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12-The

Sentinel

Ohio

Meigs

Spencer hearing set
Pamela PhyllJs Spencer, 23, the
Syracuse woman who was indicted
June 'l7 on charges of endangering
children and involuntary mans·
laughter, will appear before Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Judge
.Charles Knight Tuesday in a
hearing to determine whether or not
she Is competent to stand trial.
Judge Knight will decide Tuesday
morning whether Spencer Is able to
be tried on tl]e chargess, or if she
must undergo forensic evaluation
beforehand. llforensicevaluatlon Is
determined necessary, it should
begin within 30 days after the
hearing, and will takeplaceover a60
day period. Location for the
evaluation will be decided jointly by
defense and prosecution.The usual
facility appointed in Meigs County
cases Is the Shawnee Forensic
Center, Portsmouth, according to
Judge Knight.
In the event' that Spencer should
be determined by the court as

competent to stand trial, Judge
Play continues
Knight reports that the trial shoUld
begin before . the last day of
The Meigs County Players Is
September.
presenting ''The Dead of Night", a
Spencer's case concerns a baby
boy, found May 30 wrapped in a · three act play, and two vignettes ,
written and directed by Jeff
plastic bag ina car In Meigs County.
Hllleary, tonight and Saturday at 9
The infant was reportedly born in
p.m ., for those who have not had
the car In Syracuse and placed
inside the plastic bag, before being opportunities to attend. The perfor·
taken to Holzer Medical Cent er , mances will take place at the
Pomeroy City Hall auditorium, and
whfre it was dead on arrival. Gallla
admission Is $2 for adults, $1.50 for
County Coroner Dr. Donald ' R.
students. · Children under 5 are
Warehime stated that the baby was
not stillborn, according to his admitted free 01 charge.
preliminary autopsy report.
Squads make 3 runs
·
Spencer's case went before a
grand jury, which Indicted her on
The Meigs County E;mergency
the endangering children and Invo- Medical Service reports three runs
luntary manslaughter charges. were made by area squads between
Since she did not have counsel yesterday and this DHlrnlng. POmepresent at the arraignment, the roy's unit was called to Laurel CUff
court entered a plea of not guilty on for Della Stahl at 11: 13 a.m .
her behalf. An attorney has been Thursday, Rutland' went to Harri·
appointed by the county for her sonvllle for CecU Harvey at 2: 10
defense.
p.m., and at 2:46 a.m. Friday,
Pomeroy went to the Health Care
Center on Rqut:E: 33 for Ann Cook. All .
three were transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
low, may not represent real
improvement In the state's eron·
Support suit filed
omy. however.
Robin Estridge, Dayton. and the
Roberta Steinbacher, OBES ad·
mlnlstrator, said a shorter layoff State of Ohio, have filed a suit In the
period for plant retooling and Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court
vacations may have had more to do against Mlc)lael Joseph Trent,
Pomeroy, on charges of non·
with the drop.
About 670,000 Ohioans are still support. Estridge and Trent were
unemployed and 111,104 people have divorced In 19'77, and Trent has
. exhausted aU their jobless benefit$ , allegedly failed to pay the $60 per
since June, she said.
week support for the couple's minor
children sbtee April29 of this ye\"'.

Unemployment claims hit two-year low
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -New
claims for unemployment benefits
under Ohio lawdroppedtolB,l&amp;'llast
week, the lowest level since Sept.12,
19lll, state officials reported today.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said the fillngs, a 22-month

Marijuana taken
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department reports that a total of 213
marijuana plants were confiscated
Thursday afternoon · In two loca·
lions, Minersville and Burlingham.
FIVe deputies went on the patrol to
take tbe plants, which were four to
six feet In height and bushy.
Investlgatlon Into the Identity of
the growers of the marijuana Is

area happenings•••

Plan picnic Monday

Smith hospitalized

Meigs County Salon 710of8and40
will have a picnic at 6 p.m. Monday
at the home of Loretta Tiemeyer.
Members are asked to bring a
covered dish.

Lincoln W. Smith, Pearl St.,
Middleport, Is In University Hospl·
tal, Columbus. His room Is 920
Roades Hall, and he Is In the ninth
floor neurology ward.

Plan reunion

Hospital news
Veteraos Memorial Hosplial
Admission -Mary Deren berger,
Pomeroy; Juanita Norman, Pomeroy; CecU Haning, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Juanlla Bowles,
Allee Loomis, Ray Clark, Pa.uUne
Taylor, Pearl Russell, Inez Silvers.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGI!S JULY 28
Russell Bergdoll, Margaret
Bland, Carl Bonecutter; Elza
Crump, David Culpepper, Christa
Gleich, Vera Hickson, Mrs. Joseph
Loomis and son, Jonathan Louden,
Elmer McWhorter, Mrs. Randy
Sclirberry and son, Esther Scragg,
Franklin Sisson, Claude Swisher,
Roger Vanco Sr:, Verble Waugh.

IIIR11IS
Mr. andMrs.NicholasBeard,son,
Southside; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Roach, daughter, .Point Pleasant;
Mr. and Mrs. James White, son,
Hamden.

'Ibe annual Weber reunion will be
held at the Bellevlltw Locks and
Dams, Reedsvlle. Aug. 7. There will
be a basket dinner at noon with
relatlve; and friends Invited to
attend. ·

Hospitalized

Today's
TimesoSentinel
Business....................... c..,.

Rousll of Middleport
~~~~derwent surgery 'Ib\l.l'Sda.Y tit
vera-ans Memorial Hospital for a
hlp fracture. She received ~
· 1tracture In a' fall at her horne.
Beulah

Dealhs , ........................ A·5

Classllleds .................. &amp;3-7
EditorialS .. ..... ... ......... .. A·2
Fann ..... ............ .......... C-8
U.Cal ...................... A-3,0-3
lJfestyle ..• .. .... ....••..•.. . B·J-8
StatAl-National ............. D.J.2

ELBERFELDS

Spor1s ............... ' ••• ··•·• C.lati

EN 0-0f:.THE-MONTH

... 611 .... ofDorwl!'

Vol, 17 No, 22
CcFplghttd 1983

•

(FORMERLY SCOTT'S GROCERY)

PH. 367-0314-Phone In Orders Welcome
STORE HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 8 a.m. to 7

First of Month "SPECIALS"

From Associated Press •
He said the lock and darn are needed because "!be
T.S Staff Reports
average delay there now Is eight hours per tow. By ·
Legislation for a new lock an_d darn to clear a costly
1~ !hat Is expected to Increase to 32 hours U nothing
Ohio River bottleneck at Gallipolis has a good chance
Is done."
of passing although an unresolved Issue remains,
'Ibe delay has added an average of $6.000 to the cost
says Rep. Bob McEwen, R-Ohlo.
of taking a barge through the Gaillpolls locks.
The lock and dam ar~ included bt a bill approved . McEwen said. "That cost Is expected to quadruple
Friday by the House water resources subcommittee.
over next decade," he said.
McEwen, a member of the su)Jcommlttee, said
The water projects bill, 11 passed. would be the first
prospects for passage of tbe bUI "look very, very
of Its kind to get through Congress In more than six
.good." However. McEwen said the Issue of user fees
·years.
.
to help .fund the costs of waterway improvements
Members of the su)Jcommlttee said they were
appears to be a "hangup."
optimistic about the latest bill winning pase•ge In the
"I' m not sure how It will be resolved. The blll does
run Public Works Committee and on the House floor.
not address it very clearly," he said.
Even U the authorization bill Is paaaed, Congress

STEAK ................. Lb. $1 99
SMOKED SAUSAGE ...... lb. $1.69 SMOKED JOWL. (By the Piece) lb. 69~
2 LRBE. AT AM
Sliced ....................... l.b.79~
G
ER. CONEY ..Pkg.$1,99 BONB.ESS
GROUND BEEF .............. lb. $1.19 CHUCK ROAST ............. lh.$1.69
3 Lb. or More ........ lb. $1.14 T-BONE STEAKS ............. lb.. $2.99.
1 LB. SKINLESS

. CUBE

(

Here Are Just SOME Of

Daily Low Prices ....

Redskin Bologna ...................~b. 79'
Old Fashion Bologna ........... l.b. 51.59
Breakfast loaf .................... Lb. '1.79
New England loaf ............... Lb. 52.09
Dutch loaf ........................ Lb. s1.79
Pickle &amp;Pimento loaf..; ...... Lb. 51.79
Braunschweige( ........ :.......... Lb.. 69'
Honey loaf... ...... :............. Lb. '2.09
Chipped Chop Ham loaf ..... Lb. 51.49
Pepper loaf ...................... Lb. '1.79
Barbeque loaf.. ................. Lb. Sl.89
1-lb. Wieners (All Meat) ..... Lb. 51.39
Boiled Ham ......................Lb. '2.09

Boneless Smoked Ham ........l.b.s1.99
Whole or Half Ham ......... \.b. SI.89
Zane Trail 1-lb. Bacon ...... Hb. s1.89
Thriftee Pak Bacon ........... l-Lb. '1.09
Bacon Ends &amp; Pieces ... 2-Lb. Pkg.'l.59
Longhorn Cheese ................Lb. s1.99
Swiss Cheese ................. ;...Lb. s2.19
Hot Pepper Cheese ........ .-.... Lb.s2.09
American Cheese ................ \.b. SI.99
Ground Beef Patties .... 5 Lb. Box S7.95
6 lb. Bulk Whiners .... JAil Meat)S8.35
6 lb. Hotel Bacon .............. ~ .. s9.99
Port Chops (Center Cut) ......Lb. sl.99

I

I
I
I

--..........
-ccr:o
-..... .
w

--+&gt; ....
.,.cr:
_.,.

;:,-

011.

w~

--+-

.

The reason for the project's slow mCNement has
been money; but James R. Wllllarns, chairman of a
SEORC su)Jcommlttee overseeing the project,
doesn't accept that as an answer.
"I feel that If they've spent so much money In
·surveying and clearing, It would be counter·
. productive to let grass grow on It while otljer areas
have their projects completed," WUllams said. "It's
been listed as a priority, but It's become politically
expedient for the Ohio Department of Trans(Xlrtatlon
, to earmark funds elsew¥ce."
. SEORC President Bob Evans blames lack of
progress on the state's decision to fund a bypass at
Chesapeake. Evans claims it draws additional
funding away from the 35 proje&lt;'t and a bypass at
Jackson.
"It's what the state decided to do. I'm very
disappointed," he commented.
Evans said OOOT·has removed the35 bypass fror. !
Its priority list, but the Columbus oHice said It's stU!
PROJECT STATUS- SouiiHutem Ohio olllcWI
rated as a top Item.
are concerned about the fulure ollhe u.s. 311 bypua,
Becky Hart, an. ODOT spokesperson, said the now under rt!Yiew by lbe 11a1e "'-IJOn.tlon
project is under review at this time, but no decision departinent. lJoted 88 a priority Item by a relllonal
has been made.
highWay lnlerelliJ'OIIP, olllclalli fear money wiD be
SEORC officials feel politics Is btvolved in highway dlrecled 1o proJect. ellewhere;
funding, a statement OOOT Director Warren Smith
was reported to have madt a few weeks ago.
"Polltlcs Is definitely in the declston-rnaklilg," be
But G . . Kenner Bush, chairman of SEORC's said. "It's the only way we'D get highways bullt. We
highway users committee. believes It's part of the won't get them by measuring trattlc counts."
game, and urges · bipartisan support In attaining
Rep. Jolynn Boster, 0-GaWpol!s, also belleves the
SEORC's alms.
(Continued on page A4)

Common stock
No. shares authorized
16,000 (par value)
No. share~ outstanding . 16,000 (par value) ............................... 400,000.00
Surplus .......... ........ , ... ..... .... .. ... .... .. ,.............. ...... ........... ....... .......... 1,520,000.00
Undivided profits ............................................................................ 2,115,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .... ............. ...... ............... .......... ............. 4,035,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY ................ .... .......................... 44,661,000.00
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Standby letters o! credit
Standby letters of credit, total .... ................. ........ ......................... 272,000.00
Time certificates of denominations of $100,000
or more ................... ... .............. ... .. ...... .. ... ............ ............... .... . 1,215,000.00
Average for :ll calendar days (or calendar months ending with report date:
Cash and due from depository Institutions ..................................... 7,546,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
,
under agreements to resell ....................................................... , ...... 821,000.00
Total loans ................... ...... ..... ..... ... ................... .......... ... ..... .. ..... 27 ,546,000.00
Time certificates of deposits in denominations of $100,000
or 'more ....... ................ ...... ........ .. ....... ............. .. ...... .............. .... .. 1,215,000.00
Total deposits ................. ...... ........................... .'...................... :... 39,341,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under
agreements to repurchase ....... ......... .................... .. ............. ............. 54,000.00
Total assets ......... .................................... ....................... .... .. ...... 44,776,000.00

-

Gallipolis ' effectiveness.
Slnt'l&gt; the corps' stlldy was released in 1!8J, various
Interest gfoups, Including the National Coal
Association, have rallied to support the project. BUt
nothing can be done until the project makes It through
the federal treadmill .
" My analogy for It Is like telling a kid he can go to
tbe movies and not giving him the money to do It,"
said Phil Strawn , an aide to Rep . Clarence Miller,
R-Ohto.
Anea civic leaders are pushing for the project
because of the business It wlll bring Into the area.
Meanwhile, American Electric Power Is awaiting
progress on the waterways bill before It Implements
construc tion of a hydroelectric plant at GaUipolls.

DEAD AT SCENE - Emergency pei'IOialel examine the body
Richard T. Mills, 40, IB Evllllll Helghls, GaWpoUs, alter Mills waalound
dead on Ohio 1188 near GlllllpoUs of an apparent gunshot wound 1o lhe
heatt The driver's side door of MUis' car, which wenllnloadllt:h, hanp
open In lhe loregroond.

Home sales mixed-realtors
By EKIC JENNINGS

'IInu• SEutlneiSialf

a...;=.;:::.:;;;.::.:::.;;::;;____________..,.___.:.;;;:;:;.:::::;;;.;;;;.:;;;:;.;~-----' -

GAU.IPOLIS - Although area
realtors appear to be feelln&amp; the
pinch of hard eror1001ic times, some
seem to be doing more business this .

year than In 1982.
Realtors In Pomeroy and Galllpo·
Us Indicate btterest rates have
decreased during the course of the
year which has increased the
number of people who can afford
housing.
The market Is considered a
"buyers market" as many homes
are on the selling block. According to
some realtors. people continue to

move out o! the area In order to
relocate and flnd new jobs that offer
higher btrorne potential.
Several area realtors say that
even though Interest rales have
decreased, peoplestlllhavenotbeen
purchasing houses In great droves.
· John Fuller of Baird and Fuller
Realty said, "It's not as good as 1
thoug ht It would be this summer. 1
(Conilnued ~n pagoA4)

gy LARRY EWING

15,729 ctvUlan labor force were
without work InJun~.
In Meigs County, however, the
unemployment rate continued a
steady decline from Its April hlgho!
19.3 percent. The OBES reported In
May the figure had fallen to 15.5
percent The county's most retent
June posting sets the jobless rate a.t
14.7 percent.
According to the OBES, 1,811) of
Meigs's 12,390 work Ioree were
jobless bt June.
One factor known to have
contributed to Metas CoUnty's
declining unemployment rate was
the April recall pf some 1,400
(Contln'led oil' paa:e A3)

Defending the indigent: Gallia taxpayers
spend more than Meigs, other counties Area jobless rate:
than
Meigs continues
The
down; Gallia, up

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources
and llabU!tles. We declare that 'It has been examined by us. and to tne best of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
Paul A. Barnett
Edison Hobstetter - Directors
Horace Karr

.I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier of the above-named bank to hereby declare that
this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belle!.
Joan Wolfe
July 8, 1983

DIRECTIONS:
Take Rt. 7 South To Cheshire,
Tum Right At Light &amp; Go One Block.

AT WHOLESALE
.,

GALLIPOLIS- All investigation
Is continuing this weekend Into the
Saturday death of a former GalllpoUs city llllll8gel'.
Richard T. MU!s, 40, 19 Evans
Heights, died of an apparent
J1U11§hot wwnd follaovlng a one-car
accident on Ohio 581. one-quarter 9f
a mUewest of Bob McConnlck Rd.
The GaUla County Sheriff's Department was to go to Baird's
wrecking servl'l" In GaQipolls late
Saturday afternoon to examine the
car Mills was driving when the
accident occurred.
According to the Gallla-Melgs
post of !he Ohio Highway Patrol,
MDI$ was driving west on !51!11 near
BobMcComlack Road at 12: 58 p.m.
when he reportedly lost control or
the car oo a lett curve.
The car, a 1978FordThunderblrd,
went of! the right side of the road,
struck an embankment, hit two
mailboxes and then struck a culvert
CNer a pnvate gravel road.
The car then front -imded into a
ditch alongside the road, the patrol
said.
Investigators are stU! looking into
the clrcuirtstances behind Mills'
death, which was apparently of a
JIUnshot wound to the head. The body
was discovered a few feet from the
car - in a grassy area above the
ditch where the accident occurred.
A gun, Identified by a Gallla County
deputy as a .38calllbre revolver was
recovened at the scene.
He was pronounced dead at the
scene by Dr. Donald R. Warehime,
'Ganta County coroner. Mills' body
was later released to WUI!s Funeral
(Cont(nued on page A4)

'nines-Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - Is southern Ohio being passed
over by state government for consideration of
highway project funding?
That question concerns the area's political and
b\lslness leaders as they prepare to co?vince the state
three highway projects deserve planning money.
'Ibe three projects - the U.S. 35 bypass from
Gallipolis to Thurman; a linkup of U.S. 33 from
Pomeroy to the William Ritchie brl(lge at Ravenswood, W.Va.; and a U.S. 23 bypass at Portsmouthwere outlined as priorities by the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council last Thursday.
. At this point, the 35 bypass Is the only project to
reach fruition, If In a piecemeal manner. A contractor
Is currently clearing a path for the bypass, but two
additional stages of the project haven't been touched
yet.

Demand deposits of Individuals, partnerships,
and corporations .............................................................. :........... 2,627,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individuals, partnerships,
and corporations .......................... , .... .... .. .............. ... ................... 34,122,000.00
Deposits of United States Government .............. .... .... ... .......................... 1,000.00
Deposits of States and .p olitical subdivisions
In the .United States ...... ...... ........ .................... ............ .................. 2,259,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ............ .. ................... .. .. .............. ........ .. 121 000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS .......... .... ..... ........... ......... ..... .... ... ....... .............. 39,13Q:OOO.OO
Total demand deposits .......................... ................. 3,302,000.00
Total1lme and savings deposits .. .............. .. ... .... ... 35,828,000.00
Other liabilities ............................................................................... 1,502,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) .............. ......... .... .. ...... ..... ... . .'......... , ....... :...... .... .40,632,000.00

11 Soedona, 84 Pog,. 35 Canll
A Multlmedll lne. ~..,.,...

Probe into death of former
city manager Mills continues

By KEVIN KELLY

cr:

--- -- -- - -·- -

will have to review the projects again with teg\slatlon
for funds to carry them out.
The bill would authorl:r.e $260 mUllan for the
Gallipolis project. Construction plans detailed by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers call for a 1,20!Hoot
· main lock to replace the present ®loot facility. A
®toot. auxiliary will also be built to replace the
J6o.toot standby nOJN tn uae.
The COJllS selected this plan- one of five proposals
- at the end of a fOilr·year study of navigation
problems at Gallipolis, opened in 1937 and at the time
considered .an achlevemt!llt In lock and dam
technology.
Otnclals have cited the fact that increased river
tratrlc Iince the mld·19ros have quickly outdated

State's commitment to area
highway projects concerns
business, political leaders

In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1983 published In responke to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12. United States Code, Sec·
lion 161 .
Charter number 1980
National Bank Region Number 4

ttttint

House panel :OKs Gallipolis project

FREE
PARKING

Cash and due from depository Institutions ................ ~ .. .. .. ................. 7,310,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .................................................. ................ 4,066,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
.
In the Un.lted States ........ ,.... .. .... ....... .................... ,....................... 2,564,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures .. ...... .............. ... .... ........... ......... ......2,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ..................................... , .. .. 58,000.00
Ill
.....
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
w
agreements to resell .. ... .. ........ .. ........ ..... ........... ..................... .. ..... 1,100,000.00
Ill
Ill
Loans, Total (excluding unearned Income) .. .. ....... 27,785 ,000 .00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses ..... ...... .. ...... 306,000.00
Loans , Net .. ...... ... ... .. ....... .... ..... ... ......... .... ..................................... 27,479,000.00
Lease financing receivables .......... ,................................................... :809~000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets
representing bank premises ..... .................... .. .. ........................ ....... 624,000.00
- - 1 - Other assets ...... .... .... ............... , ...... ....... .. .... ................... .... ...... ..... .... 6$$,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ............ .... ................. .. :.......... ...... .. ..... ........... ... .... 44,667,000.00

Ill

Jlt·

reclamation in Meigs .County
Carr pleads not guilty

-------- - - - - - - --- - --- -

*All SUMMER CLOTHING
*SPECIAL LIVING ROOM SUITES - '12 OFF
·*lV SPECIALS .
*ANGEL TREAD SLIPPERS
*SUMMER JEWELRY
*SUMMER HANDBAGS
*SPECIA~ OCCASIONAL TABLES- Y2 OFF
*s2()()00 OFF ON All GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
* 10% OFF ON ALLIN-STOCK FLOOR COVERINGS .
AND INSTALLATION

BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

GENERAL ·STORE··'ATF

L~nd

Middleport-Pomeroy~lipolis-Point "-nt Sunday, July 31, 1913

'

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries

----ESHIRE

.

tmts

CLEARANCE
SALE.

REPORT OF CONDITION

·--.-

PapC-$

•

UNCLE BOB'S

CHICKEN PALACE

Gallipolis Pony League Championship

••

By JEFF GRABMEIER
Tlm...sen&amp;lnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- Under the U .S.
Constitution and Ohio law, a
criminal defendant who cannot
afford an attorney must have one
provided for him. And the taxpayers
of Gallla County are paying rensld·
erably more to guarantee that right
than citizens In neighboring
counties .
Gallla County appropriated
S10,00l 1n 1983 for defense of the
Indigent - about four times more
than Meigs, which appropnated
$15.250. Jackson County orglnally
allocated $14.750, but will spend
about $.'11,000, a county otrlclal said.
The reMOIII tor the clltference are
nebulwa and there Is no agreed
upon solution tor lowering costs.
'1'm always swprlsed by the
amount GaDia County spends on
defense of the Indigent." Charles
Knight, , ~ County common
~lief CClUlfludaeaald last week.

Of the $70,000 approprtated this
year In Gallla County, $39,'!73.57, or
slightly more
half. wasspentas
of June :ll.
However, the county does not
h~ve to pick up the entire cost of
defending the poor. Thestatepubllc
defender's omee reimburses the ·
county for 50 percent of approved
payments to attorneys.
Knight gave several explanations
as to why Gallla spends more than
Meigs County. . ·
Many defendants In Meigs County
give voluntary pleas of guilty before
they are brought to trial. Knight
said, which does not happen nearly
as often In Galla.
Meigs County also paysattomeys
less tor defending the poor: $3!5 for in
· court work and $25 for out of court
work, compated to $40 and $.'11
respecttvely In GaUia County.
More dlttlcult tD pin down Is the
role defense attorneys play In the
amount counties f,Y tor tlflendlni

Coet of
defending the
indipnt in
Gallla County

the !ndl&amp;t'nt.
rues, the more money he can make.
Knilbt laid· Gallla County has
But both Judges defended the role
"very actl'le ~ C!IWIIel" of attorneys and emphasllad the
whldtmayhelplreepi!JIP!IIIfthllb. need for counsel tD represent the
Altlloulb the IICC.'Uid blve •rllht lndtgent.
to a complete clefawe, he Alii the
Despite the relatiVely high
act!ona attorneys take can l"lliiCh amount GaWa Coualy spends on
"ridiculous piopoi tlonut tlmll." . defense of the IJidllp!nt, Roderick
Richard Roderick, GaUJa County laid moatcwrt-appolntedattomeys
cornmonpleelcourtJudp,Nidalot IIJ'e maldng Iesa than they could In
ofmotloniiiJ'ellledlncrlmlnalc:ues private practice. He llllled that fi!NI
In hll court. UDder tilt bourly fee QaiJipoiJI laWyers IIJ'e wUllni to
scale. the!IXftmotloniUlattomey
(Continued bn Jlll&amp;1! A3)
~

'nme&amp;-Senllnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - While tbe unem·
ployment rate in Meigs County and throughout the Immediate area
- continued two-month pa Item of
decline In June, thejoblessflgurefor
Gallla County rose by 2.2 percent.
Gallla County posted 16.9 percent
unemployment - up from May's
figure of14.7 percent. The June rate
reversed May's one-month decUne
tor the county. GaUia's jobless
percentage feU from 17.1 percent in
Apr11 to 14.7 percent In May,
according to the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
.•
OBES repol)IS 2,651 of Gallla' s

a

I

·~

�July 31 ' 1983

Commentary and

Area jobless... . .

•
perspective

(Continued from page All
workers to the Meigs Mine Division
of Southern Ohio Coal Co.
' Vinton County - wbere two of the
three Meigsmtnesare located- has
registered a 5.5 percent decrease in
unemployment since April. That
county's jobless figures fell from an
April high of 18.2 percent to 14.2
percent In May. In June, the
unemploymeni rate fell to 12.9
percent.
During June, Ohio's unemploy·
ment rate stood at 12.8 percent,
accqrding to the OBES, Nationally,
the percent Of joblessness registered
10.2 percent for that same period.
· Across the state, new claims for
unemployment benefits under Ohio
law dropped to l8,1831ast week, the
lowest level since Sept.l2,1981, state
officials reported Saturday.
The OBES said the filings, a
22-month low, may not represent
real Improvement In l!be state's
economy, however.
Roberta Steinbacher, OBES. ad·
mlnfstrator, said a shorter layof!
period for piant retooling and
vacatiOns may have had more to do
With the drop.
About 670,ro&gt; .Ohioans are still
unemployed andl11,104people have
exhausted all their jobless benefits
since June, she said.

Extremism repe}S:___________:J:_ames_.;_J._K~ilpa_t_ric_k
A Division of
~L---r-lr"T"B!Bdl-=::11 .

825 Third Ave.. Gallipolis, Ohio
1614 ) 446-2342

Ill Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio
i614l992-2156

ROBERT I.. 'WINGETT
Publi, her
HOBART WI LSON J R.
EX(.' t 'Uli \'l' F:tl ittll'

PAT WHITEHEAD
A!':i.s i st &lt;::~n t

Publisht ·r-Co ntn dJl'r

A 1\U :I\tRJo:ft ur Ttw .b ~&gt;&lt; • · i ah' d P r• ·~s. lnln ntlll11 ih l' r t·~ s ,\ss•"·iali•»l an d lh •· Amt'rll'w n
Nt•Y. t-p.:IP"r Puh l i~ h t•n. ,\ ~ sm • ialiu n .
·

I .F.TTf: RS OF Ol'l l'l llll'l. ;iro•·u.o·!n tnlt'd . Tho·~ shuuld IW' lt•!!is thlm :JO(I u.unh l01np( . All

h•ttt·n. 11n suhjrd ln t·dil ill lo! 11 nd mu!l.t ht· s l ~ th• ll u.ilh namt•. addn·s~ ;md 11-lt•photlk'
numh~ r . Nuun ~ i)( nt• cli i:' Ut •rs 11 ill lw publisht&gt;d . l .d t\•rs s huuld b.- in ~u•od lilsh•. w ddrn~i n~
Ll!!iU('S,

nol rll' r~ una li t i t· ~ -

Economists view a
positive slowdown
,,

;Atter a surge In the spring and summer, many economists suspect
lloistness activity will lose some of Its momentum.
:But, they hasten to add, the kind of slowdown In economic 'growth they
edvlslon could prove to be an overall plus rather than a problem. 1bey
argue that at a less feverish pace, the recovery from the recession stands a
~ch bet~r chance of continuing for a period of years rather than months.
: •A very high growth rate would not persist very long without caUSing
hliber Inflation and Increases In Interest rates," says Ben Laden, chief
etilnomlst at the investment management firm of T. Rowe Price
~JCiates .
'
:"Jn fact, If the pace of recovery were considered to be too fast, ~
Federal Reserve and the admlnlstratlon rnlghl take steps to slow it down,
,The way economists S, Jay Levy and David Levy see it, other forces are
already at work to cool things off. "Industi1alproduction'srise, rapldsofar
in ·1983, wtll soon begin to moderate," the falher-!1011 team ot forecasters
maintains. ''Retail sales will be strong through Christmas, sluggish In the
first half of next year,"
The Levy§ argue that weak demand for U.S. exports will act as a brake
on economic growth In t:tm; counby.
"A major reason for theworsenlngtradeplcture Is the excessive value of
the dollar relative to foreign currencies," they say, ''The high price oi the
~Dar makes imported products bargains In the United States and
AJDerlcan goods expensive abroad,"
'·At the same time, they maintain, someofthemostimportantstimulants
to economic activity lately have lost their former force - among tbem the
housing industcy's revival, deficit spending by the federal government,
apd inventory-bulldlng by increasingly confident businesses.
·A drop in mortgage interest rates from about l8 percent to about 13
percent touched off a spurt In bousing actlvlty. But since then mortgage
rates have stopped falling and backed up a bit again.
. "The swelling of the federal deficit to aboutsnl billion t:tm; year has raised
many justlfled concerns, the Levys say, but It has also provided some
sirong short· term Impetus to the recovery. They believe the deficit is Ukely
td narrow somewhat in the government fiscal year beglrmlng In October,
tllereby r educing its stimulative effects.
'

..

WASiflNGTON - The National
Women's Political Caucus that met
recently In San Antonio, Texas, was
" national" In name oniy, and unless
I am badly mistaken, the tmpor·
tance of this "caucus" has been
vastly overblown. Mr. Reagan has
reason to be concerned about the
women's vote, but this is not the
women's vote he needS to be
concerned a houtl
Except for a few token Republl·
cans - and these were very token
indeed - the women who mel at
San Antonio were mostly Democrats on the far left fringe 9f their
party. They were no more representative of · the women of this

VIEWPOINT •

.,.,..

Berry's World

'·

nation than a convention of flat Among these were "moderatiOn" charms, and in 1933 the amendment
earth fundamenlallsts would be and "temperance."
was repealed.
representative oi American Chris·
Strom Thurmond, runnb!g tor
We ought to to learn from recent
lalns. These were the :zo&lt;&gt;glrls. political history. The Prohibition president in l!N8, was perceived as
They are Interesting curlosltes, but movement that culminated In the an extremist; he carried four
after hearing them · half a dozen 18th Amendment was an extremist states. Bany Goldwater lnl96f was
times on taxpald abortions and . movement. It called Itself the . perceived as an extremlst; be
lesbian rights, we , tend to move " temperance"movement, but t:tm; carried six states. George Wallace
along, Sic transit Gloria Steinem.
was a sham , Its goal was to prohibit In 1968 was perceived as an
I venture this proposition: Ex· absolutely the manufacture and extremist; be carried live states.
tremlsm attracts followers only for . sale of intoxicating liquors. For a So, too, with George McGovern In,
the short rim; over the long haul, while, that prospect seemed attrac· 1972; he carried out Massachusetts
extremism will always repel. That
tive: The resolution of amendment and the Distrlct ot Columbia:
proposition is as old as the VIrginia
Remember the John Birch Sohandily cleared the House and
Declaration of Rights of l'n6, In
Senate in December ot 1917; within ciety? It once was a force In
which George Mason called for a
13 months 45 of the 48 states bad American polit!ca; it Is mllrlbund
firm adherence to certain tunda'
ratified. Then reaction set in, now, a victim of the extremism it
mental principles of pubUc llfe.
Prohibition lost Its supposed was thought to espouse. Ralph
Nader's consumerism has suffered
the same fate; no one in public
Supreme Court Decision: Legislative Veto
any longer trembles at the rw;ne oi
Nader. Extremists on the environ·
ment are headed In the same
direction, A few organizations on
the far-out wacko right still finance
their operat!nos by scaring Utile old
ladies with tales oi the terrible
TrUateral Commission. These out·
fits have no political clout. One cl
these days some courageous na·
tiona! figure , will take on the
National Rifle Association, and the
NRA will be exposed as all bark and
no bite,
It is against this background that
the National Women's Polltlcal
Caucus should be seen. I have a
notion that the five Democratic .
presidential candidates who went to
San Antonio did themselves more ·
harm than gopc~ . Only Reubln
Askew had the sense to stay away. ·
John Glenn and Waler Mondale ·
toadied to the ladies. Ernest F.
Hollings wooed them with Southern· ,
charm , Gary Hart and' Alan,'
Cranston made commitments that ·
will haunt them In coming months: .

life

~

ln~igent

elected, they would withhold money
They promised expUcltly that If
for , federal programs In states ·
' whose legislatures faUed to ratify
the Equal rlghts Amendment.

Govenlment ethics_______:..._Ja_;_ck_A_nde_rs_on
for two years while he was privy to
secret inteillgence Information on
world economic trends. He was also
a founding investor In a company
that's In line for $450 mt!llon in
subsidies from the publlcJy.fllnded
U.S. Synthetic Fuels Corp.
Casey Insists there was no
conflict of Interest or ethical
misbehavior In his active stock
dealing while he had aCC('ss to
Inside informatiOn , Albosta sees •a
potential danger, through. An
amendment to the ethiCs act may
be inroduced this summer that
would require the directors of the
CIA, FBI, National Security
Agency and Defense Intelligence
Agency to put their stock holdings
In a blind trust if they amount to
more than $100,rol,

But Casey isn't the only Reagan
appointee who has tiptoed along the
edge of the ethics act. My associates John Dillon and Corky
Johnson gathered several examples oi dubious ethical conduct that
illustrate the need tor strengthening
the law:
-Attorney General William
French Smith, the natlon's top law
enforcement official, took question·
able tax write-off• after he as 'I
nominated. He also falled to 'report
an unusual $50,ro&gt; seVerance pay.
ment from a lirm which he had
served as director. After consulting
with the ethics office, Smith
returned the $50,ro&gt;. Albosta proposes to change the lawS so that
Cabinet nominees will have to
update their financial disclosure

before cOnfirmation hearings.
-Navy Secretary John Lehman
promised the ethics office be would
break contact . with a defense
consulting firm he had worked tor. ·
'But he didn't - nor did be Inform :
ethics officials he was still deallni
with the firm. Albosta would
require such promises to be made
in writing.
-Members of the President's
Private Sector Survey on Cos(
Control, headed by lnc:lu.strlallst J. ·
Peter Grace, reportedly exalned .
federal agencies that regulate their
own companies. For example, a
vice president of Diamond Sham· ·
rock, a chemical manufacturer;
was assigned to Identify bother·
some Environmental Protection
Agency regulatiOns. ·

..
·.

..

....•
..
.'.

"We weren 't going to do it, then we1 :'f:j~~t
what the heck - why NOT keep u
the

Joneses! "

~

Today in history
Today is Sunday, Ju ly 31. the 212th day ofl983. There are 153days left in
the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On July 31,1790, the U.S. government issued its first patent- to Samuel
Hopkins of Vermont lor a process in making potash.
tln this dale:
in 1498, Christopher Columbus discovered the Island of Trinidad,
tn 1877, Thomas E dison took out an early patent leading to his
developme nt of the phonograph.
m 1917, the World War I Battle of Flanders IJeean,
i'n 1964. t he U.S, Ranger 7 spacecraft transmittedd to Earth the first
cidse-up pic tures oi the moon .
Ten years ago: A Delta Airlines jet crashed In heavy fqg at Boston's
Lol(an International Airport, killing all but one of the 89 people a.lxlard.
tive years ago: A gunman shot his way Into the Iraqi embassy In Patis
and held nos tages for severai hours before surrendering to French pollee.
Clne year ago: u.s. officials. reported that the Soviet Union is wWing to
cui [Is long -range misslle and bomber force If the United States would
cancel deployment of m edium-range missiles in Europe and restrlcl fUture
cruise m tssile deployment
Today's birthdsy: Actor Don Murray is 54.
Thought for todoy: " Beh!nd ·every argumerlt"is someone's ignorance." ·
-Lou is Brandeis, U.S) Supreme Court ju.stlce (1115&amp;1941), I

a Washington Redskin linebacker
In half."
" What kind of a massage parlor
do you think we're running? Our
girls come from some of the best
families in the counby, Several are
graduates oi Vassar and ,Sweet·
briar, and we have one who has a
master's degree from the University of Tokyo.
"We have the most beautiful girls
In the Washington area, and whlle
we try to make all our cllents happy
there are limits to the services we
will provide, Now if you really want
a gorilla, you're going to have to
give us a few days to find one and
you'll have to pay for · his trainer
becau5e we can't allow him to make
house calls on his O";:fl. "·
"I need someone this afternoon.
Don't you have a simple masseur or
masseuse who just gets pleasure

i~ §

s~l ~~
~~~ ~----~~~;::::;~----------------~------~--------·---­
::!z ·•

..,, •..- •
C&gt;

"'"' ..·•
c ::
m

..
• ••
,,

•• • ••• •••• •

•

defense...

practice, it does y ot compare
favorably.
, "People are often screaming
·· about how much it costs" ,to defend
the poor, King said. But, he added
that it costs the taxpayers much less
t1lan it does to keep a person In
prison.
If tbe county commissioners do
not want to pay local attorneys to
defend the Indigent, their only
aiternatlve tinder Ohio law is to set
up a public defenders office.
'
·"I'll bet that would cost quite a bit
II)orethanisbelngspentnow,"King '
said.
For now, the commissioners
agree. Although there has been talk
of hiring a public defender, they say
it still may be too expensive.
Commissioner Paul Niday said
the county has to depend on
Roderick, Municipal Court Judge
James Bennett and JuvenlleProbate Judge Thomas Moulton to
hold expenses down,
Niday noted that the judges are
responsible for detennlnlng who is
In~! and making sure attorneys .
submit honest bills,

Ar_tB_;_uc:..:..:.h.:...:..:.wa.:::::ld'

mind."
"Well, I do have this fantasy ," I
said , "thai someone will come over
to my house and take his or her
strong hands and wring them
around my neck and get the crlck
out oi it"
"I see. You're Into sadomasochism," he sald. " Would you like
her to wear an aU-leather outfit?"
"I don't care what she wears. As
a matter of fact , I don't care If you
send over a ,JOO.p(Jund gorilla as
long as I can get some relief."
" We've never bad anyone ask for
a gorilla before. You do have some
strange fantasies ,"
" Look, I really don't want a
glorllla. What! bad In mind was one
of those large, heavily bullt Swedish
or Finnish women, who is stacked
Uke a brick federal building and ha:s
steel arms and hands that can tear

.•

~rvice.
"It is really quite a hassle," Klng
said. "U you compare it to private

Pain in ·the neck ________
It is regrettable that as the
massage parlor Industry grows by
leaps and bounds there are· fewer
and fewer places that actually offer
you a real massage - one that will
alleviate pain and distress when
you really need it
I discovered this last Sunday
when I found myself with a pinched
nerve and decided that I might get
some rellef from the strong hands
of a tough masseur or masseuse
who was willing to throw me across
the room, if necessary, to get the
crick out of my neck.
· There are 10 pages devoted to
massage parlors In the Washington
Yellow Pages, but very few seem to
have too many massage specialists
&lt;in duty on sunday afternoon,
The listings include "Aladdin's
Chest," "Bunny's Topkopi," " Bobbie Jo's Flaming Den," "Tiffany's
Velvet Touch," and "Sheik Abdul·
lah's Harem ." I tlnally . called
" Lolita's Geisha House" becaue
my fingers got tired of walldng
across the Yellow Pages, Lolita's
ad sald they made house calls.
A man answered the phone:
"I have this crick in my neck," I
said. "And I was wondering if you'd
send over an expert masseur."
"Of course. Do you want a blonde
or a brunette?"
"I don't care about the color of his
hair, I want a guy with strong
hands."
"Oh, you're on of (ita!) them
(unital)," he said,
"One of what? " I asked,
"Wen, we usually send out
masseuses for men and masseurs
for women."
"Look, I'm not particular as long
as the person knows what he or she
is doing,"
"They know what they're doing,
all rlght," he assured me. "They
\VOuldn't be workipg tor Lolita's
Geisha House If they didn't. We can
fUlfill any fantasy .·you have In

