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~ Middleport,

Charles W. Jewell

Beatlice Marie Juhllng, 72, of
Hartford died Thursday In the P.leasant Valley Hospital.
She was born March 12, 1009, In
McDowell CoUIIty, the daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. James
Crlgger. She was also preceded In
death by her husband, Charles C.
Juhllng, In 1960.
She was a mem her of the Mason
County Democratic Womens
Association.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Earl (Maxine) Fields, Hartford and Mrs. John (Martha C.)
Reltmlre, Mason; one son, James
W. Juhllng, Point Pleasant, five
gr~ndchlldren and three greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be at the
Foglesong Funeral Home on Saturday at 1 p:m. with the Rev. Wllllam
"Bud" Hatfield officiating. Burial
will follow In th e Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today between 5 p.m. and 9 ·
p.m.

Charles W. .Jewell, 70, o! New
Haven, died Thursday In Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
He was born Dec. 27, 19llln Mason County, son or the late Jessie E .
and Cora M. Ihle Jewell.
He was an area'servtce lineman
for the Appalachian Power Co., attended the Bachtel United Meth&lt;:&gt;dlst Church, was member of the
Clifton Masonic Lodge No. 23 and a
member of the J.O.tJ.A.M. ot New
Haven.
Surviving are his wUe, Mildred
Louise Jewell, New Have n, one son,
Wayne R. Jewell, Mason; a foster
daughter, VIrginia M. Southall,
Greenwood, Ind .; two brothers, Edwin E . Jewell, New Haven and Arthur W. Jewell, Letart; and one
sister, Mary Catherine Goodwin,
New Haven.
Funeral services will be at the
Foglesong Funeral Home Sunday
at 1 : ~ p.m. with the Rev. CassHutchtnson officiating. Burial will follow at the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call on Saturday
!rom 7 p.m. untll 9 p.m.

Syracuse ...
clea~~ntinuedfrompagell
Ash also saW snow removal work
went ver:y well. Following the
snow, ·streets were cleared and
cinders placed where needed .
· Ash suggested that the pool and
park funds be combined In order
tharthe park may be Improved this
summer. CouncU will take action
. on the suggestion at the next regular meeting of council.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, reported more than 1re youngsters
were given treats during Santa's
visit.
Imboden said the tire department spent $109 on candy, paid
Santa $10 and received donations
totaling $91. •
Imboden on behalf of the lire department extended thanks to all
those who' donated toward the
project.
Imll'lden also demonstrated a
portable computerized blood pressure unit recently purchased.
POUCE REPORT
Clilel ot pollee Milton Varian submitted his annual report which
showed that he received 117 complaints, made 79 arrests, lnvesugated 14 accidents, received 245
phone calls, Issued 78 warnings,
drove 4,577.4 mUes and collected
$5,314 In fines jlnd costs.
Varian was commended lor his
outstanding efforts lor the village.
Varian did suggest to council to consider purchasing a new cruiser by

1983.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Kathryn Crow.
Attending were Mayor Eber
Pickens, Janice LWwson, clerk,
George Holman, treasurer, chlel
Varian, John BenUey, Jack Williams, Ash, Willie Gulnter and Crow,
council members, Imboden, Wlnebrenner,and Sayre water board
members, Jim Teaford, Kenneth
Cundiff, Blll Cundiff and Malcolm
Guinther.

•

By The A"'O)Ciated Pre"'
bucklEd under 10 feet of
snow as 3,IXXI people south of Lake
Tahoe - some without electliclty,
food or water - waited lor a third
day ln subzero temperatures today
lor relief crews slowly digging out
roads.
Meanwhlle. avalllnehes trappe4
skiers and campers ln the Rockies
and Sierra Nevada, as bitterly cold
air swept through the Midwest.
Five deaths since Tuesday have
been blamed on the latest round of
Ice, cold and fioodlng.
Chilling Santa Ana winds
whipped across Southern California at 60 mph, knocking out power
to five counties and fanning a $1
mllllon tire· that destroyed five Malibu homes.

rcontinuedfrompageJ)

•

Child welfare s~rvices, children's
services, $9,774; · health and lcinics,
T.B., $58,577.57; EMS, levy created,
$254 ,277.35 ; SCG, HUD access road,
$80,000.16; CETA 11-D, $5,300.71;
CETA VI-A, $1 ,490.50; CETA·PM,
$8,505.97; EMS transfers, $52,403.04;
mentally retarded school operation,
$141,551.81 ; grand total of all funds,
$7,663,053.24.

Judge terminates
25 court cases
Sixteen defendants were fined and
nine others forfeited bonds in the
court of Meigs County Judge Patrick
O'Brien Wednesday.
Fined were John B. Weekley,
Marietta, speeding, $30 and costs; J .
1,. Saiki, Tucson, Ariz., speeding, $23
and costs; John Pritchard, Athens,
speeding, $22 and costs; Shirley
Guthrie, Colwnbus, $11 and costs,
speeding; Larry Romine, Pomeroy ,
speeding, $25 and costs; Steven
Hankla, Rutland, expires operator's
license, $50 and costs; Thomas
Myers, Route , Langsville, overweight vehicle, $309 and costs ;
Thomas C. Scally, Middleport, hitskip, $150 and coslq, five days confinement with three suspended, and
licenses suspended; Kent A. Varney ,
Route I , Portland, driving while intoxicated, $150 and costs, lhree days
.in jail and lY,cnse suspension for 30
tlay:!; · Danr~~ A. Territo, Pomeroy ,··
driving while intoxicated, $250 and
costs and three da~~ ip ja)!, .39 days
s uspensiMr ·'be" 'l ce'o;se ; resisting
arrest $50 and costs, 60 days confinement, 30 or which were s~pcn­

tlcd

~nd

one year's probation: Bon-

Winter weather

council; Huntin~ton Inter-state Milk
Produceo·s' Association board ~~
directors ; the Ohio Bankers
Agriculture and Rural Afiairs Coon.
mittee; 25 yea rs of service on the
board of supervisors, ,Meigs County
Soil and Water Conservation
Districl : Meigs County Child
Welfare Board; and a pas! Chair'"''" of the Southern Local Board of
Educatoon ..
Johnson was the recipient of the
"F irest one Champion · Farmer's
Award in 1939, and the Ohio State
University Distinguished Alwnni
Award in 1979.
A Past Master of Racine Lodge
No. 461 , F. and A.M., J ohnson is also
a member of the Scottish Rite
Bodies, Valley of Columbus;
Pomeroy Chapter No. 80, F. and
A.M. : Bosworth Coundt No. 46, R.
and S.M.; the Ohio Valley Commundery No. 24, Knights Templar;
and a member of Aladdin Temple in

GRADUATES-Pldured

W~y

night are

these members of a graduating clalll!l In a-paramedic
claM held at Veterans Memorlal H011pttal. More than
400 bow's ot training are required by each member
for graduation. · The group Includes front, I to r,
Sharon Dailey, R.N., lustructor: Unda Diddle, BeUnda Johnson, Charlotte Wamsley, Louis B.

Vaughan; back, I lo r, Charles Weber, Patricia
Vaughan, Sllony Wright, Klu1Jyn Black and Dollll8
Ale8hlre. other grads not plclurell are Aaron Sayre,

Twenty persons have graduated
from an extensive traljllng paramedic course.
ln order to graduate the 20 partie·
lpants had to complete 240 hours of
classroom Instruction plus 170
hours In clinical Instruction.
They have been Instructed by
Sharon Dalley who Is a registered

nurse and a paramedic. Classes
. have been held at Veterans MemorIal Hospital. ·
The class contained four
members ?f one family, Louis B:
Vaughan; his niece, Patricia
Vaughan; his daughter, Carolyn
Tripp, and her husband, Robert
Tripp. Members represent every

·-

1/ol. 15 No.'48

Veterans Memorial

'

mon, New Haven, W. Va., driving

Raymond Howard Napper, 24, Rt.
Pomeroy, and Christine MarJe
Vlnce'nt, 18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; MIc hael J e!frey Meldau, 20, Racine ,
and He)en Marte Rood, 31, Racine .

4,

To end marriages
Two suits for divorce and one dissolution of &lt;tnarrlage have been
flied In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
FlUng lor divorce were Bobble
Branham, Pomeroy, against MarIan M. Branham, Seattle, Wash .;
Pamela A. Walker, . Pomeroy,
against Charles M . Walker, Jr.,
Rutland.
Filing lor dissolution of marriage
were Janice Deem, Pomeroy, and
Norman Deem, Racine.

Illinois man faces
charges

'

T~s

By KEVIN KELLY
Tribune Stalf Writer
GALUPOI.JS - 1s Ohio PUblic
Workers United, one ot the largest
unions With ~bershlp at Galllpc&gt;lls Delleloptneltal Center, financially strapped and Inefficiently
rurl?
A larger union which helped subsidize OPWY says yes, and has
ended Its association with the
Columbus-based organization.
However, OPWU's staff representative tor southern Ohio saY$ no.
Edward P. Mills ,charactef(zed
statements made by Service Employees lnternallonal Union last
week as a "clever smokescreen"
and said the loss ol SEIU financial
support won't affect OPWU
operations.
"U there was anything wrong.
we'd be In jail by now,'' Mills said
when he was contacted
OPWU
headquarters Friday.
However, a letter ·Issued to
OPWU members at GDC last week
cast accusations about the union
· and Its president, Mike Clifford, an

.·

Dllnols.
Mitchell's arrest came atxiut after the sherlft's department received a phone call complaining of
a man bearlng Mitchell's descrlpUon going to homes posing as an
appliance repairman.
As the deputies were responding
to the call a second call was received In regard to the same sltua- : ·
Uon, narrowing the search area .
Mitchell was apprehended by
Gary Wolfe, InvestigatOr and special deputy Walt Manley. FollowIng ·a computer check It · was
discovered that Mitchell was
wanted In Dllnols.
Officials are expected to Interview Mitchell about his possible Involvement In thefts ln the Galla
County area according io the sherift's department ,

while intoxicate, $372.55.

of Portland; Mary and Kenneth
Konicek of Parma Heights, and
Virginia and Scott Wheeler of
Wheelersburg. The Johnsons have
seven grandchildren .
Johnson was honored at a banquet
dinner on Dec. 29 in the Archery
Building of the Royal Oak Lodge in
Pomery.
·
In honor of his retirement, the
bank employees presented J uhnson
with a set of golf clubs, a year's
membership to the Jaymar Golf
Club for he and his wife, and a check
so he may purchase golf attire for
his new hobby.
His plans for retirement include
fa rm"ing, raising roses, golfing,

fishing, swimming, travelling, and

at

January Clearance Continues

NFL playoffs
resume, C~l

-.

• SHOP EVERY DEPARTMENT
e VISIT EVERY
FLOOR
•

--·---

-

@ATaT

•BIG SAVINGS ON ALL WINTER CLOTHING

1,868
Up
912

20--

··---~;

·-.--21
23
' .....
----.-I

....

'

.

.
·····- · ,•••

PICK

OARUPMK

Get 15 pieces of the

Colonel's Orlglnot Recipe
or t•tra Crispy Chkken
for only $7.95.

119.55 + '.62

.Oow Jones Ind . '

I

POMEROY I OH.

868.53 + 4.75

Business page,
.......... ·

Farm •..••...••••.• C.7
Lifestyle ......... B-l•U
1«81 • • • • • • • • • A-4-I!D-t
State-Naltlml •••• 0.1-W
Sportl •·.••••.••••• C.l-1

Take-ODe • • • . • • • • lalert
'

•

.

New E!lgland Tel. &amp; Ttl. Co. .. .
2. T~.e Southern New England Tel. Co .
3 New York Tel. Co .
.a. New Jersey Bell Tel. Co.
'5. The Bell Ttl. Co. ol Pennsylvania
6. The DiamOnd State Ttl . Co.
7 The Ches . &amp; Pot . Tel. Co. of Maryland
8 The Ches . &amp;.Pot. Tel. Co. (O .C.l
9. The Ches &amp; Pot. Tel. Co . ol Virginia·
10. The Ches . &amp;Pot . te.l. Co . of Will Virginie
1 1. The Ohio BtU Ttl , Co .
12. Michi II lell Ttl. Co .
1.

lluJilw'tl • • • • . . . . • • • • C-1
Clalllfled . . . • • . . • • D-1-1
Editorial .......... A-M

.CROW'S FAMlL Y RESTA..U.RANT

\' '

0 ,: •

~
•

• • '

c
~· • •

0
• ;1 ' '

ttl:r!rm - - -

WEATHER FORECAST- The National Weather Senrlce predicts
snow lor lhe Great Lakes area and the Rocky Mountain States: The
Parlllc Northwest can expect rain changing lo fiurrleoo In parlll of Idaho,
and showei'JI can be expected In soulloern Arlaona lor Sunday. jAP Laser-

Kaiser closes fourth potline today

DIE BELL 'Q!:IDRONE 8\'ri'EM - Tile
ud - ~ Ccnpelll' ....

..._.._ Tel•••-

....... Ill ..... lllelf " . . . . pil1'

.

WelLston police spared- for now

69.36 + .34
•S .&amp;P Comp.

liP

' ...

[!TIE)

'

558

$795

... ......,

Members·ot the United Steelworkers of Amerlca employed at Kot""'' I
and plant management could not reach agreement last week on keeping
the potllne open, and the union had also rejected a proposal to maintain
operations at the plant through 19821f the union agreed to certain changes
In work procedures and seniority provisions.
.
Mar.agement said It's willing to keep open dlscusslo115 between them selves and the union.

Down

18-f!IOJj .

News briefs ...

rat~s

.....

Issues lraded

Area deaths

..

Loss of SEnJ support won't hllrt
OPWU, Mills continued, and only
~o minor benefits were lost. They

•NYS E Index

-9PIICI

O.P.W.U.

·open."

company In February, he said.
Ohio Bellis one o! 461ocal services companies operating In Ohki.
The others serve some 1.8 milllon
telephones, MacDonald said.
MacDonald said he could not detaU possible Increases as a ~ult of
the AT&amp;T dlvestlture, but he said
Ohio Bell Is continuing to press tor
rate hikes pending approval by the
PUCO.
He said competition alter that
would Ioree "rates whichever way
they must be to be profitable,' '
Under the pact, Ohlo'BeU would
retain control only over local service facUlties - those used 'for
completing local calls and tho!!" to
gain access to AT&amp;T's or other
compani es ' long distance
networks.

-dumps

~y.

C-6

~

nald, president of Ohio Bell.
He said Friday the AT&amp;T pact
with the government also will assist Ohio Bell's expansion In local
service.
In Cincinnati, Richard Dugan,
president of Cincinnati Bell, saki
Ills company's rates would go up
even though the firm Is not one of
the AT&amp;T majorlty-oW!!ed companies to be sold.
Dugan salq the pact "Clears the
air and the clutter" o! regulatory
problems and should help his
company.
Nevertheless. long distance
rates will probably go up tor Cincinnati Bell customers, he said. Local rates would also lise under a
proposal to the Ohio Public Utilities Commission to be made by the

None of the unions are recognized
by GDC ~drnlnlstratlon .
Mills said an Irony he's noticed In
the dropouts Is that none ol those
who lc:tt OPWU have afflllated
themselves with any SEIU-related
groups.
OPWU said It's a service organization tor Ohio public ~mployees.
It's presently protesting the layoffs
of more than 300 bureau of unemployment workers In an economy
move.

S.E.I.U.
.

50,181,970

l'ried Chicken.

. PHONE-992·5432

were a $500 death gratuity to
a breach of SEIU bylaws.
members and a seholarshlp proSEJU linked with OPWU In 19!ll,
gram. OPWU's main benefit packand estimates It has given out
age Is secure, he said.
$365,IXXI In subsidies and dii'!!Ct 11Prior to the withdrawals, OPWU
nanctal grants to the'unlon.
membership at GDC was set at 131,
Mills said there Is no Impropriety
In the union operation, and blamed · the highest amount among other
unions represented there. The
the situation on apparent bad blood
American Federation of State,
between ·the two organlzatlons over
County and Municipal Employees
their split before New Year's.
has 69 members, Communications
In a relea~ to OPWU memberWorkers of America, 41, and the
ship last week, Clifford said SEIU
Ohio Civil Servjce Employees Assowas trying to co11trol OPWU from
ciation, 20.
·Its Washington, D.C. headquariers,
raise union dues, decrease benefits
and "renege on Its legally binding
'financial comrnllments."
Mills said OPWU Is strlvlug to be
an Independent unit and Is being
open In Its financial obligations.
"You can read their statement
any way you want to," he l aid.
"They accuse Mike of all sorts of
things - but, he's POl ln jaU, the
money's all here , and Ute book$ are

Volume Shares

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
TIL 8
•

A Multimedia Inc . NeWs paper

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp.
closed Its fourth · aluminum-making potilne at Its Ravenswood plant

. 398

· • 3 pieces of chicken !Original Recipe
or l!xlra CrtspyJ
•
_.;,.....,r:-:~
• Colt: Slaw • Roll
• Potatoes and gra'o)'

ex-GDC employee. SEIU has said It
will offer a new provisional charter
to anyone currently In OPWU.
A source has said more than ;lO
OPWU members at GDC returned
their union cards alter receiving copies of Qle letter, slgiled by SEil.J's
International president, John J.
Sweeney.
MUis adrhltted this. and blamed
the "panic situation" caused by the
letter on the with&lt;:lrawals. " U I was
a member, I'd be concerned, too,"
he said.
"We're ln the process of severing
ties (with SEIU), anctweexpecled
something like this would · come
up," Mills added. "'·
In the letter, Sweeney said "for
somii ~·- now we haVe been concerned with the conduct ot the prlnclpal ottlcer (Cllttord ) ol Your
organization," . adding , OPWU Is
S175,IXXI .In debt, owes $125,IXXI to
federal, state and local governments ln. unpaid taxes' a nd penalties and Jw,s kept no t,record o1
expenditures for funds, salaries.
.equlpmen~ purch~ a.n leases -

HE BELL TELEPHONE SYSTE

Consolidated Trading
Friday. ·Jan . 8

Unch1nged

This J piece meal includes :

RETIRING - .Thereon Joluuoon, rlglll, shown with ~"' T.
Reed, Jr., President and Chlel ExecuUve Officer of The Farm.en'
Bank aud Savlugs ComJIIIny, Pomeroy.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Telephone rates are likely to Increase
lor customers of both Ohio Bell and
Cincinnati Bell, although the two
companies will not be affected slrnUarly by American Telephone &amp;
Telegraph Co.'s 'settlement o1 an
antitrust suit, ottlctals say .
Ohio Bell ts one of 22 local telephone companies AT&amp;T must sell
under a pact reached' Friday settling a 7-year-old antitrust case.
Cincinnati Bell Is only partly
owned by AT&amp;T, which holds 2.7
rnllllon of Cincinnati Bell's 9 mllUon shares.
"With or without (the settlement), rates would have togo up,"
for some 5 mJUJon Ohio Bell customers atier an 18-month transition
period, said Wllllam E . MacDo-

visiting with family fri ends.

· SPliCE
CCX.O..'S
CHOICE

Sunday, Jan. 10, 1982

Divestiture may hike phone

Antitrust suits
dropped, D-1

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

10 Sectjons, 76 Pages 35 Cents

Plea~ant

Ohio.Systems affected

Meets Wednesday

A meeting of the PomeroyLarry Mitchell, 45, Decatur, Ill ..
Middleport Lions Club has been set
has been arrested by the Meigs . for noon Wednesday at the Meigs ·
County Sheriff's Department In
Inn. All members are asked to
attend.
connection with a warrant Issued In

.tnntt
t•

Today's._ Public workers' union in trouble, maybe

..

emergency unit of the county ex- -.
cept Middleport and the class Is credited with securing two heart
monitors which are now In use.
This Is the sixth paramedic class •
Mrs. Dailey has taught and there
are 12 other paramedics In Meigs . :
County now ln addition to the n('W :
graduating class.

or might be tempted to look elsewhere for help,'' he said, adding
that It would be dan_&lt;&gt;;erous to try
ancf seek help because o! whiteouts and windchill factors of 25
or~ below zero.
"They could be sertously hurt
or even kllled, " May sald.
A whlte-o.ut Is a. phenomenon
which occurs when the snowcovered ground ble nds Into a
uniformly white sky, destroying
au· sense ot depth, direction or
distance.
The snowfall wasn't expected
to be as heavy across other portions o(. the state.

);:ven heavier ~ounts were
expected ln the snow belt along
the short ot Lake Erie.
May de!!Crtbed Interstate 90,
between Cleveland and Buffalo,
New York, as the most treacherous stretch ot highway, because
"very cold air ott the Lake Erie
sops up a lot of moisture and
dumps It onto higher ground."
May advised motorists ·to
avoid traveUng along I-00 because of !hi! posslblllty of a stallout or an accident.
"TheSe people might be tempted to get out of their car and
look for the nearest farm house

tmts

Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point

35 Cents

Meigs County happenings

.

.

. ..

hard.'in Oh.io

•

uttba:

..

Dorotha Rmle, Susan OUver, Robert Tripp, Carolyn
Tripp, Dennis Newland, Helen Newland, Carolyn Ritchie, Karen Baker, Michael Thomp110n and Lois
Walker.
·

20 graduate as paramedics

nie ·Shaffer, Route 3, Pomeroy,
driving while intoxicated, $150 and
Admitted--None ·
costs and three days in jail, license
Discharged -- Cecil E lsels te ln,
suspended for 30 days; Charles ReitNeiUe Prlce, Kenneth Keesee, Darmire, Route 2, Pomeroy, driving . lene Johnson.
while intoxicated, $150 and costs and
three days In jail, license suspended
Emergency runs
for 30 days; Michael Taylor, S.
Charleston, W. Va ., speeding, $22
Four calls were answered Thursand costs; John K. Garrett, Rutland,
day by local units, the Meigs
improper backing, $10 and costs;
County Emergency Medical SerJohn Pridemore, Rutland, littering,
vice reports .
$35 and costs; Robert King, MidPomeroy at 4:53 p.m . took Willie
dleport, speeding, $21 and costs . •
Robinson from Pomeroy VIllage
Forfeiting were James A. Sim·
Hall to Veterans Memorial Hospimons, Huntington, w: Va., $50.5Q,
tal; Rutland at 11:37 a.m. took
speeding; Donald K. Austin,
Roger Wallace from Meigs Mine 2
Whiting, Ind., speeding, $40.50;
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; RuRobert L. Halley, Route I, Cheshire,
tland at 10: 54 p.m. took Mike Norris
speeding, $40.50; W. R. VanMeter,
from Pageville to Veterans MemMason, W. Va., failure to yield ,
orial Hospital and the Tuppers
$45.50; Cecil Haning, Route 4,
Plains Unit at 5:13p.m . took Kathy
Pomeroy, driving wbile intoxicated,· Barringer, Sumner Road, to Holzer
$370.50; Brinley F. Seth, Pomeroy,
Medical Center.
driving while intoxicated, $370.50 ;
Ethel Shank, Pomeroy, speeding,
Marriage licenses
$50.50 ; James Diddle, Racine,
sp&lt;.&gt;cding , $50.50 ; Paul Mark HarMarriage licenses were Issued to

He and his wife, Mary Lew
one son and · two
anii,Shirley Johnson
' .
""'

h~ts

By rnoMAs RIZZO
May, a National Weather SerAMoclated PreM Writer
vice meteorologist In Cleveland.
Motorists were warned SaturOfficials also advised· motorday to stay off the Ice-glaZed
Ists and passengers to dress
roads of northeast OhiO, as drivwarmly and carry SUrvival
Ing conditions de\frlorated due
equipment, It driving . was a
·
necessity.
to deep spow, Icy winds and
"Prepare for the \VOrst,'' May
. plunging ~peratures.
.......
The rest of the state, mean'
cautioned. .
while, braced for bitter cold arcThe weather service- posted
tic air that would combine with a
winter storm warnings across
windchill factor to push over- ·" the entire northeastern portion
night temperatures to well - of the state, predicting up to 8
Inches ot additional snow on top
below zero•·
"U you are going out, make
ol the nearly 6 Inches that had
sure you bring a couple ol
f!lllen late Friday night and
early Saturday.
blankets with you," said Jack

Col~mbus.

Phil~on, hsve
dau~hters: pon

.

'Prepare for the worst... '

Johnson retires from bank
After a 22-year ca reer wilh Farmers and Savings Bank, P omeroy,
Thereon "Ca p" Johnson, Rl. 2,
Ral'ine, has retired as executive
vice president as of Jan. I. He will
continue as a bailk dirt.&gt;t:lOI'.
Johnson wa s elected to the board
of directors on May 16, 1950 and served as. vice-president from 1963 to
1969. In January, he was elected as
Executive Vice- President, seo·ving
in that position for the past 12 years.
A natiye of Meigs County , Johnson
~dliated from Racine High School
and received his bachelors degree in
Agriculture froon Ohio State University in 1938. Following graduation,
Johnson returned to Meigs County
and began working. on the farm he
now owns and operates.
Currently serving as chairman of
the Meigs County Regional Planning
Coorunission, Johnson has been involved in a number of community
activities including pa~t leader of
Meigs County 4-H Clubs; Meigs
County Better Livestock Club advisor; Meigs County Extension Advisory Council; Ohio State advisory

.

Ohio

Roof~

1982 budget. ••
$11,943 ; bond retirement funds,
general, $28,761.64; revenue (mentally retarded facilities), $94,811.52;
lan~fill, $46,700; juvenile probation,
$19,000 ; community corrections
grant, $1,665; battered spouses,
$2,410 ; FmHA planning grant, $935;
LEAP, $3,985.79; juvenile court
program, $7,054; access road, FHA,
$22,583.80.

..

3,000
.
await
.
rescue

Area deaths
Beatrice Juhling

........;.·--....

" .. -

IJIIII1• ATIIr .ateiU ..WIP'rldltJ lltt et• nl.aee
. . . ..C Jet ntddreN 1111 q8atlaa II ftedler ATIIr will

13. Cincinnati Bell Inc .
1•. lndlene Bell Ttl. Co. Inc.
15. Wlaconsln Ttl. Co .
1_8 . llllnoi~ Bell Tel. Co .
17. Southern Bell Tel. Co.
11 . South Central Bell Ttl . Co .
11. Southwestern Bell Ttl. Co . ·
20. Northwestern Bell Ttl . ,Co ..
21 . The Moutain Stet" Ttl. &amp; Tel . Co .
22. Pacific Northw11t Bell Tel. Co .
23. Tht Pacific Ttl. &amp; Ttl. Co .
be n ;ztnd 111 dlvmlllelf II n. niilnorlty lniereltllla
two oilier l«aa operaUeo c-paolel: lhe Soulhen a
New .......... l'elepbilnle Co. aud ClncbunaU BeD IDe•
(,u'l verpbllo).

WELLSTON. Ohio - Wellston's undermanned . pollee department
won't be abolished, at least for the tlme 'belng.
Joe Saltsman, a new city council member, had suggested last month
that the department be abolished and that a contract be drawn up with
the JacksOn County Sheriff's Department for protection.
City Council·discussed the matter Thursda~ night In executive session
tor nearly two hOurs, but apparenUy decided to try and resolvl! tile
problem without abolishing the department.
Saltsrryan sa'l.d councll and pollee were going to try and work out the
matter together.

Seeks new theft probe
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, Ohio - An Investigation Into
charges that the pOllee department mishandled a probe Into the theft of
cable televls!Ori converters last Februl!fY Is apparenUy stW under way.
, A tanner Washington Court HOI18e pollceman, Larry Mongold, appeared before ctty coiii)CU last October and raised questions about the
handling 'of the Investigation of a thetl from thcl ofllces ot Court Cablevlslon !De.
MonaoJd claimed two converters contlacated as evidence were In the
homel of "two of the lllgtlest ranldng poliCe ottlcers" In the department.
Oty law directors Daniel W. Drake and Gary D. Smith earlier this
week 1uuec1 a statement sayln&amp; a ~~Ubiequent Investigation yielded no
evldellce to support alleCatlolla that jUJtlce was being obstructed.
Altboutlh thl:;y conceded a m!Jdemeanor violation may have taken
place, they did not recommend action against anyone on the pollee force .
Oty Councll thl&amp; week authorized Ute Investigation to continue.

�·,·'

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Jan. Hi, 1982

Commentary and, perspective
won'd erful, SUP.E:=e~r;.;b~====./.=am=e=~=J.=K=ilp=a=tr=ic=k
Page-A·~

Jan . 10, 1982

A Division of

~~~

S!m~

"q)v
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

Iii Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

m•' 446-2342

_l614) 99Z.2156
ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PATWlllTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEPfiBER of Ttw A!iHtJCblted Pr~n. hal s nd Daily Pre»li AllkOClatloo and lbe Amt!rkun

Mrw.,.pe:f P11b1JIIIer1 AuuclatloL
Thty whut~ld De ll!tlll lhlio 301 word• Ions. All
HI&amp;Dc:d with name, addrrn and telephone
IW1lbrr. Nu umdptlldtrn will~ publh1hrd. LdkrJ ~hiluld be IDJ.ud liii!JI.e, addrt!illng
LE'ITERS OF OPINJO~ are
••b~cl

ldkn art

welcum~ .

kl edftlac alld mutH

~

6MMue.,Mt penorulldH.

Sense, cents and nonsense
..

. frhe
farm hill
..'
·•r

SCRABBLE, Va. - Man does not
live oil bread alone, l\BYS the GJW1
Book, and 'tis true. II can tell you
what man Jives on in mid-Jan Wiry in
the country : Man lives on hopes,
dreams, expectations and the seed
catalogs.
The catalogs start coming ~the
week alter Christmas, when the
tides of country living record their
lowest ebb. Here in the Blue Ridge,
the trees are bare and the fields are
sparrow-brown. Above a blotchy
skin of snow, the stubbled patch of
corn betrays a three-day beard ..
When the wind blows - and it blows
most of the time - the chill factor
falls to zero.
·At such a time, man's first object
is merely to keep warm, and for this
purpose the kitchen fireplace sui·
!ices very well. But there is a dif·
ference form of warmtli - the war·
mth that truly sustains - and this is
the warmth , the catalog artists
provide. Observing the annual
ritual, we sit at the table after dinner. Th~ Vice President in Charge of
Grounds and Gar~ens is a picture of
concentration.
· "This sounds good," she l!Bys, and
then, doing her comparison shop. ping, "but this sounds better.''
Good? The flowers and vegetables
of January are rarely good. At the
house of Burpee, in Warminster,
Pa., the potential products of the
summer are rich, glossy, vigorous,
delightful, sturdy, prolific, crisp,
tender, succulent and sweet. At the
house of Park, in Greenwood, S. C.,
the authors are not so reserved.
Here the corn is scrumptious and the
snap beans a flavor sensation. Mr.
Park's "whoppers," among ott;er
things, are wonderful, perfect, captivating, bewitching, mouth·
watering and unsurpassed. His peppers and tomatoes are not large.
Perish the thought! THey are huge,
enonnous, immense, terrific, gigan·
tic and fantastic.
The vice president, having read
such works of art for 40 years, long

.

ago learned to discount these ad- dragging the squash on sleds behind
jectives by 82 percent. Even so, si1e them. ·
now and then succumbs. Last year
The Kula Memorial Squash Patch
she succwnbed to Mr P!lrk's blan- will be in cantaloupes tlJis. year,
dishments and took a flyer on ,the courtesy of the.house of. Hastings in
squash called Kuta. She planted---l\tllmta. Its !tsy Bitsy Sweetheart
three small hills. It was an almost has an irresistible appeal. We also
fatal error. A week after planting, may have a fling at Professor
the Kula shot from the ground like Hastings' Georgia collards, largely
Jack's famous be;1nstalk. In two · because he iilforms us with an ex·
weeks the plants had taken over the cited bang-mark at the end, that
garden. Those three hiUs produced "collards have been cultivated in
squash by the peck, by the bushel, by Europe (or over 4,000 years, but only
the truckload. We could not giveth" in the South ·!\ave they become a
stuff away . The leaves were as big tradition!" ,
·
as bass drums. In the end, · crews
The vice president, you will un·
with chain saws had to fight their derstand, is the true gardener
way through a Kula jungle, around this establishment. My own

principal contribution· is to suggest
that the peas, beans and lettuce that
are merely delicate, spectacular,
vibrant and gorgeous- poor things
- should be passed by. Out fn Iowa,
Henry Field has some tlult are
" marveloui!." The Spring Hill
people, in Ohio, offer items that are
" breathtaking." Tlre Stark
Brothers, in Missouri, have black·
berries with " the brushed sheen of
black satin."
A toast to Messrs. Burpee, Park,
. Stark, Fielding, Hastings and the
others! What do these vendors sell
one-half so precious as the dreamS
they give away•

Go~ernment . red

.

KN?LAW«
WOKKtRS OF TilE wafL.q fJA/!Tl/
YOV iiAYE NP!HIN(j m
CHAINS.

tape remains

Unbeli_evablel:i:Y==========Ja=c=kA==n=d=er.=so=n

. WASHINGTON (NEA) - It is of·
ten said that a politician and a book·
maker 11re alike in at least one
respect: Their word is their most
valuable asset. Both are finislted if
people begin to doubt what they say.
Historians may well decide that
Jimmy Carter lost his Il'lomeQtiun,
and ultimately lost his presidency,
when he beg~n to have difficultieS
with Congress. And many irisiders
say that those difficulties began
when Congress rC&lt;~Iized that the
president could not be counted on to
ket.p his promises.
Ronald Reagan was supposed to
be different. Congress was told that
this president was a man of deep
principle who would stick to his

guns.
But these days the administration
policy as it goes along . What was
sacrocanct in March has been tossed
aside. As a result, many members of
Congress are starting to view this
!'dministratioit much as they viewed
the Carter ailministraiton during its
'final years. Reagan may have some
llifficult times ahead on Capitol Hill.
The early months of the Reagan
administration
were
replete with big
.
.

the competence of the ad·
congressional successes. The
minis.trat.ion has greatly
president's tax and budget victories
deteriorated.
in the Democratic-controlled·House
Take the issue of federal deficits.
were pol"!ible only with the support.
The administration originally said
of the liberal Republi~ans known as
the "gypsy moths" and the con- that the tax cut should so stimulate
the economy that military spending ·
servative Democrats known as the
1
I boll weevils.' '
could be massively increased, key
These groups backed the president . social programs could be main·
mainly because · of the many - tained and the budget could be
promises that he made to them. The
balanced by fiscal1984.
liberal Republicans received
Then, in July, the administration
Reagan'ssolemn word that he would
predicted that without additional
not touch the so-called "safety net"
large budget cuts the federal deficit
programs of life-and-death im·
would reach $42.S billion in fiscal
portance to their constituents.
1983 and $44~2 billion. in fiscal 19114.
But it was still saying that !he
budget could be b&amp;laneed by fiscal ·
But in recent days the safety net
1984 given some particularly
has been ripped apart. In a
favorable economic events.
desperate attempt to cut the huge
In November, the administration .
deficits anticipated tllrougp fiscal
admitted
that the economy,·had not
1984, . the Administration is talking
responded to the tax cut in the way
about slashing or eliminating
that had been hoped. Thus, the
programs sueh as Head Start, job
dtiflcitforecasts
were raised to $96.7
training· for the disadvantaged and
billion
for
fiscal
1982, $126.5 billion
public-housing assistance.
· The conservative Democrats· for fiscal 1983 and $145.7. billion for
fiscall984.
voted for the tax and budget cuts
Now those figures have been
because they thought th8t the ad·
revised again to predict deficits of
ministration understood what was
$109.1 billion in fiscal 1982, $152.3
wrong with the economy and how it
billion in fiscal 1983 and $162 billion
could be corrected. But their faith in

New York is not the nation, a truth and crime, and the plight and pur·
pose of an overcrowded prison
for which the latter has frequent
'
system.
enough cause to be grateful.
The plight is very real in ·New
Not infrequently, however, what
happens in New York - or happens York, where the memory of the At·
there first ·- is of interest and even tica riot remains vivid. Yet a decade
after that murderous explosion, the
applicable nationally.
, Such as the preliminary report of entire state prison system is "in the
a· gubernatorial advisory corn- midst of a population explosion."
inission engaged in an ongoing study The inmate population has doubled
of the administraiton of justice in the in less than 10 years. Worse, the rate
state. Actually, in light of the com· of increase has tripled in the last
mission's dim views on nwnerous year alone.
current practices, the better word
Yet the voters of New York in
might be misadministration. ·
Much of the commission's at· November rejected a $SOO million
tention is directed to specifically, if prison-construction bond issue. The
not . always uniquely, New York commission's observations on that
problems. Such as antiquated court point are not entirely critical. It
and information-e xchanging noies there is a body of opinion that
procedures, prison staffing and the questions whether more prisons and
uneven distribution of judges and , tougher laws are the right ways to
parole facilities between thinly deal With the problems of crime and
populated northern and western punishment.
New York is especially well·
countries and metropolitan New
prepared to examine that question,
York City.
But much of it also focuses since its legislatOrs have responded
squarely on.questions of national ill)· in recent years to perceived public
port. Specifically, the proper func· demands to "get Iough" with har·
lion. of the judicial system, the sher laws, particularly those dealing
relationship between pUnishment with drug offenses, and Statutes

the same.
. Until you retire.

E.EHutton
youtoa _ .

on

[

%.CARAT of DIAMONDS s75()00

TAWNEY _JEWELERS
424 second Ave.

,

Gallipolis, Ohlo

1-I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.,
·- - - --

S10RI HOIJRS:

Mon.·ThUJS. 9 am

I~ 9:~

F1i.·Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
CIDSED SUNDAYS

12oz.39e
Pkg.

.

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AND• ASPACIOUS CLUBHOUSE. SAVE
'

'500 ON YOUR INITIATION FEE BY

·use' ·this

coupon · or •Imply call I-8GIHU-3410 Ohio
re•ldents or W. Va. ret~ideots call collect 31M-52So11100 aud
ask tor Mn. Stark.

JOINING TODAY. CAll lHE GALliPOLIS

•

WHEN: Tuesday; January 19, 1982
WHERE: The Down Under Restaurant
SPEAKER: C. Markle Kiesling, Attorney
Stephen R. Lee
Account Executive-E. F. Hutton

GOLf CWB.AT 446-3075 OR SUBMIT

lHE FOWMING INFORMATION TO
P. 0. BOX 359, GAWPOLIS, Ohio.

MtD E.EIIIittDn. FICetDfare.

p•·----------------------·

1\0uge, La., left two policemen and two young blac)ts dead.

I ow;;
I
I Cllr
l . iWi....

s-

I

fill

...,._

: i l i r t : t - - - ·= OldoOOI-·l .P ....:O-.

· : ~WIIuttan
£.:::.:-.~·
t:
h\&lt;'·
11t11ti11c11nr W. VL 25711
I. •••••••••••••••••••--.••••.
_LI...._.................. .-~

f. "'"""' fl·l : · -

.

!

TO

3 TENNIS OOURTS, SWIMMING POOL

tive and free eeminat
.
Spice illinited. So pae- llllile your reaervaticnl early.

I
I

•

ssgsoo

FEATURING AN 18-HOLE GOLf COURSE,

plan; an IRA could nwan the dif.
ference between limply retirin8, and retirintl weD.
What mallei uiiA from E.F. Huttaa "3 iiit7
With many IRK1, your invntment choices are linWted. But
with E. F. Hutton you have many illvettment opciant.
Optionl that let you dlllnae your in~tment llrlltqy u
. the market c:hanan· So you have 1 better chance oC aeuinl
the liahelt po11ible return each reat
.
AI IIIia and IIIOl'e il e~J~~aine$~ in E. F. Hunon'a inform~-

-:'tlian originally believed.

\

PRICED
FROM

GALLI POLIS COUNTRY CLUB

~-ymore.
If you have 1 COII1PIIIY

1 O ·Pioooe,_..__lollor,_..-.. _ ... _ _ _
llocu ... lltKo. Cllodi .... _( Doli ) -&lt; 0. )
I o 1 --.~~~~~Jioooo-menaooobo 1' •loowdot1
ta ... llocu lho IRA.

'

January Clear,ance

ON THE NEW
mo..

I~------------------~---------,
· .· _
I

I NgE

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'II ADDRESS

II

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CITY·

1 PHOIIE
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·cALL TODAY FOR D~TAILS

Under the new tax law, 111e Individual Retirmlent A=unt
CIRAJ it now aVIillble 10 everyone who workl for 1
Uyou don't have a COIIIJ*lY peneion plan. in IRA il
euentill. AI we Ill know, Socill Security bene6ta jull aren't

"'lin

'

'

"

ssoooo

affects

.
;::-On

f

'
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SAVE

howthe_tax_

'

' '. .

...,....

Already tlie GOP-boll weevil
coalitiOn that passed the tax and
budget bills has been replaced by a
I
Democrat-gypsy moth coalition that
i);
was eVident in Republican defections on .appropriations and fann
i
legislation.
Even more ominous is the growing
"How about knocking around some new Idees
belief that Reagan c~n no longer
for more stridently snti-Sovlet rhetoric?"
count on tbe Repub!ican..:ontrolled
Senate, at least in budget matters.
The president has" made many r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
promises to achieve his·victories on
Capitol Hilt. Now he is having to
break those promises.
Thus, the same unhappy fate that
befell Jimmy Carter on Capitol· Hill
may lie ahead for Ronald Reagan.

mandating stiff. sentences for some lawmakers and lawkeepers "do not
first offenders and prison terms for know what else to do" with of·
fenders, violent or not. Those who
all non-violent repeaters.
"In short," as the corruni.Sion are not could be dealt with, depen·
sWTUII8rizes the impact upon New ding upon the offense, through vic·
York, "more offenders arc going to tim restitution, financial penalties,
prison for longer pertods of time, restrictions short of imprisonment
and commun~ty service.
and fewer are coming out.''
The impact upon crime, however,
is something else: "There is no proof
' Finally, the commission report
that increasing the lengtl) of sen- points to what may be the nub of the
tences has re•ulted in concomitant whole problem, expecting more of
the judicial system than it can
reductions in the crime rate."
The commission suggests other . deliver and blaming it for the
"less expensive" methods should be failures of other forces :
"Drugs, child abuse, the
studied to accomplish this. Al'liong
... others:-· alternative sentences weakening of the family structure,
providing ·supervision and even racism, the problems of the public
punishment of non-violent offenders education system, alcohol abuse and
lack of employment opportunities
without imprisonment.
have more to do with crime rates
than
the efficiency of law ··en·
That approach is far from original
forcement
agencies. The police, the
, wlth the New York comnlission. lt is
courts
and
correctional institutions
stressed in a recent s)jdy, "Imare
not
surrogates
... Confusing the
prisonment' in AmeriCa," which
·criminal
j~stice
system
with other
holds that the real purpos~ of prisons
core
histitutions
of
society
can only
is "to make it impossible, for some '
lead
to
the
failure
to
deal
with the
limited period of time, for violent
organic
causes
of
crime.''
criminals to commit new offenses.''
· The plight . of the prisons arises . Put that way, punlshrpent itself
through overuse,
because ,can be a crime against society.

..~"' may

r;roday
in
history
.·.

·
. Five years ago, Secretary ol State Henry Kissinger said no American
; president wOuld ever Jet the Soviet Union gain strategic superiority.
. One year ago, a top Iranian negotiator said hls government was likely to
· awro\re within a week the latest lii!Uatlve lor the release ol52 American
. hostages held in Iran lor more than a year,
: Today'&amp; birthdays: Singer Gtsele Mackenzie is 55. Former baseball star
; WWle McQlve'y Is 44.
: · Thouiht FOI' Today: Our ofvlllzatlon Is stlll in a'lnlddle stage, nb longer
wbolly guided by irlstlct, not yet wholly guided by reason. - Theodore
;Dreller; u.s. noVelf8t (lB71·1945).
.

in fiscal 1984. Thus, between July
and December the total deficit
forecast for those three years grew
from $139.4 billion to$423.4 billion.
The bOll weevils w~o .sided with
the adininistration because they
!bought it knew what it was doing
a'Ono1nicaUy have been left to swing
in the wind, as have the gypsy mot~
who relied on the president's
promises to protect programs vital
to their districts and to their reelections.

-an..___r

.

~ ,Ten years ago, a clash with pollee at a black militant rally In &amp;ton

...

•

Punishment as a crime;..._.._-~--n_on_c_·r.........

Truth in w~ighinga==========A=rt=B=uc=hw=a=ld:

...

Berry's World

doubt Reagan~s word?._·____Ro_b_er_tw._a...;...gma~n·

,; f

11

'

·Is Mill starting·to

seems to be inventing its economic

By LOWELL WINGETT
; I am a conswner and, Lord, how I hate it. Worse than that, I am a
P.,mocratconswner. If I complain someone is sure to say, "You sound like a
ftepublican." I sound like a conswner. Democrat or Republican, and con·
cwners can't win as a trip through the supermarket will prove.
;
As I am so often reminded, it was we Democrats who first inaugtlfated
Jhe fann price supports. Then it was a good idea but greed and politics took
tlver and the program got out of hand. The dairyman who milks a thousand
4:ows or the poultryman who has a half-million hens is a fap cry from the but·
Je~ and egg man who knocked on the back door on Saturday mornings when
lhe supports were first made a part of our fann program. Then it was the
~ /3IfT .
small fanner who needed the income protection but now, for every small
lanner who needs the protection, there is a large private or corporate farm
Y~PR
Jn the businellS of manufacturing milk and eggs. They are the ones who are
JObbling up most of the price support gravy.
, There is nothing more melancholy than a trip to the supennarket. Look
~tall the good things nobody can possibly afford but must buy anyway if they
eilpect to eat. No wonder the conswnption of boore has gone up in the United
States. It's cheaper to drink than to eat! At our supennarket ~ six-pack of
B)ldweiser is' cheaper than a gallon of milk. For the money you spend for
~nough steak'for dinner, you can buy two bottles of the best wine. You could
probably buy your own liquor store for the retail price of one beef. Bought
any pP,anut butter lately? That's for only the very rich or the poor guy who
~
Jll&amp;nts to impress his best girl by taking peanut butter and jelly sandwiches
t9 the class picnic. On my last trip to the market, I foolishly picked up a
~
small package of cheese without noting the price. When I did look at home it
was $2.15 for the 10 ounces' package or 21.5 cents an ounce. Grandma always
told me never to go to the store hungry.
; As you may have suspected by now, this is leading to comment on the
f~nn bill the president and congress gave us just before Christmas. It was
p~ just before adjournment of the congress until January 25, the
president signed i\ and they.all got the hell out of town in a hurry. Specifics of
the m~sure have not yet trickled'down to us common folks but if it contains
anything for the conswners except bad news it has not been leaked to the
press.
The gasping businessman got his
What plagues the bureaucracy - ·
WASHING TON - Every private
· Agriculture Secretary John L., BloGk told the newsmen, "It's bare bones,
Included for Vande-Weerd's
or
rather, what perrwts the
head
abOV'e
the
paperwork
long
enterprise
of
any
consequence
is
enedification
were
18
pages
of
"Non·
it's lean." It was $11 billion lean! That may be lean compared to the $200
bureaucracy
to plague the citizenry
e
nough
to
appeal
to
liis
snarled
into
government
red
tape
Discrimination
Regulations"
and
a
billion def~nse budget but to the customers who will eventually pay for the
is
ary
internal,
inexorable drive
congressman,
Berkley
Bedell,
[).
to
the
extent
that
each
year
40-page
booklet
from
!Qe
Federal
biD, It is just another kick in the pants. Conswners expected more from an
toward
expansion:
The end result
Iowa
,
who
fired
off
an
angry
letter
to
businesses
prepare
an
estimated
114
Reserve
Board
on
"Equal
Credit
Opadministration which promised to end government intervention in the
has
been
·growth
beyond
control or
·
SBA
Administrator
Michael
Car·
million
(arms,
IS,OOO
different
types
portunity,"
plus
two
copies
of
a
market place.
•
,
even
comprehension.
.
denas.
of
them,
for
the
federal
government.
"
Compliance
Report"
and
a
T~ fann bill was avcepted by a bare majority of congressmen,
But
only
part
of
government
ex"Surely
the
proprietor
of
a
firm
A
statement
glassy-eyed Chester Vandefor him to sign attesting
squeakmg through the House by a mere two v0tes. Its approval was hailed as
Weerd got more than his share of that he had duly read all the that employs five people, .all of pansion can be blamed on the
anuther legislative triwnph_l&gt;yJhe administraiton, although 59 Republican
whom are related by blood or bureaucracy's inner dynamics. An
them six months after he had otr material.
representatives voted against it. Some critics labeled it as inadequate to cur·
tained a loan guaranteed by the
The original purpose of most of the marriage, has more productive added impetus comes' from outside
tail gov~rnment influence on farm economics while others claimed it was
Small Business Administration. He paperwork is laudable enough - to ways to spend his time than by - in the demand of society at large
disastrOWI for some fanners and too generous to others. President Reagan,
was confronted with ll().odd pages of .enlorce the civil rights law. But Van· reading 60 pages of regulations and for more services. Legislative
possibly relying !lJI•some more of Budget Director David Stockman's dream
forms and instructions from the de-Weerd's modest firm, which forms regarding equal opportunity bodies at all levels - federal, state
figures, said it would increase farm exports by 42 percent. The conswners,
and local - enact an estimated
agency. "I couldn't believe it," he reconditions farm equipment, con- regulations," Bedell wrote.
j!~ usual, wound up holding the dirty end of the stick. The government will
ISO,OOO laws each year.
Vande-Weerd.
isn't
the
only
small
said. " It was beyond a layman to fiU sists of himself a,nd four employees,
t!imtinue supporting prices on milk, grains and fibers and any number of
The bureaucracy seizes upon each
businessman
to
he
getting
the
them out."
all relatives or in-laws.
~er corrunodities we can't do without. It continues grain and cotton sutr
law
and buffers it with regUlations.
··business
from
the
SBA.
In
1981,
the
Wl\at boggled poor Yande-Weerd's
"They wanted to know about
~es and peanut and tobacco quotas and props up the sugar industry.
The
more entangling regulations
agency
sent
out
69,91S
·of
the
civil
mind was SBA Form 7(!1 and its at· parking lots and drinking founThrough Florida sources I have some information about the sugar supthat
the
bureaucracy can produce,
rightsiorms,
and
received
31,531
in
tachments. To the 52-year-old tains," an exasperated Vande·
·~· It. will cost U. S. conswners an additional $1 billion a year to sweeten
the
better
it can justify its own ex·
return.
What
happened
to
the
other
businessman in Rock Valley, Iowa, Weerd told my associate Tony
~ir oatmeal. It will cost the federal treasury $2loil million yearly in taxes.
pansion
and
conswnption of tax
38,384
is
anyone's
guess.
Maybe
the
1PO be sure the sugar support will benefit Florida and a few other southern it was like a Boeing 7(!1 trying to land Capaccio. " That was the end of it for
'dullars.
recipients
just
gave
p.
on a helicopter pad.
skttes. U was one of the prices the admini~tration was willing to pay for the
me."
silpport of Boll Weevil ~'Ongressmen in the tax cut and budget " triumphs"
last summer. For those few votes, all American conswners, most of whom
lwtow nothing about sugar production, will pay through the nose for the four·
'car life of the bill.
To distract public att~ntion from his inconsistencies, the president
1
covered tangerine.
drugstores that tell you your weight
It got on my scale the day after ning?"
~uthorized the release of 30 million pounds of cheese from government stockI stepped on the scale first and it on one side of the card, and your for"I didn't get on the scale, but I ·
New Year, and discovered it was off
'lJlles to the states which wish to give it to the poor. The distribution must be
lit up at "201.6.' 1
tune on the other, for a penny!'
by five pounds. Whereas I should kicked .it once or twice."
made by .non-profit organizations in states that ask for it. This would seem
'.' That's insane, "·I said
haven't seen one in a long
have weighed 165 pounds, the scale,
"Howcome?"
,
like a handsome gesture until you consider the government now has a 560
Lester got on the scale and it time." ·
which had been ·guaranteed for 10
"For the past few days. I've been
million pound cheese surplus piled up in government warehouses. This is in
"That's because the scale· cartels
years, was wavering between 190 getting ridiculous readings. Y~u showed "209.4."
addition to the millions of pounds of butter and dried milk we also have
He demanded to see the manager. are buying them up and replacing
know I've never gone aver 195 pounand 192.
stores - all surplus from the milk support program over the years. Oddly
"Someone has been playing ds in my life. Well , the ~ay after "Sir, I pay $35 a month dues and the them with ones that won't tell your
enough, the president's home state, California, became the first state to
around with this scale," · I told my Christmas the pointer showed 201 , least I can expect for my money is· weight unless you put in a nickel.''
receive the free cheese, three million pounds in five pound blocks.
and two days later 203 and yesterday an accurate weight reading."
wife.
"You game for a dish· of frozen
Which leaves a cynical old cuss like me to wonder: Does one of Reagan's
The
manager
stood
on
the
scale
yogurt?"
I asked him.
.
"Maybe
one
of
the
children
jumrich California buddies own a laxative factory?
207'"
ped on it too hard," my wife said.
"Where was the scale made•" l and it showed "145.2.''
" Why not? If. you're not going to
'
" It seems all right to me," he said.
get a square deal from a scale tliere
I urged her to try it, just to make asked.
·{'
"That's what I weighed last week.''
sure I wasn't wrong.
"Taiwan."
is no sense starving yourself all year
" What else could the man say?" I long.' '
"Not on your life," she said. 11 1
"That explai ns it. I heard there
never get on a scale after the have been a lot of Chinese imports told Le&gt;'ler later as we slopped to
holidays. It depresses me too that were never properly adjusted." have a pizza. "If he admitted the
. Rosenthal c~rpe by with a deep
much."
'
dish nf cherry pie."
" Let's go over to the Chevy Chase scale 'was off, his entire health club
,Today Is Sunday, Jan. 10, 'the lOth day ol1982. There are.355 days left in
I called up Lester Shor. "What are Racquet Ball Club. They have a operation would be threatel)ed."
"Trouble at home•" Lester asked
him., .
.the year.
•
Lester nodded his head, "There is
digital scale from Switzerland which
you doing?" I asked him.
·: Today's highlight in history:
"Finishing up some cheesecake doesn 't gain or lose an ounce in a no truth in scales any more. Even
"Yeh, -1 weighed myself this mor~,: On Jan. 10, 1928; Loon Trotsky was ordered into exile by the Soviet
the ones made in Switzerland lie. ••
year,'' ~ster said.
left over from the Si!!!ar Bowl.''
ning, and my wife took the scale's
~vernment.
·
"The worst ones are located jn
"Okay, I'll meet you there in an
"Did you go to the Sugar Bowl?"
word against mine."
thls date:
doctors' offices," I Said. "All of ·
"No, but we had cheesecake and hour."
"If she. did ihat to me," Lester
1942. the Japanese invaded the Dutch East Indies in WOfld War II.
We met in the locker room. I was those are at least thre~ pounds off."
coffee at halftime because I once
said, looking at the cherry pie, "I
: •:In 1966, India and Pakistan agreed to withdraw their armed forees to
"I tell you the only good scales left
knew a kid who played for Georgia." finishing up a piece of fruit cake and
would have put whipped cream and :
· jqeltlons they had held before fighting the previous autu"!" over Pakistan.
nuts on top."
"Did you weigh yourself this mar· Lester was biting into a ch~olate- in Al'lierica are the kind you find in
' ' In 1973, a tornado cut through a wideareaol Argentina, killing atleast40
:~pie and Injuring 300 others.
·
.
~ •' And In 1979, the surgeon general ol United States said there·was."over·
'~Vbelrnlng evidence" that smoking causes even more death and disease

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-A·J

Pom.eroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

II
I

.

·-~--------------------------J
'.

.U. S. NO. 1
lnstut

POTATOES
20 18. $}99
BAG

COPPII
1oor.

Jar .

S339

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J;~n .

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

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

10, 1982

Stargazer uses ho~e~ade telescope
PARAGOULD, Ark. (AP) Homemade telescopes made from
odds and ends bring the dista~t
heavens close to stargazer Kemut
Rhea, a former Ohio man.

Alice, movedfromChllhcothe, Oh1o,
to Oak Grove Heights, about six
miles north of · Paragould. , Rhea
grew up m the area and dec1ded to
return after retiring from his job as
a therapist for the Veterans Administration.

A Pringies potato chip can is part
of the housing for one of his
creations, and· lenses from used
microscopes and· cameras provide
optics for the eye pieces in his
telescopes.
The advantages of building his
own equipment are obvious to Rhea.
~ 1 Jt'S

He says his backyard in, Oak
Grove Heights gives hi.m much
clearer view of the sky"than he had
in ' Chillicothe. He suspects' that's
because·there's less air pollution in
Arkansas.
Rhea , 62, learned to make
telescopes from months and months
of reading, studying and experimenting. He used the Chillicothe

a

cheaper," he said, UJ Jearn

more. I can make them and adapt
them to my own use."
Two years ago, Rhea and his wife.

cater to observers of the heavens.
He has published infonnation abOut
som~ of his sightings_ ill these
pubhcatwns •and has wntten to Dbservatories about some of his ex·periences. 1
A pair of magnifying reading·
Rhea, a member of the
glasses from a dime store provided · Association of Jntrrpianetary Obhls fit'st objective lens - the n:win
servers, 8ays he has seen .all the
lens in a refracting telescope. Rhea plants except Pluto, and has sighted
remembers that he strugglfd with comets, including Koho'utek.
the lens for days before he could see
He has spotted seve~al meteorites.
much.
His research informed him of a
" I'd go back and read and then meteorite thatleil in Greene County
look," he said. At last, the craters of on Feb. 17, 1930. It was known as the
the moon popped into view.
stone meteorite of Paragould, and is
Rhea gets a Jot of journals,
listed as one of the largest stone
magazines and newsletters that meteorites known, Rhea .
librarytofindinfonnation.
"I want.there night and day until 1
went throu~h all their books," he
said, before he built his · first
telescope.

Jan. 10, 1982

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

New bill gives break to
p:.ASifiNGroN
(AP) - Rell. • charitable and other 1100·

U.S. mad~ ~ar purchases

motherb::Jod," he said.

Tthepostal mer-, 13Jumsald,
"wW
do exactly the oA~osJte" as
prutt C11P111lmbs wW have a
what
Plesldeat
Reagan adwcated
harder time ralsUie money - and
last
taU
wben
he
Uflll!d that ''volun·
some are l!lCpected to dlsaweer _
teerism"
matre
up
for cutbaCks In
beca111e f1 maJor Increases In their
federal
social
programs.
~ rates lakbv effect today.
"'! be aovemment says, 'let's not
Robert Blum. bollrd dlalnnan f1 rely 111 U~Ele Sam. Let's raise it
the National Sociely of Fund Ralsprivately.' Then the government
IJII Ellecutlves, predicts the In- makes It mucll more diftlcult'to
creases wW force nearly 10.cm f1 ra11e 11 privately:· lk• said. ·
the 'IO,Q non-prUtt organlz.atlll1s
f'«l~ example,, the Disabled
that llave been tinanclally viable · American Veterans nialls more
unutmw to cloe.
than 'Z1 million ploc"eS annuaUy.
'"Ibis Is a vetyWI'I!IIChiJrgchange Max Hart, Its director of maU mar·
like attacldng apple pie and
tr.etlng, said rna111ng c1wt1es

ror

furldralsq solicitations and the
DAV rnap1Jne wW go from S1.4
miiiiii1 to $2.3mllllon. DAVwUisilrvlove but wUI haove to maU Jess, he
sald.
BeCall!l! they were pi'I!SIIJ11fd to
be acting in the public interest. noR·
pJUII groups such as the DAV have
been aUowed a government·
su~ maU
for decades for
tl!elr solicttationsand publlcatlons.,

rate

The subsidy was scheduled to be
phased O!lt graduaiJy by 1~. but
lhe Reagan administration COli·
v1nced Ca)gress to end the subsidized rate na.v with a bW.pilssed last

month.
Nm-pmtt ma11ers wlllmw llave
to ll!l! 'Z1 cents per pwnd lnsbBI f1
the oJ.d 1!1.8 Ci!n~ tlor lllelr thirdclass maU tul)d IOIIclatlms.
· Piu1lcuJarly hard hit wUI be non·
PI'Q(It orpnlzatlons ~ secimdclass mall to send publlcatlll1s th&amp;t
contain Utile ~- Tho9e
rates went 1rom 0.9 cents to 4.5
cents per piece.
· .
The ctwweS do not affect rates
for regular lnBil, inc~ tint·
class Ieite!'$. And the non-profit
rates are st!U loMier than thOse
charged CO!liOflltlons and other private maJiel'$..
·

.. .

hml ""-'b'bO • ·10 ...... _ , ~ .
hMd ~- on 11ud o-, 0111 ll'otl¥ft · M -"
ld\ltrt.d' ~-.rl ,. rt01 MIWIII lot pur·

0\lr

dll. . 8ul ~ '"~ unlo&lt;IJMft , I. .I Oflo ,

IC mart Will 1 Ran Cilia en IIQUI:_III
!he ~ ... ~o.. lone ~ttn or~·
1 lew
lble ~ quwotql to bltfUI.:t..Nd tlllhe
-CIAOI-'-I~IiiMIIelltMII ...
yau 1 (;(Jmplll.,._ ®~lolr o1tm llj • _ , . . .
.... ~ .... prq

,
HERE'S LOOKING AT YOIJ - Carol Smith, dlredor of wUdllle
·. programs for the Audubon Society, holds the great homed owl that is
: belug nuned back to oonnalafter smashing into a mall truck tbls week in
·. , Jl:eeoe, N. H. S~th examined the bird Saturday and plans to release It
, , ,tbia week, when the temperatures are expected to rise a little. (AP Laser' photo).

..

Your
Choice

·~·
.

:;Catholic leader
·- ;denounces
wat
'.
.

"

., . : COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl .:._ Win·fling a nuclear war is not possible
and would amount to mutual
· destruction, says Bishop Edward
:. Herrmann of the Columbus Catholic

The bishop said he would support
peaceful demonstrations against
nuclear weapons, just as he has done
in the past.
While he would participate in a
demonstration against the manufacture of the B-1 bomber at the Columbus plant of Rockwell International
Corp., Herrmann said he would not
oppose Catholics working there.

Oiocese.

--··. •"Civilization as we know it toduy
· ..,ould not exist," Hernnann said in
·:·ah interview published Saturday in
· U)e The Columbus Dispatch.
.
' Hermann, the spiritual and ad- T-------------1
ininistrative leader of' about 200,000
. tathoiics in the diocese, is one of
ileveral Catholic leaders who have
J~mbav 'timr• • imtinrl
USPSli~
recently spo~en out 'against the arA Mullimt!ilia Newspilpt!r
' nis ra-:e.
Publisht.'tl each Sunday, 82~ Tllinl
Avenllt!, by tilt! Ohio VHlley Publishin~
"A lot of people are simply not
Company. Multimedia, Jiic. St!cond l'lass
aware of what one bomb can do, the ,
po&amp;a:fi:t: pald at Gallipolis, Ohio. 4li631 .
Entt)M a» treeond cla!ll mailing matter
magnitude of destruction," he said.
11 \ Pomeroy, Ohio, P~ l Office.
.Auxiliary Bishop George Fulcher,
Mcmher : The A.isociatetl Pres~. lnlant.l
w)lo participated in the interview,
D11ily Pn::~11 Assocl11lilln .il llll th~
· agreed that nuclear warfare seems
Am~r!can
New"paper Publlshus
1\~sodation , National Ad\'nthlin .:
remote to the average person. · ·
RepresenU.tlvc, Brantuun, 17117 West
. "Just like the .whole economic
Nine Mile Rood, Suilc zo-1, Oclroit,
Michigan, 4807G.
issue," he said. "Citizens of Columbus can read about recession, inSUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrlu 11r Mohlr Route
Dation and unemployment, but until
Onewec11 ...... . ....... ,, ...... SI.OO
it hits· home it doesn't have an imOne Month
. .. ....... . $4.40
Onl!y,•ar .. ... , , ... . . . . . ....... SG2.80
pact on their lives.
SINGU·.: COP'V
"We can't let that happen with
PRICE
35Ccnlll
nuclear weapons. We have inwmatlon about what they can do.
No sublk:rlptiona by muil pcrmith.'tl in
lown» where huu1e t.:H rrter serv1ce is
now. we have to assimilate that inu'&gt;'a i l abl~ .
fonnatlon."
The St.mt.lay Tim m~-Sc ntinel will not be'
The Catholic Church sRould be the
n.-sponslblc ror tH.lvan~.:t: a:wyments made
leader in outlining the issues of
to carriers.
· justice and Pi'ace, Fulcher added.
MAll, SUUSCRIPTIONS
· ;':'Hemnann advised priests and
SundBy Only
One year. .. .. . . . . . .
. . . $20.80
· ~ergymen not to be politicians, but ·
Six months . .. ... ·. . . .......... SHi.40
'apggested they "should p•each the
Dallyand SIIIIdu)'
Ohlu and We11t Virl!lnla
,gospel, speak with a prophetic
On~.: yea r ......... ..... . . ,..
. . $39.00
"vOice."
Six Jnolllh .
. ........ $20.80
Three monlln; . , . , , .. . , , .... , . , $12.3a
Every pope since the bombing of
R11tc~ Oubldc Ohio
Hiroshima has spoken oul against
und Wc11t Vlrglnhl

the nuclear arms race, but lheir
voic~s liave no\ trickled down to the
· diocesan level until the last few
-1.ears,'' Hernnann said.

Sa le

(l02)

Pr iced

19-oz: Carpet Frelh®

32 oz. Dove Dishwashing Liquid
on yo1'·r

~Hnds ,

with long lasting

.....

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Warm Flannel Shirt•

Thrt.oemnnth::~

our Rea. 4.96, Gl~o ' 7-14
Plannellhlrto .. . ... .. .. $1

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to '15

Ill

00

OFF Rag. Price

Women's ..·

i I co.;i;;- .

Brooks. Values to $48.00

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Men's

N9W

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..~ Hushpuppies

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o

w
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E

Our ReQ. 6.47

The tough stain · cleanser with fa st
bleach formula .

Bl

$15 .

(216)

(215)

Our Reg . 24.97

Dukes' PoWer Cycle

Our Reg. 5.94

HP2 Road Race Cars

Dukes of Hazard Cy cle
Popular curve hugger
with action-ride splnout
cars and vans. For slot
lever and wide wh,;e,;,e,;ls;.
. _..,.~t;,;ra;;;;c,;k;,s.

Wellington style
Work ~ull·on Boots
by Chippewa
and Georgia
$80.00 Values
s~o .oo
$48.00 Values
SJS.OO
545.00 Values
$32.00

•

~ugs
in many scenes.
Acril an acrylic yar n.

Our(218

Reg .
For
99e
VInyl Ptact Mat Variety

Ea sy-to-clean., c hqice
o f shapes. colors, prints

$2

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Twin-size

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Choice or Envelope&amp;

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Carpet Remnants
Heavy Shag or plush
carpet

with

matching

Sporting Goods Dept. Only

$3

Eo.
(222)
3 Days Only
20xl0" Areo llugo
Lois of styles! Polyester. polyester /nylon

$5

Made
of
dacron/ poJyester .

ALL

COATS
30% OFF
•

01881

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AIGNER
LEATHER
ACCEr;SORIES

1. l?eploce hont broke paC1 1

2 frue roror•

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• AefHI hydraulic IVSIItm
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6 Replace h onl o roo1e tool•
1 In~ I mo1ter cvtinder
a 1n1pect roar Wningator wear

Presto Quartz Heater
Eff ic ient

in fra ·red

quartz heater saves

energy. UL tested .
(205)

sea
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Front only Many U.S.
cars. Lt. trucks . imports
more .

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Our Reg .
5169 .

(2~)

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McDonald Stereo Radio/Casselle/

I

Recorder

,.."'

Radio with casscltc
stereo recorder. !'ias car adapter .

m

Mon.·'

'Disc lrake Special

~

AM/ FM I ~ tereo

$32

'KM 200' Flberglau left~ Whitewalls
(210)
Sale Prlc:e 1

K.-...AMDC'

Poollet lacllo
9-volt" porloble
radio. 2'/'' speaker. direct tuning,
c;:o(ry strop Save.

011Reg. 42'?7

A7ht3

$2~
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lOY.!

ry pan with· 'Silverstone
king surface. Completely
·easier clea.,ing .

Plus FH. t69 Each - All TJre1 Plus f.E.T:
2 Pol~eater Cord, Plies - 2 Flberglou Belts ·
Mawil 'I lnoluded- No Trade-In Required

25% OFF

"••••te
A4joo•t-~•
w.... ~•t'

GROUP Of

On Sale l'hru Jan. t6

Sole Price

"'
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'INClUDING HANDBAGS ·

(OOdthonol COli il 1ep0ir1 on rear
broke• o re ne6&lt;JeCI)

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24x36" Bath
Fursolft Oval Rug

I

,..~

Sibley, 18, Rt. 2, Crown City.
,
Ra;ymond H: Clarkson, 54, GaW,
polis, charged with disorderly CQO·
duct, fined $17.
.
,;
Charged with no operator's ll'
cense and fined Slli was Steven A..
Kiser, 30, Rt. 4, Oak HUt.
Forfeiting bond for speedillg
were Norman M. Louk, 25,
Bowden, W.Va., $36; Billie R. soft~.
gen, 26, Rt 1, Gallipolis, $40; Pati't,
eta J. Adkins, 112, Rt. 2, VInton,~; ,
Brenda L. Ferguson, 20, Rt.1, GaW•
polis, $39,
'

Iil the Lafayette Mall

Jdavsonly (223)

m

Sale Prices Cash Only I
No Lay-Aways
SALE- SALE- SALE- SALE - SALE- SALE...:. SALE
,!

20x27" latch Hook Kil

$3.
4

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d

·

(217)
Our Reg. 8.27

I

Ill

Store Hours:
Mon., Fri. 9·; 30 to 8
Tues. Wed. Thurs.
· sat. 9.:30 to s

~6

GALLIPOLIS - Ten oases were
lermlnated Friday In Galllpolis
Municipal Court.
Each charged with DWI, lined
$300, sentenced to lour days In jaU,
driver's licenses suspended for six
months and p!aced QlUIJ&lt;.JTIOnths
probation were Dallas A. McGui!'ll,
45, Rt 2, P11trtot; Savay (Bruce)
Detsackda, 21, GaillpoUs; and Gerald E. Ross, 40, Point Pleasant.
Ross was also charged w1th
speeding and was fined $17.
Charged with flrelng a police of·
ficer and lined $20 was Jeffrey T.

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

m

Special Group

· Offices of the Meil!ll County Court- Care Center, - ~ Washington ~.
•
house will close at noon Monday in N.W., Warren, Ohlo4t483..
Syracuse resident, Guy ,Gulnu.,i,
tribute to Eleanor Robson, Meigs
•~
County Recorder for. the past 19 marked his 79th on Dec. 211.
years.
~Winne~ of file Daily Sentinel fir;t
Eleanor, who
baby of the year contest has not )'fl
bas such a sincere
been determined. Contest deadllie
interest in so
is 5 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 12. ;!.
many people, will
.statement from . the attend!!
be missed. She
physician giving the time and date .
\YIIS a popular.
birth
is required. Big Bend m
lady. Tbe support•
are providing a number Of
chants
she
always
gifts
to
the
first·baby of the year al)d
received from
~"
voters attested to that and when ~he the parents. ·
was ill, cards poured in from across
Residents of the Meigs County Iii-.
the county. Eleanor was also a
fighter. In spite of her lengthy · flnnary again enjoyed a nice Christillness, she was on her job and lliiiS, thanks to a number of
movil)g abOut when most of the rest organizations and individual8.
Providing the plealllint holiday for
of us would have been in a heap.
residents
were Charles Biakea~ee ,
One of our better people is gone!
Dutton Drug Store, Eagle Ridge
We hope 'fim Sa~!~rs continues to Community Church, Seventh-Day ·
· .,rogress. A nice young JYUin, Tim Adventist Church, Jay Hall, Si!IYI
met with misfortune two !lays before ' Dol'$!, Marion Ebersbach, Laure)
, Christmas at the''home of his In- Cliff Free Methodist' WMFI, Barlaws, Mr. and Mrs. George Yonkers. bara Sargent, Xi Ganuna Mu
Tim was using a hose to remove Sorority, Heath United Metbodl!it
gasoline, w.hich apparently had Church, Florence Ttai!ll'r, Bank One
water mixed in it, from a car. The of Pomeroy, Avon Distributori· of
end of the hose .accidentally Dipped Rutland, ReedsviUe Methodist Chill'
up in the air striking a light bulb ch, Pomeroy Baptist Church; St.
which exploded causing some of the John's Lutheran Church, Mt Moriah
gasoline to ignite. Tim's clothing Baptist Church Missionary Society,
Zion.Church of Christ, Church of the
then caughtlire. ·
Tim was taken by the emergency Nazarene of Pomeroy, Rutland
unit to the Holzer Medical Center American Legion P011i 467, Feeney•
where he remained in isolation until Bennett Post American Legion, Midlast Wednesday. He is now in Room dleport, Pomeroy Fraternal Order
237 and is able to. be up and about of Eagles 2171, Pomeroy-Middleport
some. He is undergoing whirlpool Child Conservation League, RC Bet.
therapy twice a day, By the way, tllng Co., Pomeroy Order of E .ten\
Tim is an employe of the Jones Boys Star 186, Meigs County 4-H Jllftlor,
Leader Club, Bill and DoroJ,IIy
in Pomeroy.
Winebrenner, Pomeroy Cub Scoqtl
And so many of you also know Den 1. Rita Fields, Angela Mar;
H;~zel McKelvey, assistant director · cinko, Purl and Barbara VanMe"r,
of the Gallia-Melgs COmmunity Ac- Meigs County FF A, Evei;tn
tion Agency. But did you ·know that .Gilmore, Joan Tewksbary, Mr. alid
Hazel underwent foot surgery at Mrs. Paul Simon, American Legioln
Riverside Methodist Hospital in Auxiliary, Frances Reed, Dave Hflf,
'•
Columbus on Dec. 28? She has been Uoyd and Jean Wright.
Thanks to ail of yQU I
returned home where she IS now
recuperating.
The holiday came and went.
Every cent you bad, you apent.
And with lhe birthday people are
Of CQUrse, you're broke, but just
Mrs. Elsie Durst who will celebrate
think
of all thO&amp;! people you belped
her 85th on Jan. II . She is confined to
to
keep
smiling...
...
a care center in Warren. Cards may
be sent to her at Washin~ton Sa•Jare

LEATilER

"',..

..

By BOB HOEFLICH

m

Htishpuppies
All
Dexters
Groups Grizzlies
Morgiln Quinn l&gt;

' "t _,

-··"

(203)

JACKETS, VESTS,
SNOWMOBILE SUITS

Zion Fia Cookies

:y, sleeve, poJyestar!COiton.

Off Reg. Price

5
In

5 for

Our Re g . 1.38

Men•• lateball Jtr..y

.Selected Group ,..I&gt;
Pro Keds, Converse &amp;

Ajax Gian! Size Cleanser

Save now on giant 32-oz.' size .
Softens
hand s while you do dishes .
...

OFF All

l'rtntNegatlvee

Save

..

'•
''

15% to 35%

COLOR
Prom Your Color

": I

2

$ 5 "(214)
Sale
Boxes
· Pnce
Beltle.s s _S tayfree• Maxi Pads
Se ld-odheslve regula r, super or new
super deodorant pods. 30 per boK .

Closing· will
honor Robson

':
•••

Bennett ends 10 court cases:·

DOWN
CLOTHING

PRINTS

··:•"'ct

$}

•

'

Full time cl eani ng edge, con·
vP.nient cord wrap. On·ott toe
switch. Complete with at
tachments .

EXTRA

SAL E- SALE- SALE - SALE

~ w

Palmolive• Dishwoshing Liquid

FOR

(213)

Beat of Bend

.'

Hoover Celebrity Ill
Canister Vacuum Cleaner

Smartly tailored cotton
shirts In sporty plaids.

....... .... ...... 113.00 ·

•• ..1

v,

$5 4.

No. S3169

Six 1n0nth!1

"
; I

:~

Box of 200, qualily 2-ply white facial
tissues, 8Y4X9%" sheets. Save Now.

2.~3

2

Sale
Price 1212 1

I

Latch Hook not included

..

.• I

K mart&lt;~&gt; Facial Tlnue

Powder deodorizer for rugs and
rooms. Vacuums up odors. Save.

.,~ I
,"

: ..1

Kmqrt Price

One y~:a r .. .................... $4&lt;1.20
.... _ . . ......... SZJ.40

11

~ SALE- SALE- SALE -

(200)

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

Our Reg . 1&gt;8 .88

Sale

,

Savel 60-1110. lallery

front lllcl lptclal

Many U.S. cars. light
trucks. Top , side ter-

Many U.S. cars. Disc
brol&lt;es S10 more. •

minals.

AltdltlclnM ...... -.len I Jirl

ACT HI
VELVETS

-,

54.88. $36 Mo~.-Sot

$1

50% OFF

All Dresses ,

Our Reg. 1.23·1.1&gt;4

25%-50%
Your
_Choice

OFF

Staltlng fluid Or Dt-loer

Mllny other items on sale, including sportswear, n#ts, lingerie, etc.

Get 14.9-oz.' starting fluid or
14.1-oz.' windshield de-icer

300 Second
Gallipolis

..

• I

·'

.

�.

.Page

A -6

Middleport - Gallipolis , Ohio-Point Pleasant,

P'omeroy

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.. .....

,

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

..

~ .... ,.....,

.. ~

.

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.; ,._ ,

,..

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~

l

.... · · -

·

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.. •·

Jan. 10, 1982

w. Va .

$1.1 million. -set as, fire loss figure ·
••'

, Gene Beegle

Frank Hilldore

POr,iEROY - Gene Beegle, 79,
3413 43rd St. , New Bri~hton, Pa., formerly of Meigs County, died Dec. 25
'Ill his horne. He was born Nov. 3,
1902 in Letart Township, a son of the
. hte Ira and Mary Flescher Beegle.
He was a retired self~mployed
truck driver.
Surviving ate•his wife, Sarah Boyd
·Beegle; a Son, Don, and a daughter,
: f/lril . Uoyd (Lois) Smith, both of
' New Brighton ; three grandchildren,
a nd two aunts, Clara Roush of Akron
'1md Vera Beegle of Racine.
, . Besides his parents, he was
•preceded in death by two brothers,
Brooks and Charles.
, Services were held at 2 p.m .. on
Oec. 29 at the Donald D. Druschel
~uneral Home In New Brighton with
lhe Rev. David W. McClain, pastor
. ol the Sylvania Hill• Baptist Church,
:Officiating . Burial was in the
·Sylvania Hills Memorial Park.

POMEROY - Funeral services
for Frank. HUidore, · 78, Steubenville, were held Jan. 4 In the
McCiave-Chandler-MIIIs Funeral
Home, Wintersville. Burial was In
Fort Steuben Burial Estates.
Born July 9, 1903, In aocklngport,
son of the late WUJiam Frederick
and Bertha Nicely HUidore, he was
a retired elec'trtctan tor Weirton
Steel.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth Myers Hllldore; three daughters, Mrs.
David (Gretchen) Conn of Sacramento, Calif., Mrs. Earl (Juanita)
James of Weirton, W.Va. and Mrs.
Nick (Maxine) . Daniels · of Fort
Ciiy, Pa.; four grandchUdren and
five great-grandchildren.

,

1

.

.

~Mamie Hendricks

