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O'Brien terminates 25 cases

Area deaths

Syh·ia G. Herrmann

wife, Adrain Ord Bail.
He l•·ork.ed. as a carpenter and
was
a memtX'r of the Oak \.rove
Funeral S.:wices for wirs. Svlvia
Un
ited
Methodist Chu rch.
Gail Mulford Henma nn , 78. ·R. I.
arl' a step-claughier,
Smv
iving
Cheshire, who di&lt;'d \Vcdnesda)' will
M•·s.
Grace
Bowman. NalcrPSt,
be held Sarurdav al 2 p.m. a l lhr
Fla.: a sistel', Mrs. Genevieve
Silwr Run Fn'!'wiil Baptist Churrli
not Raw li ngs Coats Blower Fun - Roush. l .etart: a brothet·, Iris Bali.
Pomeroy. a sistPr-in -iaw. Mrs.
eral Home. F riends rna)· r a il at the
fu neral home until 12 :30 p.m . Mm·ie Ball. Letart: 1wo Slepgra ndr hildren and .'i&lt;'verai greatSaturda)' when the body will be
and severa l
step-grandchildren:
taken to the church. In Jiru of
nieces
and
nephews
.
flowers friPnd s arc askE'cl to givr .
Funeral scrviees will tx' Sunday,
dona Iions to 1he Silve r Run FrC'C'W iil
a t 1:~ p.m., in thP Oak Crave
Baptist Church.
Uni ted Methodist Church with the ·
Clydt' King
Rev. T imothy ScarbenY officiating . Buria l will follow in Evergreen
Clyd&lt;• King. former!, · of Meigs
Cl'metcr-:-•. Let a rt .
Count y, died Thursda\· in Manha l·
Calling hours will be Sa turd ay
tan. Kansa ....
after 3 p.m. at the res idence of his
Lo&lt;'aisu!Yi\·or lsadaughter, Mrs.
sister, Genevieve Roush. Letart.
George 1Paula 1 Mora, Pomeroy.
The l:lody wi ll lie in state at the
Fu neral arrangements wilt bP
church one hour prior to services.
announ&lt;"ed b' Ewing Funera l
Arrangements are being handled
Home.
by Foglesong FOnPra l Home.

Charles Ball

Mason.

Charlc•s Ball. 83. Leiarl. was dead

Friday, March 25, 1983

Pome roy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Senti!'M!I

on arrival T hursda )'o' m Pl('&gt;asant

Marriagt' licenst'

Valley Hospital.
Born Ort 4.1H~all.elar l ,he wa s
the son of the lat e Willi am and N01·a
Adkins Ball.
He was precedE'cl in dc•a th by his

A marriage license was issued in
Meigs Count) Probate Court to
StPwart LeeBiankenship,34, PomE'roy and Betty Lou Lee, 28, Pomeroy.

J

/;

HONORED - Lonnie LeMaster was among the top honorees
at the Meigs 111gb School F FA
. parent-m em ber bllllCiuet .Wednesday night. He won an a ward
lor public s pea king, a green, hand a ward, a check lor being
the best fruit salesman a nd WIIS
elected s tudent advisor o( the
chapter for next year. Speaker
at the annual banquet was Hick
Rudd, past state FFA treasurer,
who Stressed the Importance (If
an "I Can" attitude in Ufe.

Twenty-one defendants were
fined and four others for!ei ted bonds
in Meigs County Court W~nesday.
Fined by J udge Patrick O'Brim
were Carnell Vance ,Jr., Cheshire.
overload, $69 and costs; Janie~'
Hankla. Rutla nd, no valid registation, $10 and costs: Paul Miller,
Midd leport, DWI, S'nJ and costs,
three days confinement, license
su spended for 60 days: Charles
Gierhart, Westerv ille, DWI , $:ID
and costs, three days confinement ,
licnese suspended for 60 days: Ray
Shuford, Middleport , no operators
license and fleeing an officer, 20
daysconfinem ent : Brett Matt hews.
Pomeroy, Madeleine Johnson, Ak·
ron, John Krider, Long Bottom
Gene Perry. J r. Albany, and
Michael Nance, Syracuse. speed,
$20 and costs each: Scott Napper,
Langsville, overload, $171 and
costs: James Gibbs, Pomeroy,
speed, $10 and costs: Monta S.
Metzger, Pomeroy, defective exhau st, $5 a nd costs: Ra lp h Snider.
Middlepo11, speed, $43 and costs:
David Watkins, Middleport , no
dr ivers license. $50 and costs. one
year probation: Hobart Templeton,
Jr. Middleport . fa iled tosop forstop
s ign, $10 and costs: Charles White,
Long Bottom , DWI. $200 and costs,
three days confinement . license
suspended 60 day~: Timothy Ba·
sha m . Rutland, criminal trespass,

10 days confinem ent. costs only:
Deborah HarmQn , Rutland, passing
bad checks, restitution, costs only:
James E llars, Charleston, speed,
$21 and costs.
Fotieit!ng bonds were Alfred

Moore, Magnolia. speed, $38.50;
Ray Emrick, Belpre, speed, $37.50;
.Jam~s Sparks, Olive Hill, Ky.,
speed, $.16.50; Terry Walker, Rutland, no motorcycle licenseendorsement, ~.50.

ELBERFELDS

.

eD~41~e~

'

Don't Miss . Out On
Our Easter Sale Prices
On Quality Spring
Clothing For Your
Easter Holiday.

Oil
&amp;

FILTER
. ONLY
5 QTS. OIL, FILTER &amp; LABOR

1st Only

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2174

SINGSPIRA TION
"SONGSMAN QUARTET'
525 N. 2nd Ave.

..

I

· Our Reg. 29.67

Our Reg. 3.67

Victory Baptist Church
Middleport, OH.

SAT., MARCH 26TH

Our Reg. 129.88

19.88

2.57

109.88

2 Gal. Sprayer

50-Ft. Reinforced Garden Hose
50'x'h'' reinforced vinyl ho5e with
brass- couplings. Shop and save.

3·HP 20-lnch Mower
Recoi~start engine. side discharge

&amp; Garden poly
tank sprayer.
Home

AT 7:00P.M.
PASTOR JAMES KEESEE
CORDIALLY INVITES
THE PUBLIC
.

2.47

4.97

liTJ

Fruit Trees
Choice of 5'-{:/ fruit trees.

'"''

Our Reg. 5.17

~;d~?rter

Tray

W~h 50 square Z'

pot..

'17'
L!!.J

Fertllmix ............. 1.47

Ready to plant.

18.97

Drop Spreader

20" drop spreader width,
fino•&gt;rlitn control.

dotril ert .
gridt

OPEN HOUSE ..:.......~.,

ond

SATURDAY, MARCH 26- 10 a .m.-8 p.m.
SUNDAY, MARCH. 27-12 Noon-8 p.m.
Sign up to win FREE Micro-Wave ·

·. KINGSBURY HOME SALES

CHATHAM . ,_

the
See it at
·
Route 50 West by AMPAK PLAZA
ROBERTA HUFFMAN 698-8111
Coil992-7034 or5~18

.

Our Reg. 5.97

1 gal. healthy evergreen.
Our Reg. 4.97 .............. 3.97

window'

.

Our Reg. 2.97

Broadleaf or Coniferous

'- Po r ch

Featured on Page B-1

Story on Page A-t

·

·

·

•

Kilpatrick on the freeze resolution
Colwnn on P age A-2

'

.

Tylenol ·deaths: six months later
Story on Page D-1

+

tmts

·:-·
Vo!. t7No.4
Copynghted 1983

,iddleport~Porneroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

tO Sections, 78 P,.., 35 Cenh

Sunday, Man:h 27, 1983

" Mulnmedia

'

State

o~~poses

forest sale by Feds

he ~ •a nted

to be as strong as we could against it ,"
maker said .
Th .e U.S. Agriculture Departm~nt has said it
inten ds to seek congressiona l approval of legisla tion
for ti 1e possible sa le of 63,093 of Ohio's 177,035 acres.
It I s part of a plan to sell off a il or part of six million
acr e!; na tionwide - about 3.2 percent of the public
land in the system operated by the fores t service.
Me •st of the Ohio la nd .involved is in the Wayne
Natic ma l Forest.
Ro bert Redell, chief of the Ohio Division of
Forestry. said the federal land covers pa rts of
Law1 -ence, J ackson, Sc ioto, Gailia, Vinton. Perry,
Mar~ :an, Athens and Washington counties.
Off 'icia ls said no land will be sold un til Congress
Sh~

gives its a pproval and an intensive s tudy of the
property is conducted.
Shoemaker said the sta te will try to enlist the
support of Ohio's 21-member delegation In the U .S.
House, as well as U.S. Sens. J ohn Glenn and Howard
Metzenbaurn.
"I think we've gi:tt a united front. We're going to ask
our 21 congressmen to stand up for Ohio and save our
natural resources. We' re getting those letters out
today," Shoem aker said Fr iday.
Ohio is one -of 39 states from F lorida to Washington
In wliich acreage is being considered for sale.
Officials have sa id the property involved is limited
to isola ted parcels, some lands In checkerboard
ownership patterns, and la nds needed for community

expans ion. It said some is unlikely to be needed for'
future public use.
But Ohio, at 36 percent, would lose the highest
percent age of its public land .
"Once they do that'the acreage is lost forever to us
as far as na tural ha bitat," Shoemaker said. " It would
wreck som e of the programs we're int erested in a nd
the people of this state are interested in."
Redell said the Wayne forest serves a number of
purposes.
"They are actively managing it for wildlife , timber
production and recreation. P ublic hunting is a big
item ," he said.
Ohio separately manages an add itiona l 171,000
acres of state-owned forest.

By KEVIN KELLY

G.M. VEHICLES ONLY

AT THE

I

EPA .staff celebrates resignations

AEP plans litydro plant at
Gallipolis man
site·of Galli]?olis locks, dam dies following
3~car accident

$}495

500 E. MAIN ST.

Times-Sem\i-11

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio !API - Lt. Gov. Myri
Shoemaker has lined up in strong oppositio.n to the
possibiP sale of 36 percent of the U.S. Forest Service
land in Ohio - including acreage in.Gallia Countyand is seeking congress ional support to block it .
" We're going to do m ore than oppose it. WE'' re
going to blast the stuffing out of it ," Shoema ker said .
"! just don't see how we could stand idly by and sa'
this happen without being very angry a bout it."
Shoemaker. who also is director of the natural
resources department , said Gov . Richard Celeste
shares ·his opinion that the la nd should not be sold.
"I talked to the governor this morning and he said

LUBE

Apr~ I

Tooa~(s

Along the River ....... : ...... ....,..,.
Area Deaths ., ............. : ... ..
Classllieds ... ., .......... 1 ...... v -.&gt;- •
Editorial ......................... .
Loca1 ...................... 1 ...... ; . .....
State-National .. ........ , ...... ..
Sports ..................... , .. ... .
TV guide ............... ... .... lnsertl

~~~~-

SERVICE SPECIAL

Effective Thru

Nt&gt;w !-1St' for
old lihran·

lm

I]]

~ mJ

Sale Price

our Reg. 8.97

Sale Price

Our Reg. 4.27

1.n

5.97

1.57

3.47

40·Lb." Caw Manure
Composted cow manure,
non buming and odorless.
' Net wl.

K·Gro"' 27· 3-3 Fertilizer
18-lbs.' lawn fertilizer. Covers
5.000 sq . .ft. Will not burn .
'Net wt

40·Lb." Top Soli
For patching. top dressing
lawns, gardens and shrubs.
'Nelwt

5-lb. Grass Seed

Quick cover seed for a lush
lawn.

Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Power
Co. has every intention of
bulldi1!g a hydroeiectrtc plant at
the Gallipolis Locks a nd Dam,
provided something ha ppens in
the way of funding the proposed
new lock system a nd dam
reha bilitation project .
William Stelle, an American
E lectrtc Power Corp. spokesman , said AEP has filro an
a pplica tion for a license to build
such a plant wi th the Federal
En e r gy R eg ul a t ory
Commission.
But FERC is apparently
walling on authoriza tion fund ing
from Congress for construction
to begin a t Gall ipolis to replace
the old locking system . Stelle
noted.
Since one a lternat ive under
study by the government for
upgrading the dam may possibl :y mean going to a not her
location, Ohio Power will have to
m ow with it , Stelle noted.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
E lect rtc, an AEP subsidiary ,
operates a sm all substation on
the dam's Ohio side a t Eureka.
StPllr said the plant would be
similar to the one put on line in
September 1982 a t Racine's
locks and :lam - a $00 million
structu re generating 23~ million
kilowa tts to regular AEP system customers via tu rbine
action and two genera ting units.
In Racinp's cas!', Ohio Power
worked .w ith the ·u.s. Army
Corps of E ngineers to a iiow
m a intenanc-e of r iver tra ffic

Tax

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis
m a n died a nd a second was
ser iously injured as a result of a
three-car collision on Ohio 7 north of
the city Saturday morning.
Larry K F ras her, 27, Rt. 3,
Gallipol is was pronounced dead a t
8: .JJ a.m . a t Hol?.er Medical Center,
a nursing supervisor said.
. Injured a nd in sta ble condition a l
HMC is Dwight P . Greer, 30, ot
Henderson, W.Va.
. The accident occurred a t 7: 05
a. m .. about three miles nort h of
Gallipolis, according to trooper s a t
the Gallipolis pos t of the Sta te
Highway P at rol
Greer was a pparently travelling
south on Ohio 7 when he swe rved
into the northbound lane, s ideswiped a· pickup truck and collided
head-on with the Frasher vehcile,

POWER PLANT SR E? - Pending approval of plant sbnllar to the Racine Locks and Dam faciHty,
funding lor rehabUitatloi '" of the Gallipolis Locks and using the turbulence created at the dam, as seen here.
Dam, OWo Power Co. p laos to bulld a hydroelectric
through the locks, wi th the
utility using the same : Oow to
generate electricity. Th• e plant
will be built on the Ohi 10 side.
·
Stelle said.
The reason for anotheJ ~ hydro
plant is th£&gt; easy availa t &gt;ilitv of
wa ter , the spokesm an sa id. ·
"It's a renewable sou rC!' of
energy," Stelle expiaineG t. "We

are interested in using such
renewa ble methods while conserving other forms of energy."
The location of two hydrd
plants with two coal-burning
plants in between a t Cheshire
. does not mean AEP is losing
interest In that type of facility,
Stelle sa id , noting tha t recent
coal s tockpiling at the plants

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

controversy· c ~ontinues . on

Celeste readies reform package ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. Rlchard Celeste is expected to reveal this week a tax
reform pacl(age to soften the
blow pf a recent 00 percent
Increase in the state ineome tax.
However , the package a lso is
expected to Include recommen-'
dations for closing some business loopholes, . requiring busit:~CSses to absorb a bigger share
of the state tax burden.
Allbough the Legislature except for leaders and some
committee members - is away
on an Easter break, the Democratic governor Is scheduled to
submit Ills two-year budget btu
We!lnesday morning. ·
· One provision In .his budget
plan, otflclals said, Will increase
the perSOIIlll exemptiOn in the
income tax from $li50 to $1,000 a
year. Also expected Is an etrort
to Increase credits thet may be
clalrni!d by married couples.
•When the Legislature enacted
the pennanent lricrease In the
Individual incOme tax, which
took ettect March l , Celeste

have had a r ipple effect throughout the area 's coalfields, a
s ituation the eight-compa ny system is m onitor ing.
In it s a pplica tion, Stelle said
conceptua l plans have been
submitted to FERC. Ohio Power
saw no point in deve loping
deta iled plans until the license is
(Continued on page A3)

promised tax reform iii ' the
budget docwnent, which' lays
out state spending for the
biennium beginning July l ,
The governor ·indicat~ that
hiS proposals generally 1 Wtll
follow the recommendatlo~ s ofa
special tax advisory con unission he named shortly I alter
taking office Jan. 10.
' .
Among those a re proj &gt;068Js
that would extend the sal~ os tax
to rover some service '· that
businesses must buy. for ~~ -: IClii'TI­
ple legal, architectural and ' data
'.
processing.
The. gover nor's proRI iosa!S
probably wm include some ·other
changes In tax laws,. ani d his
aides Indicated thet one llli ay be
repeal of the lntanglbles b !LX on
,
stocks and bonds. .
Howelier, the 5 peu:en' t tax
has been used over the ~ U'S to
help finance libraries, and ~ orovl·
slims would be~ tore! ~lace
the library fUnding
Oiherwtse, Celeste haS been
urged to seek repeai of· the
business Inventory tax.

soorcel

two fronts

Rep eal effort · begin., ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio' s Republicans are pushing
hard In support of the emerging
effort to repeal a recent 00
percent boost in the' state lricome
· tax, but they also are trying to
stay In the background
A committee wa s formed last
week to spearhead the drive,
and its members are mostly
prtvate citizens - no state
lawm a kers or p r omine nt
officials.
Instead, it is headed by
Thomas Zuber, a Columbus
attorney and one-time Democrat who more recently has
leaned toward the candida t.es
and issues supported by the
Ubertarlan Party, GOP sources
said.
· The Stop Excessive Taxation
(SET) coalition, altl1ough stili
working orilts proposed ballot
language, hopes to collect more
than 335,00&gt; voter signatures to
place the repeal proposal on the
November ballot.

Under the measure, all tax
Increases enacted In 1983 would

be repealed. Also , any future
increases would have to be
a pproved by either three-tlfths
or two-thirds majorlties of the
House and Senate. That option,
though, is still being discussed
by the coalition.
Cl!rrently, only a bare majority is required to enact' a tax ·
Increase.
Republicans, now in the minority of both houses, claim the
00 percent lncome tax boost was
excessive and should not have
been made permanent.
Not a single GOP legtslatqr
voted for the ineasure· .a s
submitted by Democratic Gov.
Richard Celeste, since they
advocated a scaled down, iemporary Increase to deal with
current budget problems. ·
Celeste and the Democratic'
majority moved quickly to pass
the bill, pointing to earlier
stopgap Repubncan budget biDs
the! failed to balance tlie state
budget and creale!l a $5ll
mlllliin deficit in . the current
fiscal year.

patrolmen said.
The driver of the p ickup, J ackie L.
Williams, 28, 212S Chestnut St.,
Gallipolis, received minor injuries
but was not immediately treated,
aceording to thr pat rol.
The HMC nursing s upervisor said
a passenger ip the F'ras her vPhirle,
John R. Sanders, 24, Mill Creel&lt;,
Gallipolis, was treated a nd re leased
a t the hospital.
Greer' s a nd F rashe r's vehicles
were both demolished . William 's
truck sustained heavy dam age.
As of this morning, no cit a lion had
been issued in connection with the
accident. T rooper s said the wreck is
s tili under investigation.
Frasher's body was ta ken · to
Willis FunNal Hom e. Funeral
services are scheduled for 1 p.m .
Tur sday at First Baptist Church in
Gallipolis.

Boster co~~ponsors
measure to reduce
individual taxes
GALLIPOLIS - J oiynn Boster,
D-Gallipolls, has co-sponsored legisla tion in the ' Ohio House of
Re presenta tives which would reduce individua l taxes by increasing
som e exemptions a nd eliminating
the so-called marriage pena lty.
· Ac.eording to Boster, . House · Bi.U
272 would raise the incom e tax
exemption from $650 to $1,000 for
each dependent a nd increase the ·
senior cit izen exempt ion from $25 to
$50.
In addit ion, senior c it izms would
be permitted to earn $5,000 a year
ta x free, Boster said. Currently,
senior citizens ha ve tax exem ption
on $4,000 of their Incom e.
The bill would also elimina te the
tax pena lty cumntly ·lev ied a gainst
m arried couples where each spouse
earns wages, she sa id. Couples in
. this situation would be given the
option of filing e ither singly or
jointly.
Boster called the proposed ta x bill
''comprehensive.
" In the past few· weeks, sewral
bills have been int rod uced In the
House to decrease the income tax
burden on the taxpayer," she sa id.
"The purpose of this com prehens ive tax bill is to include a ll · the
individual · bills so that ail relief
measures will com e from the
legislature as a whole.
''This will s implify the process, "
she eontinued, "and give more
consideration to the tax problems of
our citizens."
According to Boster , the bill will
nowbe senttoa standingcommittee
of the House of Representa tives for
debate.

TAX BIU, - ik'Jl. ,Jolynn
Boster, D-G allipolis, ha• ce&gt;spon.'IOred tax refonn l~gisla llon
which would reduc&lt;• Individua l
laxes hy incrca• lng sonw exemption.• and eliminating tlw
marriage penally. The hill will
he seni to a House L'Ommitte&lt;• for
dehale . _ _ _ __
Boster a lso co-sponsorrd HouSE'
B UI 246, int rod uced March l!i. which
s he said would brncfit iowrr a nd
middle-income taxpayrrs. This bill
would also incrrase theprr sona i tax
exempt iOn.
"Ohio w ill stand to lOSt' .; ome
revenues by t hr PDuctmcDI of t his
legislation."· Bostrr said, " but it will
put our sta t&lt;• tax laws on par with
increasing ineomc lrvrls and P\'0v ide relief to a subs ta nt ia l Sl'i(mPnt
of Ohio's population."

�•

Commentary and

perspe&lt;~ttve

~lb
t:~:m~ t"'T""'L.-1'"--r• ,......_c.~
'qjv

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis. Ohio

16141 446-2342

Ill Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio
1614) 992·2156

ROBERTL. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART Wli.~O N JR .
E xet•ut t \ t ' F.dil ur

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assitllc:Hlt Publisht T·CUntrolJt·r

A 1\oU:MRF.R ur Ttw A ~s o w i a h· d Pn ~ss, l11 l:md llail y l,n~~ ,\ s~ udali un amltht· Anwrtnw
N'' " ~ papt•r l ' uhl i ~twr ~ As"'•••·i.;tl i1111 .

I .F:TIF.K.'i OF OPINIU!'\ :m· '&gt;'l'lt•umt'd . 'Tht· ~ slulll lol tit' lt•ss than JOO '!'Innis lull~ . t\11
lt•Ht · r~ an; suhj•·• ·t h• o•di t in ~ und mu:'tl tw s i~nt•d '14 ith namt·. udtln•ss :uld lt•lt·ph•.••w
num~r·,
uns i~nt·tllelh·rs "il l ht• publish1'tl . l.t•\h•rs ~ h•~t~ld bt• lu J(UIId l..a~l' '· atloln·li~l ll l!

N••

issut•s, nut p•·rs••halith's .

Page-A-2:,
March 27,

.

to

Recovery threatened
by a severe relapse
Allhough there Is considerable evidence to support President
Reagan's diagnosis !hat the country's sick ecooomy "Is on the mend,"
there also are indications that the recovery could be thwarted by a severe
relapse.
.
:; With a recession-weary nation anxiously poised for the long-awaited
eeonomlc resurgence, the likelihood of unp~edented pressure on the
.;Ountry's credit markets threatens to undermine - if not destroy- the
nlcovery.
·
::· The good news Is that vtrtually·all of the most important economic
lhdicators finally are pointing" in lhe right direction: Interest rates,
l!lftation, oil prices and tax rates are all declining while housing starts, new
ofders for consumer goods and business inventories are Increasing.
: • But the bad news Is that the federal government already has started to
pt&amp;ce extraordinary demands on the country's llmited pool of credit to
lj~ce three consecutive years of deficits . expECted IJJ reach
l'¢ord·shattertng levels of approximately $200 billion annually.
: · · The credit markets can temporarily sustain that demand because the
tecesslon Is expected to keep the borrowing done by the business
~mmunity IJJ finance its growth at a relatively low level throughout most
o( this year.
: •. But the Irony of the situation Is that an extended economic boom
"l}liMtably will lead to an accelerated pace of corporate borrowing- and
iliere are not enough funds available to meet the expanded credit demands
6-cim both the public and private sectors. In olher words, an economic
fecovery could sow the seeds of Its own destruction.
The Initial produce of those intense credli demands would be severe
upward pressure on interest rates, which ecooomlsts universally agree
must remain at moderate levels if an economic recovery Is to be sustained.
·' If lhe Federal Reserve Board attempts to avert an interest rate crisis
by monetlzlng a substantial portion of the federal government's deficits in
the 1983-85 fiscal years, that llction would almost certainly produce equally
U.tolerable strong upward pressw-e on the Inflation rate.
Projected federal deficits already have surged to unprecedented
liEJghts. The White House says this year's deficit will reach·s:m blllion,
~wed by a $189 billion deflcil in 1~ and a $184 billion deficl.t in 1985.
: ' In the third quarter of last year, federal borrowing, measuied by the
!!'fasury Departmmt on an annuallzed, seasonally adjusted basts,
l'f!ached a record level of almost $187 billion- and in lhe fourth quarter of
1llll2 that record was broken when borrowing soared to more than $2:Jl
1114lon.
Throughout last year, the federal government claimed 38.7 percent of
available credit, a sizable increase over the Treasury Department's
~.3 percent share one year earllr.
: : : Competition for credit from the private sector Is not expected to be
e$eelally lntense.untlllate this year for a number of reasons, most notably
the projected relatively low rate of new Investment and expansion in plant,
equipment and Inventory.
In addition, an econol)'lic recovery will generate addltk&gt;nal prdlts,
thus providing Internally generated !unds for expansion, while additional
funds wUl become available as a result of the decline In interest rates and a
reduction In federal taxes.
"Toward the end of this year, however, lhe picture could .change as
private borrowing begins to lise and the recovery gains momentum," says
New York's Morgan Guaranty Trust Co.
The prospect of a massive credit crunch terrifies exJ:ertS both in and
out of government. Describing the situation as "Intolerable,'' Martin S.
Feldstein, chairman of the Presldent(s Council of EcoMmlc Advisors,
warns !hat It "would do substantial damage to lhe economy in the years
ahead."
Arthur Levitt Jr., chairman of both the American 'Stock Exchange
and th~ Am~rtcan Business Conference, Is even less sanguine about
prospects for the future .
"What started out to be the beginning of a recovery could very well
turn back Into a recession that's even deeper than the one we've come out
of."

&lt;·

&lt;·
au:

Letter to the editor
Cheese project.
Approximately 4,440 indlvlduals
and !arn1lles received U.S.D.A.
S\Jil)IUS Cheese In Gallla and Meigs
counties during the recent dlstrlbu·
tloln on March H and 15. The
project was canied out through the
cooperative effort of many local
volunteers worklngwith theGallla·
Meigs Community Action Agency
(CA.A.).
The C.A.A. would
to express
Its appreciation lor the assistance
of all lhe volunteers that helped. ·
The cheese-distribution would not
been successful without the
help of the Individuals and organ!·
zatlons that participated.
The volunteers Involved In the
cheeSe project were: Gallia and
MeigS Ministerial Associations;
Excelsior Salt Works, P&lt;meroy;

tore

have

Gold Van Lines, Galllpolll;; Senior
Citizens Centers In both counties;
Mt. Cannel Church, Bidwell;
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains;
Church of God, Rutland; Village
Hall, Crown City; Presbyterian
Church, Middleport; Guiding Hand
School, Cheshire; Methodist
Church, Racine; American Legion
Past, Racine; Meigs County High·
way Deparlment; Gallia County
Extension Service; Galllolls and
· Middleport Pollee Departments
and many area individuals.
The C. A.A. has more . cheese
ordered and Is making plans for
anolher cheese dlstrlbutlon. Again,
the C.A.A, would like to say !hank
you to everyone that helped.
Hazel McKelvey
Executive Director (Actiltg)

Today in history
Today ls"Sunday, March27, the 86th dayo!l983. 'I_'hereare279daysleft In

the year.
·
Today' s highlight ln.history:
On March 27, 1911, the worst airplane disaster In history killed 581 people
when two jUmbO jets collided on a runway In the Canary Islands.
On this date:
·

1111933. Japan withdrew from lhel..eagueofNatlonsafterbelngbranded .
as an aggressor In Manchuria.
·
In 1H5, Gen. Dwight D. EisenhOWer declared that Ge.r man military
tomes on the Western tront durtng World War ll had been defeated.

·

NoA

"Forget the EPA, OPEC, El Salvador and Herschel Walker. Let's plant
the geraniums,"

t

I

1

The nation's' weather

Fronts:

lty that dates hack long befoi:e the
Bolshevik revolutk&gt;il. The Bulgar·
tans, cut off from lhelr Russian
cousins by Romania to the north
and Turkey to the southeast, have
tradltk&gt;nally looked to the Russians
as their saviors and champions.
Evidence of this ethnic kinship Is
the fact that Sofia, alone among
Soviet bloc capitals, boasts a statue
of a Russian czar -'Alexander II,
who ln 1878 freed the Blllgarlans
from five centuries of Turkish rule
at a cast of nearly a quarter-million
Russian soldiers.
It's bani to Imagine a monument
to a Russian belng tolerated In
Poland.
The Russians and Bulgarians
share the Cyrillic alphahet

MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:. Chance of rain or snow
Monday. Fair Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs mostly ln I he 40s.
l..Dws 25 to 35.

Sunday: warm, wet weather
By The Associated Press
Scattered showers was expected to move into southwestern Ohio
Saturday night as a low pressure cen ter comes nort h. Rain will

.

would like to pass on to the media
that week. If, for example, lhe
Gross National Product Is going up, .
Commerce will ask to,leak It, and if
unemployment ls going down we'll
let Labor leak lt."
"This Is all nuts and bolts stuff.
The big leaks, · to have any
credllilly, have to come dtrectly
from the White House."
"Would you give· me an
example?"
"Well, suppose It's decided that
Secretary of the Interior James
Watt wUI have to go because of the
EPA scandal. I'm not $8ylilg we
have decided It yet - but we can't
rule out that he Is becoming a
political liability. A White HoU.se
alde will tell a reporter 'This Is off
lhe record, but the Presl~ent has no ,
lntentk&gt;n of ftr1ng Jim Watt.' "
'"!'he very fact that the White

U.S.S.R.," the DIA report states.
Much of this Is lhe doing of;
Bulgaria's Communist boss since
1954, Todor Khrlstov Zhlvkov, the
Kremlin's devoted 71-year-old
stool(e.
Bulgaria's slavish servntty to the
Kremlin has drawn the contempt of .
other Comrnu nlst satellites. But lt
has paid off lor Bulgaria, the only
Warsaw Pact nalloo whose economic condition has Improved
since Its association with the Soviet
Union.
The Bulgarians got a price break
on coal and all Imports from the
Soviets, who also provide a steady
market for Bulgarian products,.
which have changed from primar·
lly agricultural to mainly industrial:
ln recent years .

House atl td e dented It wilhout being
asked lr nmedlately alerts the reporter t hat something Is in the
wind. If.,~ reports lt and the rest of
the meo:l tia pick It up. When Watt
reads al1 -out It he calls the President
and ask s him II he wants him to
resign. The President says of
course not Watt can have his job as
long as he wants. This private
converst olton Is also leaked to the
press, a nd pretty soon the only
question Is not wnt Wati resign but
when.''
"It's the old 'leak by denial'
trick," I : sald. "They've used It on
me a h•.J .ndred Urnes."
"It •n ever falls . The trick of
leaking: when It come5 to tirli!g
scmeb&lt;:•:ly in the administration Is
not to pt \Sh him out the winww, but
make ltllm jump of his own free
wUl."
" Wh.a •t about unauthorized

·

The Washington cal)'lpalgn is glad
to see the presidential hopefuls, but
pressaide ChrlsChandlerwasmore
enthusiastic about the appearance
of veteran U.S.Rep.CiaudePepper,
D-Fla., who is widely known for his
involvement in Social Security
issues.
"Somebody like that can be more
Important I to the campaign l than a
presidential aspirant,'' Chandler
sa id.
The nat ionat candidates are
hoping for Washington's support In
lining up delegates at the 191&gt;\
Democratic Nationai"Convention.
However, U.S. Sen. Alan ·Cranston, D-Calif .. who backed Washing·

: WASHINGTON IAPl- U.S.Sen.
John Glenn next week will join the
list of Democratic leaders activPiy
supporting U.S. Rep. Harold Wa·
shington's Chicago mayoral
campaign.
·
The Ohio Democra 1 plans to
campaign for Washington in Chi·
cago on Tuesday. his presidential
~ampaign office reported Friday.
Another Democra 1ic presidential
hopeful, former vice president
Walter Mandate, wiU be in Chicago
this w&lt;&gt;ekend. U.S. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., toured Chicago
a few days ago with Washington,
who hopes to become the city's first
black mayor.

COLUMBUS. Ohio IAPl Confused by the a lphabet soup of
medical acronyms• The Ohio
Hospital Association has the
solution.
The organization is offering a
"Guide to the Health care AI·
phahet" to sift through such
med.ical gobbledygook as HEMP,
HIP and ESRD.
Tl!e 30-page booklel contains
many acronyms - words formed
from the first letter of a series of
words- used by thestate'smedical

profession.
While such acronyms may
shorten things, Dr. Margaret Roberts of Children's Hospital says
communication between medical
proiessionals and patients is ham·
pered by too much abbreviating.
"The problem Is !hat health care ~
professionals get used to using
acronyms and you think everyone
around you understands them,"
sa id Ms. Roberts, the hospital's
director of speech pathology and
audiology . "I don't like to use

Bar association seeks volunteers
CLEVELAND I API -Taking its
cue from the Cleveland Academy of
Medicine's program of free medica I
aare for the poor, the Bar Associa·
lion of Greater Cleveland ha• begun
a campaign to get J,OOJ lawyers to
volunteer !heir services to a id the
. poor.
The association has appealep 10
~.500 lawyers in Cuyahoga County,
asking thl'm either to volunteer to
handle two or thre&lt;&gt; cases each a
year or to co~tribute $250 a nnually
t~ assist the Legal Aid Society of
Cleveland.
The nred for the program
resulted from cut s in government
funding for Legal Aid, sa id C.
Lyonel · Jones. dirl'Ctor of the
soclgty.
, Legal Aid has had to close threeof
its six branch oillees while laying off
10 of 41 lawyers who handled civil

ton In his primary battle against
Mayor Jane Byrne, has the edge
over the other Democratic hopefuls
with the Washington camp.
Calling the California senator
"very helpful" in the ·primary,
Chandler said, "This campaign
would be beholden to Cranston."
ln another development, an
NAACP leader has been named to a
management post in Glenn's unoffi·
cial presidential campaign.
Charles H. Smith, deputy executive director of the NAACP since
19ffi, will be · deputy national
political director of the Glenn
campaign. sald campaign press
aide Louise Swartzwalder.

cases, he said.
"WP're in some extraordinary
times. and we need more assist •
ance." Jones said. "There's·a lot of
need out there. We' reseeingmoreof
the new poor. peoplewhohadjobs15
or 20 years, now coming to us."

(Continued from page A1)
granted. The project's cost is
another unkiiown al this time. he
added.
"We wouldn't attempt an
estimate unl U we have a firm
date," Stelle said. "At I his time,
it would just be guesswork."
Conrad Ripley. a public lnfor·
mation officer _for the corps of
engineers· Huntington, W.Va.
dislrict, sald there are no
problems with anolhcr plant
built on one of iJ s structures.
Presently, a nother plant is being
built at the Greenup dam to
provide power for Vanceburg.
Ky.

" Given certain require ments : :
10 adhere to. ihls kind of · :
deve lopment is a uthorized ;.
under law," Ripley explained. :
" We couldn't approve anything :
oulside of regu lations. "
·:
One of the issues lhe corps is;·
studying is in how much river '
now can be allowed through a ••
plant. he SH id.
. · •'
. can't
. shut I he gates anti .~·•
"We
lei you play with the Ohio
River," Ripley added. "Sq ::
again. as long as 11 doesn:t
compromise navigational func: •
lions. and a ssuming lhe proper
co nstrue! ion techniques are
used, we have no objections." '.:

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The poor need legal help ln a
variety of cases. Including evic· r---~--------J..._------------1
tlons. foreclosures and bankruptcies, bar association officia ls said.
Help also ls needed in probate,
housing, -domestic relallons and
uninsured tort cases.
A bar association task force
determined that Legal Aid's financial problems are forcing it to tum
away 2,500 low-income clients this
year.
Last year , 800 Legal Aid cases
.. :
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Cleveland office.

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Bank as the m a in depository ;
although several other banks in the;
Columbus area wUi get smaller ·
account s.
.
Huntington will replace BancO-:
hio National Bank, which has held ;
most of the state's checking funds ·
for more than 10 years. An average :
of about $10 million a day is kept in ;
the main checking account .

Smith, !\1, a native of Lexington.
Ky., was minister at First Baptist
Church In Huntington, W.Va., for20
years before going to work at
NAACP headquarters In New York.

acronyms and I encourage my staff
not to."
She knows she's fighting a los ing
battle . The number of acronyms In
the health care field increases
constantly.
To add · to the confusion. Ms.
Roberts noted, the same acronym
sometimes can be used for two
different organizations. OSHA, for
example. can mean Occupational
Safety and Health Administrdtion
or thE' Ohlo Speech and Hearing
Associatl?n.
"People In this profession use
SERRC quite frequently," she said.
" But who knows what that means?
It means Special Education Re·
gtonal Resource Center, but how
many people· can be expected to
know that?"
Melanie Pariser, who teaches a
class in medical terminology at
University Hospitals, said acronyms a nd abbreviations are "a
necessary evil."

~ oolittle

•

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP l -Ohio
is changing banks for its
milltlmillion-dollar checking ac·
count, but the switch is not directly
related to a recent $1.1 million
embezzlement in the state trea~ ur·
er'soffice, officials say.
The State Board of Deposit , after
looking at bids from four ba nks
Friday, picked HunttngtonNational

.'

'•

..J

"We have a National CouncU of
Office Leakers, which meets every
MOnday morning. It Is composed c#.
senior otftclals !rom an the departments and agencies, and Is chaired
by a very high White House miii'CE!.
Each official presents the leaks he

.

.&amp;-JLt...;l!

.leaks? Is that where the lie detector
comes in?"'
' "!'hat's correct. As soon as we
read a leak that we didn't okay, we
send F. Lee Bailey and his
techniques over to the department
to take the tests. Anyone woo
refuses to have the electrodes
attached to his chest wUl automatl·
cally be dismissed. If he takes the .
test and Bailey decides he's lying,
the leaker Is pushed out the
window."
"But tsn 'Ill true that Ue detectors
are very unreliable and pan' t even
be admitted In court as evidence?"
''T)le President was aware of It
and the lie detector was DQt his first
chotce . . He prefeiTed to have an ·
employee swear on the Bible he
wasn't a leaker. But to his chagrin
he discovered this was
unconstitutional."
·•

·

State moves bank.·::
.
checking account

Booklet tries to explain ini . .

Don't .lie to tne'-"==== ;;=:;;;;;;========A=r=tB=uc:;=h=·wa=l=d
The President has Issued an
executive order requiring every
federal employee with a security
clearance . to sign a non-disclosure
pledge and submit to lie detector
tests lf asked.
Mr. Reagan's given reason was
to prevent leaks of classified
Information. His real reason was to
stop leaks that make his admlnJs.
tratbn look Incompetent or bad. 1
Will thls stop lea king In
Washington?
"Not on your life," said Stanley
Plncher; chief coordinator of Leaks
for High Government Offk:lals.
"But the government will now have
much better controt" over what Is
leaked to 1he press and what Is
withheld because lt would give us a
black eye."
"What constitutes a good leak?"
"Top secret informatk&gt;n about
the nuclear superiority of the Sovlel
Union. We want that leaked out as
fast as possible; especially while
Congress Is debating the defense
budget"
"What, ln your opinion, Is a bad
leak?"
"Top secret lnformatk&gt;n of swee·
!heart deals with U.S. defense
contractors on weapons oow In
l"'oduction that don't work and cost
lhreet times as much as we said
they would."
"1 can see why you wouldn' twant
that kind of lnformatt&gt;n leaked," I
said. "The lie detector wDI be a
great ·help In stopping whistle
blowers !rom ratting · on the
administration."
"It may not stop all unofficial
leaks IN! It wUl certainly have a
chilling·effect on anyone whO leaks
to cover up wrongdoings.''
"How does your department

By The Associated J'ress
A late winter storm that swept through the Central Plains
Saturday produced hail and thunderstorms in Texas and was
responsible for dumping 12 inches of wet. heavy snow on much of
Nebraska.
Three people died in weather-related traffic accidents. one in
Nebraska on Friday and two in Utah on Thursday, according to
authorities.
A tornado touched down early Saturday near Del Rio, Texas. but
no damage or injuries were reported, authorities said.
Hail broke windows in west Texas, said a dispatcher at the Tom
Green County sheriff's office in San Angelo. Forecasters sa id they
expected the storm to move out of the state later Saturday.
The same storm system produced seven incoes of snow in parts of
South Dako.ta's Black Hills on Friday night.
·
Snow also fell on Minnesota and Iowa, according to the National
Weather ServiC!'.
In California, the Pacific Coast Highway, buried under two
successive rock and mudslides from soggy slopes, was to remain
closed through the weekend, officials with the California
Department of Transportation said today.
Winter storm warnings were posted E&gt;arly Saturday for parts ·o f
Nebraska. South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota.

.

.•

Sen. Glenn backs Harold Washington

.

named after one of two ninth
century :E lulgarlan brothers, CYril
and Metho odlus, later sanctlfled by
the Orthc dox Church. And since
Bulgaria'" liberation by the Red
Army In 1944, lt has shared other
outward , Russian vestiges, like
Soviet ca 1 rs and rnilltary unl!onns.
AccOrd tng to a confidential Detense InJt. eillgence Agency appral·
sal - o:~ •e of several lntelllgoence
docurnenl ts reviewed by my asso·
elate Dale. Van Ana - Bulgarian
Commuu tst Parry meetings are
"little me ore than replays" c#. those
In the '! iovlet Union. Bulgarian
party le;lders constantly .seek to
affirm "1 he orthodoxy of Bulgarian
soclallsrr: , and the party's total
loyalty &lt;md commitment to the

WW ...,.,,~"'u~u

Extended Ohio forecast

No flak from Bulgaria =========:::=:~Ja=.=ck::::::::A=nd=e=:=rso=n
WASHJNGTON -Becauseoflts
alleged connectk&gt;n to the attempted
assasslnatin of ~pe John Paul II,
Bulgaria has received more inter·
national atientton in the past two
years than at any time In the nearly
four decades that It has been a
Soviet sateUite.
The fact that It's Bulgaria taking
the heat, Instead ol Big Brolher In
the Kremlin, does not surprise ·
Western Intelligence. Secret lnteUI·
gence reports warn that Bulgaria:
will remain what It has always
been: the most loyal of the Soviet
sateilltes. For thi$ reason, it Is
referred to as the 16lh republlc of
the Soviet Union.
One reason for tills devotion Is
historical, a case of Slavic solldar·

..-.

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service
foreclllit for Sunday predicts showers In the PacHic Northwest, parts of
Florida and Georgia, and in a large area stretching from Westem New
York to the Carolinas. Snow Is forecast for a large area in the Midwest.
(AP Laserphoto).

'

operate?"

cover much of western Ohio by "Sunday afternoon.
Temperatures will warm Into !he 50s Sunday.
The low pressure center developed through the night over the
Oklahoma Panhandle. A high pressure system over the Great Lakes
was gradually shift lng east.
The low will start to plck up large amounts of moisture from the
Gulf of Mexico today and lt will begin its journey up the Mississippi
and Ohio River valleys. ,
Skies were mostly clear through the night and temperatures fell
. into the 20s across most of the state. A light easterly wind was
blowing, dropping the wind chill readings below 10degrees in spots.

'

tlve need to reduce the risk ol
atomic war. But even as a symbol'
H.J.R. 3 is flawed. The resolution
begins by saying that "The greatesti
challenge facing the Earth Is lei
prevent the occurrence of nuclear;
war by accident or design." 11 tha~
were all there Is to It, lhe challeng&amp;
could he met at once: We coulcl
avert nuclear war simply by
dtsmantilng all our nuclear wea:
pons. Farewell, war; hello;
surrender.
.
Anolher finding Is that" A mutual
and ver111abie freeze and reduc:
tlons In · nuclear weapons and
nuclear systems would greatlY.
reduce the risk of nuclear war.''
Again, the response Is maybe yes; .
maybe no. Our own miclear a~llel
grows old; the Soviet Unloll'J.
strategic weapons are new ""'I
fearlully new. An "lirunedlate''.
freeze, which Is what the resolutlort
urges, would freeze that dlsadvan•
tage and make It Irreversible.
·
Under these Instructions, out
negotiators would be required~
"to pursue" a freeze on presen*
levels of nuclear arms. But pursu:
ing and getting are two different
things. Given lhe Soviets' record a(
Intransigence, the pursuit could
take months and years. Meanwhile
It Is hard to see how our negotiator!(
simultaneously could pursue an
objective of arms reductions. A
freeze Is a freeze and a thaw Is a
thaw, and the goals seem
Inconsistent.
Suppose the pending resolution Is
adopted by both houses. Suppose
the president, caught In a political
bind, permits It to become "law"
without his signature: How would
these well-intended Instructions bE'
perceived abroad? Would the effect
of the resolution be to Incline the
Soviets toward agi-eelng to this
"Immediate, mutual and ver111a~
ble" freeze? It seems unlikely.

(X'€Sldent'. s signature; they are
subject to veto. But this particular
resolution Is worded not as a joint
resolution, . which mandates partie·
ular ;~ets; It Is worded more as a
concurre1nt resolution, which
merely e:~ presses opinion. BeCause
this meaS]Jre Is Intended io have the
force of: law, lhe Congress Is
embarklr.lJ g upon a mlschlevilus and
meddles01 ne course. 11 It were
Intended ( mly to express lhe sense
of the C ongress, the resolution
rnlght pro perly Influence our negotiators bu t It would not tie Ulelr
hands.
I would have no objection to a
concurren t resolution, syrnbollzlng
a national consensus onthelmpera·

~A @)1983 ~'IV~)1A~·'~&lt;tE$~

·

.---:.....-Weather:-~--------------.

1983

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea5ant, W. Va.

resolution~:=:===~Ja=m=es=J=.K=i=r=lpa=t=ric~~

WASHlNGTON - When the
patriotism of the sponsors, nor Is
Ho11se of Representatives returns
dispute the underlying prupose on
from its Easter recess, debate wm· both sides. The purpose Is simply to
resume on the so-called "freeze
do what can best be done to avert
resolution." The purpose of the
the catastrophe of lull-blown
resolution is to instruct our negotla· .. atQmlc warfare..Nothing Is g11ined
. tors at Geneva in their arms control
by Implying, on the one side, that
talks with the Soviet Un)on: PropoPresident Reagan Is a nuclear
gunslinger; nothing Is gained by
nents of lhe measure have pretty
well dominated the news with · suggesting, on the other, · that
eloquent and persuasive argu·
proponents are dupes of lhe
communists.
ments ln support df the resolution.
Permit me briefly to argue the case
My first objection goes to form
ralher than to substance. 1bls Is a
against tt.
A preliminary word: In lhe
jol!lt resolution, which under con·
nature of things, the issue of course gresslonal precedents has gener·
involves partisan politics; It could ally the force of law. Such
not be otherwise. But lh1s Is not to
resolutions are viewed constitution·
discredit the slncerlty or the
ally as bills; they require a

HULME

March 27, 1983

7 p.m. EST

The freeze
A Di\•lsion of

,

"

GAI11P0u.S;

.•.. '

,

.•

· .·'·II

..'
.. . ..

•, '

Ott. . r.'.
.;

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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio--Point Pleataot, W. Vo.

Poge-A-4-;:- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Maldl 27, 1913 ~ . : .

Exxon ordered to reimburse public
By MATT VANCE\'

A.,,_
, odatt'll Press Wrilt·r
WA HI NCTON . tAP ! - F.vrr;•
stat&lt;' would get a pi('('&lt;' or morr than
$\OJ milliOn [Oren&lt;?rgyronSPJYa tion
program s und&lt;'r a fcdt•ra! judgf'' s

order that the na tion's larg&lt;•st Oil
company relmburSP th&lt;' publie lor
0\ 'C' I'Ch argC's.

U.S. District t'OUJ1. 1udge Thomas
Flanncr\' ruled ~' ridav tha t Exxon
Co rp .. unjust lv reap&lt;'(! huge p1ofil s
bv improper),· dassifving crude oil
from its Hawkins field in Trxas as
" nr w oil."

Flanner~

estimated that the
0\Wchargcs towled $8\Y.!.5 million
betwN'n 1!175 and 1981 'md ordt•red
Exxon to rPimbu 1-,;c that a m ount plu s inl&lt;'n'sl - to thP public through

rPndNs impossible the tracing ol
thP O\'!'r!'hargrs to thrir ultimate
vi&lt;'tims a nd th&lt;' ca lculation ol the
precis&lt;' damages sufl~t·ed by each ,"
hC'said in thr 90-page ruling.
sta tP.IUII runSf' l"\'at ion pro,C"rams.
F. .~xon said it will appeal.
"From what we understand of the
Flaml &lt;'J)' Pstima led that thP
judge' s ruling. wP believe it is ·
m·Pr&lt;' h a rg&lt;'~ totalro $8%.5 milliion
incorrect and unfair." the company
I)('III'N&gt;n 197:i and 1!l!ll and lltt lr tn l
said in a statement read by James
r:x.xun 10 rcimblll:S(' lhi11 ~un ount to A. Moraki&gt;. manager of its press
I he public lhroug h s laW -run ccinsPr· . SC'Jv ic!'s in New York. "We will
\ ':JI ion pm ~rram !'
prorrrd pmmptly In thP court s to
"Th« broad sca n N ing ot thr ill
att r•mpt to l'orrect 1his decision."
t'ff('(· ts of F.xxon·s \\'r6ngdoing
If th&lt;' r1Jiing is upheld, the Exxon

•

•

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The Department or Energy has
taking office,
\
statement said. payments made by
Exxon would be signttlcantly offset
estimated that consumers were
FlaJll'l«"y "'ld the Treasury .
Dej&gt;artment would distribute lhe : , .
by payments recovered from 'o tber overcharged as much as S10 bUUon
products and royalty owners in the
between the time tlle law was
money to the states based on their , .
field.
passed and January 1~ when
energy consumption under a for- ".' :
Flannery's ruling said Exxon
President Reagan removed a U
mula used 1n other, similar refund ' ,
owned between 75 percenl and !lJ price controls on oU eight days after
Cjlses.
'"
percent of the production at , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "•I
Hawkins field.
&gt; •
The refund is the largest ever
. 11
j I •
awarded under the 1973Emergency
Petroleum Allocation ACt, which set
'
up a system of federal price controls
:f"l
on domestic all production immediately after the Arab oil embargo.
' '1

MARCH SPECIAL SAVE $255

..

EPA staffers celebrate resignations

I

By MARTI]'; CRUTSINGER
Associated Press Wr!ler
WASHI I\'GTON tAPI - Some
Environmental Protection Agenc,·
employees brou ght out champagne
to cetebra te after five morr top
officials J'es igned under pressure.
clearing out the Reagan appointees
who had .been pnncipal targets of
congr&lt;'Ssional investigations.
The resignations - led by that of
acting Administrator Jolln Hernandez - were accepted by President
Reagan on Friday, opening most of
the top JObs in the agency for
_Wil liam D. Ruckelshaus to fi ll as he
ta k~ over as Reagan's choice lor
EPA administra tor.
But Reagan steadfastly rejected
allegations of wrongdoing by the
EPl\,, saying. "no proofol\.vrongdoing has been presented in all of this
fusS ...
Besides Hernandez , resignations
wct;e also announced for . EPA
C.cftera \ Counsel Robert M. Perry;

Associa te Administrator J ohn A.
Todhunt!'r; Paul C. Cahill, director
of EPA 's Office of Federal Activiti~s. a nd John Daniel , who had
served as chief of staff lor former
Administrator Anne M. Burtord.
Staffers in Perry's office opened
bottles of champagne to celebra te
once his resignat-ion was made
official, said EPA sources who
refused to be quoted by name. A
f01mer attorney for Exxon Corp ..
Perry had drawn the enmity of
many in the general counsel's
office. He was being investigated by
a House panel on whether he
committed perjury when he denied
keeping "green books"withderog~­
tory comments · abOut EPA
employees.
And in what has · become a
familiar pattern a t the agency.
guards were posted outside the
offices of the departing officials to
ensure that no files sought in the
hall-dozen congressional investiga-

•.

lions were taken from the building.
Lee Vers\andig will replace
Hernandez for the next month until
the Senate confirmation of Ruckelshaus. who was persuaded by
Reagan early this week to return to
the job he held in the early 1970s.
Hernandez. the deputy EPA
admin istra tor named to serve as
acting EPA administrator after
Mrs. Burtord resigned March 7,
. spent most of his s hort tenure before
congressional committees defending himself against allegations he
· had favored the chemical industry
in decis ions.
Reagan sought on Friday to leave
the impression that thi&gt;liveofticia\s
had not been forced out. He·had said
the same thing abOut Mrs. Burtord.
But EPA sources made it clear
that the White House told the EPA
officia ls to quit.
The sources, who spoke on
condit ion they not be named, Said
the resignations were requested by
J oe Ryan, assistant personnel

a brief news confei'ence Friday.
Reagan also signed an exPCutive
directive to put in motion the
scientific effort he called · for
Wednesday to build a n anti-ballistic
missile system in the hope of
renderi ng nu c lea r weapon s
obsolete.
Adelman has been under a ttack
by congressmen skeptical ol his
commitment to arms control and
concerned that he lacks the experience to head the agency.
The Senate Foreign Relat ions

,.

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...
' )

.~ ,

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til\\

Visit Germany,
Austria, Italy, and.

~

(!!A

Switzerland

tf.\'1

'ii1)

360 SECOND AVE.
GAWPOUS
PH. ~99

'§)

{!7).
\"ii;?)

~

'@.

®~~~~~
If your mortgage
outlives you,
Mortgage Life
Insurance can
help keep your
homelnthe
family.
Check with
State Farm.

The pres ident said. "But isn 't this
natura l. that som rone who is in a
pos ition of assuming the director·
ship of an agency ... is going to m ake
inquir'i&lt;'S of people on the scene with
regard to personnel?"

CAROLLSNOWOEN

4t 1 Second Ave:
Gallipolis, Oh.

SPICIAL

REGULAR

$995

!lfl(

up efforts to keep its planes from
being used by smuggling rings.
Customs olficials seized a record
229 pounds of high-grade heroin in
fiscal 1981-82 worth an estimated
$29.2 million. and say they believe
that is only one-tenth ol the a mount

CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS AVAilABLE .
we carry our own account•

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r--------COU'ON----~----,

I
1 0
J

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!'looM Mn4 ,.. f-ff booklof1 ""'"'"ii - •·olt
P'"'tM •n fvll co&amp;or ~ ••••• ond prte" liPM

I

0 C,ftdlp ho... on o"'t\o'''" L090n

....... """

0

1

Logon Monument ComJN~ny, Pomeroy, Ohio

Mrof'lw~t~e;;t Co ,.........

at .., ""-

f'looM Mn4 ... -Oit

ebo"'

~VIGIO""'O

'"'"

1

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J

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1

...
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f•

·'&gt;

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~~~=====-=-=---==-=~~=---=-~-~-~
1 0% deposit and balance in convenient low monthly
payments. Choose from the largest ~elections in
Central and Southestem Ohio. We have the seme Interest rata as we did in 1 969. Order now for IPfing
delivery.

OPEN IVININGS AND SUNDAY aY API'OINTMINT

..

.''

'.'
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,· .

''

WIITE FOIIOOilm SHOWING MUIOIIIALS IN FULL COLOI
WITH SIZES AND PRICIS STATED

QOOd nerghbor
State Filrm
IS tMf?re

Rebels claim control of provinces

1\ Multimedia NewlJI)aper
Pu bl ished each Sunda y. R2."i Thi rd
Avenue. b;.' the Ohio Valley P\Jbllshlng
Corripany · Mu!Umedia . Inc . Second c lass
~~a12:e paid at Gall!polis .. Ohio ~5631.

POMEROY LANDMARK

Memtx•r: The Associa ted Press. Inland
Dally Press AssoCiation and the Amert -

PRICE

35 Cents
'
No subscriptions by

mau

permtned in

towns where hOme carrier service ls
avbllable.
The Sunday Ttmes-Sentlnel will not be
ll"Sponslble for advance payments made
to CaJTI£&gt;rs ,

MAIL SVIISCRIFI'IONS
Sunday Only

Oneyear .............. .. .................. Sal.a:!
Six months ..... ..... ......... , .......... .$10.40
DilDy IUid Sunday
MAIL SVIISCRIFI'IONS
JntldP. Ohio
52 Weeks ..... ~.......................... $51.48

26 Wa&gt;ks .................... .............. $27.:11
13 Weeks .............. ..... .. ..... ........ Sl4JJI
·
llalooOulaldeO'*&gt;

52 Weeks .... : ........... .. .. .... .......... $56.16
26 Weei&lt;S .......... .. ....... :..............$29.64
L1 Weel&lt;s ............ : .......... ............$l5.n

992-2181

IJUID._YICI!l JACK W. CARSEY, MGA.

c m Newspaper PubliShers Association.
Na tional Advertlslnll Representative,
Bra,nham. 1717 West NlrK' Mile Road,

SINGLE COPY

CARPET
SALE

Hoover Sweepers - Reg'. ·$124.95 -·Only '89"
General Electric TeleVision - Starting At '89"

Hotpoint Refrigerators - Only 365"
Hotpoint Microwave Ovens - Only 1299"
1

IN STOCK CARPET

$6.00

&amp; UP Sq. Yd.

Baler Twine - 119.9S (10 Bales Or More)

DUPONT ANTRON
· CARPET
$8.95

.. . 5 Hsp. Tillers - Only s299''
10 Hsp.-34" Ridiilg Mowers - Only 1899"
16 Hsp.-44'' Riding Mowers - Only 11549"
3 Hsp.-20" Push Movers - Only '11~

&amp; UP Sq. Yd.

16 COLORS

749 Third Ave.

Redi-Crete Gravel Mix
Redi-Crete Sand Mix
Redi-Crete M.ortar Mix

JUST ARRIVED.
· Georgia Marble .

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING
4461995

.

Gallipolis, Ollie

1.,
·'•'

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lr==========::; ..
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FEATURING

MARY LUCAS
AND FRIENDS
FOR YOUR liSTENING AND DANCING
PLEASURE.

American legion Post 27
Bob McCormick Rd.

TUES., MAR. 29, 1983

8:30 To 11:30 P.M.
FOR LEGION MEMBERS. AUXILIARY
MEMBERS AND THEIR INVITED GUfSTS.

9 am til 9'.30 pm/
Fri.·Sal 9 am bl 10 pm

TAVERN
HAM

FROZEN
TURKEYS

n

39 .·

*******

I r om /h(' o tl ice o f

George W. Davis. O.D.
458 Second Ave .. Gallipolis
Phunc 4&lt;ib·:wt'i·

FAMOUS BRANDS
FOR HER

eBryon
•Peaches 'N Creme

."

llB.
PKG.

ff ,.t:::::l(l;·;a- .. •Martha

E TOO .•.

Mi!Uture
•Jill Lynn

We haven't forgotten
the Small Fry .. with
this festive collec:;tion
of Easter Finery!
I

~,,~.

SIRLOIN
STEAK

It /he 1 r r te ru~ l o f bf" , e r vis 1on

.Cinderella

ALLISON
GRADE A

NORTHERN

TOILET
TISSUE

EXTRA LARGE

EGGS

Grandma will love
them in dresses and
suits.

BOYS
SIZES I.NFANTS
TO 16

4 ROLL
PACK

FOR ·HIM
•Suits •Sport Coats
•Shirts •Ties
•Pants •Belts
•Ties

)ACK&amp; 1ILL'S
"Fuhion• for thf' Young"

..

S.O.A. CHOICE

•••

•Coats •Purses
•Jewelry •Tights
•Dresses
.,
~
·.. ,,~,

Registrar Michael J. McCulllon . ·
announced that the Bureau of
· Motor Vehicles has the second
advance dlstrlbutlon o! 1983license ·
· tax revenues totaling $18,299,9§9.95.
ready for · disbursement to local
governments. Meigs County's •
shine Is $61,416.47.

STORE HOURS:

ing, there Is a leveling off and
glasses need changing less
frequently.
Many norrnai .and most farsighted people begtn to nfed
special glasses for readiilg ·
around age forty-five. This
development may proceed with
sufficient rapidity to require a
change in reading glasses about
once a year until age sixty-five
or so.

year.

.;

·-

Entered a.'i seco nd class malllnl&lt;: matter

RAT&amp;~

~

PRICES GOOD THROUGH M.ARCH 31, 1983

at PorrK'roy, Ohio. Post OfDce.

SVBSCRIPI10N

-42.95'
..... . ~ .. : ... 69.95
• • • • • ,f, • • • • , .•

Post anchor (24-2473,8) . .' .... .. 5.29

USPS 5'!HOO

By Carrier or Motor Route
0.., Week ...... ....................... ..... $1 .00
Orif MonTh ....... .......................... $4 .40
0nf' Yf'ar ............... ........ ...... .. ... $52.80

,,aubinlttlng applications for the
·.position r4 lifeguard at I.Dndon
~f.. Syracuse, Is AprU 1. George
:!folman, poOl-manager annOWiced.
• , Applications may be mailed to ·
. Holman
at Syracuse, Ohio 4.5779.
.

FOR HER

imb:•v t'imn • i'mtiml

Sull&lt;' 2()J, Detroll , Michigan. 48)75

•-

.: ,SJRACUSE - The de!ldllne' tor ..

How frequently should one
"change glasses"?
There Is nci hard and fast rule
ln this regard. amain people
can keep the same prescription
for two or three years, others
require frequent ~hanges . The
latter Is particularly trlle lor
near-sighted chtldren and many
adults between the ages of
forty-flve and slxty-ftve.
When growing children develop near-slghtedi\I!SS, It Is
common lor that near sightedness to Increase .r little
with_every Inch of helgl\t. Untll
they stop growing, their glasses
become lna&lt;!equate about once a
sometimes more ·often.
After they have stopped grow-

GIRLS
SIZES INFANTS
TO 14 &amp; PRE-TEEN

On

pushed back the targeted com piclion date.
Enr[ched uranium is used to fuel
nuclear power plant s and produce
e iPCtriCity. ·
The Piketon projPCt already is
being- operated at partial capacity
by the Goodyear Atomic Corp.
under contract with the federa l
govermn\'nt.
McEwen wants the House Appropriations Committee to approve the
$572 million request by the Reaga'n
adm~trd tion for fiscal yea r 19Sl.

Funds distributed

three

SAME TIME NEXT YEAR?

the

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., Inc.

MANAG UA, Nicaragua !API In T&lt;'gucigalpa . the Honduran
N i c~ragua n exiles fighting to over·
capital, the pres idential press office
throw th&lt;' Sandinista government
on Friday night issued a second
claimed th~y ·have seized control of · denial of Nica ragua's charge that
Hondura n soldiers had crossed the
three northern prov inces, but there
were no reports of new fighting to
bord!'r to fight a longside rebel
confirm or dl~prove thP claim .
forces.
In a broadcast \at&lt;' FridaY, the
" Hotiduran troops ha,·e not
rebels' el andest ine Radio lo de
pcnPtra ted into Nicaraguan terriSept iembre sai d that ant itory ." the sta tement said. adding
government rebels were in "com that"thearm.v remains at it s posts.
plcte cont rol" of northern Jinotega,
ready to drf~nd territoria l integrity
a nd national sove reignty."
Nueva Segovia a nd Ma lagaipa
prov inces.
The Nicaraguan Foreign MinisThe report. said to have been
try said late Thursda)· that Nicara broadcast from "somewhere in
guan troops fought Hond ura n
Nicaragua," was impossible to
soldiers in the Papayas Valley,
confirm since no reporters arc
about 1M miles north ol Managua.
allowec\ intoth&lt;'combat area and no , - - - - --------------------1
indepe nd en t rep o rt s were
ilo ble.

a'·"

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WASHINGTON (API - Rep.
Bob McEwen, R-Ohlo , says a
federal commitment to finish the$7
billion gas centrifuge plant at
Piketon. Ohio, Is mandatory lf the
country is to remain competitive In
the international urani um enrichment business.
McEwen sajd , the scheduled
completion of the projPCt by ,1984 Is
too important to be subjected to
"whims ical pollcy and program
changes." He said pas t administra tions had agreed to budget cuts that

ot gas at about M: 11 p.m .
Also cited by police Friday was
James H. Grlttin, 19, 1455 Eastern
Ave .. lor assa ult.

LEAN, NO WASTE

·Deadline April 1
d.

CANDIDATE--William E.
·Snouffer, 121 WeheTerrace, has
meJ a petition for the Democrat
nomination to run for Pomeroy
Village clerk-treasurer. He Is
unopposed but . will go against
. incmnllent, Ellen Rought, R., In
the fall . Snouffer, who has been
employed in various clerical
posts • at Midwest Steel . In
· Pomeroy for the past21 years, Is
a fonner Pomeroy VWage
CouncUman. He and his wtte,
Jane, have
children, ·Meiody Ramshurg, Pomeroy; Gary,
Pomeroy, and · Dana AJJen ol
Malta, and four grandchildren.
Mrs. Snouffer Is a graduate of
Rio Grande CoUege where she
'm ajored ln social work,

-----OPTOMETRIST·- - - -

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McEwen says funding mandatory

DR . GEORGE W . DAVIS

:· POMEROY ·- Marriage llrenses
'were Issued in Meigs County
Probate Court to. Dougll\s Dayton
;"Gloyd, 21, Dexter, and Pamela Gall
,.Michael, 'rl, Point Pleasant; Elbert
~Thomas Cains; Jr. , 41, Pomeroy,
. and Rebecca Rae Bartlett, 'rl,
Parkersburg.

~.

stopped in northbound tra.ffic at
12:10 p.m. when, according to
police, Lockhart hit the rear of
Klnnarld's vehicle, initiating the
pileup.
No citations were issued.
Pollee arrested Robert W. Bevan,
19, Rt. 2, Patriot ,In connection lj'lth
a gasoline theft from Superamerlca, 801 Second Ave., Friday nigh t.
Bevan was charged with petty
theft. He allegedly stole$14.76worth

SUPERIOR

'MaiTiage license

.' .

GALLIPOLIS - City police
investigated a lour-car chain reaction pileup on Eastern Avenue
Saturday afternoon.
All the cars were slightly dam·
aged and there were no injuries.
Pollee say the drivers oft he cars
were: VincentT. Lockhart,l8,Rt.3,
Gallipolis: Betty M. Kinnaird, 31,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va .; Mark A. ·
Still. 30, Tuppers Plains: Archie c.
Meadows, 44, Rt . 2, Crown City.
Kinnaird, Still and Meadows were

CLOSED SUNDAYS

:': POMEROY--Three calls were ;'answered by local units Friday, the
:,Meigs County Eriwrgency l\lledlcal
'Services reports .. At 12: 18 p.m .. the
»Racine Unit tookGEorge Oll~r from
&lt;~th St .. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 12:51 p.m ., the Pome-roy Unit took Norma Goodwin !rom
:Veterans Memorial to her resi..denc;e and at 8: 57 p.m ., the Racine
: unit took Eva Schaffer to Veterans
· Memorial.

•

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Admitted--Shirkoy Smith. Ru'
tland: Robert Knapp, Syracuse:
Otho Karr. Middleport: Lawrence
Potts, Middleport.
Disc harge d -- DebOrah Smlth ,
Mildred Fisher, Wilma Osborne.
Norman Goodwin , Frederick
Hildreth.

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SIMPLY MAIL US THE COUPON FOI FUITMEI INFORMATION

Lril(!'il

Vett&gt;rans Memorial

.',Emergency runs

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Phone 446·4290

llome 44'-4511

happenings

· PoMEROY--The . cast of the
musical, "Happy Days! " is to
report to ihe Meigs High School
~onday from 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. lor a
"$pe&lt;;lal musical workshop. All cast
,tylembers are to report and all are to
.take a sack lunch.

. The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

Police check chain reaction pileup

acres.
For. more information o" rental
fees contact Gary Heward, District
technician, Meigs SWCD Ofl!ce on
the second floor of the Farmers
Bank bullding or phone 992-6647 tp
get on the Ust to use this equipment.
CQoperator agreements were
· slgneq lor Jack Ervin, Salem
Township, a nd James Ottford,
Bedford Township.
·
A no-till field day was discussed.
A date will be announced soon.
The Meigs SWCD Ladles Auxlllary judged the fourth grade poster
contest and sixth . grade essay
contest. Winners will be announc-ed
soon.

~

ALPINE
· WONDERLAND .
~Sept. 15-28, 1983 .
~

POMEROY - The Meigs SoU
· and Water Conservatlon District
:)3oard of Supervisors r-eCently was
'Interviewed by the Goodyear Dls11nctlve Service Judging Commit·
"tee. Meigs SWCD Is one of the -top
-~lx counties tn Ohio In the Goodyear
~Disttncttve 8ervlcp . contest this
•year.
.
; Bus~s diS&lt;:Ussed · during the
•regular tneettng was rental agreements for a Moore Unl-drlll no-till
: pasture and hayland seedlngs and a
Buffalo 2-row no-ttll corn planter.
. th~ Is no rnlntrnum or maximum
·acreage that must be planted.
"However, tOOre Will be a $25 deposit
·Ctutrge for the first flve acres and
·luldltlonal charges for all over five

.
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~Meigs County
'
· Workshf)p slated

'·.

®l
®l

~~ .

· :M eigs SWCD in 'line
·for service award

~

,.

- ~®®eee·

Committ ee, which has recom mended against the nomination.
had released memos show ing that
Adelma n was involved in an
excha nge of notes about major
personnel changes in ttie agency hr
does not yet head.

Heroin traffic increasing
By ED BLANCHE
: Associated Press Wriier
LONDON (API - British custom:; officials say the heroin tra ffic
in Britain is increasing ra pidly and
warn they may confiscate a British
AirWays jet unless the airline steps

I ''

,..--------'-------1

Reagan stands by Adelman
: By MAUREEN SANTINI
: Associated Press Writer
\YASHINGTON !API ~ Pres ident Reagan, focusing on persqnnel
problems in his administration.
stands bv his controversial anns
conirol nominee. Kenneth L. Adelman, and rejects the notion that live
.;_.r1ew resignations a t the Environmental Protection Agency look bad.
"You bel I'm sticking by Mr.
Adelma n," the president said of his
nominee to head the Arms Control
a nd Disarmame nt Agency, during
•

.r ,

director at the White House, who
made the demands in a series of
meetings late Thursday in Hernandez' office.
The sources said the White House,
in an effort to control tlle political
damage !rom the long-running
EPA crisis, wanted to remove a ll
officials who have been Implicated
in the congressional investigations
and smooth the way for Ruckel·
shaus' return to the agency.

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

Match 27, 1983

303
CANS

$}

TEXAS STYLE

8.ISCUI.ts

4

12 oz.
CANS

$

�The

~rch 27, 1983

Times-Sentinel
I

'

~pringtime brings decisions on croplan

••
'.

.

• I

"

.;

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am·lO pm

ifnd)IS€rs a MooretlliUnl-driU atend a
sgoodet
-aslde com tahecreagte. idGettfng
~1o 2-row no. corn p1an r.
cover on
se -as e croI. The Moore drtU ls used for . pland protects the ground from
·l'!ayland and pasturela nd seedlngs. excessive son erosion and ~!.so
'It can he used In no-till and helpstobulldthesollforfuturecrop
;ih!n1mum tlllage seeding opera- , years. .

298 SEOOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
FILES PETITION
Kenny K. Klein, Pomeroy," has
filed his petition for Democrat
nomination to run for Pomero)·
mayor and will oppose Democrat William Quickel who filed
his petition earUer.

POMEROY--Meigs County sheriff'sdeputles are investigating two
breaking and entering offenses.
The residence of Hal Harmon.
Route 1, Dexter, was broken into
sometime Friday. Entrance was ·
gained through a rear window. A·
footlocker was reported missing
from the house and a large
grindstone from a nearby shed.
The E lberfeld Farm in Orange
Township was entered with entry
gained by culling the screen on a
rear porch and breaki ng of a pane of
glass from a kitchen window . Only
one minor item was reponed
missing.

It

there are

PH.992-5776

SYRACUSE, OH.

NOW OPEN FOR
THE SPRING SEASON
"L'I'

Potted Plants for Easter:

•y I'

any questions

olnff trmhe plalanndter ~lll edu~~~ and
0
·
users on guvu so11
conservation.
Gary Howard, SWCD technician,
lsavallabletoasslstMelgs!armers

U IPS

"H

· th

. ecoitnhecerningr
pfeceth;equsaulgpemsecnhted
, fularmed e!orsr
0 ·•
should contact Howard at the
Meigs SWCD office at 221 West
Second Street in 'Pomeroy or call
;ln~t~be~u~s~e~of~th~e~M~oo~re~d~rf~li~an~d~th~e~~992=-664::7·_ _:_.:.__ _.,...._ _j2~~==~0~P~EN~DA~t~LY:9~T0=5~A~N~D~S~UN~· ~oA~Y~I~T0~5~~~~~

.•
.
Open Daily 1 0·9;
Sunday 1·6

...

(;.

'•

GRADE AWHOLE

Chicken ..............L!~ ••

,M

J•;'/ J-...1.

By The Pair

Order 2 Sets Of
Prints When You
t(. (!;. tt
' t.'·\._, Bring In Your Roll
Of Film And Save
1".fff if On The 2nd Set

•' ~

$

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

5
.
9
.Chuck Roast.....~~ ..

~it~
•

· Hove

~our

1

cok»' print 111m

•devetopeo on&lt;! prlnled
at our reQulor law priCe
and get a 2nd set o l Pfinls .
ol o special low priCe
~A

400

For E~ch
2nd Print

«1:
4
g;ocess:r;g

2:1c eJCtro

Slide Or Movie Processing

$ 49

BUCKET

$ 19

FRESH BUTT STEAKS OR

Cube Steak ........L!-...

.

'•

TRACTOR TEAM- Greg Bolen, left, and Blllllolcombmadeup
the tractor trouble team for Meigs 111gb School's FFA Chapter this
)ear. 'lbe team placed fourth In dlsbict competition and was given
ltpeCial recognftloa at the annual FFA banquet. Bolen was named the
~llltandlng aenlor and Holcomb was named a stale-level Star chapter

20·exp. Slides
Or8mmMovle
Film

•'
'

.
19
Ground Beef......!!.~
. $ 39
Ground Chuck.., :~·...

::

AT

.• ORANGE CRUSH
. A&amp; W ROOT BEER
·8-16
~TLS.

oz.:$}19
•
Plus Deposit

8-16
BTLS.

BTLS.

· BTLS.

:8-16

oz.$}2 9

'BTLS.

Plus Deposit

oz.$ 49

..,..

BTLS .

Bubble

Gum

GEM RAVORS

Eggs

oz. $12 9 '

'8-16
BTLS. ·

GAWPOUS, OHIO
PH. 446-1 862

Plus Deposit

Our Reg. 1.37 ·

"Coldest BMr in Town"

97¢
~
1.97 .
2F!r1l!fl

OUr Reg. 88C Ea.

Prius Go«! ThN

April 2, 1983

Sale

Bubble .Gum Eggs Hershey&lt;!' Easter Kisses

Terry Potholdar

12 oz. box assorted fla · 14-oz. • bag chocolate

Of colton terry with

vors.

print design. 7V.x7W'.

•.

FlAVORITE

1o M.II k ' .
°
$
27(
•••••••••••••••••
PlASTIC GALLON

59

GRADE A

Med. Eggs••••••••••••
DOZEN

BORDEN'S ELSIE

.

$ 29

Ice Cream...... ~~-G!~ ..

Marriage licenses

• CHERRY PIE FILLING
•

2102.
UMIT 3 PLEASE

99¢

HUNTS CATSUP
• · 320Z.BTL99¢
Urnit One Per CUatomer
Good only .. Powell'•

Off8r

2, 1883

Movie, Slide And Print Processing·

''

•

lettuce.............. ~~D

ri.~

'&lt;tl

79¢ ··,

Limit One Pw eu.tomer ·
Good only lit PaMI'•

kisses In pastel foil.

L=.t " '

sse~

Chocolate Eggs

bag of yummy
treats for Easter. Save.

1o·&lt;&gt;&lt;. •

'

Bathroom Tissue ·
4 rolls, 2 ply. White.

.

.. '

"Net wt.

Fitting
Follow-Up
.
Annual Checks
Professional Audiologist
Licensed·Hearing Aid Fitter
and Dealer

For

--

trlllonl Com•-

g(f1

~le Price

OUr Reg. 14.97

Llmlt'Z

19.97 13.97 8.97
lnlfant Color Film

IC&gt;cup Mr. CoftH"
Coffee Saver' • brew-

"Soft Touch" Seat
Padded vinyl seat,
decorator colors.

20-exp., twin pack
of Kadamallc'" film.

Ing; makes 2-JO cups.

Popping Corn
2-lb.• bag; pops up
fresh and lender.

Men's
'i~llton
Women's
5
Styloo .loys•.
Girls' ·

5

•

97