Ill
)o

(Continued from page Al)
defend the Indigent and those that do
volunteer as a favor to the court.
''It can't be that lucrative, or more
attorneys would want to do it,"
Roderick said,
One reason for the difference
between Meigs and Gallia county
appropriations may be how l!be
courts are operated,
Several Gallipolis attorneys said
Gallia County courts have been
more liberal In Interpreting law
concerning the indigent than .courts
In Meigs and Jackson counties.
AlthoughoourtsinMelgsCountyare
changing, defendants in Gallla have
been given more opportunity to
request an appointed attorney,
according to some Gallla County
lawyers.
Hamlin King is among Gallipolis
attorneys who regularly accept
court appointments to defend the
Indigent Hesait;l he is surprised that
Gallia spends much more than area
counties for l!be program ,
"I always thought (the amount
spent) was paltry," King said.
He echoed Roderick's comments
that he and other attorneys accept
court assignments as a public

~~~~~~~~~~~

WASHINGTON - AJl but lost
sight of In the nap over the
''pilfered" Carter briefing docu·
ments is the House l~lative
lnquicy that almost accidentally
started the whole ruckus. Michigan
Rep, Donald Albosta's subcommll·
tee unearthed the brleflng·book
caper while lnvest!gat!ng whether
the 1978 Ethics in Government Act
needed strengthening.
U the conduct of top Reagan
administration officials is any
yardstick, the answer is a resound·
tng "yes."
Consider CIA Director William J ,
Casey. Untll recently, Casey bad
stubbornly refused to put . his
considerable stock Into a blln(j
trust. He was playing the stock
market with enthusiastic success

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

out of rubbing ~ muscles and
massaging bad backs and necks?"
" We might have," , be said
suspiclously. "But how do we 1mow
you're not from the vice squad?"
"I swear to you I'm not. I have an
Amerlcan E;i&lt;prews credit card, a
Master Charge and a Bank Amert·
card. Would I be able to get credit
from all three if I was a member c1
the vice squad?"
"All rlght," he said, "We'D send
you over Annie."
..Is she strong? "
"StrongJ She'll put three lashes
across your neck with a horsewhip
and you'll forget your neck Pain In a
Dash."
"Thanks, but no thanks. I'll call
the YMCA."
"It's up to you, but I doubt it
they'll have a gorilla working on
Sunday,"

-,hniq,Jm;..:: ltmtlmi
USPSA Multlmeda Nlm'!lllaper
Published each Sunday, 825 Third
Avenue, by the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company - Multlmed.la, Inc. Second claal
postage paid at GaHipoll s, Ohio .a5531.

Entered as second class maUJ.ng matter
at Pomeroy , Ohio, FUt OHJce.
MernbPr. The Associated Press. Inland
Dally Press AssOCia ttoo and the Amert·
can Newspaper Publishers Associatlcn,
National

Advert1.1tn g

Representatt~.

Branham, 1717 West Nine Mlle Road,

&amp;lite

a~t ,

Detroit, Mkhlgan, W75.

SUJI8CIIIPI10N RATES
By Curter M Mo&amp;Gr RDule

One Week , ,:................ .............. $1,00
One Month """ " """'"" """"" " " suo
One Year ........................ .... .... ..$5211)
SINGLE roPY
PRICE

35 Cetlts
!fo subscrlpUons by

mau permitted

in

towns where home caiTier service IB
available.

The Sunday ~Sfndnel wW mt be
Il!$1)0nslble for advance payments mad!

tocan1ers.
MAIL SIJII8CRIP'I10N8
~Ooly

One year ..... .. ...... .. ...... ....... .. .... 12)..80
Six months """"'"""" """"'"'"" $]0,«1

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MAIL SlJIIIMJIUFI10N

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52 Weeks "" " '"""""""'

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•••

'L~t&gt; ...

AIM...

I

_I

..............~ _ ...... , .

I
\

•

The

�f'aga

A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

r:--We.ather

Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis,

(Continued from page Al) .

Raintml

Snow~

J'

Ohio
WEATHERFORECAST-TheNatlonaJWeatherServlceforecastfor
Swlday predlds showers lor the Northeast, parts of the )msslsslppl
Valley andtheGuHCoast. Showers w-e also predlcled forw-easalongthe
Rodly Moontalns down Into the Southwest. (AP l,aserphoto)

Extended Ohio forecast ·
MONDAY THROUGH wtDNESDAY: Scattered showers or
thunderstorms Monday. Fair Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs In the
mld-&amp;ls to lower 90s Monday and Wednesday and In the 80s Tuesday.
Lows at night In the mld·60s to lower 70s early Monday, cooling to the
60s early Tuesday and Wednesday.

agr~ultural

substantive work directed toward

projects In her district first, but
"that's not to say they consult me
first to see !fit's right," Mrs. Boster
added.
1
The 33 project, which officials say
would create a straight shot from
Charleston, W.Va., to Columbus,
has been studied · by a Cleveland
consulting firm that favors an
extension of 33from Rock Springs to
the Raverulwocxlbrldge.
"We're trying to (lo something,"
noted Earl Mathews, chairman of
the SEORC subcOmmittee assigned
to the 33 project. "Really and truly,
the reaction has been, too many jobs
and so little money. On a statewide
basis, It has little Impact, but they
haven't considered how Important It
)s as a connector route. ''
· "Probably the hardest task of my
job Is to he squeaky enough when
they want to shut me up," Mrs.

advisory

.
• By The Associated Press
Rain Is possible In Ohio Saturday, but totals would be quite
variable and not expected to he sufficient to alleviate all of the son
moisture shortages around the state. Thethreatofscatteredshowers
is expected to last through Monday.
The scattered nature of the rain will stili allow some field work
Satilrday. Working conditions wW be uncomtortable, with high
temperatilres in the upper 00s to low 90s. Increased cloudiness will
decrease the.sun load.
The humid weather will mean fairly rapid deterioration of produce ,
in the field.
.
Wind speeds Into the teens this afternoon will he sufficient to cause
problems for spraying operations.

pending using the new low Interest
loan money guaranteed by the state.
think It's a combination of factors •
Most realtors said they believe
Including the · economy and
middle- income families have been ·
unemployment."
hurt the most by the higher Interest
: Fuller, whosaldhedealstoalarge
rates.
el&lt;tent In relocation for appraisals,
Bud McGhee of McGhee Realty
said he believes "a lot of people are
and Insurance said "housing sales
moving out of !he \lft'a and not many
are far below normal compared to
are moving back in."
four years ago."
For the most part, realtors report
However, some realtors feel
people are obtaining loans with
housing sales have Improved.
lftterest rates ranging from from 12
"Sales are going better, but
t013percentonVeteran'sHomeand they're stili not up to what they ougl\1
Federal Housing Administration to be," said Willis Leadingham of
loans.
Leadingham Real Esiate. He
Fuller added that he has one sale added, "I think people are back In

the mood to buy."
not enough money for the program
Realtor Ranny Blackburn said,
existed In Melgs County," he said.
" Residential property business Is
Although there are a lot of
probably up 100 petc!!fll over last
properties on the market, Vlrgl.l
year at this time."
Teaford of Teaford Realty said,
Blackburn attributes the housing
"Business Is kind of slow even
though I expected It to he up a little
sales Increase loa nwnberoffactors
Including lower Interest rates and
n10re."
thepubUc'slncreaslngconfldenceln .
Teeaford said a lot of people are
the economy.
relocating In an effort to increase
In Meigs County, two Pomeroy
income as a result of plant layofls.
realtors had varying opinions on the
"I believe next month things will
real estate market.
start togetbetterslncepeoplewillbe
Ha~ Cleland of Cleland Realty In
back from vacations and are ready '
Pomeroy, said sales of less expento make decisions." be said.
sive properties In the $25,00&gt; range

Prohe ··~-----

are"I've
goingbeen
quitehere
well.nine years_and
this Is the best real estate market I
can remember."
Cleland said Meigs County could
have been allocated almost $1
mlllion for 9.95 percent interest
financing as a result of the passage
oflssueOnelnNovember; however,
many banks refused to participate
In the program because of the large
amount of paperwork Involved.
The two Meigs banks that did
participate In the program - Bank
One which had $40,1XXJ to distribute
and Central TrustofPomeroywhlch
had $100,000 - vaned In terms of
how much each required for a
downpayment on the loan, Cleland
said. .
''The bottom line Is a nwnber of
famllles who could have obtained
financing at the 9.95 percent level
weren't able to participate because

·(Continued from page Al )

Ingels was later treated and
released for soft tissue injury and
Ferguson was to be admitted for
observation, a· hospital spokesper·
son said la.te Saturday afternoon.
Mills was appointed city manager
on July 8,19'75, and served until May
2, 1911, succeeding Paul Willet, who
had resigned.
A Gallla County native, he was a
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School and Marshall University and
served threeyearsln the U.S. Army
airborne dlvLslon;
Prior to his city appointment,
Mills was employed on different
occasions by Bob Evans Farms,
Gen. James M. Gavin power plant
and was a felony investigator for the
county prosecutor's ofrlce.

Cloth
or
Vinyl
.' .

r:==~:iiiiiE::=:;;;.;==;

ourarea," she said.
1,
ooor doeS Inform her of road

Homes sales mixed, report realtors
(Continued from page Al)

Boster noted. "The only way they'll
sllencemelsbybrltlglrlgmoneylnto ·
southeastern Ohio." ·

area Is being Ignored.
"There's nothing concrete at this
time, and I haven't seen any

CORRECTIO'J .. L '
'
In today's circular

'·

We are sorry for ally inconveni~
ance this may have caused our

DENTURES
NOW OFFERED AT
The Dental Center
And Up

PHONE (304)-372-3222
Ripley, W. Va.

· State Bank No. 130
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries)

VINTON -John M. Reed, 72, Rt.

3, Albany, died Saturday In Holzer

of GaUipolls, Gallla County, In the Slate of Ohio at the close of business on June 29,
1983.

.

~

OR . GEORGE W. DAVIS

------;OPTOME:TR I ST---~

Communication
Some people. do not view
kindly being asked a lot o!
personal questions. They obviously expect the optometrist to
ask -about the nature of their
visual complaint, but they also
should be prepared to answer a
number of other relevant ques·
tlons - particularly If It Is a first
visit.
The nature of your occupation,
for Instance. may help the
optometrtst determine how you
use your eyes. It Is also possible
that your eye problem or
symptoms might be job-related.
Furthermore, the final prescription should take your job Into
consideration.
You should also expect gen·

'

Hugh Crowther, ameteorolglst with
the national Severe Storms Center
In Kansas City, Mo., predicting
some cooling In the next feW days,
Some relief came from thunder·
storms Frtday across the Midwest,
Into the Great Lakes region and in
parts of the Eastern Seaboard.
But the same storms ripped the

Here Is a state-by state break·
down of the July heat wave deaths:
Kentucky 43, Mlssourt 41, lliinols
32, Georgia 23, Tennessee 10, North
Carolina nine, Indiana six, Okla·
homa and Iowa five, South Carolina
four, Ohio three, Alabama three,
and one each In Arkansas, Maryland and New York.

f

~

em Michigan, Including Detroit,
were without power today.
Temperatures were In the 90s
frOm California to New York, with
some cities In the Southwest and
mid-Mississippi Valley reporting
triple-digit readings. High temperature records for the date were
broken In parts of Michigan and
Ohio. The high at Wichita Falls,

· '·OIJI 10WN'S JINU1 SUPfl MAIICI.f

,.__

i---'

GO TO CHURCH [V[RV S UNOAV

· meetlngwouldbeheldThursdayat1
p.m.,whentherotarywillmeetwlth
the Lions Club for a golf match.
· A picnic at the course at 5:00p.m.
for members and their families will
conclude the day's events. Each
member Is asked to bring a covered
dish for the picnic, which Is In lieu of
the regular Friday meeting.

Sat., August 6 . 1983

SUPERIOR

PEPSI
PEPSI FREE

Except for Monday and Tuesday.
temperatures in St. Louis have hem
above 90 degreES every day since
July 9. For five straight days last
week, high temperatures exceeded
100d~.
.
"It's getting real serious out there
and people aregolngtohaveto make
sure to take care of themselves and
check up on their neighbors," said
Sister Patrtcla Kelley at the city's
disaster headquarters.

BOILED
HAM

39

MT. DEW
DIET

LB.
DEll SLICED
THE WAY
YOU LIKE IT

PEPSI
8 PK.

rd

L~BIJ.iri~~II~~ EQ.uiri.cA.Piii.'L
·:: :::: ::::::::::::::::::::: io~:~~·::~
MEMORANDA
'

Amounts outstanding as or report date:
.
Time certificates of deposit In denominations
of $100,000 or more .............................................. ; ... ..... ........ ....... 9,588 000 00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
·
' ·
ending with report date:
Cash and due from depository Institutions .... .. ........................ ....... 5,955,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
;~~e~;nents to resell· ................................................ , .. , .. ............. 5,888,000.00
a oans ................................................ :............ .... ... .............. 54,326 000 00
Time certificates or deposit In denominations of
' ·
9 598 000 00
$100,000 or more ...... ..... .... .......................... . ..
Total de
· · ............ ................ · '
' ·
T
posits ................................................ .·.. ........................ 100,129 000 00
1
ota assets ................................................. ... . ......................... 109 ' •' .·
932 000 00

I

''

Emergency runs
POMEROY- The Melgs County
Emei &amp;alcy Medical Service reportl thn!e calla were answered by
area &amp;qiiiMb late Friday and early
Saturday.
•
Frldayat4:46p.m.,Syracuaewas
called 110 the Alhland Bulk Plant for
Helea Jeffers, and at9p.m., RadDe
went 110 the IICelll! d a bicycle
acddellt by the poll dDce for Mary

We, the undersigned djrectors. attest the correctness of this Report of Condition
(lnclulng the supporting schedules) and declare that It has been examined by us
and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared tn conformance with
the lnstructlc&gt;ns ISsued b)l the FDIC and Is true and correct.
Morris E. Haskins
Selwyn R. White - Directors
John McNeill
State of Ohio, County c.t Gallla, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 26th day or July, 1983 and I hereby certify that I am not an officer or director of tbls bank.
·
My commission eJOplres March 25, 1986. Cindy L. Harrington, Notary Public.

_________________.,,.
,.

Mullt!ll.
At 2:31a.m. Saturday, Pamau,y
waa called to itt Mulbeny Ave. for
Dorll HayDel. ~ lllree -

) fnllllpa1ld to
. fkllpltaL
I

..

v•-

M1111D1111

99

oz.

TAVERN
HAMS

$

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE

49

49

$
14 oz.

JAR

1.65
Y2 HAM

.

. -.

LOGAN MONUMENT COMPANY, INC.
· VINTON, OHIO

SIRLOIN
STEAK

LB.

$259

RIB
STEAK

LB.

$499

CHUCK
ROAST

LB.

$}29 ..

POMEROY. OHIO

~L~~J~a;m~l8~s~O~.
Ph. 388-8603
gB~us~h~,~Mbg~r·~~~Leo~~~~g~~~~
Ph.

Marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples filed for marrtage licenses
this past week In Gallla County
Probate Court.
Jeffrey P. Coley, 20, VInton,
unemployed, and VoazeU Ward, 22,
Rt.l, Vinton. Duff's employee.
Edwin R. Perry, 24, Rt. 4, Oak
Hill, laborer, and Della S. Garrett,
17; Rt. 2, Patriot, at home.
Steven G. Gherke, 24, 354 Debby
Drtve, manager, and Sherry R.
Smltl!, 24, Rio Grande, teacher.
David S. Grigsby, 25, Gallfpolls,
park maintenance, and Lon A.
Clark. 20, 1l3 Garfield Ave.,
.
waitress.
Randy L. l:larrlslm, 23, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, Robbins &amp; Myers em·
ployee, and Marsha c. Cax, 26,
Patriot Star Roote, Gallfa County
Local Scllllols teacher.
Jeffrey T. Smith, 19, Rt. 2.
Bidwell, mechanics assistant, and
Pamela S. McCarty, 18, Duff's
supervisor.

George W. Davis, 0.0. .
4&gt;8 Second Ave., Gallipolis
Phone 446-Ulii

to'Limit

Texas,was1ffid~, butwith
only~ percent humidity.

MIDDLEPORT - Blll Francis
delivered the program and showed a
videotape of the Jack Nicklaus Golf
Clinic at the Friday night meeting of
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club at Heath Methodist Church,

I

tr om r h~ oHJCe o f

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Meigs Rotarians

the group, announced that the next

*******

1r 1he m l e r e \ 1 ol b e fler v1sio:r

Fri.-Sat.9 am til 10 pm

LB.

president of

eral health questions. Certain
physical conditions can, and '""•
affect your vision. Remember to
mention ALL medications you
are taking: Some drugs have
side reactions which may affect
your eyes. It might be good to
prepare a list at home with all
the names and dosages. Certain
eye conditions are hereditary;
and you should not be reluctant
to provide your optometrtst with
the relevant information.

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Thur.. 9 am til 10 pm

outlined .to

M=~~keydoo.

Count~

with 100-mph windS and 22,000 r~=:=:::::::::::::::~~====~;:====~~==~====================~
roo~offbuUdingsmpartsof~
homes and businesses in southeast·

A TOTALLY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

Golf clinic

c..................................... ,......................... . ........

'

McCoy reportedly hit broadSide
Martin's car, which was northbound
on 7 after just turning from Fifth
Avenue.
Martin was taken to Holzer
Medical Center andlaterSt. Jv.ary's,
where he died. Four other people,
passengers In Martln's· car, were
injured in tbe accident
Named as defendants In the suit

Medical Center. ,
FUneral arrangements wW be
announced by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton. ·

Federal Reserve District No. 4

'

cruiser.

negllgertce," according to the suit.
Sheriff Montgomery was negll·
gent for railing to have guidelines
concerning when to break off
high-speed chases, the suit charges,
and the commissioners were negligent for "!allure to provide suffl·
clent funds for adequate training of
Its officers... "
In addition to Herman, the suit
was rued for the child and parents of
Martin.
The suit asks for $15 million In
compensatory damages for all
plaintiffs and an additional $7!i0,000
for Herman.

16

JohnM.Reed

The Ohio Valley Bank Company

I, the undersigned officer do hereby declare that this Report of Condition (lnclud·
lng the supporJ!ng schedules) bas been prepared In conformance with the Instructions Issued by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora tlon and Is true to the best oi
my knowledge and belief.
Madge E. Boggs
Vice President and Controller

are: McCoy; IJ.puty Alva Sullivan,
who was reportedly Involved In the
chase; Sheriff James MontgOmery; ,
commissioners Paul Niday and
James Saunders; and ronner 1
commissioner Lonnie Burger.
The suit charges Sullivan bad
reason to know who he was chasing
and knew there were rio felony '
warrants currently against him.
By purSuing the McCoy vehicle;
"at speeds In excess oflOOmlles per
hour with sirens and flashers" .
instead of trying to set up a
roadblock or arrest · him later,
Sullivan "showed a gross, wanton

, Area death

I~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill!.;;.iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;~

TOTAL

-

Highway Patrpl reported a vehicle
drtven by Lonnie McCoy, 25,
fonnerly of Rt. 2, Bidwell, D0\'1 of
Meml&gt;hi!l. Tenn., was southbou",'1
on 7, being pursued by a sheriff s

By KlM MILL'!
declared a statewide heat emergency Frtday as temperatures
A-ocleled Preo8 Writer
A broiling heat wave blamed for
zoomed Into the 100s. Nigh directed
state Health Commissioner Joan
187 deaths nationwide fol'C€() officials to reopen shelters today for the
Leavitt to make dally inspections of
elderly andpdor, and one golfer said . all nursing homes and room and
board faclllties, checking for exces·
the temperatures qave turned the
slvely hot conditions.
U~S. Women's Open Into a "flghtfor
Nigh also appealed to city officials
survival."
Oklahoma Gov. George Nigh to keep all public facilities open
seven days a week forthedurationof
the heat wave so people will have
somewhere to escape the heat.
The heat took Its toU on particiOsburn Durham
pants and spectators at the 31st U.S.
Women's Open golf tournament at
VINTON - Osburn Durham, 65, Cedar Ridge Country Club In Tulsa,
who bad resided with his niece, Mrs.
Okla.
Jam!$ (Joanne) Pierce In Tucson,
"I feel like I'm In a girl's camp
Ariz., died Friday In a Tucson ' Where they set you out with a
hospital.
canteen of water and tell you to
Born Feb.13, 1918, in Clay County,
survive somehow," said golfer
W.Va., he was the son of the late
Patty Sheehan, who was the early
Fred and VIrgie Mulllnl; Durham.
. leader. '"This Is a grueling tourna·
Surviving are two brothers, O.E.
rnent. It's a fight for survival."
o~ Rutland, and Jack of Caldwell,
Red Cross officials said at least a
I~; and six sisters, Bernice
half-&lt;iozen spectators were treated
Mullins of Tucson, Mrs. Leslie for heat prostration.
(Eloise) Siders of New Haven, M,rs.
In St. Louis, where the high
Bill (Helen) Hunter of Rt. 2, VInton, Frtday was 100degreesat41P,.rcent
Mrs. Ernest (Llta) Jones of Dexter, humidity, health officials declared a
Mrs. Harold (Katie) Tucker of Lutz, heat
alert and began reopening
Fla., and Mrs. Roland (Loretta) ·.about 20 cooling centers for the
TayloriJfMountHolly, N.J.
elderly and poor.
Funeral arrangements will be
The heat continued early today
announced by McCoy·Moore Funacross Texas and Oklahoma, said
eral Home, VInton.

rebate.

ASSETS
Cash and due from depository Institutions ... .............. ...... ........ ......... 5,311,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ................................................................. 27,626,000.00
Obligations of other U.S . Government agencies
and corporations ................... ....................... ...... ................. ......... 4,952,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
.
In the United States ............... ............ ....... .................................... 8,581,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
.
under agreements to resell ........................................................... 6,200,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned Income) .. ............. 54,621,000.00
Less: allowance for possible loan losses ....................... 559,000.00
Loans, Net .: ......................................... , ......................................... 54,062,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises ... ............. .. .................... 1,485,000.00
Other assets ... ............ .......... ... ........ .......... ................... ..... ..... ...... ... 1,649 000 00
TOTAL ASSETS .. ... ......... ........ ... ....,.: .................................. .. ....... 109,866:000:00
LIABU.ITIES
.
Demand deposit of Individual, partnerships,
'
and corporations ............ ............................... ................... ........... 11 ,427,000.00
Time and savings deposits of Individuals, partnerships,
. ·
and corporations ................................................................... ~ ..... 80,055,000 oo
Deposits or United States Government ................................................. 68,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
·
~n the United States ......................................................... ... ......... . 8,474,000 oo
rtlfled and o!flcers' checks ...... ...... ......... ....... .. .. ........... .. ........... .. ... 282 ooo'oo
Total Deposits .............................................................................. 100,306• ooo' 00
a. Total demand deposits ......... ............... ....... ... .... 12,257,000.00
' ·
b. Total time and savings deposits ......................... 88 049 000.00
.
Other liabilities ........................................................ : .... :................ 1,622 000 oo
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes
·
' ·
and debentures) .. .. ... ...... :.................. ...... ....... ............................ 101,928,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock
·
No. shares authorized
175,000
No. shares outstanding .
175,000 ..... (par value) .................. .. 1,750,000.00
Surplus
. ... .... .. .... .... ....... ... .... .. ... .... ........ ....... ......................... .. ......... 3,
500'000 00
Udllded
TgTlL E ~onts
2,!)88,ooo:oo

W.Va.

Heat wave continues to bake sections of nation

qualify for manufacturer's

3 Pinnell St.

GALLIPOLIS - A $15.2 mlllion
lawsuit has hem filed against GaWa
County' the sheriff's department
and other county olflclals, charging
they are re.iponslble for the death of
a man who was kiUed after a
hlgh·speed car wreck Aug. 1, 1!1!1.
Tile suit was filed last week in
Madlsoo Coonty Common Pleas
Court by Sandra Herman, wife and
administrator for the estate of the
tate Ricky L. Martin.
Martin died In St. Mary's Hospital
lnHuntlneton, W.Va., hours alter an
early-morning collision on Ohio 7 at
Kanauga.
The Gallla-Melgs post of the Ohio

.

GULFPRIDE PREMIUM
. MOTOR OIL
Must purchase 5 Quarts to

$147°0

Ohio-Point

County officials hit with $15.2 ·million lawsuit

:-------s-h_ow_e-rs-:-.•-st-o-rms--'o_r_e_cas_t- : - - - - , Highway projects.. ~-----By The Associated Press
.
Low pressure along the north shore of Lake Erte and a cold front
that was dropping southeast through the northern Great Lakes will
cornblne Into a cold front moving Into northern Ohio by Saturday
evening.
·
A strong high pressure area covers the Atlantic and extendS Inland
over the southeastern states. The high will hlock the front from
moving south, so It will become nearly stationary over northern Ohio
overnight, then he pushed back northeast as a warm front Sunday.
There .will be scattered showers and thunderstorms on both sides
of the front, putting most of the state in theareaofposslbleshowers
Into Sunday. The south to southwest flow of warm and muggy air will
remain over most of Ohio until Monday night or Tuesday.

Home In Gallipolis.
The sheriff's department lrn·
j)ounded Mill's vehicle. Officers of
the Bureau of Criminal Investlga·
lion, London, 0., were scheduled to
join the Investigation late Saturday
afternoon.
The patrol said there were three
passengers in Mills' car at the time
of !he accident. They were Identified
as Carla R. Ingels, 29, Middleport;
Richard G. Ferguson, 29, 56 Mill
Creek Road; and Rick C. Smith, 27,
Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
Ingels and Ferguson were Injured
In the accident, the patrol said, and
Smith was not Injured. Ingels and
Ferguson were taken to .Holzer
Medical Center by theGallfa County
Emergency Medical Service.

31 1913

July 31' 1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

GROUND
BEEF

MIRACLE
WHIP

09

29

'.
•

'

'

'•
•
•
'

r---------,

I
I
I

ARTCARV~D SILADIUM"

NOW
ONLY

I-

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I

I
I
I
wrTH
THIS AD. I
super
on. your Arocarved I
Every nng is
I
This
ArtCarvect
I
I
cu_ _
I
I
I

HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS

Bring this ad 10 get
savings
Silaclium• Class ring.
backed by the
ArtCarved Full LIIMim. wamnty.
ollar expires
November 30, 1983 and is to be used only for the
pyrchase of
Silaclium• Clus Rings.

I'LUS up 10 1 2 1 - of
,..FAEEI

Enerutt.ng

FPNO&amp;nr

Sunhgl'1!

IOIIJ;I IIi
Design

!1fl0nll

Full NIIN

I.Jf1del 11001 I

tWne

EngtltY!I'IQ

~RT((1~£Q.:

-

'.!Pa-/ gtU'JN
=--=~=
SALE BEGINS AUGUST 1, 1983 8'73

L·--CIIIollngo."' .

I
JI

J-0000
,

- - -MSJOTMIAD---

soc OFF LABEL
49 OZ. BOX

49

PORK
CHOPS

89

::

':••

1:

'•

.,'·

··.·.:.••

.,

,.
I 0

••

•:••
'•
••
'·

�31, 1983

The Sunday

W.Va.

J.:'rogram takes teachers froin :c lassroom
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Some

Colwn!Jus.area merchants !In! gtv.

1111 scOOolteachers the business anil the teachers appear to be

:::

: .:;

'

Plea to be .entered
in
. . bad check.citation
•

·:
•.

•, ,•

....

..

.•

• •

..

·GALLIPOLIS - Six counts of
tnsufflctent fUnds were continued
Friday In GalllpolisMun!clpal Court
t 1 :SUOW the ·defendant to enter a

"'"'·

Salutes and rewards participants In the

34t~

Impressed.
Twenty teachers have taken part
In a special Teachers·ln·theWorkplace program this summer,

Richard E. Van Gundy, Rt. 2,
GaUipoUs, wW taceJudgeJamesA.
Bennett again Wednesday. Bennett
pli\ced him on $1,1XXJ recognlzance
bond.
Van Gundy Is charged with
haying · wr!ttep bad checks to
s8yeral Gallipolis businesses beiWeen AprU and May of this year.
a.Rrges were brought against hlm
bYJ:IIY pollee.
). disorderly conduct charge
aa&amp;tnstGary ~bert. Rt.1, Crown
a~. was also continued unw
W,.,....,ay. Mark T. Porter, 21,
Ejlreka Star Route. entered a not
guilty plea to a charge of no valid
optrator'sllcenseandwasplacedon
$:1;~ recognizance bond. A pretrial
~ been set tor Aug. 8.

Annual Gallla ·county Junior Fair

as a broad based and new approach to incentive awards, and in addition to regular
premiums and ribbons, Central Trust wiJJ present to winners in nearly 100 designated
&lt;:_ategories of non-livestock projects and small animals:

1st Place ......... .........: $15.00
2nd Place ................. $10.00
3rd Place................... $5.00
in recognition of abe Gallia County youlh who put forth bani work and long hours of

:,

li'leadlng not guUty to an assured
clear distance charge was Roger D.
Ajllworth, 18, Rt. 4, Gallipolis. His
trllills scheduled fnr Aug. 17.
L. Rees, 23, Rio Grande.
cbil1!ed with DWI, was lined $.}X),

effort in the planning and development of lheir exhibits. ·

sentenced to three days lnjaU ,glven
a 60-day driver's license suspension
and was placed on. 18 months
probation. A squealing tires charge
aga!nstReeswasdroppedwhenhe

which Is designed to educate the
teachers In what It takes to run a
success!ul · business !n today's

world.
Barbara Fischer, a teacher at
Jones Middle School In suburban
Upper Arlington, said she took 50
pages of notes ln her first tour days
as a management trainee with Rax
Roast Bee! Restaurants,
"I never would have guessed
there's so much Information," said
Ms. Fischer. "There's so much you
have to retain."
She and Barbara Courtright did
''everything from picking up gar-

!rench fries." Sometimes they were
ondutyat5:30a.m.Othertlmestbey
were there tor the store's 11 p.m.
closing.
The program 1s an attempt to
·bring business and education cl011er
; together tor the be"eflt of both, saki
Mary McDorw.lt'. tl)Qcher development coordinator ' 1 Upper Arllllg·
ton City Schools ano amemberofthe
committee · that . crea ted the
program.
Ms. Fischer, Ms. Courtright and
eight other. Upper Arlington
teachers were chooen by tottery
trom20whoappUed.

2

1 SALE

ON SELECT GROUP OF SPRING &amp; SUMMER SHOES

Buy one pair of shoes at the regular price, and pt
the second pair of equal or lesser value
\!RING A Flti£NO}

FREE!

iRING YOUR MOM]

:11111 Second :\vt' .
tafa.l'&lt;'lle ~hill
llalli1101is, 0.

pleaded totheDWI charge.
r~bage~~to~takln~~g~!n~ve~n~to~ry~to~coo~klng~-----------J._--------------------In traffic cases, Homer A. Baker, 92, Eureka Star Route, forfeited $25
bond tor !allure to use caution when
leaving a vehicle; Stephen M.
Forgey, 19, VInton, forfeited s;J!i
bond to~ no eye protection; Ruth
Beller, 62, Crown City, and Kevin);:.
Tllomas, 26, Norton, each forf(\lted
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Ouo 111m_,.,.. ' 1&lt;1 n, ... ••~ -~~
Ralph F. Shuster, 24·, 153Texas Rd.,
lotiCI oWim
011
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forfeited $40 bond tor !allure to
chill dul lo .,,
..••n ••uon '
1 A1o1
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register; Brenda K. Johnson, 31, Rt.
loo ,........
...
01 '1110011
. . IWMy' qtJIIIIOIJI IU ...
II hi
4, Gallipolis, forfeited $40 bond tor
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olo!M ~olin"' PIICI
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WOllam E. Ambrose, 33, Fort
Wayne, Ind., $36; Paul A. Dye, 52,
arctevllle, $38; Je!!rey s. King, 20,
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Ohie&gt;-Point

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W.Va.

Despite disease, Niven valiant to end
before he died was to give the
thumbs-up sign."
A8!i0Ciated Press Writer
The charm, wit and quiet courage
CHATEA!J p-OEX. Switzerland
of Niven's screen characters made
(AP) - Plucky tn the end, David
Niven gave the thumbs-up sign just hlm one of HollywOOd's most
before he died at his chalet from a enduring leading men. Friends said
rare muscle disease that had wasted It was a reflection of his real
.
his body fdr more than a year, his personality.
The
body
remained
at
the
chalet
nephew sald.
Friends, fellow movie slars and and funeral arrangements will be
fans were stunned and saddened by announced Monday, a family source
the Friday death of the Oscar- said.
Niven had suffered for more than
winning actnr who symbolized the
.perfect English gentleman. He was a year from amyotrophic la~ral
73.
sclerosis, a neuro-muscular ailment
"My uncle died peacefully and also known as Lou Gehrig's disease,
without pain," Swecllsh nephew named after the baseball star who
also succumbed to It. The disease
Michael Wrangdah tn!d reporters.
'"Hts last gesture a few minutes crippled Niven and caused a drastic
loss of weight.
Ironically, the nephew said,
Niven's health had shown signs of
Improvement alter he arrived in
ChateauD'Oexfromhismalnhome
at Cap Ferra!, in southern France.
"He had been very cheerful and
POMEROY -The Meigs County
happy. He had put on some weight,"
Sheriff's Department said two cars
Wrangdah said.
reported stolen in the past month
Among the first tnreact tn Niven's
have been recovered by the
death
was British director Bryan
department.
Forbes,
who said: "We tthought the
The first wa,s a car stolen in Lake
near but not as close as
end
was
Worth, Fla. on July 1.. It was .
this."
recovered Saturday at 4: 36 a.m.
Trim, dashing and with a pencilwith one arrest by Deputy Paul
thin
mustache, Scots-born Niven
Rowe.
According to the report, Rowe
was on patrol and noticed a 1980
Chevrolet, bearingFlorldareglstration, with three occupants. Running ·
the registratiOn number through the
National Criminal Information Center, Rowe discovered that the
vehicle had been stolen from a car
rental in Lake Worth.
The car was stopped on Ohio 7
north of Pomeroy, and three
juveniles - two male and one
female - frnm Richmond, Ky.,
were taken into custody.
•Two of the juveniles were
released tn their parents, and the
driver, a 17-year-old male, was
retained to be turned over to Florida
officials, who indicated come to
Pomeroy to take him to Florida.
The driver was held in the juvenile
section of the Gallla County Jall.
JuvenUe space in the Meigs jail is
occupied.
The second recovered automobile
is a 1979 Pont lac Trans-Am reported
stolen from the Meigs Mine 1
parking lot on Wednesday.
The car was found burned on the
beltllne off County Rd. 2 in Salem
Township, with the trunk lid
misSing.
Owner of this vehicle is John W.
Blackburn, WllkesvUle, and investigation into the theft is continuing.
In other matlers, the sheriff's
department is investigating the
_buritlng of a barn on Thursday near
Snowville. The barn, reportedly
covered by insurance, is owned by
Dave Wandling. The Albany Fire
Department responded to blaze.
Seyeral juveniles were allegedly
seen at the barn shortly before the
lire broke out.
Also, Leo Taylor, Rt. 1, Racine;
reports that a bull calf he owns has
been missing since July 21. Anyone
seeing the an !malls asked to contact
Taylor or the sheriff's office.
ByTHO~.W.NETTER

• reporl
Deput Ies
aUtOS recovered

.

'

broke into films after ameetlngwlth
movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn. He
had game to to America in the early
19:»; and worked as a waiter,llquor
salesman and partner in a pony
racing company.

Study~ fi~atbelt
GALLIPOLLS - Seven persons
have died in six fatal accidents this
year in Gallia and Meigs counties
and none of the peopl~ killed were
wearing salety belts, according to
statistics released by the GalliaMelgs post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
Six people were killed in five
accidents in Meigs County and one
person was killed in Gallla County.
The patrol reported statistics
show a properly fastened safety belt
can improve a )iersons chances of
survival six hundred percent lf he or
she were involved in a traffic crash.
The patrol reported three of the·
fatal accidents occurred between
9: 10 p,m. and 9: 55 p.m., which
indicates late evenings are a
particularly dangerous time of the
day tD be driving in this area.
Four of the six fatal accidents

Goldwyn signed hlm for $QJ a
week. Niven's first movle parts, as
an extra, were registered by the
central casting bureau as "English
type No. :ml."

Critne ·prevention - involvement
By LEE ANN WELCH
'l1Jnes.Sentlne staff

usage down
involved drlnklng drivers. The
average test of the four drivers of
blOOd alcohol tests was .18 percent.
One driver had a blOOd alcohol test
of .26 percent. Ages of the people
killed in the fatal adcldents were 3,
22, 23, 24, 28, 29 and 57. Traffic
accidents are the leading cause of
death among all Ohioans under 45
years of age.
Five of the fatal accidents were
caused by vehicles going left of
center and the other fatality was the
result of a vehicle driving off the
roadway.
The patrol also reported 229
drinking drivers have been arrested
in l!I&amp;J by officers astgned to the
Gallla-Meigs patrol post.
"The Ohio State Highway patrol
has made a commltment tQ rid
Ohio's highways of the drinking
driver," said Lt. G.D. Henderson,
posi commander.

Imagine thls ...you're sitting atborne in the late evening hours with
your family . Outside, you hear
something strange, you aren't
certain what It is, so you get up to
take a look ou\Side.
Peering out the window, you ·see
So!neone breaking into a neighbor's
car.
Are you going to call the police?
Maybe. "If they won't take down
my name," yousaytnyourself. You
don't want to get involved, because
maybe the crirhinal will find out you ·
called the pollee, and come after
your car, or home or other property.
Getting lrivolved is the key to
crime prevention, according to
Deputy Rick Wiseman of the Gallta
County Sheriffs Department.
Wiseman has been trying lor the
past few months to get GaUia
countlans involved with effective
crime prevention.
"We (law enforcement agencies)
would rather prevent the crime
from happening, than having to
Investigate It after the · fact,"
Wiseman said.
Nipping crime in the bud, so to
speak, is the whole Idea behind the
crime prevention programs nationwide, and Gallla County is no
exception.
The Gallipolis city pollee department has become active with a
crime preventiOn unit in operation
for the last three months, according
to Patrolman Keith EWott, and
much to his dismay, the public is not
responding.
"It's a tree service to benefit the
pUblic," EWott said. "A crime
prevention program will not work
untO the public gets involved."
One group of people do care and
are gettlng involved in a major
effort, Wiseman said.
Stopping the crime before It
happens takes a community wide
effort, and residents in the Spring
Valley area of the county have
formed a NeighborhOOd Watch
program, and have been meeting
for two months, he added.
In theclty,accordingtoElllott, the
need for a neighborhOOd watch is not
as great as It is out in the county. Ill
Gaillpolis, he said, there is adequate
manpower to keep a check on the
residential and business area.
"If we get a call," he sald, "we
have the men to be therein justa few
minutes.
Programs being Implemented
within the Gallipolis pollee depart·
ment for crime prevention Include

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360 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
PH. 446-0699

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property Identification, public lee·
ture, house checks during family
vacations and home security checkUs!, helping homeowners find wea·
knesses in their home securlty.
Besides the neighborhood watch,
other programs utlllzed by Sheriff
James M. Montgnmery's department are CB patrol, which is much
like neighborhood watch; Operation
ID, which marks valuables with a
specially coded nwnber .that!s!Ued;
Night Hawk, an alarm system
allowing law enforcement to get a
signal in the event of trouble of
varying natures, InclUding fire and
medical alert; Hpme Survey, in
which an offlcer will check out your
home and help you secure lt from
intruders, and lastly, a speaker's
bureau.
The most revolutionary of these
systems, Wiseman said, Is the Night
Hawk. It entails an electronic
monitering device that is connected
to the Sheriff's radio dispatch.
The only cost to the homeowner is
that of the device, Wiseman said,
and no further fee is Imposed. The
electronic monitor "bug" costs
approximately $1m, and after that,
the only thing needed is a telephone
line. The bug comes from a securtty
company, he added, and is not
purchased through the sheriff's
department.
This system, Wiseman said, can
also be used to activate assistance to
a fire or medical emergency.
In the case of a medic alert
system, the unlt Is worn by the
individual as a bracelet or belt, and
once activated, communlcation to
help is begun. He stressed the
dispatcher cannot talk to the person
in trouble, but they can hear you .
and send the nearest law enforcement officer or paramecllc unit.
"This system works," Wiseman
sald. "We've had two of our own (in
thesherlffsdepartment) and tested
lt.
''We've had the capabUity for this
(Night Hawk) system for two
years," he added, noting it Is not
being used in the area.
The Night Hawk Is a remote
system, whereas the other prograrns: Wiseman emphasized, need
Involvement from the community.
"People1 feel 'It can't happen
here,' but It can, and does,"
Wiseman said. "People need to
realize that.
"I want people to wake up and
realize we live in an age where you
don't ·go to bed at night with the door
unlocked and the window open,"
Elliott said ..
"Crtme prevention can be a

deterent to many lhlngs," Wiseman
added. " It can prevent kidnapping,
assault, burglery and even murder .
'.'But people have to get involved
for It to work," he said.
To get involved, there must be
tll!St and understanding between
the community and the law enforCement agencies.
This fall, Wiseman said, there will
be a major effort to "teach the
children" of the area schools in a
number of law enforcement related
areas.
One children's crime prevention
program used In a number of other
areas, and being developed and
prepared here, is Child Print. In lt,
children elementary school age and
smaller are fingerprinted, and a
record of the prints given to the
parents in case the child Is lost or

kidnapped.
Crime prevention progarns are
proven nationwide to be a major
deterent to criminals, Wiseman
said.
"If a program is successful," EWott
said, "itcandramattcallycutcrtme,
but people have to get involved.''
Involvement Is the key to crtme
prevention, both men agreed.
Once the people of a community
get Involved with crtme prevention,
the crlmlnal element doesn't know
who is watching and will call the
pollee.
Involvement, Wiseman said, t8
something which Is growing, not
only ln the state of Ohio, but
nationwide. People are fighting
back, protecting their community
and residents.

Wltb help of a C.U from a witness, a breaking and entering was
avoided tn this illwtratlon created for the Times-SentineL Making lhe
"arrest" were Sheriff's Deputy Rick Wiseman and clvOlan employee
George Woodyard. For crime prevenllon to be eHectlve, the public must
take an aclive part.

Sheriff James M. Montgomery oblalned the .help of a
rdhl!d man IJirougb the Grea~
Thwmbp~.Here,~

Woodyard takes lnlonnalloa for
0pera11oa m. .Be 1s YlsltiD&amp;'
residences and
111111'11tng propody wllh specially
coded nwnbers.

lw••-.

Slate meeting
RACINE -Racine Village Council will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
village hall.
The third reading of the National
Flood Insurance ordinance will be
held, and residents are invited to
attend.

Investigate accident

.

'

POMEROY - Pomeroy pollee
reported a .two-rnr collision occurred at 8:53p.m. Friday on West
Main Street near Adolph's Dalry
' Valley.
P.F. Justis, Racine, was reportedly driving west on Main when an
eastbound car driven by Dianne
Rnach. Mason, a!:tempted to turn
left into the Dairy Valley parking lot
and colllded with the Justis auto.
Moderate damage was caused to
both vehicles, and no one was cited
· for the accident.

MarldDg lll'tlckw Is ·an Imporpart of
preveralon,
and msen- and Woodyard
111111'11 a te1ev1s1oo at a Galllpolllll
""*'-. So far. Wileman said,
over :100 people have applied lor .~
IUIIbers on tlldr vaJ"abfes

tant

Teaching children · vital to effeaive ·program

Veterans Memorial
. Admitted- Ann Cook, Pomeroy;
Robert D€emer. Syracuse; Robert
Hysell, Pomeroy; Lois CorneD,
Pomeroy; Ruth Lewis, Syracuse.
Discharged - Ryan Petrie,
Patricia Smallwood, Anna Powers,
Charles Beegle, Larry BaUey,
Juanita Norman, Leota Cooper.

Boanl to meet
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
Board of Education will hold a
special meeting Tuesday at7p.m. at
the junior ,high school central
building, to discuss personnel
matlers.

Trustees meeting
' Letart Town·
LEI'ARTFAlJ.Sship tnJBtees will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at Letart F'alls. ,

crme

WE ALSO HAVE A SElECI10N OF WORK CARS
ON OUR LOT • MORE CARS &amp; TRUCKS

Public educatiOn Is. the first step in Crtme Prevention, according to
Dan Gilmore of the state program, Operation Crime Alert,
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Open MondaJ thru FridaJ 8 a.m. • 8 p.m.,
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headquartered In Columbus.
"When you begin to educate the public," he sald, "they become
aware of pollee. roleS and crtme reporting." He added that people
, who dldn'l previously report a crime will begin to do so.
.
Gibnore, like local law enforcement offlcers in the Gallipq!ls
· : Pollee Department and GaWa County Sherltf s Department,
• · believes that to .have a successful program, the people must
. - understand the role of the olflcer and get Involved.
• Tbere are more Cl'ime prevention programs In the state of Ohio
:: than ever, Gilmore saki, but theycan'toperatewithoutlnvolvement.
·
'!be pOOnomellen of crime prevention occurs when' the program is
· lint Initiated In an area, he said. Sometimes, that can start when
people hear of another town that has had a successful program, such
as the 0111!11111 Columbus, Findlay and Mentor.
1be pt'OIIIIIl bi Meator, a Cleveland auburb, has been exliemely
succesatul, .Gilmore said, with a 7Al percent reduction In crime over ·
the last tbree yean. Al!OOugh it cannot be 1\fu'lbuted comjlletely to
the crime PM'altloo PIOIII&amp;m. a good deal of It can, he added.
More and more, people are getting Involved statewide, because
lhef are ccrnlng to the realization that the public must take smne.
O'IIPI'Jb!U!y to proled IOCiety.
I

"We can't have one pollee olflcer lor each person," Gllmore said.
Therefore, law enforcement must begin to educate the public that
they have to take some of the responslbWty themselves.
A good start on education and involvement is in the public school
system, Gllnnore said.
"We are an tnnuenced by our chUdren," he said, adding that
parents·get Involved with what goes on In theschoois. That Is thetlme
and place to get the chlldren educated to the role and function of the
law -enforcement o!llcer.
Deputy Rick ·wiseman of the Sheriffs Department said that the
parents often,will turn a child ag'alnst the pollee or make them afraid
of the olncer in uniform.
"It really gripes me to see some parent point at me and tell their
child 'If yru don't do such and such, that poUceman willlockyoo up! "
That, Wiseman said Is part of the reason people won't get involved,
they don't trust the poUce.
,
"Kids need to know that If they're in trouble, they can approach
any officer in uniform for help," he sald. Going to the schools, he
added, will help let the children know the pollee officer is there to
help.
. In the schools, Gilmore said, the officer can introduce the children
to the functlcll of the pollee and dlscu.ss their attitudes toward Cl'lme.
'"l'helr mtnds are more open and 1ecept!ve (at a young age) to

J·
these things, he added.
If they learn at an early age to trust the pollee. that law
enforcement agencies are not always "out to get them," when they
grow older, they· will most likely take an active part ln crime
prevention.
AU u takes is a phone call and a tragedy could be prevented, local
police officers agree . Before that happens, the Individual must
decide whether tn get involved or not.
Many communities have formed Neighborhood and Block
Watches, Gllmore sald, !lnd statistics are showing a considerable
drop In crime rates around the state, partly attributed tn the
progr!U'(IS.
.
According to the FBI's Uniform Crime Report, over 50 percent of
residential burglery shows no forced entry. This would lead you tD
the conclusion entry was obtained by an open or unlocked door or
window, Gilmore said.
Most pollee departments will visit a home for a !rf"' security
check, and In Gallta County, both the city and county departments
will come out and help homeowners. find their weaknesses.
''There Is no fooi·Prwl method to prevent crime," Gilmore said,
but crime prevention programs increase the odds in the favor of the
Individual.

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the Rev. Jack F'arSJJ~S.
The bride Is the daugbter of Mr.
and Mrs. David W. Smith, Mason,
and the groom Is the son of Mr. and
: Mrs. Donald w. Leach, Cheslllre.
Two seven-branch candelabra
and tloral arrangenents decorated
the altar. Music was provided by

Carol Colmen.
Escorted to the altar by her
' father, the bride wore a gown of
white lace over satin fashioned with
a high neckline with the yoke edged
In lace. The A·llne skirt had a ruffle
around the bottom and the gown
Oowed Into a chapel iraln.
The bride's three tlered ven of
Uluslon fell from a bandeau. Her
bouquet was made of daisies and
lavender . carnations mixed with
rosebuds with the rtbbon5 tied In
lover's knots.
Sabrina Clark was the maid of
honor and wore a lavender lace
· gown with a velvet jacked trimmed

Pf 1 er ·
Special

SpecilJl

USDA CHOICE

with lace. She wore baby-breath In
her hair and can1ed a lace fan with
lavender carnations.
Flower girl was Missy Smith,
COUSin of the bride. She wore a
lavender and White chltfon dress
trtnuned In lace wlth a matching
hat. She carried a basketoflavender
clirnatkms and wore a corsage of
lavender carnations and dalsles .
Mike Bowles of Pomeroy was the
best man.
A recepton was held In the church
social room. The three tiered cake
WIIS decorated with lavendar rosebuds topped with the traditional
miniature bride and groom. It was
baked by the groom's mother.
Marsha Browning, sister of the
groom, registered the guests.
'The bride Is a graduate of
Wahama Hlgh School and Is
employed at Crow' s Steak House.
Leach is a 198lgraduateofKyger
Creel&lt; Hlgh School and ls employed
at Martins Trucking In GaWpolls.
Among the out-of-county guests
attending were Junior Veith, Columbus, and Hetty Hampshire,
Mlms,Fla.
'The couple resides at R&amp;te 1,
Stmy' s JWn Road, Cbeshlre.

Mason, W. Va., and John W. Leach
· of Route 1, Cheshire, exchangP.d
wedding VOWS In · a candlellght
double-rlng ceremony at the CIJe.
$hire Baptist Church on May 21. The

YOUR FOOD QQLLAR5

GALLIPOLIS
PH

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S

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

l8.

Pieaser
SpecUJL

Sprid

PICK OF · ~~
THE CHICKEN2 8=s

99¢

LB.

Lb.

Dart
Brand
Bacon

BOa EVANS
Rfi., Hot. or S.

Sausage

12 oz.
PKG.

$

68

LB. ROLL
STOlE sucm

PES04KE

WIENERS

=---, Once-A-Year

Savings on
Singer•

MaChines

Deluxe FrM-Arm

Mllc11lne Model8136
14 built·in stitches • Sol id state
speed control mainta ins an even

'

POLISH SAUSAGE

Lh.

·,

s

THE FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy, OH.

S'erving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

ln charge of flower arrangements was Sharon Tackett of
Gallipolis and the cake was baked
and decorated by MarUyn Skid·
more of Gallipolis.
After a trip to St. PeterSburg,
Fla., the couple will reside at 10
Berger Ave., Gallipolis.

.-----------1

, leathir

_

..

"'*'
~'

"Perm Special
(FOR AUflUST)

George Kovach of Ra-

White

Reg. '40.00 to $45.00
Perm Special

Try the latest in sleeping comfort. Fantastic Water Beds. Choose.
from a number of beds from Sunnylist styles of California
Sunshine starting at •199.
Free Flow or 12, 16, 21 Baffles and Fiber
Accessories and Recliners

$2500 to S9()00 with cut.

FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP
. Open 6 Days A Week From 10 A.M. to 9 P.M.

For an appt. call 446· 7090
or
walk in.

catch pudding.

Cen~, Mulberry He!ahts, Porne·roy, Invile!; all SEI1lor ptlzena of the
countytotakepartlnactMtlesatthe
center, which ls open Monday
through Friday !rom 8: 30 a.m. to
4:30p.m.

NEW

Bananas
FRESH SOUTHERN

The Meigs CoUnty Senior Citizens

u.s. 10. 1·

GOLDEN
RIPE

~~r;.$2399 .

Mr. and Mrs. John Leach

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey David Saunders

Btulpt
Plauer
~

SpecilJl .·

SAVE S4QOO

PRODUCTS

·Meigs Senior activities

SpecilJl

Machine Model5&amp;25

SINGER

phael's Hair Remedies is
having a Perm Special.

99'

Budget'
Pleaser

Fre.Arm

speed over heavy seams • Bulh-tn
buttonholer

IN~T

CHE£SE

SUPERIOR

SALE

SEASON

· GALLIPOLIS - Roy and Chris·
tlne Wray of GaWpolis announce
the marriage of their daughter.
Tresha Leigh to Jeffrey David
Saunders, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Saunders of Gallipolis.
The wedding took place Sunday,
May 22, at Centenary United
Methodist Church, with the Rev .
Pearl Casto performing the
ceremony.
Tom Saunders, brother of the
groom, was best man.
Barbie Wray, slser of tbe bride,
was mald o1 honor.'
Brent Adkins and Matt Stepp,
both of Gallipolis, were ushers.
Jeremy Skidmore was the
rlngbearer.
Lorrte and Krtscy Saunders,
sisters of the groom, registered
guests.
Music was provided by Donna
McGuire of Gallipolis.

SUPERIOR'S

57

The

Miss Wray, Jeffrey Saunders
trade vows in Centenary church .

~lopa

s,.,
Pleaur

Budget

Tavern
Ham

.

Debbie Smith, John Leach ·wed

to lb~

'We Resent the

'

31 1983

ThuJ:Sday.. (plcnlc) grWed ham·

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!!

burgers and welners, macaroni
salad, relish plate, potato chips,

watennelon, cupcakes, homemade

lee cream.

Scbellule of activities for the week
of August 1·51s:
. Monday--Physical Fltness, ll: 30;
Square Dance, 1-3.
•
·
Tuesday.. Physlcal Fitness,
11: 30; OlofUS, 1-2.
•
' .
. Wednel!day-socJal ~rtty 9::J).
noon; Physical Fitness, .11: 30;
Blngol-2.
Thursday-CandleWicklng class,

Frlday~lub

sandwich, bakeQ
beans, tossed salad, apple cobbler.
· Choice of coffee, milk, and tea Is
available dally.

DOWNTOWN

HOOVERn

:' ~~~ ll' I , l"
'- l

GALLIPOUS

I

-'

. Quik-

.----------_J_---------i

ROME BEAUTY

PEACHES

1

10. .

Budgei

Plenser

Budget
Pleaser

Pleoser

SpecilJI

Speool

SpecilJl

Budget

Corn
m~l

SLB.
BAG

French, Italian,

conow£LLE

Toilet
TISSue. • ROll .

o·

BTL

'AK

Budget

Budget

Pleaser

Pkoser

·~~

SpecilJI

Specw

.s,.w

Salad
Dressing

Vitamin D.
Milk GALLON
PLASTIC

$
JAR

ALL VEGETABLE

SCO OIL

48 oz.

Bottle

$219
·-

Paper
Towels

R. C. DECAF.

JUMBO ROll

8-i6 Oz.

ASHER SANDIWQt MATE Pkg.

Half
Gallon

CAN# RRE

IMIT. CHEESE SLICES

MliY

$ 19

PHK.A. BRAND

BROUGHTON'S
PREM. QUALITY

Ice
Cream

HALF GAllON

19

DISH UOUID
1110 LAUNIIIY

DETERGENT

CREAM CHEESE

440z.
Box

Budget P'-er ':SJl)eC&amp;a&amp;

Shasta
Soft •
Drinks

$ 69
...

,,

Oxydol
I.Qndry
Detereent

'.

again provide a tend for senior
citizens durlni llie Meigs . fair,
August . 16 through August ~.
Tlcckets for Sen lor Citizens' Day at
the fair, Thursday, August 18, are
available at lhfl center for $1.50.
Handmade articles to be sold at the
county fair tent must beat the center
by August5.
The center's vans wUl be fur·
nlshed for anyone wishing to attend
the Ohio Slate Fair Buckeye H1lls
Area Agency on Aging Day,
Wednesday, August 10. Cait wUl be
$8. transportation. and fair admls·
slon tncluded. Resl!rvatlons should
be made Immediately. Tickets may
be purchased at the center tor other
days ot the ,fair, at a cost of $2 for
those OOyears old and over.
The Senior Nutrtilon program
· serves a hot meal each day at noon.
Resl!rvatlons may be made · by
phoning 992-2161 before 9 a.m. the
day of the reservation.
MenufortheweekofAugust1-5ls:
Monday..pork steak, mashed potatoes, cooked cal!l!qle, plums.
, TIM!Jday-beef barbeque, oven·
lrled potatoes, cole slaw, and mixed

. fndt.

Wem-lay-chlckenandoondles,
peaa, three teln Iliad, butun-

..

, .r

,

'

Now Get a FREE Shake with any Big Sand~ich.
That's right. Take your choice of any big sandwich on the
menu. And we'll'give you one of our NEW Great Shakes ...
FREE . Richer, creamier. with real old-fa shioned ice cream
parlor flavor. Now, get yours FREE. Delicious reasons to
Taste the Rax Experience:·
,.

•

·'

The Hoover Quik.:.Broom .... Lightweight Portable,
Convenient..... Cieans on all Types of surfaces.....
Rugs, bare floors, Even furn.i~.~.tu~re:.;:;.;.!!;.....______

'All Hoover Cleaners
On Sale!
HOOVER .
Upright with
Headlight

by calllng.!m-2161.
'The Meigs County Fair BoatdwW

8

SCOT

R. C. 100

ROYAL CREST

BUTTERMILK

"

R. C. COLA
DIET RITE

ROYAL CREST
EN IZED

MIRACLE WHIP

The Senior Nutrition Program
has scheduled a picnic on the lawn
below the old children's home for
Thursday. In caseofraln, theplcnlc
wUl be heldtnsldethecenter. Games
,wtll be conducted• before dinner,
which wtll begin at U a.m. The
Senior NUtrition Prollram wW
furnish all the food, so those
Interested are urp!d to make
reservations by Monday In order
that enough wUl be prepared.
Lunches are paid for on donation
bast.. Reservations may be made

SpecUJ

Bacon &amp;Tomato 16 ~
Creamy Buttermilk
~

~N

1-3.

PL. ret

Kraft
Dressings

MAXWELL HOUSE
Reg., Drip,
ADC or E. Perk
3LB.

MARTHA WHITE
PLAIN OR SR

Friday-Nutrition EdUcation, 11;
Physical Fitness, 11: 30; Bowllng,

BMc~pe ·

Full-time
edge cleaning
Perfect for quick pick·
ups! Large disposable
biOI Lightweight! Com binetion nozzle for
carpets end floors.

REG. '124.95
SALE

REG. $49.95

·sAVE

·$1QOO

' HOOVER

FREE

SAVE

SHAKE

PORTAPOWER'"VACUUIY ·

REG. '89.95
SAVE
$20.00

$35.00
•16 Quart

SALE

Diopo18ble Beg

•All Steel AgitatOf

··-F~;;...,U;.;;.lime-ln.;;.gE-dge_ _ _.. _
t. ~ •
} ' I

•

$6 995
• 3-way filtered elr system
• Eaay to empty dust bag

• Compline with toola and
axtralont'l cord

I

1503 Eastern Avenue
.Glll~lis, Ohio
,.

• Compact - Portable - Llghtwelghtl11% "long,&amp;" wide.
10ll" high
• Atl on a stair trod
• Full lite •nlster power

__,

'

•

(TWO LOCATIONS)

N. 2nd Ave.

/842 Second Ave.

Middleport, Ohio
,,

Gallipois, ~hio

�:~~~~·~B~4~n.~~~~~y~T~ime~~~~~n~~ne~l================~~~-~~~~~~~r~~~~·~~pm~~~~~l~li~po~h~·,,~Oh~i~o;·~~~·~n~t~Phc~~~~m~,~W~.~V~a~.==~==============~==~========~J~~~3~1~,~1913~,~·­

Beat of the Bend

Marshall chamber music scheduled on radio

MHS reunion success
By BOB HOEFUCH

a lot of effort and
the peaof Long Bot·
w1U be dedi·
lcattng their new
mun l t y
Ibuilding at 2 p.m .
Invite you to join
them
the ceremonies which wiU
feature severa l speakers and re- ·
!reslunents will be served during a
concluding social hour.

J . M. Gaul Is .ISing crutches to get
around his Flatwoods Road home
atrer quite an onleal.
J . M. feU while on a fiShing trtp to
Canada and by the time he back
home a knee had swollen badly. It
was a trip to the emergency room at
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg
and this resulted In a considerable.
amount of surgery. ·
However. he Is home now and
doing well except for the inconvenIence ~d gettlng used to navigating
on crutches .

ce~~~TO'~Cb~~~i1o," Exa-

can be secured by contacting Edie
""""" Bradbu Roa
King • """"'
ry
d, Mid·
dleport • or Unda Faulk a t,.....,
~u
mon
·
Ave ·• Po-, _, v,. There' s a $2 charge
for anyone
'
want•~N
._ one of the
remaining copies.

festival of chamber music at
Marshall University Ills! J une, wtU
be a lred.over West V''""'~ia PubUc
uo;u•
Radio Saturday, Aug. 20 atlO a .m.
and Sunday, Aug. :!8, at noon.

Speaking of reunions, the 1979
class of E astern High would like to
·~ •··
Org"'""'
sueh an event for th e
summer of 1984. All grads Inter·
ested are asked to contact Cindy
Pitzer at 949-21»l3 or Karen Probert
a t 9854235. The two would like you

Arranged by Scott Borden, Cultu·
ral Affairs Producer for West
Vlrgni.a Public Radio, " HighUghs of
Cha mberflO" will fea ture the Cha·
rleston Strlng Quartet performng
"Strlilg Quartet No. 1 (1896) .. by
Charles Ives (1874-1954). whlch was
presented at the June 7Cha mber/ 10

to get
your leet
wetpick
by helping with
the
planning
so do
up the phone
if you feel that old acquaintence
should npt be forgotten.

program.
Also to be aired are works from

The mail brings such interesting
things such as a good-sized letter

from Lucille Leifheit Potratz who Is
temporarily living at Ismallia,
E gypt along with her huSband E rv,
who Is employed there.
· When the couple first got to
Egypt , Erv's work schedUle was 12
hours a day. IS€Ven days a week but
it's now down to eight hours a day
with a day &lt;Jf! so the couple have
been able to take In the local sights
ot course, lncludr the
which,
Edie King and Linda F aulk
Pyrami~
and the Sphinx.
worked like Trojans pulling off the
I can assure yoo In spite of some
reunion of the Meigs Hlgh School of
of the unusual things Lucille and
1973.
However, the event turned out Erv are going through In adjusting
beaut!tuUy with 104 persons a ttend· to life in EIIYPI, Lucille has not lost
ing, Tilere was a lot of enthusiasm her sense ot humor. I quote:
"Last night we looked at an
and the group wW stage ·another
such reunion .In five year~. Eve- apartment hoping to Improve our
ryone had a great time once Edle . lot. But when I opened the kltchen
cabinet and a mouse-sized roach
and Linda got them going . .
Awards were given an went to galloped out with a -small clatter ot
Sherry Lambert Abbott for travel· hooves. tbat kind of turned Lucl off.
lng the most distance to attend, So we didn't take it.
"Here we are tucked about In a
some m miles from Palatka. Fla.,
Casbah
type hotel. It's41!z !Ughtsot
and Leta Floyd Wiseman of Point
stairs
up,
concrete matresses no
Pleasant. W.Va., won the award for
screens,
and
sometimes air ~dl­
having the most children- three.
Door prizes went to Judy Carsey tlonlllg, sometimes water and
MorrtsotEthei, w. va.,andGeorge sometimes electricity. Sometimes
none and-or nothing" .
Arnott, Bidwell.
Best of all--the Potratz letter
Incidentally. Edle and Linda
compiled an eJ&lt;cellen t class .record contained a photo of Lucllie and
book for the occasion--all done In EIV riding camels--.a nd I Uked that.
maroon and gold and containing all
And you know something else I
sorts of tidbits about the clli.ss
Including current addresses. There like-·lt's toc way you keep
are a few of the books left and these smilJn' ........ .

•

1/2 Price
Sale Is
Here!!! ·

Battle in Cambridge
today reeinacts Civil War

ALL

I

Make this YOUR Silver
Investment for the Future!
Every Item Replated at Sale Prices

Instance
S1le

nnues to soar
this 1S an e~&lt;cellent t1me to ,....:•::.:"::::''' :.'__,,.::"::!'•!·:...,.....;•::;'' ::.:..
'
take a~ventag e ot these low. low pr1ces to Teapot ... $102.50 $76.88
have your worn Silve rware. ant1ques and Creamer . .
f&lt;~m1ly heirlooms replated hke new These Clndleslick
p.ec.esare now more valuable than ever and (per i n.)
malo.e wonderful gLtts. AI work HEAVILY Sugar Bowl

53 .95

5.85
58.50

4.38
43.88

SILVEAPLAT EO by our skil led sd...erstrll!hs Trays (per
and Sale pnces apply 10 ALL pteee!l
sq. in.) ..

46

.35

THE CHURCH
ACCORDING TO GOD'S ETERNAL PURPOSE

,
•
Willilm B. Kullm
.
"To the int!nt that now unto the principalities and powe~S in heaven~ places might
be known Ill' the chii'Ch the man~ wisOOm of God, according to the eternal purpose
which he pu~ in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Eph. 3:10, 11).
The Church in tht purpose. of God durinl tht time of the prophtts:
The prophets were lilly men d God. speaking as they were instruc1Ed Ill' the Holy
Ghos1 ~I Pet 1:21). They JYophesial of the righteousness d God which is by the faith. aad
how that Jesus Christ would be offered unto all men who would beliM.!Rm. 3:2l).lnother
wcrds, as Peter puts it, they prophesied of the wace ~he salvalilfl of the ~~ills of the Jews
and Gentiles) lila! should come ~ Pel 1:1(1). The righteo\lSness of God and His salvatiln are
made jl(ISible by Christ. !Milled in the gospel ~Rm. 1:16, 17). The proptm prophe$yilg
of the ~ of God could not iJlore the words that came to them concernif18
ChrS, lis suffering. the ushering ifHII the gospel and the establisl'lnent d the church.
TheY sjd&lt;e of the church being establishal in the last days, i~ the top of the moortain
exallalabove the hils and al nations bing urio t ~ 2:2, 3). Oamel said that I would
never be destroyed not left to other people, but 1wuulil tn.k in pieces and consume Ill
the kin!iiiOJnS, Sl3nding forever (Dan. 2:441.Could God spell&lt; by way of the prophels about
His righteousness, the salvatiorl He would oflef 1o the Jew and Gentile by way ol the &amp;OS!l8,
and not be "'"'" of the church, His hoUse Osa. 2'2 I Tim. 3:15). wherein the ri;riBlus
would live? By al means, the church was in His plafiS during the days of the prop!as.
The Cludl in the purpose ol God Uinc the time of Christ
. · The sou~searching question, "Btt whom sry ye that I am!' (Mtl 16:15), was '
answered Ill' Peter, ''Thou art the Christ the SonofthelivingGod" ~Mit 16:16).Aftl!r Deter's
great confession, Christ replied, "And I 51¥ also unto thee. that thou art Peter,and upon !his
rock I will build. my church" (Mil 16:18). Jesus was promising that upon.this great
confessirn, the church wou~be buil and ~ would be the builder. Christ had come to do
the wit of God (Heh 10:7); theretlre He had lo offer the sacrifrce for sin ~Haggai I 0:10), tr;
His blood take away !he fir.;t covenant (Heb. 10:9; Col2:14), by His~ seal ores1Bblish
the second covenant (Heb. 10:9! and tr; His blood purchase the church of which He was
the buider (Acts 2&amp;.28; Mit 16: 18)). In ltht of the word of God, would rt be possilrletosry
that God, having seJ)t His Son to do His 1M. was aware of His doilg everyttling other !han
buiding His house or church? Christ received His information from God, doilgthat which
Godordainro; therefore. He said, '1lllill buitl my ch.urch." No one halthe~_,s.y
·Whll He said to Peter, "I wilgiveuntolheett-.!keys ofthe kilJP&gt;mof h""'en" (Mtl16:191.
Wlrl? Because no one hal ever had theauthoritytobtrildthis house before!Thedecisirnto
be made in the light ofthi! scriPture is that God had the church in H~ purpose during the
time of chrisfs mission on earth. -Continued

AFTER

For

.

.• .

. --- &amp;tc. o

No charge for straightening*
DURING AUGUST ONLY

40.46

Full 25 Year Warranty on all sliver rapladng.
ASK ABOUT F ULL OETAILS

and S. Ray Karr,
PLWilEioy, weremaniedonApri116
at. the Chester United Methodist
Church.
·
'!be Rev. Richard Thomas per·
forrtted theOO\Iblerlngceremony at
2:00 p.m.. for ·the·daughter of Mr.
'a nd Mrs.Robert Hoffmeister. Rille.
Colo. and the son ot Mr. and Mrs.
Horace Karr, Route 3, Pometoy,
Pre-nuptia\ music was provided
by Jenny Machlr, organist, and
Rolli!" andMaryGUmore, vocalists.
An arch candelabra flanked by
pedlstal lardlnleres ll1led with Ivy
geraniums, wjth an altar arrangement featuring pink and wine silk
flowers decorated the church.
1be bride wore a gown of antique
satin with a sweetheart neckUne

' '

'

SILVER REPLATING
REDUCED 25%

S1nce the value of old Sllverplated nems con

ot Rlfle, Colo.,

~

' REPAIR POUCl'; FRH oen llbiOV-.&amp;. 1MIIf1lilllltflin0 on 111 itlfftl wt litm,llte.

oVer~withchantlUylaceto!onna

victorian collar. The sleeves were
!uU length ,with wide cuffs; and the
lsldrt fell from a natural waistline,
edged In chantUJy lace, and flowed
Into a train.
1be ~veil of illusion was
edged in 1 t!Uy lace and was
attached to a Juliet cap of lace. Her
bouquet was of antique roses and
carnations accented with pink
flowers baby's breath.

.

'

Vickl Short, Pawhuska, Okla.,
sister of the bride, was matron of
hoB;&gt;I'; Brldeematds were Cathy

-.,,.c• .

SALE ENDS AUGUST 31
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

BundiY Momir'le

Wttall_, 10:30

s

·

JOhnston, Spanish F ork, Utah,
sister of the bride; TwUa Buckley,
Pomeroy, sister of the groom , and
Katrina Larson, Houston. Texas.
Krtsta Sargent, Pomeroy, was the
flower girl. ·
. They Wclre floor-length gowns of
jersey · with accoidian pleated
skirts, sweetheart neckUnes with a
net and lace overlay. The malron ot
honor was In burgundy, and the
other attendants In fiost rose. The
flower girl' sdress was floor length In
antique polyester trimmed with
burgundy ribbon. They carrted
nosegays of pink, rose, and cream
colored spring !lowers.
Tom Karr, Pomeroy, was best
man for ·hls brother, and the ushers
were Guy Sargent and Jerry WeU.
Pomeroy, and Bob Slekmann,
·
Columbus.
RJngbearer · was Ryan .Buckley
and the acolyte was Jeremy .
Buckley, both nephews of the

M~D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .
EAR; NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

JOHN A. WADE,

groom.
A .receptiOn was held at Karr's
Cottage lrrunedlately following the
ceremony. Music was provided by
Mr. and Mrs. S. Ray Karr
the Mary Lucas Trio. The tourMrs.KarrtsagraduateofArlzona
tiered cake was topped with satin
Dl~ Karr, a slster·ln-law, Becky
Sta te with a B.S. In sociology.
weddiJig bells and ribbons and Anderson and Sandy Sllrgent at the
Karr, a graduate of Ohio State
surrounded by four smaller cakes.
refreshment table.
with a B.S. In finance Is with Karr
Jane Ann Karr, sister of the
The couple honeymooned at
Construction.
groom, attended the guest register.
H111on Head, S.C., andnowresldeon
~ ~~ the receptbl were .rW...;Ip...;pe_I_Roa_._d_._Pom_e_roy...:;_.-:----- -- - - -- - - - --l

7:00

Tboy'roa....,.

A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN ''

jail r.. 1\aLIIy tho
coJod\d bacll r..'IW to
......,. oad ...tot. Pal a Ulde

•'

ran 111 """Jilt. Pldi.,

·'•'.

·..
·.
,.

Corbin, Brou;n vows solemnized

J

The bride wru; :..ttended by Marty
GALLIPOLIS -The rnarrtage of
Salyer of Gallipolis as maid ot
Sally Ann Corbin and Hollis Eugene
honor and Susie Lindsay of RalneBrown W, •was ,solemnized In a
,vllle,
va. as bridesmaid.
garden wedding at the home ot the
They
wore
matching dresses of
bridl!'s father on Saturday, June 11.
pale
blue
polyester
and silk fashi·
The 00\lbfe.ripg reremony was
'
oned
by
an
ott-lbe-slloulder
rut!le,
perfonned by the Rev. Kenneth '
and
a
gathered
'
rut!le
at
the
V&amp;IICe before ~setting of live fern5
bernllne. They both caiTied an
ud pillk hegontas.
.
arrangement of pastel flowers.
The bride was given In marriage
All the dresses of ~ · wedding
1!Y her parents, Mrs. Ruth AM
party were made by the brtde's
Fellure of GaDlpolls and Lariy
.
Cqlbln'of Gro9e Qty. P~ts of thj! mother,
The besbnan was John Dixon and
lll'!iJm are Mr. and Mrs. Gene
1
the groomsman was Sc&lt;!tt Betz,
also~ GaD!pl&gt;lls.
· 1lbe bride's fuU-tength gown of both ot GalliPOUs· AU tbe miln wore
wb1te bridal satin featured a high snver grey tuxedos accented by a
ud
Sleeves of darker grey satin trim.
A buffet reception was held
cbiprtlllY lace, with hand embroi·
fiillowlng
the wedding. The four·
dl$o!d trim encircling the bemllne.
tiered
wedding
cake was topped
~ back skirt flowed Into a soft
caliledral train. HerveU, which was · with Uve white rosebuds.
couple wlll res1de at 3401
waist length, had a proO!e cap
be\klplece. The veU also had the Partin Place In Grove Qty, Ohio
where thj! grOOm Is employed by N.
hand-embroidered trtm. She
'
a liVe bouquet of pastel Wasserstrom and Son and the llrlde
streamered with satin w1U continue her educatlnn at
Capital University.

'

" M..... tr ...
l ':'

thla-.....w..ta -· ran.

l

1 1:1!11A.M.

Oar alec

frail..-

bqch of .

"PUNPLOWEJS" $5 ..00
Spedally priced!

453 Jackson Pike,. Gallipolis, OH.
'.

REG. $18.99 A PAIR
,.

· 2 PAIR

w.

,;I

a_..

SMELTZER'S R.OWER SHOP

BOYS, STUDENTS,
AND MEN'S

.

'

'

of ''PUJliii.OWDS" today or any
day
opodll pdcl dull
tool

J WEEK ONLY
LEE JEANS

.•

R ....

o.ltw' ·WJEH

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

446-9510

,

.... i'bt."

. Office Hours by Appointment Only

&lt;

.

'

I

'?•

•,
.
••
:" ~
"'.

' j ..

Ew.lng

For additional Information concerning the testlal or workshop
registration call Indian Summer
Festival at (614) 373-lmT or write
P .O. Box 2$;, Marietta, OH. ~.
Workshops scheduled jnclude •
African Art, batik, blaCksmlthJng,
calligt;lphy, candlemaking, com
husk dolls, dovetailing. finger
weavlllg, fractur, natural dyeing, •
oak basketry, reed basketry, spinning, stained glass and wheat
weavlllg.

• W.&amp;.I.~IN()ALAU I 11R
AJ&gt;jAPPQIIIIIMll'll

w.-...,.

undty Evtt~ing

WorsPip I : DO

MARIE'ITA - ChUdren and
adults can now sign up for
workshops sponsored by the indian
Sllllllll!'r Arts and Crafts Festival .
The festival runs Sept. 16, 17 and
18 at the Washlngton County
Fa irgrounds In Martella. In add!·
tlon to workshops , Indian Summer
Festival offers tbe wares of 84
regional artists and craftpersons
juried for high quality and design,
demonstrations of Traditional
Crafts, supervised chUdren's acilvl·
ties and musical entertainment.

•

Buloville Rood • P.O. lax 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4883t
liblt Study 9 :30

Craft workshops set in Marietta

Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Eugene Brown III

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

Page-B-5

Monday thru Friday
9AM t o9PM
Sa turday 9 AM to 5 PM

(For .free Bible Con1spoadence Course Wr~e ...)

'ONLY S1U5 FOil ANY IOMD AH0 W. ADOITtONAL REPAIRS. no 'rnantr hOw ta\ena/YI.
on q ,_.. .. ....,._.,, lndudn ICIIdtrirt 1n11tn hlndlel, ..... knaOI, tit .
fOnly ·~-1ft 101' ~ 111'11 , . ,.. ,

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pameroy-Middlepm-Gallipolis, Ohi-Polnt Plea10nt, W. Va.

POMEROY - Bobbi Hof!meister

· Hodgkin,
the June 8 program featuring Kilt r-:;;;;:;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;~;;;;;-;:;::;;;;-.;;;;;~
bassoon, and James
McWhorter, cello, with "Sonata In
B flat Major K.292'' by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart and "Airs de Ia
Re 1ssan
na
ce Espagnole pour Bas·
soon et Vloloncelle (1978)" by
Daniele Zanettov!tch.
Pianls1 P atricia Barnes ana
Hodgkin's performance .of "Sonata
In G Major, Op. 168" by Camille
Salnt-Saens wlU be Included on the

•

31, 1983

Bobbi Hofimeister, Ray·Karr
married in Chester ceremony

'.•' -•.

"Trio In A Minor, Op. 114" b)! • •
J ohnnes Brahms.

broadca st along with vloUnist
Marna Street ~d Hodgkin with

1-~=======:;===::::::::::::::::;~..=l

1

J~

FOR
,.

•

$3.000

Bft:!wn,

,Jei::kune

•

Ioni-ntted

IHZO

n.e

same

I
Nobody-but nobody builds
a better mattress than Bemco.
It was a challenge !hey couldn't refuse.

STARTlNG
ASLOWAS
TWIN SIZE

'

STORE HOURS·•

'

in . ~tock

is on sale now!

~~
MAYTAG
'BIG

DRYERS

SARCO DESIGN

• Coffimerdally
proven it! selfservice laundries
• Gentle,· energy

• fewest repairs

UPTO

¥2 ·OFF

• lowest service
costs • nationwide
preference !Based on
a nalic&gt;l&gt;lf survey oskinQ

SETS

'\I

MAYIAG

consumcn which brand

SEALY -BEMCO
MAY CO.

Crllp, cool
chappad 111tuce

. ..
.
.,
..

All

FOR
Also
New Choices For A Change
• Fresh TOSS4kl Soled wHh choice of 3drealngs
• Hot Baked Potato • Hot country.e!yle While Beans
Soled, Beans or Polato may be subllltuled for
french fries or cole slaw wllh any order
IAdd »for h 111 d .aladl

efficient drying
• Electronic,
Auto-Dry or
Time Control

• Big Load drum

of wuha they'd like
to

••

own.&gt;

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT

. 992-2635

OHIO
,.

.,,

I

, r ,.

't,.

..

for you

LOAD

ON

-

''

•

NO. I in:
length of life

THE BEMCO POSTURE IVe

.

.•.'

~~

·

And tor the most luxurfous
mattresS available~.
ask to see "The tap al the line."

•

•••
•
,."'• ....
•

.

PER PC.

.. ''

9 :30 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M. •
FRI. 10:00 A.M TO 8:00P.M .

Come In now for your share of our Circus of Savings!

,,

FUll $139 SET
QUEEN Sl99

·

: ~• ~

.
l
ON THI "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

month loa•

Every MAYTAG

•

TWIN EA. PC.

$8 0 · THE BEMCO

SAVE 'I&gt; ON FULL &amp; QUEEN SETS

•

•

54

.• .

with a

•.

low prlceGf

limited sale. You won't believe your eyeswhen you see !he beautiful fabrics and
exceptloflal construction features for lhese
low sale prices so you better hurry in while
they last

wllllll*lal d~.

.

•...•·
•

··-··

Bemoo created !his g-ouping of outstanding

MATTRESSES

MISMATCH

For the

rnatll1!SSeS at unpelieVably 101111 prices for this

BEMCO
QUILTORAMP:

THE 8EMCO

..,.
,•...
,.

A iaiVe cooltemng otlhrlrnp,

Clllb -'·clams and white lllh lltttll

I

I
I

_,.,

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Page

July 31, 1983

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

B-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

------Engagements------

31, 1983

]ones - Quinn

Calendar

the Meigs Local School Dlsbict. She
Is currently a pianist for the
Temperanceville Restaurant In

Saturday, Aug. 13, at 6:30p.m., at
the St. Paul Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy.
MlssJones Is a graduate of Meigs
High School, Morehead Sta'te Unlvers!\y, and the C!nc!nnat! Conser·
vatory of Music. with a master's
degree In music. For.the p;u;t year
she has been a music Instructor In

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jones of Pumaoy, are
announcing the ~t and
approaching marriage of the!r
daughter, Kimberly ~- to Kevin
Thomas Quinn, Pltts~Ju.rib, Pa. He
.Js the son of .Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Quinn, Rochester, N . Y.
The wedding will take place

SUNDAY

Pittsburgh.
Quinn a graduate of Coinell
Un!verslly with a degree In econom·

MOUNT HERMON - MI.
Hennon Christian Endeavor will
hold a plcn!c Sunday, 5: ID p.m.,
at the Rwte 33 roadside park.

!cs, Is In the restaurant business In
Pittsburgh.

'

'

...~ty
Cancace K. Fulton,
Bruce Allen Waugh

Kimberly Sue Jones

· PARKERSBURG W.VA._ Mr.
and M
Richard A Ful
rs.
·
ton,
Parkersburg
W Va announ~
the
'
·
·•
-~
engagement and approachlng mar-

GALLIPOLIS Lyndon
S!inpson will preach at Dickie
Chapel, Sunday at7::1lp.m. The
Rev. Wllllam Birchfield, pastor,
. _Invites the public to attend. •

Malinda Beth Headley

Watson - Dennison

Fulton - Waugh

GALLIPOLIS-Planshavebeen
completed fur the upcoming marr••ne
...,. of Klmber]y .F . Watson and
Michael J . Dennison.

..

takeplaceAug. l2, 7:IDp.m .,atthe
First Cllurch of God, Garfield
Avenue, Galllpolls, with the Rev.
, James H. Rainey omc!atlng.

.

'

rlage of their daughter, Candace rp;;;Th;;;e;;;o;;;pe;;;n-c;;;h;;;urc;h;c;erem;;o;ny;;will;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
Kay, to Bruce Allen Waugh, son of I
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Waugh, Scottstown, Ohio.
SEE OUR NEW
T)le open-church wedding will
take place 6: ID p.m., Aug. 13, at
Fairlawn Baptist Church 1n Parkersburg, with the Rev. Sam
Crawford o!!!c!at!ng,
.
MJSs Fulton Is · a graduate of
Parkersburg 'South High School,
and attended Glenvllli' State
3 BE.DROOM RANCH HOME
College.
Waugh Is a graduate of Hannan
Trace High School, and Is attending
Glenv!lle State College. He Is
Payments As Low As
employed by the Ohio Department
of Transportation.

Y~urel

..

No Down Payment

••

4800
•

$12soo PER MONTH

TUPPERS PLAINS- Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Headley, Tuppers
Pla!ns, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter, MaUnda Beth, lo
Dean Leslie Hawk, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Hawk, Tuppers PlainS.
· The open church wedding will
takeplaceonAug. 7,2: IDp.m.,atthe
Tuppers Plains Christian Church. A
reception will be held In the social
room of the church.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Eastern High School and 1s presently employed at Camden Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg.
Hawk Is a graduate of Eastern
High School and Is presently
employed at J. C. Penney's, Grand
. Central Mall, Parkersburg..

,''Q

Number in

2
3
4
5

fami~ ....................................................................llaximum

I, o

'

Beautifully styled, all wood collection~ Solid wood .
chain, with heavy spindle be~~ck. Thick padded seatj;
shown In rich, .e arth-tone vinyl cover.
36x48 Trestle ·
... '
table· 4 chairs.

Y..ty lncon

.............................................................. $15,750
oooo~oooooo l oooo•••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $16,050
.............................................................. $16,350
••••••• ..••••~···~·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••"'"''"'''"'' $16,650
MODEL PHONE 592-14HI
992-7034 KINNGSBURY HOMES

'

'· ·I"

•

0

All-American Homes
Rt. SO W by Pic-Pac Market, Athens
1100 East Main St., Pometoy
HOURS: Mon., Tue., Thur., Fri. - 12-7
Closed Wednesday; OPen Sat. &amp; Sun.- 12 to 4
NOTE: New State FmHm Director says money
allocated for housing in Ohio must be used. Call now
for details. ·

...

All Tables. 1·118" Tope with
Color matched edges

'

'

Mason Furnitu·re Co~
Herman Grafe, Owner

Mason, W. Va;_

773-5592

ABSOLUTELY NO REASON TO BUY FREEZERS
REFRIGERATORS AND WASHERS ANO DRYERS ANYWHERE
b1·1-~&lt;J2-2181

EAST MAIN STI1EtT

NOW
W[ SERVICE

Wf Of LIVER

---

5
8
15
20
25

1-

Cu.
Cu.
Cu.
Cu.
Cu.

'.'II ~~ BVIl:l

Wl G[]f 1111 IVIlHCIIANDISl

Wl DUIVlll

•

ONLY
~

UPRIGHT MODELS

'

~FINISH

~DRUM
~

~

1

$100 DISCOUNT
ALL SIZES
IN STOCK

CHECK OUR
BIG SALE

.,

........~

.-.)..

t l•,rr

_l ~ P

SAVE ON THIS HOTPOINT SPECIAL!
Model WLW30008

•
•

Large capacily washer.
Heavy-duly lransmisslort

~1ARJSAU1al.UE

•

No-kink drain hose. .· . -

... mYU ¥AlliE! ·

ED Timed drying se1ecl ions
-up to 130 minules
1!14 Venting oplions.
[i] Separale slarl conlrol.

$9900

AS LONG AS .
SUPPLY LASTS

42 GALLON ' ;

STARTS AS AVALUE
... STAYS AVALUE!

,

Water HeaterS:
ONLY '$11995 .

..

Model DLB I2Soa

pu-!st!an

. ~InVIted.

•••

.

.
::: CROWN CITY -

The Ch!r:: ~l!an Messeni!ers wlll sing-at Big
;. Four Church, Sunday, 7:IDp.m.
·: lrhe Rev. David Workman will
:- speak.
'
.~·
::: BIDWELL- The Laymens'
-; League of Mt. Carmel Baptist
::Church will be having an all day
:· service Sunday. Sunday School
:· will begin at 9: ID a.m., mol'lllllg
-: servtces at 10:45 a.m. Afternoon
will be at 2 p.m.,
·· featurtng Dianne Cople and the
~ Gospel Sounds of Dayton.
~ Dinner will be served.

..

89

:·service

'• GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette ·
White Shrine will have rehersal,
t•

•

-

:. 'GALLIPOLIS-TheRev.Lee
: MD1er, rector of Grace Ep!sco. pal Church, Pomeroy, willbethe
: Celebrant at the 8 a.m. Holy
~: (::o(nmun!on service at St. Pe: ~s Eplscopal Church, Sunday.

.' .. . .
.. .."' ... .

..
::

POMEROY -

AU -girls of

.. Eastern Local School District,
.-:grades 9 through 12, Interested In
~ playing volleyball this fall for
~ Eastern High School are tO meet
.•In high school cafeteria, l:ID
: p.m., Monday.

Celery............~~~K.

.

,•

FIAVORITE

.BAR WIRE ·
ONLY $2295 ...

Special
Jneet!ng of Gall!a-Jackson:Melgs Mental Health Board, 7 ·
·p.m., Monday at board o!!!ces,
:595 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

•
'•

~ RACINE -

•

Racine Chapter
·134, Order of the Eastern Star,
j.otU meet In regular session
:Monday at 7::11, p.m. at the
Temple. O!!!cers are
. ,askl!il to be there.

:Maaonic

•
•'

.MAXWELL HOUSE

•

~Happening~
.
;Energy credit
~prograrn ·sign--ups

.

lta

$ &amp;9

SEVERAL USED FREEZERS AND
REFRIGERATORS ON HAND

80 ROD ROLL

POMEROY
LANDMARK
J ... w. c-. M.,.

Yoo.--.. . . -

614-992-2181
WE WILL NOJ

llttlo lind oeve • lot - ~ dollwetv - . , 71111111eo
Nil. W. - - loaollllilllalnl 0..
Stcn Houra: 1:30 ta 1:30. MM CINod !111:00 I'.M. •
lervlng Molgt, GtHio Md
Cuu:ll o

Drtve

&amp;

'·

•

• GALLJPOUS - The

:P-edtt program

EnaerY

provides relief.
1J'om the COllis of healing to
~IY. disabled and low·

:mmme houaehold!l.

~ For more lnfonnatm or

·)ign-Gp 8llktance In fi1IDI the
'appUcietloa, 8klp In at Cl!lltral
Cmlpaey, 3ll8 SeC'•d

BE UNDERSOLD

a.-

,, ,

:.IIi*

,,

-Ave~

Celllpnlls. · Wed•-tay
'AU.. 3, fl'om 10 Lm. to 2 p.m.

PARKAY

•

.

.

'

•

18 oz.

BTL

-.. . ue Sauce..

~

J

·

Coffee....·...........~~N···· .;. Margar1 ne •......L~-.
KRAFT ·

'

$

59
2% Milk ....~~c.~~~.~

'
'• GALLIPOLIS

(NO DEALERS) · ·.

. ELECTRIC

'
: ' GALLIPOLIS -There will be
~ songtest at Baney Chapel
Church, Sund8,y, 7::11
p.m., with Sharon and Randy
: licl'laffer and mother, along with
. 9ther special music. The public

·: POMEROY - Meigs Local
Band Boosters meeting at 7
-p.m;, Monday In band room of
.:Meigs High School to make
~plans for fair food stand.

,... '

UP fP C'I T

Televisions

614-992-2181
WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

·T

,.....

GENERAL
.ELECTRIC

ALL WITH
BIG DISCOUNT
SAVINGS

'

-'
~·

1

Refrigerators

PORCELMN
, ENAMEL

.

17 Cu. Ft. "Tr.'.................. $42795
20 Cu. Ft .......................... $4,, 895
HOTPOINT

NATURAL. GAS ~ .
ON SALE .

SPECIAL
15 Cu. Ft ................................. S325.95

Fryer Parts ... ~ ...~...
FRESH PORK BUTT STEAKS OR $
29
8
Pork Roasts.....~ ~

~~,.

Water Heaters·

HOTPOINT
LARGE CAPACITY
WASHER VALUE!

MIXED

. ..._,

'

WASHER &amp; DRYER ONLY S574 FOR THE PAIR

CHtf Fn!e Methodist

:::; idmDLEPORT -The Mld., ,ttleport Garden Ciub will meet
::Monday at 6: :II p.m. at the home .
.: ·Of Mrs. Jeanne Bowen, Syracuse
~ Jor Its annual picnic. Hostesses
.. ;lYill be Mrs. Bowen and Mrs. J. J.

WE GOT TllF IVIlRCHANIJISI

SPECIAL-SPECIAL-SPECIAL-SPECIAL

Ft ................................... S235.95
Ft .................................. S285.95
Ft. .......... '....................... $~55.95
Ft. ................................ S418.95
Ft. ................................ S472.95

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU .SAT., AUG. 6, 1983

:~&lt; MONDAY

l!l&lt;l ~1~!2 ,'11.:1

OUR REGULAR PRICES ~RE LOWER THAN MOST SALE PRICES AND
WE'VE GOT EVEN LOWER SALE PRICES.

CHEST FREEZERS

Umlt Ouantitleo.

Church, wtU be guest speaker
there for the mol'lllllg and
ev.en!ng services Sunday. The
· public Is Invited to attend.
•
. ; NORTHUP - Faith Com:m uni\y Olapel on u'nro!n Pike
.: -Will have a homerom!ng ser. )lice, Sunday,' beginning with a
. picnic at noon. There will be
· ~lng!ng and guest speakers. The
. publlc Is Invited.

~

BUT AT POMEROY LANOMARK

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD -

We R._ The Right To

_ SIIJI!IaY, 2: :II p.m., at the
: ~Temple In Galllpolls.

1
·TELEVISIONS )'()

EAST MAINS I Hi::E I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

~eGIII, fanner pastor of the

1% INTEREST

Headley- Hawk

· : GALLIPOLIS - Treldstone
~ptlst Church w!ii have MJs•
. -slonacy Day this Sunday. Artus
:Hurt will speak at 10:45 a.m.,
· :and at 3 p.m., the guest speaker
: :will be Jean Kerney of
. ~eathe.
·

Mon.-Sat. .8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

: LAURAL CLIFF -The Rev.

. FARM HOME MODEL

Depending On Your Income

STORE HOURS

EWINGTON - There wlll be
special services Sunday at
~ ChurchofChrlst!n
Christian Union, 10: ID a.m.
Bruce Weitzel wUl preach In
ll10l'lllng, Tina Crisp will sing .

.'.

BIG SAVINGS DN CLASSIC

The

W. Va.

CLOROX BLEACH
Gal.

79¢

conONBJ.E

BATH TISSUE

