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                  <text>Page--12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

'

Friday, April 2, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths I Judge O'Brien ends 22 traffic cases
Virgie R. Hobstetter

He was a member of the Ml.
Moriah Church of God, Racine and a
veteran of w. w. n.
He 1s survived by his wife, Shirley
DiUon Appleby; one sister, Mrs.
Josephine Wilson, Columbus; two
brothers, Roy Lee Appleby, Columbus and Kenneth Appleby, Cincinnati.
Funeral services will be held Sunday at 1 p.m . at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James Satterfield officiating assisted by the
Rev. Johnny Evans. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery . Friends may
call '14,the funer . home today and
Saturday from 7lo 9.
Pallbearers will be Dennis,
Wayne, Joe, and Greg Satterfield
and Rick and Dave Findley.

Twenty-two defendants were fined
and four others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday .
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were William Nestor, Belpre, $19.50,
speed; Michael Tutko, St. Albans.
Dennis Litton, Cleveland, and Fonna
Collums, Hemlock Grove, $24 and
costs each, speed; Robert Cundiff,
Rutland, $25and costs, while holding
a propagating license did not keep
accurate written records of raccoon
which he propagated during the last
propagation season and at present

Virgie R. Hobstetter , 68, Rose Hill,
near Pomeroy, died Friday at the
Holler Medical Center following a
lingering illness of several months.
Miss Hobstetter was a graduate of
Pomeroy High School. She was a
member of Pomeroy Chapter 186,
Order of Eastern Star and was a
member of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, having served in
the United Stales Women's Anny
Corps during World War II.
She was a daughter of the late
GeorgeS. and Bertha Hobstetter.
Surviving are two sisters,
Margaret Baker of Dayton and Martha Chsmbers, Middleport, and
--••
three brothers, Edison and George
Hobstetter, both of Pomeroy, and
William J . Hobstetter of Rutland.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Inez A. Randolph, 81, Rt. 3,
Four emergency calls were anMonday at the Ewing Funeral Home
Pomeroy, died Thursday at
swered by local units Thursday, the
where friends may call from 2 to 4
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
and 7 to 9 p.m. on Saturday and SunShe was preceded in death by her
Service reports.
day .
parents, Eliphas and Louisa Talman
At II :51 a.m., the Middleport Uml
Mercer i!nd her husband, Raymond
took Gary Hysell from Route 124 to
C. Randolph in May, 1965. She was
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Mrs. Vaczie Lee, 91, died Thur- also preceded in death by one
Pomeroy all a.m . look Dorset Biggs
sday at her home 10 Syracuse daughter, Hazel Biggs, one granfrom
County Road 39 to Pleasant
following a bout with cancer.
dson and one half-sister. Addie
Valley
Hospital ; Syracuse at 9:32
Mrs. Lee was born Nov. 21, 1890 in Shwnway.
p.m.
look
Debbie Hawley from
Meigs County a daughter of the late
She was a member of the Hemlock
Second
St.
to
Pleasant Valley and
Samuel and Rebecca Cutlrill, Grove Chri st ian Church. She
the
Tuppers
Plains
Unit al8 :38 took
Bowman's Run . She was also married Raymond Randolph Sept.
Sally
Pooler
from
her home on
preceded in death by her husband, 18, 1917 at Pt. Pleasant and she was
Route
7
to
Veterans
Memorial.
Adelbert Lee, and an infant son, known to many as grandma RanJohn Edward.
dolph
Mrs. Lee was a active church
Funeral services will be held SunThe final meeting of the MGM
worker and was a Sunday sc hool day al3 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
Men's
Slow-pitch Softball League
teacher. She worked in the tem- Roger Watson officiating. Burial
will
be
held Tuesday, April 6, at 1
perance cause and had an extensive will be in Cherry Ridge Cemetery.
p.m.
at
the Middleport Community
knowledge of the Bible. Her time Friends may call at the funeral
Park.
,
was spent in helping neighbors and home after 2 p.m. Saturday.
New
teams
may
still
apply
for
friends.
membership at this time. All teams
Mrs Lee is survived by a son and
have a representative at the
must
daughter-in-law, Archie and June
meeting
.
Lee of Syracuse.
(Continued
from
page
I
l
Entry
fees a nd sa nction fees will
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
be
collected
and lemns placed into
training
session
were
urged
to
Saturday at the Racine Baptist
dCJssificatiuns.
F'ur additional inorganize
a
loca
l
coalition
in
order
to
Church with the Rev. Don Walker of·-lonnation
contact
Jerry Davenport
develop
publi
c
understanding
of
the
fi ciating. Burial will be in the Letart
at
614-992-7323
.
Falls Cemetery. Friends may ca ll need for more 111011ey for schools and
at the residence from 4 to 8 p.m. this to generate the necessary impCtcl
evening. The Rawlings-Coals- upon the state legislature to pass a
The United Mine Workers SupBlower Funeral Home in Middleport tax to furniSh 1l. The Coalition of
Ed
uca
tiOnal
Organizations
ha
s
porters
Club will sponsor a party at
1s in charge of arrangements.
adopted a policy statement opposing the Scottish Inn, Pt. Pleasant, on
cut.s and reductions in school
Saturday, April 3, beginning at 6
programs an d favoring a tax jn- p.m.
Ruth S. Ebersbach, 78. Portland. crease.
Guest speaker will be Sam Churdied Thursday at her residence
Meigs Local teachers attending
ch, president of U. M. W. who 1s up
following an extended illness.
the meeting were Bob Oliver, Dale
for reelection.
Mrs. Ebersbach was born June 13, Harrison, Celia McCoy , John Ben1903 the da·,~hter of the late William tley, Joy Bentley, Dorothy Oliver,
E. and BerthaS. Stewart Williams.
Ellie Blaeltnar, John Blaeltnar.
A marriage license · fias been
Sh•· was a member of the Portland Dave Bowen, Don Dixon, Jeanne
is!:iued in the Meigs County Probate
MeLhodisl Church, WSCS and a 4-H Bowen, Bonnie Fisher, Jack Sla vin,
Court to Pall Hamiltton Ross, Jr.,
leader.
R1ta Slav in . and Carol Ohlinger
2/l. and Pamela Sue Kearns, 22. both
She is survived by her husba nd ,
of Syracuse.
Howard S. Ebersbach, Sr.; one
daughter, Louanna Wil cox, Canton ,
Conn.; three sons, Howard Samuel
Ebersbach, Newark; Thomas A.
(Continued from page 11
Ebersbach, Orchard Lake. Mich.,
Pomeroy firemen were called to
and Lawren ce E bers ba ch. percent. Some cs timate!:i say the W. Mam St. at 3:54 a.m. Friday
Syracuse ; 13 grandchildren and four rate was 25 percent in the worst of where a car dri ven by Roger Athey
the Great Depression Ill the ear ly
great grandchildren; two sisters,
had caught fire. Damages to the
Elizabeth Roberts, Ostrander, Ohio; 1930s.
vehicle were heavy but Athey and a
The numbe r of people who were
Charlolle McGowan, St. Louis; one
passenger escaped without injury .
forced
to accept part-lime work
brother, Edward Williams, Augusta ,
Maine.
berause of dt&gt;clinin1~ job opFuneral services will be held Mon- portunil1es grew by 150,000 in Mar- 1
day at 10:30 a.m. at Ewing Chapel ch. to a record of 5.7 million.
CORRECTION
with bunal to be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
ENGINEER
funeral home after 2 p.m. Sunday.

Inez A. Randolph

M eigs
• coun

time; Danny Buffington, Pomeroy,
$29 and costs, speed; Jean Bisca,
Columbus, $21 and costs, speed;
Paul Milliron, Racine, $11 and costs,
speed; Lona Cozart, Tuppers Plains,
$10 and costs, failure to yield; Mondell White, Sugar Grove, $23 and
costs, speed; James P. Jones,
Columbus, $20 and costs, speed;
David Brickles, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, extended load ; Randall
Kimes, New Haven, $5 -d costs,
over rear bumper height; Gerald

Ludwig, Parkersburg, $23 and costs,
speed; Mary Freeman, Middleport,
$10 and costs, assured clear distance; Ricky Pridemore, Rutland, $250
and costs, 10 days confinement, six
months probation, fine suspended,
petty theft; Walter Taylor,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, left of center; Virgil Byrer, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, driving wrong way on a oneway street; Kevin Stewart, Bradbury, $50 and co&gt;i.s, spotlighting;
Thomas Eakins, Racine, $10 and

Third and Pine:

costs, parking on the roadway;
Michael Roush. Racine, $10 and
costs, no valid registration; Randy
Mitchell, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failure to display valid registration .
Forfeiting bonds were Douglas
Freeman, Ironton, $50.50, speed;
Timothy Basham, ReedsviJie,
$70.50, no operator's license; Donnda Deem, Pomeroy, $44.50, speed;
Raymond C. Cassady, Tuppers
Plailll, $30.50, overwidth, $20.50, no
highway use tsx pennil.

The city's major traffic trouble ~pot

happenings

Emergency runs

THE ALL ·NEW

Corrunission .

YAMAHA

VaczieLee

i'

TURB0-650

.I
I

Vo l. 16 No . 8

Copynghted

Today's

Softball session

Meigs ....

To sponsor party

Ruth S. Ebers bach

Marriage license

Nine percent

Albert K. Appleby, 71, Rl. I ,
Minersville, died Wednesday at
Lake Community Hos pital ,
Leesburg, Fla.
Mr. Appleby was born Aug. 16,
1910 the son of Henry and Emma
Ashworth Appleby . He was also
preceded in death by two brothers,
David and Harvey Appleby and one
half-brother, Bill.

Dog warning issued
Dogs running loose in the communl\,v w1ll not be tolerated,
Pomeroy Police Chief George Still
warned today . Cl!ief Stitt said that
numerous comJllaints are being
received on do~s running loose and
causing damages. Dogs must be
kept on leashes or confined. Owners
of animals running loose will be
prosecuted under local ordinances,
Chief Stilt warned.

TilE WAY IT SHOULD~~.

~\\'

REG. PRICE

1982 HERITAGE SPECIALS
1981 XS·650 SH Mag. Wheels
1981 XS-650 W/Luggage Rack
1982 XS-400 HERITAGE SPECIAL

APRIL SALE DAYS
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

You'll like the savings and ·the selection during
our special sale this Friday and Saturday Make Elberfelds your shopping center for
wearing apparel for you and your family and
furnishings for your home.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

$2499

$2189

$2249

$2139

$1795

$1693

J
1981 HARLEY CLEARANCE
I
NOW ON DISPLAY!

.R.E~-.s~ 3 ~ 5 .s~L.E s4395
1981 FXEF R.E~ -. s~ 9 ~ 5 .s~L.E s5395
1981 FXE

1981 FXWGR':G: ~6~95, s~~E

S6Q95

1981 FXB .R~~· .s6.89.5 ~r.,q:

5

AMOURNER
With black mantilla on her
head and a burning candle in her
hand this lady attends a mass for .
five government soldiers buried
Friday in El Salvador. The
soldiers were killed in the
Usulutan area. El Salvador wraPup appears on page D-1 today.

6395

a

BOOT

1981 MILWAUKEE •••••• ••••••••••••••• '4395
1979 FXS Reg. $399S ............. $3695
1980 FLH-.C Reg. $5695 ..... SALE S5395
1979 KX750 Reg . $1949 .. .... SALE $1783
With Fairing (Red)

I

1976 FLH, Reg. $3995 ... , . , . SALE $36*1979 XLH Reg. $3095 ....... SALE $2 S
1979 KZ 750 Reg. $1849 . , .... ~ALE $1~ 9
With Fairing (Red)

---- .... ·- -·- .... --

WE ALSO HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF DUAL PURPOSE BIKES'

...,
WE HAVE A FULL SERVICE SHOP OFFERING
YAMAHA &amp; HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS &amp; SERVICE,
ALONG WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES.

$26

95

BAILEY'S SHOES
Middl e port , Oh .

DELUXE
24-TINE
LAWN RAKE
Spring-steel tinel end
coll-oprlng 'tonalon provi.de maximum flexibility
for faat cleonupa· with
very little effon. CDR24

Delaying the payments makes up
about three-fourths of a projected
$180.million revenue shortfall for the
last qu~rter of the current fiscal

but what we are doing is almost
irrelevant. But it does make the
fiscal problem more manageable.
spreading out the cuts over the rest

year.

uf the biennium,'' he !:iaid.

That means that instead of having
to cut quarterly spending by 24 pjlrcenl, as previously announced, the
cut will have to be about 7 percent,
Gillmor said.
However, delaying the loca l
gove rnment payments - for
homestead exemptions and pr.l)perty
tax rollbacks - means there~ill be
a further, proportionate spending
cut in the last year of the state's
fiscal biennium which starts July I.
Gillmor said.
" Maybe I shouldn't use the word,

Gillmor, along with House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
ew
Boston, said the delayed · menls
are not connected to

fate of a

pending bill hiking taxes and culling
spending.
That measure, passed by the
Senate Wednesday and now in the
House, seeks to balance the state
budget by June 30, 1983.
However, if the bill does pass. the
spendinK cuts for fiscal 1983 would
be only 7 percent, as opposed to an
earlier estimate by Budget Director

-

GALUPOUS - Welfare departments in Gallia and Meigs counties,
like a lot of other state and county
agencies, are awaiting the results of
new legislation mandating the
much-talked about six percent put in
state funding to help bail the'-.itate
out of its financial straits.
Jeanne Fisher, director of Gallia
County's welfare office, said she's
heard nothing official from Columbus yet on how eJ&lt;tensive the cuts
are, but for the time being, they're
operating on the assumption the cuts
won't affect welfare.

emergency assistance programs
have been exempted from all but one
percent of previous l:uts, our
operational accounts have taken
every reduction ordered."
Creasy said cuts in administrative
funds may make it impossible for
the state and county welfare departments to process applications, make
payments and provide services.
Some of the impacts the proposed
cuts would have are :
- By removing $4 million. th ~
stale's share for administration and
staff for the final quarter of the
fiscal year, there will be a " breakdown" of the entire welfare system,
Creasy said.
- If passed, legislation will
possibly call for cuts of $533,000 from
services to ~bused and neglected
children •for April and June. Day
care services would be cut by
$271,000, and the state match for
delivery of social services would be
cut by $783,000.

cidents ha ve dramatically increased

report&lt;; to the eommiss1on .

as an

"The traffic stud1es lntilcate that

apparent result of the

signa li za tion.

the intersectton does not Wilrrant a

There have been 17 accidents at
that intersection - which allows
lhru traffic on Pine Street fOhio 160!
with stop signs on both sides of Third
Avenue - since the stop light wa'
removed from that juncture in September. Prior to the removal of the
light, the intersection averaged approximately one accident a month.
" I ha ve had the stale district

traffic light" Murris sa 1d 1-'nday,
"In Ienns of flow of traffw and
sightlines ... tht•re are no major
problem s
at
lh ctl
Ill ·
tersectwn ... peo pl t• JU !-.1 ;Hen't
obey ing the stop sig n.··

"People drive frorn halllt ,.. Morns
added , pointing tu first &lt;tnd Fourth
Ave nues as cxcunplt'S,
.. and
( Con t1nuctlt ~ll A - 41

10 Secf10ns , 82 Page s 35 Cent s
A Multtmed•a Inc. N ews paper

Howard L. Collier of 16 percent .
Gilhnor said if the bill is not approved. the executi ve cut for 19~1
will have to be about 18 percent as a
result of the delayed local government payments.
Riffe !:iaid he had not gone over the
measure in detail but · we:~nl'; tu get
House action of some sort on it by

the end of April.
The spea ker sa id the spe nding

could affect sc hool s and n•duce
welfare benefits, ·· are lhm~s we

want to look at \·ery t'lus&lt;'iy ."
Meanwhil e. Riffe rept•ated
Gillmur's s t&lt;Jt emcnt the~t tht' book
juggl in g doesn't g tve llit· stall' any
new revenue fur thl' bu:nntum .
.. But 11 helps a lot o( ou r d1slrirts
whi ch Wl'fC fi:ICIIlg th&lt;Jt 21 ptTl"t'llt
cut. Smne of tlll'm CJn.• 111 real hnt
wakr ," he swd .

cuts in the bill, including those which

News briefs ...

welfare recipients . ... __

In addition, the cutback will affect
!:iervices

to

Medicaid

patients ,

assessment of Ohio's nursing homes ,
!:itop on-site inspections of more than
2,000 day care centers, children's

GONE ... WITH 111E WIND - The Pennyfare supermarket sign at the
Court Street entrance was a victim of high winds which blew into th~ area
I,S.aturdav. Sections of Gallipolis were without powt.'r from 12 : 15 tu 1:45
p.m. Saturday. The Times-Sentinel was unable to contact any Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co. personnel for a faust.', but the uutagc, in

all probability, may have been caused by the foul weather .

homes and adoption agencif!:i to

carry out the departinenl's licensing
function to !:iUCh facilities .

The stale's general relief fund appropriation is nearly exhausted, and
its ADC appropriation will last
through the end of June, Creasy explained, and urged that the welfare
department be spared from any
. future cuts.

Hotline calls lead to arrests
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Thirty-four citallnns were Issued and 53
arrests made during March following investigations

!:i t emmHl~

from

calls to the Ohio Department of Liquor Control's hot! me. the dt'pHrtmentsays.
Clifford Reich, department director, sa id more than fiOO c1lizens
have ca ll ed lhe hotline to voice .c omplaints about liquor vwlallons s tn~

ce the telephone nwnber went into use on March 2.
The hotline i!:i a special nwnber Ohioans can call to report s us pt·ctt•d
Reich said investigation!; of 100 of the complaints ha ve bt·cn com-

FLEXIBLE FIELD TILE
SOLID DRAIN PIPE
AND THE NEW 25 YEAR
GUARANTEE PLASTIC SEPTIC
TANKS.
1,000 GAL. AND 750 GAL NOW
IN STOCK.

pleted and 300 more are in progress. The majority of enforcenwnt c.etion!:i sterruned from sales of liquor to minor!:i, he sCJ id , but snnu: vn m-

plaints resulted in action for gambling, after-hours salt·s. boot.leggmg
and other violations of liquor laws.

OSU administrators to retire
UMA, Ohio - Two Ohio Stale University vice presidents say they
will retire next year.
John T. Mount, 64, vice president for regional campuses. told the
university's board of trustees he will retire June 30, 198.1.
Kathryn T. Schoen, 60, vice president for eduea llonal servlt'e s. sai d
she wHI retire Aug. 3!,' 1983. She is the first woman to serve as an OSU
vice president.
The announcement:; were made Friday i::lt the annue~l regirme~lci::llll-­

pus meeting of the trustees, whi.ch this year 19as held on OSU's Lima
campus.
A ~ TO PLANT --'- A conventional farm plow

cllanl!' ap loploll iD a field aloag Ohio 7at Clipper Mllls
aa tbe new plaatlag season begiDS for Gallla County
farmen; Willi IItle new season, agricultural and soU ex-

perts bave committed tbemselves to making no-till
planting, a lime and fuel-saving metbod of farming, a
common practice on local farms.

fo r

Sundoy

·a-till planting gains popularity
· What's tn for spring?
show
held thla week·1 at the ~'''""'· •
'
Oitizens•· Center
fashionS botb practiatl and af1
fordable. Page B-i

CAR MAT SET

Protect car floore from
tracked-In mud end debrlo
with theoe quility twin front
end twin rear clear vinyl
car matL
8486

,,

. '

Mqngtliertver ..... B-1-8
~rea deJ~tbs

••••• A-3-B-9

'usluess .. ...... , ..... _g..1

OUMTITU~

~sifted · ••.....•.

.D-3-7

Editorial .......... A,z.a

•

·Farm .............. .:. ~2
1.ocal ···· ··~···: •.• A..W
Sta&amp;e-natio~ • , •••• , 0.1
~

---·--·- -

.

area within the city where traffic ac-

- The cut will take $973,288 from
the public welfare payroll. The
departinent has already had its
payroll reduced by $800,000 and it's
operating at a handicap with 200
vacancies statewide.
-Cuts in maintenance funds will
impair data and computer systems
which process checks to public

Dick Clark searches the pages
of your newspaper for "those ·
gems that satisfy your curiosity
or inform you or make you laugh
or make you mad" on 'Inside
America' on ABC tonight. For
details consult our entertaiqment
~de, Take-One.

naw4~
4-PC. VINYL s "t:0:

'BAUM TRUE VALUE :· .

derstand the reason fur th1 s problem

other than dnvmg hab1t," Morns

illegal sales of alcoholic beverages to teen-agers.

BAUM LUMBER COMPANY NOW
STOCKS ALL SIZES OF CULVERT
IN PL·ASTIC AND STEEL.

4~
,.,.,,_

that intersection represents the only

Sunday, April 4, 1982

t---~---------L----~----------------=================~

f!lfi

thl·

Area welfare departtnents
prep~re for possible cuts

However, a scenario has been

~AIR

l'valuate

Ohio spreads out money problem

prepared by the Ohio Department of
Public Welfare in order to inform
the public of the ramifications of the
proposed cut.
"Welfare has not gone untouched,
as many believe," noted Kenneth B.
Creasy, the public welfare department's director. "While funds for
Aid to Dependent Children,
Medicaid, general relief and

AMERICAN MADE
LEATHER UPPER

those raising $75 will receive a St.
Jude !-shirt and jacket.
Sponsor forms are available at
area schools and banks. Children
and adults are invited to take part.
Chairman for the bike-a-thon is Mrs.
Sarah Cannan with the assistance of
Meigs County Jaycee co-chairman
Brien Conde. Interested persons can
contact Mrs. Carman at 742-2610 or
Conde al992-:i197.
The route for the event will start at
the Pomeroy Elementary School.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

$2095

25th ANNIVERSARY
HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER

Bike-a-thon riders needed
Riders are needed for the St. Jude
Children's Resea rch Hospital
wheels for life bike-a-thon to be held
Saturday , April24 .
This bike-a-thon is to raise funds
for the world famous research
hospital and its battle against
childhood cancer and other
catastrophic childhood diseases.
Riders in the local event will enlist
sponsors who donate a sum for each
mile completed. Riders who raise
$25 Wlll receive a St. Jude !-shirt and

$2449

to

tmts

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( APl
Schools and other programs
threatened with a proposed 24 percent spending cut are getting a
break because stale government is
using a bookkeeping maneuver to
eliminate all but about 7 percent of
the cut.
Senate President Paul E. Gillmor,
R-Port Clinton, said Friday, "We
didn't find any eJ&lt;tra money. We
don't have an additional nickel."
The senator referred to a decision
by fiscal officials to delay $133
million in obligAtory local government subsidies from June until after
the new fiscal year starts July l.

SALE PRICE

Extinguish blaze

r;===========:J

Albert K. Appleby

T-S

here

problem and he does not really un-

According to the city manager,

•

Middleport-Pomeroy-G;i\)ipolis- Point Pleasant

1982

eng ineer

ignore the stop s1gn."

•

unba

I

~ s~\,t

"There have only been two instances of signal failure during the
last three months and both instances
were caused by general power
outages due to electric company
failure," Morris said.
That report. which reviews the
existing status of traffic flow and
parking within the municipality,
acknowledges there were "start up
problems" during the first three
months of signalization.
The report continues : " ... with the
new traffic and signalization
program we do have some trouble
spots. One such spot is Third and
Pine and for some reason people

By LARRY EWING
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALUPOUS - Although some
problems are admitted to exist with
the current traffic flow patterns
through the city, officials are
generally pleased with the results of
the signalization and channelization
program instituted in Gallipolis six
months ago.
" In general! would like to say that
the traffic signalization program
has worked quite well," City
Manager Chris Morris states in a
report - dated March 31 prepared for the Gallipolis City

·:'

----

,,

,...:

'

•·

\

' .1,

•

farnnersthroughout

By~ JlEu.Y

GAWPOlJS - 'With the new far-

· '·.eaarin ·. a'bout to .

be~tn,

.aperta are pointing to
'

popularity of the no· ~. ,which has been
catching on with

lfi!J~nln,oallli. CottUIIJI..

cuts the
and then,cO\Iers
110\11011 - 18 being

...... ' .... c-....

.........

~pproximately

~Staff

tile

u.s.

of

Agriculture, the Ohio Department o( burn up
6J gallons fl
Natural 'Resources and other .far- gas . .With no-till, it's reduced to 2.2
mlng and .soil organizations as a gallons. An average field of 400
priority Item.
acres of the same crops may take a
Part of the reason for increasing fanner 560 hours to plant; cultivate
intereSt tn the concept ts the amou,nt and barves , but the no-till method
of time and fuel estimated to be cuts it down to abOut 240 hours.
saved· by no-till's once-over aP- ,.. "The average soil loss tn &amp;....Ia
pl'llllch.
·
County is five tons per acre;•:
~~~v.e . Hi binger, soli con- Hlbtnger explained. "If they use noservatloillst· for Gallia &lt;;ounty, said till, that will drop to well below two
plantlni a-row of com or·soybeans tons, aM in some cases, a tenth of a
cin, by the' cionventiOIIIII method,
(Continued on A-4)
·
'I

--- --Cold

Showen

""""""
~

Stotoonory

O((luded

WEAmER FORECAST- Sbowen and .ratn are expected for nortbern Callforala and tbe Pacific Northwest, cbanglng to snow and Hurries
over Idaho and Montana In the foncast period Saturday until Sunday.
Saow ·and Hurries are also due for tbe upper Great Lakes and tbe Obio
Valley, extelldlng into New Eagland. Showers and Hurries are expected
·
for tbe R~klea. (AP Laaerpboto).

�•

.

"

April4, rl982

Commentary and perspective

Page- A-2
April 4, 1982

The bell tollU:s=
· =====J=am=e=sJ=~K=ilp=am=·c=k
..
825 Third~ ve., Gallipolis, Ohio
(6141446-2342

111 CourtS!., Pomeroy, Ohio
(61419!12-2156

ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

HOBART WII.i&gt;ON JR.

Assistant Publisher-Centroller

Executive Editor

A MEMBER of Tbr Assod.at.t"ttl'rt·f'is. Inland 03ily J•rt'SS Assodallun .11nd lht' Amnlt•ao
NtWIIJRI!)«

Publi~bo·r~ A~lloH'Uillon.

Lt.ITERS Of OPINION an wrkomt"il . Tht'} ~hoold bt&gt; (t'!;S lhiln 300 " 'ords J on~: . All
\r!tt-01 iHY liUbjt'{'l lu rdltinfl: and mulil bt' s igllt'd with n.ame, addrt"!ls lind lt•lrphunt'

\ _ llumbrr. Nu uru;ignt&gt;d lt'ttrno ..-·ill br publisht'd. LA'ttt'n; should bt&gt; In )tood tastr, addrnslng
ho~un .

nolpt"niODHIIti ts .

-

Kee them down
ont efarm
Giving baby rabbits, chicks, and ducks for Easter is cruel and in many
and cities illegal. The Ohio Veterinary Medical Association urges
Jlarenls not to give children living anima ls as toys.
A baby rabbit, chick, or duck is not likely to survive in the home atmosphere, Ohio Veterinary Medi cal Association points out. A young child's
enthusiasm over the new pet often results in unknowing cruelty as legs are
broken and wings are crushed. If the animal dies or is injured, it is a
traumatic experience for the child. If the animal survives. it generally ends
up tn an animal shelter. Because such a large number of rabbits, chicks, and
ducks are left at animal shelters during the post-Easter season, it is impossible to place them all and many have to be destroyed . Even if the animal
•hould reach maturity, many local ordinances would prohibit a family from
keeping it.
Parents should remember that these are outdoor anim&lt;i 3. They cannot
be housebroken and may cause serious hoWjekeeping and health problems .
Many are disease carriers. The National Center for Disease Control i~Atlan­
l';t and other public hea lth authorities warn that children and adults in close
conact with these animals may be exposed to salmonellosis, a severe gastr&lt;&gt;·
i~testina l infection . Salmonellosis is rarely fatal, but often requires medical
tretment including hospitalization . In addition to the family, other pels in the
~ousehold may become ill .
Because of the problems surrounding " Easter pels," many com·
mum ties have passed laws prohibiting the sale of these animals, including
rabbits, ducklings, and other fowl.
. Easter and the coming of spring should be a time of joy and rebirth, not a
(&gt;"riod of physical illness. psychological trauma, and needless deaths of
young animals. Ohio Veterinary Medical Association urges parents to leave
&gt;'la te~

WASIUNGTON - An impression
years the existing requirements for
persists, not without reason, that the
pre-clearance, well and good. A betcontroversy over extension of the
ter "bail-out" provision is needed
Voting Rights Act affects only those
for localities with dean records, but
Southern states with a history of
put that point aside.
raci~l discrimination. The notion
Our concern is with the recent
oughT to be abandoned.
Hous amendments. Under this
language, Section 2 would prohibit
Hello there, Pittsburgh' Get with
any voting practice · or procedure
it, Kansas City' How are you doing,
Hartford? All of you should get betthat "results" in a denial or
ter acquainted with House'passed
abridgement of voting rights. There
amendments to Section 2 of the act.
no longer would be any requirement
· Unlike other sections of the law ,
that a discriminatory " intent" be
which do indeed apply only to
shown. Only " results" would matcovered states and counties, Section
ter.
2 applies to "any" state or political
In testimony last month before a
subdivision - and the section •~&gt;­
Senate committee, Assistant Atplies permanently.
torney General William Bradford
Let me back up a little. Congress
Reynolds asked a prointed question :
had abundant justification for
Would not the amended section be
passing the original Voting'1r.ghls
interpreted to insulate racial and
Act of 1965. Seventeen years ago
language minorities £rom electoral
many Southern states and l~ijes
defeat ? At least one prospect," he
still were engaged in the indefensible, contemptible practices ~
of racial discrimination that had
lingered since Reconstruction days.
I know . I am a Southern boy. A hundred ingenious devices - poll taxes,
tricky registration requirements,
rigged literary tests - were employed to deter blacks from voting.
It was a shameful situation.
The original act, to repeat, had
great merit ; it accomplished much
good. Black registration in
Mississippi, to cite only one example, has increased from 6.4 percent
to 67.4 percent. The number of elected black officeholders in the South
has grown from fewer than 100 to
fTl.()re than 2,000. More significantly,
political attitudes and campaign tactics have changed. Minority voters,
once indifferently ignored, now are
assiduously courted.
The picture today is far from perfect. Over the past six years, the
Department of Justi ce has felt compelled to object to 695 proposed ·
changes in local election laws; the .
department has filed upward of 50
suits to enjoin changes that had not
been pre-cleared. If it were now
proposed merely to extend for 10 ;;&amp;;JiM.i&gt;i'..J

rabb its, chicks, ducklings, and simi lar animals on the farm and give their

children stuffed toys or chocolate " bunnies" instead.

The 'Palestinian

·'

Letter to the editor

Opposes HB 890
The future of thousands of helpless
shelter animals is in your hands.
Passage of House Bill 890 would
allow for dogs to be released to any
USDA animal dealer in any state .
The USDA is to license and inspect
animal dealers but is presently
faced with a 75 percent budget cutback. According to a memo released
by the government, it is expected
that states will have to assume the
duty of inspecting animal dealers .
Ohio cannot afford this duty .
Lawsuits in two Ohio courts have
ruled it illegal for counties to release
animals to animal dealers. Further,
an Ohio Attorney General's ruling
states it it illegal to allow dealers to
perform euthanasia.
Passage of HB 890 would place
county commissioners in a po~ition
of facing such liabilities as accidental removal of a dog which is
being held in rabies quarantine; accidenta l removal of an owned dog
that has not yet been reclaimed by
its owner; or accidental removal of
any dog not held the required ~ree
Or 14 days. The Great ~kes
Regional Office has knowledge of at
!east four dogs escaping on two occasions from a pound while the
dealer went about his business
ignoring the escaped dogs.
The HSUS opposes methods used

Today in

to handle, transport, and house
many of the animals being taken by
animal dealers. One of the dealers in
Ohio works through the night collecting animals making it impossible
for the public or even county officials to monitor the activities.
This bill has been opposed by
HSUS, Ohio Human Societies, Ohio
Dog Owners Association, and even
the Ohio Dog Wardens' Association.
The supporters of this bill are county
ocrrunissioners throughout Ohio.
The excuse given for counties who
use animal dealers to euthanize and
remove dogs is finances; although
sta th;tics show these claims cannot

be upheld.
•
Is every Ohio pet or every Ohio
stray to go for research or if not acceptable for research, to be
inhumanely euthanized ? Will the entire state of Ohio bek nown for sending ALL unwanted or unclaimed
dogs to research Jabs?
If you are opposed to passage of
this bill, write or call Vern Riffe or
Barney Quilter; Ohio House of
Representatives ; State House;
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Marilyn Smith, President
Gallia Co.
Animal Welfare League

his~ory

Today Is Sunday, Aprtl4, the 94th day of 1982. There are 271 days lett In
the year.
.
.
Today's hlghllght In history:
On Aprt14, 1968, civil rtghts leader the Rev. Marlin Luther King Jr., was
slain In Memphis, Te1111.
On this date:
'
In 1581, England's Queen Elizabeth I knighted Sir Frances Drake.
In 1912, the Chinese Republic was proclaimed In Tibet.
In 1949, NATO was formed by the United States, Canada and several
European countries for mutual assistance against aggression In the North
Atlantic. ·
And In 1969, doctors In Houston Implanted the first complete artltlclal
heart In a 47-year-old man, who died four days later.
Ten years ago: The United States recognized the country of Bangladesh
after Its rebelllon ag8Jnst Pakistan.
Five years ago: The African country of Zaire broke re~tloils' with Cuba
on grounds the C$stro government was aiding rebels In nelghbol'lng
Apgola.
.
.
One year ago: Federal agerits In Los Angeles arrested boxing promotor
Harold Smith In coonectlon with a $21 nJllUon fraud against two Callfornla
branches .of~ Wells tarao National Bank.
Today's tJbibday:· Blue!! iultartst M~ Waters Is 87.
1bouiht ;or Today: Imagination Is more important than kllowledge..Ab:rt ~ln. German-bml P,IIY*lst (18'19-1955).

WASIUNGTON - Taking their
cue from the United States J ewish
Appeal, oil-rich Arab countries and
their American supporters are
trying to counter UJA's influence
with an outfit of their own. It's called
the United Palestinian Appeal.
But where the UJA's strength
comes not only from financial power
but from the political power of
Jewish voters, the UPA, Jacking any
significant Aral&gt;-Arnerican voting
strength, is relying on the economic
clout of its Arab sponsors.
The organi1ation has the support
of the ambassadors of Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates. With this backing, it is
engaged in a not-s&lt;&gt;-subtle campaign
to solicit funds from American firms
that do business in the Arab oilproducing countries.
A recent fund-raising solicitation
was titled, "An Open Letter to
American Companies that Conduct
Business in the Middle East." It
reminded the recipients that more

than 2,500 U. S. companies make
money in Arab countries, to the tune
of '' over $53 billion worth of business
for United States firms."
The Jetter pointedly notes that " of
this $53 billion worth of business for
U. S. firms in the Middle East, less
than .001 percent returns to the
region in any form of contributions
to

c harities

and

humanitarian

organizations."
The touchy point, of course, is
whether the Palestinian fund-raising
effort is humanitarian or political.
While readily admitting that they
have targeted American cor_porations for contributions, UPA officials insist that their cause is strictly humanitarian. Their first goal,
for example, is support for a hospital
in the Arab city of Gaza, in the strip
of land along the Mediterranean that
Isrqel won !rum Egypt in 1967.
UPA officials stress~d to my
associate Lucette Lagnado that their
organization is "apolitical, " and
note that the Internal Revenue Ser-

said, "and a very real one at that, is
that this amendment could well lead
us to the use of quotas in the electoral ptucess."
Most cities of more than 250;000
population conduct at-large elections for their city councils and
school bOards. Let us suppose that a
typical city has a nine-me{llber
council and a ~percent minority
population. Black candidates run,
but they fail to 'win at least three
seats. These are the "results" or
" effects." Under the House
language, such disproportionate
consequences "would lead to a
federal court order restructuring the
challenged government." It would
be immaterial that the system had
no intention to discriminate. Like
Sergeant Friday, judges could
inquire only into the facts, rna' am,
only the fa cts.

In sum, the House amendments
undertake a drastic change in the
thrust of the original act. Instead of
assuring the individual black or
Hispanic a right to vote, the amended law would accord minority blocs
a right to win. This would write the
bizarre "dilution" theory into permanent law - the theory that the
collective power of such blocs must
never. be "diluted." The amended
section would codify the racist
notion that blacks can be effectively
represented only by blacks. We
would wind up with the evils of
proportionate representation by
race and dolor.
All that is required, it seems to
me, is to return to the original pur·
pose, which is to prevent and to
punish every sly scheme to keep
minorities from voting. Simple ex-

tension of the act would accomplish
that aim.

"Have you ever seen happier rats
in your life 1 " he asked me.
Never/' I admitted. "Do they all
smoke?''
11

"A pack a day," he said proudly.
"They don't get anything to eat
unless they smoke first."
"And none of them contract cancer or heart disease?"
"They better not. If one of our rats
get sick, we throw it out of the
progrJilm."
· "But how do you know if smoking
was not the cause of its illne35 if you
throw it away?"
·
"It's a question of prtoritles. When
you're looking for scientific answers
to· medical problems, you don't
waste your time on sick rats."
A lab assistant came up · and
showed Dr. Applebaum a rat that
seemed to be expiring.
"What do you think, Doctor?"
"d'et It out of here. It could have
•
yellow fever."

The election in El Salvador is over
and the propaganda boys in the state
department are shaking hands over
a "Glorious Victory." For whom?
Certainly it is not a victory for the
32,000 dead in the campaign whose
bodies are mouldering in shallow
graves all over El Salvadpr. It was
not a victory for the half million who
have fled their homeland to save
their lives. It was not a victory for
President Jose Napoleon Duarte,
whose party failed to capture a
majority of the votes or leaders of
other parties who had even fewer
votes. It was not a yictory for the
guerrillas who had sworn to enforce
a boycott of the election and were
not able to sustain their boast. In
fact, as events will undoubtedly
prove, it was not even a victory for
the propagandists.
The questionable victors were the
voters who, for the first time in their
lives, were allowed to express themselves freely at the polls. Perhaps
the experience will prove useful
later. They responded with a large
- turnout but had little choice of candidates.
In backing the Duarte regime, the
Reagan administration had
provided arms, money and military
advisers to the government of El
Salvador. They did this in spite of

advisers!
It is doubtful now if the United
States Congress will pour more
money down this political rat hole.
The other three factors in the eleclion were even worse. The most extreme right-wing faction led by
Roberto D:Aubuisson is said to be
the leader 'of a paramilitary death
squad responsible for many killings.
He was the candidate of the rich land
owners and was running second in
the vote count as this is being written. The other two factions are of
less importance but all four factions
are definitely right-wing extremists.
Those are the unsavory characters
the administration has been sit to
link us with in the name of fighting
the communist bugaboo in Central
America.
By their all-out support of Duarte,
the administration has, as one TV
commentator put, "hoist itself on its
own petard." They ignored the advice and offer of negotiation by
Mexican President Jose Lopez PorIillo to negotiate a settlement between the Duarte government and
the El Salvador guerrillas. By doing
so they have made the future of El
Salvador more uncertain than ever,
if it has a future. Duarte is compelled to form a coalition government by uniting with one or more of

Aubuisson has 19 delegates, the PCN
faction representing the old oligarchy has 15 and another right-wing
group has two. Thirty-one is .
necesSary to govern. Here is what
may conceivably happen in the next
few days: A coalition between the
D'Aubuisson and PCN may bring El
Salvador a repressive right-wing
government by rich land owners.
Then it may be possible that Duarte
supporters will be forced to join with
the guerrillas in an attempt to overthrow an unacceptable government.
Either way, the administration
dream of a United States controlled
goverrunent in El Salvador is ended
and guerrilla warfare is again the
order of the day for the foreseeable
future .
The Duarte government, in spite
of their .repressive army, had made
some gains in El Salvador, if only to
impress outsiders. They had started
making land reforms but only
halfheartedly. The land reform commissioner was the 21 year old son of
one of the four junta members,
which does not speak well for their
sincerity. They also started some
banking reforms but only to convince outside goverrunenls that they
were capable of handling their own
economy. Most of their time in office
was spent fighting the guerrillas and

CHEECH &amp; CHONG'S

Berry's World

'It doesn't appear to have yellow
fever."
''Then maybe it's typhus."

."Should I do an autopsy on it?"
"Who do you think you are, Dr.
Nogucki? We're running a
laboratory here, not a coroner's office.~~

The lab asSistant disappeared.
Dr. Applebaum seemed upset. "I
run into that all day long. Every
ttme a r~t comes down with
something, some smart aleck tries
to find out if it was caused by
cigarettes. Nobody ever wants to
leave .well enol)gh alone."
"Maybe they're just being
thorough?" -' suggested. "Have'nt
you ever found a rat that died from a
smoking-related disease?"
"Not since I've been working for
the tobacco industry. WHen i took
this job, they gave me carte blanche
~o find out all the facts} plus a bonus
Of $25 for. every rat 1 could prove

died of natural causes. I also ge~
$1,000 every time I go on television to ·
attack the Surgeon General's Report .
on smoking. So I call them as I see
them·, because my scientifio- :
reputation is at stake."
;'
. "Then why is the entire medicat ;
•.
establishment against you 1"
"It's simple. If they blame ·
smoking for somebody's heart at-::"
tack .they won't be sued for malpracJ ·
tice.''
:·
"Doctor, will you come over tc(
cage 230? None of the rats seem to be: :
moving," a lab assistant said.
;
We walked over. Dr. Applebaum: :
said, "What have you been feedini ·
them?"
·:
"Milk and cheese," the assistant :
replied.
";:
"Just as I suspected. Look for: ;
calcium kidney stories."
~
"Suppose I don't find any?"
f'Then you can get yourself. ·
another job."
~:

w. Va .

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page- A-3

ful they will be too concerned with
the result of their interference in a
neighborjng country .
Whi ch brings us to this question :
When the hell is the Reagan administration going to stop feeding us
propaganda like we are a nation of

village idiots ? Even a good idea is
suspect by the time they wrap it in
yards and yards of propaganda and
present it by those masters of double
talk, Haig, Weinberger, Regan or
Stockman.
We're big boys and girls now'

..,..

'PAr+i

Ft~E tl.KT1a.l T&lt;lu&lt;S.

Sl1cw Mr. io YOJR 0..1~H5

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

BEING PUSHED
INTO BUYING
ANEW
CAR...

s @~ ~ ~ ~ ~

ApEp~ea~l'=J=ac=k=An=de=rs=on
A handwritten internal IRS fnemo,
vice has deemed it is a charitable
organization entitled to tax-exempt dated Aug. 31 , 1979, noted that a
"question arises over the fact that
statu&gt;l.
But the founder and original dic- the organization's (UP A's) director
tator of the UPA, Paul Ajlouny, is by is an advisor on American affairs to
his own admission politically min- the UN's PLO abserver."
ded. The publisher of an Israeli Arab
newspaper, Al·Fajr, he has been_an
outspoktn supporter of Arab causes,
CORRECTIONS
AND
a critic of U. S. support of Israel and CLARIFICATIONS: Because of
an adviser to the Palestine inaccurate information from the
Liberation Organization at the New York State Assembly, the Feb.
United Nations.
14 column erred in reporting that
What might have worried the IRS Assistant Secretary of State
more than that, though, was the fact Dominick · DiCarlo supported the
that Ajlouny was indicted in Sep- hatsh 1973 state drug bill. He optember 1978, on charges of trying to posed it - but offered an alternative
smuggle stolen communications with equally tough provisions.
equipment. The federal prosecutor
- Two special assistants tu Com- ·
who handled the case belieyes the merce Department assistant :
contraband was intended for the secretary Carlos Campbell were in- :
PLO. Ajlouny was convicted on one correctly reported as immune to the :
of more than 100 counts filed against furlough provisions of a depart- ·
him, sentenced to . two years in mental order. Unlike their boss, the:·
prison and served several months in two assistants, Jay Summerall and ·
a federal penitentiary before being ·Paul Bateman, will in fact be ·.
released.
furloughed without PaY for 12 days. ' ;':

Point Pleasant,

try will return to the same economic
condition it was in before Duarte
was appointed president in 1980, a
goverrunent for the rich by the rich.
As the Reagan administration has
been trying to create much the same
economy in this country, it is doubt-

the other factions. Or they may unite asking the United States for money,
and form a government of their own weapons and help.
I
and leave Duarte and the Reagan
If, by any remote chance, they
administration on the outside succeed in forming a goverrunent,
looking ln. To put it bluntly, by being the Duarte faction must be prepared
so damn clever, they outsmarted to abandon any reform plans they
themselves!
may have had . Therefore, the counAs the unofficial returns indicate, 1 --------------1
the Duarte faction has 24 delegates
elected to a 60 member assembly
which will name the next president
and write a new constitution. DOPENS FRI., SAT., SUN.

~

P&amp;

~ ~ f\ ~-

-

~

~ e.-

, .•.............
!

THIS WEEK'S :
:
SPECIAL
:

•••

PEPSI
and

"You think YOU've got problems! My wife has
become a MONDALE GROUPIE!"

STARTS TUESDAY, APRIL 6

THE
STEVE YATES
SHOW
The Steve Yates Band was uborn" here nine
years ago and- he's back for our lOth an·
nivesary celebration.

DIET
PEPSI

•

$}1,~

L-16oz.
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:

••
••
HOURS
•
Monday thru Saturday :
ICE COLD BEER,
WINE &amp; POP

P.M.
e
•: Gallipolistilll
Ice Co. :
8~ . M.

•
•
:

DRIVETHRU
CARRYOUT
709 First Ave.

•
•
:

fS

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

Member FDIC
Spring Valley
~

••••••••••••••••

Steve now fronts one of the top dance bands
in the country and he'll be playing for you fivf
nights aweek.

Thru April 11, 1982

Shrimp &amp; Fish
Special $2e99

And remember, you don't have to jostle the
teeny boppers at the beautiful French Quar;
ter. We d~n't admit anyone under 21.

It's a treat that's worth the trip!
Four big Gulf styimp, our crispy
fish fillet, plus fryes, slaw &amp;
hushpuppies! Shrimply delicious!

The All New

tf'r~nchr

Silver Bridge Plaza
State Route 7

Q.u arter
Why Settle
.f or Anything
. . . Leu?

u-;p._,••~ 1 •" Ktilia.i,.
'.

C&gt; tiiZUIS

I

.'

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

E~ctioo~oov~~cy---~-~-~~-----~-w_e_
nw_~_~_u

the repressive nature of the government toward its citizens. A Catholic
archbishop wa~ murdered as he condueled Sunday services. Four
Catholic women were raped and
murdered by government soldiers.
Four Dutch journalists, members c(
a TV crew, were murdered. Villages
were destroyed and the inhabitants
either murdered or forced to flee.
Remember these were the good guys
the United States government was
backing with money, equipment and

Smoking researchJ:======A=rtB=u=chw=a=ild&gt;
Despite the overwhelming evidence that smoking can cause cancer,
heart disease and other fatal
illnesses, there are still some
physicians in the United States who
maintain that all the facts are not in,
and the medical profession is
overreacting. Most of these doctors
are employed by the tobacco interests, and some people are skeJ&gt;tical about th.eir research.
·
I don't Jm,ppen to be one of them. I
believe that just because a doctor is
on the tobacco industry's payroll,
doesn 'I mean he is not as objective
about smoking as someone who
isn't.
Take my friend Dr. Heinrich AJ&gt;plebaum, who gets $100,000 a year to
defend the cigarette manufacturers'
interests. He took me through his lab
the other day.
There were hundreds of white rats
in cages, jumping about and playing
llnd munching on tobacco leaves.

Pomeroy

�..

~·

t

"14, 1982

A

Save $30 to sso During
The Toro Red Tag Rebate.

PATH OF THE STORM - This aerial view shows a portion o! the
damage done by a tornado that touched down in Paris, Texas, Friday af·

temoon. Ten deaths have been reported and more than 200 were Injured.
Details on pa ge D-1. (APLaserphoto) .

banding

as negotiator for the group.
The first attempt to force Colum·
bia Gas to deal with northwest Ohio

tngcther to battle Columbia Gas of

communit ies as a group failed when

Ohio in future rate cases.
In ct meeti n ~ in Mawnec, Tim

two of them - Fostona and Bowling
Green - declined to adopt the con-

Jochim of the Ohio Office of Consumers· Counsel 111 Colwnbus told
officials that their best bet for winnmg un ifurrn gas n1 tes was to form a
No1"lh Central Consortium.
The cJ tJt:'S a re being asked to a~
prove an ordinance by May 3

sort iwn rate ordinance.

Ohio

conunun itics

are

liL'Signa tin g the conswners· counsel

'No till' ..

The Public Utilities Commisson
later approved a rate for Fostoria
that was lower than for the cunsortiwn . Bowling Green l&lt;ibled the
consortium

ordinance

begause

negotiations on gas rates had
a lready sl&lt;irted.

scratch, ~he consumers' counsel can

confront the utility with the group
action while none of the individual
members ha ve cases pending be!ore
the PUCO.
" I think we can get a stronger case
this next time aro und with no case::;

pending," Jochim said.
He said he expects any attempt by
the conununities to ultimately be
fought in the Ohio Supreme Court.
·None of the comm uniti es
r epre::;entcd

-

Perr y!'i burg ,

I Continued from page All

it to the area's £armers.

Bryson !Bud) Ca rter, Gallia 's
agn cultural exten::;ion agent, warned, however, the loss in time and
fuell'Ost.s is made up by the amount

of chemicals used. but agrees no-till
s;.1ves soil. His office, working with
sot! conserva ti on and agricultural
st&lt;-thi lization offi ces. has proceeded
from tha t standpoint in introducing

Both Hibinger and Ca rter agreed
no-till

wa ~

slow to catch on . Carter

said he held a meeting in Gallipolis
m 1972 with approximately 70 farmers to explain the benefits to them,
and few picked it up. No-ti ll was
being used to some extent already in
Meigs and Mason ('Ounti es.

But both pointed out the reason fur

Third and Pine...
from Page All

across the nation," Hi binger ~ id .

may have served to ·· train dri vers to
During a March discussion with

" We are making up the lights from
old traf£ic signals and ha ve
requested the power company to in·

" Iowa has 75 percent of its tillage
being done no-till. Ohio, as a whole,
is looking at 50 percent."

the commission o£ the Third and

::;tall a new pole ... " Morris r eports,

No-till planting lends itself only to

P1ne problem, Morris said the prior
practice of having both a traffic light
and stop sign at many of the city's

" ... the power company is waiting for

dry ground, and Hi binger and Carter

clea rance from Colwnbus. With the

indicated it would be two weeks

1gnore stop signs.''

intersections had taught driver!'i to

ignore the stop s1gn by proceeding
i!ll " grcen ."

The existence of such connicting
traf£ic control de vices is a viola tion

of state laws gove rnin~ traffic
signalization. All such conflicting

installation
the accidents
fla shers, we
it will stopofthe
at hope
this
location ."
" If that doesn't work... i! the accident rate remai ns high," the city
manager added Friday , ·· we wiU
have no alternative but to replace
the light removed by signalization ."

\

Valley
529 JACKSON PIKE

4

~ 0 W ~~~4!0-

PHONE 446-4554

ltmtinrl

A Multimedia Newspaper
Pul.lhshl'll each Sunday, 825 Third
A11enue. by the Ohio Valley PublishinH
ComJ)&lt;Iny· Multimedia, Inc. Second class
postage pai~ at Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.
F.ntered as second (']Ass mailing matter
at Pomeroy. Ohio, Posl Office.

Production Credit Association and
Gallia Roller Mills.
However, by last year eight no-till
planters had been privately bought,
a nd the soil and water conservation
district, with the financial help of
several area banks, bought its own
no-till corn planter, which it presen·
tly rents out to farmers.
Hibtnger said it's corrunon for one
Iarmer with a no-till planter to hire
himself out to his neighbors after
he's done his planting already .
Since 1979, when Hibinger and
Ca rter began a more concentrated
PlL&lt;h for the use of no-till, only 350
acres in the county were being farmed with no-till. By 1981 , the fi gure
had jwuped to 12,000 acres. out of
approximately 25,000-30,1100 acres
eI1..
g1bJe t o be f armed .
""This Js a signal everywhere

rates indi cate a special hazard."

tL•rsed ton.''

things bener.We be~eve you do, wo.

(

USPS 52&amp;-800

and we re· of£ered £or u.se by Jackson

trol devices at many intersections

sl reels bemg thru-streets."
.. If this were a strange town. they
wouldn't have a problem, " the city
manager added, ·· irs the natives
who are having difficulty w1th the in-

lJ1111b1~ ~imrt-

due to the lack or special machinery
necessary. In 1979, for example, onl y
two no-till planters were in the area

Another probable cause for the
problem city officials hesitantly ad1111t 1s that lor many years the
existence of conflicting traffic con-

peopiL' 111 th ts town a re used to eros.-;·

50.00

HOURS: MON.-SAT 9-6; SUN. 1-6

the slow acceptance o£ no-till was

devJ ces wi thin the city have been
removed.
In an effort to correct the problem
at Third and Pine, the city plans to
install an " mterseetion control
beacon" - fla shmg red lights lacing
traffic on Third .
Intersection control beacons are
intended fur usc ·· ... at intersections
where traffic or physica l conditions
do not J·uslily eonventi onal tra!hc
signals but where high accident

GALUPOUS - Admission rates
to Ohio's Department of Mental
Health receiving hospitals are 11
percent higher than two years ago,
however, the department budget has
been decreased significantly.
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Mental
Health Board, due to these cuts
. faces an up to 100 percent reductio~
of funds for the last quarter of this
fiscal year, April through June.
Effective Thursday, the latest cut
is retroactive to July I. This cut is
the third this year. The total retroactive reduction of 24 percent for community mental health will come,
from the fourth quarter state sub- ·
sidy.
Community Mental Health
programs have been significantly
crippled by budget cuts on all levels.
Federal Block Grant funds to s,tates
for Mental Health represent a reduction of 33 percent. A provision to permit expending block grant funds
over a two-year period and extending the program funding pattern
over the three-year block grant
period has minimiz ed th e
catastrophic results that would have
occurred had the cut been made in a
single year.
Community Mental Health services are dependent on sta~e funds .
Locally, state funds are administered by the Gallia-JacksonMeigs Mental Health Bard.
A summary recently completed
for the Department of Mental Health
indicated budget cuts have resl\lted
in elimination and/or reductions of
direct services to the elderly,
children, chronically mentally ill,

"""'~"' ;" m•lci"g.

'

Membt'r The Assorialt."&lt;&lt; Press. Jnl&lt;tnd
Dally Press AssOl'JatiOil and the
Amenl'&lt;Ul Newspaprr Publis hers
AssOt' Jati on, Nati onal Ad11crtism~.:
Reprt"scntative, Branham . 171 17 West
N llll' Mile Road, SUite 204. Dt.·lrOII ,
M1dugan. 4807::..
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
fly C11 rrier ur Motor R11ute
One week
. . . . . . . $1.00
One Month
... ... $4.40

One year

$52.80
SrNGLECOPY

PRICE

35 Cenl!i
No subscnplJOns by mail pennitted :n
towns where home ca rrier se rvh~ is
a11111luble

The Sunday Times-se ntinel will not be
res1&gt;011Si blc for advance payments ma de
to earners.
MAILSURiiCRJP'TIONS

Sunday Only
Onv ye ar . .... . .. .......... 120.80
SJx monlhs · · · · · · · .. · · · · · · · ·. $10.40
Daily and Sunday
Ohl .. od wes1Vkglnla

Oncye&lt;~r

·· ··· ·· · · ·· · · · ··· ·· ·

$.39.00

Sue mon th . . . . . . .. . . .... .... $2{1.80
Thrvvmonil&gt;;
.... 112.3.\

~:~c~~~~Jt;li:~~~~o

Orwyear ..
. ..... . . . ..... $4&lt;.20
SJx monUls · · · · · · · · · · · · · .. $23.40
Three months . . ........... ... $13. 00

ribe~fo~re~n~o-~t~ill~u~se~~be~g~ins~·;.;;,;,;;;,;,;;;.;d~;;;;;;::::::;;;;;;;;~
LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN, PRE-OWNED

MOBILE HOMES
ALL TRADE-INS ON MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
THIS AREA.
1971 BELMONT 12165 ............. .. ............ : ..
1972 BARON, 12160, CENTRAL AIR . . . ... . . ... .. .........
1976 OAKWOOD 12152, furnished with central air conditioning ... . .
1967 EI.CONA 10150 WITH TIP-OUT IN LIVING ROOM ...........

EASTER SPECIAL
BINET$ &amp; VANITIE~

Lets Us
Help Make
Your Kitchen
Beautiful.

$7,395
$3,450

1973 SHENANDOAK 12160 . ... . ..... .... .. . ... . .. .... $5,500
1970 BUDOY 12x52 ......... .. .. .. ..... ; .. ......... $3,495

SPECIAL PRICED

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

GAWA REFRIGERATION, INC.

1~2 3rd

Ave.

Ohio

446-4066/2716

1100 E. MAIN ST.

"Spring" Is
Here. Now's
The Time To
Spruce Up.

'--AI-

446-1995 ,

YOURE:YFS
treatment can cure many
Your eyes are much more diseases or keep them under conthan a "window t~ the world." trol.
They can tell your eye doctor a
The eye doctor will also want to
lot about your general health.
know what kind of work you do at
When the optometrist ex- home or on the job, any kind of
amines your eyes for the first activity that makes seeing partime, he'll ask for a medical . ticularly important; also what
history. He'll want to know what · kinds of sporta you enjoy.
All of these things are imkind of diseases you've had or
about any impaired physical . portant in determining exactly ·
condition. There are a lot of ill- what type of glasses or lenses, if
ness that affect yC)W" eye5. High needed, are best for you.
blood pressure is one. Diabe~ or
anY diseases of the blood are
In the Interest of bttrter vision
·
others.
from the office of
. Many diseases show telltaJe
signs· in an .~ye ~tlon.
George W. Dav.U, O.D.
They may change the C!llor of lhe
458
Second Ave., Njpolls
~tell of your eyes or ceuse them
Phone~2231
to
up or become Inflamed.
.

*******

..

~·

®

insurance call
.

CARROLL SNOWDEN

POMEROY-Six runs were made
by local emergency and fire units
Friday according the the Meig.'
County Emergency Medical Service.

At 8:37 p.m. Rutland was called to
Dyesville for Elma Harvey who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center; at
4:24p.m. Racine Fire and Emergency units were called to East Letart to
fight a brush fire ; at 12 noon the Middleport Fire Department was called
to Leading Creek Road to fight a

brush lire; At 12:07 p.m. Tuppers
Plains was called for Sally Pooler
who was taken to St. Joseph
Hospital ; at 2:45 p.m. Middleport
Fire Department helped put out a
car fire in front of the fire department; at 4:52 p.m. Rutland Fire
Department was called to Swick
Road where a truck was on fire; at
4:42p.m. the Syracuse Fire Department was called to Letart Township
to fight a brush fire .

It' s an easy way to earn ext ra money for yo ur
c lub . favorite c harity or yourself
Turn what could be trash into cash and c lean
up while you're Qleaning up I

Point Distributing
Company
Camp Conley Road
Point Pleasant, W. Virginia 304-675-4519
Monday &amp; Thursday
8:00 AM - 11:00 AM 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM

POWER A'PLENTY!
SAVE$500
NOW$152900

Gallia County hea~th a~ency
offers tornado action tips

REGULARLY
$2029°0

THE WAY IT SHOULD

~s._\t

Gallipolis, Ohio

749 Third Ave.

~\\'

REG. PRICE

1982 HERITAGE SPECIALS
1981 XS-650 SH

SPRING IS

Mag. Wheels

1981 XS-650 W/Luggage Rack
1982 XS-400 HERITAGE SPECIAL

HERE •••

SALE PRICE

$2449

$2095

$2499

$2189

$2249

$2139

$1795

$1693

HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER

NOW ON DISPLAY!

1981 HARLEY CLEA.RANCE

· STOP IN SOON AND
LOOK OVER OUR
FINE SELECTION OF

1981 FXE • R.E~ .• 5 ~ 3 ! 5 ~~L.E 4895
5
1981 FXEF R,E~-. 5 ~ 9 ! 5 ~":L,E 5395 .

5

MEN'S
SPORT COATS
.'

...,.

$65
• &lt;

Phone 446-4290 • • Home 446-4518

.
.~

•

.' ·

OPEN FRIDAY TILB P.M.
.

.
..

't•

• ·•

' ,l

.

HOME OFFICES: BLOOMINGTON, ILI,.INOIS

i-~--. .--~----~------~~~~--~~--~~~~·!:
. .•
I
...
I

l

.R~C:· •56~ 9~ ~A,L!=

•

5

6395

•
•

1979 FXS Reg:'S3995 ..... .'....... S369S 11976 FLH, Reg. S3995 ....... SALE s3m
· 1980 FLH-C Reg. $5695 •.... SALE; $5395
1979 XLH Reg. $3095 ...... ·. SALE $2895
1979 KZ 7_50 Reg. $1849 ...•.• SALE $1679
: 197.9 KX750 Reg. $1949 ••••.. SAlE $1783
·
With Fairing'"( Red)
With Fairing (Red)
'·
'
.
.
.
.. .
-~
. .
.
''
.
WE ALSO HAVE A"GWD SELECTION OF DUAL PURPOSE BIKES

Y

•
•
•
•
•

Hi ll-holder brake
Independent blade-engagement lever
Combination clutch and brake pedal
15.00 by 6.50 tubeless front tires. 23.00
by 9.50 turf-saver tubeless rear tires.
Variety of work -saving attachments
available

0

SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF LAWN &amp;
GARDEN POWER EQUIPMENT
NOW
-v

POMEROY LANDMARK

A FUL-L SERVICE;: SHOP OFFE~ING
HA " HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS &amp;. SERVICE,
ALONG WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES.

Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Dri"ve a little and save a lot
Free delivery within 75 miles
Yes, we service at your local Hotpoint Dealer
Store Hours : 8:36 to 5:30. Mill Closed at 5:00P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason c~nties

r

'

STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES

1981 FXB

1981 M~·LWAUKEE ••••••••••••••••••••• '4395 .

~Shepard ·

From

FXWGR~G,- ~6 ~9 ~ s~~E 56095

16 HP Briggs &amp; Stratton twin-cylinder
engine
4-speed cast-iron transaxle dri ve to
wheels.
44-inch mower deck
·5-p&lt;Jsition cutting height adjustment
lever
12-volt alternator/starter system

•

·•Sewell

Ave.,
. Gallipolis, Qh.

•

·' CHECK OUT OUR EXPERIENCED MOTORCYCLF.S

By .

417 Second

I

1981

ON SALE NOW!
Designed and bui lt for hard work with operator convenience and comfort
in mind. Powerful, yet smooth and quiet... this 16 HP brute with a cast-iron
transaxle will tackle any yard or garden job without a lot of noise and vibration .
Big 44-inch mowing deck with twin timing-belt driven, overlapping blades
provide smooth even cutting without streaking ... even on a high speed turn .
Four-speed drive with five position cutting height adjus tme nt means precise
matching of ground speed lo mowing conditions.

25th ANNIVERSARY

THE CORNER

Discovered early enough, prompt

' busy Friday
Emergency units kept

for every pound (about
24) of aluminum cans you recycle.

£ailure to use caution when backing.

The Gallipolis Fire Department
said it was called out at 7:55 p.m.
Friday to the Harold Whitt property ,
a quarter-mile south of Ohio 141 on
Neighborhood Road, when spa rks
from controlled brush burning
i0nited more brush.
One acre was estimated to be lost
in the blaze, which took two trucks
and 18 men an hour to put under control.

20~

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING

JUST AROUND

A MESSAGE FROM

In another Friday accident, the
patrol said Mark L. Killen, 18,
Gallipolis, was eastbound on Ohio
588 at 7:30 p.m. when he rounded a
curve, was unable to stop and struck
the rear of a stopped vehicle driven
by Larry D. Arthur, 16, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis.
Arthur had stopped for a deer
standing in the road, the patrol said.
There was moderate damage to both
vehicles and Killen was cited for
assured clear distance.

Earn

/

WITH EASTER

INSURANCE

GALUPOUS - A Wellston man
was cited lor DWI follo~&lt;Cing a onevehicle crash in Gallia County
Friday afternoon.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol said Ronald S.
WY.ckoff, 18, was travelling eastbound on Raccoon Twp. Rd. 21 at
2:25 p.m. when his pickup truck
went off the right side of the road
and drove into a ditch.
There was slight damage to the
truck and Wyckoff was not injured.

Yes, CRC, one of the wholly owned
subsidiaries of Anheuser-Busch, will
Pay You Cash On The Spot For Empty
Aluminum Cans of Any Kind.

u••• •··~

992-7034

DR. GEORGE W. DAVIS
OPTOMETRIST----

Patrol cites manforDWI

THE ALL NEW

POMEROY, OHIO

STATE FARM

Department of Mental Health, as
well as Community Mental Health
Boards and State Institutions under
its direction, have reduced staff,
initiated cost-effectiveness in all
operations, and trimmed to "sur·
vjvallevel."

NOT
TRASH!

•16 HP Twin Cylinder •44-inch Mower Deck Included

ASK ABOUT THESE HOMES AT OUR
BELPRE LOT

LL SIZES OF AIR CONDITIONE

aftercare, alcohol and drug, transportation, emergency, outpatient,
and consultation and education .
Layoffs of community mental health
workers in the above service areas
have been necessary .
The Central Office of the State

II, Patriot Star Route, suffered a cut
lip. The Fisher youth also wasn't
treated.
The accident caused severe
damage to Holley 's vehicle,
moderate to the Sommer and
Phillips autos and slight to Fisher's
car. Holley was cited for ass ured
clear distance.
Police cited drivers in two other
accidents on Friday.
Officers said Betty "J. Carter, 30,
Rt. 4, Gallipolis, backed from a
driveway on Burkhart Lane at 8:41
a.m. and struck a vehicle driven by
Garnet M. Elliott, 55, Gallipolis, who
had turned into Burkhart from
Chillicothe Road.
There was only slight damage to
Carter's vehicle and she was
ticketed "for failure to use caution
when backing.
The report said Edsel F'. Durham,
16, Rt. I, Gallipolis, was attempting
to back into a parking space on the
300 block of Second Avenue at 4:09
p.m. when his auto struck a parked
vehicle registered to John I. Jones,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis.
Both autos were slightly damaged
and Durham was also cited for

For your LAWN and GARDEN WORK

•SCHMIDT
•HOMECREST
•SCHIERICH
•KITCHEN KOMPACT

$7,395
$7,39~

Gallipolis City Police said Holley
him, driven by Joyce I. Phillips, 5(),
was northbound on Eastern at 3:34 Bidwell, and knocked Phillips'
p.m. near the intersection with Lin- vehicle into a stopped car ahead of
coln Avenue when he was unable to
her driven by Carolyn E. Fisher, 35,
stop in time and struck the rear of a
Patriot Star Route.
vehicle driven by John M. Sommer,
According to officers, Phillips
17, Rl. 4, Gallipolis.
· complained of neck injury , but
The crash forced Sommer's wasn't treated, and a passenger in
vehicle into another car ahead of Fisher's vehicle, Chuck D. Fisher,

Mental health budget cut again

$309.95

The move to form the con.sortiwn

grew out of legislation which took ef·
feet in September 1979 permitting
the fonnation of groups to negotiate

L __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ton."

1Continued

Maumee, Sylvania, Woodville,
Huron, Wayne, Elmore, Bloomdale,
Bairdstown, Sandusky and Bowling
Green - objected to the strategy.
The communities endorsed having
the conswners' counsel representing
them before the PUCO.
·· vou (the villages) simply cannot
afford the attorneys fees, the expert
witness fees," said Ben Marsh,
solicitor for Maumee.

Jochim sa id that by starting !rom

GALUPOiJS - Three people
were injured in a four-vehicle ac. cident on Eastern Avenue Friday afternoon.
Rickey E. Holley, 23, Gallipolis,
• one of the injured, drove himself to
Holzer Medical Center afterward,
but the emergency room had no
record of having treated him.

Dealer Price

Factory Rebate

rt-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va .

Three hurt in four vehicle accident THINK OF 'EMAS ...

·.·

Now that things are turning green,
save on something red. A bright red
Toro® mower. Like our self-propelled
side bagger, now $50 .off.
You get front-wheel gear drive. An
aluminum housing that never rusts.
A Briggs &amp; _Stratto_n engine. And
easy fingertip startmg.
Plus something else no one else
can give you.
The quality of a Toro. $359.95

Officials plan battle against rates
TOLEDO. Ohio I API - Vowin ~ to
fig ht uneven gas rates, II northwest

4, 1982

LMDMARil ..
8112·7

�...

Prices
Effective
Monday
April 5th
thru
Saturday
'I lOth

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gallipol~ Oh~
Phone 446-9593

.'We Reserve the Rigftl to Urn~ Quantity''

TAVERN
HAM

WHOL~ 1 ~

SMOKED
HAM

HAM

WHOlE
OR
SHANK
HAlF

.USDA CHOICE

GOLD KIST

MIXED FRYER PARTS
USDA CHOICE

LB49C:

T-BONE STEAK

POLISH SAUSAGE

TENDER

CELLO KALE
PACK

ll oz.

FRANKIES

PKG.

USDA CHOICE

$129

YOUNG TURKEY
SElF BASTING .
12lB.

99C

CHUNK BOLOGNA

lB.

CRISP
~LORIDA

2

.CELERY STAlK

. ¢
89

GOLDEN DELICIOUS

SMOKED PORK CHOPS

lB.

lAr1Pt

LB.

register. A child must be five years

~

. v ,

8/ J .. .._,,_, l
-"rt

I

24x52

1296 Sq. Ft.
3 Bedrooms

' Jt
:

c·.- ~.r ·

r

:J

&gt;A

2 Baths
Deluxe Carpet

I

I

-LJ.....r.

•3/4" Plywood Floor •4/ 12 Roof Pitch •Anderson Windows
•R-38 Ceiling Insulation •%" Styrofoam Sheathing
•Electric Baseboard heat

QUALIFIES FORW. VA. HOUSING MONEY

Price reduced on
lot model only

WHOLESALE • RETAIL

SWIMMING
POOLS

Delivered and
set on your
foundation

$35,900

Reg. •37,900

PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM
For Your Winter Need
CaiiJ04-429-4788

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