~~~

·''

.•:

Eo .

L.C.D. Watches

Gold-lone or chrome
leather or metal band

··
· ·•

.'

'.

"Net wt.

PHONE, WRITE or VISIT

Limit

z

Speech and Hearing

OnSolathruTu...

.

2 47
•

I
I
1
I

Your

Choice

9l '
•

2.18 ~::PON

WIJHI

Pkg. COVPOII
Maine lrand Oil filters I Yummy~· COlor Print flm
•

412 Vinton· Pike
Gallipolis~ OH. 45631
'
446-5500

57;e l910l

Ea.

u.s.

I

or

cars. • Pkg.
10
e- Kodacalo...l ll0/24
Quality liters at savings:: flaVored. cream eggs. or 135/24; ASA 100.

To fit many

Ct1141Dn---.. -

.

99.•

Our

WITH

COUPON

22·oz. • Ivory® Liquid
Dlshwashlng deter·
gent In plastic botHe.

. Ct1141Dn--_ ..
'ft.OL

· ;·, :::·!)l H H!V[ n fiOAD. GALLIPOLIS
.)

l'

l9ii61 .· .

Our 1.07

.,
Sale Price

Testing
Evaluation
Selection

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
5 LB. BAG

BOOK &amp; CASSETTE SET
Choose from these and many more
of your favorite Disney titles.
Book &amp; Record ........ .. 2.37

Plus

715 RRST AVENUE

HEARING AIDS
·Medicaid and
UMW Approved

•'

oz. $13 9Deposit
·

oz.

: DO~ CCI.A &amp; SKI

2. 38

IMc1ke K marf!l Your Headquarters

Ira..; Or Antique-bro.. Flnllh

COKE, SPRITE,
PEPSI, MT. oew;
RC, RC 100,
(MET COKE. TAB DIET PEP51 ·
· DIET RITE .
8-16~1.$}.39 8-16 ~}49 8-16

•
}lOURS:
I a.m. to 11 p.m.
Jlondly ttwu Saturday

THANK YOU

36·axp. Slide Film ...........

4 wOoden blades with cane·
look Inserts. Speed control.

SEVEN UP &amp;
DIET 7-UP

3.77

Per Roil

52" Reversible Ceiling Fan

lCE HOUSE,D-RIV_ETHRU

.,

1.38

s1· 1~ale[@
~~rice

.) tanner.

:eND OF MONTH POP SPECIAL

.Pork Roasts ..... :~·...

POMEROY - Three suits for
divorce, two dtssolutfons and one
action for support were filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Filing for divorce were Cheryl A.
Hysell, Middleport, against Jeffrey ·
Hysell. Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Becky A.
Taylor , Middleport, against Brian
M. Taylor, Middleport; Virginia
PenningtOn, Middleport, against
('harles Pennington, Middleport.
Filing for cltssoiutlon of marriage
were Pamela S. Miller, Reedsville,
and Keith E . Mlller, Coolville; Lisa
Renee Schneider, Tuppers Plains,
a nd Robert P. Schneider,
Middleport.
Filing for support was Patricia
McGougal. Cheshire , against
James Daniel McD o ugla s,
Pomeroy.
Man1ages dissolved were Dora
Ann Kirby and Joseph L. Kirby;
Brian E. Dobson and Brenda K.
Johnson; James':O. McDougal and
· Pamela J. McDougal. Pamela J .
McDougal was restored to her
maiden nameo!PamelaJ. Garnes.

'·

"A 1

za eas yactn S
"Caladiums "Hydrangeas 'Mums 'Daffodils
. $}. 25 to $8.00
.
. '
Large selection of Foliage Plants and Hanging Baskets.
$}. 00 to S7, 75
I 185

·•

End marriages

GALLIPOLIS - Filing for marriage tlils past week in Gallla
·county Probate Coun were R,obert
J. Eutsler, 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
student, and 'Terry J . Walter, l7 1 85
Garfield Ave., student.
Also filing for a license were
Bruce M. Rayburn, 22, Rt . I, Point
PleaSant, constructlolllaborer, and
Re~a L. Metz, :11, Eureka Star
Rout!:, waitress.

ARD'S GREENHOUS

.
.
.
Buffalo planter.
He wlll coordinate ihe equipment
so It Is at the right place at the right
.time.
Also, Gary wlll help to calibrate
and adjust equipment so tlujt
successful seeding operations are
achieved.

,:~

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU APRIL 2, 1983

Sheriff
•
Issues
•
warning

Deputies check
t·wo break-ins

.
The Buffalo 2-row no-ttll corn
planter is available for this year's
planting seasori. The Meigs SWCD
Is Interested .In promotlong notlllage and minimum tillage cropping operations to help reduce
cropland erosion.
Presently, one out of four cropland ares have excessive erosion
rates. The SWCD hopes lhatthe)IS€
.

'

!Ions. An extension bulletin on
no-ttllage pasture and hayland
renovation outlines a 10-step re·seeding procedure. With the large
acreages of.pastureland and hayland In Meigs County, this renovation procedure may fit your
operation.
Arother area the drlli will be
useful for is seeding cover crops on

: · POMEROY- With spring aniv)ilg It Is time to make final decisions
cropland, hayland and pasture
itoo practices. Items such as
i:onservatloil ttllage, no-t!h seed·
.~ and erosion control measures
are all Important considerations.
~ The Meigs SoU and Water
rJonservatlon District (SWCD) has
available for rent to Meigs County

oo

POMEROY - Meigs Coun ty
Sheriff James .J. Proffitt Sa turday
issued a warning to trash ha uie;s
who are allegedly dropping trash
along the roads a nd highways while
on the collection routes or enroute
to the la ndfiU .
Deputies will be checking for
viola tors who will be issued citations to the Meigs County Court on
charges of insecure load. The
penalty for insecure load is a fine of
not more than $100 for the first
offense and a 30 day jail term
and/ or a fine up to $250 if a second
offense occurs within one year.
Sheriff Pro.ffitt suggests tiaulers
not havjng covered trucks to cover
the load with a tarp to keep the
trash from blowing off the truck.
He also seeks coopera tlon fr om
county residents ln helping curb the
illega l dumping along the roads.
Residents are asked to try to g~t a
good description not only of the
vehicle, but also of the people
involved along with license plate
number, make, and color of the
vehicle.
Penalty for lllegal dumping is a
jail term of up to 60 days and/or a ·
fine of up to $500.
The sentencing court may in
addition to or in lieu of the jail term
and/or fine, require the person to
remove . the lllegaliy deposited
litter.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-7

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

7.97 9.97

.. " .•

Little Oscar
Cooler by Coleman.

Save.

· ·

1913

'

.

�Pa~A-8

l'llora H. Cummi":S
Mildred L. Moore
MIDDLE PORT .. Mildred L.
Moore. 62. Middleport . died Friday
eve11ing a t Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
She was a daughter· of .Julius a nd
Ma ry Mondry Mager. A daughter.
Juli(' Munson. preceded h('r in
death.
Surviving are a sori, .Jei·ry Ray
Moore. Columbus: her father-inlaw and mother-in-law. Ray and
Ev&lt;'lyn Woffond of Middleport, and
Sf'V(Iral Flieces.

new phews

POMEROY - People who owe
delinquent property taxes wlll find
they not only wtJ1 have to pay those
taxes, but a new charge of 10
percent annual interest.
The new annual Interest which
has been added has accrued
Interest as of Dec. 1, George
Col11ns. county treasurer, reports.
According to Collins several new
areas of law were passed by the
Ohio General Assembly last year
concerning real estate taxes. The
Interest charge is to. be applied In

two parts.
For example, If your tax is QJO
per year or $100 per half year, and
there is a prior delinquency a
penalty of $20 w1ll be charged.
If no taxes were paid this year,
the first half would cost $100 plus a
$10 penalty or $110. For the second
half, if not paid would cost $100 plus
a $21 penalty or a total of $231.
The prior delinquency phis the
$231 would make a payment for the
first and seeond half In the amount
of $451.

By TEJUlY KINNEY

said. "The truth is, we just have
vezy little Industry ."
The Hercules Trouser Co., which
used to employ about lnl workers,
closed its factory In Manchester a
year ago. There has beep oothlng to
take its place, although former
employees have been trying to put
•.ogether the money to buy and
operatethefactozy.
There used to be !&gt;Qme construe·
tlon In the county, but that's
dwindled away. Those projects,
Including electricity generating
plants along the Ohio River, have
been completed.
Blake,aphannaclstlnaddltlonto
being mayor, said West Union's and
Adams County's problems would be
small, lndivldually. But collectively
they have become a monster.
·

As!loclated Press Wrller
WEST UNION, Ohio (AP)
Even In the best of times there
aren'tenoughjobslnAdamsCounty
to go around.
There never has been much
Industry, and now troubles at two of
the area's major employers have
helped boost the county jobless rate
to the highest In Ohio.
Adams County, which lies near
theooutherntipofthestatealoilgthe
Ohio River, had a state-high 23
percent average unemployment
rate In 1982- nearlydoubletheOhlo
average.
In January, the county's unemployment rate jurnped6 percentage
points from December - to 32.5
percent of the work force, com·
pared with the Ohio average of 14.9
percent.

Re,. Georgi' Oiler

Apply Aug. 1, Interest that bas
accrued from Dec. 1, last year to
Aug. 1, 1!831n the amount of $14.67
and apply Dec. 1, Interest that
accrued from Aug 1, to Dec. l, In the
amount of $15.51 makes a grand
total of $481.18.
This amounts to $81.18 In penal·
ties and Interest on :/0.3 percent for
the tax to go delinquent one more
year.
CQUlns said for the first half of
1982 a tptal of $2,1112,671.56 was
coUected. Of the total amount
$114,162.22 was fi'Opl delinquent

taxes !rom a former 'Year,
$1,822,009.41 was current December 1982 taxes and $146,475.93
was collected for JUDe 1982 payment ot taxes.
At the end of collectlolis for the
first half of 1982 delinquent taxes
from former years showed a
balance of $333,235.52. Unpaid
December taxes ~hawed a balance
of $156,314.61.
The treasurer's omce colJected
92 percent ·of . Decl!mber taxes
leaving eight percent 1p1pald, Collins said.

MIDDLEPORT--A program on
recorded sound over the past 100
years was presented by Forrest
Turner. engineering s upervisor of
Gene ral Telepbone Co. of Ohio,
Frida y even ing when the
Middleport -Pomeroy Rotary Club
met a t Heath United Methodist
Church.
Turner showed a film ·with sound
ranging tram appearances by Witl
Rogers. The Shadow, Franklin
DeJano Roosevelt through the
computer sounds of the future .
Roger Luckeydoo, v icepresident.
was In charge of the meeting when
plans were made for members to
meet at Heath Church next Friday
evening prior to going to the
Bernard Fultz homewheretheywlU
eat. The group will then work on
prepartna
for the annual Easter~a
~
~ ....
hunt to be held at 1 p,m. Sunday at
HartiJl aer Park.
Dinner was S&lt;'l'Ved Friday &lt;'vening by womeJ! of the.

_,

By LEE ANN WELCH
'•'
Tlmes-&amp;ntlnel Staff
:•I GALLIPOLIS - When the Galli·
:! polis City Board of Education
· : moved into the old GaUia County
. : btstrict Library last week, they
: • imteredoneofthemosthistortcsltes

:: Jn town.

-I

300 Second Ave.

ROCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS

All'

BRAND NEW '83 PONTIAC 1000

•••

The Meigs 1,ocal Scmol Dtstrlct
wtll be observing a "Spring Break"
from march 28 throogh Aprll 1. ·
Students and teachers will not be In
a\tendance during this period.
Classes will resume on Monday,
AprU ~1be Mel~!" Local Schools are
sche&lt;IU8! to end classes for the
19112-83 schoOl year on Friday, May

.. ,..'grant.
:... ; ; ; Other efforts of the club to raise
• ••

..

the necessary funds to build a
library culmlnated In a women ·~
edition of the GalUpolls Journal . .
May1,1895.
The edition, a 16-page paper, .
Included a history of many instltu·
t!ons in town. and was decorated
with the hand paintings of Mrs. H.C.
Johnston and Mrs. Vanarden.
The land on which the building Is
situated presently was owned by the
Gallla' Academy Trustees and
originally donated to the Thursday
Club for the llbrary. Trustees
recently sold the building and land
totheschoolbaardforthetokensurn
of$1.
The library has been adapted to
meet theneedsoctheboard, with the
· addition of several walls enclosing
the former study area, and the
renovation of one meeting room by
partitioning off areas to adapt to
offices for the variousservices oft he
board.
Joseph D. Carter. superintendent
of schools, said the building now
houses offices for himself. the
treasurer, school psychologist. director of curriculum, director of
transportation a nd purchasing.
After passing the globe lamps
outside, and walking through the
large double doors from the outside,
. people fln!l themselv~ in the

rotunda area of the old llbrary.
ArOund the center 11te oak
columns, freshly varnished, topped
w!thwttatappearstobehandcarved
flourishes , but actually made of
·
plaster.
. Edging the lower half of the
rotunda are scallops, and looking up
and beyond, there is a ceiling fan
where a stained glass window used
to be. That window was removed
and has been relocated to the Dr.
Samuel L. Bossard Distrtct Library
bulldlng at-651 Second Ave.
In the center of the building are
walls extending from either side of
the rotunda. In the walls, at least six
feet 11bove the Door level, are great
windows of heavy glass, the kind of
glass that can't be seen through
clearly at an angle.
What was formerly an open study
area has been waDed in and
changed to accommodate office
space.
On the right side of the building,
the meeting room remains truest to
Its original form, with only a drop
ceiling altering the interior.
The door which led from the room
Into the study area is trtmmed In
oak, with textured glass, arid a
window above which is separate
and pulls open. '
.
This meeting room also boasts a

gas fireplace, flanked by oak
columns and seemingly hand
carved swirls below a large shelf.
The is .also a recess above the
fireplace that could have been used
as a mantle.
On the other side of the buDding,
what had been a similar room has
been converted Into offices for the
different services of the board.
The rooms were IJ)ade functlona·
ble to the needs of the board to the
tune of $40,(XX), which was his
original estimate, Carter said.
The lndivlctual offices have' been
designed with the needs of the
personnel in mind, he added. A
major problem with their former

.....
..•.!'...I
. .'
.~

·:·

--..·.

..•.
· .If'

-.
••
·~

·Only $13142 Pe_r Month
Based on sale price of $568800 with s68SOO down plus applicable
saless tax and ti~e. 48 Monthly payments. 11.0% A.P.R.

LOVELY CORSAGES
THE F.T.D. "GLORY OF
SPRING" BOUQUET
A LARGE SELECTION

OF SILK AND DRIED
ARRANGEMENTS

EASTER IS APRIL 3
ORDER EARLY .

; Spring hreak sel
.

-: The columns, rotunda celUng and
; • scallops along the woodwork tell of
' bmes gone by, when the building
• was an educational center of the
' area. Now it wtll house the
• ectucational system.
· ' Located at Third Avenue and
State Street, the building was
CQliStru.c ted In 190&lt;1, an&lt;) occupied as
· a library the next year. It was the
; j:ulmlnatlon of a dream by the
·:p!Ursday Club. The club was a
l &lt;group of civlc·mlnded worrien;
• bound together for study and
1 :Jiterary reviews.
J.' A library was founded by the club
i ~ 1n 18!l!, and the ladies raised the
. ..;'funding for a building in a variety of
! ' ways, including an auction and a
; grant from the Ca rnegl,e
' . ,Foundation.
·
The first librar ian was Addie A.
•, •Vananden . who was a member of
' •jthe Thursday Club, and instrumen; ~,tal in the acquisition of the Carnegie

•!'

· Ph.

LILIES
·AZALEAS
TULIPS
HYACINTHS
BEGONIAS
MUMS, PLANTERS

.
*Reclining bucket seats
*Rallye wheels
*AM Radio
*Rack &amp;pinion steering

*4 speed trans.
*Cut Pile Carpeting
*Mini front consol ·
*42 M.P.G. Hwy.

~ · MPG EPA

PHONE 446-668.1
or 446-4848

WE DELIVER

SMELTZERS
Garden Center and Flower Shop
453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
Just west of Holzer' Hospital on U.S. 35.

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27.
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1983

Old library has new life as school district home

\.\;;~~~- ~F~~te;"""~;L~~~o~l~u~K~ro~~~c~&lt;~~~;;;;~~~~i;;;J,,j

: POINT PLEASANT - Funeral
"services will be held at 2 p.m. today
inCrow·HusseliFuneraiHomehere
for Wilbur H. McKown, 74, Rt " 2,
Letart, who died Thursday at his
home following a brief illn~s.
Burial will be In Kirkland Memorial
Gardens .
'
• He was bOrn in Roane County to
: the late Issac and Jenny McClain
• Mc)&lt;own. He was a retired em•
ployee of the Union Carbide Alloy
: Division. and issurvivedbyhiswlfe,
Gav. a son. live daughters, three
· sisters a nd seven grandchlldren.

---

The newest Spring
styles and delicate
colors await your selection at Bernadine's.

.Marm 27

NEW HOME - Gallipolis
City School Dl&lt;~trict employees
finished moving furniture and
other ofllces suppHes from the
district's headquarters In the K
of BuDding at 4G3 Second Ave. w
the remodeled Gallla County
District Ubrary at the comer ol
1ltlrd Avenue and State Street
during the latter part of last
week. Interior renovation began
on the 'll).year-old structure
shortly alter the Gallla
Academy Trustees1 the buDding' s owner, made a gift ol it w
the ·district lor a token Sl last
December. While work remains
w be done on the exterior
(LEFT), the lnSide has been
redone to keep some of the
structure's tum-of-the-century
Oavor. Among those touches
preserved were the old mantelpi~ Wid fire place (BELOW,
right) and a globe suspended
from the electric fWI in the
celll,ng. ·The buDding wa'l used
brieRy In 1981 by the co.unty
juvenile-probate court oflices
following the fire that destroyed
the old wbtg of the courthouse.
The spaciousness found here
contrasts with the cramped
suite of offices the district
occupied alter it moved from
Washington Elementary School
bt 1976, a move necessitated by
the closing of old Washington
Elementary, slated for demoiJ.
lion at the end of the cliiTent
school year. District officials
said the board of education wlU
continue meeting bt Washing·
l.on' s library. An Op€n house is
being considered .for the near
future. (PhOtos by Lee Ann
Welch).

Rotarians review
•
l
mUSI.Ca program

FRATERNAL LIFE INSURANCE
FAMILY SECURITY

Wilbur H. McKown

nday

Let Bernadine's help
you choose a beautiful new· dress from ·
our complete line of
Jrs., Petites, Misses
or HaH sizes.

Good Idea!

POMEROY - Clyde E . King, 6R,
Olsburg, Kan .. died at 3:30 p.m.
Thursday In Manhattan, Kan.
Born Aug. 3, 1914, in Ohio, hewas
truck driver and member
MLshawa ka lind. l Masonic Lodge.
Surviving are two daughters.
.Judith Ann Roush of Columbus. and
Paula Sue Mora of Raci'ne: three
sons. Ceorge M. of Olsburg, Clyde
A. of San Bernardino. Calif., and
P•u l S. of Springfield : and two
broth&lt;:'rs. Glenn of Ocala. Fla .. and
. .S) h:t:'Ster pf Nashville. Tenn . · Pri\'at&lt;' serv ices will be held
Monday. with burial In Bradford
O::metery. Friends may call at
Ewing Fum•ral HomPirom 1-3 p.m.
Monda_,..

Section~

This
Easter

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HO ME OFFICE •

theri

and

couSins.
Services will be he ld at 10 a.m.
Tuesday at the Rawlings· CoatsBlower Funeral Home withtheRev.
James B. Kittle officiating. Burial
will be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral .
home from 6 to 9 p.m . bOth on
Sunda)· and Monday.

Ml DDLEPORT-·The Rev .
George s , Oiler, 81, Racine. died
early Saturday morning at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was bOrn March 11. 1902 at
Larry K. Frasher
Ewlng1on, a son ofihe late Andrew
GALL !POLIS - Larry Keith J. and Mary Hutchinson Oiler. He
was also preceded in death by his
Frasher. 27. Rl. 3. Gallipolis, died In
first wife, Georgie Frazier Oiler.
a n'alfic accident near Gallipolis
three brothers and a sister.
Sa tunday morning.
At the time of his death, the Rev.
Bam March 11. 1956. son of
Edward and Bertha Akers Frasher, Mr. Oiler was the minister of the
who bOth survive. he was a Kyger Syracuse Church of God. He had
Creek plant employee · and a been a minister for 59 years serving
"Ihaveno!~awhywetooks.ucha
member of First Baptist Church of severa l churches over that period.
He
also
had
been
the
owner
and
bigjump,"saldVeraMcCarty,who
Gall !polis.
headis the Ohlo Bureau of EmployHe married Deanna Lynn Terry, operator of coal mines In both Meigs
and
Galli
a
Counties
for
&amp;)years.
He
ment Services omce In the county
who survives. on Sept. 2. 1978. at
wasamemberoftheWestVirginia
seatofWestUnlon.
Wise, Va.
and
Ohio
Ministerial
Associations
.
"We have had no mass layoffs In
Also surviving are a son, Travis
Surviving
art' his wife, Virginia L.
the
last month to accountfor It,' ' she
Jay, at home; and four sisters, Jean
OUer,
Racine:
a
daughter.
said.
''Thelastblglayoffwehadwas
Gibbs
Runyan, J anice Kerns and Rebecca
Mrs.
Ithamer
(Mona
Lee)
Neal.
aboutelghtmonthsago."
Lewis. all of Gallipolis. and Rita
Middleport; a son, Gene Oiler.
That was at the Copeland Corp.
Davis of Hilliard.
Middleport;
two
granddaughters.
plant
near West Union, which
He was also preceded in death by
·.Janet Russell, Pomeroy, and Lisa
makes compressors for air condl·
a brother. Dale.
Oiler,
Middleport:
a
grandson,
Eric
tloners. That workforceofabout500
Funera l services will be held at 1
Oiler,
Middleport;
a
great
was slashed by more than400.
p.m. Tuesd ay in First Baptist
grandson.
Ryan
Russell,
Pomeroy:
"We didn't. have that bad a
Church of Gall ipolis, with Rev.
a
stepaaughter,
Karen
Lyons.
summer
lal;t sununer, and they're
Joseph Godwin officiating. Burial
Racine:
two
stepsons,
Mike
Nease,
not
making
compres,oors like they
will be in Salem Cemetery, near
Pomeroy,
and
Mitch
Nease.
Ra·
were
for
their
air conditioning
Gage. Friends may call a t Willis
units," explained Mayor Bob Blake.
Funeral Home from 7·9 p.m . cine: four step-granddaughters,
Melanie and Amber Lyons. Racine,
Adams County's population was
Monday.
and Cassie and Jennifer Nease,
24,:nl when the 19lll census was
Pomeroy: two sisters, Clara Short,
taken. Mrs. McCarty said the
Glenna Flower
county's workforceisconsklered to
Florida, and Lenora Jenkins, Syrabe 9,00 people. Of those, 6,l..ll are
cuse, a brother, Marlon Oiler, Little
OAK HILL- Glenna Flower, 49, Hocking, and several nieces and
workln·g.
Rt. 3, Oak Hill, died Thu rsday at nephews.
"I really don't know how they
Holzer Medical Center.
come
up with those figures," Mrs.
2
Bom in Lawrence County to Tut"Sday at the Rawlings- Coats- . McCarty said, noting that people .
will be held atthe Rev.
p.m.
Services
Ralph and Elizabeth Yates Flower. Blower
FuneraiHomewith
mayflleforunemploymentbenef!ts
In any county. "We've had a little
she was employed by the Buckeye David F'ields officiating. Burial will
H!tlsCareerCmwr.
be In Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Jess (oWcetrafflc) than last month.
Survived by one daughter. Nancy Cheshire. Friends may ca 11 at t he
"But that doesn't.mean.anythlng.
Stiverson of .Jackson: two sisters.
Some
people could have exhausted
Eloise Llluis of Oak Hill and Cher ie funeral horne from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Holbrook of Hamilton: one brother. ~p_.m_.bo_th_o_n_s_un_d_a,;_y_a_n_d_M_o_n_d_ay_.__th_e_lr_un_em_p_Joymen
___
t _ben_efl_ts_:_·_sbe---t
RandyFiowero!Hamilton: and two
grandchildren.
The funeral was held Saturday at
the Trinity Weslt&gt;yan Church in Oak
Hill. Burial was in the C.M.
Cemetery. Arrangements were
made by Kuhner-Lewis Funeral
· Horne.
· Memorial contributions may be
FOR
made to the American Cancer
Society. Jackson County unit .
MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA

Clyde E. King

•

Delinquent taxpayers face penalties too

Area deaths
POMEROY --Mrs. Nora Heilman
Cummins . 82. Gra ham Road,
Rrvnoldsburg, formerly of Meigs
Co~nt y . died Friday at Mt. Carmel
Hospital. Columbus.
Mrs. Cumm ins w~s bornSept.12.
1900 on Bunker Hill. a daughter of
the Ia!&lt;' Grorge and Flora GnoenlN
Heilman. Besides her parent s. s he
was p~eded in death by her
husband .. lames Cummins. and two
brothers
Surviv ing are a daughter. Mrs.
Edward tEllrnl Havnes. Vancouwr. Washington; a son . .James.
Columbus; three sisters. Mrs .
Jessie ,Carr, Portsmouth: Mrs .
Myrtle Carman, Grove City, and
M;,. Neva King. Pomeroy: slx
grandchildren and one great grandchild.
Mrs . Cummins was a school
trarher
In Meigs.( 'ount y lor severa l
.
years.
Memorial servic&lt;'S wil l be held at
2 p.m . Monday a t the United
Methodist Church, Graham Road,
Reynoldsburg. The family requests·
that nowers be omitted.