~~~~~gg¢

Umlt una Per CultDmer
At Powell's

Explnti

•

.: FLAVORITE SUGAR
'

~~-$}49

Umh One Per Customer
Oood Only At Powell's
Offer ExpiMa Aug. 8, 1983

�&gt;

•• ••
..

-----

Paga

B-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

GRANDE - Plans have
baeno:Jmpletedfortheopen-church
wedding ~ Sheny Renee Smith
lialllbter ~ Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L:
Smith. Rio Grande, and S""'en
~herke, son of Mr. and Mrs.
•
Gherke, Gallipolis.
:tbe wedding will take place 6: W
p.m., Saturday, Aug. 6, at the First.
8apttst Church, with the Rev.
.. •
"'
• •.

I
'

•••
...
~

•
'-·&lt;DAYTON -

Meigs County Bookmobile

Harden - Williams

J oseph Godwin officiating.
A reception wm follow in the
church Fellowshlp Room.
Showers for the couple have been .
given by the ladles of First Baptist
Church, Mrs. Alvera Robinson,
Katie Brunlc;ardl and Jurrie Rey- i
nolds. Joquetta Hendricks and the
tea&lt;;hersofMadlsonDanvUleJunJor I.
HighSchool of Madison, W. Va .

opeo

POMEROY ~ The
church
wedding of Teresa Harden, daughter of Dorothy Harden, Pomeroy,
and Robert Williams Jr.. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Williams Sr.,
Harrisonville, · wUl be held on
Saturday, Aug. 13, at 7 p.m . at the
Zion Church of Christ. Music will

begin at 6: 45 p.m.
Miss Harden, a graduate of Meigs
High School, Is employed at Modern
ChernJcalln Pomeroy.
Williams, a graduate ot Meigs,
works with Pete Gould Excavation
at Ravenswood.

The acbedule for the bookmobile
to Meigs Coouty commllllltlell for
nextweeklncludes:
MODday--3: 1().3: 40, Carpenter,
Laura's Stare; 4:111-4:40 Dexter,
church; 5::l).5:45,DanvUle,church;
6: 00-8, Rutland, civic center.
Tuesday--2: 10-2: 40, Portland,

pooL

•

Wedneeday-7:25-7:55, Tuppers
Plalns,Arbausfl; 8:!l}8:40, RliJ!3C'
rest AdditiOn.
.

Induct 'five
into football
hall of fa111e

r:====::::;:==--------------------------;..._

LOw rates
make State

Fann

By GEORGE STRODE

homeowners
Insurance

AP Sports Writer

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Houston - Fahringer

'• .
•

planned forSept.17.
Miss Houston is a graduate of
Gallipolis Business College and ts
employed by the G. C. Murphy Co.
Fahringer is a graduate of Grove
City College, Grove City, Pa., and Is
an employee of West Penn Garage
in Pittsburgh.

• GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
bonald '('. Houston of Gallipolis, are
imnouncing the engagement an•'
'ai)proacblngmarriageofthedaughter, Karen, to David P. Fahringer,
~ of Mr. and Mrs. Paul R.
fahrlnger of Pittsburgh, Pa.
~ •Tbeopen-churchweddlnglsbelng

Sonny Juaa 1ai, Paul Wu1leld, obby Bel MEl Sid Gillman. (AP

417 Second Avt.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446-4290
Home

1 a• erp11oto).

What's life like after leaving majors?
'The Bird' Fidrych says, 'It's different'

•

•' '
'

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ort

post olllce; 3: 1!).3: 50, ~ Falls,
E:!fle's Restaurant; 4:35-6:111, Raclne, blnk; 6:~7:50, ~

·Anderson - Waugh

Julia Marie Ander- Morehead State University, and Is
. lk)ll, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. employed at Wright-Patterson Air
~ L. Anderson of Dayton, and Force Base in Dayton.
; ~ Jerry Lee Waugh, son of Mr.
Waugh is a graduate of Hannan
aad Mrs. Carl Waugh, Scottstown, .Trace High School and Wayland
have como!eted plans for their Bible College In Wichita Falls,
\\t-ddthg_
Texas.
~ :::Ibe ceremony will take place 1
A reception will follow the
~!Jl.. Saturday, Aug. 6, at St. wedding at the N.C.O. Club, at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
~thony Catholic Church In Dayton.
: •Miss Anderson Is a graduate of

..

July 31, 1983

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

Smith- Gherke
• R19

--------------

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......

