<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13709" 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/13709?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T23:16:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44683">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/27bc23deeb7e3e8191a7976abbb78e1c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>33bec902630001eb17bb7f461a2cbb64</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42904">
                  <text>Page - 12-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, March 4,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Californians
return home
By KIM MILLS
AssociatL'II Pre&gt;s Writer
Thousands of Californians re-

turned to their flooded homes to
begin bailing water or shOveling
mud as skies cleared after a storm
that caused $100 million in damage
and lef1 . eight counties disaster
areas_
But in Alviso, a low·lyingSan Jose
neighborhood transfol'!ned into a
6-foot.&lt;Jeep lake, 1,700 people may
not be able to return home for up to
10 days, officials sa id Thursday.·
And as the season's most power·
lui storm moved east, the National
Weather Service warn{'!! "there's
another just around tlle corner."
The new storm shoulctmove into
northern California late Saturday or
early Sunday, then travel south,
said forecaster Dan Cooper.
"It shouldn' t be nearly as strong"
as the previous storms, he said. "If!
am wrong. we're in trouble because ·
the ground Is still very saturated.''
Seventeen people died .and more
than 4() were injured in the vicious
onslaught that began last Friday.
More than 10,700people were forced
from their homes. 60 houses and .
businesses were destroyed and1.685
damaged. the sta te Office of
Emergency Services reported late
Thursday.
As Thursday's stonn drifted east,
heavv snow fell over parts of ·
Arizooa, southern Nevada and
western Utah. Nine inches of snow
covered Utah 12 at Bryce Canyon
and highways east of Monticello
were closed. Flagstaff, Ariz., got
half a foot of snow.

---Local briefsE,F.c motorists
'

to get feed to cattle stranded on . ~
flOOIIed field south of Chlco, and
pack mules carried supplies to 2ll
people ilia Monterey County canyon
hlt by mudslide!i and floodlng.
·
Elsewhere In the country, Kansas
City, Mo., enjoyed record 'l'Megree
weather Thursday, and Milwaukee
saw its earliest 7·2 degree-day on
record.
Tornado watches were Issued
Thursday In the Texas Panhandle
as at least two twisters touched
down. but caused only minor
damage.
President Reagan Inspected
some of the storm-damaged areas
of California on Thursday as lle flew
by helicopter to Los Angeles fJ:'OOl
his ranch riear Santa Barbara. A
spokesman said he would expedite
Gov. George Deukmejlan'sreques!
to make federal aid available.
'Tm:gi-ateful for the president's
promise for swift action," Deukmejian said. Earlier, the governor
declared states of emergency In
eight counties.
Sheriff's deputies called off a
search Thursday night for Angel
Garcia Sr., missing after his
rowboat overturned in the rainswollen San Gabriel River near the
City of Industry, 18 miles east of
downtown Los Angeles.
Authorities were able to rescue
Garcia's 11-year-old Son Angel Jr.,
and a nephew, 13-year-old Fran·
· cisco Reyes, said Deputy Kevin
Carney.
In Ventura County, engineers

!rom the Office of Emergency
Services and the Army Corps of
Up to 9 feet of fresh snow In the . Engineers worked to shore up Slml
past week in tlle Sierra Nevada left . Valley's . earthen Sinaloa Dam,
about 30 feet on the ground near which began to erode late Wednesday as water poured over the-top.
Squaw VaUey. Calif.
, ,
Northern Californians adopted Residents were evacuated from
resourceful stmtegies for roping as more Ulan 1,400 homes below the
rains let up: a rancher rented boats dam.

oon secure plates

Residents with last names starting with the Initials E, F and G
will be securing their new auto license plate stickers d\lling the
month of March at the Deputy Motor Vehicle Reg1strar'~.ll!6
Mulberry Ave. 1be office Is open !rom 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. anb 2 to 4: :II
p.m., Monday through Fl1day. closing at noon on Thun;day; Frlday
evenings the additional hours of 5: :II to 7 p.m. and on Saturday
mornings from 8 a.m, to 12 noon.

ment In such areas of the economy
as· construction, a seasonal variation that exaggerated the true
employment picture.
There was little over-the-month
chimge in unemployment among
the major population groups, although joblessness among adult
males rose 0.3 percentage point to
9.9 percent in February, stU! well
below the December peak of 10.1
percent.

(Continuedfrornpage1)

Unemploymen·1t--.

Letart Township Trustees will meet 'I'I!esday at 7 p.m. at Letart

Falls.

.to&amp; In the sooth Tuesday.

22.7.

For the next three months, res.ldents are requested to use caution
when burning. High winds, high temperatures and low humidity are
predicted for the next three days. Residents are asked to refrain
from any burning at a:ll during this three day pertod. At other times,
the Shade River Forestry Division asks residents never to leave fire
unattended and to burn only after 4 p.m.

SYLVANIA COLOR SETS

The decline in civilian unemploy·
ment In January, private economists noted, masked thedlsappearanceofsome600,000peoplefromthe
labor force.

_$298

AND UP
.,

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

RIDENOUR'S . GAS SERVICE
985-3307

.

CHESTER. OH._

•'

.

Jobs bill: . good or bad for Ohio?
story on Page IH

,

.

·

••

.

•

•

tntmt

subsidies, we!Iare or unemployment benefits.
effect April 1, following the end of a winter
moratorium on service shutoffs for lack of payment.
-Eligible customers m11st apply for the time
payment plan no. later than Aprlll:l, and their bills
He said he was pleased that the .utilities ''have
must be brought up' to date no later than Nov. 30.
responded. to my request for a reasonable payment
plan.'' But he said thatevenwlth it, therewlllbesome · .. · ·· --Cu$tomers ·applying for the program may not be
who will not be abje to pay their back bills.
denied P¥"!1clpation because they have defaulted In
'"This Is not the ultlml!te answer but It is a step .
the past. However, the (!ne-eighth payments wUl be
forward, " he said.
on the total owed and not just that accrued during the
moratorium.
. The program, which the .governor said will be
.
Celeste said each utilitY company will Inform
approv~ shOrtly by the public utilities commission,
provides that:
delinquent customers who are subje&lt;:t to termination
-Residential customers who are .unable to pay
.of service on Aprll1 of the availability of ihe special
plan.
·
·
their bills on April 1 wUI be allowed to pay one-eighth
He
said
the
utilities
also
w1ll
infonn
the
energy
of their debt, in addition to the current bill, each
month. ·
assistance, welfare and unemplOYment offices within
their services areas of those. households which may
.:...These customers must establish their inability to
qualify.
pay by having qualified for government energy

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohlq's mild winter
eased tlle problem of utility disconnections among
the non-paying, but the bad economy apparently
moved In to reinforce the statewide dilemma.
With the weather outside "looking more like Palm
Beach" - it was almost 80 degr~ In Columbus on
Friday - Gov. Richard Celeste noied .that many
thousands of Ohioans are in financial straits and are ·
Ul)&lt;lble to keep up with their ever-increasing utility
bills.
He announced a new plan to allow unemployed and
other money-strapped Ohioans, delinquent in their
bills, an opportunity to catch up with Installment .
payments.
Celeste told a news conference that the state's
utilities all have agreed to the plan which w1ll take

SHOP .ELBERFELDS
THIS WEEKEND
SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON
.

'

SPRING DRESSES'
HA~F

SIZES, MISSES SIZES .
JUNIOR SIZES &amp; GIRLS' SIZES
LAY AWAYFOR EASTER!
OPEN
TONIGHT

. USE OUR
2ND ST.

FREE PARKING··

TIL 8:00

Celeste said the program is in addition to and does
not affect existing installment payment plans used by
individual utilities to prevent disconnections.
Ohlo Consumers' Counsel William Spratley, who
also appeared at the news ronterence, said he was
pleased with the lnterlm plan
Spratley Said he also was gratified that the utilities
commission "has recognized ·tl)e need for long-term
solutions (to utility disconnection problems) and has
scheduled, In fact, a public hearing to begin June 14 to
explore the issue further."
The ronsumers ' . ro~nsel said that he. like Celeste, is
aware that some Ohioans still will be uhable to pay
their bills Iinder the new plan .
He said he Is hopeful that consumer groups and
ot)1ers who see the installment plan as inadequate
cooperate to seek permanent answers.
'

$5.4 million Racine, Syracuse ~OAL _ seespossihle pr~c.edent ·
sewer system now Opera~ional ·m .,~~ . longwall deciSion . ·
Porter hired an engineering firm
11mes-Senllnel staff
and later when EPA became areal·
SYRACUSE -Development of a tty a grant for the system totaling 75
sewage system for the communi· pereent of the cost was acquired
ties of Racine and Syracuse'25 ye- , through the EPA.
ars ago was considered by some an
Porter states that a combination
"Impossible dream." Today, how- loan aud grani was secured
ever.' the system Is a reall\Y.
through the EPA and Federal
Aftei: 12 years c( planning and Home Adrnlnlsttatlon. A 25 percent
two years of construction a loail was securad from the FHA at
$5,400,000 seWage system Is In full trve percent Interest. Money was
\operation In the villages of Syra· also secured from the Slate Revolvcuse and )laclne. Plans for the sys· Ing fund which has since been paid.
tern t:iegan In 1968 and were In the beglnQ1ng the two villages
completed in November, 1!112.
planned ,separate systems but this
In the early 1961Bordersweredls- plan was considered 1oo costly. The
patched by the Ohio River Sanlta· Syracuse-Racine Regional
tion CommiSsion tor villages along District ~as fonned, thus reducing
the Ohio River to begin planning for the cost to each village and maklilg
eventual construction of sewage the project more feasible.
treatment plants. Frank W.· (Bill)
The sewage system was a proPorter, Pomeroy attorney. who duct of the two village counclls, and
serves as solicitor for the villages of each share equal the responsibility
· Syracuse arid Racine - and the for the system.
sewage district - was lnstrumenInstrumental in Securing the sew. tal in the development of the sys· age system -In addition to Porter,
tern. The Environmental mayors of both villages and council
1Protection Agency (EPA) was not
members - was the late Freeland ·
even In existence at the time vii· NoiTis. Norris served on the sew·
.lages were notified on the matter.
ap board and obtained the neces·
By KATIE CROW

sewer

sary easements.

Originally the plan was·to charge
each customer a connection fee.
Rather than charge the CDIIIJI!Ctlon
fee, which would have been a sizeable amount for each cwitomer to
pay lrl a lump sum, the sewage dis·
tr1ct chose to go t9 a user cliarge.
The cost for each potential custer
mer was OJie..half of the estimated
mnthly blll, $8.40 for a pertod of 22
months, according to Gary Norris,
secretary -treasurer of the
. Syra_cuse-Racine Regional Sewage
rMstrlct.
·
The mo~ey collected over the 22
months was ~ to pay the Interest
on the money borrowed !rom the
FHA. The amount due the FHA is
$1,200,000 at five pe'rcent. The user
charge collected, in lieu of a tap fee,
was also used for operations until ·
the. system was completed. On
Wednesday, Nov. 12, 19Sl bjds for
!lie sewage project were opened.
Onlarlo Pipeline, Inc., PittSford, N.
Y., was awarded the bid for distribution of lines and the Conti CoJll.,
Lowellville, Ohio, was awarded the
(Continued on page A3)

Graveside military

UNEMPLoYMENT - ctvWan IDIIlmploymen' held a&amp; 16.4
percent In February .as large
numbers of JobleM Americans
awaited fwtber signals of bnproved hiring prospec&amp;s before
re11111111nt1: their seiii'Ch for work,
the govenunent reported Friday. (AP IMerpboto).

story oil Page A-4

'

1982
. of Labor

SPQrts .........., ................. C. J.!!
TV guide ........... , .......... lnser1

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press W~r ,

8
Source :

Wilson: 'not gUilty' of conspiracy

Middleport-Pomeroy...:...Galllpolis-Point Pleasant

by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

9.0-

.

tmts·

The forest fire season has begun accorotng to a reminder Issued

- '

-Whites. 9.2, up from 9.1.
-Blacks. 19.7, down from 20.8.
-Hispanics, 15.8, up from 15.5.
The number of people forced to
accept · reduced hours or only
part-time work fell from 6.8milllon
to 6.4 million. The number of people
out of work for six months or more,
which had risen steadily in the
second hal! of 19S2, was unchanged
in February at 2.7 million.

,

.

Celeste announces installment utility bill plan
STARTING AT

Forest fire ,·season ·unJ;(...e rway

.

I

Bunt Burkhan and the Junkyard Dogs will provide square dance
and country rock music tor weekend dances to be held at the Robert
Plckettfarrn.Saturday'sdancew1llbe9-1andSunday'sdancew111lle
from 6 to 10 p.m. The public Is Invited. The Pickett farm Is located on
Slate Route 681 at East Darwtn.

9.5-

·

LoCal ............. ~ .................. $.11

State-Natloiu!I ........... ........ D-1

.

· Ten Meigs emergency runs

.

story on Page A-3

SPRING SAVINGS

Asuit totaling $63,50125 was filed In Meigs County Common Pleas ·
Court by N;ltiDnwide Insurance and Dorothy Parsons, New Haven,
against Steven Jenkins. Racine.
The suit Is theresultofanautomoblleaccldentthatoccurredMarch
5, 1981 In Point Pleasant. According to the entry Nationwide P&lt;lid
· $60,000 at the death of April Louise Parsons and the balance for
.
damages to the Par!i!&gt;ns car.
· A suit for support was filed by Laurte Cardillo, Gallipolis, against
Antony Earl Cardillo, Langsville.

•Seasona!ly
Adjusted

h !II. • , ........................ D.f

Oa.,..neds ....-................... D-5-8
:FAIItorlal ........................... A..z

.

Accident results in money suit

10.5-

Along the River ...... ~ ......8-HO
Area l)ea(;Jis, •••• ~ •••••• •••• ~ .....A--6 ·

8¥

·'

Louise Eshelman resigned her post as president of the
Harrisonville Senior Citizens due to ill health. Her resignation wa.S
effective as of Feb. 22.

..

Within tlle various groups of
workers, tlle jobless rates were:
-Adult women. 8.9 percent •.down
from9.0.
-Teenagers, 22.2, down from

_

Health forces resignation

}unkyard Dogs will perform

.

Ohio housing program under way

.. '

Don Wilson, Middleport, recently Shot a holl}ln-one at Riverside
Golf Course, Ma5on. Bob Bowen, f'omeroy, witnessed the shot.
wi!soD made the hole-In-one onnumberl2. a160yarddrlve, with a
seven Iron.

Percent of
. Work Force

Times-Sentinel

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thul'$(lay nlght ln. :
the Ohio Lottery's daily gim)e, "The Number," was 487. . . . ; '
In the "Pick 4'' game, played five times a: week, the winning ~·, :
number was 1098.
· ·
· ·
' ' ·

. .

.Admitted--John Hquck, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Merle Davis, Clarence McNeal, Gregory Winebrenner, Harry Wyatt, Elizabeth Yost, Eltzabetll Guess, Betty
Carpenter, Naomi Floyd.

· Today's

Sunday ihrough Tuesday:
.
'' ••
A chance of showers eaeh day. 1Qgh$"1rom the mid 60s to near 'l9 · :
Sunday., from the J1lid 5os In the north to the mid 60s In the !1011111.' :,
Monday and mostly In the 50s'fuesda.v. Lows near 50 Sunday, In the . ;.
low.to mid~ Monday and from the mid :Mls.lnthenorthtothe·mld ,.

Middleport
golfer gets hole in orw
'
.

Meigs County emergency squads made 10 runs on Thursday.
They included: 8:24 a.rq., Pomeroy to Wo!I Pen Road for Bertha
Russell, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 10:44 a.m. Racine
Unit treated Jessica Kimes at her residence; 11:32 a.m., TupperS
Plains took Leona Custer from Joppa Road to Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg; 1:03 p.m., Racine firemen extinquished a
brush fire on Sugar Run Road; 2 p.m. Racine extinguished a bruSh
fire near the Herman Carson residence; 2: 15 p.m., the Racine Fire
."l)epartment extinguished a minor fire at the Dan Shain residence,
Main St. ; Pomeroy at6: 35p.m. went to Landmark for JlmForeman.
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 6: 42 p.m. the Racine Fire
Department extinguished a bruSh fire at John Ours; 7: 19 p.m. the
Middleport Unit transpo!Wd Mike Mariley from the flrehol)se to
Veterans Memorial Hosplial; 8: 10 p.m. the Middleport Fire
Department extinguished a car fire on the Flood Road, owner not ·
Identified,

.._

Cloudy tonight. Lows between :p and 60. Breezy with showers and ·
!l(lSslble thunderstorms likely Saturday. Highs bet)lfeen 70 and 75.' ~
The 1chance of rain Is ID pei1CE!Ilt tonight and 60 percent Saturday. ~
Extended Ohio Forecast · · ' .t""'
"~
.

.Winninl( Ohio lottery number

Letart trustees to meet

11.0-

10,0·

.'•

r;peat her forecast

Veterans Memorial information

Nation's jobless

•

19~ ~

.

servrces set
Graveside military services Will
be held for Homer Powell Saturday,
· March 5, at 1: l:l p.m. at Chester
Cemetery by Drew Webster Post39,
American Legion.
·

WATER BED SALE

Tlmes-Sentlllel staff
~VILLE

..:... A possible
pJ'l'Ce!]ent may arllle from a
decision by the Ohlo Depart- ,·
. -ment of Natural Resou~ to 1
modify SouthernOhio CoalCo.'s
application to continue !ongwall
mining at Meigs ·MJne No. 2.
That's what Citizens Otganized Aga)nst ' Longwalllng, the
gra..p protesting damage reportedly caused by longwalling,
is hoping Will be the reSult of an
informal conference at 1 p.m.
. today.
More than 300 people, IncludIng coal company representatives and miners. are expected
to pack the WUton Elementary
School auditorium here, accordIng to Betty Wells, COAL
president.
Mrs. Wells said the organization has spent the past several
weeks researching mining tech·
niques and preparing testimony
of approximately 35 residents of
northwestern Meigs and eastern
Vinton counties whose inlnetal
rights are owned. by the
company. •
COAL was organized in late
1982 to address damage and loss
of local water supplies allegedly
caused by the longwall device, a
shearing machine praised as the
Industry's safest means of min·
lng coal.
The longwall has been slic·
cessful in Europe and has ·only
recently been Introduced in the
THE MINE - A buDdoze~ ~ves coal past a mine building at a
United States. COAL insists
coal mine nearWDite8vllle, Ohio. Some of the coal gathered at tile mine
through its research longwalllng
comes from longwaDing and has been crUtctzed by owners of the land.
worked well overseas because It
was used thousands of feet
reading on It," she said. "It
longwall has gone through - is
below the surface, whlle locally,
helped
me
un&lt;!.ersland
how
it
repaired:
COAL says longwal!lng has
works. But you're not going to
The offer did not sit well with
been used 300 to 400 feet down.
see anytl:llilgjbe)LdQn'J~ty~rlliln.. _gnd___.MarL
In a move to reduce some .Q1
to
Spezza, two property owners In ·
the friction that hae developed
~tween the company and
No discussion was held. on
Columbia Township whose property have shown . the most ·
COAL in the past few months, . . alterl)atives to longwalllng,
Mrs. Wells explained, and the
dramatic examples of damage
Southern Ohio Coal company
company said It would continue
allegedly caused by longwalling..
officials allowed . six COAL
members, their attorneys and
to buy properly that has been
Both have reportedly negodamaged by the longwall.
tiated unsuccessfully with the
iiledia to tnur the. mine last
Wednesday and see how a
If the company buys the
coal company over a monetary
property, the former owner is
settlement. Both are expected to
longwall works,
Mrs. Wells said the expeallowed to stay and after 18
testify at today's hearing.
In advertisements published
months, has the option of buying
rience was Interesting, but she
the land back wheri damage
In Friday's editions of the
wasn't entirely satiSfied.
Pomeroy-Middleport Dally Sen·
caused by subsidence - the
"It's helped .me considerably,
.
s!nkii\g
of
the
earth
after
a
· (Continued o~ page A3) ·
because I've been doing a lot o.f

see."

1980

1978 IMPALA
4 door1 Small VI, auto., air cond.

'3685
1978 REGENCY .98
4 door, fully equipped.

'5875

$249 9 5

IN lABORATORY - llob Moen, froal, plaat
operatGrof the S~RIIctae Bqloul ~er-

Neatest, Cleannt little car in
town, auto. trans., air torN~ . , rear

COMPLETE AND SET. UP

•

defogger.

'4888

· , BOOKCASE HEADBOARD AND FRAME
COMPLETE WITH .PEDESTAL - DECK - HEATER - LINER ·
FULL WAVE MATTRESS - FILL KIT - WATER TREATMENT - PATCH KIT
COMPLETE AND SET UP

NO PAYMENT JILL MAY

WAYSIDE FURNITURE

GA~LIPOLIS'

1980 \Rabbit
1977 DODGE
1-....:F~I•:.:.t.=btcl:::.. .:. :to;:;..n_ _
'4:..:5:..:9:..:5=---11979 Pinto
1979 Rabbit ·
1975 CHEVY C-10
1980 Chentte
St•nct.rd, to-r- '1995
1979 Horizon
1978 DATSUN
. KIIIIJ Cl;b
'387 5

ABOUT OUR
WAIRANnl CALL JOHN

111111 equlpmeat for the

• trtct Anatment plut and Dale Bart are pletured In
the Jallor!Uory poRion of the cootrol bulkllnl . 'lbe
oonh'ol bidldlar; al8o hoU8el an olllce, .torage rocm ·

t---;;;iiiiE~~-f"iiCONoi\'l~AU~iSs:::-1t--o...CCHlHEAPIES"

LIMITED SUPPLY

~41 THIRD AVE.

0240MNI

'3995 1970 Buick
•200§11974 Pinto
1973 Maverick
'3995 1975 Granada ·
'3995 1976 Monza
'1595 1976 Ford S/W
NATIONWIDE
JIM WALKER, WENDELL VAUGHAN OR BILL HAAS
'

..-r• opiii'1I&amp;D In the ' - "

meiL Cbemlcall are ued lor the bnakdowa of raw
leWap, . pytAeHoo ~hell, lllgeaten! IIIII cJdorlae
ooatrol.

Gallia courthouse coDstrUction siarts Monday
a:ll goes well, according to Brunner, who w1ll
superviSe construction for the contractor.

· ByJEFFG~

,.._ seatlnelS&amp;all

GAI.J:.IPOLIS - Preliminary work for construction of the new Gallla County courthou8e w1ll begin
Monda}', just over two years after Its predecessor
was .deStroyed in a fire. ·
Mike Brwmer of Custom Facilltles Inc.,- general
contractor for till! project, told County cornrnlsslo!!ers
Frlday that workers w1ll spend the llrlt' seoreraJ
· weeks .demolishing the foundation left from the
former courthouse.
·
·
Brunner and rep~tattves of~ of fool' other
. contractors Involved with the project met with the
CDI1IIIIiBslone and tJie architect to maJre arrangl!· ~ts-~m.
The structu~ will be con\pletl!d

,,

,

IIi nine months If

Custom Facilities has hired only one subcontractor - a Marietta excavating fliT(! - for the
project so far, he said.
· Brunner said his firm ''will try to hire as many local
people as possible" to work on the courthouse. But he
added that budget considerations wiU Influence
employment dEcisions. . .
,
"We're going to .give everyone an equal chance,"
. he said. '
Brunner estlmaies !bat at most, 150 people w111 he
working on thecoul1110!JII!at pnetlme. Usually, there
' wiU w1ll be 2!1 \0 31 people, he said. .
/ 'Molt ot the rna~ .used for the project w111 be
plrchased tlu'oo8ll Custom FacUlties' headquarters

sometime after Aprlll, according to the courthouse
In Indianapolis, according _to Brunner. Some items
architect, Stephen Cassaday.
which will be needed dally, such as.concrete, will be
The sprinkler and plumbing contracts will be
.
purchased locally.
negotiated with the present contractors, Cassaday
Plans call for construction of a $2.4 mllllon
_
_said.
four•story courthouiie.
Although some workers will move onto the
Because the romlssloners were unsure of funding,
construction site Monday, the commissioners have
they awarded contracts .in December to complete
not yet chosen it date for a formal groundbreaking
only two of the bulldiJtg's four floors.
The conunlssloners decided to complete the · ceremony.
They have dlsscussed holding the ceremony in
~lldlng when they recently borrowed $1.3 mUIIon
.
about
a week.·
'
from area banks to lieiP finance construction. The
They have also not decided Whether to witlldraw
county w111 also use a!laut $1.1 million In ll)surance
their resolution to raiSe the county sales tax .5.
funds received as a result Of the January 1981 fire .
·(one-half) percent tO help pay for ihe courthouse.
The aeneraJ, electrical and beating and ventilating
If they don't withdraw the resolution, Gall!a County
contracts for the remaining two floors w1ll be bid
residents will vote on the tax hike i)1 November.
I.

~

�_,

•
I

Commentary .· and

March 6, t\983

•
perspective

~lb

ts:m~

A Divi!oo:iml uf
...,...,__,L--,-I~dt~

'q:!v
825 Third 1\\l' .. Ga llipolis. Ohio
16 14144&amp;-2342

III Court St .. Pilm.,roy. Ohio
__
16141992-2156

ROBERT I.. WJN(;ETT Puh l i~"' her •

PAT WHITEH EAD

HDil .\ iCI" Wi i .'iON JR.
t

-

Fx 1•t

U\l'.t'

A ~s tstant

l·:di\t•l

Publish• ·r·Contrnlu·r

1 1· 1'1 t HS OF 1!1'1...,111 \ ;trt· \\ o lo-umnl. lht'\ :-.tluultl ~ h ·s~ lh tm300 ""rcls lml).! . ,\1\
ku o r~ ;1 ro ' UhJ''' t ' " lt lllll tl! :t 1UI nlU~ I ht• s i).! tll'd \llilh nwmt'. atldn·ss &lt;HKl trh·ph11m·
lllii! IIH'r . '\ !I UIIM !.! IIt•d lt•\\1'1"' u ti I ht· t•uhlio;ho·tl. l .dh•N Nhuultl IH• in .t!tMifl Lil sk . iiddrt&gt;Ss in).!
l'" ll'' ' · II III pt •r,.,JI,;J Ill it" '&gt; . _
'

Tip will run
for 17th term

The turor over the squeal law appears endless. In part, of course.
the controversY, has been prolonged
by the curious decision of a federal
court to the effect that the same
Congress that desires to demlnlsh
teenage pregnancy cannot log!·
cally ,endorse a protocol (advising
·· ·the girl's parents that she has put In
for birth control Information) the
effect of which might be to fi'Uiltra te
Con,gress' objective. The reasoning
h~ Is that the more Information
you distribute to teenage girls
about how tq conceive. a baby, the
fewer babies there will be.
Unhappily, 'nOt much attention,
In disputed which are fundamen·
tally Ideological, Is ever given to
available data , The country In the
world In which a~ss Is easiest to
birth control Information Is
Sweden, where the number of bastard births Is blgbest The profusion

of Information about {!igarette
smoking and cancer Is not seriously
affecting the rate of addiction. As
for alcohol, which Is probably the
single greatest threat to individual
health and productivity, the same
country that gave us Gulag as ·a
means of controlling its people
can't seem to figure out how to keep
those people away from booze. The
good news, recently got out by a
gentleman whose hammerlock on
Soviet data never ceases to amaze,
is that the tax on vodka In the Soviet
Union Is proving sufficient to gener·
ate revenues to finance the entire
military establlsbment. . Our Jawmakers should perhaps cope with
the budget deficit by 11lducing more
drunkenness. They could be encouraged to give the public an ex·1\mple by their own conduCt, except
that one · would not know the
difference.

March 6, 1983:

rJ.

-

===·

ble to the pleasure-seeker needs to ;
be instructed in the discipline of ;
sensible self-limitation. The 15- ~
year-old girl who has bad no 111- •
structlon at all In the subject ls 7
really quite helpless, partiClllarly :'
l,!tasmuch as the routine indUce- c
ments are to libertlnlsm, rather:
than· to self-restraint, even as yol)
Will find more advertisements to
biiy this or that alcoholic dr1nk than c
you will find warnings against buy_tng it. What happens, then, Is that ::
the 15-year-old girl rwis a number :
of rtsks. One Is that of finding her- •
self, though unprepared, pregnant. :
Other risks include diseases and ·.
emotional deranglllllents. Insutfl- (.
ctent attention, It seems to me, Is ·
paid to the question of whether the •
male (or female) anlmafwbosesex;
life Is Wldlsclpllned Is happier thiUl'
hls/ ber complement. I see no evi-;
dence that this Is so.
•
Accordingly, since most of the In~
structlon in sex discipline Issues
from parents - and Issues from
them more often Indirectly than dl·
rectly - It would seem senliible to
pass along to the Pa.rents Information about a cblld's mlsgovemanace. Thls would appear to be a ·
point especially relevant given thai ·
the question of sexual activity Is significantly Informed by matters that
deal with right and wrong, which Is
the dominion of reilglon. One Is constantly surprtsed that those whoop- .
pose any religion In the schools,
usually giving as a reason that religion Is a matter for the hOme, are
almost uniformly opposed to parental authority being exercised at
home In matters that pertain to
religion.
The Voice of America Is In a tizz)r
over what kind of rock lyrics should
be countenanced, and poor Mr.
Scott, the director of programming, Is discovering thatlf you rule
out rock songs that;~reaninvitatlon
to round-the-clock sex, you pretty
well rule out rock music.

President Reaga n isn't yet saying whether he'll seek a second termbut a rejuvenated Tip O"Neill is running for a 17th. He's also running the
House in a fas hion that has silenced sometime Democratic critics who
used to say the speaker was out of touch with his troops.
O'Neill says he definitely and absolutely plans to run for another House
term in 1984. That makes it almost as definite and absolute that he'll get it.
He won last time with 75 percent of the vote in his Boston area
congressional district.
'I'wo years ago O'Neill was down, and there were Democrats who said be
should he out as their ranking leader in Washington. Reagaonomics was
taking shape over the futile protests of loya lists In a divided House
Democratic majority.
During Reagan's first.WbiteHousespringtlme, while the administration
lobbied for budget cuts, O'Neill spent a House recess traveling abroad.
While the president and his spokesman sought every opportunity to
promote their program on radio and television, O'Neill declined network
invitalions.
· He conceded early , albeit correctly on the first Reagan budget,
anticipating that Democratic votes would make the president the victor.
··J've been in politics an awful long time and I know when you fight and
when you don't. " he said. Some Democrats th~ugbt that an overdose of
candor.

Republicans hired a lookalike actor to appear In campaign
advertisements taunting O'Neill. Not longg ago, O'Neill turned ·actor to
play himSelf in a brief appearance on the television comedy series,
"Cheers."

He also played himself as a campaigner for Democratic House
candidates last fall , raising money and bunting votes in eight campaign
misslons across the nation.
At the same time. he began making more appearances on radio and
television, and mounted a barrage of statements and speeches assailing
the Reagan program and extolling Democratic alternatives.
The Democrats gained 26 seats in the House, and ()'Neill emerged as
something ora campaigh hero.
·
After. a season of losing to the Republican-conservative coalition that
approved Reagan 's tax and budget cuts, the House Democratic leadership
started winning on economic issues. And that was before the
reinforcements won In November arrived to take their House seats.
The speaker was. and is, the spokesman, and the grumbling of liberal
Democrats was silenced. In a labor speech this winter, O"Nelll recalled
that he bad been described as on the ropes two years ago, then as a revived
political leader. He said neither was true.
"I am not any dlfferent than I was two years ago," O'Neill said. "But the
House of Representatives is a lot different. 1t is firmly Democratic."

~oscoww~ary~=o=f~P~L~()==~~~~=J=ack=A=n=de=~=on

WASinNGTON - The Holy
Land may be an unholy mess, but
the situation Isn't hopeless. There Is
a bold solution that could finally
bring pace to the troubled region:
freeze the Patestine Liberation Or·
ganlzatlon out of the ·peace process
and create an atmosphere in which
new Palestinian leaders would
emerge to negotiate.
.
The PLO, even In Its present dlsarr;~y following last year's humiliation In Lebanon, Is still an obstacle
to a peaceful settlement between
Israel and the Arab world. But lf
the PLO can 'I be cHmbed over on
the road to peace, perhaps It can be
walked around.
No less than the Soviets, of all
people, have become "Impatient
with the PLO's lnflexlblllty." So
states a secret Defense Intelligence
Agency report, which adds; "Mosover the road to keep from killing . cow says It supports Israel's right
Do we have any protection from
him. The man gotoutofihecarand to secure borders and believes that
thieves, drunks, and dope addicts?
finally
coaxed him off the road,
'Phe past four or five years our
later
be
stole truck that was close
neighborhood bas been blessed
by, drtvlng It about one mile before
WIth all of the above.
· A few months ago a timber cut- running It over an embankment
Into a ditch and leaving tt.
tlng firm had batteries stolen from
We had just flnlsbed dinner when
"The SberiH was called, only to Winslow said, "I have a surprise for
tWO pieces of equlpmerit, later one
pick him up for a taxi ride borne. everyone. Come In the living room
hundred fifty gallons of fuel oil was
We
were told thatbewasonhisown while I Jock the doors and pull down
taken from my property, and nuproperty
when be was picked up the window shades."
merous small Items have been
and
nothing
could be done, If this Is
~ken from varlo us neighbors.
We went in the llving room. Wins• I live on White Hollow Road, a all that can be done, we do rot have low had set up a 16min projector
much law enforeement, but rather and a movie screen.
very narrow country road where a
·'
speed limit of 20 Is not safe, how- we have protection plan for, the
"What are you going to show us,
eVer the "Drunks and the Spaced crtmlnal!
Winslow?" Someone asked. 'Deep
What can we do to protect our Throat' or 'Debbie Does Dallas'?"
Outs" are constantly driving 50 or
families and property from these
60 taking the center of the road.
"Something much worse. I mari·
Recently one of the Spaced-Out kinds of people and their constant aged to get an Illegal print of a Can·
Cadets tried to shoot himself- un· harassment? We cannot leave our adlan documentary on acid rain."
fortunately for us be only hi t his leg. homes for fear of returning to noA murmur ran through the
thing but a shell, If we do leave, we crowd. "Couldn't we get in trouble
JJe was taken 1D the hospital,
treated and released. A few days never know If we will return alive watching a dirty film from
later, on drugs again he appeared or crippled for the rest of our lives Canada?"
at a local grocery s!Dre yelllng obs· from a beadon coillslon with one of
Winslow smiled. "You're damn
cene words at the female owner. the "high fiyers." Please speak right you could. The Justice DeFinally he was so far out he was out! What Is the answer?
partment has declared all Cana·
Nolan Thornton dian films on acid rain pure
lying In the middle of State Route
Route 1 propaganda, and they have to be
7']5, with cars having to stop for
Box &lt;12A clearly marked as such. They also
him.
Patriot, Ohio told the.Canadlan F!lln Board It bas
The next day In the road , again on
a·, hillcrest. a man baq,.to slide all
·to turn over to Jus.tlce the names of
those whO asked to see the films."
Martha Harfinglon said, "I've
never seen a documentary on acid
rain. Thls Is going tQ be exciting."
"How In the devil did you get the
: Today is Sunday, March 6, the 65th day of 1~. There are300days left In
film?"
I asked Winslow.
tpe year.
"I
smuggled
It in from Toronto,"
· Today's Highlight in History: ·
"
.
.
be
replled.
: On March 6, 1836, the Alamo mission In San Antonio, Texas, feli!D the
"You really took a chance. What
M~xican army after a 13-day siege.
If you bad gotten caught?"
- On this date:
"I would have been fined and sent
[n 1857, the Supreme Court ruled that a slave, Dred Scott, could not sue
to
jail. U,S. Customs bas strict
for freedom in a federal court.
·
orders
·!0 look for Canadian Film
· In 1946. France recognized Vietnam as a tree state within the Indochina
Board
movie
pi1nts. They're even
'
Federation.
.
·
.
training
dogs
now
.to snUf tor them.
:In 1965, the U,S. announced It was sending the first contingent of combat
The
Attorney
General
has given It
ttooPS to fight Vietcong guerrillas in Vietnam.
'
·
top
priority,"
·And, In 1974, in a televised news conference, President Nilcon denied
"Why are they uptlgbl about
ever having approved bush money or clemency for the .Watergate
!llms
on acid rain?"
defendants.
"Winslow
said, "They're afraid If
Ten years ago: The Nixon Administration reimposed mandatory price
Americans
see
them, without them
controls on the country's biggest oil companies.
being
clearly
marked
as propa·Five years ago: President Carter Invoked the Taft-Hartley Act In an ·
ganda,
wl!
would
believe
that acid
effort to get striking miners back to work.
.

Letter to the editor
Law enforcement?

Central Intelligence Agency, lorex- whlle, are confident that.time is on
the PLO should agree."
The Stale De partment bas ample, as the PLO leader "most their side- and that "Israel ultipicked up essentially the same In· . closely Identified with modera~ mately will have to de~ with the
formation !rom the Moscow em· policies" or as "relatively concilia- PLO as the representative of the
tory" within the faction-ridden West Bank."
·
bassy and other llstening posts. The
But some U.S. analysts think the ~
·diplomatic back channels Indicate organization.
Arafat's problem, according to a PLO can be bypassed. Not all the !
that the Kremlin Is weary of the
secret State Department report, Is Arab nations are as virulently anti-.-;
PLO's Insane goal thatlsrae!IT)usl
"how to extend recognition without Israel as the PLO Many of them •
be destroyed. Apparently this has
causing
a disastrous split within the would probably welcome the •
been communicated to PLO ChairPLO
rar.k
and .file. " The analysis chance to follow Egypt's lead and •
man Yasslr Arafat.
One secret c-able. seen by my as- adds: "In order to preserVe PLO work out an accommodation with ;
Unity, Its leaders feel they must be Israel.
sociate Dale Van Atta, cites evi•
dence that the So'viets are "pushing able to show solid guarantelis that
There Is another, more sinister : ·
recognition of Israel wlll be fol·
Ararat toward somesortofrecognl·
lion of Israel's existence." Another, lowed by rapid "ilnd meaningful factor that Is holding back a nego- •
tlated peace. U.S. analysts call It :
negotiations."
quoting a clandestine source, says
the "Sadat syndrome." In Its stark-:
PUt
more
simply
in
another
the Russians "view Ararat 's Intranesi
terms, this Is the fear of Arab •
State
Department
report.
Arafat
sigence as a stumbling block" to
their future plans In the Middle believes that "before be could ac- leaders that lt they should make an :
knowledge Israel's right to exist, he . accommodaUon with Israel - or !
East.
Some intelligence reports !ndl· must have something to show his appear to make one - they might .!
people." Lacking this, be bas stuck be assassinated by extremists the ~
cate that Arafat might be willing to
recognize Israel under certain clr· to bls antl·recognltion policy. The way Egyptian President Anwar Sa· :
PLO Leaders under him, mean- . dat was.
:
cumstances. He Is described by the

1s:

it?"

home.''

1

•

"Well, show It fast," Bella said.
"I'm very nervous."
"Okay, lights out. Here we go."
We all sat In rapt attention as we
watched Hsh and wildllfe dying In
the Canadian north. A few people
got sick and bad to go to the bathroom. At the end of the picture,
Martha Harrington said, "What
kind of degenerate mind could
make a picture like that?"
"That's what the Justice Department would like to know. If this film

..

'

Is shown throughout the United::.
States It could destroy the Amen-:·
can way of life as we know It.'' ::·
"How could. Canada
do It?"
""
.
Y'
"There are a lot of dangerous!:
people In the environmental move-':
ment up there, and they have con-~
trol of the fUm Industry. 11 you tlliJik-.
that one was bad walt untu you ~
the other one I smuggled ln. It's:";
about the horror of nuclear war." _
"You can't SI;!Ow a Canadian pte-;
ture against nuclear war In the uat-.
ted Stares," Beila screamed. "It:s:

.

By The A!SOciated Press
Thunderstonns hammered the lower Mississippi Valley with
powerful winds and rains Saturday, after several tornadoes
whipped across northern Louisiana and Mississippi.
One twister Friday struck Vicksburg, Miss. , and winds caused
damage near .Jackson, accordl1!g to the National Weather Service.
More th&lt;Ut four Inches of rain fell in eastern Rankin County, Miss.
Rain was forecast for Saturday-from southern Florida north to
Virginia, and from Alabama across Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and.
Wisconsin.

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY TIIROUGH WEDNESDAY:
. TUrning cooler with a chance of rain each day. Highs In the 60s
Monday and the 50s Tuesday and from "the mid40s to the mid 50s
Wednesday. Lows from the upper 30s to the 40s Monday and
Tuesday, cooling to the 30s Wednesday. ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio Brothers Kuhn Loeb, Inc., New
bo).lsing officials have started a qew
York, N.Y.; will be "the senior
program toboostthestate'ssagging
underwriters for the bonds.
housing indu'stry.
Agency officials, at the same
Officials of the newly created time, announced that Raymond T.
Ohio Housing Finance Agency said . Sawyer III. 39, Cleveland, has been
F-I'iday that the first tax-tree bonds appointed by the Celeste administration as executive dl.t:ector of the
to· finance the low-interest loan
program may be issued In lateAprll agency.
or early May.
Sawyer Is a partner In the
'The agency said Cranston Securi- .Cleveland law firm of Thompson.
t(re Co., Colwnbus, and Lehman Hine, &amp; Flory.

Sewer system..._______
(Continued from Page·Al)
bid for construction of the treat·
tnent plant. An unusual compllcatlon In the development pf the
SY.Stem was an archaeological
study mandated due to Indian reilcS that might be found at the treat· .
nient pla,nt site.
At the time the archaeological
~tudy came about, which was in
January of 1979, it was noted that
every day of delay on the system
cost the district $5.000 a day. Ac·
cording to Norrts, 85 percent of the
hOmes and businesses are booked
Into the system. Fifteen percent are

·suY

not on the system due to individual
problems; residents out of town
and problems beyond control. At
the present time there are 700users
In the two villages,
All worJ&lt; has been i:ompleted and
Inspected, escrow funds have been
released and the contractors paid.
There Is one year warranty on the
system. Norrts stated that revenue
from the sewage system - custer
mers pay $16.80 per month - ena·
bles the district to pay bills and
make payments to FHA. The first
payment on the principal amount
owed the FHA will be made ·in 1984.

Although the contracts with the
two underwriting firms still must be
approved by the state Controlling
Board, a spokesman for the New
York firm said the. first revenue
bonds could be issued by l;ite April.
The housing ·finance agency was
created early this year by ' the
Legislature, following voter' approva lin November of a constlrutlonal
amendment allowing the state to
issue revenue bonds t6 make money
for housing loans available to local
financial Institutions.

:J'oday

•

COAL
••.
(Continued from page

Al)

tine! and Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Southern Ohio Coal said It
has hied tD settle P,rlvately
beca4se It believes "every case
is different and requires indlvld·
ual attention."
Because longwalllng Is new to
the industry, COAL believes
modification of Southern Ohio
Coal's permit application could
prevent damage from taking
place elsewhere.

W-0-R-0 P-R-0-C-E-S-S-1-N-G
Computer Technology has hit the office in a bi&amp; way.
The effect it has on office work is tremendous ...

Ohioans eligible for loans, to be
discounted as a result of the tax free ·
status of the .. bonds, are those
buying, building or rehabilitating a
single·fam lly, owner-occ u pled
borne for the first time, orthose62or
over seeking to buy Jnto multifamily units.
The agency's Initial bond issue
will generate about $438 million for
loans wblch are expected to carry
an interest rate 2 percent to 3
percent below existing mortgage
rates of 13 percent to 13.5 percent.

YOU CAN LEARN WORD PROCESSING AT GALLI POliS
BUSINESS COLLEGE IN ONLY 4 SHORT WEEKS, 1AnERNOON PER WEEK DR 1 EVENING PER WEEK AND BE
PREPARED FOR A REWARDING CAREER!

CLASSES START SOON
REGISTER NOW - ENROLLMENT LIMITED

CALL TODAY!
611446-4367
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
529 JACKSON PIKE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

r----------------.,..---------1.~=======================~

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

NOW FOR
.MEMORIAL DAY

MAGNAVOX REMOli
19" Diagonal Portable
Automatic AFT Color TV
• MX/300 chassis
• ooo in-line matrix tube
• Programmable scan tun ing
• 105 channel capability
• Infrared remote control
• Green LED channel display

This beautiful double monument is of autumn rose
'granite.
..

. LOGAN MONUMENT CO., Jnc.
'·

. POMEROY,OHIO .

VINTON, OHIO

.:- Pomeroy-Muon Bridle

W. Main Street ·
388·8603

992-2588

Reg. $599.95
NOW

$44900 .

MAGNAVOX 25" diagonal
Automatic Fine Tuning
• MX/200 chassis
• 100• In-line matrix tube
' • One-knob elfclronlc tuning
· • Efflclant"4" speaker
• Contemporary styling
•

• Efllclenl3" x 5" speaker

I'DI]O?WA

REG. $429,94

REG. 1679.95

NOW

$49800

.

..

MAGNAVOX 25" Remote
Computer Cotoi 330'

·1
•I

----··------

SHARP-Front Load VHS
121)011tion llectroni: lunlr

FURNITURE ..
~ GALLERIES 1

.,;-

I

342. COLORS ott SALE
. FROM $18~44 to $29.44

Now.$59800

I

This super-affordable
19" diagon~l color TV features
,
sophisticated Automatic Fine Tuning
· circuitry for accurately tuned
pjctures'.

REG. $399.95

NOW
Special

Video

AIIPEX T120
"V.H.S."

'

'$S90

243 Third ,Ave., G!illipolis, OhPhone 446-7888

Corner Second 1nd Grape
'

MX/300 chassis ·
100' tn-ttne matrix lube
Random access niucn-T~ nlng
High resolullon filter
t05 channel capability
Infra rid remote control
Madlterraneon.styttng

$698 00

lEG. $769.95

'

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

REG. 1949.00
NOW

Salt toucb controls
dly/0111 Mttt tilltlr
Dlily Milt fllturt.

Lees has loWered its prices to us_:we'r:e passing
.the big savings on to you. Huge savings! Huge
selection! Plan to choose 'a beautiful Lees carpet
and save! Sale starts March 7.

$33900
Sup_er 19"
8uy.I
NOW

-ot'
..
-·

.history

·MAGNAVOX 19" diagonal
Automallc Fine Tuning
• MX/300 cnassls
· • 90' In-line matrix lube
• One-kno.belectronic tuning
• Contemporary styling ·
• BC4113WA

~

ID

Linda and AI Leto moved her
from New York City two years ago;
He was a successful truck owner;
operator In New York. His buslnes~
failed here.

FOR OFI'1CE PERSONNEL: THE FUTURE IS SPELLED

()hio housing program to get under way

Illegal."
· :.
" Of course It's Ulegal, that's whi.:l:
makes It so exciting," Wlnsl~:
said. "Wouldn't you rather see ~a:
film forbidden by the U.S, autborl- '

ties, than watch 'The Winds
War'?"

WESTUNION,Oblo (AP) -This
rural county of less than 20,00l
people traditionally leads the state
in unemployment and February's
32.5 percent jobless is a record.
"The economy of other places
reflects back on this county," says
Robert Semple, a county tommis·
sioner. Many of its 9,087 employed
work in other counties, some as far
awa,y as Dayton and Cincinnati, be
added.
" Th~ number of unemployed In
Cincinnati can jump 10,000, and
there won't be much of a change in
the percentage of workers who are
un employ ed," sa id Vera
McCarthy, who beads the state's
Bureau of Employment Services
here.

The nation's weather

••

J\ dllrty~=~=
· ==o=v=i~e======~~=============A=r=t=Bu=c=h~~w ~
"Don't worry about It, Bella,"
Winslow said. "My kids are outside
on the lookout. lf·they ring ibedoor·
bell three times, I'll dump the prtnt
and substitute 'The Devil In Miss
Jones.' They can't touch us for
watching a porno movie In our own

.....

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service fore... cas1s a band of snow stretching from the DakotastoKansaslor:Sunday
· March 6, A band of sbowers sj;retching from the Carolinas to weste.,;
New York Is also predicted. (AP Laserphoto) .
·•

.

I

rain is an environmental problem."
"You would think the J ustlce Department would have more to do
than worry about Canadian documentaries," Ed Harrington said.
"You don't know much aoout the
Justice Department. They finally
found a legallssue they understand.
They've been so confused about
civil rights, EPA and antitrust
cases, that they jumped at the
chance to sock it to Canada. The
Canadians·are going to think twice
the next time they finance a film
about pollution," Winslow told us.
"How long Is It'" someone
asked.
"It only runs 30 minutes. But It
will blow your mind."
Bella Murphy said, "Suppose the
FBI.breaks In whllewe'rewatcblng

.....

.

Showers may linger over all portions of Ohio but the southwest
Sunday. Although It will be cooler, temperatures wlll still be above
normal.
A weak front that stretched from soutllern Minnesota to northern
Ohio Saturday Is expected to move to the northeast. Low pressure
over the Oklahoma panhandle will move to illinois by Sunday
morning and to Lake Michigan by evening.
A c::Oid front curving out of ·the low will reach southwest ohio
Saturday night and move northeast of the state Sunday morning.
It was still dry Saturday overnight, despite a weak front that
c;llpped back down into nort!)ern Ohio. The air flow was malrUy from
· the south and southeast with rather mild air for this time of year.
The temperature was down to 39 degrees at Toledo at 5 a.m., but
elsewhere In the state, It was warmer, with a high reading of 58 in
Cinclnna tl. Most readings ranged frotn the mid 40s to the mid 50s.

William F. Buckley Jr&gt;

Beyond the failure of the birth
controllers to establlsh a cl\sual relation, a few other points ought to be
stressed.
The first of these Is that teenage
sex Is most usefully thought of as a
drug. That Is to say, sex gives pleasure, as drugs give pleasure; and
sex Is somewhere between a habituate and an addiction, which Is true
of many drugs. AlcohOl, which Is a
drug of sorts, Is Innocently consumed In moderation, and the point
Is therefore to Instruct potential victims on where the point of moderation lles. The analogous question In
sex Is to Instruct toose who are un-·
aware of uncaring of the Implication of wanton sex of Its Um!tatlons.
Just ;~s the drug taker woo overdoes It can damage himself physically, so the human animal who
looks on sex merely as one of the
smorgasbord of pleasures avalla-

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page---A-3

r---Weather:--~:--~~~-----.
Showers may linuer ·through Sunday . Adams County leads staie
For 7 a.m_ EST.
M::lr,r.h 6
with 32.5 jobless rate
By The ASilOCiated Press

Page-A-2 .

rr=====================~========================================;;--=;==

Who's squealing now?

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

_,

SONY L-830
UBETA"

$1390

�.

Page-A-4- The Suqday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Wilson found not
WASHINGTON (AP ) -A fed·
era I jury Friday night found former
spy Edwin Wilson innocent of
charges that he conspired seven
years ago to klll a libya n dissident.
However, Wilson was convicted
in two earlier trials for his dealings
with Libya and stlll faces 32years In
prison and $345,00&gt; in fines. He also
faces two more trials.
The ju ry deliberated for three
hours before returning its verdic t.
Wilson said nothing but turned a nd
shook t he hand of his attorney,

Patrick Wall, as the verdict was
announced.
If convloted on thetwoconsplracy
charges, the 54-year-old Wilson
could have been sentenced to
another 10 years in prison.
In his closing argument, Assist·
ant u .S. Attorney Lawrence Barcella urged the . 'jury to "apply
common sense" to the case.
"Money was the motivation" for
Wilson's Involvement in the 'plot,
Barcella contended.
"Use your common sense, throw

gu~lty

out aU the International !ntrtgue,"
Barcella told the panel.
.
Defense attorney Patrick Wall
also urged the pMel to use common
sense, but he said it should be
applied to trying to figure out
whethe r the star prosecution witness, Cuban refugee Rafael Qulntero, was telling the truth when be
said he was offered$1mllllon to join
the alleged plot.
Prosecutors told the jury that
Wilson and Francis TerpU, another
ex·ClA agent woo has fled the

:Progress reported on Mideast talks
WASHINGTON (AP l - With one
adm!nistra tlon official reporting
progress on negotiations over
Lebanon, U.S. special envoy Philip
Habib is flying to the West Coast to
confer with the secretary of state on
_the outlook for Mideast peace talks.
. ~ Habib decided at the last minute
· to accept an Invitation from the San
Francisco Wor ld Affairs Council,
: where Sl(cretary of State George P .
• · Shultz was already scheduled to
• speak tonight.
: The official , who spoke only on
-condition his name be withheld,
: gave an optimistic assessment of
talks aimed at getting Israeli,

March 6, 1983

in conspiracy case

Ohio-Point

Judge sentences elderly tax dodger .

:

AKRON, Ohio (AP ) -A 62-yearFisher' s lawyer, Terry Gilbert,
urged Dowd not to send his client to
ofd tax protester, labeled a "fana tlc" in a probatjon department
prison. He said Fisher Is old,
report because of his refusal to file
unlikely to nee, sick and has no
proper tax returns, liM been . history of violence.
sentenced to slx months In a federal
"That's what they said in North
prison.
.
.
Dakota two weeks ago," Dowd
U.S. District Judge Da vid Dowd replled,"and we lost two marshals
on Thursday sentenced John A. out there."
Fisher of Lod! to. six months In
·ThemarshalswerekllledFeb.J3
prison and fined htrn $3,0ll. The · in Medina, N.D., a s pollee tried to
judge also ordere&lt;! Fisher to file arrest Gordon Kahl, another tax
proper Income tax forms for 1976 protester. Kahl, who fled after the
shootout,. is the object of an FBI
through 1982.
Fisher was convicted in January manhunt.
· for falling to file tax returns for l976,
Fisher was handcuffed and led
1977 and 1978.
from the cou1 boom . He will be held

country, conspired in 19'f6 to kill
famedtem&gt;rlstknownas"Carlos."
encedto15yel!fSinprfsonandflned
Umar Abdullah Muhaysh! alter
They retorned to the United
$nl,OOJ by aq Alexandria, Va.,
Muhaysh! defected to Egypt from
States and told the CIA about the federal court tqr Uleg!ll anns ~
the Libyan Revolutionary CouncU.
plan, which then fell apart, accordwith Libya. Wt month In Hwq
Wllson and Terpil offered $1 lng to their account given in the he received another 17 years and a
m1lJJon to Quintero, and Quintero . four-day trial.
·· $145,00lflneforsmuggllng21 tons&lt;i
brought two of his friends Into the
· plastic explosives to the North
scheme, according to testimony.
r;~In=Dec==~=n~':be:r;;;W~Us;son;;w;as;;sen;;t;-;;;Atr;;;lc;an;;na;;tkm;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
But, Quintero testified, he and his II
friends backed out of.tbe plan alter
they went to Geneva In September
1976. There they met with Wilson
and Terpl)and discovered that their
targetwastheLlbyand!ssldentand
' '
not - as
had been told - the

2-For-1 Specia/1

OLD PHOTOS COPIED

LOVE THOSE OLD PHOTOS? Now you can get .
two copies for what you'd ragula'V pay for one
(from the same original). Reatoration, if needed,

efl}!~®;~~

~

NEW YORK
FOR

Syrian, and P alestinian troops to
before the Lebanon negotiations are
withdraw from Lebanon.
concluded, said the official.
The presence of those troops has
"Wby should he get hung up on
$199 00
stymied negotiations on an overall
what the Israelis do In Lebanon?"
~
•
·
the
official
asked.
~
2
NIGHTS,
3
DAYS
Mideast peace settlement.
But the U.S. official, reporting . The off!nlclal sat d the neglnot!atlohens ' ~
-· .
APRI. 8·1 0
~
360 Second Ave.
" lots of progress" in the talks aoout are near g a cr1t 1ca 1 po I on t
Lebanon, said there was even a two principal issues: whether [srael
,~~
Gallipolis, 011.
Is
to
retain
observation
posts
In
_
Ph. 446'0699
chance that King Hussein ot'Jordan
If
the
two
southern
Lebanon
and
may drop h!s demand for an Israeli
withdrawal as a precondition for
countries are
to have diplomatic or ! - - relations.
deciding whether to go to the peace economic
Although Israel has not yet
table.
Israel's expansion of West Bank formally withdrawn its demand to
settlements and a mutual desire to keepsometroopsacrosstheborder,
prevent another war are "!ncen· officials hereandlnJerusalemhave
lives" driving Hussein to a decision reported an easing off.

~

,_.....

~
'ff!i)
~
'lf;iJ
1

'!g)

424 Second Ave.

INSPECI' BUILDING - An Inspection of a buDding on Court Street
In Pomeroy was made by vWage oHicials hi detennlne if the structure
' 8biluJd be condenlned or if tt:s sound enough for repair. The building,
OWDed by Amy Klogstand Jones of Jackson, was damaged in a tire
several years ago. Inspecting the building are, !rom .Jell, Mayor
Clarence Andrews, and Qwck Mann and Herb Long of Engineering

Gallipolis, ()h.

·STORE HOURS:

.Mon.-ThurS. 9 am ti-9'.30
Fri.-Sal 9 am tillO pm
Prices Good Tl\ru Sat., MOf- 12, 1983

...11.1

wtlht

Allsoclates.

:.:Housing prospects up
CLEVELAND (AP ) - Samuel
R. Pierce Jr., secretary of the U.S.

Department of Housing and Urban.
., . Development, says prospects for a
Hvel!er housing market are lrnprov·
ing because the nation's economy is

" headed in the right direction."
P ierce, HUD's leader since Jan.
23, 1981, said Frtday that declining
Interest rates have made a big
difference ln real estate activity.

'"lftt to Limit Qllanlilitl

SPARE
.RIBS

100%
SOLID
STATE
CHASSIS

39

OR . GEORGE W . DAVIS
.

PRE-SUCED

PORK

-CHOPS

89

GAWPOLIS AREA-GaiHPOiis Dtvelopnliiillll Center

RINDI.ESS

SLAB
BACON

39

Gym Buldinl- MONDAYS 6:30 P.ll.

POMEROY AREA-IIelas Inn

TUESDAYS, 10:00 A.M. &amp;l:30 P.M.

The term color-blind is often
It Is a genetic defect which ocapplled to people who, strictly curs primarily In men. Sixteen
spealdng, do not suffer CQ!or times as many men as women
bllndness. Only a few lndlvldu- suffer from this form of color
a1s actually see the world ·en- ' blindness. Wb!le there Is no
tlrelylnblackandwhlte. Inmost knoWn cure, all Is not hopeless.
other cases, the prolilem is a co- Some Interesting work bas been
lor deficiency which rna_kes it done wlth filters and tinted condUftcult to recognize certain co- tact lenses which often help the
lors or shades.
Individual d!scrirnll1ate between
The commonest type of color colors:
problem Is the eye which uses all
three primary colors, but in
wrong PfOportlons. Another
form Is the person who only uses
In the Hl leres t ol be ll er v isio n
two of the three primary colors ..
I ro m I he oil ice of
. Such an Individual will be either
red blind, grren blind, or, exGeorge W. Davis, O.D.
tremely rare cases, blue blind.
458 Secon'd Ave., Gallipolis
Phone ' 46-UJG ·

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

CAKE
MIX

195~

William B. Kughn

DIET PEPSI
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

49

NEW '83
SHADOW

As there are physical features that characterize the physical birth in complying wrth

Plus
Dtposil

SHADOW' 750

FAMILY SIZE

THE CUSTOM Y.TWIN FOR THE ao•s

·Suggested Retail
Is $2995

TIDE
ERGE
10 LB ••

11 oz.

Rear view mirrors are s.landard equipment

$3699
V65 MAGNA"

NOT .lUST FAST

'

CHERRY :
.PIE FILL~NQ
'

...--

.·-

....•'
..'

·•.

..
'

Sugestad

Retail for this
Bie is
$3,895.

