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                  <text>friday, April 23,1982

Middleport, Ohio

O'Brien terminates 26 cases

SENIOR FEATURED TONIGHT - Members of
the 1982 Southern High Sehool Senior play cast are:
kneeling - Susan J r tt. Md Cundiff, Rex Thornton.
Tom Roseberry. Alit'n Pape, Pat Johnson. Seeund row
- Raell'l'n Oliver, Bl'\' Roush. Robin Burnem. Mindy
Morris. Alida E vans. Riehard Randolph, Oewayne
Dill, and Scott Frederi ck. Third - Sherry Beegle, Julie

Flagg, Rita Sloter, Tony Amburgey, Jackie Zirkle,
Richard Wolle, Earl Pickens, Robert Brown, Jay Rees.
Back - Darls Evans, Mary Winebrenner, Debbie
Rose, Jenny Manuel, Kim Follrod, Denise Riffle, and
Tammy Ervin. The featured play, "The Marriage
Bid, " begins at 8 p.m. at Southern High School.

British forces get
"full war alert'
WASID NGTON !API- With the
British a rmada In the South Atla n·
tic reportedly ready to go on " full
wa r alert. " Brit ish Fore ign Secretary Fra ncis Pym Is concluding
ta lks toda y with Secretary of Sta te
Alexa nder M. Ha lg J r . on the Falk·
la nds cris is.
Pyrn pla nned to ret urn to Lond on
tonight afte r meeti ngs wi th Halg
a nd Na tional Securit y adviser Wll·
lla m Clark . O!ilclals said Pym
might also meet with President
Reaga n.

British sources held out no hope
for a breakthrough during Pyrn's
visit here a nd were pesslmltlc that
a mlll tary confrontation could be
a vo id ed In th e di s pute with
Argentina .
Alter five hours of meetings
Th ursday with Ha lg, Pyrn was
asked about the posslblllty of a
peaceful settlement.
"There Is a lways hope, " he said,
" but I have never disguised the dll·
flcul ty of it."

•
terms
Pair given pnson
Douglas J . R""ves. 20. John·
stown , w ho was scntf'nc('d to two

consecuti ve se nten ces of six
months to fi ve yea rs for trafficking
In ma rijua na a nd Paul R. Stein·
metz, Jr .. 21 . Obctz, who was sent ·

enced to serve 16 m onths on
char ges flied by thP Dlvison of Wll·
life were both taken to the Colum·
bus Correctiona l Fac ility Thursday
by Meigs Count y Sheriff deputies.

Emergency runs
Seven calls were a nswered by local units Thursday a nd on F riday
morning, the Me igs Coun ty E mer·
gency Medica l Service .
Friday at 4: 43a. m ., the Rutla nd
Unit took Ga ry Mitch from Meigs
Mine I to Veterans Memorial Has·
pi ta!. Thu rsda y calls Included Mld·
dl eport, a brush fire on Page St. at
3: 15 p.m . ncar the Gary Ellis reside nce: Pomeroy. 3: 22 p.m .. Pome·
roy Unit. Bar b Smith, Park St. ,
Middleport. to Vetera ns Memoria l
Hospi ta l; :l: 45 p.m .. Clara Shuster
from Lincoln Heig hts to Vetera ns
Me m or ial; 11 : 25 p .m .. Ke ith
Musser from Second St. to Veterans Memoria l; Rutland, 2: 30p.m.
a brus h flre on the former dump
road; Racine , 6:32 p.m ., NPis
Pickens treated a t residence.

.Deputies receive
complaints

Markt·l Ht·purl
l'!"1 1 ' t ' ~ :t l 't ' Lotkt•n fru tn l!w :-.ak uf S;tlunla y,
Apnl 17 TH'I II b Vt•&lt;tl r a \ w ~ S2 lu $4 luwt•r
Fo ·o·do •r o·at : h·

~l t 'i ll h

Meets Tuesday
The Middleport Chamber of Commerce wtll meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the LaSalle Hotel. All
members are asked to attend .

l\ 1 1ilr ~ :16 . :;(}..38
S uw ;. ~OOibs andup 5 l · ~:l
1'1 gs hy tht• lit• ad ~5
Alht·n~

\" $:1 \uwt •r Cows s \ p;l(l \'

Vt·•·tkr S l!· t·r ~ {;·,,,)tj ami l 'hutrl' 250 \u .100 ltJ ~
Jfi.64 :!1 . :100 \" .WO lbs . Ji -64: 400 \u 500 lb;.

~

54 J()-4iJ ;,oo In 600 liJ:&gt; 55-65 25 : 600 to 700 l b.~
j:! J(l-lil , 700 \P 800 it J:O. 5)·58 50 : 800 illld 0\W 48-

t.:• JO
Ft·t·do•t I k tft •r' ( ; ,~)It a mi ( 'huh'l' 250 to 300 lb~
~n. :,n JO :tO:\ tu ~00 lh:-. ~ 9-5~ . ~ 00 tu 500 lb.~ ~6 5I).
:, 1 ;~ ~ t " fJOOl h:-. ~ 7-5250 . flOO!tJ 7001b~ H-{)0 ,
i'OO lu 800 It,:-. ~ 2 -~ 1 all : 800 a mi u~· l• r ~ :) _ 50-~~ l- t·•·tk r \lull:-. c;,~ lll a uti C'lh •tn' 2aO tu 300 Jbs.
;,:rr.:! :\1(1 t" ~ 00 lh:-. :,0..58 50 : ~00 II! 500 lbs 50;,;, ;;,, 500 lu f.OO lh:-. 51-56: flOO \ 11 i OO lbs 47-52 7:'&gt; .
100 ' " 1100 Jb:-. H -49 75: 800 a mi H \" t' r ~ 0-48 50
ll "l ~ l • · u t S!t·cr ' .tnll Bul b .'100 tu BOO lbs 4:1.)1).
~ ~I

1\t t lb l . OOOi h~ ,utd utd 7-:J{l
Sl,un.: hlt' r Cuws
U ttltlw ~ :lll5l.H2 50 : l'&lt;tn,l, -r , lt l l &lt; i i '.Jl\\'1' ~ :tr, D o w II
Vt ·.i l ( ';11\ t•,, ( ' lioii 'I ' Cl ll d \'l" tl l lt ' 7/ --8 7 5(}

1\; tll\ ( 'i/l\'\' ~ 4::.-%
S pl'l i l l.: l't (' ,. .,,, ~ :100- :1~
( \ •11 ,Hll \ &lt;'il ]f l'Hit liJIIld ( l&lt;lll

'1\ oo

ll u ~'

:\75-:JIJI

210 1" 1.30 Ib., 411 50-50 .'10

days, DWI; Blll Hawk, RD, Pomeroy. $25 and costs, disorderly con·
duct; Ted Copplck, Middleport,
$100 and' costs, 15 days confinement
suspended, one year probation, res·
!sting arrest, $100 and costs, 15 days
confinement suspended, one year
probation, crlmlnal mischief, $50
and costs, disorderly conduct; Sel·
bert Belcher, Albany, $100 and
costs, six months confinement sus·
pended, six months probation, as·
sault; Carl Manley Mlddleport,$10
and costs, stop sign violation; Thomas Walker, Galllpolls, $300 and
costs, three days confinement, II·
cense suspended lJ days, OWl .
For1eltlng bonds were David. M.
Huston, Syracuse, and Earl E .
Phelps, Middleport, $50.50 each,
speed; Thomas K. Gorby, Metz, W.
Va., $45.50, left ot center; Rick

U\it'SIIwk Suit's

Apri117, 1982

CAn'l.l·: PR JC'ES
Ft·,•tk t S1tWs tGu\)d i!lld Chmn·1 :l00-500 lbs
54-6:1 :,0 , 500-700 lb~ . 49 50-6 1
t't't'lk r H ~t ft• rs . 1G11\!(l &lt;Hul Chuu 'I' JOO.-:iOO lbs
~5t~1 : 500- 700 1 bs

47-54.
1Guud &lt;1 11d fhlltt't' l 300-500 lb.'

Prlddy, Rt. 1. Middleport, $70.50, no
valld operators Ucense; NoJ1ll9n L.
Cummings. Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $70.50,
no operators license, $370.50, OWl;
Deryl Edwards, Mason, $370.50,
DWI.

Clean-up week
set in village
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffma n
announced today that Clean-Up
Week in Middleport will be May H .
Residents are urged to take ad·
va ntage of this annual free pick-up
by cleaning up their properties and
putting the material to be taken
away near the curb in front of th~ir
homes. The village will be picking
up the debris the entire week free of
charge on a schedule to be announced later.

The Social Security bite out of American paychecks wlll be going up
again in the years immediately ahead, but the exact amount Is stlll to be
determined. Figures for 1983 and 1984, including tbe tax rate, are
estimated subject to change. The final figures for 1983, barring new
legislation· by Congress, will be fixed by the Social Security Administraiton in the third quarter of this year on the basis of present
benefits authorizations.

CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
As!M)clated l'reos Writer
WASHiNGTON (AP) - The na·
tlon's 36 mllllon Social Security recipients can't be certain how much
of a cost-of-llvlng raise they will get
this summer, but they won' t be find·
lng any loose change when they
cash their July checks.
Based on cost-at-living tlgures
aMounced Friday, people recelv·
ing Social Security are due a 7.4
percent Increase this July - unless
It Is pared down by Congress to reduce the fiscal 1983 budget detlclt.
Whlle the exact cost-ot·llvlng
boost Is subject to change, one thlng
Is already certain: some Social Security beneficiaries won't get the
full percentage increase.
That's because Congress

amended the Social Security Act
last year to round Social Securtty
benetlts down to the next dollar
whenever they are computed or recomputed . The change was tucked
away in the Omnibus Reconcllla ·
lion Act with a host ot other sm a ll
alterations In Social Security and
m a jor c ut s In oth er s oc ia l
programs.
It mea ns that the average single
retiree who now gets an estimated
$378.80 a month would wind up with
an increase ot only 7.2 percent, or
$27.20, to $4{16 a month, according to
Socia l Security's actuaries. A full
7.4 percent hike would give that retiree $4{16.83 a month.
Ukewise, the average benefit tor
all retirees Is now just under $386 a

•

•

tmes

month. It would rise$28 to $414, a lso
a 7.2 percent Increase.
Social Securl ty used to be
rounded up to the next higher dime .
But starting with the checks due
July 2, people will get their benetlts
In dollars and no cents , Social Security s pokes men said.

mUllan In 1985 and $420 mUllan In
1986.
The Whlte House and congressional negotia tors a re looking at
cutting Socia l Security cost-of·
living Inc reases, which will cost
$11.3 billion next yea r, as one way to
na rrow the $100-bllllon plus budget
detlclt looming ln !!seal 1983.
Depu ty Social Security Cornmls·
stoner Pa ul Simmons said Friday
tha t unless the agency knows by
May 9 or 10 ot a ny alteration ot the
benetlt hike, It would be hard·
pressed to m a ke the changes In
tlme .
The agency, which has massive
compute r problems, ba rely met the
deadline for carry1ng out an 11 .2
percent Increase last July.

The autom atic 7.4 percent hike
was triggered by the release Fri·
day of the Consumer Prlce Index
tor Ma rch. Although Inflation went
down last month, It was up 7.4 per·
cent trom the tlrst qua rter ot 1981
through the tlrsl quarter ot 1982.
Rounding the benefits to the dol·
tar Is ex pected to save Social Secor·
tty's trust funds $1 .5 billion by 1986
- $140 million tltls year , $270 mil·
lion In 1983. $320 mllllon In 1984, $370

entinel

Con sumer Pric e Index
Vol. 16 No. 1t
Copyrighted t982

I t t' ,I . I., ' Ill I( I
28 S•

I ' ll ./

1111 1 .

The sheriff's Department as well
as the Department ot Natural Re280•
sources have been recelvlng com·
plaints ot illegal dumping.
Sheriff Protfltt urges area resl·
27 5 •
dents to be on the alert tor persons
dumping bags ot trash along the
roadways. U you see the person or
270•
persons, try to obtain a Ucense plate
,number a s well as a description of
the vehicle and the Individuals
Involved .
265•
The department in cooperation
with the prosecuting attorney's orflee will do what can be done to
260 "AMJ JASOND-J FM
prosecute the violators. The Ohlo
1981
1982
Revised Code provides a panalty of
~
,,
Jllfl
.1'
llr
•pi
11!
I
.
J!
II
H
Ap ;I
L_
_________________
up to 60 days a nd or fine up to $500.

Market reports
( )hiu \alii'\' U ns\n(' k rn.

Nineteen defendants were tined
and seven others tor1elted bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday
Fined by Judge Patrtck O'Brten
were John Albright, West Columbia, Stephen Anderson, St. Albans,
and Mark Dillard, Pomeroy, $21
and costs each, speed; Claude Eblln, Pomeroy, $5 and costs, unsale
vehicle; Robert M. Pooler, Middleport and Terry Kendrick, Roanoke,
$20 and costs each, speed; Richard
Richmond, Jr., Mlnersvllie,$35and
costs, talled to display valld license
plates; John Evans, Cheshlre, \')
and costs, no small moving vehlcle
emblem on rear ot tarrn wagon;
Anthony Webb, Memphls, Tenn,
and Karen Williams, Rutland, $23
and costs each, speed; Lu Ann
Evans, Pomeroy, $22 and costs,
speed; Ronald Wilson, Racine, $5
and costs, no mutfle r; David C.
Hough, GaJJJpolls, $40 and costs,
!allure to display valid reglstra·
lion; Charles I. Blake, Rt. 1, Ra·
cine, $150 and costs, three days
confinement , license suspended 30

Social Security: exact raise uncertain

Today's T-S

'

SET CLOC KS

The smile that comes from knowing you·re giving the very best 14 Kt. gold
overlay jewelry. Cla.sstc beauty finel y crafted and affordab ly priced. Each
chain is in fact guaranteed for life and comes with Speidel 's Sure-On • cloSure
that will never. ever unfasten accidentally . ~
Come in today for something worth smilin~ about.
hll!
Fine Fashion Jewelry by Speidel.
~

Si

FORWARD
1 HOUR

J 110

CONSUMER PRICE IND E X This chart shows the Consumer
Price Index which s tood at 283.4
in March, according to the Labor
Department, meaning that goods
costing $10 in 1967 would have
cost $28.34 last month. 1AP
Laserphotol .

Americans should have added
another Item to lhelr Sunday
routtnes - seUing lbelr clocks
and watcbes ahead an hour for
daylight-savings time. 0111clally, lhe annual rite of spring
took place at 2 a.m. Sunday, except In Arizona, Hawaii and lbe
Ealtem-ilme areas of Indiana
- Jurlsdlctlons that do not participate In daylight-savings
time.

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
LLOYD SUMMER FURNITURE
SALE

Ft·t..'dt•r Bulb
J.1 23-62' 500-700 lbs . 48 .50-60.50.
S lau)! ht ~· r Bulls . 1 Ovtor I ,000 lbs. ~ 7 .63 . 25 .
Sla u)!hlt•r Cows Ull l ttl~s 38.50--43: Ca nnt' rs
and l 'u1tl'rs 2..1.50-4 1.25.
Sprtlll!l'f Cuws : 1 By lht• Hcad l 250-JGO
, ..,,. &lt;tnd C;:~ l r oa trs : 1B\i t~ Umt '350-505
Vt·ctl:. 1 Chult'.t' arttl Prune 162-74
ll;t b~ f'alw~ · 1 By Uw Ht'atl 137.50-120
HOG PHICES
ll o~ s I No. 1, Barruws and Ci 1lts 1 200-230 l b~

• FUN·IN·THE·SUN
COLORS
• PERFECT.•• AFTER
A HARD DAY'S WORK

!} ] -{) ! :~ .

• WICKER· LIKE
GOOD LOOKS

lt u\d\t'r Su l'o .~ 31')-53
l!utdwr Buars 39-42.:15.
Ft' L'tkr P t ~ s 1 By lht• Hl'ad t J.l--00
SIWJ;: p PHICE..C) ·
Sla u.: hlt-r l .&lt;~ rnbs 57-62.

• FIBERCRAFT QUALITY

During lbe 1800's a small, log

cabin v1llage thrived along lhe
banks of Raccoon Creek, situated In lhe hills of Southeastern
Ohio near Wo Grande. Now,lOO
years later, the village of
AdamsviDe, named alter lbe
Revolutionary War veteran
Adam Rickabaugh, Is being recreate a&amp; 1111 original site on the

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP

Boli Evanti Fann. For details

see feature ari1cle In Take-One,

Jl ·:~,,,.

Inserted today In the 'llmesSentlnel:::.·_________

ot7".}. ~ ~
oNf, . \ .. '' .

$ave
$35000
"REBATE"
On V.W. Rabbit and
pick -up extended to
· · April 30th. " Black-Tie"
not lncludep .

~lD' .fONll!C

G"RAND PRIX
'

121 In stock. Both nice
lean cars with all the
extras! Yoair Choice!

'6695

The Ohio Lottery: a constant question
By The As!M)clated l'reos
U Ohio's gubernatorial candl·

DAYUGHT SA vtNGS nME
BEGAN 2:00 I&gt;..M.

'78.' CH8.lSLER
L~JARON

Am Fm stereo tape, a-t,

Tilt wheel. p.s ., p.b.,

ps ,

cruise, am -fm

pb,

air

cond .

stereo,

rea l leather Int.

·: sharp "

Spring Special
1981 V.W. -RABBIT

'4495

18'.DATSUN 280-Z

4 x 4's

CONVERTIBLE

One owner . Loaded .
·Auto., less than s.ooo

. '5495
'77'.FO~~.)!QNC9 ·
· •3v95
'73' i.IEEP COM MAN

is a local one owner car.
Low mileage . "Sharp"

'6595 ·

. '12-95

People from '111 Oblo CO!!I!Hee
rallied a&amp; tile Stateboule oa Friday to pment peWioJill bearlnc
I.JI,OOO wlpel!•ree IUid calllal
for a

· '7·9' FORD

. . . . . . appell'll 011 ~

D-1.

FAIRMQNfWG.
~tl' VO.LARE

Along the river ....• B-1-8
Area death~ • . . • • .. • • D-8
Bupless ...... ,. . . . . • E-1
Claislfled ......... D-3-7
Editorial . ... . . . . . . . A·W
Farm. ...•........•• E-!
I..ocal -. ••••• , • • • • • • A-1-8
Sta~National •.••• D-l·Z

· PREr\4'1E. W.G.

·•ci¥8 ·save
446-9800
' '1l ~

I

rr-e llllbe DUCiear anna

nee. A fnl report 011 tbedeltliDit··l

Aile Allolit Our lxchishie . 12 -Monili or
12,000 Mile National UMd Car Warra~-Y.i .