~~~~Dta~=h.~_g:::;: .
City,
Elmer Lewis Bush, 31, GalllpoUs,
·also suffered burns In a structural
tire on Mill Creek Road In GaillpoUs
Oct. 31. Other Injured firemen were
Nell McMahon, )louse fire, Feb. 21;
Roger B1'811(leberry, Quick Clean
Laundromat fire In Point Pleasant,
May 11; and Robert PoUng, house
tire on Neighborhood Road, Aprll7,
imd Gold Van Lines fire, Gallipolis,
Aug. 9.
The departmen I estlma ted
$1,124.415 was lost to
In 1981,
whUe $3,6'72,21i0 was saved. There
. were 125 total alarms recorded durIng the year, Including fire alarms,
smoke scares, false alarms and
"honest mistakes."
The report said GalUpolls gave
mutual assistance to the trown
City Fire Departme~t three Urnes;
VInton, nine; and Polpt Pleasant
once, while It was assisted on other

.n1o·

Garland Mosier

·

occasions besides ,the &lt;»urtho~
f!reoncebyGOCandoncebyPotnt •
'
Pleasant.

·

GALLIPOLIS - ·Property damage caused by tire Iii the Gaillpolls
"
came to more than Sl.l mlillon
lir 1981, according to the Gaillpolls
Fire DepliUnent.
·
In Its anntlal~~rt. the department listed the blg&amp;est loss as Sl
mlillon In the fire Whi&lt;'l! gutted the
old wing of the Gallla County courthouse Jan. 8.
The fire, In which Galllpolls was
assisted by fire. units from Galllpo. Us Developmental Center, Point
Pleasant, Middleport • and
Grande, alsoresultedtn three InjurIes to three oftl\e city department's
volunteers: Ronald Patrick, James
Saunders and Wayne Elllott.
Placing second on the department's Ust of expen~lve blazes was
the burning of a tow~ ton the Ohio
River above Kanauga on April lB.
The boat, owned by Valley, Inc ..
· MUJwood, W.Va., suffered an estimated $72,000 damage.
Others on the list were a house at

4

of the best

insurance .agents
you'D ewer find

fire

•
•
•
•

Cl)r agent
Homeowners agent
Life agent
Health agent

, ,·, IGA TablaRite Q~ality" Pork Loin

""""u LOAF.. ~~.~ 89C

Spring Valley Plaza
Phone 446 -43~6

$12,000

159

·

HAM .... . .LB:

RICK PERDUE

·

73 ~~~-~ter~'~:~~~: Fire loss .p l_a ced at

CHIPPED

Like u good neighbor, ·
Stare Form fa there.

day In Holzer Medical Center.
GALLIPOLIS _ Fire damaged a
~n prted open alld two television
bert D. Balles, 45, Rt. 1. Leon, ob· Born Aprtl 28, 19Ql, at Cadrpus,
house on Friendly Ridge Road Frin•n utM
sets were taken. A check of his car
MIDDLEPORT- Mamie Hentaining drugs by deception; James
wn of the late Lafeyette and Ava · day afternoon, according to the
In the garage showed tools had also
, pricks, 66, Middleport, d!ed Friday
D. Westfall, 22, Rt. 1, Galllpolls,
Jane Hunt Mosler, he was a
Galllpolls Fire Department.
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
been stolen.
squealing
Ures; and p!eryl T.
tanner.
: · Mrs. HendrickS was born Nov,
Gaillpol!s City Pollee InvestiCause of the blaze, which caused
Miller, 36, Rt. 2, .Patrtot, speeding.
an estimated $12,«XXJ to the building
gated a minor two-vehicle accident
STAT£ FAliN .. SUIWICE CON....,IES
-~. 19151n Pomeroy the daughter of ' i · Surviving are his wife, Maude
llo.,,u,. OIIMt'• ll~r " "' ' '' l'' ''' li ln~ • • ·
Mlller Mosier; five sisters, Bessie
and contents, was sllll undeterthe late Jacob and Nettle otto Consaturday morning.
.--------~--_.1_
Mosier of Piketon, Mrs. Alberta · mined Sai-Urday:
According to the report, Tommy
kle. She was also preceded In death
McCain of Londonderry, Mrs. MinFiremen were called to the scene
R. Claytor, 31, Rt. 4, Chesapeake,
l&gt;y her husband, Arthur HendrickS
nle Shelton of Patriot, Mrs. Mary , an: 36 p.m. when a passing motorlost control of his van while southpnd one brother.
Shelton
of
Gallla
and
Mrs.
Carrie
lsi
noticed
the
.house,
located
three
bound on Second Avenue at 8: 51 .
• She Is survived by one daughter,
Thomas
of
Centerpoint;
a
brother,
mtles
south
of
Thivener
was
buma.m. and eoUided ·with a ,nprtbMary Ann Hendricks, Middleport:
WUUam of Piketon.
' ing and notified nelgh~rs. It was
bound vehicle drtven by Gene A.
three step-daughters, Mrs. Robert
Funeral services Will be held at 2
not occupied at the lime by the te{Mary) Bowen, Pomeroy; Mrs. LeMcGuire, 47, Galllpolis, causing
p.m. today In the Gallla Baptist
nant Barry saunders, Rt. 2, Crown
slight damage to both vehicles.
roy (Artie) Rite, Malta and Mrs .
Church,
with
the
Rev.
Dan
Boggs
City'
The owner
listed on the
Andrew (Onedra) Martin, West
Cited by police Friday were Roofficiating, Burlal wUJ be In GaUia
re~rt as Mason L. HemphUJ, Rl.l,
l'Jexanderta: two step-sons, Harry
BilpUst
Church
·Cemetery,
near
Northup.
•
~endrlcks, Pomeroy, and Robert
Marriage licenses
Oak ~Ill. The body wUJ Ue In state
The department said tire IraHendricks, Ewtngion; ' three sisters, Mrs. Mary Eblln, Pomeroy;
for an hour prtor to the service.
velled to a nearby storage butlding
GALLIPOLIS - TWo couples
Mrs. Ellen Stewart and Mrs. Mae
Arrangements are by the Phillips
·and caused minor damage. Eight- flied for .marriage Ucenses last '
Lightfoot both of Middleport; three · Funeral Home, Ironton.
een t!rtmen were at the scene 'for
week In Gallla Countv Probate •
!Jrothers, James Conkle, Pomeroy;
nearly four hours.
Court.
Jospeh Conkle, Montgomery, W.
Stanley Gregory; 21, Middleport,
The Gallla County ShertU's DeVa., and Fred Conkle, Kyger; eight
partmenlis probing a break-In at a
plumbing and healing, and Cathy
REASON #3:
Block's fair prices.
Andrew J. Volers .
step-grandchlldren.
Hannan Trace Road residence Carr, 21, Rt. 2, Patrtot, housewife.
' · Funeral services will be held
At H&amp;R Block, our prices are based solely on the comPT. PLEASANT - Funeral ser- Thursday.
John G. Burnet\, 26, Rl. 1, GaWMonday at 2 p.m. at the RawUngsvicesforAndrewJacksonVoiers,67,
Don Blake, Rt. . 2, Crown City, polls, sheet metal worker, and Beplexity of your return. So you can expect to pay less for the
Coals-Biower ·Funeral Home with
of Millwood will be held today at 1
said he returned to his house In the Unda s. Brrdette, 20, Rt. 2, Crown
104DA Short Form than for the more complicated 1040
the Rev. George Oller officiating.
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home · evening and found the door had City ,,sales clerk.
Long Form.
1
Burial wUJ be in Beech Grove
with
the
Elder
Bill
Hannum
of- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1----------l
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
ficiating .. Burial will follow in the
What do you get when we prepare your taxes? A comfuneral home today from 2 to 4 and
Concord Cemetery in Henderson.
plete interview by a person specially trained in the new tax
7 to 9.
~

CENTER CUT R'IB
CONSISTS OF : 2 split brest halves wtribs &amp; ~ack portion ; 2
tt'!ighs w/ back; 2.drumstick5·; 4 win9s; 2 sets of gtblets 12 necks.

BABY SWISS
239
CHEESE........... tB.

~:

. AMERICAN
CHEESE........ .

2·

USDAGRADE ' A'
THRIFT-T-PAK

09

FRYERS

LB.

___________

was

LB.

.PASCAL CELERY.............................. 69c
RIPE,SALAD TOMATOES ............~~. 69c
PEPP_
ERS............... ,.. 3/ 100·
CUCUMBERS .......... 2/79c

49C

LB .
1J9

USDA Grace A Spill

Chicken Breast ..•.•....•....•_.••... -~ ~:-

IGA TABLE RITE DUALITY
SKINNED &amp; DELIVER E D

LB

ROUTH

TEMPLE ORANGES

IGATABLERITE

.

6/79c ·

~E!&lt;ITE~ CUT SMOKED
LB.
or11.Lom Chops .... ; .. ...... .. .. .. .... .. ..

89c ,

Pork Spare Ribs ..... ... ......... ~ ~:..

149

, OSCAR MAYER SLICED .

Beef Bologna

PORK LOIN COUNTRY STYL E

~

12 or:. Reg. or Thick
o t o 0 1 oi • 1 • 0 I I 0 I I 0 o 0 0 I 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 I 0

.

LB .

PORK LOIN SIRLOIN .

}69
}29

129

Pork Roast .....•..•.•....•. .... ...•..•

109
IGA .Roll Sausage •. ••••••..•.... ....• .-.• : .•

i)&lt;IO

LB

Loin Pork Chops ..................... :.

1 •

.

LB

PORK LOIN CENTER CUT

189

1
39
All Meat Bologna ........... ... ..... .. ... ,
12 OZ . Rog. or Thick
OSCAR MAYER SLICED

Red or GOlden Delicious

APPLES

LB

.. ..... .... .'..

age
109
Beef
liver
.••.....
........
...
......
...
:
.
Slab Bacon •...••••.•••..•. •..•. .•..•..• : .•

FLORIDA

Jib.

ROUTH

SMoked Picnics . ...

LB.

USDA Grade A Cut

LB

a·

Chicken Legs.... .. ................. ..

9. C

H&amp;R

torrect addresses . needed by officials

•

·: GALLIPOLIS - "The following
118 mes drawn for Gaillpolls Munlcl1 Court jury duty have been re:'rned from the U.S. Post Office. If
' there Is any Information on the ad·dresses of those listed below, con4act the court at 446-9400.
; Deborah Sue Taylor, 141'h
:Fourth Ave:, Gall1polls; Doyle L.
Gaill II
·Plants, 536 ·First Ave.;
po s;
Barbara F . Schneider, Rt. 2, Bidweil·, Carl Humphreys, Rt. 2,

.

Willow Drtve, Gallipolis; Ma~aret
E. Wa_tson, 2216 Eastern Ave.( Gal- .
I! polls, Michael R. Wells, Rt.l, Gall!polls; Freda H. Alley, Rt. 1,
.Gall1pol!s.
Loretta Stumbo Patrtck, Patrtot
Sta~ Route, Gallipolis; Annie
Burger, Rt. 2, Gallipolis; ~ V.
Davis, Rt. 1, Patrtot; Gall L. Hill,
Vlnton· WlWam C Hutchinson
'
·
'
P .O. Box 92 • Bidwell; David A.
Darst, Rt. 1, GaiUpoUs.

'Gallipolis.
Hayden Wood, 76 Court St., Gall1:polls; Darlene Knox, Rt. 1, GaUipo-

Correction

•1, Gallipolis: Richard E. Dellinger,
•;J.o Willow Drive, Gaillpollq.
~. Nonna WoHcale Dellinger, 10

EAST MEIGS---The
Band Boosters wUJ meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. instead of Tuesday as
was announced.

-~

.~is:
FaithJames
E . Miller,
Rt., Rt.
1,
:Gallipolis;
M. MuHord

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
. VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
'r.ENERAL AllERGisT

.

