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Ohio rail lines being .. eliminated
.400 miles of track scheduled
for ~h.utdo1Dn
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WASHINGTON (AP) - If no
prospective supporters can be
found by March, Conrail will be
free to proceed with plans to abandon nearly 400 m1les of Ullprpfltable
rail freight lines In Ohio.
·
seven lines In Ohio tl!at Conrail
proposed In October to ·d!'OI&gt; have
. been spared, but four others coverIng 71.4· miles have been added to
the list of services planned for
abandonment.
The 400 miles that Conrail told
the Interstate Commerce Commission It wants to drop represent 13.8
percent of the 2,900 miles the
government-subsidized railroad
no~ serves In Ohio.
Some of the routes still could survive If Conrail retelves offers from
people Interested In buying or subsidizing them. A public relations
employee said Conrail has ~lved
a number of lnqulrtes since the first ·

moved from the list published· In
October: - Jefferson Jndustrlal
Track, six miles, Jefferson Junction to Jefferson In Ashtabula
County.
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-Centrat·Flats Runnlng'Track,
,4 mile, from . the · Qlark ·Street
Bndge·to the end of thetrack In the
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Cleveland Flats District.
-Galena Yam Track, one mile,
-Olive to Toledo (G!llena)' In Lucas
County.

- Carrothers Branch, 4.3 miles,
from Alexis to Toledo (Galena)~
-Manufacturers. Industrial
Track, 1 mile, Toiedo (Galena) to
Toledo,
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'· -Delaware Industrial Track, 5.2
miles, Delaware to Scioto, DeJa- .
ware County.
-Ma5on Secondary Track, 5.1
miles, Hageman to eastern Run
Road, warren Co!lnty.
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Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant·

35 Cents

If no buyers are found within l20
days. Conrail can begin dismantling the lines. The spokesman said
all the routes are "chronic moneylosers ~l!_d In need o( substantial upgrading work."
Additions to the Ohio list Include
a 49.S.mtle section of Carlisle Seeondary Track ruMirig between
Meekers and Carlisle Junction,
through parts ot Darke, Preble,
Montgomery and Warren counties.
Also an 11.1-mile section of Ash·
land - Secondary · Track from Rlt·
tman to Buroank In Wayne and
Medina counties; a seven-mile section Identified as "Broken Aro Mine .
Track" from Trln)Vay to Peabody
Coal in Coshocton and Muskitlglml
counties, and a 3.5-mlle segment of
Harrod Secondary Track from
Alger to Harrod In Allen and Hardin counties.
The following llnes were . re-

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unba
Vol. IS No. 47

announcement In October of the
planned cutbackS.
The spokesman, who asked his
name not be used, said Conrail .
would not Identify-tilt routes· In·
volved In negotiations. He would·
not say whether offers had been
made for the seven Ohio routes cut
from the first list. · ""' ·
Under new rules adopted by Congress to speed elimination of unprofitable routes, Conrail will be
allowed to dispose of the lines unless Interested parties come forward within 90 days with offers of
subsidies.
•
Conrail started filing applications last fall to meet a De&lt;!. 1, 1981,
deadline set by Congress under the
new procedure, so the 90-day periods for · al) routes will expire by
Marcil. After that, Conrail will put
the lines up for sale at 75 percent of
their llquldatlon value.

12 Se,tons, 82 Pages 35 Cents ..
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Sunday, Jan ; 3, 1982

Successor named

Today's-Supt. Gleaso·n resigns Meigs post
T-S

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By BOB HOEFLICH
nmes-Sentloe1staff
POMEROY - The Meigs Local
School District Board of Education
unanimously accepted " the
resignation of David L. Gl~ason as
district supe'rintendent and at the
..same special meeting gave Gleason
an approximate $24,000, six-mol)th
contract as a "non-appearing" consultant to thecdistrict.
Details of the arrangement had
apparently beeri worked out e11riier
since the action at Thursday's
special meeting went ·without a hit·
ch, The board had met in speci11_!
ses,'lion last Monday and was In ..
ex;ecutive session for two hours.
F.ollowing that session, it was announced 'tJlit no action had been
taken by the·board.
· At Thursday's meeting, the board
met in executive session for 30
minutes. Supt. Gleason read his
resignation to the board. It was
unanimously accepted by bQard
members present who included
Larry Powell, Robert Snowden, who

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NFL play-offs,
page C-1

made the motion; Robert Barton
who .provided the second for the
motion, and Richard Vaughan. .
The board then unanimously.gratl.
ted Gleason a six-month contract to
serve as a consultant for the district.
Under the agreement he does not
have ·to again appear within the
district, his consulting services to be
given through telephone con_sultation with theacting superintendent or h.io; designee or by written
response. The· contract specifically
notes that the consultation services
are limited to the two means named
in the contract.
The new contract-with Gleason is
effective Jan. 4, 19112 and ruJ)S
through July 31, 1982. The final date
coincides with the en~ of his \hree
year contract. The board several
weeks ago had voted not to renew his '
contract as superintendent· when it
expired on July 31,1982.
As a consultant to the district,
Gleason will receive pay totaling
$24,553.75 to lltl given to him on or
before Jan. 4, 1982 and his frlnee

benefits will be continued through
July 31, 19{12. This includes various
insurance benefits.
According to the contract approved by the board; -the purpose of
{Continued on A-7 )

David L . .Gleason

Morris to head Meigs Local
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J&gt;9MEROY - Dan E. r.,:orris,
Pomer-Oy, was named superin·
tenl!ent of the Meigs Local 'School
Di~trict when the Meigs Local Boara
of Education met in a second
. executive session Thursday af·
ternoon.
Morris had been a strong contender for the post two and one-half
years ago when the Meigs Board
with a split vote named David L.
'Gleason ·as superintendent of the
district. Since then, there has been
· strong public'support for Morris who
had been serving as direetor of
curriculum in the district. More
recently he was serving as assi~tant

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page B~1

Gleason who resigned Thursday effective January 4. He was given an
additional on~ year contract which
will expire July 31, 1983.
In other action, the board named
James C11rpenter to fill the post of
Morris as assistant superintendent.
Carpenter has been teachin~ in the
Meigs Local Junior High School for
the past.two years. Carpenter's contract is until July 31, 1983.
Morris will receivf the . same
salary as_paid Gleason, $39,900 an:
nually. Gleason has been named a
consultant in the district for the
remainder of his contract which expires July 31, 1982. He is not
required, however, to come into the
district to serve in the consultant's
post.

superint~ndent.

Dan

E~

Morris will begin his duties
January 5 and was named to flfl the
remainder of the term of office ol

Morris

Big Brother-Sister program
prepares to serve are~ yoQth
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By KEVIN KELLY
11me8-sentlnel Staff

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CMSlS,

D-1 Area deaths ......... A-8
BusiDess •••••••••••• C-7

Clauifleds • • • • • • .. D-4-7
Editorial .......... A-2-3
Farm ·••............ C-8
Lifestyle .... . ..... B-1-8
Loeal •••••••• A-7-8-D-3-8
State-Natloaal ••..• D-1-2
· ~ •••• ·••••.•.. C.l..

Tlke-Oae. • •••• ·••. llllert

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GALLIPOLIS · A local chapter of
the Big Brother-Big Sister program
Is beginning to find Its way to serve
the needs of children In Gallla,
Meigs and Jackson .couijties.
The program, which matches
adult men and women with child·
ren In need of adult friends during
the growing years of 6 through 16,
may be re11dy to start making ref·
errals by this fall, according to Dr.
James· E. Levemler, local chapter
president.
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Levemler said the program Is
all-volunteer, privately funded and
not affiliated with any government
or service-related agen&lt;:l(.
"We collected some data on
single-parent famllles and firsttime juvenile offenders, and saw a
large number of children ate In
need of some kind of guldarice," he
said.
·
The. program got Its start last
April when a board of d1recto ,
consisting. prlmarfiy of peciple In·
volved In service work, wu
formed. EVell then, 11M: board had
been created out of several monthS
of developmental work by Inter·.
ested citizens, Levernler noted.

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Utility files for rate increase
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. has
filed a rate increase request of approximately .. $100 million with the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
The Increase would become effective .In the fall of 1982, and the
request seeks an increase of under 20 percent, according to the utility . .
The firm said the typical C&amp;SOE customer without electric heat
uses an average .of 550 kilowatt· hours per month. Bills for . those
customers would increase by $11 per month. Customers with electric
heat use an average .of 1600 kilowatts per month, Monthly bills for
those customers would increase by $24.

Handwriting samples sought
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the program."
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The board Is moving In a "cautious, determined" way to achievIng Its goals, he added. "We don't
want to be an organization that
starts off with a bang and then dies
out, as we've seen with other agencies In the past," Levemler said.
child~
The chapter, once staf1£d, will
The local chapter Is affUtated
with the National Big Brother-Big screen prospective big brothers.
and sisters with children accepted
Sister Assoca:tlon, which provides
·
Information and advice on adminis- . Into the program.
tration and quality control.
· "We can't make lnatchups until
Levemler said the local chapter
we have supervision, becapse In
' will require another several
such relationships there Is potential
months of work t:Jefore referrals
for 'problems," Levemler said.
and matchups of adUlts and child·
In addition to Levemler, the
· ren can be made. They are presboard Is comprlled of Paul Bar·
ently Involved In fund-raising for
nett, Linda Krasner, John Wl$nlskl,
the organization, althouih no defiLynn Boster, Mary Skinner, Jim
nite plans have been formed.
However,' when funding Is ob- Blevins, Jim Rogers, Dick Laird,
Jgan Schmidt, Julia Roderua, Dr.
tained, the chapter hopes to hire an
executive d~tor 10 matchupscan Wilma Manafleld, Cynthia M·Uls,
Mark Klesllng, Ron H111, Marilyn
be made as early as Octobel'.
"We've been at It for a few ye- Anderlon, Saudy Brown and Helen
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ars," commented Levemler, a pe- VIckers.
Levernler said Dave ~of Ra·
dlatticlan with Holzer Clinic Ud.ln
cine,
nationally-known college
Galllpolls and Jaclclon: "Ouroplana
sportlcuter
for the ABC television
are belni modified u we 10 aJona,
network,
wu
named ftrat presideilt
and I'm hoping we'll be able to ckill
We don't want to ao U.S unW It the lloaoraey boaJ'd In recoenJ·
we're close to w11erf we cu bewtth tlon ~ hiiiUpport for the PI'OfP'IIm.
Many of the children Involved In
the pi-ogram, he continued, are
from single-parent homes, and the
volunteer big . brother or sister
spetds some time each week with
his llttle brother or sister In some
kind of activity which benefits the

HOME FOR TilE WINTER - A tugboat remalm frozen fur the wloter In the Lake Michigan harllor at Kewaunee, Wis. (AP Laserphotu).

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Jan. 14 hearing has been set on a rl&gt;quest for
handwriting samples of two acquaintances of former state treasurer's
ca.shier Elizabeth Boerger in the probe of $1.3 million In missing state
funds.
Attorneys for the Robert Yeazel! and Rose Ann Basso say they have
the samples but will not turn them over'without a court order.

State employee nailed .
' NASHVILLE, Tenn. - The head of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation says a dietitian c;harged with stealing about $400 worth of
food apparently was taking it home for her three children.
. Carolyn Sue Van 'Dyke, 44, the he.lld dietitian at the Tcnne!lllee Law
Enforcement Academy; was booked Thursday on grand larceny
charges and relel!sed on $3,500 bond, officers said.
James Keesling, head of the TBI, said Mrs. Van Dyke .had food In
possession when
arrested her after
her car.

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Stetteftery Oulvded

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WEATIIER FORECAST- Raln1s forte!ast by The National Weather
Servtee for lluDday on 0101t of the E;a1t c011t and parts of the PacUic Northwett how I• ellpected In the Northwest and over the Great Lakes. 1AP
r •erpllotll).
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Commentary and perspective
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Page-A-2
• Jan. 3, 19.82

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WASHINGTON - On Dec. 23, vote in botb House and Senate, majority' would be required In each case law and constitutional history.
Judge Marion J . Callister, chief Congress e&gt;&lt;tended tlie period for house that was required for the He concluded that 'the ldabo
legislators were properly before the
original resolution in 1972,
judge of the U.S. District 'Court of ratification until June 30,1982.
court.
Judge Callister held for the plainIdaho, deliveted an opinion that
Four members of the Idaho
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
825Thlrd Ave ., GalllpoUs, Ohio
At no point In his opinion did J)ldge
probably puts ari end to the P.ndlng legislature brought suit. The state tiffs on every point.
(6U) .446-2342
i6Ui992-Zi56
"The court's opinion begins with a Callister have a word to say. about
Equal Rights Amendment to the had ratified the ERA in March 1972,
·Constitution. Qls reasoning · is so but had rescind~ In February 1977. prolonged analysis 1 of certain the merits of the ERA as sucb. The
ROBERT L. WINGETI
cogent, and his scholarship so illl· The plaintiffs co.ntended (I ) that threshold questions: Dill the · four opinion is . directed entirely to
Publisher
pressive, that It Is hard to imagine Idaho's subsequent rescission ef- Idaho legislators haVe standing to quesliOfl!l of constitutional law. It
that appellate courts will reverse his fectively nullified Ill!! earlier ap- sue? Was the issue ripe !.or decision? would be use(ul' to have his conHOBART W111&gt;0N JR.
PAT WHITEHEAD
decision.
proval, ( 2) that once the -original Were the questions essentially clusions appealed and affirmed by
Assistant.Publisher-Controller
.. E~ecu.tive Editor
I have read the whole of his seven-year period ran out, all "political,"or were they fairly sub- the Supreme Court Itself, for the
Q
questions $urely will arise again.
·
opinion, which is more than can be proceedings were concluded, and (3) ject to judicial review?
In disposing of these 'objections, But barring reversal, they will not
· said for the militant feininists who that if Congress had any power to exA MEMBER 1tfTik Ali~Sutlult:tl Pkllll, lnhmd Dully Pr~1111 Anoch1iiun tnMI UM: Am~rk llll
popped off with predictable denun- tend the perl.od, the same tw()-thlrda . Judge Callister relied upon both rise any time soon for the ERA .
· NnU pilpt'f Publillhen AJ¥od wtlurt•
ciations at the announcement of
L~TrERS OF OPINION arr: . welt-nmed . Tht!)' 11iM~t~ld bto lt&gt;tn• lha• 300 ~~ttJnb lung. All
Judge Callister's order In the case.
lt'llf'f'l are toubjt!tl kl flliUng 11nd mulll ,be s igned wll.h IUime, uddr~• 111ld teleph.une
number. Nuuulgned) rtkl'll will be publbs_!lt:d. Letten , huuld be In Rood t. ~te. llddfet~li lng
Several leading spokeswomen for
illt'IH!tl, nut penUINIIitieJ.
·the ERA charged that the judge had
acted as he did because of his
religion. The judge Is a Mormon.
Such charges are contemptible, but .
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considering the source, the charges
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are fully In character.
By Lowell Wingett
By way of background: On March
On the Thursday evening before Christmas I joined the other millions of 22, 1972, congress proposed a conAmericans waiting to hear President Reagan's TV address to the nation on stitutional amendment that would
the crisis in Poland. I was expecting to finally hear him turn all the oratortal becon1e·valid when ratified by three·big guns towafll Russia and the Communtsl leaders of dtslressed Poland. In- fourths of the states "within seven
:stead he fired a cap plstoU
.
.
years from the date of Its submission
: . The pres! dent mad~ his speech II days after m~rttall~w ~as declaredm....,by 'the c;:ongress." The amendment
:Poland. Durmg that tlille he had repeated meeltngs wtth hts closest ad- would provide that equality of rights
-visers, hls cabinet and apparenlly his publicity men. In the end, he chose to under tlH. Jaw could not be denied or
'speak not in the best Interests of the Polish people but the best Interests of abridged by the United States or by
the administration. He proposed nothing lru!t had not been proposed before any state on account of sex.
:bul managed to make it look like a ~erotc prestdent arrayed agamst the forThe legislatures of 35 states sub-ces Of communism. It was such a speech such as he useddurmg the prestd~n- seguently- ratified the. amendment
:tiat campaign, full of generalities and bombast but lackmg m substance and blli the seven-year period original!; .
:specifics.
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f~d by Congress expired before the
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At least twtce before his speech, I beard him pubhcly accustng Russ1a of ~ulslte three-fourths could be ob\
:bllcklng the communistic Polish government in their 'slljlpression of Pohsh tamed. Meanwhile Idaho and four
citizens. Yet In~ address he was careful not to order ~eprlsals against other states ( Nebr~ska, Tennessee,
·Ruaaia. Instead ~ orders were agamst the Ja;uzelskt government m Kentucky and South Dakota) rescinPoland and, in reahty, amounted to no more than a tmy slap on the wrtst.
ded their resolutions of ratification
For.llllita"ce, he ordered all economic credits stopped to Poland, The in- In. October of 1978 by a majorlt;
~matlonal bankers had done that three days before. He ordered all ship'
·
rnents of food to Polarid stopped. The Iong!lborernen had done that two days
beforeily refusing ~0 handle Polish cargo. He ordered all fishing in .
American water. halted. The fishinJl season was over and-the Polish fishing·
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' fieet were alr,eady on their way home. He ordered ·American airports closed
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to Polish planes. 1 imagine few Poles would be traveling to America when
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they couldn't travel to a neighboring town. He might have made another order or two which have..,lipped my mind but no doubt they were as redundant
J~~:2~:;:~~=================;;;;;========
as thOllf above.
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· · I don't think there Is any doubt in anyone's mind that the Polish people
WASHINGTON _ The huddled level. In 1960, John F. Kennedy, the unquestioned party fealty of the rainbow, offering opportunllles tbey
are lacing dangerous times and deserves the. help and sympathy of all the nuisses who were washed upon our grandson of Boston political boss old days.
could never find In the grinding
free worl~. There is no doubt either than Gen. Wojclech Jaruzelski is a shores in the wake of Europe's in- John F. "Honey F:112" Fitzgerald,
Like .'earlier ·ethnic immigrants, poverty and&lt; repreSsion of . their
dedicated communiill and Is carrylng .out the orders of the Kr~mlln In en- dustrlal revolution eventually achieved the pinnacle of .political the Hispanics find themselves at the native countries. They don't think
'U .ving hla own countrymen with their own troops. Or thatthe Russian anny forged tightly knit poll tical
power. Though polished by a Har- bottom of the economic ladder, our streets are paved with gold, but
llrill mov~ agal1131 goHdarity If Jatuzelski faits. What I do do)lbt is the 1nachlnes organized along ethnic vard education, Jack Kennedy still resented by those who-.have clawed they believe that hard work will still .
llrilllngness of the United States or other European allies to come to the 'aid of_ lines. They succeeded In wrestjng showed ·the tough ethnic heritage of their way up a few rungs. The dlf- pay off here - even If the-only jQbs '
the Polish people before It Is too late.
.
political control of big cities and oc- his Irish roots; his kid brother Ted ference Is that ther.e Is no longer an are W!r meanest and dirtiest ones. ;
Pres,ldent Reagan has stated. that one would be naive not to believe casional states from the hold-line still commands the fierce, un- open frontier or expanding industry · J'hey"an still live better than they
RUS8ia is behind the present trouble in Poland and "We ,a re not naive." But Yankees.
wavering devotion of most Irish- to welcome these latest Immigrants. did back home - and afford to send. !
we are•naive to believe that the 'Russians or .the Polish communists are
By their cohesiveness, the Irish,
Americans,
.
Ha,·lng not~ this, it is still clear money to tbose who stayed behl'nd. :
frightened by words or token actions . ~lnce World War II we have carried on Italians, Poles and Jews made their
In coll{ltract, the Hispanics have that the Hispanic population has It's this that keeps the flood of illegal .
an adversary relationship with the communist countries, We have been poweF felt In the nation. They were
yet tO transform their Impressive created many of its own problems. immigrants pouring in.
sucked Into a cold war with Russia which neither nation can afford. It is time followed by the blacks who straggled
nwnbers into actual political power. The term Itself is misleading :' There
Another problem Is that Hispanics :
that someone called the Kremlin's bluff! •·
into the big cities from SQuthern .. But the first ripples of their is no homogene.ous Hlspanlc'&gt; com- have not yet learned the connedlon ·
Presldent Jimmy Carter ordered an embargo on grain , phosphate and tenant farms and began electing
developing muscle are perceptible murilty .
Hisp~nlcs
are between . political influence and ·
technology ~ter the Russians invaded Afghanistan. He was ;;avaged by aldermen, mayors and other public
in a few cities where they have geographically and culturally diver- economic betterment. They haven't
agricultural ,lnterests, In the press, on TV and by members of Congress. officials,
congregated, My reporter Rafael se - and remain as separate in this grasped · the central fact of .
Ronald Reagan played the good guy and ended the embargo soon after he
But potentially the most powerful
Poveda has spent the last two rnon- coun(ry as they were before the American politics: In union there is '
took office. Con~idering Carter'~ susequent fate at the polls last fall , it is palitical bloc of them all mould be'\. tbs examining the Hispanic com- !migrated.
strength~.. .
doubtful if President Reagan will have the guts to take similar action, no the Hispanic Americans who by the munlty and a;;.sessing their political
Essentially, ihe fragmented
This 'failure ·is reflected in the '
matter what the provocatloo. ·
turn of the century will constitute potential.
Hispanic population is divided Into Hispanics' voting record : In the la&gt;'l
The prinCiple argwnent against the gralri embargo was lhe availability the largest minority in the nation.
AI the outset, it's Important to note four main groups : Cubans, presidential election, only ~bout 48
of grain elsew~ere. That Is true but for awhile our nation~! cons~ience was They already nwnber 20 million, In- that the United States is a far dlf· Mexicans, Puerto Ricans and " none P,ercent of the eligible Hispanic
free of supporting .aggresslon. But, where money and trade are concerned, eluding about five million ille~al ferent place from ·the !arid of of th e above ." Even th e · population voted, well below the 59 :
our national conscience has become a frail thing indeed. Another argwnenl ·aliens, or aiiDut 9 percent of the u.s.
limitless opportunity that greet"') categorization Is a bit facile: Im· percent national average.
the immigrants of a century ago. migrants from Central and South
against a strong stand against aggression is that we do not have the support populatiOn,
If lhe ~ country's burg~oning
of our allies In Europe. Poppycock! When did we ever have the support of
The Irish have shown the most The old political machines, which America do not all share the salfle Hispanic population is to gain its
our NATO allies except'when they wanted protection or something else from sawy In coping with the rough-and- protected the newcomers·and helped backgrounds and the same socially rightful share of what the Unltod '
w;? The recent mass demonstrations all over Europe should be proof to us twnble American political system,
them find jobs In return for their useful skills.
States has to offer, it must first of all .
'that our help is no longer appreciated and that our proposed Intermediate James Michael Curley and Richard votes, have disappeared. Politics is
What virtually all Hispanic im- submerge its cultural and historic
range missiles are not wanted on European soil.
·
Daley e~tended. the Irish-American now a more middle-class. loosely migrants do share, though, Is a view &lt;Lfferences, and unite under a single '
Since'World War II we have spent billioll!l of dolla_rs maintaining troops in Influence to the state and national organized game, opetatlng without of the United States as the end of the political banner.
Europe countries. This year we will spend at least $8 billion there while our
children, our aged and destitute are ignored at home. Troops in Europe sere
ve no ·purpose in these days of nuclear weaponry except to continue the
delusion that a conventional war Is still possible. president Reagan has bin,
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~ed at "limited" nuclear warfare ; Secretary Haig has talked of a "demon.
stratlve" nuclear explosion , Which all -proves that both men in their hearts .
Once again 1981 was a year during the House."
We afrnost forgot the agricultural President, •'If we sign a defense pact
know that the days of a conventional war Is pas(.
. which many people said things they
Let's not forget the poor chap who, expert who told Governor Jerry with Israel, Begin can't do anything
If President Reagan wishes to do down in history as the leader who wish they hadn't.
•
told Senator John Warner, " Your Brown, " ! c11n get you a good buy on without first consulting us."
For example, htiw would you like wife called, and she has something sterile Mediterranean fruit flies ,"
saved the world from nuclear destruction, he will ·s top baiting the Russian
Or the chairman of the Mobil Oil . bear and ~ut off ALL the resources we have so obligingly prov[ded In the
Company
who call~ up the chair- •
exciting
to
tell
you."
And
the
top
toy
manufacturer
who
past. He wtll stop all commerce with Russia or the communist satellites until to have been the person in the White
man
of
the
Marathon Oil Company :
Or the television executive who said to Erno Rubik, "Whoever heard
they come to an agreement for elimination of all nuclear weapons on both House Situation Room who said to AI
and
said,
"Howdy,
partner."
.
said
to
his
wife,
"Freddie
Silver..
of
anyone
paying
money
for
a
sides. H~ will recall. aUour troops from Europe where they are sitting ducks Halg, " Mr. Secretary, I . think you
Lest·
we
forget
the
RUSSian
sub·
for Russtan mte~nediatc tmssiles. He will invoke economic sanctions again- better go upstairs and tell the man, the head of NBC, got me to quit colored plastic cube?"
my job and go over to his shop to be
As well as Glscard d'Estaing's marine captain in Swedl!lb wateni st any natton whtch supports communism with trade or support. We are the American people who's in charge"?
political adviser: "The French will who said to his helmsman, as he :
greatest and richest nation in the world and It is time for us to stand up and
Or the official In the Department his assistant."
And to the President's economic never vote for a Socialist supported peered through his periScope, "Hard becountll on the side of hwnanity an decency.
.
of Agriculture, who told his
. . We are not ,compelled to be the Big Brother of the World. It Is a role we superiors, " I think we better stock adviser who said to Mr. Reagan, by the Conununlsts. The best way to right, rudder. Now; steady as she ·.
goes."
)lave asswned voluntanly and when our freedoms are threatehed, we COUld up on cheese. My people are predic- " You can announce we're going to beat Mitterrand is to ignore him."
balan,ce the budget by 1984."
And th~. priest who said to Carting a shortage."
.
d1ange1
'
.•
Or the press aide to David StockAnd the friend of Richard Nixon dina! Cody of Cblcago, " Have you
And the baseball scout for a inajor :
man who said, "DaVe, do you have a who said, "John Ehrliclunan has ever thought of buying a hideaway league baseball team (not the
few minutes to speak to a writer written a book about his years iri the house is Florida?"
,Dodgers) who told hls bosse•, "I'
from the Atlantic Monthly?"
White House and you come out ' Or the friend of Governor Carey's took a.look at Fernando Valenzuela .
What about the reporter who · smellitlglikeal'lllle."
new wife who told her, "Tell him and you can forget him. The kid will
rushed into the office of the editors
Tben there was the fellow who .you've been married twice. He'll never make It in the big time
of !he Washington Post and shouted, said, "Congressman, I would like never find out aboutthe third one."
Today is Sunday, Jan. 3, the third day of 1982. There are 362-days left in
because he don'! speak E.igllsh."
"GUesli what the Carters did, while you to meet Paula Parkinson. She's • Not to mention the Japanese
the vear.
·
. And finally, .qne . ·of the White 1
' the Reagans were living in Bl
a v D' discreet lobbyist, who likes to friend of Richard Allen who said to Hou.... top aides hwo told another top ·
.', T;,.wy's highlight in hlsl9ry:
·
·
House?"
...
hav; a gooq!ime." • =~'-"'hi"m;;:.",&lt;n ruiuguratnrti · Day, "Dick, aide, "The Navy just shot ctown two
· Or\ Jan. 3, 1961, the \)nitedStates severed relations with Cuba.
Or the aide who told Tip O'Neil,
Or theprson who said to Nancy canyoudomeasrnallfavor?"
Onthisdate:
..
Ubyan ' airplanes. But . keep your
" The Republicans control the Reagall(l!l "We've run out , of · And the Middle East expert in the voice down - the President is
In 1!12l,lndia'sfifst ~~esslon of parliament convened.
Senate, but don!t forget, you control tablecloths."
State Department .who told the sleeping."
In 11!42, Japanese troops began the siege of Bataan In World War 11.
In !987, Jack Ruby, the slayer or presidential as.&gt;a:;sill 1~.-e Harvey
~;;;;;:-:;:-;;;:;:;;-,
Oswald, died of cancer in Dallas.
.· .
· ..,. &lt;~~.
And In 1980,.Presldenl Carter asked the ~te to refrain from aetiliit &lt;lh
the SALT II anns treaty.because of Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
· 'l'en years ago: With \he Nixon admlniillr\lloit wage and price controls
• In lffect,.lbe AFI.rCIO said It would report every retail' price Increase to
ill Internal Revenue IJervice as a possible vlolatim.
: Five , . n ago: The.JIWnaliUAal.l\tonetary Fund granted the largest
'.... Iii Ill »rear history - nearly $4 billion for BHtaln,lo bolller its
ew aii1L1.· · r .• ·
·
: OM ,.t.ll!o! Iranian radio broadcasts Said It was "Improbable" the
U AJnertc:an boetages Would be freed before .President-elect Ronald •
'..-,.n toall office. As it turned out, the rel~se conclded with Reagan's

•

Stand £Or h Umanlty

G~

H IspaniC
•
• Ameri·•can·s .,. "f u t .ure t Ie
• d .t 0
p 0 we r a.·t th e

II
n 0 s

TQday in·history-

r---------.

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.

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I

,.

-WASHINGTON rNEAl
We
reported last spring on what was ex·
peeled to be' a ·sensational JJ &lt;ul}ler
trial in Connelllicut. ·
Arhe Johru;on, 19, was a~c us ed of
tl,. stabbing murder of his lanlllot·d.
"Alan 'Bono. Johnson was to. have .a
-deferu;e unique In the annals of U. S.
legal histor.y: not guilty of 11\urder
by reason of demonic pm;session,
The defense att orneys ' were
prepat·cll to offe.r ;, proof" that the
younger brother of J ohn"J,U's
git•lfriend was possessed, that the
devil was 'transferred" to J ohnson
during a Catholic Church-sponsored
rite of. exorcism .8nd that J ohnson
was under the devil' ~ control when
th~ fatal stabbing took piaL-e.
The de£cnS&lt;' llnc'll up e ~pert witnt•sses and was prepared l&lt;l call to
the stand the local bishop and'priests
from the diocese.
But the jury never heard .any 'If
this testimon y,
,,
' On the first &lt;lay of the trial,

'

Hoagy Carmichael's
Buttermilk Sky" sound like .a
natural ID!'ution. He seemed to
belong to what Stephen Leacock
called the " heck, b'go, h, b'gwn,
yuk-yuk" school.; .
But, as Is the case with so many
American naifs , Carmichael's art
was built up with great
sophistication, His training, after
all, had included long nights
listening to Stravinsky with jazz cornetist Blx Bioiderbecke. Young Carmichael hall been one of the first to
recognize Bix's genius. He Improvised four-hand piario pieces with
him. He fashioned the verse of
"Stardust" on the model of a phrase
Bix had played.
JaZz is supposed to be·an urban art
form, and muc.h of Carmichael's

On radio shows, according to the late popular'Song critic Alec Wilder,
Hoagy Carmicael's so"gs were
always jntroduced by disc jockeys
with the mention of tlie composer's
name. Thi~ puzzled Wilder. The
same announcers would tell you who
was about to sing " The more I See
You," but they would not tell you
Harry Warren wrote it.
I am puzzled that Wilder was puz·
zled. We wanted to know Carmichael
wrote a song because we knew Car·
michael - from movies, from his
'own recorda, There was a face to go
with the name. On the screen, he
came across as a kind of musical
Will Rogers- sad-dog face with fun·
ny quips. On recorda, he had the
relaxed Hoosier voice to make "Old

Berry's World

.,

·Robert Wagman
S uperior · Court judge Robct·t
Callahan ruled the devil out of order,
so to speak. The judge J'Cfusell to
allow a ny IL'Slimon:,:.ubout t~ dii,V il
nn lhc grow1ds that it would be "unscientific" and " irrelevant. '! John·
son' s lawy ,•rs ' changed the ir
arg wnenl to self-defense.
Tl-.. prosecutio11 presented evillenec that boH&gt; Johnson and Bobo had
been drinking heavily on the day of
the murder and that Bono was killed
in a fi~t that erupted out of ~he
men's drunken jealousy over Johnson 's girlfriend. Tht: prOstluction's
theory seemed to be that the onl y
''devil" involved in the case was
''thatol' detmln rum ."
The jury believed that line of
•·easonillg a!&gt;d found Johnson guilty
on a lesser charge of manslaughter
after t)lrec days of llclibt•ration.
After the trial ,.,defellsc attor11ey
·•
·

evenness of scale to the lessons she
absorbed there. Mix real Indians
and Indiana. and maybe you should
get a composer who is a musical Will
Rogers.
But there are !lines when he was a
musical Mark Twain as well, no less
American for bein g Jhc
cosmopolitan who only feigns
" hick'' airs. The real voice of Hoagy
Carml.chael was often wryly wistful, ,
as
in.n
'' I Get Along Without You Very
Well

IHipcs that u tiJreL~judgc panel mall~
up nf two' judges armointct.l by

"Sad as a gypsy .serenading lhe
'noon." The words are Jo. h.nny Mer·
cer's, and are u. bit arty - as if they
should be pu~ un der a Rousseau
painting of lion with mandolin . But
the words stick In the mind because
Carmichael set them to music In
"Skylark." The four downard notes
of " -nading the moon" take three ·
half-tone steps down before reaching
the flnal drop of a whole tone. This
echoes two other such four-notes
slides In the irrunediqtely prece6ing
bars (to the wordS " haven't you
heard" and " beautiful mus·"). Each
such' ,plir..ses is played lower down
than the last, accwnulatlng sadness.
This suggests Cannichaelllsten~d to
Debussy as well as Stravinsky. By·
the Tom Wolfe standards of un·
American art activity, this would I
make ·Cannl~hael a cultural traitor.
But America is large and receptive,
as Hoagy Carmichael knew ; and he
.made stardust fall across its wlde&gt;1 .
prairies.

Lhl.-: DcnH.lCt'Hlil'

' wl&gt;id&gt; wi ll probably c&lt;:st tht•

, Martin Mlnnella announced !hat he
would appeallhe judge's rul in~· 0 11
the demonic-possession defense.
•
We have repnrt\lll several times in
the past year aboul Republica n
hopes of pic-kinA up perhaps a dO'lell
seats in the House of Represell·
tatives throu~ h co ng rc~siona l rcappurtionmcnt.
The 1980 census results ha ve for·
ecd the Northeast and the Midwest
to give up 17 House scats lo the Sou[h
and the West.
The Republicans assumed on the
basis of their strenl(lh in the Sunbclt
that reapportionment would lflOV e ct
number of scats into !he GOP
•·olwnn. National party leadct·s ~011- ·
fide11tl y predicted thal their t·eal"
portionmcnt gains coupled with the
populHrity of the ReagHn all·
·J.uinistration would allow them to
la ke control olthe lower .cl1amber ill
1982.
The inspr,e that this would happen,
tlw GOP cslablishL'Il u well-staffed
and well-finan c•'ll operalion to aid
lhc stal,c parties in !heir reaP'
IXllii onment battles.
But all of this has been to little
avail. Not only will the- Republi ca ns
1iot ~a in their dozen scats, but they
will have LO win one of Lwo of the
rcJnainin~-: rcapportiomnenl battles
).ust to break even.
Thl' big blow to the GOP Clime in
Illinois. State Republicans haJ high

A~eri~"'a...,.....____Ga_rrr_WI___:_;_us

work sounded rural , or at lea&gt;t
regional. It may come as a surprise,
then, that Wilder called Carmichael
the most jazz-influenced o( the
popular songwriters. Wilder knew,
from . his friends as well as from his
well-trained: ear, that · Carmichael
had, In the '20s, been at the very center of the white jazz, with Mid·
western and Western roots, that is .
often overlool!ed by those who thlnlt
only blacks can play jazz.
That is a mistake black jazz ar·
lists did not make. Bessie Smith, the
greatest blues singer, loved the
great white blues artist Mildred
Bailey, and admired ~r work.
Bailey was not only Carmichael's
friend (arid the most famous singer
of his "Old Rocking Chair's Got
Me" }, she was Jll!l'( of that jazz
world that revolved for ·a while
around Bix. .
Her brother was AI Rinker, one of
Paul Whi!.,; nan 's " rhythm boys" at
a time when Bix was the most
serious artist In Whiteman's circus
- the one other musicians; 'like
" rhytlun boy" Bing Crosby, learned
their phrasing from. Mildred Bailey •.
later married·Red Norvo.
There was •omething as American
in this white jazz as in tr '! New
Orlean~ style Louie Armstrong
brought to Chicago. In fa ct, Mildred
Bailey's mother was an American
Indian, who took her to learll chants
on a reservation in the state of
Washington . Mildred attributed her

S urp,r,~ i;-;r~y ~ 2~1 vot,•, the judge:.. · .

ct pproVl' tl

p,...'- ,,·uc'Jit Nt'xnJ&gt; (anti on••... ap[&gt;Ol.Jit..... ,J
by President Carter) Wtluld throw
uut the Dcl riOCratic plan ·and subslilut.e otlt' drawn up by Uu:~

Lilrcc HI)U!'lt' s •·Hls inl982.
,
Tlw GOP':-; last hopes nf gai lllll)-! ·
SL'ats thr ough i't'tlislri('!t ng an· in:
Pt• nns)rlvi:ltlia, Whl.' r e ti lt• slcrlc
legislature hal-i nut yet a l'lt•d upon a
Republit.•an lllan that L'tlulti L'''st the
Dt.~ mocr alo.; twcf~CH l !';, HIILI Nt•w Jt'r-

sey. where the Rcpublh:cms arL'
lr~' ill).!

to p l'c ~ e nt the lt·,~ is la tu n"":··

from approvii1g &lt;t DL'I.JllH.'ratk ·~l lan ;
iunba~ ~imfl • lirntintl
usrsa~

A Mullinwdi)l Ncwsi)CIPI:f
.Pub\i!(h•..'tl t'llt'll S unduy, 825 Th1n l
Avenue. by the Ohio Vullt•y Pubh:;l lltll.!
Cmnr~~:~ ny- Mull htK.'tlill. lut·. Scl'tllld duss
l}ll:i li!~ t' puit.l 111 G~:tl h!&gt;( lli s. Ohio, 4!16.11. ·
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Mt•n lbl! l; : Tht• AssoL·lu\ t•tl Pn·s!'). l nlantl
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Six mcll1ths ...... .. ........ , , .. $2.1.40

C~R~c:·p=u=b~li=l·=a n=s~.-~--~--::--l_!~~Tl§wc§···§m~o'§' '§"~-~,-===~===~..~1§"§·"~" ~
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Mon.-Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm
Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 ..jllll
ClOSED SUNDAYS

BOILED HAM
Sliced the way
you like it.

ANNOUNCEMENT
NIGHT CLINIC

AT
HOLZER CLINIC. LTD.
.

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MONDAY · FRIDAl 5 PM •. 9 PM
MAIN Q.INIC FACiliTY NEAR G.AII!POUS
''With this group, just stick
and twinkling eyes.''

with jokes, homilies

CALL 446·5287 IN ADVANCE

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HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
"Middle

of Upper Block, Pomeroy, Oh. '

SA~E BEGINS MONDAY. JAN. 4th

MEN'S SHOES
Brand Nantes :
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values to $65.011

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HARTLEY SHOES, INC.·
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we Will Not Be Open F~r Business
On January 1 and 2

: Today'a birthdays: actor Ray Milland Is 74; former Treasury
. Seeielaiy W. Michael Blumenthal is 58; hOckey great BobbyHullls43.
'

.• llUC/l)(t lllfTE '

/IJIIAT?
\

Jack Anderson

Wha· t d •.d you
. · sav ?
Art Buchwald
J-l==:=·===========================

,

ASANIIimJ·

resolutions ...

·

MEl•

inaagurltion.

•
lW

3

Whateve~ became of 'devil defense·'?

!.

Callister attd the. E R A~==;:::::;:=J=am=es..=J.=K;::::::;;ilpa=-==m=·c=k
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Ti m es - ~

Vii .

Follow-up report .

IIJe /)/{) ~

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• ·a m c ro v-'M iddl e Dorr- Ga ll i'Pol• s .

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lb. 1.89 ALL BEEF BOLOGNA lb. 1.99 1
There rue more than 100 substances that
are sweet and which chemists descube as
sugars. Sugars are carbohydrate5. important
Sources· of food energy. which supply 4
calones per gram , The one we use in our
aoff eo and cake is table sugar or sucrose. It
is relined from cane and beets to 99.9%purity
and sold in granulated or powderl!d form
Owing Cligeslion it is ' broken down Into
glucose and fructose
Thev~nter the.blood·
str.eam through the
walls ol the small Intest ine and 11re car·
rled to the liver and
!issues. In the liver,

'219
BIRD5-EYE FROZEN PE~S or CORN.•~"-' •• 2/89e

STE·AK-UMM •••••••••••• ~.· ••••••••••••••••••~~-~~·.·.

10 oz.

~;.;,.)

sugar is converted 10

gt~cogen

and stored

until the body says "t:tay . lneecJ same energy."
When this happens tt'le liver converts glycogen
into glucose which the bloodstream delivers
to organs and tissues , The liver forms faUv
substances called trigtycerides from the un-

SUGIR;

necessary glucose. During laslinq and d•elirlg.
the body can r.au ~pon thi~ reservt:
There Is no sctentilic evtdence showing a
.direcl relationship 'between sugar 1ntake and
coro11arv heart disease . Obes1ty is a result of
eKcessive consumptio11 of all food energy:
protein , carbohydrates. fat s. Research also
!ihows no relat ion ol sugar consumptiOn to the
onset ol diabetes.

2-LB. CAN .

19

G. W..

"How •"""' It I•"

IGA MUENSTER CHEESE ••• .; .. ~••••••••••••••••••••••• lb. 1.99
IGA LONGHORN CHEESE ••••••••••••••. ••••••••••••• lb. 2.09

~

_. 1

Broughton· Cottage Cheese

$1 29

I

1
,Nestle's Choc.~ Morsels
..
!.?!:.'1,.
. .

5 LBS.

,•·•·........c.~-.-....n ......

.

l

8

Vegetable 011 ••••••! .~;~!1.79
Noodles ••.•••••••••••••'!~~~. 69•

.

•

· ... ....... 21,·•
... .......
Dry Dog
zs
............
. .
n.1
h
·_ .
..
. d·
Dog Foo
'

lSOZ. CAN

Choc. Drink Mix ••• !:~.z;.•1.99
330Z, 89•
••••••••• •••••••

1

... ;

.

._

Wlsk ·····~··········~t~~--~1
.
'
Martha ·Whl_te· Corn Meai·~Mix ....... ~:~~~-.

.

. \GA
2% lowfOt

89e

.

LB.

,'3

PRICES
.GOOD .THRU l·N! . .
.

.~

•t

pV.Snc

'

. 'DOUBLE
COUPONS ARE JUSt
..
. ,....
.• NOTHER REASON TO PASS

PON .

DOUBLE VALUE

ALONG THE GOOD FEELING OF IGA

.

..

Here's how ·this C'oup.on works:

•

•
•

·

. WEEK LEFT ~ sET Of
iJTEYO&amp;I

~~L .
'
. K &amp; WAG
.
FUN .
pEDIAS•
EHCYCLO
.

t,OJI.P

·.

..

.; ~ ·

~

...•

· HURl

.

"

.

'yl- oNLY oNE

. QUANTITY RIGHTS. RESERVED

NO DEALER SALES

.

.

:foOdlirier
-Food Stamp Shoppers Welcom·e

1I · 6 SUNDAYS

Jm. Cheddar Cheese.•• ~.~~ ·•• &amp;S•

·········•r

.

OPEN 8.9 DAILY

'

Salad Dressing ••••••••••• !~?!~ .. 87•

•••••!•·················· . .
\

· 786 N. 2nd St. , · ... - ..
•. . . . . M
- iddleport, Ohio

,.

M\LK &amp;
69
$1

·.~

9
' 9' '

..

River View

.~

.

Joliet Tluu&amp;:: ••••••••••••~~-?.:~."79• lm. Mozzarella Cheese!.~:~as•
'
.
.
..
. Towes
· 1 •••••••••••••••••••
• roll
.
Gallon
~.
.
.
16 oz
.. '
J
bo
um
55•
75
-·
lm.
Amerlca,
n
Single•
•••
~.
'1.09
n•&amp;QC
.
.
. . .
CJ
.
. ' CTN . . •
.
.
1 LB. ilr.
Saltl
.
,
•. '
garettes
.......................
'4.89
. naa •••••••••••••..•••••• ·~s~
.
.
.\
.
42
~acaranl ••••. .-•. ~ •...••..~~~~ •• 89'
oz. •1
42oz. '1A9' ·· La und ry ·De t erpn t
.19
.
'
•••••••••••••••
Food
.

'

'

oz.

$clnlflush
..•.. );4.P.Z:. 79e
..

Money-Saving GeneJits;• Low Prices Everyday .·.
J

24

49

LeiiT-·IGA·---

· KetchuP •••••••••••••••~!?L 85• ·

·~·

Broccoll ........•..•........ ~.u.~~~.. 99e
Snow White
' ·
·
.
·
h
.
BOZ. 99e
.
M
.us ro.o ms ..... ~··············· ..

SUPERIOR l;lRAUNSCHWEIGER ••••••••••• ~ ••••• , ... lb. 79•
ECKRICH BOLOGNA

I.

.

-

1.

I 1\A;.'L.:

· •:.,Uuul•,......Val
. I .·
.

0111 ANV MANUFACTU.RIA'S .
: . ' • ',.cq,I!!ON POR 10c OR !,.ISS!
I ,JII WITH THIS COUPON AT
' ...~
IGA Exp, 1-9·12

-

•
'.