~~~.
W~ffi~m~in~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~
dergarten and
six by Sept. 30. for
enrollmenl in the first grade .

Veterans Memorial

Open Daily 10·9
Sund ay l 6

ADMISSIONS--Robert DiVietro,
Pome roy;
Elizabeth Stover,
Racine ; James Meadows, Portland ; I
George Sturgill, Middleport.
DISCHARGES---E ll en Couch,
Estil Collins, Betty Pugh, Barbara
Smith, Peggy Crane.

CALIFORNIA

NO OTHER RADAR DETECTOR
LOOKS LIKE THIS
OR PERFORMS
AS WELL

ORAN~-~~ $149
BAG

FRESH GREEN

89(

$129

SLICED SLAB BACON

WINESAP APPLES

APPLES

GALUPOUS - Parents in the
Ga'llipolis City School District are
reminded of the following dates and
times for enrollment of their
children in kindergarten and first
grade in the district's schools.
Registration will be held April 19
and 20 at Rio Grande and Green
elementary schools; April21 at Clay
Elementary and April 21 a nd 22 at
Was hington Elementary . Children
can be enrolled between 9 a.m. and 3
p.m. on those days.
Those children now enrolled in
kindergarten don't have to re-

$199

FISHER'S
WILSON'S'

$149

Registration dates given

lB_99C:

unibilt

ll· :,;:;, ·J\• ,

Admitted--Delores
Hoffman ,
Pomeroy ; Gary Hyse ll , Pomeroy ;
Cynthia Hoffman, Middleprt ; Eva
Shaffer , Raci ne; Teresa Canterbury, Lansviile; Mary Fetty,
Middleport.
~
Discharged-Nev White, Bonnie
Ransom , Woodrow
Hendrix ,
Kathryn Lambert.

DISPLAYS CARPET- Diana Ingels is shown with a few of the many
rolls of carpet ihat are being offered for sale at Ingels Kut Rile Oarpet
House located in lhe i(ui!ding !lull fonnerly housed The Kiddie Shop. The
store will open Monday with a grand opening on Tuesday. Store hours are
Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

tensively remodeled. Persons are invited to stop in at Ingels Furniture
and J ewelry and view the attractive
rernodelmg . The new store, Ingels
Kut Rite Carpet House, will be open
Monday through S.turda y from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m .
_,_

CLOSE OUT ON .LOT MODEL

t .: •••

C:OUNTRY PRIDE

prices below wholeSII!e.
Ingels stated that all installation is
guaranteed and he works off rolls of
carpet not Sllmples.
In addition to the new location, the
second and third floors of Ingels
Furniture and J ewelry has been ex-

l-=]p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~::::::::::::;;;:;;;::::::::::;;:;;:;;:;--

withlngelsFurniture andJewelry .
Monday, Ingels will open Ingels
Kut Rite Carpet House which is
located in the building tha t fonnerly
housed The Kiddie Shop. It is also
located on North Second, just a few
doors up the street from his present
location on the opposite side of the

SUPERIOR

lB$2 29

CUBE STEAK

N0.1

PER

oz.

SUPERIOR

3-lB.

BAG

PER

CABBAGE

PIJUND

()uo ~~"' II'Uin!oon IS 10 I\J0\'11 ......... - ..
t&lt;Md ~ .... on siOCio 0t1 " '" sr.•••• ~ an
~teO ~- ,, nol ......r.. lot '""
cl'lue ~ua to '""' u~toruee n ' """'

K...., ...a o s-aRa"'C'-~ Of'&lt;~ll
loo ft-. .....-cfl¥&gt;01se (one ~- ,. ru1011

99(
23(

-lai'WiyQU-ty )IO O.purcniS«&lt;II-

W.. pno:a -

THE FOX XK
RADAR DETECTOR.

a•a114101e "' -

1411

you I C()r&lt;'(larlble QUI~y otem I I I comc&gt;a
• • ~ • e&lt;~u&lt;:toononl)f oc e

Receive

operates on all
bands. Extra long
. range and high sen·

•1 Refund

sitlvity. Out performs all

Dlrecl from GE•

Additio nal

black box types and otner
brands because it'S engineered and designed
bY mllltarv radar specialists Mounts on sun visor
or anv place co nvenient.

PILLSBURY
FLOUR
~;~··99¢
PlAIN OR
SELF-RISING
SUNNY

15.5 oz.

CUT GREEN BEANS

CAN

·39¢
oz.
39¢

WHOLE KERNEL CORN ~~~z

SUNNY VALLEY

16

CAN

BROUGHTON'S

COTTAGE
CHEESE

LIBBY LITE

~~z.

PINEAPPLE
CRUSHED or SliCED

BOB'S ELECTRONICSGalli polio

69¢

up,.., Rt. 7

"AcrOM Prom The Plaza"

KIDNEY BEANS

ICE CREAM

1,., SJ79

GE 50/ 100/ 150
3-way bulb

(lOO) .

G.E. Light Bulbs

2 Pair L'eggs• Knee·hl's

Hb. - Jelly Bird Eggs

Rei nfo rced or sheer toe Nylon

Favorite candy for Easter baskets
6 Peanut Buller Eggs, 7.4· oz. · ,. 99C

'

Pack of 4 GE bulbs, 70, 75 or
lOOwatT, (105) .. . .. . ... .. 1.58

CHOCOLATE SYRUP

TIDE
70C O,F LABEL
FAMILY SIZE

14 OZ.
CTN.

$}79 ~

( l 04)

RED

$
·
·
$}19 SHORtEN!~~~: 199

2% MILK

1.27

Sale Price

Sale Price

Our Reg . !.54

whats cookin'at

HANOVER

CRISCO

ROYAL CREST

when you buy both.

(103)

STOVE TOP STUFFING ~~f'

'

171 OZ. BOX

'
'•'

VALLIY BELL
QUALITY

Page- A-7

I

street.
The new business will be operated
by Diana Ingels, wife of Jason .
Ingels just rece ntly returned from
Dalton, Ga., I considered the carpet
center of the world ) with a trailer
load of carpet that is being offered at

Veterans Memorial

$22?

SIRLOIN
STEAK

lB.

ioitio
$
69
cA"RROTs3 ~ 99¢ BAKERS i~~a. 1
10

USDA CHOICE

$129

lB.

1-lB.
BAG

MIDDLEPORT .:_ George Ingels,
who has operated Ingels Furniture,
on North Seco nd St., in Middleport,
for the past 22 years is expanding his
business.
Six yea rs ago Ingels added
jewelry to his present business ·

DOZEN
CARTON

EXTRA LEAN

$199 GROUND BEEF

STEW BEEF

29

99C:

SUPERIOR

FRESH LEAN

USDA CHOICE

· LB.

ts$3

PORTERHOUSE STEAK

19
LB $3

$ 09
1

The Sunday Times -SenTinel

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

Ingels will open new carpet business

LARGE EGGS

OLD FASHIONED .

MiddleporT

which is operated by his daughter,
Candy.
His son, Jason, is also associated

GRADE A

FALTER'S

5

Q~~~

Pomeroy

Happy Easter!

Find Out Why More Satisfied
Customers Shop Johnson'

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

April4, 1982

Pomeroy- MiddleporT- Gallipolis, Ohio-PoinT PleasanT, W. Va .

Page-A -6- The Sunday Times-SenTinel

VALLEY BELL

BUTTERMILK

BROUGHTON

FRUIT DRINK
·4Aavors

99¢

· PURITAN

DUNCAN ftiNES

"

COOKING Oil .
TRIAL SI:U

MIX

,··· ·-

230Z.
BOX

$129 _

PAR KAY
'MARGARINE

DUNCAN HINES

ANGE['FOOD
CAKE MIX

4STICK

POUND

99¢·

19

New!
·Our Half 0' Pound
DinnerAnd Rlur
TaslyToppings!
Slop in today and try our new~ 'n laity Half 0' Pound
Dinner! It's prepared just like you would al home, so ~·s e-tlra juicy and
flavorful. We start wilh a tender .ground beef pall)\ charbroiled lo
your orde~ and serve ~ wilh ~ur choice 'of four delicious toppings.
Choose melted cheddar cheese, 'fresh sauteed mushrooms, onions, or
green pepP.,rs. Plus french fries (or baked polalo afler SPM), warm
toasted grecian bread, and aD lhe hot home!Jl8(1e soup and garden
flesh salad you care to eal. Try pur Half 0' Pound Dinner now and gel
your choil:e of lhe four toppings at no extra C05L k's our newest way
of
·
.
. saying, "Than!~.you for coming lo Slioney's?

. . 328 'fl8nd Street
·Pt.

-'
•

."

pleasant,_. w.v•.

,
'-!

Our Reg. 4.96

,,

Kmort*

1.26
Less Mfr. Rebate
1• 25
Plus This Ad
•

: 'II

Sale Price

l J .I .

Reg.4.67

Our Reg. 1.4 7

3.37
.non
'.

YourNef

3.44

.9741:

Mille•• Casual Taps

3 WaHia-weave Dishcloths

Roll af 50 Trash Can Liners

Breezy spring looks of
polyester I cotton .

Striped cotton. 3. 15xl3'12-in

15-mi l plastic . 20-30 gal

(106)

•

Cos! Afler
Fac tory Reba te

141:

Alkaline Balleries
Pkg. of 2. "C" o r "D" .
One Rebate Per Cuslomer

AUTOMOTIVE
SPECIAL

·-···-

ii ...-- -• •

EXTRA
COLOR
PRINTS

·••••
..........

lnqui&lt;e About OUr

On-time-

•••••
•••••
•••••
•••••
Our Reg. 6.66

'"

Our Reg. 10.97

_8.88 .

(108)

· . l;.dlgH L.C.D."Calculator .
Auiomatlc P&lt;lwer-off; memory.
lottorfoltncOJdod

•·

Copyftgllt 1912 by K

Grilled hamburger served pip·
i hot on a soft bun, garnished

.lh lettuce, tomato, crispy·
French frtes. a z"ty coleslaw .•'

1 74
·

1

4.97

Chromed Lug Wrench
3-head lug wrench
with hub ca p
remover. 20" S.A.E.

�Page-A-8

I

POMEROY-Helen R. Atkins, 76,
La,ll""l Street, Pomeroy, died Friday
evening at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Atkins was born Jan. 11, 1906
in Meigs County lhe daughter of lhe
late Anthony and Almeda Whipple.
She was also preceded in death by
one son, Edgar Atkins.
She attended Trinity Uniled
Methodist Church.
She is survived by four grand' cbildren, Donna Fisher, William
Atkins, Edgar Atkins, Jr., all of
Gallipolis, and Michael Todd Atkins
of North Carolina, and two great
grandchildren
Funeral services will be announced by fulwlings-Coats-Biowcr
Funeral Home.

Earl Broadwater
MASON - Earl F. Broadwater,
80, Rt, 2, Letart, and fonnerly of
Barton, Md., died Thursday in the
Mercer Nursing Home, Clifton,
W.Va.
Born Nov . 22. 1901, son of the late
Lawrence and Elza ida Warick
Broadwater,

he

was

a

retired

Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. employee and was a World War I
veteran.
Surviving is his wife, Pearl Broadwater; two sons, Richard of Rt. 2,
Letart, and Dennis of, Tallmadge,
Ohio; a daughter, Aloha South of
Vienna,

Hojat heads hospital radiology

Area deaths

"' .Helen R. Atkins

Va . :

a

siste r,

Mae

Whiteman of Lonaconing, Md.; and
seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. today in the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. Joe Hammack &lt;ificiating.
B~rial will be in Hoffman Cemetery.

Georgia W. Calvin
WILKESVILLE - Georgia Wh1te
Calvin, 76, of Wilkesville, died Sa turday morning al Holzer Medical Ce nter, Gallipolis.
She was born May 28, 1905, m
Meigs County lo the late Oliver and
Louisa White and was preceded in
death by her husband. Leonard C.
Calvin, Oct. 17, 1981.
Surviving are two sons and two
daughters : Daren E. Calvin, Ottawa; John W. Calvin, Newcomer-

April4, 1982

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

The Sunday Time s-Sentine l

stown; Mrs. Barbara McKinniff,
Athens; and Mrs. Loree Blackson,
Coshocton . Also surviving are 16
grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren.
One daughter, Lorna Nisley,
preceded her in death.
Mrs. Calvin was a member of
Wilkesville United Methodist Church, a 50-year member of Wilkesville
Order of the Eastern Star, Number
'lfJl and the Home Demonstration
Clu,b. She was active with Vinton
County senior c1tizens and was a
past member of the Governor's
Council on Aging .
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Monday at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will
be at Salen Center Cemetery.
Visitation wi ll be Sunday at the
funeral horne from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to9 p.m.

Stella D. Forgey

GALUPOUS - Saied M. K.
Hojat, M.D., has been appointed as
the director of radiology at the
Holzer Medical Center, according to
an announcement by Hugh P.
Kirkel , hospital president.
Dr. Hojat has served on the

I,

Voter awareness
month designated

'

. RIO GRANDE - April has been
designated " Voter Awareness Month" at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
Throughout the month, the Senior

hospital medical staff in the department of radiology since Augus~
1982.
Dr. Hojat carne to the Holzer
Medical Center from lhe Chambersburg ( Pa . ) Hospital. His
medical degree is from the Tabriz
Medical School in Iran, where he
graduated in September of 1962.
He did his internship at the Barberton Citizens Hospital and a threeyear residency that included
diagnostic

radiolog y,

nuclear

medicine and radiation therapy in

the Hahnemann Medical College in
Philadelphia, Pa .
After completing a one year
fe,jlowship in angiography and
n~uro-radiology at New York
Medical College Hospital in New
York City, he was certified by the
American Board of Radiology in
December of 1974 .
He is a member of the American
College of Pathology, the American
Medical Association, the Pen·
nsylvania Medical Society and the
Pennsylvania Radiological Society.

familiar with Ohio votin g
procedures, local voting equipment,
Ohio registration laws and the
legislative process.
Following this instruction, the
students will be offered the opportunity to register to vote .
The Seniors of the Gallia- Jackson
POMEROY--The
Women's - Vinton Joint Vocational School
Association of Jaymar will hold an District at Buckeye Hills Career
organizational meeting Tuesday, Center encourage everyone who is
eligible to take part in America.
April6, at 10 a.m.
HEADS RADIOUJGY - Sated
M. K. Hojat, M.D., newly aJ&gt;poioted Director of the Holzer
Medical Center Radiology Department.

137 N. second St ., Middleport, Oh.
Phone 992-9917
Hours 10 a.m. -2:30a .m.

ientin.el

Section[ID
Su nd a

Will organize soon

Daily Luncheon Specials Serviced in the Lobby 11 -2 , Selected Menu Items Available till
Closing.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
APRIL SPECIALS
WHILE THEY LAST

PRICES ARE THE
LOWEST THAT SEEING
IS BELIEVING

2 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITES ............... STARTING AT M9t.OO
3 PIECHIVI!Ili ROOM SUITES ...............STARTING AT $799.00
8 PIECE FAMII:YROOM SUITES............... S-..RTING AT S699.9S

DON'T IUY UNTIL
YOU CHECK FIRST
AT RUTLAND PURNITURI
IINCHCRAn ·, ·
IUSHLINE

WIT11 THI PUKHAII Of ANY I or I PIIQ LIVING
IIOOM SUin YOU WILL IICIIYI A DISCO.UNT UP '10

•sor 01 MCMII 011 • •

D'ICIAL •ONUS (Optlonol)
WITH THE PURCHASE Of A LIVING ROOM SUITE YOO
CAN RECEIVE ASET Of END I ABLES

1Continued on page B-91

AT

Y2PRICE

What's in for ·spring?

Gunne Sax, li·nen and ice cream colors
By DEB FOX
Times-sentinel Staff

SOli[

or

fH[

GALLIPOLIS - Although fashion trends from New York and Paris
seem to dictate what is worn by both sexes, it seems to take a while for
such styles to trickle to and through the midwest.
Recent styles originated in those capitals of trendsetting, as depicted in
sooT)e magazines, may be described by some as outrageous and lheir affordability and practicality may be questioned.
But spring fashions displayed at a style show held April 1 at the senior
citizens center are both practical and affordable.
All outfits were personally made by the models, with one exception .
The event was planned by Mildred Jenkins and Ethel Robinson with the
help of Evelyn Gooch, manager of JoAnn Fabrics, Gallipolis.
All of the clothing modeled was made from material purchased at
JoAnn Fabrics. Shoes were provided by Madison Shoes, hairstyles by
Hair Happening and makeup from Maxine Kinnard, of Merle Nornnan
Cosmetics, Point Pleasant.
At the show, 18 models - 17 females and one male - of a variety of
ages showed an audience of about 60 persons what is "in" for spring with
a wide array of styles.
"Just about anything in the pattern line is m," Gooch said. "What looks
good on a person is the main thing.
·
"Designers are finally realizing that not everyone can wear the same
design," she continued. She said a woman's height should determine the
length of her dress.
Making one's own clothes is economical. "Multiply fabric price for a
garment by three and that's the stnre-bought price of the clothing,"
Gooch noted. " I'd much prefer to make my own clothing and have more."
Prices (or the completed outfits modeled at the style show ranged from
$9.22to $40. she said.
"Red, white and blue seem to be prominent this year as is the nautical
look. ~ l e nd ing of camel and white is also popular," Gooch said. "The ice
cream colors - pastels, pinks, blues, greens - are popular, too."
Gooch sa id sheer fabrics and linens are in style as are full skirts with
short, waist-length jackets and Gunne Sax dresses- outfits for which two
or three different fabrics are combined to make one garment.
Of that style Gooc h said, "They look terrible when a person walks out of
the store with the fabric, but when completed, they're beautiful.
"A seamstress is like a n artist with a blank canvas. There's a sense of
accomplishment once a piece of clothing ts completed, " she added . "One
caQ create something today , wear it tomorrow and it has his or her own
personal touch to it. "
Participating as models in the event were Mary Walker, Nellie White,
Gladys Watts, Helen Bloomer, Ella Dunsmore, Ruth Miller, Ethel Robinson, ,Sharon Rudolph, manager of Hair Happening: Gooch and Bob
Kaschak, manager of Madison Shoes, all of Gallipolis; Letha Long and
Ruth Holland, both of Gallipolis Ferry; and Nadine Phillips, Kinnard and
Jerry Duncan, all of Point Pleasant.

.'

Broyhill

"
Broyhill

BEDROOM SUITES

elf.:)
-..:...·

--. '

~.:-" : __

~.

~~1'-"-

·. !

~~
T6401R .

JO -In. whole house
ventll•tlng f•n

52-ln. ceiling f•n
with wood bl•des

CUT
$30

EARLY AMERICAN
CHARMFEATuRED IN
OUR BEST SELLING WOOD
DINEnES IN YOUR

.Broyhill
~·rt•

BUY ANY BEDROOM SUITE
STARTING AT '699.95 AND GET THE
NIGHTSTAND FREEl ALSO AS A SPECIAL BONUS RICIIVI A
SEALY FULL SIU ICX SPRING AND

CHOICE OF WARM SALEM MAPLE FINISH OR RICH

COLONIAL PINE FINISH. UST A FI;W OF THE VALUES ARE LISTED BELOW:

Autumn Glow
c•rpetlng
CUT
$5

.'1379

T34174

7-PC. SETS

$279

Hlgh-cilp•dty
w•ter softener
CUT
$110

SUG. RETAIL
'476

lARGER FAMILY SIZE 42" ROUIID TABLE
EXTENDS TO &amp;6" WI1H 1WO 12" ~VES
SET IIICI.UDES SIX HEAVILY BRACED HAR·

$31999

DWOOD MA'rE'$ CHAIRS.

7-PC. SETS

SUG. RETAIL

SJ99

'684

AUTHEimC COlQIIIAl STYUNG WITlt

MORE QUaLITY THAll YOU lliOUUI EXPECT

~IS LOW PRIC£. IAIIGf 42" ROUIID '

t/1-HIIg•r•g•
dooropever

'16411

t

EXTEIIDS TO 56"

Wmi TM1 12"

lEAVES. RIRMICA TAll£ TOP

11£51~

SPIW AIID SculCitEs. M.l·SIZE a!AIRS
. aJII$11IICIED rf .SIIUDIIMrlliOOD Willi
STURDY HIGH UW AIID1AIIIII.£ SEATS
fOR EXTRA smt AIID aJM!m: ·
.

April4, 1982

'l

HOTEl-ROOMS BY DAY, WEEK AND MONTH

'Bar given suspension, lodge cited

Counci l.
Funeral services wi ll be held at 1
p m Monday from the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home with
Rev. Mike Berne officiating. Burial
will foll ow in Calvary Cemetery at
Rio Grande. Visitation will be held
at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. today.
Memorials may be made to the
building fund of Simpson United
Methodist Churc h.

~im.es-

Social Studies classes are becoming

liALIJPO!JS - Stella Delores
Also Featuring Peel &amp; Eat Shrimp, Soup of the Day,
Forgey. 74 . Rio Grande, died at 5:10
Sandwiches, Side Orders, Pizza and Desserts .
a.m. Saturday in Holzer Medical
COMING SOON-EVENING DINING HOURS
Center. She harl been in failing
health for one month.
GAL!JPOUS - The Ohio Depart- April25 and end at noon April29.
A retired employe of Rio Grande
ment of Liquor Control has ordered
In another decision made by the
Now accepting reservations for meeting rooms and
Coll ege, Mrs. Forgey was born a penni! suspension be placed on a department, lhe Gallipolis Elks
private parties.
November 29, 1907 at Soldier, Ky.
Middleport bar.
Lodge was cited for reportedly
She married Morris C. Forgey MarThe commission found the City having a gambling device - a tip
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IN THE LOUNGE
ch18, 1939 in Ironton who preceded
Limits, 748 N. Second St., owned by punchboard - on its premises at 406
her in death, March 6, 1974.
~'
Steven R. Van Meter, to have Second Ave. on March 28, 1981. No
Mon ., Tues . &amp; Wed
Thur ., Fri. &amp; Sat.
Also preceding her were her allegedly furnished and sold malt penalty was imposed.
8:30-12:30
LONE WOLF BAD
Recording
parents, William Eldridge and Ida
liquor to a person under age 21 last
The department said permit
Artist
Patton Eldridge and six brothers.
Oct. 31.
holders have 15 days from lhe
Featuring
DAVE
DUNKLE
Surviving are one daughter and a
The suspension of Van Meter's 1).2 ma iling date of the decision in which
:VAN JOHNSON
son, Pa tty of Rio Grande and Hank
permit is to go into effect at noon to appeal.
of Thunnan; four grandchildren and ~----_:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __j_l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
a brother, Fay Eldridge, Olive Hill, ,...
Ky .
She was a member of Simpson
Chapel Umted Methodist Chbrch,
Rio Gra nde Garden Club, United
. Methodist Women, Gallia County
Senior Citizens and the Tri Advisors

AIon the river

'

Nadine Phillips (above)
models a full
sty led linen
skirt and
gauze top at
fhe recent
style show
while Maxine
Kinnard (near
left)
d-isplays a
three-piece
suit she sewed
fDf' the event.
Kinnard's suit
features a
variety of
colors, in cluding a blue
skirt, red top
and camel-colored jacket,
all made or
linen fabric.
Jerry Duncan
(far left) also
models
a
three-piece linen smt which
is comprised
of a short,
waist-length
jacket and
striped blous-

e.

�April4, 1982

Page-B -2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Community Corner
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Stall
POMEROY - Moving right along
are plans for construction of First
Southern Baptist
Church, just off
County Road 25
between Salisbury Elementary
School and Meigs
High School.
While the church won't be "built

th ~

nasium) a nd

pected to go up in less than a week and all with volunteer labor.
Ski lled workers ·f'lllm several of
the larger Southern Baptist Churches in the south will do the job for
this mission church.

trying to get enough chairs to handle

Mei gs Co untian.s will have the op-

nothing

more

fashioni:tble

UlC::IIl

wea ring a gannent made especially
for you. And it seems that many arc

sewing . The clothing modeled in the
Fabric Shop and Extension Service

April22 at Chester Fi rehouse .
Residents arc invited to take quilt.&lt;;
of any ki nd, except those made fr om
kits, for display. They can be family
heirlooms, those recently made, or
those made by others. For each two
quilts displayed , a person should
take a card table.
The day will also Include a
program on quilt conservation by
Pat Glass of the area extension office. She will talk about how to deter-

spring style show Tuesday ni ght was
just beautiful.
And to a~swer a ques ti on
repeatedly aske\UI4Y, we don't know
whatever happened about the surplus cheese or whether any will be
coming to Meigs County. We understand the Community Action
Agency applied for it and we know
that Rev. Robert Robinson arranged
for a distribution network through
churches. That's all.

Teacher is awarded scholarship
POMEROY - Rebecca Tate, a
Pomeroy Elementary School fifth
ded an Annie Webb Blanton Scholarshipfor$1 ,000.
The award was made by Alpha
Delta State Scholarships Committee.
Tate, who has a bachelor's degree
from Hope College, in Holland,
Mich., will enroll at Ohio Universilty
this summer where she plans to
cqmplete a master's degree in
education with a major in reading
supervision.

Tate

SAVE SlQOOO

NOW ONLY
$18900
Un;versal Pressure
system • "Spinning
reel" thread delivery
• Free-arm

ER

As

HIGHWAY SAFETY DRIVER OF THE YEAR AWARD- Sandy
Mulford was presented a Highway Safety Driver of the Year Award in
ceremonies at the Licking County Joint Vocational School Auditorium
recently. Twenty-four awards were given in Ohio and Sandy was the only
handicapped recipient. She traveled to Newark over a period of several
weeks to receive her drive r's education from the AAA School having an

Receives driving award
POMEROY - Sandy Mulford,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Mulford, Cheshire, was one of 24
student drivers selected to receive
the Highway Safety Driver of the
Year

Award

at

a

presentation

ceremony held at the Licking County
J oint Vocational School a uditorium.
A dmner preceded the trophy and
certificate presentations. Studenls
from va ri ous schools which held the

Hush

car equipped with hand controls for
students with varying disabilities.
Sandy was the only handicapped
student to be presented the award
this year. She received her license
last June after traveling to Newark
over a period of six weeks for a two
hour lesson each morning.

PUPD.i iJ ®

fashionable

Her

mother accompanied her on the
trips.

"·

Hand, One Heart," " With These

Hands" and "'The Lord's Prayer,"
while the bride and groom HI a unity
candle and knelt for the unity
prayer. The ceremony included the
lighting of the candles by the
mothers of the bride and groom,
followed by Saunders singing
':Sunrise, Sunset.''

Given in marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by' her
father, the bride wore a gown of
sheer polyester organza, lined in
acetate taffeta with a Queen Anne
neckline. Lace applique with pearl
accents and sheer- lace bishop
sleeves with snap cuffs having an
empire waistline where a skirt forms a
bridal

............ "La(ii!S" .......... :

Sandy was one of two students
chosen to represent the Licking
Valley AAA Driving School of
Newark . Ken Henson of the Newark
AAA office is an instructor for handicapped individuals and works in a

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Phone 446·4396

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Noreen Saunders was soloist and
Anne Fischer was pianist and
organist. &gt;Selections included, " The
Wedding Song," " Longer," "One

were selected to represent their dif-

:Church's evening
:schedule resume
: Beginning this Sunday, Portland
United Methodist Church will return
·to an evening schedule.
: The administrative council of the
:·church surveyed members . a nd
· other community residents as to the
: most convenient time for Sunday
: school and worship. Tbe group then
· decided to end its experiment with
· morning Sunday school and worship,
' and return to an evening schedule.
: Until the e~ of the school year,
: sunday school will be held at 6:30
: p.m. and worship will be beld at 7:30
• p.m.. During the summer Sunday
, school and worship will each begm
: one-half hour later.
·
Tbe pastor af the church is the
' Rev. Mark Flynn. Lay~ leader is
" Bruce McKelvey. ·Chalnnan of the
i acimln.i,trattve council is Kel'r)' Dob) 'blna.

GALUPOLIS - Terri L. Jividen
·and Richard A. Long were united in
marriage on September 4 at
Elizabeth Chapel Church, Gallipolis.
Tbe doub\e-ring ceremony was per·ronned by Rev . James Rainey at
·7:30p.m.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne 0. Jividen of
Gallipolis and the bridegroom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Long
of Bidwell.
Adorning the altar were three
white candles decorated with ivy,
and two baskets of peach mums with
peach bows. The family pews were
marked with brown and white ribbon. All flowers were arranged by
Cindy Graham. Peach and brown
~andles were used in 'the windows ,
on the piano and organ, and on the
banisters of the church, decorated
with
and lit the ushers.

hi ghest safety and driving records . - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - ;

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Across From The Civic Center
PHONE 525-7090

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Mr. and Mrs. Long

THE FABRIC SHOP
11SW. 2nd

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2nd Anniversary

Auxil·iary plans
.Easter egg hunt
: POMEROY -An Easter potl uck
: dinner and egg hunt will be held on
· Easter Sunday at the post home of
the American Legion, Drew Webster
Post 39, and its Auxil18ry, Pomeroy .
The egg hunt will be at 2 p.m . with
: the !fOtluck dinner at 3 p.m. There
· will be prizes in all of the eggs. Mrs.
: Gerald Rought is general chairman
: for the dinner with Mrs. Dorothy
· Jenkins as telephone chairman.
Menu for the planned potluck is
ham, scalloped polatoes, green
beans, and desserts. Members are
: asked to contact Mrs. Jenkins and
; advise her what dish they plan to
: prepare.
All post members, and senior and
·junior auxiliary members are encouraged to attend.

\

25 pre-programmed slit·
ches • One-step buttonfitting buttonholer • TouchTrontc" stitch control

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grade teacher, was recentl y awar-

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the ma ny activities to take place

Meigs County Exte nsion Service for

mine the age of a quilt, how to store

/

/--

workers are now

there.
~ The cha irs are $10 each and the
' conunittee is accepting memorial
donations as well as other contributions. So if you would like to buy
The National PTA is making con- a chair for the place, send a check
tributions to cleaning up television, made out to Rutland Civil Center to
especially in the hours when young Janet Bolin or another committee
children are watching. But their em- member.
phasis is not only on getting some of
A plaque li sting memori a l
sex and violence orr the scr een, but
donations will be placed in Its foyer.
also encouraging producers to
Meanwhile. weekly activities conproduce quality progranuning .
tinue. The re are teen dances , aucThe PTA has a program for tions, skating and meetings on a
reconunending shows which it feels regular basis.
are good for fami ly viewing. If )' OU
A name band IS expected some
paid PTA dues, then a portion of time this spring for a dance and
your money went to this program.
Rutland Alumni Association, which,
incidentally, made a large donation
In your Easter bonnet ..
a couple of years ago for the
Out at the Senior Citizens Center renovation, will be having its ann ual
an Easter Bonnet Parade and Party banquet and dance there.
is being planned for Thursday.
The fa cility is sure to be a rea l
Impartial judges will be on hand to asset to the corrunanity and comjudge hals - prettiest, largest, most mittee members, volunteer workers
colorful and the one showing the and financial contributors should be
greatest originality.
proud .
Now. as is pointed out by the center's personnel, this is an "eq ual O(&gt;How times change 1
portunity" contest ,.. so. men, show
Many will remem ber when
" homemade" somehow had the con'em what you ca n do !
notation of "poor." Now there's
portunity to display thei r treasured
quilts of traditional design at a show
being planned by Dale Stahl of

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

/
/

Work continues on a new Ru tland
Civic Center. (the old Rutland gym-

in a day," it is ex-

Sanders, Dailey to marry

Bop In For SING&amp;R
Easter Savings

qui lts, and methods of clean ing and
repair.
From all of the quills displayed, at
least three, but no more than six,
will be selected and entered in the
Dairy Barn Cultural Arts Center
Quilt Show to be held in June. The
show at the Athens center will include quilts only from Southeastern
Ohio.

Pomeroy Middleport Gafllpolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. w. V;o
The Sunday Times-Sentine l Page-B -3
lie8dpiece had lace trinJ to matCh street-lengtb beige dress and the
the bridal gown with the veil of groom's mother wore a street-length
blusher with nylon netting and lace off-white dress while both wore silk
trim designed by Patsy Campbell, corsages of peach, brown and white
Gallipolis, friend af the bride and roses.
L-'ROWN CITY - Rick Dailey and Judy Sanders, Route 2, Crpwn City
..
groom.
Registering guests and presenting Jackie Sanders announce thei r and he is the son of ~rry and
Tbe bride carried lljilk bouquet af rice bags were Teresa · Long, engagement and approaching Shirley Dailey, Route 4, Gallipolis.
peach roses, peach and white sweet· Gallipolis, daughter af the groom, ·marriage.
A late sununer wedding i~ being
heart roses, peach pompoms, peach and Sherrie Powers, Ripley, W. Va.,
She is the daughter of Merril and planned.
,
.
daisies, peach and white forget-mecousin of the bride. Both wore cor- 'i:SC;oc;oc;;c;;;;c;;oc;o;;;;c;;oc&gt;oe:;o;c;oc;;o;;;;o;-;;;c;:;;;;;iOC;o;;;oo;;;q.,
nots and white baby's breath with sages
af silk peach and white sweet· 1
long peach Bod white ribbon. The heart roses.
bride pl'ellented each mother a long
Following the ceremony, a rece(&gt;stemmed white rose with a peach tion was held in the church
ribbon. Her jew~lry was a pair af basement. The bride '.s. table
diamong earrings and diamom featured a three-tiered calle
necklace and a white gold . chain decorated with peach roses and
bracelet which were all gifts from hearts. The cake was bajted and
the groom. A blue garter served as decorated by the groom's sisters,
"something blue," a lace han- Edith Baker and Denise Long.
dkerchief, which she borrowed from Hostesses for the reception were
her great-aunt, Eva Hulbert, Penny l:laner, Bidwell, Edith Baker
Charleston, W. Va., served as and Denise Long, both of Gallipolis,
"something old," and "something all siSters of the groom.
borrowed," and her wedding attire
The couple took a short
was "something new."
honeymoon through southern Ohio,
KiJil Jividen, sister of the bride, Kentucky and West Virginia .
was maid of honor, wearing a peach
They reside at Route 2, Box 245,
floor-length gown with a waist· Gallipolis, on Jividen's Family Farlength capelet of lace. She also wore ms.
a white lace picture hat with a peach
Tbe new Mrs. Long is a graduate
ribbon and carried a silk basket af of Gallia Academy High School and
peach and brown roses, peach and employed as tax examiner lor the
'white sweetheart roses, , peach City of Gallipolis, Gallipolis. Mr.
daisies, peach and white for!!£t-me- Long is also a graduate of Gallia
nots, and white baby's breath with Academy High School and is em·
long peach ribbons.
ployed as a chemical operator at
The groom wore a three-piece Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Apbrown suit with beige shirt and ple Grove, W.Va .
brown, beige and peach tie. His r-------------1
boutonniere was a peach rose with
~
white and peach sweetheart roses
and white baby's breath.
Kenny Deckard, Gallipolis, friend
of the bride and groom, served as
Ouu st netJf)th ~OR to&lt;'&gt;u,y . . .
best man. Ushers were Mark
Jividen, Gallipolis, brother of the
Oun hope ~OR tornor~uow.
bride , and Skip McGovern ,
Gallipolis, friend of the bride and
LILIES - MUMS - AZALEAS groom. All wore brown suits and had
brown and peach boutonnieres.
CORSAGES - CUT Fl.IMER
Both fathers wore the same type of
suit. The bride's mother wore a

.,

*129

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Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, OhiC)-Point Pleasant, w. va.
The $unday Times-Sentinel
children, Mandy Dailey and Rot&gt;
Ml', and Mrs. DOnald Si8ggs, of Ii\6
Nashville.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Goble. Dailey is a 1978 graduate of SecondAve .,Galllpo~.
Haas is a 1978 graduate of St.
McGavock High School and is em- Gallia Academy High School and atJoseph
School in
and
ployed at Cardiometries, Inc. Gran- tends Marshall University College of
dson of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lucas of Business, majoring in marketing.
Point Pleasant, W. Va., the future Goble is a 1980 graduate of Gallia
bridegroom is a graduate of Gallia Academy High School and attends
Aeademy High School. He is an Marshall University , College of
alwnnus of Hanover College and Science, studying pre-dentistry.
received a bachelor's degree from
The operrehurch wedding will be
Marshall University. He is affiliated at First Baptist Church on May 29 at
withAC&amp;S Insulation Co., Nashville. 6:30p.m. Pastor Joseph Godwin will
perform the ceremony .

WisemanVan Auker

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April4

CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
'silly M. Johnson, Crown City, announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Malynda, to David Small,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Small,
Crown City.
The bride-elect is a senior at Hannan Trace High School and will
graduate in May . The groom-elect is
a 1979 graduate of Hannan Trace
High School and is a truck driver.
The wedding will be Saturday,
April 10, at 6:30 p.m. at Mt. Zion
Baptist Church. Crown City. Rev.
Richard Graham will perform the
ceremony. The custom of open church will be observed.

LAYAWAY NOW

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GALLIA County Pomona
Grange will meet at Eno Grande
Monday at 8 p.m. A potluck dinner will follow the meeting.

w. va .

BULA Vll,.LE - Addaville
baseball and girls' softball sign
up will be held Monday from 7 to 8
p.m. at Bulaville Town House .

ATHENS - The Athens,
ing, Vinton Counties Cornunity Mental Health Board will
J old a special board meeting to
/ review FY '83 funding proposals
GALLIPOUS - American ,
and conduct regular business.
Legion Lafayette Post 'll will hold
The meeting will be April 5 at 6
a meeting Monday at 7:30p.m. at
p.m. at the board office on Dairy
the Post home on Bob McLane. Athens. The public 1s invited.
Cormick Road. All members are
urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT - Si lver Run
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
Academy High School class of
a rev1val Monday through April
1967 will hold a reunion meeting
11 at 7:30 p.m. featuring Bob
at 7 p.m. Monday at 350 Debby
Rhodes.
.Drive. For more information,
KYGER CREEK Band
call Jackie Gilkey Davi es at 4462626 or Julia Shawver Roderus at
Boosters will meet in the band
446-2287 .
room Monday at 7:30 p.m. for
election of officers.
MORGAN
CENTER
Wesleyan Ch.urch will hold a
revival Mond;;v.u,rough April II
POMEROY Chamber of Comat 7:30 each night. There w1ll be
merce will meet Tuesday at noon
singing by The Ambassadors and
in the east-west dining room of
speakers will be Rev . Wayne
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

m

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eusn
has
the

Easter Dress
· r- for you.
Large Selection of Junior
Dresses in fabrics and colors sure to ~lease!

TUESDAY

Harrison

on

Monday ;

Times -Sentinel-

The Su

Rev .

Robert Hersman, Tuesday ; Rev.
William Wisernandle. Wednesday
and Thursday; Rev. Benjamin
Salvant of Haiti, Saturday; and
Rev . John Hersman, pastor, Sunday.

STORE HOURS:

.muu.-Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm

Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

GALLIPOUS AAUW will
meet Monday at Ohio Valley
Bank's Jackson Pike Branch at
7:30 p.m. Speaker will be Counselor Luellen Fairless, Point
Pleasant. She will present a film
focusing on being a friend in
times of grief. Fairless will begin
speaking at 8 p.m. and the public
is invited to attend, as well as
members and prospective rnem-

CLOSED SUNDAYS

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MOdel Rl'!M7

CROWN CITY - Rhonda Jean
Wallace, Route 2, Crown City, and
David -Lewis Drummond, Route 2.
Crown City, will marry April 10 at
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
W. Main St., Vinton, Oh,
1.. ...
James 0. Bush 1 Mgr,
• Uses tust 89 kw hours per month' with energv-.saver
Elizabeth Chapel Church.
Leo C. Vaughan, Mgr ·
swolch on normal posilion • Ellicoenl loam onsulaHOn •
She is the daughter of Ronda I and
Phone 992-2588
Phone 388·8603
19.0 Cu . 11. no-lroSI relri~e,.lor- lreeze• • 13.8 Cu. II
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• ReEmogene Wallace, Colurn bus, and ~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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and cabinea.
he is the son of Charles and Mary
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Dwnmond, Gallipolis.
r
15000 DISCOUNT CASH REBATE
15000 DISCOUNT
The bride-elect graduated rrom
wesuand High school, columbus, in
PLUS '40
PLUS 140
FOB THE Pill!
!975 and attended Rio Grande
College. She is a member of Lambda
Offiicron Psi and works at Gallipolis
Developmental Center. The groomBIG CAPACITY
elect is a 1968 graduate of Kyger
WASHER &amp;
Creek High School and attended the
MATCHING
DRYER!
National Railroad Instit~te in
Georgia. He also works, at Gallipolis
wasner
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TAWNEY STUDIO
424 Second Ave., Gallipolis

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MON. &amp;FRI.
TIL 8 P.M .

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APRIL 5th THRU APRIL 10th

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Easter .