Gallipolis, 0.

near~

... Pym carries peace plan
By LAWRENCE L KNlmiON
AMOclated l'reos Writer
WASIDNGTON (AP) -British Foreign Secretary
Francis Pym is carrying home what British sources
say is an Improved but still "unsatisfactory" peace
plan proposed by Secretary ot State Alexander Halg
to avert war in the Falkland Islands.
Pyrn, vowing that the Brttain will "not shrtnk tram
the use ot force if necessary," extended h1s two-day
mission tD the United States by several hours Friday
night to get the latest proposal tram Halg.
Britain, meanwhlle, put its armada on the second·
hlghest state ot alert Friday as the tleet neared the
Falklands, whlch are about 250 mUes ott Argentina's
coast.
The Argentine Foreign Mlnlstry sald Argentina
bad advised the Organization of American States that
two British destroyers were spotted 54 mlles north ot
South Georgia Island. Argentine troops seized South
Georgia, 850 mlles east of the Falklands, on Aprll 3,
the day after they occupied the Falklands.
A well-placed Brltlsh source indicated that the
"Arner1can-Jabel" plan Pyrn is taking home " leaves
a great deal to be deslr.ed," Nonetheless, he said, It is
more acceptable to Britain than the o~nal Argen·
tine proposal, which he called "horrendous. "
The source said that, whlle It is conceivable that
Prlme Mlnlster Margaret Thatcher might rebuff the
proposal developed ln two days ot talks between Halg
and Pym, Halg could Ignore a rejection and continue
h1s mediation efforts.
"The Ideas are, tram the Brltlsh point ot view,
unsatlsfactDry." said the source, who was authorized
to speak with reporters on the condition that h1s name
not be disclosed.
. "But the question ls not do we like them, but,
rather, are we prepared to llve with them as Arneri·
can Ideas tD carry the negotiating process forward?"
he said.
"Only Mrs. Thatcher can answer that question, the
source added.
.The new plan is described as a composite ot varlous
Argentine, British and Arnerlcan Ideas. Specific details were not made available.

·BY LARRY EWING
Time S d'nel Staff

"Vacation Specials'

'80' JEIP CJ; 7

5-speed, am-lm, a -c, this

-Armada

year, sa les were reported running
nearly 40 percent better, according
to E dwin C. Taylor, the lottery 's e xecutive director.
" We' re having our bes t sales
year ever ," he said .
Lottery profits account for less
tha n 2 percent of the $5.6 billion in
taxes and other Income Ohio receives In Its genera l fund .
Several state senators, last year,
wanted to put a proposal on the
statewide ballot that would target
Ohio Lottery profits for public
school funding. The proposal. spon·
sored by Sen. Stanley J . Aronoff,
R-Cincinnatl, didn't survive in the
Senate Rules Committee.
Sen. Paul E . Pfelter , R-Bucyrus ,
a candidate tor the U.S. senatorial
nomination, pointed out that ma ny
educators did not support the

Falklands-----.
.. .

... A r~entina reports mvaswn
'

By ANDREW WARSHAW
Associated l'reos Writer
LONDON (AP) -The Brltish government refused
Saturday to discuss Argentina's claim that an attack
on the Falkland Islands dependency ot South Georgia
was lnnmlnent. But It continued urging British clti·
zens to leave Argentina and warned of an "increasing
pertod ot tension."
Brltlsh Foreign Secretary Francis Pyrn returned
to London tram Washlngton, reportedly convinced
the crtsls could not be ended "without a shot being
fired."
The Argentine Defense Ministry said Friday that
two Royal Navy destroyers had been spotted 54 mlles
ott South Georgia, which Argentina seized the day
after It invaded the Falklands on April 2 following 149
years ot British rule.
The mass circulation tabloid Sun newspaper , quat·
ing what It said were Argentine military sources, said
an attack already had taken place on the Island, 850
mlles southeast ot the .Falklands.
But the Brltlsh Defense Mlnlstry said only that Its
61-ship naval task torce was "not Involved In any
mll!tary action ." A mlnlstry spokesman told The As·
soclated Press h1s department was "not changing
from our statement that there has been no landing."
British newspapers continued to speculate that any
invasion would be launched tram South Georgia,
whlch lies beyond the 465-mlle range of Argentina's
warplanes and Is believed defended by abOut 140
troops.
The Brttlsh war tleet, sent to take back the Falk·
lands tram Argentina should diplomacy fall, was on
"defense stalions" - the hlghest state of readiness
hart of combat alert
Pyrn refused to talk with reporters on hls arrival
here, but Chris Moncrlett, chlet poll tical correspond·
ent of Brttain's Press Association, accompanied Pyrn
on the filght and said the diplomat "now belleves Ills
virtually Impossible for the crisis to be resolved with·
out a shot being ttred.
"He has told close friends ... that he thinks the
crunch will come in days rather than weeks, " Man·
criett said.

proposal.
"Educators don 't want lottery
m oney ea rmarked for education ,"
Pfeife r said . " U we did that, they
said half the public will thtnk we
solved our ed ucation proble ms ...

The state legislator said that
abolut $2 bllllon ea ch year Is allocated for education. The lottery's
$110 million tD$140 million "Is only a
drop in the bucket a nd people have
to rea lize tha t."

News briefs ...
Senate hopeful Ashbrook dies
NE WARK. Ohio - Rep. John Ashbrook. a Republican candldl'te
tor the U.S. Senate after serving 21 yea rs In the House. colla psed and
died Saturda y afte r suffering an appa rent hea rt attack. a hospital
official sa ldd .
Licking Memorial Hospital nursing supervisor Na~cy Greten said
the 53-year -old congressman , the ra nkin g Republica n on the House
Education and Labor Committee a nd a s trong s upporter of the
Reaga n administration during last year's budget battle., had col·
lapsed a t his home In J ohnstown , a bout 20 miles from Newark.
She said Ashbrook arrived at the hospital at 12:06 p.m . a nd was
pronounced dead at 12:28 p.m He sutfered ·· a n appa rent hean
attac k," Mrs. Greten said.
Ashbrook collapsed la st month In a Mans!leld restaurant and was
examined by doctors In Manstleld a nd Clevela nd . No reason was
given for the collapse, and Ashbrook later said tests showed him to
be In good health .

All quiet in rural water dispute
GALLIPOLIS Nothing has changed ln an employeemanagement dispute between maintenan ce foreme n and lhe Gallla
County Rural Water Association.
Both the foremen and the associa tion's board of trus tees have
scheduled a meeting for Friday to discuss the Issue, acco rding to
Prosector Joseph Cain.
Cain, who serves as the board 's lega l adv isor. said both s.ldes met
Thursday night. The foremen were represented by legal counsel and
agreed to hold the new meeting after no "s ubstantive talks" were
he ld .
The foremen walked otf the job and es tablished a picket line last
Tuesday at the association's otflce near Kanauga . They claimed at
th e time the board had failed to grant them an aMual 10 percent
wage Increase. The increase, they said, was a pproved as part of tltls
ye ar's operating budget.
The fore men agreed to go back to work on Wednesday and have
remained on the job since. No Interruption of service to the system's
ne arly 4,000 customers was reported.
loo Sunday

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WEATHER FORECAST- The National Weather Service forecasts
rain Sunday for parts of the Great Lakes Region and in a band from the
Carolinas and Tennessee south to the Gulf Coast. I AP Laserphoto 1.

Mitc.hum found guilty on two counts of complicity:

miles.

'6195'

dates were asked to name a subject
they are often asked about on the
campaign trail, odds are they'd
give the same answer: the Ohlo
Lottery.
"They want. to know why It Isn't
solving our education problems,"
said Republlcan gubernatorlal can·
dldate Robert Teater.
Democratic candidate Richard
Celeste said, "The lottery was ml·
srepresented, at least in people's
minds, as a specific resource for
education."
Jerry Springer, another Democrat running tor governor, was
more blunt about the lottery.
"The people were lled to," he
said . "They were told It would go to
education, which of course, It

doesn't.
State Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter,
R·Ashland, a candidate tor the
GOP gubernatorial nomination,
said the revenue trom the lottery
was not a sig!tlcant amount.
"It's not chicken teed," he said.
~ardless ot the total take, Va n
Meter feels the money should be set
aside tor education.
Other candidates and legis! a tors
feel the same, including T eater.
"There's been so much confusion
about It, I'm prepared to say lei's
earmark the money for educa·
lion," Teater said.
In the last fiscal year, ending
June ~1 . lottery agents rang up
$297 mllllon in sales, pumping $110
mllllon in profits into the state 's
general revenue fund .
For the first six months ot tltls

$ave

'78' REGAL SPORT COUPE
'80' CHEVROLET
&amp;AMARO

11 Sec tr ons. 70 Pages 35 Ce nts
A Multtm e d• a In c. N ew spaper'

Sunday , April25 , 1982

Middleport- Pomeroy-Ga llipolis- Poin1 Pleasant

."