'

UPPER FIT. 7

the physical law of procreation, so are there spiritual featores that characterizethe spiritual
birth in complying with lhe spirrtual law of procreation. In both, the following are essential:
(1)-lhe seed; (2)-the begetting: (3)- the conception;·and (4)-the de~very.
(!)-The Spirit and the seed: The mae supplies the seed in which is life. The Spirit
being of the masculine ijender is the one from whom the seed comes by whK:h we are
begottnn. The Spirit quickens, gives or imparts spirrtual l~e through lhe word, "It ~ the
spirit~ quicUnetli; th~ ~h profitelh nothing; the words that I speak unto you, they 1
are Sfllril and they are life Jno. 6:63). ~ IS easy to understand that the seed is of the
Spirit ~the word of lruth; rt is inoorruptibe; the Spirit makes alive (quickening the spirit
or heart) of man; and the seed which ~ for lhe spirit ~ spiritu~ .
(2)-Tht bipttic of the seed: ?~peaking cl the new lirth said, "Being born
(~) •in. (fldlnot of corruptible - , but of incorruptible, by the word of God,
which iveth and abidelh for ever" (I Pet I :23). God hass chosen gospel preache~ as
human instrumen~ in begetting or planting the "incorruptible seed ....the word of God" by
PIMdlinathe pPtl, "Go ye into all the world. and preach the gospel to every creature"
(Mrlt 16:16). .
, .
(3)-Tht conception of the seed: When lhe "word of faith" isreceived in abelieving
heart, the "incorrujtible seed" has 'been conceived. The faith, received from the Spirit
lhrough the seed (word), is stimulating to the fertile heart, influencing and producing within
rt vanous changes ,lhat wiK effect the entire ind~i:lual. It believes unto righteousness
(Rom, 10:10); rtptnls (Q Cor. 7:10), and ~h the mouth conftsSII unto salvation (Rm.
10: 10). Betievinfl, repentin&amp; and confessing are the variaus changes that have turned the
believer from emlf mtruth and from evtl unto righteousness. But, the individual bas not
been born at this poin~ ro more than the infant ~ born at h~ begettin~ If the new birth
likes place the moment one believes, then the devilshave been born again, for 'lhedevils
am believe. and tremble" (Jms. 2:19). The begelting and give one "the power (righ~ to
become the sons of God' (Jno. 1:11, 12).
(4)-Tht delivery: "Bom' means 'lo bring forth", and the brining forth~ made
possible by the female at delivery. "Watt!"~ of the feminine gender, and hasreference to .
baplllltt) (Jno. 3:23, Acts 8:36,38,39; Acts 10:47; Neb 10:22). "BaJllism" is the act that
places one 'Pthe Wll• so as to be dtliverad out of the water (ACts 8:36, 38, 39). The
befiin!lr's heit1 having been quickened wrth the IWe sustaining power of !lie Sjirrt through
the WOld at his beiletlingand concerron is now com~eting h~ "new birth" inthe waters of
baplisrp. The quickened spirit and the body in which ~ dwel~ are now delivered from the
·~of darkness" (Col. 1:13) Into the "kingdom of his dear Son" (Col. 1:13). He comes
oot of a lost state into the saved stile (Mrill6: 16; I Pet 3:21). When one ~ bam, he ~
broughUor1h from that which is laraer tha~ hlmse~. The infant is smaller than the mother.
So tIS tn baptism, The belieYer IS smaller !han the water out of which ije ~ delivered.
(5)'-ltolr you know if YQ!lt.w been born apin71f you have IM!en tauitrt the
true ppe1 that imparts the one faith; ff you have received the one faith in your heart by
bllli!lotng, repenting, and ·confessing Christ as the Son of God; aoo if you have been
·ri~ptiai b" the remislion of sin~ ·
.
_

{\_.

· IF« Fr~ Bi~e Corres!lont:&lt;nce Courre,Write ...)

I ' \.

~/,.,{
·

Jf't(l

~kue,4

Bulnlile RiNd • p .Ci.

Worstllp ID : Jt

of

Select from ten power settjngs.

Chronograph ond alarm. 6 funct!ons.
Model
CB200

Kmart Sale ........... 9.99
Less Rebate ........... 2.00

l396l

Cotton terry

1 :19

·Ea.

•

After

. Rebate

13921

7•99

Eel. 59~

•

"Net wt

Photaflnlsh Speclc:il
Reprints From
Your Favorite Color
Negatives
18~ , Ea. Standard Size
10 For 1.66 •
Custom35MM
Prints 26C Ea.
10 For 2.38 .
VIall Our Camera
Department

Sola.,
Auto Dept.

des
fit1 .
years,
trucks.
•

Men's tube
socks of cotton/nylon In 3pr. package.

1

Vinyl latex interior flat wall
paint. White.

FHI't.-11
. Suntone Or Mlatone

1

99e~:uru

I

Misses' nylon
knee-hi·s in 6pr. package.

I
I
I

•

3 99
·
•

Umll2

1.99

2.99

Misses' cotton/
nylon pompom
sport socks in
pkg. of 3 .

seamnylon anklets fit 8~ -11.

King-size botlie of D!&gt;wny"'
fabric softener.
64oz.•

Wlsk"' heavyduty_ laundry
. detergent. 64fl.oz.

99e
Savel Kodama!- lr:c-::-:--.
lc'" Champ'"
Instant camera. l~;fr;::ll

Vlaslc"' "sweet
butter chip"
pickles. 22 oz.•
"Netwt.

lotteries not lncluc:led

. . - - .-

Box :loi

Sunclay Evtrthtl
Worslllp• :oo .

391

99

2.99 .

Wtcfnti4Ny

f""'"'
7:aa

.....
.....,.......

Dynamo"' liquid
laundry detergent. 64-fl. oz.
..
•

•

•

•

:.....'.,.J...'..l

O•llr·WJIH
II : UAM

OHIO

99"""'

Dorilos"' toasted corn tortilla
chlj:\5. 8-oz. • bag.

~"-'

/ 'Met..........

BETZ HONDA . SALES

E-Z Touch Microwave

GAI.ttPOLII, OHI045Ul'

Sunca., Morn1n9
IIIli It StiHIIy t 13t ·

Al11982 STREET-BIKES REDUCED FOR IMMEDIATE- DB.IVERY

Price

Men's L.C.D. Quaftz Watches

ao

PRICES DO r-IOT INQUDE DEALER PREP, FIEIGHT _OR lOCAl TAXES

.

LUCKY lEAF

NEW '83
MAGNA

.

'

89

With

n

-'

The ShadowM 750 combines the styling of a handmade
custom m,otorcycle with Honda's technological advancements, making it the hottest V·twin on the highway.
Combined with liquid-cooling, Hydraulic Valve Adjuster
System and an offset dual pin crankshaft that eliminates
primary vibration, the ShadowM .Is the custom motorcycle.
of tomorrow.
· ·
.
-

75.99

Take

- ~--------------------------~

.

DUNCAN HINES

2971

Walnu~ Finish on high-impact plaStic.

*******·

· ·

PT. PLEASANT AREA-Krodel Park
TUESDAYS 6:30 P.ll. ,

Model

-12XF3114W

OP TOMETRI ST'_-"'"
.-- - -

Eo.

rp;•-~!!!!!!!i!~i!!iiiii!;ii!ii!i!!!!i!i!!!i!;;;!P.!IP.!!ii!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1

12" Diagonal

BLACK &amp; WHITE
' - - - - - PORTABLE TV .

Color Blindness

Weight Control:
1. Weight Loss.2. S1abilization 3. Maintenance

HOUDAY
POOLS, INC.

. The Saving Place""

TAWNEY STUDIO

~
-

~~-~~~~:J~~~~~E~~W~t

That Takes You Through All 3 Staaas of Successful

grourill. Pools, equipment.
supplies in stock. Down East
Spas.
1
Call Us Now &amp; Save

'

GO TO CHURCH £V[RY SUNDAY

A Comprehensive PrOfam

In ground, any type or above

black and white: Rea. $10.95, now 2 for $10.95.

cuism SUNDAYS

WBGHT CONTROL GROUPS

SWIMMING POOLS
TO SWIMMING
POOL KITS

In a county jail until he can be placed
In a federal prison.
Although Fisher previously had
paid taxes all his life and served in
the U.S. Army and Reserves , the
traveli(ig salesman a pparently had
a change of heart.
Beginning In 1976, he filed returns
but wrote on each line "Object self-lncrtrnlnatlon" Instead of the
necessary numbers. At the bottom,
he typed, "See United States
Constitution and Bill of Rights. ''
Fisher made aoout $~,0ll in
commissions in ejl.ch of the three
yeais Usted in his Indictment.
·

renewed! Any siza. most finishes! Examples: 5x7"

OUI TOWN'S fiNEST S_UI'II MA11CIT

Democrat, said Kohl is not qualified
BONN, West Germany (AP) - In German economy, has been the
his closing campaign pitch, Chan· most . debated issue in this
to handle the chancellor"s job.
"He is not only naive, he
cellor Helmut Kohl has told voters campaign.
Vogel has said he would only understands nothing of the subthey are about to fijake a fateful
decision on whether West Germany approve deployment "in the ex- ject," Schmidt said. He called the
will "remain a part of the Western treme case" If the Soviets do not governing coalition of Kohl's Chrismake concessions at the Geneva tian Democrats and the small Free
world."
Kohl's appeal contrasted with a - arms talks despite serious negotiat- Democrats a "reactionary-right
coalition."
vow from his rival for the chancel· Ing efforts by the Americans.
lorship, Hans-Jochen Vogel, that he
Vogel told a rally of8,0ll in E ssen
Earlier Friday, Kohl and Vogel
would work to avoid the planned Friday that he would take personal said they expected new U.S.
NATO deployment of nuclear responsibility for disarmament . proposals In the near future at the
Geneva arms talks.
·
missiles here if his Social Demo- matters If he becomes chancellor.
"I will trnmedlately begin push·
cratic party wins Sunday's na tiona!
Vogel called on the United States
lng for a constructive agreement to make a "concrete counterelections.
Kohl, in a speech to 5,0ll people over medium-range m!sslles in pi:Qposal" to Soviet negotiators and
Friday evening, said a vote for his Geneva," Vogel said.
said all negotiating pdsslbUltles
Christian Democratic Union would
At the same rally, ex-Chancellor must be exhausted before NATO
ineffectbeavoteforWestCermany , Helmut Schmidt, also a Social missiles are deployed.

WAREHOUSE SALE

Open Daily 10-9; Sunday 1-6

is also sal.-pricadl Your old photos wiD 188m

~

;~~~~-~~:
· ~~-~~- ~~~
-~~-~~~
- -~·-~~~
--~·!i1~~==~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Kohl warns of 'fateful' election

to continue
as a dependable
in
the North
. Atlantic partner
Treaty
Qrganlzatlon.
"We must decide we want to
remain a part of the Western
world," Kohl said at the rally in his
native city of Ludwigshafen. He
called the Sunday's parliamentary
balloting a "historical decision."
Kohl's remarks were aimed a t
Vogel, the Social Democrat leader
who has been skeptical of a NATO
plan to base 572 American-built
cruise and Pershing II nuclear
m)sslles in Western Europe starting
later this year.
Kohl backs the deployment,
which, along with the ailing West

.

Pleasant, W. Va.

i ();,

Upp1~r H1v1~1

1\tl .. Gollipolis. OH.

�·..

._

'
March 6, 1;a1~·

~omeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va·.

March

TWA, negotiators reach pact agreement1,
PORT CHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - ·
MeanwhUe, members of the 1WAemptoyees, tookeffecttn1978. ground w~fkers who had ~TransWiJrldAirllnesandtheunlon · TransportWorkersUnlonavoldeda
New negotiations started In AprU tened a strike that could have
representing Its flight attendants strike with-American Alrllnes by 1981, and the contract became grounded the carrier.
a
reached tentative agreement on a aPP,rOvtng a three-year contract amendable that August. That
American said the cootract
newcontractearlySaturday,avert- Friday that the union's leadership . means that Instead of expiring, the ratl!lcatlon was "great news for
lng a strike at the last minute, a had rejected.
contract .rematns In effect but can · everyone." ·
spokesman for the airline said.
TWA Is the fifth-largest domestic be changed through negotiations
"The members have detenntnEd
"We have an agreement, so there alrllne, based on the number of atter that point
that this. Is not the time nor
will be no strike," said spokesman passengers rtdlng TWA planes and
Friday nlgl\t's strike deadllne condltk&gt;ns right tor'a strike," union
David Venz. The agreement was on a formula taking Into account represented the expiration of a
leaders WUllam G. Lindner and
revenues and miles flown, the 30-day cooiJng-Qff period, llpposed
reached "right around midolght. "
John J . l{f:rrtgansatd In a statement
The flight attendants had ttiea- company says.
by the National Mediation Board.
.
released In New York.
tened to slrlke at 12:01 a.m.
The last contract signed by the
, Union spokeswoman .. Monica
The contract provides for a 21
Details of the pact were not Independent Fecleration of Flight· . Kaufmann.sald money was not the
percent pay .raise over the three
immediately released.
Attendants, representing 7,000 1' most difficult tssuc 'iit-the neilota· . years of the j)act, retroactive tb Ialit
lions; she said the union was trying September. It a!$() gives all current
to match jobsecurtty provisions and
covered employees . lit~ !oh
working conditions at other airlines.
protection, and gives the company
TWA spokesman DavldVenz did more flexibility In work
. '..,.. I
' - Gallla-Melgs Community Action Ageticy omclals · not argue with Ms. Kaufmarui's 1!5Sigr)ments.
CHESHIRE
assessment of the Issues. But he did
American recetved concessions
said Friday CAA will be receiving U~A cheese for distribution
note,
"The
only
thing
that
guaran·
1n
job 'fules that would allow
sometime within the next few days.
tees job securtty is the company's management to shl1t workers
The exact date of the cheese arrival is not known, they said.
profltabUlty."
between tasks and hire part-time
Individuals · CIUI qiJ!Illfy for cheese by providing any of the ·
· In the A.nlerican negotiations,
workers
for some jobs. Union
foUowlng documentl!tlon: food stamp card, AFDC card or award
union
offlcials
.ln
Grapevine,
Texas,
.
leadership
urged that the contract
letter, SSl award letter, general weHare card, unemployment book
refused to release the vote tabula- be rejected because of those
or application lettel' or a Golden Buckeye Card.
tion of 10,500 machinists and other . concessions.
Individuals CIUI also qualify for cheese by showing proOf of Income
(W-2 form, payroU stubs, copies of pension checks, etc.) to meet
poverty guidelines.
&lt;
Regardless of how a pefSOII quallftes, documentation must be
shown at the distribution site or cheese cannot be received• .
Families with two or more members may receive two five-pound
blocks of cheese. Single-person households will receive one
five-pound l)lock.
Cheese w'ill'be dlstribured at the following locations and hours:'
Gallia County, starting at approximately 11 a.m. - Crown aty
village hall; Gujding Hand School, Cheshire (after I p.m.); old
Doxol warehouse rear, 1502 Eastem Ave., Gallipolis; Mount Cannel
' '
Baptist Church, BldweD; Senior Citizens Cenler, 220 Jacllson Pike,
Gallipolis..
'
I
Meigs County, starting at approximately 11 a.m. - ChUl'Ch of
God, Rutland; Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains; American
OHice Hours by Appointment Only
Legion post, Racine; Presbyterian Church, Middleport; Senior
Citizens Center (lor seniors only), Pomeroy.

1.

•
STAYS ON BOARD - United Auto Workers President DOuglas
·: Fraser (left) IUid Owen Bieber, UAWvlcepresldent,sharealaughwUh
·: 'reporters Saturday as Fraser announced that he wiD stand for re'
: elecl1on to the Chrysler board of directors for at least one more year.
.'The announCement was made at Chrysler headquarten! In ffighland
Park, Michigan after a meeting with Lee lacocca. (AP Laserphoto).

State
cashier enters
.
~nnocent plea in trial

JOHN A. WADE, M~D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
G_ENERAL ALLERGIST

~

: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Three
~ears after leaving her job as head .
~ashier In the Ohio Treasurer's
efflce with a 'claimed case of
amnesia, Elizabeth Boerger stands
l)ial Monday In the embezzlement
of $1.15 mUllan ln,state funds.
Ms. Boerger, 49, of Ft. Loramie,
and Robert . YeazeU Jr.. 53, a
!lJ&gt;rlngfleld bandleader who is her
19ngt ime friend, are accused In a
case that has already cost taxpayeysaimost $1 mUllan to Investigate.
• A Franklin County grand jury
lilcticted Ms. Boerger on charges of
t~eft In office and tampering with
public records between April 18,
1b77, and Jan. 2, 1900, while she
worked for former ·StateTreasurer
Clertrude Donahey.
: Yeazellls charged with receiving
state money' and failing to file state
income tax returns !rom 1977
through 1981.
: Both pleaded Innocent and have
lj!en free on their own recognizance
~ndlng joint trtal.
• Ms. Boerger left her job In
~nuary 1900. Her attorney, James
:cy,ughty of SI?rlngfield, said she is a
Vjctim of hysterical .amnesia and

unable to assist In her own defense.
But Common Pleas Court Judge
Craig Wright ruled In December
that she is competent to stand trial
despite her. assertion that she .
cannot recall her lifepriortoleaving
her state job.
Wright said an examination of
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Eight
Ms. Boerger by doctors -at the people were Injured late Friday
Southwest Forensic Psychiatry night and early Saturday morning
Center In Columbus concluded that In two separate shootings, officials
she is not now mentally ill and Is said.
Seven of those people had been
capable of under.standlng the legal
attending
a party near the Univer·
proceedings and assisting In her
sity
of
Dayton·
. One man was hurt In
own defense.
Prosecutors expect the case to another shooting.
Pollee said the seven people were
last at least 3 weeks but possibly
longer.
Doughty iS trylngtomovethetrial
out of Franklin County because of
S
extensive publicity. But Wright is
Cl
S
arence wauger
not expected to rule ·on such a
request until after attempts to
MIDDLEPORT - Clarence M.
impanel a jury are conducted. That Swauger, 81, 20 Riverview Place,
process may be held In the judge's
Middleport, died Frtday In Vete·
chambers.
rans Memorial HospitaL
Almost 200 subpoenaes have been
Born Ocl 16, 1901, In Pomeroy,
Issued by David Johnson, the
son of the late Clarence Oscar and
assistant prosecutor handlln!l, the
Hannah Moore Swauger, he was
case, but he said .not all. of those
employed as a coal miner, a farmer
Involved may testify.
and as a state employee during his
career. He was a member of Zion
Church of Christ, HarrlronvUle.
Surviving are his wife. Mamie
Linkenhoker Swauger; a brother,
The department also assisted the Paul Reibel of Reynoldsburg; three
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis .
Rio Grande Fire Department In nephews and four nieces.
Fire Department was kept busy
fighting a fire on Ohio 141 at 6: 34
Friday responding to four fires and
He was also pJ"eCe9ed in death by
p.m.
a son, William, kllled In action In
one false alarm.
The !Ire, at a home owned by D.J. World War II. two sisters and a
: Three of the caUs were for brush
Russell,
apparently began In the brother. ·
ftres.
when
a stove was left on.
kitchen
: At 1: 19 p.m., 16 firefighters went
Funeral services wiU be held at 1
Twenty-two
GaUipolis
firefighters p.m. Monday In Ewing Funeral
to a field on Fairfield Church Road
assisted Rio Grande in battllng the Home. with Rev. Robert PerteU
o.'Wned by Betty Smith. Sn)ith was
bla?.e.
reportedly burning trash when it set
officiat)ng. Burial win be in Beech
A C&lt;&gt;ll to the home of Virginia
brush on fire, burning one-eighth of
Grove Cemetery. Friends may caD
. Wooten, 1032First Ave., at6: 27p.m.
at the funera l home from2-4 and 7-9
ail acre.
turned
out
to
be
a
false
alarm.
p.m. Sunday.
: The department was called there
&lt;tsecond time at 6:42p.m. when the
!feld reignited.
About one-quarter acre of a
How can you have fun outdoors, meet nice peovacant lot on Fifth Avenue In
Kanauga also burned Friday,
ple, and make money all at the same time? By
according to the fire department.
becoming a carrier for The Daily Sentinel. We are
• The owner of the lot, Plna Ward,
accepting application for walk routes in Middle;;,as reportedlY burning trash when
the field caught fire .
port, Pomeroy, and Syracuse.
. Thirteen firefighters were caUed
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
ki the 3:25p.m. blaze.

·
·
I.Area· death I

LEGAL NOTICE

Firemen answer five alarms

THE DAILY SENTINa

-.ttml&gt;q t"im
.
.. - .tmtinrl

PH. 992-2156

.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 82-161-El·EFC (SUb·
file A) to review the fuel
procurement practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and relaled matters.
This hearing is scheduled
to begin at 12:00 p.m
an March 11 , 1983 at City
Council Office, 218 Cleveland AI'Brue, S.W., Canton.
Ohio 44702 .
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting t~e Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk,
Secretary

,

Dr. Rantz joins VMH staff

•

Member: The Associated Press, Inland
·oauy Press Association and the Amerl:can Newspaper Publishers As!lOClatlon,
.NaUonal

Adverttslng

Representative.

·Branham, 1717 West Nine Mile Road •.
·Suite- :ll4. Detrou. Michigan, 48175.
•

SUBSCRIPI'ION RATE$
By Canter or Motor Route

·One Week ~"'"''''···· ..... ................ Jl .OO

:g: ~=~ -::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Ji:~

'

SINGLE COPY
I'RICE

35 Cents
No subSCI'ipdons by maU permitted in
.towns where home can1er service la

.

·available•

'Tile Sunday nmes-Senttnel wU1 not be
.n!Sp:u!Sible for advance payments made

I

1

1
I

''
I

I -

•'

'

'

~retary.

•

'Seedling program undenooy

: GALLIPOLIS - Seedlings offered for sale In the Gallla County
SoU and Water Conservation annual tree seedling program control
-erosion, encourage wUdUfe and save energy.
· VarietieS avaUable are white pine, Norway spruce, red oak, black
walnut, sUver maple and sweet gum. These are tw&lt;ryear seedlings,
;}8-24 inches high, grown In Ohio, The serviCe also has Crown Vetch
;~nil cover plants and seeds.
• Orders must be placed by March 31 and wiU be avaUable for
. pickup during the first week of AprU.
For more Information, stop by the service office at Room me,
~ 529 Jackson Pike, or caU 446-81'87.

·~

' year.

• The br~. with year-to-date figures from this period In 1982
' foUowing 'tn parantheses, shows two deaths Iii full-sized cars (28),
; $)De In a mid·sized car (27). four In compacts (18), three In
, subcompacts (25), six In trucks (18), one In other kinds of vehicles
·~two) and six pedestrian deaths (18).

CHRIS EVERTS'

f ' -- ' ?~.. k;t_
. ·~ '(~,)_)-'
~ .,.'"'
- ' : "S::-·- . . ')
-.
( , --

.·

...,., -

''

~.

Inmates are UlegaUy segregated
on the basis of race or na tiona!
ortgin, .exposed to a pattern and
practice of brutality by prison
guards, and InadeQuately protected
from assault, rape and extortion by
other Inmates, the suit said.
Female Inmates are· Inadequately protected "against sexual
abuse by prtson guards,'' the suit
saki. It also claimed Inmates are
denied minimal visitation rights,
Inmate mall Is unjustifiably cen·
sored, Inmates are Issued lnadequateclothlng and food and they are
exposed to "Ufe-threatening fire

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 SAl, FEB. 26th
•QUANTIT'I RIGHTS RESERVED

hazards.''

The government also charged the
prison staff taus to provide ade. q_vate mental, medical and dental
care and pFisoners are denied
access to their attorneys, the courts
and governmentofflclals.

Aquamarine
The clear limpid blue of aq·
uamarine offers true na- ·
·!ural beauty at affordable
prices. Especially meaning·
fu for those born in March.
Discover the V«Jnderful
world of .cdored stones.
Many other colored stones
available.

- -

CANVAS $24.95
LEATHER $39.95

The
Shoe Cafe
300 Second, Gallipolis

..,.

......

4\M hcend Avenue

•••· t647

Gelll110lla, Ohio

'•
I

{arewell to TV personality
Adair wiU begin his new duties on
ip.EVELAND (AP) - Doug
Adair, who was a fixture In AprU 11. Ms. Scott will leave
cieveland television news for the Cleveland at the end of May.
Adair said he found It dlfllcult to
~t 25 years, has said good-bye to
leave. He gave a farewell message
!hi! city.
•\\IKYC-TV devoted the final five to viewers that was taped along the
niOtu~ofltsll p.m. news program Lake Erie shores with the Cleveland
Ff1day night to a farewell to and skyllne In the, background.
He said thatdurlngthepast week,
!rpm Adair, who is moving to
he
met an elderly lady at a church
WCMH-TV In Columbus.
.Adair and his wife, Mona Scott, who summed up his feelings very
wiU co-anchor the news at the . welL
"Sbe looked up, and she said,
Columbus station. Ms. Scott, who
has worked In Columbus before, 'Doug, I've watched you for many
currently hosts WKYC's "5: 30" years, and I'D miss you for many
years.'
~s magazine shoW.

~
Dinner18ble.

.

328 Y~and Street
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va .

COMPlnE AND
LIMITED SUPPLY

we·ve got It!

Phaeton... hijury prevention day and
night for the 1980's runner.

;

:! .._
(rJciiiMiRRJ

.~

WATER BED SALE

:~

.•'
•
...
I,

sn UP

1

·~

Pro Star HI·Cut. The future of
basketball snoests here. Ultratllgh·1ras;tlgo_gaskt~ll\19 pettern
for grip.

'.

'

..•

All ScllolaatJc•. A perfect
marriage or baseball and
football ehoae, for year·
round uae.

There's no need Ia sil by the phone when
Freedom Phone' 550 cordless lelephof)e
rs at work,
. You can carry on co rd less conve rsations
up to 750 feel from ihe control unrt Around
your·home . office, backyard. even nexl door
wilh the neighbors .
The Freedom Phone 550 features a cal l
button to page the hand se( from lhe control
unit. T"!&lt;l'POSilion volume control. Time-saving
automatic redial. Decorator styling . Pushbutton
dial ing . Dynamic.mini-speake r and ·
microphone. Lay-down charging . Battery low
light . And more . All at an affordable price.
Come in today for a
test dial of the Freedom
Phone 550.

Spiked Track. Fto&lt;it
shoes for fast proUts,
ultra-light

i

'

Dalf .... 8uoday

52 Weeks .................................. $~1.411

NO PAYMENT TILL MAY
GALLIPOLIS

'

'

'Treedomrphone'FF-550

,I

!'

tl

l•'i

WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF
PORTABLE PHONES IN STOCK!

~-

WAYSIDE
FURNITURE
..___________
._________________
THtRD
AVE..

Renge mily ~Rry oopeno,ny upon local opera1.ng conOil•ons In somo
S!luahons range w•ll reach 7b0 leel or more

lj

COMPLETE WITH PED~STAL - DECK - HEATER - LINER,
.
FULL WAVE MATTRESS -' FILL KIT - WATER
. TREATMENT - PATCH KIT

241

GREAT SELECTION OF

.

.:: COLUMBUS- The Ohio Department of Highway Safety's "box
score" report lists 23 traffic fatalities In the state, with nine (or 39
percent) attributed to alcohol.
' The Ohio Highway Patrol reported 1,015 arrests for DWI so far this

~

JIIAIL 8UJISCRIP110NS

. JUST ARRIVED!

........_

'Box score' reports 23 deaths

BOOKCASE HEADBOARD AND FRAME

J

• GALLIPOLIS - The membership drive being held by the
Area Chamber of Commerce has resulted so far In 14
renewals, 42 pledged renewals, eight new members paid and seven
·pledged for a total of 71 going Into Monday's 4 p.m. deadline.
• The chaffiber's goal this year Is 150.
: Team captain Bill Gray has gained 220polnts, C.H. McKenzie, l76,
pnd Ike Wiseman, lll, according to Thelma Elliott, chamber
~allipolls

STOP IN TODAY .
ANP LOOK OVER
THE SELECT~ON OF
SUITS AND SPORT
, COATS WE HAVE
JUST RECEIVED.

BAHR ,Middleport,
GLOTii'l
f:RS
Ohio

Member~hip drive continues

•

•lender fish fillets, golden fried In a
wuisiana-style breading
• Golden french fries (or baked potato after 5PM)
• Warm toasted grecian bread
• SerYed with tartar sauce and lemon wedge
• All the homemade soup and garden fresh
salad you care to eat

COMPLETE AND SET UP

,.

1
1

FOR MEN 'ARRIVING DAILY.

SIX months ................ .... .. ....... ... $10.40

.. .. ....... ......... ..............127:1
................... ... ............114.
Oololtlo- . .
..... ....................... ......1!16.16
..........................~ ...... G.N
.................................. $15.21

!

' POMEROY - Dr. Elizabeth Rantz recently joined the medical
staff at Veterans Memorial Hospital as emergency room director,
replacing Dr. John J. Kroening, who had served as director stnce
AprU 1982.
An associate of Medical Emergency Associates, the Louisa,
Ky .-based physicians group which has contracted with Veterans,
she Is a San Franctsco native who received her undergraduate
degree from Stanford University. She then studied for her masters
of arts degree at Graduate TheolOgtcaJ Union In Berkeley, Calif.
Rantz received her doctorate of medicine tram the University of
Ki:ntucky In 1977, and completeciayearofpostgraduatestudy at San
l ~oaquin General Hospital In tautornla, Since the completion of her
•.)nedlcal studies, Rantz has been working as an emergency room
';physician and operating a prtvate practice.

HONOLU:W (AP) - An unprecedented federallawsuUtcbarg·
lng th!lt two Hawau prisons subject
Inmates to brutality, sexual allacks
and unsafe conditions could get "the
Pulitzer Prize for fiction," says a
state official.
The state of HawaH said It will
vigorously oppose the civU suit fUed
Friday by the Reagan admlnlstra·
lion alleging unconstitutional condi·
t19ns at the prtsons.
"It (the suit) W&lt;!S written by
someone 5,000 miles from HawaH
and it just doesn't reflect Hawaii's
prisons at aU," said Deputy Hawall
State Attorney General James
Dannenberg. "We will contest
every allegation In that complaint In
court.''
Thegovernmentsult,allegingthe
prisons expose Inmates to cruel and
unusual punishment In violation of
the Constitution, Is the first ever
filed by the Justice Department
under the Ctvll Rights for Institutionalized Persons Act, passed by ,
Congress In 198J.
Attorney General William
French Smith personally slgried the
suit, saying the prisons have
"egregious or flagrant conditions"
and cause inmates "to suffer
grievous harm.·"
The suit, In U.S. District Court
here, named as defendants Gov.
George R Ariyoshi, four other state
officials and the state government
The lawsuit chiu-ged that brutal,
unsale conditions are rife at the
Oahu Community Correctional
Center, with about 900 Inmates, and
the Halawa High Securtty Facility,
with

I

ALL NEW SPRING FASHIONS

·~ year .................................. llll.SI

26 w...ks
13 Weeks
.
'
S1 Weeks
:16 Weeks
13 Weeks

•
•

..

$249 9 5

Mi\IL SIJJ!8CRIPI10NS
SUnciiiY O..y

.r

1
I~

. ................................. ................................ ,.'
••.

•tO carrlerS.

-ObiiJ

;

Times-Sentinel-Page-A-T

&amp;

•

,

SboneySNew
Louisiana-Style
Fish Dinner
$4.99
With Homemade Seafood Gumbo

USPS 523-800
A Muldmedla NOW!!Poper
Published each Sunday; 825· Third
Avenue, by the OhJo Valley Publishing
Company . Multimedia, Inc. Second class
stage P!lld at Galli!X)lls, Ohio 45631.
Entered as .second class maUtng maner
at Pomeroy, Ollto. Post Office.

'

GALLIPOLIS - OHio's February subsidy payment to' Gallla
County's two school dtstrtcts resulted In a net paYJllent of$238,587.43.
' Ga111polls City Schools received $236,509.82, Gallia County Local
Schools got $112,196.21 and the county board of education was
'awarded $19,393.19. ·
·
· Net payment for the city schools came to$191,240.62atter$6,349.20
was deducted for school employees' retirement and $3!,920 was
taken out for state teachers' retirement. The 'county schools had '
$13,776.40 taken from· tts payment for employee retirement and
$51,073 removed for the teachers' retirement fund.
' Under the new budget law, school foundation warrants are being
wrttten directly to Individual school districts. In the past, they were
written to county auditors.

part of a crowd of about 100 people 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
outside an apartment complex ~
whensomeonefiredashotguntullof
buckshot at them. That Incident
happened near midotght.
Police say the blast rruiy have
come from a vacant.second-floor
apartment. Tllere are no suspects.
"I was sitting outside and I heard
an explosion," said one witness.
"There was just one blast. I went.
back to where the party was and
'everybody was hystericaL I trted to
calm everybody down."
David Brueggemann, 19, of
BooneCounly, Ky., was admitted to
Miami VaUey Hospital In sta~le
condition. Fourothersweretreated,
then released. A hospital spokesw&lt;r ·
man said two men from the same
Incident were treated at St. Eliza·
beth Medical Center then released.

..------------t

!

I

The

Hawaiian
.
. officials
deny ;s uit allegations

_State makes subsidy payments

1

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

Shooting incidents ·injure 8

Ohio-Point

Local Briefs:

•'·

are ;

Cheese giveaway soon

983

'

:',·•
.,':

..'
'.

~

-~;

lao. &amp; Fri. 111 8:00 P.tll
TIIIL. Wid.. !Jtt!&lt;t. &amp; Sill.

111 5:00 ,.••

,oil!

·ao·B'S ELECTRONICS
UPPERRT. 71

ACIOu lrvm thl Silwr Bride• Pint!

OUR FULL PAGE AD

. __ _ _ _ _....__ _ _..."_ _I;.:..;N;....;W:.:.:E=D-.N;:.;:E~SD~A.;,.;Y;....;'S::;...:...::PA;;::.P-=E.:.:..R--..._ ..
~

�••
•

l

•

Page

A-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

~:00

OPEN THIS SUNDAY NOON TILL

••
i
••

March 6, 1983

P. M.

.
•

.

•

••

theri
______

~imts .. itntintl

Section~]

March 6, 1983 t

,
. .

.

"I love working
· with the kids, to
watch them
achieve. What I
try to teach them
is that anything is
possible if you're
willing to work
for it."
.

:I
'

d
....al~·

•

i.l

f. I

~·
!;I

!I
!I
, II
·I
lI
.I
I
,I

NEW '82 CUTLASS CERA 4 DR.

11.154.39
-1',327.36
9,826.91

•

11.9% Off
YOUR PRICE

ca.

••
~.
.(I

gl

:I
·I
;I
I
.I
.I
I
••
PI

11.9°/o Off
GREAT SEL!CTION OF USED CARS

-·2•

FOUR GENERAL MOTORS FACTORY OFFIOAL
TRUCKS '82s &amp; '83s

1980 CUTLASS 2 DRs - 3 TO OtOOSE FROM

20°/o Off

All Local Trade-ln5

oil
:!I
q.l
f. I

'80 CHEVROLETY2 TON PICKUP 6 CYL STICK

$4995

il
'81

Champagne in color, V-6, auto., AC, .t it wheei. AMiFM. cruise
control. ·
•
,
11

\..,.

J

YOU &lt;;AN RIDE ON!!
•

~·

..

•

~'

.

tlI

Good Selection Of
New &amp; :Used Pickup
Trucks In Stock.....

LISTEN TO US ON WJ.EH EVERY SATURDAY FROM 12:30TO 1:30 U_
VE WITH LYNN SMITH AND MARTY SULLINS FOR WEEKLY
SPECIALS
'&lt;

Matthews.

I

•••

~~.

" l,.

I

••

.

~· I

'

'

'

DS!Iptloe duly mixed with praise and encouragement Is Tom Lowery's
approach In deattng wllll members of the basketball team. Assistant coach Is Terry

.I
:I
;I

$4695'

"

. '

-&lt;•
!I

MAUBU 4 DR.

R~ATION

..

Jl.

.

A

are

f. I

.TWO TONE BROWN. "LOADED"_.~-

YEARS OF SERVICE TO OUR PUBLIC-

grader &lt;in Tom Lowery's basketball team at Harrisonville Elementary
School.
.
.
. And watching trorn the sidelines, Itwas apparent that hiS statement pretty well sums \!P liow thf team feels about Tom.
However, Tom ISn't "just a regular coach."
He IS a paraptegk: and an or hiS coachln,g IS done from hiS wbeel·
chair. But he's CJII!ck.to point 011t that ''when I'm on the floor, the kids
· don't even see the wheelchair."
.
The team members
considerate and res!JE(:ttul as with any
coach, but not solicitous.
·
' · For Tom there could be no other way. SIJE(:Ial treatment would be
the last thing he would want.
·
He radiates enthusiasm. a healthy adjustment to his handicap, and
a philosophy that the game of llfe Is ahead and there's nothing to be
gained by dwelllng on the past.
. "I go everywhere and I don't consider myself handicapped. I just
don't walk. I'm Independent Insofar as doing what I want to do,"
commented the young man In his mid-twenties who suffered the para·
lyzlng accident about three years ago.
.
·
Tom says that he loves working with kids, watching them acllt.eve.
"What I try to teach them Is that anything Is possible lfyou'rewt!Dngto
work for lt."
·
And It's with that pllllosophy that Tom coaches.
.
His Is a dlsclpllned team, one whlch receives quantities of praise
and apptause ·wllen tlltngs go right. and encouragement and under·
standing when things go wrmig. Tllelr response Is respect and admlra·
tion for Tom, not just as a coach, but as a person of enviable values.
Tom not ol)ly coaches basketball, but jast summer had the Harrisonville pony league.
A Meigs Hlgll School athlete, Tom attended Capital University for
two years and worked for Capital Finance before his accident on Feb.
'1:1, 1911l. A long period of hospltallzatlon and treatment in a rehabWta·
tion center followed the accident where Torn was trapped beneath a
traller when the foundation gave way.
· Returning home Tom began working toward Independence. His
car was equipped with hand controls and lt took very little tirhe tQl' him
to Jearn bow to get from his wheelchair lniD ·the car, and get the
wheelchil.lr In and out.
.
.
He admll.'l that his voacatlonal objectives have had to be modlt!ed
somewhat, but he Is hoping ,eventually to go Into sports broadcasting.
He for sometime now has been studying at home aft&lt;! will soon be ·
applying for his FCC liCense. .
.
·:
.
Meanwhlle, he stays active with school and community sports and
·
.
other programs.
Tom can be seen anocaJ football games, tractor pulls, arutees, just
about anywhere.
• ,
·,
It's apparent that h!s philosophy tor the team he coaches Is the one ·
he llves by- "An~ Is pollSible If you're wDilng to work for II." ·
'•
...

l•I

DEMO '83 CHEVROLET CAPRICE STA. WGN.

54

.
..,roes Sentlllel staff
.
POMEROY - "He's just a regular coach," commented one flftb

~.

11.9% Off

.

by 'CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~.

LOADED. SABLE.WITH MAROON INTERIOR

$5895

'

llCory and photos

.~~I

. DEMO '83 OLDSMOBILE 98 4 DR.

FROM

A regular coach

.

I
.I
I
I

fltl

'.
"Leiftdaa the P.""' and achieving !IOine ~ .• the ln!pO!tant 1111na."

.I
.'

•

�(

,.
l

March 6, 1983

I

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Poi,nt Pleasant, W. Va.

Poge-·B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

At wit's end

Sunday/Peopl~
r

March 6, 1983

'

I

Will it come to sl4tlming. down Mrs.

·t&gt;nttve surgery set for Abernathy

.

By ERMA BOMBECK
I (lon't know aboUt you, but I
never buy a eookbOOk written by a
sk!JuiY person. It's pure !lctlon.
Same with foods I buy tn the SU·
permarket. I eat to enjoy, not to
have a fiber experience. Show me a
fat Gerber baby on a jar of strained
bananas and I'U show you a-woman
who has strained bananas over
French Ice cream for lunch!
Now It seems all that Is about to
change. Remem~ those chubllY
little Campbell klc:!s with the dtm·
pies In their !at latees scarfing
down all that hot soup? In keeping
with the nat1o11's preoccupation
with physical fitness , the "kids"
· are gOing to shed a lew pounds. Ex· ·

BALT IMORE (AP) - Civil rights leader Ralph Abernathy Is to
undt'L'go preventive surgery at Johns..Hopkins Hospital~ week to
'&gt;VP•" ' a blocked artery In his brain.
·tors scheduled the surgery for Wedilesday after X-rays revealed
·o•nt of Alx•rnathy's middle cerebral artery was blocked, hospital
~an Steve Push said F r iday.
·
' ' "'''· nathy, admitted to the hospital Tuesday for tests, Is president
'•• oerit us of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and was a
1.' li&lt;'ulenant to the late Martin Luther !;{lng Jr. durtngthe civil lightS
rnoi·Pment in the 1960s.

Singer marries 'longtime sweetheart'
NASHVU.LE, Tenn. (AP I - cOunicy singer George Jones has
married Nancy Sepulveda, his "longtime sweelh&lt;jart" tn a ceremony In
Texas, not far from where the two hope to open a country music park.
Only members of the couple's lrnmedJate families attended the
wedding Frtday. The ceremony was performed at the Woodville,
Texas , home of Helen Scroggins, Jones' sister, said Debbie Banks,
spokeswoman for Epic Records.
,
Banks described Sepulveda, 34, as Jones' "longtime sweetheart."
The marrtage is the fourth for Jones, 51, whose third wife was country
· s inger Tammy Wynette.
,

necessarilY

Sometimes I think advi!rtlsel's
don't understand peOple at all. Eat· · :
lng should be a pleasurable
GOSPEL SING - ·~
experience.
,
. . . IN THE
I know by looking at the Hershey '
kids that they eat chocolate until
· SMOKIES
their. faces have to be retouched.' I
July 7 lhru fo, 1983
know that Mrs. Smith drags tnto the
4 Days, 3 Nights
kitchen every morning and bakes
every one of tho9e pies alld has
360 SECOND AV£.
never· counted a calorie IQ'her life.
GAWPOUS
' ~
And I know that when the Quaker ·~
PH. 446-4699
'fi)
appears on the oatm'eal box wear- Q
Ing Foster Grant g~ and a
Chain around his neck, It'll be all

The face$ on my CliPboard
shelves are ilke:old fliends. How do
you think I'm liotng to feel picking
,UP Mrs. Bulter,Vorth and discover·
lng a ~ble doll In my hand?
. Or poking &amp;round the
free2ter
.
.
case and comlpg up with Mama Celeste with a face!llt. blonde hair and

' 0.

.

eeeeeo

TB clinic this Thursday
By KATIE CIIOW

nn-.sent!Del stall

EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP ) - The future of the British monarchy
was suspended on a unicycle as Prince Charles attempted to ride a
one-wheeler at a conununity center.
"That was deadly," the prtnce said afterward.
Fortunately for the monarchy, Charles was steadied by two helpers,.
a teen-age disc jockey and an official of the Prince of Wales Trust, the
charita ble foundation of which Charles is patron.
The ~year-old heir to the throne and his 21-year-old wife, Prtncess
Diana, were visiting a children 's circus Friday at the Cralgroyston
' Community Center . The trust had bought some of the clrci!S'
eq uipment.

POMEROY - Blanche Gilkey,
Middleport, who recently celebrated her 93rd birthday extends
sincere thanks to her host of friends
who took time to
remember her.
She received
cards, gifts and
telephone calls
maktng her day
most enjoyable.

-

Mary Moore Young, formerly of
Pomeroy, is a resident of H!Ucrest
Nursing Home, North Hill, Akron.
Mary was honored recently on
her birthday by the many residents
of the nursing home. She was
presented a cake and many gifts.
We send belated best wishes.

Northern Panhandle not on 'Today' ·map
CHARLESTON, WVa . (AP)- West Virginia Secretary of State A.
J a mes Manchln has threatened NBC-TV with "new wtncts of wru;"
' unless its "Today Show" fixes a weather map error.
"The 'Today Show's' meteorologist, Willard Scott, on his early
morning weather map, has lost West VIrginia's entll'e Northern
. Pa nha ndle, " Manchin said Friday.
Manchln said he heard of the error from Barbara Murphy, a Concof!i
College student who has formed the "Don't Manhandle The Panhandle
Committee."
"NBC faces new wlncts of war unless the map is changed," Manchin
sa id. tongue-in-cheek. "Mr. Scott has succeeded In losing lour of West
Virglr.ia's most prized counties , either to Pennsylvania or Ohio, 3)\d.
lea1 mg 174,532. men, women and chDdren horneles~.''
Manchin said he has wrttten the network complaining aoout the map;
and that he hopes to contact Scott by telephone. Scott was not available
F: '""Y, Manchin said.
r the correction is not made by June W, or We~t Virginia Day, .
Manc hin said, he plans to "remove Scott's name from the rolls of ·
jXJt"n tial a ppointees as West Virginia ambassa~ors of good will."
M •"•'hi n regularly appoints people as "\Vest Virginia ambassadors '
' V'til." awa rding them certificates.

Congratulations to Don Wilson,
Middleport, on the recent hole-In·
one that.he made at Riverside Golf
Course In Mason.
Witness to the once-In-a-lifetime
event was Bob Bowen of Pomef9Y.

A reminder that the Meigs
County tuberculosis chest clinic has
been rescheduled for Thursday
!rom 1 to 3 p.m. to be held at the TB
office ln the Multi-Purpose Build·
lng, Pomeroy.

i·

.... ...,,"

nan'le:

'

Dr. Roy L. &amp;rmerberg, Ohio
Slate University Hospital, wW be In
charge o! the cuDtc.
Sktn testing lor food handler
cards will be ~ld as foUows:
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and
Ftlday from8:lla.m. until noon on
March 11. Alter the March 11 date
appointments will be necessary.
For appolnlrnents call 992·3'7Zl .
Monday throu!:h Friday.

KIRKLAND MEMORIAL GARDENS
WINTER FLOWERS MUST BE REMOVED
BY MARCH IS, 1983 BY lDT OWNERS

NIO WANT ntEIR FLOWERS.

~peaker sMted for

On March 14 Kii'Wand Nil Remove All
Flowers Not In v.. In Preparation
•
For Enter.

Rio nursing event
Dr. Carol M. Sholtis, ~lallst·
Internist medlcl11e, hematology
and oncology, Hdz.er atnlt Ltd.,
Gallipolis, has been announced as
the featured speaker at the Rio
CoUege-Holzer
Grande CoUegeSchool
ljnd Community
of Nursing
Associate Degree Nursing Program recogriltlon ~remony.
The ceremony, to honor the nurs·
lng class of 1984, will be held Frt·
day, March 11, at 7: ~ p.m. In the
theater of the Fien lutd Performing .
Arts Center. A receJ)tlon will foUow
the ceremony.

r~;:;:;:;;;;===;;=====~==;:;::;::;
ACRGSSTHE
COUNTRY

OR AROUND
THEWDRLD,
TRAVEL IS
'TERRIFIC
WIIHTHE
WAlKING

Baseball sign-ups
Chester area youth baseball
sign-up day will be held March 12
from lOa.m. toooorlatChesterFire
Department. For Trore ln!orma·
tlon, residents may call~.

LADY'
by~

trotters

~L------------------~.-----~--~

i: I ol elen help us
1-- -------='----

f'Night out' worries wife
•

. , UELEN AND SUE BurrEL

I

HE;LEN AND SUE:
'
, husband is faithful , kind, lov~ ir · ,licl a hard worker. Before now
,.. ht. , a.s a lways content to stay at
: hon with me and our little girl,
: exc• •t on the night he Works at his
; sec .j job.
• Lo •ety he says he must let off
~ '" , . by relaxing with the guys
;
" 11 •. ht a week. They·get together
• 11
'1 rew beers definitely no
: ww ·n. He suggests that I take a
; nlg t.. out with my gtrlfrtend, but
=Helen and Sue, I have no desire to
: go a nywhere without my man, and
• I ca .,·r see why he wants to be away
frorp me.
Though he never comes home
drunk, I worry about liquor be- ·
: cause I don't like it. Mainly, I feel
; threatened and ktnd of deserted
: when.I see him kidding around and
•·enjoying h!rr)self with these men.
~ When I complain, he gets surprls·
~ tngJy_stuboorn
for hii!'I,
.
• Is It wrong, wanting together·
; ness? - TUESDAY NIGHT
: WTDOW
:· DEAR WIDOW:
; "Togetherness" Is great up to a
·; point. But total togetherness could
•be unhealthier for a marriage than
' "a few beers with the guys on Tues·
:day night. When one becornes,com'pletely dependent on a mate, what
.1 happens If he (or she) is suddenly

•

'ott

I suggest she visit a Christian
book store and !tnd any number of
books that show sex is a celebration
of love - the more' orgasms the
better.
.·
If her clergyman disagrees, he's
sour, repressed or warped, not to
mention sexist and, as you say,
Helen, she should definitely not
take his word as gospel, but Instead
change church es.
WHOLEHEARTED

foot while • heel and of genuine
e&lt;epe take the
surfaces in
stride. Its the
dass.c that makes 'fCAX' tr&amp;\lels
t.erTIIIC. (Cc.Krs , $(X]J

Amencan-..-

A TAN!!
NOW WITH TWO BOOTHS
NO WAITING
SPEOAL!I

can make low
prices on State

: What we have here is a good and
• fai'hful husband who needs a little
:space, and a sweet and somewhat
: trtsP" 1re wife who fears it. Would
: ym• . 2al1· want a man who had no
. rather trie r:J but you? And how long
.twill he want a woman who has no
other Interest but him? - SUE

homeowners

• ,g CMAIICIInl- .,_CASH.
•'IGO CIIMCIInl o 3-paoe wiiNirobe of travel
shoes from Old Maine Trotters.

":-'

No Purchase necr

Gallipolis, 011.

~

c_..,..,

~~.,..-~~=:'.!.
.......... 0.....,1 l ... e.-..,..,,. ":~~~=~·
~oo:....-

The
Shoe Cafe

2'll Second Aw.
GaHipolis, OH.
PHON£ 446-

CAROLL SNOWDEN
en second Ave .

;S8f"¥

£-..m ---~•• ' 1-.,- Ull'!r--""-. U... 127 c.w•

BEAUTY SALOON

insUrance even
lower lor you.

G~ P~l

Phene 44H290
HomeCCHSll

:UMJ Second ,\ ve.

Larayelte !\1all
Ga IIi polis, 0.

~~cruise."

, I am a stable Arnertcan citizen
and I love my country.
My career Is tn helping the men'taUy handicapped, and I do volun·
leer work here too.
It does not matter what you love,
It ma.t ters thal YO!! love. - A STA·
BLE CITIZEN

Like a good neighbor,
Stare Farm is there.
nan ,...

MARCH
SPECIAL

STATIFARM

A ..... """"._

IIUYUMCI

, . . . .:

- - l l ' ".u I,U 11•..,, 11111111&amp;

.

SOlS' PHAIUCYI

$1149

,·

. 446:1~

.

1) Patient Drug Profihts-

5) 24 HOUR SERVICE for

PERSONALIZED MEDICATION information to benefit you.

emergencies.
6) COMPETITIVE PRICES.

2) FREE BLOOD PRESSURE

7) Information regarding

-Anytime. ,

your medicine regiment
-YOU ASK.

3) I 0% DISCOUNT on

I

preecriptions to children 8) Fill , all 3rd p~~rty pre··
under age 5 and Senior criptlons.
·
Citizens over .0.
4) FREE DELIVERY within

city !imits.

. .

owe...

12 MONTHS FREE
FI.NANCING
.

·----------...
INGROUND
$

eW~'· Contj)iiliW....., 4ue c- -,MI.
n181•P.C.S. OU.M.W.

1

•SEAL AIR ·S'OlAR BLANKETS 16x32
•lAARS HEATERS, '250,000 BTU
'

H.P. SUP.ER PUlP

•AUTO POLARIS VAC
ABOVE GIOUND
CHEMICAl PAcJc

o=f~~

Mrs. :Victor (Katherine Marie)
YoUng m was moved !rom Holzer
Medical Center late Thun;day
night to University, HQ!ipltal In
Coliunbus alter being hospitalized
. !oUowlng childbirth complications,
Meantime, Mrs. Victor YoUng D
Is caring for the four children of the
Youngs Including the new baby, at
her home on East Main Street,
Pomeroy.
·
FT!ends can send ca'rds to
Katherine Marie to Rhodes Hall,
Seventh Floor, Room 725, Unlver·
slty Hospital In Columbus.

County.
. '• The photo'graphs ' will be
framed and
plaCed , permanently In the comrpon pleas cour,
Q"oom. The pro:lect
•Judge.' John C. Baepn, who
, office at the end ,of 1982. Several
-have beeti secured. ·
11rose needed Include Fuller
[ltiiott, Horatio Strong, James E.
. helps, George Burns, Abel I..ar,
1,
ns, Peter Grow, Cushing Shaw,
'Ji.L. Osborn, Nlal Nye, John C.
. IBestow, Ell Sigler, Nathaniel Simp. I.Sbn. William Ledlle, Samuel Brad1lf.!ury, William McAboy, W.V. Peek,
\~!limeon Nash, H.C. Whitman, John
'Welch, E .A. Guthrie, W.W. John·
sOn, Silas H. Wright, Martin Crain,
WDUam ' E . Loomis, T.A. Plants,
~)ph .de Steiguer, Henry W.
l;oult~f~p, J.M . Wood, D.W. Jones
'

,j

·"

WAS

'139°0
WAS
0
'701°
. .$
WAS
. 1281.00 .,. ' 19981 '
WAS
'55Q00
'72!,00
114.95

1

1936.~

'

30-3" CHUIRINE TAII.EIS: 36 SUPP lib TAIUT ·
31 ALGAJ OUT
, · ,.
.115-- $95
.54-3" CIIAIRift£ 'tiM
SUPD IIDCK TAilETS
. I$: &amp;0
.

Kanauga hosts O:Y: KAN coin show ·next weekend ·;
KANAUGA - Cotn collectors of !rom out-of-town have secured
all ages, coin dealers, and the pubbooth dlsJ4y space and wUl have
lie !rom Ohio, West VIrginia, and
an llliiiOrtnrent of coins and other
Kentucky will.have tbelr day here . matei1al on .dlsplny !or sale or
next Sunday, March 13, when up- trade. lnaddltlon,CSealersotfer!ree

Wards of $250,00) ' worth of rare
appraisals and may accept trades rrOiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
coins, paper currency, precious o! old pocket watches, or other
'metals 8nd related Items will be on
Items nuide of gold, silver or
exhibition, or !or sale, In the ban·
platinum.
q""t rooms of the Holiday Inn tn
The event will give the public the
Kanauga.
•
opportuillty to view coins and paper
currency covering nearly 200 years
The occasion Is the 20th annual
of government Issues. Door prizeS
coin show hosted l;Jy OH KAN Coin
Club of Middleport and Pomeroy. · of Ulllted States silver dollars will
The event Is open to the pubuc with be given every hQUr during the
no admission charge. Activities
event. Souvenlor wooden nickels
BUZZ ON DOWN TO THE
will be given to everyone. A grand
open at 9 a.m. continuing to 5 p.m.
Parking will be available.
prize of gold coin will be awarded at
FABRIC SHOP FOR All YOUR CRAFT ITEMS
aurkett, show chair· 5 p.m.
~rts that 15
~~-~ ~!U'agl!d

BEE

CRAFTY

Yarn &amp;

All sizes
e Embroidery Aida
Candlewick Books
· Cloth
Floss e Pillow Top Kits
Pillow Top Kits e Polyester Batts
Quilting SupplieS and Books

INDEALER
~NT

lie

community forum

1, State SeDator Julian Bond o!

:Georgia has been aMounced as the
speaker In the seven-pari
l:::ommuntty Forum Sertes at Rio
't;rande CoUege and Community ·

,sixth

1Ieouege.
Bond will speak on "Black Poll!·

chairperson of the Southern Elections Fund and President of the
· Southern Poverty Law Center.

0

E

11 ,

v•

Council; New Deinotlon; and tiM!
Edu1 PrjKt. He II board

,

.••.
' .,, ' l

s

THE FABRIG SHOP

SINGER
PRODUCTS
115 W. 2nd
- - -·_.,.
0

an

•

p~ lis

20th fl!!l!"'ril cola sboW for ne~ Suaday al the RoUday IDn al
Kanauga. Seated, 1e1t to rip&amp;, are Edwtinl ~elt, president; Jolm
Bryan, vtee .,. !stdeat; back, left to right, w~ Smathers, aecretary;
Donna Da'VIdtlon, llllow boetaa; David Edwards, vice presldeal; RuslreD
Slaytoo, ~at-anns, aad Teny Hupp, lreaaurer.

T - ol The s;,... Compon,

r;any~ng

caae eXIra on ell modelt

pOmeroy, OH ,

Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co. ·
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

SALE
SAVE 20% TO 50% OfF

&amp;

2

GEM RloiG
Ruirt, SaP!Ihire, Emerald

DIAMOND
PIERCED

GOlD WEDDING
8 DIAMOND
BANDS
HEART PENDANT
YelloW

Of

Yelklw or white g«id

whit! &amp;Dld.

Blue, 32 Degree, Shrine, with or wit.~t diarromds.

EARRINGS
SAVE $100

7-IIECE DINETTE
Family size 36x48 " table extends to a full 60".
Includes she coordinating chairs with comfort ·
able tapered backs. Curable wipe -clea ~ v ipyt.

$19995
,Rq. $299.95
'•

Holds up In 7 stones
Also with up to 12.

SALE ENDS MAR04 12, 1983

'. .

"TAWNEY JEWELERS
Ott.

SECOND AVE.

..
rfl?~

The Women of

SAVE $105

5-PIECE DINmE SET

'lcs

In the 'Ills" on Wednesday,
¥arch 23, at 8 p.m. In the Fine and
Performing Arts Center at Rio
Grande. The presentation Is free
· nd open to the public.
·, Bond was born In Nashville,
tfl'enn., on Jan. 14, 1940. Wltlle at·
~tending Morehouse College In
Atlanta, he became .active In the
civil rights movement tn the South,
~;
· ping · fOund the .'Committee on
f. :ppeal for Human Rights
,
AHR) and the Student Nt-n·
lNJolent Coordinating Committee
r-XfiNCC).
·
, • ' Bond was eieclt)d In 1965 to the
- !'O!orgta:House of Representatives,
~r was barred, from taking his ~eat .
:
legislators who objected to his
·
tements on the war In Vietnam.
~plte wtnn!Dg two sPectat elecIn 1966, lie still did not take his
~\eat until 1967, after a Supreme
~iQ,w1 decisloo stating the Georgia
~!attire .had erred In refusing
hls,Plaee. He eventually served
.·~ur terms In the House and, In No~ ·•
mber o! 1974, was elected to the
te Senate, where he now serves.
l'!ond was co-chalrpe1110n o! the
rgill Loyal National Demo. 1 tic Delegation, an lhsurgent
at"the 1968 Democratic Na·
~nat Copvenllon. The Loyal De"' ocra't9 were successful in
N!ftseatlng the ~- hand-picked
~rgla,flelegation: Bond was nom·
tor VIce President, but with·
from consldera~on because
hls ·age.
•
.
•
Bond serves on the Boards of Dl·
tors ~ the Delta Ministry Pro. of the National Council 0(
urcileS; Robert F. ICenlledy
.
Fund; Martin Lutller
, Jr,. Center for Social Olan&amp;e; ,
ter for Community ChaJiae;
,
Rer•rch alld Educa- ' ·
, n center; · National Share.
I Fund; Southern

e Embroidery Hoops-

nnuslin

Congressman Clarence Miller

smiling ...