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GALLIPOLIS - April exhibit:
''Nature Interpreted" - 71 pieces of
art, including pen and ink, batik,
acrylic, etcl)ing, pastel, watercolor,
serigraph, egg tempera, pencil, oil,
lithograph, woodcut, opaque watercolor, stitchery, engraving, ci'Yh,
silveJll()int, silk screen, and fiber.

Tuesday, April 13, 8 p.m - Interdepartmental meeting.
Thursday, April 15, 6:30 p.m. Creative writing classes begin. Instructor Marc Harshman. Fees: $30
non-members and $25 members. To
:;-..'!egister, call Maxine Kinnaird, 67:&gt;3034.
Thursday, Aprill5, 7 p.m. - Dance classes begin. Instructor Cindy
Nau. To register, call Judi Sheets,
446-7865 or Jerry Skaggs, 446-J83.4.
Adalt classes, Thursday evenings.
Children's classes, Saturday af' temoons.
April23 and 24, I to 5 p.m. - High
school art entries to be delivered to
Riverby for May Show.
Tuesday, April T/, 8 p.m.- Board
• of trustees meeting.

CASH REBATE!

Mathis- Folden

GALLI PO US - French Colony
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will meet
Monday at I :30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Kenneth Welker. Mrs. Er·
nest Wiseman will be in charge of
the program.

Pleasant,

Riverby
Calendar

WE WILL NOT BE
UNDERSOLD

GET A PERMANENT FOR EASTER ....
CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.
I

THE MEIG~ l:land Boosters
· will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
band room of the high school.
Topics of discussion will include
the 200 Club, the band banquet to
be held next month, tag day and
another fund raising activity.
Any interested parents are urged
to be at the meeting.

CENTERPOINT Freewill
Baptist Church will hold a revival
beginning Monday at 7:30 p.m.
with Rev. John Jeffers and Light
of God. Rev. Danny Boggs invites
the public.

Ohio-Poin~

LANDMARK ,

Bring in this coupon and receive a $5.00 Discount on an·
Exercise Membership, Suntanning Membership, or a
Permanent Wave .
COUPON EXPIRES APRIL 10,1982

Gloss, Laufer

...

CENTENARY - The McQuaid
Family singers • (Sounds of
Gospel ) will be at Centenary
·United Methodist Church Sunday
at 7 p.m. Pearl A. Casto, pastor,
invites the public to attend.

GALUPOUS- Dr. Andrew H.
Wood, executive director of Shepherds, Inc., will speak Sunday at
6 p.m. at Faith Baptist Church.

RACINE CHAPTER 134, OES
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the Racine Masonic Temple. All
officers are urged to attend to
practice.

REGULAR MEETING, Racine
Village Council, 7 p.m. Monday ;
board of public affairs meeting at
6:30p.m.
·~, .

GALLIPOLIS
An
Ecumenical Palm Sunday
Celebration will be held at the
park front in Gallipolis. St.
l;'eter's Episcopal Church and St.
Louis Catholic Church have invited their memberships to participate in the solmen blessing of
palms and procession to their
respective churches for the continuation of the liturgy .

LANDMARK IN POMEROY

Haas

SAVE $5.00

~~:

.. ,..,uhlmr•fur/hl'
l16 Second Ave .

424 Second, Gallipolis

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Donald C. Haas of 1610 Charlotte
Street, Ironton, announce the
e ngagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Barbara
to Michael

OPEN
MON. : ~D FRI.
Tll8 P.M.

)ACK&amp; )ILL'S

TAWNEY JEWELERS

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1111
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April

MIDDLEPORT - Silver Run
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
a revival Monday through April
11 at 7:30 p.m. each night. It will
feature Bob Rhodes.

MEIGS COUNTY Fair Board
will meet at 8 p.m. Monday at the
secretary's office on the Rock
Springs l"airgrounds.

VALLEY Freewill Baptist
Church will hold a revival beginning Sunday at 7 p.m. each night
with Bill Hayman, evangelist.
there will be singing each night.
The public is welcome to attend.

to
Johnson

MONDAY

POINT PLEASANT
Charleston Symphony will perfonn Sunday at 2 p.m. at Point
Pleasant High School. The show
wiD be comprised of Broadway
tunes. Tickets are $10 for adults
and $5 for students.

InfantS

.~M,a

Calendar

POINT PLEASANT - Singles
Club Spring Fling Dance will be
held Sunday at 6 p.m. at Krodel ,
Park, Point Pleasant. All divorced, widowed and singles over 21
are welcome. Those attending
should provide their own drinks
and a snack.

0.

Diamond

GALLIPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
James Dailey and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Goble announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their

WallaceDrummond

For The

~

SUNDAY
OLD KYGER Church will host
a revival with Rev. Jack Parsons
.and singing nightly from Sunday
·•· through April 11. Pastor Bill
Price invites the public .

Shop
Early :
for Best
Selection

is,

idd

'ftlunaertnii Herjl

.EASTER.
FfiSliiONS

All

Dailey-Goble

GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
David E. Laufer, Route 3, Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Barbara Lynn, to Eugene
Eric Gloss, son of Mr. and Mrs.
· Eugene H. Gloss, Halliday Heights,
Gallipolis.
The bride-elect is a 1980 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School and
wiU graduate in May from Rio Grande College's Medical Laboratory
· Technician Program. She is em. ployed by Holzer Medical Center.
Gloss is a 1978 graduate of Gallia
Academy High Sehoul and will
graduate in May from the University of Kentucky with a bachelor of
science in mechanical engineering.
The open-church wedding will be
June 12 at 2:30p.m.

1982

a B.A. in ac,
counting. Staggs is a 1978 graduate Football Team.
·
·
The
opeo&lt;hurch
wedding
will
~
of Gallla Academy High School. He
24 at 10:30 a.m. at St. Jose~
will be a senior at Marshall Uflivel'
isS:

Redu
20%

Wiseman

lettefllllln on the

·tlniverslly wtlh

April Diamond
Spectacula.r
The Diamond
represents the
APRIL
BIRTHSTONE

.Johnson-Small

GAWPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. E.
M. Wiseman announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Tamra
Lynn, to Thomas Patrick Van
Auker, son of Mr. and Mrs. thomas
R. Van Auker, Charleston, S.C.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Ohio State University and employed
with Nationwide Insurance Company, Columbus. Van Auker is a
graduate of Miami University . He is
employed with Aetna Insurance
Company, Cleveland.
The open church wedding will be
held at Grace United Methodist
Church Jaly 3.

' Aprll4, 1982

'

Moeltl ~B747GA

STARTS AS AVAlUE
••• STAYS AVALUE!

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All WOMEN'S, MEN'S AND CHILDREN'S

DRESS SHOES

•!'FC •• :!wtqmitic
Fr~1,1ency Control
.
• lOG% Solid Stafe -~hassls
• In-Line Picture Tube:'• V.HF Pre-Set Fine . ·
Tunrnv - . ·'
• ·Autcimatlc •C!)Ior i;ontrol
• Molded· In H'\n~le ,

CONNIE, THOM MeAN, RAND,
POLi. PARROT

i~

!

Bring This Ad ·Jn~
And Save $10000 ·
On A_nJ . · color~ ·rv
In Th~ $tore.
.
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Haft

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1,.,: •r" ' 1 ·~·
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Classic; traditional roll·arm slyllng with

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thick liUIIon·tufled attachep pillow back
, and seat cu~hiOJ1. .
• .

··:
· Traditional J ele9a~Ce with button-tufted
attached r,lllow back, roll arms and
smart sing e welt seat cushion.

Onion Sels
49 oz. Box

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99 ~

BUTTER

MILK

.

Florida

•,

..... liOU$8 .

Det Monte Cut

Valley Bell

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NEWRED

POTATOES
$.149

ORANGES
Sib.

Bag

GREEN 317oL$}19
BEANS Cans

' Valuable Coupon SAVE 70c
-

CRISCO

$} 39
3LB.
CAN

POTATOES

50LB: $599
BAG

1

$}99

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Coupon I
I

, Goodonlv at Barr's Exp. 4·10·82 I
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Page-B-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Church, Gallipolis.
Rev. Frank and Tura Hayes will
officiate the 7 p.m. open-church wedding.
She Is the daughter of Mrs. Jel'l')'

engagement an
ort coming
marriage of their daughter, Lisa
Jayne, to Timothy Lee McComas,
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary MeComas, Route I, Vinton.

Ring, Wellston, and the jate Ralph
Gueltlg. He Is the son c1f Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Matheney, Leon.
A reception will follow the wed·
ding al the church.

::

VINTON - " Darrell Marcum,
Route I, Vinton, and Sharon Marcwn, Gallipolis, announce the

Mr. and Mrs. Welch, 25th
They were married AprilS, 1957 in
Redhouse, W. Va . and have four
children.

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1-221-5379
Lee

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c. Mittman

P41me1a N. Maggied
Attorneys-At- Law
88 E . Broad St.
Columbus, OH. 4321 S

Shirley Gueltig
VINTON Preston of Vinton and Curtis
Matheney of Leon, W. Va., will
marry Aprill6 at First Presbyterian

DAYS

SPRING OPEN HOUSE

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"

Ennre stock patterns.

S.lect linen looks

Simplicity, McColl's, Butrerlck and
Vogue•- every polrern In our stores Is
now on sole at 1/o off reg. prlcel LIMIT: 2
PATTERNS PER CUSTOMER.

"The" fashion fabric of sprlngl
Polyester/rayon solids; machine wash
and dry; 45" wide. Limit: 6 yds./customer.

OFF

"Vogue ponerru not
ovollable In every store.

SATURDAY and SUNDAY, APRIL 3 &amp; 4

50,.0 OFF

LILIES • MUMS • HYACINTHS
TULIPS • AZALEAS • HANGING BASKETS
•FOLIAGE•

land , Qh _, 1.10 79
DNE S DAY - Oes&lt;&gt; tt: M,1fl0)( ,

Colu mbta , W Va . )IS 91
SD AY - K,l l hy V,l nM c 1l •r ,
lumbta , W Va , 'io63 .64
Y E ll l' n J Lowm,ln ,
w va .. '!.6 t~ . JI .

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.

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•. ~~~COUPON~~::·
•:

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH APRIL 10, 1982

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CRISCO
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FREE REFRESHMENTS
DC20R PRIZES Will BE AWARDED

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POMEROY, 0.

-~

At least 150 ydL P9f atore

Jo-Ann Fabrics'
39th anniversary

12:00-5 : 00

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

M

hg.$4.99yd.

•

NOA Y Ruth A
Smith ,
m e roy, Oh ., S44 .0J
DAY K a th c nn e R c 11
1 , Pomeroy , Oh1 0 l.7~ 00
S D AY - T K Wo rkman ,

STORE HOURS:

•

Monday and Tuesday, Apttl5 and 6.

0/
/0

Congratulation
Wmners!!!

;:
"'

112 on, these two Items onty,

50

There will be a drawing EVERY DAY! Just put
your name and phone number on your
register tape. The one drawn will win that
amount.

:

;.:

PrestonMatheney

HAL:f
PRICE

:

(Wage Earner Plan)

GROC~RIES!!!

WIN YOUR

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No fee

4

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BANKRUPI'CY/ CHAPTER 13

North Ga!Ua High School and employedbyRobbinsandMyers.
The open-church wedding will be
April IS at Vinton Baptist Church at
6 p.m. with Rev. Steve Ebert officlating. A reception will follow at
the church.

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Albert
1\dch Jr., Route I, Bidwell, wiU observe their 25th wedding anniversary April6 at their residence.

::::

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She Is a senior at North GaUia
High School. He Is a 1979 graduate of

Marcum, McComas

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April4, 1982

t W . Va.
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasan,

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

3 LB. CAN

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$}99

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••••Limit One P er Customer

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GoodOnlyAtPowc ll 's :
•• Offer Exp . Apr . 10 , 1982 2

c·

..•............ :
GALLIA REFRIGERATION,
INC.
·-"'·

'COUNTRY STYLE

Spare Ribs ........~.,

~614)446-4066

152 3rd Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

99

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::! :!COUPON!::::
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J
Seenuckers and cords '

Shirtings

PolyeslerlcoHon stripes are a
dressing tradition. Machine
wash, dry, 45" wide.

1 YEAR FACTORY
4 YEARS GALLI AREFRIGERATION MATERIALS &amp; LABOR

Polyester/cotron plaids and
Oxford cloth solids. Machine
wash, dry, 45" '1de.

Reg. $4A9 and $4.99 yd.

ON THE FOLLOWING NEW EQUIPMENT:
ADD-ON HEAT PUMP
GAS FURNACE
OIL FURNACE
AIR CONDITONING, CENTRAL

25%0FF

Sprtng prtnts

The sportablel

The Innocent ones: Poly· .
esterlcoHon mlnl·llorals.
.Machine wash, dry, 45" wide.

Reg. $2.49 to $3.29 yd.

Reg. $3.49 and $3.79 yd.

$1.88vARD
But18&lt;1Ck

Chuck Roast ........~~ $1

3790

lntertaclngs

Come In ond Discuss Your Problem
With us.

Calicos

Gingham checks

Polyester fusible and nonfusible non-wovens. Machine
wash, dry, from 18" wide.

Entire stockl100"fo coHon mini's
ore real charmers. Machine
wash, dry, 45" wide.

Poly/cotton gingham Is one
sweet way to sewl Machine
wash, dry, 45" wide.

hg.69cyd.

Reg. $3.99 yd.

65% polyeller/35% coHonpertect tor sc51f blousesl
Machine wash; dry, 45" wide.

Reg. $2.29 yd.

Reg. tZ.69 yd.

4~~05$1

$3.19vARD.

J1.68vARD

$1.99vARD

60" linen looks

Leprechaun linen

Sheer delights

Ennre stock Qla..C.®

Polyester knits and wovens ore
true classics. Machine wash
and dry.

50% polyester/50% rayon
solids - chic pretenders!
Machine wash, dry, 45" wide.

Voiles, dimities or·lenos of
potyester/colfon. Machine
wash, dry, 45" wide.

Reg. $4.49 and $6.99 yd.

Reg. $1.99yd.

hg.$JA9yd.

Pomper yourselfl Qlanalt
nylon knit solids; machine
wash, dry;
and 60" wid• .

25 LB. BAG

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$299

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..f:

:: FRUIT COCKTAIL,
•
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PEACHES
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::• OR PEAR HALVES I!:
••

29

::

16 OZ. CAN

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2/1 ..~:

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$3.99vARD

,$2.48vARD

20%0FF

Pucker pttnts

Embroidered eyelets

Entire stocid 45" poly/coHon
emboaed; 38" coHon pUsses.
Machlr~e wash, dry.

Double knits

Decorator fabltcl

Reg. t2.99 to $3.99 yd.

Fashionable poly/cotrons In
all-overs and flounces.
Machine wash, dry, 44" wide.
Reg. ti.M and $6.99 yd.

Crepe stitch or Ponte de
Romo ol100% polyester.
Machine wash,' dry, 60" wtde.
Reg. tU9 and $4.49 yd.

Choose from our entire, ln.
store atoc1t or special order
from swatch books.
Reg. jNioe now

25cyoOFF

250Jo OFF

25cyoOFF

20%0FF

••

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'

25o/o OFF

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• 'Limit One P er Cu stom er·! •
e Good Only At Pow ell 's : •
•&lt;Offer Exp. Apr . 10,1982 2 •

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Batiste

Reg. $4.M and MA9 yd.

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$}29

USDA CHOICE

$2.99 YARD

~:

• :Limit One P er Cus tom er~ •
•: Good Only At Powell's •
• Offer E xp . Apr . 10. 198 2 ••
•'
12

Ground Chuck .....L:~ $} 59

Trigger• poplin and sailcloth
of polyeater/colron. Machine
wash, dry, 45" wide.

HYLAND CHUNK

•:

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Groun d Beef..........
lB.

Reg. $3..49 to $4:A9 yd.

$3.48vARD

$109

Sausage ................
LB.

:~

¢ l ooG Fooo ~l

HOMEMADE PORK

IS ANNOUNCING ANEW
5 YEAR WARRANTY POLICY
CALLED 1 &amp; 4

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.::! ::COUPON~!:::
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• FLAVORITE ::
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IDAHO RUSSET U.S. N0.1 10 LB.BAG

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Potatoes ......··~ ······

BROUGHTON

$}79

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SUGAR
5 LB. BAG

=~ $}39

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49, ••••••••••••••••
$
.2% Milk················
PLASTIC GALLON

•:Limit One Per Cu stom e r••
•( Good Only At,{Powell 's : •
• Offer Exp. Apr . 10 , 1982 2e

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::::=couPON:~~::

=~

GRADE AMEDIUM
.FLAVORITE

::8.-rea• d...................
. . .31$1

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DOZEN

FRESH
BAKERY

160Z.LOAF .

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· SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

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336 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

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::·= DONUTS :.

DINNER TREAT
TURKEY or ~HICKEN
'

. 'PHOHt 446-757&amp;

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Pot.Ptes......... 5

MON.-SAT. 10.5; SUN. 1~5

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$} ~~z.

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Good Only At Powell's ••
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Offer
Exp. Apr. 10, 1982 ! :
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�Page-B-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

Aglow speaker announced
POMEROY - Joyce Hlad has
been chosen to speak at the Pomeroy
Chapter of Aglow Thursday night.
She and her husband, Michael
Hlad, reside in Pomeroy with their
two children. Tamra and Stephanie·
Mrs. Hlad was raised in a holiness
denomination where she says she
got her life's priorities in order. She
served as a youth director at Free
Methodist Church, has had radio
testimonials through Rutland Church of the Nazarene, and was instrwnental in getting a bus load
from this area to Washington where
600,000 Christians mel to pray for
America.
Hlad's aclivities in the church
have includes teaching, counseling
a nd s in ging She se rves as
corresponding secretary for the
Pomeroy Chapter o[ Aglow .
Although she always attended
church. Hlad says she wsa not converted until 1967. She will speak at

Hlad

17Jotu.fi~
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is Aprilll

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Le t

IJNnild tn c's

the Meigs Inn meeting of Aglow at 8
p.m. on Thursday. Dinner will be
served at 7 p.m. and reservations
must be maqe at 742-2442 by no later
than Tuesday . The public is invited.

&lt;2£~I~tt!l~ ~ ~~~eYrd~Sh a i r ~:1~ $1~ ~a~ha~be~

Jeanette Thomas have been named
ctK:hairman of the 1.5 operating
levy promotion for the school 'for the
mentally retarted and the sheltered
workshop by the Meigs Board of

Financial chairman [or the
promotion funds is Douglas Little
and donations will be accepted by
him at .his office 213 East Second
St., or at the Meigs Community •

Tri County area happenings

made byihe Meigs Association for
Retarded Citizens.
The levy will be voted on at the
June 8 primary election.
-

Gallia health officials offer
tipsconcennngtornadoes

By William B. Kughn
One is not born again the mom en t he believes or trusts in Chri st .
The " unclea n spirits'' co nfessed Christ saying, " Thou art the Son of
God'' {Mark 3 : 11) . Were these unclean spirits born agai n the mom ent
their f aith in Christ led th em to make thi s co nfession? " The devils also
believe, and tr emble" (Jms . 2 : 19). Were they born aga in the moment
th ey beli eved? " Among the chief rulers al~b many believed on him :
but beca use of the Pharisees they did not cori)ess him, lest they should
be put out of th e synagogue : For they loved the praise of men more
than the prais e of God" (Jno. 12 :42 , 43) . Wer e these ruler s born again
beca use of the ir belief? When J esus "came unto hi s own, and his own
r ecerv ed him not . But as many as received him , to th em game he
power to becom e the sons of God, even to them that believe on his
nam e'' cJno. 1: 11 . 12) . They were not m ade sons the m om ent they
be lieved their believi n g gave them tile power to become or prepared
them in becom ing sons. Therefore, when one believ es the gospel and
receives it wi th meeknes• into an honest hear t , he is begotten of God,
being g i ven the right or prepared to be born . He i s not born aga in at
th is time any mor e t han one is physically born the mom ent of con·
ception .
Fa i th bring s abou t a c hange of hea rt and repentance . The change
of heart and repentan ce a r e one thing a nd the new birth another . The
change of heart and r epen t ance precede the new birth . Sa ul was a per·
sec utor enrou.te to Dam asc us to b in d Chri stians. Christ conv in ced Sa ul
th at He was Lo rd . Saul 's faiJh in Christ as the Son of God changed his
heart . He turned ( r epented) from unbeli ef and f rom being a per·
sec utor so as to become a disci pl e of Christ . Wa s he born aga in the
momen t he believed or the moment he r e p ~ nl ed? No. He was mer el y
bego tten of God . It was three days tal er before hi s spiritual birth was
made com pl ete when he obeyed th e d iv in e com m and of Ananais, "And
now why tarrie st thou ? arise, and be baptized, and wa sh away thy
sin s, calling on th e name of the Lord ." (A cts 22 : 16) .
Is The New Birth A Miracle?
The new birth is no mor e a mira cle than is the phy si ca l birth. Th e
creati on of Adam a nd Eve was a mirac le. The human ra ce multiplies
throu g h th e taw of physical procreation of phy sica l birth . There mu st
be a beg etting, conception, and delivery . Physical birth is not a
miracle, but a complying wi th th e law of nature established by -God .
Likewise is th e new birth . It i s a begetting, conception , and delivery.
By complying with God 's spiritual taw of procreation He has
established, suc h a birth is no t a miracle. It is accord ing to His law Or
p lan.

rr3/,af1~1

,Jfril rrihuu-11

of'

FINANCING AV AILABL
OWN A BUCK STOVE
FOR AS LITTLE AS

~ vnd .IV

Mornn1q

S u nd ~v

Aob ll' !-o tud y 'I . JO

f

~t&gt;nonq

Wor~h op

6 : 00

2926 Jackson Ave.

Evr nm g
7: 00

.Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Open 10:00 a.m. · 5:30p.m.
Monday - Friday

Rad to

" M euaQe fr om
thr R• bl l' "
O.!t l y WJ E H

300 Second Ave.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

675-7514

ll · SSAM

After 5:30 By Appointment

Active and inactive cases of tuberculosis, positive reactors to the
tuberculin skin test and sus pected
cases including anyone having
pulmonary or other lesions which
are suspicious of, but not proven to
be tuberculosis, are followed up in
these clinics.
Free chest x-rays are given to all
positive reactors . Necessary
chemotherapy
and
chemoprophylactic medications are
provided for through the tuberculosis levy fund .
The planning, setting up of inics,
notification of patients in regard to
the clinics and the nursing follow-up
are handled by Joan Tewksbary,

l-----------------~

HOOVER®
'M

Upright with
Headlight

I:JECA[JE

refre she s and rev1ves
your beaut1ful ca rp et

Steel
agitator

15 qt.
disposable bag

Ball bearing agitator has replaceable brushes you can
change.

Oeep-cleanmg act ton

600 c;q 1n frlter area
You 'll li ke the qUick &amp;

4-posltion
carpet selector
Shtfts mstantly lor shag .
hrgh. normal or low ptle
carpet

Full-time
edge cleaning
corners and along baseboards.
• Orrt· frnder headlrght

• Wtde tread wheels
• Fu ll turnrture guard

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RECEPTIONIST - Debbie
Brown is typist, file clerk and
receptionist at the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Office. She notifies
patients of their chest X-rays,
cUnic visits and other tests upcoming. Sb'e bandies aU records
of skln testing and accompanies
the nerse to the coonty schools.

REG. 132915-'

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I

,,

":. JOIJel)h L. Klrby, Mlddlep.ort, filed
• suit for divorce in · r.Jeiga C&lt;lunty
·Pleas Court against Dora
Ann Kirby, Middleport.

eornmon

,.
I

·"

Deadline near for FHA he1p
POMEROY - Fanners suffering
losses from the adverse weather in
1981 have until April 19 to file application for Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) loan assistance. This deadline is applicable in
Athens, Meigs and Vinton counties.
The Farmers Home Administraon

Church is
festival
speaker

is the rural credit service of the

United States Department of
Agriculture. This infonnation is
provided by Archie Stegall , County
Supervisor of the Pomeroy FrnHA
Office.
FmHA Emergency Loans are

made to eligible fanners to enable
them to return to their normal
operation . A fanner must ha ve suf-

fered a substantial production or
physical loss as a result of a natural
disaster in order to qualify fo r an
Emergency loan . Loan applications
will be recetved at the Pomeroy
County Offi ce o£ the rmHA until
April19.

CLINiciAN - Dr. Roy L. Doaaerberg, M.D., Ualmlty H01pllal,
Columbaa, Ia the cbeet JiDiclaD, for cbelt cllDICI ataged bl Meigs Comtty
every 1%
by the Melp CGimty Tubercul01ia Program. Dr. Deaaerberg c!lecb out X·raya Ill ciiDic paUealll •

weeu

Fire damages
pick-up truck
POMEROY-The Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported that
a 1978 Ford ' pickup truck owned by
Keith Cleland , Swick Road, RD.
Middleport, was heavily damaged
by fire Friday evening at approximately 4:45p.m.
Cleland was working on his truck
and had turned on the ignition to see
if the fuel pump would work . The
ignition stuck causing the gas to
ignite. He took the vehicle out of
gear and let 1t dnft out of the
driveway acroiss the road into a
field to keep his home out of danger.
The Rutland Fire Department was
called to the scene. Damages were
reported heavy to the truck.

Not stove company
COLUMBIA-Steve Giglio, owner
of Appalachian Stove Co., located in
Colwnbia Township, reported Saturday the building that burned down
Thursday morning was a barn not
the bui lding that housed Appalachtan Stove Co.
Giglio said he has had no tnteruption of business and 1s
operatin~ as usual.

Free immunizations
POMEROY - The health department reminds residents of Meigs
County that immumzations are
provtded free of charge.
The irrununizati on Clini cs are held
every second and fourth Tuesdays
[rom 9-11 a. m. and 1-3 p.m. No appointment is necessary . These immunizations should be started at two
months and extend until the child
begins school (pre-school or any
other school\.

Area deaths

ATHENS- United Mine Workers
President Sam Church will be here
Memorial weekend. He wiU be in the
parade and be the parade marshal
1Continued from page A-ll
for the first Appalachian Black
Diamond Festival on Saturday, May
29, at 10 a.m. He will be guest
speaker immediately after the
POINT PLEASANT - Charles W.
Long, 50, Henderson, died at noon
parade.
The parade will include the Ohio
Friday at his residence.
University marching band afong
Born Aug. I, 1931 , in Henderson,
with high school bands, a group from
son of Cody and Catherine Pearson
Portsmouth, Ohio who are shjiners,
Long, who both survive in Hertan old time Kitchen Band (Senior derson, he was a World War II
Citizens), a color guard made up of veteran and a construction worker.
veterans of foreign wars, Queens of
Also surviving is his former wife,
neighboring festivals and our own
Nancy Lou Long of Beverly ; a
candidates for our "Coal Miner's
daughter, Terri Long Sergent of
Daughter" contest and much more.
Beverly; and five sons, Mark, Rick.
The " Appalachian Black Diamond Chris, Jerry and David, all of
Festival" will be a three day eveng
Beverly; four sisters, Mrs. Betty
on Memorial Day Weekend. Besides Hupp of Mason, Mrs. Virginia Sayre
our "Coal Miner's Daughter" con- of Point Pleasant, Mrs. Grace Puttest there will be a Flea Market, Ar- ney of West Columbia and Jean Long
ts and Crafts, displays o[ Coal of Chillicothe; three brothers;
Mining equipment, continuous Forest of Point Pleasant, Bob of
movies, a model coal washing piece Chillicothe and John of Gallipolis
of equipment, etc. Grandstand en- Fc~ry; ant! four grandchildren.
tertainment daily , bluegrass music,
Funeral services will be held at
kitchen band mus; ~ by senior I :30 p.m. Monday in the Wyoma
citizens, square dancing. There will
Pentecostal Church, Gallipolis
be beans and cornbread available Ferry, with the Rev. Charles Birand chicken dinner scheduled. On chfield officiating. Burial will be in
Sunday at 2 p.m. there will be a "··ttl~- church cemetery. Friends may
camp meeting type religious ser- call at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home ,
vice. The singing group will be "The Point Pleasant, after 3 p.m. today .
Songsmen Quartet."
The body will lie in state in the
The Athens community welcomes church one hour prior to the service.
coal miners from all the coal mining
states to attend and participate in
this festival. There will be ample
VINTON - Funeral services will
and free parking at the Athens Court- be held at I p.m. Tuesday in the Mcly Fairgrounds and space for Coy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton,
primitive camping (only $15 for the for Naamon McDaniel, 89, of 11 S.
three days). A three day pass to the Second St., Bidwell , who died last
fairgrounds will be $2.50 per person Monday.
or $1 per day. All children under 12
The Rev . Vance Watson will ofyears of age will be admitted free.
ficiate, and burial will be in New
The Appalachian Black Diamond Hope Cemetery, near Harrisburg.
Festival Committee has been
Friends may caU at the funeral
working with Don .tlunley, UMW home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.
board member, ana David Baker
with the Southern Ohio Coal company as well as engineers from Ohio
LITTLE
HOCKING---Linni e
University to make the festival one
Miller, 55, Rt. 1, Little Hocking, died
that miners will be proud of.
Friday at Camden Clark Memorial
.• Hospital following an extended
, illness.
,
Mrs. Miller was born at Long Bottom the daughter of the late Charles
and Essie Randolph Congrove. Her
husband, Ovie died in 1965. She was
also preceded in death by two
GALUPOUS ~ The foUowing daughters, two sisters and one
couples filed for marriage licenses brother.
She was a member of Little
this past week in Gallia County
Hocking United Methodist Church.
Probate Court.
Survivors include one daughter,
Michael A. Cunningham, 25,
GaUipoliS, truck driver, and Brenda Helen K. Miller, at home; six
G. Bowman, 24, Point Pleasant, brothers, Raymond Congrove,
Holliday, Fla.; Dale Congrove, Tarunemployed.
David E. Small, :Ill, Crown City, pon. Springs, Fla.; Gordon
truck driver, and Malynda D. John- Congrove, Sun City, Ariz.; Bill
Congrove, Reedsville; Dan
son, 17, Rt 2, Crown City, student.
David L Drummond, 31, Rt. 2, Congrove, Whitehall, Ohio, and
Crown City, Gallipolis DevelOJ&gt;' Junior Gongrove, Zanesville.
Funeral services will be held Mon- · mental Center employee, and lUlonda J. Wallace, 25, Rt. 2, Crown City, day at 1 p.m. at White Funeral Home
in Coolville with the Rev. Wesley
GDCemployee.
Thatcher officiating&gt;Burial will be
William J. Williams, 21, Rt. 2,
ln Sand Hill Cemetery, Long BotCrown City, atudent, and Alice. F.
tom. Friends may call at'lhe funeral
Drollinger, 33, Rt. 2, Crown City,
·. home after noon today.
nurse's assistant.

Charles W. Long

Marriage licenses

GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
City Pliuining Commission will hold
a public hearing at 7:30p.m. Apnl13
. in the]llunicipal courttoom.
. The tentative agenda includes a
:. reorganizatiopal meeting, ~_Vith
: - Howard Baker Sallllders as the new ·
:: representative from the city ~m­
:: ~ion, and discussion of poss~ble
• . consultants for review of muniCipal
: · zoning ordinances and a master
:· plan.'
.
·-: The commission will also rev1ew a
. ~. preliminary plat o~ ~iverside·
Terrace, a propoSed housmg complex on bower River Road.

.:· To end mal;'l'iage
....

structure than in the open. Beware
of long-span roof areas like those
found in shopping malls or gymnasiums. Instead, try to find a
smaller room, such as a closet,
restroom or storeroom. Stairwells
also make good shelters.
U-you are in a mobile home or car,
leave it and find shelter in a
building. If there is no nearby
shelter, lie nat in the nearest ravine
or ditch. Since a storm accompanies
a tornado, beware of standing water
or the possibility of nash flooding if
you must take this type of shelter.
Remain calm and don't pamc. Most
tornadoes are short-lived, lasting
only four or fiv e minutes and
traveling on the ground for two
miles, on the average. Your best
defense is to think clearly and
rationally until the danger is past.
Share your knowledge with those
around you. Direct ce&gt;-workers, companions and fellow shoppers to safe
shelters if they appear confused.

1jnnie Miller

:Public hearing set

-

D

Meigs County Tuberculosis Office is Maida Mora. She is
bookkeeper, maintains files and
patient cbrts and assists during
clinics. She transcribefi the
clinicians impressions after each
clinic and sends the reports to the
patient's private physician. She
also notifies patients of their Xray results.

GALUPOUS - It's easy to iderttify a safe spot in your home and
teach your children to go there is a
tornado threatens. But what if you or
members of your family are at
work, shopping or traveling?
According to the Gallia County
Health Department and Curt Griffith, Chairman of the Ohio Committee on Tornado Safety, the basic
rules still apply. "The best shelter is
on the lowest level of the building,
away from windows and doors. This
basic information is often all you
need to keep in mind no matter
where you are."
Griffith also suggested beneath a
sturdy piece of furniture, if possible.
" It's important to protect your head
and chest," he explained. "Most
storm-related deaths are due to injuries to these parts of the body ."
If you are in a public buildin~. look
for a predesignated shelter area.
Always stay inside the building, since you are generally safer inside a

Naamon McDaniel

DEPUTY- First deputy at the

DIRECTOR
Joan
Tewksbary, R.N., is clinic director of the Meigs County Tuber·
culosis Office in Meigs County.
Sbe does all of the tuberculin skln
testing, provides guidance to all
the tuberculin patients, contacts
and suspects. She conducts com·
munlty skiD testing clinics,
school programs, works with
chest clinician, Dr. Roy L. Don'nerberg of Unlversiti)r Hospital
and is the liaison between doctors
and the public. She recently lectured on tuberculosis and served
on a medical panel at the College
of Osteopathic Medicine, Athen.s.

16 qt bag capacity

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2,215 tuberculin skin tests. There
were 11,814 other lcinic services performed . During the year five active
cases of tuberculosis were found and
the individuals are being treated.
X-ray and technical fa cilities
deemed necessa ry in the detection of
tuberculosis are obtained from
Veterans Memorial Hospital, X-ray
evaluation, and medical service is
received from a consulting
specialist from University Hospital.
Bills incurred in the operation of the
clinic are submitted to the county
corrunissioners for approval and
then are passed on to the county
auditor for payment.
'
Located on the second noor of the
multi-purpose building on Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy, the clinic offers
free skin testing to all organizations
in the county. The tuberculosis office
offers many ·other services dealing
with respiratory diseases to the
public and all clinic services are free
and available to the Meigs County
residents.
Contact may be made with the
clinic by phoning 992-3722.
Meigs countians renewed the
tuberculosis levy by a large
majority for a five year period at the
general election in November, 1981.

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R.N ., with the assistance of Maida
Mora, first deputy , and Debbie
Brown, clerk.
Governing the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Clinic is a board of
trustees composed df 13 members.
The members and the areas they
represent are: Jane Brown and Jane
Walton, Pomeroy; Faye Wallace
and Joan May, both Rutland; Mike
Struble, Syracuse, Maxine PHilson,
Racine; Carson Crow, Marilyn
Spencer, Orange and and Olive
Twps.; Ben Philson and Orion
Roush, Sutton, I etart and Lebanon
Twps.; Charles Rifne and Vernon
Weber, Salisbury, Rutland and
Salem Twps.; Yvonne Young, Bedford , Scipio and Colwnbia Twps.
Teresa Collins, R.N., director of
nurses at Veterans Memoria l
Hospital , and Delores Frank,
executive director of the Meigs Unit
of the American Ca ncer Society,
work with the clinic in "stop
smoking" programs.
During 1981, the local clinic also
staged five doctors' clinics. There
were 249 patients seen by Donnerberg during the year.
Forty-two patients received some
form of medication and 407 chest Xrays were taken. The clinic took

POMEROY - One of Meigs Courtly's largest health programs is
carried out annually by the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Clinic.
A primary service held every 12
weeks is a chest clinic conducted by
Dr. Roy L. Donnerberg, chest
clinician of University Hospital in
Columbus.
These clinics, staged throughout
the year, are made possible through
funds provided by a tuberculosis
levy fund which voters of Meigs
County have approved.

BUCK STOVES &amp;
COLONIAL CARPETS

wcd nt&gt; !od.ly

left to right, Jane Walton, Orion Roush, Charles Riffle,
Carson Crow, Vernon Weber, Mike Struble, Joan May.
Other members not pictured are Maxine and Ben
Philson.

TB clinic continues service

A MONTH

Bulavill e Road • P. O. 8()")1; 308
GALLIPOLIS , OH104 56J l

i•

TRUSTEES - THis is the governing board of
trustees which handles the Meigs County tuberculosis
program. At the front, left to right,. are Marilyn Spencer, Faye Wallace, Jane Brown, Yvonne Young; back,

s3ooo

riluM

The Sunday Times -Sentinei-Page--B-9

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

IS ONE BORN AGAIN THE MOM'ENT
ONE BELIEVES?

sc lccl1011 from our new

CONVERTIBLE

4, 1982

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBlE...

he lp

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Wil tttnCJ lor you'

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_/

April4, 1982

w. va .

Dorothy L. Thomas
VINTON
Dorothy Lewis
Thomas, 81, Bidwell, died Friday
night in Holzer Medi ca l Ce nter.

Born April13, 1900, in Rio Grande,
daughter o[ the late Rev. L.M. and
Sarah Qualls Payne, she was a
retired teacher. having taught at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary School
for 32 years.
She was a member of Mount Carmel Baptist Church in Bidwell,
where she was church treas urer,

Sunday school teacher and president
o[ the church choir. She was a Rio
Gra nde College graduate, a member

of the Ga llia County Retired
Teachers Assoc iation , past
presid ent

o£

th e

Providence

Women's Auxiliary and Emancipation, an instructor for the local
and state Sunday School and BTU
Congress, and past vice president of
the women's auxiliary, OBGC.
She was also preceded in death by
her first husband, Frilay Lewis, and
by two brothers and a sister.

~

Surviving is her second husband,

Carlos Thomas; a stepson, James E.
Thomas of Chillicothe; two stepdaughters, Mary Ellen Russell of
Xenia and Shirley A. Harris of
Delaware; four brothers, Marion -of
Oak Hill and Forrest, Harold and
Harley, all of Bidwell ; three sisters,
Mrs. Nellie Siler of Troy, Mrs. Bernice Burden u£ Bidwell and Mrs.
Jesta Mae Diggs of Columbus; and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
noon Wednesday in Mount Carmel
Baptist Church, with the Rev . Vance
Watson and the Rev. Elbert McGhee
officiating. Buria l will be in Pine
Street Cemetery. Gallipolis. Friends
tnay call at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home. Vinton, from 3-5 and
7-9p.m. Tuesda y.
The body will lie in state in the
church one hour prior to the service.

Mary E. Thomas
POINT PLEASANT - Mary
Elfreda Thomas, 63, of Rt. 2, Letart,
died Friday afternoon in Pleasant
Valley Hospital after an extended
illness.
Born Sept. 18, 1918, in Canada, she
was the daughter of the late William
Woshler and Mrs. Lena Forst, who
survives in Portland, Ore.
Surviving is her husband, Jack;
two stepdaughters, Mrs. Dilina
Braxton of Parkersburg, W.Va. and
Mrs. Marilyn Lane of RavenswQ!Ki,
W.Va.; a stepson, Keith L. Thomas
of Illinois; a brother, William of
Spokane, Wash.; five grandchildren,
a great-grandchild and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the WilCQJen
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, with
the Rev. George C. Weireck ·officiating . Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens, Point PleaS&amp;nt.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6-9 p.m. Monday.

•

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�Pomeroy

Page-B -10- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Apirl 4, 1982

w. va.

Sports

Search continues for survivors
of Mexic~n volcano eruption

· '•

.•

•

-f

A CLOSE SHAVE - Barber Bob Sa nchez conUnues with a haircut on customer Paul Morrison shor-

trance lo the barber shop early Friday. No one was injured in the accident after the brakes reportedly failed

PICHUCALCO, Mexico (AP) Some 5,000 people were still unaccounted as rescue workers combed
villages isolated for five days by
debris from the erupting El
Chichonal volcano, authorities said.
The death toll stood at 15 but
Chiapas state officials said Friday
more bodies may be found in areas
cut off by the volcano. Five seriously
injured villagers were evacuated by
helicoppter.
Chiapas State Gov. Juan Sabines
Gutierrez, who traveled with rescue
teams, said he found survivors
drinking heavily out of despair.
" It saddened me," he told reporters. "I scolded them because all the
men were drunk. But it's natural ,
they are very ignorant P.fOple. They
thought the world was loing to end
and because of the danger they took
to drinking pulque," a local
homebrew made from cactus.
The hot ash that El Chichonal con-

1rimts- itntinti

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
•
Free from labor strife for the first time in three
years, major league baseball opens its 1982 season
Monday with the hope that the excitement of close
races and individual stars reaching for career plateaus
can wipe out the bitter taste of last summer's sevenweek strike.
The players have put away their picket signs and the
focus now is expected to be on hits, runs and errors instead of union-management confrontations.
The Cincinnati Reds, baseball's oldest franchise.
begin the National League season with the tradi tional
opener Monday against the revamped Chicago Cubs. A
sellout crowd of more than 52,000 will jam Riverfront
Stadium to watch astronaul'i Joe Engle and Richard
Truly make the ceremonial first pitch, using a baseball
which accompanied them last November on their 1.25million mile trip aboard the space shuttle Columbia.
Included in the Cincinnati crowd will be former
baseball Commissioner Happy dlandler, elected last
month to the Hall of Fame, and scheduled to be
honored before the game.
The American League season also opens Monday, in
Baltimore with "the Orioles entertaining the" Kansas
City Royi!ls. ·
The other 22 tearru; are set to open Tuesday . Eleven
games are scheduled, six in the American League and
five in the National.
In the AL Tuesday, it will be Texas at New York
Boston-at Chicago, Cleveland at Milwaukee and Toron:
to at Detroit in day games, and California at Oakland
and Seattle at Minnesota at night. The Mariners-Twins
game marks the opening of baseball's newest stadium ,
the 54,711-seat Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodl)me in
downtown Minneapolis.
Tuesday's NL openers have Montreal at Pittsburgh
. and San Francisco at Los Angeles in day games, and
New York at Philadelphia, Atlanta at San Diego, and
St. Louis at Houston in night contests.
Baseball officials have been encouraged by strong
season ticket sales. They hope that is an indication fans
are returning to the sport, after the disruption' of la;t

hospitalized,
in
failing
health
items as food production wanes

...

.. .
;;r. . , .
I'

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il

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seriously undershot its 1981 targets,
the Soviets would probably not be
anx ious to publish data showing
major defea ts in fulfilling
nutritional nonns, ·· Mark1sh said.
Har lan J . Dirks, the U.S .
agricultu ral counselor in Moscow,
said the Soviet Union increased its
imports of foreign fann products
from $16.6 billion in 1960 to $20 billion
last year. But Dirks attributed only
part of the rise to poor Soviet crops.
·· Itis also an outgrowth of the increasing demand by Soviet consumers for more and better quality
food. " he said. "This has prompted
the Soviel'i to import increasing
quanllties of feedstuffs for its
livestock industry in hopes of
providing more meat and a nimal
products for the population."
The Kremlin's published norm for
meat and fat conswnption was 207
pounds per person a year in 1976.
The published 1981 nonn is 172 pounds but U.S. officials say actual consumption in 1980 was only 125 poun-

ds, about 2_ pounds a week .
By comparison, U.S. government
family food plans reconunend 5.78
pounds of meat, poultry and fi sh a
week for a grown man and 4.12 pounds for a woman.
Markish, in an analysis titled
"Soviets Halt Campaign to Upgrade
Diets" in the April issue of the
department's Foreign Agriculture
magazi~ sa id the dietetic norms
published by Moscow do not have the
force of law as production norms do.
But he said they are important
because they represent government
standards of nu!J"ition and thus
become part of the planning process.
In 1976, the Soviets recommended
that people eat about four pounds of
potatoes a week. They now recommend eating slightly more than 4
pounds a week, and U.S. officials say
the actual consumption is even
higher. Americans are adivsed by
their government to eat sllghtlyJess
than 2 pounds of potatoes a week,
half the Soviet recommendation .

.'

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~.:

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~y l
., ' \

~-·
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...

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•

MOSCOW (AP)
Soviet
President Leonid I. Brezhnev reportedly is still hospitalized after a
flurry of public appearances and
travel that suggest the ailing 7':&gt;year-old leader was trying to prove
he could still do the job.
" You wouldn't make your grandfather keep the schedule he had last
month," a Western diplomat com·

mented in noting Brezhnev made
two major speeches and a trip to
Soviet Central Asia in the last two
weeks of March.
Sovielf, and Western observers
believe Brezhnev, who has led the
country since 1964, was under
pressure to flex his political muscles
to guarantee the succession of his
protege, Konstantin Chernenko, 70,
who is said to face determined opposition in the army and KGB, or
secret police.
Brezhnev was stricken March 25
on his return from Tashkent, capital

of Soviet Uzbekistan, Western and feverishly maneuvering behind the
Soviet sources believe. In a break scenes.
with tradition, there was ~ , "The end of an epoch is at band,"
photographic or TV coverage of his - adds a knowledgeable Soviet source,
return, and Westerners reported who foresees a bitter succession
seeing a limousin~ambulance in the fight pitting Brezhnev's political
motorcade from the au·port.
machine, led by Chernenko, against
The president,_ who IS also Com- the army, the KGB and perhaps
mums! Party chief, was rushed to a against regional Communist Party
special clinic across the street from chieftains.
the Kremlin, according to Soviet
Chernenko's chief politburo rival,
sources whose descnpt10ns of his Andrei Kirilenko, 76, is· reported by
ailment range from exhaustJOn to a reliable Soviet sources to be
disabhng stroke. .
seriously ill and unlikely to return to
The Soviet media have carried no his job as overseer of Soviet heavy
maJOr articles or commentanes sm- industry. Kirilenko has not been
ce the reported hospitalization, and seen publicly since Feb. 9.
coverage of other members of the 13If true, the seriously failing health
member Pohtburo has been llffilted.
of Brezhnev coupled with the death
" This appears to be the Kremlin's Jan. 25 of top ideologist Mikhail
way of lettmg the outside world Suslov and Kirilenko's illness
know that Brezhnev is ill," said a deprives the Kremlin of the trio who
diplomatic . expert who believes six months ago were said to rank
other Pohtburo members are one. two and three in the country.

.'

season .

RIVERFR6NT CLEANUP - Ciuclooatf Reds crews completed preparaUoos for Monday's Opeolng
worker Riek Young hoses off the seats iD the blue level Day game when the Reds will meet the Chicago Cubs.
of Riverfront Stadium Saturday In Clnciooall; as work· The Reds have traditionally opened the major league
baseball season. (AP Laserphoto ).
•

'Numbers game' -Harris

Pharmacist innocent in death
AKRON, Ohio (AP)
A
Cuyahoga Falls pharmacist charged
with causing the death of a heart
patient by giving her a generic drug
instead of a prescribed brand-name
drug has been found innocent of involuntary manslaughter.
A Summit County Common Pleas
Court jury of seven women and five
men returned the verdict acquitting
Robert E. · Cochran after
deliberating three hours Thursday
and two hours Friday morning.
Cochran, owner of the Medicine
Shoppe in Cuyahoga Falls, had been
indicted last September on 48 counts
related to _dispensing dangerous

drugs, including the charge of involuntary manslaughter in the April
3, 1981, death of Cleo Schell, 63, of
Northampton Township.
The jury found him guilty of three
misdemeanor counts of selling an
unapproved drug. Judge William
Baird will sentence him April9.
In January, Cochran pleaded
guilty to four felonies and two
misdemeanors. Thirty-eight other
charges were dropped in plea
bargaining.
Cochran, 40, was thought to be the
first druggist in the nation to be tried
for a patient's death, officials said.
His trial covered eight days of

testimony and arguments.
In closing arguments, defense attorney Robert Meeker contended
there was no proof Cochran acted
recklessly and said the defense
produced evidence that Mrs. Schell
bad died of causes unrelated to the
generic drug.
Mrs. Schell had been given a
generic furosemide made by Pharmadyne instead of the brand-name
Lasix furosemide made by HoechtRoussel.
The drug, a diuretic, was
prescribed to make her lose water
weight to ,reduce the strain on her
heart because she suffered from
coniges:tive heart failllfl!.

;

HERMES PREPARES - A Sea Harrier jet, seen
shortly after landing on the deck of the British eartler
HMS Hermes, at Portsmouth, England Saturday,. as
the armed forces made ready for a possible sailing to

and ran the juice down there," he
said. "You bring them together (two
wires in the water) apd you get a
good light."
The wires, or electrodes, produced
an intense light, somewhat like a
welder's arc, that would illuminate
the film, he said.
Later, Earley moved to Parkersburg where he watched the
evolution of movie making from
projection booths. He also traveled
across the state during this period,
showing films to new audiences.
At Morgantown, he said, "they
razzed us," while at Fairmont,
people waited for hours to see a
show.
Earley says he never was bored by
the endless series of films and never
thought about doing anything else
for his livelihood. He and his wife
reared three sons and a daughter on
the projectionist's sal;lry. The sons
were star football pla,yers-at Parkersburg High School and two later
played at the University· of Notre

Dame.
About 10 years ago, Earley called
it quits and retired. He says he has
attended only one .movie since then.
In the early days, Earley's
colleagues provided some makeshift
sound effects to keep the audience
interested.
"We had a trap drummer and a
piano player," he recalled. "The
drummer had a leather strap he'd
smack for gun shots, you see."
But despite the primitive equipment, the movies must have seemed
realistic to the audiences. Earley
remembers one woman attending
her first motion picture show who
was frightened by what she saw. .
"She was a great, big womanmaybe 300 pounds- and she was sit·ting on tile edge of the benCh," he
said. "There was one scene wheie
the waves from the ocean ·would
come up over the bank. She sai&lt;l, 'Oh
oh!' and fell over backwards. We
had to stop the show and get,th!! seat
off her."

.•

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Just when
Greg Harris thought he had made
the roster, the Cincinnati Reds ran
into a math problem.
The problem was an overabundance of pitchers on the roster,
swollen to 28 with the acquisition
Thursday of Bob Shirley.
The solution turned out to be a
ticket to Indianapolis for Harris,
who thought he had won a spot on the
staff Wednesday with a strong performance.
The 26-year-old right-hander
figured that his reassignm~nt
Friday to the Indianapolis farm club
was a matter of simple
mathematics. The Reds had options
to send him to the minors. They were
out of options on Joe Edelen, another
pitcher in training camp.
''It was a tough decision and I had
options," Harris said. " It was just a
numbers game, not my performance .''
Harris, obtained from the New
York Mets in the trade for George
Foster, had a 4.26 earned run
average compared to 2.45 for
Edelen. But Harris thought he had
impressed the Reds when he pitched
seven innings on Wednesday against
the Mets and gave up just two runs.

"I figured WedJlesday's performance opened everybody's
eyes," he said. ';Mter that I figured
that I made it. But I guess I didn't.
"I'm just a little shocked. But I'm
taking it like I did when I came here,
when (he didn't assume he had a job
even though) everybody said I had
the club made because they bad
traded George Foster for me."
Reds Manager John McNamara
figured that Harris could use the
work in Indianapolis, and he didn't
rule out the possibility of calling him
up later in the season.
"If anything happens and he's the
best pitcher at Indy, then he'll come
back. Since I've been here, we've
always had to go there at least once
(to call up a pitcher)," McNamara
said. "If he goes out and pitches
well, he's goiog to force somebody to
keep him if we can't use him on this
ballclub."
The Reds are expected to make
their two final cuts from the roster
today, with catcher Dave Van Gorder and outfielder Duane Walker
prime candidates.
Reds President DiCk Wagner said
Friday there would · be a decision
Saturday on non-roster pitcher Bill

Bonham, who is eKpected to be sent
to the minor leagues. Bonham;
trying to come back from two years
of shoulder problems, hasn't been
strong enough to pitch nine innings
this.spring .
"It's my guess he will stay here
with Indianapolis," Wagner said .
The Reds used Shirley for the first
time Friday, and the left-hander
used one of his hitting lessons to beat
his former team, the St. Louis Cardinals.
Shirley pitched a sc'ieless inning
in the lith with the score tied 1·1,
then employed a Cardinal tactic for
a base hit that set up the winning run
in a 2-1 victory.
With Rafael Landestoy on first
base by a single and none out,
Shirley came to the plate expecting
to bunt. But when he saw the Cardinal infielders move too early to
cover the anticipated sacrifice, ·he
slapped at the pitch and grounded a
single that sent Landestoy to third.
Wayne Krenchicki was intentionally
walked and Duane Walker hit the
gam~ winning single one out later.
Shirley said the tactic is referred
to as the "butcher boy" bunt in the
Cardinal organization.

The 5(Hlay strike wiped out 714 major league games
last year as management and the players union dueled
over the issue of compensation for clubs losi ng free
agents to other teams. The settlement included
provisions for a on~time only split season which
produced a new tier of posl'ieason playoffs and stretched the World Series until almost November.
This year, baseball returns tu it' tradilamal 162game schedule, hopeful that a SUiruner free from
strikes, except the kind that pitchers throw, can signal
a return to record attendances which shot past the 4()
milhon plateau before last year.
Capacity crowds have jammed spring training bases
in Florida and Arizona to watch teams prepare for the
new season, and seven clubs have established singlegame attendance records for exhibition games.
Baseball hopes that the enthusiasm continues as the
regular season gets underway .
Six teams start the season with new managers George Bamberger with the New York Mets, Dick
Williams with San Diego, Lee Elia with the Chicago
Cubs, Joe Torre, with Atlanta, Pat Corrales with
Philadelphia and Bobby Cox with Toronto. Two other
managers, Bob Lemon with the New .York Yankees
and Jim Fanning with Montreal, took over in September last year and led their teams into the playoffs
and, in Lemon's case, the World Series.
There bas been wholesale player shuffling, with topname players switching clubs, some of them traded,
others signing as free agents. Cincinnati's outfield
wound up in New York- Ken Griffey ijnd Dave Collins
with the Yankees and George Foster with the Mets.
The Reds' new look includes veterans Clint Hurdle and
Cesar Cedeno and rookie Paul Householder in the outJield, with catcher Johnny Bench moving to third base .
Los Angeles broke up its veteran infield unit after
nine years, dealing Davey Lopes to Oakland.
Manager Dallas Green left Philadelphia for a front
office post with the Cubs and acquired several Phil lies,
including shortstop Larry Bowa and catcher Keith

Moreland. Green also signed free agent pitchers Bill
Campbell and Fergie Jenkins and obtained second
baseman Bwnp Wills from Texas.
The Rangers, who signed pitcher Frank Tanana,
were able to spare WJ!ls after acquinng Doug Flynn
from the Mets. Cal ifornia added free agent slugger
Reggie Jackson and third baseman Doug DeCinces
from Baltimore to an All-Star lmeup . The Onoles got
outfielder Dan Ford from the Angels for DeCinces.
Detroit and Chicago swapped a pair of first-rate outfielders, with Steve Kemp movmg tu the White Sox and
Chet Lemon going tot he Tigers .
St. Louis came up with two new Smiths, shortstop Ozzie from San Diego in exchange for Gctrry Templeton,
and outfielder Lonnie in a thrt.!L'-Wi:IY deal with

Cleveland and PhJ!adelphia . The Indians collected pitchers, adding Lary Sorensen and SilviO Martinez frum
St. Louis in the Lonnie Sm ith trade, Rick Sutcliffe from

Los Angeles for outfielder Jorge Orta and Ed WhJtson
from San Francisco for second baseman Duane

Kuiper.
.
The Giants acquired pitchers Rich Gale from Kansas
City and Dan Schatzeder from Detroit during the winter, then swapped Vida Blue and Doyle Alexander,
their biggest winners last season, to the Royals and
Yankees on the last day before the Inter-league trading
deadline, in exchange for SIX young players.