.~

'

~~~%~
9-6 Mon.-Fri.

H&amp;R BLOCit

~:~~:
9-6 Tues.

Sat. 9-5

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

&amp; Thur.

nge

'

I

25% OFF
Terrific Selection of
'

SKIRTS
25% OFF
J Wool &amp; Corduroy
· KNICKERS
25% OFF
" Modern Jrs."
. &amp; "F.aye's Cleset"

CO-ORDINATES
25% OFF .
WARM

ii
aluable

I
I

.

Offer Expires Jan. 23, 1982
. Pomeroy Landmarf! ,

·I
I
I
,I

'I

I

With ·
Coupon

I

I

ROBES
&amp;

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
'I

·I

25%
OFF

1

r
POLY-WRAP

FREEZER PAPER
. Reg. Price $3.30

. With
Coupon

.

$285

Offer Expires Jan. 23, 1982

$29500
.

Offer Expires Jan. 23, 1982
Pomeroy Landmark

-------------------··

1

Sweaters 20% OFF

.

19

99c

BOUNTY
TOWELS

¢

7

.Plus ~posit
Jumbo
Roll .

GiANT SIZE

IGA

TIDE.
.,.

lI

MAGARINE

3

~99c

·I

1

I1

I WATER SOFTENER l
Reg. Price $538.95
l
$38895 ~ I
I
1
I

I
1
I

With ,.
coupon

1

Offer E!(pires Jan. 23, 1982

·~

J

lI
I

Coupon

2.39
· .
2ooct.
c
SCOniES TISSUES, ••••••••••••••••••• , ..., •,, •••••• -. ••••••••• , ••••••••••• ,,,.,,, •• ,., 69
10 oz.
·
. ·
·
CAMPBELL TOMATO
SOUP,
............ ,-...... .-...........................
.. 4 for 99c
. ,
noz~... . 69c.
IGA CRISP-N-G90D CRACKIRS., ...........................................
~ ....
IGA COFFEE •••••••••~-·· ••••••••••••••••• .. •ooooo•••••••••••••••••••••••••••:~!b;~••• 3.69
.

%~.

"Did You Know?"
One ot the lll(jgP.•;t al1vi'ln tages o' my wo• k
1s .:til l he mle1 csl l!lg llimgs l lt:a tn then I get
IOShittfl !hCifl wrlh '{flU 1Ev.er WOilOfllf!a ;'lf}()(J I
those li lli e le1 1f!l~ yoi•t•M on !\Omf! o! th(! c11n
ana 1ar t a bt!l ~ !lll he s upC tHHH ktl'' My Jew1 ...t1

lnends w1 ll lulO'A' whill "K anti 11 muan
-K md• cates that 111~ lood •s Ko sher ''
co m pl1~~ w1 lh Jcw •sh d1r, larv taw :l ami • .~
nrnccs~ed unner ~~~ecl•o n ol a Hbb1 Oc·
ca swnal ly tiiC'ilqtta
11111 1 llj lhl' t il hill 1..,

.
1-Used Copper Unico
REFRIGERATOR

.ullh:c1 II 1:..1111tlu1
1/cd hv- !Ill; U1111r 11 nl

S}SQOO

Ollhu rlnx

.

I REFRIGERATOR
1-New was $635.00
FUEL OIL HEA~ER

J t : w •~ll

toc• d ~

tom olvlng wtlh Je w • ~ h r11CI&lt;Hv taw'i
Nc•th·:• otlhcse IS required t1y any Mt Of file
For1n iHla D• uu Al1mllll''l llill lon
li n . R IT)f!llllC&gt; Hlil l lhe lilhtl ll fidf! lllllrk 1&lt;,
I C[W ICieri Wl!t1 Ihr. UfU IUd ~ 1 .1 1 1~'1 Pfl lr nl Otii!.C
Wncn a tanet s po1ts a (; 11 &lt;, 11111'\l rt ;,, ,, ,
lll l!l ilfV conlfm t 1o; protected ll•lalfi O., IIIIIHI Hj+.!
rn eP I undr:r COPV II (lhl ' law., ol 1111• 1Jrrtll!r1

Slate s. A cnpv ni•I 1S l1led Wllh lht: Cu tJVIIQht
Oll ltC ( 1blrlfV ol Cu norns'i
il,t vr : lflll' '· ltnu •. : illflll ll a t ud~ ,,; ·•lmut Ull V
lltrlllj ( UIILHI 11111!111111,11 'iltii[IJIII IIJ ,till! Il l '' fl . II a
111111'} W11lrJ IU lllf' I rl lnvr· !11 Ill•. If lrr.w ~··"'

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1\ml!f!Cit to dtnnlt!

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Pomeroy Landmark

RIVER VIEW

~0

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FOODLINER

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Drive a little and·save a tot-Free delivery within 75 miles
Yes, we 'ervice at your focal Hotpoiilt Deafer
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill' Closed at 5:00P.M.
Serving Meigs, GaiPa and M11on Counties.
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Offer Expires Jan. 23, 1982.
Pomeroy Landmark

1 1-Used Gibson

1
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HALVES OR Slf.CES

16 oz.
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Peaches

490Z.

$29500

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Del Monte

YELLOW CLING

69

Reg. Price U80.05

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DECORATED , .
ASSORTED OR DESIGNER

8-16 OZ. BTLS

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LOWEST PRICES ON AU HOTPOINT AND GENERAL ELECTRIC

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SALE CONTINUES
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25% OFF

lOLL

77

,, 25 LB.. CAT FOOD 'I
1 HOTPOINT
GENERAL ELECTRIC
I,.
COLOR TELEVISION I ! MICROWAVE OVE-N
Reg. Price $7.50
rReg. Price $356.81
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wool &amp;

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d ' '
17' reasons. ne smart 8CISIOn.
Eastern . l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~
•

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2nd &amp; Brown St.
Mason, w. Vi'l . .

RCCOLA

27 Sycamore St., Gallipolis. Oh.
Sat.9-5
PH . 446-0303-Appolntments Available
OPEN9T06WEEKDAYS,9toSSAT .
Master card &amp; Visa Accepted
Golden Buckeye Card, Honored
SEARS ,H&amp;R Block Service will9pen Jan. 11-Regular Stor,e Hours

CALL (614)•992·21 04
Of (304)-6 7 5 1244

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618 E. MairrSt.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 ·
5

OHice Hours by Appointment Only.

~-----------=------~
~
(l'!tY
300 Second Ave.
I
·t
S1Sf•-'Lafayette Matt
I
f
. ~&amp;~
. Gallipolis
1
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laws. And a return that's double-checked for accuracy.
· · How much will your fee be?.Call or visit a nearby H&amp;R
Block office and we'll be happy to give you anestimate .
One thing is certain, H&amp;R Block gives good value. That's
why millions of our customers come back year after year.

U.S. No.1

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.,

OPEN DAILY 8-9
11-6 SUNDAY

AD PRICES GOOD THROUGH JAN. 16, 1981
Quantity Rights Reserved_
we welcome·food Stamp Shoppers

I

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�•

•

Times-Sentinel

The

.Jan.

Pleasant, W Va.

.
pathologist ·pa~~es

·PVH

· ACI'ING RECORDER '- At the death o,.Eieanor Roboon Friday mol'

:·niDc Lera Jones, Miaersville, was sworn Ia by Judge John C. Bacon as ac-

ting reeo1der. The procedure coustltuteo a 15 day temporary appolnt~ 'ment. The RepubUcan Central Committee must meet in not less than five
. , da)'IJ nor more than 15to appoint a permanent recorder who wiUserve un! til the DeXt election. Jones has been employed at the office of the recorder
.. : the past llve months. She was employed at Pomeroy National Bank, now
; Bank Ope NA, lor Z4 years. She was also employed ai the ofllce of the
• recorder from 1952to 1953.

•

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THE

:. GALLIPOi.Is - The January
lerm d. the Gallla County grand
:jwy handed down 10 lndlcbnents
~te Friday atlemoon afler a two·~y liHSion In commoli pleas court.
11le Jury also Issued four secret
~nts, They
13 cases,
f1 witnesses. and returned a no bW
en one of the cases.
·
I Multiple lndlctmen ts were
1od&amp;al against two Delbarton,
Va. men In cormectlon with a
pee. 26 Incident, according 10 the
tecord.
•: LawrenCe While, 24, was lndlcted
for felonious assault, aggravated
burglacy and aggravated menacIng, Ernest Hall Jr., 30, was In·
· &lt;!lcted for complicity and
~clng.
1 11)e Incident, Investigated by .the
~ County Sheriff's Department, grew out of an apparent doineMic dlspl!te at a mobile home on
lJannan Trace Road near Ohio 775.
'fVhlle and Hall .w ere originally

heam

·w.

cited Into munlclpiurourtonaggravated robbery ~barges. but the
case was bound over to OJ; grand

Jury.

robberY

An aggravated
lixllctment was handed down against
Wllllam R. Lewis, 26, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. Lewis was arrested by Gallipolis City PoUce In connection with a
Dec. Sine/dent In whlch James GUIeJJwa ler, Rt. 2, Crown City, was
reportedly knoCked unconscious,
robbed and dumped on Mound Hill
In Gallipolis afler he accepted a
ride on Gat11eld Avenue.
A breaking. and entering charge
was Issued to Donald E. White, 24,
GaWpollii. White was arrested. by
the sheriff's department and
charged with a break-In and thett of
lools at North Gallla ffigh School
last Oct. 13.
White Is presently seJV!ng a six·
month sentence In the Mansfield
Refonnalory afler being convicted
In munldj)a.J court of assaulting two

•I

state · highway patrobnen last
month.
Timothy Robinette, 21., Rt. 2,.VInton, was Indicted ·on 8 charge of
grand theft tor aiJeaedly steallJtr a
haH-ton pickup truck a.med by
George Hale, Rt. 2, Vinton, and tak· .
lng It 1D Kentucky.
Rick L. Saunders. 23, Gallipolis,
w~ lndlcted for lnsuflldent fllrlcr,
and James R Pa1110111.. Rt. 1, Racine, was cha.J'ip!d by the Jury with
grand theft In connectloo with, the
thett of a coon hound.
.
VIta Cannan served as Jury forewoman. Oilier jurors
Karen '
M. Johnson, Kenneth R. Frazer,
David H. Mohler, Ted L. Lawhlirn,
Vora A. Waugh, GaD H. Bryant,
Don R. Sprlegel and Keith F . Roble.
SeJV!ng asaltemaleswereJanetB.
Duncan, Maudle H. Belcher and

$69.95

Ferren.

Judge Richard Roderick said the
jury will.be recalled Feb. 161D consider · any cases ar1s111,g between
oow and then.

I
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Ring

$69.95

L

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Rotarians view movies

j·

' MIDDLEPORT---Twenty-lour
· Per-sons attended the Friday night
cJ!nner meeting of the Middleport~omeroy Rotary held at the Heath
(Jnlted Methodist Church ,
~lddleport.

i Hank Cleland, who was In charge
of the program, showed movies
1/lken whlle he was stationed In
VieiJI&amp;m with the U.S. Army.
· Dbmer was served by the ladles
cit the church.

.'

~eels Monday
: RUTLAND--The Rutland Pro
Will meet Monday, Jan. 11, at 7:30
~.m. Rerreshmenls will be served.

No here Wednesday
j

•' POMEROY ··-A

represents live
!rom the otflce of Clarence MWer
jvUl not be at the courthouse on
"'edheMrayas sch~,
.

Kt. white

-

A FRIEND SAVES
your fri end.

' '

· w. Main St., Vinton, Oh.
James-0. Bush, Mgr.
388·8603

,

By DEB FOX
Times-Sentinel Slaff

GALLIPOLIS- Four years ago, at age 30, Eileen Gor' don , of Lower River Road, Gallipolis, began running and
Dec. 12 of last year, at age 34, she entered
completed
the Joe Steel Rocket City Marathon In HuntsvUle, Ala.
She describes the 26.~ mlle event, which she finished In
four hours, 19 minutes and 57 seconds, a "personal challenge. It was there and I wanted to know I could do It by
myself. It ,)"as my big goal for last year - a new year's
resolution.
"Therewere2,00J people In It, Including :in! women, from
all over the U.S. I came In 1,224, buH was just glad toflnlsh.
"The llrst ·20 mlles were like a breeze. They say they
always are. But what happens at mlle .20 IS called 'hitting
the wall.' For the last 6.2 mlles, yoti have to want to do II. "
Gordon said she had never been athleUc and admiUed
that age 30 Is a llttle.il!te for a person to begin jogging as a
hobby or otherwise.
"Thirty was the magic year.-IIelt I was growing old and
decided I needed something to help. I was leellng out of
shape.
" We lived In Olympia, Wash., then and It rained a lot so I
was cooped up Inside. That's when I started running.
"Now I run no matler what the weather- rain or shine,
just like the. postal service.
"Running Is so easy. Shoes are all .you need.
"I started out slow and thought It was big stuff when I
could do a half mOe! It took memonlhs to build up to a mile
without getting out of breath, but after tha,. I just kept
adding a half mile.
·
"I was never out of breath when I ran the marathon. We
were all talking and joking around until about mile 20.''
Despite the fact that during the last lew rt1lles of the
Huntsville run she felt she'd_"be crazy to run a marathon
again," and that It was two days after the event before she
felt normal, Gordon plans to enter the New York City Marathon to be held In October.
"My dream Is ID run In the Boston Marathon, but entries
must run a qualifying marathon first and for a woman, the
time has to be u(lder three hours and 30 minutes.''
Gordon began training this week for a run set for April In
Athens. WhUe In training, shewlll run 50to00 nines a week,
Including "one long run 9! 20 nines on Saturday, 12-15 miles
on Wednesday and 5 to 7 miles the other days. I'll rest on
Sundays."
She begins her runs at the city park and "runs all over
Galllpoll$."
Besides running, the Glouster, Mass., native .teaches
·English and speech part Ume at Rio Grande College and
Community College, and has two children,.Jason, 8 years
old, and Sarah, 4, with her husband, Marshall. ·
She describes her family 's allltude toward her running as
supportive.
·:rn the beginning, my husband told me to stop. He felt It
was taking time away from the family . But he and Jason
went to the HuntsvUie marathon with me and were at each
mile cheering and clapping me on. After that, Marshall
said now that he knows what It means to me •• he would
never be discouraging again."
Gordon said 'she JW.'s tried to encourage others to tun,
Including her family. "Marshall prefers to swim, but Jason
will run the llve mile May Classic In Columbus with me In
May and Sarah can run about one-quarter mlle ..·
" Running could be a lonely sport and you have to enjoy
yourself.
"It makes me feel great and gtves me satlsfacUon emotionally. It does good for me.
"I pian to run forever.' '

and

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1

Bedroom
Suites
By: BROYHILL
REG. $899.95

SALE PRICED

----

19" COLOR
PORTABLE

RIGHT: .Gallipoli•

Save
$200.00

• Front access
color controls
• Black Matrix
picture tube
• Automatic fine
tuning

.

keeps her runntng

, OR CALL21HUQ

'l

- ..;/

' .

if'

•

RUTLAND, OH.

~I

..

'My dream is to run in the Boston ,Marathon'

~ ..99.9

Logan Monument Co., Inc

..

.

land ·F urniture Co.

7!_"'''*

:

Jan . 10, 1982
' The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

Registrat io n $7. 50 plus Weekly _Seminars 54 .5 0

'

Write lor Bol)k lets
Show&lt;ng Memorials
in full color with sizes
and prices stated .

nuu-atiWn nuJIWr Ei·
Wn Gonion 8Gid tlwt
fw[orp · eocla nua, for

Was$649.95

f'ith('r pmctic-e or a nua-

ninlf f&gt;lwtt JUCh aa a m.
ruth11n. it u important

SALE

to uunn--up and 1tn&gt;tch

95

mwr:ln to ~ tlw
potlli!Jilit~· of .m.!UCW

$449.95

and ln}Uf'\',
ABOVE: WhilP iii truln·
inlc for nua ·to be lwld
in ·lttlu&gt;tu '"" 'Prin«,
Gonion
will nin50to60
m;u,. J'f'_r '""'"· fwfrinninJf and mdinJf eodi at
tlw city fJf!!l! on .'Wvnd
AaWlUt'. FAR RIGHT:
}wtaa it uimportmt to

1tram

a

IVING ROOM SUITES
New 2 or J

Piece

Living Room Suites

~­

~~ ~forp a nm.
at .. aUo un~tmt to
walh and tlowly n&gt;laa
m~ a/tf'r a nm· to

Save $200.00 to·$600.00
SHOP US FOR
. , THE BEST BUY

amid cramping. •he
110id.
'

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Quality Sound From _;.

1982 CHEVY LUV "4 WHEEL DRIVE"
Compare with' New' Prices

"Home .of the Sharpest used Cars In Townl"
Over 40 lat'l! models to choose from.
Bank !financing Available
.

.... • '

---------------Offrr expires Friday, Jan uary 29, 1982

.TO·T ALL Y NEW DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

I

•- - ~ -...._ a. • •,

QcinVciYD~-

fi1e

Just What Yo~'ve Been Looking For

,

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ss.oo

If you bring a friend with you when ')IOU join, lhen t he
coupon w (ll b e worth 510.00, $5.00 for you and SS .OO tOr

lr;;;;;;;;;;ii,ii;iiOii;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-1

4 spd. trans., 4,429 mites
Radio, spoke wheels, special accent stripes
Raised.white letter tires, lockout hubs

•

S1. Pater's Episcopill Church, 451 S~cond Ave .
~ACIC;SON-Mondays, 7:30p.m .
YMCA Building, 187 Peart Street

CANDY'S CLASSIC

Reg. $499 ,99

----------

~~H~~s 'gu~~

Bring thi s coupon with you toanymeetinglisted and
you wilt Save S5 .00 off th e Initial R egi~tration Fee o f
S7.50 and Weekly Semi nar fee of S4.50. Pay only
S7.00 in stead of S12 .00.

gol~ .

expected to aave $287,000, The rnaney Is needed.to Jl&amp;Y back a stale
Joan, otflclals Mid.
The Colwnbla Educallcn Associ·
atlon, which reprelellll
dJa..
trlct's 89 teachel'll, !llleiiiD black the
cuts, conlelldln&amp; that the board bad
other ways to aave mmey. The Jo.
cal chapter of the Ohio Alloclatloo
ofPubllcSchoolEmployees,whk;h
represents IIOII·IeachlnK workers,
also has autllorjzed a stlike.
· . The teachen have aclleduled a
meeting ·M onday night 10 discuss
the sltuallcn.

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Leo C. Vaughan, Mgr.
Phone 992-2588

o • ...,

Weekly lnsi~r:ht-Motivation Seminars

.

posed cuts.
"It is apparent that Qhlo law
grants school boards the authority
ID make lllllfonn salary reductions,
If such reductions are a part of a
unlfonn plan affecting the entire
district," Plncura said.
The court will hear arguments
Jan.. 19 on the legaUty of the cuts.
The school board last month deckled tocutthepayofaU150dlstrlct
employees, Including admlnlstra-

I

GALLI POLIS- Tuesdays, 6:00p.m.

PreciouS diamonds set in 14

[reacher
walkout
set
Monday
.
.. Retired Lorain County Common
Pleas Judge John D. Plncura, woo
Is substituting for a vacatlonlng
Judge, has .refused 10 black the pro- ·

""' ~ '

hood."
" I couldn't find a diet that
really worked for me until I
started on The Conway Program in July, 1980. I weighed
343 pounds the night I s}'rted;
now I weigh only 141 ,pound~"
"Conway's ldeal1 000 Ca lorie Diet, which allows three meals a day plus snacks
and the weekly insight sem inars provided the know~­
ledge and mot ivation I needed ." ·
" The Conway Pmgram worked for me. It's wond e rful!!" , says the delighted Ca rol.

I

••

other employees
. of the Colum·
School District have authorized
. union leaders ID Cfll a strike
~Y 10 protest a 9 pen:ent pay
~t which Is ID begin this month.

.-

r-~-------------,

were

llaibara c.

.&amp;

with marriage and mother-

OF

.

1

_..,._,'"'II

CAROL SNIDER spent a
chubby childhood and went
. up from there.
"My weight just keptclimbing- in high school, college;

DIAMONDS

1Jul-y
returns 10 .indictments
.

'

examination

Lose·s 202 Pounds

~

'

.

In addition to recently becoming
POINT PLEASANT - Daniel P. grad!~Bting from the University of 8oaton V.A. H,~ital. His third year
boilrd certified, Dr. DeFlorio was
'DeFlorio, Jr., M.D. Pathologist at Massachusetts Medical School.
as 'Chief llesulent In Anatomic
Pleasant Valley Hospital recently During his live year ~esidency, he
Pathology wa8 completed at the
also published in tiN: November 1981
Issue of Cancer Research· the
completedhlsAnlltomieandCllnlcal had to docwnent the surgical '· University of Massachusetts
Pathology
Certification specimens, autopsies, and
Mediea-1
Center,
Worcester,
American Association for Cancer
Examination given by the American ~ laboratory tests that he completed.
Massa(husetts. His last two years of
Research Journal. He co-authored
Board .of Pathology in New Orleans,
Dr. DeFiorio came to Pleasant training were spent in Clinical an article with David T. Purtilo on
Louisiana.
Valley Hospital from Worcester
Pathology at the Worcester
" Diverse Familial Malignant
. The successful completion of the . Memorial Hospital In Worcester, Memorial Hospital, Worcester, 'Tumors and Epstein-Barr Virus."
. examination means · that Dr. · Massachusetts where he completed Massachusetts where he all.io served
The article covered a .five to s(x year
DeFiorio.is now board certified in the last two year:i his training In as·Chief Resident.
research and writing span on the efDr. DeFiorio is a member of the
fect of The Epstein-Barr virus in
both Anatomic and Clinical Pathology. He is a graduate ofca~ing cancer; especially lymPathology and lila DipiM!atC,of the Boston College and received his . American Medical AssoCiation and
American · s-d of · Pathology. M.D. degree froni the University of College of American Pathologists.
phoma.
Board certification is 8 voluntary Massachusetts. His fir.,i two years
program pathologists may enter to of pathology training were spent at
demonstrate competence in their the Mallory Institute of Pathology ~----::==============::::--­
areas of . ausapecialitles. The which includes Boston City Hospital;
examination. is given only twice a University Hospital ti Boston,
year, .and takes three·days to com- University Medical Center and .
',
plete.
Inspired By Conway Diet Institute!!!
To be eligible to .sit for the
examination, Dr. DeFlorio had to
complete a prescribed tenn bf
residence in Anatomic Pathology
and Clinical Pathology after

. ,. ..,.,_...

1982

·or

:

f

Console Stereos
3 left over from Christmas Sale.

$1 00 to $200 Off

.

.·_RENCHTOWN CAR CO.
Bil Gene Joh111011
•

••

1650 Eastern,_GalipoiB
••

4460069
l'

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Page-- B-2

Jhe Sunday Times -Sentinel

P om e roy

..

M iddl e port- Gallipol i.s, Ohio-:Point Pl e asant, W. Va .

gladioli and sonia and white
chrysanthemwns on either s.ide of
the altar ,.a n'd spira l candelabra. The
ca ndles and kneeling bench
.- ...conipl&lt;,ted the decor. The family
' pews were marked by ivory bows.
GiJen in marri age by her fa ther,
the bride was attired in a fo rinal
ivory gown fashioned with a Queen
Anne neckline trimmed with alencon
lace, a lace cov.ered bodice, long
tapered lace sleeves, with lace
motifs adorning the full skirt. Alencon lace trimmed the hemline that
extended into a cathedral train.
Her wa lking length veil of silk
illusion wa s edged in alencon lace
and held in place by a lace-covered
cap. The ride ca rried six longsterruned sonia roses with baby's
breath and plawnsoa tied with an
ivory ribbon. She wore diamond
necklace belonging to her sister.
Her a ttenda nis were He~en
Lanier, Georgetown , Ky. , sister of
the brid e, matron of honor ; Chris
Reynolds , Rose Leadingham;
Gallipolis ; and Cathy Coughenour,
Rio Grande. Her flower girls were
Amy c a rol Bogard, Belmont, W.
Va.; and J . Elaine Steele, Gallipolis.
They wore Forma l apricot gowns
with apricot lace collar and cuffs.
• The a ttendants carried lighted.
votice candles in fro~1ed tulip
holders with ivory sweetheart roses
tipped sonia and sonia peeko ribbon
and plaunu;oa ferns . They wore one

a

•

Mr. and MrS. LeheW
I'OMEROY - The St. Paul
Lutheran Church of Pomeroy was
the setting for the Aug. 16 doubl.,.
tr1ng candlelight ceremony of Alice
). Akers and Jonathan Walter
j.ehew.
• 'The bride is the daughter of Mary
1.ou Akers, 211 Jackson Pike,
Cal~poli~; and Baxter Akers, 10 Orlmard Dnve, Pnnceton, W. Va., and
l De groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Lehew, Ann Street,
pomeroy.
.
• The ceremony was-performed at 6
p.m. by the Rev. William Middleswar\h. Vows were written by the

couple and the ceremony included
·the presentation of both mothers
with a rose .from the bridal bouquet.
Mrs. Fred Blaettrlar presented the
music which included " Nadia's
Theme," "First Time Ever I Saw
Your Face," " Color My World," and
"Sunrise, Sunset" Karen Carter
sang " Evergreen" and " The Wedliing Song." Mrs. William Downie
sang " Always and Forever," a nd at
the close of the service, '·Oh Pe rfect

Jan . 10,1982

sonia sweetheart rose in their hair.
bowl for nuts completed the decor of The couple resides at Ratite 1,,
The flower girls carried wicker the table which )l'as covered with a Gallipolis.
baskets of sonia aild ivory petals.
The new Mrs. Lehew graduated
linen cloth the front of which was
Theodore Lehew, Gallipolis, ser- draped with ivy held in place by from Gallia Academy High School
yed as best man for his brother . The apricot and ivory ribbon. The punch and attended Georretown College at
ushers were Keith Black, Gallipolis;
bowl and silver coffee s'e rvice were Georgetown, Ky ..She is a member of
Joseph T. Shrader, Gallipolis ; and
Kappa Delta Sorority and a Little Sis
used on a separate table. Presiding
Dean Kirk Akers, Georgetown, Ky.,
to lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity.
then· ,, ·· ¥ rs. ·Keith Black and
brother of the bride. Jacim Dean
Mrs . .:
·· ··lPr .
She is presently continuing her
Lanier of Georgetown, Ky ., nephew
The wedding party was Seated at a education at Rio Grande Col)ege
orthe bride, was the ring bearer. The
large table with a double wedding where she is majoring in social
male attendants were in fawn regent
bell arr;mgement ·flaoked by ivory · work. She works as a community
single breasted tuxedos and sonia · candles in silver holders.
. service worker for Buckeye Comsweetheart rosebud boutonnieres.
Miss Cheryl Lehew, sister Of the munity Services.
For her daughter'• wedding, Mrs. grom, registered the guests. She
Mr. Lehew graduated from Meigs
Akers wore a jacket dess of fawn
High
School and Capital University
wore an apricot floral fom•al with a
colored suede cloth. The dress had a
where
he was a member of Kappa
sonia carnation corsa¥e. Rice bags
jewel neckline and the jacket was
Iotalam~a
Fraternity. He Is direcwere in a basket belonging to the
trimmed with silk fawn braid. She
tor
of
the
Transitional
Facility for
groom's great-grandmother, • the
had a wrist corsage of five miniature
Buckeye
Community
Service,
late Mrs. August Emma Leifheit.
sonia carnations, baby's breath and
Galli lis.
ivy. Mrs. Lehew ~ore an. orch.id
flowered long sleeved dress, and had
THE STAFF OF
a corsage of five miniature sonia
ca111ations with baby's breath.
A reception was held in the church
fellowship hall and hosted by the
by Juanita
bride's mother. Following that the
The hair place
for everyone
groom's parents hosted a garden
..,_...,
Welcomes
party· at the home of the ~room's
grandmother, Mr .. and Mrs. Harr}'
Davis.
Formerly of ''Across the Street,,
The bride's table featured a "three·
Stylists- Karen Jotinson, Mary Edwards,
tiered fountain wedding cake with
Merri Amsbary, Charlene Benthel, Chm
Thelma Ward and Florence
Reynolds, Tina Saber, Joy Hudson, Ron
Sowards
, Hours- Walk· Ins Welcome
·
Ulcessor presiding at the table.
Evening
Ivory candles in silver holders,
" Merle Norman Cosmetics"
silver tray for mints, and a silver
Phone 446·2673
Gallipolis. Ohio

.~====~=~=--=:=~=~=~~==-=~-==-1~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~

••

DI'S CANDY &amp; CRAFT SUPPLY
Gallipolis
Phone 446-2134

INVENTORY REDUCTION

40'*
.
·
·
0

Thomas.and Depoy·.

\1
Mr. and Mrs. Depoy
and escorted to the altar by her
POMEROY - The Trinity Church, Pomeroy, was the setting for the
father, the ·bride was attired in a
Nov. 14 candlelight wedding of . floor-length gown Of white chantilly
Rebecca Dawn Thomas and James
lace, featuring a high Victorian
Nicholas Depoy.
neckline, ruffled yoke, a fitted·
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
bodice, and a three-tinted ruffled
and Mrs. Donald R. Thomas,
skirt which flowed into """ chape~
Pomeroy, and the groom is the son length train.
of Mr. and Mrs. James DePoy, Bainbridge.
·
Her fingertip veil and blusher
The 7 :30 p.m. double-ring
were attached to a bandeau of lace
ceremony was solemnized by the which matched the lace of the gown
Rev. Wilbur Perrin before an altar
and was trimmed with seed pearls.
decorated with two vases of peach . For the traditional "something old,"
and Jriint green tinted mwns cen- the bride wore a diamond ring wh(ch
tered with three candles which were
had belonged to · her Grandmother
used during the ceremony o(lightin'g
Graves; for ''something borrowed,'' ,
the unity candle .
a cameo brooch belonging to one of
Two 17 branch heart-shaped canher attendants, Mrs. Kathy Price;
delabra completed the altar decor. for " something blue," the
Large candles and peacb and green traditional blue garter; and for
mwns were used in the three large
"something new,' ' the rest Of her Illwindows of the church . and the tire including a diamond pendant,
family . pews were marked with gift of the groom. She carried a
colonial bouquet of pea.~h and white
white satin bows.
Given in marriage by her parents silk roses and baby's breath. . '"""

IIOW, EVERY WORIIIIG AMERICAN
HAS ACHAliCE FORA·-

SECURE FIT..

As of January 1, 1982, there's

rniSOn

Drapa.Y arid Bedspreads
during our 1f11nter draP.iY sale.

. Plul free. . ••tC.IIatlon
lly Tope's
.
. .
'

no
why you shouldn't
start a sensible savings plan for
yourself. Thars the ctay Indivtd~
GET THE JIIST FROI -IRA
Retirement Accounts (IRA'S)
liTH CEIIRAL
offidally become available to every
IITEREST ~.
employro Amerimn, working with
N
Cmtra11hlst has tumro
.or without a pension plan. And
ow
that's the day you mn begin to put this valuable asset Into an even
your savings away In a program · better lnves~ent, by offering four
Thts cha n shows how a sample yearly
that works for you now-and later hlgh-lnteresL IRA options. Sensible
d~pos tt ofju.s t $2.000 can grow ouer 30
years. But y ou may choose to d eposit as
on ln.l!fe.
ways to keep you In control of your
ltule or as m uch as you wiSit-up to 82.000.
funds while mm1ng the most
slnce there are no minimums or deposu
limits on mos toptf.ons. !fr.Jott 're '
YEAR AFTER YEAR. IRA'S Will competitive Interest ratfs In town- f requency
marrted to an employed spouse. that
market-leV-el ratfs that
amount dou.~?les.
REMAHIV. 'MOST VAlUABLE money
make your Investment work hard
IIYESTMEIT.
118-111111 UABlE RATE OPTIOII
now. so you mn retire with a
Think about the resolll"reS
Current rate of 15.00% guaransulEtimtial nest egg.latfr on.
you're going to depend ort In the ·
teed through February 1, 1982. ·
future. Pension plans,soctal securtty,
Subject to change on monthly
whatever they may be. one thing's ·FIR ATAX .AI liTH SECUIIITY•. basis.
C.SEIIn.•
for certain - the tmcertainty of a
2.18-IOIITH RXED RITE IIPTIOI
sulEtantlal return.
a.SE
Cwrent rate of 13.75 "•guaranNow look at a Central Trust IRA. ·
CEIIRAl TNIST.
teed through February l, i982
Every year, you're guarantred a
As a working pt'ri&gt;iJn it's imInterest rate determlnro for full
return 'a t high Interest rates, and
port.ailt to find the safest: surest
18 months on date of Initial
the interest you earn ls tax-free
way to your future security. Cmtral deposit.
unill the funds are withdrawn. And
. .
· for your convenience. Central'Ih.lst 'IhlstiRA'S areyow;.moet~I:&gt;Je- 3. 30-101T1t OPIIII
solution.
Today
they
re
an
eronomlEach
deposit
recordro
is
paid at
provides for automatic payroll
drouctlon or automatic deductions cal~ shelter. Tomorrow, Cmtral the 30-month Money Market
1hlst s hlgiHhttrest options will .
rate current at time of deposit
from your CmtralThlst chreklng
help make thtm the backl'ione of
·
orsavtngs accoont In addition,
a more soclu-e retirement for you.
4. 6-MITII..,OP'"T~..... ·
every ytru', your money is
·
If you'd Uketo open anlR1\·
$10,000 mlnirpum deposit
•...
· insured up to $100,000, 5o your
or 1'3Elve more infonnation on
·requlred. Accoimt is paid at the
Investment ls safe.
your four IRA options, visit any of then current 6-month Money
Clearly, there's no savtngs
Central'Ihlst'sconvenimt locations. Matket rate.

Of!u

,

,,
)

.· Gallipolis .

·

•

·

·

II

~EMBER ,

FOIC

Reg .
2.99 .1•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
I

Bath ........ :............................. 1.so •
Reg . J 99
. s.so
Han d ............. :...... ...................
. •
Wash Cloth .......................... ~~- 1.59

I

Full Flat or Fitted

9.99

Queen FIat or Fitted

12 .99

King Flat or Fitted

16.99

Reg.
Reg.

I
1
I

Dacron
Polyester Fiber-Filleo

.• •

.

''
'·

I'

Standard
Queen
King

2 For 9.99
2 For 9.99
2 For9.99

KingFlatorFitted

~8"9~

Reg

15.99

onions, french fries, warm toasted
grecian bread and our famous ALLYOU-CAN-EAT SOUP A SALAD BAR.

$329 =.
I
WITH

.

I

c ot 'PON

I
I

~unlfllft

CJIIVIlUIC)

Exrlrcs January 24. t9R21

: SHRIMP DINNER

4.99
7A9
9A9'
12.99
4.99 Pair
5.99 Pair

I Golden-fried shrimp, cocktail sauce
I and lemon Md&amp;e~ french fries, warm

I

$399 I
~llnNift

toastedgreclanbreadandourfamous

' c

1
1I

WITH
couvoN

.

I ALL-l'OU·CAN·EAISOUPASALADBAR. CJIIV UIC) 1
1
.
.
Exptreojonuary 24 , 19Hlt

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT
$199. I
I1I SOUP&amp;:
SALAD BAR
1
I
suo·
u
lft
1
I
nua.a I
I
•••••••••••••••••••••••••

f;$·

"
9R·:;J(·

I

CJIIVAUIC) I

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Reg.
Pillow Cases- Standar d
6.99
PillowCases- King
~~·
~·"Fre!&gt;h Daisy" by SPRI NGMAI D"' No· I ron Polyester and Cotton
Twin Flat or Fitted
5.99
Full f=lat or Fitted
Queen Flat or Fitted

I

I

cot'PON
~ Ul\11~

Expire" January 24 , 19H21

I 'lender grllled beefll-n:r with sauteed

TWIN SIZE
•
Flat or Fitted
"PinHore" by SPRINGMAID"' Luxury No-Iron
WONDERCALE "' Polyester and Cotton
Reg.

.

II LIVER'N
ONIONS
DINNER

4 99

Twin FIat or Fitted

patties with American cheese,lettuce
and. ourspeclal Big Boy dressing on a
sesame seed bun with french fries.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

SPRINGMAID SHEETS
Reg.
6.99

wJT&gt;~

I Our famous sandwich has two beef

I

CAN NON®
"Coronation"
· Bordered Soiid
Reg . 6 99

AS LOW AS

$}59 I

: BIG 80Y &amp; FRIES

Wash Cloth ........................... ~~~- .99

ll'S-

.,

Applause"
I

7.49
11.99
13.99
King
99
Reo. 8.99 6 •

for lunch. &lt;&gt;wr two dozen prden-tresh ·
salad Items, IUld two hot "omemade
10ups to cboote from. A jlreat '1'11luel
lllotldlrduauth Pr~UA.M. -3 P.lll.

•

~~1'1-oN

Something UaJltiUld delicious, perfect

Standar&lt;1 ·
Pillow Cases
.Reg. 7.99 5.99
"Key Largo" Ensemble by SPRINGMAIOII
No- Iron TRANQUILITY- Kodel"' ~.olyesterandCOttO!l

·

Exrlreojonuary 24.

~

19H2

Deliccite ~vines of Bouga invillea and Butterflies on Champagne
background .
Reg ..
Twin Sheet Set
21 .00 S&lt;:t
Set .

Reg .

I

.

•

'

Full Sheet Set

Dail~

·

"For All Your Arts And Crafts Needs," .

•

Soli d Velour with Border

Queen Sheet Set
r '
King Sheet Set
Lined Draperies 50x84
M.otrhing Towel Ensemble

...

t

32.00 set
Reg.

•t:oo set
Reg.

67 .00 set

Reg .
35.50

Wash ·

16.00
24.00set
31.00set
50.00 Set
24.99 Pr.
1.79

.

"•

2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
r ------------l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_

99
Bath ...................... .................
.
.
,
Reg 1 49
Hand ................ ...................... l .99 . •

I •

9:30-5
.
9:00-8 Monda_y
.
.
· ·
and Fnday
Corner Second at Grape Street
· 4 46-0332

THE GAZEBO

' ilRIVERS
EDUCATION
STARTING
JANUARY 11th

Tm&gt;·Tone Stripe

UWEek SALE ONLY)

t , FURNITURE..
· GALLERIES

For More Information Call 675·3365

.---------.,---....,.,.-.:..j

CAN NON®

want for your future finandal
St':CI.,llity?

profi•IIOn•~.

ARTS And CRAFTS
CLASSES

was presented by Miss Jane Wise,
Rutland, ai the organ, and MISs

1sn't that the klnd of insurance you

~ttme. ~J~ ':n=~~~od

"

tralnad

•

A half-hour of p..,.nuptial music

~more constant and more

OPTI&amp;

15·% OFF on all

FOR

sage.

Bath ....................................... J .99 . •
.
Reg.1 99
Hand
...................................... 2.99
•
W a s h C Io t h .................... f~~· 1.19

TIIUST'S -

calicoes. And well,.,..,....... and~ rhem lnjUJt Zto lwe&lt;b.
Cunalni with Ruffles. For p&lt;q&gt;le who loY. ""nnlh and &amp;lmplicity,
&lt;hey'"' a c:lwraincldeo whooe time huoornc. Apin.

REGISTER NOW

SAVE ON CANNON TOWELS
CAN NON® usanta Reg
.C:ruz"
2 99
·

Dttian vcurownCuiUIN wilh Ruftlctfrom 21 ca:y girthanu and

Both mothers
wore Mrs.
corsages
11
peach
silk roses.
Ralph
Graves, gi·andmother of the bride,
was in a floor-length gown of pink
chiffon with a white silk rose cor-

Techitical School in Nelsonville in and Mrs. David Haggerty and Jeff
1979.~She is presenUy_employed at Meckstroth, Athens ; Mr. and Mrs.
the Medical Clinic on Mulberry
David Snyder, Jeffersonville; Lt.
James E. Morris, Indianapolis,
Heights, Pomeroy. The groom
Ind. ; Lt. Rilndall Jahren, Dayton;
graduated from . Paint Valley High
School, B!linbridge, in 1977. He
Mrs. Fay DeWeea and Karen, Grove
·received an associate degree from
City; Mary Romero, Chillicothe;
·Hocking Techpical School in elecMary Kirby, Cincirinatl ; Joyce and
tronics and Is presenUy attending
Kathy Pelfrey, ~ienna, W. Va.;
Ohio University · to receive his Dianna Wisecarver and Lillian
bachelor's degree in electrical • Thomas, ~ville ; Mr. and M~.
Desmond Jeffers, "he Plains ; MIM
engineering. Tlie couple resides at
Rhonda Kay, New Haven, W. Va.i
Country lanes Trailer Court lll
Horton Tholllllll · Brunswick, Juett
Shade.
and Lorinda Wedertz, Colwnbus;
·· Out-of-town ~uests were U . and
Rudy, Cindy and Mary Jo Shafftll',
Mrs. Mark Morris, Bradley and
Patasla!la ; Unda Rollinson and
Gregory, Williams Air Force Base, John Wilson, Batavia ; Mrs. Nar8a
Arizona ; Mr. and Mrs. Keith Elliott, Van Meter and Mrs. Alice Globaker,
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hedrick, Mr.
Clifton, W. Va .; and Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Albert Depoy, Mrs. Sally
Blll Thomas, Fremont.
Elliott, and Bril!n Purvis, Bainbridge ; Joy Smith, Fruitdale; Mr.

ww

HOURS: MON.-FRI. l0-5; SAT. 10,2

Ruftlct.

The Sunday
- Page- B - ~
. Time s-'Sentinei
'

Gallipolis , Ohio-: Poi nt Pleasant, W. \Ia .

SALE ENDS WED., JAN. 13

"

Sale Starts Mon. and Ends Sat.

YC!ars ago;a111'1011 all American homn had charming ruffled cunains.
But now you can have aomethina e\ren btnt:r: Cunains with .

Middleport

Mrs. Melissa Morris, sister of the • Paula Eichinger, Pomeroy, was
bride, served as matron of honor and soloist. Alilong the selections were
wore a gown Of dark peach qiana "II," " Hawaiian Wedding Song,"
featuring an · attached capelet of "Sunrise, Sunset," and "The Wedwhite chiffon with peach and mint ding Prayer" which was sung during
green flowers , Mrs. Kathy Price, the ceremony.
Mrs. Trudy Williams, and MiS&amp;
The acolytea; were Trenton Celand
Patricia Warner were bridesmaids. and ShaMan Spaun, both members
Their gowns were light peach qiana Of the Sunday school class taught by
and were made identicalto that of Mrs. Depoy.
the matron Of honor. All of the attendants. wore wid.,.brinuned hats
Following the ceremol'y a recepand carried hurricane lamps with tion was held in the church social
lighted candles surrounded by small rooms. The bridal table was covered
peach and mint green silk flowers.
with a white lace cloth gathered in
Stephanie and Stacey Price were front with a wide satin bow. It was
the flower girls. TI1ey wore long centered with a thre...tiered. cake
dresses of light peach qiana trim- over a fountain of peach colored
med in floral chiffon and carried water. Two smaller cakes flanked
white baskets of peach tinted flower the main one and were attached by
petals.
small bridges on whicb stood
miniatures of the wed din~ party.
Michael Hedrick Of Bainbridge
The guests were registered by
served as best man. Dan and Greg MissKimGrueser, Pomeroy.
Thomas, bro!hers of the bride, and
Keith Elliott, also of Bainbridge,
The large cake w~ topped with
were the UJihers. The.groom wore a the traditional miniature br.ide and
white tuxedo with a white silk groom and all of the cakes were
rosebud boutonniere. The grooms- . decorated with peach mums and
men were in light g~n tuxedoes green leaves. ~hree tiered crystal
with peach silk rosebud bouton- candelabra with peach tapers comnieres. Master Bradley Alan Morris, pleted the bridal table. Peach and
nephew of the bride, was the ring- green mints, made by the mother of
bearer and w'ore a light green three .the bride, and orange punch were
piece su1t. He also had a sma)l peach served. The reception was prepared
!'ilk rosebud boutonniere, He Cl)lrried by the Happy Harvesters Sunday
a white satin and lace pillow with the School Class and the hostesses were
bride and groom's rings attached. "
Miss Karen DeWees, cousin of .the
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. bride, and Miss Fqnda Rapp and
Thomas wore a floor-length gown of Mrs. Gay Perrin.
orange qiana featuring sheer long
sleeves and a detachable sash. Mrs.
The bride Is a graduate of Meigs
Depoy chose a light green, floor- High School, class of 197.7 and
length qiana gown fashioned with a
received an associate degree in
round neckline and long sleeves.
medical assistant at Hocking

exchange wedding vows

OFF REGULAR PRICE

•, ... ,

'

r-~

Pom e roy

Rita Edwards

The altar decorations included two
single 'ivory candles in bronze
holders, two bronze vases of white

Spring Valley Plaza

.

A

Quarters

Head

Love."

.

•

Jan. 10, 1982

. U7ed~ng~----~~----------~------~--------

"Akers and Lehew wed

'

PT.

328 VIAND ST.

PLEASANT~ W. VA~

I

'*

'

�•

Jan. 10, 1982

•

0

•'

•

'

I

..

..

~

..

......

'

.

.. ....

. . ..

. .

,.

... ...

~ -

·

~ ···

..

.

'

"-'

The Sunday T,imes-Sentinei-Page-B·S

At Penn are we ~'Price" Chicken.Right!!
. RETAI.S EFFECTJVE SUN., JAN,10 THRU SAT., JAN. 16,1982

.,f!l rlilnlllll ...... It 110ft ~oltljftlls 10 II MIMI .ifl tllis M. -

• liiiiii=AIE 'EUXF' BEEF • U.S.D.A. cHoiCE

.

RcNist · .
BONELESS 7 BONE

IIJ.

68
c
pyster Crackers . . . . ·
.
7
7
c
.Animal Crackers ...
:rHOROFARE • 13-oz. BOX

Deodorant . . . • u.m•'*~

9 eHandi 6 9 t .Plums
Purple •
.,
Wrap. . .
125-foot BONUS ROLL

.

.

-

.

Oatmeal Fudge Cookies 1 -

8
8
Bathroom Tissue . . .
9
9
c
Fig Bars ........ .

Chunk White

'

'

ggc S1rlom Steak ......
•

•

•

$229
-

NEWYORKsHaL .

lb.

.

MEDALLION BRAND
BROTH BASTED

NATALINA'S 12-INCH

PESCHKE • FULLY COOKED
. SEMI-BONELESS

Ra•Portlons ~~~~ -~~~~- .... ....... .$1 ~

Zkt

$1' 3 9
Pert Shampoo . . ·1-::: NORMAL/DRY or OILY

NAT ALINA's 9-INCH

. ~JZ9
. CENTER CUT
HEARTO'THEHAM

.

Ham Roast . . . . . . . lb.

~~1!:~~-i . ~~~a.

EVERYDAY LOW PRICED GENERICS

24C
69 'GALLO~
99c

25C

1-oz. PKG.
.
Sloppy Joe Mix

. . . '...$1~

~

sau

JUG
Anti·Freeze : • •
4-oz. cAN PIEcEs &amp; sTEMs
Mushrooms
• • • .

25C. M·;ndA~rin

Oranges

c

54C
83c
9C'

FRESH ASH I SEAFOOD

c:d
.

48 24-oz
$ 09
145c·Sna~k r~~kers 69c

.

lb.

Pork Cutlet. ..... ~ lb.

·

Rounder Rttets .... lb.

sa49 Spare
$
RibS ....

• BONUS BUY •

·

PASTA/SAUCES

$1 u

·

VANDEKAMP

3
!9 ~~~l~z~~~=~AN '1 ~
Wh1 te Bre11d Loave~ 1 Sp~gheHi·O's ~ 6
0·ozs
2

THOROFARE.SLICED

.,

.
.•

11·11.

$1
gac
Beef Ravlol . . . ·. . .
Speed Starch .·. . . . . .

DAIRY

HOUSEHOLD/LAUNDRY

---'i\WY Q

CHEF BOY-AR·OEE • 40-oz. CAN

~

~~~~~ 22-oz. BOT.
GOLDENDELIGHT

Waffles· · · · ~ · ~·~·

Dish
D . . $J17
$J Z8 etergent . .
-

THOROFARE

Crinkle CUts . . . .~:i

57
C
Ajax Cleanser . . . . . .

-

21 -oz. cAN

38C
Marganne ....... .

.

0range J uIce . . . aat.

REDPACK •

1.

49c

C~N Pled
Lemon
ge . . . . .

14-oz

·

HaH

$1 99-

I

. '

••

BeLL RINGER SERVICE
IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT:

~

·OUR MEAT SPECIALISTS WILL PROCESS ·ANY
SPECIAL CUTS OF MEAT .YOU PREFER. JUST RING
lHE BUZZER FOR PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE.

ARMOUR* ST AA

Tender
VIttles ..
.
1·VARIETIES

GOLDEN RIPE

$6!! Mille
12-iz
ft•. •

-:C

88

J0

61lln
•

•

•

•

A

ctn •

CONDIMENTS/PICKLES/JELLES

lb .

WISHBONE • 16-oz.

ROBIN HOOD .

•

50·Ct..BOT.

ftt

.a~~

$~29

A

.

, ·
.
NOKZEMA 2.5-oz. JAR

THoRoFARE

98.~
sac
. '

Tomato. 10~-S:·. ,.~·..
Soup "

'

·· .

Skin Cream •.... ~ . .

'
1
48
.
•
....
.
....
Shampoo •., ...

AGE

, Corn
.Muffin
•IX. • .
.M

WISHBONE • 16-oz. BOT.
DELUXE

$159

THOIIOFARE • SMOOTH

Peanut Butter .. 1 ~;~·

79C
Kosher .. Spears .. · . ·
-

.THOROFARE • 24-oz. JAR

.

French$JJ8
Dressing -

· FRESH

CALIFORNI~·
aunc11

·79 c
·

4 $1 Yelow Onions ... 19C

SNAPPY

Green Onions . . ...

MEDIUM

lb.

3

.

ARGO • 16-oz. CAN

;

79
~
Blsqufck . . ... . ~=~-:·

THOROFARE

.
....
. Sugar . .......
·~•

111. .

•.

$133

-.

78C
Chocolate Rav. Chips
:

BORDEN'S. 12-oz. PK
. G.

CALIFORNIA
NAVEL
·

2
8
C
Peas .......... .

·
&amp;.74..z.$J.
Pkgs.
·
GLAD • LARGE 15-ct. BOX

·.

Gartaage Bags .. • ..

THOROFARE •

49e ___

Tissues Z!!_CL
-

TJOIDFARE•4kt.Piro-

~lllllllllpln .. .

.

-

~SSORT£0

Facial .

.

$124 ·

CAI__;,C..,;_ARE_..;";,___....;~

"~

10-W·30 QUART CAN

79c
Motor Cl .........

'$451 Vll¥11111
-

,.

.

.

s·, _.•. ,

Oranges~~ ·

44
C
Mushrooms ...... s-.

THOROFARE •

NEW

•

..

~qe
.,

·naHan $J~

.

·"

Bananas

HaH

·

Vets ··1u&amp;
Dog Food Cll

DAWN PRESB PBOD .... ~

• BONUS BUY •

Z%

$178

~cd/M~

BAKING NEEDS

Bayer ·
Chicken ~oodle. Soup 2u· ·Aspirins ... . . .

THOROFARE •1 0.75-ot. CAN

'
;

-

-

• LilT 3 PLEASE •

• BONUS BUY •
.

$199

Beef Hot Dogs . . .,k,.

BroccoH

6-oz. CAN ·

Tide
$JM Nuadles-=:Detergent . :
SOUPS

lee Cream•
..

Hot Cocoa M1x . . . .

THOROFARE lltlt

3-lb. 1-oz. BOX

HiHo

.'

CARNATION • 20-oz. ';&lt;G.

TRY OUR

· 1-11.$13 9

Oran1eJufee
25C
. Tomato Paste ....•

$~ 4- 8

SUNSHINE 1·1b. BOX

THOROFARE

age

HEALTH a·BEAUTY AIJS

.

Tender

PURINA • CHICKEN

Bros. $5"
Coffee ~:·
-

LUTER'S OLD FASHIONED

EIB • FIIOZEII12-ez. CAN

SNACKS

. .......1&amp;·01.
Sahmes
au·

KEN·L·RATlON· 20 lb. BAG
BEEF AND LIVER

Kitty LHter . . . • . .
·

-

.•

. THOROFARE .

. ,

THOROFARE," Hb. !l1rs.

&amp;4·01.

78 c

•••

10·1b. BAG

REG. OR ELEC. PEAK

$11 9
1-11.
'

H0t DogS ...... Pkl.

$ ~- 19

· -

.

'

Coffee1 '.1 At ·
Rich ~\~lf

EASY ON • 22-oz. CAN

~

.I

....
RICH'S

LUTER'S OLD FASHIONED

· OUR OWN CUT-UP TURKEY PARTS

Turlre, Breast
$14 9 .
.

PET FOOOS

•'

.

·

SMALLER PICBS. lb. '1. 09, ·

;Fried
$ 9 ,OUR OWN cuT UP.TURKEY PARTS
Sliced
$~ 39
19
:.· _ Turkey
WHOLE
·7gc Bacon ~::: &amp; Flounder .. 1!"'
•...
Legs . . . . lb.
t

$115
Orange Ju1ce . . . c•n
-

THOROFARE

1

g· g· C

·.

-·CHeese 11
Ravioli .. JikS:Z·

29

tkef Patty Mix::. lb.

WHOLE

.~MINUTE

.

COFFEEntAnaEVER~GES

FROZEN FOODS

_ ,

$ S9
&amp;-oz• . -

TAMBELLINI

lb.

-

•••

$ 129

.

Shn·mp . . . Plcg.

.

·FRESH
"HOURS FRESHER" PORK
WHOLE

·

BRILLIANT .
COOKED, PEELED
AND DEVEINED

...

"HOURS FRESHER" PORK
FRESH PICNIC

sz 89

•

Rllets • • lb.
FRESH

Avg.

-

.....

PAK

"HOURS FRESHER"
FRESHLY GROUND

I

THOROFARE • CHILLED

4#U/ 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

Because at Pennyfare we're particular about the way we prepare .
our chicken. We call our chicken "HOURS FRESHER" because it's
never been even partially frozen. Pennyfare chickens are packed
fresh in each of our'stores by our experienced meat cutters.
•
Many supermarkets sell c~ickens that have been cut . and
packaged by a supplier many hundreds of miles away. These
chickens are then partially frozen (which causes loss of flavor and
·natural juices) so they will hold up during the long trip to the store.
At'Pennyfare we believe you deserve better than that and that's
why we pack our chicken fresh right in our stores every day so.
they're fresher for you. When you see the Orange and Red "HOURS
FRESHER" seal on Pennyfare chicken you know it's the freshest
chicken you can buy and you'll find it only at Pennyfare.

FAIILY
~

Chicken Breast ... lb.

•••

qqit·

·WHOLE
SID 9.Jb.

f 89

q e. FRE~SPLIT

· 011r .

DAr• . aoa·Sf
rv

1·

Ham Slces . . . . • . . 1•.

1-lb. CAN
Fruit Mix • • • • • .
12"x50' RilL
Aluminum Foil. •
100·11. RilL .
. s·
Waxed Paper • •
PKG
Duplex Creams

FPICI CRESH

$179

CENTEJ!. CUT

·

· 8 A~M. TO 9 P.M.

WHY IS PENNYFARE
CHICK~ ..HOURS FRESHER?"

=~sau••••

99C

ALL CHOICE PIECES

Best 0' Chicken . . lb.

1NII. IIIII

SUPERIOR BRAND

U.S.D. A. INSPECTED
...HOURS FRESHER" CHICKEN

vg:a ·Turlr~s ·

"HOURS FRESHER" PORK

Cottage
Cheese2-t·oz. ctn.

SUNDAy·

..

5-a.

Jars· · .

SUNSHINE·• 1-lb. PKG.

LIGHT N'LIVEL y

DAILY.

STORE
HOURS

·".

~

THOROFARE "DELUXE" BEEF • U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Luncheon
.
·
ALL
Meats vAR. • • • 12-u
1'111.'

.&amp;

c.qs

HERB OX • BEEF or CHICKEN

&amp; C• 4-oz. CAN

WALDORF • 4·Roll PKG.

T~~~pseasoning

. ............ "'..,,., l'tll• ,.._ - .. .

~

GENERIC •·SLICED

29.., .

82C
M1x1n Chicken . . c~n
·
4
gc
2
$1
Sticks
Boulon Cubes
sw.AN~ •

$'4 09

&amp;

...... -

$15 9

Boneless
$
Chue• St•• . · . . . lb.

$179

• SECRET • SQID 2.5-oz. ~T~

' MEADOWDALE

7.25-oz.PKG.
Macaroni
Cheese
7·OZ. PKG. LEMON
C
Air Fre.s hener • •
12·DZ. PKG. .
•
Hot Cocoa M1x • •
·
1-uz. BoT.
. 79~"
· Parsley Flakes • • .
'".

..... •110ft ..,._ . . . - . 1111114. -

Chuck Roast . . . . . . .-. · - Grottnd Chuck . . . . . lb. BONELESS SHOULDeR
•
· $18 9 LEAN
FAIIIL Y.
· $18 9
SEVEN SEAS • 16·oz. BOT.
$12 8 Swiss Steak . . • . . ~ lb. · - Stew Beef m . . . lb. .
Cr.....
0ressmg . . . . er..... -

THOROFARE •12·oz. BOX

: ~ind. shield.
.Washer . . ,

$16 9 "HOURS FRESHER" LEAN

•

Wt .._

RETALS U I &amp;liVE Sill., JAN. 10 THRU SAT'AJAN.11, 1H2

hi

CENTER

R.ATCUTS(ByiiiiPIIce) e e CUT

·

r~an

$

Chue•

KEEBLER •13-oz. PKG.

••

111111 It HilliS. 1111 . ~~--tor lllllfl"'""ll If picloflal 111111 .

Boneless
YOU'LL SAVE EVEN
· ,ar.;eekly ·
B. o·n.us
MORE WITH PENNYFARES W t:
. Buys
.

, AUSTIN • GALLON JUG

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
"HOURS FRESHER-" THRIFTY PAK

-

4-oz. CAN

A•
::.2!mo6.
8
'
~=~
* .
.RED

Dalclaus

Pineapple ..

v-·

.

-

2
8
C'
Willie Patltaes . . . .

·THOIIOFARE • 16-oz. CAN

.

.._$1 09 TASTY

.

.

HI $129

Red Potatoes ... ·••i
CRISP
. CALIFORNIA

rysillk

-

.

I

4~
.,~

�· Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipoiis, Ohi~Point ·Pieasant, W.Va .