March 27, 1983

Pomeroy Middlefl.C!I!-Gallipolis, Ohio-Pvint PleaSGnl, W.Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

••

·J'

location, the K pf P Building at 463
·Second Ave .• . was prtvacy for
meetings with teachers and
parents.
·
That hurdle seetns to have been
surpassed with the move to the old
library. For large meetings, Car·
ter' s office is roomy enough, and the
Individual offices are ' ideal for
one-to-one ronferences.
"People are more productive
here," Carter said, "and the offices
are more accessable to the publ!c"
than at their old location .
Movl!lglnto thel!brary. he added.
doesn't just give the school distrrict
a permanent office, "lt preserves a

landmark within the community.':
The next phase of renovation is
the outside. he said, which wlll be
presered as is. They plan to paint the
'llarge amount of wooden trim along
the upper part of the building's
exterior.
What started as a place of
serenity and great volumes of
knowledge has become the place of
leadership for the education of
today'syoung people.
From Its very inception, the
bulldingstandlngatThlrd and State
has served the needs of the people of
Gallipol!s and Gall1a County, and .
today is no exception.

�Mordt 27, 1983
Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Vo.

Page-8-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mordt 27,

198~.

Community Corner
After spring's opening, · a winter chill

Beat of the Bend
Pomeroy-Middleport · Easter egg hunt · slated next Su11day
David Nease. WJS honored recl'ntl)'
The annual Easter egg hunt of when he was awarded the Ralston
thl' MiddlepOrt -Pomeroy Rotary Purina Co.'s "Distinguished Daif)··
Club will be held at 1 p.m. next man of America" award for thl'
record hf' Psta blished as an out ·
Sunday at Harting('r
standing
milk producer.
Mean tim!',
As
his
awa
rd. Kmsc received a
club members
blu&lt;'
blaz&lt;'r
which
carri&lt;'S a dist inc·
will be wOrking
live " Distinguished Dairyman"
this wet&gt;k getting
· crest ·and a s(X'C'ial cet11ficate in
all of the prizes
recognition of his achiC'vement.
and egg s to ·
Nease's hC'rd of prlmarii)· regisgether for the
..
tered
Jcr·se)• cows. with a rolling
event which has gone on
herd
awrage
of 1:1,284 pounds of
each E:astE'!".
mi
lk.
placed
in
the top five percent
: Assisting club members - as
usual - will be members of thc in production for the Jersey breed
Middleport Voluntecr Fire Depart· in thC' Ohio DHlA standings. In hLs
n;ient . The golden egg this year is hC'rd are several cows producing
\I!Orth a $:5 cash prize; the silvC'r over 20.000 pounds of milk in less
ligg, SlO and the bronze egg. $10. than :\Q.'i days. each y ielding' over
Hundreds of plastic eggs hidden for 900 pounds of buttertat.
Jim CartC&gt;r- no, not .Jimmy- of
tOe hunt will contain sUps of paper
\.:hlch can be excha nged tor prizes Carter Feed and Grain. Inc.,
f'rankfo11 , presented Nease with
~epu rt esv of Big Bend merchants.
the awa rd. Nease and hi$ partner.
· A- well -known -local dairyma n, f'red Nease, are helped by ·family

By BOB HOEFUCH

~

~

Calendar
SUNDAY

mcmbers. Dan. and third genera·
tion dairyman. Roger Nease.
Any Rutland High School class
having an anniversary coming up
at this )·ear's reunion should
contact .Joa n Stewart at 7&lt;12 242!.
.Jerry Balck at 742-2688 or Jim Fink
a l i42-2258- a nd SO&lt;)n.
Ric hard Meredith , Rl. 2. Pomc.
roy, will enter Holzer Medical
Ccnter Monday for his second ·
recent major surgery . The opera·
lion will be per formed on Tuesday
- the birthday a nniversary of his .
wife, Mary. Now I can think of a
good birthday present for her, can't
you? May all go well.
Seniors of Eastern, Meigs and
Southern high schools are invited to
enter an essay contest being
conducted by the Southeastern
Ohio Board of Realtors, Dottle
Turner, · Meigs County realtor,
announced.
There will be a $25 savings
account given the top winner in
each of the three schools and these
are provided by the Southeastern
Ohio Board of Realtors an(! Diamond Savings and will be at the

Diamond Savings and Loan.
The essay .theme Is " How
Widespread Home Ownership
Strengthens Democracy." Essays
are Umlted to 1,000 words or less.
The contest Is being held tn
conjunction with Private Property
Week, Aprtl 10.I6, an annual event
sponsored by Realtors and Realtor
Associates nationwide. ·

Mrs. Mildred Stump, the former
Mildred Russell of Middleport,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Russell, recently learned ctetalls of
the honors given by Middleport to
Gen. James Hartinger.
Shortly later, she learned that
General Hartinger was to speak at
which Is known as the "Round
Table" In Akron where Mrs. Stump
now lives. She secured tickets for
herseH and husband, Carl, to attend
the affair 'a t the Tangle'r
Restaurant.
Mrs. · Stump writes of the
experience:
"When I told our newspaper
photographer I wanted to get the
general's picture, he practically
shoved me Into the pressroom rtght
up to the general and introduced
me as '! lady from Middleport. We

: GRUBB family singers will be
«! ttie Sprlngfield Baptist church
in BldweU Sunday 7 p.m. The
public is invited.

had a very pleasant visit and we
told each other on what street we
were born and talked about a
former teacher." Mrs. Stump was
most Impressed with Hartinger's
graciousness.
About 400 people, most business
operators, _attended the Round
Table meeting.

by CHARLENE HOEFLICH
It happens every year'
After a hint of spring, along
comes the chill of wlnt!'r and the
last snow after the
forsythia blooms.
Now that we
have that over.
surely we can get
on to the balmy
days and gentle
breezes.

day of the anniversary as she has
for many years.
''
Those of you whose last

naines'"

begin with the Initials E, F~ or G
have through Thursday thls week '
· to get your new auto plate st~ckers, '

after that you're out of business. '
The deputy al!tomotive registrar' '
office is still on Mulberry Avenue in"
Pomeroy.
·

Mildred Fowler and her husband, the late Roscoe Fowler,
Middleport, would have observed
Thanks to a mild winter, a spring :
their 67th wedding anniversary
break finally worked out lor"
Tuesday. And - as sCi many of you · students of local schools. No'"
know - Norma Goodwin had a
wonder the young people
card In Mildred's hand right on the
smlling. Hope you are too!

are '

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:
WEIGHT CONTROL GROUPS
·

AComprehensive Propm
. ·
That Takes You Throuah All 3 Stales of Successful
.
Wei&amp;ht Control:
1. Weight loss 2. Siabilization 3. Maintenance
GAlLIPOUS AREA-Gallipolis DMI.-.1 C.W
Gym Buildil!l- III)NDAYS 6:30 P.l.
PT. PLEASANT AREA-ICnldel Pin

TUEQYS 6:30 P.l.
POMEROY AREA l•'f: Inn
TUESDAYS, 10:00 A.l. &amp; :30 P.I.

welcome.

MONDAY
VINTON - Vlnton Elementary School PI"C meeting Monday will be March 28 at 7 p.m.
t&gt;arents may view science pro~ts at this time.
: POMEROY - ABE classes of
P.omeroy and Middleport Li·
llrarles will be closed for spring
6reak beginning Monday
!Prough Apil I. C13$ses will
~swne the fi:&gt;IIowlng week.
: POMEROY

-

Tull&gt;rculln

sldn testing clinic will be held at
the Pomeroy Fire Statton. But.

temut Ave., Pomeroy·, from 5: 30
e .m. to 7:l:l' p.m. by Mrs. Joan
Tewksbary, R.N., Meigs County
:t'uberculosls Nurse.

Rothemich
heads CF
bike-at-thon
POMEROY -The Rev. Richard
RDthemlch has been named cystic
fibrosis bike· a -than chairman for
Meigs County by the Central Ohio
Cystic Fibrosis Assocla tlon.
The blke-a·thon has been set for
Saturday on July 23, at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. Sponsor
sheets will be available In May, and
the prize for getting the most
money will be a IO.speed bicycle.
A planning session for the fund
raiser has been s·e t by the J:!ev.
Rothemlch for Monday, 7: l:l p.m .
at Rock Sprtngs Church. Organizations are Invited to send representatives to the planning meeting and
all interested Individuals are urged
to attend .

SAVE t307

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42" round tale e.111 eri'd~ to 62" . Formica top,
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S48888
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·• EASTERN - Eastern At·
iitetr Boosters wDI meet Mon·
day at 7:30 p.m . at the high
school. All memtl&gt;rs who will be
tletptng with food are as~~ect to
. liave a TB skin \est taken
)!Jonday at the Pomeroy Fire
Station. Hours are 5: :ll p.m. to
1: 30 p.m.

"'

.•
SAVE $105

5-PIE&lt;:E DINETTE SET
Contemporarv 36K48"' llbfe extends to a lull
60". Handy wipe -clean top. Includes 4 SWivel

POMEROY - Meigs Athletr
Boosters meeting, Monday ev·
enlng at high scmol, rather than
1tJesday evening.

. TUESDAY
; RAONE - Southern band
wUI meet Tuesday at 7 p.m . In
tbe band room.

· IS NOW OPEN

l'()MEROY - Revival services at Point RoCk Church of the ·
wiD start at 7: l:l p.m .
Tuelday, The pubUc Is btvlted. .

Nazarene

Mark Miller, son of William and
Sally Wilson Miller, and grandson
of Mr. and l\1rs. W. W. Wilcox, who
ll,ved on Pearl StJ"('('t in Middleport
before moving to Sandusky, has
made his m ark in wrestling.
Reminiscing via greeting cafds
Mark is on the wresting team of
may seem a strangP thing to do, but
Perkins High SChool and last week
for Ruby Hallida)·. the 120 she
captured the Class AA district
received on her 90th birthday was.
wrestling championship a t the
in . essence. a "happy visit" with
tpurnament In Toledo. His loss on
BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13
friends and acquaintances, many
t~e state level was attributed by his
Call for Information
roach at least partlaUy. to a bout · of whom shP hadn't been In contact
with
.for
years.
with• tile flu. A senior at Perkins.
1-221-5379
For Mrs, Halliday, each card
Mark received the most valuable
was· special particularly since her
w[l:'stler award a t a banquet there
Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N. Maggied
Tuesday night.
declining health doesn't permit hPr
Attorneys-At-Law
to be out and about these days.
•
8 E. Broad St.
· So it' s vacation time already; for
Columbus.
OH . .43215
5ome. at least.
·
'
Our congratulations to Nara a nd
Don and Mary Lisle of Syracuse Henry Hartman who tomorrow will 1 ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!'!!!!~
observe their 25t h wedding !have returned from a l(}day trip to
a nniversary.
San Diego where they visited
rj?latives. Mr. a nd Mrs. Ferrold

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ANSWERS.

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•••
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•Mini World
eNannett

UNDER NEW
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For More lnformaiiC!n Call The Fabric Shop
or Meigs
Cooperative Extension Service
A.PPFO/ED

'foi~PENOENT

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PEKING (AP) - Five young
bicycle thieves wUI knoW to keep an
eye out for television cameras If
they ever try todlsposeofloot again .
Liang Zhusbeng, a rural oHlclal,
was watching a television news
program showing a trattlc jam In
Canton when he noticed some
youths In the background throwing
bicycles Into a fish pond.

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Caught by camera

~

OFF
LEE

For

endings.
The scene Is a secluded old
manor house on the English
The Barter Players are presentcountryside, now being run as an
ing this classic thrUier at It should
inn. A group of mysterious guests
be seen; with a top professional
arrive for the weekend . Word
cast from the worlds of Broadway,
comes of a murderer at-largeln the
film, and television. To effect the
vicinity. Soon, a blinding snow·
appropriate atmosphere, Barter
storm cuts oH all access to the
designers have created an Impresroads, leaving the group Isolated. A
sive elegant manor house setting,
scream! Another victim! 'The
complete with rich paneling,
murderer Is In the house!
leaded glass windows and lolly
The world famous Barter Play·
ar.;hways, and costumes that
ers take delight In presenting their
captilre the flavor of the 1940s.
touring production of "The MouSeAudiences looking tor an entertrap,' the tremendously successful ' tainlng evening, tull of tun and
mystery thrUI by the "Queen of
surprises, will be sure to find "The
Crime" Agatha Cluistle. This
Mousetrap" a treat.
exciting "whodunit" comes to
Make a date on Monday, Aprtlll,
Ravenswood, Monday. Aprllll, at 8
to see Agatha Christie's "The
p.in. at the Ravenswood High
Mousetrap" at RavensWood High
School Audltorturn, sponsored by
School Audltortum at 8 p.m . For
the Jackson Arts Councll.
ticket lnformaton, call JAC at
The ortglnal production of "The • 273-5105 or 372-4744.
Mousetrap" Is currently In its 30th
T'hl.S program Is presented with
year on the London stage, making It
financial assistance through an
the longest running play in theatrt·
Arts arid Humanities Grant from
cal history.
the Department of Culture and
History.
AUdiences have great fun trying
to guess the murderer's Identity, as r-;;;;~;;:~~~~~===:;1
the eccentric guests, and even the
young couple who rwi the Inn, all
come under suspicion. Several of
the characters are not what they
.
.
seem, and secrets are ·revealed In
their lives which lead to the
surprise discovery of the killer, IIi
POOL KITS
one of Christie's cleverest twist

-..•

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

'411! be Mon&lt;)ay at the school.
1'he exhibits will be open to the
Wbllc from 6: ill to 8 p.m., and
tile presentatkm of awards will
~ at7p.m.

.

'

•

The North
Gama High School science fair

• GAlLIPOLIS - North Gallla
High School will be the slteofthe
I~ All-County · Science Fair
Ttfesday. Gralles nine through .
U wtll he partlcipat~.
.
:·POMEROY- ReVIval servl·
ces at Point RoCk Church of the
Nazarene will start at 7: l:l p.m.
Tuesday. The llllbUc Is inVIted.

..
,,

.• GAlLIPOLIS -

GAlLIPOLIS -An organiza.
tiona! meeting for the 1973
GAHS class reunion will be
~esday, 7 p.m ., at I4 PortsrQouth Rd. For Information call
4464678. All Interested please
attend.

$44444
Rec. $649.95

Have a .n ice week!

SWIMMING POOLS
TO SWIMMING

..

caster armchairs covered in durable vinyl,

l

..

in animal costume, do a fa ntastic
job. we're told. Cathy Rlggs. Mary
Ann McClung· and Chris Rouse
have been in charge of getting it all
together.
As a part of the Holy Week
program at the Senior Citizens
Center. Wayne Turner of Rutland
will show slides of the Holy Land at
I p.m . on Thursday.

After weeks of practicing, the
childrm"s choir of the Middleport
First Baptist Church made their
debut in .an Easter cantat a, "His
Fleec!' Was White as Snow"
Thursday at Pomeroy Health Care
Center. bn Tuesday, the youngs·
ters will perform at the Senior
Citizens Center at 10: 30 a.m. and on
Wednesday evening and Frlday
a ft ernoon a t the church.
ThE' more than l:l youngsters, all

WAREHOUSE SALE

-

: POMEROY - OH KAN Coin
Oub wUI meet Monday at
Rlverroat Room of Diamond
~vlngs and Loan Co. , W. Main,
l?omeroy; social hour and· tradl!Jg session precedes 8 p.m .
meeting. A 33-lot coin aucti&gt;n
tOllows. Refreshments will be
~rved . All interested In coins or
paper currency invited.

Harden and J udy and Stevl'n
Merion. They drove to West
J&lt;'fferson. spent the night with their
son. Keith. and his tmaily.' and then
went. on to Warren, Mich .. where
they were joined by Mrs. Lisle's
brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Kendall for the flight to
San Diego.
Jlighlighl s of their vacation
included a shopping spro" in
Tlajuana. a trtp on the trolle.v, a
visit to the San Diego .zoo. a quilt
show, a garden club meeting where
they heard flower songs on zotos b)'
Japanese girls In native attire, and
tours of Point Lamao. Ocean
Beach. and Old Town San Diego.

Barter Players to show
Christie's (Mousetrap'

-

.
· " CROWN CITY - King's
~apei Church will have family
Sunday 7 p.m. Special singing
will _be by the Heirs of Christ.
The Rev . John Jeffery invites
thepublic. _
--- GAlLIPOLIS
.
- Revival ser·
vices willll&gt;gin at Patriot United
l?feth,odlst Church Sunday
through Thursday. The Rev. :
Wellard · Graham will be t)le
~angell.&lt;;i. Servres will be :at
'r. 30 p .m . nightly. All are

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va.

OPEN MON.-SAT. TILB P.M .

735 2ND AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-2601
STORE HOURS:
. 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY
PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUN., MARCH 27th THRU SAT., APRIL 2nd
•QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

•'

�March 27, 1983 · ·

Page--8-4--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

From Consumer Reports

Astrograph
Mareh 27, 1983
This coming year a realization that certain areas of your lite have
proven fruitless will motivate you to plow fresh fields . The new, rich soU
could yield a r ewar ding harvest.
.
1\RIES {March 21-Apr1119) It won 't prove tQ your advantage today
to trv to hide mistakes. II you 've done something that turned out wrong,
sCf'k assistance in recitlfylng lt.
.
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) Try to be as candid as possible today
when dealing with one you love. Tell what needs to be said , rather than
endorsing his or her errors.
GEMINI {May 21-JWie 20) It will be best to say 'No" up front today
instead or agreeing to do something, when you might not be able to
fo llow through. Strive to be sincere.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Tasks which seem difficult today could
~ven be more so· tomorrow, so you don't gain any advantage by
po:istpo ning them . Bite the bullet a nd get going.
, .
,
LEO .( July ~Aug. 22) Be good to yourself today, but don t (eelit s
necessary to cater to all of your whims and fancies. Self-Indulgences
could prove costly.
VlfWO (Aug. ~Sept. 22) Situations revolving around the family
today could become confusing and complicated. Unfortunately, you
may be the principal contributor. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) In rnatters affecting your security, there's
a chance you'll be more tuned to the ·negatlve than the positive today.
.
Look for bright spots.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Someone you don't k!IOW too well might
approach you today with a n enticing business proposition. Check
everything thoroughly before becoming Involved.
·
SAGfiTARIUS (Nov. 2:J-Dec. ~l) It will be very difficult to get
away with anything today that others deem unethical. Do everything In
accordance with your highest standards.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 18) Be very selective of your
associations today, lest you be drawn Into an Intrigue not of your
making. Avoid t ricky tyws.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2~Feb . 19) Don't do business today with any
firms or persons whose reputation Is questionable. There's a chance
you could be added to their list of patsies.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It's not to your benefit today put too
much faith In a fltmsy alliance. lilt did not withstand the test of trials
before, it's not apt to do so now.

Checking for
By the Eaon
of Coaauiner R !I •
,
Most cheeseburgers and grilled ',
cheese sandwiches are made witll
sUces of "Ainerlcu cheese" -

·Group to meet
MIDDLEPORT - Concerned
Citizens for Youth will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the Victory Baptist
Church , Second Avenue, In
Middleport.
The meeting follows several
months of sessions by concerned
citizens from the county who are ·
making an effort to do something
concerning the drug problems In
Meigs County.
Those attending the sessions
have received instructions on drug
abuse and have learned the legal
aspects of the Issue.
Through the efforts of the group a
Fellowship of Christian Athletes
Association has been founded at
Meigs High School.
At Monday night's session the
group will fill the positions of a
meeting coordinator, one who will
be responsible for organizing ahd
promoting the m eetings; an assistant coordinator, one who will assist
the meeting coordinator and serve
d~ng that person's absence and
the secretary-treasurer post. Specific goals will also be defined at the'
meeting.
All interested persons are Invited
to attend. Anyone with questions
call 992-6875.

GAlLIPOLIS - Activities tbr
the week of March 28-AprU 1 at the
Senior Citizens Center located at
2:00 Jacklon Pike are as follows :
Monday, March 28 - Chorus, 1-3
p.m .
Tuesday, March 29 - S.T.O.P.
· Class, io:3Q a .m .; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m.
Wednesday, March 30 - VInton
Bible Study; Card Games,1-3 p .m.;
American Literature Class, 1 p.m.
Thursday, Mareh 31 - Bible
Stully, 1111.m .-noon; Vinton )3lood
Pressure Check.
Friday, Aprll 1- Stall Meeting,
8: 15-8: 45 a .m .; Good Friday Service, 12:30 p.m.; Art Class, 1-3
p.m .; Craft Mint-Course, 1-3 p.m.;
Soctai Hour, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Aprll 2 - Yoga Class,
10:30 a.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program
will setve the following menus:
Monday - Chill, crackers celery
sticks, applesauce, cornbread,
peaches and cookies, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Chicken/ gravy,
ma.shed potatoes, green beans,
bread, fruit, butter, milk.
Wednesday -Hamburger, com,
lettuce salad, bun , pudding, butter,
milk.
Thursday '- Pork cutlet, apples,
greens, biscuits, gelatin cubes/ whipped cream, butter, milk.
Friday - Baked steak/gravy,
mashed potatoes, peas, bread,
cherry cobbler, butler, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
· "Meals subject to change without

~had

a cheddary flavor and aroma.
Many also had "cheese bite" -the
feeling on the tongue that makes a
piece of sharp cheddar taste sharp.
(c) 1983. Consumers Union

·r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Bass®for Easter
White
Natural
· Red
Navy

The
Shoe CaJ!

;100 Second Ave.

1.~

Lafayette Mall

Gallipolis, 0 .

&lt;

sometimtt··t~~Six~b;randll~~tha~t~ra~ted~.~c~loses~~t~to~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~~~;;~

other cheeses. Pasteurized p~ ·•
cheddar, Colby alld
cheese food contallui less real ·
cheese; part-skin or hard grattnc
cheeses that- aren't allowed In
process American chee~ can be
used In cheese foods. Mllk, sklnl
milk, buttennllk, whliy and watd
also make up for the lack r1 cheese. ·
Pasteuri2Jed process cheese spread •
Is a process product with lel6
mllkfat and more moisture than.
cheese food .
A greeter variety at cheege{f

:m, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674,
r~~6~14~)~245-~53()l;;;·;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;l

warmer weather and increasing
outdoor activity, comes water
recreation. Many persons have
already begun to return to their
fi shing boats and canoes.
The Raccoon Creek Canoe Livery wlll organize the April 2
Clean-up at 10 a.m. Free canoes
1\111 be provided for organized
groups of persons who wish to
assist in the mafntenance of the
waterway. Chain saws, bow saws,
and ropes are needed for the log
. jams and everyone should plan on
bringing a lunch packed In a
waterproof container. The livery
staff will coordina te this effort, but
tools and Interested persons are
needed .
Raccoon Creek Clean-ups hav~
been organized for the past six
years with several local scouts and
outdoor enthusiasts helping In this
effort. Canoes, life jackets, paddles, and transportation will be
provided for the 10 a.m. departure.
For more information, contact the
Raccoon Creek Canoe Livery. P .0.

natural cheese were ]&lt;raft Sharp
Old English, Safeway, Kraft Deluxe American, Borden American,
Ann Page Mel-O-Bit American
from A &amp; P, and Pathmark. Ali six

to

Box

81

A MESSAGE FROM

Including cream cheese and cottage cheelle can be In a "spread."
Pasteurlald process "cheese product" typically Is much lower In !at
than the cilller process cheeses and

••·

THE MARK Of THE BEAST
William B. Ku11hn
Wisdom 11111 Undllltlndila
John said, "Here ;, u-iJdom. Let bim th.t hath

•rl&lt;krit•ndin~ co•oJ the

number of the beart: for iJ is the n:mnber o/11 man: And hiJ numherir Six hMrwireJ
th,.moreand Iix" {Rev. 13:18). Th~ message of Reveillion that promili!Jtl victory to the

IMPOSSIBLE!
Premium Quality Bedding
One Week Only

not~e."

.
Meigs sentors
.
plan acttvtttes

Sale Ends
Saturday
April

fi~t century church afli destruction

to her wicked ~ Uudaism, Romarism,
Heathenism) was written in code language so as to oonceal ti'is inlai IMtion !rom her
enemies. This vital information was revealed and fo be explained by inspift!d tEachers. The
fi~t&lt;:entury church, during the mii3Cuious age of inspiration, was blesslld wi1!1 prophets .
afli teache~ of the New Testtment who were endowed with s~ gifts 11 ')he word of
u;Idom." "the u•drd of kncu •ledge' 0 Cor. 12:8), ard ~ ' url&lt;krii•nd .Umyitetier" 0.
Cor. 13:2). Having reCeived these gifts by the laying on of the apostles' hands. they had the
power to discern that which the normal person could il!t Trey were able to understand
the mystenes concerning the trying experiences witil which they were then confronted
afli which we~e about to be folfiled. Th~ is wisdom, letting the spritually IDled prophets
aflileacher.; count the number of the beast
Tile llllst
•
Because of John's Hebrew training ard writing, he did use some of the Hebrew

2

to

POMEROY -The Meigs Center .
Senior Center Invites all elder ly of
the county
attend the scheduled
activities for the week of March 28
through Aprll 1.
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11: 30 a.m.; Square Dance,1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - Easter Party, ga rres
at 10: 30 a.m. Create your own
Easter bonnet and wear It for the
party- prizes will be given l:lr best
bonnets. Senior Nutrition Program
Easter dinner served at noon.
Wed.-Jay - Social Security
Representative, 10 a.m. to 12: 3Q
p.m .; Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a .m .;
Bingo, 1-2 p.m.
· Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.noon; Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a.m.;
Talk and slides on the Holy Land, 1
p.m. WayiP Turner will show slides.
taken on a trip to the Holy Land for
the Easter season.
Friday- Physical FltiEss,ll :30
a .m .; Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
The Senior Center Is open
Monday through Friday from 8: 3Q
a.m. l&gt; •= 30 p.m . Senior Nutrition .
Program meal ts served dally at
noon, please call 992-2161 for a meal
reserv atlon or reserve a meal when
you are attending the Center
activities the day beilre you plan to
eat.
Nutrltkln Prog~am menu for tbe

words: "And they h.d •

king ot·" them , which ii thf •ng•l of the bottomwii pit.
whose,.,. in the Helmw tongNe ;, AbA&lt;Idon. but in the. Gree~ r~~~~pe hath his
name Apollyn" (Rev. !U1). •And he g.the.-ed them together into • p/4&amp;e c.Jt.d in
the Hebrew roni(Ue Amur11eddon' {Rev. 16:16). ft is wthin the Helew code

language that the name of the beast ~ hidden. The Helnws assig!ltld numerical votue to
the Ieite~ of their lan~age. When yoo add the numeri:al value of the Hel!nw consonams
in the ·name of Neron Kesor {Nero Caesar), the total forms the exact numerical figure of

666: (N-!iO, HOO, C-6, N-50, K-100, S-60; R-200~
·
·
The Roman Empire was the sea beast of Vet!eS i thmugl18 of chapl!r 13; while the
land beast was JUdaism. The larli beast ~udaism) 'l¥lS under the complete jurisdiction of
the sea beast (Imperial Rome), and could do nothing wtllout the sea ~s assistance.
The beast ~ visuaized as the siKih .Uer in chapter 17, verse 10 ard II. Thi seven line;
~ the Caesar.; of Imperial Rome. Juius Caesar, woo was calitll t~ 'fllhe: of h.t, .
country," became the ~!-powerful ruler of Rome (Ill, 4911.C.- 44 B.C), 11111 from him the
title Caesar orieina1ed. The Caesars that fdtowed were Augustu~ Tilllrian, Caliguia,
Claudium, Nerv, Vespasian, and Titus. Juiu~ Augustus, Tlberius. CaligUI, and Claudius
were the 1M who had flllen ordlld. The "one u"is lin (H60, ard '"rloeocherilnoc
yet rome" would be the 7th and ath rulln WOO had not come 111 tile throne. This
identifies Nlro as the bust and corresponds with the number 666 ;.n ttl him, and
during whose reign the message came to John. Verse II expresses the continuous reign u1
the beast throuth the emperors of Rome after Nero's death and execulint !lis persecutive
power through them.
·
.
In the book, Caesar and Christ: by W~ Dulllnt ~~stated thatJotm "describes the
principate of Nero as precisely this Satan~ v ....Nero is the Beast all" ~of the .
book, a Messiah from Satan as Jesus was from God."

NOW IS-T HE TIME TO SAVE ONE HALF
TWIN

FULL

QUEEN

Each Pc.

Each Pc.

Set

24995

619~ 5

Su_ ...

Retail

KING
Set
79995_
-~ tH• ·itJI Ordr'r

l/2 price

9900
pc .

124~~
'

309~e?

Onl:;

399°0
set

week:

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER FURNITURE CO. ·
955 SECOND AV£.

446-1171

•

Monday - Tuna/ noodle casserole , mtxro vegetables, pineapple
and cottage cheese, bread, butter,
plums.
Tuesday - Easter dinner Baked ham , swee t potato,. lima
beans and corn, Easter egg , roll,
butter, angel food cake, pudding.
Wednesday - Beef stew, cole
slaw, cornbread, butter, peacn
crisp.
Thursday - Meat loaf, mashed
potatoes, beets, biscuit, butter,
butterst;()tch pudding.
Friday - Liver, onions, gravy,
potatoes, kale , breac;~, b.~tte(, ·
s trawbe'r ry gelatin · with -fruit
cocktaU.

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

(For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write..c.) ·

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
.

conne:s got 1t!

lulorito Rood • P.O. Bo• 301
G'ALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45131
Iunday Momlng
IIW. lbMiy 1 :30
Worelllp 10:30

.....

DELECrAIII.E OUOTONES.

·

·:......... frel'h

tt.liblt"
Dllf¥ -WJIH
11 :11A.M.

a;.._

Delightfully. combined by Gmnic to color you r feer in the mu;t
successful fashion duets of the season! Sling nr pump.

Nth! Til p.m.

"Tho Church with the Mo-ue"

HIS &amp; HERS
Hair Styling

Meigs bookmobile

For A New

Spring Look!!
Cbru Reyno/ds
,1IIt. Mgr.
&lt;

SLING

BIMs &amp; IF'!Jrte
BJ,~

&amp; White
Rose Bsi(&lt;e &amp; White

YOUR CHOICE

PUMP

Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Gallia seniors
weekly events

cheese· varieties

wlU:

Set annual creek cleanup
first
in April
has.been
time Saturday
when local
groups
clean the
up
debris and clear out log jams on
Raccoon creek. With the coming of

cu~rent

typically,
a cheddar-based
product calorie
has a COIIIent.
nallll! that lmplles a low
that's heated
so that It becomes
smooth and uniform. The "prbSome Imitation cheeses dl!fer
cessed" sUced cheeses look remar- !rom rep)ar process cheese bekably altke In supennarket dairy cauSe tiH!y substitute vegetable on
cases, but Consumer Reports food
for mllk~tat. These cheeses must
technologists say that you
Include the word Imitation on their
notice significant differences If you label- or llot be called ''cheese'' ·at
carefully read the labels.
all.
You'll find , for example, · that
Processed American cheeses
there are different rategorles at ofler consistency (the same taste
" process" slices ,..- pasteurl2ll!d , , time aftet' time) but they don't all
process American cheese; pasteu- · taste alike. Consumer Reports
rlzed process "cheete food "; pa5sensory consultants evaluated 22
teurlzed process "cheese spread";
brands ahd varieties. of the slices.
pasteurized process "cheese pro:
While they didn't expect the
ducts"; and, otherlmltation,substl- . process cheese~
have the taste
tute, or fabricated products.
and texture of a natural cheddar,
Pasteurized process Ainerlcan
they did want at least a hint of
cheese contains the most natural
cheddar. flavor and a generalized
Cheese. It's made trom ground-up
"dairy" taste.

to

RIO GRANDE - Annually, the

March 27, 1983

'

•

'

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs county Is brought by
· the .Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, March 28 Carpenter
(Laura's Store), 3:10-3:40 p.m.;
Dexter \Church), 4: 10-4: 40 p.m .;
Danvllle (Church), 5:20-5:45; Rutland (Civic Center), 6: Jl-8 p.m ..
short film wDI be shown 15 mlnu tes
after bookmobile arrl"es.
Tuesday, March 29 - Portland
(Post Office), 2: 10-2;40 p.m.; Letart Falls {Eflle's Restaurant),
3:05-3: iiO p.m.; Racine (Bank),
4: 35!.6: (fj. p.m ., short fllm will be
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arriVes; Syracuse (Pool),6::00-7:00
p.rn:. shllrt film wlll be shown l5
mlnutm after b&lt;lollm&gt;bUe•arrtves.
Wednesday, March 30 TU!IPers Plains (Arbaugh), 7:257:55 ' p.m.; Rlggscrest Addition,
8: 10-;8: 40 p.m.

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
TODAY
·MARCH 27
THROUGH
SATURDAY,
APRIL 2

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

85.Vine Street - Galipoli. Obi . Phone .446-9593
Resene the RtM to l)n~ Qualrtity"
-

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

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
AND MARK V

SUNDAYsta~Jill9 A.M.
TO 10 P.M.
1rt R..w The Ri&amp;ltt To Lillit Quantities

We Accept Feder~! Food

MIDDLE

tREDEEM YOUR . MANUFACTURERS MOiiEY)~---~~--~~
SAVING couPONs AT JOHNSON's ANo MARK v
AND RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE WHEN YOU
PURCHASE THE sPECIFIED ITEM. oNE coui!ON
PER ITEM. NO EXPIRED COUPONS ACCEPTED.
DOUBLE REOEMPTION OFFER DOES NOT APPLY
To ' FREE MERCHANDisr. couPoNs oR
COUPONS OVER 49' IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH
REFUNDS WHEN DOUBLE COUPONS VALUE
EXCEEDS PRICE OF ITEM. CIGARffiES AND
CERTAIN OTHER ITEMS ARE EXCLUDED BY lAW.
NO DOUBLE COUPONS
TO INSURE PRODUCT TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS,
ON WEEKLY
NE ARE LIMITING OUR "DOUBLE COUPON"
OFFER TO ONE JAR OF INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE
ADVERTISED
CAN OF
COFFEE PER SHOPPING
SPECIALS
n~~~R
GOOD

--·.~~~)~U~B~L
.-

- OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.-

tHURSDAY, MAR.
31
•
Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget ·

Pleaser
Special

Budget

Pleaser
Special

SUPERIOR

USDA CHOICE

EXTRA LEAN

BONELESS Ham
AVERN HAM

BEEF
RIB STEAK

GROUND
CHUCK ·

LB.

Your
Hometown
Supermarket

lB.

49
LB.

GRADE A

USDA CHOICE

WHOLE FRYERS

BEEF SHORT RIBS.

Budget
Pleaser

Budget

Budget

Special

Pleaser
S.pecial

Pleaser
Special

KAHN'S

SUPERIOR
DART

NORBEST
SELF-BASTING 12-15 lb.

HICKORY GROVE

BONELESS .
HAM

Whole

Ham

$ 39
·

LB.

SLICED
BACON

Pound
Pkg•

LB.

$1

3

19

$

HIUSHIRE FARMS

SUPERIOR

POllSH SAUSAGE

YOUNG
TURKEY

Average
While
They last

SUPERIOR

12 Ol.

KIELBASA .
Budget

· Budget
Pleaser

Pleaser
Special

39

10 LB.$

BAG

CAMPBEll'S

•r ..... ·

Pleaser
Special

CAUFORNIA

WASHINGTON STATE

PASCAL
CELERY

D'ANJOU
PEARS

JUICY

5

FRESH MUSHROOMS$}39

Budget
Pleaser
Special
ALL PURPOSE or

MEDAL
FLOUR
~~·~

Special

Special

MEAT
Budget
Pleaser

Special

COKE, ·SPRITE,
TAB, MR. PIBB

Plus

8-16 OZ. BTLS.

MR. p

COTTAGE
CHEESE

FROZEN

PIZZA
i:.Oz.

79¢

SUNNY MORN
GRADE A

EX. LG.
EGGs·

DOZEN

VIENNA

VEGETABLE SHORTENING ·- - . ·

Budget

Budget

Pleaser
Special

Pleaser
Special

ROYAL CREST

NORTHERN

9

2% MILK
HOT COCOA MIX

ROYAL CREST

89¢

SHURFINE

GALLON PlASTIC

BIMtget PleMer Special

BAG

ARMOUR

CARNATION

240z.$}29

¢

CAN

3 LB..

WINESAP APPLES
Budget
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12 oz.

LB.

. U.S. NO. I

Budget
Pleaser

20¢ OFF lABEL

ARMOUR

Budgefl:'lealler Special

LB.$139'

BAG

.ARMOUR
TREET

SELF-RISING

99¢

Bc,dget

Special

IDAHO

BAKING
POTATOES

PKG.

20 oz.

CAN

Budget Plelltlel' Speclll\ ;

Pleaser

STOKB.Y

TENDERLEAF

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

TEA
BAGS

16 Oz. Can

~$

19

$199

100 CT.

BOX

$199
.

TOILET
TISSUE

4 ROll
PAK

VIVA

DINNER NAPKINS
Budl(et Pleascr Special

FLOWER'S
NATURE'S OWN

l4ocr.]g¢

PKG.

Budget Pl• ·•'"·'l' ~PI"4 'iaJ

IVORY

DISHWASHING

BREAD

LIQUID

5 VARIETIES

~~-

$}49

3 (B. CAN

79¢

22 Oz_
Btl.

$129 ~

~=-==~

I

-.

�Page-8-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W.Va.·

- - - - - Engagernents - - - - St. Matthew Lutheran Church in
Mapleton, Iowa. In March he
returned to Concordia Theological
Seminary, Fort Wayne, Ind .
A J une 12 wedding Is being
planned at St. Matthew Lut heran
Church In Mapleton, Iowa.

BairdMoore

RiceFoster

Parents of the groom-elect are Mr.
a nd Mrs. Merrill Brucker of Mt.
Gilead. F ormerly ofG allia County,
he Is also the grandson of Gladys
Brucker of Ga Ulpolls.
An open · church wedding Is
plaMed fo r' July at East Shore
United Me thodist Church, Euclid.
Miss Switzer Is a graduate of
Eucl!d Senior High School and Mt.
Union Coll ege. She Is employed at
the Mt. Gilead E xempted Village
School System .
Mr . Brucker Is a graduate of Mt.
Gilead High School and will
graquate in June from the University of CinciMati.

Rotary accepts
applications
Moore, Baird
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
James P . Ba ird of Gallipolis
a nnounce the engagement of their
daughter, Tami Lynn Baird, to
J a mes Rober1 Moore, son of Mrs.
Roberta Moore , Logan, W.Va .. and
Cha rles Moore. Gallipolis.
The br1de-elect is a graduate of ·
Gp.llia Academy High School and
Ohio University, Athens, with a
degree in Secondary Education,
Mathematics.
Her · fiance is a graduate of
Ma rion Township High School,
Ma rion, IlL , and Rio Grande
College, with a degree in business,
salesmanship and marketing, with
a computer science minor. He is
employed by Pacesetter Products
Inc:, Houston , Tex.
An open church wedding will
take place April 30 a t 6:30p.m., at
the French City Baptist Church,
Gallipolis. .

JacobsRutz

Rice
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
David E. Rice of Glen Drive,
Gallipolis, are announcing the
engagem ent of their daughter.
Lynn, to Terry L. Foster, also of
Jackson.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
Mt. Ver non Nazarene College with
a degree in Sociology. She is
employed in the children's services
division of the Jackson County
Weliare Department.
Foster Is a graduate of J ackson
High School and :a trended the Ohio
University Branch at Ch!lllcothe
,majoring in business. He Is the
owner and operator of Terry's
Power Shop in Jackson.
A private wedding Is planned
Sunday afternoon , April 3, at the
First Church of the Nazarene,
Gallipolis, with Rev. Bob Madison
officiating . An open house reception will follow at the home of the
bride's parents, 2!ll Glen Drive.
Gallipolis, from 1-3 p.m.

Switzer,.
Brucker

..

Man:h 27, 1983

L.,

Helen Help Us

knew

against Chet,
Sherry has been married twice
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
since then, and one of her husbands
Rotary Club is accepting applicaadopted Sella, without Chet's contions for the 1!&amp;-84 school year
sent.
(They lied in court, saying he
Rotary Memorial Scholarship Prohad
"disappeared,"
and was paygram. Thls marks the 13th consecuing
no
child
support.)
tive year the GaUl polls Rotary Club
Recently, Sella, now 14, decided
has offered the scholarship
.
to
visit us. We tried to love herbutlt
program.
soon became obvious that she was
The scholarship program Is
using us ·- playing one "lather"
dedicated to the memory of
against
the others so she could have
deceased members of the Gallipowhat
she
wanted in money, posseslis Rotary Club. Money to support
sions,
freedom.
She was demandthe scholarship program Is raised
ing
and
uncooperative
when she
through Rotary booths at the Bob
wasn't
locked
in
her
room
with the
Evans Farm Festival and the
stereo turned full blast. After she
Fourth of Ju ly Pa r k Front
left, she started asking Chet for
activities.
money, which he sends. He reApplications are available from
ceives
no thanks or appreciation.
guidance counselors at Buckeye
Stnce
she has been adopted by
Hills, Gall! a Academy, Hannan
another
man and probably never
Trace, Kyger Creek, North Gallla,
was his d&lt;~ughter, must Chet feel
and Southwestern High Schools and
·responsible?
He's a good, conscienat t]]e Rio Grande College Comtious
person
and
I hate to see him
munity College Student Financial
hurt.MARCY
Aids office.
To be eligible, an applicant must DEAR MARCY:
Chet owes no legal responslbillty
be a resident of Gailia County and
to
a girl who has been adopted by
plan to attend a college, university,
another
man. But feelings aren't
or technical college. Graduate
students are not eligible. Appli- governed by law. Honest, deepdown probing might dl!!use the
cants from previous years may
hurt, resentments, possible guilt,
apply.
The Rotary Memorial Scholar- and overall confusion that comes
with this "daughter" package. If
ship Committee evaluates need,
you
can't inspire such talk (you 're
grade average, school ac tivities,
not
exactly
a neutral listener) , then
work or volunteer activities, and
urge him to see a counselor. - H.
goals in a general way. Applicants
need not have particlpa ted In each
DEAR HELEN:
of these areas. Deadline for receipt
A wife's pregnancy can change a
of application Is April 22, 1!&amp;.
man
for the better - or worse. I'm
Applications should be sent to
glad
to read (hat at least one man
Herman L. Koby, 502 Oak Drive,
admitted
he was turned off by the
Galllpolis, Ohio, '45631.
sight of his "fat and ungainly" wife.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Jacobs, Rutz
Mr. and Mrs. John 0. Jacobs of
Mapleton, Iowa, are pleas~ to
aMounce the engagement of their
daughter, Joan Marie, to Kurt
Gustav Rutz, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kurt A. Rutz of Houston, Texas.
formerly of Galllpolis.
She is a graduate of Maple Valley
High School, Mapleton, Iowa and
attended Wayne State College,
Wayne, Neb. She is presently
employed in Denison, Iowa. Rutz is
a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School in Gallipolis and Texas
Lutheran Collee in Seguin, Texas.
During the last year he v!carred at

ntiNt

r-;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
_~

•.;

....
. ..
~:

.
·'
~

flayes' celebrate 35th

•
E

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Uliam R. Hayes of Route 4,
etropolls, Dl ., former Meigs
unty residents, will observe lhetr
Jith wedding anniversary Monday,
J

~arch

.

~

POMEROY - New styles for
'tJ&gt;ring, created with thP latest
fRlterns. will be featured· at thP
'Wocus on Fashion" revue at 7::JJ
4.m. Tuesday in Pome roy Elemen~rySchool.

~ The spring style show is spon-

,'

"MEIGS CO.'S OLDEST S. FINEST"'
241 EAST MAIN
POMEROY.OHIO 46789 '

614 / 992-2644

"

Send your thoughts with special

Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Switzer
of Euclid are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Robin Rae , to James M. Brucker.

WITH WARM WEATHER COMING UP, A NEWSPAPER
ROUTE IS A GOOD IDEA! YOU EARN MONEY WHILE BE·
lNG OUTSIDE, WINNING GREAT PRIZES, AND MEETING
GREAT PEOPLE.
ROUTES IN POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT, SYRACUSE.

EASTER PORTRAITS
95~
DEPOSI T

-.

I

l

"red by the Fabric Shop and the
11Jelgs County Ext ens ion, with Ann
Jiambert and Da le St oll as cotairmcn. ·
,
• An Easter parade. complete with
!bant bunny, will be featured in the
Show. Fashions will be modeled by
both adults and children.
· ; Adding to the show will be
t$iucatlonal displays, including onP
of seminole patchwork with authen-·
tk lndlan garments. Modern adaptllt Ions of the old art, including
~t&lt;Hlate patterns, will be shown. A
&lt;Jsplay on plaids w!ll help particip;thl's learn aboul the various types
of plaids and how to sew with them.
A donation of $1 will be requested
at the door. Rbfreshments will be
served following I he program.
; Modeling in the show will be
Debbie Grueser. Danny Grueser,
Danielle Grueser, and Tara
Crueser, Kelly Grueser, Marlin
Meter, Elise Meier , Becky Meier, ·
{'~!cole Meier. Florence Richards.
ilenny Morrison . Pat Wolf. Susan
Wolf, Anna Wolf, Megan Longena¢re. Melanie LongPnacre, Tammy
ilohnson, Karen Walk('r , Becky
CotterUJ, Cynth.ia Couerill , Sara
Machir, Shana Machir. 1

Lisa Stethem, Holly Williams,
Teresa Houdashelt , Patti Duffy,
Mary Coleman, Barbara Coleman,
Dixie Eblin. Darla Thomas , Marla
Roush, Patty Asbeck, Jennifer
Arnold, Sarah Harris, Gina .John·
son. Tawnee J ohnson, Kathryn
Mora, Sherry Woodyard , Rhonda

G SOON

· GALLIPOLIS - Marine Pic.
Carl W. Hahn Til, sonofMarllyn R.
and Carl W. Hahn J r, of Patriot
Star Route, Gallipolis, has completed recruit training at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S. C.
During the 11-week training
cycle, he learned the basics of
hattlefield survival. He was Introduced to the typical daily routine
that he wlll expenence dut1ng his
enlistment and studied the personal
and professional standards traditionally exhibited by Marines.

PLUS CUDDLY BUNNY

...

Our Easter Gift

A reg ular

$3.50 val ue

Bunnv or ot her
plush animal
available at
l1 me o f sitlin g

/ .
with 95¢
deposit on a
portrait
package
sitting.

Si&gt;on~Mor

Groups $1.00 extra per' person.

MAR. 29-APR. 2
TUES. - SAT.

r«d~ ta1l&lt;;rlrs. irMMior-dll·:,

oa::l necklltl. 7-butor 'll&lt;1t

Very nice selection of

Robes, Gowns aoo Pajamas in lots of pretty
spring colors.

!) . \ .:
\:

.)

',•-

I

--

Asst.
Colors

-

ot OM&lt;, ~«a 's

liYOI~I best ~ler.

v- ~

It',' ~ .
'

$5.00 OFF

t/

·I

!i

I

3 S1yies

~~

Dress Slack

$1399

:, .

~· \ 1 I

Stretch polyester

' '

with Pan-Rol

\\

·. • ' .
\

wa~nd. ~

_29 to 42.

\ '

1

. ·1\ d.

Navr.

· BtacM Brown ·Tan · :~ · ··
Gray ~nd Slate 61~. ~r

Knit Shirts
First Quality
$1 Q99
Reg. $16.00
Sizes S-M-L-XL

Reg. $29.99
Chrome Finish.

$}495

.Reg $9.991ncludes
Wii! Whisk, 2 Wooden ·

$6.50
'

MARTI Ill R's

MEN'S
TEXTURIZED POLY

4 Slice Toaster

Opener

Reg. $35
BLAZE1! .. .........26.25
Reg. $18
. PANT.. .......... 13.50
Reg. to $26.00
, SKIRT... ..... To 19.50
Reg. to $25
BLOUSE ..... to 18.75

-.: r" ·- Sizes 1T to Girls 14

Tall

Dresses
Reg 28.00
$1 999
S1zes:
14\0 to 241&gt;
HARDWICK

Sport Coats

$7·999

Reg. $100 . '·
Sizes 40 to 46
.
Regular and Long

SPECIAL PURCHASE ""..,.,
British Crown
Three-Piece

Suits

SJ999
Reg. $115.00
Solid colors in
texturized txJiv.
,_Also .a muted
pin stripe.
S~es

HARDWICK

THREE PIECE SUITS

sggoo

ANo

susoo

Reg $115.00 io $149.00
S~es401o46R&amp;l

nun~•vv

38 to 46.

PRINCE GARDNER

Tri-Fold Wallets
REG .
$lQ99
$15.00

BIDAL-A·BREW

i

rchase

Mattress Pad
And Protector

Coffee Maker

$2299

SPECIAL PURCHASE
JACQUARD

Bath Towel
Solid

Kitchen Tool Set

TUES., WED.. SAT. LUNCH 1•2
10·1 2·6
Thurs. &amp; Fri. 10·1. 2·5:30, 6·8

Save 25%

JEAN

PROCTOR SILEX

Finish

PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS

'

ALL CHILDREN'S

RIVAL

Can

Sportswear

1999

House Slippers

MEN'S FAMOUS NAME
REG. 29.99
Kn~ Collar,
Floating
ShotJider.
Sizes S-M-L-XL

·~

,.

· Regular $5.00 to $30.00. Mix aoo Match the
pieces vou need. AM first quality merchandise.

. \

~\

$

Values to.