By HOWARD ULMAN

STATE FARM

AP Sports Wrler

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FAIR WEEK HOURS
M f Y Ill i

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R. CRAIG MATHEWS, DDS
•

NORTHBORO, Mass. (AP) - At 21, Mark Fldrych was "The
Bird," a happy-go-lucky kid ln a Harpo Marx hairdo who talked to
baseballs and manicured the pltchlng mound on his hands and knees.
At 28, with efforts to rehabllltate his ravaged right arm and return
to the majors ended in retirement, he's come home to this small town
40 miles west o! Boston, stlll crazy - but lovably so- after all these
years.
.
"It's amazing," said Bob Woolf, Fldrych'sattorney. "He came out
of nowhere and be's back to nowhere, and he's stlll happy." ··
. In the month since Fldrych announced lie was leaving the Class ·
AAA Pawtucket Red Sox to return to his tumbledown Bluewater
Ranch, the freesplrit has:
-Climbed a 70-foot tree and felled it from the top down.
-Fed lobster and beer to "Big Daddy," a 700-pound boar, and
cleaned up after him .
· -Woodered aloud whether his future Income might come from
television commercials, odd jobs such as house painting, or growing
Christmas trees on his 100-acre spread.
There also Is the chance of a return to baseball - a remote chance
at best, even The BJrd concedes. If '\team offered him a regular
• starting job on Its top farm club, Fldrych said, "I might say OK ...
But If someone would, they probably would have done that already."
The Bluewater Ranch.is well suited to Fldrych. He seems at ease .
hen; with his pigs, cows an'd geese.' And llke Its owner, the farm's

1981 CHEV. MONTE CARLO, T-TOP

1981 PONTIAC TRANS AM

GENERAL DENTISTRY
Beginning July 20
'

Lloyd In the first set, but Uoyd,
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) playing her consistent hasellne
Chris Evert Lloyd beat Australia's
game,
overcame the deficit and took
Wendy Turnl:A.tll 64, 6-4 and Pam
the
first
set 64.
Shrtver defeated Britain's Sue
Barker 6-i, 6-1 Saturday In the third
"I had my chances, but haslcally I
round of the $250,&lt;XXl McDonald's .
let
her off the hook," said Turnbull,
women's indoor tennis tournament.
who
was ellrnJnated from the finals.
In other third-round · matches of
"I
tried
different tactics playing her
the doubJe.&lt;ollrninatlon tourney, Antonight
and attempted to move
drea Jaeger downed Leslie Allen 7-5,
Chris
around.
At least I will know
6-0 and West Germany's Sylvia
Chris
the next time we
how
to
play
Hanlka forfeited to Lisa Bonder
meet In a tournament."
after trailing 7-6 In the first set
Jaeger, ranked No. 31n the world,
becau;., of an Infected tooth.
overcame a . second-round loss to
Shriver, to beat Allen.
In Sunday's final, worth $100,&lt;XXl.
Jaeger and Allen matched service
Lloyd plays Shriver. Jaeger and
in the first set before Jaeger finally
TUrnbull wlll m'eet for third place.
broke Allen's serve In the 11th game
It was sweet revenge for Lloy&lt;,l,
to
lead 6-5.
who was defeated by West GerJaeger
then held service In the
many's Sylvia Hanlka In the second
game
and won the first set in30
final
round.
minutes.
'l'urnllUll had a 4-1advantageover

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shaw, who is still recovering from
surgery on his right elbow In March.
The seldom-used Stoudt responded with the longest touchdown
pass play of his pro career, a69-yard
bomb to wide receiver Greg
Hawthorne,
·
He: also connected with rookie
GreggGiirrlty on an 18-yard play for
another opening-quarter touchdown. Gary Anderson had opened
the Pittsburgh scoring with a
34-yard field goal In the first slx
minutes.
Stoudt connected on 8 of 11 passes
for 174 yards.
Quarterback Kenny Stabler
made only a cameo appearance for
New Orleans, playing the first three

Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3672
I

1640 EAST.RN AVE.

446-0069

cealury• • 1111 . . . pa
7 11) Ia tile ....,
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DOWN BY 11IE IUVE11FB0NT - S1 Burtd&lt;,
· .,...aedltclriii'IIIe ~Dalb'New., adolal em.
wted 01*1'1 • 1
I •
Iss: tiler, wiD be
iiDDured todQ wllea . . - I I alteNII~m alpl'd"
2

r-.•

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••

Hank Stram, Bell's former coach
at Kansas City, called the first
Chiefs' player to reach the hall
"probably the most versatUeplayer
I've been associated with. Without a
doubt, he was the greatest outside
linebacker ever to play the game."
Bell, 43, said of his induction: "It
will be forever treasured."
He added, "There are so many
friends, coaches, teammates.
sports writers and other who left
Imprints; lwantallofthemtoshare
In this unforgettable experience."
The 40-year-old Warfield, the only
19831nducteeelected lnhisflrstyear
of ellglbUlty, five years after
retirement, was presented by his
Warren, Ohio, -hlgh school coach,
Capital University A thletlc Director
and Coach Gene Slaughter.

series. The left-handed veteran
threw nine times, completing six or
those passes for 59 yards.
The Steelers' secondary feasted
on hls replacement, Dave Wilson.
They Intercepted the second-year
player from Illinois four straight
times and picked one of Guido
Merkens' throws off.
New Orleans scored twice In the
last quarter. Jimmy Rogers
plunged 1 yard with 13: 10remalnlng
to cap a 78-yard Saints' surge, and
Merkens hooked up with Marvin
Dumas on a 38-yard Scoring strike
with 1: 18 to play.
Quarterback Mark Malone
wrapped up the Pittsburgh scoring
with I! 1-yard keeper with 2: 10 left.

broadcasters' counterpart to the Spink award, and
both shared star billing with regular Hall of Fame
..._.llted
inductees
Brooks Robinson, Juan Marichal, George
CINCINNATI (AP) -SIBurlckwlllcomplaln,with
Kell
and
Walter
Alston.
a twinkle in Ills eye, that hise&amp;reel' is dead-ended, that
"All
of
us
have
egos; we wouldn'texlstwithoutit,"
he's beelatuck In the same job tor 55 years with no
Burtck said last week when he was roasted at a
chance tor advancement.
But doll't belleve that he'd want til be anything other lunCheon by the Cincinnati Chapter of the Baseball
than what he Is - sports editor af The Dayion Dally Writers Association of ~rica.
But he doesn't worry that his prose, other than a
News. a job be lnberlted when he was 19.
compilation
of his columns entitled "Byline: Si
''I've enjoyed my Ufe In this buiiDess as much as
Burlck,"
hasn't
been widely read outside central and ·
anyone has enjoylll his business," says Burick. "I
southwestern
Ohio.
know damn well I'd be de8d If I were not wocklng,''
Burick, 14, is known In nearly every the press box · In fact, Slllkes to note- and this comes as close to
and spor\1 tralnlni camp ln the western world, He has bragging as the gentle, pun-loving man ever does attended more World Series, Super Bowls and that be's the first winner of the Spink award who
Olympic Games than most armchair athletes will hasn't worked lor a newspaper ln a city Wtth a major
league franchise.
watch In a IItellrne 011 te~.
People must have thought for a long time that
He basa't mrs.! a Cblclanatl Reds' Opening Day
a1nce 1J21, which wu the 11r1t majar league baseball Burlck might want to retire, or at least slow down.
pme he covered .. a 1p0111 reportel. And baseball Newspaper clippings from a banquet held In his honor
in 1967 say the event "brought out probably the most
has always J:'l!illiiiB dear to him.
Impressive array ot sports figures ever assembled In
EVen arnoog the many awards Burtck has received the Gem City." Cartoonist Milton Canlff was
-more than a dOzen tlmel voted Ohlo's outstanding toastmaster. Syndicated colwnnlst Bob Consldlne
ljlOIUwrtter- belli&amp; hoiiOJ'e!l Sunday at the shrine of was the featured speaker.
baseball II a special achJeo.&gt;mlent.
In 1974, when Burlck was presented an honoree's
Bul1ck's name 11 being entered an a special bronze red coat at Dayton's "Bogle Busters" charity
plaque bOwl lni the llfe&amp;t sporUwrlten of this banquet. he was praised by baseball commissioner
centuty. It wW baq permanently In the library Bowie Kuhn for his service to sports and "giving
beblnd tile Bau&gt;D HaD ol Fame at Cooperstown, service to the people who read his newspaper.''
N.Y.
Stlll, Burick continued to work. He thanks his
He Ia IIR 33rd joumalilt to receiYe the J.G. Spink bos8es for allowing him to stay on. His readers were
Award "lor ClliltrfbutlaiiiD bueblll Witting." In 80 the clear winners there.
doing, he joiDa RJng Lardner, Red Smith and
Burlck, who modestly refers to hlrnsel! as "a
Grantlalli1 Rice, who awed Burtck wlli!n the Dayton bald-beaded old guy from Dayton," has a IUetime ot
•WJtter.wu a teen' •a wortdnl bellde tbem.
sports stories filed away In that bald hefUI. If there's
l.olll-tme Cldc8ao IJme+ ...... Jack Brlckbouse anythlna he llkes better than wrttlng about sports, It's .
w_ll,cholen fer tbll YNI"• Ford Frick Award, the taiidng about sports,

..,_Writer

Equipped with cruise, tilt, air cond., roof rack, AM/FM/Stereo and only
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·

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Dayton sports editor 33rd ·
journalist to earn award

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t!i:~mage,.._also tires for wear
saf~tv. Parts e:~Ctra, If needed.
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"I have been blessed to have the
stamina to coach 50 years," said

By TERRl' lUNNEY

RARE AND HARD TO FIND!

Check suspension parts for wear

''15. 95·.

"I was determined I wasn't going
to go out there and have another
match llke last nlgbt's." said
Jaeger, refefrnJ&amp; to her loss to
Shriver. "Although I was tired ikept
talking to myself In a bid to get my
concentration going, .h ut even If I
hadn't been winning I would stlll
have enjoyed mysel!."
· "I had big problems espectally In
the service department tonight,''
said Allen. "Whenyooplaysomeone
llke Jaeger you have to work very
hard and I was justa llttletootlred."
Hanlka, who caused a inajar
upset bybeattngLioyd Friday night,
had two teeth removed shortly
before leavtna West Germany for
Australia and never showed top
form.
It was Bonder's first win for the
tournament after losing to Evert
and Turnbull.

./

CARS)

and
and

CANI'ON, Ohio (AP)- Reserve
quarterbldl: Cii1f Stoudt threw for
two touchdowns and the Pittsburgh
Steelers Intercepted five passes
Saturday In a 27-14openlng National
Football League exhibition victory
over the New Orleans Saints.
The St.eelers, rolling to their sixth
straight exhibition triwnph over the
last .t hreeseuons, werelncontrolall
the way after acorfni 17 pOints In the
opening quarter,
Before the nationally telrvised
game, SldGUbnan, Bobby Mitchell,
Bobby Bril, Paul Warfield and
Sonny Juraensen were inducted into
the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Stoudt, aaeven-yearveterantrom
Youngstown State University, filled
In for inju!'ld reguiy Terry Brad-

/ '

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We'ilset caster, camber .1na toe· in
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CANTON, Ohio (AP) - The
emotion of entering the Pro Football
Hall of Fame overwhelmed Bobby
Mitchell on Saturday, forcing him to
pause In his acceptance speech.
The former running back and
wide receiver for the Cleveland
Browns and Washington Redsklns
' joined long-tlr1'e coachlng great Sld
Gillman and former players Sonny
Jurgensen, Bobby Bell and Paul
Warfleld in the 1983 enshrlnee class.
"As you go through life and in this
game, you go no where without
family," said Mitchell, choking as
he finished the sentence.
He paused for several seconds
before regaining his composure In
the ceremonies on the shrine's front
steps, watched by several thousand
fans In 90-degreeweather.
Mitchell especially praised his
wife, saying, "lhad the glory. She
had thestrengih. She's been a great
partner.''
Washington Redskins' owner Edward Bennett Williams, who presented bothMltchell and Jurgensen,
said of Mitchell, "He combined all of
the sldlls like no one ever has."
Mitchell, 48, scored 91 career
touchdowns and stU! ranks third in
alltlme National Football League
yardllge with 14,078 all-purpose
yards.
Los Angeles Raiders' assistant
coach Joe Madro, Gillman's presenter, called Gilllnan the catalyst that
gave the old American Football
League class and credibility.
"Perhaps he is the finest passing
coachever;··MadrosaldofGillman,
71. the only one of 119 enshrlnees
whosecareerbridgedtheAFL,NFL
and the new U.S. Football League.
He Is the general manager of the
Oklahoma Outlaws, an expenslon
team in the USFL.
'

GUlman, who had 123 winners and
guided six teams In the AFL and
NFL championship games.
"This has been fun for over the last
50 years, but now this. This Is the
greatest thrill, the greatest honor
any football person could achieve:•
hesald .
WilliamS called Jurgensen nJ
greatest NFL quarterback of all
time .
Jurgensen still hOlds the NFL
record. with five seasons of 3,1XXlor
more yards. He also threw for 255
touchdownS and had 25 games of :nJ
passing yards In his 18-year pro
career. The first seven were spent
with the Philadelphia Eagles and
the last 11 with the Redsklns.
"The quarterbacks ~ all thE
credit for victorieS an&lt;J tliUiamefor
losses," said Jurgensen, 49. "'Ille
blame may be in the right place, but
teams wln,lndlvlduals dan't."
Jurgensen said he '\'as just
fortunate to have an oppo\tuntty to
play pro football.
"Remember, I went to Duke
(University)," he said. "We threw
the ball only 53 ttmes my senior

Steelers defeat Saints, 27-14

Lloyd' Shriver advance in .
McDonald's tennis tourney

: WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH HIM IN THE PRACTICE OF

•

name evokes thoughts of something greater than It Is now.
It is overgrown and needs repair. Fldrych Is good when It comes to
fbdng things, whether It's a hole In the mound, a pain In his arm or
paint peeling-of! his garage.
But the echoes of headier times and the Images of the comeback
that coukl have been still bounce around In the one-of-a-kind mind
beneath the reddish ringlets.
"If I just sat around and literally did not do anythlng, thelllt would
get to me," said Fldrych, sitting beneath a weeping wUiow outside
his nve-car garage and workshop. "Well, he~ l go and scrape paint
off the garage and 11ft my frustrations out that way."
In 1976, Fldrych was a rookie with the Detroit Tigers who suddenly
gained ba9eball's center stage. He had a ~9 record, led the
American League In earned run average (2.3t). complete games
(24) and crowd-pleasing exuberance, and was named ~ rookie of
theyear.
'
His career rapldly unraveled. In the next four seasons, he pitched
In a .total o!just27games. His ERA exploded to 10.20 In 1979, and the
following year was his last In the major league~~.
Last June 2!, Fldrych, after battling back from a knee injury and
arm troubles, left baseball. His parting numbers: A 2-5 record, 9.a
ERA and nearly two hlts aod one walk per Inning with Pawtucket.
He got the word from Manager Tony Torcll!a In a hotel lobby In
West VIrginia, where the team was on the road. Pitcher Brian
Denman was coming off the disabled list. Somebody had to go;
Fldrych knew he was the one.

.

I

�'i

July 31, 1983

C2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page

sas

EASTDIVt!J()N
\lo'

s.Jnmo••
Det.ro!t
N~· York
Toronto
.\Wwaukct&gt;
Boston

L

.w

56

.57i

~

41
H

.

1
l l,S

56

t2

.571

1~

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~

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

Oakland

J

-~

8

~

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18

·""

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52

47

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...

"
.,"

. '"

""""~

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\tiENT DIV!SIOS

Kansas . City

.588 -

~9

t)

'l'e&gt;w
&lt;:aJlJorni•

Pd. GB

57

!)I

Ck&gt;l--etand

Friday's GAtlleli
Toronto \1, Cl('l.'eland 2
Milwauk('e ll , Boston 5
Balti.roorp &amp; Texas 6
Minnescu 4, Scattll' .1
Chicago 7, New ' 'ork 2

.::00
.-100

J'n

0)

~ I,;

.-151

7...
lOa,
15'7

. ~22

.:m

Oakland 5, CalHornla 2
Detroll 10. Kansas Cit) 1. .su.~pmck&gt;d

8 Innings, curft'W

, Olicago

'19
49

.515
.510
.Slo

54

.&lt;aro

fA

...'lib 1 6~

-

1~
2
2
7

WDiT DIVtiiON
lil
56
51

SanD""'

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49
45

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•
•

"'
&lt;1
49
51
52
57

.612 .566 5
.510 1 0~

~

.495 12
.485 ll
.441 17%

.lnnJ...,

SuOO""'s Games
, . • Plttsblll)lh at New York, 2

S! Louis al Montroal
Chicago at Phllack'lptUa
Atlant.a at San Diego
, ~ ~ W Anjl;P)('s at San f"ran t'lsrn
_ • Cincmnall at Houstoo, 1n1

' •

Monday'~~; Gamel'

: Chicago at Plliladelphla. !n)
,
Houston al San Dl~. In)
" Clrlclnnatl at lAs Angf'"IE'S, (n)
, AUanta at San F rancisco. 1n1
• Only

•

games schedulf'd

· :; leaders

..

Rl.JNS.Murpey.

AtlaniB.

!II,

W:

ThOn.

Houston,

m:

Rl&gt;ar-

.. .
""".
""'
iJ.'eufel top vote
~tter in IL poll

(AP)

The Searcat® 151 Scanner
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Sun .. July 31-2-4 p.m ./Open Rec.

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Ast:ros.
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than you may have
expected to pay.

OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) Fuzzy ZOeller shot a 5-under·par 66
for a 2·stroke lead ovetrom Purtz.er
in the ~J)d round of the $425,00)
Canacllan Open GoifChamplonshlp.
'IULSA, Okla. (AP) - Patty
Sheehan shot a 71 and for a 142 total
and a 3-stroke lead In the 31st U.S.
Women's Open.
Debbie Melsterlln, Dot Germain,
Lauren Howe and Jan Stephenson
ll!'e tl!-'d for second.
TENNIS
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) Sylvla Hanlka of West Germany
upset defending champion Chris
Evert Lloyd 3-6, 6-3, 64, In the
$250,00) McDonald's Women's In·
~oor Tennis Tournament.
' Pam Shriver beat Andrea Jaeger
6-2, 6-2; Leslle Allen took Sue
Barker, 6-4, 4-6, 64; and Wendy
1'tJrnbull downed Lisa Bonder 6-2.
6-0.
: NORTHCONWAY,N.H.(AP)Unseeded Jim Gurfeln of Great
Neck, N.Y., upset 7th·Seeded Henri
~nte of France 7·5, 7-6 In
Wrd·round play at the $255,00)
!volvo International Tennis

POOL

Swtm

1-4 p.m./Camp Cresc;:enm
S-8 p.m./Open Swtm
1-4 p.m./Camp Crescendo
lh! p.m./Open Swim

x-Clooed
Frt., Aug. 5-H p.m./Open Rec.

8,:JJ-10 p.m./Camp Creo&lt;endo
1-4 p.m./Open SWim

&amp;8 p.m./Open Re&lt;.
Sat .. Aug. G-1-3 p.m./Open Rec.

lh! p.m./Open Swim
l.J p.m./Open Swim
3-5 p.m./Private Party.x
2~ p.m ./Open Swlm
lh! p.m ./Open SNtm

Sun .. Aug. 7-2-4 p.m ./Open Rec.
68 p.m./Open Rec.

'·

SEASON PASSES
for
Gallia .Co. Junior Fair
can be purchased at all banks and feed
stores in Gallipolis and ~m many youth
groups. Also at Haskins Tanner, Carl's,
Paul Davies, and Hunt's Grocery in
Porter. Passes may .be purchased until
fair time at a cost of $9 .00.

only

.

l'f.,..

Riding

••
..-,

Aug. 1-12

::';-MIDDLEPORT- Last sessional
~lplming lessons at the Middleport
POol will be held Aug. 1·12.
,; Mary Slavin, instructor, an·
that a lifesaving class wlll
be offered from 8 kl 10 a.m.;
beginners class for ages 8 and Up, 10
tc\-11 a.m., beginners clas trom ttve
tq seven year olds from 111 a.m. kl
noon. An intermediate swimming
class will be hneld trom 5 to 6 p.m .
Registration Is to made at the pool
at
Slav!J), ~o or Pat
Kitchen, 992-6212.
'

Converse- Coaching Shoe. FuH-gr!'in
leather upper and 1Win-grlp
tread rubber ou1s o1e ,

lor a winning
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the weekend

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l:mal swimming
~ons set
'•

Dave Rlmlngton and guard-tackle
Jim Mannula all are being consl·
dered as center m· punt snappers.
Coaches are looking at their
consistency, accuracy, speed, and
on the punt snap, their speed on loot
kl cover the kick.
But Coslet said the candidates
should not be judged solely on their
performancec after pracllce. "It's
tough for these guys doting two-a
days because they 're tired after
they've had a real hard workout," he
satd.
Ideally, the Bengals are working
to have a line backer t£J snap and
cover the punt. Three rookie
linebackers- Steve Makllow, Dan
fuller and Andre Young - are
starting to learn to punt snap, but
none of them Is expected to progress
enough to carry that chore this year .
The problem Is a typical one lor

professional teams, who draw their
centers from college teams that
have 9().plus man rosters a nd
snapping specialists.
" It takes at least a year to have
confldenceenoughtobcabletosnap
on a regular basts,:• said assistant

'95889 .

-

-

punt snapper, but the Bengals have
three tight ends ahead of him on
thelrchartsandprobablydon'thave
room for a snapping speclallsl.
Center Blake Moore, who
snapped in a couple of games last
year when Bush was hurt, center

Tournament.
SOUTH ORANGE, N.J . (AP)Andrea Temesvart of Hungary
Jimmy Arias of Grand Island,
defeated Chinese detector Hu Na
N:Y., took a 7·5, 7·5 victory over No,
U Corrado Barazzutil of Italy.
with a 6-2, 6-2and Pam Casale upset
Other winners InCluded.No.1 Jose · defending cllamplon VIrginia Ru·
Hlgueras, No. 2 Guillermo Vilas and
zlcl of RDmanla 3-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the
quarterfinals of the $125,00) Mutual
No. 3 Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina,
Benefit Life Open tenn'is
Jimmy Brown and Andres Gomez
of Ecuador.
tournament.

~edosecondbasemanTimTeufel,

:t&gt;9&lt;J's batting a blistering .345, was
.1~ top vote getter for this year's
ii!lernational League All·Star team.
f~.Teufel got 191 ballots from the
f!!yers, coaches, managers, front·
:l:llflce employees and reporters who
·"'lected the squad.·
;:Jhe Richmond Braves and Syra·
~se Chief&amp; each had three players
olaiined to the team.
:r;ror the Braves Jt was Gerald
~rry. a first baseman and 1982
$&gt;kieof the Year; BrookJacoby,a
:1ldrd baseman; and rookie out·
~der Brad Komminsk. The Chiefs
:Sated shortstop Tony Fernandez,
lalcher Geno Petralli and rellef
~!oher Don Cooper.
•: Fernandez and Petralli are the
~repeaters from the 1982 squad.
:' l"he Columbus Cllppers wlll be
:tl'presented by outfielders Brian
payett and Otis Nixon. Dayett leads
· t!J,e league with 28 home runs and
~on has a club record of 71 base
tliefls.
:; boc Edwards of Charleskln will
~age the team, which will play
bi~ Cleveland Indians here Aug. 18
~ · a · game marking the IOOtll
~lversary of baseball's oldest
m!nor league.
•: Edwards, in cooperation with the
~e offlce, wlll select another 14
ptayers to the All·~tar squad.

WILM1NGTON, Ohio !AP) The Cincinnati Bengals are begin·
nlng to appreciate how nice It Is kl
have a good center to snap the ball.
That's just what the team lacks In Its
four potential snappers.
"It's something we're all a little
concerned about and an have to
worry about ," saki George Sefcik,
coach of thelleld-goaJ team. "It's an
Important phase of the game. How
many games are won by lleld·goals
or extra points? You 've got to
execute 100 percent on the money or
you have a problem.' •
The Bengals have lour players
with the potential to develop Into
reliable deep snappers lor field· .
goals, extra points and punts. But
none of them are considered a full
replacement for center Blair Bush.
whom the Ben gals traded in June to
Seattle.
"It's just a matter of another guy
doing II so long you're going to have
tQ come up with somebody else,"
Sefcik said.
Free agent tlgbt end Jolm
Casanova, whosnappedatNorthern
Mtchlgan University, Js a talented

which has been stulded by league officials, will be.
returned to Brett.
But when Brett gets back his 34\i·lnch, 32-ounce
plece of lumber, will he be able to use It?
Perhaps 1101. since the excessive pine tar probably
will have caked on so solldly that Brett might not be
able to scrape It off.
Also, when the game resumes. Is Brett In It?
When the home run was disallowed, Brett stormed
out of the dugout and began screaming at the
umpires. Some said he was ejected at that point. whlle
others said no.
"
''We'll have to take WJder consideration the events
tlmt took place after the Incident," MacPhail said.
The bat controversy rapidly became the talk of the
baseball world and then went even turther.
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo commended
Yankees Manager Billy Martin for alertly pointing
out the alleged violation, and the Issue became the
butt of jokes with Jolmny Carso,non the Tonight show.
The AL called a press confl!,ri!nce to announce Its
decision, and held the. gathering .in a flrst·floor
meeting room of a Park Avenue bulldlng. Present
were MacPhail, others from the league and tbe bat
.Itself, which MacPhail later held aloft. The room was
jammed with reporters and cameras.
A.s the conference was ending, a few others strolled
by, Including one stern·looldng, gray·sulted
businessman.
All of a sudden he stopped and stared Inside.
"Look!" he exclaimed to no one In particular.
"There's tlle bat!"

Friday's sports briefs...

6-8 p.m./Open Swim
l-4 p.m./Camp Cnscenm
6-8 p.m./Open Swim
1-4 p.m.tCamp CrescenOO
&amp;8 p.m./Open Swim

Mon., Aug, 1-x-Closed

,

OK, the American League has settled the George
Brett pine tar controversy. Now there p some
· major questions to answer. Such as, how iluuly hot
dogs do concessionaires cook for a four-out game?
If, and when, Kansas Clty returns kl New York to
complete last Sunday's game with the Yankees- as
AL President Lee MacPhail ruled Thursday- there
will be two outs in the top of the ninth Inning with the
RDyals ahead 5-4.
·
That means there's a good chance tne game won't
last very long. It's hard to say how many fans would
venture to the Bronx to see four outs, a sltuatton that
could leave concession stand managers In a pecullar
position.
.
Also, do the Yankees charge admission to the
game? And, does a rain check totl)eorlglnalgameget
fans into the finish •
'\1lere's also the matter of the bat Itself, the
Pandora's Box of the whole controversy.
·
Brett's home run was nullified and he was called out
because his bat had excessive pine tar. Thursday's
decision contended that the Intent of the O!tlclal
Baseball Rules was to guard against Intentional
"doctoring" of bats. whlch the AL said Brett had not
done.
Brett, one of the top hltters in the game, has,sald
that the bat he used for that fateful at·bat was the best
one he's ever had.
Bob Flshel, an assistant to MacPhail, said the bat,

of real adventure.

GIUW)-',

Diego, 79; Raines. Montn&gt;al, n :
E'vans, San Frandsco, il: DaW!OI1, Mon-II"f'al. 64.
RBT·Da'A'SOII, Montreal, fl); MU/"Pt''Y, AtJent.a, 10; Hendrick, StLou.ts, 66: Sctlmidt.
Ph.Uadelptua. 66; Cbamtxls$, Atlanta. ti3;
Guem&gt;ro, Los AngeleS, 63.
HJTS.Dawson. Moftlmll. l28: OUwr.

of 72

Bill Doran's single In the llftb pve
theA.strosaDtherunslhl!ybEEdtd.
MaddenslaltoutlheRedluntllthe
seventh bmlng, wllen o.n Dr' doubled, wmC to third oo Nick
Esasky's slngle and IIC«ed as Roll
OesterhltlntoaOOubleplay.
Dave 8mlth carne on to pt lila
fourth save ot the year ~ the

The beginning

~

Plant fields.
Griffey's squad lost only a 3-2
decision to Diversified Manage.
ment during regular season play. At
one
point during the season, the
'
e.
champs shut out their opponents
-This year's post-season touma.
ftve stralght games.
:}ient will begin Monday and
Holzer pulled away trom the fteld
ti5ntinue through Aug. 18. Games in the last round towlnltscllvlslonby
~ be play!'d on the Spruce Street
three games over Sparkle Supply
•end Gallipolis Water Treatment and Old Brick Tavern.
Each team payed two rounds
within their own cllvlslon, and one
· round against the other cllvlslon.
The post·season tournament will
conclude this year's action.
Ohio

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP)-Todd
Schfeck of Shelby and Will Tolerton
of Alliance battled brisk winds and
·oo degree temperatures Friday to
share medallst honors in the ftrst
quallfylng round of the 25th Mid·
America Junior Open golf
tournament.
Schreck,18, a Shelby High School
senior, and Tolderton,16, a junior at
Alliance High, matched 2-over par

..:m:

.

.••.

Share medalist honors

P..' .\TIONAL LFAGUE

1::GALLIPOLIS - Griffey's cap.
~ the National DlvlsiQn and
.Qolzer Medical Center the Amert·
~ Division title In the 1983
.);lallipolls men's adult softball

:;,•.COLUMBUS,

nrn·scoring single In the fourth and

BA'ITING ~~ ar bill~r -Eas.lf'r. PlnsWrgh. .m: Hemrrt, Stl..wls., ..Dl; Madkick. Plttsb.rrgh. .l33; Knlsht, ltoo:$ton,
LoSmith. Stlwl!i . .3.12.

friffey's, HMC capture cop
:i!~P spots in softball league ·
'·

Ariz., on Wednesday. Madden
(l!mplled a J.() record with the
A.stros before suffering sprained
Ugaments in hls elbow and being
returned to the mlnorleagues on
1
JulyS.
,
Price was ·Jn trouble from the
start,walklngTerryPUhllnthenrSt
inning. Singles by Dickie Thon ~
Phil Gamer gave the A.stros a t.O
lead.
·
Knight's horner and Kevin Bass'

ll.

SAVES-Bedroslan, Atlanta, tS;

.
MIERICAN LEAGUE
.. : SAlTING 1245 at batsJ -Boggs, Boston.
• ......l'N: Ca"""-', cantornJa , .m: Bfl'&gt;lt, Kan-

Astros' Oass AAA team at TUcson,

scores

SA IJES.QWsil;onbmy . Kansas City. 2.'!1:
19: Stanlt&gt;y, &amp;5ton.
19: Caliil).u. Sta!tlt, 18.: l.qlez. DPtrolt .

don. Montn&gt;al. L5: LeSmlth, Otkago, 14;
l..a~-eiit&gt;. San Franclsoo, 12; Mlntoo, San
Franctsro. 11; Surwr, StLouis. 11: Tekulvt&gt;, Plttsbufih, 11.

~

'

133;

RDa~1s. Min~ .

Montreal,

Houston 4. Cincinnat i I
San F'Tancl.sro 5. Los An~les 2
Atlanta B. San DitllQ 1-6, 2nd game 12

"

~rctt .

RRamiret, Atlanta. W : Gam!')', San
Diego, llt Hendridt. Stl...oul5. m .
DOt.IBlEi-Bw:kner. Chkqo, 2w7;
OIJ.
vt't'. MontrPal ll&amp;: Knlgttt, Houstm. 2S;
H~ . Sti..ouJs. il; JR.ay. Plt15b1Jrgh.
~: w~ . Montn&gt;at. lf..
"ffiiPUS.Moreno, Houston, U: Buller,
Atlanta, 9; Rames, Montreal, 7: Dawson.
Montll'al , 6; 9 art' tlW w:lth ~HOME RlJNS.Dawsm, Montn&gt;al, 23;
Schmidt, P'tl11adelphia, n; Evans, san
Frarldsco. 21; MW")lhy, Atlanta, n: Guer
""'"'· Los Angek!S, 19.
STOLEN BASES-Ralne!l, Montreal, 43:
'Nllson, New York, l5: LeMaster. San
Fra:nc!isro,. 32: SSa:c, Los Angeles. ll:
Moreno, Hoostoo, 28.
PITCHlNG j' dec"LslOt1U ·FBk.'One, AI·
lanta, 8-1. B . 3.00: P?t-rez:. Atlanta, 12·
:J, .lfl7. l ·i'!t: Mmtet.L&lt;lco. San Diego, 8-2,
.tw. 3.74: Roger.i. MontrPal, m .. 7'22.
2.95: McMartry, AUIII"Ita, 12-5. :100, lU.
SI'R.IKEOt!T'S-rlton.
PhlladPiphlll.
I6.l Soh). anctnnau. 156; McWilllams.
Pittsburgh, 135: Candf-larta. Plft*qh,
107; Vall'nzUE'Ia, Los~- lOt

Frida,y'.'i GIU118!i
Montrea l ?. St. Louis 2
Plt1sburp:-h 2, N(»&gt;o· 'iOJ"k 1
• Phtladelphla l . Chk·~o 2
•

Ha&amp;s. Mltwaukl'e. 7·2,
McGregor, BaltlrMrf'. 12.-1.

Bly!P."f''l. Clewland, 110; S...tcllt!t&gt;.
Cle\."t'land 101.

52
51
19
46

n

3.24:

ll1;

-~

Atlant.a
~ Las Angeles
· Hwston

caeo . .B-2. im, 4..40: Rlgtw&gt;nl. Nf'W York.

Stlf&gt;b. T&lt;rontn 122: RJghenl, New Yook.

53 ""'47

:n

N('Y,• York

TRIPL£S.W!nnP!c1 t"Nt YGrk. '&gt; Gr1tfiJ1. Toronto, 7: HPI1'd:ln, [)(&gt;!tat . i; 6 art&gt;
tiro With 6.
HOME RlJIIS-Cooper, Mil~o~-aukee . :U :
KITtle. OUcaao. 23; Rice, Boston. n
Armas, Boston. 22: 8ft't1 , Kansas (It)' ,
:n; EMurray, BaltillV:lre. 1&gt;.
STOLEN BASES-RHmderson, Oakland,
64 : Rl:lw, Cl1lc21Q, '18: JC'l"\2. ChiCago,
-IS: WV.11s(WJ. Kansas City. tJ: 5ampk&gt;.
Texas, 31.
PITODNG 19 dt&lt;:'lsii:::MBI ·Koosman. Cbl·

SI'RIKEOln'S-Morrl.!,

Milwaukee at Boston
{.:atiforn.Ja at Mlnne-scta. 2. nm
~City at ~roll. rn r
N('Y.· York at Chk-ago. rn r
Oakland at SPattle, !n,
• • Only games sch£-dull'd
' .. "
NATIONAL I..Ei\GtiE
EAST DlVISION
lo\' L Pel. GB

• Philadelphia

~. :!a

3.\fi:
J. ll: Slat~. MilwaukA&gt;. 9-l, .750,
-tOol: Splincrfl. Kansa..~ City, '-3. .150:
4.00.

••
•• _
:.
·.,. •
.......

' 9: . I..oo.ls

c....

~Bop;gs. Ebtoo. 137; \li'hltall~r.
troll, ~ CoopK. Mltwaukre. Ii9; Ward.
MII\J1E'SCU., 119; Mc!Ul&gt;, 1U.n5a5 City, 116:
Rlpkm, Baltirrllre, us.
DOUBLES-~. Boliton, ll : Mclbt&gt;.
l:&lt;.ansas Ci ty, 31 : Hrbt&gt;k, Mlr\nt&gt;!M.Ita. J);
U.'Panish. [lplf'Oit, :11: Rlpken. Balli·

.m.

,
Monday's Game&amp;
Oe\·eland at Torallo

· Montreal

,ton. Ill: EMumy. Ballim:ln!'. 61. LNParrISh. ~mit 87: Ward. Mlnneo~a. 6!

and Ray Knight br&amp;ce out of a
mlnJ.slump with two hits, Including
a key solo 1x&gt;mer ~ lhefou11h lnnlllg,
. "I'm no stopper but It feels good to
stop the losing and put some music
in this club house becaUSI! we were
~. · ·Madden said.
Wlille- Madden · celebrated hls
retwn to promlnence,loslngpltcber
Joe Price, :J.0.6, saw his five-game
winning streak snapped.
"I was SUJtlrtsed about my lack of
control," said Price, who walked
five batters. "It was just one of !hose
games. I've felt tired the last couple
of times out. When I'd reacll back
the pitch just wasn't there."
Madden was recalled from the

,'j"j(),

Gakland at CaiUornJa

Pltt.~lxlrgh

fB; Y!'W11 .
ED; EMUift)'. Ball~. fll:
RHendenm.. OUland. 68; Upha.,.,•. Toronto, Iii.
RBI~. Mif'.Naukee. R?; Rn, 8os·

JJ.J. .786.

Stmda.Y'• GIVI1es
Kansas City Bf Ot:-troi.t. 2
C)(".•Ciand a t Throoto
'l'exa! at Baltimore
Milwaukee at Boston
New York at C'hlca&amp;")
Seanlf&gt; a! MinntSOt.a

'

JMRaf. Kalllu City. ~

\U;a...w.

AMERICA" 1£.\GVE

after

~

.321:1.
Rl1NS-Rtplll.'n. Ba!Urnono.

By'lbe~...._

Chlo...,

a!Y.

A.lker\5. Kansas CitY,

HOUSTON (AP) - Houston
rookie pitcher Mike Madden knew
what he could do,btit the Cincinnati
Redsdldn't- Wltil Friday night.
Madden, two days alter being
recalled from the minor leagues,
scattered six hits over seven Innings
to help tl!e A.stros break a flve-game
losing streak with a 4-1 victory.
"It's klugh when you know what
you can do but people don't knOw
because they can't see It," said
Madden, who started the season
with the Astros but returned to the
minors because of an elbow injury.
"They start wondering about you."
Madden, 4-0, erased any doubts
with his performance Friday night

By BEN WALKER
AP Sporill Writer

The Sunday Times-Senlinei-Page-C-3

Snaps: Important phase

Bat controversy continues

Houston rookie stops Reds 4-l on 6 hits.

Scoreboard ...
Majors

July 31, 1983

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

Pamero•t Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

41

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.

I~

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.' •

' '

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•

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~

�••
•

•
•

PEEPS, A GaUipolis Diary:

Garvey hurt, streak ends at 1,207 tilts
m.

'
In other
action, It . was
By KEN RAPPOPORT
Philadelphia
3,
Chicago
2; Houston
AP Sports Writer
4,
Clnclnnati1,
Monlreal7,
St. Louis
'The streak ls over for Steve
2
a
nd
San
Francisco
5,
Los
Angeles
Garvey. 'The Pittsburgh Pirates,
2.
llcl\wver, show no signs of letdown.
Garvey will reportedly be lost to
Garvey's Natlonalle$erecord
the
Padres for three weeks.
• consecutive game-playing streak
Alan
Wiggins was on first hasevia
came to an end Friday night when
a
forceout
grounder when Garvey
the San Diego first baseman
·
moved
the
runner to second base
dislocated a thumb In a flrst-lnnlng
with
an
infield
single.
slide In lllePadres'2-11osstoAtlanta
In the opEner of a doubleheader. The
Padres won the nightcap, G-5 In 12
One out later, Ruppert Jones
Innings.
singled in Wiggins with Garvey
"Once I sU&lt;! and was tagged, I felt ,going to third. Pasqua! Perez then
the thumb go numb, " GaiVey said
uncorked a pitch that got past
after he was treated at the Scripps catcher Bruce Benedict and Garvey
Cllntc In San Diego. "I lmew there
broke for the plate. Hewasi:lut easily
W1JS !llmethlng wrong.''
as he made a feet-first slide to try to
Garvey, whose 1,:m straight
beat the throw from Benedict to
games ranked third on the all-time
Perez, who was covering the plate.
consecutive game-playing Ust behind Lou Gehrig with 2,Ul and
Jerry Royster doubled home the
Everett Scott with 1,J07, said, "The
tie-breaking run with two outs in the
Injury was a disappointment."
Meanwhile, the Pirates continued eighth Inning for the Braves.
The Padres won the second game
as the majors' hottest team by
when Kurt Bevacqua, who replaced
beating the New York Mets 2-1 for
Garvey, singled home a run in the
their 19th victory In 24 games since
12th.
the All-Star break.
r--J

Plrale8 Z, Mets 1
In New York, TonyPena's two-oot
homer in the ...Venth Inning and the
combined four-hit pitching of John
Candelaria and CecUio Guante led
Pittsburgh over the Mets. Pena
broke a 1-1 tie with his two-out
·homer, his fifth of the season.
Phlllles3, Cubll 2
In Philadelphia, Bo Dlaz's runscoring single with one out in the
ninth boosted Philadelphia over
Chicago.
Mike Sciunidt led off the ninth
with a single off Cubs rellever Lee
Smith, 4-6, and moved to second on
Joe Lefebvre's sacrifice. Garry
Maddox was Intentionally walked
and then Diaz hit a 2-2 pitch into left
field to score Sclunldt.
AI Holland, 5-0, thethlrdPhlladelphla pitcher, earned the victory.
Expos 7, Cardinals 2
In Montreal, Bryn Smith scattered eight hits In his first startofthe
season and Andre Dawson drove in
two runs with a solo borne run and a .
single to help Montreal defeat St.
Louts, snapping the Cardinals'
six-game winning streak.

Smith, 2-4, who Is no1T1:1311y used
as a reliever, made his tlrst start
since Sept. 19, 1!£!, walking two
batters and striking out four. He
gaveupanRBislngleto02zleSmlth .
IIi the seventh and a homer to Andy
Van Slykein the ninth.
Nell Allen, 7-9, the St Louis
starter, retired theflrstllbattershe
faced and extended his scoreless
string to 212-JlnnJngs snapped by
Dawson's 23nlhomerwithtwooutin
the fourth. Allen had retired the first
11 batters before the liomer.
Glanl8 5, DooJaers z
In San Francisco, Bob Brenly' s
plnch-hlt RBI single keyed a
four-runseventhlnnlng,leadlngthe
Giants over error-plagued Los
Angeles.'
'
WlnnerMlkeKrukow,6-6,gaveup
four hits and struck out nine In 8 2-3
END OF STREAK - San Diego Padres' Steve Garvey explains the
Innings for his first victory since
aature of his Injury to te8111JJ111ie Dave Dravecky In ~· lodler
June 24. RelieVer Greg Minton
room betwem games of doubleheader wllh Atlallta Friday IIIPK- ·
' recorded the last out. ·
Garvey dislocated his thwnb In a collision at ~ wllh Bravea
'The DodgerS contrtooted two
pltdler Pasqua!~- It ended Garvey's consecutive game streak at
errors to the Giants' rally In the
1,:1117 games. (AP l.asel'phoW).
seventh, making a loser out oi
AlejandroPena, 8-5.
,--_;_-------------------

Orioles claim ·s-6 win; Indians beaten

By 'lbe Associated Press
Rules, rules, rules.
With the airwaves still buzzing
trOm AL President Lee MacPhail's
.decision to let stand the "pine
. tar-nished" borne run of Kansas
Clty'sGeorgeBrettagalnsttheNew
York Yankees last Sunday, the
~ rulebookagalncametotheforefront
. Friday, this ttme In Baltimore.
This ttme no ruling wlli be needed
from the president's of!lce. Texas
· Manager Doug Rader just didn't
' know the rule and Baltimore
Manager Joe Altobelli did. That's
why Altobelli's Orioles went home
with an 8-6 victory.
· In other AL games Friday,
Toronto beat Cleveland4-2, MUwau. kee trounced Boston 11-5, Chicago
pounded New York 7-2, Minnesota
edged Seattle 4-3 and Oakland got
past California 5-2.

Here's the scene In Baltimore:
The Rangers were leading G-5 in the
hottom of the eighth. Pinch-hitter AI
Bumbry led otffor the Ortoles with a
slilgle off Dave Schmidt, 2-2. After
one out Dan Ford singled, sending
Bumbry to third. Cal RlpkenJr. was
about to enter the batter's box when
Rader left the Texas dugout to talk to
Schmidt.
Schmidt missed on two the first
two pitches to Rlpken and Rader
again left the dugout, this time
summoning Victor Cruz from the
bullpen. Schmidtheaded,asclomost
pitchers removed from the game,
for the clubhouse and Altobelli
hel!ded for the closest umpire.
"I lmew the rule," said Altobelli
referring to the one that says a
manager may not make two trips to
themoundwhllethesamehltterlsat
bat.

Rader was summoned from the
dugout by umpires and told to bring
Schmidt back into the game. Hedld
and Schmidt walked Rlpken to load
thebases. ,
·
Re-enter Cruz and enter Eddie
Murray, who cracks a two-run
single that gives the Orioles a 7-6
lead and their fifth victory ln thetr
last siX games.
Said Altobelli: "All I can say ls
when you're hot, you're bot."
Blue Jays 4, Jndland
Jim Clancy scattered six hits for
his 11th victory as the Blue Jays
stroked a club-record four trlp)es.
Clancy struck out five and walked
four In picking up his fourth
consecutive complete game.
Thomas hit his 15th homer of the
season for the Indians.
Brewers1i, Red Sox ~
Cecll Cooper drove in four runs

and Bob McClure picked up his
seventh stralgbt victory. Two of
Cooper's RBis came on his 24th
homer of the se33Qn In the fifth,
which was followed by Ben Ogilvie's
11th that chased starter Dennis
Eckersley. .

i

BREAT IAIIIMBB
ON THEBE
@)-mstrong
SUSPENDED

CEIL/Nil PANELS/

Quality Work • Reasonable Rates • Free Estimates
-A CHRISTIAN BUSINESSMAN
~08 HAWLEY-256-9391
8 Miles SIW of Gallipolis_

Service &amp;
. Parts Spe-cials
ENGINE TUNE-UP SPECIAL

95
9
4

$

plus

tax

BuH exterior, wax and clean
interior.
Reg. Price $65.00
Specil/ Price

VAUD THRU AUG. 5, 1983

~matrong
c

lings

c

PINEHURST
• 2 • x 4 • suspended
panel
.-swirled-piaster
design
• acoustical

354

LUBE, CHANGE OIL &amp;FILTER

~mstrong
lings ·

@.mstrong
ceilings

KINGSLEY

Washable White

• 2' x 4' suspended
panel
• acoustiCal
• cteep-rex rur ecl

-2' X 4'
panel
-Economical
-Problem -solver

$259

apanel

$231
a panel

a panel

Install up to 5 quarts ol oil. Professional chassis lubrication, install new
oil Iiiier, and check all fluid levels.
Reg. Price $.19.80
Special Price ·
..
VAliD THRU AUG. 5, 1983

SERVICE TRANSMISSION
Includes removal of oil pan, clean, inspect and adjust linkage. Includes oil
filter and gasket. All GM cars. Additional parts &amp; labor extra.
Reg. Price $45.00
Special Price

@matrong

!Armstrong

~lllnga

lftV

OAK

• 2' x4' suspended
,panel
• random-lextured
effect
• washable

WINDSTONE
• 2' x 4' suspended
panel
• textured-plaster
design
• washable vinyl
surface

SPECIAL COUPON

on Armstrong =
SLIDELOCK GRID g,
cC&gt; '
C&gt; ,
C&gt;

c-

~-;;;;:=;;..-

ss23

$293
a panel

a panel

=
c-

=

Offer expires

8/13/83

$29,·95

lncl~des s~lling

caster, camber and

toe-m
and suspension safety check.
Reg. Price $28.00

$ ·

Special Price

'

.•

_,._ ··.
·. ,.