•

'·•

1

~

GAU..IPOUS -Alvin M!tchwn,
38, H1ll!ard, was found gullty early
Friday evening tO two counts of
"complicity" in connection with the
• July 28, 1981 shooting and subsequent death of Craig Fisher, 25,
Rte. 2, J;'atrtot.
That verdict came shOrtly after 5
p.m., following three hours of deliberation by the · five-man, seven
w6nuin jury. Gallla County Common Pleas Judge Richard C. Roderick, In Ids charge ,to the jury,
directed that verdicts to the alleged
'&lt;ttenses of "complicity to oegllgent
hornlclde" (a first-degree misdemeanor) and. "complicity to tamperln&amp; with evidence" (a
thlrd~ee felony) be considered.
Actin&amp; upon a detelule motion

Thunctay, a third count In the ortg-

nal indictment - compllclty to felonious assault- was dismissed by
Judge Roderick at the conclusion of
the prosecution's case. In dlsi:Jllsslng that charge, the common pleas
court judge sald he agreed none ot
the state's testimony showed evidence of "intent" - an element necessary to legally establlsh
"felonious assault."
Following the return of Friday's
Vfi!rdlcl, Judge Roderlck ordered a
pre-sentencing tnvestlgat!on.
· Fisher was shot In the back In the
early morning hours at the Captain's Lounge - now known as the
"Uth Fraine - a bar located w!thln
the Skyline Lanes Bowling Alley,
SR 7. He died on Aug. l6,1981, 1n St.
Mary's Hospital, Huntington,
W.Va., from lnjurles sustained as a
result of the shooting.
Evidence stipulated by both the

prosecution and the · qetense lndi·
cated the gun discharged whlle laying on a snack-bar counter top.
located adjacent to the tavern. The
bullet traveled through a paper
napkin holder and went through a
kitchen area into the bar where It
struck Fisher.
Phllllp Downing, 23, Hllllard, a
former bowllng _alley employee.
pleaded gullty on March 16 of this
year to charges ot neg~nt horn!·
clde and attemptell tampering with
evidence. He now awaits
sentencing.
Downing and MJtchum - for·
merly the manager the bowling
alley complex- were both secretly
lndlcted In late October, 1981, by a
Gallla County Grand Jwy.. They
were arrested shortly thereafter In
Franklin C::ounty.
Testifying ln h1s own defense .

ot

early Friday, Mitchum confirmed
an earlier d~tense allegation that
h1s attempts to "clean up" the bar
at the bowllng alley had led to nu·
merous threats.
He ~aid that at the time he as·
sumed the position as manager ot
the alley he had been directed by
facllity owner Dr. Donald Warehime ·to make It " ... a bowlers' bar,
not a nightclub."
He testified that the harassment
began after he "fired" a couple ot
employees and "barred 30 or 40"
people tram the tavern. He said he
had received numerous threaten·
ing phone calls. "They made It
clear they didn't like me," he said.
At app!'QX!mdtely 1: lJ a .m ., on
the morning of July 28, Mltchwn
testified, he received a call, the voIce advising, ''I'm going to blow you

away."

Mitchum said he replied by say,
lng, "At least walt untll 1 ge~
outside. "
,
The caller replied, Mltchum S&lt;i!d,
by saying "This Isn't funny ."
He added that approximately 10
minutes later he saw a car pull toi
the front of the bowllng alley wi~
"tour guys" inside. Mltchwn said!
that as he walked toward the door (
the'Car pulled away.
't
He testified he walked out to ~
car and took a magnum revolver!
tram the trunk. Mltchwn said he\
placed the gun on a bar stool in
concession area and covered It ~PI
with towels. He sald he stayed w1
the gun untll he let some "kids,'
who had been bowllng, out a sl
door. At that time, he said,
was no one " ... in the snack
area."
(Continued on A~)

thej

�AJ1nl25, 1982

Commentary and perspective

Colson's

P'dge-A-2
April25, 1982

82-1 Third Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio
I6141 44~2342

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

ROBERT 1•. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JH
ExecutJ Vt' Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER ul Tlw A ~:.ndut.-J l'rt·s~. lnlu ntJ Uaih· Prn.~
Nt&gt;..-SpHptlr l'uhlbhl:' r.. As.snt•iatloll.
·

,\ :;~ uduthm und

!h•· Anwrinut

l.t:Trt:H.'i 0,.- fWI-'IUN HTt' "ll't'knmr d. Th.-y !ohuuld 0.,• Its:. than lOO 14unh loa!:( . All

I.-Urn. arr ~ \Jbjt•t· l In t•d i tin~ and must bt· sigoM.I 14 ilh rutmr. addrt'Slt a11d tdt·phunt·
numbt·r . Nu urt.siJ:IWd lt-Ut•f"lo .,.·ill bt- puhlisht•tl . Ll'ltrrs ~ hnuhl bto in ~:uud tush'. ilddn·ss in~
issut·s, nut pt• nwrutlilit·~ .
'

Well., make that
next to nothing
What has 17 heads and spent eight months decJdJOg to do nothmg·•
The United States Gold Commission .
Most of you were probably looking the other way - unquestionably with
excellent reasons, whatever they were - when the commission closed up
shop the other day and for'!'arded it;; final report to Congress.
That report recommended that the United States not return to anything
resembling a gold standard for the foreseeable future . In other words, let's
leave the nation's monetary

affa ir~ exactl y

as they a re - a:; deplorable as

that may appear to be.
The reconunemJ(:ttiun hardly carne as a s urprise, s in ce the commiss ion

membership was stacked agamst gold advocates . What is surprising is that
the exercise was ever undertaken 111 the f1rst place.
The explanation is in one word : Politics.
The commission was essentially the quid se rved up by the administration to some powerfully positioned gold supporters 111 Congress in
return for the quo of their support on other matters.
The argwnent in fa vor of a gold-linked monetary sys lem is s1rnple. Smct'

the supply of the metal is limited, the money suppl y cannot be expanded for
political r easons. Monetary di scipline is thus imposed upon money-

managers and, theoretica lly, economic stabJIJt y results.
The argument might beller. however, be described as simplistiC. It
overlooks the volatility or gold it;;ell. wh1ch may be in lnmtcd but not fix ed
supply . It 1s a conunodity , subJect to the pressures of suppl y and demand
like any other and lately to extreme fluctuations in price. In the last few
years it has dropped from almost $1 ,000 an ounce to close to $300.
Further . the suppl y is IHrgely controlled by the world's two top
producers - South Afri ca and the Soviet Union , heavy selling by the
economicall y strapped Sovi ets ha vi ng contributed heavil y to the lates t price

plunge. In a gold system . the dollar would ha ve been taken w1th it.
And finall y, back when we al ong with the rest of the economica lly

developed world were on the gold standard, we were spared neither inflation
nor ruinous cy cles of uncontrolled expans iOn and deep depr ession . There is

no stabilizing magic in gold .
All of which the commiss 1on implicitly recugmzed 111 deciding to do
nothmg .
Well , make tha t next to noth1ng. It has recorrunended that Congress

coming out

process and coping

strategies of gay women ." That
sa me period saw a grant of $167,724
to a center attached to California
State University in San Francisco.
The grant was for a study of "civil
liberties and sexual orientation ."
Under the now-abandoned Comprehensive Education and Trianing
Program tC ETAI . $41 ,000 went to a
feminist outfit to produce the allnude ' 'Leapmg Lesbian F'ollies."
Another CETA grant, this one for
$640,000, funded nearly half the staff
of the Gay and Lesbian Community
Services Center in Los Angeles; the
grant was intended to provide
"education about gay lifestyles and
ga y people's problems." As recently
as this past October, after the
Rea gan admini stration had come into office, $14,595 was channeled to
the National Lesbian and Gay Men's
Radio Project.
Is th ere any constitutional
justification for this frittering away
or the taxpayers' money ' Over the
years I have developed some small
acquaintance with the Constitution.
Eve n if the general welfare ria use is
treated as a substantive grant of
legislative power, how in the name
of the Founding Fathers can these
s ubs idies be regarded as promoting
the "general" welfare'
The examples go on and on .

During the !981 White House Conference on Aging, the Gray Panthers
got $30,000 for "media activities."
The National Council of Senior
Citizens got $12,347 to pay for "2,000
annual subscriptions to Washington
Weekly newsletter." Why should
taxpayers be compelled to pay for
this sort or thmg '?
Whatever the " Feminist Press"
may be, it stood in line at the trough
last July for two grant;; totaling
$3!3,000 " for the improvement of
post-secondary educaiton." Is this a
federal responsibility' The far-left
United States Student Associati on
knocked down $107,000 for this same
amorphous purpose . The well-heeled
League of Women Voters, the
YWCA , and t he National
Organization for Women's Legal
Defense Fund play the grantmanship game .

It's a great game. Among the topranking professionals on the tour is
the National Urban League. Over
the past five years, the magazine
reports, the league and it;; affiliates
have won 66 grant;; from the Department of Housing, 28 grants from
CETA and fi ve grants from the
Department of Education. In a spectacular slam-dunk maneuver, the
league even got a grant to study a
grant - $396,000 from the Justice
Department "to assess completed

Charles Colson, arguably the most
Watergate business, may have a difficult time outliving Ius reputation
as a man who said he would walk
over his grandmother to help
Richard Nixon. That's the trouble
with a ni ce aphorism, particularly if
it's a little iconoclastic. Poor
General Sherman is remembered
not at all for h1s military brilliance,
but only lor his eponymous contribution to polities, as in a "Shermanesque refusal.'' The point is,
Charles Colson has already done
much more important things than
ever he did to help to destroy the
Nixon administration. He has founded something called the Prison
Fellowship. It has a staff of 100
people, and it could just possibly he
the agent of the most important
prison reforms of the century.
Some time in August of 1973,
Charles
Colson
experienced
Chnstianity . One is drawn to his
1natter-of-fact docwnentation of this
datwn, which (although he is cer-

research on the topic of minorities,

crime and criminal justice. "
In many instances, the Reagan administration is feeding the outfit;;
that bite it. The National Audubon
Society, the Sierra Club, the
National Wildlife Federation and
Friends of the Earth have been funded in varying amount;;, the better

"I'm angry," Robinson sputtered,

"at being asked to choose between
the expansionism of a right-wing
dictatorship and the rag-tag paternalism of a decayed colonial power.
I'm frustrated because I have to
develop a .Jine on this new world
crisis and my usual idological inclinations don't fit the occasion or
the actors.''

,...