MEN'S CAMPUS

:rr- -. ;.": 'I

C~ .n!110 rrttt "'""'·
~ror

i

QUEEN
CASUAL

DEAR FOAM

Small Leather Access«ies

REG. $17.99

~~~-

Alllhe i~porlant fash ion statement of the season are herf\.!n the
· .
prett~e~t of of 1ced pastels. MetiCulously ta1lorl!! by Qu.een Casu~ls il a •
perfect interplay of tedure, color and pattern i1 whisper.-soft Mattee
Tou.ch•• knits oi Encron• polyester. Checked skirt, $19, asymmetrical
tucketed front'shirt $21. To mix w•h solid dirndl skirt, $17, floral
fhptie ~hirt , $23, flange detailed jacket, $35. 8 to 20.
In mint and blueberry.

Poses our selection. Beautiful backgrounds available.
PHOTOGRAPHER'S DAYS .

~' lt.rld!iremal
altrrbJit&gt; d foJ 'ON l&lt;&gt;t•
~ 1r Alrtr(a WI, S1 "'S it

IIIIIIIIOIIIIU- , • , SPrint llt1orboll by 0uMn C.MIIIo .

·-~
Ilj

$1Q99

1

t&gt;ecoUI&lt; ,,,

co«or aro 40~ oot,ts:er
•!Ire! com'crt !I'd usy ca~

~

to you.

. ·-·t/3 Off

·~
... ..t?f-~·~ $2Q99

~ '''''S~ .-o ...db .,:y
o' ~e oxlo'a ~ cO'T'b-rto

''

Sleepwear

. ·· Jackef

aoct~arn

'

SHAOOWLINE
NYLON

Poplin

"'' "&lt;' )O.Jr \'Very

REG. 27:50
Black, Brown,
Bunrunclv and Tan.

Special Group

Red, White,
Tan and Black.
A 115.00 Value

C(&gt;11tmoor.Y i&lt;&gt;e·.des grto

w&lt;il' anoloil ~too ol iff,

"THE WAY AMERICA SENDS LOVE"'
PH. 992-2039
106 BUTIERNUT AVE.
OR 992-5721
POMEROY. OH.
.We Accept All Major Credit Cards and Wire Flowers Ev1uv·whe1

Calculator Clutch

Watch &amp; Pen Set

~W&lt;m des~&lt;td

Easter Sunday is April3.
-POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

Completes training

EveT DOPJI• bmUI&lt; "''""
c~·~·~ vplo:t&gt; Sob!'&lt;s~l "S
Otl! ~ to ~ep •: cortcual\

:.

The Job Bank, located in the
Senior Citizens Center, 2W Jackson
Pike, has quallfled applicants, 50
years of age or older, seeking lull or
part time ,employT11ent' in the
community.
The older worker Is Imbued with
a strong commitment to the work
ethic and . a sense of civic
responslblllty.
Interested employers should call
446-700! and ask to speak with the
Job Counselors to put in their job
orders.

BUXTON

T01Al PRI CE

.

And remember, with Pomeroy Flower Shop the flowers always come in something as pretty as the flowers themselves.

Job bank

Betty Blackwood, Na ncy Hili,
Bernadette Anderson , Becky Ta nnehill, Stephanie Gibbs , AMette
Gibbs, Cindy Crooks, Donna Curtis,
Milly Duncan, Stacey Duncan,
Bonnie Fields . Lois Ha rkins, Mindy
Hester, Stacy Heste r , 'veronica
Provo, Amy Satterfield , Kelly
. Satteriield. Helen Sauer, Karen
Walker, Mary Wise, and Sherry
Woodyard .

$1295

\

New Masks
is coverings
an exhl~tloo
of r-"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~masks
and lace
originally seen as part or a larger
exhlb!tl;m of historically ~d etjUIIcally bllsect masks. The exhibltioo
features 49 w&lt;X'ks bY contemporary
artists and artisans . It also includes
Olle-{)f-a-kind and mass produced
face coverings. These works explore the concept c1. the mask as an
exciting and challenging ronn lor
. contemporary artists, as well as a
protective dev~e with practical .
uses.
. The creation of a mask is one
vehicle for artists who have revived
an interest In figurative and
narrative Imagery without reject' ing abstractbn . Someolthe masks
function traditionally as correalHere's an Easter gift that mixes colormen! or to alter identity. Others are
ful Easter flowers and contemporary
purely sculptural objrets, using
good looks with four uncrackable Eastradltilnal materials such as Jan
ter eggs. It's the Egg Basket Bouquet.
Knoops Mask II, which is made d
· cattle bones. Ceramics, !abvrs.
And it's a delightful gift that will be
feathers, glass, fine metals, aod
enjoyed all year ·long
the basplastics have all been employed in
ket becomes the perfect kitchen accesthis wide-ranging and beaut~
sory for keeping eggs, ripening fruit,
exhlbl tlon.
or holding a plant.
New Masks was organized by the
Southern Ohio Museum and CultuOne quick call to our shop and you can send your
ral Center, Portsmouth, Ohloandls
gift almost anywhere in the US. But getcrackin'l
circulated by the Statewide Arts
Call us today. Ask for the Egg Basket Bouquet.

LADIES' LC.D. DIGITAL

:o

on sale a t the gallery. Docent tours
can ·be arranged upon request by
calling tlie gallery at 614-594-5665.
For additional information, contact
Kim Sehinder at Trisolini Gallery.

Gomez.

OPEN
MONDAY
NIGHT
11L 8 P.M.

2(8x10s)
3(5x7s)
15wallets

992-2156

COMPARE AND CHECK
WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY

'

A former employee of the Phillp
Sporn Plant, Graham Station, W.
Va ., Hayes Is plant manager of the
Cook ·coat Terminal of Metropolis.
He and hls wife, Betty, were
married at the Racine Baptist
Church ; They have six
grandchlidren.

PORTRAIT PACKAGE ONLY

THE DAILY SENTINEL

KEEP YOUR EYE OPEN FOR
·RUTLAND FURNITURE'S FLYER
COMING SOON IN THE
SUNDAY-TIMES SENTINEL

•

''

CALL US TODAY AT

RUTLAND FURNITURE APRIL
STOREWIDE GIVEAWAY SALE
STARTS APRIL14

'

CASUALS--.....

Office Hours by Appointment Only

Brenda Davis, Pomeroy and

't

TM

•POTTED LILIES AND SPRING FLOWERS
•CORSAGES •PLANTERS
•SILK
MENTS

l

Dl.

pn d1splay Tuesday

Easter is Sunday, April3.
·'
The Fro®Glory of Spring Bouquet.

~r.,o··

~se;

Dave and Steve Hayes, Metropolis,

~~te~t spring styles

Send a celebration of spting~

GENERAL ALLERGIST

Switzer, Brucker

28.

~ They are the parents· of Debby
~olfe, Racine; Blll Hayes, Syi'a'

·union Stree t, Athens, Ohio.
The gallery Is open to the public .
Monday through Frklay from noon
Ill 4 p.m. and admission Is tree. A
cataklgue cl. the exhibition will be

because

Mr. and Mrs. Hayes

~

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- -Page-B-7

en displ_~y ·at Trisolini G~llery

Trlsolln! Gallery o! Ol)io Univer- Services: Touring Exh!bltbn Sersity' will display an exh!b!tioo vloe, a program or the Ohio
entitled New Masks lieg!nnlng · Foundation on the Arts in ColumAPril 4. The exhibition wDl be on · bus. Trlsollnl Gallery of Ohio
University is located at 48 East
display through April ;19.

ioKt:

'

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

rNew Masks' now

That's a start toward reform. Mine
caroused for eight months, tlietl.
)llouldn't talk - he must became a
reverted back to loving !~ther
monster.
mate .. I've tried to fOrgive him,. bUt:
We both wanted a baby, but the
he took away wmethlnll that ~;
day I found out I ws pregnant (six
never be repta:ced. When I needed·
months after our wedding) , he
him · most , he wasn 't there.••• ~,
• ••
changed from a loVIng and wonderFOREVER RESENTFUL
::: :
fUJ husband to one who started
DEAR F .R.:
:-:.;
drinking, doing drugs, and laying ·
Perhaps It still isn't too late~'
around with every woman handy.
talk. Resolve this resentment
To top It off, he beat me. 01 course
or you may end up a singJe ~
he refused to make love.
when It festers beyond endurlll)Ct..'
I couldn't · understand, but
_H.
. ·= ~ ~
thought maybe he was just scared
__
• ~,.
of responsibility. So I stayed, and
Got a problem? ;\II adult su~
like magic. the man I married
for discussion? You can talk It "
reappeared once our son was born.
in her column 11 you write to~
Tltert it haPPened again. He
Botiel, care of this newspaper,•:• ~
made me an ootcast while he
: • • '·

®Registered trademark Florists' Transworld Delivery Associalion.
101983 FloristS Transworld Delivery Association .

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

Pameroy- Middleport- Gallipali;, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

Anniversaries

FLORIST

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

'

March 27, 1983

Play parents against each other
By HELEN BOTJ'EL
DEAR HELEN:
While my husband, Chet, was
serving In VIetnam, hls !hen-wife
Sherry had a " ten-month baby."
Though he
she'd been fooling
around, he accepted _the child
(Stella ) and tried to make a go ol
their marriage.
lnstead, Sherry deserted him.
After the divorce, Chet was given
visiting privileges, but there was
always some excuse why he
couldn't see his daughter. He even
got a coUrt order. However, when
Sherry' s father threatened him off
the property with a gun, he gave up.
The family dld a real good lob In
poisoning the little girl's mind

•

Sets

Cdors BATH ... ......... $2.99
.
· Reg. 4.~
HAND ...........$1.99

$599

3.59

~~·3 Wood SllOOf!$, I Wood Fork.

· SUNBEAM

Stand Mixer
~igsg!~

$3499

Burst of Power Switch

If Perfect Sale
TWIN
FULL
QUEEN
~lNG

$18.00
$20.00
$27.00
$33.QO

185 UPPER RIVEfl HOAU r,AIIIf'fliiS
WolD bw bill lilt HI In Amlllu 1ncl mchlag for tht mt.

'-

..

,,

,
'

•

•

$9.99
$11.99
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'

.

�March 27' 1983

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

Page=B-8-The S1,1nday Times-Sentinel

Preparing for
late celebration
PRESCOTI', wash. (AP ) -The
mayor of this tiny hamlet says she'll
bring the pickles when Prescott
celebrates ltscentennlal-oneyear
late.
The eastern Washington hamlet
forgot about its lOOth birthday until
one of the 300 residents, Alvin
Harper, noted the omission at a
Town Council meeting last week .
Harper said there should be a
belated birthday party.
Mayor Alice Hoops excused· tile
. oversight, saylrig, "l)l'asn't here in
· 1982." She endorsed tile idea of a
party, however, adding, "I'll bring
the dill pickles."

$ports

.I
'1
.

Return .Jonathan Meigs In Review; Mrs. Josepb
Colburn, Southeast District director and speaker;
Mrs. Clyde Ingels, chapter regent; Mrs. Bermett
Marlin, state recording secretary; and Mrs. Pearl
Mora, registrar IUid acting chaplalR for the
anniversary ohservance.

By ED SHEARER
AP Sports Writer
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Lancaster Gordon hit two baskets
witllln 18 seconds, triggering an
overtime outburst that carried
second-ranked Louisville to an~
victory over No.12 Kentucky Saturday In the NCAA Mideast Regional
tournament.
It was tlle first meeting in24 years
between the Bluegrass State
powers.
Tenacious Loutsvlle, 32-3, which
used a trapping defense to fight
back from a l~point first-half
deficit, scored the first 14 points in
overtime and gained a berth in the ·
Final Four at Albuquerque, N.M.

011 wliite
ANNIVERSARY LUNCHEON SPEAKER - Mrs. Joseph Colbum,

fla1meal

Southeast District dlredor, a member of Whelsto!ne Chapter, .
Colwnhus, used as her IAlplc, "Legacy of Love," emphl!Sizing the
Importance of fervent love for one's country.

Ennine
Dove Grey
Red
Jade tint

DAR's Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter celebrates 75th
POMEROY - The 75th a nniversary of the Return J ona than Meigs
Chapte r of the Daughters of the
America n Revolution was observed
at a luncheon meeting recent ly at
. the Holiday Inn in Ga llipolis.
Guest speaker for the occas ion
was Mrs. Joseph L. Colburn,
Southeast District director, and a
member of the Whetstone Chapter,
Columbus. Using "Legacy of Love··
as he r topic, Mrs. Colburn emphasized the importance of a fervent love
for America .
Mrs. Pa trick Lochary , longtime
member of the chapter , gave a
review of Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter. She noted it was organized
F eb. 8. 1908, by Mary Daniels Plantz
of Wilkesv ille, who was the fir st
regent and served for five years
with 21 charter members.
The chapter. she said, was named
after Return Jonathan Meigs who
was governor of Ohio and post mas·
ter genera l. It was in 1976 !~at the
local chapter secured a personal
signature of Return .Jonathan

Health

Meigs and presented it to the
historical society. Mrs. Lochary
noted that a few years ago, a
descendent of Return .Jonathan
Meigs was ·in Meigs County to visit
the museum.
Mrs. Lochary introduced Eleanor
Smith , a direct descendant and past
regent of Ellen Harden Walworth
Chapter in New York City, the
granddaughhter of Florence Ralston Russell , and the daughter of
F lorence Russell Smith, both charter members of Meigs Chapter.
She a lso reported that among the
community services. the local
chapter was instrumental in form ing the Red Cross Chapter In Meigs
County .
Mrs. Clyde Ingels, regent, presided at the meeting which opened
in ritua listic form with Mrs. Pearl
Mora giving the Invocation, Mrs.
Gary More J r. leading in the pledge
to the !lag. Mrs. Mark Grueser Jr ..
the American's Creed. and Mrs.
George Hackett Jr.. the Star

Spangled Banner with Mrs. Stephen
J enkins as accompanist .
Eighty members and guests
attended the luncheon with reprPsentatives from the Col. Charles
Lewis Chapter at Point Pleasant,
Col. Jonathan Bayard Smith Chapter at Middletown, Ann Simpson
Davis Chapter at Columbus;
French Colony, Gallipolis: Ma·
rietta Chapter, Marietta; Nabby
Lee Ames, Athens; Mt. Sterling
Chapter, Nathaniel Massie Chapter, Chlllicothe; Captain James
Lawrence Chapter, Ironton, and
Whetstone Chapter, Columbus.
Guests introduced included Mrs.
Colburn, Mrs. Bennett Marlin, state
recording secrtary of the Col.
Jonathan Bayard Smith Chapter,
Mrs. Roger Redick, Ann Sjmpson
Davis Chapter, Columbus. who will
be installed as the new Southeast
District director in May. Also
Introduced was Mrs'. Irving Karr.
Jr., who was regent of the chapter
when its 50th anniversary was held.

That Is why It Is Important for a
person witll a hiatal hernia to get
rid of any excess body fat he or she
might have. Walking helps ellml·
nate fat by using calories. So will a
proper diet.

Nrrt

Special music was presented by
Ronald Reynolds , Dr. Clyde Ingels.
lavendr
the Gallia Academy Madrigals,
Among those contributing for
accompanied by Anne Fischer.
table arrangements and corsages
Mrs. Gene Yost introducedtheDAR
were Mrs . Clarence Hayman, Mrs.
officers. and Mrs. Robert Ashley
Richard Henderosn, Mrs. Larry
presented the speaker.
Kiracofe, Mrs. Frank Walker, Mrs.
The gold and blue colors of the
Guy Russell and Mrs. Grace Eich.
chapter were featured in the
pecoratlons, with the table decor .
Including primrose arrangemenls
and tall ·numerals "75" In sliver
made by Ronald Reynolds . Mrs.
Fred Russell made tatted blue and
Please call Scheryl
gold snowflakes as favors. The
or your wandmother.
lallln. TU~•
inscribed anniversary cake was
le. lol.. Thoc St
Let
us
know
where
you
are.
served following the luncheon.
Til pA
We will come and get you if
Other guests besides those of
chapters represented and the state
you
us to. 'We love
officers were Carolyn Smith. Mrs.
you and care for you a lot.
Freda Russell, Mrs. Roy &lt;.rueser.
Mom and Dad love you and
Louise Eden. Keith Ashley, · a
you to come home.
member oftheSonsofthe American
Revolution and his daughter. a
member of the Children of the 1----~-----~---'-L----~--'-----­
America n Revolution. and several
husbands of members. A.R. Knight.
Kenneth Beckwith. Marlin Bennett.
.-

By JOHN MOSSMAN
AP Sports Writer
OGDEN, Utah tAP) - Sophomore Lorenzo
Charles sank two free throws with 23 seconds
remaining Saturday, lifting North Carolina State to a
~2 upset over fourth-ranked Vlrginta ·tn the NCAA
West Regtonal champlenshlp game and denying
. Ralph Sampson his coveted national championship.
North Carolina State, 24-9, now advances to tlle
Final Four In Albuquerque, N.M., against the winner
of Sunday's East Regional ·final between North
Carolina and Georgia. State beat North Carolina and
VIrginia on successive nights two weeks ago to win
the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament and earn
an NCAA bid.
It was Sampson, a three-time All-America, who
committed thE' decislvt&gt; foul ,when Charles drovE&gt; for
the basket. Charles calmly sank both free throws,
capping a Wolfpack rally from a seven-point deficil
with 7: 39 left.
·~
.
Virginia, unable to get the ball in to Sampson for a

S300

BARBARA TWYMAN

at 446-

94:06

want

~YING TO SCORE - Louisville's Rodney
McCray tries to soore between Kentucky's Kenny
Walker, 34, and Melvin Turpin, M, during first half

want

Monday thru Friday
9AM1o9PM

).\CROSS
·rt-~E

"'t•

w at~ 11oM •
' •lA
&amp;N A fi'()I N I M I I\o }

r-·r~P .P'"f

You can do a lot to help yourself;
your lifestyle really makes a
difference If you have -symptoms
from ·a hiatal hernia. I'm sending
yoi.t The Health Letter 4-8, which
outlines tlle tllings you can do.

•J

St. Francis

Saturday 9 AM to S PM

446-9510

''-tt

A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - St.
.Ftallcls, led by Todd Mitchell's
lldlllant second-half performance,
pw Toledo Its first state high
'leiiool boy's basketball cham!)lonlhlp wttll a 5849 victory Saturday
IM!Ir AkrQn Centrai-Hower bi the
O.sAAA title contest.
Toledo, the state's fourth largest
di;V; bad trted for 60 prevloos years
wtthoot winning a championship.
Toledo big schools had reached the
llMI game four times witllout

rillllng.

'Mitchell, a 6-foot-6 junior, scored
13 or his 17 points In the second half,
outtauellng Central·Hower's he~GradyMateen .

Mateen,

a 6-11~ junior center:

aetlon In Saturday's NCAA Mideast Regional
champi 1lonshlp game at the SCokely Athletics Center bi
Kooxvllle, Tenn. Louisville won, 80-68. (AP
Laserpi,lloto ).
.
.

c~lps

scored only two baskets uJ , tllelast
half and settled for 11 points.
St. Francis, an all·boy's· Catllollc
school of 4!Kl, wrap~ ~P a 27-1
season with Its 21st stra~ t victory
. before a sellout crowd of 13j 958ln St.
John Arena.
St. Francis wa8 appear!' ng In Its
first state title game. Othe ~Toledo
schools who had reached : tlle fln.al
contests were Toledo ee~ ,tral Catllollc In 1942 and 19491 Toledo
Woodward in 1944 and Toledo
Libbey in 1966.
the Knights had to overc :arne two
weeks of battling the chlc!Q en pox to
attain their title. Shawn IReid, St.
Francis' aU-state guard; missed
botll regional games a w•eek ago
witll tlle lllness. He scored' 12 points

final shot , had two more chances to win it, but Tim
Mullen's long jump shot bounced off the rim and
Othel Wilson's follow shot fell short as time ra n out.
Senior guard Dcreck Whittenburg led the Wallpack
with 24 points, most of them from long range, while
forwards Thurl Bailey and Charles finished with 14
and 11 points, respectively.
. Sampson paced the Cavaliers with 2.1 point s,
including eight straight Virginia points that built the
seven-point bulge· in the second half.
But VIrginia couldn't·hold the lead, and Sampson's
illustrious four-year career ended without the
national championship he so desired.
The Cavaliers, a solid frec-throw shooting team
during the regular season, had problems at the line
for the third straight tournament game. The
Cavaliers convC'rted just seven of14 free throws in the
second half and missed three of their last five free
throw tries, including one by Wilson with 54 seconds
left that gave North Carolina Statdtschancetowin in
regulation.

Toledo's first ,state crown

and ran tlle Knights offense in
Saturday's championship game.
Scott Grant, a~ senior, did not
play in Thursday's semifinal victory over Middletown because of
chicken IJOll. Grant started against
Central·Hower and delivered 10
points. He was one of four
double-figure · scorers for the
champions.
Roy \Vare posted 16 points and
joined Mitchell, Reid, and Grant as
tlle double-figures scorers for tl1e
Knights.
St. Francis trailed 25-24 at
halftime but scored tile first six
points of the tlllrd quarter for a 3625
lead. The Knights, whose only loss
was 37-36toT&lt;!ledoBowsher, never
trailed thereafter.
Central-Rower, the state cham-

ploninl91li,ciosedtllemarglntoone
point twiCe late In the third quarter.
That was as close as tlle Eagles,
26-2,cametoregalntngtllelead.
Dwight Carter, a 6-2 senior, led
Central-Rower wltl1·14 points. Gene
Davis, a 6-foot senior, ·added 10 tor
tlle E~les, appearing in tl1e finals ·
for tl1e fourth ttme since 1973.
Box score:
CEN'J'RAL.HOWER I.) -Carter 10.014, Jii"ord 1
2. Mateen 5 H 11. Jont'5 ol 0.() 8, Davb ~ G.Q 11).
RaCkley OCHJO, HICks 2 ().{) l Bc'll 0000. TUI"'''M'DCHIO,
SmJ!hO o.tiO. MltctK&gt;U O(}.OO,I.ardr!ll 00.00.TotllsM 1-t
().0

••

ST.f1CAN(]8 (Ill) - Warr6 4-616, S. Grant !'iO.OID,
Mitchl'll7 J.!'i 17. ~laney02-22.~SO.Ol2, Blnlngt&gt;rO
1·21 Czt.mlakowskl 0 fl.() 0. tat-~ O().{IO, D. Grant 0

(}.(1(). CasfJ('rOO.OO, BeaucilOO{)O. ~I(H).{IU. ~et

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

.

~151l

C.UW.Howt'l'
I:S 1% 12 111--e
Sl. Fnndll
It l.t 15 11-lM
Total touls-Ctonirai-HowPr L'i. Tol. Sl.f'ttin/.'1:\ ll
A- l.UM

'Toledo jinx ain't: 110 more'- Glinka
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - "The
Toledo jinX ain' t no more!"
Tllat was the way Toledo St.
.Francis coach Val Glinka put It after
his Killghtswon the state class AAA
boys bigh school basketball champiclllldpSaturday, 5849over Akron
Centrai·Hower.
''No Toledo basketball team had
.ever won a state title," Glinka said,
"and we are certainly proud to be
tl1e first. Our philosophy has been to
play evoen IW halftime and then win
It In the second ball. WE' got It done
~-''

Kick ott.your own perso-_
nal Easter Parade - and
start at My Sisters Closet.

, Glinka said the return of Scott:
· Grartt, Who sat 0\lt the opening win

We have new dresses for
Easter· in bright Spring
colors with the newest
fashion .accents.

,,

with chicken pox, was &lt; l key to our competition, and today was tlle
best."
viCtory over the Eagles.
Coach Mike Meneer o( Central"Grant's experience ins 1!de, espeHower
accepted the blame for his
cially on defense antl on th 1e bOards,
team's
loss.
enabled us to match up with
"I saw a real problem developing
Central-Rower,' ' he said "It also
gave our big man, Todd Mitchell, before halftime," he said, "but I
the added confidence for the didn't make a move to correct it
challenge he had in S'Oill llng their until I let them get back in tl1e game.
They got tl1e opening and took full
seven-footer, Grady Mate en."
Glinka said that at halftl me, when advantage of It .
"We .felt Toledo had the type of
the Knights were down l only one
team
tllat woult;llet us get back, but
point, "our team had no~ loubt they
we knew we would have to scramble
would win."
"The bigger tlle preSsure, the to do lt. They just never lei that
. happen.'·'.
· ·'
better we have played
Glinka said. "We have...,•.,.,..,,,.
AB-Toumament Team
Todd Mitchell Saturday, was
named tl1e Most Valuable Player In
tl1e Class AAA boys high school
basketball tournament.
The6-foot-6junlor'sperformance.
led St. Francis tlia5&amp;-49vlctory over
Akron Central-Hower.

A panel of sportswriters named
Mitchell to tile All' to.urnament team
with teammate Shawn Reid, Gr~:jdy
Mateen of Central-Rower, Jay
Peters of Medina and Mark Current
of Middletown .
Richard Meyer of Delaware
Buckeye Valley, Who has coached
488 winners In his 35-year basketball
coaching career, received the Paul
Walker Award Saturday In ceremonies during tlle state high school
boys' basketball tournament.
The Ohio HJgh School Bilsketball
Coaches' Assoelatlon annually~
lects ·a 'State coach tor tl1e award, ·- .
named In hOnor of tl1e retired.
Middletown coach who guided five
state tournament winners ·In his
career.
TO 'l1IE VICI'ORS- Toledo Sl. Frands D6Sale~' Roy Ware (22)
Meyer has spent his entire
and
IIIIOiher ieanuruile hold aloft lbe victor's trophy after winning
coaching career In ·tlle same school
Saturda)\s
Class AAA champl0118hlp 5849 over Akron Central Hower.
system in Delaware County. His
(AP Laserphoto).
.
·
teams have a record of 488-214.

Delphos wins first 'title in 34 years

Sizes 5-13.

· OUR LOT FOR YOUR NEXT CAR, TRUCl&lt; OR VAN
Sunday Shoppers

•

In a 146 run, Louisville built a 5&amp;-53
lead 7:45 !rom the finish of
regulation, but the Wildcats fought
back to force tlle overtime on Jlm
Master's 10-foot jumper from the
le(t side just before the buzZer.
It was a sweet vlctqry for the
Cardinals, who for years nave tried
to get a regular-season contest Wl!h
Kentucky. The Wildcats have
refused, relying on a pohcy of not
competing witll ..ln·state competltlon except in poSt -~ason events.
The teams last met on March 13,
19~. with Louisville pounding tile
defending national champions at
that t!me7&amp;-61.
The lastest Cardinals' triumph
chopped Kentucky's series lead to
9:_4.

NCS jolts Virginia

8anina

Join Our Easter Parade

300 Second Ave.
Lafayetle Mall
Gallipolie

next week against tlle wlnrier of
Sunday' s Midwest title game between top- ranked Houston and No.
13 VIllanova .
It was tlle 16111 victory In a row !or
tlle Cardinals, who have won 24 of
tllelr last 25 games.
Gordon scored 24 points and Milt
Wagner 18, most o! those after
·halftime, wllen Loutsvnle went to Its
relentless pressure defense tlli:jt
forced Kentucky, 23-8, Into numer·
ous turnovers.
The Wildcats held a nine-point
lead when Louisville applied the
pressure In earnest. The Cardinals
forced Kentucky Into six turnovers
In less tllan two minutes, going on a
10.2 spurt that cut tlle lead to 4542.
With Gordon scoring eight points

Ballet

Weight .loss listed as help to hernia patient

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
help my nerves.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have been
DEAR READER - Many peodiagnosed as having a hiatal
ple have a hiatal hernia and have no
hernia. Why do so many. people
symptoms at all from it. 11 Is
have this? Is Ita weakness and does
usually an enlargeme~t of the
It ever get better? I've been told no.
normal hole In the diaphragm that
1 have to live this way the rest of my
petrnlts a (Xlrtlon ot the stomach to
life. It's a terrible thing. to have. It
slide Ill rough Into the chest.
has changed my whole life.
If the hole Is rather large or
Because of it, l suffer a terrible allows a large portion of the
shortness of breath. If I get a virus
stomach to slide through, then the
my stomach gets very weak so I
very size ofthe stomach In tllechest
can hardly breathe. I havE&gt; to stay can compress the lungs and may
in bed until I'm completely better.
contribute to a _ sense of
The same thing happens If l do too
breathlessness.
much housework.
Anything that increases pressure
The doctors have said this is the
within the abdominal cavity may
only thing wrong with me. They
force more of the stomach through
told me It Is not serious, but as a
the hole. About fll percent of womE&gt;n
result of It ram a very nervous and
have some degree of a hiatal hernia
unhappy person.
during a pregnancy. As tlle pres·
My doctor has me on Donnetal sure within the abdominal cavity l,s
and Gavlscon. He told me to build · decreased, the pressure to force the
up my stomach by walking every
stomach through tlle hole is
day. Could my stomach be built up
diminished and the problem may
by taking vitamins? I get a B-12
not be as great or may not even
shot once a week and that seems to

.

Cards oust 'Cats

COlORS:
DAR 75th i\NNIVERSARY - Parliclpating in the
program at the 75th anniversary celebration of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
Am&lt;•rican Revolution were, from left, Mrs. Roherl
Ashley, vier regent; ~trs. Patrick Lochary, who~ave .

.

See

Bill Gene

renchtown ·car Co.
1640 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis

446.0069

Johnson or
Tany Hamilton

,,

•

'

Welcome

· :•tnJ!im ..... Delphos Sl. Jom's Dan Giese (44) Is cauaht
• Clll'lllll of New WIIBhJn&amp;Coa Buckeye~"aTocld
Kltlfllltl , . _, PliO Loy CM) In Ole lint period or play~ r 1a the
bo.P' CIItJii l cbilmploashlp pme In Colmnbua. (AP Llaerpll oto).
IJII

"We Appreciate Your Business"

lllltlli' .... f

446-0691

,,

toLtTh1BUS, Ohio tAP) -'-.Kevln
Geise and Kevin Trentman led
top-l)lnked Delphos St.John's perfeet foul shooting In tlle fourth
quarter, giving the Blue Jays tllelr
first title in 34 years with a 55-48
decision Saturday over second.
rated New Washington Buckeye
Central In tlle pass A boys
basketball finals.
St.John's, wrapping up a 28-0
season, sank alllO of Its free throws
In the final quarter to ruin Buckeye
Central'sflrststate boyscrown. The
· Bucks suttered tllelr fl~st defeat in
28 games this season.
It was a sWeet victory for aob
Arnzen, St.John's coaching veteran
of 33 years. Despite his career
reCord of 524-214, Arnzen never had
wonastatechamplonshlp.
,
Geise, whose six points bi the
second overtime gave Delphos Its

·----·-------- - ---;----..-,.--"---+---- .
'

. .......

~...

it

semifinal victory Friday over Old
Washington Buckeye Trail, hlt all
four of his free throws In !he last
eight minutes.
Geise, a 6-foot -1 junior guard,
cameoffthebenchandsankapalr
ofone-and-one!reethrowslnthelast
BOseconds. His last twogavetllel949 ·
state champions a 51-46lead wltl147
seconds to play.
Then It was the turn of another
· St.John's guard, Trentman. The 6-1
senior san~allfourofhls tree throw·
attempts in tl1e lljSt 31 seconds to
finish St.John'sscorlng.
The Blue Jays won tlle game on ·
tllelr free throw shooting, missing .
only two of 17 attempts at tl1e line to
Buckeye Central's !Hlf-10 performance. Each school had 20 field
goals.
.
'The game was close all tl1e way
wltll St.Jobn's biggest lead coming

~

.

----

. . . .... _.__ ,, '" ... 1 ......... . . ,.,..._ _ _

_ _ ... _

,.,..

at tlle e.nd. The Blue Jays had led
1~-8with1 : 44toplaylntheopenlng

quarter. .
Buckeye Central's largest margins were four points. They all came
earlylnthethlrdquarter.
Thegamewastledninet!mesand
there were lllead changes before a
sellout crowd of 13,948 in St.John
Arena.
TheBiueJaysusedthelraggresslve defense to llmlt Randy .Krebs,
the hero of .Buckeye Central's
semifinal triumph over Yellow
Springs, to tllree baskets and 10
points. The &amp;-4 senior center, who
had22pointsinFrlday'ssemltinals,
managed onlyonefleldgoaland two
free tllrows In lite last half.
Meanwhile, John Bockey led
St.John's witll 20 points while his
teammates on tl1e front line, Dan
Geise and Steve Pohlman, com-

blned for 22 more. Dan Geise had 14
of those.
·
Ken Kapil', a 6-l junior forward ,
took over Buckey" Central's scoring burden an.d had 16 points. Scott
Gray,a6-5seniorforward,addedl1
for tlle Bucks, who lost In the 1942
semifinals in thl'ir only previous
. state tournament appearance.
John Bockey was selected as the
MostValuablePlayerintheClassA
state high school boys basketball
tournament.
;.,JM, 7 1 ~11 H. I'Ohln1;m 4If.! IX.
7 fi. 7 :.JJ. 'T'rt'flttnun :.! ~ ·~ K, t\ . r:..i.'il• 11:,li ~, 1..

!fr'.oiOHN'S ($.1) - D. I
Boc'k~·

\1('18(&gt;0 ()() 11, R('in(i('l U!l-41 ! ~ T . C;,..l~· ll(HJ(I. C&gt;-.tlngflt'UI

n. BN-tun~nMn. Tnlltbl ~~ m-n &amp;l.

DUC'KEVE('El\'11(,\1, I lilt -&lt; :m_
\''•1·111 , t-;~pl l'7
2-:! lfi, Kl"f11'; :1 H lll, t\o•h•,..., 1 U ~ l t 1\ lmmd 11-:! "•.
P.a,n~flO.OO, RBmf~&gt; fll~lfl, I~ HI~ I !l, l)o, p2 fi·Ot

...........

Yourw: 0 IHlll, F.hrr~ rTl1ln II!1-0 11, 0oollf'l~baC'h Clll-llll.
-~~~.

fill, ..... :M
Beldl.l')'l' ( 'flltn&amp;l

Sc&lt;ono ~ qa:u1t•n.
U

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Tolal fwts-SLlotuf .. ,U , lllK'kl""o·r l 'rnl ri"tt 1K.
A-1.1.\M\
.

~
--r-....,_. . _ ______
_____ _________. .__.,. _____ ~ ~

------~--

�W. Va . .

Ohio-Point

Akron cage.fans upset

Scoreboard ...
.\i'rlf&gt;rlm n /\.~Mic·&gt; alt &gt;n ,

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\\' 1. 1'1'1

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NHL results ·
1\'u.lknkd ltfK·k''.\ ' l.t·UI{lw
f'ridaJ-'!'1 c;a.",lf ..

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!":1"&gt;1." . 11'1"'"'' "' l' hil ili.lt' lphill. 111 1
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W;.r ~ hln J..&gt;'I IIn ;tl f\1'1.1 ' York R;m~ ·r~. '" '
C't~IJ! ill ) ill \\'i nn iiJI'J.: . 1111
! JJS o\1\~l'k ~ ;t! \ ' nn &lt;~lu\'1 ' 1' . 1111

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M i n m~ut ;t &lt;~ I

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l'htl;ldt•IIJitl&lt;t \~ . T!li1llll •• ;tl Duno'i'lin .
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MrmiiPa!

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Hid; ThnlnJ&gt;"• •fl. pllc •ht •l ~: · .1 1'1'1~ \I ill:r n t.
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Lntlf'ld·r-:-.
r-;, .,.1 11 Rho"mb"· r~; • •ul

"ntt

Tourney
box scores

"' ·

l.t~

.\ngl'll •,

.11

\ 'pp·-,

Rc-twh. F' la

NIT result"
fo)'ida,\ , Mardi :!.1
r\1 Hn•o~•munl . IU.
nd';~ul 7.-•. M i~:-ob ) ippi 1;7

;\I ~t·w \ "nrk
S.•mlfinals
.\111nd:w. \lan·lt :!11

f)d'au l,

~'11· \1.

\ ' &lt;, ,

\\ a ko 1

Fn1o••l.

with tess than twominutes.left irithe

n . :'\I'IJI 'o t:-.k u. :!"2·!1, 111

.'\••w Yurk. •Il l.
( 'hantpimf'lhiJ•
"''*lt'!;du_,., \lan·h ;rn

,\1

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.·s. .Jl.W...E

to work.
Lions
the
first
half. The
Tha t's
whenoutscored
Bexley went
lrish29-.i in thE' next 12Y, minutes for
a 51·42Icad.

York. ·'l p.m.

.

.·

.

··

. ·

·

NOW
S/l.WE
HERE ·

1983

SP.ECIAL
NG
VINTON f MEETI .

.. -

.

Or .

Local 6197 Members
·

THURS., MARCH
31
.
AT 4:30P.M.
AT T.HE· u·NION HA.LL.

·
,.

. · .

·

.

.• ·

a

RANGER PICKUP

.

· .

·
.

List Price
Discount
Selling Pric1l'

'8008. 50
101-3.50

LUBE
OIL

Stock# 516

1983

FO~ti D

RANGER PICKUP

Long bed, 4 C)/I , auto. trans ., P. steering,
P. brakes, Xllirim Package, gauges , step
~umper, WSYI 1 tires. Plus More. ·

·

.

·

.

·

&amp;

'8~01.00

List Price
Discount
Selling

FILTER

1006.00

S7895° 0

$1495

FORD, Inc.

992-2196

.

S. THIRD AVE.

MIDDLEPORT,OH.

WE'RE A LITTLE OUT OF THE WAY,
BUT .A LOT LESS TO PAY ....

CAR

..
........""..
...
:z
..
,....,..
......

.,,...

Ill :!:1 1:! "!I-6K
Sl)ri n l!~ 1 ~1 . RUt ' k ('~ t ·

1979 GMC JIMMY HIGH SIERRA 4X4

Burgundy &amp; white. 400
engine, automatic, power steertnR &amp;brakes. air cond .,tilt wheel, AM radio.
wsw radials , rally wheels, runmng boards.

IHl II. TIJ4.;&amp;lo; ~ l,f.:!l ':1.
:&gt;~T..~ ·s ''"' ' - n. 1 :1 ·1:-.~ · " "' ' u.
Pohlman~ 11 'l. llod&lt;l"' 11 '\.:o :!i Trf'lllm;m
; UJ1 H . I. . { ;o•t-.t. · :1 !Ill n. K I .C ' I~':! I ;, I'.
J\'ll, hlli!IIHl l il T~ llll. ll "il.
.i .fi

. REAl SHARP MACHINE

$6995
'·

~-71

...

"'
...::

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

1.J 'A'II&lt;;~&gt;n&lt;t 1 .1 ::!11. T t'lo t lllJ ~•n l:! :!
n mu ~.:h tl mil

t . Winl.aud IHIJ il Mil il 'l II IJ-.1! 11.

OUt: tL\JtftOH tllh - w, ,.."~ ' tm; tn\t &gt; ll :l.
Dil'! Wf'.trld i :! 1w ~. S.. ·hif'h" 1 u:.! :.!. nan

...,.._,,IU. •
O..Ai Hwtlor

• ' FnUit ~ l ll\1 1-St ·h lf'l s.
"\\'I'I ISI'IIIP 1:\ ll;Ji&lt;. !!arb or

.
'

F l:i t' r ~

H 16 I~ ~-IC
:11 9 Ill 11 -lll

.

"'~.~:~~!',! ;~~~~~~ Two-tone Desert gold &amp;

cream, cyl., automatic,"'
AM-FM cassette stereo,
wsw tires, bodyside
ing, swing out mirrors, rear step bumper.

SHARP TRUCK

T tt l al l n ul s~
a A- l :I,X:I.'"o

3
.....
...c

$6495

11~11

1:!. Ran1.,~ ltlfl :! 1 :! "&gt;. l !nllin ~ 11-tl -t Tag,lll.' l1

•..! I·:.! r•. C'aml'mn nn 111.. lwo ·ph111Hin. Totllio

"r. -HI :-.K.
• RF..XI.E\' !i.Jt - 1\ohn ;, J.:Jn . c ... urmn ll
;~-r, l\1. t-:lllott li r)~ 17. W illi; ti·d 1 t;..t; ~.
j;a i iNdarn :! 1\.ti 10. Jlf'llamy !) If!){], t u f'l';fon l
. m~llll, J");JI\; ' II.(HHI, Fli-m,_ii !IO·IIII. B:-Ii ll(i:/lll' ..
.f.;undt "k' kl' rlt~lllt. Tol.alfi 2'.! '?I ·~ iii.
St111'l' ~ quartl'l'!&lt;l:
~ . \'-,~ .M

~

17 -t

'

;.•

J

1
'

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.
••

1':- ~

.
II li lit ~lfi
• fo'n u lrn out-Si;1m:-.. Wi!~ m. 1'ol;t l lou ls)k•kk'Y

1.'1.Kili.

l!'lan tournament

.-GALLIPOLIS

- A one-pitch
ASA-sanctloned has beenschectuled
AprU 9-10 at Spruce Street
E:]Ctenslon field in Gallipolis.
·Entry fee is $ro and two red-dot
softballs . First place team receives
a : teain plaque a nd individua l
T·shirts. Second-place team receives. a plaque and individua l
T:shirts. Third place team will
· relle!ve a plaque.
,For more information, call .Jay
~ton at 446-1134.

tar

.~ys score&amp;
~

..

Ohio HI~ IW.iloollkly"' Ra..&gt;ikr&gt;thull
Frid._y'li mtUib;
nA.,_,!~ A

: Aur·kc•vr t'mmrl fR Yt'llov• Sprin~ ~H
· ~ Dript.)~ Sl . ,Jo hl '" 7..J , Buckl":&gt;'f' Trail 71.

•ar
~

('IA"it."' .U

Ek&gt;Sk'\· ffi, Akron St. V-St . M 511
.. ~k HvrOOr !VI, Wl"'ll-;\"llk' .aH
J

'

.

"',1.:..
"'..

0

FI,.\'Ih11'ni ·SI .Ml.l r;.· :JI. Bt ·:-&lt; ~ ~Tt't · hniml ~
&gt;fo\1 .\ 'l n('('nt·SI .M :..t t) " l'oac h .SubollckJ. A-

RADI'!JliN BOX

8
A 1974 PONTIAC LEMANS CAR
R
WAS!995'
G 1976 MONTE CARLO
.A
WAS~
I
COLT WAGON
N. 1976 DODGE
..

WAS !1-HS'
0 1975 MERCURY.MARQUIS
. WAS tl9!5'
X

8

BEST
IN

..
:1.
:l.
.......
.

-,,.,,.•

'

$850
$1695
'' $895

8
$;595 8X

ANNUAL PEIRCENTAQE RATE'
Compare. Then come in and visit any of our
seven loan office\rs. We'll be glad to work
with you in taitorii,ng a new car IQan to your
budget.
, ,j

.,I. .TEREST .
CAR LOA

.
•
!....=
.......
=
.""..

Ask Your Banker
What His: Is •
'

Ours
Is Simple!
.
.

c:;

I

Bank;

Ohio

Gallipolis. Ohto

PH. 446-6592
1Y2 miles north of Holzer Medical Center on Stale Route
160. Open Mon.lhru FrL BA.M.·5 P.M. Sat. 8 A.M.·3 P.M.

i...
,.

I

CARS, UKE EGGS, ARE CHEAPER IN THE COUNTRY.

MOTOR CAR BROKERS

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

'

..

~

••

April 9, Waverl y.InvitatiOnal, Away
,
Apri l 11 , Fair land , Point Pleasant (Home) ~
Aprtll6 , Oak Hill Invitational, Away ·
April l9 , Oak Hill, Away
April 21 , Chesapeake Invitational. Away .',
April 23. Rotary Relays (Home) .
~
Apr il ~. Jackson, Portsmouth lHome)
April 29. Faltland Invltatkmal , Away
May 2, Portsmouth, Away
May 5, SEOAL Meet, Away
May 7, G.azetw Relays, Away
May 10. Oa k Hili, Poinr Pleasam, Chesa- .t.
peake (Home )
~~.
•.
May 14, Sectlonals. Away

May 21, Dlstr1ct, Away
1 May 26, RegiOna ls, Away
J une 3 and 4, State Meet, Away

........................." ('

'

~MONROE.Y.

Look closely

'

.

J

'

al what the Ariens

.l'

RT7020 offers you:

•

I

..,

• Frortt-mounted engine-rear mounted
tines ... makes tilling and cultivating
literally a one hand operation .
• Swing handlebars -n o need to walk in
freshly tilled soiL
'
• Power driven wheels with tine c lutch
- tines can be disengaged for sale
movemimt to new location.
• Two speeds forward - one reverse.
• Equipped to accept electric s tarter

~

'. .
'

Ariens 8 hp RT8020 rear-tine tiller has
many of the same features. as well as the ·
5 hp RT5020 , a modified version of the
· RT8020 and RT7020 .

Visit your Ariens dealer today and ask

about Ariens rear-tine tillers and other
fine Ariens T!tlersf

985-3308

111EBIJMP

STOPSHFDE.
LOW COST INSTALLATION
AVAILABLE

POMEROY
.1\

i
·''

$J2~~CH , · · .~

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER

.. .

~

•,
~

NOW ONLY

at ESTER

~--~--~~~~~~41 -~~~~~~~~------~.~J.I
'·

GAHS Girls' TrD&lt;k $chedule
March 28, Fairland, Away
April 4, Logan, Away

SIIOCI
ABSORBDS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
'

Sprinters - Julie Allen, Beth
Berklch, · Liesle Sheets, Tammy
Haimon, and Kim Janey.
·
Distance Runners - Kristin
Carty, _Julie Mills, Debbie Kuhn;
Cheryl Harney, Amy Davis, and.
Lorri Zamoch.
'
Field Events - Elizabeth Fife:
Lee Bowers, Teresa Todd, Ste-·
phanie Carter and Missy Sm!t~.

ltaA"KVMIUIII..

I

'

i':~de thefollowlngcandidatesfo~

UIWftft..U &amp;'I'll''

I

~

8
A
R
G
A
I
N

"That was theruming point oft he
game." said Meyer. author of 696
collegiate victories at . DePaul ,
in c luding thP 194!\ NIT
ch•mpionship.
"Their dobbers really went down
when we scored so qu.ickly a nd so
eas ily," sa id Meyer who was
pleased with thC' victmy and a sixth
stra ight 20-victory smson but a lso
di spleased with 25 turnovers committed by his team ,
As has been the habit with )he
Blue Demon ~ . they twice he ld
11-point lf'ads in the first half but
ended up blowing thf'm.

I

....
.....3......

f "h.... '' " St'llllfin:lls .
• !'IT. VIN('t:~'T-ST. i\UH\' (~I - l... n,. ;
,U.:!Jt; , Wol '1 h~· ~ 1~ 11 K Sll 1m ~ I 1 ~1111 . Wilsnn ll
•

By ,JOE MOOSHIL ·
AP Sports Wriler
CHICAGO (APt- Ttwasonlyone
of several scoring s pun s DePaul
- threw at Miss issippi. and it was so
demoralizing . it shot thE' Blue
Demons in to the semifinals· of the
National Invitation T ournament.
While the band was playing "New
York, New York, " where the Blue
Demons Will play Monday night
following thC'Ir 75.-67 victory F riday
night over Ole Miss, Coach Ray
Meyer was t-xplaining tht- signifi·
cance of scoring six points in 19
second&lt;.

REAR nNE .

And
Add·On

-......

1Hlll T~ ·-~J ! Ii ,

1~ 1.

Interest

::.1

41- ·\ A ~ ..flifaa:do.
• 'tLI.Ii\ltJ¥. f MI - I 'I~~ ·I II 2M. It

&lt;t 1 •, J&lt;t, fXJn 1111'l,t i1· :.J 1-1
J~t ~ - Tublo. ~ :!- 11 ;If!. '
••
St1tn• h:'r· quart,,.,:

PLE

.,....:r:

u H Ui ta K-tt

Cb n'' ~"

I

~,

'-1! . lu\~11 ~&lt; Jl&gt;: /') -H.'f~

~

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1:

H! ·..:\ll ,r, Ml-Ht..-~~" '
lt.,il
~ ~St.
,lUI" rt l l' lil r J· 1''&gt;&lt;1 ·~ ~·t1 lffl&gt;I"'- Bao ,_.. ., , . T r fill Ri.
h t .h ria r·~ lil '·!~.&amp;J ia.Jb.-f:.ur -t~ .. ,. nall l'.

J :11ror1 J J

Do You .Know .
The Difference ·Between

·~

:e! illllt-1--:w

!l 1.'1 li

...DeP.a·ul. o·utlasts
Ole Miss, ,75-67

·-

!i. 1\lmmr&gt;l li i·&gt;~l!t. Ra m!';&gt;· flf WI n. l..n,\ ~ 1 ~ .' \ ~ .
~ ·r&gt;:.! 1[.(1 1. \ 'oulll!fl ilfliJ. I'a r ni'IJ!~IIt. Tulak-i
~ ott-:• tiJl.
.-.1in II)· 'l""rt'•'""':

"" ....' b)~
...._..,..,... Tr.d
!iii. .lo;..~ .,

;•

'~

Rll 'KF.\1': ( 'F.N'nlr\1, 111'1 - h:aplt ~ (I
.;.~ 6. I ;ra_
,. :1:.!· ~ M, K1'f'h!.; ~ ~ - ~ :!!, Kl' hl ~ ~ 1 :1

~~i1htl7 K.'rl.

;•

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

" ' ''''1'\iOn I
1/-lj :.!. ri.Jk t•r 11'1~11 1!, h:ru m1 •r ll U-11 11, Rouc-h (I
0.11 rr. TutU; .wi til iJ..I.

Rl'nU:\'f: 'I'RAJI.1711

5 QTS. OIL, FILTER &amp; LABOR
Effective Thru April 1st Only

.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

f~ M&lt;11·o :1 tl.flri. PP:.trso n 1 B-11 L

Bamlil&gt;ld I 1 ~11 :! , c;r;"i\ liiW II. ~1: 11 '1 ' !! t-.11 :!-1.
J . Omop,, ~till ~. Shu (w , ·J 1 1·~ ~ - 1.. r•,utl 'lll l

Angels open track •. season Monday

SERVICE SPECIAL

$699500

.\ S&lt;&gt;mlijrualot

' Tol ;tl foub- \' t'I IH11
C!'fl i i'U I H . 11.- J:I.&gt;Ut

By KEN R~POPORT
In Sat urday'saction, Vlrginiaanp
flv~seconds to go, ChriS Mullin of St.
.W Spi&gt;rts W,riler
Nort h Carolina State, a pair of
John·' s hit two free throws, cutting
• The Grotgla Bulldogs don'i have Atlantjc Coast Conference teams. · the deficit to 68-67 .But Georgia
'I player In their starting lineup over met for the West Regional cham· grabbed fhe rebound and fed Fair
6-fd0t'7, but looked a lot talle r tnan
pionship in Ogden, Otah, and
all a lone under the baSket.
. that to St. John's In the NCAA
Kentucky lost to Louisville In ·
Georgia Coach Hugh Durnam
l)asl\etball pl&lt;!yoffs.
· overtime In the Mideast a't Knox·
said he used a psychological ploy In
.: ''We got beat under the boards vllle, Tenn.
fir ing· up Ills underdog team. At a
t&lt;-emendou·s ty," ~aid St. John's
Terry Fair, the tallest starter in
pregame meeting, Durham showed
CO!lch Lou Carnesecea aftl'r a
the Georgia lineup"' 6-7, scored '!1 . his team a newspaper. c lipping in
,~hocking 70-67 loss to th.e Bulldogs · points in No.18Georgia'sb!gvictory . which Kevin Williams, the cocky
Fliday night in the East Regionals.
over St. John's. The Bulldogs held
supersub ofSt. .John's, said Georgia
•:w e played a quick, jumping team,
off a ;ush by the Redmen before
would be " no trouble."
·4nd the turnovers hurt us."
putting away fhe Big East chamOhio State. which had finished ina
: Georgia's knockout of the thirdpions in front of23,286at the Carrier
three-way tie for second In the Big
·ranked Redmen sent the· scrappy
r:ioine.
Ten, gave the Tar Heels a tougher
Sulldogs into the East finale today
Georgia, m a king its first NCAA
time than expected. The Buckeyes
' 1V:alnst North Carolina 's defending
appearance after winning the
rallied twice to leadathalftime30-29
ll'dtlonal champions. The eighth·
Southeastern Conference tournaand led 4240 on Troy Taylor's
•ranked Tar Heels knocked off Ohio
ment , extended its.winnlngstreak to
jumper .
Blue Aligebl will open theh' 1983 track season at
OPEN SEASON MONDAY - The Galllpolls
State 64-51 . In the other East
six ·gam es by going on a 15-4 spree
But North Carolina then ran off
Fairland Monday evening.
semifinal in Syracuse, N.Y.
earlv in the second naif and holding
eight straight points, with Michael
: Top-ranked Houston defeated No.
off furious flnish by the Redmen.
Jordan hitting four free throws and
Ji Memphis .State 70-63 and No. 13
Georgia's biggest leiid was six
Curtis H;unter and Jim Braddock
\tillanova edged Iowa 55-54 in tne
points, the last at 57-51 with 3:.35 to
each with a basket for a· 48-42
Midwest semifinals, settmg up
go. The Redmen three times.c ut the
advantage.
GAWPGLIS . ..:. The GaU!polls
winners from the 1982 squad which
hard as she runs In the meets.'' :
another regional showdown today .
margin to two points. Then, with
The Buckeyes' Larry Huggins
Blue
Angels'
track
!!QUad
will
open
qualified
five
to
the
regionals.
The
Korab
contmued.
1
scored to cut the margin to4844 with
Its
1983
campaign
against
Fairland
only
graduating
senior
was
Sarah
While
Miss Taylor, tl!e Other;
almost nlne minutes remaining.
Monday.
·
Evans, the Blue Angels' · high
co-captain, may not have as much :
With 7:57 left: the Tar Heels then
Coach
Tim
Korab
expects
thls
jumper.
Miss
Evans
is
now
attendnatural talent as a number of girls ,
went into a stall and Jordan , who
year's squad to be "vastly imlng Stanford University on an
on the team , she more tha n makes :
finished with 17 points, broke the
proved"
over
last
year's
team.
athletic
scholarship.
She
is
a
up for It wit~ dedication and :
delay by hitting an easy layup to put
Coach
Korab
pointed
out
there
member
of
the
Stanford
varsity
deterrrilnatlon
. She Is the perfect •
North Carolina ahead 5044 with 6: 'l7 ·
are
23
candidates
partlcpatlng
In
basketball
team
and·
maintains
a
example
of
what
an athlete who ts :
left.The Tar HeelS then made good
'the
track
program
comapred
to
perfect
4.0
grade
average.
willing
to
train,
can
do. She was a :
from the foul tine down the stretch.
rune
last
year.
He
feels
this
1s
The
retUI'IIIng
letter
winners
are
member
of
last
year's
regional :
Akeem Olajilwon SGOred21 points
reason
enough
for
Improving
on
Senior
Cora
Wolfe,
Junior
Debbie
qualifying
mile
relay
tea
m.
Miss •
for Houston and .the natlo.n's No. 1
last
year's
record.
Taylor,
and
Sophomores
Tony~!
Taylor
pushes
herself
at
all
times.
:
. team survived a rash Of fouls
The increased roster of.tracks- Owens, Jodi Adams, a nd Laura
She Is. w~at coaches Cl!ll a :
. against several key starters to turi:l
ters
ts
the
result
of
a
large
riumber
Ainsb~IY:
competitor, Korab added.
back Memphis State. The victory
of
freshman
gtrls
corrilng
from
last
Ml~s
Wolfe
and
Miss
Taylor
will
The other three returning tetter ;
was the 24th straight for the
year's
outstanding
·
junior
high
~captain
this
year's
squad
.
For
·
winners
are all sophomores. As a :
ONLY
Cougars, who are 29-2 overall.
track
program.
the
past
two
years,
Wolfe
has
group,
they
may be the three :
0l'!iuw0 n, a 7-!oot native of
"The
Incoming
freshman
are
qualified
for
the
state
championoutsta
nding
Sophomores
in the ,
Nigeria who took up basketball in
women
who
are
ships
in
the
100
meter
low
hurdles.
·
area.
Miss
Adams
competes
In the :
quality
young
1979, was dominant from start to
willing
to
expend
the
effort
to
train
She
was
a
regional
qualifier
in
four
200
and
400
meter
splints
and
the : .
finish. hurting the Tigers with s lam ·
properly. The expanded Blue An- events last year .
mlle relay. Miss Amshary com~ •
dunks and fall-away jumpe~s. The
gelS'
track
program
has
also
Coach
Korab
feels
Miss
Wolfe
Is
petes .in the long jump, 100 meter :
Cougars sufYlved even tho)lgh their
encouraged
a
larger
number
of
one
of
the
state's
finest
compel!hurdles, a nd mile · relay team .
:
starting fro nt line of Clyde Drexler,
upper
class
girts
to
come
out
for
the
tors.
"She
has
outstan&lt;.llng
ability
In
Miss
Owens
has
shown
trernend·
Larry Micheaux and Olajuwon
first time," Korab said.
a number of events besides hur- ous progress as a shot and discus
played most of the second half with
Korab
will
be
asststed
by
dtlng,"
Korab said. She also
perlormer. Because of the valuable
Coach
three fouls and Drexle r fouled out
G.M. VEHICLES ONLY
volunteer
Coach
Virginia
Tirpak
·
provides
a
great
c]eal
of
leadership
experiences,
last year as freshme~ •
with 3:17 to go after scoring ·eight
who
will
work
primarily
with
the
with
her
attitude.
"She
Is
a
plim~
and
their
ability
and ~llllngness to _
Points.
splinters.
example for all young athletes to
excel, Coa~h. Korab •s looking for · •
Gary McClain and John Pinone
The
Blue
Ang~ls
return
five
letter
follow
because
she
practices
as
these prom1smg sophomores to set
sank fou r critical free throws in the
·
the
tempo for the rest of the team.
POMEROY, .OH.
500 E. MAl N ST.
final 23 seconds, boosting Villanova
He feels they will be a positive
over Iowa.
PH. 992-2174
·
influence for the '83 season.
Other members of the . squad '

Stock # 518

1T.I..I..CM' SI"R~H."i 1~ 1 - Sm i th~ n-:111.
flrown :1!~ II fi. Milc·hC'll 7 0·1 1~ .. Johnson li :!-l

\'t&gt;B&lt;M· Sprinll:'
Butil.••.v-• ( "tontr.tl

Georgia shocks St. John's,
Buckeyes lose to Tar Heels

second. It bounced o!f the rim just
before U1e buzzer. finishing til!'
Tigers' season at 24-3:
"We're runts, but we'll play
tom.o rrow," Dave Christie
promiSed.

long bed. 4 c ., 4 Speed trans., gauge$, P.
· brakes. P.
· , low mount mirrors .
re~r step bu nn per,
, tape stripe.

points
by last
the Blue
Jays'
74-71.
Kevin Six
Geise
in the
49 seconds
set tled the ou t~om e.
Yellow Springs blew a 12-point
lead after the first quarter, ma.inly
because of Rand~ Kreb&gt;;' 22 points
a nd 11 rebounds for Buckeye
Central, a 68-54 victor in the other
Class A semifinal Friday.
St. Vincent -St.Mary appearC'd ·
headed for a rout. building a 37-22

!':t•11· Yurk r!\l. i n .. Phil;tl ll'l phra o.~l
Cl!·;uw&lt;.tll 'l' Flo1
Ci('\'f'litnd ""· f'h it 'Ul.~ • rl\' l. t ,11 !\llo ·,o;,:l,
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Sru trk 1·s ."i.;m Oii"L, , " ' YuiTli.l. ,\ ri t.

f"l t'!&lt;O&gt;&gt; Sl.tlt'. :!;1 111.
Jt l l. .11 \'i'll Ymk on 1

·

Boththe
carlast
liedgame
27.0 accomplishments
into
,
St..lolm's, the 1949 sta te cha mpion, ni'&lt;XIcd two overt imes to nip
No. 30IdWashingtonBuckeye TJ:ail

l 1·an~ ,

a

.

Saturday, Akron Central-Hower,
the 1980sta te champion, and Toledo
St. Francis, matched 26-1 records.
In the Class A windup, itwasNo.l,
Delphos St.John 's, against No. 2.
New Wa,hington Buckeye Cent-ral.

l ';l lm

C hi('i!J.!II oi\l. t \''· Sr. Lout~ 11 1 Sl. p , .
Fl.1 . . 111 1.
,
1'&gt;- •troil , .... ll n u ~t o n ul (\K\1&lt;1. F l .. .
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Transaclicms

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,\nwrit1.111

\ .~ .

"We just fell asleep. Our Intensity
welL He had only one
left us," said Akron Coach Joe
just eight points.
Subotlcki. A technical foul against
WE•lls,•DOlc Coach Bob Flint said of
him helped Bexley to
rare OalkHar~•Jtr;. "Wejustsawtoomany
five-point play late In the third
qt~arter, tuminga41·38deflclt into a
Christie master·
43-3Jiead.
Oaks to their comeIt was a bitter defeat· for
trclm · DE•hl.i'~a victory . His two sons,
St.VIncent-St.Mary, 224. The Irish
AU-Ohio ·
and Don
were trying to become the ~nd
Chr!Stieie~
, ,!~~t~~~ 19-point totals:
school In state hlsfory to win the
They s1
the Oaks' last five
Ohio football playoff and state
points.
basketball tournament titles In the
Doll rh.l'l•""'s basket lifted Oak
same SChool year. Marion Pleasant . Harbor
a 4948 lead with 3: 23
accomptiShedthefeatln1972-73.
left.
Oaksstailed theball,
. TheTrlsh'sCurttsWUson ,theOhio · I)on
. · hltafoutshotthatgave
PlayeroftheYear.scoredonlytwo
the
·. their margiri with 12
baskets in the sec&lt;ind half and
seconds
accounted for just12points. Steve · Ron};~~l~~~~:~:t;~~ll~misseda
Williard, Bexley's all.state guard,
JO.foot d
shot in the final

PAT HI L FO.RD .1nc· ,

ra lly. over
turning
a five-point
Wellsville
lead
after three
quarters
for a 50-48 decls ion over the Tigers in
the other semifinal Fr iday night.
In the big-school showdown

St.,;,.

(i an1t"'
C'if·l· lancl otl Ptlilat.IC'Iph i.t
lfld1;m,, .11 w a,ru n .~::••m
Po rt land &lt;~I ko. t JI "'-1 ~ Cih 'n '

65-58 loss .

.

aNeither
nctthe third
has-rankedsquad.&amp;xley.
won a prior sta te
championship.
Oak Harbor displayed its own

l . l' ill.~IJlU J:! h S.l\ ~

March 27 1983

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

of It should
the state's
be a classic,
No . a2 matchup
ranked
regular-season power. Oak Harbor,

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, .,..,, y,, k 1 '\ l. o li. J\,,n.,_l, Ci l'\ ~&lt;.;, :,