Philadelphia got catcher Bo Diaz and reliever Sid
Monge from Cleveland and signed free agent reliever
Ed Farmer. Houston got third baseman Ray Knight
from the Reds for Cedeno, and the White Sox obta ined
first baseman-outfielder Tom Paciorek from Seattl e.
The Mariners purchased outfielder AI Cowens frum

Detroit and signed free agent pitcher Gaylord Perry,
who needs only three victories to reach 300 fur his
career.

Perry's bid to become baseball' s first300-game winner since Early Wynn reached that figure 19 years ago
is une of many goals that could be rce:.t&lt;.:hed this season.

Four other active pitchers. Chicago's Jenkins, Steve
Carlton of Philadelphia, Tom Seaver of Cincinnati and
Baltimore's Jim Palmer, also are on the road to 300

and could close the gap signi fi cantly this summer.
Jenkins goes into the season with 264 victones, Carlton
with 262, Seaver 259 a11d Palmer 248.
Jim Kaat of St. Louis, who like Perry IS 43 . starts his
24 th major league season. a record for pitche rs. and
has 278 car eer victories.

Perry IS second on the all-time strikeout llsl with
3,336, behind Walter Johnson·s 3,a08 . Whi le he might
not reach that goal, it docs seem within reach of

Houston's Nolan Ryan. The Astros' flreballing righthander is only 259 strikeout&lt; away from Johnson, and
Ryan has exceeded that fi gure in a season six tunes

during his career.
Carlton (3, 1481 , Seaver 13,0751 and Jenkins 12.962 1
also are among baseball's all-time strikeout leaders
and Jenkins needs only 38 more to become the seventh
pitcher to reach 3,000 for his career .
Before anybody gets to Johnson's slnkout mark
however, Pete Rose should reach Hank Aaron and
second place on the all-time base hit list. Rose, who wi U
be 41 on April 14, has 3,697 hits, 74 short of Aaron, who
will be inducted in!,\) the Hall of Fame this swnmer. Once Rose gets to Aaron's 3,771, the only man ahead of
him on the all-time hit list will be Ty Cobb, who had
4,191.
Rose also has three other career targets withm
range. He needs 454 at-bats to tie Aaron ( 12,3641 for first place, 55 games to lie Willie Mays 12,9921 for fifth
place, and 34 runs scored to tie Stan Musial 11,9491 for
fifth place.
·
lt$hould be an exciting season for younger stars, too.
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt will seek to become the
first player to win three straight Most Valuable Player
trophies, and 21-year-old Fernando Valenzuela will try
and repeat his brilliant rookie season with Los Angeles
when he became the first player to win both Rookie oi
the Year and Cy Young Awards.
Milwaukee's Hollie Fingers, the all-time leader in
saves with 272, could crack 300 in that category as he
tries to duplicate his brilliant 1981 season when he won
both the American League Cy Young and MVP awards.

,. IPete Rose says goal 'not a pipe dream'

the Falk.land Islands following the invasion Friday by
Argentina's forces. The carrier is still clad in tons of
scaffolding (left) which is being hurriedly removed as
the ship is prepared for sea. 1AP Wirephoto I.

CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) - Pete Rose can't understand why ·some
people in and out of baseball think his hope of breaking Ty Cobb's all-time
' career major league hit record is a pipe dream.
Rose, former Cincinnati Reds' superstar, will be 41 t.prill4 and needs an
: average of 165 hits per season for three years to erase Cobb's mark. That
· means he would have to play until he is 43 to accomplish the feat.
. "I can't believe that anyone who watched me play last year and watched
·· me perform in the off-season can say it's a pipe dream," Rose said while
· ~lowly recovering from a back muscle injury at the Philadelphi!_Phillies'

Projectionist reflects on life
and times of old movie theaters
By BOB ROBINSON '
Associated Press Writer
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (API For three score years; Elvin A.
Earley worked quietly behind the
scenes, bringing joy and delight to
generations of West Virginians who
never knew his n~me and never saw
his face. ·
Earley ran movie projectors, starting with a nickelodeon in I910 in
Bellaire, Ohio, across the river from
Wheeling.
"I was teaching school and didn't
like it, see," Earley, now 94, recalls.
"I went up to Bellaire and got work
right away in a fact!)ry. I think the
manager was Interested in me and
got me litto the picture busineS~&gt;."
Earley was charged with running
tbe nickelodeon, cranking the silent
films by band while others peered into tbe contraption to watch the early
film stars. Piimitive electrical
."equipment provided the light. .
"We took a barrel and filled It full
C'l ~ter and p11t salt on the bottom

Sunday, A ril4, 1982

Major league play
I.Jegins on Monday

tinued spewing Friday forced
helicopter Friday. "The conPichulcaclo Mayor Manuel Barballo sideration is that the danger is over
to close the town's jail and set free · andtheinhabitantscanstaythere."
its 16 prisoners.
However, geologist Federico
The mayor said he feared the jail's Mooser of the Federal Electricity
roof would collapse from the weight Commission told reporters Thurof the ash, adding: "At this time we sday that earlier eruptions could be
have more important"things to do only the beginning of volcanic acthan attend to delinquents."
tivity. El Chichonal rises about 4,314
Villagers who fled the area around feet above sea level with a main
El Chichonal volcano after a major crater 1. 75 miles wide.
Some 3,000 peasants in the town of
eruption Monday and a weaker one
Wednesday could be seen drifting Chapultenango, about 12 miles from
back to their homes Friday.
the base of the volcano, refused to
The volcano let off a powerful ex- vacate their homes.
plosion Friday morning which was
The villagers, who apparently
followed by a thick pall of smoke and feared their houses would be looted
ash. But despite predictions of in their absence, threw rocks at the
another major eruption, villagers relief team that told them they
and authorities appeared un- should • leave until the volcano
concerned.
quieted down.
Jaime Sabines, a Chiapas state
Defense Minister Gen. Felix
spokesman and brother of the gover- Galvan Lopez, asked about the innor, said no attempt would be made cident, said, "The army will not
to evacuate villagers reached by obligate anyone to abandon his
home."

g;~~~·~"';g;d~to··;;t'bigh-calorie Sources maintain Brezhnev still!
WASHJNGTON I API - Dieticians
are telling Soviet citizens to eat
more potatoes and sugar and less
meat, dairy products and fruits in
what U.S. experts say is a reflection
of the country's inability to produce
enough high-quality foods .
" It's back to potatoes and other
high-calone foodstuffs for Soviet
citizens in the coming years ... ," according to an analysis by Yun
Markish, an economist for the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
"The recent sizeable reduct10ns In
the norms for meal, vegetables and
fruit - to a level lower than any
published in the 1970s - and the
compensatory increases in potatoes
contrast sharply with past trends,"
Mark ish said.
U.S. agriculture econom ists
speculate that one reason for the
recent changes In dietary norms
published by Moscow is the
realization by Soviet experts that the
food production targets in the latest
Fiv~Year Plan are too ambitious.
"Assuming Soviet agiculture

Section

Cleveland releases Pat~e~y

. A m;BSAGE THERE- A'vldeO display term1aa1
bllDtecl II• menage bl· 8 - r empty Mlaueapoill,
MiDn. Star newsroom Friday as !he fiDaJ ec!fUon of the

•

•,.

•
.,._Star
pabliclllloll
aewp.per ud wOI merge AprD 5 wltb

SCar· Jay I.allby. Tbe
u a separJie

the Mllllleapolil Trlbwle. (AP Luerplloto).

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - The Cleveland Indians have released outfiel!ler Pat Kelly and optioned pitcher Silvio Martinez €b the minor
leagues.
Kelly, a 13-year major league veteran, was placed on .waivers for the
. ,, purpose of giving him his unconditional release Friday. Martinez was
.optioned to the Charleston Charlles of the Intemational League, the In·•
dlans' ClaS!J AAA farm team.
The cuts reduced the Americ8fl League team's roster to the opening
day limit of 25 players.
,
' ·
Ke)ly, 37, was hitleS!J in 10 spring at bats: He has one year to go on a
,-~, contract that will pay him about S125,000 this year.
·
He said he Will attend .divinity school and planll to become a
minister.
·
·
··
.
'
, , Martinez had a 2.53 earned- run average in 10 spring illllings.
. ,·: ,Manager Dave -Garcia, hQwever, said the right-hander hac! trouble
: ·,_ with his control.
,
' ·
• · The moves meant outfielder Rodney Craig, 24, and pitcher Dennis
~ · ·. Lewallyn, 211, would lie with the Indians when tliey open the season In
· : Milwaukee on Tuesday.
· .
• "I've spent 10 years In the minors waiUng for this day," Lewa1Iyn
• : said. "They even took my picture for a baseball card. That~s another
&lt; · first"
•
·

.·•:.,

.

·-.

.......

~·

training camp.
" For anybody to say it's an impossibility, I would say there is a heck of a
lot better chance that I do, than I don't," Rose said. "Unless my reflexes
;'tart to go or something like that."
That's what makes some people doubtful, Rose was told. How long can his
reflexes hold up? How many players can he number who got 165 hits at age
43 7
"For those who think I'm old; I was the first 4().year-old in the history of
baseball to lead the league in hits (last year)," Rose said. "It doesn't matter
/
now old you are, it's how old you play.
"That's what people don't understand. You can be 50 if you play like you're
30, what's the difference? Or you can be 30 and play like you're 60. There's a
big difference."
Rose said tbat_he has not lost any of the enthusiasm that earned him the
nickname "Charlie Hustle."
"That's what keeps me going, the enthusiasm. And being on a good team ·
has been a big plus for me my whole career," said Rose, who previously
&lt;i&gt;layed with the Cincinnati Reds. "I've always been on good teams, offensive
· teams, so the game is fun. I'm not really worried about it (Cobb's mark).
That's what peoj&gt;le want you to do, start worrying about it.
"I'U give it my best effort. I'm not going to play this season worrying about
it or thinking about it. I'm going to play ... thinking about getting to the
playoffs."
.
Last year, In baseball's strike-Interrupted seailon, Rose led the National
league in hits with 140 and was second in batting with a .325 average.
"I can't think of any three-year period in my career where I IuntPn't..-~
totaled 494 hits," Rose said. "And,that's aU I need to tie Ty Cobb. You can
take any three years in my career and you have to come up with over 500
hits.
.
"I call see no reason why .that should change. You've got to omit last y~r,
because it was a strike year," he added. "U there wasn't a strike, I'd ·
·
probably have gotten 210 or 212 hits.
1HE ROSE IN SPRING - Pblladelpbla Phillles Pete Rose smiles as
, · "I lhlok'you have to have different plateaus, although I don't ever put my
be takes pregame hallillg practice before tbe game with the Baltimore
~I ~oaiB ahead pl lily team," ROlle said. "But this year I hope to get
Orioles 'last week. Rose got two bits iD three at bats, apparently over his
. the 74 hits to pas8 Henry Aaron (for second place on the all-time hit llsl). You
back_problem. He wOI turn 41 on Aprll14. (AP Laserphoto) .
can't be No.I before you become No.2;''
.

•

�\

'

Page-C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va .

April4, 1982

GAHS boosters ·honor
cagers and wrestlers

.

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio

J . V. letters

Freshman Basketball
Todd Be rgdoll, cert ificate ; Brett
Bostic, numeral ; Kevin Car ty ,
numera l ; Jer r y Cal L num eral ; Dan·
ny Dresse l, nume ral ; Keith Fellure,
certifi ca te; Ed Griffin, ce rti fi cate;
Jua n McCabe, ce rtif ic ate; T . J .
Pa squal e, numeral ; Bobby Simm s,
certifi ca te; Gordon Sp let e, num er aL
and Gr eg Woodrum , numeral
Chee rl eaders ,ntroduced w er e·
Varsity- Mar ha Pro se, Cora
Wolfe, Rhond a -""-'shkar, Boudi
Niday , Lor i Hamilton and Kel l y

Wa ll.

annual banquet were, leU to rigbt, Phil King, Marl&lt;
Allen, James Lane, Marty Glenn and Tim Madison.

CAGERS HONORED - Gallipolis val'lilty cagel'li
receiving special awards during Friday nlgbt's 39th

Your Authorized
Goodyear Dealer!

agamst Gallipolis Monday

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'

OUR LOW PRICES
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TOP WRFSTLERS- Jeff Lahman, left, was named Gallia Academy
High Scbool's Most Valuable Player and Steve Bennett was named Most
Improved Player during Friday nlght's winter sports banquet.

SIMMONS OLDS.·CAD.·CHVEY, INC.
OFFERS THESE CASH SAVINGS •....

sophomores, but they will either
make us a respectable team if they
come through and pitch as they are
capable, or mediocre at best if they
don't."
The Meigs pitching ace will be
Roger Kovalchik, a veteran hurler
on the Meigs Varsity last season and
also on the Meigs Legion team.
Coach Saunders is looking for him to
have a good year. Meigs relievers

CoachSaunderswillnotonlygulde
theMarauderswithhisknowledgeof
the game, but also with his enthusiastic attitude on the sideline, a
definiteplusforhisteam.
Seventeen players are vying for
starting_ positions on the team, ineluding 10 seruors, three juniors, and
four sophomores. Coach Saunders
says, "We are mostly a senior oriented team, yet we will be inexperienced in many positions,having
only five returning lettermen all of
which are seniors.The rest of our
club has little or no varsity experience.
We are courting on our seniors to
be leaders on and off the field. This
will be one key to amount of suecess."
Early practices were limited to in
the gym, but in the past couple of
weeks several outdoor practices and
scrimmages have been very
beneficial. Saunders continued "Our
iqds have worked very hard this
spring preparing for the upcoming
season."
' :Saunders lists as another main
key to the season as the value of two
Sd!lhomore pitchers, Randy Stewart
~DJI Chris Burdette. Randy pitched
a few innings on Varsity last season
its· a freshman, while Chris is a
newcomer to varsity ball. Saunders
stated, "I hate to put pressure on our

will be Scott Harrison, Jim Boyer,
and Nick Riggs.

runners from third in give n
situations.
And overall things do look brighte r
for Meigs on down the line in
working towards a successful
season.
Last season Meigs was coached by
veteran mentor Dale Harrison.
Marauder Schedule
April 5, Gallipolis ; Apri l 6,
Soulhern; April 7, At Athens ; Ap r il
8. At Logan ; April 11, At Jackson ;

April 14. Waverly ; April 16, At'
Wellston ; Apri ll9.1 ronlon ; April21 .
At Gallipolis; Apri l 23. Alhens ; April
2.4, Trimbl e, Doubleheader ; A pril 26,
Logan ; April 28, Jack son; Apri l 29,
AI Southern ; April30. At Waverl y:
May 3, Well ston; May 4. Rav e n
~~~~:ay 5 • AI Ironton ; May 6·
Meigs Roster
Pos . Y r
Name

Ho~1

PT. PLEASANT Pl.
P leasant erupted w1th three runs in
the second inning, then held on to
defeat Gallipolis, &gt;-3, in a non-league
baseball game Friday evening.
The victory left the Big Blacks
with a 2-1 season record. Gallipolis
dropped to 1-2 on the year.
Tim Bush started fur the Blue
Devils. He was relieved by Derron
Haner with one out in the second

Bus h was charged with the loss.
Devin Slone sta rted for PPHS. He
was relieved by Ja y Wamsley in the
seventh.
The two Big Black hurlers fa nned
11 and walked four .
Gallipolis had three hits, a double
by Mike Edelmann and singles by
Scutt Korab and Joe Foster.
Aaron Vigelotti had two sa feti es,
Slone and Troy Duncan one each [jlr

Silt

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and only from Goodyear

Pag e- (-J

tllewtnners . .
·Galhpohs w11l open Southeastern
Ohio League play at Meigs Monday
eve ning. Pt . Pleasant will play at
Huntington East Tuesda y evening.
Linescore :
Ga llipolis
000 201 0-3-3-1
Pt . Pleasant
030 200 X- :&gt;-4-0
Batteries - Bush I LP 1. Haner 121
and Eutsler. Slone I WP I, J Warnsley (71 and Porter.

I Fair• Iand captu-res meet

I

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

Meigs will be strong at catcher
with the return of aii--SEOALselecCHESAPEAKE - The Meigs
Th1rd place fini s hers were as
hurdles w1th a 17.0 clockmg, and :'vl .
tlon Terry Wayland ba~k for his
Marauder
boys
tra
ck
team
recentl
y
follows
: Dave lan narelli in the 100
Kennedy
in
the
I
,600
meter
run
at
final year. Wayland is a great hitter
competed
in
a
three
way
meet
with
mclc r da s h a l1 2.4 seennds, M. Riffl e
5
:7.9.
as well as a great asset behind the
Kyger Creek and Fairland here
In the 400 mete r rela y Meigs sta r- at 2.3 1.9 in the 800 meter run. Scott
plate. "In my opinion, Terry is one
lnf 4
8
Wednesday and showed signs of
a nothe r line of second phce Eads at ?:J .7 in th e 200 meter run,
ted
of the best catchers in Southeastern
~=t';;'y ~;'~~ks
01 •
becoming
a
competitive
team
in
the
fmJ
shes
a Bub Ashley, John Smith. Troy Bauer in the Pole Vault at 9
~ Of
4
Ohio. He has a great ann, is very
X- John Cremeans
area.
~~~
M.
Hammond,
a nd Scott Eads trir- feet . and E. Blunt in the hi gh jump at
lnf
4
fundamental behind the plate, and
Dave Hoffman
C l nf 4
The only first place for Meigs was
5 fcct two in c hes.
ped
the
clock
at
49.8.
has a good stick. It's hard to find a
~~~~/~~~~l c hik
P lnl 4
David Iannare lli in the 400 meter
F'ourth place fini shers were Eads
John
Perrin
placed
sccond'
in
the
combination like this in a high school
Frank Martin
lnf 4
dash at 57 .8 seconds, however the
111
the 100 meter das h at 12.5 seconds,
400
meter
dash
at
60.0
seconds.
as
lnf
4
catcher," said the Meigs mentor of
Dave Reuter
team gave a good indication of depth
1nf 4
did Mike Kenned y in the 3,200 meter John Smith at 46 .1 in the 300 meter
Way lane\.
J . R. Wamsley
X- Terry Wa y land
C l nf 4
with a lot of2-3 and fourfinishes.
low hurdles. Bob Ashle y at 40 feet
run at II minutes, 17.9 seconds. The
Meigs is also looking at defense as
scoll Hamson
P lnl 3
Second place f inishers were K.
61 2 inches in the shot pot.
1,600
meter
rela
y
team
of
J
.
Perrin,
•
01
3
a stronghold.
Allan King
Scott, Matt Riffle, Greg Taylor, and
l nf of J
F'inal standings were Fairland
C. Sinclair, Ra ndy Murray . and
Meigs has a tight and improving
Brian Will
lnf 2
Dave Foil rod
Troy Bauer in the 3,200 meter rela y,
Greg
Tay
lor
a
lso
grabbed
a
second
.
100'·'·
Me1gs 41 ·~. and K y~e r Creek
infield. The outfield has good arms
Nic k Riggs
O f · inf 2
Bob Ashley in the 110 meter high
25 . M e i~s· next meet is Apri l3 at the
Pole
Vault
E.
Blunt
vaulted
In
the
P
ot
2
and fine speed. "Our kids are
Randy Stewart
Fairland Invitational.
P of 2
II feet.
staying down on the ball and playing
Chris Burdelle
fundamentally well. We are going to , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - take chances in the outfield at
almost any catchable ball, trying to
make things happen. It will be important to back each other up on
every play with the chances we will
take."
Meigs hopes its hitting will be an
asset to its game. They have been
making good contact at the plate in
practice. The Marauders hope to
create situations where they can force its opponent into defensive
miscues such as squeezing home

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel

P,,oint Pleasant, W.va .

Mei~s opens.Iea~e Season 1 Pt. Pleasant tops GAHS, 5-3
POMEROY
The Meigs
Marauder baseball team has been
working very hard during the
preseason in preparation for the 1982
baseball season. First year Coach
Tim Saunders is looking anxiously to
the upcoming season.
Saunders, a Rio Grande graduate,
and fonner area baseball standout
will be at the helm of the Marauders
in 1982.

Steve Wo lf e. Jeff Rathburn , John
Bos ti c. Ja son Hogan, Jeff M ee k,
Ray T ope, Tom Dun ca n, Brad
Smith ,
Kevin
Car t e r,
Chris
E ll cessor, Dave Garber. and Jimmy
Beave r .

R ese r ve-Connie Zeol i, Jean in e
Beave r , Terri Sm eltz er, Christine
Haffelt, Robin Spen ce r and Kim
Sa under s.
Freshman- Jo Ellen Oliv er , Ke ll y
Graham , Jacki e Proffitt , Crissy
Richie, Mandy North and Jo Anne
Stewart .

Pomeroy

•

and in sert ; Tim Madi son, insert. and
Tim Lani er , insert .
Second Yea r Award-Phil King,
m edal ; Mike Ed l emann, ce rtifi ca te,
and Kevin Isaacs, ce rtifi ca te.
Managers- Don McCallister , cer·
f if ica te, Kevin Plant s, ce rtifi ca te,
and Jeff Sa nder s.

Top basketball award, Most
Valuable Player, ~-ponsored by
Tawney's Studios, was shared by
Phil King and James Lane of the
198HI2 Southeastern Ohio League
champion Blue Devils. It was
presented by Dave Tawney ,
president of the boosters club.
Lane also ca ptured the Best
Rebounder Award, !Steve Thompson Memorial Trophy 1 sponsored
by the GAHS Athleti c Department
and presented by Bill Wamsley,
athletic director.
King won the Most Assists Award,
c(}-sponsored by Dr. Gerald Vallee
and Dr. Gene Abels and presented
by Dr. Vallee. King s hared the Best
F'oul Shooting honors with Tim
Madison . That trophy is sponsored
by the OWE Club at GAHS, and was
presented by Steve Haner.

April4, 1982

..

i n se rt ; Ru ss Bergdoll , le tt er and in·
ser t; L ynn Sheet s, letter and in sert;
M ark A ll en, inse rt ; Br ya n Clark , let
te r and 1nse rt: Jamie Lane. letter

GALLIPOU5-Fifty-i!ight winter
athletes, six managers, varsity,
reserve and freshmen cheerleaders
were guests of honor during Friday
mght's annual GAHS Winter Sports
Banquet, sponsored by the Gallipolis
Blue Devil Boosters Club.
Highlight of the evening was
presentation of individual awards by
various coac hes in Gallia
Academy's basketball and wrestling
programs.
Top wrestlmg honor went to Jeff
Lanham, Most Valuable.
Steve Bennett was named Most
Improved.
Rick Howell , GAHS wrestling
coach, and Henni Sanders, on behalf
of Gallia Cleaning and Renovating,
Inc.. and Nationwide Insurance.
presented the awards . Latunan was
Jj)-2 on the year, Bennett 22-17.

·

·CHESIDRE - The high flying
EQstern Eagles bombed host Kyger
d-eek 11·2 here Friday evening in an
l;lJAC baseball contest, that left
El;!stern at 3-1 overall and ~ in the
l8$gue. Kyger Creek drops to 2-4
OVerall and H within the league.
_: Eastern enjoyed another fine of·
fe(lsive night collecting nine hits led
!If Mark Holter's double and single,
~two singles by Johnny Beaver.
;',;Rogie Gaul kept his hitting streak
Jlllve with a single, Mike and Roger
Jllssell had singles, Nick Leonard
~gled, and Deroo Jewett singled.
: For Kyger Creek Anthony Kitchen
:singled, J. D. Bradbury singled,
:tarry Edge singled, and Tim Price
:Siilgled to account for the K. C.
Jllfeties.
:; !'astern raced to a 3-() lead after
9J1e inning, added a run in the third,
"mid two each in the fourth and fifth
:timings.
; :Eastern ended its attack with
lhi-ee more tallies in the sixth Inning,
lYhile KC added single runs in the
~rd and fifth frames.

In the first inning, Beaver led off
the game with a single and then stole
second. Mike Bissell pounded an
RBI single for the first run, then
Chris Allen walked to put runners on
first and second.
Rob Smith got every ounce of
wood on the ball as he sent a long
drive to left center for a sacrifice fly.
The Eastern runners advanced a
base then• ooth came home on an
overthrow by the catcher at third.
Steve Waugh went the distance for
KC, while Jeff Jones went five innings to pick up the win for EHS. He
fanned three and walked three in his
stint on the mound. Holter came on
in relief to finish the game, !aiming
one and walking two in his two innings of work.
Eastern played a doubleheader
with Federal Hocking Saturday.
Linescore:
Eastern
301 223 0-11 9 3
KC
001 010 0- 2 (! 64
Batteries: Jones (WP), Holter and
Leonard. Waugh (L) and Matt
Polcyn.

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�Page- C-4- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Ap • il 4, 1982

April 4, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

AP Sports Writer
Utah's losing streak is over. The
Kansas City Kings just couldn't handle Adrian Dantley , Darrell Griffith
.. . and all that Jazz.
" Nobody played A.D. in the first
half. We were almost giving it to
him," Kansas City Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons moaned after Dantley
scored 42 points - hitting 14 of 19
field goal attempls an(! all 14 free
throws - 10 Utah's 127-118 victory . ll
ended the longest losing streak of the
National Basketball Association
season at 18 games, two short of the
league record set by the 1971&gt;-71
Philadelphia '/6ers.
" Kenny 1Dennard I stopped him in

FREE
WITH THIS

the third quarter," Fitzsimmons
said. "Nobody could handle him in
the fourth quarter, though ...
"Mind you, they deserved to win.
It was not a thing of beauty; it was
pretty sloppy."
Griffith added 30 points as the Jazz
rallied from behind in t11e closing

than five minutes ·remaining, then
Dantley and Griffith led a nine-point
surge and to give Utah a 11&amp;-112lead
with 2:55 to go. Griffith's three-point
basket with 37 seconds left made it
123-116.
Mike Woodson, Larry Drew and
Steve Johnson scored 23 points

minutes to win their 20th game of the

apiece for Kan.sas Ci ty .

season - they've lost 53 - and their
first since Feb. 23. They 've got nine
games to go.
" Last Tuesday ." Utah Coach
Frank Layden said, " we pledged to
ourselves that we were going to play
a !().game season and we were going
to do our best to win them all.
"We're now!-{) _"
Kansas City led 11 2- 107 with Jess

Elsewhere in the NBA it was
Philadelphia 135, Cleveland 115;
Milwaukee 114, Chicago 105; Boston
110, Atlanta 107; New Jersey 98,
Washington 96 ; Phoenix 109, Los
Angeles 99; Denver 127, Portland
121, and Seattle 111, San Antonio86.
76ers 135, Cavs ll5
This year's edition of the 76ers is a
far cry from that crew of II seasons

ago - especially with the return of
Darryl Dawkins.
The Philadelphtil center, who
missed 28 games with a broken leg,
played 31 minutes, scored 15 points
and had 11 rebounds, three blocked
shots and four assists against
Cleveland, his best performance since returning to action seven games
ago.
" I'm tired ... My dunks lacked
authority, but they had enough to get
there," said the former backboard
smasher.
,Bobby Jones scored 22 points and
Lionel Hollins 20 as the 76ers handed
Cleveland its lOth consecutive
defeat. James Silas of the Cavs had
31. "It's nice to score 31, but the ob-

ject is to*'in," he said. "We've got to
play over our heads to beat the
Sixers."
Bucks 114, Bulls 105
Brian Winters got hot down the
stretch, scoring seven field goals in
the final five minutes - including
six consecutive jump shots- to lead
the Bucks past Chicago. Before that
burst, he'd managed only three
"baskets.
"I was really struggling," he said.
"In fact I was just plain lousy . When
I got my first basket in the final
quarter (to tie it at 100-100) I got a
pretty good feeling. But when I hit
my second shot a short time later l
knew I had found the groove."
Milwaukee won its fourth in a row

and the Bulls dropped their fourth
straight.
Marques Johnson and Mickey
Johnson hit 24 points ·apiece and
Winters got 20 for the Bucks. Ronnie
Lester had 17 for Chicago.
Celtlcs llO, Hawks 107
Larry Bird scored 24 points, two
on free throws that broke a 107-107
tie in the closing minute, then Kevin
McHale grabbed a rebound and sank
a foul shot to seal Boston's victory
over Atlanta.
Eddie Johnson of the Hawks had a
chance to tie the Celtics with two
free throws three seconds from the
end. But he missed the first shot,
then mi ssed the second intentionally.

----------------------------------------SALE ENDS
APRIL 17th, 1982

SALE ENDS
APRIL 17th, 1982

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GaiDSemlfiDals
: ·ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) Vilas Gerulaitis beat John Fitigerald of Australia ~7, &amp;-1, ~and
Bill Scanlon defeated Guillermo
Vilas of Argentina &amp;-4, &amp;-4 in the
quarterfinals of a $300,000 World
qwnpiolllhip Tennis tournament.
· ·In either matches, Kevin Curren of ·
~Ill Africa downe&lt;l Corrado Baraz..
IUtti of Italy 1).2, 7-6, and Frenclunan
. Pascal Portes oUsted Shlomo
Glickstein of lsraelS-2,"4-6, 7-5.

Conalltutlon

Page--C-5

AP Sports Writer
Carlton in the fourth inning and the
give the Padres a ~2 victory over ~ •
Rick Leach was a star quarNew York Yankees defeated,_ the
theA's.
at the· University of
Phillies 7-2. Winfield drove in·lour
AI Holland, who will start San
Micblgan from 1975-78, but his
runs with a single and two-run
Francisco's opener, allowed one run
career passing average was nothing
doujlle in addition to his homer.
and two hits in five innings as the
con:'pared with his average this
Bruce Benedict also drove in four
Giants broke a four-game losing
RAVENSWOOD - A Chip Martin delle came on for a third of an inning Kovalchik home run and a Jim
spnng.
runs as the Atlanta Braves boosted streak by beating the Cleveland I&amp; double in the bottom of the seventh to put out the fire but the score was Boyer double. Elgin pulled close at
, Of course, Leach plays a .different
their spring record to ~ with a 7-5
dlans 7-2.
inning lifted the Ravenswood Red tied 3-3.
5-4 in the second inning, but in the
sport these days, having been decision over the Houston Astros.
Larry Hisle hit his fifth home run Devils to a 4-3 victory over the Meigs
In that frame, Ravenswood collec- bottom half of the inning Kovalchik
named earlier in the week as the
Benedict hit a two-run homer in the
of the spring, sparking a five-run Marauders here Friday in a non- ted four walks before Pat Balue delivered another towering home
regular first baseman for the Detroit
second inning, an RBI single in the
Milwaukee ninth inning as the league baseball contest. . Raven- provided the big blow which was a run for a 7-1 Meigs lead. Each club
Tigers. He celebrated Friday with
fourth and 8 tie-breaking sacrifice
Brewers and Chicago Cubs played to swood is 2-1 while Meigs drops to~2- twcrrun single.
scored single runs in the fourth, the
four hits, including ~ twCHIUt single fly in the sixth.
7-7
Ue
in
a
game
called
after
inI.
Going
into
the
final
inning
score now 11-!i. Elgin tied the score at
8
10
in the ninth that drove in the winning
The Boston Red Sox ripped six
nings by mutual agreement because
After two scoreless innings, Meigs deadlocked at three, Meigs hoped to eight each in the fourth, and single
run - in the Tigers' 8-7 exhibition straight hits off Pat Zachry in the the Cubs had to catch 8 flight to took charge by plating one run in the hold on, but after a walk Martin runs in the fifth dropped the curtain
Chicago.
top of the third. Randy Stewart IJid doubled home the winning run. on the final 9-9 deadlock. Roger
baseball victory over the Pittsburgh sixth inning for five runs _ inPirates.
eluding doubles by Wade Boggs,
Brad Mills' 12th-inning single gave off the inning with a double, tll!n Meigs' hitters were Randy Stewart Kovalchik started for Meigs, going
In four yeal1! at Michigan, Leach Carney Lansford, Rich Gedman and
the Montreal Expos a 3-2 triumph rode home on a double by Tony with a perfect night of two for two four and twcrthirds innings giving up
completed 250 of 537 passes - both Glenn Hoffman _ and downed the
over the Baltimore Orioles. Jewell.
with two doubles, Tony Jewell a nine hits, four walks, and four
walk and a double, and Jim Boyer a strikeouts, while allowing four earschoo1 reco
New York Mets 7-5.
Baltimore's Eddie Murr_ay homered
Me1·gs stayed on top for four walk and single.
· rds
he -ha for 46.6 percent
ned runs. Chris Burdette came on in
This
s 20 hits
Larry Parrish made his debut
off_ Woodl_e
Fryman to tie the game 2- ~ stra 1·ght 1·nn 1·ngs behind Stewart's
•- spnng,
f
· lin
555 in 36 atthe
For Ravenswood Martin doubled relief, a llowing three hits, one walk,
ba..,. or a siZZ g .
batting with Texas and hit a twcrrun homer,
2 In
e1ghth.
'!chi
ff t Th M
d
average, plus a team-leading 13 runs
while Buddy Bell rapped out three
Duane Walker's bases-loaded Peoa' hnTge Saor · e . arau ers of twice and walked, Balue singled, and a strike out. Kovalchik was
. the lith . .
batted in
.
d dr
·
th
c 1m unders Increased their and Ables singled.
three for three with two home runs,
,
, , ·
lated bee
smg1es an
ovede inthtwo runs as the
sCinmg1_e 10ti "-~- ~nrung. gave e lead in the top of the fifth inning
Larry Carter went the distance for a double, and five RBI's.
11 y t e th
defeat
e Kansas City th cmna
""""
a rr VIctory
· doubled and RHS collecting nine strike outs while Boyer had a double and two walks,
when stewart agam
had1 m rea
back
ll ause · 1tve Rangers
R
n •
St Louis
Cardinals
Mik Vover
.,
1
0
11
1
my
e wa a WIO er
oya s ""·
e · h
.
. · . e. ai s later scored on a single by Jim walking three. Meigs pitchers John Cremeans a double and a walk,
and spring," he said. " All the talk
Bob Boone singled home the winone-out omer 10 the runth mrung off Boyer. Boyer later came home when Stewart, Burdette, and Kovalchik while J . R. Wamsley walked twice.
about this club never involved me, ning run in the top of the ninth in- Enc Rasmussen sent the game mto a Meigs runner edged off first and fanned four, walked eight, and perMeigs plays Gallipolis in the
and that hhaurt. I came down here ning, giving the California Angels a extra innings: .
decoyed the Red Devils on a run- mitted four hits .
SEOAL league opener on Monday at
knowing 1 d to have a good spring 2-1 victory over the Los Angeles
Buck Martinez bounced a bases- down play the score 3-0
Meigs High School.
9
at the plate, and I did. I went out and Dodgers before a crowd of 32,241 at
loaded single over a drawn-in infield
'
·
~ Tiethe Marauders
Linescore ._
Thursday evening
had the best spring I've ever had. I Dodger Stadium.
in the bottom of the ninth inning,
Stewart won four and tw&lt;rthirds
1 d M · E 1·10 batt!'10 t0 "
Meigs
001 020 0- 3 4 1
had to prove I could be an effective
San Diego's Juan Eichelberger, in giving the Toronto Blue Jays a 2-1
ayebefore
anon
g ' set in after
g five
a"" Ravenswood
000 030 1_ 4 4 1
innings before bowing down as 9Ptie
darkness
major league hitter.
his final tuneup before Tuesday's victory over the Minnesota Twins.
Ravenswood ignited its offense for nnings.
Batteries: Stewart, Burdette 5,
"Earning the job makes it real opening-day start, limited Oakland Toronto's Alfredo Griffin homered three runs in the bottom half of the
In the first inning. Meigs blasted Kovalchik 6, and Jewell. Carter
sweet. lfeel proud because I always
to one hit in seven innings and Terry in the first inning.
inning tying the score. Chris Bur- off to a :;._1 lead behind a Roger (WP) and Koiner.
kept a good attitude. A lot goes back . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - _ ; _ - - - - - ' - ' - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - to what Bo (Michigan football Coach
Bo Schembechler) taught me in
college. He's a stickler for hard
work, and that helped me when I had
to go out there and earn a spot this
spring."
Manager Sparky Anderson said
Leach, a former outfielder, came to
see him over the winter.
"He asked for the chance to gain
the first base job," Anderson said.
"I said, 'All right.' By doing that, he
ran the risk of not making the
ballclub at all. He was going for all
the marbles. But you earn it and it's
yours.''
The Pirates had tied the score in
the sixth inning on a pinch three-run
bomer by veteran slugger Willie
Stargell, who is ending his big
leagw! career this season, while
Leach is beginning his except for 83
at-bats a year ago.
In other games, Dave Winfield and
Rick Cerone hit consecutive home

FRANKFURT, West Germany
(AP) - Chip Hooper upset
·Czechoslovakia's Tomas Smid ~2. 57, &amp;-2 to advance to the semifinals of
-a $250,000 Grand Prix tennis tournament.
Joining Hooper in the semifinals
will be Brian Gottfried, a &amp;-3, 4-6, &amp;-3
•winner over Rod Frawley of
Australia; Ivan Lend! of
Czechoslovakia, who defeated Steve
-Penton 6-4; 4-6, 6-3 ; and Peter McNamara of Australia, who beat Tim
~yotte 6-4, &amp;-4.
Noah Advances
NICE, France (AP) - Yannick
Noah of France advanced to the
semifinals of the $75,000 Grand Prix
tournament by defeating Ramesh
Krishnan of India &amp;-3, 7-6.
: In other matches, Balazs Taroczy
of Hungary beat Jose Luis Damiani
Of Uruguay ~7, ~1. 9-7 ; Fernando
Luna of Spain beat countryman
~el Gimenez 3-6, ~2. &amp;-2, and
Italian Claudio Panatta dispatched
Spain's J0541 Garcia 6-3, 4-6, &amp;-4.
:
Borg Survives
•. MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP)Bjorn Borg of Sweden sufVIved his
first qualifying match in five years
With a 7-5, ~ victory over Italian
Paolo Bertolucci in a bid for a berth
lr) the $300,000 Monte Carlo Grand
Prix Tennis Tournament.
· In other matches, Marco Ostoja of
V.ugoslavia posted a 3-6, &amp;-4, &amp;-4
triumph Dver Juan Aguilera of
sPain. and Jlnuny Arias scored a &amp;4,,S.7, &amp;-4 victory over SW9!1en's Per
HJerquist.

ouR-AR1iSTRONG-REPRESENTAfivfi
WILL BE IN OUR STORE ON
l
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1982. l
PRESENT THIS COUPON TO ED AND lI
RECEIVE A 10% DISCOUNT
1
ON CEILINGS.
I

--------------------,
I

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

,

.Hooper
:advances

CEILING
_____ PANEL

l

w. va .

1

CAROLINA
LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY COMPANY*

Phone 675·1160

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

f!.~~~~ S!~ Jo!l!-~Is-~s netroit nips Pittsburgh I
Devils top Marauders
te~back

Utah ends losing streak at 18 with ·victory over Kings
By BRUCE !--OWITf

Pomeroy

-

®

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

April 4, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-7

Gallipolis Boat Club season opens May 1 Young Marauders win meet

liEMPO·
POWER STREAK or
POWER STREAK II

•All Season Radial
•2 Steel Belts · Whitewall
SIZE
P155/80R13
P185/ 80R 13
P185/75R14
P195/75R14
P205/75R 14
P215/75R 14
P225/75R 14
P205/75R 15
P215/75R 15
P225/75R 15

REPLACES
155x13
CR78x13
CR78x14
ER78x14
FR78x14
GR78x14
HR78x14
FR78x15
GR78x15
HR78x15

SALE
PRICE
$39.00
49 .00
58.00
60.00
63.00
65.00
67.00
64 .00
67.00
69.00

•Our Newest Diagonal-ply Tir~
e'll Ply Polyester·Biackwall .....
•Shoulder-gripping edges for extra bile into
curves.

DOMESTIC RADIAL
•All Season Radial
•2 Steel Bells - Blackwall

•Two Durable Steel
Belts
•Black
European
De s ign
Sale
Size
Price
155R12 . ...... .. $35.00
155R13 .......... 36.00
165R13 ........ . . 39.00
175/70R13 ....... 43.00
175R14 .......... 44.00
185/70R14 ....... . 46.00
195/ 70R 14 ....... 48.00
11.41 toS1. 17.

Sa le
Price
$46.00
48 .00
53.00
59.00
63.00
65.00
67.00

Size
P155/ 80R 12
P1 55/ 80R 13
P165/ 80R13
P175/70R 13
P185/70R 13
P175/75R 14
P185/70R14

Plus Federal E xc .se T;u
Sl.J9 to S1.85 .

of

CUSHION
BELT POLYGAS

Plus Federal Excise Tax of

.

LIGHT TRUCKS AND VANS
TRACKER LT
• Flilt

treild

for

lonq , eve n

Sale
Size
Price
G78x 15 .......... 60.00
H78x 15 .......... 65.00
l78x 15 .......... 72.00
8.00x16.5 . ....... 73.00
8.75x16 .5
76.00
9.50x16.5 ....... 84 .00
9.50x16.5 RWL .. -' 91.00

'

..

design
• Keeps its footprint
even in the rain
• Whitewall
e2
steel
b e I Is
Size

Sa le
Replace Price
155x13

P155 - 0R1J
. P175/75R14
P185/75R14
P195/75R14
P105/75R14
P105/75R15
P115175R 15

BR78x14
CR78x14
ER78x14
FR78x14
FR78x15
GR78x15

P22517SR15

HR78xl5

P135175R15

LR78x15

159
63
66
69
69
74
76

81

Plus Federal Excise Ta x of
Sl

53 toll 01

RV - LIGHT TRUCK

TRACKER XG

wear
• Usc for front or rear wheel
dnvc
e Rugq cd 6 or 8 ply nylon

CUSTOM
POLYSTEEL
eOriginal equipmenT

• Our best non-radial
•
• Two tough Fiberglass
belts over polyester
Sale
Size
Price
B78x13 . .. .. .. . . $40.00
D78x14 ...... .. . . 46.00
E78x 14 .......... 48.00
F78x14 .......... 51.00
G78x 14 . . .... . ... 53.00
G78x15 .......... 54.00
H78x15 ..... ... . . 58.00
l78x15 .......... 62.00

• Deep lug traction for mud ,
sa nd , snow
• Ou1ck r·1dc on or off road

Sale
Size
Price
H78x15 .......... 69.00
700x15 .... . ..... 71.00
750X16 ......... . 74.00
8.00x16.5 . . ...... 74 .00
875x16 .5 .... .. .. . 86.00
9.50x16.5 . . . ..... 94.00
Plus Federal Excise Tax of
3.44 to 4.43 .

WRANGLER BIAS
e Aggressive,
se lf -cleaning
deep lug
• Long
wearing 4 ply
polye ster
• Rai sed white letter s

TRACKER AT
f{iC,~~~

1

F70· 14 ...... ... . $52.00
l78· 15 ........... 60.00
31 -1050·15 ........ 90.00,
31 · 1150·15 ........ 94 .0«1
31·1050·16.5 ..... 109.00

• Raised open letters
e4 ply all purpose
polyester
Sale
Size
Pr~£e
9-15 ........... $84.00
10·15 .......... . . 89.00
11 ·15 ............ 91.00
Plus F edera l Excise Tax of
$3 .67 to S4.5 1.

F ederal Excise Tax of S2.S4 to

14.10

Federal E xc tse Tax of 3.10 to
4 . 21.

RADIAL RV

AUTO SERVICE SPECIALS

MONROE RADIALMATIC
WRANGLER RADIAL ALL SEASON
' • Outline white letters
• Polyester plus steel belt strength
• Traction on or off road
2F·850R14 ....... . ... ............... $86.00
9R -15 . .. ...... .. .... ... ....... . ..... 99.00
10R · 15 . ...... ... . ... . .. ... ........ . 109.00
31 ·1150R15 ....... .. ................ 119.00
7.50Rx16 ..... . ..................... 119.00
800x16.5 . ... .. . ..... .......... .... .. 99.00
875x16.5 .............. .. ........ .. .. 119.00
Federal Excise Tax of 53.06 to 54.69

of open river boaiing on the Ohio and
30 miles on the Kanawha can be enjoyed without passing through a
lock .
Raccoon Creek, Crooked Creek,
Leading Creek, Campaign Creek,
Gallipolis Islanu, and Ei~ht-Mile
Island are popular stopping places
for Gallipolis boaters.
Dass, sauger, catfish, and crarr
pies are caught in abundance near
the club. Frog gigging and turtle
hunting are popular pastimes for
sportsmen of the area.
Water skiing, boat camping, artifact collecting, and real relaxing
are enjoyed on the numerous treeshaded, sand beaches within easy
travel distance from the club. Many
marine buffs enjoy watching commercia! tow boats and paddle-wheel
steamers which ply the inland
waterway system, in addition to
visiting historic sites such as Point
Pleasant, the location of the first
battle of the Civil War, Ellen-

Other local attractions in the area
are the Bob Evans Farm and
restaurants, Raccoon Creek Canoe
Livery, Our House, Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy Salt Works, 0. 0. Mclnlyre's grave, the Art Colony
museum, Holzer Medical Center,
and numerous other places within
walking or driving range.
Many club activities are planned
for the \1182 season: a Spring marine
swap meet, a Fourth of July pig
roast, an August club cruise, and a
gala October Annual Meeting, in addition to weekly interdock activities.
Deer, geese, owls, ducks,
muskrats, beavers, egrets, mud and
snapping turtles,
raccoons,
opossum, coyotes, herons, and other
such wildlife have been sighted by
club members.
The Gallipolis Boat Club is now accepting applications for membership for the six-month 1982
season. Persons desiring application
fonns should contact Conunodore

convenience,

Gallipolis roller dam and four miles

nerhassett Island and castle, the

George Durst at 6141384-3974 or
should write 504 E. Broadway,

SHOCKS
BUY 3 GET 1 FREE
MONROE MAGNUM 60

SHOCKS
BUY 1 GET 2nd Y2 ·PRICE
LOW COST INSTALLATION AVAILABLE

.,

~.

,

stores

and

By Gary Clark
MASON - Randy Buck limited
the Wahama White Falcons to five
hannless singles and Jim Bird swatted two towering home runs in
leading the visiting Spencer Yellow
Jackets to a convincing 10·1 baseball
victory over the bend area diamondm!!_n of Coach Gordon Spencer.
The setback was the first of the
1982_~ampaign for Wahama after
the FalconS- had won- in their first
two outings of the season over Meigs
and Southern.
Friday's contest was halted in the
seventh inning due to darkness and
erased two more Yellow Jacket runs
wnich had crossed the plate in the
uncompleted frame.
Spencer got off on the right foot in
the opening inning when leadoff
batter Bird smacked a high drive
in.!_o the left field bleachers for an
early 1-0 Yellow Jacket lead.
Wahama retaliated In their half of
the inning when Darren Gilland
singled, went to second on an error,
advanced to third on a passed ball
and sCI&gt;red the tying run on Jim
Powell's fielder's choice.
The Yellow Jackets regained the
advantage for good in the second
frame after taking advantage of
some shoddy Falcon fielding with
WHS committing three errors in the
irullng. A walk' and an error put
runners on first and third followed
by a run producing single by
Nichols. A stolen base and still yet
another error permitted Spencer its
· third run of the game and an early
3-llead.
.
Buck stymied the Falcon hitters
with Wahama mounting only one
real serious threat after scoring
their lone run in the first inning.
The locals managed to load the
bases in the sixth with one out on
singles by Darren Gilland and Steve
Lyons and a base on balls to George
Zlispan but Buck closed the door
unscathed by getting the next two
men on fly outs to end the threat.
Spencer added two runs in the
fifth and five more In the sixth to
put the game on ice. Three oi the
Yellow Jackets tallies In that sixth
riame came on Bird's second round
tripper of the night In what would
liove to be one of the longest balls
ever hit at Bachtel Field.
·-The Yellow Jackets outhit
Wahama 7-5 with Bird owning two
llQmers and a single while Nichols,
Mare, Nichols and Allen all had
sfngles. Wahama received two•
silfetles from shortstop Darren
Gilland and one single each from
George Zuspan, Steve Lyons and
Nonn Laudennilt."
. 'Laudennllt, the second of four
Falcon hurlers, was tagged with the
mound defeat despite pitching
allmirable ball. The big lefthander
was the victim of some shoddy
White Falcon fielding which sa.w his
fel!orddlp to 0-16n the season. Buck
~t the distance for . Spencer
giving up one unearned run on live
bits while striking out five and
,iaDtlng one.
. ·
, .Both Wahama spring sports
·Uams reswne acUon on Tuesday by
~vellng ~ Kyger Creek for a pair
jlf.J:SO p.m. games. On Wednes~y
~ the- girls softball and boys
iWebelliiCiuads are sebeduled to be .
-~
Hocking to cloae out the
li!,ek belofll thll Easter brea~.
~ ~: .·

·1m ll2S-\0-7·2
~
.
100 1011'- loW
1..l!atteries - DaviB, Laudennllt;
(lt LP; Spradlli)g (5), Rollins (8);
dil4 Zuspan,
(WP)
and Mare.
. Buck,
.
\

·'

1600M .. 5 37, Slurgd l IOH)
400MIRI . 55 65,Meigs
800M. 2:38, Brown IOHI
100M, :28.30. McCoy IOH I
1600M IRI. 4:JB, Meigs

POMEROY - The Meigs Junior
High track team swept the Oak Hill
Oaks in 10 events, including four
relays, and took eight first, nine
second and 10 third place finishes in
other events at the meet Thursday .
Meigs' boys outscored the Oaks
7\.f&gt;-37.5 while the girls won 85-29.
Results were :

-...._

Girls ' Events

Shot. 24' 10". Soothworlh IMl .
Discus, 6 1' S' 11 ", McCoy ( OHl
Long Jump, 13', Swa rtz (Ml
H igh Jump, 4' 5", Neece (Ml

100 LH, 18.6B . Stapton IO HI
100M, : 13.70. English IMI
1600M . 6:58.36. Rdll e IMI
400M IR) , :58 53. Meogs
400 M. 70.B8. Anderson IMI
200M. 30 B. Engl• sh IM I
1600M IRI. 515. Me•gs
BOOM. J 07 64 . R•ggs IMI
BOOM IRI . 2 08 B6. Me•QS

Boy s' Event s
Shol , 41 ' SJ• ", Belcher ( QH )
Di sc us, 98' 2111", Belc her (Q H J
Long Jump, 15' 8", Wise (M)
Hi g h Jump, 5', Chancey (M)
Pol e va ult . 7' 6". Korn (M)

11 0 LH . :10.31 , Kennedy IMI

100M , 13.49 , Chan cev I M l

Watson's 7-under par, 137 tops field
GREENSORO, N.C. (API _ Denis
Watson posted a 7-under-par 6!) for a
137 total and a 1-shot lead after the
second round of the $300,000 Greater
Greensboro Open .
Danny Edwards had a par 72 and
was one slroke back at 138 _
Claims Lead

the $310,000 Nabisc(}-l)inah Shore
women 's tournament .

Transactions
11

~:i~~j1",! 1 •

PACE "" ""'

,. ~.:

00

RANCHO MIRAGE, Ca lif. (AP ) _

M•ke

M I' A - Na mcJ

Md'"'"'"
Rwharll

,.,.,."
SdmnJt

525

69¢qt
79¢qt
89¢qt

Kelly Springfield Poly
Whitewalls Benchmart 78
•

Wide grooves tor good traction on wet

pavement
• Five continuous riding ribs for good
mileage
• A great tire value!
SIZE
PRICE
SlZE

Nationwise 10W40 ·

Kendall 10W30

B78x 13.

'27

E78x14
F7Bx14
G78x14

1

H78xl4

536

Kendall OSL &amp; Racing
Oils 30, 40, SOW . 99'qt
specs o f SF•CC

Fram Oil Filters

3.19 Reg.

Lim1t 2

37

'39

A70xl3

B60xl3 . . '42
E60xl4 . . '47
G60xl4 .
'51
L60xl 4 . ... . '59
G60xl5 . . '52
L60xl5 ..... '60
E70x 14 ..... '43

4.44

Fram Air Filters

For most domest 1c &amp; impor t s
Limit 2

(Vega. Oresel &amp; Turbo avarlabre a:
slrghlly fugher prrcesl

FET 179 -407

6~ea.
Non Resistor

Autotron
Tune Up
Kits and
Distributor
Caps
Tune Up Klts
Reg . 2.95-4.75
Sale
. 2.88

Reg. 79'

~~~-~

1

• Double poly cords lor strength
and stability with two fiberglass
belts
• Outlined white letters
SIZE
PRICE
SlZE

2.19 Reg . 3.44

Except HP -1, HP -4

•Js

600xl5
G78,15
H78x1 5
L78x15

Kelly Springfield
Super Chargers
50, 60, 70 Series

DSL lor automotive d1esels
Sale Oils Limit 12 qt s
C &lt;~•

34

FET!l22 79

Kendall 10W40

Oris e•ceed all new

.'

~

A78xl3

Realator

Reg. 99'

Limll 16

'4plypoi~ C OHIIoro s

1.29ea.
Reg . 1.95

6 cyl.

f=== - --'1 Reg. 7.95

Kravex
Wire
Sets
3000

oxcep1 elec rgn

Autollte
Spark
Plugs

F70xl4 .
G70xl4
G70x15 .
' B50xl3
'M50xl4
'N50xl5

WD· 40
9 oz . spray

Sarlos

---~---

98~

1.88 5oz.

4oz.
Reg. 1.75
Armor All
Protectant

Reg . 2.69
Dupll·
Color Auto
Spray Paint

Save over 25%

2.89
Reg. 3.89

16 oz.

Reg. 1.95
Armor All

II

oz.

DupllColor Auto
Panel Paint

~ ..~Cleaner
Trigger spray

2.44pt.
Reg. 3.39

4.44
Reg . 5.95

Duro
White
Knight
Body
Repair
Kit

Turtle
Wax
Minute
Wax

Save over

18 oz.
Save
over 25%1

25%!
Quart Size
Reg. 4.99
3.44

Ramanufacturod

Carburetors

39.95
52.95
72.95

1 BBL.
2 BBL.
4 BBL.

All w/rebuild able exchange

32.88

*22

40 MONTH

Starter

*23

Alternator

Natlonwlse
Maintenance Free
palclum BaHerles

Remanufactured

41.88
50 month

1.")7
High torque starter wlrebuildable
-'
exchg. lor most Chrysler and some

Starters or Alternators

Both w/rebulldable exchg. lor
most dom. ,ars except Integral
and Motoro la

47.88

60 month
All batteries w/exchg., available
lor most cars. • Never needs
water under normal conditions.

1

'.

;

Ford cars

•

•

J:ecleral

~

'

liquor

Falcons
lose 10-1
battle

Plus Federal Excise Tax of $1.43 to $2.79.

TURISIMO GT

The club pr~sently has 120 slips to
acconunodate riverboats, cruisers,
and houseboats up tQ 50 feet and offers marine-service, 30 amp elec!rica! hookup and Gallipolis city
water as a part of the dockage
charge.
Boaters who have boated on Ohio
and West Virginia lakes and rivers
as well as many Lake Erie boaters
have transferred to the Gallipolis
Boat Club because of its economy
and congeniality .
The proJtimity to populated areas
makes the boat club attractive to
boaters within a sever Ia hundred
mile radius. The club is only two
hours by car from Columbus ; oneand-a-half hours from Athens,
Chillicothe, Ironton, Marietta , or
Parkersburg; and 45 minutes from
Charleston and Huntington .
The club is located on what has often been referred to HS the most interesting stretch of the Ohio River.
The clubjs 10 miles upriver from the

carryouts; movies, restaurants; and
down river from the mouth of the location of the Silver Bridge collar&gt;Hollis Stacv fired a 7-under-par 65 to
TEXAS- N""'"' " "" we~tl ..-h ,.,...."
1''"'1" 1 ''""'""' "' '"'""
fast food facilities, the club has amKanawha River. A total of 45 miles se.
Wellston , Ohio, 45692.
cla•·m the s'eeond-round lead at 138 ,·n Rt11JI
SA - E'
l' han.bun
, l'U&lt;
Wh. fur unt• )t'itr
pie secured auto and tra i~r parking , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - facilities .
The greatest advantage the
Gallipolis Boat Club offers, said
Conunodore George Durst, is that
boats are moored in quiet waters
one-fourth mile off the main channel
of the Ohio River.