Page-B-6- The Sunda.Y Times-Sentinel

~~~,r~:~:~:=a=n:::;;;;d=_M=a=t=TJ:=O=n=e=e=x=~=h=a=n~g~e~.~.v~o~w;ggsg;.~au~o~hio-::Po:int:P::w:. =======~~~~;;:2.·

Jan. 10, 1982

v:a·: '

Engagem~nt~----------------------~----~-------·

~odes

and Rice marry

Methen~y­

Brumfield-

Cobb

GAI.UPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Clyne Bnunfield, 74 Glll'field Ave. ,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Cindy Kay, to Billy Lee
Walter, 1101\ of Mr. and Mrs. J{atry
Walter of Gallipolis. , ·

Walter

· POME.l toY - Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Metheney , Route 1,
Ew i ngton , announ ce the
engagement and . approaching
marriage of their daughter, Donna, .
to Joe Cobb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Cobb, Glenwood, W. Va.

WALK WORTHY OF VOCATION
Br William B. Kughn_,

'"'

Paul e)(horts the Ephesi an Chr ist ians saying . "I ther efore, the
prisoner of the Lord, bes,eech you that ye walk worthy of the yocation
wherewith ye are called" (Eph. 4:11.
"Beseech" means to call to the aid of one-s;o as t o bring about a
distinct impression. It w8s Paul' s desire that they would always m~ke
a distinct impression In their lives. He aids them by beseechi ng them
through the word. stressing the importance of thei r walk and vocation.
The principle set forlh by Paul is just as powerful unlo us today,
therefore, he aids us by beseeching us through I he same word.
~•walk" his reference to observing and respecting the will of God
. in our daily conduct. ·~w{l rth.Y., denotes that whi c h is g'ood and
honorable in lhe sight-of the Lord. "Vocation" is t he r ealm of destiny
intp whrch one iS called. ucalled" signi.fles God's heavenly .invitation.
God's heavenly invitatiOn is eng r aved in the gosp~l by which we are
called, "Whereunto he called you by the gospel, to the obtain ing of the
glory of our Lord Jesus Christ" (II Thess. 2: 141 .
Being called by the eospel, we are " called out of darkness Into his
marvelous light" (I ·Pet: 2 :9) . "Into his marvelous light" is the
vociltion of realm Into which we have been invited . Accepting the in·
vitation, we become redpients of the many benefits this 11 new
vocation" offers. There are the benefits of " the feii()WShiip of his Son
Jesus Chr ist our ·Word (I Cor . 1: 9) wh ich include (1 )- "peace) (I Cor.
7: 14) ; (2) - 1 1 recon.ciliation'' &lt;II Cor . S: 18); (3) - 11 the grace of Christ' '
!Gal. 1:6) ; and "~II $pir.llual blessings" !Eph . 1:3) which inc lude
(1)- "redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins" ( Eh .
1:7) ; (2)- belng "translated into the kingdom of his dear Sonu (Col.
1: 131 ; (3)-" holiness" (I Thess . 4:71 ; and !41 - " salvation" (II T im .
2: 10) .
Being a .11 new creature 11 in Christ (II Cor . 5: 17) and r eceiving
these benefits, we enter our " new vocation" to th e obtairiing of the
glory of Christ . We are n'ow " his workmanship, cr eated in Christ Jesus
unto good works, which God hath before ordai r.~ e d that we should walk
·in them" !Eph. 2:101 . Bv walki~g in good works, we show respecrro
God and His word by applying it to our daily conduct. By walking worthy in good works, we "walk w orthy of the Lord unto all pleasing,
being fruitful in every good work, and inc-rease in the knowledge of
God'" (Col . 1: 10). letting our conversation be as it becomes the gasp~ I '
of Christ, standing in one spirit and with one mind str iving together for
the faith of lhe gospel !Phil. 1:271 . and doing that which is good and
honorable in the sight of God .
By walking worthy in the vocation of ri ghteousness into which we
are called, by a high and heavenly calling. we s ~ow respect ro God.
confirming that we are recip ients of God's word!
(For Free Bible Corr~spon d ence Course Write... )

BULOVA
QUARTZ
.
.

THISWIII20~

OFF

.· Mrs. Rice

: CHARLESTON
Denise A.
The bride Is a DuPont J{lgh
!UJodes, South Charleston, and School graduate and Is employed as
David G. Rice, Niles, weremarrted · a medical secretary ol CharleSton
Dec. 26 at Rensrord l;laptist Area Medical Center Memorial
Church, Charleston.
. Division.
· The.bride is the daughter or BWy
The groom graduated !rom Gal·
i,. and Elizabeth Rhodes, Charles· Ua Academy lijgh School and
ton, and the groom is the son or
Mount Vernon Nazarene College.
David E. and Jo Rice, Galllpolis.
He Is manager or a Bob Evans
• For the marrtage, officiated bY Restaurant.
Rev. Harry Crowder, the bride was
The couple resides In Niles.
81ven by her grandfather, Coy E.

Metheney

.· 'IGIJoiul :#ill rfluucle

fUlodes.
·. The bride's attendants were
Tammie Perdue and Dellna
Rhodes, sisters or the brtde, and
Marilyn Lowery and Melody Ar·
thilr, friends or the bride.
; Steve ·CBudW was best man and
~~&amp;hers were Kevin Hawk, Mark
Sheets and Tim Neal.
:: Melissa Holstln was fiower girl
aDd ring bearer was Tony George.
!ifuslclans Included Lori Koontz, pi·
antst, and Lynn Rice.
, A receptiOn was held at Fair
Haven Nazarene Church and the
!-'OIJPie took a wedding trip. to
'{oungstown.

Brwnfield's fiance is a graduate Of
Hannan Trace High School and Is
self-employe;&lt;!. Brumfield is . employed at Duff's in GaUipoli.!. ·
Wedding plans are incomplete.

7 AMESSAGE FROM litE BIBLE. •.•

The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate ·
of Meigs High School. Her fiance is
currently employed at the D. and E.
ToolofCBbeliCounty, W. Va.

.·

Norris wore a lilac dress with a corsage of white roses tied with Iliac
ribbon. Mrs. Mamone was in a
powder blue dress with a corsag~ ot '
white roses tied with powder blue
ribon.
A reception was held at the LitUe
Turtle Country Club in Westerville.
The bride's table featured a threetiered cake decorated with live roses
and mums. Carolee Thabet and Mar·
aha Williams, Columbus, registered
the guests.
The couple took a wedding trip to
Hawaii. They now reside at 7747
Chancel Drive, Worthington. The
bride holds an associate degree from
Columbus Business University. Her
. husband received a degree from
Ohio State University. Both are employed at R. S. Fling and Partners,

of

Mr. and Mrs. Mamone
POMEROY - Penise M. Cross of
Columbus and Frank A. Mamone,
Worthington, were married on Aug.
22 at 3:30 p.m. at the Worthington
United Presbyterian Church:
The bride is 'the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Earl P. Cross of Racine,
and the bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Vincent Mainone, Strongs· ville.
The Worthington United
Presbyterian Church was the setting
for the wedding performed by Dr.
Charles Norris.
Given in marriage by her parents,
the llride wore a white empire A-line
dress with embroidered cameo on ·
. chiffon overlay. She had a veil of
iUusion which fell from a bandeau.of
material matching her gown. The
bride carried the Bible which her

rfi..W.t

Bulaville Road • P.O. Box 308

THE WICKER HOUSE
court Street
Gallipolis

GALliPOLIS. OHIO 45631

GUARANTEEDONEFULL
FREE VEAR ATTAWNEYS

SII!Jdoly Enning

Wonltlp6 :00

Free Engraving

WE WILL REOPEN-MONDAY JAN. 11
AT 10:00 A.M.

Even ~ ng

I

709

~~-$

MEAT SPECIALS

19
FRESH
·CHICKEN
·LIVERS

Ave.

1ST

7: 00

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

.50\ OFF

Wtclnesday

grandmother llad carriedn her wed·
ding day in 1912. She had a bouquet
of lilac and white roses and
nliniature trailing white mums with
baby's breath .
Diana M. Cross served as maid of
honor for her sister. She wore lilac
taffeta with a lace averlay and
carried a bouquet of lilac roses with
miniature trailing mums and purple
violets.
Kendra Norris, Racine, niece of
the bride,' was the flower girl, and C.
J. Harris, Portland, nephew of the
bride, was the ring bearer.
Jerry liasbrouck, Worthington,
served as best man, and the ushers
were Jack Grega, Columbus; Joe
Polis, ·Worthington; Gary Norris,
RAcine, and Jeff Harris, Portland.
For her daughter's Wedding, Mrs.

•••••••••••••••••
THIS WEEK'S •
••
SPECIAL
•••
RC •
•
RC ••
100 ••
•
DIET ••
U.S. NO. 1 WHITE
•
RITE •
••• ·AlL PURPOSE
POTATOES
'1·29
PIUS
••
·
Tax &amp; Dep. •
. •• •
••
••• ICE COLD BEER. ••
&amp; POP
•• .WINEHOURS
•••I
GOLDEN RIPE
thru Saturday •
••• Monday
•
8 A.M. till I P.M .
•
,•• . Gallipolis Ice Co. ••
·BANANAS
••
•• DRIVE THRU
•
CARRYOUT
•
- •
••
First
• ••••••••••••••••

MIXED
FRYER
PARTS

R•dlo

" Menagalrom
'"• Billie" •

424 Second Avenue
Gallipolis

Dailv ·WJEH\
11 : U.t.M , ,1

All Wicker Unfinished Furniture
Chimes- Harley Items

12 oz.

THE WICKER HOUSE
PH . 446·9458
. 41 Court

PKG.

No Layaways .- No Refunds

FRESH LEAN

.$129

NO BEEF

ON

\

SPECIAL MEALS...

I ,

'

USDA CHOICE

Special Deals!

BEEF CUBE STEAK

1

SUPERIOR

- ' ·- ....

11 oz.

-·

.

80¥
3-PC. FISH DINNER
SPECIAL

'$2.69

,.
I

Each dinner includes 3 crispy fish
fillets, ·golden fryes, fresh cole slaw
and 2 hushpuppies.
Offer expires: February 20, 1982

Turlley, Salisbury, Melfioaf, Beef
Pattie/Onion,
Beef
Pal·

BUTTERMILK

PEPSI; DIET PEPSI

.'

i

20o/o off all patterns
2CWo off all notions, trims and accessories
20o/o off all decorator fabrics
20o/o to SOo/o ~ff original price
all our fall and winter merchandise

MON..·SAT.
10.9
SUN. 1·5

24.0Z.

BOmE

:Each dlnf\er include~ 4 white:neat
{Chicken Plenks~ golden fryes and
1fresh cole slaw.
.
Offer expires: February 20, 1982

I

ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

oreaus

.

"i!

• • • • • • • • • • • • • CLIP COUPON • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Please send me inlormation on lrdMdual
Retirement Accounts. MaiiiD 0!1io \/alley Bri.
420 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Otlo-45631
Attention: Rk:Ntd Scott.

..

Fish &amp; More· Dinner $1.99 :~~n

. ~

1

a..:.t&amp; oz.

$ 39

BTLS.

$', 1 19

VALLEY BELL

FESTIVAL
_ICE CREAM$

SCOTTIES
•
FACIAL
TISSUE

39·

HALF
GALLON

SUN., MON. &amp; TOES. ONLY I
Each dinner has 2 crispy fish
~I

·······-~---···--···----------··------- .................. ~....J
Reti181T111flt can bti a beautiful thing. ~ you
A total of $4,000. And whatever you put lri is

can alford tt. ~you don't have a retirement
plan, ot Hyou want to supplement the plan
you have at work, start now. With an
lndMduai Retirement Aocount (IRA) from
Ohio 'Ialiey Bank. You can put ANY
M1QUNT up to $2,000 a year into an IRA.
l'ligardless of the amount of your income, or
$2,250 a year Hyou include your
,
non-WO!king spouse. And Hyou both work,
each of you can save up io $2,000 a year.

MT. DEW

SYRUP

69

including new spring arrivds and basics

and

RED WIND
CHOC. FLAVOR

PLANKS.DINNER
~PECIAL$2.•
I• NAME _____________________

$ 6

tie/Mushraom.

4-PC. CHICKEN

20Cfo off all fashion fabrics,

PKG.

FAMILY
·MEALS

=~N 99~
........
-----· .. ·--··--..·--_l_..··-·-··..............•
I

12 oz.

.

fillets, golden fryes, fresh cole
5.
slew end 2 hushpuppies.
i
Offer .expires: Feb. 16, 1982
§.
Only at: State Rt. 7, Silver Bridge g
Shopping Center, Gellipolls
~

tax .defemld until withdrawal. Your account

earns interesl at o.irrent market rates.

lnlenlst that remains tax·free until you retire.
A time when your income and your tax rate ·
wiH be a lot lower. Helpil ig you gain financial
eecurity In your retitement years.... Another
reason you can and stwld expect more
from OhiO Valley Bank.

•

JUMBO

ROU

Royal Crest
2% MILK

OXYDOL
.DETERGEN! $

GALLON PLASTIC

These new IRA reglll.r~s do norO«omll ett.cr•ve u"fl/11 J•nuery 1,
1HZ, OtA 1:00•• i n now lOt lull particulers IMJ tJdditiOf!el tnlotmaricm.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

79

Phone

,_,_/_.

89

490Z.
. 'BoX

. 446·7576
\

\

•

t

'

'.
• ·" • • "

.~ I

' ... , '

'

... ...

•

•

�'

Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

Jan . 10, 1982

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

~nniversarie·~------~~------~--~~--~------~-----Haleys observe -35th

· Gallia

Astrograph

.

Monday, Jan. '11 - Chorus, 1-3
P·:::·i Tax Aide Traihing, 8 a.m.-4
p. ·
Tuesday, Jan. 2- S.T.O.P. Class,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Filness, 11 :!5
: e.m.; Tu Aide Training, 8 a.m.-4
p.m.
'
Wednesday, Jan. 13 '- Vinton
Bible Study, I p.m.; American
Literature Clam;, I p.m.; Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.; Tax Aid&lt;' Training,
8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Thursday, Jan. 14 - Bilile Study,
; 1·2 p.m.; Tax Aide Training, 8 a .m.-4
p.m.
Friday, Jan. 15 - Art Class, I -3
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p.m.;
Tax Aide Training, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; .
Social Hour, 7 p.m.

J.-ury 1t, 1181 '
CAPRICORN (Dee. D-.11111. lt) 11li.s is not a good day to become
involved In a project with a pal where you may have to furnish all the
tools and material. Each muat make an equal contribution.
AQUARIUS (Ju. zt.Feb. II) Decisions regarding an Important
matter directly affecting you shOuld not be left up to the sole judgment
of another today. Your Input is essential.
.
P18CES ·(Feb. 2t-Mal'l:b ZO) Use your ¢0mmon sense todloY in
health matters. If you know cerlsln foods 01' ~~ges a' not good ·
for you, pass them up or you 1Jl8Y regret it t&lt;morrow.
ARIES (March Z1-Aprii 11) Steer clear of ~tuations today which
cowd lead to one-QJ1SIT18DShlp. The "I'm better than you" syndrome
will spoil fun activities !01' you as well~ !Or 0\hers.
TAURUS (April2t-May 2)) Be carefw today that you~re not
pushed Into positions where you have to make promises or commitIIK!Ills you may be unable to keep.
GEMINI (May 21-J~ 28) Take care of your respoJW!bllities as
early in the day as pouible. The longer you delay, the more reasons
__ you'llfindtoJIOlllponethem.
.... ·--CANCER (June Zl-JWle 22) Spending could get out of hand today if
you yield to extravagant whims and impulses. Don't be stingy, but
carefully screen any borrowers.
.
LEO (July za.Aug. ZZJ Befqre volunteering to ma_nage something
for others today ask yourself if you have the expertise to do so. If not,
keepmum.
.
VIRGO (A'ug. zs.sept. ZZ) You're normally pretty gOOd at keeping
friends' sei:rets, but today there's a strong possibility Jl.!!ll could reveal
Information you shouldn't.
LIBRA (~t. Z3-0ct. !3) Unless you·are very care!W today there's
a chance you may complicate an opportune situation to the point
where it will not serve your bat interests.
· SCORPIO (fkl 24-Nov. ZZ) Clarify your goals wisely today , or you
could strive to achieve s.omething only to realize it was hardly worth
the effort elpellded.
SAGmAl\IUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Others will be han~ing on your
every word tOday, so be very careful that you don't pass off something

The the
Senior
Nutrition
Program
will
serve
following
menus
:

rJ;;as;;;fa~ct~w~hi;'ch;;you~la~ck~the;;e;v;id;en~ce~t~o;;:su;p;po;rt~.::;;;~;::~~~~~

·Senior
Citizens
·Calendar
GAWPOUS - Activities Jor the
weekofJan. 11·15,1982attheSenior
Citizens Center located at · 220
Jackson Pike areas follows :

.....-.

Mr. and Mrs. Smith
...,.,•. ..
: ~Oth year ·celebratfrl
'-'•

Mr. and Mrs. Connolly
Mr. and Mrs. Haley

. MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. 'the fonner Eulonda Little, daughter
Dwight Haley, Sr., Middleport, will of the late Vern and Glenna Little of
observe their 35th weddillg an- . Middleport.
niversary on Thursday, Jan. 4.
· Afamily observance is being plan·
Married
at
Pomeroy
by
Percy
ned.
.....
Peoples
in
1947,
the
couple
have
·'. They were married Oct. 29, 1931,
three children, Dwight, Jr. and
:mPikeville, Ky., and have three The three-tiered cake for the event Mark, Middleport, Mrs. Gary
i•
was baked by their granddaughter, (Becky) Drenner, Reedsville. They
1!ll'ughters. They are Mrs. Grover
•{-Gaynell)
Fields of Jackson, Mrs. Sue Holcomb,
also have five grandchildren. Haley
l, .
is the son of the late GeOI'ge and
sliver wedding anniversary
:r··~----------------------~--------~-------J-w~l~e-Hal~ey~·-R-ut.la_n_d._M_rs_._Ha_l~ey~w rA The
Mr. al!d Mrs. John Lambert was
.celebrated on Dec. 10, at the home
rA Fred Lemley, father of Mrs.
j :
·
Lambert.
..
' ' ROONEY · The tUm "Heav·
hold a regular monthly meeting ·
HARRISONVILLE PI'O will
.John and Mildred Lemley were
: jmiyOeceptlon"willbeshownat
Monday at 7:15 p.m. at the
meetTuesdayat7:30p.m.atthe
married on Dec.lO, 1956atMJddle.
' ~mmunlty Church of God,
board orrtce on Dairy Lane.
school. Plans fQr the spring carport by Rev. Guy Sayre. Hoste!ises
: ;State Route 3.'1, Rodney, Sunday
Tuesday
nlval and other qiOIII!Y·maklng
were Ellen and Paula RJte With
· 'at 7 p.m.
.
projects w1ll be discussed.
Paula baking the cake. Others at;;
Monday
RIO GRANDE . Gallla· Wednesday
.
tending were Fred and Betty LemJackson·VInton
Joint Vocational
I.
.
ley, Susie Lambert, Charles
GALLIA COUNTY Extension
I : RIO GRANDE - Atwood Club
School District wtll hold a 1982
Jandara a,nd Sam Rife.
: MllmeetatnoonMondayatRio
organiZational and January
Homemakers wUl meet Wednesday at the Columbus arid
: J:;rande CoUeae·and Community
meeting Tuesday at 7: :.1 p.m. In
' ~ Dining Hall.
the board room of Buckeye Hills
Southern meeting room at 10: :.1
Career Center.
a.m. and a potluck lunch will be
•
held at noon. There will be teach; ·:' GALLIPOLIS - "The Family
CHESHIRE · An organlza·
Ing
of basic crocheting at 1 p.m.
1 illld the Breastred Baby" will be
tiona! meeting of Gallla County
Every
homemaker Is welcome.
! ~topic of the January meeting
Board of Mental Retardation
Cl La Leche League of GaWpoUs
and Developinental Dlsabllltles
RUTLAND · Afree blood preslobe heldMondayat7::llp.m. at
will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
.
sure
cllnlc wtll be held at the Hill
·
borne of Judith Thompson;
Guiding Hand School, Cheshire.
St., Rutland Chapter or Rutland
For turtller Information call446For more lntonnatlon call 367Silver Circle, Wednesday from
6314 or 446-4010
0102.
noon to 1 p.m. Barbara Van Me'
EASTERN . Band Boosters
ter, R.N., will have charge of the ·
: ' ' ATHENS • Athens, Hocking
will meet Tuesday at 7: 00 p.m.
clinic, which .the open to the
t ·w VInton Counties Commun·
at Eastern High School.
public.
·: lty Mental Health Board will
Members are urged to attend .
.

EWINGTON. - Mr. and Mrs.
::b.wrence (ll4ttie) Smith celebra.ted
:'llieir fiftieth wedding anniversary at
:-Ewington Town Hall Oct .24.

Garland (Ezell) Waul of Vinton, and
Avonell Norman of Vinton.
The couple has seven grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren.

Silver year
observed

.

Coming Events

sun~ay

.

.. ;.

Connollys reach
. LONQ BOTTOM - Mr. and Mrs.
William Connolly celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary recenUy
with a family gathering at their
horne on Success Road, Reedsville.
The couple were married on Oct.
5, 1931 at Long Bottom by Fred
Swan. They are the parents of 10
children, Mrs. Glen (Doris) Deeter,
Long Bottom; Mrs. Kenneth (Betty)
Barber, Hebron; Mrs . . Robert
(Carole) Barber, Reedsville; Kenneth Connolly, Newark; Dale Connolly, Fort Myers, Fla.; Ted ConnoUy and Warren Co!lllolly, Reedsville. A son, Darrell Connolly, is
deceaaed, along witiJ two childa;en
who died at birth. Mr, and Mrs. Connolly also have 24 grandchildren and
18 great-grandchildren.
A buffet style d\nner was served to
Glen and Doris Deeter, Earl, GlenKeith

50~h

Hunt, Kathy Pierce, all of Long Bottorn; Ted, Marjorie ·and Mike Connolly, . Carl; Arlene and Jason
Parker; Bob, Carole, and Kevin
. Barber, Steve and Laurie Barber,
· Warren, Collll\e, Amy and Tina Connolly, Alta Dill, Joe and Eloise Connolly, Okey and Janet Connolly,
David Brandt, Emia Jean Connolly,
•· Reedsville.
·
- Also attending were Raymond,
· - Debbie and Misty Lyons, Parkers. burg, w. Va.; Kenny, Beverly and
' Shawn Connolly, David, Kim,
Teanya and Kendra Branham, Tom,
. Vivian, Tommy and Brad Zlgan, BiU
· Trish, Eric and Jason Barber,
Terry, Tammi and Brandon Covert,
Jerry, Cheryl and Jessica Barber,
'Newark; Kenneth and .Betty Bather,
Hebron.
· · Giftswrepresentedtothecouple.

~

...-. .; .
.

.
lt·-·:'
~ .

·~ ·
•r
•

ByERMABOMBECK_
People have entered a marriage sweat and itch. 1 needed a drink of.
J be gan shivenng un- knowing a lot less. I thought a long water.! felt lightheaded. Then I saw
::eontrollably. My mouth became dry. Ume before we pla!lJled a trip to a man next to me thumbing tlirough
:.('.could not concentrate. My nerves South American for a vacation. a Portuguese newspaper. I saw a
:"Were like a cavity exposed to ari ice What if t~ey had never heard r1 small face surrowtded by fat hair
::J:IIbe.
Brooke Shields? How could 1 handle- and said otit loud, "Thanks. I needed
••• •Then I reAlized w:1y. I had gone ten no • dimple - no ; Calvin - Klein that."
:J4hrough ~n entire day w&lt;t~'lllt RePin~ days?
I towd make it through the night
:·~e st.;elds. Tl:~ wilt.dre·.-:al
Over Rio, my palms began to now.
''·
•. ptoms were predi cU. bl e.
· •ym
::-:It brought back memories or an r-_ _ _.......,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;.__ _~
:;werdoae of Farah Fawcett In ltm,
:ltld of 1979, when I picked up a
·magazine that did not have John
;;~ravolta on It and l couldn't stop
,crying.
·
·
:;: ·.~very year, the media blitz In on
·~-and we are saturated with
there is to know about them. In
:JI!Ille Instances, the depth of the per:;a!" deserves no longer than 15
•.minutes, yet week in and week out
!:iliey create a supply· ol facts for
LIWilicb thet'llls no demand.
:;; :por eight monlba once I followed
l:clbeely the dating habits of Princess
;:Qrollne rA Monaco. 1 knew what
~ Caroline got up in the morning,
:~ llhe was with, what they did
·- what they were charged with. I
:~d have known so much about
daughter.
:!:.:At one Ume, I kept pace with every ·
, :~e ·rA Jacq!Jellne O!lassis. She
. :JI.illn'l 00111 without my knowing
·~IIOut it. Then it was Marie Osmond
~ dominated my me and last
;~. the face that made pork a rour,tluej. word: Miss Piggy.
:~For awhile, I didn't think 1 could
• · ................. o....................... ...
:~ve Miss Piggy. She had her own·
• .... . . , •I . . . IM$$16
'J'j show, wrote booU, guested on ·
ijWk shows, appeared on the cover of ·
and every othet: major
1.'jbllcation while her likeness was
.~
&gt;P.lfroduced . on glasses, pillowa,
~. cocktail . napkins, tooth. 211 Upper River R011d . '
:IIOW-, lltlltlonery, poetera, T·
:ffrtl, 81htraya, banb, bookends,
•• a • ....., ..
towell and~ lltlckera, -I .

:*own

.•_,.......,......,_......,

C•ptala D'&amp;

......,.......,
••••

''""'-·a

·

E

fuU..grown

woman 1f_ho ·

2E~&lt;llPlab
Dlnnen lor $4.99
Flab DIMei- Includes ioide" flail · tlleis. crnmy

cGiree from a11111g with a pig •
blonde wll. for God'a like.

J
colt slaw, '""eft lrln, 111112 clallcloua hulh puppln.
Dl... IIIII'" JIIIINiry !4, 1912

~;:-t Jaaow more about Ilrooke than ·
penon _hu I rflbt lo know.

;p

•• • "t

...'"'''
I-'!' .

I

I.

•

•

*

• •

•••••••••••••••••••
. .......... .......,

t face the momlng news ·.

I.'"'•

1

·•
,_,

.

..

WEDNESDAY
~ SATURDAY
-- - - -·
-·

LEGG'S DIAMOND
TOP 40 &amp; ROCK.

WEDNESDAY- SATURDAY ·

IT'S YOUR FUTURE - MAKE THE
BEST OF IT .... ATTEND

.._, Last week,

;:.n

Closed Sun .
Mon. &amp; Tues.

START THE NEW YEAR OFF RIGHT.

===At Wit's End

·~

The
Entertainer
.

FINAL WEEK FOR REGISTRATION

SAVE •To "h OFF

..

.
NEW WINTER HOURS

l\6onday - Dry lima beans and
.ham, vegetable · gelatin salad,
pickled beets, cornbread, butter,
fruit cobbler, milk.
Tuesday Macottage-beef
casserole, broccoli, tossed
salad/dressing, bread, butter,' baked
custard, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken, mashed
potatoes, kale and vinegar, bread,
butter, red fruited gelatin; IJ)ilk.
Thursday- Meatballs and gravy,
green beans, stewed tomatoes,
bread, butter, applesauce and cinnamon, milk .
Friday - Fish on bun/tartar
sauce, Harvard beets, cottage ·
cheese and crushed pineapple,
melon or oranges in season, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
eachmeal.
·
"Servites rendered on a nolldil!criminatory basis."

GALLIPOLIS
Reg. 51130
Reg. '980
Reg. 51750

'I
SOFA
SOFA
SOFA &amp;CHAIR
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
AND OTTOMAN

Reg. 1832

SOFA

Reg. 11100

SOFA &amp;CHAIR

Reg. '1874

5

•

SOFA

· Reg. '950

SOFA

Reg. 11100

2 SWIVEL ROCKERS

Reg. 1510 ea.

1-41AIR

Reg. 5500

CHAIR &amp; OlTOMAN

Reg. 1734 ·

2~SWIVEL ROCKERS .

Reg. $480 ea.

·NOW $565
NOW$490
NOW $1166 .
NOW $916
'NOW$825
NOW $1249
NOW'$712
NOW$825
NOW-5255 ea.
NOW'250
NOW$300
NOW 5240 ea.
.Nows356

1 CHAIR &amp; OlTOMAN
Reg. $712
.
ALL OTHER FURNITURE AT JANUARY CLEARANCE PRICES
.

OPEN .MON •.fRI.
nLL 8 P.M.

,•

BUSINESS COLLEGE
'

,.

IT WILL COST. YOU LESS AND YOU WilL GET
ON THE·JOB SOONER.

(,_.

•

GREAT PROGRAMS IN .
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
'

.,

WE STILL HAVE CLASSES AVAILABE IN
COMPUTER SCIENCE ENROLL NOW -CALL 446-4367

I .FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE

1

f

I APPROVED FOR vmuNs I

'

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
,•

SPitiNG VALLEY PLAZA
"A Pfofessional Collep af Business with You~ Cateei in Mind"

PHONE 446 4367

' 75-02:04728

�)

Pege-B-10-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

,,, __,.._

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

Riverby
Calendar

Astrograph
January 11, 1981
·shifting ~onditions this coming year could put you in challenging .
sit\IBtions and alter your direction and goals. Don'tdespair. The new ·
course you set will be a more'l'ewarding one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) It could be a ttjflc difficult ·
jockeying for position· today in order to fulfill your ambitions.
However, you're capable of doing so.
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. 19) You might not like everything your
· _mate ~s to say today, but do listen carefully. What you are told may
" be for your good_.
,
PISCES (Feb. :!&amp;-March 20) You might have to shelve your
- priorities temporarily today in order to help anoih~r whose needs 11111Y ·
· be more immediate. Do so willingly.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Take whatever steps are necessary
: today to .reassure your mate how much you care. He or she will
• welcome your supportive gestures.
,
TAURUS (April 2&amp;-lllay 20) Today you're up to handling a task
which you've felt to be a little too difficult to tackle. You'll find, once
you get into it, It's not as hard as you thought.
. GEMINI (May 21--June 20) others will find you a welcome companion today. They'll Instinctively kriow ·they can depend upon you in ·
. : situations they may need help to manage . .
CANCER (June 2l·July 2!) Focus your efforts today on matters
.:-that could contribute to the security of yourself and your family. Your
; practical instincts will urge you toward the right actions.
: ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 others may look at situations through rose- ..
• colored glasses today, but you'll .see things for what they. are, minus
-the frills~
'
VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22) Your hunches in business or commercial matte..,. sh_ould be on target today. Couple these with your .
, _ logic and know-how and you may be able to-turn losses into gains.
;
LIRRA (Sept. ~I. 23) Dare to be a dreamer today, but also be ·
: realistic regarding how you hope to realize your wi&gt;!hes. Solid effort is ·
... needed to be successful.
.
..
ScORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) DOn' t1iii:dlieo1ii-agi!d'tOilliy ~
eludes you initially. You have the perseverance to overc"!Pe imrments that may block your path.
.
.
• SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23--Dec. 21) If you have a problem which you
·feel you can't resolve yourself, go back to the same old friend who offered you wise counsel in the past. He or she will have the answers.

..

4

·

·

(ZJ.?tb

Jan. 10, 1'982

'

Meigs Bookmobile
POMEROY - Bookmobile service
in Meigs County iB brought to you by
the Meigs County Public Library under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries. .
Bookmobile schedule for Monday,
Jan. 11 - Darwin, Duncan's Store,
3:3S-4 :05 p.m.; Harrisonville, Rigg's

House, 4:40-5:10; New Lima Road, 1
mile south of Ft. Meigs, 5 : ~:05;
Rutland Bank One,' 6:21&gt;-7; Rutland
Depvt·St., 7:05-7 :45.
.Tuesday, Jan. 12 - Long Bottom
Post Office, 3:55--4:40 p.m.; Reedsyille, Reed's Store, 3-5:50; Tuppel'li
Plai~ , Arbaugh , 6:21&gt;-7; Bawn Ad-

·Jan. 10, 1982
.
. The Surid~y Times-Sentinei-P.age-

'

sc~edule

Al-l set
for •1ce
Bowl•

d!tion, 7:30-8.
Wednesday, Jan. 13- ijiggscrest
Addition, 6:45-7 :25 p•m.
.
Thursday, Jan. 14 - Keno, North
side of Keno Bridge, 3:45-4:15 p.m.;
Rl!cine Bank, 4:45-5:45; Syracuse
Pool, 6-7.
·

IS THERE LIFE
AFTER HIGH ·SCHOOL?

·Insure
· your ·child's fut~re
for 4' a day

Ph.
Home Ph . 318-9691 ·

Frul~rnal Life /mlf~llnfl!
Homt O ffice- l~ck lilond, l llinoi 1

0

We Believe
There Is •••

KEEPING THE HANDS WARM -San Diego Cllargen quarterback
Dan Fouts keeps his hands in his sleeves wbBe worklug his arms~~) keep
warm during a team workoal Saturday In CincliUiatl where lbe Chargen
will face the Beoi!J!IB In Sunday's AFC tide game. Below-freezing temperatures and snow greeted the Chargen at their ·workoul. (AP Laserphoto). ·
' •· '

W"RMING W/1-Y- Cincinnati Bengali quarterback Ken AndenOii
wanns hlp hand during a workout In a snow fiarry In Clnclnllatl Saturday.
Tbe Bengals were going through final preparatioDI for today's AFC tide
game w,lth the San Diego Chargers. (AP Laserpboto).

Tar Heels edge Cavs, 65•60
.

*FLEXSTEEL- .

··~

CURIO CABINETS From. $169
RECLINERS .
* BRASS BED
(Queen size) $299
~~~EATSc,._~~O t~ GLASS TOP TABLES
$~99
CHAIRS
f~
* GUN CABINETS
From $169
.

·~ . DESKS

*LANE- .

CEDAR CHEST
$159
OAK BEDROOM SUITE $995

MANY SIZES AND STYLES
SALE PRICED
$299

&gt;'.&lt;RCA-

ROLL TOP
13" XLlOO COLOR
$299 •:, MANY BEAUTIFUL TABLE ·
19" XllOO COLOR
$389 ·
_
sJ.\.l
17" COLOR TRAK REMOTE $459 LAMPS
ptl\CtO
25" CONSOLE xuoo
$599 ·~DOOR AND DECORATIVE MIRRORS
VIDEO DISC
REBATE PLus 2 FRE,E MOVIES* FOAM CHAIR
$
(Movie Value $25)
,
(Makes B~d) 99

*FRIGIDAIRE-

~~

CHOPPING aLOCK

(Sound Maple)

* DINETTES-SERVING CARTS
30" ELECTRIC RANGE $349*UNFINISHED TABLES AND CHAIRS
17 CU. R. FROSTFREE $699

• Basic . Educational Opportunity Grants
• Bureau of Vocational Rehabilitation
eVeteran Approved (VA Benefits) eGuaranteed Student Loans.

HAVE 'A SKILL! with training in
less than one ye~r •••
Auto Body Repair • Auto Mechanics
• Building Maintenance eCarpentry • Electricity • Factory Maintenance • Food Service
• Heating • Air Conditioning e Machine
Trade.s e'Office Clerica•-steno • Welding

We Believe In H!ire

EDUCATION

BUDGET SHOP VALUES

...

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*RIVERSIDEALL WOOD PINE BEDROOM
SUITE
$959

SOFA BED ........ ~............ $138
3 PC. BEDROOM SUITE .•. $199
DRESSER ......................... SH

*HOOVER.;.,
. PORJAPOWER

CHESTS........ ....... ............ $49

CELEBRITY IV CANISTER
WITH TOO.LS AND
· POWER HEAD

$188

~""!"!!'~~'!"!'!-J!!I!!!"!!"!~~---1
N F 0 RMAT 1·0 N -......_
REGISTE
MAIL 1 HIS COUPON
TO SECURE OUR .CLASS SLOT

1 would like more information about your
adult vocational programs. Check one or
more.
You.rName . . ... ..... o • • o • . • o • • • • • • o • • • •
Address • . .
o • o ••••••• o • • o o • •••
0

$69

.

BED FRAMES
.............. : .... $20
TABLES (3) ...................... $S9
•

I

RECLINERS •.. .' ........ ........ . $11

By JOHN NELSON
AI' Sports Writer
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) ~
J8111es Worthy hit a turnaround jwn·
per that gave North Carolina Its first
lead in the second half, with less
than four minutes to play, and the
to~anked Tar Heels clawed their
way to a 65-00 basketball victocy
Saturday over No.2 Virginia.
. Worthy 's short jwnp shot fom the
left baseline put the Tar Heels ahead
55-54 with 3:47 to play and capped a
comeback that saw undefeated North Carolina erase a nine-point
deficit. The teama traded advantages in the closing minutes until
two foul shots by Sam Perkins with ·
1:48 to play'gave North Carolina the
lead for good, 5!1-58, and the Tar
Heels held on for their lith victory
this season by going into their famed
four cornel'l! offense.
Ralph Sampson, Virginia 's 7-foot-4
center, led all scorers with 30 points,
but its was his North ·Carolina counterpart, 6-9 Sam Perkins, who put
the finishing touches on the victory.
Afrer reserve guard Jim Braddock
sank four free throws to put North
Carolina ahead 63-58, Jeff .J~nes
pulled the Cavaliel'l! within three
points, 6J.jj(), wi!h a jwnp shot with
seven seconds to play.
On the ensuing inbounds play,
Perkins got bt!hind' the Virginia
defense, took a long pass, and hit a
layup that helped hand Virginia its
first loss in 13 games this season.
Worthy led the Tar Heels woth 17
points, freshman Mi chael Jordan
had 16 and Perkins, who played
much of the game in foul trouble,
had 12.

With the m_a ny financial aid programs . we . can offer you ... i ust
about aoyone can continue the_
ir
higher education.

(Deluxe With Glass Shelves)
Green and Almond

•

0

••••

•

•

Phone . . : .. . .... : . . . ... .. . .... . . . .. . . . .
Mail to: Adult Education
· - Tri·County Vocational School
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

.

FULL TIME ADULT PROGRMS
- WELDING
- AUTO BODY REPAIR
-MACHINE TRADES
- BUILDING MAINT- ~NANCE
- FACTORY MAINTENANCE
-ELECTRICITY
- CAR .P EitTRY
- HEATING &amp; COOLING
- OFFICES OCCUPATIONS
- FOOD SERVICE
- AUTO M
ANICS ·

.

Tri-County·
Voca·t ional Schqol
ADULT EDUCATION DEPT.
-Rt. .1, state Route 691Nelsonville, Ohio 614-753-3511 .

·I

.

GALUPOUS - Exhibit for the
month of January for the French Art
Colony is 32 pieces of art by Patricia fr============;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Reynolds Reed, j..e.Sage, W. Va. Airbrush incorporating a variety of inks
and acrylics, as well as prisma
colors, pastels, oil sticks, etc.
Gallery hours: Tuesday and 'Thursday 10 a.m.-3 p.m. ;' Saturday and
Sunday 1-5 p.m.

MODERN WOODMEN
· OF AMERICA

c

-

'

BOXED lN- Vlfllnla's H ceblel' Ralpll !lampoon
can't get to tbe ball u North caroli'IB defenders Jeb
Barlow, 43, and James Worthy, 52, ._~ blm In dur!Dg

flnt baH action In Saturday's Atlan\lr- Coast Con-

ference game being played at Carmichad-oAudltorlum
In Chapel HID, N.C. (AP ~..:&amp;serpboto).

By WILL GRIMSLEY
AP Special Correspondent
CINCINNATI (AP) - Everybody talks about the weather, but Don
CoryeU has nightmares about it.
·
"I don't like the cold and snow," said the he~d coach of the San Diego
Chargers, who came to arctic Cincinnati to meet the Bengals for the
American Football Conference title today and a place in the Super Bowl.
"I'm not used-to it. Nobody in California is used to it. It makes the football heavier and harder to throw and catch."
On the other hand, Coach Forrest Gregg of the favored Bengals appeared less than upset if not actually delighted. He knows the Chargers
live by the pass.
·
"I don't want my players e~en thinking about the cold," he said Saturday. " It can be a distraction."
· Windblown snow. swept into this river town overnight and posed-a
threat of slippery conditions plus numbing cold lor the championship
game. Forecasters predict a temperature of 10 to !6 degrees with .a wind
chill factor of 30 below. .
·
Coryell said his team would be equipped with n~nnal thermal protection.plus heavy gear and gloves.
·
"We have rented a bench heated to keep bottoms warm," he said. "It
seats only 20. I expect a scramble."
The Charger~, whose quarterback, Dan Fouts, generally throws bet-·
ween 35 arid 40 passes a game, have had ideal conditions for their past
eight games - five in sunny San Diego, one each In warm Tampa and
Oakland, and the other under a dome in Seattle.
Some of the National Football League's most historic games bavc been
played in ihe kind of foul, numbing weather predicted for Riverfront ·
Stadium Sunday.
· One of the most historic was the 1967 National Football Conference
championship game at Green Bay between the Packers and the Dallas
Cowboys.
They called It the "Ice Bowl."
The field was frozen and the wind chill factor was 60 below zero.
Packers' quarterback Bart Starr sneaked for a touchdown in the closing
minutes for a 21-17 victory.
The Packers then w~nt to sunny Miami and beat the Oakland Raider.s ·
33-14 for Coach Vine1l Lombardi's second straight Super Bowl title.
The 1962 NFL championship game in Yankee Stadium between the New
York Giants and Packers also was played in windy, sub-zero temperatures. The Packers won 16-7.
• The Giants also were winners in the famous "Sneaker Game," when
. they donned sneak.ers at halftime to beat the Chicago Be'ars 30-13 on the
glassy Polo Grounds turf in !934.
The Cleveland-Oakland playoff game al Cleveland a year ago was
another memorable contest.
It was 16 below on the field. but Tom Mees of ESPN cable TV, who was
on the roof at the tline, recalled that the wind-chill factor there was 50.
below zero.
"Jeff Israel, our cameraman, had iciCles running down his
mustache,"Mees said. "He had a can of Coke brought to him and it exploded."
Don Weiss, executive dir_ector of the NFL, recalled that films taken of
the game were frozen despite relay rimncrs who carried It from the field
to fires under the stands to prevent destruction.
"We thought about postponing the game," Weiss said, "but we learned
it was going to be 20 below the next day. It was 40 below when we got the
airport."

'·

Weiss offered one consolation .
"Extreme heat is worse than extreme cold," he_said. "Army experts,
making surveys, say deaths result from heat exhaustion."

NFL Playoffs at a Glance
Natlfllll Foulhlllll~ague l'l•ytlffM
Ry Tile A11110da~ Pre1111
Suncby, D.!oe.%7
WUd.C1nl Playuff11

Amerk.n Cual~rtatt'
Buffalo 31 , New Vork Jd.!l 27
N1Uoaal C...ere~ee
New York d la.nl.a 'n, Phll1dclphiu 21

·CIIDfrreDa! Scmlll•l•

s.cunt.y.J•a:t

N1 UUM~Ctafe~

Dallas 31, Tampa BMy D
San

Oi e~o

Amerklia Cotdenenet

Amcrl&lt;n Confereocc
CinclnmtU 211, BuUulu ~~
·"- N11tlnrull Cutlfettntf'
Sa n Fr;mciiiCO lll , New York Ghtnbt 2~
Cnnft!Mtt~ Clul mpitm~~hiPII

.Sundly'111 G1me:•
Amt'!rlr•n Ctlnlt'! reiM'e
SHn Dicl(lll:l l Clncllm~ttl
N•UmwiC•Iftrt:rlt't'
Oalluli al Ban l&lt;' ran chlco
S..prr Rowl X\' I
Sunday, J1n.U
AF C cha 1npltlrl

41, MUnni 31, OT

.

Sund1 y, J11n.J

Ponthu:, Mich.

"'"· Nf'C cllHmpJ oo

HI

Jowa edges Illinois five, S:6-50
By MARGY McCAY
was led by Tucker with 17 points and
Auoelalecl Prell Writer
. Griffin had 13 points and eight
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- Iowa 's rebounds. Michael Payne equaled '
Mark Gannon scored 15 points, in- Gannon's point production and was
eluding a one-handed shot that stop- the onlx other Hawkeye in double
ped a second-half Illinois surge, to figures .
give the seventh-ranked Hawlteyes a
Doal '1%, Gam«ocu 71
56-liO victory in regionally_televised
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - A
Big Ten college basketball Satur· technical foul call and clutch
day.
·
shooting by reserve guard Eric
Iowa, ID-1 overaU and 2-0 in the Slaymaker helped No. aSan Franleague, took advantage of the lllini's ciSCO to a n-71 overtime college
foul trouble and forged an 111-10 lead 'basketball victory over South
with nine minutes, 17 seconds left in caroUna Saturday.
the first half. The score wa.s 28-20 at
Slaymaker hit a 10-foot jumper
intermiasion.
· - with *I seconds left in regulation to
The Hawkeyes streiched their . tie the score a~ ~. He also ~red
lead to 13 points before they went . San Francisco s last tl)ree pomts on
cold withaboutl3minutestoplay.
free~ in the last !I seconds of .
Illinois' James Griffin scored on a
overtime'
three-point play, Craig Me.- adOne of thole free throws followed a
ded a balket and Derek IW1Jer bad
t.edJnlcal foul call by official Frank
two to briDg llllnoiB to within four
Buctlewicz againlt South carolina,
polnlut.~ with 7:51 rematnlncH.
That's'when GBMOII !ltepped in to
San FranclscO, 1l-l, was holding
break up the IUlnola run. Iowa uaed the ball for one allot and Soutll
tour clutch free throws by Sieve car-· carolina wuln a zone defense when
fino to seal the victory.
Buddewlcz warned the Gamecocb
~- which fell to a-3 and 1-1!
with*' seconds left to come out and

Meyer who began his career at
DePaul '1n 1942, becomes the fifth
college coach in history t.o reach the
I ,000 select circle.

pressure the ball. Nine seconds later
Buckiewicz called a technical on
South carolina for not forcing the action. Slaymaker's free throw put the
Dons ahead 76-69.
The Dons brought the ball ir&gt;bounds and Slaymaker was fouled,
makir.~ both free throws with eight
seconds left. south carolina's Kenny ·
, Holmes then SCQred a final basket
with two seconds left.Jimmy Foster, with 22 points and
15 'rebounds, . was the game's top
scorer. San FranciSCO's Quintin
Dailey, the nation's tlftli leading
scorer with a 26.6 average, scored 21

The Sth-rariked Blue Demons, ·now
12-1, did not finish off the Flyers, !1-3,
until the final four seconds when
reserve senior center George
Morrison missed two free throws.
wtth z&amp; seconds remaining,
DePaul's Skip Dillard, who .led his
team with 18 points, was called for
' traveling and the ball switched hands to Dayton.
Dayton guard Kevin Conrad
passed to Morrison, who was foUled
by Terry Cummings while shooting.
With four seconds left; Morrison
missed the first of two free throws
with DePaul ~dlfig 7~- After a
time out, he missed the second.

points.

DePaul7!, Daytod 18
,
CHICAGO (AP) - Guard Kenny
1
Patterson made a clutch defensive
CI.i;:AaiNG A PA111 - ClndDIUitl Bengahl •tadlum worker Joe
play with 1:210 remaining and BerE-tweepldle
1\eplln lbe ~~eating area •• the team practice• on the
nard Randolph sank two free throws
1ldel._ oldie covered field Satu..W.r in ClnclnnaU. A heavy overnight
Patterson was . foqled on the
as DePaul edged Dayton 71_. on
.-t.U ud Durrlfll during the day caused 1t&amp;dlum personnel to
Saturday and Blue Demons Coach rebound and hit on one of lw!l free
keep
tile
field
covered
•• the Bnplll aad the Silo Diego Chargen comRay Meyer picked up his 662rki win throws with one second left for the
pleleclpnctlce
for
Suaday'•
AFC tide game. (AP La•erphoto). .
victory. '
in 1,000 g8111es.

''

''·

-

_ _

__:l j - -- --

-

-----'----1• ......,___ _

~

�•,

'
'

.

f'age-C -2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. \Ia .

Jan . 101 1982
Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

·Big Bla~ks p_ost 50- 35 cage
victory over Wahama five
· ByGENEMooRE

.

POINT 'pLEASANT - Point
Pleaaaot's supertor height was too
nluch for Coach Lewis Hall's
Wa.hatna White Falcons here Friday
night 88 the Big Blacks won their first game of tbe season, 50-35. .
Point Pleasant's record Is now 1·1. ·
WahamadroppedtoW . .
A capacity crowd witnessed a
strong perfo!"!DBnce by the Big
Blacks 88 they outrebounded the
smaller White Falcons, 42·19. Ed
Legge, 6-8 poet man, had 17 rebounds aild 13 points; 6-4 John David had
10 rebounds.
.·
•
•
Leading scorer .In the game was
Point guard Todd "Ice" Gibson with
20 points. Rod LitUefield had nine
points and n,ine rebo1111ds. For
Wahama, Alan Machir was the
lea~ng scorer . with nine pofnts,
wh1le Kendall Weaver had eight
points.
·
·
The Big Blacks . .rreil to an 8-0
lead before- Alan Machir hit
Wahama's first basket at the 2:56
mark. Point PleaSant ·led 11-4 after
one quarter. ·

. . SHOOTS FROM THE OUTSIDE - . Ke.dall blodt lt. Aile pldored are Joba Da'rid (No. U) and Ed
Weaver (No. 11) takes a sbot from tbe oullllde wblle Lege (No. 34) ul PoiJQ Pll!uaot and Allul Machir (No.
·Rod Littlefield (No. 12) of Point Pleapnt attempllllo :10) from Wahama. (Pbotoby Charlie Lee.)

Late ·comeback. gives
Rockets 75-69 .victory'
'

'

.

'

: · PEEK·A·BOO - It appears Logan's CbiJ) Patterson (12) Ill playing
;••peet...boo" with Gallla's Phil King (21) and .James Lane (33) in lhls ac•tloo
pboto. durtog Friday's SEOAL cage battle at Gallipolis.
j

''

PASSING GAME- GaiUpolls' Lynn Sheets ~ 15), came off the bench .
to tum In a solid perf~rmanee lor Gallia Academy's Blue Devils against
visitlug Logan Friday. Sheets tallied lour points lor the winners.

Area cage
standings

IGallipolis ·has support from

ALL GAMES
W L

TEAM

OP
444
8 2 560 511
8 2 668 570
p
8 0 625

Wheelersburg

Gallipolis
Athens

Portsmouth
Ch il licothe

7 2 . 692
6 J 401

Wellston

bench

572

353

504 497
1 1 99 100
4 5 498 463
5 6 806 766
Washington CH
2 s 361 384
Logan
2 8 565 665
MeiQs
o 9· 464 632
Non· SEOAL. results :
Pt. Pleasant SO Wahama 35

Pt. Pleasant
Waverly
Jackson

GALUPOUS - With three starters in foul trouble early, Gallino1i•
had to rely on its bench in Frtday
niKht's 57·35 Southeastern Ohio
League basketball victory over
visiting Logan.
Senior guards Phil King and Marty Glenn, and junior forward Tim
Madison all had four personals, and
spent considerable time on the sidelines as Coach Jim Osborne's Blue
Devils chal!&lt;ed up their eighth victory in 10 outings.
The Gallians finished first half
play in the SEOAL with a perfect 7-0
record.
"Our junior guards (!;yon Sheets
and Steve Skidmore) played super,"
said Coach Osborne following the
contest. " Lanier (Tim) came off the
bench to turn in another good ef·
fort," Osborne added.
" Our kids were real aggressive
out there tonight. We did an ex·
cellent job on the defensive boards,
especially Lane, (James)," Osborne
continued.
"Defensively, we were strong,
especially on our end of the court.
We kept them from pressing and
earned ourselves several opportunities to score," Osborne concluded.
Gallipolis led all the way as Coach
Kirk Harrunan's Chieftains dropped

Wheelersburg 51 Delawa r e 45
H illsboro 65 Washington CH 54

SEOAL VARSITY
W

L

P

7 0 413
5 I 406
4 3 450
3 3 357
3 4 385.
3 4 467
2 5 .379
0 7 354
27 27 3211

GalliPOlis
Athens
Wellston
I rpnton
WaVerly .
'Jackson

Logan

Meigs

TOTALS

Frida·v·s results:
Ga llipolis 57 Logan 35

OP
343
333
461

334
357
444
448
491
3211

AI hens 58 Waverly 55 lot) .

I ron ton 70 Jackson 56
Wellston 74 M eigs69

SEOAL RESERVES

TEAM

OP
1 330 239
5 1 260 212
4 2 282 216
4 .3 285 241
' 3 262 270
3 4 281 311
1 6 222 . 333
0 7 208 308
27 27 2130 2130
W
6

J ac kson
Athens
Ironton
Ga llipolis
Waverly
Wel lston
M eigs
Logan

TOTALS

· Friday's results :

L

P

Ga ll ipolis42 Logan 25

Athens 3~ Wa-.rly 27

Jackson 47 Ironton 45
Well ston 60 Mei gs 41

Tuesday's games:
M ilton at Pt. Pl easant
Meigs at F ederal Hock ing
Lancaster at Chillicothe
Wa sh i ngton CHat Wilm i ngton

Sat~:~rday's g~mes :

Meigs at Jackson
Waverly at, Ironton
Athens at Logan

Fairland at Wheelersburg
Co lumbu ~

mouth

blue Imps

St. Charles at Ports·
•

.

aefeat Logan
Ceam,
42-25
I
.

.

Well ston at Gallipolis

UST

·!!""

• score by quarters:

¢alllpolls
~~gan

·
. 12 6 11 13- 42'
· 2 6 9 8-25.
I

11,080.00
'9717.00
. '9237.00
'9361.00
'9576.00
'9988.00
'9189.00
17261.00
.
17413.00
1
7377.00
'6819.00
17085.00

1

.

·. ·pAT HI·LL FORD, INC.

,.

·-

S. 3'rd Ave.
I

LOG.AN 135) - . Angle 1-6·8; Me·
Dan iel l · l ·J; Morgan 7·2· 16; Trucco
0·0·0; Nloore 0·0-0: Gill1 -0·2; York o1·1; Patterson 1· 2 4; Manke 0·1· 1;
Helber 0·0·0; Murtha 0-0·0;

Van·

vorhisO·O·O. TOTALS 11-lJ·JS.
GALLIPOLIS U7J - Bergdoll1 ·0·
2; Madison 3· 2·8; Lane 4·3·11 ,· Gl enn

4·1-9; Ki_ng 3·2-8; Skidmore 2·1-5;

Lanier 2·2·6; Sheets 2·0·4; Edelmann

e-0·0: Isaacs 1·2-4; Allen 0-0·0; Clark
0·0-0. TOTALS 22-13-57.
Score by quarters r

Loga n

Ga l lipolis

4
16

9 ~ 13- 35
8 14 19- 57

WHOLESALE • RETAIL

SWIMMING
POOLS

outstanding etlort with 25 points
Me~ bit 29 of 55 from the iloor
while Roger Kovalchik had a great Including a torrk113o1181n thetlnal
game with 18. Randy Murray bad trarne. The locals hit 11 or 24 from
10 points and Nick Riggs added 9.
the line, had 18 turnovers and 22,
Wellston blasted ol! In the first personal fouls.
quarter to a 16-Siead, and Ironically
Wellston canned 29 of 50 from the
sharp-shooting Derrow was held field, hts 17 of 23 from the line and
scoreless during the Initial, stretch. bad 35 rebounds.
The Rockets tried to use a run·
Boh Ashley, who had 12 of Meigs
nlng game plan, then fell back Into ' totai 22 rebounds, went Into the reIts zone on defense.
cord books' as Melis' all·tlme leadMeigs did an o\Jtstaodlng job Urn· lnlf rebounder with a career hlgh
ttlng Wellstol) to the long shot and
~- Ashley surpassed ~!~~·league
on several occasions forced the bad standout Steve Ohlln'ger, wbo set
shot. However, Wellston was tough the
last year at 383. Asbley's
on the boards and got two or three 25 points also moved him Into third
shots each trip down the floor.
place In aii·Ume scoring with 563
Meigs held tough ·the second points. Ashley plaCe!; third behind
quarter and . was always within Ohlinger's !iii! and teaderJetiTyo's
strlklng distance, despite going to 814 points.
the lockerroom at the haU, down by
Ashley started the year Ill eighth
13 at 36-23.
place on both IIJts.
During the third frame both clubs
The talellted senior eager In juat
played fairly even, although the nine games Is averaging 14 points
Marauders didn't gain any ground per game and 11 rebounds
and trailed by 16 at the buzzer, 57· pergame.
41.
Meigs played_ Nelsonville-York
In the fourth quarter Meigs last evening, tbeo travels to Fedshowed qualities of a good learn, eral Hocking on Tuesday.
not giving up, unlll the tlna1 buzzer.
Meigs t69i - A$hley 11 ·3·25;
Meigs exhibited a strong and elfec· Murray 5-0·10; Rigg54·1·9; Edwards
live press and began running with 1·4-6; Kovalchi~ 8·2·18; and Whaley
0·1·1. Totals 29·11-69.
the ball effectively.
Wellston (75) - Derrow 13-11·37; ·
The Marauders started to work Peters 2·1-6; Benson 5-.0·10; Erwin 0the balllnslded to Ashley who con· 1-1 ; Perkins ·4·0·8i Mio~\.ly · -:t-5-ll &gt;
oected on several key goals Ill the llloo~lli 0·0·0 and C. Derrow 2·0·4. .
Totals 29·17·75.
bid for ~ victory.
·
' By quarters:
Despite the effort time ran out Meigs
8 15 18 28-69
-16 20 11 18-75
and Wellston claimed the 'I5.G9 win. Wellston

.

For Your Winter Need
Call304·429·4788

·HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

MAKES RECORD BOOKS Meigs' Bob Ashley went Into the

record books as the Marauders'
aiJ..tlme leading rebounder with
393 with 12 rebounds In Friday's
loss ·at Wellston. Asbley surpassed the old mark · held by
Steve Ohlinger. His 25 polnlll put
him In third place In the all-time
scoring race behind Ohlinger's
658 paints and Jell Tyo's 814.

Frld•y'• Collfff! lbeketball S ~orn
By The A....,llled P-•

Pomeroy
Landmark
Jack w : tarsey, Mgr.
Ph. 992·2181

HIGH SHOT ~ Ed Legge (No. 341 of Point Pleaaant lakes a sbot over
Wallamll'• Travis Gny (No. %2). Also pictured are KeviD Smith and John
David (No. 4%1 of Point Pleasant and KeodaU Weaver (No. 11). (Photo by
Charlie Lee.)

ldalw St . -1. MoniOtN"
fVe a~•

EAST

-~11

Dickin•o" ·62, Gcu,..bur6 62
FrmJbom JIKJ, TuJu 57
fV. C• rolit~~t 4&amp;T SJ, HotcJanl U. 41
Prlnet!IUII s~.. YeiiP 417
S.Ceroli111 St . 73, Del,...•r• Sr. D8

Me.d co 61. Air FOrce 61

Jot#/ St. 75, U.S. l~tl ttl'flldo ttol b5

Suule 46. Trirdly Vethmt 36

Wt~tllbt~lmt 60, Arlao11a 51. OT
lf'lil&amp;ln-ton Sr. 53, Ariaono Sr. 43
W'l!ber S1. 7~ r\fonuu1o Sr..16

SOUTH

Wolle .&amp; LH 73, B~tll•iir tiS

'fOURNAMENTS

IIIIDWEST

Rinker'• Cl ... le
· f'lnt R..,•d
t.,,.hiJh 70, IW•rl~r 611
Fairfield 75, l.llful•, Md. 71J
Cltn.T..,...ey
· ·hret RMnd
C•mpb~U 58, a.,JE .. newt'oob,e~t 57

Nor-rll Dolw tn 79, So~trh Dolm ta 72
1V .ColorDdo .U , S.Dalcma Sr. "-1
SOUTHWEST
NW OlctahamO 95. Olrlallomo CllriJ .9J
SU' Olrlahoma 69, Ce nl ..~l ., Okla. 67 OT

FARWEST

Den ve r 79, ll'e~r e rtt S1. 63

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mar..

. College results

. PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM

followed by KOCI ~·a nine '
points. John Oshel and Howal'\1
ded when Todd Gibson hit two free Given had seven rebounds apiece.
throws to give Pint Pleasllnt a 25-20
For the Wahima Little P'aleons,
lead.
.
,
· their leading scorer and rebounder
Point Pleasant held a 34-27 lead af. was Mark Roush with 13 polnta
ter three periods.
seven rebounda.
..
In the las! quarter, Point Pleasant ·
Pint Pleasant plays the sec;oo
managed to ojlen a 41'&gt;-29 lead with ranked team In Class M, the MOtor.
4:44 reinaining in tbe game. (;ibson Greyhou.~ds Tuesday at 7:311 p.m. on
scored seven straight points lor the . Point's floor.
BlgBI~cks.
Wahama will play at Kyger Creek
The closest Wahama was able to on Tuesilay.
get alter that wa&amp;15 points, 50-15.
Box score:
Both teams had · an off-night in
PT. PL'EASANT (50)
Johr
shooting. Point Pleasant was 20-47
David 1·2-4: Ed Leooe 6·1-13; T.od&lt;
for43 percent; Wahama hit 12 for 54
Slmpklns.:i·0-4; Rod Llmefleld • ·1-9:
shots for only 22 percent. Point Todd Gibson 7-6· ~ ; Joe Wall is o-o-o.•
Kevin Smith 0·0·0; Scott RutherfOI't•
Pleasant had 19 assists; Wabama 10.
Donnie Jo~so-o-o ; Randy M(:.
Coach Lennie Barnette attributed .0-0-0;
Donald 0·0-0; Rod eordman· 0·0 ·0~
the wi~ to the crowd and the players' John Hamma(k 0·0-0. TOIIII 20·10..
enthusiasm. He also cited Point so.
WAHAMA 135) - Kendall Weave1'
Pleasant's work on the bOards and·
2-4-8; Estel Lavender ,2·0·•; Travl.:
felt Point Pleasant's defense led by Gray 1-3·5; Don VanMeter 1 · 1 · ~,,
Rodney LitUefield, was a decisive Alan Machir 3·3-9; Jim Powell2-0·4,'
Shawn Paugh 1·0·2; Eric Embletofi
factor.
Totals 12·11·35.
In the reserve contest Coach 0·0·0.
Score by quarters :
Larry Markham's Little Blacks up- Pt . Pleasant
11 14 9 16-Sif
4 16 7 8- 35
ped their record to 2.{1 with a 61-35 Wahama
Reserve sc;ore: Pt. Pleasant 61.
victory over lhe Wahama Little Wehama35.
Falcons. Coach Tern Cullen's lads
are now 2·2 on the season.
The Little Blacks, using 10 men
and all of them scoring were led by
Dldyou~er
6-2 Randy McDonald's 15 points,

Zeroing in on tbe basket, Wabama
cut Point's lead to ~20 . The half en-

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prlc. . apply to dog food,
tool Juat compare out price
per pound with other leacllng brandt and, In moat
caa.. , you'll be plaaaantly
turprlatd at how much you
: can aava.
we have Gravy Style,
Nuggeta, .Puppy Food Incl.1,
tina Cat F'ood, too. Btop In,
pick up • bag.

.

lied 17 points· and Tom Duncan

1981 LTD Crown Victoria ·2 dr. Tutone Brown
1981 Granada GL 4 dr. Dark Blue Met.
1981 Granada l 2 dr. Tutone Silver
1981 Granada l 4 dr. Tutone Brown
1981 Thunderbird, White
1981 Thunderbird; ll Blue.
1981 Mustang 3 dr. Tutone Red/White
1981 ESCORT L 3.dr, Red
1981 ESCORT L 3 dr. Tutone Brown
1981 ESCORT L 3 dr. Dark Green
1981 ESCORr L4 dr. Wagon Red
1981 COORIER Pickup, Red (With Rebate)

WELLSTo'N-Desplte a determilled, late-game col'l'H!back effort
by the Meigs Marauders, Wellston's Rockets rolled to a 75-69 w1n ·
Ill ~EOAL boys baske¥ action
here Friday evening. The Rockets
were led by a powerfill 37 point ef·
fort by 6-3 senior"John Derrow.
The bopsts Wellston to 6-4 overall
and 4-3 In loop play. Meigs Is wtnl~s at 0.9 and 0~.
Joining Detrow Ill double figures
Was Scott Massey with 11 and Benson wi\h 10.
For Meigs Bob Asbley bad an .

MONITENN-~"·

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~

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C/Jamw/Mwez·

JANUARY CLEARANCE ON All 1981 MODELS

pped In with 12 markers as Coach
· ck Payton's Gallipolis Blue Imps·
•efeated visiting Logan, 42·25, in
friday ~ight' s preliminary basketball contest.
: Gallipolis, now 7-3 overall, upped
js South~stern Ohio League mark
Co +3. Logan dropped to 2-a overall
tnd0-7 in league play.
.
~ GAHS led 12·2, 18-10 and 29-17 at
a,;; quarternnarks.
·
fchuck Stufflebean led the
rapooses' attack with six points.
·
.
• Box score:
: GALLIPOLIS RESERVES 142) _ :
J·0-6; Duncan 6·0.12; Smith 2~5; Carter 1·0·2; Ellces.sor 8·1·17;
ek 0·0·0; Garller 0·0·0; Rathburn
IJIO·O; HogaQ 0-0·0; Tope 0-0·o.
TOTALS 20·2-42.
.
, LOGAN RESERVES (25) · Picken 2-0-4; DenniS 1-1-3; Murlha 0·
l-4: Stufflebean 2·2·6; Conrad 1-0-2;
"yers 1·0-2; Johnson 1·2·,4. TOT AU

Logan played at Marietta Satur·
day night. The Chiefs play at Meigs
Friday, and host Athens Saturday.
Gallipolis plays at Athens Friday
and hosts Wellston Saturday.
Box score:

TIJCSON, Ariz. ( AP) · - Craig
. Stadler fired a 6-under-par 64 for a 129
total and a 4-stroke lead after the se. cond round of the $300,00l Joe
Garag!ola-Tucson Open. Alan Taple,
who shot a 66, was second at 133.
DURBAN, South Africa (AP) Mark McNulty of South Africa shot
his third straight three-under-par 69
and took a two-stroke lead at 'lJJ1 after
three rounds of the $52,500 Sisa
Classic.

t GALUPOUS - Chris Ellcessor

•HS.

to 2-a overall and 2-5 inside the conference.
GAH,S was on top 164 after one
period. It was 24-13 at halftime and
38-22 going into the final stanza.
James Lane paced the Blue Devils
with II points and 12 rebounds. Mar·
ty Glenn added nine points. Phil
King and Tim Madison had eight
points apiece.
Tim Lanier chipped in with six.
$teve Skidmore had five and Lynn
Sheets four. Kev Isaacs came off the
bench to score four markers for the
winners.
Russ Bergdoll had his best night of
lhe year on the boards, picking off
six rebounds for the Gallians.
G'allipolis hit 22 of 49 field goal attempts for 44 percent. GARS was 13
of 17 at the foul line for 76 percent.
The Blue Devils had 36 rebounds
and 14 turnovers.
Logan hit 11 of 41 shots from the
field for 26 percent..The Chiefs were
off.fonn at the fo~l line, sinking only
13 of 22 attempts for 59 percent. UlS
missed five straight front ends of
bonus shots late in the second
period. Logan had 23 rebounds,
seven by Jim Angle. The Chiefs had
16 turnovers.
Jeff Morgan paced Logan with 16
points. Angle added eiKht.

Stadler leads golf
meet by 4 strokes ·

Friday's games :
Gal lipolis a t Atheri s
Jackson at Wav erly
Ironton at Wellston
~ o g ~ n at Meigs
Pt. Pleasant at Barboursville
Whi tehall at Chillicothe
Wa shington CHat Circleville
Northwest itt Wheel ersbur g
Columbus Centra l at Port smouth

ELBOW BENDER- GoUla's Tim Lanter (53) slipped inside lor two
• polnlll with a second quarter move 'on Logan's Jim Gill (20). Lanier
:·-lallied six jlololll and bad two rebounds lor the winners. (Keith Wllllon
:photos).

•
•
In
57-35 VICtory

7 4 734 729

s. 4

Ironton

TEAM'

STARTERS ON BENCH- GARS Coach Jim Osborne gives signals to
his players while starting guards Marty Glenn, center, and Pbll King,
rigbt, watch game from·beocli'with lour persoiiBis.

In the second canto, Ed Legge bad
nine points and seven rebounds to
help the Big Blacks open a 19-a
. spread. This was the biggest lead of
• the first ball.

.SAI'E-T•TPSIM ltl#lliwilelli""•d•~andYow'-.

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CHESTER, OHIO

'

••

.

•. :

•

�..

..:..

J

-Jan. 10,

Southern rips anoth~r
SVAC opponent, . 94-49
.

SHORT JliMPER- Eastern's Tim DDlj43) goes
up lor a short jumper In Friday's SVAC con\"YI at
Kyger Creek. DIU finished the game with 15 points but

spent some valuable minutes on the bench with four
fouls. Kyger Creek's Tim Price (30) pulls up 1o prevent
fouling DUI. Krls Wilson photo.

