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•

friday,April30, 1982

Earthen holding ·p ond very helpful .
Anyone who has livestock tnows
that animal waste is a problem that
mUBt be haqdled.
Tom Hamm, Sutton township
dairYman, decided last yea~ that
hauling manure every day was not
for his farming operation. He
realized he needed storage ·for
animal waste M he could . haul

With the asalstance of the U.S. Soil
Consel'\'lltlon Service, the ¥elgs Soil
and Water ~rvation Diatrict,

and the Agricultural Stabilization
Conservation Service, Hamm
decided to build an earthen holdjng
pond.
The pond, designed to hold animal

VUlage clean-up r~minder is given
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today reminded residents that next
week, May ~7, is Clean-Up Week In
!he' village. Residents are urged to
take advantage of this once a year
free pickup service by cleaning up
· their property and putting the debris
near the curb in front of their homes.

•

0 0 0 .... . . . . . . . . . 0 .... 0 ••••

Cla181fieds .. " .................. 1}-Z-7

The village will pick up next week • hayland, and . the more solid
on the followlnll achedule: firSt material will go on his ~rn ground.
ward, Mondlly; second ward,
The advantages of a system like

WADS TANK SPREADER- Tomm Hamm loads ·
the seH-loading tank spreader. Says Hamm, " We are
just tickled with the way thls animal waste

management system has worked for us." SCS photo by
Robert L. Flnt.

Area deaths
Eunice .Reed Loehr

Mabel Clara Pickens

Mrs. Eunice Reed Loehr, daughter of the late Lillian Thompson
Reed and Wllllam F. Reed, founder
of The Farmers Bank a nd Savlngs
Co., Pomeroy, died Thursday even·
tng In Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
She was p~eded In death by her
first husband, Dr . WOllam L. Hobart, who practiced medicine ln .
Lakewood, .Ohio, for many years,
and two brothers, Theodore T.
Reed, Sr., and D. CUrtis Reed.
Surviving are he r husband,
George R. Loehr, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.; a brother, Fredertck Reed of
Okemos, Mich., and the following
nieces and ne phews: Mrs. Lillian
R. Daniels, Vero Beach, Fla.; Robert E. Reed, Arlington, Texas;
Wllllam C. Reed, Saratoga, Calif.;
Agnes R. Schellhase, Canton; Ted
Reed, Jr., Pomer/iy; Ann Hoefle,
Rockford, lll.
Servlces will be conducted at 11
a.m. Monday, May 3, at the Saxton
Funeral Home, Lakewood, with In·
terment at Sunset Me morta l Park,
Cle_veland.

Mrs. Mabel Clara Pickens, 72,
Shade, mother of Eber Pickens,
Mayor of Syracuse, died Thursday
night at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Pickens was a daughter of
the Ia te Homer and Amanda Sayre
Donahue. She was a lso preceded In
death by seven brothers and three
sisters.
Survlvlng are her husband, Samuel Pickens, confined to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center; six
sons, Elmer, Letart Falls; Em·
melt, Wesley and Donald, all of
Toledo; Shelby pf Racine, and Eber
of · Syracuse; a daughter, Clara
Smith, Columbus; 32 grandchild·
ren; 19 great-grandchildren; three
sisters, Mrs. Mamie Warner, Alliance; Mrs. Daisy .Pauley, Dearfi eld; Mrs. Teresa Boulware,
Newburg, Mo., and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held at 3:30p.m.
Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James Kittle
officiating. Burial will be In the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home a nytime
after 1 p.m. Saturday.

Judge ends
35 cases

Nineteen defendants were fined
and 16 others for1elted bonds In
Meigs COunty Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrtck O'Brien
were Ertc Saunders, Gallipolis, Arnold Tomblin, South Point, and Debra Estep, Pomeroy, $20 and costs
each, speed; William Kldd, Jr.,
Pedro, Ohlo, $10 and costs, Improper passing, $10 and costs no
valid traller plates; Wllbur Ward,
Middleport , $5 and costs, no
mumer; David Greer, Pl. Plea·
san!, and Lawrence Hysell, Rutland, $10 and costs each, stop sign
vlolatlon; Larry Harman, Shade,
$100 and costs, left. of center; John
T. Eaton, Wheelersburg, $30 a nd
costs, speed ; Wendy A. Elkins,
TUppers Plains, and James.Birchfleld, Rutland, $10 and costs each,
!allure io yield ; Ha rold McGrath,
Long Bottom, $10 and costs, falled
to display valid license plates;
Relno B. Lind, Pomeroy, $22 a nd
costs, speed; John A. Casto, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, $175 and costs, overload;
' Eddie FHe, Pomeroy, $10 a nd
costs, Improper parking; Wllllam
Maynard, Syracuse, $63 and costs,
overload; Randal Kennedy, Rutland, $24 and costs, speed;
Wells, Long Bottom, $30 and costs,
passing over double yellow line;
Terry Walker, Rutland, $10 and
costs, unsafe vehicle.
For1eltlng bonds were VIctor E.
Cook, Pomeroy, $45.50, no valid
plates on traDer; WIIUam E. Ham·
monds, Beckley, W. Va., and Rl·
chle E . Blumenauer, Columbus,
$370.50 each, DWI; Sue A. Regan,
Athens, $70.50, speed; ; Lynn M.
Congos, Columbus, Gary E. Ad·
klns, GalUpolls, and Robert New·
ton, Jr. Centerburg, .$.'i0.50 each,
speed; Marlin D. Hughes, Galli(»
Us, ·and Jack D. Owens, Waverly
$40.50 each speed; VIrgil T . Hupp,
Mason, $60.50, speed; Jack L. Provence, Long Bottom, $35.50, Improper backing; Diana L. Tillis,
Rutland, $45.50, fictitious license
plates; Davld J: Priddy, Rt. 1, Ru·
tland, $45.50, failure to stop for
flashing red light; Dan E. Morris,
Pomeroy, $45.50, failure !0 obey
traffic control device; LeWis E.
H'fmphrey, Jr., Rt. 4, Pomeroy and
Harold L. McGrath, Long Bottom,
$45.50 each, no cycle endorsement.
•

l

Trash pick-up set
Trash, pick up In the v1llage ol
Pomeroy will be held May 3,
through May 7, Mayor Clarence
Andrews announced today.
Schedule for pick up Is as follows:
Monday, first ward; Tuesday, second ward; Wednesday, third ward
and Thursday fourth ward.
All trash must be placed at the
curb for pick up the Mayor advlsed.

Emergency runs
T!J

R

e ulland Emergency Unit
answered two calls Thursday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reports. At 8:15p.m., the unit took
ClarenceKlghnfromMetgsMinel

Clean-up day in Racine Village
has been set for the first and second
Wednesdays of May, May 5 and May
12. Mayor Charles Pyles and council
members urge residents to clean up
their property and place items for
pickup at the curb.

YOU .C AN L£ARN

WORD

United Pentecostal Church, Middleport, will observe,baby day Sunday morning, May 2.
Anyone wishing to have a baby
dedicated at the service inay call
the Rev. Baker at ~3564 .

B

c

446-4367

.
ADMISSION$ OFFICE OPEN 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Reg . No. 75-02·0472&amp;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;~~
REPORT OF .CONDITION

Announce program

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, N.A.

The Rev. and Mrs. David Mann
of the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church will be the speaker and SQIQIs! respectively _a t the _ Salvation
Army Sunday at 7: 30 p .m .
Eloise Adams, W.P.S.M. will
lead the meeting with Major
Glenna Rummel at the plano. The
public Is !nvlted to attend.

SUNDAY,
. . MAY 2nd, 1982
STARTING AT 1:30
HARMONY SINGERS
~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~H

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

COLUMJ!US, Ohio (AP) - A
House committee wllllnvlteamendments this week to Gov. Richard
Celeste's 1983-1~ budget b!ll, with
reports persisting It may be in for
some drastic changes.
One of the strongest and most
vocal lobbying efforts In years Is
being waged against one controversial provision. It lmposesa4percenl
excise tax on business servlces such
as architecture, accounting, law.
engineering a nd other services

· Thousands of Dollars
Cash and due from depository institutions .................. , ............. $11,768,000.00
U.S . Treasury securities ............... .. ........... .. ...... ..-: ......... 2,938,000.00
Obligatiol18 of other U.S. Government
.a.:•ncies and co~ratiol18 ............... .. ......................... . . 1;759,000.00
Obligat. ''of States and political subdivisions
..
in the ~nited Sl;ites ............................ . ..................... 3,471,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ....... . ........... .. ....... .... ..... . ..... 2.000.00
Federal Reserve stock and co~rate stock .. . . .... . .... .. ................ .... 58,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
.
under agreementto resell .. ......... .. : . ...... . .... _................... 570,000.00
Loa,118, Total ( excludin~ unearned income) . . . . ........ 20,009,000.00
Less : Al\owanceforposslble loan losses ....... .. .......... 278,000.00
Loans, Net. ........... ·.· ... . ...... ·.. .... .. . .. ........ . ... .......... 19,731,000.00
Lease financing receivables ...... . .......... . ............... . ............. 564,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing hank premises ... . .. .. .......• . .... .. .... ...... 611,000.00
Other assets .. .... .... . , ..................... .. ........... . .............. 647,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ..................... . ... ......... .. . . .. .. ... ......... .$42,139,000.00

LONG BOTTOM, OHIO

EVERYONE WELCOME

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Pl"!5S Writer

Statement of Resources and Ltablllttes

MT. OLIVE CHURCH

I---+-

.... ..of.......
... .... .. ... ....... .. .............. .... 3,327,000.00
Timeand
andco~rations
savings deposits
individuals,
partnerships, and co~ratiol18 ..... _. _.. .......... .... .. ... . ... . ..... . 30,464,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ..... . ....... ... .. .. . . . .... .. : ...... .... 4,000.00
In
Deposits of States and political subdivistons
·
Ill
in
the
United
States
...................
.
.................
.
...........
. 1,984,000.00
1Certified
and
officers'
checks
......................
....
.
...
..
..............
42!i,OOO.OO
:i
Total Deposits ............ .': .................. .. .. . ............. .' ...... 36,204,000.00
1111
Total demimd deposits ....... ... .............. .. .... . .. 4,294,000.00
Total time and savings deposits ....... . .... , ........... 31,910,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase ...... . ....................... ... . .. .. 1,101,000.00
11 tes· .. . .......... . ..............................
1,255,000.00
Other l'1a bTl'
1---t- TOTAL LIABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures) ..... .. ............ . ....... .... . ... . . .. .... . .. $38,560,000.00

-cc
-...

·----l-

•••••

••

•

••••

11 S•,tiona, 84 Pag•• JS tents
A Mwltimtdia Inc. Newtpape1

Pleasant Sunday, May 1, 1983
-

action.
GaUia -Jackson-Melgs Community
What is Plummer's status now?
Mental Health Center.
The 648 board Is a public lxxly
Most members contacted !hls
week sa '!d they were unsure If the
which funds and ov&lt;'l'Sees the
board will move to fire Plummer,
delivery of mental health servlcesln
bul several indicated they thoug ht
the !hree-county area . The mental
the Issue was dead .
health center Is one of the private,
"I feel there's a chance of it
non·proflt agencies the 648 board
coming up again," board c hairman
funds a nd- according to therevlew
John Rice said . "But I think It's
group - the two agencies have had
.
" long-standing disputes centering
unlikely ."
Plummer, her staff members,
on ·the control a n(! funding of the
and the648 board came under flre!n
public mental health programs."
a 32-page repcrt released by the
The review group concluded
Community Services Review
there were serious problems at both
Group in early January . .
the 648 board and the mental health
Th~ reviE!l" group was formed In
center. For Its part, the panel called
for the 648 bOOn! to cut Its budget,
Octe!ber by Ohio Deparunent of
Mental Health officials who were · eliminate some staff p6sitions, and
concerned about bitter conflicl
req uest the resignation of
between the 648 board and lhe
Plummer.

Plummer 's employment re·
mains one of the tew publicly
unresolved Issues In the revlew
group's treatment of the648 board;
the board has followed through on
the recomme ndations to cullts staff
and budget
Rice said the board could decide
to consider Plummer's employ·
m ent again a! any time. But ti\e
chalfman said he felt a majority
have Indicated they do not want to
pursue the matter.
He noted that If the board decided
it wanted to fire Plummer, li would
have to hold hearings to give her a
chance to respond to cha~es made
by the review group.
Board me m ber Rev. Frank
Hayes agycect that while lhe issue
(Continu&lt;'&lt;l on Page A41

provided one business by a nother.
All of those groups and more
complained vigorously about the
tax a! hearings last week, and by
Frlday there were signs they may
be getting their message across.
However, House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., D·New Boston, and
other leaders said those opposing
the tax haven't suggested a way to
fill the revenue void that removlng It
would create.
The tax, proposed by Celeste as
part a reform package containing
more than $640 million In tax relief.

House ha ve announced lhelr unanimous opposition to the tax and
will be sure to offer an amendment
deleting It If no one else dOPs.
11 the business groups win ti1e
battle, Hinlg's commltlee would be
faced wllh so~ tq\'Eh e hoices , su&lt;'h
as taking away! a bigchunkoflhe tax
relief. making deep cuts In Celeste's
budget or Increasing the a mount of
some other tax hikes in tile bill.
Those seeking deletion of the levy
say Ills unfair beca use i1 hits small
businesses, unable Jo keep lawyers,
accounlants, and others whose

Is being counted onfor$255 million to
help offset that relief.
Riffe and House Finance Chairman William E. Hlnlg, D-New
Philadelphia , were non-committal,
saying they wouldn't ta~·a position
until after all committee testimony,
which resumes Tuesday, Is heard .
H!nlg said his panel wi ll accept
committee members' amendments
Thursday. However, they won't be
voted on until May 10. The budgel is
due lor a floor vote May 12, H!nig
said. '
Minority Republicans in the

By KEVIN KELLY

I, Joan WoHe, Assistant Cashier, ·of the above-named hank do hereby declare that \his
Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge ~d belief.
Joan WoHe, Assistant Cashier
APril
17,
'
1982
We, the undersigned directors attest the correclness or this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined bl' us, and to the best of our kn.owledge
and belief is true and Cl)rrect.
PAULA. BARNETT
EDISON
HOBSTETI'ER
DIRECTORS

HORACEKARR
•

school," he explained . "One day, I
told my dad, 'I don't want to go to
school.' My dad sa i~J , 'okay.' I
wasn't through seventh grade yet.
My dad died , and we were on the
farm, my mom and three sisters,
and we tried to make a go of it. "
DeLong was 20 ·and the family
farm near Kltts Hill was not doing
well when he met quallflcatlons to
e nlist In CCC. His family's economically depressed situation was a
major factor, he said.
"There was a certain standard of
a thing you had to meet," he said.
"Your parents coii!dn't be too well
off."
What followed was what DeLong
now refers to as "a wonderful,
wonderful thing" for young men.
facing bleak futures !that turning
pclnt year of the Grea ·Depression.
Onlyonemantromatamllycould
join CCC, DeLong explained, In
order for that man to help his
family. Wheretheywould(lllwasup
to CCC administrators.
"! had some first cousins at

'l'lme8-Senllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - In the spring of
1933, with the nation In the throes of
the worst economic depression In
history, rural areas In southeastern
Ohio were .hard-hlt by widespread
unemployment and overall despair.
A new administration In washing·
\On pi'O&lt;.'eEded to crea !e several
~lal programs to put Americans
back \O work.
The critics thought of It as
enforced socialism, but for Ray·
mond DeLong, enlisting In the
Civilian Conservation Corps lhilt
year provided a chance to get away
. !rom his Lawrence County hornes·
lead and earn money to IIEllP his
mother and sisters.
. The7Q.year:-oldDeLong, whO now
resides along Ohlo 141 near Centenary, shared some thoughts and
memories o! his two years with CCC
as the second statewide reunion of
CCC workers is planned for May 21
in Akron.
"In my case I W¥11'1 craiy about

. I

•

tntitte

tmts

--

-

- - --------

Hearing on
Lee's status
as juvenile
onMond.ay
GALLIPOLIS- A hmringwill be
held Monday in GaUia County
Juvenile Court lo determine II
17·year·o id accused murderer Charles 1-"C II should be. tried as an
adult .
Lee, a Point Pleasant youth, Is
accused of murdering Barbara
Twyman. 17. of Rt. 1, Ewing10n. He
has pleaded not guilty .
Donald Cox. assistant county
prosecutor, flied the motion requesting that Lee's case be moved
to the genera l division of 'common
pleas co,~rt when' he can be tried as
.
an adult .!

Maxine S. Plununer

servicPs they req uire, In houSf'. Rig
corporations can do that and will
f'SCHpc' 1he tax. they say .
In other business this W('('k, a
Senate committe&lt;' will look into
procedurt's of the Ohio Building
Authority in the awardh.r~ of
conl racts and handling of prcllm i·
nary work on a new state officf'
tower in Co lumbus . Sm. Charles L.
Butts. D·Cleve!and, who brads thr
transport a tion and publi c impruv&lt;'
m ents commitlf'e, sa id his panPI
will me&lt;'t Tiwsday and Wcdnrsday
to lnvPsliga tP.

.

·

·

Judge I Thomas Moulton said
F'rlday this Is the first instance he
knows of in Gailla Counly where
pmsr'Cu tors havl' attempted to try a
juvenile as a n adult . Moulton said hr
&lt;•xpc&lt;·ts to make a decision on the
motion soo n afte r the hearing.
Att omry Hamlin King will repr'PS{'n( Ll'&lt;' at llr•' hearing, which
will be c losed 10 lhc public.
Cox said Jhe judge will probably
consider the result s of Ll'l''s
psychiatric tes1ing when making a
clrc!slon.
Thr psychiatric lrsting Is now
mmplrh•. but Cox d&lt;x- llnt~lt o makr
lh&lt;' resull s public .
Unde r Ohio law. l..c&lt;' may bc lrlt'&lt;l
as an adult if It can lx•det ermim'&lt;l hr
Is not su i! able fe1 r rrhahl!!ra rlon ar a
ju v1•nilt1 facility and pre.sfmls a
t Con11mu~l on Pag&lt;' i\ ·41

50 ears later, IDan remembers the CCC era

.

IN POMEROY

Story on Page A-5

who received training
at Fort Knox, Ky.

Common stock :
No. shares authorized
16,000
No. shares outstanding
16,000 (par value l ............... .. .. ... . . ..... 400,000.00
.Surplus ... .. .......... .. ..................................... .. , ....... 1,520,000.00
Undivided profits .................................. . ... .. .. . . . ... ....... 1,659,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ............ .... ....... ... ....... .. ......... . $3,579.000.00
TOTAL LIABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ............. . . .. , ......... $42,139,000.00

I

ELBERF~LDS

Ohio _ho~sing program delayed

sei1d CCC enlistees

Amounts outstanding as of report date:
. Standby letters of credit, total .... ..... ......... .. .... . .. .. ..... ....... . 244,000.00
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of$100,000ormore ............................. ~ .. ... . ... ... ......... 1,818,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending
with report date :
Cash and due from depository instltuliol18 ................. . . , ... . _.... 10,8S3,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ........................................... I ,057,000.00
Totailoans ............. .. ~ ...... . ... . ................. . ............... 20,644,000.00
Time certificates of deposits in denominations
of$100,000ormore .......... . .................. . .... .. ........ , .... .. . 1,806,000.00
Total deposits ....... ' .................................... .. ...... ...... 35,936,000.00 '
Federal funds purchased and secqrities
·
sold under agreements to rep~rchase .... , ... . ........ : . ...... , . . . ....... 993,000.00
Total assets ............. , ............................. : . ............ , $41,555,000.00

. BLLE LUSTRE DRY CLEAN. MACHINE
AVAILABLE FOR RENT.

.

'

IT WAS HOMEFor nearly 200 Civilian
Conservation Corps
workers assigned to
Gallia County in late
1933, this camp on
the site ol wh~t is
now the Gallipolis
Terminal Co. building
was their home. The
romp site was favored
by U.S. Army oHicials
searching southern
Ohio for a location to

Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,

0

'·

Drastic changes possible for proposed state budget

of Pomeroy, in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1982, published in
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
Sectionl61.
Charter Nwnber I911o

·

·'

By JEFF GRABMEIER
'l'lme&amp;Senttnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - More than three
months after a state-formed revlew
group blasted the Gallla-JacksonMelgs 648 board and called for
sweeping changes, the board has
yet to publicly resolve whether It
will Implement the panel's most
controversial recommendation.
On Jan. 24, adlvldedboardvoted6
to :; to follow the request of the'
Community Services Review
Group and ask for the resignation of
its executive director, Maxine
Plummer.
Plummet immediately refused to
step down , Since then, the board has
spent sever al hours in closed-door
sessions discussing the embattled
direc tor, but has taken no further

Inspection slated

Eads trom his home on Main St. to
Holzer Medical Center.

.

'

G·allipolis Business College

nual Inspection this evening at 7:30
p.m. Grace WUson Is the Inspecting
officer. All members to take des-

Story on Page &amp; 1

648's executive director:
what's her current status?

in 4 weeks (non -credit)
Classes begin May 8)

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, WID hold its an·

·

Peoples Bank announces stock split

Middl'!port-P~?f11eroy-Golllpolis-Point

CopyrighMd 1983

'

PROCESSING

To observe bady day

HYMN' SING

r

Vol . ,17 No. 9

·•

•

unba

to the' p.m.,
Holzerthe
Medical
and at rise;rt;fo;r;ref;res;hme;;n;ts;.
9:04
unit Center
took Robbie

Veterans Memorial
Adrnltted··Otho Karr, Middleport; Helen Wllllams, Middleport;
Verne Ord, Syracuse; David
KeStner, Mlnersvlll~; Josephine
Myers, Reedsv1lle; Cledlth King,
Pomeroy; Mlchae! Stanley .1
Dexter.
Discharged-Gladys Croy, · wu.
11am Morns, Garnet Brewer.

Racine ciean-up set

Edllorlal .......................... A•2
Fann ...................... ..... ... E-3
Local ........... .................. A-~
Stale-Nallonal ................... D-1
Sports ..... .......... ........ ..... C-1·8
TV guide ...................... Insert

Featured on Page 8-1

'Tuesday; third ward, Wednesday, Hamm's are less water pollution,
and fourth ward, Thursday.
time and labor management, and
After clean-up week, it will be being able to stay out of fields during
necessary for the village to charge · wet timeS of the year.
$10 per truck load for any hauling
For further infonnation and
done for residents to cover Iran- assistance, contact the SCS office in
Meels Monday
sportation and landfill coots.
Pomeroy.
Racine VIllage Council will meet ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:._ __:._:_:._ _ _ _ _ _ __

at 7 p.m. Monday at village hall. A
meeting of the Racine Board of
Public Affairs at 6:30 p.m . will
precede the council meeting.

Story on Page IH

Abl1 the IUver ....... ...... .B-1-8
Area death!l ................. ..... A-7
BtiBiness
E-1

~;..=n~:;:r~q=~nH~':e':~

.

Victim thought Reagan was a dream

Today's
' Times-Sentinel

and rniJkllouse waste, has an ear•
then fill with a concrete~ at ome
end used for emptying, ConstructiOn
was ~~~ last September and
, Hamm started filling the holding
pond at that time.
Hanun feels !hilt this holding porllj
has really helped in the
management of ·his farming
operation. In April, he started to em-

manure when Ume best sulied him.

·1

homeslci&lt;, but you weren't com·
Ironton who enlisted, and they
pelled to stay . It wasn 't like the
wound up In Iowa," he said.
Alter a two-week training pertod Army - they dldn '1 come alter
you ."
a1 Fort Knox , l&lt;y., which had been
Bul moot stayed, DeLong said. He
converted to a CCC Induction
center, DeLong and Ws fellow CCC earned $30 a month, $25 of which
wen! toh!sfamlly . And lheworkwas
workers found thf rnselves at the
corps camp established In thefaU of always there, he said .
" l don 't think they had too many
1933 on the old Gallla County
days
sel lo stay Inside," DeLong
fairgrounds . between the Ohio
"There
would be work. They'd
said.
Hospital for EpllepUcs, now Galli ·
give
you
a
winter supply (of
polls Developmental Center, a nd
clothing)
an!l
a
summer
supply. We
what's now Eastern Avenue In
were dressed, and youdldn 't haveto
Gallipolis .
.
For four months, 1 b..Long and . go outside and fn.-eze."
Although many of the workers
nearly 200 other CCC Wo~kers, split
were from all over the state,several
up Into platoons, wcrked mainly In
were local people, DeLonl( said,
flood and erosion control, ·d am
noting the names of Roy Neal, Paul
construction and tree planting
and Jake CheValier, and E mest
southwest of Gallipolis. Much
fore5lry work was done along Ohio Thome, the Thurman resident that
325 between Rio Grande and Gage, frequently cont ributes letters to the
edltortal sections of several area
DeLong recalls.
"1 think they (the workers) were newspapers.
"Ernie came In as a local - we
satisfied with It," DeLong said.
called themlocals-asa leader. We
"They reaUy enjoy~!&lt;! it, In my
were young boys, but he was older
opinion. Of course, everywhere you
(ContinUed on Page A-41
go you'd have soineone whO was

�-·-1983

·.•

•

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

:CQmmentary and perspective
•·

.

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.

Times-Sentinel -Page

CUSTOMER

PIERCED EARRINGS

.-

J. o~ ~ 4'~ .~I

.

..

'"

Virginia non-springC,'=========Ja=m
=es=J=:K=i=lpa=t=ric=k
A Division of
I""T"'\..r-' '-_,.... . ~ d·-==-

825 Th ird Ave., GalliJM&gt;Iis, Ohi o
(614 144&amp;-2342

ll1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
16141 992-2156

ROBERT!.. WINGETT
Publisher
HORIIRT WII.~ON J R.
Exec ull\'t' Editnr
A MF.MAER uf Tht• ,bsudalt&gt;d Prt"!!ili.

PATWHITEHEAD ·
Assistant Publisht·r-Cunlnlllt'r
l u l&lt;! ml Oail~ i'n ·~~ .h~wtlth u/1

and tht· Am..rir;tn

N!!" l'f*pt'f Puhl i"ht&gt;r" 1\s!i•,. ·iMl inn_
LETTI-:RS OF fWI ~ IU N an '&gt;~t·kunlt' d . 'l'hn ~ h uu ld ht• h· ~ l hllll :!1111 'olnnb ln ll ~ - r\ 11
kl h· r~ ilrt· suhjt•t•l lu t•t h1in!! and m u!&lt;1o lw ~ igiwd '&gt;lith nan11•. ;1dfl n·~ ~ :111d ldt•p ho ~u• ·
numbt' r . Nuunsi~rat• d lt•th'rs " ill hi· puhlill llcrl. I A·t H·r~ ~ h 11u l d be· 1111-( ..ud lol ~ h· . :.~ dfln•s!&lt; tll l(
istoiut•li, mtl P•'l'lWitlllitit •s .

SCRABBLE, Va.- At this peint
In Iinne, as the Watergate boys used
to say, tradttlon ctecrees that I must
produce a column about spring in
the Blue Ridge Mountains of
VIrginia.
It Is a nice tradition. The writer
who has been shut In for months
with E l Salvador and the Exclusion- .
ary R ule yearns to get outside with
the dogwoods and tulips. He seizes
upen the chance to wax lyrical
about blue skies a nd warm earth,
about bluebirds a nd purple martins, about peach blossom s and a ll
the tender tints of spring.
Aaargh! This spring has been a
disaster. This ts the b&lt;ist that can be
said about It. It has rained, and

raliled, and rained. The winds have
blown, and blown, and blown . Night
alter night we have seen the
Uiermom eter fall below freezlng.The d ogwood buds, tight as
clenched fists, are just beginning to
open.
Blue skies? Who can remember
blue skies? Day after day our skies
have been as gray as old sweat
shirts. Warm earth? The earth Is as
cold as a tax collector's eye. Yes,
the bluebirds are back, but so are
the cowbirds. We redecorated the
m artin house with new carpets and
chintz c urtains , whereupon the
sparrows moved ln.
I a m sore at the dog. She ·Is a
small blond shelly, name of Happy,

with limpid brown eyes and an
outgoing personality. The other day
I drove In from three hard days on
the road, and there on the front
lawn was Happy having tea with a
ra bblt. They had spread a cloth
under the maple . .They bad hot
buttered biscuits ~na oran ge marmalade. I mean , really! The rabbit
took off.when she saw me coming,
and Happy sulked for the rest of the
afternoon. I don't expect her to
chase the resident rabbits, and
certainly not to terminate them
with extrem e finallty, but these tea
parties have to stop.
The firewood Is wet. Ordinarily
we close the damper In the kitchen
fireplace a bout April 5 and call It

)The gospeJ accordi;ng
~ to j. Peter ,Grace
: : The gospel according to J . Peter Grace Is simple: If the federal
: gover nment doesn't get its costs unde r control we are going down the drain
: together .
·
· "We can 't go along like this," sa id Grace, chairman of The President's
:Private Sector Survey On Cost Cont rol. The penalty for falling to correct
. our ways, he warns, Is "the loss of free society as we know it."
"People carne here for freedom, " said Grace,w hose grandfather, W.R.,
.n€d Ireland with a colony of farmers ;lfter the famine ol l!W6, settling in
:F'eru long enoug h to found W.R. Grace &amp; Co. before coming here in 1865.
:"!'low It Is ·aU being threatened" by government overspepding, he sajd.
·: Grace, 69, Is an unaffectroly religious man who tends to sermonize on
. !"a tiers dear to his heart. And lew rna tters beyond his family and the
· ctompany he runs, W.R. Grace &amp; Co., seemdearer to htnn than cutting
, governme nt costs.
· · J . P eter Grace was a cost -cutt ing advocate long before being named to
:bead the President' s survey, which S€eks to bring private sector experilse
: to bi&gt;ar on goverrunent opera tions. Reclining In his cha uffeured lim.ousine
:im the ·way to the a irport, his security man silt ing up frort , Grace cites
statistics supplied by economists of theGracecompany, a company whose
sales exceed $6 bUUon a year . ·
. : ''We (the American people) pay$2SS billion in income ta x," he begins as
·the car works Its way through city streets. ",Pfus $29.6 billion In excise,
:estate and corporate Incom e taxes." In 1965, he says, It was only $34.2
: billion.
; He works quickly toward the peint: "Forty· three percent of a ll r-eVenue
·is for transfer payments, excluding Social Security." And transfer
:payments involve "entitlem ents." or social program s.
'
: · "Eighty-six cents of every $1 In taxes goes to social programs," he
:stresses, his finger running oyer a sheet of calculations he was studying in
· prepara tion for a task force meeting In Washington.
: One of the strongest criticisms of the task force Is that It is m ade up
:alfnost solely of big-business executives rather than a mix of big and small.
:'Thad to go to big companies, " said G race. "Small com panies didn't have
·the staff to put there." E ntrepreneurs genera lly are too busy, he
·suggested.
: : :The staffing has led to c r iticism of executives ex amining the very
:opera tions of government that regulated them or with whom they did
·business. And, as well, that they were biased against e ntitle ment s.
expected, that accusa tion has been atnned at Grace, who res pends
;W)th hard data, as he usua lly does when discussing such matter s. "Who
·pays for e ntit lements?" he asks? "It Isn't the rich," he answers. "Ninety
:percent of taxable Income Is below $3S,OOO a year. And 92 percent below

: :As

' U/\ """ "

·~·~·

· : ·Cutting government involvement in private lives isn't a inned at
: d~rlving the needy either, he argues. He suggests the truly needy m ay be
: d~prlved because of so man y entitlements going to others.

Berry's World

••

I

.....' '

..

" It appears, my d ear, that we have both gro wn ,
but we seem to have grown in DIFFERENT
DIRECTIONS. "

'

..

Today in history
: : Today Is Sunday, May 1, the 121st day of1983. There are 244 days left In
:trte year.
:: :Today' s highlig ht In history:
·. ·On May 111945, German radio announced the death of Adolf Hitler in
:flertln .
•
.· On this date:
; : · In 1707, a union between E ngland and Scotland was formed under the
·name Great Britain .
: · :·In 119!, an American na va l force under Adm . George Dewey destroyed
Spanish fleet In Manna Bay in the Spanish-American War .
-: ·In 19:tl, the E mpire Sta te Building was\ dedicated in New York.
·: And, In 1961, the first poll tical hijacking of an American plane to Cuba
:took place.
: · Ten years ago : Defense Secretary E lliot Richardson was nominated to
;replace Richard Kleindienst, who had resigned as a ttorney general in the
·wake of the Wa tergate scandal.
·
:; Five )iears ago: It was announced that a Japanese explorer had reached
Nortlt Pole after a 600-mtle trip by dogsled over the frozen Arctic

:a:

.

.

:lhe

·Ocean.

'

.

'; One year ago: P resident Reagan, took part In o!lening day ceremonies a t
!he 1982 World's Fair in Knoxvllle , Tenn.
. : Today's birthdays: Sing{,r Kate Smith Is 74 years old. TV personality
·Jack Paar Is 65,
:, Thought for today: ;'In the midst of great joy, do not promise to give a
)nan anything; in the midst of grea t anger, do not answer a man's letter."
-.J ChineSe

proverp.

. WASHINGTON - In Western
countries, the first of May conjures
visions of dances around !he
Maypole and other innocent rites of
spring - a time to set out the
tomato plants, dus\ off the lawn
chairs and otherwise celebra te
.-~na ture 's annua l reas surance that
she has not, a!frr ,all , forgotten us.
In Soviet-bloc ' oountrles, May
Day has been given quite a
different dtnnenslon. In a perverted
observa nce of the traditiona l
workers' holiday, the"first of May Is ·
an occasion for the communist
bosses to parade the troops and
weapons that keep their workers
under cont rol.
This year, May Day has made
the old m en In the Kremlin long for
the days of their youth, when Stalin
ruled a nd the workers and peasants
knew the ir ()lace. The Soviet
empire Is showing s lgns of restive-

ness a nd impat ience with the harsh
repression that characterizes the
communist system.
In Poland , the mlUtary regime
felt It necessary to warn its subjects
that com petition with the officially
orchest rated cele bration today had
better not get out of hand.
Dem onst rations in suppert of the
outlawed Solidarity moveme nt will
be tolera ted, the authorities have
Indicated, but If the genuine
workers' observances go too far,
retribution has been threatened .
There's good reaSon for the
Kremlin to be nervous a bout the
effect the Poles' stubborn resist·
ance can have on other parts of the
commun ist ennpire. J ust a few days
ago, for example. a high Soviet
official d isclosed tha t Solldarity's
courageous example had encouraged popular demonstrations in the
Ba ltic republic of Extonia, a

Jack Anderson
peace with Kadar. They gave up
their hope of pelitical freedom In
return for capitalist-tinged economic oppertunlties that were
unmatched in the communist
world .
The " Hungarian solution" Is
regarded as a unique accommoda·
lion between communist dogrrl&amp;
and free en terprlse.
But it tu rns out that Kadar after more than a quarter century
- is worried about the memory of
the 1956 uprising tha t stili burns in
his people's hearts. He is appar ently determined to stamp out the
last spark of rebelliousness befom
It Is fram ed to life by the Intracta ble
Poles.
Kadar has decided to " liquidate "
(the Hungarian word ~ol)
the pertion of Karapashi Ce~ery
in Bud apest tha t contains the
graves of some 240 freedom
fight ers killed in 1956.

constitue nt part of the Soviet Union
s ince its forced annexation in 1940.
Even within Mother R ussia
It self, the regime has Instituted a
harsh cr ackdown lntended to root
out the tiny but persistent d issident
m ovement. Was this really necessary? Obv jously Yurt And ropev
.thought so. As the former boss of
the KGB, he should have a good
idea about how dangerous hom egrown dissident s are.
Now fro m Hungary com es
furt her ev idence of the communist
leadershi p's anxiety. The nature of

the , government' s action ls as
strange as It s source : the regime of
J anos Kadar , one of the most
secure a nd pepular of Soviet
satellite leaders.
After their heroic but d oomed
uprising In October 1956 was
crushed by Soviet armor, the
Hungarians supposed ly made their

Why are we there?

~~

..

Memory of freedom

Q: Why a re we In E l Salvador?
to .suppert E l Salvador a nd · the
A: We are In E l Salvador to
Soviets decided to s uppert Nicaraprotect It fro m Nicaragua. The
gua. Once the s ides were chosen It
Sa ndlnlsta Marxis t government of
beca m e a whole new ball gam e.
Nicaragua Is training Salvadoran
Q: Centr al American governrebels to take over the elected
me nts h,a ve been overt hrowing
government of El ' Sa lvador with , eac h other for hundreds of years.
Cub a n and Sovie t mili tary
The people there !aU to benefit no
eq uipment.
ma tt er who takes over. Why should
Q: Why a re we in Honduras?
the superpowers get Involved?
A: To tra in rebels to takeover the
A: Because In the past , the
government of Nicaragua with
revolutions were usually between
American equipment.
one fac tion of the military and the
Q: Then U.S. pellcy is to defend
other. Whoever took over a lways
the government of El Salvador,
pledged good rela tions with the
whlle worklng for the overthrow of
United Sta tes. As long as we could
the government In Nica ragua.
do business with the new governA: Tha t Is correct.
ment we saw no reason to
Q: How a r·e we doing?
in tervellj'. but Central Am erican
A: Not very good In El Salvador.
coup d'etats took a nasty tu r n once
But much betler In Nicaragua.
the Cubans get Involved . They
Q: Would you say It 's easier to
s tarted tra ining people to support
overthrow a government In Central
60vernments who refused to have
America than It Is to preserve one?
A: I think I could say that.
Q: Why'!
.
A: As soon as govPrnment takes
over in Central America It turns
against Its own people, becomes
corrupt, a nd commits atrocities
against Its domestic oppenehls in
order to stayJn pewer.·
Q: This Is true In both E l
Salvador a nd Nicaragua?
A: It Is with this difference . Since
we are supporting the present E l
Salvador government we have to
overlook their shortcomings and
abuseS to protect our own national
Interests. At the same time we
carumt lc,llera te the shortcomings
and a buses of Nicaragua since they
are being supported by the
Communis~:
,
Q: Did the Nicaraguans start .
ge tting aid from the Communist
' rountrles beeause we were giving
a id to the E l Salvadorans? Or did
we start supll('rting the El Salvadorans because the !'llcaraguans
were getting help from the
Communlsls?
A: That's a chicken and ·egg ..
question . The fact Is the U.S. opted

qulls for the season. Not ~year.
Since the first of March we' have
gone through two cords of lfrewood ·
- well, one cord, anyhow - and all
the roma nce of an open lire has
gone up the chimney. It dropped a.
heavy locust log .on my right foot .
That Is the foot with the gout.
Nothing Is going on in the garden.
I heard tliat Myrtle Falls, who llves
on the next farm, managed to get
her peas plante&lt;l In between
downpeurs, but atnnost everyone
else has been out ofluck. We did gel
In a dozen rows of lettuce - nice,
nea t, straightaway rows of lettuce
- but then eight feet of rain fell .and
the straightaways look like S.
curves. It wasn't exactly eight feet.
It was more like 12 feet. In one
night.
You wouldn't belleve the wlnd . ln
one of those fits of enthusiasm that
aiD!ct us now and then, a !(W years
ago 1 becam e an ama teur vexillologlst and erected six flagpoles. If you
have six flagpoles, you want to run
up flags on them. Right ? I haven ow
lost the flags of F lorida, Colorado ,
New Mexico, Portugal and Guam .
One big gust of wind last week
ripped a.grommet out of Scotland. I
never lost a grom met before. So I
have suspended the flag-flying
business.
What's the good news? It's been
too cold for the blacksnakes to
emerge. That 's so mething. The
delectable m usrooms we know as
merkles have pepped out. This
weekend the swollen streams
should ma ke for great canoeing.
Down in the greenhouse a small
fores t of seedlings Is gtowing. The
bass reportedly are biting down In
Madison Coun ty. Before lOng we
will welcome summer . bu t as for
the spring of 1983 - it never was .

w

OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF
.14 KT, GOLDFILLED &amp; STERLING
MANY PRICED UNDER '15.QO

WEATIIER FORECAST - The National Weather Semce
foreca.ts rain for the Atlantic coast from the Carolinas thJ'ou&amp;h New
England for Sunday. Snow Is predicted lor part of the Rockies and
additional rain Is forecast for an area siJoetcldng from Qldahoma to
Kentucky. (AP Laserphoto).
,

MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY - A chance of showers
Monday and Tuesday; fair Wednesday. Highs tD the upper 00s and
70s Monday and mostly in the !i()s Tuesday and Wednesday. Lows in
the 511&lt;; Monday morning and In the ~ Tuesday a nd Wednesday.

a

Always in &amp;ood taste,

a fine strand of cul-

A NEW DES.IGN FOR
PERSONALIZED MEMORIALS

tured pearls would.
make a terrific &amp;ift
that your erad will re member forever

FOR THE LOWEST PRICES ON
PLAIN BANOS - SEE US.
NOW
21111-14 KT PLAIN .................... 40 . ~
31111 -14 KT PLAIN ........... ....... .. 62.55
51111 -14 KT IIILICHAIN ............. 87.75
51111·14 KT PLAIN ...........,... .... 137.25

ADD-A-BEAD~

REDUCED

14 KT GOLD CHAINS

MARKED DOWN

DIAMOND &amp; COLORED STONE
JEWELRY

1

PH. 3·8-8603

SPECIAL
l2WHIEEL F"RONT DIS C! cycl inder ,

brake

caliper,

and

bralle hoses, bleed sy•tom and add
new fluid, then road test the car.

$58 88

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE

S1618

Frean

(MO ST AMERICAN

C•RSI

Huk Tesl &amp; Cylinder
Perfurm~~~ee

We'll 5et caster, camber and toe·in
to manufacturer's specifications,

Tesl

*Adjust Belts
*Clan Condensor filii

$

Check suspension parts for wear

and damage, a lso tires tor wear
and sat,tv . Parts extra, if needed.
No extr1 ct)arge for air·condl·
tioned cars, or toni on INn.
Call fOr 111i iiPPOintment now .

4'5

ELECTRONIC ~ -~
IGNITION t}!!J ~+.:
lUNEUP ~~ I

s4~..
~

Mn o

• -;-

A~~ttr•U" C•n

I

,:t=tr

SAVE 110. 00

Wt !RII•U ne.· ltct«v rH6"'ft'l t MI.-.I l fNi r• INVl ,

. .I"·'·"··

' tuM t iltn, •ll kl tl l!"unt, 1tl lflt ....... CIWO
11rt l ......
•MI rHII ,.,,.
'

OIL CHANGE
·
.. , SPECIAL
.S
SAVI

15

•s•

20o/o

REDUCED

20-50%

BULOVA, PUIAR, SEIKO, CARAVELLE
GENTS :
PULSAR S/ S 0/ 0 QUARTZ .. 79.50
SEIKO YEL 0/ 0 AUTO . ..... 125 00
BULOVA SS DATE AUTO .......94.95
OMEGA VEL 0/ 0 AUTO ..... 335.C'.l

NOW
63.59
87.49
66.49
167.49

LADIES :
BULOVA SS MECHANICAL .... 125.00
PULSAR SS QUARTZ ...... .. .... 95.00
SEIKO VEL MECHANICAL ... 105.00
OMEGA GF MECHANICAL ........ 250.00

52.00
140.00
348.00

74.97
76.00
62.97
124.97

80.00

fOR GR AOIJATI ON ANNIVER SARIES FATH ERS DA Y AND WEODING S ·~~ SAV E 10-50 /.,

REMOUNTING

l0°tb TO 50o/o SAVINGS

20o/o OFF

WOOD ITEMS, CRYSTAL BRASS, PEWTER, SILVER,
' . JEWEL BOXES, POMRY, FIGURINE &amp; MORE
. HUNDREDS OF ITEMS

BRING US YOUR OUTDATED, WORN OUT
DIAMOND JEWE.LRY AND LET US SET
. THEM INTO FASHIONABLE ITEMS OF
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MOST AM E AICAf'l CAU

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

All Rings Reduced! Opal,
S1ar, Black Onyx, Jade,
Black Star. Masonic, Eastern
More.

WATCHES

ALL GIFTWARE

we Install new front brake pads,

r

MOTHlR S DAY IS MAY BT H-- BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

DOZENS OF DIAMOND AND COLORED STONE
PIERCED EARRINGS. All ON SALE.

resurface rotors, repack front
wheel bearings, Inspect muter

20o/o

RING~

OFF

SAVE

All DIAMOND PENDENT$ - NOW at 20o/o REDUCTIONS. CHOOSE FROM THE AREA'S lARqEST
SEL£CTIONS

.03 Ct. TW Dia. Ear •... il&amp;-...6.5.00 ... Now
.lOCI. TW Oi1. Elr...... il&amp;-.17.5.00 .. . Now
32 Ct. TW Dia. E1r . ... ila..tll.OO ... Now
Saphire 14 Kt. Ear ..... il&amp;-.ltlOJlO ... Now

STONE

~

.10 Ct. Enaaeement Rina ....2l5.00 ... Now 188.00
.16 Ct. Enaaeement Rin&amp; .....l2S.OO ... Now 340.00
. •32 Ct. En&amp;a&amp;ement Rin&amp; ...6.50.00 ... Now 520.00
7 Diamond Cluster Rin&amp; ....US.OO ... Now 92.00
1/2 Ct. 5 Diamond Band ....795.00 ... Now 636.00
.I Ct. 7 Diamond Rinc .. .. .1150Jl0. Now 1080.00
.10 Ct. Gents Di1. Rin&amp; · :3S.O.OO ... Now 280.00
Saphire Diamond Rin&amp; ..... ..&amp;5.00 ... Now 236.00
Ruby Oi1mond Rin1 .......... .3.50.00 ... Now 280 .00
Emmld Diamond Rin&amp; ......4!;0.00 ... Now 360.00

r fll ll[l l r ro SIIIJP

ENTIRE INVENTORY OF
MEN'S AND LADIES rATU&lt;D 1'1
PRODUCTS - SAVE

( '

DOWN 20%.

IJUN

PRINCE GARDNER

GOLD FILLED &amp; STERLING

AU·RINGS- GENTS AND lADIES - CLUSTERS AND SOLITARES - NOW MARKED

LEO VAUGHAN, Mgr.
'"·"2·2511

JAMES 0. BUSH, Mgr.

By

- CROSSES
PENDENTS·

2()0/o OFF

POMEROY, OHIO

BILLFOLDS

~OCKETS

.03 Ct. 011. Pand1nt ..... .- . ....85.JIQ ..... Now 68.00
.10 Ct. Oil. Pend1nt .. ... ..--. •. 16.5.00.... Now 132.00
1/4 Ct. TW Dia. Crocs ..... --. .. A50.00. .. . Now 360.00
1/2 Ct. Two Dia. Ptndentl Rec. 1250.00 Now 1,000.00
Ruby Oilmond Pendent . tee.. ..27.5.00. .•. Now '220.00

VINTON, OHIO

-40% OFF

Ree.
NOW
16" ·serpentine ........ 38.00 .. 22 .80
18" Herrinebone .... .IAl.OQ .. 84.60
24" Cobra ... .. ........ Ul .OQ .. 70.20
7" Brae. .................. .51.OQ .. 34.20

INCLUDES ALL 14 KT BEADS
STONE BEADS, "CLOtSSONNE"
AND CHAINS.

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.

25o/o

ALL 14 KT FASHION CHAINS NOW REDUCED. HERE ARE JUST SOME OF THE
SAYINGS NOW BEING OfFERED.

25%

By The Associated Press
Tornado- laden thun(lerstorms were rumbling through the
mld·Misslsslppl a nd northe rn Ohio valleys Saturday, after dumping
m ore than 4 inches of rain and hall in Missouri and Kentucky .
Tornadoes knifed through parts of Oklahoma and Missouri, where
two people were killed, 17 Injured and an estimated 100 buildings
destroyed.
Showers and · thunderstorms reached from the central and
southern Pacific Coast region through the central Plains to the
m iddle and northern Atlantic Coast early Saturday.
Showers also dotted the western third of the nation, a nd a few
thunderstorms were reported hanging over eastern Florida .
The Southeast and much of the North had clear sides.

I

BUY NOW I SAVE WHILE YOU CAN

. GLASS
DIMENSIONS

SAVE lf2
NICE SELECTION GlASS
VASES AND CANDl£mCKS

NORMAN ROCKWEU
FIGURINES &amp; PLATES

SPECIALS

ALL CLOCKS

10-300/o OFF

11 pc: Toolery Set ........... 6.71

S" Domed Cheese Box

... 11.97'
Kitchen Memo Plaql(l ...... 8.63

AlARM, !KlUTIQU E.

6" Tile w/wood Boxes ...... 3.15
Pottery Vases ............... .. 6.71

AND MANTEL CLOCKS
NOW REDUCED/

MOST AM ERI CAN CAR l

40o/o
SAVINGS
ON ALL AUTHENTIC NORM.AN'
ROCKWELL MUSEUM PIECES

oil, new oil tilter,

tubl•icllt ch•nis! check

ltvtls, tire
pressure, Dan,ry belts, llosal, and
check t)!Must system condition .

--1

GMQUAUTY

'

ALL 14 KT ARTCARYED DESIGN
WEDDING BANDS 20%

The nation's weather

ddd up to 1 lb. ol

j;J_.

CULTU.RED PEARLS

All WEDDING BANDS
SAVE 16-20%.

Flash flood watch
By The Associated Press
A flash flood watch Is in effect lor the southern rountles Saturday,
and thunderstorms were expected to be accompanied by hea vy rain
at times - especially over the southern and central sections of the
state.
The storms are the result of a front that has been stationary over
Ohio for the last few days. A low-pressure ~stenn will move east
along th~ front Saturday to a pesltlon over central Lake Erle thls
evening. But after the low passes, the front will become stationary
again aeross southern Ohio.
Showers and thunderstorms will be numerowi as low pressure
moves across the state Saturday,. and strong, ·gusty winds m ay
accompany some of the thunderstorms.
Showers will taper off tonight as the low moves to the northeast,
but rainy weather will likely linger into Sunday as the fron t ha ngs on.

~ow 200/o OFF

SALE EVERt

Extended Ohio jol'ecast

lo being d umped on ."

Q: What's wrong with that?
A: Beca use. as in the case of the
Sandlnlstas In Nicaragua, they
came in to power promising the
people who were dumped on that
things would bediffeent uncter their
regime. As soon as they got corltrol
they sta rted dumping on t he people
themselves .
Q' So our choice In Central
America Is not to stop the dumping,
but su pper! the governments
dumping on the people who are
friendly to us, a nd destabil ize the
ones dumping on the people who
are in cahoots wit h Soviet Union.
A: Now you've got it. We can't
a bide a Ma rxist government In
Central American that dumps on
Its people, but we ca n live with one
who depends on us to s tay In pewer .

OUR LARGEST

STOREWIDE
SAVINGS I

A rt Buchwald
good relations with us. Tha t' s when
we had to call In the CIA.
Q: How do you keep the Central
American government In pewer
tha t's dumping on Its own people?
A: By s upplying the leaders wit h
enoug h military equipment to
make sure they can m aintain
cont roL
Q: Do you make any effort to
Improve the lot qf the m a jority of
people who are being dumped on'!
A: You try to persua de lhe
government you're suppertlng that
it's In the ir Interests to do this. But
that's long-term process and you
can' t cha nge a cou nt ry's habits
overnigh t. They've had a long
tradition of dumping down there
and up until recently the peasants
accepted it asthelrlot. Now that the
Com mies have gotten into the act ,
the people are reacting nega tively

A-3

~/PARIS

CROSS PENS • DPPO •
COUBRA UGII1ERS • SPBDEL
I.D.S • mAlTON - COIPACIS

• JllfASUU CRAFT KllCIIN ·
~ . auo a 8AiioN ·
Gin ITEIIS - ~ .101£.

All Reduced ·.
'

PEWTER - BRASS
LEAD CRYSTAL

¥&amp;

300/o

404 SECOND AVE . •

SAVINGS
ENTIRE GROUPING

AMIIIICAII lib IOCIIITV

'

�--·--

.....

-,

_..--~-

' '
•

.

~ ~lummer's

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Pomeroy-. Middleport

Page--A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

statuloJ.__________________________._-·_
·
District Court, Plummer charges
some local ar.J state officials are
rrylng to "Illegally stack the board"
with newmemberswhowUi support
firing ber.
The suit liseH may bave made the
board more cautious In deciding
what to do concerning its executive ·
director.
"When you have a $12 million suit
(aga inst you), you have to take It
kind o! easy," board member Paul
Barnett said.
Rice said the board's legal

CCCs rememberedL________

,c_o_nt_in_u_ed_f_
ro_m_pa_g_e_A1)

and had a lready been to Rio Grande
College," DeLong said.
. Not all was work, DeLong said.
· On Fridays, for example, when
day's work wa s done and DeLong's
duties In the kitchen- he had been
promoted to cook aft er the first few

staff at Battelle l'vlemorlal lnstitu te
in Colwnbus, where he worked until
retirement In 1971.
He also diG! a four·year stinl in the
U.S. Merchant Mat:lne during
World War II. Upon retirement
from Battelle, DeLong and hls wife
returned to Callia County . Last
year, he ended 10 years as a bus
driver with Gallipolis City Schools.
"CCC was a great thing for us,"
DeLong said in retrospect " It
helpedmea lot."

During that year in CaUJpolis,
DeLong met his future wife, the
former Hazel Eblin, whom he
married In 1935. In 1934 he was
transfPrred to the CCC camp at
Moundsville, W.Va.
When he left the corps in 1935,
DeLong returned to Lawrence
County with his wife, later worked
as a ·molder in Dayton and in 1939
joined the process meta llurgical

Were over, many would

jump on corps trucks and .a ttend
:square dances in Pomeroy. or go to
Ihc movles.

Lee hearing

!Continued from page Al) 1
Moulton ruled there was probable
information at this time.
cause to keep Lee in custody.
Calli a County sheriff's deputies
The county has also received arrested Lee April7, several hours
results of ba llistics tests donPon the after finding Twyman'•s body In a
alleged murder weapon, but Cox 40-foot-deep well located off Alice
said he does not want to release that
Road near Ewington.
An autopsy conducted at the
Franklin County coroner's office
determined Twyman was killed by
gunshots to the chest and head.
Investigators believe Twyman
"In May, eight such projects are
scheduled tor bid. They are valued was killed an.d then dumped in the
at $23 · mlUion. Betweim J une arid · welL Twyman; who was a Buckeye
AugUst, four more projects are Htlls Career Center student, was
scheduled to sell, valued at $68 reported missing by her family on
million. So the first eight months- March 20.
Investigators were led to the weU
$99 million in major highway
by
an anonymous tip.
construc tion projec-ts."

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

threat to community if he is
· released when he beco mes an adult.
Lee Is incarcerated at the Ross
County Juvenil~ Detent ion Center
in Chillicothe, where he has been
's ince he was charged .
At a preliminary hearing Apr!l l3,

ODOT behind schedule
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - The
Ohio Department of Transporta·
tion. despite exira moncy ·from the
increased fL'!lera l gasoline t&lt;\1(,
hasn't started a single construction
pmjcct this yea r, a newspaper
report s.

•
0

_i_Con_tln_ued_tro_m::-:pa-:ge---:-Al)

could be brought up again, " I feel it
the imminent addition of five new
won't be at this polnr ...
board members and a S12 million
Other members said the board suit .Plummer filed against the
. should make a flrrn, public decision board and other officials.
conCPmlng its exec-utive director.
The department of mental health
· "I would like to think we would
has to fill fivevacancieson the board
· resclve this thing one way or the and is expected to make appoint·
ments soon.
other," member .Joh n Koel5ci said.
"But apparently the board is not
No current board members
. would predict whether new
ready to ma~e a decision y€'1. "
Several members indicated there m~mbers would be likely to want
are too many variables to say with
Plummer removed from her
certa inty what the board will do. $44)i00-a-yea r position.
. Two of the varia bles mentioned are
But in her suit filed Feb. 14 in C.S.
•,

months -

•

Nay 1, 1983

•

counsel, Columbus attorney w.
Joseph Strapp, has not advised the ·
board illshould walt until after the
suit Is settled before taking further
action concerning Plummer.
But Strapp did ad\1se the board
should bave "a pretty strong
consensus" If it decides It wants to
go through the process to remove
Plummer, Rice said.
According to board members,
there Is no consensus now.
"The board was split on the
question (when it voted Jan. 24 to
ask for Plwnmer'sreslgnatlon) and

~ ·s still fairly well split,"
said.

member Jean Scurlock said:
She noted the review group also
faulted the mental health center in
its final rept)n and called for the.
reslgy~atlonofitsexecutlvedlrector,
Bernard Nlehm.
Hqwever, on Jan. 'n the center
board voted 8 to Ho support Niehm
and not ask for his resignation.
"I think we have
a I least as

far as the center boar6 .in lmple'
menting the report," Scurlock said
The Tlmt!s·SenUnel tried several
times last Week to reach state
mental health oflldals by phone to
see H they would take any action to
persuade lhe .648andcenterboards •
toremovetheirexecutivedlrectors. · • ·
However, o!flcialsdldnotreturnthe
calls.

STARTING MAY 1

Barnett

Plummer. contacted Friday ev·
cning, said she did not know If the
board would take further action to
remove her. However, she would
not comment furt her on her
employment status.
Even If Plurruner Is not removed,
most members satd they felt they
have solved many of the problems
mentioned by the state review
group.
"!think we have Implemented the
majority of the review group's
reco mm e nda li ons ,'' bo ar d

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

JIM'S SOHIO

Weatherbeater Sale

EXTERIOR

TIRES, BATTERIES, ACCESSORIES AND SERVICE
JIM WHITIINGTON, MANAGER ·

~-;: ===·=·~========~~~~=================~
STORE HOURS:

9 am til 9:30
Fri.·Sat. 9 am bl 10 pm

)I .MIOil.-InUrs.

wiSED .SUNDAYS

OUII TOWN'S fiNJST SUPEI MAIICIT
GO TO CHURCH [V[RV SUIIIOAY

.~

SA V

SUPERIOR
ALL MEAT

~21f99

SATIN

$14 99
GAL

,. GLOSS

$12 99

~li9G99

WIENERS

RIG.

1

16.99

GAL

$.9 99
GAL

EXTERIOR LATEX
WEATHERBEATER 10 SATIN
IN 45 COLORS
REG. 114.99

$}799

GAL.

LB.

$}59

PURE VEGETABLE
SHORTENING

EASY LIVING INTERIOR
ONE COAT LATEX PAINT

CRISCO

'

$9 99

II lTD

SEMI GLOSS

$11 99

GAL

Reg. 115.99

··-111111

CEILING

$9 99

GAL

Reg. 117.99

PIUII' • • llllll

PEPSI FREE

MT. DEW

s 99

EASY APPLICATION AND CLEANUP IN 22 COLORFAST COLORS

FLAT

, Reg. or Diet

49

3lB.
CAN

Gal.