'

·oouble.Val

ON ANV MANUFACTURE~'&amp;
COUPON FOR tiOc: OR LIS&amp; I
WITH THIS COUPON AT
RIVERVIEW IGA fixp . 1·9-12

.,

I

I

&gt;I

'

•

Doubl• YQiu• Double
ON ANY M.II\NUFACTVRER'S
. COUPON. POR tiOc: OR LESS! .
WITitTHIS COUPON AT
RIIIEIIIIIEW IGA EKp. H·82

'

.

,

39
L C -· llfl
.
HEAD
'1
Fresnau ower............

I

89 .

SUPERIOR BACON
1.59 lb.

29

.

ON ANV MANUFACTUR.'f8~
COUPON FOR IOc. OR LUSI('.,

•
•

Present this coupon with any one
manufacturer's "cents off" coupon
and get double 'Savin gs. .
...
Only one Double Val ue Coupon per
item.
If the total value exceeds the purchased Item , money Will not be refunded . Also, if total coupon value
exceeds 50¢, money will not be re·
funded ..
,
This offer applies only to nnrnutacturer's coupons. II does.not apply to:
ret~iler'scoupons, grocery coupons ·
or free coupons•,
.
Not valid with !leer, wine or tobacco'
product coupons .
'
•
•
1
Lim1t 4 double coupons per cu~tomer

�...

•

•

tddlcport-C.il llipolls, Ohto- r.oint Pleasant, W . Vi1 .

'
The sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-Ar7

Jan. · 1982

~greemeot "la lo JH'l!Yide for con-

:WE.LCOME A&amp;P CUSTOMERS
..It Is cilwciys our ln,entlons to glv,tt our
-.. loya I customers ·the best pc)sslb.l e .value .
.

.

at the bast. possible price.-We Invite all

..

former A&amp;P customers to try our .
frter(dly service a_
n d shop. our m·a ny

'

..

" · • .J

...'.

.

• .

good vbiues In ·~u our

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m~ ·
85 Vine Street
· Gallipolis. Ohio
· Phone~ ~9593
."We Reserve the --..;
_to~-..~~----11

MORE SATISFIED CUSTOMERS ·SHOP HERE I
FLORIDA

U.S. NO.1
. ALL PURPOSE

WHITE
POTATOES ·

'.

U$DA CHOICE

C::ALIFORNIA

FRESH
LEAN
'
.

CELERY

GROUND$}29

•

•
.' '.
'.

..
~

~.

I [

.'....
.'
~

'

...

•
•

.

.' ...
,. '

'

. ·59 .
1

20 $}99
.BAG

STAlK

5

. BEEF

4

ORANGES

$.

BONELESS
. CHUCK
ROAST

•r

29

LB. _

·

MIXED
FRYER
PARTS

· LB.

1-LB.
·BAGS

.

SUPERIOR
..
SUPERIOR

.

CHUNK BOLOGNA
SUPERIOR
'

.POLISH SAUSAGE

8_
.9 !
99°

GRADE A
EXTRA LARGE

s...
••
&lt; •

~.

BUrrERMILK

PICNICS
SUPERIOR

20

oz.

$UNNY VALLEY
WHOLE KERNEL

DOZEN

5 LB.

CTN.

BAG

BOX ·
~&gt;

. .·
.~

.. ..
•'

ICE MILK
.

$ 29

.BANQUET or MORTON

~

PACK

PIG~

BROUGHTON

~·

" 2% MILK ·$

~- lJ!JI

GA• I ON

.

27•
II

II

UNE

ANn
FREEZE

'

'

I

{
l

&gt;"'

.
I

;•
t

••

@nuliln
'1IQI' COCOA MIX

·.Tide
5 LB•• 4 OZ.

Car'nttlon Cocoa Mix .

I

3.29

.

4 CT._TALL
' ..

KITCHEN•.. BAGS

3~2·
.. 7

HOUSEWARE

PIMII Mild ,... il1lottT-.alon on lnclivldual ,
· Allltemenl Ml;l:lunll. MIIIIIOOhiO Vlley Bank,
420 Third .twnue, G 'I '41, Ohio 45831
Alllnlion: RiclllftiScoft

G*NERIC

.ol BOil~ $}49

F63

.

~E ------------·---'ADDRESS - - - - - - - -

~AA

"

.COFFEE
CREAMER ·

179 ~~ $129

1

ON

~:z. 99~

10 oz.

4 ROLL

32

4.99

D1l1t1ooi:· Ho• Cocn 101 e~la ~~'~'~" .''

motll'lltlg• 12 Coun1 ,Piig

97~

Re&amp;. '4.09
HOUsEwARE

BOX

CHICKEN
IVORY LIQUID
DISHWASHING DnERGENT

.

JEWELRY

KRAFT

11 oz.

'

~

'1S.96

9~ '

DINNERS

'

12.99 .

3

HNJ$129

·$

16 .OZ.
CAN

FIRST OF YEAR. SPECIALS
SUNDAY, JANUARY 3

. GE STEAM
. . IRON

GRAPE JED.Y

COLLEGE INN

300
cr..

SWEET PEAS .

'

Upper Rt. 7
. Across from the
Silver Bridge Plaza

I

SUNNY VALLEY

BOTTLES

•

.SCOT .
NAPKINS

39.

l~~z.

8716 oz.

POUND
BOX.

ALL FLAVORS

·CORN .

ROYAL CROWN
Din RITE
RC 100

ZESTA SALTINES

BROUGHTON

at. Ben Gurion Univer·
sity have developed a greeilbouse
which keeps plants wann during
the night by recirculating a fluid
heated during the day by the sun.
The fluid, a pale grey dye,
flows in Fhannels between two
sheets of plaatlc which form the
greenhouse roof.

'I

Martha W~ite Self ·

CAN.

FLOUR.

THE NEGEV, Israel (AP) -

'
..

-•

3

-

Reg. 11.99

'

1'5.5 oz.

- . . ......... L...... , - . -

8.39

•.
.••

HAM

-AWAY

' _

SENSOR
HEATER

$}1995

•

SUNNY VALLEY

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

USI OUR COIM.NT

'Ml•sller high pertormance. mult~band radar
detectors pick up only speed radar. And pick up
on it long before it can pick up on you. The 'Mlistler
Radar-Eye® Miles ahead of the rest.

I

cut GREEN BEANS

SUPERIOR

6.5 Ol
CAN

9~

PKG.

$179

lOLl

.'

.PRICES IN EFFECT lHRU JANUARY 5
WHILE QUANTITIES lAST

I

f
•

~

RAISIN BRAN

LB.

89~

12 oz.

FRANKIES

TUNA

GENERIC·

.,

I

.. '

.

APPLES

v

STEW BEEF

(HICKEN OF .THE SEA

: :. G:N 99~

ROME.
BEAUTY

.

.

Thursday's action by the board had
not been widely voiced Thursday af.
. temoon. However, one resident of
.
the district at the·Meigs Junior High.
Sc.hoot just after the board _action
said that he intended to consult an
attorney on the ,legality · of the
board's spendiii\1 tax dollars in such
· a manner . .
Immediately following the action
. iJJ Gleason's direction, the tour
ljooard 1J1embers went back into
executive session. It WJIS reported
that Assistant Superintendent
Morris and Attorney Charl•s ~nlght
'th the boa · d
·
were WI
r .

.

Sc~ntisfs

.

LB.

EGGS
.

~-

.,

board 00 a split vote.
The reaction of the public to

.
BOB'S 'ELECTRONICS

Hothouse

19

.

~~

IAI.r:

ROYAL CREST

LB.

. .·

89~.

SLAB

5 LB. BAG

OKED PICNIC$·

$25!·

.2

~

·GRAPEFRUIT

SUPERIOR

SIRLOIN STEAK

-CAR~ROTS

4

GOLD KIST,

USDA CHOICE

TENDER CRUNCHY

... '

· ·

. Morris; now assistant t perintendent, be hired as superint odent.
However, Gleason was hlrec &gt;Y !he

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

.. administration
Local indlucing:has tarought to Meiga I I
" The development, organization
and pasaage of the $1,000,000 bol)d
issue; '·fixing of the high school
walls;. repla_cerocnt of eight roofs;
establishment of a bus l'l:lllacement
procedure and the purchase and ordering of 17 buses in the last two
years; organization of thti, pa"ll'&gt;t.
lejlcher conferences; imProvements
during the last six months on the
buildings; selection of new per·
sonnet; management plan ·
developed for each adritinistrator;
long rapge plan to renovate the
junior high; intr.oduction of the conipuler terminal for the treasurer's of.
fice; implementation of sound fiscal
management which has kept ' the
district in the black through these
tough financial times; recently
published ' Armual Progress
Report' ; development of the weekly
newspaper article, 'Round Meigs
Local' ; in-service . education
developed for teachers, administrators, cooks, custodians and
bus drivers.
.
"However, past achievements are

departme~ts. ; . SHOP JOHNSON'S ANI) FIND OUT WHY

•·

tmg services to priiYlde a smooth

Y

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY~ JANUMY

~pec•ALS . · · ·

(ContinUed from page ;A1)

pothlng more than a f~tlqn for
future endeavors and I have an op.
. ~ttion lo • llt!W 1111per!ntendent of portunlty to pursue oomething I
Meigs Local Schools. David L. · have always wanted to do in'""' area
Gleuon requested lo resign and the of professional advanceme"n~t wa'th
Board of Ed ti
has
same ,
uca on
accepted the time being righl Therefore, ef·
• ...:... of ---·•
fective Jan. 4, 19112, I am tendering
""""" ........~tion covered· by •my reslgnatlon as supe rintendent of
the contract . include: personnel the Me1gs
· Local School •District •and
, management,
transportation
ling
· contract.
·
.
• accep
a cons"illting
cafete~, building and I!J'Ouruls,
budgeting and appropriations
· "I certainly want to thank aU
orgarlization of special programs: those people who have helped me
special education (state and during my admi~atlon and I
federal) in-service training bo d , helieve the way IS clear for coniSsues ~ levies and c~cul n . saderable ~rovements to be made
coordination.
'
urn mthefuture." .
In hi'S) letter of
.
. .
GIE:BSOII was hired two and oneGleason slated:
resignation, half1fl!lrs ago a~ a sto~y board of
" Looking back ov the
t three education meetmg which ·was at~rs, feel proudeofr 1as f lb
.
tended by '1 "large crowd of people,
1
some o e · many of wnom urged that D E
changes and accompUahments my
an .

:

-.

••

'

"'Baker's Joy
A tollll at $4,000. And whaf8Ver you put in ii
tax delened until withdrawal. Your 8COOII'II
_,.,. inlllr'lll ai current market ratel.
h...... that remains tax..freia until you retire,
A limlllltwl your Income and yoor tax rate
WiU be a lei lower. tlelping you gain financial
aecurlly In yoor ietiemenl years.. .. Anolher
reason you_can and should e)(J)8Ct more
from Ohio VIIA'rft; Baok.
rhelf ,..,IRA f'ltg'tl•lliOnl do.rKK ~»Come e/te,/IVI U11ttl Jlf'IIJM'f J,
1H 2. but comf in now tor IW pat'IICu/lfl 1nd ~ddlfklnlllmlarm •tion.

No-Stick Cookin1 Spray

#

1.00
With 11.00
.

Rebate offer

- 79~
32 oz. Hun!JrV Jack

htr.a light
Pancake ~ix
Hunorv ·J ack r•
the fla"'or will

alwayS bring you
bac~ .

FOOD OE PT .

�...

'

•·
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.

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Pomerov- Middleport-;-Ga

·8- TM

.Redistricting:· 1st h)J.s in·ess

'

0181'1• Knbs .of Point Pleaunt.. · .
Funeral services WJII be held Sunday at I: 30 p.m. at Wilcoxen Funeral
'

'

.'10

00

Finding solace in art
I

Lodwick
prepares
'
.
for exhiWt
,________

I

.

, ARMADIU.O CASUALS

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'

'

Values to $39.00
1 Group Women's

'15" Pair

DRESS SHOES

Auditiol)s
Vogue
Jolene

40 %• OFF•·
·

t Group

ALL WOMEN~$
LEATHER

CHILDREN'S SHOES
Y2 PRICE

'FASHION BOOTS
. Jf2 PRia ·

MARGUERITE SHOES
POMFROV,OH.

i-.

..,.
· c::
3

.

....

·e:~ ..£;'"
CD

&gt;

.

'

lly CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentioel Staff ·

'14" Pair

1

'

...;.
· ------------~,·

l"~~ESS &amp; CASUALS

1 Group M!!n's

.

.•Jan. 3, 1982 .
.The Sunday Times-S

1 Group Women's Shoes

Pair

C't

t

~.-

·Marguerite's Winter
Clearance Sale
SHOES

•

"'

l

TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS &amp; BEAUTY STUDIO

1 Group of Women's

K

)
'

Now Openl

PLEASANT - William
'!Billy" Dean Krebs, 38, Ill
Jl:vergreen Drive. Point Pleasant,
died l'hursday at 10:30 p.m. after a
Ibng tllness in Pleasant Valley
$ospitsl.
·
.•
' Born July 25, 194~ at -Mason, he
~as the son of Mabel Parsons Krebs
.and the late William Clifford KrebS,
~tho preceded him In death March 2,
J113. He worked on the river for
Richardson and Sons . of Racine,
dhio.He was a member of the LOyal
Onler of tihe Moose and a member of
the NaUonal Guard Ordnance Company 3864th.
'
, He is survived by one daughter.
~e~ Jo Krebs; two sisters, Mrs.
Sue Built, and Mrs. Lana Grimaley,
· A~Je8llen)', N. Y:; two bnlthers, Benny 8lld Jobany ICI:ebl; grandfaiJier,

..

Va .

a

'
:' pOINT

.

.l

·~ ·

~:. ~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~

!william D. Krebs

.

it~D1 :

By ROBt:ftT E. MIUER ·
chore tn the Demoerat"COntrolled
Gillroor noted that the state will ·
~IIOCiated Pre11 Writer
- HoWie:
,
··
have.to be re-divided lnto 21 districts
'ooLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's
Sena~ President Paul E. Gillmor, and that every district in the state
lawmaker_s reconv~e for the 1982 R· Port Clillton, alsO gives priority in coulq,leei the ripples ofthedectsilln,
~ion this week With most of. their · the GOP Senate to the aame subject,
.Jfe and Riffe conceded that hard- ,
.'!npleasant chores behind them.
Nhich l'ill be considered by the two ball politics is involved ;md said both
• The battle of the budget is over, at chambers ·simultaneously, ·almost parties will be. adamant In their efleast (or now, and the smoke is just certainly leading to a showdown forts to protect their lnteresl,!l:
•
:Clearing_ from enactment of the later. in a joint conferenCe com"There's just no way you can take
· 'biggest tax hike in the state's mlttee. .
'
· the politics out. of this thing,"
history.
.
It's up to the Legislature to draw Gillroorsaid.
But leaders of both houses of the new . districts for Ohio members of
Traditionally, both the 0em9erats
polilically divided Legislature say Congress after each federid census, · and Republicans try to gerrymander
~here still are things to do ·and to eqllalize populations and· adjust the map to create strong districts for
11riorities for doing them.
. · them to population shifts. This year, their candidates. This year will be
: Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., 1). it's thornier than usual becallSe Ohio no exception.
New Boston, said congressional is losing two of its23 seats in the U.S.
Republicans appear to have a
·redistricting will be the first major House.
·
slight edge in thjs year's tug of war
because GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes
·can veto any plan that emerges from .
the Legislature if he thinks it faVOI'J
Democrats. But the Senate will be .
WJable to impose its will"on House
Democrats, who "must approv~· any
measure before it is ever sent to the
governor.
Gillmor said he and Riffe will slf
Home ' with the Minister Eugene
Robey F . Harrison
Zopp and' Rev. Roland Sager of- down .to see if there is any way a
•
•
; CROWN CITY - Robey Franklin ficlatlng. Burial will follow in compromise can be worked out, blit
he didn't sound optimistic about the
Jlarrison, 79, of Ri. l , Crown City, Kirkland Memoria] Gardens.
chances.
,
died Thursday in Cabell-Huntington
"It's
going
to be very difficult," he
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
said.
.
Amy
Lowther
: He was a retired employee of the
The
Senate
and
House
both
will
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad.
reconvene
in
skeleton'
session
• Surviving are his wife, the former
ALBANY - Amy Lpwther, 59, Of
J;lbsemary Brought~; , f~ve Rt. 3, Albsny, ~Friday .af~fDOOn Tuesday, but major floor actions are
paughters, Mrs. Jewell Coffee of in O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, not expected until later iii the month.
However, committees will begin. to
bkl8homa ..City, Okla., Mrs. Anette Athens.
Crabtree of •Covington, Ky., Mrs.
Born Sept. 26, 1922, In Vinton Coun-' meet to prepare meas~rl!ti for floor
Lea Brown of Oak Hill, W.Va., Mrs. ty, daughter of the late Moses and action.
Both houses have one major piece
Diana Robinson of Chesapeake .and Zelia Sutphin Perry, she was a memof
unfinished business left over from
ber of ihe Boring Chapel Church and
the
fall session, which adjourned
the Albsny VFW. Post 893 Ladles
Nov.
20. It is a massive, $500 million
(:inciMati, Kenny of Harrisburg, Auxiliary.
prison
construction plan thai curren-·
fla. and Jack of Crown City. . ·
.
Surviving are her ·husband,
• Funeral services will be held at 2 George; a son, Doug of Albany; a tly is stymied in a·Senate-House con;.m. today in Good Hope Church. daughter, Mrs. Gary (Kathy ) Spen- ference committee.
C]lalrman Myrl H. Shoemaker, 1).
· 8urial will be in the church cer of Albany; five grandchildren ;
¢emeterynea r Crown City . three brothers, Virgil· of Columbus, aourn.eville, had not said by week's
Arrangements were by the Hall and Veron and Victor, both of :enii when he will ' r~onvene the
Funeral Home, l'foctorville.
'
Albany; three sisters, Hazel panel. One major Senate-House
Dunigan and LOuise Ellis, bot~ of dispute is whether prison labor
Nannie Javins
Albany, and Fernie Woodgerd of Rt. should be WJed in some of the construction.
: GALUPOUS - Nannie Bertha 4, Pomeroy.
Democrats are under pressure
Funeral services will be heid at 2
lavins, 68, Reynoldsburg, died at 5
from
various labor unions concerned
p.m. Thursday in Mount Carmel p.m. Monday in the Bigony-Jordan about the eff~~ on jobs already
Funeral Home, Albany, with the
HO!Ipital East, Co(uf!!bui.
scarce in the coMtruction industry.
Rev.
Rl!y Pr~
. Officiating. Burial
~ Born Sept. 13, 1913\ in Cabell CounGillmor said the Senate pl4ns to go
ter Cemetery, near
ty, w.va., daughter of the late will be in
slow
in terms of floor sesaions and to
fiilbljl' and Maggie Mercer, she at-. Point Rock in , elgs County. Friends devote more time to committee
!ended Good Hope . Baptist Church, . may call at the uneral home from 2- . · work.
4 and 7-Dp.m. I y.
$1. Albans, W.Va.
1't!e first full session of the Senate
• Surviving· are her husband, W.C.
is not scheduled until Jan. 26, but
Savins; two daughters, Ma,deline
several committees will get down to
Matthew Zer~le
~ullivan o( Portsmouth and Grace ·
business this week, he said. This
Hornsby of Lafferty, Ohio; two sons,
POINT PlEASANT - Matthew session is ·expected to end "in late .
{lilly of Charleston, W.Va. ancl' Ray Zerkle, 830 30th Street, Point · · June after a break during May to
James of Reynoldsburg : 16 grandPl~asant, died shortly alter birth allow meml*!rs to campaign for the
Fndsy, 5:~ p.m., 10 Pleasant June primary. .
children, 14 great-grandchildren and
great-great grandchild; two
Valley Hospital. He was the son. of,
Looking on "into the year, the
sisters, Genevieve Smith of Bucyrwl
Ronnie and Cindy Flo":ers Zerkl~; leaders said they expect extenSive
and Gladys Casto of Patriot; and a other survivors are SISler, Jod1e deliberation .by a new joint combrother, Froud of Patriot.
· Zerkle, at home; mat~mal grand- mit tee · on taxation. 11 w&amp;s
: Adaughter also preceded in death.
mother, Mrs. AnnaJean Casey established by language inserted In.. • Funeral services will be held at I Flowers, Pomt Pleasant; maternal to t~e state budget bill after
p:m. Monday in the Centenary
grandfather, Harry Flowers; pater- laW1118kers conceded they were
Methodist Church, with the Rev.
nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. un]lappy that property tax relief and
Jackie Dale Clark officiating. Burial
Ronald Zerkle, Sr., New Haven, and other reforms did not accompany
will be in Ohio Valley Memory Gar- t.he maternal great-grandmother, the recent Sl.3 million tax boost.
. dens. Friends may call at the Willis Mrs. Gamet Ca~ey, Point Pleasant.
The committee is charged with the
·funeral Home from 2-t and 7·9 p.m.
Funeral serv1ces . will be held II responsibility of taking an
today.
· a.m. Monday mommg Ill the Crow- el!hm!stive look at the tax structure
: The body will lie in state one hour Hussell Funeral·HOm~ with theRe~. and ~ recommendations
Herman Hayes. Bur1al will be m back. to the full Legislature
prior to the service.
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. FrienLate last month, the ~gislative
Verlin H. Jones
ds may call at funeral home after 4 Service Commission authorized
staff studies of s.everal problems the
p.m. Sunday.
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Vcrlln
H. Jones, 53, of Ravenswood, died
. lawmakers will be examining later.
---------- Thursday in Jackson General
Hospital, Ripley, W.Va., following
an extended illness.
.:.Born in Jackson County, W.Va.,
son of the late Monic and Mamie
Ashby Jones, he was a Morris.Harvey College graduate, taught school
!Pr 21 years and attended the Christ1)18s Church. ,
PERMANENT SPECIAL·
30% OFF .
• Surviving are his wife, Dorothy; a
.daughter, Mrs. Katrina Hayes of
SPECIAL MEMBERSHIP FEE ~25 00 ~';n-th
Racine: ·a son, Rodney .of Raven~wood; two sisters, Mrs. Cassie
€ounts and Bessie Jones, both Of
MARY POWELL - O,Vner/Operator
Walton, W.Va.: a brother, Donald Of
.Liberty,· W.Va.; and 'five gra ndTRUDY' ROUSH- ST·YLIST
~hildren .
.
,
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT - .992-6720
• He was also preceded in death by .
two brothers.
··
Evenings By Appointment Only
' Funeral services will be held at 2
2021/z
E.
Main
St.
Pomeroy, OH "
p.m. Monday ln the Straight'fuckers Funeral Home, Ravenswood, with Arnold Shaffer . and
Gary Smith officiating. B,urial will
fle in Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
(rom 3-9 p.m. today.

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POMEROY - Nine years ago with an ache in her heart ··
and time on her hands, Juanita Lodwick turned to her "slwribering" talent in art as a sol11~e to the anguish of having lost ,
a child on Christmas Eve.
Next week the extensive st~dy and the hours and hours of
creative practice with paints will pay off. ·
Juanita is one of about 20 artists Invited to exhibit at the
annual Winter Arts ard Crafts Show at the Grand Central
Mall in Vienna, W.Va ., Jan. 12-16.
.
/
The exhibit will be her first major show, and she looks on
it as a "realbeginning, a boost to my career. a hope that from
this show will come oiher invitations."
'About 50 pailltings, mo;1ly in oils and watercolors, will be
displayed by the artist who will also be demonstrating her
skill for several hours a day atthc show. . . (,
_
Juanita cre.dits her husband, Harrtl«th giving her the
encouragement to seriously study art alter that Christmas
Eve accident when their son was struck and ·killed by an
automobile.
·
Shy about getting started, Juimita solicited the company
of another.artistic Meigs Couritian, Norma Newlun , and the
two enrolled in an art class taught at the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy-by Tricia Adletta.
·
Juanita said that was when she ''fell in love with water..
colors."
From the Adletta classes, she went to Vienna, W.' Va. to
study with Martha Sargent, and then on to Dorothy Decker. a
well-known We~t Virginia artist, with whom she still studies
' twice a week.
.
·
Juanita admits to a great " hunger for techniques" and
s;J)'s she has painted lor practice some works of the great artists. While painting is nQt only a "fun thing to do," Juanita
· considers it great therapy , an avenue of self-expression, and
amedia in which she cari become totally absorbed.
In fact , she admits to becoming so emotionally involved
in her work at times that she lo$eS track.of time, working well
into the night.
Julmita has exhibited in numerous local art shows including the .Meigs County. Fair, ·Regatta, and shows of the
1 I Bend 0' 'he IJ.iver Artists Council of which she is president,
as well as ihe French Art Colony and the Jenny Wiley State
Park in Prestonllurg, Ky. She displays a box of ribbons.
Her paintings hang in many local homes.
Mrs. Lodwick offers claslies in beginning water colors
and has a waiting list of children and adultS most of the time.
.. _}h~ ~Jll!cious Lodwick homeplace has, been remodeled
and is innovative in design. It features a special room wher~
Juanita teaches art, and another place where she does lier .1
own painting.
·
Her "l~fl" is lighted from a large south window and there
are racks for displaying and drying her pai~, and
shelves and drawers for her supplies and books.
Located on a hillside in Chester, the renovated brick and
frame has on one end a 20 x 50 foot solar heated greenhouse.
Besides her painting, Juanita delights in working with plants
doing much of her ·own propagation.
Among the many flowers in the greenhouse this holiday
· season are poinsettias started from slips. One is nearly five
feet tall with dozens of blooms. Warm water flows from a
fountain created by the Lodwicks With mGSl;-COVered 'rocks
hauled in from the hillside. A pet parakeet flutters about.
These are busy days for Juanita.
The ache in her heart has cased. · ·
She no longer has time on her hands.

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,4 BOIIE :' Mei!(•
Cuunt)c'• Jwmit11 Lodwi ck i• mle of about 20
- lt'ti•h •elrwted tr~
1•rhibit ot the (;rRnd
Centr'lll MHII in the lln ·
nwrl Wintvr Art• 11nJ
frHft~ S hou&gt; J11n. 12
thm"f(h IIi. i-EFT: A
farJ~trill•
11m11n1( her
JX'rtrnitlf ilf thii4 tmin·
tin1e t&gt;f h&lt;•r doU!(hlr•r·inIHrv, K11ren Rcerl J.odwil-k ht&gt;ldin/( ht•r infHnt
•on, TrHvi•. BELOW:
Oil•, lfcrrlir• 1111d
UIHit•rrolorR

, I

ulill h•• in ·

rfudvd in IAJdwidr ·~~
••rhil&gt;it in .th1• &lt;'rllft•
•hm~. Nut un/y will •hr•
••xhibit for the five
tl11)'•, but •h•• "'""
1mint ~teveral hour/4 H
dlly.

"'ill

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Moddl

1982

J

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Jan. 3, 1982

Engagements

&gt;

p

OLD MAN HATFIELD &amp; OLD
MAN McCOY .BRING BACK THE
GOOD OLD· DAYS- tfr/ITH

·;plymale-

...~Criss and Reed ·m

GALUPOUS - Saint Peler's and ivy. White satin ribbon · Halley Birnie of Boston, Mass., and · !rimmed with S..tin navy rlbbpri and'
Episcopal Church of Gallipolis was streamers with lover's knots fell Lisa Halley of Crown 'City. Both a wide sash belt. On her shoulder she
the setting lor the·open-churrh wed· - lro111 the bouquet holding an orchid hostesses wore shoulder corsa~es of . wore a white planaenopsis orchid
ding of Ramona Jayne Criss and t'Orsage in the center.
w~ite fuji chrysanthen)ums nestled
cor sa~ .
.
PauJMeadowsReedonOct.!7.
Mar gery 'C le ve land
oJ in ivy.
.
·
The new Mr~. Reed ili. a 1981:
Rev: Harold Deeth and .Father Waynesville, OH, served as maid of
Following the ceremony, a rel•eJ&gt;- graduate Of Ohio University, where
· Albert MacKenzie, friends of the honor. The bridesmaids included tion-and bufret dinner honol'ing the she was a member of Alpha Gam~
family, perfonned the candlelight Nanette .Thompson of Canton, Jen- couple was held at the Royal Oak Delta sorority. and holds a B.s: irJ';,
double-ring ceremony which took nifer Hilbnan ol Centerville, Rhonda Park Archery Building in Pomeroy. Organizational Communications.
placoi at 6:30p.m. following one-half Criss of New York, N. Y., Laurie The bride's table .Ceatured ·a lour- She is employed as conununity
hour of piano and organ music per· · Province of Pomeroy, Mary Johnson tiered cake over. lour e)(tending · relations assistant at Holzer Medic.U.
fonned by Ann Fischer. Favorite of Rutland, amt Connie Bamberger cakes lrirruned in burgundy and Cenror in Gallipolis.
selections olthe bride and groom in· of P eveland.·
.
The groom is u gra duate or Meigs
· white with .a · top arrangement of
eluded "Jesus, Joy of Man 's
The attendants were attired in lor· burgundy and · pink roses with High School in 1977 and Ohio UniverDesiring,'' "Art Thou With Me," mal gowns of short sheer burgundy stephanotis. The table, covered with sily inl981, where he was a member
" The Ring," uu ," ''Love Story," · tone on tone slriped chiffon. Their
a white linen tablecloth, featured the of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. Reed
" Tft~hepherd's Pipe," "The Trum- peplum jackets were accented by a wedding cake llanked by a is employl'll at the f:anner's Bank
petA1r" and the "Trwnpet Tune."
wide satin ribbon with a large bow cascading silver champagne foun· and Sayings Compa~y in PomefOy.
The bride, is the daughter of tiedatthewaistintheback.
Following their honeymoon, the
lain anc! crystal punch bowL Cathy
Ronald F. Criss of Boston, Mass..
Each attendant carried a cascade Cleland of Pomeroy, Mrs. Lynn Ar·. couple resides at ·.305· North Third .
and Shelby Fields Criss o£ Tampa, bouquet of white fuj i chrysam· JTJ&amp;Of Pomeroy, and Mary Lou John- Ave., in Middleport. ·
Fla. The groom is the youngest son themwns with burgundy centers, son of Racine, helpt.'&lt;l to cui and ser·
Out-of-town guests included Leon
of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Reed stephanotis, ferns and ivy arranged
ve the cake,
Meadows of Jacksonville, N. C.; the
Jr., of Pomeroy.
in a gen!le crescent curve and white "1 For their ho~eymoon trip to the R D. Bateman family of Zanesviile;
Adorning the altar were a white satin ribbon streamers.
Greenbrier in White Sulphur Mrs. Robert Schelbase of Canton;
lace frontlet -and two center
The groom wore a black lull dress 'Springs, W. Va., the bride changed
Mrs. Wayne Yeager or Canton ; May arrangernents..ol white fuji chrysan· _ tuxedo with long tails, a white
into a street·length navy crepe dress Meadows of Houston, Texas .
themwns nestled in ferns and pleated wing-tip shirt and a black
. greenery. Tbe church pews were silk band bow tie. His boutonniere
marked with brass hurricane lamps was white stephanotis. Best man
holding white candles and white - was Theodore T. Reed Ill, eldest
satin bows. The ceremony included brother of the groom. Groomsmen
the traditional receiving of holy ·were Bruce Reed of Pomeroy, Dan ·
communion by the bride and grooin. Thomas of Pomeroy, Jeff Kelch of
The bride was escorted to the altar Urbana, Kevin Scott of. Cleveland,
on the ann of her father, with Jerry Yeatts of Athens, and John
Fisch~r playing the traditional wed· Gi~ nopoulos of Pomeroy .
ding march.
Attending the register stand were
For her wedding the bride chose a
formal gown of white organza and • 8 8 8 8 8 • • • • • 8 8 • 8 •
chantilly lace. The V~neckline and ••
~
wE~K'S
back were trirruned with layers of
5
la ce accented by satin bows. The •
II
chapel.Jength train created a busUe •
effect with more rows or rurne and ,.
- .•.••
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organza. Thfllh
e u s eer sIeeve.s were . •
gathered at the wrist with a satin •
'- 8
· ribbon accent. The waltz lengt~il :
of French illusion was edged in seed •
. pearls and fell from a fingertip 'cap •
of chantilly lace adorned with tiny •
pearls. Her only jewelry was a •
string of slightly graduated pearls, a •
DI~T
gilt from the groom, and earrings ot., •
small pearls nested in gold settings.
:
. The bride's bouquet was a 8 8- 16 oz .
prolusion cascade of white • Btls.
phalaenopsis or~hids and •
Plus •
stephandlis hi li'~'~hted with fern •
Tax &amp; oep . •
3 pc .
Suite

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ON·
~RODNE

- Carol A. Plymale,
• Gallipolis, and Stuart E. Hyden,
' Gallipolis, WI I, m~rry March 6 at
: Raith Baptist cAurch,'Rodney.
~ride-elect is the da"ghter of
• Mr. ana Mrs. Lester Plymale, of
1Gallipolis. Hyden is the son of Or.
, lind Mrs. Marcel · Q. ·Coronel,
~- &lt;hlllipolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl E.
: 'Hyden, Scotts Depot, W. Va.
• ; She will graduate in 1982 from Rio
: Grande College with a bachelor of
• science in accounling. He attended
' ;: Rio Grande College and is super·
' visor with Greyhgound Lines, Inc. in
~ Qayton.

'· .

~Buchanan•

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PRICES

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'1 976 r o

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! building.

·
: : Miss Budmnan i.s a 1980 graduate
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Pm·kcrobUI'g South High School

• and is attending the Pa r kersbu rg

; Ejcauly College.
'/ Her fi ance is a g1aduale or
East~&gt;rn High School, cl ass of 1981
: and will be leaving in May of 1982 fOI'
; f~u r yea rs' duty in the U. S. Air For,
:. c~ .

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Febr\J;.ar~S~t~hJ...--·-1..0_.-a_m_-_9._p_m.,
TOQAY
0
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•

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$795

sunday, Februa•~~S~th--~~~~~--~---. ·

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The famous nylon fiber that not only
$1095 sq.yd. resists soiling but actualy repels dirt for
laaav maintenance and extra long life.
'completely Installed
tilgh lustre mult'itone styling comes
~.;,:.;..;..._;__ _ _'"lin todaya ·moat wanted earthtone.s and
Ina+••••' colorations.

1 976

completely Installed

1976

Short Shag

sags
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WASHER

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO-·~·

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709 First Ave;

:

.......•....... ,

Sale ssss

.

ALE
1
TO 2 OFF

388·8603

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.FITNESS.CENTER HEALnt SPA

417 s·econd Ave.

'

Open U~der New Management
DONNA-F.ISHER : MANAGER·--,wOMEN'S HOURS.

'

MEN'S HOURS .

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Gallipolis, Oh.

Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to 7:00
Sat. 1:00 to 5:~ .
· Mon •.fri. ,7:00 p.m. ·to 10:00 p.m.

Special Starting Jan. 4th
~
2-For-1 Special •

I

Phone 446 4101
. MILUR'S PITNESS QNTER

'

3 PC. PINE BEDROOM SUITE ... ............ '36900

00

. .SUITE..............'499 .
3 PC. MAPLE BEDROOM
3 PC. PINE HUTCH
,1300 .
MIRROR BEDROOM SUITE... ................ 89900
.
3 PC. TRADITIONAL
'1064 '79900
PECAN BEDROOM SUITE .................... ..
. 3 PC. COLONIAL B~DROOM SUITE..
. '2048
'153900
........

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TWIN SIZE.. ... ....•..' '89 SET
FULL SIZE ........... '99 SET
QUEEN SIZE ........ '199 SET

limited Quanti,

COLONIAL STYLES

SOFA
&amp;
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STARTING
AT

$399

2 PC: SOFA &amp;Pmc.~.~...............~~~ ....~459
2 PC. SOFA.&amp;F~l~ ...............?~.~ .. }469

W. Main St., Vinton, Oh .
James 0 , Bush, Mgr.

•

. PHONE 446-8390

e
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STOREWIDE

· - ~~~~~

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DRIVETHRU
CARRYOUT

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

..:~-&lt;

on ·

steel interior
Unique soft food ·
disposal system
Dual spray action for
cleaner dishes

.

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JANUARY ONLY SAVINGS

WINtER VALUES

LOGAN MONUr.,ENT CO., INC•
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Leo c. vaughan, Mgr.
Phone 992· 2588 · '

e

~ ·- -

Wile tor tree brochures s,howing memorials in full color
,.
with sizes and prices listed .

., t

$188
.

REGULAR '1150

.

. · .·~.

UNDERCOUNTER
DISHWASHER
Pd'rcel~in enam~l

--6:.... 6

:
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-CLEARANCE·

·a.

$188

.

MODERN · WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

,

~99

:

Gallipolis Ice Co.

Call Garland M. Davis
512 second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.

Ph . 446·8235
Home P~ . 388 -9691

•••

Monday thru Saturday -#
aA.M. til 11 P.M.
:

•

Frllt t rtllll Lifr lm11 ra nrC'

$2 28
$ 22
'-:c;:~;:=l~~======;=:~
,:. 1 9 7 6
•

HOURS

when they are?

H om~r Qff iu - ltodt hlor1d , lll i .,~il

2 Speeds
• 2 Cycies.:... normal &amp; gentle
• Si'lper Surgilator agitator

UNDER
COUNTER
DISHWASHER

ICE COLD BEER.
WINE &amp; P.OP

Will you be . ready

POMEROY- The Meigs County
: Pomona Gra nge will meet Friday at
:; the Rock Springs grange hall.
Hemlock Grange will be hosts ..

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How soon college!
Life insurance can help.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA·
an

n

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CHESTER - A special meeting o(
,· Shade River Lodsge 453 , F XAM ,
• schedul ed (DI' Friday night. Jan. 8,
' has been cancelled.

:

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Whirlpool

1129

-

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Family size oven
I nterlor oven light
•.a.rcodgrain decor

0

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HOUOAY POOLS INC.

177

Fri. Oct.1-st
HOTPOINT
TWO SPEED
AUTOMATIC
WASHER

ForYourWinterNeed

Old Fashion Savings for
Today's Lifestyles

:
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: : Announcements

• 15 Minute timer

01976

•
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Calt304-429-4788

MICROWAVE OVEN
•
•
•

PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM

.

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'I'RPPlln

Mrs. Kassell

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; :.. They are r~s iding in Akron .

329

0
Completely Installed
wool with Its low lustre and warm eartl}·
Sun. Nov. 14th
~-~-··_.tone colorations. 100% contlnuout~~ n"'"'l
TAPPAN
A thick low profile pattern reminiscent of

0

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RCA 19" XL1 00 1:. ------- ~ -~ ~ ,,
RCA
. COLOR
,,
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PORTABLE
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~~~=
WHOLESALE • RETAIL •
:
SWIMMING
•
.
:
POOLS·
•

•
POMEHOY - Lawrence R. and
• • Cora Lee of Route 4, Pomeroy, are
: : announcing the ma rriage or their
. ~ dau g hte r . Kathy Ann , to Jeffery
. · KasselI.-Akron.
· ~· The coupre were marri~tJ in an
- : open church ceremony al Trinity
· : ·cilurcil of God in Akron on Dec. 19.

RCA 19''XL100 COLOR PORTABLE

Tues. Dec. 21st

•• -

··

RCA extended life chassis
Automatic fine tuning
system
Viewer' con'trolled color
and lint ac:ijestments
Wood grained cabinetry

$188

A versatile tweed pattern made of tough
sq. yd.
durable 100% nylon face fibers - and
Completely Installed
completely Scotchguarded· for
In·
l\0'---~--- --~---1 creased resistance to soiling and wear.
The dense foam backing proVIdes extra
hisulatlon and comfort.

sunday, Februa.;;rv..;s.;.;,;th;....l..._

C

°

·1976

o1-976

Commercial Type
Cushion Back

marries .Kassell

SPECIAL . •
RC _, •. -,
RC . •,
100 :

.

$329

•1 Q95 sq.yd.. .

$595

•
•
•

Sun. Jan, 25th
'-~C;po-.m--·_.._ln_s_ta-lle_d_ _.... MAGIC ~HEF
COMPACT
Sunday, February 8th
MICROWAVE
OVEN
Nylon
0
TODAY
0

0

•'
; ' POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
: Cha rles Ne ece announce lhl'
: cnga ge m ~ nt and forth comin g
~ mal'fia~e of IIJeir daughte~, Deena
Louist'. Pomeroy. to Dav1d Cra1g
. Kennedy, son ·ol Mr. and M•·s. Ed·
•
• ward Kennedy, Pomeroy.
~ The bride-elect is a '1981 graduate
; of Meigs High School and is em·
,_ : ployed by The Farmer,s Bank . in
; Pomeroy. Her fian ce is also a 1981
' • graduate or Meigs High School an• '
· is employed by the Kroger Cu.
1 Pomeroy. He is presenlly attenjling
• Tri·County Joint Vocational School.
: Ncb'Onville, studying electricity.
: · The wooding will be an event of
·: Saturday, Jan. 23, at · the Silver
~ Memorial Freewill baptist Church in
· ' Kanauga. Mwlic will begin at 3 p.m.
• and the .service will start at 3:30
: p.m: Open church will be obsetved.
. , ~ reception will follow at the Kyger
&lt;;reek Club House.

0

. and Mrs.·- Reed

r'HIS

- $4~6
:--- --------t.______....;;...._;...
_ _.......

S
.._._·.;c;.om;,;,;.;;PI~et.;.;;;e.;,;.IY•In.s.ta.ne_
. d_ _.,
1 91
Plush

--

e

.
sq.yd. ·

..

RCA 25"XL100 CONTEMPORARY
COLOR CONSOLE

$496

$595 sq.yd.

Neece, Kennedy ·

.. -·.~Lee

0

Sun. Jan. 25th
RCA 25" XL1 00
COLOR
CONSOLE _
(ON LEGS)

Elegant traditional closed loop styling
'
from 100% -eontlnous
fibers which resist shedding. Thl
pattern comes In I! rich array of tone o,n
tone colorations.

bberback

~ Neece­

01976

MON·THUR

Completely Installed

: to Ernie Gl'iffin, son of Ruth Ann
; Cjriffin, Roulc I , Reedsville.
• , The open church wedding Will be
; all event or Jan. 9 al the Limestone
'. 1\'h·tllodist Chu•···h in Hock pori with a .
• rrccption to fo llowat the communily

l

475

F

12:30-6:30

$795 sq. yd.

: t~arria ~e of their daughter , J oyce,

SUNDAY·

CORf&gt;IN &amp; SNY[)f.R
. fURNITUR[ CO.

I

$498

ulptur$d
Ny1Qp .·

' : POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Carl
; Buchanan of Rockport, W. Va. arc
! ctnn ounc'in~ the approaching

. CARPETING, COLOR TVs,
and MAJOR APPLIANCES

.

19 7 6

0
sunday,

.

' '4 .

In 1976 America was celebrating its bicentennial and - ---....,...- - Hat field and McCoy had one store in Chesapeake,
0
0
Ohio. Our low overhead and volume buying enabled us
0
to offer the lowest prices in the area ori famous name Tues. Dec. 21st
color TVs; major appliances, a·nd carP,eting.
ZENITH EARLY AMEQIC~N ,
It's 1982 and prices on nearly everything have sky·
MEDITERRANEAN, OR
ZENITH 23"
rocketed, but Hatfield and McCoy now has 9 store
CONTEMPORARY CO.LOR
buying powe-r so we've been able to keep our prices low MEDITERRANEAN
CONSOLI;.
despite rlsi ng costs everywhere else. To m,ke tl1e po_int COLOR CONSOLE
· • Single knob lighted dial
electronic tuning
we went back to 1976 newsp,per ads we actually ran
•
Your
choice of three
and then reduced prices on 1982 merchandise until
be~utltul cabinet styles
they w'e re EQUAL TO OR LOWER THAN 1976
• Automatic frequency
BARGAINS. So-If turning back the clock on inflation
controls
makes sense to yo~-come see us today.
. .

Griffin

: :. Griffin, Buchanan

Middleoort- (;alhpolis, Ohio- &gt;' oi nl i'·leasa nl , ~ : "' ·' ·

'

'

. den , Plymille

•otn c ro y

NO

LAY~WAYS

1

SWIVEL ROCKERS ................... '169
FULL·&amp; QUEEN
·HIDE-A-BEDS ..
3 Pt TABLE GROUPS
MAPLE &amp; PINE
BROYHILL CLOSE-OUT SAVIN.GS'
UP TO '259
3 PC.' WOOD
. LIVING ROOM TABLES .

YOUR
CHOICE

MANY UNADVERTISED SPECIALS
'

20% TO 50%
. SAVINGS ·.
SAU .ENDS JANUARY 3ht '

COR~IN ~

SNY()f.R
fURNITURf. CO.

955 Slcond Ave •

.• 446-1171

· O.Uipolle, 0111o

�·•
Jan. 3, 1982

- M tddl &lt;: p'ort - 0 .llltpolo s, Ohto- f' 0 int f' le a sa nt, '/&gt;.' . Va .

, · omeroy - M oddl e p ort- 0,, 11-i f?Oios, _Ohio - P oint P leasant,

The Sunday Times-Sentinel_- f'a g e- t'I-S ·

I'

vo.

va.

Jan . J ,' 1982

At Pennyfare We Do ·The Work To Make
_Our ·Meats FRESHER For You!!
RETAILS EFFECnVE SUN., JAN. 3 THRU SAT., JAN. 9, 1 ...... .

we rtltrVt the nghtto ttmlt qu1ntt1.,s on an Items in this ad . None. solei to del~rs . Not resp~nsibte tor

.
WHY IS PENNY FARE GROUND BEEF "HOURS FRE~HER?" -

i . I or pictorial erron.