•

"r

GAUAPoLII - Co8dl ~
Se. . . . . . """"'ml8d !Wurday ~
taa .,.... 0'" . , • 1 drill

: wiD ...... 8:. a.m. MalldiiJ 011

I

. MeQ,.W Pllld.

s.,............ tqb lltilool pld

I

...'

;. £::::;:·:·:::-n=
~-'
•

... fWaniiQ' .. the

... . .&amp;i'

.

:·

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

•

• Hurricane Exit I""

RIDEN ouR'S

TV &amp;APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

CALL 446-3217

79c
Kendall.

•.•with Wax and Cleaners
Save over 45%

10W30 Oil
After;::

age

Turtle Wax
Minute
Wax
18 oz. Spray, 16 oz. Liquid ,

Kendall
10W40.0il

13 oz. Paste . Sale 3.19
Turtle Wax Finish in Less than
15 Minutes

sac

69C

Solder Seal
Puncture
Seal
Reg. 1.49 Tire Repair and In flate r

DL Blue Label
Hand
Cleaner
Reg. 1.29 14 oz. 01-015

M11 · 12

limit 3

2.77
Fram

Air Filters

Poly Whitewall
Benchmark 78 'S

'

$20
·

~'fe~1 3

E78x14
F78x14
-G78x14
H78x14
AlB 13
600x15
'
G78x15
Rog. 124.00
H78x15
F.E.T.1.78·2.98 L78xt5

.....: .................. ...
...........................
...........................
...... ................ .. ..
.........................
..........................
...........................
...................... .. ...
.................... ......

~ioG&lt;i&lt;L ::i~o
$35.1XL
$37.00...
$39.00 ...
S4t .OO ...
$35.00 ...
$40.00...
$42.00...
$45.00...

128.00
129.00
131 .00
$33 .00
127.00
$32 .00
136.00
$37.00

For mast domestic and Import cars
except Vega. Diesel, and Turbo .

Umll 2 Reg. 4.95

Through
Windows
Reg. 49.95
1 quart
-on Funnel
22 Reg. 49C

Pierce
and
Poll'~

..

C020C Reg. 99C

011 Drain Pan

T1t7 6 ql. capacity
Reg. 2.49
.

STANDARD
Reg . 99C Llmll 16

RESISTORS
Reg. 1.24 Limll 18

2SC

$2Q OFF

sse

Guaranteed Products

Sunroofs
15x30
.79.95
Reg . 99.95
7x35

1•25

74c
age

~h~me~.

Save over &gt;5

lor m 0$1
OOmesllc 4·6 ~y l &amp; Chevy
small Blotll V8 19ti9·71

18.95
wilh fttbuild. e•ch.
101 mosl 9 cy1 , aomoslle

,,.. 13.95

Champion or AC
·Spark Plugs
C..nplon Plugllnipoua mlaaga

Thrush
Mufflers
. 15.95

Drag Links

Idler Arms or
Pitman Arms ,,..

18.95

Stabellzer
Links

Tie ROd Ends ,,..

4.50

Wheel Seals , .,.

Control Arms
And Bushlnga ''""

2.50

Wheel
Bearings

GAlli .......... 1M e.m-

: . . . .&gt;

8 a.m. 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. - 12 noon

Heating &amp; Cooling
•Commercial
*Residential

P •,_ tweatv . , . w11

; ........ FlttJar, llep&amp;. I. I&amp; hame

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

GERNIE'S

_______

. GALLIPOLIS - Green avenged
; · last week's 5-4 loss to Bidwell in the
·' 1983 Gallipolis Pony League post:· season baseball tournament with a
:· resounding 21-4 victory Friday
· : evening on Memoi1al Field.
Green's victory forced a second
. · championship game In the double
: ellmlnatlon event, to be played at 2
· p.m. IDdayonMemorlaiField.
: Bidwell entered Friday's contest
: in the upper, or winner's bracket
: with a spotless mark. Green needed
a victory to remain alive.
Green broke a 1-1 deadlock with
' · five runs In the third Inning. The
• winners added tour more in .the
, fourth and !lfth innings, three In the
: sixth, and four more In the seventh.
• Sheplerwasci-edltedwtththewin.
• A.Howellwaschargedwlththeloss.
: Shepler had two doubles and a single
: ln four trlpsforthewtnners. Holstein
• had oneo!Bklwi!U's tour hlts.
·
Green banged out :ll hase hits.
: Neither lel!m made an error.
: : In other summer leagUe games
•. Friday, the Padre&amp; edged the Whlte
: Sox, 6-5 In Uttle League play. D.
: DeWeese was the wtnnlng hurl!!!':
: . Bradley was cllarged wtth the loss.
The Red Sox downed the Padres,
:. 16-7, In a Wednesday contest. Haner
: was credited with thewln. DeWeese
: was charged with the loss.

•

19 95TC

GMQUAIJTY

v

.

: Pre-season drills
: begin here Monday

VAUD THRU AUG. 5, 1983

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
675-1160

I·.. _:
r:~·

FRONT·END ALIGNMENT

SERVICE/MillS
312, Sixth Street
•
· reffours: Monday-fri

'•

VALID THRU AUG. 5, 1983

15%0F~

GEIIALD ..., lelt, ...;...ItA BID Hall plaque ........ --- _.--...._,
,..
- - . """V'
1818
cererJlOIIIal beld at the Rollda.v llln. BID Han. a
Meroervllle
graduate, was an Oldlltancllnl football, WbaD aad lrack pedonner
ror tour years, anc1 was named the Wlldcala' Tup Alldete of the ear.
'lbeawardwaspreaeotedooJuty9,l.B8S.Genldlblllllld,"Aafausl

tlqns, Including one ))811lcularly ...
poignant one, a plaque to his
brother. It happened thus: Bill Hall
was presented a beautiful plaque by
lils brother, Gerald, slgnlfytng ~of
Bill's athlellc achievements while
af Mercerville High School. 1be
plllque was given as a token of
appreciation for his efforts In
-IJIII)dng the reunion a reality, for
·which Bill thanked each for his
-;attendance and participation ...
.plus the expectation that the next
'reunion would be In Florida.
• Gerald Hall Is from the class of
,1940. A Verse written 40 years ago
..was read by Arle"" Tracy of the
::class of 1!01: There were three
, 'special guest speakers - ex"Professor Ruth Thomas, ex-High
::School Principal and retired Ma: 'r lne Corps Col. James N. M. Davis
' ,at the class of 1932, ai!d Attorney
: .wan-en F. Sheets of the class of
· '1943. Sheets was a World War II
: ·combat veteran.
· Bill Hal gave the closing , re, .marks, and the Rev. Charles
· Lusher the benediction. It was the
. ,first ttme In 45 years tbat these
· : -people had observed thetr gradua, .tlon. 'the programs, printed In the
· school colors ot red and black, were
designed and printed by Cline
: Clary. Arlene Tracy provllled the
· ·red l'(l5eS In black vases.

'

$15.95 $43. 95TC
I

*ZENITH
*SYLVANIA
*KELVINATOR
*SPEED QUEEN
*WARM MORNING
*SUNRAY
*LITTON

•

: Green force8
::extra game m
:; Gallia tourney

CAR CLEAN UP SPECIALS
Wash car and shampoo
interior.
Reg. Price $24.95

By Bey..n R. Carter
seeding. In addltion, there are
~rves as a means of double
Exteilllon Agent, Apiculture
usually fewer weed problems this
cropping and soil protection.
Here are a few tips for Increasing
GALLIPOLIS ~ The summer ttme of year.
seeding of forages has gained
August seeding, when following
the success rate oftheforagecrops.
popularity over the past few years. the harvest of a small grain, also
Continued on C-6
While more farmers are using it as ..----------------~-----a primary forage seeding period,
others :t all back on August forage
seedtogs when spring seeding has ·
failed.
August Is the recommended
month for making a surrimer
seeding in Ohio. The seeding period
can be extended to Sept. 15 In
southern Ohio.
August seoomg offers several
advantages over spring seeding. It
procides a ,dlstrlbution of risk and
labor while allowing a second
chance when spring seeding has
Ullled. It also provides a fanner the
advance time to apply the ni!cessary lime and fertWzer before

L/mlt12

TC

VAliD THRU AUG. 5, 1983

Agriculture and our community

~~GeraidH~madepre~nta- ~~~~~·~ooo~ln~~~~-.~~~~~~M~~~·-----mw--~-~----~-~--hed ~ _l~~~~~~~~~~JJ~98~5~-33~0~7~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~0~H~.~

•ADDITIONAL CIRCUITS FOR APPLIANCES

Spocial Price

-,

. - By J. &amp;UltiEL I'EEP8
GALLIPOIJS - A hlgbllght of
th~ 1983 rewllon d MercervUle High
School In July In the HoUday 1nn
was the attendance of 122 folk from
&amp;eVen states.
Of course. most of them came
frOm Ohlo, but the greatest delegation .-.. other than OhiQ's - was
FlOrida's. Besides those two states,
there were reunersfrom California,
illinois, North Carolina, VIrginia
and West VIrginia.
To tell which MercervUler was
from which class glyes a sampling
of the overall people who attended,
For Instance,
The Rev. Charles Lusher of the
class of 1932 gave the Invocation,
and then there was the buffet Bill
Hall of the class of 1938 delivered
the welcome oratory, but Cline
Clary wss the program chairman
and master of ceremonies. He also
sang a solo, Sixteen Ton. Clary Is
the class of 1937.

faynlly gave a medley of gospel

•REPAIR SEVICE EMERGENCY CAllS
•NEW HOMES WIRED -OLD HOMES REWIRED
•COMPLETE ELECTRICAL SERVICE

Includes spark plugs, points and
condensor on all GM cars and trucks. ·
. Four and six cylinder even leSs.
Additional parts extra.
Reg, Price s71. 95
Special Price
•

Tirr~es-Sentinei-Page--C-5

'

John Flowers of the class of 1939
read a poem. nui Carl Waugh

1-64 Hurricane Exit, Hurricane, W. Va.
PHONE 757·8700 CHAS . OR 743-7100 HUNT.

- ·~ -

The Sunckty

Qne-hundred ·and twenty-two from Summer seeding of_forages
seven states attend recent reunion

BOB'S ElECTRIC
CERTIFIED BY THE STATE OF OHIO

..

--

Pomeroy-Middleport Golli~lis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

July 31, 1983

July 31' 1983

Pon~eray--Middleportr-Gallipolis, Oh~Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

Paga C 4 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

. . . ..

'Die .... DiwllwiiiiiiiDtallepaft

. ~...
: ....-n:- '1
: I+'

~ a

pM pae;lllw lit
4 ' 'W 7 ?11e•IJII!Iu.

r·' ..... :rr.

HOURs: Sun. 10.5;

11-F t30-5;
Sat8:30-6 .

209 Upper River Rd.

446-3807

,.,.

2.25 •

1.95

�Page-C-6-: The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis, Chi-Point Plepsant, W. Va.

•.

July 31, 1983

. '

'

Popular songs 40 years
ago still familiar today

LAST YEAR WHEN tblo pldure WU taken tbe Goodie Shoppe WM 1•,
bel'&lt;! at 35 c.rt Slreet. Since then Cbarlle and CompaDy baa '-liD 111111 ••
1818
Tbe
baa III!I'Ved a ~bel'"'..- - monuary, • \
c1pr ataod, ~loWng, llboe 1tore and wu tbe place wber&lt;! In 1938 Morris \
· Elliott bepD EIJiolt Applluee.
I

buD..,.

By JAMES SANDS
continued blo watch over Gallipolis'
watering holes.
Special Co!Tespondent
IN THE 1112&amp; the building at 35
..!~~ii:,l~~ - In what year
f'
were the followCourt was used as the Phillips Shoe
Ing songs at the
Store. In the early 1930s Pete's
Place was here and one could buy
head of the record hit parade'
wool shirts for $1.19 and tobacco
"Some Sunday
canvas for 3 cents per yard. It was
ornlng" by
In 1936 that Morris G. Elliott took
over the building and during that
s Prima;
"Sympathy" by Danny 0-NeU;
year he ac;lvertlsed string Instru"Personality" by Dinah Shore;
ments, Leonard Electric Refrigera- ·
"Blue" by he Five DeMarco
tors, Meadow Electric Washers as
Sisters; "Did You Later" and "I'm
well as Emerson and Oarlon
radios.
Always Chasing Rainbows" by
Perry Como; "Atlanta Ga." by
For a brief period In the 1930s the
Sammy Kaye; " My G uy's Come
store was known as Allison and
Back" by Thelma Carpenter; and
Elllott Shop and was then changed
"The Moment I Met You" and
to Elliott Appliance. Sometime
"Chicago" by Tommy Dorsey.
during World War II Elllotts moved
The answer Is 1946 and during out and 35 Court was used as the
that year one could buy all of these Button-Hole Shop under Mrs. E. E .
· songs from the Elliott Appliance
Nlda. In the late 1940s Nlda
Store on Court Street.
Appliance was here followed by
By the way the number 15 song Hatcher's Shoe , Store which bethat year was "Let It Snow" by came In 1951 Carl's Sboe Store
Vaughn Monroe.
under Carl Bias. It was In 1957 that
. Elliott Appliance, which today Is . Carl's moved to Its present location
two stores In the Old French Qty on the square.
In the 1960s Dr. Bradshaw held
(Third and Pine, and the SUver
forth
here followed In the 1970s by
Bridge Plaza ) began In 1936 In the
Gherke's,
Naskey's, and the Goodie
buDding we feature tooay at 35
Court Street.
Shop. Today 35 Court Is home to
THAT PARTICUlAR building Charlie and Company.
Box 92 Clarks burg, Ohio, Is the
appears to have been buUt around
· 1849 and was first used as a address of James Sands.

July 310 1983

...,..sure

POMEROY.- Two employees of
Fanners Bank&amp;SavlngsCo.; 221 W.
Second St.. have received

Summer...
Continued from C-5
First, prepare a ll!Tn, level,
wj!ed-free seedbed. This Is critical
when making an August seeding.
An early August seeding date Is
prefe!Ted to later dates. Make the
seeding early enough to allow
adequate time for the seedUngs to
establish . prtor to winter. Early
seedings also take advantage of
favorable temperatures and moisture conditions of late summer and
fall sea~ns.
Alfalfa, orchardgrass, smooth
brornegrass, and timothy are well
adapted for August seeding. Red
clover, blrdsfoot trefoil and tall
fescue can be August seeded, but
because they are less vigorous,
special emphasis must be given to
seedbed preparation and to seeding
as early In August as possible.

DILES
HEARING AID
.CENTER ·

INVENTORY - Harold Moore, left, llliiiUigel' of Uvlng Breads
1!"•~11 Fe~ ~ blo wtre, Cldelw, examine some "'tbe 11ems they

....

have far l8le Ill &amp;be llore, wlddl oper r tMwt"' a private rel!lldenoo Ill

...._

444 W. INION; A1NIIIS 5t4·U71

·•
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cremes.

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ByLIUJAN.SWANSON
"-ad w 1'.- Writer

let you pick
.'

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,,

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.

'

INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT

oo,

I

-'

." .

ACCOUNT

' '

l'

.' '
0 ''

,.

There •s 11 substantial imerest penalty for early wtthdrawat.

BANKONETM
Member FDIC.

1'

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,,~

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.

and
newtrendsandtecbnlques.
Karschnlk,
his wife, Connie, and
two children, Keith and Joe, reside
on Flatwoods Road near Pomeroy.
Reed has been nami.l to a new
poslilon of controller at the bank, In
which he wU1 oversee Its asset and
llabllity program.
Reed, a 19'71 graduate of Meigs
High School, jOined Fanners Bank
after graduating from Ohio University In 1981. He recEIIUy completed
the ~nd-year COU1'!I8 of specialIzed training at the Ohio School of
Banking. Thecounelssponsoredby
the Ohio Bankers Association In
cooperation with Ohio University
and annually trains approxjmately
lXl bank officers and employees.
Reed was eiec!ed secre:tarytrea.surer of his clalls. All a
second-year student, Reed also
partlclpatedlnacomputertzedbank
simulation program. Student
"teams or banks" were confronted
with typiCal bank problems and
were required to make management decisiOns based upon a
comput(!r-slmu,Jated model

Jon P . Karschntk has been named
assistant vice president, and Paul
M, Reed Is controller.
Karschrilk joined the bank In l!lffi
upon completion of a tour of duty
with the United States Air Force..
Karschntk' scareerwlthFarmers
Bank Includes promotions to public
relations offtcer, marketing officer,
compliance officer to assistant
cashier where he concentrated on
reviewing loan appUcatlons.
His new dulles Include assisting
the viCe president with overall
management of the bank's loan
department.
Karschntk ·ts a graduate . of
Wahama High School and Parkersburg (W.Va.) Comlnunlty College
where be received an a8sociate
degree In May 1978. His banking.
education Includes completlon of
courses In the Ohio School of
Banking; Essentials of Bank Mar·
ketlng In cooperntion wtth the
University of Colorado; School ,of
Bank Marketing; Ohio SchooL of
Consumer Credit ·In cooperation
with Kent State University.
He recently attended the aJth
annual Ohio School of Consumer
· Credit held on Kent State University's main campus at Kent. The
five-day course acquainted banking
students with all aspeets of consu·
mer credit Including direct and

economy,
Reed was elected president of his
team bank which WlHI first place In
the program. He was also required
to write project between his first
and second year course at the
school. He entered his asset and
liability plan tor Farmers Bank as

a

Tomato farmers may
contract with Heinz
By Tbe Asl!loclated Pre88
TheH.J.HeinzCo.lsJooklngatthe
feaslblllty of contracting with central Ohio fanners to grow tomatoes
lor the Pittsburgh-based company.
Helni wants to obtain a few rpore
days use of Its PI'O\lE'SSing plant at
. Fremont, Ohio, which makes
ketchup.
Company of!lclals say that by

tlon would be In addition to present
production, the company says .
Brooks said It Is unknown how
much earlier tomatoes grown In
central Ohio would he ready for
picking. He said the company ts
Interested In growers In Fayette,
Plckaway, Ross and Pike counties.
"There's quite a blt of Interes(

The Suriday Ti,....Sentine.I-Page-C-7

Bane One
announces
3-for-2
stock split

R~ISTER

NOW!!

FALL TERM

common sllarescurrenllyoutatancJ.
In&amp; and on newly lisued shareS
resulting from the stock split.
Aa a result of the stock dMdend
which wW be paid 011 SWt. 6 to

sbarebolders of retOld asofAug.9,a
)lreS!!IIt owner of 100 lhares of Bane
· aae·wlll receive an addltlollal :!0
lhlrel..
Jolin G. McCoy, vice cJIIilnnan of
Bane One, apl•he! !be COl para·
t1011 raJas dividendi Ill correspond
to IDcl I 111!1111 e81'11111p.
He notal that this dividend
lncreue, aJq with the lncn!Ue
eflectlve In Mmdl of lbla year,
l1leiJil that Bane One's cub
~ bu been railed u tlmes
IM!I' the PMtlD&gt;-'1.
~

COURSES OF STUDY PREPARING
FOR GOOD BUSINESS POSITIONS

CALL NOWH
446-4367 or 992-7644
GAWPOLIS BUSINESS COu.EGE
Reg. No. 76-02-047ZB
'

hisprojectandwasoneofthetopftve
S\Udentslnthestate,competlngwlth
150projects.

Reed and his wife, the fanner
Mona Criss, reside on Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy.

rr-------------------..
Life E;aension is r;, vital new science that is working to addyears to
the life and life to the years of people of all ages.

Written for lay persons.
scientists and physicians by
two research scientists
who have been deeply in· ·
volved in aging studies for
over fourteen years, Ufe.
Extension is an e»traordinary book, one that
provides answers to
these questions and
many others:

•What does aging really mean?
•What fundamental biological mechanisms cause aging?
•How can these aging mechanisms be retarded or reversed?
oCan nutrients reduce the rislt of cancer, heart attack, and
stroke?
oCan you reduce the risks of smoking and drinking without
quitting?
oCan you be as lusty as you were in your twenties?
oCan you combat depression and helplessness with nutrients?
oCan Nutrients improve learning, memory, and concentra·
lion?
•How do you know which health experts and magazines to
believe?
There is literally no peraon alive today who can
afford to overlook the revolutionary advances
described in this new number one bestseller. Life
Extension is for everyone.

The
Alcove
42 Court St .
Lafayette Malt
Gallipolis
Open Deily 9 :30-8:00

~·---------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

tomatoes,
the Ohio
fruit farmers
would grow
ripen
having central
· more quickly than In the Fremont
area, which Is about 120 mlles north
of Columbus.
The idea Is In the "lnvesUgatlve .
stage.·' said Ronald Brooks, Heinz's
regional manager of agriculture.
Brooks said a "couple of more
years of fie)d trtals" are necessary
befone Heinz makes a substantial
commitment to growers.
He said the company's Interest In
central Ohio Isn't connected to any
desire to move productkm away
from northwestern Ohio fields,
where migrant wnrkers perlorm
much of the field labor.
Heinz now contracts all oflts.Ohio
production with northwestern Ohio
growers. Any central Ohio produc-

ftrst quarter of this year, the
steelmaker lost$118mlltlon, or$1.31
a share, on sales cif$3.9 b!Uion.
The nation's largest steelmaker
Tile conpany'sMeel operations said Its sales and net Income In 1983
recorded a klss of $141 m!Won otl second quarter were lower than In
the comparable period last year, but
sales of$L3 bllllon In AprO, May and
operating
Income was significantly
June, the lowest operating loss In
sU!el since the first quarter ofl~.lt higher, reflecting efficiencies In
steel and Improved results In on and
said.
gas operatloli.S.
During the 1!112 second quarler,
U.S. Steel earned $4 mUilon, or 5 ·
The steelmaker's directors orcmts a share, on sales of$5.1bUUon.
dered a quarterly dividend of 25
The Joss reported Tuesday was cents a share on common stock,
the smallest since the third quarter
payable Sept. 10 to stockholders of
record Aug. 5.
Tbe steel operating loss was $91
rnUUon less than the first quarter
1983. In the second quarter 1982, U.S.
Steel's .steel segment lost ' $186
rnUUon on sales of $1.5 bliUon.
"This Improvement occulTed
despite lower 81\les and reflects the
C()Sl reduction programs begun In
1982, whichwUJcontlnuelhroughthe
AT CHATEAU - Lisa Allen,
dan.,.... of Doll&amp;. and Pam
balance of 1983, as well as benefits
attrtrutable to the March 1983 steel
Allm, Pomei'O)', Is now employed at Clla&amp;Mu Beauty Salon.
labor accord," Chaimlan David
Roderick said In a news release.
Allen P""""led tram Melp
IDgh Scllool 111111 year wllh a
COLUMBUS - The board of
Secorid quarter 1983 operating
directors of Bane One Corp. has lneane from oll and gas operations
cerUIJcate In ~- Slle
lslnllned .. hair wtllng for 111m
declared a three sbareslortwosplit was $247 rnUilon better than In the
luad womeu and In aD llaell of
In Bane One's common stock and ftrstquarter, the company said.
COIIIIt'tology. She wOI be .t tbe
Increased thecasbdlvldend.
"Signs that the consumer-related
a.ateau
Tu8!lday and !!aturciiQ'
Theaewquarterlycashdlvldend sectoroftheeconomylsbegtnnlngto
evealnp
by appollltment.
represents an IncreaSe of &amp; percE!It strengthen are becoming more
overthepn:'VloUSquarterlyrateand ,..-evl-den_t._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
Is the second IncreaSe this year.
Effective with the March 1983
dividend, the cash dMdend was
raised 13 pel'l'EIIt over the rate paid
In l8ll2.
The C8llh dlvldl!nd tor the third
I
quarter of 26 cents per share wU1 be
pald on Sept. :ll to shareboldm of
record as of Sept 15. This dividend
will be pald on both Bane One
Pl'ITSBURGH (AP) -U.S. Sleet

In today's market, interest rates on longer term IRA
investments are more attractive than ever. BANK ONE
lets you specifically pick a maturity from 36 to 120 months
(3 to 10 years) which should help you plan your retirement
investment strategy. And your IRA interest is fixed and
guaranteed until maturity.
If you have an eighteen-month IRA investment that
matures during the next few months, or if you haven't made.
an IRA contribution yet in 1983, now would be a great time
to consider locking up a longer term rate. Of course, an IRA
is one of the best ways for any wage earner to save on
taxes, since contributions can be deducted from gross
income before you figure your taxes.
The interest you earn on your IRA
is also tax deferred.

Don't forget to attend the Ga!Ua
County Junior Fair. There Is a toto!
activity each day and evening.
Opening ceremonies are Monday
evening, Au&amp;'. 1, at.6 p.m .

of last year, wben U.S. Sleet
reported an $82.4 rnUilon loss. In the

Corp. last week reported It lost $1l2
mDllon, or $1.25 a share, on sales of
$4.4 bllllon In !be second quarter.

.'

If you are looking for a way
to improve your IRA investment
strategy; ask about our
longer term IRA plans at any
BANK ONE office.

Because they are operating out of a private residence, Moore said
the store doesn't contain any refrigerated Items. The store receives
nearly all of Its Inventory by truck delivery, and through this, Moore
hopes to keep prices at tbe store down.
"The natural food Industry Is big. All we have to dills order them,"
Moore said, adding that the avallabillty ol such foods keeps the
store's over)lead down.
··
Moore, an Athens native who has resided In the Galllpolls area for
the-past 1* years, Is also a preacher and shares stone operation
dulles with other members of the gr(Aip.
''We're looking toward moving Into a storefront, or a traDer,"
Moore said of Uvtng Breads' future plans for expanskm.

Steelnlaker .records
second quarter loss ·

..

---Fair stan. Monday

'I

GALLIPOLIS - It all st&lt;lrted when a grolip of
who attend
the same church In Pomeroy got tlredoftraveUing lellgthy distances
to obtain their favorite natural foods.
The end result or their planning Is Uving Breads Natural Foods,
operating out of the Lynn Brinker residence at 121 River St.,
Kanauga.
''We had to drive to Athens, Parkersburg or Huntington to get
natural foods,'' explained Harold Moore, a Mill Creek Road resident
who manages the store, who added that opening the local outlet
would more convenient' tor his friends and for those with a taste for
non-treated food .
The store, which occupies two rooms, carries such .food Items as
seeds, smooth peanut butter and herbal teas, tO shampooS and hand

•

'

.Natural food store
opens for business.
people

•

··-·
Pesticides For Uvestock
and Farm Bulldblgs
t;lulletln 473 Is a handy reference ,
tor controlling Insects around livestock and fatTns. Cost Is $2 plus tax
and It Is avaUable at our office 1502
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.

Indirect credits, collections, statement analysis, bank credit cards,
bank law, bankmanagementSkllls

prmnotlons.

fumlturewareroombyJ.
Payne.
Payne advertised thatH.he
sold ll~--------_jL...:...--:-....:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~-

.
I

Pon-v Middleport-Gollipolls, Ohio Point Plea•nt, W. Va.

.

Karschnik, Reed promoted at :Farmers Bank

· 1982 MERCURY LYNX. 2 dr., std., blll8 ........... ,........... '4495
1982 MERCURY LYNX. 2 dr., std. Red........................ '4495
1982 TOYOTA COROLlA TERCEL 4 dr. auto., AC, PS ..... 15995 •
1981 DODGE DIPLOMAT, 4 dr., auto., AC, PS .............. '4995
1980 DODGE PICKUP TRUCK 1)..50, 4 spd st............... '3995
r~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;~j 1979 DODGE ASPEN, 2 dr. auto., AC, PS .................... '2995 ;
1979.AMC CONCORD, 4 dr., lllto., AC ........................ '2795
1979 FORD MUSTANG, 4 cyt., auto., HB .....................'3495 ;
1979 FORD MUSTANG, 6 cyt., auto., cpe..................... '3495
1979 FORD FAIRMONT, 6 cyl., auto., AC .................... '2495
. 1979 FORD FAIRMONT; .4 cyl., auto., AC .................... '2495
1979 FORD fAIRMONT, 4 cyl., auto., AC .................... '2495
1979 FORD FAIRMONT, 4 cyt., auto., AC ....................12495
1979 FORD FAIRMONT, 4 cyt., auto., AX ..................... '2495
19n- FORD PINTO, auto., AC .................................... '1795
SINCE 1949
19n CHEV. TRUCK, 3 spd. std., low mileap .............. '1695
Hearing TesiS
Metliml Referrals
1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA, 4 dr., auto., AC ................ '1395 ·
1979 FORD TRUCK. auto., PS ................................... '3595 ~
Home Appointments
Also AvDIIDble
1979 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER, 5th Ave. Ed. Loaded ..... 16495

s ates, door frames , window
frames, as well as furniture. In
addition Pay11e carried a . full
undertaker's line. Payne himself
doubled as a mortician. That year
(1849) he claimed that he had a new
hearse and made no extra charge
for serv1ces rendred less than 12
mlles from town.
DURING THAT same year
Richard Payne (most likely a
relative) advertised that he ran a
sawmill on Firsi Avenue near
Grape Street. Richard turned out
sash, joists, scantling, weather
boards, sheeting, lathing and flatboats. In hls.ad he wanted to hire six
more carpenters.
In the late 19th century the Irwin
family owned this building. Toward
the turn of the century Fitch's Shoe
Shop and later J .G. Fitch's Cigar
Stand were located here. Fitch
rolled his own cigars as did a
number of Gallipolltans. Gallla
cigars wefe blg export commOdltles for tbe county and on at least a
couple of occasions stogies from the
OJd French City were mentioned In
national magazines In the early 20th
century.
ABOUT THE TIME of World
War I the Arrington and Payne
Saloon held forth here, but they
closed down In 1919 with tbe advent
of Prohibition. The whole Issue of
the fight to outlaw the saloon Is an
interesting saga In Gallipolis
history.
Probably the most fascinating
period was In tbe early 1890s when
Purley A. Baker was the pastor of
Grace Methodist Chureh.
Baker campaigned ftrst to have
, · Sl)nday sales prohibited and the Jaw
enforced. He even formed a sort of
vigilante group to make sure
1
saloons closed on Sunday. The
town's support ol Baker was not
uDJversal and some ol the town's
p6Uce who resented Baker's Interfering In poUce business began to
Interpret the letter of tbe law on
every matter especlaUy bW postIng. i\Jter the Rev. Mr. Baker had
posted signs on several of the town's
teiephone poles about upcoming
events at Grace, a WaJTant was put
oql for the arrest of said preacher.
Baker got off with a wamlnz and he

'

State Bank No. 983
CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF

The Commercial
and Savings Bank
.
Federal Reserve District No. 4
of Gallipolis In the County of Gallla, In the State of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries
at the close ol business on June 30, 1983.
ASSETS
.
Cash and due from depository Institutions ........ ...... ................. ......... 3,413,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .................. .................... ....................... .... 12,732,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies
and corporations .... ....... ........ ... ................................. ................ 2,263,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
In the United States ...... .......................... ....... .. ....................... ... 6,192,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
·
" under agreemehts to resell ........................................................... 1,600,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned Income) ..........18,873,000.00
Less: allowance lor possible loan loses .................... 220,000.00
Loans, Net ......... , ........................... ..... .... ..... ......... ................ .. .... 18,653,000.00
Bank premiss, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises ............... ;.... ....... ........... ...918,000.00
All other assets ........................ ............ .......... .. ......... ...... ..... ........... ... 905,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ... ............................................. ............... ...... ... .....46,676,000.00
UABILITIES
Demand deposits of Individuals, partnerships,
and corporations ........ .......... .......... ................................. .. ........... 4,284,000.00
Time and savings deposits or individuals,
.
partnerships, and corporations ...... ............. .. ......... ....... .. ... .. .... .. ..35,900,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ........... ..... ..................... '............. ~4.000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
In the 'united States ............... ................ ...... .. ............................... 1,892,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ............ ..................... ..... ...... .......... , ...... 272,000.00
Total Deposits ...... ........ ....... .......................... ................................ .41 ,592,000.00
a . Total demand deposits ... ....... ............................... 4,898,000.00
b. Total lime and savings deposits ........ .. ................ 36,694,000.00
All other llblllties ........ , .................................................. ........ ............ 614 ,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) .......................... ................~............................... 42,206,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock
a.No. shares authorized
1,800
b. No. shares outstanding
l ,SOO ..... (Par Value)
·
900,000.00
Surplus .............................. .......... .. ...... ...... ........................ ............. 2,850,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve !or contingencies
and other capital reserves ..................................... ............ .... ........ .. 720,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ................... .... ................................ ... .... 4,470,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
·
'
EQUITY CAPITAL. ... .................................................................. 46,6~6,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as' of report date
Standby letters of credit, total .............................. .. , ......................... 63,000.00
Time certificates of deposit In denominations
of $100,000 or more ... .............. ...... ................................................ 2,074,000.9Q
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month
ending with report date
Total deposits ...... ,.......... , ...... .. ... ..... ................... ......... .... ........ ...... 42,162,000.00
I, the undersigned officer do hereby. declare that' the Report of Condition (in'
. eluding the supporting schedules) Is true to the best of my knowledge and belle! .
Wayne L.Niday
Executive VlcePresldent &amp; Cashier
We, the undersigned dlr~tors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condition (Including the supporting schedules) and declare that it has been examined by
us and to the best of our knowledge and belief bas been prepared tn conformance
with ibe Instructions and Is true and correct.
Donald L. Crance
D. Paul Davies - Directors
Phllllp L. Pope
State of Ohio, County of Gallla, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 28th day of July , 1983 a nd I hereby cer·
tlty that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
My commission expires August 1, 1986. Christina Day, Notary Publi c.

•

�•

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

,State/

July 31, 1983

Investigator sees no.reason for legal ·action against Rank
By DON KENDALL
AP Farm Writer '
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal
authorities ;u-e looking at a senior
Agriculture Department official's
Indirect participation in a crop
subsidy program he helps oversee.
But one USDA Investigator says
he SEeS no reason for legal action
against the official - Everett G.
(Bud) Rank, admtnlstrator of the
"

department's Agricultural Stabillza tlon and conservation Service.
Rank reportedly will receive
more than $1ro,OO) worth of free
cotton under the government's
·payment-In-kind program.
Under PIK, farmers are given
free amounts of cotton and certain
other commodities as partial payment for taking land out of
production of the crops this year.
,

J . Michael Kelly, USDA's ethics
counselor 1n the Office of General
Counsel, said Thursday that he saw
no reason for taking official action
against Rank.
Rank was . not available for
comment, and his office referred all
queries to Kelly.
.
Kelly's remarks, In a telephone
interview , followed a report 1n The
Washington Post that a number of
big California cotton farmers and

conglomentesarescljeduledtoget
massive PD&lt; payments I!Ql!al to as
much as $3.8 rnllllon. In the case of
one big operation.
Rank, thearticlesa!d, !sa partner
In Cinco Farms, a Fresno COunty,
Cal!!., operation that enrolled Its
cotton Iandin the P!Kprogram. The
farm will get about 1.3 mtlllon
pounds of cotton, worth, at CUJTent
prices, more than $1 mllUon.
Kelly, however, said that Rank

d!vestedhlmselfofactlvepartk:lpat1on tn the operation when he was
appointed head of the qsDA agency

.

I

more than two years ago, and was
WU1Ware of Cinco Farm's PIK
enrollment untll recently.

SPECIAL ON ALL .

· WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan and
Cuba's Fidel Castro appear to be Inching cautiously
tpward negotiations to remove outside military
advisers from Central America and curb supplies to
the embattled region.
: "I am willing to give (Castro) the benefit of the
.pubt bt any negotiations and so forth," Reagan said
when asked about the Cuban president's offer
to support halting supplies of weapons and advisers to
Other countrtes 1n the region !! an agreement could be
reached among "all parties Involved!'
Reagan said, "U he Is really serious about this, I
think that's fine."
The president also said, "I'm not at aU dismayed ,"
by a 228-195 House vote to cut off supposedly secret
U.S. aid to rebels battling the leftist regime In
Nicaragua. The administration Is counting on the

HAY TOOLS
IN STOCK

lfrtday

FROM

$49500

WASHINGTON (AP) - A task
forceonacld rain appointed by EPA
chief Wllllam Ruckelshaus has
drafted a proposal that Includes a 50
percent cut In sulfur dioxide
emissions in 21 Eastern states,
double what the Reagan admtn!S·
tratlon reportedly has been
considering.
: The strategy was among a series
of options to be presented to
Ruckelshaus. next week 1n a
250-page report prepared by the
Environmental Protection Agency's top acid rain experts.
The report has been eagerly
awaited as a sign of what approach
Ruckelshaus will recommend to
President Reagan for curbing
pollution blamed for the deaths of
hundreds of lakes In the Northeastern United States and Canada.
: While'not recommending a single
option, the lask forcedoesstatethat
a cut of 50 percent in sulfur dioxide
emiSsions In 2l states and Canada
would provide "the most uniform
reduction" 1n acid perclpltation 1n
the most sensitive areas of the
Northeast and Canada.
"'Based on the National Academy
of Sciences report, this strategy
should achieve close to a 50 percent
reduction 1n (acid) deposition In the
northeast quadrant of North AmerIca," the stuc!Y said. Various
scientists have said a reduction of
this magnitude Is .-led tosolvethe
acld raJn problem.

DALE HILL FORD TRACTOR
AFTER RECLAMATION -The same section nearlY cornpleled now
will be WJed primarilY as a haven fo~ wildlife since reclaimed ground
remains lraglle lor many years.

'
1

Tr

I

Eqt.rpr

. 11

Reclamation project underway in'Scipio Twp.
POMEROY - A 40-acre a bandoned mtneland reclamation project is underway In Scipio Township
near Pagevtlle.
Robert First, district conservatlonlst, Soil Conservation Service,

reports the project is being funded
with monies through the Rural
Abandoned Mine Program with the
purpose being to reclaim old
abandoned mine land areas which
are causing a problem to the public.

Timber buyers get
additional time
WASHINGTON (AP) -Timber
buyers In the Pacific Northwest will
have additional time - up· to five
years to fulfill high-priced
purchase contracts made when
timber prices were high se"eral
years ago.
The extensions, announced
Thu'rsday by Agriculture Secretary
John R. Block, can be made for up to
five years without requ!rtnglnterest
payments, and apply to national
forest timber sold before Jan. 1, 1982.
"Many of those sales were bid at
prices which cannot be profitablY
harvested at today's prices," Block

!tytomlxharvestofthehigh-priced
sales with more recent lower-priced
sales so that their overall harvest
operations are economical."
The issue involves more than 16
bUllon board feet of federally owned
timber for whtch prtvate timber
tnterests offered some S6 btillon
during a bidding war In the wake of
thehoustngooomofthetate1970s.
Most of the timber is In USDA's
national forests in Washington,

covering the spoil with borrowed .al;;;o;;;ne;;;f;;;o;;;rm;;;;any;;;y;;;e;;;ar;;;s;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;~i
soil, and liming, fertlllzlng and
1
seeding the 40 acre area.
"Swface water control will be
handled by stone centered waterways", First pointed out, noting
further that "the work will hold
erosion problems to a mtnlmum
.over the reclaimed area.,,
· Once th~ reclamation Is com"
(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)
.pleted andagoodsodestabllshed the
land will be used pr!inarlly as
110 Spring Ave., Pomeroy)
wildlife land, he . wqllalned. First
cautioned that the nature· of the
PH. 992-51 01

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• AutomatiC string advanc1ng

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4FT. CUTTER

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' "Now In the Area"
· 9 Years Experience

Special Introductory
Rates
j "FREE ESTIMATES"

ACCENT
FENCE
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-6931

PAY NO INTEREST

·on Used

J Q MAJ Q ES
and
SWEET CORN

•

1

CINCINNATI (AP) -The most
toxic fonn of diOXIn and some
dioxins In combination probably
cause cancer In humans, an
International panel or scientists has
concluded.
11lose scientists, from five nations, told the U.S. Environmental
I
. Protection Agency on Friday that It
could not be ~!ermined at what
point exposure to dioxin becomes a

-·
'

WATERMELON
CANTALOUPE
PEACHES

We have a complete
stock of dimension
lumber, poles and posts
for all your decking,

.
WE ACCEPT
FeDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

,.

• Combines, headers and com headsno interest until May 1, 1984·

••
· Thlao,ller eubttct to eN~ or clnCelllllon b)'lrJtemiiUonal Hll\'elter Company at .nv tlmt without not~• orobllg•Uon,

•SALES •SERVICE •PARTS

EAST BROADWAY
PHONE 286·2139

JACKSON
DWIGHT J"NKINS RES. 682-6588

.

.

"This report doesn'l attempt to
estimate exposure," said Dr. Roy
AUiert of the New York University
M!!dlcal Center InstltuteofEnviron• mental Medicine. "However, there
is
agreement thatdloxtn Is a
jlC1Werful carcinogen."
1\Jbert saki there are too little
research data on humans and toO
little infonnat!on on background
teyels of dioxin In the atmosphere to

gmeral

' By 1be Auoclalecl Prell8
Nicaragua a~sed a U.S. warshlpoflurklngprovocatlvelycloseto
Ita shore and clalmed an unldentlt fled pJanestrafedoneafltslslandsas
nllle Latin rnlnlBters urgently con.: fe(I'ed to reduce Central American
teaslonS.
1
In E1 Salvador, President Alvaro
Mqan8 aakl late Friday that
electlons schednlfd for later this

: year at the Reagan administration's

SAVINGS VALUES ·TO IMPROVE YOUR BOTTOM LINE

REASOR EQUIPMENT

l

AGREEMENT REACHED - Chalnnall Donald Albotlla, of Mich.,
who heads a bouse IIUhcommlliee looldr•l lnlo the 1810 campalan of
Pre&amp;ltleat Reagu held a news coaferenoe F'rlda)' 110 Ill¥ that Ida panel
anclt!JeWblteBouaebavereachetlfi&amp;TI!IIIIlMtlorthe~tocamJIBIIn
papers. (API 'UI photo)
'

WASHINGTON (AP) . - An
estimated 22 million food stamp
recipients will get their benefits on
time next month, and members of
the Senate wUl receive a pay raise of
$9,138 following congressional approval of a catch-all spending bill.
Congress sent ·the measure to
President Reagan late Frtday,
several hours 1n advance of the
deadline that administration officials set to assure smooth continuation of the food stamp program.
Congressional leaders said they
expected Reagan will sign the
measure, despite miSgivings over
·several provisions.
Final passage came after the
Senate gave In to the ltouse and
agreed to delete an $8.4 bllllon
contribution to the International
Monetary Fund.
The Senate approved the overall
$7 billion· spending blll on a vote of
49-25. The House vote on the overall
measure was 257-133.
· The measure Included money lor
dozens of federal programs and
projects, but the tunds n®ded most
urgently were $1.2 billion to prevent
disruptions In the food stamp
program.
Administration af!lclals said recipients laced delays In receiving
their sla!)'lps !! Congress dldn 't

01utine~rs,

Beirut-Damascus highway near the Syrian border,
ppllce said.
The latest casualty toll brought the overall Dgure 1n
eight days of fighting In the Syrian-controlled central
sector of the Bekaa to 30 killed and 73 wounded by
pollee count.
The rebels led by renegade Col. Saed Mousa
mutinied May 7 to demand a more militant PLO
policy, a bigger say In the decision-making process
and financial refonns. Arafat claims the revolt was
Instigated by Syria 1n an attempt to bring the guerrilla
movement under the control of President Ha!ez

predlci the cancer rtsk It poses.
The statement was produced In a
three-day workshop with 31 researchers from the United States,
Sweden, Italy, the United Kingdom
and Netherlands.
It said that "2,3,7,8Te t ra chlorodlbenzo·p-dloxln
(TCDD) is probably carcinogenic
for humans on the basis of animal
carcinogenicity studies which were
positive 1n multiple species and

organs."
"Epidemiological studies of
workers exposed to chemicals
contaminated with TCDD such as
2,4,5-Tr!chlorophenoxyacetic acid
and 2.4.5-Trlchlorophenol are consistent with the posjtlon that TCDD
Is probably carqb\bgenlc for hu·
mans; the available evidence
lndlcate,s an excess Incidence of soft

~icaragua accuses

These Waiver of Finance terms apply to the following equliJ11MH1t:
• Used trac;J.Q_rs and Implements sold with tractors- no Interest until
March 1, ~
.
·

. ;:

BEmUT, Lebanon (AP) -Mutineers and loyalists
ol Yasser Arafat's Palestine Uberatlon Organization
called. a new truce 1n east Lebanon Saturday after
sporadic shelling duels that killed four combatants
and wounded :ll, poilce reported.
In the north port of Tripoli, reinforced pollee units
stood by to take over from warrtng Moslem m!lltias
who occupied positions vacated by Syrtan troops on
Thursday.
·
The PLO cease-ftre went into effect at daybreak
after 24 hours of fighting In and around four towns In
the Bekas. Valley abutting a nine-mile stretch of the

C81JCel' riSk.