Reg. 115.99

ASK ABOUT SEARS CREDII PLANS

liMIT 1 TO
A CUSTOMER

PRIMER SALE

EASY
LIVING

.. - · 1

Housing program delayed
homebuyers may apply for loans
carrying a lower-than-market Inter·
est rate to buy singie'family homes.
Not everyone ls·ellglble, however
-only.thosewhoarebuylngahouse
for lbeftrst time or have not owned a
home within the past three years,
Sawyer said.
Although there are no Income
limits to qualify, there are guidelines which estabUsh maximum
prices which can be paid for houses
In various areasofthestate, Sawyer
said.
The director said those Interested
1n a loan should be shopping for a
house now because they must have
a sales contract ready on the day

COLUMBUS, Ohio iAP) Lawmakers will scrap a Board of
Regents' report suggesting the
state's li)Cdlcal school network
.
.
needs to be trimmed , Ha legislative
leader has his way.
Senate President Harry Meshel,
[).Youngstown, referred Friday to
Ille report which says Ohio will have
....,
ofl,'""'physlclans by
an oversupply
1"""
Tb
,..,
e report a1so suggested
reducing enroUments and realign·
lng medical school campuses.
Meshel said It suggests "a direction
h uld
d will 11 k ..
we s 0
not an
. 00 a e.
He said the report Ignores the
concluslonslntheOhloStateHealth
Plan 19112·1986 prepared b~ the
Statewide Health Coordinating
Council and the Ohio Department of
Health.
. Meshel said the latter's report
·Indicates that although there may

EXTERIOR
LATEX
~RIMER

EXTERIOR
OIL BASE
PRIMER

INTERIOR
LATEX
PRIMER

INTERIOR
OIL BASE
PRIMER

GALA

PAPER
JOWELS

SUGAR

59

GO:

VICKERY, Ohio fAP) - The
removal of 1 million gallons of
· )?CB-talnted oil from a VIckery
. waste $lie is .expected"\o be!itn next ·
·week, officials say.
The state Ertvirorunental Protec·
lion Agency's enforcement chief,
Richard Shank, said Friday thatthe
waste Is expected to be taken from
the Ohio Liquid Disposal site In
Vickery off Ohio 412 to another site,
possibly 1n Alabama, owned by
OLD's parent company, Waste
Management Inc. of Oak Brook, Ill.
Shank said waste oil with the
ltlghest concentrations of PCBs will
fJe the first removed. He said more
than 30,00&gt; gallons of the on has
q,ore than 500 parts per mlllJon of
~CBs. and that a large percentage
bf the halal!ce contains between 50
;md 500 parts per mlllJon of the
suspected cancer-causing agent.
The removal will be supervised by
the Ohio EPA antl the U.S.
Envirorunental Protection Agency.
· · Shank said different regulations
apply to the disPosal of the on
depending on concentration of
PCBs. He said that under federal
regulations, any PCB·tainted material that has been dlluted must be
considered to he over 500 parts per
million for the purpose of removing
It.
. The PCB problem at Vickery
came to light in March. when Waste
Management officials Informed the
Ohio EPA thai PCB·laden ~d
been brought to the ·dwnp. The
PCB·talnted oll was mixed with
other waste oil being held in lagoons
and In huge storage tanks.
"U dilution has taken place- and
It's pretty obvious It did -the (U.S.)
EPA says the material has to be
considered to be over 500 parts per
million," Shank said.
He said the method o! disposal has
not been determined. Normally,
Shank said, federal toxic subStan·
ces regulations would require that

the PCB.contarnlnated waste over
500 parts per million be incineratect
1n an approved facUlty . But there ·
are . only a couple of approved
Incinerators In the nation , Shank
said. The Incinerators chLrge about
$5 a gallon to get ridofthewaste. he
said.
Oil with between 50 parts p&lt;&gt;r
mUllan and 500 parts per million
could be placed in soil, packed into.
containers and placed In a landfill ,
or It could be Incinerated In a
"high-efficiency" furn ace, he said.

WE HAVE
A COMPLETE

WASHABLE ONE-COAT

LINE OF

COVERAGE IN' 15 COLORS

PAINTING
SUPPLIES AT
SEARS LOW
PRICE

REG .
14.99

1

.$999

GAL.

- - For one-coal resulh1 all Sears one-coat P(/ints must be Clpplied ~.directed .•
Need o spacial color? Coma see our Easy Living Custom Color dloptay and select from a lull
spectrum of 520 custom mnced colors. ·

.

. I

L!!t us do your painting .

· can 44&amp;-~no

Phone

446· 2770

Is·ears I

SatlsfactloQ Guranteed or Your Money Back

For

Free Esttmetes

·

111\IIS, IOIIUCK AND ca.

·SILVER ,,BRIDGE PLAZA

WAGNER

WHITING 5 tB $399~ ORANGE
FISH . sox . ·
DRINK

In non -targeted areas, the maxi·
mwns for those same clt1es would
be Cincinnati, $92,400; Cleveland.
$117,370; Columbus, $135,Dl; a nd
Dayton, $92,400.
Sawyer said the targeted arl'as ,
under a federal formu la, will not be
final until approved by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development and the lntema l
Revenue Service.

WEIGHT CONTROL GROUPS
A Comprehensive ProtP~m
that Takes You Tnrouatt All 3 ~ges of Successful
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1. Weight Loss 2. ~bilization 3. Maintenance
GAlliPOUS AREA-GIIIiPGiis

~lopmental

Gym Buildina :- MONDAYS 6:30 P.ll.

PT. PLEASANT AREA-Krocltl Pllrt
TUESDAYS 6:30 P.ll.

POMEROY AREA-IIeip Inn
TUESDAYS, 10:00 A.M. &amp; 6:30 P.ll.

PLE
lnt~est

And
Add-On

INTEREST
CAR LOA

A. Multimedia Newspaper
Pu bllshPd PaCh Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, by t~ Ohio Valley Publishing
Company · Multimedia . Inc. Second class
'p&gt;sta~l' pold at fillll i!Xllls 4 Ohio .fiJ31.
Entem::l as seco nd dass mailing matter
a t Pomeroy, Ohio, Pos't Office.

Member: The Associa ted Pn&gt;!os, lnJand

LARGE
ROLL

A·s k Your Banker
What His Is.

RATES .

2or.99¢
.•

One Week . . . . . . .. ....
. llJXI
One Month ............................... 14.40
One Year . .. . .. ... ... .. .. ... .... .
.. 152.80
SINGLE roPY
PRICE

.

Centar

The Difference Between

Dally Prf'S.!I Associat ion and the Amertcan Newspaper Pub!Jshers Associ atloo,
National AdveMlsln!l Rt&gt;pt'('SI' nt allve.
Bran.ham,..t.1?17 W~t Nlrle' Mile Road.
SultP Dl. U('frolt, Mk'hlgan. 4RY75.

5 LB.
BAG
FROZEN

$112,440. .

Do You Know

USI'S 51lHliiO

~UBSCRIPI'ION

Latex Floor Paint

each wUi receive wUi not be knoWn
until the first bonds, up to $300
million worth, are sold Thursday.
In the program, W percent of the
Proceeds from the bonds are
required to be allocated for loans In
areas of high economic distress and
unemployment. All gr at !Past parts
of Ohio's big cities wUi qualify for
these targeted funds. ·
Guidelines set by IJle hous ing
finance agency say that homes built
or sold In targeted areas of
Cincinnati could cost no more than
$100,!0); · Oeveland, $128,040;' Ca.
lwnbus, $147,600; and Dayton,

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

By c.mer or M.ur Ro.te

SAVE SG

they apply for a single-famtly.·home
lilan. Tbe.contractcanbecontlngent
upon approval of the loan, he said.
Voters last November authorized
the housing project In which the
Stille Is selling tax-free bonds. The
proceeds are loaned to lending
Institutions at a discount rate, and
they, In turn, make loans to
consumers ,,passlng along a part of
their savings.
.
The conswner loans are expected
to be 2 or 3 percentage points below
commerctal rates. Sawyer said 124
local Institutions have asked for
some or the bond proceeds and that
all of them will get an alloca1ion.
However, h&lt;&gt; sa ld the amount

We're

be an oversupply of physicians
nationally, "The state of Ohio will O.Ne;., ~s~n, ~~t all in
experience a shortage of over 100l mem rs oo a pos onaga st t e
physicians by 1900."
•
~.at a cau:us on Thursday.
The busmess services tax now
The Senate leader also con· be! th Legis!
demned the report for suggesting a
ore e
ature 1s comp1etely
patient-physician ratloof 3 S00.1
unfair. I would urge you to examine
That ratio "falls to ac~ount .for ~business services tax carefully r - - - - - - - - - - - population pockets In which many
. viusel your lnfl~nfce to have this
.
pro s on removm rom thP state
citizens do not have primary care budge1 bill ,.. Nixon wrote.
doctors. A primary care doctor
Riffewasnotlnnmedlatel availa·
would need to see 350 pat1ents per ble for comment but he sal~ earlier
week, or 70 patients per day or one he
ld t tak
h
1
patient every eight mlnut~s In a taxwoutil nfot b eda post
h t1ortn on .' e
SYRACUSE. OH.
•n
,
un a er u ge ea ngs are
PHONE 991·5776
.,..hour week, Meshel said.
completed next week.
NOW OPEN FOR SPRING SEASON
In another development, House
The Re bll
c 1 1· f
Republicans said Friday they will Nl
, I ttpu can fctaucus akndf
ompete me o vegetable and bedding
xon s e er came a era wee o
plants. foliage plants and hanging
oppose a budget bill provision hearings at which businesses born·
baskets. Also • large selection of
'levying a 4 percent excise tax on barded the House FinanceCommlt·
sh rubbe!Y and dward fruit trees.
business services.
tee with oppostllon tes llmony.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 5
Minority Leader Corwin M.
· - ·
·
SUNDAY l to 5
Nlxon,RLebanon,saldlnaletterto r-----.----~--J.~::::::::::::::::::~~
House Speaker Vernal C. Riffe Jr.,

, ...... t:im.. . ''"'""'

SHUR FINE
PURE CANE

The

Ohio-'-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Oil removal to·begin

One coat house paint with our exclusive 3 year mildew
resistant warranty in 45 colors - mixed while you wait

FLAT

1, 1983

Meshel deplores regent's report

309 UPPER RIVER RD.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO--PHONE 446-1449

,.__

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ot!lctals have postponed from May
12 to May 23 the opening date for
receiving aJll)llcatlons for loans In
· 9hlo's ll€W housing financing
program.
Raymond Sawyer, executive di·
rector of the Oltlo Housing Finance
Agency, saki Friday the delay wUi
give lenders more time to prepare
..."for the rush of people whose
applications must be processed on a
first-come, flrst·serve basis."
Sawyer said, "We also felt we
needed more time to educate
Ohioans on how to qualify for this
program."
Under the program, potential

OPEN 24 HR.

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WEATHER
BEATER

•

35 Cents

•

No s ubscrlpdons by ~ U permitted In
towns 'fhere' home earner ~c. IS
available.

Ours Is Simple!

The Sunilay T\mes-Sentlnel wlll not bP
responsible for advance payments made
to carrkors.

MAIL SUBSCRIP110NS
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1981 BUICK SKYLARK LIMITED 4 Door, t~n . velolll rnlcrior. 4 cyl, auto.
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1981 OLD DELTA 88 ROYALE 4 Dam , clmk blue. dtesrl eng11re. cloth seats.
air cond , crutse, vinyl top, reor window tlelog
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1981 PONTIAC PHOENIX 4 Door, datk bt own , ta11 , cloth seats. 4 cyl., au·
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1980 OLDS CUTLASS LS Yellow, 4 doot. V·6, il nlomattc. atr cond . vinyl
lop, crtnse mn trol, tan velour seats. rear wtml ow delop,., AM radt o.
'5995
1979 DODGE MAGNUM XE Tan. V8. aulomatr c, 2 door, arr cond .. crutse.
AM·FM, delay wtpets, vtnyl top, b11c kt~l sc&lt;t ls
'3 700
1979 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX lwo tone hl11e. V8, illllont ~ l tc . ~ ~~ . ctutse.
trlt, power srats &amp; w r ndo1~ s. cloth buckel S ~'ilh . AM tarlto . lactory l lop,
wire wheels. one ol a kind .
i5500
1978 DODGE ASPEN Wl11te wi red vr nyllop &amp; rnh•nm, 4 rlom , V8, auto·
malic, ai t co nd ., AM rarl ro.
12800
1977 VOLARE WAGON W h tlt~. 6 tyl , 3 s pP~d w/ ov etrlr 1ve
' 1700
1976 CHEVY MONZA Blue, 4 cyl . automalic.
• 1200
1975 MERCURY MARQUIS Wlttle, V·8, aulontattc, 4 door, lot ol extras.
11495
'595
1973 ·AMC MATADOR WAGON V 8, automalrc.
1981 CHEV£TTE Medturn blue, 4 door. 4 speed. atr cond .. AM tarlto. rear
window defog, new tires.
'3900
1979 CHEV£TTE Red, 4 door, atr cond , AM tad to.
'2700
1978 BUICK SKYHAWK lwo doo r hatchback. dark brown, lan tnlertor,
cloth bucket seals, V·6, autom atic. tt l! whee l, ~tr coml
13495
1968 MERCURY COUGAR 289 auto mattc, powet steertng, lluckcl seats,
AM radto, 58.000 111 11es. abso lutely showroom condition'
l35 00

- TRUCKS -

' - Ou-

Ll Weeks .... , ............................. IIC.IK
,Oiolo
·sz ~·· ............................
;...'... sse:~s.

.

1982 DODGE RAM MISER Reel, 6 cyl., 3 speed w/ ovetdrrve, power steer·
in g, wsw radials, carpeting, 8,500 rn tles.
i6500
1982 CHEVY C- 10 CUSTOM DELUXE Two tone blue &amp; stlver, 305 V·8, au·
tomatic , AM radto, power steering &amp; brakes, dual gas tanks. '7500
1982 CHM S-10 Red, short bed. 4 cyl., 4 speecl.rarlral ltres, power steer·
ing, sliding rear window, AMirM cassette stereo.
16995
1982 CHEVY S-10 Si lver, short bed. 4 cyl, 4 speed, radr allites, power
steering, aluminum toppe r AM tad ro.
16995
1982 CHEVY S· IO Blue, long hed, 4cyl, 4 speed , r11li al ti res. power steer·
ing, gauges, AM rad io, fiber glass topper.
'
'7295
1979 DODGE 100 CUSTOM Short bed, medtum blue w/ lobo strtpe, 6 cyl. ,
automatic, AM radio, pow steering.
'5995
1979 GMC C-25 SIERRA GRANDE 4X4 V8. auto , power steering &amp;
brake~. AM, full time 4 wheel dtive, dark blue &amp; whtte.
15995
1979·GMC JIMMY Burgundy &amp; White, V·B. automatic. powe r steering &amp;
brakes, ai1 cond .. tilt wheel, Rallye wh eels. runnm gboard&gt;. rad ial tires, AM
radio. .
' 6695
1979 DODGE 4X4 Two tone green, V·B, automatic, new ttres, running
boards, AM radio.
14995
1978 FORD F-150 CUSTOM Burgund y, V-8, automatic. long bed, AM·FM
8 track. sliding rear window. power steering &amp; brakes. carpet, new tires.
'3995
1978 CHM LUV TRUCK Red w(custom "Lobo" stripe, 4 speed , AM ra·
dio, new radia l ti res.
' JSOO
1977 FORD F-150 CUSTOM Black 9 reel , V·8, automatic. power steerin g &amp;
brakes, AM-FM 8 track.
•2795
19n CHM VAN Oark bl ue, V·B, autom atic, radial ti rs, AM/ FM 8 track,
36.000 miles.
s3595
1977 JE.EP J-20 4X4 % Ton , brown &amp; white, V·B, 4 s peed,·
loc kout hubs, AM radio. new tires.
·•
'"""";,1976 CHM LUV Red, 4 speed.
s1595

MOTOR

OhioY~J!ey !!~!}k .

52 \\'eeks ......... ............ ......... , ... SSl.fl
,II Weeks ,,.,., , .......................177.ltl

$6995

4 Door, two ton e blue. vr nyl seats, V·8, auto mtrc, power steenng &amp; brakes,
atr cond ., AM tad to, cturse control, wrre wheel cov ers. on ly 35.206 mtles.

C&gt;nt&gt; )'E'ar .......... ... .....................
Six rnonti'IS ....................... ......... SlO ..O

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SUB8CIIIPI10NS
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Two d.oor, dark bl ue metallic with light tan interior, cloth seats, V·6, autom·
trc, power. steering &amp;bra kes, air co nd., cruise co ntrol , rea t wrndow delost
AM radio, wire whee l cove rs. quartz clock, 27 ,982 low mtles.
·

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CAR BROKERS

l'h miles north of Holzer Medical Center. on State Route 160.

PH . 446 -6592
SEE ALAN - 'JAY-

MERRILL

CARS, UKE EGGS, ARE "CHEEPER" IN THE COUNTRY.

:IS Weeki ......................... :........119.6C

.

JJ Weeki ....... , ...................... ,..115.21

..
0

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Mon. lhru Fri. 8 A.M.-5 P.M.

Sat. 8

.- 3 P.M. .

�·-

Pomeroy-Middleport~llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleascint, W. Va.

Poge=A-6--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

May 1, 1983

GAILIPOUS '-- Two drivers

em Avenue near

the Intersection
were cited for ~ clear - with MW Creek Road at 5:16p.m.,
distance by city· pollee Friday In
falled to see a vehicle stopped In
separate accid,ents.
front ot him driven by Thomas M.
John L. McGinnis, 38, Greenup, Meadows, 32, Rt. 3, Gaillpolis, and
Ky., was ticketed after Ills tractor struck the rear of Meadows'
traUer reportedly coUided with· the vehicle.
• rear of an auto driven by Jily.ce K.
Only inocterate damage was
. A$kaw, 31. 856 Second Ave., on tbe listed to Meadows' vehicle, and
700 block of Second Avenue at 9:31 Love was cited in the Incident.
a.m.
Pollee said they arrested Garland
Pollee said McGinnis was appar- Stover, 40, 1701 Chestnut St., for
store
entiy southbound when he failed to shoplltting at the Jones
stop In time and struck· A$kaw's on Pine Street Frtday.
vehlcle, causing moderate damage
Also cl~ by pollee Fliday were
to Askaw's car and slight to tJie Curtis L. "Cox, 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
McGinnis' truck.
...----,___,
In the second accident; police said
Preston E . Love, 36, Rt. 1, Point
Pleasant, was northbound on East-

Boys

Betty R. Stewart
GAHANNA - Betty R. Stewart,

60, 2E8 Audalus Drive, Gahanna

oorn

I&lt;ITCHE N CENTER

AHEAD - This b'TilUP of Meigs County senior
citizens were ahead of the hounds in working .on
Saturday's Clean-Up Ohio Day. The group worked
Friday In cleaning the auxiliary road Wider the
llrldge and gathered several bags of rubbish. Among

the seniors taking part were LQia Oal'k,, Caryl
Tyloer, Goldie Graham, MeMo Lovesee, Ullie
Randolph and Manley Christy. Helping were ca~ter
employes, also pictured, Wanda VIning and Noreen
Ondrusko.

Chamber supports legion program
MIDDLEPORT - 'The Middle- quarterly meeting. Middleport
port Chamber of Commerce has Postmaster Joe Struble presented
voted to suppor1 a program of ·a program on postal services.
The group recognized the move
Feeney-Bennett Post 12H, Ameri can Legion, to honor two residents which the Pomeroy Sears Store wiU
of Middleport who became Con- make into Middleport, and recoggressional Medal of Honor winners. nized the opening of Ginz.a, noted
The two honorees are t11e late new owners are operating the
James Stewart and Ed Bennett former Baker FurnltUJ'e Store as
who now resides in California .
Bob Gilmore , a member of the
post, has pointed put~qat it is
unusual for a community the size of
Middleport to have had two
winners of tile highest award the
I'
nation gives servicemen.
The Middleport Chamber has
· decided to stay with \?Venlng
meetings on tlrr fourth Tuesday of
POMEROY - Sidney Edwards,'
each month at 7: :lO p.m . ,;, the
Executive Director of the GaillaLaSaUe Restaurant. Last Tuesday
evening, the group dLscussed im- Meigs Community Actioa Agency,
a nnounced Satunday the agency is
provement of thr Routr :~1 accepting applications for the
Improvement of the Route from
Summe r Youth Employment
Darwin to Athens and the developProgram.
ment of a corridor road to the
The eUgibillty requirements for
Ravenswood Bridge.
the
program are: (1) Resident of
Dr. Craig Mathews report.ed on a
Gallia
or Meigs County; (2) Be
meeting of the Athens Chamber of
econornlcaUy
disadvantaged; (3)
Commerce he attended in regard to
Be
between
the
ages of 14 through
the regional push for all of
21.
Southeastern Ohio.
Under thls program, youth wiU
Chamber members planned
be
assigned duties for a period of 32
sidewalk sales for May 6-7 In
hOUJ'S
per week and will be paid the
conjunction with Pomeroy activicun·ent
federal minimum wage of
ties a nd discussed the aspects of
$3.:!5
per
hour.
busine"' for the u pcorning MemorInterested
persons should ro nial Day weekend when alumni
tact Elaine Armstrong at the CETA
~nq"ets are held . the Dave Diles
Intake Office, 117 Second ·street,
Golf 'roumam~nt a nd the Big Bend
Pomeroy, Tuesday and Thursday
Regatta on the weekend of June 23.
be.tween the hours of! p.m. and3: :JJ
Yvonne Scally, preside nt, rep.m . The phone number is 992·2222
ported on the recent Meigs County
or
992-2313.
Regional Planning commission

Etnpire Furniture and noted the
opening of Angie's Pizza.
t;. discussion was held on dealing
with bad checks and a membership
drive was planned.

Plan council meeting
Racine Vlliage Council wiU meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at village hall .
Council will c 0nsider approving
t_he first reading of an ordinance
granting a $3increase In gas rates as
requested by the Racine Gas and
Service Company.

CLEVELAND lAP)- More t11an
900 people lined up three hours
before a potato giveaway was to
begin and the Salvation Anny
reported that 15,1XXJ pounds of the
spuds donated by a tanner were
swallowed up by the crowd in :JJ
minutes Fliday.
Salvation Army spokesman Don
McMurdo said some elderly people
began llnlngupasearly as 7:30a.m.
for the planned 10 a.m. giveaway.
He said he had to teU some peOple at
the end of the line that there would
be no potatoes left for them.
The farmer from Clyde. Ohio,
said he made the donation because
he had a surplus crop. He asked not
to be identified.

·-oualitv At

Co!IIJII!fitive Prir:l.'s·

286-3786

675-2318

Jacl&lt;son, Oh1o

Poinl Pleasant

Arched
cathedral

50%'

knotty alder.

OFF LIST PRICE

doors in

'(:1'~!:0' .

cabinets
by Riviera.

PRia5
ON ALL
' . ·-·
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P£R SET

....

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - The
ColumbUs Area Chamber of Comn\erce, whichgaveupltsdlrectorto
·h ead Gov. Rlchanct Celeste'sdeveiopment department, has joined the
business chorus op'posing Celeste's
proposed state budget &amp;:~d business
tax increases.
The chamber's board. representlng about 3,200 companies: said
Frtday the record $27.6 million
budget anG the business tax
Increases would cripple economic
recovery in Ohio.
The package of business taxes
and the proposed budget would "be
devastating to the economic well-

He said the package wOUld make
OIUo's combined state and local tax
burden the eighth-highest In the ·
country and would come at a !lme
when Ohio is struggling to compete
in attracting businesses with the
lower-tax regions of the South and
Southwest,
The board said Celeste's proposal
ofa4peic.:nttaxonservices-such
as janitorial, accounllng, leg'll,
advertising and engineering work
-would take money from companles that .could be used to hire
additional workers .
A1 Dietzel had been director of the
chamber before being appointed

has

Fragrance for Mother

by Ester Lauder &amp; Ultirrw II

·-

13 STYLES

~,,.

Chamber opposes increases

I

ALL WOOD

CLOSE~

.
Life
Insurance
For
Everyone
you love

Times-Sentioel-l'vge--"A-7

We've Got It Good!

5 STAINS

E mp l 0)71tent
a'P1nlications
being accepted r;:::::========~

great·grandchllctren. '
Funeral services wU1 be held at 1
p.m . Monday In John Steen Funeral
Home, Ashland, with Rev. Joseph
Godwin officiating. Burial will be in
Rose HUI Burial Park, Ashland.
Friends may caU at the funeral
hoi"" trom 5-9 p.m . today and until
the hour of the service Montlay.

Sunc~C1y

died Wednesday 'in Riverside Meth:
odlst H~ltal.
- - -Mrs. Stewart, a housewife was
March 15, 1923, · In Meigs
County, a daughter of the late Frank
G. and Cora Stobart Buck. She was
also preceded In death by her Donald M. Welzel
husband, Paul J . Stewart.
COLUMBUS _ Donald Morgan
300 Second
She is survived by two sons,
WetzeL 58, Flshlnger Road, ColumLafayette Mall
Jac!&lt;le and James Stewart of
bus.
died
Friday
at
Riverside
Gallipolis
Gahanna; one daughter. Sandy
Hanunond of Gahanna'; a grandMelhodist Hospital.
rjbe~ing~of~th~e~e~nt~ire~sta;;te~,'~'
sa:id~J:ohn:_jst~a~te~cl:eve:lo~p=rne:n:t_:d:irec:to:r_:b~yl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mr. Wetzel was born August 20,
Fisher. board chailman.
Celeste.
child; two brothers, Roy Buck of
19'24 In Columbus. His mother,
Belpre,andFrttzBucko!Pomeroy;
Helen Marie Wetzel, dled Aprll10.
one sis!,er, Mildred Foster of West
He was also preceded In death by
Palm Beach, Fla.; and several
his
father. Earl Wetzel, and one
nieces and nephews.
Open Daily 1 0·9
brother,
Robert WetzeL
Funeral services will be held
Sundays 1-6
Mr . Wetzel was a veteran of
Monday a 110 a.m. in Ewing Chapel ,
World War II and the Korean
with Rev. James M. Clark officiat .
conflict,
having served with the
ing. Burial will be in Letart Falls
U.S.
Army
Air Force.
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
He is survived by one sister and
twlerai home today from I to9p.m.
brother-in-law. Margaret Jane and
Joseph Kelley, Columbus; one
nephew, Joseph Earl Kelley, JohnGrady Waugh
son Bible School , Knoxvute. Tenn.;
two nieces, Sarah Marie Kelley,
GALLIPOLIS - Grddy Waugh,
Columbus, and Sharon Koiotf of
80, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, died at 7:25a.m. Grand Junction , Colo.; one local
Friday in Holzer Medical Center
cousin, Kathryn Crow, Syracuse.
I
after an extended illness.
Funeral services will be held
Born Nov. 20, 1!m, In Ashland.
KMC -IJIIG
Monday at II a.m. at l11e SchoedinKy., son of the late Moses and
ger Funeral Home, ZoUinger Road . ·
Maggie Mormon Waugh. he was a
I
Burial wtu also be in Columbus.
..........
retired barber at Orient State
Hospital and a member of Trinity
Baptist Ch.u rch at Rio Grande.
Funds received
He was also preceded in death by
- his wife, Sue Osborne Waugh, In
POMEROY --Meigs County vil1979.
lages received ~.982 as their share
Surviving a~ tour sbns. Carl and
of t11e April distribution of $9,172,960 ·
Paui Edwai-d, both of Columbus,
from l11e state's seven cents per
Ernest of Eaton, Ind .. and James of
gallon gasoline tax.
R-5515
GallipoUs; three da ughters, Mrs.
Amounts . received Include MidEdna Mae Bryant of Ashland, Mrs.
dleport , $2,297; Pomeroy, $2,656;
3o1
Mildred Wilcoxon of Bloomfield, . Racine. St;96; Rutland. $.'i'32, and
and Mrs. !JellY. Delaney of ColumSyracuse, S75I.
_l)us; . l7 . grandchildre~
12
·~ . . .
•.
.
g Take.-

UALE'S

500 people line-up
for free potatoes

The

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

Area deaths

for theft, ai1d ruta M. Payne, 22,
Bidwell, for DWI.
The Gaillpolis Fire Department
said It extinguished a car fire at the
intersEction of Second Avenue and
Grape Street at 6:42p.m. Frtday.
The department said fire started
with a back!lretllrough thecarbura·
tor of a 1976Cadillac owned by Pam
Zlnn, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, and spread
through the rubber hose and wiring
insulation.
The fire caused approximately
$300 damage. One p-uck and 12 men
responded to the call. the department said.

,.,

.

May 1, 1983

· Drivers face ACD charges

.

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GALLIPOLIS,OHIO
PHONE 446-4517

/

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Reg. 49.96

39.96

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Our 1.97 Socks ...... Pr. 1.57

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675·3398
•

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'·-- ~-r--.

328 VIAND STREET
POINT PLEASANT, \IV. VA.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
••

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RESTORATIO NHome for the Chris Llyh
family is this 120-year old
cabin on umg Hollow
Road. Restoring and
repairing the landm4rb
has occupied much of their
time since they purchased
it three yean a1w

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Meigs couple give students ·best educr:ztion,
while preserving part of.countj/s history
.·•

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-.o
-.o
A

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
T!mes-Sentbtel Staff
POMEROY -A rainbow of light
danced across the floor as the
evening sun struck the colored
glass in the chinking of the old log
ca bin.
Sitting on a stone next to the
massive free-form brick fire pla ce,
Carol. Layh reflected on the good
times In the cabin and -at the
Carleton School.
She turned a trtfle sentimenta l In
comm enting that be fo re the ·
summer passes her fa mily will
leave this place.
Chris and Carol Layh, with their
three children, Emily, Va nessa and
Brian, wUI be movi ng to the historic
town of HUisboro, N.C. where both
have accepted positions In progra ms for the menta lly retarded .
The Layhs came to Meigs Coun ty
about seven years ago and worked
In school s ln adjacent counties untll
1978 when Chris accepted the
pos ition of school admlnlstra tor
with the Meigs County Boa rd of
Me ntal Retardation. Two years
la ter his wife joined the sta ff as
director .
With the Layhs adding expertise
In administration, energy, enthusiasm , a nd skill In developing
programs, the county saw the

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program for the mentally retarded
ta ke off.
Under their direction the pro·
gram expanded In live years from
16 students traveling on thr&lt;&gt;e buses
to Gallla County for their educa ·
tiona! opportu nlty, to a comprehe nsive service to 70 children and
adults In a new modern facility In
Syracuse especially designed to fit
their needs .
" It hasn't been easy ," the Lay hs
admit .
,
Joined by parent volunteers and
,others, they have literally hustled
for money and pushed lor an
adequate tax base to keep tllings
going. Skllled In grant w riting. Ihe
Layhs have brough t In between
$100,000 and $150,000 each year
which has puf the sc hool on the
sound fin ancial basis it enjoys now.
f'or the Layhs the challenge of
bringing Ihe best to Meigs County 's
mentally retarded has been met.
Stlllt Is not without mixed emotions
that they leave Carleton School theu· iabor of love for these pa st few
year s.
Reminiscing on their years here,
the Layhs said August 1lm was the
turning point In time for them . It
was then, Chris recalls, that
"everything began to happen."

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RACINE--The Racine EmergencySquad answered a call to Mile
H1il Road at 11:00 Friday for Bill
F oster whO was take n to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

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Named to commillee
POMEROY - JUdge Gerald E.
Radcliffe, President of the Ohio
Juvenile Judges Association, has
announced Judge Robert E. Buck
of Meigs County was a ppointed a
member of the nomina ting committee whose function and respnslbllity will be to provide a slate of
otrlcers tor the Association at the
annual meeting.

I , 1983 .

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Marriage licenses

POMEROY · Saturday morning,
the Simmons Motor Co., E ast Main
St., Pomeroy, reported that two
tires and wheels ha d been stolen
overnight from two new trucks
par ked on the company's parking
lot. Value to the tires a nd wheels Is

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GALLIPOLIS - Mic hael Crem eans, 426 Fourth Ave ., Ka nauga,
entered a not guilty plea to a
disorderly conduct cha rge f'rlday
In Gallipolis Municipal Court.
'His case was continued for a
pretrial conference, set for Monday.
fn other court matters, Sandra S.
Carr, Rt 2, Patriot, wasflned$10for
faUure to pay parklng tickets. Also
charged with fa Uure to pay parklng
Uckets and forfeiting $25 bond were
Rona ld Ashworth a nd Boyd Burne tt, both of Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
F orfeiting bond for speeding were
J e r ry L. Johnson, 35, R L 2, Crown
City, $34 , and Stephanie Ousley,l8,
Wellston, f92.

Tires, wheels stolen

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Pleads not guilty

GALLfPOUS- Filing for mar·
riage licenses this pasi week In
Gallla County Probat e Court wer·e:
Michael D. Bates, 40, l2.'i River
Drive, self-employed, a nd Linda L.
Chapman. 31, 125 River Drive,
nurse's aid .
Hugh L. Walker, 29, Rt. 1,
Thurman, seaman, a nd Betty M.
Tolliver. 24. Rt. 1. Thurman, at
hOme.
Carl W. Stover II, 18. Rt. 2,
Patriot , student, and Rebecca L.
Barker, 16, Rt. 2, Patriot, student.
Raymond L. Rupe, 23, RL 2,
Bidwell, National Gua rd. a nd
E velyn·D. Sears, 17, R L 3, Gallipolis,
student.

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GALLIPOLIS - Three people
were Inj ured In separate accidents
investigated by the Gallipolis post of
the state highway patrol Friday.
Two of the Injuries occurred In a
one-vehicle crash on Nebo Road
near Rio Grande.
The patrol said a pickup truck
driven by Sammy D. Queen, l 9, Rt.
1, Northup, was southbound, one
and six-tenths of a mile west of Ohio
32.'i, at 4: 10 p.m ., when the truck
went off the left side of the road and
struck a tree, causing severe
damage.
Queen and a passenger. Mark
Bennett, 19. RL 1, Northup, were
both Injured a nd lake n to Holzer
Medical Center by Gallia County
E MS, where they were treated and
released. Queen was cited for DWL .
Betty DeWitt, 53, RL 1, Bidwell,
was also treated and re leased from
HMC for m inor Injuries received In
a two-vehicle collision near the
In terseclion of Ohio 7 a nd 21Jl.
The patrol said DeWitt was a
passenger In a vehicle d riven by
Dona ld DeWitt, 58, Rt . 1, Bidwell,
that was northbound on 7 at 4:40
p. m . when he turned left Into the
path of a southbound pickup truck
driven by Arthur George, 48,
E ureka Star Route.
Both vehicles were severely
da maged in the resulting collision,
and DeWitt was cited for fa ilure to
yield .
The pa trorctted Roger Randolph,
59, Rt. 1, Shade , for DWJ following a
one-vehicle collision on U.S ..'!3 at
Darwin early Saturday.
According to the report, Ran·
dolph was northbound at 12:30 a .m.
wpe n his vehkle went .o.lf _the right
side of the road. drove back onto the
road , went off to the lefi ~nd landed
In a ditch, causing modPrate
da m age.
Randolph was report edly Injured
In the accident and was treated and
released froni Vetera ns Memortal
Hospital la ter.

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Wi th more a nd more money
golng Into Gaiila Count y a s the
retarded student s wrre trans "
ported to school there. the demand
lor local facilities Increased .
It was that August when sevt'ral
rooms In the old Pomeroy junior
high school building wel1' secured
tor classes. The Layhs ha d little
over a month to complete prepa~a ·
!Ions for opening the local sc hooL
Clea ning. painting, partitionin g.
making the place safe for the kids
a nd coming up with lunchroom
equipment and fac Ulties were just a
few of the problems to be lact'd and
solved in time for school to open
that faiL
About the same time a friend who
had been looklng for a fa r m for the
Layhs to purchase , found It - 121
acres on Long Hollow Road wit h a
rustle, ,but charming. two·room
cabin of 1800 vintage with, as Carol
described, "a pond In the forest, a
creek around the cabin, and li ve
caves wi th waterfalls!"
So - slmuit eanously, the work
begin to get the school opened and
the ca bin ready to move In to before
wi nter .
By day at the school the Lays
LEAVING' - For Chri.1 and Carol L1yh. ihe
joined by volunteer parents and
Clmzmilrnent I n hriu;; the beJI to Meigs Countfr
others scraped th ~ walls, put on
some paint, dug out the bat hrooms.
mentally retarded ha.r been met. Still it iJ not without
· a nd moved In furnlturP they
mixed emotionr 1hat they leal'e Carleton School
sct-ou nged aroum) ..,.d fou nd .
By night a nd on weekends. they
knocked out the hOrseha ir a nd mud
betwee n the logs of the cabin and
put In the c hinking, Inserting
colored glass here a nd there.
fin ished the second story Into stones." shells from a frien d's
bedroo ms for their kids. a nd did all
hippie necklace. a Sus a n B. An·
the other things· necessary to ma ke
thony co:n. a nd a variety of other
It livable .
moment os.
The cabin Is really two cabins
The kitchen maintains the rustle
joined together.
fl avor with hits old oak ta ble with
The ortgina l one was the Well s
leaves which stretch out to seat 20
fa mily homestead . The second one
-a nd often d. b - a n a ntiqu e gas
was moved the re In 1971 from the
s tove on legs with a s ide oven, and
Rlghthouse property near by and
numerous shelves flll ed with jars of
attached by the former owners .
dried and bulk foods, spices a nd
When th'-e Layhs bought It , there
seasonings.
was a main living room wtt h
l'he place Is comfort a ble and
sleepi ng space, a .kitchen with a
a ppealing.
sink and a batht ub (yes, In the
kitchen!. and a loti overheatl.
Chrls and Ca rol Layhs' contrlbu·
lions
at Car leton School deserve
Since then the Layhs have
notice .
finished the upstairs with the
Their life In Meigs Cou~ty ha s
en trance being a n open sta irway
been
much like the light that
fro m the living room , added two
fl ashes across their living room
rooms and a ba th on the bac k. and a
from
the colored glass, In the
porch on the front.
chinking.
The focal point of the Uv!ng room
J ust as the energy from the sun
Is a unique seml.clrcular fireplace
creates
that rainbow of light as It
with a novel m a ntel ot a tiled "s"
comes
through
the glass. so has the
design which extends from the floor
of
their
lives created a
energy
to the ceiling.
rainbow
·of
hope
for
the retarded In
Inserted Into the firepla ce brick·
Meigs
County.
wor k are the Layhs' · " worry

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A TIME TO
- Sitting on a stone m:xt to the massive free
form brick fireplace in ~""~.... 120 year old cabin, CarollAyh turns sentimental
as she talks about.
the farm and Carleton School.

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�1, 1983

W. Va.

Nelsonville school hosts hot .rods

City .Run
.•
•
registration
still open
-

GALUPOLJS - Although prer.egistrat ion has closed for the
Second Annual French City R un,
Saturday, May 7, in Gallipolis.
runners can stU! participate by
registering on the morning of the
run .
Sponsored by the Holzer Medical
Center Recre.auon Conunittee and
the Ohio Valley Pubtishing Company of Gallipolis, the French City
Run will open with aSK race, which
is a 3.1 mite event to begin at 9 a.m .
on the Upstream Pubtic Use Area,
located along the rivertront below
the city park off First Avenue.
- The main event. a 10K race
: which is a 6.2 mile, will begin at 10
.a. m . During thi' race, the Dinosaur
· Dash, a one mile fun run will start
• · at 10: 15 a.m .
:: Age groups will apply to the 5K
• ·and lOK races. they are· 14 and
under; 1:'&gt;-19; 20-24; 25-29; :J0-34;
: 35-39; 4044; 45-49; 50-54; 55-59;
' M-64; and 6.'i years of age and over.
· The Dinosaur Dash will not be
• divided into age groups. but w ill be
: (/pen to all ages.
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l'iEUl()NVILLF, - Street rods,
vans .and antique autos will all he
displayed during the Southeastern
.Ohio Antique and Street Rod Rally

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Dash plaques will be preser.t£d to
the f!rst .l25 antique cars registered
In the .28 Categories. The firs. 175
vehicles registering In the street
rod/van dlvlslon will also receive
dash plaques.
One judges' choice trophy wiU be

;yans.
Admission to the show Is $1 for
adults, 50 cent$ tor students and
children age six' and Wider will be

50%COTION - 50%POL VESTER

POMEROY

-

Proceeds

HOUSE

of

$738.72 from the annual wine-cheese

FOR RUNNERS ONLY - Paul Barker of Ohio Valley Publishing,
co-sponsor of the French City Run, shows oil the shirt which will be
given to participants In the event, May 7, In Gallipolis.
Award s will he presented to the
first two male and female finishers
In both the 5K and !OK races and to
the top three male and female
winners of each age group. Special
participation awards w ill be given

to all entrants In · the Dinosaur
Dash.
Registration on Saturday will he
$5. A registration desk, located at
the parkfront, will open at Sa.m .

The other missionary witness is
an African clergyman. He is the
Rev. Muyombl. who has served as
pastor and Is now a District
Supertntendent in the North Shaba
Conference of Zaire. He graduated
from . Mulunguishi Theological
School. From 1979 to1982 he selved
as District Superintendent of the
Kabongo District. From 198:2 to the
pr-esent he has served the Malemba

District.
Alfred U .M .W. wUI provide a
luncheon for partiCipants and
guests at noon following the 11 a.m .
presentation. Rev. Richard Thomas Invites all interested persons
to take part. ·Rev. Muyombl and
Mr. Monroe are made available as ·
part of the Athens District's
Missionary Witness Week April 29
to·May 5.

party held recently at the Meigs Inn
were given to the M eigs County Unit
of the American Cancer Society.
Pam Kelly, Ralph Werry and Pat
Ingels were co-chairman for the
event which included guitar music
by Denver Rice, and a photography
display by the Meigs County linage
Seekers Camera Club.
Sbowin&amp;" plctw-es were Randy
Houdashelt, Susan Darling, N ick
Depoy, Susan Frazier, Janet Koblentz, Roger Randolph and Debbie
Spencer.
Assisting at the wine-cheese
party, attended by about 100
persons, were Bernadette Anderson, Betty Baronick, Nellie Brown ,
Barbara Chapman, Teresa Collins,
Janice Kesmer, Dorothea Fisher.
Wilma M ansfield, Barara Mathews, Mary Mora, Lllllan Moore,
May . O'Brien, Roberta O'Brien
Barbara Sluiter, Yvonne Sisson:
Joan Tewksbary. Susan Thompson,
Pearl Welker. and Jeanie Witherell.

DRESSES
$18°0 $19°0
14~

TO 24 1h
Adelightful group of dresses
from Nancy Frock. Choose
dainty prints or fancy woved
plaids in MisseS and Half
Sizes. All have the popular 4
hem.

.
.

B£ Ofte.()M NO 2

$10 OFF
t/ 0' -

10 '

QUANTUM

o· ___ -:

j r eg. $34.50)

Special values now thru May 30th. with all new 14' wide homes sold off our lot we are
offering a free delivery &amp; set-up, the best vinyl skirting installed free PLUS a S500
rebate: No trade-ins at these values.

Now through May 14 with a copy of this ad.
Haircut not included.

Let your good looks go to your head.

14 wide starting at s12,000 thru 515,650

...

KINSBURY HOME SALES INC.

1100 EAST MAIN ST.

POMEROY

.

-

: This year's May Feiiowship Day
• service was written by women of
Brack denominations r elated to
· Church Women United. They take
their theme from the spirutual
"1'here is a Balm in .Gilead,". and
their-inspiration from 'the lives of
Black wom en who- hllve left their
mark on our country's history.
Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman.
Mary McLeod Bethune, Nannie
Helen Burroughs, Abbie Clem ent
Jackson, and Rosa Parks are
highlighted as examples of the
countless Black women who have
made outstanding contributions as
leaders, liberators and educators.
Bearers of the "balm" of healing
they were participants in a continuIng m inistry of reconciliation.

The one process, one formula perm for
every head. Let us show you.

LI YtNG F100N

FFA DEGREE ~ Wayne
Waugh of Hannan Trace ffigh
School has been given an FFi\

Degree.

He is t he son of Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Waugh of Crown City and
his advisor Is Tom Pope_

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MAYO MONUMENT CO.
,.

.,

DECOR A liON DAY DELIVERY GUARANTEED

The Perfect
Gift For
·Mother

• May Fellowship Day events in
' Meigs County will be at St. Paul
• Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, at
'
· noon,
sack lunch to precede
· m eeting. ·

QVAN1VM: PERM
PROBLEM SOLVER
r:

Wayne Waugh, Senior FFA
member at Hannan Trace High
School. will receive the Sta"te
Farmer Degr"" ai Colu mbus at the
State FFA ~onventlon _ Two per"
cent of The 22.00J FFA membcr'i
receive this, the hig hes t degree in
the state, each yea r.

Chur~h

STORE HOURS
MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY
10:00 TO 8~30
SUNDAY1:00 TO 5:00

-

All buildings on, t hP M use urn
grounds will he open_

FFA Degree
awarded
local student

; POMEROY - M ay Fellowship
Women United brings
lng through 2,(0) !coal and 51 state
: Day, observed In communities
together more than half a million
units. they fund a variety of
Protestant , Roman Catholic and
programs in support of the empow: across the country on May 6 Is an
• annual celebration sponsored by
Orthodox women into one Christian
erment of women, human ' rights,
: Church Women United. Observed
"conununity of caring." Functionjustice and peace.
: each year on the first Friday in ,------"'------------~------1
; May, It brings together Protestant,
; Roman Catholic and Orthodox
: church women in a worship
. experience designed to develop
• creative and healing relationships
· between people.

SIZES l 0 TO 20

WITH
YOUR COX'S
'PURCHASES

corllii1eal pie, hot (logs, Ice cream,
sassafras tea, and ot)ler " down on
the !arm" goodieS.
'
Sunday, May 8, at 9 a.m .. the
Rev. Louis R. H usseii wiii conduct
church in the old log church. Lu
Ann Hussell will play the pump
organ and direct the singing. The
public is invited to anend the
service.
There Is no admission charge to
the Monday eve n ~.
The Farm Museum is iocared
four miles north of Point Pleasant,
W. Va .. just off State Route 62.

;· May Day speaker scheduled in Meigs

AND

AND

.

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. needing additional information
engine will operate a buhrstone
The Mason County Regional State
should contact Paul Fltzgerl))d ,
grist mill. Some of the old,
Fann Museum will host the fourth
phone 31»-67&gt;-5225.
one-cylinder gas engines Will furannual Antique Steam and Gas
Saturday evening there will he a
nish power for corn shelters, grist
Engine Show May 7 and 8. The
square dance under the direction of
mills, and other small farm
show ts sponsored by the West
Floyd Rayburn. Everett. Wedge
equipment. A n\Jmber of the
.VIrginia Antique Steam and Gas
and his ba nd will provide the
tractors will be In operationg
Engine Association, Inc.,' and will
music.
during the day.
be at the Museu'n grounds.
Burl Tennent has arranged for a
An added attraction to this year's
Raymond Mcintyre, president of
of musicians to furni sh
group
show will he a parade, each day at3
the ass&lt;iclation, '¥!1d that several
entertainment
during the two days.
p.m. . on the Museum grounds of all .
antique steam engines and nearly
string
bands
will play blue-The
antiq~e mobile equipment. Howard
one hundred gasoline engines will
grass
and
country
music. plus
Schultz's steam engine will lead the
.he on display during the two day
some
good
old
"
foot
stompin' "
parade. In addition. to the Antique
'show. Some antique tractors will
fiddle
tunes
.
Steam and Gas Engines Show.
also he shown and operated.
Raymond Zuspan will he In
there will be additional activities at
• V artous pieces of old '! ann
charge of a petting zoo which will
the Farm Museum during 'the
equipment wlll he exhibited. and • two-day exhibition, such as blacksbe stoc ked with baby f arm
:will be operated periodically. One
•
animals.
mithing, spinning. weaving and
The Country Kitchen will he open
-of the steam engines will furnish
com-meal grinding. Many people
:the power to operate an antique
both days of the show. In addition to
will he Interested in the Muzzleits specialty of cornbread and
.F arquhar threshing m achine patloading rifle shoot Saturday, May 7.
beans, the Kitchen will serve
:ent£d in 1878. Another old steam
Anyone wishing to participate or

A MOTHER'S DAY
FAVORITE ......·

Report revenue

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3

Pomeroy- Midc;lleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
.

.Antique festival · slated at farm museum

presented to a 1winner In each
division, antique and street rods-

May 21 and 22.
'
Sponsored by Hocking Technical
admitted free.
College on the college,campus, the
weekend wlllfeatuivatleamarket, ,~--------------------­
games, a car smash and displays.
Over 10 trophies will be awarded In
categories in both the antique and
street rod/van division.
A pre-reglstratlon fee of $4 will he
charged, and will InCrease to $5 on
the day of the show. RegiStration
begins at 9 a.m. Sunday · and
participants must be on the
grounds and registered by 12:30
p.m . to be judged lor awards.
IWll TO Wl-'" ......,p[
Trophies will he awarded at 4 p.m.

:Missionaries speak at Alfred church
· MIDDLEPORT - The Alfred
i.Jn ited Methodist Church wUI host
• tWo missionary witnesses on Tues. · ~ay, May 3, at 11 a.m. One Is
' Ronald Monroe who, with his wife
· Sharon, have served as mlssionar·
~ in Zaire since 1975. Their
; ~ iality is in agronomy and home
· economics. Monroe works wit h
; ~al farm ers in growing better and
'
crops.

: May I, 1983

.

Full cut classic gripper front
dusters. featuring a broad
placket front and two roomy
patch pockets; In colOrful ·-·
springtime prints.
· ·

SPRING SPECIAl - $49500
VISIT OUR LARGE DISPLAY. WHERE PRICESARE LOWER AND
QUALITY IS HIGHER

Sizes: S-M-l-Xl-XXL
Prices:

WE DO CEMETERY LETTERI~G '
FREE INSTALLATION IN CEMETERY
ALL WORK GUARANTEED

Sl2.00-S,2Q.OO

OPEN 8 :00A.M.- 9 :00P.M . 7 DAYS A WEEK

336 Second Ave .
Gallipoli s

located on Stale Rt . 141 at Centenary. Ohio. 2v1 miles from Gallipolis. Ohio

l 446-7017

Silver. Bri_d(e__Plaza

446-3353

992-7034

'

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REMEMBER
MOTHER'S DAY MAY BTHI.

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She'll always appreciate o
Jo-Ann Gi" Certific ate!

Linen looks

DU

Cosmopolitan or casual. Our
entire stock of poly/rayon
and 1_00% poly favorites.
Machine wash. dry; 45" wide.
Reg. from $4.99 yd.

Mother's Dar.

BeHer dress-ups
Satins, sheers , more. Nylo n
and polyester; machine
wash . dry: 45 • wide.
~-

Here's an elegant gift to show mom
you remembered her dav: The Tissue
Box Bouquet . .
It's ll beautiful brass-pl&lt;lted basketweave tissue box that holds a g1lrgcous
arrangement of fresh. colorful flowers . .
And when the flowers are gone. mom can
place a boutique tissue box inside to dress
up any room in the houst'.
A quick call to Pllmeroy Flower Shop :tnd your bouquet is on its woty ;tl·
most anywhere Jn the U.S. Ask for the Tissue Box Bo~quet. An~ remember,
with Pomeroy FJpwer Shop. the flowers alw;.~ys mme 1n somethm~o: ;ts pretty
as the flowers themselves.

,..

....i

106 Butternut Ave.

Pomeroy,Oh.

~

•

'

T1\!'E ADVANTAGE OF THIS ONCE A YEAR SALE. ALMOST EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE IS ON SALE.
HURRY IN TODAY AND SAVE WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD .

•

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

•
•
•
•

~

Summer prints

Sporty Cindy solids tor
clothes that ploy! Polyesterlconon; machine
wash and dry; 60 " wide.

Front-porch tlorols and
stripes in on eosy·ilving
blend of potylconon. Machine wash , dry; 45" wrde.

Reg. tram $2.29 yd.

S3.66YARD

1-/3oFF~~e

Sheer prints
and solids

Weaver'slkeHie cloth
and classic twill

Voiles, Ienos, dimities. Poiylconon blends ore machine wash, dry; 45 • wide.·

Teltlured solids and twills
for sportswear. Poiylcollon;
machine wash , dry; 45" wide.

Reg. $2.99 and $U9 yd.

keg. $3.79 and ss. 99 yd.

$1,99 AND
$2.33YARb

$2,53AND
$2,66YARD

REG.

'395°0
CARAT
WEIGHT
CARAT
WEIGHT

... ... .,..
"

c•

.....

--

•

,.

NOW

t .
I.

...•

RINGS
NOW

eEmeralds
eSapphire
eLinde
eTopaz
• Birthstones

REG.
'1~7.50

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10 TIL 9 - SUNDAY 1 TIL 6

· VERY SPECIAL
BIRTHSTONE AND
DIAMONDS

'

$119 9 5

$3 9 5

•SEIKO

ePULSAR

IF YOU ARE IN THE MARKET FOR ANEW WATCH THE
PRICES Wll NEVER BE BEITER. AND REMEMBER WE
ALWAYS SERVICE WHAT WE SELL.

DOZENS OF STYLES TO
CHOOSE FROM

A L
14K GOLD CHAINS
NOW

THE
SIZING
IS

30o/o

..

OFF

. LARGEST AREA SELECTION

·FREE

.

SAVE

'37.45

GOLD FILLED 15" CHAIN
REG. '12.95

t

25%

eOp;ttis

•
•

•BULOVA
.CARAVELLE

20°/o OFF

MEN'S AND LADIES'

......

ON.LY
"

REG.

$41995 ssgsoo

._
._

OFF

NOW

'450°0

PIERCED EARRINGS
AND NECKlACES

~

I

•

REG.

ALL

.

'

•

SJ2495

7 BEAUTifY.L-·QIAMONDS SET INTO
YOUR CHOICE OF YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD

e

·. Ph. 992-2039
Or 992-5721

All WATCHES IN STOCK

•••

1/3 OFF ~~e

WE ACCEPT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS, AND WIRE ROWERS
'

OF GALL!POLIS

•
•

The perfec t Mother's Day gift!
Choose lrom our In-store
selection of sewing, pinking
and embroidery shears.

~

.••

-

I.

Jf'av
. AmPrica

•

MON., MAY 2ND THRU SAT., MAY 14TH

..•

Plus many mare unadvertised specials.

FLOWER
SHOP
..Tht&gt;
Sends Lm'f&gt;...

••
•

.•

Wlss®Wlssper·llter ....
scissors

Interlock knits

. ~· $5.49 yd.

POMEROY

"'•

$3.99to$8.99yd.

$2.66m
$5.99YARD

Send theTtweBox

i

•
•

1/3 OFF~~e

Sund~May8 ·

i•

.-..

.

•

~

~

342 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
446-2691

'
·

OPEN MON.·FRI. TIU 8 P.M.
. AU DAY THURSDAY

"Your Professional Jeweler"
•WATCH REPAIR
· ESTIMATES

•JEWELRY REPAIR
. •APPRAISAL SERVICE

PRINCE OR PRINCESS
GARDNER

BILLFOLDS
NOW

25°/o OFF

REMEMBER

MAY 8th
MOTHER'S DAY

..

ALL
CROSS PENS
AND PENCILS

NOW

20o/o OFF

FREE! FREE! ·
RING SIZING
ENGRAVING
GIFT

..

�•

.'

r---------------T-i~,~~n~:ne=l::::::::::::::::iiiii:iiiiiliiiii!i!:=Oh~ioii~ii·n:t="=.a=..==nt!,=W=·~¥=a=·::::::::::::::::::;::=:=::::::::::::~~
Calendar

'

GALLIPOLIS - Diane Coble
and the Gosgel Sounds from
Dayton will present a .concert a t3
p.m. Sunday at John ~ Chapel
Methodist Church on Pine Street.
Admission is free and the public
Is Invited.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Orange Town·
ship Trustees wUl meet In
regular session a t 8 p.m .
Monday.
POMEROY - THe Meigs
County Fair Board wtll meet a t 8
p.m. Monday a t the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
POMEROY - All concerned
pMents and public officials are
Invited to a drug a nd a lcohol
abuse meeting to be held a t 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Meigs High
School cafetelia.
GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Lafayette Post No. 27wlll
meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the
post hQme on Bob McConnack
Road for the nomination or
officers. AU members urged to
attend.

"·

GALLIPOLIS - French Colony NSDAR will - m eet a t the
home of Mrs. B.V. M~ t thews at
1:30 p.m . Monday.
CHESHIRE - Poplar Ridge
Freewlll Baptist Church will
begin a revival Monday, contillu·
lng with services a t 7:30 nightly .
The Rev . Paul Taylor will be
speaker .

JOHNSONS

SUPER .MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A.M. T~ W P.M.

85 Vioe Street .
"Ne ·

--~

POMEROY - A microwave
cooking class, sponsored by the
Meigs County E xtension Ser·
vice, wUI be held at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the Rlvl'rvlew
Grade School, Reedsville. Cost
Is $2 a person and Instructor will
be Dale Stoll, extension service,
home economics. '
GALLIPOLIS - The Pem·
broke Club will meet Tuesday, 8
p.m. at the homeofMrs. Dona ld
Warehime.

-

Happenings

Gallipolis, Obio
the
to

School art at FAC
GALLIPOLI S G allla
County School system Is displayIng over 140student work at The .
French Art Colony loca ted on
First Avenue In Galllpolls. The
exhlbl! w!U open today at 1 p.m.
and run through Friday. The
selection or art work repl'I'Sents
all' eleml'nUlry and secondary
county schools Including
Bidwell-Porter Eleme ntary,
.Cadmus Elementary, Centerville, Cheshlre-Kyger and Viiiton Elementary and HaMan
Trace, Kyger Creek, North
Gallla Local and Southwestern
High Schools.
Hours tor the exhibit are
Sunday 1·5 p.m ., Tuesday 10
a.m.·3 p.m., Wednesday even· ·
illg 5 p.m.-9 p.m ., ThiiJ'sday 10
a .m .-J p.m. and Friday 10
a.m.·noon.

·Phane-.446-9593

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S

ce..ume..

Budget
"
Pleaser
Special .

yc;u might try an
activated-carbon water tuter. It
can c:lear$4!&lt;1tment from tap water,
the boneycombed channels of the
activated carbon can also etrec.
lively remove many objectklnable
tlavors and odors.
A sillk-tnounted lUter or countertop model willfUl the bill If your
rondli'n about the Ulste and odor of
your tap water Is mainly aesthetic.
However, If you bave water that
tastes awful unless It's treated, or
water that contains harmful organlc chemicals, an under-sink
water filter can help.
One unwanted organic com·

79

BOB EVANS

SAUSAGE
Reg., Hot, Sage

POUND$

ROLL

·$129

BOSTON IIUTl

PORK .