·..:·B obcats use balanced
•
:~:attack ID
67~63 victory
'

.:

CHESHIRE - By using a well·

; balanced scoring attack Kyger
:·, Creek's Bobcats posted their fifth
·, IVIn 1n six outings here Friday
,. ' '
night, 67•63 over the Eastern
' : 'Eagll!fl. ·
· ' ' It was KC's first cage victory
an Eastern team In five
. ). over
'

· ; seasons.

· '. The win also puts the Bobcats of
:: ·eoacll Kelth Carter Into sole posses·
'. ' ston of second place In the loop
. standings behind defending cham: ' Pion. Southern.
1
•• • Coach Dennis Eichinger's Ea·
···· ~1!!1 dropped to i&gt;-3 overall and 1-21n
., .the SVAC.
'· 2 ' Weather permitting, Kyger
'
'Creek played at New Boston Satur; ·. cjay night and wtU host Wahama in
non-league battle Tuesday night.
' ' · Eastern goes to Miller TuesdaY.
Eastern took an IUJ advantage in
· : '!be opening minutes of the first
• 'q uarter only to see Kyger Creek re. group folloWing a timeout. Mike
· ··· fUssell, the game's leading point
.. · ·prooucer with 26 points. canned
elgbt during Eastern's 1S point first
' lluarter whlle 6-4 center Tim DIU
·· put in three of hfs 15 points.
:·· Kyger Creek came back -behind
·· '.the shooting of junior and senior for.. ·warns, Jeff Moles and Tim Prlce.
The qyarter e~ded with Eastern
ahead 1.5--14.
·The Bobcats took control ln the
second period as Eastern fell on
bard Urnes by scoring just nine
. points.
Kelth Clark, junior guard, who
fouled out early In the fourth period,
:;· led the Botx:at scoring with six
points whlle Moles added four , P.J.

.

' 'a

.

.

By scon' WOLFE
next round, while Its quick de!ense
Southern won the reserie contest
RACINE-The rampaging South· Umlted SWHS to just 13 markers.
44-29led by Wade CannoUy with 13.
eiJ] Tol'll&lt;ldoes swept through the f!.t the .halt the ·score stood 49-24.
Steve Pelfrey bad 9 for
Southwestern.
·
highlands · of Southwestern With ' ' '
~t intensity Friday evening, de- ·
During bal1tlme.the ;whirling Tor- · Southern travels to Kyger Creek
featlng Its fcie 94-49, adding the
nadoes gained second Wind and next Friday to play tbe red hot
u ..... ,".A
·
f113lnlalned a bltstertng pace to the Kyger Creek Bobcats of Coach
.....,.........ers to its long ll~t of casuend of the game. ·eoach w_olfe
Keith Carter In a very Important
allies during ibe 1981-82 basketball
.season. ThedomlnantTornadoesot
cleared bls bench early In the t-on~ SVAC battle. The Tornadoes then .
Coach Carl Wolfe are n.ow 1().() overtest and every Tornado gained vaj- host non-league powerhouse Alex·
all and 4~ wlthln the SVAC. The
uable playing time.
ander on Saturday.
hustling Highlanders drop to 1-6
Southern hlt38of8lfor47percent
Southern - Kent Wolf~ 13·3·29;'
overall and 1-3 in loop, play.
from the field, canned 1S of 'n for67 Richard Wolfe 4·0·8; Jay Rees 5-1·
For the third time tbts season ev- ·percent from the llne and commit· · 11 ; Zane Beegle 3-0-6; Robert Brown
Tom Roseberry 1·0·2; Tyrone
ery Tornado hit the scoring ted 21 personal fouls and 19 tumov- 5·3·13;
Brinager ()- 1· 1; Scott Frederictt 2·2·
colurnn.
ers. Southern won the battle of the 6; Nick Bostick 1·6·8; Chris .Bostick
Senior point guard Kent Wolfe boards 49-21 led by Brown's 10. . 0 1·1; Allen .Pape 2·1·5; Rusty Cum·
ins 2·0·4. Totats 38-18-94.
agalnledth,escorl!)gparadewith29 Paul McNeal had ten for m SouthwesternPaul Mc Neel 5-3·
polnis, while Robert BroWII and Southwestern.
13; Randy Layton 3·0·6; Scolt Lewis
Jay FU!es put forth another outSVfHS hlt 18 of 42 from the floor 1·3·5; Gary BaKer 4-2·10'; Rob Price
standingetfortwith13and·11polnts fora respectable 43 percent, whlle 2·2·6; Roger Wells 3·3·?. Totals 18·1349.
respectively.
connecting on 12 of 23 from the II·
By Quarters:
22 27 20 25--94
For Coach Lloyd Myers' High- ne.The Highlanders had 32 turnov- Southern
11 13 li 14- 49
Southwestern
landers ' Paul ·McNeal and Gary
ers and 18 fouls.
.Baker agaln hltdoubleftgures with
13 and 10 points.
After the ·first minute of play
Whether it's State
things seemed fairly . evenly
Farm life, health,
matched, but the pages quickly
home or car
turned.
Insurance, you can
Southern r~ to one Its fa·
get more value for
vorite chaptei's and began to blow
your Insurance
the Highlanders away. As Coach
dollars. Find outfnr
Carl Wolfe put It, 'Wecouldn'toveryourself. Call
power !)~em, but our experience
me today.
and qute)mess made things work.'
It was th1s faithful formula that.
the Tornadoes used to take control
of the game. Afler Richard. Wolfe
CALL ME.
and Kent Wolfe a!lded the first two
buckets, then Paul McNeal and
·cary Baker retallated to knot the
• score at 44, Southern went to a
straight man-to-man press.
Throughout the cllurse of the night
CAROLL SNOWDEN
the press and fast-paced SHS at·
417 Second Ave.
Gallipoli s, Oh .
tack led . to 32 Highlander miscues
Phone 446·4290
and 26 Southern steals.
South\llestern exhibited a potent /
STATE FARM
U&amp;fl JAIM
effort of lts own, and good hustle,
1nsur1nce Companies
Home OHicas:
however, at the end of the first
Bloomington.
Illinois
frame SHS led 2.2-11. The Tornado
Ulc• a flood neighbor, Stat• Flll'm Ia there.
fast break racked up'npointsln the

"Good service,
good coverage,
good price ...

that's
State·Farm
·insurance.''

Riffe came off the llench to pace Steve Waugh led the Bobklttens
Eailern With six markers. .
with nine points.
With both teams experiences foul .
EASTERN C63l - Ritchie i ·0·2;
trouble In the third quarter, Kyger Cole 1-1 ·3; Buckley 1·1·3; Riffe 5·2·
Creek came but wlt!1 a 5Q.42 lead 12 ; M. Bissell 10·6·26; Di114-7·15 and
R. Bissell1·0·2. Totals 23 - ~Hl .
going Into the final e@ht minutes.
KYGER 'cREEK (61) - .Clark 6·0'
At one time, the Bobcats led bY ·u
12; Sands 5·2· 12; Moles 5-6-16; Price
many as 12 points In the third quar- 6-2-14; Stroud 0·2-2; Barr 2·2·6;
2· J.S . TOTALS 26·15-67.
ter, 40-28 but Eastern, behind the Bradbury
.By quarters:
(hot shooting of Bissell roared back. Eastern
15 ? 18 2163
14 16 20 17- 67
Employing a 1·3-1 trap, East- Kyger Creek
ern's offensive came to Ufe as Bls- r------------------------....JL------------,,-----------_:___
sell and Dlll ' broke J)le Meigs
Counttans , _wjUW.· tllfee points at
least tWice during the final quarter.
With 1: 33 remaining, Out converted two fouls to cut the margin
to 60-57.
A clutch basket on an offensive
rebound by senior Tim Barr, a foul
shot by Barr, basket by Moles and
basket a'nd twQ fouls shots by senior
David Sands provided to be the difference In final minute and one half
of a~tlon.
Moles led Kyger Creek with 16
points; Price had 14, whlle Clark
and Sands finished with 12 points

Sears

I

198~

Athens edges
Waverly 58 tO 55
ATHENS- Visiting Waverly took
lbe host Athens Bulldogs into ovectime Friday flight before bowing 51155 before a full house at Athens.
A free throw by Waverty•s Jerry
Miller tied the. regulation game at
49-49 with 1:09 remaining, but he
missed his second charity toss,
·which could have won the game.
Following an Athens turnover, the
Tigers had the ball for the final 42
seconds of the fourth period, but
Tom Thompson's forced 15-iooter
just before the hohl !ailed to connect.
In the overtime it was all Athens
as Steve Bruning made a steal and
scored, Brent Henry hit a fielder,
and later, two free throws. That put
Athens up, sa-49.
Waverly commlttei:t 14 of .its 22
personal fouls in the first hall, and
lour more in the overtime. Thom·
pson and Joe Branwn exited with
five personal fouls .
Following an early 4-2 Waverly
lead, the Bulldogs remained in control until-- the ··Tigers regained the
lead, 35-34, with 1:30 remaining in
the.third quarter.
This lead swelled to 42·38 after
three quarters .
The Bulldogs came out shooting
and hit the first six points of the fourth quarter for a 44-42 lead. This was
followed by three lead changes until
the 49-48 Athens lead was tied by
Miller's free throw.

IRONTON - Dennis Bacon and
Jay Wolfe combined for 39 points
Friday night in .leading Ironton to a
70.56 comf..lrom·behind SEOAL
triumph over visiting Jackson.
The lronmen broke a 16-16 first
period deadlock by hitting the first
goal of the second quarter before the
Tigers erupted lor 16 unanswered
points and a big32·18lead. ·
·
Four points by Jackson 's Matt
Bonzo closed the halltime gap to 32·
22, but when the third stanza ended

For the
record ...
Basketball

Btssellled Eastern with 26 points,

~allonal

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Athens shot 43 percent on 20 of 47 ,
converted 18 ol 33 at the line, and
claimed 25 rebounds with Bruning
getting seven.
Wiitverly made 23 of 4S lor 50 per·
cent, connected on nine ol 14 free
lhrows,s and grabbed 30 rebounds,
paced by Bill Preble's eight before
he fouled out with 2:31 left in
regu~ation play.

14
12
1'1
8

Hr! Uifllll

U1ah
Kan11U Clly

Dnllw

19
20
21
2·1

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19
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151-1

"

S~o~nday't

Bo•ton

Ke vin Malone 0·0·0 . TOTALS 28· 14-

70.

Score by quarters :

Jack son

16 6 13 21- 56

Ironton

16 16 19 19- 70 ·

Reserve score : Jack son 47 , Iron·

.424
..111./

IRONTON ('70)- Denni s Bacon 8·
4·70; J ay Wolf e 6· 7- 19 ; M ark Fi el ds
5·0· 10',: J immy M o rri s 3· 1· 7; R ic: k
Fritz 3·0·6; Bill Thomas 1·2·4; M a rk
Di ckens 1·0·2; Ed Rawlin s 1·0· 2;

:l '1

4'"

Gam•"

nl Nt&gt;w }t'rlf•y

RIO GRANDE - The Continuing
Education Office at Rio Grande
College and Conununity College will
offer four courses in physical Illness
tor area youths this winter.
·
According to Bernard E. Murphy,
assistant dean, continuing education
and off--campus programs, the courses will be offered at Lyne Center on
t.he college campus. Courses include
beginners gymnastics I ages sixeight), tumble bugs gyrrulastics
1ages four-five), beginning swimming, and advanced beginning

will be offered from 8:30-9:30 a.rrt.
each Saturday between Jan. 16 and
March 6. Tl!e course Will include
work on the balance beam, vault'and
bars. Some trami&gt;oline work will be
included.
.
The lwnble bugs gymnastics class
will be offered from 9:31HO:i!O a.m.
each Saturday between Jan. 16 and
March 6. The course will 'include the
basics for the young person in·
terested in gymnastics. Also, an in·
traduction to basic tumbling, wannup exercises, ~lance beam and
swirruning.
limited experience on .the tram·
The beginners gymna•'lics class · poline.

from
the state tothe
local
outlets,
collec·
who distributes
licenses
received
Is the money and returns it to the
Department of Natural Resources.
Each year a pol'tion of the license
writing lees collected are donated to
the Ohio Wildlife Legislative Fund.
Another major ·program of the
club is sponsoring the hunters'

However, both sides enjoyed a
good offensive night. .

HT's Greg Webb scored hls customary 21 points for the game, fol·
The Win places HT at 2-~ In me lowed by Toby Sheets with 1S and 10
by Jeff Barnes and Mllce
svAC and i&gt;-5 overall. North Gallla each
Rossiter. .
.
'
'
Is 0-3league play and 1-6 overall.
For
the
Pirates,
David Roberts
Early Into the game, the Wildcats
surged ahead at one point, 17-7. A led with 15 points and was assisted
aedes r1 foulJ and turnovers put by 13 each by Bo)lbY Blackburn and
'
Coach &amp;Nee Wllaon's crew back · Matt Kemper. .
Slau.tlcs
show
the Plralft had a
Into the pme. The stanza ended
better time of It, scoring 61 ·percent
with Hannan Trace on top, 19-16.

~ictory

Mel Weese, Southern's talented
junior guard lro her club with 1S
markers, followed by sophomore
· Debbie Michael wlth 13, Laren
Wolfe had fourteen rebounds and
two points. while McNeal grabbed
11 rebounds for SW .

..

"

him to the bench with hls ~'fth personal. !'101' about the next mtnutn of
play Ohio Valley played three on five
basketball. With less than half a
minute to go Cross Lanes had to drop
to four players because of foul
trouble. The first ·overtime ended in
a 59-$ tie.
. .
In the second overtime Cross
Lanes once again took a four point
lead·. Ohio Valley fought back· to
within two with a bucket by Larry
Miller. With less than 20 secondlj to
go John Godwin stepped to tile foul
line and sank both ends ol a one and
one to tie the game.
·
Early in the third overtime, Cr08a
Lanes lost another player due to
·fouls .. With the odds now even with
threeplayerseach,OhioValleywen(
ontoposta74-67vlctory.
Leading scorers ,for Ohlo Valley;
were John Elardo with 19 points aflll.
Lonnie Sanders with 15. John Van-•
Meter, Larry Miller, and Phil Ar··
cher had nine points, John Godwin:
had seven points, and Terry VanMeter had six points. Leadjng:
rebounders were Lonnie Sanden:
and John VanMeter with elght and,
Larry Miller with slx.
•
Leading scorers for Cross Lane{
were Todd C!Uiders with 23 and Eric
Clark with 18 points.
· .
..
Thls wln left the Defenders a 4 and
I overall and a 3 and 0 record in ·th8
OhioValleyChristlanConlerence. ,·
In the preliminary game, Crosa.
Lanes Junior High defeated OhiQ;
Valley Junior High 31 to 17. Leading:
the Defenders ln scoring was· .left
Haner with ~~even points. The junior
hlghrecordnowatandsatZ-2.

..,
tJ ...

,.•
•
I

•

•

''

tax deferred

retirement
account

available
for the .housewife

Spousecial m.A Accounts whereby a working husband can
contribute up to $2250 per year and the contribution can be
divided into·· 2 accounts, 1 for the wife and 1 for the
husband.

on tree throws (11 out of 18 atcempts) and sank 25 -out of 47 trles
from the field for 53 percent. HT
was 3!1 pereent on free throws (14
out of 29) and roughly 50 percent
from the floOr (30 out of 61).
HT hosts Ironton St. Joe Tuesday
night, and then travels to Eastern
Friday for a league game. North
Gallla was .scheduled to -play
Frankfort· Adena .Saturday night
and plays Southwestern Friday.
HANNAN TRACE 1741 - Kelly
P•trie3·2·8; Greg Webb0·1·21; Mike
Waugn '1·3·5; Toby SMeets 7·4·18;
Jeff Barnes 4·2·10; Keith Campbell
1·0·2; Dan BaysO·O·O. Tolals3G-14-74.
' NORTH GALLtA 161) - Bobby
Blackburn 5·3·13; Gregg Deal 3·3·9;
Mall Kemper 6·1·13; Mike Mays 3·3·
9; Paul Hotlingsnead 1·0·2; David
Roberts 7·1-15; Eric Holle' 0-0·0;
Kenny Neal 0·0·0; Joy Moore 0-0·0; ·
Eric Penick 0-0-0. Totals 25-11-6 I.
Score by quarttn:

later. The firSt kiddie fi$11 derby was
· po
ed b th F
-•
s nsor
y e anne •.,portsman Club ln conjWlCtion wlth the
lucal VFW.
The conservation club meets th
-~nd Wedn sda" or·
the
.e
~- v
e ' Jan. every
o , r
month
beginning
,
at
13
6 30
p.m. at the Gallia County Gun Club.
All meetings are open to the hi'
. .
pu lc.

I--;====================================~

picked up 3 personal fouls going
Into the lockerroom at the halt. with
the score 27-21.
SQuthern changed Its strategy
the second halt, and midway
through tbe thlrd quarter drew two .
more fouLJ on McNeal, thus ending
SWHS's chances of vlctoJ1'.

Hannan Trace
North Gall.la

safety ~lass~ tor new license ap- tatives of local sportsmen and far·
ph cants and ftrst time hunters. More mers were Involved m selecting huntha 150
1
~
peop e completed the hun- ling seasons. A portion ol the dues
ters safety class m 1981. .
from these original members went
Each year a representative of the to the now defunct " Ohio Con·
clu~ IS sent to the League of Ohio servatlon Bulletin."
Sportsmans
' Conventi on. Del~gates G~me most commonly stocked
from the mem~r~p are .also sent durm!r the club's early years was
to the annual Wildlife Hearmg at the rabbit and raccoon with quail added
Ohio Department of Natural Resour·
.
ces district office in Athens. ,_Th~
club had two of its members ap. .
pointed to the Ohio Wildlife Council.
Atty. John Halliday was appointed
to the council in the 1950s, and Bob
Evans was appointed to the cpuncU
in the 1970s.
Other current activities of the club
GALUPOUS - Ohlo Valley
include providing three prizes lor 4- Christian School opened its hOme
H Conservatiofl Awards at the Gallia basketball season last week with a
County Junior Fair and furnishing 7~ triple overtime wln over the
shooting supplies used at the annual Warriors of Cross Lanes Christian
district'4-H camp.
SchooL
The club also sponsors an annual
After lelllng behind by four points
Fanners' Appreciation Dinner lor early In the first quarter the Defen·
those directly involved ln wildlife ders tied the game at 12·12 at the end
conservation during the Bob Evans of the flrst quarter. During t11e
Conservation Day activities. Each second quarter J,..onnie Sanders
Spring Conservation Club members came off the bench to tally seven of
distribute wildlife seed packets for hls 15 points to stake·Ohio Valley to a
planting to improve wildllle ~24 hall time lead. Ohio Valley
habitats.
went into the locker room with three
Begun as the farmer-sportsman of its seven varsity players in foul
club in the 1940s, it is not known trouble wlth three fouls each.
when the name changed to the Gallia
The third quarter saw Cross Lanes
County Conservation Club. gaina41.J41ead.
Establislunent of local fanner·
Early in the fourth quarter Ohio
sportsrnanclubwaspromotedbythe Valley was down to its last five
State Govtrnment to improve players after seeing two starters
relations between fanners and spor· foul out of the ball game. Midway
~men and to encourage restocking
through the fourth quarter a Cross
of game.
Lanes player and an · Ohio Valley
Meeting in the Common Pleas player were ejected for throwing
Courtroom at the Gallia County elbows. For the last three and a half
Courthouse, first officers of the Far· minutes Ohio Valley was playing
mer.,Sportsman Club were: Wayne lour against five basketball.
Booth, president ; Herb Saunders, Trailing two points with four secon·
vice president; Hubie Carnes, ds left in the game, Ohio Valley's
secretary and Raymond Allison, . John Godwin took alO loot jumper
treasurer.
!rom the baseline which was rebounFrom the more than 400 rntimbers ded by Phillip Archer and put back
during this first year, two represen- in as the buzzer sounded to setid the
tatives were sent to the Ohio Depart· game into overtime.
ment ol Natural Resources district
The lit; 't overtime saw Cross
meeting in Waverly..
Lanes take an early four point lead.
That meeting, two members were John El.ardo stole the ball two times
selected to attend a state meeting in in a row to allow Ohio Valley to draw
Colwnbus to establish dates for the even. With a minute and 20 seconds
various hunting seasons.
left in the overtime, Elardo was
This is the ·first time represen· called lor a reaching foul to send

OVC Defenders win
triple overtime tilt

in victorY over _NG .Pirates
H~nnan Trace, behind a 22 point
second period, led at the bat:, 41-32.
Despite the size advantage enjoyed by North Gallla, the Pirates
were unable to to overcome the
"hOt-shooting Wildcats". The scor·
ing lead remained at 11-13 points in
lbe WUdcats' favor throughout tbe
third, and at one point, was·opened
up to as much as 15.

The beginning swirruning class
provide continued development of
will be offered from 10:46-11:30 a.m.
the basic skllls learned in the beginners course.
,
each Saturday bet-ri Jan. 16 apd
March 6. The course will include the
Each of the classes wlU be inAmerican Red Cross system of in: structed by Dyalli' Irvine. Swimstruction. Among the objectives of ming c-ourses will be held in the Rto
the course are floating, gliding, kick Grande College pool.
and stroke development, and sitting ,
There will be a $10 registration fee
and standing dives.
' for each of the gymnastic COIIJ'SeS
The advancect beginning swim- and a $12 fee for each of the swimming class will be offered from II : 4li ming classes. There ls limited
a.m.-12:30 p.m . .each Saturday be- enrolhnent.
tween Jan. 16 and March 6. The
For further inforrl)lltlon and
c'tlurse is intended to · be for those
reglstratlon..contact the Rio Grande
who ha've completed any program in Continuing Education Office at 246beginning swirruning. The clll!is is to 5353.

Gallia Conservation Club membership drive underway

Wild~ats' ~mploy press
VINTON - Beleagured Hannan
Trace, coming off a series of comefrom-behind, last -minute victories,
came out with a strong press In the
first quarter here against North
GaWa Friday In taking a 74-61 win
over North Gallla.
"We played good team · ball.".
Wlldcat mentor Mike Jenkins com·
mented afterward. ''There was a
lot of balanced scoring for us, and a
lot from them. It was a real good
baU ga.rni! for us. and North Gallla
did much better tban I expected:"

Page--C-s

Physical fitness courses offered

Tomadoettes post comeback
PATRICYf-The Southern Torna doettes, after trailing 27-21 at half·
time and early In the third quarter,
came roaring from behind to out·
score Southwestern's lady Highlanders 32-6 the last halt, picking up
an exciting 56-33 win.
The victory gave Southern a com·
manding 3-0 lead In the SVAC girl's
basketball race.
The flrst half was all Southwestern's as sensatlortal 1&gt;-2 freshman
center Tonja McNeal was unstoppable, scoring 19 potrits the first half
In an outstanding effort. At the
same ttme,however, McNeal also

The S11nday Times-Sentinel

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

GALUPOUS - The 1982 mernbersh1p dnve or the Galha County
. ·ct b · · d
ConservaI 1on
u IS un erway, a
club spokesman announced Satur·
day. .
.
.
The Tigers committed 22 personal
Hopmg to mcrealle 118 mem· 'tes· ar~a hunfouls and had 21 turnovers while he r~·h'1p, the c·1ub mv1
Atheru; was whistled for 12 fouls and ters, fl~herman an~ fanners to 1ts
20 turnovers.
·
next dmner meetmg Wednesday,
Box scores:
Jan. 13, at 6:30 p.m. at the Galha
WAVERLY (55)- Eric Breiten· · County Gun Club on Buck Ridge
Road.
bach 7-3·17 ; Joe Brown 0·0·0; Joe
Branum .4-1-9; Jerry Miller 7-4-18;
OffiCers lor 1982 will be elected.
Tom Thompson 2·0·.4; Jeff Allen 1·1·
Current officers are: Marion cald·
3; Bill P r eb hi ~ -0- 4 . TOTALS IH-55.
ATHENS (58) - Brent Henry 1-3· well, president; Jack Mink, vice
5; J im Schanzenbach 4·3· 11 ; Kevin
president; Nick Johnson, secretary:
Schwarze! 0·1· 1; Tom Downey 6·4·
Oscar
Bastiani, treasurer; Merrill
16; Mike Croci 4·2·10; Steve Bruning
Saunders;
B•m&lt;!~u iicc~:.c is.;u.ng
5·5·15. TOTALS 20·18-SB.
Score b.V quarters: •
agent ;~nrl a.:vi•or, Ken ·t'omti:lJOH.
Waverly •
14• 13 16 7 6--55
game protector.
·
Athens
23 9 6 11 9- 58
Purpose
or
the
conservation
club
Res erve sco re : Athens 39,
is to 'foster awareness of the im·
Waverly 27 .
'
portance of the area's wildlife
heritage while working to protect
this heritage lor future generations.
In fulfil.ling this purpo&gt;ic, the conservation club, with the cooperation
and assistance of the Ohio Division
of Wildlife and other appropriate
Ironton owne.d its biggest lead of the state, federal or local agencies,
game, 51·35.
·
strives to initiate and promote wild·
The Tigers moved into fourth life ·co nservation . programs
place in league standings by beneficial to ail citizens of Gallia
shooting 53 percent from the fi eld on county.
28 of 52, converted 14 of 21 at the line,
In implementing this purpose, the
and picked of! 36 rebounds, l~d by conservai!b ~. club promotes and
Bacon with 13.
provides instruction to the youth of
Jackson, with five losses in a row, (iallia County in hunting safety and
dropped into a fifth place tie with ethics.
Waverly on a 19 of 59 shooting per·
Several ·goals have been identified
fonnance for 32 percent. The Iron· for 1982 by the conservation club. In
men canned 18 of 23 charity throws addition to increasing membership,
and had 19 rebounds with Allen the club plans to sponsor mo.re guest
Collins grabbing six.
speakers and educational programs,
Bacon swished 20 points and Wolle to improve th~ hunters' safety
19 to pace the winners while Collins classes with an increased nwnber ol
tallied 15 for the Ironmen.
instructors, and to have one or more
The Tigers did' not alte.mpt a free members become official scorers
throw until the clock showed five . fortheOhioBigBuckClub. _
minutes lelt in the third quarter, but
Recent guest speakers sponsored
Jackson was forced to lout to stop by the dub were the Director of the
the clock, resulting in the !·Tigers Ohio Department of Natural Resour·
connecting on 11 or 14 free throws in ces, the Chief of the Ohio Division of
the fourth quarter, including a seven Wildlife, and an Ohio State
of nine efforts by Jay Wolfe.
Representative. Awater craft safety
class and turkey calling seminars
Box score:
JACKSON (56) - Al len Collins 5·5· have been among the educational
15; Ma f1 Bonzo 4· 4-12; J on Cl a y 3·4·
programs offered.
10; John Ha le 4· 1·9; Todd Dav i s 2· 1·
The club elects a bonded hunting
5; Tim Dobbins 1-3-S; Marty Grymes
and
fishing license issuin~ agent
0·00. TO TALS19-18-S6.

ton 45 .

Mond•y'• G•m•

HERI!~HOIII TO ORDER:

PRICES ARE CATAlOG PRICES.
SHIPPING. INSTALLATION EXTRA

..•,

.6 76
.5 15

Dtounh •·•· Bwlfln cl Hanford. Cm1n .
Wc.. htn,l{lttfl ar Nf'w Y(lrk
Lv1 ,c,.,f'l~• 111 MtlweMic-f'rt
Hou•trm 01 Purlla,.J

99

s.tbfll&lt;tlon

/0 '1

12

_,F_'lTERN CONFERENCE
M\dwf'tl Ol"lalon
•1156
.O,:nq Ar1111ni11
21 II
IJ,.,,,.n
17
17
.500

D""""'

For. L.P. gas only. Has stand·
lng pilot system.

will make price

..•.

(; H

t 'rld•)"• t;•mr•
Bmwn 96 , P"iladl'lphi• 90
NPMJ }f'rllf') Jl(}, Cl f'Vf' larul /00
ChiNI'" 110. Lm An,,./,., 1/J
Allatlld 90, MtiMJoduk,.,. 88
Utah 108. lndiano 102
124, fun{,.nrl 121

Series "IS" L. P.
Forced Air Gas
Furnace . .

Low as

.4.18
.J(}.,!

Cf'nlral Olvi11ion
2.1
II
11
/6

l. o ~

~407

.758

18
1D

1.1

.'it&gt;oll lf'
Ph11r11i x
f; oldrn .0,:11'11 1'
Purllan•l
Son lli~&gt;'n

Kenmore "S"
Split System
Central Air
Conditioning

l't l,

8

MilWDuiH'f'

Sean Best
Central Air
Conditioning
System

l

2!i

Wrllhin~lon
Nf'w Jn•"'J

as

I

1\•t~or.iatlon

Atlantlt Dlvi ..on

Low

.'

Baakf'lbalt

EASTERN CONFERENCE

20 of those came In the second half.

DUI had 15 points, six ot those in
the final quarter.
Kyger Creek shot 47 percent
from the floor hitting 26 of 55 while
£astern sank 23 of.67 attempts for
34 percent. The Bobcats sank 15 of
25 at the foul lines. Eastern hit 17 of
29 attempts.
Eastern held a 38-35 rebounding
,
.\...
edge.
The Little Eagles won the reserve contest, 29-20. Troy Guthrie
bad eight for the winners while

Tom Downey swished 12 of his 16
points in the first period all Athens
built ·a 23-14 lead and was joined in
double digit seoripg by Steve
Bruning. with 15, J im Schanzenbach
with 11', and Mike Croci with 10. ·
Miller led Waverly with 18
markers with Eric Brietenbach adding 17.

Middleport

Ironton hands Jackson
fifth straight setback

apt~ .

DANCE STEPS- AI Eastern's Charlie Ritchie (21) tei. go·widl a ·
c«atz 1bol; Ky1er Creek'I Keldl Clarll (4) appean lo be laklDg dance
depl tnanl Rlleble t. dill Krll Wllloe photo lakea durlut Friday's
svAC eoatat 11 Jtypr Creell:. Tbe llelltlllllloolt sole poues~loo of seeoad
pllleeiD 11M! loop allltdlap with •17~ victory.

Pomeroy

22 15 18-7A
16 16 13 15--61
1~

Think of your retirement while doing your housework and
then treat yourself to a retirement check you can call your
veryown.
·
For mo~e information on this Spouseciaf mA and other
personal IRA Accounts, come into any of. our Baoktng
Facilities or Phone 446-0662.
Substantial Interest Penalty for Early Withdrawal!

T~C~--~~~~~!~~nk%
"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court .Street

'

Silver Bridge Plaza

...

Member FDIC

Spring Valley

'

�Jan. 10, 1982

Pomerov-'Middleport":-Ga'llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w.

;Ex:Meigs resident
. publishes new boo~
POMEROY
Enterprise
Publishing, Inc., of Wilmington,
Del.. is announcing the publication ·
of a book by Norma Chapman
Morris, former Meigs County
resident. The book, "How to Set Up-a .
Business Office," by Norina Morris,
is filled with · Information on
locating, outfitting and staffing a
business office. The book is supported by a comprehellllive appendix or chart., forms and checklists, and also hits upon selection of
furniture and equipment, selection
of professional services, how and
where to find qualified employes and ·
suggested floor plans.
Mrs. Morris, currently vice
president of M &amp; M Productions in
Bowling Green, was formerly
assistant to the dir.clor of

v·a.

Jan. 10, 1982

Tax service opens
Gallipolis office ·

Management Information Systems
Institute at Bowling Green State
University.
She has also held administrativ~
. positions at Findlay and 'George
·Peabody colleges. As a free-lance
photographer, Morris has been
published in such · magazines as
Country Music, Mother Earth News ·
BiUboard, Mechanlx Illustrated
Guide and People.
'
She resides in Bowling Green with
her husbl!nd and three children. She
is the d;lughter of Anna Wheeler, Apple Grove, and a graduate of Racine
High School and the University '
Without Walls in Ohio.
Before .leaving Meigs County, ·
Mrs. Morns was seen on local stages
as a vocalist for several years with
the Bid Bend'Minstrepl Association.

GALLIPOLIS- It's tlmeiogather up all your Inccmestawments
along with receipts tor your deductible IU!ms, and settle your account With the internal Revenue Service.
To ald In the task, DanTax, a tax-preparation service wil!IAQS:atlons allover the Ohio Valley, Is opening a Galllpolls otttreat33Court
St.
.
.
Claude Daniels, DanTax president, 1s managing the ottlce, he said
was lounded on theeoncept pt pl'OVJdlng top tax preparation at a low,
reasonable fee which he sald can save most taxpayers up to 30
percent-of the cost of filing their ~tum.
. Daniels said an additional 10 percent d!sccunt Is offered to all
cltlzens age 66 and over.

TV

(:racks down on farm loans
COLUMBUS ~. Johi, W. Brown,
state director, Farmers Home Administration, returning from a
training session in Kansas City held
for study of Farmer Program Lending, announced that the agency will
step up its efforts to reduce the number of delinquent loans.

Foote Mineral to
build new plant

making some progress," Brown

NORMA MORRIS ·

Brown said Washington leaders

EXTON , Pa.- Foote Mineral Co.
has ani)Ounced plans to construct a
pilot plant to ·produce electrolytic
manganese dioxide at its New Johnsonville, Tenn . electrolytic
manganese metal plant.
:·Construction of the pilot plant,
estimated to cost in excess of
$500,000, will begin immediately and
completion is targeted for the third ·
quarter of 1982. Plans are to operate
the pilot plant for six months in ord~ r to develop the necessacy
tej:hnology for the production of
EMD fo r. the alkaline battery industry.
Following the six-month pilot
plant operation , plans are to convert
a -portion of.(he New Johnsonville
o!.!ectro!ytic managenese metal plimt
tq; the production of electrolytic
manganese dioxide. Annual production capacity of 6,200 net tons is plan·
qed.
· ·The modernization or the New
Johnsonville plant, announced in Octpbcr 1981, pennits the conversion of
a )lortion or the plant to the product.lgn . of electrolytic manganese
!jioxide without reducin~ the level of
j)r odudion
of electrolytic
1nanaganese
metal.
,·

I

u..;

said.

Agriculture and i
\our community

I,

w. va .

The Sunday Ti mes·Sentine·I- Page-C -7

Me_igs County agent's corner
'8y John C. Rice

than the !9110 crop. The projected
priee is $6.26-$7 per bushel.
The cyclical expansion starting in
1980 was slowed by the higher temperatures reducing feed supplies,
resulting in 25 percent higher grain
prices .and the low return ex·
perienced by feedlot and cow-calf
operators in 1981. This slowing of the
iPiventory rate could be a longer
term.ble.ssing for cattl~m~ni.
The mid-year cattle inventory as
of July I, 1981 ~wed a m st in·
crease in total cattle numbe · com-.
pared to the excessively
id
building in the year from July 1,, I
to July 1, 1~. Per capital use of
beef on a retail weight basis may be
· 40 pounds or about the same as last
fall. In the last half of 1980, pork supplies may be down 5-percent and
poultry meat supplies may increase
about 10 percent.
Fed cattle plicel! for choice steers
in Omaha weighing 900 to 1,100 pounds during 1982 may average $64 to
$68 per cwt. Cattle prices could

move .into the low 70s in some months and may be in the low 60s in other
months. Hiilher interest rates and
past losses by feedlot operators are
major restraints on, feeder calf
prices.
Feeder calf plices will probably
follow fed cattle.
Hots ,;__ inventories are dt wn 5.percent. Farrowing intentions are
down. Prices for barrows and gilts
during the first and seccnd quarters
of 1982 may average in lhe high $&gt;lOs
to low ~s. Hog prices may average
in the low $50s next swruner and w&gt;U
trend downward into the fall .
Weaker corn priCes means some
improvement in feeder pig prices .
The demand for feeders should increase .as the big U.S. corn crop is
harvested and stored.
Many Ohio fanners experienced
their roughest year in inemory in
1981 - horrible weather, poor crops,
increasing costs, declining prices.
and rising interest rates. Any one of
these can cause financial stress. But

1

Steer registration deadline week away

HERALD OIL AND GAS CO •
35857 WELLS RD.
MIDDL£_PORT; OHIO

742-2160

_

If Interested In leasing your

farm for purpose of drilling

an oil and gas well•••

I
•

CALL

BETH FARLEY 8 am-4:30 PM . 742-2160

After 4:30 Call 742-2821
or

BARBARA WELSH 742-3104

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2 000
deductible from your income t~ each year.
If yo~ have a non-working spouse, you can
contnbute up to $2,250. Of course if you
and your spouse both work, you ~n each
open an IRA and contribute up to a total 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

·.

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During January the
18-month rate is 16.25%~) Or you can
ch~se a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate 1n effect f&lt;?r January_is 14.09%:)
Act quickly to get
·
the best tax advantage.
.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
or the vanable rate plan, you will be assured
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
for your retirement. To maximize the taxdeferred interest you ecjm, you should make
your.contributions as soon as possible after
the fitst of the·year-. You will receive monthly
statements on the status of the Account and
your funds are
AGE . AMOUNT insured by an
When You Ope
Yau-~
agency of the
YourtRA
AIAgeW"
federal
50
$ 83,506
government.
40
$ 298,667

30
20
1

1

$

"~lhB!s umes ltlat you m~e a $2,000 contribution at the beQlnnlng of each year at a 1:2-..-lntert.:lt rate
!"'

a v.ou eave funds tn your IRA through your 65th year .

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj~ I

•

CHEVETTE
SUPER SALE

'

Ther'a is a suDstantlallnlerell penalty tor nrty withdrawal.

Whcnewcr JOU think ·
of IIWIIII money, our name
comes up first.

!

Member FDIC
'

BANK ONE OF POMEROY

POMEROVoRUTLANOoTUP.PERS PlAINS

. · .

_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

Locat1oo _ _;________________ __ __

s

Course _ _,;__ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ __

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

II
I

LQCation

1-982 Models

CJ No classes now . but send me Brochures/Schedules wh eo ava1lable .

1- 2 dr. Diesel- white
· 2-,4 dr. Scooters- maroon, blue
2-4 dr ..Chevettes w/auto. - air
1-2 dr. Chevette 4.spd. gas

Name __________~----------------

3- 4 dr. Chevettes -,- Automatic with air, roof
rack.
··Also a few i981 mode,ls at u·nheard of savings,
as well as 1982 Olds. - Cadillacs ' Chevrole1
Cars and Trucks. Stop by and see...

.· SIMMONS
'

Olds.-Cad.-Chev ., Inc.
JOB

e. Main

-Mon.-Fri.

8 to 6 ·

.'

·

•
PH. 992-6614

Pomeorv, OH.
Saturday
91o5

FOR THE KIDSI

C oors~

No.: 93003 Title : Begin ner s Gymnastics (6 8 vears ol d)
Work on balance beam, vaul t and bars . Som e tr ampo line wo r k
wil l be in troduced . LIMIT E D E NROL L M E NT
Location : Ly ne Ce nter Gym

Oates : Sat urd ay ( J a nu ~rv 16·Mar ch 6)
Time : 8: 30 a .m .-9 :30a .m .
tnstruc1or : Dyanna Irvine

c•• ,, $10.00

Course No.: 93·0020·Titl e: Tumble Bugs Gymnastics / 4 &amp;5 yeAr s old )

A basic course for the young perso n 1n'terested 1n gymnasti cs . ln

traduction to basic tumbling , warm·up e xercises, ba lance benm, and
1imltpd exper ience on tra m poli ne. LIM IT ED ENROLLME NT
Location : LyneCe nter Gym •
Dates: Sa turday s (January 16-M ar ch 6)

Time : 9:30 a.m .-10:30a .m .
ln struc1or: Dyanna Irvine

Cost ' S10 .00

Course No.: 93-01 20 Title: Beginning Swim
Th e Ameri can Red Cross system of instruction . Am.ong objectives
of the course are floating, gliding, Kick and stroke development. si t·
ling and standing dives. L1MI TE0 EN RDL LMENT
Location : Lyne Center Pool
Dates: Saturd ays (J anu ary t6·M ar ch 6)

Time : 10 : 45 a . m . · l1 , 30 a . m

FeeS --~-------TOTAL AMOUNT ENC LOSED ' $ ---------~

YOUR DEALER ON 1'HE lOVER

BANKONETM --·
-(!)

fee$
Course _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Course _~---.,--_::._

'lhl5ls the in terest rate and ef1tctt~eennval yiekj,

..

location - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Fee$ - - - - --......------

1981 Models

Stop by any · · ·
BANK ONE office
for details. ·

CONTINUING ·EDUCATION COURSES:

Course _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __

location - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

1981 &amp; 1982 Models

966,926

$3,042,435

I

many Ohio farme1·s have been faced
with several or a·ll or these forces ,
resulting in severe financial
problems. :rhose who also have
large amounts of borrowed capital
and low equity in their business may
very well face foreclosure in the
coming months.
· Most Ohio farmers are facing
financial stress, but will continue to
manage viable farm operations. And
there are several bright spots on the
horlzon for the well·manag~'&lt;l. soun·
dly-financcd operatlon.

Couuty Ageal, Agriculture
POMEROY- Oullook 1982 - Last
' - week I · discussed the overall
economy. This week I would like to
Ry HRVSON R.IRUDJ CARTER
confine it to agr'culture.
Galliu tuul'lty F.xtt·nsi!m A~t·nt
Much of the outlook is influenced
by export.. Fanners m;~rketed 25 .
GALUPOUS - Dairy cattle lice over the withers, at the lail head and percent of their crops through ex- ·
and mange are seldom detected near the nose, eyes and ears. Lice in- ports in 1981. ·Fifty-eight percent of
early, and much loss can occur fested cattle appear gr,easy, dirty all the grain moving in world
before the need f9r treatment is .and rough. AnilTlllls with mange markets in 1980 belonged to the U.S.
recOgnized. Crowded housing and sometimes appear scabby wi.th der- The year ahead promises to be ·one
of record demand for farm products.
&lt;'Old weather contMbute to lice and matitis.
.A 1981 corn crop of 7;85 to 8.0
mange buildup. You can expect
Treat lice infested animals with a
"Good buys" may be available for
billion
bushels combined with a
populations to build up throughout
pesticide. A second treatment
items
such as land and machinery .
carryover
of
1.0
billion
bushels
adds
the winter and into early s11ring.
should be made three to four weeks
The
operator
who wants to expand
.
up
to
a
supply
of
8.82
to
9.Q
billion
These elC!ernal parasites usually
later to kill newly hatched lice. ·'
and has sufficient equity with the
are found in large herds with poor . The choice of a pesticide depends bushels. This ties the largest crop of
manageme n~ to back it "I' - may
sanitary conditions, especially on
on the age of the cattle, whether cat- record. A final yield of 107.2 or more
find some bargains this year. Th"
bushels
per
acre
on
74.lnlillion
harthe l!ftderfed and poorly houses cat- tle are lactating or non-lactating, or
unfortunate part is it may be at
vested
acres
would
give
us
a
recor~
.tie. However, healthy cattle in good
how soon animals will be ·
another
operator's expense. And a
output.
The
projected
pMce
for
corn
·
housing sometimes become infested. slaughtered or marketed. Usually,
continuation
of high interest rates
for
1981~
is
$2.60-$2.90
per
bushel.
Calves, young stock and old, weak
sprays of C~&gt;-Ral, Ciovap or Ciodrin
and
·low
!ann
incomes may moan
Soybean
production
of
2,089
cattle that are poorly nourished suf- and dusts of C~&gt;-Ral or Ciodrin will
land
purchases
should be delayed
million
bushels
on
66.9
million
harfer most from ~ce. Lice left ungive good control of lice. Ciovap will
vested
acres
was
15
percent
larger
fOr
rnost
farmers.
controlled spread qui cJfl Y also kill mange or the bam itch mite.
•
throughout the herd .
However, for scabies or psoroptic
Infested cattle rub on stanchions,
mange, the .treatment must he apgates, posts, fences and stationary
proved and oyerseen by federal or
objects, usually licking and biting at
state veterinarians because this is a
..
the infested areas. Sometimes, large
reportable, quarantinable disease
Junior F,~ir, :Steers must also ~
Hively. Lindu Hively. HillbUIIc:;; Dt~rlellt!
castrated, and
Allt.ly Adams. Hlllbillic.ll f·H Cl ub; &amp;rbttrll
Jcnld n~;, Ohio River Ru11chers; Kl'nndh 1-.t.&lt;e
· areas of the hide become denuded of
condition. Veterinarians can provide
By Fred J . Deel
dehorned ' Pro .,.,rly
r
A.t.lamU!, Hillbillietl 4-H Club : l.l.sa o~..-ck E.T.C.
Jenk ins, Ohio RI-ver Rtull'ilers; Mutt Kemper ,
hair, and raw red patches appear.
specific quarantine and eradication
County Ex. Ageu~ 4-H
weigh at least 825 pounds on the·first Cl ub: Kim Bicker~. HUlbillii..':J; Truy Broyles Hillbillies; Mikl· Kcmptlr, Hillbillies ; KHlhy I..Mil·
d of th f .
tittle Ky~er V~ilt!)' Boyli: Bradley Burd~l!. Rtw:
cc,, CaulJWI"n ; Stev1~ Janet!, CampaiJ,tll; All\)'
Cattle become weak and less able to
programs.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County 4-H
ay
e Blr.
t'OOn Vll llay; Harold BurOOII, Raccoon Vullc)';
i,QU\Icil, Rio Frie ndship: Jenny Loutlcn, ltiu
stand cold weather and· excessive
Additional lice and mang~ control
and FFA members have only one
All ~te~rs which are registered Grcji!MOt.~l. Raccoon ValIt:)'; Tbtltl ~ 1 . RHl.. lo'.ril'lld!!hlp; Will Louden, Rio .~riendshlp : CoHn
be . hed d
l'tMln Vwlley; Twmmy Elliou , Rodney RanMerw
M!.!Kcu n, T~ 3 J 's &amp; GiU1M; Jotumy McKcuH ,
1..
exercise or resist diseases.
information is available in Exweek left to register their steer must 8J:i0
welg . an tagged on Terry ElliotL, ROducy Rallii:L'nl: Sl'Otl E lliott'
The. 3 J'M&amp;t Gun~; Sht'l li! K~ y MiliCI', Bu r·
Check for lice and mange in the
tension Bulletin 473, Pesticides for
project for the 1982 Gallia County Jan. 23 .
Catbnu.s Rt.'tlskinll ; OwiJ.~ ht Ev11ns, Ohio Blut:
dcrlillt!r!l ; Luca Hu.st!ll, Hi llblll tvs : Mattlww
JackeL!&gt; ; Justin Fallon, Hope'll, Hclpln~~: Hani.b:
Sa:tun tlcrll, Httys.;cdll : Steven Sau ndcr)j,
. lmir coat around the neck, brisket,
Livestock and Fann Buildings. Ask
Junior Fair.
,.
MCIUbe I'S can Iearn Very muc h April Grllham, TrillnKie : OullH Gn.~n - Norl11 Haystlt.'ll!l; Nl:ll.lll lt• ShonH. Rio Sil ver Thhnblt.!s :
hack, inner surface. of the thighs,
us a bo~t a copy.
Deadline fpr registering steers is through their f.H steer projects. Gallia JoTA; Tim G~n. No1th Gallia F'l"l\ : TOt.k.l SMnlo!. SUn dan"''tl Kitb : 1\n~cla Smi th,
Hamilton, Ohio V111lc~ Blue Jackcl'i ·, Lori
T ·
I J W61 tk ·
Jan. 15, and all members who plan to They can learn ho.w to·select a good Kelly
Hami1ton, Ohi(l Valley
nttn~ 1.!: couutrymcn
~~
nl!i,, IJ · Cltalnf»! IMn: Sleve
lue Jackets; Clirl
Wilt..'OltCJ1,
exhibit steers at the Gallia County
caretheforbeef
the 1,
~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Junior Fair must have the steers steer,
animal,howandto feed
also. and
about
purchased and under their care marketing process. Steer projects
. before the January 15th deadline.
·a re also an opportunity for the memFour-H members must register biir to make a profit from his/her
lo•aturing
their steers with the County Ex- project.
Annie Anybody
tension Office, all FFA members ••.Last year 90 4-H and FFA inem·
By BETIIE CLARK
may register their steers either bCfll' d:Cgistered steers before Jan .
Extension Agent,
through the Extension Office or with 1&amp;. So"lar for 1982 there have been
Home Eronomics
their FFA teacher. A member can several members hwo have
register and feed out as many steers registered steer. projee\8, and there
as they choose, but only one can be ·remains only a week for any one else
GALUPOLIS - To cut fuel bills blood pumped to the brain. So take
shown at the Gallia County Junior to select, purchase and register
this winter, insulate your house -' to advantage of that heat supply by
Fair.
cut even more, insulate yourself. If covering your head with a hat, scarf
steers (9r the Gallla County Fair.
LC)CAU.Y OWNID AND' OPERATED
To be shown at the Gallia County
you wear the right clothes, you can or wig. The body heat saved can theri
Listed below ari!'t'llli1l}f1heinbers
turn back the thermostat and still be warm other part. of your body, like --·~ _;,~-----who 'have registered their steers
comfortable this winter.
your hands ·and feet. Actually, we
with the Gallia County Extension OfWhen you feel cold, you're usually can learn something from our an- the body'. Ribbed or ·turtleneck
fice as of Jan. 6, 1982.
uncomfortable. But your body is ce&gt;iors' sleep . attire. The old- collars, tiutton or ribbed cuggs on
doing the best it can to maintain nor- fashioned long-sleeved gown, ·and sleeves and pants tucked into boots
mal temperature inside and out. even a night cap and bed socks are are all good insulating choices.
Meat import
However, close fit does not mean
Let's compare your body heating ideal for sleeping in a cold or
quota is down
tight fit. In fact, garments like tight
system with your home heating unheated room.
leotards,
socks
and
underwear
acplant.
Clothes act as insulation, keeping .
tually cut down body warmth. The
WASHINGTON (AP) - The goThe furnace keeps your house body heat in and CQld air out. Each tight garments inhihit blood cirvemment's laU!st figures show lm·
warm enough so the plumbing layer trapS a layer or air. These culation, which in turn slows down
ports of quqta·type meat continue
doesn 't freeze and all household trapped air layers are warmed by the body heating system . And tight
to run well below year-earlier
equi11ment operates nonnally. Your body heat and serve as insulation. clothes don't allow that trapped
levels.
body's internal . heat plant works As more air is trapped and warmed, layer of air for insulation.
Through November, the Agrlcul·
much the :;arne way. lttries to main- you feel wamler. However, some
Even accessories add insulation.
lure Department sal(l Wednesday,
l!lin normal body temperature so all types of clothes are better insulators Ties and sca rves·add a layer of warImports at those kinds of meat vital organs and body processes can than others. Ughtweight loose mth. Belts and draw!!lring waist 1 - pMrnarlly frozen or chilled beef
function.
layers of clothes keep you warmer
lines keep clothes close to your body
used to make hamburger and other 1
Your body even has a built-in heat than a single heavy layer because where the heat won't escape. ·Looseproducts - totaled less than 1.12
conservative system. For instance, they trap more air .
fitting leotards and long fuzzy socks
btllion pounds, down from more
if you're sleeping in a cold room, you
Because of an el&lt;lra fabric layer, keep legs and feet comfortable.. .
than 1.26 billion 1n the first ll
may lose .too much body heat. To lined garments are usually warmer
So choose your winter wardrobe
months of 198).
. .
keep your internal organs warm than unlined ones. However, this with insulation in mind and you can
Officials estimated last taU that
enough, your body pumps less blood doesn't mean heavier clothes are personally contribute to a more
less than 1.24 bUilon pounds would
to the skin surface. And hefore long, warmer. A shlrt, vest and jacket economical fuel bill this winter. You
be Imported In all of calendar 1981,
you may wake up feeling cold.
.
combination is warmer than one will probably be more comfortable, · below the level that would trtgger
FRANK HERALD JR., Owner &amp;
Surprisingly, almost 90 percent of bulky heavy sweater. And if you get too.
quotas.
the body heat you lose goes out your too·warm, it's easy to she&lt;!,a layer or
head. Even when your built-in con- two.
servation system is at work, the
Clothes that fit close at the neck, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - body cannot cut down the Bmount of wnsts and ankles keep heai close to I
PLEASE REGISTER ME FOR THE FOLLOWING ·

·Homemakers'
Circle

¢ounsel urges
-'earings
..
.: COLUMBUS - Whether or not
c!ustomers of the General Telephone
~o . will he granted local public
ho;arinl(s a·s a part of the com)ll!ny's
$64.5 million rate increase request is
ow up to the Public Utilities Com- ·
mission of Ohio.
' The Ohio Offic-e of Consumers'
Counsel has filed a motion with the
co)nunission requesting that it hold
bqth daytime and evening hearings
in five different cities throughout the
G'e ner al Telephone service
territory ,
According to the Conswners'
CouQSIIJ, those five cities - Marion,
N'.ew 'll'runswick, New Philadelphia,
O)&lt;ford, and Englewood - would
provide the greatest accessibility for
customers of General Telephone in
t~nm of actual participation in the
Upc'Oming rate case.
The Consumers' Counsel is con-'
vlnced that customers or General
Telephone will testify in the rate
proceedings If given a reasonable
opportunity, due to heavy participation in six forums presented by
the counsel across the state regarding the phone company's requested
increa~e. Over 500 conswners attended the forwn presentations,
~hich centerc'tl mainly on service
problems customers are having with
the phone company.
-"General's servic-e territory ·is . •..
really state-wide," noted Dick
Rosenberry. trial attorney for the
Conswners' Counsel in the General
case. "Hopefully, the commission
will recognize the difficulties involved for people-who wish to testify
Ill U1is rate case, but may live three
hours away from Colwnbus. Remote
iervice areas, plus a daily . work
$Chedule, often keep precisely the
' Jli!Opl~ who should be testifyin~ in a
case from being able to make any
appearance at all. " .
: : The hearing for the $65.4 milliol\
ii)crease will he held some time in ·
February. The Conswners' Counsel
would like to see the conunission
rule on Its request for local hearings
and the dual time schedules quickly •.
ilo that custo111ers throughout the
General Telephone area may plan
for their participation In · the
hearings.
·
: " There is no guarantee that
commission will rule ·On our
motion," said Rosenberry, "but with
allthenput we've already had from
the customers ol this Cllmpany, 1
· would certainly like to believe that
this comrnlasion wiD be responsive ,

pointed· out that the future
allocations of loan funds will depend
on how well individiial states perform on this.
"We don't expect wholesale
foreclosures in Ohio and will go
along with borrjlwers who are
making an honest effort and are

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Instructor : Dyanna Irvine
Cost : $12.00 •

·

Course NO. : 93 -01 30 Title: Adva nced Begin ning Swim
For those who ha ve compl eted a ny program In bcqinnlng swim .
Contin ued de'w'elopment of basic ski ll s tear ned in Beginning . L IM I TED

ENROLLMENT .