!zed tn Point Pleasa~t . w. Va., tn,
1962, but moved to Middleport ~
1973. Memberships are soUclted ~
.year long. Fifty active member&amp;
currently participate.

hlblt Items they.own. Lockedsecurlty cases wt11 be provided for that
purpose. All exhibits will be noncompetitive. ·
OH KAN Coin Club was organ-

haS sent a dandy big American !lag

to Mr. and Mrs. George Folmer !or
use at Rock Sprtnl!li Cemetery.
The Folrners are most enthusiastic about the new flag and are
looking forward to getting the
cemetery sptueed up for Memorial
Day. Residents with relatives
burled In the cemetery whose
graves
should be marked' with
~dJ.G1 Reeves: Thesejudgesdate ·
small American flags are asked to
&gt;tiack as far as 1819. If you can help
place the fiaghoiders f1J they can be
!ludge Knight with the project, he'U
easBy seen. The Folmets don't
happy to hear frm you . .
&gt;: Incidentally, the Mel~ County want to ll!isS a one.
·B ar Association, In addition to
&gt;
Ambitious members of the ladles
staging
a ' dinner honortng Bacon
auxiliary of Orange Township's
who served 25 years tn the common
Volunteer Fire Department In
llleas post, presented him with a
tolar portrait and a book of Tuppers Plains are gtvtng the
Easter Bunny a helpln' hand.
:ihtormal photos taken during the
The group Is making Easter
Wnner and a framed portrait of
candy to seU through March. Eight
$aeon to add to the photos already
ounce egg,· cherry nut or peanut
on han&lt;l for placement In the
butter are $2; smaU suckers, two
'Courtroom.
for
~ quarter; large suckers, 35
•
cents and crunchy bunnies are 75
~ The new track facility at Meigs
cents.
iilgh School - a long project from
:the standpoint of planntng and
For more lnlormatlon or to order
call 667·3933, 667-6269 or 667-3555.
financing - is nearing completion.
J There are rules Involved for
·p ersons who use the track for
tuMing. Those who use the !acUity
You are Invited to attend one of a
~ being asked to help pollee the - series of health related 'meetings
'track area so that It can be weU
helng held by the Metm; County
kept and any rule "lolators should
Department of Health.
be reported to assistant superinThe next session will be Wednes·
.t endent . James Carpenter of the
day from 11 a.m. to noon In the
Meigs Local District.
east-west dining room of Veterans
' The rules are: aU perSons must
Memorial Hospital.
wear rubber soled shoes; they must
Norma Torres, R.N., supervisor
;.run tn the outside two lanes;
of nursing for the department, wW
•
~absolutely no wheel objects are to
P.~nt a :IS-minute color fllrp,
''go Into the area . - this Includes
"Sugw Mountain Blues," present.
'bicycles, skateboards, skates, wha·
lng aspects of a · new technology
· tever; there Is to be no ruMing
which allows people to monitOr
after dark and no parking Inside the
their own blood glucose levels and
, fence area.
offers new hope to juvenile dlabet·
~ Remember- a word to the wise.
lcs. Beautiful scenery frames the
:
f
--authentic climb about which the
• Conbatulatlons to Mr. and Mrs. film revolves.
~;Paul ~wisher, who observed their
~ 55th Wedding anniversary quietly
Spring brln~ a basketful of

- . rPP•

ACCESSO.RIES '

• 3h

•

:.'lttJn

KITS

.

MlddlE!PQrt Feb. 11. We go "way
back" with the Swlshers - and
that's nice.

:·-citms

INCL. EQUIPMENT

"Y.OUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER'"

400 Second Ave.

SUMMER WiTH A POOL

GROUND

.ar.marn~ -

(FORMERLY PRICE &amp;

_SPLASH INTO AN EARLY

' .ABOVE
'

.~no little .

~

,: DEAR HE LEN AND SUE:
: I can't believe the born-again
•"Christian whO ·slgned herself "The
•
'•flesh Is Weak! "HoW could anyone
,f~l guilty about enjoylni 8I!Jt with ,
flier husband? She must be a throw·
.lbaelt to Puritan days when men de•manded; women erl!lured, and &amp;ell
was tor pr• creatlon only (so minis·
ters sald) .
.

9

EVA'S

Farm

........

d one week vacat.ians for twa at
OisneyS EPCOT Center. With round tnp transportation
v1a Eastern A•rlines. hOtef accommodations tor 1 days
and 6 nidlts and $500 cash.

M250

20 Seuiom

Chances are, I

)

~ !J'NW:

~rch

• 1

~mmo~ P~as

~: RGCCC

I!IIITU Till~ lllnl1'111 WAUIIIIG LADY"

~

By BOB HOEFUCH
Common Pleas Court
Judge Charles H. Knight iS search·
iiJg !or
of all former

f:]Ji:~e &amp;~~{;ill ;;~it~7

Fine. tap grain leatter a-adles the .

Now ThN

HELEN AND SUE:
This for the up~ght ·psychologist
who thinks homoselCUals are dan·
gerous, subversive and twisted.
I'm a 21-year-old gay and I am not
sick, nor.am I out In left field . Moreover, I do not chase young boys or

·;gone?

·: I'd say, take your husband1s sug·
•; gestlon and form a Tuesday night
•women' s group. You'll be amazed
: at how Interesting, Insightful- and
': humorous ~ women are on their
:1own. - HELEN
.

-t

"If you
want to talk
about discounts
on homeowners
insurance, talk
tome"

Beat of the bend
Portraits of former judges sought

an'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-3

•

Mel~

over for me.
It I ~en! the ll(lvertlsers, I'd
the .otber· way. I'd try to restore
aome ot the wannth and ple$SIIre
that COJne!l with good food. I'd have
11 fold-Wt page of Orson WeUes eat:
lng avocado and sour cream dip
and saying, "Would tlils body lie tq
you? "
.

a Jogging suit? It won't be the
same.
I t•!ppOSe the Blye l'lun ,..W go
modenl and exchallle her tradl·
tiona! habit il.nd bicycle lor a threepiece suit and a Corvette. Or worse,
-some ad agency w!U put Orvllll! Reden~cher In COIItact lens!is, dye
his hair and have him-shorten his

-perts are now.saytngfat babies are
not
bealthy babies and
they're go!Di to update their ,
Image.
I
Okay, I didn t'say anytblng when
they lightened!up Aunt Jemima a
lew years ago,. I even kept sUent
when they gaye Betty Crocker a
lli!W hairstyle, but now they've ,
gooe too far. ' ' · , ·.,

Katie's korner

Prince Charles takes unicycle ride

Butte~orth?

••

PometOy-Midclleport-Gallipolfs, Ohio-Point lleasant, W. Va.

BfiUI /

ContempOrary 36~48" table axtends to a full
60". Handy wipe-clean top. Includes 4 sw ivet

tlt!ler armchairs covered in durable vinyl.

$44444
Rq, $649.95

,,

-~~~

·f#·
We're now carryin~ tho famous BALl
line of bru-featunll!j BALl's Custom·
At System-bra's deSigned for your fig·
ure type-noljustalze alone.

· STONEVILLE

.. _5_-PIECE DINETTE__

_

Huge 36x4B·in. oval teble extends to 60" with

12" leaf. Mar-resistant oak lamina te top. 4
swiwl 11rrnch81rs with oek arms 8t caster bases.

SAVE $191

$48888
Rq. $679.95

LuxurioUsly feminine support tor th&lt;i awrage figure

For cl181lo, lui tlgU111 ~upport

Btu dnlgned to enhance your figure with
oclt. p n t t y Coine In 10d81' ll1d llllecl t1Je BAU Bra that~
right tor yau~IWmember "hll lila your
..... noll!* your llle"
.

•

• 0

OAK, GLASS &amp; BRASS
Beautiful 45" Square Round Oak, Blass and Glass Table with
Sturdy Cane Back Chairs with Tufted Fabric Seats.

I

�Ohio-Poinf Pleasant, W.Va.

Timet-Sentinel

March 6, 1983

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinei_-Page-8--5

Calendar

GALLIPOLIS - Riverside
Study Club will meet Tuesday at
1 p.m. at Mrs. Douglas Mulllneaux residence for a program
by Dr. Edna Gett!es.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - Skating at Rutland Civic Center Sunday, 2 to 4
p.m . Take your own skates, $1
for chtldren, $2 for adults.
.

GALLIPOLIS - Right to Life
Society of GaUJa County wW
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
Buckeye Rural Electric bullding. The public Is Invited.

POMEROY -There wW be a
dance Saturday, 9p.rn. to1a.m.,
and 6-10 p.m. Sunday at Robert
Pickett farm , E. DarWin on S.R.
681; music by Bun! Burkhart
and Junkyard Dogs; open to
publ!c.

RACINE - Regular meeting,
Racine Masorilc Lodge 461,
F &amp;AM, wiU be held Tuesday; all
members asked to attend.

.---

GAJ.,LIPOLIS - First Baptist
Church wUJ host Piedmont Bible
Col.lege Chorale of Wins tonSalem, N.C. , Sunday at 6 p.m.
CROWN ClTY- Rev. Jamie
Panca ke wUl speak at Victory
. Baptist Church Sunday at 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - FOCUS wll)
meet Sunday at 4:30p.m. at Gall!a Senior Citizens Center. New
members are urged to attend.

SALE STARTS ·sUNDAY, MARCH
CiARD EN lliiiiiiiii•

4

'"'c;;~:Y' '"$ 99

EAST MEIGS - Eastern
band boosters will meet at 7: 30
P-!11- Tuesday In band room of .
Eastern High ScbooL

PENNZDIL
. . . . . . . .3
e-:.,

~

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
Band Boosters wW meet Monday at 7: 30 p.m. In the band
room to plan for an all-county
music testlvaL

MIST CURLING IRON

SCOTTS
SOOO SQ. FT.

nu sr or dry ro cr~are cruls. llrps , r .en(l r rl~
L:oum a11a chrnem rnclu ded

BALLONOFF

II£G. PRICE . . . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . $23.99
AD PRICE .......... .............. ·.. . 18.88
LESS llrGR'S REBATE . ............... -2.00

INSULATED
SECURITY FILE

YOUR COST
AFTER REBATE

Protect rour valuable papers tn th•s fire retardant and heat

res•stant secunly ltle Double steel walls. ceram1c ltber
~nsulahon matenlll. ntchl·plated cylinder lack w1th 2 kews. amf
heavy -duty lull length contmuous P•&amp;na hmge

KENTUCKY 31
GRASS SEED

lEBCD

Otters a rugged lawn in sun or modera te shade ·

511 ~

SPINCAST REEL

All chmate mul!l·v•scos•ty detergen t, 1hsp11sent mot01 o•l !lows
heel¥ ill low tempeflhlfl! Touvh bod1td lubncatton 11 tugtt
t empera~urt Gulfds agatnst engtne wear. cltbon dtpas•ts.
sludge. and rust

97CQ.

•
....
••

''

.10. $1 .09 Qf.

AUI'OMOnl'f Df,,

I OZ.

oz.

STP

$1~

For tM f•she~man '" the famifv! lebco S ~ttncau reel features
durable ABS co~rs and sprmg-loaded drag. Filled w1th
p•em•um Z~co monoldamem

$466

SUN CAMERA

A piece of the sun tires ·every
lime. automatically! Uses 600
nigh speed land film and never

l7'fi8
REG. $89.88

REG. $5.99
SPOil$ DfPr.

•10. $2.1• EACH
U0411SD.,r.

JEWELRY DEPT.

49

LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls Trustees wW meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. In Letart Falls.

oz.

SYRACUSE -Syracuse PTO
wUI meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the school. The students wW
present a variety show.

OXYDOL
REG. $2.64

Engagements
Jacobs-Rutz

Houseware _~pt,
GOOD THRU MAJICH 8 1981

WOOLITE

,.

SONOFAGUN

$}59

PROTECTOR

GLASS
CLEANER

BEAUIIEH

Onr SI!JJ

SERVICE

REG. $1.93

8 TRACK TAPE CADDY_

ttrans,

goly·ptOittf•nt

beaultlrts. and seals vrnyl, leathtr.
rlilber. pluhc. and wocld

69¢

Housewares Dept.

$177
..o.

REG. 99'

$2.41

11

oz.

Jacobs, Rutz

FIRESh)E

GALLIPOLIS - French Col·
ony Chapter of D.A.R. wiU meet
Monday at 1: 30 p.m. at the home
Scotts' speCial

• · of Mrs. Frank WetOerholt, First .

blend ot annual ryegrass.

bluegran. and !me fescue rs perlect where la5t ,

Avenue, Gallipolis.

1emp01a1y coverage

lfl

de5ned

$ 44

BIDWELL - Bidwell-Porter
PTO will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
"' at the schooL

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Chapter, Order of DeMolay, wiU
meet at 7: 30 p.m. Monday at
Middleport Masonic Temple .

MOTOR OIL

HECK'S

CENTERVILLE
O.A.P.S.E. Chapter 682 wiU
meet at Centervllie Elementary
School Monday at 7: 30 p.m.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Fa ir Board wW meet at 8 p.m .
Monday at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.

ZEBCO

POLAROID

oz.
SILICCN: SPRAY
LUBRICANT

s ~uea lu ng

lnVISII:IIe

non ·greasy

tubmant IS e,;teUent !or otf1ce or
~endrng

SQ.

YOUR COST

YOUR COST

PRESTONE

GREASE £A1ER

COUPON
WITH

ENGINE
DEGREASER
gre1st 1nd 01! Just 3prar on

49C

FOOD DEPT. ·
GOOD THRU MARtH 8. 1913

BEACH

2 SLICE TOASTER

Rem~es

and hose olf

loasrs Ore ad and co n~en•ence foods

$16~

d•al lor

COSMEriC
DfPJ.

l·~ ht

h'""'" '"

Future~

select a colo•

10 dar•. wrde toast M:tls and lnrge •·guard

$1599 .

"~· h"•d'"'!l

REG . $19.96

3 oz . .

JELL-0

AUI'OMOnl'l DfPf,

REG. PIIICE . $ 5.6$ REG. PIIICE $10.44
AD PRICE . ... ·. 3.99 AD PRICE .. .. . 7.66

llrGR'S.

~="'ll

.10.$2.11

SQ.

MrGR'S.

mathlnf!s

$177

GRASS
SEED
1000
FT.
2000
FT.

SNAa&lt; &amp;PARTY
CRACKERS

16
PRESTONE

A heilvw durv s1lrcone lubr\cal'!tlor auto
or home use Prevenls sllckmg an

SCOTTS
_ FAMILY

POMEROY - Meigs High
School band concert wiU be at 7
p.m. Tuesday at high schOol
gyrnna5lum with music by both
the symphonic and J= bands;
admission is free.
·

16 oz.

• , GALLIPOLIS - A no-till
• dinner meeting will be held at 7 ·
p.m. at Gallia Senior Citizens
Center. Reservations are· required. Call Gallia SoU and Water Conservation District,
446-8687, for information.

I

lOW-30

I!IG. $15.99
HAaDW,Uf DfPr.

12

POMEROY - Meigs County
~ Salon 710, Eight and Forty, will
.,
,.. meet at 7: :Jl p.m. Monday night
.. : at the home of Mrs. Eunie
,, Brinker . .Memorial services for
deceased members will be held.

PENNZOIL

$999

Pro11rdes a filsl ·eSiabrhdung, broad bladed lawn

$~~~66

andWa~e s . wa~t·

WITH ,COUPON

goosetad 1 Grves lu ll fee·drn g Of Turt Builder Amencis
lavo r!le fer!tl rler tor develo prn g thrcli green lawns

GALLIPOLIS - A.A.U.W.
wUJ meet Monday at Ohio Valley
. Bank's Jackson Pike Branch at
7:30 p.m. Joy Barlow, head
teller of 0 .V.B., will address "Investment Opportunities for Today's Woman." Members and
prospective members are invited to attend.

$799

U~e

TURF BUILDER
PLUS HALTS

GALLIPOLIS - Gall!aJackson-Meigs Mental Health
Board wUI meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the board offices, 595
Jackson Pike, Gaillpol!s.

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees regular meeting
wUl be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Chester Town Hall.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Prevent s crab!J(a ss !also barnyard grass. I0¥1 311. and

MONDAY

•..

Ourilhl~: . yalvill ll/l!d ran wrlh rrqh r lll truy

01p .

~!5PE

GALLIPOLIS - Services will
be held at Bailey Chapel Church,
S.R. 218, at 7 p.m. Sunday.
GALLIOLIS - Rev. George
Kelly will speak at BeD Chapel
, Community Church's 10:30 a .m.
and 7 p.m . Sunday services. The
public Is Invited to attend.

POMEROY ~ Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority wW meet Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m. at Meigs Inn. Dee Spencer
wW have the cultural i-eport and
Linda Faulk and Sharon Stewart wiU handle refreshments.

GELATIN
WITH COUPON

II£BAT[ .... H.OO II£BATE ... :. -2.00

4

::~E $299 :r~~E $566
HARDWAR( DfPr.

BOXES

51QO

GALLIPOLIS --, Mr. and Mrs.
John 0 , Jacobs are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Joan Marie, to Kurt Gustav Rutz,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kurt A. Rutz of
Houston, Texas.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Maple Valley High School and at·
tended Wayne State College. She Is
employed In Denison, Iowa. Rutz Is
a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School In Galllpolls and Texas Lutheran College In Seguin, Texas. DurIng the past year, he clvarred at St.
Matthew Lutheran Church In Mapleton. ln March he will return to
Concordia Theological Seminary,
Fort Wayne, lnd.
A June 12 wedding is planned at
St. Matthew Lutheran Church In
Mapleton.

FOOD DfPT.

t:OO!l THRU MAACfl8 HI8J

Keever-Atkins

I.J

';!·

RACINE ' - Racine Chapter
_,. 134, Order of the Eastern Star,
wUI meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at
.~
Racine
Ma5oruc- Temple:AJI of,
• -fleers are asked to attend.
.

F

...

MIDDLEPORT - Middle• port Garden Club wiU meet at
• 7: 30p.m. Monday at the home of
Mrs. Paul HaptonstaU.

BEnY CROCKER

BROWNIE MIX

Fast easy protect•on
pruned graf ted ,
damaged trees. roses.
shrub s

TIJESDAY

FOOD DEPT.
GOOD THRU MiRC/4 8. I 9fll

MIDDLEPORT - Work wW
be In the fellowcraft degree
~ when Middleport Lodge 363,
;!. Free and Accepted Masons,
: meets at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
!; temple. Refreshments wUI be
• served following the meeting.

•
;

Your cho1ce olthese bealJtrlur ••_. ,,....,,
has rwo shelves ;~nd drop hdUnrt
• 111rawve woodgra•n hm sh&lt;tnd

r.canon

\

•IG. $49.H

GALLIPOLIS - Gallla
County District Library Board
of Trustees will meet tuesday at
, . 5p.m.ln theRareBookRoomof
.- Dr. Samuel L. Boosard MemorIal Ubrary, 641 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS -

_r, League wiU meet

La Leche
~a¥

at
9: 30a.m. at 17~ Chatham' Ave.,
Gallipolls, for discussion of "Tile
Advantages of Breastteedlng."
It Is the first in a series It four
~, discusSion meetln&amp;B tor brealt" teedlllg lnfo.nnatkm aDd interested molben or motllen-to-be.
For Information, can "'-&amp;11( cr

286-4990.

~

$.

· 4 LB. BAG

'NGETIT
PUPPY FOOD

OPEN

WITH
COUPON

A hmdional wallsvs11m •ran
\ un.t allords btlu1rtul drsplly
1 boob. or s1ereo compooenls
I

•J

' -·-

RIG. $46.99

~$

$169

FOOD DfPT.
GOOD !HAll

MAR C H ~

~·il .

Keever, Atkins
RODNEY - Carola Keever is
announcing the engagement and
forthcoming m'I!Jiage of her
daughter; Marta, to Edgar L.
Atkins.
The bride-elect attends Gallia
Academy High School. Her fiance,
son ofLanieAtklnsofGoldsboro, N.
C., and the late Edgar L. Atkins,
• Gallipolis, Is I\ 1977 graduate ofGaiIIa Academy. He Is an emplOyee of
Ohio Valley Supermarkets, Inc.
An open-church wedding wUJ be
held at Rodney Methodist Church
at 2: :Jl p.m . on July 30.

'

�~~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~0~h~io~-P~oi~nt~~~~~m~n~t~,W~.V~a~. .__.._._~. .~T~M~~~~~~~~~~~

; ~ ,;._ GAlLIPOLIS - PoUlt Pleasant .
• t ~ Clllm:ll ~ the Nazarene was
.., lttielfltlllgfor~l6c111UbJe.rillg
~

YOU WIN

ta*Jul Luelnda Dl!nile

• OSII'SiiODY

' .. Hollll9~1\11d'lbomas'£ . Roach
' .. Ill

tn8rJiiet.

: ~ daug!tta-

'-"a.
T
.
' . ' ftev.
0l

1-"'
~·

;-

.

¥oirta Wolle olllclated the

e~le11"' tile Wllddlng was
' :; - · - · ~ Kalllryn Duncan,
..,

298

SEOO~D

'

; ·i! t!velllagJteii!ihllll)o . A half-hour ot _

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby B. Herdman, Rutland , announce the engagement of their
daughter, Sandy, to Keith Johnson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald John·
son, Letart.
The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate
of Meigs High School and attends
Rio Grande College, Holzer School
of Nursing, from which she will
graduate in May . Her fiance Is a
1981 graduate of Wahama High
School.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

and Mn. James
r ..n~pn~~s, 8Dd the '

;
gnDI\la Ole lilt! of Mr. 8Dd Mn.
: :1 Thomai ~bid~, Point PIE IIBI)t, W.

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

Johnson, Herdman

.•

t: . .

fn

:. : Escoltt\11
the altar l7t her
; father, the lrXIe wore a white gown
" ot nykm ai)d chantllly a.ct wtth a
\; hlgi!VIctorla~aceenledbya
. • cllalitllly Uptunied cotlat, Inserted
~ Engilsh net fomtbli a V;yolre, and
~ tuB l!lllql sleeYI!s featuring chan"" tllly la~l!l&amp;Jow length cutrs. The tun
., skirt of J&amp;thered layer-s of chantilly
rep to a chapel-li!ngth layered
Mr: and Mrs. Roach
" chantl'_ly tralft. Her veil was ot Immediately, following the wed~
was made by Phlllls Ferguson of
"! elboW
lmported Enallsh Jlel ding. The hall was decorated with PobJtPleasant an~ served by Marie
:.. a-at~ll!recpo . a chantllly and YJ!Illce · pink and white streamers. The
Edwards and Barbara Mallete,
• buckrani ' band headpiece. She tiered cake was decorated In pink
sisters of the groom. Betty Jean
; carried /a bouquet of roses and and white with a waterfull l)Dd . Owens, Missy Owens, Opal Stover
. j cama~oi'IJIIIkaildburgandy.
staircase, and topped with , a
LWJanP!ckens served.

ST.

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 12, 1983

:! lace.

leiiCth

'

~; J~

- ~ ::.r.Uiy: Roach. ~lster

Ground Ch11ck~.
USDA CHOICE .

Burris

Janey-White

G

EAWH

Whole Chicken..

~8•••

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED ·

. .

$

¢ Ch11ck Roast~~ ...

39.
.
'

,_,.

29

ot

·

99
~~~~~E! ..............~~-SUPERIOR ·
.
$
39
Lunch Meats...... ~s•••

,

Carousel ConfeCtionery

the

317 N. 2nd AVE.

They wore noor-lengtll gowns of
) plnko~andchantillylacewllh
": titled spagtll!tti strap bodices
1-: matdllnl- ipllt shoUlder capes ot
: \ organza and chantilly lace trtm.
~; The Dared sidrts hall side Inserted
• , panels of organza and lace ruffles .
•• They carried boUquets of pink
~ orcblds.
'{ljrrrf Edwards, niece of the
:; gi-oom, was llowergirl. She wore a
~ tlopr-length c1rwsa of pink organza
and chant lily lace trim, tlttm bodice
.. and lace ~ orgaiiZ8 ovecylay
"' coDer, filii Bldrt with chantilly
~• drapeil rume trim, aJid carried a
:, basket ot bu!pll~ rose petals.
!' Thegroom'sfatherservedasbest
~ man. UshersM!reJenyRoese,Jetr
~ . WIU!ISiey, John Varney and Kevin
Holllnpbead, brother ot the lirkle.
.The g1 oern wo~ a black tuxedo
"' with a whltrcarnatlonboutonlllere.
~ Best man and ushers wore bur; gandy tuxedos and whl1r and pink
:. carnation boutonllleres.
•· JamleBurehanlwasrlngbearer.
Healsowor'eaburgandytuxedoand
:" a white babjcatnatlon bouOOnlllere.
'
Kelly Kt!mper, pianist, and Rl:;, chard · Slflele, *1st, perfonned

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. 992-6342

WJ: ·
·10 LB. BAG MILK or WHITE CHOCOlATE

SI6.95

t

BUY ANY 10 1 LB. BAGS CHOCOLATE - GET ONE
'2.10 VALUE MOLD FREE.

WILlEN COMPLETE BOOK OF CANDY
WILTON WONDER MOLD CAKE PAN

-Reg. $8.95 . -NOW ss.SO

CANDY MAKING WORKSHOP -'-LEARN TO MAKE YOUR
EASTER EGGS, SUCKERS AND RABBITS!

-

YOU WILL ACTUALLY MAKE CANDY
IN CLASS TO TAKE HOME WITH
YOU! '5 - CALL TO REGISTER.

" "Endlesai..ow."
; Jenny~ n:tlstaed ~ts.

•••

NOW SJ.SO

Reg.$12.99

t.

$

An arch was decorated with pink
•
bells and~ and a basket ot flowers

FREE CANDY .MAKING DEMO STILL .
.AVAILABLE- CALL FOR DETAILS.

:- w¥ on bOth sideS ot the altai.'
! A ~ was held at Sacred
: Hellrt Cliithollc Cllurch social hall

= -...._~__.---'-----'-=

D FURNITURE'S
'

.I

t

I

I

Microcomputers big
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) American
educatiOn is entering the computer
· age In a big way.
There are now approximately
96,CXXl mlcrocompu ters l1l 24,000
AmeriCan public schools - 60 .
percent more than last year,
•. according to Market Data Retrle,. val, which keeps track of such
stattttcs.
·.
"The time of classroom acceptance of the personal computer as a
teaching tool has arrlved," says
T.W. MWerofC&lt;Jntrol DataC&lt;Jrp., a
.. . computer company here. The
company 1s the creator or a
computer-based education system
called PLATO, which has nearlY
lO,CXXl hours of courseware ni::lw
being adapted for several l11lcrC&gt;
computers which are beginning to
be iiBed In homes and businesses as
• well as In schools. . '

SANDWICH MATE,IND. AMER.

Cheese ~s-Ite

HAVE A SKILL! with training

in less than one year •••
•Auto Body Repair •Auto Mechanics •Building
Maintenance •(carpentry •Electricity •Industrial Maintenance •Food Service •Machine
Trades •Office Services •Welding •Business
Data Processing.

You can draw unemployment benefits while
attending Tri-County.

· BEST SB.ECTION
~ ~N THE AREA

· There are programs for' everyone.
Give us a call~ tell U$ your ideas.
•wE MAKE THINGS HAPPEN!'
.

~US~

ARRIVEDI
A TRUCKLOAD'

. . .~ ~R~:g~1_THE

FINANCIAL.AlD IS.AVAILABLE.

':

Spring Quarter
Starts April 4th

ALL CARPET ·wiLL BE IN-

Mar~arine.....~
$
·Spaghetti .. ~ .... ~~-.a2!
HY~ND CHUNK
·
$ 99 DINNER TREAT
Pot ·Pies ....... ~~
Do Food .. ~~~~~...

MUELLER'S MACARONI OR

STALLED WITH FREE PAD EXCEPT/ON CASH &amp; CARRY.

•

~

., .

.

Phone ••..••• •' ••••...• • ••.•••••••••..••.
Mail to: Adult Education
Tri·County Vocatio11a1 School
. Nelsonville, Ohio45764
'•·

S499

f

Tri-County
Vocational School

I

· . : Plenty Of Samples .·

. ·To Choose From ·

OtARMIN .

FULL TIME ADULT PROGRAMS
- BUSINESS DATA PROCESSING
- WELDING
-AUTO BODY REPAIR
- MACHINE TRADES
- BUILDING MAINTENANCE
- INDUSTRIAL ·MAINTENANCE
- ELEC::TRICITY
- CARPENTRY
- OFFICE SERVICES
- FOOD SERVICE '
. - AUTO MECHANICS

I would like more inlormation about your
. adult vocalional programs. Check one or
more.
Your Name ..•...... ....... ... .. .. .....
Address ...... . ........... . •. . •. .. . .. .•

CASH &amp; CARRY'
RUBBERBACK

'

---INFORMATION-..,_;

REGISTER IN PE.RSONOR
MAIL IN THIS COUPON

'

TOILET TISSUE

~ 4 ROll PKG. ~ •

Rt. 1, State·Route 691

ItO••
,_..!... ·

Umit OM 'pir Ct

•

. Nelsonville, Ohio
.

~

\

•

Phone614-153-3511,Ext. 44

12, · - .

..

'

ADULT EDUCATION DEPT.

' 10.5 oz.

,.

•'

you can •• .•

NOW IS THE TIME TO M~KE YOUR
MOVE •••

I

Bananas·............. !~·~

TRAINING PROGRAMS

With the iob market today ••• only the
qualified are getting the good lobs.

'

LANGSVll..LE - Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Janey of Route 1, Langsville, are announcing the engagement and approaching marrlage of
their daughter, Joyce Annette, to
Kelvin Terence White, son of Mr.
. and Mrs. Thomas White , 267 Galloway-Rd.,- Galloway. _
_The brlde-elect is a 1981 graduate
ot Meigs High School and employed
at Wedding Chalet in Columbus.
Her fiance, a 1974 graduate of Wes·
tland High School in Galloway, is
employed through Carpenters Local200.
An Aprll 23 wedding in Columbus .
. Is planned.

With Our FULL TIME ADULT

Are you now out of work? Have you checked all
the lob prospects and find that you are not
qualified for any of them?

SPRING
CARPET
LE

lr /
.

_,

_!mln~l~tu~re~lir;lde;;;~;;;;Th;e;Cak;;;e
~;;;;;~~;;;;;;~~rl
i

Mink was maid of honor
::.; and blokle8roalck were Tammy [
j Knox: 1NataUe Shong, Julie Steele -

Burris-Caldwell

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Burris, VInton, have an·
nounced the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Lou Ann Burris, to Robert Allen. (Robbie) Caldwell, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Caldwell,
Vinton.
·
·
The brlde-elect is a student at
· Buckeye Hills Career Center study·
lng cosmetology.
Her fiance is a 1982 graduate of
Buckeye Hills Career Center. He is
employed by B &amp; D Auto Sales and
Gallipolis DaUy Tribune.
An open-church wedding is helng
planned for March 18 at VInton
Baptist Church. A reception wW
follow.

EVERY TIME

tl Mr.

}Wit•. , ead,

·.

~ brJde IJ the

,.

I ,

.
'

'

'

�..
March

•

•

::;:::========Anniversaries·=~=======--~~:,··.
'
. .) ,.

Membership drive for . The French Art
.
Colony will continue through this ~on
.

'

'

'

YOUR SUPER OFFER FROM _ESTEE
MakeuQ-Go-Round---A 35.00 value. Yours tor a.so
Lr"\UL.J

..

Por~land

couple observes 40th

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
George Black of Portland wlli celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary on Thursday, M;arch 10.
Mr. and Mrs. Black were mar. rled on March 10, 1943 at .Portland.

They are the parents of 11 children,
Larry, Joan, Robert, Garry, Diane,
Cheryl, Cathy, Danny, Mark,
Jackie and Johnnle, and have 11
grandchUdi'en,

Silver year celebrated in Meigs
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Hayman of Unlon Ave,
Pomeroy, wtll observe 'their 25th
wedding anniversary Tuesday.
They have two chldren, a daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

James (SaUy) Hutton, .andasonand '
daughter-In-law, Mr. and
Leslie Hayman, Pomeroy; and two~
grandchlldren.
·
A family celebration .Is being, ,
planned.
"

Mrs.·:.

FA B R \ C S :.
JO-ANN

Warm up to spring with Dollar Days savings happening
right now! Choose from our in-store stoc;k of fhese items.
There 's rio purchase limit!

42 Catn1 Sl. .

$

Twin

PER SET

lhon\&lt;5 tor

*
..
.
•

.•'

The French Art Colony wUl hold
Its annual membership dinner at St.
Paul's Episcopal Church, Second
Avenue, GaUlpolls, on Thursday,
March 24, at 7: :KJ p.m. The annual
meetmg will foUow wlth election ol
new trustees and o!llcers. The
annual report for events he kiln 1982

BARGAINS
McColl's

Stitch 'n Save 8407
A greqt fash ion xotue.

BASICS

CLASSICS

*COTTON CALICOS. Machine wash. dry; 45" wide.
Reg. S3.99.yd., NOW $3.00/YD.
THE SPORTAI$LES. Sailcloth and twill. Poly/cotton; machine .
wash, dry; 45" wide. Reg. $3.49 and $3.99 yd., NOW $3.00/YD.
DENIM. Always a favorite. in poly/coHon. Machine wash .
dry; from 45" wide. Reg. from $4.99 yd .. NOW $3.00/YD.
CUmNG BOARDS. Protects tabletops when you lay
out paHerns. Reg. $5.00 ea .. NOW $3.00 EACH.

*

*

*

Important Rejlsons Why
You Expect More
From Ohio Valley BankYour J:lometown,
Home-owned Bank

\

,.

GALLIPOLIS - Paul Bradford
will exhibit .wattercolors through
· March27a!TheFrenchArtColony,
~First Ave., Gallipolis. Bradford
lsagraduateofColumbusCoUegeof
Art and Design .aitd Is senior
graphics designer at Ohio University Press. The exhibit Includes
rural and urban landscapes as weU
as the honorable mentioned winner
of !he Nationiil Jigsaw Puzzle
Design Contest in 1982.
Gallery hours are Tuesday and
ThursdaytromlOa.m. to3 p.m .and
Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 5
p.m. The French Art Colony Is
closed Monday. The exhibit Is free
and open to the public.
The following claSses will be
offered through March: Voice taught by Robert Saunders. Individual vocal lessons ate scheduled at
ttmes convenient to the student;
Basic drawing - taught by Susan
· Clark. Enrollments ari! being
taken; Art history- a survey of arl
from Egyptian times to present
day. It 1s taught by Dr. Lawrenee
James. Youth e&gt;epress!ons workshops - taught bY Bob Herdman,
mime and · self-expression; Basic
painting - taught by Margaret
Brim on Tuesday trmJ 3 to 5 p.m.;
Youthdance-taughtbyCtndyNau
on Saturday from 1 to 4: :KJ p.m .
For Information on future
classes. contact Director Connie
Campbell-Eaton at The French Art
Colony, 446-3834.

Independent banking is a vital and
essential part of the American enterprise ·system.

GALLIPOUS- The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memortal Library wtD
be at the foUowtng places the wel!k
9f March 7 to 11.
· Monday- Lewis Dr., noon-12: 15
p.m.; . C&amp;S Bank (Rt. 35), 12:1512: 30 p.m.; West Apts., 12: ~1
p.m.; Meadowbrook, 1: 05-1: :.&gt;
p.m.; Scenic HlUs Nurs!n« Center,
1: 3.'&gt;-2 p.m.; Gallla Metro Estates,
2: 1&amp;3 p.m.; Pinecrest Care Center,
3:15-3: :ll p.m.; Rodney VUlage,
4: 15-4: 45 p.m.; Crousebeck· Rd., ~
5: 30 p.m.; Northup, ~: 45-6: 15 p.m.
• Tuesday - MltcbeU Road, ~: :.&gt;
p.m.; Sanders/ Adelaide, 4-4::.&gt;
p.m.; McGuire Subdv. I, n, 4:455:15 p.m .; LeGrande I, II, 5: :/n-6
p;m.; Neighborhood Road I, II.
S:15-6: 45 p.m.
Wednesday - Chatham. 3-3:30
p.m.; Venz Rd. (Davis Dr.), 3:404:15 p.m.; Kanauga ~th. 4: :JI-5
p.m.; tJohnson's Tr. ct., 5:15-5:30
p.m.; KirK Tr. ct., 5:45-6: 15 p.m.
ThursdJy - Cora, 2: 45-3: 10
·p.m.; Raccoon Tr. Ct.. 3: 5-3:45
p.m.; Pab'tot, 4-4: 30 p.m.; GaWa,
!Hi p.m.
Friday - Crowri City (Clty
Bldg.), 12::JI.1::KJ p.m.; Shafer,
1: 45-2 p.Jil.

STYLE-SETTERS

LEPRECHAUN LINEN LOOKS. 50%
polyester/50% rayon; machine wash. dry;
45" wide. Reg. $5.99yd., NOW $4.00/YD.
60" SUITINGS. Gabadreme'" and VISA ·
Codence"' of polyester; machine wash and dry.
Reg. $4.99 and 55.99 yd .. NOW $4.00/YD.
.• PREMIUM KNIT TERRY. 80% coHon/20%
polyester; machine wash, dry; 60" wide.
Reg. $5.99 yd., NOW $4.00/YD ..
WISSPER-LIJE®QUICK-SNIPS. 43/• .. ·scis·
sors lor purse or suitcase. Reg. $5.95 ea ..
NOW $4.00 EACH.
'

*

*

SILVER BRIDGE· PLAZA
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 A.M. TIL 9 P.M.

y

,

or

SUNDAY
1 P.M. TIL 5 P.M.

..

You do·business with the officers of a
···Gallipolis independent ·bank. We're
right here to advise . and serve you .
There's no problem · of . decisions
made
a "home office'~ somewhere 'else.

from

I

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'

,

Denna probe'
DUNDEE, Scotland (AP-) - A
square meter new 'ldn could be
grown from a 2- to 3-rnllllmeter
square of human sldn, says a
. Scottish patbolotlllt researdllni
new ways to treat burn vlctlml.
· .Dr. Mlcbllel Faed of Dundel!
Unlvenlty here Is working on aneW
method araw1n11 ~ 1n cu~t~n
dlsbetl to avoid IP"8fUIIg Jarae -

'

'

·.
When~ depollt.

Jt10U

•

when you borrow. wtwn

for~.

or

•

..

Whether · you deposit or botrow or
use some of out many other banking
services, you,. benefit by dealing with
your h~rnetown, .ho~e-owned bank.

Ill helllthy skin tllaue bun IJulla
vlctfma.I

,.

..-.

Directors and . officers of the Ohio
Valley Bank are folks with ·a
whol~-hearted . interest in the
prosperity and well-being of the area
we serve: They h~ve a real stake in its
future. They know its conditions and
needs intimate)~ It is their home~ ·
A · good portion· ·of our depc)sitors'
fu:n;ds .are invested-in the communities we serve-in sound loans
to the individuals and businesses of
· aur banking area. .

Gallia bookmobile

*

$

300 SECOND AVENUE
. LAFAYffiE MALL
GALLIPOLIS '

Riverby calendar

SPRING PRINTS. 50% polyester/50%
coHon; machine wash. dry; 45" wide.
Reg. $2.29 to $3.99 yd., NOW $2,00/YD.
* PRI.NTED PUCKERS. Mactline wash.
dry;~% polyester/50% coHen; 45" wide .
Reg. $2.99 yd., NOW $2.00/YD.
* SHEERS. Poly/cotton voiles, dimities and
Ienos. Machine wash, dry; 45" wide.
Reg. $2.99 and SJA9 yd., NOW $2.00/YD.
* SCISSORSAVER" . Sharpens and realigns
Fiskars® shears. Reg. $3.25 ea .. NOW $2.00 EACH.

$

.

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

* CHAMBRAY SHIRTINGS. Poly/cotton ;
machine wash and dry; 45" wide.
Reg . S2.79yd .. NOW $1 .00/YD.
* INTERFACING$. Sew-in and iron-on! Polyester; machine
wash, dry; from 18"wide. Reg. 69¢ yd .. NOW 4 YDS. /$1 .00.
* NYLON NET.100% nylon solids; machine
wash. dry; 72" wide. Reg. 69¢ yd .. NOW 2 YDS./$1.00
* THREAD. You can never have enough of this all·
purpose polyester tl)read. NOW 5 SPOOLS/$1.00.

$

with any Est6e Lauder
purchase ot 6.50 or mar..

.

Sale ends Saturday, March 12th.

$119 95

March Is tbeaMualmembershlp
and expectatiOns for 1983 will be
For more Information on becom·
drlvemonthattheFrenchArtCol- . rmd. Membersmayrnake reservaing a member ot the !french Art .
· ony in Galllpo)ls. The Frenqt Art
tlrins through Tuesday, March 22,
Colony or participating In the proColony otters the community tine . bycalllng TheFrenchArtColonyat
grams, caUCampbeU-Eatonat44&amp;art and craft exhibits monthly, tree 44fhl834,
3834\
and open to the public, according to r-~;:;;:~;::-----=~~~;:;;:--::-----:::::==-1
Director Connie Campbell-Eaton.
This year's scheduling of classes
Include CQurses designed for advancement of artistic techniques as
w&lt;!U as courses geared toward persons Interested In developing a
greater understanding and appreciation In vlewtng art, she said. This
year's membership drtve,marks a
new period of extended benefits to
aU members:
- Ten percent ott on aU clasS~!!,
. gift shop Items and French Art Colony products.
- GalllpoUs retaU merchant cou- ·
. pon booklet wtth discounts · on
merchandise .
. - Alll!ntrles are tree to French
Art Colony eXhibit competitions.
- Monthly·newsletter of events
Lafayette MJJ
and activities offered.
GallipoliJ, Ohio
.
- Fine arts library for use of
members only. .
~Elil DAILY 9:30 ln. 8:00
- Invitations to aU receptions,
O.OSED SUNDAYS
eXhibits and annual memberslllp
dinner.
- Discount on annual events
such as Tour of Homes, Antlq4eSemlnar and Oktobertest.
Thl!i year's membership categories are:· Individual $12, family $20,
:rno~, patron $100 and benef~·

· The Alcove

c£\.£8RA1~0 •

The

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

1983

•111*1 more from

Bank.;_.....,.

. . . . . . . . . . ? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
• .Ill \
JIDIC
.,

ai•

,.

•

'

�1().-The

Times-Sentinel

oris

Meigs senior center
l'OME ROY- Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pom eroy, Invites all elderly of the county to take part In
activities at the center. The center
is open Monoay through Friday
from 8:30 a .m . to 4: 30p.m . ·
The schedule of activities for the
week of March 7-llls as follows:
Monday - Physical F itness,
11:30 a.m.; Square Dance, 1·3 p,m .
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a .m.; Chorus Practice . 1-2
p.m .
Wednesday - Physical F itness,
·n :30 a. m.; Ga mes, 1-2 p.m.
Thursday - Ceramic Instruction, 10 a .m .-noon; Physical Fitness. 11 :30 a . m.; Food co-op
die livery. P ick-up before 4:30p.m .
Friday - Physical Fitness, U : 30
a.m.; Bowling, 1-3 p .m .
Coming events - Make plans
now to attend Center on Monday,
March 14 for Blood Pressure Reading. This Is a good way to keep
check on your blood pressure tree
ot charge. Call ahead for your meal
reservation.
Quarterly Birthday P a rty and St.
Patrick's Day Party will be held
Thursday, March 17.
Games tor the day will begin at
10: 30 a.m. 'Following dinner, seniors celebrating their birthdays in
January, February and March wtll
be honored . Music for your entertainment and dancing bY the ' 'Cherokee Nightingales" to follow
btr!hday presentations.
The Senior Nutrition Program
serves.a hot meal at noon each day.
Call 992-2161 to make a reservation
tor a meal no later than 9 a.m. the
day of the reservation.
The following menu Is planned
for the week of March 7-11:
Monday - Salisbury steak/ gravy, mashed potatoes, beets,
biscuits, apricots.
,Tuesday - Creamed baked
chicken, peas and carrots, tossed
salad, rolls, apple crlsp.
Wednesday - Roast beef/gravy,
escalloped potatoes, mixed vegetables, vanilla pudding with vanUia
wafers.
Thursday - Macaroni/cheese, .
stewed tomatoes, peach jello mold,
cherry pie.
Friday - Fish on bun/ tartar
sauce, · French fries ; splnace/v!- •
negar, cole slaw, gingerbread/ whipped topping.
Choice of milk, tea, coffee available dally.

Gallia senior center
GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of March 7-12 at Gallla
Senior Citizens Center, 2~ Jackson
Pike, are as follows:
Monday, March 7 - Chorus, 1-3
p.m.; Ceramics class. 9:30 a .m .noon.
Tuesday, March 8 - S.T.O.P .
class, 10: 30 a.m.; Physical Fitness.
11: 15 a.m .; Diabetes and Foot
Care, 11 a.m.-noon.
W~nesday , March 9 - VInton
Bible Study, Birthday Party, 12: 30
p.m.; Card Games, 1-3 p.m .;
Gatden Club, 1-3 p.m.; American
Literature Class, 1 p.m.; Yoga
Class, 6 p ..
Thursday, March 10 - 'slble
Study, 11 a .m.-noon; Games, 1
p.m.; Blood Pressure Check, 1-3
p.m.
Frlday, Marchll-ArtCiass, 1-3
p .m .; Craft' Mlni-COjiTse. 1-3 p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
wUI serve the following menus:
Monday - Sausage, potatoes,
buttered cabbage, fruit, biscuits,
butter, milk.
Tuesday- Beef-noodle bake, ap•plesauce, tossed salad, tapioca,
roll, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken/ gravy,
mashed potatoes, orange gel. carrots and pineapple, Ice cream,
bread, butter, milk.
Thursday - Seafood patty, scalloped potatoes, coleslaw, rtce pud. ding, bun, butter, milk.
Friday - Chicken noodle casserole, carrots, Waldorf salad, brownie, bread, butter, milk.
,
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.

Meigs bookmobile
POMEROY - Bookmobile
service in Meigs County Is provided
by the Meigs County Public Ll·
brary under contract with the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule lor Monday - Hemlock .Grove (Post Of.
!lee), 2:45-3:15 p.m .; Pageyll)e
(Store), 3: ~: 25 p.m .; Harrisonville (Church ) ,4:~5:05p.m.; New
Lima Rd. (one mile South of Fort
Meigs), 5:~6p: m .• short fUm wUI
be shown 15 minutes after bookmobile arrlves; Rutland (Depot St.),
6:40-8:10 p.m., short fUm will be
ahown 15 minutes after bookmobile
'arrtves.
Wednesday -Chester (Fire Sta·
don), 2: 15-2; 45 p.m.; Keno (North
Side Ot Keno Brtdge), 3-3:30 p.m.;
·Succell Road (Near 39060), 3:454:15 p.m.; LOng Bottom (Post Of.
flee), 4:25-5:10 p.m., short lilm wUI _
be shown 15 minutes after bookJno.
· ile arrives; Reedavllle (Reed's '
ore), 5: ~: 10 p.m.. thor! 111m
11 be shown 15 mlllull!l ilter book, arrlves; Tuppers Plains
·;k's ), 7:10.7:40p.m.; aaum '
, ddi!uJn, ~: 10-8: 40 p.m •

••

'

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
TODAY
MARCH 6
THROUGH
SATURDAY,
MARCH 12

..

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

85 Vint Street .. Galipolis, ~io
. 'We Resene the Riefi\ to

: PhOne-.446-9593

DO
COUPONS

Beat .Waverly 5245 .for third straight district title
I

GAHS girls advance to regionals

THURSDAY, MAR.' 10

Budget
Pleaser
Special _

THURSDAY, liiARCH 10, 1983.

Budget
Pleaser

Special

Special

99

LB.

FRESH SKINNED &amp; DEVEINED

.

LB.

59¢

Budget

LB.

Special

LB.

PORK ROAST

$}39

79

TAVERN
HAM

LB.

SUPERIOR

LB.

DART BACON

$}39

Budget
Pleaser
Special
GOLD£N

LB.
4 LB.
BAG'

$129

Budget
Pleaser
$pecial

1

USDA CHOICE

29

SIRLOIN
STEAk

LB.

FRESH PORK

SHOULDER STEAK

Special

EXTRA LEAN

49

GROUND
CHUCK

LB.

SUPERIOR

GRADE A
MIXED

FRYER
PARTS

SUIERIOR

CHUNK BOLOGNA

FRANKIES

LB.

Budget
Pleaser

Pleaser

Special

Special

Budget

U. 5. No. 1 Red or Golden

MAINE
POTATOES

DEL APPLES

10 LB.
BAG

TENDER

3-LB.
BAG

NCHY CARROTS

Budget ,
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

CHARM IN

TOILET
TISSUE

HOUSE

4 ROLL
PAK

INSTANT
COFFEE

4 LB.
BAG
WHITNEY

PINK SALMON

~==-=
· :!!
Budget

Budget
Pleaser

Special -

RC COLA;
DECAF. RC
RC 100
16 Oz.
Dl ET RITE sBottles
CORN CHIPS

~oz.

$}49

JUMBO
EGGS

D

, GALLON
PlASTIC

MINUTE MAID OtiJ.ED

ORANGE JUICE
KIDNEY BEANS

HALF GALLON

.

.

''·

300Z. ~

BORDEN

·CREAM ORA

~~ oz.

TOPPING COMB. OR

$

SAUSAGE
PIZZA 20 oz.

I

640Z.

$}39

.......
JOANOiAk.

SUI\IIN MORN
GRADE A

10 oz.

JENO'S EXTRA

ROYAL CREST

MILK

$
...

Budget , •
Pleaser
Special

Please.r

· Special

FRITO'S

151fz OZ.

$179

•' BISOJITS
~2 .0Z, CAN

CR~M PIE .
BudRd ~Speelal
5I 'D'S
COUNTRY ClOCK

TEXAS STYLE

MARGARINE
'·

SPREAD
.
.

~ ·$

Brenda Reed led the losers with 15 points.
Gallipolis led 10-8 after one period. The ~gers held the upper
hand most of the second period. Evans' two field goals just before the
halftlme interrtllssion gave GAllS a 2:1-21 advantage.
The Blue Angels scored the ftrs.t eight points of the third period
to take a 33-211ead. Waverly, after il timeout, outscored GAHS 10.2
over the next four minutes to reduce the count to 35-31. Renee
Halley's long jumper and a tlpln bY Evans gave GAHS a 39-31lead
going into the final period.
Evans hit two buckets and Jill.Miller one to widen the gap to 14
points, 45-31, with 6: 30 left to play. It was Gallla' s biggest lead of the
game.

140Z.

79'

~ fleaser Special

' BANQuET

FRIED
CHICKEN

79

The Tigers, behind Reed, Chris Patrick and Judy Trimble,
didn't give up. WHS pulled wtthin five, 5045, with 37 seconds left .
Halley's two tree throws with 34 seconds left iced the GAHS
vk1ory.
.
Jodi Adams came off the bench to do a line job defensively for
the Galllans.
Both teams had 19 turnovers. GAHS had only seven the second
half.
By quarters:
Galllpolis .................... , .. ..... ................. .. .... .......10 15 14 13-52
Waverly ................ .. .......... .... ... .. ..... ...... .. ........ .. 8 13 10 14-45,

··Buckeyes looking for big
J?len for 1983-84 campaign ·
GEORGE STRODE

..

Machock Is aware of the necessity of a big man,
saying, "If you want to be a dominant team ill the
country, you have to have a legitimate 6-10 or 6-11
player. But we still will have two youngsters (6-9
freshmen Keith Wesson and Alan Kortokrax) who
will be adequate In the post. They've both aggressive ·
bY nature. If you're 6-9, you had better be a power

AP Sports Writer
COLl.}MBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio State's basketball
recruiting effort this spring wUI be directed toward
big men and No. 1 on the Buckeyes' shopping list ill
Ohio Is 6-foot-9 Kannard Johnson of Cincinnati.
The reason is obvious: Ohio Slate wtll have no tall,
dominating center In the mold of Herb WU!Iams or center."
Besides Johnson, Machock mentions Dennis
Granville Waiters, a pair of6-llleaperswhoplayed In
Hopson
of Toledo Bowsher as an In-state player the
the pivot for the last six seasons.
want thts winter. "He'sG-4¥., and is going to
Buckeyes
"We're looking for the biggest and best athletes we
grow
to6-6.
He's a player," the Ohio State coach said.
can find," said Chuck Machock, an assistant Ohio
Mac
hock
believes Johnson, who averaged 32polnts
State coach who coordinates the school's recruiting.
and
21
rebounds
as a high school senior, can step right
"We don't need any more guards."
Ohio State has five basketallscholarshlps available In help the Buckeyes as a freshman.
"He's as good as an athlete as we've seen this year.
wtth the departures of four seniors, Larry Huggins,
He's
very quick. He can shoot the 15-looters well. He
Mitch Haas, Derick Polk and Walters, plus the spot
can
handle the ball on the perimeter and noi
created when freshman M11t1 Lucas quit the team In
embarrass
himself. He's Is just not a good big kid who
m'!dseason.
Is
dominating
because of his, size either," the
Coach Eldon Miller, however, says he wiU spend
recruiter
said.
only three of the five grants for two reasons. And one
The Buckeyes, of course, wanted Columbus
of those already has been committed to 6-1 Akron
Whitehall's
7-2 senior center Martin Nessley, who
St.Vincent-St.Mary guard Curtis Wilson, who signed
signed a national letter of intent last fall to play at
· with the Bucke¥es last fall.
"We've got 13 players now and I'd be happy with 12. Duke.
The tallest player Ohio State Is seeking is 6-9¥.,
I don't like too many players. With too many, they
Steve
Wiegel of Parkersburg, Class AAA All-West
don't get enough work in practice. They have to stand
as a junior. An excellent shooter at long
Virginia
on the sidelines," Miller said.
_
·range,
he'saveragfng24
points and 11 rebounds In his
A bumper junior crop in Ohio high school
last
prep
season.
basketball Is the other reason for banking the other
Also on the Buckeyes' shopping list are 6-8 Troy
two scholarships until next winter. "I feel next year
will be a banner one for Ohio talent. So why take Bowers of Ro6elle, N.J .. , 6-7 Clance McGee of
youngsters now that would only be backup help?" Chicago, 6-7 Mark Beavers . of Pittsburgh and 6-7
Mark Clime of Williamson, W.Va.
Machock asked:
In addition, Miller wants to take a look at 6-6 Erlc
If Ohio State spends three ·grants this spring, the
Kumerow,
who wlll cometo Ohio State on a football
Buckeyes would have fjve scholarships available
grant
because
of his quarterbacking ability.
after the 1983-84 season. One of those juniors Ohio
has
been
averaging~ or more points as a
Kumerow
State Is following for next winter Is 6-11 Grady Mateen
fOiward in basketball for Oak Park, Ill.
,of Akron Central-Rower.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Splins Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Fourteenth-ranked Ohio State sank
19 of ~ free throws while Putdue

•

LB.

.

DISTRICT CHAMPS AGAIN - GaUia Academy
Wgh School's Blue Angels captured their third
straight Class AA District basketball championship
will) a 52-45 victory over Waverly Saturday

managed only 13 of25at ,t he foul line
Saturday and It helped the Buckeyes beat the Boilermakers 7fH&gt;5
and remain In contention for the Big
Ten basketball title.

MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Kevin
Georgetown i:Wmps
Willis scored 14 of his~ points In the
.second hall as Michigan State broke
LANDOVER. Md. (AP) -Sevenopen a close game and defeated loot center Patrick Ewing scored 21
Wisconsin 91-651n a Big Ten college points and grabbed 15 rebounds
basketball game Saturday Saturday to lead 16th-ranked Georafternoon.
getown past fourth- ranked VillanMichigan State built a 34-24 lead ova 87-71-and deny the Wildcats the
with 3:35 left 1n the first half, but . regular season title In the Big East
Wisconsin scored the final six points Conference.
of the period to trail 34-30 at
halftime.

. Wildcats lose
BATON ROUGE . La . (AP ) . Howard Carter and Leonard Mitchell combined for 43 points
Saturday in leading Louisiana State
University to a 74-60 victory over
seventh-ranked Kentucky lhatgave
LSU the runner-up spot in the final
Southeastern Conference regular
. season standings.

Jackson may join another league

SEOAL may admit Marietta
during special meet Ap~il 6
. .

Box score:
PURDUE (1111)- Bullock 2l-6 7,
Elfert21-2 5,Cross62-514,HaiJ4(}{)
8, Clawson 2 2-2 7, Gadls ~ 0, ·
Palomblzlo 1 1-3 3, Reid 5 4-6 17,
Rowlnskl2 0-14. Totals 24 13-21185.
OIDO !nATE ("M) - Campbell6
2-314, Concbeck40.08, Walters30-0
6, Tayklr 4 ~ 14, Huggins 60.0 14,
Stokes 4 ~918, Jones 0-0 Haas
0-0 0, W1!S8011 0 2-2 2, Smith 0 0-0 0,
KDnokrax 0 0-00, Polk 0(}{)0. To&amp;all

rr . . 'll.

individual trophies are are Kris Cook, Jill Miller
NW!cy Evans, Shelly Dodson, Theresa Todd Wid tij:
team statisticians. (Photo by Keith Wilson).

Michigan, Georgetown wm

It was a big turnaround for the
Buckeyes who made only 15 of Tl
foul shots twodaysearller and lost to
lllliJols.
Eldon Miller, Ohio Stat.e 's coach,
was asked after Saturday's victory
If . his players spent more time
practicing their foul shooting
Frlday.
"No, we shot less," he answered.
"It's a mental thing, It's not a
repetition of fundannentals. ·'
Gene Keady, Purdue's coach,
accepted his team's tree throw
shoot!rig phllosophically.
"How· are ·you golrig . to change
free throw shooting? You can either
shoot them or you can't. Weshot300
of them In practice last week," he
sal(!.
The victory llfted Ohio State's
league record to 11-6 wtth a
showdown Saturday at Indiana In
the final regular season games for
both teams. The Hoosiers played ·
visiting Dlinols ' Saturday night,
needing a victocy for a share of the
title.
Ohio State took advantage of
Purdue's sco~ing problems In the
second half. TheBuckeyesscored12
straight points, ted by the shooting of
Larry Huggins for a 56-441ead. The
Boilermakers went almost six
minutes w!thout scoring In that
-stretch. ·
.
·
Keady understood why. · "We
were trying to get the ball inside to
Russell Ctoss. We kept saying
during tlmeouts, 'inside, Inside,
Inside.' But we're nota good passing
team," he said.
Miller, who addressed a news
conference less than one minute .
. after the lllinols 'loss, was beamlng .
after avenging an earlier 64-57 loss
at Purdue.
·

o o,

afternooiL Among those accepting the team and

•

Ohio State defeats Purdue

U.S. NO.1

GREEN
CABBAGE

TilE PLAINS - Gallla Academy HJih School's Blue Angels
al!vanced to the Class AA Regional 'lliu~ent lor the third
consecutive year followlrig a hard-fought 52-45 victory over Waverly
In the lower bracket of the district llnals here Saturday afternoon.
Coach Jackie Knight's quintet: now 19-4 overall, will battle New
Lexington, 20-3, In a 7 p.m. contest Wednesday at Lancaster. The
Lady Panthers romped over Portsmouth West, 61-30, in Saturday's
upper bracket contest at Atllens High SchooL
.
Coach Mary Gecowets' Waverly Tigers hewed out with a 1!H!
seru&gt;ort recotd.
Nancy Evans paced Gallipolis' v!ctocy Saturday with 25 points
and 19 rebounds. Renee Halley added 13 markers.

1

Pleaser

FRESH

RIPE
BANANAS

.

Budget

'

SUPERIQR
BONB.ESS

NO DOUBLE COUPONS
ON WEEKLY
ADVERTISED
SPECIALS

.

BOSTON BUTT

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Pfeaser

.

Budget
Pleaser

USDA CHOICE

T-BONE
STEAK

Hometown
Supermarket

when you purche .. thupecified item. One coupon per- Item. No expired coupono,.ccepted.
Double Redemption. Offer doet ndt Iippy tQ
"Free Merchendl.. " coupona or coupon• over
49C in fece voue. No c..h refundo when double
coupon• v1lue exceeda price of item. Ciprett•
eQd certain other item• ere excluded by lew. To
in1ure product to ell our customers. we erelim,iting ou.r 'Double Coupon' offer to one jar of
in1Unt caffee end one can of ground coffee pe.r
ahopplng family. Double coupon offer 900d

.

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
AND MARK V

BEEF LIVER

•

· •Redeem your manufacturer~ maney-uve coupon• et Johnoon'o end receive double the velue

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

~futes- ientintl Secti.

o

llalftiR:e Oblo St. . . Purdlle . .

Enrollment Big Factor
JACKSON - So\ltheastern Ohio Athletic League
In a new league that includes Marietta , Jackson
officials have called a special meeting April 6, at
Jackson, to consider admitting Marietta to the enrollment-wise, would stand to be the fifth lar gest
school In a six-team league. Athens , Logan and
conference.
During last Wednesday's regular spring session at Marietta would be clearly larger. Gallipolis is just
Jackson, conference officials considered Marietta's barely larger. Only Ironton, which ironically has fared
application for membership, according to an article In exceptionally well, would be smaller than JHS.
Bevins said the administration has discussed the
Friday's Jaclfson Journal-Herald.
. Under the heading, "SEOAL Door Turns," the Marietta Issue with the local coaches and others
Involved or interested in athletics. He indicated thai
Jackson paper reported:
Marietta High School is the latest passenger on the the consensus was against admitting Marietta.
The JHS principal acknowledged, however, the
revolving door better known as the Sou theastern Ohio
SEOAL
's need to admit at least one new member:
Athletic League.
Some
schools
alcady are wrestiing with the scheduling
And Jackson High School has the ticket perhaps to
problems brought on by having only a nve-te a:m
take the next ride.
Lately, the revolving door has been leading teams league.
But the plot Involves much more than just Marietta.
out of the SEOAL. Wellston departro after the last
At least two other schools have indicated an inte rest
school year and both Waverly and Meigs will be
In joining the league. Representatives of Warren
leaving after this one.
Local.
(Washington County) and Portsmouth high
The remaining five members of the 57-year-old
schools
attended November's league meeting to seek
athletic confederation now are considering the
·information
about entering the SEOAL. And both
-application of a would-be sixth member.
At Wednesday's regular meeting of the SEOAL, schools are smaller than Marietta.
However, neither have followed up on their initial
olflctals voted on bringing Marietta Into the fold. The
·
.
Washington County school !sa member of the Central inquires.
At least three other league schools, Including
Ohio League and badly wants In a league with more
stabil!ty than one that has only three schools. Jackson,. say they have been invited to join other
leagues.
(Lancaster and Newark are the other members.)
Jackson officials told SEOAL member s Wednesday
Rescind Motion
But just a5 Marietta seemed tp be on Its way in, the evening that JHS has been extended an invita tion to
SEOAL representatives rescinded a motion to accept join the Scioto County-based Southern Ohio
MHS after procedural questions were raised. The C,Onference.
The SOC has divisions for its large and sm a ll
question of application ' , "· Je brought up again at a
special league meetil.o. ·~ - ~ 6, also to be conducted In schools. Division II, the large-school grcup, Includes
Wheelersburg, Minford, Portsmouth West, Scioio
Jackson.
Stll, It seems that ultimate approval for Marietta to Northwest and Lucasville Valley . Wa verly will begin
as a new member next school year.
join the league Is assured.
· Except for Valley, all these schools are ClassAA and ·
League representatives from Athens, Logan and
Ironton high schoolS Wednesday night voted for smaller than Jackson. And if travel is considered to be
Marietta . . Jackson cast the 'lone vote against the a major factor, the longest road trlpfor Jacl;sonwoulcl'
be the40miles to West HighSchool.
prospective member.
.
But Jackson Is not the only SEOAL me mber with a n
· Gallipolis abstained, repOrtedly because its
alternative.
Athens and Logan have been invited to
representative was unaware Marietta's application
~me
members
of a league that would reported ly
would formally be considered at the meeting.
Include
Lancaster,
Cambridge, Warren Local
A~rding to the SEOAL constitution, a threefourths affirmatiVe vote Is necessary to approve anew · Newark .and perhaps Marietta, if it does not join ' th~
member. Therefore,lftheyeasand naysstayasthey SEOAL.
GtWS Left Out?
were Wednesday, It would take a no vote from
U the SEOAL folds, Gallipolis may be tell out'
Gallipolis to keep Marietta out. Reliable SO\Irces say
altogether. The Ohio Valley Conference, which
the Ga!Ua Countlans wlll approve Mar!etta'sentry.
Jackson High School Principal Robert Bevins says ~tudes AA teams Chesapeake, Fairland, Rock Hill
Jackson Is opposed to Marietta's admission for South Point, Coal Grove and Class A Symmes Valley
and Oak Hill, or the SOC would be a logical choice, but
several reasons.
JHS has reservations about the size of Marietta -It the question Is, "Will those two leagues accept GAHS 11
Is a AAA ilchool with a significantly lar!lerenrollment Galllpolls applies for admission .?"
(;alllpolls already plays · several OVC, SOC and
tbanJacksaJ- and there Is thematteroftbed!stance
larger Class AAA teams (Chillicothe, Portsmouth
~ teams and their fans would have to travel when
Marietta, Lancaster) in non-league outings. The Btu~
playing at Marietta (nearly IMl miles).
Ten years ago, Jackson was one of the iwo largest Devils have done well against the AA schools, but art:'
ICIJoo!s In the SEOAL. But consolidations and the well below the .500 mark In major sports (football and
recent moves of Wellston, Melp and Waverly, has basketball) agalnsttheAAAschoolsduringthepastl5
years.
chanaed the picture conslderablv.

�6, 1983

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.
'

Defience
record
U8US DEFIANCE OOLIE.GB
. MEN'S VAII8ll'Y

BABKETBAIL SCORD
(!left•- lleoord)
Slerla Heights 83, Defiance 82
Dellan&lt;e 95, Hlllallale 92
Dellance 92, Heldelllerg Ill
Dellance II), Wllt]11ngton 61

Taylor 61. oecance 53

Deftance 86, Earlham 64
Bowllng Green 1!8, Defiance 69

•

:.:~

. BRETT ~GATE

Detlailce 73, Manchester 64
lleftance 95, Otterbein 83
Dellance 76, Tlllin 71
Heidelberg I!I.Dellance 77
Del1ance 62, Denison !i6
Wittenberg 63, Dellancf 9l
De!lan&lt;e 13, indiana Tech 64
Defiance 72, Bluffton 70
Flndlay 77, Oetlance 82
Detlance 78, Hanover 71
Deflance 67, Anderson 65
Central State 72, Defiance 64
oena~e 96, Wilmington 84
Defiance 62, Taylor 57, ot
Defiance 77, Earlham 64
Dettance 69, Manchester 59
Defiance '71, BlUffton 64
Defiance-01, Flnd1ay 53
Trt·State 68, Defiance ril
Defiance 94, Anderson 82
DefiancE 96, Goshen 74
Hanover 75, Defiance 64

JEIWME FLOYD

Redinen, Jackets

.~lash

in District
·2- .2 ·tilt at Rio
!

'

•

'

.

rlted offensive outburst that placed
four men In double figures .
Ace guard Jerry Mowery paced

D e ience
1

the attack with 18 points, former
SotilhernstarKentWolfeaddedl7,
.Rick Penrod 14 and Sbaw 15 for the

rOSter

'RIO

RESUME MEMORIAL F1ELD RENOVATION
-Members of the buildings and trades class a&amp; Buck-eye HWs Career Center are busy renovating the girls'
-softball dugouts on the Little. League . dlamoad at
:Memorial Fleld. Last fall, class members buBt new
•
~
•

dugouts for tile boys' vlll'!lily dlamood. Spring basebaD drills wiD bepl at OAKS Mooday according to
Deao ~. Blue De\11 coadt. Girls' soflbaD drills
wUJ bello alter tbe Blue Angels' basketball team
completes Its 1982-83 campalp.

•

LETU/
PUT·YOU

•

•••

more

..•

AM/ FM, rear defroster. tmted glass. V
roof, lu:r.ury wheel covers. and much

Sticker Price

ANNUALPERCENTACE RAll •

•
;•

•

.•
t

••

con; rol. tilt wh eel. power door locks .

SIMILAR DEALS ON
1983 T-BIRDS
&amp; CROWN VICTORIA

auto. trans. w/overdnve plus much

_1

'---------~·

more.

Sticle; Price

SU,228

PAT HILL FORD, Inc .

• S. THIRD AYE.
•

\ -..,

~--

!PH. 992-2196

•

25 Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

. Member FDIC
Spring Valley

MIDDLEPORT. OH .

•

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
SALE CONTINUES
·-· . .

TOP QUALITY* LOW PRICES

.

SALE ENDS NOON
MARCH 12, 1983

'

Name
Pos. Ht Yr.
R. Schomaeker ................ ......... G 5-9 9
J. Frank .. : ..................... ........... G 6-0 12

G-~ ~~

J

J . Short ....................... ,.......... GF 6- 1 9

o. Schlmmoeller .. .................... :. F 6-4 11

. B. Renollet. .............. ---....... . .. F 6-3 9

HOILAND; Mich. (AP) -Hope
College met Wittenberg University
last night in lhe finals of the NCAA
Division III Great Lakes basketball
regional. Tim Casey scored a last
minute basket to advance Wltten·
berg in Friday's battle.
Capital played John Carroll in the

* LARGE QUANTITIES

•

weal bowling
·• """Y
'

w-.,.
Mbed Learue
Febi-uary 23, 11163

~
No-.6 ... ...... ...... ..... .... .... ....................... 44

Teim

All types of commercial,
residential and agricultural
pole
buildings.
.

Qilality materials and workmanship at competitive prices.
Owned and operated in South Central Ohio.

SUPREME

COUPE

1981 OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88 ROYALE.

1981 FORD THUNDERBIRD·

1981 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE COUPE
Local one owner, low miles!
EXTRA SHARP!

~ r ::=:=:::=:=:::=:=:::=:=:::=:=:::=:=:::=:=========:======= ===::======================= =============:=======:============:r.~~

· •2 Steel Belts •Whitewall
SIZE
P\55/80013
Pl75nOR13
Pl75/80013
Pl85/800!3
P175n 5RI4
P185n5RI4
Pl95n 5RI4
P205n5RI4
Pl95n5Rl5
P205n5R15
P215n5R15

REPI.ACES· .
· 155·13
Pl55/ lllR13
BR78x13
CR78xl3
BR7Sx14
CR78x14
ER78x14
FR78xl4
ER78xl5
FR78x15
GR78x15

PRICE
$46.00
$54.00
$54.00
$54.00
,SSlOO
$58.00
$64.00
$68.00
$10.00
$10.00

FU.
$1.52
$1.62
$1.74
$1.91
$1B5
$1.88
$2.16
$2.30
$221
$2.42
$72.00 $2.57

F.E.T.
$1.51
$1B8
$1.99
$2.14
$229.
$2.42
$2.59
.$225
$2.39
$2.51
$2.71

•2 Fiberglass belts
•Free 30,000 mile limited warranty
SIZE
REPLACES PRICE F.E. T.
Pl55/8DR13
155.13 $39.00 $1.51
PI75/80R I3
BR78xl3 $44.00 · $1.74
PI85/80RI3
(]!78xl3 $44.00 $1.81
Pl95n5R!4
ER78x14 $48.00 $2.08
P205/75R14
FR78x14 $52.00 $223
P215/75R14
GR78xl4 $54.00 $2.40
P225n5RJ4
HR78x14 $51.00 $2.63
P205n5il!5
. FR78x15 $52.00 $2.39
P215n5RI5
GR78x15 $54.00 $2.54
HR78x15 $51U00 ~

\

•Steel belted •20.000 mila potential
. SIZE
REPLI4:ES PIIC£
. PI55/BORI3
155-13 $19.00
Pl65/80013
AR78xl3 $22.00
Pl85n5RI3
BR78xl3 $24.00
Pl85/800 13
CR78x 13 $26.00
Pl95n5Rl4
ER78xl4 .$21.00 ·
P205nSRI4
FR78xl4 S2loo
P205n5Rl5
FR78xl5 $21.00
· 'P2Isn5(us
GRJaxis uo.oo ·
P22SnSRis'
HR7Sxls
~~ ...... IIMrtN Prlcls .. Pius$1.10F.U.IndRICI[IIII11Je CIMtl($4.00~ Ow ......... CIIIYihl ..... W1111111r a · .

sn.oo

Fe~Jnoaey 11, 11183

;(

'hom
f

T~'s Ca1T)'

.....

Out .................................. 44