.
B
Weekly Bonus uys
'

YOU'LL SAVE EVEN
MORE WITH PENNYFARES

4-VARIETIES ·
14-oz.PKG.
Murray ·
Cookies

.

18-oz sen.
$299 GALLON JUG
Mazola Corn Oil . . . - AUSTIN'S

6-qe

2-VAR.• JUMBO ROLL
Scotowels ....... .

-

windshield
.Washer •..

LOWES

·Because at Pennyfare we're pa.ticular about the way we make 11. We call i1
"HOURS FRESHER" because at Pennyfare we grind our beef fresh in eacn of our
stores everyday. There Is no time wasted shipping it from state to state or s_
tore to
store.
Some supermarkets sell ground bee~ "chubs." .These "chubs" are packs of
ground beef prepared out of state -that are transported and warehoused for many
hours and even days before they reach a store's meat cases. · _
·
.•
At Pe~nyfare we beleve you deserve better than that and that's why we gnnd
our.b_eef right in ·our stores ev.eryday so it's fresher for you. When you see ·the
Orange and Red "HOURS FRESHER'·' seal on Pennyfare ground beef, you know it's
the freshest beef you can buy and you'll find -"HOURS FRESHER" ground beef llD!l
~hn~re. .
·
·
.

-sqe

. S:J4·
9 LUCKY LEAF
79C Kitty
"'
t
t
20·1b.
LI er .•
.

$13- 9
50·01.
Applesauce . . . . Jar

Bag

~====~

21b·: BAG
~
$139
- ·. Large Lima Beans . .
-

THOROFARE _ ~
20_-ct. $198
_
Trash Bags • .... Pkg. ., .

DEL MONTE
PINEAPPLE-PINK .
Grapefruit4 79e
Drink .•• ~~~z.

OUR FAVORITE
CUT
Green ~ 1&amp;-oz.SJBeans . ~ cans ,

CAMPFIRE BRAND
SKINLESS

RIGHT
SOLID • 2V.AR
9
2
Anti Perspirant . ~-~ L

to
¥

Cans

ctn.

to

Pkg.

_·

Sausage

79

,

24
69
99
79
25

25
3!!!
4
4
·5

ENGLISH CUT

"7" BONE ' •
$19 5
f; Chuck Roast. • . . .lb. _ BLADE cuT ·
s17 9
c Chuck Roast ••. ·.. lb. -

54
~:~~~.. . • lb~I u
83
LEAN AND TENDER FAMILY $249
5..gf; ROUND BONE
Shoulder SJ99 Cube Steaks. . PAK lb. -:$1 09
.R
t
BONELESS
- · oas • • • • lb. · 69f; LEAN
SBtewf_ Famnv SJ99
.. lb.·'1 I!

Short Ribs •.

- ee . .

.• BONUS BUY •

_----

.

--~ Ov___..
-

· 20·DZ.$ , ..

4

Loaves

!!

HOUSEHOLD/LAUNDRY
EASY oN • 22-oz. CAN
Speed Starch . . . . . .

g8

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

·'

~

FRANCO AMERICAN
J4.75-oz. CAN Spaghetti-D's

3

. "
6

..

GOLDEN DELIGHT
··
16.5·01.
Wafftes • . • . . . . Pku.

•
Dish
SJ!7
uGHT N'LIVEL y. _
Detergent • - _
Cottage
SJZ8
•
· Cheese24-oz.'ttn.
- P 1·oz.cAN
·

38

Cl~anser

RICH'S
Coffee1 ~.t
Rich ~i:.·~

'

TljDROFARE," 1-lb .Otrs.
C
Marganne .....•..
THOROFARE • CHILLED
.
64-az. $14_ 8
0range Ju1ce . . . Bal.

78
• 20-oz.
$19 9
89C CARNATION
Hot Cocoa M1x • . . . .
-:~KG:

THOROFARE
'Crin'kle Cuts . . . .~-~

57c
. .. . ..

REG.OR ELEC.PERK
C Hills Bros.
Coffee · ~-!~·

•

• SUPER BONUS BUY •
&amp;B • FROZEN 1-ez. CAll
AEDPACK • 6-oz. CAN
.
Tomato Paste ..•••

' I_ --- -· -- ---··

• BONI.IS BUY •
THOROFARE

l •e Cre·am
..,

· _ ..

.,,

·e

..

'

-

-Hallofn
Gal
e Ctn.

-

·

.souPs .

, -

.

.

.

BOT.
Bayer . .
•.
Aspirins •.-. • • 50,ct.

se

. , NOXZEMA 2.5-oz. JAR .
Skin cream ••...•.

NBE,ISqUICk
W • . . . . • • .20-oz
Box ·

"I

79C

·

88

THOROFARE
. $13. 3
C _
·a
s111.
Sug ~ . . . . . . • • B•u
-:-

r

78c_. ·

'lRAND • SMOKED _$12 9
Pol1sh Sa.usage . . . lb. _ -

THOROFARE

Z%

Mil II

0

•

•

,

. .
~

15 5-oz

79C

•

BA~UET•2;b.PKG.

.

d

•• ••

·

Pork &amp;16-oz.~ •

Beans can~·

5

t

WHITE
Seedless
Grapefruit ·

EXTRA FANCY • WASHINGTON
RED OR GOLDEN
Delicious Apples ·lor

. I)J) c
Sliced Beets . . . . . . .J \1

·

4·4c
6
8
c.. _

-

_THOROFARE • 4-oz.CAN ·
GLAD • LARGe 15-ct. BOX
$12 4 Mushrooms Pile.••, '""'' .
Garbage Bags •.•• ·• - TH.OROFARE • cRusHeD zo..z:
c
~
Pineapple •• 111 Julcl
JUMBOROLL
· 4&amp;-~
CAR CARE
Hi Dri Towels . . .-• .
. '
.
.
10-W-30 QUART CAN
THOROFARE • 20-oz.CAN·-~ lit
SU:ED DR CHUNK
.
"
THOR,QFARE • 48-ct. Pkg.
59 vaiVoliR~ .
C
Pineapple 11
Daytlm__e Diapers •. :. - · Motor 011. ....•_•.•
.

79

J..

~

·

59C

8 99C
FLAVORFUL .
39c
Avacados .....
each

•

.

.Russet Potatoes
· 5-lb. SJ
.

. Bag

'

e STOKELy. 16-oz.CAN .

2

..

~~·89-'

79

VAN CAMP ,

-

"FRESH ASH &amp; SEAFOOD"

•

49c

..., CAN~ED FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES

~

DAWNFJIES JrRODVCE

~

99A . ·

.

, ..

.

Zl

g.
c
7

Sliced Bologna •12Pk:~·
SLICED. SK~NNED &amp; DEVEINED
Beef L1ver .••... tb.

LARGE RED O,CEAN .
$ 79
Perch Fillets . • . . lb. -,
VANDEKAMP
FRESH
_ .
$221
1 ~·0Z $179
Fish
Fillets
.
.
.
Pku. ·
"Boston Pollock .•• lb. . \..

Ctn.

1ft

" ·

CORONET PAINTS
. Bathroom 8
•
. 4-Rol
T1ssue. • Pkg.

,,

-

,'~ WISHBO~E
•16-oz. BOT.
DELUXE

PI Fill' I

'4

$299

.QUAKER MAID • 32-oz.PKG. '$399
Beef Sandwich Steak
- ·

e-

CONDIMENTS/PICKLES/JELLIES
• 16-oz.
STOKELY ·
Italian SJ~ c~_sup •.••. 14-az. Bai.

•

err, e

.

$1.09

79

.

PREVIOUSLY FROZEN

-:-

FROZEN FOODS

Fried Chicken . . .

''OUR OWN CUT UP
TURKEY ,JA~TS"

Half
· Gallon
•

Sficecf Bacon . . • . .

SUPE~IOR

• BONUS BUY •

• LIMIT TWO PLEASE •

ROBIN HOOD .. Corn
$
Muffin ~ .6.74-oz. If
Mix. . . -~ Pkgs. .&amp;

09
18o ogna • • . • • . • . lb.

suPEIRimi BRAND • JuMBo RED

THOROFARE. sMOO\H ·18-az. $1 ~
French SJ
Peanut Butter. . J•r
D .
_
Dog Food can .. ,
THOROFARE. ~4-oz. JAR .
ressmg _
CRISP . .
Kosher DiU Spears . .
THoRoFARE • 24-oz.JAR
C Green Peppers •• lb.
__ .- ____: ~
• SUPER BONUS BUY •
.
No Garlic Spears ...
IDAHO BAKING

-·Ch'

. THoRoFARE
. ·
Tomato.1~.75-az.J 9 t A~ee
. $148
Soup
Sh
......
a-ez. . _ _ &amp;h:~-~t~0R~~. Chips.
Can
ampoO
•
01y ••• Bet.
.
. .

SJZ9

·VARIETIES
Vets

7

1~.

s·-~ 79
.
"HOURS FRESHE~" PORK
_ - couNTRY _sTY. LE

WHOLE
. $119
Turkey Breasts .. lb. ,
FRIGO • 4,oz.PKG.
59~ WHOLE
"Turkey Legs : • . lb.
String Cheese .....

----HE-A-LT_H_&amp;_B~EA-U~TY-.A-ID-8~ -----B-A-KI-NG-N~E=ED~S--~-

..

Deterge_nt.~ • •

..

FRIGO • 8-oz.PKG.
$119
- Mozzarella BaliS . • . -

10-lb.BAG
Kitty Litter. . . .. . . $1!.!
.
PURINA • CHICKEN
12·01 as- ~
Tender Vittles . . Pke. · ·

THANK-YOU • 21-oz. CAN

Ortlnee
Juiee
_
·
25C·
• LIMIT SIX PLEASE •

-

-

KEN·L·RATION·20 lb. BAG
BEEF AND LIVER
Tender S698
_hunks -

.

. • • • • • lb.

I

"HEART OF THE HAM"
Ham

FRIGO·• 8-liz.PKG.SHREDDED $13 9
· $3!! Pizza Cheese . . . . . . -

PET FOODS

·
$115
Orange Juice .. -1~~~1.
-

CHEF BOY -AR-D~E : 40-oz.CAN $15 9
Beef RaVIOli . . . • • •
_

LIQUID

Ajax

-

lb.

PKG .
. . $1 ~
R1c~~a
Cheese .•. , _
.

NEW YORK STYLE BONE-IN
.
Strip
$.., S9
Steaks • • lb. . , -

1ft~HOROFARE

AJAX • 22-oz.BOT.

.;iiitl

lb.

S1rlom Steak • • . . • lb.
.

5·1bs. or More

_Smaller Pkgs. . . .

$2 79 FULLY COOKED • E.Z. CARVE ·

s.-, !9 .FR~G0•15·0Z

Bo~ELE~s NEw YORK sHELL

B5 5

Pkg.

lb.

YORK SHELL
Sirloin
Steak .• • lb. ·. , .

COFFEE/TEA/BEVERAGES

ihii~iread 3
DAIRY

Pak

s•
59
A

THOROFARE "DELUXE" BEEF
U.S.D.A. CHOICI!

THOROFA~E

7.25-oz. PKG.
f; 1oz.PKG.
c 1-lb.CAN
Macaroni &amp;Cheese
Sloppy Joe Mix
Fruit Mix .. . . . .
1-oz.PKG.LEMON _·
c
_ 12"xso· ROLL
· Air Freshener . . .
GALLo~ JuG
$
Aluminum Foil ..
12-oz. PKG.
.•
f; Anti-freeze . . . .
1OO·It. ROLL .
Hot Cocoa MIX . .
. 4-oz.CAN PIE.CES &amp; STE.MS
a· ' Waxed Paper . .
,.oz. BOT.
f; Mushrooms . . .
24-oz. PKG. .
Parsley Flakes. .
Duolex Creams
f; 1_
1-oz. CAN
·
f; 10-oz.PKG.WHE~T
1.25-oz.PKG.
· laco Seasoning ·- . Mandarin Oranges
Snack Crackers

...

1-lb.
Roll

_~

~•f

12·0Z.

"HOURS FRESHER"PORK LOIN HALF
$14 9 Por·k
. _:
$12 9
S
R1b
lb. • Roast •• lb.
·
· pare. s · · · · · · lb. -:- Loin
SJ4
~;
"HOURS FRESHER" PORK CENTE8 CUT
9
,~~NTERcuT~
_ , 189 Pork
. Roast •• lb.
- ·-. ·:
HICKORY SMOKED
SLICED
l'iam Slices ..•..• lb. . - Loin
. s· J79 "HOURS FRESHER" PORK . $159 : .
p k Ch
Vlrltty
.
Slab
$~ zq 8;~R;~:~h~eiger .. lb._,_s gc Roast •• lb.
or
ops .. Plk lb. - :
£
PESCHKE • REG.,THICK OR GARLIC · '
Bacon
•· .
$
SMITHFIELD•1 -Ib.PKG.
$159
99~

BALLARD FARMS FRESH
COUNTRY ROLL

1

EVERYDAy LOW PRICED GENERICS

HORMEL
.
. Pizza Pepperom ..
VICTORY BRAND • FRESH HOT
· · Country Sausage

'

~

2

Ground

·wieners

~UARD

5'9

"HOURS FRESHER" BEEF

0

~
.
DEL MONTE • CUT
MEAo,owloeALE
$~ LIGHT~· L~VELySMALL cuRD 12_,z_ 6
.-9
c
,
.
.
,r~o~o;~RE "Deluxe" BEEF • u.s.o.A. cHoicE $
a-o1.
67C
P
Green Beans 2
Up
~ 29 ·oz. '- Cottage Cheese
"EW YORK WHOLE BONE·IN
-Plums ., cans
KEEBLER
_S trip Loins lb.
BONDWARE • WHITE
Zes~a
79e
.17 to 20-lb. Avg.
raper . 100·CI88e MccoRMICK
Black Pepper ... c::· 59 "' Saltmes =~~z.
Plates ••
"Deluxe" BEEF • U.S.D:A. CHOICE

15.251o 15.5-oz.CAN
. • Tid BHs
Monte
Del
• Crushed
•
. • Sliced
Pme~pple . . . . • chunk ·

•

!9

TASTY _
Anjou Pears . . . . lb,

T~~gerines

49c

10~ 8gc

SOLID GREEN
·Cucumbers .

3

'

$9 :

tor

&amp; . :

P.O.V.• 5-lb.BAG
' $259·
Sunflower Seed . . -

SALAD SIZE •RED RIPE ..
·Tomatoes
lb;

.) ·qe·

�(

.

P~ge- B -6- The surid,,y Times -S entinel

Jan . '!, 1982.

,

. ·--·······-··'"-)

•' om c roy -M iddleport

G~llipolis. Ohio

f' oint Pleasant, W. Va .

Jan . 3, 1982

WINT:ER

, •om c roy - Middl e port - Galllpoli •. Ohoo- ·f' oint f' lcas.lnl, VI- ,

·

groomsman. They w:ore gray
tuxedos.apd iden.ticallli&gt;utonniere.
. Ushers were Geoff Kunselman
and Mark. Kunselman •. both of
Highland Heights, Ky .- ,. Glen Ray
PIWl)ber, Greenup, Ky., · Charles
Stearns, Point Pleasant, Gary
llepell 3nd ~d llysell, both of
Rutland, Ohio, James Gray, Huntingllln, and Doug Hilton, Fort
Thomas, Ky.
The bride chose as ringbearers,
. Ryan Gould and Mike Menich of
Brooksville, Pa. Taper lighters were
Renee marsh and Rhonda March of
Highland Heights. Ky. _
The organist was David Withrow.
Soloists were Terri Willoughby .of
Silver Grove, Ky., and George Shonts of Coal Center, Pa.

I

.
:···----···· ...... .... ...

SPRING MAl[} "FRESH DAISY"
- .SAVE ON
.
THESE EASY CARE PERCALE SHEETS
.
. - 7.99
Reg
. fl at or f'tt
Tw1n
1 ed'.... ... ~ ............
·•••••••••••••
.

~

"'-

.
Reg.
········~- ·········9.99

...

~

'

.·

"

.;.

'·

.

749 .

Bessie M. Hicks Dec. 31, 1931 in
Milton, W.Va.
They are the pa1·ents of Troy N.,

Mr. and Mrs. Killin,gs&gt;worth

Stock Up on Spring Maid's
Wondercale® · Polyester and
Cotton Percale Sheet
.
·
.
/
Reg. 8.50
499
Twm Flat or F1tted ........................................ .