Location : Lyne Center Pool
Da-tes : Saturdays (January 16·M ar c h 6)

Time: 11 :4Sa .m.· l2 ,30a.m.
Instructor: Oyanna Irv ine

AddJess

Cost : S12 .00

City - •- - - . , . - - - - - State - - - - - - - - - - , -

Course No .: 93·0330 Title: Rifl e M arkmanship
Basic course in rrl ar kesma nship with emphasis Dn aq:ur acy .
proper sighti ng, firearm safety . Not only for begin ner s bu t for those
interested in improvinp acc uracy and sharpening Ski l ls. Ri fl es will be
,22 CAL competit ion type (18 lb.) ; a challenge fo r any leve l of ex
perience. Minimum Age : 12

Couoty of Residence - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Location , 1St Session- /lOT C Building on campus

BY MAIL: Use the

· ·
i
spaces
check or money order f01 the conecl amou~t payable to .
LEGE: Send to: Rio Grande College, Box 453. R1o Grande, Oh1o 45674.
BY I'HOIIE: Call 245-5353. extensioo 201. for those persons ·with the
telephone prefixes: 286, 384, 68'2. call toll-free 286-4689. You will be ask~d
your name, address, aod wh ich class (o1 classes) you want to take. A space
in those classes will then be held for you providing your check tor the appJopriate Jegistration tee is received by the Continuing Educatioo Office of
Rio Grande College and Community College within fiw days follow ing your
phone call.
Registration will,also be accepted on the first meeting ol the class providing
space 11 available.
'
For further inf01mation, Phone 245·5353, exteosioo 201.

I
o...nct.
.

-

I '

CONTINUING E DUCATION

Rio

Cdllge

.

~Celt.

2nd Session- Pt. Pleasant National Guard Armorv

Dates' Sa1urd•vs (Janu ~rv 23 &amp; 301

Time: January 23- 9;00 a. m . · Noon
January 3G-9:00 a.m . until complet ion

'

Jnstructo" M/Sgt. Ray Parsley, U.S. Army/ROTC
Minimum Age : 12

cost: $20.00 (Inc l udes all eQuip ment, ammunlfi on. targe ts. range

fee•J

·

course No.: 9o4·0760 Title: Basic M anagement
An updet ed program for mlddl e·managcrs, supervisors. and
third· line m ana9.er s. Cour se inc_tudes "hand·on'' te chn iq ues, · case
st ud ies and on·stte situations in dealing with th e manaement of per ·
sonnel. Prac tJcal solutions to everyday problem s will be disc ussed ,

Location: Campus. Yale Hall, Rm . No. 2
Dates: Tuesdays (January 19 March 231
Time ' 7 :00p.m . · !O :OOp.m .
.
·
•,
'Instructor: Less Elcessor. Ma ch lnjng Supcrin tendnnt
Robbins &amp; Myers. Inc.
·
·
ReglstraiQII Deadline' Jan . IS, 1982
Cost: S3S.OO

�Page- C-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Jan . 10, 1982

cta.ssitied

Contused with IRA Rates and Terms ...

Jan .

1~.

1982

D .,

Pefense o~jection leads to
weekend adj'ournmerif
.
·in .William's trial
.

By DAVID PACE
.A!!MOOJ•ted Pl'l'8!l Writer

T

ATLANTA (AP) -A defense objection ended the
second week of the murder triAl of Wayne B. Williams just as prosecution witnesses began describing a
re-enactment
the evetltl

••

•
KJ!;lAJl)!;ll Lead defense attorney
for Wayne WWiams, Alvin Binder, relaxed by puffing
away on a cigar as he leaves court Friday. Hfg client is
cbarged with the murder qf tWo Atlanta black youths.
lAP Laserphoto l,

stopped by pollee near a Chattahoochee River bridge .
The 23-year-old black free-lance photograher Is
charged with the murders of Nathaniel Cater, 27, and
Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, twoof28youngblackswbose
slayings have been under investigation by a special
pollee task force.
Judge Clarence Cooper on Frtday adjourned proceedings untll Monday morning after defense lawyer
Alvtit Blrider objected when Pollee Sgt. Henry Bolton
began describing how authorities had re-enacted
what they contend happened In a 'pre-dawn May 22
Incident on the Jackson Parkway brtdge.
,
Officer Robert Campbell testified earlier· Friday
that he saw the lights on Williams' car appear suddenly on the bridge directly above the river where
. moments before he bea{ll a loud splash.
WUI!ams was stopped by pollee a' soort time later
and was detained about two h9urs before be!Jig released. He became the main target Of the task force
Investigation two days later when .Cater's body was
found In the river about a mJie downstream from (he
bridge, the same area where Payne's body had been
found a month earlier.
'· • .
..
Defense lawyers have maintained that the out-ofshape, HiO-pound WUllams could not have ll1ted Cat- er's 146-pound body and thrown .. (t over the 4-foot
guard raU on the bridge.
But the re-creation prosecution witnesses were beg!nning to describe-Friday appeared to be an attempt ·
to disprove that defense contention.
.
Before he was interrupted by Binder, Bolton testh
fled that officers had borrowed a car virtually ldenti; .
cal to the one Williams was drlvtog that morning and
parked It on the bridge.

CAMERA SHY- Fay Williams, mother of Wayne
Williams,. uses a newspaper to shield her face from
cameramen •• he leaveo Fulton County Court Frtday.

on
'

Union starts talks
Monday with Ford

NDIVIDUAL
ETIREMENT
CCOUNTS

By STEPHEIII JONES

A$ooclated Pre88 Writer

Diamond's IRA rate will be higher than any
advertised rate in Ohio.
'
Contact .your local Diamond office for full details
or call Diamond's IRA Information Center.
'

UAW MEETS- Bargaining council• of the United
Auto W_orkers gather ill Chicago Friday to vote on
reopening talks with General Motors and Ford Motor
Co. The lndusiTy, entering lls .34th coltllecullve month

-·

I

TOLL FREE

.

.

SAVINGS AND-LOAN COMPANY
•·

W. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OH.
,PH. 99~-6655
.. ,

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reagan administration won one and lost one when it ended anUtrust suits
againSt two of America's corporate giants ~ American Telepbone &amp; Telegraph Co. and lnternational
Business Machines Corp.
With the settlements Friday, a new corolliiry was
lidded to the adfnlni!ltration's "bigness Is not necessarily badness" phllosopby of business regulation.
The new corollary goes beyond the "bigness" statement, made in May by Attorney General WUllam
French Smith. It tells American corporadons that the
Reagan administration noi only wm tolerate bigness;
it encaur&amp;Kes corporations to grow as blg as they can
get, so l!lng as they refrain from UJega I practices.
AT&amp;T 1s a unique enterortse. a regulated monopoly
that finally was chopped apart by the same government that had, allowed It to grow to maSSive proporlions- The admlnlstrat!oll pt·~r...:! for, and 'fOD,
AT.lT.'a pledge to aelllts 22 Be~ OJlt'ldtlnJ! companies,
worlh an estimated ~ bUHon. ·
But It was the case that was lost, to IBM, that '
reveals mare aboUt theadmlnlstratlon's,antitrust pollclei and their lmp!ICa\IODS for American business.
The ~puler lndultJy exists In a more normal,
compeUttve bustDell envirOnment than the telephone
lndultly. ID the JBM
theeoveinment'sultlmate
p i bad been a court order breaking up ·the

case,

Accountsinsuntdto
JJOO,OOO by FSLIC

of recession, say they need reductlollllln labor costs to
compete with foreign manufacturers. 1AP Laser·
pboto),
'

CHICAGO (AP) - A decision by United Auto
Workers bargainers to open talks with the naUon's
two largest carmakers leaves some UAW offlc!als
worried that big contract losses are ahead.
"We think early talks mean concessions and we're
not ready lor that," said Don t;Jouglas, president of
UAW Local594 at General Motors Corp.'s Truck and
Coach division plant In Pontiac, Mtch.
The union's bargaining councUs for General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. authorized th~ negotiations In separate meetings Friday. Both councils
planned to meet with the automakers Monday, and
UAW President Douglas Fraser said the councils
could be discussing tentative new contracts when
they reconvene Jan. 23 In Washington.
"If you don't do sometbtng reasonably quickly,
what's the point?" Fraser said. The contracts exptre ·
Sept. 14.
.
Ford and GM balled the union's decision, but some
bargaining councU members complained that their
unton. bad been railroaded and company threats of
layoffs and the movement of jobs overseas amounted
to .. blackmail."
" We don't think we should bow under to the thea tot
blackmail," said Douglas, adding that his local membership strongly opposes renegotiation.
Officials ol both companies, plagued by slumping

sales for nearly three ·years, have insisted for 11
months that the UAW must grant concessions to
make 'the companies competitive with foreign automakers ..Year-end reports this week showed further
decline in domestic sales.
UAW negotiators were to meet with Ford bargainers in Detroit at 10 a.m, Monday, followed by a 2 p:m.
meeting at GM headquarters here.
Union leaders refused to call the negotiations a
reopening of the contracts, but acknowledged that the
process eventually could lead to changes in the pacts,
"We're not willing tocommltourselves to aqyproposal before we enter into negoUatlons," Fraser said.
Bargaining on a new contract ordinarily would
begin In July.
·
'
The resolutions adopted by the bargaining councils
left open the question of whether the contracts wm be
altered or bargainers would try to negoUate a new
pact.
In a statement Issued from Detroit, the GM vice
president' lor industrial relations, Alfred Warren Sr.,
praised the union 's decision, caUing it "both reall~tlc
and appropriate."
.
Ford Chairman Philip Caldwell ·agreed, saying
"we all know that we bave major problems In tbls
Industry, and they're not going to be resolved unless .
we can slt down and talk about It and work out the
Issues together."

Suit settlements boost
Reagan antitrust pol~cy

1·800·472·9588

~16

Her son Wayne is on trial lor Ute murder of two young
Atlanta blacks. lAP I..aserphoto) .

,

~-

.

.

.

The ~t cbBrtred that In the ~. IBM
· enppd In ''pnda!Dry-practlces," maldngunproflta- ·
bie productl•leJUDi them below cost'solely to hurt
po'"l!fl ~'
Wlllam Bater, the lllllltant attorney ge~~eralln
cblrlt~ tbeJUIIfce Deparlmeat'a anUinlltdlvlalon,
· dedllell ~~ the case apb!lt IBM, bullt over 12 ye-

•t

ars, was "flimsy." He dropped the case.
Baxter, a chain-smoking former Stllnford University law professor, assumed his classroom inlen
when reporters asked what lessons could be learned
from his decisions.
The administration does not view the Sherman Act,
the nation's main antitrust law, "as creating a nofault monopoly situation," said Baxter, thereby dis·
posing of a lynchpln of liberal economic theory.
A "no-fault" monopoly, as Baxter called it, Is one
created by a corporation tbrougb. tts own efficiency
and competitive zeal, not through purchasing other
competitors or engaging in Wegal "predatory" practices. Liberal economists would have the government's antitrust arm break up such a monopoly.
In contrast, Baxter presented the R2agan admlnls·
!ration vtew. "A company tbat Is large and has a
large market share Is free, and ought to be ffl!e, to go
on competing aggressively, keeping its prices down
. and c_a pturing an even larger share the market if It
can," he said,
The adminiStration's first-year record in ·anU-trust
.enforcement demonstrates how Baxter's Ideas bave
been put into practice.
. The government has permitted two or the largest
mergers In U.S. history, wtthDuPontswallowlngConoco and U.S. Steel taking over ·Marathon
The Fed~al Trade Commission has abandoned Its
1973 antitrust sutt against the major aU c_onipanleS.
The Reagan appointee who heads the FTC's antjtrust
dlvtslor&gt;, Thomas Campbell, last month urged the
commission to abandon the government's remaining
mammoth antitrust case, agalia!lt · the cereal

or

ou.

lndustcy.

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SETiu:MENT REACHED - Cbarlea Brown, . tlement . In a seveo-year-old antltrn•t •ult agalm~t
cbalrman of Amerleaa Telepbooe aad Telegraph AT&amp;T, which will reqilfre the company to give up Ill
opeakll at a - • eanfere~~«, alnc with Aut.tant A&amp;- local operating oompaDiea wllltln the nell 18 months,
(AP I..aaerpholo) ,
~Y Geaenl WIW8m Basler, left, Friday io
WasJtlriCion. Tbe Jaallte Departmeat aiJI!OQIICed a ae&amp;·'

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Pa9e-0-2- The Sun(jay Times-Sentinel

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

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HU:SNO, ·eallf. (AP) - Rescuers
who were kept off the high Sierra for
five days by winter storms managed
togettothe.wreckageofallghtplane
and found an 11-year-old boy !lllVe,
huddled ·In a sleeptilg bag near the
bodies of his mother. and stepfather.
"I think It's remarkable D9nald's
allve after five days," Dr. Rfchard
Chandler said Friday after examtnlng Donald Scott Priest at Valley Medleal Center here. The coy's body
temperature had dropped to ~

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. REP. BUZZBALL

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Ball will
address group
POMEROY - State Rep. Claire
"Buzz" Ball will be the guest
speaker at the annual met&gt;Ung of the
Meigs County Association of Township Trustees and Clerks on Wed:
nesday (Jan. 13). Toe lawmaker will
speak on legislation affecting toWnship government and · on reapportionment.
Ball, an Athens attorney, is servlng in his fifth House tenn. Prior to
being in the legislature, he served
four years as prosecuting attorney
of Athens County, and -is a fanner
legislative assistant to Congres:;llian
Clarence E. Miller.
The meeting wili be held at the
Roc)! Springs Grange Hall. It will
begin at 7 p.m. All members,
honorary members and other in- ·
terested persoris are invited to attend.

STANDARD PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

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~~ ~ -~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~M~
· C:b:e:q;•;cl=·~~:·:~:~:n:l,~~~sh=~=~~~=t=of~s=no=w~o=n~the=
· ~S:te:rr:a~N=ev=~=a~a=n=d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!
preeeDtiDC WOIOD with a plaque.
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N£W HAV£N

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Nash chosen for
~. group_membership
group~
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· FURNITURE

POMEROY - Jeffery Nash, 516 this highly talented
student
~berry Heights, Pomeroy, lu!s musicians is considered a musical
~
~n accepted for nieiiioei'shtp in
honor of national i!Dportance. The
: tfie U'lited States Collegiate Wind members of the orie hundred piece
• Band, a highly selective musical wind band are chosen from all over
~ organization which will make a con· the entire United States once each
l• .•cert tour of England and seven year.
o 'European countries nex! July and . In -addition to perlonning conAugust.
certs, the wind band members will
,
His parents are Mr. and Mrs. visit musical shrines, musewru; and
~
Qeorge Nash. He plays trombone in places of musical interest including
• tile ·local Meigs High School Band, Richard Wagner's house in Lucerne,
: conducted by Douglas M. Hill.
MO'tart's birthplace in Salzburg and
:
The invitation to tour with the Beethoven's hoUSe in Bonn. They
~
United States Collegiate Wind Band will also attend selected concerts
&lt; was received · from Prof. AI ·G. . and performances in various British
Wright, Director of Bands Emeritus and European concert halls and
l at Purdue University (Lafayette, In- opera hquses.
,j(illna) and conductor of all eleven of
• 'the previous United States
' Jeclllegiate Wind Band tours since
: 'l!Jey were started In 1971.
l
The United States Collegiate Wind
Band will travel for three weeks in
~ .,. England,
France, Germany.
• Austria, Italy, Holland, and Swit•• zerland. Among the cities in which
: the concerts will be perlormed are
: London, Paris, Lucerne, Salzburg,
• Innsbruck, Lugano, Berchtesgarten,
Muni~h. Vernona, Cologne, Milan,
Heidelburg.
The group will assemble in New
•• York Ciy for rehearsals prior to
• their departure from Kennedy Air; port on July 13. While ill' New York
City· the band will play invitational
concerts at the Uncoln Center for
~
the Perlonni,ng Arts and in the
Plaza of the Americas at
.J'OCkefeller Center.
• . ,. {lcceptance for membership in
NASH
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aven,n•
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0VEfi-.2JS;GQr[ W

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ASsembly:
PRISONS - A-$481 mt111M pro) gram for Con.stn.ctton and renova, ttoa c:A prisons throughout the state.
i • ··Oitferent versions passed by House
'
and Senate; pending In a joint confei'E!IICe commtttee which meets
I Wednelday.
; . ·- REDI8I'RICTING-Orawsnew
' bOWIIIarY 1lnes for Ohio's ccngresC
stonal districts, reduced from 23 to
21 this )'ell1' due to populatloo shifts.
Pendll1iJ In the House Elections
Coolmlttee.
;
ORGANJZED CRIME - Pack:
88'! or biJJs reslnstatlng an organ; ''bled crime statute struck down by
: · ~ the Ohio SUpreme Court, expand·
•
1ng powers of attorney general to
~ . coaduct Investigations and autho-

)

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THIS HAS TO
.. .
FURNITURE SAL::
:HH!HGREATEST MONEY SAV 5
DO ,
ISTORY OF Nl
lNG
. NT YOU DARE MISS ITI ASON COUNTYI

j Major ·legislation still
~ pending in both houses
the status of major legislation
pending In the 114th Ohio General

. '251,000 .

of

QUALITY FACTOR. y
FRESH F . · ·
·
-~ RN IT·URE
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crlLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Here

rlzJng COW't-ordered wiretapping
by pollee. Hearing Wednesday In
Senate JudiCiary Committee.
SCHOOL FUNDING - Proposed constitutional amendmeitt
and school aid bW which would shUt
local funding of schools !rom soli!
rellanceon PI'Oill'rty laXes to a mixture Qf pl'q)eJ1y and personal Income levies. Hearing Thursday In
Senate Ways and Means
canmtttee.
MANDATORY SENTENCING
- Imposes mandatory prison
terms without chance of parole or
probation for people convicted of
using firearms to commit felonies.
Passed Senate; pending In House
Judiciary Committee.
.
ABORTION - Requires certain
lnfOJ'!I'I8tlon to be giVI!ft to pregnant
woq1e11 before they consent to abortions. Passed the Senate; pending
In House.

SORRY!
WE CAN'T
SHOW
EXAMPLES

ABSOLUTELY

ItO JXCEPTIONSI

EVERYTHING IN THE
STORE HAS BEEN
DISCOUNTED FOR
QUICK SALE. ·
•Credit Available
•Layaways Welcome
Extra Discounts For

·

Cash
I"'Yffllll ... If

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: .-...Plane crash kills Rayland ~ident
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POMEROY-The, Metp County ·
'JI! lll't'Diip!ibueilt J'IIIOI'ta a hit-·.
Veieran. Memorial
• lldp N4 FltdatP fiiiiiiD&amp; 011 ,
SR
,at
Maplewwd Lake.
ADMtssiONS---CIItfotd ~os- 1
Acclordlng to the report the dekey, Middleport; Martha Hatrmap,
partment received Charles Ma·
A RQmeroy; Faye H8Jllel', Racine.
nuel, Jr., Racine was travenng
DISCHARGES-·-Oretba Durst,
down river wben an unldentlfted
Otho Karr, Maude Ba,Uey, Pauline
vehicle sideswiped his car and continued on.
·
Ol!l'l!llberger'

•

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PORTA~LE.

19" COLOR

• Black matrix picture
tube
• Automatic
Frequency Control
• Color Correction·
·
Clrcut

Single knob electronic
tuning
DeluJte cabinetry
Automatic fine tuning ..

..

sa·as

non

19" REMOTE CONTROL ·

25" REMOTE CONTROL
COLOR CONSOLE
•

Keyboard Electronic

•

Tuning
1
Convenient swivel base

~~--§
-~ §~
-ii-i~-~ COLOR PORTABLE

f!

~sass
ROll COLOR CAMERA &amp;
Quasa,. ~ortable 6 HR . .
VI
0 TAPE RECORDER
CAME~A
• 3 :1 manual

zoom control
• F 1.8 lens
• Electronic
viewfinder
RECORDER
• Top line special
effect. rncludlng
slow motion &amp;
fra'me by Ira me
advance
• 90 min. battery
pack

:· Pomeroy police check
E· two minor accidents
•.

POMEROY---'1\vo minor accl-

~- dents were Investigated by the

&lt;Pomer,oy

Pollee Department

:. i'rtday.
,, At 3 p_.m. a truck owned by
': James Perkins was parked In front
. ~ or Lela Hawk's residence ,
·' Pomeroy.
· According to the poUce department the unattended vehicle
jumpedoutofgearanddrtftedback ·
and struck the front portion or the .
Hawk hOme.
At 11: 55 a.m. at the Intersection
,;; of Butternut and Main Alton Har- ·
~; mon, Pomeroy, was attempting to
. park and In so· doing struck a
~ parlted vehicle owned by Regina
' Butcher, Pomeroy.

0

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$995

COMPLETE ~~\.::](

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~: Driver escapes injury

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GALLIPOLIS- A driver wasn't'·
llijured In a one-car accident In Gal- .
• • lla County early Friday night.
:,
The. Gallla-Metgs Post or the
::: state highway patrol said Brent M.
• James, 21, Rt. 2, Crown City, was
.• eastbound on Teens Run Road, 1\&gt;2
·::: mUes west Of Ohio 7, at 6:30p.m.
·, : wben he lost control on a curve and
::. slf11Ck an embankment.
· • · Sllght damage was reported to
James' vehicle.

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WINTER SAVINGS 0
ON SPRING CARPET *
PLU-SHES AND FRIEZES

SAXONIES
1n a tremendous range of colors. weights
and yarn systems. including Antron·s.
Anso's and continuous filament nylons.
A color and pattern for every part of your
home.

Rich. velvet plushes and highly textured
friezes In solids •.md tweeds.
Beautiful'and durable stylings that
compliment contemporary homes .

VALUES T0_$25

Now$595TO$19
·
9Q.
·
sa.vo.

;: F":are ruled arson
•WATTIRS
·•BROYHILL ·
•THOMASVILLE
•SCHWEIGER
•SIDEX .
•BASSETT

• lock In COlO I &amp;

- fine tuning
• All electfonlc
channel selection
• In line mask picture '

~

r';' -:NEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio

'1AP)-1bepllotofa~
, .plane died early Saturday at Ault-

POMEROY --Three emergency
runs were made by local units Friday and one early saturday mornIng according to the Meigs County
Eme111ency Medical Service. ·
, J\t 4: 32 . a.m. Middleport was
called to North Front StreetCar Cllfford Demoskey whO was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
11: 11 a.m. Syracuse was called for
Andrew Manning who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center; at 7: f1l
p.m. Middleport was called to
North Third St., (or Mandy Murray
who was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
.
saturday at 12: 18 a.m. Middleport was called to the Stonewood
Apts·. for Ann Martin who was
taken to Veterans Memorial ·
Hospital.

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The crull occurred In a wooded
area about oae-qUarter mlle from
'
Harry Klever Airport In New
'"Tnan Holpltalln Canton of Injuries Phtladelphla.
received when the a1rcratt crashed
1\oqpa ut the HJabway Patrol's
~
while attempting to land Friday . New Phlllldelplda post said Brown
night.
failed to !aDd the plane on Ids tlrst
Authorities Identified the victim
approacti and had turned left to try
as Howl'rd Brown, M, of Rayland,
apln when Ita slnale engine tallect
who was the plane's pilOt. A pas-'
The Fedl!ral Aviation Admlnl&amp;senaer, Leonard Reed, 51, of Smith- . lnllloa Willi to belln an lnvestlgafield, was InJured In the crash and
tilxl ot the crash 8ablrday.
.1
,I
was admitted to the Canton
·'
ho&amp;pltal.
Cheek hit-ekip
:

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MEDITERRANEAN
COLOR CONSOLE

·:·Emergency runs

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Old Man Hatfield and the boys are putting the "freeze''
on high prices for the ne;tt 3 deys with storewide reduc- ·
tions on famous · name Color TV's, Major Appliances,
and Carpeting. A tremendous selecfion of 1982 merchandise plus salect closeout f 981 goods are available
right now! However with these low prices, fhey won't
fasr long so don't get left out in the cold-come in ·rlght
away/

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The Sunday

Prodlfed mudstldM In lower eleva- therinla, but was conscious and lucid,

WE'VE MOVED
TO OUR NEW
LOCATION AT

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Jan . 10, 1982

tlons of Northern California. The hospital o!tlclals Said.
. stonns destroyed $211) mtlllon worth
Donald was "askln&amp;9uest1ons.He's
Qt. residential and commercial prop- looking around. He', hungry. He
erty,, state and local officials estl- asked Cor Cood1" ~said. "He's
mated. At least· 6,023 hOmes we!.'!! muchbettertbananyalusexpect.ed.''
damagedand439destroyed,saldNels The chance of " suiVival from a
Rasmussen, chief administrative of- plane crash Is pretty small,"
fleer of the California Office of Emer- Chandler added. "I IUIIJ)eet Jhe snow
gency Services.
may have helped.''
,
"The sleeping bag probably kept
Chandler said be.assumed the boy
him allve," saJd Navy Chief Petty or- knew his mother and stepfather were
fleer Jerry Balderson.
dead, but hospital officials dl(l not
"" degrees.
He was suffering frostbite on his question him about the ordeal.
--- ~!,erial searchers found him In the feet an~ hands p)us shock and hypa.
•
•
four-seat plane, which crashed In a
.
.
stotm Sunday, 11,100 feet above sea
level In the Sierra Nevada. The crash
site was about 90 mUes east of Fresno
and east or Yosemite National Park.
Two Yosemite rangers on crosscountry skis trudged tlrrou8h newfallen snow to the site after getting out
of a he!lcopter. and found the boy In
· the rear or the craft, having survived
303 UPPER RIVER RD. (REAR)
ROTARIANS HONORED - Five memben tile
Plea111111t Rotary Club have beeu hoooml for
near zero-degree cold.
perfectatteadaaee alld aoolber for blo .volanteer worli: Ill ronjunellon with the club's anaual lee creanf sales
The deaths In the crash brought to .
PHONE 446-3782 ·
Pl'!lleet durlq the MaiOD Coanty Fair. Recoplzed were, from left, BW Klllgbt, eight yean peJ1ect attendance;
26 the number'of people who died In a
Dr. Jack Buton, !7 yean; Andy Jabbarpour, elgllt yean; Fay WUson, r..,lplenl or the Super Scooper award;
series of storms that dumped up to 10

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-Survivor found by search team

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Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

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OOVINGI'ON, Ky. (APl - 1be
spectacular
tire that destroyed the
,.
1 · Fray Elt'lle Dallun qency Nov. .2
has been ndecl anm. art the rulllw
hal Jill eUect Ill lnlurance clllml,
IICX:UdbC lo Fruk Rapier, IIIII!Dl
:.: fDr the U.S. 'l'reaany, Buralu at '

• Alcdlol. Tobacco .. Flreluma.
~

. "We have noc amutd anyone,
nor ' lia~·we ellmbaled anyone.
We're ldnd al Ullie banlle11 )'OIIowi!.
I!IOIII!Y to. We're .lll*w to illeep _
Will ldn&amp; lo tllat 0.. lll!ljJOIIII· .
ble pay their debla." Rapier '*Ia
~ _ . COIIIen!DOI! Friday.
,J
Rapier said IIM!IIWalilxl
r taund 110 combullllllel or elecb lc ·
:.. wires that fllllbt haw callll!d tile
tire.
. .' .

MULTI· LEVELS

SILVE.R BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446 8390

s ·c ulpfures. cut &amp; loops. traceries and more- In
solids. multi·coiors ·and tone-on-tones. Many new
styles all at sale prices!

VALUES TQ $23

. $7 95. ·$16 95

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�Page--D-4-'The

Ohio-Point Pleasant

.ltJ t t PS••. -~ · &amp;ail!politJ

w. Va.

1982

Jan. 10, 1982

Pomeroy

Middlepor-t Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

Genealogists in search of Lawrence Cou~ty Harrisons
.

~ Three

shop11 date back
.a lmost 100 years ai'pa~k

By JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOUS -.,. In 1883 Peter A.
Sanns and James McClurg financed
the building of the three
·
rooms that now
house HaskinsTanner, Circle's
Restaurant, and
Gherke's Boutiqu·
.e. The three
rooms are ac~
tually a part of the
same ·building
with a corrtmon
SANDS
foundation; 70,000 c~bic feet of,earth
'were removed from thilr"' spot to
make the cellar, which in 1883 was
,the largest cellar in Gallipolis.
While the Circle's .and Gherke's
liarts of the building were made
from the native red. brick, the
Haskins-Tanner part of the SannsMcClurg block was · faced with
Zanesville . pressed brick. The
builders of this bloek of three stores
was the firm of James Mullineaux
and Company. ·one of the
distinguishing characteristics of the
Sanns•McCJurg block was the
beautiful tile floors.
THE FIRST occupants of the room
that now houses Haskins·Ta1mer
. ~as the clothi,ng finn of Harry
rank'sSo'ns. One can see that name
tched into the brick work yet tpday. ·
In the Circle's room was located the
drug store of Peter Sanns, and
Gherke's room was first occupied by
the T.B. Flower Grocery Company.
In 1884 J .M. Smith ·took over the
Flower store and also ran a grocery
here for a few years. Smith had a
chain of groceries around Gallia
County; we know in 1884 that he also
had stores at Mercerville and
Sprinkle's Mills I Cadmus). By the
1890s this room had become a
millinery store and in 1907 it was
known as Stewart's Millinery. In
1938 Mildeck Shoes Store was here
and in 1959 Ft. Pitt Shoes used this
location at 336 Second.
P.A. SANNS WAS born in
Gallipolis in !830 and started in the
drug business about 1856. P.A.'s
father was John Saims, who had im. migrated from Holland and built the
'store and l1ouse th;!t still stands on
Court Street between First and
Second. At least three of the Silnns
children became prominent in
Gallipolis history: P.A. as a
druggist; John as a doctor; and
Henry as a merchant. Prior to 1883
the Sanns Drug Store was located
across from the square in one of a .
series of buildings t11at burned down
if) !882.
In the Sanns Drug Store one cou ld
b~y pu1·e drugs and chemicals;
popular and patented medicines;

oils, paints, and varnishes; as well
as pure wines and liquors (only for
medicinal, mechanical and
sacramental purposes, of course),
fine cigars, and surgical supplies.
During
the 1880s
son James
H.
was taken
in asP.A.'s
a full partner.
In

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The Third AK• to anyone over age 60
OLD AS YOU FEEt? 01' PeePs
was feeling parlicularly chipper free of charge." ·All t])ey have to do
iB write to Horrocks, director of the
New Year' a Day when he drove into
ouUit,
at this address:
Calvin Layne's service station, got
Area
Agency on Aging District 7,
out rl. ye Zeffer, and walked around
Inc.
thjl front of it jUBt a. a green Chivvy
P.O, Box 978, Rio Grande College
pulled in. Another ol' codger got out,
Rio Grande. Ohio 45674.
eyes wide in a happy·race and just
Or
telephone at (614) 24lHi.'io6.
one tooth showing in the broad
smile..He pointed a finger at Peeps,
KEVIN KELLY shelled out $8.75
and said, '''111ere IS one, after all. I'll
for
a book, "Ohio: A Photographic
bet you're in your eighties!" Peeps
Portrait
1~1941. Fann Security
said he wasn't too far off, but no, he
Photograph,s, "
Administration
hadn't reached eighty yet. "Well, ·
how old are you?" The amlle was which he purchased at the Alcove on
fading. Peeps told the old codger Court Street. Terrific pictures from
.that Peeps would be 74 on the last carl Mydans, Theodor Jung, John
day ill February. Snaggl&amp;toothspat. . Vachon, Arthur Rothstein, Ben
"I'm 78,'~ he said Peeps explained Shahn, Russell Lee, and Marion PO!il
that he's ALWAYS looked older than Wolcott. Mydans is . the only one
he is. There's a saying that you look Peeps has heard of, and it was a
as old as you feel. Tain 't so for Mydans shot which Peeps liked
Peeps, who that day felt good ·and best; you'd have to call it a still life
and it would reveal the scatologicai
looked ancient.
.
character of both Mydans and
Peeps. It's a rusty old commode in
ROBERT HORROCKS, P.O. Box Cincinnati. There are views in
978, Rio Grande College 45674, wrote Jackson and J~cks~n ~ount,r
a letter of thanks for Peeps' Zalesk!, .&lt;\tlanta and Utopia, Oh10:
coverage of Th" Third All" Jan. 3. London, several . only "Central
"You might tell your readers,'' Ohio," Plain City, and Washington
Horrocks writes, "that we will send Court House.

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PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
nation's steelmakers, claiming
trllde laws are being ignored at the
expense of Americap workers, wiU
file complaints against foreign
producers for allegedly dumping
steel in sweak U.S. market.
The petitions, 1o be filed Monday
with the U.S. pepartment of Com·
merce and the International Trade
Commission, were. announced
Friday by U;S. Steel Corp., the
natioo's top producer, and several
other companies.
In W11shin~ton, Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige said
the actions will force the government to suspend the trigger price
-· mechanism, designed to keep a floor
on import price levels.
"This flood of foreign-produced
&gt;'lee!; much of It in violation of the
TPM, is causing widespread unemployment in the domestic steel in·
dustry,'' said U.S. Steel Chairman
Oilvid Roderick. "Currently 76,000
American steelworkers are on
layoff! '
~ petitions allege the domestic .
steel industry is being -banned
because foreign imported steel is
government subsidized on a massive
scale and sold in the United States
""lowcost. ·

Judge ends 16 cases
·POMEROY - Sixteen defendants $10 and costs, improper backing·
fined when they appeared John Pridemore, Rutland, $35 and.
recently before Meigs County Court costs, littering; Robert King, MidJudge Patrick O'Brien. Nine other dleport, $21 and costs, speed.
Befendants forfeited bonds.
Forfeiting bonds were ·Jame9 A.
Fined were John B. Weekley, Simmons, Huntington, ~~thel Shar.k,
llfarietta, $30, speed; Jalal Fousuf Pomeroy, Rr.d JaJT~ea Diddle
Salhi, Tuscan, Ariz., $23, speed; Racine, $50.50 each, speed; Donald
Johli · Pritchard, Athens, $22 and K. Austin, Whitting, [nH., and
costs, speed; . Shirley Guthrie, Robert L. 14alley, Cheshire, $40.50
Columbus, $11 and costs, speed; each, speed; W. R. ' VanMeter
Larry Romine, Pomeroy, $25 and Ma3on, $45.50, failure to yield· eec1i
costs, speed; Steven Hankla, Hadllf!, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and Brinley
J:\utland, $50 and 'Costs, expired . F. Seth, Pomeroy, $370.50. each
pperator's license; Thomas A. DWT; Paul Mark Hannon, Ne~
, f1yers, .Rt. l, Langsville, .$300 and Haven, $372.55, OWl.
costs, overweight; Thomas C.
SCally, Middl~port, $150 and costs,
live days confinement, three days
WASHINGTON COURT
suspended, restitution, hit-skip';
HOUSE,
Ohio (AP) - An lnvestl·
~entA. Varney, Rt.1, Portland,$150
galloo
Into
charJIIeS that the police
:and costs, three days confinement,
depuUnent
mllhandled a probe
:license suspended 30 days, OWl:
Into the theft of cabk!televlllon tal·
.Oaniel A. Territo, Pomeroy, $250
Yel1erllast Febnlary Is apparently
lind COllis, 30 days confinement,
1t111 under way.
.
~icense suspended one year, OWl,
A former Wuldnpm Coun
$50 and COllis, 60 days confinement
Houle polloeman, Lmy MciWJid,
.. '30 days susperuled, one year'
appeared before cl1y COIIIICil last
· probation, resisllllf!; Bonnie Shaf·
&lt;klllbel and railed quest..• about
fer, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $150 and costs
the ilaJidlq d. the lm-dpdon of
. :three &lt;laYS confinement, licen..;
a
theft from the c6'el of Court Ca·
:Suspended 30 days, DWJ; Charlea
bii!'YIIIIII
IDe. •
.
:Reitmire, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $150 and
MoQaold clalmal twoCmvener.
;costs, fine suspended, license
Cllllftlcated
u l!'llldlnce were In the
·suspended 30 ·days, 10 days conJuns
d.
"two
of the hllhelt raak·
. ~inement, DWJ; Michael Taylor,
In&amp;
·pollee
offtcera"
, tn tile .
,SOuth Charleston, $22 and costs
departmeat.
.
. speeding; Joh/1 K. Garre!t, Rutland:

Foreign producers shipped 31 per- foreign governments . .
While U.S. Steel plans suits again ..
cent more steel into the United
st
11 producers, Bethlehem Steel
States during the first 11 months of
Corp.
said it would file 12 · an·
1981 than 1980, while dOli'lestic
tidumping
and countervailing duty
production remained unchanged ,
on
steel mill products impetitions
U.S. Steel sald.
ported
from
Europe.
.
The American Iron and Steel In·
·
"The
resulting
lOllS
of
business
to
stitute, an industry group based in
Washington, says steel· imports in dumped and subsidized foreign steel
August 1981 reached a record high of has d~pr&lt;1S!led order entry levels,
24 percent of the apparent domestic caused a reduction in operations and
employment and, if continued, may
supply.
impair Bethlehem's ability to carry
forward its ($750 million) model'·
Roderick said the corporation will nization program," said Bethlehem
file i:ounter\iailing duty petitions Chainnan Donaid Trautlein.
Inland Steel Co. of Chicago said it
against producers in ,Belgium,
will
file complaints involving nine
Brazil, France, Italy; Luxembourg,
products
and Ii nations. Filing with
the Netherlands, .South · Africa,
Inland
are
Republic Steel Corp.,
Spain, the United Kingdom and West
Jones
x
Laughlin
Steel Inc.,
Germany.
National
Steel
Corp.
and
Cyclops
In addition, Roderick said U.S.
Corp.
Steel antidumping petitions will be
filed simultaneously against
Belgium, France, Italy, Luxem"The petitions note .!hat, during
bourg, the Netherlands, Romania,
the United Kingdom and West Ger- the psst six years, steel manufacturers in these 11 nations have
many,
Dumping is the sale of products in received·massive amounts of. goverthe United States at prices below the nment-generated funds totaling In
cost of production and is a violation excess of $30 billion," Inland said.
of international lair trade laws. " Additional subsidy programs now
Countervailing duty suits allege being adopted there will exceed $30
foreign steel is being subsidized by billion within the next four years."

R.eleases oil ·swindler ·on bond ·

r--------------_;_;:_:_________________________:_________

looking over Sanns' records for the
year 1881 we find that it probably
should have been called a paint store
as he sold that year over 30,000 poun·
ds of lead for paint, 5,000 pounda of
paint coloring, !50 barrels of tur·
pentine and linseed oil, and 1,500
pounds of putty.
IN ABOUT 1895 the Sanns Drug
Store became the Rathburn Drug
Store with the Rathburns remaining
in business until 1939. Rathburn in
the 1890s continued the Sanns line
and added a few of his own like perf~nes, soaps, sponges, toilet ar·
tJcles, trusses and crutches. The last
two items were probably added for
ali the inexperienced painters that
frequented the store.
Harry Frank's Sons clothing
began in 1879 in Gallipolis, although
Harry Frank himself was in
Gallipolis as early as ,11150 as a
clothing merchant. He left town for
Cincinnati from !886 to 1879. Harry
was one of .the four Frank brothers
(Henry, Moses and Leopold beinl(
the others) who came to Gallipolis
from Alsace.
HARRY FRANK RETIRED from .
business· in !887 and turned the
operaHon over. to his two sons Jacob and Samuel -'- who ran the
store until Samuel retired in 1903
and moved to Scranton, Pa. Jacob
then ran the business by himself
(although .Samuel remained a silent
partner ) until 1911 when the Franks
sold, out to a corporation headed by
James Haskins, Daniel Thomas
Vincent Tanner, Charles Clark, and
Judson Sheet;&lt;. All five of these men
had extensive background in the
clothing bUsiness as several had
worked for the Franks. Strangely all
fiye of these men were country boys
- Haskins from Crown City,
Thomas and Tanner from Perry
Township, Clark from Morgan
Township, and Sheets from Mer·
cerville.
Under the rules of sale the Franks
agreed to let the new finn use the
name Harry Frank's Sons and the
Franks ~~reed not to open up
another store m Gallipolis. This corporation changed some through the
years but they retained the name of
Harry Frank's Sons until 1936 when
the company was reorganized and
the name changed to HaskinsTanner.
James Sands' address is ·sox 92
Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
'

wer~

•

Paqe-0-5

Steel industry fights dumping

Jhat!'·- - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - ,

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
JIM MYERS called attention to
GAU.lPOIJS ·- James c. Myers the numbers of people searching for
of Ingels M9Witain, Galllpolill Is a aliceStry in ~pages of The Meyer
subscriber to and · contrtb.,ting Mirror. He said that the Myers
. author for a family genealogists' people- or however spelled- seem
publication, "The Meyer Mirror '' ·_related to everyone, but ·"have not
two copies of which he lent to the found any connection to Aijila the
Peeps colwnn. An editor's comment Hun but woul,d surprise me none."
at the 'bottom reada that the Jamea ·
C. Myers Column was taken in great
part from the "Myers Famlly"
MRS. CHARLES HAIUUSON,
book; which Peeps reviewed a few
2857 Regal Circle, Blnnlngham, Ala.
monthaago.
This issue is Volwne 2 Number 3 35218, and Myers are trying to trace
for the Fall ~ 11181, and it's heade&lt;I. descendents of l)olomon and. Polly
Harrl.onofLawrenceCounty. "lam ·
"What's in our name?/ '.
·
from the line of their son Creed .
First paragraph reads:
William. Mrs. Charles Harrison's
We ar41inclined to believe that prnona (Jf lbe
husband is from the Lewis J. line.
IYlllle nafne are rebded by blood J!OfDe'Whtre 1n
We
hope to publish a book in llite 1982
the put. Th1s ll not 10. We. mult KO brick to,the
· 12tll century In Europe. II wu Ill JIU.rtimo thai
or early 1983 oo this Harrison
people took a ·t.!d or fam.lly name. Our nanie
family. We would certainly like to
COillfS rrom the Latin word Major.
hear from the descendants of
Second paragraph reada that in SoiQIDon'a daughters, and the 11140
German countries Major meant cel18us showed there were seven
head of a meirhoff, a tract of land of and the~e may have been anotlie; ·
at . least 500 acres, and anyone in one or two married prior to 11140."
charge of it became a Meier. At that Thla book Myers said he'll donate to
time there wasn't a Yin the German the Dr. Samuel L. Bosaard
alphabet, but once they let it in Memorial Ubrary of Gallla County
barely, at that - it bumped the i in "if we can get enough response to
Meier, which became Meyer.
make the book worth printing."

The'Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va .

•
FUGITIVE Philadelphia police officers George Mock left and Pat
Taylor hold a bulletproof vest and a bag they r~covered
Hfter they arrested Anthony LaBorde Thursday night

in Philadelphia. LaBorde is being held on charges of
aggravated assault, weap9ns offenses and a fugitive
warrant relating to the killing of two Nyack, N.Y.

Police riab terrorist suspect
PIDLADELPHIA (AP) - Two
traffic patrolmen were looking for a
couple of neighborhood crooks when
they caught a man who turned out to
be one of the FBI's most-wanted
fugitives Bild a suspect in the killings
of three poiketro!•n and a Brink's
truck guard.
Anthony LaBorde, 32, is alleged to
have killed a New York City
policeman ~nd also is charged in an
aborted $1.6 million Brink's armored-(!ar heist in October In which
two police officers and a guard were
killedinsuburbanNewYork.
LaBorde, who authorities said was

a member of the radical Black
Liberation Army, was to have been
listed on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted
list beginning today, officials said.
LaBorde was extradited to New
York City on Friday and faces
arraignment today on a charge of
first-degree ~urder in the Apri11981
ambush in which officer John
Scarangella was killed and his part·
ner was wounded.
Philadelphia Patrolmen George
Mock and Patrick Taylor were
looking for a "Mutt lind Jeff" pair of
men believed to have committed ·a
string of robberies in a commercial

secuon of north Philadelphia,
authorities said, when they approached LaBorde and another man
Thursday night. LaBorde dropped a
bag . carrying a 9mm automatic
pistol, they said.

DALLAS (AP..) ~ A,rnan accused
of detrauding a Columbus, Ohio,
dentist out of $200,000 In ari alleged
oil fraud scheme has been freed on
bond.
Joseph A. Timo, 35, was freed
Friday after turning himself in and
posting $100,000 bond set by U.S.
Magistrate .,John Tolle. Tolle also set
a preliminary hearing for Jan. !8.
According to ~ sworn statement by
FBI· special agent Eugene F. Gee
Jr., Timo met with Dr. George

Collins of Columbus while the two had been reinvested.
were in the Cayman Islands last
Tlmo and his company, J. Timo
International, have filed for Chapter
April.
The statement said Tinio told 11 reorganization under federal
Collins he was buying and · selling bankruptcy laws. Gee said a. review
Nigerian oil and that any investment of the company's financial records
would net a 33 percent profit. Gee shows no invewnents in Nigeria! oil .
said Collins invested $110,000 and
Several other of Timo's investors
received $146,300 in return thr. ,e . have filed suit in .. federal court
weeks later.
'
saying they lost $7.8 million i~
·In. June, the statement said, similar deals. They seek $38 miliion
·
Colbns invested another $201!,000, _indamages.
but was told his money and profits

A s\'ufne ensued, . and LaBorde .
was struck with nightsticks and ·
blackjaci..., police said. It later took
40 stiches to close a gash on his head.
One of the officers was punched 12
times and kicked in the groin by
LaBorde, Capt. , William Demski
said.

New rates hurt organizations ·

lmes?
A father who realizes that a newspaper carrier route can reward a
youngster with much more than spending money.
It can teach the sweet satisfaction of self-reliance and paying
your own way. It can teach a lot about people, about getting
along with fellow workers; about bosses, and about what
you o"(! customers and what they owe you.
I

.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Religious,
charitable and other non·profit oganl·
zatlons will have a harder time raiS·
ing money - and some are expected
to dlsfppear - because of major in·
. creases In their postal rates takblg ef·
feet today.
Robert Blum. board chairman of
the National Society of Fund Raising
Executives. predicts the Increases
will force nearly 10,&lt;XXl of the 70,&lt;XXl
non-profit organizations that have
been financially viable untU now to
close.
·"This is a vecy wrenching change ...
like attacking apple pie and motherhood," he s,aid.
Tthe postal Increases, Blum said,
"will do exactly the opposite'.~ as what.
President Reagan advocated last fall
when he urged that "volunteerism"
make up for cutbacks In federal social
programs.
"The government . says, 'let's not

rely on Uncle Sam. Let's raise it privately.' Then the government makes
it .much more difficult to raise it prl·
vately/' he said.

For example, the Disabled Amencan Veterans mails more than '1:1 mil·
lion pieces annually. Max Hart, its
director of mail marketing, said mail·
lng charges for tundralsing sollclta·
lions and the DAV magazine will go ·
fro'm $1.4 million to $2.3 m1lllon. DAV
will survive but will have to mall less,
he said..
Because they were presumed to be
acttng In the public interest. non-profit
groups such as the DA V have been
allowed a government·subsldlzed
mallratefordecadesforthelrsollcita·
tions and publications.
The subsidy· was sCheduled . to be
phased out gradually by 1987, but the
Reagan administration convinced
Congress to end the subsidiZed rate
now wtth a bill passed last month.
Non·prolll mailers will now have to
use '1:1 cents per pound Instead of the
old 15.8 cents for their third-class mall
lund sollclations.
Particularly hard hit will be nonprotlt organizations using second·
class mall ·to send publications that
contain Utile advertising. Those rates

went from 0.9 cents to 4.5 cents per
piece.
The challf!es do not alfect rates for
regular mall. Including first-(!lass let·
ters. And th!! nOI)·profit rates are still
lower than those charged corpora·
lions and other private mailers.
Nevertheless, "the magnitude and
sweep of the chan~ are unprecedented," said John Jay Daly, head of
a Washlngton consulting finn that
specializes in postal affairs.
The only preferred rates not yet at
the Intended 1987level are for second·
class mall sent within a county and
fourth-class llbracy material. BQth
were increased, but only to the level
scheduled to take effect In 198t.
Blum said the changes will affect
smaller and newer non-prollt brganl·
zatlons most. "Relatively few old, established groups will go under"
because they illread¥ have found
steady donors, he said.
Ending the subsidies was sought by
some proftt·maklng magazine publisbers who competed against well·
known non-profit publiCations

Cardinal
. returns -to service

.

.

It can teach pride, responsibility and hanging in ther~.
doing what has to be done and doing it right.

Amtrak observed the train's dina! was coming back I decided to
ABOARD THE CARDINAL (AP)
wait ; it nearly broke my heart when
- 'A slice of the "good old days"· return by serving champagne to fir- · they took this train off. I ride it three
roared across the eastern United s!-(!lass passengers. The college or!our times a year."
States on Friday and Saturday, in kida, however' had to console them·
Stella Tyree, from West Virginia's
the fonn of a resurrected passenger selves with $1.56-a-can beer in the . Raleigh County, was seated next to
club car.
train known as the Cardinal.
Mrs. McClung. She said had been
The Cardihal, which runs between
Many passengers said they were visiting her daughter in Alexandria,
Washington, D.C., and Chicago, was grateful-to Senate Minority Leader Va .
put back in service by . Amtrak,
Robert C. Byrd, 0-W.I/a., who sponwhich dropped the train Sept. 30 in sored the amendment that put the
an effort to save money.
" I'm so glad they got this train
Cardinal back on the track three
When ·the . Cardinal left · days a week- Sunday, Wednesday back on because !.visit my children
. Washington's Union.Station at 9:05
a IQt," she said. "I've also got a son
and Friday.
p.m. Friday on Its inaugusral west·
"I was visiting my ·son in Alexan· in Proctorville, Ohio, and I ride' the
bOund run, 81 passengers were
dria (Va.)," said ~ McClung of .train, both ways. It costs twice as
aboard, including a liberal Hu~tington, W.Va. "I came over by .much to fiy and even the bus is more
sprinkling of college kida returning bus on Dec. 19 and didn't plan to stay expensive than the train, and nit
to schools in Virginia, West Virginia,
so long but when I beard the Car· nearly as comfortable.''
Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. ·

If you'd like this for your youngster, suggest that he-or
she-call our circulation department and ask about a
newspaper' route.
Oh, and about the money. In this job the nickels
and dimes very
- . quickly add up to real. dollars.
'

Cable investigation

Ex-Gallia couple wins parole

•

......
·np
,

readtnftlp

A CARRIER. The big job you can handle.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Beaver, an elderly
couple known as "Grandma" and
"Grandpa" to their young drug
cutomers, have been paroled Iinder
Ohlo'uhock probation law.
Beav~r. 74, and his wife, Audrey,
63, bad served seven weeks of their
. ~10 year sentences on convictlonl of aggravated drug traf·
flcklpg, a business they
aclmOwiedged tiling to supplement
their Social Security payments.
Jllllle Clifford Rader of Frsnkllll
County Corrtmon Pleas Court

.,

•. '

•

Ohio jobless rate at new high
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ··There
were 601,000 Ohioans out of work in
December, the highest number of
jobless in 41 years, the U.S. Labor
Department says.
The 11.8 percent unemployment
r~te exceeded the 10.9 percent rate
of November.
.
" This is no doubt the highest since
April 1940, when the federal census
showed a rate of 15.2 percent for
Ohio," said William Papier, director
of research and swtistics· fo( the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
If adjusted for seasonal factors,
Ohio unemployment actually
~uates to 643,000 workers, or 12.5
percent, according t.o the Labor
Department.

Plane crash kills
Rayland resident
NEW PHILADELPIDA, Ohio (AP)
- The pilot of a single-engine plane
died early Saturday at Aultman Hospita! in Canton of Injuries received
when the aircraft crashed while at·
tempting to land Friday nlght. ·
"uthorlttes ldenUfled the VICtim as
Howard Brown, 54, of Rayland, who
w8ll the plane's pilot. A paasenger,
Leonard Reed, 51, at Smithfield, was
Injured In the crash and was admitted
to the Canton hospital.
The crul\ occurred In ·a WOOded

was naive about drugs. Defense AI·
suspended the rest of their sentences
tomey
Donald Alexander said prison
Friday and put them on five years'
could equate to a death sentence for
probation. He ordered them to have
no contact with illegal drugs, but both because of their poor health. He
said he wllll satisfied they would not · said Mrs. Beaver was overwelgli area about one-quarter mile from
and that both suffered from high Harcy Klever Airport In New
be repeat offenders.
Phlladelphla.
blood preSSUI'Ii and di_abetes.
Relatives who greeted the couple
'I'roopet's at t.he Highway Patrol's
refused to identify themselves.
.~
Phlladelphla . poet .said .Brown
The couple wBll 81"rested after a
Alexander
referred
to
the
health
failed
to land the plane on his 11rst
1980 investigation. Drugs con.
problems
in
requesting
shock
approach
and had turned lett to try
fiscated in their home included LSD;
haahlsh; marijuana, vaUum and probation, but conceded that priiOII apln when IIIIIInale enctne failed.
officials made strong efforts·to aee
'l1le Federal Aviation Admlnlatra·
methaquslone.
At the Nov. 19, 1981, sentencing, to their medical care while . lheY . tloll wu to bept an lnwltlptlon of
the crash Saturday.
·
Rader ignored pleas that the coupte were confined.
'

•

BURIED LOT - A group of new cars sit at a· local northern portion ~- :'&gt;~ichigan has received up to 23 In~
dealer in Traverse City, Mich., buried by snow which . ches of frosh snow smce Jan. I and is still falling . (AP
has been falling steadily since New Year's Day . The Laserphoto) .

Papler, however, said the figures
are theoretical and include such ~actors as additional Christmas
workers in department stores and
tcen·agers joining the work force at
the end of each school year. Papier
said he prefers to work with actual
figures.
"Now we have cyclical unem·
ployment and we are in a state of
serious recession, probably the wor:
stsince 1940.," he said.
Ohio levies an unemployment tax
on some 200,000 employers in the
state and, until September 1900, it
sustained the state unemployment
trust fund. The fund had a reserve of
nearly $750 million at the end of 1974
but recessions since then have been
costly.
"Those recessions of 1975 and 196081 draihed the fund," Pepler said.
"By September 1980 . we had to
borrow for it and we have borrowed
continuously since then so that with
what we owed atthe end of 1981 com·
bined with what we will .borrow In
the first·quarter of this year we are
appproaching a $1 billion debt.
"And none of It has been repaid
yet.''