LB.

Budget
.Pleaser
Special

47

GROUND
CHUCK

LB.

POUND PKG.

GREAT AMER. WIENERS

$109

Budget
Pleaser
Special

-BONELESS

TAVERN
HAM

WHOLE
HAM

LB.

s

USDA OtOICE

STEAK

BEEF CUBE STEAK

GOlD KIST

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

10 LB.

BAG

RED OR GOlDEN

DINNER NAPKINS

PKG.

•
"

HEAD
LffiUCE
'

HEAD

RED GRAPES
Budget
Pleaser
Special

TOWELS

79¢

HALF
GALLON

4

$
WAGNER GRAPE OR

EXTRA TOPPING PIZZA

ORANGE DRINK

Budget
Pleaser
Special

2% MILK

54

oz.

$
..

ROYAL CREST

BUTTERMILK

BANQUET

\

CREAM PIES

BATHROOM .
TISSUE ·· ~~oLL

oz. ·
4 FLAVORS

14 oz.

69¢

Plelllll!l' Spool aJ

PUfFS

FACIAL TISSUE
Bud~

. GRADE A

EX. LARGE
EGGS

Free-Arm

Deluxe F,....Arm
Machine Model6105

SAVE

Machine Model 5522

$5()00

NOW
ONLY

$19999
Pomeroy. OH .

Serving Meig s &amp; Gattia Co.
As Your Singer Approv ed Deale r

1-====

Ple•erSpoolal

IVORY .
DISHWASHING
LIQUID

-

The
Department of Safety will pres·
ent a program on traffic safety
for senior citizens at the C.
wuuam O'NeU Center in Ma·
rtetta on May 12.
The program will cover
reflex drlvlng, seat belt usage,
personal security and pedestrian safety. It will start at 10
a.ll\. and conclude at 2 p.m. with
lunch to be catered. Meigs
Counties wishing to attend may
secure registration forms at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center,
992-2161. Deadline Is May 2.

49

45700.
POMEROY- May Romine II
~addresses of sane of the
members d. the :IS28 graduating
ctau ·d. Pomeroy High School.
'Illls year lhectau
celebrate
.jia 55th reunion. AdclresSes are
needed for the following
members, . Clara Stahl, Wlll!s

250 CT.

BOX

ww

Bud,;et Pie,....,. Spt~ · li1t

I

TIDE
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT '

McMurray; Hugh Davis, Hllda
Duist, 'Aueuat Ccmpton and
GeOrae Reuter.
An;yme bavtng any lnfonnatlon 'INIY caD Mrs. Romllle
!m-71113 or .write to ber at :mol

•t

ttemJod{

~

.- -.
'

-

The
Harrisonville - Scipio Alumni
Assoclaton have completed
plans for the annual alumni
banquet and dance to be held at
the Harrisonville school on
Saturday, May 28, at 7 p.m.
The dance will begin at 9 p.m.
Admission Is $6 a person, dance
ony $2 and dues only $1. · ·
Reservations may be made by
calling Lelmle Jewell, president, .
at 992-2634 or Jay Clark, secretary, at 992-3690. Mall reservations may be sent to Jay Clark,
102 Park St., Middleport) Oh

Oz.$ 29 · 710z.$699
1

·'.•

116 W . 2nd ·

614-992-2181

614-992-2181

WE WIU NOT BE

POMEROY

POMEROY

POMEROY LANDMARK - SOUT-HEASTERN OHIO &amp; WEST VIRGINIA'S MOST
COMPLETE FARM &amp; HOME SUPPLY CENTER - COME - BROWSE AROUND
COME IN AND SEE US AT POMEROY, OHIO

.··"·
'·
.....................
..................... ...

MARIETIA -

HARRlSONVILLE

JUG

OIAMIN

11

~~~(~~~-\~(

THE FABRIC SHOP

·--

~

~

Bu\rina a compact tractor.

Getting dependable Jacobsen
performance for lawn
or garden work.

SPECIAL PRICES
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD

33th LB .

ONLY $}9 99

L own tCtng mow ers

WALKING ~OTARV
MOWIR.

hove Joc ob•en
dep endabil ity bu il t m
An d th ey ' re butlt on a

_-....··-·
, . .. ....
·._
.. . ... . . ....
,...,
_
...............
..
........
...........
_.
_
.....
............
.,.............
..........
......
.,.._. . .... ..
....= . ···'Z'
...................

steel d ec:: l. to ma ke th em

1

¥1!!1)' n H ordo~ l . ,

~_

...

Grove Road,

J."'Y, OlleJilll.

.l"o~M­

ONLY

---·-

$525

.... •!5"

Get the best for yourself .

._.ACOBSEN ·
HOMEUTE

HOTPOINT MICROWAVE!

25 LB.

::,~.:·:.

-~

~

PLANT PEP

)

•"

~--

-;,~

•219 ....

---_

oao .... o "1" •~•-· _
•••.

,

$JJ99S

-·

WEED VEX

ig

- $154900

J•H o b o;cr 1 \nwr1 I r a( l or

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
SPECIAL
ONLY$ 1495

. 19' Dlllgonal

COLOiiTV
S 17.2 Co. U. no host refrlgora
tor-freezer 1 12.-41 ~ ft. lr esH

I food

c•pacily I 4.74 Cu. fl .1
freezer IIICiicn D Rev ersi ~~~

di)OIS 1 Rugoed Trilon II dOQr
llld cabinel Tiner I SetH~
meat kHpel I Rollt·out·on

·.

wheel s.

No appoilltrnent Is necessary
ror the screenillg. Tests can
detect heartng Impairment and
speech problems In children,
adults and older persons.

Budget
Pleaser
Special

FROZEN
DINNERS

WE HAVE OVER 100 REMNANTS AND
SHORT ROLLS, SOME LARGE ENOUGH TO 00
A LIVING ROOM HALL AND sTAIRWAY aJHERS THAT WILL 00 A BEDROOM OR
BATHROOM- AND WE WILL GUARANTEE
THAT YOU CAN BUY ANY ONE OF THESE
PIECES FOR LESS THAN FACTORY COST.
WE ALSO HAVE ROLLS OF CARPET OF ALL
TYPES. BRING US A QUOTE FROM OTHER
CARPET STORES IN THE AREA AND WE GUA·
R4NTEE WE CAN BEAT THEIR PRICES.

HAPPY; HAPPY
~OTHER'S DAY

CALL FOR OUR
SPECIAL ON BULK
BAGGED OR LI\IUIIIII
FERTIUZER

100 and 35.

Pus Deposit

20 OZ.

JENO'S

JUST RECEIVED

GAUJPOUS To help
promote May as Better Speech
alii) Hearing Month, the speech
and heartng department of the
Gallla·Jackson·Melgs ComIJ!Iijlity. ,M ental H:ealth Center
Will' have a free screening on
Saturday, May 14, from 8: ~
a.m. to 12: ~p.m . Tile screening
will be held at the Community
· Mental Health Center in GallloUs at the junction or State Routes

8 PACK
16 OZ. BTL

BANQUET

ROYAL CREST

99¢

EMPEROR

ICE
CREAM

l60 CT.

LB. ·

ICEBERG

.

GALA

SCOTT FAMILY PAK

BACON

CHUNK BOLOGNA

$ 59

RIO GRANDE- J ohn D. Scholl,
Fr ancisco.
saki that, at $23, the Sears Is clea rly Dean of the E m erson E. Evans
Prior to his appointme nt at Rio
a Best Buy. The Sears model tested School of Busilless Management at
Grande, Scholl was Research
has been superseded by a new Rio Grande College an4 CommunAdministrator at the University of
model , but Its replaceable carnage lty Colll'ge, Will be atte nding the
Maryla nd. From 1978-00, he Sl'rved
is still the SIU!leaMual ml'eting of the Ohio Ecoas Assistant Professor at Syracuse
Water tuters don't remove bacte- nomic Association May
_ ill
University.
12 13
ria .. In fact, a carbon lUter which rolumbus ..Ohio.
'
He has held adjunct tPachlng
remains Idle tor several days can
He also had a paper accepted tor
posit ions with the Sta te University
Increase the bascterlallevels In the presentation at the annual meetillg
of New York, CoUegp at Buffalo;
treated water that's discharged. So of tbe Allll'd Social Science AssoclaUtica College; Piince Georges
It's a good iljea to tlush wa ter lion . at their convention In San
Com m unity College, and Howa rd
throughanyfllterbeforeeachday's --------------~C~om~m~u~
n l~
ty~~~--use.
,...
(For a specia l reprint of consu·mers Union's evaluation of smoke
detectors send $1 for each copy to
CONSUMERS, P.O. Box 461, Radio
City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to ask for the reprint on
smoke detectors. \

IIli.;iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.;;iiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiii;;;;;;~~

GAUJPOLIS - Participants
In the ElderWalkslatedforMay
5 must contact the Gallla County
Senior Citizens Center at 4467001 by Monday' to get a picnic
luncb.
The walk will be conducted
Raccoon·Creek County Park on
Dan Jones RoAd. Participants
will leave the senior center at
10: ~ a .m ., witli the walk
beginning at n a.m .
A noon lunch will be served.

POUND
PKG!

POLISH SAUSAGE

BROUGHTON'S
PREMIUM OUAUTY

JUMBO
ROLL

SUPERIOR
DART B8AND

SUPERIOR

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Specia

Budget
Pleaser
Special

LB.

pound the
Is chloroform.
result
from
chlonnatlonIt can
of water.
While chlorine kUls harmful microorganisms, It can also react
with decaying vegeta lion and
certaill man-mac)e chemicals ill
water, translormillg some into a
family of chemicals known as
trlhalometbanes , or THM's. Chlorofonn Is one of these and It may be
harmful. It's known to cause
tumors In laboratory animals, and
Is being studll'd as a possible
carcinogen lor humans .
Consumer Reports engilleers
focused on chlorofonn removal
when they tested water filters
becauSI' It's both prevalent In water
suppUes, and difficult to remove.
The engineers passed water that
they · had "polluted" with chlorofonn, chlorine and other organic
chemicals through the filters to see
. how weD they could remove the
pollutants·and how long they could
do it. A filter was considered spent
when It no longer removed at least
50 percent of the chloroform.
Among the stn)&lt;-mminted models
le!lted, the engineers top-rated the
Hurley To..,n and Country, $190. It
was milcb bl!4ier ·than other

System 55ai (avaUable ftQm Rush
Hampton Industries, P.O." Box300l,
Longwood, Fla. 32750), like . the
Hurley, sits on the e(Mlllter, but
costs about $35. The Pollenex Pure
Water ''99/ ' about $35, Is mounted
on the end of a faucet. The chemists
judged that tbey dld a better job of
tllterlng chlorlr.e and chloro!onn
than some smaller faucet-mounted
models. However; their effective
filtering lifetime Is much shorter
than the Hurley.
The engineers judged that the
widely advertised counter-top Norelco Clean Water Machine, $50,
was quite eHecUve. After you fill its

reservoir and turn tt on, an electric
pump forces the water through Its
IIIIer cartrldie. The Norelco could
IIIIer up to one and Oil('- half quarts
of water In less than a i'nlnute; It
lms a useful lifetime or about 250
gallons.
All under -sink filters tested by
Consumer Reports engllle('rs must
be pennanently mounted into the
cold-water line. they're generally
bigger and more expensive than
units mountl'd on the end of the
faucet. All of the models tested .
removed chlorine easUy. ·
The Culilgan Super Gard SG-2,
$175; Sears Cat. No. 3464, $23;
AMF-CUNO AP501', $67; and, the
Seagull IV X-1F, $290, would all be
adequate. However, the engineers

'
'

Happenings ·

SUPERIOR

BAKI.NG
POTATOES

'

¢

WHOLE GRADE A
FRYERS

STRAWBERRIES

$}29

$219
LB.

Budget
·Ple:a ser·_
Special

IDAHO

RORIDA

•

CHARCOAL
STEAK ·

FRESH ?&lt;)RK

FRESH
CALIFORNIA

QUART

..

USDA OIOICE
BONELESS

SUPERIOR

Budget
Pleaser ·
Special

EXTRA LEAN

..•

Budget
Pleaser
Special

The~ogtzerWaterTreatment

~ ~ter.

THURSDAY, MAY 5

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Sink-mounted units alid lasted
longer; but It was expensive.

oJ
Reports
To Improve the quaUty of your

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

GAHS reunion set
GALLI POliS - The Gallia
Acadtlmy High School Class of
1963 Is holding a reunion .July 2,
1\R'J. Class members are try ing
to contact Tom Balles, Cheryl
Baisden, Rober1 G. Brown, Ruth
Ely, Kathy Heiskell, Lawrence
Henry, J eanne MU!er, Low&lt;?ll
Rollyson , and Sally Swa nson.
Anyone with knowledge . of a
relative, .friend. or place of
employment of these people,
please call Martha Roderick at
446-0011.

By tbe ·E dlion

SAME FRIENDLY SERVICE - BUCKY WALTERS, MANAGER AT J()ijNSONS IN MIODIS'ORT INVITES All HIS OJSTOMERS TO COME IN AND
SAVE.
OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

'

GIBSON'S
GALLIPOLL~ American
Association of University
wonien (AAUW ) will hold Its
final meeting of the year at 6: 30
p.m. Monday In James A.
Rhodes Student -Communit y
Center on the RloGra ndeCollege
and Community College cam·
pus. Ma ry C. Bana , president of
Ohio Sta te AAUW divis ion. will
speak on "You May Think You
Don't Need It, But a Sense of
Humor Helps."

Filters .improve drinking,·warer quality

NAME TO
CORNER OF MILL
AND SECOND IN IIIDDLPOERT ..... PHONE 992-3480

The Sunday Times-Sentinej:._.Page-B-5 ,"

Business School dean
to visit OEA meeting

From Cqnsum:er Reports..

MARK V'JN MIDDLEf)()RT CHANGED THI;IR

SUNDAY
. MIDDLEPORT - Reglstra ·
for Tile Meigs American
Legion Baseball Team will be
held a·t 2: ~ p.m . today at the
Feeney-Bennett Post Home In
Middleport ; youths must be 19
after August I to take part.
Those reglsteling m ay be from
Meigs and Gallla Counties. They
are to Ulke birth certificates a nd
$7 registration lee.

Pomerciy-Midcdeport-Gallipolis, Ohio--l'l)int Pk!a~ant, W. Va.

P1Gy I, 1983

tea. Prict S*)4.99

-279

~~~~~~::;; jilt$

-tf1Dtjp..o.,. .. ~&amp;= .

11o1t1 Cllll!B

~:$649

lli. IIICI '511

NOW ONLY

. $444

LIVE PLANTS

GAS CANS oHLY S3'S

HOIELITE ST 20
STRING TiliMER '3495
WHEELBARROWS 3 cu. ft.

·

12~5

ONION SETS
KENNEBEC SEED POTATOES
2 LITER COKE OR SPRITE
ONLY

89• EACH

BALER lWINE
• OJiLY _
$ 2]95
10 1Al£S·OR 101(

614-992·2181

WI WILL NOT
II UNDIRSOLO

l

I

BARB WIRE
$2495

STRAWBERRY
CABBAGE
ONION
CAUUFLOWER
BROCCOU

NAIL

SALE ON
WHITE MARBL
CHIPS

PRO•MIX
NOW IN
. STOCK

POMEROY
LANDMARK
.
w. c.....,. -..
Drive • IIHto •net- • lei-PrH •tr¥ery within 75 mltoo
.,.,, - •rvk• ·aa pur 1.-1 Holpolnl Dealer
s.... Houfl: 1:30 to 5:30. Mill CloMd al 5:00 , ,M . .
.

~-

· leNin'

~~ ...

0.111•· and~- .C:.Unllet

SPECIA~

ONLY 10 .
BOXES LEFT

$1495
614-992-2181
· w~ WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD .

,.

'·

LANDMARK 'i-

'

I,

'
'

I

�Ohio-Paint

,.
~

·'
.,
:.
;,
•·
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The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pbge-B-7

" May 1, 1983

Engagements

Eng~gements ·

Couple wed
in Cheshire
CHESHIRE - Gerry Lee Hand"
ley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Handley of Cheshire, became the
bride of Howard Gruber, son of the
late John and Rosalee Gruber of
ColumbuS, Aprtl 2, at the Salem
Community Church, West Colum"
bla , W.Va.
The Rev. George Hoschar, pas"
tor of the church, o!flclated. Music
was furnished by Jane Layton,
pianist, a nd George Oliver,
vocalist.
The a ltar was decorated with
candles and Easter Lilies.
The btide was given In marriage
by her father and mother.
She wore an Ivory gown, taffeta
over silk chiffon "featuring apron
effect bustle back, long sleeves and
a VIctorian neckline with headpiece a small Juliet cap, ne! bow
attached trimmed with old pearls_
She carried a bouquet of pink roses
and baby's breath.
Matron of honor was Margie
Taylor, sister of the bride. She wore
a rose pink gown a nd carried a
bouquet of pink tiger Lilies.
Oliver Taylor, brother-In-law cf
the bride, was best man.
A reception was beld at the
Community building. The brtdal
table was centered with a four"tler
wedding cake, trimmed with pink
roses, topped with the traditional
bride a nd groom, baked by Margie

I, 1983

W. Va;

.WoodwardCanaday

PATRIOT - Mt, and .Mrs.
Richard Neal of Rt . 1, Patriot,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, . Debbie Lynn, to Jim
Ehman of Galllpolls.
A May wedding Is being planned.
MISs Neal Is· a · graduate of
School and Is
Southwestern
employed at Ohio Valley Bank.
Ehman Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Aiber1 Ehrnaq of- Patriot Star
Route, Gallipolis. He attended
Southwestern High School and Is
employed by Ohio Power
Company. "

. REMEMBER MOM
ON HER DAY
SUN., MAY 8th
WI
A GIFT FROM:

HoffmanOwens

Karen Leslie Powers

POTTED FLOWERS -

Azaleas, Mums,
Geraniums, Caladiums,
Porch Boxes
Bedding Plants, Dwarf Fruit Trees, and Flowering Trees.
.OPEN ON

.GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
George K Woodward of Patriot
Star Route are announcing the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Nona
Kimberly , to Je!frey Dean Canaday, son of Mr. and Mrs" Jack
Canaday, GallipoLis"
The ceren\ony will take place on
Saturday, May 21, at the Grace
United Methodi s t Methodist
Chapel. Pastor Frazier will .
officiate.
Miss Woodward Is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
will receive an Associate Degree In
. Medical Laboratory Technology
from . Rio Grande College and
Community College In May.
Canaday Is also a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
employed as a boilermaker.

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gruber
Gruber Is employed by tbe
Chessle, Columbus, Ohio System .
They took a honeymoon trip to
VIrginia Beach and Gatllnburg,
Tenn.
They are residing in Galllpolls.

Taylor of Dresden.
Assisting at the reception were
Pearl P,ayne and Bonnie Handley.
Pearl Payne registered guests.'
Mrs. Gruber is employed by Bob
E vans Steak House, Gallipolis.

Waldnig
•
anntversary
Mr. 311d Mrs_Robert Waldnlg of
Racine recently celebrated their
25th wedding anniversary with a
dinner party a I the Brown Derby in
Columbus.
Attending the celebration were
: Mr . and Mrs. James Moore, Grove
·" City, Mr. and Mrs_Rribert Waldnlg,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs.Jo~h Holman,
Columbus; Jullus Waldnig and
Unable
Wanda Lambert,
Urbana.
.
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to attend but sending a gift was the
Wa ldnlg' s daughter, Mrs. Alan
Petzo and famlly of Wheaton. llL

'S DAY

=Powers:Wilfong
VINTON - Ms. CoMie Powers
announces the engagement and
upconilng marriage o! her daugh"
ter, Karen Leslie, to Mark Anthony
Wilfong, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Wilfong of VInton.
The open church wedding wlll be
May 1~. 11: l1 a"m. at the VInton
United Methodist Church. The
reception wlll follow In the Fellow"
ship Room of the church.
Miss Powers Is a graduate of
North Gallla High School, and Is
attending Rio Grande College,
majoring In Elementary
Education. '
Wlltong Is alSo a graduate of
North Gallia and Buckeye Hills
Career Center. He Is employed at
Bob Evans Steak House In
Galilpolls. ·

SENIORS
CAP AND GOWN SPECIAL

2-5x7
4-WALLETS
ONLY

$}.500
Pius Tax

DUE TO THE VARIETY OF CO~ORS WORN. AT VARIOUS AREA .
. SCHOOLS PLEASE BRING YOUR OWN CAP AND GOWN . .

LIMlTED TIME OFFER!!
CALL NOW -FOR BEST APPOINTMENT TIMES

LEii.R.

Hutchison.Cotterill
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RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Riffle are announcing the atr
proachlng marriage of thelrdaugh"
ter, Tracy Lynn, to Jeff Thornton,
son of Bernard Thornton . Seatle.
Wash .. and Mrs. Florence Thornton1
, Letart.

The open c hurch wedding will be
an event of Sunday, May ,15, at the
First Baptist Church in Racine.

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Hoffma.n, Owens
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles C. Hoffman are announcIng the engagement and approach"
lng marriage of their daughter ,
Yield Lynn, to David Brian Owens,
son of Mary M"Owens, Rio Grande,
and Arlen R . Owens, Vinton.
The open church wedding will he
. conducted June 4 at 6: 30· p:m, at
Pom eroy United M ~ th odlst
Church.

arnmc~

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of Ma y 2-6 a t the Senior
Citizens "Center located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, May 2 - OOOT Seminar Shawnee Lodge State Park,
8 a .m .; Ceramics , 9: ~noon; Ch&lt;&gt;"
111s, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, May 3 - S.T.O.P .
Class.lO: 30a.m .; Physical Fitness,
11: 15 a.m"
Wednesday, May 4 - VInton
Bible Study, · 1 p.m .; Crown City
Mobile Unit, 1 p.m.; Card Games,
1-3 p.m .; American Literature
Class, 1 p.m .: Garden Club, 1 p.m .
Thursday . May 5 - E lderwalk ,
10:30 a.m.; Bible Study. 11 a .m. ·
noon; MPSC Advisory Council, at
Mcintyre park, 1 p.m .
Friday, May 6 - Staff Meeting,
8: 1:&gt;-9: 45 a. m .; Craft Mlni"Course,
1·3 p.m .; Ali Show Tea .at Rio
Grande. 1-3 p.m .; Social Hour, 7

400 Second Ave.

-

Mr. and Mn. David VanMatre

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VanMatres celebrate 50th
WEST COLUMBIA - Mr. and
Mrs. David Van Maire of West
Columbia will be celebrating their
50th wedding anniversary a t an
open house reception 2 to 4 p.m.
May 15 at the Community Building
In Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. Van Maire were
married on May 13, 1933 at the

String Quartet
plays at Athens

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Un ion Parsonage by the Rev.
Slaughter. They are the parents of
four children, Mona Werner. New
Haven: Paul D.. Letart; Donald,
Poin t Pleasant . and Eddie, Mason.
They have six grandehlldren and
one grea t"grandchlld .
Mrs. Va n Matre Is tbe former
Ll'ah Grins tead, daughter of the
la te Mr. and Mrs. Harry Grinstead.
Mr . VanMatre is the son of the late
Mr . and Mrs. Howard Van Matre.
F'rlends and relatives are Invit ed
to a tt~nd the reception.

May is MAYTAG MONTH and
we're celebrating with a month

long CIICUIIf IBI••n...a
for you. Every MAYTAG
in stock is on sale now!

reprin
•lowest

your dishes
elmer' • Low
Energy Wash
Cycle for
• loods
everyday
• Energy Saver
Dry Cycle

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Milo
B. Hutchison, Rutland, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Leora Jayne, to Bruce E. ·
Cottrtll, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Cottrill, Syracuse.
Ms. Huchlson Is a
graduate
of Meigs High School and Is
employed In the loan department of
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA Cottrill
_ Is a graduate of Southern High
· School with the class of 1977 and ls
: employed as a maintenance me: chanlc with Appalachia Central: !zed Plant Malnter.ance. Appalach"
• ian Power Co.
~
The wedding wUI be held at the
~ f!W-Jil~bJIU!rian C~urch In Syra·.
• ~on May 22, at 2:l:l p.m.

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A'- Af'"IJIOf I M I Of I

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446-9510

300 Second Ave.

Lafayette Mall

Gallipolis, 0 .

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FULL
FIGURE
FASHIONS

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l h U tWI ! I'I\OWI'I
1111·-~· QOI -

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For qll the years of love.

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S, M,- L, lX, 2X

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for

Large Selection
, : . . .'\
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of Gowns and ~ - .
\0~
Robes /,1- .: ' ~~ ,~ -··)~ 'Vi~

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. FROM

CRADDOCK'S

$1200

By
Lorraine. Shldowline

.."··-CQUNTR Y

GARDENS

&amp;~

1111 Viand St. • Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

Monday thru Friday
9 AM to9 PM
Saturd ay 9 AM to s PM

'The
Shoe Cafe

,

LET US HELP MAKE YOUR SURROUNDINGS MORE
ENJOY ABLE AND MORE USABLE!'

'

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!-

~ NfW DIRfC riON IN HAIR DC SIGN

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7~ 1st Ave., Gallipoli1

notice.

,....r
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Navy on White
on White

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SPENDING MORE TIME AT HOME THIS YEAR?
WOULD YOU LIKE A BETTER VIEW? ·
OR MORE PRIVACY IN YOUR OWN YARD?

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Choice of beverage served with
each meaL
Meals subject to change without

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IN

SILENT RAGE

ICE HOUSE
DRIVE THRU

bread, butter, ire cream, mi lk.

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Mother
On Her Day ·

675-2702

Monday - Ham, sweet potatoes,
peas/ mushrooms. bread, butter.
lemon pudding, milk.
Tuesday - .P.epper steak, rice,
buttered cabbage, bread. butter.
chlflon jeUo, milk.
Wednesday - Roast_ turkey·
/gravy, ca rmrs. mashed pota toes;
dressing, ·pink applesa uce, bread,
butter. milk.
Thursday - Sloppy joes, but tered com, tossed salad, bun,
butterscotch pudding, milk.
Friday - Dry lima beans t toma·
toes. peac h/ cottage cheese, rorn·

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rc

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OWNERS

wjll serve the following menus:

CHUCK NORRIS

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N &amp; DIANE

a.m.
Saturday, May 7- Yoga Class,
10:30 a .m.
The Senior Nutrition Program

2 Liter ............ ..... S1.19

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Cans ...... ,...... ..... S1.59

1m

Chloe
..
• Noluly gets

ATHENS - The International
String Quartet will perform Wednesday In Memorial Auditorium In
Athens at 8 p.m ., as· a part of the
Ohio University Performing Arts
Series. The International String
Quartet was born In the Inspirational surroundings of India na
University In South Bend. known
world-wide for Its excellence In
music and Its hig h standards of
performance. As were their
· teachers, In the tradition of the
legendary Eugene Ysaye, Zoltan
Kodaly, and L . Weiner, the
members of The International
String Quart.et carry on the legacy
of these great artists Into a new
generation .
Though the quartet la cks the
sheer power of a symphony
orchestra, there Is a vast variety of
tona l color to he reaped from these
four stringed Instruments. Its
power lles In the ablfity to reveal
the music's structural e lements In
a pure a nd direct manner.
Since lis debut 1n 1974, The
International String Quartet has
moved steadily Into the forefront of
the American chamber music
~he. The quartet tours exten· ·
$1,vely, performing not only In the
major U. S. cities, but worldwide,
, 'hjlvlng played In the capitalS of
South Amertca and Europe and the
Orient.
,
Tickets are available at the
Memoria l Auditorium box otflce
Monday through Friday from
noon4 p.m. and on the evening of .
the perlonnance at 7 p.m.. For
resetvatlons, call594-00I.

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c,_,4tv

6 Pak

"J·\CROSS

CONVERSE
ROADSTAR

" Leora Jayne Hutchison

446-1883

PEPSI
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

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"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION "cENTER"

and Mrs. Delbert Yost, Lancaster
Rt. A cake decorated with 45 yellow
roses, made by Ann Fausnaugh,
was served. Mrs" Fausnaugh dell·
vered the cake, accompanied by
Eunice Gtllllan and Norman Mid"
k!ff. The serving table was cen·
tered with a bowl of pink daisies,
gift of the Ewlng~aldwell families .
The main table centerpiece was a
bowl of silk spring flowers, gift of
Mrs. Parkers' Adult Sunday School
Class. Homemade Ice cream, nuts
and candles were served With the
cake. The Park~rs received phone
calls from their sons, Eric, Bend,
Ore"' and Edward, Everett , Wash.
Friends honored the Parkers with
95 cards. They extend thanks to all
who remembered them"

Bookmobile service In Meigs
Sunday School attendance Aprll
County Is brought to you by the
Meigs County Public Library under 10 was 33; church anendance 14.
Aprll17 Sunday School attendance
contract with the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries.
· was 45; church attendance 20.
Martha Poole hosted the 45th
Bookmobile schedule lor Mon- wedding a nniversary of her pa rday, May 15 - Hemlock Grov~
ents. Mr. and Mrs Wilber Parker at
(post office), 2: ~3:15p.m . ; Pagetheir home Aprll 17. Due to Mr.
vllle (store), 3: :i!H: 25 p.m.; HarrlParkN's frail health, only famlly
sonvllie (church ), 4: 35-5:05 p.m .;
members were present: Will Poole ,
New Lima Rd. (one mile south of
Mr. and Mrs . Samuel Michael, Mr.
Fort Meigs ), 5: 2().6 p.m., short film
and Mrs. Roger Leifheit. Dorothy
Will be shown 15 minutes after
and Michael, · Mr. and Mrs. Gary
bookmobile arrives; Rutland 1DeMichael: Matthew , Kimberly, and
pot St. ). 6: 40-8: 10 p.m .. short film
Todd, Mr. a nd . Mrs. Herbert rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiji
wUI be shown 15 minutes after
Parker, Louise Michael, Mr . and
bookmobile arrives.
Mrs. Marlon Parker. Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Parker. Genevieve GuthWednesday - Chester (fire
rie, all of Meigs County, a nd Mr.
station), 2:15-2: 45 p.m., short film
wUI be shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives; Keno (north ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
side of Keno bridge), 3-3:30 p.m .;
Success RDad (near 3\KJSO), 3: 4:&gt;4:15 p.m .; Long Bottom tpost
office), 4: 2:&gt;-5: 10 p.m., short film
will be shown 15 minutes after
(Reg . &amp; Diet)
bookmobile arrives; Reedsv!lle
tReed's store), 5:~6: 10 p .m .,
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
short fllm wlll he shown 15 mlnu tes
after bookmovlle arrives; Tuppers
Plains (Lodwick's) , 7: 10-7: 40 p.m .;
8 Pak ........ ....... .. SJ.49
Ba um Addition, 8:10-8: 40 p.m .

Senior citizens activities

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Philson and Mrs. Dwigh I
Wallace attended the American
Lung Association of South East
Branch meeting held Thursday,
April 28 at the Western Sizzlln' Steak
House In Athens.
Mrs. James Fernlhough presided. The annual meeting was set
for June 2'l at Western Sizzlln'.

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA-GAWPOUS
CLOSED

Tracy
Jeff Thornton

RiffleThornton

Attend meeting

PttOIO&amp;RAPIIY

~no little

I

Uly Randolph called on Pearl
Randolph April 4 a nd took her to
Pomeroy for shopping and a visit to
the Senior Citizens.

l'il8h

1

Nona Woodward,
Jeff Carl4day

By BERTIIA PARKER

Neal~ Ehman ·

Foliage &amp; Blooming

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Bookmoblie ----Personals---in Me~gs Co.

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SECOND &amp; STATE

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Mother's Day is Sunday, May 8.
Give Mom an FTD• Big Hl.lg' Bouquet.
In a Pfaltzgraff Stoneware Serving D)sh
with brass-plated carry 'n serve rack.

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FULL
GIFT '
WRAP .

241

The Englis h
Club Chair
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Sale
' 199

FLORISTj

CO.'S OLDEST. FINEST"
PoMEROV,OHIO 46189

114/1192-2644 .

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8 8 The Sunday T...-Senlinal

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I Galipalis, Qhio Pallot Plea~a~ol, W. Va.

Mock wedding~ highlight

Beat of the Bend

class at .Meigs .school

Heart run June 4
by Bob Hoelllch

,.

The second annual tun run for
heart will be Saturday, June 4, at
Meigs HJgh School under the
sponsorship of Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Entry fee will
be $5 will! proceEds from the
event going to the
Meigs Branch of
the American
Heart Association.
races for men and women. ages
13-18, 19-30, 31-40, and over 41 plus
speclal kiddie races for 0.5, 6-8 and
9-12. There will be prizeS of !-shirts,
tropWes and otber awards. The
pre-registration deadline Is May 27.
The Racine High School Class of
1943 hopes to have a big turnout for

tbe 40th reunion on May 28. Betty
Hoback Brtckles Is heading efforts
to get aU of the grads of tbeclassout
for tbe event.
A committee, headed by Bill
Hoootetter and Lyle Hysell wltb
members including George and
Mary Morrts, VIrgil Brown and
Rose Sisson Is churning out special
plans for a reunion of the Pomeroy
High School Class of 1938. All of the
addresses needed to notify aU class
members have been secured. The
group wiU have a sfleclal get together at the Meigs Inn preced~
tbe general reunion of aU alumni on
May 28.
Beverly Spires of Langsvllle and
Sharon Durham of Pomeroy are
working towards a ,project to help
tbe Navajo Indians ln. ArizOna .
They are making plaster of parts
plaques in the form of owls. The
owls wUI be costumed as graduates
and w!ll bear the student's name,
school colors and year of graduation. They will sell for 116 and can be
seen ·Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at what Is known as "De
Place" In Rutland.
The two women have a pickup
true)&lt; full of clotblng that's been
donated for the project. If you have
any questions just call 742-2457.
Racine Emergency Squad
members hang light In there
raising money for their heart
monitor and accessory equipment.
They will have a car wash !rom 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday and
Tuesday, weather permitting, and
a yard sale will be held in
conjunction with the two days of
activity.
BUI and Ramora Young sent up
some 40 hellwn filled balloons on
Blll's blrtbday on Jan. 22 and a

May 1, 1983

POMEROY - "With this rtng, I
do wed ..... "
1bose tamliJar words in .wloat
seemed like !!Oiernn maniage ·
ceremonies were exchanged lit
Meigs HJgh School Friday by Rita
Rhodes 'and Steve Pallerson and
Jeannie Welsh and Nathan

couple of them had addresses
attached. noe !!nit was found on
Aprn 24 and the IInder who tlves at
Colwnblana has gotten In touch
with the Youoogs. That means the
balloom traveled some 150 mtles
· before touching down.

Boatrtght.

Coal miners and their tamllles
are bovlted to an Appalacwan
Black Diamond Festival at the
East State St. Recreation Center on
the weekend o! May 20.
Activities will be !rom Friday
through Sunday. On Friday there
will be rtdes, concessions, a Dea
market, art$ andcraftsopenlngat5
p.m. on Saturday there wUI be a
parade at 1 p.m . and continuous
entertainment !rom 2 to 10 p.m .
and, incidentally, the activities wiU
Include a "Coal Miner's Daughter"
talent contest. On Sunday !rom liD
8 p·.m . there will be vartous
religious speakers and singers, a
"Little Miss Coal Miners" contest,
and appearances by several musl·
cal groups.
Admission Is free to all events but
there will be a one dollar charge for·
parking.
If you need any more detail or
have questions contact John
Comb«, 592-4494 durtng the daytime
or Ray Skinner, 592-1B86 in the
evenings. Or- you can wrlte Black
Diamond Festival CommJttee, Box
2614, Athens, Oh. 45700 .
Oops!
Patty !hie Struble advises me
that tbe famlly film series "Focus
on the Famlly" w!ll be shown at the
Racine Flrst Baptist Chureh each·
Suriday for the ne)CI seven weeks
rather than nightly on a dally basts.
The , flrst of the tllms, ''The
Strong-Wllled Child" will be featured at 7: 30 ,this evening. The
se.r tes feat~u:es · Dr. James C.
Dobson, ass&lt;iclate clinical pro!es·
sor of pedlatrtcs, University of
Southern California.
As you undoubtedly know, the
cost of repairs - Like everything
else - continue ID rtse and as a
reswttbePomeroyand~rt

Libraries have to Invoke a $2 rental
charge on the 16mm movie projeeout
without charge for quite a spell.
tnrswhlchtloeyhavebeenlendbog
All the news Is not bad, however.
The llbrartes now have targetabte

~~l!yC~bg~sse:nd

a!"seof:
available for loan at no charge.

'l1oo8e In Rlla Rhodes

a picture.

,

and S&amp;eve Pattel'80o'o wedding pany pose for

Meigs school menus
In accordance with the unl1onn
menu program for schools of the
Meigs Local School Dlstrtct, the
following Is the menu !or this week:
M
onday - Cheeseburger on
bun/dUI slices, buttered corn, fruit,
cookie, milk.
Tuesday Beenle weenles,

creamy cole slaw, fruit, bread
butter,
mtlk. _ Chicken, noodles,
Wednesday
tossed salad, fruit jello, hot rolls,

But the 1!/eddlngs weren'tforreal.
Mock ceremonies are held at
Meigs High School every spring, a
conclusion to Bennlta King's famlly
living co\lrse, and follbw Jnstructlol)
on wedding etiquette, privileges and
reponslblllles that go with' marrtage, and the expense involved.
The weddings took place In the
music room, wWch had been
decorated with an archway, lighted
tapers bo candelabra and !lowers.
Music was provided by pianists,
Sonya Wise and Cindy Crooks, and
singing tor the wedding music were
Jeff Carson, Julie Spencer and Joy
Sauters.
·

A n;ocepllon followed with ~
tradltloaal tiered cake and JliiiiCh
beiJig served to the guests.
.
Taking roles In the ~,
Patterson wedding were Melvin
Van Meter, rnlmster; Robin Barrett, mald of honor; Ta,nya Stobart,
Z;ondra Vaughan, Rhonda Jeffers,
bridesmaids; Heinz Coates, best
man; Dean W))lttlngtoh, Barty
Pearson, and Greg Rife, UShers;
Andrea Hudson. flower girl; and .
Ertc Patterson, rtng bearer.
·
In the Welsh-Boatrtght wedding
party were Cheryl Rlffle, minister;
Kalby Dean, maid bf hOnor;
Roxanne McDaniel, Joy Sauters,
Lynn Epple, bridesmaids; Mark
Mattox, best man; Rick Chancey,
Charles David, Barry O'Brten,
ushers; Leanna Jo .Bush, Dower
girl.
noe Dowers for the mock wed. dings were donated I?Y Francis
Flortst and the Pomeroy Flowers
Shop. .

butter, milk.
Thursday _ Meat loaf, sweet
potatoes, celery stick, fruit cup,
mllk
Friday_ Cook's choice.

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Special for Mother's Day

10°/o OFF
Walking Lady
.trf

torotters

lfi

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-...;:;:::_.._...,_. "The most comfortable
walking shoe ever m ade."

The
Shoe Cafe

:1011 Second :\ ve.

Lafa)·ette

~lall

orts

em-met- Jtntin.d

'""'".etmo:
getting
. . the ·right
pitches

Reds top
Montreal
MONTREAL (API - Johnny Bench. who earlier cracked. hls :wth
career home run , singled in the go-ahead run in tbe sixth Inning¥ t:ltl'
Cincinnati Reds beat the Montreat Expos 4·3 Saturday.
·'
,l'he Reds tralled 3·2 entering tbe sixth but took advz ntage of the erratic
throwing arm of Montreal catcher Tim Blackwell, replacing Gary Carter,
who has missed the Last three games with a strained elbow .
. Eddie Milner drew a Leadoff walk against Expos starterCharUe Lea, 2-1,
and promptly stole second before .lll.klng third when Cesar Cedeno followed
with a sbogle. Cedeno then stole second and Blackwell' ~ throw sailed Into
center field for ·a n error that allowed Milner to score and Cedeno to
advance to third . Bench followed with a single. sending the Reds Into a 4-3
lead.
'
Cincinnat i's Rich GaLP. 3-0. limited the Expos to sLx hits a nd two walks
over 72-3 innings . BILL Schi"rtl'r· and Tom Hume finished up for th!' Reds.
Hume gained his third saye with the help of a ftne defensive play by center
fielder Eddie MILner, who threw out Doug FLynn attempting to score from
second on Terry Francona's pinch one-out single in the ninth.
Tim Wallach was Gate's main nem esis. delivering RBI singles Ln both
the first and (Lfth innings. Thf' SI'COnd RBI gave Ihe Expos a 3-2 Lead all hat
point.
'
Montreal's Andre Dawson rollec ted ·his I.OOJ!h career hit wtth a single Ln
the flrsl Inning. He a nd Carter arc thc only two Expos who have reached
the l,lXXJ.hit pta tpau.
Bench's Sl'Cond-lnntng homer, hls second of I he season. lied hlm with
Orlando Cep!'da for 22nd place on lhP all ·time llst. Duane Walker also
b!'lted a solo homer'lor the H!'ds Ln thf' llfth , his first thL' sPason.

By BILL WERONKA
AP Sports Wrtter
MINNEAPOLIS (AP ) -

ASk

John Castlno about being one of. the
Arnertcan League home run Leaders and he laughs.
"I won't be there Ln September,"
said the Minnesota 1'111!ns second
baseman, who had Wt stx homersas
of Saturday, just one beWnd leader
Fred Lynn of the California Angels.
"It's just one of those things. I'm
just getting the rtght pitches."
Someone mentioned that at his
current pace, Castino could Wt &lt;18
homers by the end of the season.
''Sure," he.responded skeptically.
The home runs are unusual, sboce
his career high for a season was 1J in
1981, but his other slats haven't
sll"ocked a nyone.
( ""castlno Is Wtttng .3()1 and Is near
~e top of the League In runsbattedln
(17), hits (28), runs (16), tolal bases
(55), trtples (2) and slugging
percentage (.004 ).
.
What Is amazing Is that he's
playing at au.
Castlno, 28, co-rookie of the year
in 1979, had surgery for a spinal
fUSion In October 1981, and, bY
normal standards, would have been
"out Of action for atleast a year.
Instead, he started his !!nit game
Aprll 19, 1982 alter badgering the
'1\vlns' doctnrs. And he started at
second base instead of tblrd, where
· · he had playeil most of Ws career.
His tenacity ·and [iei"Se'ierenee
have earned hlm respect among his
peers and so no one is surprised bY
his impressive start.'

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f i ..r-::1. ..,..e ~~!"·

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Linda Angel JftSided . Jack Zlnn aTXI Anne
~vttte led l'levot!OM . Elec tion was held and

offlcen elected

were

Calhy Halley, Angie

ztM, Kf'llh Angel, Tm-y HaUey: Tt:dd,
Randy and DaMy AngA, recreation commit·
lee; Jack Zlnn, saff:'ly chalnnan; l...e!Indra
Chapman, health chalnn an. Gut!'Sts were
Mrs. RosemaT}' Ange l and Mn. Louts Zlnn:
-1\ep)rt('f Terry Halley.

program . John Bl ack was speaker . We
dl.Jcussed oonstJtuUon and by-laws . We wUI
elect officers next llll'etlng and we will sell

codtbooks . Advlson are Joyce Young and
Becky Vanco. Membt&gt;rs present were Tonya

Black, Ttm Merry , J . C. Gla.~sbum, Annette
Moore, Andy Howard, Chuck Young, Q&gt;nc
V~nco.

-

Rcpor~r

Carole Carmlch a.e l.

Young Prt'1tnders 4-li Cub met F'f'b. a; at
Fred M cNeal 's home. Paul McNeal presided
and Dean McNeal 100 devoUons. GarnPt
M cNeal had

c:harg\~

or

the PfUgram. Paul

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

Rutland Furniture's Breakfast 'Set

Philadelphia Saturday. Dlaz WllS ti-ylng tb for the
ninth nm for the Ph!Dles, who settled for an g.j) win
behind · the two-hit pitching of Jolm Dennl . ( AP
Laserphoto ).

THIS WEEK'S SUPER SPECIALS

Myra Oweru~. Judy Siders, Ailsa lllillney.

were

guests. - Reporter Sa rdra Patrick.

Members present wert' K1m Lair. StaceY
Lair, Dean McNeal, Paul McNeel. Shaun
M cNeai, Tonya M cNeal, Myra Owens
Danny Patrlck , Sandra Patrick, Alt.s.a'

Rainey, Judy Siders. ll&lt;ih Lanch. Guests
Wfre Mrs. Mar)' Patrlck, Miss Vkky Siders,
Mr. and Mn. Charles Patrk'k. - Rej)Jrter
Sandra PatriCk.

Regular $449.95 .

SUPER SAU
PRICED .

$29995

.

Delivered

LAST SECOND DECISION - Second seeded John McEnroe decides at the Iaiit po!lllble secoDCI to Jet a voUey from Vltas Gendaltls go
long and out of bowodllln Sa&amp;urday's flnlt 11ernlflnal maWh of the World
ChampionShip Tennis Flnala In Dallas. McEnroe heat Gerulaltls 6-3,
6-2, 6-3. ( AP Laserphoto l.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -For the past four years

~7 · PIECE

BREAKFAST SETS
STARTING AS LOW AS

2322 Jackson Ave.
Point Ple..nt, W. Va.
Use our convenient drive thru

Mar 6, 1983
•

a
=
.... 4

MISter

Doru•t:

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More tban a great playPr,
Twyman , now a · supcrmarkf' t
executive Ln Cincinna ti , became the
legal guardian of hls teammate,
Maurice Stokes, when Slakes was
stricken with encephalitis Ln 19:'&gt;8.
Twyman cared for Stokes until hL•
death in 1970.

$22995

KINGS MILLS, OWo (AP) tbe Gray team 20-14 In the earLier
Freshman Keltb Byars rushed for a
ga me a t Massillon.
game-high 00 yards and one
The Buckeyes will conclude their
touchdown. and Rowland Ta tum spring drUis May 7 with the
returned an Interception for another tradi\Lonal Scarlet·Gray game a l
score Saturday to help tbe Gray Ohio Stadl wn in Columbus.
team beat tbe Sea riel 1!HO bo Ohio
Byars and Tatum were chosen
State's second spring Lntrasquad
the offensive and defensive stars of
football game.
the gam e. played at tbe College
Byars, a running back from
Football Hall of Fame. Tatum also
Dayton, took an option pitch-out
won defensive honors Ln the
from quarterback Mike Tomczak
Buckeyes' first intrasqua d game.
and dashed 'll yards tor a touch·
Rich Spa ngler kicked a 41 -yard
down that put the Gray squad ahead
field goal and fullback Va ug hn
for tbe flrst time In thegame. l:l-IOin
Broadnax bulled 1 yard for a
tbe fclurth quarter.
touchdown to help tbe Scarlet team
Tatum, a Junior linebacker.
build a 10.6halftlme lead . Scott Neff
· stepped In front ol a pass from
and Paul Allen booted first -half fi e ld
Scarlet quarterback Jim Karsatos . goals for the Gray team .
and returned It 32 yards to the end
Followbog a scoreless third quar·
zone for a 19-10 advantage.
ter, the Gray team drove 74 yards
It was Ohio State's second spring
and scored on Byars' run with 8: 54
scrtmmage. The Scarlet team beat
to play .

LONG ARMS - New York .Knick.~' Trent Tucker (8), center,
reaches for a shot bul Phliadclphla '78enJullus Erving (6) right, block.~
lhe shol Saturday attemoon at Madison Square Garden during first half
action. Philadelphia won, 10'1-lM. (AP Laserphoto).

Emslie takes case ·to National Labor Relations Board
BID E mslie was rated the top umpire in the

Limit One Coupon Per
Customer, Per VIsit At
Mister Donut.

'.

Grays edge Scarlets

You~ Pretenders 4·H Ciub met March 5ft l
Junior LaJr's home. Danny Patric k presided .
Dfoan M cNt'al led devotions and Nina Lair
had charge of the progra m . Kim Lair had a
demonstration on how to take pulse. We
decided to parUclpate In seUing c andy bars
for tne extensk&gt;n otrlce. Advisors 8J'"'t Juntor
and Nina Lair, Fred and Garnet McN eal

With Coupon

l,hilltt-'S R, A.'ttros 0
PHlLADELPHIA (AP I - John Denny allowed two hils a nd Ga rry
Maddox drovp in Ibn'&lt;' runs with a pair of doubles as lhr Philadelphia
Phlllles ddea tl'd thr Houston As tros 8·0 Saturday .
Denny, 3-1. struck out ltve, walked one and retl"f'll the f.Lna l16batters. He
didn't allow a runner to reac h second base.

Union President Lou WLII&lt;e .
Twyman, a standout at the
University of Cincinnati. epltom·
!zed the offensive forward, averagIng 19.2 points a game during his
11-year pro career wltb Llle Royals
in Rochester and Ctnclnnalt.

Associated Press Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. tAP! Former Cincinnati Royals star
Jack Twyman will be Inducted into
Basketball's Hall of Fame on
Monday, joining 139 others who
made important contributions to
tbe game.
AlsolnductedwUlbeFormerNew
York Knick stars BUI Brad ley and
Dave DeBusschert'; University of
North CaroUna Coach Dean Smith ;
and two pioneers of tbe modem
game. now dead . referee Lloyd
Leith a nd former Amateur Athletic

president : Tonyn McNeal, !leCf('tary; Sand!"a
Patrick, news rt'PJrter : Judy Skten, recrea-

Glazed Donuts

A's, Tigers tut PO!;tpont'&lt;l
.
OAKLAND. Calif. .(API - Rain fore«! the pos tponement of. the
scheduled American League gamP hetwrcn Oakland A's a nd the Di"trolt
Tigers on Saiur'day. 'llte game""' ' be played as part of a doubleheader
Sunday.

~

McNeal Is JX'(.'Sidc-nt: Danny Patrick. vice
tion ; Ken Lair. health off~r; retrE'ShmenlS
commlltee, Tonya McNE"al and Sandra
PatriC k . Advtoors are Fred and Gamet
M cNenl and Junior. Nina Lair. Members
Prt"SeRI "NCre Paul McNeal, Tonya McNeal,
DaMy Patr1ck, Sandra Patrick, Kim L.alr,
Stacey Lair. Dean McNeal, Shaun McNeal,

.

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If you can't sparkle plenty sparkle a little - and do keep
smiling ...

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llrnvr"' 6, Met.• I
NEW YORK !API -Cr aig McMurtry ptrrhcd a four·hiller and Dale
Murphy clouted hts sixth and seventh home runs, leading lhe Ail anta
Braves to a 6-1 victory over the New York Mets on Sat urday.
McMurtry , 2-1, struc k oul eight and walked onP .
Rick Ownbey. 0.1, he ld the Brav&lt;'s scor·elcss unt ll the s\xth. when
Murphy homered. The Braves scofed their f;'Ven tua l wll\1\lng run In the
seventh on a triple by Bruce Benedict and a double by Brett Buller.
Neil Allen replaced Ownbey in rhe ntnllt and was taggl'll for four runs.
two oflhem crossing the plate on Murphy 's second hompr·.
The Mets scored Ln I he sevmth on a onP-out triple by HublcB rooks and
Dave Kingman's infll'ld out.

Ex-Royal Twyman
will be inducted
..
,. .
....
,
into Hall-of-Fame ".. ...

Gallipolis

Table &amp; 4 Swivel Cha rs On Casters

Offer

.

By TRUDY TYNAN

Danny Patr1ck 1uld MLss Mlndy Kite

GaUia County Dairy Cl ub met F&lt;'b. 28 at
Joyce Young's home. J . C. G lassburn
pretkled. Joyce Young had chl:lll.Ce ~ t.h(&gt;

.

Astros tags Bo Dlaz of the Phlllles '"' a nm from thlnl
'"' a single In the eighth Inning of Uoelr game In

-----------4-Hnews-----------R.klge RuMers 4·H Club met March 2 a t
advl!ors' home. Roger and Linda Angel.

,.,. .

NOT EVEN CLOSE..:.. Alan Ashby of the Housion

t.'.rAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Ser.ond Ave.

Gallipolis, 0 .

I

International League. Now he's painting houses In
. Flortda, trustr~ted and sa~ he's been unfairly
denied a chance to make It loin major league
baseball.
Emslie and Riehle PWIUps, general counsel for the
Major League Umpires Association; have taken the
case to the Nallorial Labor Relations Board.
They say Emslie's vocal support or the strtke by
major league wnplres In 1979 has prevented him
!rom advl!JlCing despite being honored .tor Ws work bo
the Class AAA International League.
."He was very persuasive In convincing the minor.
·ieague ~ptres not to aecept positions In the ina)on
·during the strike," Ph!Wpa told 'I1Ie Columbus
1 Dispatch. "Sboce that lime, the (National Association's) Umpire Development Program has dtq:JJ)ed
Its ratings on him despite the fact that he has wo~
In the International League and baa bEet votl!d the
best W11Plre In the.league by thecoachel, managen,
. general ~nagen and players. Son1l!lhln&amp; II
wrong. ''
Emslie lost hil, job In the Iall!matlonal Leque
because Harold Cooper, cornrnlulcner of the

Columbus-based league, has a policy of not retaining
umpires who don't-have a chance to make It to the
majors.
"If the major leagues had told me they were
interested in him, he could have stayed here for
another 15 years, as far as I'm concen.ed," Cooper
said.
Cooper decided to release EmsUe and another
umpire alter the 1981 season, but said he brought
them back for another Yffil" alter tbe majors agatn
Indicated Interest.
· "In Emslie's case, the majors paid au of his
e~, salary and per diem tor the chance to.have
. another year to scout him," Cooper said. "I already
had a tuU complement or umpireS, so he was an extra
one. At the end ot the yffil" they said they were no
longer interested, and I released him again." ·
Cooper said the top salary lor an IL umpire Is
"about $l,&lt;XX&gt; a month" tor a five-month Job.
"After three or four years, it the big leagues aren't
Interested bo them, I think we're doing them a favor
by giving them their release,'; he said. "If they could
make • Uvinlllllhllleague, it would be ditlerent, but
they can't."
.

Emslie's living now comes entirely !rom painting
houses in Cl~arwater, Fla. Previously, the painting
had been off-season work he shared wltb Rich
Garcia, an American League umpire .
· Aller graduating !rom umpire school In 1974,
EmsUe made It from the rookie league to Triple A in
three years.
When tbe major league umpires went on strike in
1979, he was one o! l2 minor league umpires asked to
work. Only four o! them did, but all the others except
Ernslle wound up making It to the rnajorse\'entually.
"I beUeved bo the wnplres association's cause,"
Emsue told The Dispatch. "And 1did try to convince
the other umpires to support It, too. I was told by a lot
of people that I didn't need to l!&lt;i up to
big lealiues
then, because I was eventually going ID make It
anyway.
" All through the minors, I was told that I was
eventually going ID be a big league wnplre, and I
wasn't really worried at that polntatwhat supporting
the association might do."
noe. major leagues make their wnptrtng choices
based on reportS !rorn liCOUts and. the Umpire ·
Development Program directed by Barney Deary of
· the National Association.

the

Deary said he had been advised not to comment on
tbe Emslie case. However, he questioned the value of
the Umpire of the Year awards . saying, "you can get
them on any comer."
And, he added, "Some people develop real weU and
then all of a sudden they just peak out. It happens to
ball players aU the time."
Emslie, who gave 28 pages of testimony at an
NLRB healing last week, said he has been given
contllctlng reports on how his work was viewed.
He said fbat whUe National League President Chub
Feeney tnld him tbe reports on him were aU negative,
an wnplrlng scout and a major league umpire both.•
said they were positive .
. " I tbbok-be's an excellent umpire," the IL's Cooper
said. " I always have. I've told everybody that aU
along. But what I think doesn't matter much . If the
major leagues aren't boterested in him, which they
have said they aren't, then I don't see any reason to
keep him."
. "I honestly don't kltow who's to blame," Emslie
said. "I don't thbok the owners know Bill EmsUe from
Santa Claus, but someone Is Involved here bo
something that's not kosher ."

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E;

May 1, 1983

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

C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

. .

r... .Scoreboard Montreal -Expos top Cincinnati Reds 9-6 in slugfes
...
. . . Majors
.....
...
t:·
.......,..-.
By11w~P1'811

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST DlVI!ION

...
...
J .

U8

MilwaWtee

.............
,,.
'

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./. .

·-.
,, .
•.,...
.,.
..

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8 ,9
8 10
Tc.-onto
C'lt&gt;vt&gt;lund
8 11
M:ST DIV&gt;IION
Kansas City
10
6

Call!om!.a

Oek!and

u

Minnesota
Chicago
Seenll&gt;

10
f!

9~

8
10
~
1•1
WEln' Dr\IISION

All.a nla
Cloclnna II

.722

\7

How10n
San F'rand!lCU

II
1\

13

.381
.11 6

7
8

I~

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'.

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SUnday'R GIUI"'Ir.tl

:;_ GALUPOLIS - Captain D's
~;. softball team of Gall!polis Is
.._,
- sponsoring an -A.S.A. round robin
_ ,softball tow-nament May 7 and 8.
:.~Call 614-4~6694 after 5 p.m .
:,, , E ntry lee !s $60 and two game
..,. balls .

San Dll!gu 111 Pltt,;Wfl(h

Houston at Phlladel]:i1ltt
AtlanLa at New York

Cincinnati at Montn'a l

San Francisco at Sl . l..ouls
Lo!i ~lcs at Chlca li:O

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Leaders

,

Boston . .:r7J: HaS9cy,

.:m.

(.lcYcland . ..m: Tabli'r, Ck&gt;vt&gt;laOO,
RUNS; Brott. Kan.'Hlll C,:lty, IS; Casttoo.
Mlnnf&gt;!llla , 16; lhvnllll(. Ca lllomla ; · 1&amp;:
Demazard, t lllcallO. L\ E.MUJTay, Baltl

DOUBLES: Bn&gt;tt. Kall.':lll.~ Ci ty, 12:
Bogs, Boston, tl; S.Hmdcr9Qn, SCnltlc , tl;
Bwth, Mlflll('l()\a , 7; Jo'oor 111m tl«:: w ith
miPLES: .G.Wil!IOtl, Detroit, 4; E'·ans,
Ho&amp;ton, 3; Tabler, Clevl•lancl, J; Wlnfk!ld,
New York , J.
HOME RUNS: Lynn. Ca!Uomla. 7: Cu·
tlno, Mlnnetota, 6; Barfield, Toronlo, !i;
Brett. KaMil! City , 5; Dl(:\IICPI, Callfor·
nla . ~; Kl!lle, Ctlkogo. !'J; Rice, EloiiiOrl, 5.
SI'OL.EN BASES: J.Cna, SCOttie, 13!