~~~
~:.:::::::••:::•:::: :•••• : •:·~
Eftles Club ............... .......................... 30

Snith-Nelson Motors ................ ............. 25

F~ ~~~d·~-&amp;~-~~d--R~~·c-:
Bach~r 556; LaJTy

... 519. Carolyn

· 5.1!! Pat
~h

1980 BUICK REGAL
2 dr., slate gny, blue velour interior. Air. tilt.
cruise, AM!FM/Stereo. Spl~ seat

1978 OLDSMOBILE OJTLASS
SUPREME BROUGHAM

',.'.· Eorty Wedne8day
'
Mbed Leogw

.

.

game - Fetty Tree Service 7f17 •

,.

RADIAL .RETREADS
ALL SEASON WHITEWALL

2 .dr., V-6, air. tilt, AM llldio, silver w/ maroon
vinYl. rallye wheels, ww tires.

2 dr., one silver. one maroon. Cloth, air, ti~.
super savings.....

•

!feam series - Eage Club 197'9.
~am

1980 GIEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

2--1979 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME

sertes - RAy Roach !M, Carolyn
Bob Couch 542, Pat Carwn 474.
lll&amp;b a:ame- Charlie VanMeter :m, Deb21ll: Clyde Sayre 196, Pat Carson

"*'Sayre

2 dr. coupe. Pa.r seat, air, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM/8 track, Only 31,000 miles. Doeskin
w/beige cloth. Landau roof.

Local one owner. Features Town Landau opton, tilt, cruise, AM-FM-tape, vinyl roof, power
windows, new premium radial tires, and only 28,000 miles.

1!1111

179.'

OJTLASS
BROUGHAM

Air, ti~. cruise. AM/FM/Stereo. super stock
wheels. Much more!! Black on black w/maroon
cloth.

s.6bner 41f&gt;;

All SEASON RADIAL

Crusaders ahead 52-51 with 4; 14

15140 Middleforl&lt; Rd.
Laurelville, Ohio 43135
614-332-1?745

Snith·NelsOn Motors ...... ....................... 29
f'etly 's TrEe Service .............................. 25

•2 Steel Bars
•Whitewall with scuff bar.
SIZE
. REPLACES PRICE
Pl55/811!13 (Bikj
155-13 $42.00
Pl85/80!13
CR78d3 $48.00
Pl85n5Rl4
CR7Bx14 $52.00
Pl95n5Rl4
.ER7Bx14 $56.00
P205n5R14
FR7Bx14 ·s58.oo
P215n5RI4
GR7Bxl4 $62.00
1!225n5Rl4
HR7Bx14 $66.00
Pl95n5RIS
-ER78x15 $58.00
P205n5R15
· FR78xl5 $58.00
P215n5R15
GR78x15 $60.00
P225n5R15
HR7Bxl5 $64.00
P23SI75R15
LR75xl5

both endsofaone-and·one to put the

IRON HORSE BUILDERS

=;:.st': ~.••••.•.: : : : :: :•• • • :••:?:

FIESTA
ALL SEASON RADIAL

t.eS~::O~~~:~.:.?~i';~tMorr~i:'~;

Wittenberg, while J ay FerguSQn
add~ 10 for the Tigers, now 23-5.
·Morrison and Joe Glassco bolh
had 14 points for Capital, which feU
to 21·7.
Jeff Heerdt helped lead the HOPE'
assault with 23 and Dave Beckman
added 12 for the Flying Dutchmen,
who imprqyed lheir record to 19-3.

~-~~~~er : : : : : :: : : :: -~ ti ~ ::;:~~~~~~~J~:~!~;:e~~:~~r;:'~; re~~~J,rtr had 13 points to pace
:): ~~~~~~~. :::::::':::::::::: : ::::::~ · t: ~
Cleveland 81-72 Friday night to win r;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;.
Its finals berth.

Toay's Carry Out .... .. ....... .... ... .............. 44

GOODYEAR
ARRIVA ALL SEASON

Casey scored with 1; l8remalning
to give Wittenberg a 57-56 victory
over Capital Friday night and send
the Tigers into the finals.
ed th

• Outs~ingFrosh - ~kDll- -----~--------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

101) 240 pounds.
~
, Ul-140 - Sophomore Ed Griffin
li!Spounds.
, l4D-150 - Junior Mark Bausell
275 pounds.
• :i50-160. - Sophomore Brian .
Shepler m pounds.
, l&amp;0-170- Sophomore Paul Close
2!li pounds .
' i~oo- Sohomore Greg Clarke
255 pounds .
• ID190 - Sophomore Greg Bush
255 pounds.
·
·190-200 - Sophomore Bernie
Nithm 240 pounds.
)X) - Junior Todd Sheets 290
poimds.
:fhe Junior High weight program
will begin March 1. All Junior High
aoilete$ who have Jlllrtlclpated in a
spcirt are Invited to attend. The
we)ght program Is under the dlrec·
t16n of the football staff of GaUia
Aoiulemy.

(TAl &amp; TITLE NOT INCLUDED)

" ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE "

(Varslly)

0

lng off undefeated Wa Ish in the last
v
of their three meetings In Canton. r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;il
Jerome Floyd. 6-2 junior guard, I

Yellow Jackets will enter Monday 's contest with a sparkling 20-9
a given amount of weight over lhelr season record.
·lle~d . The bench press Is one of the
F1oyd has 35 steals on the year, 33
measuring devices tbat college and
assists and 162 rebounds.
p;Os scouts use to determine lhe toBrett Wingate, 6-8 senior center,
tal strength of an athlete which has scored 3:JJ points for Defiance.
wquld he a factor in determining He has 292 rebounds.
thPir capability.
Doug Schlmmoeller, 1&gt;4 junior
· The total program Is designed as forward , lias taUied 339 points. He
8, ~preventive medicine" factor for · has 174 rebounds .
the athlete to compete in hig h
Ron Schomaeker, 5-9 freshman
~bool athletics without fear of se- guard. has scored 250 points and
rt6us injury.
leads t)le Jackets In assists wllh 173.
: putstandlng efforts In each reBrent Renollet,.6-3freshmancens~tlvewelghtclassforthemonth ter, 'bas 232 points on the year for
&lt;1 Feb~ were:
Defiance.

SEE PAT HILL OR MAY MILLER: We Want Your Business

,.•
•••

~lnln
gahll
me. Earinller RJo tdeknfeatedk
, ..... , w e com g c 1ose o oc ·

"

' A "MAX" winner Is an athlete In

t

••

w!il meet the winner of the Walsh·

w;tten berg T. iuers oust captta
• l' 57•.56

co~~~g~
}. ~~-~ : : ::

Priddy, Alex Varian, Johnny Barlt&amp;, Jell Henry,
Cbarlle Meadows; second row, Chris JeweD, .Jeff
Greer, E. T. VanMatre, BWy ZWipiUl, Bobby Kincaid
and Kevin Sparks; back row, Qlacheo Terry Keary
and BW Zlll!paa.

'
a glven
weight class bench pressing

YOUR PICK AT SIO, 100.00
PLUS FREE RUST PROOFING -

NOW AJ
SA"E
,y

1

:;~;~n-~t~=~-ln their ~::;e~~a:~~s~re~ f;~!:.i~

Then go auto shopping! You 'II have a much better picture of
what to look for. Meanwhile, we'll be 'p rocessing your application ·
' put you behind the wheel of that
and doing our best to ht!lp
· n e w or ~!most new car or vehicle,, pronto!

'V -6. arr cond.. AM/ f M stereo. speed

~~~n

Curry a nd Ron Fumier
added six, John Jeffers four, and
Rl k Fritz
Findl dro ped to
ay
P
c
one.
15-14.
. Rio~ ~op~g t~ get a 1~t?f public
suppo or on ay n g s game
Important contest against De!lance, The wlruter of that contest

!JALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
Academy Blue Devils announced

$11,303

1983 FORD LTD SEDAN

•

tn THE

You '11 get prompt facts and figures on an auto loan from our
people, including an estimate of payments on a loan of that will
be tailored to your budget. If everything looks good to you, you
can fill out an application while you're here .

1983 FORD LTD BROUGHAM

•••

Max winners
artnounced

Before you shop for ·t hat new (or ·new I!) you) car you want,
or pickup, van or 4-wheel drive vehicle, check our auto loan
·
officers for some good advice.

SAVINGS LIKE THIS:
' V-6, auto trans. w/ overdnve. atr cond.,

.

DRIVER'l/E.AT J

THE BEST OF '83 FROM PAT HILL FORD
•

GRANDE --' The Rio
Grande Redmen basketball team,
coming off a convincing 81-73 triumph over Flndlay here Wednesd~y evening, will begin Dlstrtct 22
T®rDament Play here Monday evelllng at 7:)Jl against Defiance according to Redman Coach John
!,.awhom.
Wednesday night; Rio Grande
ended regular season play with an
ouistandlng 25-10 record and a spl-

CAPTURE FIRST PLACE HONORS-Tile Mason Kulcb receatly clabned ftrst place In lbe Bend
Area Grade Scbool BasketluiD Tournament beld at
Wabama IUgb Scbool. Team membeni Include, Drst
row left to right, Eric Petry, Sbawn Petry, J . R.

Dugan

Canon 5!JI.

game ..;.._ Russ Carson 217, Carolyn

~hner

212'; Charlie Vai\Meter 211, Pat Car·
Sdlll&amp;1.
'Team serles - Eagles Oub 1969.
ga- - Eagles Clu~ 611).

:'f-n

1982 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Local one owner, only 10,000 miles. Tilt, cruise, power windows, wire. wheel covers,
showroom clean.

Air, tilt, cruise, AMIFM. Save Big SS$$ .. ~

THESE FINE USED AUTOMOBILES ATTHE MOST COMPETITIVE PRICES IN THE VALLEY,
ONLY AT.. ...

·:
•

;

· TUESDAY 'l'IIIPUCATII
FebnllrJ' 11.1183
8t S I'

=
~~

;.

Croos" SOIIl

SUpr Run Asllland
MtiPinn
· ~m

:II
:II

l&gt;
~

~·&lt;L•G
~ ~n
•
:111
bod. Gomo - ,.,._ Hu.,...l87, C.·
Bodlller 183, Carolyn BOchner 181.
------, - Carolyn BocbDer 112. Fnn·
I*
11111, Wlll&lt;lt &amp;\
-IIIJII Ollmo.:. JBL Conatructloa 4ell.

- JBL ~

Toom Hllli -

1314.

'

~

.·

·•

SIMMONS

OLDS.~AD.-CHEVY, INC.
PH. 992-6614

:

1

'

�.Page-C4-The Sunday Times-Seentinel

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

March 6, 1983

Cleveland pitchers may not
be .the _best, but they are big

WAmNG FOR RAIN TO LIFf - Ueveland
Indians' manager Mike Ferraro blows a bubble of
gum as he and team walt for rabt lo slacken at Tuc-

TUCSON, Arlz. (APJ -On the
average, they stimd &amp;feeta% Inches
taU and weigh lm-5 poulKis.
Basketball players? No, they're
the 18 pitchers at the Cleveland
Indlans' spring training camp.
"It's the biggest staff I've ever
been on," said Rick Sutcliffe, who Is
the tallest at 6 feet 71nches.
Reliever Dan Sjltuner Is amazed.
"Man, I feel ltke a midget out
there," he said "MeandJerryReed
are the smallest guys and hell, I'm
6-1."
.
Most of the other players, coaches
and managers In camp say they
can't remember agroupofpltchers
thls big.
"What have they been eating?"
asked catcher Chris Banda. "Boy,
I'll tell you, we've got an IntimidatIng staff and they're ail hard
tlll'owers:"
Alter Sutcliffe, rookies Jay BaUer
and Wayne Johnson staitd 6 feet 6
inches tall, RichDoylels6-foot-5and
Ramon Romero and veteran Len
Barker both are 6-foot4.
Pitchers Bert Blyleven and Bud
Anderson, both considered goodsized at 6-foot-3, almost seem short
when standing an;10ng their taller
teammates.
Pitching Coach Don McMahon,
who is 6-foot-2 himself, said the
trend now is toward greater size.
"A lot of staffs nowad;iys are
getting bigger and bigger," McMa. hen said. "When I was with the
Giants last year, we had some big

son. At left Is coach Ed Napoleon and center Is
catcher Jbn &amp;sian. (AP ~rpholo).

~ USFL has awakened 'sleeping giant'
By HOWARD ULMAN
A.P Sports Writer
BCSTON tAP ) - If the United
: States Football League isn't at war
: yet, the young upstart certainly
· dropped two bombs on the National
: Football League by signing Her: Schel Walker and Dan Ross.
: . And the es tablished league has
· noticed .
' "As Yamamoto said in World
: War!!: 'I thinkwe've awakenedthe
: sleeping giant, ' " says Boston
. Breakers' part-owner Randy Vaf: aha . "He was one of the Japanese
· admirals after they bombed Pearl
· Harbor."
The historical analogy may end
: there. Vataha is not at all sure that
· the NFL will try to blast apart the
: USFL with its own version of a
: Hiroshima attack.
"It' s hard to figure out how the
: NFL is trulygoingtoreact, " Vataha
: said F'riday. "The question in\me. dlately becomes, 'Do they need to
: bid !·against the USFL for top
. players 1?' ·flow many guys really
: have gone?
· "Obviously, the Boston Breakers
aren't going to have 25 Dan Rosses
·on the team. Will the NFL rat ings or
attendance go down next year
because of the signings we have? If
'not, it's probablynotagoodbusiness
issue
war."plans to move
Theroget
NFLina
already
its draft up from late April-to about
Feb. 1 next year, clo~~r to the
USFL' s January draft.
But Vataha thinks the NFL will
take time to develop a " l.ong-term
course.of action" to deal with USFL
signings of players to contracts that
become effective once their NFL
pacts expire.
Ross, the 26-year-old tight end
who lias one season left on his
contract with the Cincinnati Bengals of the NFL, signed this week a
reported three-year. $1.5 million
contract , starting in 19!W, with
Boston.
Ross caught 71 passes in the 1981
season, when he played in the Super
Bowl, a nd was In the Pro Bowl after
the 1982 season. He Is the first NFL
player to sign for a future year with
the new league but may not be the
last.
" I'm not working with any today
and I'm going to go to theiBreakers' I game in Tampa over
the weekend," Boston J'res !dent
Bob Caporale said Friday at a news
conference at which Ross was
introduce&lt;). " Bul starting Monday
we're going to keep a t it. Sure it's a
possibility."

Coming on the heels of New
Jersey 's signing _of running back

_AI0MERI" AN HOMES

KINGSBURY HOMES

more

F'ridaf'll "-WWt!
, d11M MA ToumaJJJe~Wi
I'

Barberton '-1, MassWon Perry. 36
. Cle\'e. Gkonvl1!e 66. CIM. ~aurno111 li8
Da_
y . Stcbbln." :11, Vandalia 'l8
E. Ck&gt;~.oeiQI1d Shaw 58. Clc.&gt;Yc. East f)5
Valley Forlll' ~ . B ~ksvtl)(' 46
WesUOkr 54, Lorain Kin ~ 5.1
Oat~~~. AA Toonwnents
Brookfteld 48, Struthers 4.1

Canfoo ?t.l..oodonvUll' ~7

E. Knox !6, Newark Cat h. 57. 20T
KU1l&lt;11d 36, BriStolll
'

Boys scores

&lt;

•

Olalo ll!rh &amp;hoel Boy.. Baskethidl
FriUy'l Relds
l l - 1\A.A Tournarnt'QUi

Athens 9!, Chllllcotht 57
CamlrldR€:'63, Carrolllon 62

Canton 11rnken al. Fll"ltl :rr
Ctn. Boron 59, Cln, Walr~.~l H!lb ~
On. St. Xavier 64. Cin. Tall M
Clev£&gt;. Colllll~,~o'Old 62. Wick 111ft• .'\:\
, Col. Llnibi-McKJnlry 68, Col. Northland
&lt;1

Col. Mifflin 7.\, WorthlnKIOil !'il
Cop!~~. Norton 51
E . 01'11t'land Shaw RR Solon Th

This y-, theN are more than 100 changes In the
tiiK laws and forma. But It HltR Block, one thing
hasn't changed ... fair prices! Just ask. and wa'U
give you a free estimate of the cost for prel*ing
your retum. You gat a complete Interview . Plus we
doublachack your ratum

li2. Marlon Han:tlnR ~
Fremont Ross ~ - Malabar 51

F1ndlay

Lan&lt;"asler

OPEN WEEKDAYS

Wlni('I"S'-'illc fit Zan.-svlll£&gt; !H
OINK AA Toul'ftiUT\f'BlJI

Akren ~t. V.St . M 7.\, I...Dudort\'llle 37
&amp;ll£'\w 89, F.dlson n
Beltil'y Rl. Col . St. Olark&gt;s ~1
Campbl'll Memorial 50, Ravmna SE ..0
Oiamplon Jlo!, Cortlapd l.ak(l'll\p,o.• :w
Cirl. Marlmionl 91. N. Colk&gt;J.,rt• HJIII\'l
Cin. MrNichola•; Dl. C\('f'tnonl :--.rr, 4fi
C1l'ar Fork ti4, UPJ)E'r Sandus k~'t' &lt;Ill
Col. Ea...r 76, i...r:lj{an Elm sa
~k'siOI!'o' n 61 , Norwavn&lt;&gt; ~~- 01'

PHONE 992-3795

Ohio
Pt. Pleasant

Pomeroy,

675-1632
AVAILABlE

Elgin ~:l. Rlve&gt;r Vol. :ri

27 SYCAMORE STREET

Falrtlcld Unlon ~- Col. [.l{&gt;Sal('!i
Girard 57, WaiTt'fl Kffltlf'dv -11
Gl"((('fllkotd 14. Hillsboro 44 .
Lima Cal h. fll. Coktwclll"!" 41&gt;

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Open 9 A.lf.-6 P.lf . Weekdays, 9-S 5.11.

APPOINTIIENTS AVAILABLE

Loca l n

Warren Hardln~ 14, ¥0Un,i. Chant,' 57

9:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00A.M. TO 5:00P.M.
618 E. Main Street
41-9 Main St.

:w. wa!T('I\

Llma ?R. Elida 63
Ml:&gt;dina 11.1. Parma 70
Nor mandy ."D. 0('\'l'. Rhodes ..a
Sanctusk;)· 64. Mansflt&gt;ld 63. at"
Sylvania Southview (i.li. Pcn:vsbur}i: 6.1
Tol. ~- sht&gt;r 64, To~ Ro~ til
To!. Macumlrt" Ill, To!. Crntrat &amp;a . OT
Tot St. Fmncis 82, Ta l. Woodward ~

for accuracy.

Phone 446-0303

Thla year'a number one rea1011 to go to HH.IIocl!.

~7

Lorairl Ca th. Dl. Elyrla W. 4.q
Napolf'On f!l, Waynl' l'rll('(' 47·
Nolv.-alk 64 , Huron .'ill
Dak HarOOr 2.1, Kan....as l..akofa Ill
Olms tPd F"all! ~- (.1co..o(-, Thinlly 5-l . .OT
Ottawa..(l lafl!brf '/0. BaTh 8"1
Fort CUntoo lit F'O!i iCI"III !'tl

-

·The new tax laws. II&amp;R BLOCit...-.
·
...

Fortmvuth n . Ch£'sap€'ak~ 57
Shl'rwood Fall"\.'k&gt;w fiR. Br;.· ~:~ n ~(l
Sparfu Hl_l!hland fC, Olmtang\' 40
SprinR. Norlhf&gt;a!:l ('f'TI -18, Bcti&lt;"IOntainf'

'

..

"'

Sprinfl:. \lorlhv.'&lt;'Sif'rn

Slr1tdi

RM.sford 6.1

Ql,

:il.

Tlpp Cl~ · ~!!

Swanhn !;)1. F..astwco:l ~
'Nhlt£&gt;hall 62. Ulica ft2
,Willard 61 , Moh.aw k :W
Voo ~. Ra}'{'n til Pt't('t~but~

Sprtn~.

41

O~H~ATou~
Artlllg~on

66, Llbl:'rty Jfll ton f•l

Avt'rsvlllt:• ~ - Pf'ftls\"llk&gt; -l'l , OT

Biuffton 79. Way~fl('lci-Co!ihf'fl -17
Buck&lt;'Yf' Crntral 19, Monr()('\'UIC' -H
On. Summll IJl. &amp; lavla 4'7
Oc'-\'£&gt;. Hawken 00, t.:.rdRtmOn! Sl
CUmm-Ma.~k&lt; ~

Macoo E:a$t(lrn SJ
:C. Russia :wl. O'J'
Oi&lt;t-r"s\1\1£' Pt-ny 00, Hardin N. -t!l
Dl&lt;tptDs ~ - John ~ 1 . COn\' ~ Cm;t\'lf.'\1,•
C&lt;WI~oo

Pick YOur

~

E. camon

!ll, Wayncdnk' !VI

Fa~·t&gt;ttl' ~.

qt.

MonljX'Ik'f' "'R

F~· ]d( ~\';, Tf i · VIII ~r 47
La k~ldl·

"

Kalldol 70, Cont lnmtal ~
lakC'Iand !'1.1, GUl' r~· Calh. ~ I
Lu tb&gt;ran W. 56, C'l ••al"\•l1w ~

,.Mans.

SL

F\'l&lt;'t" &amp;1, Collins W.

fl.(':"('!'\"('

qt.

Ma plf'loo 72. lnri'Pt"'ck&gt;ll('(' i1
Markln Local ~- New KnoxvlUr ~7
Mlllt'f' City 67, P:mcbra -GIIba&lt;l !ill

Von Burrn

~-

C01 rC')' ~~

1

, O.r. ti.1
Hora('(' Mann, N. V .. Iii. f'll"\'l" , Unlvi't"•

·

s!Jy 67

1
~

Luthe-ran F . ~ 1 . F:I.Yria (\x'n Door -II
M&lt;l ranatha rhr. h7, Col. Hl'rlr £U!.C' ~H

Frilky'~ Colk-,;C'

DMkrtball

""',.

Regular
$15.49

·Valvoline
10W40 Oil

s-~,...,.

T117 Reg. 2.49

~ - 1.09 Lfmlt 12

L:.' ifl
Morf'hf'&lt;•d S t. ~. Mlddlr' Tron . li'l
MUITaY St . lfi, E . KmfiK'kY 6.1

Choose Sears premium
quality interior latex for
washable one&lt;oat coverage that resists spotting. In
23 colorfast colors. Soac
and water clean-up.

SOl/'111\\F.ST
A.rk.·Ll111£' Rork 7-1. Han11n-Simmon." ~7

--

Sii.m Houston St . ~- SW 1\o.'l.as S t. til

Alg. tUI5

Tmt"'('!!t&lt;;«' Tf'&lt;'h 76, Akron Iii
MIDWE&lt;T
.
N . Dakota S1 . lfi, South Dakotu H-I,

m·

FAR "'fliT
Sanra Clwa ?.!, Sa n

Natlonwlse
Batteries

5.88

Slandanl

Tie Rod Ends

Re;. 13.85

From4.50

12.88
Y.nATruet

_..

Idler Arms

From 19.75

Rlg.21.86

- 1 , MHUCIIAIIDCO.

PIAlA '

PH. 44&amp;-2902

99~
Real a tara

AJC or Champion
Spark Plugs

For,.._~ Rlg. e-4.'-1.18

e,.rydoy low Prlco
Orlg. Equipment
lgniHons
Dolco*&gt;poNo4otorcrott

..._,

Tu..... IUit.-HC,I,

~.............

......... 3.71
• . ,. . . . . .. '-'" .c ....... 3.111 .
DllllllulllrC.,.Ior

Stalrn ls l..-Jd ~ . N ..l . Tf'('h R!
Rodlf'Sf('f' 00, Albun.~· St. 711
Ham UIM 102. O!rcw(\jlO S1. 9-1
Stt&gt;phm F . Au.&lt;illn !'19. Anwk) ~t. .iFt. OT
Fordham fi4i. St. P&lt;'f('r '!i5:!

lona fi.'l. Army ~

Hartwick f\1 , Union. N.Y. 49

Potsdam Rt. i6, Ithaca 74 , 3 OT
.

n.. Cupl tal ~
Hopi' fll Jom Carroll7l

Wll1&lt;'11~

Wldmw

'

When things go topsy-turvy we'll help you
make them right with top quality prod·
.ucts, friendly service, and probleinsolylng advice.

-CAROLINA LUMBER .
SUPPLY COMPANY

312 SIXth Strett

67~·1160

. Point Pleasant

store Hours:

Mon ..fri. 8 a.m.·S

., Sat. 8 a.m.-12

*40~=~

•4·2 =

P11110-13 ·

0 •••••••

~

Lc&gt;M~nl"--o4'rn 7ti. R~t&lt;;~ ti2

0 • • • • ,. • • •

Wm . PuK"rson 'M, Upsala ~lit
Roanok&lt;' £6. N.C. Wesleyan 6.1
Sonoma St. !ft. BL-;hOp 6.'i
9;mMaus St. M, AuR~J stanu , Ill. 7:t
NW, Mln~a 75, Cmt. Blblt&gt; 66

We're the Problem Solvers

Mark GP Radials

P11510-13 •....•.•...• 47.00
P1ti7&amp;-U • .•• •••.... ; 51.00
1'20571-14 .• ''.' •••••• 53.00
P2117&amp;-14. : .......... 11.00
P21175-11 • •••.• ' ••••. 11.00
LIOx14 ••••••••••••• , • 84.00 1'2217&amp;-11 ............ n.oo
CH0x1l .............. 17.00
LIOX11 .......... ; .... 11.00 PUS71-15 .•.•.• ••• •.. IUO
F.E.T. 1. 79-4.07

tit, Wm . Prnn H

Mllliklll fi6. &amp;loll. Wis. -1!1
(lark fa, Ma!&gt;..&lt;i,-Boston 71
IJrldRP.l.•atf'l'. Mar..,., :'16. MusldnRUm
St. ArldrrN'5 00 ~ C'rntre Si

Superchargers
o\70113
E70xU............... 47.00
F70aU.•.•.•. • •.•••.• 41.00
Q70J14 ••••••
51.00
Q70JI11 .......... ; ... 13.00
MOx13 ........ . ...... 41.00
uoxu............. .. 51.00
110114 •••
011.00

rlfl. Grovr CitY ~

Scranton T.l, Moravian ~~
Wlo~ .·Whl!£'\l •atPr

AND
SilVER BIIIIGE

For most domestic

84~

Ho..,oard U. ti'i. S. Cilrolln;J S t. !li
N. Ca!U!na 1\&amp;T fll. Md .· F: . ShQn• 7-1
Waynt"Sbur~ ffi, Pin-Brndfm·d til, OT

IsearsI

Reg . .3.44 Umit 2

Everyday Low Price

24.88,... ..

~tt-l

TOURNAMENTS
C'atawbll !U. Pmlbrokr ·" ' . ';!'1
J~· C ity S1. R'J, J ohn . I a .~ · Iii

For one,coat results. all
Sears one-coat paints must
be applied as dltected.

Satisfaclion Guaranteecl.or Your Morley 8acf&lt;

•

Ace
Air Filters

p·ART

soum

Alabama !-\1. 79, Southr&gt;r·n

.•

1.77 Drain Pan

29.884omonlll Unlversa
41.88somonlll Joints
47.88 eo month Reg. 6.95

Amt•rt-:an U. ~l-1 . Hol,;tra :\'I
Bloom'ibui'J;: S! . m. Clar.,n S1 tl:l
Bnw.·n MI. Harvard 70
~. ,.,_. St. !1!1. F'.dln ooro S1. '\1
Llnrolll U. iR Phlla Pharm~ tJl
Mar1S11l , W aji:riC't" til
Pmn ttl'. f'olumbta ~
Ptin«'!on ji,l, Com•ll ~I
JUJJdr l slWid Colt . i'li, ('oJh\ 7;), OT
Trinity 7~. BoY.·dotn tW
YaiC' R.'l . Da rt mouth ~

J

WE CAN DO
YOUR
PAINTING-CALL FOR 'F~EE ESTIM~TES
'
. '

Reg . 2 .44 Umit 2

~~;~ Domestic

College scores

SEARS
HAS ALL YOUR
PAINTING
NEEDS.
~Our Custom
Color Display.
520 Colors
Available.

1.5

and import cars.

w .v nkrd 7.1. N('\\' Rlc-,;:r-1 ~
'r't&gt;llow Spr1nfl:S ffi. (C'(.IIU"''IIIC' 4ti

Fashion Semi Gloss

.for pick-up within a few days

TB6C Reg. 2.49

Ace
Oil Filters

~ - Wf.'llli:o!ln ~'t. C lt.;onburJ! 41

Reeular
$14.49

Most merchandise available

Wrenches

.. .

S. Cmtrnl ffi. A.Vl.IW'Id CI"''St ~'i!'w ~ r
Stryk£&gt;r ~. Hll!lop ~
Trimlj(• 'N. Unlolo ~

1

o5ears Beot 1W' angular Slllh --··""'
bNIIh.

1.77

Reg. 99• Umit 12

0110\ilk&gt; 4M. Lrncolm: k'\4• ~
Ro&amp;r&lt;-rans ~- lncUnn VaJIC'y S. ~
St . Hmr;.· ~ . Mlro&gt;!('f" .Jti

Flat or Ceiling white

I

Valvoline
10W30 Oil

Halgat£&gt; 6.1. Ottuwa Hil ls iO
HopN'f'l! LOUdon !f+, Du ntNr:\'

-,
•

Fashion Latex

Set indud•:
•Se. . Boot ~ 'Gold Coat" roller cover
(114691
•Deluxe "Slip-On" roM• frame.
•ExtTB-deep tin-plated point 1riY·
•14'· pointed .,t.,oion P!'le.
•

We reserve the right to limit quantities.

a .. A TOIII"Mmuats

E.

~IIII'S..'lL'IDn

Y2 PRICE ... ONLY $5.99

Prlc" effective 3/08/83 thru 3/12183

River View 57, jlr1aysvlll£&gt; 48

'CI('V{'. &amp; p!lo:t !i\1, C!f&gt;\'t'. f;rjswn ld ~ ~
f"al lh ( ('111f'l' ffi, Huniii1R'JOn IW. Va

Set 11119 now only $9.99 or
with purcha$1! of 2 or more
gallons of any paint.. ...

Tanvier of France, who suffered a
pulled thigh muscle in the first set;
top-seeded Martina Navra t Uova
overpowered Bonnie Gadusek 6-1,
6-3, a nd second-seeded Chris Evert
Lloyd defeated Virginia Ruzlci of
fulmanla 7-6, 6-1.

W. Hoi~ 59, Trt-Voriey Sf

Springtime Paint Sale!

Our $1 1 .99 Sean; Best Roller

In other ma tches, Andrea Jaeger
won by default over Catherine

'

AUSUniOwn Fitc h :1!, Niles M cKinley JJ

HALF PRICE

PAINTERS SPECIAL!

Bunge of West Germany 64, 641n a
quarterfinal match of the $165,001
Carta Blanca Women' s Fer Invitational tennis tournament.

a,.

CHATHAM

.

round of the Samaritan Turqoulse
LPGA o;,ssic. Cindy Lincoln and
VIcki Fet u-on are tied for second
with 70s.
. TENN5
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) BUlle Jean King upset -Bettina

Oh6o JUrh Schoel Olrh 8.-kdbd
1be Alleoda~etl l"re88s

r--..~ ·~~.--~.;~i~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~

He said other USFL owners
should investigate when contracts
of NFL players expire.
. "lthink if they' redoing their job,
they should have ~n doing that
already," Caporale said.
"I would be dumbfounded if they
didn't," Vataha said. "It doesn't .
mean they'regoingtosignanybody,
but If they don't look at it, that w6uld
be crazy."
Caporale said the Tampa Bay
Bandits who reportedly were
lnteres~ il1 Bengals' wide receiver
Crls Collinsworth, is the only other
USFL team he knows about that has
shown ·an Interest .in such future
contracts.
"Even If this does open the
fioodgatf"' (for USFL "futures"
slgnlngs), I don't think there's
anything wrong with it." said Ross,
a native of nearby Everett who
played at Northeastern Untvel'§lty
In llo5ton. "If a team wants to sign a
player for a year after his contract
there's nothing Illegal about II. It's
good busineSs." '

•

s.. - - rs

Honda-Inverrary Golf Classic.
Payne Stewart, the first-round
leader, is second with a 137 total.
PHOENIX, Arlz. (AP) - Anne
Marie Palll, fired a 5-under-par 68
on a drenched course to take the
lead In the rain-abbreviated first

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-CS

iris scores

When informed of the average

Walker, a college underclassman, rr========:::=:=::==~===:::=~:::=~=====~;;:;;=;;:;;:::;~
would the signing of an active NFL
player brew more trouble for the
'-"'
USFL•
"What the hell are they doing for
us?" Caporale said of the NFL.
He agreed that early USFL
statements indicated it would not
compete as vigorously for college
stars and NFL players as it has. But,
he added, the NFL decided to move
its draft closer to the USFL's draft.
"So they're going head to head
with us next year. Some of them
(NFL officials 1are sorry they didn't
do it this year," Caporale said. "So
I'm not going to sit around and walt
for that to happen If I can make
amove to posit ion m yself so I now go
into our draft In a much better
situation."
Ross said he wouldn't have signed
with any other USFL team.
"We wanted to come back home.
WATCH FOR OUR OP£N HOUSE IN MARCH
That was the main reason" for
SEE IT AT ROUTE 50 WEST AT AMPAK PLAZA
signing with Boston, · said the
four-year NFL veteran. "That. and
it was a chance, financially, to help
CAlL 992-7034 or 592-1418 FOR INFO
myself. It 's a business now."
He and his wife both grew up in
Everett and were "always" homes-

Friday's Sports In Briel
. By The, Assoolated Press
GOLF
LAUDERinLL, Fla. (AP )
Veteran Ray Floyd shot a S-underpar 67 tq take a three-stroke ·lead ·
after the second round ofthe$4Xl,lXXl

Sports
briefs.•.

'

pkJyers have a different f0Cl.l£.lllan
others In eondltlonlng.
"They need to roneentrate
on flexibility and stretchllig,"
Warfield said ·" So(ar, they'vebeelt
doing very well.''

guys.''

lck in Cincinnati, he said.

the

size of his Indians' staff, McMahon
said, "'That's somelhliig.'The average size in the NBA (National
Basketball Association) lswhat,&amp;-5,
6-6'h?"
Trainer Jim Warl!eldsal~ the big

'

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

Mardi 6, 1983

••

BOXING
·· NEW YORK (AP)- Undisputed
middleweight champion Marvelous
MarvlnHaglerwasnamedBoxetof
~ Month for February by the
~lng Writer~ Association of
America. Hagler successtuUy detended his title against Tony Slbson
Feb. 11 by siDpplng him In the slllth ·
round of their boot In Worcester,

MaSs.

· ·.)·

STORE HOURS:

SUNDAY 10 AM.~TO 5 P.M.
liON. THRU FRI. 8:30 TO 8 P.II.
SATURDAY B:stTO 6

'

·209 Upper River Rd.

446-3807

Ma sterCard

�. March

W. ,Va.

Ohio-Point

'

N~tlonal League West Division title

In their spring game with
laSt season.
·.
· Montreal, Torre planned to start -•
Torre, who once had to lost 25
Torre's other concern Is his
Phil Nlekro, 17-4 last season, and ·
pounds to continue his own playing pitching. He won the dlv!son tast
also use Falcone, Mahler and
career, has six of his players on a season without a left-handed
youngster Craig McMurtry.
'
diet '- third baseman Bob !'~Orner,
pitcher. Now, he has two _ Pete
The Expos, play!ng·for the flrit
pitch~ Rick Mahler, Rick Camp
Falcol!e and Terry Forster _ who
time under new Manager Bill ·
and Tommy Boggs, and flrst
were acqulred as free agents.
Vlrdon, planned to start Steve · •
basemenChrlsChamblissandBob ~- "Theoneway_wehavetoimprove · Rogers, runnerup to Fernando' •'
Watson.
· Is oilr pitching," says Torre, who
Valenzuela In last year'sCyYoung •
"Ifeel! can relate to thelr weight
can rely on the hlgh-powered bats of
voting with a 19-8 record, 8lld also
problems ~ause I had ·the same
men like Homer, Chambliss and
u.Se Ray Bu)'J'Is. '.
problem," says Torre. "l}n1ngthe DaleMurphy, lastyear's!'I.'LMVP.
The Yank~ and Orioles were , 1
courseofheYeaz',carrytni?\heextra
"Hopefully, Forster will stay
playing tllelr first ~heduled game&amp; •• •
weight takes Itstoll on you, so I just healthy for us and help us out 111 the
under new managers, although, Ill.
spelled .out III SO!Jle guys that I felt
bullpen, and Falcone has a chance
the Ca,&lt;le of the Yankees, thei!c
~ey were In a position to help
tobeastarter."
sk!pperls.nostranger.

themselves by iosingsomewe!ght."

Puleo; despite-knee surgery, thinks he'll start ':·_-:

VYING FOR Si\ME POSmON - Pirates' Lee Lacy, rlpt,
watches as teammate Lee Mazzllll selects a bat during a spring trainIng practice In Bradenton, F1a. Both players are trying for a starting
outfield position. (AP Laserphoto).

Milner: 'I like center field'

·'

TAMPA, Fla. (API - Now that
Eddie Milner has pinned down the
center field job for the Cincihna ti
Reds, the former Ohio state high
school 132-pound wrestling chainpion will have a regular place to
show off his speed and arm.
"In has been deemed that l am
g9ing to play center field, and l'm
working now to get adjusted to it,"
Milner said. 'Til have no problem
With the longer throw or getting a
good jump on the ball.
"Center field is my favorite
position. I played It throughout my
minor league career.' '
Milner hit .268 and scored 61 runs
last year, his rookie season, and was ·
a bright spot on a team that lost a
club-record lOlgarnes. Heplayed23
games in_centerfield,36inrightfield
and n in left field.
Plans ID move him to center field
permanently fell awry when Cesar
Cedeno refused to make a peaceful
position switch in mid-season. But
Cedeno has agreed to play right field
this year.
"There is a lot more to playing
center feld than catching flies. It
entails leadership qualities, dlrec-

tion and dedication," Milner said
during a break at Redsland, the
Reds spring training camp.
'·'I work a Jot on the release of my
throws. You have togettotheballas
quickly as possible, come up with it,
and hit thecut-Dffman so hecan Jet it
through and get the man at the plate
or cut it offifwe have a runner hung
up between bases."
Last year, Milner cut down seven
runners trying to SCXlre.
"I work on it," he said. "You
never stand still when you are
throwing. Practice doesn't make
pertect, because nobody's perfect.
Practice makes routine."
Although Milner was juggled
among the outfield positions last
year, he usually was the lead-off
hitter in the batting order. Tliis year,
that spot will go to Gary Redus, the
rookie in left field.
"I'm going to bat second, so my
role will change," Milner said. "The
man in front of me, Gary Redus, is a
very fast character, so I si)O.uld be
getting some good pitches to hit. I'm
a contact hitter. I won't have any
problems."
·

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Pitcher
Char lie Puleo believes he will be
able to start the .season with the
Cincinnati Reds despite surgery on
his right lq!ee this week.
"I don't think It will take me that
long to get ready once I start
throwil\g;" said Puleo, who came to
C!nc!nnatifroin the New YorkMeis
in the off-season trade for pitcher
Tom Seaver. "The question Is when
I can start."
The Reds said Puleo wQUld
undergo rehabilitation for the knee
for a$despite getting tired from the
strenous spring-training exercise
programs.
"I'm ,going to hit 25 this year."
sa id se&lt;;ond baseman Ron Oster,
who hit 16 home runs last year, then

spent the off-season w:ork!ng In a
weight-lifting program.
Oester complained • of fatigue
Frtday from ManagerRussN!xon's
grueling workouts. He threatened to
get a burr halrcut.
"U they're going to run thiS place
llke a boot camp, you might as well
' look like it." he said.
.
Nixon said the players areh't'the
only ones making sacrifices. He has
· giyen up drinking beer.
"I haven'thad one since I've been
down hei-e and I don't think l wlll. I
feel so much better this way. I don't
mis&amp; it at all," said Nixon, whose
weight was down to 178 pounds from
Its usual190.
",MY brother wlll be all over me,"
he l;lughed. His twin brother, Roy, Is
a beer distributor In Cincinnati.

.'

FISHERMAN'S W.HARF
BAIT AND TACKLE
Nice Selection of Live B!lit:
Ni&amp;flt Crawlers .
Bass Minnows
llul Worms ·
Crappie Shiners
Wax Worms
'Arkansas Shiners
'Mud Eels
'Sprina ·Lizards

TACKLE
Ambusador, Shimino
DiaWI, Shakespere
Blcley, Bomber, Finwick

.

.

;
:
;
·
:
;
.
•
CAMERA SALE!

'Seasonal Bait- not avaitab• at all times.
4 mi. N. Qf Holwii.C .. old Rt: 160 at Evei'Jretn

~.====
---

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

.

..
'

PPHS drops Ripley
for I Oth cage victory
POINT PLEASANT - Coach starts . Shawn 1bomashad25polnts
Lennie Barnett's Pl. Pleasant Big for the winners.
Blacks flnlshed strong here Frtday
Tuesday, PPHS will begin sec·
night to defeat visiting Ripley, 59- tiona! tom11ament play at Parkers52, in a Pioneer Conference contest. burg against the Parkersburg Big
The victory left PPHS with a lO- Reds. Tipoff time Is 7: :1&gt; p.m.
ll season mark. Ripley dropped to
SPECIAL $299.00
Vars!ty box:
'.' ,'
8-12.
Includes $22.50 case. $29.95 Strobe. $9.95 Sky Filer and 1 Roll of Film.
RIPLI!Y (Ill) - S. Casto 4-0-a; Rose~
Pi. Pleasant led 13-12, 29-2~ and Chancy 2-0-4; MuWno 7-0-1i; D. Casto 0:1-2;
SALE ENDS MARot 12th, 1983
S+20;' Peicy 2-0-4.-- ~
'.
39-38 at the quarter marks. The Big -Cunningham
ft.
WE
ALSO
HAVE
CANNON
SUPER
SURE
SHOT
'
'
Blacks outscored Ripley 2fi-141n the
POINT PLEASANT (SI)-Gibooo11+28;
.
·.
AND
AE-1
PROGRAMMER
Jones
1·2-4;
Simpkins
6-3-11;
Nibert
2+10;
final canm.
Hammack~ Smith ;ww;; Ullnbert !1611;
Todd Gibson's 28 points paced Pt. Rutllerlord IHI1l. 0·1Htl.
SCorebyqPleasant's attack. Todd SI,mpk!ns
Ripley ................ ... .. .... .. ..... 12 12 4 14-52
added 11 and Shawn Nibert 10.
Point Pleasant. ...................13 16 10 »-59
Scott Cunnlngbam led Ripley's
" !!G!!!A~I~I'PC~OUS~~·!!!OH~~·~
attack with 20 points. Brian Mulilns _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _lJI!!i4!!2i!SECON!!!!!!!!D!!i!A!JV!!E!!.!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
added 14.
{"
Pi. Pleasant won the reserve
game, 68-58 for Its sixth wtn In 10

..

TAWNEY STUDIO

NOBODY PUTS ADEAL TOGETHER LIKE YOOR .

;r

.,
s

'i;:&lt;·&lt;r&lt;~

'
•

1982 MERCURY LN-7

...

15 Jack Roush Motor Car, Inc.

CASH DEPENDING ON MODEL, '1000 ON .
IMPERIAL, ON NEW '83 AND REMAINING
'82 CARS. ·
Once again Chrysler comes through with help for new
car buyers. Now , 11 .9% financing on all of our cars_. No
exceptions Get the car you want at the linancing you can
afiord . Or take the cash Jrom Chrysler. to spend or apply
to your down payment.

9. INSPECTION OF ALL LIGHTS
10. TuNE -UP ENG.INE (IF NEEDED)
11. CAECK ALL ELECTRICAL COMPONENTS
FOR PROPER WORKING COND .
,
12. ALL FILTERS CHANGED (OIL. FUEL , AIR,
PCV VAL VEl ·
13 . ALL TIRES CHECKED. PROPERLY
BALANCED AND INFLATED
14•. VEHICLES PROFESSIONALLY CLEANf=D
AND WAXED
15. STA'(E INSPECTIONlF REQUIRED

.'

,

'

.

.

.. '
'

.

c

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

A.P.R.

You could save even more down the road w~h Chrysler's
Protection Plan·for five years or 50.000 miles. whichever
comes first~ Chrysler ptot~cts your new car investment ·
. long after rnost otMr car warranttes have run out.

eo

tFinanclng Is ahllable through participating dealers afld landers for
·
quallllod buyers . DEALER CONTRIBUTION MAY Aff£CT CUSTOMER .
~RICE . •Protection Plar~ls a limited warranty (ln engine and power
train, and outer body r UsHhrou~ . A deductible may be required .
See dealer fQr d~1 i l s .

LOCAL OHIO &amp; W. VA. BANK FINANCING .ON All QUALIFIED VEHICLES.
*With Approved Credit
*On lot Financing Available

Jet. of Rt. 2 I 35

MOTOR CAR, INC.

·675-5045

Hendeison,

.

' '-

81 • 82 Models- 12.9% to 13.5%
79 Models - 14.5%

ROUS~

~

...
.' .
•

.. .
' .

.

YDU must order by February 28 or take delivery by Merch 31.

SEE YOUR PARTICIPATING CHRY~LER·PLYMOUTH DEALER FOR PROGRAM DETAILS.

w. Va.

CHRYSLER

CARROLL NORRIS, INC.
Gallipolis, Ohio· .

' "

.

.

&lt;4.' }-.- ,_. •';'&lt;..""'t t';JUc..

.
FREE CAP11VE -Cleveland dvallers' World
B. Free ill under heavy guard In Salt Lake City from

with nine seconds remaining and
later added two free throws as the
Bullets overcame a 19-po!nt deficit.
Los Angeles was led by Norm
Nixon with 26 points. Kareem
Ahdul-Jabbar =red 21, but missed
his flrst nine shots In the final period.
Jeff Ruland led the Bullets with 26
points and Rick Mahorrt had 25.
Hawks n~. Rockets 87
In Atlanta, Tom McMillen,
Rickey Brown and Keith Edmonson
came off the bench to lead the
Hawks to thelr sixth straight
victory. Atlanta reeled o!f 12
straight- points In the last three
minutes of the flrst half to take a
60-46lead and wentona32-17tear In
the fourth quarter .McMillen scored
19 points, Brown 16 and Edmonson
14.
Bucks 108, Mavericks 102
.At Dallas, Sidney Moncrief
scored 31 points, Including four free
throws In the last 1:08, to pace ·

Utah Jazz defenders John Drew, left, and Jerry

Eaves, center. lbe Jazz woo the NBA coolest 118-113.
(AP Laserpholo).

points from rookie Rod Higglns.AIbert King paced New Jersey with
3l.Chicago turned a 12-po!nt deficit
into a five-point advantage with a
30-13 spurt in theftnalsevenmlnutes
of the third quarter. Theus scored a
dozen points and Higgins added_lO
during the blitz.
Kings 1.20, Pacers 103
At Kansas City, Mo., Larry Drew
scored 22 points and fueled a
balanced attack to power· Kansas
City. The Kings had five othe(
players In double figures In !tanding
Indiana Its eighth straight defeat.
Suns 109, Warriors 102
At Phoenix, Larry Nance scored
10 of his game-high 29 points In the
thlrd period as the Suns sent Golden
State to its sixth ·straight Joss. With
the store tied 56-56, Phoenix reeled
off 16 straight points, with Nance
accounting for six of them.Golden
State scored the flrst llpointsofthe
fourth period to cut the deficit to four

with 9:57 remaining. But Nance's
six points and eight by Walt Davis
padded Phoenix's lead.
Spurs 107, COppers 99
At San Diego, George Gervln
SCXlred 24 points and Gene Banks
and Artis Gilmore added 19 apiece
as San Antonio won for the eighth
time in Its last 11 games.The
Clippers were led by rookie Terry
Cummings' 24 points.
Nuggets 142, Blazers 138
At Portland, Ore., Dan Issei saf!k
four free throws In the last 36 ·
seconds to cap a Denver rally and
give the Nuggets thelr sixth straight
victory. Denver traDed i14-104late
In the third quarter, but caught up at
126-all wtth 4: 38 remaining on two
free throws by Mike Evans. Alex
English led the Nuggets w!h 35
points and doled out 10 assists.Kik!
Vandeweghe added 29 points, while
Issei flnlshed with 25.Calvln Nattled
Portland with 33.

A GREAT UTTLE ECONOMY

AT A GREAT PRiCE!

1979 FORD MUSTANG - Red, 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed, bucket seats.
AM/FM/Cassette/Stereo, factory air cond., powersteering and brakes,
radial tires. body side moldings.
ON~Y

$3 4 QQ .

HOW ABOUT SOME LUXURY!
1979 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE- Burgundy, 4 door,V-8, air cond., ti~
wheel, crUise control, rear w;ndow defog, AM!FM/Stereo cloth interior, white sidewall radial tires, custom sport wheels. '

A REAL BEAUTY!

$5495

t982 CAMAAO Z-28 ...................... ... .. .... ......... .................................... '10,,..5

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

Can you afford
retirement?

White. V-8. automatic, air, cruise, ti~ intermittfnl wiper.;, AM/FM/Cas.sene/Ster"'. SHARI' CAR.
1982 04EVY C-10 OJSTOM DElUXE ... .' ......... ............................... ; ........... •7500

Blue and Siver. V-8, automatic, m rad io. dual tanks, rad~l tires. power ~eering and brake~ rear •.
stEp bumper.•

t911 FAIRMONT RJTUAA ........ ..... ........................................... ............ .... '4,..5

Blue, 4 door. 4 cyl., automatic. air cond . cruise. white •dewall radol or" txJwer steering and
brakes. AM radio On~ 28.741 mil"
'

A Modern Woodmen
retirement plan
can help .

t 910 FORO L70 .............................................. .. ....... ...... .......................... '4995

Two tone Ill~ and y~low. 302 V-8. air cond., cruise contr&gt;. PM/FM!Stereo. remote mrrcn.
radial tires. wire wheel covers. C~tlt Interior.

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA

196Q GMC C-ll SIERRA ClASliC 4X4 .......................................................... ~9\&gt;l
~adio, ti~ wl'eel, ""' tir"'

Grey and •lwr, V-8. aul!lmatic, lockout hu~ AM

Frpternal Life Insurance
HOME OFFI CE • ROCK ISLAND . ILLINOIS

t97910RO l't50 OJSTOM 4X4 ............................... ................................ '5995

Red

Royce Iuper Buyl
40 Channel Digital
AM B••• with RP Oaln

T1
78
!J7
100
100

Baternar. Fanns ........ ....... ............. llt
Electric Motor Service ........ .......... .. 95
VUJago Pizza .............. ................... 92
Pt. Pleasant Exxon ......................... 92
Pt. Pleasant Auto Parts ................... 9J 102
Joe catn. Atty ... ....... ...................... 11!100
Grtmm's Rabbitry ............ ...... .. ...... 721l!1l
Whittington Sohlo ...... .. .. :...... .......... . ll! 100

127: VUiat10 Pizza .,- Jane Dowel&gt; (sub) 1661:11:. Pl. Pleasant Exxon - Betty &amp;:rnard
(1ub) 116-420; Pl. Pleasant Auto Parts - Vlrglnla Rob!nson 162-381; Joo cain. Atty. Ruby WUt (sub) 1~; Grtrrun's Rabbitry
- UMa Grimm 202-479; Whittington SohloCarta Stump 156-423.
.
Splits converted: Barb Brown 3-10; Sharon
WUicoxen 5-7: Jackie Fowler 3-10; Unda
Grimm 5-7.

and silw1, V-8, automat&lt;. lockCllt h u~ PM/FM/Stereo, til whee, oKiing rear window.

1979 MUSTANG .. .... ... .. ... ............. .. ......... ...... ..... ......................... .. ......... '3600

Tan. 4 cyl., automatic, AM radio, factory air, vinyl tcp, wire wheel covers.
1'979 PONTIAC FORMULA RREIIIID ............................... .. .... ...................... '5495

Black Ill V-8, autanatic. air, cruise. ti~ wheel, rear window delo~ PM/FM/Caseae/Sier"' new
radial whrte lettered tires.

WH ilf THEY I AST 1

1978CHRY5LER CORDOBA ... ... ................... ..... .... ..................... ..... .. ..... ... . •3400

265 l -4-6 Hr VHS - LCD O.g""" '•DCkll"m"' I
count~r , paus~tst ~l rramP. s1ng r~ lram&lt;.adv•nc•.l

Charcoal grey. V-8. air. ti~ wheel, powe1 seats. windows and door locks. PM/FM/Stereo, radial
tires, power sunrnol. SHARP CAR.

rorward and rtvtr~ VISual searcn. PAN PV 1

1978 VOlARE WAGON .... ..... ................... ... ...... .... ..... ....... ...... ...... ... ...... '2800

V-8. automatic, ar cond .. AMIFM!Stereo. new tires.

VIDEO RECORDERS
VIDEO CASSETTE
MOVIES

•o

R811 o40 t...nanneiBtsetM obile with
Chen·
nel Dlgllal Rsadout. S/RF Meter. Volume,
Squelch, RF Gain and Mlc Gain Control.
Automatic Noise Ltmrrer. CBIPA Switch.
Transmit lfldicator light. E.ctern,r Speaker
and P.A. Jack. AC/DC Swlrch. 115 Volts AC or
12 Volts OC (Posll lvefNegalive Ground).
Coax latlype Antenna Connector. Dynamic
Microphone with Push-To-Talk Switch.
Slack No. 500 3221 .......... Aetallttt.ts ·

VIDEO BANK
SPECIAL
BUY 2
GET 1 FlEE!!

NOW RENTING .
LARGE SELECTION

_,SIIni

1978 JEll' CJ5 RENEGADE ........................ .............................. ................. IJ995

Brown, 6 c~.. 3 sjXl., AM/FM/Cassette. Whrre spoke whee~

t977 04EVY WV TRUCX ..................... ...... ..... .'........................................ '2600

Brown, 4 cyl., 4 sJftd, siKiing rear window. rear !Jtep bumper, white sK!ewal bres.
t977 DODGE RAM CHARGER 4X4 ............... ... .:.... ......................... ..... ...... '1750

V-8, Automatic. power sleering and bra!"' Qxx! running gear, rough bod,.
1977 1'4!00 FORD VAN TAUCI&lt; ........ ... ......... .. .. ....................................... '4995

'lbundQ
Februry 17, 1!81
Stand'np

5 sll!Od trans, 14' van body, rol up dOll', hydraul.ic lift ga~. good tires. runs good. N&lt;e truck.
W.L

~

1976 PlYMOUTH TRAIL DUSTER 4X4 ..........................................: ............. •1250

V-8, 3 sjXl., po"'r steering and brakes, good runnrng gea1, •ough bodj.

MUis For¥ Equip........................ . C7 17
Hunt's Grocery ...................... .. ...... ·. 44 ~
~ Fountain .............. .. ...... ......... . Cl ZJ
CrownCityMinlng ......................... . Jll 26
Baird&amp; Flllter .... ... ....................... .. Jll 26 •
George&gt; s Grocl!ll( .... .. .................... .. 36 :II
Faot-Stop ....... .... ........................ .. .. Jl 33
Beaver's Gara&amp;e........... ...... .. .......... 27 :rr
Kemper's Salvafll' ........................ , .. 26 :II
~a'sllwtlque ....................... , .. 26 :II
Marcum's Roofing ..................... ..... 26 :II
Go..mor'sGirt .................. ........... . 24 «1

1976 MONTE CARLD ........ ........ ,....... .... .... ............. ................................. :. •1995

Red, V-8, automatic, air cond., AM radio w/c onverter, power steenng arw:l brakes, cloth llterior,
vin~l

Wh~a

Loaded with optiooals

t974

autO&lt; IISAIRE .. ........ ... ............................................ ..... .... ............... '6SO

1969 COUGAR ........................................................... ............ ................. &gt;n95
~ne ooiofed ~8. outo., tk iD!Y air, m radio, ~n~ top. wire wheel covers, white silewal tires.

America ............ ......................... 24 40

.·•

Real Shorp Car. REDUCED'!

CARS. ARE LIKE EGGS, THEY'RE CHEAPER IN
THE COUNTRY!

a

Cia•-•

top. RaRye wheels. Anice clean car!!

Blue. V-8, air cond., AM/FM/8 Track. Nice WOfk car .

Warehtrne CUnk: ............. .... ..... ... .... 20 6l
Htflh pme and hltlh aeries:

ll1llb ForaiJI' F.quiJment- M. Jenldnl1'10,
ct7; HWit's Grocery - G. Hunt 1IMI, 467; Blue
Fmmtaln - D. WondaD 1!11, illl; Crown Qty
Mining- C. Lockllart:l13. 1111): Baird Fullel"
- J. Petite (subt 117, m:-Georae'o GI'OC.'I!I)'
- B. Burrto 17ll, «11; Fut-Stop- D. Caldwell
1114, 418; Beover's GaraiJI' - M. Wu-d 190,
«&lt;I; Kemper'sSatv... -B. Rus10Dl66. :113;
,,;• - · • Boutique- J. Fife 197, $13; Mar·.
·• • ;,cam's Roillln(- P. Swtd&lt; llll, F. Marcum
• • -~: Go\111'11111''1 Girl - R. Cl'flll.... 181, D.
' Do*nl 113: Modern Woodmen of Amonca'
- K. Hlllll 151, 311: Warelllme 01'*&gt; - J.'
Jlarrta (IUb)lBI, 48'1.
SoUto COIM!I1ed- C. N - U-101111d3-10;
S. Crtmth 5+7; S. Wold 6-7·10; R.
11-4-r, C. lllnl!&lt; 11-?, M. Jenldno 5-6-10; B. MWs
:1-7: J. Ftlet&gt;7-l0; c. Loc:klllrt :1-10; M. Wu-d
:I-71Wioe.

,-

1975 MEAaJRY MARQUIIS....... ........ •• •• ••• ... •,• •••••• •• • •••• S1995

Modem Woodmen ot

.,

~

1982 CHM C-10 SCOTTSDALE- Two tone brown and tan, 305V-8,
automatic, AM radio, power steering and brakes, body side moldings,
whrte sidewall radial tires, wheel covers, rear step
. Only
16,667 miles.

W. L

Circle's ... .... .......... ........................ 115

-·- .

.-:;

HOW ABOUT A FUll SIZED TRUO&lt;?

OIW!ns National Bank ................... 124 Ill.

- -·--·

~.,,

1979 04EVY C-10 aJSTOM DElUXE 4X4 .... :............................................ 15995

Elecb1C Motor Service -Kathy Butcher~

..

•

WHY PAY 18% INTEREST!
E BEST AUTO RATES IN THE VALLEY ARE HERE·

&gt;'/, -....

Red V-8, automatic, full bme 4wh. d1., AM radio, new mud and snow tires. Only 14,808i&gt;w miles.

Mareh3, 1!81

Citizens National Bank - MarUyn BrownIng 211-558; Circle's - Barb MUter-;
Bateman Farms - T..-.sa Allen 168-487; .

. '

f

JACK

Mcmey for charity

Indtvidual high game and sertes:

REASONS WHY YOU WANT TO
PURCHASE LATE MODEL USED VEHICLES FROM

83 Models - .11.9%

shot put Washington ahead

,1};(:.:~~;~1·~~:·.~· .,i ~t/.·. };:: ' •.,

. ·.: ;. "" ::: ,

'lbanday s.n.,.n

Get More For The Money' Because We Pre-Service
What We Sell! You Buy With Confidence I

•

ju~

OR

Was ~895 NOW : '5990

1. NEW OIL AND FILTER CHANGE
2. LUBRICATION OF ALL FRONT END COMPON.ENTS .
3 ALL DOOR JAMS AND HINGES LUBRICATED
A. tNSPECTION OF BALLJOtNTS,' TIE ROD
ENDS, IDLER ARM AND PITTMAN ARM
5. SHOCKS AND SUSPENSION CHECKED
~ FRONT AND REAR BRAKES CHECKED
( REPLACED ~ NEEDED!
.
7, INSPE CT ION OF EXHAUST (REPLACED IF
NEEDED)
. .
.
8. INSPECTION OF COMPLETE DRIVE TRAIN

: Bullets 96, Lakers 93

A! Landover, Md .• Ricky Sobers'

7295

.A REAL BEAUTY!!

Local
bowling

ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RIVE FINANCINGt

2 door ~port coupe, bubble hatchback, 4 speed, 4 cyi. front wheel drive, air condition. tinted glass, am-fm
stereo, bucket sea ts w-viny l trim , digital clock, dual mirrors. bs mldg., rallye wheels and much morel
Compare to a new one! America's economy two-seater sports car! ~Is ted new for $8638.92!

1983 FORD RANGER TRUCK - Two-tone red and white, XLT package; 4 cyl engrne, 4 speed, AM/FM radio, pow·er brakes, intermittent
windshield wipers, tinted glass, radial tires, sport wheels, $1iding rear
wmdow, rear step bumper, fiberglass bed liner, lower body side
moldings, Ziebart rust proofed. Only 14,500 miles.
$

larly well'- he played with a painful
Infection in his right foot that kept

teaiunates. ''

WE HAVE EXPANDED
OUR SALES LOT!! .

WITH GREAT GAS MILEAGE

Larry~lrdwasn'tfee!ingparticu­

him out ofpracticeforthreedaysbut still led theCeitlcs w!th32 points
as they tied the season series with
Philadelphia at 2-2. Kevin McHale,
who was lO.Of-11 from the field,
added 21 points as the Celt!cs,
playing at home, snapped the
S!xers' lO.game winning streak and
handed them only their eighth
setback In 58 games.
·
Elsewhere, the Washington
Bullets stwmed the Los Angeles
Lakers 96-93, the Atlanta Hawks
trounced the Houston J;Wckets
ll:H!7, the Milwaukee Bucks
downed the Dallas Mavericks
lOB-;102, the Chicago Bulls upended
the; New Jersey Nets 124-119, the
Kallsas City Kings trlnuned the
Indiana Pacers ID103, the Phoenix
SuflS defeated the. Golden State
Warriors 109-102. the San Antonio
' beat the San Diego Clippers
Spurs
107:99 and the Denver Nuggets
outlasted the Portland TrailBlazers
142·'138.
The Celtics and 76ers were tied
nln~:times and the biggest lead was
nine points by Phlladelphla early in
the:game.The lead changed hands
for the 12th and final time of the
~nd half on an eight-foot jump
shot by Robert Parish that put
' ' Boslonaheadl04-103with4:06togo.
Thallaunched a seven-point run in
whl_ch McHale followed with a dunk
and• Nate Archlbald converted a
thn!e-polnt play. Moses Malone led
. PhJladephia with 26 point~.
"It' salwaysgood to beat Philadelphia because they're such a tough
tew," said McHale. "When you do
beaJ them, you always feel good
abBot yourself and your

The

W.Va.

By 1be Associated Press
The Boston Celtlcs must feel like
they're on a treadmill.
· Despite a 115-110 triumph over
runaway Phlladelphla Friday night
and a glittering 43-15 record, the
Ceitics stlll trali the 76ers by seven
games In the National Basketball
Association's Atlantic Division with
time running out on the regular
season.
.
.
Boston Coach B!ll Fitch called the
76ers "too great a team to fold with
lhlitkind of lead unless they have an
epidemic. Th&amp; Intensity of the
rlv~ Is there, and you get a
playoff preview and you get a little
better feeling If you're Boston."

PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) . Commissioner Deane Beman of the
,PGA has disclosed that 44 PGA-tour
·sponsor-members contribUted a
recotd $7,032,fXXl to various charitato ItsMarques
fourth consecutive
ble, civic and cultural organizations MUwaukee
road victory.
Johnson
projects during 1982.
added 'l:l for the Bucks, who held the
That was an Increase of :tal Mavericks scoreless for the last
percent since 1971 when $3,293,fXXl 3:23. Dallas, paced by Mark
was contribUted. The 1982 figure Aguirre's 35 points, led 98-91 with
brought the all· time contribUtions ID 6: 16 to go, but Moncrief and Johnson
~ivic organizations and charity ~ •.combined for 13of the Bucks' flnal17
more than $54. million.
points as Milwaukee outscored
Dallas 17-4 down the stretch.
BuDs 124, Nets 119
At Chicago, rookie Quintin Dalley
scored a career-high 29 points and
Reggie Theus added 'l:l to lead the
-. Bulls, who also got a career-high 25

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH .DEALERS.

JACK ROUSH MOTOR CAR SPECIAL$111

Ohio-Point

_. Celtics end .76ers win streak, 115-110

ExhibitioQ..campaign begins Saturday .·

By JOHN NEL'!ON
AP Sports Writer
The weight-conscious Atlanta
Braves, with one eye on the scales
and another on earned-;un averages, helped kick offbaseball'sl983
exhibition season Saturday.
The Braves had an exhibition
game scheduled 11gainSt Montreal
atWest PaimBeach, Fla .., while the
New York Yankees were set to play
Baltimore at Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Atlanta entered the exhibition
season with two goals In mind' ~
stay thln and Improve the pltcliing.
The result, Manager Joe Tol'l'!!
believes, will be a repeat of thelr

1983

QOSEOUT ON All

Only

MAnB. CARTRIDGES
Upper Rt. 7

'S ELECTRONICS
. Gallipolis, Oh.
Silver

Plaza

SEE ALLEN OR JAY EVANS

MOTOR CAR _
PROKERS

PH.446 6592
1'!1 mi.les from Holzer Medical Center on State Rt. 16\i.
HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8 AM.-5 P.M.
SATURDAY 8 A.M.-3:00 P.M.

.,

.,

..
'

�Times-Sentinel

W.Va.

1983

'

'

J

I

~3

R

Was hingtM

f'rlda.y' !l Sport&amp;~

BASEBALL

.Hl 7
.G:ll 131.,-z
..a&amp;l '!l
..WS 'N

N.tbud Ltoacul:'

/'I.'EW YORK METS-Signed Jeff BiMJ·
ger , pUcher and Danyl StiawiX'rry, out ·
flf'lder .to O!l('o~ar mnlrl!c ts
FOOmALL
NaUonal Football Leque
BUITALO BILl..S-Named Perry Moss.
to ttl£&gt; offensive staff.

CmtraJ Dr."l-.ion

.667 -

O€&gt;frolt

:10 20
31 29
~ .11

.4~

9
1!1,1

O!ll"~l

21 39

.l'IO

l!t

MiJ~o~• aulu.~

Atlanta

.517

Dallas

.~

ll :xJ

22 .~
11 49
Paclllc DM'ikln
l...o!; i\ngpi£1S
42 16
Phornh:
37 2-1
Pon land
.'l'l ~
Sf&gt;ai11C'
:t! 2M
Gol(. 'rL Stt~U'
23 ~
Sar~ Dlt':'e!O
W 41
Fridu.y ·~ Games

ARIZONA

Utah

.:li l

.00 ?il&lt;j

L'i

nm. salt?()'.
LOS ANGELES EXPRES$-ReleasOO

..1&amp;1 8
.5.13 11

Don H an:k&gt;man, running back .
1\'EW JERSEY GENERALS-Acquired

.m ~~,
.:m 23 \.:-

cobs. klck£!r and Joey Hackett, tight m d.

A.clivated 'rl&gt;d Cirli.b. ot!"m stve ta('kle and
Reggie Mathis. llnebackc-r, from their In ·
JUrod rest&gt;rVe T'0'3 tc,-.
MI CH I GAN P AN THE:R S-R ('l e8sed
Her·
man WvavN, pu nl&lt;'r.
OAKLAND lNVADE:RS--Released Jet(
Sevy, !a('k]('.
IIO(](E\'
Nad onaJ HockP)' League

Cf'fl tr al Hockey League.

WASHINGTON

SOCCER
No r1h AmH1c.an Le~u.·
N AS L-AnrounlRI ti"F reslgnado n

Stephen L. Srnatorf', Cootrol.lcr. Named

" ' L T (; t~ t:A ~
&lt;12 15
8 :J.69 177
9'2
.11 22 l:! 2~ S 191
78
31 21 H 254 231
7li

)I·Ran,I,'Crs 'lll 2l!

9 ll7 2-10

~

Plttsbu.t"J&lt;h tS -1"1

8 2L'&gt; 341

3R

13 100 272

Allan Collingo;, Vk'e President ot Finance.
COu..EGE
ND'rRE. DAM E-Named Brian 8ol..lloc.
ro assiSta.nt at h!C'tk' !:iiJ'('('tor.Col. J ohn J .
St('!Jhms. assL~tam cllrf't'lor of speCial
projECts. JOf' O"Briefl and Ro!','('r Valdl·

:r1

nSSQl'\ntc athletiC' din&gt;ctors,M al
Moore. ' runni n ~ back roach, Ron Hudson

.&lt;\darll'i Dlvtilon
&lt;11 15
R 261 176
~
J.J 19 12 29i '!Zi
81
IJ 22 U 262 219
ill
Quef:I&gt;C
!i 27 11 276 Z73
01
H.a r11ord til -&amp;3
6 21.2 l?3
.ll

Exhibition
results

Norn. Dtvl!ilon
:fl 17
9 276 22.'1
X·MinrK'SOia :D li 15 :!i2 W
s . Lwls 20 33 14 23i :li-1
Dr&gt;t n:XI
JR 33 I."i 2IR ~
Toronto ll 33 11 216 2E!!
51
x ·Chk~o

••

!

•

I'
j

If'
In

U 3'11 !ill
9 ail ~
8 ~ '.."T7
10 245

m

,NN· York fALl SS vs. Montrt'al at
~

16

AnJ;:eltos 1·s. Allomta a t W('St Pa lm

Beach. fla .

~

Vanrouv('r 22 32 11 229 ?:,7
x-cllnched playoll SIXlt
Frtday's Gm.e
Bulfalo, 10. Pltt.sbur¢1 2
Sundily'!l Gama.
Quebr&lt;' at Hartford
F..dmonron at Bostoo. In)
Detroit at Buffalo, In !
F'tlUa~lphla at P lttsbuf!m 1n )
l.ns An~IPS .al Minnesola . 111 1

CXXlKEVll..LE, Tenn. (AP) Sophomore guard. Jimmy Elliott
scored 21 points, includingelghtfree
throws in the closipg seconds, to
lead Tennessee Tech to a 76-61 Ohio
Valley Conference triumph over
Akron Friday night.
· The victory gives the Golden
Eagles a 15-11 reeord overall and a
8-5 record in the OVC and assures
them of a berth in the conference
tournament. Akron is 13-14 overall

\\ £&gt;St Palm Ek-och. F'l&lt;~ .

~

Monday 's Game'S
Atla nta ~· ~ . Baltimo re at Miami

!)(&gt;troit \"S. Chk' B.£0 1AL1

Sa rasota.

aJ

"'·

New York rAL • v s. Texas at Pompano
BC'ach, Fla.
Los A~li&gt;s \'!$. Montreal at WC"St Palm
Bearh . F'la.

Toronto \'S. St. l..f'O at St. Lro. F'la.

t

· ~~•~u~~~-~~~~~ -,_,_j
ers as of Fe bruary 19,
Team

·J

ph tne StarUng (sub) 191-510: Jordan's Gas

W. L

'

OoweU Chemical.. .... .................. ...... 30-10 •
•
'

Prescription Shoppe ...
...... .... 26 14
Blossom Basket ........... ...... .... ..... .. 26 14

~ Central Trust .. ...... ......... .....

.. ..... 24 16

G.P. W.......................................... 24 16
1 Royal Crown24 16
3 Baird &amp; Fuller Realty , .. ....... ... .. , ..... 22 18
DaUey Ranch .............. .. ................. 22 18

11

l
,

Adolph's .. .................. .. .. ..... .. ........ 20
&amp; Snyder .. ... . .... .
.. . 20
Polnt License ... ...... ..... ................ ... 20
VInton Antiques .. .......... ...... ... .. .... 20

~

Cor~n

j

20

~

26
26
28
28
:xl

Adolph's, Joe Eldlck 237-600: VInton Antiques, DaMy Browning 196-491; Centra l
Trust. John Hawley 223-572: The BUly Bobs.
Don Duncan (sub) 196-515; Baird &amp; Fuller
Realty. Bernard HoUey 248-656; Corbin &amp;

Snyder, Tom Whltehalr 1.83-503; Dowell
Chemical, Ruby Halll934~ ; Point License,
Vlrgtnla Grover J.ffi, lArry Wr1ght (sub) l90;
Grown City Mining, Teresa Fife 437, Greg
FUe172: Prescrtptton Shoppe, Stephen RUfle
191J.501; Dalley Raneh. Jim Dailey lBI-495:
Nite Owls, Jim Gaskins 18).447: Blossom
Basket , Jim Nlda 236-574; G.P .W.. Eddie
Frye B5.'J); SheUy Co.. Mary Ward 2!&amp;486:

WUcoxen's, George Casto al9·554.
SpUt.s converted by: Don Duncan 5-7; Juan.
ita FUr 1-2+ 10: Sue Holley 4-5-7 and l-10
• Standings for Junlor Bowlers as of Febru·
ary 19:

w. L
42 14

Amertcan Legton Post 23