BELL PEPPERS
HOT PEPPERS
GREEN BEANS

turnout.
Reagan said that "any government down there. we
havP to say, 1s going to have major problems because
for centuries now, tht..&gt;y've lived with this kind of social
system 1n which they don't- they can't even deftne
human right$. And even thP people who want them
hav!' trouble explaining what it should be like."
Reagan said the presidential commission he
established on Cenlral America, headed by Henry
Klsslnger. must lind a plan tb help the reglorl
eliminate conditions which foster revolution.
"All their revolutions back through the years have
just becn trading one ~t of rul~rs for anot~~ set of
'rulers," said Reagan. "And t'Ondltions don't ilet any
better, just somebody else gets the hand In the till
instead of the people that they've put tn there."

planned U.S. military maneuvers .In the region .
.Reagan called on the Organization of American,
States to demand that Nicaragua hold democratic
elections and better qbserve human rights.
He said the OAS offers a "broader" forum for
negotiating settlements In Central Amertca than the
"well-intentioned" COntadora group repesented by
MeXIco, Panama, Venezuela and Colombia.
The president was bttetvlewed by the McLaughlin
Group, a panel of broadcasters lllld joumallsts who
appear weekly on television.
Reagan ridiculed tanner President Cartet•'s
description of the U.S.-backed regime ln El Salvador
as "the most bloodthirsty in our hemisphere, perhaps
the world:" Reagan said El Sillvador's government
was elected by the people with an Ill percent voter

replenish the food supply funds in
time for the issuance of August
benefits.
The $1 .2 billion bl'ings the total
foodstampbuctgetfortheyearto$12
billion.
The pay ralsP - which survived
the House on a vote of 225-100 wouldbringthesalaryofsenatorsto
the same $00.800 that House
members receive. In exchange for
the raise, ~nators would race
restrict ions on their honoraria
Income to~ percent of their salary,
or more than $~.000 a year,
beginning next Jan . l.
That provision was fashioned
after several senators reponed
large outside earnings last year
from speaking engagements.
The dispute over the IMF
contribution threatened for a time to
hold up llnal passage of the bill, but
.l he lsSt.ie was resolved after the
administration informed the Senate
Republicanleadershlpitwouldwait
untO later in the year to seek the $8.4
billion, sources said.
The administration l• expected to
renew Its push for the money next
week. according to one aide, who
asked not to be Identified by name.
The House voted, 213-165 against
spending the money, which Is the
UnltedStates'shareofthelncreased
financing the 1MF needs for

developing countries to meet their
borrowing costs.
In addition to the setback on the
lMF , Reagan also had to setlle for
onlY half of the $50 mllJion he
orip;tnally sought 1n military assistance to El Salvador.
In all, the bill provided financing
for a grab bag of programs and
projects, including money lor hiRh·
waysandbrldges,astudyoflnterlor
Secretary James Watts' policy of
coal leases on federal property, and
approval for the Air Force to
purchase armon.'&lt;l sedans to help
protect high-ranking officials from
terrorist acts overseas.
A House subcOmmittee resurrectedaprev!ouslydefeatednatural
gas .blll that a consumer group says
would push up prices for many
users. On a 10.9 vote, the House
Energy Committee's fossil tuels
subcOmmittee approved a compromise that 'differs greatly from
the f\tll dct'OOtrol wanted by the
Reagan ndrnlnlstrallon and a gradual decontrol blll approved earlier
this week by the Senate C-Xpe
UqO'ue ur tcg5. ceilings In tncrernental Increases on old gas produced as
a result of reopening abandoned
fields, drilltngnewwellstnoldllelds,
or otherwise making new Invest ments to enhance recovery of the
gas.

loyalists call truce
call their men off the streets und allow the pollee to
take over.
· Bul local reporters In Tripoli said Saturday there
was no sign Indicating the mllitlamen were preparing
to withdraw although pollee units assembled at the
go\'enunent house area and near the anny's
barracks outside the city, ready to move in.
In Beirut, President Amin Gemayel was reported
Saturday ID have engaged in "quieti contacts" aimed
at reconciling warring Christian and Druse militias tn ·
Lebanon's central mountain regions before a planned
Israeli pullback.

Assad.
Telephone reports from Tripoli Saturday said about
500 policemen were standing by to take control of the
. city If agreement Is reached to withdraw rival
m!lltlamen from Syrian-vacated positions.
The Syriaps pulled back from their mid-city
posltlons to the outskirts of Tripoli without advance
notice. Rival muttlamen quickly dug 1n at all seven
vacated positions with heavy weapons.
Lebanon's national pollee chief, Col. Osman
Osman, held ali-day negotiations Friday with vartous
mllltla commanders In Tripoli to persuade them to

Panel affirms cancer-dioxin connection

•

Look us over. We're offering tremen- terms. That means you don't pay indous savings on just about everything · terest for months. Used tractors, and
on our used equipment lot If you buy implements sold with tractors, combefore October 31, 1983:
bines, headers, corn heads, cotton
Finance your purchase through Inter- pickers and harvesters are Included. lnnational Harvester Credit Corporation . tematlonal and competitive equipment,
for a minimum period of 12 months and too! Buy now. Save big. Offer ends
you'll get special Waiver of Finance October 31, 1983.

sund•y

August food sta01p
benefits. will be .paid

Waning PLO

985-3308
- -

CHESTER OH.

HOME GROWN

dock kit luet for you.

915~3301

31 .1CC Homehte engri1e. the ST-200
easily handles tall grass and weeds .
Optrona1 accessories turn trie
ST-200 mto a powerful blower or a

PH. 843-5193
PORTLAND, OH.
FROM POMEROY: Take
East

1111 cu•tom tlftlgn •

•

ST-200

OPEN 9:00 TJ ll 8:00

lecdttrlc»r wood need1.

CHESTER,O.

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Featunng light werght (13 114 lb~ . ). a
•
20" culling swath and powerful
~
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HARRIS FA

Pre11ur• treated
lumber lor all your

LUMBER

200
· GASOLINE-POWERED
STRING TRIMMER

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1

OUTDOOR
WOOD

building

~

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HOME GROWN ·

and

reclaimed ground is very fragile
and lt will be best If the land Is left

c

Oregon, California and northern
Idaho. A small amount Is on land
owned by Interior's Bureau of
Reciamatlon.
When the bottom !eli out of the
housing market during the recessions that began 1n 1979, the merkel
value of federal Umber plummeted,
making it financially impossible for
those bidders to pay the government
what they had ortglnally offered.
Timber buyers who want extensions of their contract terms submit
a "multi-sale extension plan" to the
contract offer before Dec. 31, 19113,
Block said.

! &lt;r

.,

1N

said.
The qepartment's ForestServlce 1r;;;:;;;:;;:;;:;:;:;:;;;~;i
will .begin processing appllca tlons
Immediately.
HEMLOCK PIPELINE
"Even though markets have
begun to climb, it is apparent that
Pipeline, well sites, reclama·
prices may never reach the highs of
tion, ponds, utility construc"the late 1970s when the high
contracts were bid," Block said.
tion and septic tanks.
"Accordingly, many timber pur.Cha.!;ers WO\lld face default on their
Bob Campbell &amp; Don Rose
contracts without some form of
Racine. 011.
relief. This could lead to bankruptcy
Ph. 949-2224
and economic disaster for many
"Bonded
&amp; Insured"
communities dependent on the
timber Industry."
Block purchasers
said the extensions
"will
provide
with theOexibU-

The work has included grading
and shaping the mine spoil areas,

Republican-dominated Senate to kill the ban.
Castro signaled a willingness for negotiations,
during an interview Thursday in Havana.
"'U there were tQ be an agreement .a mong all the
parties Involved about withdrawing all the advisers.
we would be willing to support such a settlement."
Castro said. "ll an agreement were reached Qn the ·
basis of cessation of sending weapons to any statP of
Central America, we would be wllling to abide by it."
Reagan said the United States was willing to
participate In any negotiations leading 10 a settlement
of the turmoil in Nicaragua and El Salvador though
·
democratic means.
The president suggested that Castro's statement
and conclllatory statements by the sandtnlsta regime
1n Nicaragua about negotiations were the result of

Task force drafts
~cid rain proposal

AND UP

251 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-6441

SectionJuly. . . . . .,

Reagan, Castro inching toward negotiations

r;;;;;;;:;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;

HAY ·RAKES

BEFORE REClAMATION - Pictured here Is a 40 acre section of an,
abandoned swfare mlne area bt Scipio Township near PageviUe.

'Qrimes- ~enti•te1

•

u1111D8 muat be delayed untll 198!1
becalllt! tbe tlratllng of a hew
COIIItllutlca and electlon law have
1¥?1 beell llnlahed. Magana said he
- diJappolnted by the delay.
ColamblaD Foreign MlhJ.ster Ro; di1IO Lloreda Caicedo said he did
1 oot expect the rnlnlaterlal conference Ill Panama a~y to produce
I mAJor l'l!llllta, but told repocters

: ...

said.
"Because TCDD is almost always
found 1n association with other
materials, such as chlorophenols,
combustion products, etc., It may
never be possible to evaluate the
carcinogenicity or TCDD by Itself In
humans.''

Dioxin !sa byproductofmaldngor
burning certain chemicals. Re-

searchers say 75 different chlortnated dioxins, each with different
physlcal-laild chemical properties,
have been ldentllled.
The TCDD isomer Is extremely
toxic, but the panel said combinations ol other dloxhis also "proba·
bly" cause cancer In humans.
"1,2,3,6,7.8-Hexachloro- dlbenzop-dtoxin (HCDD) and 1,2,3,7,8,9.HCDD In combination with each

other Is probably carcinogenic for
humans on the basis of animal
bioassay studies which showed an
excess Incidence of hepatocellular
tumors 1n rats and mice," the
statement said. "There are limited
data In humans that suggest a llnk
between exposure to mixtures of
chemicals which Include these two
HCDOs and sOft tissue sarcomas."
JeiTYStara, director of the EPA's
Environmental Criteria &amp; Assessment Office 1n C!nc!nnatl. praised
the panel and agency staff.
"This scientific panel, which is
truly the best group or scientists tn
the world on this subject, Is making
sure for EPA that these documents
and the science Included 1n these
documents Is the best ... knowledge
on the subject, from the standpoint
of health effects," Stara said. .

U.S. of provocation

there FridaY night: "There are
agreements. I think that there is an
Improvement."
As the meeting of foreign mlnls·
ters drew toward a a clOse, U.S.
warships deployed for maneuvers
ott Nk:aragua'sAtlantlc and Pac!!lc
coasts and American troops prepared for a big exercise 1n
neighboring Honduras.
A Nicaraguan Foreign Ministry
communique late Friday clalmed
the U.S. frlgateCUfton Sprague was
leas than 15 mUes off Nicaragua's
Paclllc coat In "an attitude that Is
clearlY provocative and offensive to
the natlonaliOIIm!ignty. ''
Theconmunlquealaoclalmedan
unidentified plane fired three
~at El Cardon

tissue sarcomas/' the statement

illalld'Ibun·
day ~~ wttbout hlttiD(IIIYtblni'
before fleeiM towarda Hontluru.lt

also claimed fourT-33HonduranA!r
Force planes buzzed two Nlcara·
guan border towns Tuesday night.
El Cardon Is two miles sooth of
Corinto, Nicaragua's main Pac!!lc
port, where the Soviet freighter
T!mbukwas unloadlng15,oo:Jtons of
wheat. The communique called the
alleged strafing a "criminal

action.'.'

·

Corlnto, 94 miles northwest of
Managua, Is where ftve conununlst
bloc ships bave unloaded and three
Soviet freighters are expected soon.
But Nicaraguan ofllclaJs say the
&amp;hips are bringing general cargo,
not weapons aa the United States

clalma.
'"lbeseeventscon11nnonoeagaln
the aerloul threats cloabli In on
NICaragua aa a rarult of the
mfl!tarlst and warlike pollcles

advocated by the Reagan administration and Its allies 1n the region,
constituting the most serioUs and
direct threat to peace In the Central
American region," the communique said.
Nicaragua's leftist Sandtnlsta
govenunent has threatened war
with Honduras If attacks by
Honduras-based rightist-led Nicaraguan rebels do not cease. The
Santllnlstas clalm the rebels are
financed and trained by the United
States In an effort to overthrow the
Nicaraguan lfO\'enunelll.
The United Siates supports the
Honduran government. President
Reagan has called the rebels
"freedom flghtenJ" and says they
wUJ cootlnue to receive co:rert U.S.
aid despite Thursday's HOUBe vote
to cut It off.

..

WEEDING OUT DIOXIN -Aa EPAcleiu&gt;-uplelm pulllweedlll&amp;tlle
111ut of a dloldn cletiiHIP camJNIIp aear a ~ lao11•
herblddeplanUnNewark'llroabaundnellhbQrhood. (API ·n pl... )
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
evidence examiner has testified that
JeanShrader"sbodywasatonelime
In the trunk of her car, and another
witness testified thai Mrs. Shrader's
husband, John, carried what appeared ' to be a long, heavY bundle
from h1s apartment to the trunk of
ills wife's car the nlght she was
killed.
Sylvia Acton. who examines
evidence for the police department,

testified Friday that comparison of
fibers and other material found on
Mrs. Shrader's raincoai matched
with those found in the car.
" In my opinion, the victim was
once in the trunk qt the car," she
said.
Kindra. Baker. 17, who lived
across the street from the Shraders
on Oct. 22. 1981, said she watched
Shrader load the b\llldle into the
auto.

~on little

nrnmru
"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER''

400 Second Aw.

•

446-1883

Salutes
The Youth Of
Gallia County
During the 34th Annual
Gallia County Jr. Fair
August I thru 6
,r-

Miss Baker also said she hadn't
seen Mrs. Sllrader at all that
evening.
•
Shrader is la!klng a&amp;lout $118,001
In Ufe 1nsura11ce benefits on hlswl!e,
Jean, 25, who was found strangled in
downtowB'· ..Colwnbus parking
garage. The bid Is belli&amp; oppoeed by
Mrs. Shrader's pareRis, Dale and
Leah Wolford of Ashland, who
contend Shrader killed ills wife.
Testifying 111 the civil trial In
Franklin Couuty Common Pleas
Court, Miss Baker said Friday she
had been s1tt1JJ« ootdoors, smoking
clgarettes, wiM!n Shrader can1ed
!be bundle - Wlhlch appeared to be
clothes, coatiiBDd blankets- to the
open car trunk.

a

3 Announcements

LAFF·A·DAV.

-·---·- .... -· -· -··-·

'"-

We want to thank our
children, relative• a. friend•
for the nlca glftt, floral
..-angaments and card1 of

our 26th Wedding
Anniversary.
Sterling and Sandra
Maaur.

1

1'1. Pleo..nt WV.
NOll. Coli

•

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-~ :

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........... ~ Fri...... ot

a.

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H.,..,.. c - . l w

Center.

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hcklo•d• Df n•w

e..;,_

Ilea me. Rich•rd

,·do;-.

...,_ld,

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.,.ts

~vetlon

Box of clothing ond miKol· 1~=:-:----.---­
lonoua ltema . Coli 44&amp;. LOIT: .... rd
-

B•rn. Contlgn•
tobol evory -doy
1:10 dl time. Emmo
IIIII A.-.or. .304-428·

. '

..

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..

441-H72
ELKHOUND. bliiCk &amp; ten, 5 LOif • n h l g - ot
50 mlleo. 614-992·3377 or montht old, good with child· Melgo MS E_,. ._,tod kr "'v uHCI -1 &amp;
814·992-5007.
ron, 304·e75-4096.
douallllf.. MlaM 11 ~"" . . . . . s-In l'toml·
acroH tile wrln bond . .,.., ......3158, 3nl. 1o
SWEEPER and MWing ma- THREE klneno, approx. 12 ---llnwootol - · · Cllwo St., Ooillpolla. 011.
chine repair. perta, and WMka
old. 30-4-882·2213. C"" 1141J•IIf1.

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39.00
49.00
52.00
56.00
58.00
60.00
60.00
62.00
66 .00
69.00

1.51
1.88
1.99
2.14
2.29
2.42
2.39
2.51

..-man allle-

54.00

58:00
64.00
66.00
69.00

Your services were
100% perfect, we
thank you. Also your
helper Ralph Moore.

-·-·....

fall.

. .-. . .

Car blaze

~-

OPEN MONDAYFROM 10 AM TO 8 PM.

..

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'

·II AT JJ'S WHIN THi
DOOIS OIIIN FOI THI BEST BUYS.

.

'

The limit of our

'

t.o:••,.

..
...
.

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• !•'

lobyalttor In my homo.
Addleon oroa. Cell 3e7·
050e.
Exp.

Amloh Food Products In
e-d domond. Dlatrlbutor·
ahlpe ovalloble with high
Income pmontlol. No major
l"voetment, no lnv.,tory or
. .Ivery, Apply In PMSOI' 8
.,PM Tuoa. 8·2-113 otColum·
bua loulllorn Eloctrlc Co.
180 8ocondAve.• Oonlpolle.

1--:-:-=:-=--:-:-

to live In and 01 ,. for .acterty
lady tor room, boerd. •nd

machine, blby clothla, tlze
1 2 penta. cloth••· old

amoll ..lory. Coll44e·31119
or e14·2S8·18e7.

dlahoo, booko. rooking chair.
_•n_d_muc
__h_mor
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•CRISISUNE/24-HOUR EMERGENCY CARE

nteda home worker to up-

......~....~.~~-~~···········

=~~o~::ns.:::•·!~:

.·'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
Pomeroy, Ohio

--

atch

)'011

thou&amp;hts of
UIOII u...

foNver, w• ·

l'lm•

Gi.-..

Jot, Tim &amp; Wlllllll

v· .

ahow houu on Aug . &amp; &amp; 8

2 BR hou11 on nice lot. RIO from 2 until I p. m.

dlahee. cloth11 and v•rtoua

lnauleted . Call 814-24&amp;83211 or 814·245·8384.

Call 814·992·e941 .

FINISH YOURSELF. 48 X

r tlgna .

m•tlc door opener, g.. h11't ,

air conditioner Included.

304-578-2711.

8

FOUR Soturdoy,
ftomlly yard
oolo,
Frldoy,
July 29th.

&amp; 30th. Nl'-orto Storo. At. 2,

Apple Orovo.

School. Sians. Si&amp;nl Postocl.
Far mall M. tractor, 8 H. pull.mowing machine, 8ft. drag disc,
drag plows cultipacker, farm wagon. 2 wheel trailer, push
plow , 350 Honda motorcycle, 10" Rockwell table saw, wel.dong table, ~rinder mounted on work bench, Powercralt l'i
saw. floor 1ack, Portapower, acetylene cuttmg torch , hose
and gauges with cart 2 boat trailers, 10 horse boat molor,
power push lawn mower. 17511. olll" cable, 23 channel C. B.
several beehive bodies and supers - honey d1straclor,
"5-5 gal. plastic jugs, wood frame windows, alummum ex·
tension ladder, 20 ft. wooden ladder, lois old lumber, WOO·
den cattle racks, 275 gal. fuel oil lank. cannmg &amp; m1Sc. 1ars,
Hardwick gas range wrth grill in cenler, 2 form1ca top tables .
foldin&amp; chairs, old library table, old crock. some glassware.
Many rtems not lisled .
Terms of Sale-Cosh or chock with Positive 1.0.
Not Reaponsible for Accidents

•COMPLETE SPEECH &amp; HEARING CARE

Columbus, Ohio

--·

Area Code 614-890-2551

••
'

"
•DRUG/ALCOHOL SERVICES

... ".'

.

•COMMUNITY EDUCATION/PREVENTION

....

~

.

"

•AGENCY CONSULTATION

•

JACKSON
200 Main Street
286-5075

I•

POMEROY .

Muierry •ights
~-2192
.

446-5554 ---CRISISLIP4E--286-5554--CRISISUNE-992-5554

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----------------------

.

..••'."

.."••
..•
' ..
•

-

ProfeMionel
Service a

-..ry.

1,.

tvaii•IM to
moot lndlvlduol - · · Con·
tocrtAoyWodo.....,.,.ogon,.

- · ,.,.1241 "

=r·~'l!'~uc~:
Carroll

Snowdon, 44e·4280.

lrurlarnl

Due to expansion, Rax . has
openinp for five manaaemen.t
candidltesj The successful candidate for this excitln&amp; position
will possess a dear" and/or
supervisory experience; ·effective communication skills and a
hip ener" level. Relocation a
possibility. Attractive compensation packaae. Send resume to
lax T. Ahl, 396 Richland
Athens, Ohio 45701.
,.

.,...,...Rol•"•_..,...
l'or ..........

........

......,,.••• tol•

coli

992·6312

.

EAFORD

1

NEW LISTING - 4 acres plus
5 room house, bath, T.P.
water, Southern schools. On~
o~

$25,900.

POMEROY - Tender Loving
ea.., shows in th~ three
bedroom home. Beautiful
woodwork throughout. K~chen
has st011e, d~hwasher, disposal, 4 walk·in closets &amp; Ill
balhs. Nice garage with
apartment. Reduced $48,000.00.
RUT IAN 0 - Nice Starter
Home! Very neat welfkept
·three bedroom home 011
60'xl00' lol. $20,000.00.
CLOSE TO HI SCHOOL LO'Iely four bedroom, bHevel
home Fealures formal l~ing
room. formal dinin&amp; equ1pped
kitchen w~p breakfast bar.
Large family room w~h wood·
ourner. Sils on Ill acres.
Asking $49,000.00.
HAPPY HOLLOW RO. - 1974
Freedom 12x65', 2 bedrooo1
mobile homa Nr condilionoo,
all eklclric. As~ng $7,000.00.

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

Phone 742·3171

NEW LISTING - 6 ""· house
and trailer. Equipped kitchens,
baths, garage and · 1~ kt
NEW · LISTING
• 1979
Wndsor furnished and level lot
in Middleport $22,000.
DBL. RENTAl.- For additional
income or inveslment.
Middleport.
RACINE - Reasonable 8 ""·
n~ older home Good panelin&amp; nice carpetin&amp; furnace, 2
baths, I&amp; lot $35,001. Offer
welolmed.

II APTS. - Rm. for m&lt;re.
Have been 1emodeled. Level
lois. Stores. schools and
churches near. Will take
$85_000.

3 A TS. - In Pom'eroy within
wal~ng distance of businesses.

$23,500.

RT. 124 SYRACUSE Excellent 2100; and 2 bedroom
trailer. P&amp;~ng $23,500.

10 ACRES - Just off Rl 33
near Bu~inghom. For $1.000
per acre.
·

Housing
Headquarters

Real Estate General

•

RELAXING RETREAT

Charming old country home with 200 acre
wooded land, stocked fishin1 lake. Ideal for
hunting and fishin&amp;. Will sell all or part. Owner
wants action.

95 Acres, Meigs Co. Beautiful rollin&amp; land with
outbuildings, lake and woods.

·"

••

~

•
•

•
•••
"
••

-...

L. SMITH
REAL ESTATE

VIRGINIA

61 4-388-8826
Reel Eatate

-..•
•

.

.

I'

ESTATE·

... -- . . ..

SAT., AUGUST 6, 1983
10:00 A.M •.

-

Tllil is lhllllltl of Klllllllh Nilson. l.OCIIId one milt on SR
160 11 Willillvillt. Olllo. T.U SR 619 to lint houso on rialll
Wlldl for Salt IfF~.
.
JUCI'OIIS: 8N Ford (Good Rubber) AC-B Tr&gt;Cia' w/6 it. Side

•

31 Home• for Sale ·

c•1

LawnMo•~••no.,...uolll•

Bill Childs

MUIIIt Co. Phone

Houooalellnlng Inhour.
Oolllpollo 'ii=ii.;;::ii-~~~~1
CltJ.
&amp;• ..,,....
44a·115 , nfer•••••I;========~J
............
I·

es r.'

Crai&amp; S'"naon

1·614·593-5571

~

814-742·2811 .
Oonorol MouUng ond Trooh
lorviOo. Rlllolllo
end tleponcloblo. Co!l 44e·
1151 betMJft 8 Md I .

RCS REALTORS

a.. Htle-614/867·8050

PIANO TUNINO·LANE DA·
NIELS. llallollle oorvloa
181141. A . . oloto of

18 Wented to Da

CALL

Geo. S. Hobstetter. Jr.
Broker
Office: 992-5739

LOCATION: Charlas St., Crown City, Ohioi a
short driva from New Bridge at Proctorvilo.
Auction sips will be vlaoblo. Gtrcit Proptrt~.
R11son for stllin&amp;, movin&amp; 011! of stale.
FULKS LAND COMPANY
llac fullls, AuctioMtr
"W• 11t lh• job done"'
For inforllllllon ull 614/256-6661 or

.....

...

,,

30 y..re. ovolloblo oftor
Aug. 9. 1913. Coli oftor e
p.m., 1·304-e75·2882.

FiRST TIME BUYER - 9.9%
INTEREST - ~ a.vailable 011
this contemporary 3 bedroom
home which features vaulted
ceilings. oak cabinetry, fami~
room, &amp; garage. Take advan·
tage of this oppmunily loday.

$18,000.

AUCTION
This well built, well loc!lted spacious
Brick Home will be sold at Public Auction
this Saturday, August 6th -Starting at
10 a .m.
3 bedrooms, ful~ equipped kitchen, dining room. fami~ room, 2
fuU bathS garau, on beautifuly landscaped yard. All ~ems and
furniture to be sold. 1-1970 Buici&lt; in Mint Condition.
1older home to be sold. just cotnf)letely remodeled and decoraled
in and out 2 bedrooms, dininJ.room, liVing room, enclosed porch,
garoge w~h carport, 12x 18 buiding can be usa! for st&lt;rage or ren·
tal unit
.
TERMS: 15% down on day of ulo, Bol1nct 11 Dud '" 45
doys.
·
. ..
Come 11M a loo~ inspectlho=onthouiL TbiSJUsl
lillY 111 tho home~~~~ 11M bMn
101. Wt '" not •kina
UIO,OOO. not $75,000 not_, $50, • this ia•IUCiion, wt
1111 you set 1111 price.

GREAT BUY
9.9% FINANCING
JUST LISTED - Thisoomfortable 3 bedroom home~ situated
on 2 wes with several
oulblds;;. Pavoo rood~ con. venent 10 tM mines, shoppilg
&amp;schools. Best olaM affordabl~
w~ ·a modest down payment
. you• monthly irwestmentis less
.than $175.00!

HOBSTmER
REALTY

Phone 742·3092

For l..oo, Auto lervlco
com~~r,Moaon,WV,3uya.
2 holote, oxaellonlloCIItlon,

23

Real Estate General

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

E_.,,.. hou• polntlnt
ondlownm-rotlolr. Vory Houoo for Mlo 8 rooma •
_
.... - · Coil 44e· both with or without furnl·
turo. Cllll 441·0824.

,,.,

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" • •'

OWNER -JOSEPH MASTERS
AUCTIONEER - RED SMITH

- r . Uppor Rt. 7 In
Koneugo. Ohio. Coli 44t·
2112 or 44e-8171.

-~~~~· In Oolllo County
lor o l - •
Form,
fire lniiUrenoe
home ondfor
~*""'•I
property

2965 DuWin.Orandvllla Rd.
Or Phone

.. npportunlty
·~
1 NOTICII
THE OHIO VALLEY PUIILIIHING co. roc:ommondo
thot you do buolnNt whh
P..,ple you lmow. ond NOT
to aond monoy through tho
moll until you hove lnvaotl·
gotool tho offering.

•ra•

Phone
1- ( 6141 -992· 3325

Public Sale
I!&amp; Auction

Rooclovllle, OH.

eucoeuful bulln••• far O¥er

off-

SHOW SAT., SUN.

388·871 1.

3 miles from RHdaville on 124. turn rl&amp;bt at Riverview

1_.:.:..:.__-:---7::---:--:Country CoOTYoul for ula by

BANDY AND BEAVER In·

DH!ECTONS ...
South on Rl. 7, 5 miles below
Gallipolis , lo Raccoon Crk .
Bridge and follow si&amp;ns.
·

N11r Tycoon Lake,

Sat., Aug. 6, 1983-10:30 A.M.

I:~==j~;;;;;:==

Room. board 1nd 011rt for 1n

fend.

r

Mo.

Houee for ale . 4 room•.

AUCTION

YARD tole. Auguet 1,1989.
125 Pork Drive. Pt. PlooYord ule·Augult 1 &amp; 2 on Nnt, 9:00 t1111
North Moln St. In Rutlond.
e14·742·2e48.
YARD ..le. 2414 &amp; 2416

IIIII suppot1.

•
.•
•

s.,.ocu... Ohio. 614·992·
29e7 oftar 6 p.m .

Lr-------==::::::::::::::,__,;_,

wish to the Will oore tor eldorly In our 22 Money to Loan
c1os1rw • ot Aua-t 1 or homo. Trolned ond E rlonoocl. L.P.N. caro given. HOME LOANS low fl•od
the Rio 0~ V.llriiiiiY . , 882-7314.
mo. LMdor Mortgogo. 77 e.
Clinic IIIII lllgylly llllllk
I toto. Adlono. Ohio. 1 "e 14·
111 af ow clkGts IIIII
112·3011 . or 12 to 4PM
1·800.3•1·e5541n Ohio.
friends for their lllrolllll

For lion lnfonlation, Please Contact

Water · Electric
Bath House
&amp; Boat Dock
DOWN

•44 budget. cantralolr, fuUy bath, outbuilding, lot
carpeted. Box 408 Clrle Dr .. 80x1e8. ApploOrovo. Rt. 2.
-Pio;::-:n::tz:-:S::u:-;b::dl::vla;-:l::on::.;-;;:::;~ 304·6711·2282.
~acre on hard rortd, South·
aldo, WV. whh old houoo.
32 Mobile Homes
•12.ooo. 304·937·2eae.
for Sele
PERFECT SHAPE 10x40 all
.tectric modul•r home. aolld
11 new, •31500 . Even a1m1ll TWO TRAILERS on 1 ecreof

rlngo, Old Rt. 33.

r•noe . .Cell

uBig Foot Park"

d•led home with firepl•ce,
poalible woodburner, cloH Hou•• for nle-Contect Clarto achooll end ahopplng. ence Hill It Ruatic Hilla In

•

lershi~ Available for the Gall.ipo III• Om.roy Marke t Areas ' '

Over 100 yeaoo old. To be
removed. *600. or beat

ANaonoblo. Colllltz·e022.

Line International Harvester
Fafm and Outdoor Products Dea-

11x20 hand hewn cabin.

In Middleport, newly remo· ollor. e14·912· 2478.

---- ~- -------·------- - - -····-·

ford Rllldenc•. Rockap-

..ronco Co. hot

*Campsite...

Oronde. Control hut, woll

Aug. 1 lo 2. Bohlnd Pennzoll
In Recine.
'
1

- . t y poraon In my l!omo.

Richlnl K. As'*· DVM

LAND
SALE

0-n Twp. U8.eOQ. 448· Tho llrot unalbla offer gota
8038.
it. Will be on promlaoo to-

north of Cheater D•lry

Plo--·

3 Announcements

Real Estate General

oarage &amp; Haement, brick Handymtn•t 1peclaf In Ru~
front. large lot. city tchoola. tland: Eight room• whh
4Y.t mllea from Gallfpolla. p0 111bllltlll. NOrth Meln St.

auoon .

nll:llllllrV. Hlghntaammla-

Woodbumer (forced air)
fireplace, outside PfliP
and 3 outbuildinp. Beauti·
lully landscaped end rudy
for occupan •
LL ~29

A GOOD HOME FOR
Pomoroy. Auguot 1 •2.3 . plated. · On 1.14 ooroo .
.3500. NICE 1 Ox40 .
Boby clothoo. loto of mlac. ' Re ..onable .
Cell 448 - ELECTRIC HEAT, EXCEL·
ltema.
, 3044.
LENT CONDITION . t700.
DOWN. BALANCE Fl·
4 tomlly. Aug. 4 &amp; 5. Mony For tole by Ownor 1200 NANCED. 38 PAYMENTS
lnfont chlldrono lo womiono aq .ft. houla • corner lot. OF .106.48 A MONTH.
cloth11. Numeroua rqlac. Full '-ooment'thoom &amp; '-oth. 304·57e·271 1.
ltomo. At, 7, flrat drivewov liJII'IIge In buament . Cutto·

Middleport
1).
'ty

tDn. WV 211708. (3041 82 · olon. No lnvmmont. - ·
7101. E.O.E .
..-lng, or oollectlne. Cioll
814·742·3094. Aloo book·
COMPANIO~ for ~ lng portlea.
lody, muatlive ln. Wrtt. lox
P.30. In core of The Point
Plo-ll~tloter.200Moln 12
Sltu..lona
Bt. Pt.
WV 288110.
Wanted

Real Eatete General

plete baths with exira
in lull basement

28 blument. wall1, winBoltlnd Ucan• Bu-u In ; dow and aub floor com·

rlenca. Coli e14·2Be·2131.• ltome. At Fltzpotrok Or·
chord, SR. 889. Phone
WAN TED·R eaponolble WMkevglo e89·3788.
porty to tur - · old "'rn. ·l-::--:--:-:-:--:-:::-::-:e14·t48·2858.
Aug. 1·2, 9·4. Rollin Rod·

end work when you went.

soo-

REAL BAROAIN11 yoar old 304-782-8488.
bl·leval. 3 BR. A-1 cond., ------::-::-:--::-:

····· .'Pt.fiiiiiiliirif ····

Con't work 8to e1 Soli Avon

Must Sell!
Movi111 To Florida
lovely 7 rm. house and 14
acres near town. 2 com-

conaider lend contr•ct. lo01rted In SyrecuH -Ntar
Pfeue no call after 9PM. achool &amp; twlmming pool. 3
814~2t16-9400.
bedroom attueted on one- ·
third •ere lot. t24,&amp;00.

•n•

1v1U.IM. u.,.nd on eXpe-

43 ."

Reel Ea..te General

HOME FOR SALE IY OWNEI
In Gollipolls. Wolk lo ocllool.
loncod back yord. penolod d"
with separate tntrlet. 2 ctr
roao. c.orpatod. Z IIIII bitlis
I lull bath. Eat1n1
Ia
kllchtn , sunporch. I~ Vlntoo
Sl, 131.900. 446-ZOII . .

goraga with work apace. Wllll -:---::--:--:----:;-

WOtchlng TV. AI ogoa. - ·
rlonoo un-ry. Coli 1· ·3 fomlly vorogo aolo. P - beck booko, Horlo·
71 e·l42-eooo. Including Aug. 1 .2.3. from 8 to 11. quln.. lllouene Su.,_r Rom·
lundll'(, ut. t850.
ClothN. IIPPII•n•••· como·
6 Certlttnd. 8rideman
motorcycle, curtllna. &amp;In lyroauoo. Aug. 3.4,5.
1NI,
Quollflod lo uporlonoad etc. lohlnd otore ot Letoort
porto mon- nMded lor Folio, Oh.
largo fenn oqulpmont . .1. 1-::-:---::-:::--;---;-:;--:mhlpo. Solory ond lno.,tlve July 28·30. Iron bed &amp;
&amp; Vicinity
11 well 11 benefit plln apr[nga, chelra. TV atand.

International HaMSter Co•

··-.

•RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT

•SPECIAUZED SERVICES FOR
TKE ELDERLY

Wl.lffHJL

full b111ment, unatUched

A1hono. Oh. Orovlllytrootor,
BOCC motorcycle, guna,
tool a. euw•re, antlqu••·
W

fio"meroy········-··

••• , ••

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•'

•CHILDREN'S SERVICES

•HOSPITAUZATION SERVICES

4l2 VintOn Pike
446-5550

1

•1oo poo wMk port tlmut
hom•. Webater. Am~iiCII'a
fovorMo dlctlonory cqmpony

•'

~;.:::::;.

8 ,00 _5 ,00 •oil 203 dFourth
Ave.. 0 elllp I. 8 ren neme
olothoa alua 1 0 · 1 2,
• pplloncoa.

PDroh 8olo810 Fourth Ave.,
NMded lmmodlotlily. lady .Golllpollo. Aug. 1· 2· 3 · Copy

Full

2.71

2. 74

fomlly room, don. 2'-'1 bothe. Sohool. •40,000. Coll992·

aome •ntiq!l11, new gl•ll· Spring Ave . , Pomeroy .
ware, whet nota. Petrlot Plenty of clothe• all alzaa.
G•a• Rd., \i:mH•oHAt. 1,. 1 b•by Item•. gleanverea.
boob, many ftema too nu•t •oe.
meroua to mention. P•rklng
Yord Solo 1e04 Cliothom .._, tho at-t.
Avo.• Oonlpolla. Aug. 1•2•3 · Yord Salt July 30 &amp; 31. I to
9 to 5.
5. Off Rt. 33 ot Burlingham
Yord Solo Aug. 2 • 3 . ~ woy - n Pomen&gt;y lo

oov.....
:====~~~~~~~~~====:~•rvlee•.
••
..

2.44
2.59

roomt, fireplace. ttttchtd
garAg•. full bitaement.
By Own• 3 bdr. houae wllh newly ehlnglld roof, walking
8 or 20 .crM. Sun~en LR. dlat1nc• to Pomeroy Elem.

Mini FIN Markot. Opon 7 Fomlly Yard Solo. Aug.
tAM·8PMdolly. N-toolo. 1,2,3.4.5. 8:00·1. 412

Coli 44e· 7150.

.,

.

high-quality, confide.,tial, affordable service:

•INDIVI_DUAL &amp;FAMILY COUNSELING

slaht

L llolller Goodlllu
Lila L lin dak1 IIIII

The Professionals at Woodland Centers _offer a wide range of

•DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES

MEMORIES

" ''

•,

•'

2.13

441-8171 after lpm.

lt.
Rt. 110 In Porter oouth dlahea. oloctrlc motora. ate.
off Rt. 11114.

Nurelng · Center. Mondl'/
thru Frldoy, BAM to 4PM.

3 bdr. bl-level titulted on
1 ,A •crea. KC School Dlt·
trlot. 3 min. from HMC, 8
min . to t9wn, 17,000 down
ealtUmeblt 91.4% loan. C1ll
441-4178 .

quiet nOJig\lborhood . Anu· l - - - : - --::--::-:::-:-:--:moblo 8~% mortgoge. Coli Ronch typo (brick). 3 Md-

•now tlrea. 1172 Ford Recine. Aug. 2 • 3. Corn•
pk:ltup. frM Ice w•ter. Old of Fourth a P11rl . Cfothll,

Scenic HHio Nurolng Center
Ia now hiring atoff RN'a •
LPN'a oppllcotlono con be
obtolnod ot Sconlc Hilla

!:::;=:;;;::::;===

Lift is lllmal
Love immortal
Delli! only • horizon
Horizon?

(FORMERLY THE GALLIA.JACKSON.MEIGS COMMUNTY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER)

uo

Belrutlfully
bdr. home
acanfc ecre
IChoola, 5
town, fireplace,
floora. m•lnten•nce

-.11-ua. 117e Mollbu, 081 ••·

AN, P.O . Bo~eUI, Hufttlnr

~"

* ALL STORES WILL BE

.

1.89
1.90
1.99

CA.e. Mlac. ltoma. modem.
ontlquo • potlo fumlturo.
., • .882·21411 .

Aug . 1. 8AM-IPM. Furnl- Furniture, 1ppf11ncM, televiture, am•ll•ppllencea, baby Ilona, guna, glenwere,
iteme. clothe •II 11111, mla- cloth••· miac. No urty

e14·t48·2405. •
lor help-F.. 1o. Port tlmo 1 1 . Help
pooltlono
ovollo!Me. Apply In 1 - - - - - - - poroononly.LoBoleLoungo,
Midcl'-l!ort. Oh.
Monogemant oollber poroon
·
·
port limo t8111 month.
OPINING~ at Huntlntton Honoot poroon kl honlle
HooDIUIIIor LPN'aond oompony Iunde. Clorlcol du·
Pooltlonureevolloblo tloa. 17141 182·0381. Cell
worldng with clovolop- tDdey. One poohlon.
-ntolly - - · ....,_t. I:-:=:::-:-:-:--:--:-:::--::-rloocuM,ondlong·termcaro MERRI·MAC n - 3 - ·
...-~a of tho ftoclllty. If onatrotoraln thlao-1 Olfta.
1 - o d . - CV or _,. tDyo, homo Item• on
tocrt Pnlole Vondevokle. pony pion. Cor ond phone

.--t-·
_....,.....,,

'.

Mr. John F. Fultz

Hum. Funeral Home

~

Woodland Centers, .Inc.

FET

Vicinity

-=---::--:;-;----;-:--- I e14·112·548o.
2
In Memoriam
Wontod·-So...ono to Uvo In
with oldorly lody. llghf
Monroe An. Augult. 1 at. a
hou-ork, cooking ond Aug 1.2.3. t to 11. 1192 2nd. 9·5. clothing, uby
11111. Nlao homo In Aoclno.
lrooclwoy St. Boby to odulto ttem1, mlac .

.. 1:

992·2101

'*

.... .
-··
-. . ..·

CUSTOM POLYESTER
42.00
46.00
48.00

Jack and Billie Jo
n haintltlleir ftnt _._
3 FamilyY1rd Sallll
.Some lllliques, ,_tools, llnic:t linlcb, Ioiiis of
toad clothes, jals, Pllio fumilu~. lots of
stuffld ~ '1 Ill of
illll wheel truck clilins. [y.
erythincwiil 1111 Alii- 4, 5, &amp;
- 9 a.m.-6 p.m., 279 SID
St. l'lrt II Head bt
School.

Call 4411·0278 .

realdencti In Br•dbury . .

FOUR FAMILY Ooroao lola. Yord aololn Mlcklloport. 181
3 ~ mlloo out Bulovllle Rd . Front lt. Ono .rug ol.. 12 x
Fri. ond Sot. Wotch for 1 e &amp; Iota of odda ond onda .
olgno.
Clothing. Auguet 1 · 2-3·4·11.
Mlchlgon Yard Sole; Boby From 9 to 5 MCh cloy .
furniture. clotheo. bllcoa. 1·:::-:f.-m-l::-ly-8:-:.-::
3
4-,-::A-ug-.-1:-:.-:-2.
mower~. curtelna. 10 Nell Rein or ahlne. lv1f Powell
Avo. July 28·1
Roaldonco IICroao from Bop·
Onoo a yoor Yard lolo18at. tlot Church. Racine, Oh .

'

MINI FARM
FOR SAl£

achool. 1 milt from town.

llole·Auouot 3.4.5. Moor•

t~ol~ot;-~·~~~~r==~iiii~iii~

the Ignition ~ tile Insulation on the
plug wires due to hlgh tempera·
tures. No one was ilqured In the
blaze.

2.90

••e-

NOTICE

l'lllill L Mohler Goodwin
btl L. Goodwin H1ll
· Grandsons:
Joe, Tim and Wil

, - . IR.UI. Vlclftlty of
A•'l- t i I d llwldge. 8435371.

1-:========'==---====--=:-..JL-:-------...L..~---..:.--­

•PSYCHOTHERAPY.
ww

.

·'

FOR PROFESSIONAL COUNSEUNG &amp; FAMILY SERVICES-

FET

Gr1ndsons:
Joe , Tim &amp; Wil Hall

Rutllnd, OH.

WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE!

ww

.

.

gurt 5th. The only authoriled co-ordin•tors within

Founct~-.....