W'NII8on, Ka/\181 City, U; GBI'('la, Toronto, 9; · M.DBvlA, O.klaOO, 9: Baylor,
New Vorl!:. G: Collins, Toronto. 6:
R.Henrle£'!1011, Qaklard, 6.
P11'CHJNC (3 dl'l'l!llorul) : F\a_NJKan,
Baltimore, :J..O, I .IJII. Hl : Fonteh. Call ·
fom la, :J..O, um, 110; Gura. Kan.-.as City,
4.0,
3.16; Mterqror. Balttmon:o. Ul,
l.Ll ; MomM . Tormto, J.a, 1101,

um.

u:m..

0.00:

Pttry. [)ptrolt, J.&lt;l. t.IDI. 2.01:
SmttNon, TeM~, J.O,
1.
mtiKEO~:
Surtl, Turonto, 2!1;
BlyleYen, CleWLand, :ll; Morr\1, DPtroU.

um. 1•.

lll; Bal'kl'r, Cleveland, 24: RawiP.y, Nt'W

York. 2.1.
SAVES: SlaNey, Boston, ti: CaudlU ,
Seatde, •: Q.J!Jienbt.•f-ry, Kunsas Clly, 4:
SpiU~rr. ~veland, 4: Beard, Oakland. :1:
R.Da vts, MIMC!Ilta, l

NATIONAl. LEAGUE
Rh'rMNG 125 at b.otsl : T.Kf"f!JW'dy. San
01~·

ter, C!nc!Jinal\, ..m; T .("(orot., Phlla·
delptlllil, .l11 : He!IIrtek . St.l.ooiJ!.. .J70.
RUNS:
Garvey.
San I:H!:1ro. 16:
SChmidt , PI\U!Kk'lph\a, 16; Bon!Ua. san
Dk'JfO, 14: GUf'rrero. l..oli AJ"«('k!s. 14:
M8lthi!W1. l•h!J&amp;drlphla, 14: M urphy . AI·
lanta, H: S.SWt, Loll Anac-lcs, 14.
R 81 : H @nd rIc It , St,l.ouls, 19;
T.Ki&gt;nlM!dy, S.n Dk&gt;tfo, 19: Murphy , AI
lanta. 18: Gamrr. Hou! \on, 1~ !Guet'n'ro,
1.41 Ar\a('lel, L~; l..andreaUII, ~ Anac" k'l,

...

Hrt"S:

Ronllla ,

T.KeiW\fdy, San
natl, 2:1; Cnal.,

Dlt-f:o,
lJ;
CJt'Ntrr, C!nt·ln·
216; T'htln, IIOUll·

2.-J.

,Qac1nniiU. '6: WUAI.Jii1on , Atlanta. n: CfL
deno, ClnCIMall, !'J; DIIW!iOII, MOIIII'l'!tll, !'J;
J .Ray , Ptlll!burgt\, !5; l.nritOO. SA.n ~ -

... '·
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.. *'Phil.

Sale Price
of Case
Mail-In
Rebate
Your Final
Case Price

HOME RUNS: Gucll'f'ro, Ia An,re lf'l.

6,: Hendrltk, st.IAU.La, 6; Schmidt, PhUa·
6; C.Davis, Sliln Jo"ranf'J IOO, 5;

Jlor'Mr. Atlanta, !i; M\IJflly. Atlanla . ~ STOLEN OASES: Lacy, Plltsbwl!:h. 11:

Lacy, Pl!tatiW';tl. ~; S.SU, IAII t\nit'II"S,

'•

E.Milnl.&gt;~,

Cincinnati. fi; Mon:ono,

llou.~ ·

lm, 6; R.alDH. Montreal: 6: Wllson. Ntw

York. 6.
PITCHING £3 decisions): P . ~. Atl.ulla, 4-1), l.tm Reu.M, lhl .1\nge}a .l(l,

Case of 12

SlODB

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ol gr. de &amp; wt .l One $3.00 reba te per lam1iy l per address.

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Valvollne ~ ~Valvol
Dll
Diesel
Filters
~ALnuMf
Oil

Valvollne

ATF

'Die..,Jf'l'uJI&gt;D .

·-·~ · I
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Dexron
'

99~ $1'!

Case of 12 · $11 .88

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20W-50. 40 wt. or 50 wt.

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Case of 12 -

Case of 12 - $11.88

·• Sizes to fit most cars .

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McWWiaml. Ptittbullfh, ~ PP.~. Atlana, :.!5.
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SAVES: S.Ho\1.\1, lal Angt'les. 4· [)(L

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CD-2

. 011 Detergent
Oil Treatment

$)4!

Puncture
Seal
w.lth Hose
$4.99
Sale Price .$3.93
Mail~n •$3 011
Reg. Price

Rebate

Snap
Power
Steering
Fluid

Outboard Oil·

$1 ~! ,;~,
89

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COST

sa

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(IM.W..O,--Nl
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San AniONO Uf. Deln'fr lCII
s.n Antonio 121. DM~Yer us,

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&amp; Visa.

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801 ~COND AVE~, GALLIPOLIS

or

San A.ntonJo 11 {)eonver, In! , Monda)',
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.

•••
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(16oz.
Case of 12 · $10.68

Limit : One Puncture Seal rebate
per lamily/ per address .

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. 750 167 1!!14

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$1.53R13

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M.lchlgan at BOIUCil
BlrTningham at WashingtOn
New~ a t Denwr
C'hkqo at Lo6 Angt&gt;Jes

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1 55 80 A 13
18580Al3
19575A14
20575A14
205 75 A 1 5.
2 1575A1 5
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Center~

Rec............. .. .. ....... ....

..... 7·9 p .m ./College Swim.

Ret .................................. ........ .. ................. ,

p . m ./Col~

FET:

Arizona at Oe.Jdand. fnl

May 2 8-10 p.m ./College Rec.................. ............
.. ..... ~ 10 p.m ./College Swtm
May 3 J:.xl p.m!Men 's Track vs. WDm lngton
8-10 p.m ./College- Rec.......... ..
.. ...................... Closed
May 4 S-10 p .m ./College Rec............. .
.. ...... .... . ......... ..... &amp;.10 p.m ./Col lt&gt;ge Swtm
......... CloO'd
~ay 59 a.m .4 p .m./Special Oh·mplcs
May 6 9 a .m .·l p .m./Special Olympics
.. ................... 7·9 ~ . m .!Ope n Swim
7-9 p.m ./Open Rer .
May 7 1 p m ./BasebaU vs ...... ............ .
. ..... ........ 24 p .m ./Open Swtm
Parkersburg CC
2-4 p.m ./Open Rec .
May 8 1-4 ~.rn ./ Open

Plus

_Whittwell
low Price FET
$42 .00 $1 .53
52 .00 1 .92
60 .00 2 . 18
62 .00 2.34
65 .00 2.47
69 .00 2 .59
72 .00 2 .78

l -4 p .m ./Open Swtm

Rec....................... .. ................... ...... .. .... 7·9 p.m .!College·Swlm

Tl

PO

STEEL
·RADIAL
State No. 223X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CON DITION OF

•

oti ', •

10W-40

limit: Valvoline rebate good on only one case (your

54: Bloreayt, Cincinnati. 34; So\1), Clnl'ln·

L..!ut, San otego, 3; C.rU!r. Alhmla. 3:
!Acu, S.n 06ejo, 1 Minton, San F'ran·
ctlco, 3: Mlnton. San 1-"'rant'bco, ~ St&lt;'W·
art. 1AA Angdet, 3.

.

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Case of 12 -

.M. ~. Montret.l. 3-1. .ml:
Show. San Oteao. :n .7!JO; Valer\zU(&gt;ta,
LoA Anae&amp;et. 3-1, .r.!O.
!ITRD&lt;EOU'I'S: Carlton, Philadelphia .
Valenzuela, U.

'

.6.25 ' 182 153
_150 123 1fll

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~ $9.48

1.lln A.Pt&gt;na. Lee .\naek'll, 3·1, .'00,
camp, Allanta, 3-1, .7!10; Dravtdcy, San
01e10. 3-1, ."1!10: ~l'llo . Mootn•111, .1-1.

1\111, JJ;

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Your Final 59~
Quart Price .
,.

St .Louis, 3:· Moreno. Houslun. 3.

t:

6
7

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.,........

qt.

tOW-30 &amp; lOW-40 Example:

1lUPLES: 0\tW!OO, MOnt!Y'al, J; Gl'('efl,

'

0

2
1

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Get a $3.00 Mail-In Rebate
when you buy a case of Valvoline!

DOUBLES: Ashby. Houston . 6: Or-:'ltf'r,

•

CUSTOM
POLYSTEEL·

W LTPct. PFPA
0 .!m 161! 1J

7 1
5 J

.:r
.,..-(:,

30 wt. or 20 wt.

Sun

Di&lt;?J, :D;

Uou.&lt;~ton ,

-

U1lled Bllllel Fooiii.ii 14qut

Other Winners tor the bi)ys were
Troy Bauer, pole vault and the
Meigs relay team of Jon Perrin,
Mark Hammonds, Chad WW!ams,
and Craig Sinclair, all juniors, won
the m!le relay.
Seconds were Mike Kennedy,
both 1600 and 3200; Perrin, :n:l high
hurdles; WUJtams, 100; Perin,
Sinclair, Kennedy, and Allen Terry
in the 3200 relay, and Hanunonds,
Sinclair, WUJtams, and Bauer in 400
relay .
Thirds went to Jerry Brevlck In
the 100 hurdles. Williams, ~. and
John Smith, 300 hurdles. Fourths
Won were by Greg Lathey, dlscus,

-' 'I'

...

HPO

YOWit, MJJwuket&gt;, L'i .

l.ynn, Calllornla . Zl ; Brett. Kan-

sas City. n Klttif'. ChiCago, Jg; Rict',
Boston, Ul; Thornton, &lt;.1f.'V('Iand, Ul.
HITS: Ca11'W. Cti lllornl!l , 32: Bn:•ll,
Kansas City. 29: Cai'itlno. Minfl('5()ta. 21:1:
Yount, Mllwttukce, 'P: fJoRB!l, Bo6ton, 26;
S.Hlmdt&gt;r!OO, SPallle, 26.

ton ,

.

.....,

City . .400: Carow, Cautornta, .&lt;&amp;.18; SIK&gt;I ·
by, UaiUJ'TKm'. .&lt;115; l..liYit'llSI1•in . 1\altl ·

L~;

YOUR ONLY AUTHORIZED:
GOODYEAR DEALER

...
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.. p-~~------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiil

AMERICAN I..EACmE
BATMNG I~ ai bats t: 8rt"t1. Kansai'i

RBI

..

USFL results

•

7-9 p .m ./College

nlnp, !.l.ISpt'rded.

more,

tm.

D.\Til - GYMNI\SIUM
POOL
May 11-4 p.m ./Open Rec ....................................... .. .... .............. . 1--4 p .m ./Open Swtm

Captain D's to
sponsor tourney

Hooston 6, Phlladell)t!lo :1. IU Innings

moN' . .Jitl ; Bot!:KS.

400.

Scott, long jump, Sinclair,

Tile boys' team had Saturday off
while the girls traveled to the
Minford Invita tiona!. Tuesday,
both the boys and girls teams travel
to Federal Hocklng to race the
• LanCer.;. Eastern will compete 1n
the boys' competition only.

Shawn Eads again led the boys In
po!nls as the swift junior won both
the 100 and 200 while llnlshing
second !n both the high jump, and

Lyne

NPW Yor k 6, Atlanta~
San Franclllm a. St . Lnub fl. tk&gt;. 14 In·

Dk1ro . .l!O: Hrt"P. Nrw, York, .:116;

•

"

ley, BOO.

Keith

100, and Terry'

Week of May l, 1!183

~.

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.' .

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1

serond In the 100.
. Thlrcls went to Karen Spencer,
shdt put, Haddox, high jump,
Sherry Russell. discus, Fry, 1600,
and Turner, 200.
Fourths earned were Mae Nakamota, both high jump and ~.
Spencer. dlscus, and Kristin Bai-

Gune~~

... .
''..
'.

EXTRA! $3.00 Mail-In Rebate Offer!

f

By Keith W18ecup
POMEROY - In Meigs High
School track action Tl)ursday, the
• girls whipped both Wellston and
•. Oak Hlll In the thl'ee-way meet.
while the,boys: pi8Cecl second.
Final point standlrigs were
(girls ), Meigs ~. Oak Hill 40.5, and
Wellston 21.5 and (boys). Wellston
89.5, Mel{l!l 53, and Oak Hill 22.
Freshman Dreama Engllsh stole
the show lor the Marauderettes as
she sped to tour first places. The
short -distance speciallst English
won both the 100 and 200 meters
while learning with Paula Swisher,
Linda Stewart, and Charmele
Turner to win the 400 and BOO
relays.
. Others winning for Meigs' girls
: were Rhonda Haddox In the long
. jwnp: Penny Dewhurst , BOO; Lisa
_ Riggs, Kristin Ba!ley, Ruth Fry,
and Rowena Averton, 3200 relays,
and Renee Willis , Melissa Howard,
Carol Bailey, and Rhonda Neece,
1600 relay .
Taking seconds were Karen
Goggins In both the shot put and
discus, Neece, high jump; Swisher,
long jump; Susanna Wise, 100
hurdles; Riggs, 1600; W!ll!s, 400,
and Turner and Swisher tied for

Montreal 9, Clnc1nnatl ll
Lo!i Angeles 4. Ch lcal\'0 .1
San Diego at Plttsburgh. ppd ., rain

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EXTRA! 12th Annual Oil Sale!

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.:'11!
.461

San Dk'lto

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6
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6

PIM.~b!Jll(h

New York

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10

Frlda,r'11

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where I threw quality pitches, they
fouled It ott.
·"Whatthlsgamewas, was a team
Tile Expos picked on starter
effort that picked us up by the
bootstraps.''
Frank Pastore, 2-3, In their flrst!rmlng assault. Raines walked to
Some of the llttlng. was done by
Wallach, who entered the game · start the Inning .before moving to
mired In a Hor-15 slump that had
third on Uttte' s single and scoring
dragged his average down to .176 .
on a sacrifice fly by Andre Dawson.
"I've spent at least 45 minutes a
Little took 'Second on the sacrlf!ce
day !n the batting cage," said , before advancing to thlrQ on AI
Wallach. "But when I've gone on the . Oliver's single and scoring on a
field, I've been swinging too hard
passed · ball by catcher Dann
and llying to hit the ball out of the
B!lardello.
park.

W_ J •..Fct._ GB
St . Louis
Montroal
Philadelphia

Los Angek's

•

....
Jl4

10
16

"Instead of being ~ve. I've
been over-aggressive. I have to
relax and just let thingS happen.

qua!Jty pitches. In !our or five cases

Mllwautoo at Minnesota
C'k.&gt;wland at Kansa..&lt;i City
New York ot Texas
Boston at california
Df'fm(t at Oakland
BaJUmore at Seattll&gt;
NA110NAL LEi\GVE
EAST DJ\'t~ION

'• .

I

I
2%
l

hits and lssulng five walks, entered
the ninth leading IK, but left When
the Reds load€d the bases with one
out. Dan Schatzeder relieved and
the Reds promptly made It ~ on
Dt1essen's Infield out and an RBI
single by Oester. Reliever Jcf1
Reardon got the final - 6ut for his
second save.
Rogers, who had not pitched since
the previOus Frtday, said his
problem wasn't related to one
speclf1c thing.
"U it was, I would have corrected
it," he said. "!was getting ahead of
batters, but not closing !t out with

when they grabbed a 5-0 lead !n the
first inning, hlghilghted by Tim
Wallach's two-run home run, his
first of the season.
But It was not one of the Sharper
outings tor starting pitcher Steve
Rogers, who yte!ded a solo homer to
Ron Oester In the fourth and
run-sconng singles to Cesar Cedeno
and Dan Dtiessen in the fltth.
Tim Raines, on base five times
with thne hils and two walks, then
tripled In·two Montreal runs In the
l!tth and Bryan Little followed with
an RBI single.
Rogers, despite atiowlng eight

Ctlk:aao at Toronlo

O.k ...

4,'

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Balll.mon.&gt; 9, Seattle 1
- __ - Sunday'a Games

•

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476

lklston 6. Callfornilll S
Oakland 5, Detroit 4

''

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Cblcago 9, TOOJOIO ]
M11'11'1f'Klta 1, Mllwauket' 4
Kansas Cl!y ti. Cleveland ~. 11 Innings
Texas 8, New .Yor~ J

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.444
421

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------' W

MONTREAL (AP) - After
watching his team collect16hitsand
nine runs, one might have expected.
Montreal Expos manager Bill
V!rdon to have enjoyed himself at
the ballpark Friday.
Guess again.
"! never relaxed the whole
game,'' V!rdon said once the Expos
defeated the Cincinnati Reds 9-6.
"You fret more In games like that,
where the pitcher·~ having trouble,
than you do !n the dose ones, where
you're leading or have to come !rom
behind."
•
The Expos seemed about to coast

19J3
·:_ Meigs girls trip Well~ton,
Marauders ·second in meet

..•.
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The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohi o and Foreign a nd Domestic Subsidiaries. at the close of business
on March 31, 1983, a s ta te ba nking institution organized a nd operating under the
banking laWs of this State and a member oft he F ederal Reserve System. Pub!shed
In accordance with a call made by the State Banking Author!tle and by the Federal
Reserve Bank of thi s District.
.
ASSETS
Cash a nd due from d! s posltory Institutions ........ .... .............
.. 1,759,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ................. .... .................. .................... .. .. .. 5,1l!8,000.00
Obi!gations of othe r U.S. Government agenc ies a nd corporation s .. ... 5.780.000.00
Obl!gat!ons of State and pol! tical subdivisions
!n the United Sta tes ...................................... ..... .......................... 3,136,000.00
All other securities ..... ...................................... .. ................ .. ... ....... .... 30,000.00
Federal fund s sold and sec urities purc hased under
agree me nts to r esell ... ................ .... ... ........ ........ . ...... :........ ... .. ..... 7,350,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding un earned income) ....... .. .... 15,398,000 .00
Less: Allowance lor possible loan losses ....... ............. 150,000 .00
Loans, Net ................ .... .. ..... ......... .. .................................. .. ....... 15 .249 ,000.00
Bank premis es, furnitu re and f! x tures, and ot her assets
representing ba nk premises .............. .......... .... .. ......... .. ............ ...... 384.000.00
All Ot he r assets .. ..
.. ............ .... ........ ........................................ 572, 000,00
TOTAL ASSETS ........... .. ...... .... .. ...... .. ............................ .... .... .. ..... 39,348,000.00
LIABILITIES
Dema nd deposits of !ndlv!duals. partnerships
a nd corporations .... .................... ... ..... ...... .... .............. ...... . ......... 6,660 ,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individua ls, partnerships ,
and corporations .................................... .... ................................ 26,298.000.00
Deposits of United States Government .. .... .. .. ............. ..... ... ............... 14.000.00
Deposits of States a nd pol!t! ca l s ubdivi sions In the
United States ..... ....... ............................. ......: ...... ... .... ...... ,. .......... 3,032,000.00
AI! other deposits ......... ... ..................... . ... ... ...... .. ... ... ....... :7:............ .....1,000.00
Certified and ot!! cers' c hec ks .. .... .... ....... ........ ....... ................ .. ...... .. ... 169,000.00
Total Deposits .... .... ...... ... .. ................................ .. .............. .. .......... 36,174.000.00
Total demand deposits ........................ ............ .. ...... 8,388 .000.00
Tota l time and savings deposits .. ....... .. ... ............... 27,786 ,000.00
Other !!a bili ties ......... ... ...... ...... .. ............ ...................... ......... .... .. ...... 486,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITI ES (exclud ing subordinated
note a nd debentures ................ ...................... ................ .... ...... 36.660.000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common Stoc k
No. s hares authorized 16,000 (par value)
No . shares outstanding 16.000 (par value) .... ................ .. .. ....... .. .. 400,000.00
Surplus .... ........ ........... .......... ... .... .. ............... ..... .. ..... .. :.. ...... ............ 600,000.00
Undivided prot!ts a nd reserve for cont ingencies
and ot her capital ... .. .................. ........................... ..... ... ............. .. 1,688,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. ........................................ ...... .. ........ .. 2,888,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQU ITY CA PITAL .. :.......................... 39,348,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outsta nding as of r e port date:
Time certificates of deposit in denoll'!nations of
·$100,000 or more ............ .. ...... .... :.... ....................... .'........... ...... .... 100,000.00
Average lor 30 calendar da ys (or calendar month ) e nding with report date:
Total deposits ................... .. ............ ....... .. .... .. ....... .. ....... ............. 31.938,000.00

R:B
HI-MILER
Size
750-16

Price
FET
$56.00 $2.81
74.00 3.54

L------------------J

BUT.

• •

Tires aren't all we are!

Service-

America's
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car battery.

Brake
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2-WHIIL FAONT DIIC : lnetall new
lronl brak• p1d1 tnd ore"'e sealt •

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THE
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$3995 Installed

rotort •

Repack tro nt

whetl btlringa • lnspecl cali pers end
hydrauli c lyttern • Add lluld jdOtl not
In clude rear whMitl

oroup 2-24
Exchange

..WHI!L DRUII : lnst ell new brak e
lining , 111 rour whlllll l • New front
ore•ee Mill • Rt1ur1ace drums • Ae·
pack front b..ringa 11 Inspect hydrau·
lie IJIIIIIm II Add fluid

l, Roger W.Hysell , Cashier·. of the a hove- named bank do hereby declare that
this report of condition has been prepared In conform ance with the In structions Is·
sued by th e Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System a nd t he State Banking Authority and i.s true to the best of my knowled ge and belle!.
Roger W. Hysell
We, the undersigned directors , attest the correctness o!thls report ol conditi on
and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belle! has been prepared In conformance with th e !n~tructton Issued by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Rese rve System and the State Banking Authority and is
true and correct.
·
·
RICHARD C. FOLLROD
BEN H. EWING
THEREON JOHNSON
-DIRECTORS

426 Viand Street
Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

1

�The Sunday Times-Sentinel-l'age-C-5

.

whh Low .Low Prices on Body Repair Kits,
Guages, Paints and Accessories

with Savings on Tune-up Items,:Shocks and FiHers

SALE!

49c ..... -

Standard

•

Resistors

Valvoline

5.88 5 qt. cost
after rebate

Reg . 1.07

6.48 5 qt. cost
after rebate

Reg. J.Q5 .... .. . . ... ....... ......
For 4 eyl. Fords

!"•&lt;&gt;U I

For most domestic cars e.:cept

Vega diesel and turbo Reg. 4.44

E-Z:Ride
·Shocks
By Monroe Auto Equip. Co.
Heavy Duty
. Shocks .................
Reg. 10.95

1

I

:Oil Pan
Gasket.............................
)liio:
from 4.!15

·

"1

Save over ' 3

'

50.95

~~
~~tJi~~

Raider 14x6

14x6 48.95

3.50

12.95
Plastlcolor

79~95 ·

lnterpart
Window

1

59C
per qt. after mig's $1
rebate with 5 qt purchase

39.95

CarPt ed Import

Reg. 17.95

L.!::::::!..!::::::!.J

Reg. 81).95

llmH 12 on all sate oils

~~ Nationwise

from

11 .95
•

10W30 5 qt.

Fore1gn Auto
Water Pumos
from 16.!5

17.88 Pick up

22.95

Sperex
Enamels or
Primers
Reg . 1.95

Reg.-2.99 ·
B oi. 09'08·24

Reg.
Ford t9 . ·
Chevy 192 • ,·-..

rnoun tm g b racke t s hardware
in s tallati dn insl!u c lions

·1.29

~lal Finish

Truck Mats

..1 0.88
Oil/Amp/Water .. ........13.88
Kit includes guag e pane1

Your Choice

with Savings on Waxes and

Summ~r

Chemicals

·2.96:rf.!.sso
IAPCO

!~9~~Toyota
. ~~.~.C......30242.21 : .:.
E~&lt; ample

Distributor Caps · .:

.

~~............... ~6~
Example Toy ota C 3030

3.95 sale
1.00 mig' s rebate
2.95 your cost
attar rebate

5.96 : :

3.39

Car Ramps.

Reg. t9.95 1077
6500 lb.
.

Eagle I
Wheel
Cleaner

Mats Reg. 17.95

1.88

Oil/Water ..................

per pair

1.99

Floonnats

~=;;:::;112.95 Custom
I
Mats Twin Front

Cai'Jlaro Fireblfd

Price oo

Foreign
Auto
Starters or

Jack
Stands
Reg. 5.49

~!.'2~pers

Sunspoke Ill

&gt;

011/Amp ........................

Adjustable

7.88

48.95

Edico Guages

2.88

Save over ' 5

with Foreign Auto
from

12.95

Klasslc 14x6

'

.·

from

SAE. and t.,!etric Reg . 7.95

louvers
Example: '75·'81

Sale ?fY;

~--~::::::~

..,

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.-

ValveCov~r
~......................... from 2.25

·Ultra Air
Shocks ............. -.v.
Strut
Replacement

•·

40 pc Socket Set

(.·~"%~~ '' Keyslone
Wheels
•

7

Van &amp; Truck
Shocks .............

',Reg . .15'..95

"

Reg. ~8 .95

Valvoline
10W40

..,.

Fram
Air FiHers

'

Distributor Caps

pun::hase

-----,-~------

'

Reg 10 -'9 . .. . .......... ......::

.
per qt. after
mig's $3 rebate with 12 qt

5 qts oil 9.48 sale price
·3.00 mig's rebate

. ;. ·

Fof 6 cyl. C!lryalers

Actron
Timing Lite
or Dwell

c
54

•'

"

Tune-Up Kits

15.88

per qt. after mfg's $1
.rebate with 5 qt purchase

3.29

Electronic Exampl&amp;: :,

Fluorescent
Automotive
Worklite
12 Volt

3.88

Fender
Cover
Reg . 6.95

Reg. 3.95.,, ••.• ••,, ,,,,,,, .... ,,
Fo r 6 cyt. G.M.

Your Choice

54C

•

9.44

, For most domesti c cars except

Autolite
§J;!n~~ pe!ugs

.
'

Reg . 87C

9~ea.

purchase
5 cits oil 8.88 sale price
-3.00 mig's rebate

Fram
Oil FiHers .
HP·1, HP-4 Reg. 3.44 ·

mig's $3 rebate with 12 qt

_,

~9~88

1.99

age ea.

.

Foreign Auto ·
PCV Valve..................................... from
Foreign Auto
··· ·
Fuel Filters.................................... trom
Foreign Auto
Thennostats. ................................ from
Foreign Auto
-~ .
Voltage Regulators ............... lrom

1

· n ,ro,

from

Foreign Auto
Oil Filters

:

1.95
·•

3~4~

,

2.95

from

Foreign Auto
Air Filters

: ·
95
19.
·

2.9·5

5 Minute Motor Flush

6.69 'sale
3.00 mig ' s rebate
3.69 your cost
alter rebate

efter$1 rebate

3.69

Turtle Wax
Minute Wax

etters3

Reg . 1.95

~

Save over $3 after Rebate!
· T1 5 8 oz. spray
T16 16 oz. liquid
T17 t 3 oz. paste

1.00 mig 's reba1e
2 .95 your cost

4 oz . Reg. 1.95
Prot ec t s an d be ~IU!ifl es vinyl

Solder Seal
Power
Steering Fluid
or Brake Fluid

leather , pla sti c e tc

1.95 8oz.
5.49 Twin Pack
Reg 2.98

Reg . 1.39 pi n!

Sale 6.59
Reg . 6.95
16 oz. il q. BP25 paste BP30

3.95 safe

Annor All
Protectant

99C

Blue Poly
Sealant

Sole 3.05
Reg. US

ggc

2.49 at. Brake Fluid

Reg 7.49 ,

Reg. 3.49

after rebate

2..59

after •1 rebate

Simonize
~Y Guard
Reg 5 95
AS951 14 0 1
AS953 16 0 1
AS95 4 Ex pre ss

with S2 - ss Off Kelly Springfield Tires!

32.95 .

OOOFF

Carburetors

Benchmark 78's

Aamanulactured
1 BBL Reg. 40.95

All with rttbulld. exch.

Nationwise Maintenance
Free Calcium Batteries

27.88 40 month
34.88 50 mon.th

Reg 32 .88

Reg 41 88

"""'"• ..•"" 60 month Reg . 47.88

batl,orles with eMchange. A\laitable for most cars and
Never needs water und er norm al d0nd11ions

41.95z BBL
61.954BBL

49.88

9.95
Nationwise
Dorey
40 Month
Marine Starter Motorcycle
Batteries ·
Batteries
·
Honda, Kawaskl, Yamaha
With exchange Reg. 59 .88
Suzuk i Reg. 12.95

Reg. 55.95

SIZE

A78x13

Ro~?S24

REG.

B78x13......... ..........
$30.00
E78x14................ ...
$35 .00
F78x14........... ...
$37.00
G78x 14....... ............
$39.00
H78x14:.. ................
$41.00
600x15........ ...........
$35.00
G78x 15.... .............. .
$40 .00
H78x15...... ....... ......
$42 .00
L78x15 ...................
$45.00
F.E.T.1 .76-U8

Reg. 76.95

fiom

9.95:

'

$22

s3.00 OFF
Superchargers
60 &amp; 70 Radials

SALE

$28.00
$33.00
S35.00
S37.00
S3t.OO
Sl3.00
$38.00
S40.00
SU.OO

SIZE

$·53

P205 Rt3 Rogulor S55
RE G.

P235 Rt 4.. .
$63 00
P235 Rt 5....
$68 00
P275 Rt S.......
$78 00
Pt85 Rt 3..... ..
$5100 ... ,
P205 Rt3. ..... .... ....
$56.00 ·
· P205 R14... ... ..........
$59.00
P225 Rt 5... .....,..........
s 7_.oo
570 00
P235 Rt 5... ...
F.E.T.1.t5·3.38

s

SALE
S6o .oo
$65.00
$74.00
148.00
$53.00
$56.00
S84.00
$67.00

With rebuildable exchange

from

ggc

INSTALLATION FREE

Gas FIHers

9.88

from

22.95

Aemanufap1ured

Air Conditioning

BloWer Motors . .
With exchange
Air Conditioning
Control Valve• lrilm

Water Pumos

8~

For most domesti c

6~· 71

Air Conditioner

10.50 Freon
M8141FR12

antflffiport

·

~~''!,&lt;..::;!'! ;1

!

cars all 2 BBL V8 Chevy

307-350 with rebuild .. exch .

.

:e.. JointS...........
filii. 'from

Q..

rrom

14.95

Radiator and

14.95 With rebuild. oxen. for most do mestic 4·6 ~yl.
cars

lma•lmum •2 per tire)

By Pall HoJe

.

Fan Balt1.................. .

~eg. 1.49

STORE HOURS:.·
SUNDAY 10 AM. TO S P .M~
MON. THRU FRI. 8:30 TO 8 P.M.
SATURDAY 8:30)Q 6

'
•

•

..

'

\

\

\

'

446-3807

ss.oo OFF

Mark GP Radials
SIZE

Reg .

SALE

P18580 Rt 3 .... ..
Pt9575 RtL . .
P20575 R14..... .......... ....

$45 00
$4800
$48 00

S39.00
142.00
$42.0 0

P21575 R14 ... .. ....... ....

S5J.OO

S47.00

. P21575R15. .
$5500
P22575 R15 ................... $5700
P23575 R15 . . . ..... ........ .. $63 00
F.E.T. 1.58·2.86

$49.00
$51.00
$~ . 00

�'

llay 1, 1983

Pomeroy-Middlaport- Gallipqlis, Ohio-Paint Plaamnt, W. Va.

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Senti.nel

'

CHICAGO-ManagerLeeElia's
tirade against the fans and mfflla
that have bEen rtdlng his 5-14
b;illclub - the worst record ln the
major leagues - almost cost him
his job, says his boss, General ·
Manager Dallas Green.
But even though he had to
·apologize for the outburst, )Clia
makes no apologies for his team 's

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAY 14TH

effort.

"Rip 'em, lip those counr.ry
suckers (fans I like they lip my
players," Elia fumed in front or
reporters after Friday's tough 4·3
loss to th€ Los Angeles Dodgers.
"Eighty-five percent of the people
In this country work and the other 15
percent come out here and boo my

I.

SAFE TIRES ARE YOUR LIFE AS WELL AS OURS
Tiempo
Power Streak II
ALL SEASON RADIAL

•Our Newest Diagonal Ply Tire
•4 Ply Polyester-Whitewall
•Shoulder-gripping Edge for Extra.
Bite 1nto curves

Sale
Price

Replaces

Size

PI55/80RI 3
Pl85/80Rl3
Pl85/75Rl4
PI95/75RI4
P205/75Rl4
P215/75RI4
Pl45/75Rl5
P205/75Rl5
P215/75RI5
P225/75Rl5
P235/75R l5

155xl3
'Cil78xl3
CR78xl4
ER78xl4
FR78xl4
GR78xl4
ER78xl5
FR78xl5
GR78xl5
HR78xl5
CR78xl5

SIZE

39
48
50
152
158
1
1
1

60

1

58
'58

160

64
68

1
1

$27
N/ A
N/ A
832
t36
837
N/ A
N/ A
$37 '
$40
N/ A

KANSAS CITY, Mo. lAP )- U.L.
Washington's bases-loaded single
through a drawn-In Cleveland
1nfield in the lith inning Friday
night gave the Kansas City Royaisa
6-5 victory ovier the Indians.

829
$29
832
836
837
839
842
829
$39
842
$42

Plus Fode11t Excise lax of $1.60 to $2.80
{Substitution of another' brand of equol or better quo lily will
be made when Power Streak lis are depleated)

-~

Cuatom PolylfMI

Radial
All Season
Whitewall
Sale
Size •
Price

Highway
Sale
Price

$15
$1'6 -. ·
$16 "

$19
$20
121
$22
!21
22

sp

Eagle ST
RAISED WHITE LmERS
70 &amp; 60 Series
Sale
Size

$19
$20
$22
$24
$26
$26
$30
$26
$30
$31
$31

Pl55x80Rl3
. P165/80Rn
PJ85/80RI3
PJ85x75Rl4
PI95/75RJ4
P205/75RJ4
P215175RJ4
P205/ 75RJ5
P2.15/ 75RI5
P225/ 75RJ5
• - · P135/15Rl5