O:IM . ~

"

'c.~

destroy their ancient culture.
The Miskifos' punishment for this
undcrs!fndahle reluctance to embrace entirely new way of life has
not - so (ar - included concentratlon camps and gas chambers
Intelligence report;; chromcle the
killing of dozens of Indians, the im-

1

tribesmen, this all seemed like a
deliberate effort to stamp out their
culture. It probauly was much the
same fee ling experienced by our
own lnd1ans when the U.S. government decided to "civilize" them for
their own good.
Like any insecure revolutionary
regime, the Sandinistas viewed the

re bels ·who

ove r-

prisonment of hundreds more and

Miskitos' residence to directives

pollars of American investors now going into South Afri can Krugerrands

throwing Somoza's brutal regime
have not lived up to their claims of
being humane champions of the
long-duwntrodden
Nicaraguan
people. In their own way, the Sandinistas have proven to be as cruel
toward at least one segment of the
Nicaraguan population as Somoza
ever was.
The victims are the primitive
Miskito lnd1ans, who have the
misfortune to live in the northern
part of Nicaragua, along the uorder
with Honduras.
All the Miskito Ind1ans wanted
was to be left alone, to live their lives
out in peace and security. But like
the Eureopan Jews of a generation
ago, the Miskitos resented the government's apparent determination to

the forced relocation of thousands in
an obvious effort by the Sandinista
regime to achieve a "final solution"
to the Miskito problem.
Somoza did not single out the
Miskitos for harassment. He was
primarily interested in extracting
Nicaragua's wealth for his own purposes, and the land occupied by the
primitive Miskito tribesmen had littie that Somoza considered worth
stealing.
But from the very beginning of the
Sandinistas' successful revolution in
1979, the Miskitos resisted the
Marxist-oriented government's
threat to their life style. They resented the leftist ideology, and such
possibly well-intentioned programs
as literacy classes. To the simple

from the central government as
evidence of rebellion, or even loyalty
to ex.Somoza forces in exile. The Indians' location - in the northeast
corner of Nicaragua near the Honduras border, across which many of
Sornoza's defeated national guard
troops had fled to safety - made
them naturally suspect toSandinista
leaders of paranoid inclinations.
Occasional outbreaks of violence,
perhaps fueled by the Somozan
exiles, led the Sandinistas to consider the Miskitos as a threat to the
revolutionary regime . Their
suspicions of the Indian tribesmen
became a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Miskito leaders were imprisoned
beginning in early 198!.
Then , la st December, the

medallions to that purpose without particular success, but the coins under
the curruniss iun 's recmrunend&lt;:~tiun would ha ve th~ ad v anU~ g e of being tax

exempt.
That might make s ome sense conunercially but, in encouraging the
locking of investment funds 1nto a non-productive asset, not economically.
For all it would do lor capital growth we mi ght as well gi ve tax breaks to
stamp and baseball card collections.
The gold comrmssion at th1s point has to rank as one or the sillier undertakings of the Reagan ad.rmni straon. But perha ps it deserves some ap-

preciation for that very reason.
A little comic relief i:; we lcome wh en the res t of the s how i:l so g rim .

Berry's World

succeeded

in

Managua regime apparently
decided to get really tough .
Claiming that they were putting
down "counter-revolutionaries," the
Sandimstas moved in.
At least 100, and probably more,
Miskitos were killed as thtt Sandinistas tried to settle the Iadian
problem for good. "The situation on
the

ea s t

coas

is

rapidly'

deteriorating," according to one
State Department cable. One source
went so far as to say that the SVJdinistas "are bent on Wiping out tAr
Miskitos, many of whom have fled to
Honduras or Costa Rica to escape
reported massacres."
Another source considered
reliable by the State Department
said that "early in January, bodies
began flaoting downriver" past one
M1skito village. " He fthe source)
also told of a rumor that the FSLN
fSandinistas) had rounded up a
group of males, lined them up on a
barge on the river, shot them and
allowed them to float downriver "
the report said. "He could not pe'rsonally verily the reasons for the
deaths, but he personally observed

" We'd like to go to South Succotash. wherever
that is . ..

Today in history
Today 1s Sunday, Apr1125, the 115th day of1982. Thereare250days lett In
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On April 25, 1898, the United States declared war on Spain.
On this date:
In 1945, delegates of 45 nations met In San Franctsco to organize the
United Nations.
In 1971, a Soviet spaceship landed safely after docking with an orbiting
space laboratory.
,
In 1973, the United States set up talks between Henry Kissinger and
Hanoi's Le Due Tho In Paris aimed at achieving "strict Implementation"
of the Vietnam war ceasetlre.
And In 198), President Carter announced an attempt to tree 52 Amertcan
hostages In Iran a day earlier had ended In !allure, with eight Arnertcan
soldiers kllled In the etlort.
Ten years ago: There were widespread anti-war protests throughout the
United States as Amertcan planes stepped up attacks on North Vietnam.
: Ftve years ago: President Carter and King Hussein of Jordan confeiTed
l!l Washington on Palestinian and other Mideast Issues.
: One year ago: SecretaJy of State Alexander M. Halg Jr., said the United
States would stop aJ1 trade with the Soviet Union If It Invaded strife-tom
Poland, a threat softened considerably by the White House two days later.

' 'Whata comedown! ' '

" It's actually not a bad job as soon
as you learn the alphabet. You see,
yoll_ ignore.1he fi_rst name and only
look at the initial of the last name.
Then you put the letter in the box
corresponding to the letter on the envelope. When I get the letters all sorted out, I give them to Dr. Fromm
and he marks the r09ms on them."
''Dr. Frorrun?'' "
"Yes, he used to head the mineral
exploration division, and he's a whiz
at knowing room numbers without
having to look them up in the directory."

"What happens after Dr. Fromm
puts the room numbers on them' ••
"Then Dr. Lasker takes them and
puts them in a supermarket basket
and delivers and delivers them to
the various Df!ices."
"What did' Dr. Lasker do before he
took that-job'"
'"He was in charge of studying
earthquake faults around the world.
He was working on a new way d
predicting them in advance, until
the OMB decided it was a waste of
money."

" He must be very bitter."
"He was until the head of the mail
room explained to him that
delivering people's mail on time was
just as important as figuring where
the next earthquake would take
place. Sometimes while Lasker is
waiting for us to sort out the mail he
sneaks off in a corner with his
calculator and predicts earthqua~es
just for the hell of it. But he has to be
careful no one sees him, because
therfs talk they may lay off
someone in the mail room and he has
less seniority than Dr. Fromm and I
do.''

"Do you ever examine moon rocks
anymore? "

"No, but if it's a light day I might
take out my microscope and analyze
what kind of ipk they used to print a
postage stamp. I like to keep my
hand in just in case something opens

upstairs."
"I can't believe the government
would be so stupid as to allow three
scientists like yourselves to work in

a mail room."
"We're lucky. Dr. Ridgewell, who

ee

- The annual cost of keepmg
someone in prison is about twice the
cost of keeping a student at Harvard
University.
- An interesting statistical coincidence : About 53 percent of men
behind bars are there for having

Pag e

for insl&lt;Jncc. had served as chairman of the boa rd of tr u;;tees of the

te rns u£ penology
It IS s t r&lt;H l ).!l' lhctt .tl

AmerH.'(l ll Mi.'{hcal Assoc t1::1tion . gut

UJIC IS CIH "UUI"i:l g t•d \ () !J1111k !"itdl( ·, dl~ .

of dangerous

in volved in an embezz le m ent , ant.l

so

criminals ((he horror of their living
conditions is mitigated, making less
likely the stimlilation of thell' bestial
instinct;;! , 2) for the sale of nondangerous criminals rthey are
costin~ society $20,000 pe r yea r in

was spending three years 111 jai l.
Why not - ins tead - sentcll&lt;'t' that
man to three years or fr ee medica l
serv 1ce [or 'tile needy? Wh y not the
s&lt;.u ne for lawyers '' Or carpent e rs ')
Or, indeed , a nyon e: grvin g the m ac-

IJ

conunitled a crime that did not in-

for

the

sake

volve violence or cause physical
upkeep and depriving soc iety of the
ccs.'::i at ni ght t o the ir families. who
which is one part devoted to per- danger. Meanwhile, 53 percent of
use of their talent;; I: and 31 for the arc innocent vJduns of ex1sting patsuading criminals to believe in Americans report that they arc
Christ; the other, to persuading the afraid to walk one mile from their sake of the public, which stands to ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.
American public for God's sake to residence after dark . To some ex- gain by lessened tax load and by
tent. then, it can be said that half of likelier reintegratiOn mto society of
listen to reason . To wit :
- The prison population is ex- America is imprisoned in virtue of non-dangerous felons.
panding 15 times as fast as the the impulses of half the criminal
The accent of Charles Colson is on
national population. And th1s not- population.
how usefully to deal with criminal s
What does this all add up to'
withstanding that only two out of 100
who are non-dangerous, in the
Not, Colson insists, more pris ons;
agents of crime are apprehended ,
ph ysical sense of the word. A comthough that is the $3 billion direction
convicted and put away.
panion in Colson's own penitentiary,
~
- · The prison,; are bursting at the r-------------------------~
I
searns, with over 200,000 more
f
criminals inhabiting quarters than
our prisons were designed for :
resulting in a gruesome intensification of the awful experience
of prison and a resulting increase in
of, Colson explains his ministry,

fOR SAL£

Glasses Giveaway
$150 Value

l

~,

r ~!

volved in a war in which we have no
interest."

"Thanks," I said. "You've cleared
it all up. But you said earlier that
you were frightened as well as
angry . Are your afraid that this
could develop into a larger war and
eventually a nuclear holocaust'"
" It could," Rob1nson said. " But
that's not the immediate danger.
I'm afraid that Reagan may invade
Mexico and Canada when he sees
what aggression can do for a shaky
leader's popularity ."
"He wouldn't," I said .
" He wouldn't be the first," Robins on said as he walked away .

525 RichlandAvenue
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to win your choice of fr•mes and lenses ¥alued up to S150 .00

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WI_,

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May 9th

"You know I take it black, dwnmy," the head said as he walked
away.
"Do you let him talk to you like
that?"
.
"As lo~g as they [lily us $50,000 a
year, what choic~ do I have' Look,
I'm not going to stay in the mail ·
room forever. Dr. Billington, who :
discovered titanium deposits on the :
ocean floor in the GuH of Mexiro, is
retiring in a couple of months, ·and
when he leaves he's going to recom- :
mend me for his job."
"What does he do now?"
"He works in the motor pool as a :
. night watchman."
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A/101/T.,

·. SlORE .
•
342 Second Ave.
:-Gallipolis ·-

r

'

....
"l

..