Think )'OU friends. We
needed )'OU CMr the
IIIIIIY yws. Homer Illjoyed your help &amp;visits.
To Mlnnirw • Btckle
&amp; Donny llohlerto 11M
you close. meant true
love for Homer.
.
late L. Goodwin Hall

)IVHITI c-t...- · I
2711-30...
THREE BLACK PUPPIES. 1 0 - 011&lt;1. A Nt of loo• 1 ~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;-:ii;:
28 Evono Hoighta or 441· .... - . . . . .711- 11711.
1Cooo plete Auctlo._ .....
337e or &lt;Me-437e.
~~~~:';i";;;;:-3G.t:;75. ...... Aloe do o,..._la.
1-::--:----:------ I'
• 304-•75· U...MCI a bonciM "' toll.
Young fomole dog to good
- . . ! d a , form fuMiohhome. Hoa ahota &amp; been 1:-::--::-:--:::--:::--::-:7 -:::- lnp a ROlli ....... O.W 2e
opode. Coli oftor 2PM. 441· I I - lftlllod Coflle ,_,.o-lenw In buying &amp;
21Be.
&amp; Sh.....,. - · - t o o - g - · uNCI &amp; ontlquo
IIOOd -... Cot &amp; kltteno fumlturo. t14·812-8370.
Hoy lor outtlng. Coli 44t· k&gt;O . C. J04·e71-8S78.
0., A. Monln.
1142.
AUCTION ovory. llo-y
light, · 8 p.m. Mt. Alto

0

"

l'llma L Mohler Goodwin

Schoenberg, Scottsdale. HewUI be a
senior atScottsdaleHighSchool this

TIEMP "All Season Radial"

&amp;

;7.:
f" '' •

ANY PERSON wtoo 11u "'I loot up golf because I
anything to give awoy IUid tired, ~ous and run-down."

Poodle puppleo. 304-812·
2488.

..-·. ''Giiiiipoiii"".. ·;.••

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

Card of Thenkt

Reel Eatete General

full '-ooomont with gor-.
woodburnor lnoluded. city

-~-------· ·· ····· ---------····

r

Sale

. 4 bdr. ranch horne large LA,

'

..

• AuctiOII

a.--

Call

Bton·dlne tlmbor. ony euy~oog dolly gold, •11omoun't. Coli t14·318· oolna, rlnga.jowelry. -Inti
1801.
ware, old oolna. ..,_ cur..,oy. Top prlooo. tel. llur·
ken a.- Shop, 2nd. Avo.
Mlddloport, oh . e14·892·
3478.

.--

Public Sele

31 Home1

31 Hornea for Sale

..:·.

1177.
3 Announcements
9628.
tton. no • r tl -. on ..... I;=;;=.:;::;::::;;==
2t ln. 10 apooc~ bloo. Coil I·
3 brown Guinea Pip. 843- 441·7117.
Wanted To
ezeo.ooo. Bingo gamo. 61tt.
' 1-=----~---- ~~--"":""::---::----~
Cherokee. N.C. leaving
LOIT ....., '-lo - · tan W. poy lor loto ""'dol
Pomeroy Augult 19. U5. ONE pon 8 ...1• - · ·
..
the wlclntty of JIMtl.ooro.
for tranaponation and mo- femole. 9 -ka old, 304R d . - - - """ Ml'* Chev.·Oiolo lno .
tei.Ae•erv•tion deadline Au- 875·8702.
oft-. Coii...._2MO.
801 - J o h n -

Ooorgoo Crlltlk Rd.

Wanted To

,,,.,

uoo

1101)

·co .. 44e·4313.
-;::=::;;=:=::::===
-::;;
4
Giveaway

and Court stn1ets.
The fire wu allegedly caused by

NO HIDDEN COSTS!

....-S....,_f!

~

i

ch•rg• to the adv.,.._.

Tho family of O&lt;ko B. Wood
would lik• to thank our
friendo and noighborafortho
lovely flo-a end dellclouo
food. A apeelol thanko to
...ryono ot tho Pom""'y
Health Core Center. Thonk
You, The Cloll Wood Family.

Buy

,, rt •

Awctlon every Tue•d•v
- 1 Pull Clu'-

GAlliPOLIS - The Galllpolls
Fire Department reported a til\,
occurred In vehicle owned by Anna
Frank of Pomeroy at 5:18 ·p.m .
Friday at tile Intersection of Third

GOOD

-~

Df(or any othorthlng tor- -:---::=:-------1_.,.... ..,.ry -k.
moy plooe on . ad In IIIIa 4
GNeew-v
of ond
be no
m-hondloo • column. Thort1 -

MIDDLEPORT . - An Arizona 446-0294.
boy with roots In MiddlEport will
represent
illsChampiOnship
state In the National
PGA
Jlllllor
In Palm
Beach, Fla., Aug. 15-16.
He Is Bll'd ScOOerlberg, of
Scottsdale, AriL, who was tbeNo.l
qualifier In tile Arlzona·Las Vegas
area with a :!&amp;bole 146 eflort.
Schoenberg Is the grandson of
Mrs. Betty Lighter Marls, LosAltoo,
Calif., who wu born and reared In
Middleport. He Is the great nephew
of Mrs. Torn Riley, Mlddleprt, and
Mrs. LoweD Wingett, Syracuse. He
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles

~:

hOIPit•f or home for •lmott
any occaalona. Blrlloene a

.,ppllea.
Pick up and
delivery, Davit V•cuum FOUR port BNgle pupplea,
Cleaner. one helf mtle up .blook lo whlta. 4 Terrier •

Schoenberg lop
qualifier in n;tf;el

l'U
Ill~
""'•

•

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

don not offer or attempt to

Bundle figures in Shrader trial

•M-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . loft..

B•lloon• for •II oc fzma.
Soy Hoppy Fothor"o Ooy.
Separated sealed brds wdt be Hoppy Blrthdoy. I LoW Yo~.
rece•ved i:lt the Offrce of the C•ty Get W.H, It' a A boy .,.. h'o o
Manager. City of Galhpohs. Girl. Anything you - I n •
Ohro. 5113 Second Avenue
dlllorent woy. Delivered to

with any federally·l'lllated p-a•lusM. Miller w11 a111o
COnduct an opinion poll 011 "'""""' l!loueoi 81111 invlles
all falrgoers to exp- diW' vtewB.

...
.....

•• · -

u~•·•-

Ill~

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS

MillER B00I11 AT FAJR - Rep. Clamlce
Mlller, R-Ohlo, willhavehismobUepltlceattheGallla
County Jllllliir Fair tills week to assist area residents

JIJ Uo• F -

9

:::
~~ ........- f -U
-.- - - - - - -IJMI
- - - , :"
..............
•ll_. . _ _ _

l l-l -

41·1 . - . -....... lll• •u

Gallrpolrs, Oh10 4 563 1 untri
I 2:00 o·clock. Noon. Thursday.
August 18, 1983. at whrch trme
they Will be opened fo r the
Brrch Lane Sanrttuy Sewer
Conslructron ProJect
Brd forms may be obtarned ul
the Crty Manager's Offrce at the
above .loca tion
July 31 . Aug. 7

.. ...

The Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va ,

· -.

.,. =._a."'---· .,
........ .......
_........,,
-·-

·-~
MP ~~

41ForU...

Notice

31, 1983

'"

.... c-.11'1

JM . . . . . . . ..

,

• 1983

t:I.Ufi••rl [,.,,,..,,..,.,,, rlw
/111'-•'""'tt ,,..,,.,,_.,,_,, •. ,,.h•rtp·s ...

1f .......... . .

....... .... _
.........

OP

July

==~

-3 Jt 7fl. mower, 6ft. 31i Kin&amp;Kult!f, disc. 3
Jt POSt hoiediiiPI'
cultivator iorAC, 3Jt · 3xl4piow~3
Jt lift I)Oie.llat bed' wqon Ofiver manure spreader, AC small round
t.ler, lwo wheel trail«, L.8iy 3 Jt wheel hay like. Jlllin and hay

FREEZER SALE
CHrST
IOD...rLS
..

5 Cu: Ft.
8 Cu. Ft.
15 Cil. Ft.
20 Cu. Ft.
25 Cu. Ft.

'*"'and

-.m.

IIOUSDIQLD: CIMI!I ol chwtn, beds, dressen, rocller, desk
wtchlir llldiner, sol' Stoker-Malic stove. vanily diiS!« :tt/stOO(
t.nps. pc.livin&amp; room suile, GE chest filar, Surs teflpalil,
G£ efldric rtl!ll efldric fan. misc. linent metal wardrobe, C8
i1dio.
' ..._ . ~
MTIQUE orCOI.l.ECTOIIITEIIS: Surly w/twoseats; oiQrleJars,""
scUs. wood IOCice!. mlk CII1S, oil lamp, wood plene, wood ooxes,
wood wheelbarrow, wood barrels, treadle S8Winl maclune. .
1110Ls.&amp; IISC.: Crafbm1n acel)1ene outfilond r..t, .blinch vae,
anvl, Holtllliill chain - . bench &amp;Iinder, Joe chans, battery
chiiJIII, lip •d die se1, all kilds of IDols, b1d!r chains, IH 5 hp
rdder, push town mower, tluminum ladder, catl, wood

... '235.95
... 1285.95
... 1355.95
... '411.95
..• '472.95

2

SPECIAL
15 Cu. Ft. .. • 32 5.95
1

=id~~~.r:~batm«w~

POMEROY

11Dt • com lnd two lois d hi;.

LANOM~RK

VliiiDII Co. Ciao llo. 13-14,513 ........ Ellctrix lllf4hd llellon .
WIICII
CAlli
I'OIIYM I.D•
AUCIIOIEDI- DM .ITH - Mf.at33 • 112·7301

614·992·2111

.'

"''lllllulllatluu • 1111'1111 ......,_

•
•

IWICH WITH ACifAGE - Nice ranch home, 3 bedrooms, 2 car
&amp;n&amp;e. large bam and Mr 7 acres make lhis 1 Yet)' attracti;e
p11ce. Located on Upcreok Rood.
n441'

•

POINT WITH PRIDE - l.ookin&amp; for a home lhat's better quaiiY
1nd more attractive than most? Inspect thil lovely brick ranch. 2
yeaB old. family rm., dilil&amp; rm., fuf~ carpeted, lerge bedroom, 2
C¥ prag~ over 2,000 sq. ft. IMn&amp; space, beautiful selling on I

•
••"

acre.

.

11799

SECLUDED AND PEACEFUL -lovely place in the country his an
ll(der home and a 2 BR Schutt motile home w~h central air. Large
let of 5.6 acres. K. Cleeil schools.
112020
IN TOWN - Ranch with 3 bedrooms, balh. carpel, garaga IJI)od
buy at $19,50(l

"

•

�31, 1913

nmi5-Sentinel

The
32

Homes
Sale

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1981 SHULTZ Moncheotor.
T R I · STATE M 0 BI LE 2 bedroomo. excellent oon·
HOMES . USED · CARS. dition, 116,600. 304·876~:~g:~UR~~~~:oc~~~-3~7_&amp;_.______________
441-7172.
1973 SHULTZ 12x86 with
12x24 1977 add on. 3

CLEAN USED MOBILE beodrooma,utilityroom, cne-

HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL· trol air. new corpo~ 12x12
lTV MOilLE HOME SALES. dock, fromod undorp.,ning
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS, beckod by 4 " ino~lotion ;
ecove, refriger•tor, · metal
buildil'!g with electricity, c•n
Trailer fOr Hie or rent In 1M moved or left on rented
RT 31 . PHONE 441 -7274.

MfM'CMVille. Oh . 1200 mo. lot.. Trantferad. mu.c nil.

pluo d-olt. Coli 614-2&amp;8· 304·876 · 1 194 . 11 no
1955 or 1114·256· 111011.
anowor coli 675· 4507.
1978 Buddy cuotom 1 4 x70,
3 bdr .. 2 batho. garden tub,
undorpinnod.
motol bldg.
Call
814-387· 7858.

l :ii~~;;;;;;T.;~~;=
for Sale

1 ----------

1·

78 acres. Good house. bam,

1980 Bayview 14x70, 2 chicken house. large shed.
bdr., central air. Call 814- Excellent large garden. frutt
388·9916 or 446·821 1.
treat. well wandter, wl o~d~
paature, hayla

·

......

1979 OAKBROOK 14.&amp;0, woot of LongOY~Io on SR
2 bdr .. gao hoot, flrepllco. 6124. &amp;14·742· 2860 ...,_
10 x 20 deck with awning,
p.m.

Houeea for Rent

mo .• 185 depo1it. Call448-

3870 or 448·1340,
lAr~

how• with porch,
idul for l1rge f1mily, t1 00
mo . A-One R"l Ellatn,
Carol Yeeger. Re•ftor; C•ll
304· 6 75·5104 or 304·875·

7386 .

Condomlnum- 2 Hdroom. 2
bath, completely furnlatt.d.

d•ilr m•d
aervico, tlvoo poolo. tonnlo
courto. pluo 24 hr. oocurfty
guard.
Myrtle
Boach.
SC.
Phone oltof
5PM.
448·34M
or 814-387-0480.
Oceen

front,

Deluxe II rvom hou11 off
m-et
pMI:Ing.. no pet:a,
'!ttpoait aM referenc-. Cell
114·246· 11529.

1---------4 bdr. houN with 1 YJ batM,
Rt. 7 It Eureka. $210 mo.
Co11••e.•222
.._woon
9 a~•
_..
5.

6 room

5pm.

osit •

b..ement. Country wat•.

'

heM,~•

in Vinton,

complotoly carpotod, dop·
ret.rMct~~.

Clll 81 4·

Houees for Rent

3 BR hou.. on CIMrgeo
Cr-. c.ll &lt;We-3824.

4 rms • ltath, loc1t1d 733

Third Avo .. Galllpolio. '1&amp;5

framed underpinning with 30 acre farm to trlde fQr
tie downa, good con d . Call smelter farm from 2·6 acr•.

44e-2929.. 387·0.858 oftor Would llko outoldo cellor .,..

41

42 Mobile Home•
for Rent

44

2 bedrooma, unfumlo'*l. 12xl0mobilohomoln Syr• ·
Camp Conley. f121 per cuM. 2 bedroom•. I 1 4month, 304-871· 1371 Ot 192 -11117 or et4 ·992&amp;732.1176-3812.
Above .... age •Ingle f.mtty

12xSO mobile home In Syr•

cuoo. 2 bedroomo. 614·
g. roomo, betha. 992 · 11"87
or 814· 992·
baeement, corner of lth 6
v
Vlond. Phone 304-e75· 1 _87_3_2_._ _ _ _ _ __
1931 .
1dwellln

8

2

MT. Vernon Avo .. 2 - · 1 bedroom 1p1rtment for
room1, t200. • month plus rent. Cel 448-0390.
dopooit, 304-175·21111 .
Fuml- opt .• 0210, utili·
llao pd.. I bdr.. 820 4th
4~ Mobile Homes
Avo.. Golipollo. Cell 448·
for Rent
4416 oftor 7PM .

48 Sp.ce for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

1 •••

2 now unfurn. 2 beck. apto.
819 s-nd AVo.. Gaii'Pollo. C-A. gorogo. $260·
$2751 Coli 448·2118.

' '

nice vord.
6882.

1 2x62, complete with 1ir pa11ure. 24• by 30' po..
conditioner. carpet. drape~, bam, lerge utility bulcling.
furniture and underpinning BNuttful 8 room home. .tt

t4.9110 . Coil 614-448·
7508.

1978 14x70Windaor 3 bclr.,
ex. cond.,1 'hbeths. deeth in
family mull Mil. Re••oneble

offttr. Coli 446· 7513.

eloctrtc. completely lnou·
lotod . Include• new Clrpot.
fenced In yord, 1111 c!oonlnt
""""· lido by olde rofrlgoro·
tor freezer.

bedroom with prage.

1----------

a.c .. underpin-

ning &amp; porch . •6.660. 614·
992-11416.
'
USED Mobile Homn. 304'
5711· 2711 .

,.

.... :~

I

:t.

. ... ..

,.....
;,\

.'

.'

,,,
• &lt;I.);..

Reel Eststil General

.·:

'

Rea ·

KEEP COOL and inspect this contemporary 4
bedroom, 2 bath home with vaulted ceiling, formal dining room and much. much more.

.~

..',•"

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

..

...

I ' I 'I
'

' ' ' ...

'

R.C.S. REALTORS
Crail Swenson-1·614-593-5571
Bill Childs-992-6312

·. CReaQto~~

.•

u\udhP4 Co.1•aday
' -. ..
25 ~ust gtlteet, Qo.QQlp~ir 19hto· . ,,
"
' ' "

. . ' ·.

PHONE 985-4290

35 acre• et Rodney on W.T.
Wauon Rd. Owner flnenc·

Furnlohod 81fioloncy .1411.
utl- pd. AleD fumlahod I
bdr. •2211. U1itltleo pd. 807
2nd. Gelllpello. 44e-441e
oftor 7 p.m.
Konougo. 2 ·fiR wllh
cal'fiO!, - • Rolrfgorotor.
Woohor • Dryor hook-up.
"811 pluo olactrlc a gao.
Coli 448·2127 or 1-304273-17411.

Mo~ ,I IIR •pt. c - to
town. C • II 448-20511 oftor
8.
TWO lOR. APT. $3211. por
mo. 1 1 Coutt lt. Ref. and
dop. c.rl 448 •412e .
Unfurnleh•d Ap•r:tment1:

1--;LA-;::Y;:N::E:::'S:-::FU:-:::-R~N:-ITU-R-E-­

Golllo or pick up ot Rlohordo
8o Son. Coli 448· 7785.

· - · Cloll Rogloton.
Soto. ahalr. rockor, on• Ill
oleo. Coll1 ·114-3e7·0378.

mon, 3 IoblN, loxtro hoovy
by F.....-1. •ea11. lolo•

clloir ond lov-•. $275.
Sofu ond cllolro pricodfrom
12811. to "Ill. TobiN, $411
~~~~ up to '1211. Hid•·•·
bodo, $440. ond up to
$1121
•• RacU.ooro, $171. to
ueo.. lompo tram $28. to
$711. II pc. dlnonoo from
$81 .. to $431. 7 pc .• nail.
- up. Wood tlblo with obi
cllolro , 421 . to • 741 . Dook
$110upto $225. Hutchol.
$11110. ond up. mopleorplna
ftnloll. Bunk bed complete
with matb n n. e210. end
up to Ulll. floby bodo.
1110. MOlt,_ or box
oprlngo, full or twin, $18 ..

!!.31!,-lt~el~ b:~~:.~:~h~

11
1 11
poet on nc n• wel·ghl

H-

t-

Bonnie Stutes

trac:ttnv·ovolllbe to qu,_
buyoro. Con 61 4-388·8101.

(]
lEAl.lOll

'·

Realtor

furniahed ,

V. doublo. 2 bedroom. All
f u - . Adulto pt"oforrod.
No polo. Depoolt rwqulrod.
814-112-2749.

Apert,.ento. 304· e711 · Coucll 9
111141.
.
.
condition, : •.::..""'!."'•..
2411·1078.
APAfiT.MINTI. mobll•l::::-::-==-------homoa, hou-. Pt. Plea4ont DINNETTE oet. butchor
ond G•lll,oll•. 814·448· block toblo • 4 cll-lro, llko
8221.
$1110. 304·1711·218~.
ON~ bodroom opartmont;
SWAIN
4021&lt;k 241h. It; Pt. 1''-nt.
AUCTION a FURNITURE
Phoni. .1·114-II2·118H.
42 Dliwl It,. Golllpollo. t

1973 12x80 KIRKWOOD
mobile home, 2 bedrooma,

•e.ooo. 304·e75·5022.

CENTRAL REALTY
1

QUI£T S1RE£T - 2 bedrliOOl home in Racine, fealures W.dude:
large eat~n ktchen, cilrpeted living room, cha~ link feru:ed yard,
cafiJIJI. basement with shower and laundry area and room for 3rd
bedroom or whatever yoor needs are, woodbiKill!l' could be added
for efficiency. Owner says SB.L Price reduced to $25,500.
REDUCED IIOBILE HOllE - Wdh large add~n building asphalt
dnveway. lor.aled on quiet street out of high water in Racine. The
living room is extra·large There oacement-walk and large covered
pon;h, a~o a melal slorage bu~ding Asking $15,900.
3 ACRES IN RACINE - Surveyed flat lam, pr~ate and peaceful
locatlln. Owner will help finance.
NEW USTING - \1 mole out of Racine, 3 ~room home on Il ler!!
lot. l~ing. room carpeted, kicben and dinilg room Pine &amp; Cedar.
Must see to appreciate. .S..king $24,!100.
.
NEW U5nNG - 2 bedrmm tmiler, 12155, lor sale complete~ fur.
nished induding washer &amp; dryer or unfurnisi'ed. Ask for pric:a
US TO BUY OR SELL

Jasper·~siZ:&amp;~~~ciate

Real Estate General
Brokor·Auction"r

LIFE
INSURANCE
Call 446·0552 Anytime
Bttll Null 245-9507
811.-437 - NEW UsnNG - FIRST niE 011 IIAIIKEI - .
Deluxe brick ranch sluated oo 1~1 I acre lot House includes 4
BRs. 2\! baths, deluxe kitchen, 21amily rooms (I with fireplace, I
with woodbumecl. Electric heal pump. Much more. Call for details!
•
BIIR 431- Briel&lt; ranch includes 3BRs,lR, DR. fami~ room, 2\l
baths, situated on 38 acres, CaM to see this one today!
I

BMii 426- OWNER SAYS SEU- tt hasanassumableloanwth

only 9\1% interest We are llllkilg about a very clean. 3 BR home
muted on nice 11at 1« in a family orie(rted n~lxlrhood.
REDUCED! •3,000 down and assume loan!

8111 433 - OWNER TRAIISFIRRED - Nice 3 BR ranch
includes dinin.B area off livinc room, nalur31 ·gas heat. central ar.
budget $48.00 mooth. Situated on large flat lot. On Jackson Pille.
Priced to sol at $44,900. Belter call to see this one.
8MR 434 -IIIEW USTING - 3BR, spl~-level home. This home is
be1fer than new. Includes 2 c_ar garage Situated on large comer lot.
first time on the ma-ke!. Priced at $44,500. Call for details!
IIIIR 435- IDEAL STAmR HOllE - 3 B~ large kitchen,LR,
carport. omural gas heat. new roof, located w~hin Gallipolis city
limits. Priced 11 $31,!100. Be the lif&amp; to see this one!
IIIII 436 - IIEW USTING - Excelenl start.r home with 28R,
LR. OR nice kitchen,' utility and new bathroom. Carpeted
throuatWt Screened paio, carport lar&amp;e lot. Call br appoinlmenl
IIIII 477 - OWIIER TUIISFERRm - PRICE .REDUCED
DUSJICAUY - Tl)is ~ 1 very~ 3 BR home. ranch styk
Miintenance free siding. Possible 811% loan aswmpliOn. Call for
Ilia&amp; $31,000.
IIIII 319 -OWIIER SAYS SlU lOOAYI- YourllmiiV wlllenjly
the 1GIIfllilllls !IIIlis ho!Be. lnclidls 4 8Rs, 2 bath!. lR. IJR.
bul-in klcllen. Slualad on lqeoomer lot. Close to town in ely
sc/IOCII..&lt;fi!trict ~ ElamJ ____________
CaiJIII see this one!
_.

L-~~~~-9

I

IULn PURPOS£
PIOPERTY

locaiOO on Ohil Rl. 7 near
Gallipolis. Walk·in cooler, display cabineis, three ren!JI
molile homes - income ,.,..

$660.00 per mo. Cook! be 6

I
XI1 0

I GUVEA

I KJ

WHAT A PE~SON

WHO

~05E51&lt;1$

Hl!!AP WOUL.P HAVE
P IFFICUL.TY DO IN IS.

J I K (]
Answer here: r 1 I 1 1 I ) r X1 r J
- - - - - - - -- - - - lorm ttle

IUI'pfiN

anaw.r, u sug-

Qelled b'f the above car1oon.

(AntW8fl MOOcia'f)

Ve5 lerday's l Jumblel : OBESE DRYLY FROLIC IODINE
Anawer: Wht the bluah lng bride was turning. whi chtver way one looked-:- REDDER

-1

GUN oolloctoro itom, Win·
cll-r
12. 12 gouga,
31n. cllo.-r, 301n. lull, lolr
condition. n .000. Tole·
ho 304 875 57119
P ne
•
•
·

...·.,
,,

66 Building Supplies

1.

.,,
'•

11580

KlllER CREEK SCHOOL DISlRICT •
Modern 3 BR ranch home approx. 4\1 Yf$. otL Th~e
win00ws. storm door&gt;, FA furnace with central li', kitchen ha
buil·in cabinels, stainless steel dbl sink am dining area. 'ull
basement with . patio docn Rural water ~ garage Call
now.
f379

.

"

,l . ..

WHAT A DEAUI $27,0110
Come see for voooself. Cozv 6 IOOI1IS and ball\ washer. dlli!r.
dishwasher, refri~•. woodbumer•. and alll~e new. SIOIIIIII!
building and 2 car carport Kyger Creek Schools.
41552

.

)f.

7

IN GAW POUS ~ WAlK TO SHOP DOWfllOWII
Pric,e. reduced fur Quick sale, $29,!100. 6 rooms, 3 BR, lui
basement. nice large ~ont porch. No upkeep. Mce l•ge shade
trees, low taxes. Home you should check on.
· 11530

HOIIS

6.95 ACRES VACMT IAIID OFF liT. 35
Rolling land - Beside Old U.S. HiiiWIY 35.1n an area thalli
detelnpi1~ lost Rt. 35, slot distance west II Gallipolis. GeU 111111.
11544
I ACRES

SOUND Doolgn otoreo ro·
coiYOf with 8·trock pllyer.
ceeutte player recorder,
phonogroph • cabinet. 304·
.
1175-277e.
.Real Estate Gener•l

For rent llloeplng Roomo
ond Ugllt hou11 koeplng
roomo. Park Control Hotol. Curtlo Molhlo rwcord playor
• rodlo, uood Moytog outoColi 448-117.111.
metlc •••her. IO"JJIO"
1lumlnum picture window.

814-882-3173 oftor 4 p.m.

bedrooms, 2 blthl. eat~n kichen with ranee. dlshwlsher, ful
basement. atllched snae. dd. immediate passessiln. Neartt

new home. ~r city. CaH for an ap~ntrnent Doo'lmissoutonthls
exceptional value!
SIN!TER

Within 10 minute drive lll'downtownGailiooli!. CitY School Slstam.
Has hoolwpfor mobile homa Gallio RuiiiW~~andsepti:
lank NighlliWll oo pole, 200 ft. !rootage on blllllll1 Sdlool_l!!l..
_rmber. Bllildnesa Call ,.,...
· - 1141'7

OIIIEI FIIIMCIIIG - Lot wellltr.lla! llulll llvina 11011
wlbow window, 3 bedrooms, 2\! blltl. COIIIPI l IIIOdlm ithen
wth II the exira$, famly 100111 with bri:ll wall, lreplaca llld

LAIID. IDl$10 AaiES more or less. RiYer view. KC school dill

llt!llJliNG SITE- 5 acns. Wlllr.................................. $10.900

RN
:·:~~·y

"l,

'
':~·

NEAT AltO 'CLWI - CONVEIIIENT IN TOWill
INSTANTLY APPEALING -lovely 4 BR brick and LOCATION - 211Rs. 12118 IR, large klthen· &amp;.
lrame bJ.Ievel In Pleasant Valley Estates. Other dini"'larea with ran111 relrig. &amp; disp.laundry with
.attractions Include fami~ room, equipped k~chen, ·washer &amp; dry«, new carpet, expensive drapes,
jiving room, one fu! and two hart baths. 2 car carport gas heat. humidifier, dehumidifier, air
garage and central ~r.
cleaner. central air. Walch the Blue Devil folltblll
games from the large rear sun decfc. $50.0001 NO,
PRICE REDUCED TO $29.500- Modern ranch' $37,500.
.
.
witll 3 B~. living room, kitchen, bath, carpel.
electr~ BB hea\ and an alt!ched garaga located CREMEENS ROAD - 53 acres mil. 10 A.tillable,
in Rodney V111age II; Excellent buy for first time balance woods, oemodeled home. I\! stories. 7
(IRS. and bath. llflW siding new well, excellent
home owner!
24x40 steel bu ild~&amp; several Old buildine;. Only
GREEN TOWNSHIP - GaAHAII SCHOOL ROAD $37,500.
- 12 acres mil, 721l fl. level Rd. frontal~ rural
water availabl~ excellent for buiding or mobile . NEAR Jll(IRTH GALUA HIGH SCHOOL - 5.29
homes. Call for mll'e information.
' acres m·l. apJXox. 2 acres cleared, balance
wooded. 3 BR 14x 70 mobile home in flOod
condition, carpetsd lhrooghoul, stove &amp;relrig. stay.
HUNTER'S PARADISE - 48 acres m/1 on Bargaon priced at $25,000. Catl for appointment
Raccoon Creek near Ewington. approx. 10 A. IIIIIEDIATE OCCUPANCY ..,. You owe it to
tillable. balanc · woods, 11\'story log COllage, cellar yourself and your lamily to see th~ one. 3 BRs, 2
house. 12115 metal buildin&amp; extra nice 14x70 2 baths, large lR &amp; dininum., plley kitchen wilh
BR, 2 bath molile home. Alllh~ for the as~ng price refrig, fNI, range &amp; d•p., ,den, family rm, II8S hett
of $39,400.
.
&amp; cent11r, cove= &amp; hill basement All this
on a welllandsca lot at the edge of town. FHA
RIO GRANDE AREA - Rio Center~nt Rd. (Cherry -VA-~ ON,IL
Ridge); approx.175 acres woodland, froot on 2rds.,
county water availa~e Owner may help linance. FUllER'S FARII - Approx. 50 acres near
Priced to sell at $400 per acre.
V1nton. All clean crop &amp; pasture land, remodeled 3
BR home, 60xM bam, 2 ~los !former dairy larm),
FHA-VA SPECIAL - 3 bedroom, maintenance ~onls on 2 rds., large pond, SEE THIS ~E BEFORE
free homa (Veterans, no downpaymenl) (FHA PlDWING TIME. $49,900.
1Ju1ers, approx. $1.250 down). Located in Rodney
Village II.
PRICE REDUCED TO $56,9001 Excelent cattle
larm. 132 acres mj, mostly clean hil pastur~ flOod
GREEN ACRES - Uke new Cedar Home oHers 3 fences, I~ story home, 5 rm~ &amp; ball\ large bam
Brs., large lR &amp; kilchen, 2 car garag~ carpeted to~ base, fronts on -3 roads in W.lnut Twp.
'
patio, wrap-around deck. cent. air &amp; I y, lois. Be the
lirst to see this one.
FINISH THIS OIIE YOUIISELF AltO SAVE IIONrt
- Apprllll. 10 acres mostly flat land near Rodney
LOOKING FOR SOIIEIHINC NEAR THE l.AI(E?- 28x60 unfin~hed house with lull basement lob oi
Th~ ~ it 3 BR modular w~h 2 baths, living room, polential
dining area, kitch., with stove and rehig.
Comlootable screenoo porch, woodbuming stove. GREEN HOUSE- CENTRAlLY LOCATED -112
24x60 block garage and lois d trees.
· acre farm has frnnlilee on Sllte RDute 588. Fairfield
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd. Excellent for
FDllOW THE. CIRCULAR DRIVE ... and you will farming or development Older 5 rrn. &amp; both also
find th~ eye.catching home that features a room, included. Owners will consider sellina smaler tracts
fami~ room. 5 BRs. 2 baths, buit·in range and ol short term financin&amp; Call for more information.
dishwasher, 2 freplaces, 3 patios, woodburning
stove, central air. also has a pond and utility OHIO RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - located 3 miles
building
belol&gt;l Ell'ei&lt;a Dam. Ideal for cmaping building II'
mobile homes. Call Ranny llackllll'n.
AWAY FIIOII THE CITY MADNESS- 3 BR ranch
oo II acres, m/1, pond, full basement, lami~ room COIIIIEI,ciAL . BUILDING - 82x80 all steel
with woodbumer, IOing room, equipped kilcfl.,, consl!uction with fi'eproof ilsulation. Overhead
dining room, I \1 baths, alt!ched 2 Cl!r garage crane, has office &amp; baths. Formerly used for boat
I.Dvely setting!
sales &amp; ~epair. Located acrw from Sii'ler Bridge
Pl~a , with access to the Ohil River. Potential
NEW USTING IN VINTOUIIEA- 48Rs, k~chen , unlimited. Call Ranny Blackburn.
ball\ large living room with woodburning fireplace
all on one story. Nice IBYellawn with 1.6 acres,m/1. PRICE REDUCED! Within walking distance of goll
course and downtown shoppins 3 BR, dining room
with WB ~ ell·in kilchen has eye-level
oven, ranee. dosp. and refrig. carpet over hardwood
floon tlvouamut. prage, newly tiled breezeway
landscaped lawn ·and nice garden.
'

cent.··=

IIIIIIES-

riiEAT lAND IIU'tl NfARI.Y 38 fCIIfS; IINETW. 1¥t11S IN0.$12.0011 .
103!CIIfS. RO. fROOIGE IJIII.QT(JI RD.. RIJ1W. WATER
111M. "'" ......... "" ....................... "'".......... '" .. "'" '...:............ $100.0
CMR 21 H:RfS, PN!TWJ.Y 'MQID, EXCa 11m SITES ..... $22.000

1

814·38 ·B24e.

IIIIEDIATE OCCUPANCY - Yoo owe • to
younelf and your family to see this ooa 3 ~ 2
baths, iil'ae IR &amp; di1ing rm., &amp;Olley kJchen with PIICliEIIUCID TO US.!JOO! - Owner says sell
q, rN#, ral¥! &amp;disp., den, fimly rm., ps heal lhis mootll 3 Ill ranch will! brick ~ont features a
nice famly rliOOl will chimney for WB stove. LR,
&amp;
lui~
on a wellllndlca Ioiii thll
qe II town.Nllllis
FHit lqe kldien, laundry nn. and large back porch.
-VAlat:alad on liUMit l!d.

COlli• bar. Apidule perfect hame inside and out Owr8' •1
Ill help with financing to q~lfied blryer. 10'16 lrt. Rill!. ·

ROUIII HOME, I aae woodland, 1amer1t l'llmq $65,000.
TARA ESTATES, bHeYol, 4 br, IS flmiy &amp; riC. room. ........ $7trs
IIRIC1&lt; TRIID'El, 3 br, beseunrll, Jandsraped lot. Hldl
Dr.....................................................................................$59,000
NICE HOM£.IQI shade trees. 1\laCIIS. City Schools.$49,900

DieHl loader, dozer, tr•llert,
Pfckup, dunebuvay. cyCle.
Ford . , 1ne IJ'Id trent. Call

Petl for Sale
I~,;i~:~~;Muot
ooll. Prlco
-56---------------1:
. '
43.614·742· 2957

DUTCH ffilE COUNTRY HOME
4 bedrootns, 2\l baths; luly equipped eat~n kil:hen, formal dini1c
room. family room with woodbumer, two car ~ wth auto.
opener. St,1e. beauty, ch•m and comfort - all desaiJe tlis
hqme. Pric:ed $74,900.
1322
SPRING VALLEY SUBDMSIOIII
Vacant lots. Nice size bulding lots with a1 ulilies lhel'e. lDt siZI!
101.8 by 171.2. Better get ·um now.
M!Mi

4 oolo ar trodo good Formoli
H wtth loader, scraper bled•
• bole mo..,, ..911 whh
now point. Cali 4411·01 17.

AKC Roglotorod Golden Ro·

insid111nd out 3 IIR, flmly
fireplace in livina room. Jg patio. (lty schools. SSI.~' !tJne

OWIIER FIIIAIICIIIG with low down payment to qualified buyer: 3

RCA Color TY IT• PI•

Wo buy uood Equlpmonl.

trlever puppies . Sholl,

~

lrilevel hom&amp; Formal l~1ng and dining room. Spacious luiY
equipped eat~n kitchen and famly room with fireplace.&gt;.IJIIhls
house is situated on 4\l acres more or less that is beautiluiY
landscaplll.
11576

BRAND riew Peevey T-16

69 For Sale or Trade

mall C. New Holland round
bat., orevtty wagons, NH
grinder mixer. compick.,, 2
&amp; 3 battant plawa, potter
auger.

Cloude Wlntoro. Rio Orondo,

o. con e14· 2411-6121 .

Re•l Estate General

TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE
If. it's lots of space you need, we 1111 i1!!! 4 bedrooms, 2\! baths,

PIANO for oalo. *300. dol·
lero. 304-8711·4286.

lland.

•oorvlcel
UIED EQUIP
IH Hydro 70. ford 3000.
ford Jublloe. Moooey 38.
Mouoy ell w-loodor. For·

2 AKC rogloterodd femolo

Olbeon I cubic foot chen

25 ACRES - I 10011 HOII£
Nk:e remodeled hom.&amp; Blown-in insulation. 2 storage buildings.
chicken house. M1m farm. Chesh•e township. New couruy
ktchen.
11558

new. 0110. 1114·742·2274.

t.odgatoo. pootlo tonka,

woodbumere. And s" ua
for 1 complete lin• of parts

8eeglet. 1 year old . Heve
Building materiel•
shotl • are running. tiSO .
block. brick. oower plpoo. ee~h or *90. for pelr. Benny
window•. llntele, eto . Wlloon . et4 ·848·21143.

Trollor-ot Rodney. Coli froour . Coli 114·949·
25311.
1114·2411-11418.

ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses? See tile fenced-in pasture willl4 acres more ll' ·less
includingaltuee bedroom home, justa few niles .from Galipolis.
Exrellent land for farming as wei as new home construction. Large
bam plus two mage buld~ pord stocked wth catfish, bass
and bluegil~ large concrete drive. Can for a showing and be

HOMEGROWN tomotool, 4
mlloo below GoiHpollo Forry
Poll Office at roed1ld1

oorn aprayen. wagon1,

rot1ry tltere. rotery cuttera
blede1, G•tH cuh:tvltor,
l)lowe, dlao. pott driven,

7

•34.
"411.

48 Sp.c• for Rent

Bundy B ftat cl•rl~et. Uke

KOeHOriM . TobiCCO •

Roglotorod Cocker Sponlel
popo. Mole. buff. t150. Aloo
edult Poodle end 1 Cocker
Sponlel. et4-992·2607. ,

$221, _.h. ail utllitloo with II lnoh flot .,...
bu'* bedo completo
...... 304'e71!·21811. '
bunldoo $191. 2 pleoo '.n·
TWIN fi1VER8 TOWER. tron lhllngrvom oultN •til;
A.,......ta nowav•l•bleto onti'Oft ,..Hnon •ea. ,.._
&amp; -blod wllh on , . . - . ••o. maplelnooma o' 1111 then 0111 "71. $70.
tt2,300. Renting for 30 hld•·•·bod t250, bax
poroent at odlu- lncomo· oprlnga &amp; - - twin or
full •100 1101 rogullr·flrm
.Phone 104-e711-ell711.
"20, mople dinette ahaln
SMALL furnlohod oport· $31, wooll otondo
mont. odulto. nq.poto. refer- m~pl• rockorw •••· 7 DleOI
chromo dlnltle 1101
II
304-171·1315.
plaoo dlnotto 1101 . .8. uood
Wedl• Ap•rtments. no bedroom oultN, roftrgoro·
chlldrln. no poto, 304-87&amp;· tore, rengu. ahelt, drw••"·
wringer Within, TV'I,
2072 .
dryerao •• ohoao. can 44e3119.

on-.

mond Rowe.

• mow.re. Complete llni
of balo hondllng • loodlng

Boalpolnt Siemooo mole kllton. Born 3·17·83. •so.
_5
::-1_4·_
99_2_· 2_1::-07_._;__ ___
1

er-.

room brick frml home phis 2
rooms for bus&lt;less - wf1a. restful area after a day's
Wll'k
.s74
lever you have in mind Flower shop, small grocery
stll'e. carry-out. etc. lots of '
uses. Phooe for appoinlment to
see. Live in part - blusiness 01
olher part. Rent mobile homes.
Great Opportunity!

nut. ceder. mehogany end

....., ••. et4·982·11813 .

long trwcton. VermMr
round balara, rakl-ledd•n.

446-0008

*!!'.:1;

close ne9Jbors. Rural wal!!r
system plus drilecf and a dug
wei Extra water lap' for a
mobile home hookup. Nice

Oermon Rldgo Poachoo. Coli
M.,tln Acouetlc guitar ._ 441 ·1511 or e14-:J79·
Heavy duty caee . Superior 2303.
Condition. 81 4-441 ·7221 ,
APPLES·Eirly opploo for
Plono· llko now. t1.100. ootlng ond dellclouo opplo
IBM copier. 160. Sink with uuca . FITZP,.TRICK OR ·
Ioucei, $75. Mlmoogroph CHARD. 8R .I88. Phono
with atenclle end ink. •aoo. Wllkll!llit 8li9-3781.
1114·892·3824.
C•nnlng tomato•a-t4. 10
Hand crafted Ap~lechlen por buohol . Plokod . firing
Dulalman. Midi from Wll - contolnoro. 247·4282 . Roy·

JIVIDEN ' S
ARM
EQUIPMENT
44e-1e7a

REALTY

ON£ tltllaoom 1partment, pleca- lhllna room~

1~ ACID WITII COUIIliY
SETJIIIG - tb llld solid 2
bedroom home located on 1
State Hi!WIY willl no real

s~p~

Artley flute l'leellitnt condl·

tlon. Coli 44e·3778.

Farm Equipment

-=========.!~::;::;:;=;=;;::=::;.!..:::==::==::::===

SINGER 11wing mochl...
ltyilot !roo orm modolll84.
with coblnot, .0200. Cell o~
ofter 4:00. 304·e?e.
4e42. 1211 Ylond St.

near Porter, some lend _...

pick your own. tiO bu.
Bring contai-. Roynor'o.
Lower Rlvod Rd . Coli 44e.
4807 .

- - - - - - - - - - , r - - - - - - - - - - l e l e c t r i c guitar. Electronic model), like new, will trade
amp c•••· 10 welt. greet for' for boet trlil,r. &amp;14-948Antique pump orpn. Cell r
baglnnoro. 304·676·1517o. 2994 .
44e-0722•
28' 10 •-d blko with 64 Misc. Merchandise 66 Pete for
Real Estate General
apeedomet:er, eKe . cond.
Colle14·2118·111111 .
WHITE Franch Provinclol POODLE GROOMING . Coli
Judy Toylor ot 814·387·
New Oak Furnltu,., tebles. bed, box oprlnga, mottrou. 7220.
cholra. cupboardoL 1&gt;1o lifo. d••k. hutch. dre1aer • mir~ry olnko. Poul Conkolo ror. $250. 304-e75·1950.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
Antiquee, Tuppeq Plaint.
SQUARE gl111 &amp; cllromo • KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
plao, CFA Hlmoloyon, Ptr·
a.u;thon Allen wingback dinning room table with 4 -'an and SlemeM kittens.
pedded
wlcbr
chalre.
new,
ell~. Up~- In oolld
Coli 446· 3844 ofter 4PM .
dooort 1011 "!!toriol. UIO. ueo. 304-e1e-II022.
or beat oHor. 814·1192·
KITCHEN toblo with oxtro Amerlc1n Pit Bull Terrlert
2478 .
loaf &amp; II cholro. •110.00. 8110 t300 •• · li male. born June
17. CoH 614-388"8180.
Artley · ftut• In excellent Btlcko. $110 .00. 304· 8B2·
2549.
condition. Aloo now bath
AKC Reg. Chow Chow
tub. et4·912-3097.
BEDROOM oulto. ping pong pupploo. · Coli 114· 2118·
'
Norge room elr condhloner. tablo. Atoricartrldg11, 304· 1271.
15.000 BTU. Coli 992· e711·670e.
Aegl1t1red Oermen She 3044.
USED Konmora dryer, $75. pherd pupo. Botwoon 6 • 1
WHkl Old. 614·985-3849 ,
phono 304·875·11704.

36 Lots 8o Acreage

446-4206

6 pc . drum Ml, alao PA

bench. C.ll441·1218.

Appllootlono oro being oc. linn, . . a. ond •79. o-.
coplod'-eldorlyorhendl· oeto, $1111. 4 dr. cheotl.
capped •klentaforthenew '42. II dr. cllnto. $84, Bod
a-ley - Aportmonto In tromoo. UO.ond
10
Atlllno. Olllo. C-lent gun
• Gun ooblnoto. $3110 ..
d o - to.tlon, oil utili· dlnone cllalro *20. ond $21.
tloo lnolu- In rent. oH· Goo or olectrlq rongoo, t3211
ltrMI porklng, oprlnld• IYI- upta
lob'fm•-•·
tllil ond llflloke d-oro. 1211•13711.
•38.
bed frO-. t2o.
comploto -rlty eyotom. f21. &amp; UO,Idngfromo $110.
rent •*tidy .,.._ble. open Good IIIIIDIIon ol bedroom
f o r - u -·Auaunl. For IUitll, Cldlr che1t1,
mora lllforlnolton contact rocker~, metel cebinete,
Ailoo Curtlo In • - • ot IWivelr-oro.
583·8484 or lllvor
Uood Fumlturw ·• bookca11. Oet your winter wood now.
Dowlopment Co. ot 108 s rangea,
chelra, dlnnett Ht, llobo. tiO .OO. Plok up lood.
Second St. Morlettio, OH
wood
ond chllra, drf· Clinton R. Pltzor. 1114·949·
411780.
oro, relrlgarotoro end TV"o. 3 20113.
mlloo out lulo- Rd. Opon
1 br .. oomplea kitohon, olr, lem to lpm, Mon. thru Fri .• Chlppondolo otylo love oeat,
carpet, downtown. Coli diYI hm to llpm. lat.
gold VIIYOI,•Iiko new. $76.
448·4313...... 44e-Ot3&amp;. ' 448-0322
Coli et4-882·1834. ,

•zs..

&amp; Veget•blea

oyotom. Col 448·4098 .

Now arrang.~ the drclttd ltttt rs 10

HOSPITAL8ED, crank typo.
1811. Coli 441· 7433.

711CC motorcycle. 304·
11711-e574.

wooher • dryer, coli 304676-4293.

.

448-73tl.

ing avolloblo. Call448, 8221

1977 OAKWOOD, control
kitchen

GOOD USED APPUANCES

· wootooro. drvwo. -.....••
Smllll furnloMd olfldoncy toro, rongn. Skoggo lip.
o p o - for ono proloo- P"mol a. Upp.r Rtvtr Rd.
oionel typO gondamen only, booido 8tono Crnt Motoi:
control lir. Cell 441-0338.

Umeetone, lend, Grav1l.
Dolhtlrod In Mooon. Maigo,

1fter I weekd•Y•·

304-676-2711 '
eir.

Even• Enterprlltl. 4 mi.

Gar•ge Door. 10'x7', two
20 Inch blcyclet. Honcle

THIS WEEK SPECIAL. Now
1983 14x70 Fairmont, only Exc. level lot• of 1 to 8 acre,
f1 2.996. 10 porcont down
for lon'd flnendng. All State oil udUtleo ovollable. locatM
Modular Homet . Half w1y
between Huntington 8t Pt.
P1ee11nt on Sllte Rt. 2.

..
.

..

-------:::--:-:::-,--,.-:::---:---------

IMng lOOm, dining room. witll - . n l n g
firopl-. 3-&lt;1 bodroomo wilh lllge kitdlen wit11
- - · - -In - . _, ond """111011 golon ond
boookloot - · 2V.- - · bollroom. lorvopotio w1t11 dlarooel fiowpllco. fuolollil:iaJt pull1) ond
air coo-.ood. Prico t121.000. Ovmor wll fin-.oo.

36 lots 8o Acreage

,..

swimming pool. garagawortcshop. Immediate poSS8811ion.

nlohod. No poto. D-olt
rwquirod. 614·992-2749 .

ON TWO ACRE lANDSCAPED LOT
IN BAUM ADDITION

.

fences,

Follow Rt. 7 East of Pomeroy to Roller Rink, left to Bium
Subdivision, 4th homi on the left.

1Binch. linch t1 .IO·porft ..
12 Inch $3.10 por ft. Ron

Soulh ofJoclooan on ST. RT.
93, 1114·288·1130.

....'
.: '

For Sale
Owner
Phone 446-8221

bedroom treiler. Fur-

Beautiful Brick Ranch Home

1972 Sherwood Pork
14xe5. 3 bedroom. partially
fumiahed.

2

A1hly wood

burning otove. ldool for lddo
ond· horooo. 8118,000. Cell
44e-11810 or 992-38011. ·

Und two bdrm. mobile·
homee, fumlahed. Brown's 1e3 Hre farm. farm houee.
Trailer Park, Minereville, Oh. 7 room• • beth. undlw·
ground cell1r whh 2 edra
614-992·3324.
room• on top. Nice gerct.n
·1970 12xll0 troller. Portly IPIDI. huge b1rn 6: t bfg
fumiehed, woodbumer, c- building~ . Natural gu. loca·
A. new Clrpetlng. mlr\Y tlon near achool on New
extr... Can be moved or lett Ume Rd. For more infonll•
on nlea farm lot. •&amp;.800. tlon call 814·742·28115.

614-9B2·7442_or614·992·
2717.

2

Solem St. Rutll'nd. $180.
month. 614·.373·1813.

autvert in ltoclc. 8 Inch thru

"

Bedroom brick home with
.' ~ ...
Chandler kitchen, custom drapM, . ' ,...'
•
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
'.
n
situated on 12 acres with stable. rail '

388-Be82 ofter 7PM. or
1974 CHAMPION 14 x 65, Doon Wlblln, Rt. I, Box H .- 448·1014 doyo. .
Homo pork. 81 4-992·311118.
2 bdr .• 1otal electric, com- _0_ u
_ y_•_v_Hio_._4_6_7_3_6 _·_ ___
1
4
room•
6
bath.
Unfur·
plet .. y furnlahed on al'tra Meigs Co . Rd. 1 B. 88 acne
Two bedroom. unfurnllhed,
large lot in Quail Creek.
11 3 p11ture, 2/3 wooclecl. ni1hed. funv carpeted. •II Camp Conley, tl 80 per
French City Brokari!IQ 8 Ser- all mlnerel rightl, unllmhed new pelnt. No lnaide pete.. month. 304·1176·1371 or
vicee, 446-9340.
gravity ted apringwatar, dopoall rwquired. 614-992- 875·3812.
3090.
Skyline mobile home maturing timber. fenced in

448.e2~1 .