SAVE gso
~~~~PREAD ..... ,~:L~~..............~~~. 32 50
TWIN SPREAD ......... Reg. 31... ... :........
. QUEEN SPREAD ....... Reg. 56................
.KING. SPREAD •• ~ ...... Jteg. 67 ...·............

99

'

Choose from matchin2 spreads, draperies,
towels and sheets - All at bi&amp; savings

23.00
42.00
50.00

.

Reg. 10.50

.

Full Flat or F1tted ..... ... ......... ......... ...............
Queen Flat or Fitted

949 . King Flat or Fitted

Standard Pillowcases

499

· Reg. 15.00

· ·

Reg. 8.00 pr.

]49·
1299.

Reg. 8.50

King Pillow Cases
. Reg. 8.50 pr.

Solid Color Thermal
Blankets·

•

"Key largo" Sheet Sets

Reg·. 9.99

16.00

TWIN, Reg. $21 set : .. : . : .... .. . ...
.. FULL, Reg. $32 set .. . . . . - . · · · · · -·· ·

72x90

2(0Q

. BATH,

WASH CLOTH, Reg . 2.50 . .. . ... .. .

3.99

]99

· POLYESTER

.Sed Pillows

2 999
_ For

I

Bath Towel .............................~:.~:.~~.~ 6.99
Hand Towel .............................~.e.~:?.·:~ 3.99
Wash Cloth ......... :..·................ ~:.~:~:~." f.59

REVERSIBlE
CHATHAM
SCATTER RUGS MATTRESS PADS
TWIN
24l(36
_119 .
999
Reg . 1.59
REg.
.

J2- ~9

24XA.5
Reg. 1.99

FULL
Reg. 15.99

:} 49

QUILTED
PILLOW
.
COVERS ~ 199

QUEEN
Reg. 21.99

'

,_..

Reg. 2M

,.

'

KING

.

~eg. 2-4.99

1199

1649

1899

... SWEET DREAM
LUXURY SATIN

PILLOW CASE STANDARD
Reg. 2:50

,1

2

For

•

69~

1" INCH ·
MINI SLAT
VENETIAN
BliNDS
23," ~ 26" -64"
Reg. 36 . ~
28"·29" 30x64
Reg. 39.99

KING
Reg. 3.50

WINTER CLEARANCE

p.m.
Married on Dec. 15,. 1956 at the
Christian Church in Athens by the
Rev. Joe ·&lt;&gt;. Maffei. they are the
Jlllrents of two children, Pamela
Massie, Gallipolis. and Bill Kautz.
Pomeroy. and 0nc grandchild, Ja~on
Massie.
·
They operate a farm and Agri Ser-

•

COATS,
_
Long &amp;·Short ....... ~···· SAVE 25% to 50%

vice .
Friends and relatives are cordially invited to attend the
celebration. The couple requests
that ~ifts be omitted.

ZIPLINERS, ALL WEATHER, DoWN, WOOL .PWSH, QUILTED, ETC.

BETTER SPORTSWEAR,
Junior &amp; Missy....................... SAVE 25%

STATE FARM

DRESSES, Long &amp; Short ........ SAV~ 25%
;

ON

32"·33·34·35·36· x64
Reg . 44.99

THE CHURCH • GOD'S
LIGHTHOUSE
•

HATS, SCARVES, GLOVES, SUPPERS, SLEEPWEAR, BLOUSES

By William B. K·ughn'

so does th e church ex ist tor th e si'l kc of th e worl d. She ha s a··gr cAt
mi ssion, and th e en tire world is tn e sen of li fe upon w hic n sh e sheds her
l ig ht so as to lead soul s to the r ea lm of sa f e ly .~ S h e mu st l abor ever y
minute. ne"'e r a llowing her light to grow di m , but brig hter
w ith each P.ass ing mom el"'f . Eac h m em ber ot the c hur~ h is a p art of
this lighth~ se . It is upon eac h ind ividual discip le Chr is t r elies in
r eflec tin q (by the way of i nftucn cei t he true l ight . Th er efo re . we, as
Chri st ians. mu s t ~
Shine through union with Chri st : Chri st iS the tru e l ig ht of tnc
-World (Jno. 8 : 12 ). and is fa r b r ig hter t han any Hqht ex istin g tod ay,
ban ishing darkness and making other l ights appea r as thr ough they
w er e not shin i nQ . Thi s tru e li ght does not ori ginate with in us,·nci th er is
it qc ner ated by our own power s of m ot iv at ion, bu t it shines by r efl ec
t ion s (Eph . 5 ·8 ; .Ph il. ? · 15} . Th£&gt; ch urch w i ll en l iq hten the m or al
d ark n e s~... of the world , mdkc our path wr~y clearer ; p r ovide us w ith
c lear er l)'i'sion ; ana c rown oi •r o;, nul w i th the best of spi r i t ua l hea lth
Shine in union with tl'le church: Here Is th e position of the ones
reflecting the true light. ." A ci ty that is se t o n .=~ hi ll c annot be hid'"
( Mtt . 5 : 14 ) . T he -c hurch, made up of Chri st 's diSCIPl es, m .'I Y ver y w el l
be compared to thi:;; city on a hill. and her influence c~ nnot be hid or..
ignored in the world . H er light shines for the benefit 9f a ll i n th e c hurch!
.
and the community .
Shine in good works: Th e rad iance of this light str ea m s out from
the ljghthouse by m ean s of good wor k.s . The wo r ld m a y no t have t.oo
.9reat a concern for our words. but it is very much concerned about our
works. It is keen to di scern inconsistencies in the liv-es of Christi ans .
The antidote tor Inconsi stent living is to have the word w r itten in our
nearts. making the ·gospel (good new s) we preach, an d i n whi c h we
believe, a reality in our . lives by w ork s ~O f r ig hteou sness, justi ce.
bP.net iccnce. and consistency . For our conduct to reach a bcncr way to
men, it 'must be seen! M en cannot see our fi ne ideas, nob le purposes,
nor our holy aspi rat ions as long as they ex ist i'n word, but w hen c lothed
w ith woFks. they becom e vi sible ~ they shine ! Our thoughts about
Ct~rist , our tait.hln Him , and tenderness of heart toward H i m r:~r e as the
Oil in the lighthouse lamp. If th er e is no work , ther e is no l ight, "A nd
shipwreck sw ill not be prevented . We cannol prevent mor a l wrecks by
being overly anxious, devis ing way s, ar\d ver doi ng not hing . Bv
allowing the word of GOd dweflln 'l! so that we may car!ry out its good
works . the light will not go out!
Why not begin your new vear off by heeding the. l ight that shines
from · GOd' S lignthouse. the church , at .the Chapel H i ll Church of
Christ? A warm and fr iendly wel come awa its you, and an oppor f lln ity
to stud-; God' s word in its puri ty and simplic ity
·For Free Bible Corre$pondence: Cours·e Wr i te.,. .

Standard - Queen
or King

"CORONATION"'
SOLID CO~OR 100% COMBED COTION .

CANNON WASH .CLD-TthSALE

Second AW!nU~

!'OMEROY-Dale and Joann Battrell Kautz will obst!rve their 251h
wedding annjversary"With an open
reception on Jan. 10 at the Royal
Oak Park recreation building, 3 to 5

&gt;i~t'.1&amp;fl &lt;elruMit

of &lt;e~l

Bull'illle' Ro«&lt; ,; P.O. Boo 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Wednnd•y

. Crown Craft "Antoinette"
Slightly lrreg.
Values to64.95

full

r .

26

00 ·

E¥Miq
'

.....

. " Mn&amp;•,.lrtm
theli ......

•

35

- --··

7:"'

TWIN:l295
SIZE

Queen

Sprint valley Piau

A s the lig hthouse C)( ists f or the good of the sea· vo y agi ng v eSS('IS,

Bl_ue, Green, Brown, Pink
13nd Beige

.

Reach -2 Sth ~Be~Ipre~High~sch~ooi.p;;;lilriij~~~~~~~=~

Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N. Mi199ied
Attorneys-At-Law .
88 E. Broad St ..
Columbus, OH. 43215

..

-~~~~

Bath Towel .... :.......................~.~~:?:?.~. 1.99
Hand Towel. ..........................~.~~: .1:?.~ .. 1.49 .
Wash Cloth .............................~.~~::~·.~~ .. ggt

Pkg.

CALL (614) 992 21 04
•
•
Or (304)-675-1244

1-221-5379

..

100% DACRON

"APPLAUSE"
SO.LID AND STRIPED TERRY

Herrih&amp;bone AD-Pur~ Towels
-1139
Reg . 1. 99 Pkg. of 3

OHice Hours by Appolntme.n t Only

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

'
Blue. Beige, Raspberry, Yellow
·. and other Colors

.79

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

SAVE 20%

Bath Towel ...........................~~.~~~:??.... 2.99
Hand Towel. ......................... ~:~.-.~:~?. :. 1.99
Wash Cloth ............... ~ ...........~~-~~~.- ~~.... 1.19

flteg. l.OG-1 .25

VETERANS -MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

No fee for lnf~atlori:

.

"SANTA CRUZ"
BORDERED VELOUR TOWEL

•

1956, in South Webster, Ohio, by Rev.
David Bates. Mrs. Fisher is the former Peggy Hazlett, of Teen's Run
Road.
·
.
They are the parent' of Mrs . Kennelh Davis (Sharon) of Little
Hocking, Debbie, a second-year
student at . Hocking Technical
College, and Dwayne, a junior at

(Wage Earner Plan)

. 72X90

CANNON®TOWEL SALE ,

UITLE HOCKING - Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Fisher of• Route 2, Little
Hocking: were honored by their
children Dec. 23 with a celebration
of their 25th wed\ling anniversary. A
dinner ' was held at East Winds.
res!Burant in Marietta and with a
cake attheir residence.
The couple was married Dec. 23,

BANKRUPTCY/CHAPnR 13

Printed Polyester
and Acrylic

1.79

The couple lives'and works their

!ann in GalUs Couniy.

Honored for 25th year

.

.

Reg. 9.99

Assorted
•
Kitchen
Towels··

and Mrs. Wheeler -

~

Reg. $9.99
72x90

R~~;99~~g~". ~OWel~. : ..\.99

HAND,. Reg . 5.50 ....... .. : . · · · · ..

POINT PLEASANT - Wedding hat to create a fuller effect. The
vows were exchanged at the First gown was made by the bride.'s
Church of the Nazarene, Newport. mother. The bride carried a waist to
Ky: on Aug. 22 by Amy Elaine Kun- knee length bouquet of wh.ite car·
selman, Highland Heights, Ky., and . ~lions with baby's breath and
John Mark Killingsworth, Point gj\enery.
Pleasant.
.
The groom chose a gray tuxedo
The double-ring ceremony was with a dark g~y jackeL. pin-striped
performed by Rev. Daniel Kun- pants and a white sweetheart rose
selman and Rev. Geoff Kunselman. . boutonniere.
The mother of the bride chose a
The bride is the daughter of Rev.
and Mrs.· Daniel Kunselman of green floor-length" go\vn with matHighland Heights. ~Y. The groom is ching accessories. The mother of the
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel groom wore a peach noor-Jength
gown with matchi!lg ·accessories.
Killingsworth of Point Pleasant.
The bride was given in ma&lt;riage Eath wore a corsage of white car·
l&gt;y her parents ·and escorted ·to the nations.
altar-by her father .
Best man was Daniel Killingswor·
The bPide's gown was made of lh; father of the groom. Maid of
white bridal satin with appliques honor was Marlene Leslie of Califo&lt;·
from the back of the gathered waist
nia, Pa.
to the end of the lace border. The apBridesmaids were Pamela Rose;
pliques were on the· high waisted Highland Heights, Ky., . Karen
. front in a design to meet the back on
Dillon, Brownsville, Pa., Romona
the bottom edges and sides of the
Melvin, Wurtland, Ky., Deana Plwn·
o;kirt. · A lace bodice with full
ber, Greenup, Ky., Lisa Alleh.
Dayton, Ohio, Tracie Willoughby,
gathered sleeves and fingertip cuffs
were covere&lt;! with pearls. The Sliver Grove, Ky., and Lisa Hacker,
Silver Grove, Ky. The bridesmaids
Queen Arin neckline was trimmed
with lace 'as was the top of the gown. ·wore . noor·length gowns of blueThe gown also buttoned from the
green polyester with !Bffe!B linings
and chiffon jackets. Each carried a
back with satin covered buttonil. All
of this was to~ With a full-length
bouquet of flowers . Each bridesveil which was brought up. over the
maid was · accompanied by a

Solid Color Polyester
and Acrylic

31.00
.. .... . . . . . ... . . 38.00

QUEEN, Reg $41 set . . · · ·- · · · · · · ·
,.-KING, Reg . $51 set

'

JOHN A WADE .M D IN.C

11
King flat or fitted ...................f8~29 ............. 1399
Standard Pillow Cases ............ f~· ............. 599
.. King Pillow Cases .................... ;.:,;i·........... .. 699

Spring Maid ·"Key largo" Coordinates

~' Because,"

_...
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Perry San Diego, Calif., Joyce Ann, Colwn0. Wheeler of Route 2. Bidwell, bus, and th~ late Leslie Vaughn-·1-r - - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . t , .
marked their fiftieth wedding an· Wheeler. Mr. and Mrs. \Vheeler
nivet'Sary Dec. 31. ·
· have five grandchlldren and seven
• .
'
•
.,
·•
W]leeler married the fom\er great-grandci:Jildren.

·,~ ' ·.

'.

.

,'_

·············

.

"Sunrise, Sunset," "Whither 'Thou
Goest," "My World," " If," " Wedding Prayer" and as Terri sang
" One .Hand, One Heart" the bride
and groom lit the candle and then
kneeled and recei~ed communion.
As they knelt, George Shoots sang
"The'!.ord's Prayer."
As tlje bride entered the sanctuary, she presented her mother
with a long-stemmed rose and as
they departed she presented the
groom's mother with a longstenuned rose.
A re&lt;;eption was held in social
roomsi!if the church and the couple
received many gifts.
After a week's honeymoon to
Jamaica, the couple are now
residing in Huntington.

Wheelers·observe 50th

Queen flat or fitted .. ............ ~e~ ...........

' ...,_
....
..

,Selections included

~

Fu II flat or fitted

r h e~ undil y 'f i m cs; ~c.n ton e I- Pa q e- B· 1

"Kunselman. ~nd Killingsworth marry

·.
~

V~ .

O.it\1-WJ.H

00

Shams
~

'

]49

ll : SSAM

p~ne

446·0"

Like a good neighbor,
&amp;ate Fann is there.

L

ALL SALES FINAL

-_--·etc. o

Sltte Ft~M tJ!WfiiQ ~in
IbM Dflitn : ltloll!u'lfllft, llhnois

-·

'

RUTLAND fURNITURE CO.'s

Pre-lnvento·
r
y
.
.

'

.

."

.

Cl.eara~ce

Safe ·

.,
'

HAS· BEEN 'EXTENDED
-Buy Now THROUGH
For Spring,
-

·•

.

JANUARY .10, 1982

and Save Hundreds of Dollars

SAVE UP TO 50% OFF.STOREWIDE
.

-.
* CURIO CA_.NnS
* COFFEE &amp; END TABLES
* BEAN BAG CHAIRS ... A,LL AF'PLIANCES * DESKS * _ROCKERS
· * GUN CABIN OS * LIVING ROQM SUITES .
'

*BROYHILL ROCKERS
...

.

.

·RUTLAND FUR.NITURE CO.
, RUTLAND, OHIO

.
'
"
"Drive A Little; and Save A Lot"
·• ..... The Grate Boys for! Some Great Buys"

'

�,
P~ge- B - 8 --,- The

Sunday Times-Sentine l

Jan. 3, 1982

f· omerov- Moddleport -'- G.allipoli s, Ohoo- f'oint f'lea s;ni ,W . va .

·'

Coming Evten ts

Sunday
• Ralph Work·
BLADEN - R..,.
man will speak at the 11 a.m. and
7p.m. Sunday services at Mounty
Zion Baptist Church, five miles
soutli of Bladen on Olde State .
Routd.

GALUPOUS - PemJiroke
Club will meet at8 p.m. Tui!sday
with Mrs. Jack Knight.

POMEROY CHAPTER 80 will
confer the mark master and past
master degrees, 7:30 p.m. Monday attemple. .

POMEROY - Pomeroy Cha!&gt;'
ter 186, Order of the Eastern Star
will meet Tuesday at 7:45 p.m:
Officers arc to wear their chapter
dresses.

Monday , '
BIDWELJ....PORTER PTO will
meet in the school gym at 7:30
,&gt;.m. Monday for a business
meeting. P- C. Strutters Baton
Gro~p will perlonn.

-

POMEROY - Elaine Keith,
area president .of the Southeast
Ohio Women's Aglow, wili be the
speaker at the Jan . 14 meeting of ·
the Pomeroy Women's Aglow
Fellowship to be held at the ,

~Riverby

Calendar

Meig~Jnn .

@b
GALLIPOLIS - Exhibit for the
month at January for the French Art
Colony is 32 pieces of art by Patricia
Reynolds Reed, LeSage, W.Va. Airbrush incorporating a variety of inks
and acrylics, as well as · prisrna
colors, pastels, oil sticks, etc.
Gallery hours: Tuesday and Thursday 10 li.m.-3 p.m.; Saturday and
Sunday 1·5 p.m.
Jan. 2- Riverby Galleries
reopened.
Jan. '4-Deadline to register for
the. dance classes ·taught by Cindy
Nau, available for both children and
adults. Cali Judi Shets at 446-7865 to
indicate interest' in registering for
the 10 week courses.
Jan. 5- F.A.C. Interdepartmental
Meeting.
Jan. 9-Beginning of !().week cour·
ses for children in pre-school dance,
children's ballet and modern dance,
taught each Saturday afternoon by
Cindf' Nau. Call 446-7865 1&lt;1 prerel!!ster, no later than Jan. 4.
Jan. 11- Adult classes in dance,
- taught 'each Monday evening for 10
weeks by Cindy Nau. Contact Judi
Sheets at «6-7865 to pre-register, no
later than Jan. 4.

1 ONLY

Mrs. Keith, who teaches in
Aglow Chapters, c.hurches, con·
ferences and at retreats, marks
her messages about Christ with
her own personal experiences
and much humor.
The public is invited to attend
the meeting with doors to open
foi' a pre-dinner feiiowship hour
at6 p.m. Dinner wiii be served at
7 p.m. and Mrs. Keith 'will sp..ak
at8p.m.
Reservations are to be made
before Jan. 12 with Sarah Win·
ters, 44&amp;-7444; Gloria Johnson,
742·2442; Joyce Hoback, 949-2325;
or Billie J. Dawson, 773-9123:Women's Aglow Fellowship is
an international non-profit

SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (AP)

.

5 ONLY 40 INCH

SELF CLEAN OVENS

water &amp; ice i'n door . Almond

·

S\400

HOTPOINT CHEST FREEZERS
2 ONLY 20 Cu .

• Harves1 Only .

Reg . $689 .95

•

SALE ,

Harvest

. of Words Banished from the Queen's
English; the Unicorn Hunters or·
dered Secreiary of S~te Alexander
M. ijaig Jr. to "speak only classical
Latin (or a probationary periOd of

"revenue enhancement" have been
banished from the English language
by ord_er of the Unicom Hunters.
The Lake Superior State CoUege six months."
group, which annually bans words
" Haig's misuse and abuse of the
and phras"" for overuse, misuse or language . is chronic, • perhaps
general uselessness, h&lt;sued this irreversable," said Peter Thomas,
year's banishments· Friday after . senior herald of the Unicorn Hunreceiving 2,000 nominating letters ters. "There seemed a period when
from as far away as Paris and he might have been in remission, but
Tokyo, according to archivist W.T. he has now broken out again. Even a
simpie 'getting old' becomes
Rabe.
In its New Year's Dishono'ur List . 'maturalion' ·inHaig language."

n. REFRIGERATOR

color . Frost Free.

fellowship promoting the whole :
gospel of Jesus Christ to women
of ali denominations.

Unicorn hunters annotince banishments ·
- The phrases ''first time ever" and

500

1 only 40 in. harvest Range
2 only 40 in. white Range
1 only 40 in. almond Range

?50

'450

. S62U5
•'

'475

SALE

HOTPOINT DISHWASHERS
·PORTABLE

KYGER CREJ;:K B·•nd
Boosters will rrleet at 7: 30 p.m.
.Tu·esday, in the band room.
GALUPoUS - The J;:nglish
Club's mon\hly meeting will be
held Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Keith Suiter, 661 Second Ave., at
2:30p.m. The program will ·be by
Florence Wickline. -

GALUPOLIS - Activities for the
week of Jan. 4-a, 1$82 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at 220
Jackspn Pike are as follows :
Monday, Jan. 4 - -Chorus, 1·3 p.m.
. Tuesday, Jan. 5 - S.T.O.P. Class,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11 :15
a.m.; Bible Study, l·2 p.m.; Blood
Pressure C~eck , 1:15-1:45 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan. 6- Vinto.1 Bible
Study, 1 p.m.; Crown ' City Mobile
Unit, I p.m.; American Literature
Class, I p.m.; Card Games,I·3p.m.
Thursday, Jan. 7 - Quilting and
Visiting, 9 a.m.·3 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 8 - Advisory Coun' cil,l p.m.; Art 'Ciass,1·3 p.m.; Craft
- Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7
p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following·menus:
Monday - Sausage patties, parsley potatoes, sauerkraut/caraway
seed, bread, butter, bilnanas, milk.
Tuesday - Chicken, gravy,
dressing, winter squash, cranberry
fruit gelatin, roll, butter, fresh fruit,
milk.
Wednesctay - Johnny Mar·
zettVcheese, broccoli, pinea-pple
sarru
· llkad., Italian bread, butter, tapioca,
Thursday -

~ AIGNER

1· .,

&lt;t

t.·_·

~

.

1

Sundan t·•

SUNDAY
THRU
TUESDAY

'

CLEARANCE
SALE
20% TO 50%
OFF
WOMEN'S .
AND

Reg . S679 .95

SALE

•550

1 Only 17.7 cu; ft. While
Left Hand Door.

INCH RANGES
2 only white
1 only &lt;J'!Ocado

REFRIGERATORS

'550
It:
REFRIGERATOR

Defrost 11.8 cu.

Less Factory

Reg. S49.9.95

SALE

SALE

_...._

1.38
1.00

Rebate

38

RANGES

30

CYCLE DEFROST
REFRIGERATOR

S579.95

Reg . SS29.95

•360

Self Cleaning
1 Only Avocado
1 Only White

c :. -o·: Of ·AA''
oo t terro~ So" "
=~:::;:__ _ (412)
cell

Table Model
3 ONLY
.
. SS40

'415

SYLVANIA CONSOLE .
Si'lle Prices Start At

l.U FOC:IOty

:r.':,. 2,09

leba!•

3.12
=-r·~ 3.63
l'f.~.
,5.16
, ....,,,...
... _,..,.._

•• 1)01.

YINI Nil CQ I!
Afte r ~oe iGfY.

e
\

34~

Gl Q55 WHiff

""·· . .- ~~ ...·-· .. .. ~ ..

$~ '

~
Can

(407)

Our Roo 1

88$

(408)

II mart· Spray lnom•t
tn te1101 te .. te rro r u 'JC tn

.....

Whr te and colors
~.

Save

Save On Tasty
Purina 100 Catfood
Choice · ol

k.ilty '5 favorite l iver.

beeL c h ic k e n or turk e y . &amp;1/J 01

1 37
•

PllpflathW
Tw•n pac k g tve s

( 411)

l o reli ab le 1101he s
FOf

0 11

Fl•pF IO$f1

type cameros

6.80 ' (410)
l(oMk' '111·10'

lnttaf.l Pllm
rmprolfetJ 101 lo, ler
aeveiOOII"oQ 10 col·
8KPmuf e~

Our Reg,
Oyr Reg . 1Q.97

9.97
Fire Exllntiuisher

Multipurpose flgnts
llll tvpes of fires with

a mounting bracket;

1 Only Copper

· 30 INCH RANGE

HEATERS IN
NOT INCLUDED·IN
I

1 Moo

. ,

· Sa!

lhocb

1 . 1

30 INCH RANGE

··- -

'DOUBLE OVEN RANGES
1 Only While .
1, Only Avo,ad?
Reg. 51050

SALE

1 Only Harvest

Reg . SS4US

'..

SALE·

'425

Plallorm.Rocker.s
Starlal

Recliners start et
Swivel Rocktn at

.R. ~~~:~:1ecllners

ALLISON ELECTRIC

seo.oo
S10fi.OO
S100.00

sm.oo

quarterbacks in this league, but this guy has
everything - experience, the ann, leadershl'p - he's
not lacking In any department.
"If. we're going to win, we have to pressure hlm.
Sometil nes, pressure is enough, but sacks are better."
The two running backs who will l)e spotlighted are
Joe Cribbs of Buffalo
and Pete Johnson
of Cincinnati
.
.
-·'
runners with vastly different styles. 'CribbS' forte is
outrunning defensive backs; Johnson, at 249 pounds
likes to run over thenl.
'
"He f11!18, he catches passes, he does all the 111lngs
that good backs do," Knox said of Cribbs.
"He's game-breaker," Gregg said. "He has speed.
and a great touch on (receiving) the ball.
Cribbs ran for 1,099 yards in the regular season.
Johnson had 1,077 yards . ~ The Bengals .have reached the playoffs three
·previous times since joining the NFL in 1988, losing to
Baltimore in 1970, Mlam.i in 1973 and Oakland in 1975.
But Cincinnati has a 5-4 eiige over Bqffalo in their nin~
game series, including a 27-24 victory in overtime last
September.
-'
Buifalo has reached· the playoffs · seven times, including winning the American Football League cham·
pionshlp in 1964 and 1985. But the Bills have been shut
out in three AFC tries and have been erratic this
-season, losing..five and winning three on the road and
having to rallY at the end of the season to wih four .
sll:aight to make the playoffs.
'

a

•

lhefr last prildice session Saturday In cbicinnalf
before today's AFC playoH game with the ,Buffalo
BIDs. Anderson Ia the top pa1 ser In the NFL this
season. (AP Laserphoto).
· -

'

CINCINNATI (AP) __: The Cin·
.cinnati Bengals, · like the Dallas
.Cowboys and the Pittsburgh
Steele.rs, were built on draft cho~es
- most of them the result ·of trades
of popular players. ·
All of the team's 22 staf\ers, who
face the Buffalo Bills in an
American Conference playoff gaine
this afternoon, were acquired as
draft choices. Some of those draft
' choices came as the .result of trades.
Although some of the trades were
unpopular with fans, gone are Bill
. Bergey, Coy Bacon, Lemar Parrish,
·.Sher;man White and Stan Walters.
As a result of the draft choices won
by the . Bengais in .the trades, Cin- ·
cirmati now has Eddie Edwards,
Ross Browner, Wilson Whitley .on
· the defensive line; linebackers Gary
Burley, Bo Harris; defensive back
Ray Griffin; offensive linemen
Glenn Bujnoch and Dave Lapham ;

4

•

.

running ba~k Charles Alexander and
tight'end Don Bass, the leadlDg pass
rece;verthisyear.
The Beng@ls traded Bacon and
Parrish to the Washington Redsklns
for a first-round draft choice in 1979
- AleJO:ander.
"The only reason we aren't considered traders - perhaps we're
considered traitors - ill because we
traded players like Parrish and
Bergey and didn't get player right
away," said Mike Brown, assistant
general manager.
"As a rule, we haven't traded for
players. I'm not going to argue that
it's the best philosoph necessarily.
If the right situation . veloped, we
would try to trade r a player.
There was a player i our dlvison
(Central ) that we tri ' to get this
year, but he went to an
team
because .the team that had him
didn't want to trade within the

a

division. It was Rob Carpenter,"
traded by the Houston Oilers to the
New York Giants, said Brown.
"For lhe most part, though, we
prefer to raise our own. We feel
there's li big advantage lf a _player.fs
yours from the beginning. The
feeling is that there's a deep loyalty
when a player is with one team,"
snidBrown.
" If a player isn't happy here, you
can't handle him. There have been
times when we have opted to·trade a
player in that situation," Brown
said.
" We were criticized highly for
trading Bergey but now we have
Browner, WhiUey11nd Ray Griffin to
show for it," Brown said.
Edwards was drafted before
Whitley in 1977, when Cincinnati had
two first-round picks. The selectlnn
was secured in the 1976 trade for
Shennan White.

Defense ~atne of the game

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KEEPING SHARP - Clndnnalf Bengals quar·
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light end M. L~ Harris as the Bengals went through

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By TERRY-KINNEY
. Assoclau:cl Press Writer
CINCINNATI (A,P) - The Cincinnati Bengals and
the Buffalo Bills, two teams that never have gotten
past-the first round of the American Conference playoffs, meet this afternoon to detennine who moves on to
the AFC championship game.
The Bengals, 12-4 _
and Central Division ·champions,
are led by 11-year veteran Ken Anderson, the top.rated
passer in .the National Football League. The Bills, l().li ·
in the regular season and wild-card winners over the
New Yor~ Jets, are led by quarterback Joe Ferguson.
• Both quarterbacks established club records fol'
passes, completions and yards gained this season.
" ~lrAnderson is a super, super quarterback," said
Bills Coach Chuck Knox. "He throws the ball with accuracy, he can run ... he stays in the pocket, ~e doesn't
throw interceptions, he throws the ball away."
Knox said the Bills "have not thrown the ball as
much as Cincinnati has, and we haven't been as suc&lt;'t!'SSful at it'. But Anderson and Ferguson are both fine
quarterbacks."
Cincinruiti Coach Forrest Gregg recalled that
Ferguson had one of his best games of the season
against the Bengals.
"They do a heck of a job pass blocking," Gregg said
of the Buffalo offensive line. "Joe Ferguson is an outstanding quarterback. There are a lot of outstanding

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MORGAN CENTER' Wesleyan
Church will host Freda Farmer,
· · a missionary of the Wesleyan
Church to Indonesia, a( 7 p.m.
Wednesday.

ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING · of Southern Local School
Distnct . Board of Education at
high school, 6:30p.m. Tuesday.

-1

Bengals, meet
·Bills in~ AFC

Swiss steak and

UPRIGHT

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GALLIPOUS - Gallia County
Board of Health will meet at 9
a.m. Wednesday at the Health
Department offices, 412, Second
Ave. -

. CHESTER 'COUNCIL 323 ,
Daughters of America, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at. hall ; charter to be
draped in memory of Leona Babcock and officers will be installed. Members and officers
are to .wear white uniforms.

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Gallia County Senior .Citizens Calendar·

Speaker
announced
.

Meigs County Fair Board will
meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the
Meigs C01mty Extension Office,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.

24 CU.

Tuesday .

.' Jan.3,1982
j, ·.

Wednesday

.

EASTERN Athletic Boosters
will meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the
high schooL there will be an election of officers and all members
and th011e interested in joining in·
vited.
·

c

.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Bill . pl~y, take on Perkins' New :York theteamsappeartobeeven.
Walsh and Ray Perkins, who both G1ants today at Candlesl1ck Park,
"The ' 49ers have played good
moved into head coaching jobs with woth the winner takong on Dallas or aggressive ball on defense forcing
reputations as offensive master· Ta"?pa Bay in next weekend's fumbles and scoring poln~ " says
minds, now fi~d themselves in Nat10nai Conf~rence title game. ,
Perkins, who recalls how t,;,o New.
charge of defensove powerhouses.
San Francisco has the NFC s -.York turnovers helped the 49ers win
. Both pr?bably ~ould admit ~eir leading passer, in Joe Montana, 17-IOatCandlestickfive weeks ago.
first love IS offensive manuevenng, while New York s quarterback IS 24Perkins was offensive coordinator
but as the San Francisco 49ers' year-old Scott Brunner, who had for the ~Diego Chargers before
Walsh says, "The best defensive thrown only nine touchdown passes taking-Over tbe Giants three years
teams are the ones in the National as a pro before tossing three in last ago. Walsh who held the same San
Football League playoffs."
Sunday's 27-2~ wild:ard play~! vic- Diego job i~ 1976, was head coach at
The 49ers, 13-3 in
season
tory over Phlladelp1a. DefensiVely, 'Stanford two seasons before tile
49ers hired him.
The Giants' offense ranked last in
the NFL this season, although it
perked up considerably with the ad·
dillon of running b&amp;ck Rob Car·
penter in October and produced 275
yards in the game at Philadelphia.
Carpenter rushed for 161 yards in
the playoff opener.
The defense was · stronJ!
f PASSING UNDER PRES8tlllE ,... Tiun.. Bay · pua under pre11ure from Cowboy• defe~~~lve elid Ed
throughout the season, with rOoiue
qaarterbeck Doac WUila1111 (1!) pre..m to rei~ a J011e1 {7!) durlllg fil'llt quarter aclloa 'in Dallu Satur·
linebacker Lawrence Taylor one big
dll:v. lAP Latel'llhotol.
reason for a dramatic improvement.
·
.
'I '
The Giants were 9-7· this season aild
ahowed 257 pQints: one year after .
g01ng 4-12 and y1elding 425 points.
· .
·
"Our first ~oncen\ Is how to deal
..
.
sacked four times.
patlll into the an111:1 of defensive end
with that' defense,'' says Walsh.
By DEJiiNE H. ~EMAN
Thunnan's
8econd
grab
led
to
a
9Ed
"Too Ta!P' Jones at the Tampa
"There's just no weak point. Our
AP l1polrt. Wrller
yard
White-to-Tony
Hill
touchdoWn
.
·
Bay
-25,-, Backup Ulilback James
second biggest concern Is how to
IRVING, Teus (AP) - Dallas inpass
in
the
second
quarter.
Jones
scored from 5 yards.
deal With Carpenter. You just can't tlmidated Tampa Bay quarterback
Dallas
led
10.0
at
halftime
·after
Tampa
Bay got to the Dallas 5wear him down."
Doug WIUI&amp;IIIB . with four in·
Rafael
Septleil's
32-yard
field
goal,
yard
line
in
the fourth periOd on a 75CarJ)enter got most of his yardage· tercept10111, and the Cowboys rode,
and
the
Cowboys
struck
for
three
yard
Wl'lliams
to Jimmie Glies pass
up the middle, with center Jh:n Clack Danny White's pasaing into the
touchdowns
II!
the
third
period.
but
couldn't
!ICOre
. .
ihe key blocker; last weekend. San National F~ Conference title
'
The
Bucs,
champions
of the .NFC
Francisco nose tackle Archie Reeie game with a 38-0 roui Saturday of
A
25-yard
White-to-Tony
Dorsett
Central,
ended
their
third
foray Into
and inside linebackers Jack 1 the Buccaneen.
screen
paM
helped
set
up
Ron
the
National
Football
League
playofReynolds and Craig Puld will take
Tbe Cowboys, champions of the
Spring.s'
!·yard
scoring
run
on
the
·
fswltha~ledgcr.
on the job of clOi!llng the inside holes · NFC Eut, lri1l meef tJIIi survivor of
It was D81las' 18th victory in .a
Sunday.
Sunday'a makllup between the New openingdrlveofthesecondhalf.
Rookie
free
safety
Mike
Downs
inrecord
30 playoff games.
Reynolds, 34, ·was released by the Yoril Giants and San Francjs(:o
tercepted
a
Willlaml
pau
on
the
,
For
the
heavily-favored' Cowboys
Los Angeles Rams last seuon 4tenon8unday, Jan.IO.
Buca
33,
and
Dalias
took
advantage
who
went
into the game 7t-point
. despite leading thai team in tacl(les.
Tine Of WUJ!ama' interceptions
of
the
turnover
with
Donett's
5-yard
favor!!fs,
next
week will mark their
He also was the leading tackier on - two by cornerback Dennis Thur·
touchdown
gaUop.
lOth
appearance
in an NFC chamthe4911nL defense, which got ex· man - wer, converted Into Dallas
WIUiaJtu
wu
victimized
yet
again
pionship
game.
They
have been ·lri •
ceDent performances from many touchdowna~ He allo wu guilty of
when
tackle
John
Dutton
tipped
live
Super
Bowls.
8
newcome,... .
·
· gJ'OIIIIdlnc the ball twice, and he wu
,•
'
..

cowb oys oust Tampa· ~Bay ·

••

•
'

�...
Jan, J, i982
t

·om t'ro v.:...... M

Pomeroy

I S, Ohio- t ' oint P leilSflnt. V,;• , v ..~.

Ga ll ipolis. Ohio-Point Ple;~san t , W. V~ .

..

"

Walker
never

Middle port

PASADENA, Calif. (IJ&gt;) - Tlie
Pacific-10 Conference needed a vic.
tor)t to avert heing shut out in bowl
g4mes this season, . and the
Washington Huskies supplied it.
They did it with a shutout Friday·
~ the first whitewilsh in the Ro6e
Bowl since 1953 when the University
of Southern California stopped
Wisconsin 7~.
Led by •. freshman speeds~er
Jacque Robinson's two touchdowns,
the Huskies salvaged the Pac-IO's
pride with a 28-!1 victory over Iowa,
Big Ten Conference co-champion.
"I'm not a savior," Washington
Coac!l Don ·James said with a smile,
" but I'm happy we won;"
· The Huskies, 2'f.o·polnt underdogs
at game Ume and big losers to
Michigan in t!le 111111 Rose Bowl, won
on a day when ~Pac-IO's perennial
footbaU superpower, Southern Cal,
'lost to Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl,
UCLA feU to Michigan, 33-14, in
t!'e Bluebomiet Bowl Thursday night
·rind Washington State earlier lost to
Brigham YoWJg In the Holiday Bowl.
But New Year's Day in Pasadena
belonged strictly to the Huskies.
" You jUst witnessed an olct,
fashioned end kicking," Iowa Coach
Hayden Fry admitted to reporters.
"Washington really put It to us in
· every area of the game, including
coaching.
"They were impressive on offense
and devastating on defense. That
was the worst game we played, bu~
the Huskies were the reason why.''
Robinson, a S.foot·ll, 204-pound
tailback !rom San Jose, Calif.,
rushed for 142 yards on 20 carries
and was named Player of lhe Game,
despite the fact that Ron "Cookie"
Jackson started the game at
tailback and Robln!!on played only In
the second and fourth quarters.
Robinson scored on a l·yard run
early in the second quarter for a 7-!1
Washington lead. He added a nifty
34-yard scoring dash early in the
fourth period to run the·lead to 21 -!1.
Washington's second touchdown
came 19 seconds before halftime at
th
rd gh
e end of a 110-ya ' ei !·play drive
that began
with just 1:35 left in the
second
quarter.
Fullback Vince Coby, playing in

had a
·c hance

UP ON TOP- Clelllllooeoach Danny Ford Is carried !rom the field at
lhe Oraqe Bowl late Friday night alter hi• team' deleatc'tl the Com-

halken Ill Nebraoka In 'the 48th Annual Orange Bowl Classic 22-15. (AP
, Lberplloto).

.

'=
We ·came)lp with
big play, '--Davis
_MIA.Ml ( AI&gt;) e ·son
llnebecker Jeff Davis red down at
the noor for a lew seconds, giving
Uie queltion a UWe more thought.
He was replayill!l the fourth quar·
ter of the tOJH'8nked Tigers' 22-15
Orange Bowl victory over Nebraska
in hlJ mind, particulatly the defensive series after tjle CornhiiBkers
pulled to within seven points· on
Roger Craig's :JS.yard sprint and
tWG-pOint convm~icn run.
·:"The feeling I had was that '1\'e had
been there before, had our backs to
the wall and come up with the big
play whenever we nee(led it," said
· D)vis, a &amp;-foot, 223-pound senior
from · Greellllboro, N.C. "We've
ci&gt;m~ up with the big play in
s[tuatiOllll like that time after lime
and we believed we could do it
again,''
:Clemson buill a 22·7 lead through
tbree quarters on three Donald
Igwebuike field goals, Cliff Austin's
Z.yard run and Homer Jordan's 13·
.yard touchdown pass to Perry Tut ·
tie. But in the end it was the defense
!hat rose to the occasion as th&lt;:
tigers completed a :Cl-!1 season and
V)rtually assured themselves of the
national championship._
: craig's scoring r:Y,!I capped an Splay, 61)-yard ·drive thai moved !he
' • Cornhuskers, '9-3, back into con·
tention with 9: !5 remaining in the
game.
: The Nebraska de(ense, which
yielded 289 yards on U1e nfghl, sud·
denly stiffened on Clemson's next of~
fellllive possession . and forced the
Tigers to punt four plays later.
"The p~essure was on ·then. We
knew we had to stop them when they
got the ball back," said Davis. "The
nallonal championship was right ·

.

the"'_.ll:be won . We stopped therti,
gav~ ball back to the Offense and
that was it."

The fourth.,ranked Cornhuskers'
national champiollllhip hopes had
been buoyed by second-ranked
Georgia's loss in the Sugar Bowl and
No.3 Alabama 's setback in the Cot·
ton Bowl.
"Our MOal was lo beat Clemson
and let everything fall into place.
Everything fell into place for us, but
we couldn't lake it. That's what hur·
Ls 1"

said Nebraska center and

threw a lallt·minute tOurhdown
to BroWD, giving •
PIU.b!ugh a 24-28 victory over Georgia. Marblo W!1J1
named the Sugar BOwl's Moot Valuable Player. (AP
Laserpho!o).

Y.O~ng guy ~nd 1can get up and mo)le
defense, yielding only 62 yards per best I've faced."
.. ~
on," Walker said.
garne and AU-American linebacker
Spnseri and Sherrill led the Pan- ·1
Wal~er still wasn't saying whether
Sal Sunseri said the Panthers' goal !hers' charge off the field to the i
he would be moving at Georgia or was to hold Walker under 100 yards.
locker room after the game, arms .
testing the professional football life.
"Everybody w11s talking about wrapped around each other.
Asked if he would forego hill last him gettinif''l40 yards or 150 yards
"How bout them Panthers?"
two seasons. or collegiate eligibility ·~d we got tired of. hearing about shouted out SUlllleri.
and lur~ pro, Walker said, " I'm still that," Sunseri said. " I'm not af~aid · "How bout t!lem Dogs?" replied
deciding that. "
to admit it. He ran me over once freshman nose guard Dave G.rillo.
Pitt had .led the nation in rushing and, I'll tell you, he's good. He's the

oo

')

Pitt ends

Georgia~s

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Tight
end John ' Brown said he didn't get
Qervous about catching the winning
\Ouchdown pass for Pittsburgh In the
Sugar Bowl on New Year's night, but
the impromptu victory celebralion
in the end zone almost did him in.
With 35 sec-onds left on the clock
and lOth-ranked Pittsburgh trailing
second-ranked Georgia 2(!-17, quar·
terback Dan Marino hit Brown with
a 33-ya rd scoring pass.
The pass gave Pittsb.r.gh a 24-20
victory and dashed Georgia's hopes
!hal it could repeat las! year's
national title. Tol&gt;'ranked Clemson
downed fourth-ranked 'Nebraska 22·
15 in !he Orange Bowl in another
New Year's night game.
Following the winning touchdowa
in lhe Sugar Bowl, Brown's teaJn·
mates mobbed Him, burying him
beneath !heir bodies in the end zone.

Brown said that while !he ball was
in the air, he heard nothing and saw
nothing butthe football .
"The feeling :_ when you realize.
what you did - coines as soon as you
t&lt;1uch the ba,ll," he said.
Then he looked ·up and saw his ·
teanunales coming to celebrate with
l1im.
"I wanted to run," he said. " I
panicked under that pil e .claustrophobia."
It was Brown's second touchdpwn
reception of the final quarter . He
gave Pittsburgh a brief 17·13 lead
four minutes intq the final period.
Other Pittsburgh s~ores came on a
41-yarif1ield goal by Raymond
Everetf in the second quartet&lt; and a
36-yard pass from Marino to wide
rc"C't!iver Julius Dawkins in the third
quarter.
Georgia got two tourhdowns from

Should be number one; Paterno says
Wisniewski, held USC's Heisman
Trophy-winning tailback Marcus
Allen lo 85 yards on 30 carries and
fnrced him to fumble twice.
For Allen, who rushed for an
NCAA-record 2,342 yards this
season, il was his worst game "since
I don'! know when.'
"No exclli!es, but I don't think we
were ready to play," Allen said. " We
carne out Oat.''
USC Coach John Robinson, whose
four-game winning streak in bowls
was broken, said his Trojans "didn't
play with intensity.
"We were outplayed in . about
every way. We didn 't have it in us.
We made plenty of mistakes, but I
thought we qould work lhern out o!
· tJur system."

35857 WELLS RD. ·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
742-2160

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MAKING TRACJts - University of iowa fuUbeck
Norm Gra1111er (28) bead!! lor a ' clearing aa be gain~
short yardage during secoacJ.half action Friday again-

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FRANK HERALD JR., Owner &amp; Opemar .

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - For
'quarterback Steve Pelluer,
Washington's victory over Iowa in
the 68th Rose Bowl was especially
satisfying.
· Pelluer directed an offense that
was oversha'dowed by the defense
·. (or much qf the 1981 season. But in
front of a national Je~,evision audience in·the most famous bowl giiiJle of
all, Pelluer and his. teanunates
, ·::~· l)rllv'ed lhll, J~!JSkies could score as
· weU as play defense.
"Our ~idence level increa!ied
as the gan',e went on," Pelleur said
after Washington whipped Iowa 2IHl
Friday. "We needed to establish our
Pli'Sin!! game. That's what got us

'

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
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BAHR ·CLOTHIERS
~

In 488 1:~te appearances in 1981,
Omar Pt~o reno ol the Pittsburgh
Pirates grOurKled Into only one
double play.

' .

st the University Ill Waahingtoo in the Rose Bowl.
Despite GraDI!er'a.eflorta, and thOt!e of his teammates,
the Hawkeyes,l01t, ~- (A., Laserphoto).

Garnett back in the lineup " r:eally ·
makes a heck of a difference." Gar,
nett, a 6-foot-2, 256-pound sophomore
from Pasadena broke his foot in October, but returned to play in the
regular . season finale . a ga inst
Washington State. . ·
"He plugs lip the middle so much
because the offensive guards have io
double team him. It really helps to
have him In there," defensive tackle
Fletcher Jenltillll said.
Iowa linebacker Mel Cole said his
team simply' was outplayed by the
Huskies, who lost to Michigan 2U In

Middleport, Ohio

.

downs.
"I think our offellliC has arrived,"
said RobinsQII, voted the game's out·
standing player. "~t knowa ·19hat It
ctn dO now. That should help us in
the future."
.
&amp;nior linebacker Mark Jerue led
!lie Washington defeme that limited
(qwa to 264 total yards and recorded
the first Rose Bowl shutout in 29
years. Jerue said he wu surprised
b§ the margin or victory.
'"'I thought that wu- a litUe
rimarkabie," he aald... , thought
wie'd win 13-ICI or lt-7 'or BOmething .
' ~that.''

last year's Rose Bowl.
"They had both a passing game
and a running game," said Cole, who
led Iowa with 12 tackles. "We
couldri't adjust to it. That was
definitely the most balanced game
we've played this year.''
Tailback Bill Blatcher, Iowa's
leading rusher for the season,
praised the Washington deferute.
·. "We coul&lt;ln't run anywhere, we
couldn't pass anywhere," Blatcher
said. "There was nothing we could
do, bul they had a lot to do with
that."

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' PeUuer, a sophomore, completed
15 of .29 passes for 142 yards and
surrendered only one interception to
Ji.defenae that had'been regarded as
one of the best of .the country. His
pasiting complemented the running
of freahmen tailback Jacque RobinsOn, who came off the bench to rush
for 142 yards and score two touch-

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417 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
SALE

Pete Rose, the first baseman of
the Philadelphia PhiUies, led the'
National League in hits with 140 in
1981, and 117 of them were singles.

For insurance.call.

Home Ph. 446-4518

terback Gordy Bohannon, who also record in bowl games in the pastfive .
lost another fumble and had two years. He is 2·1 in Rose Bowl ap- ·
passes intercepted. The Huskies pearances.
quickly moved in lrOl,ll the Iowa 111The victory was the lith for the .
d
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'th
·
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ba
k
host
conference In the pasl13 ,ve•rs·,·
yar me, Wl reserve q~a er c
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Rose leads league
with most safeties

· INSURANCE

Ph. 4464290

VAl-UABLE YARDAGE
Uni'l'et'lllty of WublngloD Huskies'
taUback J•cque Roblason (281 attempts te break a lllckle by a University .
•f Iowa delen~eman during l!efoncJ.lutlf action Friday in the ROlle Bowl. :
RobiDion was aamed moat valuable player In tile game that saw the
Huskies oouodly defeat the Hawkeye&amp;, ~. ( AP Laserph?to ).

his first Rose Bowl after IOatching rl·iTheiiiiiiiiii.viiictjiojiryiiiiiiigajivji.eiiiiiJaiimiiiiiesiiiiiaiiiii:J.iiliiiiijiejiigjihjitRiiosiiiiiejiBjiojiwjilsji.iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij.
two from the sidelines because of Injuries, scored on a !-yard run for
Washington.
The Huskies, who finished the
season at J()-2, scored their final
touchdown just 2:34 after Robins.on' s .
second scoring run.
Defensive tackle Lynn Madsen
rerovered 8 fumble by fOWjl quar•

STATE FARM

LOCALLY OWNID .AND OPIRATID

......

..

&gt;1ellar sophomore ru!'ning back ' Marino was named the game's
Herschel Walker - an B-yard Most Valuable Player 'after hitting
scoring burst in the second quarter 26 of 41 attempts for 261 yards.
and a !().yard dash in the third quar·
Pittsburgh's ground attack was
ter.
led by tailback Bryan Thomas, who
Georgia quarterback Buck Belue got 129 yards on 26 carries.
hit wide receiver Clarence Kay with
The Panther defense held
a 6-yard scoring pass in the fourth Georgi;~'s W~lker - who ran for
quarter, .Wx minutes after Brown's 1,891 yards this yedr - to 84 yards on
firsttouchdown.
25attempts.
.

HERALD OIL AND GAS CO.

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title hopes,

-

TAKE IT FROM ME, BOYS - Unlvert1ity of agalnlt lhe Unlvet'lllty of Iowa Hawkeye&amp; ID the.Rose
Wulllng&amp;on's VInce Coby (5) expres~~e~ bil feellncs af· Bowl. The Husldo...Jef'eated lhe Hawkeyea, ~. (AP
ter ~~C&lt;~ring a TD In the seeood quarter of play Friday Laoerphoto).

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

Outland Trophy winner Dave
Rimington.
The favored Cornhuskers could do
little right against Clemson. Two
·lost fumbles, eight penalties and an
interception he.,&gt;ed stop Nebraska
when the Tigers' defelllle couldn't. .
'"We were so close and we hurt
ourselves 8o much, " said Craig.
Tuttle and . Davis both said they
felt the Orange Bowl victory should
go a long way toward establishing ·
respect for the Atlantic Coast ConTEMPE; i\riz. I AP i - Although
ference as a football power.
!he
pollsters may disagree, Penn
" We were out to prove ourselves/'
State Coach Joe Paterno says his
said Tuttle, "They talk about the
seventh-ranked Nittany Lions ·
ACC as a basketllall conference, but
this proves we can play on the same· should be voted the nation's No.1
college football team after thetr
. level SS any conference in the cOun•
Fiesta BOwl victory here over No.8
Lry."
Southern Cal. ·
" I fell going into this game that
the winner would be the best team in
the country," Paterno said after
Penn State's 26-10 victory Friday.
Skiin~
"We feel we could probably heat any
learn in the country right now."
GA RMISCH , Wi.!MI G~ rm&lt;1ny !API - ROJ,1t:f
Ruud of Norway won 11 New Y c~ttl!t-~kJ jtnnpln l( . F;nteriAg the game as slight unc..'Ompetillon with l!!Yp!i pf 329 fL't?l llnd 3!5 {L'tll io
u-.ovc into !hinl place illlht• rwc rall s~ndill~~ of
derdogs, !he Nittany Lions upset the
lhtJ :Uh h Four-Hi ll TuUI'Illmienl Hftur two event~ .
Trojallll wilh a ·swarming defense
M;,~nfrt.'t.l l&gt;L'Ckl!rt of EHsl Germany, lender In
. and a deliberate offense. Penn Slate,
' ltlt! Four·HIII tihiiH.iilll!ll. WiiS SI..'CO!ld with two m
foot jumps, t.•o\lcctln ~ 2.16.6 pplnl.s compa rt!d will\
led by linebacker Chet Parlavecchio
Ruud ':; 237.
. and defensive tackle Leo

ALL
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S
DINGO BOOTS IN STOCK

pa••

WINNING COMINBATION - PiU.burgh quarterbatk·.Dan Marino U3) ~nd tight end John Brown ·
(89) walk off lhe field arm In arm after Pltt.bur~h won
· the Sugar Bowl Friday lilght In New Orlcuu,. :.tarino

Page-C-3

lowa .first .Rose Bowl·
.shutout victim ·since '53

'

NEWORLEANS (AP)- Herschel"
Walker, Georgia's All·American
tailback, never had a chance.
A .quick, swarming Pittsburgh
defense held the sophomore sen·
sation- under 100 yards rushing for
the firs! time in 14 • game~ and
enabled one of its own - halfback
Bryan Thomas ...,. to pass the 100
mark in Pitt's 24-20 Sugar BOwl
tr,punph over the defending national
chilmpions Friday night.
Thomas harrunered out 129 yards
on 26 carries while Walker had only
. 84 on 25, but the Bulldog star did
score two touchdowns on runs .of 8 .
and 10 yards.
· Thomas said · Pitt Coach Jackie
Sherrili ''had a dream he (Walker )
would get 80 or 90 yards and I'd
outrush him·. I didn't think I woUld.
"I'm excited a6out it, but I don'tthink it will hit me until morning,"
.Thomas added.
,·
" I goi hit good a couple of times,"
Thomas said. "We started the game
running inside, we got them
suckered in, then I got outside a few
tirrles."
·· " Pitt's defense Is one of the best in
the nation," said Walker, who was
stalked. throughout t}le game by
tackle Dave Puzzuoli and middle
guard J. C. Pelusi, who had II
unassisted tackles between them.
·"It hurt a great deal . but I'm a

The Sund.1y Times-Sentinel

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�1·,

Ohio~ Point

Pomeroy-Middlepqrt-Gallipotis,

Pleasant,

w.

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va.

Jan. 3,

Texas surprises ·, Alabama
14-12 in ·Cotton
.BoWl tilt- ·
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1982

.DALLAS '(AP) - Texas Coach
Fred Akers has been -criticized for
being dull personally and having an
offense twice asl!ei:ing.
· But he . mapl)eQ the proper .
strategy in an exchange of che~ .
moves· with legendary Alabama
Coach 'Paul "Bear" Bryant in the
Cotton Bowl Classic Fr-iday and it
. was Akers who prevailed in their firstmeeting14-12.
.
Th~ Longhorns overcame a til-()
deflc•t With two touchdowns in the
fourth quarter, then gave the Crim- .
son Tide.an intent(onal safety ·before
weathenng a counter-charge. ·
Not only aid the victory by Texas
keep alive a Longhorns jinx of never
having lost to Alabama, but It kept
B!')'ant from winning an NCAA

- .

.offatL~neCenterTuesd&amp;ynight.

RIO GRANOfl - Twt1 lcams that
have beeiJ pickt'll by Mi~-Qhio Con. R10 Grande's Redmen, picked to
ference coaches to battle for the fmll!h first by league mentors, and
' league crown in 1981~ will square . Walsh College will square off at 7:30

Nomina.te Burson for
All-American honors
RIO GRANDE - Scott Bunon, a
5-6 sophomore gilard at Rio Grande

College, has been nominated for
academic a.li-American in basketball.
Burson has averaged six points;
five assists and three steals per
game so far this season and is
.sh()jlting a ,bot 87 percent from the
free throw line and 54 percent from
tlte field. The Redrnen are 14-2 on the
season after claiming the title-at the
Marietta Shrine TOtJrnament earlier
this week.
Burson did not compete in the
tournament because of two injuries.
He has a jammed hand and badfy
· blilised knee.
Burson was nominated for the
laurel$ on his athletic achievement
and ~ perfect 4.0 grade point
averake after thelast quarter. To be
eligible for nomination a player
·t mllSt be a starter or top reserve and
must have at least a 3.0 grade point
average overall.
Burson averaged .14 points . and
eight assists per game during his
career at Athens High _School, earning All-County honors from the

r-------------------------

WH\lEWAl~
TEXA.'l INTERCEPI'S - Texas safetv William
Graham, Jell, Is bugged by teammate Mlk~ Halchelt,
right, after he tnte.-.,epted an'Alabama pass bn his own.

one-yard line to squelch a drive In the final ni'lnuleil of
the C~tton Bowl game 'in Dallas Friday. Texas won it,
14-1%. (AP Laserphoto).

F78· 14 aG7B· I~
:e7B-14 •F7B· IS

•L78 - I~

'They just w~ipped us'--Bryant

USED CAR VALUES FOR 1982

1980 FORD FAIRMONT 2

N'OW '4355

Was 54795.00

RIO GRANDE ~ Coach Jamie
VanArsdalen's Rio Grande's Redwomen .will start the 1982 portion of
their schedule Tuesday night when
they host · Ohio UniversityChillicothe in a 5:15 p.m. contest at .
Lyne Center.
The game will be played before
the key Mid-Qhio Conference· bout
between Rio Grande and Walsh
College. That game starts at 7:38
p.m.
,Tile Redwomen will be looking for
their third victory of the season.
They fell to Shawnee State by a 71-69
score in overtime In their opener
before rebounding with a 77-55 w!n
over Ohio Dominican. Their · other
two contests have been a 100-56 loss
to. Ohio University and a 71-64 victory over Bluffton.
VanArsdalen said she'll start
junior Robin Hagen at point guard.
Hagen transferred to Rio Grande
from Shawnee State where · she
averaged 17 points per game and
was tabbed first team junior college·
All-American.
· Starling opposite Hagen at the
other guard slot will be Sue Camp, a
5-6 freshman from Swanlpn. She
averaged'2t points, eight assists and
six steals per game last season in
earning prep All-5tate laurels.
Starting at the forward slots will
be 5-7 senior DeaOC!e qavis and 5-7

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MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Point Pleasant, w. va.

The Sund.w Times-Sentinel

P~ge

C -~

SCOTT BURSON
Athens ·Messenger and All-5outh
East Ohio.

senior kim Clingman, while' 5-11 ·