•
~

wht·n

lltth' rall tl'C:Il thou L!h l ts 1-~ 1 \' t •n t11: ·
lhe s ubjl'd of pn:-.on rdu n o:
Colson's nusadt • 1s pr nfuu ndl y eun-'
l'C IVCd , t'X IStl'lll tal ly
iiiJPI'&lt;I!HH '.:
splemhd 111 Clll tbt lr un Wl· ;m ·:
rtln •;tdy 111 Ius rk ht fo r tht· P ns t lt (
F\ :lluwsh1p Tilt' ~h ol t · t"ounln :
wuuld hl' llltk blt·d \11 h1n1 1f l1 1.'i rd•&gt; ! ~
rns wen · effected

.

fiF 6YIIi NCH (Yl.

'r

an ;q.: t·

·w-"
·' ' '\':'.

was just about to figure out a way of
measuring ultraviolet rays by a
laser beam, is now operating a
paper-shredding machine in the
boiler room. She was riffed out of a
Nobel Prize."
The head of the mail room carne
over to us. "Delbeck, go down to the
cafeteria and bring me up a coffee
and a Danish."
"Yes, sir, "Dr. Delbeck sald.

A3

federa l and local governments arc
heading toward. We should empty
the prisons by OnL"-half , Cols on says,

'\:"

DOONESBURV

lil/iU., IT IIJt1&lt;S (j()()().
1111 MAY PQ55IBI.Y

That much having beeo disposed

recidivist crirn~ .

,

JRtiJtJtiJ1l~C2============================================th~c~bod==i:4~·n~;~;i=nB~i~~th;eh~ri;~~r:~·l~d~
Riffing, or what is known in the
government parlance as "reduction
in force," IS taking its toll on
Washington . By law those with
seniority cannot be fired from a
department if there is another job
available, ev en if it is a much lower
one. The person has to be kept on for
two years before he can be let go.
Many overqualified people are
taking menial jobs just so they can
stay in the government and collect
their pensions, or hope that someone
will put them back where they
belong.
One of these happens to be
Delbeck, who has a Ph.D. in
geology, and formerly worked with
the U.S. Geographical Survey
Department studying mJOn rocks.
I went to see Delbeck out in
Reston, Virginia. Instead of being
directed to his laboratory I was told
I would fine him in the mail room.
" Dr. Delbeck, what are you doing
here?" I asked him.
"Sorting mial. It was the only job
open when we had our last riff."

tainly willing to expand on the im[liiCt of Christianity on him 1 he
treats as a datum, pure and simple .
As in : date of birth ... date ri
graduation from college ... date of
marriage .. . date of Christiamzation

"Try Gilbert and Sullivan," I rr.~=~~~~~~~~;;;~
suggested.
"Be serious," he shouted .
IJunba~ 'l:imro - Jfrntinrl
LEI'S 525-000
"There's got to be a right and a
A Multunedut Ncwsp&lt;~pt'r
wrong way to interpret these event;;.
PuiJhsl\ed carh Sunday , 825 Tl11rt.l
Av enue , by the Ohio 'Valley Pubhslung
No right-thinking person can SUJ&gt;COJ11pany - MultiJn~ia , lnt• . Second dass
port Argentina's military dictators,
post.&lt;Jge paid al Gallipolis. Ohw. 4:£31.
Entcrt'd as s~.:ond da!i.'i uuu li n ~ 1natter
who were shooting their own citizens
al Purueroy . Ohw, Pusl Offln :.
down in the streets of Buenos Aires
Mt·mi.M!r: The A sson&lt;~tcd Press, Inland
at the same instant that the mannes
IA:uly Pn:ss A ssoci~tlwn and tlw
landed in the Malvinas.
Ame n ld ll Nc w:; papcr Publi sher !&gt;
Assut·Jat•on , National Ad ve ri! S in ~
· "It's clear the invasion served to
Re presentallve, Branham , 17117 West
temporarily dampen opposition to a
N111e Mite Road, Suitt• 204 , Detroit,
Midugan, 40075.
government that has outlawed
dissent and stifled human rights.
SUBSCH.II'TION RATES
By C11rrier or Motor Roult'
Torture and assassination are
()w wel&gt;k .
. ..... .... ....... SUIO
familiar tools of the Galtieri governOnt.' Month .
. s-4 .40
Ont• year .
$!)2.80
ment. Opponents of the regime
SINGLE COPY
vanish. Trade unions and opposition
PRICE
35 Cents
[lilrties are prohibited."
"Then you have to support the
Nu subsL" npt!Ons by Jmul ~!"lllltl t'd 111
towns where home l'urrier servke is
Union Jack in this one," I agreed.
avuilabk
"On the other hand," he said
Till.• SumJa v Tmws-&amp; nl!rwl Will not btslowly, "it does my heart good to see
reS J&gt;U !l.S ibl~ for ad vallt.:t' pa yme nts uUtJe
the Thatcher government humbled
tu l'a rners.
and the British lion's whiskers
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
tweaked. Colonialism isn't any more
SunW.yOnly
O
llt'
year
..... .... . ... .. ...... $2'0.80
acceptable today than it was in India
' Six months.
$10.40
before Gandhi or on the Gold Coast
D11ily .11ntl Sund.!ly
Ohiu.am.l Weill Virginia
before Nkruman. No nation has a
Olw year .
$.19.00
right to territory outside its borders
Six •••unJ.h .
. $20.80
Thrt'l' rnnnths .
.. SJ 2.3!i
- not Britain, not the Soviet Union
Rate~ Outsidt' Ohio
and surely not the United States. For
11nd Wt'llt Vtq(inlll
One year
.. 1'420
the British to threaten war over
S1x !llonths
123.40
territory that have no right to claim
Three 1nonths .
. . 113.00
means that all of us may become in-

"""
l't&lt;i Srll&gt;ro1&lt;1

Somoza's re~C!:i=·=ll=l=e~========J=ac=k=A=n=de=rs=o=n
WASIDNGTON - As one of the
ha rshest critrcs of the late
Ni caraguan dictator Anastasio
Somoza, I feel no qualms about
faulting his supposedly democratic
successors for the same violations of
decency that led me to criticize his
oppressive regime.
Unfortunately, the Sandinista

Th e Sunday Tim cs -Se niJn e l

.
A DeW crisi.s~J_u_lia_n_B_o_n_d
''I'm angered, frustrated a ~d
frightened by the Argentina invasion
of the Falkland Islands," said my
friend Robinson.
"They're the Malvinas now," I
reminded him. "But what's it to
you?"

authorize minting of a new gold coin designed to keep at horne some of the
and Mexican gold pesos . The Treas ury h(:ts bee n marketing t: mrunemorative

to attack the president's efforts to
develop his own programs of conservation. The International Union
of United Autoworkers is down for
nearly $6 .5 million for 1979-82. The
Textile Workers Union shook the
taxpayers' money tree for $3 million
over a three-year period. The
Women's Equity Action League got
a million. There's no end to this
fiscal hemorrhage.
T. S. Eliot observed in a famous
line that Spril is the cruelest month.
For millions of wage-earning
Americans, hard-pressed to make
ends meet, the April 15 income tax
deadline is a painful occasion. We
pay our taxes under threat of being
sent to prison if we don't. With this
year's deadline fresh in mind, it is
especially infuriating to discover
where some of our money goes. Let
us turn these faucet;; off.

w. Va .

reJtorm~o..:~S~___________________w_iL_lia_m_F_.B_u_c_kl_ey_f~~·

exubenmt ~inner duriug the whole

Small sum, large angc~e~r====]=am=e=s]=.=Kl='lp=at=ric=k
WASIDNGTON - In the current
issue of Conservative Digest,
publisher Richard Viguerie has
pulled together a hundred examples
of grants and subsidies paid out over
the past five years to various.causes.
The swns, relatively speaking, are
sma lL They add up to a large anger.
Consider, if you pl ease, certain
grant.&lt;; of our tax dollars to
homosexual groups. In 1979-410, the
magazine reports, the Department
of Health and Hwnan Services gave
$18,416 to the New Ways Mmistry of
Mount Raimer, Md., to study "the

Pomeroy- Middleport - Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

WATER BED SALE

LARGE SELECTION

�Page-A -6- The Sunday Times -Sentine l

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

April 25, 1982
iddl

Mitchum guilty of complicity, jury finds
(Continued from A-ll
Mitchum said that after letting
them out, he returned to the concession area, turned out the lights In
the bowling area and went Into the
bar. He testl11ed he was standing
next to Fisher when the shot was
fired.
"He (Fisher) looked shocked___ grabbed the waitress' station and
fell back ... pulllng It with him." MJt chum said . "He couldn't answer... was unconsclous... dldn't say a
word."
MJtchum said hl'

~ 1a11£'d

toward

toward the snack tw through the
kltchen . "As l got cloSPr...it really
sunk ln ... I SdW the gun on the snack
bar...! asked him 'What the hell's
going on .. .what are you doing with
that vu n '. "

·I was bangtng on the counter
asking him what happened, " Mit chum said, "He tDownlng l kept
cl}'tng ... pleading It was an acc ldent...he kept Insist ing he couldn't
stay ... that ~e had Jo get out of
there."
MJtchum said he called for an
ambulance and wPnt back to check
on Fisher.
At that point, Mitchum testified.
Fisher was conscious. " ... he said 'I
can't feel my legs'."
MJtchum testified he went back
to make a second call for emergency aid and met Downing "com Ing around the counter." " He said
he couldn't stay ... and left...that
was the last time I saw him ."
MJtchum said the last time he
had seen the gun was when It was
lying on the snack bar cou ter top
Immediatel y f o ll ow in g the
shooting.
Mitchum testlfled that when sheriff' s department personne I a r rt ved at the scene a patron of the
bar , later Identified as Mike
Shaver, pointed at him and said, " !
saw that son-of-a-bitch do it." He
sa id the officers then shook him
down and searched the bar for the
gun.
Asked why he didn't make a
statement at that time. Mitchum
replied, " .. because of that r&lt;&gt;mark ... he knew l was standing next
to Fisher when the shot was fired ."
"I didn't say nothlng ... except It
could have been me who was shot... they tthe deputies) acted like
they half-way believed this guy ."
Mitchum added .
He sald that la ter during questioning at the sheriff' s department ,
he had not told about Downing and
the gun because, " ... (a ttorney)
warren Sheets told me to keep
quiet and let the pollee do their
Job."