Wa .~ hlnL'Iun ~~7 . "M il\\ .r uki• • 41i
01'11\"Pi " \:11 . fll •lt'Hil ~:!II
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lli.t.t~l on

1J olll l1 ,\ lUI

1\ !'1-oi P, ('.lit ' hl 'l, , 10(/ ,!(Irk'(!
1 1' 1

t"rida\ .... t; :unt-...

t 'riduv'.., flaim'!'&gt;
B)'.!OI1 l:!t Clt·l ·t ;l;on&lt;l Jtr!
Sf'w ·. kr:-o~·~ Ull. Ptl iladl'iplii.t 'I~
!':t'\i· York H~l . ,\ !lt.t11 hl .H7
lnd ia.n.t \l'f. l't:oh 117

St·att~ · ill

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tllrion. il tl'I(•U'o4'.
1\11., ,"\ f- :s! rr.\ 'IWJ:-..S-Trad i'l S.tl llu
l&gt;'t.J . •·:•&gt;• '111,'1. 1r&gt; 1iu • l lll•rnoil TIJ!o ·r·~ li1i
Sit •i no • l'&gt;•1ll'. 1'\&gt;h'ht•&gt; '.
\"J·:W YOI.U\ Y . \ :'-"1\ I : I·~S-lkh • o~.-,j •tl B.n

111'

-

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!!&gt;7 _It&gt;•.

llo

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pltl'ht•t', 1•0 ll ' l'f'\'l o( 'l lhlt · U'iJilo'l "- Ill!'

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t::A."i'rt:tw &lt;usn;Ht:Nft:

:dhloo

Df~ I'HOIT

,

!'\latioo&amp;tl Ba.'\kl;ha.U .\.-x·iatiiKJ

x rhlll ldl 'li-\hi:&gt;

By GEORGE S11t0DE ·
· AP Sports Wriler
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - It
may haVP stunned . the sellout
crowd, Columbus Bexley's 65-58
victon· · over' Akron St. Vincent· ·
St .Mary, esp&lt;'('ially aftE'r thE' Lions
trailed by 15 point s in the Class AA
.statE'boys basketba ll semifinal
"I saw it a na 1 still don't b€IievC'
it. .. grumbled oneAkron fan ~ s he
lett St..John Arena Frida~· night.
Genr Millard. Bexley's .coach,
sa w it and he did believe it.
·:our kids alwavs manage to
stage a m lly. 1 knew they would
tonight. ltwas just a matterofwhen
thev would do it," sa id Millard, who
gu ided the 26-1 Lions against26-0
Oak Harbor in the Class AA title
gameSaturday night.

fit•lcl'r, ro Hw Oiou'll':"lon ('hMii&gt;"' uf !Ill ·

NBA results

March 27 1983

.•

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Page-C-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Marth 27,

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

1913' ·II•

.Southern's Weese .c·a ptures
third straight MVP award
By SCO'IT D. WOLFE
award Weese became the only
CHESHffiE ~ In
recent
player to win the award more than
meeting of girls' coaches from the · ~nee.
Southern Valley 1'\thletlC Confer, Jolnlrig Weese on the first team
ence, 10 girls representing the five
was teammate Amy Littlefield,
league schools were named to
Eastern's ~ Dalley, Southwesta ll-league teams, headed again by
ern's Tanya McNeal,and Tana
league champion Southern who
George of North Gallla.
placed lour candidates among tbe.
Amy Littlefield, 5-8 junior, paced
top 10. For the third straight year,
Southern's attack this season with a
Southern's Mel Weese was leading
long list of outstanding statistics oil
· vote recipient, gaining top honors
the season. She averaged 25 points
withlng the league · as Its Most
per outing, n_eltlng 583 points on the
Valuable Player.
season, while clearing the boards of
Weese, the Southern point guard
278 reboundS, 'collecting 36 steals,
for four straight years, ended the
and 20 assists.
season wi\h a 12 point average,
Littlefield was among scoring
totalllng 322 points on the season.
leaders lnSoutheasternOhioasweU
as being on top in league scoring.
During the year the 5-5 point guard
collected 28 rebounds, 37 steals, and·
Eastern junior Dee Dalley aver39 assists. while exhibiting a series
aged 18 points per game and 15
of fine floor games throughout the
rebounds per outing with an
season. In ·
the MVP
outstanding effOrt !or the Eagles.
North Gallla Senior Tana George
averaged 21 points per game,
grabbed333totalrebounds,andshot
54 percent from the field !It
completing a line career.

a

MEL WEESE

DEE DAILEl'

AMY LI1TLEF1ELD

SVAC league team
SV AC ALL LEAGUE
First Team
Name -School
Year
Mel Weese, MVP, Southern ..... ..................... : ...... ... .............. 12
Dee Dailey, Eastern .... ....... ...... .... ..................... .. .... ....... ... .. 11
1 unya McNeal, Southwestern .'............................................... 10
Amy Littlefield, Southern .... ..... .... .... ........................ .. .......... 10
Tana George, North Gall!a .. , ........ .. ... ...... ............ ..... . ........... 12
Second Team
Tanya Salser, Southern ...... .............. ..................................... 12
· Angle Spencer, Eastern ................................... , .................... 10
Amy Roush, Kyger Creek ........................ ..... .. .............. .... ... 11
Lisa Triplett, Hannan Trace .................................... ............. 12
· Laren Wolfe, Southern ......... : .. .... ................. ........ .. .. ............ 11
Honorable Mention
Michelle George, North Gallla
Tanya Atkins, Southwestern
Cindy Evans, Southern
Heldt Carmen, Kyger Creek
Michelle Johnson, Southern
Julie
Dillion, Hannan Trace
i&lt;elli Whitlatch, Eastern

Lyne Center Schedul e
Week of Mardi 27, 19113
. Date- Gymna§ium
Mar. 'Zi 1 p.m./Rio Baseball vs. Thcmas More

Pool

,---------------------.:.... ·· "~
11

FISHERMAN'S WHARF

,; J.

BAIT AND TA'CKLE
Nice Selection of Live Bait:
Ni&amp;ltt Crawlers
11111 Worms
Wax Worms
·•11ud Eels

TONY A McNEAL

Bob Waterfield,
ex-pro gridder,
dies at age 62

Bass llinnows
Crappie Shiners
'Arkansas Shiners
'Spri111 Lizards

TACKLE
Ambassador, Shimino
Dim, Shllttsptrt
.
lll&amp;lty, Bomber, Finwick ·

'Susonal Bait- not availab 1 11 oil timtl.
4 til. ·~. Jf Hoizwr » .C., old Rl 160 at

~~ r J'

''·' .

EVII'IfHR

...

.

Noon-6 p.m./Archon Basketball Tou m.

Closed
7·9 p.m.! Cd~ge Swim
8-10 p.m ./CoiE&gt;ge Swim

7-9 p.m./College Recreation

Mar. 28 8·10 p.m./College Recreation
Mar. '!J 8-10 p.m./College Education
Mar. ll 8-10 p.m./COllege Recreation
Mar. Jl 8-10 p.m./College Recreation
Apr. 1 7-9 p.m ./Open Recreation

Qosed
S.lO p.rn ./ColFge Swim
B-10 p.m ./College Swim

7·9 p.m./Opm SWim

Apr. 2 1 p.m./Rio BasebaU vs. Central State
l4 p.m./Open Recreatbn

1-4 p. m ./Open Sw l!n
Qosed

Apr. 3 CJosed-Easter Sunday

Bump more than a nuisance- Cheever
J,.ONG BEACH. Calif. !API ' 'Le bump" became a cause celebre
on the first ' day of qualifying for
·Sunday's Toyota Grand Prix of
Lmig Beach.
Eddie Cheever, an American
driving for the French Renault

BURBANK. Ca lif. (AP I - Bob
Waterfield, considered one of the
finest all-around players In National
Football League history, has died of
respiratory failure following a n
extended illness.
Waterfield, a mem ber of the NFL
Hall of Fame who played lor the
Rams in bot h Cleveland and Los
Angeles and later coached the
team, died Friday at St. Joseph
Medical Center, a hospital spokes·
womari said. He was 62.
Waterfield had been In the
hospital' s intensive care unit the
past two weeks, according to Rhoda
Weiss, the facility's public relations
director.
Waterfield played quarterback
for rhe Rams for eight years
beginning in 1945. He stood out as a
passer, runner, punter and placekicker .. In his early years , he also
was a fine defensive back.
He led the Rams to division titles
a nd NFL championships In both
1945 and a nd 1951. He was the first
player in NFL history to be a
uQanimous selection as the League's
Most Valuable Player when he was
so honored as a rookie in 1945.
The Rams moved to Los Angeles
In 1946, becoming the first major
professional sports franc hise to play
on the West Coast.

team, said the bump on a. new
portion of the revised circuit
through the shaots of Long Beach
was more than a nuisance.
" It's like hitting a brick wall wirh a
paper airpla ne,'' Cheever said.
Another driver. E liode Angelis of
Italy , said, "I put a pillow upder my
backside so I could take the bump
better."
Rene Amoux, the Frenchman
• )Vhomoved Lastwlnterfrom the seat
Cht&gt;ever now occupies with Renault
NEW ' YORK (API · Martina
to the Ferrari team, was worried
Navrat ilova is out to even som e old
about the t;&gt;ump despite winning the
scqres. Billie .Jean K.ing is just out to
provisional pole Friday.
·
enjoy herself.
"Witti.a full (fuel) ta'nk it would be
Navrat.Uova, top-seeded in ihe
very dangerous," Amoux said.
$350,&lt;XXl Virginia Slims Champion·
"The cars are built very light a nd 70
ships ot New York, took on Sylvia . laps is impossible if they don't
Hariika of West Germany and K.ing,
c hange !he track. The cars will
the '"Old Lady" of the women' s · break."
tennis tour, played second-seeded
ChriS Evert Lloyd in Saturday's ,----'---~------------------l
· semifinals of .the richest women's
tourn!lmerrt In the world.
The. left' handed Navratilova ad·
vanced to the ·semis at Madison
Square· Garaen. by crushing Pam
Shriver. 6-1, 6-2, while King ousted
Barbara Pofter·6-3, 6-1 on Friday
night. .
King ..affectionately called the
"Old Lad¥," showed flashes of her
youth · as she . e3$ilY handled .the
Left-handed Potter.
Potter Lpst only one point on her
first rwo serves, on a double-fault in
the third gaine, to .take a 2-1 lead.
But then King broke five straight
. times en route io r ipping off eight
consecutive games. :
Potter !ought off one match point,
at 30-40 in the siXth . game of the
second set, before finally holding
serve. Then King, who has won a
record 20 Wimbledon titles a nd is
currently ranked .Uth In the world,
cLOsed It out with a love game to
march into the. sen\ifi~als against
Lloyd.

King advances
.semifinal match

&lt;.

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.ANNIVERSARY SALE
Continues yt,ru ~pril 2nd.

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Robbins &amp; Myers ........................... no ~
Tim's Body ShOp'.. ....... .. ..... .- ........ ... 101 101
Jordan 's Gas servlce .. :.................. :. 98 no
Fe&lt;~M&gt;ral Mogul ................................ !11 111
Johnson's Market .. .... ....... .... . :......... 88 W
Bk&gt;S50m Basket Florist. ..............~ .... 86 12'.2
Fetty's Tree Service .... .. : ....., .... .... : .. 9) 128
IndiV'idual high game and high ~rtes :
Pederai4d401fUI, Sllar. D - · llll-485; .
·Jordan's Gas, Marty Hunt 175-482: · ConW'-

..,,.,i
.' .••~ 1
• '' I '

'i I}

... , l
•.~ I 'l

nlent Food. !Jetlby Russeii195-5Cli!: Rodney

Supply, Delpi!Jne Stal'llng (s~bS ~10-6l0: '

Feity's ~ Svc., Cindy Jan es 167~: J's
Food 1\lart, Maryl.ookacjo211, VenJtlaSmlth
5.111; Johnson's Mkt., Bev '. C.Sio .ljl04~;
Robbins &amp;. M:l"ro. llai&gt;!l Holley 202-Wl:
Blossom Basket, Sue Cox 169, Gamel E lliott

418: Tlm 's llody Shop, FtoAnn Rlltle 196-556:
Sue'~

Cera mics, Darleaw!SWaJn (~b) 235-540;
Bryan's Svc., Karen ·Chattln 181-487.

· Converting splits: Shl~ey Shobe, Karen
Chanin. Violet C&lt;&gt;x the 3-10: Sue COx the S-10:
VenJna Smith Jlle 9-10: Cindie lileheart the
6-7-10.

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'Rebate offer good on car~ons Of cushlontone•, Masters. collectlqn,.
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64 and 64.'J&lt;ev Carty beat Pat
Hurley, 64 and &amp;1 and Brad
JOhnston beat Terry Barr6-1and&amp;O
kl complete the sweep.
, GAHSalsoblankedtheBobcatsln
ISoubles play. John Owens·Sharon
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~ruce O'Rourke defeated Ed
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Rio fmishes 12th
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~n Marshall outing
.
• HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Rio
trrllnde College's track and field
fledmen finished 12th out o! 16
teams recently at the Marshall
pntverslty Invitational.
: ·The Redmen finished with five
points In the prestigious event to
lraiJ West Virllblla University,
Marshall, Kent State, Ohio Unlver&amp;ily, Ashland,Jndlana University of
Pennsylvania, Wf!!lt VIrginia State,
Centre, West VIrginia Wesleyan,
9'IH Track Club, and GlenvDie
§tate~ The Redmen were first
· among Mid .Ohio Conference teams
· in the rompetltton. Scoring was on
.i relay basis with no Individual ·
· - ·
' C!Wnplons 1181'ni!(i, . ·
~" Rio Grande's triple lump team
llnlshed fourth with a dlstanre of
83-10~ whlle the long Jwnp team
was sixth In !10-1.

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season on a winning note Frtday
evening with a !}.8 victory over the
Southern Alumnl.
The Alumni roster Included Joe
Bob Hemsley, .Kelly Winebrenner,
Jim Hubbard, Jeff Hubbard, Scott
Wolfe, Steve Hendricks, Bryan
Wolfe, Steve HDJ, Jay Rees, and
Dave Snodgrass,
Temilerat\U'es fell Into the lower
3J!s resulting In many errors, seven
by the Tornadoes and three .by the
AJumnl. Of the 17 runs total, only
twQ were earned.
.
Rob · Cunningham and ··· John
.forter pitched fine ball for the
'fpmadoes, combining for nine
strikeouts.
'tony ~ led the Tornado
hltle's with a slhgle and double,
Rob Cunningham had a triple, John
?orter an RBI slllgle and two walks
to.· a jlerfect night, and Wade
qonnouy a single. Paul Harris had
a single and was credited with a
fine catching job. Joe Wolfe added
a single.
The Tornadoes jumped off to a &amp;0
li'Jul In the first Inning.
, The Alumni scored three runs in
the third and fourth frames .
. Iii the fifth Inning, · the· Alumni
gave the young Whirlwinds a scare
as the elders tied the score on an
·illtleld hit by Dave Snodgrass at 8-8.
~ In the bottom half of the frame
Mth one out, Wade Connolly
piked, Joe Wolfe had an Infield
ftlngle, and Tony Deem doubled
!!eeP over the centet11elder to wtn
1M game as darkness claimed the
~~the tilt.
~ Unescore:
$outhern ............ 6 1 1 0 1-9 7 7
Alumni .............. 0 0 3 3 2-8 4 3
': Batteries: Rob Cunningham,
lohn Porter 4th (wp) and Paul
lfarrts. Bryan Wolfe, Steve Hen·
lriclat 2nd, Jet! Hubbard (lp) and
:Yay Rees.

f.Ner Kyger Creek Friday evening.

..' ,'

W. L
l31 T1

TeJVn

does opened their 1983 baseball

lltgh School's tennis team opened
ils 1983 Cl!lllpalgn with a 5-0 victory

..

Bowing Belleo Bowlilq Learue
March 18, 1118:3

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RACINE -'The Southern Torna·

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Local bowlirig

Prices ellectlvo 3/27/83 thru 4102183
W• r~servo the right to limit qu1nllt111. ·

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sears

. Bring yol,Jr rotary mower
to Sears Service Center for .

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, ohiC)-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

Tomadoes
~lip pa8t
alumni, 9-8

t;~

Complete statistics on Tonya • •
McNeal were ncit available, how- ·
ever, she completed another out· •
standing season and was na~ to ·,, I·
first team· ·all-league as' a • · ,
sophomore.
·
· ··
SE!cond team nominees were •·•• .
Tonja Salser and 1;aren Wolfe of ;
Southern, Angle Spencer of East' •,,r
ern, Amy Roush, Kyger Creek; and • • '
Lisa 1iiplett, Hannan Trace. These · ·"
top ten award winners will receive . · ·.
awards at the SVAC banquet Aprtl ·. "
19. , Named to honorable mention ··
was Michelle George, North Gallla; · ·" •
Cindy Evans and Michelle Johnson, · "
Southern; , Kelly Whitlatch, East· ·" '
em; ton§a Atkins, SOuthwestern: · .-•
Held! Carmen, Kyger Creek; and :•
Julie DUion of Hannan Trace. - ' "',·
1be Southern Tornadoettes were ·~ ·,·
agalnrecognlzedasleaguecharnpl· ,: .. ·
ons,posting a 1().{) league mark and
22-J overall·slate.Southern claimed ., '
the seCtional and district titles •, &gt;
before bowing from tournament ,c ·
play lri the regional semi-final to .. ;
daraway.
· '~

I

(t\prch 27, 1983

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SUNDAY 10 Al.tTO 5 P.M.
MON. THRU FRI.I:30 TO 8 P.M. ·
SATI!~DAY 8:30 TO 6 .

209 Upper River Rd.

.446-3807

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

Ethanile Betz was 'Jack-of-all-trades' in 1890s

Count On Us

• • •

's
GOOD/YEAII

ROTARY CLUB DINED .HERE - Many G811la County residents
remember some of lite cood meals eaten In lhls building a&amp; the corner of
First Ave., and' Syeamore St. At one lime, the Gallipolis Rotary Club
beld Its weekly !llnner meetlnp here. It was called, "The Island VIew
Inn." 'lbe brick -part of ibe stnJcture was built In 18'7l by Ethanlle Betz.

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Diary:

.
'

Friends reunite 36 years
after serving in big war

...'
REDWOMEN TRACK SQUAD - Members of
the 1983 Rlo Grande track and field Redwomen are
(Iron! row, from left): Cindy Pennock, Jane Poetker,
Ty Lawrence, Hlroe Oshita, Karen Baker, Beth
Birkhimer, Penny Edwards, and Coach Monica
Mlze. Second row, Sonia Scott', Ri.t a Keck, Vicki ·

DURING the past four years,
By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - Ralph Oller, Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis
who lives on Glen Summit Road, Blue Devils have posted a 57·29
VInton, brought In a lengthy . overall record on the hardwood.
Only area· teams with better
Illustrated clipping about two
r.e cords during that span are
friends who reunited 36 years after
Wheelersburg (81-14); Ports·
serving together In World War II.
mouth, (81·18) and Athens (66-25) .
He was one of the two friends.
In Southeastern Ohio League play,
THE CLIPPING WAS from the Athens Is 45-9 the past four years. after
Ethanile
the Civil
Betz
War
came
from
to Gallipolis
Jefferson
GAHS ls 39-15.
Greenwood, Miss., Common·
County, Ohio and by the 1870s had
wealth, a dally evening newspaper
begjln the E. Betz Brick Company
with about 1,001 more subscribers
SENIOR members of the 1982-83
on the land now used for Memorial
than the Gallipolis Dally Tribune squad who presented "Oz" a
Field and other recreation pursuits.
has. Author of the piece was Tim
plaque (photo) compiled a 57-:ll
In fact the office of the brick
Katich. He started out thus :
mark during · their high school
company is still standing at 610
career. The current seniors were
Fifth Ave. Betz used steam poIT WAS TilE late fall of 1945.
12·2 as fres)lmen , 16-4 as sophowered equipment to press the.
World War IT was over. At Camp
mores, 15;7 last year and 14-7thls
bricks Into the desired shape. His
Carson, Colo., the two · Army winter. Only other group to come
machinery could press 2,001 bricks
buddies looked back on their three close over a· four year period . an hour. The pressed bricks were
years together. The rigors of basic
(excluding the Dick S~rlder era) . than baked in a kiln . In 1880, Betz
training In Florida. The near fatal
was Jimmy Noe's crew who
boasted that he could tum out one
brushes of combat duty In Italy. complied a 54-21 record (1970-73) .
mUllon bricks a year.

'Clayton, Jean Emneli, Kyle Simpson, Cindy Dennis
and Mbo;y Walker. Third row, lAlrl Roberts, Crj.sta
Berry, Andrea Riggs, Diane WUamowskl, Judy
Weston, Carol ·Bialkowski, Janet Groves, and
Danette Pratt.

California wins fifth in row
By The Associated Press
If .outfielders Mike Brown of

California and John Shelby of
Bait imore can carry their spring
performances into the regular
season, there might be quite a race
for American League Rookie of the
Year award.
Brown, making an impressive bid
for a job with the Angels, capped a
five-run six th inning Friday with his
fourth spring homer, a three-run
shot that helped Californla to its fifth
consecutive exhibition baseball vic·
tory, a 7-1 decision over the Seattle
Mariners. Brown leads the Angels
with 16 RBI in 16 games.
Geoff Za hn held the Mariners to
five hit s and a run through five
innings a nd RBI singles b)' Rod

Bannister
just wants
to play ball'
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -They cail
him "Mr. Versatility" in . the
Cleveland Indians· press guide.
· · The name sends a chill down Alan
Bannister's spine .
Bannister would m uch prefer to
b€ a regularcenter fielder, a regular
second baseman, a regular any·
thing. He is cursed, however. with
the ability to play just about
anywhere on the baseba ll field nowhere superbly, but anywhere
adequately.
·
·
•' The result: Bannister spends half
of each year on the benc'h. waiting
until a hole needs to be filled .
·; Last season, he played fivl:'
positions for the Indians, but he
came to the plate only 348 tinnes. ·
"I'm not going to sit around and
mope about it," Bannister said. " I'd
like to get 600 a t bats: .But I've
wanlcd 600 at bats for the last 10
years,anditjusthasn't happened."
This year is shaping up no
differently
old Ban nister
than, last
who
for the
carries
31-year·a
.lifet ime .270 batting avl:'rage.
: "Hegive usso much versa tility,"
says Managet Mike Ferraro, using
that cursed ward again . "Bannister
!sa great guy to have on the club.He
will play, probably against left·
handers a nd maybe more.··
: Bannister is now prinnarlly an
outfielder, although he was the
regular shortstop for the Chicago
White Sox in 1977 a nd he has filled In
a t . fi rst, second and thir&lt;) since
joining the Indians in 1980.
Despite his status as a utility
player, Bannister was regarded
flighty enough by the Indians that
tJ1ey re-signed hinn to a three-year
!ree agent contract this yea r .

Reds notes...
. TAMPA. F la . iAPl - Foremr
Reds infielder Jimmy Stewart. who
managed the club's E ugene, Ore.
affiliate last season. has been
nained Minor League Coordinator.
• Former Reds outfielder Sam
Mejias replaces Stewart as the
manager of the E ugene team. the
Reds said.
· TAMPA , Fla. tAPl - The Reds
have decided to go with a four·
pitcher rotation this season.
• 59 far , the starters are Mario
Soto Bruce Berenyi and Frank
Pasiore. The fourth hasn't been
fleclded yet.
• "It will give Soto and Berenyi and
Pastore more opportunities lo go
oot there. If they want to win more
games, this Is their opportunity,''
$ald pitching coach BUI FisCher.
The Reds went with five pitchers
during the Tom Seaver era. Seaver
was traded back to the New York
'Mets last year.
: "Seaver wouldn't go with four
ilays" Flsehe sad. "If your main
\)ltcher won't do It, you can't do it."

Carew and Brian Downing pi-eCeded Brown's home run.
Meanwhile: Shelby continued his
torrid hitting by collecting five hits
and driving in three runs as the
Orioles whipped the Texas Rangers
10-3.Shelby, who is hitting .400 for
the spring. doubled his first three
times a nd singled his last two.
Meanwhile, Frank Viola held
Philadelphia to three hits and one
run in six innings as the Minnesota
Twins bea t the Phillies 6-2.
Philde lphi a s lu gger Mike
Schmidt sa id he..fel1 he could have
fielded a ball that went by him fora
run-scoring hit, "but my Instincts
told me" not to try for it. But he slid
into second base on his first-inning

double down the left field line.
"I'm seejng the ball, laying the
bat on it. If I can do that for six
m onths, it will be the best season
I've ever hart. But I know I can 't do
that, " said the two-tinne Na tional
LeagueMVP.
Rookie Pat Tabler slammed a
two-run homer off Brad Lesley in
the ninth inning to tie the game, then
scored the winning run In the 11th on
Ron Kittle 's grounder to give the
Chicago White Sox a 54 victory over
the Clnclnnatl Reds.
Reds starter Mario Soto surren·
dered just lwi' unearned runs and
thrl'e hits In seven Innings, walking
three a nd s triking out eight.

The
celebrations
in theheady
northern
Alps. of V·E Day

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COMBAT
DUTY canied
them
through
the Appenlne
mountains,
across the Po River Valley, and
Into the northern Alps, and they
batUed German forces all the way.
Combat was especially tricky in the
mOuntains, and the machine guns
and ammun!t!On had to be loaded
on mules when the troop traveled .

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the
7
See it at
Route 50 West by AMPAK PLAZA
ROBERTA HUFFMAN 698-8111
Col1992-7034 or 592: ] .418

lI~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ANNIVERSARY
SALE
.
.

Continual Thru Aprll2, 1983

. when you buy
Champion Genuine Hardwood
Plywood PanE?Iing

,..--------.

RALPH OILER and L. C.
Alldrews remembened this a dven·
ture and a hundred others. They'll
tell you that war gives you
memories you'll not forget!

Installed

BISMARCK. N.D. IAPI - ln orie
year, a well-nourished Hols tein
d a iry cow will produc-e as many as
13,950 quarts of milk, reports the
North Dakota Dairy CouncU .
During that year, she will drink
3,000 to 7.001 gallons of water and
will eat about 2 tons of concen trated
feeds, 2 tons of hay, 6 tons of silage
a nd the gras s on one or m ore acres
of good pastul'('.

SATURDAY, MARCH 26-10 a.m.-8 p.m.
SUNDAY, ·MARCH rJ.7-12 Noon-S p.m.

ONE DAY ANDREWS was
taking such a mule train down the
mountain side when the Germans
shot a 5Q.milllmeter shell into the
train . The shell did not explode.
Kallch wrote, but the impact
covered Andrews and his mule with
"dirt. "You . better coirte on,"
Andrews said to the mule, "be·
cal.tse we are fixing to go."

Aslc about our Service Warranty Program!

asgc
~
cabinets .

,

OILER WAS WED almost 36
year s and raised eight children.
But back to the war: the two friends
started at Naples, Italy, Dec. 23,
1943, and life got tougher. Nevertheless, they stuck together, Oiler a
machine-gunner, and Andrews an
ammunition bearer who set and
loaded the guns .

UGHT TRUCK TRACTION ON SAlE HERE!

RettiiSm.as

back .of the Bob £vans · Steak
House. Her e the trio built a
grandstand and exhibit buildings.
In the 1890s, the fa ir saw its best
days at that location . Betz had two
occupations that were to prove his
undoing - specula tion on oil wells
and the street railway. He lost
consid era ble sums in both
endeavors.
Betz died in 1903 a nd his house fe ll
iilto other fa milies' ha nd s. His
storeroom (t hat was lorn down
som e years ago) attheearlypartof
the century became a dance ha ll.
IN 1929 MR. a nd Mrs. Ira
SwL,her bought the Betz home and
turned · it Into ·the Island View inn
'and It's probable the porch arran·
gement da tes from then. II was a
good place for customers to relax
after a big meal.
The Swishers specla lizE.d in home
cooking, Southern style. The favorites on the menu were chicken and
stea k, white and yellow cornbread,
rolls, biscuits. cakes and pies. The
Swls hers canned the ir own vcget)l·
bles. The Island View Inn operated
into the 1950s at which time the old
Betz home became a rooming
house.
James Sands' address is Box 92,
Clarksburg, Ohio, 43115.

•

Quartz Clock. Tracking Control. Automat ic

Traction Sure-Grip ... The workhorse
that delivers traction all year round.

Arched
cathedral
doors in
knQtty alder.

rp~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::;:;:;:;:~~~~

'A PHONE CALL In the summer
of, 1981, however, brou'g ht them
together - the reunon taking place
In Greenwood. They both wept on
the long-distance telephone when
they had worked out the m ysteries
of their wanderings. Andrews, 58,
had marrted and had three child·
ren. Oller, 57, enrolled on the Gl bill
at Rio Grande College, and after
four years of study In agriculture he
went to work In VInton for the milk
business where he served for
nearly 20 years. Later he moved on
to the meat -packing Industry.

Custom POI.YSIEEi.

Betz also operated a construction
company that bullt not only his own
houses, but a n'Uillber of business
houses still standing. Among the.
number are the buildings at 346
Second and 400 Second.
THE BETZ AD in an 1890
directory reads: "E. Betz and Son,
manufacturers of pressed and
re-pressed brick; also contractors
and builders: we make a specialty
of buldlng and paving brick.
Located at thenorthendofCedar."
But Betz.dld otherthlngsaswell.
In an 1897 Interview with the
Gallipolis Bulletin, Betz com·
men ted: "The first thing ldld today
was set 14 hands to work at the
brickyard; then ! .contracted to sell
some property for $4,001; I sold a
man on Court Street 1.001 bricks;
sold a house for $130; contracted to
wall up an ice house; contracted for
two loads of dirt for Union
Furnace; and the day is not yet ha lf
over."
Gallipolis residents were always
amused that Ethanlle rode in his
carriage' with onelegoutsldeas if at
any time he was ready to spring
from It for action.
About 1889, it was Ethaniie,
Abraham Betz, and Lucinda Lewis
who developed the Gallla Coun,ty

~~F;a;ir;gro~un;d~s~,~th~e~n~loc~a~ted~in~a~fie~.l~d;;;;;;~~~~~~~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~::~:

BUT TIIOSE are Tim Kallch' s
words. The staff wr! ter of the
Greenwood , Miss., paper identified
the two as Ralph Oller and L. C.
Andrews. Andrews was discharged
first , and Oller stayed on a while
before going back to VInton. They
thought they'd never see each other
again ... bui they did!

SPECIAL
,·

By JAMES SANDS
Special CoJTeSpOndent
GALLIPOLIS- In 1891, a poll of
ellgiblt: voters was taken to deter·
mine their OCC\ipatlon.
nie poll revealed that ~67!~~~
of aU Gallfa vot er s . w e r e
farmers; 18 per·
cent were labor· •
ers; and the other '
15 percent In·
eludes tout of
5.549 polled) 91
carpenters, 65 clerks, .60 saloon!sts,
51 mechanics, 50 rjvermen, 45
teachers, 43 miners, ·42 millers, 38
physiclaru;, 33 teamsters, am! 33
blacksmiths.
· BUT 1HERE was one man who
defied description by any one of
these categories, for he was a
"Jack-of· many" trades. That man
was Ethanile Betz, who In 1873,
built the house at thecornerofFirst
a nd Sycamore. Only the brick part
is original, with the total cost of that
part being $1,600. ·one year earlier,
Betz had also built a storehouse
near the corner. One can see a
picture of both buildings lp the
"Landowners' Atlas of 1874," a
copy of which Is In the Bossard
Library.

Moo

Ctafl•nan

Waodglerr
Top quality, yet
moderately priced.
Rebate of

13 STYLES

Hllslde
'

Proof1of purchase
required . Qualifying
buyers will receive a
check redeemable in
merchandise. See •
coupon for details. Offer
does not apply to Shop
Grode Panels..Offer ends

Julf a lew~ more
than woodgrain repro-

5 STAINS

ductions.
Rebate of

·cLOSE-OUT
·. PRICES :
ON ALL

April16, 1983. MaJC!mum
Rebate: 12400 per family.

CHECK WITH ANY OF OUR
LOAN OFFICERS
•Any make, any model new car!
•Ask about this special offer at your nearest C &amp; S Bank office or
ask your dealer to arrange it!
•Used car rates have also been reduced accordingly!
.Pick out the car you want theri come in or have your dealer call
us.

Lower Interest Rates
•
are 1ust one more way

it pays to be a
C &amp; ·S Bank Customer!
· "A lways on your side."

CAROLINA LUMBER

CABINETS .
BUY NOW!

·r--

AND

675-3930

':RR HITCHEns

426 Viand Street

SUPPLY COMPANY

Pt. Pleasant

.

.

COACH .JIM OSBORNE.
j

'·

n \.)
'

'•

-

.

312 Sixth Slreet

.• .,,.1160

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Mond•r-Fridar I i:m • . 5 p.m., S.t. a a .m•. 12 noon.

" ALWAYS ON YOUR SIQ.E"

25 Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

•.

Member FDIC
Spring Valley

.' .

�Page-C-8- The

Mardi 27, 1983

Ohie&gt;-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

• r
•••
r

Agriculture and our community
jonll!l;/1!/!!r,i

.It's that time of year
again for area farmers
By BRYSOS R. CARTER
Ex tension Agent
Agricu.ltu r•• &amp; CNRD
Gallla C llmty

C LLIPOL!S- THis is the time
uf yc•ar when farmers are thinking

about making pasture resee:llngs
··ndplantingcorn . !f you happento ·
" consider tte no-t illage met bod of
TOp production, then you may be
.nterested in two publlcatiJns
avai lable frte at the Gallia County
Ex tension Offkoe.
OnP is called "Checklist For
No-Tillage Corn ProductiJn" arid
the other is "No-TUlage Pasture
Re• Jvatlon." These are handy
references for anyone planning to
grow corn or make pasture sredlngs using the no-Ullage method.
Our office is locat!!d at 1502
Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis, and
our telephone number is 446-7007.
- - -;-

The 14th Annual Ohio Performance Tested Bull Sale Is sche~
duEd for Monday evening, Aprll 18,
1983. 6 p.m., at the Bltll Test Center

Meigs County
agents' corner

-Belle Valley, Ohio. This is a good
sa le to purchase a beef bull for your
herd a nd I understand there have
been 226 .head on test throughout
the past few months. I do have
Information at the Extension Office
on these bulls and the.ir performanre. Feel free to stop by and look
over the list showing each bull's
performance.
F11-!Tilers In Gallia County can
now apply for gove rnmentsubsidlzed Insurance against a
partl&lt;il or total loss of their tobaccc
crop Investment. The All-Risk
Insuranre covers all losses caused
by natural conditions beyond the
farmer's control, but the insurance
does not protect anyone from the
consequences of mlsmangement.
This Is the llrst year All-Risk Crop
Insurance Is available in Gallia
County on Tobacco.
The lnsuranre must be purchased by Apr11 15, 1983, a nd can be
purchased through any local insurance authorized to sell and service
the policies. The names of agents
a uthorized to sell All- Risk Crop
Insurance can be obtained from the
ASCS Office or by calling 1-lm-4474700.

.1~, r

State/ ational

Xi J'/;//)J

_;

Telephones of ·the future. . .

TAX RETURN FlUNG
~XTENSION

You can get an· autometic 4-month
extanlion of lima to file your 1982 Form
.1 040 individual income tax return by
simply fling 1 forha 4868 "Appliclition for
Automatic ExtomliOn of Time to . F~e U. S .
Individual Income Tax Return." The
extantion fonn mu111 be •led by April1&amp; . William 0. :tnteiiZttr
1983 with the Internal Revenue Service CEITIFIED PUBUC ACCOUNTANT
Center for your 11'88 .
This fonn manly oxtanda the lima to f~e and DOES NOTal&lt;t..,d
the time to pay taxes; therefore. you mu111 pay In any taxes thetare due
with your Fonn 4868.
· One potential benefit of filing on "extension" is that the toxpao;er
has 4 additional months in which to coma up with a desired 1982
lncividuai Retirement Account (I.R.A.) contribution. Texpayers are .
entitled to make their 1982 I.R .A. contributionslill the way up to the
due date, INCLUr;&gt;ING EXTENSIONS, of their 1982 FOi'n! 1040.
Thus if you really wantto makellll I.R .A. coninbution for 1982 but will
be unable to coma up-with the cash by April16, 1983, you have the option of giving yourself an additional 4 months to coma up with the
money (i.e .. untl August 15, 1983).

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

,I
,.

:.••

REDUCE YOUR

•'

..
:!

. PHONE BILL
The key to efficiency.
From 2 to 12,000 stations.

'

'

·..•

. Coming Events - Mond&lt;\Y at 8
;p.m . the Meigs County Shepherds
'4-H Club will meet at the Extension
'otllce; on Saturday, Aprll 2, there
be a county-wkle4-H Bake Sale
'at Kro~r's fn Pl&gt;meroy from 10
·a .m. to 2 p.m.

:w1n

·

Sundci

March 27, 1983

WASHINGTON lAP) President Reagan
Saturday stepped up his campaign against a
House-passed Democratic ' budge! pian, saying it
would put the brakes on the economic recovery and
send the couiltcy back to the era of high Interestrates .
, "It's this simple: II you like the 2lpercent prime
Interest rate, 18 percent mortgage r ates, double-illgit
inflation and sky's-the-limlt tax increases of two
years ago, you'll love their budget because that's
what it would bring back," Reagan sa id .
In his weekly radio address, live from the Oval

the clock to the high lnllation , high interesf rate
nightmare of 1900 by giving a green light to at least 10
brand new government spending programs at the
same time it would allow a program , of crucial
)mportance to our cltiu'ns , Medicare,' to· go
bankrupt."
·
Reagan said that with his plan In place, "I believe
go lower."
interest rates can, should a nd
The president said Americans should not be
spectators In the struggle over the budget , and should
tell their congressmen " not to turn back the clock and

Office, Reagan said the Democrats' plan- approved
Wednesday - would force deep cuts in defense
spending and repeal of this year 's income tax cuts, as
well as inflation-indexed tax cuts due to begin in ;1985.
He said elimination of the lax cuts would cost a
mectian famUy $3,550 over the next five years .
"It's not right for them to overtax you just 5o they
can spend more, and they do want to spend more, a
lot more," Reagan said.
· He said the Democratic proposal "would turn back

will

squander America's future."
The president's discussion of the Democratic
budget came a day alter he focused on personnill
problems In his administration during a brtel ne\il's
conference.
·
On Friday, Reagan vow&lt;'(~ to s tand by his
controversial arms control nominee, Kenne th L.
Adelman, and rejected the notion . that five new
resignations a( the Environmental Protection
Agency look bad .

'.~

TeMtAo•lnc.

Authoriied Dimibutor

,•

School bus crash kills
nine injures 29

Complete priwcy • Least cost routing
Hands fnle oJ!IIfiUion • Muhi-line Conf&amp;nlriC8 callng
Data transmillion • OutgQing line restric1ion
Printed R,~ for accounting • Speed caiNng
Do not disturb • Nillht call an~ng
• Message waiting • and mora

•
•
•
•
•

912

Sato. - lnllala&lt;ion - ~ - ._...,....,nia
Ave., Charlellon 34J..9922 •

-

~-' so. .. -

(100~2-3056

~7S.62t7

•
j

Computer
sales up
By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agenl
Agriculure, Meigs County
POMEROY - Nearly one million micro-computers were sold in
the United States in 1!*12. It's
expected that more than two
million units will be sold In 1983.
There are more than 150companies
offering micro-computers. These
micro-computers are aiso often
referred to as personal and/ or
professional computers.
Small business computers range
in price from about $2,000 ·to In
excess of $10,000. For most smaJI
businessmen, Including farmers, a
minimum configuration of hardware would cost between two and
three thousand dollars. In aditlon to
hardware, a small businessman
would need some off-the-shelf
software. ·Essential software often
costs more than the hardware. It
should be noted , however, that
many computer companies are
now including an Impressive array
of software along with a microcomputer purch&lt;\se.
Recently, In fact, some manulact:urets have been offering $3,001.
worth of softWare II one will
purchase a $1.~ micro-computer.
The cost of software is In its
d e velopment , not in its
reproduction.
A business person consider the
. the purchase of a micro-computer
· should galn some computer literacy. This can be accomplished by
attending classes, visiting microcomputer stores, and reading tbi,
literature. There L' a lot of good
literature available to the beginner.
For example, a booklet such as
" How to Buy A Personal Computer" published bY the Alfred
Publishing Company, is a pretty
good place to start. There are also
general purpose monthly magazines published. For example,
Personal Computing and Byte are
beth good general information
publications on micro-computers.
Select Corn Varieties For Perfor: manre - How do the corn hybrtds
you select and use perlorm?
According to Larry Shepherd,
Extension agrooomist at The Ohio
State University, performance is
the key to selecting a hybrid to
plant. The farmer wants to know
the potential yield, ho~ well it
· s tands up (Minimum C!odgil)g) :
moisture content at maturity, etc.
"That's where we can help the Iarmer," he said.
Corn hybrid performanre !ralls
have been conduCted in Ohlo for the
past 10 years. Tihe Information is
complied and published annually In
:Agronomy ·Department Sertes 215
·"Ohio Corn Performance Test. "
The 1982 edition Is avallable at our
omre.
From lnformatlcm gathered over
the past decade, there has been an
avernge of about 60 bushels per
acre difference between the highest .
yielding and the lowest yielding
hybrids.
fn 1982 64 companies entered
hybrids. These companies suggested the see:! drop they wanted
for high yields for tte hybrtds. All
hybrids were planted and harvested at the same time. They are
listed in the performance guide In
order of moisture content, which
essentially lists theha In order of
maturtty.
·

.

·:

NEC

-

Reagan steps ·up fight against Dem budget

AMERICAN
TELETRONICS
CORPORATION-. .
·

~ttnell-~e•dlnd Section D

UNO, Ark . (AP) - "Lady, can you please help
us?" asked the frightened teen-ager who pounded on
Barbara Kinard's door at dawn . " I've got all ol 'em
out of the bus I can. I think some are dead ." ,
Miss Kinard , a nurse, telephoned for help and then
rushed with a neighbor to the scene of the natiOn 's
worst accident during a school outing in seven years,
where nine people lay dead or dying in a fallow
soyb!i!an field.
In the aftermath of the scl)ooi pus crash Friday,
whJch also Injured 29 others, students wept, residents
circulated petltloll$ ·to fix a dangerous interseCtiOn
and a teen-age survivor vowed never to ride a school
bus again.
·
"We started going around that curve, and
everybody started shouting, 'Hang on!"' said
18-year-old Jimmy Gibson, lying In a Memphis.
hospital with a broken back.
The students and their instructors had left
Jonesboro In the northeastern part of the state shortly
alter 5 a.m ., bound for a convention of high school
vocational s tudents In Little Rock . Many were asleep
45 minutes later when the bus s kidded off Arkansas
214 as it curves Into state R oute 181n Poinsett County.
The bus hurtled Into a ditch, went back up on the

pavement then down into a second ditch, landing on
its roof, officials said. Four students and live
teachers, Including the driver , were killed in the
worst such accident since 1976, when 29 children died
In a crash in Ca lifornia.
Miss Klnard said she was at home around 5:45a.m.
when the teen-age youth rushed to her door.
"The little fellow was in shock," said Miss Kinard,
32. ·:He was scared. I told him to come on in. He just
.kind of went back arid sat lhf?re and rocked back and
forth ."
She started grabbing blankets drove to the crash
site, about 110 miles northeast of Little Rock.
"There was screaming a nd hollering and crying,"
Miss Kinard said. "It was just a horrible mess- kids
on the ground, some ... walking around. It was lust a
bloody mess."
Eight members of a National Transportation
Safety Board team flew to Jonesboro on Friday to
begin investigat ing the wreck . Residents said
accidents on that section of road are common and
began circulating a petition to make the curve safer.
Gibson, awaiting surgery for his back injuries, had
been studying auto mechanics. :'I won't ride
another" school bus, he sa id .

DEATIISCENE-AnearlyFrldaymornlngbus
accident claimed the lives of nine .. Northeast
Arkansas students and faculty enroute to UUle Rock
on school activities. State Pollee satci the bus

apparently went out of control on IUghway 214 and
sUd for a distance, overturning In ~ field. Injured
were taken to Joneboro, Ark. hospitals and two
NewpOrt, Ark. hospitals. (AP Laserphoto),

.

Tylenol deaths: hunt continues, families cope:
CHICAGO (AP) - Si1&lt; months after seven people
reached lor re lief from Extra -Strength 'JYlenol and
died of cyanide poisoning, one of the 'nation's most
costly crimes J,"emalns unsolved.
The news reports and the copycat crimes have
dwindled since Chicago-area residents became
targets of a twisted new crime: random murder
spawned by a killer who was lurking as near as th&lt;'
neare;t drug store shelf.
'
After an investiga tion cost ing as much as $3
million, a corps of detect ives, reduced in number, is
still silt ing through thousands of pages of reports
hoping to tum up new leads.
Meanwhile. the families of the victinns -including
a recently married young couple and a' teen-age girl
- are attempting to put their lives back together.
Four lawsuits are In the works.
'

MAKE YOUR IRA CONTRIBUTION
AS SOON AS POSSIBLE THIS YEAR.

for

.w.:·

. .

whose grief ~nded up the in glare of a national
spotlight.
"Every time an article appears In the paper, we get
cranks or cra;!ies calling or knocking on the door,"
says Macy's father, Dennis Kellerman.
The situation is much the same in neighboring
Arlington Heights, where two brothers and one of
their wives fell victinn the day Mary Kellerman did.
·'i'ere;a Janus, whose 27-year -oid husband Adam
was the first to die there, has a n unlisted telephone
number now. She is quietly trying to ra ise the ir two
small children.
There were victims who were mothers: 27-year -old
Mary "Lynn" Reiner of suburban Winfield was
raising four children; 31-year-old Mary McFarland
of suburban E lmhurst was raising two.
The fina l v ict im was P aula Prince, a 35-year -old

..

HOLY \'EAR- A wooden a-- ·carrted by
youthS opens the procession that arrives at St. Peter's

--BANK ONE. ....
MembO&lt; FDIC

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEROYoRUTlANDeTUPPERS PLAlNS

ROME (AP) - Celebrations for the 1983
extraordinary Holy Year of Redemption start today
in Rome's m ajor basilicas as Vatican cardinals open
Holy Doors just as Pope J ohn Paul II did at St. Pete r's
Basilica.
With three taps of a gold hammer on the Holy Doors
of St. Peter' s, the pope u$ered in the Holy Year on
F riday , The cardinals open the Holy Doors at Rome's
other major basUicas .:... St. John the Lateran, St.
Mary Major and St. Paul's Outside the Walls.
John Paul proclaimed the Holy Year to
commemorate the 1,950th anniversary ·of the
crucifixion of Jesus. In Christian belief, redemption,
the theme of the jubilee, refers to Jesus sacrificing his
lile to save mankind.
"Aperite Mihi Portas Justitiae"- open the door of
justice - the pontiff chanted In Latin before striking
on the door at the inner entrance of the basilica. The
basilica' s 10-ton bell pealed. and inside, the Sistine
Chapel choir sang "Eievamlni Portae Aeternales""Lilt Up E ternal Gates."
More than ,15,000 pilgrims gathered in the rainy
weather cheered. The door-opening ceremony was
televised in 24 countries under the direction of Italian
film-maker Franco Zeffitelli.
The 62-year-old ponlill, in blue-trimmed white

basWca In Vatican City, lor the Inauguration of, the
Holy Year Friday. ( AP Wirephoto) .

speech, George Keyworth, the pres ident's science
adviser, reportedly said weapons based on lasers,
particle beams, missiles and microwaves were
among the high-technology a lfernatives.
Richard Garwin, a former defense consullant now
at IBM, says defensive s,ystems are doomed to fall
because each defensive maneuver can be countered
with a cheaper, easier offensive measure . Exotic
weapons such as lasers and beams of charged
subcatomic particles would be. ineffective against
bombers and cruise missiles, he says.
Garwin and others have questioned whether laser
and particle weapons will work at all. They object
that the atmosphere and the Earth's magnetic field
would Interfere with them, and that supplying power
to them and aiming them accurately and quicklY

would be difficult if not impossible.
Satellite weapons also could easily be destroyed by
inexpensive "space mines,"
Even if It would work, a defensive system would
have to block thousands of warheads - perhaps on
only two or three minutes' notice..
, Not all scientists questioned by The Associated
Press said tlatly thet defense against nuclear attack
Is not feasible. Some say it is not yet possible to know
whether an effective defense system can be -built.
"The president Is saying let's not jump to a
conclusion because some sclentilic guru says it won't
work," says Harold 'Agnew, a physicist who, during
the Nixon administratiOn , was chairman of the
general advisory committee of the Arms Control and
Disl1rmament Agency.

'.
.•

-·

.,.i.

vestments and and blue-embroidered miter. broke
with tradition and had the door, sealed since 1975
opened by-assistants. In previous years, the pope'~
hammer blows were a s ignal to workmen to knock
away the last br ic ks encasing the door a nd lower it by
pulleys. This time , the masonry was removed in
advance.
"Rise up once more," the pope said in his homily at ·
a Mass after the ceremony. "Protect the nations and
peoples. Do not permit the work of destruction that
threatens humanity today."
For the first time since Holy Years began in l:nl,
the celebrations will be held in churches around the
world. The original Holy Year was called to restore
faith and partially to raise money for the church and
so the faithful were required to come to Rome to
receive indulgences -or remission of temporal sins.
When John Paul first called this extraordinary
Holy Year, there was some criticism in the Ita lian
press that it was designed to bring in money for the
financially troubled Church.
But in his papal bull, John Paul made it the first
global Holy Yeat and asked bishops worldwide to
carry out the ceremonies In a simple , modest fashion
with mlnumum expense. Holy Doors may be
established In churches worldwide.

High-tech ~efense plan may be ·'pipedream'
' NEW YORK (API - Interviews with scientists
around the rountry suggestthat President -Reagan's
idea for a high-technology defense against nuclear
attack may be a scientific pipedream.
The technical difficulties in building such a system,
many scientists say, are Immense.
"I see-no prospect of deploying on the ground or In
space an effective defense," says Sidney Drell, a
professor of physics at Stanford- University and
former defense consultant to the White House and the
National Security Council.
In a televised speech Wednesday. Reagan called on
scientists to "embark on a program to counter the
awesome Soviet missile threat with measures that
are defensive. "
In a briefing at the White House following Rengan 's

•

flight attendant who took some cyanide-spiked
capsules on her return to Chicago from a grueling
three-day st Int.
The investigation goes on, thoug h on a sm aller
scale. A hotune set up to ga ther information a nd to
answer questions has been dismantled.
Emergency headquarters In suburban Des Plaines
- near most of the deaths- has moved back to the
Illinois Law Enforcement Department's area
headquarters in suburban Elmhurst.
The multi -agency task for('(' has been cut from
more . than - 100 staffers to only 20, says Law
Enforcement director James B. Zagel.
Neither Zagel nor FBI agent -in-charge Edward D.
Hegarty wUI discuss any olher aspect of the
investigation - how it is being approached or
whether the trail is growing cold.

Jubilee celebrations
open in Rome Basilicas

variable rate 18-month .
If you have an
Individual Retirematurity plan.
ment Account,
Whether you sign up
now is the time to
for a fixed or variable
make your contrirate plan, you will be
bution .if you want
assured your money
to maximize your
is earning inflationtax-deferred
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT proof interest for
interest. And if you
your retirement.
don't have an IRA, now is the time
You can set aside savings up to
to open one. The reason is simple.
$2,000 a year, which can be
The sooner you make a deposit, the
subtracted from your income before
more tax-deferred interest it can
your taxes are figured each year.
earn during the year.
If you have a non-working spouse,
Now you have four IRA
yo~ can contribute up to $2,250.
investment options at BANK ONE.
If yru and your spouse botb work,
BANK ONE has an investment plan
you can each open an IRA and
to meet almost every investor's needs.
contribute a total of $4,000 to your
You can choose a fixed rate IRA
plans. You will receive a qu~rterly
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statement on the status of your
market interest rates and guaranteed
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for 18 months, five years or even ten
insured by an agency of the
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federal government.

--._-BANK OtE office

.John son &amp; Johnson. the company whose bestselling pain-reliever was pulled from stores
nationwide alter its name became synonymous with
disas ter. has fought back to win 'JYienol abcut 00
·percent of its previous market share. Bu'tcompetition
has never been s tiffer.
'
And there is a new awarepess of ·the risks of
everyqay medica tions - with triple seals and
security packaging evident in drugstores.
Tuesday marks six m onths sinee the first of the
poisonings , when 12-year-old Mary . Kellerman
collapsed on the floor of her parents' suburban Eik
Grove Village home. after she had take n a
cyanidP-Iaced Extra-Strength 'JYienol capsule for a
cold.
Her mother and father have quit ta lking to
reporters. as have most of the victinns' families

'.

Agnew , now president of GA Technologies of La
Jolla, Calli,, says it wiii take perhaps a decade or two
of research to know whether a nuc lear def&lt;'nse
system wlll, or will not, work.
Agn('W was one of a group of 50 scientists and
poll(icians who met with Reagan b&lt;'fore a nd after hls
speech. Another was Edward Telle r. the physicist
who developed the hydrogen bomb. He strongly
supports the presidenl 's goa l._
"It is not what some people shooting from the hip
are calling Buck Rogers or Star Wars ... Teller savs,
praising Reagan's speech. " I have round again ,;nd