SIZE
SALE PRICE
A78x 11 .................................... 28 .00
B78x13 ... .. ................................ 31.00
C78x14 ..................................... 34.00
D78x14 ..................................... 36.00
E78x14 ..................................... 38 oo
F78x14 ..................................... ·
G78x14........... •• . .. .. • . . . • . .. .. .. • •• •• • • 39 · 00
H78x14 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 42 . 00
F78x15..................................... 40 .00
G78x15 ..................................... 40.00
H78x15 ..................................... 42.00
L78x15 .................... .. ............... 48.00

Plu s Federal Excise Tax of $1.52 to $2.73.

GALUPOUS - On May 1, the
Gallipolis Boat Club will officially
open its 32nd year of service to
boaters on the Ohio River.
Located on the Chickamauga
Creek at Ohio River mile 270, the
boat club provides full summer
weekly and overnight ac:
conunodations for boaters on the
Ohio and Kanawha Rivers.
The club presently is the least expensive marina, in tenns of gasoline
and docking cost, on the Ohio River
with open dockage rates less tha~
$1.50 per foot per month and covered
dockage rates less than $2.25 per foot
per month.
Club members come from all
walks of life. Truckers, mechanics,
construction workers, salesmen,
executives, white collar workers
educators, engineers, politicians:
and retired persons are some of the
occupations of club members.
Located within walking distance
of laundromat ; grocery, hardware,

HOURS:.
Sun.
10· 5
8:30.7
M·F

. sat.

8:30.6

209 Upper River Rd.
'

'

.

446-3807 cs:

�Page-C-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

April4, 1982.

~~==~~~~==~==~~~~~~~~~~~~··

I ·

·Scoreboard

Exhibition results
MoJtr':1BooeboJJ

y-Boaton
y-Buffalo
y-Queb«

H!trtford

Non11 Dlvillloa

x·Minnesoi.M
y·Wmnipel(
y-St. Louis
y-ChiC81(0
Toronto
Detroi t

37 22 26 343 284 94
33 32 14 318 330 80
31 39 I 308 34{1 70
28 38 12 321 3:il8 68
20 42 16 N3 367 56
21 46 12 269 347 f)4
Smytbt Dlvi•l®
x-Edmontun
47 17 15 415 294 109
y-Ca lgary
29 33 17 l33 342 7S
y-Vaneouver
28 33 11 m 282 73
y- l..os Anl(eles
24 39 15 310 JS6 63
Colorado
17 49 13 238 J61 47
Xo.Ciinched f1rsl r)JIN' in ti iVSiOil..
Y''hndled playof spots.
Frlday'aGamn
P1 t tsbur~h 7, New York R.anl(ers 5
Mmn~:sula 5, Winn lpeK 2
Suoday'11 Gam~
New York Islanders at PitLsburl(h
Minnesota al Chicago
Hartford ut Boston I n )
Qut!bt't' ut Buffulu lnl
St. Loui.s Ht Detroit ( n l
Toronto at Ph1ladclplua 1n 1
Montre&lt;tl at Washington I n~
Wuullpcf!! at Edmonton 1n ~

Dolrolt I, PIIWlwl!h 7
Montnal 3, 8altirrl4n 2, 12 inn

Twontoi.Minnelootal
1'eul t, Kansas City 3
San Francilco 7, Cleveland 2
Oticqo INL) 7, Mwaukee 7, tit!
10 Inn, travel corrunittmen~
San Diego 8, Oakland 2
Qlllfomia 2, Los Angel~ I
Sudlly'•Gamn
N.Y. INLI w . St .Louis at St.Pete
ClnnaU n . Pittsburgh at Colwnbus
Detroit v~ . BAn at Wmter H!t ven, F'la
WlchiUI
IAAAI
vs.
Montrea.l
at
W.PalmBeach
Toronto vs. Houston at Cocoa, Fla
CVLand vs. M'lwkee at Sun City, Anz
Otlcqo I NL) at Chlcai(O ! ALI
PhUa at Minnesota
Tnu vs. N.Y. IAL ) at New Orleans
S Oleti!O vs. Seattle ISSI at Las Ve~as
~..Ali AnHeles Ill Califorma
OHland vs. San Francisco
AU.nta at Seattle ISSI

Los

EXHmmON SEASON ENDS

An~clt!.S

at

Vancuuv~r

l nl

REGUL\R SEASON ENOS

NHLresults

1-Montr~al

92
91
110
59

Campbell Coni~

QndnnoU 2. SlLouls I. II Inn
Alllnlo 7, H-011 5
Bolton 7, Nov Yon iNLI 5
New Yort (ALl 7, Philodelphia 2

NaUorud Hockey Lett)(IJC
Wain Conference
Patrick Olvhllon
W L T GF
SJ 15 10 m
39 'll 13 313
J7 l:) II 315
30 36 13 303
24 41 13 310
AdllJilJI Oivhiloo
f6 15 11 356

41 27 10 3U 278
38 25 15 291 2112
32 30 II 345 338
21 ~ 17 2ell 341

NBA
results
NaUonal

Ballkdball AlliUK'IatJOII

EASTERN CONFERENCE

GA Ptll
240 us
J03 91
l06
335

Atlanti(' Dlvblon

W L

11J

57
fl l
38
37
32

y-Bt.i!itOn

8S
73
61

y-Ph1htdelph1a
New Jersey
Washln~ton

New York

215 109

16
22
36
36
41

Pet. GD
.781 .199
6
.514 191.,
.507

.,

.438

25

.1Glenville wins pair from Rio

C~otnl

Dlvl11ioa

x-Milwauket
AUanta

Detroit
Indiana
Chie&amp;HO
Oeveland

51

23

36

37

.689
.493

34
33

40
40

.45-9
.452

29
15

..
58

.:m

14'1
17
17'&gt;
21"1

.205

:\5~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Olvbloo

San Antonio

..

Denv~r

&lt;3
42

HOW&lt;ton
KaMas City
Dallas
Uloh

211
25
20

30
30

.595

32

.568

..
49
53

-

.589

"

2

.351

18

.3311
.174

19
23"1

24

.676

-

30

.644
.562

2'&gt;
8'&gt;

.548
.507
.219

9..,
121.;

Pacific Dlvi11lon
y-l...ol!iAnl(d~ll

50

47
Settllle
41
PhoeniJ.
Golden State
~
37
Portland
16
San Diego
x-clinchctl divi:;ion tiU!!.
y-clinched playoff spots.

32

33
36
~7

Friday's Games
Boston 110, Atlanta 107
N~w Jersey 98, Wtt!ihmKIOn 96
Philadelphia 135, Clevdand 11 5
Milwttukee 114, Olicttgo Jill
UlHh 12'1, Ktmsas City 116
Denver 127, Portland 121
Phoenix 109, ~ Anl(c l ~s 99
Seatllt! Ill , Sa n Antomo lki
Sunday'll Gamt'~
Chkai(O at Booton
Jmliana at Mi lwaukee
N~w York ut Philttdclplua
New Jen;t!y HI Cleveland
Kansas City at Phoenix
Portland 111 Los Anl(eks
Houston at San Antomo
Denver ul StatUe
Mooday'11 Gamn

No

~t:l mt!:!

scht.-duled

RIO GRANDE - Coach Larry
Cook's Rio Grande Redmen made
their 1982 home debut Friday, dropping a doubleheader by 7-5 and I~
scores to the Glenville (W. Va.)
Pioneers.
The twin losses dropped the Redmen to 0-4 on the season while Glenville moved to 5-S. The Redmen were
slated to open their conference
season Saturday at home with a
doubleheader against Ohio
Dominican.
They will play Thomas More
College at I p.m. today at Evans
Field. Rio will then be idle until

l1~

Final meeting set
MIDDLEPORT - The final
meeting for the MGM men's slowpitch softball league will be held
Tuesday, 1\pril 6, at 7 p.m. at the
Middleport community park. New
teams may still apply for membership at that time. All teams must
have a representative at the
meeting. Entry fees and sanction
fees will be collected and teams
placed into classifications. For further information contact Jerry
Davenport at 614-992-7323 .

April 8 when they battle NCAA
champion Marietta College on the
Pioneers' home field.
In Friday's first game, the Redmen fought back from deficits on
three occasions before allowing the
decisive runs in the eighth on a
double by Jay Fipes, an RBI single
by l!rian Dowell and an error that
allowed ·Dowell to score.
Glenville took a I~ lead in the first
only to see the Redmen tie it and
then take the lead. on a walk to Dan
Knost, a single by Steve Little and
back-t&lt;rback run scoring singles.
The Pioneers pushed across two
more runs to take a 3-2 lead in the
second, but the Redmen knotted it in
the fifth on a bases loaded walk to
Tom Bloomingdale that scored Littie.
Glenville again took a lead in the
sixth on a single and a tw&lt;rrun
homer by Jeff Shriner.
The Redmen tied it with a tw&lt;rrun
surge in the seventh. Eric Frazier
singled in Bloomingdale with !he run

POOL

DATE - . GYMNASIUM

April 4 1· 4 p .m ./Open Recreation
8·10 p .m ./College Recreation
Apri15 6·8 p.m./ 101 Class
8· 10 p .m ./ College Recreation
April 6 8 · 10 p .m ./College Recreation
April7 8· 10 p .m .
/C ollege Recreati on
AprilS 8· 10 p .m ./ Coll ege Recreation
April9 7· 10 p .m ./College Recreation
AprillO 2·4 p .m ./Open Recreation
Aprilll Closed - Ea ster
ATHLETIC EVENTS -

1 4 p.m ./Open Swim
8 ·10 p.m ./Col lege Swim

SEE MR. GOODWRENCH FOR A

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT

8· 10 p .m ./College Swim
8 · 10 p .m ./College Swim
8· 10 p.m ./ College Swim
8· 10 p.m ./ Coll ege Swi m
8 10 p .m ./Open Swim
'l 4 p .m ./Open Sw im
Closed - Easter

WITH GENUINE G.M. PARTS

April4. Basebal l vs. Thoma s More, 1 p m ., doubleheader .

Modern Electrical Equipment

Local bowling
Styllnen~

League
March %5, 198Z
StamHnKil

Tnm
W.l.
McDonald 's
64 24
Baird and Fuller Realty
S6 32
Warehime':;
54 34
Headquaters Bar
50 38
Central Supply
48 40
New River.tlec .
46 42
JimanetU'!l
45 43
Gavin Elec.
+i 44
The Hair Clipper~~
36 ~2
VUbl.ge IllS .
33 55
The Elb
., ;a
Bob Evans Farm
30 58
Gavin Elec . won ell(ht point s from
War~tlime 's. Hil(h bowler for Gavin Elec . was
Bectltel with 5fll. Hil(h bowler lor Warehtmt''s
was C. Conley with 516.
McDonald's woo six pomts from Nt!w River
Elec . High bowler for McDonald's was K. Bra~~

I

with588. H1 ~ h bowler tor New H1v~r Elec . Wt:IS J.
Dt~vJs with 535.
Central Supply won six pomt.s frum Bob Evt:1011
Fann . HJto:h bowler for Central Supply was R.
J&lt;1ck.son w1th 574 . H1.:h bowler for Bob Evans
Fann was H. Spe~ wilh 529.
ija.1 rd ttnd Fuller Rt!alty won six poinl'l from
ThJ Elks. H1~h bowler for Ba1rd and Fuller
Realty was J. Fuller with 568. Hi.:h bowler ror
The Elks was D. Taylor with ~14 .
Jurutnetti'll won !llX point:&gt; from The Hair Cli~
pcrs. H111.h bowler for Jilrutnetti's was 0 . Petr1e
w1th 552. Hi..:h bowler for The Hair Clippt!MS was
S. Stephens w1t~!i60 .
1-ieadquartcn; Bar woo stx points from Villal'(e
Ins H111h bowler for Headquarters Bttr was T.
Waul(h ~· 1th 575 . Hil(h bowler for Villa~e llt!i. was
H

jentin:e!

By ERIC KRAMER
Associated Press Writer
Three dozen tornadoes spawned by a freak lowpressure system swept through eight states, wiping out
a family of five in Arkansas, ripping open hundreds of
buildingS' for looters in Texas and killing 25 people,
forecasters said.
"I ran to get in the drainage ditch next to my house,
but I was afraid my house would blow over me," said
Margaret Seiterman of Paris, Texas, where eight
people died Friday. "Then I ran over against the well
of the church, but the storm sucked the wall of the
church right on over me. I really don't know who dug
me out."
Her hometown of 23,000 people in northeastern Texas
was torn apart Friday by a tornado 200 to 1,200 yards
wide that de&amp;troyed more than 100 homes and
businesses. Ten people were arrested for looting .
National Guard troops and police from two states
patroled the debris-littered streets guarding against
looters while teams of volunteers and paramedics
searched for additonal victims.
The twisters fed by the low pressure killed two
people in Missouri, one in Mississippi, 13 in Arkansas
and nine in Texas. Tornadoes also were sighted in Tennessee, Kentucky , Louisiana and Illinois .
nit's a near~record low-pressure system,'' said
National Weather Service forecaster Dennis
Slaughter.
"It draws ·the warm air and the cold air into a
collision to spawn these tornadoes, all the air just
rushes into the center because of the low pressure and
goes out the top."

The barometer hit 29.01 inches of mercury at Kansas
City International Airport, just above the 28.82 record
low set in 1960. Atmospheric pressure averages 29.92
inches of mercury at sea level.
Five members of a rural southwestern Arkansas
family died when a tornado threw a tree onto their
home near Hope, said state polic~ Capt. M.A. Mosier .
"We thought we could get them out alive. We got a doctor out there, and when we got in we found all of them
dead."
"A big tree just blew across the house and smashed
it," he said.
Another eight died in Arkansas's worst day of tornadoes since 45 died on May 15, 1968. Mter the twisters,
a policeman in Conway was struck and killed by a car
while directing traffic around the debris.
Herbert Juniqr Ness, 5ll, of Caulfield, Mo., was killed
when a tornado threw his car 25 feet down an embankment near his hometown, and an S-year-old girl
was killed in the nearby town of West Plains in a
similar accident, authorities said.
" It made a pretty good swath," said Jimmy Looney,
West Plains police dispatcher. "It tore up Caulfield and
Ba~ersfield pretty good and then it was on us before we
knew what was happening."
1\ tornado in central Mississippi early this morning
claimed one life, and winds of up to 143 mph raked
Colorado and contributed to a 2,000-foot-high dust
storm that claimed the life of a Norman, Okla., family
;n a plane crash near Lamar. In additon to the eight
deaths in Paris, Texas, one man died in nearby Dodd
City.

Colorado Springs.

intn the roof of his home. Hurricane force winds caused

Colo. resident Keith Simpson was awaketwd .Friday

nv.-r c1 million dollars worth of damagt• and left 10,000

morning by the sound of this giant spnu·t• tn.'c crashing

n•sidt'tlts without t'lertrical powt'r. 1AP Laserphoto).

WINDSTORM DAMAGE -

/

We H'ave AFine
Selection of Fabrics,
Weaves, Colors
and Cuts.

SPRING SPECIAL
ENDS APRIL 15TH

GM~

MEN'S SUITS

SERVICE PARI'S

By
•SHEPARD
•SEWELL
•KINGSRmGE

GENERAL Mai'ORS PARTS

SIMMONS OLDS-CAD.-CHEVY., INC.
PH. 992-6614

308 E. Main St.

~imes-

Three dozen tornadoes
rip through 8 states

EASTER IS
APRIL 11th

Including Tax
Parts Additional

HOME EVENTS

State/ ational

EASTER
WARDROBE

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE

Week of April4. 1982

that tied the game.
The Pioneers then won it in the
eighth.
AI Dettwiller (G-1) worked the
final inning and took the loss for the
Redffien. Mark Hash (3-2) was the
winner for the Pioneers.
Utile and Larry Carter had two
hits each to lead a six-hit Rio Grande
attack.
In the nightcap, the Redmen ran
into some stellar pitching by Terry
Spangler in dropping their first
shutout of the year. Spangler (~)
allowed the Redmen just two hits
while walking two and fanning three
in gaining the complete game win.
Spangler got ail the offense he
needed in the first when Dave Hail
scored on a grounder by Jay Fiber
that was misplayed at shortstop.
Jeff Hatfield, G-1 , worked four innings, allowing three hits and the
one unearned run . ·
Little and Carter had the only hits
for the Redmen. Carter's hit was a
double.

2,500 rally for Duarte·

•(~JUatfiEER

Pomeroy, OH .

WaL~onw1th~7 .

$120

From

lly SOLLSUSSMAN
Associated Press Wrill'r

Transactions
BASEBAlL
Leaglk
CAUFORNIA
ANGEI...S- Piuccd
Ed
Ott, ca~ on 21-day disabled hst.
OUCA~o/ WHITE SOX- Traded Wayne
NUI"l!h#gt;n, outfielder-catcher. tu U1c T"'
ronto Blue Jays for Aurelio Rodri.:ue-l,
third baseman. Optioned Jeff Schattin.:er,
pitcht!r, to Edmonton of the Pacific Coost
l..eaKUe.
CLEVELAND
INDIANS - Wa1ved
Pat
Kelly lo give him Ufll.'\)ndJtJoottl releuse
Optioned Silvio
Martincz,
p1tcher , to
chur l ~ton of lhe International LeaK Ue .
MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Pia red Jim
Slaton, pitcher, 011 the 21-dlly d1sablctl
list. R«aa.led Dou.: Jones, pitcher, from
Vancouver
the Pacific Coast League.
T 0 R 0 NT 0
BLUE JAYS- Optioned
Georl(e Bell, outfielder, Jadtson Todd,
pitcher, and Gene Petralli, call"her, tu
SyracUHe £t the lntt!rnatiunal Leal(ue.
St!nt Tony Fernandcz, short.stop, and
Dave Geisel. pitcher, to Syracuse.
National Leai{Ue
CINCINNATI
REDS- AS.!Iil(ned
Gre~o:
Harrill. pitcher, lo Indianapolis uf the
Am~rlcan

10% DISCOUNT

SAN SALV 1\DOR, El Salvador IAPI - About 2.500
people rallied here in support of junta Presnlenl Jose
Napoleon Duarte's Christian Democrati C Party whtch
is demanding a place with rightists in the country 's
new interim government
"This chapter still has not been closed," Duarte told
the Friday crowd at Plaza Libertad, a squa re in downtown San Salvador. "Have confidence, have faith in the
God, have faith in the Christian Democrals."
The centrist party picked up more votes than any
single faction in last Sunday's election for a 00-sea l
Constituten~ Assembly. But the Chnstian Democrats
fell short of a majority, and rightist parties, whose
combined votes outnwnber those of the Christian

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

or

American Association.
MONTREAL
EXPOS- Wui ved
Stan
Bahruien, pjtcher, for the rurposc of I( IV·
ill( him his uncooditiOfUI
rele11se. Oj:&gt;tioned David Palmer, pitcher. to Memphis ul the Southern

~ague .

PHILADELPHIA
PHILLIES - Placed
Tul( McGraw, pitcher, on lhe 21-day disabled li:rt. Optioned Mike Willi:~ and Mark.
Divis, pitchers, and Julio Franco, shortstop, to Oklahoma City of the American
Aasociation.
PIRATES- Placed JJm
Plii'SBURGH
Bibby, pitcher, on 21-day dJs.abled list.
.
f'OOTIIAU.

on all farm gates and electric
fencing supplies

Boso Agri Center
Third &amp; Sycamore

'

• • • • • • •

NatioDal Football Leagu~
CARDINAI...S - Si~o:ned

ST.LOUIS

Willard

Harrell. runninl( back, to a one-year rontract .
WASHINGTON
REOSKINS - Si~ned
Rodney Goosby, I..Joyd Joot!:! and Chy Da·
Vidson, wide r«eive!'ll; Joey Hackett and
Cleveland Jackaoo, tight enlb, and Bobby
Joe Bitton, running back .
Cuocllu Football Lea11W
MONTREAL
ALOUET'l'ES- Named
Dick Walker and Mike Faulkiner assistant coaches.
Col.lq~

NORnl

CAROUNA

Ax T- Named

Mo

Forte coach.
WASHINGTON

STATE- N•med

0..1

Wight 88:5iatant coach.

. can Hockey ~ue .
. , MONTREAL
CANADIENS- Recalled

BW IOtchen, deferueman, from
Nova
Scotia of the American Hockey League.

· opening day hurlers
.

-Deyl'nllobl• Pltthen
- lol-1'· Go....

• oniypmt~IEIIGUE
.. JtaMU City (Leonard IS.ll) alBallimore (D.
Martina 144).

'Onlypmt~.Go-

'

....

1980 Datsun 8310 3 dr. . • . • . . . . $4395
1980 Ford Fairmont 2 dr. • • • • . • . . $4305
4 cyl., air cynd ., PS,

v. roof, low mileage.

a

1979 Ford Fiesta ..

• • • •

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Air cond ., Radio, local owner.

1979 Granada 4 dr.

• • • • • • • • • • •

1979 LID 2 dr•••.

• • • • ••

6 cyl., air cond .. AMIFMIStereo, one owner.

0

•

0

0

•

Air cond., AMIFM.

;.......,.. (RAIIenlUl at Pittsburgh 1Rhoden

'AMeloo(-IH)

Yort (Zocbty 7-141 at Philadelphia

,&lt;~!!"!- JJ-4), 42,180, (n)

• • La. LGoit (B.J'cnch 1116) atHOUIIA&gt;n !Hyan 11··tJ...... (o)
·
1.
)Atlanla (ll..ler 1-t) al San Diego
· ''lkt nw ,..N),40,000, (n)
,'''.~r..tODIY~~
. ' ' '4 MftK-.NLEAGUI
~~

(auillll·lf) at Delrolt (Monit 14-7)
' !TaU(j.JI) ot New Yon (Guidry II- .

.,)!...... (~ItalatChicqo (Burnl IHl
'CIIJ¥ ..... (Biita'

k.o

-~,IHfr

·~~~ .;,.

~7)

Milwaukee

Nltt-(Redf&lt;rn

.(IL J'nch 11-7) ot Ookland .

~• ~-II)(D)
·' "S'd '

............ ._.u.t.d.

·~ ·

'

at

'

.
.

l;

...

'

Duarte."
The term "communitananism:· is used by rightists

to describe what they perceive as Duarte 's cmrunumstlean mg poltcies, including land redistribution to the
peasantry .

The statement, published by the newspaper El
Diariu, charged Duarte with abusing power ami " per-

petuating himself in the presidency against the popular
will ." '

passengers deplaned, including some women and
children, and it appeared tbe entire marine contingent
of the islands was evacuated. (AP Laserphoto).

Friday In Plaza Libertad In tbe capital, San Salvador.
(AP Laserphoto).

Britain would have
military edge in island

AM/FM/Stereo, extended warranty .

:'"J.,. y.-..,o (Holland 7-6 or Gale !HI at Los
·"· 'New

supporter in El Salvador, the engineer Jose Napoleon

1980 Pinto Wagon . . . . • . . . . . • . $3995

• • • • • • • • • • •

NATIONALIEAGUE

curn-

4 spd. trans ., speed control, air cond.

NATIONAL lEAGUE

Ollcqo (8ird44) atCindnnaU !SolD 12-91.

against

1981 Ford Escort GL3 dr. • . . • . • . $5995

4 spd. trans ., radio.

HOCKEY
Notlooal Hoclley Leal"'
HARTFORD WHALERS-Signed Dan
. Fridgen, ldt wifll(. Rdumed Marty
Howe, defenaman, and Ray Neufeld,
'right wif\lll, to Bl~hamton of the Amerl-

was

spokesman and pricinciple

According to various press reports, virtually the entire Argentine fleet took part in the Falklands
takeover.
The only British ship in the area Friday was the
3,600-ton Antarctic surveyor Endurance, which was to
be scrapped later this year,
Behind the Endurance is the remnant of the naval
force with which Brittania once ruled the waves - an
armada now in decline because of government costcutting.
The Royal Navy includes two aircraft carriers - the
Invincible and the H~rmes -14 destroyers, 46 frigates,
38 minesweepers, 25 patrol craft and another dozen
special types. Submarines include four Polaris vessels
armed with nuclear missiles, plus 28 hunter-killer sub- •
marines .
"We are preparing a naval task force which is large
enough and powerful enough to &lt;leal with any problem
it might meet in the South Atlantic," Defense
Secretary John Nott said, without elaboration.
N'ott added that a "substantial" nwnber of British
ships already were at sea, but he refused to reveal
\heir positio&amp;.
The Press Association, Britain's domestic news
agency, quoted "authoritative sow'ces" as saying virBRITISH MARINES - Four Britlab marines
tually the 'whole naY¥ would be mobilized for tbe task
8rrtfe In Montevideo, Uruguay SatUrday via Argentine
force.
air force jet from the Falkland Islanda. FJghty-three

1981 Ford Escort 3 dr Hatchback .•. $5795
WAVES TO CROWD - President Jose Napoleon
Dnarte waves to crowd of several supporters of his
: Cluistlan Democratic party whom he addressed

il~

Ul tra -rigiLt lst Ruberto J' Aubuissson, whose ARENA

......

trans .• air cond ., PS, 1 year or 12,000 mil es warranty.

elel't uratc

party fini shed second, sa id the rightists still were
willing to talk to the Christian Democrats "to share the
destinies of our country .
.. But we have not constdered and will not accept
Duarte as the head of government," said d'l\ubUlsson ,
38, who told reporters he was willing to become interim
president himself.
The 3S-yca r-old d'l\ubUlsson. a cashiered army
maj or linkt:d to right-wing death squads, sa id th&lt;tt if
ARENA control.&lt; the new government it will fulfill
campa ign promises to rollback refonns implemented
since an October 1979, coup ousted a rightist regime.

Auto. trans .• air cond., AM/Fm, 1 year or 12,000 mi les warranty .

A~to.

Salvadoran

munitariamsm .. and

whatever coalition is formed.
Speaking at the rally, Chnstian DcrnQCra l junta
member Jose Antonio Morales Ehrli ch said the more
than 500,000 votes received by the party showed they
are "the motor of democracy of our country and we
will continue strugglin~ ."
A caucus possibly leading to a coalition government
has been formed by the fi ve rightist parties. which took
a combined 36 seal::; to 24 for the Christian Democrats.
The anti-Duarte parties sa id in a published
statement that they " reject the ndi culous pretentions
and threatening attitudes of the Chnstian Democratic

than 2500 mi les.

1981 Ford Escort 4 dr Wagon

the

Dt!mocrat.s, s till insist on keep1ng Dua rte out of

1982 Plymouth Reliant 4 dr.
Less

Pa rt y 111 l&lt;tkt ng t over I thl' direction of a govern ment
which the people with their vote denied them ."
The ri)..(htists repeated th eir call for a unity government but said they interpreted "the rnajonty vote of

• • • • • • • • • •

•' • • •

$3995

By MARKS. SMITH
Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP)- Britain appears to have a military
edge over Argentina in a possible battle for control of
the Falkland islands, but experts say it could be two
weeks before the weight of the Royal Navy can be
brought to bear on the Argentines who seized the
British colony.
Argentina took tile disputed islands Friday with 12.
warships, three submarines and a repo~¥d 4,()00.5,000
troops. The only British military presence in the area
was a lightly armed ice patrol ship and 84 Royal
Marines.
But any subsequent showdown is likely to leave the
~· Argentines outgunned by the Royal Navy, although
•· Britain may have a hard time supplying a fleet 8,000
· miles froni London, while the Argentines are only
about 250 miles from home.
According to the London-based International fn' stitute for Sta\tegic•studies, Britain has 353,646 :!Den
•·IInder ai'llls. Argentina has 185,500. · ·
.
Howeyer,
in
an
island
engagement,
naval
strength
is
.
•
ey.
.
.
It
Argentina has .one ali-craft carrier, bought from
Britain; one cruiaer, bought from the United States;
nine . clestroyet'II; two French-built mlasll&amp;OIIT)'ing
four submarines · and a dozep or so small
patrol
'
'

...,..,,ett..,.,

.,..'

,.

..
••

•

...

'

�1982

2- The Sunda Times-Sentinel

Quantity
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t

"The work is proceeding at a very
WHITE SANDS MISSILE
: RANGE, N.M. (APJ - Preparations excellent pace," he addecj. "The
' for returning the space shuttle to guys have done exceptionally well in
.: Florida leaped ahead of schedule
catching up since the weather made
a complete turnaround."
:;· Saturday, and space agency officials
Friday morning, winds gusted to
·. speculated that the Columbia may
: leave the New Mexico desert a day • 50 knots, blowing clouds of fine white
gypsum sand·atoft, and forced a halt
· earlier than originally planned.
• · Troublesome winds which forced a to the work.
~ . one-day delay in the shuttle's lanKukowski said that by Saturday
: ··ding after its third test flight last workers had virtually finished
,. week had put recovery crews 12 to 24 checking the orbiter's subsystems
and minor cleanup operations,
:." hours behind schedule Friday.
~.
But · on Saturday, National clearing the way for the major
. , Aeronautics and Space Ad- operations needed to mount the
:' ministration spokesman Jim space ship atop a modified Boeing
747 jet for its piggyback flight to
~ Kukowski said : "The winds are light
:, and variable out there today. We Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
Becuase of the wind storm late
::: couldn't ask for better conditions . ...

ALL
MINNESOTA
PAINT

-

-

-- -

/

IN STOCK

$19'!ile Quanti~

-

•

":'
;

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,,
Jl

~ COLUMBUS ' Ohio (AP) - Ohio
"HIS' involvement in the life of the
·•
::state University trustees bave a~
university, its people and in"'
ed
I ti
ha · g th
stitutional process has been ex.,.,prov a reso u on c ngm
e
;~flalne of Stadium Drive near Ohio tfaordinary."
~Stadium to Woody Hayes Drive. ·
Trustees said that wanted to
-"
Hayes
spent
28
years
as
head
foot
create
"a living memorial whi.'ch
.• ball coach
recognizes Mrs. Hayes' significant
.
:: "His outstanding contributions to - roleinthehistoryoftheuniversity."
':public service are evidenced by his
The resolution mentioned that
:::deep involvement with the less forHayes' record of 205 wins, 65 losses
.";!:tunate and by his active ~rand 10 ties is unmatched in the
~ ticipation and support of university's history.
"'organizations committed to the betOfficials were not certain
;;,tennent of mankind," the resolution
specifically when the name change
! reacts.
would be officially made.
•

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...::. .:. .:. ·_;_:..- ---:--

-·'

French officials said the attack
was the . first time an Israeli
diplomat had been assassinated in
Paris.
Israel blamed the Palestine
Liberation Organization, but the
PLO denied that it had anything to
do with the attack.
A PLO source in Beirut, Lebanon,
who asked not to be identified, said
an obscure terrorist group, the
Lebanese Armed Revolutionary
Brigades, had claimed responsibility for the murder il) a telephone
call to an unidentified We~iern news
agency in Beirut. No major Western

~~

SELF STORING

/

By GREG MacARTHUR
Associated Press Writer
.,
·. PARIS (AP) - A young woman
:~ shot dead an Israeli diplomat Satur: day in front of his wife and daughter
· and then threatened to shoot the envoy' s teen-age son, who was in pursuit, Israeli officials and police said.
The woman dashed from the
mirrored lqbby of Yacov Barsimantov's fashionable Paris apartment building and then escaped into
a subway station after pointing her
:· gun at 17-year-old Avi Barsimantov
~ to make him end his chase, the
·; Israeli Embassy said.
•

$}3999

. Cases
;~ E Dd SIX
"

17" .

·.

~

'
: GAILlPOUS - Six cases were
"'tenninated Friday In Gallipolis
uunlclpal
. Court
.....,
·
· Colb McClask
21 Rt 1
::
y
ey • ,
· ,
"' Ewington, charged With no valid
-'"'-ti f' ed"""
· ·~"wwa on, m ...,.
"" ""·-ed
,,_,. with overheight burnper
: anclfined$l5wasCbarl.SA.Kinder,
: 24, Rt.l, Gallipolis.

Manual

87 ,OLIVE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

$}699

ciples in mind and make them an in-

tegral part of our lives : to proc laim
the gospel, to perfect the saints and
to redeem the dead ."

Oscar G. Stephenson, 66, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, charged with improper
lane usage, forfeited $40 bon,d.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Hal B. McMahon, 31, Barboursville,
W.Va. , $38; Austin D. Worley,. 59,
Corbin, Ky., $39; Matt D. McCarthy,
24 Jackson $41.
'
'

and Senate.
Police said he was killed when a
woman in her 20s stepped from
behind an ornate column In tbe lobby
of 17 Avenue Ferdinand Buisson in
Paris' 16th arrondissment and fired
her 7.65mm semi-automatic pistol
five times from about six feet away.
The' diplomat's wife and 3-year-old
daughter were only a few steps
fbehindhhim wh~dn thThewomaifn ~penedd
Ire, t ey 881 •
e w e s an
daughter's names were not immediately available.
bul"lHisdi: sonh wash chOillleard·ngthintosh ttshe
ng w en e
e 0 •
saw the woman running out and
heard the concierge screaming,"
said Colette Avital, an Israeli En&gt;bassy spokesman.
"He chased her up to tbe point
when she turned around and said, 'If
you continue to chase me, I'D shoot
you too.' He is only 16 or 17 and he
stopped. That gave her time to run
into the metro station," Ms. Avital
said. Police said the son was 17
yearsqld.

' breWers.

Rice Is one or the world's leading
food grains. Most of It is eaten In the
countries where the crop Is produced . The United States, although
a relatively minor rice producer,
uses only a small portion of Its crop
and thus has most of It available for
export.
"World rice production for 198182 Is forecast at 410 million metric
tons, rough basts, about 14 mUllan
more than last year," the report

said .
"VIrtually all major exporters
had excellent crops, as dld some
major Importers - particularly Indonesia and South Korea. World
rice trade Is projected at 12 mllllon
tons In calendar 1982, about 1 rnll·
lion below last year's record."
A metrtc ton Is about 2,205 pounds
and, in the case of rice, Is equal to
approximately 22 hundredweight.
For 1981-82, the report showed,
exports may be about 91 miiiion
hundredweight, down slightly from
last year'r record of 91.4 mllllon.
"Following two y98rs of record
sales to South Korea, U.S. mediumgrain exports wtii drop dramatl·
cally this season," It said. Even so,
other markets appear to be taking
up the slack.
"Sales of long-grain rtce to lraq,
lran and Nigeria, and enlarged pur·
chases by Italy pushed U.S. exports
above early expectations."
Rice prices at the farm are expected to average $9.25 to $10.25 per
hundredweight this marketing
year, down from $12.80 In 1980-81,
the report said .

Groups share computer system
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department Is sharing
In a computer system at the Unl·

news service reported receiving
such a call.
However, the method of attack a lone attacker using a 7.65mm
pistol - was similar to that used in
the January murder of U.S. military
attache Lt. CoL Charles Ray and an
attack in November agairu.i U.S.
Charge d'Affaires Christian Chapman, who survived it.
·
The
Lebanese
Armed
Revolutionary Brigades said it was
responsible for those shootings and
for a machine gun attack Wednesday against the offices of the
Israeli military attache in Paris.
There were no injuries and no
arrests. There also have been a
spate of minor anti-Israeli attacks
around the world in the last week.
Barsimantov, 43, a middleranking political officer .t the
Israeli Embassy, who handled
liaisons with the National Assembly

mllllon hundredweight.
Domestic use Is expected to require about 56.5 million hundred·
weight this season, Including 39.5
mllllon to be used as food, 5 million
as seed for the next crop, and 12
mllllon for beer.
Alberta Smith, a statistician In
the agency, said Monday that the
projected use of 12 mUllan hundred·
weight of rice by brewers would be
a record for that purpose. In 198081, brewers used about 11 mUllan
hundredweight, and In 1979-80 they
used 11.2 miiiion, the previous high.
Com and barley are the other
grains that are used by American

U.S. agricultural products.
Agriculture Secretary John R.
Block satd last week that the joint
venture - which will continue as a
pUot project for 90 days - could
lend "extra punch" to U.S. export
expansion efforts.
The project Involves a computer
system called AGNET operated by
the university and the depart·
ment's Foreign Agricultural
SeiVIce .
Inqulrtes from prospective foreign buyers have been collected by
the agency for the past decade or so
under a program called the Trade
Opportunity Referral SeiVIce TORS.
Block made his remarks In a

Written
contracts
are not
required
WASIUNGTON (AP)- The govemment has decided not torequire written contracts between
shippers and haulers for lntersl;lte
movement of agricultural com·
modlttes otherwise exempt from
federali'I!IIIJltlion.
Officials said Monday the Agrtculture Department and the Interstate Commerce Commission
decided not to require such contracts after studying the Issue for
more than a year.
Congress required the study In
the Motor Carrier Act of l!9l.
A federal requirement for writ-

ten contracta was supported by In-

dependent

truckers

but was

speech prepared for delivery at the
UniYerslty of Nebraska, Lincoln.
Copies were released here. He said
the trade leads provided by the
agency and dlstrtbuted by mail
helped promote more than $150 mil·
llon In additional export business
last year. "The new system, In
which F AS computers can put
trade leads Into AGNET Immediately a fter they are received,
should provide the opportunity for a
substantial Increase In this busl·
ness," Block said.

Most of the foreign requests In·
volve manufactured or semi·
manufactured products. These
value-added products - wheat
flour and frozen foods are examples - totaled $12 blllion to $13 bll·
lion last year "and USDA Is making
a concerted effort toexpl\lld" them,
he said.
the AGNET system delivers
news of all sorts to subscribers
around the country, Including
farmers, agri business people and
extension offices.

City incQme tax
deadline approaches
GALLIPOLIS - In order to save
paying penalty and interest, city
residents and businesses are remin·
ded that the last day for filing city income taxes is April30.
Most people subject to the income
tax have had their taxes withheld
where they're employed and aren't
required to file unless they have additional income.
Persons receiving wages, commissions or other earned income on
which the city income tax wasn't
withheld, are required ttl. file a city
return. Payment of any taxes due is
also required.
Non-city residents who earn income within the city are also af-

fected by the same filing of taxes.
Failure to rile or refusal to pay the
city income tax is subject to a
maximum fine of $500, six months in
jail or both. Also, persons who are
late with their filing and the
payment of city income taxes are
subject to a penalty and interest on
taxes due.
Those needing assistance or with
questions about the city income tax,
may contact the income tax office
located in the city building at 518
Second Ave. or by calling 446-7378.1!
assistance is needed with filling out
the form, they are urged to bring
their W-2 forms or a copy of their
federal withholding forms .

Meigs students
participate in
ACS fund-raiser

brought in $234, Letart, $221, PorPOMEROY~Youth of Meigs Counopposed
shippers
of fresh
......
and by most
bles
bo lndl
tland,
$163 and kindergarten studenty
collected
$2,950
for
the
American
•nut
vegeta
w
cated
they would
..._ to ,!her
of Cancer Society's "Send A Mouse To ts collected $191.
""" o
means
Eastern School District had two
transportatloo If sucb rules were · College" fund-raiser this year.
The money wiU go toward resear- participating schools. Tuppers
Plains collected $141 and Riverview
ch for a cancer cure.
Students from 11 Meigs County Elementary brought in $103.
The students who collected money
tlon, said a maDdatory contract of elementary schools parti~ipated .
Pomeroy Elementary School's for the program will be awarded
haul, even with miDimwn rules to
~t and enforce It, would reo students, with the help of their · prizes accordin~ to c011tributions
gained. All 580 participants will be
suit In llel'lous. problems ~ the secretary, April Smith, collected
given a "Send A Mouse To CoUege"
$1,024'.
fresh trult 'and Veiletable iDdustry
button. The 156 children bringing In
Other
elementary
~ehools
parthat would ~;proclure any mean$S-!5
will receive a "Mouse" a~
.ticipatlng
include
Salisbury
with
lniful belle!lta for tbe-lndepelldent
$278, Middleport, $204, Salem Cen- plique. The 43 students wbo,collected
OIVIIel'q)(!l'ltors.
"'lbe contract of. baulls an ex· ter, $lll, Harrisonville, $84 and $1:&gt;-25 will be awarded a "Mouse" Tshirt, and those nine who 'brooght in
tremeJy Important~ policy de- Bradbury, rn:
over $25 will receive a stulfCII
Southern
School
District
had
three
c111on a1fectlni
aazrlcultural
schools participating. Racine toy.
ln. . . .N be l8ld.

tbUrcbes
plan.]·oint-service
Dance setAprlll&amp; ::::~~~
=
· ,- .
.
··

'

STORE-HOURS

POMEROY-The Athens Dance
the Church of the Nazarene, Mt.
C)ub will sponsor a dance Aprll18, ,at
zT~e wllbl! oil~MlfVed .by, ~ Moriah Baptist Chureh and the F,u-.t · Bakers Center Ballroom frun 8 p.m.
...,cbd ol Middleport oo Good Fl'idaY, Pri!sbfll!l'lan Church WID read the unW midnight.
~:10
at the First l'reallytc!rlall. Biblical
ol the events lmd
Music . will be by "Gentl!!ffiell
011
Of Middleport. ·
. .·
will provide
mlisl~.
Three." Tickets are $12 a couple and
; - Tenebrae, ,which means shadows,
The service will conclude with an anyone interest may contact Gerald
a aeM.;e that deacribed~event . the CO!!ife8ation Ughtlng Candles as Powell at 1192-21122.
·JIIIIIIII'' last supper
th biB ' adeclaraUonolthehojlethatcomee
Powellalloremlndsihosethatare
b1s arrest and
and 1n the lmowledge ol the reautrectloo · lnterelted that the Ruls McqiD CJl'o
cnm:lfilioo.
memben and the light 1n that open
· cbestra will lie at Rutland CIWc CeoHeath United Methodist ~
•
.
ter 00 May 11. •

!

MON.-THURS,'&amp; SAT..
7:00-5.:00
FRI.-8:00

'

$37

99:

•
'

'

J4.699

SALE ENDS - _APRIL 17, 1982
'

$4619 ..'
,,

$5399·

MmDI,EPORT-The Service of

·fa
~

"': ·b
••
'·

pual!ges

p.m.

sPeclal

a.\rcli

••
~·

v.-.-

' \

'

-

'

last week, workers could not build or
attach a 4~foot fiberglass tail cone
to the 210,000-pound shuttle before
the space ship could be lowered onto
the jet. But work on the cone and
other recovery operations inside the
craft progressed rapidly Friday and
Sa luray, Kukowski said.
Kukowski said the jumbo jet,
waiting at Biggs Army Air Field in
El Paso, Texas, would land Sunday
on the same runway at Northrup
Strip where the shuttle touched
down Tuesday after a 24-hour delay
prompted by strong winds.
Columbia's fourth and final test
fli ght is, scheduled to begin at the
Kennedy center on June V, forcing
NASA officials to return the shuttle
to Florida as soon as possible .

WASIUNGTON (AP) -Record
quantities of rice are being used to
make beer but the Agriculture Department says there ts sttll plenty
left for rice pudding and weddings.
In fact. according to a new analysts by the department's Economic
Research Service, the U.S. rice
stockpile on Aug. 1 - v, &lt;.en the next
crop season begins - w111 be approximately 51 million hundredweight, a record.
11la t would be more than trtple
the 165 million hundredweight In
the year-end carryover last Aug. 1.
Arkansas ts the leading rice producer, but the crop also ts grown
commercially in Ca!lfornla, Louisiana, Mississippi, Mlssourt and
Texas.
Because It ts Important In world
trade, rice production and demand
has an Impact on virtually all
grains In the International market.
And that, In tum, affects prices ~
celved by American farmers.
Last year's U.S. rice harvest was
a record of 185.4 mUllan hundred·
weight. Added to the carryover of
old-erop rice last Aug. 1, that made
a total supply In 1981-82 of about 202

killed in Paris;
deny responsl•brn•ty ~:;=:::!r:~:;:~~~~

-R. oad named
··.: after Woody

~

/

.. J8",

I

.Z•.:L.~--:....

'I

OFF

• • •

TUB ENCLOSURES
White ....
Colors •.•.
• \ 1,''

'i

I

20%

• • •

•

may return
t~ to Florida earlier than planned

~ Palestinians

NOW, Do·lt·YOUnelf

. XR-1().

Portland Cement
Masonary Mortar

wblle Mike Slm., tbe den chief, ~:ot a one-year pin and
special cerUficate. Seen above are (from left, front)
Brian BaUy, Eric Slm, Del LaudermUt, Floyd
Ridenour and David K.lng; (back row, left to right) Bill
Slm, leader; Mike Slm, den chief; and Ray Laudermllt, leader.

11.99

I"

RED I-MIXES
Gravel • •
Mortar •

HONORED- Chester Webelos Pack 35 was recebtly
honored at a banquet· honoring the Webelos and their
pack leaders. Receiving tile the arrow of Ugh! awards
were Brian BaUy, Eric Sim and Floyd Ridenour. David
King and Tammy Clark received their Webelo badge,

50

45

to help unemployed members find
work .
In his remarks, Kimball
reiterated hi~ message of a year ago
when he outlined the three-fold
mission of the church founded in 1830
by Joseph Smith Jr. :
"Let us keep these sacred prin-

w

~ Israeli diplomat

BUCKETS

'

- '-

~

'·

WOODGLEN OAK

material assistance and were urged

Rice stockpile at all-time high

-.•.

"'"'

,

2GALLON

.

•.

~hurch members of much of the
financial responsibility for building
meetinghouses.
And during an early weUare
session today, members were counseled against becoming dependent
on the church for financial or

~

...

IMAGE PAINT

d

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On All
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Haycock. It was Haycock who
By VERN ANDERSON
delivered
Kimball's address.
A..odated Press Writer
The ailing 87-year-old "prophet,
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Mormon Church President Spencer W. seer and revelator" of the world's 5
Kimball Saturday urged the faith's million Mormons has been in a
membership to seek perfection in a weakened state since skull surgery
troubled world where Jesus Christ seven months ago sharply curtailed
ltmds tbe church "which Satan seeks • his once-energetic ministry.
"This work, which Satan seeks in
in vain to tear down."
"Be of good cheer, for the Lord is vain to tear down, is that which God
guiding his church," Kimball said in has placed on earth to lift mankind
remarks prepared for delivery at up," Kimball said in his five-page
the morning session of the 152nd an- address, delivered at the Mormon
nual General Conference of ·the Tabernacle on Temple Square.
Meantime, church leaders on the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
eve of the two-day conference anSaints.
It had not been known whether nounced two important changes in
Kimball would attend the morning policy, cutting by six months the
session, but moments before it time a Mormon male will spend on a
began, he entered slowly on the arm church mi$iOn and reli eving local
of his pei'Sonai secretary, D. Arthur

•

BRANDY BIRCH

WITH 42" MOWER DECK

urgessearch
for perfection in today's world

..

After
Sale
Price

CHERRY HARDBOARD

MTD
16 H.P.
RIDING MOWER

1 omes -se ntinei-Pag~D-3

~ormnonleader

"SALE WHILE SUPPLIES LAST'

SPRING
HEADQUARTERS

MTD
11 H.P.
RIDING MOWER ·

The Sunday

·Quality Paneling

YOUR

Check Our
Low, low prices
On Selected
Vanities.

, 'flpril 4, 1982

'

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Page-"-0-4- T h e Sunday T1mes-Sentonel

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea5ant,

w. va .

· ~ Apr114, 1982

Reagan schedules working
vacation in Caribbean area
WASHINGTON I API - Pres1dcnt
Reagan IS flyong to Jama oca and
Barbados this week for a workmg

rorrumtment to JamaiC;:I, w hi ch has

vacation, but " to say he os goong
down to deli ver an Easler basket full
of goodoes would be mosleadong," a
State Department offlcoal says
Reagan woll offer nothing beyond
the approxunately $300 m1lhon on Ius
1982 budget and 1983 spcndong
proposal for the regoon . accordong to
admomstratlon offocoals and Ca nl&gt;bean experts
In what the offocoals say os the forst
presodentoal vos ot to the two oslands,
Reagan wo ll fly to Jamaoca on Wednesday, meet woth Prune Monoster
Edward Seaga and attend a state
On Thursday, he wo\1 go to Barbados to meet woth Eastern Canl&gt;-

a tmdotoon of democracy "
Asked what was on the tnp for the
Unoted States, Peter Johnson .
executive do rector of Caribbean Central Amen can Actoon, sa od "A
rested and tanned presodent "
"The fact he's goong down and
pocked a vacat oon spot there says a
lot for the emphasos he's put on the
reg oon," saod Johnson, whoSe grou p
deals woth trade development and
onve'iW'ent 111 the Canbbean
Admonostratoon offocoals, broefmg
reporters on the condotoon they not
be odentofoed, took pams to portray ot
as a workong vacatoon
Asked whether Whole House offocoals added the stale vosol 111

bean l eader~

J amaica, arter th~ Barbados

dinner

and two days of seaside

vacatoon woth Ius wofe, Nancy
For the islands, Reitgan's VI~It

IS

"a very symbolic thong,· smd the
Stale Department offocoal, who
requested anonymoty "The expressiOn of personal mtcrc.st IS so
unportant "
'' To say he IS gmng down to dehver

an Easter basket full of goodoes

one

source

sa1 d

" It

wouldn 't surpnsc me"
Adnunostratoon offocoals have sa od
Reagan's $350 rrull10n Ca nbbcan
Bason lnotoallve, ontended to boo'1
the local economies m the Canbbean
and Central Ameroca through 111-

ranged from $171 06 for the Bucyrus
offoce for three mon,ns, to $3.183 13
for the Luna offoce for a four-month
penod. Uno led has 400,000 customers
m52 of Ohoo's 88 counloes
The prob lem, Yahncr saod
weanly, traces back to Washongton,

DC
We are funded by the federal
government. a nd the federal govern-

the larger OBES offtces was bcmg

ment has been sl ow m pay mg."

restored on F'roday The rest of the

Yahner explamed " All the money
thC~t the federal ~overnmc nt owes illi
has not been released In fact, they
owe llii more than $2.3 mlih on "
"Obvoously, of I had that $2 3
nulloon , I could pay a Jot of bolls,"
Yahner sa od " It's a cash flow
problem "
Yahner saod he spoke wolh Unoled
Telt&gt;phonc nff1 r1a ls lt-~ s t \\ee k and
assured them that he would obta111 a
check for payment from the state
audotors offo ce. " ! don't lhonk they

serv1 ce

to mnl'

offi ces

will

be

restored nex t week , 1f the bureau
comes up woth about $20,000 to pay
the deltnquent bolls
.
The bureau. ca u~hl between a
toght-fl sll'd federal government a nd
a pressmg cred1tor, was trapped Ill a
·cash flow problem," Yahner sa od
Scrvoce woll be restored onoloally to
OBES offoces on Defo ance, Mansfo eld, Loma and Warren
Bureau offocoals saod the bolls

·- - - -

· -- -

-

-

~ 1H86 · 5t94 .

4

,,

;

.sale may place an ad In this
column There will be no
charge to the advert •ser .

3069

Old TV's for parts Ca lf 9'12
3408
One yr . Alaskan ilalamute
mate. 992·6706
5 gray kittens, 7 wks. old

Calf 4-16·0728.

··----

Poodl e no papers. Ca ll 446·

8361. ,
T.o give away Ba rn fult of
Pl ease pick up

742 2421

-------

5 sm m; xed breed pups. 2
femal e, 3 male Call 245·
5671.

•6

lost and Found

-

' FOUND·6' blade huntong
,knife in case. Identify Calf
25lr1379
LOST fe m a le A 1rd a l e,
"brown &amp; bla ck, 111 vicrnity

SIGNS OF SPRING - Cherry trees show, some of
their first blossoms of the spring along the Tidal Basin
near the Washington Monument Friday. The annual

of Vinlon
088 9809

cherry blossom festival culminates with a parade
Saturday, celebrating the trees, originally given to the
United States by Japan. (AP Laserphoto).

The company saod F'nday that
contmued financial losses and
workers' refusal to grant wage concessiOns led to the planned closmg.
Offoc1ais a t the com pany' s
headquarters in Cleveland said the
shutd own wo uld not , affect
Republic's steel-makmg fac1loltes on
YountJStown.

Yahner sa od.
Offices affected by the shutoff oneluded Luna , Bucyrus, Van Wert,
Napoleon, Mt Vernon, Warren,
Mansfoeld, Defoance, Green, Ottawa,
McConne lsvo ll e and
Marysvolle

The closing 1s expected to ta ke
place wothm 90 days, a spokesman
sa1d, adding that the company w•s
proceeding under the basic steel
contract woth Umted Steelworkers
Local 2334, wh1ch represents some
300 workers at the facihty .
The company said, however, that
ol was wilhng to contmue tail&lt;s with
the unoon .
In announcmg the closmg, the
company saod the dov1soon, part of
Republic's Manufacturing Group,
had not been profitable for a pertod
of tome.
The company said the unoon has
been aware

of prohlPmo.: ..:'"""'

Calf

of Gold

Ridge and Ki ngsbury Rd
Dog with shaggy gray hair
18 on tall. 992·6581

Republic Steel to close plant
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) Although theor decosoon IS not "etched 111 stone," Republic Steel Corp.
officoals say they mtend to permanentl y close lheor storage rack
and cot! coatmg div asJO n an
Youngstown by July.

Reward

· Lost in vtcmity

Small rust colored cocker
spantel, answers to the
name of Rusty . Reward

Caii30H75 28 10

August. Last November, one highrankmg uruon off1c1ai had told reporters he feared the plant would close.
The contract concession proposals
presented to the uruon, calling for $4 .
per hour wage cuts, were rejected,
as were counterproposals presented
to the company by the union.

Men's bittfotd, at Scottish
Inn Reward . 304·675 6493
YardSale

7

Large Garage Sa le A pril
, 2.3. &amp; 5th Lots of new Avon
• ,&amp; good ctoth1ng. 9 5 624
· Oeenle Dr , 2 mi. from
hospital across from Mink s

Auto Sates.
fhe company said it did not know
how many workers would be affected, but an unofficial count
showed nearly 400 union and
management workers on the
payroll.
The div1s1on makes steel racks
and also pre-paints steel coils.

3 Family Yard Sate 2.3,
, _.4th. 10AM·5PM. Ctothong

&amp;
&amp;
• • ·m1sc. goods 114 mtle on 218

'

sizes,

Wed. Baby clothes, Avon

• Large Yard sale April 5,
and 6. 2 mites on Flatwoods
·Rd from Five Pts Boys
fiOthes, large table, toots,
; dishes.

stone

~spreads ,

drapes. 992·7669

jars,

5 Happy Ads
6 Los t and Found
7 Yard S.a te (pa•d 1n advance )
8 Pub l 1c Sa le
&amp; AuC ti On
9 Wanted to Buy

Real Estate
31 H om es tor Sa le
32 Mobile Homes f or Sale
33 Far m s for Sa le
34 Bus 1ness BU1Id1ng s
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 Rea l E stat e Wanted

emplOyment
SeF"IIces

Classified pages cover the
51 Household Goods
52 CB, TV &amp; l_3ad10 Equ1pment
53 Ant, q ues
54 M1 sc M er c ha nd• se
55 Bulldmg Suppli es
56 Pe ts for Sa le
57 Musc •at Instruments
58 Fru•f s&amp; Vege tables
59 For Sa le or Tr ade

11 H elp Want ed
12 S1tuat1on Wanted
13 Insurance
14 Bus• ness Tr a1n 1ng
15 Sc hool s ln: tru ct •on
16 RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repa1r
17 M •sce ll aneous
18 Wan ted To do

61
62
63
64
65

- - -- -_

Not1 ce ts her eby g1ven
that sea l ed b•d s w tlt be
r ece •ved by th e C1ty
Manager, of th e Ci t y of
Ga llipolis, Ohto at hts off•ce
m the MuniCIPal Butld1ng
f or wa ter m et er s.
B1ds wtli be r ecetved at
the above n~rh e d office un
tr11 2 00 Noon, loca l ttm e on

NOTICE

TO : Owam Helton, whose
last known address IS
Route 1, Reedsville, Oh1o
You are her eby not1fied

3

Announcements

SWEEPER

B 1 Mar• on Caldwe ll.