~~~~lng

l~

32 24
32 24

l•

28 28
28 2ll
24 32

SOuthfork 1M

.American
Team No. Legton
1228 28Unit 2.1

1 Team No. 1

} :ward's Keyboard

22

34

~~~:.~~~=~eandhlghserll: ~

- Team No. 1. Vickie Nott 175-348; Teain No.
12. Jamie Hauldren 177. Mark No!Ttlan 4l6:

Southlork
1nn. Mark
176-437:
Anlel'ran Legion
Post 23,Hasseman
~awn Nibert
22.3604; The Trophy King. Jimmy Reynolds 244·sa;; Ward's Keyboard, Mark Ward 12J.311;

Don McCallister
IG!~-4~!2.Bernard
Klpp!e
1 Kook
Bowles
Lanes, Valerie
1 ~.;.~= ~:.l"'tk~:r;y~~.h ·
' :368; American Legion Unit 23, BWyWard lXl.
Kals,
41'2; Skyline

' :=

~ ~Brian McCarley 541; Team No. 4., Doug Hern

~

J~am No

8, Mike Hanson 137, Greg
• • ~ Splits , converted by: Brtan Wedge and
.Mark Hasseman 5-10: Mar k Hasseman J.lO

~;9Angle Lear 5-T;

•j

• 1

,

Bei-nard 4-5

Valer1e

Bowlq ileBes BowllnJ League
Febnlar)' 25, 11113

Team stAnd.lngs a.s or Feb. 25. 1963:
~

w. L

115 Qt ·
102 82

SUe's Ceramics
J"s Food Mart 8t ,Dell
jlodney Supply

Conveolenl Food Mart

100 IIi
100 IIi

Body Shop

98 86

I--·-

91 90
93 91
90 91

:nm·.
-..,&amp;Myers

,Bryan"• SeMce 'Center
)Mian"l Gu Service

~

tli!OO

...... liloiW

1 Skwi•-Fiorlot
'

ret~Y• T r w -

Market - Gale Ferguson 169, VIckie Perry
· 462; Tim 's Body Shop - FloAnn Rime 238-

549.

NORTH OLMSTED. Ohio (API
-Tom Milton entered Saturday"s
championship round in the Professional Bowlers Associatlon·s
$110.00l Cleveland Open as the top
seed after defeating John Wilcox
257-201 in Friday night's fina l
match.

:t;

JBL Construction
Meigs Inn
Blue Tartan

32
32
26

44

Larry" s G rooery
. 23
HJgh Ind .. Game - Carolyn· Bachner 188,
Marie~

Wilson ® , KeUy Wilson 175.

HJgh SerlE'S - Carolyn Bachner 518, Mar-

.

11!;
:'1279n 107

- - -!'ell Fequoon (sub)
J"o Food Mart -Thoreoa Silva J88.
0111&gt;_, Food - C.lby VanWinklo
_ . !kle"• c..mJco - Mar1lynn Jus""

118. !kle Holley e!; ~ ~~- ~r·

I

'I
I

.J

=nAY TIUPUCA.TE

POrE ANDHONORGUARD-PopeJohnPaul
D pMIIe8 lhe miUtary honor guard during greeting
ceremonies upon hill arrive! Friday In Managua, Nl-

February 8, 19S3
Standings

Team

Wald Cross &amp; Sons

:fl

~·

Sugar Run Ashland

28
19
JBL Construction
l8
Blue Ta rtan
18
High Ind. Game- Marlene Wilson 167 Dl·

Team High Game ~ wald Cross&amp;Sons426.

RIDE. NOUR · su·PPI.~
5 3 30 1

'

'

'

,.•
r
•

•
'

~J
••

~'
~

EPA

•'
l

chief~ Burford

•'•

i:'
I'

This full·sized truck is alocal one owner. Small V·B, auto. trans.,
power steenng and brakes. Long wide bed. Only 57,000 miles.

I

COMPARE

OUR

compleblly -1 your
PRICE
home from all-111har.
All THIS Willi GUARANTIID WORK AND AT A IOWBI COST lliAN .YOU CAN OIT FROM
ANYONE
Compare Our Price and Ability 1J7 Callin&amp; or Con1acli1J1. ...
' .

JOHNSON &amp; SON ALUMINUM CO.
RT. 1, BUlAVIUE RP.

'&lt;

~

·OVER 40 NICE CLEAN LATE
MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM ·

Vl"fYL OR ALUMINUM SIDING IS ONE WAY Of REDECORATING YOUR HOME.

C8ll

I

•t

In Nicaragua. the ruling three-man junta
welcomed John Paul at the Managua airport with a
'
political diatribe against tllc United States. and
•I•
decorated the pia tform for the papal Mass with a
•
revolutionary billboard.
Chanting mllltla members took front-row positions ·
in front of 500,001 faithful at the Mass • .and signs
proclaimed the government line that there. Is no
conflict between revolution and Christianity.
The pope, however, warned the worshippers to
beware of ••unacceptable ideological commitments."
There is only one true church, he said, and It must
remain united behind its bishops "to · be able to
counteract the various forms ... of rnaterlallsm that
Its mission encounters ln the world.""
•
To another gathering. in the northern city of Leon,
he declared: "You. do not need Ideologies foreign to •
your Christian tty In order to love and defend man. ••
The pope· s visit was marked by reminders of
tension between the Nicaraguan government and the I
c.hurch hierarchy, of divisions within the church
'I
itself, and of the Sandlnlsta regtrne•s )Xllltlcalllne. •
•
The government welcomed the )Xlpe as a head of •
·s tate, rather than a religious leader. and Vatican •
sources said they could not arrange for a cross at the t
Mass.
1

says she won't .quit

RATES ARE DOWN
MATERIALS ARE DOWN
•LABOR COSTS ARE DOWN

We an1 Trim Work Specilllisu
-Windows. Doors. All Over·
hings. Outten, Spout8. We

•'

I

e INTEREST

!

caragua. One of the soldiers holds a gw1 with allxed
ba,yonet. (AP Leserphoto).

PANAMA CITY. Panama (AP 1- Pope John Paul
II arrived here Saturday to. make a 10-hour visit tD
Panama after confronting chanting militiamen and
political diatribes In MarxiSt-ruled Nicaragua .
The pontiff, making an elght-na tlon tour of Central
America. landed at 9:25 a.m. EST in his AlitaUa
DC-10 jet after a one-hour flight from Costa Rica, He
was to return Saturday night to that country. his base
for the first half of the tour.
The pope's visit to Panama was to Include a Mass
at a former U.S. military airfield to be renamed In his
· honor, and an address to peasants and Indians a t the
National Stadium. ·
While John Paul was in Malragua, Nicaraguan
leaders refused to allow a cross on the platform
where he celebrated an .outdoor Mass Friday.
Instead, .ihe )Xlpe waved his own s ilver crucifixtipped staff as he called on the Roman Catholic
faithful to . remain united and wary of ideologies
outside Christianity.
In El Salvador, which the pope plans to visit
Sunday, a Defense Ministry spokesman said a
suspected left-wing guerrilla told )Xllice there was a
plot to kill the )Xlntlft. Thes)Xlkesmansaid authorities
were investigating the a llegations. made by the
suspect before he died of Injuries sustained when he
was hit by a car while fleeing from pollee.

·

Don 'f' Delay!!

COMPLETE
FINANONG
AVAILABIIi

''

•"

1978 OIEV. PI(:KUP

Spring Is On It's Way

•

Dorsey.

.

•'

.f,

1247.

.

money available for borrowing. DeWine said ..
"With this bill we would simply ha v.e to go out and
borrow $55 billion more. That will drive up Interest
rates and retard recovery."
Rep. BUI Gradlson. R-Ohio. of Cincinnati. also was
concerned about the Impact on interest rates but
voted for the blll because he thought it would provide
some relief to districts with high unemployment,
according to a spokesman.
"He thought it ($4.9 billion) was about as far as we
could· go with additional spending," said aide Andy

SEE ONE AT

r~T~e;am~H=Ig~h;S~er~les~~-;W~a;ld~Cr~o~&amp;~So;ns~~~·~·~
ss
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~C~H~E~S~T~E~R~,~O~·~H~.~~

sO

"'I dldn"t think the 7th Dlstrlct or Ohio benefited
very much."" said Rep. Mike DeWine. R-Ohio. of
Cedarville. who also voted against the bill.
He said he believes the t€glslatlon would do more
harm than good by increasing the federal deficit.
"'Every economist says the one Impediment to
recovery is the huge federal deficit s," DeWine said.
· ·we·re slowly corning out of the recession, and to add
$5 billion to the deficit wUI have a very negative effect
on the economy. help s low down recovery. "
The federal government already Is dominating the
money markets, absorbing the greater share of the

What can we say?-TRUE CLASS! All the buttons. Only 10,800
low miles. It is showroom condition inside and out.

Meigs Inn
Larry's Grocery

(More ~ustom Vans On The Way)

I

'We may not be the biggest dealer - but we
our lot."
81" 0 - Johnaon - Tarry Hamilton
'

town Car Co. ·

1l2

· ladlojdullldlh 1ame and h1gh 9fr1es :
• F'lll)'o TrH semt:e - POlly SW1oher 1J8. •
rtr~ 6 M)&lt;m- NeUle Jacltlon 157·

!

1981 BUIO&lt; PARK AVENUE

'"

lene Wils6n 510, FrankJe Hunne1 457.
Team High game - JBL Construction w .
Team High Series - JBL Construction
1329.

naarl.ets. Reapn made ills remarks In a speech to
the Commonwealth Club of Callfomta In Saa Jl'ran..
cisco. (AP Laserphoto).

URGES NEW JOBS TJDWUGH EXPORT
MARKFI'S - frealdenl Ronald Reagan Friday denounced trade protectionism and urged American
bt...,.,ses to create new jobs throup export

Pope John Paul Il
arrives in Panama

1981 FORD CROWN VICTORIA 4 DR.

This is a rare find - Not many of these arQund. Full power, air,
power steering, cruise, tilt, Landau top, wire wheel cover;, one
owner. SEE IT TODAY!

The ideet high production 1aw, " Fail Safe" vibration isolation cushions
the handles from the power head, reduces operator fatigue . •Low noiae
~evel than.ks to Homelite's Softone dual chamber muffler •New 3 .6 cubic
1nch. her:m-head ~ngine . •Capacity dischll!rge ignition . •Adjustable autom~tte oller. •Un1que chain tensioning. •Rubber coated handle bar and
~r1p. ·~ar ieng~hs from 16" to 28" . •Advanced design for high produc- ·
tton With low operato~ fatigue .
,

''

..

!

360

Standlllp

Team
Wald Cross &amp; Sons
Sugar Run Ashlan d

•'

.'

Milton. of St. Petersburg, Fla.,
began the final eight gat)1es of
match play at Buckeye Lanes ln
third place Friday anci fell to slx!h
after dropping his first match.
He then put together gamesof258.
239. 234. 259. 245 and 215 before
defeating Wilcox.

HOMELITE'S

=nAV TIUPUCATE
February !2, 1!183

.

This sharp truck has only "3,427 m~es. 4 spd., V·6, radio, lorig
bed, chrome rear bumper. IT IS st:tARP!

Splits converted by: Karen Ch.attin thfo 5-610: Pam Rll!le Ire 5-7; Sue Holley the 3-10:
Peg Ferguson the 5-7; Venitta Sm.lth the 5-10;
Garnet Elllort the a-ID: Sue Cox the 2-7: Ruth r----r~-----------------....,------1
MUler the 5-6.

POMEROY BOWLING LAND;

'

~

'.;

Milton top seeded in PBA event

~ ~ HuMel
·~~~~a~e~~~.o~11l.Fra~kle
457, Diana Ash 4CB.

Team No. 4
1 Team No.8

:t

vice Center - Pam Rittle- 172-4EO; Johnsoo·s

:;n
20

Oubbers ................ ...... .. .. ..... .... ..... l4
Shelly Co . .. .............. .... .. ...... ....... ... 14
Crown City Mining ......... .. ..... ..... ..... 12
Nlte (}wls ..................... ............. .. .. 12
The Billy Bobs
.. ................. 10
Individual high game and high series:

TEAM

Serv1ce - Marty Hunt 183·517: Bryan's ser-

and 7-7ln the league.
Akron was led In scoring by
sophomore Rick Accord with 18
)Xllnts. The Zips" leading scorer Joe
Jakublck. who was averaging 29
)Xllnts coming into Friday's game,
. was held to a season· low nine points.
The score was tied 35-35 at half.
Tech took the lead for good on a
layup by guard Joe Mintz with a
little more than 11 minutes to play in
the game.

W

Wilcoxen's ................... .... ... .. ..... .... 20

19.82 OfEV. S-10

Akron drops 76-61 contest

Exhibtlion ~ason
Sunday's Gamt'l'
Mi~· York iAL \ s..o:; n . Balllmon:- at

Sreythe Dl ~lon

I

AFTER THE DELUGE - Flshennen In J'hnbeUan Beach, CaHf.
take advantage of a quiet moment during the setdng of the sun over a
ravaged coestlloo Friday. After a week's wOii!l of devesteHng storms
.a nd tornadoes, the Manhattan Beach pier was left Intact. (AP
Leserphoto ).

otfi•nslve roorrlinatoc. Tom Llchta'l~r)l".
rt"CNII In2 roordiNJ.tor and l'('('ei\'Cr C'Oa&lt;"h.
Jim J otmon. assi.slant he-ad coach.

C~~~nphell Conferu~a-

19
T! ll
?I ll
2.1 l2

This compact has only 14,600 miles, 4 spd., vinyl trim, one
owner.

scm.

X·Boston
x·Mont real
x·Bullalo

37

CAPITALS- ·

Rcralled
EriC' Cald!'r. Ck'fe~an. from Cornwall
of tlw&gt; Ontarkl Hockt•y League.

Natlol\al Hodtey I.A-ft,(Ue
" 'ale; Conff'I'EII('('
Pu.iridl Dlvioilnn

Edmonton
Ca lgacy
Wlnnipef.l
l..oo; An~les

1982 CAVAUER 2 DR.

!'I.'EW YORK RANGERS-Calll'd up
Steve Baker'. 2(l&lt;JUe. from Tulsa of t~

NHL results

n

auto has all the toys- Full power equiprnen~ very neat and
clean. Qmpare with new price.
·

lers. Rt"leased l)ma Moure. kicker and

J im Moorf', center. Rt'Signed Oaw.' Ja·

UTah at Ponland, ·rn J

,,"

three

ltl(' rights for Leamon Hall. q~Wtertack .
w ho was watvro by the Arilona Wran~­

Clt'\'l'land at San Antooio. 1111

· Nt•w JC'f'S('Y l1

1981 MERCURY XR-7-.

WRANGLERs-P l aced

.TJI .007 61.Aj

'l'imes- ientin:d

.

By ROBERT L SHAFFER
Eckart. of Lake County, said a lot or the joblessness
~Press Writer
Is "structural unemployriJent, and local governments
WASHINGTON (AP) -What Impact would the
are strapped to provide seiVIces.
$4.9 b!Ulon jobs bUI have on Ohio?
"'This legislation will enable local communities tD
Most Ohio · congressmen voted for the bUI that
lake advantage of any reCOVery" in the priVate
passed the House this week, and most said they
sector. he said.
thought It would help Ohio- at least to some degree.
Rep. Mike Oxley. R-Ohio, one of
Ohio ,..
However.• with unemployment apparently declln· · Republicans who voted against the ·jobs bill. said he
lng. some congressmen said another spending · was l)Ot suprised at the drop in unemployment since
program could do more harm than good.
"other (economic) signs are )Xllntlng up."
Labor Department figures released Friday showed
'"It's typical of Congress to come in at the end. when
that despite a sll~ht drop in February, Ohio
things are starting to pick up and pass a jobs bill;" · the
unemployment Is still painfully far above the national
Findlay Republican said.
average.
He called the bill "too expensive and too late" and
The Ohio unemployment r ate. second highest
said he didn't think there was anything in ltforhls4th
Congressional District.
among large industrial states. declined for the second
straight month to 13.6 percent in February.
'"We don't have any public works projects.
That comPare&lt;! to 11.4 percent .a year ago and 14.0
although with the Edgar amendment there may be
some things in Ohio."·
percent In January.
.
The state's unemployment hit a record 14.5 percent
The amendment authored by Rep. Bob Edgar.
In December, with 727,001 workers Idle. The number
D·Pa., would require targeting 75 percent of some
of unemployed dropped to 686.001 in February.
programs - about half the jobs bill - to
Rep. Thomas N. Kindness, ROhio, of Hamilton.
high-unemployment areas.
said the bW; which still has to clear the Senate and the
tjp one was able to put an exact dollar figure on
White House. would not do much to alleviate
whil.t the bill would do for Ohio. However, Rep.
unemployment In Ohio.
Chalmers P. Wylie. R-Ohio. of Colwnbus, said that
'"lt"s really too late for this bill to do much good with
even without a targeting provision, the $1.25 bWion
boost in Community Development Block Grant funds
job opportunities. as we wlll be out of the recession
before this spending really takes effect." Kindness
contained In the bill would mean $49 mUllon for Ohio.
said.
The community development grants likely will
Kindness. who voted for the bill. sa id the Important
have the most inunediate Impact because there are '
thing for Ohio wa8·its provision for additional funds ·projects awaiting oompletlon that were started under
for the federal unemployment trust fund, which will
this program then stopped because funding was cut
make $5 bllllon available for state borrowing.
off, an aide to Wylie said.
""The funds for unemployment compensation
Rep. Delbert L. Latta, dean of the Ohio GOP
(payments) are needed and will be available
delegation, said he voted against the bUI because It
immediately after enactment." Kindness said.
was loaded with pcirk barrel projects for Individual
congressmen.
Ohio now owes the fund more than $1.8 billion. and
with unemployment. continuing at high levels. sta te
In a speech on the House floor. Latta said that in his
officials say they soon wUI have to borrow more to
25 years In Congress this bill was '"the purest. rarest,
meet payments to jobless workers.
most unadulterated pork I have every seen:·
Even If declining unemployment signals a
"I wonder whether they just have not put ... a lot of
tum-around. '"deeply depressed"" communities In
things Into this blll that have been on the shelf for a
long time that this Congress has already turned
Ohio will still need help, said Rep. Dennis Eckart.
down." said Latta. of Bowling Green.
D-Ohio.

J.3Ckle.
BOSTON ·AREM&lt;ERS-RPleased
Mike
Llvingo;ion. quarterback , and DICk Jau-

Sunday's Game-t

:o: · WII~ h.

-

I€!1SI\'e ba&lt;'ks and Vlntt Stroth, o!fcns!Ve

Phlladt-.Jphht at Nl""' Jei"S('y
Atlanta at Washlngtoo
Indiana at Chicago
San Dit..'t(U ott Kansas CiTy

X·NYlsle;

... ...

Tony NPely and Eddie Ray Walke-. dc-

Boston I~- PhilaOOlphla 110
At.lanta 115. Houston Ri
Washlnj;ton !:16.• in; An.et'h:'S 9.1
ChiC"&lt;IgO 114, NN• Jersf'_v U!f
Mllwaukfot&gt; lffi, Dalla-;. 10'1
Ka nsas Cl!y lZJ. lndla11a !f1,1
PhoeniX 109, GoiOC&gt;n Sta t(' 102
San Antoolo 107. San Dlej,&gt;o !li
DrrlVl'f lt2, Port land 1311

1 x -Phrl.

..

_~jan
. - · • •· · .
•
Manuccl,. quarter back , Dou"g BankS.. run ning back. ,.~ernando Jackson. urWbacker,

6'-J

H OOstoo

.

United S&amp;alal.Football Le~e

16 43 .171 231~
O(".'e land
L'i 4-l
.2.SI 2-1'11
\\ESTERN CO"'-"FERENCE
Mldwe!t Dl v~Jon
San Antonio
37 :!4
fnl Dl'fl\"~' 1"
.1'2 JO . 5 !6 !il-7
Kan:.~as City
.'Vl 29 ..i*! 6

lndJana

State/ ational
Will jobs bill .help or hurt Ohio?
'

Transactions

86l­

IS
:rt 22
:!8 l)
21i .12

N(ow JPI"W}"
l'(&gt;lol,• Ynrk

~DS

Mont !'P-Ill at Chicago, ( nl

W L Pet. GB
~

•
=·

. ... , , ,

Wlnnlper at VllJ\COu\W, In l

NMIIHW Bat;kdbalJ AIMCI.aoo
By 'l'tN&gt; ~ Prt'IOil
FASTERN ffiNFERF...NCE
Adantk- Dtv!Non
Philatl:•lphia

..

New Jersey at New York RangrerJ. 1n1

NBA results

!b;l(,,

.1

CLRSSIFieD

Scoreboard ...

...

l..''

PHONE 446-4741

1640 Eastern Aw.; Gallipolis

•

U&amp;.CJ0&amp;9

GAWPOUS, OIL

,,
_.....,_..o_

...,.

---

.,. ...

WASHINGTON (AP) Anne M. Burford,
described as tired and weary of battles over the
Environmental Protection Agency, nevertheless Is
vowing Sl!e Will not resign as head of the agency, her
aides say.
·
·
Pressure on ·her to quit grew as two top ·
RepublicAns In Congress celled on her to step down
and the Justll."e Department said It would no longer
defend her in cOntempt of Congress proceedings.
In New Orleans, Mrs. Bulford was buoyed Friday
night by the respo~ sl;te received after a speech at
the Louisiana Federatlort of Republican Women.
"Hang in there," several womensaldas they cheered
the EPA chief.
"It has not been tun.'" Mr,;. Burford told the group.
"I woold !Ike to teUyrueverY!hlnglscll~an and settled
· in Wasillngton. It Is not."
Later, she said: ''I apologize for being so - not
upbeat"
Mrs. Burford slid she was proud of what slle caUed
"a solid record of achievement.'" and added she felt
shehadfollowedfalth1ully.adlrectlvefromPresldent
- Reagan to streamline the EPA while bl!arlng down
on enforcement of environmental laws.
Mrs. Burbd Is piannln&amp; to give enother speech
today In Denver, her hometown, to a group of

ColOrado Republlcan women.

In Washington. Rep. Bob ' Mlchel of Dllnols, the
House GOP leader. and Sen. Robert Stafford of
Vermont. cha.l rman of the Senate Environment
Committee, joined several Democrats in saying Mrs.
Burford shQul&lt;! be replaced.
••J don•t think in view of what's haP.pened she can
ever regain the credibility you need to'tlo a good job,"
Michel told the Chicago Sun·Tirtles. · Michel said
Reagan needs to '"make a clean sweep" at the EPA.
But one of Mrs. llurford' s aides said: "She Is til-ed
and she is weary of aU the Intense attention, but she Is
resolute. She Is not going to resign ."
!n San Francisco, where Reagan was visiting
Friday. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said
the president retained confidence in Ute EPA
admlnlstrator.
However, Mrs. Burtord let It be known though
aides, all of whom refused to be named, that she
thinks Reagan had received poor adv!Cf! through the
three month battle over EPA documents subpoenaed
by Congress. The comments marked the tlrst dme
that Mrs. Bulford or her aides had not spoken In
concert with White House officials. ,
A top aide said Mrs. Burford wruld "press bet
case" with Reaian penonany neXt week, telling him
the only way to end the contr&lt;iveny Is by giving
Co~ess conlplete access to all documents.

I

!

II

i

i
t

s

:
••
•

.~

••

•
f
•
1,

BOUSE wn'NDI8E8 - William Bednan, Jr.,
' dlredor of lbe Oflloe of &amp;iNaaency and Remedllal
RF'.apoo- of lbe ~ l'rotecGoD Apncy,
left, and o- Lucero, dlredor of lbe EPA's Olllce of
Wiltltei'rOtlrama Enfotceaneat, tall! before teetlfylaag

before a

ao- .ib'commtttee ... lnv~ illld

ovenllht. Tile IIUbcommlttee wu boldine INiarinp
011 bazardoaa Willie coalamlnatlon of Wil&amp;er resilai'
cea, Friday 011 C1pllol BID. (AP Luerphoto).

,,

I
,,

�' Sunday Times-Sentinei- Poge-0-3
The

March 6, 1983
Page-D-2

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Zimbabwe farces "hold dissident faction

Deaths linked ·to drug; prodUct off market ~

By MIKE WILLIAMS
Aeepct•ted ~ Wrller
BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe (AP)
-Automatic weapons fire erupted
In Bulawayo's black nelghborhoods
today as Prime Minister Robert
Mugabe's forces sealed off the area,
and detained scores of people
Including one of opposition leader
Joshua Nkomo's members of
Parliament.
"There's been a lot of shooting In
there,"' 11.soldier at one of many
roadbl~ · told journallsts, who
were prevented !rom entering the
so-called western subums. ' 'They
(dissidents) have more guns than
we do."
Nkomo. president of the Zlm·
habwe African Peoples ' Union, was
"conflni!d to bi!d with nu" at his
fenced blingalow In the subums, an
aldesald.

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP )
An "apparent increase" In
all~rglc react Ions to a prescription
pain reliever called ZOMAX, Including five deaths, has prompted
the manufacturer to recall thedrug.
Johnson &amp; Johnson Inc. said
Friday that lis subsidiary, McNell
Pha!'l'naceu tleal of Spr ing House.
Pa .. is " temporarily w ithdrawing
;ZOMAX" unt il a new label spelling
ou t possible side effects can be
Issued In consultalion with tbe U.S.
' Food and Drug Administr at ion.
The drug, introduced In October
191ll and since used by an estlmaled
15 million people. will not have to be
taken from tl!e market permanently, FDA SJ:XJkesman Chris Smitl!
said in Washington.
The com pany said It noticed an
"apparent in,crease In the number
of allergic r eactions .. to ZOMAX
las I month. It did not Indicate how
long the product might be off the
market.
•
" The latest number of total
allergic react ions we have had
reported to us is about 1,001.
-

Wreck injures two
GALL IPOLIS -One person was
admitted to the hospital and another
was injured alter a head-on collision
on Ohio 7 Friday morning.
, Odie Bush, 70, Gallipolis, Is In
sa tisfactory condition at Holzer
Medical Center's intensive care
unit .
.Jenn) · Sm ith, 30, Middleport, was
l reated for facial cuts at HMC and
rPicased.
, (\ccordin g to the Gallia·Meigs
J:XJSt of the Ohio Highway Patrol,
Bush' .'aSsouthbound on 7 just south
of GalliJ:XJli,s when he went Into the
opJ:XJsing lane and struck ·a north·
bound car driven by Smith.
Both c'\rs received heavy dam·
age in the 9: 35 a.m. accident. No
onne has been cited, and troopers
say the wreck is still under
investigation.
: Troopers cited Garland Waoo·
~a rd , 38, Rt. 1, Crown City, for
']:lrunken driving after a single-car
accident on Teens Run Road at 6
a.m . Sal un:lay.
. Woodyard was driving eastbound
·about one-half mile west of Ohio 7
;when he reportedly went off the left
1ide of the road and trito a ditch.
• Hi ,•••hi cle sustained moderate

..

dari.JgP.

' '

•

c:.:

rPOLIS - City police ar e
~ , .t.,_ ,, ling a hit -skip accident

},

rl( ), .••.,

I'Urred

on Second Avenue

Gary and Sharon Toothaker
:r •·port someone hit the driver's side
· ponr of lheir car while it was parked
in lh&lt; • IOO block of Second Avenue.
Th• •car was slightly damaged and
jJoltce are invest igating.
: P" lice cited the following persons
• ft iLlay and early Saturday:
:
t pciJ Benne)l, 82. 105 Ohio St.,
•·
to }i eld; Bernard R.
:-: . :'r1vn , 19, 919 Second Ave.,
&lt;;queatin g t ires and illegal exhaust;
:David D. Duncan, 20, Gallipolis.
~eckless operation; Paul J. Gauze
· •J r. , 20, lll Mabelene Drive, !allure
·'to cbey stop sign; Jeffrey T.
' Phillips, 38 Henkle A ve. . open
. container.
'•

.

:Found gtiilty on
:·cultivation charge
GAlLIPOLIS - . A charge of
:.attempted cu ltivation of marijuana
.:r esulted in a fine and, suspended
:sentence In municipal court Friday.
; · The charge was brought against
j &lt;::huck E. Roberts, Rt. 1, Northup,
t by the Gallia County Sheriff's
itiepartment for an Incident which
: occurred on Aug. 2. 1982.
~ · J;l.oberts w as sut\§equently fined
~ :$50, given a suspended stx·montl!
&lt; ~ail sentence and was put on one
) y ear of probation.
A DWI charge against Roger
: 'Bu sh, 34, 205 Kelton Rd. , was
: ~educed' by prosecution to open
: container. B ush was then fined $17.
; : In traffic cases, costs were levied
•!.gainst Donald E. Long, 43, Cross
'-"anes, W.Va ., for parking In a
yrohibited area, and Dian C. Davis,
' 40, Rt. l , Bidwell. for unsafe vehicle
: t.Ioyd H . Capehart, 53, Leon W.Va. ,
:.fh arged with speeding, pleaded not
;,gu ilty an.d his case was continued
i 1mt il March 16.
; f'nt1t•Jtlng bond were Jerry L .
"fl.a~· , 2l. Canal Winchester, lm·
proper passing, S36; Pamela J
~p. •rkJns. 21, Gallipolis, !allure to
~Yl "' l t $:J3: Phillip A. King. 19, 74,
~Sp ruct' ~~- . wrong way on a one-way
:itreet, $.'16; Richard A . White, 29,
•p au ipolls, unsafe vehicle, ~
:E'rancls M . Marcum, 35, Vinton, no

inu tiler. $.'}).

·

; Forfett ingbondforspei!d!ngwere
; Michael W. Woolems, ll. Poca,
:JN.va., $34; James A. Casto. 56,.
:i;:Wtn,oton, $.15; Valerle G. Joseph,
d-5. Polllt Pleasant, $:1i; Dmna M
~a.«
.'J.9, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, $36;
F
&gt;J Shaffer , 56, Summersville,

W.\'·1, $36.

1

'&gt;

. R.traton March 7, 1983-l: po to 4:00P.M. and 6:CJ0.8:oo P.M.- Davis Techni~ Career Cen~
•o.

Cours• Dtseri9tion

~CCOUNliNG

105

n4
124

134
134
134
134
214

244

Dtys

HoMn

LoettiOil

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

Gen. Ace, Fundamentals

Tih

6:00· 8:30 p.m

LC203

Prin. ot Ace. II
Prin. ot Ace. tl

MIWTh 11:01).1 1:50 a.m.
MW
12:00- 2:50 o.m.

llC138
0£138

Prin. of Ace. Ill
Prin. ol Ace. Ill
Pri n. of Act. II I
Prin. of Acet. Ill

MTWTh
MTWTh

OCi 38
DC138

Inter. Ace. !I

Fund. Accountine
- In Act. Prin.

MW
MTWTh
MTWh
MTWTh

2:00- 2:50 p.m.
6:00· 7:50 p.m.
3:00- 3:50 p.m.
9:00: 9:50 a.m.

LC 20C

1:00· 1:50 p.m.
8:00- 9:50 p.m.

01
DC138

OCJ38

324
MW
4:00· 5:50 p.m. llCI38
AGR. I &amp; I .............................................................. .'.............. :.................... .
T215

Tractor firm

ANIIAL fECI\

T203
T245

f~eld

Crop Prod .

t'!l.l

123.
123

t~

TBA
TBA

143

Amef. lilerlture

223
234
2431

NWSI' lay Out Ds1n.

lo.

• Curriculum Ovlpmnl.

163

•Basic Photograph

124

Lob
203

252
343

• Selected Topics

M His·Pri to Med.

'Scut ~ure

Lab

Tlh

12:011-12:50 p.m.

FA141

MW
TTh

6:00· 7:30 p.m.

Ul2~

Tlh
TTh

403
453

•Independent To pics
•Adwanced Pho!o

473

•Adwanced W~ ter

MW
MW

lab

MW

lab

Tih
TTh

AN2
FA141

11:00·11:50 a.m.
2,00. 2:50 p.m.
3:00· 3:50 p.m.
6:00- 7:30 p.m.
-4:00- 4:50 p.m.
5:00· 5:50 p.m.
4:00. 4:50 p.m.
5:00· 5:50 p.m.

FA124
F!m
Fll29
F~l2-4
F~ l 4l

f!l4 1
FA 1 2~

FA124

BIOLOGY ....... ..... .............................. ., ............................................. .............
104
•f und. of Bioi Clgy
MWF
9:00· 9:50 a.m.
HI 02

lab

104
116

Th

•f und .ol Biology
•Lite Science II

l ab

MTWThF
M

116

•ute Sc1ence II

116

•ure Sc1enc e II

225

•General

l ab

l ab

nh

Zoolog ~

lab

MTWThf
F

9:01).10:50 a.m.
5:30· 7:50 p.m.
1:00- 1:50 p.m.
9:00-ll:50 a.m.

W

p.m.
9:110·11:50 o.m.
1:00· L:SO p.m.
9:00·11:50 a.m.

MWf

11 :00-11:50 a.m.

MTWThf

1:00- l:SO

HID!

HlO I
HI02
H101
HI02

HID!
HJ02

HID!
Hl02

10:110·11:50 a.m. Hl04
264
•Local FIClra
nh
2:00- 2:50 p.m.
H102
lab
MW
2:00· 3:50 p.m. Hl04
285
•Microbiology
MWf
2:00- 2:50 p.m. Hl02
lab
Tlh
1:110· 2:5() p.m. HIOl
•M i~ ro bi olo gy
MWf
2:00- 2:50p.m.
H102
185
Lab
TTh
3110- 4:50 p.m Hl03
364
•toca l Fl ora
Tlh
2:00- 2:50 p.m.
ti l02
lab
MW
2110· 3:50 p.m. Hl04
375
"General Physiology
MWf
12;00-12:50 p.m. H104
lab
TTh
1200- 1:50 a.m. Hl04
385
•MicTobiCllllgy
MWF
2:00· 2:50 p.m. HIQ2
La b
Tlh
3:00- 4:50 p.m.
H-103
385
•MicrobloiClgy
MF
2:00- 2:50 p.m.
H102
la b
Tlh
.. l:OO- 2:50 p.m.
HI03
SECRETARIAL SCI. ........................................................................................................
213·
21 4
23 3

274

Tlh

DictatiOn. Trans
Ex .. l , Med. Typing
OHice P1ocedure
Office Management

Tlh
MTWlh

MTW
MW

6:00- 7:50 p.m.

5:00- 5:50p.m.
4:00- 4:50 p.m.
6:00- 7:50 p.m.

OC136
OCI36

OC136
OC133

BUSINESS MNCMT ............................................................................................................ ..
104
Intra To Blliln ess
MTWTh
l:OQ- 1:50 p.m.
DC125
204
lntro To Bus. Mngt
MW
·s:OO- 9:50 .p.m.
AN225
214
Bus. Communicat1oos
MW
6:()0- 7:'50 p.m.
OC125
234
Bus. Statistics
TTh
3:00- •:so p.m.
OC1 38
263
293
29 4

32 4

354
39 4
454

Small Bus. ~hna11mnt
Reai State fin
Business Law II

MTWT h
"'
.TTh

Selected-Topics
A.dv. Busi ness M11mnt.
Quantitative Mthds.

MW
MTWTh
MW

Selected ;opics
Internship
Oirectt:d Stud1es

MW
TB A
TBA

8:00 8:50 a.m.

8:00-10:50 p.m.
-4:00- 5:30 p.m.
9:00-10:50 a.m.

2:00- 1:50 p.m.

6:00- 7:50 p.. m.
9:00-10:50 a.m.

DC138
AN222
DC125
SC114
OC125
AN222
SCI14

104

Data Systems
Basic Lang

133
133

RPG It
RPG II

22 3

Bus. Computer Prl)j.

323

Bus. Computer PrOJ.

MTWThF

MTWThF
MTWTh f
TTh
MW
MW

11 :00-11 :50 a.m
9:00- 9:50 a.m.

1:00· 2'50 p.m.
5:00· 7:50 p.m.
5:30- 7:50 p.m.
5:30· 7:50 p.m

OC105
DC105

DCI05
DC105
OC105

OC105

CHEIISTRY ..................................................................................................... ..
105
•Prin. Cl l Chem. l
MWThF
2:00. 2:50 p.m.
H 1
lab
I
2:0~ 4 50 o.m.
H 5
225
•Qua ntitati~e A.na ly.
-~WM_nh~
12:00.1 2:50 p.m. H 7
lab
t0:00-12:50 o.m. H 5
282

241

382

383

•Qual. Orgar~ A.naly.
01gan Chm. Thry. lll
Qual. Organ

Anaty.

Oru n.Chm. Thry Ill

flh

9:00·11 :50 a.m.

H 6

9:00 -11 :50 1.m

H 7
H ~
H 1

MWF

9:00- 9: ~ 1.m.

MWF

.9:00- 9:50 a.m.

nr.

Children's Lit
Shakespeare It
Selected Topics

MTMWThf
MTWTh
Tlh
MW

Blckllrounds in Lit.
En&amp;lish Gramnuu

Comparative Nolle!
Selected Topic's
Science fiction

l

~

Co1t11 Description

1:011· ISO p.m.
9:00- 9:50 a.m.

1100-12:50 a.m.
2:110· 3:30 p.m.

Days

Mo.r1

AN225
SC113
SC114
AN224
SC113
OC114
AN221
OCI38
1N221
~N224

FA134
0 I
LC204

ANI14

D2

!Nll4
SCI13
!Nll4
Locatton

ENGliSH SIC. LAN ............................................................................................. .
Adv. Re1d-Wrtina

TBA

AH204

FINUC£ ~!All ................................................... ............................................
11•
Personal Finance
Tih
9:00-10:50 a.m. SC114
224

Ban~

363

Reo I Estote

&amp;fin.1nce Sys.
~n .

MTWTh

11:00-11:50 a.m.

lC204

M

8:110·10:50

AN222

~m .

Seleded Topics
MW
9:0(}-10:50 a.m.
SCll•
fN E!ITS ............................................................................................................
105
•Fine Arts
MTWThf
11:00-11 :50 a.m.
FAllS
105
'fine Arts
MTWThf
10:110·10:50 o.m. F!ll5

39-4

GO'IUIIENT
................................... ,,. ................................................................
1
105
Amer. Syst. of Govt.
MTWThF
91)0- 9:50 a.m.
ANI I.
305
E..c. lea. Coni. Rei.
MIWThf
10:110·10:5() a.m. IN221
HULTH &amp; PE ...................................................................................................
100

101
101
101

Keadersguo U

TBA

Found ot Phys. let
Found ot Phys. let
Found ot Phys. l et

•

F
M
MW

10:0011:50 o.m.
6:011· 7:50 p.m.
10:00·10:50 o.m.

121A

"Archery

MW

11 :0(}- 11 :50 a.m

1211
1218

'Arche,

MW

IO:OD-10:50 a.m.

Tih
TTh
TTh

9:00- 9:50 a.m.
10:00-10:50 a.m

121 C

Bee- Swimmma
Inter. Swimmina

121G 'Colt
121G 'Cot
121G 'Got
121 Q

Trick &amp;field

MW

1211
1211
1211

'
Tennis

MW

Tennis

MW

Tennis

MW
MW

1211

12tH
L21W
200
223

232A

h rmis
•Horseback Rid1ng

234

243

252
263
280
324

•Jre.lt of Ath. lnj.
W1ter Safety lnstr.
ludmhip Ill
T!stin&amp; in Hpe ..

•91
492
493
494
495

5:JO. 7:00 p.m.
p.m.
12:00·1 2:50 p.m.
1:00- 1:50 p.m.
2:00. 2:50

3:00- 5:00
8:00- 8:50 .1.m.

M
Tih
TBA
MWf

•Badminton
Leader}hip ll
Per. &amp; COmm. Health

Office Sftbl. Sse~ .
Movement Attiv1tt
Firsl ~~ S.tety

333
3530
414

~DO· 9:50 o.m.
1:011- 2:50 ~m
1'011- 2:50 ~m
2:00 - 2:50 p.m

F
Tlh

9:00 - 9:50 .1 .m.

MW

11:110.11:50 o.m.
12:00. L50 p.m.
2:11(). 2 ~ p.m

nhf'

MWF

nn

School Hlth. Pro~m.
Coach Bse~. SttbL
PE Rec. hcp. Ch~ .

9:00- 9:50 a.m.

MWF
MWF

1~110· 10:50
~()(). 8:50
1~00 · 11 :5()

TTh

o.m
a.m.
a.m.

T8A

Dtrected Studies
Oirecttd Directed
Directed Studies
Directed Studies
Directed Stud'es

fBA
TBA
TBA

TBA .,

LC

LC G
LC G
LC C

•

~

LC20•
LC P
LC
LC203

LC103
LC2113
LC103
LC
LC
LC
LC
.LC

1~

284

Amene&amp;nHist. I
Amer1t1n Hi51. Ill
Non Western Hist.

Mid-Eul

194
394
474

Monil1th~

'II'

General Psych

TWThf

10:00.10:50 .1.m.

DC1 13

lWThf
Tlh

1:110- 1:50 p.rn.
6:110· 7:50 p. ~.

111:133
A~ I

213

Psy. of CMttn

MWF

215
215
234
234

llllman Grwttt De•.
llllman Grwth. De•t.

Tlh
MlWThf

304
334
334
383

424
!WES
124
394

393

Oraamzational

PSy

MT

Dr1onintiONI P,y

MlWTh

Educationalsych.

ITh
MTWTh

Oraanizational Psy.
OrganiZation•! Psy.
Prt. Ttm &amp; Measur.

396

Soc. M . PractM:
Soc. Wk. Prtctic.
Soc. Wk. Proctic
SOc Wk. Pr.1ctic

397
398

Soc. Wlr. Practic
Soc. Wk Practic

399

Soc. Wk. Pt1ctic
Soc. Wk. ltlettlods I Pttc.
Soc. ~ri . Cotloqu•um
Sol;. Wk. Fkl. Ptaceme.

394

395

8:00- 8:50 a.m.

fA124

9:0D-lt..30 o.m.
11:011-11:50 o.m.

llCI25
OC133

3:00· 4:50 p.m.

OC133

12:00·12:50 p.m.
3:00- 4:50 p.m.
12:00-12:50 p.m

OC115

3:00- 4:50 · p.m
6:00- 8:50 p.m.

MT
M

1:00- 1:50 pm.

AN222

6:00- 7:50 p.m. ·

AN221

164

SC113
DC125
OCI33
AN22t

2:00- 2·50 p.m.
10,011·10:50 o.m.

AN222

Communlc•lions.Sem.

MTWfh

1:00- 1:50 p.m.

H12•

MTWih

1'00- !·50 p.m.

FAI1•

Phi. of laftJU.IJe

360

MTWTh

1:110· 1:5() o.m.

AN222

6:110· 7:5() pm.

AN222

THlATEI ........ ................................................,..................................................
223
'Actlnil
MWF
~()(). 2:50 p.m.
FA!Ol
243
Selected Top&lt;s
Mllh ·
!:GO· 1:50 p.m. FAI03
2~
Theatre Arts
nh
100 4:50 p.m. FA!Ol
273
!ctinell
MWF
1:110· 2:50 p.m. FA103
.343
Selectlld Topics
Mllh
1:00· 1:50 p.m. FA103
454
Theitre Arts
Tih
3:00- 4:50 p.m,
FA!03
483
lnd1v, Thesis Proj.
TBA

'fBA

Studies
TBA
IND. SOC. ORi ENT ............................................................. .................................................
101 Fresnmon Orienl
t,~·
6:011- 7:50 p.m. CC
Dl·rected

ITh

11:00-Ll:SO a.m

0

10

•

AN22~

AN222

Studies

~

1

10:00·10:50 a.m.

493
494

,

SC113
0

Communations Sem.
Ptlil. ot l.JOIUalf

SPRING QUARTER
ON-CAMPUS REGISTRATION INFORMATION

202
MW
3:00- 4:50 p.m. SC112
I--DRAFTING ........................................................................................................ ..
IIOTE:
1 ~3 ·
•Adw. Eng. Drawing
Oh
2:00- 4·30 p.m.
DCll6 • M!NUFAct. TECH ......................................... -· ............... .................................. ...
113
•Mach. Tool Pr~. I
MW.
5:00· 7:50 p.m.
OCI33
All incoming freshmen, unless pmiously tesled , must be tested for English ond
203
•1ne. tllustrabon
MW
3:00- _
5:20 p.m.
DC116
133
'!loch. I~ Pro. t
11W
8:00·m50 p.~.
OCill
Mllll placement on Morch 7, 1983.
223
•Architectural Drtt.
Tih
8:00-10:20 a.m.
OC116
153
·~ont l i!OUt-llot.
MW
8:011-10:20 o.m. OC116
ECONOIICS ........................................................... :....................... .................... .
English: 8;30 o.m.• I p.m. end 4 p.m. in the leornina Center
254
Mar~ulactur Synlhu
Tlh
5:00- 8:20 p.m.
OC133
114
Intra To Mkroecon
IIIW
8:01J- 9:50 a.m.
0Cil4
Moth: 10 o.m., 2 p.m.ond 6 p.m. in lhe Technitol Center
283
Moct.ne Re~ Moim.
TTh
8:30·10:5() p.m. OClll
124
lntrCl To Macroecon 24
Oh
9:00·10:!)1) a.m. SCI1 2
l.AT! IEitSRATIOtl
LIBERAL ARTS ...... ............................................................................................................
314
La bor Relations
MTWTh
8:00. 8:50 a.m. DC133
!lllll IE THIDUGH TUESDAY, lARCH 15.
511
Wid. Stot~ C.m. Atlr .
W
8:110-10:110 p.m. FA Aud
394
Selected Topics
MW
9:00-10:50 1.m
SCil 2
FE! SCHEDULE
FOIIIUNITY FOIUI '. O~TES: ..................................................................................
DIESEL ..............................................................................................................
January 19. 1983
tosidoots of Gollll. Jackson, lolp or Vintoo Countiu
184
•Diesel Fuel Sys. I
Tih
6:00- 8:50 p.m
OC!l9
Febru1ry 9, 1983
225
•oiesel Trble Shoot!!.
Tih
9:00·11:50 a.m.
0Cll9
Instructional fNs:
March 23. ,1983
234
•Brakes &amp; Suspension
Tih
2:00- 4:50 p.m.
OCIU
for E1ch Credit Hour ............................................................... $ 15.00
April 20, I ?B3
EDUC~TION.. ..................................................................................................... ..
tnstltutiooal
fN;
I~THEIAIICS
..................................................................................................
.
101
Fid . Exp. Sclloot
T
3:00- 3:50 p.m. AN 3
For Eoch Credit Hour loa ma•imum of $60 per term ................ $ 4.00
104
Math Review
MTWTh
8:00- 8:50 a.m.
AN224
103
lntro To Education
MWF
1:00- 1:50 p.m. · AN22S
114
lntro Al iebr~
Mllhf
2:00. 2:50 p.m. 0 1
Community College Aud~ fees are the same as instructtonal and Gener11
103
lntro To Educ11tion
MWf
11:00·11:50 .1.m.
AN225
114
Intra Atgeb~a
MTThf
10:00·10:50 1.m.
0
2
Fees.
' 101
f~ . Exp. School
W
3:00- 3:50 p.m.
IN 3
134
Int. ~g. l
MW
&amp;DO· 7:50 p.m.
H 7
202
fkl . hp. Agency Sth.
TBA
RESIDENTS OF THE STATE OF OHIO
204
lr~form.ll Geometr~
MIThf
9:00 9:50 a.m.
0
1
204
Prin.ol Teaching
MTWTh
200· 2:50 p.m. AN224
BUT
OUTSIDE THE FOUR COUNTY DISTRICT
204
lt~ormal Geolnttry
MTWTh
3:00· 3!50 p.m.
D 2
204
Prin. of·Teaching
MTw'rn
1~ - 1:50 p.m.
Atu24
Instructional
fNs:
214
tntro
Slati~&lt;s
Mllhf
10:00-10:5()
o.m
.
HI02
.
214
Nat. Sci. Ml:hds. Elem.
n~
10:00-11:50 a.m.
AN 2
For Each Credit Hour ............................................................... ... $ 1!.00
2-45
Calc~us Ill
MTWThf
1:00· 1:!)1) p.m.
0
l
234
lnh. Excep. lewner
MTWTh
IO:D0-10:5() o.m. Ailll4
260
Data proceslin1 II
Mllhf
3:110· 3:5() p.m. OC125
263
Gifted learner
M
4:011- 6:50 p.• . AN 2
424
Differential Equal
MTThf
2:00- 2:!)1) p.m. . D 2
lnstilutiooal F":
264
SOC Sci. Mlhcb . El~ .
MW
11~· 12: 50 a.m.
AN 2
494
Spetial Top~s
MTWF
11:00-11:50 a.m.
OC106
283
Ad'llnced Sign language
T
For Each Credit Hour'to a '""imum of S60 per term ................ $ 4.00
6:DO· 8:50 p.m. AN 2
302
fkt. Exp. Tchr. Aid
TBA Community Col~ge Aud~ Fees are the Slme 11 instru~tionol and Gtnerol
1[0. ~~~~~.p-~ ~~~----- - ·······--· ·------- - ............................. :................................
303
Human Relit. Tchr. '
MWF
Fees.
1:110· !:So p.m. ANI14
121
Med. TechnolOgy Ill
M
2:11(). 2:50 p.m. OC!07
313
F~ . E•o. Tchr. A~
MTWThf
8:00-11 :00 a.m.
AN 3
1-41
Med. Tuminoloo 11
M
1:00- 1:50 p.m.
OC107
313
fld. Exo. Tchr Air1
MTWThf
12:00 3:110 p.m. AN 3
JR .. SR. STANDING AID OUT·Of·STATE RESIOEIITS
221
Med. Tech . Sem. Ill
M
11:00-11;50 a.m.
P
325
Re1d~g Mthds. Sec.
MTWThf
11 :00-11:50 a.m.
AN114
Instructional
FNs:
.
.
221
Med.
loch.
S.m.
Ill
F
..
2
:3D3:20
o
.m
.
iA
333
Readina L1b K·l2
TBA
·221
Med. loch. S.m. Ill
T
11:110·11:50 o.. m. HC
for Each Credi! Hour fewer than 12 hours ................................ $ 79.15
381
Ed . Mentally Retard
MW
4:110· ·5:50 p.m. AN114
. 224
Clinical HematCIDI
MWTh
10:00-IO:SO a.m.
OCI07
Enrollment ot 12 thru IB hours ................................... ................... $950.00
483
Adwanced Sign ·languige
T
6:00· 8:50 p.m. AN 1'
Lo
W
1:110· 250 p.m.
Classroom Managmnt.
w
433
Eoch Credit Hour in mess ol 18 hours ....................................... S 80.00
4,11(). 7:50 p.m AN 2
p
299
Clinical Practicum
TBA
453
OCC Train Handicpd.
T
6:00
p.m. AN 1
tnst1tutio01l FN:
463
Gifted Leamer
M
4:11(). 6:50 ·'p.m. AN 2
299
Clinil:al Practlcum
TBA
OC HC
•
For Each Credit Hour to a muimum of $60 per term ................ $ 4.00
485
Mltfl Mlhds. Elem.
F
9:00- '9:50 a.m
AN 2
299
Cliniul l'tacticum
TBA
OC VA
A
single
osteriskl"l before the coune descriptiMIInthe ~chedule indrcat.S alob
MW
9:00 1 ~ 50 a.m. AN 2 295
Sptci.1l Topics
TBA
DC107
fee i5 required for ltle course.
491'
Directed Studies
TBA
295
Specl.1l Topil:s '
TBA
VA
492
Directed Studies
TBA
ltliTAIY ICIUC£ .....................................................................t. ..................... . ..
507
•1ntem Teaching LD
REquttEI[ITS: Any resident of Jackson, Gallil. Meigs or Vinton Countie! with
TBA
122
Map Rdna. Orie,nteer
MW
4:00-4:50 p.m.
D 2
508
·~r~tem Teach. EMR
a
hLgh school diptoms or ~s equivaletlt moy reSister for up to 12 CredN Hours
TBA
122
Map Rdna. Orie'nteer
,. MW
8:00. 8:50a.m.
0
1
w~hout applyina 101' admission to lhe Cotlep. There~ only a need to·rea;ster ..
~515E
• intern Tcfmg. Elem.
TBA
222
Mil
BaHI/C.~Pi.
fit
8:008:5()
o
.m
.
0
2
515P •1ntrn. Tthng. Sg/ Reg.
Much 7. fulttime students muat apply for admi!Sion by conllcting the Otfice of
IBA
222
Mil Bani/C.mlfi.
MW
4:()(). 4:50 p.m. D 2
Admissions ond Recordsd at Rio Grande Cotleae and Community Collep.
515S •intern Tchng. Sec.
TBA
222
· M~IBaHI/C.~.,
TTh
4:00· 4:50 p.m. 0 2
523
MuSit lntem Tchna.
TBA
320
Plltoon
Lew!
!oct
TTh
8:01). 9:5() a.m. 0 1
ElECTRO"ICS
Rio Grondt Collqe ond Community Colle&amp;e admits students•of any roce color
ub
•
I
8:110- 9:50 a.m. 0 1
1
155
•Electronic Apps. 1
'"'· reli&amp;ion. handicap, eae, IOd nationol or ethn~ oriti~ . Rio Gronde Cot~gi
Mllhf
11:110·12:50 p.m. OC112
322
Pl.atoo n Level Tact
f.
8:00· 8:50 a.m.
0
1
and Community Colleae is on equol opP.rtuntty employer. ..
lab II
w
10:00-11:50 1.m.
OC112
.
322
~oloon Level loci
TTh
4:()(). 4:50 p.m. 0 1
!55
•Eiec tror~ic A.PP 11
Mllhf
12:00·12:50 ·p.m. '0C112 . IU$1C ...................................................Tih ......... ............................................. ..
. Lab I
CIEDIT FOI llfl Ell'fii£1Cl
1:110· 2:50 p.m. DC112
w
102
Musit Prif!ler
t:l)C). 1:5() p.m. f!ll5
175
•circuit Analysis 11
Tlh
6:DO· 7:5() p.m. DC114
A new 1eaminl Protr•rn deve!Opld ID aid peop1t with ut:ensive expefienct in ~•rious
104
fund
ol
Music
I
Tlh
~110- 9:5() am.
FAllS
l.1b I
Th
fields his been d~v~ at Rio G~'"! Calltat 11111 Communi~) Colltie.
DC112
8:00· 950
131
ChorU! lob Pncl!
MTWih
3:0()- 3:50 p.m. FA115
175