ngain that new ideas ar&lt;' not to be discounted ."
In recent public statements. Tellrr has hintro that
unspecified new defenses based on I'€'CI'Dt scientific
breakthroughs are in development.

\

�March 27, 1983

pharmacist
poison specialist

Sen. Glenn got start in sleepy college town
By Jt\ME'S HANNt\11
i\ssoclated Press Wrtwr
r.;Ew CONCORD, Oh io !API II' road John Glenn hOpes will lead
the White House started in this
eepy college town In eastern Ohio,
here pebple still greet strangers on
1estreet and reca UGienn as "j ust a
ount ry. down-tc;.earth person."
It was his hometown of New
~o ncord that Gle nn "buzzed" in hiS
Marine jet fighter as he was coming
off duty. It was New Concord to
which astronaut Glenn returned
tlme a nd again after liecoming the
first Amehcan to orbit the Earth.
And it is New Concord that the
U. S. senatormHy use as a launching
pad when he formally enters the
race for president. Aides say that
could be next month or in May.
Mary Steele, whose husband
taught Glenn In junior high and high
school, said she wouldn 't be
surprised if Glenn formally a nnounces his candidacy in New Concord.
something the Glenn campaign
staff has heen considering.
"It makes sense tome, in a way,if
he starts out his campaign here."
said Mrs. Steele, a longtline friend
of the Glenn family. "It's roots. He's
not really basica lly a city pel'Sln In
his thinking."
· Glenn was born .July 18, 1921 in
nearby Cambridge, but the family
moved to New Concord when hewas

2.
Coleman Knight, professor eme:
ritus of mathematics at New
Concord's Muskingum College and
longtime friend of the Glenns. Is
mayor of the town or 1,800.
He calls Glenn " just a good local
boy" of humble beginnings.
, "His father was a plumber,"
Knight said of John Glenn Sr. "I can
remember his lather lying on the
floor In a little closet off our kitchen
installing a lavatory." ·
Knight said young John was
"enthusiastic, doing lots of things,
mowing lawns, just working around
'because he had to work to make

ends meet . And I think he s tayed
that way - jus·t a natural , nice
fellow ."
The 1939 New Concord High
School yearbook listed Glenn as a
member of student eouncil. junior
class president and a worker on the
school newspaper. He played foot ·
ball, bask~;&gt;tbail and tennis; was a
member of the band, orchestra and
glee club, and had a major role In the
school play "Fanny and the Servant
Problem."
·
"He was a good student," said
Mrs. Steele. who added that Glenn's
nickname was " Bud."
"He was a good worker," she
said. "He was a hard-working kid.
And he had a lot of determinationget-up-and-go."
That view is echoed by Ellis M.
Duitch , who taught Glenn high
school physics, science, physical
education and freshman football.
Duitch, who says Glenn called
him "Cactus Pete" because of his·
Texas background, saidtheboywas
a "good, solid student."
"It wasn't a straight-A s tudent,
but It was a B·plus student ," Duitch
said. "He was a vel)' fine student in
physics. I suspect he got A's with
me. And he was very much
Interested in government at that
time."
"He had a good bit of scientific
curiosity," Duitch said. "In physics
class, he and two or three other boys
got intensely Interested in building ·
radio sets. We put up an antenna on
the building, and we'd meet at
night"
Dultch said Glenn was a "good,
substantial player" on the fresh·
man football team. "He wasn't the
most outstanding, but }le was a
good, solid player in football ," he
said.
AI Balsler coached Glenn In
varsity high school football and
basketball. Glenn playedcenterand
"worked hard at it," Baisler said.
"He was one of the top first stringers all the three years."

.. -

Glenn was a ''stabilizing In flu ence" on the team, he said, adding
that "there was no such thing as
skipping practice (forGiennl."
Balster, who also taught Glenn in
a high school government class,
said the future senator was an
lndependentthinker. yet a person of
"good humor. "
"He had his own way. He was
ready to engage in an argument
(about class material l. r thlnk his
greatest asset is his intelligence,"
Baisler said.
Glenn was graduated from high
school in 1939 anc! began studying
chemistry at Musliingum College.
In 1943, he married grade school
sweetheart Anne Margaret Castor.
who was graduated from New
· Concord High School a year before
him. They later had two children,
Lyn and Dave.
Duitch said a c lassmate of
Glenn'sonee persuaded him to take
out another girl during their high
school days.
"That's the only time I know that
John went with another girl besides
Annie," Duitch said. "That sure
didn't setgoodwit hAnnie. He never
did it again to the best of my
knowledge."
In 1~. Glenn joined the Marines.
He became a fighter pilot. flying 59
combat missions between 1944-45.
Mayor Knight said Glenn would
often "buzz" New :oncord .In his
plane so his family would know he
was home and come to pick him up
at a nearby atrfleld.
"John would come back from
vacation (in the serv ice 1 and visit
my physics class and I always gave
him a chance to lecture them,"
Duitch said.
· . Glenn anced lectured on the
. Norden bomb sight , a device that
told pilots when and where to drop
their bombs. "He sa id that thing
would do everything but shine you r
shoes." Duitch recalled.
Glenn new 90 combat miss ions
during the Korean War .. In 1957,

•

[ ,, I .·' ·I

"!!" •
"!!"

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

STAYING IN TOUCH - Chief cyclolron
phyMclst .James Blue, rlghl, dlsc.-s monitor
readouls wl!h his aMI!itar&amp;, BW Thomas. The TV
monllor shows cancer ·pallent Joe Dubbett undergo-

T.,- J.

lng a double neutron beam treatment. In the 1900s,
Blue used the NASA cyclotron to research nuclear
propulsion for spacecraft. Now he nms the device for
Cleveland Clinic doctors who use It . for cancer
treatments, (AP Laserphotd).

Physiologist studies body fat
CLEVELAND !API - Dr. Do: nald Kirkendall says he knows the
best way to determine if a person is
lat.
" If you look in the mirror and you
think you're lat. you probably are,"
he says.
Kirkendall, an exercise physlolo·
gist at the Cleveland Clinic, spends
much of his time working with
scientific ways to determine the fat
content In the bodies of athletes and
how it affects their performance.
Among his methOds to test lor fat
are computers and a water tank
used to measure body density and
convert It to body fat.
The water-filled tank, in which a
person Is immersed after exhaling
as much alr as possible. is attributed
to thP Greek mathematician and
Inventor Archimedes'\
"The story goes that Archimedes
had two gold crowns and he wanted
tO:see whlch one had more gold so he
immersed them in water and . he
could tell by the.denslty which one
had more gold," Kirkendall said.
The same principle can be used
with the body because muscle is
more dense than fat. Clinic doctors
put the underWater weight figures,
data from skinfold tests and other
factors into a computer to determine i he percent of body fat.
J)octors.conducting sklnfold tests
use pincers that grip two Jayers of
skin and fat to register the thickness
or' Ia t at seven parts of the body.
Dt;oslrable body fat for an adult
male averages 15 percent to .20
percent; forfemales, It is20percent
to 23 percent,
"We don't want people to gel
stuek with thls ubiquitous thought of
hOw much tat they should have, so
we try to give them a range of
weights and what thefatlevelwlllbe

at each," said Glenn Street, . an
excercise specialist at the clinic.
To Cleveland Indians center
fielder Rick Manning, body fat is an
enemy. Two years ago, he reported
to the Indians' spring training camp
overweight. Even though he
trimmed down. the stigma stayed
wlthhlm.
"He came in here a few weeks ago
and was plenty worried," Kirkendall said. "When we weighed him,
he was 193 pounds. one pound more
than hedidthe last dayoftheseason.
He was quite relieved."
Amount so! body fat vary greatly
In athletes. Kirkendall said partici pants in lndividua I sports generally
have less body fat because their
performances depend completely
on themselvPs. He mentioned
dancers and wrestlers as examples
or athletes who usually have the
least amount of body fat. about 5
_
percent to 10 pereent.
Cleveland Browns linebacker
Tom Cousineau, a wrestler in high
school, was shown to have about 3
percent body fat when he graduated
·from Ohio State University In 1979.
Kirkendall said such a low
percentage of body fat is extremely
rare. - We hear ail kinds of
outlandish numbers," he said. 'This
can be a very subjective test"
Athletl's In team sports carry
body fat related to the team position
they play. In football, for Instance,
players closer to the line of
scrimmage generally carcy more
body fat The offensive line of the
Super Bowl champion Washington
Redskins was nicknamed the
"Hogs," partly because of the
weight or the players.
"The defensive backs and often- ·
stve backs tend to be leaner. They
have to move more and they don't

want to carry any more of a load
than they have to." Kirkendall said.
"We've had whole football t!'ams
come in and,wc can tell by body fat
what position they play."
Kirkendall and Street sometimes
make a game out of their science. A
visitor who took the underwater test
had within OJ percent oft he body fat
estimated by Street before the
procedure.
Street explained that because the ·
number of fat cells in a person
doesn't change after puberty. the
gues~lng is easy when you know
something about a person's background. Fat cells can expand and
shrink. however, he said.
In non-athletes. body fat tends to
Increase with age. "A person tends
to lose a llttlemuscleand gain a little
fat each year," Kirkendall sa id.
"Even though the scale weight
might only change a pound a year,
that'.s still a pound or junk tissue
that's been added.
"Pinching an inch In front of a
mirror when you're nude doesn 'I
tell you If you're 20 percent or 2.'i
percent body fat," he said.
Meanwhile, researchers at Case
Western Reserve University say
only one in three people who Jose 20
pounds In a year succeed in keeping
the weight off.
"The successful 'losers' changed
their eating habits and they chose
patterns that were like people who
were not fat ," said Mary Ann
Weber,a ~U assistant professor
of nutrition and family medicine.
"The faster the weight comes off
the faster it usually goes back on,"
Kirkendall said. "But there's no big
secret to successful dieting. All a
person has to do Is reduce or
substltutl' some foods."

· Hying from Los Angeles to New
York, he madethefirsttranscontin·
ental flight that averaged super·
sonic speed.
Despite his accomplishmen'ts,
Glenn has maintained hls modest
ways, Mayor Knight said. Even
though Glenn was an ace, "he
wouldn't go around bragging about
il."
Knight said Glel)n once piled into
the ·back end ·or Knight's station
wagon instead of riding in a seat,
and he recalled the time Glenn
returned to speak at Muskingum
College and said, "This is the first

time I've been on campus that l
haven't ha~ to mow the campus
before the celebrity shOwed up."
Knight also .recatied the time
Annie dropped Glenn off ai the high
school for a commencement address and he hesitated kissing her
goodbye because he was in a hurry.
According to Knight . Annie
replied , "Keep it short, stupid."
Glenn's easygoing nature is
confirmed by Dultch.
· "He's very common; nothing
stuck-up about him at all. lf he were
here, he'd just as soon sit on that
desk and dangle his feet and feel at

STREETS OF NEW CONCORD - 'lbe road
John Glenn hopes will lead to the White House started

ea;:e." Dultch said.
Basically, John is just a country, ,
down-to-earth person," echoed
Mrs. Steele.
"We were out there In the garden
one time, and John came out where
we were working out there and
picked up a tomato and rubbed It off
and started eating it.
"I said, 'My gosh, can't you even
le(mewasi1thatforyou?"'Hesald.
'Well, this is fine."'
In 1959, Glenn was named an
astronaut ·In the Mercury space
program. ln1962hebecametheflrst
American to orbit the Earth.

damage to healthy tissue the beams
might penetrate to get to a tumor.
The two nt&gt;utron beams and the
increased energy makt&gt; the cyclotron at NASA Lewis Research the
most powerful cancer-treatment
tool of its kind in the nation;
according to Dr. Antonio R.
Antunez. the clinic's chief of
radiation therapy .
"The scientific hypothesis, that

thetwo-beamsystemanda therapy
room .
"The cooperation or the authOrities. technicians and physicists at
NASA to accomplish the modifica'
tions was absolutely unbelk&gt;vable,"
Antunez sa id.
Now. Blue works lor the clinic at .
NASA operating the cyclotron for
the doctors. Doctors report aU
1rea1mem n:-sults to the Radiation
thP neutrons may have some
and Therapy Oncology Group In
advantage over X-ray treatm&lt;'nt .
Philadelphia, a branch or the
still really exists at the clinical
National Cancer .! nstitute.
!('vel," Antunez said. "Weare trying
"Mosi or us are convinced that
to demonstrate that our hypothesis
most of thC' patients are goln!( to
is correct in a sufficient number of
benefit from neutron therapy," said
patients."
Dr. Pra nk Thomas. one of the
James Blu&lt;' was a physicist at
physicia ns who trt'ats patients on
NASA Lewis Research in the 19:xls
the cyclotron. "We have some
when nuclea,·propulsioncaught the
reason to thin k that this is
fancy of scientists . T):lecentergot its
promising. but genemlly spcak ingi
first cyclotron in l958and updated It
a n institution like ours .has to be
in 1970. when Ihe research involved
con"''rvativc."
nuclear propulsion for spacecraft .
Only certain kinds of tumors are
" Back in the Nixon administra ·
considered lor neutron beam treattion. about 1970orthereabout s, they
ment. Thomas said. Especially
decided it was really going to cost
targeted are localized ·tumorS, or
too much." Blue said. "NASA
malignancies that haven't spread
couldn't support that activity With ' beyond a certain point.
·
the JevC'Is of budg£'1lng it eould
Dr. Reinhard Gahbauer; one o{
expect in the future. ThC' glorious
the doctors using the cyclotron, said'
00;, whel'l' budgets increased .alsuch loca lized tumors develop
most automatically. wer&lt;' gone."
hypoxia , a condition in which outer
Blue said 400 NASA employees
layers of cancerous cells. lack•
lost their jobs when research in
oxygen and become resistant to
nuclear propulsion and related
conventional radiation tn:oatment. .;
fields stopped. and the cyclotron at
"II you usc neutrons, cells an'
the Lewis center no longer had a
much less protected by this lack of
use.
oxygen. and so neutrons, dose per'
"1 suggested that WC' might look
dose, would be more effective •
Into medlcin£'. and the Cleveland
against hypoxic cancer cells," '
Clinic bccam£' interested In neutron
Gahbauer said. "What we expect
therapy," Blue sa id.
.
with neutron' is Improved local ·
Antunez said the Cleveland Clinic
control of advanced malignancies ~
Foundation obtained NASA's apwithOut increased liability to the".
proval for the project and financed · patient."

CHICAGO (API - Even before hls voice begins to calm a frantic·
: mother whose young son just swallowed a week's supply ·of vitamins,
- Anthony Burda's fingers begin "reading" antidotes at the polson control
,_center.
.. lie knows the value of speed ih poisoning cases. The 28-year-old
, ,Pharmacist was blinded seven years ago In an accidental poisoning.
.. As he swiftly and coolly locates the Braille file card containing
' life-saving measures, he assures the mother the dose Is not enough to .
. damage her child's liver or kidneys.
, "Let's just say It's more of a coincidence that I work at a poison control
center," says Burda, refusing to talk about the· accident that left him
,sll;htlesS,.: Tm really not 0111 on a crusade or anything.''
That he works at all, hliwever, Is due to a fight he's been wagii.tg since
before finishing his education.
Although he was near the top of his class at the University of Dllnols,
teachers and rehabtlatlon C()unselors discouraged him from continuing his
pharmacology studies when his blindness occurred during hls junior year.
Despite "very narrow-minded" counselmg, he refused " to tum Into a
weaver or a rocking chair pacifist"
"I've had to more or Jess blaze my own trails," he said, adding that he
got some help from those closest to him. His wife, Marl, lor Instance.
helped him by reading an entire 1,6~page pharmacy book to him.
Burda ultimately finished among the class top 10 and scored 91 percent
on the .licensing exam, but the IllinoiS Stat&lt;' Board Agency refused to issue
him a phamnaclst registration "simply because I was blind," he said.
"They were ignorant .,. afraid I'd jeopardize the health and safety of the
public."
He . fought a two-year court battle before he finally was granted his
lklense about two years ago.
In the mean!lme, numerous employers shunned him.
"They all looked at me as some poor guy looking for a job who had a
degree In pharmacology," Burda said Friday. "I looked at myself as a
very good pharmacist who just happened to be blind."
Finally, he joined the staff at the Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical
Center's Polson Control Center In Chicago- where callers never suspect
he is blind.
"It's very fulfilling because I get a chance to really use a lot more of my
pharmacology knowledge more than the guy pouring (drugs)lrom one
bottle to another," he said.
"He's got to be one of the most knowledgeable pharmacists in the
bUsiness," phamnacist Layne Oliff said of Burda. "He remembers
formulas from four or five years ago that I can't even remember from last
year. He's incredible."

Don Carlos Payne, Beatrice
Certltlcatl' by Transfer, Sutton.
Payne. Judith E. Payne. Charles A.
Paul P. Fisher, deceased, to
Paynt' to Norman E. Hawle.v. Lot
Theresa Fisher, James Paul
426. Columbia.
Fisher, George W. Fisher, AffiWest Ohio Annual Conference davit, Sutton.
of the United Methodist Church
Norman Fisher, Helen Fisher,
to South Bethel New Testament John W. Fisher, Violet Fisher,
Church, Inc .. 1 A., Orange.
Hiram T. Fishe~. Grace Fisher,
Otis E. Chutes. Vyona R. James Mason t1sher, Virginia
Chutes to Burl Putnam, Bonnie Fisher, Theresa Fisher, James
Puinam, Parcel, Olive.
Paul Fisher, Lou Fisher,
Raymond J. Fowler, Patsy R. W. Fisher, Edle Fisher, to Denny B.
Fowler to George H. Warner, Brown, Cordelia Brown, 1 acre,
Right of Way , Rutland.
Sutton .
Clifford L. Adams, Judith D.
Lucretia Werry, deceased, tc:i
Adams to Eagle Mountan En- Harold W. Werry, Walter C. Werry,
ergy Corp .. Right or Way, Olive. John E. Werry, Paul C. Werry.
Wayne W. Upton, Elizabeth L. Margaret Phelps, Cert. of Trans.,
Upton to Eagle Mountain Energy Pomeroy.
Corp .. Right of Way, Olive. .
Elizabeth Yost, Elwyn R. Yoot,
Douglas W. Little, Connie · L. Affidavit, Middleport Village,
Little to Columbus arid Southern
· John Tyree, Delores TYree to W.
Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way, Dan Roll, Trustee, Aetna Casualty
· Sutton.
and Surety Division at Aetna
Fraklln · M. Rizer, Wanda M. Casualty and Surety Company,
Rizer to Columbus and Southern Trust Deed, Pomeroy-Middleport.
Ohlo Electric Co., Right of Way,
Lucy Sencer, Charles Spencer,
Pomeroy.
deceased, Brenda Cunningham,
Richard E. Chambers to Colum- Affidavit, Syracuse.
bus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Clyde J. Morlan to Grego!)' J.
Right of Way, Chester.
Light, Cheryl Light, Sheriff's Deed,
Larry R Rapp, Linda M. Rapp to Orange.
John Chaney, Dorothy Mae ChaEleanor Welch Zelher, deceased,
ney, 2.rn acres, Chester.
Dallas Cadle, Betty Cadle, Cert. of
Buckeye Pipe Line Company to Trans .• Middleport Village.
Ohio Oil Gathering Corp. ll, Right
Beatrtce E. Howell to Kenneth
o( Way Assign, Meigs.
Kenna w · Howell, VIrginia Arlene
, Donald J. Peterson, Pearl H. Howell, Lot 38 and Lot 39, Rutland.
Peterson to Curtis J. Dalley, · Donald E _.Llttle, Lois J. Little to
Wllladeen Howery, 1 acre, Herald 011 and Gas Company,
columbia.
Right of Way, Rutland.
Richard L. Fetty, Glenna Fetty
Edward E. Ourtiam, Pansy B.
to Perry Carpenter, Hilda Carpen- Durham to Joel K. Kitchen, Sallie
ter, one-half acre, Rutland.
E. Kitchen, 1.92 acres, Rutland .
, Georgia Smith, Harley A. Smith
Glenn Eugene Vance to Robert
to David C. Kennedy, Deena L. Earl Vance, Parcel, Rutland.
Kennedy, 1 ~ acres, Salisbury.
Robert Earl Vance to Glenn
John Melvin Wells Jr., deceased Eugene Vance, Parcel, Rutland.
to John S. Wells, Shelley Proffitt,
Robert Earl Vance to Freda
Gary Wells, Cert. of Trans., Marie Durham, Oswell Eugene
Chester-Lebanon.
Durham, Parcel, Rutland.
MaJY Allee Fisher, deceased, to
Russell Roush, Bernice R. Roush
Norman Fisher, John W. Fisher, to Columbus and Southern Ohio
Hiram T. Fisher, James Mason Electric Co., Right of Way, Letart.
Fisher, Paul Fisher, Lot, Sutton.
John E. Anderson, Luda J.
Paul P. Fisher, deceased, to Anderson to Columbus and South·
Theresa Fisher, James Paul errt Oblo Electric Co., Letart.
ll'lsher, George W. Fisher, Lot,
Paul S. Moore· to Columbus and
Sutton.
Southern Ohlo Electrtc, Co., Rlgllt
: Norman Fisher, Helen Fisher, of Way, Sutton.
.lbhn W. Flsher, VIolet Fisher,
~am T. Fisher, Grace Fisher,
Jaines Mason Fisher, V~la
Fisher, Theresa Fisher, James
Paul Fisher, Lou Fisher, George
W. Fisher, Edle Fisher to Danny B.
Brown, Cordelia C. Brown, Lot,
Sutton.
Thomas Parker Sr., deceased,
Mary Allee Fisher, now deceased,

George ·

Revival slated

'.

''

Property transfers...

In this sleepy coDege town In eastem Ohio, where
people still greet strangers on the sll'eet. (AP
Laserphoto ).

Neutron beam used to fight
man's malignant rte·ck··tu.mo.r..
By M.R KROPKO
Associ~ed Press Writer
CLEVELAND !API- Joe Dub·
bert travels 120 miles every week to
rest prone on a treatment table
while a JOO.ton cyclotron bust s apart
atoms and shoots two powerful
neutron beams at a malignant
tumor In his neck.
"It' s no sensation at all," said
Dubbert. · a Muskingum College
history profesSor. "It's just lik&lt;'
·
taking a nap."
Dubbert, 43, suffers from melanoma, a form of s kin cancer. He
previously underwent chemotherapy lor a tumor on his shoulder.
He comes weekly to the National
Aeronautics and Space Admin istration's Lewis Research Center lor
lh&lt;' rare form of treatment at a
device described as the most
powerful of its kind in the United
States. All he must do is try to
remain still during the treatment.
The cyclotron is a machine that
exc ites hydrogen a toms and sends
them at a berylium target. The
collision busts the a toms and the
frees the neutrons from the nucleus.
The neutrons then are fired at a
tumor.
The device was dev!'loped at
NASA for research on nuclear
propuls ion of airplanes and spacecraft. but it was convened into a
therapeutic tool by doctors and
physicists of the Cleveland Clinic.
Clinic doctors have been perform·
ing cyclotron "trials·· under the
guidance of the National 1 Cancer
Institute in Bethesda. Mct .. since
Nov. 1977. The treatments are
described as trials, since effects of
neutrons on a tumor aren't fully
understood .
"I had three X-ray treatments at
Ohio Sta te University ," said Dubbert, a res ident o!New Concord. "In
theprocesso!that ; I found out about
this treatment and switched up
here.
"I a m, of course. hopeful the
tumors will shrink . I think what one
can expect from this therapy is to
buy some tim&lt;' until a systemic
treatment is developed."
Doctors and physicists in the
Clevela nd Clinic project say the
Fermi National Accelerator Lab,
ope1·ated by the University of
Chicago, and a lab at the University
of Washington in Seattlearetheonly
other places using a cyclotron on
cancer patients.
The National Cancer Institute has
awarded grants for other cyclotron
facilities at UCLA, the M.D.
Anderson Medical Center in Hous-·ton and the Fox Chase Ca:1cer
Center in Philadelphia.
The treatment uses a stronger
form of radiation than conventionai
X-ray therapy. Tile ., other two
facilities use one beam. The
Clev~land cyclotron uses two
beams, one at the side of a patient ·
and one above a patient.
About 400 cancer patients have
been treated with the cyclOtron
since Nov. 1977. Last November,
doctors Increased the power, or
energy, of the beams, hOping lor
quicker treatment results withOut

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Poge-1).3

~ Blind

March 27, 1983

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

Page-1).2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallij,olis, Ohict-'Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'"

'''

PoiiiUVLBEAM-Nune-tberaplstPatrtclaMocarsldadJusls
a devlee wblch wDI llhoot a beam of neutron&amp; at the patleat's neek. , ;:;
Reatln1 calmly Ia .11m Dubbert, a college professor wllo IN the
·lreatmeat once a week In tile hope a tumDr wDI be elilniJuUed. 'lbe
beam 1lhown here Is ooe ollwo beiUIIII attached to a lar&amp;e cyclotron,
which bual8 up hydrogen atoms to free neub'ons. (AP Laserphoto).

POINT ROCK- Rev. Rlclulrd
C. Baker, a full-time evangelist and
song evangelist of the Church of the
Nazarene, will conduct 1ervlces at
7: 30 p.m. Tuesday at the Potnt
Rock.Church of the Nazarene,
A native of Charleston, · W.Va.,
where he presently resides, Rev.
Baker has lleen In the evangelistic
field for a number &lt;:1 years and has
also served the West VIrginia .
District In pastorales.
.
· Rev. 1'homas McClung, pastor of
Point Rock Church, extends an
Invitation to the publlc.

\.

REV. BAKER

\,

RAKE'S
RS
-.

'

'

'.

..

'

\.~ii'·~ .
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'

.SPRING ONSLAUGHT - A pedestnan sruggles through drifts
that buill up from an elpt-lnch snowfall and 20 mph winds 1n Sioux City,

iO

~

...

j,

Iowa. The snow was expected to continue through Sunday. Travel was
lhnlted lhrougho~t Northeast Iowa. ( AP Laserphoto I·

18 inch snowstorm -hits Midwest_regio~
By Associated Press
A late ~arch snowstorm
squelched spring Saturday with up
to 18 Inches of snow blown tn'to
waist-high drifts across the Midwest, sending cars and trucks
skidding into ditches and prompting
officials to urgepeopletostay home.
Violent thunderstorms unleashed
hall and tornadoes in Texas,
causing scattered damage, while
temperatures dropped to record
sub-freezing lows from Michlgan
deep Into Georgia.
')'he snowstorm, which swept out
of the Rockies .earlier In the week,
was blamed for at least · three
deaths, one in Nebraska on.Friday
and two In Utah on Thursday.
Heavy snow fell Saturday from
western Nebraska, across northwestern Iowa and parts of northern
Illinois into South Dakota, southern
Minnesota and Wisconsin.
The weather service said the
snowstorm was a threat to newborn
calves.
In Nebraska. where some communities In the western part of the
state got more than a foot and a half
of snow with 4-foot drifts. officials
also advised people to stay off the
roads ..

Meets Monday
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
meet Monday, March 28, at 7::.ll
p.m. at the high schooL
ThOSI' who will be helping with
food are asked tohavea TBskin test
taken Monday at the Pomeroy Fire
Station. Hours arE&gt; from 5: JOp.m. to
7: :.ll p.m .

Omaha authorities said they quit
counting the automoble accidents.
Lincoln police reported similar
problems.
Bob Elliott, president of the Box
Butte County Wheat Growers· in
Nebraska, said the snow was "going .
to be really good" for winter wheat.
"I think thls is as good moisture
conditions iii thespringaswe've Had

Reagan's attorney's
wife is murder victim
PALOS VERDES ESTATES,
Calif. (API -The 20-year-old son of
President Reagan's .tax a ttorney
was. in jail today alter sheriff's
officers said he confessed to the
bludgeon killing of his mother, a
s laying that left friends and
reia lives stunned.
Los Angeles County s heriff's
deputy Ward Finch said Michael
David Miller "has made a full and
complete confession to the
murder."
Finch said the death weapon, a
17-inch wooden club. had beell
recovered.
Those close to the family described the young ma n as a polite and
aloof lndivictual who sang with' his
parents, Roy D. Miller and Marguerite Miller, in the cl)urch choir
every week.

near Hillsboro, Texas. and hlgn
winds toppled trees and damaged
the roof of a bowling alley at College
Sta te, Texas.·
·
Hail broke windows in west .
Texas.
Temperatures dropped into the ·
teens across !he Northeast a nd in
the Great Lakes region, with record ·
sub-freezing temperatures posted
deep into the South.
·
Record lows for the date were,
reported at As heville. N.C., where ft ,
was 1!4; Augusta, Ga .. 28; Alpena,
Mich .. 6 and Erie, Pa .. 14.
The coldest spot in the nation
Saturday was Bradford, Pa .. where·
it was3.

lor a long time," Elliott sa id.
South Dakota highways were a ll
covered by "crust of frozen slush
with some snowdrifts," a highway
patrol trooper sa id. Snow depths
ranged up to 8 Inches by midmorning, with forecasters expect . ing 15 inches In places.
The storm was blamed on an
-intense iow pressure center over the
Texas , Panhandle that sucked
moisture from the G ulf of Mexico
across the middle of the country.
A tornado touched down nE-ar
Dayton. Texas. damaging at least
two hOuses and uprooting trees, and
ln central Texas winds gusted to 58
·mpli. A car was blown off the road

'

Bookmobile schedule listed :
•

GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel p.m.; Smith, 2:45-3:15 p.m.; M~
L: Bossard Memorial Library will
ers, 3:30-3:45 p.m.; Mercervlll~.
be at the following places the week 4-4:30 p.rri.; Burd, 4: 4().5 p.'!ii
of March 28 to April L
Crown City P.O., 5: 15-6 p.m::
Monday - Ewlngton, 1:15-1:45
Eureka, 6:15-6:45 p.m .
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m.; Adney
Thursday - Watts, 2: :.ll-2: 4!;
Rd., 2: .45-3:15 p.m.; Vinton P.O ..
p.m.; Brick School Rd. , 2:55-3: 10
3:30-4:30 p.m.; Bidwell, 5-6 p.m.;
p.m.; AddaviUe Elementary, 3: 15'Harrisburg, 6:15-6:30 p.m.; Holly, · 3: 45 p.m.; St. Rd. 7 (Roadslcte
6:45-7 p.m.
Rest). 3:55-4:10 p.m. ; Georges
Tuesday - Eno, 2: :JJ.3 p.m.;
Rd. ·r. II, 4: 15-5 p.m.; ·BulavUJe Tr.
Rece, 3:05-3:20 p.m .; Africa Rd.,
Ct., 5:30-6 p.m.; Plantz Subdlv. 1
3:30-3:45 p.m.: Kyger I. 3:50-4: ~ 6: 15-6: 45 p.m .
·
p.m.; Kyger II, 4:25-4:40 p.m .;
Friday - Kerr. 3-3: 40 p.m~
Roush Lane I, II, 4; 45-5:15 p.m .;
Buck Ridge. 4-5:05p.m.; Jey Dr;t;
Cheshire I, 6-6:30 p.m.; Cheshire II,
II, 5.15-5.45 p.m ., Bob McCormiCI!
6:35-7 p.m.
Rd., 6-6: 15 p.m.
:;
Wednesday -Bane's, 2:15-2:30

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Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

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Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
March 18. 1983
Contnoct
t.egot
Copy No. 83-268
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT

LAFF-A-DAY

3 Announcements

0 0

s-

ED HOPPES

Hoppes chosen to
board of trustees
RIO GRANDE - L. Edwin
Hoppes ·of ~oppes Butlders Inc. or
. Springfield, Oblo, has been named
to the Board of Trustees at Rio
Grande College.
.
Hoppes comes from a family of
buDders and has developed the land
tor and constructed over 2,500
hOmes In Clark County.
He was reared In eastern MaJY·
land, where he graduated from
Wicomico Hlgb School In 1934. He
has resided In Clark County since
1936 with the exception of a three
year stint In the Army.
Hoppes has researched and
wrttten a .book about his ancestors
entitled "Hoppes and Related
Famtlles." His bobbles are fishing,
travel, sports, gj!nealogy · and
. aardenlng.
He Is married ID the former Mary
Francis Chapman. They have six
children and six grandchildren.
'

Shootirlg . Match every Frt

night 7PM at Robert Burns
home. Harrisburg Adamsville Rd. Call 614245 -6449 .

Cakes made for all occa sions : 304-273 -5288 .

Square Dance every Saturdayfrom9to 1AM . Country
Rock Sunday 7 to 11 PM.
" The part I liked best was when Robert PK:kett's, East Darthe monster got indigestion ,w
_in_._s_t_.R_t_._6_8_1_.- - -

proposals w 1t1 be
receiVed at the of11ce of the
D1 rector of th e Oh10 Depart ment of Transportation. Co lum bus. Oh10. unt1l 10:00 AM .
Oh10 Standa rd T1me. Tuesday

swallowed a drugstore lor PRAISE &amp; Evangelistic Sor-

Apl'll 12. 1983. for Improve-

promp~relief!"

Sealed

ments 1n:
Athens . Gallla . Hock1ng ,
Me1gs. Mnroe. Morgan , Noble,
V1nton and Was hington Coun· '
t1es. Oh10. on vanous foca tons,
by applymg pa1 nt for lane l1nes.
center llnes and edge l1nes
Pavement Width - Vanes
Protect Leingth- 0 .00 feet or

0.00 mile.
Work Length - Va n ous feet
or va nous m1les.
"The date .set for complet 1on
of th1s work shalf be as set fort h
in the b.tdd1nQ proposal."
Each bidder shall be requ1red
to f1le wtth h1s b1d a cert1f1ed
check or cash1er's check for an
amount equal to five per cent
of his bid, but in no event more
than hlty thousand dollars. or a

bond for ten perC8f1t of his bid,
·payable to th e Director
Bidders must apply, on the
proper forms. for q ualification
. ·at least tefi days p rror to the
date ·set for opening b1ds 1n
. accordance w 1th Chapter 552 5

Oh1o Rev1sed Code.
Plans and speclf1cat1ons ai'e
1n the Department of
Transportatton a.nd the off1ce of

on file

from eating so many people and

Public Notice
the D1sl nct Depu ty D1rector
The D1rector resel\leS the
n ght to re1ect any or all b1ds ·
WARREN J SMITH

1•

.vices, Center of Ufe. 40
Warwick Rd . Pt. Pleasant.
Saturday 26th. 2 p.m.
Speaker: Daymond Adams.
Saturday 26th. 7 p.m ..
Sunday 27th . 2 p.m .• Sunday 27th. 7 p .m. speaker:
Doug Isaac .

1- - - - -- - -- McDANIEL

Custom

But·

ly1arch 27 . Apnl 3

chering. Open first week in
every month. Kill on Mondays . Hours 7 a.m . to 6 p.m.
till September 1, 1983.
304-882-3224 .

3 Announcements

4

DIRECTOR
Rev 8- l 7 73

Giveaway

luppllio.
·Pick up and
delivery·. Davis Vacuum
Ctoonor. one hotf milo up
Goorgoa Creek Rd.
Call
448-0294 .. .

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may. place an · ad in this
column. There will b" no
charge to the advarti•er. •

'Control hunger and lose
wolghl wHh New Shape
Diat Plan and Hydrex Watar
Plllt at Fruth Pharmacy.

t part German Shephard •
Collie female pup. One rod
mixed bfood dog. Colt 6 t 4266 -1398.

SWEEPER and sewing mo.-

chine repair,

paris,

and

4

Give~way

7 weeks old German She·
pherd &amp;. Doberman, lovelY" ·
puppies to give away to ,
good homes . Alrea dy been .
wormed . Cell 446·3839.
Kittens 1 white female, .,, ·,
yellow male , Call 446 1079 .
'. •
Male Cocker Spaniel wf1h ,
papers. 447 Second Ave ~
Gallipolis .

.

1 puppy mixed breed male&gt;
Call 675-5702 .
•

Two white ducks, Call 614: ~
367-0581 .

.'"

Nice friendly Doberman tg
good home . Black and •
brown . Cal1614 -992 -5019, ;

FOUR puppies , 8 weeks old"
304-882 -3264 .
•
''
SIX Labrador Retriever pup.
pies. 3 months old , 304675 -3628 .
&lt;0

.

ONE puppe, male. mixed, ·
67~ · 5702 .
'

' .
LOST 4 reupholstered bright

6

lost and Found

blue nylon c ushions on Rt. 7 ·1
close to R &amp; M "FUrniture

8i

Crown City , R8ward . Calt ._.
614-245-5876 .
•
LOST medium sized male1 '
dog, looks like a Cqllia. ~
White, radish brown withL -.
black spot on tail. Lost o~ .,
Roush Lane-Cheshire - Kyger
ereo. Reward. Celt 814- 367 -7379.
: '

•

'·

�Ohi.-Jr.int Pleatcml, W.Va .

Times-Sentinel

6

Lost and Found

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

32

w1th Major

·:;

LOST large ma le black Clllt

Fairview

Buckridge

area

Iii,

Chdd"s pet Call 446 -9629

CloL ............
Tox RetwRo • booltllelllilll

lost· Medtum size very long
.hai red brownish red male
dog w1th black face. la1t

IDrlndiv.. woll •bualll .....
ShortfonM fti .OO
Long f20.00 Inti . .,
Ca"'l Ntol ' 441·3Ml!o

seen in the Ktngsbury area.

Call 614-992-3505 or 614 446 -9510
Jackte

FOUND

and

ask

for

PIANO TUNING e. REPMI
Coli Bll w.,d for
mont. w.... ·o Koyb......
446·4372.

"'''*"'.

horses, call 304 -

576 -2718

7

- --

. - ....
...-·-

Yard Sale

Ca rp ort Sale 44 7 Second

They'll Do It Every Time

Home•

Sale

March 27 1983

Mardi 27, 1983

Apartment
for Rent

48

Cloan 117:i 14x60 Klrll·
-od M.... homo. 1•
h..t. 1 '14 '-tho, front ond
r•r b.......... •noo. Call
114·UJ..I732.

Fi'lt floor lurlnllhed opt
utlllti• paid, deposit e.1eou
required . Adulto, no peto.
Call It 631 Fourlll Avo.,
Galllpoh.

Bockhoo endloader diga 8
ft .. loll• bed pick up houlo·
ble. operate youroolf. eso
por dey. 304-895-3841 .

t2,1110. up uoad mollllo
hom• for ilalo. 2 bodr•m.
complatoly furrilohod ,
Rollly tot ..,..,. ln. BrowR'S
Troller~ Mlnonvlle. Oh.
114-912•3314.

2 bdr. Regoncy Inc. Apon·
manta $200 per mo . or If
Income Ia $10,000 or leiS
HUD available. A·Ono Real
Eotates, Carol Yoavor. Real·
t&gt;r. Call 304-676·6104 or
676-6386 or 676 -7788.

49

..

6 Family Sale Centenary

tounuin ,

Avon ,

bike,

clothes, recrd player with
stand Lots more . Tues &amp;
Wed , 2018 1h rear Eastern
Ave , Gall1potis 1 0-?

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AuctiO n every Fn night at
the Hartford Commun•ty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Cons1g ments of new end
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer 275-3069
AUCTION every Saturday
night, M t Alto. WV. 6 p m
Cons•gnments welcome .
Emma a; ell auctioneer

9

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old lurni·
ture and Antiques of ell
kmds, c.all Kenneth Swain.
446-3159 o' 256-1967 on
the eVen1ngs
Buying Gold, Sliver. Platinum Gold and Silver prices
are the highest in two years,
check our prices on gold &amp;
s1lver. scrap jewelry Buying
Old co•ns, scrap rings &amp;
silverware . Daily quotes
available Also co1ns &amp; coin
supplies for sale Spring
Valley Trading Co . Spring
Valley Plaza. 446 -8025 or
446 -8026 .
We pay cash for late model

clean used cars
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson
446-0069
Pay cash for used mob1le
homes or travel travel trailers Prefer 1965 and up Cell
614-446 -0175

A THANK-YOU LffiER
I want to thank the
staff at Holzer Hospital
for the kindness and
care that they gave me
when I was in the hospi·
tal.
And I also want to
thank my many friends
who came to see me
while I was in the hospi·
tal and at home, and for
the cards and telephone .
calls that I received.
They have meant a lot to
me.
One night when I was
restless and could not
sleep, this was what
came to my mind:
For God so loved the
world that he gave His
only begotten son, that
whosoever believeth in
Him shall not perish but
have everlasting life.
John 3:16.
The thought that
came to me was who
could offer more than
that. I jus! want to thank
H1m for sparing my life
over the many years.
Roscoe Houck

Set of used golf clubs. Call
446 -4094.
1983 tobacco pound .. e.
Cell 614-379-2330 .
Tobacco poundage. Will pay
30 cents per lb. Call 446·
9485 after 7PM .

Rag rug loom. Call 446·
4213 .
BEDS·IRON, BRASS. old
furnrtwe, gold. silv• dollars, wood 1ce boxes. atone
jars. antiques, etc .• Complate households . Wrtte :
M.D. Mille,, Rt. 4. Pomeroy.
Oh. Or 992-7760.

Odd jobs. pointing, small
carpentry work, houte
cleaning. 614·992-6614.
Riverview

Personal care

home for the elderty pa·
tiento . 304-773-5882.

Charitable organization hlr·
ing out for odd joba From
cutting gr111 to plumbing
and from dun up to fin·
ished car~ntry Call 81 4992·7825 ond 614·985·
3564.

13

Insurance

Gold. silver. sterling, je·
welry . rings. old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Barber

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. h81 olered
services for fire inlt~"lnce
Shop, Moddleport. 982 · coverage in Gallia County
3476.
for almoat 1 centwy Farm ,
home and per~ one I property
Wanted to buy Investment coverage• ere eveil•~e to
P'Oporty . Call 614·912 · meet individu•l needl. Con5868 .
tact Eugene Holley, egent.
Phone 388·8890.
WANTED old p!anoo. Paying
$20 00 and· $40.00 each. Are you paying to much for
F1rst floor only, write giving your hospit81-health insu·
d1ractto ns. Witten Pianoa. ranee. Call Carroll
Box 188, Sardis, OH Snowdon, 446-4290.
43946 . Phone 614-483.
1606.
15
Schools
lnstructio n

Karate the uttinate in self
defence all private lasso na,
Men, women, e. children .
11 Help Wanted
lnstructbn th&lt;u block belt.
Also •vailable Keratl uni·
forms puching ond kicking
Legal Secretary wanted, e.l- bogo, ond protective equip·
perience preferred . S.,d mont. Jerry Lowery e. Ano·
resume to Box 989, Gallipo- ciatao Karote Studio, 143
Burlington Rd.. Jockoon.
lis, Oh 45631.
Oh. Col 814-288-3074 or
Experienced teacher n•dtd 614·3B4-6180.
tor after school program, 2
afternoons a weak. Arta and
Crafts orientation nee•~ 1 8 Wanted to Do
sary Apply Gallipolis Parka
and Recreation Dept. 1518
Second Ave , Gallipoh. C•ll General HouHng and Tram
446-1789, ext. 24.
romollll Sorvtco. Rollabla
GET reaquainted with W. T. and dependable. Call 448·
Rawleigh Products. Ratail 31 59.
or wholesale on a profitable LltWn Mowing no ~rd ID big
part-time basis. Call before or small. Relilb .. anddepen9 a.m Dale &amp; Wilma Wood, dable. For olllrnott coli
phone 304-676-1090.
446·3189.
SOMEONE to help with Smoll onglilo rapoir, lawn
Spring cleanilg, refer.-tcea, mowera,
rkll,g mowers. rophone 304-675-3210. Coli ID.Iten. Reoooneble roteo.
between 9 -4.
3rd. e. Olive St., Gollpollo.
448-3169 between 9 and 6.
12
Situations
Wonted to do plumbing,
Wanted
electric, roofing. r..-odeling
e. buMding. Free oot. No job
to largo. or to omoll. Coli
Room. board &amp; care for 614-245·61 14 or coli col·
eldarty onty. Reasonable . lect 1·286·2862.
614-992 -6022 or 614·
992 ·6748.
Mother will bebyolt in .her
homo on Edgemont Dr. in
Golllpoh. Coli 446· 7354.
We wtsh to thank our family,
neighbors and friends for !fie
beautiful flowers, cards and
telephone calls we ' received
for our 50th weddi111anmvtr·
.sary.
Thank You Very Much
Mr. &amp; Mrs Kenneth layne

In memory of Gilbert
Johnson who passed
March 27, 1982.
We tlunk of you every day
since you've been gone, but
we know that God knew best
when he called you ltorwe. '1111
tears we"ve shed smce you
went away, only God knows.
but he'll wipe away our turs
death never comes
get home.

.m.,,...,

M1ssed by w1fe and family .

Gardena plotNed with l1rge
rototiller si• inctwa deep.
Reedy to pllnl. Router-814·
992 -2490.
Will gi~ria""!hoono to
advance It udenta and
edutto. Aloo t. .ch chording
e. . traniJ)oaing. 61 4·992·
6403 .
4

Sovo thou•nol• f by~
from ow,..r . Aaauem~•
loon 1 1'h%. 3 bdr. rancto.
1'1• betho. louilt li1 kltchlft.
laundry "'"'"· largo llvnt
room wllll brick flfople ...
new above ground ......
gard., - · · homelo3y,..
old. 4 mi. from Gall polio.
pric_. Ill IO'o. Cal .....
4703.
Largt co....,rnporary famjly
homo ovorlookng Ollie
Rivor. Wootlo, 1-ZO aer•.
•mla coun. city ..~:
448·36114 .. 1·1113·421·
1928. Own•r· Aaonl.
REDUC!D now 3 loclr.
houae - In lunkiet, w11
ue.ooo •n.ooo. Colt
448·3617.
-------·10House for 1111 with vlow of 11\o Ohio. Kitewith
ar• . 2 -...

n.,..

6 hlom houtl in

with 1 bait , metal
outsile, Z emil
nice ye111. Within
dlatanee 1e storM.
614·992·1101.
Now roof, oarpot, poneiJnt
on thla a bedroom h .....
Outbulldi,.' 1 privota aero.
ue.ooo. 14·742·2310.
On Roush Len•2 btl.roolft,
2corg11111. -demklt-.
ewimmint IH)OI. fenced In
bock yard. Coli 814·311·
7697.
1---------""'
8'11 ASSUMAILE l•n. poymini 1231.00 1 molllb.
Throe bedroom, HI balll,
tlnc»d in ~rd . Coli 304·
875·1881
4:30.

"'*

THREE bedroom. lull baMmont. 7111120 lot. CUIcity wotor, gaa hoot .
•14.900. i04-182-3137.·
304 773 •tl;;=.;:::;.u;:"":;'

====

J-

Mobile Hornea
for Sale

Ftlrm fOf aale 28 .:ra
mdotly levol, good hay
fioldl, t41,000. Muot oall,
ooasonolllo offer. 3 bdr.
hom1, rtlw furnance,
county Wltar new blith
carpeted, now alum . aiclng
coal e. wood burning otove.
Good b•n e. ot .. , out
bldgo, gotave. Located on
old 110 n•r Porter. Call
614·311·1080.
207 ICN farm. Langoville.
min•al riles Included, no
house •12.000 down wMI
catty root. 114-388·9346.
Mal ga Co. Farm for oalo.
Houae, out building. ...
cludld aotling. 48 acr01
(mora ovallollloJ. Procod In
140'1. can Clyde JaNil
592·2317 or 1194·4211
Century 21, Ploutz Realty
Inc.

35 Lota &amp; Ac::reage
lot in Not1hup on concrete
Rd. 127'•1 zo·. t4.8oo.
Coil 448·1214.

1·20 Ac- WOOdl, OVtr·
looldng Ofllo River. city
ochoolo. 441·3664 or 1.
513-423 · 8928 .
Ownor/ Agent.
35 ocroo It Rodney on W.T.
W•tson fld. OwMr finaotcing avallalllo. Call448-8221
oftor 8 wOIIIdlya.
Lot on D..lo Rd .. 200 loy
200, • 1.000. Call 441 ·
4884.

Lolo tor Ill• In Rael110.
'614-941-2340 or 614·
949·2671.

TR 1-ST ATE M OIILE ",l~:------~- -lc ­
HOMES . UIED· CAlli. 1 aero of land. George
TRUCKS. GALLI POLIS . Freeland. 114·992-2648.
CHECK OUR PRICEI .
CALL 441·'172.
Lot In 8r..,ury, very - d
lomtlon wftlt trailer '-~·
CLEAN UIED M081LI! up. All utiMdoo. ooptlc t -.
HOMES KUIEL'S QUAL· Coli 114-HZ-2802.
lTV MOBILE NOME SALEI. 1-~--,_.~--4 Ml WElT. GALLIPOL... HUNTER
HER·
liT 31. PHONE 448-7274.
MAN"S
100
ecru,
with
1975 Hollot Park MoWo bo.,flll
aero lake. LD·
Homo, 1"-'0 with c••t cot_. on County Road 8 In
oir. now tlropoo. n- corpet. WOVIIIMf Dlatrict. Mooon
Own or wlllltl 10 - o
County, WV. hcollant hum·
ont locot1011. lncltldlllg lng groun.._ Would mekl
a.oo on Ill 11114, Bidwell. id•llocelloaforoommen'o
Call 448·8711, 1 :30·3:30. club or p.,.,, for the mon
Evoningo, 3t7-7160.
' who wnats to "gel owoy
from It oil". Priced ot
12x80 mobile homo, 2 w... 126.000wlllownorflnonc·
Call 614-241·11830 alter 8. lng ot 6 ~t~rconl intoroat .
Down .-ym-.t and inJtll·
1974 Klr-d 14x70
lment ~-to nelotloblo.
bdr., control air, carpot, Phano 614-192-7206 oftor
undtrplnnfrlll, 60ft. covorM I p.m.
porch w 24 ft. .:rwne•.
266-1672 at•r 7.

pr._.

z

DOZER, TRACTOR
DUMP TRUCK WORK
DAN &amp; JOE STIDHAM

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOAI'IS 12% fixed
rote. Leado' Mortgave. 77 E.
Stoto, Athono, Ohio.1·614·
1974 Arlin""" 2 bdr..
692-3061.
olect,ic . Call 814·2
Busineu &amp;. Second Mart- 1619.
gaga loana. Equity Rooour- 1 - - - - - - - - - cos. In Ohio 1·B00·992· Mobile 1xc. con-..
2351. out of Ohio 12x47, a4,,1 00. Call 441·
1-Bil0·641·62B6.
0708.

Ul-1673

OR 446-2124

41

2 bed room home in town .

8240 mo . deposit required .

Coli Jim at 4411·31143, The
Wieemen Agalcy.
Two bedroom house in city
blaanent 1 carpeted. gas
fu nenc:e, adults, no pets .
Call 446-0958 .
fu II

Modern 4 bdr. house on 20
acres with 30x60 garage.
Rent 8300 mo., dep01it
required . Coli 61 4-246·
6190

bedroom trailer. Furnished . Adults only.
Brown ' s Trailer Park. 614 992-3324.
2

14x70 THREE bedroom
panly furnished, all electric
trailer. buih on room, wood coal burni1g s10ve. one acre,
outbuilding . t260 . 00
month. $100. deposit. Jerry ' s Run Road. 304-676 ·
2356.

7 rm houee in Centenary,

city water, deposit raq., no 2 bedroom lumishad. 1
pets, g01. Coli before 9 30 Child, no pets. a160. per
month. New Haven. 304 ·
PM. 446-9844.
882-2466 .
2 bedroom house. Large
livng room. kitchen It b8th 2 bedroom mobile home
Furnished . Overlooking fu rushed, located below
Ohio Riv•. Adutta only. Hitching Pas, t on St. At. 2 .
Brown'• TraBer Perk. 614- You pay utlities e160. per
month, 8100. deposit. 304·
992·3324.
576-9084 between 9·12 or
evening 7-9 .
'
42 Mpbile Homes
for Rent
44 Apartment
for Rent
Eureka: Riverfront k&gt;t, 1
bedroom, fun , adults Ref
llo dep . 1100. Cot1614·643- 2 bdr. apartment park front
view, part turn .. water paid.
·2644.
$175 mo .• Coll446-391 9 or
446-0021
.
2 bdr. trailer for rent. all
eloctlic Coli 446-44BO
JACKSON ESTATES ' Equal
Nice 2 bd r mobile home Houatng Opportun1ty' has
bedroom apartments
waaher &amp; dr"r hookup, one
starting at e157 per
••pendo, on Bob McCor· rent
month and two bedroom
mick Rd. ca~e available, apanmentl
rent starting at
a176 mo., ptua utilities,
8193
per
month.
CaM 446 ·
water paid. Deposit • refer- 2745 or leave meaaage
ences required. Call 448~
4491 after 5.
3 rm and 4 rm . unfurniahad
apartments. UttliOes patd,
Nice 2 bdr . mobile home
tuniahed . Convenient loca- no pets. no children Call
tion on Rt. 7. Call614 ·248· 446-3437.
5B18
Mobile horne furnished on
Rl. 35 WQI, dopooH required Call 446·4229
Nice 2 bedroom mobUe
home. new cerpet, w.. her &amp;

dryer hookup, bottled gao
funance • appliances, private Yz Kre k:Jt overlooking
theriver.offRt 7inAddieon
ere a. *220 mo plus u 1ilities,
water &amp; tra1h paid. immediate occupency, depoait
and reference required. Call
446 · 341 evenings and
weekends
- - - - - - - - ·IC-

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
dENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT

UNFURNISHED apartment
for rent, 1 bedroom,
$180.00 Call Automotive
Supply, 8· 6 . 30,4-176·
221 B. 675·6763.
ONE bedroom apartment•
b r the elderly. AI u tlltloo
paid. Tenants pay 30 per cant of their lld)uotod In ·
come in 1his HUO subaidized
apartment buih:lng. Twtn
Riven Tower. phono 304·
675 ·6679 . Equol opponun ·
lty housing.
Mt. Vemon Ave 2 bedroom
aponment. 304-676·1982. ·
THREE bedroomaponmont.
central 111. waterbed.
washer &amp; dryer hookup,
storage area. •260. 1
month . 304-676-6294.
ONE bedroom unlumlohad.
all utilities paid. except
electric $176 . month. 304 · ·
6?5 ·1317 o' 676-3B1Z.

45

Furnished Rooms

'
---.,....--Sleeping room e1111, u•ll · .
ties pd, single male, shire '
bath . 919 2nd Ave., Gollipo ·
lis Call 446-4418 after
7PM.

46 Space lor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Ho"me
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy large Iota . Call
992-7479

Electric drye'
6621 .

Ueed weahera 6 dryers ell
reworked and guaranteed
30 dayo. DiHerent mokeo e.
modol1 . Call 614·266 ·
1207.

SPRING CATILE SALES
{Feeder-Springer-Cows-calves) .

52 CB,TV. Radio

The Ohio Valley Livestock Co.

Equipment

52 Vinton - Gallipolis, Ohi.o

SIX channel marine mob1le

radio with new power pac,
$300. fifm . 304·676-3628.

March 29, 1983, 7:30 P.M.
April 12, 1983, 7:30 P.M.

- ·

TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
Discounts. Avoid April price
inc,ease. Free Hiller on·
eluded . Immediate ship·
ment Pans, engines. Trade
ins accepted. 703 ~ 942 3871 Hickory Hill Nursery,
Rt. 1 Box 390 A. Fishers-

ac-

The Meigs County Heahh Department will be
cepting applications for the following positions
now through April 15. 1983. Resumes may be
sent to Meigs County Health Qepartment, P.O.
Box 631, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, Attention Jon .jjcobs, Deputy Heahh
Commissioner.
Assistant Sanitarian, must have High School
Diploma, must be astute and have interest in
Environmental Health. Must be willing to persue deg~e in sanitation field. Salary commensurate with experience.
·
'

Experienced Registered Nuise, preferably with a
BSN or MS as Assistant Supervisor of Nurses for
the Meigs County Heahh Deparbnent Need
progressive, aggressive individual to do Bureau
of Crippled Childrens visits, write grants,
minister clinics, give immunizations, etc. Admin·
istrative experience is a must SalaJy commensurate with experience.

a

ad·

PHONE CALLS PLEASE

Auction

Auction

BERT ROSE·
Wholesale Distributors
MARCH 31, 1983, 7:00 P.M.
THE OHIO VALLEY LIVETOCK CO.
52 VINTON AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OH.
All merchandise new and RUaranteed: Radios, porta&amp; tlble models; cassel!e recorders, &amp; pla)l!rs; Illstereo units lor cars and trucks cookware cuttl·
ery, small appliance lamps, cast iron collectibles,
leather goods.
TOOLS: Roll around tool boxes, compresseQ; bench &amp;
floor model dnll presses, arc welder &amp; elliliPIIIent, air
1mpact sanders, ratchets, air hammers, mluls, work
gloves, com-a-IQ~g~ wrenc~e~ screwdrivers. Somelh·
mg for almost everyone - much, much more.
lunch Roo111 Open.

55 Building :.upp11es

56 Pets for Sale

Building materials
block, br:ick. aawer pipes, HILLCREST KENNEL
window•. lintels , etc Boarding all breedo. AKC
Claude Winters! Rio G rende, Reg. Doberman• pups afd
Doberman Stud Service.
D. Coli 814·246-6121
Ca11446·7796 .
TO ALL CONTRACTORS·
We are able to give contrac - AKC Doberman pups black
tors price on all building &amp; tan, 3 n•onths old. $76
rntlterials . Delivery avail abe Call446 -1069 .
Galllpollo Block Co .. 123'11
Pine St . Gallipolis, Oh 446 · Pedigree Rex Rabbits . Fur
resembles ground moles
27B3 .
Blues, blacks, lilacs. chocoBUILD YOUR ()WN HOME .lates. Beautiful for Easter
614 ·985·41 34.
5 rooms and bath, 82,995
See our models, 1-614 AKC reg1sterad Shetland
BB6·7311 .
Sheepdog, 1 year old , male,
$125 . 304·675-353B .
,56 Pats for Sale
AKC Doberman Pinchar,
POODLE GROOMING Cell blue bloodline. black &amp; tan.
Judy Toytor ot 614 -3 67· call before 4:30 p m. or after
7220.
9 p.m. 304-675 · 1822.
Real Estate General
Broter-Auctioneer