By Dec. Jt, 1981, Ohio had
borrowed $599.9 11)illion from the
federal government to sustain
unemployment compensation in the
state. On Dec. 15, 1981, Gov. James
A. Rhodes Hsked to borrow another
$307.7 million during the first three
months of 1982 to keep the fu'nd
~oing .
.
Papier said Ohio is one of 16 state~
plus the District of Columbia whlcl\
has had to borrow from the federal
government to maintain unem.
.ployment compensation.
.
,'
As1de from those problems. Ohio'*
unemployment
compensatio•
payments are tied to average annu111
salaries in the stale and are adjuste.
each January to conform to thai
average .
For that reason maximum weekly
benefit!! increase'!! Jan. l !rum $215
to $233 per week for a claimant for
compensation who has three or more
dependenl~ . Papier said that in no
case can a claimant collect more in
unemployment thau 50 percent of his
average earnings In the year before
he started drawing unemploymert
compensation.

r-:.::..-------'--------- -- - - -

.
LEGAL NOTICE
TO I!IDOERS
Notice Is hereby gi~o~ en
that sealed bids will be
received bV the City
Manager . of l~e Cily of
Gallipoli s, Ohio, at hi s of ·
flee in the Munidpa l
Buildin~
for q asoline ,
motor od , diesel fuel and

kerosene .

Bids w ill be re ceived at

the above named office un ·
lit 12:00 Noon, 1ocat lime on

Tut••day. January 26, 1982
and public ly opened and
r~ad at !hat hour i!nd Place.'
B•d forms mao; be obtained
in the Office of the City
Manaqer , 518 s econd

___

~ublic Noti~ e

A vc nur.. G;1 1f 1po hs, Onlo

Jan. 10. 17
PUBLIC NOTICE

The F armor s Home Ad-

ministrntion lias tor selc
from tim e to time , r cslden:

tial proped ies located In
Athens, Meigs and Vinton·
Counties. Any licensed real
estat e brok er int·erested in
lis- ting th ese properties
~hou l d confact t he Far
J'T'1Crs Hom e AdfTl lnistratiOn
a1 P. 0 . Box ~69 , Pomero·v
OH 4S769 . T elephone : i614)
992-6644.

( 121 31 ( It 3, tO. 3tc

�-

Page-D-6-The Sunday Ttmes-Sentonel

~

-

•

1982

C.lassifieds
Galllo Co. *-rea Code
614
446-Golllpolls
367-Cheshlre
311-VInton
~45-R 10 Grande
256-Guyan Dis!.
~43- Arabla Dis!

.

-.............
. ... ·-. ·. ..
"

992·2156
In Ma! on County
11

675-1333

...
... ·-. ···. ......... . ..... .
...........

_

Giveaway

4

PUPPIES304 675 3717
card of Thanks
Lawrence Manley Jr
and Lawrence Manley Sr
w1sh to thank all the people
on the garbage routes for
remembering them at
Christmas t1me W1lh all the
g1fls and money they gave
them Your klr.tdness wtll
be remembered and may
God Bless and prosper you
Oil In 1982.
Thank you all

card of Thanks
My Husband and I w1sh
t() thank our friends
ind my customers for
the1r
sympathy ,
prayers, cards and
understanding durtng
the recent •flness and
death of my father. I
wtll cont1nue to bake
iind decorate cards for
all occas1ons
Bunny K uhl
Ph 992 7537

3

Announcements

SWEEPER ond sewong
)'nachtne repa•r, parts, and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
:Cleaner. one nail mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
~0294
'
Complete line of Muhle
L:oadlng Guns and Sup·
Spring
Valley
'piles
Trading Co , Spring Volley
,Piazo. «6 8025
Anyone having furniture
for replllr at the res1dence
of the late Harold Russell
make arrangements to
p1ckup by .January 31 . 1982
all unclatmed Will be sold
'Call «6 1881 after SPM
'For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heatmg ott and
dte5el fuel , call Landmark ,
992 2181. Pomeroy. Oh
Gun Shoot Ractne Gun
Club Every Sun start1ng
at 1 p m . Factory choke
guns only
Racine F1re Dept. sponsors
Gun Shoot, Sat nights
6:30pm , Bashan Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun

a

Income
tax
serv• ce
Federal and state Income
tax forms, quarterly repor·
Is, and W·2 forms will be
done by appointment See
Wanda Eblin, 41000 Laurel
Cliff Rd, Pomeroy 992

2272
GIVING PIANO lessons In
Bradbury $4 half hour
Adults and children over 8
Call 9'12 5071
GUN
SHOOT at the
Rutland Amer~can Legion
12 noon·every S'-Jnday F.ac
tory choke guns only
0
PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL
Profess.tonal Electrolyses
Center. A.M A approved,
Doctor referals. by ap·
poinlmenl only
304 675·
6234

Flea
Market .
New
Opening. 7 days a week
The Heart of Middleport 20
N 2nd 51 formerly Marlin
General Store 992 6370
~~--~G~I~
ve~a=
w=a=
y-----

ANY PERSON who has
llnythmg to give away and
does not offer or allempt to
offer any other thing for
Jlale may place an ad In this
column, There will be no
c;harge to the advertiser.

•
·------------------tWO CALICO CATS, both

9 SHEPHERD pupp1es. to
good home, 304 773 5798
THREE hall Beagle pup
p1es, 304 895 3641
6

Lost and Found

FOUNb Gall l a Acadmey
High 5chool Class ring
Graduat•on year ts 1939 It
Is a woman class rmg To
ldenttfy letter •nside of nng
call «6 2343

LOST mans Lev1 leather
wallet. Shop·A·Minol. 22nd
&amp; Jefferson Return con
tents, pictures sent• mental
value. keep money Phone
304 675 3983
LOST Small black purse,
vtctntty of Mau'l and
Pleasanl Valley Apls
Reward 675 7426
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auctton every Wed at the
Hartford
Community
Building Sale l1me 7 p m
consignment of new and
used merchandiSe always
welcome
Rtchard
Reynolds aucttaneer 1 304
275 3069
FARMERS turn thai un
neected maCh mery tnfO
hard cash Siders Equtp
ment Co tS now taktng con
stgnments
for
fhe
February 13th Auc!IOn
304 675 7421
9

Wanted lo Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
ntture and Antiques of all
kmds, call Kenneth swa1n,
256 1967 m the evemngs
CASH PAID tor clean, late
model used cars Smtth
Buick Pont1ac , GAllipolis,
Ohoo Call446 2282
BUYING GOlD&amp; SILVER
paying ca5h tor anythmg
stamped lOK. 14K. 18K and
dental gold. Class r~ngs,
wedding nngs, silver coins
or
anyth•ng
stamped
sterlmg Clarks Jewetrv
Store Gantpolls 4-16 2691 or
992 2054 in Pomeroyl

13 1nch or 15 tnch wheel for
Subaru Phone 675 4154
~--:-:--:-:-­

Gold,· silver, sterling,
lewelry, r ings, old coins &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport 992
3476

1 black cat part Persian To
• good home. Call4o16·0562 .

~DORABLE, tuddly pup·
pies, Iatner Is • border
Collie, molher·terrler type
!lOg, 8 weeks old, only Jlefl
1:whllt!, 1 tan, 1 black wlln,.
while. Caii61H9H57~ .

RAW FUR puyer Beet &amp;
det!r hide glnsnang Trap
ping supplies . George
Buckley, Rt 2, Athens, Oh.
614·664 4761
Open
evenings.

.

~

- _,H~e~lp~W
=a~n~
le~d~~

VINTON
COUNTY
HEAlTH DEPARTMENT
•sa dual agency tnvolved tn
BOTH pubiLc heallh nur
stng and home health nur
stng servtces. We have a
postt1on ;wadable for a
regtster ed professtona I
nurse to ass1st In these
programs If you destre NO
'on call' hours, and can
wor ~ 321 12 hours per week ,
please call 596 5233 Ap
pltcattons accepted unt•i
January 22. 1982 WE ARE
AN
EQUAL
OP
PORTUNITY
EM
PlOV E R
D~rect Care Staff needed
by Restdental and Day
Treatment Program ser
vic lng retired adults Wtth
behavtor dtsorders Ap
plicants must be un
derstandmg, pattent &amp;
c:reattve Interested people
must have prevtous ex
pertence working w1th
people and be able to work
flextble hours $10,000 year
salary for 45 hr work week
plus otner benefits 11 1n
terested send resume to
Ohto Res•dental Serv .ces,
Rl 1 Box 7 Moll Creek.
GallipOliS. Oh 45631

GET VALUABLE tra1nmg
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great g1fts as a Sen
f tnel route carrter Phone
os right away and gel on
the ellgtblltty list at 992
2156 or 992 2157

'
Serv1 ce Manager Needed
for automobile dealershtp
E)(per.ence
requir~d
Replies kept confidential
Send resum e to Box 729 H
co
CallY
Sent1nei ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Automob1le
Sal esman
Needed Amb1t•ous person
Willing to meet the public
selling new and used
automob1les. Some ex
perlence requtred Replies
kept confidential
Send
resume to Bo)( 729 c. co
Dally sent1ne1, Pomeroy.
Ohi045769
RELIABLE PERSON to
clean downtown Pomeroy
offices once a week tn
eventng Wnte Box 729 8 ,
Dally Senttne l, Pomeroy.
Oh iO45769

m·

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDES. Gene Hines
Rt 1, Amesville, Oh 448
6747 Buying raw fur after
Dec 12 Dolly 6 PM to 9
PM, closed sundays Also
closed Dec. 24 &amp; 25.

female . One mostly black,
one mostly while. Call 388
1510

·· ~

R N immed1ate opening
Pharmacy based 1 v team
work for professional
Pharmacy
Buying
Gold,
StiVe1·, hosp l'tal
Platinum. old cotns, scrap n1anagment co Part·time
No
expenence
rings &amp; sllverwllre Dally day s
quotes available
Al so necessary Call V M Phar·
coins &amp; coin S'-lppl les for ma cy 9'12 6297 E 0 E
sale
Spring
Valley
Trading, Spr~ng Valley Sales trainee opportun1ty
Plaza, 4-16 8025 or «6 8026
available E xcellent ear
n1ng potenttal. Salary plus
Company
OLD FURNI.TURE, beds, commlsston
be n ef •h
Old
•ron. brass, or wood K1 t patd
chen cubbards ot all types establ.shed terrt1ory No
necessary
Tables, round or square expertence
training
Wood •ce boxes Old desks Complete
M a nagement
and bookcases Wil l buy program
readily
complete household Gold. promotions
sliver, nld money, pocket avaolable. For additional
· Watches. chains, nng5, and information call Rt chard
etc Indian Arl1facts of all f'lsner 9'12 2480
types Also buying baseball
Need e)Ctra monev for
cards Osby Marlin
holiday bills? Ari·Craft
6370
Concepts now seeking
counselors. tra1nlng now.
Cash for old and used start In January No In
books. no paperbacks, vestment, no delivery, no
schools books, or book club collecllng Call 256 6572
edition Also buy old 011
Plltntlngs Box 114, Athens,
Why settle for less, sell me
Oh 45701 593 8915
best AVON Call 444 3358
Or742 2354
Raw furs , htdes. scrap
metals ,
batteries ,
radiators, glrseng. yellow PART TIME Non·foods
stocker
1n
root, i'!nd merchandiSe s e rvtce
Pleasanr
brokerlrg Harper· Halste· GalliPOIIS · Pl
ad Sa fvage · Company. 300 area Approx . 20 hours per
Eleventh Street. 675 5868 week Must have car Send
Also Flea Market open resume to E Knotts, P o
dally
Open
Monday· 1303, Charleston, WVA
2532S; •nci'-Jde phone num
Friday 1 5 pm
ber

- --

Situ•tions Wanted

Wanted : Person to share 2
bdr apt Cal1245·5835.

Have vacancy for elderly
Home cooked meals, hot
w_ater heat ~ 992 ~6022

Tee

In Metgs County

446-2342

12

Carpool
to
Marsha ll
Un•ver s 1ty ,
sprt ng
BEDS IRON , BRASS, old 'iemesler M · F 8 4. Call
furn1tur e, gold , silver 615 5688 after 5 pm ,
dollars, wd0"1f
boxes.
stone 1ars, ant1ques. etc , 1..3c.....__.....cl~n~s~u.'.:
ra!'n"!c~ec____
Compl ete
households
Wnte M D M1ller, Rt 4, SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
Pomeroy. Oh Or 992 7760
servtces for fire •n.surance
coverage 1n Gallta County
CHIP WOOD Poles max for al most a century
dn! me1er 10" on large5t Farm, home and personal
end Sl2 50 per ton Bundled propert y coverages a r e
slab
SlO 50
per ton
available ~ to
meet 10
Oellverd to OhtO Pallet Co , dlv1dual needs
Contact
Rock
Spflngs
Rd . Lewts Hughes . agent
Pomeroy 9'12 2689
Phone 446 3318.

TO PlACE AN AD CAlL
In Galha County

Wanted lo Buy

2 to 5 horse power slogle
phase motor. Call379 2115

Ma,on co., w. va.
Are• Code 304
675- P-t Pleasant
458- leon
576- Appie Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
895- letart
937-Buffalo

1 S1nger Stvlis1 z1g·zag
Sewmg machine Wlttl
cabinet. ex cona Call 446
8266 after 5PM for more in
fo .

iunhag. ~imt•- itntint!
..
We pay cash for l ate model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co
• Bdl Gene Johnson,
«6 0069.

Meigs Co. Are~ Code
614
992- Middleport
Pomeroy
915-Chesler
343- Portland
247- letart Falls
949-Ractne
J42- Rutland
667- COOIVIIie

Ohio-Point

.

5-4

9

(;fNIIIIi{ied /)11/(t'tl cover the
followinl( telephtme exchan/(f'll. ;.

AU T OMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been
can
c elled?
Lost
your
operator's L1 cense? Phone
9'12 2143
15

Schools Instruction

REGISTER
NOW
for
vanous Arts and Crafts
classes to begtn soon For
more mformat10n call 304
675 3365 The GAZEBO, Ar
fs and Crafts supplies, Pt
Pleasant

31

Homes for Sale

Newly
remod el ed
2
bedroom house, city water.
garbage ' pickup, 2 acres
ground . Located 4 miles
from Pl. Pleasant on Rt 62
S Call Andy W ilson 675·
~281 after 5 and on weeden·
ds
THREE bedroom house.
lot, Leon . 304 768 ·4041
Greall y
reduced
4
bedrooms, lrHevel all elecfnc , new kttchen, full
basement, large fam1ly
room, d1ntng room, ilvtng
room, two and a ha If baths,
garage, extra large lot,
covered patto, pnced on
showing only Phone 675·
2634
3 bdrm
home. carpet,
beautiful cabinets, vlnly
sidtng, outbuildings, car·
pet, nat. gas, City water &amp;
schools «6 3897

·~

3 or 4 bedroom house w•1b
bath 1n country On 2 3
acres
Storm windows,
rural water, garage, lots of
storage space. Close to aiiJ
mmes Price reduced for
qUick sale $15,500 614 742·
2502.

EXCEPTIONAL OFFER
OWne~: will help ftnance
- -- - - - - Rare opportunity, don't
miss . Come see this
18
wanted to Do
beautiful 3 bedroom. brick
home with i1s many
Butcher's Shoppe Cu5tom
butcher ing &amp; processtng l,feat•ore11. Opeh House, Sun
p m (Jan IO!hl 45141
Call 446 2851. Gallipolis, Baum
Addn . Rd off Rl 7
Oh
Rate of Interest, lO'h pet
- -

~-

Will do baby sttttng •n my
home on Chillicothe Rd
Call «6 9845
Will do sewing for woman
&amp; choldren Call 245 9213 or
245 5601 .
ELDERLY lady or gen
tleman to care for m my
home ,
pnvate
room,
phone. 304·576 2103
TWO expertenced
and
dependable ladles w111
wall paper or pa 1nt m your
home or bus1ness Phone
304 458· 1835 or 458 1536

Rel1able woman to babys1t
tn your home Weeknights
or weekends Call245 9213
Sandbiastmg old
cars,
trailers and smaller ttems
Call 446·8274 alter 5 Ask
for Rtck
Wanted to babYStt durmg
the week after oiPM &amp;
anyttm e on weekends Call
«6 2258
Will do babyslltmg In my
home Day shofl only Call
«6 4158

1 1nane1a1
21

Business
Opportunity

Fl!cemyer Cab Co &amp; also
1ncludes Yellow Cab
Equ1pment &amp; everyth1ng
goes Call379 2404
Own your own Jean and
Sportswear Shop Offering
all the na110na11y known
brands 5uch as Jordache,
chic, Lee, Levi, Vanderbolt,
Calvin Klein, Wrangler and
over 100 other brands.
$12,500 00 oncludes begin
nino Inventory, lllrfare for
1 to the Fashion Center,
trlllning , fixtures and
Grand
Opening
Promotions . Call
Mr .
Kostecky at612 432 0676
22

Money to Loan

Columbus Fin! Mortgage
Company FHA VA Finan
clng Loan Rep Cookie
Krauller (304)675·3473
REFINANCE or purchase
your home . lO vear fixed
rate WVa. &amp; Ohio Leader
Mortgage, 77 E Slate St ,
Athens, Oh 592 3051
'
23

Pr:ofessional
Services

Plano Tunlng· Be k1nd to
your ears Call Bill Ward
tor appointment, «6 4372

M=o=b=,=e=H
=o=m
= es= =
3=2===
1
for S•le
TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOMES Gallipolis Year
end sale, pnce reduced,
used mobile homes CALL
«6 7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT
35 PHONE «6 3868
1965 General mobile home
12x65, completely ready for
setup, tncludes cement
blocks &amp; skirting, $4,800.
For more tnformatlon call
«6 0511

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home Set up wtth 2
or 4 lots. gas heat, rural
water, close to town, fman-cing ava1lable Phone 4461294
IOxSO mobtle home, $1,200.
Call388 9354
For Sale 1976 Rembrant
house tratler 12x60, 2
bedroom. woodburner &amp;
atr condlttont:r Call 25lf
1669 after 5
1976 Castle, 14x70, S3,495
1973 Fleetwood 14x65,
$5,9'15 1972 • New Moon
12x65, w/exp, $5,995 1964
Champoon 20x44. $7,9'/5 .
1965 Ca~tle 10x55, $3,495 .
Kanauga Mobtle Homes.
Rl • 7. Kanauga, Oh Call
446 9662
1972 Skyline 12 x 44 1
bedroom furnished, gOOd
condition
Also small
trader for rent 992·7479
Priced to sell Three used
mobi le homes. 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at 0 and W
Estates, formerly K and K.
Rt 62 north, Pt Pleasant,

wv

TWO bedroom 12X60, par
t1ally furnished, yas heat, 3
miles out from
Pt
Pleasant,
Rt
62,
Charleston Rd call after 4,
304 675 3741
64 TWO bedroom, , tra11er,
$1200 304 675 5481
12 x 60, 1972 model. 2
bedroom, gas heat, window
ac. furmshed Located 66
Burdelle Add1!10n. Phone
675·2704.

NOTICE
Lowest
Prices

Neal «6 3862

Ever
GalliPOliS Only Rubber
Stamp Shop Ususally one
or two days service,
Dismuke' s 405 2nd Ave ,
«6·0474.

New 14' Wide

MOBILE
HOMES
$9,295 00

D&amp;W

Homes for Sale

)

lmmedtate openings for
RN Supervisor 11 to 7 shill.
Contact Judy Holley RN
DON, Pinecrest Care Cen
ler. 446 7112 E 0 E

Or r:ent·l bedroom fur ·
nlshed home on Bud Chat·
lin Road on big level lot
576·2711 .

Babysitter needed 1n my
home, day shift, need own
transporta11on References
requ ired Phone 675 5628
after 4pm

House·Meadowbrook Ad·
d ltlon. 3 bedrooms. fam1iy
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement. 304·675·
1542.

12

on Broodrun Road,
will tak" hall down and rest
by month . Call Lucy
Kaylor 882·2407.

FArm, located, o!n Rt 218,
40 acres, 1200 lb . tObacco
base Call alter 6, 2-16·9222.

Sandhill Road , PI
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms, 1
half baths, doUble
garage Owner will flnan
ce. 304·675·5817

115 7 ACREs secluded
far(n, 10 mlie SE · of Pl.
Pleasant., priced on In·
specllon, Todd Bush, 304·
675-51J76.
•

Slluallans Wonted

Will care for elderly
)NOman or man In my
J!ome. Good experience
,RHIOflable rates 667·3602

\II' 6/;7·6329.
Will do ll•byslttlng In my
flame. Reliable. '19'HM7.

J

ESTATES, INC.
Wtth 2 Locations
Former K&amp;l&lt; Mobtle
Home, Pt. Pleasant, w.
Va

675·3000
(Jim Ei!IOII) Rt 93
North, Jackson, Oh10.
288·3752
33

Buildings

Large building for lease or
rent In Middleport Former
C1ty,
Ice , and
Fuel
bu1ld1ng. 742·3195.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2, 1 acre house tots, on 554,
low downpaymenl, land
contract, rural water,
Columbus and Southern
Eleclr~c Call 256·6413, 12
p.mto9pm

Farms lor S.le

42

2

44

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2

Bedroom Tratler tn
Chesh i re
Adults onl y
Phone 367 7329
2 bedroom 12X60 mObile
home . Must have referen
ces and deposit S175 mon•
lhly Home 992 6206 after 5.
busmess 992 6173.
House trailer for r ent tn
Middleport Call
3590
Copf)ertone electroc range
Two bedroom unfurmshed
moblle home located 2
miles out S8B Adu lts only
S175 mo &amp; depoSit Call «6
2300

2 bedroom well tnsulated

2

FOR RENT
3 B edroom ~ 2 bath
home .
CENTURY 21
Southern H tlls
4466610
2 s1ory farm hquse, 4 m•
from town K C. diS! , yard
&amp; ga•den r.an «6 0648 at
ter 5.
\

For rent or lease 3 4
bedroom sp111 level, 2
bath5, f,a mtly room with
wood burner
Close to
hospital 1n PI Pleasant
$300 00 a month $200 00
damage depos•t Call 446
8234
2 bedroom cot1age, fur
mshed, $200, water paid .
Call «6 4416 after 7PM

bedroom house Spr~ ng
Pomeroy Carpe1ed,
remodeled Call after 6
S195 month not 1nclud1ng
utololies 9'12 2288

l··••v•• .

bedroom tratler on
Road $150 month
$50 deposit Call675 3858
Jer~cho

Two and three bedroom
mobile homes. furnished or
unfurntshed 6 room house,
full basement Call675 1371
or 675·3812
bedroom furntshed
tra11er , $150 00 plus
utillttes, New Haven, 304
882 2.466
TWO

ONE bedroom mob1le
ho me,
furntshed,
all
utilities patd, outsk.rts of
Henderson, 304 675 6730
44

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furn1shed
room
$85,
utt111ies pd • single male,
range, refrtg share bath
446· 4-416 after 7PM
3 rooms w1th pnvr.te bath.
845 Second Av e Pl1one 4-16
2215

2nd floor furniShed ef
hency apt 729 2nd Ave ,
Gall opolis Call 446 0957
Adults only, no pets

2·3 room turn , apts
Utltt•e5 patd, dep &amp; ref
requ~red S225 S250 per mo
Cal1446 0952

'

7 room house Jackson Ptke
beh1nd P1necrest Nurstng
home S200 plus depoSit &amp;
ref and 2 bedroom apt $175
mo
down town plus
Unturntshed very n1ce 2 depOSit 446 3919 or 446
-bedroom house 51 Rl 248 . 0021 .
985 4244
4 BedrOOJ'l remodeled
home in Racme area, near
schools Depostt and ref
required 773 5778

5 rooms, 3 bedrooms. bath,
utility room , n1ce and
clean Phone «6 1519 or
992 2430
Nice 3 bedroom house for
rent
mile from Me1gs
Mone 1 614 742·2126.

v..

ALL electrtc home w1th full
me basement, 304 675 3217

2 bedroom house, carpeted,
stove, refrogerator
S275
plus deposit 2 miles from
downtown Gallipolis 675·
3655
room hovse ,
full
basement Two and three
bedroom mobile homes.
furnished or unturn1shed
Call675 1371 or675 3812

THREE bedroom
un·
furni5hed house 10 Hen
derson, references
&amp;
depoSit requ~red 304 675
9760
l b\:droom house. referen
ces, no pets . 675·1365
ATTENTION
M.
U
STUDENTS 4 Uedroom
house. 2 blocks from Mar
shall. 2 baths. tolnl kitchen.
furnished refrigerator ,
washer,
dryer.
beds,
dressers $85 pper student
per month plus utilities
Please call 675 5056
Mabile H&lt;lmt!s

------~fo~r~R~e~n~t _____

2 bdr and 3 bdr. mobile
homes Call4o16 0175.
Centenary. 2 bdr., private
lot, adults, ref. &amp; dep
Eureka. Riverfront lot, 1
bdr , adults, ref &amp; deposit
CaUl 614 643 2644
2 bdr mobile home com·
pletely turn Call.l46-9669
bedroom mobile home
perllally .turn., extra nice,
In Gallipolis. S250 per mo
plus gas, SISO dep., adults
preferred Call «6·3791 "af·
ter5.
Two bedroom all electric
mobile home, 2 miles out
588, $165.00 a month Call
Arden Dobson, «6·2602 or
A-16·3045
2 bedroom, 60~12, FlatwOOds. $)50 per month plus
utilities and deposit Partially furnished. Adults

9925834

45

E. Mait•WIIII

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

46

Furntshed effiCtency. S145
Ufllif1es pd , one person
Call «6 4416, alter 7PM
3 bedroom apt on M1~
dleporl S150 month 9'12
5692
Small 3 room turntshed
ap1 Pomeroy Short walk
from center of t own
Responsible person only
9'12 2588
Apartments 675 5548

For Sale K 1lchen table .and
2 cha~rs. S25 See at 769
Brownell Ave , M iddleport
New wood stove, half pnce.
never Us.ed, $350. Can con
vert to furnance . Call 256·
1216, Gall opolis
Restaurant
equ1pment
recond itioned by RAOCO
Call 304 523·1378
Hgln ,
WVA

All case kn1ves 10 per cent
off Sprmg Valley Trading
Co . Sprong Valley Plaza.
446 8025.
Remington Thunderbolts
22 LR, Sl2 75 per 5 hundred
Spr~ng Valley Trad ing Co.,
Spring Volley Plaza, «6

11025

•

S&amp;W 38 special amo S11 .99
per SO
Sppng Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 .

MIDDLEPORT - ThiS
furnished older home on
good
street
2· 3
bedrooms,
kt1chen,
bath, on large level lot
w•th garden space and
garage $16,000

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBI L E Home
Park , Route 33. North of
Pomeroy Large lots Cilll
992 7479

MIDDLEPORT - Th is
home features a wood
burn1ng hreplace. large
1tv1ng room, beautiful
formal d lmng room,
study and doll hoOse at
mospher.e bedrooms for
the k1ds Basement, ntce
k1fchen for mom . deck
area and stttmg porch
for dad Wtth a beauttful
view of the nver all for
only $45,000

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chatr, rocke r, ot
taman, 3 tables, SSOO Sofa,
chatr and loveseat, $275
Sofas and chairs pnced
from S285 to $795 Tables.
$38 and up to S109 Hide a
beds,$340., queen s1ze, $380
Recliners, $175 to S295 .
Lamps f rom $18 to $65 5
pc d1fettes from S79, to
S385 7 pc , $189 and up
Wood table wtth 4 cha1rs,
$219 up to $495 Desk S110
Hutches, SJOO and $375 •
maple or: pine ftn l sh
Bedroom su.tes
Bassett
Oak, 5675 . Bassett Cherry,
S795 Bunk bed complete
wtth mattresses, $250 and
up to SJSO Capta1n's beds,
S275 complete Baby beds,
$99
Mattresses or bo&gt;&lt;
sprmgs, full or twtn, $58 ,
ftrm, S68 and S78 Queen
sets, S195 5 dr , chests, S49
4 dr chests, $42
Bed
fram es. $20 and $25, 10 gun
Gun cab1nets, $350, dmet
te cha~rs S20 and S25 Gas
or electnc ranges, S29S o~
thopedtc super f1rm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25. &amp; SJO
Electnc ftreplace, gun
cabtnet, Ltvmg room sutte .
wood tab le &amp; 4 chatrs
Used,
Ranges ,
refngerators , and TV's,
3 mtles out Bulav111e Rd
Open 9a m to 7pm, Mon
thru Fr t , ~am tQ5pm , Sat
«6 0322

POMEROY If you
want your own bus• ness
and 0!1ly need the
b\.tlldtng, here 1t ts!•
Bus mess on Matn Street
• w1th 2 apartments over
to fD&lt; up and rent Th1s
may be the beg1nntng of
someth1ng great for
you Call for del~ol\
TUPPERS PLAINS Ntce ranch type home
w1th 3 bedroomS, ca r
pet, pat1o, storage
bu1ld1ng , in good
locatton , on a level :~;,.
~ere lot Proced to sell
$32,500 •
SYRACUSE - A neal
double W1de home w11h
equopped k1lchen plus
dishwasher. electric
heat. storage bulldtng,
wood burner, n1ce lot
$32.000
POMEROY
3
bedroom.
pr.vate
locatton Excell ent con
d1t•on . F treplttc e. full
bas~ment ,
garage
$34.500
REAlTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI992-6191
Jean Trussell
949 2660
Roger &amp; Dottte Turner
992-S692
Office
992·2259

SOFA, 89", green velv et.
$75 . 304 675 1033
G OOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
r etng erators,
rang es
Skaggs
Ap
pltances, Upper Rtver Rd.
bestde Stone Crest Motel
446 7398

REALTY
George s. Hobstetter Jr
- Broker
OFFICE 742-2003
~CRAGE
with a
lovely 3 bedroom home
Th1s home has an equtp
ped Kenmore kitchen,
11h baths, full basement
and n1ce sun deck,
overlooktng your own
pooct 'fhts 711'2 acres of
secl USIOn I S pnced jUSt
right at S45.000 00
OWNER FINANCING
- Lovely 2 storv home
Wi th nver \ltew m Mtd
dlepor t
10% , nt.erest
r ate Ftnanced for 12
yr s at approx 5268 00
per mo Selltng pnce IS
$26 ,500 00 Great starter
home
EXCElLENT BUY Rac1n e
Large S
bedroom home Lovely
wOOdwork throughout
ON LY $25.000 00 and
owner w•ll ftnance at
10%
1 nt erest
r_,te,
55.000 00 down and
S264 31 per month lor 10 '
yrs
RACIN E - 4 bedroom
home, we lt tnsulat ed
Kd c h e n
h as
ew
cabtnets You must see
tht s home to apprectate
•I s beauty Make your
appt
today 11 ONLY
$32 ,500 00
MIDDLEPORT - Ex
cellent locatiOn. close to
school and shoppmg
ThiS
home
has 3
bP.drooms ,
full
basement and vtnvl
stdtng N1 ce fenced back
yard
PRICE

$38.500
R E D u00
cE D
t0
OWNER FINANCING
- Why not look at thts 2
story home on Unton
Avenu e Thi S home has
many
posstblltttes
Ther e ts off street
parl&lt;tnQ and lhe owner
will fmance w1th down
pmt at only 10% tn
ter est
You can' t beat our
owner ftnanced proper·
11es for good value on
today ' s market. We
have more, so why not
call for a showtng on
these today ill
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc
Phone 742·3171
Velma N1t1nsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3092

For sale gas range, $30
Call388·8655

Real Estate - General

VIRGIL B. SR.

54

Misc. M..-chandlce

Lump c;oal SJ2 per ton.
Zlnn Coal Co , Inc. Call «6·
1408 between 9 and 5

Phone
NEW LISTING - On
lop of the world at
Pomeroy This bulld ong
lot will gtve vou fresh
a.r and view of the
beautoful Ohio plus the
surround1ng htlls
2 FAMILY HOME Large and roomy , v1ew
of the Ohio, a ll c1ty
ut1hhes and large yard
Excellent 1ocat1on ~or
busmess No zoning, use
for what you want
1 ACRE , l bedroom.
lull basement home
Coal furnace , 2 car
garage and all c11y
ut,lotoes Only $16,500
Owner financing
12 ACRES - On Slate
Rt, ci ty water, natural
gas, J bedroom home
overlook.ng the Ohto
R1ver
CHEAPIE - 4 acres
covered with young
trees for firewood 4
room frame house. Only
S6.000cash

Housi11y
H e.lriC/11&lt; If t1: r .~

54

Eff•c•encv rooms by the
week on Matn Street.
Mason. WV 773·5651

Used f ir e place msert
' Free heat Machtne' Dua l
blower system , exc cond ,
S175 Call446 4885

OUTSTANDING BUY F rame hOme With
aluminum Stdtn g 2 bedr ooms, balh , located tl'l
town
N0085

m 22o.s.

cu .. , .......

John
Bulldozer,
mOdel Deere
350 w1th
w1nch
gasohne operated $6,000
Caii14Nll44
Rear Window louver tot 79
dr Omn1 or Horizon
new S75 7A2 3154 or
992 7-167

~I~=========~==========
54

Misc. Merchondlce

Crossman B B' s S1 09 per
1.500
Sprong
Va ll ey
Trading Co , Si&gt;r~ng Vall ey
Plaza. 4-16 8025

We1 ghts. bar bell, and ben
t i res
Hanshaw' s ch. SJ5 Call4ol6 0562
on Lucas Lane 6757360
A carry out busmess closed
down and has all beverag e
OPEN Saturday Sundays coolers tor sal e Ca ll 1 614
I 006 30 p m only Sam 286 5740
Somerv1lles Warehouse,
( foeld jackets ) 7 Miles easl
Ravenswood "s bridge 304
675 3334
Used
T.res

54

Mtsc. Merchandlce

Apartm ent s1ze bottle gas
cook stove 45,000 btu gas
hea l er 9'12 2077 or m 7476
after 4 p m
F IR E WOOD sp ill oak. S40

a r 1c k, $70 a cord, call 30-4
675 3137 anyllme

SE ASON E D oak firewood.
call 304-675 2757 alter 4
pm

DUAL HEAD Freeze Kong
soft serve 1ce cream
machine in very good con
d•t•on Ha\le dlsconttnued
selltng 1ce cream Must e)C
pand carry -out business
Nophonecalls Canbeseen
11t Shl!lmmy ' s Cl!lrrv out.
605 w Ma1n St , Porneroy,
Ohio

43 ACRES - Old house, other bull dtn gs 1 some
woods, a ll m meral n ghts, Add ison Twp
M' 029S
GOOD BUY - Bu1l dtn g or m obi le
acres, m or e or tes!i, first $3,000 buvs tt

ho m ~

tat.
11

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367·0228
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
Darvin Bloomer', Realtor 44~.-2s,99~"'
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327
----- · ,...__--ReaiE~-Generat ----- - ...

-

----- -- - - - -

- -~---

· --~-·--

Broteer Auctlonee:r

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-lo66

.,

LIFE
INSURANCE
421 Soc-Ave.
Coil 446-0112 Anvttmo
BMR 406 1 25 Acr es m/ 1 loca ted cl ose to
GallipoliS Fronta ge on 160 and Bu 1av111 e Rd

BMR 139 - Two story home on Second Av e. 3 or o4
bedrooms REDUCED to S22,500 Belter see thiS
one

II iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii!i~;!~"~-~
NEW LISTING - 2 B.R tra1ter on very nt ce lot o.
qutet strect K1tchen has stove, r efngerator, dinette
sef, corner d1sh dt5play cab tnet, &amp; easy vtew .nto
spactous L R Thts pl ace cc-~t ld be very nice 1tv1ng
for you or used as 1nvestm ei'h ,' ro eprty Now rents
for S175 Askmg 512.000
JUSTLI5TEO - Newdolltype3B R, home , COlYIS
the key word here Kltcher.1 comes complete w1th 1
year old self clean1ng oven. refngerator &amp; 6 chatr
wOOden dtnette set ThtS flame is about 1 5 mtles out
Of Middleport on 2 plus acres, 11 has outbu ildtngs for
stOrage Rental mcome from a tratl er S17S All th1s
lor only S35.000
VER¥ NICE - This home has 3 m ce s1ze B R 's,
closets, eat en k1fchen D R or F R , &amp; an extra L R
Lot IS J plus acres, garage, several other n•ce
bUtldlngs fru1t trees, several vari eties of berry
bushes, curtam s woodburner d tshwa5her, all stay
G1ve us your otter 1n the 550' s

RENTALS AVAILABLE - Ntce bn ck home in
Letart. OH 5250 a monm plus S250 depoSit &amp;
references

Mise Merchandlce

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots w ith A
r ental mobile home pads. a ll are r ented, each pad
has concr ete ru nners and pafto, located tn ROdney
12155

Excelsior 0 11 CQ • 636 E
Ma in St , Pomeroy, Oh10

together on balance

304

YOUR PRIVATE f'ARM - ~ oc r es. ~!tract ive
wooded country selling for lh os big beautiful 4 BR
Colon ial home.onl y3years o ld Nlce v1eW
t om

NO TRAFFIC NEIGHBORHOOD - l ove ly f ra me
ranch on a pr ivate ~treet , has 3 bed r ooms, livi ng
room w1th f1repl ace, gar age and lar ge tat
N1449

AVAILABlE IMMEDIATELY - Close toRt 7 In
the Chester area 3 B R S300 a month plus depos11 &amp;
reference
CALL us TO BUY OR SElL
Nancy Jaspers- Assoclat4!
PH. 843 "207 5_
Vtrgtnta Havman - Assoctate
PH . 985·4197

REFRIGERATOR ,
675 3594. call after 5

I

Homeltte Cham Saw, hke
new Call245 9212

G E
doubl e
door
refngerator, almond, 1
ye ar old$125 Call895 3618

APARTMENTS. mob 1le
homes ,
t.ouse s,
Pt
Pleas-ant and Gal lipolis
614·446 8221 or 614 245 9484

•I

OFFICE 446-7013

3 8 II showcases w ith
ltghts, 1 large bedroom
su•te, doub le dresser and
chest, 2 antique clocks, 1
meat s11cer and mt sc
grocery store equipment.
Call 256 6413, 12 p m to 9
pm

lANO FOR SALE - Close to Rl 7 20 acr es Askong

Rc11r Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canada,, Realtor 446-3636
25 Locust St, Gallipolis, Ohio

·-- -- - -

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY

216 E. 2n~ 51.

H6141-992· 3325

Times· Senti nei-- Pag ~ D-'1

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

Firewood·se•son ed har·
dWood, SJS PICkUp load
delivered Call «6·4176

$13. 000 Owner Will land contract 10% down &amp; work

USED apartment st ze
refngerator , good con
do loon, $75 00. 304 675 2226

The

w. v

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal,
Alumntuni, Brass, Copper,
Batteries .
Sk i dmore
Fosler, 123 112 Pine St
GallipoliS Block Co . 123111
P1ne 51 , «6 2783.

Large 2 dr frost free
refrigerator:,
$125
Wh•rlpool washer and
dryer patr, $225 A number
of used Qryers guaranteed
Call256 1207

'

APARTMENTS for rent.
304-675 3929

Misc. Merchandlce

Furn1shed Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
119hf housekeeping apt ,
Park Centr a l Hotel

51

TWO bedroom mob1ie
home m New Haven
Adults only, no pels, 304
675·1452. '

2 bdr home 1n town. gas,
central
a1r,
garage ,
deposol Call I 614-861;·6406
after6PM

Reol Estate- General

THREE bedroom and 1
bedroom apartments tn' Pt
Pleasant, newly remedied,
clean , c o nventenJIY
located, 304 675 6020.

work ers
Pht~ne 304

bedroom unfurntshed
house
15 Vine
St .
GallipoliS. No pets &amp;
reference required Call
«6 2419 or «6 3949
house near Rio Grande
College, $200 per month
plus utilllres and S100
refundable depos11
References requ1red Call
26·9325 or 245 5364

Apartmemt
for Rent

m

Con5tructton
trailer for three
773 5651. Mason

42

On

From
31

Busl~ess

6

Tra1ler and lot 1972 all
electric 2 bedroom on a 200
)( 100 tot Gall tpoli! Ferrv
67i 4096

C &amp; L Bookkeeping Com
plele bookkeeping and tax
servtce tor bus tness and m

Farms for Sale
112 ACRES, Ashton, 2~x48
double wide, farm out
buildings &amp; tobacco allot·
ment $50,000. $20.000 - n.
owner finance balance!. 10
onterest. 304-576·2911 .
33

34

\

Jan. 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middlepbrt- Gallipolls, Ohlo-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

BMR 388 - OWNER FINANCING I Three BR . Iarge
family room With fi re pl ace Natural gas heat avg
b1 ll $32 00 month last year Call now!
BMR 400 - BARGAIN - For only S8.500 you can
buy a two BR w/ rur al water and ba1h School
d1stnct
BMR 402F - CHECK ON THI S ONE - 37 acr es
w1th 1401 toba cco ba se, lOxJO barn Call toda v~.
BMR 405 .J. GREAT LOCATION I Nice rnch st yle
home w1th a full basement wtth f arru ly room Matn
floor has 3 BR 's, large llv1ng r oom wtth coz y bn ck
fireplace Two m iles from town
BMR 4041 - LOW 30's - • C1ty schools, newlv car
pefed and patnted Th is 3 BR home tS a gr eat buy on
tOday's market
BMR 409 - OWN E R FINANCING! Tho s sploll oyer
nome mcludes J be9.rooms. 2 fu II baths. l~~rge den
With fireplace, neat pump for year round comf ort
See thts fullv carpeted home no\
BMR 391 - REDUCED TO $8,000! Owner wants ol
sold now' Mabtle home situated on r iver front tot

BMR 31'1 - Tht$ f tne home ha s 4 bedrooms and 1S
located en the ctty school system Y,ou wtll ha ve a
large lot w•th a country atmosphere a nd have all th e
ctty conventences Call now 1
BMR 399 - OWNER FINANCING - Two story
home presently betn g used as dup le)(, could bP.
eas11y converted to Stng te tam1l y Cho•ce toca t1on
near Washmgton Schaab Call for deratl s 1

situated within M ills ·
VIllage, fa nat gas furnace,- fireplace, fmtshed "
ba se ment, •n ground pool . manv other amccutt es
Proced to se ll • $75 000 00

MODERN 3 BE DROOM hom e over laok lnq the Ohto
River, Ky ger Creek School Dtsf Owner wi ll help
fmance
PRICE REDUCED on ol de r 2 stor y mc&gt;dern;,,,,
home located on Upper R tver Rd , K yqcr uoook .. •. o
School Otst Property has e)(tr fl lot Now sel ling for ·
$49 900 00

.

"'

MODERN l · BE OROOM, 2 ba ths 'lome Stf uflfed Oil"
Bear Run Rd near Ra cc;oon Cr eek Proper ty con
roms many fr u .r rrcc$ ann 6 r~cres of tetnd
$78 500 00
3 BEDROOM MODERN hom e located on Rl 141 .
1ust out ot city ltm lts, conven1en1 to ctty , n•ce gar
den a r ea .n r ea r Pncc $A9 ,500 00

VACATION MOBILE HOME or perm anent home 1 1
nea r Tycoon Lake Screened '" picmc ar ea, utilitY'
bldg A ll pnced l or i 12.900 00

we PRESEN4TLY have two 2 bedroo m vacant
ap ar t ments near polf Laurse adults on ly , no pets·•
Good loca t• on Ca ll tor m or e "'f orrnat1on

BMA 391 - OWner transf erred a nd must sel l tht s 3
BR ranch Close to town tncludes det ached 26x26

Wood Realty, Inc

~2 Locust St ' Galhpolt s
446 1066

:;~~~-~~l-~~~~~~~~Ri•i•ii~E;s;t;•;I•~;Ge~""i'i•~l~~g~ ~r~a~g~e~p~lu~si1~8~x-3~6~1~n-~g~r-o~u~n;d-~p-~oi-o~~~~-~:~:: : ;-~-~~-~-~~~-Reo_I_E_s_t~lfe.! _e_r_iT_-_:~_-_-_-=_-=_::_-_-=.:::::_:-

VISUALLY EXCITING - A ftreplace opening i nto '
the living and dtntng rooms guarantees a cozv at
mosphere. Family room With woodburner .hat
could make you look forward to wtnter 4 bedrooms,
2 full baths Basement with rer~ms of storage 2 car
allached garage $92,000 Assumable mortgage

Ice ftSh1ng supplies now tn
sto ck
Sp.,ng
Valley
Tradtng Co , Spnng Val ley
Plaza. 446 8025

GOOD TIMES - Country kolchen wolh" adjoining
family room os perfect tor Informal enterta,nlno.
fam1ly fun Four large bedrooms tnclud,ng a master
sui1e with a walk tn closet and private bath Family
bl!lth Formal dm.ng 2 cl!r l!lttached garllge ll'h
acres very private location near Rio Grande

SWAIN

$79,500
A VERY SPECIAl cozy home wolh lots of nk
touches Family room has fireplace With state hear
th, soft plush carpet, custom plant window. Eat tn
kitchen with range and d1shwl!lsher Full basement
gas heat Cent . atr cond Ctty sch.ools OWner will
finance on land contract wtth S6,000 down payment
20 ., .. term at 12% interest rate Monthly payment
$383 J, $39,000

AUCTION,
FURNITURE
&amp; PAWN
SHOP

LET"S TALK QUALITY level home Brand new Split
ltvlng room, formal din ing , wife ap
proved kitchen. 2 baths. 3 BR , could be
.4th downstaers easement level un
finished 1 car garage. Redwood deck In
back Situated on approx ucre. U12

CENTENARY - $43,500 - Three bedrooms, 1i;,
bath ranch Cozy fam1ty room Wtth ftreptace You' ll
love thtS fr iendly netghbOrhOod tust a few mtnutes
from GallipoliS Nearly one half acre level lawn
QUALITY PLUS - Lovabllily - 2 brand now homes
near coly 3 BR, 2 full baths, eou1pped k1t&lt;:hen, plush
carpet, cen a.r, attached finished garage , full
basement designed to add a family rm later city
schools, owner w1ll constder mob1le home or other
property as down payment $56,000

3rd &amp; OUVE STREETS,
GALUPOLIS, OHIO

COUNTRY PLEASURE - 2 bedroom
frame home and 37+ acres Home all
electric, large ktrchen, lots of cabmets.
Add· on room 1 bath and new blls.ement
land has approx . 12 acres tillable, re$1
IS woods &amp; tobacco base
N914

OUIET SMALL TOWN
ThtS older stone home in MiiJdl o,po,rl
bcaut•fulfy m atnta •ncd some
lhe
amemtt eG are m ode rn khcnen, formal
d,n.ng r oo m, 3 bedrooms, 3 bath s, wAlk
In cl osets. form al entr y Bascm(' nt &amp; il
lar q~ 2 car qara gc
11 93 5

SIT ON THE DECK and watch the boats on the
beautiful Ohto, have your own boat dock spactous,
like new modular, 1,248 sq II llv .ng area 3 BR.
equ,pped k1tchen, full basement, wood burn1ng
stove, over an acre sloping lawn $39,900

OPEN 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
·6 DAYS

VINTON- 132,000 - Commercial Building - 2,220
sq ft suitable for grocery , hardware or would be
good locat•o'l for arcade Two n1ce 2 bedroom apart
ment son second floor
. _J
KYGER CREEK AREA - 565,000 - Pr~vacy
guaranteed . 13 bellut1fUI wOOded ~cres surround
this 3 bedroom ranch home . L~!~rge k1tchen wtth tor
mal dmlng ara 20'x40' pool Auurnablt! mortgage

FOR NEW OR USED FURNITURE

.

RIO GRANDE - $311,000 - W1lhm walking distance

of Rio Grande College. Good onveslment for college
student, buy tnstead ot p!Ying rent. Nrc.e 2 BR: , w,

We have 5 used dineHe sets, 5 used coal
&amp; wood burners, gas ranges, new maple
rockers at $49.00, 3 piece new living
room suites at S199.00, 6 used chests, 5
dressers, end tables, bunk beds, table
lamps, kitchen cabinets, wardrobes,
lounge chairs, sofas, baby beds, several
TVs. We have a complete line of new
and used furniture.
we also pawn merct~andise if you need
some quick MONEY. Bring in your
guns, TVs, rings or anything of value.

baths, tormlll d1ntng Williamson forced a.r fur·
nace Garage Garden space.
COZY COMFORT - for singles, young married or
rt!llred couple 2 bedroom, dining room. kitchen and
parlor. A IIIHt! work and Imagination can make this
homt! your "caS1It!". Deep lot goes to the woter's
edge. In coty $16,000
LI!ASE : Brand new home. 3 BR's, 2 full baths. full
basement, attached garage $300 month plus
uti hiles. $300 dep., ref No pets Nearc1IY

'

,,

FOR RENT DOWNTOWN-3 rms &amp; bath 1150per
month plus utilolles ~75 00 Oep. F!et. FurniShed kit
cnen
,;

t.ll me If •
maintained
asking price. 2
bedroom&amp;,
, Laroe storaoe
area . Owner willing to help with doWn
oayment. Rutland.l24,900.
1'"

FARM S
SMALL FARM - 3 bedroom home
W1lh ma in bath, kitchen, d1ntng room, 2
enclosed porches &amp; pert basement
Barn, shed, garaoe- &amp; 27.•1 acres of
beaulifUIIand. 18 acres tillable &amp; about
700' of road frontage Ju&gt;l wo111ng for
that part ttme&gt; farmer ,
,.,,
HAVE YOU OVERLOOKED THIS? 70
ae're modern, grade A. dairy farm now
in operation Four mtles of Gttlllpolts
Sole priced for a short lime ar ,o nly
$50,000.
1915

JUST LISTED! .::. Convenient ln·town
locatlon t Older' two story .4 bedroom
home L~rge kttchen with old fashion
pantry Natural gas. Off Slr«l parking
SChool bus p1ckup S29,900
1 193

COMMERCIAL
NEW liSTING- NEED TO BE YDUR
OWN BOSSI Take a took ol lhll at·
tr11ctive bus1ness opportumty Fabric
shop complete with bulldmg, fixtures
and 1nventory. 5«JJ SQ. ft . Ideal down
town locatton. Owner •w i l cons,der
helptng wrth financtno to qualtfn~d
buyer
H29
COMMERCIAL LOTS - Rio Grande
Vollage 2 level lot's CloSe to Rt 35,
chUrcnes, and Rio Grande College. All
utilities ovallablt, Just losted Call
today
ffll

HOME SWEET HOME - 5 rooms total. MIODlEPORT - Ro!)ht dow ntown A
Barn, outbUildings, grape arbor. fruit 1 bedr oo m ~ pa r tm c n t buil d lnQ w tth ~ 2
trees. Approx . 1~ acres tillable. 20 Am•• car ga r age tn lower level Convont cnt
pasture and r.esl wood"d 77 acrP.S total ana a qoocl ren tal l or it ddcd .n comc
Priced In low 40' s
I 144 Pr •ccd so low Ca ll tor compi oto ciNa ll ~
~
•
93 6

LUTS

FOR

SALE

LOTS

FOR

SALE

1 ACRE LOT - Located on stale high
way , has drilled well. and 1S read'{ for
the home of your cho1ce Pnced at
SJ.500
1876

2 ACRES - ldeat for loq hom e Par
tlally wooded Water and elec tr ic
avlllfabl e C• tY school CIJStrlct
1 895

54 ACRES or 5 ACRES - Are y ou
10oktng for a trllct of land for the home
of your dreams? 5. .4 ac res part1aiiV
cl eared and part,ally.wooded or 5 acr es
of mostly woods M ake your own
c hooce
, U77 ·1 178

A:CREAG E - J acres tOM ! A l ovel y
bu,ld ,ng spot S,1t s hlfJh 11nd ovN·Iook s
t he n vcr with a beau t1ful v1C!W
~ 934 ~

...

�"

·-Times-Sentinel

TheS

14

Misc. Merchandlce

S4

Pom

54

Misc. Merchandice
II

Koda K M22 lns tamat ic
mo vi e ca m e ra , movie
light, Sears Super 8 projec·
tor, SlOO. Sound D£&gt;sign
AM· FM &amp;·tracK stereo
receiver and 2 speakers,
S7S. 12 x 10 red oculplured
shag carpel, $90. 8ft. truck
topper, $75. 1969 Che•elle
V-8 Automatic, new pa int,
fa ir condition, S.i.SO. 1975
M ercury Monarcn 6-cyl , 3

Mo•ing out ot state. Must
sell Immediately. Heavy
· duty half ton rear end $75,
Parting otf 1970 Chevrolet

:.~ Impala.

Chrome and glass

• dine"eset. Drum set. Elecsynthesizer. Ant ique
I.' aresser and lOIS ot mi5C.
• Items. 675-6750.

~ tric

~

'- ·- --·--

~. Large

lighted advertising
~ sign with sliding letters on
. ~land . $400 . 576 ·2602.

cas h

Doberma-n
pups ,
registered . 675·7763 .

57

- ··

()I

KALFE
.

WHA"T

I RAJEBBj
I

WAY5 5U:!!P&amp; i.IOC:E A

KI

BAI5Y F'ROI!JABL.Y
NEVER HAD.

•"•nge

Now
the cli'tHd letten lo
lotm the. IUrpriM Mlwe!', U tug·
gosledbylho-.canoon ..

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Prlntanawsrhsre:

614-992·2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil .

auto·

return, SR ·230 Toshiba tur·
ntable, technics FM·AM
stereo receiver SA-80, gOOd
condition, 304·615·6572.

•Topper for b ig bed pickup

PRICED RIGHT
CALL TODAY!

in. high, gOOd

' COnd., $125. 304·675·6662

55

i"E~&amp;ON

WHO CLAIMS HE AL.·

CALL:

STEREO. J·way centrix,

.a

National

alarm . Caii61H92· 722'1.

REMINGTON
30 06
automatic model 742 with
slino &amp; swivels. Excellent
condition. SJOO.OO call 304·
675· -1828.

; truck,

N6000

registers, 1 N1 2 Hobar:t
scales. 1 Navar burg lar

Beauty shop equipment.
Call675·4399 or 675·1526.

P.loneer speakers,

' ::~;.u::.:..-·· -

tires, $1395: Call 992·5388.
2

AKC
registered
Pekingeese puppies, 304·
11112·2683.

[J I · I

Building Supplle•

Building materials blocK.
brick, sewer pipes, wihdows, lintels, etc. Claude

Winters, Rio Grande, o .

Caii245-S121 .

~--YI
Yesterday 1

I

Jumb*ea : AGILE JOINT ECZEMA BRAZEN
Antwer : A kick many people gat lrom rUle practice -

RECOIL

· Seven piece beautiful reel
sparkle drum set with foot
cymbals. $170.

m -3660.

NEW Conqueror 5-slri ng
banjo with case, $250. 992·

.

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367 ·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. . AKC
Chow puppies,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese l&lt;illens. Call 44&lt;1·
38« after t1 p,m .

originally $1100 .. 00-now
$550.00; 304-882-2350 alter
4:00 .