Janet Groves will open at center.
Davis, a · native of Osk · Hill,
averaged nearly 14 points per game
a year ago, while Clingman, from
Springfield, netted nearly 13 points
and 10 rebounds per outing. Groves,
a native of Gallipolis, accounted for
16 points and II rebounds per clash.
VarArsdal en · said tha ~ 6 ~2
sophomore center Terri Wilson of
Pomeroy, :HI junior g~rd Kim
Conley of Jac)lson, 5-9 junior forward Vickie Teegardin of Utica, 5-6
sophomore forward Vickie Clayton
of 'l)ppecanoe, and lHl junior forward Tina Hiles of Lancaster will aU
see action in a reserve role.
In thei~ last outing against Bluff·
ton, the Redwomen built a big 19point lead in the closing minutes of
the first half and managed a 40-25
advantage .at the intermission. They
built their biggest lead of the afternoon in the early going of the
second half )"hen Hagen netted
back-to-back jwnp shots for a 21·
point bulge. , .
·
· Bluff! fought hack to narrow the
different
ints In the closing
minute, but Ki Clingman responded \\:1\!i a basket o put the game
out of reach.
Hagen led all scorers with ~4 points , while Clingman chipped in 15,
Camp II and Groves 10.

Richar~o

that played key roles in the strong ":;.... 6-3 forward
Hairston,
lint half showing. Pan Curry, ,. 6-7
averaged 10 points and . six
fres,hman forward who averaged 17" rebounds per game. The two have
points and 12 rebounds per game been suspended for the remainder of
before being sidelined with a broken the season for disciplinary reasons.
foot three weeks ago, will return to
l.awhorn will starlli-li Watson Mcaction in about two weeks, while.&amp;-:I Donald an~ &amp;-6 Tom Jutze· on the ·
forward John Maisch is sidelined in· front line and use a three guartl
definitely with an ankle injury and 5· setup of &amp;-2 Vince Wollen burg, ~
6 guard Scott . Burson "lias been Rick Penrod, and 5-8 Jerry Mowery
sidelined with a hand injury.
in thebackcourt.
· :
The Redmen will also be without
Bob Shaw, a 6-8 freshman and
the services of 6-S fo..Ward Kevin D.11vid Wallace, a &amp;-2 senior, a~ exCastle(nan, who accounted for 14 peeled to see action in a reserve
points and 11 rebounds per game, rol~.

~

STEREQ · RADIOS .
COMPACTS 25%to43%
2go1o 44%0ff
Off
. to ·
1 DECKS/
33%to53% .
20% to330fo Off . Off

the money'
Nicklaus, with another 70, and
Miller, with a second round 68,
sharedsecondplace.at !40.
•
Nicklaus, who has played two good
but not spectacular rounds, was conceding nothing.
Trevino how~ver, missed eight
greens in the second round and said
he " was fortunate to shoot 74," . a
figure that put him at par 14&lt;1 and
seven strokes off the pace. Player
was tltree more strokes behind at 147
after a 77 on the course he ~esigned
in. the crater of an extinct volcano
and adjacent to thiS $!~million
resort complex some 100 miles from
Johannesburg .

- Seve Ballesteros said he faces
rpore pre!18ures than the others in
the elite field chasing the biggfrt
prize in the history of golf.
"I need the money more than they
qo," Ballesteros · insisted with a
straight face alter be had stretched
his lead to three strokes Friday at
the halfway point of the f1-million
Sun City Golf challenge.
Tbe other fOur in the invitational
field - Jack Nicklaus, host Gary
Player, Johnny Miller and Lee
.Trevino - all rank high on the alltime liirt of golf's money-winners.
.While Ballesteros, a former winner of the Masters and British Open,
has become a wealthy man through
his golf exploits, he doesn't begin to
a~cb the wealth of the others.
Garvey make';\
'4Y'tplember how my fatlter told
. me he worked 16 hours a day for 30 onlr. o~e error
Steve Garvey, the first baseman of
~·· abou\ 50 cents," the young
Spaniard said.
the Los Aligeles Dodgers, made only
• "He told me I must try hard to do one error in 1981, posting a fielding
better than thai in my life."
percentage of .999.
·And Ballesteros, who made only $5
a month ln a &amp;-month stint with ·ihe ·
Spanlah Air Force a few 'years l!go,
now Ia playing - and lndlng - in Ryari has most
the chase for a f500,000 first prize.
·.,Seve Ia going to be a hard man to wild pitches
catch," Trevino ' said after ! Nolan Ryan, the strikeout
of
. Ballesteros had built his lead with a 'lbe Houston Aatros, Jed the National
bllalerinll., 5-~der-par 31 ·on the League In wild pitChes in 1981 with
bact nine Friday, finiJhlng off a 68 · 16.
that gave him a 137-total, 7-underppr on the 7,M-yard Gary Player .
·Country Clu~ course. . .
"A lucky round," Ballesteros MostNLwins
.
.
I I
lhnlll!ed.
The Cincinnati Redl won 118 gamee
TrevinO dlllqreed.
' "I w.. afraid of lhll," he said. "I In the strike-shortened 11111 - .
was afnlld IIOIDeOile wu going to get •the 1110111 in the National l.eague, but
0\ltln froDt IIJid rim away. And, he's they attJJ did not qualify for the
playoffs.
the guy to do it."

-

I,

~sin-

. WalSh coach Bob Huggins
dicated he'll start 5-10 Tony Harvey
and 5-11 Curtis Craft in the backcourt with 6-1 Ove"Potopsky and 6-4
John McKeown filljng the forward
slots and 6-7 Chris Arthur working at
c-ente.r Harvey ~nd Potopsky are the
only double ~igit scorers back from
last year with respective averages
of 15.8 arid 12-2.
·
·
Wa)sh is cOming off a 14-16 season
last year, including a tiH mark in
theMOC.
The Redmen will open the conference season without five players

•

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CAR TAPE

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in different stores. but
Dif1eJent sale •1e ';;sd with budget plea sers .
all stores are loa e d here Hurry in for
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·PAT - HILL
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THE . WINNJ!lll8 - Teua
bead foolballeaae• Fred Alten l•
carried by lellm memben after
their 14,12 vidor)' tmr AlabaJDII
In the Cotiea Bowl bl Dalla•

-

NOWf6895
. .

·6 cyl. eng ., 4 speed trans., aux. fuel tank, new tires.
I

SUN CITY, Bophuthatswana (APJ

fJOD

Gallipnlis. Ohio

ill home for the Redmen this season.
They opened their league season at
Tiffin University Saturday night.
_Qoth. Rio Grande and Walsh, along
with perennial powerhoUse Cedar·
ville, have been picked to battle to
the end in the conference.
"We're looking for a real battle
from Walsh," · Rio Grande coach
John Lawhorn said. ~ 'They brought
in more new 'talent this year than
.. probably any other team in the conterence ... And they play a real
ag~resslve style_of game."

Redwomen to host
OU-Chillicothe five

.r;n:1• •H7B-ts

DALLAS (AP) - Both head better than the play we had called. It · we'd get them," Graham said.'
coaches for the 46th Cotton Bowl ·wouldn ' t · have worked . He :'They challenged us one time too
_Classic agreed they pould not point recognized that and called time out,' many .' "
out one play, or even a series of we discussed it and called the
Bryant's record against Texas is
plays, as toe key to the outcome. .
draw."
0.7-1 while he has been at Alabama.
"They just whipped us in the four- .. Texas then forced 'Barna to punt His o.nly coaching win over the
th quarter," said Alabama head and marched 80 yards for the win- Longhorns came in 1956, when he
coach Paul "Bear" Bryant, who ning score, a 8-yard Terry Orr touch- was the football boss at Texas AXM.
holds the record for career wins but down scamper. But drama
But he waved aside questions on
hM not beaten Texas in 24 years. remained.
that subject.
"The fm1her along the game went,
Joey Jones romped 61 yardS, a
"I don't know, J don't ltlJOW," he
the more they took over."
Cotton Bowl record, with the ensuing shrugged. "I really haven't had any
"We feel the fourth quarter kickoff, putting the Tide on Texas' feelings about it."
belongs to us. We've (ell that way all 38. On the next play, however,
Then, withasJOile,headded, "But
season," said Longhorn boss Fred Graham leaped in front of Tim Clark I probably will have some now. "
. TAKING THE LOSS wirJner of the 14-12
that for the Interception atthe Texas 1.
Akers cal~d the victory "the
Alabama
bead football coach
took an
Graham, 'who set a school record .greatest of m~aching career" and
Paul
"Bear''
Briant urges team
and kicked out of . for interceptions during the regular · lobbied · for a higher Longhorn
onward
during
1111 14-12 loos to
trouble with 48 seconds remaining. • season, said his theft was inevitable.
ranking in the post-season polls.
TeJll!!l
In
the
Cotton
Bowl In
Texas safety William Graham,
"We knew If they kept trying to
"We deserve to be No. I as much
Dallali Friday. (AP Laserphotu).
who blulited a potential game- beat our secondary, sooner or later as anybody," he said.
' .
winning Alabama drive with a goalline interceplion in the final two r--------;__------------,----------..,.-------~
minutes, harped on the saine theme.
"They kept us off-balance most of
the first half. At halftime we had to
talk about our courage and make adjustments the second half. We
. played up to our capabilities ihe la!t ·
DR~
30 minutes," Graham said.
4 cyl., autp: trans, air cond., p. steering, vinyl roof.
Alabama led Ill-() when Texas
began tuning up its fourth-quarter
offense.
Robert Brewer, named the game's
most valuable offensive player, got
the first Longhorn touchdown on a
V:6 eng., auto. trans., power steering .
quarterback draw, scoring from the
Alabama 30 on a third-down and 10
play.
"Robert saved us, " Akers said.
6 cyl. eng. air cond., AM1 FM, auto. trans. ·
"The defense they bad called was
.

Pomeroy MiddiP.port

Walsh visits Rio Gra1l~e Tuesday for MOC cage contest

..

record seventh consecutive bowl · game for the longhorns, romped 3!J
game in seven yean.
yards for' a touchdown on a tricky
"Coach Akers did ev~rything ·he draw play.
·
needed to do to win the game," said·
Mter . a· 'punt, he whipped the
Bryant. "His (taking a safety in the Longhorns 80 yards in 11&gt; plays
final minute) had to be a great call clirruixed by Terry Orr's 8-yard
because it worked."
·
touchdown run. Included in the drive
Bryant added, "I don't think there was a 37-yard completion .to tiglt
is .a Texas ' whanuny on Alabama. end Lawrence Sampleton on a thirdTheir players and coaches beat us- and 10 play.
notawhanuny."
·
Joey Jones r~turned the ensuing
Quarterback Walter Lewis' &amp;-ya_rd kickoff a Cotton Bowl ·record 61 yartOIJChdown pass to Jesse Ben dross ds, but cornerback WiiUam Graham
and Peter Kim's !~yard field goal intercepted Lewis on.the next play at
gave the Longhorns a tiig fourth . the Texas I.
quarter hill to cl4nb.
Tben the game of mental checkers
Texas . quarterback Robert started.
Brewer, starting only his fourth

SNOW TIRE .
RETREADS

·-

1.982·

CTR-46A
by Reanatlc

'20011

4995

Check
Your
. .

Cut 17o/o

Cut 41o/o

18

88

Reg.
31 .95

PRICES MAY YAAV AT INDIVIDUAL !:TORES

•

.

Great sound, greal ,
price! Dua l controls let
you adjusl volume and
balance just the way
you want! #33·1014

Store or Dealer

A DIVISION OF

..

•
__
, - i'p

'

�•
'
~ Page- C -6- T he Sunday

Times-Sentinel

Pom eroy- M iddleport

&gt;

For the record.
Star~ .

M PhUac.lelphia

' "' Booton

23
!2
IS
12
II

• ...,

New York

L

w""''"~~~""

Ntt'f" Jeney

l..upul, Center, fnim Dallas,

O.ll'oit
Atlanta
Chit.:ago

a~ve land

6

7

16
111

GB

.793

-

,lti)
,llil
.379

' "'
1111&gt;
12

7(&gt;9

15

I

"21
16
ll

8
14
11

.~~
.633
133

51;.J

12
12

16
18

.• 29
.400

a'-t
9'/z

. 6 . 23
.'JJ11
WESTERN OONFERENCE

lSI
g
14 15
12 II
II 19
10 19
7 !2
P..:-lfk- Dlvllioo
24
7

Dem er

HOWitoo

Kanoo. City
Utah
Qalla•
,
LooAntJelooi

'

I'

Golden Sial&lt;!

.Yfl
.:H:i

ts

Wala! CHirreiiC!e

a
9

-

Wedlleldlty't Gamet~
Netr J eNey 13l, Detroit lUI
San Oil!gO N, Atlanta 91
New York no, · Cleniand J(j
MliWIIukee ID'/, Woohlngton Jf\'1

Wuhington

21 11
22 13
16 15

5 UIO 131 47
I 145 I:M , 4!i
6 143 142 31

15 17

,

10 24

l 13t 180 23

Adam~: DMII'-n

4Yiz

'
6

1

151;

-~Oiltl't!a i "

Booton
aurralo .
Qu ebec

llartlor&lt;l

9 111

4 1541 Ill 41
8 141 ll7 48
5 112 161 13

9 121 IS9 29

11 17 • 1411 JS3 4()
11 12 . 157 132 40
14 i 114 Ill 37
18 8 140 172 ..:w

It
14
J3
II

10

Edmonton
Varn:ouver
Calgary
"' J.Aa MgeleH
Colorado

17

9 112 172 31

22

'

• '
17 8
18 8
21 3
23 8
Wedanday'1 Gamet
NY Ringers II, NY hllanden:1
Pitl!!iburgh &amp;, W8!1hin11:to.l 2

2:i
• 14
12
13
9

St.Louis a, Toronto 4

Seattle at Loa Ant~e l~
Kansu City at POI'\11100
Mo..a.y'» Gamt~~

No games »ehOOuletJ '

Football
NFL Playoffs
Slllldlf, Dec.Z7
Wt'd-Card Pllyolf1
Amerialac..fermce
Buffalo 31, New York Jel.tl 'Z1
NalloaaiColierea~

York Giant._ 27, f_hlladelphls 21

19

20 10
19 IS

Smydw DMtloa

SIIDdly't Gam e~

tio

22 10
10 II

Toronto ·
Detroit

Denver at Milwaukee

~

131 141

CampbeU Confrrrate
Nmill Dlvilioa
C hica~t~o
Winnipe~

Kall8ll City 120, Denver I Ul
Bolton 121, Ulah !10
'
Phoenix 113, Pottlond 112
- ~lad&lt;ipll ia 1111, SutUe 99
1'1Mandly'1 Game
No &amp;arne» scheduled
Fridlly't GamH
Philod&lt;lpllio 120, Portland 106
Goklfn SLit.e 12$, Kal'lllatl City 9.1

a

20

St. Loui:l
Min......

Son Antal!&lt;&gt; 1011, HOIIIItOrl 104

. · .

W L . T GF GA · PU

NY !JIIan ders
Philadelphia

.774

u

21

51&gt;

Pltbburgh
. ..
121,&lt;, ' NY Rl;lnHer!l

.586
.586
. .552
.250

7

PatrklDtv..._

-

.241
.843

12
12

~

San Oie!j:O

N~ w

Hockey
NHL

.a-.

.4110

10

17
17
16

-lx

.879
....

'

SOUTH
CA ROUNA-Announced ' the
re!!iKJl&amp;tloo of D~le Evana, aaaistant foot·
ball coach, ao he may joln Texat Ax M a 11
~efen.sive ~ coon.linator. Announced the rnij~llil i OO ol Pam · ParjOOJ women's ~skelb¥11 t.-oach.
'

M&amp;dwe~t DIVillloa

Sail Alltonio

S..We

COlLEOE

Ptt.

Cnta:al JlJYillklll

Milwaukee
Indiana

.

VANCOUVE"R
CANUCKS- Aul(!led
Jony Butler , lorwan!, 10 Doi!OII of iho
Central Hockey l.al!:ue. Recalled Gary

WTERN CONFERENCE
AUaa.tlt Dll'illoo
W

I

• ••

L'Ofllrat.1s oC Kevin Mnwt"ll and JUn [)ob..
son, forw.antl, from the Mi.nnetiOla North

Basketball
NBA

127 163

211

229 1~2 511
140 141 36
I~ IJe 32
1~ 185 29
:Ofl JIU 24
,.
4
.

Montreal 8, Chicago 3
Hartlon.l 8, Win11ipeij I
Boston 4, Ca l ~ ary 2
E&lt;hnonlon 7, Philadelphia ~
CoioradD 3, Los An~eles 2
Tbundly a Ganae11
BuHalo 4, MIIUlr.IIOIAl 2
Toronto 5, Detroit 2
Vancouver 3, .Edmonton 1
ll'ricla!''• Gamel
No games ~eheduli.'d
·
s..&amp;.y'• Game.
Montreal at· Buffalo
Pltlibur~h at HarUord
Wallhlngton at NV fbul gen~
Detroit at ChlcaJj:o
Boston at Winnjpeg
MltDday' a~Gaml!

Vancouver at NY Islanders

CMiera« Semlllllalt.
S.blnlly'• GIIIDftl
NaUODII CObl'ereQ«

Tampa &amp; y ill Dalla"

Amerie111 COIIfereaee

San Diego at Mlll:flll
Suadlly'• Gamt!11
..

Buffalo at

Bowling

Allleriela Coalcn:a«
Cl ncinn~U

Natieaal Coalfftace
New York Gianta lit San Fnmci!ico

Bowllac Lequl!
December!t, 1111
S&amp;aadfll«l
Team
Pf.l.
JBylllMr Coal Oo.
Powell'aSuperValu

S•DdiJ,.JIIIIII.
SupeT lktwl XVI
SUDday, Jan.:U
At PontiMc, Mich.

Roach'11Gunstk.lp

Transactions
,
•

Holkllly Spo"'l'rlluo'"'"'
By .ne A..oelakd Pte~~
'
HOCKEY
NaUoaal Hockey Leape

· COLORADO

ROCKIES-Purcha1ll"ll

lhe

J.an .. 3, 1982

7~rs, warrior's start y~ar off right
'

1

'

•

Golf
•
SUN CI TY. Bophuthadswana (API - Seve
SpMln fired 11 4-under·par 68 for a
· 1371t&gt;LIII and 11 3-str oke lead in t~ ' 1 mill!on Sun
·• i;{l ly ChttJII!liKC.
.• Jack Nlc.law· anti Jolumy Miller 11hMretl
~-ond place In the f!ve-man event al 140.
NickbiUI h~:~d a 7D for tht! saoond Mlndght tiBy,
while Miller had 11 ai!Contl-round 88.
PEBBLE BEACH, C. li f. I API - J•y ""'
llhet 11 &amp;.untJer·par 88 for 11'1911tot.a l to Ulke the
lhlrd·roond l1.'itl In th ~ $100,000 SpaltUng lnvU.atlmmi t'ourm&amp;tncnt.
Thrw HtrokeHi&gt;ack at ~ I w11s ltick Acton, who
firft! a thlnl-round 117.

80
70

Fritmdly Tavem
81
Royal Crown
M
O. luldJ.AutoPar1..11
~
Hl~h ~rle~ men - Ray R011ch ~78 : Darrell
Du~~tn $$4; Blll C., Rt~ndy D. S25.
,
·
H~h KWne men - Oarn!ll OujJ,an 211 ; Ray
Roach 201, ~.
High ~ ri eK wo~n - &amp;tty Smith MIIJ; Mulne
Duga~ 501; &amp;tty W., Tt] elma 0 . 193.
High game w~n - Bt:tty Whllialch 213;
Becky Kl ~ 182 ; Thl!bna ~ borne 178.

It wH!. Mor11'H fourth victory in the event. He
aloo won In 1972, 1973 i nd J975. Colombia's Sli vlo

After the race. !Wine runners crilldled the
violcnt.-c and o~ a nl za ll oo of tt.e race and said
th~y wouljlllkely not return.

~wimming ·
REUS, Spain I AP I - Jortli Cervera, of~
RcWI Swhrun i~ Club, set a world rt!Conl for
dhtlance 8WWn in an indoor pool In 24 hours.
Of.flclalll of the Spanish Swlnunin~ Federation
gaJd Cerver11 swam !IS mlh!• from mllldaly Thurllthty to midday Friday. The previous r«ord of
Mt mileH ~longed to Bt!llun Malatter of Fran·
c~ .
,

Rill~terDY of

Track

General
BOULDER, COlo. IAP l - lAnk Singldon,
who was the Jeatllng r~ht r at the Unlvendty of
ColonuJp wht.'ll ht! walt slrlcken wllh mcnln~!: i U:J
before a t~,ame Bl(alnst Iow11 State on Od.2t, dial
In Loti AIJKeies, the university announL't!d.
Sln~~: leton , 19, .twd ~n rt!lea!fed In early
Nov~mber from the Ames, lowtt. hospital wht!re
he been treated for u dly11. He wa.!l hOspitallzOO
II.Kuln at . lh~ UnlverJ!ty of Ql l.lfornla at Lmt
An)(ll.! i ~ ML'liical Center while v hdtln,~~; his r.-m!l~
over Tiwnb)liVIDK.

~ ..

NEW YORK I AP) - Grel( Meyer ofN utk k,
beal out 2,300 ollll!f' partid p~nls to win

LAWRENCE. Kan. IAP ) - Chrl!l Emerson. 11
Unlveulty ot' Kansas fullback wh«) wali held c&gt;ut
of compe:IU!on this ~'MI!Ofl , died at Uw Ull!t! of 19.

G!ntral Pttrk. ·
Meyer was clocked In 23 lnir1Ut~s . 0.7 secor1ds.
Eva Shieid3 of New York led tht! women with a
tune of :&gt;H3.3.
.. SAO PAULO, Brazil rAP) - Colombll 'ti Victor
Mlll"ll won the St.SI\vestn
lnt.ernaUonttl
Footrat" wllh a time v( 13 minutes, 30.2 !ieeonds
over 11. Hl-inllc counc.
·'

taken to Lawrenct Memorial HOMpltalafler 'com·
pla lnlng of che:Jt palna ahd shc!rtnelsl of breath.
liospital officlalA aald Emersoo tiled of
pulmOIUiry emboiUbl.
·
Eme n~Un lrant~ferred to Kal'l.!l.llll last sprln~
from St."'tllidail!, AriZ., Jwlior Ctlllll.!tte, and wa1:1
ht!Jd out or the 1911 seasonaft ~ r lU'ldt:rxoing arlh~"'Jllc surgery to repair a knet! Injury.

lh~ flv~ mllc Ruru1~r-Br oob Mldnil(hl Run in

An university llp(lknm.an 11.1kl EnM:r!Wfl wall

Clemson proves ACC tough league

·Wall Str~et tie~ up_loose ends

As is oftep the case, Juli'!ll Erving
led the 76er charge. And the defensethrottled Portland's starting back·'
court of Jim Paxson and Kelvin Ransey, who combined for just 13 points.
Paxson was held to five, llis lowest
output of the season.
Ervmg led the ·balanced 76er attack _with 22 points. Steve Mix came
of( the bench to add 18, including 12
in the second half. Rookie Franklin
Edwarlh&gt; added 14, all lrt the third
quarter.
Philadelphia, 23-6, placed seven
players in doublefiguresandsank '55
percent of its shots from the field.
Calvin NaU led the lllazers, 16-13,
with 21 points, ,while Mychal Thompson add\!11 19.
.
Portland led 30-22 in the first quar·
ter behind the scoriltg of Thompson.
llut the 76ers caught the lllazers in
the second period and took the lead
47-45 on two free tlirows by Erving.
Nat! tied the score at ·47, but the
lllazers weni the next six minutes
Without a field goal while
Philadelphia built a 65-491ead.
The Blazers rallied briefly in the
fourth period behind reserve guards
!lilly Ray Bates, who had 14 points,
and Darnell Valentine, who scored
16. llut Portland could get no ~loser
than 10.

Revises ·stripmine procedures

GOTCHA - TraB lllazen' Jim PBJUioo ill caught Steve Mix as he lrieo to score during their NBA game
between Philadelphia players Lionel Holllllll, left, and Friday night In Portland. (AP Laoerphotol.
·
Warrlon125, Kings 93
World Free threw in 26 points1
llernard King added 23 and forward
Larry Smith grabbed 18 rebounds to
spur Golden State to_its rima way victory over Kansas City.

The Wan:lors built a 33-23 lead after one quarter and raised the
margin to as many as 31 points late,.
in the · game., The romp prompted .
Golden State Coach AI Attles to give
his reserves s~me extra playing

Rio adds 6-9 post
player to roster

.The Cincinnati Reds had the best
road _record In the ~ational
Natton1al League in 1981, winning~
gaml!sandloslng 20 for a percentsge
of ·630·

nament last year.
Morrison went to St. Joseph's
from Central High School in Seat
Pleasant, Md., ~re he averaged 16
points and 13 rebounlh&gt; per contest
his senior year. He was first team
All-County and third team All-Metro
as cojich Ed Trout's cagers went 21111.

Classes to .res~me
GAWPOUS - AU dance aerobic
classes sponsored by the Gallipolis
Recreation DepartmenL that were
suspended for the holidays will begin
again lit their regular times the
week of Jan. 4.
In addition, .the classes scheduled
. for Dec. 17 and 21 that were post·poned by weather will he made up in
January.

-

I

1,

.'

'

Rodney M. Collier heen vice president £1nance and·
has joined llroughton Foo¢1 Co. In ,:hie! financi al officer of the Lawson
the newly created position of vice -' lilk Co., a large bakerypresident finance • comptroller, 'Be- •·onvenlence store organization.
He I"BS formerly wiUl the Akril
cording to Samuel . R. c ook,
Corp.
in r:antori as manager of acllroughton president.
, Co llier ·-hli s an ex tensive counting and prior .to that was con'backgrOund in _dairy and con- troller· or a North Carolina. subvenience store accounting, having . sidiary of Rubber Maid, Inc., of
Wooster. He graduated from Kent
State University and served with Lhe
U. S. Army in Germany.
In his new position at ll roughtmi,
and also by practicing the society's Collier will be the chief fi nancial ofhigh standards of ethics and ficer and direct all financial and acproficiency in his agency operations. counting activiti es at lhe corpora te
The society· now has more than 600 office and at the manufacturing ant!
members across the count ry. PIA is branch offices of the company.
an organization of 35 ,000 in- Collier, who is married and has
dependent insurance agents who three daughter, ages 13, 16, and 20
deal primarily in property and will be. moving to Marietta rro1 ~
North Canton In the near future.
casualty insurance.
MARIETTA ~

SIMMON'S Olds~-Cad~-Chev., Inc.

r.ooo)li'EAR

General ·Telephone
sets expansion

1912 MODELS

U$ED CAR
CLEAN .OUT WEEK
.

·~

BUICK SKYHAWK

't98o DODGE

AC , ti It wheel.
AM·FM·Tape

3.soo

0 ·50,
miles.
ShOppers Specfal.

SALE PRIC'ED

'4995

'5995

1979 AMC CONCORD 1978 BUICK CENTURY
.DL
· LIMITED
LOADED
Silver with·Maroon
,Cloth Trim.

q

1978
You won't find a cleaner
.wagon anywhere, but only
pricedat:
·

'4795

'1600

1974 FORD PINTO
WAGON

'

Drive It Away For

'3195

.'495

1974 Ford Mus~ng .... ~-~Y- 1::.~ .5.~~::~•95
AS IS .
1974 Pontiac
FJreltlrci
.............
...'69S ·
'
.
.

I

Fonl

.

..

.

2 Dr............. '595

SMITH-NELSON .
· MOTORS INC.

~E. Main

:Phone bill..excise.
.
:taxes-~ will drop
'

•

'

of 1916-17,111d lnt-32,' scme form of
federal aelle tu hu been levied on
communications services llhc:e 1914,
be noted.
World War D marked the high
point In · esclle Ius ·on ~
munlcatiCIIII. In ltM, the rate wu Ina &amp;ued lo 2$ pea cent on long diltanelimination.
' a.np. In the law ~cted this ce calli and II perce11t. on ICIW -..
~ - require the tu .to vice llld equipment.
remain • - percent throulh liM . . OrtciJially the tu wu ilclleduled
aDd lie ellmlnlted Jan. I, I a
to end aiaaa with the Saud WCII'Id
~ The flnt Oblo Bell bWIIo nflect War, but It with a
·: the lower tax rate wiD .. dated Dec. fluduatllll tu rate over tbe years.
'• 2$, llllllld wiD be mallld Jaa. 4 ~
In nceat,....., federaladle ta
;i tvl clint to iMJIIItl' BID Qll«**e
cm w•
" a ·..w.. ha
·: The tu MlctlaD .. apll.'ted to bein ......... fw t.ntllaatiGa ..
.. uve te' f,..,. • ' 'Ditl aer. 1111 lint jNiwtaul dldll: Jan: I, U.,

GAWPOUS - IJb the meri:ury, federal excise tax on phone
bills will drop in Jf111181')'. The tu
; won't plununet, ,however, u ib!
~ teduced from two to G!'t perced
• Jan. I, but It II the lalelt step In an
el!lllve move tqw8rda Ita eventual
•

SALE PRICED ·

992·2174

'

F32

Size

Radial

•57~
• lntertqckina tread

56

9&amp;

llzo Pill&amp; 80R1 3
Pluo •1.&amp;1FET .

P155 80R13
P166 75R13
P185 SOR 1:i
P195 75R14
P205 75R14
P175 75R15
P215 75R15

7:4 .96
815 .95
89 .95
117 .95
94 .&amp;5
97 .95

1 . 51
1 .61
1.95
2 .23

.:...~: 3 4
2 .31
----

• UniQue Hlltl rubber comp ound
has bendiD!IIIy in 111e cold .
. under the tread

more

s d tion ._WAgon .
One
owner. NAC?A ~holesal~.

302, A . T. Sliding
Rear Windows.

~

'4295

THIS FOR .
ONE

F-150

1977

60/ 40 Splitsea't, AC,
Lcic&lt;;~l One Owner.

PONTIAC GRAND
LeMANS

LEBARON · wAGON

'.

MARION - General .Telephone numbers are automaticaUy idenCo, of Ohio today announced fiv~ tified by equipment when making
year plans to put more. than $491 direct dialed toll caQs. An operator
million Into exp808ion and moder· will not BBk for the caller's nuniber . .
Sanner said the new technology in .
llization of its facilities statewide. ·
switching
systems first will appear
.The outlay for 19821s $68.8 million,
this'
spring.
Lndi (Medina C.ounty)
up about If percent over 1981.
will
switch
to digital compuiJ!rCapital expansion the last five years
cOntrolled
operation.
totaled $395 million.
Following in December are digital
' · Richard E. Sanner of Marion, vice
changeovfl'll
at Lilcasville (Scioto
~resident of engineering and conCounty),
Wellington
{Lorain),
Struction, said the company will
l!erlin
Heights
(Erie)
and
Norwalk
launch two major programs In 1982.
and
North
Fairfield
(Huron)
.
One calls for initiation of new
Nine digital conversions are
technology in switching equipment.
scheduled·for 1983. They are:
'All exchanges will be converted to
~ver
and
Piketon.(Pike County),
operation by
llrunswick
aflllt Valley City
-1996.
·
(Medina),
Carrollton,
Harlem
The other program aims to
Sprlnglr
and
Mechanicstown
eliminate all party lines by 1990, he
'118id. General of Ohio CIIITtlnlly is (Carroll) and Bowling Green and
.about 86 percent one-party Grand Rapids (\Vood ).
Further digital conversions in the
,operation.
.
five"year
period call for II In 1984; 22
Numerous projects ·. also are
in
1985111d
'rl in 1986. Atotal of 75 ex·
scheduled 1o expand local and toll
changes
are
earmarked for digital
c..ll-swltchlng equipment and out-operation
between
1982 and 1988. By
side cable and tnterexchange transyeaN!nd
19115,
253
conversions wiD
mlttliig facilities.
take
place.
Sanner said emphasis will be
About 211 percent of the company's
placed on replacing many .physical
lines
currently are computer conCopper circuits with electronically
trolled.
The existing teclniology uses
derived systems. Thill will Improve
analog
computers.
tranamlsalon. quality and help
Digital switching lnvQlves coneliminate background noise.
verting the voice to streams of
The company will introduce
automatic number ,Identification dlgttsl ."blta" which are sampled by
(ANI) to 10
communities in the computer 8,000 times a aecond. .
1982. This will push the total nwnber At the receiving end the voice is conof ANI exchanges to 137. With ANI, verted back. llut In the process, un- .
one-and-tw()oj)llrty customers' phone wanted background and electrical
noises are eliminated.

~-

•

THE

,.

Joins -Broughton Foods

sep. •

SUPER DISCOUNTS
ON
ALL
.,,..,,f ......
. .. --·

Only '2,795

. .,

••

' FRONT WHEEL DRIVES FROM BUICK AND PONTIAC.

He was tabbed outstanding male
athle~e at Central and carried a high
Bacademic average.
The Redmen are 14-Z on the season
after dosing ou the 1981 portion of
their schedule by claiming the tiUe
at the Marietta Shrine Tournament.

..

;

I.

· We're

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
STOP IN AND SEE THE Al( NEW

.

1977 Mercury Monarch

u

time, with Purvis Short coming of(
Jhe bench to score 23 points and
Lorenzo Romar adding 13 in the late
going.
Rookie center Steve Johnson led
the Kings with 23 points.

I

Best road record

GALLIPOIJS - The nominating committee for thl! Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce has selected 10 names for five director's positions
opening soon. ~
Thebna Elliott, chamber secretary, said Thursday the nominees are:
David Carma~. D.D.S.; Dean Circle, Circle's Re$auranl; Paul Knotts, .
Oscar's Restaurant; Lester Plymale, Ohio Valley Electric; Robert Mal' · .
·chi , Marchi Distrlbullng; Richard MacKenzie, Gillingham's Drugs.
C.H. McKenzie, Ohio Valley Ilank board of directors; John (llill ) Mills,
G.C. Murphy Co.; Wendell Thomas, Ohio ,Yalley Bank ; ahd James
Williams, Central Trust Co.
·
.·
· Members have the rigbt to petition members Included on the ballot with
10 signatures, Elliott said, ahd ballots will he mailed out Jan.l5. Five are
to be elected to the board, with tenns of three years each, starting March:.

Brogan ·qualifies

ATLANTA (AP) - On paper, four field goals by freslunan walk-on aU','' said Woodside, who wrote let- some Ivy League school or
. Fl.orida was· a prohibitive favorite kicker Paul Woodside, that they
ters to a nwnber of colleges last something.'' ·
over West Virginia ·In thursday's believed Florida had little respect year, asking for an opportunity to
Nehleli, in his post-game com-·
Peach llowl game.
for them.
·
walk on as a kicker.
ments, repeatedly referred to the
But the Mountaineers claimed af"I spent some time with some of
"We weren't supposed to be.on the fact .that West Virginia was given litter tlieir ~ upset victory that they the Florida players \his week," said same field with a team from the tle chance. "Thank goodne.S our
never believed that analysis. Nor did one West Virginia. player, who didn't
great Southeastern Conference," team never felt like that," he said,
they believe an article in an Orlan- want to be identified. ''You could tell said quarterback Oliver Luck, who
West Virginia enlh&gt; the season wit!\
do, Fla., paper which said West they didn 'I respect us. They felt like wound up his record-setting career a 9-3 recoril, its best record since an
Virginia's participation in the game all they had to do was go out and by completing 14 of 23 passing at- identical mark in 1975, when the
would set tiM! Peach Bowl back 30 play the game."
• tempts for 107 yarlh&gt; and a touch- Mountaineers beat North Carolina
years.
West VIrginia Coach Don Nehlen dpWn, "They felt West Virginia was. Stste 13-10 in the Peach Bowl.
Several West VIrginia players said
read
after the ronvincing victory, which , to
his ~
teamFlorida
before newspaper
the game. _article r;~;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
was spark!!(l by a pair of touchdow1111
"We haven't had any respect at
by tailback Mickey Walczak and

RIO GRANDE - Paul Morrison, a
6-9, 220-pound post player from Andrews Air Force !lase, Md., has been
added to the basketball roster at Rio
Grande College.
Morrison, who was ineligible, to
compete during the first half of the
·season because of NAJA transfer
rules, played the last two seasons for
national power.house St. Joseph's of
Philadelphia. He averaged four
points and four rebounlh&gt; per game
during his frestunan campai~n for
coach Jim Lynam and played in only
six games last year because of injuries.
St. Joseph's went 23-10 during his
initial campaign and fini shed 28-7
last season. The squad advanced to
• the final eight in the NCAA tour-

Jan . 3,1 982

Nol)linate 5 to board

By JAMES PELTZ
Allegheny International Inc. and
· - The government's Ieiding
·AP a.b Writer
Sunbeam Corp. were approving, In economic iridlcators feU a moc!elt 0.3
NEW YORK.•(AP) - The stock separate meetings, their companies'
percent in November, following
market moved Into 111112 on a 111ther merg_er In a transaction valued at
declines of 1.6 percent in October
dull note, but many; stockho!ders about~milllon.
arid 2.1 percent in september. Some .
briefly put their holiday season on ' Allegheny, heailquarlered In Pit·
economists said that suggested the
hold this past week to tie up S!H1Ie tsburgh, already Qpe1'11tes in several ~on might be slowing, b~
important I~ ends.
industries, including metals and .others argued the November drop
It was a busy week for Sean, conswner products. With Sunbeam,
was a temporatX pause In the
economy.' s dlin
ec e.
· •.
Roebuck ~Co_., the nation's leading . ~egheny . now will be a leading
-Savings and loan industry losses
g~ retailer that is ' maker of ilmall appliances and outmounted In November ~sales of AD
beCOming an industry leader In of· door products bOth a\ home and
fering a b,toad range of fl11811Cial ser- abroad,
Savers Certifical.es slwnped, the
Federal Home Loan Ilank lloard
vices, · ,'·
' .·
Most Marathon holders, meanIn Lots Angeles, stockholders of · while, already llave tendered' their' sail!. The net worth of the nation's
3,800 federally Insured s&amp;Ls fell$1136
Coldwell, BaJ1l'er &amp; Co., !1M! nation's shares to U.S. Steel, but .the
million In November to $27.9 billion
largest real estate brokerage con). steelmaker under court Order 1s not
as
the industry continued to struggle
pany, approved their company's allowed to pay them a cent of its $6.3
to
capture
deposits going whighel'
acqulsiUon by Chicago-based Sears.
billim offer until midnight WedRE'1'JRF8 .,.. Sara V. (Cn~y)
yielding
investments.
1'111l next day, people owning stcick nesday.
'
Cbrltity,
fonnerly of Meigs County
- Home sales rose 11.3 percent In
in Dean WittP.r Reynolds
Until then, Marathon holders
and
a
·graduate
of the old OUveNovember from ~ober , the ComOrganiZation Inc., the fifth..largest could withdraw their shares and tenOrange
High
SchoOl
In Tuppea!l
nietcf ~PAiimel!treported, lo an
U.S. securities finn, also awroved der them lnSteed lo Mebl!; bUt that Is
Plains,
has
taJtn
an early
adjusted annll81 rate of 403,000 units.
thelrcompimy's purchase by Sears.
only If MobU can convtnee the court1o
rellremeat
after
29
years
with
.
In just two days Sears, for an 1n- to postpone the dale U.S. Steel can . Economists attrlbu~ the gain to
Colwnbu•hased
Nationwide
In"creative financing" techniques,
· vestment of just under _... miilloil," begin buying shares and then consurance
Co.
,She
and
ber'
husband,
and said lower interest rates could
becaiiie a vigOI'OllS competitor vlnce them that Its buying of
boost sales this year. '1'00 increase Orville, have two sous anlheslde at
against other financial services Marathon would not violate antllnlst
1269 Frisbee Rei, Columbus.
still left the nwnber of new homes
giants 111ch as American Express laws,
sold 28 percent below the level of
Co. and Prud~ntial Insurance Co. of
In other developments this past
November 1980. .
America.
week :
!\t the same time, holders of
POMEROY - Larry Brogan of
llrogari-Warner Insurance Services,
Pomeroy , has qualified for memberShip in the Insurance Fire Mark
Society of the Professional InCOLUMIIUS ·Revised
Under the old system in the Povolny, Coordinator, Small surance·Agency (PIA ). '
procedures for administering the program administered . by the Operator Assistance Program,
Brogan has' qualified for this top
Small Operator As8lstance Program division of reclamaUon it could take Building 13-3, Colwnbus; Ohio 43224, producers' 1t'Oup by achieving an
(SOAP) for Ohio strip miners has
three-four mcnths for an operator to telephon~ (614) 2115-86611.
outstanding sales record for 1980,
been well received by the· coal in- get help. Now, thanka to an abdustry,
breviated ajlplicatlon form) a slmAccordlng to the Division of pllfied review proceBil and direct
...
.!
· ReclBmation of the Ohio Depart· agreements between the operator
ment of Natural Resources (OD- and the DlviBion of Reclamation, apNR) , strip mine operalon are pllcations can be approved In threepleased with ~·s i-espon- four weeks.
..
siveness.
- .
The program, which IS · federally
The new system,' inl~ted In
funded, Is (or operators who antember 1981, makes it .easier for nually produce 100,000 tons of coal or
small coal mine operators to get less from all operations.
financial IISSistSnce in obllllnlnl!
Stl;lp mine ope~tors who feel they
hydrologic/geologic studies. The quallf)' for assistance under the
studies are required before strip program, .or who have questions
mine pennlts are issued.
about It, should write or call Don ·

season.

respect us early in the g~me," said
Conference has long been noted for Davis. "llut I'll tell you what turned
Its basketball teams, ·but Clemson them around real fast. We went oi.t r------------....:...-----"------~
W:ide· receiver Perry Tuttle said there early, put It lo them and
Friday night that the tOJ!-ranked showed them we came to play ball
Tigers' Orange JlpWI victocy $hould and win the national championship.
go a long way towards eB,tabllshing
"I went face-to-face with some of
'
lhe ACC as a football power.
them and it w~s like they were
: "We believed In ourselves. We saying, 'You're from the ACC,
l!new. what we had to do," said Tut· you're not" supposed to play like
. .
. . ..
. '
Ue, a senior from WinSton-Salem, this.'''
~ 4 Dr. Light Blue, Air, Rear Defroster and 'More.
N.C., who caught a touchdpWn pass
Clemson Coach Danny Ford said
55,000 Miles
in Clemson's 22-15 triwnph over he felt the key to the game was his
Nebra8ka. "They talk aboutthe ACC team's ability to shut down
a buketball conference, but this Nebraska's powerful rumiltg game.
00
JlroVes we can play on jbe same level \ "We felt we could win the football
~any conference In the countrY.
game by giving up 14 points or less
r, •'Once Nebraalla or 110111ebody like
... Nebraska Is a great football team,
that beats you they say, 'Welcome,to by far the best football team we've
. We .have a very good selection of 1982 Oldsmobiles
the lllg Elghl' Well, I think the played aU year. We' re just thrilled to
and Chevrole.t Cars: and Trucks. Stop by and
·cad•llacs
ICQI'tlboard lold lhe story tonight and death to win."
.
see....
·
.
'
.
il'ugood feeling."
·
• AD week long, Tigers' linebacker
Jeff Davis talked about what he per-·
YOUR DEALER ON
RIVER&lt;~ •.
celved as a lack of respect for Clem- around the country. He said he Worst road .record
sot the Al1l8 feelinC when he took
The Chicag.,Cubs had the worst
the Reid llllinlt Nebrilalla.
''A lot of people tooll111llghlly this road record in the NatiOnal· League
992-6614
year 111C1 that hurt them. I had the in 1981, winning only ·11 pmes and
~ that Nebruka didn't ~Y · losing 35 for a .239 pertentage.

; MIAMI (AP) - The Atlantic Coast

•

Pomeror- M !ddleport- Gallipolis, OhiO;-Point Pleasant, w, va.

Sll h:l~ r WII H KCOOd .

MELBOURNE, Australia I AP f - Hank
Pfister dt!feattd Kim W11rwick &amp;-1, +-B, 6-4 6-3,
..-hilt! Steve Otnton topped lar11el's Shlomo
Glfckst.eln 8-4, 3-8, 7.fl, ft.41, to join Johlln Krlek of
South Arri ca lind Mark Edmotltbon of Australia
In tht&gt; st!ml£inaiA of the 1400,000 Marlbtlro
A."\Wtrall wn Opt!n.
·
~Earlie r. Edmondson beat t•ountryman Peter
M:cN11maru 7-5, 7_., W , while Krle~ Lopp!!d Th~
M~yolte 7-8,6-3, 74.

•

PORTLAND, .Ore. (AP) .:_ Teams
In the Pacific · Division of the
National llasketball AssoCiation
must he hapjly they won't see much
of the Phi18delphla 76ers this season.
The 76ers won their thli-d consecutive game •011er · a Pacific
Division club Friday night, riddling
the Portland Trail lllazers 1:1»-105.
The ~arne was . one of only two
NBA contests on the first night of
1982. Golden State ·downed Kansas
City 125-93 in the other game.
'NpA scl1edules h8ve teams in the
East and West to play each other no
more than twice each season. So
Friday night's game was the Sixers'
. only appearance in Portland this

· 1J2

Sports briefs ...
Tennis

•'.

Gallipolis, Ohio-P oint Pl easa nt . w. v a.

Florida .no match for West · Virginia

Eorly l!ullday Mlxod

Coldertace ChllmpjiNUIIIJPfJ

' j .

\

contt""''

"'*

:· ~Jt&amp;) :

I,.....,-~~ miJUan
Bell I I WI wiB

Jaa. · I, lf'l3 and Jm I, 1• .
;t" mnllJ.
........ dllal• In tlie tu law
ibaa&amp;f14 ..... ,_.,
,..... blfln the dliea arrived . .
• Wltb ~ .,.,... all the paiodl . tended It ..:11 time•

.i.....

. RUST·
PROOFING .
Applied By Qualified Personnel

'

Helps protect metal from ult . Htlps
..,..,.., rust on new C8MI. Helps rust frtm
sprHdlllll on older cars • All vulnerable
arus spray c:oatecl.

'79'5 Compact Cars
'

426 VIand Street
Pol·n f' Pleasant,
w. Va.

675-3930

.

•

�._,

__
,

,. f

•

-

Jan. J, 1982

' ·ont c r oy ·- M •ddl c poq - L. .1 111poli s : Oh•o,- - 1 ·omt P leasant , Vi . Va .

0'

·Meigs Couf!tY Agent's -C orn"er

Agriculture and
.
•
'our community

builduj) so you can better cope with
By JOHN C. RICE
this
fire ha~ard .
Exte01ioo Agent .
IF
you are unfamiliar with the
Agriculture, Meigs County
problem
and you feel i~capable of
POMEROY ~ Tax Seminar - I
checking
the chimney yourself, hire
would like to announce again the In·
a
professional
chimney sweep to
come Tax SeJtlfnar sponsored by the
·
By BRYSON R, I R!illt CARTf:R
.
clean
the
·chimney
and stove pipe.
Cooperative Extension Service and
c;allia Cnunly f:Nh•nsion Agt•n\
~
While
he's
there,
ask questions ·
the Pomeroy H &amp;.R Block Office. It
regarding
creosote
formation.
will be held on Wednesday, January
·--·~
Once the chimney and stove pipe
6,
at the Meigs Inn. The meeting will
GALL!POUS - According to our
individual in the Meigs.&lt;Jallia·
are
free of creosote, follow these
State Extension !ipecialists sucMason area. A meal will be provided start at 9:30 a.m. and will conclude general rules. First, open the air
cessful N~Tillag• forage seeilings.
by cooperating chemical companies dround 3 p.m. in the afternoon. T~
. inlets on an airtight stove for 1~ to 30
especially alfalfa, can be obtained
and we need to know if you plan to seminar will focus on record minutes each day to produce a hot
keeping, the new tax laws, correct
when seedeLI into small grain stub- · attend, preferably by Jan. 8.
tax
fonns and filing dates. Special fire. This will eliminate small
ble. In this way the fanner ca,o push
Don'l forget to attend our Farm emphasis will be given to new tax amounts of creosote formed in the
for optimum small grains and straw
lnc'ome Tax Meeting this coming laws. regarding investment tax chimney during the past 24-hour
yie!Lis and succ~sfully establishinl(
. . ~
legumes for hay- crop production ·Tuesday, J&lt;Jn. 5, 9:30 a.m, to 3:30 credit and the new depreciation . period.
Do
not,
let
me
repeatytlo
not allow
without tillage.
p.m., at the Columbus and Southern---laws.- the
stl&gt;ve
pipe
o~fo
become
red
Electric Building here in Gallipolis.
Wood Stoves anLI Creosote Buildup
This subject will be Lliscussed
hot
'
d
uring
this
procedure.
·
Gallia and neighboring county fann - For tho:re of you enJOYIDll your
during·our Jan. 13, Crop Production
Second,
install
a
thermometer
families are invited tg__attend. Bill · wood burm~g stoves for the f1r~1
Meeting, at Holiday Inn_,Gallipolis,
Smith Glenn Graham and Delores· season, usual concerns center close to the thimble conneetion to the
9:30a.m. to 3:30p.m . All phases of
Wall 'or H&amp;R Block will be the around maintaining a sufficient chimney and at least 18 inches from
alfalla production will be covered
.
· wood supply or providing uniform the stove. Conscientious attention to
speakers.
dnd we'll devote a good part of the
They will help you better un- heat in the. house. - However, you the temperature and comparison
program to corn an~ grain ferderstand recent tax law changes·and should not overlook the fire hazard with creosote deposits will ~elp you
tilaation with emphasis on nitrogen,
answer general questions. about potenhal create~ by cre9sote operate your stove at a minimum
phosphate, potassiwn fertilization
fann income tax filing .
buildup m the chimney and stove creosote formation level.
·and liming.
As a rule of thwnb, I reconimend
pipe.
The meetin~ is open to interested
Creosote is a substance which thai you maintain a temperature of
buiiLis up_ in chimneys and stove at least 3511 degrees F. If rapid for·
pipes when incomple!e combusion mation of creosote occurs,. raise the
occurs and flue gases are 11llowed to temperature slightly.
Avoid two obvious shortcuts or pit
cool below · 270 degrees F. It is
'" lo•alurln~
falls.
Don't try to increase the time
recommended
that
you
learn
as
• Annl• An)·body
between
refueling . the stove by
much as possible about creosote
.

Homemakers'
Circle

Effort aimed
at consumers
.

'

·· WASHINGTON (AP) - Two meat
Industry groups have joined in an inlonnatlon effort aimed at· consqrners. ,
,
.
"!'he pJ'OI!ram was aMounced
nicentty· by the American Meat InJGtute; wblch has Ita headquarters
e, a~d the National Livestock and
·
t Board, Chicago.
, a .Joint statement, officials of
U, two organizations said the effort
focus on prpcessed meat produc-

sa

&gt;.

Grange support&amp; .
trade embargo · ·

•

REAGAN PLANS SHAKEUP - President Reagan day's meeting with Halg and other heads of state. 1AP
said he planned a "shakeup" In foreign policy·in Satur· Laserphoto)

' ..•... .

Jan . 3, 1982

•

D

·1 ,

PAI:M SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) -- President Reagan, • with both personnel and the procedures by wmcn
plannmg "a pretty w.ide shakeup" of his foreign policy foreign policy decisions are reached.
.
operation, will give his national seCurity adviser more
Asking that he noi be identified by name, the officiai
authority in a m.ove that could lead lo the ouster of said the decision could be made as early.as nexi week.
Richard V. Allen, White House officials say.
Asked about t~e likelihood that Allen would leave
Deputy Secretary- of State William P. Clark one of another aide said, "There's got to be some contingency'
the most senior member1J of the Reagan inner circle,.is planning."
·
.;;aid by one top White House official to be the
But presidential counselor Edwin Meese III said no
unanimous choice of the president's top advisers to final decisions were made. •
replace Allen in the upgraded job.
Reading from prepared notes, deputy White H~e
Allen remains on a paid leave of absence pending press secretary Larry Speakes said: "The president
completion of a review of whether hfs contacts with for- has before him a nwnber of recommendations on the
mer Japanese business assQCiates and omissions from operation of tl!e office of assistant to the president fo,r
his financial disclosure fonn violated a White House national security affairs. The objective is to Improve
code of conduct. The Justice Department has cleared the process of communication and coordination."
Allen of any illegal wrongdoing in connection: with
He said Meese w.as 1naking recommendations to the
those actions.
.
president on the basis of an infonnal study.
Meese has overall responsibility for coordinating
In two separate interviews Friday, Allen told repornational !!CCUrity operations and domestic policy
ters no one has told him he will be replaced.
"This is a decision that the president is to make, and operations.
I'm sur,e that when the appropriate White House
review Is done and the conclusions are drawn, that he'U
Clar~. who, with Haig and Dofense Seeretary Caspar
be in a position to make a decision,·· he said . .
Weinberger were guests w.lth Reagan at a New Year's
The president was meeting this afternoon with Eve party given by publisher WalterAnnenberg, had
Seeretary of Stale AleXllnder M. Haig Jr., who, like no formal meeting planned wl th the president, Speakes
Reagan, is spending the New Year's holiday at the said. But he said Clark anLI Reagan had seen each
desert resort of Palm Springs.
·
other socially while in Palm Springs. ·
Haig, who feuded with Allen throughout the first year
The president and his wife, Nancy, arrlvetl ,ln P~lm
or the Reagan administration, planned to .confer with Springs
Wednesday afternoon and ·will return to
lhe president on the visit to Washington next Tuesday Washington Sunday. As they have been for more than
of West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt.
10 years, they viere New Year's guests at Annenberg's
But other topics, including the Polish crisis and the 200-acre compound.
conr mplated shift in the White House national
Friday was a Llay lor watchin~ college football bowl
security operation, could be added to the agenda.
games on television and-Reagan's only·venture outalde
" I would guess that there would be a pretty wide · the lush, irrigated desert-estate was to a pr.lvate dinshakeup," said one official, adding that it woilld deal ner.

..
.•

-,
,.;
•
.•
.. ,
•

... .

Egyptian president. asks
·for formation ·of cabinet·

I.

•

•

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000,
deductible from your income tax each year.
If you have a non-working spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
and your spouse both Work, you can each
open an IRA and contribute·up to atotal of
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
money market interest rates for an
inflation- proof rate of return.
The chart below illustrates how quickly
your financial future can grow. .
·
You can choose one of
two ways to earn your interest
at BANK ONE.
You can choose an
interest rate which is
set for 18 months.
Any new funds
deposited will earn
.i

t~e

18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During January the
18-month rate is 16.25%~) Or you can
choose a variable rate plan. ()he variable
rate in effect for'January is 14.09%~)
Acfquickly to get
the beSt tax advantage.
.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan ·
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
your money is e~ming inflation-proof interest
for your retirement. To maximize the taxdeferred interest you-earn, you should make
. your contributions as soon as possible after
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
statements on the status of the Account and
your.funds are
insured by an
AGE
AMOUNT
W'-1 'IW Open
YouWII·agency of the.
'lbur IRA .·
AtAgetr
federal
50
$ 83,506 ·government.
. ·r, \
$ ; 298,667

30
20 '

,

•

Dne project will he a special Issue
at,1 ·Food and Nutrition News
published by the meat bclard. More
· than 25,001) copies will be distributed
to health care professionals,
nlitrltionl8tll and home economists.
N-i:Olor ne..-spaper features, in·
c:ludlni pholpl and .recipes for food
ldltoi'l al8o wiU be ileve)oped.
"Other elemenll til the consumer
education program· include the
development of meat information
,
pamphlets, the production of a film .
on a nutrltloua, healthful diet, and a
i!pOIIelpenCIII rep! II lling the 111881
lJiclllltr)' In -teWl11 COIIIUI1lln about
the nutritional cpllty of.meat and . ·
Ill role In the diet," the 8J'GUPI aald.

classified

Reagan pla~~g '· wide
·shakeup' in foreign policy

•

-.iii!

't·

.

ll©ffil©\,...

re~-tricting the wood's air ' supply.' );!og prices should average close to ...
Also, do not fiU the firebox as full as . $6 to
per hundredweight above
possibie. Both practices tend to in- last year lit seven-eight percent less
crease creosote buildup.
hogs are marketed. An increase in
Outlook 1982 - Wh8t dOes the receipta from bro!lers and turkeys
ccrystal ball tell us? I will mention seems certain. The larger 1981 grain
the overall economy first. Ef.. crop· will be marketed at lower
pansion of private investment. is a average prices.
.
.
Productionexpenstli have risen an
primary objective. · How.ever, interes! rates caused private in- average of 10 percent per year over
vestments to lag. There is also a · the last two years.
backlog of goods to be sold.' Private ·
Economic policy directed at · investment Is expected to pick up in . reducing .inflation rates sMwld slow
1982 in response to new. tax , in· dovrn the rise In the cost of farm in·
ceritives and some easing of · tax puts .to the seven-eight percent level
rates. I~flation has alr~ady in 1982. Low. farm prices for the 1981
decreased some and should be in the crop and income difficulties niay
seven-nine percent range for 1982. mean some. cutback in com acreage
Unemployment rate will probably and livestock operations in 1982, thus
remain around . the seven Jl!'rcent moderating_the quantity Qf farm inlevel. Wage increases will probably puts used.
'
trail inflation some in 1982.
General Agriculture· - 1981 net
farm income was doW.. This was
due to disappointing livesiock
Priells, large crops and weakening
prices, high interest rates, and a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
stronger dollar decreased exports.
Cash receipts were up eight percent National Grange bas told President
. but ~xpense~ were up nine pereent. · Reagan it would support an acrossIn 1982, dairy receipts will in· the-board embargo of.trade with the
crease modestly with more milk Soviet Union to counter Soviet acmarketed. Price support -levels w.ill tivity in Poland.
· Edward Andersen, master of the
-remain at the same level as 1981.
his
Cattle rece'ipts may increase Grange, · explained
modestly from larger nu.rketirigs organization's feelings. in a letter to