~~~~~~~~~~::;~~~=~~~=;;;~ ville.
VA 22939 .
1979 HARLEY
Brand new Win model 9 4
3030 lever action rifle with
C
3x9 scope and cau. R A
23' color console TV 160
Coli 446·231 6 after 5PM.

Davidson
Sportster, 1000 cc, black,
black motorcycle trailer.
Both
condhion .
1973 excellent
VW .s upe' Beetle.
goo d con d"1t1on. w1t h 1actory
air condition. Priced on
inspectoon . Call 304-675·
4852 .

For sale 100 Locust pot1.
.Call 61 4·258-6026.

Prom dress size 7 , 304-676 2032 .

Victor torch, 60 ft hosea,
gouges e. regulator. Bake~
tree stand and hana
climbers All In good cond.
Call446-4472 .

For sale- telephones. assorted types and colors also
cordless phones, low prices,
call 304-875-5393.

54 Misc. Merchandise 54 Misc. Merchandise
,

c o I f e e t a b Ie
47"hx181f2:1l151h 1n. and 1

locuat po•t• for sale $1.75 a
piece. Call 614-388·8609.
1978 roll up camper and

1976 Plymouth Volorie. Call
448· , 552 .

Antique Oak Reproduction
furniture, full line in stock.
also Antiques. Paul Conkels
Antiques. Tuppers Plains
King Size water bed Exc.
cond. Used 3 weeks. Firm
price $695 614-992 -6762
after 5·30 .
For sale-Washer, double
tub. Dexter. Used one year .
Like new Bathroom. lava~
tory. Dining room hutch,
table and four chairs. Magnavox cabinet stereo &amp;large
speakers 614-843-6234.
Re11l Estate General
JUST LISTED - W11h attrac·
tive owner financ1ng, Th1s
comlort.a!Je 3 bedroom 2 story
home which has storm win·
dows, doors and extra lnsu~ ­
tion w1ll keep you warm 1n the
wmter and coolin lhe summer
Attraclovely pnced under
$30.000 w1th lriendly owner
financ1ng ava1lai:Je. Why Ren11
- Located near Dexter
"Let's Make ADeal"- That1s
what lhe seller says about this
contemporary bi~evel w1lh 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, vaulted
ce~lings, family room and
attached · garage. Available for
1mmed1ate occupancy on
lease-sale terms. Located near
Pomeroy Less lhan $3,000 Oil
down and assume the exisllng
LOW 1nterest loan! Th1s real
bargaon only heeds YOU

HOUSE FOR SALE

CALL:

4 Bedm.

RCS REALTORS

New

Brick

LAKE DR .. RIO GRANDE

. $65,000

Craig Swenson

1-614-593-6672
or Bill Chitda 992-6312

Land Contract
8% Interest

DAN Wenon 38, 357 magnum, has 4 &amp;. 6 inch barrels.
carry1ng case plus ammuni ·
tion. $400. firm . 304-675 ·
3628.
BROWN plaid couch and
chair with matching teble .
$75 00 or best offer. 304·
882-2573 .
Real Estate General

Geo~~t

S. Hobstelter. Jr.
B"*er
Olfoce. 992·573!1
FARM -135.70 acres With oil
and &amp;if! rnnera~. All ul11ties
available Excellent property
lor subdiv~10n, has krts of road
frontage, and approx 3 mies
out ol Rutland Ask1ng
$49,000.00

1974 FREEDOM Mobile Home
All eledr1c and a1r
COrHitiOnOO Two bedro001s
Th1s 1s an exceploonaly c~an
and well kept mob1le home.
$7,00000
CEDAR &amp; BRICK ranch home,
w1th beautiful fealures
lhroughoul 3 bedrooms, hv1ng
room With fireplace, large
fam1ly [0001 w!h slldmg doors
onto · a provate deck, oak
cab1nets. wfth an eat-1n bar. in
krtchen Ful basement w1lh
fireplace. Two car garage, all
sluated (J1 approx 7'h acres,
only 2 mles from Route 7, near
Chester $75.000.00

LIFE
INSURANCE
Call 446.0552 Anyt1me

Vel111 Niaroky, Assoc
Ph. 742·JI92 or 742·2160

Cltoryl IMnloy. Assoc
Pltllte 742·3171
Geo/p S. Hobstelter, ;,.
B"*er-1'11. 992·5739

BMR 422 - N1ce ranch located on Roush Lane os pnced lo sell at
$38,1100 large lR, 2 BR, kitchen mcludes range, eye-~v~ oven.
d~hwasher and disposal Call to sell
BMR 424 - 2 plus acres w1th a very n1ce 3 bedroom ranch style
home You woll love the country atmosphere Possible loan
assumption
BMR 426 - Pnced nght at $37 500 It has an assumable loan
wilh only 9\1% onterest We are talking about a very clean, 3 BR
home situated on mce flat lot on a Ia m1ly onented neoghborhood.
C~l for complete deta1ls.

BMR 428- Sleel s1dong, 3 BR ranch Situated on large flallot C1ty
School D1stncL Priced al $37,500 Oil. Call for appomtment
BMR 429 - All electnc bi-level 1n Kyger Creek School D1stnct
snuated on 1.21 acres w1th assumable 9\1% loan Call lor complete
dell!lls'
BMR 430- NEW LISTING - Excellenl buy at $38,500 Lovely
frame ranch woth 3BR's, large kitchen wnh carpeted d1nmgarea, 2
balhs. Better see th1s one lo:lay'
BMR 431 - NEW LISTING- Bnck ranch oncludes 3 BRs. LR.
OR, family room. 2\1 baths solualed on 38 acres Call to see lh1s one
to:lay1
BMR 432 - NEW LISTING- 3 BR bolevel, 1n Rodney V1~age II.
Includes fam1~ room, lireplace and more. Siluated on lencoo
corner lot Call lor delaols.

Real Estate General

..'

CANADAY
REALTY
m~ Audtey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

Ll:!Jii!« Diana PeaiSon, Realtor 67~
REiltOR

25 Locii.st St., Gallipolis, Ohio

OWNERS MOVING - MUST SELL- 3 BR, 1~ balh ranch, bu1~
by one of the area's lop builder;, line qualtty lhroughout Comb.
family room · kitchen eqUipped w1th range, dishwasher &amp;disposal
alt.ached garage w1th storage, automatic opener, central air cond.
Now 1s the time to get a super deal on lh1s fine home Poss1b~
mortgage assumption City schools

.

I '

#1149

'
''

'
'

BURGER AVE. - Nice 3 bedroom ranch, basement Owner wanis
offer.

.' ..' .

grocery, hardware ret.aH buslrte51i Call for more mformatoo.

'•

7 ACIES - Large brick &amp; frame home, has new rod and
spoutin' large bam. owner wil finance, city school d1slr1ct

'.
' ''

'

'.
'

tie, wooden ladder, hand tocls, throw rugs, beddi~. and
many other miscellaneous and collector's items.

'

I '.

IAI8I t£1Al BUILDING - Btolding IS 32'x7tr, good for cornmen:ill-111 slarale. located on I acre at Bidwell.

Office ............................ :....................... 9$2·2259

'

' , .. ,J.

!'!

"·•

(

Hll45

LONG BOTTOM - 3 bedr0001 house - Renlal.

Hl012

..
:

Crown city, Oh1o
Phone 256-6740
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Property

HI055

*1105

Home 446 9539

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

WE MOVED TO 450 2ND AVE.

DUTCH STYLE
COUNTRY HOME
4 bedrooms, 2'h baths, fufly
equ1pped eat·m krtchen,formal
dmmg room , family room woth
woodburner, two car garage
w1th auto opener Style,
beauty, charm&amp; comfort- all
descnbes lh1s home Pnced
$74,900
#322

GRACIOUS LIVING
IN A
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
Truly grac1ous fam1ly hvong can
be yours 1n thos beautiful 4
bedroom home approK 8 miles
lrom Gallipolis The kotchen os
gourmet's delight Unbehevable domng room and lam1ly
room SUI~ lor lhe most
discromonallng home owner 20
acres Pasture land Horse
stable Another 73 acres
available Many , many
amemtres

#542
WOW! $39,900.00
wow• 9%owner financmg Wowl3 BR. 2 balhs, central air, garaga
storage bU1k!1ng, al furnoture 1nduded 5 m1nutes to downlown
Galhpolos C1ty schools. large lev~ ~t
IN GA111POLIS
WAIJ( TO SHOP DOWNTOWN
6 rooms, 3 BR, full basemen!, mce large fronl porch No upkeep
V1n~ s1dmg Natural gas lurance, mce large shade trees, low !axes.
Home you should check on
#530
WHAT A DEA~! $27,000
Come see lor yourself Cozy 6 rooms and bath, washer, dryer,
dishwasher. refngerator, woodlxlrner, and al hke new. Storage
bUIIdmg and 2 car carport. Kyger Creek Schoo~.
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
.. ,
Vacant lois, mce soze bu1ldong lois w1lh all utohbes !here lol soze
101.8 by 1712 Betler gel 'um now
#456
25 ACRES - 8-ROOM HOME
N1ce remodeled home Blown-In mulat1on 2 storage bU1ld1ngs,
chlckenhouse Mom larm Cheshire Township New country
kitchen .

Henry

Jo

Hill ................... :.........., ............ ,....... 985·3335

,A

W

ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses' See the fenced-m paslure w1th 4 acres more or less
1nclud1ng a three bedroom home, JUSI a few miles fromGallopolos.
EKcellent land.lor larm1ngas well as new home construcl~n Large
bain plus lwo storage b•ldongs, pond stocked With caHish bass &amp;
blueg1lls, large concrete drille. Cafll!Jr a showong and be s ~rpr•ed
#437
COUNrRY HOME &amp; 40 ACRES M &amp; l
8 rm CQUnlry home - 5 bedroms, bath, shower ·some carpet
dnlted wen wrth pump N1ce tobacco barn Two com cnbs Garage.
All m1neral nghts goes. Several nalural spnngs, some fr•t tree~
Locatd on Stale H1ghway. Pnced only $30,000 00
#543
6.95 ACRES VACANT lAND OFF RT. 35
Rollong land - bes1de Old US. H1~hwav 35 In an area thai 5
developmg fast Rt. 35, short d1slance west ol Galhpolos Get 11 now.

11544
ONE ACRE ~LUS- HAS ASSUMABLE LOAN
Kyger Creek School D•t 4 room home with lull basement Wrth
small down payment JXliSible to assume tne presenlloan Phone
lor detais
I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTIAGE
-Nice comfort.ai:Je home wnh nice large shade lrees Concrele lront
porch, lois of frurt trees (apple, cherry, plum and peach). grape
arbor, ~spberry v1nes, good garden land all ~vel In Green Twp
Rural waler. 2 car garage, fuel oi FA furnace Basement barn,
approx 16'x24' Pnced m the $20's
#491

OLD RT. 33 -County plus. 22.67 acres and 70x14 tra1ler Move
in and ei!J~ tlis traier tmi~ 2 ·bedroom~ u{lde-p1nned, aN,
elednc, washer and dryer, ~rge INing 10001 wnh Franklin fireplace
Pond and two bUildings 14x24 and IOdO. $29,30aOO.

'' .
'

*Willis T Leadtngham , Realtor. Ph
• Phyll1s Loveday, Phone 446·2230
• Joan Boggs. Phone 446· 3294

11556

REEOSVII!E- One mie out Rt. 681- Fam1~ comfort wnh
plenty of 10001 in th1s one. Four bed10001~ 2 blllhs. TV room and
extra mce kitchen This horne has a garage and workshoP m tun
basemenL Plus an extra unattached garage. Natural gas heat AN
on an acre lot $46,000 Oil

REALTORS
E. Cleland, Jr., GRI... ....................... 992-6191
Dcttie T - ... ....................... ................ 992·5692
Jean Trusllll ...... ..... •.......... ..•.,_ .... ... , ..•... 949-2660

'•

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER/tl:i/J&lt;&gt;J

LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Rent or Buy. SUitable for

RT. 33- Nellis repair AS1s lor $300down, 1211, 30year; 1o pay
Payments $141.95 a month. One floor block house, 2 lo 3
bedrooms Equal hou~ng oppilt1u11iy. Total pnce $14,100.00

150 ACRt:S- Good farm, beautiful rollmg land, 3 barns, tobacco
base, pond, Rt. 141.

I:

In case of inclement weather, the sale will be postponed.
Terms: Cash or check With 10.
Pearl McKitrick, Owner

~-::.

SUPEILOCAliON - N1ce ranch with 3 bedrooms, VInyl sKim~
course. Immediate possession.
~
.
14350

c~ ~ g~f

I •

'

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
NANCY JASPERS- ASSOCIATE
PHONE: 843·5175
Or 992·2751 To Leave A Message.

#564

SPLIT FOYER - Great de~gn lor a grow1ng fam1ly 3 BR, new
carpet, fuH basement Ande~n Thermo Pane wondows, spac10us2
car garage, bnck and lrame construcbon, n~e country
surroundings (Jliy 41h m1les from tily. $55,000 Just listed!

.

RENTALS:
Leiart-$220 plus deposol
Raclne-$150 plus depo~t.
Plus &lt;ther occasoonal rentals

PACKED WITH POTENTIAL
HOME &amp; 6 ACRES SITS CLOSE TO TOWN
Just a skip and a hop to Green School. 2 or 3 bedrooms, hv1ng
room, dining room or den, large counlry kitchen w1th appliances,
bath, uti1ty room, and slorage room. You woll tike lhos one! On~
$26,900 wilh a land conlracl available

RUTlAND- Have 11 all lor Just $500 down and $324 01 a month
lor 30 year; al 12%. Th1s ~ a ranch style home wrth 3 bedrooms,
hardwood fbor; and carpeting, gas forced air heat Th5 horne IS
sluated on 4 lois. Equal hoUSing ~portun!y . $32,1100.00.

Antique china Cab1net, desk. cupboard, table with six chairs,
kitchen cabinet, ant1que rocker (handmade), beautiful love
seat. two 3 piece bedroom suites. 2 ant1que chests, stone
jars, many, many pieces of antique dishes ~nd collectable
glassware much Of which IS in mint condition. mirror. toaster oven, crock pot, 2 utility cabinets. complete set of dishes
(servtce for 6), pots and pans, bone dishes, milk glass. Fenton ware, brass bed frame, antique chair. stereo, dehumidi·
tier, .cedar Wlldrobe, sewine cabinet, platfunn rocker.
Toshiba portable TV (color), half bed. chest, 2 aircoodition·
ers. la~~t teddy bear, porch tumiture, Samsonite folding ta·
ble, what not sheH, b!'ed bowl, electric lawnmawer, iron ket-

3 ACRES - Raane. owner wll help f1nance

11558

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1983

Asko~g

11552

SALEM lWP. - Here's your chance, your own home w1lh IU!I
$2,0110 !IJwn and $529.75 a monlh for 30 year; al 12%
Approximately 79\1 acres of nee lay1ng land, tnostly cleared and a
pood. Th~ 5 a 2 slory bnGk home w1th 4 bedr1m1s, dining room
sun room and a tun basement. Equal hoosr1g oppOI\unly
$52,50000

446-9760

Located at 414 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
the following will be sold:
'

tiaths. needs very little to make thos home a '"~I House"
$25,000.

11407

WESTERN REO CEDAR TUDOR - Magn1f~en1 counlry homa
bu1~ lor a IMme of good livmg. 3,370 sq tt I1V1ng area plus lui
basement, fi~ng room IS 19'lll'x25'5"', bay w1ndows on etther
end, fireplace Formal dmmg and fam1ly room w1th easv access
from cuslom des~gned, lui~ equipped kitchen. Spaaous study and
central Ioyer On the second floor there are lour large sleepmg
rooms, 2 full baths, plus ~ batn on fir;t floor Abundant storage and
clOset; 3 acres has walnul grove Shown by appomlment only.
Just listed' ·

614-992·2181

3 BEDROOM BRICKHOME - WBf P, !lard wood floors. HI

BMR 398- PRICE GREATLY REDUCED' Owner lransferred and
must selllh1s 3 BR ranch C~se to lown mcludes deluxe 1Bx36
1nground pool Reduced to $44,500 - PlUS Owner; Will pay
FH.A -VA · pomls and c~s1ng cosls

All Consignments Welcome

446-7222 -

SACRIFICE - QUICK SALE - 2 bedrooms balh. hv1ng room. &amp;
eat-In kilchen on first floor Basemen! has 3rd betlroom, laundry
area &amp; extra room. Concrete lloor woth shed al the end of dnve
Conventional and FmHA lmanang poSSible Asl&lt;ing $27.500. Make
your offer, owners loss can be your gaon

BMR 389 - Th1s fine home has 4 bedroo·ms and IS located close
to lown. You woll have a large lol w1lh a county atmosphere and
have all the city conveniences. Call now'

RUTlAND- Mam Street- Move nght ~ w~h 1ust $500 down
and $235 56 a month lor 30 year; at 12% 3/ 5 acre w~h hoose
f'ouse G 2 story on front J)lrt and I story on back part B1g krtchen,
dinmg room lvmg ro001 w1th F.P., utiily room and part bas8Tlent
Equal housmg opportunily. $23.400.110.

POMEROY
lANDMARK ·

NEW LISTING - 3 or 4 bedrooms possobleon lhos one Tra1~r w11h
large add-on on nealiy an acre lot. Includes storage bUIIdmg Lol
can have second tra1ler as extra 1ncome Askmg $12,000

245-5439

OHIO BOND ISSUE IIONEYWII!BE AVAilABLE SHORTLY. CAll
FOR APPOINTMENT ANO INFORMATION ON ANY OF OUR OVER
100 PROPERTIES.

TOMMY JOE STEWART

MOBILE HOllE ~ wtth large add-on buld1ng, aspha~ dnveway
Located on qu ~t streel out of h1gh water 1n Rac1ne The IIVong room
1s extra large There 1s a cement walk and large covered porch. also
a metal storage buoldin&amp;You can be on lh1s one 1~ two weeks lor
ordy $16,900

BMR 427 - $30s, maintenance free s1d1n&amp; lenced back yard,
fam1ly or~e~~ted neighborhood Th1s ISa very c~an 3 BR home. Call
lor appointment

WTS -One acre lois. approx.
3 rrliles oli Leadmg Creek Rd
Excellert buid1ng s1te or for
mobie horne.
Call

CENTRAL REALTY

Beth Null 245·9507

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

WE ALSO WORK

~-

614-992-

Firewood. $10.00 a pick-up
load . 9 veer old Paint
Gelding . a450. 614-992·
6382.

CATTLE WILL BE RECEIVED FROM
8:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M. ON THE
DAY OF SALE

ON
All OTHER APPLIANCES

For sale 26 in. color TV, A· 1
cond ., 1125. Call 949·
2994.

LEASE-OPTION TO BUY 3
bedroom house. For infor ~
motion coli 304-675 -5689
after 4 30 p.m.

end table 26x1 8'11x20 'h
with light walnut finish $30.
GOOD USED AI!'PLIANCES 32x63· 174 pleceo brown
• washers, dryers, refrigera· underpinning for a mobile
tor$, ranges . Skaggs Ap- home used just 1 year came
pliances. Upper River Rd .. off a 14:1l70 mobile home,
beside Stone Crest Motel . long pieces measure 32" ,
446-73g8
short pieces 21" and 10
inches across. enterlock in a
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
metal frame , wood groin
Sofa. chair, rocker, qtto- finish. Call after 6PM. 448 ·
man, 3 ta~lea. (exHa heavy, ,3_0_6_5_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
by Frontier!. 8686. Solo. , .
chair and loveseat. *276 Firewood split &amp; cut to
Sofas and chairs priced from lenght . Pick or delivered . We
1286. to tB95 Tobleo, $46 honor HEAP Vouchers. Call
.
and up io 8126 Hide·•· 61 4-256·6245
beds,t440. and up to l--'----...:..-~-­
al526 .. Recliners, $175 to 8ft. meat case. 8ft freezer,
8360 .• Lamps from 828. to 14ft. produce case. other
$75 . 15 pc. dinettes from misc. store equipment. Call
199 , to 8435 7 pc .• $189. 614-367·0378 between 10
and up. Wood tablel(Nith six &amp; 4
chairs 1425. to $746 Desk
8110 up to 8225 Hutches. For Sale! 10 new quality
85150. and up, maple or pine bu1lt 4 'xB' flashing arrow
finish . llunk bed complete signs Complete 82,600,
with mettreues, 8260. and Call collect, Mr CalhoUn
up to 1395. Baby boda, 602·563-9926
8110 Mattresses cw box
1pringa, full or twin, 868 ., Air conditioners 2 yrs. old.
firm. 118 and .,8 Queen 12,000 BTU, 110 Emoroon
aets, e196 . 4 dr cheats. Quiet Cool. 8325 ea . Cell
$42 6 dr . choots. $54 Bod 614-367·037B
lramea. UO.ond 826 .. 10
gun • Gun cabinet•. $360., Quality locust posts for sale
dinette chalra $20. and t25 . Call doy or night 614-256·
Gal or electric ranges. 8326 6702 or 614·256-1 146 .
up to e375. Baby ma·
treasoa, US llo S36. bod 275 gel oil drums Call
frames no. 825, llo 830, 446-4684.
king frame $60. Good selec·
tion of bedroom auite1, Swimming pool, 18 ft by 4
ceder chests, rockers. metal ft Includes sun deck &amp;
accessQries. 8326 or best
cabinets, swivel rockers
Used Furniture •• bookcase, offer . Call 614·388·9969 .
ranges, chairs, end t-ble1 .
washer•. dryers, refrigera- Sigler stove large size ,
tors and TV's. 3 miles out 8200 Coli 614-367-7459
BulaviUo Rd Ol"'n 9am to
&amp;pm, Mon. thru Fri , 9am to Photographt equipment
Coli 446-8630
6pm. Sot .
448·0322
5 prom dresses sizes ,7 -13,
New 5 drawer dreaurs 182, like new. Worn only orace.
small desk 189, 4 drawer Call 446-9769 or 446·
cheat S&amp;O. unflnished herv - 3594.
e•t gold rafrig. frost free
$250, white 2 dr. refrig . Airline ttcket from Charleafrostfree e95, electric range ton to Loa Angelos. CaliforS91i. gao range 195, 2 pc. nia. Must be used before
Jlvineroom SUite e65, 6 pc Aprol 12. 8100 . Coli 446·
dlnotto sot S56 Skaggs 3485 .
Appliances, Upper R1ver Rd,
Gallipolis. Oh. 446· 7398
Real Estate General
Open 9·5, Mon .·Sot.

Houses for Rent

Firewood, split. f30 .00 a
tntcklood. 136 .00 deli ·
vored . Ph . 16141 992-2770
or 13041 882-2194.

For sale White refrigerator
$125. gold goa rangel126,
White gat range &amp;35 . Cell
446-4434 or 992·3B92.

love
ts 870, as
newlow
coal as
a
wood, ..heaters
$399 whh blowers, uoed
coot e. wood heatoro, new
dinat seta $100 It up,
refri,_...•tors,
rangeo, bunk
bedo_..
complete $199, bun ·
kles mattrasse• $40, chests,
dretMra, TV's. Call 446 ·
3159.

33 Farm• for Sale

. Merchandise

Store for tease
t100 per. mo, Call 614·
246-9316.

10:00 A.M.

NO

1(:, "f"fe~-~ ~

For Leaae

SWAIN
AUCTION e. FURNITURE
62 Olive St. , Gallipolio. King
coal • wood ha.ters with
fan 84159. set box spring &amp;.
mattren e100. firm $120.
sofa-love•at It chair $199,

See stgns.

mtxer, pans, oven, table
decoratio ns, shelves, water,

~~ (J.S?;e

Country

2 Fam1ly Yard Sale d1shes.
kmck -knncks, toys, child rens clothIng Friday Apn11.
9 to 4 - Cen t erv ille Vt llage

Yard Sale Home bakery
supplies. m •xers, pd . sugar,

I-At1-/, t4DMe OF

by Larry Wright

)b()R t&gt;R"N~S l..iceNse !
11\e'/'Re AU.. P.Cf"LlRe:. Of

A !-iffl~

Wed

more

IT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Equipment
for Rent

31 HomM for Sale

Ave , Gall1pOI1s (behmd 7 6
Station) Baby items, deco rated Easter Candy Friday

TownHouse. At 141 BHP
tiller c hildren &amp; teens 1eans.

Ohio-Point Pleasant W . Va.

NEAR HOlZER HOSPITAL - Shopping Plaza , 4 BR, 1\\ bath
ranch, family room wtth fireplace. and a 16x32 In-ground poollhe
entire lamiy Will enjoy $65.000 Just listed'

8 ACRES
Wrth1n 10 mm. dnve lo downtown Galhpol• City SchocJ Syslern
Has hookup lor the mobi~ home Gall1a Rural Waler. eleclr~ and
septic tan~ nile h~ht on pole. 2110 ft fronlage on Graham Schoa
Rd T1111ber. BU1ld1ng siles Call Now

#4n

154 ACRES. No~h Gal1a acres, rolling land, could be excellent
priiducina "tarm." Modem In-level home, good bUildings, fence~
One of Gil!l'a County's better farms

121 ACR£S, Walnut Twp, some RICe tilla!Je, timber, mmeral nghts
1ncl Good house.
IF ANYONE CAN HELP YOU FIND AHOME
YOU CANAFFORD ,., WE CAN!

NEW AO OAILl

�Page-~The Sunday Times-Sentinel
56

Pets for Sale

DRAGONWYND CATTER Y
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pup ·
pies, CFA Himalayan . {'er·
sian and Siamese kittens.

IIi polis,

62 Wanted to Buy

71

W an ted toba cco poundage.

1980 Pontiac Phoenix. 2
door. front drive, automatic,
am .fm . a .c:: ., sharp. Econom·

304-675 -6626'.

ical. Only
7438.

Call 446 -3844 aftor 4PM .

AKC Doberman puppies,
blue bloodline. black and
tan . Call before 4 ; 30 p .m . or

63

alter 9 p.m. 304·675· 1822.

Angu s bull s 1 to 3 yrs . old.
excellent blood line , Slate
Run Farms, Jackson .Oh .

BABY

Easter

Bunnies .

livestock

$2 .50 ea ch. 304 -675 ·
3081 .

Call 614·286·5396 o• 614·
286·1787.

EASTER Bunnies. $5 . all
colors. w ill be month old by

4 . Reg istered Polled Here·
f o rd Bulls breeding age .

Easter, call 304, 675 ·6043
or 675·1690.
·

446 -2109 .

Registered Polled Hereford

59 For Sale or Trade
1975 Buick Electra 2 dr.,

PS, PB, AC , AM · FM nero
$1 ,850 or trade for canle ,
f arm equipment of equal

value . Call 446-4537.

bull 4 yr. old. Call 446 0871 .
Holstein cows, fresh and
springing Holstein heifers .

Call1 ·614·286 -2496 .
For sale very gentle milk cow

for $350. Call 61 4· 256·
6080.

8 H P Cub Cadet with snow

blade S450, golf cart $350, RegistereCt Quarter Horse .
20 ' boy bike $35 . Call "Ruth Reeves . Also grade .
446-4426.
Saddles, bridles, winter
1982 Chevette. 4 speed . 4

cyl. , 4 door. am -fm , tinted
windows, 9000 miles . 614 ·

£..19 -2301 . Gray.

Farm Equipment

61

horse

blankets .

Western

boots. 614 -698 -3290.

new tires, new paint, rebuilt

engine . Call 614-245 ·
6818 .
200 bales of hay $1.75 bale.
Tractor &amp; farm machinery &amp;

lumber. Call614-388·8483
or 1·471 -1472.
International disc 20 cutter.
3 point hitch, new. S350.

Call 667·6647.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

M .F. 1 086 with cab S. duals

2883 hours 18.4-34 tires,
New Idea Super Sheller, pull
type 2-30" rows. 5 Kill ·

brothers gravity beds with
wagon, 26'x6' electric corn
auger, Raco frost alarm
model WMFA - 1 , Gordan
Rupp irrigation pUmp model

166M2 type Ind . 56A for
parts. John Bean meter flow
pump model 500, John
Bean rheter flow pump
modal 450, Ellison rolling
cuhivator 6 row 1 cubic yard
earth moving pan, 2

tAs
+KQ86

t KQ6
+AIV4 2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

vertibla. 6 cyl .. 4 speed.

West

Nurlh

East

Soulh
!NT

Pass

·3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

$4,000 . Call 614· 245·
9370.