$17

' PI95170RI4
~~~~~$8:U
P215/70RI4
P235/60RI4
P245/60RJ4
P215/70RJ5
P135/70RJ5
P295/ 60RJ5

~m;~gm

o(Jrilii\11 "'llifi'I)Ht tiiiiCO
•lttps Its foltfllrlnt tvtn in the

~~·
Whitewall
Size
· PI55/ 80RJ3.
PJ75/ 80Rl3
PJ85/ 80RJ3
PJ75/74RI4
PI85/75RI4
P)95/75Rl4
P205/75Rl5
P21/75RJ5
P215/ 75RI5
P235175RJ5
Plus F.E.T. of 11.50 to

Price

u:

175
$79
183
185
184
$88
$89

m

Pus F.E.T.of $1 .95 to 13.36

All Retreads Plus F.E.T. of 50' to 11.10 &amp; recappable casing 114.00). Ourretreads have the same tread pattern and warranty as

Tracker XG

•Flat tread lot long, ewen wear
•Use lor l•onl ot 1111 wheel drive
•Ru,ued 6 or 8 pl,lon

•Deep lua

tr~etlon

lor mud,

•Raised white lttten
werin1 4 ply

snow
•Quiet ride on or off road
Size

Price
$65
'72
$73

$76
184

.:~::~,,

oOulline while letters
•Polyester plus steel
slrencth

Prite

G78xl5
$65
H78xl5
$69
700xl 5
171
800x16.5
$78
875xl6.5
186
194
950xt6.5
Plus F.E.T . of 13.08 to
14.21

ISO

~49

$53
$57
$62
$64
167
172 $2 .96

Tracker AT

Sale

on or off road
Sale
Size
Price
P235/75Rl5
· 195
9R-15
.
1105
IOR-15
$115 ·
31· 1150R-15
$115
875RJ6.5
1128
95oR-16.5
$154

Silt

F78-14
l78:15
31-10.50-15
31-11.50-15
31-10.50-16.5
31-11.50-16.5

Andre Thornton had tied the score
:;.5 against Kansas City relief ace
Dan Quisenberry ln the ninth inning
with the first home run by a
Cleveland player in 15 games since
Aprll9 and only the club's fifth of the
season. It was Thornton's third .
Joe Simpson walked with one out
ln the Royals' 11th and went to third
oq a single by John Wathan . Loser
Dan Spillner, 0-2, Intentionally
walked W~e Wilson, setting the
stage lor Washington . The winner
was Mike Armstrong, 2-1, who
pitched one !nrilng;_,
Wathan _trtggered Kansas City's
comeback from a 4·0 deficit with a
leadoff double in the sixth and t he

State No. 983

The Com'mercial and
Savings Bank

Price

$54
$58
$91
195
$110
$117

Sale
Price
$81
$85
$91

Size
9-15
10-15
11-15

Plus Federal Excise Tu of 12.00 to 15.89

Tradlon Torque

Rear Tractor Tire

$8700
8.3 -24

TRACTOR FRONTS

4 plypjus $2.13 F.'E.!.

$2 700

Farm
Tubes

400·154Piw
plus 51@ FU .

CUSTOM WHEELS
SAVE UP TO

Triple Rib RS
• AuQ9eel rrm shield prot ects
lower srdew1111 tram tuls and
I:NVIStng

Fronl tubes $7.50 ea.

'

Rear Farm

w1ae center ub lor
ease

Tubes $19.00-$37.00

9.50-15116
lll-15/16

$10.95
$12.95

All Tubes Plus F.E.r.

ON

Appliance
ET
fiJI] Crager
~ /.
American

Western
Tru Spoke
Keystone
Racing

Suspension

Mu r:l'lw rhl!t l \itut 1 urr• ·1 lu•l •'

• 'If.! P11r1 ~ .t~u l .uldtltu ll 1l
, rvn :•·•. ''''' ·' 1l ,,, .,., f,•t l

FMC-COMPUTERIZED
4 MONTHS OR 4,000
LE LIMITED WARRANTY

Units
They put the Monroe ride in
MacPherson-type suspensions.
Fils soma models of:
Dodce Omnl. Aires, 400,
Plymouth Horizon, Reliant,
Mercury Zephyr. Coucar.
Lynx. Ford Fatrmont, Granada, Escort, Chev. Cita-•
.tion. Celebrity. Olds Omega

Ciera.

PER
PAIR
INSTALLED

$119

Import or

-Installed

Fits some models of:
Audi
Mazda
Datsun
Ply. Champ
Dodae Colt Toyoto
Honda
Volkswleen
Price includes installation and
FMC compputer front end al icnment. Additioh parts extra
II needed.

.See the Service

68

Per
Pair

domestic cars
Addi_tional partsand

1 ~erv 1ces

Restore Orll)inal stability
and handling . Protect
suspension and steering
systems . Protect tire performance .
Monroe · Strut
Replaeea~ent

Cartridge•

-aDd Savel

We can remedy your "Lemon-on-four-wheels blues! " Our pcrsonaized auro loans could have you up and around in no rime in :1
new or used tar "Bur ri1y budget is ailing .roo,'' you say; All rhc
more reason ro see us' Or have your dea ler call us. You e m choost·
an extended payment plan with lower tx•r-montlt p:t )' llll'tlt.'&gt;'
And talk al:x1Ltt speedy relief' Apply !lllw, and y&lt; tur I&lt; Ktn JltSI 1n:ty
be &lt;tpproved wi_thin minutes.
Please compare rates before buying!
1

C&amp;S Bank
The Commercial 8r Savings Bank
"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE "

ASSETS
.............. .. .......... 3,077 ,000.00
Cash and due from disposi tory inst itu tions .. .
..
.. ....................... 25,265,000.00
U.S. Trea sury sec urit ies ........................... ..
Obligations of other U.S. Governm e nt
.... ........ ... ........... 2,191,000.00
. agencies and corporat ions .......... .. .... :··:·--·
Obligations of Stat&lt;' and political subdivls ton s
·n
Unit ed
.......................... . ........... 6,573,000
I the
.
. Stat•"s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Federal fu nd s so ld a nd securities purc ha sed und e r
agr!'Cment s to resell ............................................ ·...... · .. ., .. · .. · .... 2.800 ,000.00
Loans , Tot a l (excludi ng unurned income) ............. 1 8,~57,000 . 00
Less: Allow a nce for possible loan losses .................... 226,000 .00
Loans, Ne t .. .. ... .........
.. .................................... ··--.-- ........ 18,.131,000.00
Bank premises, furnit ure a nd fixture s, a nd
ot her asset s representin g bonk premises ...... ... ... ., .......................... 933,000.00
All other assets ...... ...... ........... .. .... ..... .... ..........
. ... .. .. .. ......... 874 .000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ... . . . .. ..................... .. ................
.. .. ....., .... 47 ,044 ,000 .00
LIABILITIES
Dema nd de posits of ind ivid uals. partnerships
and corporations ..................................................................... . 4.196,000 .00
Time and sa vings de posits of indiv idua ls,
......... ........... ' ....... 35,577,000.00
partners hips a nd corporal ions .. ......... .
. ........ " ........... ' ............... 2,000.00
Deposits of Uniled S tates Government .. ..
Deposit s of States and political subdi vision s In the
United Sta tes
...... ..... .......... : .......... ·· ··· ........ 2,090 ,000.00
Certified a nd offl·~~~~; ~ h~~;;;
:.180,000 00
Total Deposits
......................... · .. · .,.. · ..... · .42,045,000 .00
a . Tota l dem;~dd~ j;;;~ ii ;·: ::: .............................. 5,367,000.00
b . Total time and .savings deposits ........ .. ..
36,678,000.00
All other liabil ities .. : .................. ... ..................................... ... .. .......... 658,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding s ubordinat ed
A2,703 ,000.00
· notes and debentures ...................... .. ............................. .
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common Stock
No. s hares a uthorized 1,800
No. shares outsta nding 1,800
..... {par val ue) ...... .. ................... 900.000.~
Surplus ........... ........ ..... ·.................. ...... .. ..................... .... ... ... ... ...... 2.8.50,000.
Undivided profits and Teserve for contin genc ies and
other ca pital reserves .................................................... .......... .... ... 591,000.00
-TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ................. .. ............................... .. ........ 4,341,000 ,00
TOTAl LIABILITIES AND j;::QUITY CAPITAL ........ .. ................ .. .47,044,000.00
.
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report dat e:
a . Standby lette rs of credU, total ........................................ ............ .. 63,000 .00

llte'l. .: ln s111ll Ot!W lroul ·•r•·&lt;4:o.t'
Sttell. p1r.L frulll wht!d beilrtn~:'l 111
apect l'l~dr.tUh r ·· ~~h·m . ttdd JluttJ

road'""'
.
l ·\VIetl Front ~: ln..11111 nt~w In

$i~~e~~~~~ar~s-~f- ~~p.o~it.l~ de~~~ln.a tio~~ ~f

_b .
.. ........ .. .... ........... 2. 698 .000 _00
Averag~ for 30 calendar days (or ca lendar month) e nding with report date:
Total deposits .. ... ·:··
............ ................... ·· ·· ·· · · ····· · ····· ····· .. 42,025,(M)().OO

utra if needed

SAVE NOW- BEFORE THE PRICE INCREASE!
REGULAR 15595

NOW

I

ONE ONLY IN WINEBERRY

INTERSTA TE"-

REGULAR 13895
NOW

$3795
REGULAR $6995
NOW

$6495
1 ONLY IN REGEL BROWN

11tt

I, the undersjgned officer do hereby declare that this Report of Condition line luding the supporting schedules ) Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Wayne L. Niday
EVP and Cashier

lirctke pid!'l. ,,·o;u fl,., ,. frunl rulur•,
ln!'lpecl ulipt•r\

OK

•WMtiDnua: ln ~lllllt~t•w hr .. ~" hn·
1n1 and r., surf~t • :•: •II lour drumN
Wam.ntrtll~ munii'I!O&lt;IIf ll .tl.llmt~. ·

whldw.vt!r ' nm1•' lirsl

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Coni;lltlon (including the supporting schedules ) and declare that it has been examined by
us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been pre pared In conlormancewith the instructions ana Is true 11nd correct .
·

'

Sworn to and subscribed before me this 28th day of April, 1983, and I hereby cer·
Ufy that I am not an olflcer or director of this bank. My commission expires August
1, 1986. Christina Day, Notary Pubiic.

ASPENCADE"

REGULAR '2995
NOW

SHADOW" 750

BETZ HONDA SALES
UPPER RT. 7

\

Spring Valley

FOLLOW THE LEADER

b. Paul Davies
Phyll1p L. Pope - Directors
Donald L. Crllnce
State of Ohio, County of GaUJa, ss:

•

Silver Brid ge Plaza

Member . FDI C

:::::: : ............... ............... ·... ·...... ··

MacPHERSON STRUT
SERVICE FOR
YOUR IMPORT

Monroe ,
Super Strut'M

Are you drivinU a-·
~·
headache?

of Galllpolls in the State of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business
on March 31 1983:

!............

• l011pud rtll fn11r ltr• ·:-. •:urrt••·f
u 1r pr• l S"iUtl : • :Ow l fronl 11r rt :nr
wh t' l'' I ll !i kl I olllllll'f, ,11111 II W
In p rupo' l nh l: llll\11 1!1 • ln )olwd
" U tiiJ'I'Ihll!ll nll d 'o il Trill~ l'ly~km
Mn!oot l : S t:Hr" m"lunport -. w tlh
.1!1111"1llhlo• " "~'~ lli 'lll'l lt\11 lru hulo •.,
hnn1 w h1 •t•l 1 r no · C h,·\11'11• ·,
i&amp;j.! IJ I ll' ljC ~ ' oll lolt oil' " fl ' ljlllrtllj.l

-•

.

F ederal Rieserve District No.4

~

Implement. Tractor Tires &amp; Tubes

The Sunday Times-Senlinei- Page-C7

W. Va.

25 Court Street

•Raissd while letters
•4 ·Ply all purpDSe
polyesler

self·cleanine

lua

•Trecti~

actions. I lost it ," he continued,
"Yes, this Is an apology ."
Green said that after healing the
!ape' that Ella's job '-'was lit
jeopardy. I"ll guarantee that. Hie
called mie before he got ln the
thern .' 1 ,
•
But two hours after !hie outburst, shower and he didn't lmow what he
sprinkled liberall}'with profanities,· had said. Weplayedthetapebackso
he understood at the t1me how bad It
Ella turned around and apologized.
really was. It was not handled
Cub General Manager D&lt;illas
professionaUy and Lee bas told you
Green called a news conference ln
his
feelings about that. "
his office aftier healing a tape of his
There is no way . to blame the
"
fi ield manager's tirade and a
media
or the fans for a lack of
subdued Elia said. ''I get frustrated
pPrformance,"
concluded Green,
because a lot of positive things have
"but
It
will
change."
·
transpired around here ln the last
What
won't
change
immediately
year and a half, and that doesn't ·
is the Cubs' dismal record, which
show on the record.
"There's no way to condone my was thie foca l-point of a television
commentary Thursday that set Ella
off in the first place.
·
" Tonight," Ella began Frtday's
blast, "some jerk on TV will say that
the Cubs are :&gt;14 with ' the worst
record ln baseball. That's lovely. I
Royals then strung together six
hope we get hot- just to stick it to
straight singles.
those 3,!XXJ people who show up
The Indians took a 4-0 lead ln thf
every day."
first inning off Vida Blue, whb
"All these so-called fans (9,391
walked the bases full, surrendered a
paying customiers Frtdayl who
three-run triple to Pat Tabler and Jet
come out here, who're supposed to
Tabler score on a wild pitch.
be behind you, come out here and lip
Cleveland starter Len Barker
everything we dO," h e continued. ·
cruised Into the sixth with a two-hit
" ... Whatamlsupposedtooo,letmy
shutout. N ter Walhan's double,
players go out there and get
Wilson, Washington and George
destroyed every day and be quiet
Brett strokedslngles, with Washing- about It? .. . For the nickel-and-dime
ton and Brett getting RB!s.
·
peoplie who show up?"
Juan E ichelberger, 0-1, relieved
Unfortunately , Elia wasn't the
Barker with two runs home and
only frustrated man wearing a Cub
runners al first and third and
uniform Friday. Outfielder Keith
watched Hal McRae rip his first
Moreland, the target of some fans'
pitch for a run-scoring single, Brett .obscenitif'S himself, tried togo after
scored on a single by Willie Alkiens
the group on his way to the
and Frank Whitie singled McRae clubhouse.
home with !hie [ifth run.
"I saw it," said Green, who
Blue, 1·0, was relieved. in the lndieated. the. fans had been drinkseventh by Quisenberry, who Ing. '"three guys with a pitcher lull
needed a lucky break to escape a of stuff. Keith tried to go over ihe
bases-loaded jam.
dugout, which he couldn 't do."
players," continued Ella, ln his
second season as a major league
rrtanager since moving with Green
from the Philadelphia PhlWes
organlza tion. " It's a playground for

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF

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Sale

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Size
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H78xl 5
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Price
112 .
1• 8
$49

Plus Federai Exc.se Tax oU1.S3 to n.n

new Goodyear tires.

Tracker LT

~sant,

Royals nip Indians, 6-5

BLACWALL WHITEWALL

A78x13
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C78x14
E7Bx14
F78x14
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A78xl3
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Pom.roy-Middlaport-Ga11,polis, ()hi-Point

Outburst almost cost Elia job

-

Whitewall

Nay 1, 1983

'

KANAUGA, OHIO
'

..••''
..' ' ''
'

-'

�•
Page-C8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

:~irdless

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

May 1, 1983

Boston Celtics drop 95-91 tilt to Milwaukee Bucks

By WILLIAM R. BARNAJU)
AP Sports Writer
· TheMilwaukeeBucksflguredthe
·Booton Celtics couldn't keep hitting
tWo out of every three shots, and
they were right.
; Trailing57-42afterBostonhit66.7
percent In the flrst half, Milwaukee
cut the deficit to eight after three
quarters a nd then held the Celtlcs to
ftine points In the fourth period en
route to a 9:).91 victory F[iday night .
The triumph gave the Bucks a 2.0
jead In their National Basketball
Association Eastern Conference
playoff series, with the next two
2ames In Milwaukee.

"Things looked pretty dark In tlie
first half the way (Danny 1 Ainge
and (Gerald ) Henderson were
s hooting, " Milwaukee's Sidney
Moncrief said . "They really out·
played us, but we didn't panic. We
knew it Was just a matter of time
when the Celtics' shotswouldn 't!all
consistently."
In the Western Conference semi!!·
nal,, both Sa n Antonio and Los
Angeles took 3.{) series leads with
overtime victories on the road. The
Spurs beat Denver 127-126 and the
Lakers tripped Portland 115-100.
Larry Blrd, the Celtlcs· leader In
nearly every offeJ!Sive category,

mlssed Friday night's game because of a virus and a 104-degree
temperature. But Alnge and.Henderson took charge, scoring 12.and 10
point•. respectively; as Boston
raced to a 28-22 lead IJ\ ·the first
period.
·
Alnge went on to add 11 points In
the second period, hitting 11 of 12
field goal attempts In playjng the
entire first half.
He hit his flrst shot In the second
half, glvlng him a career·hlgh 25
points , but then he turned as cold as
he was hot, missing hls last nine
shots.
"We were really psyched when

25 in the thlrd periOd, cutting the

TENNL~

DALLAS (API - Top-SP&lt;'ded
1van Lend! a nd Bill Scan lon took
·quarterfina l round wins in rne
$300,000 World Championship Te n·
ni~.Fi nal• tournament :
Lend! bea t Steve Denton &amp;-4, 7·5,
&amp;4 while Seanlon defea ted Kevin
Curren 2-6, &amp;-3, &amp;-2, G-3.

Fitch ls not opllmlstlc about hla
team's chances ct bEcOming only
the fifth te;un lnhlstorytora.IJYfrom
a 2-11 deficit to Win a best-&lt;&gt;f-seven

15-point deficit to 82-74. Thl!n the
Bucks completeQ the rally as the
Celtics hl\]ustfour ol22 shots In the
final 12 minutes. The nine-point

tional

State/

•

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Injured officer thought
Reagan was in dream

BOSO AGRI-CENTER
THIRD &amp; SYCAMORE, GALLIPOLIS

ports
briefs.. ~
By The Associated Press
GOLF
AUSTIN, Texas (AP I · Austral·
lans Peter Thomson and Kel Nagle,
locked the Liberty Mutual Legends
of Golf into afour·way lie with a
best-ball, 7·under par 63.
Thomson a nd Nagle joined Billy
Casper and Gay Brewer, Jack
F leck and Fred Hawkins, a nd
Roberto De Vlcenzo and Rod
Funseth a t ]().under par J:lO.
HILTON HEAD ISLAND. S.C.
(AP I - Hollis Stacy shot a 71 for a
138 total a nd held a one-stroke lead
over Kathy Whitworth after the
second round of the $17!\,IXXl-dollar
CPC ln!Prnatlonat women's golf
tournament.
IRVING , Texas !AP I - Tom
Purtzer and Mike Donald shot
7·under-par 64s t.o lie for the
,second-round lead at 135 in the
;$400.!XXI Byron Nelson Classic.
·. NORWALK,Conn. IAf&gt;) - Millcr ·
Barber, winner of $1(l;,ll90 last year,
was honored as Golf Digest's Senior
P layer of the Year at the Legends of
Golf tournament In Austin, Texas.

than tlte~-Ume NBA playolrlow.

Milwaukee outscored Boston 32·

we heard that Blrd wasn't going to
play," Milwaukee Coach Don
Nelson said. "However, they played
very well without ltlm. We had to go
back to square one, hoping they
wouldn't continue to hit for the rest
of the game."

WITHTHES~
..

PURINA DISCOUNTs·
Hurry, coupons expire June 4, 1983!

------------'-- --------- -- _:~----I

STORE COUPON

I

EXP. DATE : 6/ 4/ 83

One Coupon per purchase.

I ~RE COUPON I

EliP DATE 6/ 4/ 63

One Coupon per P"'Chasa.

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EXP. DATE: 6/ &lt;4! 83

One Coupon..,. pun:haso.

1

~f:~~~ ~ ~~~ l ~0!~9
o~~~LB.

11 x -

LAVEIIA

LAVENA"'

SURPRISED RECJPIEm- Jim and Diane Gallagher and John
and Bert Hawley present Brenda Nelgler with a s~r trophy 38
winners olthe Tuesday Nlte Foursome representing Brenda's BouUque
of Middleport. Diane and Bert had previously Pl'!l5ented Nelgler with
the Rrst place trophy lrom lhe women'S doubles en the 1982 summer
league.

brand
LAYING RATION

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Portsmouth to host softball tournament

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PORTSMOU1ll - A softball place teams wi ll receive sponsor
tournament w ill be held May 7-8 a t trophies.
U.bold F ie ld Ln Portsmouth. Entry
An MVP, and home run trophy
· fee L~ $75 for sa nclloned teams. A will a lso be given. ·
·
drawing wlll be held Thursday,
Contact Craig Staggs at 614·354May 5, at 7 p.m . on La bold Field No. :!797 or P hil Malone at 574-6600 or
I.
574-2558 or Terry Evans at 574-5909
Individua l trophies will be given for further Information. The event
to the first place team along with a Is sponsored by Best Care.
sponsor trophy. Second and third

~

DOG MEAL

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•

PRE'!IDENT TALKS- PARAMEDIO!i·WORK
- President Rooald Reagan, upper felt, talks with
Holl!lwn Pollee Sgt. Ralph Gonzales as paramedics
work on hls leg Friday after hls mororcycle hit a sign

Tower, RTexas.
Deputy White House chief of s.t atf Michael Deaver
told reporters that Reagan Lnslsted on ~out of
the llmouilne when It stopped.
When the president reached the officer's side, "I
thought 1 was dreaming," Goll7.ales said In a
telephone Interview from Memorial Hosptr·l Southeast. "He was very klnd. what I remember.'\ Lhlnk
he asked me was I OK and I told him I was sorry that
I'd blocked the IJIPtorcade ."
The officer suffered a sprained neck a nd bruises.
He was released after about three hours of treatment
and observation, emergency room supervlsor
Marilyn Peoples said. The officer with whom he
collided, Prothro, refused to go to a hospital,
spokeswoman Dorey Zodrow said.
Deaver said Reagan was touched because
Gonzales apologized repeatedly.
"You're sorry• I'm sorry .'' Reagan told the injured
man. according to Deaver, who added that Reagan
stayed several minutes after \\'hite House chief of
staff ,James Baker suggested they leave because of
potential danger.
The motorcade was dPiaym about.tO minutes and
the accident caused a massive n·affl c jam.

By ANDREW M. WILLIAMS
Assoclaled Press Writer
HOUSTON (AP ) - A policeman says he thought
he was drearnJng when a " very klnd" President
Reagan ' appeared at hls side, just after the officer
was knocked to the street In an accident with his
motorcycle.
" I don't think I was in my right mind ." Sgt. Ralph
Gonzales said at a hospital Friday, hours after being
injured in the crash. "I do recall seeing Mr. Reagan,
the president. I didn't realize I'd actuallyha(l a wreck
until I was In the ambulance."
Gonzales, 32, and motorcycle officer Harold
Prothro collided early during the preside ntia l
motorcade from Hobby Airport to downtown
Houston. Pollee spokesman Larry Troutt said both
apparently tried to close the same intersection.
Reagan, accompanied by a ides and Secret Service
agents, got out of his armon!d limousine, retrieved a
pollee service revolver from the street and handed
the weapon to a bodyguard. He then walked about 100
yards to where Gonzales Jay with ambulance
workers tending his Injuries.
Reagan had landed minutes before at 2: 20p.m . He
was in town for a fund-raising d inner for Sen. John

as the molonlade headed for downtown Houston. The

officer's leg W3S apparently broken Ln lhe accident.
Reagan is In HOIL'!ton for a hmd-raislng dinner for
Sen. John Towe r. (AP Laserphotll ).
--~--------------------~---

Reagan on Mondale: 'vice president malaise'
"

.

HOUSTON (AP) - President Reagan ts taking
note of a .potential t!Val for the White House next year,
and he Is calling him " former VIce President
Malaise."
·
The president made the reference to former Vice
President Walter F. Mondale on Friday in a
Republican fund-raising dinner speech In which
Reagan defended his Central America .policles and
touted his economic programs.
.
'
Reagan said recent positive economic signs such as
falling interest rates, Increases Ln homebuUdlng and
auto sales and the soaring stock market reflect "the
new hope that we've managed to build from the
despalr we Inherited.
"You remember whe n they were calling what was
alllng America as a malalse, and now former Vice
President Malalse Is running for president, promisIng he can do everything just like they did before,"

va lentine In February . I'm sure It was from Fritz
Monda!"'The heart In It was bleeding.'.'
· The pnc'Sident focused his weekly radio address to .
the nation. recorded a t the White House before he left
Friday, on education and sa id "our high standards of
literacy and educationa l diversity have been
slipping."&gt;
"Well intentioned but misguided policy makPrs
have stamped a uniform mediocrity on t h~ ric h
variety and excellence that had been our heritage,"
he said . · ~
RefeiTing to the work of the National Commission
on Excellence In Educa tion, which Issued a report
TUesday that was crftica l of U.S. education, RPaga n
sa id most students do less than an hour of homework
a night and many have dropped voca tional and
college preparatory courses.
"When they graduate from high school. they·,..,

Reagan said .
· T1)e term "malalse" related to a speech that

J immy Carter made as president In July 1979. Cai1.er
talked al&gt;out specific problems In the country as well
as problems with the nation's morale. The term
"malaise" was applied to It by Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, 0-Mass.
Mondale's aides said they tried at the time to put
some dlstance between the v1ce president a nd the
pres:Ji&gt;nt ori the matter, and one aide, Richard Moe.
said, "We a lways had some problems with that
event.''

Mondale has declared ' his candidacy for Reai'an's
job. The president has not said whether he will seek
re-election .
At another point. referring to Mondale by name.
Reaga n said, " I get a little irritated with that constant
refrain about . 'compassion. I got a n unsigned

prepared for neither work nor highPr education." he
said .
·
. Jn his speech Friday at the fund miser. Intended to
boost the politica l war chest of Sen . John Tower.
H-Tcxas, Heagan did not miss the opportunity to
point out the proximity of Te&lt;as to Ce ntral 1\merica.
He said the alternatives to hi s plans were a
" presrliptlon for disaster."
"11let'(' are those," "'' sa id "who suggest that
because our ftiqnds In Cent ra l America are not
pet1ect, WI' must back away and permit those armed
to lhP t ~th by the Soviets to do as they will. to shoot
their way Into power."
The pi'('Sident said that thP r ha tiPnJ;r faced by the
United States In Centra l Amr1ica "Is not some threat
In a distant land: It' s a bnJshllrr that 's bumlng In our
neiJ;hborhcxxt. "

Washington sworn
into office
CHICAGO (API. - Minutes after taking hls oath of
office as Chicago's first black mayor. Harold
Washington promised a new era for a city long ruled
by patronage and special favors, and said he would
begin by flrlng hundreds of recent political
appointees.
"The only greater challenge In the history of
Chicago was 110 years ago when Mayor Joseph
MediJI looked over a c ity burned to the ground and
called for a great outpouring of civil responslblllty,"
Washlnglon said at his Inauguration Friday, 17 days
after being elected in a dlvlsive ~a mpalgn mar~ed by
racial tension.
As outgoing Mayor Ja ne Byrne sat stone-faced to
the left of the podium, Washington told an overflow
audience of 3,(XXI people tha t shaky city finances left
" no choice but to release the several hundred new
city employees ... added because of political
considerations" In the last month of Mrs. Byrne's
administration.
Washington also announeed an immediate freeze
on city hlrlng and ralses, and a cut In salaries paid to
'
'

LAWN AND GARDEN PRODUCTS

executiv"'level managers to begin wha t he called "a
grea t movement of revitalization and reform" in the
nation's second-largest city.
The cuts would extend to· hls own office.
Washlngton said.
.The 61-year·old former sta te legislator and
congressman has pledged to dismantle Chicago's
patronage system. which he says frrrle minorities out
ol power a nd neglected poorer neighborhoods.
.The grim, blunt tone of Washington's swearing· in
address contrasted with the festive air of the
Inauguration, which featu red poetry readings,
orcheStral numbers, th'e Chicago Children's Choir
and an enthusiastic audience representlng a m ix of
political persuasions and ethnic groups.
Washington broke tradition by mov1ng inaugural
rites from the cramped City Council chambers ,
which seat just 700, to the cavernous auditorium on
historic Navy Pier to Illustrate his campaign pledge
to make Chicago govemment a mirror of
neighborhoods, not special Interests .

WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI
ls Investigating the apparent suicide
of a former Pentagon intelligence
analyst; the thlrd figure to die in the
tangled set of cases Lnvolvlng
ex -CIA agent Edwin P . Wllson.
Pollee said the body of Wa ldo H.
Dubbersteln, 75, was fowid Friday,
shot In the head but s itting upright

* $ERVICE
* ATTACHMENTS

on a chalr In the basement of a
suburban Arlington, va .. building
that overlooks the Potomac River.
Federal la\jliell(orcernent sources
said the former Pentagon Middle
East specialist apparently llved
there with Renata Strelau , hls
32-year-old East German
glrltrlend.

The discovery was made Friday
afternoon, just hours after Dubber·
stein failed to a ppear In federal
court In nearby Alexandria. Va . He
was to have entered i plea to
charges filed a day earlier that he
sold secret U.S. Information about
the Middle East to Wllson and
Libyan Intelligence agents for

,...

O'DELL TRUE VALUE
Across from ·K-Mirt
•·

_

TCJmUDOD&amp;MAOB-.....,._.tlrellllldnh , - - ., Pellll 17 tllld clarnaatll .. II18IQ' .. 3110
.. llle ••• 3 p ' .. • :.me Ill banla-'nle N..._., Guard IIIII been C8IPed lo 1be

-- •

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la'tf'di!QIIP6

'w.•.,t•.,•..•

lo help . . . lbe clean up tllld provide tleCIIrlly.
(API 1 pbolo) •

bkl ..

- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~-F*
',·

Arlington County Pollee spokes·
man Tom Bell sa id offlce1·s wl're
ca lled to the buDding In ea rly
afternoon and found Dubbersteln In
a storage area , with a shotgun and
shotgun shells next to the body.
11tere was no note near the body
but officers found not hing to
Indicate a ny thing other than a

suicide. Bell said.
Mulcahy, a former CIA ana lyst ,
'\'3S the first to te ll federa l officials
of Wilson's Libyan dealings and was
expected to testify against Wilson .
But after he was found dead In a
remote area of the Shena ndoah
Valley In Virginia last year.

Killer tornado lashes
central United States

'

....

$32,(XXI.
The federa l sources said severa l
handwritten notes, which they
characterized as "suicide notes,"
were being checked to see If they
were In Dubbersteln's writing. The
sources, who declined to be named .
did not say where the notes were
discovered .

&lt;

*PARTS

.EASTERN AVE.

a.•

Oath of Ofllce to Harold Washington
Mnyor of lhe.
City of Chicago Friday. Outgoing Mayor .Jane Hyrne
look.• on at right. (AI' l.aserphoto) .

FBI probes Dubberstein apparent suicide

*SALES

' \

~

WASIUNGTON BECOME'! CIDCAGO MA VOR
- The Honorable Harold Freeman, Judge of lite
Circuli Court ol Cook County, Jell, administers tlJC

•

•

By KIM MII..U!
Alilloolated l'rell8 Writer
A tornado, part of a broad system ol thunderstorms
that rolled across the nation's midsection, cut
through Sprtngfll!ld, Mo., destroyjng an estimated 100
homes, injuring 17 people and leav1ng one person
dead, officials said today.
Stol111i; Friday also soaked parts of Missouri and
KentuckY with more than 4 Inches of rain, and
drowned a Missouri woman when she was washed
· Lnto a swollen creek, authorities said.
, An unldenWled glrl, believed to be a teen-ager, died
ln1Springfield when she was thrown !rom a car and
~erpassenger· was seriously Injured. The vehicle
waS&gt;"caught In the tornado that spun through the
SOUUI'I"estem Missouri city of 120,~ people, pollee
said,
The h&lt;(lster scissored a path 1.5 mUes long and a
quarter-mlte wide across the city, destroying at least
100 homes and damaging another 200 dwelllngs,
Mayor George sCruggs said early today. At least 16
.people suffened m~ Injuries, Scruggs said:
Two other tornadoes touched dOwn Friday night In

,

.,

southwestern Missouri but caused no ser ious
damage, offic ials said.
Thunderstorms stretching from Oklahoma into the
Ohio Valley sent fioodwaters up to 4 feet deep surging
through portions ol southern Missouri and central
and western KentuckY.
In· Houston, Mo., witnesses said a woman was
washed away Friday lifter a wall ol her apartment
beside Bushy Creek collapsed. The body of Ruby
Reese, 55, was found about a quarter.mJJe
downstream In the Big Piney River, a Texas Countrv
Sherriff's dispatcher said.
·
·
Meanwhile, rainfall continued setting records In
California, where combinations of snow . . hall,
thunderstorms \lind hmnel clouds assaulted the state
!rom top to bottom. 'The snowpack In the Sierra
Nevada was the deepest recorded .so late In the
season, with more than 16 feet on the ground at
Norden, Calli., near Donner Sumrn!t,,offlclals said,
In Loo Angeles, FTJday's rain swelled Lhe season
total to :ll.561nches. Normal for the season to date Is ·
about ruill that.

•

.

'

I

�Times-Sentinel

May I, 1983

iunbaJI ~imts- Ientine!

23

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

Ohio-Poont Pleasant, W Va

Professional
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1983

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pursuant to Chapter 1306 of
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(, til p l1'i ( 11\1
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l)

£l hoots
Noh d rr rl '; IJf' w th rl r1W 1 fn r
a p • r.nrl nl ""dy (liO\ rl;tv'&gt; CJ itf' r
lh" • t 1' I lr d dosn1q t 1 1 to
I hr

ff St 1.11 ~ !Ill'&gt;

ql

1 In

Fft

r

flO AR D OF
EnUCATi ON

r Jhl to

f' Jf! AAR
1 " 1yRErN dJ Jll
b1 ds
SMITH

Hr v/3 171:3

M ew 1 8

Pubhc Notoce
PUBUC NOTICE
Community ServiCe
Btock Grant
Program for
F1scaiYear 1983
lrr compl rancP w th Puhlr r.
Llw No 97 35 Sullt TIP f1
Grant

Se rv1 r PS B loc k

IC SBG) Pr onr&lt;~m Sechon

671 683

1742

17 43 nnrt

111~ G ;) li ld M t"1q&lt;;

d111l Ounccs the &lt;'lv 111.1h I ty o l ts
( SIJG Plrn lor public 1evrew
11 d t orrrnPnt rt11' olan hLJS
b( ~n ilPIH UV('cl !Jy t hf' OhrD

Pubhc Nottce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACtORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Dt•n Htmr nt ol

Apnl 22 1903

Copy lllo BJ 441
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
FR 1(79)
SA 901(3)

7

~

Pr o rnc r ;rnd W o 1k lnnnth 81 892 IIWI or 1!.-, b 1 rn It's

Department

ot

nit blrlrlo"'rS th at 1! wrll all r nn
)rV'JIV n surn thilt 1n any contr act
t&gt; n lt&gt; efl rn to f)r 1suan t to lh rs
'flrlvt:&gt;rtr SCIT1(&gt; 11\ mr nor ty buSJ

Wtll bO at

1nrc1Prl l ull 0 11 11011 un tv to s ub

Card of Thanks

lp o l !_,..,.

U p C&gt; 15 - ·

On. d - . - . , . .

n,._ .... _,_

~ ·· ' 5 'ffll•&lt;lo

........ _,.....
IA_.,.., ••

IJ(I(I
UOO

1100

We are try1ng to keep the
cemetery at Letart Falls in Its
present condition but must
depend on thoae interested
to help Send to ClareQce
Noms 23262 Hdl Rd •
Rac1ne your lot care money

thankfulness 10 our fnonds and
alll!te many "" of ktndness and
conStdmlton showtr lo all of us
itnct the acctdent
To alllht mtmstm, churches
and arouos for l1te many
prJytfS wtitch we art certatn
wert l'lelfd and answtftd by our
10\ltlll Fal1ter to lilt onos who
catlcf for hlnr)lllor to l1te atrival
of tllo E!l"'''iiCY S!IU&gt;A Tuppers
• Plltns EmoJ1111CY sq,.. foi their
• effkii!ICI ai1d inoliltda pll~h
!Md to bo so invaluo61t ~~ 11te
rtlllf tllllmont of tht 111oirits
-~~ iJWOCiaiiOfl to our

Was hard lo take the
burden up
Where Dad had layed
11 down
,
He bnfhlened every lOY
of he
And soothed each care
and frown
But oh 't1s eood to think
of htm
When we are troubled
sore
Thanks be to God that
He has been
Although he 1s no more
You won't come back
We know II s true
But some day we
Will come to you

r.

ds for thttr _presence dunna;

...... of .. ~,,. and ...
cOYIII)', ,. lila food caids Itt!-

"' 111d all ollitl klndneaes our
• tlanls

.w:rdo%rt~:..t= ~

-ns

- ......,. lo !loa lnltnolvt Can
• Untl Still of
-~1
Hospital for
excellerrt nul1lrw '*" Iiiii All wt wfltllwM
bt """' !llriful lo 1111 EMS for
1111 onftlly ....,.., .... ~ ...
• ~ lltd IIi lilY Md Ill who

""I'

,==~~,::~
Ill
.•• Tho Robert IVood F1mlly

SADLY MISSED BY WIFE.
CHilDREN ANDGIIANDCHILOREN

a.

Yord Sale 1930 Chot1111u1
St • Galhpoha Saturday &amp;
Monday. 9 to 6
Flea Market and Craft Sale
mtac Items for Mother's
Day Thuu &amp; Fn • May 5 It

B~ngo

4

tnp from Pomeroy to

Cherol&lt;ee

NC

May 20

Giveaway

Pupp1es

9570

S55 p&amp;r person for trent
portattOn &amp;. motel Reserve
ttons taken until May 6

Gtveaway

1-=:=========
J.

5

t1f1DI:I~ Ads

lc: Ron Robens 1 am proud to
bbe your wtfe 1 want you
and the whole world to
know I love you snd will
forever Carol Rober.ts

Free lu.Jtena Catl446 4999
Part Coll1e temale dog, real
fnendly Call 614 266

7

6210

· Yard Sale

Free k1tten, 6 wka old Call

614 246 568B

Free to good home 3 k1Hen
&amp; 3 cats Call after 6 or

weekends 446 B667
Heavu duty full11ze coU bed
spnngs for sale e14 992

6136

Yard Sale K &amp; K Mob1le
Home Park Lot 10, Gallrpo

lia, !Jh May 2 &amp; 3
Yard Sale May 2 7, 9·6 Rt
664 7 mrles from Cheshire
Clothing furniture bada
preads
curtain•
kntck
knacks. much more

S ESSFUL
BUSINESS
IS A CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!
That's right! When you usa a column
onch or more in nawspapar advart1sing,
be it dislay or classified, you reach
thousands of potantial buyers that are
eagar to raceive your monay-saving
messaga

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
3 Announcements

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action CETA
Program IS currently accepting applications
for the (SYEP) Summer Youth Employment
Program. Eligibility requirements:
1). A resident of Gallia or Meigs County
2). Economically disadvantaged
3). Between the ages of 14 thru 21
Participants will work 32 hour per week
and will be paid the current federal minimum wage of '3.35 per hour. '
GALLIA COUNTY
CETA Intake Office
Elatna Ar11stronc
4171\ Second Avenue
Gelltpohs OH. 45631
Mon ·Wed.· frl.
9 00 A M.·3.30 P M
Phone 446·2137
OR
' 446-6578

Yard Sale Koontz Sa1lor Ad
at Vinton lues &amp; Wed 9 to
6 Port TV. dtn111g room 98t
atero, baby furn • m1sc

Yard Sale Bulav1lle Town
house on Bulaville Rd past
Shr.ne Club
Kno x 8t
SwiSher' s. May 3, 9 to 1
PUP black &amp; tan , Dach ·
player wtth stand,
shund &amp; Chihuahua female , lt'~~~:~d hatr dryer nrce end
to good home 304-875 ·
I
&amp; anttque stand.
6164
btcycles. pots &amp; pans all

I===:;:======
ANY PERSON who hll
anythrng to give away and
does not offer or aHempt to
offer any other th1ng for sale
may place an ad In th11
column There will be no
charge to the advertiser

Call 614 - 246

Yard Sale Mon S. lues 113
4th Ave Gallipolis Guns
lawn mowers, rototlllers
miSC 9· 6

PART German Shepherd.
part Potnter puppies 304
676 6241 or 676 6702

614 992 -5007 or 614
992-3377

MEIGS COUNTY
CETA Intake Offtct
Elatne Armstrona
117 Second StrHt
Pomttoy, Dh10 45769
Tuesday· Thursday
1·00 P.M.·3:30 P II
Phone. 992-2222
DR
992-2313

hoapital at J.ck Ne•ls. signs

on nght Ladies. mens and
kid clothe•. boys •nd girl•
JUris 10 to 1 4.1adiesJeana 8
en up. 'new 4Jt4 t•e for Ford
truck, chain saw, ne welect 1
ric gu1tar, k1d record player
Mon • Tues Wed lit mile
out on Rt 143 Ra1n or

ktnda
gluaesrad1o,
&amp; dtshes
tabla of
clothes
fan ,
sweeper gun rack srngle
tractor diSC, 4 t1re1 [truck)
16x5· 8 ply afghans new &amp;
used clothtng of all ki nds &amp;
,_
m~11_0_11_
•_
m_•
t
Yard Sale May 2 &amp; 3 Ftrst
St past Pomeroy Elemon
mrv Ram or shme

___-,-_ _

3 famtly Mon &amp; lues at
110 WoHe Dr
Pomeroy

614 992 -6952 or 614 992-5332
810 S Second St

Middle

port Apnl 30-Mey 7 Bed dtng , ltnens clo1hing
dishes. Stiver stone Jewelry
Avon apphances stands
somethmg for everyone
Large porch sale May 3.4 5
9· 6 836 E Mam Pomeroy
Garage Sale May 3 &amp; 4 at
John Keck residence , Mul ·
berry He1ghts, Pomeroy
lots of newS. used clothes
bed linens almost new
luggage can•r fits all car
tops, and lots mora Items
Garage Sale Clean up of
rematnmg 1tema Pr~cos
drlltlcally reduced Mon &amp;
Tuea
May 2 &amp; 3 A•
Blondena Ramer' s Tyree
Blvd • Rac1ne Oh
6 tam1ly yard , ate Bon y 's
Carryou t All stzea now &amp;
used clothmg Sat Sun

Mon 614 992 2969
Yard sale May 6th 6th
houM on New Hope Rd •
Cheater
9 6
H e nry
Hartman
Carport Sale Mev 3 6

am 4 p m

GARAGE sale 2221 Jeffer·
.aon. Fnday &amp; Saturday, Iota
of n1ce rclothes for children
THREE miles up Route 36
above Henderson Furnl·
ture househofd items. 2
pickup trucks patnt tprayer.
aandera, m1so tool• Begin·
1ng Monday May 2nd 8 00

d•~eou•s to •n•or Clhzena · contrac1
churches-sc hools Call 81111- - - - - - - - - Ward Ward ' s Keyboard For .... by owner-4 bed·
446 4372
room 11 YJ: st:ry alum•nuft)
1.
Siding house Approx 2 '/:a
Will open &amp;r elean sw1mm~ng acres level ground Urge
pools Call 446 -489&amp; after kitchen dtrung room foroad
6 OOPM
111r heat Separate large
garage 2 mles from South-

..._

__,_ ..,

Wentedtobuy New.•Hd•
anttque furniturw Will buy 1
piece or complete hou•·

holds Call O.by A Martin
614· 992-11370

WANTED to buy oldquil11 &amp;
top•

old linens

Clothing

modo booforo 1960 Phone
614 246 9448

lWOfamtlyyardsale 1 m1le
outJerlcho Rd Pt PIMsant
Clothtng and m1sc nday
9 3 Watch for s1gns If
ratn canceled

GARAGE sole 1209 Sand

hdl Rd Pt Pleasem lues

10

91B S 3rd

Middleport Somathm g for
e"'eryone 1 Reasonable
Main St Cheah~re Oh May
2 &amp;: 3 9· 4 Ratn cancels
Yard sale May 3rd 9 a m
Greg and Janet Ebhnaon CR
22 laurel Chff Rd
Yard sale the whole length
of VIne St . •n Rac.ne
Tuudey May 3rd 9 to 3

&amp; 4th 10 till 4 Furniture,
home interiOr good clean
clothes, many nama

YARD sale, Monday&amp;. Tuea
day , 2nd &amp; 3rd 810 Matn
St 9 3 Ch1ldrans ctof\ea
By Episcopal Church

YARD sale 412 lew•• St
Pt

Pleasant,

Tuesday

&amp;

Wednesday. May 311o 4 B- 7
E\leryth•ng

PORCH sale, ra10 or ahtne , 2
mtles oft 87 Leon - Baden
Road Startrng Saturday
through Saturday

B

Publtc Sale
&amp; Auctton

Au ct10n every Fn n~ght at
the Hartford Community
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Con11gments of new and
used merchandtao alw.y•
welcome Ar chard Reynolds
Au ctioneer 276 -3089
Auct1on every Tuesday
n•ght Krodel Park Club
House, Pt Pleasant WV
Auct
Lonme Neal Call

614-367-7101

Complete Auctioneer Ser·
v1ce Also do appraisals
l1censed &amp;. bonded to sell
Households farm furmsh ·
mgs &amp; Real estate Over 26
year&amp; e~penence tn buytng &amp;
selhng new used &amp; ant1que
furn1ture 614 992 6370

SANDY AND BEAVER lnsurenca
aerv~eea

Co. hal offered
for fire inturance

cover~ge

in Galia County

tor atmoat 1 cent•v Farm,
home ondp ....onel proporty
cover111• ere avaUable to

mont 304 675 -5568

Sno~n.446 - 4290

18 W•nted to Do
1111110 In

mv

home anvt•me. f«tced In
back• yard S. ref.,.nc•

General Heuling all(l Treah
removel Servk:e Relie ble

avatlablo. Call 614 388
9755

ond dlpendoble. CaN 4463169 botwoen 9 ond 6

Fu'l t1me LPN positron Call

Lawn M-ing no \lllrd 10 big

446·7148

In M1ddlepon newly ramo
deled home w1th ftreplace
•pou1ble woodbumer, close
t o archools and shopptng

Sell AVON Call 446-3368

640 Buck ridge Rd. Bidlwo,u.
Oh 46614 on or
11, 19B3 An
PROFESSIONAL SALES PEOPLE local Sa lea Orgem
zat10n Expandmg! We are
leader m the knowlege educatiO,.. communitcatfon
tndustry We are looking for
profeu1onal salespeople
who are mteralted in per·
aonel freedom . challengrng
work. opportun1ty and ex traordmary mcome paten·
t1al Send resume to P 0

Bo• 707. Gall1pol11 OhiO
46631
Electron 1c1 repairman
needed to work 1n reta1l
store. must have eJI prartence
&amp; tools We provide good
locatton
customer Ideal
opportu ntty for an Ala ratant Send resume to P 0
Box 342. Gallrpolla Oh

45631

Dependable drummer for
est1ablished rock group ,
sertous tnqunea only call

676-3113

GOVERNMENT JOBS·
Thousands of vacanc1e1
must be filled Immediately
Up to data directory lists
JObs from 817,634 to

$50,112 Call 718 8426000 Including Sun cloy,
ht 443B
Chrrst1an Tenor s.,ger and
or pianist for local Goapt'lll
Group Phone 614·9B5 ·

Call 614 -381l-

3 bdr home 10 Add1aon
s11111ll lot newly r.-nodele,d.
new electrtc plumbtng. etc
Furn ance &amp; wood burner ,
fully tnsullated, &amp;JtC cond ,

Need anything houlad Coli
446 4B51

a

12

INANTED TO BUY Old furn~

ture and Antlquea of all
k1nds call Kenneth Swam,

448 31 59 or 256-1967 in
the eventn gs

Buy1ng Gold . S1lver. Pleti
num Gold and Sliver priCes
are the h1gheat 1n two years
check our pnces on gold &amp;:
silver. scrap jewelry Buymg
Old COinS scrap rtngs &amp;
silverware Da1ly quotes
available Also cons S. co1n
supplies for aarle Spung
Valley Tradtng Co . Sprmg
Valley Plaza , 446 8026 or

446 B026

S1tuattons
Wanted

I ha'We room, board and care

for the eldarly
6022

Any oge 614-949 -2779

Will babysit tn your home or
m1ne
Reference•
614 ·

949 -2639

•

446 -0069

Sono Cell 614-258·1643
located 1fJ ml Souf1 of
Roller Dam at Eureka

Mother will boby1lt In her
home on Edgemont Dr
Gall•p ohs By week or dey

peld Coli 446-7300
BEPS IRON . BRASS old
furniture gold sliver dol
llrra wood Ice boJtes, stone
Jars, antlques. etc . Com
plate
Wr~te

MD
Oh Or 992-7'711,0 .

May 5 7 9a m 4p m Lyle
Swalno County Rd 2B

Gold, silver.
welry, rmga , old

between Chne1 Farm 6
Eas1ern Much m11o 614

currency Ed Burkett Bal,bor
Shop. Middleport
3416

Cal 446 -7364

WILL mow lawns in Pt

MOTHER'S DAY
FLOWERS
SANDY'S GREENHOUSE
Down 111 7 11 Chppoo Mtlls
Follow tho StJOS Ono milt to
Stanlty Plymlfo Rd

TYPING at home, ortampor•rv ofiee fill in, by expa
nenced •cratary Rauona

bla rates 304-676·4831

446-7892

JACK La LANNE
DIET SHAKE

$2 200
B649

lovely 6 rooms Double
garage beautifully Iandi·
caped area lot Atop Rose

1 2Jt60 Schultz mobtl e
home, 2 bdr , new carpet
expando 1tv1ng room Call

21

Thr lrtul nndldal

h iYf' 1t ' li'OftA hiC'Illri'IH

In llnanrf' ln11urancr nr , • .,, II
11r •llf' mll ~l IW l btf' In ''lf"fi I
t ontfflrqllhh tall!. wllh pronpll' of al
~~ Ill IIIII l't'Oflfllmltal lf'Yf'lll Til

l ~ ll'lln

In

lhr

rnrm nf u l• ry an

wilt ahtn h1rn~ll a ne
ur anti 1•11 frlnlf" ~"""
patllllf' t M' IH'I'IIIINI ll'ltnk'w
pl••t~ • ~ IMI a hriPJ re~~•m• ..
c r'fdltONI KtrviC'P InC' Po llo
»:1 HarbMrnU1• W\ !5.'114

---~

----~

Cal' 446 97B6 B 30 3 30
Evemngs 614·367 7150
1977 Wtndsor 14x70 3
bdr . w1th utllrty budding
eJIC cond , $13.900 Call

For Sale by Owner· 76 acres.
elm oat self- aJfftctent 3·4
bedroom home. wood heat.
young fru1t trees. large
garden, pond, bam. workshop. chicken hou1e Plenty
of woods, pasture , Open
fields Mineral rights E1s1ly
accessible 1 mile we1t of

81.11iness
Opportunity

lNOTtCEI
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO recommends
that you do bu•nesa w1th
people you know, and NOT
to send money 1hrough f'le
mall untH you have investigated the oflenng

before 3PM. 446 7613
USED MOBILE
676 2711

$6 500
4417

comm••s•ons &amp; multilevel
bonus Work from home
full p.-t tine New we1ght
loss pr~ram helps people
eaa1ly 1hed unwanted
pound• f69 mvemary 1n
veltmem required No ex·
perince needltd Local super·
visor trams you
Call

Small house e1ght acres.
outbUIIdmga. mmeral rights,

1------ - - - -

HOUSE &amp; large lot for ..Ia
as Ia m Henderson. 304-

bedroom. 12x46, excellent
cond1don , furmahed w1th
underpennmg 304 6 75

675-6408

3069

rao1onablo 304-895-3819

446 1988

MOBILE home 14x70, all
elect1rc a1r, 2 bedrooms. GE
waaher &amp; dryer 3Jttra nrce.
call 304 675 7666 or 6762685

Phona 614 92B

22 Money to Loan

8

rate Leader Mongage 77E

19BO MOBILE home

01

23

C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Tax Returns Ia bookkeeping
for Individual• bustnesaea
Short forma
00

a
•s

675 6685

Apt 1n M1ddlepon $1 60
month 614 992·5692

FARM for sale 30 acres
Broad Run Road , call 304 -

Small furnts hed h ouse rn
City , adults o nly Cal l

882 2407

446 0330

.., Wtlhs T Leadtngham , Realtor , Ph Home 446 9519
• Phylhs Loveday, Phone 446 2730
.. J oa n Boggs , Phone 446 3294

PH. OFFICE' 446-7699
One lot 40x1 30 Call 675

4391 or 446 -4030

36 acrea at Rodney on W T
Watson Rd Owner f1nan c
mg ava•lable Calt446-8221
after 6 weekdays
1 4 acre lot 1n Bradbury
good locatton tratler hook
up all utiht1es septiC tank

614 992 2602

SIX room house acra. Rt
62 South, Pt Pleasant

Phone 304 676 7641
eventngs
THREE bedroom s, 1 112
baths centrt!ll a1r 2 car
garage. mce ne1ghb orhood
Two bedrooms
1 bath .
fireplace garage overlook
mg the r1ver 304 675

6540

36

Real Estate
Wanted

42 Mobole Homes
for Rent

Buymg hou.sas and apart·
manta Need propert•es w1th
favorable pnce and terms
Box 1109 GaU1pohs Oh

45631

41

Houses for flant

Modern 3 bdr ranch gar
age cerpet Rodney area
Deposit &amp; references re·
qu~red $2B&amp; permo Black·
burn Realty Call446 OOOB
Seven room farmhouse near
Galllpoha
Garden, butld
1nga, county road ru ..l

wetor $236 Call 614 668
3730
4 bdr house 2 baths. good
locatron 2 mt from Holzer
Med Center Oep reqw red
$360 mo Call 614 245

9170
large
hvng room kitchen &amp; bath
Fu rn1sh e d Overlookmg
Ohto R1ver Aduhs only
Browns Tratler Park 614

2 bdr mobtle home for rent
Call 446-3105
Furn ished &amp; unfum1shed 2
bedr ooms atr cond beautr
ful nver v1ew rn Kanauga
Foster s Tra~ler Park

1----------:-:::-:--Delu11.e 2 bdr
Wmdsor
dlf\mg room 1 VJ baths
conven~&amp;nt location Rt 7
No pols Coli 614 246

6B1B
3 bdr trsrler tn country
$166 mo plus dep Call

614 379 2436
3 bedroom tra1ler % mtle oH
At 7 on BuJav1ll e Addison
Rd Addrson Oh N1c e 1h
acre lot $200 per mo Call
2 bdr trarler 1 % bath out Rt
160 at Evergr ee n W1ll ac
capt children &amp; pels Cal l

446 -0157

2 bedroom, all new parnl
some carpetmg Oepollt re
qUired 614 992· 3090

10 " 65 2 bd IQOm mobtle
home 1n Rae me area 614-

2 bedroom
remodeled
Downtown
Call after

Tra1ler 12Jc:60 1 bedroom
furntshed
large yard
garden 8150 month S100
depos•t Laten area ,614

e

60B6

house Newtv
ms1de Near
$100 depo11t
p m 614 992 ·

2 bedroom. all new petnt,
soma carpet1ng Deposit re

*

l1 47 4656

TWO mob1le homes f or rent
on Rt 2 about 5 m~nutas
from town Ce ll aftftf" 6

304 675 6277

Publtc Sale
&amp; Auctoon

124

ythmg you bnng m w111 sell
POSITIVE I

D.

DAN SMITH , AUCTIONEER
992-7301 OR 949-2033
Not responsible for acCidents or loss of pooperty

CASH
POSITIVE I 0
DAN SMITH: AUCTINEER
DR
949-2033
992-7301
Not responstble for acctdent 01 loss of property.O
EATS

ESTATE AUCTION
'

Athens Co. Probate Court Case # 33295
Estate Of The late leta Evans

ADDITIONAL 5% DISCOUNT IN APRIL - CASH &amp; CARRY

ESTATE SALE

. '

MAY 5, 1983
THURSDAY: 1:00 P.M.

Mrs LETA EVANS was 101 years of ace when she passed
away. Enrythmc lrom the larae two story double house
hu been moved to the HOCKING VAllEY MOTOR LODGE
Nelson~tlte Ohio The Motoo lodae ts easy to locate
Exit off U S 33altho South edae of Nelsonvtlte onto State
Route 691and travel less than V. mtle tuon onto lane loadIn&amp; to lodce

LOCATION: CENTERVILLE OHIO

FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1983 AT 11:00 A.M.

Across From Centerville Grade School.
Watch for Sale Sien's.

VERY BRIEF LISTING Beauttlul sla g glass sh ade table lam p
w/ fa ncy base &amp; lrame w/''Btrds &amp; Swans' as molt! {a be~u
ltful lamp) mce Wtnd sor sfyle rocktg c~ atr. oak low Boy
dresser w/ mtrror {31 ptece 1930 bed room su tte, oak bevel
mtrror ~all ~at rack, good tall ma ~og fer n pedesta l several
ptece s of lurmture from 1930 eo a pressed destgn sewtng
stand w/2 baskets. severa l glass shade ltg~ls depression
glass, HUNDREDS Of Unltsled Items {2) square tub Maytag
wrmger washers Queen Anne styl e lt vmg room sutte oak
dresser / mirror oak New Royal sewtng mach , low stretch er
wl~dow ta ble, oak cup &amp; plate rack, B5 pes Klkusut dtnn eo
chtna PlUS MODERN ITEMS'

M1sc tools, push lawnmower s. garden pu sh plow woo
den wheelbarrow, small Fng1da1re refrigerator, numerous cha1rs. lamps, qu1111ng frames, a few qu1lts,
Wicker sewmg baskets. seamtress dress form, m1sc
sewmg accessones, portable TV old Royal typewnters, •
bookcase, room d1v1ders, 2 metal beds
AIITIQUES . One oak h1ghb~ck. bed, 2 oak dressers,
love seal, few stone 1ars. ol~\wood Velveeta boxes •
numerous boK6S of old books -Readers D1gest, Gtlod
Housekeepmg, Amencan and ld ~~ls 2 boxes old Galh·
poi1s Dillly Tnbune
\

TOMMY JOE STEWART, AU~IONEER
Terms: Cuh or Clleck wit~ D.
Lunch Served
\
Not Responsible tor Accidents

\

J

2049

Ph 245 - 5439

44

BEAUTIFUL HOME
INSIDE &amp; OUT
7 years old ll KE NEW 3
bedrooms ntce kttc ~en elect
nc range all carpeted con
crete pat1o garage concrete
drtveway Thermostat to con
!rol heat tn each room rural
watet system storage bwldJng,
ch atn ltnk fence encloses the

backyard lnsulatton 1n ali
outs1de wails lois ol
shrubbery Approx matel) I
m1le from Hrnzer Hos~tal )USI
oH of Stale Route 160 Ntce
comtot1able home See 1t now

30 4 67 5 5 110

Apartment
for Rent

RENTAl AREA
3 BEOROMS
I 38 ACRES
Pnce reduced lo $31500 IXl
C1ty walet Close lohre hydrant
Basement Well blll~ house
Carpot1 Ouibwldtng:; Good n
sulatton trees garden space
Very qu~l area Posstb~ assu
mabie mortage at low ttlleresl
rale Phone 101 delatls
#566

#571

1 bedroom apar tm ent for
rent Call 446 0390

I 57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS
Ntce home Cc mal atr mral wate1 system large famtly room

26'x22 Ga~aRe slmage blllldtn~ stmm wtndowsand doors Ntce
home See tt now

Fur nrshed efflency apt tn
Rt o Grande ut1httes patd

~570

Go tt 446 0157
Efftencev apartment pn
veta b at h ~13 Third Ave
Galhp o hs $135 Jnc ludes
elec t &amp; water Call 446
4 222 between 9 &amp; 5

BRICK HOME - BASEMENT - DEBBY DR
Central att lull basement natu ral Ras lu!Oace Ctlv water SewaRe
system Ntce brtck home tn an excellent subdtvtson Has an assu
mabie loan P ~one lOt delatls
~572

Apt f o r rent Half double 2
bd room Apt Ad ults pre
ferred N o pot s 614 992

INVESTMENT - INCOME - INVESTMENT
71 l 2x65 lut niShed mobtle home 68 llx50 lurmshed mob1~
home 68 WtndsOI 12x651ttt n1Shed mob1l home and 3 extra lo~

2749

lor rentr1l ~· phc systPms all on State Route

1 bed room Apt $196 m o
m c lu dtng ut11l t 18S Equal
hous 1ng o.-~po rt umty Con
ta ct V tll ago M anor Apt s

V IRG I L B SR

614 992 7767

'11l'lf

Real Estate General

H565
PEACEFUL SETTING - $39 000

.

It tl s prtva cy rt t a COlt ttlrv atmosphere you wa nt wt ve gotrt fhree
bedroo ms 2 OOt!ls la tRt•ltvtn g ro om &amp; tamtly room Kt lchen plus
torm;:d clrmng room AUon I 5 acres New ltstrnR

']nd St

116 acres

more or less

1 1614) 9 92 3325

NEW li ST ING - Duple! of 3
bedroom untts You oNn one
and lellhe othe1 hr.l~ pay im
all In town lot $27000

Located on Jtsco Road and
Twp Rd 242 approXImately 1
mtle from Jackson County

NEW li STING - 25 Actes ol

Oh10 Courthouse

rttce laytng land

Grac tous older 2 s lor~ home

on 2 ROOd count1 Y roads )deal
101 small farm Only $12 50U

completely modern 3 81 2
baths fam1ly ro om fully
carpeted ample closet space
electuc heal ce ntral vac uum
sysl em large modern co un try
style kitchen OW bui lt 1n
ranae largs ultlrty room
storm doors and wmdows Ap
prox rmately 90 acre s of pro
ducttve hay Jnd pasture sev
eral of these acfes surled to
no ttl! farmmg 2 bun s pl enty
of road frontage fenced F•
nancrng avatlable Shown by
appomtmenl Call 614/ 44 6

Real Estate General

m~ar RuH &lt;~ nd

BRICK HI}ME AND 2 ACRES - $47 000
3 bertroom•, J lt. balhhome wtth lo15 ol e)( Ira mr:P. Ieatures bwH m
cabmet~ St'il clea nrng tangc drshwasher .:arbaKe d ~ posal and
large drnm p, room Ky ).,'C r Crtoek Schools

H50l
BUSINESS PROPERTY - 131 Z EASTERN AVE
Lots ol ptcture wtnclows Stone front lrke nw 30 -.80
lnts ol uses - [wo lots Appro&lt; 92 lro t~ 'K'' lots ol concrele
Nt ce b wllt m~

p ark m~ SPliCes

NEW liSTING

-

Phone lor all detarls

#562

Ntcell

reH OO~e&lt;t 3

bedroom hom!:)
wtlh 11 ba ths. large lrvrng anct
il re.t! woodburrt er ln~utiltN1

and cenlral ~ ea l JU&gt;I $29 500
POMEROY BAR GAIN - You
can now buy tll rs 6 rmmllome
w1th balh and all ulll~s 1m
IUSI $13 000
RACINE - 8 100m 111e oklet
home Has cor~ ( sto ~er lurnacf
carpeltng. ntce gar age wt th

and latgr. gatdcn l pol
A;ktnl $35 000

BUSINESS - HOME RENTAl
Uus1ncss equrpmcnt bwldrng 6 room home - Cenhal a11 modern
kttchen I lt~t hs all crty convent ence Ntce horne Rental - 3
roomo; All for tmr prtcr. An excrllcn l mvestmenl Get started now
111

builtlit!~ 111d a tlCil t by home

#529
BEAUTIFUl WATERFRONT All BRICK HOME
CITY SCHOOlS
Ideal lor boattnR hshmg and ptcnrckmR at yout back dom En1oy
th1s spacrous chPerl ul house wtth 3 bedrooms l'h bath s lar RC
l tv tn~ toom ea1111 k1
tchen 2 lnepiaces lull basemen! 2 porche\
c ht~tn lrnk fence plus much more Call tocli:ry to make an
appom tment to see thts lovely yer~r around t1omc

#505

NEW &amp; 2 ACRE S - You ca n
9 9",\, INTEREST - and low
low monl~ly pay ments CAN BE
YOURS by nwesltng 1n ll11s
comlorta~e 3 bedroom 2
story home l ocated on paved
roads conventnt to the mtnes
shopptng and sc~ools AHocda
ble pr&lt;e nterest rate and
terms DO NO !MISS THI S
.JlNP
PRICE REDUCED - T~ 1s
conte mpor::~ry 4 bed1oom br
level IS beggng lo be put
c~ased Save thousands and
thousands ol dolla rs nov.' Oak I
cabmelry vau~ed cetlings
ltniShed family room and
attached garage Qw,..,, ts
seektng offers Invest now and

save'
CALL

RCS REALTORS
Coati Swenson
l -614 -593-5571
Btll Chtlds
992-631,2

save st!veral 1housaml by
fim shtn p lhts 3 bedroom bttck

ranch I '1 baths garage and
neatly level On ly $38 000
IN THE COUNTRY - On hard
road 7 room home 2 baths
over 2 acres 1m $30 000
ONE STORY - 2 oodtootn
~ ome near lhe City ~atk Oalh
&amp; gas heal Large level lol net
stores Asktng $24 900
BRADBURY - V&gt;ew ol Rt 7
itom l~ tS 147 acres l tlll e one
Hoor 5 room ~om e Wood
burner Hue~nd cellat Balh &amp;
rural water Only $11 000
BESIDE SE\ pNG YOUR
PROPERTIES OUR SERVICES
ARE APPRAISAlS MORTGAGE INSURANC~ AND IER
MITE INSPECTIONS CAll
992 3876
\

'
Housing
Headquarters

8'1,% ASSUMPliON

5 Hooms J bedrooms large modern ea t m ktl chen

lull basement

wtllil tt~e latmly toom and woodburner lhal does an excellent rob
heatmg lht~ hurne Garage summe1 atr condttoneff A down

payment and loan assumable Payments ol $292 00 pe1mon l~
Nr ce large lol Phone !01 lull nf01mahon

#559
NICE BRICK LIKE NEW
ClOSE TO EVERYTHING
Beaultlul surruundtngs 7 rooms aU brtck two car ga1age l arge

lot Fa m1ly toom 14 x28 ltvtng 100m 14&gt;28 Nce modem
kitchen And IIIC !Jest pa rt abou lt~ IS proeprty IS the~. low pnce
P~onr. now

#554
5 ROOMS 3 BEDROOMS
Appro• I acre N1ce yard Gatden space Ntee co mlortable ~om a
Large Iron I porch back pano deck modern country k1lc~en large
bat~ roo m On Stale H1
ghway Pho ne lot mme delatls
#555
COUNTRY liVING AT llS BEST
84 ACRES MORE OR lESS
Step tnto one ol t~ e cleanest farm ~ames tn an 1deallocat~n T~ree
good s11ed bedrooms large l1vmg room sunny eal tn kttchen a
bath Tobacco base gas lease and tree gas all go w1l~ tl larebatn
cellar house and chiCken~ ouse Ca ll today lor many more exha&amp;
#843
DRIVE A LITTLE. SAVE A lOT
3 BR lull basemenL wMe alummum •dtn~ luel otl FA lurnace .
30 x40 bam s~tn gled roof lots ol young peac~ and apple!tees AI
thiS reduced to only $14 900
·
11452
CHARMER AT $27,900
POSSIBlE ASSUMABlE lOAN
WllH lOW DOWN PAYMENT
Could be 4 or 5 ood rooms large proc~es bath ltvtng room
\ firep~ce wtth gas logs. dtmng mom kitchen w11~ bUltt tn ca btne~
(ull basement. storage butlding and garden spot m etti scho~
dtstncl Call lor more dela tls

ff550

REDUCED

NOW '55,

tiCS I

EXECUTOR: JAMES F. SHUMAKER
AUCTIONEER. OTTIE OPPERMAN
(614) 385-7195 or 347-4842

FOR SALE
New 4 Bedroom Br tc k
lake Dnve . Rto Grande
$65,000. 8% Interest
land co ntract

PASTURE Gelhpolrs Ferry

AucttonHrs Note Th1s old house In Ntlsonvlllo 1s full'
Tlus llsttn&amp;IS very bnef Attics on both Sldts ol the house
contatn unknown 11ems end the bulldtna whtch 1s loceted
1n btck of the holM has yet to be ontered Could be some
surpnstS Atmembtr, lh11 111t1n1 Is very bnef Terms
Cash Day of Selt or Check w/ 10
"Completa Two Story Houe full Plus Outbulld1n111nd At·
lunch Avlllablt

Real Estate General

; l~p

Tractors. trucks. lurmture. garden tractors. an

flower pols. laugh a-Head, wash bowl &amp; pttcher and
lots more

UNFURNISHED trtuler for
rent m Hend erson 200 per
mo nth Garbage water&amp;lot
pa 1d
Phone 304 67 5

3143 8 30 to 4 30 Monday
through frrday Prrce
$130 000

D J s Tradmg Post m Syracuse. Oh

CASH

Ftnt floo r furmshed ap t
ut•ht•es patd depos1t &amp; lease
requtred Adult s no pets
Call at 631 Fourth Ave
Galhpohs

304 675 7300

FOR SALE

SAT. MAY 7, 1983
10:00 A.M .

EATS

TWO bedroom fu mtshed
mobile h ome pnvate toea
t1on J errc ho road $175
month
deposit requ•red

99 2 5B5B

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
Located at
on St Rt.

1- - - - - - - - --

Pho ne

992 3324

l_:_________

2 bedrooms 10 Racme 614

367 02 BB

43 Farms for Rent
1 bdr furn apt 6 mo IRase
requrred plu s $50 dep,
$175 per mo no ch ildren
no pets Cal t446 3667 after
5

614 JOB 9755 alter 6PM

All new lools of all kmd M1s c chalk ttem s. btrd baths

POMEROY LANDMARK

FurniShed apt 1$200, utili · ONE bedroom apartments
ttes pd adults 607 2nd for the elderty All utlli11e1
pard Tenams pay 30 per
Ave Gallipolis Call 446
ce n t of theu adjusted
4416 after 7PM
1ncome tn th11 HUO aubakl
FU RNISHED one bedroom 1zed apartmenc build i ng
Tw1n A1versTower phone
apartment rn Pt Pleasan t
4 - 675 6679 Equal
E11tra mce . adults on ly no
hous1ng
pats phone 304 675 1386

2215

.

LOCATED ON CO RD .28 IN BASHAN. OHIO

'9.95
.... '12.20
.. '14.45
.. ................ . '16 .70
.. .. .. ...... ..
'18.90
.. .. ... . .. . .. .
. '20 .90
. .... ..
. '22.95

Apartment
for Rent

Furmshed 3 rm epartm~mt
w1th puvate bath at 84 6
Se c ond A ve Gallip o lis
Ret prefered Cell 446

35 lots &amp; Acreage

8

TOOL AUCTION

All LENGTHS IN STOCK

6 room upst au s unfurmshed

44&amp; 2699

qulred 6149923090

I

Long farm• e2o 00 end up
Carol Noel
448-3862

ALUMINUM ROOFING
10FT
12FT
14FT
16FT
18 FT
20 FT

2

EVERY TUESDAY NITE 7:00P.M
AI KRODEL PARK ClUB HOUSE
RT 62 Out Past Heck s
Movm&amp; due to larae coowd from Henderson to PI Pleasan_t
Tools. jewelry owl lamps, head phone radtos y,.y,.y,.'/•
socket sets, artnders. candy over $5.000 00 merchandtse
1
Sponsooed by Fretern1ty Ooder Poltce
Aucttoneer. lonnte E. Neal- 614-367-7101

Professional
Services

Supply, 8 6 304 675
2210 675-6753

142 acres. close to rio
Grande. good house. bar na
some limestone &amp; coal Call

Public Sale
&amp; Auctoon

AUCTION

*

Stoto, AtiMtno. Ohio 1-614 692 -3051, or 1-800-341
6564 tn OhiO

UNFURNI SHED apartment
f o r rent . 2 bedroom
$210 00 Call Aut omotr ve

33 Farms for Sale

2 bedrodm house

304-1571-2792

2 bedroom house 10 Harnsonvllle Remodeled ils•d•

Eam $700 t1600 monthly

HOME

79 Mob1le home 2 bed·
room unfu m1shed 1!1 acre
wrth chatnllnk fence county
water
located tn Oh1o
$1 6.600 Call afteJ &amp; p m

LangoYIIIa on SR 124 Cell
742-2060 aflar 6 JO p m

P O fte11 :\tl
llnrhftur &lt;~v iltr \\\ •!~Ytl
Onf' M tllr Trl fn l.lftl\' lrl'l
IPacltn • 111ln d•a ln'l \11 !lf't'lll••
l1,1t1 um--r fl•anrP n•tt ln &lt;~ ur.nC'

manun

1975 Holly Park mobile
home, 14"70 With central
arr new drapes new carpet
Owner w1lhng to lease pre1
ent locat1on rn cluding pasture on SR 554. Bidwell

614 -992-2602

44

Apartment
for Rent

44

Bidwell

Call 614 3BB

614-379-2727 or 614
379 2194

garage good location 680
S Second. M1ddleport Call

;\ NO
I N!iit.; HA"( t
\t .V•J\C • F:R
CRf lliTitR"' SF HVI('f:

-.on'" wr

A nut11tlonal balanced ,
I~ niiUIII, very dl ·
cestlble. no after taste &amp;
low 1n cost.

arr . fireplace, larga lot , close
to t&gt; wn Call 446-2699

8 room houn 21ots. double

J-1 ~..\:\C ..

&lt;~hiMIId

1969 El Car 2 bdr • mostly
furnished. carpeted ap
pl•ancas, good cond

House tn Syracuse Oh 3
bedroom• w1th carport on
one th1rd acre lot Reduced
to 124 600 304 762 84B8
after 5 p m

Plouent, 304-878-3244

INC

3 Announcement,

614 266 6672

H1ll Pom 40 s 614 9B6
4267

54 M1sc Merchandose

B FT

l &amp; l Scrap Metals Now
buy1ng alum cans &amp; glass
Scrap metals Top priCes

614 992

Would like to do baby11t11ng
1n my home Ractne area

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
Frenc htown Car Co
81!1 Gene Johnson

3 family lawson resu:tence.
top of Flood Rd 1n Syra ·
cuae All kind• of merchan
d1se May 2,3 &amp; 4 10 a m
to 4 p m

wahaar dryer d1ahwaaher
stove refug
A C WB
$6,000 exc cond Call

3 bdr. 2 full betho. control

1n

14x66 lllaloctrtc Cefl614
38B ·9984

1973 New Moon 12•60

M1d 820 s Call 614 6924369

ctl.in II'NI repaired, lawn 8&amp; garden tiBc·
tors are lp.C:tality Neleon
MOW8r8 ,

tn good shape. make

of.,r Call 446-097B

HOME LOANS 12% foxad

Wanted To Buy

9

12~t60

614-379-2683

B643 , Vmton. Oh
Community Senm:e Coord•·
nator Soc1al Service POll·
t1on for a 140 unn apartment complex
Ouallf1cet1ons Bachelors degree m aoc1al work. expe
rlence 1n aSSisting IndiVIduals with problem solving
srtuat1ons Apply at GMHA

$12.600 Or 41ots &amp; moblla
814,BOO Cell 446 -1240

a

Lemley Drilling Water
wells. aheUow Qll, and core

drilling

a mobile home
2 bedroom w1th
rural water gas heat Haa
some furniture , prtce

Modern home. 11 rm
2
bath on 2 acre tot At 326 .
6 mt S of R1o Grande Call

446-31 &amp;9 between 9 ond 5

tota lr.

12~t60

Call 614 992 -6941

oramall R.Uableanddependable For eetmate call

Need mom take home PAY'?

2

Apartment
for Rent

44

17 81:61/VS/./KE st&gt; •.••

On ranted lot

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-D-3

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED· CARS .
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES
CALL 446-7572
4 bdr. 2 full baths finiShed 1- - - - - - - - - baoomont 2 c:ar gerogo CLEAN USED MOBILE
Appotntmont only 20~ K1 - HOMES KESSEL'S QUALnoon Dr , Gallipolio 446 lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
1223
4 Ml WEST GALLIPOLIS.
AT 35 PHONE 446 -7274

your hoopitol-lvtollh 1nou·
r1nce
Cell Carroll

W1l do boby

3~

mootlndlviduol n•dl. ContlrCt Ray Wedemeyer. ~~gent
Phono 388·B249

4192 or 614 992 5888

pm

949 2603 or 614 -9B6 4215

Reliable 1erv1ce a ppo1ntment only
1965 Assoc1a1e of $23,500 614· 949 ·2023or
Brumeardl MuSic Co Phone 614 949 2?77
614 742 -2951
~--~-'~---'3 bedroom buck. large lot
PERMANENT hatr removal 1 % baths fuM basement. 2
Profeas1onal Electrolya11 car garage College Rd .
Cltmc A M A approved Syracuse By appt 614
Dr referrals M-onday Wed
992 5133
needay Friday, by appomt

1111ce

AN you pey.ng to much for

tumty Employer

INSIDE sale ram or shtne
Monday May 2nd 9 30 t1ll'1
North on At 2, 3rd house
on left past M1ckory Chapel

~ NIELS

lrsurence

13

am 1304 676-7617

•
~-

Wantotd To Buy

4 family Brenda' s Bot1que.
Middleport Mon , May 2 .
Starting et 9

day &amp; Wednesday. Mev 3rd

Yard Sale rn Centenary May
28i3 9 · 6 Clothes home
n tenor, t~res appha nces.
glassware &amp; m1sc Rem
date 4&amp;6

In Memoriam

IN MEMORY Of HUSBAND
FATHER ANO GRANOFATHER WILLIE SHAfER
WHO PASSED AWAY FOURTEEN {14) YEARS AGO
APRil 29. 1969

the fttllnl of lppl'tCiaiiOr'l 100

'L

SWEEPER and !118wtng me
ch•na repair
parts
and
supphes
P1ck up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner one halt mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

3. 9 to 4 713 P1ne St, Rio
Grande Stero, 2 rockere.
bunk beds, r lawn mower.
floor lamps metal lawn
cha1ra. glassware. d11hea,
,ewelry, pans, women 's clo
many m11c items
thing

564 May 4,5 &amp; 6

3 Announcements

9

3 F.am1ly Yard Sale. Mey 2 a. l -""-'_n_e_6_1_4_·_9_9_2_-3_B_ll_9_ _

Yard Sale F~rst Ttme Ever 6
Femtly Glassware houae ·
hold cloth1n'9 &amp; fum•ture
2 Yl m1 east of Porter of SR

3 Announcements

2

CARD OF THANKS
Think you 11 0111 of the mosl
used plna.., ol our dilly l~e and
see~ns so 1ujequate lo express

·'

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

Ho~kn~

Pike St , Kanauga Ohto.
across from Ztnn s Land1ng

M IV 1

446 0294

Jrnnspofl atron hl'rri)V not Ires

•

, ., ,,.
lolflolo

F1r.t One, At 588, Honey suckle Mondsry S. Tuesday .
Jeans, cloth ea. pots &amp; pan a.
dlstiw81har dmette cha~ra.
antiques. Mise

6 9 00 AM ' Io 5PM 432

w.tl

anfl
JJAL s n 1&gt;'J3 (0 oo
Sr.1tr
.Rolltr 55~ 11 t1 1t&gt; v !ldql' ot
{:I own (I I ',I hv lf' 'ill l l ;)o_rnq Wl\h
~ ~ p h ul t com u tr
• P,1vf'mPIII W1(Hh
V.:1 r1es

·1

1~

"'

4 3/IG

11137!&gt;59

Pll\ fl l i)II ::&gt;CS

!I ll

~MOKE

1 1071 (1 11 HOI

Tt1 e Ohro

"""'""
l &lt;ll lo n&lt;!

IU

CP..N

1J lrt mr:n! ol Dr vetoprw~n r I' 0
Rnx 100 I Colun hu :. Otuu

be
fPCit Vf1d 11 !li P o ft CO Ol thr!
b 111 r tn
n t thr Ohl O Onpnt t
rlfll l nl l r r ~ po r t 1! on Co lum
b 1!. O h1u IJ!ll I 10 00 A M
btr o St tnrllfrt T1rnr Trrf'i d JY
M tV I ll I l l1l I
rllp ow
mPnl 111
Gcl llr I r r tll\ly
OllrO
on
GAl S A 7 1000 () 7 ll c tr\I P
f kH1ll1 7 u1 tho V•lliH I' ol Crown

hf'SS

tnpnwnt

I'V ( '~\ 11 ttlr.
Agencv ~ C l1 r~hrt( O h ro o tt r:l
Th ~ J)l ll l m ry \)p cll ,\ln 1ned
I ::~n 900 rn to t1 00 o m
Mondily thr ouqh l 1rdt1 y All
pu i)IH ( omm1 n ts will h1 rnd r
1n1nrH1 l et rn PW hy till Oll rc
o t Hwnun Scrvtt r s Ohro D(

Contntct Sales legal

-2

D ••vr

CJnd r&lt;; ()vti rlrJ I)Ir. l u

Columbus Ohto

Rf)lllf

II •"

AND
1'10
ONE

DIRFCTOR 4

Corn
lll(lll l! y Act1011 Aqt;ncy P 0 Box
772 Ctlo~~1rt Oho 4J6 'JO

Str t1

112 ••* "•"~~

• •-

Cell 446-3693

pnyflhle to thr. DtreCior
13 dd ers m us t apply on rh e
proper l orrns lor qual trea t ron
at teas! len days nr1o r ro th e
d ate srt l() r o pEn n~ btds rn
occO rrJ;mce wrth Chaprer 5525
OhtO Revrsnd Codr.
13rr t rlr'! l ~ rm s t apply on th e
proper lorrn s { lor L!Urtl tr ca tr on
a• least ten r!~v s or ro r to lhe
c! 1te se! lor OPf~ n nr") brd s rn
di..C:O rlanr.P w th C hdp t{ •r 55:!5
O hro Rev1sed Cor! r
Pt uns 1n I ~pe( I I{ dtJon s ;trr
nn 1le 1n thr DrpJ t m { nr ot
f f INSfXll ! l l 01 1t1 HJ lhP o ft CO Of
thr 0 "\ I ct 0f'p u ty D rec tor
I he Duff.! O r tf'&lt;;P- r-vos I hr.

I 74 5

.. 09 00)

... _ r;;,,...,

_.,.,...~,..I

C:om mu n 11y

'F IIP.nM 8 u ry
;frf'OSU II'r

.. 110 41

1-

th an !1ft y th ousand do!lars 0 1 a
bono for ten per cent of h11 bid

f"'j f

GALLIPOLI S ClrY

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Don
frolrluf

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the hrddr nq PI OPOSJI
F r~r:'l brlrj~ r sh all bn requ P.d
to f1le w•th h1s b d a c ertd Ad
&lt; t1Pd or cashrflr s c hr.c k lor an
amo unt r.ctu l l tc flve per cent
of h1s bid but 111 no even I mo re

rtl on

br I ci PernNI mo&lt;;l f,JVQrJhi P to
G rllrpolr• C1ty Sr. I ools df d to
w arvc 1nl or rmtlrllf'S

p opn sills

a ..w.,. o."

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drsc r m 1nated aq ams t on the
grounds ot race co lo r or
nnl onal or•g n rn consrderatron
lor an ._.ward
M ntrnurn wal) e ra tes lor l hrs
prOJP.CI hMe beP:n pred e ter
rn1ned a s,.equ red by law and
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,46
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11112

Pubhc Nottce

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

rrr~n

-

....... c-•'"
.................

mowera. arr cond•honer,
ctoth1ng. var~ety of
everything

IAoooo(:~ W'\0
Jo-4

.... ~·

~I MHAn10&lt;

Pubhc Nottce

ioJtow,nq ~"qu p

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ft l fO Mt~U'I'"'On l

61

4fl SilO« o R""t

nropo s;tlo;

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Yard Sale

Yard Solo Moy 2,3,4. Old Garage Sole Mon - 2.ta 4. 9
Rt 180 Evorgooen Lawn til 1 Old 160, 2 mlloa from

I l11 ~ uju •I f"'l" •' " ' • ~ lh •

ju//,.uo" l! '' '' l''" ,., •uh•u11• •

74-DrCIICift
1~ loo o I. M"'"" '

$ 1' "'. a. "~· ·'*•
55 f o Solo or in""

lltftl

lllle&lt;h l'tl llo C IRooo

Sealfct

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72 huo;hll&gt;&lt; l ot•
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l7 loi..WoHom. . ltwho
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2111oal t oo..,Wo norl

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7

7

for Sdle

6 room &amp; bath.largegardln .

PIANO TUNING -LANE DA - ern H1gh School Shown by

-- -::Mt Jba

They'll Do It Every Time

32 Mobile Hrmas

31 Homes for Sale

,
100•100 lot Space hootPIANO TUNING U off plus oro 614 992 5242 L•nd

'

~

.

Ohio-Po1nt Pleasant, W. Va.

bedlrootm house. family room , 2 uau•• ·•
1centra heat &amp; air with haat purnp. 2
in Sunkist. 446-3617.

-~-

'

3 BEDROOMS - 3 ACRES M OR l
Mobtle ~ome 14 x7a 1976 freedom l ~ balhs underp~m nv. lots
of buttt tn cabmets rang~ relngerator. dtnetle set Atr rondrttoner
and other furnrture Rural water mce land lor garden AI thiS tor ·
only $22.500
,
I
11425
39 ACRES MORE OR lESS
some ttmber, plenty ol sprmg wateo \\ mtle
lrontage on Prospect Churc~ Road Pho"' lor lull deta1~

Ttlla b~ pasture ~nd

114t7

�••

Ohio · ~nt Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel

44

Apartment
for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

45

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light hol!•• keeping
1 8t 2 bedro.o m apta. 614 -

ONE bedroom apartmeot ,

402 V• 24th. St. Pt. Plea 992·5434, 614 -992 -591 .4 sant. phone . 1 -614 -992 or 304 - 88~ - 2566 .
5858.
2 bedroom furnithed apt. in

ONE bedroom apartment in

Middleport $175 . plus Henderson , $150 per
utilities. Days 614 -992 - month. 304 -675 -1972 ..

5646.

E~nings

614-949 -

2218.

rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Coli 448 -0768 .

Apartments . 304 -676 · $250 . month . 304 -875 Furnished apt . adults . No
5548.
5294.
Pett. 304-675 -1453.
APARTMENTS , mobile THREE room furnished
homes, h~tea . Pt. Pleasant apartment, dean nice yard,
end Golltpolis . 814 -446 - ou &amp; water paid , adulu . Furnished apt . adul1$ . No
8221 .
Pets. 304-675 -1453 .
Phone 304-675-2651 .

.....

...

61 Houaehold Goods

l

GE harveot gold 12 cu .fl .
THE former Moora ' 1 S.tor·e
Garage on 3rd . Street, Pt.
Pleuant . Equipped with
hoist, tire chenging equip ·
ment, wheel balancing
maChine and more. For more
information contact· Wayne

refrigerator, al1o uaed
w11hera &amp; dryera. all QUI·

ronteed 30 doyo. Coli 614266.1207.

Kincaid. 304-675-2460 .
Real Estate General

r-----~------J~------~------~---·--J-----

WISEMAN

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

•eo..

"' ' ' ' ""

814-992-2259 .

Real Estate General

I•
I

GE wuher&amp; dryw nice peir
8225. 30 dey gua,.ntH,
Hotpoint dryw
Karl'
mono dryw teo. c.11 446818t .

COUNTY APPLIANCES.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home remodel for right tenMnt . INC. Good uoed oppllo.-o.
Park, Route 33 . North of Soddlebrool! . Inn. Pt. Pleo- 827~
· dryws,
,relrig
.. TV
Pomeroy . Large lott. Call oont. 30o4-e78-U71 .
11te.
3rd. Avo
.. O.IN992-7479.
Coll 448-1698.
' '

Unfurnished 3 bedroom
central air .. water paid ,

61 Houaehold .Goode_ 61 Houaehold Goode

Goode

OFFICE;,opoc:e ovolloblo. WHI

Sleeping room $125, util1ias pald,lingla ma~ . Share Small office apac .a in
bath. 919 Second Ave . Pomeroy . Cle!and Realty,

Gallipolis . Cal1446-4416
after 7PM .

61

46 Space for Rent

Fumished Rooms 46 Space for Rent

REAL ESTATE .AGENCY
PHONE 446-3643

May I, 1983

1983

Now Lozyboy
Mt.
-11 mim&gt;r.
top,
room Ulbl.._ t?OQ for

_;r;_~~~~t~J~o~ck~oon~~E~at~Apt. 8118.

. __ SWAIN
_
RNITURE
AUCTION • FU
82 Olivo St .. GoUipollo. 6.
piece woocllivine room .,Ita
with 8.1nch flo_Unno e399,
bunk bodo comp- with
bunki• t189. 2 piece ontron llvineroom ouiteat199.
ontr~ rec:linon t99. other
rec:linero tao. maple dinette
All t179, love -~~ t70.
hido-o -bod t250, bo•
&amp; monreu twl Infi or
opringo100
full
Ill regu or- nn
t120, mople dinette chliro
us, -•h otondo t34,
maple rocltoro t59, 7 piece
chrome dinono Ill t149. S
pioce dinette Ill a89, uoed
bedroom ouiteo., refirgoroton. ronlieo. cheat .
drea~ers.
w•aherl,
TV' a, dryerea.
shoea. Coli

*

wrfnrr

448-3169.

64 MiiC . Marchandiae 74

LAYNE'S
Solo. choir. rocttor. otto........ ;t tobin. loxtro '-Y
Frantler). t885. Solo:
ond 1 - 1 . t275.
Sofao one! choiror.:::trom ·
•ns. to t896. · - · -t41i
ond up to •1 25. Hlde-o·
· bodo.t440. ond up to
t525.;
Rocllnero,
to .
t3SO., Lampo
fromt1711.
828-~to
•7s. s pc. dinott.. from
.99 .. to t435. 7 pc .. t189 .
end.up. Wooci.Uible with ol•
choiro t426. to t741i. Dull
•1 10 up to t226. Hutchoo,
•••o
nd
..... "'
•• ' •
up, ma,_ or..,no
flnioh. Bunk bod complote
witil 11111nre-. UIIO. and
up to 8396. Baby bodl,
•1 10. Monre- or bo• ,
opringo, full or twin, 158 .,
finn . tea: end f78. a-n
~~196· 4- dr. w-w.
.....
t42 . 5' dr. chasti,
•&amp;4. Bod .
fromoo. t20.end a26 ., 10
gun : Gun coblnots. f350 ..
dinettechliro t20 . end t2S.
u••
Goo or olactricrongea. ..
up to 137S. Boby mo,....... 825 &amp; 136, bed
!romeo UO, US, &amp; UO.
kinefrome tiiO. Good-tlon of bedroom 1ultn. ,.
cedar cheoto. rockoro. metol

1

toblo ·
ln. ond 1
end lllblo 25x1B'hx20'h .
with light wo.,ut finish t30
32xli3- 174 p1ecot bmw~
untleopi111&gt;ing for o mobile
home -lust 1 ·- r come
off 1 14x70 mobile home,
long pieces meooure 32".
ohort pieceo 21 " ond 10
lnchoo ocro... entorloclt .in 1
metlll fAime. wOOd g111in

finish. Call after &amp;PM, 446 308&amp;.

HEAP Vouchoro . Coli 614268-6246.

IS prom dre111a "iizoo 7-13,
lllto now. Wom oroly once .

3694.

wa&amp;htlfl,

opprovod 1 8 gouge 12 inch
t5.35 por fl .. 24 inch
t10.10 por fl. 38 inch
t16.50 por fl . Aleo plootlc
culvert in atodc.. 6 inch thru

1 8 Inch. 8 Inch • 1 .80 per fl.,
12 Inch 83.80 por fl. Ron

e~~binetl, swivel rockefa:

Even• Enlerprius. 4 mi.

South of Jackeon on ST. RT . ·
93, 514-288-6930.
Cedar

wardrobe.

en~que

tNnk. 3 tier gl&lt;lu teble &amp;
concrete picniC table with

bonchoo . . Coli 814-266176B.

Real Estate General

Tillers. Swi1hers Imple-

ment. St. Rt. 7. North of
Golllpolio. Call 446-0476.

Canaday
Realty

REAlTOR

CHAROIAIS HILLS - Very attractivri' 2 story
home ~tuatr!d on 31h acres off Rt 160. This fine
home offers 4 bedrooms, deluxe kflchen. fa&lt;mal
dining roan. famrly room wilfl fireplace and Buck
stoW&gt;. 2YI baths, lull basement 2 car garage plus
20x40 oo~ and exceptionallandscap ng. Call l~e
Wiseman.

I
1

NEW LISTING - WITH LOTS OF CHARM Mosl attraclive 4 bedroom bnck and rame
leaturing large Early America n family room
with a big loot warming fi replace and indoor
barbecue. Pretty formal dining room with .
anolher old b_rick fireplace, large bow window
rn livrng room aflords you a bird 's·eye view of
the river. There are 2 full baths, modern
kitchen wrth lois of cabinels.

JUST . USTED - 8Yo% ASSUMPTION Attractrve 3 bedroom bncl&lt; home located just off
Rl. 35. !mr 1300 sq. It of li~ng area includes a
lar~ bath wnh garden tub, equipped kitchen,
utilrly room. large covered porch, and allraclively
decorated. Good loan assuplion. $55,000. Call Jrm
Cochran.

Call 446· 7795.

-~

Phone 304-676-4671.

POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor ot 614-387-

l\l1l61tt f -Ill

OtW~~-. .,....._u... ,.._&amp;NOI.

0NE twin 1ize bed with

7220 .

white 11ollywood hood - ~=========:r:===;;;.:.====~ _O
_R
_A
_ G_O_N_W_Y_N_O
_ C_A_TT
_ E_RV
board, bel• oprlneoll&amp; mottroll, t36,00. O'n, air- KENNEL AKC Chow pupconditioner. 11,SOO BTU :

window unit. uoed 4 yearo. 64 MiiC. Merchandise
8100.00. Comp tont, oloopo
eto B. comp nove&amp; !&lt;Intern.
t160.00. Dna Kenmore 1 punt breed malo Siamooe
•wing machine .wtth ~- kitten 10 wlu . old, wonned,
binot &amp; h11ooclt, like new. $60 . 1 oot bunk bedo, 8SO.
t200.oo. Coli 304-875 - Coll448-8608 .
. 81119 otter 4 p.m.

t5. dozen),

Electric chain a.aw.like new.

$30 . Coli 676, 2836 .

Som

Amene 17 fl . refrlg. ovacodo

Somerville'•· E•st Ravens·
wod junction Independence
Road-Route 21 . Open only
Friday, Saturday&amp;. Sunday,

$160. fireplace aetwith iron

1 0'•7' rnollll building. Uoed
one year t136. Call 114992-83!16.

7 h . treated picnic tables .

Rio RidiiQ Runnero 4-H
Club. Coli 814 -245-5347.

;Good uaed s:v rooting tin, a
ft . &amp; 12 fl. lengtho . Call

820. Cell448-2429.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Browning auto. 12gouge28
modified

Belgium

•••

lieo. Call 614-256 --6540 or · ·
614-256-6516 .
••
Simental cow wi1h JA ~ Si­
mental heifer calf at side .
Ben Bickers Simentel Farm

old. If intarested call 614- 1979 20-c P.1assey FerQu 245 -9578 .
son end loader, plow, disc,

614 -387-772 7 .

tine• . bush hog,
HORSES &amp; ponys. 304· cultivator.
garden blade . 810 ,500 . Call
876 -6110.
-t46-2971 .
AKC regiatered Poodle pup· 68 c
f
aae Vac, wide ron1end
P ies, phone 304· 882-3447.

like ne,. 614-949-2059.

trailer. Call814-245-5347 .

685-2260. John L. Bono.

with

2 - 14

plows,

utility

...

New HoHand 488 Haybine .
NEW &amp; Used Harvestore - •.
Structures. Automated li vestock feeding -computer • .
feeders . Cell collect 614 -

·pial , CFA--Himalayen, Per·

sian
and Siamese
Call 446-3844
efler kinens
4PM . .

Real Estate General

1975 Dido Omega . 2 dr. ht .,
automatic, very clean. new
radial tires. new exhaust
aystem, new brakes . exc .

- -•·

cond . $1 ,496. Accept•!rado.
614-667-308S .
1

"·•
~

••

1976 Jeep CJ -6 . 8 cyl. . runS '
BJCC ., body rough . rag ~op ,
roll bars, good tires . motor&amp;
trans uain axe . $1 ,396 .

..

~

·--

Accept trade . 614-667 3085 .

======;=:::;::;::=-!._--=-_--c:----Real Estate !3eneral

-

made

mint cond . 8550. Call614 388 -9611 after 4.

tion, double XX barrel. tri

rifle Browlng douglao ac-

UFE
INSURANCE

pOd, 24 power lopold ocopo.
t800. Coli 814-3 88·961 1

Call 446-0552 Anytime

after 4 .

·-..

Brol.er-Auclioneer

243 custom heavy varmit

•

..••
-

Beth Null 245-9507

-,;;;;;;;;;;R~e=ai;E:•:t~a~te~G=e~n~e~ra:l;;~;;;;;;l

I

CENTRAL REALTY.·_.

MOBILE lllME - wittl large add-oo bulding. asphal driveway.
located on quiel streel out of high water in Racine The livingroom
is extra large. There~ a cement wall&lt; and large covered porch, also
~~':ls~ buitdmg, You can be in this _one in !Wo weeks for.
NEW LISTING- 3 0&lt; 4 IJedjOOms possible on this one.Trai~rwilh
large add-on on nearly an atre lot. Includes storage bu~ding, lrt
can hOve second lrai~r as extra income. Asl&lt;ing $12,000.
SACRIFICE - QUiet&lt; SALE - 2 bedrooms. bath, living room, &amp;
eat-in ~!chen on first flo!)r. Basement has 3rd bedroom. laundry
area &amp; extra room. Concrete floor with sired at the end of drive
Comieritibnal and FmHA:financing po6Sib~. Asking $27,500. Make
yoor 1fer, owners loss can oo your gain.
3 BEDROOM BRICI&lt;HOME - WBJP, hardwood floors. 1\\
baths, needs o.t&gt;ry itlte to make lhis home a "Doll House". Asking
$25,000.

PRICE REDUCED- WAS $66.900 NOW $59,900
- The owners hao.t&gt; spent tire last 3 yers
lflis -home over and tire interi&gt;r looi&lt;s like a
from House Beautiful. tt features a orge
room, 2\! baths. library llith si&lt;ylight 3
bedrooms, formal dinng, new kitclre~ new
and a o.t&gt;ry nice Spring Valley 1~. Possible
assumpboo.

days &amp; 446-4267 ewen.

-·

59 For Sale or Trade

Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg. Oobennans pups afd
Doberman Stud Service.

o.k dinning table. 6 chairs,
buffet &amp; hlilch. 82,000.

plus clo1hing, (rental clo-

grade Walker female 2 yr.

Call 446-0865

HILLCREST K·ENNEL

BEDROOM oulta, one 3 pc.
t$00 .. 2 pc. t8oo. Lorge

tobacco poundage will poy
cooh. Coli 441 -4288.

Mlo-61 4-992-S878.

56 Pets for Sale

phone 304-67S-2512.

814-388-9884 otter &amp;PM .

.

Building materials
block, brick, s~r pipes.
windows. lintels, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Call614-246-6121 .

Greenware 10 percent to 26
percent off. For inform~~tion

614-992-2078, Judy.

Bar '"'" with two atooll for

~

55 Building Supplies

Folrview Rd. C4mp Conjy,
Pt. PlooAnt. Galzo &amp; opecillty glozeo 20 pon:ont off.

voice modular. Warrenty on · port car for aale 1860, all in
antint oet. 6 tepoo, t200. good cond. Went to luM

COtana cpeahson 6 75 -'4008
CReaQtons
[B Gl

Sale or trade Reg. Walker
pupa, 9 wks. old . na male. 81 .200.
three fem•le also have one

urday. M.J .'a Ceramica,

1 :00-7:30 p.m.
81 4-388-8643 .
REPOSSESSED SIGNI No-.
Motintoo &amp; box opring now. thin
gclownl
poyment1
*68 Toke
.00 ovor
monthly.
12•12 I')Jg. Call 446-051 B. 4'•8'
fluhine orrow oign.
Now bulbo. Ionero. Hole
Antiquo Oak Reproduction Signo.
Coli FREE 1-800fumii\Jre. full line in otock, 628-7446,
lflyllme.
oloo·Antiquea. Paul Conkelt ·
Ant!queo. Tupporo Plaine.
Cub trirctor with cultivotoro
Odyioey T.V. gonle wlth plow t1.760, 1976 Now'

Jtudney Canaday 446 -gt,g6

Bush hog in good shape
S326 It older modellnterna tiqnal tracto' (J!aedl work,

12" 20 fl. wide fl&lt;lngo
1-beom, 81 30. 6 fl. stoet
mortar bO•, t1oo . 304676-3452.

CAMOUFLAGE army our-

Farm Equipment

Ford tractor with disk.
plows. brush hog. and
swarm of bees with aupp·

t126 .. Sofobed 1110.• tif.
pllco in...-t t300. AU in
foir-aood cond. 304"875ne9 befono 2 p.m. or oftor
tO p.m.
·

Weter well drilling rig . Cell

446-3636
ltEALTOI

61

.S tove and rtifrtgerator
t380. both. Sony ~­

New &amp; Uoed Troy 8uih · thing

-·

Ike Wiseman, Broker, 440.3796 Eve.
Jim Cochran, Associale, 440.7881 Eve.
B. J. Hairston, Assoc., 440.4240 Eve.
Clyde Walker, Assoc., 245-5276

or 446-

For ule metal culvert 6 inch
thru .10 incl'! in llock. St•te

rongeo. cholro. end lllbloo.
wuhoro. dryero. refrlgoro-·
ton end TV's. 3 miles out
Rd o
9
Bulavilla
. pon am to
8pm, Mon. thru Fri.. 9em to
lipm. Sot.
446-0322

dryen, refrigera·
roniiQI. Sltogga ApI .toro,
pliancei, Upper River Rd.,
be•ide Stone Creat Motel.
I 448-7398
.
·

4411-9789

The Sunday Jimes-Sentinei -Page-~5 .•

Motorcycles

SALE Thurodoy. Fridoy, Sot-

Knouff Cool &amp; Firewood
!'ricea reduced Moy-July.
Pick or dellvenocl. We honor

Used Furniture •• bookceH,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

coffee

47'11i&lt;U1~•16'h

C41~

lis, Ohio--Point Pleasont, W. Va.

· PonMMOf

3 ACRfS -

Racin~

owner wil lrelp linance.

BMR 427 - $30s. maintenance tree srding. fenced back yard.
lamrly onenled n•ghborhood. ThiS IS a very c~an 3 BR home. Call
lor apjXlmtment
BMR 389 - Thrs fine home has 4 bedrooms a nd ~ located close
to lawn. You will have a large ~t with a counly atmosphere and
have all the city convenrences. Call now'
BMR 424 - 2 ~us acres w~h a very nrce 3 bedroom ranch slyle
home You will_love the country almosphere Possrble loan
assumption.
·
·
BMR 426 - Pr~ed rrght at $37.500. II has an assumable loan
.with only 91h% interest We are talkrng aboul a very clean, 3 BR
home siluated on nice flallol1n a larrily oriented neighborhood.
Call lor complete delais.
BMR 398 - PRICE GREAnY REDUCED' Owner lran slerred and
musl sell lh1s 3 BR ranch. Close to town rncludes deluxe 18•36
ingrourxl pool. Reduced lo $'14,500 - P~US Owners wrll pay
F.HA-VA · poin ~ and closm~ costs.

•

..•
..••

CLOSE TO HOSPlTAl - Good home, reinodel ed msrde, ·2
bedrooms krlchen wrlh range &amp; relri geralo r new wor~s hop ·
burldin g &amp; gaf:rge.
#1562
JUST liSTED - IN TOWN - Ranch w1lh 3 bed rooms. bath.
carpel, garage. good buy at $19.500.
***BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOTS'** 5 acres 01 more.
cose lo town . e&lt;eell enl resrdenlra l, $10.000.

BMR 429 - All eleclnc bi-~v~ 1n Kyger Creek School Drs~rcl