"Is that what you did ?" asked d&lt;&gt;fense counsel Edwln L. Malek.
"Yes, sir." MJtchum replied.
Melak : "Do you now think that
was good, or bad, advice 7 "
Mitchum: "! think It was vel}'
bad advice."
MJtchum said that the next day
Downing told him the gun had been
thrown In the Ohio River, near
Win's Landing, Immediatel y following the shooting.
On Aug. 'll, Mitchum testl11ed,
following consultation with Malek,
he and Downing made a voluntal}'
statement to the Gallla sheriff's d&lt;&gt;partmenr placing the gun In the
river. That statement led to a weeklong dragging and diving effort In
th e area specified by Downing.
"When did you reallze Ute gun
wasn't In the river 7 " Malek asked.
"When they didn't find It," MJtchum replied, "with all thedraggtng ... lf It was where he said It
was ... they should have found it."
MJtchum testllled that thereafter
he traced the gun to Gahanna resident Marshal Murray, who earlier
gave evidence that he had purchased the weapon from Downing.
The defendant testllled that after
numerous attempts he pursuaded
Murray to returr the gun to Gallla
County. "I told him the gun was
Involved In a homlclde ... and to get
It back here."
Melak : "Did you tell Phillip
Downing to dispose of the gun?"
MJtchum: "No."
Melak : "Did you tell Phillip
Downing to hide the gun 7 "
MJtchum : "No.. .I had nothing to
do with the gun except to try to get It
back ."
Reacting to a final defense question, Mitchum said, "It was a freak
accident... the kld shouldn't be dead
today ... lt should have been me .. .lt
shouldn't have been him ... no one
will ever explain how or why that
gun went off."

On cross examination , Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L. Cain asked
what rei alions hlp Mitchum had
with th e county sheriff's
department.
"! thought the relationship was
pretty good," Mitchum answered.
The defendant answered afflrmatlvely when asked If he felt he
could call upon the department for
assistance.
"On the night you say you were
threatened, why didn't you call the
sheriff's department&gt;" Cain asked.
"To be truthful with you .. .I don't
really know," Mitchum answered.
Cain : " When you put the gun on
the stool were there still kids
bowling ?"

Mitchum: "Yes, slr ... but Ute gun
was wrapped up ... no one could see
it."
Cain: "When 13-year old Klm
Back sald she saw the gun and
could have grabbed It If she had
wanted to ... was that an untruth? "
Mitchum: "Yes."
Cain: "When Dave Davis said he
tried the front door and found It
locked was he lying?"
Mitchum: "Yes."
Cain: "Did you make a stat&lt;&gt;men t to Diane Shorter that som&lt;&gt;one had come In and shot him 7 "
Mitchum: "!don't recall making
tha t statement."
Cain: "When she said she heard a
noise near the bowtlng pins was she
lying?"
Mitchum: "! don't
know .. .! didn't hear it."
Cain: "Did you say to Officer
(Ed) Siewert that somebody came
In and shot hlm 7 "
Mitchum: "I probably made that
statement ... somebody did ... th e
kid 's dead."
Mitchum answered affirmatively when asked by Prosecutor
Cain If he was aware the sheriff's
department was looking for a gun
In the bowling alley on the morning
of the shooting and Ia ter when they
searched the defendant's mobile
home.
"At no time did you tell them
about Phil Downing and the gun?"
Cain asked.
"No, I didn't tell them about the
gun ... No, sir." MJtchum answered .
"Old you tell him (Downing 1 to
turn the gun In the next day 7 " Cain
asked.
"No ... he said he threw It in the
river." MJtchum answered.
Pointing to the month long gap
between the time of the shooting
and the recovel}' of the gun, Cain
asked, "When did you get concerned (about the gun)."
"!would like to have told the next
day ... except for that statement that
I had shot the kid." Mitchum
answered.
Cain: "Is It not true that If you
hadn't brought the gun In (the bowling alley I ... Fisher would be alive
today?"
Mitchum : "It probably Is."
Cain: "Is It not true that you left
the gun where an employee or patron could get It?"
Mitchum: "An employee apparently did ."
In his closing argument to the
Jury Prosecutor Cain charged : "If
you are to believe the defendant,
you must believe four or five other
people are lying."
Referring to the negllgent homicide charge Cain said, "He, by his

and left It In the snack bar area of
the bowling alley ... where a 13-year
old girl could have grabbed It If she
had wanted to."
Following the
shooting, Cain charged, "He had to
be the one to let Downing out of the
buUdlng ... remember, he was the
only person who had keys."
"Would a person who was so concerned for his llle, as he would have
you believe, have left the front door
unlocked ... to an area where a gun
was so available.
"The defense would have you believe that he went to Gahanna to get
Ute gun out of some sense of civic
duty," he continued, "there was no
civic duty lnvolved ... he went because he was scared .. .because he
was afraid there would be murder
charges lodged against him."
In his closing argument, defense
attorney Malek called the prosecution's chief witness, Phillip DownIng, a man " ... who cannot tell
reality from flction ... a dreamer ... a
man who has had so many night·
mares about the Incident that he
doesn't know tact from fiction."
"Phil Downing pleaded guilty,"
Malek continued, "he's your cul ~rit...not Mr. Mitchum."
Referring to Mitchum's alleged
participation In the recovel}' of the
gun, Malek said, "Hedrugthetruth
from Downing .. .It was througljMJtchum 's efforts that the sher1tl's department recovered the weapon."
In Mitchum's defense, Malek repeated the allegation thAt numerous "serious" Incidents at the
bowling alley justified the defendant's POSsession of a gun.
"Is this man (Mitchum) responsible for the fact that Downing
picked up the gun ... put It on the
counter...and that It accidentally
dlscharged ... at some point In time,
AI Mit c hum's responsibi lity
ended."
"Are we to punish a man for
something such as this... somethlng
that could happen to anyone of us 7 "
he asked .

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Cabbage, Peppers, lettuce, flowers.

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17 Court St.

Gallipolis

FRIDAY
MAY 7, 1982
7:30P.M.

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W.Va.

Meets Wednesday
POMEROY- -The PomeroyMiddleport Uons Club will hold a
regular meeting at 12 noon Wednesday at the MeJgs Inn.

departments
the blaze
under
control
In 15had
rnlnutes,
Smathers
reported.
In other matters, Gallipolis firemen said they extln~ished a car

fire on Sycamore Street between
First and Second Avenues Friday
night.

The report saki an electrical
short In a car driven by Nita G.
Wisnlsld, Galllpolls, Ignited wlrtng,
Insulation and the engine at 9: 43
p.m. and caused an estimated
Sl,!XXl damage.
One truck and six volunteers put
out the fire In :ll minutes, the report
noted.

NOW APPEARING

STEVE YATES
BAND
Tuesday thru Saturday
9:00 P.M. · 2:00A.M.
NOONEUNDER21
ADMITTED

French Quarter
LOUNGE &amp;CARRYOUT

The Sunda

- - - - - -... eteran8 Memoria}--- - - - - Admltted --Ketth Musser, Porn&lt;&gt;roy; Helen Braden, Middleport ;
Charles Ohlinger, Middleport;
Mal}' Bissell, Long Bottom.

Departed
loved
One

--

' ~-; - .J:

-,..~_ .;• '

I ~ :,\ -. .·

.: • '

Write For Free Brochures Showing Memorial In
Full Color with Sizes and Prices listed

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
POMEROY, OHIO

VINTON. OHIO
W. Main St.
388-8603

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2588

t::==========~====~========::::::=.:::::=======.
STORE HOURS:

Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm
Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

••
~ ~··
•~···~·
•••
• • • KJ
·~·· ~··
~··~·
~········.
nl

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Things Bright &amp; Beautiful
~.,.--------. ' AU Creatures Great &amp; Small
All Things Wise &amp; Wonderful
The Lord God Made Them AU
AU

Available

Discharged -- Keith Musser.
Hazel Combs, Jack Corder, Bertha
Dutton, Bonnie Warner. Marilyn
Shamblin.

For a

~··
..,.

•

Times·Se ntinei -Pa ge- A-7

Now In Paperback
At

FEATURING SQUIRE PARSONS
Also Appearing

•JORDAN SISTERS •HEARLDSMEN •LIGHT

MIDDLEPORT JR. HIGH AUDITORIUM
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TICKETS:
$4.00 Advance
$5.00 At the Door
Under 6 free

Order your tickets
by calling:
614-992-6300
or 614-446-9471

Tickets available at all Fruth Pharmacy's, Middleport
Book Store, Willa Book Store in Pt. Pleasant, W. Va., '
Faith Book Store, Gallipolis. Hurry, tickets are going
fast!

•. t

Big Savings on...Console RCA Color TVs...

Our wholesale distributor tor RCA consumer electron1cs has just held their
once-a-year clearance sale. We've taken advantage of this special buying
opportunity in order to pass on tremendous savings to you!

Lane®

Show your love and pride for her in
a way she'll never forget with a Lane
Love Chest. For the occasion we selected
these styles that represent outstanding values
and are offering lhem this week only at one low
price. But do hurry, our stock Is limited .