Opening lead: tl o

1981 Honda Accord LX, 3
dr ., 5 speed . AC, ni c e stero
cassette. 30.000 mi . Call

1973 Ford l TO Brougham.
good cond. Owner retired.

614-949-2558.
1979 Datsun 280 Z. 614·
992-3886.

~ and

I

James Jacoby

Today 's

h a ~d

has

:a ppeared in one fo rm or
another in every column and
most books on play. It shows
a perfect safety play

1975 Pontiac Ventura 2
door hardtop, 360 auto .,

three in hearts. He needsl
two club tricks to make hill.1

REALTOR"

Autos for Sale

71
1974

Chevrolet Sport
Coupe good condition, PS,
PB·. air, new tires, paint &amp;.

top. Call 446·2026 or 4463077.

tricks. But if West had held
the clubs instead of East the
contract would fail because.
of timing. West ·would get in
with one hii!h club to clear
the diamonas and with the
second high club to cash two
diamond tricks.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

71

QUIT

Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility
buildings

512 Second A" .. Gallipolis
SeiVina Gallia &amp; Moils

Howmet icreen rooms

446-0855

691 Miller Drive

Counties

446·2642

I

(Answ.,. Monday)
Jumbles:TAACT CHIDE BECALM GOATEE
Answer The fish refused to eat the worm on the hook
because he waa afraid there might be thi s-

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

NEW USTIIIl - FRAME RAN.CH -3 bedroom~
bath, at~Ehed garage, mce kitchen, IrVIng room
aoo a lovely landscaped lawn. Back lawn 5 fenced
tlr privacy wlh agazebo, chidren's j:lay area, pen
for yoor favori1e pet Gallien spot.

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE . Calls614-367· 7471
or 814-387-0691.

GHEEN'S PAINTING INC.
Industrial, Commerciar,
Residential, Interior and Exterior.
Painting
Parking Lot Stripping
Sandblasting
Spray Painting
Waterblasting
Texture Coatings
Paper Hanging
FULLY INSURED - FREE ESTIMATES
614,1949-2686

Need something hauled
away or something moved?

We'll do it. Call446-31 69 or
614·256·1967 alter 6.

SOLUTION

PRICE REDOCED TO $59,900 - Newly
redecorated 4 bedroom home in town. Just about
everything ~ new in this attractive home including
vrn)i sidin~ rod, carpet, wallpaper, ~ring,
insulation, etc. Has 2~ baths, equipped kitchen,
family room, baseme.n~ nat gas hea~ 2\\ car
garage plus lencoo private yard. Call Jim Cochran.

Haven West VIrginia . Over

Good quality ·hay. Never
wet . Contact Opal Fitzpatrick, St. Rt . 689 . Phone

1979

Wilkesville 614-669-3785.

Hay for sale . Good quality.
Square bales . 614 -949-

2568.

COUGAR

loaded, low mileage, 304-

lion, 82,000. 304·675·
2377.

676-3658.

1976 FORD F100, 302 3
speed , air conditioning.

304-676 · 271 4 or 676·
1577.

iiRESTiQE lDCAnON -

Real Estate General

' t 446-1066

NEW LISTING - Jusl outside of city. Comer kt Ltri of trees 3
BRs, ~ving room with wood burner, krtchen witt! separate dini'ng
room. Full basement w~h workshop. Priced in lower 30's.
Washington Elementary.

.

RUSSELL D. WOOD, REALTOR, EVE. PH. 446-4618
KENN MORGAN, REALTOR, EVE. PH. 446-0971
CANTERB.URY, REALTOR 446·3408

De\lekiped
., 4 bedroom bi-IM. la!JI! IMng
living and entertairment 3 bedrooms, 2 trl baths,
kitchen, dining area, family room,
I shower stal. Top ·grade aprJrances. Home m firep,lice,, 2111 baths. heat pump, centralarr, 2 car
immaculate a&gt;nditirn. Porch, Decking. 30'x36' · 3 garage, concrete drive. Swimming pool 18'x36'.
bay garage. Two boat docks available. A~rOl&lt;. 4 Lds ol living on II acre corner kt
acres to enjoy.
1125,9

11288

WHAT A PlACE TO START! Your first home can be
this newly remodeled home with the charm so
many dream of &lt;Wld so lew find. 2 berooms, llilrage
with attached carport Alumon Siding, thennopane
windows aoo storm door&gt; Pliced reduced!

.

USTID - BYt% ASSUMPTION
iii:- Aitraoo· ~ 3 bedroom brick home located just oH
1300 sq. ft olllvrng area includes a
large ·bath w~h garden lub, equrpped kitchen,
~ utiity room, large covaed porcn, and atlractively
decorated. Good loan irssuption. $55,000. Call Jrm
: aochra~
·

11201

VICTORIAII $1YL£ WIT.H LOTS OF CLASS COUNTRY UVING at the edge of town w~h th~ 3 Home has been par1fy r!Strred. Co[jd be a beautibedroom remodeled ranch with 11 acres. Smal . lui home. New kitchen. new bah, formal dirin&amp;
barn. Mobile home induded lor .extra rncome. room, fami~ room, livirg room, 3 bedrtxrns, Base-·
ment aoo attic. ~prox. I acre. Price in the 201.
Priced in the 41Ys.

Ill.
FARM- 114 Acres. 3 bedrooms, Bl story frame
house, 2 barns. Smoke hoW! and ofller
outbuilding$ Tobacro base. 92 Acres pasture aoo
woods. 23 Acres tillable. htneral righls. AI this aoo

•

$26,000 - 4 bedroom home srtuated on 1\i acres
on S.dwel . Rooney Road. Has alum. sding, new
100. rural water, celar, rAus 3 outbuidrng~ cel~r
1\ouse and trai~r pad aoo hook-up. Call Clyde
Walller.
'

more for $80,500. Farm ~ipmert optional

11215

SIIAU FARM - 25~ Acres, house. bam, bush
hog, traca and waJlll 2 stDiy horne has 2 fled.
rooms upstairs, livinc room, dining room, k*:hen
aoo balh dow~ land rTDt!y pasture. some liable
· aoo a rice size tllbacco base. Property ~ loellled Ill
11277 Frieooly Ridge.

IIORE THAll YOO'D DPECT- Yoo need to tal&lt;e
a look at lflis attractive 3 bednxim brick ranch. H
off~ a charningliving room, 2 baths, kitchen with
buift~n range &amp; oven. Built for lire famiy who
needs comfort Price reduced!
COMMERCIAL RETAIL BUILDING located down·
town business district 3 story, 011er 6,000 sq. ft.
Buidrng divided for extra income. Use part lease
lhe rest CaR for more details.

H253
lDCATED AT UPPER ROUTE 7. 2 siDry rome with
separate garage aoo rice size klt 2 M.H. spaces. AI

present there ~ a smal barber shop in front aoo
one room has been used as a gun shop.

11270

MIDDLEPORT - Solil older lrOmli in excellent
carditiln. 2 story wlh 3 bedrooms &lt;r1d Iaiii! bath
up. Mein leliel foyer, lving room, al modern kitchen and a beautiful dinrng room. This home has a
ful basement. 3 car garage and nice big log.

11247

SUPERB SETTING - Five acres of wooded area.
surrounds this natural wood sided orne. 3 bedrooms 2 ful baths. Fireplace, cathedral ceiing and
wood 'beams. Tastelully decorllled Minutes ~
Holzer Medical Center. Priced to sel.

1196

EN.iiY R£AL UVIIIG in this spacioos 3 bedroom
bi~evel. 1 lull balh, 2\1 baths. Large family room
with w.b. fireplace. .Plenty of cabinet spiCe i1
kitchen. Ga:f:. La~ lawn. Assumable rnortpee.
Price redu
$5, .
.

11257

3 BEDRII. HOME situated on scenic lot ove~ooking the beautiful
Oh~

River: Kyger Creek School Dist. Approx. 4 yrs. old.
$45,000.00.

VACANT LAND -I Acre. Clark Chapel Road. Halll
surlace road. Good lot for trailer or home. Rural
water available. No restrictions. $2,500.

11280

STATELY HOME located along 4th Ave., Gallipolis. Home can be
used "as is" for income producing property and resrdence or
convert back lo single lamily residence Must see lo appreciate!
$65,000.00.

NO RESTRICTIONS on this cleared corner lot
Approx. ·1 acre, rrore or 'less. Well. Rural wa1er
available. City schols.
·

11202

IMMEDIATE INCOME - We have just listed a local bar and
restaurant lllthrn lhe city of Gallipclis. C.5 lie. and price includes
walk·in cooler, cash reg. Property has 5-year lease; Apt. upstairs. AI
for $35.000.00

APARTMENTS NEAR GOLF COURSE. aduHs only, no pels. From
$200.00
VINlON - CIJilmercial &amp; residenti~ property situated along St
Rl. 160, w~hin Vinton. Approx, 1,500 sq, ft. of seiHng space !Jus 2
apls. Upstairs. Buy now lor only $32,000.00.
EWINGlON - 2·bay service sblon. Nice corner lot plus anOther
~llage \0 lot across Rt. 160. Buy all now for only $18,000.00.
Owner wanls to sell now!!
Wood Realty. Inc.
32
Gallipolis

.

$12,000 -Located rn town . 4 rqoms &amp; bath. Nat
gas heat, storage bldg. and lree shaded yard.
Located on deadeoo street Could be good for
rental purposes or sbrting horne. CaR Clyde
Walker.

11266
SMALL 2 BEDROOM HOllE krCated just inside city
liniiS. Presenlly used as rerrfll property. Horne has
living room, dinin~ room, litchen, bath and !Miity
room. Priced at $ 4,900.

11269
40 ACRES, more or less. Bi·level horne. 5years old
with 3 bedrooms and 2lull blllrs. Large separale
a-aae. Coal shed. Tcrbacco base. Approx. 5 acres
cleared. T1is property ~ nmtly wlXIded and IDeated

in 1'etry Township.

.11231

l

II

RIO GRANDE Vlll.ftGE - 91 back and erioy the.
cantrrt' of ttris well mairtlifled trick and " bi~evet 3 bedroom~ I II bllhs, Wen, complele
with disposal, ran&amp;e, refrigerator, cishwzhef. LDw
heating tils. Woodluner. Garage. l.ar&amp;e deck..
Attic fa~ Assumable mortpye.

Nee 3 bedroom horne located rn
Southwestern School 1Dist Has. an eqt.ipped ,
kitchen. drnrng area. I ~ baths, lull basement, 2
carports &amp;.1'.1 acres. Call Clyde Walker. Possible
part fmancrng.

11246

3 ACRES - located along lower Ro~e 7. Nice
land for builing a llrme. lard lays lat and over·
looks the river. ·
. •

11252
11244
BUILD NOW whle irterest rates are drowrng. 10·'
Acres vacant land Ill do as yoo rlease. NO restric·
li&lt;ins. City school district

BEAT'THE .PRICE! 42 acres, more or less wrth 5
room house aoo other outbuildings. Most al
wooded, some timb.!r. Moran Twp. Unbelievable
11265
price at $21.000. Posi~e ~oo contract. 25% down,
10 years .\P.R., $208.15 monthly.
BUILDING PLUS ADDITIONAL IN· '
11242 COMMERCIAL
COME - , Ide~ location for yoor business, plus 3 ,
START WITH US - l'h acre ~t. more or less. Perry moble homes, all rented krr~xtra income. Two len ·
. Township. foil improvemeols in place; ready to 00 street parking, Forme~y a ftoral shop. OwnetS •
liiCM! on. Near Raccoon C(eelt Statge Route 775. anxious to sell. Call for more information.

.

QUICK ACTION PRICE TAG! Pric:t 5-t·l·s-h+d. New 12d6
kitchen, buiH·in range. microwave oven, dishwasher &amp; disposal
New bedroom &amp; bath, 2 other bedrooms, gas heat Washinjon
Elemenlary.

=E~;j :u:~C~DAR
HOME :-ltr. o1 glass aoo aloVely
4

area All WOOde . be ~drooms. ~tchen, lrvrn~ room . dinilli
comPletely arou~ th:mheo cerlrngs. Circled rustic round declc
me.
36 BUILDING LOTS - In an approved 1x1· Ce
and all underground utilities. City school sdist~ nlral sewiiJI!S
IIODUN RANcH HOME - .3 or 4 bedrooms. nice living room,
eat·rn ~hen, famrly room, Jul basement Thrs home has been
very wen kelt 2 car garge. Priced only in lhe 40s.

11276

11233 .

WINTER BLUES7 - Chase them away and get
ready for spring in this cheerlul, weH·kept home. 3 '
lied rooms', bath, 2 car garage. I ~ acres, more or
less. Mobile home hook·up Within !l'llkrng '
distance ol schools, church, grocery store. •
11219 $42,500.

BUSINESS OPPOtnullm - 35'x35' prage. 2
bay, stlirage room. Built acarrding to safety regufa.
lioos. lnc:ludinc most equipment Furnished 2 bed·
room Coventry roobile home. Approx.li acre. Rural
wale!. Call for. more information.

--·•--•manunD... ·

' © 1DI2 Century 21 Ru:l E11a:e CorponUon ••trustn f'or the NAF

11215 '

(fi) and n~ lradtim~n-s of
Gtnrury 21 Real Estel"! CorpofaUon . Equ1l Hwstnt Opportunity Q)'

·

PRICE REDUCED - AN OLD FRENCH CITY
ORIGINAL - Yoo owe l to yoorself Ill look. Yoo'l
awee that ttris ~a mur~ ;1 home than yoo had
imaeined. An ext • " " 1. absdulely great
view, walk Ill M
~" remember almost
everythinc is new a.
c: 'Y IJiod taste. New
tool, new lurnce, Ol
~ N plumbing, new
kitchen, new appian,.... new carpet, new paint. 2
.new baths- a new l~e foi you~ only yoo wil
e:ome and see rl for jOUrseif.
IIEW USTIIIG- COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING IIESID£IfTIAL IIIEIITALS- Several sources.of
ilmne. 38Jr50 brick buidilli on 3td INe.
DownltliB has 2 fini!IMII rooms curren11y housing
1111ta1 buliness.Upstairs his 2 apallmenls rentin&amp;
S200 mo. each. I9n mob1e horne l!lllin&amp; $275
,mo. Houle his 3 bednroms, 1 brllr. family IVDII1.
woodbumer vinyl sidi"'iiiSliltitrn sllrrm windows
lnd in pd 'c:ondlion. Will sell
separall Cal

I

Qff

9.

lllllay tor deUils. Call ·Jim Doclnn.

I

1192.

74

Motorcycles

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

Qr/:J

---

SUNDAY PUZZLER

PAINTING - interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
aome remodeling . 20 yra.

1982 Honda 460 custom
exc. cond . Coli 446·2360. exp, Call 614-388-9852.

1974 Yamaha Enduro dirt Marcum Roofing S. Spout·
bike, 2,900 miles. Call458· lng. 30 yearaseKperience,
1997.
specializing in built up roof.
Call 614·388-9857.
1978 Suzuki 550 has been
reck41:d,

make

468-1997.

offer.

Call

Home Maintenance Handyman Service. Also remodeling &amp; room additions. Call

1982 Harley Davidson 446-4915.
Roadster 1000 CC. 65
octual miles 84,600 firm. R&amp;S 'Remodeling .' Interior
Call 446·8530.
and Exterior. bUilt on rooms.
patios. carpons. roofing,
masonry finiah concrete.
electrical work. Frae esti IY\IItel. By hour or job.
Refarence if required . Phone

1988 Harley Davison
sportltar , new angina,
S 1 , 800 . 79 motorcycle
trailer holds 3 bikes with tool

box, *276. Call 61 4-367· 614-742-2296.
0478.

Irwin's Gl111 Service makea
replacements insulated un ·
its acreena, storm windows
for reaidential or commer-

1976 FLH Harley, 19,000
mi .. 13,200. Call 61 4·246·
9370.
-------·lc1977 Horley Davidson
Sportster. 83,000. ortrade.

cial. Callll1 4-256-8544.
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and '
Motorola. Quezar . and

614 -949-2446.

houae cella. Cell 576 -2398
1982 Kawasaki Spector or 446·2464.
KC1 100, 614· 742·2066 .
F &amp; K Trea Trimming. stump

1975 Honda 750 chopped .. removal. Call 675-1331 .
2224.
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
Lots of chrome. 614-992-

rienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpenter. electrician, mason. Call

304-875 · 2088 or 875·
4580.
.

11 Made w1th
rattan

16 StriP of

77 Healthy

leather .
21 More painful
22 In want ·

78 Cipher
79 Funda-

23 Conve.:

82 Terrified
84 Uquid

144 Piece tor

24 Pope's
scarr

measure
85 Sagaci Ous

145 Ventitated
147 Funda-

25 Poem
26 Narrow

86 Conde-

1 Confirm
6 Stage
whisper

molding

openings

2a Mistake
30 S1lly
32 Note of
scale
33 A state:
abbr.
34 Danish land

diVISion
35 Vast age
36lairs
37 Mountam
pass
38 Pismire
40 Unit of
Iranian
currency. pi
42 Small bird
43 Pulverized
rock

44 Tidings
45 Consumed

82

Plumbing

14ft. aluminum b111 boat.
&amp; Heating
Deluxe seats, live well;
atorage, carpeted with naw 1 - - - , : - - - - - - -

troiler. Call448-4183.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
1981 FIBERGLASS ban
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
boat with metal flake point, Phone 446·3888 or 448·
2 live wells, 76 HP motor &amp; 44 7 7
trailor, 814-1198·1288 or ~
___ _ _ _~----'304·671· 21104 .
83
Excavating
76
Auto Parts
a. Accessories
lonnie Boggs Excavating.

1

1

Car tr1ller for sale. 304-

77

Auto Repair 1

Dozer, backhoe. dumptruck. Wo~ by hour or iob.

Coli 448-7903.

&amp; Refrigeration

Auto .. paint job, •1 50 to DEPENDABLE WASHER·
DRYER REPAIR. ·Guoron·
taod work. Coli anytime
814-2118·81120 or 1114·
79 Motors 1Homas
21111·1207.
&amp; Campara
SEWING MochiM repolro,
aorvlco. Authorized ·Slngor
Soles &amp; Sorvlce Shorpen
19 71 Storcroft fold down Sclooon. Fabric Shop,
..mper, oiHpo 8• llko Mw. Pomoroy. 992·2284.
Callllt4·211·1142.
APPLIANCE REPAIR
1972 22 ft. Storcr0 1t ED'B
SERVICE
cell City Fumlturo
camper, ax. cond., 12,800. 304•1171·21108'.
Coli 11711·1824.
UOO . Coli 448-0388.

I----==----=-::

scen'llng
look

88 Direction
89 Mathemati·

cat function
'90 Manservant
92 Ph)'sician
94 Eyeglasses
98 Wolfhound

· 99 Departed
100 River 1sland
102 Scorr
103 Secret

agent
104 Brim
105 Path
106 Showy
flower
108 Music: as

wnlten ·
109 Preposition
110 Stamp of
approval
111 Aavellng s

112 Changed
114 Man's name

scale
66 Conjunction
67 Extinct

Boets and
Motors for Sale

mental

from
Hansen's
disease
49 Goals
50 Turf
51 Calm
54 Certain
55 Performs
56 Brook
59 Make into

65 Note of

75

69
70
71
72
74

47 Sufferers

leather

I
I

138 In music.

Hails
Succor
Kmd of fly
Crim son
Daughter of
Tantalus
76 Born

ACROSS

60 limb
62 Small waves
64 loud nois~

675·7348.

PRICE REDUCED - VERY SPECIAL HOII£"Very high quality'' will be your trst thou~t on
seeing this unsually rice liome in Wa.shrnl#on
grade school districl31arge bedroom~ Wlh leAs of
close! space Big living room with bow wiooow,
mosiQI!Istaooingkitchen (beautifulcalinetry),dis·
hwasher, triple bowl sink, roll-out shelves, range
oven~ lazy SIISIIIS, bui~-'·c·t_~nd lois of counter
top work spac li.~\)
roofed and has
Flagstone llaor. •
11
1miy room with
brick wds and h \ '\: "' •. , ~uiStandmg bar with
al the aa:essor~ l~ sparW11g balhroorns, large
utility room and IJ)bs of storage. The lawn
shrubberi. mne walls. flower galllens. and 11ne
trees backdrop mal&lt;e this trtiy R belulifiA fantly
palldise. Owner has just firished a new hoine out
of stllte and tS very anlliOUS
·

304-675-41 54.

Call 61 4-266·

CLOSETO TOWN- Convenient location, l'h miles
west of lown Attnlctive &amp; spac~us 3 bedroom
ranch. Has fuh basement warm &amp; cozy fireplace,
lamily &amp; recreation room~ rJenty of storage area.
Nat gas &amp; eentral air plus garage &amp; fenced yalll.
Priced to sel. Call Jim Cochran.

i.

houle

\

eatimates.

PRICE REDUCED - WAS $89,900, NOW
$64,33~ - One of a krnd- Pllrtecllor a professonal office, a business in your rome, a large
resrdmce or as rt sbnds now, a2 family home. Th~
is aquality bur• older homettrat has 2 kitchens, 2 ~
baths. modern gas lurnace &amp;central air. Yoo cook!
have a nice office complex downstairs aoo lamily
rental or more offices upstairs. There's afinished 3
floor, lui basement aoo 2 car garage. In the process of new parnt carpet &amp; wallpaper inside. loc&lt;ted near Court House &amp; City Buiding.

garage &amp; large yard. Owners anxious to sell. Cal
Jim Cochran.

MOWREY$ Upholstery Rt .
1 Box 124. Pt. Pleasant.

sea to apprlclota, 81400. textured cejllnga commar·
cial and residential. free
304·675·7749.

EXctll£NT BUY- IN TOWII -Modern 2 story,

•

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING

Call eveninga after 7 pm.

4 bedroom home within walkin~ distance ol NEW LISTING 8Yt% ASSUMPTION - Good
schools. Has 2 WB fireplaces. equrpped kitchen, Location! 4 bediOQfTI home in Pleasanl Valley
diring room, knony pine famly room, III trellis, Estates off Rl 35. Over ·1450 sq. n. CA 1~. area
lui basement nat gas H.W. heating, 2 car llilrage incktdes dining room, fully equipped kitchen, IIi
aoo more. $51.900. CaM Jim Cochran.
baths, util. rooni, nat ga~ cent air, oversized

RENTAL PROPERTY - Needs some fiKing but
would be a good rental investment Small 2,
bedroom home w~h living room, k~chen. attic,
basement and n~e s~e lawn. Located in city. ~

81

Idaho , body excellent,
standard, lock outi, must

I

11268.'

condition,

1973 WAGONEER. from

ARE YHOU HUNG UP 011 REAL OUAUm -Wei
here's one lilt will impress you. Afine brick ranch
which was built with good material by a fine
cra~inan. ·A lormal sunken li~ng room, laney
dinrng, and a complete kitchen and eatng area. 2
woodburning fireplaces, 2 baths, 2 car garage, 4
large bedroom~ a beautil[j family room, large
utility and rec. rooms. plus avery nrce party r~
with wet bar. Th~ one will be here when you re
gone. we·o llVe mshow tt to you .$89.900.

9% IITG. ASSUMPTION - Attractive bnck
colorual ranch in tity school dist. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, fireplace, lamrly room, woodburner, 2 car
garage and l.7acres setting less than 5 mies Irom HollE &amp; 10 ACRES - This is a 5 year old 3
bedroom home lhat has a large kitchen, ful
l!lwn. Cal Clyde Walker. Pr~e $65,000.00.
basementlamily room, wood burning fum ace, new
IIEDUCED TO $27,900 - 1982 14x54 motile 18x24 llilrage &amp; storage buiding. The 10 acres
home located on 2.4 acres in ~o Graooe just out of includes a new 3Bx50 bam aoo some woods.
corporation limls on Rt. 325. Has city waler &amp; OWners an~ous 1o sell. $39,500. Call Jim Cochran.
iewage !could put anolfler mobie home or 2 on
pi). Cal Jim Cochran for more inlo.
JUST LISTED - 9%. .ASSUIIPTION - Very
attnlctive colonial brick home located 5 miles lmm
168 ACIIE FARII- $48,500- ucellent buy on IDwn in Gallipolis School Dis!. Over 1700 sq. It of
th~ large acreage with a remodeled 4 bedroom tastefully decorated living area indudes 3
home. Approx. 10·20 acres crop with balance in bedrooms (master ~urte has walk~n closet &amp;bath),,
wood and paslure. Has some buildings and barn~ 2 full baths,large e~ipped kitchen, fireplace.
Horne has fireplace. carport and garage. Off Rl woodburner, lamily room and 2 car garage. 1.7
554. Can ..im Cochran.
.
Acre setting rn quiet location._$65,000.

V.A. IDAII ASSUMPTION - Ranch style !Jric11
horne. Green Twp. 3 bedrooms, III baths, large
Irving room, formal dining room, deluxe kitchen,
utility, patro, heat pump, central air, 2 car &amp;araee.
Private concrete St Extra Iaiii! level kt low sixties.

Do as you please. No restriction.•
Home site. Wooded. Road frontage. $4,000.

$26,000 - I II story home located on 2acres, I\\
mle from Porter on Rt. 160. 3 large bedroom~
wood burners, new ceilings &amp; panelrng. New siding,
plus a p&gt;d ~alllen spot. Call Oyde Walker.

$34,000 -

11221!

5~ ACRES -

BUILDING LOTS - CIIAROIAIS HIUS - 7.9
acs. with 2 home sites in wooded area. Has 32x56
l!rundation wan. Private drive ~cated in an
excelent neighborhood. $19,3001

tunnlng

. 304-676-7666.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis .
446· 7833 or 446-1833.

1977 JEEP Cherokee Chiel,
good

PRICE REDUCED- WAS $66,900 NOW $59,900
- The owners have spent lhe last 3 yers making
this home over and the interior looks lrke a ricture
from Ho~se Beat.trful. It features a large fanily
room, 2111 baths,.libraPI \'lith skytrght, 3 large
RT. 588 - 3 bedroom ranch in an excellenl bedrooms, formal dining, new kitchen, new roof,
location in city school~ Has lull basement lamily
aoo a very nrce Spring Valley lol. Possible 9\0%
room, fireplace. 16' master bedroom, 1\0 bath, assumption.
·'garage, carport plus 40'x60'xl5' high buiding
w/20x40 attached shed. !Excelent for tractor INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY - 7 RENTALS )VOrkl. all locted on !'.l acre~ $60s. Call Clyde and
located at the junction of Rl 7 - Rt. 141. 6
Walker.
residential renta~ and I fasl food rental: Overlooks
'
boal club. Your investment should pay lor ilseW.
164 AC. - SR 141 -Located on Raccoon Cree It $65,000.
.
•
lh~ larm offers tobacco base, a~rOl&lt; . 60 ac
~asture, 50 crop, balance in woodland. 40x&amp;l HERfS A BEAUTY IN THE WOODS -Just what
bam aoo 16x60 shed for tobacco &amp; livestock. Well the doctor ordered if you're looking for a liUie
&amp; rural water availa~e for home site. less than peace &lt;r1d quiet When you come home in the
evening you11 fiod th~ haoosorne 4 bedroom with
$450 ac. Call Clyde Walker .
an English Tudor accen~ tucked back at the end of
IITG. ASSUMPTION - Attractive brkk tire drive surrounded by huge trees on the 5ac.lol
· ranch in city school dist 3 bedrooms, 2 This one offers an unusually large lamily room, 3
baths, fireplace, family room, wocdburner, 2 car batlrs and a very nice k~chen. City school district
garage and 1.7 acre setting less than 5 miles lmm See ~ and make an offer. Immediate possession.
Owner moved crut of state.
IDwn. Gal Clyde Walker. Price $65,000.00.

$22,900 IS THE ASKING PRICE rlllr~ 3 bedroom
home in Rt.tland.l.ivili room, formal dining room,
blllh, kitclren, encbsed hellled front porch. Blsement Nai.Jral ps. large sb'¥ are&amp; Owner fi.
nanling available.

11228

LOYtLY IIODERII HOME located in the city school
district Home has 4 bedrooms. I\0 bath~ lanily
room, kitchen with dining L Tilts home ~ priced in
lire 50's. Possible loan assumption.

NEAT 3 BEORM. HOME situated w~hin Rodney II S.D. lot size
75'xl20'. Adapted lor woodbumer, attached garage, home in
excellenl condition. $31,900.00.

87

75 DODGE Powerwagon. 3.4
ton. club cab, good condi·

XR7 ,

WOOD
~ REALTY, Inc.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

\Jb balfls. gas furnace. family
room aoo study. W~ sell ttrree
acres for $4500.00 on · land
contract $500 down 12%
interest. 60 paymmls at
$8898 per month.
I

Housing
Headquarters

tested Divorces $350.00
(Costs included).
Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

A CATCH TO IT

20 leas expensive cars in

340 ACRES - Or will di~de.
I 0 room home wlh free gas, 2

111.

Yesterday's

REDUCED TO $36,000 - 3 bedroom rome only COIDNIAL HOllE- 40 ACRES- Just listedth~
3\i yrs. okl. Has basemen~ 14K16 patio, large lovely 2500 sq. ft. modern 4 bedroom home. This
porch and storage building on 1.6 acres. Jus! off Rt fine home offers 21arge baths. equipped kitchen,
218, city schools. Call Clyde Walker.
lamily room, fireplace, woodbumer, basement plus
apprQl&lt;. 10 acres crop and ba~nce in pasture &amp;
woods. 4 barns, 1472 lb. tobacco base plus over
frontage on twp. road - Rl.77~ Can
lor more info.

614·667-3085 .

RIVER VIEW- What a ~ace to.
e11rr;. 8 rooms, nice lamily
room firepace, basement and
walk ID too slore. Trying for
$45,000

wilt

Aluminum &amp; vinyl
.
siding
Howmet Patio Covers

Free Estlmates

Ford piokup, good motor &amp;
trans., as is 8226 . 1969
Chevy Malibu, good motor,
trans. &amp; tires. as ia $225.

RUTlAND HOME - 21wel bts
aoo a p&gt;d 7 rooms, I ~ baths,
ctirmey for woodbumer. 2
enclosed porches. Askilg
$26.000.

'

~Ce CAlf~

15EC:AU5E HE C:OUI. D
1-JO I.ON6EFt DO'THI5.

farm equipinant of equ1l

N£W LISTING - Uke new
1980 Nashua 2 bedroom mo·
bile home with over 3acres, tall
lrees, and gocd well. Peaceful
location on good gravel roaad.
Want just. $21.500.
NEAR SALEM CENTER - 3yr.
cld ranch with 4.8 acres. Srx
rooms. insuated, carpet carptJt, Ltrity and rural wate1.
$ll,OOO.

WE AD'IERIISE ALL . 00~
LISTINGS 4 times or more •'
11*1111. CAU 992·3876 to ~51

TO

Now ln'ange the cirded letters 10
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gestad by the abovo cartoon.

Phon~

OUTSTANDING - looking for
a super hiJile with a large
l&lt;r1dscaped lot' Spacious 3
bedroom brd&lt; has 1ust aboul
everything: central air and heat,
2 fireplaces, 2\i battrs, 2 pabtE
11 covered. lor entertaininll),
aoo many extras ucelenllor,
a bu:iness coup~. $125,000. :

windows

'THE FELLOW WHO U5ED

value. Call 446-4537.

H 614 )·992·3325

MIDDLEPORT - A real nice
car~d home. Hot wa1er heat,
air coodtioned, full basement,
2 ful balhs and litt~ !.llkeeP
yard, !meed. On~ $45,000.

HAMUN KING

AITORNEY-AT-LAW
Dissolutions or Unc:on-

Storm windows &amp; doors

Becky Lane-Auoc:.-446~468
Don Blak-"-.-675-1460

11262

MIDDLEPORT- Good o~er 6
room hiJile &lt;r1d garage. Has 2
bedrooms, tub balh, gas
lurnac~ lots of cupooards in
the ~hen, porch &lt;r1d level lot.
Just $17,500.

r

Bill's

Nu-Prime replacement

IEAUDR ,

1975 Buick Electra 2 dr.,
PS, P8, AC. AM·FM otero
$1.850 or trade for cattle.

~EM10'

CAR WASH ~ on West Mainin
Ponleletj. B~lding, land and
e(Jlipmenllor only $15.000.

1

Autos for Sale

TEAFORD
r: . 2nd St.

•

Judy DeWitt-Reeltor-388-8166

11254

21e

f'

(]

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

East is in and can do any·
thing he wishes to do, but ali
South has to do to establish
his second club 'tricl&lt; is to ·
lead the next club from
dummy.
Note that !hill club play

Real Estate General

VIRGIL B. SJI.

Jim Cochran, a.-iat•, 4~7181 Eve.
ll J. Hoktton, ........ 44 ......240 M .
ctvd- Walbr, A-. , 245·5276

!f-.t.IMPI!OVEMENT$

leads low toward dummy's
ja'ck. West shows out.
I

1---------'"T----------l

1973 VW Super Beetle.
Good body, excellent run -

spades and diamonds and:

was sure to bring in two club

By Oswald Jacoby

S1 ,800 or trade.• axe .. cond.

PHONE 446-3643

IB

looking at two trico each an.

game and whi1e be would

• A. 9 7
Y K 94

1974 Triumph TR -6 con ·

446-6610

.

East takes bill ace of dla·
monds at Irick one and

like three he doesn't let thai•
possibility. detract from the.
main problem.
He l~ys down his ace of ~
clubs. He. can handle all 3·2
breaks. If either opponent
has all five the oilier will
show out, but both opponents
follow small. Now South

SOUTH

good work car, $600. Call
614-379-2776.

stock .

614 -247-

585 -2260. John l. Botts.

• J. lD 7

t l098!4

+9

74 Tornino 49,000 actual
miles, runs good, some rust ,

6566.

1 3. 6x28 4 ply tires with

NEW &amp; Used Harvestora
Structures. Automated li·
vestock feeding-computer
feedera . Call collect 614-

'PB6 32

75 YW Rabbit goOd cond .
Runs good, $1,300. Call
614-379 -2775.

Cell446 · 1688 after 4.

The

HARTS Used Cars, New
Hay for sale, square bales .
Delivery available. Call 446·

tube on power adjuat M .F.
rims. M .F. 32 loader. post
hole digger. Andrew Cross.

Rt .2. Racine.
2852 .

+J 7 s 3
EAST
• Q 10 8 3

WEST
+J S 4

card combmaUons.

returns tbe suit. South is oow,

t J3 2

79 Pontiac Sunbird Formula
4,500 miles, 83,150. Call
446·0665, 8:30 to 4:30.

614-245 -5474.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

good cond . S950. 1971

$1,200. Call 446-0856

days &amp; 446-4257 even .

cassette. leather aeat1. axe .

cond.. 85.800. Call 446·
8050.

after May 25th. 61 4-985· ning condition . $1,300.
4346 .
614-992-2849.
Regiatered Bay mare for
sale. Broken to ride . $500.

3-Zf.JS

+K6 2
'PAQ S

window defogger, AM·FM

4 door ., fully equipped. very

LaBonte's Quail Faim . Mature Quail now being sold .
Eggs available with notice
after May 1st. Day old
chicks available with deposit

NORTH

rear

Suffolk Ram . Sell or trade
for Pony. $125. 16 months

Call614·256·1142.

Bush hog in good shape
$325 &amp;. older modellnterna ·
tional tractor {needs work)

wheel.

77 Chyoler Cordoba.

Massey Ferguson 50 farm

designed to bring in two
tricks in the safety play suit
against any and all adverse

1980 Eegle limited AT. PS,
tilt

March 27, 1983

The perfect safety play

cond ., 4 speed. t2,700.
Phone 446 -2974.

air.

AIiJ 111 WMT!P} ..·

I •.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

1978 Chev . Monza. excel.

PB,

March 27, 1983

BRIDGE

83500. 446·

LaBonte 's Quail Farm . Ma ture Quail now being sold .
Eggs available with notice
after May 1st. Day old
chicks available with deposit
after May 25th .

old. 304-773·5707.
tractor. Like new S3,000.

Autos for Sale

Pleasant, W. Va.

flightless
bird

116 Fuss
117 Feel ind1g·

nant at
119 Baby's
napktns
120 Peruse

122 Trapped
124 Number

125 Communtsts
126 Not solid
128 Urge on
129 Hill of
a knife
131 Deposits
132 Veh icle
133 Raise the
spirit of
135 A.way

high

139 Transgress es
140 Deface
141 Falsehood
142 Ch1nese
d1st ~ nce

measure
143 Guido's low
note

one
mental
149 Man 's

nickname
150 Mor e recent
152 Globe
154 Pu t on one's
guard
156 Get up
158 Handle
159 Wants
160 Clayey
earth
16 11ron

DOWN

1 Sktn d isease
2 Fren ch
sculptor
13 Nati ve metal
4 Btother
o f Odin
5 Bitter vetch
6 Bea st
7 Colonizes
8 Plural'
en d.ng
9 Clencal
deg ree :
abbr.
10 Organ of
sigh I

11 French
pa1nter
12 River 1n
England
13 Con1unctton
14 Spanish
·
article
15 Indefinite
number
16 Off spring:
pl .
17 Attempt
18 Sun god

19 Permit
20 To lls
27 Burma
native
.29 Units ol
· Portuguese
currency
31 Conjunc t ton

36 obstructs
37 Give up
39 Mountain
lake
4Q Rockfish
41 Urg e on
42 Surgical

9 2 Depression
93 Ceremony
95 Whale
96 Kind Of
poem
97 Church
council
99 Need
101 Fright
105 Boundary
106 Priest's
vestments
107 Walk

unsteadily
t 11 Period of
lasting

saw

43 Poses fo r
portra it
44 Standard
46 Symbol lor
tellurium
48 Man·s name
49 H1gh c ard s
50 Halt
5 1 Look fl .:edly

11 2 Helps
11 3 Small valley
115 Arrow

poison
116 Jason's
Ship "
118 M1td
119 Wagers
12 1 Unit of

currency: pi

52 Art ist's

stand

53 Weasel
55 Ma1ntam
56 Food fi sh
571Worshtp
581 Engtne
61 Debatable

63 Entreaty
64 Stnp ol
leather

68 Gastrop od
mollusk
70 Hurries
71 Edibl e nut ol
East: pt.
73 Skin under

123 Symbol lor
Silver

125 Fame
126 Rabbit
127 Blouses
129 Visit intru·
SIVBI)'

130 Change
13 1 Yellow

ocher
Pasteboard s
13 4 Beverage
136 waste sUk
hbers
132

ammar s

137 Monetary
penalties

neck

139 Classify

74 Bird 's home

140 Salt

75 Build
77 Kind ol
,fastener: pi
78 Metall1c
element
80 Altitu de
81 Still
83 Possesses
84 FalSi fier
87 Coo ks m

144 Ocean
145 EKISt

a9 Takes

whirlwind
155 Behold!
157 Railroad:
abbr .

oV&lt;n

unlawfully
90 Bravery

9 1 Simtlat

I '

146 Pigeon pea

147 1nsect
14 8 Once
around
track
t49 Expire
15 1 Pronoun
153 Faroe
Isl and s

·,

�.
Page-D-8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Man:h 27, 1983

Life of.luxury doesn't always accompany pot of gold
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API -The
Ohio Lottery games bring
dr·eams of mUJion-dollar prizes and
an easy life forever after.
But two women who won million·
doliar drawings belo•·e Ohio discontinued the big payoffs " couple of
years ago say the lil~ of luxul)·
doesn't nec('ssarily accompany the
pot of gold.
At least on(' thing has ehangro for
(;erry Essig since she won a million
dollars in lhc Ohio Lott&lt;·,y - th~
n~w

give awa.\' much lx&gt;er...
· Mrs. Essig reflected on the past
ihrE'I' years durin~: a rtocent tetephone intervi&lt;&gt;w ast heOhio LottelJ'
prepares to resume million-dollar
awards with a dra wing in
Columbus.
Tenfinalistsw ill competeApril 27
or the top prize in the $1 Wheel of
7
• ort une game. which ends this
nonth. The Iotter:&gt;· has scheduled
•nore g-ames wit h million-dollar and
;&gt;o len t iall)· mu itimillion -dollar
,,wards.
Whileth~ Essigs ar·e taking things
at a slower pace. Katie hShank ?I
Df&gt;fiance. who becam&lt;' 1 e .state .s

l'7th and last million-dollar winner,
wishes she had never won.
" Terrible," Ms. Shank said when
askrohow herUfelsgoingnow. "It
has been hell."
She credited winning the payoff
with contributing to her husband
suing for divorce. "You don't get
any money," she said. "All you getis
taxes, taxes. taxf'S."
Except for early retirement and
the comfortable knowledge thai
each Decemberforanotherl6years
the Essigs ran expect a check for
$40,00l, Mrs. E ssig says things
haven't changed much.
They live In a four-bedroom

home. just as they did In Walbridge,
Ohio, and Mrs. Essig still plays
bingo two nights a week. The family
car Is the same 1977 sedan they
drove to Cleveland for the lottery
drawing.
Her husband did buy 'a pickup
truck, " and he has a boat that Is
parked In front of the house most of
the time - l don't care much for the
water," Mrs. Essig said.
She said taxes were a problem the
first year, even though $10,1ixl is
withheld from each year's $50.00! .
award to cover them .'
She said that In 1979,herearnlngs
at Verd-A-Ray Corp. and her

husband's pay as a train diSpatcher
"I'm Uvlng nice; but I'm not rich
fortheChessleSystem wereenpugh or anything/' she'said.
that the lottery win pushed jhem ,....:,,._...;:.;,;.;.;;.=~==:;.....-.,;.,
lntoan$81,00ltaxbracket.
~~~f/bflj)e~ ·
" WewereaudltedbythelR.S,and
~
MEXICO
'Ci
we had to pay about $2;,00)
A
..
altogether," she said. But In .GJUNE '18, 25, 1983 ~
subsequent years, with nelthet of
A
·
them working, the withholding
'(;
·
covered taxes, she said.
· Trip Price includes $100,000 W
The most difficult thing about
Tra\ltllnsurance.
, /!!,
Winning the Ohio Lottery has peen
V~ . ·
SECOND AVE.
\if
360
budgeting on an annual basts, Mrs.
· GALLIPOLIS
I!IJ.
Essig said.
V
"You tend to go overboard a)IItle tf!!:J.
PH. 446_.99
. ·
bit," she said.
'ffi/
_' 0 , """""•'. ~
. , · -~
•. - -.. ~;
Does she feel like a mUIIonalre? .
~ 'lliJI' ~ ~ ~

-....,.....

A!t

4·

weather.
Mrs. Essig, 48, won the Ohio
Lotlcry "millionaire" dr awing00&lt;'.
t\, 1979. !\ow. she and her
64-year-old husband, Roger,cnj o)· a .--~-----------_;--~--------------.;_-------------,-----L-----------­
Iif~ of leisure. basking in the su n at
Boulder Citv. Nevada.
"Anv day thatt the sun doesn't
shine,· they have a bar here that
gives away frre tx&gt;er," M rs. Essig
said. "Let me tell you. they don't

~·0e

By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI I AP 1 - The Ohio
River Valley Water Sanitation
Commission' s network for detect·
ing unreported chem ica l spills is a
model for every other proposed
system for a simple reason.
" It's the only one," sa id Glenn
Moore, manager of surveillence for
the commission, which is known by
the.acronym ORSANCO.
Pollution Speo:'ialists from Canada, E urope, China and Japan have
studied t-he system. This week;
Moore will le~d a tour of Ohio's
monitoring sites at Portsmouth and
Cincinnati for a group from
Louisiana.
"They are trying to combat the
same type of problem we were
trying to combat w h~n w e put the
system in," Moore sa id.
"We were having organic spills,
and the carbon let spill in l977-78was
the driving force which caused this
system to become operational.
." I n the lower Mississippi. they
are having similar spills that arc
going unreported and gerting into
their water supplies. They are
looking to see what they can use
similar to this system to establish a
system on the lower Mississippi.''
OR.SANCO is a confederation of
eight sta tes that horder the Ohio
River or its major tributaries. The
organics detection system, or ODS,
was designro to prevent unreported
chemical spills from contaminating
the water supply of cities that draw
water from the river.
"It gives the wa ter utility opera·
tors notice so they can take elective
action in the treatment process, or
evasive act ion by cutting off the
Intake until thespill goes by.''Moore
sa id
To do that , the monitoring points
- 11 sites between Pittsburgh and
Louisville - sample the river daily
for traces of organic chemicals. ·A
chromatograph records their pres·
ence, and if a big Increase Is
measured from the previous day an
alert Is Issued.
There hasn't been an alert in 2 ~
years becausethesystemworked so
well during its first two years,
Moore said.
"When we first started the
system, we were having spills quite
frequently, but as word got arou nd
(that the system could pinpoint
polluters). the spills decreased,"
Moore said.
"On(' of the best things, many of
the water utilit ies think , is that it is a
deterrent. It's just like radar on a
highway; If you speed, you take
your chances."
'
ORSANCO considers the system
both a deterrent to industry and a
monitor of overall river conditions.
"The monitoring is just some·
thing we use to bu ild a data base on
the r iver," Moore said. "Thc
prima ry purpose Is to detect spills
and to alert downstream users if
and when spills occur. But we
haven't had to go into th at mode
since August of 1900."
Operat ing the network costs
about $000,00) a year, according to
ORSANCO. Half the cost is paid by
nine water utilities and two industries where the sampling sites are
located; 35 percent is paid by the
member states; and 15 percent is
paid by the U.S. E nv ironmental
Protection Agency under the Fed,
era! Clean Water Act.
·ourtng the first two yea rs of
operation, the monitoring system
located at least six unreported
chemical spills, Moore sa id.
" if proved its worth t he firsrtwo
years, and I he word got around,"
Moore said. "They knew that
somebody was out there monitor·
lng, and II they had something
unusual happen they could get
caught. "
The monitoring stations begln at
Pittsburgh, where the Ohio River is
formed,' and are spaced downriver
throughout West VIrginia, Ohio,
Kentucky and Indiana.

ELBERFELDS ·

i
i
i

ORSANCO
model for
new systems

SPECIAL
SALE PRICES
THIS WEEK
ON

•G

'

f@

i

''
G
'

i
i

i

~

e
~

e

'
•

@

Ladies Slips
Camisoles, ha~ slips and full slips.
Sizes 32 to 50 and small thru XXL

Reg. s4.00 ........Sale s3.39
Reg. SS.OO ........Sale ss.09
Reg. sg.oo ........Sale s7.69
Reg. S14.00 .... Sale su.89

Men's Knit Shirts

A guide to local

Boys 19.95 Jackets ............. '7.75
Boys 114.95 Jadle1s ......... 111.65
Boys 119.95 Jackets ......... 115.55
Boys 122.95 Jackets ......... .117.85

television programming
March 27 thru April 2

Includes complete

Jr. Sizes 3 to 13 and S, M. L

SALE PRICED

FROM ONLY

EASTER SAiff

Spring Handbags

DRESS 'SALE
Sundresses, 2 pc. oufits, pinafores, 3
pc, coordinates and open stock
skirts.
Sizes 6 ~ 24 tiiClS., 2to 4, 4to 6x, 7to 14.

Reg. '5.00 ............ Sale 13.99
Reg. '7.50 ............ Sale 15.99
Reg. '9.50 ............ Sale ?.59
Reg. 11100 ......... Sale '10.39
Reg. 119.00 ......... Sale '15.19

Rec.

"Channel 23 listings included
mthis week's guide."·

110.00

...............Sale 17.99
Reg. '13.00 ............ Sale 110.39
Reg. '17.00 ............ Sale 113.59
Rec. 123.00 ............ Sale 118.39

EASTER SAIEI

EASTER SALEI

BOYS SHIRTS

MEN'S

This sale is on all of our boys spring
short sleeve shirts. Knits • dress
shirts · sport shirts and westerns.

Sizes 8 to 20. Stock up now for
Easter. Spring and Summer wear.

Boys,'4.95 Shirts ......... 14.07
Boys '6.95 Shirts ......... '5.67
Boys '9.95 Shirts ......... 'll7

Boys 112.95 Shirts ..... 110.57

lADIES'

Our entire stock of new spring dresses is in-

cluded in this sale. Jacket dresses, sun· _.__....

dresses, party dresses aoo jachet/skirt sels.
Misses sizes, Haff sizes .and Petites.

·~ RE~. 123.00 .......... SALE 118.39

REG. 134.00 .......... SALE '27.19

0 REG. 42.00 .~ ........ SALE •33.59
1

REG. 158.00 .......... SALE 146.39

•••••••••
'I

Linda Ronstadt
Pages 4, 5

LITTLE GIRLS'

Beautiful new clutch and shoulder
bags, canvas, leather, tapestry, lace
and vinyls.

~

listings

fASTER SAlE!

•
I
;•I
e
• DRESS ·SALE·
'•
i
•
.•

· Boys light weight iackels in sizes 8 lo 20. ·
Some styles are lighUy lined - perfect for
wear now and all summer long.

Sundresses, 2 pc. sels, short sleeve dresses, 2
pc. mini shirt outfits, sleeveless dresses and
fancy dresses.

Men's 1U5 Knit Shirts ...... .'5.49
Men's '9.95 Knit Shirts ...... .'7.89
Men's 11.2.95 Knit Shirts ... .110.29
Men's 114:95 Knit Shi_rts ....'1189

i

•

Boys Spring Jackets

'

Dress _knits · casual looks. tank tops. cut"
oils · leans sh1rts and many more. Sizes S,
M, l and XL Entire stock included in this ·
Easter Sale. Short sleeve.
·

@;
~

~

EASTfR SALE/

Junior
Easter Dress Sale

EASTER SAlE/

•
'G®
e@)

EASTER SALE/

-Men's Sport &amp; Western .
Shirts

~

i

'

el.ittleBoysOutfits
el.ittle Girls Slips
.Children's Easter Hats
eMen's Light Weight Jackets
e8oys Dress Pants
eHanes Underwear

•

e

.. .,~••(D~

'

·The Private Eye ·
Pages 5, 6 .

.DRESS SLACKS
Psychology Today
Page 6

You'll like this new selection in lash·
ion solid colors and neat patterns.
Waist sizes 30 to 42 and utra large
sizes 44 to 50.

Men's '15.95 Slacks ... 112.60 ,
' Men's '19.95 Slacks .. ..115.70
'
Men's 124.95 Sl•cks .. 119.70·
Men's 129.95 Slacks .. ..123.60

SALE. PRICES
GOOD THRU
·SATURDAY
APRIL 2

Filmeter
Pages 7, 8

GOINGSTRONGATIII-Aiiiiii!III,PeeWeeKIDIIIaUllanadlvecounll'ymwllcperfonner.
1 Wallz." (AP Laeerplloto)
'

Be II beat 11nown u eo-writer Ill lbe +...,, "Ttuc e

fASTfR SAlE!

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN .

Dress Shirts

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
.
.........

'

'

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