Clerk
_ . __ ___P_u b_lic No.:ctic:ce, __
PUBLIC NOTICE

A publi c hearing will be

held Monday. April ' 19,
1982, at 7·oo p.m. at the
Green Township Hall
regarding the cable fran ·

ch ise of Gallia Cable Com ·

and

sew;ng

machine r epair, parts, and

GREE N TOWNSHIP supplies
TRU STEE S delivery,

._ Pu b.!!£_Not• ~e _

LEGA'L NOTICE
TO BIDDERS

Pock up and

Davis Vacuum
c;teaner, one half mrle up

Georges Creek Rd. , Calf
446·0294 .
F1shing Lic ense on sale .
come and see our new ship-

ment of 1982 Fising Rods,
Reels, &amp; Lures. Spring
Valley Trading Co .. Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·8025. -

Wednesday, April 21 1982 pany. Th1s hearing shall Turkey Hunters · We have
and publicly openea1 and regard a cable franchiSe mouth calls, slate box
that the 1959 Marlette r ea d at fh'at hour and place. for providing .cable calls, camo gear &amp; decoys
Caravan House Trailer, Bid form s may be obtained television service to the in stock. Spring Valley
residents of Green Town·
senat no 246 XFK 615. wol) on the office of the Coty ship.
Trading Co .• Spring Valley
be sold by the Farmers Manager, 518 Second'
Maroon Caldwell, Plaza, 446-8025.
Bank and Savings Com Av~nue, Coty of Gallopotis,
'
Clerk
pany on April Wh, 1982, at OhiO
April4
10 :00 a m at the sit! of said
For bulk delivery Qf
Public
Notice
home, which is the
ijasollne, heating oil and
Barnnger .Pr.operty
diesel fuel, calf Lanamart&lt;,
PUBLIC NOTICE
a
ute 1, R•svllle,
992·2T81, Pomeroy,Oh.
pubt ;c hea•ing witt be
_,,, ,
0 0
Monday, April 19,
•Th e Farmers B
af 6.30 p.m . at the
Savings Company
3
Announcements
reserves the riQhf·to
"',,"e•&gt;ardinoaTownship
Hall
the cable fran·
any and all b1ds on
Raclr1~
Fire Dept. sponsors
f
Thompson
mob•le home.
Inc . This a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
Further, said mobile I·Cabllev1
regard a 6:30p.m.. Bashan. Factor.y
home wilt be sold on the
ranchis e
for choko12 gauge shotgun . .
condition •t is in with no ex· cable
W

preued or implied warra!l-

providing cable television.

J

-·

Items

67s-Pt. Pleasant
4SI- Leon
176-Apple Grove
773--Mason

Pomeroy

379-Walnut

98s-Chester
343,--Portland

' T_R_E_A_S_U_R_E__C_H_E_S_T-~~n
air !tea market . 6 Acre
iletd on Rt. 62 in Midway
between Buffalo &amp; Etenor.
:wv. Space for rent, call
30-4-586-3095 or 586·4419 for

182-New Haven

247-Letilrt Falls

19s-Letart
937- Bullalo

949-Racine
742-R uti a old

•reservations . Opening day

667-coolville

86 M H Repa;r
87 Upholstery

Public Not1ce

(4) 2. 4, 2tc

Public Noftce

81 Home Improvement s
82 Plumbong &amp; Heating
83 Excavat.ng
84 Etecn ca l &amp; Re fn gcrat•on
85 General H auling

Area Code 304

992-Middteport

256--Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.

serv1 ce to the r es rdents of
Gree n Towns htp

l• es g1ven

-

SeF"Jiees

Ma5Ck1 Co., wv

Meigs County
Area Code614

3111-Vinton
24s-Rio Grande

sand 6. First Mobile home
on Twp. Rd .79. Back of
:i.\eogs fair ground. Many

)&gt;.prll17th.

rnseruon

Up to 15 woro s Three day

.nsertion. .

Up to 15 Words .. Six day

Friday-Saturday, Spencers
across from old Henry's

. . . .. SJ.OO

Up to 15 words One day

. .... S4 00

·•

store,

0

... ......... . ..... .. . .
0

Ofl

T..r ••

I

0.,

3

Announctments

Sheppard Sew1ng Machine
Sales &amp; Serv1c e. Wtll

reopen Mpnday., Apri I 5th.
Open Mon ·Sat. 9·4, Closed
Thurs. &amp; Sun.

The abandoned Antoquity
Methodist Church building

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

and its land is for sale Interested persons may sub·

Profess ronal
Electrolysis
A M .A . approved,

LOST small while west
Highland Terrier. Lost In
vincinlty of Igra Estates.
Reward. Call'367·0435.

2·11

Aloe Vera--forever living
·products opportunity
meeting . 7:00 PM, April
5th, Shoney's,
Point
Pleasant. for further in-·
formation call (3041 776;J631 or 675-5185.

mit b1ds to :Athens District
United Methodist Union,
Mulberry

CASH PAID for clean, tate
mOde l used ca rs Sm1rn
Bui c k -Pont•a c, Ga llipolt s,

Oh10 Catt 446·2282
Buy111g
Go ld,
Stiver,
Plat•num , old coms, scrap
ring s &amp; SilVerware . Oa1ty
Quot es ava •labte
A l so
co 1ns &amp; coin suppltes for

sale

Spring

to all ' our

brothers &amp; sisters In
·ChriU, friends and loved ones for their
p•ayers and help during our time of need

SURF'R ..SE
.
OPI!t+HOIISI! ,
For Beatrice ' (Elliott)
wett{llan at 'her
sister's,

Mlri•m

Allison. tt9 Bastlani
Dr, Gallipolis, O~lo. · ·
. .
. APRILI ' •
, 1 P.M.to'4 P.M • .
Friends,

classmate~

iln~d:anyone ~elc;:ome.

. ~ If rein

\ ~va~ Sate and Flea
. Ma et, dally to:oo A.M to,
.15:ll0 . M. except sunday.
''Oidaj(er's Variety, Leon,
-~'W. Va.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. All
bids must be submolted bt
April26,'1982.

preciation

apd sorrow in the expiration 'of our wile and
mother,

Dorothy

L.

Veith on , March 26,
1912.
Words cannot · tell just
how much 'you were appr'&amp;clated. · May God
bless and keep you Is
our pr•yers.

.

u

1~

HusiN!nd, John R1 Veith

,

,
Daug"tllr,
Dorothy H. LHch
son,sari R, Veith

daUghters,·· friends
andrelatna

Vall e y

'' .---.:-----~·

::Six ·tamlly sate, 123 ~outh
·Point Pleasant,
•1Ciothlng chltdrens, adult
,(• tl)z.~.and misc.

't!hrk,

ijt

FRENCH500

1

,

fj

'l

FLEA MARKET

.-

Ga llipoi&gt;S, Oh 45631

----

RESPONS IBLE baby S1f

Human Serv1ce Poslf•on
The Gal It a Jackson Me1gs
Mental H ea lth 5oard •s
lookmg for an 1nd1V1dua t
who can work on a month
to m on th con tr act bast s to
seek out, f 1nd and license
eK tr am ura l care hom es 1n
Ga tlt a, Jac kson and M e1gs
Cou nt •es
M1mrmum
r eq u•rments B A or B s
1n a human se rv1 ce freld
w1th a n emphas•s rn
Psychology or Soc•a l work

fer , Monday Fnday days,
references requ1red, ca ll

614 446 7693
Wanted , senous mtnded
mus•c•an, any th1ng and
everything to f orm ba nd

Phone 614 446 7344
12

Sttuahons Wanted

So meone to commute to

Please apply by subm;tling

WORK SHOP
superv rso r
Bu s drrver, H1gh School
01ploma plus 2 years
co ll ege Reg1stered Nurse
Cont act Dav•d Eak le, co
Green Acres Reg 1ona1 Cen
ter, P 0 Box 11 5, Lesage,
West V•rg.n•a 25537 Phone

26 ac r e farm, hou se,
barn ,
other
out bultdmgs, tobacco ba s~

Wanted timber We cu t ,
pay1ng good pr iCeS Ca ll

446 0706
Antrque oak turn1ture,
round tabl es, bookca ses,
desks, dr essers, chests, •ce

boxes, etc Calf 446 3759
ROSENBERG RECYCLI
NG 307 Upper R1ver Rd .
Gallipolis. Blue buildmg
across from Sil ver Bndge
Plaza Open Mon , Wed , &amp;
Fn 10 to 4 Sa t 10 to 3

S PECIALIZIN G
IN
ALUMINUM
CANS,
aluminum s1d1ng, sheets &amp;
cast alum , copper w1re,
brass, rad• ators, auto bat
tenes &amp; IBM ca rds 446-

2340
t want to buy 6 potted
Spruce trees, 6' tall . Call
446·4635

Charl
eston
675
5820
after dally
4 30

Box

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

FARM FOR SALE
$18,000
256-1579

CALL

AMBITIOU S
Earn
what you ' re worth!
Respected ,
grow1ng
lea der 1n party pl an
sa les needs two superVISors 1n your area
D emon str ators
also
ne e d ~d . Car a nd phone
neces sa ry . GUaranted
ltne of gifts, toy s, hom e

Ca ll

FREE ·

1·800-5 53·9077

or wnte

MERRI - MAC.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

chests ,

desks ,

stoneware, et c

Call 367·

Cedar Trees 2 to 4 ft w•ll

dig . Call 446 4416 alter
7PM
BEDS·IRON , BRASS, old
furntture , gold, silver
dollars, wood 1ce boxes,
stone jars, ant1ques, etc.,

households .

lO in Cu l l 11 HP

types Also buying baseball

SALE

IWtlitUt Ohio tfartlnO .

,,....
! • . oWitft ..... l
'·
I d .PWiurthei' lnfe Call ~14- .
)

Blue

"M ISC.

30 ga l copper kettl e, •r on kettle, wood h• g h cha1 r,
t1brary t ab le, Smger tread le sew rng m ac h me, lard
press, kraut cu tter , clocks, meat gr 1nder, m1 sc
d•shes &amp; P• cture frame
OWN ER- MR . &amp; MRS . OSCAR WEBER
Lunch
Cash
Pos1t1ve I D
Dan Smtth
Jtm Carnahan

949-2033

$~

II~

11!!J...
"V7'

h

Ill

'l'tV" , _
~
~

V1rg1n1a and Allan Gibson, Widow and son of the
late James F (Jigger) G1bson, edge of HAR -

RISONVILLE on St Rl. 143 wilt offer the fottow·
ing at AUCTION .
FARM EQUIPMENT WILL SELL AT 1.00 PM

Nancy Ja spers - Assoc1atc

Real Estate -

General

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066
Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408

rake, 3 pt rotary hoe, 2 tnt 2 pt 14" 4 ga ng plows.

lnt 2 pt 14" 2 gang plows, 2 pt d1sc har ow, eleva tor
w•th gas engi ne, lnt s• tage bl owe r , N o 46 lnt baler
(new kn •ves and knotters). tnt dra g m ower, N ew
Idea PTO dn ven manure spreader, 2 pt lnt
mower, cultipac ker, 55 gal spray e r , 2 pt to 3 pt
adapter, wagon, sltp sc raper, 1.000 lb. platform
sca les, 100 ton M a rtin m etal silo, tr ac tor cha m s &amp;
we•ght s, he avy duty log r acks, 3 pt h1tch ca rry aiL
PTO hydraultc pump, hydrauli c cy l•nder, Chor e

Boy short line milkers w;fh heavy duty pump. Solar
300 gal bulk tank
AUTOMOBILE , MOTORCYLE AND PARTS
1969 Plymouth 2 door, runs good, good rebuilt
trans., Honda ~B 100 motorc ycle, 2 helmets, tnt
engines &amp; par ts, radiators, generators, st arters,
alternators, gaskets, filters, 2 speed rear ax le, ) ront
axle, new 8.24x20 tire with liner

OIL AND GAS EQUIPMENT

~

~~

Open end box wrenches, sockets, one Quarter , th r ee--

.f/lt

.f&amp;

on skids with gasoline heavy duty pump 2 onch Ime
for crude, 2 inch p1pe threader, pipe v•se, pipe cut

ters, 4-250 gallon tanks, 55 gatton drums, all s ozes
pipe fillings, pipe wrenches, heavy duly cha1n h01st
HAND TOQL,S AND MISC .
eighths and one half; ratches, breaker bars, ham

3-BE DROOM HOME S1 tu a l ed on 43 ' x170' 1n
Ga ll 1poh s , l ome has been remodeled and has new
kttchen, bath, fa furn ace and hot water ta nk
w1thm wa lktng d•stance tr am stor es and ch ur c hes
Pn ced tn the 20's Owner m 1y help I 1nance
SPRING I S HERE an d we 11ave 2 n1ce. com
f ort ab le r etr eats near Ty coon Lnkc Bofh Situated
on wooded lots w1fh1n walk1nq d•stance from lake
Rela x and en tOY nature and the qood ba ss f1 Sh1ng at
T ycoon L ake 1n your own re tr eat
LOOKING FOR IN VESTME N T property We have
two propert1 es located w 1t h1n l hP c 1ty of Ga l It polis
5 rental unrt s rn all Ca ll t or cornplc l e defails 1

mers, b lacksmith, body and carpenters, torque

wrenches, tool boxes, refrigeration gauges &amp; lines,
acetylene gauges and hQses, many other smatt
toots, severall*chlans &amp; binders, cant hook, come
a-longs. walking horse equipment. chain link fen
clng, 2 metal C. L, gates, mowing sythe, cross cut
saws, old hay hook, fancy lightning rod, electric
motors. single and three phase, Coleman lante('n.

·1

MODERN (2 Years old) 3 bedroom home s1tuat ed
1n Kyger Creek Sc hoo l Dt st , overtook1ng th e
beau t 1tul Oh 10 R1ver Only 15 m1nutes from
Gal t1po l• s Garage and u t il1fy roorn .n basemen t.
owner may help f•n ance Call todny lor more 1n
torm at 1on Pn ced rn the 40' s

tnt 400 di ese l tractor w •th front end loader , 2 pt
ca rry all, 2 pi ln t cutt• va tor , g r arn dn ll parts, N ew
Idea gra •n dr. H, lnf 2 pt corn plante r , S1de de l• very

800 gatton tank. 1,000 galt on tank, 1,000 gatton tank

'

eA LL US TO BUY OR SE LL

949-2708

SATURDAY, 9:30A.M.
APRILIO, '82

RICK PEARSON, AUCTIONEER

II

LARGE A FRAME on 6 acrr s Hil S 3 bPd r oo rn s. 11 1
baths, )lev e l s of li v1ng SP&lt;1 CC. 1M tt0 ttdrnqc·. loc ated
on Rt 248 Many , many fine fcel lur('S Low 'io70 's
MUST SE LL
Almost a QIV L' ilW(lY Rf'clu ccd nqn1n
from $ 17 ,000 to$ \0 500 F11nn c 1nct ilVrldilble
3 BEDROOM BR I CK HO ME
L•v•nq roo m has
woodburn1ng fir eplace. 11} l)il lt1 11nrdwooct fl oors,
we ll constru c ted &amp; .nsulatect fl.s, k onq !.35,000
3 BEDROOM HOME - 111 mii &lt;'C. out ol M1dd leport
on 2 ac r es Rental 1ncomc f rom 1r~1•l er on prop&lt;'rty
also A ll th1 s lor $32.000

FARM EQJ~tPMENT
AUCTION

OWNER : MR . &amp; MRS . ORVA RICHARDS

••ll!2~•ft

Ge nera l

J1m Brown, App

Terms: 10% down ont.da y of sale. The rest due on
delivery of deed.

,
'
$
$
sa $
$ ~ $ ~ .~ ~

.. .

" ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS "

sold

IRK ICI'OSS.ll"''

Real Estate -

PH 843 ·2071

Log cha1ns, snatch block, rope &amp; block, push garden
p low, c rd er barre l s, 1ft w1 ndows, 16 ft boat. drop
lea l table w/2 cha•rs, fan, sweeper , lamps, &amp;
ke r osene stove

se.ng Lots No N1ne (9) and Ten (10 ) 1n sa •d tow n
of New H ave n, frontrng 50 fee l eac h on the south
s1de of George St and eac h runn •ng southern l y 150
fee t, hou se, ga rage, out budding, lumber all to be

"

Pre ston Mustard , Auct1oneer
Bud._ Me Ghee. Auct.o neer
Johrl M •t chell. Auc f• oneer
Te l ry Ll oyd, Apt AuCf1onecr

"T RACTOR "

" CATTLE "

va

· . ' · 307,Upper ftkoo•
Rd.'
ltVI
'
build'
,_;..SilVer
B 'dge Plaza
1

·

~ACHINERY AUCTION
SATURDAY, APRILIO, 1982
10:30 A.M.

FARM

2 Her eford cows &amp; ca lves

APRILS, 1982 AT 1:00 P.M.

)

OWNER S FRANK AND BETTY LEWIS

MUSTARD'S COMPlElt AUCTIO NSERVICE
Jackson, Ohio 286-1229

" MACHINERY "

REAL ESTATE AUCTION

.SHEET &amp;CAST ALUM.NUM
•ALUMI~UM SIDING
eC()PPER WIRE &amp; TUBING
••BRASS &amp; RADIATORS
·
•AUTO
BATTERIES
·
.IBM
CARDS
'
•'ZINC ~LEAD' • STAINLESS
STEEL
'1·

AN TIQU E GLASSWARE Su ch brand names as
Croo k sville.
Au :. lr 1&lt;1,
H ornrn('r
L iluqhlln ,
Will1amsburq , Al fr ed M ca k ' "~ Fren ch SrlXOn
Johnson Br os, 0 E M c N•co l ~ ou tt,e rn Po i! NIC'S,
East Pal•st•nc Co, Park lanc, Pop0 Gosser James
Edwards, W1 ck Ch•na Co, Ironstone Well er
Roseville , Hull illld Norlldk e, IU ':&gt; 1 10 ll dl!ll' rl few 20
tur ee ns. 8 l ead c ry stal fumb ler&lt;; 70 P•C'C (· Pope
Gosser sef , bowl~ p1t chf'r c, d 1ShC' '&gt; qt,l:.'&gt;C'C., urn s.
vases, plalf er s cream ,1nd &lt;:, uqar se ts sc vc&gt;rell
opalescent p1 cccs milk qla ss li on! qlass 2 11ve bo t
ti e cas tor sp tc, F lohlu0 plu s m,lnv m,1ny I"''O r P sr i &lt;;
and pteces
FURN ITU RE 2 SWIVC' I top st ;:uld'J dr um l dblc
li brary fi!bl c, channel back cll ,lor . w,11nu 1 bu ffet.
corne r shelf. oak s1and. sm a ll v ,ctoro&lt;Hl tabl e em
p1re stand. th eater se at s rn,lplr Trlbh· w 11t1 bread
board ends, oak rocker , V• c l o r1.'ln r oc ker lovese,.r,
couch and cha1r. record Cel b•n r t 1CE' cr0n m fr PC7N ,
cooper sp .tt oon . seve r ,ll lamps, ol d IJook s l)r onze
cloc k w •fh hor se and shoescss •ons. plu s m ore'
CAR · 1974 Plymou th gol d Du ster
CAR 1972 Ford p1ckup l ,d cnrnpt•r '&gt; P~' l ,,11
TERM S Cash or Loc a! Check w1th Prop er I D

CENTRAL REALTY

2x 14 Fast h•tch p lows, t H 7 ft f ast h1t ch d•sk, 100
I H fa st h1tch mower, A C Side delivery rake, A C
hay cond1t 1oner, N H 66 baler, 16f t Dav•d Brad ley
flat bed wagon, N t 95 bu manure spreader, 7 ft
woods brush h og, PTO grass seede r , 10 m I H Burr
M1ll

P. 0. BOX 327
IACKSON, OH. 45640

WE BUY:

....,- ' '

8x20 st orage bulldrng (On Sk i dS). band sa w w/s
ta nd &amp; motor, wo rk bench, 5x5 calf hut c h, wooden
gates, one l ot of rough lumber, metal barrels
wooden stock rack f1t s ~· Chevy p1 ck up, whee l bar
row, 5' p1 Cn1 c table . wooden extens1on l adder,
bl ade tor garden tr actor , some metal s•d•ng,
ch 1cken wa ferer, condu1t. copper p1pe, p lasf• c f eed
buckets, 2 H78x15 t1res, 2 re cord players &amp;
spea kers, oak fab le, baby pt q,y pen, se t of fable
tamps, J C Penny back c hild ca rr• er. 36"x5 4"
asbestos stove board, Kenmore upr1ght sweepe r .
b1ke part s, some tool s, and o1her m•sc ellancous
•terns
TERMS CASH

DATE: Saturday, Aprii!O, 1982, alll:OO A.M.
lOCATION: 120 Huron Street, Jackson, Ohto

240 1 H util• fY w/ f as t htfc h

: Rosenberg Recycling
•
l)))
("Specializing i'\, ll
• Aluminum Cans I

·r

10:00 AM

Locat1on : From Galhpoh s follow State Route 141
to Junctton 775, follow 775 to Hannan Trace Road
a t Bethesda Churc h and go ''l mtle , th e tollowtng
w11t be sold

,

JJJ~

.

SATURDAY, APRIL10, 1982

PUBLIC AUCTION

H ave dr sco nt.nued farmmg so w1 11 se ll the
followtng . Located 3 mtl es from Chester, OhiO on
S.R. 248 Watch for sa l e s1gns.

Needed immedialely in the lackson area, an individual
who has construclion supervisory experience or one who
can demonstrale conslruction supervisory capability. The
successful candidate for lhis job will be able to interprel
consttuttion blueprints and install equipmenl accordingly. Knowledge ol heavy i_ndustrial ~quip!"enl ri~ing, art
welding and torch cull1ng, electncal 1pstaUattons, and
the ability lo plan daily work schedules will .be lmporlant considerations. II you belteve you qualify, please
submil your resume to:
Plant Manager

~~$F ,$~~$~~$

.

PUBLIC AUCTION

JOB OPPORTUNITY

FIII'II'GIIndl

, . ....._MN or 446-42110:
'
'

1529

l~S=a~la~d::M:a~s~te~r--fo-od---cu_l_t.,er_
. ~l::::::::::::::::M:a:s:on~,~W::.V:a:.::::::::::::::::~
Ca 11675"2885 ·

I-·

" Not responsible tor acc1 den t s or toss of property "

1

Reg UU9

7773-5785 or 773-9185

••

73 Dodge Dart, 6 cy l , 2 lawn mowers, 3'h hp bat
ter y charger , 10 amp Schauer , H ome l •fe c ha•n
saw, 12 " 1'2'' dril l 6&amp;0, 36 t oot alummum ex tad
der, potbelly sto\'!e, lumber , Century 295 amp
we lder leads st1nger hood, 7. H o r1rhng lawn
mower, 8 foot ga r age door comple te, large counter
top, large tab l e saw
Own er Mr &amp; Mrs Orva R1c hards
Terms : Cash or check w 1th 1 o

16HP441n Cu t

Real estate as recorded '" Vol . 35 Pag e 436 in
Mason County Court Hou se, Po.nt Plea sa nt, W

cards. Osby Martin 992
6370.

FURNITURE

TI LlER
MOWER

OWNER MRS ROSE THOMAS
AUCTIONEER I 0 "Mac" McCoy
Phone 985 3944

L1v1ng room su 1fe, Kenmore washer and dryer,
Fng1da1re refngerator , Hardw1ck gas range, 3
p1 ece bedroom su1t e, cha1rs. po r ch furn1ture, o ld
S1ngcr sew rn g mach•ne, dishes, pots and pans

Not R es pon sibl e f or Acctd ents or Lo ss of Property

OLD FURNITURE, beds,

etc. Indian Artifacts of all

SATURDAY, APRIL10 1982, 10:00 A.M.

Located 9 m11es north of Gailtpohs, Oh10 on block
off Rt 7 or 6 mtles south of Mtddleporf, Oh to, corner
of George and Maple St , Chesh 1re, Oh10

Bureau, 4 ol d frunk s, marbl e top dre sse r . d• slle s,
p1e sa fe, tr eadle sew •ng ma c h111 e. old rocker, oil
l amp w1fh hobn a il globe. 2 che sfs bcds•de l elble 1
clocks. l stand , kn1ck kna cks, e fc
Lunch Served
Not respons1b le f or acc 1dent s or toss of property

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

George St. off J.th St. m New Haven, W. Va .

s•lver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and

PUBLIC AUCTION

sgg

SHPl61N

801

HOUSEHOL D
19 10 co lor TV, 3 rad •os, 7 p•ece d.netle set, utllt ty
table, IIV1ng room couch, large sw•vel c t1a1r, odd
c ha1rs, pa1r fw111 beds, odd bed s. C'lecTriC sktlle t.
etecfnc kn •f e, 3 elec tnc toa ster ove n s clccfnc fryer
(Fry Baby). blender , crock pof. blank c f s, towels
and ot her l 1nens, afghan, Wh1fe e lcc tr• c sew1ng
mach1ne. portab le typewrll er and fable , 1.1rg e w1n
dow tan . 2 hassock f11ns . other l &lt;'l ns w~c1!J lamp pole
lamp, other l amps, d• she s, pof~ pans, etc ,
Whtrlpool foot bath, dehum•dd•rr pr('ssurc canner.
1rons and 1ronmg b oards. book ci'l scs . m1rrors. sp •ce
rack, hand fool s, efc

ANT IQUES ANO COLLECTIBLES

PUS H MOWER

ber ShOp, Moddleporf 992·
3476.

Wood ice boxes Old desks
and bookcases. Witt buy
complete household. Gold,

55

Fnday, Apnl9, begmmng at 10 30 A M on 2nd Ave
(1 block off St Rt 124) m Re edsv ill e, Oh1o 1 have
sold my hom e and Will se ll th e followrng

lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER

wrote
. M.D.
Rt 4, 1
~==========c=========:;l
Pomeroy,
Oh Motter,
Or'l'l2 7760

iron, brass, or wood . K•t
chen cubbards of all types
Tables, round or square.

OWNER . MIKE McCALLA

614-992-2182

Jackson Street, Dubu qu e, Iowa 52001.

Gold, s liver, ste rt1ng ,
jewelry, rings, old cotns &amp;
c urrency . Ed Burkett Bar

w•lh

AUCTION

MARVIN MILLER, OWNER

~,;;.~-;-A-n-ti-q;c~;-nt-ry-t--ur I~=========~~~~~~~~~~~~
n•ture. cupboards, all ktnds r

of

Check

Mechamc on Duty : 8 A M to 7 P .M
SpeCial of the Week Lube, 011 &amp; F11ter
"112.95 • lax "

Drummer wan ts postion
wrth es tab li shed band, per

304 762 2522 E 0 E

decor.

Ana lyrer
up

every tun e

Phone r~~=========::.:!==========~

ters rock Pho ne 304 675·
4045

446·0069

• Ma1or repa1n
*Oil c hang e &amp; lllt en
* C h an • ~ lube
• •• • \e rvi Ct ffidiOr &amp; mmor

RICK PEARSON, AUCTIONEER
773-5785 or 77S-9185, Mason, W.Va.

We pa y cash for l ate model
clea n used cars
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson,

; f , , U.S. M.l 1"'
: ·i Galllpoi~ Oh,
1
'
A,ltiL t-111-11
t'.
l'ta.....t fiJI' m1'1!•t Ill

1,

tn devel oping a compettfive
edg e on
t oday 's
job
market ? Sem•nars and md•V Idual help ava ilab l e
For Information se nd
resume or bnef work
h• story to Gdl co Carerr
Counse ltng 1n care of Box
401.
Gall1pOitS
Da1ly
Tnbune, 825 Jrd
Ave,

ter 992 6606

Health Board, P 0

• Br•kn

• Tunt ·up

JO B
SEEKERS!
FRU STRATED? Need help

514, GallipOliS O h10, 45631
The Ga lli a· Jackson-Me•gs
M ent al Hea lth Boar d ts an
equ a l Opportun 1ty Em
pi oye r

Vall ey

• E•haust

* wa~h . msule &amp; o1.11

med 1ately Call 446· !930

a r esum e to the Ga ll1 a
Mental
Jackson -M e •gs

Sprin g

...._

' • Glllll county

l ady
for
N eeded 1m

Plaza, 446·8()25 or 4-16 8026

(
,._____________

referats, by aponly . 304-675·

IN MEMORIAM
In loving ~mory of
Margaret E. Chambers who_ ,passed '
awaj one year ago,
April 31 19.ll. ,
"We can't call on
yotl in· persOn, but
oilr t~ou&amp;hts are
, ,_
-a"...
always near
Sadly .ml$ied by

Ferry,

Giant Neighborhood sale,
' • MondayAprll5th,at9 6.M.
1111. All types pf clothes, ap
pllances, foys, rototlller,
radio, stereo and much
. more. Look for signs at
railroad crossing on Rt. 2,
.· Gallipolis Ferry. cancelled,

Ave .

We would tike to express our deepest ap-

Gallipolis

flowers-house
'Jllants,
household,
clothing,
everything .

insertoon .. . .. .$7.00

(Average 4 words per hne)

Public Not1ce
The purpose of th• s
pub l1 c mee t ing •s to g •ve
people ul ' the aff ec ted area
an opportun•ty to ex press
t hc•r com ment s on these
al t e rna t 1ves
to
so l ve
wa stewa ter probl ems 1n
the Men A ll co nce rned
CiTIZCnS MC' 1nV1ted to at
TC' nd
March 28, Apnl4, May J

Galha County
Area Code 614

446-Gallipolis

Farm E qu,pm ent
Wanted to buy
L•ves tock
Hay &amp; G ra•n
Seed &amp; Ferf •l•zer

.4-famity
---------carport 'sate April

foilowing telephone exchanges.

74 Motorcy c les
75 Boats &amp; Motors
76 Auto Parts &amp; Accessor• es
77 Au to Reparr
78 Ca mp_.ng Equ 1pment

Farm Supplies

be inside. Lawn mower,

stands, tots of items.

&amp; tlllestotlc

41 H ouses for Rent
&lt;t 2 M obil e Homes f or Re n t
43 Farm s f or Rent
44 A partm ent for Re nt
45 Fu rn• shed Rooms
46 Spac e for r ent
47 W anted to Ren t
48 Equ1pment tor Rent
49 For Lease

Public Not•ce

7l Autos for Sa oe
72 Truck s for Sa le
73 vans &amp; 4 WD

367- Cheoshire

Rentals

evenings

bed-

,April ? 9·4. Turn firsf r0'110
left pasl radoo stat;on,
follow signs. II rain it will

Transportation

21 Bustness Opportun ity
22 Money to Loan
23 Profess 1ona1Serv1ces

446·3159 and 256 1967 in the

Complete
Carport Sate 17 Woodland
-or. April 1, 9 5. Lots of
·· goodies.

M•ddleage
housekeeper

as a young business per son
and earn good money plus
so m e great gifts as a Sen
t1nel r oute earner Phone
us right away and get on
t he eligib1l1ty lt st at 992-

------

misc.

·--------Financjal

Ca ll 446·6567 after 5PM

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- 0 -5

447 Second Ave .
"44'-2924"
Complete Auto &amp; Truck Center
*F r ee

Garden plowed &amp; di sc west
end of George's Creek Rd

GET VALUABLE trammg

nrture and Anttq ues of all
kinds, ca ll Kenneth Swa 1n,

Need r ea r bumper ends,
chrome for doors, front fenders of 1957 Chevy 2 door
call 446 1458

,bottles, teen clothing

'•

work rnto management
446:"3320, 9-noon

RN or LPN for 11 to 7 shift

Garage Sale 2018 Marquet·
,te Ave .• Pt. Pleasant. Fri.
&amp; Sat. April 2 1!. 3, 9 to 5. 6
1amlly baby clothes, tots of

Yard Sate Rt. 141 , Cen·

Or Write Tribune .Classified Dept.
825 Third 1\ve., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

fife and health age nts to

w. Va.

McCALLA UNION 76

Need Immediate l y ltcensed

Ow n er operators w1fh
si ngle ax le or tandom frac
tors. Older tractor s in good
cond. excepted. Work ouf of
Ironton ar ea. Call Motor
Servi ce Co , Inc 614-621

Call Nancy VanMeter,
Pomeroy H ea l \ a r e Cen·

0138

tenary Townhouse . T ues &amp;

PHONE 446-2342

Someone to bu.Jfd fences
Phone 304-937·2205.

9
Wanted to Buy
WANT TO BUY Old fur

on right.

9irl dress, &amp; brides maid

i11aUu Jtihnnt

~w
aiiied-- -

Full or part t1me RN for 7
to 3 sh1ft Full or part t1m e

Tradrng,

,Four beagle pups, 8 weeks
old, 2317 Jefferson Ave.
1

1J _

2156 or 992·2157

446-4999.

clothing all

1 Ca rd of Thank s (pa•d 1n advance)
2 Ca rd of Thank s 1pa1d 1n advance)
3 A nnouncement s
4 G1veaw,;~y

Auction every Fri n1ght at
the Hartford Com mun1ty
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Constgments of new and
used m erc handi se always
welcome
R1chard
Reynolds Au ct•oneer . 275

Kittens gray &amp; black . Call

Manure

1_1__ ~Wanled
Feel Beautoful t SeLf Avon
Earn good S$$ Meet great
people Ca tl 446·3358

SeF"IEBS

2967

·bedspreads, draperies, TV,
•&amp; record player. Flower

AHHBQHEEMeAIS

vrce
Estat e· Farm Household·Misc . We se ll it!
Licensed &amp; bonded Ohio &amp;

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
,does not offer or attempt to
·offer any other thmg f or

coopera ti ve." a bout the s1tua t10n ,

~allipolij

L.E Nea t Auctioneer Ser

wva 367·7101

understood l couldn't somply sol
down a nd wrote a check It's not a
ma tter of days - ot's a matter of
weeks," he sa od
Tha t's when the Iones started
go1ng dead.
Landsberg denoed that Unoted
Telephone, too, os hav mg cash flow
proble ms. .. Aga m, these boll s
weren't JUSl a month due - they
were several months overd ue,'· he
sa od.
Yahne1 sa H.I the bureau owes
telephone bolls to Ohoo Bell a nd to
Ge neral Telephone as well
" They've been very good, very

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

-

Bunny suit for rent $10 to
$15. Kiddie Shoppe. 9'12·
5044.

Telephone company
disconnects OBES lines
By Assocoated Press
In hard economoc limes, a promose
that " the checks os on the mao!"
won't always hold off hu ngry
credJtors - a.':i Ohw's Burecm of Em·
ploymentServoces lea rned thos week
when te lephone se rvrces \\ere
dosconnected to 12 offo ces
In a negot1ated settlement, abo ut
30 percent of the servoce lo fou r of

-

,3_ -- - ~~~~c.!~~!!_· -

In 1981, J amaoca's gross natoonal
product was a bout $3 bolhon - after
seven consecull ve yea rs uf nega to ve
growth, the growth rate was 1.2 percent- 1nflatoon stood at !0 percent,
and the per capota oncome of the 2 2
molloon resodents was $1,340.
Barbados has a literacy rate of 99
percent, a per capota oncome of
$3,040 and project' growth of up to 4
percent, " bulolosn't what they 'd hke
and I decreased) tourosm os the
vo llaon." saod J ohnson

V ISi t

•

•

offJLe.

was announced, out of fear Reagan's
1ma ge would ~ uffe r beca use of the
vaca tiOn,

8- - - Piiiilic-Sale - - - ·
_ _ _'!&amp; Auction
'Gun Repair &amp; Hot Bluing.
We stock modern rill ... Rick Pearson , Ex ·
shotguns &amp; hand guns . All per1enced AUCTIONE ER.
muzzle loading guns &amp; ac· Estates, antiques, farm .
cessorles. Best prices In household. Licensed Ohio·
.me area . Riverside Gun WV . Buying antiques. 304·
.Shop, Rt. 7, Athat;a, Oh. 773·5785, 773·9185
I

creased trade, woll be a key topoc on
the lnp Approxunalely onL~lhlrd of
the fund os dorected at El Salvador
across the Ca nbbean on Central
Amen ca.
The offocoals sa1d Reagan would
not be see forst-hand any of the
poverty the program os mtended to
allevoate althoug h h~ os meetong wo th
the leaders of "some of the poore'1
counlnes of the reg1on "
Unem ploymen t on Jamaoca, the
State Department offocoal saod, 1s
about 27 percent, about 1 percent
below the rate when Seaga took over
from Prune Mm1ster M1cha el
Manley shortly before Reagan took

would be miSieadong," the offocoal
saod, "but he IS demonstra tin g a

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

,
HOUSE ANOGI\RPEN
Magic Chef gas heater 70,000 BTU, air castle radoorecord player, metal bed, Hoover sweeper, rad•os,

NEW LISTING - 3 vacant l ots w1th1n the c •ty of
Gallipolis Buy a ll :t;.or 1-at a t• mo ss,ooo eac h
MODERN, 3·bedroom home w rth 18 'x32' sw. mm •ng
pool, w•thm walkmg d•stance from H olzer Hasp• fat
If you're look ing for comfortab le hom e w1th several
amenit1es you should look at th1 s home as soon as

possible

COMFORTABLE

3-BEDROOM, Older coton1al

8·track tapes, 18" rotary mower, 8 HP Huffy rider
mower, small riding mower, new lavatory and

home w•th•n 2 mil es from Ga ll •pot •s Owner w 111
either rent or se ll If inter ested, please grve us a

many more Items too numerous to mention.

catl!

MCho str.ol sale will be conducted under rool. Bring
01

MODERN

2·BEDROOM

downsta1rs

a partment

OWNERS : VIRGINIA &amp; ALLAN GIBSON
tocated adjacent to the Ga llipolis G'otl Course can
742·3182
eother be used for offices or res;dent;al
Auctioneers-Laurence Donohue -742-3048
Dan Smlth-949-2033
Wood Realty,lnc.
~
Cash
Pps, 1.0 .
·
Lunch
32 Locust St., Gattipolis
,..I_L_.,"_o:..t..re.,.•,;.pon_s_l..:,b-'.:,!_'o_r_•_c_,c.,lden--tso_,r..lo_•_•_o_f.,pro_pe.,....;.rty.,. .......: II------...;.--•44•6-"1•0•66--------.J

\

�A
The Sunda

OhiD-POIOt p

T1mes - sent10el

31

SA NDY AND BEAVER In ·
2 bd room 10 Harnsonvllle
$8,000 May cons 1der land

contract 614 928 4417
2 story a lm ost 'h acre 4
bd 2 ltvtng room ktfchen
d1n1ngroom
bath small
basement 2 l arge carports
S1de porch
front porch
wood burner 949 2403 9 to
4 949 2460 eve nmgs

379 3318
S~ool s _!_~truct1on

Karate the ult1m a te 1n se lf
defence a ll pnvate lessons
Men women &amp; childre n
t nst ruct 1on thru black be lt
Also available
Karate
uniforms puchtng and
k•ck1ng bags and pr otec
f1ve equ1pm e nt
J erry
Lowe r y
&amp;
Assocla te s
Kara t e
S tu d10
143
Bur l1n gton Rd
J ackson

New 3 bd room home wtth
4 8 acres near Met gs m1n e
no 1 $.35 000 742 3132 or
742 2764 a fter 4
In

acres,

J

2
bd room Rental tak e car or
mobile home 1n trade John
Shee ts 31h m•l es South
M1ddleport R 7

Wantedtooo

18

Mason 2

bd room large garage

Dh Ca ll 286 3074

For Sa le
two bd room
home fully ca rpeted 20x40
ga rag e cellar, barn, on
3 92 ac r es of exce ll ent
lay1ng
l and
East of
Wllksvll le on St Rt 124 669

L1mes tone for d r 1vewavs
w II sp r ead Call379 2642
Expert lawn mow1ng se r
v1r:e dependable low rate
f ree est1mates Ca ll 245

4333

Reel Eat,te -

- Oener1l

General

House for sale or rent
Bes1de Bapt1st Church m
Anf1QU1tv 1112 m 1 below

Hydro Plant
949 2129

949 2281 or

LIFE
INSURANCE

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
d•t•on J bedroom , tamdy
room w tth fn eplace cen
tral atr basement 304 675

1542

BMR 411 -

THREE bedroom home 5
acres 9 miles from town
Phone after 6 00 p m 304

675 7198
IF you can afford $405 per
month total payment , taxes
and 1nsurance tncluded
th1s ran ch w1th 3 bedrooms
2 baths &amp; family room on 112
acre can be yours for
sma ll down payment Ca ll
30.4 458 1582 Mason Coun

tv

NEW LISTING -

Ike Wileman BrOker 4.46 nu Eve
Jim cochran Anoclate 44• 7111 Eve

3 bedroom home 3

Silk House (cus tom
ll owersl
Com pl e te

2381

BMR 404-

LOW 30's

~ C oty

37 acres

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY 1-4 P.M.

4J6 0930
Cu~tom

garden plow1ng
Gi311tpOIIS areo Call 446

th1s 3 bedroom ranch Has huge famtly
room w/f1replact, 2 baths, deluxe k1t
chen 2 ca r garage &amp; 'h acre 9% dssum
pt1on and owner wtll help fman ce balan

the en t~r e fam1l 1' year round Love l y 4
bedroom ranch w1th over 2200 sq ft
Situated on 2 acres w1th 625 lak e fran
tage a' Charolats Hills Th1s qual1fy
hom e h as deluxe kttchen
formal
mg family room, ftreplace 2 baths
.,,,..""deck 2 car 9arge &amp; more Pr1red
se ll1n upper 60' s

ce

•

Temporv office work good
account1nq &amp; typ1ng sk ill s
Call 446 4408

eMR 409 -

OWNER FINANCING -

Thos splol

foyer home mcludes 3 bedrooms., 2 full baths large
den w 1th firep lace heat pump See tht s fully car
peted hom e now Located 1n Crown Cttv 1

Was her and Dryer Repa 1r
All
wo r k
guaran teed
Reasonnble rates Call 256

BMR 391 - REDUCED• - Owner wants 1f so ld
now I Mobile hom e located on nver front lot

1)96

BMR 389 - Thts f1ne home ha s 4 bedroom s and •s
located c lose to town You will have a l arge lot w1th
a country atmosphere and have all the c 1tv con
ven1ences Call nowt

Wdl p ck up old was hers
and dryer s Ca ll 446 8181 or

256 1396

BMR 398 ASSUMABLE LOAN 1034% lnt Rate

MILLION SSS VIEW -

Babys 1tl nq n my home
Cn ll 446 7282

Busmcss
Opportuntty

Oft Stale Roule 35 -

Close

GET READY FOR SUMMER ' Owner

transferred and must se ll tht s 3 BR ranch Clo se to
town tnc ludes deluxe 18x36 1nground pool Ca ll for
an appo1ntment today 1

to Holz er Med1cal Center Doctor moved out of the
area needs to se ll th1 s lovely new ru st1 c L shaped
ran ch Th1 s very plush home featur es 3 large
bedrooms format entry and llv1ng room Built 1n
k1tchen 2 full bath s full ba se ment 3 ca r garge
S1tt1ng on J 2 acres Be one of th e Bes t Addressed
People tn Town 1 Pnced m the80 s 1

BMR 407F - Camp s1te Potent1a1• 32 acres m / 1 wtth
f rontage on Raccoon Cr as we ll as frontage on
blacktop h1ghway

Turn l ef t off St Rf 35 on Buht Morton Rd (bes 1de
Foodland) 1 m1le Follow Open Hous es 1gns•

BMR 386 - REDUCED - Qu1 et c ountry home on 112
acre lot 1ncludes 2
n W1th loft and part1al
basem ent Ca ll for ( ~ "'"::,1

Own you r own Jean Shop
Lad1es Wear or Ch ddr ens
Stor e Over 200 brands
available $11 950 Includes
1nvent ory
fi x tur e
E tc
Comp lete store Ca ll l 800
87 4 4780 ext 2

Real Estate -

BMR 410 - A frame s1tuated on a beaut1ful wooded
se tt1ng you wtll love the atmosphere Owner f1nan
c1ng for quallf1ed buyer s Low 30 s

c.Ql\l . .

BMR 413FJ - M1n1 farm located 1u st off the Ap
pa!ach1an h1qhway near J ac k so n 31 7 acres m / !
wtth an older two BR hom e seve rn! outbuild1nqs
Just r1qht for le•sure t1m e or full t1m e 11v1nq Low

General

\20 s
414 - 12 x60 mobile hom e s1tuated on a 1 acre
-t lot Inc lud es furnitur e has rear pat10 w /c over
co vered front deck 12x24 qnraq e w1th storaq e Low
~MR

C1gare tt e
Vend1ng
Bus, ness Ca ll 304 773 5651

&gt;20 s

Money to loan

22

REFINANCE or purchase
your home 30 yea r fixed
r a te WV a &amp; Oh1 0 Leader
Mortgage 77 E State St
A th ens O h 592 305 1

Reel Estate -

P1ano
Tun1ng
&amp;
Reparr Call Bill Ward for
appo1ntment
Wards
Keyboard 446 4372

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General

You don t want to spend lots on' flxtng ? Then thi S
lovely older home IS for you Comp lete new k 1tchen
&amp; eat ar ea Formal d1n1ng &amp; 1tv1ng room Family
room W1lh woodburner 3 bedrooms new vmyl
S1d 1ng &amp; storm w •ndow s Co mpletely 1nsulated Full
ba se ment S1ng le ca r garage

DOT SONS Tree Se rvt ce 15
years ex per1 en ce w e c an
r emo ve any tr ee anywhere
reasona bl e free est1ma tes
1nsured 304 576 2897

31

Home s for Sale
TIP TOP SHAPE•
Ju st a little pretf1er than so many Modern J 4
bedroom br1ck home Formaii1V1ng &amp; d•ntng room
Large k1tchen Full basement Large 2 car garage
Workshop &amp; barn S•fttng on 58 acres more or less,
of landscaped grounds Spnng will be breathless
her e • Owner will help f1nanc e 10% tnt Rate

Beaut1ful b r1 c k &amp; frame 3
bedroom hom e w /sce n 1c
v1ew
wood burn1ng
f1repla ce formal d1n1ng
ce ntr al a1r w / heat pump
L a nsc aped
1 ac re lot
w/ f enced 1n back yard
$45 900
ll% f tnanc1ng
small down payment Call

only $96 000 00
OWNER WILL CONSIDER TRADE
ENTERTAIN EASILY or hode out on your second
story bedroom w1th a good book Exceptional foyer
has bndal sta~rcase
powder room Spac 1ous 11 v
mg and d1nmg rooms Kttchen has ISland range
built m oven breakfast nook w •th v1ew of bn cked
courtyard Peacefu l env~ronment tn the hea rt of the

446 3766
Hou se for sa le m tow n
Pn ced on 1nspec t1on 3 or 4

bdr F R 2 baths Ca ll 446
1223

Clfy Assumable mortgage $49,000

CHAMPAGNE TASTE• You'll bubb le wolh ex

SMALL FARM FOR SALE
A n1c e .t bedroom home

cltement when you s1p •n the features th 1s luxury
hom e offers Large format ltvtng room wtth w B
ftreplace Formal d1ntng room w1th huge built 1n
c htna cabtnef 3 modern bedrooms, 2 baths, bu 1tt 10
k1tc hen wtth breakfast bar Family room Wlfh
slid1ng pat1o doors leadtng to a 18x36 pool and pat 1o

w1fh 8 acres of pasture gar
den space barn, niCe out
bu1td1ngs Located one mile

from State Rt 7 Call 256
6663

gas groll 2 car garage Beautoful decorated home

- -- - - - - - -

Gas hea t and central a~r Profess1onal landscaped
grounds Shown by appomtment

F1shermens chotce of
11v1ng J bedroom, 2 baths,
1/ 2 basement
near• the

2 berl house 1n the East end
of Gallipolis, very good

t980 BAY VIEW 14x70 woth 7x24 It extensoon 3
bedrooms, 1'!1 baths, built tn k1tchen, bUilt 1n ste;eo

netghborhood $16,000 Call
446 2942

system, pat10,

__ I

NEW INCOME LIMITS If I
you earn between $9000 to
$15,000 a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobtle home)
for as little as 5135 a month
No down payment Call992 1
7034

I

)

sltdmg doors

Loan assumption

p6ss oble Monthly payment of S215 14 per month
payment' Central arr

ASSUMABLE LOANS
ONLY $2,000 DOWN- 11% lni' Rate Mon
thly payment- S353 71, lncludrng taxes Ins
3 bedroom ranch Only 2'12 yrs old

a.

LOAN ASSUMPTION - Only $2,500 down
9% lnt rate Modern 3 bedroom brick home
slate ~ntry ltvmg room woth w b. fireplace'
Scluded on 3 acres of pnva&lt;;y Buy before
Aprtl 15 and If can be closed In a weeki Best
buy on the market,.,

J

' NO

HEATING PROBLEMS HERE• Immaculate
and beaulofully de&lt;:orated 3 year old L shaped ran

ch Masstve stone ftreplace '" llvmg room plus wood

burnong stove 1n fam11y room 3 BR, 1'12 baths
Equipped ktfthen, fenced back yard with patoo
Near ctty $54,500
BULAVILLE ROAD - $125,000 - Pro me bUIIdmg
sttes

137 acres

Frontage on Bulavtlte, Morton

Woods and Yale College Roads 60 acres to li able 15
pasture, rest ttmber N1ce 3 BR ranch home, eaf m
k1tche.n...Jjorm doors and wtndows Kyger creek
Schoots~6rft 11 es from City

OWNER MUST SELLHIS LOSS IS YOUR GAIN!

locks Ca ll 256 6008

3 bd room 2 baths, built m
kitchen, pool , l'h garage,
flreptac~, wood burner
close to town, f1nancmg
available at low mterest,
priced below appraised
value.992-5505

BEAUTIFUL LINES• And onsode some genuone
delights L1ke a 14'x24' ltvtng room w•th trad1t1onal
f~r,place Enormous master sutte For easy 11v1ng
an eff1C 1ent k1tchen w1th lots of counter space, built'
m oven, stamless steel counter top range and d 1sh
washer 3 baths Cen atr 2 car attached garage
plus 24 x26 storage bulldmg Shown by appo1ntment

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
L1 cen sed &amp;

m sured

Ca ll

304 576 2711
For sa le 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trail er s
furn1shed , w tfh

1981 ALL ELECTR I C 11'
WIDE
2
BEDROOM
mob1le home sett m g on lot
ready to move 1nto $8995
10% down , BANK FINAN

CING AVA IL ABLE
576 27 11

304

home $10 000 Must be
moved Ca ll 388 8270
'

576 2711

Ca ll 773 5260

NOTICE
Lowest

33

New 14' Wide
MOBILE
HOMES
From

$9,995 00

1
1

124 742 2860 after 4 p m

5 rm s &amp; bath, located 110
4th Ave Gallipolis n1ce
garden space Ca ll446 3870
3 bedroom house m c 1t y

S150 dep and $250 rent Ca 11
446 0367

-

-

-

-

- --

-

L::.ovely qu1et ranch sty le
house 3 bedrooms 2 baths
exce ll ent cond ce nt a1r
l arge tot
garden area
Located 3 m1 from R 10
Grande $250 month plu s

3 bdr

3~ - BuSine Ss ~~~ngS =._
Apar tm ent Bulld1ng w1th
commerc 1al space North
end Pomt Pleasant low 1n
lere s t loan assumab le

Garage' Warehouse corner
2nd and Pomeroy Streets
Mason
Ava il ab le
after

APRIL
2971

14

Ca ll

303 882

3~ -- _Lots ~A_cre~ge

2

lot s

at

Grandv 1ew

Heoghts Ca ll 675 3626 alter
5PM

4 bedroom cen tr a l a1r and
heat c 1ty water f1repla ce
unfurn1shed
except
k1t
chen
$300 month plus
utd1t1es
Reference and
deposit
requ~red
1n
Ra c 1ne 949 2293
4 room house for rent 1n
Rac1ne 949 26 19
42

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

Mobile hom e for rent Ca ll

2 bdr

part1al l y furn

Rt

35 Dep &amp; ref req Call 446
4229
2 bdr trail er furniShed
ad ults on ly Brown Tr a der

Park 992 3324
Mobile hom e ntce loca tiOn
1n Syracuse 992 3860
Mob1le . hom e 1 k1d ac
cepted l bd room apt fur
n1shed ut111t1eS pa1d no
pets, dope or drunks John
Sheets 3'h mtles South

ModdleportR 7

PRICE

R

TO

$38,500

JUST LISTED - Br•ck &amp; fr ame ranch
nn Rt 141 tust 2 miles west of town 3
bedrooms, f1repli!ce, ea t 1n k•tchen, full
basement, r ec room family room,
qarage, deck &amp; f enced back yard o
nearly-&amp; acre Good 1ocat1on

-

Owners anx 1ous to se ll th1s 3 bedroom
ranch on Rt 141 Has f8f1"HIV room, eat
1n k1fchen, nat gas heat ($38 budget)
plus J3 ucre fenced yard

FARMS &amp; VACANT LAND
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Wolh less
than 20% down payment and 11% on
teres! 168 acre farm off Rt 554 Ap

160 ACRES - Former da~rv operatton
near R10 Grande 50 60 ac crop 70 ac
pastur e balance ,, woods Bc:rno:., ::.1 lt..)
tobacco base gc::s 1 P ~se ;&gt;lu:; an c der
remodeled 4 bedroom hom e Frontage
on 3 roads tn ct ud1ng Rt 325
111 ACRES - S~..:'P m &amp; start to work
Approx 40 ac crop balance 1n pasture
&amp; woods 2 large barns, well fenced,
2400 l b toba cco base, 4 5' coal ve1n
reported (mcludes all mtnerals) plus
remodeleJ J bedroom home Call for
more 1nfo

prox 20 25 ac crop ba l ance 10 pasture
and woods Lots of p 1ne (red &amp; wh 1te),
t-- rn, plus moderniZed 3 bedroom
1e 60'5
83 ACRES - Ver II pretty locat1on jUSt 2
miles north of R1o Grande Lots of
p1nes, some t1mber reported Excellent
for horses, some crop &amp; pastt,~r c land

100 ACRES - $3500 DOWN -

operation for senous farmer Approx

Good buoldong lots $42.500 Coty schoo ls
208 ACRE -

10% IN

OWners must sel l Wol'

f•nance at low 1nterest rate 4 bedroom
home off Lower Rt 7 Has f~replace,

full basement &amp; garage $34,900
KYGER

CREEK

SCHOOLS -

Ex

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HOG FARM- Good hog

50 60 acres crop, 100 ac p&lt;Biure. balan
ce on woods Modern feeder pog bldgs
1900 lb
tobacco base Modern 3

a.

bedroom

home wtth

2 car garage

Assumable mig

1132NDAVE - Largeredecoraled4or
5 bedroom home In qualoly neogh
borhood Has~ fireplaces, famoly rm,
d1nmg
dows,

rm , arched
10"

doorways, bay wm
msulahon, 1117 bath,

basement, nat

ee l lent construct1on Immaculate 4
bedroom home on L1ttle Kyger Rd Has
ftreplace, equ1pped k1tchen, family
room, l'h bath, full basement nat gas
heat and 2 acres A must to see $53,500

gas heat plus much

more 60's

503 OAK DRIVE -

Very attractove

,bnck &amp; frame ranch 1n

a great location

off Rt 35 3 bedrooms, T'l2 bat~;-Tam
rm w/foreplace, equ opped k1lchen, full

ELEM Cozy 2 basement {has built m stereo system),
bedroom home located m c1ty school nat gas heat, plus 16x32'" ground pool
d1st Has f1reptace m llvmg room, large $69,500
k1tchen, 1h ac yard 9112% assumpt1on

WASHINGTONE

OAK DRIVE - Owners transferred
Attract1ve 4 bedrOOm home on a quality
OWners neoghborhood Has 2'12 baths, famtiY
moved to another state, must sell fast
room, toreplace, equipped k1lchen,
Attract1ve tudor ranch located 1n Rod
d1nmg room, 2 car garage &amp; corner lot
nt m a very gOod neighborhood 3 60's
bedroom 2 bath family room, wood
burner, large master sutte, garage 11111
86 STATE ST Excellent on town
ac yard Low SO's
location, 1 block from h1gh school 3
5t2 4TH AVE
o;, block from
bedroom hOme wolh basement. en
closed porch, nat gas heat, 2 car
washmgton
Elem
Newly redone
throughout 3 bedrooms. equ opped kol
garage and .Ox174 yard

20's
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO!" -

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chen, fireplace, nat gas heat garage

Lot goes to football foeld

A 1 story

TOWN? -

home Pnced m 40's

3.85 ACRES - Modernized old time 2
story home located 4 miles from town
on Green School Dlst House has 3
bedrooms, fireplace, dontng room,
glass enclosed porch
bath Very
scentc 1bcat1on with lois of. shade
trees 1 mile off Rt 1. Low 40's

•

a.