and slightly higher fed cattle prices. Reagan.

...
By Bettie Clark
. Ext. Agent, Home Economics
GALUPOLIS - " Hello, I'm a
Llark-eyed junco anu a frequent winter visitor to your bird feeder. Now I
happen'· to like snow and cold
weather, bul things get tough when
it comes to finding food this time of
year.
Usually, food produceLI during
past growing season is abunuanl.
That includes weed se.Lis, grains,
berries, fruits, nuts and almost any
other edible plant part that is
available.
But that's just the problem. Food
isn't always available. Snow, sleet,
driving rain and wind knock n1uch of
the supply to the ground, where it
gets buried under a blanket of snow.
So, anything you put ·out for me
and my frienLis is apprcciateu,
paticularly in our -visits to town ,
where natural food supplies are not
so plentiful. We like all kinds of
things - cracked corn..._ sunflower
set'd other grains, breaLI crumbs,
shelled and broken peanuts, cut up
fruit, cracked nuts, suet anu table
scraps. We ·also eat !ICed mixtures,
which you can buy at a garden supply store, supermarket or hardware
store.
Afancy feeder is nice to eat at, but
I'm mainly there for the food.
Homemade feeders are fine, as are
eommereial ones. However, bf sure
the structure is coverw to proled
the goodies from rain and snow.
Don't make it haru for me to reach
the food - I'll just go elsewhere for
dinner. And if a predator attacks, I
expect lhe fee\IIJr to be open enough
for me to escape easily.
Squirrels are bird food glutons.
Ke.p them out by hanging the feeder
or placing il on a post with an inverted cone underneath the fecuer.
Also, plese locate the structure
where it is protected from wind anu
neighborhood cats.
I have to warn you about
something disastrous that ·can happen this winter to me and my frienLis. If .you should stop filli.1g your
feeder· after I've become useu to
eating there, I'll starve unt,il I find
anotherfood source ~ if Ifi.nd one.
So, please keep food until winter is
over. I'll reward you by coming back
as often as I can and, I hope, by
bringin~ots of enjoyment to you
and yourfa1nily."

. ..

$ 966926
$3,042,435

""TI'11s assumes that you make a $2.000 Contribution at lh8 beginning of each year Bt'a 12% Interest rate .
and that you leave fund11n your, I ~A through your 65th ya•r.
· ,
.·
•

There is a aubtlantlal interest penalty tOr early withdrawal.

ASKS FOR CABINET - Dr. Puad. Mohleddln, President H011ill Mubarak has asked him to form a new.
Egypt's new Prime Minister, tells reporters lhat cabinet by Monday. (AP Wirephoto I.

.
lhlnk ·

'•

Government .grants privileges
. to spur production efforts ..

...

,

SWpbyany
BANK ONE offl~
for details.

of....._
MDney,our name
COIMIUpftrst.

Whc....., you

.. ,

.

'Member FDIC

BANKONE,w
BANK ONE OF POMEROY
f19MEAOY•AU1:L''-NiloTUPPERS PLAINS

'·

--

"·····

-®

.

Mustafa Khalil, assumed the ~remiership himself and ..
appointed a 2a-man cabinet. The cabinet has grown due ,
to shakeups ordered by Sadat and now numberS 32
Well-infonned Egyptian sources said they expected •..
Mohieddin to make changes mainly in the area of · •
economics and planning, which now Is headed by Ab- , ·
del-Ra:tZak Abdei-Megutd, who holds the title of deputy
prime minister for economy and finance and minister , ,
or planning.
Mubarak has (ocused the attention of the nation on ,
'the c'COnorny since · taking \Office, ordering a ·;
reassessment of Sadat's "open door" economic ,.
liberalization and scheduljng a national conference on
the economy for. later this month.
,,
Abdel-Meguid.has made many enemies In the Egyp- .
!ian business·coiTUnunity for his restrictions on foreign , ,
currency change:-·.
The new prcsiuent has vowed to continue Sadat's·
basic foreign and domestic pollcie~, Including the
economic libe•alizatlon.
Th~ agency'quoted Mohieddin as saying the change~ "
would be "limited." It appeared lhat the old cablll!lt , ,
would remain In office until MohiL'ddin made his an-, .
nouncement monday.

..

"This tS the lntere11r1re a1d effedve amuel yield.

.

CAIRO, Egypt (API - President Hosni Mubarak
today asked Deputy Prime Minister F'uad Mohieddin to
fonn a new cabinet because Mubarak wants to devote
all his time to the presidency, the official Middle East
News Agency said.
"I will help the president as a prime minister according to his instructions needed in the general plan
which required a limited change to cope with the
present thl)es," the agency quoted Mohieddln as·
saying.
The cabinet is to be formed by .Monday, and in·
fonned sources said the ll)ain changes would be in the
areas of economics·and plannin~.
The Middle East News Agency said Mohieddin an·
nounced the shakeup after meeting with Mubarak, who
until now had •etained the sarne Cabinei appointed by
President Anwar Sadat in May 1980. . Observers said the Cabinet shift had been expected.
Mubarak, the former vice president who took over
following the assassination of Sadat on Oct: 6, appointed himscll prime minister after Sadat was gunned
down by Moslem extremists.
·
The cabinet has been essentially the same since may
1980 when Sadat dismissed then Prime Minister

''

In an apparent effort to spur production and boost many ofthem young people.
·
Poland's crippled economy, the martial law govem- • The report claimed many of the " parasites" were .
mentis holding outtbe promise of early retirement and . pe.rched .on the diVIdiDg hne. ~tw.e~n idleness and
increased disability pay for more than 2 million cr~mmahty . ltalsonotedthatmB)or crunes :- murder,
workers.
rape, robbery and . theft - doubled in 1981 over the
The official PAP news agency Friday quoted a Coun- previous.year, but dropped by 70 percentsfnce martial
cil of Mfnlsters decree promising extra benefits to law was 1m~d.
:
those "who perform tasks hazardous to health; work in
In other official reports from Poland reachmg the
·conditions causing rapid physicical.exlfaustion, run a We~t on Friday,. Warsa_w RadiO announced former
high degree of occupational risks and do work radiO and .'eleviSIOn ch1~f Maciej Szczepanski and •
requiring special physical and mental efficiency_.'' . .
others · Will stand trial for corruption . and
PAP said these workers may retire at~ instead of 60 . ITUsmanagement.
•
and will get a 5 percent hike in disability pensions.
·. Sz~epansk1 w~s a close associate of former ComThe report did not link the decree to Premier Gen. mun1st Party chief Edward G1erek. Both were fired
Wojciech Ja~lski's· &lt;reclaration of martial law Dec. follo.wmg labor )!~rest '" Au~ust 1980 that led to for13 that banned the independent Solidarity union and .maiiOn of Sohdanty .~nd whilt became known as the
susPended most civil liberties. But the new privilege• reform m~vement. Gierek,was.reported intem~a.·.'!·'""'----·"
appeared aimed a! undermining worker resistance to · pos~·martial ' law r~undup and may be among
··
fapng charges of Imsmanagement.
· .
the military crackdown.
Leading the PAP list of recipients of the new benefits
Warsaw Radi_o also broadcast a.New Year's message
are coal mlnen who provide the goverrunent's chief by lntenor Mmll!te_r Cesl~w K1~zczak,_ wammg all
source of foreign currency and are among the nation's secunty forces to reJect SoltLisnty s pleas for reslstanmost militant pro'unionists. Other recipients include ce to m1lita~ rule.. .
.
~czak .S wammg followed uncensored reports
chentical workers, drivers, teachers, cominunication
workers fishermen meatpackers and others ·with reachi~g the West thai the independent union highesttulng j~. PAP said.
,
.
·
. rankin~ leader still at large,_Zbigniew Bujak, ~d sent
Reports of scattered strikes, particularly in the coal 8 . cl.andestme message urgmg pohce. and soldiers to
fields of southern Poland slowdowns and indu8tiial disobey orders.
sabotage have reached~ West since the imposition
The 27-year-old chief .or Solidarity;~ .warsaw chapter
martial law, hampering efforts to revive Poland,'s near had pleaded With secunty forces to hsten to the voice
·'."batlkru!lt ~omy., The military junta baa jailed strike of their ~itlnce before that of their orders. I hope
Jnstlgatonl detained thousands of union leaders and you all remember that first you are hwnan beings and
diasldents 'and repeatedly warned Poies they must Poles and only second the e•ecutors of orders."
work. .
·
·
Bujak has been mentioned as possible successor to
CROWDED STREET VENDOR - C.~ military crackdown In Polaad. The fUm wu bruught to
Meanwhile Wanaw Radio Aid the Communist Par· Let:h Walesa, who was \detained hours after martial
cnwd
ai'OIUIII a •!reel veDclor Ia Krakow, Polud, the Ualtecl8talel by anotlleutudeallad the plloto wu
, ty nenpape; TrYbuna Ludu reported today that there .· law was declared and i.s reportedly under house arrest
where
food
lborlalft are commoa. Thll picture~ pabllo~ ID 'lbanday'• Mllwa1111ee Seattael. (AP
are at least ;pJ 000 110-Clilled "social paruites" ill in Wanaw. Independent reports reaching the West
IUea lw a 1tudeat from WllcoasiD lollowillg tbe l.alerpboto).
Poland today,
of them physically healthy and' earlier thla week said Walesa was' negotiating with the
'
KOVenunent bl!t thla was never conflnned.

...:0.

..',,• ·

�.

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The Sunday Times -Sentinel
Jan. J, 1982

·seek

...

~ ]urors'
~

;·.. ddresses

. ::: GALUPOUS ~ Judge Richard
:1toderick of the Ga!Ua County Com·
.:moil Pleas Court ~equested that the
::ilersol\5 . listed below, who are
:.:Pro:!pective petit jurors for the
~orning year, potify t!'e Court of
t-their correct mailing addresses.
•.,. Judge Roderick advised that the
:t:ddresses that are currently on file
: n his office for these individuals are
: ncorrect and. that in ~rder to assure
• ,}hat jurors receive adequate ado
~ance notice of the time when they
;"Will' be needed for jury service,
'~rrect.mailing addresses need to be
::-obtained.
; : Roderick requested that. persons
:/listed below contact the Common
•;,&gt;leas Court at phone numbers 446- ·
r-"'11612 or 446-4702, during the first
~eek of January 1982, and advise the
:x;ourt of • their coree! ma'iting ad·

...

'

- - ~-- · -~- .

SlORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. &amp;am-10 pm

.

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS .
GAL~POLJ_S - They've put in
sometl)mg entirely new at the Gallia
County Senior Citizens Center
namely a job bank through which
people 50 years of age and older can
get jobs and where businesses of
ANY age get good dependable hired
hands.
This fact is from "The Third Age,"
a newsletter published by Area
Agency on Aging District 7, Inc.,
operatmg l)ut of Rio Grande College
and headed by William Jenkins.
Jenkins is not only president of the
Are.a Agency but also of the Gallia
County Senior Citizen:~ Center.
Story of the job banli is on page six
with a couple ofline engravings. The
story starts: "Reproduced are
covers from brochures developed to
promote a pilot program of the Ohio
Commissi~n on the Aging tO' encourage employers to hire persons
50 years of age and over ; and to encourage . applicants to seek those
jobs."

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEUJND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
·PRICES GOOD ntRU JANUARY 9, 1982

'112 Petit Jurun

• '" -Brian Neal M'ur$ltly, 8())( 32, Vinton ; Joseph
"~

J',.'harchak, Rl. 1, Crown Clly : Garh:md OJnar
: ~&amp;Wlders, Rl. 2. Galllpoll!l; Jonathan Daniel
.-•,Meek, Rt. 2, Bidwell: Retha Mae Oavl:l, Lower
~ •fUvcr Rd., Galllpoliai Michael RO)' Coleman, 141
~"'~rfield Avt!., Galllpoll!i ; Cynthia L. Speakman,
•'DM Jack!IOO Pk., Gallipolis ; Ora Mae Lotjue, Rt.
'- '- : Vinton: William H. BrW"IIing, Rt 1,
,.,.J:iu llipolis ; Wanda R. Halley, JU. I, Gallipolis;
' ",Geneva J effenl, 2216 EaHtemMI!'e., Gallipolis;
~~:\l.tnda S. Hall , Box 142, Che!lhlre; John F.
.Mllllir'le, Rl. 1, Gallipolis : Matl~e T, Franch~. B:t8
• •.Upper River Rd., Gallipolb: Cheryl Hulton
· •.•.'Kir'lll:toryJ Patriotst.a.r R~ute, Ga llipolis: Enna B.
;..,1\unnion,_Rl: 3, Gall!~hiJ ; John Mark Haggerty ,
...."Rt. 3, Galhpoi!IJ; William H. Sharpe, Rl. 2,
~ ... Palllpolia; Renee C. Ward, Rt. 2, Vinton: James
• • .Greto~ory Hurst, Rt, 1, crown City: Mildred E.
1• &lt;Edwards, Rt. 3, Galllpoll11 ; Charley Sh.irp, 1818
1
"'oQlathlllm Ave., Gallipoll:s; Cathy B. Cooper, Rt.
1,Chetd\ire ; Boyd Crow Clark, Rt. 2, Cr?Wn City ;
'Besaie E. Ovennan, BoK 17, Crown City; John
"' 'Edwin Baltlwin, Rt, I, Crown City.
1
; • · Phyllis 0 . Stewart, 151 Upper Rivu Rd .,
: ilalllpolls ; Bonnie Gay Pit:rce, Rt. I, Crown
• L.Qty ; Earley E. Hay1nan, Rt. I, Bktwell; Do~ld
'" ·T ~t Plants, Rl. 1, Galli~llt:~ ; Russell Pottll, Rt. 2,
~ "• VJnton · JJllle Davl!l Hill, Rt 3, Galllpoll1; Ruth
;:·~nn G~een, Rl. 1, Gallipolis; .Elise M. Debille,
,. ]jbby Hotel, Gullipolis; Nevil BllrrOwiJ Turn~r.
• j &amp;J Garfidd Ave., Gallipolis; Joyce Ann Sawr
• .~trs, Rt. I, t'het:~hire ; Unda Bundy Calhoun, Box
• ,a· Crown City: Ronald L. Alellhire, Rt. L Patriot;
.ijobert D. Flow~n. Rl. .z. EltlweU; Jam~ll 0.
' SLov~r. Rt. 1, Gallipolis; DonnaS. Mo!lohan . Rt.
· ~~,' 1 1 Cheshire:' Lyndell E. HarruponU, Rl. 4, Oak
)illl ; John Robert Sclunoll, _ 960 Fin~t· Ave., .
~ .Qallipolis; JOt: Neal Oark, 419 LaSalfe Dr.,
~.Gallipolis ; Frank A. Plymale, Lower Rlvt!r Rd.,
''..(lallipolls; Nina P. Bfa's, 80K 1715, Ch~hlre;
: •Aobert D. Walter , Eureka St.Hr Rt. , Ga!lipplls:
.. ·Sa ndy S. Brll(ht, Rt . l. Glllllpolls: Mar11,ard W.
.. 'Knotts , So08 Maple Dr., Gallipolis; Terry J. Ht~r­
.. ~ n On, Rt. 1, Galllpollll; Roger 1•• Barnett, Rt. 2,
tOIIIIipolls; Larry Pickett , Rt. I, Crown City .
" .. ' C111'roll R. Sllt!elll. Box 124, Bidwell ; Karen T.
r · ~Wldcrs, Northup ; G11rnet I. Lttmm. Eurek1:1
~ •SU!r Ruutc, Gttlllpolis; Cy nthia C. Gilrnore, Rt. 2,
' Bidwell · Cla rence Edwurd J ohJL'ion, Rt . J,
-~ 'Gt~llipolis: Elmer N. Vance, Rt. I, Patriot : fi'11ye
.~~E . Yuun~ . Rt.J Bidwell : Rot&gt;ertF. Burnett, 2216
• ,.Raslcrn Av-: .. Ca Jiipol iH: Jat:lt E. C11ldwell. 210
• ~stem 1\vc. G11 ll i~ li s: Gnn.'t: J. Wl1caldon ,
•-.Routt: 1. Ge~Uipolis ; Sharon A. . Cra i~rnlles, 536
'" "4 ck11on Pike, Gallipolis: J_udith Garll.t!onard.
-a())( 160, Kerr ; Br~nt.IH Gay le Planlz, Sht!lton
~ ~d .. Rio Grunde.
•
' ,•
:

USDA CHOICE

Round·

--"'

ETHEL ROBINSON, 109 Cedar
St.; Gallipolis, told us that this job
bank was - ·and is- the only one under sponsorship of the Ohio Commission on toe Aging. Page six, of
" The Third Age" recognizes it as a
pilot program. That means if it
works he~e it probably will start functioning in other counties, too. It
points out that two job counselors,
Joan Boggs and Ruth Mullineaux,
work pa.rt·lime and share'a desk and.
telephone. If-you're 50 or older and
want a job, telephone 446-7000 and
ask for one or the other of these two
women. The service is free of charge
to both the employer and employee. ·

j

t

..

:.HEAP announces
•••
!~:Jan. 31 deadline

::: · CHESHIRE - The Home Ene~gy
: · ~s#istance Program, designed to
• '' help eligible low-income individuals
: ,;and families pay the higher costs for
i~:winter heating, will stop taking aJ)r :J&gt;IIcations on Jan. 31 '
, :. Anyone needing assistance 'from
~::the prOJlram must apply by this date
· i ' to be included in the program, ac:·1;cording to Gallia·Meigs Community.
• •Action Agency.
::: Applications are available at the
:::following locations in both Gallla
::•and Meigs counties: senior. citizens
~:cente"', veterans service offices,
:·:u .s . · Post Offices,' county welfare
&gt;·•departments and CAA offices in
• ·:Gallipolis, Cheshire and Pomeroy.
: : Individuals applying for the
:':• program must supply Social
~:;:security numbers of each member
· •: of the household that have &lt;hem, a
;;:copy of the fuel bill of the prln)ary
; ~· heating source and proof of mcome_
• ,: for the past 12 months.
: • Assistance in obtaining and filling
; .:out applications may be obtained by
:::f;l)lling CAA at Gallipolis, 446·4~H2,
~:; eltt. 63; Cheshire, 367·7341 or 992·
; '"6629 · and Pomeroy, 992·5605.

USDA CHOICE

QUA~ITY PLUS

Sltced ·.Bacon ..... !-~8~
FRESH PORK

Steaks or

$129
••

.

' ' $'129

Chuck· Roast .......~·..

•

'

IT SAYS ON page six:
Employers in Lht&gt; eounty hHve ~n r~i!ptiv~
to the Jui.J Bank and are li ubmitt i n ~ mort! Job ur.
Llc r~ thctn .tf1e program can, fill ... MMny Galliu
CI)Unty employers have shown a desire to t:m·
ploy the oiLier worker. Thi!y find the oldi!r person
has a strOnJ.\ ~· ornmltmen t to the work ethic ~nd
belitlve in l(iving an honest day's work for an
honest day':t pay.

-.

$}l9

. .

Martin A. Janis, the director of the
Ohio COJrunission on · the Aging,
visite&lt;l the Gallia County Senior
Citizens Center and was impressed
with the progress recorded by this

Roasts.L~.

BALLARDS

Sausage!!!!!~ 0!!~~.~"~~.~ 1

19

Whtte

.DAR I FRESH •

.

.,,

; ,: GALUPOUS. - The following
;:: people filed for marriage licenses
in Gallia County
·.··
r • this past week
.
1;: Propate Court.
·
·
.
1·· Ervin Crabtree, 54, Rt. 2, Vmton,
·: operator, and Dorothy J, Mayo, 45,
~ ~lRt.. 3, Gallipolis, medical secretary.
;;. Danny D. Murray, 31, Gallipolis,
; 1-truck driver, and Shirley A. Allen,
:::a1, Dayton, bamutid.
•:: Duane M. Skidmore, 20, Colum~·-bus, l)ead sawyer, and Regina A.
•::vaughn, 17, Rt. 2, Bidwell, student.
!·· Charles D. Thevenlr, 22, Rt. 1, Bid·
; ': well, mechanic, and Debbie Francis,
: : 20, Ri. 1, Bidwell, unemployed.
: ·; ROller Watson, 33, Rt. I, Crown
;•City, coal miner, ·and Bonnie M.
•:watson, 38, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, billing

,.

,.;clerk..

.t.!• ~
•••

f

·Chunk Tuna .... !·~~;.

'

$169

M

T

'
Air conditioning/ Heating
Auto Body Repair
Auto Mechanics I
'
Basic Household Repairs
&amp; 1mprovements
•Basic Math &amp; Blueprint.Reading
Body Dynamics

'

.

I
.1
I
1
I

80
60..

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
3 LBS.

$599

NORTHERN
TISSUE
4 ROLL :
PKG.

·gg~

TOMATO SOUP'

SUGAR

10.75

oz.

51$1

5 LB.

BAG

$}29

POMEROY
LANDMARK
-.
-

.

'

_, _

We Service What We Sell •••
. :. ~This Is ~~~ortcint.
G~

I

Used 15 cu. fl Freezer •••••••••••••••••••••• Only '250.0Q
•:

·
Prices Start At
4 Micro Wave Ovens ···~···························~·~·····
'295.95
·
Price~ Star1 At •
· .
3 Water Softenet'S •• ••••••••• •• ••••• •• •••••••••• •• •• ••.•••• •• 366.
95
.2 Wood Burners ••••••••••••••••••••••••
·•••••• ::~~~~-~ ~a.r:::'•• '342.95.
.
1 Uke New Repo.
Avocado Hotpoin~ 18 cu. in. Refrigerator ·
.

'

'

1 Uke New ~epo.
·Almond Hotpoint 18 cu. ft. Refrigerator
•

Cl:EARANCE PRICES ON ALL GENERAL ELECTRIC·
TELEVISIONS
Console and Table Models

~ YOUCANNOTUATOURPRKH

.ALL APPLIANCES ON SALE
Water Hea141rs, Washers, o ·ryers, Refrigerators, Kerosene Heaters, etc.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack W. farsey, Mgr.
Drive a little and save a lot-Free delivery within 75 miles
Yes, we service atyour local Hotpoint DealerS tore Hours:
8:30 his: 30. Mill Closed at S: OO P.M .
Serving Meigs, G;~ll,ia and Mason Counties

LAIIDIIARil ®

I
1I

I

I Rio Grande, OH 45694

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

ADULT EDUCATION

Class size req!Jirement- Minimum 12 students

WINTER SESSION JANUARY 19, 1982 THROUGH MARCH 11, 1982
Registration - January 4· 18
·
GALLIA·JACKSON·YINTON
Monday through Thurs-day 1 P.M. to 9 P .M.
Fo'iday 8 A.M . to 4 P.M.

•

JVSD

l;~cility

r

E

40

1·19·82 to 3·25·82
1-19·82 to J-9·82
1·19· 82 to 2· 18·82

$80.00
$60.00
$40.00

40
60
12

T · TH
M:w
T· TH

1-19· 82 to 2· 18·82
1· 21·82 to 3· 10·82
1-1 2· 82 to 2· 18,82

$40.00
$60.00
$25.00

Body Dynamics

12

T· TH

H 2-82 to .2· 18·82

$25 .00

*Computer Program Writing
Gunsmithing
I

40
12

T· TH
T· TH

6·10
' 6· 10.
4; 30·
5:30
• 5:30·
6:30
6·8
6·8

1-19· 82 to 3·25·82
• 1· 19· 82 to 2·23·82

$40.00
$25.00

ra
* lntens
60
1ntroduction to Electricity
120
*Nurse *ide/Orderly
40
Shorthand
small Bu.s iness
·270
Financial Recordkeeping
270
small Business Operati~ns •
40
small Engine Rep(ir
12
smart House Buying
Engineering 96
s'tationary
40
Typing
270
Welding

T· Th
M· W
M· W
M·W
T · Th
M· W
M ·W
M ·W
T · Th
M·T· W· Th

6·10
6· 10
6· 10

1-19· 82 to 3·9· 82
1-20· 82 to 3·29· 82
1· 20 ·.82 to 3·31 ·82

$60.00
$120.00
$40 .00

6·9 : 30
6· 9: 30
6·10
6·9
6·10
6·10
6· 10

1-19· 82 to 5·27· 82
1· 20·82 to 5·27· 82
1·20·82 to 2·24· 82
' 1· 19· 82
1·20·82 to 4·20· 82
1-19· 82 to 2·18· 82
1-19·82 to 5·27· 82

s4s.oo
$45 .00
$40.00
$25.00
$100.00
$40.00
$365 .00

'

..

*Computer programing will be held at Jackson High School. Nurse Aide/ 0&lt;·
derly and Intensified Office Training Will also be held at Buckeye Valley in Vin·.
ton County . Registration forthese classes may be made by mail or by stopping at
Buc.keye Valley between the hours of 8: 00a . m. to 4:00p.m .
·

Registration ma1 be made by mail or ~y stoppin~ at the Adult .Education o~fice .
Individuals will not be considered reg1stered unto! fees are paod . For additoonal
information please contacHhe Adult Education office (614) 245·5334 .
'

.

' '

SPONSORED BY TIIESE FINANCIAL INSTiTUTIONS

l UUPOI\o

•
FLAVORITE

'

I P .O . Box157 '

6-10
6·10
6· 10

.,

lh GAL

'
CAMPBELL'S' .

AT

COURSE . . ... ' .... ' .. '.''.' . .. ' " ' ' " " ' ' . ' . ' . '
Make checks payable to :
MAIL TO
Gallia · Jackson ·Vinton JVSD
Adult Education
Gallia · Jackson· Vinton JVSD

T· TH
"F· TH
T· TH

·,

Ice Mtlk .......•••••••••

c:LEARANCE SALE

WINTER SESSION SCHEDULE ·

•

Pinto Beans...:~~.~

··JANUARY

BUCKEYE HILLS.CAREER CENTER LEARNING IS LIFE LONG

Large Eggs....... ~:.7

FLAVORITE.

.

.,

..

VALLEY FARMS GRADE A .

.stARKIST '

Where?
Courses may be held wherever adequate fa c ilities exist.
Generally. c ourses will be held at Buckeye Hills Career Cen·
ter..

.

2% Mtlk ............G:~L~~..

~i~F~e parking
.,,,
;.;on
... Saturdays

· ..~~Apply
for license
,

Potatoes!~~8~.~•

Pa!le 0 · 3

I TELEPHONE ' ... '' ' . ' . '' ' ' ..• . '. ' ' . '. ''.'' . '.'

When are classes held?
Courses in adult education may be offered anytime sufficient community interest is evident. Standard courses will
be ofte'red periodically through the year as per class
schedules.

Fees?
Fees are based on instructional, consumable and
costs.

. The StJnday Tini es - ~entinel

I NAME ·( print) ............. . .... , . . .. .. . ..• , . . . .
II ADDRESS ... . ..... . .. : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
I
....... . .. . ........... .. ........ .. . . . .

What is adult educatoon?
Adult education is a program of courses for individuals to
upgrade th'e mselves or prepare for new jobs .

$119 ~

·.

fr----------------------------~
Registration Form ·
:

BUCKEYE .HILLS CAREER CENTER

·.

w. va .

.

~

'

pilot program which started only lone Caldwell of Highland County;
last September - the September ri and Louetta Fields of Brown County.
1981! ·
·
The corporation elected tjlis board
•
of trustees: President Dr. Elmer
JOB BANK started in late Sep- Eickelberg of Jackl!on County ; Vice!ember, 1981, and in the last eight President Mildred Schuler of Scioto
days of the month chalked liP eleven County;
Secretary: Treasurer
applicants and four job orders. In Harold Schritter of Lawrence Coun- ·
October there were 13 applications, ty; John Rittenour of, Pike County;
;18 job orders, and four placements. . : Donna Caldwell of Adams County;
November sHowed 31 applicants, 43 Alvin Norris of -Brown County; E.
job orders, and six placements. William Frey of Ross County; and
"The Third Age" said that the first· Betty Allen of Vinton County.
sevendaysofDecembersawtwojob
The writeup also read that past
applicants, 2 job orders, and eight . chairpersons of Senior Citizens Day
placements, Ruth Mullineaux and activities receiVed certificates of apJoan Boggs were gone on their . preciation from Director Bob
Yuletide leaves when Peeps wrote Horrocks and staff: Ethel Robinson,
this, and he couldn't bring it up to Mike Powell, and Hobie Voiles.
date on December - .naturally Ethel Robinson was chairperson of
and obviously the complete month the first Senior Citizens Day.
would have to wait ·until it IS complete. ,
BACK PAGE of "The Third Age"
for October, November, and DecemWILUAM A. JENKINS, 108 ber, 1981, has two pictures at the top,
Kineon Dr., Gallipolis, has his pic- both depicting the cartoon characture on the same page of " The Third ters, Maggie and Jiggs. Mary
Age" as the article on the Senior Walker had the part of Jiggs ; and
Citizens Job Bank. He's pointing Mildred Jenkins - First lady of not
with his right hand to somebody in only the Gallia County Senior
the audience, and he has hold. of · Citize~ Center but also of the Area
Martin A. Janis with the other hand. Agency on the Aging District 7 The cutlines say that he is took the role of Maggie. Frank
. distributing door prizes at the Scioto Claytor. was on the stage as Saint
County fairground for Expo '81. Peter, and Ethel Robinson as the
Bob Horrocks is in the other photo. narrator.
The cutlines say that he is
distributing door prizes at the Scioto
Bike hdmets
County fairground for Expo '81.
NORWALK, Calif. (AP)- Only a
Horrock• is director (lop hired . small portion of the nation's 105
han&lt;j) of the Area Agency on Aging million bicycle riders wear protecDistrict 7.
tive helmets, according to a bicycle·
helmet maker.
Figures gathered by Bell Helmets
FRONT PAGE of "The Third
Age" had a long writeup about the for 1980 show that about 75 percent of
joint meeting of the Area Agency on more than 1,000 fatally injured
Aging District 7 and its corporation bicyclists died of head injuries: The
board of trustees at Chillicothe's figures also indicate there were
Holiday Inn, Dec. 9. The Area Agen· · more tll'\n 500,000 bicycle ac&gt;idents
cy elected this council: President serious eo.ough for cyclists to
William A. Jenkins of Gallia County;
require hospital emergency-room
Vice-President Clifford Langdon of care. Meanwhile, the study reveals
Lawrence County; Secretary Linda that one-half of one percent of all
Mendenhall of Adams County;
American bikers wear protective
Treasurer Alice Mason of Ross
headgear.
County; W. E. Stanley of Jacksor
Although wearing a helmet cannot
County; Edward Wikle of Pike Counprevent an accident, it can reduce
ty ; Margaret Hilt of Scioto County;
the risk of head injury, according to
Bell.
·
Ruth Johnston of Vinton County;

'

u. s. ~0. 1,

f' oont f' lcasanl,

·B uy Times-Sentin~I classified ads

&lt;!i'lallipoli9

NIGHT LIFE AT.

..

, •• POMEROY - Free parking every
F &amp;turday 'is still in effect In
·, •:)&gt;omeroy. During the two weeks
:~;before Christmas free parking was
• ;!lranted to shoppers. The free Satut:1
: .day parking, however, was granted
. l)lefore the Christmas season, by
:~-village council in cooperation with
:, ~:merchants to encourage Saturday
' ~::Shopping In the community.

~

Middlcpo&lt;I- Gilllipolis, ()hio

'Third Age' publicizes job
bank _p t senior center

:''~..t!ress. · •
• •.

t 'omc&lt;oy

..

.•

,

C&amp;S BANK

GALLIPOLIS .

SAVINGS
AND
LOAN

·COMMERCIAL AND

SAVINGS
•

,I

BUCKEYE
BUILDING

CENTRAL

AND

TRUSL

lOAN
~

OHIO
VALLEY
BANK

�f'age- D - ~ - Th~ ~und.w

Ttmes-Senttnel

f'omerov-Middleport- Galhpolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

w. va.

Jan . 3. 1982

t 'omeroy - Mtddleport- Gailipolis, Ohto- Point Plea sa

Nine injuretj in holiday·w~ecks

played havoc with service in the lower part of Pomeroy
where many residents have been without service since
Monday night.

WATER PROBLEMS- Worker. oflhe Pomeroy
Vlllage Water Department were in their fifth day
. Saturday of tryfug to locale a water leak which hBB

..

Pc:)meroy residents ·without
water; village seeks cause
mitted. that the water outage was a
hardship in trying to operate a
business.
A fire department truck 1s being
used to visit homes and fill drums
and other contamers of re5idents
who are struggling to get ~long
without regular water service.
Mayor Andrews 1s a resident of the
secti on of town affected by the
outage.
He reports that reSidents needing
water can go to the fire station or
Pomeroy Vtllagc Hall to pick up a
supply if it is needed between trips
by the fire department vehicle.

long hours and worked ,over the
holiday m an attempt to find the leak
but to no avail.
Crow's Steak House affected by
the outage of service was operating
but with a limited menu. Paper and
plastiC serving· supplies were bemg
used. Other businesses from there
towards Middleport were affected
greatly by the lack of water. Mrs.
Vera Crow, manager of Crow's
Stfak House, commented also that
workers of the street department
have worked extremely ' long and
hard in trymg to correct the
~i tuation. By the same token, she ad-

POMEROY
Numerous
,Pomeroy residents Saturday began
their fifth day without water service
as village water department
workers set~rched frantically for a
leak in the lines.
Water service went out Monday
night in the West Main St. section of
town and was still out Saturday morning from the area of near Crow's
Steak House to the corporation
limits near Middleport.
Mayor Clarence Andrews htghly
c()mmended water department
workers .who have been puttmg 1n

GAWPOUS - 'Ibe New Year's
struck a· ditch, .causing severe
holiday was ushered in with 12 acdamage to his vehicle.
•
cidents, nine injuries and nine
Farley was taken to. Veterans by ,
Cltalions.
_the Meigs EMS, and was later tranThe GaUia-Meigs Post of the state
sferred to Pleasant Valley Hospita~
highway patrol said four . people
where his condition Saturday was
were injured in a twe&gt;-vehicle crash
reported to he stable.
in Meigs County Thursday afThe patrol said Janet J.. Burris, 16,
temoon.
· •
Rl. 3, Gallipolis, was eastbound on
According to the report, a vehicle
Ohio 141, three-tenths of.~ mile west
driven by Patti K. Johnson, 18, of the Gallipolis city limits, at 11 :18
p.m. Thursday when her vehicle lost
Pomeroy, was eajltb&lt;iund on Ohio124
at 12:38 p.m. when she collided with control, w~nt off the )eft side of the
thltear of a vehicle drlven by Den- road and collided with a house
nis R. Howell, 35, Pomeroy, ar the owned by Carl Rathburh.
junction with Hysell Run Road.
Burris was injuted and taken by
The wreck caused severe damage the Gallia EMS to HMC, where she
to Johnson's vehicle and moderate was later treated and released. The
to the Howell auto. Injured were
patrol cited Burris for DWI and no
both drivers and respective operator's license. Her vehicle was ·
passengers in their vehicles: Amy severely damage'd.
R. Johnson, 9, and Nonna J . Howell,"
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
3.!!•.bothofPomeroy.
.
Victor COunts, 52, Syracuse, pulled
Tlie Johnsons and Dennis Howell from Ohio 124 onto College Road in
weretakentoHolzerMedicaiCenter Syracllde at 10:05 a.m. Thursday
by the Rutland emergency squad, and struck a verucle driven by Holly
and Norma Howell was taken to N. Fnend, ao, Syracuse, causing
HMC by the Middleport squad. All moderate damage to both vehicles.
were treated and _released, and Patti Counts was cited for failure to yield.
In a three-car accident in the
Johnson was cited for assured clear
Spring Valley area near Gallipolis
distance.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by Thursdey,II)Oming, the patrol said a
Kimberly · A. Jenkins, 20, Racine, vehicle driven by C. C. Fowbl~, 75,
rolled over after driving into a ditch Addison, was unable t9 stop on U.S.
along Metgs County Rd. 34 at 2:10 35 at 10 :25 a.m. and struck the rear
am. Friday. Her vehicle was of a stopped vehicle driven by Jerry
severely damaged, and she was in- L. Taylor, 39, Rodney. '
The collision then forced Taylor's
jured along whh two passengers•.Terry J. Wilson, 19, Pomeroy, and vehtcle mto another stopped car
Marjorie C. Nelson, Rt. 2, driven by Howard R. Moore, 44, Rt
Crooksville.
3, Gallipolis. There was moderate
Nelson was admitted to Veterans damage to Moore' and Taylor's
Memorial Hospital after being taken vehicles and slight to the Fowble
there by the Meigs EMS. Her con- car, and Fowble was cited for
dition was listed. Saturday as assured clear distance.
satisfactory. Jenkins and Wilson
According to the report, James c.
werf also taken to Veterans and Cunningham, 24, Battle Creek,
treated and released.
Mich., .was stopped at the junction of
U.S. 35 and Green Twp. Rd. 44 at
Thomas Farley Jr. 39 Athens
was westbound on Ohi~. 14l iii Meig~. 12:15 p.m. Thursday and was struck
County at 2:20 a.rnl Friday when he by a vehicle driven by Dwayne E.
reportedly fell asleep at the wheel, Varney, 18, Rt. 2, Wellston, causing
drov~ off the left side of the road and slight damage. Varney was citecJ.for

assured clear distance.
. ·
Paul R. Spence, 43, Jac~onvtlle,
Fla., was eastbound on Gallia County Rd. 11 (Cool Valley Road) at 2:50
p.m. Thursday when he lost control
of hts vehtcle on tee anddr.ove ~the
left stde of the ro~d mto a dttch,
causujg moderate dlill)8ge and no lllJUry.
.
.
.
Tlfe patrol satd a vehtcle dnven by
Raymond L . Patlel"l\on: 19, Rutland,
was southbound on Ohio 7 m Metgs
Count! at 3 p.m. Thursday when he
atte.m pted to stop for a tummg
vehtcle dnven by Kelly C. Nelson,
17, Cheshtre, slid o~ wet paveme~t
and struck the s1de of Nelson s
vehtcle.
.
There was slight damage to both
veh1cle and Patterson was ctted for
assured clear dtstance.
Troopers reported a a southbound
auto dnven by John B. Brooks, 20,
Huntmgton_,_ W.Va ., was unable to
stop on 7, Six-tenths of a mtie north
~~ 35, at 6:15 p.m.~Thursday and
struck the rear of a stopped vehtcle
dnven by John W. Gous, 34, Rt. 1,
Rutland. •
Ther~ was. moderate damage to
Brooks vehtcle and shght to the
Gous auto. Brooks was Cited for
assured clear distance.
.
The report satd Dana H. Halfhtll,
22, Rt 1, Ches hire, was northbound
on Metgs County Rd. 3, three-tenths
of a m~le south of 124 , at 11 :45 a.m.
Fr.lday when the left front ~heel of
hts pickup truck fell off and struck a
house owned by Malcolm Ingram,
.Rutland: There was shght damage
·to Halfhill's truck.
!he patrol satd a vehtcle dmenby
Ft ank L. Queen~ 32, Rt. 2, Patrtot,
pulled from Gallla C_ounty Rd. 42 onto Oh10 77_5 at 3 p.m. Fnday ~nd
collided wtth a southbound vehtcle
drtven by Vernon K. Houck, 26, Rt . 1,
Gallipolis.
.
The~e was· slight damage to
.Queens vehicle and 11)oderate to the
Houck auto. Queen was Cited for
!allure to yteld

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, un-

CAMERON 12x60,
ssooo .. 30'4-675·2560.
1974

1972 mobile home, fur·
nished, 2 bdr., like new.

67S 37 41.

Miscel lan
,eous
Membershi p
Sales

No 4Y87Ali897S

1977 Olds cutl ass. 4 Dr

3G29C7D191534

The Farmers Bank and
savt ng s
Compa n y
Pomeroy. Ohio, reserveS
the righ _to b1d at fht s sa te.
and to wtthdraw th e above
vehicles prior to sa le. Fur ·
ther , Th e Farmers Bilnk
and Savi n gs Company
r eserves the n ght to rej ec t
any or all bids submitted
Further, , vehicles ar e
sold in the condihon th ey
are 1n with no expressed or
implied warrant 1es Qtven

Sll ,357 .55
581.00
27.37981
8 01 1 15
3096.00
5.603 50
16.950 00

conces·
$1005

Ca mp
Ground
Exhibit Building
Tractor Pult
Donations
Bui lding and
Grounds ·

Rent

( Il 3. 4, 5, 6, 7. 8, 6fc

4.043 00
9.085 00
40,917 00
23.038 00
10,000 00
4,447 00
1,145 II

Advertt se

ments

Ga te
Admis stons
Season Pa sses
Amusement
R tdes
State Atd
Interest on
Deposit
Lease
In come
Annual

----------"Public Notice
----·-----

ME JG S COUNTY
AGRJCULTURF
SOC IETY
FINANCIAL
STATEMENT
1981

644 .50

D~nncr

Flea Market
' Receipts

35

7.041 10
6,302 22

Mud Run

Rece ipt s

Balance 1n

Total Recctpl s ilnd
Bal a nce
187 ,470 53

Interest
Loan
Refu nds
Misc. 1nco me
Bal . Begtnn ing
of year

1981
EXPENDITURES

Mi scell an

eous
Tractor
Pull

9.009.25
4.586 64
Junior Fair
15.702.93
Prem tum
EQ uipment
Expense
4,653 .43
2.416 11
Labor
&lt;.809 22
.Salar ies
Payroll
1,557 52
Ta•e ~
Police sr.td Wa tch
4,842 58
men
1.839.89
J udges
Ticket Sellers
.find Ticket
"fakers
N~wspaper Adver

Exp
Judges

Balance
Total Expend• ·
·tures

6,287 98

Racing Purses
&amp; Expenses
36,070 35
Public Uti1111 es
.4,079 73
Grand Stand
Atfrac tt ons
12.766 oo
Santtation
175 00
Atlverftsing
1,188 96
Sound System. Tent

Balance in Treasury,
December 31 ,

19ll1

23.656.97

Jan . 3
Public Notice

• PUBLIC NOTICE
· Notice Is ~ereby given
that on Satu•day, January
9th, 1982, at 10·00 a.m. a
ubllc sate Will be held at
05 Union , Aveoue
Pomeroy, Ohto t1&gt; se ll for
. cash the 1ollowing

f

The Joint ·Heirs Gospel
S1 ngers are now taki ng
m1 n1 str at1 on has tor sa te. enga ge men ts 895 ·385.4
from ttm e t o ttm e. re siden
tta l proper ti es located rn
Athens, Meigs &lt;lnd Vinton
Cou nt1cs. Any licensed rea l
. As( Me About
es tate broker tnterested tn
MARY KAY
listi ng these propert1 es
COSME TI CS
should contact th e Fa r
For
compl1mcntitry
mers Hom e Administrat1on
f;1c1.11 and re -or ders
rtf P. o . Box 589, Pom eroy,
Ca ll Jlt rl cne Burd
OH 45769 . Te lephone · (614)
At 256 -b6B9
992-66&lt;4

PUBLIC NOTICE

&amp;

Supplies

Loan Payments

you write modern
poetry' Would you like to
get toge ther with others for
sharing &amp; evaluafton? Ca ll
446·24)9 ,
Bridg e
player
with
med 1um experience would
lil&lt; e to find J others tn ·
ter es ted in playtng bndge.

Call 446·2439

Cl ea ner, one half mile up
Ca ll
Geor ges Creek Rd

446·0294 ..

Complete li ne of Muzzle
Loading Gu ns pnd Sup·
plies .
Spring
Vall ey
Trading Co., Spnng Va lley
Plaza, 446·8025
Gun Shoot Raci ne Gun
Club Every Sun starttng
at 1 · p.m . Factory choke
gu ns only .

'"'"";--.,...- -·- ----

Ra c ine Fire Dept sponsors

a Gun Shoot. Sat nights
6 30 p,m , Bashan Factory
choke 12 guage shotg un.

Flea ~ M a rk e t /
N ew
Opening . 7 days a week .
The Heart of Middl ~a port 20
N 2nd Sf form erly Martin

For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating otl and
d1 esel fueL call Landmark.

area . Reward . 742·2264.

FOUND : Brown &amp; black
German Shepherd type
dog . Near
Ravenswood
Bndge on Otlto Side. 843
2971

2r 1 acri! house lots, on 554 ,
low downpayment. land
, contrac t, tural water,
· Columbus and Southern

Electric Call 256·6413, 12

p m to9pm .

3 grave lots for sale at 6hto
Memory Gardens. Will sell

cheap . Call245·5682.

•

Furnished mobi le home .
washer , dryer , air, {l)ig
Y~rd, a~ults preferred, fuel
ott , outstde pet. 446-3918.

41

Houses for Rent

245·9325 or 245·5364.

LOCATED in Oak Htll . 5
rm . house, vediY nice . Call

682·6010.

room house for rent in rio

Grand"'-li. J 446·3485 .

bedr~

2
house. Spring
Ave .• Pomeroy . CarPe ted ,
remodeled . Call after 6
$195. month not mcluding
utiliti es 992·2288
Unfurntshed very. nice 2
bedroom house . St. Rt. 248

.'

985 4244

.

-- ,

German Shepherd found
around Salt Creek area.

675·2856

Gtve away female, mall
Shepherd, tour 6 we - old
puppies, and 2 cats . Call

367 0687 .

Small male pup, 2 cats-2 yr.
olrl and 1 yr . old, anQ 1 dog.

Wt~l..,
~oes

Need

One

Angora

Hamster .

FREE . Call446 0562.

White mother ca t &amp; 5 kit·
tens, 2 white. litter trained

'ca ll992·3229.

____

Would like to give away 3
male puppies Inquire at 70
Riverv1ew Dr .• Middleport

Gun Shoot at th e Rutland
American
Leg ion .
12
12.354 83 o'c lock Sunday
. Factory
16,061 74 .•choke guns only.

,

'

veshgate.
1. If you are above average/ CAREER Ml NDED

one-half mountain Blue
Tick coon hound. 667 ·3762.

' PUPPIES, 8weekSOJd. call
after 5, 304·675·6426

2 Neat Appearance/ HI GHLY MOTJVfi TEO

3 Aggr esstve with ou tgoing personality

4 Oyer25 (ormaturcl / SELF STARTER

5 Htgh Sc hool ~radu a te min tmum w ittl wotk ing
experience or coll ege deg ree
6 Can be out of town 5 nights per week.

. OLAN MJ LLS PORTRAI,T STUDIOS ha s im·

m~diate openm.gs for mature, professional sales·
· or.ented women and men that need to earn
~15,000_.0,0 an.d .UP per year. 5174 .80 per week while
1n tramtng w•th f!totel eMpe~s~s. car allowance
~nd corp. _benef1ts
Expenence in cosmetic,
rewelry·retall sales such as: Avon, Tupperware,
Sara ~ovenJry ~ telephone sales helpful . For per·
sonal1nterV1ew call Jtthif"C. Hall TOLL FREE at 1·

800·762-5903 or CALL COLLECT 1-513·323-5528 or 1·
513·323·5313, Mon~ay through Thursday, between

8:JO a.m. ·4:30p.m. or. send resume i!fo· ATtN·
John C. HaU, Post Office Box 300, Spnngfield oH

e oe M~

.

•"

'

BEAUTIFUL white kitten .
8 Months old, has hod
shots, 304-675·3214.
I

To H .
Happy New Year
py Birthday,

&amp;

Hap·

Ff-om one whO cares!
6

Lost and Found

LOST· Foxhountl ,. female,
white with black spots, ~
may have collar &amp; cnaJn
with " Blankenship" on It,
vicinity of Lakin &amp; West

Columbia. S50 reward . 304·
773·5066. .

bills?

money

Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069 .

BEDS· IRON, BRASS; old
furniture ,

gold,

sliver

dollars. wood Ice boxes,

Concepts now seeking
counsel ors, training now,
start ·in January No in·
vestment, no delivery, no

collecting. Call256·6572.

q~ICk

2502

Real Estate- General

fEAFORP(B

sale. $13,500. 614·742

VIRGILB. SR .

Base. Ca ll-446·807 4.

32

Will 'do babysitting in my
hom e or housework Full or

TRJ · STATE

part time . 675·7827.

Phone
19

GET VALUABLE ,training
as a young business person
a~nd earn goOd money pluS
some great gifts as iJ sentinel , route cerrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the eligibility list at '192·
2156 or992·2157.

Taking Bar Applications.

Pos t tlons open for front end
alignment-brake mechanic
and •tire changer. Send
resume to Box 729-P, c·o
Dl!lily Sentinel, Pomeroy ,

Ohio. 45769.

Service Mapager NEieded
for automobile dealership.
E:xperlence
required .

PhOne solicitor. Part tlme,
mainly evenings. Call alter
10 a.m. 992·744C.

21

Business

Opportunity
Your o'wn jeans and sportwear shop! Offer the latest
in jeans, denims and sportswear . $14,850.00 includes
inventory , fixtures, etc.

Complete Store! Call 1-800·
874-4780. Ask for EXT 32 .

NOW YOU CAN OWN
YOUR OWN SPOR ·
TSWEAR &amp; FASHIO N
SHOP!
Exc i ting
and
profitable opportun1ty now

available in the Gallipolis
area .
PRE ST IGE
FASHION offers you

992-210

.

Asking $59.900
ONE FLOOR

of S12.soo.oo
$15.soo.oo
ACT NOW I for ·your e~ ­
clusive opportunity

,.
8

-

ONLY S37.900

FO~ 1 Buy these
and rent one out . J
bedrooms
in eac h .
natural gas heat, baths
and city water . V1ew ol
river on Ea~ t Main .

1

i965 GenerAl mobi le nome
12x65, compl ete ly ready for
setup, mcludes cement

ski rting, $4,800.

Both for S28,500 .

For more information call

446 0511 .

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, _gas heat , rural
water, close to town. financing availa ble. P}1one 4-46-

'

'

2 bedroom, 60xl2. Flatwoods. $150 . per month plus
utilities and depostt. Par·
t1ally furn 1shed . Adults

Money to Loan

Columbus First. Mortgage
Company FHA-VA Fi nan·
cing Loan Rep. Cook ie

Krautter (304)675·3473.

Small

or

furnished

house,

1·614-263· 3 rooms.wiln private bath,
845 Second Ave. Phone «6·

Apartment f or r ent

446·0390.

-

2215.

Furnished Apt. lsi , floor,
util ttles furnished . Ref.
required . No pets Adults
preferred Call at 631 4th
Ave.

Call

Modern 1 bedroom fur ·
nished apartment. adults

only, no pets. Phone 675·
3788.

3 APARTMENTS Jn Hen·
derson. S150 per month,
304-675·1972.
THREE

10xso 'mobile home. S1.200.
Call 388·9354.

2nd . floor furnis hed ef
f iency apt . 729 2nd . Ave.,

Galltpolls. Call 446·0957.
Adults only, no pets

2·2 bdr. unfurn 1shed, apts
1n Vinton . Hookup for
WOOdburner or fuel oil ,
refrig . &amp; stove f urnished .

Ca ll 245·5818 . •

-"

.

-----

Apartm ents tor r ent 614 -

992-5908.

J bedroom apt In Mld·
dleport $150. month 992 '
5692

bedroom apart,

ment, 2 bedroom trailer ,

304-67S·4045 .

• - Gene7cii ---- - - - ------rieii e5tiie:_

--·~

Apartments. 675 5548 .

--· -

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

CANADAY :
REALTY

42

Const'r uct ton
workers
trailer for three. Phone 304·
773 5651 , Mason

Modern 2 bdr . furntshed ,
12x70 trailer . Conventent
l oca tion, sec. dep . &amp; ref'
required, util!ttes paid ex

2 bdr. and 3 bdr . mobile

after 5.

For rent 6 acre farm , 3

2 bedroom, furntshed. all
electric $125 plus ut il tttes
and deposit . 675·4068
V

K

Furnished 2 bedroom
mobile home, close to Pt.
P-leasant. Sl25 month and
care tak1ng ot property·
Wnte PO Box 587, Pt.
Pleasant, WV 25550.
12x65TRAILER near Leon,
wv. partially furnished .
DepoSit
&amp;
reference
required , 304-458· 1978 after
5.

cept electric Gall 446 ·8558

home s. Call 446·0175 .
43

Farm5 for Rent

bedroom. 2 lull bath mobile
Attractive antt modern 2 home. $225. monthly . 742
bdr. Skyline, furnish ed , 2266.
nlce location on Rt. 7 above

bypass. Call 245·5818

centenary · 2 bdr .• Prt"'ate
lot, adults, ref. &amp; dep
Eureka · Riverfront lot, 1
bdr .• adults. ref . &amp; deposi t

Call 1·614·643 2644.

44

NEW

5 room apartr;nent, yard,

13% FIRST YEAR FINANCING

stove and refrig er ator . Pt.
Plea sa nt 1·614·263 8322 or

1·614 263-1669

DUALITY PLUS - LivabilitY - 2 brand new homes
schools . 556.000.00. ·
VISUALLY EXCITING - A fireplace opening tnfo
lhe l1ving an d dlntng room s guarantees a cozy at·
mospherc Ft1mily room with woodburne.r that
could make you look. forwar d to' wmter 41 bedrooms.
2 full baths . Basement with ream s of stora ge 2 car
attached gara ge $92 ,000 . Assumabl e mortgage

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446.()971
Mose Canterbulj, Associate 446·3408

GOOD TIME~ - Country kitchen with adjoi ning
fil mily room Is perfect for informal enterta.nt ng,
family fun Four labedrooms including a master
sui te with a walk -In closet and private b;tth Famtly
bath . Formal d1 n1ng. 2 car attached garage 11117
acres Very private loca ti on ncar Rio Gra nde.

$79.500.

LISTING -

7

room house wtth a la rge
front si tting porch ,
fir eplace, pantry ' area,
lull basem ent. farge
foy er area, and a 2 yr.

VACANT LAND -

E NTERTAIN~ASI LV or h 1de out in y'Our second
floor bedr oom with a good book Except ional foyer
has bridal stai rcase . . powder room . Spactous
living and dining rooms Kitchen has Island rang e,
buil t· in oven . breakfast nook with view of bricked
courtyard Peaceful environment in th e heart of the
city Buy w1th $5 ,000 down paym ent , balan ce on
land conrrac t at 12%.for 20 years . Monthly payment

Ap·

px 56 acres with appx . 5
t1llabte, and balance is
wooded .
Southern
school dtstnct, near th e

new bridge $23.900.

LARGE

Ron ·Canaday, Rea~or, 446·3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
REALtOR -• 25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio
1

Apartmemt
for Rent

WOOD REALTY, INC.
.446-1066.

E.Ma,in•oltlll
POMEROY,O.

"[ 9 '

·

near cih' . 3 BR, 2 full baths, equ tpped kit chen. P.lush
carpel, cen. air. attached finish ed g arag e, full
basement designed to add a family rm . later . City

Real Estate- General

CORNER

LOTS - and '""' 5 room
one floor home with new
carpet . new storm w1n·
dows and 'in sulation.
Recently remodeled and
1S
very economically

$484.49 NEW LOW PRICE $49,000.

S21,000.00 - 8 room 2
story frame -home in
Middleport . 3 or 4
bedrooms ,
bath ,
basement, new gas tor·
ced air furnace and 2
lots.

• Based on conventional financing nt 1lio/o, 3 year
R.O.M ., :ZS% down payment. 1 year buy down. •
FOUR VACANT LOTS - In Ci ty . NI CP. r esi dential
r~rea . Grea t building locati on or investm ent proper

tv . 575.ooo .

FINANCING - Move in condition . 2
bedrooms, newly · car pelod · t a.mlly room with
fireplace 6at ·ln kitchen . Fu ll basement. Garage .
Beautiful l awn with Ohio ~iver frontage $39.900.
$6 ,000 down payment : balance on land contract at
12% interest rate, 20 yr ter m Month ly payment

OWNER

$363 .36

FARM - 56,4,900 - St)( mtles I r om Rio Gr ande. Nice
3 BR frame tlome has VIMY I Sl dif'!g , 2 ba ths. fUll
basement, 2 car garage 40 acres. mo ~tly t imber ,
2.0751b. toba c;c obase. Great family home

'•
"CA LIFORNIA FINANCI

BY OWNER -

3

t

bedroom newly remodeled home si tu ated within th e
ctty of Gallipolis . l'?nce of hom e is $30,000.00. Owner
says, "Pay •13 down and balance in 5 years and there

•J

will be NO INTEREST CHARGED! See this one
today and

id for in five

he ated $29 ,900.
CUTE

&amp;

COZY

d esc ribes
t his
2
bedroom home w1th an
equ 1ppped
kitchen.
utility room , front porch
and n1ce level lpt

.......
'
'

IN THEO COUNTRY near the mines - appx .
1 acre wtth a 3 bedroom
house that has nice
woodwork , a bay win·
dow . and a family room

$30,000
NE W

"C ALIFORNIA FINANCING" BY OWNER -; 3

,.

bedroom home, approX Imatel y two years old ,
modern, overlooking the Qh 10 R•ver Prtce of home
•s $60.000 00 Owner says. " Pay •~:~ down and balan ce
in fiv e years and there will be NO INTEREST

12 ACRE ESTATE wlth a " OaJJas" flavor . Rail len

ces. ,.stabl e, swimming pool, garage/ workshop
svrrolJnd ed by beautiful level land . Vi sually C)(
citing brick home Sunken
room . f amtlv
room with glassed
elegan t
format din i
room .
plus a

CHA~G E UDl.
' --~

Wood Ret~lty , Inc .
32 Locus t St .• Gt~ ,llipoli s

ENGLISH

TUDOR - with spl1t entry , 3 bed rooms, 21h
bath s. large fam ily
room.
ga ra ge
and
works hop. Owner will
f1 na nce with large down
payment .
Asktn

446·1066

' -

study . 2•12 baths A kitchen that promises to turn f'l
· novice cook into a pro. Nutone work ce nter, dou.blc
ovens, dishwasher, r ange and brc akf,l st booth
custom destgned by Chandlers . Custom drap es,
plu sh ca rpet . A11ach ed 1 car gar,1ge. Expensive?
Yes, but impossible to r ep la ce for the Asking pr ice

----

$49 ,900

NEW LISTING
BAUGH ADDITION Your cnance to own a 3
bedroom ranch · hom e
with 2 baths. tul!
basement, garage , elec
hea t, atr cond ., equip ·
ped k ttchen , di ning
room , on a 100 ~ 361 lot
for only S20.000.

REALTORS

Henry E Cleland, Jr .
Jean Trussell
Dottie Turner
Office

992·6191
949·2660
992·5692
992-2259

GREAT

LOCAtiON

GREAT

VALUE is offered by this neat 'n clean
,bHevel home w i th 3 bedrooms, '}•! ,
baths. t•rep!ace •n ltving room . 2 car
garage and much m ore. Would possibly
con sider land contra ct to qualifi ed
buyer. Call now.
•f 791

Trail er for sale or rent 992&gt;'

3860
22

hook·up, excellent
I
&amp;Reference and

Twin single, Iaroe rooms

675·2453.

only . '192 5834

Call

Mr Hartley, 1·800·S27·6443.

Newly decoraed.' &gt;eall to
wall carpet. wasHer &amp;

-----

Housing
Headquarters

1294

2

air and heat, adults bnly, 1-d,eposlt required Coil 304·
dep. 446·0338

For rent 3 room furn apt ,
adults only, no Pets Cal l

3 bedroom mobile home
Qua il Creek . Call after
5 00, 245·9519

&amp;

apa ?tments.

Mason, WV . 773·56S1 .

2069

2 bdr . mobtle home com
pletely turn. Call-«6·9669:

Some

rooms, 2 baths, wood ·
buroer , carpeting, lar ge
ba ck porch: wa sher and
dryer. stove -r efrtgerat ·
or and level 1 88 acres

CLE AN USEO MO,flJLE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MJ
WEST , GAL LIP OL IS, RT
35. P~ONE 446·3866

MORE for your investment

------~-

Priced to sell. Three used
mobile homes, 2 bedrooms.
can be seen at 0 and W
Estates. formerly K and K, •

THAT EXtRA MEASURE OF QUALI·
TY - Imma culate J bedroom hOme In
the city. Lovely swimming pool for
summer ple!sure . Large family
room, d ining room, kitchen. Sb many

extras in th is lovely home and priced so
right .
1908

OWNERS ARE AN~ IOU$ and
even help with the dOwn 'payment on
thiS stylish victorian 4 bedroom home.
Plenty of.r.torage space. Fu ll basenient.

Fireplace. Flat lot. Well insulated.
P05slbitlty of loan assumption . Priced
in the $40's.
W924

HA-NDSOME · ELOQUENT - Qoallty'
construction throughou t thi s brick and
atumlnum siding · 2 story . De!lghtful
decor, 4 bedrooms. 21h ba th s, formal
dining,' family roo m w /fl r epl ace, full
basement WOOdburn er , 2 car garage,
P/2 acres of land mil PLUS many more
deluxe features Move before winter .

nn

Rt. 62 north, Pt . Pleasant,

wv.
23

Professiona-l- -

___...:S,_,e,_r_,v~ic'-"e-"s-~Plano Tuning-Be kind to

your ears. Call Bill Ward

for appointment, 446·4372.

M&amp; M Electric . All electric
work

~ar&amp;n1eed

304·675·2236.

&amp; bonded.

'

rlldllltbrs, glnHng, ye-llow

AUTOMOBILE
·IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled? " Lost vour
Oflll'ltlll''s License? P~

MOBILE

HOME S. Gallipolis. Year
end sale, prtce reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL
441&gt;· 7572

&amp;

-

fence d. small st r eam ,
ol d 7 room farm house,
barn cOrncr ib, shop and
garage 12x52 Schultz 2
bedrqpm trailer wtth
T P. f'w a ter. on Rt . 7
near Easte rn School.
RANCH
- 8 room ~.
large family room with
woodburner,
3
bedrooms . 2 full baths.
insul ated, garage and 1
level acre plus 2 yr old

Mobile Homes
for Sale

blocks

ACRES

bedroom

Mobile home In city'"C:t:_ntral

$24,900

1-(614) · 992·3325

Flnanelal

245·9520.