•Cifcuit Ari.1lysis ll
Tlh
6:DO· 7:5() p.ni. OC114
_Tht_prr,"'!i'' dlflcted kllhe tndMtlual who his IIPirienct,,eithf:r;oolea,e rel1ted Ill'
201
Muiic
VoL
Ad.
hp.
TT11
•
lab II
I
1:00· 2:5() ~m .
OC112
,otside work, whiCh ''" ltiWd as 1 v111d means ollllmina. Co1tt1ecred~ may De •••rded '
261
5eloded Topics '
TBA
254
Industrial Control
to quahfied peBans.
,
·
Tlh .
6:DO- 7:5() ~m.. OC112
.
t
'·
285
'£1e. MNTC Trbtshlni
MW
0Cli2
6:110· 9:50 ~m .
,
_
I~
~s
m(At
be
enrolld
rtfUllff)
11
Rio
Gtlindt
1nd
must
be
in
IGDd
.ca~TUw ~!:rf!·A";;-;;·~~
.r&amp;l. ..............j:oo:"9.,50..;:·~: .. ......iiio2 demiC stltlllfiJ With the scttoot in·ordtf 1o QUI~fy tor tile propam.
122
Simin.1r: Ptoer~mmable
TTh
4:DO- 4:50 ~m .
llCI12
204
Physical
GeoloJ!
·
MW
~DO- 7:50 p.m.
HID!
Contlollen
Astudent tn.t thinks tblyq~~aNfy for tht proper~ lf!Uitllt an aj)plitltion with tne acar
•
der?lic dean. from tMt1 the dun determines tM r.nltli llty ol the ~tet .1nd ISsi(rls 1 faEIGUSH
culty SCJOnRK who 'lrilllssiltthe S~l in puttint klllltler 1 portfollt larwhil:h credlmly
100
Comp. Commun. SiliNs
9:00· 5:5() .... DCI38
MWf '
be IWarded.
..
·
•
104
Comp. Comun. Skills 135
MWF
~DO· 9:50 a.m.
AN225
The
portfolio
COitlis1l
oil
Cll'lful
Pl'tlaltdan
vi
PriOr
lelf'ninJ•nd
supportin1dGc113
' Ccwnposition I
til(). 9;5() a. ~ .
MWF
111224
urMIIIIIion. Afoe ot ISO Is for Ita piS!tfelo l'flluation and the sludetlt is "*10&lt;1
Ill
CoMposition 1
MWf
2:«1· 2:5() p. ~ .
111115
$7 ,... Cfltlt wfttn thJ project is CIIRftl-.cl.
113
Clotpooition I
Tlh
1:()(). 720 ...... SAI4
\
. 1M fta~ of rtw ~Diit _il pert,r11Wd br a• alstssment Committee, which 111 y
123
Ce~position II
MWf
8:00· 8:50 U l.
!Nl'a
l
1ndude ftculty and tJPirt$ tn till field. Thl Mluahn may ltlen result it~ the IWirdilc of

.

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

I
.1

crldlt.
·
,
Up thrtu&amp;tt 24 flours of crtclt lllf blapptied tlw1rd •n nsociation de&amp;re~- "Iii
- tllnlup 41 qulrllr lloors al credit rosy be alll)tiod tl&gt; 1 lllchelor de,.. ..

.\

'

.

~~

TOLEI;JO, Ohio (API - Two
"Therearesomewhosaythatour
• Nicaraguan farm union leaders say government Is totalitarian and
: they're touring tl!e United States to communist," sald Ms. Espinoza, 32.
~ convince people that the Central
a member of the Nicaraguan State
• AmeriCan country Is not a commu: Council and representative of the
.nlst state.
Association of Farmworkei'S.
· ~ Jorge Mora and Olgha Espinoza
"Ifthatwerethecasedoyouthlnk
"t chargi!d during a news conference our government would have Invited
~ Friday that tl!e Reaganadm1nlstra·
Pope Jolu! Paul to our country?"
tlon Is hacking the military In
Ms. Espinoza and Mora said that
, Honduras while farm workers and Somoza loyalists are noW using
. s peasants In Nicaragua are being rocketlaunchers and bazookas sold
; killed 1n border clashes.
by the United States to the
1 Speaking at the Farm Labor Honduran military. Both said the
t Organizing Committee (FLOC) military is equipping the Nlcara·
1 headquarters. the workers said guan refugees for the eventual
under the deposed Nicaraguan Invasion oftheir homeland.
dictator Anastasio Somoza, there
." The b)lildup Is becoming more
were no health centers for the poor, sophisticated, " said Mora. "These
~ and now tl!ere are 368. "We· have are Items that are not available on
Improved working conditions. At the black market In that quantity.
, eachworkplacewenowhavestores The Honduran military Is being
1 where the workers can buy the bas 1C used as a conduit."
Botl! said the presence of Amerl·
• food necessities," said Ms.
: Espinoza.
•
can military advisers In Honduras
~
Ms. Espinoza and Mora spoke and tl!eir use during joint military
• through an Interpreter, FLOC operations Is aimed at a well·
organized Invasion "In grand mil; president Baldemar Velasquez.
ltary style."
:

i

TBA

MIWTh

TBA
TBA

~

741
Mo"~le &amp; Fo,.ly
Ml'/ffll
2:110· 2:50 p.m. ~N221
404
Soctll R...,rch
MTWfh
IO:OD-11:50 o.m. SCit2
•24
Sociological The&lt;.
TTh
3:011· 4:50pm.
ANIU
smcH ........... :................................................................................................
104
Fund of Spch. Comm.
MTWTh
9:00- 9:50 a.m.
fAI2"
104
Fund ot Spch. Cornrn.
MIWih
11:011-11:50 o.m. FA120
104
fund. ol Spch. Comm.
MlWTh
' l~OO· t0:50 o.m. FA120
104
Fund ot Spch. Cornm.
MW
6:110· 7:50 ~"·
OC114
134
Prin. ol Discussion
MlWTh
12:00-12:50 p.m. FAit•

MTWTh

l)rected Studtes
Directed Studies

Union leaders claim
"
~Nicaragua free nation
•

TBA

TWThf
MTWlh

'

.'·

TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA

515
TBA
SOCIOLOGY ......................................... ............ ,..... ................. .......
104
lntro to Socioloo
MTWTII
11l:00-10:50 .1.m;

AN222

492
492

Freshm1n'Orienl
Student leadenh1p

0

Gr!nerot P'Yt.h.
General Psych.

10:00-10:50 a.m.

TTh

IOU

6:00- 7:15 P.m.

104
104

ANZ22

Tapiu l Studies
Hfs.of Tech.
-

TTh

104

11 :00·11:50 i.m.
9:00 - 9:50 a.m.

474

Otrecte~

Philosphy. Thin~in&amp;

.
.
.
\
RETIRES FROM BOARD- Bob Mackenzie, left, a memberoltbe
: Gallla roomy 1111 B!lal'd of Meatal Retardation lor the past 16 years, Ill
• rongratulated on lils - t retirement from the hoard by ~
~ · James L •. "Jeep" Holley. BoDey Ill seen pl'eSf!dbtg a plaque to
~ Mackmzle from the Ohio School B!lal'd Asl!ioclatlon.

~

PHYSICS ............:. ........ ,......................................................................................
144
'Ap~iOd Physics II
Mlh
1:011· 1:50 p.m. 0Cit6
ub
Th
12:011- I :50 o.m. DC106
225
General Phys. Ill
MTThf
2:00· 2:50 ~m.
OC186
lob
W
1:110· 2:50 ~m
OC!06
PSI'CIIOLOIIY ................................................................. ......................... --... :..... :.
104
Gr!ooral Psych.
MW
t,OI). 10:50 o.m.
llt125

MlWTh
MfWTh
MJWTh

His.ot Tech
Non Western Hlst.
Mid-East
Tollita.l Sludies

7:01).11:110 o.m. OCI
100- 8:JI p.m. · OC l
M
UI·IO:JI o.m.
fC P
I
l JO. 8:00 ~m . ' OC P
W
7:011-11:00 o.m. OC l
lh
100· I :JI p.m. • OC l
W
UHO:JO Lm. 0C P
lh
tJO. 8:00 ~m.
OC P
210
M
.~011 - 12:110 o.m.
llCil4
I
10:()().12:110 o.m. 0Cil4
I, II C~nical Gn:~ups
WTh
}:00- 3:00 .a.m.
OC ZIP
111, IV Ci(licll Groups
WTh
3:110-10:30 p.m. DC ZIP
PHIL &amp; IEL!G!OII ................. .'.......................................................................,.: .. ;
203
lntro To Philosophy
· MWF
2:110· 2:50 pm
IICI22
t"J 3

MW

I

M •••••• , . .. .. . .... ....

•

Monarch~
To pie~l Studies

Section
Section I
Section tl
Section II
Section ill ·
Section ttl
Section tV
Section
lied. Surg.Nu,... lll

414
444

HISTORY ....... ,...................................................................................................
113
The Ml!die~al W~rkl
MW
4:00- 5:20 p.m.
AN222
123
MOO Civiliation
Oh
4:00· 5:20 p.m.
'Mt222
134

NUISIIIQ .............................................. .11111 ...................... _.............................. .
126
Molemal &amp; Newborn
2:00- Ul ~m.
0Cil4

AbndO&lt;mol Psych
MTWTh
1:00· 1:50 ~m.
St111
~ IUIET ...................................................................:...........................
lntro tl&gt; .""rietina
MlWTh
12:110 · 1 ~ 50 pm.
DC!l4
LC G
Selected Topes
MW
9:01).10:50 o.m. SC113
LC G 434
Ad~. &amp; Public: ~It
nh
6:00· 7:50 p.m.
D
I
LC P 444
Soci~ lsssues ""rk
MIWTh
1:01). 1:50 ~m.
Stll4
LC P
SOCIAL SCIEIC£ .............................................................................................. ..
LC G 104
lnlro to Soc. Sci.
MTWTh
1():00-10:50 a.m.
LC204
lC G 104
lntro tD Soc. ScL
MTWTh
11:00-J1:50 a.m.
lfft221
LC G 104
lntro to Soc. Sci.
MTWTh
11JO· 1:50 p.m.
Dell~
LC G 204
Pnn. of Gqr.1ph1
MTWTh
12:00-12:50 p.IJI . AN221
214
~rch Pro Hi•"'Y
MlWTh
1:00 1':50 p.m. FA120
lC G SOCIAL........................... ......................................................................... ..
LC G 721
SOC Welfate)nsttl.
!dTWTh
11 :00-ll:SO .1 .m.
AN224
LC G 283
lntm-~wln1 S~ H
MWF
lO:OD- 10:50 a.m.
SCI12
LC G 291
SWFld. Ob,.r Rept
TBA
St1bles
LC G
292
SW F~. Obser. Rept.
IBA
LC
293
SW f~. Obser. Rept.
18.1
LC204
294
SW F~ . Obser. Rept.
TBA
LC103
383
!nteMewin1 SkHI
MWF
10:00-10:50 a.m.
FAT\1
LC203
391
Soc. Wk. Practic.
TBA
LC203
392.
Soc. Wk. Practic.
TBA

1:00- 1:50 p.m.
7:00-10:00 p.m.

T
TBA
MfWlh

To!)ltal Studies

COMPUTER TECH........................................................................................................ , ...... ..
103

Tlh
MWF
MTWIIIF
MW
MWF
MTWTh
MWF
MW

Science fictiM

424

114

2:00- 2:50 P-"'·
Jl :OO·ll :50 a.m.

TTh

Amer. Lil.-ltur!"

ART .................. ..............................................................: ..............................
104
Furld. of Design
MTWTh 10:00-10:50 a.m.
U l 2~
MTWTh
Tih

Tlh

205

295
304

10:00-10:50 a.m.
1:01). 1:50 ~m .
11.00-11:50 a.m.
6:110· 7:20 p.m.
1:DO- 2:20 p.m.
2:()(). l:JI p.m.
1110· 4:JI p.m.
IO:()().JO:!iO a.m.
12:00-12:50 p.m.
~DO· 8:311 p.m.
1:00- 1:5() p.m.
11110·11;50 o.ni:
10:00-JO:!iO a.m.
2:110· 3:311 p.m.

TTh

205

483

•

MWF
MWF
MWF

Co mposition II
Composition II
C~mpos ititn II
Co mposition II
Composition II
Creative Writing

Tech. Rpt Writin1
Tech. Rpt. Wr ~ n1

~~

l

Sheep S•ine Prod

Marketing To Aa. Pr.

!23

283'

T8A

TBA
PLAIT TECH ........................................... :..~ ..................................................
1202
Fora" Crp Prod. t1
TBA

T276

493

'$01YI(-'I.une Thursday.

::

.

1

244

.Probe hitskip

SPRING QUARTER SCHEDULE
OF ON .CAMPUS CREDIT COURSES

·
Rio College
and
Grande· Community College

•

of three members of Parliament
"We have heard shots but we
among the a! In the lOO.member
don't know what"s going on out
there," said the aide. who requested National Assembly. One was detained last year lor alleged links to a
anonymity and spoke to The
coup plot and the other fled the
Associated Press by telephone.
Witnesses said they saw several
country after pollee said they
&lt;truckloads of people, evidently
wanted him for questioning.
detained by securtty torees, ferried
Mrs. Malunga said she had asked
out of the western subums. They
attorneys to try to secure her
said at least 'l1 troop carriers took
husband's release.
sold!en Into the city.
On Feb. 19, pollee barred Nkomo
from leaving Bulawayo. The ZAPU
Tens of thousands of workers
were trapped In the townships,
preventedfromgo!ngtothe!rjobsln ·
~
the city and Industrial sites.
I .
Bulawayo•s center was almost

•••••••••••• .,.1.,..,.
IU

;Sl

-

deserted.
Among those detained was Syd·
ney Malunga, member of Parlla·
ment tor Nkomo's party In Mata·
·belelaild north and the party's chief
parliamentary spokesflllj11.
ffis arrest, conllrmed by his wife,
Audrey, has robbed Nimmo's party

Labor unseats .7-year
•
•
•
conservative
maJonty
SYDNEY. Australia (AP)- Bob
Hawke's opposition Labor Party
swept the 7·year-old conseiVatlve
cliailtion of Prime Minister Mal·
colrn Fraser out of office In
Australia's national elections
Saturday.
Fraser conceded defeat and
resigned as leader of the Uberal
Party In the face of a Labor
landslide that could give Hawke's
party a rnajortty of more than a!
seats In · the 125-seat House of
Representatives.
Vote counting is a long process In
Australia, especially In the rural
districts, and t1nal results were not
e&gt;&lt;pected untO Monday.
His voice breaking, Fraser said
he took "total responsibility" for the
timing of the electionand the party's
defeat.
" I would like to congratulate Mr.
H!!.Wke and the Australian . Labor
Party on winning this electlo~ 8lld ~.

hope they can achieve what they
Intend," he said.
Hawke, 53, promised his govern·
ment would be one of national
reconciliation and would represent
all Australians, even those who did
not vote for him.
"Tonight, I'm enormously proud
and conscious of a greatresponslbil·
tty," he said.
Hawke, appearing on television to
claim viCtory, promised his admln·
!stratton would be "a government
·
fol' all Australians."
"I ask you to give us your trust,
your confidence, and your cooperation," he said.
Hawke said he expected to be
sworn In Frtday, and added In the
meantime, "I want to emphasize
Mr. Fraser and hism1nisters wtll be
given the opportunity to tidy up their
affairs with dlgnlty and grace, there
will be no breathing down their

Last Fall! became aT. V. Superstar in my first
CBS special. But stardom couldn't spoil-me ; J·
was already spoiled. I only gor tubbier, testier
and even more bestselling in my latest bo,ok
"Garfield Eats His Heart Out"!

The Alcove
42 Court St.

Lo.fayette MaiJ

Gallipour, Ohic
OPEN DAII.Y 9:~

-

•

.

m

--

8:00

UOSEDSUNDAYS
.

IZI.l~. H ••• ~~ •• ~. oQo . . . ... ij_.GJ!:;.

necks.~~

SPRING SALE AT POMEROY
LANDMARK
CHECK THESE PR-ICES

LANDMARK .

Agriculture and our community

leader .said l)e ' was . going' to
CzechOslovakia to attend a Soviet·
sponsored conferenc:e. PoUce ques·
tloned him lor eight hours, confls..
cated his passport and said he was
under Investigation to~ alleged
sedition, currency smuggling and
Wegat·emerald dealing.
Before his detention, more than
400 of Nimmo's officials and
supporters had been deta!ni!d for
alleged links to a coup attempt.

~ New garden calendars are
~ available at extension office
•

•
~

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extensloo Alent

Agriculture &amp; CNRD
Galla County
f
GALLIPOLIS - The 1983
~ Garden Calendar Is available
~ through county Extension offices
~ for $1 plus tax and postage.
~ The 32-page calendar caJT!es sev·
" era! pages of flower and vegetable
gardening Information plus 24
pages split between a page of lnfor·
mation and a calendar page of tips
tor each month during the year.
;, . You'1J find the calendar helpful
~ as reminders of weekly and dally
; chores note!~ on a timely basis. And
you can look ahead at the next
: week's reminders - even do them
~ ahead of time If you're going away
j for a week.
Check with your county exten·
sion office for a copy now. We're
l
•' located at 1502 Eastern Ave., GaJII·
~ polls. ICll help you with your gar·.
~ denlng plans the day you receive lt.
~
For example, there are a couple
• of maps that show 1) dates In the
~ sprtng after which there Is a 50~·
~ cent risk that temperatures w1ll
~ again fall to 32 degrees F . or lower,
~ and 2) dates In the fall when there is
• a 50 percent chance that the first 32
~ degree F. temperaturew111haveal·
: ready occurred. Also. there.ts a ta·
ble showing when to sow seed or set
plants, depth In Inches to plant seed
per 100 feet. days to maturity, plant·
Jng dls.tances In rows and between
rows, and estimated yields for
some 40 vegetables.
'J'be month·by-month lnforma·
tlon page and re!Jl!nders page give
you Ups that are timely during the
week. However, the dates on which
i ·certa!n suggestions are listed are
flexible, so don't be a1armed If you
. • fall to ~~CCOmpllsh everYthing that
t Is sugg~sted. There Is alw~ys to~. morrow If you can't make It today.
Also, you ·u find a guide to spac·
Jng, expected yield and years to
• beartng for tree fruits. It covers
~dwarf, semi·dwarf and standard
;;tree spacing, average yields and
useful Ute of trees: The same Is true
, for small fruits. A guide points out
~the vart&lt;;~JIS small fruit varieties,
j beartng lge space needed, approxtt'mate yields and other Information.

l

.
I

I
!
t

1

:~

•.

i

---·

'fo\lacoo Plaat Bed 'l'lpe

Methyl bromide provides control
most wljeds a J gr881es andre- .
·Puctlon ot Jhe casual apt for
[black shank, root knot. black root
;
'
.
rot. damping off and perhaps !lev·
l!t'al other soU borne d!seeses.

;of

Apply when solly moisture level Is
low (good tilth) and soil tempera·
ture is above 50 degrees F.
The can methnd is most popular
tn Burley country. This Involves releasing gas (nine PQunds of nte\hYI
bromide are suggested for each 100
square yards) under supported
plastic cover. Bags of straw (scat.
.teri!d over bi!d) provided an excellent cover support. Some growers ·
bury the plastic cover on two sides
and one end and then purnp up with
air. Cover should be allowed to remain on bi!d for 24 hours. Growers
that treat In faD could leave cover
on bi!d until time of seeding In
sprtng.
Allow adequate yardage - Plant
production Is expensive but this is
not the place to cut costs. The rule is
to allow 100 square yards of bi!d
space per acre (100 teet by nine or
75 feet by 12) . Small growers of less
Ulan one acre need to prepare about
a! square yards for each 0.1 acre.
Large growers with 75 to 100 acres
should allow 80 to 90 square yards
for each acre.

ONLY

$89.95

$19.95

ONLY

$1-19 95

10 H.P. 34" RIDING MOWER
ONL~

FENCE SALE
Weeder Fence Controller
(28-0093) . . .. .... . . . .. .. .. ...
Solid State Controller
(28-0091) .. . .......... .. .. . ..
Fence PI iers (22~707) . .. ~ . . . . .
· Steel Panel Galas
12ft. (24-1230) ...... ... ......
14ft. (24-1231) . .. .. .. .. . ... . ..
16ft. (24-1232) .. .. ' .. .. " " ..

$899 95

1CJ H.P. 44" RIDING MOWER
$
0

CHECK THESE PRICES!

Mollo Field Fence

$29995

EACH
\'

High-tensile smooth wire
150,000 psi; 4000 ft. ... .. .. . . . $55.95
6'1&gt; ft steel post (24-1813) ..... . . 2.59
Etectnc fence wire , •;., mi.
(24-2926) . . ... " . " .. . " " " " 5.99
Feedlot Panels: Hog (24-1801) . . 14.99
Cattle (24-1805) .•.. .. ........ 16.29
Standard Field Fen&gt;e 47-10-12'h
·
(24-D022) 20.rod roil . ... ... .. .. 59.95
Motto Barb (24-2838) 80 rod . .. 22.95
Post am; hor (24-2473.8) .. ...... 5.29

$299

3 H.P. 20" MOWER

10 BALES OR MORE

$89.95

ONLY

5 H.P. TILLERS
ONLY

BALER TWINE
G.E. TELEVISIONS

MICROWAVE
OVENS

ONLY S365

REGULAR PRICE $124 .95

Marriage licenses
GAlLIPOLlS - Filing for mar·
rlage licenses this past week In
'GaUla County Probate Court Were:
Edward R. Sofranko, 39, 24~
State St., college professor, and
Judy M. Garlic, 41, Eureka Star'
Route. clinical assistant.
Uonel B. Triplett Jr., 35, Rt. 1.
Gallipolis, coal miner, and Glennil
M . McCormick, 34, Rt. 1. Crown
City, housewife.
Jonathan A. ~Whorter, 20,
Eureka Star Route. unemployed,
and Michelle L. Campbell, 17, Rt. 2,
BldW~U. student.
Darrell Craycraft, 41, Cheshire.
self-employed, and Susan Halfhill,
34, Rt. 1, Galltpoljs, Head Start van
driver.

REFRIGERATOR

$545°0

HOOVER SWEEPERS

AS LOW AS

HOTPOINT

10.6 CU. FT. HOTPOINT

ONLY

HOTPOINT .
WASHER &amp; DRYER

32.49
43.95 .
7.99

38.95
42.95
49.95

•

14•;, ga . (24-2890) . .......•.... 42.95
12'h ga . (24-2892) .. .. ......... 69.95

BULK GARDEN SEED

AND
LAWN AND GARDEN
FERTIUZER

•

T
LOA OF
A
REDI-CRETE GRAVEL MIX
MORTAR MIX ARRIVING
SPeCIAL PRICES •

Outlet sales
NEW YORK (AP) - Factory
outlet salesofmen'sandboy's
are expected to reach $6 billion this
year, up from $4 billion In 1982.
Such sales were $1.25 bUUon In

wear ·

RBLE STONE
"~&gt;an~D MIX AND
WEEK-

P"'RICES

:um,

POMEROY

''The reason for this· rise." says
MalVIn A. Blumenfeld, president of

JACK W. CARSEY, IIIGR.

April-Marcus lllc., a merchandJs.
lng consulting ftrm, "Ia that people

992·2191

Drive A Llttlo and Save A Lot-Delivery Within 75 Mil••
v.. Wo Service ·a l Your Local Hotpolnt Dealer
Store Hourt: 1:30 to 5:30. Mill Cl-d at 5:00P.M.
Sortllll Mole•• Galfla and Ma10n ~untl01

today are more Interested thani!Yft'
In getting their money's worth and .
there's economy at these stores."

LAIIDMUK-®

,A

•'

..

•

•

.. )\ .

.

1

"

�'

_,f&gt;omeroy-Middle~rt~llipalis,

March 6, 1983

Business

SectionD4 -~

JQueen .Elizabeth plans -quiet
·weekend as U.S. tour .ends

·-

Business consultant .calms
corporate's fe~r _of failure
Leon
Danco loves his work. Anyone who
can make $250,(XX) a year holding
c&amp;zy discussions by the fireplace
would probably feel the same.
· Danca is ·one · of those vaguely
titled but highly sought-after crea· ·
lures known as a "business
consultant."
"He's our shrink. Nobody knows
more about the problems of family
business," said George Abbott of the
National Family Business Council
in a 19!ll article on Danco In "Across
The Board'' magazine.
Harvard-educated and founder of
the suburban Cleveland-based Cen·
ter for Family Business, Danca
caters tosomeofthe natibn'slargest
- and smallest - businesses. l{is ·
clientele, ranging from a flower
shop owner with sales of $150,00J a
year to threeofthe50largest private
industrial companies, are linked by
a common thread - a fear of
CLEVELAND

FROM THE RUINS - Ethanol storage tanks
stand across the railroad tr..cks from refuse left from

a bume&lt;krut anunonla plant In South Point, Ohio.
'The tanks are part of a plant dlsWIIng ethanol from
com. (AP Laserphoto).

Successful candy :c ompany
·m anagement 'a lot of fun'
NORTH CANTON, Ohio (AP)Tall and tanned, wearing a dark
'blue blazer -and wheeling a dark
.blue station wagon, Cedric Wag·
,goner looks too much the no__nonsense businessman to do what
he did.
The tailoring is so precise, he
seems to step from the pages of an
annual report.
He doesn't seem a man tb turn his
back qn business school logic. He
doesn't seem a man to sidestep the
, computer industry. He doesn't
' seem a man to choose anything
: frivolous.
He chose candy. Chocolate chips,
; not microchips. And he's having
fun.
His tan the shade of maple cream
fllllng, Waggoner, 43, is president,
· publicist, think tank and taste tester
: of Harry London's Candles Inc.
• "We make everything you can
: think of In chocolate. We're really
, unique In every sense of the word.
yYe have a lot or fun," said the
corpora'te captain whose company
.-makes a foot-longchocolatepacHier
for unruly grown-ups.
"It's Important when a customer
: buys something from us that he
have fun with it- and after he has
· fun that he also has a really good
' piece of chocolate," said the
merchant who, laughing, molded a
half pound of chocolate into a giant
, tooth as a gift for dentists.
: "The nice thing about our
· business right now is that our sales
· are high enough we can pretty much
' try anything we want. Alotofpeople
can't alford to risk a flop . We can
' have fun," said the executive who.
laughing. named one for himself:
"Weird Cedric's Butterscotch."
The business flow that produced
the foot-long chocolate pacifier
,dates back more than f.iO years, to
when the late Harry London worked
.for Republic Steel.
' At Christmas, London would tum
out homemade candles as gifts for
friends. They were so good,
neighbors urged London to rna ke
more so they could buy the candy as
gifts for their friends.
In 1922, London started his

business, gradually expanding
from his house to the house next
door and linking them with a tunnel.
A factory followed In 1951.
"He was really a neat guy. He'd
work 12 to 14 hours a day in the busy
seasons," said Waggoner, who
joined the company after London
became ill.
"He became very sick in 1968. I
was in California at the time,
finishing up my graduate degree In
marketing and business. I was
supposed to go to New York and an
agency back there," Waggoner
said.
"I decided to write my graduate
thesis on the candy business.
Everybody in the program was
supposed to discuss their masters'
theses - these guys were doing
computers and such - and nobody
could believe it when I stood up and
talked about the candy business. "
Waggoner joined London' s in
1969, not convinced candy making
was the bottom line. "I came with
the intention of buj!dlngthe business
back up and selling it off."
Instead, he stayed, added a
second factory and boosted the
that began in a
business baSement - to $5 mUllan in sales
last year.
The company owns three stores in
Canton and another In Columbus,
has established more than 40
franchise operations in Ohio and
distributes candy nationwide, Wag·
goner said. It sells candy In Japan,
the Philippines, Puerto Rico and
Canada. It churns through 3,500
eggs a nd 30,00J pounds of chocolate
a week.
The desk of the easy-going
Waggoner siis in an office with two
others. One wall opens toward the
factory, and voices and machine
noise echo around him. He knows
most of the &amp;l to U&gt; employees by
name.
''Everyone is in the profit-sharing
plan. That doubled this year," he
said.
Much of London's success - the
company has even purchased a
computer - is due to Waggoner's
Innovations with novelty ltelns.

Business Briefs:
Registration begins at GBC
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Business College Will begin its spring
quarter March 28 \lllth emphru;is on a new program in
microcomputer administration. Registration will be held from 9
a.m.·6 p.m. weekdays untO March 25.
Approximately 2W students are expected to enroll in GBCcourses
thls.sprlng, noted Leo Blackburn, college president.
Other courses offered are business administration, acroimtlng and
executive secretarial science, In addition to junior accounting and
secretarial.
The school recently received a six-year accreditation from the
Association .of Independent Colleges and Schools, with all of Its
programs approved by the U.S. Department of Education.
The school is part of the educational division of Julia Corp. Other
business colleges operated by the firm are in Wellston, Portsmouth, ·
Chillicothe, Lorain and Sandusky.
j

'Murphy profits shaw increase _
McKEESPORT,Pa.-G.C.MurphyCo.salesof$45,236,000forthe
four-week period ending Jan. Tl were up ~.000, or 1.75 percent
higher than the corresponding period last year. '
· Sales of $822,282,000 for the 52-week period ending Jan. 27 were up
$4,459,(0), or .55 percent higher than for the same period In 1982.
January sales were generated from 422 stores In 1983 compared
with 435 In 1982. Of the total number of stores, 111 were Murphy's
Marts In 1983, compared wtth·106 in 1982 and 311 were conventional
and other stones compared with 329 lnst year.

'

•.

,.

-

"The candy business was a very
mature industry when I started.
Everybody made boxed
chocolates."
But in 1972, Waggoner began
making a 13.5-ounce chocolate kiss,
a large version of the tiny,
foil -wrapped favorite. Today he will
sell you a behemoth weighing 4
pounds.
"The best noveltywe'vehadin the
last 12 years has ·been the big kiss.
Every year we have a new version.
We did one for a savings and loan
promotion that said, 'Klss your
banker goodbye.'
"The giant kiss sort of set a new
direction for the whole Industry, but
we were missionaries for the !li-st
five or six years."
After that first big kiss, Waggoner's Imagination took wing. And he
had run.·
He thought up the chocolate
pacifier. "I figured every kid In
America has had a pacifier, and
sooner or later, when they get big,
they ought to have a big pacifier.''
He thought up the "People
Biscuit," a 9-ounce slab of chocolate
shaped like a dog bone. "I figured if
a dog can have dog days and get a
doggie biscuit, people should have
something for their dog days."
He thought up "Gourmet J unk
Food, " a cardboard garbage can
stuffed with c hucks of a
butterscotch·cashew-rlce combina·
!ion that's the candy maker's
good-natured jab at health-food
lana tics. "Did you ever see somebody in a health food store? They
a lways look pale and worried."
He thought up a designer heart
that proclaims to one's Valentine:
"I love you more than c hocolate
itself.''
"For some people, that says a
lot," Waggoner notes.
And there's his iavorite, the
"Ch :x:ahollcs Pill," which includes
a five-page booklet of "first-aid
information" written by the company president himself.
"Chocahollsm is a very common
problem," the hooklet explains.
"Maintaining a good supply of
high-grade chocolate is essential to
the well-being of the patient.
Sometimes even low-grade cheap
stuff."
Fifteen years after rtsklng the
scoffs of business school classmates
to make candy, he stillgrlnsoverhis
chocahollcs' pill. "That says every·
thing I want to say."

Name manager
CINCINNATI (AP) - Multime:
dla Broadcasting Corp. has named
Robert Gordon as general manager
of WLWT·TV In Cincinnati.
Gordon was formerly general
manager of WCPQ.TV, a ScrippsHoward Broadcasting Co. station. ·
Gordon resigned from WCPO-TV
in 1981 after 21 years to become
president of Western Broadcasting
Co. Gordon had also been local sales
_, manager, assistant general IJlanager and 'general manager of
WCPQ.TV.
At WLWT, Gordon succeeds ,
H.Joseph Lewin, who Multimedia
said had resigned.
.
"WLWT and Multimedia Broadcasting will greatly benefit from
Bob's outstanding capabllltles,"
said Multimedia President James
Lynagh. ":ats experience and
reputation well qUalify him to lead
~WT In the exciting and challengIng decade of the '!Kls." .

. "'

(AP)

-

failure.
~. r
"Each person who comes to me
thinks their problem is unique," he
said. "It isn't, l:mt you can't tell a
person that. And you can't make
this a business that runs on a scale .
The guy with a single flower shop
has problems as big as the person
who owns a fleet cif trucks."
Most of his clients meet him at
seminars and lectures. Over the
years, Danca has spoken to assocla·
tions of ceiling and floor installers
and owners of nearly every bus iness
in between. A few seek him out after
reading one or more of his three
books. Because of his books and

lectures, his own business- the sale
of Information and advice - Is
self-perpetuating.
His fee for lectures and seminarS
reportedly ranges from $6,000 to
$15,000. Hts folksy approach at·
tracts audiences of young and old.
He passes around pictures or his
grandchildren, and even his dog, to
put the audience at ease.
"People want hope. They don't
need technical expertiSe," he said.
"They have more going for them
than they think. It's just that nobody
ever told them to go 'sic 'em .'"
Alter receiving his ba~helor's and
master's degrees at Hanrard,
Danca earned a doctorate from
Case Wes)ern Resenre University.
He taught there for a time, and
today he is a contrlbutlng editor of
some 5d trade publications.
For most consulting sessions, a
business owner comes to Danca's
home, pulls a chair up to the
fireplace and just talks. Danca
takes mental notes and makes
suggestions. All the while, the
visitor Is surrounded by walls
covered with dozens of family
pictures.
"Most clients are scaned to death
when they come to see me. They
know something is wrong," be said.
"That's why I use this house."
But Danca, 59, said he's careful
not to become involved with a ellen!
for a long time.
"You cannot build yourself Into a
system, because you become a
crutch," he said.
But at the same time, "I'm not a

.-

.. .
•

·r

-

...

lnvesti:ng .group announces
.
merger with supply company~~~
.

•

CINCINNATI - An Investor
group headed by Gilbert R. Hyland
and Lawrence P . Murtaugh, executives by Hyland Mid-America,
Cincinnati-based distributor of
building specialty products, has announced plans to merge with 'Lima
Distributors Inc., a central Ohio
distributor of building and floor
covering products, said Hyland,
who wUl !unction as president and
chief operating officer for the combined compimtes.
The new organization will produce a combined growth rate of 20
percent In l!Kl and employ over 00
people.
Larry Murtaugh, chief financial
officer, indicated that the motivation to merge was based on a mutual interest to expand and improve

market penetration and Increase
the return on Investment. .
Hyland Mid-America, a premier
DuPont Conan distributor, was
founded In 1!!79 and has been recoe·
nlzed .by DuPont (Double Eagle
Club) for outstanding achievement
in sales and marketing,
Uma Distributors was founded
35 years ago by brothers Fred and
Dick Heifner. Fned Heifner wUl become chairman of the combined
companies. Dick Heifner has ~
tired and will be retained on a consulting basis.
Lima Distributors, based in
Lima, is the 46th largest floor covering dlstrtbu tor in the country. I..Jnia
also has offices In Cincinnati, Columbus, and Flint, Michigan. Its
major sales-service area Includes

southern, central, and northwe$1 ~
Ohio. southern Michigan and east· ·
ern Indiana.
I
:
•
"'
In addition to Congoleum vinyl
fioor covering, other products dft- •
trtbuted by Lima Include CaUowar ,;:;and Continental carpeting, Hartoo ;:-.
hardwood flooring, Azrock tilt, •
Johns-Manville building product$, .• ~
U.S. Ceramic tile, Abltlbi pane~~n¥ and Nevamar laminates.
In addition to being a master dis- ";
trlbutor for Cortan, Hyland a)$ functions as a manufacturers' "t
presentative and performs a sale&amp;
and merchandising function
five cabinet manufacturers - Formltex, Decora, Rich-Maid, MIU· :~
brook, and Ca-st. Major areas r:t
activity are Ohio, Kentucky, southem Indiana, and West Virginia.

ore

••
•
•

-

-

Thequeenandherconsortwereto
fly to Yosemite Satui-day- taking
over the Imposing Ahwahnee Hotel·
for a weekend.'s rest before flying to
Seattle on Monday to rejoin the
Brttannia and travel Into C'Ulada.
But Friday was another hectic
day in the social whirlwind of the
queen'sfirst visit to the West Coast.
Forty-six wealthy and powerful
guests, including several members
of Reagan's cabinet and banking
and Industry leaders, helped the
traveling monarch enterialn the
Reagans, 24 hours after a formal

.

.

.

state dinner for the queen hosted by
the president.
Four U.S. Marines and a pair of
British sailors guarded the gang·
way as the dinner guests boarded,
while dazens of police, Secret
Senrice agents and a sinal! crowd of
well-wishers watched the gleaming .,
ship.
.
They dined on medallion of veal,
· broccoU with mornay s;luce, spin·
ach, apples and an lc.e cream
; dessert.
The queen grumbled "Terrtble! "
before the dinner as news photographers, a llowed aboard to take
pictures, startled guests with dozens of strobe flashes. But she
brightened during an exchange
with the president over who had
experienced a more miserable time
at sea.

WET SENDQFF - Queen Elizabeth 0 holds the
umbrella as she and President Reagan depart the
royl!l yacht Britannia In the rain Saturday momlng.
'The Reagans spent the nlgllt alloard the yacht as

.:Mter two years of trying,
-agriculture chief unhappy
fo 11ft the partial embargo that

By DON KENDALL

former President Carter had placed
on U.S. grain sales to the Soviet
Union. President Reagan lifted the
embargo that April.
"What can be said about the
embargo? We'd like to forget It,"
Block says now. "It was a bad
decision, a totally Ill-advised decision, and it'll takeyearsto repair'the
damage."
After climbing to a record $43.8
billion in 198).81, farm exports
dropped to $39.1 billion in 1981·82.
They are expected todeclinefurther
this year to $36 billion.
What happened to exports is
symbolic of what has taken place in
agriculture In the past few years.
"The world is in the grips of a
recession," Block told a Senate
hearing recently. " Industrial economies parely grew last year, and the
U.S. economy declined. Developing

AP Fann Writer
. -, WASHINGTON (AP) - Agrlcul• tural exports, the lifeblood of many
,....,o_· American fanners, rose every year
. for12eonsecutive years beforeJohn
. Block took otflce as secretary of
_agricUlture. Then the bottom fell

.out
; It wasn't for lack of effort by
_,I;Ilock. An Illinois hog farmer and
!OJi"llerstatedlrectorofagrlculture,
Block considered one ot his main
goals to be boosting exports. The
unexpected decline occurred largely because of events over which
he had no control - the global
recession, huge crop harvests and
•
lagging consumer demand .
'
At midterm of the Reagan
administratiOn, two years after he
assumed command at USDA, Block
::' · is deeply frustrated.
In 1981, Block's main concern was

:=.

-··

guests of the royal famBy. Queen Ellzabeth travels to ·
Yosemite National Park where she will spend the.
.weekend. (AP Laserphoto) .

Sheriff, ·farmers at odds
over repossessed property

countries, which offer the greatest
potential for export development,
experienced growth of only about 2
percent in 1982, well below that
experienced In recent years."
Nevertheless, the 48-year-old
Bllock is an optimist; he sees the
bright side ·even when surrounded
by dark statistics.
"In 1983, we expect the picture In
the agricultural sector to steadily
Improve," he said. "We believe that
general economic conditions, both
at ' home and a broad, will be
somewhat better, as policies to
promote a sustainable recovery
take effect."
The sit uation confrontin g
farmers and the administration is
formidable:
-Net farm income m ay range
from $17 billion to $21. billion this
year, probably not much different
from the $W.2 billion net in 1982.

LONDON, Ohio (AP) -Madison
County Sheriff Stephen ·Saltsman
says he wUI not tolerate threats or
violence
he moves to repossess
farm equipment lost by fanner
Doug Dailey In a property
foreclosure.
Saltsman made the statement
Friday, In discussing an Incident
earlier this week when a farmer
threatened to bu ry the sheriff' scar
with a bulldozer as he tried to claim
to tractors at the Dalley farm.
Dailey's brother, Richard, said
Friday that emotions ran high
Monday when deputies tried to take
the tractor.
Saltsman sa id he warned Dailey
and others in the Family Farm

as

Movement that , "I'm not going to
tolerate a ny form of threats."
· "In the course of a heated
discussion" concerning whether
deputies could take the tractors,
Saltsman said farmer Larry Sheets
made a statement to the effect that
"if the blood ts going to flow, let it
flow now."
Saltsman said Sheets then started
up the large bulldozer and drove it
toward the deputies and two
sheriff's cars.

Dailey lost in a foreclosure action in
January to the Production Credit
Association. Saltsman said Richard
Dailey was cooperatjve on the
second visit and helped him start
one of the tractors.

Doug Dalley lost his farm and
equipment to the PCA in a
foreclosure action in January after
he defaulted on a$400,000mortgage.
He has been in jail on contempt
charges since refusing to tum over
-financial records to the PCA.
The dozer stalled and Saltsman
Saltsman said the court seizure
and his deputies backed away from
order identified 34 pieces of equipthe confrontation Monday. They
men!, and he has hauled in 17pleces
returned Tuesday and got the · so far, including two ' semi-traDers
tractors, part of the property Doug
and a pickup truck.

'

•

---...·'

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Regi~ter - 675-1333

•

. ~·----------~~---------------~--------------------------~------~--------------------~
""

1-Card of Thanks (paid in advancer
2-ln Memory
(paid in advance)
3· Announcements

21 -Business Opportunity
. 22-Money to Loan
2 3-Profassional Sarvices

4-Giveeway
S-Ha1 pyAds
6-Lostand Found
7 · Y••d Sale (paid in advance}
8 -Puoic Sole
&amp; Auction
g ,wanted to Buy

~

•

'

'

tot

Lakin outlines subdivision rules
GALLIPOLIS - In an effort to
update Gallla County residents on
subdivision regulations, Planning
Coordinator Richard Lakin ~
cently outlined what those regulations m ean to property owners.
He said regulations govern the
manner In which land is div ided and
specify minimum st~ndards . for
land improVements on a new
subdvision .
·
These standards include the right
of way, pavement width and road
construction; size of water and
sewer lines; and establishment · of
proper drainage.
A subdivision is the division of one
tract of land into two or more parts,
any one of which is less than five
acres. ~·lle improvement of a tract
of land of any size for commercial,
residential or industrial structures
where a new road is created is also a
subdivision and must comply with
regulations.
The enaclment of subdivision
regulations are provided for by. the
Ohio Revised Code and . were
adopted by Gallia County commissioners In 1974.
Subdivision regulations were designed to protect citizens and
taxpayers from the hidden cost of
random development: Once land
has been divided into streets and
blocks, it can be extremely difficult
and expensive to correct defects
which m ay have been built in. .
The subdivision of land is a
concern of the entire county, Lakin
said, because subdivisions eventu·
ally become public responsibility ..
Roads must be maintained and
public services, such as pollee
protection, must be provided - aU
wlthtaxpayer lunds.
Regulations apply to all subdlvl·
sions of land within
unlnco~
rated area of Gallla County except
that land within three miles of the
Gallipolis citY Uml\5, which Is under
city jurisdiction. ·
For .more Information, call the
Gallla County Planning Commts·
slon at the courthouse at 446-4612.

'

'

The festivities had originally had
been scheduled to greet the queen
Wedne!!day, but the welcome was
washedoutbyPaclflcstormswhlch
raked California and forced the
royal couple to fly rather than sail to
the Bay Area a day early.

A880Ciated Pl'e88 Writer
. , SANFRANCISCO(AP)-Queen
' Ellzabeth II and Prince Philip plan
a seclUded weekend at Yosemite
National Park after helping Pres!·
dent and Mrs. Reagan celebrate
!,heir 31st wedding anniversary In
'pomp and elegance aboard the
. ,r,oyal yacht.
·
1. The 56-year-old monarch woJ;e a
·long turquoise dress accented by a
• 'brooch with the royal emblem and a
glittering tiara as she hosted a
-private dinner lor the Reagillls on
,1\le Britannia, docked amid heavy
"li€CUrtty at a bunting-festooned,
o/illlantly illuminated Pier 50.
· · This morning, the city had a
,belated chance to fete the royal
• couple with marching bands, Oreworks and a hot air balloon.

•

.

.-

,,

By ANN BLACKMAN

-..

'Kelly Girl. •I don't sell whatl do like
a meter on a taxi. I become deeply
~~~- ihat
Involved because
credibility and acceptance.
"You must show the way, but
convince the person to do It on his
own. If I stayed In constant touch
· with all the peoplel've worked for ...
I couldn't dolt."
Dancoadds: "l'mnotgolngtobe a hitman for a bum. I'm not going to
.~shhow someone how to cheat on taxes andl'mnotgolngtowastemy · time and knowledge on a loser.
" If a guy Insists the economy is
killing him ... · I can't fix the
economy. I have to deal \VIth
winners. I'm not a socJal worl\er,"
He said the founder of a business
becomes isolated over time and .-"
oftendevelopsafearthatnooneelse ""'•
can run it. He urges company
owners to be open with their
families about the business.
"Planning for perpetuation of
your business is a very personal
decision. You must ftrst accept your
own mortality; sooner or later we
all die," Danca said.
_
"Most businesses In this collntry •
don't outlive their founders ," 11e
said. "By the time the end of the
second or the beginning of the third
generation comes around, the
business often Is In trouble."
For now, Danca's own business is
in no trouble at all. It wasn't always
that way.
"Twenty years ago, I couldn't get
my lunch paid for with all I knew,"
hesald. "lfeelverymesslanlcabout •
this. Ilove what! do."
,;;

'

.