Adorabll!, sweet tempered
puppie$ ..5/8 black lab., lAB
golden retrl~ver, 7 wKs old,
S35. caii.W.·8371.

WURLITZER Studio piano
with bench, excellent con·
dillon, 3 years old, 30H75·
7822.after 5.: 00.

Fish TanK and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pl.
Pleasant. 675·2063. Mon. ,
Thurs.,/ Fri . 11 to6. Tues.,
Wed., I Sal. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.

SEARS, Silvertone 30
chord organ, like new,
make offer, 304·675-1033.

Wanted : Male Schnau&gt;er
to breed to female. Coll ·256·
1911afler 4PM.

DACHSUHUND
mixed
ploll &amp; Beagle. 1 red male;
1 black female, 6 months.
Trade for domestic rabbits.
Phone 304·675·1076.

59

For Sale or, Trade

1978 4x4 Dodge s'uper
sharp. ' 1969 ss Camaro best
In area. 1967 Chevelle SS
need paid . 5·15' Che•erolel
ralley wheels and 2 deep
Corvette rallys. Call US·
9423.

ATTRACTIVE ALl
BRICK HOME I!
Enjoy the beautiful Ohio
River
from
this
spacious,
cheerful
house, 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, large living
room . eat-in kitchen, 2
fireplaces. full . base·
f ment , 2 por~hes, plus
many eXtra.s. Phone to·
day for details.
N 505

HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.
-.,...--:-~=-

CHARMING TRI · LEVEL
1800 50. FT. PLUS REDUCED
room With

sliding doors tO concrete patio, modern eat·ln kit·
chen, large recreation ,room on f i rst level. Utility
room, 3 bt!drooms with plenty of closet space. 2112
naths, air conditioned, storm doors and windows. 2
car finished garage, level lot IOO'x300' , lots more .
Call for info.
N465

'
GOOD TASTE A'ND GOOD BUY·
Crouse-Beck Area
. Beautiful 3 to 4 bedrooms, two and one· half baths, 2
car garage, extra large kitcheh leading to 8 sun
deck, family room with fireplace, extra lot, plus
more. Superb condition and In city schools. Listed In
the mid seventies.
N514
39ACRESMOREOR LESS
Tillable pastureland, some tim~er , plenty of spring
water. 'h mile frontage on Prospect &lt;;hurch Road .
Phone tor details.
11497
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME
Located in city of Gallipoll:;.., close to supermarkets
and business section . 3 or -4. bedrooms, "ry'IOdern kit·
chen with lots of cabinets. dishwasher, garbage
disposal, electric table top ranoe. Formal dinino
room , family, recreation room . Just lots Of room .
central air, natural gas F.A. furnace, central P.A.
system, fireplace, planter in home . · Young ap'&gt;le
and peach trees, flowers and shrubs and a lot more.
MUST SEE THIS CITY HOME .
1391
C·O· U· N· T·R· Y
Remodeled 4·5 bedroom home with fireplace
located on 53 acres of tillable ahd pasture land,
pond, barn. large.melal building, tobacco base. All
this for the low, low price or $42,900. Call for more
details.
N479
6 ACRES, 7 ROOM HOME-BARN
3 or4 bedrooms. tobacco base, electric range, built·
in woodburner, fuel oil F.A. furnace, lots of fruit
trees, grape harbor, strawberry patch, 3 acres
tillable, assumable loan . Phone for more details.
UOJ
l BEDROOMS-l ACRES M. DR L.
Mobi le home 14'x70' 1976 Freedom, 1'12 baths, un·
derplnning, lots of built·ln cab,lnets, range,
refrigerator, dinette set. Air conditioner and other
. furniture. Rural water, nice land for garden. All thl&lt; ' ••
lor only $22,500 .
N425
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
Looklno tor that perfect horoF? Look no morP.. Fn11r
bedrooms, 31h baths,, 23'X18 ll.•l.n.ll, [~m •. 20'X24'•
famiiV room, e&gt;&lt;tra nice country kitchen with all the
latest ~;onveniences. Gracious living with Approx.
3ol50 sq . fl. living space plus a beautiful pool on 3.2
acres of wooded land . Much more, call for your ap·
polnlment . #
•
504 '
IN CROWN CITY
Nlce4 room frame house wllh a bath. Eat· in kitchen'
With melal cabinets and dOUble sink. Fuel oil
heating stove. Located on nice city lot net1r church
and grocery. Prlcedtosell!l
#511

·.-

_...

.

~ ......

.

KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT
Modern 3 B R ranch home approX. 4112 vrs. old. Ther·
mopane windows, storm doors, FA furnace, with
C"'Jirol air, kitchen has bullt:ln cabinet$, ~ talnless
steel dbl. sinK and dining area . Full basement with
patio doors. Rural waier system, Qarage. Call nll\'i.
'
1379
BUY.THIS HOME
FROM D\'YNER WITH $2,500 DOWN
And low Interest rate on balance with owner, 2 1
bedroom collage within 5 minute~ of Sil•er Bridge
Shopping Plaza.
_
.
#260
. LIKE NEW BRICK HOME-_ I_(IIj_E_Q!I_I~~ 6 rooms, 3' bedrooms, garage. Immediate
possession . Natural gaS furnace, central air. All
closets are cedar lined. This Is one well buill brick
home.· ·vou can se&lt;i'ihe &lt;iualily In this home , Call
for appointment.
#515
'

.

'

'

.

DRIVE A LITTE, SAVE A LOT
'
3 BR, full basemenr,_wlllle aluminum siding, fuel oil
F.A. furnace, 30'•40' barns, hlngled root, lots of
young peach and apple trees. All this reduced to
ly$14,900.
,

•

Annountes the opening of his offite for
the prattice of internal meditine •

1
1

I
I

[]l

~""'LOT I

LOW I
DOWN PAYMENTS, LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS &amp;
LOW INTEREST RATES ARE .. AVAILABLE ON
MOST OF OUR HOMES. CHECK 'EM OUT. YOU

5 YR . OLD SPLIT· LE\IEL- features 4'
or 5 BRs, 3 baths, 30 fl. LR, 2 family
rms .• 2 woodburnlng fireplaces, large
kitchen and dining area, 2 car garge,
one of the county's nicest pools (20x50)
and a truly professionally landscaped
lot". Located on Debby Drive. Owner
says sell ... so call RANNY BLACK ·
BURN for a personal showing . You' ll be ·
pleased you did .

FARMER'S FARM - One of Guyan
Township.'s fines"t. 106 acre m t I, ap·
prox . 45 A. fertile bottom land,
balance pasture &amp; woods. Nice modern
kit . &amp; family rm. 14x18 LR, attached
garage, maiis 56)1.104, also included Is
20x24 steel garage, workshop &amp; several
sh e d~ . owner is retiring &amp; will help
finance.
BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Apprmc . S'h acres located on the
Graham School Rd., co. water, d•er 300
ft . rd. frontage , Green Grade School &amp;
Gallia Academy High School. 510,900.
WALNUT TOWNSHIP ..:.. Beet, hay &amp;
ora in farm. 80 acres, m/ 1. approx . 35 A .
good cropland, 10 A. woods, balance
pasture. good fences, 9 rm ./bath, home
was buill in 1812 &amp; has been partially
remodeled, SOxSO cattle barn with con·
crete floor , large silo with auto.
unloader, several sheds, large pend,
springs, stand ing crops go to new
owner.
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 108
acres m/1 vacant land, fronts on Rae·
coon Creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd . Appro• .
311111able &amp; the balance wooded. Under
S-400 per acre .
GREE.N TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has tron·
Iage on Stale Route 588. Fairfield Cen·
tenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd. Ex·
cellent for farming or development.
Older 5 rm . &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp;
silo included . Owners · will consider
sell ing smaller tracts of short term
financing. Call for more information .
LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN·
CHER plus 78 ACRES ot land _i n
Cheshire Township offers lots of good
lhtlng for your growing family . Home Is
;ust like new with 1438 sq. 11 . of ll•ing
area plus lin atta(hed "garage. 2
spacious BR's, 2 baths. 8x27 LR. 10x24
kitchen with refrlg., dlsp., OW, double
oven &amp; ranoe, washer &amp; dryer stllys in
laundry . Land is mostly rOlling pasture
land with
. 2S acres wooded . Call

,.ru;~r;~~:-,,;;.;

MAKE US AN OFFERlll - Owners
hae been transferred &amp; will sell on a
LAND CONTRACT with· a reasonable
down payment. Lovely 3 BR ranch Is
located next to Clay School &amp; Is in ex·
cellent condition . Call Ranny Black·
bUrn for en appointment ,
PRiCE REDUCED TO S37,9001 Nice 3
BR low maintenance·home is less than 3
yrs. old and features large LR , dining
rm.. kitchen, bath, part basement.
utility building and almost 2 acres near
Route 218 . City schools.
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restr icted
building lot. 1.22 acre, nice wooded set·
ting. city schools. S5,900.
ROOM TO ROAM - This lovely brick
ranch.offers lots of. good living for your
growing family . l.BR's, 2112 baths, large
kifchen &amp; LR, formal dk"llng rm .• 2
firep laces, wood bUrning sto•e. cent.
air . garage, full basement with family
rm., bar &amp; laundry . Located on approx .
2 acres on State Route 55-4 between Por·
ter &amp; Eno. Priced to sellal$59,500.
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pasture farm , mostly rolling &amp; hil·
ly grassland with approx . 10 A. wooded,
lots of springs. llh story home has .4
rms . &amp; bat(l, large barn, tobacco base,
front's on 3 roads in Walnut Township.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Remodeled home includes S rms. aod
bath. carport. stove, refrlg ., dish·
washer, mobile home pad, almost 6
acres on 588 , 2 mi . from town. $30,000.
NEAR CADMUS - Forty acres, ap·
prox. 1h tillable and 112 woods, old 2
story farm home in need of repairs,
barn . sheds, fronts on 141. Owner finan·
clng available at 10%.
BEST BUY IN TOWN - Stylish 2 story
h(Jme was bl!ilt in 18~-4 and muSt be seen
to appreciate . Large open foyer and
stairway, LR, dining rm .. parlor. ~ com ·
plelely equipped modern kllchec, 4
BRs, 2'12 baths, new siding, garage,
near schools, sh()pplng, etc .
HOMESTEAD HE~E or use as a hun·
ting lodge, vacation home, etc. Rustic
log home is built from hand hewn
beams and has a sleeping loft, modern
bath, large stone fireplace and approx.
27 acre ot wOOds In the Wayne National
Forest. Extra land available . Easy Ter·
ms.

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp; Met all
Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and me1ats;
1· mil ·e ·. west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.
33 .
Mon.- Fri .8: lll to 4:0(1·
Ph. 992-6564
1·7· 1 mo.

. 1971 FINANCING AVAILABLE- 20%
down,10% Interest, 3 BR, bath, LR,
family rm . With Chimney for wood bur·
kitchen, laundry, large back porch,
gas heal &amp; a Iorge- flat lot
on BulavllleRn •

~-.

ROAD - Surroun·.
ded by trees and s-ituated on nearly 4
acres, this older 3 bedroom home has
lots to offer . Fireplace, large k.i"tch en,
family room , dining room &amp; baSe·
ment. 3 small buildings &amp; fe n ce~ .
$42,600.

D&amp;D .
WELDJNG SHOP

I
I
I
I
I
I
DO· You N
TOWN7 - Tnen this one is perfect. WHAT YOU WANT, AND WHAT YOU I
CAN AFFORD - are 2 d lflerent th ings, I
I
,
30 .s.
'
I
I
I
Ov.er
sq . IJ . Much more. Only $61,000.
I
I
I

REPAIR WORI&lt;
• Gas &amp; Electric
eCutting
• Brazing
e20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates
166 South Third
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992·5663
1·7· 1 mo.

Cozy end modern 2 bedroqln, 1 floor
plan. Hs brand new kitchen, dining UNTIL NOW! The house and location
room, living room, detached garage are ideal. Owners hate t? sell but have
and nice flat yard . Meke us an offer . to. Need the money to buy home out of
state . Will sell at a very rea sonable
price (assume low interest mtg ,},
House in move·i n condition and has
everything that realty matters . 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, family room ,
fireplace, 2 car garage, patio,
1700

REESE~·:, ·

•

.TRENCHING
SERVICE·
Water·Sewer· Eiectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water line Hook-ups
. Septic Tank• .
County Certified
Roush Lane
crieshire. on.

:;',~Lv';.~~:;";~..~'::t~;,,,;:

home.
bedroom
wifh a
family
overlooking town. Has l'h
room, fireplace. formal dining. en·
closed porch (g~;eat in the sum·
mertimel plus 1 car garage . Nat. gas.
~ust see . SS4,000.
·

Ph. l67-75~

1·7· 11fc

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For

1
I

your

Let George Miller
check your present
electrical sy:stem. ·
R esidentia I
&amp; Commercial

I
I

9&gt;.4% ASSUMPTION ~ See hOW easy NEW HOME AND 2.5 ACRES - ~
vou can buy this c.harming home. 2 Modern cedar home with 3 bedrooms,
bedroom home in good cond . Has loft, woodburner and nice kitchen.
fireplace, new carpet, full ba$!ment, Rural water. Located off Rt. 554 .
vinYl .siding, 2 car garage. ~arn 12 S3 2 600
·
beautiful flat a~ res 1n city school dist.
• ·
WASHINGTON ELEM. Cozy 2
THE PRICE IS RIGHT - The home is bedroom home located ·;n city sc hool
a nearly new 3 bedroom ranch on Rt. dist . Has fireplace in l iving room , large
160. Very nice decor, large kitchen , kitchen, 1h ac. yard . 9'h % assumption .
garage &amp; 3t.~ ;.t;re y-ard. Pr'iced at 20' s.
$37,500. Make us an ofter.
18 ACRE - EDGE OF TOWN - E x·
549.900 - GREAT LOCATION - 3 ·cell en! location for !his nice 3 bedroom
pedroom brick home sltvated on 1.3 rl!nch on Rt. 508. 18 wooded acres. with
acres on Rt. 588. This older, but·'well barn . .Househas2baths, fam ilyroom , ·21
kept home has family room ~ 1'17 baths, fireplaces , full basemen t, nat. gas and
equipped kitchen , d ining room, full garage Need offer
basement, woodburnino furnace. large
·
·
'
deck &amp; more. Immediate possession . .
RODNEY Thi's attractive tu dor
h!Jme is located i, a top quality neigh·
PRICE REDUCED - O..ners anxious bOrhood and must be sold as soon as
to sell this spacious tri ·level on_. acres . possible, .3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family ·
Has 4 bedrooms, 2'12 baths, fireplace, room w/woodburner, large equipped
woodburner, family &amp; recreation kitchen and 2 car .garaoe . Fl at 'h acre
rooms, 2 car garage, equipped kitchen yard. $5.t,900.
·
&amp; much more. Cr ll for appointment.
CITY SCHOOLS- RT·. 2ld - Modern 3
HOME &amp; 5 ACRES IN RIO GRANDE bedroom ranch situated on over 1. 3
A good location near Buckeye Hills acres. Has large living room , kitchen,
Career Center. Remodeled 3 bedroom bath, basement, woodburning furnace
home with large open f ireplace. Land carport &amp; mobile home hookup . pr iced
lavs J)!'rfecl for just about anything. al$32,000. Assumable 11% mgt.
Only $39,900'.
'
101 ACRES - O&gt;llner will finance at
·A· FRAME MOBILE HOME . - You very reasonable rates lo QUalified
have to see lito believe it . 3 bedrooms, buyer. EXcellent land for hunting , hor·
fireplace, toft, much more. Only $8,000, S6 or a few cattle . Mostly wOOdland .
Call us and let us snow you this unusual Also older 2 story home in livable con·
ditl0f1. 40's.
'
home.

all

wiring needs.

HAVE READY BUYERS LOOKING FOR HOMES
PRICED BETWEEN $30,000-$50,000. GIVE US A I
CA F OU'RE THINKING OF SELLING.

aDCKS

From $34.95
To $79.95
PH. 992·3269
12:3·1 mo . pd .

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
e Roofing of all tvpes
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
·•.20 Y rs. e• perience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph.949·1160 or t49·2482
7-S ·IIC

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

NOW

OPEN
992-6259

176 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9-2Hfc

SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
·cooLING
Tappan Retuperat ive
Furnace, Coleman ~ir

•1ou
.11111111
tl
.J2

. ....

PH. 985-4269 or

tAJU4
.UQIII
SOUTH
.Ait9U
.KQZ
tK78S

•s

onS&lt;Ore
Deller: South
W.. N~ Eul

Sizes start from 30.:24"

Utiity Buildings,
sizes from .. to 6 and all
Wood buildings 24N36.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, BoN 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843-2591
6·15·tfc

1

I
II
I

TOP OF llfE STAIRS

rltness
. &amp;Beauty
Salon

'

202'11 E. Main St.
PH. 9f2-6720
Miry 'Powell
owner/Oper1tor
Trudy Roush·Styllsl
Call for Appointment
Perm Special
3~0FF

12· 11·1 mo .

Vinyl &amp; Alumjnuni
SIDING

BISSEll

SIDIJIG co.
".B-Ifuf, Custom
BulltGirages ' '
Call for free siding
estimltes, t49·2101 or
949·2160.
No Sundav Calfs
3· 1i ·IIC

KINGSBURY
PARTS. &amp;ACCESS.
Rl. 124
Minersville, Oh ,
Ph. 992-5587
12·31· 1 mo.

FAIRPLAIN TRACTOR
SALES, INC.

Iii

Paa
Puo
P110

work .
&gt;UNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rt . 2, Albany, Ohio
614·698-6791
11 ·16·11n
Reupholstery
SPECIAL
•
Bar Stools
S'ZS.OIJ
Truck seats
SlOO.oo
Labor &amp; Material
Effective Dec. 15th
Thru Jan . 15th

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY &amp;

Trim Shop
Racine, Oh.
PH . 949·2202
12· 15· 1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

,.

SMII
Paa

It

By O.weld JIIC!tby
ud Alu Soeto1
'Here 11 a fairly reasonable
band from "Bridle in the
Fourth Dimension." West's
blddln1 can be e•plalned by
bll40-polnt part ...,..,, wblle
South'o blddln1 can only be
described u conaervatlve.

...................
..... . .... . . ... ....
,.
~

71

Auto for Sale

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

76 Ford 'Torino, 2 dr., $9(}0 .
Call379·2156 .

little rust , new vinyl top ,
can be seen 107 Ch illicothe
Rd.

1978 Mustang II , 4 cyl. , PS,
PB, air, new tires, ex .
cond. Call 446·7838 or 446·

~~~~~~~~~~~ 1u1 a«er 5.

FREE
ESTIMATES
. PH. 99H011
8·20· tfc

1976 9 passanger Chevv
station wa gon . Call 446·1881
after SPM .
1979 Cutlass Supreme ,
loaded . Call 256·1667.

.,.,. ; Plymouth wagon. 318
auto.-985·4346.
1973 Pinto s.w . Good on gas
and good condition . Air
conditioner 25,000 btu. 61.4·

b~~~~~~~~ 66-7- ·6636
__
. -----

SKATE-AWAY
Open wed ., Fri. &amp; Sat .
7 , 30 Til10 : 00
sunday 2:00 to 4 : 30
Private Parties
Available

PH· 985· 3929
or 985·9996
12· 16· 1 mo.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

1970

Pl~moulh

GTX . 440

1mag~urn', all stock, nice,

rare, price reduced
quicK sale . 742·2143 .

for

- concnte wGr ..
- Pivmbinl ancl
&amp;leclrical work

(Free Estimat~s)
II. C . YOUNG I ll
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30 ·1fc

Keep This Ad For
Future Reference

APPUANCE
SERVICE
Call Ken oung
For Fast Service
9 5'3561
PA•T!i .lt.florOSUtVICf.
AI.LMAI(f."S

•W•shfn
•Dryers

--------

1976 Chevette . 675·6445 .

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

•Ditpollllt

• Dishwuhers

•HotW•trrhnh

95H c

• Backhoe

76 Plymouth, 6 cyl. , 3&gt;14-675·
1402 .
1981 TRANS-Am, lOaded
with T· lop. $8700 . 304-675·
3137 anytime.
1978 PINTO Pony, 2 door
sedan , • cyl., 52200 . 675·
6174 .
67 CHEVELLE Mal ibu 2.
dOOr hardtop, make _rP.al
good work car, auto trans.,
runs real good, S275. 304 ·
675-6662.
Moving out of state . Must
sell immeqiatly . 1977 Trans
Am, chocolate brown, t·
hand pa inted • pin
striping, luggage rack, am ·
fm stereo with both casset·
te and 8 track players, rear
. window defroster, ps, pb,
ac, automatic, tilt wheel,
S4SOO. Ser ious inquiries
only .·675·2383 after 5 pm.

• Excavating

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
eDou~ r ~

eBackhot.:s
e Dump Trucks
eLoBoy
eTrencher
eWater • Sewer
eG•s Lines
• Septic Systems
Large or Sm'a ll Jobs
PH . 9f2·2471 .
12· 7 · 1mo. pd.

• septic Systems
• water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
eOumpTruck
. Licensea

~Bonded

Ph. 992-7201
5·21-tfc

P;:=:=:=:======~

CERTIFim GAS
Our Specialties
Clgarelfes
62c pock
CMtons
S5.95 &amp; ss.ss

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

New Homes - ex·
tenslve
remodel·

inti.
• E leetrlcal work
• Roofing work
14 Ye1rs EJ&lt;per.lence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

or992·2282
1-3·1 mo.

Open 7 Oa Vi A Week
Open Mon. 4Thun.
h .m. to 10 p.m .
Open Fri . at 6 a . m .
thru Sund11y at f p .m.
OPEN 14 HOURS
. Fri.·SUN .
We Sell Pep1i, il .c . &amp;
Coca · Cola Products by
the 6 &amp; I Pack 1nd also
In liter llotlte1.
Authorized Sunflower
Deller. Soli or Rent
Titese SIIIIS.
12·16·1fc

1962 FORD Falcon Ran·
chero pickup with shell,
runs good, needs paint,
$700 . or offer 304-576 ·2921 .
1971 FORD Ranger with
topper, PS, PB , ~ ood
shape, $600 . Phone 304·89.5·
3997 .
73

1/ans &amp; 4 W. O .

79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
wheel ·drive, 29,000 miles, 8
cyl . call afler 3 p.m . 304·
675· 3898.
INTERNATIONAL travel·
all , • wheel drive, 4 speed,
1;.,. ton, air conditioned, PS,
PB. 37,000 miles, $2600. call
304-6 7Hi28 .

-

77

1970 FORD Torino, 2 door ,
5600 . 30H75· 5625.
1979 Chevy Malibu Classic,
landau lop. 35.000 miles.
$41100. 67~· 5625 .

1947 Ford, good motor,
soild
body . Ser i ous
Inquiries only. 675·2207.
1977 Dodge Monaco wagon ,
4 door,
p,o wer , air ,
automatic, $800, 1974 Vega
wagon SSOO. 615·3962.

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

Auto Re air

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . lnsvranc e work
wel c ome . Sunroof s in ·
stalled from $200·$230 . Au1o
Tr im Center . 4.46·1968:

~urniture

Stripping
and Refinishing

11

Home
Improvements

ser"ltes
Home
t mprovements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com·
mercia! and res idential,
free eslimales. Call 256·
1182.
CAPTAIN STEEM E R Car·
pet Cleaning f eatured by
.Haffell Brothers Custom
.Carqets. Free est imates.
Call 446·2107 .
PAINTING · inte rior and
exterior , plumbing,
roofing, some remo&lt;leling.
20 yro. exp. Call :!88-9652 .
French City Painting
Residential . commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and te•ured
ceil ings. Ph . 367 ·7784 or 367·
7160 .
Cl!ill 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rod ent, sPider,
and flea s control. Free
estimates.sBill Thomas.

RON'S Television Service .
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola , Quaz er , and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or .W.· 2454.
RINGLES' S SERVICE e• ·
perienced mason, roofer ,
carpenter , elec1r iclan ,
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560.
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-895·3802 .

CARPENTRY
&amp;
remodeling, electrical and
72
Trucks f"Oriiie
- - plumbina. 304·576·2989 or
19'4 Ford F -250 new slake 576-2587 .
bed, and dual wheels. Call
256·6413, 12 p.m. to 9 p.m .
LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential, automotive .
1'76 3/4 ton Ford 41&lt;4 truck Emergency ser•lce. Call
.
with topper, 69,000 miles, 882 · 20~9! ·S2,500, Caii.W.·9285 after 12
noon.
.
EXPERIENCED car ·
penler available tor hOme
For sale 1977 Ram or business remodeling or
Charger. excellent con· 'new structures. Free
dillon, low mileage. Call ,estimates . References.
,Wii'l beot1 any signed writ·
.
2-'5·9213.
3!M·675-2440.
·ten esti11Jale.

CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAV/ITING INC.
Bltkhot 1nd dour
work by tht 'loft or by
the hour. Also lcelloed
••pile 11nko Instilled .
Dump truck.
Free
elllmates. Clll 311·1623
or441·945f.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

11

E

83

xcava ng
Gallipolis Diversified con·
st. Co. Custom do:zer &amp;
backhoe work . Spec i al
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·44-40 .

84

REESE TRENCHING

M~T

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump r e moval. 675·1331 .

81

. RUSS AND MAX ,
ELLIOTT
Lennox Htlllnt &amp; Air
Conditioning. All Typet
lniUIIIIOn . EltclriCII
Wiring.
·
C:lll 4411UU or 441·0..45
afltr4:30 p.m.

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47 tt. Worklngl:lelghl
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
1S2 Thtnl Ave .
614·446·2716'

l5 Court si.
Gallirolls, Ohio
Cal 446· 3896
or 446-3080

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
ewater eGas
-.electric • Sewer
Lines Installed
Ph . 367·7560

Sou,heastern lns.ulatlon

&amp; const. Types : blOW·

lng, celulon. Fret
estlmil)e .
Work
gu~ranteed &amp; Insured.
Also ttome improve·
ment. Dave Hager &amp;
Jay Hancock, Owners.
37
,\.__4_4~6~·•.,.•_os-~4_4~"-2.,6_
_.;..;
._,

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs;
service. ~uthorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servlce1 Sharpen
Scissors . Fabr ic Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2274.
JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition serv ice,
commerciaL Industr ial.
PhOne 882· 2079 .

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
446·l915
No Answer 446·2062
Modern ste1m Cleaning
for carpel &amp; upholstory
C insur~nc.,

war~) ,

• Scolchguora·3M
• Walls, "floors,
windows
• Water&amp;
smoke damage
lndustrl•l
Commercial
Residential
Dependable, I years tiCrienca. We do care1

Frank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction, all ty..pes.
Fret estimates, all
work, tully guaranteed.
Residentlil,
com ·
merclal, industrial and·
mining, electric work,
MSHA Cert.
446-4627

..
,.

SOLUTION

-

~·

Wandling' s Electr ic Ser·
v ice. Old work and new
work. 24 hour service. 30
years experience. Phone
675·6663 .
85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 ·7471 or
367-0591 .
NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; II mestone tor driveways.
Call for estimates 367·7101 .
87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ave ., Gall ipolis.
446· 7833 or 446·1833.
'
MOWREYS Upholstery Rl.
1 Box 124, Pl . Pleasant, 304·
675·4154.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
~

ACROSS
1 Pooled
6Thaonn
there
11 Llgllt
cotton
febrlc

t&amp;Roman
official
19Luoo
20 In n~me
only

21 Punctu11lon
mark
23 Dolry
product
24 Edinburgh

repul
26 Spanish
tOWil
27 C.lum

....

symbol

29 Remains 11

81

Ir~=========;1top,

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

1980 Chevy lf• ton 4 wheel
drive. Auto trans with over·
drive. Insulated topper,
trail er hitlch1 many extras.
Call992·3129 afler 5:30p.m .

64 ~ORO Fa irlone 500. 2
door with 69 302, 4 speed
engine, has low milage .
Coli after 6 , 304-895 ·36!)3.

•A•nt••

u . s . Rt. SO East
Guvsville, Ohio
AuthOrized John Deer,
New Holl1nd, Bush Hot
Farm Equipment
Dealer

1979 Dodge pic Kup, low
milea9e . Call446·4185.

76
Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories
HARTS used Cars, .New
Haven West Virgin ia. Over tHARLIE'S SALVAGE
20 , less e&gt;&lt;pensive cars in ·Auto partS, auto repair ,
~lock .
wrecker service, buv
1
automobiles, r adiators and
GOVERNMENT
SUR · batteries. 446· 7717 .
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now available Windshield broke n? Call
through local sales, under Southern Auto glass . In ·
SJOO.oo Call 1· 714·569·0241 surance claims welcome,
for your directory on how Fr ee
mobil e
serv ice
availab le . Caii.W.-1011 :
to purchase . Open 24 hours.
1939 Plymouth . 1974 Dodge Si x 920 tires. Phone 675·
Colt . 1973 Gr.eml in. Phone 31-18 .
675·3470.

' 1977 R'ENAUL T LeCar. 40
mpo, oood condition , new
!Ires, $1400. 576; 2127 .

- .Addo.ns and rtmMiellnt
- A to lint lind tUtt&amp;r wor ..

Trucks for Sale

69 Ford XL Ranger, 3/ 4
ton , 390, uses no oil , $500.
Call446·2459 .

12 Pontiac; e•c . cond ., "ery

Custom kitchens and
ap'pt;ances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling.,
plumbing, electric, and
healing .

(NEWSPA.P!REN'I'ERPRIIEASIN.)

72

~

Massey Ferguson In·
dustriill equipment.
we sell the brst and
service the rest.
On Rl. l3 W.
Ripley, w. va.
Ph. (l04) 112-9875
or (304) 372-5479
12·18· 1 mo.

~~r~~_ilti~~~Q~Ir ~~~~~: ~=========~
tioning . Sheet Metal ~

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

-

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
SALE PHONE NO.

Cal\742·3195
2·8·1fc

I
I
I
I
I
1

HOME &amp; 6 ACRES _: Located off Rj.
S20,500 - 2 bedroom ranch home off 'RI. 325 north ' of Rio Grande . 2 bedroom
•554. Has A rooms, bath, elect. heat, home In need of some minor repairs.
storage ~fdg . &amp; nearly 112 acre.
QIJiet, 5tenic rural setting . Has wood
·
., burner. full basement and rural water.
DELUXE SPRING VALLEY HI)ME $28,600. ownerw.ill help finance.
A •eh' attractive well 1\ept 4 bedroom
I
home In one of the area's finest neigh· SS,SOQ ' DOWN - 10% INTEREST borhoods. Has 21/2. batns. equipped kit· 527,000 - You can't beat figures like
chen, dining room, . family room these when you are buy ing a home. This
w/flreplacf:, nat. gas, c:~t. air. 2 car c()!Jid be an e)(cellent starter home or
oar age pius a lo•elv landscaped corner rental · located in Rio Grande. 2
lot. Low Interest loan assumptiorl bedroom remodeled home in good
available. 169,900. ·
·
lototlon.

~

HOME
PARTS

14 Available
Made from
Cedar,
Cypress, VValnut &amp;
c"erry.
·

WANTED TO BUY

IGI~BORHOOD

OWNERS ANXIOUS FOR OFFER GOOD
FINANCING
TERMS
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Located AVAILABLE - You can have im·
in town. A clean well kept J bedroom mediate possession of th is n ice 3
home situated on 2 lots. Good .neigh · bedroom home IC)!:ated near Green
borhood close to grocerv . Kitchen has. Grade School . Has sunken family room ,
rarige &amp; refrlg., dining area , bath, nat . eat· in kitchen. uti I. rrn .• nat. gas heat &amp;
gas heat, air cond .. patio. house &amp; 21ots . part. fenced yard . Priced in low 40' s.
·$43,500. House &amp; '11o1. $39,900.

•J7

MOBILE

31J Years E11perienc c
small Pipelines A
Specialty
North of Racine
On Carmel Road
at Sawmill

1·8·1 mo. pd.

GO

1"\

.108'76
EAST

Vulllerable: Eut-West - 4

HANDCRAFTED

SCRAP

BUYER PROTECTION - .Seller is Of·
fering 1 year buyer protectjon against 9
major components in home. This ranch
style home has nearly everything new.
3 bedrooms, firepjace, equipped kit·
chen, nat. gas furna ce, garage &amp; nice
yard. 1 block from schools. 40's . 8'11%
assumption.

Chester, Ohio

Antenna Installation
Hous~ calls and shop
service available .

CUSTOM
WELDING

J. R. PARSONS

, .....

tQI08

APPLIANCE SERVICE .

Anything for your
Mobile Home.

B. J . Halnlon , Anoc .. 4U·•2•o e v•.
~~.,~e Walker, Auoc . 24S:S2U•

A HOME CAN BE
EASIER THAN YOU THINK

and

All makes and models

REAL ESTATE AGENCY.
PHONE 446-3643

NORTH
.QII
.AJt

BUll, It wu juat u well be
only went to thNJe spades
becau.e the Hideous HOI
defeated the three contract
by two tricks.
He, openejl the kinl of
clubs and bls .. portlier
dropped the jack. The H01'•
ne•t play was the ace ot
diamondrr. His partner pro-·
duced the deuce so the HOI
continued with the .jack of
diamonds.
Eut Miffed and since East
was f1mlllar with the suit
preference aipal, be led
bllck a hurl. The Hog
ruffed, gave his partner a
second diamond ruff and
ruffed another heart for the
sixth defensive trick.
The band Is noteworthy
for tbo Hoc's explanoUon of
how he llnew that his
partner'• deuce of dlamondrr
had been a olnaleton.
The Hog explained that
with two diamonds Eut
would have played the hlp•
er one to shOW a doubleton.
That Is, unless he held kinadeuce wbich was most
unlikely.
He also nrlalned thai
East could no have been
dealt three dlamoods, since
with three diamonds Eut
would surely have 1one
from three clubs to three
diamonds since the Ho&amp; had
bid that suit first.

The Sunday T l mes-Sentlnei- Pag-0·'

Services Offered

Hideous hog•a hot hand

985-4382

Addre$5:
Pinnell Sl Ripley, W. Va.
· Office Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
By Appointment Only
Phone 1304)372-8550

.

.YIII~~ .

'

STEVE R. KESSEL, M.D.

General

lkt wtnm•" · BrOktr, 44..37" Evt.
Ji m Cl""ltran, Auoclfot•, 4.._.71t1 Evt.

BRIDGE

S&amp;WTV

WISEMAN

GiBSON Les Paul Guitar,
will sell to best otter, call
J!M -675·5027 after 4.

STROUT REALTY, Inc.

dinin~

Real Estale

Pomeroy-'Middleport-Gallipolis , Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. II a .

Business Services

Real Estale- General

.

Large living room with firep lace,

to buy-Formall
Hor se
il .l y,
Reqis,ter·ed
Ap;
A with or
cul ·l l•ators. John paloosa, • yrs. old and good
· L. Caldwell, Box 4 Rl. t, blood line. Call 2.56·6413, 12
JIVIDEN'S
FA
p.m . lo9 p .m .
EQUIPMENT See The Hay Ona, WV 25.545.
Equipment ot the future,
New from Vermeer also Almost new 255 Ferguson
Iaroe round bale movers &amp; tractor, 450 . round hay
feederplus a fuli line of baler, 7 fl . hay bind, used·2 Selling out. 1 lot of beef cat·
equipment, from LOI'lO· corn p ickers, hay baler, 2 tie. 1 registered Polled
Vermeer, Kuhn, Kelley, hay rakes, 2 row corn plan· Hereford bull . 2 years old . I
registered Polled Hereford
and many others. And see ter, small i_arm. 675-1858.
cow, 9 years old . I
us to get your ports &amp; com·
registered Polled Hereford
plele service.
USED
Heifer to fr"e! hen in Spr ing.
EQUIP : Tractors : 1 IH 6:::3c.__ _:L
:::I:.::v.::.
es::.:I:::O::::
Ck: __ _
Hydro 70, 1 445 Long. 2 MF Two 1J. Nubian Does. bred . I Polled Hereford bull calf,
5 months old, can ·be
135, 2 Bush·hoos. 1 Tobacco
Setter, Cultivators, 2 rakes, Gentle 12 year Appaloo~a registered. 1 . fir st calf
Gelding . 304-937·2003 after 6 Heifer , Hereford and
haybind, large bale mover, pm
.
Holstein crossed. I Heifer
bale unroller, 76 Jeep
calf , Hereford and 1
pickup , NH
man·ure
spreader. CHECK OUR Buckskin mare &amp; 2 cons: Holstein crossed. 8 month s
PRICES &amp; COMPAREI 100 bales ot gOOd horse hay old. $2500. Phone 614-949·
and rabbits. Call379·2761 .
44&lt;1·1675.

Splnet · Console Piano
Bargain. Wanted : Respon·
slble party to take over low
monthly payments on
spinet plano. Can be seen
locally .
Write . Credit
Manager : PO Bo• 33,
Fridens,-PA 15.541. .

HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies.
Everything
ili1aginable in horse equip·
ment, A)so belts, boots.
Riding lessons and trail
rides .
698· 3290 .
Ruth
Reeves·:

·PH. OFFICE 446-7699

gar·
bage disposal and large
dining room, Kyger
Creek Schools .
N 501

•

r56~~::;P~e~ls:f~o:r~S:a:le~~=1r:S6;:~::;;P:e;ts:f~o:r~S~al~e~:"'1 SEARS
chord organ, full
rhythm section, like new,

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and groom ing .
AKC Gordon sellers,
English Cocker Spaniels .
Call 388·9790.
*Willis T. Ltadlnthlm, Rtlllor, Ph. Home44H539
• Phvllis Loved1y, Phone 446·2UO
·
•Ja.n Boggs, Phont44H294

Or I I I J

Musical
Instruments

Piano ·in stor11ge. Respoi1·
slble party mav take on low
monthly payments. Call
credit manager collect,
614·642·5180.

65-18.

Jari. 10, 1982

Pels for Sate

by f*wf Amoid 111111 lloiiiAe

1

Unsctamble lhttM four J ul'f'lbfel ,
one letter 10 each tqul,., to torm
lour ()fdln&amp;~y word,.

speed, new paint, and new

----

1982

30 Young horoo
3 I Thailand.
tormllly
32 Without
end, tn

pootry
33Sfaek

J4 Plccodllly
ltltut
~5yYatchloce

38 Undlactpll...,

...

38 t.owlor In

,

40 Trantllll

., Spore

42 Worbll '
43 Fern~~* ruff
45Wioor
4e Oiphlhong
47Bhodl
o~tfritiid
48 Bcoflloh
dencOt
·5181Ucy
52

~lcolna :

Abbr.
53 Wort,_
leaving
5-4 Form
55 HIWked
57 Nollce
58 llobytonlon

hero
80 LIPitcllllun
lind
81 Tron1greorr
82S.Uor
dwltWO
84 Aold: Abbr.

85 Tetlurk.lm

ovmbol

ae Singing
voiCe

87-·

eef.=.1me

71 .....,...
73 Subatonce
74 SnlkM
76 Red ond
G.-

1i Forolgn
61 Betoro
82 GrMk letter

64 Embank·
ment
esMen-·
'lanta
17 Hill
IIOConcel'"
92 WWII egcy..
93Howtllon

o-lno

85 Fethlrl
87 AlgonqUian
lndlon
oe Stomp o1
opprovtl
HScalenote
101 Smllllllll
t03 Tannli
11t0kt

104At-l

ume?

1208cofonole
121 Dtnloh Off
123 Encountered
12• Cov!Jrl
t25 HorN ot 1
certlln color
128 Boopllte&lt;
127 Cllmlllng --

112 unwonted
plent
113 Member of
lhlfloclc

114 Elth«'l

companion
t 15 DotiCIMI

Wolfe
117 Snooped
111 Humotlltl

__. .

1te Library

dOWn
15 H1bltu1t..

te Glrl:o nick·

-.

1211 Exceoolve
olloctlon
t31 Lim•. ror

ono

132 Pllltlpplne
ltllnd
t33 Summer, tn
Parle
1:14 Olpolil

1341 Tldlngo
137 Trlnkot
1341 Apportioned
t3iCornpuo
pl.

140 bkll
14t Denoting
qutllly:
Sui.

142 EurUian
·
mountlina
143 lrllh port
144Forecut
tole como lnl
1441-t •
t4e Comfort

150 Mullcel
instrurnenla
1.511re

nome
11 OYwhoed

rtll
21 Mlko rlltdy
22 Wolrdool
23 Groan
25 Raid lho
lridge

. 21 S..ppiiOr of
plllyiOOd
28 PUt In
lllgorout
ectlon

300ectoo
318Nclllllglll
33 Thetlter
boxoo
35 Dlpr8MI011
36UntiiMO
37 W1nt1
3$ TOUrllt'l
need

41 ltailltl C04n
42 CObbler'o

-·

4&lt;1 ActrMI

Burotyn
47 Pitch
41Crownt

77Corded

eo

Mor~~yt

54 Blohopo'
55Midout

DOWN

I lndMduet
2Mine

ent;ances

3 At.era, tn
Mod rid

4 Old: Poet.

5Chltloo -

a Tilt
7Mound
tsllldelree
DCIIy mop
abbr.

10 Dining

11 Chatrned
12 Prepooltlon
13 Froncll lor
" trt.nd"

56Domono
58 Klngoflllo
Huns
8001norwtoo
81 Yeo. In Leon
13Fim

....

ee Right 67Tho -

. -Ilion

ee Orotiono
707 1 -...
lollor

72Chlcken - king
73 Bury
75looked
flxodly

...

83 Solw chk .;;
HWOOI . ..
pr""'-1 .,
H Lubrlceled :;
II Urge on ,..
110 Eldlto .
.,
81 Cojlege-

-

84Wamlng~~

K ErtMum

:

eyi,ftbol
eeUn~oc~t
ttetolke

"''
•I
...,

100 Ropeat
•
102 ""-"" '
t04o_.. ...
105
- blttl Ill!
~
tOI ·
Dllt\n..
·
QUIIIIed ;::
t07E-.,
1118 W-IWI!I ~
t II ExP!ode
"

"'*

112
~
113
Of,!he down-'

118 AnCient

..;

111 Hoirpleoeo oo1
118 Burden &amp;
f22 ANt•
:
t24 Attorney ,..
125 Aclu411

-- -

41l.....
50 Cui

:

*Iii
71 Red Of DeN•

t21Tr.....,_~

f21 PWUMI ''
130tlumllloe :.,:
t31 Urtlne

brOOd

-... -

105 Squlnde&lt;ed
tot&amp;runclled ' ·
ItO Hl\'lng

14~

..\

,.,:!

132 Stop
135Gr-ot ..
lhr.

,:

1 3 7 - ....
I :Ill Heul With ...
effort . ·:
J&lt;IO Gold, in
Gr-. "'
142_,_:-:j

t43'',..._
- -.. ...,J
number • '
t44 Per cent· J

Abtw. . "'

t45 ' "' """'· •
147 eor.,p.. :::
pt.
1-18 Refroln
' ~

�.

Pi!ge- D-10- The Sund a y T im es -Sentin e l

Pom er oy - M iddl e port- Gall ipol is, Oh io- Point Plea s ant, W.Va .

.Refortn ·group

w~nts

·, OOLUMBUS,' ()hlo (AP) - A
utility reform IJ'DUP Saturday anIIDUJIOed It IWUid alk Gov. James
A. Rhodes to recaU the three
lnl!mbera he appointed to the Public UtWtles Comrn111D1 of ()hlo.

"Y ~ could also say that WI! cut
their nequests by l8 percent," he
ltijiCiidtd. ''You can look atit both
ways. I don't think the numbers
lhlmseiYes necessartJy tell the .
story."
.

''We feel llfte people are doing
IUCb a tax IBidws job," said C}ydl!
lllcledon ct the OhloCitbens UWit.v
·R eform Coa II lion . "They· ve
eranted what WI! feel II an outrage.
0111 rate ct return to the utlltles."
· The coalition att«nsited to place
a prupollll on the ballot last N~
YBnber that IWUid have required
direct elfclloo ct cmnrnlstlalers,
but It failed to collect enlllllh
~i~Mtures.
Incledon said the cunent PI.JOO
members- Jon F. Kelly, DennlsS.
PIQel and Michael Del Bani!. have granted 82 percent of the rate
lncreues requested by.the utilities.

Kelly defended the cmunlsslon.
saying It Is following Its funclloo as
deftiled by Ohio law,
' .
"I ~ ~ anya~e woo
claims we haY!! granted more that
what Is reuonable liilde!' ObJo
law," he said. "I don't recall ibe
last tlme the (state) &amp;IJ!iaiW!eoUrt
reversed the COi'M1Isalon on a revenue awanl."
lncledon, howeYer, accused present commJsslon members at oot

flllftllbv thdr roles as oonswner

repi =ntatlves.

''The PUOOisa ~tatlveat
the people, oot utilities," Incleden
said. "This one Is not protecting
WISUillerS from abuses."
IncledOn, wholiecoalltlonplansto
renew effort to put a ballot'lssue on
next November's lll!lleral election

PUOO Olaliman Kelly, who said
he was aware of the coalllkln's ac·
IDI, said the ~ given by
Incledon sounded correct.

recall

ballot required dli1!ct election at
PUOO members. cmcetled recall
wasn't the total answer to the
ptoblo!m.
''I think It lilllhUtlhts the sltua·
tlon," be said.
In addltkx) to direct ~ at
l'mllillsslooer, . Incledon said a
new llll'lllliadng ~was ne-

cessary, perhaps by a ~ at

"consumers, tanners, labors. utll·
lty •ep:csetttallves, senior ddzl!ns
and · m ·a n u fact urI n g
representatives."
Incledon also suggested that cur,
rent uWity rates are "repressiVe to
busirii!SS" and pri!Vtntlng lndusPies fnm locating Into the state.
"WefeelthewhQiethlnghasbeen
getting out of hand," he said. •'The
result Is ~~ ObJo has more pendlng rate cases or major status than
any other state In the u.S."
Incledon IW!Ueves public pressure
wUl eventually dictate a change Iii
the makeup of the PUOO.

WI

more rimcts!Jc!e. are hampering ef.
fm1s to find out how many more

jleople were entombed by this
, week's casCades at mud and water
In ilorthem Callromla, oftlclals

said.
. Relcuers unearthed the lxidy of a
27-year-old man from a horne Fl1·
~ In the remote mountain hamlet
ct Ben Lomond, but It was not
known how many more bodies Jay
beneath the ITI!ICk. O!flclals said
iNUiy homes In the Santa Cruz
mountains are summer cabins and
may not have been occupied when
storms set orr the massive

destruction.

The 2\!z days of heavy rains and
mountain snows that ended Tuesday has 1e1t an olfielal death count
or :a; people.
The search for more bodies near
Ben Lomond was halted Friday,
said J011eph Henard, an lnvestlgator for the Santa ClliZ County
sherllf.
Although oftlclals agree that the
region wW IW! 1e1t reeling trom ihe
storm for quite some tlme, officials
relaxed some at the restJ1dlons on
water use Imposed because a main.
water pipe bum.
A man died Friday night after the
tractor he was di1vlng to clear logs
near his p111pe1 ty In Scotts Valley
. toppled over, said a sheriff's Investigator In Santa Cruz County Dar·
rol Anderson's body was spotted by
neighbors and retretved by deputies. Because he died In the after·
math, the death was not Included in
the list or storm-related fatalltles.
As much as $2111 rnJlllon in resl·
c:lenUal and cornmerctal property
was ruined or seriously darnagcd,
state and local officials estimated.
At least 6,023 homes were darnagcd
and 439 were destroyed, said Nels
Rasmussen, chief administrative
officer or the Callromla O!flce of
Emergcncy Services.
, In Santa Cruz. where stoml dam·
age drastically cut supplies, officials
"easing the restrictions
wc had on water," said Ken WhJs.
ton, plant managcr at the Santa
0

Dies in accident
By The .&amp;eoo!eted Pre.
· The Highway Patrol said that a
Kentucky man was the first person

repdrted kUied thls wcekend on
Ohio highways.
.
' The 11\an was Identified as Rick

D. Meadowa,l9, Of St. Paul, Ky. He
was killed Friday night In a one-car
accident on Ohio 139 In Scioto
Cmnty.
.
The patrol counts 1ratt1c deaths
each wcekend from 6 p.m. Friday
to lllldilfgbt Sunday.
-The dead:
. FRIDAY NIGJrr
PORTSMOU'IH ..:.. Rick D. Mea-

were

0

'

County.

"Restaurants can open If they
paper plates. We're applying

1976 drought standards. People
can't use water to wash their
~ or ca'rs, but they can take
showers."
Department engineers planned

:='~and~r'::xt:·

said.
.
. Since Monday, when a majorwafer main ruptured, some 'IO,lOipeo-

'PIIOES Ull 1011111. .IIIIIIY 11·
Till 111111, .111101 11
WilLE etiiiTinES • Ull UST

u.s. aon.

ple In Santa Cruz and SUITOUIIdtng
hllls were ordered not to bathe or
DUSh toilets. By F'rlcia¥, night, the
\VOter level'had Improved COnsiderably, Whiston said, because of deliberate reductions In use, the
repair ct key pipelines and the
drawing or water from wells and

Ll
R

other sources outside the. regular.

suj;lply area.
. •. :, , . .. .. ·
The forecast for a string of dry
days also buoyed spbits.
There's a "pretty good chancc of
dry wcather at least for a wcek and
probably longer," said ·Keith EwIng, chief forecaster for the Na·
tlonal Wea Iller Servtc,e In Redwood
City.
Clean-up work was "get.tlng
·some areas starting to look good, "
said Capt. Bud Finch of 1111! state
Department of Forestry In Santa
Cruz County. But others ''are going
to take a long time 10 get open."

.

Sale Price: $5895

'

Only $158 Per Month
30

'

Plus $610.00 down and applicable
Sales Tax

I nc'l udes :
* 4 spd. manual trans.
* Sport shifler
* Rock ' pinion steering
*Radio
*Front disc /rear drum brakes
* Reclining front bucket seats
* Fold-down rear seal
1

* Color keyed deluxe seat belts
* llc!dr side moldinp
*Front and rear bumper stripes
and guards
*Styled steel wheels
*Roof ~rip mldgs.
* Stiort steering wheel
freed om II Battery

*

, Sale Price
Tille fee

$5895.00
15.QO

Ufe Ins.
Interest
481$158.30

116.16
2112.24

8208.40

· with approved credit

Pti. (614) 992-7271

'

.

WE RESERVE
THE.RIIHT
TO LIIIT
QUAITITIES

OFFICE HOURS :
Mon .- Tues .· Thurs . &amp; Fri .
9 :00a.m.· 12 : 00 Noon
200 p .m .-4:00p.m.

8,1. ""·

IIIPEOTED

u.s. 1m.
II$PEOTED

CIT·UP

WEDN E SDAY
9 : 00 a.m .-2:00p.m .

ELBE·RFELDS IN .,POMEROY
.

SATURDAY (By Appointment Only)
9 : 00a .rn .· 12 : 00 Noon

'

JANUARY CHAIR SALE!

'

y

'
I ...... .
Filii

Llll&amp;
NIU
.
.
PIYII ·Willi .. ..........._.
0

RECLINER
WALL HUGGER .
WALL HUGGER
WALL HUGGER
WALL HUGGER
WALL HUGGER
ONE ONLY

Regular
$449.95
Regular .
$449.95
Regular
$399.95
Regular
$4-48,85
Regular
499.95 I
Regular
$429.95

GENUINE LEATHER
RECLINERS
Reg: $799.95 ·, ·

Filii

,.

'ALL
THESE

AT

$249
.

i

95

I-

YOUR. I
· ·CHOICE

ALL OTHER FURNITURE
AT JANUARY
.CLEARANCE PRIC~S

·'

.

USE OUR
CONVENIENT
CREDIT SERVICE

FURNITURE DEPT.
3rd FLOOR

.SAVE

Fine group of chairs bY Berkline 'and Kr~hler. Rockers· Walla~ay Recliners·
Swivel Rocker- Recliners. Good selection of colors a.lld covers- Vmyl or Cloth.

ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY
I

'

I
'I IIII
IIIIIII

•••ma

ILL
1.2LII&amp;U ..

•I

0

o 0 o o o o I I

I

I

0

I

I

o

.

.IICII ·&amp;

'.

OPEN MON.-FRI.
Tll8 P.M.

''

~thatusea~torwateraN!d
~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
resume
operations today, Whiston I

Osteopathic Phy s ician-&amp; Surgeon
150 Mill St.
Middleport, Oh. 4576 0

WASIDNGTON (AP)- Besides
their salaries, which mostly arc
around $50,ro&gt; a year, 52 of the Agriculture Department's top bureau·
crats are getting cash awards
-lotaUng $328,200.
; The bonuses arc authorized an·
nually to memlk!rs o! the government's senior executive service lor
" outstanding performance" on the
job.
This year's awards ranged from
$!5,512 1o $10,023, the department
said Tuesday.

P.M. SUIDAY .

the readathon. Taking part were these studeilll, front. I
to r, Kevin D. King, Patricia Davis, Michelle Taylor, ·
students, fourth, fifth and sixth graders, placed third In
Michelle Klein, KrisUn King, MlclieU~ T~ylor,
the State of Oblo In the Oble Mental Health Readathon.
Michelle Klein, Kristin King, JoaoleAh..,oo,.ll;elly .
With 311 spilo.son the studentS read 228 books and
D011glas, Marc Corsi, Amy Brothers; secoad, Ito r,.
raised $779.54 for mental health. Students rt&lt;!elved
Wesley Young, Michelle Folmer, Treoa Buchanan, •
various prizes Including radios, wakhes, umbrellas;
pens and other Items. In the state compellllon, Deflan- · Allsha Gilkey, Shannon Slavin, Tamml EbUn, Sue Fry,
ce Junior High in Defiance County was first. Jane Ann Usa Frymyer; third, I to .r, Gina Scarberry, Jody
Taylor, Joe Parker, Alison Jones, Patti Jolwsloi!,
Williams of the Salisbury School was awarded a $50
Heidi Caruthers, Jane Ann Williams and Jennifer
savings bond aw4rded by drawing of oames •of an
Reed. Abseal from the picture Is Angle Sloau. :Jobn
students r ising a mlnhlium amount of.mmiey through
• ' ~Lisle Is principal of the winning school.

DR. JAMES P. CONDE, INC.

Receive cash awanls

DIILY~IOOI-8

WINNERS - These Salisbury Elementary School

rr:==================;;;1

dows,
19, or St.
a onecar
accident
onPaul,
ObJoKy.,ln
139 In Scioto

.'

_....

Cruz Water Department.

use

8 l.li·l P.l.

IPUIILM. .I
ULLIPIUI ......

.W eather hampers rescues
dANTA CRUz, CaBf. (AP) ··"reezzne weather and the threat or

Jan. 10, 1982

'I

t

I

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I

I

I

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·~
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