~~~11 0.,

216 E. 2nd St.

Gall iPOliS,

BUYING DEER AND '
BEEF HJDES. Gene Hines Urgently need dependable
Rt. 1, Amesville, Oh 4-18· person wno can work C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com6147 . Buying raw fur after withOut supervision for pteie bookkeeping ahd tax
Dec. 12. Dally 6 PM to 9 Texas oil company in Pt. 58VIce for business and in·
PM. ctosed Sundays. Also Pleasant area. We train. diYtduals.
Carol Neal 446·3862
closed Dec. 24 &amp; 25.
Wrtte D. .D. Dick. Pres.•
Southwestern Petroleum,
Raw furs~ hides, scrap Box 719, Ft. Worth, TX
metals,
b-atteries, 76101.
root, and merchandise
brol&lt;ering. Harper-Hatste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5161.
Also Flea Market, open
dally. Open Monday· ·
Friday 1·5 pm.

bath in country . On 3.2
acres Storm windows,
rura l water, garage, lots of
storage space Close to all3
mines. Pri ce r educed fo r

"""Or ren t 3 bedroom fur·
18
Wanted to Do
ntshed home on Bud Chat
Butcher's Shoppe Cus1om tin Road on b1g level lot
576·2711.
butcherin$J &amp; processi ng

Babysitter Rodney area
Refere:nce reQuired. Phone

currency_ Ed Burkett Bar·

3476:

call 304·675·3734.

675·6512

3 or 4 bedroom house with

for

stone jars, antiques, etc., Replies kept conildentlal .
Complete
households. Send resume to Box 729-H
'/(rite: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, c · o Daily
Sentinel,
Pomeroy. Oh. Or 992 ·7760.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
'
CHIP WOOD . Poles max. Automobile
Salesman
diameter 10" on largest Needed. Ambitious person
end. Sl2.50 per ton. Bundled willing to meet the publi c
slab. $1 0.50 per ton : selling new and used
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co .. automobiles. Some exRock Springs Rd., perience required . Replies
Pomeroy. 992·2689.
kept confidential. ' Send
resume to Box 729·C, c·o
Gold, ' silver, sterling, Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp; Ohio45769.

ber Shop, Middleport . 992·

in ·

Art·Craft ,Wanted to teach Guitar and

Trading, Spring Va lley 9'/2·3860.
Plaza , 446·8025 or 446·8026.

We pay cash for I at~ model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.

lessons ,

TWO bedroom furntshed
trai ler, $165. month . p lus
utilities. $50. deposit. 304

446;3192.

$85 , MT . Vernon Ave., 1

Deposit and references. 1-

ola roof. $22.900

6730.

8074, Helen .

paying cash for anythi ng

Buying
Gold,
Silver.
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware . Daily
quotes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale .
Spring
Valley

GUITAR

dlv ldual classes, personal
attention, modest prices,

payment, $250 per mo. in ·
el uding mter est at 10 1/2
per Ge nt
Ac ce pt good
mobtle home m trade. Call

House Meadowbrook Ad·
itto n 3 bedrooms, f amily
Wanted to teach Children's , oom w1th firepl ace, cen·
r-,3i·a1r, basement. 304-675·
Gymnastics and L adies
Excerc1se classes . Call446· 1542

Help wanted
extra

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

mobile home, all utilittes
pa1d, outskirts of Hen ·
derson . $230 month . 30.4 675-

74, $31.000. S5.000 down

room

Efficiency rooms by the
week- on Main Street,

614·263 8322

NUMaeR&gt;S.

Eureka. ca ll 256·1922 .

month ,

FURNISHED 1 bedroom

Nice 3 bedroom home on
1/2 acre lot 3 mi)es from
HMC on old Rt. 160 Built in

Furn is hed

and yard . Pt. Pleasant. adults only Call 446·0338.

New'leMs

2 bdr . mobile home below

deposit and references
required Call 614·.448 ·3821

~

holiday

Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992·2054 in Pomeroy t

Schools Instruction

Call 446·2851,
Oh .

CASH PA ID tor clean. late

Call 245·5089 after 5.

4 female Collie puppies to
give away. Call256·1352.

15

SQuare . wood ice boxes, old
desks and bookcases. Will
buy cofnplete house holds.
Osby Martin, Middleport,

11

BUYING GOLO &amp; SILV ER

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

Pt

Apartmemt
tor Rent

,dryer

RtSoLoTioN

large beautiful house. 1
block fron T in Middleport
· 3 or 4 bedroom . 11h baths ,

Homes for Sale

31

tifacts of all types. Osby
Martin . Middleport, Ohoo

niture and Antiques of all
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swain,
256· 1967 in the evenings. ,

model used cars . Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis,

Insurance

deer hide ginshang . Trap· surance Co . has offered
ping supplies . George -services for fire insurance
ln Gallia County
Buckley, Rt . 2, Athens, Oh. coverage
614 · 664 · 4761.
Open for almost a century .
Farm. home and persona l
evenings
property coverages are _
avai l ab l e to me et in ·
Gold, silver, old monev , dividual needs
Contac t
pocket watches. chains, Kat I Burleson agent Phone
rings· l!lnd etc . Indian ar · 446·2921.

9
Wanted to Buy
WANT TO BUY ' Old fur

4

anyth ing to gtve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other th ing tor
sale m ay place an ad in this
column . . There will be no
charge to the advertiser

RAW FUR buyer. Beet &amp;

Ohio.

wedding nngs, silver cotns
or
anything
stamped
ster ling . Clarks Jewelry

ANY .PERSON who has

13

utilities pd ., slngt~ male,
range, refr fg. share bath.

houses ,

fllel&lt;f

Call446 3870.

S300 .

homes .

44

Apar-tmemt
for Rent

Pleasant and GaJI ,poils.
614-446·8221 or 614-245·9484. 446 4416after7PM.

2 bctr. trailer in city, adults
only ' no pets, SlSO security
depos it &amp; $150 month. Pay
all utilities. Call-446-405 1.

House 5 rms . and batn,
newl y remodeled ins ipe,
nice garden space, loca ted
110 4th Ave , Gallipo lis

garage .

44.

'192·3324.

2 bedroom well insulated
house near R tQ.__. Grande
College, $225 per month
plu s utilit1es and SlOO
re fundable
depos t t
References requirPd . Ca ll

9

--~

The Sunday Times-scnttnei - Page- D-5

Apartmemt
for Rent
APARTMENTS, mobile
44

2 bedroom trailer Brown's
Trai ler Park , Syracuse

lfentals

42

Wanted to Buy

STRAYE D or stolen 1 OLD FURNITURE . Beds,
Polled Hereford ball call. iron, brass or wood. Kitabout 400 lbs. with a bran· chen cupboards of art
ded 'W' on hip. 304·895·3621. types, tables, round or

992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .
Giveaway

9 ·

45160.

stamped 10K , UK, 18K and
dental ·gold. Class rings,

---------

If vou ,wa~t an opportunity that comes rarely 1n a
pers~n s hfet1me then you owe it to yourself to in·

45501.

Harrisonville

Ohio. Call446·2282.

. ATTENTION : WOMEN AND MEN

1

LOST: Blue tick &amp; Walker
mixed dog

.Do

2.305 29 General Store. 992 6370.

Premium Book s
&amp; Printing
1,196 81
Maintenance, Repa ir s

1.706 92
3, 700 00
6,427 65

187,470 53
.
163,81 3.56

02
00

5,123 51

3.838 00

Taxes
600
Concession s
3,302.88
Expenses
t..nnual Dinner
·Expense
663 .94
Mud Run
"Expenses
6,302 .22
Ti)ta f Expend I·
.. lures
163,813 56
Total Receiprs and

75

Premiums (Jr F air )

Rental s ett .

ON THE ROAD AGA IN

!~e F a,rme r s Home Ad

-----~---

~2R

Taxes, Lt censes
,668
Dues
90
Prem iums CSr F air)

Awards and Troph ies

Real Estate

Q98 21

Exp

and Features 32.159.25
Djrector's, ·
:Expense
466 57
Postage '
162 26
Utilities
10.350 50
B.,ilding Maintenance
and Repairs
16,903 62
Mortgage
10,100 00
Payments

l~ur..~nc es

7,922 .26
935.20

Otre ctors E)( pense
Admin tstri.1 tlve

Specia l Attra c tions

E•penses

5,17 1 38
$144.665 .10

a.

tising
235 56
tising
2.235.12
Prin1tng, Stattotnerv
and Supplies
11.876 30

Sound Rental
"Ex pense

-·------Public Notice

. Lost and Found

992 5056 or 949 2657.

6234

~---~-----

6

Red tick male coon dog.
by ap
304·675- '· Ball Run John Koehler.

Doctor ref erals,
pointment only .

Announcem ents
3,755 00 3
222 .03 SWEEPER and sew ing
10.000 00 machine r epair , parts, and
835 45 suppltes:
Ptck up and
242.75 delivery , Davis Vacuum

Sa l artes
$ 2, 000.00
Tempor ar y Payroll8,705 25
Bus
Prot ess1ona1

Genera l Adv er

Loan

-~-

3 371 21 Professiona l Electrolysis
$144,665 10 Center A M A . approved,

30,699.00
7,500 00
1.948 00

Expenses

3.900 00

Interest on

( I J 3 I tc

Announcements

PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL

22. 13600

Adverti sin g
1,560 00
Short Term Rent als

6,027 49

1980

Speed Rec1p ts

rSQ.OO
5,025. 00

Sta te Aod
County A1d
Sales

Treasury,

December 31 ,

Amusemen t co
Bank Ba l
end of vEar

3 •

I

9-.150 25

Cla s~ try Fee

by Larry Wright

446·4258.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Call 304·675·1301

( 12) 31 Ill 3, 10, 3tc

Conc.~:_ss, o ns

'"

992-2259

Rece1pts
Gate adm issi ons $~0 , 8 2 6 24
Member ships
5.850.00

1.800 00

--

for Rent

J bdr trailer in Vinton · Call

SIX room house, located
U ncoln Ave , Pt Pleasant

Public Notice

collateral
1979 Ponf tac Grand Pr ix
Serial No 2J37Y9P584657 ·
1974 Ford T Btrd, Ser ia l

GALLJA COUNTY
AGRICULTURAL
SOCIETY
Gallipolis, Ohio
,456]1
FINANCIAL
STATEMENT1981
•1991 RECEIPTS

675·4064.

42 ... ~bite Homes

9 5 or 614·448·2555.

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

Public Notice

for Sal "• ~~-

de rpinn~d .

Classifieds
Public Notice

Mobile Homes

32

w. va :

31
House on Broadrvn Road,

will take half doWn ond rest
bY month. Call Lucy
Kaylor 182·2401 .

HAPPINESS FOR SALE - Lovely 5 year ranch, 3

NOTICE

bedrooms, n1ce carpet, livtng roorry w ith lirelace •.
1'/:: c~ r gara_ge, metal building, l arge lot
~ 1499

'New 198114' Wide

NEW LISTING - L11vely 3 bedroom ranch, formal
dtning, wife approved kitchen, full basem ent. 16xJ1
inground swimming pooL Neighbor:-hood Rd . ~ 1SS6

s9,295
'

'

.

Calli mmediately·
;

·D&amp;W Estates; Inc.
(JiiJ1 Elliott)
Rt. 93 North
Jackson. Ohio
216-3752

.

lOWER RIVER ROAD - Seethisn iceranchhome
overlooking the Ohio River. 3 l~rge bedroom!. ,
wooctburning tireplace. g~traQe in basement +
separate 2 car garage .
t 7400

'

s ACRES

- N ice rolling land on Floyd Clar~ Rd
BeaUtifUl building si te
512,000

Eveninp Call
Patricia ~ith. • · ·367-t22B
Darvin Bloomer~ Rultor, -'446-2599
~n Fuller, ~uttar 446-4327

!~~~~~~t~owners want to retire

from their well e~tabl1shed flonst
business . Step right in and take over, a,_ll
inventory goes plus 3 rented mob il'e
hOmes tor even EXTRA income Call

tOday I Don't delay!

1931

NEW LISTING -, MEIGS COUNTY -

Picture perfect is this well matntamed
30 acre farm . Large barn . Work shed , .
corn cribS. storage buildings: All
buildings have been freshly, pa1nted .
Large
bedr'oom modern home.
Fireplace. Besement. Give a call today .

s

,

926

HOME PLUS -

Double With one Side

rented. 2 bedrooms, · kitchen, llvlng
room , 11J:1 baths, one side. 1 bedroom,

IIYi'IQ room, kitchen, batn other Side.
Ha s been remodeled. Owner will he1p

with financing. In tow.n location.

1923

MOTIVATED SELLER - An•ious to
this 92 ecre farm . WOOdland,
pasture, some tillable with tObacco

sell

base. Modern A bedroom house, 3 room
b&lt;tsement. Hell1 pump; cel\tra l air .

Owner say~ approx. 50 acres
New listing. Clll now

I

'

' J., '

of

coat .
1922

· LOVELY VIEW of the river and priced
under SJO. This l'h storv home ha• J
bedrooms. 1 baln, kitcnen and tlvlng

room with fireplace . Part ~asement 1
and 311-a acres of land. Loca1ed on
Honeysuckle Lane.
I 928

MOBILEHOME 'llfth . PRESTII#E _.
Beautiful 1977 14~75 home with form~!
dining room. bay window, jamlly room,
· 21arge baths and completely furnished .
This !• just a. few Of , the amenities.
Sltuoted on I acre of lovely lawn .
•
1907
114 ACRES of vacant land to do as you
please. Greenfield TOVfnshlp . Priced In
Jhe S20's.
_, , .
I 142

complete,

sq. tt 3.91 acres ot

land. Conty wat er now bei ng installed
Septi c tank Discover th e beauty of
ara . Near W~yn c Nc'ltional Fores t

$30,900.

'894

COMMERCIAL PROPER TV - 1 acre .
more or 'less, on Upper Route 7. Proper ·
runs to river. Financing av,:l!lable.

tv

Just listed. Call todav , don't Jet lhls one
get awov.
H2S
RIO GRANDE 7 2'1&gt; tots toea ted In,the

Village of Rlo Grando Sewer and water
avaUablt . Close to churct- . school anr'
stores.
if 9'

21Trtr
' '

•

�•'

j.
J a n . J, 1982
TheS

f'

s4 SLEE PIN G ltOOMS 1N1
lig ht housekeep ing a pt.,
P a r k Centra l Hote l
T r aile t lot for r ent. Ca ll
446·4265 .
46

One' year old tr .. )lree
refrigera tor 1nt Slove, In
gOOd condition. $600 . for
both or S3.50. for ref. &amp; $250.
for stave . Call 4&lt;14·0562 .
LAYN E'S F URN ITURE

Space tor Rent

COUNTR Y MOBIL E Honv
Park, Route 33, North Of
Pomeroy . Large lots . C•H
m -7479 .

49
For LNse
HoUse for ~•se in ,.,,
Ple a sa nt. 3 bdr . house with
basemen t,

family room.
-~ OOdbu r n e r , $3.!0 pe-r mo.,
$200 depos it. Clil 44H23•. ·

SQ.fa,

chalr,

rocker, ot·
tom~n , 3 ta bles, $.500. Sola ,

chair 1nd loveseot, S275.
Sofu end chl1rs priced
from S!I.S. to $795. Tobin
SJI ond up to $109 Hide·a ·
~ds,S340 .. queen si ze, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
lamP' from $11. to $65. 5
pc . dflelles from $79 ., to
SJBS. 7 pc ., 1119. and up.
Wood t•ble w ith 4 chai r s.
S2 19 up to $495. Oesk SilO.
HutcheS. $300. 1nd $375.,
maple or pine f ini sh.
Bt!droc:Wn suitH · Ba ssett

51
Househal&lt;l Goads
Autom a tic waSher &amp; dryer,
cou ch, two chairs, desk and

chest freezer . Caii256·62M.
Up r ight lree:er IS c u.ll.
l ike new $191, frost fret

refrige raton·5 io ch0011
from avo, copper, &amp; white.
2 spac e he aren 56.000 8TU
S95 ea ., Hoowr rorllble

dryer S95, r.tr.rators not

fros t ·~ &amp; to ·choose ·fro"'
s ta r ting at $50. Skaggs A•
pliances, tJPJ)e'r River Rd.
446·7398.

Moving out Qlf 'state . Must
sell immed iately . Sofa and

loveseat. queen size . bed
wi t h

frame, cnrome "ncl

g lass dinette set, 4 pc
ster eo unit with 4 speakua..
antique dresser, drum wt,
el ec tric synthfti,zer . 675·

6750.
G OOD
USED
A" ·
PL IANC E S
washe.-.,
dry ers,
r a ng es
pli ances,

refrig e rators.
Sk a g gs
~p ·
Up~r R iver Rd.,

beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398.

Oak, W7S., Basself Cherrv,
1795. -aunk bed complete
with -ttresses, $250. and
up to t3.50. Caploin' s bed!,
S275. complete. Boby beds,
S99 . Mattresses or boic
sprinp, full or tw in, $58.,
firm , U,l. and .S71 Queen
sets. 1195. 5 dr. chests, $49 .
• d!'. chests, $42. Bed
framn, $20 and 125., 10 gun
· Gun cebinets, 1.350., dlnel·
te cne1n $20. and $25. G••
or oi«&lt;T'Ic ranges, S295. Or·
lhopesllc super firm , $95,
baby._.,.lresses, S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20 $25, &amp; S30.
Electttc· fireploce, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wOOd llble &amp; 4 chairs.

Usof, ,
Ranges ,
r efrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out BUllVille Rd.
Open fam to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am lo5pm, Sat.
446·0322
Misc . Merchandice

54

lump Coa l $32 per ton .
Zlnn Coal Co., Inc Caii.W.·
1o401t:oetween 9 and 5.

is, Oh i~P oint Pl easa n t,

idd

· ·- · -

fi r ewood-seasoned h'a r ·
dwOOd, $35 pic kup toad
de li ver ed. Call 446·4176.

- "'7-- ·-

Ca ll 256·6413 . 12 p.m . to 9
p.m .
For Sale 1&lt;: itchen table and
2 chairs, $25 . See a t 769

Brownell Ave., M iddl e port.
New wood stove, half price,
never used, $350 Can con·

ve rt to furn1nce . Call 256·
1216, Gallipolis.
Complete front axle for VW
Beetle, S35 . Long royal blue
velvet evening dress worn 2

Ping Pong table with net &amp;
paddles, $50. Call 446·0562 .

I YONJE
. I()

'

l ilt W• st m.n, Broiler, 4U · l7.. EYt.
J im Cothran, AU GC I• tt . U t · 7111 E ve.

I

ICUDISS I
~HOBt
J I J
"'esterday $

ting

torch

and

hose

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

gt011dbyl... - -·

ONE OF THE Fl

ST - Ab••nhttel v
one of the best homes in the area .

Jum-· LOOSE CHIME BUSILY SAILOR
What work meant for the doctor turned
burglar - "HOUSE CALLS':
0

Superb location , edge. qf t own on 2112 a c.
grounds. 2 story 4 bedroom home has
lovely cherry trim. 2 fireplaces,
fini shed basement, glass enc . porch, 2
full and 2 half ba th s, den, family room ,
2 car gar age and work shop. H i!,s h·ad
only one owner would consider ~om e
financ ing .

set, gas cookstove . Call446·
701 3.

baths. tir ep lace, large eq u1 pped k 1t·
&lt;: hen, t.:im il y r oom, 2 ca r gar age, n1ce
work shop, cov er ed dec k p lus 1.07 acres

$22,000 - This
is a real bargain. Owner s must sell im·
med iately . 3 bedroom bri ck home with
full basement . nat . gas heat, ca rport
ttnd fenced yar d

Whirlpool aUto washer $90,
Frigidaire dryer $90, bot h
In e x.. cond .. Call-«6·8181 .

home is r i ght here in
Northup and f,e atures 3
bedrooms. Jll:l . baths,
spacious living room ,
dining area1, cheery kit·
chen, 2 car garage,
patio. plus much more.
Call now and let u s
make your dream s
/1512
come tru e.

GALLIPOLIS
A bn ck nome that you
can get with a small
down payment and low
inter est rate 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms. baement ,
and garage, one floor.
lan Nice ICJndscaped
lot. natural gas. F .A.
furn ace . L.ik e new .

Don't de lay. call lodav .
017

WELL BUlL T ANO COZY
In Mint Condition
3 or 4 bedrooms with l arg e closets. One bedroom is
perfect for offi ce or sewing room . Liv1ng room ,
dining room , batn and eat·ln ki tchen with built· in
ca binet s. Front and bac k porches, full basement
and garage w it h 31• · acr e more or l ess, In City
School s Priced in the mid. 40' s. Call today for
det ai ls on th e c h ~ rmin g home.
# 519

WALNUT TOWN SHIP - Beef, hoy &amp;
gr ain fa r m . 80 llcr es , m/ 1. approx. 35 A .
good croplond . 10 A. WOOds , bll1nce
pasture, good fences, 9 rm .lbatn, home
was buill in 1872 &amp; has ....,n parllallv

re modeled, .50&gt;&lt;50 cattle o.trn

wit~

con ·

cre te fl oor , lar ge site w ith •uto:
unloader , s~ v e r a l shec:b. lar ge pond ,
sprmgs, standing crops go to new
owner .
HUNTIN GTON

TOWNSHIP

-

108

i'lcr es m / 1 va.cl\nt land, fronts on Ra e·
coon Cr eek &amp; t he Tom Gle n Rd . APPf"O I&lt; .
J l till.:t ble &amp; the ba la nce w ooded Un der
S400 per ~e r e
·

GR E-E N TOWN SHI P - CE NTIIALlY
LOCAT E D -

11 2

acre Utrm hH fron ·

tage on St a te Route. 568, Fairfield Ce n·
te mu: y Road &amp; Va nco Flirfietd !ltd. E x·

or

cetlent for· fa rmi ng

deve lotlfMnt.
Older 5 rm . &amp; ba th farlll hame, llerll &amp;

silo inclvCled. Owners wilt cottsider

sell ing sma ller tr ac ts of short term
f inancing . Call for more infor mat'on,

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FIIAME• IUN ·
CHER plus 78 ACRE$ of fond In
Cheshire Township oft.n tots of 9D0d
livi ng to ~ your orowing familv . Home is
just li ke new wi th 1438 sq . f t . of livin g
area plus •n a ttac he-d garate. 2

'

CROU SE BECK ROAD -

Restr ic ted

spac ious BR ' S, 2 baths, lx27 LR , 10X24
kttChe n Wtlh relrtg ., dlsp., OW , doubl e
oven &amp; range, washer I. dryer st1ys in
l aundry . Lend is mostly-rol) ing pasture
land with apProx. 25 acrn wooc:tetll. Call
for appointment.

·

-- -

ROOM TO ROAM -

Th';, love tv br ic k

ranch off er s lots of good livmg for your
growin g family . 3 B R' s, 21f7 baths, la rge
k itchen &amp; LR . fo rma l dining r m .. 2
fireplaces. wood burning stave, 'cent.
air , gar age, full basement with f a mily
r m . bar &amp; li~ u nd r y . Located on approx .
'llllcres on State Route 554 between Por·

ter &amp; E no. Priced to sell at SS9 .500 .

•

START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 137
11cre pasture farm , mostly ro1t1ng &amp; hi I

NICE - (LEAN
6 Room house, bath , ~e llar, 2 storage buildings, own
wafer
yst~ m . nice countr y atmosphere, n ice

N516

terest . Owner redvced the price $7,900 and 11
llnxious to sell Thi s three bedroo111 spotless, air

OWNER WILL FINANCE - W it h less
than 20% down~ payment and 11% in·
teres t . 168 acr e far m off Rl. 554. A p·
prox 20 25 ac . crop bal ance in pastu re
and woods . Lots of pone Ired &amp; while I.
ba r n, plus m oderni 2ed 3 bed room
home 60's

condotloned home has 2 baths, living storage
bu ilding, heoled garage , ·all furn iture Included .

101 ACRES

"
WOW!
Look wha t you can get on a land contract at 9% tn·

N407
1 ACRE lBEDROOM COTTAGE

livi, blle con·

Nice comfortable home with nice large shade trees.

1491

BEST RUV IN TOWN - Stvli s h 2 slorv
nome was built in 1894 and must be seen
to apprec iate. Lar9e open toyer and
st~irwa y . LR . dini ng rm .. p ~ ri o r , ~om ­
pletel y' equipped modern ki tchea . .11
8R s. 2'!1 bath s, new siding . gar age.
near schools. shopping, etc.
HOME STEAD H E R E or use as a hun
ting lodge, v t~C l!ltion nome, etc . Ru stic
log home is built from hend hewn
~llms and has a sleeping toft, modern
bltn, large stone firepl ace and appro)( .
27 •ere of woods in tne Wayne Nationa l
Forest E)( traland available. Easv Ter ·
ms.
'

MEIGS COUNTY 3.25ACRES Mor L
POND . 8 room remodeled country home beautifully
landscaped, all 3.25 acres mowed . Garage with con ·
crete driveway . Ux27' family room with fireplace .
Large block storage building. Fruit trees. Been
reduced over $17,000. You niust see this country
home . Phone now for an appointment. ·
1507
IN MIDDLEPORT
Nice, could be 100 year old home in n ice condition.
Solid, i r has 7 rooms, 4 bedroom ~, 1V2 b~ ths,
basement, modern kltc hen. family r oom, fireplace.

All citv utilities . Carport. Shown by appointments
ontv . Phone_now. .;
1506
8 ACRES
With tn 10 min. drive to downtown Gallipolis. Citv
School System . Has hookup for mobile home, Gallia
Rural Water. electric l!lnd sept ic tank , nile light on
pole , 200ft. frontage on Graham School Rd . T imber.
Building sites. Call Now.·
1477
.

.

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
v acanr tots, nice size building tots with all utilities
there. lot size 101.8 by 171.2. Better get ' um now.

14U

AllforontvS~ l ,900.oo .

...

~;:;;..

Ul;

.
CITY SCHOOLS
3 bedroom ranch style home. Eat·ln kitchen. tun ·
basement. Spacious living rocm. Owner must sen.
i&gt;rlced drastically tow. 129,900. ·
1412

. ,_ .. ..
~

flmil~ rm. with chimnev tor wood bur-

ner, kitchen, leundrv. large back porch,

n•turat gas heal &amp; a large flat lot
IO&lt;aledon BullVIlle Rd .

old . t ime 2 stor v home
A m iles from town in Green

Oi st . _House has 3 bedr ooms,
dintng room, g lass enc losed
. Very sc eni~loc a tion w ith
shade trees. 1 m ile off Rt. 7. Lo.w

Basement, barn approx . 16' x24' . Priced in the $20's.

concr:ete floor . Four lots - over 1 acre of level land

lt71 FINANCING AVAILAILE - 20')t.
- n . I~ in,~est., 3 BR . bath. ' LR,

NEW liSTING -

Rural wa-ter, 2 car garage, fuel oil F .A. furnace .

ATTRACTIVE CLOER HOME
Well kept. 9 rooms, 5 bedrooms, On Slate Highway,
approxomotely 1700 sq. ft. Jiving space. Concrete
block cellar with frame smoke house. large foal
shed, large blOCk workshop with .2-car carport with

OWNER WILL FINANCE ·- Great
family harM with J 11'11o, 2 0&lt;11111. 15x27
LR with gN firepl- largo - • r n
kllclleh wllll ra~ge , Hll·cloant,. ~t~~en,
OW and
laundry with w - r an
·~~a,se.rner•t over • ICres
Nwn. Coil lanny

OWner Will f1na nce at
t o quali f ied
hunting , hor ·
I woodland .

Everything you need in one purchase. In city school

OWN E R FINANCING AVAILABL E ·
Remodel ed home includes 5 rm s and

Forty itcr es . a p ·
prox . ''' tillabl e and v, · wood s, old 2
stor Y" farm home i n need of r epa irs,
barn . Sheds. front s on 141 Owner fin an·
c.ing rwa l!abte at 10~0 .

LAND-LAND- LAND - Crop ' Pasture - Lots of wood s - Tobacco
aase - 217 acres.. $300 per acre . Call
for more information .

__._

~-- --

OWNER WILL FINANCE
Wolk Into formal entrance with open stalrcose to
this lovelY completely redecoreted f)Ome locate~! In
the cily. Within wolktng dlstancetashGPPing 1rea. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths and charming 11rge kitchen.
Spacious living room with woodburnlng fireplace.
This gracious home has a natural gas FA furnace
Ilk• new. Immediate possesSion . We're waiting lar
vour call .
·
1146

II ACRES -

l STORY HOME -

A

home 'with chara cter on lower R t. 7. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, familv room,

U~li~~.:~:~w~OOd~acreage.
burner, 2 Acarr ea
garage.
I eve·

I

,000.
6 ACRES -

Located off Rl.

of Rio G'rande. 2 bedroom
lh•ome in need of some minor r epairs.
scenic rural . setting . Has wooo
lb&lt;"rter., full basemenf and rural water.
Owner will help finance.

I"'"·''""·

..

, .. ACRES - Former
near Rio Grande . .50·60

.

pasture, balance in woods, Barn,,,
tobacco base, g~s lease plus

CAN AFFORD - ar e 2 di ff er en t th ingS,
UNTI L NOW! Th e hou se and locatton
ar e ideaL Owner s hate to se l l but hav e
to. Need the money to b u v home out of
st at e. Will sell at a ver y r easonable
pri ce (assu me low i n ter.est mtg,).
House in move -in cond i ti on and has
ev~,r ythin g
th at r ea ll y matter s 3
bedrooms, 2 ba th s, fa mt ly r oom
firepl ace. 2 ca r ga r age, pa t io, over
sq. f t Much more. Only $6 1,000.

noO

loft, WOOdburner and nice kitchen Rural

.

water. Located Off Rt. 554. S32.600.

1% lAND CONTRACT - Owners
must sell nowt Large 4 bedroom
riverfront home, wifh banment,
family room, etc. Approx. 1.4 acres
with river frontage . S39.900.
M

Sl6,900 - owners very
anx ious to sell this 2 bedroom home
ACRES ~

.______________...J
MAkE us AN OFFER - ThiS cout~ be
y6ur chance to buy e nice· home with a
low equity 9'h % mortgage. Newer 3

(.,992 · 7656
8· 20-tf c ,

I
I
I

II

acres. Ha s large li v inq r oom, kttchen,
bath, ba sem e nt ~ woodburningJur nace1
carport &amp; mobile hom e hookup . Price d

al$32,000. A'Ssu'i-na bte 11 °o mgt.
9'h %

ASSUMA8l.E

MTG . Ni ce
roomy bHev.el with J bedrooms, 2
baths, fam ily room w / f irept ace, ver y
nice equipped k itchen , nat. oQas, cent
air and garage. Nea rl y 1/ 2 acr e w / pooJ .
Near town. 50' s.

acre yard .

Better hurry . Rt. 218 . . $1700 DOWN 12% INTEREST -

A new

30 year mortgage with 0-"" 'Tlents uncktr

1% LAND CDNTRACT - Owners must $3.50 mo. A 6 v•s-Ji.l.E

oom ma int.
•" .-1 Large 4 bedroom riverfront free homer,
._.Gs garage &amp;
hclmo, with basement, tam fly room, fenced yard oE NO h-. opportunity
lk. Approx . 1.4 acres with river Iron· tha! may n."" available again.
tall. 139.900.
Only 134,000.
I

JtuD (tbe lro-

Pets for Sole

POODLE GROOMIN G.
Call Judy · Taylor at 367·
7220.

79 DODGE power wagon , 4·
wheel ·drlve, 29,000 miles, 8
c vt . c all alter 3 p.m . 304·
67S·3898 .

Himalayan.

Persian

INTERNAT ION AL

and

Siamese kittens. Call 446·
38« after 4 p.m .

98~9996

Trav~ l ·

All , 4 wheel drive, .d speed ,
lA ton, air condition ed , P S ,

PB, 37.000 miles. F ir s t
$26,000 takes II, caii304·67S ·
6628.

SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
'COOLING

Reupholstery
SPECIAL
Bar Stools
515.00
Truck Seats
1100.00
Labor &amp; Material

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks'
La Bay
Trencher
e Water • Sewer
• Gas Lines
e Septic Sy~stems

I

~

U sed Color TV Sets for

Sa le.
NEW PHONE NO .

992-6259

276 Sycamore St.

9926:3 t5 or 99'273 1•

Middleport, Ohio

9 30-tk

Effectlve Dec. 15th

Thru Jan. 15th·'

SNODG~ASS .

~PJIOLSTERY

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And. Home Maintenance
•Roofing of all types

•Siding

•

•Remodeling
•Free estimates
•20. Y rs. experienc.e

&amp; Trim Shop

T9M HOSKINS

Racine, Oh.

PH . 949-1101
12·15· 1 mo.

.

9·21-tfc

Massey Ferguson In·
dustrial Equipment.
we sell the·best and ser ·
vice the rest.
On Rt. JJ W.
Ripley, W. Va .

Ph. (304),.372-987S
or (]04) 372"-5479
12·18· 1 mo.

For SJs: i"' black short haired
Laballor &amp; pups 8 weeks
old. Ca ll446· 1688. ·

HOOF HO CLOW Horses &amp;
poni e s .
Every t hing
imagin.able In horse equip·
ment. Also bells, boots. 698·
3290. Ruth Reeves.
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
7413 Ja ckson Ave., Pl .
Pleasant . 675 2063. Mon.,
Thurs., 1 Fri. 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed ., I Sat . 11 to 4. Chec k
our Fish Special .
_ ,,

-

·

..... .....