~==;:;;::;;~
;;;;~~:~~~
=---~~~~-~---:~--~--~-~~-------------------~------------------------~----~M.~~~~6~_J1~ft~3L__

."'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-5

Ohie&gt;-Polnt Pleasant, W. Va.

~~

••
••

"

- ''

31-HomesforSale
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
3 3-Farms for Sale
34-ilusiness Buildings
3 5-Lots &amp; Acreage
26-Real Estate Wanted

51-Household Goods
52-CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54-Misc . Merchandise
55-Building Supplies
56-Pets for Sale
57-Musical Instruments
58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

71 -Autos for Sale
7.2 -Trucks for Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
74- Motorcycles
75- Boats &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77-Auto Repair
7B-Camping Equipment

•

t'

"

SVFVIGII

•

41 - Houses for Rent

I

..
..,--·
.
,,

-..._

11 -Help Wonted
12-Situated Wanted
13-lnsurance

42 -Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
46-Space for Rent
4 7-Wantad to Rent
4B· Equipment for Rent
49-For lease

14·Business Training

1 5-Schools
18- Radio. TV &amp; C B Repair
17-Miscellaneous
18·Wanted To Do

81 - Home

61 -Farm Equipment
62 -Wanted to Buy
63-livestock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
65· Seed &amp; Fertilizer

lmpro~ ements

1

B2 -Piumbing &amp; Heating
83-Excavating
84- Electrical &amp; Refrigeration
85-General Hauling
B6 -M.H. Repair
B7-Upholstery

C la.~sified paf'e-~

cover LhP

followinf{ telephone exchanf{es ...
Gallia County
Area Code 614

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446 3 67388245 256 643 379-

9 92.- Middleport

Gallipolis
Cheshire
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guyan Dist.
Arabia Dist.
Walnut

Mason Co .. WV
Area Code 304
675 - Pt. Pleasant
458 - Leon
576 - Apple Grove
773-Mason
. B82 - New Haven
B95 - letart
9 37 - Buffalo

·Pomeroy

9 B5 - Chester
3 43- Portland
· 247-Leta.rt Falls
949 - Racine
742 - Rutland
667 - Cooiville

Up to 15 words ... One day insertion ...... .. .. S3 .00
Up to 15 words ... Three day insertion ........ $4.00
Up to 15 Words ... Six day insertion .. .. .. .. ... $7.00
(Average 4 words per line}

~

~

...

Public Notice

~-~·---------------.:. . •:·
LEOAL NOTICE
,... '0:
TO BIDDERS
r

;._

hereby gro~en that
sealed btds wtll be receiVed by
ltle CttV Ma nager. of the Cltybf '
Qallipolis, Ohto at hts oHtce tn
•

Not•te

IS

C. WAY-NE DUNLAP

JoUlE&gt; C. GAHRIS

Personnel file
COLUMBl,lS - · Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio' Electric Co. has
promoted C. Wayne Dunlap to
manager of the company's
Poston generating statiOn In
Athens County. He previously
served as the station's assistant
manager.
He succeeds John Cun·
nlngham, who retired at the
beginning Of February. A 1962
, graduate of Tri-State College,
Angola, Ind. , Dunlap joined
c&amp;SOE in 1973.
·cANTON- James c. Gahris,
a 33-year emplclyee of Ohio
Power Co., has been named the
company's €C!)nomlc develop·
ment manager.
Hts duties Include a:ttractlng
new Industry to communities
served by the company· and to
assl.st e$ting.lndustnes In their
expansion plants.

"I am looking forward to
working with people throughout
Ohio to help improve our
existing ecoqomlc base," Gahris
said.
A Tiffin natjve, Gahris holds
bachelor's and master's degrees
In business administration from
Ohio University. He joined Ohio '
Power In 1950 at Tlffln in the '
cu~tomer services department,
and later moved on to company
offices In Lima, Zanesvtlle, ·
McConnelsville and Mount
Vernon.
• He became general manager
at McConnelsville in 1964 and •
moved to thecompany'sgeneral ·
office at Canton as an area·
development consultant ln 19QI.
Gahrls was transferred to J..an. '
caster In 1970 as area manager,
and returned to Canton last fan ·
as associate area development
Jllllnager.

M arch 6 . 13

March 6. 11

'

labo'w'e named oft•ce untill 2 .00
'Noon. local ume on Thursday.
March 24. 1983. and publicly
·opened and read at that hour
and place . 81d forms mav be
obtained in the Office ol the

LAFF,A·DAY

3 month old puppy. Part
Cocker Spatllel, part Terriar.

Club. Every Sunday atarting
1 p.m. Factory choked gun1

TO BIDDERS

Cl'y Manager. 51 8 Second
,:4-venue. Ctty ot,GalllpOiis. G&gt;h10.

:mr meters.
.-· B1ds WJII be rece•ved at the

3 Announcements

GUn 1hoot, Racine Gun

LEGA~ NOTICE .
Not1ce. ,IS hereby g1ven that
sealed b1ds wil l be rece1ved by
the C1ty Manager. ot the C1tyof
Gathpohs. Oh10 ai hts Of,f1ce 1n
the Mun1C1pal BU1Id1ng for two
(2) 1983 model pohcecruisers.
B1ds w1ll be received at the
above named off1ce unt1l 12:00
Noon. on ThUrsday, March 1 7,
1 983 and pubt.dy opened and
read at that hour and place. Btd
forms may be obta1ned m the
Offtce of the Citv Manager. 518
Second Avenue . Ga lli polis.
OhiO

ltle Munic•pal Build•ng for wa-

3 Announcements

Public Notice

We wish to thonk all our Tutoring. olloubjecll K-8 by
frland1, nelghbon and certified teacher. ExceUent
retulves lor the flowers. roferoncoo . 1114-387-7221 .

food. oarde. pnyen &amp; leave rna11aga .

klnclnesa shown during the(-:----:---------deoth of our door huobllnd, Alcoholic• Anonvmou.o. Coli
lither. &amp; grandf•ther , 44.6-0278;304-876-3547.
Emmott McCukey . A
opect•l thanks to tho Ru ·
tland Squad , Veterana 4 .
Giveaway

gancy 1taff. pallbearer~,
Ewing Funeral Horne, Rev. ANY PERSON who .hu
&amp; Mr1. Amos Tllll1 &amp; alngers anything to give owoy and
· sncl to all who helped In any doe• not offer or attempt to
woy. The family of Emmett offer any other thing for aala
McCaokoy.

Card of Thanks

2

In Memoriam

3 Announcements

Reward offered. Call 614·
388-81136.

3 Border Collie puppies 2
lomelo, 1 mole, 7 wl&lt;s old.
Coli
814· 379-21111.
.
'

Found 1 4' aluminum boot In
1979 In tho Ohio Rlvor .
Cont.ct 814-992·7284.

" I IDid you he dlga you, Rosie.

1 female 4 mo . old yollow
Old you noii"" ' - lavish he SWEEpER In d uw ing tiger otrlpoclkltten, litter boX
was with the sauerkraut?"
mochlne ropolr, porto, ond lnllnecl. Call otter e. 446··
'
'
sur.pllll
. P19k up ond 4737.
,
3 Announcement•
__
pu_p_p_ll_o___d_go_od
do Ivery, Davis Vacuum 1-A-d_O_N_ble
Cl.. ner. one holf mile up homa. Born 1 · 1 B-83. Holf
Georgoo Creak lid. C•ll Roglotered English Sitter,
4441"0214 ..·
h•lf Hulky-8hepherd . Call
441-41117.
.
WANTED TO DO
LHrn to uve nionev •·
lloolllelper-Accollltant
ohont• Nfund formo end 1111 yr. oil INII Collis·
Av1il1blt lmmedl1tely. ooup-. Join frM'o Re· Shepherd
good · wetoh tloa.
fund Club. ... '11 4.441;
Clll~.
To • good- homo. C•ll
0337:.
814-2118-8783 .

'

LOST-udlos billfold. Brown
clutch. PI•••• return . Area

Bidwell, Ohio. 1-814-388..'
9630.
'

of Joneo Boys In Pomeroy.
614·742· 2028.

Maybe this is JUSt what you've been thinking
abou! Call tOday to find oul if your classification
code is in an area of critical need by the Air Force.

Reward: Block fem•lo Pit
Bull mlulng. 614 -992·
8238, '

For more information call Ssgt John McG uire at
614-446-8500,

FOUND: Iorge white cot.
Appears to bo pert Angoro.
Coli 304-&amp;78·1 11.7 2.

'

De'preuion giiSe, like na~
couch &amp; chair, metal bed
with brass trimming, Clark' a
O . ~ . T. thread cabinet. Iota
of 1tems to numerous to
mention. Paul Oennay•s 1

.. . about the special status you once enjoyed
with the U.S. Air Force. · II your priof service
classification is on our Critical Needs list, you
. may be eligible to return at your former rank to
the base ol your choice.
We need Prior Service personnel for active
r&amp;-enlistment whose expertise is in the following
areas:
• Aircraft Maintenance
• Systems
• Avionics
• Weapons
.
• Amunitions Specialities

1 black and tan mala coon·
hound -In Ewlngton area .

old. C.. 448-2898.

stein , bags of asaorted
clothing, Meah purae

Thinki~

FOUND pony on Yellow
Town-Clay Chepol Rd. Coli
2&amp;6-1427 to ldontHy.

446-9473.

Yard Sale

Maybe VOtive

6 Lost and Found

Soma truat in cheriots.
and aome In horM1; but w• . 3 part German Shepherd
will ·remember the nam• of mala puppia1 about 4 moe.

7

J--------:----------+---------...L.--------'----

Spaniel, good witt. kids.
.mun be allowed to run free.
304-882·2673.

Electric water heater. Call

the Lord our Ood.
Plllm 20:7

TWO male dogs. 1 mixed

Saturday Fob. 26th . Ro·
word . Call collect 814·632·
11619 .

TO give away to good 'home
.In country, male Cocker

column. Thera will be no
charge to the advartiMr.

Garage Sale Mar. 6th &amp; 6th,

mowers, washtubs , vases
by Hull, old Garman bear

Lobrodorpuppleo . 304·675·
362B.

msv ploco an ad In this

.1

LOST Air Force ring in
Holzer Hospital parking lot

Yard Sale

1 2 YEAR old Border Collie
to good homolnthe country.
Good companion for older
pooplo . Call 304-676 6768.
breed - 1 part Labrador
Retriever . Seven pert

Memorial Hospital\, emer·

7

9 till 6. Gl ..nware, books.
recorde, Iampi, razors,
Session• mantel chime
clock. typewriter.. adding
machine. ballt. kitchen
gadgets. flower VIlli ,
wicker. furniture. picture
fremee. dolla. hand &amp;garden
tool1, wheelbarrow, lawn

White w~h block spots. Call
614·992·686&amp; .

only.

6 Lost and Found

•

~
I'

�---·~--

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant VV. Va.

Time~Sentinel

9

11

Wanted To Buy

Caah for UMd mobllo hOmoo

H alp VVa nt1d

'N' CARLYLE'"

conalder damaged or burn

outo . .Coil 446-0176.
Good uted pickup truck.
Call 446-4013.

Auction everv Fri. night 1t 40 or 60 HP outboard
1he Hartford Communi1y motor. Call 614· 266-6640.
Canter . Truckload• of n'e w
merchandise evarv week . Good u10d hoop ito I bed . Coil
Corisigmantt of new and 6 1 4 ·388·9807.
used merchandita alwavs
welcome. Richard Reynolds Wanted tobacco poundage
AuctiQnear. 275-3089.
.for 1983 season . Ca,ll
614· 379-2618 oftor 6 .
ANTIQUE AUCTION SUNRegister•d Phai'mlst for 68
DAY MARCH 6 . 1 p. m .. BEOS -IRON.
, old bed hDapital. Located In Oak
PUTNAM AUCTION furniture , gold , silver Hill, Ohio. Full lime, 40 hrs.
HOUSE. WINFIELD WV . dollars ; woad ice box.ea, per week, day thift, weeLocated next to new Win- atone jars, antiques. etc ., kend• off . Excellent salary &amp;
field Hig h School. If you . Complete houtaholds . fringe benefitt . Contact
enjoy top quality Antiques, Write: M.D. Millar , R1 . 4 , Admlnluruor 614· 682·
Primativet &amp; collectebiQI . Pomeroy , Oh . Or 992 - 7717 or send ratume to Oak
thil auctio.n is for you . n80.
Hill Community Medical
Although we can not list all
Center, 360 Ch~rlotte Ave .,
tha tmaeurea you will find. a Gold . silver . sterling . Oak Hill. Oh 46666.
foojy hilflllighto include: Oak jewelry , ringt, old coint &amp;
ice box.~ rotiQd table. pressed
back ch-airs. wash stand . Shop . Middleport . 992 · INFLATION GOT YOU IN A
telephones; rN!ipht butchau currency
3476. . Ed Burkett Barber PINCH? Eoso the oquooze.
block, cherry parlor set. S
sell Avon. Coli 614·843·
roll top deak. pie allfe with Trophyo. good uM!d old . Will 2982. 614-38B· 9046, or
pineapple tina, preu~d back pay e2 .so &amp; up. Any kind . .:.6_14_·_9_9_2-_3_6_90_._ _ _ _
1
roc:ker , claw footed dresser. Call
614-742 · 3006 or,.
wall cupboard, spool ca Salol Management Trainee.
binet , brass bed, rail road 614·992-6138 .
11 y 0 u oro a gg reu iv e .
lanterns, bedroom suite, W&amp;ntad Dead or Alive . Old goal-oriented,
have a
churns . buckboard seat. TV' s. 614 -949-2994.
positive montol attltu4e .
quilts, silver plate, pewter,
need fint· vear earnings of
WICKER . round table , WANTED to lease. Tobacco up to $20. 000 and went
~ewing stand, childs rocker,
quota, will give .16 lb . unlimited income increase•
1920 ' s all natural doll -Morgans Woodlawn Farm , each succeeding year, you
buggy. Alao a fine collection Pliny .;104-675-2275. 304· may be the person for whom
of cup &amp; saucers, Nippon . 623-6843 .
I'm looking . Due to expanDepression . Fiesta. Hummel
sion. we have a sales
figureins , cut glass·ineluding
position open that offers
23" cut glass lamp. Ben &amp;.
lifetime financial security,
Judy Guillemette Auctioprotected sales territory.
neers . Phone 304 -776 annual conventions that
2828 .
include spouse . We have a
company contributed stock
11 Help VVented
bon us plan . Career posi9 Wanted To Buy
tions. No ovarnig~t travel.
ladia to live in &amp; share living International NYSE listed
W A N T E 0 T 0 B U Y 0 Id ax.pansea. Vinton area . Ca:fl company with proven
furniture and Antiques of all 61 4 -38 8 -8412 or 81 4 - training and marketing
kinds, call Kenneth Swain . 388-9831 .
system. ca·ll or~rltanowfor
446·3169 or 256-1967 in 1--- - - - - - - - a confidential intarview:1lhe evenings.
$200 . to $400 . weekly 614 -632-4961 or P.O .Bo•
275. Ironton, Oh . 45638 .
Buying Gold. Silver. Plati- working part end full-time at
num . Gold and Silver prices home , no experience , all
are the highest Jn .two years. ages. national company .
check our prices on gold &amp; Free information. Send
silver. tcrepjawelry. Buying self-addresaad stamped
Old coins, scrap rings &amp; envelope to L.R.G. 606 4th
ailverware . Daily quotes 1 S_t_
.._N_a_w_H_av_o_n_._wv_.__
·available . Also coins&amp;. coin J: supplies fo' ssle . Spring You can make money
Valley Trading Co., Spring AVON . Coil 446-3358.
' Volley Pion. 446· 8026 or
Experienced tanni's lnstruc·
•446-8026.
tor for Saturday mornings,
We pay cash for late model Spring Quarter. Ptaaseapply
immediacely Gallipolis Parks
clean uead can .
Fr.anchtoWn Car Co .
and RecreeliOf'l .D ept., 618
Bill Gene John son
Second . Ave . 446 -1789 .
ext. 24 .
446-0069

18 Wanted to Do

C.L Bo&lt;!kkM!&gt;Ing
Tu Roturno • booldl..plng
forlncllvlduelo • buoln••-·
Oener1l Hauling and Tr1ah Short formo •a.oo
remove! Service. Relleble LOng formo UO.DO ond up
446·3882
and dopondobl0 . Coli 448· Cotol NHI
3169 after IPM 218-11167.
PIANO TUNING • REPAIR
LEMLEY'S DRILLING Water Coil 8111 Word for appoint·
Wollo, Shallow goo and co,. ment. Ward' a Keyboard,
drilling . Myoro and Gould 446·4372 .
pumpa. Salea end Service.
Goo ond oll-11 urvloo. Coli
614·38B·8643.

.0
0

~~======~~:,~~~~~~§==~
12

Situations
Wantad

Will plow or disc gardena In
Racinearea. Call949-2277.

MEAT cutter or manager. 20
years ex.pariance, wants to
return to· Pt. Pleasant or
Gollipolio, OH. Write : 701
North Maple. Eaton . OH
46320 .

16

Schools
Instruction

31 Homes for Sata

Jack ' a Locksmith Service.
C ommercl•l- DomeatlcAutornotlve. Coil 304·882·
2079.
WILL do aowlng. ohorotlono
&amp; mending, rtatonabla,
304-676-7824.

Broedwoy·Midclloport.

Modorn buolnon bldg . 118
Court St .. Gellpollo.
;-;·2·;--~~-r;~--;;j;~- -2-· ~om ..

~

--·

POMEROY

LANDMARit
614-992-2181

378·1301.
1 acre ln Porterfietdearee.
NIOor Rt. 339. 114-3781301.

•

TRI·ITATE MOilLE
•, HGMU. USED· CARl.
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS.
·c"ECI: OUR PRICEI.
-'. CALL 441·71'12.

'

Cott'992-32117 or676-2611

·

For ale-Aerugo on Goorgo
F,...land'a property·.. Call
114-1112-2841.

Real Ettate
" CLEAN UIED MOBILE 36
HOMEI KEII!L'I QUAL· .
Wanted
ITY MOBILE "OME BALE I.
·4 MI. WI!IT, GALLIPOLIS.
..;RT 311. PHONE 448·7274.
Buytng hou•• and ap.-1·
~L_~~~~~~---· Noodproportloowlth
• 1871 Schull 14•70 •ory -fawor~ble
price and terms.
• nico, _,trill olr. 2 ful bethl. lo• 1109 Galllpolla. Oh.
• t13,000 will conoldor 48131.
ttnonclng wtth
P poymont. CoH 448-1142
,&gt;8 :30 to 2 : 30 er oflor I
•304-743-3333.

-n

:•o•not

NEW USTNG - 4 bedroom home in lhe .country, vi·nyrsidin&amp;
stoon windows, on 3.acres, lots of fru~ trees, plenty of good water,
assume loan ~f $18,500 With monthly payment of$258or arral¥!
a new loan.

"".. Freedom total electric
t 12xiiCI 2 bdt. mobile ~omw
··.for oole. Coli 1!14·387·
• 7438.

. NEW llmNG - 3 ~W 4 bedrooms possible on this one.Trailer with
large add&lt;lll on nea~y an acre lot. Includes sloolge building. Ld
can have second tnier as extra income. Calf for more dela1ls.
Askill8 $12.000.

:'uSED MOilLE HOME.
• 171-2711 .

dop. CoO 448·3117.

~1971
TWO -_
onobllo
•h ...........
._
..d
• On Tho- Ridge Roed.l;ell

NEW·LISTING- 1973 trailer in Middleport, 2 bedroom1laundry
room undefpinning, insulation, total electric hookup included, can
be mOved ID your lot 01 rental at present location. Appraised value
more than asking price. $6,950.

304-871-3280 and aok for
".lion Hickman.

8 rm. houoe 2V.mllooout.Rt.
1188, carpet thru out. •zoo
mo. Coli 446·3041 day.
4411·2802 OV1illingo.

Nice 2 bdr. houu 21'. mi.

2 bdr. in city, full bnerntnt,
carpeted,
furnance .
edulto. no poto. Coli 446·
08118.
.

a••

2 beclfoom houae on 3rd.
AVo .. GellpoUo. t216 mo.
plut utll. 0,-.e bedroom
fu ·ontlhed olbncy In town,
•110 mo. Inc. water. Call
Wlaeme n Real Estate,
441·3t43.
.

'mooUy tovol, oood hoy
.)'loldo, t41,000. Mull ooll.
tnoonoblo ol!or. 3 bdr.
·hoMe, new fUrnence,
county Vlflter new beth

Real Estate General

Houses for Rem

from HMC 1196 mo .. 1100

~arm for 1111.21 earea

NANCY
Builnea•
Opportunity

41

• 33 Farm• few Sate

-poted. · alclng
• - bwnlng ltovo.
·oootl bertt • other out
"Jolldp.
Locotod oo
:itld 110 near ~rter. Call
t14-311-1010.

WANTED work on deiry
farm. Experienced. ct.penKarate the ultimate in aelf dable. non-drinker. Write
8qx P 21, Pt. Ploooont
defence 1U private leaaona.
Men . women. • children. · Rogloter. 1'1. Ploo10nt.
Instruction thru black belt.
Also evaileble Kar•te
unlforma puchlng and
Real Estate General
kicking bags. and protective
equipment. Jerry Lowery •
Associates Kl!rate Studic,
EIECI/TIVE HOllE - RENT
143 Burlington Rd., Jock·
Oil SALE - Th~ cortempor·
son, Oh• Coil 614·288ary 4 bedroom, 2 bath home
3074 or.61 4-.3 84' 6180. ·

Misc. Merchandise

1.17 aor.. Curtla HoUow,
-Forked Run Lake Oock
• Guo Club. U,IIOO. 1114·

• 32 Meblte Home•
fl)r , _

witfi finished family room, att·
ached garage located near
Pomeroy is available f01 immediate occupancy. A lease an·
d/or optioo to purthasecan be
arranged.

'

*
*
*

,

*

environment.
to put patients first and paper work second
- ward clerks on duty l4 hrs.
to obtain additional compensation for education and competence in these speCial are.s.
to partlcipale in our excellent salary and
benefit package .

• Guntra and OowntpOUtl

NI'N LISTING- MIDDLEPORT- Commen;iallot on Hartinger
Pkwy. 100 x IOO' Iot wrth sewer, walerand electricity on site. Small
buiding with 1\ battt $21,000. .

• Sk)lleH on eocll Sklowan

NI'N LISTING- HARRISONVILLE- Most unusual older horne..
Has 7 rooms, of which on~ one is recta.ngular. Nice level lot next to
the school Storage building and garage. $25,500.

G

==
MIITodlr------·

(Or call IOR·Irat 1-80Ul7·204$

o Ma11ulacturing Plant

o Retail-Wholesale Outlet

.-

·:
l: -

0 Church
0 Other Application

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

• -Cly -_
Stoto---Zip:.
. ____
_ County _ __

..

TUPPERS PlAINS- I.Dg home with 4 rooms, bat~ full basement
and approximately 12. acres. Home has a rustic flavoc.
Woodbumer and a barn. $33,500.
RUTlAND - 6 room home wrth 2·3 bedrooms, garage,
woodbJrner set up, alum. &amp; vinyl siding, nice kitchen. Reduced to
$21,000.
REALTORS
Hen:y l Cleland, Jr., GRI .................... ,........ :...992-6191
J• Trussell ................................ ......:...........949·2660
Dottie Turner ............................... ................ .. 992·5692
Oflica ...................:..................... .................. 992-22.59

WHAT SOME
DI5TAIIIT ~ELATIVES
HAVE DOlliE.

IDANAGEl

· r1 r1

1:::=:::::===::;;:==

Now arrange the clrdad lettere lo
fonn the aurplite antwer, aa sug·
geatad by the above canoon.

Ariswerhere:THEY'VE" (

2 bdr . apt . unfurnished
e.~~:capt refrig. &amp;. stove . $135
mo. Main St. Vinton. Call
614 -246 -6818.

XXI J ( XI ]"

Effiency apt . In Rio Grande,

Monday!
ves1er day .s / Jumbles: CANAL MIDGE JUSTLY EXCITE
Answer: Might have been seen In the ballroOms of
grand ancestral homes-"DANCES"
(Anawtnl

45 Furnished Rooms
1- - - - - - - - - -

Sleeping room S 1 25, utili tiat pd, single mala, share
bath . 919 2nd Ava., Gallipo lit . Cell 446 -4416 after

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

fum . all utili tiat paid. Cell I-7; P;M:::;.
446 -0157.
1-

Apt. for rent. Half doubla-2
Mobile Home for rant. 2 L.:=:::::::=::::::::::::~:;::::::::::::=-r:;=;:::::::=;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ bd.room Apt. Adults pr8bodroom . 1 2x110 . An attrac· f'
·
foroed. No pets . 614 -.992·
tivo country iottlng near 43 Farms for Rent
44 Apartment
2749 .
Coolville. City water. fraa
for Rent
------~-ga1. Waaher-dryer hooku... 80 acraa, with 11 tillable.
2 bedroom furnished Apt.
Call evenings ·or weekends Bottom land. Along Shade
Call 614-992 · 5434 or
3
rm
.
and
4
rm
.
unfumithed
114-887-3838.
Crook . Locotod Hit miles
wilt of Alire~ on CR 231 . apartments. Utilities paid. 1·8B.2 ·2566 .
2 bedroom In Mobile. home Call collect 1 -513-886 · no pats, no children . Call
5 rm apt. shower. Pomeroy
446-3437.
in Syracu1e . Furni1hed . 2050.
shopping area , adult a, no
*1 80 . month. You pay
utilitln. Employed couple or PASTURE for rent, phone Nicley fumlshed mob. home pots. newly carpeted. $160
In city. Adult• only . Call mo . plua utilities. 614-992 ·
omoll family . 614 -992 · 304-676-6110 .
3201 .
446 -0338.
8966.,. 614·992·6236.
1
Furnished 3 rms . with Apartments . 304 -675 12x65 Skyline with tip out. 3 44 _ Apartment
private bath, 1sl. floor . 846 5648.
bedroom . R'acina, call
for Rent
2nd. Ave .• Gallipolis. Call
814-949-2162 oftor 6 :30
446-2216.
APARTMENTS , mobile
p.m.
JACKSON ESTATES 'Equal
homes, house!l . Pt. Pleasant
THREE bedroom turni1hed Housing Opportunity' has 2 bdr. Regency Inc . Aport· and Gollipolio. 614 -446 ·
trlller, buill on one bedroom apart~ants menta $2.00 per mo. or if 8221 .
1 11-·ol-trlc
.... ,
rani starting at $167 per income Ia $1 0,000 or leas
f1mlly room. coal·-wood month and two bedroom HUD available ~ A-One Real
burning stove. on acre.
t 11 1 rf 9 at Estates, Carol Yeager , UNFURNISHED apartment
rtn
'"
for . rent, 1 bedroom.
g. rd•'· n plot, outbuilding. apartment•
$193 per month. Call iloollor. Call 304·876 ·
Jerrya Run Road. refaren- 441~2746 or leave 6 .1 04 or 676 - 6388 or $180.00 Call Automotive
Supply, 8 . 6 . 304 - 676 ·
cea. *276 month, plus
676 -7786.
221 B, 675-6753.
dopoolt. 304-67&amp;-2366.
mouoge.

==========

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park. Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
992-7479.
1-------~
FOR rent-garden plots,
plowed 8t disoed. $20.00 if
unempl
Phone
304 · 6
. Happy
H
_o_l_lo_w__::_ _ _ _ _~
1
..
LARGE trailer lot, with
garden space , 304 -6752017.

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

48

Equipment
for Rent

Backhoe endloader . digs 8
ft . , large bad pick up

haulablo. operate yourself.
$90 . per day. 304-8953841 .

Real Estate General

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Oliva St .. Gallipolis. King
coal &amp; wood heaters with
fan $459. set box. apring &amp;
mattress $100, firm $120,
sofa-loveseat &amp; chair e 199,
love ilaats $70 , new coal &amp;
wood heat4rs as tow as
$399 with blowers, used
coal &amp; wood heaters. new
dinet a at• $100 8t up ,
refrigerators , ranges. bt.jnk
beds complete $199, bun kies mattresses 840 , chelts,
dre11era, TV's. Call 4~6 3159.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, dryers. refrigerators, range111 . Skaggs Ap·
pliances. Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446-7398.
Whirlpool avacado wuher
ax . cond . $126 and Whirlpool harvest gold dryer 895.
30 day warranty . Call
514-266 · 1207.
Sale Items. 30 in . electric
range &amp;96 , 40 ln . ef.ectric
range $96. 30 in. gas range
S65, 5 piece bedroom Jet
$150. color TV cabinet
model 6160, 6 piece dine'tte
set $66. Whirlpool wuher
S95 ...GE refrigerator harvest
gold frost tree 8125, 2 piece
livingroom suite 886.
Skaggs Used Applienl;a,
Open 9 tQ 6, 446-7398 . ·

Real Estate General

_

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

.I
I

-I
~I

B.J. Hairston

Clyde Walker

Eve. 446-4240

Eve. 245-5276

I
I

RCS REALTORS
Crall Swenson
. 1-614·593·5571

COST ~FflCIEIIT SPACE Jius pleasing aJlll!arance' You'll be
amazed at the low he.lbng and aJding cosls for this all electric
home. 3 blllrooms, I 1\ baths bolh have ceramic tile. Work sawer
ktl:hen with dishwa:slret , dispmal, range and hood. lois of counter
spoce, 1V room Ill' formai dining off kitchen. Twin windows in living
room alow the rigtll amtiUf1t of ight for Jjants. A!tachOO garage
with au1omatK: opener. Near city. $49,500. Pmsi~e Mortgage

NEW LISTING -looking for a nice home in town? This ranch has
3 bedrooms, carport, ~nyf sidin~ Locale!~ in Adrian Dr.
414350

buyen who wailec! too long and missed wt This
honle is in the Sll1le enllent neiahborhood and IS pncedln!l!l. W
you 111 N•l f I, bllt!r hurry! One story frame with steel siding,
eat-il W.:hell for!nef dininr.l bed1110111S.localed at 154 Second
Ave. Walk te Rroceri. downtown shoppng. $31,900:
L·SIIAI'ED RANCH - Super size fam1~ roorn . livini room has
beautiful stme li'eplare. 3bedroom;, I1\ baths. Kitchenhas range,
dishwiiSioer, lots of cabinet!!. Fenced back yard. I~ paoo. Storage
bldg Near city. $54,500.
·

$3t ado II ~i CREEK AREA -

2 tory fllme home, exce~
fllll'kl:don, 311edroams,'11811 lwnace, beautihA deck. basement
lmd richf, betler hu~

LOVELY COlONIAL- Beautif~ two story home. in the heart of
downtown. Has 2 bedrooms, I 'h bath~ formal dinmg, mce carpel
See nlay!
.
N!l49

IWIDYIM'S D£U811T- Sillily brick home
alet
of tender love .00 c:n You 1\eve seen ~ dooe on "This Ofl!
House", so why no1 do Kwith ''nlr Old Hj)use". You ~usee your
efforts bloom. Come look II ~ with us!!
,

NEW LISTING- Nice 2 bedroom home, new building fill' shop or
storage, garag~ da;e to hospital Only $26,500.
· me2
53 LINCOLN ST. - 2 bedroom hcime· with aluminum siding
$8,500.

SMRAI. SELECT LOTS situated in Tara SubdiviSion. Why nit
buld ~ own home on one of !me overloo~ng the bei!oof~

Ohio

Lit v¢1 water &amp; sewage, for mobile home. $4,000

WE IE£0 LISTIIIGS- Hyou heve just been thin~ng about selling
your property live us a cal We have buyers cal~ng every day
wartifl8 certJin tJiooert'l. Maybe your's is lhe one!! IF WE DONl

7 ACREs - Large brick &amp; trame home." has new.~ aoo
spwting Large bam, owner will finaliC8fGiiY school d~ U

1

150 ACRES - Good farm, beautiful rolifl8llnd, 3 barns,
base, IX'fld, Rt 141.

. '

m

SEll. YOU DONl PAYIII

.

· TWO 2-IEDIII. APAIIIIEIITS for rent near IPf course, no pets,
ed.., only. .

tl012
'

DUTCH COI.OIIAI. HOlt slluated ICIOSS from court house just
Wlli111 fill' allnjy, a)'01111111Dmey, or a nice ~rement couple.
Spacious lvi11l rm. willl w/burmna fireplace, large detached
..,..., wt Willi~ dilllnce Ill II of downtown, churches and

lARGE •nAI. BUILDING- Blildina is '!lx7!J,IPJd for commercial or ~ klceled oo I acre II Bidwell.

. . . AVERY Sl'fCIAI.t.OCAnONm

[]J

.

$26 110 SJ111 BUYS 1 nice pllce to live. 2 bedroom~ ~rge ~ving
room and Wlen I sUv !nome home with alum. siding Very mce
lot 011 Lower Rt 7.Clay Elsnenllry Sc:hool Galia Academy High
s~

.·

SPII.a IIAY BE JUST AIIUND THE COINER but there are afew
tOld ~ Mninlll l!ft to er;rt ltis reautiful twnily room and
•rep!P J bed-, I \1 bllhs, 110111 !Mr equiflllld kitchel\
~ 1119 11M! llfriln!Dr. lM)e uiily room willllots of
. . 2 C., . . . M:k dlrilll' fill' lew mainllnlnce. Nice
Ccll*y ..._ .ny 11!1 m K7111 Ciolek Schoof IJisl O.,rm
·11M made - . errt by ralucint the as~ng price ID a low, low
$45.(0).

YOU11 UM THE VIEW from
the IMIII11in141r. Tlis hllnte
. -1 ' .. rilir lltiiiWlin
w bltll filA a:llp IIIII
I lilcl:jb f tllo, bellllllol

.••...=.::.....
_,

i:r'J •

Aa:inl'

bisllal Cape

Q:d

rllur·

ill Udlao. '

Wood

clly

' 32 - · - ••• G,llipolis

1Ul1UI

JUST LISTED - 9% ASSUMPTION - Very
attractive cclonial brick home located 5 mies from
town in Gallipolis School Oist Over 1700 sq. ft. of
tastefully decorated living area includes 3
bedrooms !master surte has walk-in doset &amp;bath),
2 fuU baths, large equipp!d kitchen, fireJjace,
woodbumer, fam~y room and 2 car garage. 1.7
setti!'B in Quiet kx:tion. $65.00J.

.. 1111 ....

$24.500 - Ntlllfy an acre
rrith • very nice 19~ Sa .

14170 onoflill home will~

Elpando. 3 bedrooms,
equipp!d eat'in kill:hen and
· bath. Color co-ordinated
drapes lnd cwlains. Mostly

hlrrisl8!. Gas lon:tid air fur.
nace. Klllf Creek Sdloofs. fl.

cllllll

t:ur!

NlW NJ DAILT

'''""'''''·

I
IF YOU'Ll BUY the big house in the top
picture which indudes 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, for·
II YES,
mal dining, family room, eat-in kitchen, formal
I entrance
and full basement. the owner ..;11 give
you the 2 bedrm. home 1n the.~m 9icture. The
I Dig house is located in oneoflhe best blocks on 41h
I Ave.
I bkx:k from the schools. The small house has
renl!!d in the past for $200. Presenl renter
I $62,000
$175.00 but has !lll the interior in mint condition.
buys il Lellhe rent help make the pay
menl Happy lo show you anytime -call for an
I1 appantment
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Good location out·
I side
town. 1412 SJ. bnck rando type ixoilding. Has
2 haff baths, nal gas heal central.air &amp; 2 storage
I rooms. Has been used for church
Large
IIJimparkingCochran.
area &amp; 2 lots: Priced at $54,000.00. Call
pur~s.

•

\,

~· .

','~:{.::.&lt;i:&lt;~~-~~·

,_,·,·_

stall~

.availa~le. Call Clyde Walker.

ST\'.~kl

-Owner
is not broke, he is1ust fed up wrth not beingable to
·sell this brand new 3 bedroom split-level. Features
lovely carpeting, Anderson Thermopane windows.
chimney for wood burner
'ity oak krtchen
cabinets, 2\! ll&gt;"t:\)\)Cl- .g. huge finished
family room. 2 c~1:.··~• with opener, alarge flat
lot, city school district. birds eye view of the river
and Raccoon Creek. The price has been reduced
$10,000.00 which makes ~ one of the real bar·
gains on today's market. Price ~ $59,500.

co··

NEW LISTING - WITH LOTS OF CHARM- Mo~
attractive 4 bedroom brick and frame featunng
large Early American lamiy room with a ~g foot
warming fireplace and 1ndaor barbecue. Pretly
formal dining room Wllh another ~d bnckflfeplace,
large bow window in living room affords you a
birdseye view of the rwer. There are 2 full balh~
modern kitchen with lots of cabmets.

101/2 °/o
FIXEll RATE
MORTGAGE MONEY

·

I
I
I

I

II
I

--

COLONIAL HOME- 41) ACRES - Just listed this
lovely 2500 sq. fl. modern 4 bedroom home. Th~ ·
fine home offers 2 large bath~ equipped kitchen, '
family room, fireplace, woodburner, basemen! plus •
appro•. 10 acres crop and balance in pasture &amp;'
woods. 4 barns, 1472 lb. tobacco base plus over
2,000' road frontage on lwp. road - Rt 775. Call
ayde Walker for more mlo.

i

rated home 1n a good in-town neighborhood. This
weft decorated 2 story home has new vinyl si:fing,
new wiring, new ~ ·new h.w. heater, part new
LOW % FINANCING AVA! IABLE
roof &amp; is fully insulated. Offers 4 bedrooms, 21\
bath~ .family room, equipped kncherl, full baseThe terms are excellent on this. most attractive . ment nal gas heat oversized garage, large fenced
brick home on Oak Drive but thai's not all. This. ~ yard and more. Call Jim Cochran for ap~ntmenl
an enerllY effkient 3 or 4 bedroom home wrth
t60s..
• lltcEe speeiaiiDuches that the owners added that
mPe5 this an IJ!lislaooing jllaceto love. The yard~
Iorge and private with exceptional lo[ldscapi~,
farge in-ground pod and a lovely view. The home SPRING VALLEY SUB. - Attractive Coklnial bi·
has 2 fireJJaces, woodbumer, finished basement. · level in one of the are.o'•o•·\.0 1eightxorttoods. 4
fully equippe:f kitchen, dining, 2 bath~ hirdwood
bedrooms, 21\ baths, laS . .~"'· fireplace, 2 car
floors &amp; wall to wall carpeting. ,Nalps, central alf garage &amp; more. ·
&amp; much more.' Immediate possession. Lei us show
you one !I Spling Valey's finest
'
EXctAnLLE N!!t!_W 0bedFCroomfTY-hornFIN EwBithRf.CnKwHaOik.ngE
MI
6
1
8111....,. 3
'
I NEW LtsnNG IN !OWN - 4 bedroom home dislllnce of sc:hoofs. Horne is in excellenlcondition
Mlhin walking distance of schools. Th~ modem 2 eoo features an ov«Sized famly room with flreslory fealures a biJII-in kitchen with lots of ca- Place. buil·n ~&lt;*:hen, dining room. 2 ceramic
'binlls, lormal dinin&amp; 2 fireplaces, Ill baths, the baths, custom dr8tJ8fies. new carpel screened
lui"· nenlltau rice flmly nxnn,llll.ps h.w. porch, 1umart, nal fillS h.w. hedng &amp; 2 car
. . _ I 2 car datild fllllll. Priced • · au1f11. P'oail:le 1111'111 ISIUmption. Immediate
8IUIJOIII1f In:: hltjl lit.
1'1
ian.

I

"NO INTEREST FOR 5 YEARS"11! That's nghtpay one-third down and get first 5 yrs interest ~ee
on mortgage and a heck of a buy on top of that.
Very nice modern 3 or 4 bedroom home with
family room, den, 2 baths and 2 car garage. Great
place to raise children in a private neightxorhood
and can walk to school. Price $62,500.00.

·.~

ACRES - Owners an•&lt;Jus to sell. Located on
I 8Horse
Creek RD., I mile off Rt 7. 1ncludes modem
4 bedroom home wrth woooburner. basement &amp;
I large knchen. Has 100 lb. tobacco base &amp; 24•36
bam. Would consider mobile home in trade. Cal '
I (lyde
Walker. $37,500.
I
I located
GRADE ADAIRY - 2 homes ;_ 238 acres m/\
I mile west of Rutland. 90 Ac., m/1, good
I crop
land. Modern milk parlor &amp;milk house withal
equip. 60 free
16x50 C.
with un·
I loader
&amp; feed 'bunk.-Tastefully remodeled older 6
brick home With full basement Also 2nd
I room
remodeled frame home with new kitchen &amp; bath.
1 Fullline offarm equ1p. included in price. Financing NEW LISTING_ IN TOWN_ Complell!ly red~c'o.

~

'

'

IYAFFOLj

Unfurnished apartment no
children or pets, 9150 pe~
mo .• plua utilitiaa , seC . ONE bedrOom unfumilhed .
dapoait req. Call446-2129 . 8176 . month, all utilities
Furnished apt. 807 2nd .. paid . except elecuic ,
304· 676-1371 or 676 ·
Gallipolis . $236, utilities 3812.
pd . ,-4416
1 b d alter
r., a du
Its.. Call
446
7PM

lton Canadiy, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
Dianl P8IISOfl, Realtor 67~ ·
25 Locust st.; Gallipolis, ~hio

ping &amp; schools. Affordable with a modest down payment,
your ITIIf1thly payment is less
than $175.00 per mooth!

FOR SALE: 1974 KIRKWOOD MOBILE
HOME 12x60. TRAILER AND
ACCESSORIES.
PH. 446-4792

rri. ~54 -

KJ

Laroe unfurn 3 bdr .• ucon.d
ftoor apanment, overlooking the perk . 1 year le11e
• 260 par mo. Call 448·
1B19 or 446 -4425 .

446-3643

cient, localed on paved road~
convenient to the mines, shop-

'

NI'N LISTING- BRADBURY - Nire home srte. Approximately
4.6 acres, with water and eloctricity available $6,000.

mllis 01 iiri Umbaugh office. Other Sizes rwalleblt.

warenouse

t) I

Furnished apt ., 2 bdr., $176
mo .. water paid. 2nd. floor ,
131 4th Ave ., Gellipolit .
Ca\1446·4416 after 7PM.

ONE bedroom ·apartments
for the elderly. All utililias
paid. Tenents pay 30 per·
cent of their adjuatad
income In thia HUO substd ·
ized apartment building .
Twin Rivers Tower, phone
304 ·676-6679 . Equal
opportunity housing .

2 bdr . unfurnished apt .
overlooking city pork. •115
per mo. Coil 448 -1819.

REALTY

disl!l!JOinll!d

NI'N LISTING - MIDDLEPORT- In tOo'ln and convenient, a
nice 3 bedroom home wilh many ~vely features. Nice lot. Garage
See th~. one Only $21,500.

Prices inclljCjt.erection &lt;lll .your-ttMII ndlii iQ) air

· 0

2 bdr. trollerUpporRivorRd .
Rot. &amp; dopoalt. odullo only,
no poto. Coll448·82&amp;2eftor
6 446·2491 .

3 room labalhfumiahad apt.
Utllltlao paid . 366 N. 4th
St .. Middleport .

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE :!

~umption.

•12' iPIH Elldwall Sldln!i Door
• One·Mandoor
• Colored SIMI Aool 11'&lt;1 Sklowals

~-------Cut Out•. P"- f1tM , _ rrprt$tlllllllvt NIL I ,.., ilrllleSttd ill:

2 bedroom 12x60 odga of
town on Rt. 688. e1 65 per
mo . plua deposit. no pall.
Coil 44S-0822. Port f~Wn.

FLEAS

WHY REtm This wal cared for
3 bedroom horne is enerllY effi.

If you would like to be part ·of our special team
of nurses, contact:
Mercy Hospltol, Jean Carlson, R.N.
Portsmouth, Ohio (614) 353-1131 eKt. 351.

lor $3,970.00

Rl7N,Box7
Reno, Ohio 45n3
(6141373-0130

1 2x80 TroKar. furnlohod, 2
bedrooms , gas heat,
t210.00 month, t100.00
depoaJt. Oaa 1nd water paid.
1-614-448-6683.

r
J ....
·-·
----

II

and assessment skills In a patient centered

Offer &amp;pires 4/8/83

.

448·4110.

Furnlohed opt. 1 bdr ., 920
4th Ave .Gallipolit. Adulla,
water &amp; electric pd. $200
mo. Coli 446 -4416 oftor
7PM .

For Lease

CANADAY
.
.

An Opportunity

ABig 44' X80' X 11'9" An Ecanomlcsl 24' x 30' x 8'9"

C~

2 bdr. mobile homo fully
fumllhed, adults only. Call

Apartment
for Rent

1

Jim Cochran
Eve. 446-7881 _

PH.992-2259 ·

c,pP urnblugh lll.ilding eo, Inc:.

Eurelta
12x60.
bel
fumlahed. •teo mo.. 1 r ..
•·too mo . Ref. &amp; dep .
Adulto. Co111114-643 ·~644.

IN BAR

Real Ettata General

&amp;liS E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

. , Colored Steel Root and Sidewall!

Homes
for Rent

~~-~-,--1-1_11_1_____________

Mt£1111£ l£ct11TlY sold the home next d(Jor there were ma,Y

• 22' Spill Endw~l Sl~ing Door
• 20' Spill SkMw&amp;U Sliding Door
• One Mtndoor
• Guatrl and DowniPOUI!

2

42

Ap
. artment
for Rent

1&gt;1'-•AmoldondBoblM

.trella. They've made
a bundle

I

to join In a trodlllon and rtputotlon of 60
yean of ext:elleMe In prol'lding patient care.
to use and expand your clinical knowledge

THATICR•-IDWOADQAME

0

From my couslnaln Aua-

is for

*

II

11

at 918 2nd . Avo .. GaiHpolla.

4 bedroolft remodeled home
In Chnhlro. Not. goo H·W
heat, garage. baaement.
tZ21 mo. Coli Wloomon
Root E••••· 446-3643.

e•-·

General

lor $9,925.00

QIJ ~

Loaa~~-0 h=.~~feH.~·~==

of "MC lo Suotdat. Call
~
7•
• "-.-·311

CALl

21 ·

5 rm . .ltouea &amp; bath . Inquire

• .... 2 - ........ 21111. w. 1...:.:..;.::_______ 1-~~;;-;ii,;;;t;.;;;;-12;;&amp;0.

----·- ··---· ------ ··----.

ewnlnp.

-•

.;.,
100'milo
frontage
.
then one
from Spring
Valley Piau. Call 4411 ·
4111.

S bclr. llouoa. falftlly
·: "'-· l - L _.. hoot

························Hom• end Or rental

Oolllo Colinty .

·

F- . . 2 - IT.RT. ll

NEW

IIOBILE HillE- with llflll adckln blildiil~ also asphalt driveway. l..ocRld oo quiet, clean Slreel 1M of hi8h water in Racine.The
IMfl8 room is extra farge. There~a cement walk and farge covered
poo:h, also a metal S0f181! boildill8 You can be in this ooe in two
weeks for only $16,900.

Retponeible mother to do
bobyolttlng In my homo In
Pomoroy. Cot' 614·992·
3209.

·

.•

Excollont condition •
location- - all rlady fur
Immediate occaipancv· ·
lnterett ratel 1re •wn end
probobly won't btl-or.

\1\lji

loU. Ac:r--e

. 31 Homee for Sele

CENTRAL REALTY ·

Small engine repair. lawn
mowera. riding mowers.
rototillen. Reaaoneble
rotoo. 3rd. &amp; Olive St.,
Galllpollo, 448-31&amp;9 bo·
~n Bond 6 • •

--·

- ·- · --·

'

CALl:

Critical Care
Y ou

TERRY LLOYD
Apt. Auctioneer

super .Prices

_.
_
,
814 992 1040

WE ALSO WORK ON
ALL OTHER APPUAIICES

or

JACKSON. OHIO

I

OR

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
~ENERAL ELECTRIC
. &amp;HOTPOINT

Room ·

MUSTARD'S AUCTION SERVICE
PRESTON MUSTARD
Auctioneer

TREE TRIMMING. REMO·
VAL . CALL 614 . 94 9 -2129

54

ANTIQUE AUCTION
ITEMS TO SELL: Serpentine oak dressers, 2 roll top desks,
fancy organ, oak dressers, brass cash register, 3 wall
phones, iron beds, 2 wood ice bo•es, Hi Back beds, edra
nice secretaries. spool cabinet, sets of pressback cha~rs, 6ft.
hall tree, fancy rocking chairs, primitive cupboards, old
wash stands wall cabinets, blanket chests, wooden churn ,
old trunks, aid tool bo&gt;es, wi cker baskets, many old cloc ks, a
cut of nice quilts, gold watch , old post cards, old bott.les,
Daisy churns, 12 pc. of w1cker, collect1on of 35 stone tars
w/ writing, 12 guns, 3 corner pegged cupboard, a lot of old
crocks, broad a•e. wood planes, carbide. lamps, 2 sets of
stack-on bookcases, old carpenters tools, wooden buckets,
old granrte ware, 300 old coins, brass and copper kettles, old
lamps, coin banks, bean kettles, iron pots, and a lot of old
glassware. Plus much more'
.
LUNCH. SERVED
TERMS OF SALE: Cash or cortifified check, local check
w/proper I.D. No out of state personal checks.

Situations
Wan1ed

have one vacancy for an
Insurance
elderly man or woman in my 13
home . Good experience, ~--------­
reaonabla rates. Call 867·
6329 or 667-3402.
SANDY AND BEAVER
lnaurance Co . haa offered
Vacancy in boarding horne services for fire lnaurance
for elderly only. Reaonable. coverage In Gallla County
Calll14 -992 -6022 .
for almoat 1 centwy. Fann.
home end personal property
Will eara for the elderly in coverage• are a'lailable to
our home. Trained a. ex.pa- meet l.ndivldual naedt .
rienced . LPN care given. Contact Eug8na .Holley,
614-992-7314.
ogont. Phone 388-8'690.

Emergency

LOCATION: Due to the size of this safe, we will hold this
safe at the Gallia County Fairgrounds. located on U.S. 35
11 Gallipolis, Ohio.

12

The elderly is my concern . I

··· Maybe

DATE: SATURDAY, MARCH 12th AT 11 A.M.

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or email. A ella ble and
dependable. For aatlmate
call446·31 69 or 268·1867
aftor IPM .

.•.

Attention RN's

BdPublic Sale
&amp; Auction

-~­

23 · Profenlonal
Service• ,

0

--~~~~1;91~8t;:::::~~========~==~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~io~~Po~i~n~t~P~~~sa~nit,~
V
V~
..~V~a~.~~~==~~~~~T~he~~~~Ti~~~~~Se~~nt~ine~I-~P~a~g~e~~~7
·--·-···
_...
.
---.:
41
~UJ]
44
44
49

1983

. ·..-·- ...

22 Mo~~ev to Loen

by Larry Wright

a

_,

-

March

HOM I LOAN I 12" llxtd
rMo. LM41er Moragago, 77! .
lteia, A-o. Ohio. 1 ·114·
192·3011.

ACCOUNTANY Multi ·
locetlon Southern Ohio
vending company Ia aHklng
1 self·movatied lndivlduel to
be re1ppon11ble for' all
•ccountlng end gener1l
Qfflce function•. R.. por\libllltlet Include preperttion
of joumal1, financial ltltementl, end 1upervi1ion of
steff. College education a
plu1. ·S alary commenaurate
with experience. Send
.._aume 8!'\d salary hlttory to
P.O . Box 313, McArthur,
Oh 46661 .

or tnvel trailers . Will
8dPu blic Sale
&amp; Auction

-

41) ACRE FARM - $2,000 down, 12% fixed rare

financing up to 30 years. VA acquired·properly that
any oualifM!d buyer can buy. [Need nat be a vel)
Very clean farm has barn, large pond plus mod. 3
bedroom home wrth full basement. Priced at

$68,400.

$22,000 - 120 3RD AVE. - Owner may help

finance. 2 bed[OO!TI ranch sl'jle home near grocery
store. Nat gas heat cellar, siDrm wiidow~ conveninet location.
INVESTMENT OPPORIUNITY _ 7 RENTALS _
. and located at the junction of Rt. 7 &amp; Rt 141. 6
residential renta~ and 1last food rental. Overlooks
,boat club. Your investment should:pay for itself.

$65,000.

WE FEEL THERE IS NO BEITER TillE THAN NOW
TPROIBCUESY

AORREs~.!_NHOABLIIEE. AIIINT0ERPEESTOPILES ~lEW,
ft.....,
~

BUYING IIOWI CALL US NIMI

I
.
I
JUST LISTED- MINI FARM - If you're wanting 1
to raise lots of tobacco then thi&lt;&gt; isIheplace for you. ' .
14 acres that includes a 1586 lb. base !owners 1
raised over 4600 lbs. in 1982). 3 barns 13Bx48 I
new, 14x84 new and 36x40 tobacco barns[, bot·
toms have a good cover aoo one is tiled. Alsio I
includes an attractive 3 yr.
booroom maint
free horne. Includes family room, fireJjace
1
woodburner. large kitchen, util. room. patio &amp; new
root cellar B.. workshop. Will :.ell some equip. Call 1
Jim Cochran. $60s.
.
EVERYTHING YOU'll NEED- A PRICE YOU CAN I
AFFORD - You must soo all the extras this fine 3 1
bedroom home offers. lncaled in city schoo district,
this ranch has a beautiful kild1en with qualy cali- I
nets, range &amp; oven, dishwasher · compaclor, fire- _
. place in living room, I \?
lui basemen' family , 1
room, g;~rage and 1Bx36 in-groond fllOI,huge
~d

an~

crN·

ered dock and %ac. Only $53,!ll0.
INTERIOR LOOKS LIKE APICTURE FROM HOUSE '
BEAI/TIFUL - Diann &amp; Jack h~ve spent the last 3
years ma~ng this house over, and beiM!ve me sh~
has atalent Take your time while you're kxl~ngro
you can see every little mitingdetail. It fealures a
large new fam~y room with Buck stove and over· : •
head fan. 2\! .bath~ a library wrth skyight, 31arge-.
boorooms, formal dining wrth crystal chandelier,
neffly remodeled ~t.chen, new roof and avery nice
setting on large Spring Valey 1~ . You should look 1!1
!his one before buy1ng anything else. Owner trans·
ferred,must sell. Possible 9 ~% assumption.

J
1

RIO GRANDE - $38,0(10 - A bargain price for
this neatly decorated 3 or 4 bedroom home with
access off Rt 35. Owners remodeled in 1979 and
have in very good condition inside &amp; out Vi n~
siding, basement, nat gas heat, fonnal dining, new
bath, extra nice wood finish on all trim &amp; mok!ing
Storage bldg. &amp; %acre \lith storage bldg. Cal Clyde
Walker.
.
PRICE REDUCED ·- WAS $89,900, NOW
$64,333 - One of a kind -Perfect lor aprofes·
s~nal office, a business in your home, a large
residence or as~ stands now, a2family home.This
is aquality buin older home lhat has2 kitchens,2\?
baths, modern gas furnace &amp; central air. You could
have a nice office com pie• downstairs and family
rental or more offices upstairs. There's afinished 3,
floor, ffull basement and 2&amp;car garage. In the pro- •
cess o new pa1nt carpet wallpaper Inside. La•cated near Court House· &amp; Cily Building.
LOW OOWN PAYMENT - LOW INTEREST ASSUMPTION - Priced at $2B))OO- 2 bedroom
akom. sided ranch in ely. 4 rice sized rooms &amp;
bath plus util. roorn.Screened~ porch. located oil
Rt 7. Cal Clyde Walker for lnfn

-------------~------~------------.