sfluated on 1.21 acres wrlh assumable 91\% loan. Call lor complele
detarls1
BMR 430 - NEW LISTING - f~r• 11 "1 1 buy al $38.500. L011ely
lrame ranch wflh 3 BPoi:
lhcar peted drnrng area.2
baths. Better see this 1\~ - ""' ' vwner anxrous to sell'

150 ACRES - Good larm, beau l llu l
bacc o base . pond. Rl. 14 1

BMR 431 - NEW LISTING - Brock ranch rncludes 3 BRs. l R,
DR, lamily room , 21h baths. situated on 38 acres.Call to see th15 one
today'

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PRICE 11EDUCED - Nrce remodel ed honre wrlh 4 bedrpom s. balh wrlh shower, carpled . 3 beaulr lul acre~ wilh
shed. you'll like thos one.
#1479

7 ACRES - large brock &amp; Ira me horne. has new roof and
SPQUtlng . La 1ge ba111. owne r w1lllmarJC 1!, c1ly ~chool diSI! lei
#1145

oucHl

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NEW LISTiNG -Very nice Sechonal Home. 3 bedroo ms, 2
balh s. lully carpeted. wile approved krlchen. drnrng room
and n1 ce lot
H345

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land. 3 barn s. lo·

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#1012

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NEW LISTING - 90 acres good roll1ng land. one-li111d II liable. som e woods. large barn .
#1190

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BMR 432 - NEW liSTING - 3 BR b..level.1n Rodney V1Mage II
Includes lamily room, fireplace and more. Srlualed on tented
ca&lt;ner lot Call lor details.

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EXCELUNT BUY -IN TOWN - Mooern 2 story,
JUST LISTED - 2WILLOW DRIVE - The owners
4 bedroom home wittlin walking distance of . of lh~ attraclive home are anx~us lor a quic ksale.
schools. Has 2 WB fireplaces. equipped kilclren,
located just a fewblocks lromlfle downtown area
drnrng room, knotty pme famiy room. 1~ baths,
lhis ranch sty~ home of1ers 3 bedrooms. a large
lull basemen\ nat gas H.W. heating.2 car garage
Ioyer, 20x20 _lamily room wflh a c01y stone
and more. $51.900. Clll Jim Cochran.
irreplace, equrpped kitchen. drning room. 111
balhs, plus nat gas heal &amp;cenlral air. This os one
you musl see lor $57.000. Call Jim Cochran.
JUST LISTED - CROWN CITY - Attractive
totally remodeled and redecorated 2 bedroom ARE YOU HUNG UP ON REAL QUALITY? - Well
home on corner lot. Has an enclosed porch. here's one that will impress you. Afi ne brick ranch
dinrng room , bath and farage, brick and which was· buin wilh good material by a fine
alummum siding. Also has 2x18 building that craftsman. A formal su~ ken livini rwm. lane~
could easily be used as a rental or large storage dining. and a com~ete k~chen and ealrn!i area . &lt;
woodburning fireplaces, 2 balhs, 2 car garage, 4
area . $46.500.
large bedrooms, a beautiful lamily room, large
PRICE REDUCED - VERY SPECIAL HOM£ utility and rec. rooms. plus a very nice par!'j r"'\m
'Very high Qual~y" wil be your 1"1 thought on
wilh wei bar. Tho one wiH be here wlren you re
seeing thrs unsually ~ce home in Wash~gton
Kone. we a lOVe Ill show it to you $89,900.
grade school district. 31arge bedroom~ wth lots ol
closet space Big living room with bow \Iindow. INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY - 7 RENTALS mo·~ o~lstar,ding kitchen (beautilul cabinetry), dis·
and ~cated al the iunclron of Rl. 7- Rl. 141. 6
hwastler. triple ·bowl ~nk. rolfoot she_lves, range residenlial rentals and !last food rental. Overlooks
oven~ lazy susans, bui~-·-c- tU nd lotsol counter
boat club. Your investment should pay for itsell.
top work spac \l.tUU
. rooled and has $65000.

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~~~~~a1~"~:d fl \\'1. .~~~~~7n;~~ ::~
II allhe
accesS!JI'Ie,,
bathrooms. large
utility room and l!lbs ol storag~ The lawn
£ ~ spar~~g

shrubbery, stone walls, flower gardens and pine
I trees
backdrop make th~ tnJy a beautilul family
Owner has jUSt finislred a new home oul
of
stale
and
is very anxious
I
PRICE REDUCED - WAS $89,900, NOW
I $64.333
- One of a kind - Perfecl for a prolessional office, a business in your lmle. a large
1.residence or as it stands now,a2family home.This
a qua~ly buin older home lflal has2 kitthens. 2~
I1ishaW&gt;
baths. modern gas lurnace &amp; central air. You cou_ld
a nice office complex downstarrs and famly
parad~e.

REDUCED! - WAS $69,900 NOW $50,000 Here's your oppo&lt;tunrty lo gel a great buy on tho
newly redecorated 3 bedroom home ~luated on
13 acres cklse totown. Has famiy room, fireplace,
drnrrig room. new equipped kitchen, 2 baths,
basement central air, woodburner, garage.
Anderson windows &amp; new roof. Call Ike Wiseman tn
see lhis today.

PRICE REDUCED $6.400 00- NOW $58.000 Family ~zed 4 bedroom home just l 1h mile frum
H.M.C, Has all equrpped kitchen. dinelte, family
room rs ~rge and has a fire~ace. partially finislled
basement and a workshop. Over 2 acres wrrh a
garden area. Call Oyde Walker.
'

COIDNIAl HOME - 40 ACRES -Just listed lhrs
lovely 2500 sq. n. modern 4 bedroom home. This
fine_home offers 21arge ballls, equipped krtchen,
lamrly room, fireplace, wood burner. basement plus
approx 10 acres crop and balance in pasture &amp;
woods. 4 barns. 14721b. tobacco base plus oo.t&gt;r
2.001Y road lronlage on lwp. road - Rl.775. Can
Clyde Walker for more rnlo.
CLOSE TO TOWN - Conven~nt location. 11\ miles
west of town Attractive &amp; spacoous 3 bedroom
ranch. Has full basemen\ warm &amp; ClllY fireplace,
family &amp; recreation room~ ~enly of storage area.
Nat gas &amp; central air plus garage &amp; fenced yard.
Pr~ed to sel. Call Jim Cllchran.
HOME &amp; 10 ACRES - This is a 5 year old, 3
bedroom home lhat has a ~rge krtchen. lull
basemen\ lamily room, woodbuming furnace. new
18124 garage &amp; slorage builrfing. The 10 acres
rncludes a new 38x50 bam and some woods.
Owners anxillll! tn sell. $39,500. CaN JimCochran.

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9% iiTG. ASSUMPTION - Attractive brick
colonral. ranch mcrly school dist 3 bedrooms 2
bdths. frreplace, fam i ~ room, woooburner 2 ear
garage and 1.7 acre setting less than 5 mikis trom
town. Call Cl)lle Walker. Price $65.000.00.

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REALTY
BUILDING LOIS- CHAROIAIS HILLS- 79 ac&amp;
With 2 home sites in wooded area Has 32x56
Inundation wall. Private drive loCated in an
excellenl neighborhood. $19,300.
NEW LISTING 8Yo% ASSUMPTION - Good
location! 4 bedroom home in Pleasant Valley
Estates off Rt. 35. Over 1450 sq. ft. olliv. area
rncludes drning room. fully equipped Mchen, 1\\
baths, util. room, nat gas, cent air, ove~zed
garage &amp; large yard. Owners anxio~£ to sell. Cal
Jim Cochran.

ALL OF THESE PROPERTIES WILL QUALIFY FOR THE NEW LOW INTEREST
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY YOURNEW HOME!

NEAR HOllER HOSPITAl - Plenty for your money. Split Ioyer
home has 4 bedrooms, l full bath plus 2 haW ballls. Family room,

eq11pped ~tclren. cent arr. ,IJI carpeted except kitchen and ballls
2 car garage. Amust see' $59.900.
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$34,000 - Nice 3 bedroom home located in
Southwestern School Dot Has an equipped
kitchen. dining area, 1\\ baths, full basement. 2
carports &amp; 1'.4 acres. Call Oyde Walker. Pussible
part financing

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REDUCED TO $27.900 - 1982 14x54 molile
home locatedon 2A acres in Rio Grande iust out o1
corporatiOn hmKs on Rl. 32!i Has dl)' waler &amp;
sewage (could put another mobie home or 2 oo
loQ. Cal Jim Cochran for. more info.

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WE HAVE MORE _ CAll

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FOR INFORMATION

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tr)hio

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VA ACQUIRED HOMES
LOW$$ OOWN-120/o INT.

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ISSUE MONEY!
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RT. 588 - 3 bedroom ranch in an excellenl
1location in c1ly schools, Has lull basemen\ lamily
1
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room. lireplace. 16' master bedroom, l'h bath,
JUST LISTED - 9%..AW!Ili'TIDN - Very
\
garage. carport ~us 40'•60'x15' high buiding
attractive colonial br~k home localed 5 miles from
\
w/ 20x40 attached shed. (Excelent for tractor
1
town iq Gallipolis School Disl Over 1700 sq. It of
168 ACRE FARM- $q,500 ..,.- Excellenlbuyoo
work). all ~cted on 11A acre&amp; $60&amp;Call Clyde
ta~elully decorated living area indudes 3
rental or more offices upstairs. There's a finished 3 Walker.
lflis large acrease \lith a rei\IO(Ieled 4 bedroom
bedrooms !master suite has walkin closet &amp; bath),
1
floor fuM basement and 2 car garage. In lfle prohome. Al)prox. 10:20 acres crop with balance in
2
lull baths.~rge equipped kitchen, fireplace,
and poslure. Has some buildings and brrrn~
164
AC.
SR
141
located
on
Raccoon
C
reek
~~o:,;'ae;'r!~t::'~&amp;c~a"&amp;:~~;mide lo- lf11s farm offers tobacco base, approx. SO ac woodburner. family room and 2 car garage. 1.7 wood
Home ·has fireplace, carport and garage. Off Rt
Acre setting in qurel location. $65,000.
554. Cal .lm C'ochran.
paslure. 50 crop, ba~nce in woodland, 40.&amp;1
1
NEW LISfiNG - COMMERCIAl BUILDING RESIDEIIOAL &amp; RENTALS - Several sources ol bam and 16x60 shed fur tobacco &amp; livestock Wen
&amp; rural waler available lor home site. Less than
illCOil'E. 38x50 brid&lt; building on 31!1 !we.
$450
ac. Call (lyde Walker.
Downslairs has 2 finished rooms currenly housing
ren!JI business. Ups!Jirs has 2 apartments renting
AGREAT DEAL - 101!% Blend may be possible on this 3 OR.
$200 mo. eac:h. 1973 mobie home renting $275
$12,000 - located in tbwn. 4 rooms &amp; bath. Nat
br~k rarch. KC school district $48,000.
mo. House has 3 bedroom~ 1 bath, lamiy room,
gas treat storage bldg. and tree shaded yard.
. woodburner, ~nyt siding insrJalion, stDrn]. ~ndows
localed on deadend street Could be good for
(Anyone Can Buy)
and in good conditioo. ~~ sell house separate. Call
rental purposes or starting home, Call Clyde
OWNERS IIIMIIG - Musr SELL- 3 BR. 1~ battuanch, built
today for delar~ . CaJi Jim Cochrap.
Walker.
ACRf
FARM_
Altricbve
bedroom.
by one ol the area's top ~rs. fine quahty throughout. Comb. •
40
3
RIO GRANDE ESTATES - Beautilul wooded
bath
hoolti
with
lui
ADDISON
Nice
remodeled
3
bedroom,
llmily
room-frib:hen with llfllll!, dishwasher and disposal, l)tacired
2
1basement, fireplace
buitdine kits from 2 to 5 acres each. Ideal location
PRICE REDUCED TO $59,900 - Newly
l\1 bath i1clole; Includes mmily room, very
praae with s!Dra&amp;e. aUomrrti: opener, central aircond. Npw is the
near colege in good residential area. $6.800 to
redecorated 4· bedroom home in town. Just about
:~ ~{:; tt,raaetia~=kir':a~ mce kitclren, lovely carpet, central air.
time Ill ,el 1 super dell on this fine horne. l'ussible mortgage
Sll.OOO Land ~ys very good. lots of privacy.
evervihing ~new in lflis allractive home including .·
okler house. $2,000 down. $68,400.
~raee. _and 3.5 acres. $2fOO down.
assum.pioo City, ~~LOW PRICE ~...9iJDI
. ·
vinyul siding. roof, carpet, walll"'lfEI'· _Wlnng. •
$52.500
4WN:. - Attractive wooded -acreal!ll. near Rio
insulation , etc. Has 21'1 baths, equrPiled k~chen,
EVERGR£EN Modem 3 bedroom
· Grande. Rural water available. ' Excellent home
lamily room, basement nat gas heat 2~ car
on Old Rt 160. Has nice kitchen
4\l ACRES - 2.bedrOOm home kiclted
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Restricted to housing only. No mobi~t Call garage pi~£ feoced private yard. Call Jim Cochran,
utility room, and 2 Clr prage. 11 aC_ yaro:
near Cadmus. Very nice ~nd. Only $500Ill on !eCOnd. Frontaae on lliRh traffic street Plus weri:J:nsq.
_Giyde Walker.
$1.000 down. $38.000
· down. $18,000. ·.
. ft. WI Slf!ll.b.le
lrontini! on alleY
cOMMERCIAL LOT IN RIO GRAND£ - hcel~nt
,,£R£'S ABEAUIY IN THE WOODS - Just wlrat
DW_NER WILL CONSIDER LAND COiiTRACT
, locltion a1 corner of Maple &amp; East College Ave.
the doctor Oidered if you're looking for a I~
Reslricted building lot zones commertial. Can
peace and QU~ When you come home in the
EDGE OF TOWN - This is a good buy on
154 ACI£S. Noflh Ge1i1 .,._ rdlinc lands, elcelenl prodocing
Clyde Walker for info.
.
evening you11 find lflis handsome~ bedroom with
this 3.bedroom, 1\! story home. Has full
llrm. toblem trHMl home, good building!. 1ences. One o1 Gllirr
I ACRES _ Owners an~ous to sel. located on
an English Tudor accen~ lucked back at lheend of
basemen~ nat gas heat and carpolt $500
Coonty's beiB mrms.
.
. Horse Creek Rd., 1 mile off Rt 7.1rcludes modern lhe drive surrounded by huf11!1n!eson the 5 ac lot
down. $27,000.
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4 bedroom home _ w~h wooobllrner. basement &amp;
This one offers an unusually II!Jil larrlly room. 3
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121 ACII£S- Wllilllt Twp, SOllie nice tiilable. timber, mineral
baths 1nd a very n~e kitchen. City school district
r'chts ildJled. ~ house,
7001b. to_ brreco ba_se &amp; 24•36
Ia. 1111! klchen. Has.
...... --"'" home
ade Ca'
See Hand make 1n oiler. lmmedialr! p115sessjon.
,
o:lll. Would con,..,. """""'
'" tr · '
Owner moved'Dlll o1 state
10 33 500
1 .Ct1de
W.lla!r.
lleducaj
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~ocust
~~eet,
QaQQtpoQi~.
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1, 1983
Oh"110 Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Times-Sentinel
61

Farm Equipment

66 Seed 8t

71

NEW Holland 268 hay baler. FARM ADVISORY SERVI•1.600. Ford 841 tractor, CES Grain &amp; livestock mar•3,000. Siders Equipment, keting, soil testing, crop
304-4175-7421. Hendoroon , planning. bookeeping , 1inancall plann ing . T.M . Ari-

wv.

Services, Inc. Call614-4460698 or 304-675-6140 .

63

Live.stock

to

lease

tobacco

, Mason, Putnam, Ca CaU:~Imgor

Woodlawn
· ny. 3 04 -6 75 ·
304-523 -5843 :

Autos for Sale

1978 Bonneville PS. PB. tilt
wheel, cruite control, AM ·
FM stero, *200 rebate. Call
448-9478 after 5, week days anytime w8ekenda.
1 974

Super

VW

e~ecellent

Beetle.

conditiol) ; (no

rust). no mechanical prob·
lema. Cell 614 -246 -95B8 .

1-:--::-:-------- -

1982 Honda Prelude essen tia,lly new, 9 ,400 m i., elect -

ric

s un

roof.

5

\1ff~1.\hl ~\1 ~THATiCR-' mWORDIWil
~ ~ ~~· • byMoM-ondBobl,oo
UnSCtamble these lour JumtMet,

one 1en&amp;r 10 each square. to lorm
10\lr ordinary WOfdl .

I ANCKK I

Angus bulls 1 to 3 yrs. old .
excellent blood line, Slate
Run Farms. Jackson . Oh
Coll814-286-6395 or 614 288-1787.
- - - - - - - --lc UBonte' s Quail Farm . Ma·
ture Quail now being sold.
Eggs available now . Must
have advance notice with
deposit . Chicks available at
later da~es . Order early.
61 4 -9B5-4345 .

For Sale or Trade: 1979
Camara, 61 ,000 m i. New
tires, 305 engine, auto . Call
379 -2726 .
For Sale or Trade: 1977
Camara. 305 engine. auto ..
a.c .. new tire's. 34 .000 mi.
Coll279 -2726 .

1 976 Corvette dark brown.
T-top, factory alum . wheel s.
exc . cond .. low mileage,
many e)(tras. Call 446 ·
0498 .

1971

64 Hay 8t Groin
Ear corn for sale. 1 ,200
bushels . 1 6 acres of corn
ground for rent at Broad
Run . 304 -882-2882 .

Buick Skylark . Air,
p .11 ., p .b ., auto . 614-949·
2336.

1 978 Camiuo . Air, automatic, Keystone ·wheels .
rear defog , very good cond .
49.000 miles . 614-9493093 .

Real. Estate General

$3,000 lor all. Coli 614367 -0631 .
1972 Opal Manta. $400 .
Call446-1609 .
1977 Camaro $2 ,300 . Coli
614-388-9611 after 4 .

1979 Ford Granda air. PB.
PS . auto . vinyl top . $3,300 .
Call 446-8592 .

79 FORD F260, 4 -wheel drive, power steering.
power brlktl. air condition~
lng . AM -FM . 4 apeed.
14.800 .. 304-876-1546 after 6 .

ITTYD

1982 Honda 460 cuotom,
2,000 m i., exc. cond.,
U ,260 . Call 446-2360.

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750 Honda with fairing &amp;
aoddloboga. TS 400 Su_z uki.
Call 614-245-521 1 .

KJ

TO

Answer

J!I~ I 6HTEJ-J

UP

YOUII: !JOYFII:IENt:&gt;':S

lNG.

r J

I I I

Now arrange the elided letters to
form tne l _urpriH &amp;r:IIWtr, U sug·
g••t~ by the abovtl canoon .

[I I ](J:]THE( I I I )
(Anowers Mondavl

Yeslerd ay

Motorcycles

~-

5

I

Jumtllss GUEST AROMA DELUGE
M swe'r : What some backseat drivers

GUNNER

never seem to

do-RUN OUT OF GAS

74 Monte Carlo AC . runs
good. 80.000 miles. 8500.
Call 446-0478.

1974 Yamaha 260 dirt bike.
good cond.. 8325 . Call
446-3192.
1980 Honda CR' 80 dirt
bike, uc!. cond ., $4150 . Call
614-246-6892 .

1979 Elsnore Honda. exc .
cond. Call 614-388 -8673
after 6 .
1981 HONDA 900 cuotom.
showroom condition,
f3.000 Call 304 -6 75 2851 .

Real Estate General

1 979 FOrd Fiesta with sun
roof, rear window defogger,
AM -FM , runs real good.
30-34 MPG . $2.160 . Call
after 7PM Wdekdays, any·
time weekends . Call 446·
1888 .

cone.-

81

block etc. F-

1980 15ft. Bay~ner with 50 ----~---­
HP Merct,KV .e ngine. an ac~
cooa~&gt;rloo included. Call STUCCO PLASTERING
448 ·1J38&amp; efter 5.
textured ceilings commer1_18 .. Ta,.Y baN ~. 90 cial and residential. free
HP Mercury angina. Mar- ootima1ao. Call 814-2561 182 ·
curv trolling motor
see drive on trailer.
·
d
seen to appreciated at 61 PAINTING - intonor an
Garfield Ave .• G•llipolis.
·exterior. plum~ing. roofing,
IDITWt remodeling . 20 yra.
- 1-2-.-.-lu-m-in_u_m_bo_a_t,-(_M_y_e_rs
_)l exp. Coll814-388-9862.
plus Elgin motor 5 or 7 Yl Me,cum Roofing &amp; Spout·
h.p . $360. 814-742-2602. ine- 30 years e•perionco.
speci•lizlng in built up roof.
Coll1114-388-9857.

77

Auto Repair

.

79 Motors Homes
8t Campers

Hi Pre11ure Cleaning . Alum inum aiding, mobile homes.
wood. brick. sandstone
building and homea . 1Aiso
heaoy equipment. Fully in sured, Free estimates. 61"4 949 -2886 .

Peintlng interior • oxwlor.
-llpopor lianging. lnoured.
F - eotimaUio. llt4-8492888.

Roofing. ohinglea. -uting
ond oluminum aiding work .
Insured , Free Estimates .
614-949-2686. .

RINGLE"S SERVICE expe·
tiencad ...Ofin~ . Including 1---~--c...:.-:-----:-:
hot tar applicettOn,· cerpen. Water Welis. Commercial
ter. electrician, maaon. Call end Domestic. Te11 holes .
304 -875· 2088 or 675- Pumpo Saleo ~nd Service .
4560.
304-895-3802 .

,-rf'1. A

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. 960

+KQJ 107

. QI132
SOUTH
• J 10 9 2
• AKQJII

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REALTY

Vu lnerable· Both
Dealer:'NorTfi_..
Well

East

So ulh

lt

Pa~ s

' "'

4\'

By OsM·ald Jacoby

and James Jacoby

.,.,, I

2 slofy oome was
buin in 1894 ard must
seen to apprec~te.
lar&amp;e open foyer and stailway. LR. ~nina rm.
par1oi, completely equipped modern kitchen, 4
Br.~., 21! baths, new sidin&amp; l!l'rage, near school~
shopp;n~ etc

Judy DeWitt - Realtor - 388-8155
Becky Lana - Assoc. -'-- 446-0458
Becky Elliott - Asoc. - 446-0885
379-2748

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
You owe it to
yourself and your famrly to see th is one. 3BR's, 2
baths, large LR &amp; dining rm., galley kitchen witt1
refrig, DW, range &amp; aisp.. den. famrly rm., gas heat
&amp; cent air, rovered patio. &amp;full basement All th~
on a well ~ndscaped lot at the edge ol lawn. FHA
- VA - CONVENTIONAL

chance to force South to ruff
again , but now South would'
be able to put that last

South started proceedings
by discarding h1s seven of
clubs on dummy's ace of
diamonds. Then he led a
heart to n;s ace,
. East $)lowed

out . and

contract.
The most interesting li ne
would be for West to ruff .
Dummy ·s last diamO nd
would be discarded. If West
then led another diamond
South could ruff in du mmy
and discard one cl ub. The
last !our tr icks would go to
du mmy's ace of clubs and
South 's K·Q·J of trumps.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR!SE .\SSN I

.

NEAT AND ~~N - CONVENIENT iN TOWN
LO~TIOII - 2 BRs, 12x 18 LR, ~'II' klchen &amp;
dining area wih range, refrig. &amp; disp., lauml"y wih
. washer &amp; dryer', new carpet, expensive drape&gt;
c&lt;rport, l!l'S hea, humid ~ ier, de~ umidilrer. air
Cfil'lef, central ~r. Watch the Blue Devil football
gillles from Ire I&lt;rill! rearst11 deck. $50.000~ NO.
$37,500.
-

1977 lincoln Town c,r.
mile a. E~~:cellent
condition. $6 ,700. John
Lyons . 614 -992 -3463 .
Buick Diesel . Take
paVmenls or will take
$6,000 . 614-667-6344 or
614-378 ·6369 .
1979 Dodge Onini , 2 dr .
hatchback . 4 speed. good
cond ., no rust, 30 plus
m .p .g. $2 .800 . 614 -985~251 .

1981 Buick Skylark , V-6,
auto ., p.s.• p.b ., a.c .. cruise.
am -fm stereo. &amp;5.000 . 614992 -5082 ,

JUST LISTED- Lovely cedar ranch witf13 bedrooms.
kilchen comp~te. Living room witfl bay .-ndow, dining
are&lt;~ has glass ~Kli ng dooo to deck. 2 full baths, basement completed wrth a famly room and pP.autiluf fireplace. Offjce room or 4th bedroom. Gallipolis Schoof
District
I

LOVELY sm!NG :... 3 bedroom ranch ard I acre of
trees, l~wers and sh rubs. Some amenities are family
room wrttr glass ~ding doors and woodburner. U.rge
covered patio rn lhe back. Outbuilding with a
workshop. IIOOd shed and storage. Priced in the 40's.

#306

OUTSTANDING RANCH, 4 bedroom~ l'h bath~ den,:
sewing room plus farge family room. Beautifully·
decoraled. Full fin~hed basement Over I! acre:
landscapal for just the beginning. One mile o( city·
limits. State Route 14 L By appointment
:
#297 ;

1981 VW Rabbit. 38,000,
am -fm . air , cruise . $5500 .
Also 1979 Old a Cutlan
Supreme, am - fm , air,
cruise . $4500 . 614-992·
3710 .

1 980 Ford Fiesta. 27.000
milet. still under warranty,
$3700 . 304-876-3634.

1979 Olds Cutlass. V-8
auto, air. am -fm cuaette. 4
new radials $6400 . 446 ~
1387.
1 981 VW Rabbit, 304-6766163 .

SOUTHERN PLANTATION? - Not qut~ llrt has the
style ol .the south. Pertect _
for a large family,
entertaining or just to enjoy th1s home. Has all the
modern convenrences. 17 acres wrth paS1ure, small
creek. pond. bam. 2 outbuildings Some til~ble
acrroge. Located rn Green T'l"nshrp.

RIGHT DOWN TOWN - Lar~ 2 story hotne. Could be
used a commercial or residential property. Stairway
and woodwork original. 9 rooms total. The extenor is
aluminum siding. Garage witfl storage area. Located
414 3rd Avenue.

MINI FARM - Green Township- Modern room
house. Tobacco base approx. 1200 lbs. Clean, neat
Barn in Rood condition. Garage. Pasture, some wood~
(ertile tilfabfe ~nd . 3 miles of Gallipolis Listing price

$34,500.

#296

#300

DODGE Omni ,
31,000 miles, standard.
AM -FM . $4 ,000 .00 . or
price negotiable. 304-6767142 .
1978 MERCURY Zeyphor.
2 door. 4 cyl ., automatic
transmi11ion. power lteering, 4 new redial tires.
304-676-3364 , 676 -4437 .

STATELY OLDER HOME wh ich canbe used as IS for rental property
or converted lo ~nl!le tamify resrdence. Good locatron for famrly
witfl school age children.
MOBILE HOME located on 214' x 104' lot nror Tycoon U.ke Good
buy $15,000 ·
12'K65', 1972 SCHULTZ mobile home, with 6 acres, Hazel Ridge
Rd. 13.300.00.
1.95 ACRE MOBILE HOME. Rt 218. near 790. Cou nty waler and
sep. tank $3,1XXJOO.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES, GALLIPOLIA AREA:
1. [listing. operating 10 UNIT MOTEL with house. owner rndicales
goro "cash flow'. Many possibilitieswth adJacent acreage'!! Call lor
more information~
2. Ex isting. orERATING BAR rn Gallipolrs. Everything goes
including the waf)(~n co~er, bar. cash reg.. seats 37. "D-3" 1ic. and
many fixtures, $35,000.00.
3 COURT STREET, BLDG. Approx. 3.500 sq. ft . Iron( ~de and rear
entrances, across from the city parkrng I~ owner .;11 ~ase or sell.
Call about th~ one todar,!
4. COURT ST. BLDG presently being used lor business. approx.
3.00b sq. ft. Owner will lease to qualified per.;on. Call fm meinfo.
STATELY 2-STORY HOllE located a~ng Upper River Rd. Owner
has done considerable remodeling. 3-tar garage, nat gas he&lt;~l
w.b. fireplace, 4 bedrms., extra ~rge lot .has I motile home
hook-up. Located within commercial area m residential.
$44,90.00. Owner may trade for small farm'!
9 LOTS IN PLANTS S.D.• to be sold as o~e unrt for $20,000.00! .
· 2 lOTS IN PLANTS SUB. DIY. $5,900.00 for bothl

1

2 BEDRM. COTTAGE near Food~nd. Ideal for retired couple. alum.
sid .• storm windows, close to everything downtown. Buy now for
$28,000.1)()1!
2 - 2 BEDRII. APTS. adjacent to golf cou~. Lg. ~!chen and
1Piing rms. Showert. Adults 011ly, no children. From $200.00!

76 MONTE Carlo, 78 Ford F
160 pickup . 304 -876 5281.
72 VW Beetle , $995 . 304-·
458 -1926 .

72

OWNER FINANCING - Located Route 160. Older .
· home that is nea~ dean and cheertuL 4 bedroom~ 3
u!lSiairs. I downstairs. Bath, dining room, livin~ room,
krtchen, sewing room and utility. In good cordition for
an older home.
11299
LOOKING FOR A NEW HOllE - Tire owners have
pr~ed tflis home to selL 4 bedroOms, ~rge kitchen and
dining comb., living room, double , vanity in bath.
Narural gas heat 4 extra lots. Mobile home hookup.
Priced rn tfle 30's. City schools.

1979 Dodge 3.1ir. T Power
Wagon , good cond .,
$3. 500 : Call 814 -379 2817 .
2 YJ T International Cab over,
long wheel baae. cob "&amp;
chessis. new paint. good
cond .. $2.700 . Call 814379 -2817 .

OlD
story with some remodeing
3-4 bedroom~ I bath. living rom. dining room and
family room Large l!l'rage w~h carport. Storage
burlding Cet~r house. Property could be used for
home and business Situated or 4 large lots.
#232

I \\ STORY FRAM with approx. 2'h acres. Home has3
bedrooms. farge kitchen. living room wrth fireplace. I
bath and part basement This overlooks the river and
pr~ed at $25.000
#256

Trucks for Sale

72 Ford PU truck, and 69
Pontiac LeMens. cuatom\ x.
2 dr. hardtop . Cell 4481622 .

NEW LISTING - COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Great
corner ~t for a bu~ness. The building is in good
condition with a 2 bedroom apar11itent.upstairs. The
downstarrs has a ~rge showroom kitchen bath end
storage. Have your business nght at lmt~· now more
gas m ie&lt;~ge to worry about.
#305

LANGSVIllE AREA - 2 bedroom home with
aluminum siding. living room, krtcheo. bath. screened
rn porch. Gas furnace. ~liar house and I \1 acre
Priced at $22.900. Located at Crouser Road.
·

#2n
CADMUS WATERLOO AREA - Rt. 141. Modern 2
bedroom home Master bedroom 12'x 16' wrth walk-in
cklset Famifv room 16'x29'. ~replace insert with
blower. Living room 13'x22'. U!rge country kitchen, a
beauty everything including new old lashion cook
stove. Patio. Rural water. Must see inside to apprec~te.
.
H279

MINI FARM _ 27.20 acres, 2 miles lrom Vinton on
Mt Tabor Road. 3 bedroom, l'h story oome. electnc
J \ baseboard he&lt;~t Vinyl siding. Insulated tflroughotJt
\ carpeted. All mineral rights. Priced right
292

*

1974 Dodge truck. 0-100.
Y, ton long . bad. 318 engine.

3 speed, AM r~dio, Reece
hitch $600 . Call448-2089 .
1 976 Oatlun . Long bad.
83.000 milaa. Naw 8-ply
tires. very good cond .
e1 .9911. 814-949-3093.
1 979 Ford pickup. 150 3
speed, with overdrive, 302
motor, atylo aida bad, dlgllol
clock, low mile.Qe. one
owner. exc . cond. e4.500.
614 -887- 3085 or 814687-3074.

EXCEPTIONAL - fmmacu~te in~de and out is how
you will find th ~ inviting brick ranch. Situated 011 4
seduded acres. Featuring 4bedrooms, buit-in kitchen,
lui finishal basement Over 2,000 sq. ft plus 2 c.1r
garge. Call for your private showing lrx!ar,
11307

Vans 8t 4 W.O.

·1 979 Chevy 4 WD. 8 cyl., 4
apaod, mag whNia • lock
oull, short bed. n•w paint.
Call 4114-21141· 1484.

LOOIUNG FOR A FARM? 113 Acres, more or less. 2
stort, 4 or 5 bedroom home. Krtchen, formal dr~ng,
famrly room. ilath. hving room, encklsed porch.
Basement Large barn, si~ machrnery shed. milk
house plus other outbuildings. Pnnd. Priced in the low

50'1

. •

\

NEW LISTING ~.,_. NEEDS REPAIR - But at a p(ice
you c.1n:t _beat 3 bedroom older frime horne. livin&amp;
room, drnr~ room, famtfy, k~chen, bath. large lront
porch. Off street parkin~ LDcated al721 Third Avenue.

$21,500.

.

11309
.

73

hauled

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sac. ·Ave .• Gfllipolio .
446 -7833 or 448- 1833 .

Painting, interior &amp; exterior ,
brush or spray, commercifl.
residential. mobile homes .
alter 6 . :104-676- t 128,
L.M . Johnson.

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR

RUSS AND MAX
ELliOTT

llnno1 HNtfn1 &amp; Air COfld~ .
lionin1. ~II Typos Insulation

Reasonable Rate
Buick Ponliac:

SMITH

El1ctriCII Wirina.
C.ll 446-1515 or 446-IM45
~N1r 4:30 p.ll'l .
lie

Gallipolis
~6-1282

I

82 . Plumbing
8t Heating
CARTER "S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446 4477
.

HAMLIN .KING
AlTORNEY·AHAW

Bill's

Dissolutions or Uncontested Divorces $350.00
(Costs inctuded ).
Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

Nu -Prime replacement

windows
Storm windows &amp; doors

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt 's
Plumbing. Coli 614-3670676.

83

,.

TS

Excavating

Aluminum &amp; vinYl
siding

Howmet Patio covers
Howrnerscretn rooms

446-0855

Mobile home awnings
Alum i num utility
buildings
691 Muter Drive

512 Second A-.. .. Gall ipolis
S.l"li"i Galli• l .....

Counties

446· 2642

SOLUTION

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

'

TRY OFFER! 5 rooms and bath. Modern kilthen.
Woodburner. Eklctr~ baseboard heat Two mobile
horne pads. Three se~ tanks. Rural wallr. One ICre
ol land. I \l milesfrom HOlm Medical Center. $30,000.

11271

•

U13

JUST USTtD - IIIDDUPORT - T~s n ~e older
home has 2 bedroom~ formal dining. batfl, eat-rn
kitchen, full basemen~ central air, aluminum ~ding.
storm windows, garage. Located near Mergs Junror

Hi[lh.

. m2

LOVELY MODERN HOllE - located in tile cit)' school
dm:t Home has 4 bedrooms. I 'h baths, lam1ty room.
kitchen tdh dining L This home ~ priced in the 50'~
Ptmble loin assum~ . .
•
#
262

IDEAL for young. old and in-between , 3 bedroom
ranch . Nice carpet throughout Garage-with
opener. Fenced back ~wn. NatUral gas forced air hoot
Central air. located in town. Priced to sell.

$1.000 DOWN PAYMENT - on this Ohio River
VX!w property. Approx 8 aces wooded ~nd 011
Route 7 ard 5mi. south o( town. Owner wrlf frnance
· balance at 10%

#3
RIGHT OUTSIDE CITY li·ITS- Selling cheap. 2
room home witfl li~ni room, dining room,
bath and ublity room. Overlooks tile nver. located
Garlield Ave. PricaJ at $14,000.

N'""'" •

DUPUX 558 THIRD AVENUE- let the incon1e"lrcrm
th~ property pay for itself. Each ~de
.
large formal dining, bath, kitchen. Fenced back
.
Separate entry. Vinyf sidin~ Both ~ des presenHy

occu .

'

MAKE
10 view th~ attrlebe ltuee be?roon~. 2
baths, ~ l'i&lt;Je. Ptrmanent foundation Approi.
acre. Rural Wllet. Cal today.

\

·

ED "S APPLIAN CE REP.AIR
SERVICE call City Furniture
304 -675 - 2608 or 446 0631

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACHOSS
1 H ar sttl o
lho 1as1a

HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a hunting lodge,
home, etc. Ru st~ ~g home rs burtt from
hand hewn beams and has a sleepingloft. modern
batfl, large stone firep~ce and approx. 14 acres of
woods in the Wayne National Forest. Extra lard
ava~abte. Easy Terms.

6 Ptece ot
dmncrw &lt;u c
11 Expor ls

18 Stlowcr s
19 K1nd ol
tab m;

20

.

PEACEFUL COUNTRY-LUtE SETTING. Errctlltnl
bay at $45,900. Owners haw! been transmrral &amp;
are anx~us to sell th ~ lovelY brick &amp; frame ranch
with 3 BRs, large kitchen, lJI with v.1! fire~are.
n~ carpet thfllllgflout. altlc~ garage &amp; I acre
pine-studded klt Poslible blended mortg!&amp;e for
qualified buyers.

GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 18 acres m/1, focltal
south ol Men:ervilla Approx. 20 A. til~ble. blllance
woodS. 10h basa Owners will hillp !ina~.

I'

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JB Cu ddl e up

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su rlllu nl y
97 L nm;h fond

-1 0 Sunburn

98 Pr oc tJc d

41 S hulu11
4 ? Ki nd nl
choose

10 I Ocs m11 ct •

57 Compass
p am I
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currency
61 LampHJy
62 H tt b lllUltr,
64 Foot fla il
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a peer

100 Co mma nd ed
102 NCIVO
networks
104 M emoran d um
105 D1m 1111Sh

106 Vi s11ors
107 lngrodiont
109 Mother -of .
pearl

50 Vm n1:11 y

I II Shah bu3sl

S4 Wmmtld .

Co lloq.
1 12 Koon
11 3 lf!lO lru nk

~5

Walk
ll fl SIOo1!'l il y

56 Mo sl lilolt•lul
59 Sliilld;tti.IS

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a :lCIJ/Illl!(J

11 6 -

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18 Bralilian

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11 9 Mud

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11 nwso l• oiO mq o tlrr.u
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fj I 1. 111 111 COil-

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t1y sl)ro s•ur •,
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fi3 Parnd tSfl
66 NOifl 01
&lt;;CUll '

67 S ~: rHOI

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telluru tm
10 Pllld gu
11 Aflurnoon
pllrlorrn-

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t.:J An!lornd

collOQ
123 f- alsehoo d
1 ~ 4 H o rse' s
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125 D•s tanca
measu re

pmnl
94 Pm tnining

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12

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summorv

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118 Fruil se ed s
1 19 Fashion

arhclc

89 Small rugs
90 Con junction
91 Comp ass

f/Pr srrm

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progrnl'ns
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lurr~s ortlf'

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116 Food

CO ti St~

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136
117

8 I RtV()I 111

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garment

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.

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48 K.nd Oll,11e h ·
4f:t l nl ended

CHILDIEN GROW - HOUSES DON1 - Thi; 5
bedf011111 beiuty i; ilm right for your growing
lamily. You1 find this home situated 011 almost 3
acres tdh lots of liees. pond &amp; circular d~e. The
2300 sq. ft of IMng areo Includes an eq!Mpped
kitl:hen. LR. family rm. llundry, 2 bath s, 2 v.1!
firepllces &amp; cent air. Calf for appointment

7 I Smu an

73 l oop,ud
!l't S h al-.. ~ -

1:19

4 7 Krln

.

;..' 8

plan I

4 5 Act s
•Hi 1 eul unr c
dmlv

CREMElNS ROAD - 53 acres m/1, approx.IOA.
tilable balance woods. remodeled horne, I '~
stories: 7 rm~ &amp; bath, new siding, new well.
excellent 24x40 steel buildinR several old
building!. $37,500.

1:1 I EJ 11li1CUI
Wt'Cd

:&gt; lud,-

! t] C l1m lm oq

4J Man 's.

GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP - 15.5 acres m/ 1.
n~ely remooeled 2 story farm home. 7 rms.. bath,
basement 4 fireplaces, barn &amp; lobacro base.
Asking $38,900.

129 Stick 10

snhr1$

oaso

RACCOON ROAD - BUILOERS SPECIAL - 13
acres m/1, frontage on Raccoon Creek, water tap,
aerobic septic tank and 28x44 basement. B~kf lo
sun yoorsetf.

6 7 PrC Ci pi ! Ou ;.
69 M UfriCill

? 5 S llkWOIIll
';1 7 MO:l l lltl n

21 Geomr' ln c

3 0 F IOSII

GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY LOCATED 112 acre larm has fronta1e on State Route 588.
Fairfield Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairlield Rd.
Excellent for farming or deveklpmenl Older 5 rm.
&amp; bath. also included. Owners will consider selling
smaller trac(l; o( short term financi ng Call for more
information.

I ;J lj S llddllhl 't'
I 'J7 M1 $ l il k u~

Sc orpr o

24 Ob twr1
26 Cen turv
p l11n t
27 Sw 'J o l &lt;&gt;1m!
?9 Romnrn s m

- 3 or 4 bedrooms, nice living room,
room. ful oosement This home hasbeen
car prage. Priced 00, in tlie 40s.

19711 CJ-5 Jup, 8 eyl.,
hardtop, n .ooo: Call 441184102 attar 7PM.

'

! ; t ~ lmq

sC:IIC
66 Oo cn :c

klll9
Hi P &lt;lld
al l lllltlull

23 Gli'lll l U St:l ,, ,

I

COUNTRY COIIFOI_IT - Escape to PJaCe quiet and
carefree iving in th~ fantastic contemporary oome.
fleautiuf Qualier made cQI8Is in kitchen, sunken fiv.
rng room will! fi~ and Cllthedral ceiling. Formal
dining. 3 or 4 bedrooms, den. 21! baths, family room
basement_ ll'dil' gara[le. AflProQnatefy l acre:
lMner wilt consder
finance
.
. in..City schools.

H ng ~ 11 es t

st ar rn

9 ACRE ESTATE- Ranch style brick 3 bedrooms 3~
baths. basement Caretakers buikliilg. trees shrUbs_
beautiful lardsaping._ la~ dean stocked Pond We
wrlf show you the rest. Farfield Vanco Road. Green
Townsf"jp_ ·
.
1
.
1251

SEWING Machine repairs.
service . Authorized Singer
Sales 8t Servic e Sharpen
Scissors . Fabri c Shop .
Pomeroy . 992 -2284 .

60 1111Cr1&lt;1

.

WHO COULD ASK f~R MORE - Nice view of theriver
ard place to dock yOur bool is included with tflis
immacu~te 3 be room\ 2 bath home. Kitchen has .
island range. Basemen!\ comletely finished. Lar~
9'x57' deck plus 9'x57 pat~ . Priced right in tfle 50 1
\
#274

STARTER HOME - Mooern 3 bedroom , living room.
dining room. modern kitchen. laundry room. n ~e (amily room wrth
a woodburner. U.rge stora1e area or workshop, maintenance Ire~
Ni ~ lol iri dty school district

NEW LISTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
approx. 4 mi. rmh of HMC on ole!. route !6Q·
·Modern tri-levet has brick &amp; vinyl construction, 3 GREEN ACRES - Like new Cedar Home offers 3
BRs 2 baths, equipped kitchen, dinrng area, Brs.; farge LR &amp; kitchen, 2 car garage, carpelal
~undry &amp; 2 r~r l!l'rage. Cln be bouiht with or patio, wrap-around deck, cent. arr &amp; I ~ loll;. Be lhe
first to see th1s one.
without acreage.

.

.
I

DEPENDABLE . WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR• Guaran teed work . Call anytime
614 -255 - 6620 o r 614 266 -1207 .

vacat~n

OHIO RIVER IDTS FOR SALE - Located 3 miles
ONE OF VINTON'S FINEST - twely I ~ story below EtJ"eka Dam. Idea for ca mping buil&lt;lng or
brick includes 5 BR'~ t 'h baths, LR w~h fireplace. mobile hrrnes. Calf Ranny Blackburn
k~chen &amp; dinerte. full basement &amp; a well
~ndscaped rorner ~t Calf for appointment
NEAR NORTH GAtliA HIGH SCHOOL - 5.29
acres m-1, approx 2 acres cleared. ba~nce
wooded, 3 BR t4x70 mobrle home in good
conditon,
carpeted throughout stove &amp; refng_ slay
FARMER'S FARM - Approx. 50 acres near
Bar1ain
prked
al $25,000. Can for apporntment
Vint011. All clean crop &amp;pasture ~nd. remodeled 3
· Bfi home, 60x80 bam, 2 sios (former dairy farm! . WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beel, hay &amp; grain farm.
lronts on 2 rds.• ~rge pond. SEE THIS ONE 80 acres, m/1, approx. 35 A. good cropland, 10 "BEFORE PLOWING TIME. $49,900.
wood~ balancepasture, good mnces, 9 rm. &amp;balh
home was bui ~ in 1872 &amp; has been partially
remodeled, 50x50 caltte barn with roncrele floor.
OWN YOUR OWN CAll' SITE- in thewlderness ~rge ~fo wrth auto. unloader, several sheds, large
cl the Wayne National Forest. 5 to 9 acre •acts d pond, springs, slanding crops go to new owner.
woat~nd now available, adjOining thousands ol
aaes of Jllvernrrent ~nd I'IJbll: 11/nting. liihing HOLIDAY PARK - 2 camping lots, lurh~hed 26
and cam ling permitte:l. Pr~sstart at $3500 with ft Tf{twood travel trailer, shetter house, utility
financing avaieble
building. county water, sewer. access to Raccoon
Cree~ Priced for quick sale.

1981

1982 PONTIAC Bonneville.
In showroom condition. lass
tt1an 10,000 miles, still
under factory warrenty, fully
equlped , air conditioned.
wire wheels, power doors 8&amp;
windows, $8,600 .00 Phone
304-678-2689 .

GAs STATION &amp; GARAGE-131 'ft frc~t 011 State ·
Route 554, corner lo~ ovet 3100sq. ft. 5 bay~ COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 82x80 all steel con-·
presently used for auto, tractor &amp; !arm eqlipment s1nrctiorrWrth fireproof rnsutation. Overheadcrane.
has office &amp; batfls. Formerly used for boot sales &amp;
repairs, partial financing ·avai~ble.
repair. Located across from Silver Blidge ~aza witfl "
access to tfle Ohio River. Potential unlimrted Call
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF AND SAVE MONEY Ranny B~ckbum
- Approx. 10 acres. mostly flat ~nd nror Rooney,
28x60 unfinished house with full basement lois of SECLUDED COUNTRY SETTING. LOOKING FOR
SOMETHING SPECIAL? let us show you lh ~ new
potential.
3 BR. 2 bath double garage home with over 1700
sq. ft ol living area. Just right for tfle large family
. NEW LISTING - $39,500 - Be the first to see that needs ample space. Other frotures are natural
this oorgain priced ranch with 3 BR's. batfl. large wood siding heat pump, range, refrig_, OW &amp;disp
kitehen 12xl8 LR, 10xl8 fam~y rm. &amp; laundry. Can be purchased wrth 2 acres or 40. Locatal in
Green Township.
Located on a flat lot in Centen~ry.
PRICE REDUCED TO $56,900! Exc~lent cattle
farm. 132 acres m-1, mostly cte.n hill pasture. good
fences. I\! story home, 5 rms. &amp; bath. larif brim,
tob. base, fronts on 3 roads in Walnut Twp.

1976 Vega wagon . Automatic . a.c . $750 . 614-992·
7403.

2 OR 3 BEDROOM. carpeted home situated a~ng Locust St.,
Gallipolis. Watch the new construcl~n ol the Courttrouse whi~
enjoying the amenities of this quality home. ~nlra l arr, delached
llllrage, extra parkrng rn re&lt;~ r.

something

.

42 .000

RiverRd. Approx. 4yrs. old, Kyger Creek School. Buy'. Relax! Watch
.the world go by1!!

Need

aVI(IIIY or something moved?

Services Offered

84

1976 Ford Mavrick 250 6·
cyl .. 56.000 mi..$600 . Call
before 3PM , 446-7513 .

3 BR CARPETED HOME overlookini the OhKI River, Upper

JIMS ' WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier. 304-117117397.

lonnie Bogg s E)(cavating .
Dozer, backh oe, dump truck . Work by hour or job.
Call446-7903 .

77 Gran·d Pri)( black int . S.
ext ., good cond ., 57,000
miles. Call 446 -42_
9 2.
. .

General Hauling

I- - - - - - - - -

DOZER WORK By Ted
Henna . ponds , ditches .
basements . etc Call 446 4907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.

1972 Chrysler exc . cond .,
$595 . Call-.614-745 -9570

.

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE. Coli 614-367 -7471
or 814 -367 -0591 . .

'b=J

spades at trick three.

'East would take his queen
and force South to ruf£ a
diamond . A second spade to
dummy 's king .and East's
ace would give East a

85

General Hauling

We'll do it . Call 446 -3159
E &amp; R Tree Service, fully between 9 and 5 .
inaured. free esti m ates . 1 --~------­
Phono 814-387-0836 , call

Painting
or exterior ,
free estimates . Call 676·
6344 or 446 -9326 .

possible later use he would
have made his contract
instea~ of going down one .
The winning play was for
South to lead his jack of

Opening lead : • 3

1 NT
Pass

ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-446-2107 .

ef1er 6 .

nine.
From here there a re se\' ·
eral possible variations . All
would see South make his

1+

86

Home
Improvements

realized that he needed that
second trump in dummy for

Pass

P:t~S

..

high hearts. The pause may
have refreshed South, but if
be bad paused longer and

trump in dummy to work .
He would cash his ten of
spades and contin ue with the

Pass

446-0008

~orth

'"d

I Utility trailer. Call 614 367-7297 .

Assoc . -

before cashing t wo more
1-S!J-11

+ A.IU
• A K 10 6
EAST

• 10976 2

Real Estate General

Cathy Pope -

.,

South paused for a moment

NORTH
• .K 8 s

Times-Sentinel- l'aga--0-7

Get your carpet in ,hip
Wpe . Water removal , FREE

Wrong third· trick

~ 763

CKBURN

81

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

WEST

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith
Motorola. Ouazar. and
houao calls. Call 676-239B
or 448 -2464.

446-6610

74 Vega wagon 62,000
miles, good on gas. air. good
1ires. S500 or rea,onable
offer . Call614-379-.2706 .

aotlrnno~.

Call 4411-4393 or 1114-21141·
1717.

BRIDGE

Home
lmprovem~nts

F S. K T,.. Trimming, stump
temovel. Coli 4175-1331 .

y

Rep1ir It sell automatic
trlnsmi11iona . $76 . l up.

614-992-7403 .

-rtc.

d - y •.
.-...... potlos. llricll •

·Home
Improvements

'

1979 Datsun 310 GX, good
cond ., AC, 6 speed , AM -FM
radio . Call614-266 -1484.

Home
lmprov•ments

lm~vementl

Vans 8t 4 W .O.

74

.,

speed.

HP Chrysler motor with
power lift. Some extras,

Home

I.......... Kn
.. _ ,., [J

AM -FM tape, etc. Call4467417 .

1974 16ft. tri haul Chrysler
boat &amp; trailer with 1 975 90

73

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

a hb•

6R

M otr c hc r ~

70

Nr!w ~ pilp OI
O JHCUII VO

7 1 Moham lllf!d &lt;lll

nmne

.mcas

7 ") rransl1 11

A t11 CIO

7J Cou nlt'r' nl

an 11nn 1
1-1 C la w
It! w orn aw ov
16 t- cmolc ruiJ
17 S teamship
ll h br

? I Guord
? ? HoqUIIO$
?3 Pf'1110d ol

Cen tral
Am CII C:!

75 Tnk c awav
f7 FcdCHJI

a gonc y lrlll

78 POIII ICOI
parl'r' ahtl r

80 Sh orl sleep
pi

83 Top ot he .-, d

12 4 Su b sta nces

12 5 Female

horse
12 6 Self -

cen te red

person
128 Ceremoni al
meal

130 Torrid
13 I Doctrin f:l
132 Mo r~
unusual
135 Roc kfi sh
I 3 7 Pon der
138 SwiSS rtver
140 Encou n-

lered
142 Peda.1dlgU
143 b rrs~rmg
144 Sun god
14 5 Symb ol t6 r

technellu m
147 Exclam ati on

148 Greek lett er

�~8- The

P\:ig•

'

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Micldlepot1

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleosant, W. Va.

•

Patriot area resident.
faces drug-charges
'

~

~y1,1983

.

GALLIPOUS - Gallla County
sheriff's Investigators arrested a
Patriot Star Roqte man on drug_.
,.elated charges Friday night followlngexecutlonof a search warrant on
tile man's Graham School Road
residence.
Forrest Ronald Russell , 32, was
lxloked Into the county jail Friday
after being arrested on Second
Avenue in Gallipolis, and charged
with trafficking and possession .
Details were sketchy, but a
department spokesman said that
after Russell was arrested, investi gators went to Rus'*'ll 's mobile
home and recovered a quantity of
marijuana around 11 p.m .
The spokesman said the Investigation In to the incide nt is
continuing.
Investigators were also informed

Friday of a break-In at the Gallla·
County Cun Club that occurred last .
weekend .
·
Entry was gained to the bulldl,ng
after a glass pane on the slcl'e of the
building facing U.S. 35 was shattered. Although a "tock was bl'Oken
on the door to the storage area and
an outside storage building, nothl,ng
was reported missing.
Lawrence Bastian!, 101 Bastian!
Drive, who made the report,
requested increased patrolling in
the area .
A mailbox owned by Faye Prose,
Rt. 1, Patriot,,was knocked over
sometim e Thursday or Friday at
her Germa n Hollow Road residence, according to reports.
Also arrested by deputies Friday
was Craig R Summers, 21. Rio
Grande, for menacing and failure to
comply with an officer.

DAYTON - Lt. .John Sandford,
Pomeroy and Oak Hill physician,
has been named one of the 20
members of the National Platform
Committee of the Libertarian
Party. The announcement was
made today .by Tom Brown of
Dayton, the party's chairman in
Ohio.
Dr. Sandford will he holding a
series of regional meetings In Ohio
to receive recommendations on the
platform prior to the commlttee's
meeting In Austin, Texas, June

10-12..

• .

Llhertai-tans wUI meet in Galli~
lis for that purpose on Thursday.
May 5, 7:30p.m., In the modular In
front of thecourthouseon Locust St.
Brown stated thai anyone Interested In learnl,ng more about the
Libertarian Party and Its program
Is Invited to aitend .
Although the Libertarian Party
was only organized in 1971, its
presidential candidate appeared on
the ballot In all 50 states In 1980,
according to Brown.
He stated that the party's
program Is generally based on the
Ideas of the late philosopher Ayn
Rand, and emphasizes personal
responsibility. tree enterprise capitalism, drastic cuts In taxes and
government programs, and nonIntervention In foreign affairs.
Brown said that the party's focus

Meigs Cot,tnty
happenings ..
---..Rot~ari1m8 entertain

West Germany group
MIDDLEPORT--Several West
Germany Rotarians were guests
Friday night when the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club m et a t Heath
United Methodist Church.
The West Germans, each of
whom who spoke briefly, showed
slides of their country. Numerous
fields of endeavor were represented
among the group Including medl·
cine, music, engineering, farming
and phannaceutlca l sales. The
group was brought to the meeting of
the local club by Bill Diles, Athens,
·formerly ot Middleport. The Ger' '''"matll are.Jnvolved in a group study
program and wlll spend one month
at various Ohio _locatlons.
President Dr. R. R. Picken$
Introduced the guests and following
the meeting entertained them and
other Rotary members at his home
In Pomeroy .

P~engerinjured

in minor accident
POMEROY --Two vehicles received moderate damages and one
llrtver was cited as the result of an
accident on E. Main St., al2: 21 a.m.
Saturday.
Pomeroy Pollee sa id that a car
driven by Reglnold Pauley had
· stopped preparatory to making a·
Jell l\1m whrn It was struck from the
·rear by a pickup truck driven by
Michael J. Nanee, Syracuse. Nanee ·
was cited on an assured clear ·
distance charge. Robin Campbell, a
passenger In the Pauley car." was
taken via prtvate vehicle to Veterans Memorial Hospital to he
checked followed the accident.

Veterans Meniorial
Admllted··MIIdred Barnett,
~roy; LeroyBarton ,Syracuse;·
WI!Uam Mo!Tis, Pomeroy .
Discharged--Donna Hayman,
Shaffer, Gladys Sigler, John
1'-{onnan, Rose Reynolds.

\

famous

LOve
Olests
ily

L ane
CALL NOW 614-446-0374
No

$o6t

••n-~

&gt;...Oily oa1&lt;

P1n

"' h&lt;r&gt;,. n tlm l:)o,.,.

..., h on t • B• 16• 18 '1&gt; 1-1

llo

:

Ru -tl l( pon., ,...
n-fl!flA IIIJh ! &lt;:&lt;ll&gt;n l"' nonP
~7

-

!W;IIIMI

ra •,,

H1 ch

H

lr;tdoto o nal

o:: ne• ry •.,,....,,,. .n ••u•I"' O&lt;&gt;d
f. l'lo&amp; h •11o Ill&gt; lf:l'•l ' H

renchtown Car Co.

Your toye •s spec•al every
da.,. But on l'lf!• Graduat•on Oil~ vo u

11a11e a chan ce to s ho w •I m a

on individual Uberty leads it to
strongly oppose the military draft,
as well as the s.rcalled vtcUmless
crime laws that regulate personal
behavior rather than Injury to other
persons or property.
The Libertarian Party's presidential nominating convention wlll
he held this fall In New York City
fl'Om Aug. ·28 to Sept. 5, rather than
In 1984.
According to Brown the early
date Is necessary in order !D
adequately publicize the candidates, and -also to allow !line to
circulate their nominating petitions
in s!;l tes like Ohio where the party
does not yet have permanent ballot
status.

mo"~

endearmg way A LarHl' to ve c n c5 1 ·~ 11
ta s!tnbJ Qt ft to hold and p rot a&lt;: ! t ne
!ii'UJ IQ11e s I! sa g.rt o l trad•to o n

says

'""'Q!.

c r•ned o l the Itnest cabt nct
w oOd iS ""d ve neer s ami
lmed With the SWCCI ·

.''See Us First!"

es t smcllmg cedar
And n o w 11"8 s pec tall.,.
p n c ea to notp vou say
' I IOIIC \I OU

11''1 11 wl;ty

NEW OPERATION - RoMar, a sheet metal
operation at 9e E. Main st., Jackson, has recently
begun serving southeastern Ohio, Kentucky and West
Virginia. I eased from Charles E. Simpson Sheet
Metal Shop, the c.lmpany plans to serve some of tbe
same customers with expectations of expanding Its

liMe.

'lbe above photo shows one of the machines
within the facility, with capability extending from
very thin metal tbni Ill-gauge and 10 feet In length. i\
complete fabricating capacity of -metal sheet to
customer require'""!'ls are avalla:ble.

Bane One shareholders OK
affiliation with Dayton firm

s h e 11 ne•e• target

84:! 2-n d AvenUe Gallipolis, OliiO ·
253 N. So!cond Avenue ~lddlepof"l, Ohio

State Bank No. 130
COI'/SOLIDA'I:ED REPORT OF CONDITION OF

This intermediate is dark carmine l'i~h contrasting vinyl trim. New
premium radial tires, small V-8, air cond., Rallye wheels.

The Ohio Valley ·Bank
Company

SHARP - SHARP - SHARP

•

1982 BUICK SKYLARK

COLUMBUS. - Bane One Corp.
shareholders approved the pending
affiliation with Winters National
Corp. at the corporation's annual
shareholders' meeting.
The affiliation of Winters Na tional of Dayton with Bane One, a
multi-bank holding company based
In Columbus, Is subject to approva l
by the -Froeral Reserve -a nd by
Winters National's shareholders.
At the meeting, Bane One
reported first quarter net Income of

$17 million. Netincome per s hare of
$1-· wasJ2.~ percent above the · !l9
cents reported for the first quarter
of 1982. In his remark's at the
meeting, John G. McCoy, vice
chairman , _ noted that quarterly
operating earnings have exceeded
the prior year's In each quarter for
the past 11 years.
Shareho lder~ elected all -directors including: William L Cas&lt;'.
Leonard K Firestone, Daniel M.
Galbreath, John F. Havens. Ed·

Business Briefs:

'

Medical society meets
POlNT PLEASANT- A presentation of computer software was
presented by Jim Busby, a Metpa th Co. representat.Ve, aflhe recent
Mason County Medical Society meeting.
In oth~r business, the society elected Dr. William E . Triest . a
pathologist at Pleasant Valley Hospital, as a member. Presiding
over the meeting was Dr. Mel P. Simon, society president, whlle
minutes were read by Dr. Richard L Slack, secretary-treasurer.

Federal Reserve District No. 4
of Gallipolis in the Stale of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business
on March 30, 1983

i\SSETS
Cas h and due from deposllory Institutions ...... ........ .. .. .................... 4,398,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ... .............. ..... ......................... ................ _25,884,000.00
Obllgallons of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations .......... ....... ...... .. ........ ... ....................... 4,035,000.00
Obllgaatlons of States and political subdivisions
•
In the United States .................................. ........ ... .. ..... ................. 8,606,000.00
Federal funds _sold and securities purchased under
agreements to resell ........... ....... .... ... ...... ....................... ... ... ..... .. 10,1!\0,000.00
Loans. Total (excluding unea rned Income) ............. 53.455.000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses ... .. ....... ...... . .4R6,000.00
Loans . Net
................... ............. ..................................... ........ .... 52,969,000.00
Bank premises , furniture and fixtures, and
other assets re presenting bank premises ·... ................................... 1,508,000.00
Other assets ............................................. ............... ... .. ................. . 1,913 000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .................. ................ , ..... .. ........ ........... : ..... .. .... 109,463:000.00
Lli\BILITIES
Demand deposits of Individu a ls, partnerships
and corporations ..................................... ~--- ---········· .................. l1,057,000.00
Time and sav ings deposit s of Individuals,
partnerships and corporatIons ... .. .......... .... ...... ... .............. , ... ...... 77,524,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ......... ... .. ... .... ........ .... .. ........ ..... 51,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions In the
United States ......... ..... ............................................. ... ................ 11,176,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ................................................ ... ......... .335,000.00
Total Deposits ..... ............................. ..... .. .... ... ........... .......... .. ... ... 100,143,000.00
a . Total demand deposit s ........ .. .............. ...... .. ....... IJ.960,000.00
b . Total time and savings depos it s .............. ........... 88,183,000.00
~ther liabilities ............... .......... ... ..... .. ... ................. .... .. ....... .......... 1,569,000.00
1 OTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debe ntures) .... ... .. .......... ....... .. ........ ... ...... ...... ..... .... ... 101,712.000.00
EQUITY CAPITi\L
I
Common s tock
No. shares authorized 175,000
No. shares outstanding 175,000 ..... (par value) .......................... 1,750,000.00
Surplus ...... ..... ..... ......... ................... .... ....... ... .............. _... .... __ ..... 3 500 000 00
Undivided profits .. ........ ....... ............ ....... ..... ..... ..... .... .... .... .... .. .... : :: 2:501:000:00
TOTAL EQUITY CA PITAL ......... ........ ....... .. ............. .. ...... .. ........... 7,751000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ......... .......... .. .... .. 109.~63:000.00
MEMORi\NDi\
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certifica tes of deposit In denominations of
$100,000 or more ........ ......... ... .......... ................. ..... : ................. 10,345,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with' report date:
Cash and due frQm depository Institutions ............... .... ....... .......... 5,399,000.00
Federal funds sold and securllles purchased under
agreements to resell .................... ... .. ......... .... ....... ........ ............... 8,997 000 .00
Total loans ............. ... ..... .... .... .......................................... -. ... .... .. 52,163:000.00
Time certificates of deposit In denomlna llons of $100,000
more ...... ....... ............... ....... ................... ............. ......... ...... ..... 8, 784,000.00
Total deposits .................................... .............. .... .. ..................... 98,192,000.00.
otal assets .... ... ....................... ....... .. ............ .. ........................ 107,580,&lt;Xl0.00

r

I , the undersigned officer do hereby declare that this Report of Condition (lnc ludlng ,the supporting schedules) Is true to the best of myknowledge and belief.
Madge E. Boggs
Vl.c e President and Controller
We, the ~nderslgned_ directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condl·
lion (Including the supporting schedules) and declare that It has been examined by
us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared In corllormance
with the Instructions and Is true and correct.
·
·
,
\
Metrlll L ..Evans
\
Carrol H.McKenzle - Directors.
\
.
Frank H. Mills, Jr.
.
State ol Ohio, County. of Gallla, ss:
.
. '
Sworn to and subscr~bed beforfme.this 26th day of April, 1983,and I hereby cer~~ty that I am not an officer or director of this bank. My commission expires March
25. 1986. Cindy L. Harrington, Nobary Public.

\

· residents
Monday

Land Bank association plans
closer ties with customers

1983-84 REGISTRATION IS OPEN
GRADES K-12

ro"• •B • 16•

Physician on platform
of Libertarian Party

Business

.
This sharp compact has front wheel drive, air cond., power steering,
VInyl tnm and only 17,000 miles.

1980 PONTIAC PHOENIX

Extend registration period
RIO GRANDE- Registration for the Introduct ion to Computer
Programii)ing class a t Bu~keye Hills Career Center has been
extended.
'
The course, which provides Instruction In problem-solving
through computer usage, uses BASIC language with brief
introductions Into FORTRAN and COBOL systems.
For more information. contact the Buckeye Hills Adult Education
Department at 2~~5334. extension 240 anyt ime from 2 to 10 p.m .
Monday through Thursday. and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m . Friday.

RGC-CC students tour ,plant

This Hatchback is dove gray with carmine custom cloth interior v-6
eng1ne, air cond., AM-FM, ti~ wheel, Rallye II wheels and only
26,876 low miles.

1978 CHEV.
light blue with dljl"k blue vinyl roof, V-8, air, only 49,000 miles.

1977-CHEV. MAUBU CLASSIC
STATION WAGON
Red, roof rack, cruise control, sport wheels.

1975 DODGE DARTI 4 DR.
Slant 6, air cond., power steering, vinyl roof. Only 54,4181ow miles.

1975 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME
Light blue with white landau roof, V-8, air, Rallye wheels, radial
tires, AM-FM-Cassette.
.

1977 OlDS CUTlASS SUPREME
,

BROUGHAM

White exterior with burgunday Cloth fnterior, V-8, air, locally owned.
Priced betow wholesale.
Bll a- Johneon ~- Terry Hemiltori

renchtown
Car Co.
.

RIO GRANDE - Six student s from a manufacturing technology
class at Rio Grande College and Community College recently toured
the Merrllat Industries plant In Jackson as part of a fleld~xJ)('rl&lt;'nce
project.
The student s were Gary Ellis of Middleport: Linda Banks of
Vinton; Dean Canter of Oak Hill, Robin Napper of Cheshire; Rob
Rickman of Porismou th; and Larry Witt of Westerville.
The students are a part of the class. "Plant Layout and Mater ials
Handling ," a study of the relationships among men. machines and
efficient movement in good and service production.

POINT PLEASANT - Peoples
Bank of Point Pleasant board of
directors, subject to shareholder
approval, has authori?Pd a: 100
percent stock spilt and sa le of an
additional 20,000 shares, President
Vltus Hartley Jr. announced
Saturday.
One addil ional share would be
issued for each share of common
stock owned on June J of this year. lf
approved by shareholders, the
stock distribution will be made on
July 30.
Cash will be paid in lieu of
fractional shares.
Hartley said the split. coupled
with salP of the additional stock.
would raise the number of common
shares outs landing to 100.000.
Proceeds from the additional
stock sale would be used to add to the
bank's capital base, thereby givi ng
It greater lending ability. Hartley
said .
··Sate uf 20,000 additional shares.
half of which wou ld be offered to
present stockholders and the rf'mainder to new stockholders . is an
action the bank's board of directors
believes Is nreded to satisfy
demand .'" Hart ley commented. He
pointed out that there has not been
any stock'\ivaila ble for some time,
but that requests for it have been
persistent.
Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant.
established In 1965, now has assets of
more than $32.500,000.

•

COL:UMBUS - The Internal Revenue Service has accepted
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.'s determlhation of the
portion of cash dividends paid on Its common stock In 1\m that was
not taxa~le as dlv)dend Income tor federal income tax purposes.
It proved to be ··substantially greater" than the preliminary figure
C &amp; SOE projected in early 198:!. :The new determination shows a
jump to 5138percent on Sept.10dlvldends, up from from28percent,
and 51.38 percent for Dec. 10 dividends, up from 36 percent.
June 10 dividends are up to 7.29 percent, where a nontaxable
portion existed before. None of those were determined on the March
10 dividends.
C &amp; SOE paid $2.321n dividends per share In 191llln payments of 58
eents each in March, ,June, September and December.
The new determination Is subject to change, C &amp; SOE officials
said.

Wendy's posts gain
DUBLIN - Wendy's Intematio!ltlllnc., a restaurant chain. has
posted record earnings of $10.1 million for the !lrst quarter of 1983.
Wendy's chalrrilan Roherl L. Barney said the earnings, a 24.6
· percent Increase over the $8.1 milliOn_earned In the first quarter a
year ago, came on record sales ot $406.2 million.
Earnings per share were 25 cents, up 19 per cent over 21 eents last
year.
BaJvey said there now are 2,-168 Wendy's hamburger restaurants
In the United Stale\&gt; and 10 foreign countries, 837 of, whiCh are
company owned. The company aLso has opened 26 _Sisters chicken
restaurants, said James Near, Sisters president.
Barney also said the shareholders have voted to Increase the
number ol common shares from 60 mllllon tcJ 100 mllllon.

. 1640 Euttrn Art., GalliJI!)Iis

Land Bank Associations closed $591
million in loans to farmer s and
rural residents. This was down
substantially from 1981 n .ord
figures of $1.1 billion.
Schlader attrlbu_ted this decrease
In new loan ac tivity to the pa st
year's agricultural economy.
"In general." said Schlader,
'·economic uncertainty left most of
our dlstrlct"s farmers with a walt
and see attitude. They became
more cautious In their debt fi nanced activities."
Although loa n volume was down ,
Schlader said that a significant
milestone In service to fa1mers was
achieved In August. when the bank
reached $5 billion In Iota! loans
outstanding .

Other conference spea kers Included: Farm Journal stall economist Dr. John Marten. f arm Credit
System fiscal agent Peter Carney
and motivational humorist Art
Holsl. Panel discussions on congressional affairs and credit administration were also part of tlie
conference.
The FLBA of Ga llipolis Is one of
&amp;I FLBAs In the Fourth Dlstlict
Land Bank Syst811. Webster stated
that the Ga llipolis Association
services more than 3-lO loans to
farmers and rural residents In
Athens. Ga llla. Lawrence, Meigs,
M or gan, J ackson. Vinton, and
Washingt on counties. Outstandlng

loan vo lu mf' Is
of $1J.711(l20.

currf'ntl~'

in excPSs

cu ltura l Unancl al cooperatives.

The major portion of their loan
funds Is obtained through Ihe sale of
securities to Investors In the
nation's money markets.
At the conference's opening
sesslori. conferees heard reports
from District Djrector B. Dale
Harrison and Land I'lank President
R. C. Schlader.. ,
_
_
Harrison and Schta·aer gave a
review of the 1982 fourth dtstrtrt
board a nd bank activities and
accomplishments. Schlader a lso
highlig hted the bank"s plans for
further decentralization of a uthorities lo FLEAs In 1983. ··our goal.'"
stated Schlader, ··ts to move our
services as close to the frll'mberl borrower as possible.'"
In his comments. Schlade•· noted
tha t during 1982 I he . 64 Federal

Di\VIS PROMOTED - Michael C. Davl• luiS lx.~·n muned ''-"'l..Umt
cashier with Ohio V..Uey Bank Co. Davis, miUlag&lt;•rofOVR's ltloGrande
bnu1ch, hils been_employed ~Yith the bunk slm-e November I!J!ill. i\ 1957
graduate of Gallla i\cademy High School 1U1d a 19641 griutulu•• of
Columh11• BusintJss University, Davis l• m•UTI•'tl tAl th•• fnntl&lt;'r Elva
WUIIum• and has two cldldn-'11, lwhln, 13, 1utd Etlutn, l Th••y N'Hilk 1t1 Iti
Sct.-ond i\vt• .. Gallipolis .

peoples Bank
announces 100
percentsplit
Harley-Davidson

IRS acc;epts utility_ determination

'\

\

ward H. .Jennings, John B. McCoy.
J ohn G. McCoy . Robert Ho" Potts.
and William K. Westwater.
Shareholders a)so appruved an
amendment of restated certificate
of incorporation to Increase the
number of aut horlzed shares of
common stock without par value
from 2o.OC(l,OOO lo OIWXl.OOO.

GAWPOUS - More than 450
manage men I personnel and dlrec·
tors from Federal Land B!lnk
associations (FLBAs) In Indiana,
Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee,
met In Louisville, Ky. for ihe 1983
annual land bank stockholders
conference.
According to Carl L. Webster,
president·of the FLEA of Ga lllpolls.
five manage ment . personnel and
directors from this area attended
the conference.'
They Included Webster. C. Darrel Young, dfrector from Gallla
County: David D. Lang, director
from Lawrence Cou nr y·, Otis
Knopp. director representing
Meigs and Athens counties. and
Howard Strode. director representlng Washington a nd Morgan
counties.
The conference was hosted by the
Federal Land Bank of Louisville
tFLBJ, the district headquarters
for &amp;I field-based land bank associations In four states. The FLB of
Louisville Is one of 12 land banks
nationwide, which together supervise 474 FLEAs. All FLEAs arP
farmer-owned and -eon trolled agri-

RECEIVES AWi\RD - Da·
nicl G. "Gill, a fonnet Salem
Center re~ldent and !ll!llior staff
engineer at Welltem Electric's
Winston-Salem, N.C. works, has
received the company's technical professional excellence
award. GW, who Dvesal Green&amp;boro, Is the first ~ at the
North.CaroUna works to receive
the award. A - oi the lale Mr. ,
and MrL Grover om of Melp
County, GW's father IIIIo operated a produce market Ill
GaDipoll8.

subjected
J
ff
to apanese tart· legislation
_

•
CINCINNAT I (API-Somehard
feelings have been directed at thP
makers and sellers of HariPy
· Davldsons since President RPagan
s igned a hPfty tariff hike for the big
bike"s foreign comJ)('t it ion.
Harley manufactutl'rs a nd deal ers In the area say they arc being
subjected to a new brand of new
name-c alllng.
"One man called this morning
and critlclzffl mr bccaus&lt;' hr"s
going to have lo pay more for a
Japanese bike.'" said a toea ! Harley
Davld•on dealer who asked not lobe
named .
"There are so many bad fN'Iings.
especia lly among car workers. who
didn't ge t a ny help when .Japanrt;!'
cars started putting them out of
work,"' said Don Bunger, sal('&lt;;
manager at Harley Davidson &amp;
Kawasaki of Hamilton.
ThP lncrPasP., lxlosting thP tariff
from 4.4 lo 49.4 this y&lt;'ar and
gradua lly reducing It back to J:l.7 by
1988. was requested by Harley
Davidson. r('C()mmended by the
U.S. International Trade Comm ission a nd s igned Into law April I by
Pres lden t Reagan, a ll for the benefit
of an American company strug,::ling agalnst and los ing to forP!gn
compel It ion.
II applies only to motorcycles
with engi nes bigger than 700 cubic
centimete rs - the lari(e var iety
Harley makes - lind, by virtue of
the quotas II establishes, narrows
thP attack to the major Japanese
firms: Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki
and Suzuki.
Most "motorcycle dea lers tn
Greater Cincinnati said they ex pected the Increase to have little
effect . If any, this summer.
"Depending on your poi,nt of view,
the Japanese manufacturers have a
one-year to 18-month supply of
motorcycles already In the country," said jim McElroy, a Trade
CommissiOn analyst In Washington. Some Cincinnati dealers esti·
mated the supply at two years.
Whatever the supply, those bikes
already In American warehouses
won't he subject to the tariff
Increase. None of Japan's big lour
has announced a price Increase to
dealers, and such an anrouncement
Is not expected for some time.
Craig Savage, a salesman at Rlck
Case Motorcycles, In _Colerain
Township, said, "We expect practl·
caUY no price change here because
they buy In such volume." Rlck
Case, based at Akron, operates
motorcycle stores statewide.

To furt hPr weak~n thP impact.
Honda produces lwo of Its biggest
blk&lt;". the 1.101 and !.ltXI. at Its
Marysv lll&lt;• plant. n011h of Co lum
bus. ·oh io . Non&lt;' of thP bikes
produced there, which account for
virtually all l,IXXkc. and 1.100-cc
models sold in the United States. will
IX' su bject lu thc tax .
" 11' s vPry St"ldom wf' sell a big
bike•,'' sa id Bunger. who sells both

dC'alpr sJ lrnpnrl fr·w~ ·r thnn ~1 . 101 n
ypar."
i\C('Otding !1 1 Vkl·:l rn,\', thf' fir.o.;t
;l,(Ul laqw bikL·s fnnn Wl'sl Ct•r
ma ny w!\l l)(' la X('&lt;-1 a! a l' i \11' of 4.4
Last yf'a r. hPsa ld , ltlf•lJnilt'fi Statrs
tmportro on I~' :UOi stwh hikf•s frorn

Wf-st ( ;f'tn l any. a II or I hNn I ~MWs .
Thf' Milwaukr'f' has1'(l llarll'~'
davidson se ll s t~I:WlU I :1 of all
motorc:vclf's soiL! ill tht' U nlfc'(l

Kaw~:~ sa k!s .

Stall's. Mci ·:Jrny said . and ah:llll 12

.Jim Gels. managPr al thP BMW

to \4 of tho.~· bikf' s wi!t1 morf' than
7t10 ('C cli!-ipl;ll'f'm('n !

Harlrys i:ind

SIOJ'f'. said the tariff will haV(' "no
l'ffrc t on usa Iall, tx-&lt;·au sPW&lt;' tiiMW

Dt\LELEi\R

Lear photographs
get ·h onorable mention
GALL IPOLIS- Dale LearofLea_r Photogra phy, 529Jackson Pike,
GaUl polls, recently participated In theportraltcompetltlon at the:Xlth
annual Professional Photographers of Ohio Convention a t the Hyatt
Regency In Columbus.
Two of Lear's portraits were accepted for exhibition, with onP
recelvtng an honorable mention . A portrait of a Gallla County
resident, Greg Cennamo, was given honorable menUon and
represented casual portraiture. A portrait of a Columbus resident,
Linda Larger, was aceepted for exhibition representing formal
portraiture.
More than l,tXXlphotographers from Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia,
Pennsylvania , kentucky and Michigan attended and completed In
the regional print competition judged by photography experlS from
all over the country .

�The

Times-Sentinel

Ohic&gt;-Point

1, 1983

W. Va .

ew1sn synagogue on top floor of 3-story

:
·•
:
:

'l1flS TIIREF.rSTORY edilice near the comer of 'Third and Coort
was built in 1858 for Leopold Frank, who was a drover as weD as a
butcher. In the early part of lhl• century Frank's daughter, Rose
Shurtz, ran a ~rant here. In recent years M ullineaux Decorating
and the Coffee Barber Shop have been here.

.:.PEEPS, a Gallip olis Diary:

)ames McQuaid opines ~yes"
:on Puerto Rico joining U. S.

;.
By J. SMIUEL PEEPS
· GA LLIPOLIS - While on vaca ')Jon from Federa l Mogul, .James
M cQua id and his wife, Maria,
visited her parents In Puerto Rico,
0 nd their answe r Is unani mously
':"Yes" to the question, Are you-in
1avor ol ad mitting Puerto Rico as
1he 51st state?

.

•

gets it !Jack he'll send the informa tion to the E nquirer.
NOW OL' PEEPS never heard of
this before, but Bill Barnette says
that the E nquirer will give $100 for
honesty --- But It is up to Bob.
Barnette Is still waiting, a nd closes
wit h his plaintive note: "ll you left
!!_,somewhere call a nd tell please. "

,J A M E: S McQUAID

ANDRES AND LOLA ESPIET
are the pare nts of Ma rla . McQuaid
himself did some fishing a nd saw
some cock fighting: cock figh ting Is
legal at San .Juan. Highlight of the
vacation was McQuaid 's m eeting
a nd chatt ing with the governor of
P uert o Rico, Ca r los Roml'ro
Barcelo.

Hamilton prize
ANN ARBOR. Mich. tAP! -The
1!!82 Hamilt on P rize was recently
awarded to Anthropology Professor
Sa lly Pr ice of .John s Hopkins
Un lverslty for her book "Co-Wives
a nd Calabashes: The Social and
ArtL•IicLifeofSarama ka Women ."
The prize Is awm·ded annually by
lh&lt;' University of Michigan for the
be&gt;it book-length
· schola rly manuscr lpl on women.
The book Is to be published by the
U-M Pr!'Ss.

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GAlLIPOLIS Before the
railroad came to GaWpoUs in 188) It
was a conunon sight to see pigs,
sheejJ and cattle
driven
through the town
north all the. way
to Belpre where·
theywereloaded
for transport to
Baltimore. One
of the Old French
City's most
was
Leopold Frank or a son, Jake or
Aaron.
, On one such drive in the 1870s
• Frank drove north 186 sheep, 95
cattle, a nd .327 hogs. About half of
the animals Frank had bought
from other Gailla farmers and for
half he was merely collecting a
drover's fee. Among the Gallla
farmers that -Frank drove for
were: J . M. Kerr, A. Newton, J~ .
Graham, W. S . •Hanson, George
Eagle, W. F . Butler, and John
Kerns. It _wa5 in 1858 that Leopold
Frank and his brother, Moses
F'rank, erected the three story
building near the corner of Third
and Court. Leopold, Moses and
their two other brothers, Henry and
Harry. had come to Gallipolis
around 1850 from Alsace.
In an 1876 directory put out by the
Gallipolis Bulletin we read:
"Mr. Leopold Frank Is an
extensive stock dealer , and those
wis hing to find him will call at his
residence on Third, a short distance
below Court. He a t all times wants
hogs, sheep, beef cattle, and 1\orses.
He buys prtnclpally for the Eastern
markets and anyone having stock
to dispose of will do well to call upon
him . He has at this time a number
of two-horse farm wagons and
buggies for either one or two horses
which he desires to exchange for
cash or gOQd paper. They were ·
m a nu fa c t u red. 1-n 1 h e
Penitentiary."
IN THE BUll.DING near Third
and Court th e Franks also operated
a meat shop.
Alter Leopold retired his son
Aaron was In charge of the shop at
least up to 1899 as we firrd. an ad In
the Ga llipolis Weekly. Trtbune that
Aaron Frank is a " dealer In horses,
ca ttle, sheep and hogs. Veal calves
are a specialty."
The F ranks used som e of the
animals they bought In their own
shop; others they resold on the
eastern mar ket as stock brokers.
In the late 1800s and early 1870s
the top floor of the Frank buUding
was used as the Jewish Synagogue.
In 1870 there were eight Hebrew
families In Gallipolis who worshiped on the Sabbath in t he Frank
building. The li'ranks were themselves J ewish.
IN CONJUNCfJON with the
Synagogue a Rev. Strauss ran a
He brew-German school. We have a
copy of a report on the closing
exercises at the school in 1870:
"Alter a few preliminary remarks from Rev. Mr. Strauss, the
exercises Opened with a tra nslation
of a port ion of the Holy Scriptures
from Hebrew Into German. !ollowtng which was a German hymn then German reading, Hebrew
reading, and German spelling aflerwhlchtheclasswasexamlned
in the Bible and arithmetical
numeration in Ger man."

11i!S CONVE:RSAT ION brougl!t
fort h Gov . Barce Io·s op1mon
I11at
t"u
lied
P uerto Rlco ""I
~ ongs as ·K- n
•
o1
t
M
Q
ld
h
Sta tes ·• st s ate. c ua . w OS&lt;'
hom e add ress Is RL 1. Box ~JR.
- Ia Iked a 1 grca 1 1cngt h
Ga Ul po11s.
wll h the gover nor. who Is lh&lt;' Inlier
ma n to the 1'\ghl of the accompany- r-------------==:c=.::___::::..:...;:::..;,;,:;:;.::::._ _ __,
lng photograph. Marla's brother,
Tonio Munzus, w fls then• .
'·ADVENTURES of a fifty-cto lla 1·
bill " cou ld be Ihe Iitl e of this story.
which came to Pl'&lt;'ps hy way of Bill
Barnette, Rl. l , Box 54~- B. Ga lllpo!Ls. Barnette says thai he lost a li'JO
bill In the Greyhoun'd Station on
Jackson Pike, and that was April
18. On Aprll 21 Bill gol a call from a
ma n who sa id Ihat his name Is Bob.
·Bob found the $-'iO bill jus! a
hail-hour after Bill lost it .

~- ORDER TODAY!'

•·•''"•1 ro,.,,,.,

: "I THOUGHT HE would leave It
'at the sta tion where he found it . But
I haven't received It yet. I would
·a pprecla te It If he would give It
:back or call a nd let me know lf he is
going to give It !Jack or not.
P lease!" From that point Bill
;Ba rnette goes on to say tha t If he

:Bronze relief

'

DAY
IS
THURSDAY
MAY 19th

25 S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks • SOli Purina
'
Chick Starter Meet
s19. ~Save 111.35
SO S.R. Heavy Breed Chicks + SOli Purina
Chick Starter Meet
IJLOO-Save 115.80
100 S.R. Heavy Breed chickes • Purina
. ·
150.00-Save 18.80
· Chick .Starter Mad.

1'\ri-

• The museum says the work Is
!•consklered the finest Italian Bai-oque bronze relief in this count ry, "
;md was probably executed between 1735 and 1740.

MODERN SUPPLY

On the farm front .

.

-.

,

Take advantage of our
cash and cany specials
dll'ina the month of
....._April
and-SAVE!

BUY IN BULK AND SAVE!
KENNEBEC

Seed Potatoes
$475 SOLB.
PONTIAC

Potatoes
$475 SO LB. ·.

rising about 8 pcrccntt o$15.1 billion
from tess than $14 billion last year.
the repon showed.
Shipments of U.S. agricultural
pi'Oducts to Western Europe ·are
expected to decline 'to $10.9 bill ion
from almost $12.2 billion last year.
Export sales to Japan. the largest
sing !&lt;:&gt; foreign customer of American rarmers, arP projected at $.11.4
billion. down !rom $-1.74 billion last
year and a record $6.74 billion in
1980-81.
The report said that sales to
Eastern Europe, which includes
Pola nd. a prime U.S. mar ket unt il
recently, will hold .stcady at about
~'900 m ill ion. However, that would
be less \han half the value of $2.06
billion shipped to Eastern Europe in
1980-81 .
Shipments to the Soviet Union.
va lued a t $1.7 billion. are down
sharply from $2 .32 billion last year.
mainly " beca use of lower plic&lt;:&gt;s
and reduced wheat shipments," the
rl'port said.
- Expor ts to .China. which rose to
$2.1 9 billion in l!lffi-81, have declined
-steadily a nd are exl'&gt;'!Cted to· be .
wm1h about Sl.4 billion in i982-&amp;3.
"U.S. grain exports 1to China I are
expec ted to maint ain recent high
volumes. but shipments of other
products - particula rly eolian wi II once again drop considerably."
the report said.
Looking ill the developing na -

By DO~ KENDALL
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON I AP t - Most of
the decline in U.S. agricultura l
expons in 1982-8.1 is expected to
occur in sail's to developed cou ntries. particularly those in Western
E urope. according to' Agriculture
Dl'partment analysts.
The total value of agric ultura l
sales in the fiscal year that bega n
Oct. 1 is projected at $37.5 billion.
down from $39.1 bill ion in 1981-82and
thP record of $4.1.8 billion In 1980-81.
Much of the decline in va lue was
due to lower pr ices, depressed
because of huge world supplies and
lagging demand. However. the
act ual volume of shipment in 1981-82
also was down.

•

Export.values climbed 12consecutive yea rs before last year's slide.
Th&lt;' expected drop in 1982 -83 would
be the fi rst back-to-back val u&lt;'
dec line si nce 1968-69, according to
USDA records. Some increase in th&lt;'
actua l volume may occur. however.
The .latest look at the export
$1tuatlon was included Mo~day in a
new Agrtcultu :-e Outfook report
issued by the departm ent's Eco-

nomic Research Service.

100 GAL

180 GAL.

300 GAL

STOCK
TANK

STOCK
TANK

STOCK
·TANK

Over 70
Varieties
Garden Seed
ASSORTED PLANTS
$235 ~0 $295 BUNCH

-$5395 $8Q95 $}}295
61h ft. - 12.60
7

48"

As broken down by the analysts.
1982-&amp;3 shipments to developed
countries - primarly Western
Europe, J apa n. Ca nada . Aus tralia
;md NewZ.,aland -are projectedat
$18.4 billion. down 8.5 percent !rom
nearly $20.1 billion last year.
Sa les to centra lly pla nned countries, includ i~g the Soviat Union,

Beef events to be held May 5 at Gallia F~brounds
at 6:45 p.m .: the Princess Contest
at7:30p.m.: andwewillallheadto
tlhe Feet Lot at 8 p.m . which means
beef sandwiches and many otber
good things. The only food you
would need to bring would be a
dessert dish.
Don't forget youth, parents and
au other fol~ interested In beef
ca ttle are welcome to attend.
See yo~ next Thursday evening.
Maybe you can get some corn
planted now with !be weather
clearing up. Here are some reminders you might want to check over as
you plant this year's crop.
Long-t~rm studies or da tes or
planting corn conducted at Wooster, Ohio show the highest corn
yields have been obtained from a
May 7 date of planting, and lower
yields when pla nting was earlier or
later. Research workers stated
that, moving south from Wooster,

$.'i06 billion last year.
But exports to the less-develo(ll'CI
countries are expected to recover,

planter manual setting lor seed
drop per acre and the resulting
stand of com at harvest To obtain
the recolllliJended harvest stand, It
Is suggested that the planter be set
to drop 20 percent rrore seeds than
the desired stand for plant populations below .20,000 plants per acre.
For plant populations above :;n IXXi
• •
Sl't the planer to drop 10 percent
more seeds than the recommended
harvest stand.

r.==========;;;;;;._______
SPEECH &amp; HEARING

..;;;;;;;;;;==;

Recommended plant populations
at harvest for corn hybrtds may
range from 18,000 to 24,000 plants
per acre. Early maruring , hybrids
have smalll'r ears than full-season
hy brids. An l'arly hybrtd may
require a plant population of 22,00) ·
plants per acre at harvest for a
150-bushel per acre yleld. Some
full-season hybrid grown under the
same conditions w111 produce sufficient ear size at a pOpulation of
18,000 plants per acre for a

412 Vinton Pike
Gallipolis, OH. 4.5631
446-5500

Hearing Evaluations
Testing, Evaluation, Selection and Fitting of
·
Hearing Aids
·.
Follow-Up and Annual Checks

***
.SAVE
TIMEI
.
SAVE MONEYI

Professional Audiologist
Licensed Hearing Aid Fitter &amp; Dealer
Hearing Aids- Medicaid &amp; UMW Approved

SPEECH &amp;
LANGUAGE SERVICES

Now. save $1 30 wh911 you purchasa
an Ariens Riding MaiNer with Rea r
Grass Bagger .

You 'll save ti me .and money' Anens
G rass Bagger wtually e limi nates raki ng
aft er mowing

$2 billion this year, up from $1 .5
billion In 1981-82.
Commoditv shipml'nt s to some
less-deveiop(.J count ries in As ia are
expected to ga in , including !nella
and Bangladesh , where poor
wf'a thpr reduced ha1vests .

~::t:rn1o :~~~$4E~~:-fr~~

the season changes on the average
150-busbel yield.
of one day l'arller lor each 10 mlles. , - Many of the new hybrids yield
This Indicates an Ideal planting
best at plant populations of 2;1.000 to
time or com at Portsmouth Is Aprll
24,000 plants per acre. There are
23, 14 days earlier than at Wooster.
exceptions. Rely on the advice of
Yields decline rapidly when com
your seed producer regarding the
is planted alter May 7. Moisture
plant populations recommended
content of grain Increases and test
for the hybrtds being grown.
weight decreases with later dates
Plant population recomrnenda ot planting. Yields fell to 91 bu/ acre
lions are based on the stand at
In the nine-year test average When
harvest. In _general, there is a
planted in mid-June.
decrease of 10 to 25 percent from

HEARING SERVICES

tions. exJX)rts to Mexico may reach

Speech and Language Evaluations · and
Therapy

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

For Children, Adults, The Elderly

CHESTER
985 · 3308

10 ft.-5 Panel Gate .......... '34.20 Vigoro
1
12 ft.-5 Panel Gate .......... '38.60 Weed Control Fertilizer .. ...50 lb. 17.95
14 ft.-5 Panel Gate ....... .. . '42.00 Vigoro Lawn Fertilizer ....... 25 lb. 17.35
16 ft-5 Panel Gate ........ .. '49.60 Vigoro Lawn Fertilizer ..... 50 lb. 112.95
10 ft - 7 Rail Pipe Gate ..... 140.95 ·Vigoro
12 ft. - 7 Rail Pipe Gate ..... '46.00 All Purpose Fertilizer ....•.. 40 lb'. 15.95
14 ft.-7 Rail Pipe Gate .. ... '51.00 Malathion Oust .. .. ........... J•• 41b. 12.95
16 ft. - 7 Rail Pipe Gate .. :.. '60.65 5-10-10 Fef\ilizer ............ 50 lb. 13.80
12-12·12 Fertilizer ........... 50 lb. 14.50

EW
GAS
ARE

Diazinon Spray .. ........ ..... 16 oz. 15.75
Potting, Mix .. ..... .............. ... 4 qt. 69'
LB.
4 LB.
Rose Dust .. ... .. .. ............ 12 oz. 11.49
WHITE ONION SETS
Ro~ Spray ...... ....... ....... 16 oz. IJ.69
LB.
$} ()() 3LB. Ammonia Nitrate ............. 50 lb. 15.30
~~~~~~-~~~~ Garden Lime ... ................ 50 lb. 11.75
Sevin SOW ................ ....... 2 lb. 18.95
Liquid Sevin ....................... Pt. 14.25
COMPACT TROMBONE SPRAYER
Liquid Sevin- ..... .................. Qt. 17·45
$
Fruit Tree Sp~y .. .. .............. Pt. '6.95
_ H_
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FIELD SEEDS