····-- · • • ••• -r

PA ITS

Membership
Gift Certificates

Rates
per visit
available. Come in
&amp; · see what we
have to offer.
12· 11 · 1 mo.

lilly,
Registered
Ap· •
patoosa, 4 vrs. old and gOOd
blOOd line. Call 256·6413, 12
p. m . to9p.m
!&gt;oiled
R e gi s t e r e d
He r e ford bull , ge ntl e,

Utility Buildings

Mobile H,ome.

•

KINGSBURY
PARTS &amp; ACCESS.

SizeJ from 4 to 6 and oil
wOOd buildings 24•36.

'rs&amp;s'aUii.DiPi"lis
Rt. 3, Box 54

Rt. 124

Racine, Oh.

Minersville, Oh.

Ph . 614·843·2&gt;91
6·1Hfc

Ph . 992· 5587
12·31 · 1 mo.

Cvpress,
cnerry.

Walnut

&amp;

From S34 .95 ,
• To $79.95 .
P" . 992-l269
12·3· 1 mo. pd.

Washer &amp; dryer never been

used, new. Call 367-0602 aok
for Jenkins.

CERTIAEDW
Our Specialties

•

c;gare""'
62&lt; pack
cutons
U .951 ss.es
Open 7 D1ys A Week
Open Mon.· Thurs.
u.m.to 10 p.m .
Opeoi Fri. at6'a.m.
thru 5un41Y 11 f p.m .
OPEN,. HOURS
FRI.·SUN.
We Sell Popst, R .c., &amp;
Coci·COII Praducts by
- 1~1 6 &amp;I PICk onclatso In
111..-IIQIItts.
Authartzecl Sunllawer
DNier, Sell or Rent
These Signs.
12·16·HC

Phone 882·2079.
General Haulln

Tire s on Lucas Lane. 675·
7360 .

CORN , $2.50 bu . 304-458·
1680.

plated, with holste r , $375.00
304· 675·6628 .
40 CHANNE.L side band
cobra base &amp; 0104, stili in
box , $200.00, 304·675·1564.

KP 750 Pioneer in dash
auto r ever se dolby system .

'

76 Malibu 4 dr., PS, PB,
AC, 350 2 barrell, new t ires
&amp; paint, 61 ,000 miles. $1900.
Call446·2868 anytime.
1977 , Mec ury Ma rque tow
miles, Michelin tires. All
options. Phone&amp;14·«6·«06.

M itsub lshi Power Am ·
phllller, 30 watts per chan·
ne l , 6 b~nd graph ic
equalizer. TSx9 2 way high 1969 Plymouth wagon . 318
tact John Wise a t 614-742· ·performance s peakers, all · auto. 985·4346 .
2131 or David Price a t 61 4· new S3.50. 30&lt;-675·3133.
1979 Chrysler Le Baron
Salon, V·B. Like new, tow
__
. --------~5 · Building supplies
mileage 7,000. Must see to
Jd" electric r ange, Cop·
appreciate. 15,295. «6·03&lt;2.
pertone. Exc . cond . m : Building materials block,
brick , sewer pipes, w in~- • · lintels, etc. Claude HARTS Used Cars, New
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Haven West Vlrginlll . Over
E)Ccelsior Oil Co., 636 E . Call 245·5121 .
·
20 less e)(pensi ve cars in
Main 51 .• Pome rov, Ohio.
stock .
992· 2205.
s~eet metal . Flat 20 to 24
gauge, Porcelfan enamel
74 VOLKSWAGEN for sate
coaled . Sizes 4 It by 8 fl. or trade, 304-675·6153.
thru 4 1,1 by 12 11. Many
building uses. !&gt;rices $5.60
to 18.00 . Tuppers Plains,
1966 Chevy Biscayne, 2
Ohio. 614·667·3085.
doOr, 283 four speed, 40,000

------

.

CALL:

61 +992-2111

Bo1tsand
Motors for Sate

76

Call for.eslimates 367·7101.

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTE RY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave ., Ga ll ipoli s .
446·7833 or 446· 1833 . ·
MOWRE YS Upholster y Rl.
1 Box 124, ,Pt. !&gt;feas ant, 304·
675·4154.

SUNDAY PUZZLER.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessorie s

CHARLIE'S SALVAG E
Auto parts, auto repa ir,
wre c ker se rvi ce,
buv

automobiles, radiators and
batter les. 446·7711 .
Windshield brpken? Call
southern Auto glass. 1n·
surance cl aims .welcome,
Free
mobile
se rvi ce

·-- ,.,_- --- .. _ ..
k-··
H.. -.
·-Eng.
l-n--·-""'
....
-- . -

-;==~::;::;::~::;:==-c
:
56 ·

!&gt;all for Slfe

actual mites. excellent co.-.·

dillon, SISOO. 812-29:16.

For
Fum and
Home Delivery of
Gas . • Diesel
H•atlng 011.

ACK English Springer
Spaniels. Liver &amp; while, all
shats and wormed, 185. s20
will bold. Call 446·8234.

Trucks lor Silo
7' .
1974 Ford F ·2.50 new s lake
bed and dual wheels. Call
256·6413, 12p.m . to9p.m .

PRICED RIGHT.
CAU.lOIMY!

ACK Registered while Ger·
men Shepherd, I weeks old.
mate. Phane M7·02:14.

~nd 1971 Chevy truck 112

.

tO....,

11 Mooontc

doc!l&lt;-

teDoou
'I jOb
21 Uquld

,.,
77

Auto Repair

Oua llty AutobodY &amp; Pa int
' wor k . I 1\ s ur~n ce work
wel come . .. Sunroof s i n ·
stalled from $200·$230 . A uto
Trim Center, «6· 1968.

Abl&gt;f.
18Attlcfo

121Cium

17..._·.

110 L.aalo

17flltr-

121 Bo•

IIZ.UO't " 18-

70 flrldgo
71 l..abton """'

1211lbwl:cer
131 O&lt;y
1:12 Dulc:ll 1....

g•rmenla
91 Angry
82 Falllllad

72~ ··

reTJte...,

7771Ptoolrer'eworcl

tatllr*d

25-1

82 Bloop

COITjpOIIUon

1880u!IIAM-

143144-

can Dutc:ll
81011 ....

147 Nlpo

,.....,._

118 eo.ctr

lm rovements
Carpet Clean1ng

«6·.208
STUCCO PLASTERING

1eM1ured cei lings com·
mercia ! and residenti al,

free estimates
1182.

01 at.

Call 256·

lrotdor

3e AOiall
37 Oomon

38 N.tloor

.._

,.....

40 Coot!;, u
choptt

&lt;2 PI'OIIl with
pllyO&lt;Ioy

43 Blbllcol king

«

Ttmo

porfodo

45 Alricln

20 vr,a. exp. Call 368·9652 .

.

ceilings. Ph. 367·7784 or 367 ·
7160.
~
Call 446·2801 for te rmite,
roach, bird. radent. s pide r ,
and fl eas control. Free
esli mates,sBill Thomas .

RON ' S Televis ion Se rvice.
Specializing tn Zenith and
Motorola, Quaza r.L. and
house calls. Phone &gt;16· 2398
or446·2454 .
F &amp; K Tree Trimm ing,
slump remova l. 675·1331 . ·
RING LES' S SERVICE .ixperlenced mason. roofer,
c a rpenter, electrici a n,
general repair s
and

remodeling. Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·45641·
Water wells. Commerci al
and Domestic . Test .hole!.

Pumf)I,Sales and Se rv ice.
304-895-3102.
CARi&gt;ENTRY
&amp;
remadellf!ll, electric al and
plumbing. 304-576·2989 or

~76·2517 .

LOCKSMITH
Residential,

Service .
automoti ve.

Emorvency service. ' Call
112·2079.
BUILDING &amp; remodel ing,

304-675-4.506.

..

47 WlfVI*lg

nota
51 Clr&lt;IUI

. . . . . lOCI
55MOiutod

- of
brfeb"

115Potponon:

fOOtwMr

1111

4t~

42lrl-.

,

44V..V.

~

pl.
48MndOWI

1150-

4t 8-tllaped
rftCikllhg

115411y-

150 8hon jeci&lt;OI

. ..

~

t114111141-•

1150 Long fOr
IIIOc.taln

'*'YQD~lfl

--.g

"Ew•01••.
1000&lt;-,

102 0.. up
103104 lady 01

106.1 0 1 -

IBIS.Oooglll

....

tF-

112 lllwollbpl

ts ,

114Pigpon

111 AdiMeint:
Sui.
117 COitti lid

Ill Dock
120Act
122T-anc!

1 2 4 -125CI I VO

tO 18t2 ond

11114;.Abllr.

uwllwt.

·t z -

......

11 tThllllnd.

1t5Ttme Plflod
118 Caprt '
118Pmeuure
118 Ache

121 Tracing
123 Nic k~
l ymbQI

125 Stylish
t 28fc&lt;llandlc

114 Em&gt;!Jon

ew.o

111 prodircl

51 Com-.
52 OIIIMt maon
113 EJiacl
55 Nut
541 " - lite.

II VInit-a
f13 Ela:bO!a

5 Tia11Qii-

7LanGoltbo

."'"""
..

57 Aj&gt;potlloned

DOWN
1Cult2 Mimn
3 - afllll

109 OtphdWMQ
110AM: UI.

""""*"'

Q

108 Toward

unatudlty

82Book·

-d

. 101 Oar
105 Whip .

IOfmerty
112 f'lvlng
crealure
. 113 WIIk

43WIIgod

141Enomy

.

s.n ..

107 Oboe, lor

prOduotl

162Boullqut

Olory

==01
828-114 " .•. •• -

87" 011\dy'o

go~

lOll SUI -

•• Bpokon

541-

French Ci ty P"i nting
Residential, commerciel ,
interior, e&gt;C ttrior, pa per
hanging , and t ex u r ed

'

•

U5AIIIIando
911 Lift

40Bakor!l

wt.twltid

85~ow

34 Vontlloll
35 Drwl

STANL E Y STE E M E R

IS

caniiiCt

114T-

28W30Wan
32 TfvM.Iood

27-

38 Food 111ft
37-land
38 lleiOid up •
wllhlnllrOII

142F-

21=

pooplo . ."

Home

-

D3Conrmony

"" 31 Prilll'l

78 E.dltpelw

ltiOih
33 "-, the

81

140Pc

onlmar

20~-

211 lite one

133T131-

,_ '
138-

74&amp;::-

22M-tUIO
23Uk. 24 COral

1978 Ford Van cus tomized

ton. Call 446·8012.

.. """'__

ACROSS

roofing, some: r emodeling.

Mixed ha rdwoods, V2 cord
S«J . I cord $75. 2 cords $130.
Splif and delivered. Con·

POMEROY
.lANDMARK

JON E S BOY S WA TER
SERVIC E . Ca ll 367·7471 or
367·0591 .

U sed

=:::::::::::::~~~--3-556

.-

REF RIGERAT IO·

condition !.er vice,
com·m er cia l, i nd ust ria l

154 a-.

7.:.1_._.....:.A
:cu~lc=
o.:.lo
"'r"S"'a"-'f"e__

14 Av•llabte
from Cedar ,

7ACKS
N. a ir

PAINTING · Inter ior and
ex t e rior , plumb i ng ,

Hanshaw' s

SOLUTION

Pom e rov. 992·2274

I!OGortdo

t ir es.

E lectri cal

SEWIN G M ~c h l ne r epairs,
serv ice. Authori zed Singe r
Sa les &amp; Se rv tc e l Sharpen
Sc i ssors . Fa br ic Shop ,

CAPT:O. IN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning feature d &lt;..by
Halfell Brothers Custom
carqets. Free 'estim a tes.
Call446·2l 07 .

1974 Che vv pIck up, $7.50
1977 Harley Dav id son,
$3,750. 1980 Coleman cam·
per, $18.50. Call446·8234.

Made

Call 446·851 S or 446-0445
ller4 : 30 .m .

Electric. . - -&amp; R efri era:.:l:.:
io"'n,__

SE ASONED oak firewOod, gentle, 12 vr. approx.
ca ll 304·675·2757 after &lt; Geldi ng . 304-937·2003.
p. m .
GRAIN led Angus beef . 50
L ighted large adver tising ce nts lb . live 'Weight. 304·
si gn wi'h sliding · letter s on 675·2902 .
sland . ~ .00 . Phone 576-2602.
..
Hay&amp; Groin

~=:::;;;;;;~~;;~~=;;;:::~;;;;;;;:~
C0 l T
P VI h on
. 3 75
UAIIIV'DArrrD
541 Misc. Merchlndice
m agnum. 6" barrel , nickel

a.ocKS

84

Insulation.
Wiring.

$1000.

14' ALUMINUM John Boa t ,
3 swivet sears, 2 anchors &amp;
anchor mates, oars , 3
c ushions. 304-1175·1564.

de liver S7.50 . 304-736·4398 .

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

nnnU\IIUU' n;;

'75

Prime at three years old,
prov en
breeder .
will

TWO II• Nubian does, bred,

Anything _for your

conditi on,

availa ble . Call «&amp;· 1011 .

face Hereford Steer .
;~=~:;~~~~~~t~===;;:~~~~=~f~~~~~~§.~~~White
:. ALL STEEL·.
MOilLE
54 Misc. Merch•ndfce
Grain fed r ead y for but·
F IR E WOOD·s pli t oak, S&lt;O c he ring. Approx. 800·8.50
HOME
a r ick, S70. a cord, call 304· lbs. 24h2841 .
BUILDINGS
675·3137 anytime

Sizes start from 30.24"
SMALL

1975 Tr iumph Tr ident 750 3
c ylinder, 6,000 miles, ex·

AKC Reg. Boxer puppies, 8
wks old , S125. tall «6·3870.

Ph. 949·2160 or949·2412
7-5-lfc

•

Large or Smoll Jobs
PH .992·1478
12·20· 1 mo. pd.

RUSS AND MAX
ElliOTT
Lennox Heating &amp; Air
Cond i tioni119. ' All Tv pes

NOW HAULING house coa l

cellent

L i v~stock

•
•
•
•
•

Gallipolis Diver si f ied Const. Co. Custom doze r &amp;
backhoe work . Specia l
farm rates. Call us for f r ee
estim ates. 446·4440.

• Scol&lt;hguord· JM
• WaIt s, floors, w indows
ewater&amp;
·
smok e damag e
Industri al
Comm er cia l
Re sid ent ia l
Dependable, 8 vears experience. We do c:a re 1

Excilvatlng

&amp; limestone tor d ri veways.

Motorcycles

74

675·1256 anytime. ·

r~================~~~~~~~~~~~3iti~~~~==========~61MasseyFarmEqulpment
Ferguson 135 trac·
FAIRPLAIN TRACTOR TOP OF THE STAIRS ~~e~.u~~~~~~:2 J;5 10bacco
PUWNS
SALES, I"C.
FITNESS STUDIO
'l
202 111 E. Main St.
EXCAVATING ..
Ph. 991-6720
Register ed Quarter Horse

I·

r

English Cocker Spaniels.

, Call 388 ·9790.

OPEN

wort.:

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Condlliotng, Arkla·Ser·.
vel Gas Air Condition··
ing, sneet lvtetat Work .
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp;COOLING
Fit. 2, Alblny, OhiO
614·698-6791
11- .16-lfn

BR IARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AI&lt; C Gordon setters ,

NOW

•

Pomero y. Otllo

needs lillie work. 675·5341 .

HARRISON .
TV SERVICE

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"
_ Concret work
_p lumbing and
electrial work
(Free Estimates)

Ga llipol is, Ohi o

Modern st.,._pm cl ean ing
f~r carpet I UPhoisterv
( tnsura nce worlc) .

IS

Dodge v a n, 4 ne w

AD Vl. NC E D
CLE ANI NG SE R VICE
444·3915
NO AnS V(e r 446· 2062

J S Court St.

Ca ll446·3896
or 446·3080

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

73

DRAGONWYND
CA T·
TERY · KENNEL . AKC
Chow
puppi e s , CFA

Ph. 985-3929
or

Farm EquiP~~~ent .
Parts &amp; Serv ice
I 1·Hfc

Tappan Recuperative
Furnace, Coleman Air

th is immaculatel y ke pt 3 bedroom , 2
sfory home in town . Has f am ily
room, woodburn er , di ning room, 1111
bath, natural gas, central air and
fenced yard $40s.

CITY SCHOOLS - RT . 1 18 - Moder n 3
bedroom r anch situated on ove r 1.3

Private Parties
Available

_ Roofing an~ gutter

FOR CHRISTMAS

.

· 7: 30 .TIII10 :00
Sunday 2:00 to 4:30

L.i censed &amp; Bonded

Weft

f------------+----------~

Open Wed., Fri . l Sa) .

• Du.mp Truck

·

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

Plumbing
&amp;"H eating

83

IInl S. Kant pn a ....,..,
1..- a LUe Mulen Jadi.Yidri11 Tooarna!MDI lilDlled to M
pll,en. Tile lint -

56

eWater, sewer&amp;
Gas Lines

remodeling

Deater

NICE HOME - GOOD LOCATION
_.... You' ll be pleased When yov see

,.

SKATE-AWAY

• Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Syste ms

Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

I

bedroom ranch with fireplace and J;,.
140,900.

CONTRACTING

Ave. In Ri o Gr ande Has f ull bi\sem ent,
nat . gas hea t, lar ge porc n &amp; nice sized
yar d. Make us an offer .

in city school dist. Home needs some

repair. Has tot~ of .)V9&lt;Jd5 and coat
seam right out your back dOOr. Off
Ill. 218.
.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

446·4617

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

BICt 1D tnt, tbe lite WU-

evtr y ~

MSH A Cert .

CA RT E R' S PLUM BING
AND HEA T IN G

FREE
ESTIMATES
\pH , 992·60.11

__.Addons and

LA~O CONTRACT - A gocd I
·buy on t his 3 bedroom ho me on Cerl tr at l

NEW HOME

ANO :1.5 ACIIES .
Modern cedar home with 3 bedrooms,

J&amp;F

u .s. Rt. 50 East
Guvsville, Ohio

spacious bedroom nom e on R t . 160. 1
Th is br ick home has 1112 baths, lar ge
fo r mal din ing, eq y~ pped kitchen , f ull
basement, wi t h nuge f ami ly r oom,
firepl ace, workshop, et c . 2 car g arag ~ . ~
A ssumpt ion at 11% .

tnese when you ar e b u ying a ~ o me .
1'his could be an excellen t starter
home or rental l ocated in Rio
Grande, 2 bedr oom r emodel ed home
in good location

82

wiaMn

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

bedroom home located in ci ty school
dist . H as firepiCJce in living room, large
kifr;Jl en, 112 ac . yar d. 9'h % assu m ption .'

SS,$00 down - 10% INTER E ST S27,000 - You can' t bea t fi gures li ke

Dltl.

Tom . Top prices

d1 y 1 Or set MTS cotns,

Cor . Fourth and Pine

·

2·8-tfc

BOGGS

ar e gone and an xious to sell t hi;
older bu t well kept 2 story brick on
1'/,
r oom, woodburni ng f urnace, ful l
basement and
acr e yard. $49,900.
·

remadeled 4 bedroom home. Frc&gt;!'tago&gt;l
onl roads including Rt. 325.

...••
.....

Custom kitc:hens J4nd ap·
p11 a nc es ,
custom
bathroOms, remodeling,
'plumbin, electnc, a nd
heating ,

Call 742·3195

9-5-tfc

.....

tires, ·good body, m otor

I
MOVE IN CONOIT.ION - Owne r• I
I
Rt. 588 . 3 bedroom,
ba th, fa mil y
I
w,
I
WASHINGTON
ELEM. - c ozv 2 I
I
20's .
JUST LISTEO - An a ttra ctive and I
.c
I
s2s.ooo -

Vllllltrable: Nortli-Sotltb

Fra nk Rose ConM Co.
Remode ling re pa \r , new
constru ct •on, a ll ty pes .
Free es t imates, all work
tul l Y
gu ar an t ee d .
Re s•dentl al, com m er·.
ci a I. indust ria l and mi n·.
ing , el ec t r lc w o r k .

Gold ' 1 nylhlng m or~ed
IOK , 14K , 18K ) clan
ri ngs, denta l). sliver
co ins or ster li ng . Bring
to Tope Fu r n. Ask for

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
• water
• Ga s
• Electric • Sewer
Lines Installed .
Ph. 367-7560

lA JIII
+7

1971

room , eQuipped kitchen, nat ·gas, ce nt.
ai r ,2car g.ar age and corneri ot. $59,900.

ment, nat. gas and garage. Need offer .

REESE TRENCHING

3·1Hfc

YO ,

Style, beauty, charm, comfort - all describes tt'lis
home, 4 B R, 2111 baths~ equipped eat· in kitchen,
fam i ly r~m w ith fireplace, formal living and dining room . You won ' t believe this home unless you
see it for yourseit Make your a'ppointment today to
walk into the entrilnce of one of the most lovely
nomes in tne ar ea.""Pr iced in t he S80' s.
N 322

concrele front porch, tots o! fruit trees !apple,
cherrv, plum and peach) , grape arbor. r,asJ)berry
vines, good garden land, ail level. 11"1 Green Twp.

,Hf."'R CADMU S -

cellent location for tni s nice
bedroomranc h onRt 508. 18wooded
acres with barn. House has 2 baths,

2 LOTS IN GREEN ACRES
Lo1N21. Side walk , 75'x l48'
lot N23, Vac ant 88' fronta ge by 148 depth . Pric ed to
~1.
ND•Nm
DUTCH COlONIAl

dlslr ict.

SECLUDED BI · LEVEL - ·

You w ill enjoy the care th1s attr active
Jri c:k home ha s been given .- 1m·
-n acu late ioside and out . Plu ~ h ca rpet

ground , lots of shrubbery, large l evel garden area
and priced only $29 900 . You must see trlls one.

ly grassland with a pprox 10 A . wooded ,
lots of springs, 11;, story home has 4
rm s. &amp; bath, large barn, t obacco base.
tronts on 3 roads in WCJinut Township .

bath, carport, stove, refrig ., di sh
wnher , mobil e home pad , almost 6
acres on 588 , 2 m i from town S30,000.

trtcal system .
Residential
&amp; Commerc1al

"li1utlful, Custom
Buill G1r1gos"
Clll . fpr frH siding
t1lim1111, 949-1101 or
949·2160.
No Sund1y C1lls

I
I
r--=~~-------. 30's.
.
1
. FARMS - LARGE
PLEASANT VA\.LEY ESTATES II
&amp; SMALL ACREAGE
T8 ACRE _ EDGE OF TOWN _ E x·
love ly firepl ace, 3 bedroo,.,s, din ing
3
1.
1
family room, 2 firepla ces, full base ·
WHAT YOU WANT, AND WHAT
I
I

Ready to Move? We' ve got just wh at you are looking
tor! Furn i.s he~ or, unfvrn ished .Gr eat for starting
ou t or r et1rement . Extra nic e 1979 Model Mobile
Home ori approx . ~h acre level tot with chain link
fence. Like New. Priced in th e low 20' s.
11518

Phone

RT. 588 -

Nestled in over 1 acr e of trees thi s dutch
styl e home has 3 bedroom s. 2'h baths,
513 2ND Ave. - Very attractive and fam il y room , 2 large unf ini shed room s
spac ious 21f::z story 4 or 5 bedroom home _i n lower l evel, large wr ap around deck
In town. Ha s 2 firep laces, family room , and 2 car garag e. outsta nding loca tion.
den, format .dining, 2112 baths, full S67,!i00.
basement, .nat. gas, cent. air; etc . E x cellent constructi on and care. could HlEFIE ' LL BE A SCRAMBl E FOR
easily be adaptable to professiona l of- Tt-'IS HOME - 4 bedroom tn ·level w 1t h
l oods of living space . Stone fir eplace, 3
fi ces. Call for information .
ba ths, fwm ll y r oom, equi pped kitchen,
DELUXE SPRING VALLEY HOME r ec . room . woodbvrnher, 'I car oaraoP..
A verv attractive well kept 4 bedroom plu s 4 1h acr es of lovel y pine land·
home in one of the area' s finest neigh · scaplng . A r ea l ti ne home Reduced .
borhoods. Has 2112 baths, equipped kit ·
chen, dming room. famil y room
w/ fireplace, nat. gas, cent. air, 2 car STONE RANCH A. sp a t~o~ s 4
garage plus a lovely landscaped corner bedr oom home over look 1ng the nver
lot. Low interest loa n assumpti on owner s ha ve pn~ed well un ~ e r market
available. $69 900 .
- value. ~.as fa m 1l y room , f.repl ace, 3
'
baths, dung room, nat gas, cent. a ir &amp; 2
RIO GRANDE - 3 or 4 bedroO~ home car ga r.i9e. A must to see .
right on campus Has 1117 bath, family
room . fireclace . full basement. nat gas MOBIL E HOM E &amp; &gt; AC R ES - 1970
heat, garage plus nearly lf• acr e. Could Ha llm ar k 12x65 3 bedroo m harp e. Has
d n equi pped k itchen. cover ed pat 10 . air•
be used as. r en'taL $38,900.
cond .. rur al wa ter pus 5 6 acr es of n1ce
512 4TH AVE 1;, bl ock f r'o m 1ay 1ng land w1th lots of t r ees $19,900 . ,
Washington El em
N ew ly r edone.
throughou t 3 bedroom s, equ ipped k i t FAST FOOD RE STAURA·NT - M ake a
chen, ·t.replace. nat. gas hea t. ga r age. good li ving, be vour own boss Good
Lot goes to football fie ld . A-. 1 story location 1n Centenary Incl udes 24X1 4
home Pri ced i n 40' s.
brt ck bl dg., equ1pment. 1nvcntor y p lus 2
lilrge tots 565,000
22 VINTON AVE . ._ It ' s hard to fin d a
DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME IN
home in town in as good condition as
TOWN? - Then thi s one is perf ec t.
th1 s 3 bedroom nome." Equipped kit·
cozy and modern 2 bedroom , 1 floor
Chen . dining room , gas heat , 3 air cond .,
pl an. Has brand new kitcnen, d 1ning
patio plus 21ots . .Can buY wi th one lot at
room. li v ing room, det ached ga r age
539.900. Won'! last long, so call toda y .
an.d nice fl at yar d. Make us an offe r .

+UJIIIS

CONSTRUCTION

let George
Milter
check your present etec·

•Dryers

$63. 000.

.

•u n s

C. R. MASH

•Disposals'

mattr ess, 31&lt; bed frame

with springs &amp; m attress,
desk , rocker , sma ll dinette

build ing lot . 1 n acre, nicf:' wooded set·
t1ng. cit y schoo ls $5 .900 .

-

•Wash•rs ·

&amp;

PA SQUAL E
ElE CTRI C
152 Third Ave.
j 14-446·27
16 °
.

SOUI'II
+KQ7.

County Certified
Rousllllne
Cheshire/ Oh.
Ph. 367o7S60
1·7·1 He

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

•Ranges

JU ST LISTED - 10% ASSUMPTION A v ery good low equitv assum pti on. 3
year old brick &amp; f r ame home w it h 2

BR low m amtenance home is less th an 3
yr s old and features l arg~ LR , dining
rm .. kitchen. bath. par t basement,
ut 11ity build ing a nd almost '1 ~ c r es neM
Route 218. City schoo ls.

tau

+4

Septic Tanks

SERVICE

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES

••Dishwashers
•Hot Water Tanks

47Ft . Wor k ing Heign1

ltABI

\rttHOft

southea stern lnsulatto n
&amp; canst . ·r vpes : blow·
ing . ce lulose. Free
es t imate .
Wa rk
guarat'lteea · '&amp; )nsured. Also home impr ove·
ment. O a ~r~ e Hager &amp;
Jay Hancoc k, Owner s.
446·8605-446·2637

AE RIAL BU CkET
TJI UCK SE RVICE

......
•Q•
..

WIST

Water Line Hook-ups

1·3·1 mo.

985-3561

w ith famil Y room , uti I. room , eat· in k if,
ch en &amp; fl at yard. Nat . gas heat. Loca ted
rn i nutes fro m town $39,500.

+AH

••u

Water·Sewer· E lectric
Gas Line-Di tches

Greg Roush
Ph . 99·2· 7583
or 992·2282

.....

I K Q11
+At US

,_

3 piece ~r .• spri ngs &amp;

' PRIC E R EDUC E D TO 537.900! Nice 3

• E' lectnca t work
• ~oof m g work
14 1' ears E xpertence

Call Ken Young
For ·Fost Service

VA ACQUIREO PROPERTY - 2,000
down , VA will finance balance for
qualified buyer.. Ni ce 3 bedroom home

_,.
•s

*. 1/

REESE
TRENCHING
· sERVICE

CONSTRUCTION

New Homes - e x ,
tensive
r e mod e l·
ing .

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC

Future Reference

I Mtwet:

The S unday Tim es · Se ntin e i- Pilg e - D - 7

Services Offered

Dealer: Eut

Keep Thi•""Ad for

Now arrange the cii'Citdllettet'l to
lorm the turpnae ....... .. lUg•

gauge. Call446·9638 .

MAttE US -.N OFFER!!! - Owners
nato been transferred &amp; will se ll on a
L AND CbNTR:ACT with ll reasonable
down pay ment. Lovely 3 B R r anch 1S
located next to Cl ay School &amp; is in exc::elleont cond it ion Ca ll Ranny Bl ac k·
burn l or ~ n appointm ent

I

I All makes and models
Al'ltenna Installation
Hou se calls and shop
ser vice a~ ailabl e .

Ford 4x4 360 with'
headers, S97.5. 1 HarriS cut·

-#

ti UILDIN G OR MO BIL[ HOM E SIT E

8 J , HAi rs ton, Asso&lt;., 44. ·4UO Eve.
Cl'fllf Wil lker, A J~oc .. 14~ · UU

PHONE 446-3643

WHAT A BUY

- Appr ox .§IJi ac res located on th e
Gra h"m Sc hOOl Rd .• co. water . 0¥9'r 300
ft. rd front age, G r e ~n Gr ade Sc hool &amp;
G" llia Aca demy H igh Sc hoo l. Sl O,NO .

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
PH•.985-4269 or

ROUSH

985-4382

LOTS ON BLACK TOP ROAD - S7,500
We have 2 lots si tuated on Bulaville Porter Road .
Approx.. 1/ &lt;1 ac re each. Call for detail s.
1510

I 1nancr .

and

1972

H'OMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE 'BEDROOM STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.

.45 A fert ile bott om land ,
b alance pasture &amp; woodS. N ice modern
kit . &amp; fam i ly rm . 14X11 &lt;L~. att.ched
gM il g C, ma ii ! 56 x 10.4 , also Include-d is
- i ox1 4 s tee l ga r ~g c, workshop &amp; sew~rit l
sheds Owner is re tiring &amp; Wtll help

.S&amp;W 1V

.REAL ESTATE AGENCY .,

IAiilh a heolllotor, $200. Call
318·8701.

,;U/~~-

pr ox

__ ____ _ _ _ _;;_ - - --· - - - -·--·- ,. ----- ·-- ·--- - - -

WISEMAN

For sa le Fr1nklin fireplace

STROUT REALTV, Inc.

FARM E R' S FA RM - One Of Guv an
Tow ns h i p ' ~ f inest . 106 a c re m/ 1. a p·

--- - ~----------·-------

times , SIS . Call 304'·458·
1997.
.

'

p lea sed you did .

~---..

BRIDIE

Bu.s iness Services

---- -·Real Estate- General

--~-- ---

FIND YOUR ROOTS
(Extra Lot Avoilabtei
The perfect · 111 brick

one of t h~ county 1 5 ni cest pools (~li:.SO)
and a truly prot esstonally tands.cAped
lot Loc ated on Debby Drive. OWner
says se ll
so ca l! RANN Y BLAC K ·
B UR N for a personal shoWing. You'll be

--·-~----

3· 8 11. showcases with
lights, 1 11rge bedroom
suite , doublt dresser and
che-st, 2 anti que clocks, 1
meat slicer and mi sc.
g'rocery store eqv ipment.

w. va .

J a n . 3, 1982

_Ml s~.-M.rth'"indiee­

15% •tscounl 011 wood &amp;
coat stoves while supply FirewOOd S30.00 pickup
last. Gallipolis Block co .. · toad . four toads $100.,
de livered. Clll388·9823.
123 112 i&gt;lne st., «6·2783.

5 YR. OLD !PLIT· LEVIL - features;
or 5 B Rs. 3 bllhs, 30 tl. LR, 2 f1milv
rm s., 2 woodetJrn tng flrl'f!llaces, l•rge
k itc hen and dining are•. 2 car . . rge,

w. v a .

P om er o y- M iddl e port - G a ll i pol is, Ohio - P oint P leasa n t ,

writing

127 Pill ol USA
t28 Snaree
130 Proportion

-bull

13t Imitate
132 ConiUmed

l!lllmpfOWII

._. .

1~

70~

138 Dlocon·

71A73 Annoying
penon
740riM1and
75...,_
nMoc:aw
7a !-oJior

1G7 Encounter•

ao-..aoy

,,_.,

11-lniiMt

14For ...... 1
plo:Abllr.
15lllflglr

114El&lt;lc!
17-

13U Arom•
t&lt;IO Gorman IIIIo
144Number
145 Exllnot bird
14li - ·UOIJII

147 Nec:kptoce
t.a Hoggard
llorotne
148 FIWbucka
Hebrew
month

1153 Tellurium

_"' .

~

. noctod

15~

,_.,

f13W..-

Before

'

lymbol

156 USMA Utld
16l EliMt-'1
Plrlner

�•

.

.

•

.

Pome,~oy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plea.s ant,

Page-0·8-The· sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va.

Gallipolis ·~ewspaperman
.
.
.

Safety paper
BUlUJNGTON, Iowa (AP) Americans write more than 37
billion checks a year, or 1411 million

.

.gets jail on libel·charge
By JAMES SANDS ·
GAWPOUS- The building that
now houses Dollar General Stores
·316·320 Second
A~l!llu~ · ·
rn
Gallipolis , was
built in 1871 for
William Shober.
Although known
more recently for
its service as a
five and 10 cent
store,
this
SANDS
building that came to be known as
the Shober block began as a jewelry
and bank home.
William Shober was an immigrant
from Germany who came to
Gallipolis in 11155 to work as an apJK:entlce'Silversmith under Thomas
Wilkinson whose shop was located
on Court Street between Second and
Third. Wilkinson was an immigrant
from England who had settled in the
French City in,the 1830s, taking over
theshopofRobertWarth.
IN DUE TIME ShOber located in a
brick building that used to sit near
First and Court In his earlier years
Shober dealt in silverware and
jewelry but he. soon had added the
making of gold watches and gold
rings. In a typical year Shober sold
250 silver watches, 411 gold watches,
and 400 gold rings. In his.28 years of
being a jeweler in GallipOlis, Shober
daimed that he had repaired over '
l3,UUU watches. ·
When the Shober block was
flnished, William himself occupied
the first room closest to Court
Street. The ,Ohio Valley Bank and
Abe Mach's department store had
charge or the rest of the building.
SHOBER WAS . quite an entrepreneur as he all!o had interest in
the Gallipolis Gas and .Coal Company, the . Fuller·Hutsinplller Fur·
.niture Company, and the Hocking
Valley Railroad, not to mention the
fact that he was a director for the
Ohio Valley. Bank wfiich !lagan in
1872.
In 1883 Shober died and his jewelry
business was conlinued by his wife
inpartnershipwlthMr. Kirk. ln1886
theShoberblockwaslengthenedin
the back some 16 feet and a giant '
. watch on a beam put in front of the
Shober jewelry store. One can get a
. looking
on page
the "GaUia
goOd _picture
of 4theof watch
from
County, Ohio, Peaple in History to
1980'' book.
LATER THAT year Mrs. Shober
died. The Shober family had ex·
perjenced eight deaths in eight years
Including the deaths of five of the
Shober children and Mrs. Shober's
mother. .In 1887 the je)'l'elry store
was known as Uhrig's. The Shober
children that survived were more in·
~rested in the furniture buslne~
than in jewelry.
.
On the third noor of the Shober
blOck was located for many years ·

the lodge.known as the Grand Anny
was• an
organization of northern veterans of .
the Civil War. Shober Hall was all!o '
the home of the Patriotic League of - Union Veterans (PLUV).
•
·
PWVS were responsible for
the ooly arrest on libel of any
Gallipolis flewspaperman. The
.v ictim -was Howatd Ham way,
editor of the "People's Voice"
-newspaper. Hardway charged
that tbe PLuVS were .iecreUy
ruDDiog the Republican party
and that all Republicans bad to
take an oath to join the party in
SROBER BLOCK- Tbe DoUar General Store budding was erected
1891.
in 1871 for WWiaQI Sbober, an Immigrant silversmith from Germany.
or course, the charge was . Shober ran his jewelry store in ooe part of the bulldiog. In 1872 !he slru()ridiculous and the PLUVS filed libel
ture became tbe first home of the Ohio VaUey Bank. Other five and 10
charges that resulted in the in·
chains have· ha.,res here before Dollar General. 'The third noor has
hOWled a number!il lodges, inl:luding tbe G AR.
i
carceration _of Hardway, at least for
•
a few days. Within the year Har·
dway's newspaper had folded. The
"People's Voice" was the political Later G. C. Murphy's occupied the also located. in the Shober .blnck for
news organ of Gallia's Populist par- whole building (at least . the some years.
ty which lasted only two years (1890- ~torerooms) just" ~s Doll~r General
You are encouraged to write to
91) . In 1907 t~ere were three stores does in the present. Some may recall James Sands, . Box 92, Clarksburg,
on the first floor of.the Shober block:
with "pain" that the dentist offices Ohio 43115, concerning anything
Womeldorff-Thomas, Sach's five of Dr. Allison and Dr. Pope were whichrelatestoGallipolishistory.
and 10, and Amos Sheets . r-------'-------------'----'---1
Restaurant. The Home Telephone
Company, which had moved from
the Ohio Valley Bank, was on the
second floo,r. Thelhlrd noor hehl two
J8J N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
lodges: the Knights of the Golden
Eagle and the United American
Mechanics.
· IN 1915 mE storerooms were ocRon and Jan Carlisle, pastors of
'Faith Christian Fellowship_,
cupied by Gus Lear's &amp;!loon, the
louisville, t&lt;y. are returning to
CorrunerCial and Savings Bank, and
minister as the Lord directs, in
Sach's five and 10. The Commercial
, musiC, through the ·g ifts of the
Holy Spirit, particularly the
Bank called the Shober block home
Word of Wisdom , the Word of
for most of the years from 1909 to
Knowledge and Prophecy . .Ron
1928 when it mov~fl. to the Lafayette
has a~hored ELEMENTARY
DOCTRINES OF NEW TESTA ·
Hotel.
·
·
MENT
BAPTISMS
ond
In 1915 the Shober block was
APOSTASY FACT OR . FICowned by two of William Shober's
; TION and co·authored OUR
EN E MY .
descendants: Belle Mannion and
Laura Shober Jones. It wus a!Jout
thiJ time that Mrs. Jones sold her
one.haH interest in the building to
'
Ron &amp; Jan Carlisle
'Frank Shaw. During the 1920s one of
_ Louisville. KY.
the two A&amp;P's in Gallipolis "was
loeatedhere.
Come join us · FRIDAY I:VENING, JANUARY 8th,
JTWAS.iN1939whenMorrisfive
7:30 P.M. and again SATURDAY MORNING,
andlOwasestablishedherethatthe
JANUARY 9th, 10:00 AM. Special music with Roger
Shober block began its alinost exand Jodie Greer.
:
cii!Sive associati011 with such stores.
BE
1982 WITH JESUS!!!:

\

·.

I

•

too muc!J

STREAMWOOD, Ill. ~AP) When caring for indoor houseplants,
Ullng too much water can be just as
hannlul as too little, says the maker
ol Garden Scene planterware. Too
much water causes plant roots to

rot..

I

.

WE RESERVE
. TIE RIIHT
TO LIIIT ·
.·. QUIITIT.IES _.-~- .

OfF

...........
PRICES IDOl 101111 JIIUIRY 4TH'.
TIRU SUIIIY, JIIU~Y 18TH WHILE QUIITITIES 01 11~1. UST

.WINTER
COATS

\

GI~LS

INFANT TO 14
BOYS INFANT TO 16
PRE-TEENS
-·

1ILL'S

)ACK &amp;
1
'

Fm4hi'ontt for the Young "

326 Second ·Ave.

Phone 446·4343

ELBERFELD$

'

'

OF QUALITY HOME FURNISH.INGS

"FEATURING" ·
'

.

'

=-·

~

'BEDROOM
SUITES

Syracuse . ~ccident

No(

28th

JANUA.RY SALE

•

Thursday Admissions -'- None ..
Thursday Discharges - · Lowell
ColliiJS, Rosalee Clarke, Inez Ash,
Lucille Lewis, Adrian Roberts,
Mali&lt; Rice, Walter Haggy ..
Friday Admissions - Mamie Hendricks, Middleport· Janice Cundiff,
Pomeroy; Thomas Farley, Albany;
Marjode Nelson, Crooksville . .
Friday Discharge - ·Thomas
Farley.

DECEMBE~

ri~~;~=~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~;~~~~~;;;;~~;~

.

Veterans Memorial
Hospital

.STARTS.MONDAY,

RETURNING TO CHRISTIAN FEU.OWSHIP

Sheriffs office

POMEROY - The Meigs Coun,ty
Sheriff's Department investigated
one accident at 3: 10 a.m. New
Year's on Route 12.4 in Syracuse.
Paul Mark Hannon,. 55, of New
Haven, W.Va .. was traveling east on
Route 124 and went off the right side
of the road and over an em·
bankment.
The Syracuse Emergency Squad
transported his wife, Ann Harmon,
to Veterans Memorial :1ospltal
where she was treated for an arm in,
jury. Harmon was arrested on a
charge•of driving while intoxicated.
There were light damages to hiJ
truck.
· The sheriff's department is also
investigating a hit-skip accident
which took place at 6:14a.m. Friday
when a southbOund vehicle on Route
33 went off the highway on the left
and struck and tore down a newspaper tube and mailbox at the Nor·
man L. Price, Jr., residence.
The .department is . also :nvestigating a complaint of vandalism to a telephone at the Sohio
Service Station in Tuppers Plains
sometime Thursday morning.

checks every business day.
.
Safety paper is used for nearly au ·
checks, because it -is deterrent to
alteration and counterfeiting.

·C OAT. ,SALE

of the ·Republic. Thi~

.

\pves~ates

Jan. 3, 1982

II
Ll

.

by Dixie

.

· *WINDJAMMER
by "fong-Hiiikle

.,, ~r,~ k&gt;l,..., ,.,. , l'f'l*llll""

bro.!""""'

Mh!.tl"'l ~··....,. •• •hot
~ .. ol liN ,,.,~ .. .......... ....

...... . a~......~.... pt . . . . . .

t1 11'01'n\i(&gt;n oi"""'KIO'" -

.. ,.~

~f&gt;II&lt; Dyo

Saddle Brown finish in
heavily distressed SOLID
oak
and ' matching
veneers with newsprinl
drawer bottoni"s.
Various BedroQm Pieces
Including Hutches Desk,
Dresser, Chest ana1 choice
· of Full or Twin Bed.
SPECIAL 20%,0FF

,.,.,..

_.....,.""'7'

'" '1"'"..... .. ........
••• ~•f"flltllNI on I!Wfl ,.,,.

*PINE RIDGE
by Rherside

&lt;'u"""'d..'ll ~ ""'"'"'"' Cull~
., nf(), , .., ',~"""

lhr !.U f'll410f\&lt;1""

........."'

u.....,.- ...

.............. a~ ~.... ~~o-ro ....... .... ••""'

. Special
AS TIME PASSES, YOUR SELECTION OF ALL
. ·,

.

'

"''hkl".,....

,.,. (Qu~"' Ct&gt;111-&lt;1oon" .. •'""''"
&lt;r • llf'd on 0.~ KWl ()o,l, _ , . . ..;,..

'

Pictured Abcwe: Buck Stove
Inserted in existing fireplace.
Bottom Picture: Same
-· Stove
FREE STANDING INSTAUATION

....., IWI!W'd '' lhr

~""I"

l

.

French Provincial styling
in grained ,veneers and
selected hardwoods with
fruitwood color finish. ,
Tr.J.flt'h ~Frsr~e; Spada I
Five Drawer Chest
Commode ·
Bed

~

...

RIVIERA

'Dae&amp;eepflotmls
· by Dixie, furniture of exct;!ptional '
styling, quality and value!
,.

All wood solid P.ine and
pine .v_eneers with pine
engravrngs.
·
• Trjple Dresser with ·
Dual Oval Mirrors.
Five Orallfer Chest
Com-mode
Bed
Spaded '959

WOOD FURNITURE FROM BAKER FURNITURE'
WILL PROVE TO HAVE BEEN A WISE Ct!OICE.
.

.

BAKER
i .

FURNITURE
..Free Delivery
OPEN 9-5 DAILY
.

.

'•

..

CALL 992-3307 .
··
APPOINTMENT ·

. .OAK CREEK
· · by RiJelside
!All wood solid oak and
oak Vj!neers with · oak
engravrng .
TriPle Dresser with ·
Cheval Mirror
Five Drawer Chest
.Commode
·
. Bed Sp.eclal '1036

.The.oneandOiifyBu&lt;kStore.
STC)P IN ELIIRFI!LDS WAREJtOUSE ·
'

.

AND FIND OUT HOW A NEW lUCK . ·
STOVE, CAN lAVE YOU 'MONEY ON

Visit our ' Budget .·Shop
fine values In
t·tH~aroom ·Furniture. Sta
ltlron As Low As: .

- .
199.95 '
"

1

.

YOUR HEATING BILLS THIS WINTER
Authorized Dealer tor Meigs and Gallia Counties

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

TOP

18

II
Ll

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