.

•

I

bath~

II
I
I·

I
I

'I
1
I1.
I
1

.I

�,. '

~
BRIDGE
-~~~a~~~~~~8~T~he~S~u~nda~y~Ti~~~~~Se~n~t~-~~~~,-~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

·MtiiUI6, l913:~·:

Ohio-Poiilf Pliasant, W . Va.

61 Household Goods

64 Misc. Merchandise

64 Misc .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

EarlyAmoriconcouchboigo.

USED COPPER TUBING

Sob, chair, rocker:, Otto· good con d ., $40 . Call

Y2" &amp;. fittings. 160'·250•.
*26.00 . Gee hot elr furnace

'
l

man·, 3 t,_bles, lextre heavy 448·0929 .

by Frontier). 1685. Soh .
cha ir li"d lovesaat, $276 .
Sofa1 and chain Priced from
•*286. to 1895. Tables, 145
.. and up to 1125. Hide·• ·
"beds , 1 4 4 o. 0 n d up t 0
; 1526., Re•linors, "75. to
ir83!iO., I.ompolrom 128. to
~76 . 6 pc . dinettes from
199., to 1436. 7 pc .. 8189.

1 -'---~----'--'-Early American aofa and two
chairs, very good condition .

Call 614-446·3882 .

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

Maple bedroom au ito com·
plete. Cell 446-3346.

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

Firewood . oplit. 830 .00
truckload . 136 .00 doli·

0

~~~irs S426. t&lt;&gt; $746 . Desk ro_r_i_3_0_41_8_8_2_·_2_1..,9_4_
. ___

up to 8225 . Hutc hes, r
, 'f660. and up. maple or pine World Book &amp;

Craft tor

1 CaII 949 •2277 ·
. finlah . Bunk bod complete sao.

~ ~ith

mattresses, $260. and

with duct work, U60. Gao
hot water tank, t26.00. All
Item• have to be removed
from damaged houoo .
304·675 -9782.

NORTH
+ QJ 9
• K 8 73

1-:::-::--::--::-::---::--::--

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

up to 1396 . Baby beds . Colonial Ba ss ett maple
1•110 , Mattresses or box hutch with glaoo dooro .
, springs. l ull or twin, 858 .. S350. 614-992-6293 after
1

iiirm, 868 . and $78 . Queen L6_. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
~ sets , $196 . 4 dr . chests,.~

WEST

wind.owe . lin tell . etc.

c laude Wintero. Rio Grande.

1:;:;:=;::=:;:::=;;====
0 .

Call 814-246 _6121 .

66

EAST

• :;

: ~~;: 123

• A8

•

•
•
t
•

76 4 3

9
J
Ql 072

7~ 4

SOUTH

A K 10 8 2

Pets for

t 6

Vulnera ble: East-West

De 1
a er: South

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding all breads . AKC
Rag . Doberman&amp; pupa afd

We5t

North

East

Doberman Stud Service .

2t
Pass

2•
Pass

Pass
Pass

:aaa orelectricrahges, 8325
1.up to $376 . Baby ma·
!troooo s, &amp;26 e. S36 , bod
.lr.ameo $20, S26 , e. 830,

Call446-7796 .

Floor model color TV. 26 ' ".
Like now $150. 614·949·
2994.

k 1 n g fr am 8 $5o . G 0 0 d 1----------------

1

••election of bedroom suites.

Kenmore automatic washer-

cedar cheato, rockers. motel $86. Maytag electric dryer·
cabinets. swiliol rockers.
$ 85 . Auto. washer and

Used Furniture __ bookcase.
1 ranges. chain. and tables ,
: waehers. dryers, refrigara 1 tors and
TV's. 3 miles out
• Bulaville R!=! . Open · 9em to
J6pm, Mon . thru Fri ., 9amto

dryer-$1 26. Maytag portable 110 dryer- g re en . 885 .
Call 614-742-2362.

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

For sa le-New ld.e a Manure
sp reader. 36 acrea Timber.
Mostly Oak . Cal843-5186 .

, 5pm, Set .

1446-0322

I '

~ GE .auto

washer in perfect

MUST sell new

•condition 8110. Call 448·

li~ing

room

5 :30p.m .

1

'
1

I64 Misc . Merchandise
r
Call446 -1408.

' C'ut up slabs for firewood
816 pick up load . Call
614-245-6804 .

New

DRAGONWVNO CATTERY
• KENNEL. AKC Chow
puppies, CFA Himalayan ,
Persian and Siame11 kit-

tens. Call 446-3844 after
4PM .

1 -:~:------------AKC Registered Cocker
Spaniel six puppies. B wke.

1-:----------------

Pedigree R.. robbits. Pluoh

white like fur . Blues, lilaca.
chocolates, black . 614 ·

ffJt

6942.9 -6 .

lent eond ., 8600 with

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

American or foreign truchtJnted or clears $79.95
inltallad . Irwin's Glass

Service. 814-258-8544.

len hone power Western

~to Wizard rldl ng mower.

elllt. cond. Coll446-3961 .

1- c o f f e e t a b 1 e
4?VJ:x18Y2x16 Yz in , and 1

end table 26•18Yu20 'h
with light walnut finish $30,
a,.o light walnut 7 drawer
dresser , with large mirror
8'66 . 32x63 · 174 pieces
b[ own underpinning for 8
mobile home used just 1
came off a 14x70
mobile home , long pieces
measure 32", short pieces
21" and 10 inches acroll.
e~erlock in a metal frame ,
•od grain finish . Call after

v••r

SINGER Golden Touch and
Sew deluxe fashiOn disc and
fla1ci stitch disc sewing
machine in bakersfield desk
with chair. Used vary little.
Button holer and all other
attachments included . Cost
over $600 . new. Asking

1300. Call 304-876 -2845.

Chuck Lanier.

TWIN bod and springs, 875 .
Exercise cycle, $50. Baby
stroller, 820. Call 304-676·
1672.
SEAS 0 NED fi rowood.
$10.00 your pickup, 304·
676·2010.
BUNK bed L shaped unit .
Includes 2 beds with mat·
tresses, 4 drawer cheat, 2
shelves, wardrobe, qilardrail
and ladder . Excellent
conti1ion. $260 .00 . 304675 ·2495 .

...

Saara. deluxe continous
clean. electric cook stove .
(30.11ess than 1 yr. old. paid

8600, asking S250 . Coli
814·266·6752.

2' Concord 1 2 speed long
distance touring bikes ,
almost new. 8176 each . Call

Discounts. Avoid April price
increase. Free Hiller in eluded. Immediate shipment . Parts. engines. Trade

CAPEllO tap shoes. girls
size 13%, $10 .• 304-676-

Partially new bunk bed1 .
Orginally $400 will sell for

GIBSON frot1·free refrigerator, avocado green . Sylvania TV, black&amp;. white, 20 "
screen . Antique pie safe .

304-675 -2017.

Real Estate General
Broker-Auctioneer
LIFE
IN S URANCE

Call 44&amp;-05112 i\nytime
Bet!! NuU

24~9507

- $30s.· ma·1ntenance Iree srdmg,
.
lenced back vard

family orrented nerghtxJrhood. Th ~ is avery clean 3 BR home Cali
lor appomtrnent

.

• BMR 389 - fh• fine home has 4 bedrooms and is located close
to town. You wrll hbavea. large lot with a country atmosphere and
have all the crty convenrences. Ca ll now'
BMR 414 - . 12x60 mobile hn~- ;ituated on 1 acre "plus lot
Includes turnrture, has rear so\.O.over. converted front deck
• 12x24 garag~ with storage.
'
BMR 422 - Nrce ranch located on Roush Llne rs pnced tosell at
$38,!XXl. Llrge LR. 2 BR, kitchen includes range. eye-level oven.
•dishwasher and drsposal. Call to see.
BMR 424 - 2 plus ac10s with a very nice 3 bedroom ranch style
home. You wrll love the country atmospohere. Possi~e loan
assumption.
BMR 425-..:Exea.rt~e type brrck hom e. in French Prrr;rncial
"Featunng 2,100 square leetol lrvrngare; on the mai~ lloo; p,·;;a
ful walkout basement Thrsfine home • one of a kind in this area.
Be the firsl lo see this one Call now.
BMR 426 - Pnced rrght at $37,500 It has an assumable loan
with only 9\l%interest We are talking about a veri clean, 3 BR
home situated on nrce flat lot rn a family oriented neighborhood.
Call f01 complete details
BMR 398 - PRICE GREATLY REDUCEO! Owner transferred and
must sell this 3" BR ranch. ctooe to1Dwn includes deluxe 18x36
inground JXla. Reduced to $44",500 - PlUS owners will pay
F.H.A-VA · points and c~ilg cos!&amp; .
BMR 428 - Steel siding. 3 BR ranch srtuated on largeftatlot. Oty
Sc:hool District PrD!d at $37 ,500.00. t;all for appointment
BMR 429 - All electric bi-level in Kyger C~eek School District
situated on 1.21 acres with assumable 91h% loan. Canfor complete
details!

..iii14Jl- NEW LI~ING - Excel~nt buy at $38.500.Lovelv

frllnt ranch wth 3 BR s,larf!B kitchen with ca~?eted dining a.aa 2

.bathS. l!e!Er see th~ one ,tmay! .

rythm , upper &amp; lower
keyboard presets. plus other
features. Some books

included .. 614·992· 7667.

Farm Equipment

814-24!1-!1804.

HAV for sale , square &amp;

round belao. call 304·882·
3~ 10.
66 Seed &amp;. Fertilizer

1974 Nova. 8.1. ttea.io
back. p.o.• p.b.• 1100c1 ·
814 -378-6348. 310." .......
*796 .
.
'•

1979 V.W. Rabbit. 4 door,

1971 BUICK otoilon WIOI!II •

am -fm . rear defogger , 1
owner. low mlle1ge. excel·

1974 Novo SS 360 auto.,
good cond .• p . s .. p . b . •
bucket seats . 81,000.
614-986-3888 alter 6 p.m.

good running cOnditiOn· ,

uoo. 304-17&amp;·1117.

'

~9

CHEVY oedan. $600.
f1rm, 304 -678· 2802 . Call
only If inter.. tecl.

82 CHEVROLET Citation .
6,000 mileo , 86895 .00 ,
304·676-3054 .
72

March
73

62 Wanted to Buy

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1976 Buick Electra 2 dr .•
PS. PB. AC. AM -FM stero
$1 ,860 or trade for cenle,
farm equipment of equal

'

• • • 431 - NEW LISTING - Brick ranch includes 3 BRs. LR.
OR., famiy room, 2 ~ bath~ situated on 38 acres. Caii1D see th~

one !Dday!

'

1111432- flEW LISTING- 3 BR bi·level, in Rodney Vilage ll
Includes family room, fireplace, and more. Situa!ed on fenced
comer lot Clll for detai~
'

74

.7 9 Dodge 4 wheel drive· 1971 CJ6 Jeep, good condi·
28.000 miles , auto., A-1 tion, 304 -11&amp;-3817.

79 Ford Bronco Ronger XLT.
IXC. f:?O"d . • price t! ,&amp;OO.

Cell 814·387-723B.

.

78 Ford van customized cot
MOll AM -FM radio lo otero
good condition. Cell 448·
3348 .

Trucks for Sale

74

Motorcycles

1982 Honda 460 cilotom
uc. cond . Coli 446 -2350.

condition. Call 446-17&amp;8.

Motorcycles

Wanted: Tobacco Poundage
for 1983. Will pay 20 cento
lb. 814-266·1146.

10 blkeo from IIOcc to
750 cc . All under 1989.
8atz Honda Sileo, Upper Rt.
7. Konouge. Oh.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

POTATOES. 16. lor 76 lb.
beg. 304·896-3400.

Tractor for aala. John Deere
Modal L Mth plow. $1 ,200.

1977 Dodge Colt auto

An guo Bull Coli. Call
446·2698.

p.m.

1B82 Kewuekl 200 CC. ucollent condition, .$3700.
firm, 304·882·2032.

Three wheeler. 81 , 000 .
firm . After 6 p . m . Call

710 Ho1111a K model law
extroo. Cal 448 -2618.

814· 885 -4317 .

.

Regletered Quarter Hor...
Ruth Reevea. Also grade .
Saddles . bridle1 . winter
horse blankeu . Western

boots. 614·698·3290.

, 989 ca"dilloc 2 door, lair
t i res . $400 . 614- 992·
7177."

Tool bo• for S-10 PU. Cali
446-2!198.

1977 FORD Maverick.
power steering. automatic
tranamiuion. eir condition-

farm equipment of equal

Ing 40.000 aotual miles.
304-773-6170.

L

Don Blake-Aieot:.-676-1480

'S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER, CENTURY 21.

Nrce loo~ng 2
bedroo~. I ~ baths, wood·

burner, carpeting full base·
ment and bui~ in 1959. Now
just $23,000.
FARM - 80 ACRES - Atxrut
half lays real gooo. A real
handyman's ' farm. Good 3
bedroom farm home with bath.
woodoorning fireplace Ideal
for cattle and children. Some
tmber. As~ng $00,000 but
give us an offer.
SWIM POOL - You ca~ enjoy
the hot summer here. Nrce
ktchen. gas furnace. full
basement. new 2 car garage
and 2 lots next to the school.
Now just $47,500.
BARGAIN - Wou~ you give
$21.000 for these 2 houses
next to each other. This is a
~ investment for any me 3
bedrooms and bath rn each. All
utiliies.

trans. vinyl top , newly
Painted red on white.
~xcellent gas mileage. clean.
m very good cond .• •2.200.
1979 Pontiac Tran 1 Am
1Oth year anniversary all
available options, ehow
room condition. k)w miles.

Cell 446-9278.

i.ocaled in the city SChool disrome, excellent condrtion. 3 bed·
bath, nice size kitchen. Unat1achoo garage.
is neat and clean. Priced in the tow 30'~

U~IIIIIO -

#286

LOW. LOW PRICE- You ~
can't beat th~ for price 01
convenience. 3.47 aCiesanda
4 room house with bath,
leadrng Creek Water, woodoorning chimney and cellar
near Middleport for only

$11.500.

9 ACRE ESTATE - Ranch style brick 3 bedrooms.
3 ~ · bath~ baement Caretakers buildir&amp; tree~
shrubs, beautiful landscaprng. Large clean stocked
pond. We will show you the rest. Fairfield Vanco
Road. Green Township. '

#251

.

.

NEW LISTING - MIDDl£·
POIIT ...:. I floor, 5 room home,
being remodeled, bath,' gas furance, new wiring, equipped
kithen, 2 porches &amp; level lot
nllll the park.

Housiny
Headquarters

OHIO RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - l.oca1ed 3 lilies
below. Eureka Dam. Ideal for camping building or
mobie homes. Cal Ranny Blackburn.
·

, without acreage.

HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH OPTION
TO BUY OR lAND CONTRACT. TWO AND THREE
BEDROOM STARTING AT $200 PER MONTH.

Dependable washer-dryer
rep1lr . Guennt1ed work.

Call 114 · 256 · 8820 or
114· 258-1207.

STUCCO PLASTERING textured eelllngs commercial and resldentlll , free

aotlmatlro. Call 6 14·266·
1182.

. '

PAINTING • Interior
axtorior. plumbing, roofing,
oome remodeling. 20 yro.
axp. Call 614·38B-8662 .
Marcum Roofing

e.

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE call City Furniture
304-B?B-2608.

Spout-

Ing. 30 year11experience.

weight. fibergla11 Scamp

specializing In built up roof.
Caii614-3B8-9867.

86 · General Hauling

to,lllreo 1·800·348· 48112

HOWARD L. WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY .

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Collo814-367·
7471 or 814·387-0691 .

13 •· a. .1 8' travel trailer• a.
new 19' 6th wheel. Cell now
for free brochure and eavel

• Joan Boggs, Phone 446· 3294

.o

OuttersaDownspouta-New·
Repair-Gutter Painting Storm Doors &amp; Windows.
Free Estimates . Phone

Need something hauled
aWay or something

moved?

814 ·949-2263 or 814 ·
992-2791 .

We'll do it. Call446-3169 or
614-256-1987 alter 8.

RON'S Televiaion Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar , a nd

Now hauling lime1tOne for
driveways, top soil for yerda

lo fill dirt. Call 814-367·
houoe calls. Call !178-2398 7101 .
- - - - ' - - - - ·lcor 448·2464.
Gravel or fill dirt. Delivered.
Flo K Tree Trimming, stump Cell 614-992-3B59 .
removal. Call 676-1331.
~IMS WATER SERVICE.
RINGLE'S SERVICE upo - Call Jim Lanier, 304-876·
rlenced roofing. Including 7397.
hot tar application. cerpan tu. electrician. maapn . Call

87

Water Welle . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes .
Pumps Sales and Service .

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolio.
448-7833 or 446-1833.

ro·rii~i,Y,.IIIilll

Beautiful
i . 7
rooms. al brK;k, two-car gar·
age. Llrge lot. Family room,
14'x28'. living room 14'x28'.
Nice modem ~tchen. And the
best part about th~ property is
the low, low price. Phone now.
#554

ESTIMATES.
CL.EANING.FURNITURE
CAPTIAN
ST2AMER 814-448-2107.
STARKS Tree Trimming lo

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST
84 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Step rnto one of the cleanest farm homes in an ideal location. Three
good ~zed bedrooms. larf!B living room, sunny eat-m kitchen' a
bath. Tobacco base, gas lease and free gas aH go with it la~ge barn.
cellar house and chicken house.·Call today for many more extras.

1 ·

Bill's

,

f

N.u-Prlmo replacomltll
windows
Storm windows &amp; doon ·
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
.
Howmel Pallo Co•en
Howmet screen rooms

Mobile home awnlnp
Aluminum utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive
444-2~2

Free Estimatts

HAMUN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-lAW
Dissolutions or UIICOII-' "

tested Divorces $350.00

(Costs ini:luded).

I.Jpholstery

446-0855
512 Second Aw., fllllillafis
Servq tlslfio &amp; • •
Cowltios

MOWREY&amp; Upholotery Rt .

1 Box 124 . -Pt . Pleasant.

304·875·4 1 54.

rI=====~~~~~~-----~-·

SOLUTION

Removal. Muni - backhoe
•16. hour, in1ured. free

eotlmateo. 304-678-2010.

E &amp; R Tree Service. fully
inaurad, free estimates .

Phone 614-367-0636, call

after 6 .

82

5 ROOMS. 3 BEDROOMS
Approx. l acre. Nice yard. Garden space. Nice comforfllble home.
Large front JXlrCh, back patio deck, moCfem country ktthe11, large
bathroom. On State Highway. Phone for more details,
#555

tt-.f:.:.o'o.:.M::..P.:~.R~O,tV!;EM~E!!N!!;S~~·

' i&gt;oy

Wills $25.00
Small Eslates $350.00

304-871i-208B or 8754680.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine ·

Phone 448-3888 or 446·
4477

DRIVE A LITTLE, SAVE A LOT
3 BR. ftJI basemen~ whilE alumrnum ~ding, fuel oil FA fumace
30'x40' bam , shingled roof, lots of youngpeaeh and apple trees. Ni
thrs reduced to only $14,900.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

#452

wide. Permanert
. Rural water. Caii!Dday.
l =~~~~~.~dlouble
11290
ENJOY EASY LIVING within your budget with th~
bargain pricoo one floor plan 2 bedroom home
Modern kitchen. forced air heal Stormdoor.;, ther·
windows. Pos~l:je ~nd contract Eve1·
green are~ Priced mid twenties.
- more or less, in the village ri
Rural water ..Storage buidrng. Several feel
of trontage. No 10strictions

11201

ONE YOU MUST SEE TO APPRECIATt - aean
and attractive 2 bedroom home. Forced air fur·
nace. County water syste111. 2. 75 Acresof pasture
and wood!- Pnced in the lo\\llr 20's.

11249
I ACRE LOTS - Frontage on Stat~ Route 160.

Excellent home site. Rural water availal:je.
. Restricted.

#193

V.A. LDAN ASSUMPTION - Ranch style brick
home. Green Twp., 3 bedrooms. I ~ baths, large
ivrng room, formal dining room , deluxe kitl:hen.
utilrty, patio, heat pump, central air, 2 car garage
Pr~ate concrete St Extra large le~~el lot. Low ~xties.

PEACEFUL SETTING - $39.000
·nirs pnvacy in a country atmosphere you wan~ we've got it Three
bedroo~. 2 baths. large hvrng rooni &amp; family room. Kitchen plus
formal dining room. All on 1.~ acres. New listing.

11246

#568

375 DEBBIE DRIVE - Owner isbeing transferred
anQ ~ anxious to sell thislovely 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
brick ranch. Full di~ded basement. large 2 car
garage. Nice level ~ndscaped lawn. Priced in the
60's. Call tooay !

INVESTMENT !.... INCOME - INVEstMENT
'71 12x65 fu rnished mobile home. '68 12x50 furnished mobile
ho~re '68 Wi ndsor 12x65 furnished mobile home, and 3errtra lots
for renllll, septic svstem~ ali" on State Route.
.

•

#250

BUSINESS OPPOIITUNITl - 35'x35' garage. 2
bay, storage room. Built according to safety regula·
fiOI'rs. Including most equipment Fum ~hed 2 bed·
room Covenlri mobile home. Approx.1h acre. Rural
water. Call for more rnformation.

#289

H274

LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME- The owners have
pncoo this home to sell. 4 bedrooms, ~rge kitchen
· and dining comb., living room. double vanity in
bath. Natural gas heat 4 extra lots. Mobile home
hookup. Pnced rn the 30's City schools.

11271

KYGER CREEK LOCATION - 3 iledrOOm frame
home wth bath, living room, kdchen. Co1J1ty wale1
· and I acre ot ~nd. Natural gas ~ neil house, but
not hooked up. Owner needs to sell. ·Make us an
offer.

#238

•67 OF AN ACRE. more or less. Older garage. Rul31
wafer tap induded. 1'«11estriction&amp; City school&amp;
QUICK ACTION PRICE TAG! Price S·l·a-s-ll+d. New 121116
kitchen, buih range, microwave rr;en, dishwasher &amp; clspasll
New bedroom &amp; bath, 2 other bedrooms, gas heat •i111U1
Elementarv.
MIDDLEPORT - New klg_cabin. Select your own C8iJ1t!1 and
d!!XIr. lovely .nver VIew, ~Ying room. 2 bedroo~ kitchen bath.
Gas heat Priced 30'&amp;
'
'
LOAN ASSUMPTION ....: 9'/,% INT. - $3,9oo
- Monthly payments $348.24 inckiding taxes &amp;Ins. 31Noomn
ranch. large ~!chen.
· ·

00111 ,AYII'£IIr
'

POMEROY- ROUND CEDAR HOME ~ Lots of glass and a~
VIew. Woodoo lot 3 or 4 bedrooms. kitchen, living room • ~
area. Nl wooden beamed ceilings Circled rustic round
complelefy around tile ho~re.

~

.IANGSYIUE AR£A - 2 bedroom home with
aklminum sidilg Living room. kitchen, bath,
SCieened in porch. Gas furnace, Cellar house and
I \1 acre. Pr'ced at $22,900. Located at C!vuser

.

tl271

FINISH THIS OfiE! - Have a beautiful home at
edll8 of woods. 5 Acres, more or less, 3 bed•.
2 fireplaces. 1.00; of possibHities.

11204

l =r:~~-~ ~Rel~m~ltld~eled

~ome

olde1 .2dining
sklry room.

new roof. Nlblraf

Older I car garage.

BARGAIN OF THE Y£AR- Suburban 3 bedroom
ranch. Famly room w~ fireplace plus wood bum·
ing stove. Fully carpted. 2 ~ car attached gal)lge, \\
acre lot Fenced in backyanf. Priced for quick sal~

#264

DUPLEX 558 THIRD AVENUE - let the income
!rom this property pay for itself. Each side has 2
bedrooms, large formal dining. bath, kitchen.
Fenced back yard. Separate· entry. Vinyl siding

Both sides presenlly.occupied.

11282

TRY OFFER! 5 rooms and bath. Modem ~!then.
Woodbumer. E.ectric baseboard heal Two moblk!"
home pad&amp; Three Se~ tanks- Rural wamr. One
acre of land. I !h miles from Holzer lkdical ~nter.
$30,000.
11278
NEW liSfiiiG - MINI FARM - 27 20 acres. 2

rrsio~m=-~~~~~~~
ing. lns!Utad throughoUt Carpeled. AI m111eral
ri&amp;jlts. Priced rigfrt.

11292

MaoniCI.
&amp;8 I IUGWDI.uniOPUAtaD.
,'(') 1112 C.nlury 21 Real &amp;swot Colporalkm.s trUIIH ror the NAF ®and U1- ttadcm.vi\S or
.
CentUry it Rul £11M Cotpor•ten . Equal HousMfi C&gt;yportunhy (i)

.

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
.
B£AT INFlATION- 8V,% ASSUMPTION
Charm &amp; quaity wil be yours rn th is all brick 3 bedroom home.
Large livrng room and formal dinrng room w/picture windows
overlooking the Oh!&gt; River. 3 baths. famiy room; 2 car garaf!B with
door opener-. attic.•2 ~replaces, central air, large basement. and
over I acre o! beautifully landscaped ground.&amp;C~seto the city. For
more defllils call today.
#523
RESTFUL AR£A- 3 BEOROOMS-1.38 AC~ES
Price reduced to $31.500.00. City waler. Close.to fire hydrant
Basement. Well bur~ house. CarJX)rt. Outbuildings. Good insulation.
trees. garden space. Very quiet area . Possible assumable mortgage
at klw interest rate. Phone for details.

FRINGE BENEFITS - Buy this home and enjoy
free natural gas for heating and a monthly chock
from royaftie~ This farm home is rn excellentcond f
tion withal modern fac ilities and 48 acres of land.

NEW LISTING - WHO COULD ASK FOR MORE
-A nice view of the nver and a p~e to dock vour
boat is induded with this immaculate 3bedroom, 2
bath home. Kitchen has island range . Basement
completely fin ished. Large 9'x57' deck plus9'x57'
patio. Priced in the 50'&amp;

SIYLE .•. EliGAfiCE ... A WAY OF LIFE ime on the mar~ for this like new contampmary,
3 or 4 BR's, 2 batl1s, larf!B open LR wilh fireplace &amp;
beamed ceiings, kitchen includes range, OW &amp;
rehi&amp;. lui basement. wrap-around dec~ ceda1
siding. 12124 above fJOUnd pool, l!ilrage, bam &amp;
10 acres near Eureka. City schools.
WALIIUT
TOWNSHIP - Beef. hay &amp; grain farm.
EXECUTIVE CHARM - Thars what you'N find in
th~ 4 BR, 2\i bath lluti:h Cofo!QI located in . 80 acres, m/1, appmx. 35 A. pd cropland, IDA
beautiful Charolais Hrlls Estates. Compiet!l in every woods. balance pasture, good tenees. 9 nn. &amp; bath
way including_a com~etelv equipped kitl:hen, home was buik in 1872 .&amp; has been partially
larf!B f1vrng &amp; dmmg nns, family rm. with fireplace, remodeled, 50x50 cattle barn with concrete flool',
basement &amp; cent air. The 300 sq. fl. sun deck ~rge silo with au1D. unkiader, several sheds, lill"f!B
overlooks the beautiful 20x44 pool. AI this plus a pond, springs. &amp;tlnding Clti!IS go 1D new owner.
wei landscaped 3~ acre lot Shown by
NEW USfiiiG - 25 N:RE. MINI FARM kx:al!!d
approx. 4 mi. north of HMC on old Route 160.
Modem llHeYel has bli:k &amp; vinyl conslruction, 3
BRs, 2 baths, equipped kitchen, dining area.
laundry &amp; 2 car garage. Can be bought wilh or

RUSS AND MAX

#483

BEST _BUY IN TOWN - Stylish 2 story home was
b111tt rn 1894 and must be seen to appreciate.
L.a~ge open lover and staiiWay. LR, dining rm,
panor, completely equipped l!l(!dern kitchen, 4
Brs. 2~ baths, new sid111g garage, near schools.
shopping. etc.

'

BUY Factory Dlntct. Light-

*Will is T. Leadingham, lleai1or. Ph. Home 446-9539
*Phyllis Loveday, PhOne 446 · 2~30

8\\% ASSUMPTION
5 Rooms, 3 bedroom, la1ge
modern eat-in kttchen, full
basement with large family
room and woodbtJrner that
does an excellent job heating
this home. Garage, sum~rer air
cooditioned. A down payment
and loan assumable. Payments
of $292.00 per month. Nice
large lot Phone for full
information.
#559

38,000 mi. A-1 cond. Ron
Shooto, 614-268-1484.

446-0008

appointment

and add on room, $4,000.
Call 614-367-7238.

Home
I mprovements

shape. Wotor removal, FREE

PEACEFUL COUIITRT·UKE SffiiNG. Excellent
bay
II $45.900. Owneis have been lralisferred &amp;
NEW LISfiiiG $49,500- Owners have moved &amp;
are
anioous
to sell this IJyely brick &amp; tra~re ranch
have their klvely 3 BR brick ranch Piked 1D sell
with
3
BRs,
~rge kitchen, lR wilh W8 fireplace,
Special features a10 I\\ baths, family nn. with WB
nrce
carpet
throughout,
attached garage &amp; 1 acre
fireplace, carpet throughout full basement ga{3ge, ·
pine-studded
lit
Possible
blended mortgage for
covered rear porch &amp; large lot on the lkllaYifte Rd.
qualified buyers.
SECLUDED COUNTRY SETTING. LOC*ING FOR
NEW liSfiNG- ApiJllx. 50 acres nearVin1Dn, al
SOMETHING SPECIAL? Let us show you this new
clean grassland, remodeled 6 rm. &amp; bath home.
3 BR, 2 bath double garage ho~re Ytith over 1700
60x90
bam, 2 ~m, pond, only $49,500.
sq. ft. of living area. Just right for the larf!B family
that needs ample space. Other features are natural
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRAllY LOCATED wood sid i n~ heat pump, range, refrig, OW &amp; disp.
112 acre fann has fronfllge on State Route 588.
Can be purchased with 2 acres or 40. Located .,
Farrtiefd
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Failfield Rd
Green Township.
Excellert for farming or development Older 5 nn.
&amp; bath also included. Ownern wil consider selling
LOCATION PLUS QUALm should describe th~
smaller lracts of short lenn financing Call for more
klvety 3 BR brick ranch. Special features are a
information.
•
large LR &amp; dining nn., equipped kitchen, I\\ baths,
laundry, quality carpet, cent.air &amp; an overs~ed 2
PRICE REDUCED TO $32,900 - 50 acres more
car garage. located on U.S. 35 West &amp; shown by
or less near Eureka, afll)rox. 15 A. grassland bae
appointment
anee wooded, nicely remodeled 6 rm. and 'bath
home. WB fireplace, stove, refrig., several outbuild·
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 82x80 all s1!e1 conings.
Owners leaving the area and would like a
Slruction with fireproof ilsulation. Overhead crane
quick
sale.
has office &amp; baths. Formerly used for boal sales &amp;
repair. Located across from Silver Bridf!B Plaza with
RECREATION lAND - 25 acres mil mostly
access 1D the Ohil River. Potential unlimited. Cal
woods, fronts on Uttle Raccoon Creek'&amp; Stare
Rannv Blackburn.
Route 325 near Tycoon Llk~ $15,000.
ASSUME 8\\% lDAN -'- l.ovel~ ranch at the edf!B
of town is priced to sell at $49,900. Features are 3 HOLIDAY PARK - 2 camping fats, furo~hed 26
fl. Tf00¥00d liavel trailer, shelter house, utility
BRs. IIi baths, large LR wtil W8 fireplace modem
buiding.
_county wamr, sewer, access 1D Raa:oon
kitchen &amp; dining area, laundry rm., garage &amp; gas
Creek. Priced for qurck sale.
heat Call for appointment

COUNTRY -

tully equiped. with screen

ElectrLcil

&amp; Refrigeration

Get your karp at in ship

LISTID! MAKE HASTE 1D view tb ~ attractive

BARGAIN Will take
$13,!XXl for this 3 bedroom
frame home Has bat~ gas
furnace carpeting basemeot.
2 porches and level lot

76 28 11. lmpolla camper

84

304·896-3802.

2nd 51.
Phone

NEW USTING - Nice ~r
ho~ that has carpeting,paneJ.
rng, 2 baths. 2 pore~ natural
gas furace, also acoal sloker furnace. 2 car garage with siJJp
stornge in base~nt La~ge kJi
for your garden or pets. Asking
$35.000.00
NrN LISTING- RACINE9 100m. 4 or 5 bedroom, 2 bath
home. New kitchen cabinets
and srnk natural gas furnace.
nrce carpetrng and large level
lot Owner financing at jus!
$20,!XXl or will consider trailer
as down payment.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

76 FORD Grand Torino.
needs body work. 304·882·
2681 .

IF YOU LIKE a very livable home, agood neighbor··
hood, a CO(Iverierlt faction, this home is for yo~
Featuring 3 bedrooms. I I\ baths. fireplace , large
• coveroo patio, aluminum ~ding, 16'x32' in ground
pool Storage building. Possr~lity of owner
#243 financnig.

1· (614) ·992·3325

1974 Comper-oleeps 4, 14
ft .. stove 1nd refrig . fur·
nlohed. t750 . 814 -887·
308!1.

Becky IM!e-~ . -446.0468

VIRGIL B. SR .

216

81

Judy DeWitt- Realtor-388-8166
J. MerriU Cartar-Raaltor-379-2184

79 SR6 Toyota truck. il
epeod.long bed with t o -.
304-676 -3638 .
•

REALTY

value. Call 446·4537.

-Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

cond ., new exhaust, radial

BLACKBURN

PS. PB , AC , AM-FM stero
61,850 or trade for cattle.

1981 YAI\IIAHA 650 Special, aloct"ric start, 1800
milea, 11 660. firm. 304·
937· 3169.
76

Polmino gelding. Coli before
New Idea 217 PrO Manure 8. 448-9219 .
-------------lc- Cell 814-388-8809.
oproador. 814-986-4169.

1975 Buick Electra 2 dr ••

'

1980 Monza ex . Cond .

1880 Shlroeco fuel injected,

59 For Sale or Trade

1980 KX 126, rode oppro•l·
mately 160 mil eo. 304·8711·
3308.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-~9

The

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

Camping
Eq'"'ipment

Edition, 3 , 600 miles,

Real Estate General
68

---------1

78

$3,996. Cell 446·3648 .

red , AM-FM cassette.

after 6 p.m .

Motorcycles .

4 cyl., auto. , air, AM·FM

bottom Oliver plow-$800 .. 1 horM SA Tennessee WalkllHay- round bales . 843 - 7 yr. old, good with kids.
6216.
1460. Call 814-258-9383.

Farm tractor . Farmell M.
New paint, good tlree.

74

1978 Kowa10kl K2 860wlth
header. Good obape. •soo. 1980 YAMAHA XS 1100,
Midnight Special Limited
614-949·2488 .

Raal Estate General

_v;:a::lu::e:-:.::c_•_ll:-:4:-4"""6-·4:..:6:..:3:..:7.:.·__
•
1

ter,
wheel
• rodlalo.
tonewt,.
paint,
only
18 6002
mileo . Price only $3,000 .
Cell 614·388-9811 .

livestock

Vans &amp; 4 W.D·.

.SOUTHERN HIL.LS R.E., INC.

atero, PS, PB, R • L remote
mirrora, rearwindowdefros-

!:;;::=;::;:======

7~

lL..J.__j--'-----'

r____________
1-

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-P•int Pleasant, W. Vo.

1983

1970 Pontiac. 4 dr. aadan.
Wanted to lease tobacco p.&amp;.• p.b. 1400. 614-892·
poundage for 1983. 614· 3270.
2!18·8534.

transport disc-$700. 4

Cell 614-992·6501 otter 5

198'0 Oldo Cutlooo
ugham 26,000 mlloo.
ox""flent condition . Call
446-3882.

lent condit ion . •2. 896 .
Accept trade . 614· 667 ·
Conditioned hay. ear corn . 3085.
Cell 614-949-2870.
Good quality Hay. Nevar 1980 Oldo Cutlau
wet. Contact 0 pol Fltzpe· Brougham. low mileage.
trick. St. Rt. 889 . Phone Exc.condltion . Call 614Wilkoovllle 814·589 -3786. 992-6621 .
300 be leo hay. $1 .00 per
bele. 614-887 -36 31 .
'

Autoa for • •·.

980 Pinto 2 dr. hatchback,

- - - - - - - - - - - - lcFor llle-10 ft. John Deere

81 ,200 . 814-986-3868

Baldwin piano for sale. 1 Yl
years old . Good condition .
61 4·949·24 77 '

INEWSPAPERENTERPRISEASSN.)

1----------"T"---------~

61

Mixed hoy. •1 .60 bale. Call
814-378 -2817.
.

71

finish .
As North had pointed out,

all lrouble with that 4-1
trump break .

~~~~~~~~~~~
I Ll Mlipk

tome,
.

Autos for Sale

3871 Hickory Hill Nursery.
Rt. 1 8o• 390 A, fishersville.
VA 22939 .

614 -388-9809.

•BMR
••••_. 427
•• .

Lowrey Magic Genie 88
organ with bench . Has
double key board, pedals,

led a second club.
South won. drew •trumps,
took his remaining h•gh
cards and lost a heart at the

e.

71

ins accepted . 703 -942-

1199.

f280 . Coli oftor 8, 446·
4737.

hardshell case. Electra
"Flying V' model guitar like
new, $400 with hardshell
case . Call614· 388-9809.

held up his ace.
Actually, West took the
first club with the ace an d

~WNMOWERS , recondi1i-

IPM, 448·3066.
onod. now parts , priced
,
846. to sao. Call 304-675·
fop quolity hatching white 2334.
•llky eggs 87.00 e dozen . 1-::---------------0ff 218, 2 '12 mi . on Uttlo TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
~ull Sk~n Ad at J .M. Taylor.

Epiphono Rivie ra aeml·

hollow body guitar, excel ·

dummy s third trump as
defense against the lead of a
th1rd diamond. Therefore, he
started on ·clubs. It did not
matter if WeSt ducked or

" All's well that en ds
well," remarked Soi.lth as·he
scored his game. "I was cer·

Loodor-Muoey Ferguoon 1

COKE machine. 304-773-

mondandstartedontrumps.

West showed out.on the s~"
ond one. South paused for

and James Jacoby

wk . 366 with forks . Cell

Instruments

had ruffed the second dia·

South should have lost that
heart at trick two~ a loseron-a-loser play an avoided

Open afternoons, weekends

1-:-:----------------

pick ups, ta•tured black
freme. full radius fit . For

ByOsweldJacoby

9
CAMOUFLAGE
1
S Army Sur· 1_ _8_5_-4_1_3_4_._ _ _ _ _
5
Pus. em omorvillo 's, 7
milea Eeot Ravenawood . 57
Musical
printed advertising 1 -------~--------specialties .

rear sliding back glass

Openrnglead: +K

1-:----------

only. 304·875-3334. lm·

li.or sale lump coa• &amp; fire wood. Zinn Coal C!o .. Inc.

South
1•
4•

7220.

old ready to go. 8100 each.
Call 448 -1824.

suite. 304 -675·6182elter

•, 8181 .

POODLE GROOMING. Call
Judy Toylor at 814·387·

rounds of diamonds . South

not afford to go on with
drawin~ trumps. He needed

+K J 6 3

Maple cabinet. Exc. con d.
New car radio for Citation or
Chevetta . 614-992-3442 .

talnly lucky to flnd East
with three clubs after th8t
unfortunate trump break."
"' You certainly were ,"
~eplied North. " If you had
~::,st remembered there is no
ly nt~~c~al~jgr!~~~~M\~"J;
needed that luck In clubs."
West bad started with two

study. He saw that he could

'A 5 4

•142 . 6 dr. chests. S54. Sod RCA stereo phono. console .

~ frames , S20 .and $25... 10
, gun • Gun cabipats, $360.,
•dinettachaira $20 . and $26 .

1-1-11

: ~~ 092

66 Building Supplies
Building materials
block, brick, aewar pip eo.

T.URKEY heno
304·576 -2218 .

South wins, anyway

1

and up. Wood table with six vered . Ph . 1614) 992-2770

l ·

livestock

'

#565

BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES-$47,000
3 bedroom ~ I ll bath home with lots of extra nice features, bu ift~n
cabrnets, sel f-c~aning range, dishwasher, ·garbage disposal and
~rge dining room. Kyger Creek Schools. .
#501
B£AUTIFUL WATERFRONT All BRICK HOME
CITY SCHOOLS
Ideal lor boahng, fishrng and pickmcking at your back door. Enjoy
th ~ spaciouscheertul house with 3 bedroom~ I \7 baths, large living
room, eat-rn krtchen, 2 fireplace s, full base~ren~ 2 porches, chain
hnk fence, plus much more. Call today to make an appointment 1D
see this lovelv year around home.
#505
{0

BUSINESS PROPERTY-1312 EASTERN AVE.
Nice ·building. lots of picture windows. Stone front. ike new
30'x80'. Lots ol uses - Two Itt&amp; ApP(OX. 92' fronfllge. Lots of
concrete parking spaces. Phone for all detai~.

#562

BUSINESS-HOME RENTAL
Business equipment building, 6 room ho~re..:.. ~ntral air, mooern
.kitchen, I ~ bat!1s, all city convenie~e. Nice home. Renflll - 3
rooms. All for one price. An excellent rnvestment. Gel started now
in business and a near-by home
#529
ENERGY "EFFICIENT

..

. . 3id AVE.. ""CA(!1POO$

Be sure to see th5 clea~, 1emodeled home with large open living
room. drn!ng room , eat-rn lichen, .utility room, garage; storage
bu r~ n~ wrth gas heat &amp;centnl arr. Frm roouced prl;e at$25,000.
#!i6l.
BUY THIS HOME FROM OWNER WITH $2,500 OOWN
And klw interest rate on ba~nce wrth I)Yner, 2 bedroom cot1age
within 5 minutes of Silver Bri:lge Shopping Plaza .
#260
. CHARMER AT $25.900
POSSIBLE ASSUMABLE lOAN
WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT
Cou~ be 4 or 5 bedrarns. LlrtJ! porches, bath, living nxm,
fireplace with gaws logs, ctinng riDIIl , kitchen with bult·in
cabinets, full basement storage buildilg and giltlen spot in city
school distr~t. Call for more detarls.
•
#550
-

3 BEDROOMS - 3 ACRES M. OR L

Mobil!! home 14'x70' 1976 Freooom, l'h baths, underpjnnin~ lots
of burl-in cabinets, range. refrif!Brator, dinette set. Nr conditioner
and other funiture. Rural water., nilE land for garden. AH this til
on~ $Z2,500.
M25
39 ACRE&amp; MOAE OR.LESS
Tiltal:je pasture land, some timber, plenty ofsprilli wata-. ~mile
. trdltl•
... on l'ml..;..,
,..... Chun:h .Road. Phone
. for ftjl detlis 11497

ACROSS
1 Ve•es
6 Crude

11 Buccaneers

18 Rowed 19 Mechanical

man

20 Ra ise
21 Prohibit
23 Citrus fru it
24 Sea eagle
26 lavish fondness on
27 liken: Abb r.
· 29 - grinder
30 Heavy
volume

31 Forest deity
32 Pose fo r
a portrait
33 Aofe for
Ed Asner
34 Disturbance

35 Sagacious
360ebaso
38 Temporary

way

66 Aleutian
island
67 Fertile spot

69 Fresh set
of horses
71 Be ill
73 Scoffed

74 Turbans
76 Craftiest
79 Handle ·
8~ Uncles
82 Female ruff
84 Raise the
spirit
85 Assuage

87 Ell
90 Dazzled .

92 Bakery purchase
93 Stair post
95 Field flower
97 Jargon
98 Switch posiHon
99 Hebrew
letter

101 Seamstress
103 Recent

40 Obtain

104 Miss Kett

41 Stop

105 Pondered
108 USNA grad.
110 Expels from

42 Edible

seeds
43 Noggin·
45 Raises
-46 At home
47 Narrate
48 Rage
49 Sharpen
·51 Poker stake
52 New Eng.

acount(y
112 Burrowing
animal
113 Affirmative

114 Arlihcial

language

t 15 The sweet-

sop

I 17 Erases. in

54 Dispatched
55 Demolish
57 Weight of
India
58 Ancient

118 Indefinite ,

60 Surfeit

number
I 19 Swift
120 World org.
121 Author Ahya

123 Corded

Abbr.
142 Danish

cloth

devices
125 Planet
126 Oklahoma

clly .
127 Rugged

17 Compass
point
2 1 Pardon
22 Adjusts, in

away
23 Misplaced
25 Regret

27 Wooed
28 Ships'
finance
officer
30 Cash
drawer
31 Accomplish-

mMI
33 Grants
use of
35 Go on foot

island

36 Depression

144 Quietude

37 Direction
39 4 PM meal
41 Chief.

143 Coupled
146 King of
birds
14B Basque cap

glass
44 Shipworm
47- the line

struments
151 Lock of hair

48 Came back
49 Cuttlefish
50 Europeans
54 Glossy
fabric
55 Sprint
56 Shouted
59 Somber
60 Stalk
61 Rl's neigh-

DOWN
1 Neglected
2 Clerical

collar
3 Name lor a
Dublin lass
4 Spread for
drying
5 MN's

6 Felony

capJtal
Vi god a
9 Conjunction
10 Emits vapor

12 Negative
pre lilt
13 Clarets
14 Evade
15 Shred
16 Summer, In
Paris

,...,,-,;;-T;;-"T:.,-

86 Married

again
88 Needs

89 Cravats
90 Preposition
91 Certain
ellen, for
short
94 Social

outcast
96 Compass
point

98 Expel
99 Rustic
100 Went in
102 Parts in pl ay
104 Vest ages
105 Army meal
106Learned
107 Gave

109 Mealier·
ranean

42 Sheel ol

149 Make ready
150 Musical in-

11.Fiags

62 Singer

66 Bono

139 NFL score
140 Paradise
141 Explosive:

8 Actor

124 Cooling

64 Symbol for
dysprosium

ranean
island

7 European

printing

61 Chart

Ready

138 Mediter-

neighbor

State
53 Shade tree

ctJariot

mountain
crests
129 Sarcasm
131 Brought lnto·
existence
132 Landed
133 Born
134 Guido note
136 Regulation
137 Damage

bo&lt;

63 Metal fastener

66 Article
67 Gl green
68 Precisely
10 Longs tor
71 Siamese

coin

72 Anger
73 Co oked
slowly
75 Lawmaking

body

77 Pigpen
78 Gollmound
80 Imitates
83 Author

Ferber

vessel

~

111 Clever retort
112 Lion's pride
113 Knttt1ng

wool
116 Drunkard
118 Paddock
dweller

11 9 Tilled land

122 Sowing

implement
124 Strainer

125 Philippine
Moslem
126 Puts on
one's guar Cl
128 Slumber
'"

130 large cask

131 Aeveats
~
132 Zodiac stgn
135

l?avlova

137 Rolalnea

.

138 Solicitude

'

140 Goddessol
healing
142 Mature
143 Through

144 Madrid's

locale, for
short

14 5 Bank abbr~

147 OIPhlhOng
148 Brit. tiUe

�•

March 6, 1983'

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Paul Wat~on of Add~o~ ·~onstructed phone building _
--reopen
stove
By JAMES SANDS
Lawrence McQuaid, Francis was Samson was a blgstovemadefrom

'

CREATIVE AND ACTIVE cheerleaders of North Gallla Junior
mg~~ School were photographed on the baskethall Door. Left to right,
they are - FRON'JC ROW (girls with anns and legs eK\ended): Mls$y
WDey, Sberrl Jaekson, and Carla Uevlng. BACK ROW (two girls leanIng): s.-n Booth and Leigh Ann Layne, captabi. Not plchlred were
Bebbl Jo Saunders, the mascot, and Mrs. Sharon Saunders. Mrs. Saunders Is the junior high cheerteader adviser.

PEEPS, A_Gallipolis Diary:

North Gallia marks school
spirit week, has pep club
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOLiS - North Gallla
Junior High SchOOl held a school
spirit week recently and set up a
pep club to spur the Pirate basket·
ball team to victory. Victory In the
annual Gallla County junior high
basketball tournament. that Is. according to Peeps' Informants.
Sharon Saunders and Leigh Ann
Layne.

teacher, and Mrs. Jean Smith
helped this season.

THESE ARE THE winners:
Tied in the primary division Miss Peggy Tope's third grade and
Mrs: Lynn Arnott's third grade.
Tied In the juniOr high division Silas Johnson's eighth grade, Mrs.
Corliss Miller's seventh grade, and
Mark Carlisle's eighth grade.
Loudest cheering at the pep rally
Mark Carl!sle's eighth grade.
HERE ARE SOME of the
Green and white corsages for be·
activities:
lng tpe teachers with the most
1- ''Pirate Day" (students draw
school spirit- Mrs, Corliss Miller,
pictures of pirates and younger stuseventh grade teacher, and Mrs.
dents color the pictures) .
Judy Burdell, first grade teac her.
2 - "Green and White" day .
The cheerleaders, who were the
3 - Pirate poster contest day.
·
ac'
tual powers to get this school
4 -A pep rally.
spirit
week going, presented John
5 - A victory day with prizes goDenney
and Pat Stout each with a
Ing to the winning rooms and
green
and
white boutonniere bE.fore
students
the championship game for good
A PEP CLUB was organized and luck.
The cheerleaders~ mascot was
went to- the championship game,
Miss Bobbl Jo Saunders, whose raiwith the cheerleaders rooting for
North Gallla Junior High , of m ent was that of a.green and white
Pirate.
course, and North Gallia annexed
first place. Chaperons for the pep
club were Mrs . Maxine Wells, Mrs.
Margl Layne. and Mrs. Avelene
· EVELYN MORROW sent a post McComas.
card that she's had mal de mer
ever since she took off on her cruise
BRIAN ROLLINS, the art to Jamaica.

Special COrrespondent
GALLIPOUS -The buDding at
Second and Spruce that Is now used
by Ohio Bell Telephone to store
equipment was
contractor Paul
Watson of Add!·
son. In the last 36
years the struc·
ture has been
cqanged somewhat. The orjgl·
nal owner of the EUiiiiii'~r wa
Agee Implement Company. For a
few years 0-Kan Transport held
the corner and then the telephone
company.
The Agee buDding replaced an
edifice that had been torn down In
1945. This article wlU deai .Wtth the
history of that former building
which from 1895 to 19ll was used as
a stove foundry.
rl' WAS IN 1895 that Robert
Thompson and w.·H. Francis were
convinced by area merchants to
move their foundry business to
Second and Spruce. The pair had
..for five years operated at Second
and Grape In the old Treasure
Stove Works after Treasure's
owner Fred Dages took sick. But In
1895 there was a movement to
reorganize Treasure and so
Thompson-Francis were forced to
vacate and find another locatiOn.
Businessmen from Catlettsburg,
Kentucky had all but convinced
Thompson-Francis to inove there,
untll some GalllpoUs businessmen
a~eed to help Thompson-Francis
loeate In the old ax handle-woolen
mlll factory at Second and Spruce.
W. H. FRANCIS was born in 1858
In Maysville, Kentucky, and moved
to GalUpoUs about 1877 to work for
the Kling Stove Company (which
was on the lot now covered by the
Gallipolis Motor Company). In due
time Francis became a foreman .
But In 1883. when Fred Dages
began Treasure Stove Company,
Francis moved there. Accordlm&gt;: to

about 225 pounds.
On one ·occasiOn McQuaid remarked that some of the foundry
workers had asked for a raise, to
which Francis responded:
"Anyone who can Uck me can
have a raise."
No one did but they got the raise
anyway.
ROBERT'DIOMPSON was born
In 18541n Gallia County and was'the
bookkeeper for Treasure StQve.
Thompson AYtd hls wife Katherine
Ecker and farnl!y lived for 43 years
In the house at 502\ -Third
Avenue.
.
Ac,:xJrding to an 1897 ad Thompson and Francis made stoves,
ranges, hollow-wan&gt;, grates, and
fancy castings.
" Their trade extends throughout
Ohio, Indiana, Virgmla, WestVIrglnla, · Kentucky· and other central
states_and their goods are favora·
bly known wherever used.''
McQuaid went toworkatThompson and Francis In 1918 and was
paid 75 cents a day. Wrltes Mr.
McQuaid: "There was no set
hours; you had so much to dowhether It was 10 hours or
whatever."
IN 11IE TIME that McQuaid
worked In the foundry, they made
stoves, ranges with Charll;!s McEIhaney being the expert In making
pots, ham bowlers, skillets, dutch
ovens and car wheels. 'The car
wheels were used In the coal mines.
Of the stoves and ranges made,
there were the Master, Torchlight,
Laundry, Indianola, Burnside, and
Samson. The Master Range h;~d a ·
water lank on the side and a
warming closet. The Torchlight
was a small cook stove that came In
sizes 7 and 8 and used wood or coal

the Burnside pattern.
In 19Z7 W. H. Francis died and
Robert Thompson's son Lester
• moved to GalllpoUs from Kansas to
help with the stove foundry.
According to Lawrence McQuaid,
the depression caused things at the
R. L. TIJ9mpson St&lt;M! Foundry (as
It was thlih called) to go from bad to
worse, and he says Thompson
Stove Foundry shut down al)out
1932. Thompson did try to sell off
what he alteady had In order to pay
his debts. We have no record that he
went bankrupt.
,
IN 19:rl DR. C. E. Holzer Sr. led

Battle blaze
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Fire Department, aided by
Pomeroy and Syracuse's fire units,
fought a brush fire for more than
five hours Friday.
The fire was first reported In a
wooded area behind the Mlddleport
H111Cemeteryatabout12:llp.m.
The blaze was fanned by winds
and spread over nearby hillsides,
the department said. Firemen
fought the blaze with water back
packs and tanks.
David Lawson, a Syracuse fire.
man, received a leg Injury fighting
the fire and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospltalfor treatment.
Other calls on Friday answered
by )ocal emergency units Included:
Pomeroy, 11:15 a.m., Bob Hysell
from his Pomeroy home to Holzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy, 5: 43
· p.m., John Stewart to Veterans.

efforts~
the
t~ .
B. C. Zuhai-s was brought trorr-t
Canton to !JI3IIllge what came to ~
known as the GalllpoJis Stove and
Foundry Company. A new 250-tori:
machine was even brought to tOWJt
to help In the casting process.
This COJllOratilln of local cl~
also purchased the old furniture
factory at Seco'nd and Sycamore
Efforts to ree;tabUsh the stove
foundry, however, failed In 19ll,;
and In 1940 the Comtnerclal
Savings Bank purchased the buDd•
lng at Second and Spruce. In du;
time Agee Implement moved here
and had the old stoVe found!)('
buDding town down to make way
lor the present building one sees
there today.
One can see a picture of the;
Thompson and Francis Stove;
Foundry as It appeared In 1897 ~
the Railway Reflector In theo .
•
Bossard Library.
M.aiilug alldress of James Sand![:
Is P .0. Box 92, Clai-ksburg, Ohio .

ancr

43115.

.

A guide to local

as fuel.

TilE lAUNDRY STOVES were
made with either two l1ds or· four
lids. The Indianola Cook Stove
came In a size 7 or 8 and used wood
or coal. The Burns.lde was made In
sizes 1 to 4 for coal only. 'The

OillD CARE CREDIT
Taxpayers wha pay child or
dependent care expenses in onler to
enable them to be gainfully emplayecl
are entitled tO· a tax credit for such
expenses. Employment-related . expenses that qualify for the child and
dependent care credit include, amon~~
other things, ~ for houlehold •
service. and rhe cure !If a "qualifying Wtl
individual."
·
CERTiflfD
ACCOUNTANT
A "qualifying individual" is limited to the laXpayer's child
under the age ol 15 and cerrain other individuals who are
physicQIIy « mentaUy i.--pable ol caring for tt-lv.
iesjarc)j- ol their age. Depending uPon the laxp tryer' I adjUif.cl
9I'CIA income level, his credit CICITI ,tofal 20% to 30% ol fhe·
employmenl related care expen••· The child « dependent care
credit can 8¥81'1 be token for payments made to a relatiw
the Nlative is a dependent ol the raxpaver or is the
gyer's
limitations an
child and is ur!der 19 .,..,. ol age. There are the amount !If the CNdit bated upon the laxpayer's earned
income (wages, etc.) and the ~umber ol "qualifying
individuals." To tab rhe credit, a Form 2441 must be filled out
and attached to the laxpayer's Forrn 1040, Individual j , _ Tax
Retum.
Chamber of -Commerce Building

PRECEDING THJS 1847 vlntace '-MDI Oil 1MB DIII'Del wu a
p-oop of factory bulldlnp that boueed a woolen mDJ, ay!jent!Je factory,
and, from 111911 to 1839, a stove foundry. 'lbe ladory '"•Mop were lllnl
down In l!IU and some of the brlckll and wood were bGught by tbe Sbrloe
Club and moved there. Ape bnplemeot Company held thlll bnfJdlnrlor
a nwnber of ye~.

•? •I

.

.•

'""I

THAT's THe. REAl- WOR"-0

•

television programming
March 6 thru March 12
Includes ~ompl~te

Ull._

listings
I

Cheryl Ladd
Pages :3, 4 ·

16 State St.

Phone 446-4471

SPECAL PURCHASE
--channel 23 listings included·
in this week's guide." •

DINETTE SETS
Round Oak uminated Table opens to
60". Caster arm chairs . roll easily ,

Showbeat
Pages 4, 5

about. Chairs covered in tobacco colored supported vinyl for durability.
REG. '439.00

VBS LEADERS,
TEACHERS,
and WORKERS

SPECIAL

• l •

butcher block laminated
table: Soft supported vinyl·seats with

wicker backs.

REG. S339.00 "

PLACE: Middleport Church of Christ

SPECIAL

REFRESHMENTS

'

Plan

•

$27900

PHONE: 614-992-2641

to attend the Standald Publishing Vacation Bible Schooi~J~View.lfs ~ur

opportunity to examine the all-new, aii..Sible;l983 course and to discuss all
aspects of Vacation Bible School \lith 1 Stalldlrd 11presa~. lfs 1 pt
opportunity.to shall ii!Ns and experiences lltth others.
' ,.. ...... tor AlhM. C1 ttll . n. STo\NDAID "'--IL.ISHINO COMPANY . QlltiiiUII. Ollio. DMib IISTANOI!JC IHTtlNATIONAI. COAJIOMTJON . IT_,.,.,...,'"UIA

LARGE SHIPMENT
JUST RECEIVEDJ ALL AT SALE PRICES.
..
Stop by our 3rd Floor Furniture Department c;wnd see for yourself the
trer:nendous ~vings on quality di'nlng furniture.

.

'FREE
·PARKING

Filmeter
Pages 7. 8
..

Serving Gallia, Mews and Mason . ~cJu~tU~s·

R~ngular

'

437 Main Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

t '

I

nME: 9'.-30 A.M. ·

DATE: Friday, March 11, 1983

SPONSOR: Middleport Book Store
83 Mill Street
Middleport. Ohio 45760

$35900

'

1
IIKI!2! UFE ON THE ROAD-~ 11utJara Mutln!IIUJS llhe prelen Dfe 011 the ·.
l"OIId to the CGQ tMAiea al tbe MGM GNIIII Bate!, where llbe playa to !Bed crowds. (AP
.:-rpllllf,o).

You are invited to preview the all-new 1983
Standard Vacation Bible School
. course;
Come and learn and share!

.

Hollywood
Pages 5; 6

FREE
DELIVERY

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="127">
    <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="2702">
                <text>03. March</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="42906">
            <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="42905">
              <text>March 6, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6158">
      <name>swauger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