FARM CHEMICALS

Red Clover • Alfalfa
Timothy • Orchard GFass
Kentuclcy 31 Fescue
Seed Oat s· • DeKalb &amp;
Kenworthy Seed Corn

See Boso Agri-Center
For Popular Prices On
Your Chemical Needs.

'

Chick Order.
We w ill fill onlv orde " pla,ed w ith u• p rior to Mov 9 . All chld1:1 will
be Hea vy Breed , Shaight .Run.
,

399 W. Ma in
992· 2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
THE STORE WITH " ALL KINOS OF STUFF" .- FOR PETS, STA·
BLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS , LAWNS AND GARDENS.

Agriculturt &amp; CNRD
Galla Cou1Uy
GAlLIPOLIS- We WOUld Uketo
have bee! fa110 famllles Join us for
t~e Annual 4-H-FFA Beef F'lttlng
and Showing Demonstration and
Beef Queen-Princess Contest It
will he held Thi!I'SdayevenJng, May
5_. at the. Gallla County J unior
Fairgrounds . If you know of a beef
farm famlly or someone connected
with the beef Industry who didn'~
receive an Invitation, then bring
th&lt;'m along. ·

BUYS

SEEDs

One of the main purposes of the
event' Is to provide opportunities
and trainlng for youtb. Anotber
purpose, however, Is to give Mom,
Dad and othl.rs a chance to "talk
shop" and enjoy an evening of
fellowship with other folks In the
beef cattle Industry. The event Is
sponsored by the Gallla County
Extension Beef Conunlttee.
Here Is the time schedule:
Contestants arrive for pre-judging
at 5 p.m.; Practice llvestock
judging contest at 6 p.m.; the
demonstration will get underway

&amp;tension Agent

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page E.3

Ohio-,.Point Pleasant, W. Va.