LOW INTEREST ASSUMPTON - 5
yr old, 3 bedroom home with over 1500
of llv1ng. Fully equipped kitchen,
family room, 2 baths, cent air, plus 10
acres of land (all cle'arl. 16x36 barn and
large rd frontage 'h mile off Rt 160
$39,000

ACRES - RANCH HOME- $39,000
Owner will finance with $5,000 down
pymt. 3 bedroom home with dining
rqom, full basement &amp; eat-1~ kitchen.
Land lays well and has pond Frontage
on Rt. 160, south of Porter.

!i~~.P.!~D

ACRES- ATTRACTIVE\
HOME Remodeled 4
home off Lower Rt 7. This
home
family room, 2"
2 baths,
2 car g.arage
trees &amp; ntce large lawn.

ss.ooo

'

''

JAY DRIVE- Attractive colonial ran·
ch located In ~ VdOd neighborhood off
Rt.
bedroom, 2 bath, faJYIIIY room,
fireplace, equlf)Ped kitChen, nat, gas.
cent. air &amp; 2 car garage. $51,900. 9'1•
assumption
•

35.'

DO YOU NEED A SMAll HOME IN
Then fh1s one IS perfect

Cozy and modern 2 bedroom, 1 floor
plan Hs brand new k1tchen, dmmg
room, llv1ng room, detached garage

and note flat yard Make us an offer

30's
ONLY $31,900
$15,000 DOWN
PAYMENT ~ VA acquored property
Anyone cat\ buy 3 bedroom home wolh
family room, nat gas heat Large yard

Coty schools wash Elem
NEAR THURMAN - 5 year old 3
bedroom, 2 bath home s1tuated on J;.acre 16l(22 hvtng room, woodburner,

14x16 master bedroom. equopped kol
chen elect heat, plus 4 storage bldgs

Only$32,000 ~
IN TOWN 1vate locatoon on thos
older weiJ' kept
b~droom, 2 story
home. Has equopped kttchen, 2
foreplaces, fam1ly room, l'h bath,
beauty shop, nat gas heat, 2 car
garage, 16x32 '" ground pool, all
Sttuated on approx 1 ac 60's

Reai"Eat•te -

l

rocker

ot

loman 3 table s $500 Sofa
lovesea t

Lamps I rom $ 18 to $65 5
pc d•nenes from $79 to
$38'!' 7 pc $ 189 and up
Wood lclbl e w• lh 4 c ha•r s
$219 up l o $495 Desk $11 0
Hulclles $300 and $375
maple or P•ne flnt sh

Bedroom su •t es
Ct1erry

$795

bed

com pl e te w•th mattr esses
$750 and up to $350 Cap
ta n s beds $275 comp lete

$58
I rm $68 and $78
QuePn se ts $195 4 dr

AP

42

44

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

~

TWO
bedroom
un
furn1shed One bedroom ef
f1 c1encv 304 675 2722

Apa rtment
for Rent

Furn1shed apt 1 bd $200
E lectnc &amp; water p a 1d 2nd
floor adults Ca ll 446 4416
after 7PM

chests $47
$20 clnd $25

TWO bedroom all etectnc
furn1shed $175 monthly
plus e lectnc1ty
304 576

3 bedroom
unfurn1 shed
apartment 992 5434 or 992

2441

5914 or 304 88 2 2566

3 two bedroom tr a il er s one
at Ashton Upland Road
$150 month plus depos1t
and util1t1es Phone 304 675

1 bed room furn1 sh ed apt

992 5434 992 5914 or 304 882
2566
N1 ce furn1 shed 1 bd room
apt 1n Middleport c lose to
sc hool
Utiliti eS
fur

nos hed 1235 992 3190
Call

Apt

1n Pomeroy

4 room s

Kenmore 6 cyc le wc1s ~1 cr
$90 and Norge washer &amp;
F n g1da 1re dryer $80 each
guar an teed Call256 1207

RAY 5

USED

bedroom
rent starts at
$152 per mo &amp; 2 bedroom
starts at $188 per
mo
SpeCia l rates for Sen1or
C 1ttz ens Call446 2745

Apartments 675 5548

APARTMENTS
homes
P leasa nt

mobile

hou ses
Pt
and Ga llipolis

614 446 8221 or 614 245 9484
2 &amp; 3 bedroom apartments
for lease or se ll 2 bedroom
house 3 bedroom house A c
and pool HUD Program

4S

Call
7284

li ght housekeeping
Park Central Hot el

304 675 5104 or

675

FURNISHED apartment
centrally located Adu lt s
ref and depos1t r equ1red
446 0444 a fter 2 p m
1st
floor
furn1shed ef
f1c1encv apt 729 2nd Ave
Gallipolis
Adult s only
shower Call 446 0957

Furn1shed Rooms

SLEEPING

ROOMS

Kenmore
wnsher &amp;
quarantccel

copper t onf&gt;
dryer
Bofll
$2\0 00 Cn ll

256 1207
54

M1sc Merchand1ce

Pta st1 c Sep t 1c ranks Stat e
rlnd county approvld 1 000
qal lclnk pn ce $340 Other
s•zes 111 stock t1aut 111 your
p1ckup tru ck Call 614 286
5930 Jackson Oh RON

FUR

NITUR E Hospllal bed
co mpl ete $100 6 drawer
dresser $50 dry er $45 por
ch sw1ng $20 onk dresser
$ 100 gas cook stov e $45
r efr1 gerat or $75 Hour s 9 to

EVANS ENTERPRISES

5 Ca II 367 0637

and bath 992 5621

APARTMENT S

Bed frames
10 gun
Gun
cnb .n c ts
$350
d1net1e
cha1r s $70 and $25 Gns or
elec tri C ranges $295 Or
lhoped1C super I rm $95
baby mn t resses $25 &amp; $35
bed frames $20 $25 &amp; $30
Used Furn1ture bookcase
5 pc d1nct1 se t J L1v nq
room su1te Ranqcs and
TV s 3m lcs out 8ui:Jv1 l lc
Rei Open 9nm to 7pm Man
thru Fn 9r1m to Spm Sr~ t

446 0322

Co ppert one k1t chen
ap
pl1anccs S1de by
s1de
refng erator buil l 1n qas
ove n qas cook top nnd 36
1n hood sofa and cha1r
Ca ll 446 11 71 Corb1n &amp;
Snyder Furn11urC'

Two p1ece I1 V1ng room
su1t e loveseat 13sveu X 13
Orange ca rpet good con
d1f10n $350 all phone 304

895 3388
M ov1n g Sale 11 V1nqroom
so l a cha r s tables lamps
2 bedroom su 1tes &amp; m1 sc

Ce ii 2S6 6437

.

D 7

M1sc Merchand•c e

L uxman Lnb ref
com
ponenl stero w1th Bast 901
speakers Call 446 7317
Cab1nets lrlwn turnllurt
p1cn1 c tables repd1red Set
Arnold Skaqgs 101 Court
Woodst1op 416 OY/~
36 It tr o1en food &lt;'lnd /4 tl
da 1r y d1 Sp i 1V (il"il''&gt; GOO(i
cond and (r1n !)(' ')rln
beh1nd l ormr r A &amp; P Sup1 r
markC' f C1 lt 446 2601 h1 1
Wf'(n9/\M 1nd SPM

Basse tt
Bunk

Baby beds $99 Mallrcsses
USED

Page-

$275

Sofas and cha1rs priCed
fr om S285 to $795 Tables
$38 and up to $109 H •de a
beds $340 queen s •zc $380
Recl•ner s $175 to $295

La t e
model
Ho over
washer Ca ll 388 8641

446 0390

rei req Call256 1922

cha•r

Chiur and

446 7]98

2 Bedroom larg e ltv1ng 44
Apartment
room W1fh expando room
for Rent
beaut1ful furn1shed, 4 to 7
Apartment for r ent
p m ca ll 446 1409
2 bed mob1le hom e Dep &amp;

LAY N E S FURNITUR E

Sofa

PL! A N CES
washNS
dry ers
re f r1gerators
ranges
Skaqgs
Ap
pl•ances Upper R1vC'r Rd
bes1de Stone Crest Mo tC'I

4088

675 4424

I

GDDD

2 bdr

Ca ll446 7886

54

Hou se hold Good s

or box sp r ngs l u ll or tw1n

AC 2 bdr hou se, HUD 304
675 5104 or 675 5386
unfurn1shed hou se
1013 2nd Ave No util1t1 es
pa1d $150 permo Dep req

51

44631 59

hom e delux e pool

446 3358

Phone 304 675 4045

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.

I

Farms for Sale

Farm 76 acres
Good
house barn, work shop,
sma ll ch1cken house 1 mtle
west of Langsville on Sr

Pnces
Ever
On

•

T1mes SentiO e i-

The s

Ga ll1pOI1 S. New sof a bed s
$250 used sofa beds $100
r ec lin ers $80 bunk beds
$100
bunk1e mattresses
$40
mapl e rockers $49
maple d1nett se ts tram $ 125
to $175 bedroom su1te s
$150 3 pc
l1 v 1ng room
su1tes $199 2 pc 11 v1ng
r oo m SUit es$ 140 love sea ts
$70 owl l amps $25 r1nger
wash e r s
$75
dryers
several
relr1gerator s
Utility
cab1nC' I S
beds
mechan1 c s toots
silv er stone TV s wood
burners stero s and lot s
more Open lOam ro Spm

dep Ca ll379 2785

State Modular Homes 304

Corner 2nd &amp; V1and
Pt Pleasant, w va

ONLY
DOWN - Balance at 12%, 20 year
term, $220.22 monthly payment. 3 bedroom home on
2V&gt; lots 1n Village of Cheshire Home has vtnyl
stdtng, forced air gas !urnace. 2' car garage $25,000

IN CITY - 89 acre,
dustry 35 acre zoned Reslcl~ntliit:

HOME

24x52 double W1E:Ie mob1le

286 3752
or

I

515,000 Two bedroom fra,.;,e wtth alummum
sld1ng on 'h acre lot Approx, 6 miles from tlfY
KygerCreekSchools.
'· &lt;'

USED MOBILE
576 27 11

14
WI DE
3 bedroom
mobole home $8995 All

Jackson, Oh1o

ches, wood and coal burning stove, new furnace,

LOTS- OWNER FINACII'IG- 3'1&gt; lots In c1ty Ex
cellent neighborhood $25,000 Finance with $5,000
down, balance at 14% for 15 years Monthly
payn\enl$266 35
•'

Call992 2156

Rt 93 North

13

bath and water system. •Aiumtnum Sldtng Barn
plus other outbldg Rural water Located lust off Rt
160 $54,000

- -- - -

1975 Memory 12x60 un
derpmnmg and 2 porches

Call 675

Wtth 2 LocatiOns

'
TWENTY-SEVEN

ACRES - MostfY level, good
producing land 3 bedroom home has two sun por

304 773 9185

1979
l4x65
Norr1s
2
bedroom assume loan set
up on rented lot Must sel l

I
I
I
5
I
I
I
I
I
I

*Applicable on Qualified Homes

ls4,000 DOWN -

l
I

•

,

J

1972 Concord M ob ile Home
12x65 Ca ll 446 7015 afte r
5 30 p m

'

dscaped yard

TEREST - Owners must sel l tht s 100
acre farm near Thurman
Mostly
wooded w1th some crop &amp; pasture
l and Also hits large 2 story 4 bedroom
home 1 m1le north of Rt 35 Low .tO's

544 THIRD AV

614 446 411 3

Jerrvs Run Rd
2356

lmmedoate

IF WE DON'T SELL YO~R HOME
WE WILL BUY IT!*
Call Your ERA® Specialist Today

'

C &amp; L Boo kkeep1ng In
come tax r eturn s for 1n
d1v1dua ls &amp; bus1nesses
Ca r ol Nea l446 3862
FIR ST
a nd
seco nd
m orgagcs l and co ntract s
and r ece 1vabtes pur c hased

P1cturesque sett1ng Or' ) l d 160 near Par
ter 10 yr old 2 bedroom home w1th
garage full msutat1on &amp; thermo w1n
dows Ha s pond, good garden area
shop plus an old farm house that could
be remodeled

12x65 Hillcre st 2 bd room
good cond Pn ced to se l l

aor Call304 773 565 1
14X70 1978 Shannon
all
elect
exce ll ent cond
3
bdl', 12x24 room built on
coa l &amp; wood burner partly
furntshed a 1r cond
un
derptnned good w ell 2 lg
porches out bulld1ng acre
land , moved mu st se ll

posseSSIOn - Large attract1ve 4 or
bedroom b1 leve l 1n Rodney
Thts
familY s1zed home has 2 baths huge
family room equ1pped k1tchen and
overs1zed 2 car garage 11:2 acre lan

HOME &amp; 3 ACRE'S- NEW LISTING -

NADAY
REALTY

Prof ess ton a l
ServiCes

23

REDUCED TO S59,000 -

Buddy

1294

I·

2300

Lawn Mow1nq Serv1ce no
yard to b1q or sma ll hou se
pa1n t1n g &amp; roof1ng and
!1ght llaul1ng Ca ll 446 3159
alter 6PM 1 286 5740

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

OWNER TRANSFERRED - Must se ll
now Over 1700 sq ft of l1v1ng space 1n

OWNER MUST SACRIFICE - i!EST
BUY ON MARKET - Recreatoon for

Two story

General

l2x60 2 bedroom

mobtle hom e Set up w 1th 2
or 4 lots, gas heat rural
water c lose to town f1nan
cmg available Phon e 446

.;..I

sc hools newly car

GREAT LOCATION o -

MOBIL E

CL-EAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALE$
4 Ml
WEST GALL I i&gt;DLI S RT
35 PHONE 446 3868

I
I
I
I

peted and pam ted Th1 l'J BR home 1s a great buy on
today s market

BMR 399 -

Mob1le Hom es
~a t ~

~- --

~

CHECK ON THIS ONE -

Realty, 446 0008

homes CALL 446 7572

PHONE 446-3643

BMR 139- OWNER FINANCING• Two story home
on Second Ave 3 or 4 bedrooms REDUCED' Bet
BMR 402F -

12 x 60 trailer
exce ll ent
cond1t1on Ca ll 446 1552
Furn1shed a1r cond tf1oned
und erf&gt;'rmmg se t up on lot
1n Middl eport

145 52U Eve

profeSSIOnally 1nsta ll ed wood burner forced a~r fuel
furnace Outs1de features a garage and a screened,
sum mer k1tchen w 1th bu•tt tn VIII Call for ap
po1ntment

fer see fht S one

Homes for Rent, Lease or
Land Contract 10 town or
country
Ca ll
Strout

TRISTATE

BMR 412- NEW LISTING - Older home located on
Thurman Conta1ns 7 rooms and bath, 2 f1replaces,

House, 3 bdr 1n Rodney
V1llage 11 $200 mo Ca ll

bath, 2 bdr hodden ulololy
room Ca ll379 23 10 after 5

va

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 D lov e 51

Houses for Rent

ca ll304 675 5468

HOME S Ga llipOliS Prt ce
redu ce d ,
used
mob1l e

-.;;;;;;;···············
1

Babys1tt nq 1n my home
References nvailab le Cal l

~uoc

w1th 14011b tobac co base 30x30 barn Ca ll todav•

SI X rooms 2 story br1ck
1211 Ma1n St custom butlt
by Everett Lutton 304 675

Real Estate -

Clvde walker

41

1980 Wmsor new cond
deluxe, lg llvmg room &amp;

32

H1lnton Anoc 446 4240 EvJ

&amp; J

2 bedroom trailer, 1960
Pontoac. $300 Ca ll446 1391

By Owner, close to school
pharmactes and hospttal s

675 5455

rptles from City Owner will cons 1der tmancmg
Situat ed on l arge flat lot V1nyl S1d1ng &amp; natural gas
heat Carportw 1th storage area Ca ll for defat lsi

home presently be1ng used as a duplex cou ld be
eas ily con ver ted to s1ngle family Cho1ce locat1on
near Wash1ngton School Ca ll for deta11s1

111 occas1ons
Call367 7566
br1dnl
l1ne wedd1ngs
and

21

for Sale

w

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

446 4416 after 7PM

House 191 N Park Dnv e
Point Pl easa nt Phone 30 4

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

4211 Second Ave
Call446 0552 Anvt•Me

c lose to

sc hool 304 773 5261

WISEMAN

Broker Auchonee,r

Sf

Rentals

Mob1ieHOmes

32

Homes for Sale

Mason, 4th

Honlis for si.ie
-- -- - - - --

5017
The
Si lk

31

FOUR room ~ &amp; bath, on

sura nce Co has offered
se rviCeS for f 1re msurance
cove rage 1n Ga llt a County
for
a I most a century
Farm hom e and persona l
property cove rages are
ava ilabl e to m eet tn
d1V1dual needs
Conta ct
Foster L ew1s age nt Phone

1S

Apnl4, 1982

W.Va .

l~s~ranc!_=---

13

Pomeroy-M1ddleport-Gall1poi1S, Oh1o-Po10t Pleasant,

1982

A home you can .1110rd
$25 500
P~1 t r10t
Hom e
Budders will budd on your
lot a 3 bedr home car
peted rf'ady to move n to
will cons 1der tr adr 1n on
mobde home Call 379 2617
And see our model I mile
North of Silver Br dqe on
Rt 7 ncro ss from H ond&lt;~
Shop Open Man S.1t lOAM
to7PM

M illf' S fl(
Con 1 11
lr1
standmQ \ lrf'I-Jidet wil ll n
sutni PCl p1pr root l;oot 1nct
top $275 00 F VL 36 &lt;.,t t
l 1ons at Amr r vr nt 8
n
sut&lt;'l tecl siOVf p1pl SJO 00
pcr sC'cton or$13000\ or il l
Sscc t ons B lr111 K 1nqwond
burn£ r &lt;, tovt
l 1k1 nt w
$450 00 C1 11 2'&gt;6 63'&gt;1

Ex(rlsor 01 Co 6Jr
Mn n St PonH r o, 0 1
992 270\
R el nq I 1w n mnw r Jr
c u t 7 I p SJOO /4? 12 19
F I!'\ 1 /\II&lt;; moO&lt; 1 ':..J'i

r dl

l 1rt r 1CI to 1d1 r , i 11 d
buck( 1 com pi 11 ly
~,
hnulul wdh n1 w r m 11 n, 1 •
Cl ll l nf concl 1 on
ljt
11
bt r

K nq

R pli y W'l,

lO1 J!J

6390
FOUR prr n Ur "&gt;'&gt; I
910 lllUr IJ I t phOli
675 ?\ 15

!

l il ..\

Onr !1ll l r 1olr r 16 II 1n1 q
twavy (!ul y elu 11 wh 1 '"
"il600
l r 1elf' tor I o t 1 r
l rilllrr 1(1 t Hlf~ Jf\79
Fore! ton tru f k w th L Ill Di n
200 1mp Wtilhr A I ro n
(fd on Pt wnr J04 89S l)J 1
Boy s nLW ..\ pc tr rll I I'&gt; ;II
$37 00 P1l OI11 304 67S ~610

95

Bulld1ng Supplie s

Bu1 ldHlq mc'l trr ell') IJIO&lt;k.
br c k &lt;::,ewrr p p1 '&gt; v n
dOW "&gt; I nil I'&gt; l tr ( I hJCif
Wn!tr &lt;, RoGr1nd1
0
C.lll/4551) 1

and
apt

Real E!tate -

General

46 _ __Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

STROUT® REALTY, Inc.

Park Rout e 33 N orth of
Pomer oy Large lo ts Ca ll

992 7479
PASTURE

for

r ent

J1ll ~ J'imfJiim

304

675 S110

HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT . TWO
'
AND THREE BEDROOM
STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH .

General

'''

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a=

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAM E RAN
CHER plu s 78 ACRES ot l;ond n

fh;DUCED• Owner has reduced the pnce
over $5,000 on th1s m tnl farm 3 bedroom ran
~h hom e on l y 5 years ol d Over 13 acres
Tobacco base 20x60 tobacco barn
Ap
f)ra&gt;omately 8 miles from town Kyger Creek

~ hools Pro ted on the $30 s
'

..

•

w

f..iii

~ 962

~

1

Chesh1re Town sh1p off ers lots of qood
I1V1ng for your grow1ng family Hom e s
lU St l1ke new With ]438 SQ ft Of IIV nq
area plu s an attached qaragC'
2
spaciOUS BR s 2 baths 8x27 LR 10x24
k1tchen w1lh refr1g d1sp OW double
oven &amp; rang e wa sher &amp; dryer st ays ,n
laundry Land 1S m os tly r oll1n q pasture
land w1th appr ox 25 acres wooded Call
for appo1ntment

NEED FINANCING" The owner of thiS J
A PLACE TO START• Sma ll 2 bedroom home bedroom ranch 1S willing to p rov1de th e f1nan
w1th 11v1ng room k1tchen ma1n bath and 1 Ctng to a qualtf1ed buyer
Dishwasher
outbuilding Ex tenor frame w1th shutters and d1sposal Basement Alum1num S1d 1ng Over 1
sttu ated on 11:2 ac r e located on Route 218 N 981 acre W1th1n 15 m1nut es of town Mak e an ap
po1ntment today 1
11942

LOVELY

••
IQORTH IT ALL -

92 acre farm

$58,900

G.tght room modern house only seven vers old
~d full basement Hea t pump central a1r
tobacco base , coal lease gas and oil lease
~onderful v1ew You must look th1s over # 974

NEW FARM LISTING -

Modern home full

basement, a ll modern co nventen ces Rural
water, barn, corn cnb Rol lin g ground ap
prox 30 acres grass 10 woods 2 farm ponds
One of the better ones Call for more deta il s #
9
7
3

ttt ,,.
QUIET &amp; PEACEFUL COUNTRY -

Thos

home can be bought w1th 1 to 6 acres has 4
BR 2 baths family room basement study
l arge covered pat10 2 car garge Lots of
beaut1ful shade trees Owner fman cm g makes
tht S one even more attra c t1v e
11943

•
f-IIDDLEPORT - Lovely older home
woth ~ lottie bot of the past, but modern
~_n every way 2 story stone and full

IN TOWN LOCATION and enough room for ATTENTION• REBATE• Owners of th1 s
all the famtly 4 l arge bedrapms 11h baths, 4 ctvh"'h hnmP .:~rp offf&gt;r 1no a cas h rebate of
fir ep l aces pantry, natur al gas Concrete $1,000 or rebate can be deducted from pur
dnveway Corner lot A lot of hou se for the 1 chase pnce 4 bedrooms formal dmmg,
money Pn ced 1n the$20 s
11893 1 fam11y room basement Ftrep l ace Garge
Large flat lawn Pnced 1n the $40 s
11988

rb asement Specia l feature IS a beautifU l
,d1n1ng room w1th chande lt er Large lot
With n1ce garden area Also 2 car

garage

#935

COMMERCIAL LOTS -

~

iERENITY IN NATURE
Lovely 3
bedroom. 2 bath home woth 11 58 acres Hun
lers haven wtfh 9 acres wooded Home has
formal dm1ng, II Vtng room, famtly room,
,U:t11ify, kttchen wtth mce eatmg bar and out
f tde storage bulldmg Will se ll on l and con
ract
•
11972

Roo Grande Voltage,

2 level tots Close toRt 35, churches, and R10
Grande Co ll ege All util1t1e s available Just
lo s ted Ca ll today
9
11 11
ACREAGE - J acres total A lovely bulld1ng
spot S1fs h1gh and over l ooks the nver w 1th a
beaut1ful v1ew
11934

R

~TARTER HOME OR INVESTMENT - 1112
~tory. 3 bedroom, plenty of storage, newly
remodeled, garage Lots of trees Posstble
§Jlec oal ftnancong
N 948
~

MOBILE HOME and 48 acre Rvral water
~Va 1lable 2 bedrooms, l1vtn g room, bath, k1t

Chen, fuel ool furnace Ca ll today
ER FINACING -

N969

Don't worry about

1ng on th1s 22 acre farm 2 older homes

&lt;to•ba&lt;:tobarn All moneral roghts $22,000 N944
LISTING - Strength of character

2 ACRES wooded

Ideal for log home

Partoally

Water and etectr1c available Ctty

schoo l dostorct

down payment and a good cred1t ratmg we're
tn busmess 5 room house bath oil furnac e,
alummum sid1ng, county water Close to

Route 7 Blacktop road and good lot S18 000 N

8

9

8

L.()VELY VIEW of the nver and prt ced under
$30 Th1s 1112 story home ha s 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, k1tchen and llv.ng room w1th fir ep lace
Part ba se ment and 311:2 acres of land Located
on Honeysuckle Lane
II 928

~ 895

COUNTRY PLEASURE - 2 bedroom frame
JUST LISTED - Acreage- 2 acres. more or home and 37+ acres Home a ll etectnc, large
less N1ce place for your new house or mob 11e k 1tchen, lots of cabmets Add on room, 1 bath
6961 and new basement Land has approx 12 acres
tillable, rest 1S woods &amp; tobacco base
1/914
VACANT LAND - Three acre bulld 1ng s1fe
Two acres clear, approx one wooded owner
will help fonance Lost.ng proce S3.000
N 970
NEW LISTING OWNER HAS LEFT

home County water avaolable

NEW LISTING WANT TO BUILD&gt; Well there
1
1S to be found In thiS rust1c ranch
IS plenty of room on thiS 2 12 flat acres Rural
tH.odr&lt;&gt;Onns. 2 full baths, cathedral ceohng '" ' water Electroc Road frontage No restroc
k1tchen complete woth dtSh ' !tons
N986

~:~:~~:
atr
~
roF,;~:e;~::;~;'cia:c~:er:ntral
proced

MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY'" A sma ll

R1ghl downtown A 1Garage
N9875 MfDQLEPORT
bedroom apartment building woth a 2 car
garag '" lower level Conenlent and a good
rental for added Income Proced so ' low Call
for complete details

to town

YET

CONVEN I E NT

---

GUYAN TOWNSHIP ~ \08 acres m / 1
loca ted south of Mer ce rv il le App r ox 20
A tillable balan ce w oods tob ba se
Owners will hel p finan ce
$200 PER ACRE - GrPenfleld Town
Ship 84 acres M L approx 10 A bot
tom 35 A wooded 35 A str1pped sma ll
creek
ex cellent hunt1ng
TOTAL

PRICE $16 800
WALNUT TOWNSHIP -

$3 soo
CROUSE BE CK ROAD
bU ld1nq fOI ) ?? lUI nl(
!lOCI Ci t y SC il OO I ~ S5 90()

I

Rc'&gt;lr 1ut
W()O(If (1 &lt;., 1

GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE
I ll 11
front on Staff&gt; Rouh JS4 ( or l1 r I\ 1
0\£'r 3 100 SQ 11 5 1BY S pn "&gt; 1 n !l y J'&gt;l d
lor auto l rnc tor &amp; I 1rm fQu pn 1 n!
rEpa1rs pnrl1.;ill n&lt;~nc1nq nv,11 i 1tJif'
THE
SE TTIN G I S \ U PFRA
Beaut1ful 1 8 ncr( wooclf tl lo t on n 1 ll J
Wh1f e Rd 311 It lronllQf&gt; t2x.6) 1 l3R
mobil e home w 111 ( xpnndo Pr Cf d ro
se ll a t $ 12 900

TWO MILE S OUT STA TE ROU fE 188

Beet hay &amp;
gram farm 80 acres m / 1 approx 35 A
good cropland 10 A woods ba l ance
pasture good fences 9 rm /bath home
was bUilt tn 1872 &amp; ha s been part1ally

- Remodeled homt ~nc l u cl f&gt;"&gt; o rm &lt;,
and bath
ca r por t
stove
r 1tr q
di Shwa sher alm ost 2 ncrps ot 1nncl nnd
pr1 ced f or QU1ck sa 10

remode led. 50x50 ca ttl e barn w olh con

BU ILDING OR MOB IL E HOM E "TE
Approx 5 t lUCS IOcilff'CI on tt1e

crete floor
large sil o w1t11 auto
unloader severa l sheds large pond
sprmgs, sta nd1ng crops go to new
owner

Graham Sc hool Rd co wa ter ovp 1 JOO
ff rd frontaq e Green Grode Sc t10 ot &amp;
Ga ll1a Academy H 1gh Sct1oot $10 900

NEAR CADMUS -

START RAISING &amp;

N984

cong avaolable at 10%

SPRAWLING SPLIT LEVEL - Discover thiS
beautiful home overlooktng the Sprong Valley
Plaza Huge dlnmg, hvtng and family rooms
3 or 4 bedrooms, electric heat, 2 fireplaces, 2
baths, 2 car garage Can be purchased w1th 2
or 22 developmg acres
N909

CENTRALLY

Great family hom e w1lh 3 BR 2 brl ths
15x27 LR w1th qas lir ep l ncc 1~1rqe
modern k1t chen w1th ranq p
setf
clean1ng oven OW and d1sp taunclr y
rm w1th wa sher and dr yer pnrt bclse
ment larg e covered pat10 Qclrnqc rlnd
over 6 acres of l and at the edqc of town

42 acre Water ava il ab le Restncted

to help protect your property values

RAN

LOCATED - 112 ncre f nrm ll AS Ir on
tage on State Route 588 Fa1 rf1 01d Ccn
tenary Road &amp; Vanco Fa1rfleld Rd Ex
ce ll ent for farm1nq or development
Older 5 rm &amp; bath farm 11omc bar n &amp;
stlo 1nc lud ed Owners w111 co ns1dcr
se ll1ng smaller tr ac ts of sho rt term
f1nanc1ng Call for more 1nform~1110n

prox 112 t1llable and
story farm home m
barn, sheds, fronts on

STATE and needs to se ll thiS lot located close

FRAME

&amp;

GREEN TOWNSHIP -

COUNTRY

•

..

BRICK

CHER plu s 78 ACRES of lAne! n
Ches h1r e Townsh1p ott er s lot s ot qood
liVIng l or )OUr qrOWinC) f,1mdy Hom( S
fUSt lik e new wi1t1 1438 sq 1t of 1 v~rrq
area plu s an n tt nc twd qar&lt;Hif'
?
spa c 1ous BR s 2 ba th s Bx27 LR JOx24
k1t chen w1th r efr1 Q d 5.p OW cloublf&gt;
oven &amp; r ang e wast1rr &amp; dryer '&gt; l rW"&gt; 1n
laundr y La nd 1S mos tl y ro l l nq p1~ t un
land w1th approx 25 acres woodf&gt;d c l ll
for appo1ntment

A LOT FOR YOUR MONEY
l r 11 '&gt;
wt1n t you qC' t wl!ll ll1 1s 1 k , n0w rJr n
rancher J BR s I !Jnlll'&gt; 16 x/7 1 HI\ ly
rm w1 tt1 !lc,lll lntor f l rPpf1 ( f ltx/0 LP
wdll WB SIOVf'
f'QU pp1 cl
k I( Il l n
doub lf qaraclf wllll i!Uio opt nr r \ ( nt
r11r cen t vilcuum l 1rq1 1111 101 &amp; rtH i r l
more LOCr1tecl 1n Rodnty (11 1 1--'l lrlf
B l ackburn for a prrsonill npo1n l mr nt
NEAR E WINGTON
141 lUI&lt;,Irv1l&amp;
ro ll 1ng l and l olso l tront ~lQ£ on R,1 ccoon
Creek some ma l urf' 11mber rcporr( cl
6 000 vounq bla ck Wr11nuf trrf' S appro\
6 yrs o ld Ask1WI S63 000 D 1r l 11 I n 1n
c1 nq ava1lnhlr
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP
1/t&gt;
acres m / 1 Vrlcan t l 1nU f r on t"&gt; or R1c
coon CrC'ek &amp; 111c Tom Gl 1 n Rei /~ppro-.
31 tillr1ble &amp; ltle bllilrlU WOOCII d Unclr r
$400 per ac r e
BEST BUY IN TOWN
Sfyi1Sill '&gt;lor 1
ll OmC' was buil t 1n 1894 nnd mu'&gt; l br sr 0n
to nppreC ia4e LMCJt: open loyt r c1nd
sta rwuy LR ei1n nq rm p.1rlor CD n
pletely c Qu 1ppcd moclt rn k tr ll u l
1
BR s 21 1 bnths n1 w s Cl nq qM Fll
neM sc hool s sl•opp nq , rc
RODNEY CORA ROAD
1\ppr n :w; / 1
acr es woodland loc~lh d 3 nl
fr om
Rod n ey
coun t y watrr
1vod lt)l f'
$ 12 000
OWNER FINANCING AVA IL ARLF
20°o down - Cnmpsllr&lt;; n nw W 1yn1
Nat 10na I Forest 5 to A ~1c rf' 1r 1c ' "' W(10r
cd land qoocl rlUn t ~rlq Pr 1rt.., q n
11

Forty acres, ap

112 woods old 2
need of repa1rs,
141 Owner f1nan

GRAZING

132

acre pasture farm mostly roll1ng &amp; 1111
IV grassland w1th approx 10 A wooded
lots of spnngs 1112 story hom e h as 4
rms &amp; bath l arge barn toba cco base
fronts on J roads 1n Walnut Town sh p

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5 YR SOLD SPLIT LEVElFEATURE S 4
OR 5 BRS, 3 BATHS, 30FT LR, 2 FAMILY RMS, 2 WOODBURNING
FIREPLACES, LARGE KITCHEN AND DINING AREA 2 CAR GARAGE
ONE OF THE COUNTY'S NICEST POOLS (20x50) AND A TRULy
PROFESSIONAL, LANDSCAPED LOT LOCATED ON DEBaY DRIVE
OWNER SAYS SELL
SO CALL RANNY BLACKBURN FOR A PERSONAL
SHOWING. YOU'LL BE PLEASED YOU Dl

�\

p

April 4, 1982
56

Musical
InStruments _.

57

· ~~AGONWYND

CAT
KE NN EL. AKC
_TERY
Chow
puppies,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Sia me se kittens
New
Sia m ese kittens . Call 446
3844 after J p.m

63

Slingerland Trap drum s~t
with Zilgean cymba ls. f'O
yrs . old. Perfect for begin
ner , S250.00 . Ca ll256·6351 .
s~

__ '=._O!__ ~a.!_e:_or TI_ad~

For
Sa l e : Barbie Doll
c lothes and all siz es of
Raggedy ann dolls. Call
992 6729

. BRIAR PAT CH KEN N ELS
· Board•n g and qroommg
·A K C
Gordon
st• ll ers .
· E nq l ish Coc ker Sprln•el s
Ca tl188 9790

Leaded g la ss hanging l igh t,
all f i ttin gs, lec;o; than cos t
pr 1ce Beautiful cond $150.
992 1961
For Sa le or Trade Redbone
female , 3 years old, good
tlunter . Ca ll 5761757 .

·Gentl e hor se, broke but not

: hn• shed Pho ne 388 99? 1 or
. 388 8623
:Eas ter bunn•c s and Bcclq le
·pupp1C S C.l ll 7J5 56 1-1 or

.245 5597
For So le $100 6 rnon H1 old
AKC ff'QISINCd Bassf' ll
,H ou nd puppy H ouse !)rake

-and

good

Cnl l 99 23005 or 99'1616"7
He's so ugly he 's cute.

Col li e Pupp •cs Amcr •can
KENN EL Clu b RCQ IS iered
·tr• colored 7 wks ol d 985
1567

Young whilf' E(1s ter Rab
bd 5, 71 Ourdelle Addn
Po1nl PI C'asa nt
Pet Lambs. make s n1CC
.Eas ter
pr ese nt
t or
chl.ldren ba ili e l ed $35
ca ll 304 882 2974 .
Full blood ed IRI SH SE T
T E R pups, Bwee ks old 304
675 5053 P 0 Box
435,
Gallipoli S Ferry , WV
Ea st er rabb i ts $3 00 and
uo. ' f i ve d1 ff er ent kmds.
. PhOn e 304 675 1105
Mu sical
In strum ents

F or Sa le upr1qh l p1ano
' Ca ll 256 6038
NOTI CE TO BIDDERS
Not1 Ce 1S hereby q1ven th at
sea led bid s will be r ece 1ved
oy th e Ga llin Co unty Coun
'c il on Ag1ng l or th e sa le of
; an E verell Organ. Mode l
1Number 7022. Ser1al Num
· bcr 131:7. vall S 117 , cyc les 60
and watf s 75 Th1 s or gan
may be v1ewed anyf1me
dur1nQ the hOur s of 8· AM fa
4 PM . Monday 111rougn
Fr1day . a t t he Se ni or
· C il 1zens Ce nter , 110
Jac kson P1k c Bid s will be
r ecc1ved a1 th e Sen1or
C1l i1ens Cent er unt il 11 00
noon local t 1mc on thur
sdav. Ap ril 15. 1987 , and
opened dur~ng th e Board of
Trustee s meet1n g that day
Ele c
gu dM . Jm p &amp;.
· speaker . $300 Co ii45B 177 5

Feeder ca lves.
5076

Ca ll 675·

Chickens. cow ~~nure,
stee r s, Larry Sayre . 304
895 3319 .
64

Hay_!. Gra_1n_

Ground ea r cor n. $5 .00 per
100. Cal l 675·3306.
Corn for sale. $1 .50 bushel.
247 3972.

)I

1 12'

John Deere wheel
disc. 1 se t of John Deere 4
bottom 16' se mi mount
plows. 1 H illsboro tr i axle
goose·neck 18' tra iler Cal l
614 2S6 6534 .
Wanted MF 35 tr ac tor or
si milar w1th live power .
Call 256 1379
Comp let e se t of cult1v ators
for Farmall cu b or ne)(t
S IZE' bigger . Call 614 593
6S35
2. 000 Ford tractor gas. PS,
with a ll hydrali c loader,
will se ll loader separate.
MF 135 gas. PS. $3 ,SOO Call
446 7322.
Pototoe grader with motor
and transmi ss ion . Stalk
culfer , cull ipak er 7ft .. Ford
pull type rake l ike new.
Paul Sayre, Portland. 0 1
Rt 338 . 1 mile below new
Or•dge .
TRAILERS M on tg ome ry
Trailer Sa les, Lang svi ll e,
Oh'O
45741
6146694245
even rn qs
197 5 Grave l y tra r: tor , rea l
good co ndition , sulky ,
brushhog, grader blade.
electri c start. phone 304
458 1854
Liv es tock

Re Po lled Hereford bull
Approx 1.800 lbs. Call 256
9303 .
1 Hol ste1n Spr in ger heifer .
Close up . Ca ll 446·4053

9001b. mare work , sin gle,
doub le . or ride . Reg . POA
(Appa loosa) . Outstanding
color B. coa form ation . Call
446 2222 .

Used pick up truck toppers,
S95 toS195 . Cal1446·7322 .

1971 J;,. ton Ford $300 .
Automatic, Ps,PB. Good
Tir es. 304-675-3056.

I I [) (]

i3 -

DRAFTI

I I I

t
I KJ J I

I FRYLUR

I

A"(

1980 Toyota Cel ia e)( . cond,
$65 Ca ii6S7 7438 after 5.

1979 Ford F150. 4·whee l
drive. automatic. AC. PS,
PB . $4000 . 742 2460.

1974 Bui ck Rega l AM · FM
stero, PS, PB, $650 Call
245 9567 .
75 TR ·6 Convertible , A · 1
condition , 6 cyl., 27 MPG,
tw o conve rt ible
t ops,
st orage cover. 60 ·day
warranty . $3,375.00 . 245·
9118.
77 Chevy Malibu Classic,
small V·8 regu lar gas.
auto. fully loaded. 53.000
m iles . $2,375.00 245-9118 .
1975 Cu tla ss Supreme 350
auto, loaded, ex . cond . Ca l l
446·05 15 any t ime .
For sa le 1977 Chevette. 4
speed. AM · FM 8·tra ck
stero. Call 446 0076 or 446 ·
1875 .
1977 Cutlass Sup rem e
Salon , Ps .. pb .. p .w ..
recl ini ng buckets, T·top ,
ve lour interior . Like new.
$3600. 9926362 .

HARTS Used Cars, New
Ha ven We st Virginia . Over
10 less expensive cars in
stock .
GOVERNMENT
SUR
PLU S
CARS
A ND
TRUCKS
many
so ld
throu gh loca l sa tes under
$300 .00. Ca l l 1-7 14-569-024 1,
Ex t . 1855 f or your directory
on how t o purchase.
MUSTANG ,
1970, 351
Cleve land engine, $2500 .
304·675·41 14.
76 THUNDERB I RD
ce l lenl condti l ion,
3008. ask for Neva .
1967 Ford Fairlane Gl.
door very little rust ,
orginal paint . Call 57619 19
after 4.
75 Monte Car lo. $1,000 Ca ll
458 1)75 .
1976 Mustang, runs good,
$500. 305 Hend er son Street ,
Hender son. WV .
1971 Volk eswagen with new
engine asking $700. Phone
304-675·3406 .

72

rruck~_!_or Sa.!_e __

79 Must anq . $3400 742 24S l.

1977 Ford pi c kup, good
cond . 6 cy l. Call 446 4554 .

1973 Ford 429 . Sf50. 992
7610

1978 Chevy 3/ 4 pick up, 350
eng in e. good cond ., $1,400 .
Ca ll afTer 5, 446·4316 . ·

197 5 Ford
LTD
400
Automatic. al l pow er .
Needs body work, but run s
real good . $7.00. 742 2263.

7_4__

r

Jumbles NIECE LIBEL BROGUE HEARTH
Answer Not the whole story of Lady Godl va- juat
thlo-A " BARE" OUTLINE

7_
1 ___ AutoS fOr-S~-

1980 Har ley Davison F X ·
WG wide glide, e)(. cond .
Call446·7377

Now arrange the drcled letters to
form the IUfl)riM anawer, u aug·
goaled by the above cartoon.

I I )-( I I I

198 1 Chevetee . Can be seen
on Slate St . ac ross from
Gallia Academy .

1979 vw Rabbit. gas
eng ine, AC , AT and stero.
Cal l 446·7377 .

--.,.~s&amp; 4\v~--

74 CJ5 ieep, A · 1 condition .
304· V6. 2 tops, $2000.00. 304675-6726 .

(Answtn Monday)
Yesterdays

- ---

1979 Ford 4)(4, customized
paint j ob and interior . LOw
mi lage, good c ond . Pric ed
to se ll. 304 713&lt;118S.

--AufoStor Sa le

1979 vw. ~ - spd, air cond .
Call 446·2599 .

60 Ford F -600 dump truck .
$1,200. Ca ii 458· 187S.

I SQUETl

Printsnswerhere

New &amp; Used Troy bui!f
till ers. Bulk garden seed
Sw1sher Implement, In c..
Gal liPOli s Call446 0475

D · 8-The Sunda

7~-= =-=MOtOrCyCles- - -

72

12 Dodge 1/2 ton pi ck up,

I·=-..=::::r-·I r tJ

1 ransportatlon

61

63

Unacremble theN tour Jumbln,
one lener to each IQUIJI, to IO{m
four ordinary words.

Pa

1977 Harley Davidson spa r ·
tster, l ike new and 1979 CJ ·
1 'J eep, V -8. 23.000 miles.
Call446-2445 .

flatbed, SSOO. Caii24S·50 15.

tluestoclc

w• l h ch ldr cn

1

57

&amp;

\fft\lN'JID'ft ~ntATIICIWIIILEDWORDOAMEI
r:J WI I,Nl.ll.!) ~ * by Henri Amok1 anc1 B9b Loe

For sa le Ducks . Call 675·
1136.

HI LLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all br eeds, clean
indoor ou tdoor l acil•l•es
Also AKC Reg . Dober
man s. Call 446 7795

POODLE GROOM IN G
·call Judy Tayl or at 367
. 7220

THREE year old mare,
weighs 700 lbs. Due to foa l
in June, 30.4·675·6626 .

rt- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

1979 &amp; 1978 GMC pi ck ups
wi th CB's. Ca ll 1·304-882 ·
2237 .

-- - - --

Mot~!cyc l es

1977 Harl ey Davison E lec ·
t rog li de. 17,000 mi ., a ll th e
ex tra s . $3500 firm . 446·8234 .
1· Honda mopeds, ex .
cond .. $300 eac h. Call after
5. 446·4316 .

72
Dodge truck. 1973 Hon. S·
speed forward, rear dua l s,
80 gal lon gas ca pa ci ty ,
12x8x7 bed . Good condi t ion,
$1,800. Ph 614-9&lt;12 7104.
1977 Ford 6 cyl. . 3 spd .
trans ., with topper , new
tires, v G cond .. S2, 195 . Ca ll
446· 4554, no answer 446·
4141.
-~---

-- -- ~-----

Real htate - General

__

1974 Hond a 554, windsh ield
low m il eage. ex. cond . Ca ll
446·0014 .
1980 Har ley Davi son r oad·
ster 1000 cc, ex. cond. Cla l
446·0446.
19 60 H onda C R 125
E lsin ore. like new, $800.
Ca ll 36H 147.
76 Honda Hawk. 400CC
automati c, 7,600 mi les .
Blu e with sissy bar and
crash bars with highway
pegs. Hasn' t been on road
fo r 1 112 yrs . Very good
cond ition . $900. Call 446·
4249
1981 HARL EY
304-67S·4824 .

Porn
16 -

*Willis. T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446-9539
* Phyllts Loveday, Phone446· 2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446·3294

1975 Captains Craft, 45 ft ,
steel haul, sleeps ~ · . Ex ·
cellent
co ndlt1on ,
rea so nably pri ced . 30~ 341 3111. 304·344·3896 eventngs.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