'

11

Fruit

lnstrumentl

Peach.. ; yeUo¥t freeetone,

~~4~9;=~::=;:lee::::a=e====

For ute metel'culvert l inch
F...,_ Apt. 11911, utili·
thru 80 Inch In otock . Btoto
1111 1111.. I lldr, _ , HMC. 1 - - - - - - - - - - - IPP&lt;OYod Ill gauge 12 Inch
oduMI. 446-441e 7 I
fll.31 per ft.. 24 Inch
p.m.
For LMee: Modern office $10.10 por ft. 31 Inch
buldlne. 21 Locuot St. t1 11.110 per ft, Aloo plootlc

.-

Four

Rent or 11ie. 14a70. Par- ·
ti1lty fur.!'tithed. Very nice.
Located Country Mobile

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Poole, Routoo 33, North of Knouff Cool&amp; Firewood 8uy
Pome.oy. Large lots. CaU now for ...aonect wood thlt
winter. Coli 81 4· 258·112411.
112-7479.

r . .•

Unfurn . ap1rtment, 1at
floor. 4 r. &amp; bath with yord.

1 :00-4:00 Sunday

1- 304· 773 ·

.

'

1---'----- - - -

OPEN HOME

2 bedroom. Roulh Lane.
ChNhire. 1 or 2 children,

• •

0t

controlly, locatod. odulto
only. no poto, ref. a IIC.
dopollit, NQUino. caa 441·
0444.

•pt .• 1 bdr ,,
u21. ~ pd .• •zo ""'

4 4 " - 7PIII.

ep1rtment1 Mtallabla now.
$200 mo. A·Ono Rool
E1t1t01. Coftll Yoog•. Roal·

tor. CoH 304-1175·5104
304·e7tl-7318.

Fur~lahH

,...,.., Galljoalo. Col 446·

2 bdr. R-cy Inc. Aportmenta Utlltioo portly !urn..

Trailer tor rent or llle In

Mercorvillo. Oh. $200 mo.
pluo dopollit. Coiii14·Ziill·
1955 or 1114-285·1&amp;08.

'-.

•

68

Mlac.

Ti.,..Sentlnei-Page--~5

The

Ohi~Point Plea1C111t, W. Va.

31, 1983 -

W. Va.

.,
IIREAT LOCATIOII -Nice level lot. lots of room for
llnily. Has 3bedrooms. farmal dining room, vinyl
lilln&amp; iNinlit lniy room, and I front porth.
Qaocfbtry II $27,Ul.

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Page 0 6 The
81

Farm Equipment

For aale-H Farmall Tractor ..
Good condition. 814· 949·
21518.
Gravely tractor with cultivatore. 30 inch mower, 48 inch
onow blodu . 614- 992 7111.

NEW •

1.

'

Used Harveatore
Sb'\lctures. Automated fl .
veatock feeding -computer
feeders. ' Call collect 614·
588-2280. John L. Bona .
CASE 180 bockhoo &amp; loodar
'7600. HD8 dozor $6500,
Cataplllar 12 grader
13,000. Or all 3 for
.16,000, 304-882-2004
after 8 p.m .

63

- - - - -Rag . Tennessee Walker, one

---=-------

TWO year old Appaloosa

78 4 dr , Mercury Marquis
PS. PB. air." 6 w . seat. stero
sound. Call days 448-4383.
eves. 446-0139.

stud, yearling quarter horae
mara. Call aher 4 :00, 304676-1385.
1980 AMC Eoglo Umitod
auto. trant, P.S. PB, AC,
HAMPSHIRE boar hog, power locks, AM - FM
304-676-33Da.
cassette. exc . cond . •
$5,300, Coll448-8060.
675-6592.
Hay

&amp; Grain

HAY , $1 .00 bale. allr;t
straw. $1 .25 bale. 304·
45a -1 898 o• 304-8963060,

7·.10-ll

.,

\\ EST

£AST

• IIIIi f1 :1

• .1
·~ :12

• QIOHIH

.,

+ t\IU 9 H

·~ li ~ ~ :i

· ~ 10 z

S&lt;JliTII

• .q,lg 2
t KQ.fi~

FOUR hor1es for sele, 304·

Livestock

FOUR HORSES, one pony,
AH - 1 broke. St. Rt. 141to
St. Rt. 233. One mile on the
right. After 4pm.

~ORTII

.K ./11-4
¥AI0 752
• 4
+K 0

+ A Hi

19'78 Dodge Aspen station
wagon, would make good
work cor. 11 ,000. Coli 9927304 .
77 MONTE CARLO, call
304-882-2888 after 5.

72 DODGE Dan Swinger,
good body, good engine,
good tires, needa trantmia·
aion repair. 304-876-4096 .

Su.,_r Chlx 2 year old
1982, FORD EXT. 4 apaad.
gelding, trained . Excep·
AM-FM rodlo, ca11304-67671
Autos for Sale
tlonal ehow prospect. Call
2D69 .
814-892-2488 dava &amp; loto - - - - - - - - ev•ningt.
1977 FORD Mustang ,
1976 Datsun Yz Ton with hatchback. air conditioned.
Quell Sale. Fair Week. 30 shall , runt .good, lookl fair. ·CB, cuatom wheelt, 82700 .
pet. off on all young birda . 379-2716,
excellent condition. 304Either at· Fair or Phone
876-2636.
614-9a5-4346.
1978 Capri II. All new tires, 1 - - - - - - - - - exhaust, front braket. Call 1972 Buic;k Electra. good
~ SIQ1mental bull out Of Mr. 4 4 8 - B 1 7 4
o v o ' a &amp; condition, coil 304-876Olean, 1 yr. old, wt . 1 1 66 w-onda.
3788,
lba. Double B Simmental
Fanm, 814-367-7727.
1981 Monte Cerlo, loaded. 1973 CHRYSLER Newport,
1978 Trana Am, bleck. for parta, t176.00 take• it
all, 304-882-2629.
THE COWBOY SHOP, New 1979 Ford Courier Tr.uck.
Hov..n, WV. 304-882-2360. 110 Auto Sales, 388-9906. 1-- - - - - - - - 1989 o'ldt 98. EKcellent
Now In stock : Cattle halters,.
ahowaticks. tupplies. accet· 1982 Camero 87,000, machanlcally, bodyandlntasorlet . sheep haltera, 3:7.00'0 mil ea. 304-882· rior excellent. Runalikanew.
$690.814-992-6420.
blankets. all horie tuppllea. 2461 . .

1----------

1----------

VulncraQie': Both
De31cr: Norlh
Wt&gt;sl

Norlh

1•

Pass

Pass

2W

Pass

Pas~

t+

"'"

6• ·

Pa s.~

Easl

Pass
Pass

,.
,.

Soul

2+

Pass

•

Opening lead :

rebid showed a good hand
with four spades. Nori, Who
had made a nqnforcin rebid

1978V.W. BHtlo. Sunroof
ond good tlrea. $2,900 .
814-985-4201 ,

of two hearts, showe very
good spades by his jump to
four. South invited the slam
by his five-club cue bid since

1987 Comoro. 814-9927881.

he kMw that Blackwood was
not appropriate . .,

72

Trucke for Sale

Finally. North's jump to ·

six was a fine gamble .
South won the heart lead
with dummy's king and led
the .!iingleton diamond. East
went right up with the ace to
lead back the queen of

1881 Ford F-160, 3 apHd,
overdrive. loaded! 17,000.
Col1448-21110 oftar 4:30.
1178 Chovy Scottadole 11
ton pickup, eutomatic ateer·
lng, "power brakes, one
owner. 48,000 actual miles.
Excellent condition. 814·
941-21&amp;8.

hearts.
South .ruffed with the ace
and carefully led the nine of
trumps to dummy's jack, a
second trump back to his
queen and then bi1 deuce of
trumps to, dummy'S king-

1974 CHEVROLET pick up,
rough aha", t400. or beet
offer, 304-876-2238.

eight, which wa1 now · a
tenace over West'slO.

He dlscarded his remain-

ina: low diamond on the last
trump and threw a low club
on tile ace of hearta. The

•J

. By Otwald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby

Today's hand Is
gem. Tbe bidding is
of study. Note that
two-level response

a real
worthy

South's
in dla-

Vans

4-3.

for Sale

1982 Buick LeSabra. cruiM
control.alrcondltlon. powar
atHring and brek... "low
mileage, ucellent condltlon, ; •a.OOO . 304-882·
2920.

71

1
Autos for Sa

a.

JEEP CHEROKE~. 4
, Coll448-4777 otter

remaininK five tricks went
to the ace-klnl of clubs and
the K-Q-J of clfornondo.
Had Eut ducted the lint
diamond, South · would have
rulfed•dlamondlndummy,
drawn trumps, led his king
of diamondl and made the
slam since cllamonda broke

74

76
Motorcycles

74

1974 Hondo 380 , 7,400
actual miles. t500. Call
614-388-9765.

1 - - - - - - - - --

1 979 . Hondo CBX ahow·
room cond. Call 448 -D64B
after 6 .
1978 XL 360 Hondo. Coli
4411-0722 .

1982 Harley Davidton
tra glide Cla11ic. Call
0038 ,

•lee~

446 ~

Motorcycles

82 SUZUKI 8&amp;0 LZ. 1100
milea, excellent condlt~n.
ahaft drive, 2 tone biiiCk •
Z
gray. Riding goor •
helrnela Included. t2450.
304-875-3191.

81

Coil 114-HI-1711.

2&amp; ft. Wllderne11 camping
troller. Call 448-9889.

Home
Improvements

81

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured c:ell,i nga· c:ommercial and reaidential, free

79

78_. Auto Part•

a. Accauoriaa

1 982 KAWASAKI ISO LTD · "'
Wlndj8mmer, lower~. AM· • ·,,
FM. Cllllttl, cr11h'bar.'
liaay bar. '1700.00, 304• · ·
882 -3221 '
' .. • , .

&lt;·

. ..,·

Boats and
Motore for Sale

Tri·Haul Chrytler Sport · •
Fury, 18ft., 85horHmotor. ,,1 ...
266-6282 .
. . ,_.

.

'

19a2 Hondo186S AT.C.Iike 1 yr, oldBeseTraakerlllba.. ' •. ,
n•w. 8960 . Coil 814 -379- ·boat, 40 HP Mercury out. ' '""
board &amp; electric motor, .. .:
2802.
many extrae. *4500. Call -·
• •
1980 Klowonkl 440 LTD, 614-246-8478,
Uke now , 11,600. 1978
,
Kawasaki KE176 Like new 18 ft . Stor Croft tl~r gloaa
HOD. 614-992-2921 or boat. 40 horaapower mer: \ -~
curv motol lo trollit, $41a..;, ·~
304-773-690&amp; .
814 -992-6068.
•.• 4

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

S60 0....,.. Motora onglne
and tnnomlaalon. Appro• .
11,000 mila. •1&amp;0. 114-

1t82.
PAINTING - Interior ond
exterior, plumbing, roofing.
aomo romodlllng. 20 yra.
oxp. Coil &amp;14-388-9662.

RNI Eatate General
~

.

Home
Improvements

&amp;

Water Wallt. Commercial
and DomNtlc. Teat hor. .
Pumps Sal• and Service.
304-896-3802 ,

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, Ono
piece cultom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanoed Outtor, fOoy 814-592-4088 ,}
{night 814-891-820&amp; .}
Roofing end Carpentry
work. general rapaire, call
Anthony Wllllomaon, 614387-0194.

Real Estate General

... ..

~

e . 1987 Ford Von.Hoovyduty.
muffler. Low
orbeatoffer.

~,~:'

Judy DeWitt. Rultn&lt;, 318-8155

.=_;lr.=l

-~OUTHERN HILlS R.~.; INC. .

•

' ,,

1 9 7 4 Cam a r o L T •
automatic, p.1., p.b., a.c.,
am•tm atareo tape. low
lntamational Scout 4
mileage, one ownar. looka l':'~:;!~,.;drive. 3 tpeed. ecoand drivu like new. &amp;14- 1~
6 cyl., good cond.
949.2588.
'
614-992-8176.

1---------

,

(Costs included).
Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00
446~855

r

.

,

.,

SWIMMING POOl
SAlES SERVICE

Counties

Instillation Repair
Ooar, Bacthot &amp; Dump Trudt
446-1 761 or 388-8869

85

General Hauling

Need aomethlng hauled
away or somathjng moved?
We'll do it. Coli 446-3169
between 9 and 6.

Cat 214 hoe, dozara, crane.
loaders. dump truck. Call
814·441-1 142 between
7 :00AM &amp; 6 :00PM ••

.

The Stail-Shor Co.

512 Second Aw,. Gallipolis
Servirc Gallil &amp; Moip

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lonlor. 304-6767397.

f'

!l-;(I_IMPIIOVEMENTS

1

' Bill'S

.

r

' Nu·Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; ._oors
AlUminum &amp; vinyl
siding
·
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility .
buildings
·
· · 691 Miller Drive
446-2642

TRI.STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Ave,. Golllpolia.
446-7833 or 446-1833.

Free Esllmiltes .

1----------l---------- ..

2088.

.AFFOIIDABY .MADE US NUIIBER1#C.~"'U~ 2~;- ·,
~ ";:·. _·&lt;''-:''~ -"J ~ .
. ::.;.:::.~. ~· t ·. }/ '.

:'

Dissolutions or Uncon-

lonnie Bogga Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe. dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call
446·7903.

ments. footers. landacaplng.
drlvewaye,
farm
ponda.
814-742-2407
or 614-742-

ELLIOTT

Lennox HeiHnf &amp; Air CoiK!itton·
irc All Types nsulatioo, Electrical Wir fn~o
C.OII446-8515 or 446-11445
Afier 4:30 p.m.
"

tested Divon:n $350.00

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna. ponds. ditches,
basements, etc. Cell 4464907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.

&amp; beckhoe tervice. Base-

locky ~no. Assocille. 446-0451
Becky Elliott, Assocllte, 446--888_
5

-

'

RUSS AND MAX

HAMUN KING .
ATTORNEY--AT·LAW

Meigs Excavating . Bulldozer

J. Merrill Carter, RuHtlf, 379-2114

'SOLUTION

'

Cat 216 Hoe, dozera. crane,
loaders, dump truck. 814·
446-1142 between 7 a .m .
to &amp;:p.m.

}

84

Electrlcal

&amp; Refrigeration
APPLIANCE SERVICE. All
make• and models of
wethers, dryera, refrigara·
tou, air conditioner•. Bar·
goin Sam, 446-8033 .

..•..

·~.

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-~.

•

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I

~.

~.

.":" "•

.. ·'. .·.

·'·
·'·J.
., ..
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I
I
I I
I I
,' I

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·-,.-

SEWING Machine repaira,
aervlce. Authorized Singer
Salea &amp;. Service Sharpen
Scinort. Fabric . Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284,

PICTURE PnfECT - Th~ lovely home siiS on one
aae 61 wellllldscaped lawn, Featuring 3 bedfliOms,
bah, living fliOm with lireplace, nice kitchen, 2 car
PJ&amp;e. centr1f air and a IIJ(Id garden area.

:

...

-.-..

#383

85,

General Hauling

I"'

--:~

' ~&gt; '

·i ~f

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE. Coli 814-387-7471
or 614-367-0691.

,..

.,~
·f.,
r

B. J. Hairston, Assoc., 446-4240 Eve.
Jim Cochran, Associate, 446-7881 Eve. ' Clyd~ Walker,
''W

,p·.

ASlloc.,

1'

r·

·I

FEEL FENCED IN!- Then lake alook at til~ vrily well
maintllined ranch. 2 bedroolll$, nice s~e living room,
kitchen, bat~ attached garage. Bat~. pond. 3 acres,
more or less. Pnced in the 40's.
#338

1

~

~

,j

•

ACROSS
1 Show fl ower

6 Winglike
10 Mother ol
Castor and
Pollux

.,

14 Hi ndu guitar
19 Separated .

$44,900 - n,~ ~ an exceptional buy that you ' PIICE REDUCED - "AS $19,900, . lOW OIIIIER SAYS SEll TODAY! JO'ff. ASSUIIT'TIOfll·
can't alford to miss. Located ofl Rt. 35 1n iO!Id i $64,333 - One of a kind - Perfecl· b a - $5.000 1101111 - An ottractive 3 bedroom ,
neighborlxiod th~ home has 3 bedrooms, 2-Allr· ~alolfice,ebusinessilyouriiJme,allrJ! brief&lt; and frame ranch that's less tltln 4 ye1111 old.
baths, lami~ room, ll(!Uipped krtchen and nal gas,
residence or as rt stands OON, a2 famiJI: llime. fhis Has anice fi~ a.,._ kitchen that Ills lots ol
central air, large covered patio and garaga I Year
~ aquality burl older home that Ills 2kill:hens, 2\! cabinels 1nd ~ equipped. 2fun baths, heat pump,
Buyer l'rttecOOn.
baths, modern gos furance &amp;centralai'. You could 2 pqe w~h workshop and OYef I acre trestl

scale
69 Communlsls
70 Knock
71 verve
73 CharacterIstics
75 Attach to

77 Paddles
78 RoadSide

21 Opening In

renee
22 Flower

restaurant

eo Bend
81 Music: as

wr/Uen

23 Prevailing

mood

IOOEIIN EQUIPPED DAIRY - Ready
137 acres, 2 I~ barns. 2 free stall barns, machile!y
shed, 2 silos, 1250 bushel com crib, milking parlorglass line mikers, 2bulk tanks. 5ponds. Tobacoo base.
1680 sq, ft. modem home, 3 bedrooms, 2. full baths.
One of Gallia County's most productiVe da1nes.
.
#334

A: HOlE W1111 A FAIIILY IN liND The IMIB' invites you 1D lake alook at fhis kwely
!j.IMI home. 3bedfliOms, 3 baths, fimly room, den
or.4111 bedroom, Aoma room. Central air. Areplace. 2
P11f18, Nice shrubbery,City SChOO district. Call lor

have a nice office complex dOwnslairs ind f1mly
rentJI or IliOn! office upa!Jirs. There's afinished 3rd
ftoor,
and 2 car garage. In the process of
new
insidt Localtll near

c.-ap1:loiibielt today.

·
•

•

382

NEW HOME - located in Addison Town!!hip.
Amenities indude vinyl sidin&amp; nice entJy, large living
room, master bedroom with II bath and 2 closets, 3
bedroom total, main bath, kiichen, utility room. Priced
In the 40's. Check lh~ one oufi

SIIAU FAll - Immediately likes your eye. 5fliOm

INVEST Aunu ... HAVE A LOT... We have anice3 bedrm. home
il Rodney II Subdivisi&gt;n which needs a little money, elbo grease
and some TLC to give you avery liveable ranch style home. Priced
now lor $26,500.00.
STATRY OLD£R HOME. iocated on shaded lot I block lrom city
schools. Ideal lor fami~ wrth school chidren. Can be used as 2
apts. or converted to singellamily residence.
MOBILE HOMES:
.
NEW LISTING: 2 bedrm., Clay Chapel Rd, 2 acres ..~~i~~~~~j
NEAR TYCOON lAKE. winter/summer, nice retreat ..l
BIDWELL ROONEY Rd., fenced-in yard, near new
HAZEL RIDGE RD., 2 bedrm..

"-

SUNDAY PUZZLER

i,..

'{

•

A B£AU1Y IN TliE WOODS- Just what
the doctor IJdered ~you'reloo~nglora lillie peace
and quiet 1'11len you come home in the evening
you11 find this handsome 4 bedroom wrth an
En~ish Tudoraccen~ lucked back at lhe end oflhe
drive surrounded by huge trees on tile 5 acre lot
Th~ one oHer.&gt; an unusually large famiy room, 3
baths and a very niiJ! kitchen. City schOO district.
See rt and make an oHer. lmmo:liate posssesion.
Owner moved out ol sl,iite.

.

'

AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Phone 448-3 888 or 446-

J .A.R. Conatructlon Co .
Water Linea . Footer~,
Dralna. All kklda of Ditching.
Rutland, Oh . 614 -742 2903.

•.

~

CA~TER'S PLUMBING

Dozer work, ground clean·
lng &amp;:axcevating. •2&amp; hour .
Coli 446-9638.
"

·446-661'0,

.,~

Senrices ·Offered

Heating

PLUMBING &amp; HEAT. Fome r ly Dewitt's
Plumbing. Call 814-3670676 ,

I- - - - - - - - -

GENE'S CARPET CLEANFor u'io 1977 Venture aoft
lNG SERVICE . Rocom top Clmper, alaepa 8. Excelmended for profeaaionel
992-2478,
lent condition . Call 441· Mercum· Roofing It Spout- Iteam cleaning. Scotch
1708 after 6PM or 441- ing. 30 year• ••perienca, Guard -Free Ettimatea. Call
TRUCK t-wHh llghta•l-::3-::7-76_._ _ _ _ _ _ _·_ apociollzlng In built up roof. Gone ot 814-992-8309.
.,.b!Mt, ., 11. 304-875_c_.,_,_61_4_-_3_88_·_9_8_6_7._ __
18150.
18 ft. Beeline camping 1
trai111r, ltova, refrig .• eep. Painting Interior &amp;. exterior,
bathroom, Jleepa 1. C811 wallpaper haf!ging, lntured. F &amp; K Tree Tfimmlng,' stump
C~mplng
448-4887 ,
Froe oatlmotea. 814-949- removal. Coll676-·1331 .
2688 .
Equipment
RINGLE'S SERVICE expe1871' •••chcreft motor RON'S Television Service . rienced roofing, Including
Slidl-ln l*ftpe&lt;, *375, for home. Dodge 440 engine . Specializing in Zenith and hot tar applle~don. carpen·
lent bed nolnl truck, good Crui11 control. tilt wheel. Motorola, Quazar. and tar, electrician. maabn . Csll
condlton, coli 304-871- Sleepa six. Complete. 814- houae calls. Call 576 -2398 304-676-2089 or 676 •
3'89.
742-2843.
41160.
or 446-2464 ..

· ~·

Real Estate General

81

Home
Improvements

HI Pre11ure Cleanlr1g. Alum ·
inum aiding, mobile hom...
wood , briek , undatone
building and homu. Also
heavy equipment. Fully In·
aured. Free eatlmatet . 814949•2888. .
.

eatlmates . Call 814-2t5&amp;·

1979 JHp CJ-6, 8 cyl. 3
tpHCI, new top. tires. axe.
cond. t3700. Call 448·
_0_1_15 - · - - - - - ' - - - New

Even rude MOler • tltl trailer.

,

1 970 8110 TRIUMPH, UOO.
Coli 304-876-8832.

75

Camping
Equipm~~nt

S01ra olumlnum boot, 8.1
~

~

1980 YZ 80 Yamaha good
coridltlon t4!i0. 6HP rototlllor runa good $200. 1971
Ford % ton pickup runs
good, body fair, needs some
minor repair 8600. Call
814-246-5021 '

78

B01ta and
Motor• for Sale

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

1979

trock,
low mlluge.
*499~ Call

L,;;m;;;•;;;nd;;;•;.;';;;•l;;;lo;,;;w,;.ed:.;;;.;l;;;h•;;.::;,:;~l"'ll&lt;EW--IP-APIII--BiiTBRPIIIIIE---AJJN-•.)-~
r-

71

Autos for Sale

t 97&amp; Vogo, 4 cylinder,
llondord ahlft. f360. Co!l
387-0881 ,

Well bid, well made

radio. new tires, low ml ·
leage. Real clean. $2996.
LaBonte' a Quail Farm . John's Auto Sale1, GallipoChicks&amp;eggsreadilyavailt• li~ . 448 - 4782 , open
ble. Order early. Mature evening•.
Quails available again in

71

BRIDGE

Autos for Sale ·

1979 V.W. RABBIT, yellow,
4 spd .• air cond .. AM· FM

non Reg. Walhr gelding.
Coll446-9219 .

64

63

71

Livestock

Augul1. 614-985-4345 .

The

1983

Times-Sentinel

mi!dam ranch style home. 3 bedrooms, lilm, lobacai
blse, 6 IICniB ._all crop ~nd. Several dllerenl type
1rut lrells. Bailer look - one low price. $25,000.
11357

#369

1379

98 ACRE FARM - READ CAREFUUYl Older full story
brick home. 5 bedrooms, 2 staircases. also one to attic.
Partial basement, IIJ(Id conditi)n. County water, lair
barn. 10 acres crop land. 63 Acres pasture, 25 acres
woods. Good larm, e•citing location. $78,700.
#368

21tm. Spartan 81126

CHARMING AND CONVENIENT is til~ Ill story home.
3 bedroo!IIS, I II baths, dining area has brick arch and

HIINTEIS PAIIADISE - Any hl.llter or nature lover
IOIJ!Jid apprecial! fhe beauty of this property, 64 acres
with true lui cabin. ~ road frontage. Secluded.
IWdlife. Get beck lo nature with th~ one. priced in the

30'1

CAIIPIIIG SITE -

Holiday Hils.

c.nper. Cemplete. 20 It concrete pad, covered patio,
bwbeale IJl electric, water, sewer. Sel up and ready
111joy. $10,900:

fireplace. Mobile home pad rented at present time.
Nice large lawn. In walking distance of post office and
grocery, Priced at $34.000.

to

'·:

M310

.

COUiim CHARI - E"" ~gin tlleoouitrY wlile
lili1&amp; in tlis alder I\! strJy I'Gme. 3 betlltllili$, lqe ·
ioidten, nwfy dt!alrllal bmar dining room, family
nan. lice bllll l4 liCit! Chiclien OOuse and shed. .
$~]50

.

.

M337

0U1E1 FUME HOlE -l.ocal!d u~ibJia 7. IIi
strJy with kt:hen, 2 or 3 bedrooms, · room, beth,
small room in lr(l1t presentt; used lor riEr shop. .
There is rural water lllus 2 dried welts. )!so 2mobile
~ hook-ups.
#366

llblu.- ss.soo -

can' belt

..

1370

$36,000.

-

TWO, 2-BEDRI. API$. lor rent nw lldf cou,_ Adulls only, no'

'

3 BEDROOM MODERN HOI£ buiH1965. Living room
gives a rustic apperance, high beam ceilin&amp; attractive
fireplace, same type porch which ovemoks the valley.
Drilled well. County water available. $24,900.
11393

3 BEDROOM IIOOEfiN HOME - Buift·in kitchen witll

11371

SIIALL FARII- Sl Acres, 2 bed,roOillmollle ho!fll,
llrJ! bam in IIJ(Id condition. A lillie farrmn&amp; a little
ltuntin&amp; a liltfe loolilg around Free ps. Rural war.
Appna. 45 IICr8S wooded. 6 miles frllm Cheshire.
$34,900.
1391

7,936 SQ. FT. of stora111 or manUfacturing space in Galipdis, lor;'
sale or ,__ Call b I1MII1 inlo.
.

11388

PRICED F~ QuiCK SALE :_ 134 Acre farm, Stale
Route 681, Tuppers Plains. ARJ&lt;OX. 20 acrescroplan~
most an level The rest~ Wooded. Has streams on land
Gas wei( past royalties approx. $750 per year. County
water ava~abta $38,800 all yours.

11308

11390

50'•

WEEKEND RmEAT - Reetwood 2 bedroom mobile
home on a wooded lc!l llilly bldi on concrete.
Screenhouse 16 It by 20 fl. cement floor, s~
condrtion. strong driled well. County water avatlabte.

Tycoon

~ke.

$12.900.
.

11387

SOliD OLDER FRAME 2 story home will 4 bedrooms,
living room, kitdlen, lamily room, dnilg room, bath,
ceHar house, garage wittJ attached carport Could be
use:! lor businl!$$. Priced in the 30'~
M'!T7

IIMSIIIOO PROPEIIIY - 828 2nd Avenue. All il
px1 oondbln. All 3 apartments rented. Total ilcome
as ~ $475 per month. Call b appOirtment and

complefe inlormatiin.

fl3l9
170 ACRE GRAss AIID BEEF FARM - 57
Acres permanent hme and treated pesture. 60

Acres reclaimed, treated and seeded in aHalfa,
clpver, orcherd gms. Woods, tobacco base•
2200 Christmas trees 2 years old. Modern 1
room hoose, good barn. Buy while farm prices
are low.
'

••

'

- -·-· ....

Gal~pcjis.

TINDER LIVING CARE has been ~ to this 4
betlloom home. Kitchen with disposal and dohwasher,
breakfast nook, spacious living fliOm, lamly room,
formal dining, 2 baths, basement, garag~~ I\! acres.
IWiin mrJUtes of Holzer Medical Cenler. Priced illhe

~.

.

three bedroom, ~rge eatin kitchen, formal diling
room, living room, lami~ room with !replace, utility
room, large__concr!ll! patio. Aprax. 8 miles from

ELEGAIIT - Slip away to the quiirt and
~ of this luxury home surrounded by natura
Briel! chalet with 3 bedrooms, sunken IMng room,
kitchen complete, 2ful baths, 2 beaut~ul firelaces, full
basement level and 5.90 acres. CaU lor appointtnent
#376

IEIGS COUNtY - You1l be plea$ant~ suiprted '
!'hen yau 181! tl'!s 3 bedroom r111cli. Pam doors. VinyL
"!lkfil&amp; f.el• and cell• house plus 211 acres, more or
less. $21,000. Shown by appointment

-· ...-... ---··

1973 RANCH mLE HOME - Hhas rt aiL One story

refrigerator, stove. range hood, deep lreezer. Large
living room and family room with woodbumer. Drilled
well with pump. Garage and ~ outbuildings. Old
Route 35, Thurman area. $34,000.

lARGE 4BEDIOOIIIIME in ascenic settin&amp; Tobacco
baSe, barn and dher outbuildngl. Just large enough
- 20 acres, most all tillable. Present crop, a~alla and
orchard IIJISS. Harrison Twp.
.
MJS6

.,are Waadburrla-. Underpinnil&amp; JUcbes, tie down
stiaps. Apria! vau

FARM - 114 Acres. 3 bedrooms, 1\! stlily lrame
house. 2 barns. Stnoke house and other outooilding~.
Tobacco base. 92 Acres pasture and woods. 23 Acres
tillable. Mineral rights: All this and IliOn! lor $80,500.
Farm equipmefl\ ootiooal
.
I
11285

TRY OFFER - 5 rooms and bath. Modern krtl:hen. ·
Woodbumer. Electric baseboi!d heat Two mobile
home pad• Three s¢ tanks, Rura1 water. One acre
of land. I\! miles lrom Holzer Medical Center. $30,000.
#278

1367

121100. Total

1976 Cllstle

'

\

funds
28 Kind of
narralive

29 Take
unlawfull'p'
30 Narrow

opening
32 Me11.k:an

PRICE llfDUCED TO $21.000, 2 bedroom frame
home wiiJr living room, kitdlen, bath, ~lily room. Nice
size lot 'Mth chain Ink fence, septic tan~ rural water.
Located near Raa:oon Creek. F~lillg &amp;real!
11330

li341
NEW USTING - USE YOUR IIIAGINAnON auilding site. 21! acres close to Rio Granda 28&gt;&lt;48
basement shell just waiting lobe fin~hed. Call for more
deflils.
11401

24 Flier
26 Treasure or

EXCELLENT LOCAnON the city, Older 2
bedroom home, large k. chen, dining room,
living room, bath, part b semen!, front porch,
nice hardwood lloors, I eplace. Large back
yard. Nice lor retireme t couple,
11345

laborers

33
34
35
37

Tree trunk
Conducled
Exact
Author and

"''een
writer
Anita-

82 Green

garnel
84 Stage
whispers

86 Smoothed
87 Funny
picture
89 A state:

abbr.
92 Macaw
95 Vision
98 Advanlage

99 Fingerless

attendants:
abbr.

40 Female

hOrse
41 Supplicates
42 Supercilious

person .
44 Hit lightly

46LocaUon
47 Doom

101 Signify
103 Group ot
three

104 Dance step
105 Monetary
106 Symbol lor
niton ·
107 Part.of
"to be"

108 Withered
110 Theater
sign: abbr. _
111 Printer 's
measure
112 Chinese

dynasty
(1368-164&lt;1

50 Abandoned
52 Planet

53 Above
55 SluggiSh
57 Pronoun

113 Solar disk
115 Negative
prefix
111 District In

Germany

58 Time long
since past

1 19 Saint: abbr.
120 Reject

59 Tear

60 Symbol for

121 Gave
124 Heavenly

tAntalum

body

62 Algonquian
lndlan

64Jog
6~ A continent:
abbr.
68 Note of

135 Bri&amp;tle
137 Potato:
slang
139 Fruit seed
140 Foreman
141 Project ion

143 Parent:
colloq.
l45 Israel : abbr.
146 Fatty
148 Let go

126
127
128
130
132

Army meal
Shower
Hurls
Stalk

Band worn

around ·

23 Masculine
25 Underground part
of plant

27 Aftectlonately
28 Opening In
skin
31 Frog

· DOWN

43 Nut's comword

46 Typed
dialogue

47 Cooling
del/Ices '
49 Classify
51 Small
amounts
52 Interfere

sa Employed
54 Sanskrit

dialect
56 Becoming
less good

1 Separate
2 Dei lghls in
3 Defender of
the people
4 Greek letter
5 Soaks

6 Symbol for
sliver

7 100,000
rupees
B Above and

touching
9 Arbiter
10 Holds on

59 Renews
lake
61 Pari of

church
63 Absurd ·

time

105 Suits
109 Dines
112 Intertwine
113Dry
1141rrltate
116 Smaller
number
118 Rodents
120 Remains
121 Shallow
vessels
122 Kind of

candy: pl.
123 Profound
125 Complains
126 Unmarried

136 Armadillo
138 Frock
140 Adventure-

some

pla~er

14 1 Strip of

leather

homes

76 Parent;

COlloq.
77 Apparent
79 Spanish lor
"river"
. 83 A state:

abbr.
85 Kind or
mask

1"

...£:
.,...-·
..-..

.~ .

-,

--...
"

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

· ~

.,...
...

•

---

Pierce

scale
70 Los Angeles
loolball

Zeus

-

;,.:-

Flower

134 Male
elephants

god
13 Conjunction

.......

woman
127
129
131
132

67 Snake
69 Nole ot

reports

74 Maiden
loved b~

slabs

!ellurtum
102 Periods of

66 Makes lace

gresses
12 Underworld

17 Assert
18 Mualeat
ln!llruments
20 Plaything

97 Debatable
100 Symbol lor

Body organ
Masts
133 Sit for
portrait

72 Birds'

15 Man's name
16 Marble

stakes

60 Mountain

property
11 Trans-

14 Painful

91 Poker
92 Girl's name

panion

160 Crates

88 Man's name
89 Near
90 Pertaining
to lent

93 Forg ives
94 Article
96 Ventilates

45 Magician's

158 Obtains
159 Petitioned

87 Contend
with

mammals
36 vast ages
38 Jetlorth
40 Small
amounl
41 Poet

152 Feast
153 Gangster's
girl friend
154 Ed ible
rootstock
156 Revolutio naries
157 Mortimer

86 God of love

33 f lying

150 Poise eYenly

penal!~

48 Man 's name

ships

thermal unit:
abbr.

glove

39. Hospital
·

"f&amp;lst
133 Body of
water
134 British

·:
.....

142

Brother of

Jacob
144 Fish sauce
147 Equallly
148 Fish eggs
149 Before
151 Arabian

garme nt
153 Milligram:

abbr.
155 Hypothetical
force

.,

•

..
...
.
•
,

'

•
••

•

•

•

.,'
'

•••

�·-••

..'
~

-

·r--Local Briefs:-____,

Carr pleads innocent
WINFlELD, W.Va. (AP) -Dr.
DavldCarr,PolntPieasantosteope·
thlc doctor, has pleaded InnOcent tc

•

.. Tavern found in violation
;.
•

•
•

c~ ·or~

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio . Liquor Commission has found a
Kmlauga tavern ln violation of liquor control .department
c
regulations.
•
. 11le finding was made against Charles Edward Davis, doing
business as CJ's, 519 Pike St. The commission alleges Davis
advertised ln a manner vtsibJe · from outside the tavern a price
advantage for an alcoholic beverage on or before last Feb. 17.
11le tavern, which holds a D-5 permit , received no penalty.

'

'

assanlltQg

a

woman and robbing her and her
husband of $.'11, a court olflctal said
Friday.
.
Dr. Carrenteredtnnocentpieasto
four charies. In Putnam County
Circuit Coort, then pll'lled a $50,!XXI
bond~ was released, accordlngto
a dEputy court clerk.
·
The
involv~ a. break-In

I'

"·

Residential water off Monday

..

July 31' 1983

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

.=:Pnae D 8 The Sundoy Times-Sentinel

JaP. 8 at the home ol a Fraziers
Botla1l oouple, accordlna to the
lndlcbt*"L Carr aJJegedly robbed

tlteWWIIAIIaf$1,berhusbandofSii
and tileD raped tbewoolall, theclel1t
said. Their names were not
released.

Putnam County Clrcult Court
JudlleJ-HollldaysetanAua.u
111w1ng date for motions flied I:!Y
Carr's lawyer, Jlliln G. Ander8on of
Wlnlleld, tosetaaldethebidlcbnatt.

MIDDLEPORT - Weather pennitting, water will be off in
Middleport Ln all area5 north of Mill Street from 10:30 p :m. Monday
to 12: 30 a .m . Tuesday.
The interruption is to allow employees to make necessary repairs .
to a valve in the area .

Chamber to meet
POMEROY- Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce will meet at noon
Tuesday ln the Meigs Inn. All members are urged to attend.

, · ·Extend museum hours
POMEROY - Hours have been extended a t the Meigs County
Museum, officials said.
~- .
The museum is now open from 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday, Friday,
'"' Saturday a11d Sunday.
•·

-•-••

-•.

•

•

.•

nu-n.

Grant promissory judgment
POMEROY - A judgment ln the amount of $478,698.43 against
Robert C. Mattox, et. a!., has been granied to Jackson Production
Credit Association on promissory notes, according to an &lt;;ntry flied in
the Meigs County Corrunon Pleas Court Friday.
The entry specifies that the amount represents the prjncipal plus
accrued' interest through July 26, 1983, and fs to include interest at the
rate of $192.23 per day untO the amount is paid ln full.
It was further noted that Jackson Production Credit Association
has agreed to stay execution untO ~t. 10.

Patrol probes 3 accidents
~

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported three accidents occurred Friday.
A tw&lt;&gt;ear accident involving vehicles driven by Larry E. Grueser,
42, Racine, and Helen G. Jeffers, 59, Syracuse, occurred at 4 p.m. In
Sutton Township on Ohio 124.
Both vehicles were traveling eastbound when Grueser's vehicle
stopped to turn left and Jeffers' vehicle - unable to stop - struck
Grueser's car ln the rear.
Both cars had moderate damage and Jeffers was cited for assured
clear distance. The patrol reported Jeffers was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy by the Meigs County EMS.
A tw&lt;&gt;ear accident involving vehicles driven by Debra K. Scott, 21,
Cheshire, and Rodoey L. Wedlake, 23, Wintersville, occurred at 4:05
p.m. Friday in Addison Township on Ohio 7.
Both vehicles were traveling northbound and Wedlake's car struck
the rear of Scott's car when Scott's vehicle came to a halt in traffic.
Scott's car had moderate damage and Wedlake's vehicle had light
damage. Wedlake was cited for assured clear distance.
Curtis A. Brock, 30, Charleston, W.Va., was involved in a
one-vehicle motorcycle accident Friday at 5: 43 p.m. in Green
Township on Ohio 588.
Brock's vehicle was traveling westbound when the driver lost
control on a curve, went off the left side of the roadway and
overturned. The motorcycle had light damage.

I

I

I
f
;

SCHOIAIISIUP PRESENTATION - A scholanhlp for $250 w
pre!IEI'Ited by Wayne Robinson, center, owner of Gallipolis Eleetrtc Co.,
to Richard Payne, rf&amp;hl, a student at Wo Grande College and
Communlly College, lD memory of Jbn Bill Robinson. founder of the
company, on the finn's 50dt anniversary. AI left is Robert Price, a
Southwestern Wgh School tll'aduate who will attend RGC-CC lhls fall.
Price also reoolved a S250 scholanhlp from GalllpoUs Electrlc In
memoryofEddleJ.
a26-yearemployee. P~waschosenfor
the scholarship by Mount Cannel Baptl.!Jt Church in BidweD and Price
by Centerpoint FreewlD Baptist Church.

•

Fair parade Saturday
POINT PLEASANT-'- The 1983 Mason County Fair will be ldcked
off with the anoual fair parade at 2 p.m. Saturday, according to
Charlie Wood, chairman.
·
Wood said Shrine metorcycles from Charleston, W.Va., and .
Gallipolis wtll participate in the parade, along with area bands and
fair queen contestants.
Lineup, slated for 1 p.m., will begin at Second and Main streets in
Point Pleasant.

I

City police fuvestigate
3 accidents Friday
GALLIPQLlS Clty pollee
Sycamore Street Clinic, according
reported three accidents occurred to reports.
on Friday.
Pollee made the following
An accident Involving vehicles
arrests:
Chuck E . Roberts, 23, Rt. 1,
driven by L1j.!'ry R. Mace, 46. New
Marshlleld, and Charles L. NeutNorthup, sbopllfting; David S.
zllng, 43, Rt.1, Langsville, ~rred
Glover, 41. 35MadisonAve., misuse
at10:28 a.m. on Upper River Road.
of dealer tags; Kelth A. Dye. 27,1624
Both vehicles were traveling
Chatham Ave., no eye protection;
Dennis L. Martyn, 23,40 MUJ Creek
southbouod when Neutzllng's car
Road, 23, speeding.
stopped ln traffic and Mace's car
struck Neutzllng's vehicle In the
Patrick Taylor, 22,Eureka Star
rear.
• Route, speeding; David/';. CarpenMace's vehicle had moderate
ter,l8, Rodney, speeding; Mary E.
damage and Neutzllng' s car had
GObert, 19, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, speedlight damage. Mace was cited for
ing; andFrederickL.Barker,21,197
assured clear distance.
Kelton Rd., drunken driving.
The Gallla County Sheriff's DePollee reported a vehicle driven
by Everett C. Delaney, 74,24 Crilzl:,t
partment reported that Sherry
St .. struck a parked vehicle owned
Steinbeck, Eureka Star RoUte, said
by Patricia L .. Davis, 1132
several items were stolen from a
greenhouse in Kerr.
Ave., at 12:22 p.m.
Takenwereashovel,ahammer,a
Delaney's car pulled out from a
driveway to go southbound and
rake, a hoe, a water hose and
struck Davis' vehlcle, whlch was
misceUaneous tools.

v.

.'

-'

.. ..
'

.1•. .)"·

. ().&amp;r

basic ., e1tern cut

jea111. Made to take it
doy in and day out
100% COt100 14'4 oz.
Wrangler "NO-FAULT'fll
broken twill indigo
denim that won't shrink,
wrinkle or ~· Prewashod denim. Sizes 27-42.

A guide to local
Television programming
July 31 _thru August 6

ComploreS.lectionof

Includes complete

Sizs in both Straight
log and Boot'Flare
Scyles.

second

listings

----------:----,..1..------------------"""'-""•

parkedinfronto!Davls'bouse.Both
cars had light damage.
''
A car driven by Pauline M.
Wayoe, 68, Point Pleasant, hit a
parked motorcycle owned by John
F. Null, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Wayoe backed in tO the fifth
parking space south of State S~t
on Sec9nd Avenue and struck Null's
bike.
Pollee reported someone broke
into a car owned by Steven Miller
and stole his wife's purse. The car
was parked ln the Ohio Valley Bank
parking lot.
Someone threw a brick and broke
a window at Holzer Clinic Ltd.'s

Filmeter
Page 5
"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

Close Out On All '83 Models

Station listings
WSAZ
HBO

I

I•

I·

..

'

MEN'S

SUMMER SUITS

S-PARK AVENUE SEDANS
5-LeSABRE SEDANS
I-LeSABRE STA. WGN.
_2-CENTURY SEDANS ·
I-REGAL COUPE
2-REGAL SEDANS •
I-SKYHAWK
,

MEN'S SUMMER

SPORT COATS

1/3

Reg. 190 NOW $6()
Reg. 1100 NOW

'67

OFF

SHORTS

SWIMWEAR

GROUP OF MEN'S

JEANS
FAMOUS NAME
'

Rea. '26.50

$}4 99
I

PONTIACS

CBN
ESPN

3-6000 SEDANS
.1-BONNEYIUE SEDAN
I-BONNEVIUE STA. WGN.
I-TRANS AM
I-PARISENNE SEDAN
2-GRAND PRIX
I-PHOENIX SEDAN
1-TlOOO SEDAN

WTBS
WTVN
WTAP
WCHB
WPBY
WBNS
WOUB
WOWK

WVAH

•
FROLIC IN THE RAY -Caatmembenoltbe a)'lllllcaled television ohow "Hew Haw" enjoy
1411118 OOIIIiry JJ111111c durlli&amp; &amp;.fine fll lbe Jll'llptiiii'B JMh 'Ole JII'OIIl'llltl ......WD 011 217

....... retiChiDI n

m=

H

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Columbu•. OH

Parkersburg, WV
Cherie•-· WV
Huntington, WV

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8 MORE COMING

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Reg. '14.00
NOW $970
Rea. 117.00

11.5% A.P.R.

' NOWSU 40

Financing _

SHOES

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Reg. '75 NOW $5()00

Sunday Shoppers
Welcome

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OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

·
SATURDAY, AUGUST I
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. SEE WHO SINKS A HOLE IN ONE ON M1 TO WIN
THE 1983 PONTIAC DONATED BY Us.

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Alheno, OH
H\lfltington, WV
Hurricane. WV

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Hollywood
Pages 7, 8

Serving Gallia, Meigs .and Mason Counties
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COME IN AND BROWSE
UP TO 48 MONTHS
AROUND
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••••
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SEE YOU AT THE JAYCEE CHARITY GOLF CLASSIC
:•

GROUP MEN'S

Reg.

7 MORE COMING

&lt;D
Gill

Coiumbuo, OH

MEN'S ·

COMPLETE STOCK

Reg. 115 NOW f}
Reg. 118 NOW S1

BUICKS

MAX

8(1)

HuntingtOn. WV
Home Box Oftice
Clnemex
Chriotlen Netwrk
SportaNetwork

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