39¢

BIG DEALS ON CHICKS 'N FEED

Plu t e4 .60 S1ving1 with Coupon on fee d. S1vlngt Book GIVen with Each

: LOs ANGELES (AP) - The
:11~11an Baroque' bronze relief "Tsi-'umph of Neptune and E uropa" by
, the F lorentine sculptor Antonio
-Montautl was recently acquired by
lite Los Angeles CountY Mu,seum of

By BRYSON R. CARTER

·MAY CASH N' CARRY

59¢

I

BILl- BARNETTE'S actua l writ·
tng was this: "On the 21st I got a
ca ll from a ma n who said that his
:name was Bob and he found a S50
·blll a t I p.rh. the same day." (!t was
lost at !2: 30p.m.)."! had It listed in
the paper and my phone nu mber
446-3759 tha t he would leave money
at the Greyhound Station so I cou ld
:pick It up. But he did n't say what
:Sta tio n he would leave It at."

before World War I and haS spent
more than half ot Its ~ In
the old Frank buOdlng.Thefounder
Ker!ts and Sons Frlg1dalre Store Edgar Percy MuWneaux was the
was here. TheyaJsosoldradlosand son of Ja!Tles and Anna Mullineaux
one can still see the remnants of an and Uved from 1873 to 1951. Edgar
ad tor Atwater Kent radios on the was a master wood carver tor the
lower side of the building closest to Ohio Valley Furniture Company
Th)i'dAvenue.About thesametlrne - untU It closed In 1915. It was then he.
there Was another "eatery" here got Into retalllng wallpapers and
the Rose Kitchen. •
such.
·
dates to

tw:n

Pomeroy-Micld ~port-Gallipolis,

Agriculture and our community

In 1870 GalllpoUs had some 60 Soward's Saloon and later the
Gennan farnilles. The Rev. Strauss GalllpoUs Liquor Company.
Urged Jews and Germans to keep _ IN THE EABLY l!ros the J. N.
alive in their chlldren Hebrew and
German in hlsspeech atthecloseof
the ceremonies.
At the
of the century the
Frank ,bulldlng was home for Rose
Shurtz sRestaurant. Rosewbowas
thedaughterofLeopoldFrankalso
owned the buDding. Another ~110m
in the
was held

1

May 1' 1983

J

..

-

•

BOSO.AGRI-CENTER, INC.
THIRD AND SYCAMORE

(

They 're real ly hot on saving you energy. And while
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keep energy consumption down . That's so mething
everyone can warm up to .
Most efficient ever. The new gas
furnaces are truly energy efficient. while
. still keeping you comfortable. Operating
efficiencies are now as high as 96%.
New savings features . There .are
many reasons for the improved operating
efficiencies of the new natural gas furnaces:
specially designed heat exchangers and re~u ­
perative cycles for better h e~t retention, fuel-scnr:np1ng
features like pulse combustion and pilotless 1gn1t1on .
And cleanliness. Anyone converting from another fuel
will also enjoy the clean operating benefits of natural gas.
Contact your local heating and cooling contractor.
He'll show you how you can save energy with a new high
efficiency natural gas furn ace.
Natural gas. The energy that makes your home more
efficient.

'

COLUMBIA GAS

GAUIIIOLIS, OH.

•I
I.

I·

.

..

I'

..

�Page

E-4-The ~y Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Mid4lepott ·Gallipolis, Ohio

lloy 1, 1983

Paint Pleamnt, W. Va.

.

May 1, 1983

.

··'Ride sharing' program pushed by ~inc;r:in:==n=at;;;.i...;;~;;;.;;e;.;;.si;;;.,;;;.d.-e..n....t - - r
CINCINNATI (AP)- From .hls
. modest downtown office, Greg
...WesterlJeck pictures himself com·
petlnf with the nation's blgfest
. automakersforthedrlvlnghabltsof
· . · Ohio workers. .
. While automakers push sleek
cars and the joy of driving,
WesterlJeck tries to get commuters
to share thelr vehicles or business·
Operated vans on their dally trips to
.
aoo.from work.
· WesterlJeck tuns a "Ride Shar. tng" program of a local plaMinf
. . agency and admits he's
overmatched.
·
" In the short term, Jet's face ItI'm trying to sell car pooling up
: · against General Motors, which Is
· selling Camaro ads on 'Saturday
Ntght Live,'" Westerbeck said.
"Youcan'tcompetew!ththat.
· "! can never make ride sharing
· lookassexyandasattractiveandas
desirable as General Motors 1S
• eolng to make riding a Camaro look.
It can't be done. "
. Westerbeck takes a dollars-and, cents approach to selllnf car and

van poollilgfortheOblo-KentuckyIndiana REgional Council of Governments. Herunsoneotthemost
acti.v e car-jJOOUng progratm In
Ohio.
ThreeyearsatterOKIIauncheda
ride-sharing PrDf.I1Uil,l24.167 com·
routers used car or van Pools to get
to work In a nJne.county area,
WesterlJeck said. He estimates that
lakes68,rolcars offtheroadsevery
day In Hamilton, Butler, Clermont
and Warren counties of Ohio, three
northern Kentucky counties and
two In eastern Indiana.
"If you parked them next to each
other In two lanes and put them end
to end, It would stretch from hereto
Louisville," Westerbeck said.
"When people think about that even the people that are tr&lt;U~Sit
experts- they are awestruck Qy
that number. Tiley don't even think
In those terms because nobody's
ever put It out In those terms to
realtze how many people are doinr.

tqat."

-

Car pooling outranks public
transportation In some areas. For

HamUwn

Instance, 17 percent of
heart of the ettorts. One OKI
Countyworkersusecarpools,only8 representative works at contacting
percent the bus system, according businesses to organize carpools.
to WesterlJeck.
Some t1nns have van pools, and
"We never see them (the car employees park In outlying areas
pools) when lheydrlveontheroad," and lakecompany.operatedvans to
WesterlJeck said. "Tiley loQk like work. 'l'he Procter &amp; Gamble Co.,
any other cars that are on the road. operates M of the 95 vans used for
auses you see. They're very big and
pools In the ft!ne.&lt;xlunty region.
very vlslllle. and YQU see a lot of
Van and car pooJJng can save
peoplegetoffthem, and you assume
businesses moneythatmlf'htotherthat the majority of people go to
wise be spent on parking lots and
work ey bus. But they don't."
garages, be said.
·
WesterlJeckattributes.thatlnpart
"I think the only way to have a
to etrorts ey OKI, an agency that
successful ride-sharing pl'OfTam
does ~vlronrnentaland transport&amp;· .....and a successful transit system Is
t1on pllinnlnf. Carpboltnr Is funded
you need your private employers to
with federal and local money.
get behind It and to realtze there's
The program was In a 5E!COI!d some economic Incentive for them
wave of rl(le-~ ventures to promote that type of transportalaunched In the United States In the tton," WesterlJeck said. "That's the
1970s. The first
around 1974 ~· keytom&amp;ktngttorbreaklngit."
when there was fear of an oU
An OKI survey showed that 95
shortage.SeveralCtnctnnattgroups percent ot pool participants were
lrled to get car poollnf started, but satlsfied with the arrangements.
failed. The gasoline shortages of Westerbeck said selUng car pooltng
1979 ConVInced OKI to make 1t a
to prospective riders Is the most
prtorlty.
dlftlcult part.
WesterlJeck thinks OKI sue"I tell them about hOw .they can
ceeded because It uses a computer save money, and then I tell them
tomatchcarpoolers.Whenailerson
bow It's convenient, and then I let
car pooling !;ell Itself," he said.
contacts OKI for ride sharing, the
name t?Oe5 Into a computer and a list ''Because once you get somebody In
ofprospecttveridesharerslssentto . a car pool, they suddenly start to
the person, who makes arrangebecome friends with these people.
They get to know them, they play
ments from there.
AboutOOpercentoftheprogram's
volleyball with them, things like
participants come from businesses,
that. And they have a fOOd ttrne.
o\nd then It takes overfor Itself."
which Westerbeck says are the

beRm!

-t-- w~o· -+-~

This psychologist gambles with ·f uiure so patients won't

,..,.+1_..,.,....-----4

BRECKSVU.LE, Ohio (API remained the only one, Taber said.
Dr. Julian I. Tabergambles with tbe
antll 19'79 when the k:IE!a begaD to
future of his patients so they won't. . catch on elsewhere. Only mllltary
The 54-year-old psychologist
veterans with honorable or medical
treats compulsive gamblers discharge!; can enroll here, but
people who can't control an obses- Taber said Maryland, New York
sive drive to bet.
and perhaps others have more
Taber. who holds a Ph.D.. directs
recent state-funded programs.
,
a treatment program for gamblers
Custer, former chief of staff here,
In conjunction with a lcoholic and
has moved on to another VA Job oot
drug treatment programs at the
Is creditect with putting a descripVeterans Administration Hospital
tion of the Illness included in
In · this Cleveland subu rb. The
authoratlve psychlatrtc manuals.
"Gamblers &lt;\~~onymous" program
Taber has newspaper clippings
was the first in the nation to treat
on an office buUiten board about Art
gambling as an illness when VA Dr.
Schlichter , the Baltimore Colts
Robert Custer set it up In 1972. It
backup quarterback from Ohio who

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Travel Agency
Phone 446-0699

360 5

econd Ave .

C
nm

\
,,
Gi\MJIUNG DOCTOR - Dr. Julian Taher, who holds a Ph.D. In
psychology, direct' a "Gainhlcrs Anonymous" progrrun at the
Veterans Administration in Brc'&lt;'ksvllle, Ohio. The treatment progrrun
Is in conjunction "ith alcoholir :u1d dntg tre11tment programs at tbe VA.

and high tolerance of stress. These
Individuals llke stlmulaUQJt and
seem to be attracted to situations
that are challenging."
Taber said compulsive gambling
Is a progressive, overwhelmtng
urge. Like alcoholism, he says, It
can't be cured, only controlled or

Is a central figure In a federal
g;unbllng case In which he reportedly lost $389,rolln sports bets over
a three-month period.
He won't discuss Schlichter
becausethecaselspendlnglnCOUrt,
but be said the money Involved
there Is small compared to some he
knows.
"A man in the east dropped $2.5
mli!Jon over about four years," he
said. "And heonlygambledwltenbe

~ted.

drank.' '

Taber , lnvolvedwlththeprogram
almost from Its start here, surveyed
gambling In Ohio two years ago and
from tllat estimated the state has
perhaps 100,000 compu lsive
gamblers. He used those figures to
estimate there are five million
compulsive gamblers In the nation.
The Commission on the Review of
the National Polley toward Cam·
bllng, an agency created by
Congress a decade ago, estimated
In 1975 there were 1.1 million
compulsive gamblers nationwide
and another J3 million potential
compulsive gamblers, good candl·
dates for addiction.
The commission said six of every
10 Americans 18 years or older
gamble, about 82 mUllan total. The
highest percentages of gamblers
areyoungwhltema tesandtheodds
arctheyareCathollcorJewtshorof
Italian or Irish ancestry.
Custer said compulsive gamblers
have slrntlarltles. In a pamphlet on
f&lt;ambllng he cites clinical cases
which "fairly consL,tently show
constitutional factors such as volatlllty of mood. superior Intelligence,

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_

.·

..
SEILS RllpE SHARING -Greg Westerbeck explains hl8 strategy
for convincing motorists to get Into car and van pools In southwest Ohio,
northern Kentucky wtd easlern Indiana. (AP LaserjJhoto).

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to anchor your investis available on a quarterly
ment strategy, our
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your investment is proRates are on their
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ance up to $100,000.
like they may stay
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there for awhile.
on the future when you
There's still time,
can get '!_guarantee from
however, to take advanCentral Trust? Call us
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:

If you were oounting

'IHECE

~TRUSfCOMPANY

lVur Ftizatzcial Center

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Chi-Paint Pleaiont, W. Va.

If high interest

rates have squeezed
the life out. of your
lifestyle, cheer up.
You don't have to
put off buying the
things you need and
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off lending rates. Aild,
at Central Trust, we're
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For instance, with our
an adjustable
Simple Solution .loan, . you
rate loan, but
can now finance any new car . .
at just 10.990Jo Annual Per- If you act now your rate
centageRate.Otherlowrates will be fixed for 6months.
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lower rates means lower always remain the same.
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The ~imple Solution is · a modest effect on the

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tHE·CE
·TRUSTCOMPANY
· · lfJur Fznancial Center
Mmtbn- fo1)/(."

"Plog~ esslve means that at ftrst
you can deny 11. postpone It,- oot It
gets harder to say no and you get
more and more preoccupied with
It," he said. "It's progressive In the
sense that the amount that you have
to bet goes up, from $5 to $100 to the
sky's the limit.
.
"It's progressive In the amount of
time and In the amount of money
you spend gambling. And It's
progressive In the amount of
damage It does to the Individual."
Many patients are young, bright,
pictures ol corporate sut'Cess; men
who were honor students In 1t1g1t
school, excelled In athletics at
colleg:&gt;, had good looks, were
popular with the opposite sex, and
did everythin~ well. They became
ex~utlves In ftnanclallnstltutlons,
salesmen eamtng
large commissions who work
more to earn gambling money than
for fulfilment or job satisfaction.
"Theyprobablyweretargetedfor
succes~. highly respected," Taber
said. "But they probably also had an
alcoholic father and a mother who
was a saint, who was loving ~nd
gtvlng and religious but distant and
cold.
." The gambler may havegonetoa
parochial school where discipline

was sttict in ctass as well as tn
sports. o\nd then he may have gone
Into the MarlneCoJllS and been tops
In boot training.
" What he has Is all external
discipline, no Internal strength ...
When they are riot following
somebody else's orders, there's
nobody home ·Inside, · rio inner
program . That's not the reason a ll
people are compulsive gamblers;
It's just a pattern we see a lot.
"For one reaon or another, all of
o ur pati e nt s lack Internal
discipline."
· Bonnie Adkins. a ·soctal worker In
the program. says !&lt;ambling, like
other diseases, may strike anyone.
SOme patients here are blue-collar
workers or high school dropouts.
StUI, she said. the lack of self
discipline Is evident.
When they c.o me to Taber they are
the dregs, often with mental,
emotional. physical and legal
probl..n1s . They s how neglect In
saggln~ bodies . bad teeth, and poor
eyesight. Some have multiple
problems, Including pollee records.
With fad lit If'S to treat only six
gamblers at a !Inti.' In his :.klay
program, Taber want s only "worse
cases" who come voluntarily, aitd
only when they are really hurting.
"Li k1• any other mental IUness,
there must be pain and there must
be disability." he said. "These are
the two major criteria In diagnosing
any Illness . &lt;'SjX'Cia lly mental
Illness." The pain, he sa id , Is
psychologica l. usually showing up
as dtopresslon, frequently visible
through self neglect.
"About 70 percent of our patients
· are diagnosed as having depressive
Illness when they reach us. That
makes them pretty good suicide
candidates. They are full of !;elf
hatred. have a profound sense of
!allure. They are Isolated and
alienated. Nobody wants to be with
them any more."
'llte disability, he addt.'ll, Is their
tnablltty to control the compulsion to
gamble. "I want them when they
are truly hurting, " Taber said. "If
mother brings him ln. then he's not
hurting yet, or It the law sends them,
we can't work with !bern. ·
"We occasiona lly discharge a
man becauS&lt;' he has just come here
to get his wll•• back, or hl• job back.
'lltey usually don' t work out . ·'
Patients start with a ruu physical
examination and psychologica l Jn.
t.ervtew . Every one writes his
autotiloboraphy and It Is a reference
forTaber' sstalf. Each Is Involved In
daily group -the rapy sessions of
about one-and-one-half hours each,
and attends fourGA mPetlngseach
wC€k . There also Is peer counseling
with arrested gamblers.
Where possible. families are
Involved In the counseling or GA
meetings. Some who finish tile
program stay on for vocational
training for a new career.
The program has a walling list of
patients and applicants are encouraged to attend Gamblers Anonyritous meetings. while they walt tor
admission.
Taber said GA can sometimes do
the same thing the hospital does . .
"But we do In four weeks what jt
may take CA two years to
accomplish," he added.
•

Sometimes a ringer slips In, as In
the case of "Orryllte," a ~
· .Taber chose for a patient, "becauie
we never had
Orrville." He's a
former corporate vice .president In
his mld-:.ls who connect'hls way Into
the hospital.
•

an

�The

Times-Sentinel

Ohio

Point

W.Va.

May 1, 1983
1, 1983

Activist
•
remams
committed
YOUNGSWWN, Ohio ! API Staughton Lynd hasn't led an
occupation of U.S. Steel Corp.
headcjuarters or angered the fed·
era! guvernment for severa l years,
· but the antlwar-acttvtst·turnedlabor·lawyer remains committed to
the cause of the American worker.
Lynd :was at the forefront of the
.,
battle ·to stop the shutdown of
Youngstown's major steel miU s In
the late 1970;. He lost every fight but
says attention glven the issue of a
company's social respons lbllity to a
' community led to some positive
:.change.
1n successive years from 19T7 to
1979, the abandonment of the
Mahonlng Valley by Youngstown
Sheet &amp; Tube Co., LTV Corp. and
U.S. Steel led to the direct loss of
· lO,!XXJ job; In steel and countless
thousands of others in service
Industries. The area today has an
unemplaymen t rate of more than 20
percent.
,
" What I think was achieved In
''·
Youngstown is that Youngstown
became a symbol of the proposition
that there's something not right
about this kind of Investment
decision," Lynd sa id In a recent
Interview.
"!think that the consensus of the
w ay we've been making these
de€islonsis not awfuUygood. lt'snot
·: , . •i)ilOdfortheYoungstowns. ltdoesn' t
... ,. ;appear to be very good for the steel
Industry, and It doesn't appear to be
very good for the American
economy as a whole."
The 53-year-old Lynd, New Yorkreared and Harvard-educated, ad vocates a Te0 ness.ee Va I ley
· Authorlty·ty'pe · system for the
nation's steel industry, which only Is
beglnnlng to recover from Its worst
slump In more than 40 years.
"(TVA) seems to be kind of a
preview In a particular area and a
particular industry of the problem
that we now have nationwide," he
said. " Maybe we need a Monongahela Valley (Pa.) Authority."
The TVA was created by Pres ident Franklin Roosevelt in the 19~
to develop water and other resources of the T ennessee River Valley.
· The authority, with 26 m ajor dams
on the Tennessee River and its
tribularles, has been responsible for
the-elimination of major flooding In
' the area and crea tion of electric
generation facilities as w ell as jobs
for area residents.
Lynd said utu!tes in the 19Th
dldn't want anything to do with the
Tennessee Valley because of the
enormous cost ofprovldlngpowerto
the area.
Government Involvement in business, as In the TVA ,IsoneLynd says
could work for steel and other
Industries In 'which companies say
profit marglins are too small to
continue operations in certain
areas .
"You're not taking over every thing," Lyndsald. " You'resaylngto
the David Roderick 's (challman of
U.S. Steel !. 'Let's not get excited.
You tell us what you think you·can
do. But then let us do what you
yourself hl!ve said wouldn 't be
profitable enough for you.'
"If private enterprise can do 11,
God bless them . But if private
·enterpr ise itself says It doesn't want
todoit , how can it object Itt he public
sector wants to glve It a shot'!''
He compares his idea with his job
as an attorney for the national Legal
Services Corp. In Youngstown.
More than 90 percent of his sa lary
comes from federa l. funds. He
provkles legal aid to the needy
through the locally administered
office. Lynd contends that local
control of steel operations backed
by federal money would have saved
many or the 10,!XXJ jobs In
Youngstown.
"The only successes (to come out
of) plant closings have been In
'situations where private capital for
its own reasons decided to let a place
continue under other auspices,"
" · Lynd said.
One such example is Weirton
Steel In West Virginia, where
National Steel Corp. decided last
year that its operation was only
·"rrlarglnally· profitable" and offered, to sell the mill to employees.
••
Though he stUI believes confron-·
tatlon 'c;an be necessary - such as
the occllpatlon of U.S. Steel headquarters'~hat he wasa part ol in 1979
- Lynd'sworkas a legal aid lawyer
Is relativelY calm.
Hehaswrl(tenabook: " The Fight
'Against Shutll_owns: Youngstown's
· Steel Mill Clos~gs. ·: which details
the unsUccesstult'orker movement

to wy the mills. ,

Eighteen

years ltgo, Lynd defied
U.S. passport regul~tlons by gQing
to Hanoi on a " fact-flrilllngmlsslon "
• ·when travel to North V~etqam was
resttlcted. Years later he won
Ylndlcatlon tram the Stat~ Department, which had seized his P,a
\ sspori
after the trip.
\
"I'm more -mellow now, but~that
dol'sn't mean that I don' t Have
· 1trong beliefs and convictions,'· ~

. sald.

Ohi-Paint Plealant, W. Vo.

The

·Art director
doesn't fear

'

'
' .

c~ntroversy
CLEVELAND

(APl

-

CaU

Shinnan Lee the dean of American

PRICES IN

~. ·ECT

SUNDAY, MAY 1

museum directors, wh.lch ~
have, and he just smUes. Call him a
curmudgeon, which others have,
and hestalksoutofhis o!flce)ooklng
for a dictionary.
.,
"Let's see," said Lee, paglng
throligh an Immense diCtionary. It
was as If, after 2.~ brilliant and
sometimes stormy years as director of the Cl eveland Museum of Ati,
he was gQing to dec ide if he agreed
with som e of those art writers.
" ! often times. have to say 'No,'
and go against the grain,·' he said,
fingering a thick cigar and as his
eyes raced down the pages . "This L'l
not necessarily always popular.
Some people say I take a ceria ln
del ight in doing It and I would not
deny thai. I think going against the
grain is essen! ial."
Lee. 65, who will retire at the end
of J une, has not hesitated to llll
against the grain. For example, his
open citlcism of Thomas Hoving's
policies while Hoving was director
of the Metropolitan Museum of Ali
ca used no small amount of stir in the
art world.
Hoving resigned in 19T7 after 10
vears at the Metmpolitan and Is now
~!tor of Connoisseur, a New
York-based arts magazine.
"Hoving was a populist," I.e&lt;'
said. "He believed in show biz and
g&lt;•ttlng p&lt;'Ople' s attent ion. He believed in exhibitions that primar ily
were orient f'd loward box o!flce
attendanrf'.
" In general. becauw thenatureof
a museum is to consf'rve, I ta ke a
very conserva tive attitude towards
art and the uses of art In society."
. Suddcnlv his roaming [lnger
st~pped o~· ~ page oi the dlctlonary .
"Curmudgeon - a grasping, avaricious man , a miser.·· h(\sald . There
was a touch of disagreem ent In his

TUESDAY, MAY 3

WHILE QUANTITIES

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3.29

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Automattcally blends nat ural light wtth light hom the llash.
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"Two- a crusty, Ill· tempered or
diffkult and oftPn elder ly person .
. Now thai' s l'lo~t't' ttH ht.' PQlnt ," h~
said, laug hing .
" I 'm npjx:&gt;S&lt;'tl to a lot of things
happ&lt;&gt;nlng in tho world In g&lt;'neral
and thear t worldlnpartlcular."L&lt;.'P '
sa id. " When Hoving start ed on his
great rush through lhc museum
world, I simply had to on numerous
occas ions say that I didn't th ink
that's a very helpfulor con" lnJctlve
approach. /\s a ma tter or fact , I
think it'sdownrlghl perver se."
To this man, art is , li1f'rally. a
vc1y sPrlous mallt'r. To hlm, HIs the
rPlat ionshlp of an individual lo a
wo 1·k of art that ls import.anl rathe r
than how many thousands pass
through tl1r turns! IIPS .

Pretly. c:~mlorta b le
under la ~hron wa"rdrobe Choose !rom our wrdf!
ass01tment ol pantieS. all ol whr ch feature
couon !iears Assofled colors Srli!S !J to 7

FASHION HANDBAGS

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3.39
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AD PIIICI ............ ......... 12.99
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REG . PRICE •••• •••••••••••••• ••••• $19.97
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LESS MFGRS . REBATE •• ••••• • $5 .00
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AFTER REBATE
JIWILIY DIPT.

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1.57

2.99

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Pre se1 1hermos1at controls lor cr1s p, prpmg
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21.99

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GENERAL ELECTRIC

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Su11mtr'i 111111'1 10·12 hours lor 1b0111 l t C11n

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1.79

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miur . Up front b11ater P, fet tor. balanced handle
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lFTER REBATE

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Oonom. and malclung
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Ny lon labiiC m two
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Powerful 225 wa U governor controlled motor .. mamtams pre·sl'.' sp~e ds
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rncludu bullon llvnt

6.99 9.99
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Sum .aer IDJ I ~ tor the
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styles fabuc rs poly·

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car. bu t on lh(' rrrms of thC' area
It self. so as to establish that
rel ationship be!Wf'f ' n tllf' Individual
and nalul\' ," he s;~ld, silting in his
muS&lt;'um office . "Unle'"you havPI1,
you havr no way of knowing what
it' s likl'.
" Unlrss the nrt m uSC'um does
pn•s4 ~ rv(• this particu larly fragile
mult'rlal. it 'sgo lng to l.x' gone or at
(past tho know l«lge of It will be
gunl•.''

I ... CORPOR AT IED

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HECK'S-2ND STREET, PT. PLEASANT, W. VA. .· .PH. 6'75-l&amp;OO·

\

\
\
\

\

•

.

\

,,,

~IPr.

T lw numbe rs i.A'C' leaves behind
a1l'l&lt;'vl'iand art• Impressive: 44.1XXl
plf'&lt;'es or art. a staff of 240 that
lnc lud&lt;'s 20 fulltlmo ed uca tors and
an mdowment of more th an $100
m illion. much of w hich Is in
blue-chip stocks like IBM· and
G&lt;&gt;neral Motors Corp. The lnstltuHon Is one of the la' t major
Amcrleun ;rrt mu SPums with free
admission .
"Sometimes prup le say, 'It's OK
for' you to take a higlt moral stance
because you 've got plenty of money
- that you'd sing a different tune if
you had to raise funds, " Lee said. " I
don't think that's lt1Je.
"Bul if il Is li1Je, one thing the
money gives you Is the responslbllty
to speak ou t on things that may not
be popular and to liy and maintain
the Integrity of the art museum In
general and lhls Institution In
particular."
An ac know Iedged expert In
Oriental art. Lee is ret iring after
engineerin g a highly acc laimed
exhibition of Japanese realist art.
The show included more than 100
paintings and near ly :ll sculptures.
Nine or the artworks are considered
Japanese national treasures.
"Before this. Japanese art was
displayed as either decorative and
colorful or as consummate crafts·
manship, usuaUy In a very ~ma ll
scale," Lee said. "But the Japanese
have a very long tradition of
seriousness and of a traglc view of
life which is ju st as deep as the
Western t radit ion."
His accomplishments as director
have been varied. He has been
credited with building the museurn' s Oriental collection Into one ot
the foremost in the country ant;\with
strengJhenlng Its areas or mapem
art and paintings by old European
masters.
Because he doubted the skeptic$
and believed In a palnilng's aulhel!tlclty, Lee was able to buy a rare,
early Velazquez tor a mere s:ni.!XXJ
I

•.

�-

'
I

#My 1, 1983

Ohio-Poini

. . Pnetic engineering explored at Battelle
r;:=======::=:::;

11\'S'rANilER.~

KILLED - 'l'wo men were

k!Ued

By JOE B. McKNIGIIT
A!I!!Oda&amp;ed Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) -Cattle
with denser meat, corn with firmer
kernels and tomatoes with the
texture of apples may he just a test
tuhe away now that 51!lentists are
tinkering with genes.
Genetic engineering is helng
·explored In many areas at Battelle
Colwnbus Laboratories, where
scientists like James E . Flinn and
Anthony J. Dennis test a more
inclusive research they call
biotechnologies.
Biotechnology has heen around as
long as yeast. In Its simplest fqrm, It
is used for baking, brewing, cheese
making, to produce drugs, treat.
wastes and leach ores. All use
single-cell organ Isms such as yeast,
bacteria, fungi or other mlcroorga·
nlsms that work like miniature
chemical factories.
rn·addition to genetic engineer·
lng, Flinn and Dennis speak of
hybrldoma technology, a means to
make specifi c antibodies In quanti·
ties not previously available; plant
tissue culture, a way to alter genetic
traits in plants; immoblllzed cel\s, a
way to exploit the physics of CE:'I$
and their components, and bloreac·
tors and support systems, which are
ways to make large-scale conver·
slons of cells or their components.
Possible results range from
cheaper Insulin to an ability to spot
potentlal cancer patients at birth

this morning

wh1•n thl'lr l 'ar was rammed by an Oa.kland CoWlty SheriU's
llf'par1m ent 1Tuis1•r dm..tiiing a SIL~pected stolen car. The chase started
at 2 a.ln. in Orion t11wnshlp and cndt~d at about 2: 30 a .m.ln Pontiac. The

and to produce agricultural seed
with bullt·in fertlltzers.
.
Flinn and Oennls view these
technologies as diagnostic tools
rather thaii ways to fool nature.
"Maybe one of 'the greatest
benefits In some ways Is not that
someone Is cured but that It's being
able to Identify genetics " said
~qnis. "Nqw that we;ve 'got the
tools to find all this stuff, we can
. probably ldi!ntify a lot of ~etlc
I ralls In Infants or newborns and·he
able to say 'That child has dlahetlc
traits' or 'Yes, that child Is going to
he an X ora Y' ... We're going to he
able to predict that there are genetic
problems in children as opposed to
just waiting and then curin11."
"Technology Is providing a lot of
new diagnostic approaches," said
Flinn. " ... It's like examining the
individual's gene pool to see
whether he' s got the potentlal for
certain types of diseases as well as
for direct detection of diseases.
Genetic engineering allows one to
produce single, pure antibodies
never before available that can be
used to diagnose cancer. It lets us
say, for example, thatapersonhasa
certain type of cancer In a specific
location In the body. Using the
antibodies allows us to pinpoint not
only the type but the location.
Flinn, biotechnologies program
manager at Battelle, and Dennis,
manager of a genetic engineering
section at Battelle, spoke of a report

Sho•r;lf'.&lt; llcpuly is in fair l'flndilion In Rochester's Crtttenton Hospital.
( AP l .. a .. f'rphQlO).

DOXOL PROPANE'S

Meigs SWCD joins
nationwide celebration
POM EROY - The Meigs Soil
and Watc•r Conserva tion District
will .ioi nt lilf' na tionwidf' cPIPbr.a ·
lion of Soil Stc•w; n lship Wr'C·k to
takP pl ao~ M a_v H- 1), according to
Tum 'J'hd ss. ('hai
;..~ n of thP
Mri1-,"S SWCD . Thr mr · of t his :w·ar 's
cCIC'IJI': II ion i "i " Li vin g Walf'r s."
Thf' N; d ion;tl A..,soCi&lt;l l irm of C'on.sPr
va t ion Distr !C" Is j N .'\CD J ha s spotlStf'w~rt s hip WC'Ck sincp
1~~~;, .
" I f our wa tPr · mn nngl'rncnt
practicPS i n the past have bf'en
adequa! C', wp m ay Ign or e the r ising

soml Soil

popul ation. the lncrmsr&lt;l Indu s·
trialization, a nd C'Xp and('fl ir riga tion . a ll of which rcquirr- mon-.

water from our I'C'Sen:nlrs. " ci i('S

NACD in the lG-pagr Soil Steward·
ship Week IJookl&lt;'l.
"One of uur more comp&lt;'l lln g
soc ial and N·nnomie nC&gt;C'ds Is for a
full appreciation of the I rui'valuc of

uur abundant supply or watl'r. It is
time to think sPrlously about

SPRING FL,NG "83"

conservation pollution , priority us·
age and our dependenace upon it. "
Information materia l on the SoU
Stewards nip Week theme isdistrib·
uted each year through local
conservation districts to clergy·
men, la y leaders, churches, clv'lc

011 biotechnologies they publlshed

last year for Battelle, a non-profit
research tlrin. In the .-eport, they
noted that antibodies are nqw used
to deliver a. treatment drug to a
particular organ or disease tissue.

STAN-SHOR
POOLS ·

"Pure doses of antitumor anti!Jo.
dies have alreacty heen delivered to
patients to destroy caneerous
ceUs." they said.

Are Proud To Announce

Spring Sale of

The potential tor cheaper lnsulln,
they say, comes from a new abillty
· to 'code' genes for certain proteins
In yeast or bacteria. This relieves
·science of the dependency on llve

SWIMMING POOLS
I

animal tissue for lnsulln production.
Dennis said growth hOnnones are
producing denser meat~., cattle but
tha~ work hasn't progressed so tar
on plant llfe.
"Fil:&gt;m a theoretical standpoint ...
any gene that exists In the
environment that we can get our
hands on, we can manipulate,
produce more of the product, " he
added. "The real. question Is
whether or not the product does

AND COMPLETE

Researchers say priest's reputation unjustly smeared
By GEORGE W. CORNELL
AP Rellgloa Write~
He objected to attacks on Jews.
He sheltered hundreds of them after
the Nazi invasion of Poland. Like
many of them, he was slain at
Auschwitz, volunteering to die to
save a fellowp~er. Yet he's been
iaheled "anll·5em!tlc."
That Is the strangely incongru.
ous, yet smudged Image stirred up
about Roman Catholicism's newest
saint, the Pollsh priest Maximilian
Kolhe. But an investigation by two
researchers finds the slurs against
blm are basically false.
"He's been smeared with a lot of

un]ustl!led abuse,.. says Warren
Green. director or the St. Louis
Center for Holocaust Studies. "In·
herently, by his conduct as a man,
he was not ant1·5em!tlc. His act ions.
the true test. prove the contrary."
Green, a Jewish historian of the
Nazi era , this week presented
findings of the detailed inq uiry to the
Nalion;~l Workshop on Jewish·
Chr~&lt;tlan Relations In Boston,
termed the largest dialogue yet
between the related faiths.
The investigation, carried out

with. CO·researchE&gt;r Daniel L.
Schlafly Jr .. a St. Louis University

Steel Wall Kits
16x32
s2500
18x36
s2700
20x40
S2950
Structual Glass Wall
16x32
13100
18x36
13400
20x40
13675

5

DRIVER TRAINING
SCHOOL
MONDAY. MAY 2nd

'""''

FINDLAY. Ohio tAPl - The
"We Love Marathon" buttons are
coll~tlnf dust in Findlay house.
holds, 13 months after the nation's
17th laffest oil company was
mefl'ed with U.S. Steel In a $6
bllllon·plus deal.
But one phase of that corporate
takeover Is quietly continuing in
Hancock Coun ty Common Pleas
Court. Dissident stockholders who
opposed the U.S. Steel takeover bid,
complaining they weren't being
paid etiOUfh for their Marathon
holdiJWs, are still fighting one phase
of deal under Ohio's general
corporation law.
Common Pleas .Judge Robert D.
Walker has scheduled an Oct. 3 trial

Also above ground, round
pools and spas vailable.

AT 5:30 P.M.

ATHENS
AUTOMOBILE CLUB
OF SOUTHESTERN OHIO

CALL NOW AND SAVE

388-8869

STEVE SHORT

89 COLS . RD ., ATHENS

593-6677

••

e Can Set A Doxol Propane Tank, Hook It Up To Your
Ho111e And Fill It With 400·Gallon~ Of Doxtll Propane For

for one portion of the courl battle. to
determine what the actual value of a
Marathon share was, based on the
company's assets before It was
mer€ed with U.S. Steel.
Another lawsuit stemmini from
the merger is scheduled for trial
May 9 in U.S. Dlslrlct Coun In
Cincinnati.
That case Is a class
. action on
beha lf of all Marathon shareholders
ara lnst memhers of the boards of
directors of both U.S. Steel and
Marathon,

.

When the U.S. Steel offer was
made, the company offered $125 In
cash per share for the first 51
percent of Marathon's stock, or

It's picking the first ;.ildflowets
of spring . It's spending a day in
town , or an evening by ca ndle·
light. It's the Harbo r Town of
Maine'" collection.
·"

.

LIMITED
TIME
OFFER '

.•
_,..,.,.._

obligated to a bide by tte l!nlversal
laws and to help, rather than
hinder. the process by which the
conswnt supply of water Is re·
cycled and repurllled," according
to NACD.

TACO Latin weavt· thoOJ! nn

'21.00

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

985-3307

PORTO "11n·t-:,." wHvt•n vam r
trl' almt·nr it'l un a
'i("ll lpf\Jrt'd Wt·dgt•

Downtown Gallipo lis
lion . &amp; Fri. til B P.M.
Tues .. Wed .. Thur.
&amp; Sat. tit 5 P.M.

• •

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...
THE H0LY SPIRIT

William B. Ku~rhn
I.- The Holy Spirit Promised The Apostles: Jesus told the apostles,
"Nevertheless I tell you the truth; h is expedient for you that I go away" (Jno
16:7). Why was rt expedient unto the apostles that Christ go away or die1 So that
Hi! might send themthe Comforter. "For if I go not away: the Comforter will not
come unto you; but tl I depart I wiil send him unto you" (Jno. 16:7) ."-s long as
Christ was wrth the twelve on earth, He was their Collilorter. The Comforter Chnst
had promised to the apostles would be sent by Him! What was the Comforter
Christ was to send1 The Spirit of truth, "And I wtll pray the Father, and He ~hall
give you another Comforter, that he may abK!e With you for ever;Even the Sp1r1t
of truth· whom the world cannot receive, beca use 1t seeth ht m not. nerth er
knoweth' him: but ye know him; tor he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you"
(Jno. 14; 16, 17). The Holy Spirit is spoken of as the "Spirit of truth.:· Why1
Bwtuse !he HolySptrit was lodeliver all truth unto the apostles, "Howbeit when
he, the Spirit of truth. is come, he will guK!e you into ail truth: lor he shall not
· speak ot himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak: and he wtll
shew you things to come" IJno. 16:131
2.-Christ Administered H~ Spirit Baptism: Christ wasd the only one to
administer the baptist of the Holy Spirit "I indeed baptize you wtth water unto
repentance: but he that cometh after me is mightier than I whose sh~ I am not
worthy to bear: he shall bapttze you wrth the Holy Ghost and wrth fire (Mit 3:11:
Mrk. 1:8; Lk. 316; Acts I :Sjln the Lord 's last meeting wrth the apostles, just
before His asiension, he reminded them that hey would "be baptized woth the
Holy Ghost not many days hence" I Acts 15).
.
.
3. -Apostles Baptized with Holy Spirit: They were bapttzed wtlh the Holy
Spirrt by JeSus on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2). Why were they .\J&lt;!Ptized with the
Holy Spirit? Unto them had been gwen the great commtSSJon. Go ye therefore.
and teach all nabons, baptjzi n~ them in the name of the Father. and ot the Son.
and of the Holy Ghost reachtng them to observe all things whatsoever I have
commanded you: and , lo. I am wrth you alway, even unto the end ol the world"
(Mit 28: 19. 20)., The apostles being wrtnesses of the Lord,. were td preach
repentance and remission ot sins in His name among all nattons, begmntng at
Jerusalem Ilk. 24:47, 48). ~atn the Lord sa Ki. "Ahd , behold,! send the promise
of my Father upon you: but tarry ye in the city at Jerusalem. unttl ye be endued
with power from on hogh" (lk. 24 48). Please note that Jesus said, "Isend you the
pnrmise of my Father upon you." "I" was none other th~n Chnst and )ou" none
other than the apostles, Among the last words spol&lt;en by our Lorrl ',unto the
apostles just before His ascension were, "But ye shall reCeive power,afferthat the
Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses unto me f:Joth tn
Jerusalem and 1n all Judea. and in Samaria. and unto the uttermost part of the
earth" (Acts 1:8). What were the apostles to receive? Power! When would ·~ey
receive this power1 When the Holy Ghost came upoo.them. Why were they, to
receive the baptism of the Holy Spirrt7 To be guided tnto all truth, concerntng
things past, present, and future Uno. 14:26; Jno. 16:13): to be able to speak the
word in all languages wrthout having been taught them (Acts 2: 4, ~ ; and to be\
able to impart the miraculous gifts of the Holy S!)rit to baptized ·OO!tevers (Acts 1
11:16; 9:17). - continued.
.
(For Free Bible Cooespondence Coo~ Wnte ... )

(""'llrWJ
1~ !IIJII·~,
[

Buy 10 rolls of famous
Owens-Coming Pink
Fiberglas~ lnsuratlon.

Get a FREE
Solar Calculator
There's no better time and no better
way to help control your energy
costs. Or ~alculate your savings.·
Because when you buy 10 rolls or
more of any Owens-Corning Pink
Fiberglas Insulation. you get a fob·
ulous solar calculator absolutely FREE.
Offer limited- 1 per retail customer.
See your dealer for complete·
details. Offer ends May 31, 1983.
'" ' lid ''"k fr:11ne, i' the co mplete look for

roJaY':..

tn.: tu. l:-

it t ld

r( lfllo rr ow 's n ('l'd s .

8 o;tst·ing Int.., o f :-. p:tl' L: a nJ grenr fea tures

.li ke h n11dy d ro p lid s, it \ perfect fu r
an yo ne .

Complete
10 Piece Bedroom Suite
Regular 1,795.
5

00

NOW

$1,29995 .

Ri c h oak harmon izes with bold brass
accent s to blend traditiona l ideas into a

. modern look of elegan c ~ for your home.

RECIEVE A FULL SIZE BOX SPRING
AND MATIRESS... FREE.....

Allow 6 weeks for delivery.
'Sqvings vary. Find
out why in t11e Seller's
Fact Si1eet on R-values.
Higher R-values mean
greater insulating power.

$1175
pet roll R-25/8"

Carolina Lumber
AND

on procedural erounds, 16 lawsuits
remain on actlve status. Those
include 437 stockholders who own
about 122.1lXl shares.
The dissident shareholders represent about 200,1lXl shares of
Marathon stock. Under Ohio corpo.
ration law,. they are seeking an
"appraisal rights" valuation of
their stock by the court .
In the first phase, Walker heard
arguments on which of the stock·
holders were entitled to appraisal
rights and whlch were not . The
second phase, expected to he the
more complicated, Is to determine
In the Oct. 3 trial the value of the
stock based on MarathOn 's assets
and liabilities prior to the me!'fer.

Eoch dW.ner Includes: two fish fillets. 'J

~13rnus

porf!on ot

bOnetess eh_icken tillers. crisp french frtes. creomv cole staw.
two Soutt\e:rn style hush puppies and sweet ·n sour sou ce .
(at ponlctpotlng Captain o·, l

,$299
MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY
2 CHIPPER DINNERS $3.69
dinner Includes: two go lden blown fish IUiets. crisp trench tr1es. c'e&lt;&gt;mv cole.
slaw and 2 so uThern style hush puppieS

21 7. UPPER RIVER ROAD

Captain
D's.
seafoOd a hamburgers

Riverside's Pure &amp; Simple Sale

LIMITED
TIME
OFFER

L

L

E
T

E

T

·.

~.

.'

FIBERGLAS

c

c

E

0

0
M

M

p

p

E

E
T
I

T
I

I
0
N

I
0
N

T

T

B
E

w

2 door, 6 cyl. engine , power ....,.,.,.1
and brakes, outomotlc tronsmission , AM-rldi~;», bucket seats,
air conditioning , · accent stripes,
WSW lire• . 20 .000 ,mite5 .

and
brakea , automatic transmission, air conditioning , sport
mirror&gt;, AM rodio, while side watt
tires 34,410 milts .

WAS

WAS

.

Stock

'5995

A

·R
E
•

lun_. Momlnt
INbte...,., 1 :30

wor.... 10:IO

Point Pleasant
· STORE HOURS ·

No.

HA77 A

front

bum~r .

SPECIAL

W.\5

'2495

'3995

l~y benlng

._,... 1 :00

.....

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Chwchwiiii .... Mt......

'•

,.

·~

,'

'5395

2 door Horchback. 4 cyl. englno , 5
speed tronsmisslon. power SIHrint.
AM-FMradio, twos oiiHtod&lt;tmaiiO Ill

. . .. WJIH
11 :11 A.M .

.Saturday I o.m.:12 noon.

NOW

2 door. va engine, power steering

995

1

HONDA ACCORD

''M...... from

MondiY· Frid&lt;ty lo.m.-5 p.m.;

1983 FORD.

1976 FORD LTD

1981 FORD GRANADA

6ulovNio Rood • P.O. Box 308

CopyrlQht c 1983 Owerts-Coming Fiberglas Corp.

·'

T
H

. (lAlliPOLII, OHIO 45831

675-1160
'. '

T
H
E

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

Supply Company
312, Sixth Street

,,

·FISH'N
CIIICKEN

'22.00

CHESTER, OH.

Completely Contemporary •

II~--~········-~--~~~~~~~~~~-~~

a "u lpturtod wt'dgt•

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Details

RIDENOUR'S

theRather
Nazisthan
by supporting their
curryingshe
favor
with
anlt·J
ew!sh campaign,
says,
he
fed and housed about 1,500 JeWs In
hls monaslecy, begged Clothing for
them , provided medical care and
told others to help them.
·
Kolhe, arrested by the Gestapo in
early 1941 as an enemy of the Third

August 1941. the camp commander
picked JOothers from a camp lineup
to he starved in reprisal. One, a
Polish army sergeant began sobbing about hls wife and children.
Kothe stepped fotward , cap In hand,
asking to die In the man's stead. He
did.

11.5% APR Av~ilable On 1983
Models To Qualified Applicants
Offer Good Through May 15, 1983.

$37995

ln fOJ•matlon and m aterials for

0 (

roughly :ll million shares. But in the
second phase of the deal, U.S. Steel
offered 12·year. 12% percent notes
with a $100 lace value for the
balance of the Marathon shares.
Immectiately after the merger
vote, however, Wail Street placed a
value of about $76 on those notes.
The stockholders who got in on the
cash s ldeofthedeal fared well, Wall
Street analylsts said, but the notes
weren't worth gettlnf excited
about.
Since then, 700 Marathon shareholders filed J9 separate lawsuits
over the merrer, complalnlnr they
were not being paid a "!fa ir cash
value" for their stock. After some of
the sui ts were dismissed by Walker

_

ONLY

knew

Reich, wa5 · one or' 3,646 Polish
catholic priests sent to concentra·
tton camps and of 2,647 who dt!ld
there, about a third of the Polish
priesthood. Tortured, often beaten
on work details, Kolhe was No.
16,670 at Auschwitz.
After a prtsoner escaped Jn·

It's not a shoestyle,
it's a lifestyle.

to individuals participating in the

: This &lt;mnrr bedroo m wa ll system m;1de

"They're flat wrong, " says
Schlafly. "Claims that hepromoied
racial nat red or political action
against Jews are totally false. He
show'ed love and respect for all
people as children of God, including
Jews."
The issue, aired In some U.S.
newspapers and religious weeklies
on the basis of an article in an
Austrian opinion journal. Wiener
Tagebuch. aroused concern hefore

and after Kolbo!' s canonization last .
Oct. 10.
The accusations "are spurious,"
says Patricia ~. authOr of a
vividly moving boOk about Kolbe's
life, "A Man for Others," published
by Harper &amp; Row and based on
accounts ot those whO
him.

Dissident stockholders still fight merger

Complete installation and
S!lrvice available.

und Pducatlonal organizations arid

the 1983 observa nce of SoU Stewardship Week are available In this area
!rom the Meigs Soli and Water
Conserva tion District at 221 West
Second Street. Pome roy. or by
phoning 992·6647.

historian;. after a ·gust of charges
about the Polish priest-hero, a m·
eluded they were either groundless
or misrepresentatiVe.

SWIMMING POOL KITS

SPECTACULAR SAVINGS ON
TANK SETS

observance.
" If we are to make certain that
supplies wUI be adequate for
prrsent and future needs, y,;e are

The Sunday Ti~Sentinei-Page--~9

Pameooy-Middleport GallipOlis, Ohi-Paint P!.sant, W. Vo.

I, 1983

W. Va.

•I

I

Stnc:k No.

' NOW

E658A

COUGAR

Green 2 doOr, VI . 1n9me, power
steering onol brokes, outomotic
tronsmttsion, ,_M radio, sroreo I
Irick , bucket stots ond console.
WAS

'995

NOW

'495

THUNDERBIRD

Light blue, V6 engine, pow er
steering and brakes, automatic
tr•nsmission. air conditioning, til t
wheeL cruise control, rear
defroster, AM-FM stereo, exteriqr
occenr group, tinted glass .
WAS
Stock No.
NOW
11540 E629

s~ed transmissi on .
AM- FM , stereo cassette, · rear
dofogger, tllp up sun root , sport
nUrrors , styled wheel with trim
rings.
·
,.,..
WAS
Slack No.
NOW
*6695
T n•A

4 cyl. engine, 4

'5995

B
E

w
A
R
E
I

•

\

�May 1, 1913

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleat.tt, W. Va.

Page=-E-1 0--, The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Opinion·sought concerning effects
of new gas tai on prison exp~sion
·.

aJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Attorney General Anthony J. Celebrezre J r . ls being asked for an
QPinlon on whether the new federal
gasoline tax Increase can affect
Ohio's prison expansion plans.
Department of Transwrtatlon
officials say they are concerned
about reports that the s tate'sshare
of the nlckel-a·gallon lncre~~Se may

Is relatively small, 1J1 tenns · of

overall JlllrchaseS, they want to be
sure whether the federal legislation
·does CPntaln such a !)an. The
attorneygeneral'sofflcelsexpected
to Issue Its QPinlon In the near future,
otflcfals said.

Rep. David J . Leland, D-Colwnbus,
says he has figures proving that tl!e

purchase of Ohio natural gas by the
Ohio's g115 utilities leads to lower
prices for coiiSIIIne!'S.
He Is co-spcmorlng a bOl by Rep.
Thomas P . Gilmartin , D·
Youngstown, wiiiGh encou~ the
uWltles to purciii!Se Ohio gas as
oppQSed to mtft; expensive , gas
produced In . othei' states ll!ld
broil gilt Into the state by pipeline.

ootbeu~to buy roadooUdlngandr---------------------------------------------­

TOUR SLATED - The Jackson County
Historical Society Is Sponsoring a home tour In
Ravenswood, W. Va Saturday, May 21. Tickets are
$4. Hours are from 1'.5 p.m . This Is a heritage tour,
featuring old homes,

church~

Mcintosh home, a grand exuberance of Queen Anne
s tyUng. Tickets go on sale at noon In tbe front yard ,
with free coffee and tea on the front porch. Restrofims
aDd exhibits will be open In this old house now used as
a oommunlty bulldblg. Another home Is lbe Benford
residence above. The tour will Include besides the
Macintosh horne, lour private homes, two churches
and a museum. The homes run the gamut from
ltaUanette viDa to tum of the century bungalow .

and mlLI!ICUm exhibits.

The tour Is being s ponsored for the benefit of the
Washington's Lands Museum, with proceeds going
toward the restoration of a log cablp. The tour start.•
three blocks from downtown Ravert• wood at the old

malntenance equipment from prl·
son Industries.
Under Ohio' s $632 mnuon prison
expansion plan , enacted last year,
bonds to finance construction are to
be backed by proceeds from tljgsale
of prison-Industry products.
Among other things, Ohio's
prison system manufactures soowplows and salt spreader s, alongwlth
various types of highway signs.
Normally , these are purchased
from Otllo Penal Industries by the
transportation department.
Department officials say that
while the a mount of such purchases

Dial in Style
$1795

"I hate Pepsi," says Lawt·ence,
30. an elementary school teacher
and mem ber of a national group of
Coke-aholics ca lled the Cola Clan.
Lawrence Is so effervescent
about Coke that instead of gett ing
a pples from his stude nts, he gets
add it Ions to his Coke collec tion such as a Coca -Cola eraser that
smPils like the soft drink .
·, My student.s think I'm nuts,'' he
said .
·
His wife, 29·ycar-old .Jeanne
Boyer , is a hit mor~ diplomatic,
even though shf' thinks things go
better with iced tea .
" I try to show a wifely enthusi·
asm ,"•aid Ms.Boyer. " ... At least it
keeps him off th!'streetsand into the
junkyards."
Ms . Boyer even accompanied
Lawrence to a national Cola Clan
convention several years ago in
Minnt&gt;suta.
"The pt'Ople were nice." she
conceded. "but I didn 't fit ln. "
Lawrence said the t:onventiuns

are " fun . Besides, I m eet people as
crazy as I am ."
Coke definitely Is the r eal thing for
Lawrence. Among the Items in his
collection are toy Coke trucks, Co ke
thermometers, a Coke bedspread,
Coke keychalns, matchbooks, fl ash·
lig hts, sa lt and pepper shakers, tool
kits, knives, shoelaces, door locks,
tie tacks, ties, school boxes,llghters,
checkers, Ice picks, pretzel dishes
a nd yo-yos.
· There are Coke signs that rotate,
light up and simply ha ng on the wall.
Ms. Boyer said she m ade her
husband confine tUs collection lo the

. Usage quadruples .
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAP) - The
number of Ohioans using. ctllld
restraints In thelrautos hasjumped
four-fold
since a new
reqeffect.
uiring
such
restraints
wentla w
into
state officials say.
The new law requires restraints
lor a ll ctllldren under 40 pounds.
Before the law took e ffect earlier
this year, only abcut IS percent of
Ohio families with s.m a U children
used sp&lt;&gt;clal car seats or other
restra lnts, Kenneth Cox , dlrec.torof
the Ohio Department of Highway
safety, said Thursday .

NUM ERIC
Kf Y8 0 ARb
~;"asy

""

p ush but ·

MUTE BUTTON
spe.ak. p ri vo~t e l .. to
~omeont&gt; withou t
co ve r ing mou t h-

I
.'
.

p•ece

/

de n because "l couldn 't take all that
stuff in the living room ."
Unlike som e pu rists who wa nt
only antiques, Lawrence will settle
for any Coke collectibles.
Lawrence's oldest Item, for which
he paid $100, ~a small l 9(X) tip tray
painted with a sweet young wom an
drinking a Coke. His newest
a cqu isitions, costing a tota l of $12,
are a Diet Coke pen, a pewter Coke
bottle opener. a Coca-Cola tooth·
brush and a Coke Rublk's cube.
But Lawrence is proudest of the 61
decks of Coca-Cola playing ca rds.
P rimarily festooned with pretty,
wholesome-looking young wome n,
.the decks cost anywhere from $100
to $S(Xl
·
. Du ring a recent interv iew:·La w·
renee wore a Coke delivery m an 's
shirt from the 19!Xls - comple te
with green pinstripes a nd " Enjoy

j

ton operat 1on .

Coke lover has massive collection
R IVERSIDE. Ca lif. IAP I -The
den at Mark Lawre nce's home is a
shr ine to the pa use tha t refreshesa ma..sive collection of Coca -Cola
signs, Coke botlles. Coke radios.
pillows, umbrellas, trays, cuna lns
and even a Coke machine.

'

,,,,,

ONLY

I· .

RINGER
I
OFF/ON SWITr:H
used to ~ l tn ce
nnger sound

LAST NU MBER
REDIAL - automat•c Ont&gt; Dutt on d•al
•ng of last number
dlclled .

CIRCULAR

IN SUNDAY'S

HANG-UP

NEWSPAPE~

FOLDING DECK
CHAIR 519:84"'-0n Page 4
Illustration incorrectly shows a di
rector's chair.
~

RUGGED H(GH-STYLE JEANS
'5.86-0n Page 5 ·
!len's and boys ' jeans are
''WRANGLER" Brand.

BUTTON - i 1mpJy
p lac@on any flat
su r f_
ace to hang up.

DECORATOR TELEPHONE
-Government Approved - Can be used on all telephone
systems, rotary or push button. ·.
-Easy to install - simply plug it in.

CA.TILE KING SLEEPING
19.97- 011 Page 5

1

A guide to local
Television programming
May I thru May 7

I n.cludes complete

. et•·~l·l••
. ...... ,.,,

llue to manufacturer. this item will
not arrivo in time for this sale. Rain
checks will be issued.

'0MII&lt;n. I)NOO

CIWGE CARD

r~C~oc~a~-C~o~la~·~·£pa~t~ch~e~s=.-==--==J:==========:J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

listings

Jim Nabors
PageS

30°/o OFF
.

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

ALL IMPERIAL WALL
COVERINGS

New Station Wagons In Stock

10°/o OFF
ALL WALLPAPER IN STOCK
SALE RUN THRU MAY 14th

CROSS HARDWARE
992-3831

MIDDLEPORT

A Timely Offer
For
Mother's Day

•LeSabre Estate Wagon
•Bonneville Station Wagon
*Regal Station Wagon
•Sunbird 2000. Wagon
•Rockwood Customized Vans

1983 PONTIAC 1000
3 DR. HATCHBACK
ONLY

$12657

PER MONTH

Only $650 down, sale price $5620, 48 payments
of $126.57 equals $607.75.
Total Contract $6725.63

Vacation Sperials!

9.9% INTEREST

ALSO SEVERAL USED WAGONS.

Local one owner, navy blue with matching landau roof,
rear defroster, wire wheel covers, tilt cruise, overdrive
transmi ssion, 60-40 interior seating, AM ·FM stereo. EX·
PECT QUALITY

1981 Bonneville 4 Dr.
Bamboo cream, rear defogger, wire wheel covers, power
door locks, AM·FM stereo, 60-40 seats, local one owner.

$9900
Local one owner, two-tone beige,load ed,low miles, cleanest one around .

STORE
342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

,,

' .

•

.113 Court St.
Pomeroy

DIFFERENT INTERI'RETA110N - Llndlay WllfiMI' ~abe doell nol110 much recrea&amp;e
8ulan Haywanl'1 A=' my Awanhloobc role Ia &amp;be raruike of ''1 Wlllll To IJ1ie" 111 lfve It a
dllferent illlel'pMa&amp;lcll 'Ole ABc~ ft'mak• lelltllhe Mol')' of Barbara Graham; who was
exectUd llllhe 8u Qa tiD
c11unt1er for~ .....,lwomealn lhe RIU1'der and robbery
of a widow. (AI' I PIJ1ilb'I'O)·
'

c-

Filmeter
Pages 7, 8

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason · Counties

1981 Thunderbird Town landau

FOrt A LIMITED TIMI' ON LY

Hollywood
Pages 4, 6

(Applicable Sales Tax Extra)

1982 Olds Delta 88 Royale

on her day ...
Kre mentz "Rose Bar Pin " fas hi oned in 14 Kt.
Go ld Ove rlay . A r rad i r itniOOO";~~Y by Kremenrz.

Showbeat
Page4

1975 Olds 88, 4 Dr.
local one owner. immaculate interior, bodyis A· l. Solid
dependable transportation.

$7995
$2295
OVER -U9 NEW &amp; USED CARS ALL

Interest

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