741· 2003

TO COME HOME TO - Nice brick &amp; frame
~~~c~ with 3 bedrooms. f ami l y room with firepla.ce.
beauti ful Carpet . 2 ca r garage .
• 14Qli.
PLANTS SUBDIVI SION
Bea utiful n.e w
doubl ewide, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. woodburntng
fir ep lace,·fully carpeted, air co nd ., nice lot.
11 1045
Building or mobile home lot, 1 /~ ·
{1cres, more or less. first $3,000 buys iT .
II OOJ

GOOD BUY 4 ACRES -

Ni ce ro llin g land on Floyd Clark Rd .
S l 2,000
Beauti ful buildi ng si te .

21 1 ACRES ~ Good bui lding site or mobil e home
S6,000
site . Blazer Road. Addison Twp.
142 ACRES - Good home w ith 4 bedrooms, ba th
wi th shower. ful l y carpe ted, 2 large barn s, tobacco
f/ 1009
base, 11 acres bottom land.

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367 ·0228
Bob France, Assoc. 4~6-1162
John Fuller, ~ealtor, 446-4327

Windshie ld broken? Call
Sou th ern Gla ss. Insurance
claims welcom e. . free
mobile service availab le.
' Cal l446· 101l.
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL
BRICK HOME
Loca ted in ci t y
Ga ll ipo li s,
c l ose
super mark e t s
bu siness sec tion .
rooms, 3 or 4 be,drc&gt;onnsJ•
modern kitchen
lots of cabine.t.s, d i
was h e r ,
garbag
disposal, elec Tri c tab!
top range .
dining room ,
recrea tion
tots ot room .
air, natural gas
furnace, ce ntral
sys tem, firep lace ,
ter in home .
pie ~nd peach
flower and shrub s
lot more. MUST
THI S CITY HOME .

" GONE WITH
THE WIND "
WITH TEH CHARM
OF THE OLD SOUTH
Gracious colonial home
with 17 .acres of rolling
l and. 5 bec·.. aoms. large
fam ily room . moder
n ized sunny k itchen , 1
porches. Has alumi num
sid ing and owner. ha s
added extra insu l3tion .
2 barn s, chi ckenhouse .
stor age building . Close
to Ga lli polis in the city
schoo l sys tem . Call for
more details.
tJ 389

KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT
MOdC'rn 3 BR ran ct1 home ~ppro)( . 41 1 yrs .old . Th~r
mopnne wrndows. storm doors. FA_furna ce .. w1th
rPntrr~l r~ 1 r . kitchen hils built 1n ca b1nets, starn less
stee l dbl. sink &amp; dining area. Fu ll basement w ith
pat1odoor s Rural wr11er sys rem , qa r aqe Laiii iOW .,
·
N 379
CHARMING TRI · LE VE L
1800 SO. FT . PLUS REDUCED
Large hv1nq room w ith flr ep laCl', din 1ng room with
sl iding door s to con cr ete pat10, modern eat in _k1t
chen. larQ(• r ec rent1 on r oom on fir st level. Utlli~y
room . 3 bedrooms w1ttl plenty of close t spac £&gt;, 1 1
baths, ai r condit1 onec1. st orm cloors and w1ndows . 1
car fini shl·d qaraqe, level lot IOO'x300 ', lots more .
Call for 1n(o
11465
3 BEDROOMS ~ 3 ACRES M . OR L.
Mobile home 14'x70' 1976 Freedom, J11:1 baths, un ·
derpinning , lots of built ·in cabine ts, range,
refrigerat or. dine tt e set .. Air .conditioner and other
furni ture. Rura l wat er', n1c e land for garden. A l l this
lor on l y $22.500
N 425

BEAUTIFUL WATERFRONT
ALL BRICK HOME ~ CITY SCHOOLS
Idea l tor boating, fishi ng and picni ck ing at_ our
back door . Enioy th is spaciou_s ~ h ee rful hbuse ~~~~ ~
bedroo m s. 1112 ba th s, lar ge liVIn g room, ea t· tn k t.t
c hen 2 fireplaces, full ba se ment, 1 porches, cha1n
link fence , plus mu c h more . Ca ll t oday to make an
appointm ent to see this love l y year around home. II
,.
_!505

Housing
Headquarters

BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES $47,000 3
bedroom s. Jl/:1 bath home with lots of ex tra n ice
features, bui lt· in cab inets, self ·c leaning r~n~e,
dishwasher, garbage disposa l and large dtn1ng
room, Kyger Creek Schools.
11501
COUNTRY LIVING AT IT' BEST
84 Acres More or Less
(Free Nat. Gas)
Step ·into one of th e cleanest farm s in an ide al loc
tion . Three good siz~ d bedrooms. lar ge l iv ing roo m ,
sunny ea t· in ki tc hen and bath. Tobacco base, gas
lease and freP gas a ll go wi th it . Large barn, cel lar
house and chicken house. Ca ll today for many more
N ~

LIKE NEW BRICK HOME ~ KINEON DR .
PRICED REDUCED ~ OWNER WILL HELP
Fl NANCE . 6 room, 3 bedroom, garage, immed ia t e
possess ion . natura l gas furnac e, central air. A ll 1
c losets are cedar lin ed . Thi s is one- well built brick
home. You ca n see t11e qua lit y in thi s home. Ca ll fo r
./15 15
an appointment .
IN CROW N CITY
N 1c e 4 room framt.' house with a bath Eat· in kit c he n
w ith m etal ca binets and double sink . Fuel oil
heating s l ove . Loca ted on ni ce ci ty lot near church .
NS ll
LANO CONHACT
SJ9,500
Owner w ill help you f inance this extra nea t hom e,
located on sta te highway . Three bedrooms and
bath. Kitchen with range and refrigerator . Would
make a good in vest ment for a home or renta l . 11 493
Ranch hom e in town .
full
basement .
Two
bedroom s. Dining room &amp; centra l air .
$17.500 .

A HOME FOR YOU
549,000
•
Lovely brick a nd fr ame ran ch home loca ted on state
highway . L ar $Je countr y style kitc hen with lots of
built-in cabi nets. bar. range , and refrigerator.
Three bedrooms, 2 baths, for m a l dining r oom, and
large li v in g room with fireplace . Ca ll for your ap·
poin tm e nt now.
11378
PICTURE BOOK SETT ING
.
.
Unique three or f our bedroom brick h?":lP tn mtnt
condition . Large li vi ng r oom a nd dlntng room,
both with fireplaces . 21f2 baths. ~rant _po_rch and
back patio. Kitchen is equ ipped Wi th bull! tn stove,
refriger~tor, freezer, d ishwasher a n~ food cent~ r .
Master b edroom has a private dressmg room. wtth,
sliding &gt;door s lead ing to patio and ~ool. Beauttfull~
decora ted. Cal l today for more deta11s.
N52

i

SYRACUSE - 1 1 /:;~ story, 3·5 bedroom
~ home, ce ntral air, garage, on a
200'x 100' lot . $20.500.

8
RACINE - Four bedroom home. ap·
prox . 'h acre lot. part basement, m ake
an offer .

POMEROY - Two bedroom hom e, for ·
ced air gas heat, ca rpet, patio, garage
in basem ent. Doubl e lot. $20,800 .

SYRACUSE
Remodeled tllree
bedroom home on a level lot. cute as a
button and a bargain at $17,800.

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
BEAT INFLATION
8' '• % ASSUMPTION
.
Charm and qua lity. wil l be yours in tt1i s a ll bnck 3
bedroom home. Large livin g room and formal
dining
room
with
.
_large
ictvre w indows over looking the Ohto R1ver. 3
~aths, family r oo m , 2 car garage with door opener,
attic 2 fireplaces, central air, large base ment, and
over 'l acre of beautifull y landsca ped grounds. Close
to the city For more detail s ca ll today .
·
NS23

LANGSVILLE
family and li vi ng rool")'l, garage,
prox. an acre lev el lot. $19,500.

FARMS FOR SALE
HARRISONVILLE - 21 Acres. Remodeled 4 bedroom home, barn,
shed , fencing. Secluded . Should see this at $39,900 .

•
NEAR CHESTER Appx. 82 acre farm with 30 acres tillabl e ,
pasture . 3 bedroom house remodeled . Barns, sheds. $89,500 .

•

27

•
..••.

IN GALLIPOLIS
WILL TRADE FOR FARM
6 rooms 2 story home. Natural gas. F .A . furnace .
All the ~ity convenience. 1 car garage or stora~e
bldg. It you have e farm and wa nt in town , come ~~
and let's talk trade.
N
524

7s
EAST

•to71
.711

.,8

Camping
Equipm~

tQi87

__

.HI!

tJUI
.QI02
SOUTH
.AQil

.AI
t

A K 31

.Ki8
1975 Starcraf t ca mper, 14
tt, sleeps 6, air co nditioner,
awni ng, an ten na, good con ·
dition . Ca ll 304-882·2242 .

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

79 - -- MOtOr Ho,;;c- &amp; Campers

N.....

Pus

1•

Puo

Soo..
I N'l'
I N'l'

Obi.

Pw

Pua

Pua

Openln&amp;lead: .A

B ~ aid J - ·

1969 Cob ra sli de i n camper
good cond ., S850. 197 1 VW
$450. Cal l 36).)236.

y vow
awvY
ud Alu Soatal
Tbe late Ben Ames wu.
llallll wu one of the m ..t
aucceulul wrtten of the '10.
and early 'SOl. He wu a!Jo 1
brld&amp;e player with bll own

sennees
81

ayatem.

Home

___ !_!n_e~~e.!_ll~'!!~ _ _

ex t erior,
plumbing,
PAINTING
interior a nd
roofing, so me r emodelin g .
20 yrs . exp . Ca ll 388·9652.&lt;

Eut

a 1131 oecUon of "Bridge
World, " Utled "Ezperta at
Their Best and Wont."
Obviously, tbe DllluiDe
did not want to antagOIIIJe
Wllllama, 10 there were oo
commenta Ob the blddln&amp;.
We wlll make one commenl
Wllllama bid like a IIW1 wbo
didn't care whether be woo
or 1..1.
Fortunately, tbe namelea
West wu really cooperative.
Not only did be double tbe
1Iom, but he opened the ace
of clubs and lhlfted to a low
spade.
After th01e two very
friendly pla)'l, declarer bad
little ttouble brln&amp;Jn&amp; In bll

Here 1J a hand reported In

..
.·-'
..•

•
•
•

'
wifn

OPERATING DAIRY FARM
Approx. 170 acres
mineral
-rights, 90 acres tillable, 80 dairy cattle. Barns, pipeline milkers,
several pieces of equipment. All you need for $217, 500 .00 .

MIDDLEPORT
An excellent
location. Two bedrOQms, dining and
living room, kitchen. $19,7.50.
'

'·''••

.,.
~

••'
-·"'

VIEW OF THE RJ VE..-- Appx . 75 acres·, .3 bedrooms; tillable tand
. plus pasture, pond, river frontage, . tillable or rental campsites:
·~ $62,000.00.
.
.
•
.
' .
•

.. .

GOOD TASTE AND GOOD BUY
crouse-Beck Area
Beautiful3 ro 4 bedrooms, two and one-half baths, 2
car. garage, extra large kitchen leading to a sun
deck family room wtth fireplace, extra l~t , pl~s
more. Superb condition and In city schools. LtSied '"
th~ld seventio!S.:.
.
.
N514:
.
ZONE BUSINESS GAI,.LIPOLIS
n . be a Beautiful Home or Home a.n d/or
Ca . ·
Offices Apartments. Lots of uses. t.ots
Busmess
I . ·~lng 12 rooms plus 4 rooms In
of off snt~~.fa:as F .A furnace, central alr. Close
baseme ·
·
· ·
Must see this one
tob~slnesssection. lear garage. ,
•
· .

2
S

.

JIM LUCAS
PH. 742-2753
35tfn

MAIN STREET
GARAGE

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Sl. Rl. 114

kine

'""""· 011.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
Owners

AlSO TIWfSIIISSIONS

BRAKES -TUNE ·UPS
OVERHAULS DlESEL· EXHAUST
Open Mon. -Sat. 9-S
3 5 1 mo

PH. 992·5682
OR 992-7121

11Im wu tbere.

{NDIPAPD Cfft'DPftlll diN.)

J.24·11c

Play Million
Dollar Skating
Game
Stop In For Card
Wed., Fri . &amp; Sat.
7:30to 10 : 00
Sun. 2:00to4:30
Available for
Private Parties
PH. 985 - 3929 or
985· 9990

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING

.{Former ly Bare Metal)
278 w. Main, Pomeroy

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ce il ings com ·
mercia l and resident ial ,
free estima t es. Call 256·
1182 .

CAPTA IN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleani ng featured b y
Hatfelt Bros thers Cus tom
carpets . Free es timates.
Cal l 446·2107 .

RlN GLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced ma son, roofer ,
car penter ,
electrician ,
general
repairs
and
r emode ling . Phone 304·675·
2086 or 675 4560 .

Fren c h Ci1y
Painting
r esidential &amp; co mmer cia l ,
interior, ex terior, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
t ex tured
cei li ngs. Ca ll 367 ·7784 or
367 )160.

Water we ll s. Commercial
and Domesti c . Test hol es .
Pumps Sa les and Service .
304 -895·3802.

SEWING Machine repairs,
ser vice . A uthorized Si nger
Sales &amp; Ser vice Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy . 9&lt;12·221 4.
JACK S REFR IGERAT ION Air condition service,
co mmercial , industrial.
Phone 862 ·2079 .

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

ELECTRICIAN, li ce nsed&amp;
ce r ti fi ed , al'
t ypes of
wiring, low r~s, guaran·

:~rk.

30_4 95

AND

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer &amp; back hoe ser·
vtce , wafe r, sewer,
pond s.
foundattons ,
reclamation .
Ltccnsed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949-2193
or 949·2417
3 3 tf n

SIDING CO.

'

" Beautiful. Custom
Bui lt Garages"
Ca ll for free Stdtng
es ttmate! , 949·1801 or
949 ·2660.
No Sunday Call s

L------'1

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

1· 3 ffc

.

Keep
FAuPtupreLRIAefeNreCnEce

::_Q~it'i&gt;
Ha.Jii~- =BOYS WATER

Plumbing
__ ~ .!!_ea_~i~--­
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAT IN G
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3868 or 446·4477

JIMS Water Service. Ca ll
J im Lanier, 304·675·7397.

Ca II Ken Y oung
For Fast service

ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
446·3915
No Answer 446·2062
Modern steam cleaning
tor carpet &amp; upholstery
(insurance work) .
• Scotchguard-3M
• Walls, floors ,
windows
• Water &amp; smoke
damage
Industrial
Com
I

U.S. Rt . 10 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deater

3 II ti c

COMPLETE

Rs"E~It 1TCOER

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

985· 3561
PAitTS AND H llVI( f:

ALL MANES

8! ___U__p~~!!!)' ___

e was hH s

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave ., Gallipol is.
446·7833 Or 446· 1833.

New Homes -

Greg Roush
Ph . 992 · 7583
or 992 -2282
3 17 1 mo

•Drven
eR.:.n 9 n
• OISpoiolll

•OI\hwa,nen
eHol Waff'r To~n~,

ex·

tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Custom Pole Bldgs .
e Roofing work
14 Yea r s Experience

9 S li t

From the Smallest
Hea ter Core to the
Large st Radia tor .
Rad 1ator Spec,ahst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Y rs . Experience

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.
Pomeroy. Oh .
Ph . 992-2174
2 26 tt c

MO-w-·R~E~Y~s -u~h;;~~,;,; r&lt;t U:==========~~:::=========i:=========:

1 Box 124. Pt . Pleasant. 304· I r--=:-::"==-=~:-::;;;;;-,
675·41S4.

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

POMEROY,
OHIO
PH .
192 - 2063
STOP and look at our
f ine selection of pla ster
and ceramics .
- bank s
- planters
-s tatu es
- paint
- mirrors
-spray
- plaque s
- brushes
FREE ~

A S2.00 d etai l brush,
with the purchase of a
paint kif.
3- S· 1 mo. pd .

35 Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Call446·3896
446-3060
tf c

H. L WRITESEL

J&amp;F

ROOFING

CONTRACTING

All types of roof work ,
new or repair gutter and
downspout s,
gutter
clea ning and painting .
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Price s
Call Howard
949-2163
949-2160
2 24 tt c

AU

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Heating &amp; Air
Conditioning. All Types
Insulation . Electrical
Wiring .
Call 446· 8511 or 446-0445
after 4:30p. m.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BISSEU

8·20 tfc

SERVICE

M&amp; T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING INC.
Backhoe and dozer work
by the job or by the
hour. A I so licensed sep·
tic
tanks installed .
Dump
truck.
Free
estimates . Call 388·8623
or 446·9459.
lfc

&amp; Aluminum
SIDING

~~6 t~========j~=========~fr==;:;;~;;:;:;:;~==l

Services .Offered
Frank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction,G all types.
free estimates, all work
fully
gu a rante e-d .
Resid ential ,
com mercial, industrial and
mining, electric
MSHA Cerl.

CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitctlens and
appliances,
c u stom
bathroom s, remodeling ,
plumbing, electric, artd
heating .

--~--~~ -

teed

Vinyl

MASH

SERV ICE . Ca ll 367 7471 or
367 ·0S9 1.

Ga llipolis Diversified Con·
st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. Spec ia l
!arm rates . Call us tor fr ee
estima tes. 446·4440.

F &amp; K Tree Trimmin g,
stump removal. 675·1331.

C. R.

85 JONES

8! _ __ ..§ ~~ vati '!_9 _ _

.,

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential. automotive .
Emergency service. Ca ll
882 ·2079.
81

RON ' S Televi sion Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Mot or ola, Quazar. and
house ca ll s. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454 .

84

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bill's

-Addons and re~in1

-loofiOJ
ltld '""" ....
-(onuttoWOfi

Nu· Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Atuml~um &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Coven
HOiom,tt scrHn
awnll•gs

-Piumblo1ond

oloc1ricol ....

lfoeo Estlmolesl

V.t. YOUNG Ill

BUILDINGS

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood building s 24x36.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Bo x 54
Ra cin e, Oh.
Ph. 614 -843 -2591
6 15 tfc

912-6215 or 192-731 4
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-llc

l[~;:t;:;~!Rfi.i:~:8~Jv·~elarsex·

STEEL

*backhoe
* excavat tn g
*septic syste m s
*wa ter, sewer
&amp; gas lme s
*dump truck
• liiJl ~Sti.ne

licensed &amp; llonded

PH. 992·7201
3 29· ttc

MILLER
ELECTRIC

S1zes start from JOx24 "
SERVICE
For all your wiring
n ee ds ;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742· 3195
3 · 7 tfc

We do care!

OHIO VAUEY
ROOFING

NON-DRINKING
MAKES-GOOD
SENSE
insure only nondrinkers. Check the extra
benefits we offer on all
your insurance needs.

We

INSURANCE
COMPANY

W~stDes Moines. Iowa •

LEADINGHAM AGENCY

Aftd Home Maintenanc e
• Roofing of all types
•Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e 20 y rs . ex perience

TOM HOSKINS
· Ph. 941·2160 or 949-l322
7·Hfc

RY TREE
MINIATUR E
GOLF COURSE
Ravenswood, w. Va .
Now Open Weekend s
llo4 P.M .
Weather Permitting
Clip This Ad lor a Free

Game

wit~

I paid Game.

Upires maJ IS.
Located across from
the Shopping Plaza at
washington Motel.
3·29 1 mo. ...

._ __________

CANDLELIGHT INN
PH. 992-1913
Ill. 1 Cheshire, Oh.
. SI.RI.7
OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
Open Mon.-Sat.
1
· 12:00p.m . lo2 : 30a.m .
Sun. 12 a.m.·12 p.m .
Carryout Beer
Available
Bands Every Fri. &amp;
Sat. Night
THIS FRI. &amp; SAT.
MARSHALL
TENNANT BAND
Coming Next
Lone Wolle Band
Then Tranzit
Happy Hour
" Mon.· Thurs.
4:00to6:00p.m . '
Mon. - KegNighl
Tues.-Ladll!l Night
Wtds.-Gent. Night
, fhun.-Pool Ttiurit.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
• Doz ers
• Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
elo·Boy
• Trencher
• Water
• Sewer
• Ga s Lines
• Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH . 992 -2478
l l l l mo ·t&gt;&lt;J

REESE- :
Mon., March 1
thru
-·- Wed., March31_ .
Reg. S20
Now $17.50
Reg. US
Now S22.SO
Reg . $30
Now S21.50
wave Lenth
For Longer Ha ir
Now S29.50
K11's lleluty Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport

'

BUY THIS HOME'
FROM OWNER· WITH $2,,_ DOWN
Interest rate on balance with owner, 2

~=~~
~~z:~~ ~Jihln 5 minutes Of.Sliver
s

t

1
2,

Site·s
•Water &amp; Gas lines
•Spri ng Developments
" Small Jobs A
Specialty''

Something Special
103 Washington St.
Ravenswood, w. Va.
PH . 304·273-3148
3-19· 1 mo.

He •Imply develoi!Od a
double ~qu- tba( wu
there becaUJO West held the
1pade kin&amp; and Eut the club
qu-.
South'• queen of 1pades
held trick two. Tbe aee of
opades and kinl of clubs
came next, followed by Ill
roundl of heart.. Tbllloft a
~rd endlq. Ben bald
A·K·S of dtamoodo; dummy
held tbe black )lclu and bll
one diamond.
Wt~t bad to k..p the
ot opadoo - Eut the qutoll
of clubs. Neither one could
111anf dtamondl and the

1

RACINE Approx . 191 acres, 1112 story house, 3 bedrooms,
basement. Barns, other bldgs . Tjllable acreage plus pasture. Seller
Financing . $90,000.00.

Chester, Oh.

t~-~~~~~:::::::::::,~==~===============--1~==================~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
81

Mar c um
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex ·
perier"\ce, specia lizing in
built up roof . Ca ll 388·9857 .

AERIAL BUCKET
. TRUCK SERVICE
47ft. working Height
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Third Ave .
. 614·446·2116
ti c

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"learn How Free"
One Simple Class
•Summer Coatings
•A comp lete line of
Molds &amp; Candy
Suppl ies
•Wilton Cake
Decorating Suppli es

111m.

West

1976 18ft. camper . sleeps 6,
T . ax les. ex . cond .. S1.350 .
Ca ll 446-822l.

Special March and Apri l
on ly . Gene 's Deep Steam
Cleaning . Scot ch Gaurd.
Free es ti ma te. 992 6309

9

n~s.

POMEROY -

WEST

Bell Contracting General
plumbing service. hom e
remode l ing &amp; r epairs. Free
es ti ma tes. Ca l l446·4001 .

DRIVE A LITTE, SAVE A LOT
3 BR . full basement. while alum1num S1d1nq, fu el oil
F A . furna ce. 30 ' x40 ' harn , sl11 nqled r oof. lots of
younq pea ch ancl iiPPlL· tr ees All th1 s redu ce d to on
ly $14,900.
f{ 452
.
39 ACRES MORE OR L ESS
Tdlilhle p ns ture lond. some 11m her · pll'n l y of spnng
d
water , , , mil{' fr ontaqc on Pr ospec t Ch urch R~: j
Ph ont· tor f ul l ct.e tall &lt;:&gt;

Real Eetate -:- General

W. B F P .

.J

+to

197 1 21 ft . Starcra fl travel
trailer , se lf contained. Ex c .
cond . Ca ll 67S·3626 aft er
5PM .

BUlllllNG LOT ~ Ex·
cellent vtew of the Ohio
River and the country .
TRAILER LOTS ~ 3
leve l lots wi th Lea ding
Creek water availabl e.
Abou t one acre on
' bla c ktop road for on l y
$5.000
ALL UTILITI ES ~ 2
bedroom hom e, ba t h,
full basemen t . garage,
and a l most one acre of
land. Ju st $11,500.
NICE OLDER HOME~
Large lot of .66 of an
acre, 3 bedrooms. ba t h,
ten tr al ai r and hea t .
Carpeti ng, basement ,
and tour porches on St.
Rt . 124.
12 ACRES ~ 3 or 4
bedroom hom e, bath.
natural gas heaL ca r ·
peting, city water ,
located on bla ck top
road. Asking $35.000.
COUNTRY HOME ~
L arge leve l lot, 3
bedrooms, modern kit ·
chen
with
range,
disposal.
and
r efr igerator. Gas for ced
air furnac e with wood ·
burner (attr~ c hed). 2
garages,
one
with
storage.
7 ROOMS - A ll uti l i t ies.
3 or more bedrooms.
bath , 2 porches. ca rport ,
and
garden
spo t s.
Aski ng just $9,800.
FARMS A ND WOODLAND NEEDED . WILL
TAKE
TRADE
ON
SOME OF THE ABOVE
PROPERTI ES. CALL
992·3816.

•

NORTH
I·HI
.HI
.IQJUII

7J. -==_.=- Auto ~alr~ ~

78
_ __

Phone
1- ( 614 )-992 - 3325

OFFICE 446·7013

For Sa le 4·13' tires. Size
B78· 13, S600 each . Ca ll 67S·
6730.

The Sunday Times · Sentinei-Page-D-9

Business Senices

The best and worst

•Ko

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E . 2nd St.

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY

BRIDGE

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professiona l cus tom
pain t work on motorcyc les.
Auto Trim Cen ter , 446· 1968.

- - AUt-O Parts
76
___&amp;
_ ~~c~sor i es

General

·AuiO Pari S- &amp; Accessories

Oh. 992-6246.

79 Star craft 16' aluminum
v ·haul, open bow win ·
dshield, canopy, 80 Mer·
cury outboard , tra iler c raft
trailer . Exc. cond . 992·1849.

1974 Yamaha 350 Torqu e in
duct ion $400. Phon e 304 ·675
1284 after S P.M .

Real E1tate -

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

For sa le : Topper 6 It $140.
400 L'C's ley St . Pomeroy,

Reel Estate - General

GeorgeS . Hobstelter Jr .
Broker

NEW LI ST ING ~ Nice
two story home. 4
... d rooms , bath . par·
furni shed . Ex·
corner lot , nea r
· hool in Mid·
000.00 .
ST .
•r qe two
s To ,
with
beautil u1
, ·ci wo rk .
Four bedroom s. Irv ing
room, family r oom, rcc
room, modern kitchen ,
garage
a nd
full
basement
Room for
garden on the leve l
119'x124' lot . Must see to
appreciate . $31,500 .00.
COR N ER LOT - Mid ·
dlepor t , spacious thr ee
bedroom home, I iving,
family
and
dining
rooms , sunny kitchen ,
full ba se m en t. Ideal for
retired co up le . Lot
50'x60'. One car garage.
ACREAGE
Two
acres and beaulilul r an·
ch style hom e wi th ap·
prox . 1267 SQ . ft. livin g
u t ility
w / s torag e,
build in g. $45,000 .00 .
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
742 -3092
Che ryl L e ml e~, Assoc.
742·3171

MO tOrCyC les__ ~-

74

1916 Yamaha 360 XS Str eet
bike, very good cond1t1on .
$600 . Phone 304-67S7241.
--+·
------ ----75 - BoatSand
Motors for Sa le

Davidson,

HOBSTETTER REALTY
OFF ICE

Times·Sentrnel

, ..

Brld{le

.

us

Caii99Z·2725
3-J-1 mo.

TRENCHING :.
SERVICE · '
Water ·Sewer-E tectric
Gas Line-D i tches •.
Water Line Hook-ups ·
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph . 367-7560
1·1· 1

• FoWLER . CONSTRUCTION

.

- CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTlliNG IN BETWEEN_
PH. m.uu or 992.23..

3· 17-1 mo .

-~~;----.:.. ----·------·----,....:__:__-:-------~---::------------

�-.

r
Pomeroy - Middl e port- Gallipolis, Ohi o--:-P oint Pleasant,

Page-:- D-10- The Su nday Times-Se'Rtinel

Unidentified body found in trunk

Wildlife course offered today

FORT WRIGHT, Ky. (AP) - The
body of an unidentified woman was
found in the trunk of a cal' that was
being sold at a salvage yard Friday.
The body was discovered when the
trunk was forced open for a
customer to check for a spare tire
and jack, said Kimton County Police
Capt. Joe Schmiade.
Officials of the Ratermann Inc.
salvage ya rd bought the car

required

them young whipper-snappers,
didn't they? Again, it proves that
you don't get too old to do the job.
While you're aging ... do keep
smiling'

refundable whem moving if all bills
are paid. The deposits are to be paid
to Betty Sayre at the Racine Department Store.
t:5at1e and Hank really showed

No~youcan

Business

'limes- jentittel

Budget cuts reduce ODNR staff
COLUMBUS - Larry Vance, chief
of the Division of Soil and Water
Conservation, Ohi o Department of
Na tural Resources fODNRI, sa id
the effect of state budget cuts
already taken and those proposed
would reduce his staff by 24 percent.
" These staff reductions wi ll
severely impair ODNR's ability to
administer statewide programs to
conserve soil and water resources
and abate water pollution from
ag ricultural, mining and urban

•

runoff," Vance sa id .

Si nce early February, ODtiR has
absorbed multiple cuts which have
seriously affected departmental
operations . The proposed cuts - six
percent of ODNR's fiscal yea r 1982
general fund alloca tion - would

Sharon and Robert Jewell of the
Harrisonville area are thankful for
good samaritans of Meigs County like Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kennedy.
The other evening, Mr. and Mrs.
Jewell left a local grovery and got
into their car. It wouldn't start. The
Kennedys noted the problem and
went to their home and got jwnper
cables hoping they ~uld solve the
problem. They did - only momentarily. The Kennedys then called
Pomeroy Police for an assist. The
Kennedys then took the J ewells to
their home so they could pick up
another vehivle and got a new battery for the stalled car - and so it all
worked out.

The Jewells have big thanks for
the Kennedys. I hope there are a lot
of Kennedys around Meigs, don't
you? I feel sure there are.

Apri l1 and Jun e 30 .
Departmental predictions are
that. given the slate's emerging
cash fl ow problems, even a departrn•nt as well managed as ODNR will
not be able to pay its bills this summer if the proposed cut is enacted.
The long-standing program of arr
propriating state funds to match
locally generated fundmg for Ohto's
88 count y soi l and water conservation distn cts would be hard hit
by budget \'Uls, Vance expla ined. By
Ap ril 1, cuunty distri cts will be
asked to return a total of $72,000.
Those cuts could prevent some
districts from pa y1ng their bills,
Vanct' sau.L
'· The overall loss of slalt• funds in

lht• soil anti wcttcr cunsc r va twn

have to be implemented over a mere

program will cause a drcunalil·

three-month period . resulting in a
crippling 25.3 percent cut between

reduction in ass islanct' to rarrners.
dl'vl' lopt•r.s and other land users in

the ctreas of croswn control , stormWCJler managemen t and livestock

waste pollution prevention," Vance
emphasized . " In addition, assistance to local government officials and
people 111 the division's soi l survey
and the Ohio Capabil ity Analysis
Program will be reduced to levels
where pre viously established
projcl'l conumtments would be
delayed ."
.. All Olu oa ns should concern
themselves with the scope and full
impcwl of these proposed cuts,"

Vance satd . " The effects of cuts Will
hurt t' vt• ryune fur man y years to
l'Ullll'

Vance ur ~cs people associatt&gt;d
with st.HI and walcr conservaltun to
contad stale lc~is!C:Jlors and the1r
local tnt:Lha and cxpre~ :i lht•t r
lh S IIl{j Y ami
concern about lht&gt;
proposed budgl'l rcdurttons.

SOMETHING OLD, SOME-

TIDNG NEW -The A &amp; P store
at 735 Second Ave. Is presently

ens
ssoo-ssso

SAVE

16 HPWorkMachine
•
•
•
•

Powerful16 HP
Gear or Hydrostatic Drive
Built Rugged
42" or 48" Mower

TheBolens
Mulching Mowers
11 HP Lawn Tractor

SPECIAL PURCHASE

• 11 HP engine
• Rugged Gear
Transmission
• Electric Start
• 38"Mower
• TurfT ires
• Built to Last

• No bagging or raking
• Powerfi.;~ ~asy start
engtne
• Sel f-propelled 4 hp
• 22" steel cutting
deck

General Telephone reorganizes
management makeup, op~rations
stre ngt hen our operations to
capitalize more effectively upon the
opportunities that ~x is! in both
regulated and deregulated markets
as a result of the sweeping changes
that are taking place in the tclecmnmunications industry," Wellman
noted. " They will streamline our
operations, make us more co mpetitive and improve our speed of
response to cus tome r-serv ice
requirements."
" The reorganization also will
eliminate duplication a nd redundancy of some staff functions
throughout the GTE Midwestern
Telephone Operations. This will
ultimately result in an overall reduction in employment through attrition
relocation of employees elsewhere
within GGE, and some layoffs over a
period of several years," he said.
He said the overall changes in
staffing and reporting relationships
will occur over the next several
yea rs but it is tou early to determine
what specific impa ct th e
reorganization will have on em-

MARION - The consolidation of
management staff functions at
seven GET telephone companies, including General Telephone of Ohio,
said E. R. Wellman, president of
Gep_eral Tdephone of Ohio.
General Telephone of Ohio will
become part of GTE Midwestern
Telephone Operations, headquartered in Westfield, Ind., a new
organization wh ich has been
restructured from GTE's northern
region telephone operating group
headquarters. The other GTE companies involved are Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Midwest a nd
Pennsylvania.
" This is the latest in a series of
ma jor organizational changes implemented over the last several
yea rs to ensure that we will continue
to manage our traditional telephone
business effecti vely while preparing
to compete successfull y in the new
deregulated telecommuni ca tions
business,'' Wellman sa id.
"These organizational changes
are designed to structure and

ployment at General Telephone of
Ohio. " A task force is being formed
at the GTE Midwestern Telephone
Operations headquarters in Westfield . Ind ., to examine the
organizational questiom:; atisociatcd

with the consolidation, " he said .
" The conclus ions of the task force
are expected the latter part of this
year."

OFFERS BANKING PROGRAM TO SCHOOLSJames R. Williams (center), president of the Gallipolis
offfce of Central Trust Co., discusses materials used in
the banking program currently ollered by Central
Trust to Gallia County's two school districts. "You and
Your Community Bank" is a 26-minule film strip and
set of 1.-a&amp;:;Jlllrencies covering the Federal Reserve

clliations, savings accounts and other aspel'ls of the
financial sector. Discussing the program with
Williams are (from left ) Kay Adkid's, Kyg~ Creek
• Kay
High School business education instructor;
Michael, North Gallia High Srhool guidance counselor ;
George Woodward, Central Trust marketing dirtctor;
and Mike Jenkins, Hannan Traee High School srienre

Sys te m,

a nd math instructor.

rMf'k

writing,

bank

statem ent

• No bagging or
raking
• Patented mulching design
• 20" cut
• Powerful easy-start
3% hpengine

8 hp rear engine rider
Model 831 electric start
Model830 recoil start
30" mower
•

&amp; Myers show profit
rise in second quarter report

last yea r but its backlog is apDAYTON - Robbins and Myers. is, neve rtheless, optimistic abo ut the
proach ing minimal levels, sa id Wall.
Inc. returned to profitability in its ceiling fan industry, indicating that
Tlw recently funner International
fiscal second quarter ended Feb. 28, the company's studies show the
Division was co ntinuin ~ its growth
though results are still off from the market wi ll continue to grow.
In commentin~ on the company's
cmd devcloprnt'lll with incoming orcomparable period a yea r ago.
ders up s ub ~ tantiall y. he &lt;:~dded .
For the second three months of other divisions, Wall noted tha t the
Wall sa id that the anticipated imfiscal 1982, Robbins and Myers had Electric Motor Division and the
Fluids
Handling
Div
ision
were
both
provement
during the second half of
net income of $727,000, or 31 cents
showing inc reases in sa les and ea rfiscal 1982 would be due to the
per share, on sales of $51.7 million .
projel'lcd seasonal increase )n
This compa res wi th a 1982 fiscal nings over a year ago: however.
ceiling fan sa les. and he noted that
first quarter loss of $879,000, or 37 backlogs arc ve ry low a nd order
the company's olher di vision.s would
cents a share, on sales of $42.8 levels are nnt showing signi ri ccmt
eont inuc tube s trun~ly influenced by
million. for the 1981 fiscal second imprOVCIIIC!ll.
He sa1d the Electric Motor
the econom y and capital spending.
quarter, Robbins and Myers had a
Robbms and Myers is a diversified
profit of $2.6 million , or $1.10 per Division's improved results we re
due to a continued strong perindustrial and consumer goods
share, on sales of $55.9 million.
manufacturer with plants in the
For the first six months of fiscal formance by Electn&gt;-Craft DC
Uni ted Slates. Canada and Spain.
1982, Robbins and Myers had a loss motor products coupled with a
The company' s product lines include
of $151,000, or six cents per share, significant improvement in AC
ceil ing rans. elcdric motors a nd
cmpared to net income of $5.7 Motor products.
The
Materials
Handling
Diviston's
controls, flu ids ha ndling equipment,
million. or $2.42 per share, for the
comparable period in 1lll!L Sales for results were about equal to those of ami materials handling systems.
the 1982 stx month period were $94.5
million compa red with $111.9 million
a year ago.
Fred G. Wall , president and chief
REJOINS STAFF- Christy Lash
has rejoined the staff of Across the executive officer, said the comStreet Hair Studios, where she's also pany's return to profitability during
business manager and C~&gt;-Oii'ller. A the second quarter of 1982 represen1976 graduate .of the Valley Beauty ted an encouraging turnaround from
School In Marietta, Christy has a losses incurred during the first three
managing cosmetologist license and months of the fiscal year.
" The second half of the 1982 fiscal
ts a licensed instructor in Ohio.
year is expected to show considerable improvement over the first half, although results for the year
as a whole will be off significantly
from
the record results of fiscal
GALUPOUS - Kim Jackson, a
1981."
hairstylist with Raphael's Hair
He attributed the first-half decline
Remedies, 44 Court St., Gallipolis,
recently returned from New York, from results of a year ago to
where she attended the In· seasonality in ceiling fan sales,
distributor reluctance to carry international Beauty Show.
ROSS R. BROWN
At the show, she was briefed on the ventories due to high interest rates
highlights of spring and summer and depressed conswner spending.
designs. Styling artists were from He noted that carry-over of dealer
various parts of the world, including fan inventories from the 1981 selling
New York, Paris, Milan, Tokyo and season had been considerably
greater than expected.
Hollywood.
Wall said that in previous years,
She also viewed many seminars on
lack
of capacity in the industry and
the black curl revolution, featuring
pent-up
demand for ceiling fans
the California curl, Fulla Naves,
spurred shipments in what normally
Lustrasilk and others.
.would have been the off-season. This
backlog has since been satisfied and
orders now reflect the more normal
ATHENS - Two O'Bieness seasonal sales cycle, he added.
Wall said that Robbins and Myers
Memorial Hospital employees, both
residing in Athens, were recently
honored.
Anna Mae Gilbert of 10 Townsend
Place was chosen February employee of the month. Mrs. Gilbert.
DAYTON - The board of direcwho recently retired, served 25 tors of Robbins and Myers have
EDWARD GRATA Jr.
KEMP SMITH~
years with the hospital and was em- . declared the regular quarterly
ployed in the patient accounting · dividend of 32 cents per share on the .
MAltKETING STAFF - Roes R. Brown has been appointed sales
department.
manager of the 125-ye&amp;ll'eld Scotten-DUion Tobacco CAl. Fonnerly with
corrunon stock of the company,
·Tom "Vaughan of 420 W. Union St.,
•Pblllp Morris, Brown came to Scotten-DUion to head the finn's payable June 15, 1982, to
a Pomeroy native, was named Ma·rllllll'lledn&amp;BWI: Kimberly IL Burr, who wUI work In both lll8l1ulUnc
shareholders of record May 28, 1982.
ch.empl,oyee of the month. A senior
and .U., and Edward Grata Jr. and Kemp Smith as regloaal managThis is Robbins and Myers' 127th
radiology technologist In the X-ray
ers. ScoUea-DIDon proce•es and packiiRich cbewlq tobiiCCCIIIaa Unconsecutive quarterly dividend and
department, Vaughan has worked at
Ion Worliinan, Ill&amp; Kick, Uebennan's. Peachey, Bourbon street,
the 31st straight year In which It's
the hospital for the past ni?e years.
Yankee Girl and Uncle Sam.
been paid .

Honors employees

HAYWARD DISTRIJJUTING CO. COLUMBUS, OHIO

See Dealers below for the Bolens Big Event In your area.

'

.

.

CHUCK COLLIER SERVICE STORE INC.
Third &amp; Court Sts.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
614·446-3314

Releases dividend

, .

•

1

··r

·,;j

•

1'

'BRANCH MANAGER- Doaaa Waqh l!albeeDjlromoted to IIWIIIger
'' ol the Sprlltg VaUey 'branch Ill Colnmerdal and Savlilgs Bank. She
• replaces Da~ Sbafer, wbo Wall ~ to ' the main office in
; Gampollla bead Ill lbe t.t.Dmat lou~~. Waagb, who's
, ~been "!Ill CIIJid S, for 1J!e jalt etpt ,_,., • ~ with the lelldlag
depaJ1meot.'l'lle daapler Ill Mr: nil M!".,Jee E. ~ Ill Chellalre,
Mn. Waugh, ..lier 'bubud 11Gb ll!id their· tbree 1001 ralde at RL 1

· A couple ol reminders for Racine

residents.
Water lind traah bllls can now be
paid at the Racine Department Store
or .malled to P. 0. Box 375, Racine.
·· 8IJla are due on the 15th and a

,-._..nt Ill '
. ........po'

•

'

•

•

•

r

.

.

.

'

n~f'un-

Robbi~s

Attends show

SPECIAL PRicE!
Free Hopper Bagger
$166 VAWE
•
•
•
•

wtdergolng a remodeHng lor opening as a Plc-Pac store In April.
The Plc-Pac lacWty Is expected
to be a tradltlonai ·Store, but the
owners Intend to deal with the
local population as much as possible In buying produce and holdIng fanner's markets at the
store. Mark Lowe (left pboto)
UlleS a vacuwn cleaner on some
of the shelves at the store while
work was being done last week.
Store olllclals said the Plc-Pac
wUI offer old-fashioned service
and courtesy to Its customers.

FREE
MOWER DECK!

A Full S1ze Garden Tractor
Model G16X1 or H16X1

Bad news for Allegra Will,
Rutland area resident, who has
given so much of her time over the
past yea rs in encouraging the rest of
us.
Allegra has been taken to St. Anthony Hospital in Coiwnbus. I hope
you will remember her with a card.
The address is West Wing, Room
555. Incidentally, Allegra is taking
phone calls and the nwnber is 2573555. She is expected to be at the
hospital for severa l weeks.
The Pomeroy Kindergarten is
selling a variety of great cookies to
raise funds for supplies and equipment. One of the novelty items is a
flower pot which serves as the
cookie container and a package of
marigolds is thrown in so you can
kill two birds with one pot, so to
speak.

Section~
Sunday April4, 1982

afford the
BEST!

Mrs. Velma Rue of Middleport
was quite pleased with an official extension of sympath y by the Ohio
Senate concerning the death of her
father, Hobart Dillon, who lived in
Gallia County.
The offi cial docume nt states in
part :
" Although there are no words to
ease the sorrow you are now feeling,
surely there is solace in the remembrance of having been touched by
such an outsta nding man.
The wa rmth of his personality
made a lastin g impression on
everyone around him and the love,
compassion and understanding he so
readily extended to others will
remain long in the hearts of all those
who knew him . The la urels of his life
stand as a tribute not only to him,
but to those he left behind .··
The document was signed by Sen.
Paul E. Gillmor, president of the
Ohio Senate, and Oakley C. Collins.
senator of the 17th district.
Velma is one of two surv iving
da ughters. The other is Marge
Bowman of Pompano Beach, Fla.

'

Tuesday at an auction sale in
Louisville and drove it to their yard
on Wednesday, Schmlade said. The
car had been reported stolen from
Antioch, TeiJil., in 1979, and was turned over to an insurance company
salvage pool for sale after Louisville
police recovered it.
Schmiade said preliminary a utopsy reports indicated that the woman
had been shot to death

for

anyone 18 or
younger who has
BOB
never had a trapper's license and the course will
satisfy the requirement for first
time trappers to be able to buy a
license this coming fall .
To be ta ught by Pete Thompson,
district four wildlife educational officer, and o' hcr wildlife personnel ,
the course is also beneficial for any
Hdult who wants to become a certified volunteer instructor .
These instructors are needed stl
wildlife people arc hoping that lots of
folk will receive the training . No prl~
registration is required - just show
up.
The course, best of a II , IS free and
is be1ng spensored by the Me1gs
County Fish and Game Association
and the Ken Amsbary Chapter of the
lzaak Walton League of Amenca .
Hunters also will be mterested
probably in a wild turkey clime and
seminar to be held at 1 p.m. nex1
Saturday at the lzaak Walton
League Farm .
Wildlife officers, Andy Lyles and
Jim Splete. will be instructors and
again there is no cos t for the
seminar. The event will last for
about three hours and sponsorship
again is by the lzaak Walton League
Chapter and the Meigs Fish and
Game Assn .
The clinic will cover such things as
bird identifica tion , habitat . hunting
techniques, turkey calling and there
will be a slide series on the turkey
program .
Game Protector says those who
have applied for a turkey permit
should know that the 2,500 permits,
good for a two week penod. are 111
the mail and the pernnits, wh1ch are
good for the second week of the
season only , should be receivc'!l
some time this week by appl icants.

'

April4, 19_82

va .

oeflich's Beat of the Bend
penalty is being added on late bills.
By BOB HOEFUCH
Meigs outdoorsmen are advised ' Betty Sayre can answer any
that a trappers' education course questions on billing .
New residents of Racine moving
wiU be hell! from I to 6 p.m. this
into rental property arc required to
afternoon at the
I~aak
Walton
pay a $16 .50 deposit on water . This is
Farm, between
Chester
and
.Bashan.
The course is

! '

w.

�Page

E-2 The Sunday Times-se'ntinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio

Grain
Pesticides are killers issue .
d·~ confusing

•

County agent's corner
ByJOHNC. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - Dairy Banquet Tuesday, April 6, at 7:30 p.m. at St.
Paul's Lutheran Ch ur ch in
Pomeory. Everyone is welcome .
The dinner will be potluck.
Gardening - Pesticides - Labels
- modern tcience has brought us
many things. One of these is
pesticides. Some people would say it
has also brought us more bugs.
Pestlcidcs are killers! This doesn't
mean we should not use them. It
does mean we need to read the label
and use them wisely. Guns are
killers a lso but we still have them. It
J·ust means we must use them safely .
Let's take a few minutes to sec
what we can do to use them wisely.
First of all . we want the chemica l to
do its job. Correct tllning and
thorough app lication is a must.
Make frenuent mspeclions (at least
.,
once a week I. At the first signs of an
Infestation - spray. Be sure you
ha ve identified the problem : spray
or dust when there is little or no
wmd : do not treat during the hottest
part of the day or when plant.-; are
wilted : apply 111 recorrunended
dosages.
Know the insecti cide you are

using. How does it kill 1 How long
will 1l last" Follow the d1recl10ns on
the use of the insecticide and the

proper preca utiOns .
Never store pesticides in anything
but the uriginalnmtaincr. Store in a
dry place. Keep above freezing and
lx•Jow 100 degrees F.

purpose

in secti cide

mixtures

the lllie of pesticides. Be Sure to

Read and Heed The Label'

Homemakers circle

Surprise Easter Egg
By BETTIE CLARK
Extension Agent

Home Economics
GALLIPOLIS A dramati c
history envelops the simple egg,
making it tod&lt;:~y an Easter symbol of
Christ's resurrection. But certainly
the Western World cannot lake
credit for the use of bright,
decorat ed eggs appearing 111
springtime. The Persie:ins, Greeks,
Romans and Chinese gave the
Christian World the idea of colored
eggs. The egg was regarded as a
symbol of the universe and they

were used as gifts during the many

'

pagan spring festivals.
The history of the egg in Western
civilization is many fold . In
Medieval England; the eggs were
sent to the church to be blessed on
Easter morn . So blessed, they were
believed to ha ve the virtue of sa nctifying the body .
Superstitions also surrounded th e
egg at Eastertime. Eggs sa id to
have been laid on Good Friday were
supposed to work wonders. And if
you kept a good Friday egg for 100
yea rs, it would turn into a
diamond!!!
Of co urse the Ukranians have
always been well known for their
beautiful decorated eggs. All the
symbols decorating the eggs have a
specific meaning. The tradition since 988 A.D. believes that the
decorated eggs exert a powerful force which maintains the survival of
the earth.
Dye materials used in the early
years for the brightly colored eggs
were composed of natural products
such as walnut she lls. orange peels,
onion skins and apple peelings;

cranberries

gave

of£ an

ex·

ceptionally handsome lavender
color.
Dully Madison was the first to introduce Egg Rolling on the lawn of
the White House. The tradition lapsed during the Civil War and World
War I, but it was revived in 1921 by
President Harding. It IS said that
during the year's festivities over
300,000 eggs were rolled.
So even though traditions ha ve
been altered, the SIIllple egg still
remains a symbol of Easter and
springtime. However, many people
view the egg with askance because
of the high cholesterol level of the
yolk. If you. are among those who
would not dream of eating a hardcooked egg, you might want to try
our "Surprise Easter Eggs."
You will need six large eggs, a

Cutbacks
continue
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department has Issued
turther notices !ndlcating that It Is
serious aboUt cutting the costs of
distributing certain reports.
Beginning May 1, says the department Economic Research Ser·
vice. tree distribution of the
agency's publications wlli end and
they will be avaUable only on a cash
basisThe 'publications that will be a1rected Include an assortment of
"outlook and situation" reports
aboUt crops and livestoCk production and prospects.

•

Farmers may be 'in mood now to
accepi plan proposed 33 years ago

Insecticides are sold as
liquid concentrates, wettabl~ .
WASHINGTON (API - Some
powders, gra nules, and aerosol !armbelt memberso!Congressand
sprays. Dusts are used as they come the Agriculture Department agree
from the package. They are usually that It would be a good Idea lor the
less desirable than sprays because United States to consult with theSethey are easily blown away and are viet Union about buying more
more difficult to handle and apply.
In
Dusts adhere better if applied with gr~~ matter, however, Is snarled
dew . Liquid concentrates of the 1n a mesh o! diplomatic and policy
same product do vary in strength. stategy that relates to President
Be sure you read lhe label for Reagan's sanctions announced
correct dilution .
three months ago to punish the SoWettable powders are simi lar to viet Union lor Its role In the lmposidusts. However, wettable powders Uon of martial law In Poland.
arc mixed with water and are much
Reagan suspended talks that
stronger. Powders will settle out and were to be held this spring on dehave a tendency to plug nozzles.
signing a nev• long-term agreement
Gra nules are larger particles and for the sale of American grain to
1
appl ied by gran u ar applicators. the Soviets. The current pact Is due
Aerosol sprays are in pressurized to expire Sept. 30.
cans and are designed to do small
But Ills sanction order dtd not a1jobs. They are not practical for feet the existing agreement, whlch
ge neral vegetable garden use guarantees that the United States
because they aretoo expensive.
will sell the Soviet Union up to 8
h
There are many pesticides but l e mUUon metric tons of corn and
home ga rd ener does not want to be wheat annually - and more If the
burdened with a Jot of materials. All- Soviets want It and the United

ge nerally will do the trick and not
require a lot of products around the
huse. Most all-purpose sprays are
wettable powders and contain
malathion. methoxychlor, and the
fungicide Caplan. Malathion is for
sucking insects and methoxychlor is
for chewing insects. Both insecti cides are among the safest we
have.
I hope this will s hed some light on

April4, 1982

Point Pleasant, W . Va .

States approves.
The pact also requires that two
meetings be held each year so that ·
both countries can consult on the
grain supply, Import needs and
other detaUs relating to the
agreement.
At last !all's meeting In Moscow,
the U.S. participants told the Soviets that they could buy up to 23
mllllon metric tons of grain during
the 1981-82 agreement year, whlch
began last Oct. 1. That Is 15 mUll on
tons more than guaranteed by the
pact.
The Soviets so far have bought
more than 13 mllllon tons but have
not said publlcly whether they will
take the full 23 mllllon offered by
the United States.
According to the grain agreement, a second consultation with
the Soviet Union Is due this spring.
It would have nothing to do with the
negotiating talks that were suspended by Reagan's sanction

three ounce package fruit flavored
gelatin and one and one-half cups
boiling water.
Prepare the egg s hells by making
a hole about the size of a sma ll pea in
each end of the egg with a sharp- order.
pointed skewer, an old fashioned ice
But no date for such a meeting
pick or manicure scissors, being has been announced, and some peo- •
sure to puncture the inner mem- pie are worried that future agriculbrane of the egg. Blow through one tural trade relations wtth the Soviet
end of egg until contents are emptied Union may be jeopardized.
A week ago, Sens. Bob Dole, Rinto a bowl. If blowing is difficult ,
enlarge the hole. Carefully rinse in- Kan., a nd Roger Jepsen, R-Iowa,
side of s hell and let dry about 30 said they had met with Soviet Am·
minutes. The eggs that you empty bassador Anatoly F. Dobrynln as
from the shells may be used for well as of!lclals at the departments
scrambled eggs or baking . Cover of State and Agriculture.
Dole and Jepsen said they were
and store in refrigerator until ready
to usc.
optlrnistlc that the Soviets will buy
Empty gelatin into second bowl
the full 23 mllllon tons this year and
and add boiling water. Stir until all
urged that the United States Invite
gelatin is dissolved. Cool about IO
them to Washington In Aprtl or May
minutes.
to consult on the current
Close one hole in s hell by covering
agreement.
with tape. Pour part of the gelatin
mixture into a spouted measuring
Monthly record
cup and carefully and slowly pour in- .
WASHINGTON (API - Catfish
to the dry egg shells. Place the filled
farmers produced a monthly reegg with the open hole on top in an
cord of 7.85 million pounds In Febempty egg carton. When you have
ruary, up 62 percent from the same
filled all the eggs, carefully place
month In 1981, says the Agriculture
the carton in the refrigerator and
Department.
__
chill, five 151 hours or overnight.
The volume represents the live
To peel the eggs, remove the outer
weight of catfish delivered to proshell first , then the membrane. If
cessors by grpwers.
you find it hard to peel, quickly dip
Officials said catfish farmers rethe chilled egg into a bowl of warm
ceived a weighted average of 59
water.
cents a pound last month, com·
You will want to make three or
pared to 64 cents In Feb. 1981.
four different flavors of gelatin eggs
Imports of freshwater catfish In
to have a variety of colors. If you are
January - the most recent month
going to have more of the insides of
tabulated - totaled 564,&lt;XXJ pounds,
the ~ha,l)...-you can use right
down 44 percent from a year earaway, put two in a smaU container,
lier. All o! the ca t!lsh were !rom
beat slightly, cover tightly, and
Brazll.
freeze . Two is about the number of
The monthly catfish report was
eggs you need for most recipes. Of
the last to be Issued by the Agriculcourse, if you make a dozen gelatin
ture Department. It was ordered
eggs, you'll have six little containers
discontinued to save money.
of frozen eggs in your deep freeze.
For a really different Easter
dessert serve the gelatin eggs on a
nest of green tinted coconut. Two
eggs of different colors nestled on
the green coconut for each individual dessert plate is really pretty.

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Wh,en
Charley Brannan was Harry s.
'
Truman's secretary or agriculture
he didn't have to worry much about'
White House Interference In hls job.
"I had almost total freedom "
:.
says the 78-year-old Brannan. I
don't even remember clearing a
h t th Whl H
"
speec a
e
te ouse.
Brannan, who was secretary
from 1948 to 1952 saJd he didn't
'
have a bunch o! budget-trtmmers
looking over hls shoulder, etther,
telllng him whlch program to cut
and which to Increase.
"We got practically no lnstruc·
tlon on how to operate and the pres·
!dent only told me to' employ one
Individual In all of the time I was In
the department " he said
'
Early In .bls tenure
as a· Cabinet
ffj
o cer, B rennan proposed some
programs "which became famous
or Infamous depending on your
point of view'"
· j ted hls
Co ogress re
ec
proposa1·
but Brannan said last week the
farm subsidies and controls he un·
successfull y advoca ted In 1949 may
be needed to rescue today's
tro u bled a grl c ult ural sec to r ·
Moreover Brannan said farmers
'
may be In more
or a mood to accep t
hls program than they were 33 years ago.

The concept he proposed In 1949
basically scrapped the old syst em
f ke r
m
of price supports or Y arm co useddlr
t
b
ldl
modltles and
ec su s es
k t rt
to Ianners when mar e. P ces
dropped below specified levels.
In return !or those Income supports, farmers would have had to
agree to strict federal acreage con·
trois and marketing quotas The
·
program - Immediately labeled
p
j ted
the Brannan lan - was re ec
Co
by ogress.
,
Brannan, 78, said he doesn t think
hJs plan Is out of date "In &amp;ny respect" and that farmers "may be a
little more rea dY"to accept federal
productlon curbs th an they were a t
the time
,
·
The present sltuatlon may be so
severe that they wUJ see lhe1r partlclpatlon In that manner as areas·
onable price to pay for
governmenta I s t a blllza t lo n e!forts," he said.
Brannan said In an hour-long
meeting with reporters that target
prtces Introduced In the Agrlcul·
ture and Consumer Protection Act
o!l973 represented "part of the con·
cept" he proposed 1n 1949.
Current law also provides dellclency payments - subsidies - to
farmers when market prtces fall
below specified levels or target

prices.
th thrust
Since 1970, e
o1 governth k
ment farm programs 1or e ey
In 1 din
h t feed
crops cu g w hea, bee'
grains and cotton as
n
"market oriented" and Jess federal
controL Brannan saki hls or!glnal
plan If adopted In total would not
·
•
mean a repudiation o! that policy.
"Fundamentally, the proposals
(of 1949) would allow the price of
farm commodities to seek their
d ~
d
In the
supp1y-an -ueman 1eve1
marketplace," he said. "I don't
think It's a repudiation of any of the

resent

ams "
progr
·
be
Budget-conscious mem rs o1
drn1nls tl
f!l
Congress and ja ted tra on o ·
c!als have re ec
mass1ve 1n·
creases In direct subsidies as a way

P

o! rellevlng the crunch on farmers
who are seeing net Incomes decline
for the third year In a row
·
ed
Brannan, a lawyer, has serv
for many years as general counsel
o! the National Farmers Union,
whlch has Its headquarters In
Denver.
He went to work lor the Agrtcul·
In 1935 d
ture Department
an was
appointed an assistant secretary o!
grlculture b President Franklin
a
Y
D. Roosevelt InTrum
1944, a post he held
1m
unill President
an tabbed h
lor the Cabinet lour years later.

Agriculture and our community

Best bulls promised buyers
during 1982 sale near Caldwell
By BRYSON R. CARTER
be better than others," Reed said.
occur at any of the seasons.
Extension Agent
Currently, 21 bulls have a gaining
Winter tetany usuall?comes from
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
performance record in excess of
use of poor hay. Of course, this can
GALUPOLIS-" I do not believe it
four pounds per day and 70 bulls in
be corrected by adding supis possible to purchase a poor quality
excess of 3.5 pounds per day.
plemental magnesium in the form of
bull in our sale."
"Each buyer has a chance to buy
magnesium oxide. Two ounces of
Those words came from Randall
the bull of his choice," Reed added.
magnesium oxide per cow per day
R. Reed, Extension beef cattle
" These are the kind of bulls
provides both curative and prevenspecialist, The Ohio State Univerneeded in Ohio's beef industry to intive measures.
sity, who promised buyers the best crease weaning weights and~ovide
Because cattle do not like
bulls in Ohio at this year's Ohio Perbetter replacement heifers lor our
magnesium oxide, it cannot be fed
formance Tested Bull Sale. The sale commercial and ' purebread
free choice. One may make it
will be held at 6 p.m. on MDnday,
producers, as well as faster gaining,
available to animals in a 50 percent
April 19, 1982, at the Eastern Ohio more efficient cattle for our feedlot
rnagnesium oxide and 50 percent
Resource Development Center,
industry ."
salt mixture. Do not provide any
Belle Valley, about four miles north
otherform of minerals while feeding
of Caldwell, Ohio, on State Route
Grass tetany is more prevalent in
the magnesi urn or the cows will not
215.
the spring because of the lush
eat the salt-magnesium mixture.
Between 135 and 14C bulls qualified
growth of pasture. With good growth
· Another way is to feed the cattle
for the sale. They include Angus, of grass, you get a lot of water. Catdaily with enough corn plus two ounHereford, polled Hereford, Simtle become filled on fluid materials
ces of magnesium oxide per animal
mental, Charolais, Ankina, Short- and cannot eat enough of the diluted
to resolve the problem. Dairymen
horn , Red Poll, Santa Gertrudis,
materials to maintain milk producusually do not worry about this
Limousin, Red Angus and Chianina
tion thus, the ma gnesium
because they are feeding their cows
breeds.
deficiency . The other reason the
every day. The lactating beef cow
Before a bull could qualify for the · disease is more prevalent in spring
presents the biggest problem.
sale, he had to be certified or ceris that spring is the main calving
tified superior by the performance season. This places double stress on
Is it too early to mow your Iawn 1
tested bull sale test standards. Also,
the cows. Temperature rise and fall
Not if grass is about three inches
he must have originated from a per- also has an effect on the animals.
high. Set your mower to cut two to
Autumn, winter and spring tetany
formance tested herd and have been
two and one-half inches high. Never
one of the top calves from that par- are essentially the same thing. The
allow the grass to become so tall that
ticular herd. All bulls must ffillke the cause in each case is for the same
two inches of growth will be
minimum weight when de.livered to
reason : lack of magnesium. Also,
removed. Easier said than done the test station. Bulls are weighed cattlemen now have cows calving
you're right and I agree, but at least
each 2B days the test is terminated at
throughout the year. So, tetany can
this gives us a goal to shoot for.
140 days.
At the 140-day weight, the corn- r-------------------------puter automatically screens 33 to 35
percent of the slower gaining bulls.
Further screenings that cannot be
programmed into the computer include !) a committee of two
breeders and one College of
Agriculture person screening all
bulls for sound conformation: 2) all
bulls measured for frame score: and
3) all bulls screened for reproductive soundness with only guaranteed
breeders being sold.
Bulls must survive these rigid
screening processes to qualify for
the sale. "Obviously, some bulls will

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LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utllltles Com ·
mlsston or Ohio ho.s set
.for public hearing Case
No . 81-303-EL·EFC Sub·
!Ue A, to review the fuel
procurement practices
and policies o! Columbus
&amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
o! Its electric Fuel Component and related mat·
tars. This hee.rtng Is
scheduled to begin at
9 :30 a .m . on AprU 6,
1982 at the orflces or the
Public Utllltles Commls·
slon, 376 South High
Street, Columbus·, Ohio
43216 .

During our spring sale, with the Gravely
riding tractor or your cholce. you get a free mower.
'lllisoffer Is good oo all our ridlng~­
tors. All ti3CtXli'S feature our famous
I' all-gea~- direct drive for years or depend-

.--,.__

NEW SPRING AND

·See your Ariens dealer and the new
5 hp, SRT5020 rear-tine tiller today!

-

.

SUMMER HOURS:

Would You Believe:

- ·lion--Fri- 9:00-5:00

'764'5
RIDENOUR.SUPPLY
.

GRA ELY TRACTOR
__SALES
and.SERVI.
C~·- ·..
.
. .
.

COYlUBSION OF OHIO

M.

• Lug tYpe tires
• Convenient controls

. CHESTERb· OHIO

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES

David
Seorete.ry . .

• Adjustable height handlebars
• Easy-pull recoil start
• Self-propelled wheels

Sllll'dly 9:00-1:00 .

All Interested parties
will be given an oppor-,
,. tunlty to be heard . Fur·
ther Information may be
obtained by contacting
the Commission.

By:

able pertormance. Save now. But
huny, the sale ends soon.

The new special model, economy-priced
SRT5020 rear-tine tiller from Ariens
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~

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I

00
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:1

f

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