•••

POMEROY -Meigs sheriff's deputies are Investigating a breaking
and enterlng ot the James E. Wln·
r;rove residence, Clu1sty Road,
.Route 1, Reedsvtlle.
The Incident was reported Friday night.
• A turntable, stereo receiver, lape
deck, speakers, a color television
,and a number of saws and tools
were missing. No evidence of
foreed enll}' could be found.
Dwaln Edward Helton, 48,
Reedsville, was taken Into custody
Frtday night on a warrant charging
corruption of a rnlnor. He was
lodged In the county JaU pending
bearing In the county court.

GOSPEL
CONCERT

bY

ARE

Probe theft case

IT'S BULOVA WATCH TIME

'

A mutual aid call was sent out to
the Gallipolis Fire Department,
which In turn called the Mlddlepori
Fire Department for assistance.
While Gallipolis sent 13 men and
two trucks to the scene, VInton was
able to respond to the call with five
men and two trucks.
Upon arrival, It was found a
grass fire. which had already
burned about a halt-acre, was
threatening the mobile home. Both

CLINIC OPEN HOUSE- A public open house for Holzer Cllnie's new
Meigs County Branch will be held on Thursday, April 29, between 6:30
and 8 p.m. The branch began operations at150 Mill Street In Middleport
March 5, and is open Monday lbrougb Friday from 8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Tuesday evening anUI 9 p.m. and Saturday morning al5 p.m., Tuesday
evening until9J!.m. and Saturday morning from 8:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Staffing is provided by physlefaDS from Holzer's Departments of Family
Practice and Pediatrics.

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VINTON - Two brush fires
which broke out within an hour ot
each other Frtday kept volunteers
!rom the VInton Volunteer Fire Department on the run.
The !lrst caU came at 12: (J! p.m.
when !Ire was detected on Mount
Tabor Road. Flnl Chlet Harry
Smathers saki the blaze burned approximately an acre aAd six men
and two trucks respollded to the
call and stayed on the scene for :ll
minutes.
The second report came In at
12: 26 p.m. while the other !Ire was
being fought. It was orlgtnally reported a mobile home on Roush
Hollow Road, north of Eno, was on

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•c,_

218 Weet Main Street
Pomeroy • 882-8855

A aubaldtary of

WAS 1849

BREAD

YELLOW
ONIONS

PEPSI
DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW

HEAD
LETTUCE

3~ 89¢ 5~!

8-160Z~ ~~~
BTLS .

.

Tax &amp; Deposit

�Page

A-8

Pomeroy

The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohi o- Point

Plea~ant ,

April 25, 1982

W. Va .

County wide participation sought for Hartinger event
MIDDLEPORT Wide participation in a number of activities
OCing plcmncU fur the observance 0f
the visit of General James Hartinger
lu his hometown Memorial Ot~y
Weekend is bei ng requested.
The event will get underway on
Friday May 28, and will run through
Sunday, May 30. Genera l Hartinger,
a native of Middleport, is one of 12
four star genera ls 111 the United
States today .
Middleport Village Officials and
Middleport Chamber of Commerce
members are workmg a long with
other groups and indi vid uals to plan
a festlvHI around Gl'neral Ha r·
tinger\ vis it.
Mrs . Yvonne

Scally, vtce
preSident of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce, is se rvin ~ a s head
of the e~ct t v ttt t•s bein!,.! coordinated
by the Middleport Cham ber. Bill
Childs, busi nessman . is head1ng the
~n ttr c observance.
Mrs. Scally reports merc han ts
plan displays uf arts and crafts. a
flea nutrket . comm~rci1:1l 1:1nd noncorrun erctal cxhtbil!:i, car shows ami
cntertatnmcnt

as

part

of

the

celebralwn . There will be a parade .
ht.•adt.•d by Hnger Murgcm, i::l golf
tournament, a public reception and

other actJvi!les over the weekend.
Mrs. Scally asks residents across

All individuals, organizations and
businesses

asked to complete the section of the
fonn in today's
per-

taining to their activities and return
the section to Mrs. Yvonne Scally,

LaSalle Hotel,
45760.

Middleport, Ohio

AIon the river

1rhnts- ientin.el

Sectionrn5
Sunda

·1 25, 1982

the county to participate in the

celebrati on. Residents involved in
activities planned, however, are
asked to regis ter on the acl'Ornpanyi ng

form

as

soon

as

possible so that Mrs. Scall y and her
cununittecs can proceed.
Individuals, organizations and
busmesses are all being asked to
take a role 111 the observance.

Thru May 21, 1982

3-Pc. Fish Dinner
Special $2.69

Ch1:1irmen £or the various activities being planned by the chamber include : Mrs. Ruth Gosney, arts
and crafL': Osby Martin. flea
market: Cas h Bahr, commercial
and non-conunerci1:1l ; Roger Davidsun, car shows; Vernon Weber, entertainment. Anyone with specifi c
queshmb may call the chainnan of
the respective event in which they
are interested.

Each dinner includes 3 crispy fish
fillets, golden fryes. fresh cole slaw
and 2 hushpuppies.
Good only at:
Silver Bridge Shopping Center,
Gallipolis

Arb itnd critft!:i, f!ci.:t market ac-

tivities, the ca r show and commercial itnd non-commercial
exlubil' will be at va rious locations
throughout the town from 9 a. m . to 5
p.m . on both Friday and Saturda y,
Apnl 28 and 29 . E ntertainers will
perform on Sa lurday afternoon at
the Middleport C01run unity Park .

GENERAL HARTINGER FESTIV AI.
We w1s h to take part in the fest1val for General Hartinger as mtlicated below :
1Check areas of interest 1
1 Arb anU Cra ft&lt;;
I Flea Market
1Conuncrcial/Non-Commerci£11 sp&lt;:ll'l'
\Car Shows! Antique and flacing)
l Entt:rl&lt;:llnl'r

Cl1'Ji1

us

•

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

Sunday· Tuesday Sale

Open Dally
10-9

Sunday
1-6

~uilting:

Nallll'
Addrl'ss
0... •~"' ,.,.....,,_ •• to ""•• ••• ,.,. ..,..,

Phnne/Cuntad Person .

ftH(J •I .... "' \lOC O Of&gt; &lt;).,• 1 ..... e1

~

011

od~OI.O•Iefn•I I&gt;OII• ..I-Iool)l,&lt;&lt;

chue due to an ~ unlo•ueen &lt;ell&lt;ll'
• ....-t ,.." •llue • A&amp;rn C I&gt;K~ Ot&gt; •-...11
lor ........... c .. ....,. ... ,,..... ...... "' •• ...,.,
to oe pu&lt;r h•Md 111.,.
WI~ Ol'&gt;&lt;e - • • • ••ooi&amp;Oie 0&lt; ,..II aeJ1

Hnd I'L'Sllllll' of entry .

-••"'"' qu•""'''
IOU I CQml)811tlle

~~~~If

••bill ,..,...,,.,. ... P'«

• ..., &amp;II CO'nlll

. . By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
'l'lmes-Sentlnel Staff
:POMEROY - "In the sky the
bright stars gUttered,
·Qn the banks the pale moon
shone,
And 'twas from Aunt Dinah's
quilting party
I was seeing Nellie home."

Send to Yvonne Scally, LaSalle Hotel. Middleport, Ohio 45760

COME AND WORSHIP!

REVIVAL

When these words were penned
by Stephen Foster, qulltlng bees
were highlights o! the social calepdar and Dan Cupid, that symbqilc matchmaker, enjoyed his
rnc6t successful moments ..... "seeIng Neiiie home."
But times have changed and
wlille we no longer associate qulltlng with romance, the custom o!
getting together to create lovely
quills Is always with us.
Qulltlng Is truly a living art In
Meigs County.
Parents and grandparents make
quilts to hand down to their children
and grandchlldren. Some sell their
creations to add to the family Income. Others qullt In churches and
centers across the county to make
money lor their church or charity.
And there are dozens of patterns.
Historically, qullls told the story
of the women who found a medium
tor creative expression and brightened their homes with colorlul,
tunctlonal !urnlshings.
Doves were often used on quilts ID
syrnbollze !emlnlnty and a happy
marriage, red roses meant love; lilies, purity; daisies, Innocence,
while pineapples denoted hospital-

Ewington Church of Christ
In Christian Union
Located 15 miles North on Rt. 160 from Holzer
Hospital to Ewington - Turn left on Ewington Road
to church

(219)
Kmart•

Sale Price

APRIL 27 THRU MAY 2
7:30P.M. NIGHTLY

SINGERS-HOLLEY FAMILY
Paslor: Rev. Thomas Rhoads

REV. DAN TIPTON-EVANGELIST

Less

Polaroid•

38$

Rebate

Our Reg . 37.97

Po"

(218)

27.97

(1171

YoufChoice

29.88

.1

•

19.88

Save! Comfort Top Knee· hi's

. Wicker Type Bassinet

Time Zero One Step

Comfortable nylon/spandex b lend.

Comes complete with pad, liner
and hood . Folding legs.

The world 's simplest camera.

Soulh Cenlral Oislricl Superintendenl

OPEN
HOUSE

SPECIAL!
At Regular Price

32·
fl. Oz.

~

1•I.,7

Nylon like Jackets
Snap or zip hoof styles wilh

co«on flannel lining Fashion
co lors Sizes S-M-L

2 Pc. Short Set

.dec I S14)

Only
fl: loch
·c-• 1l'tKXESS flMS ONt.r

Our reg. 2.27

11.96 1.97

Each

DOES NO! APf'l YTO Rf:PIHNTS

Quart

Salad Drenlngs

Boys or girls. 9 months to

4T . Assorted colo~s

Dellclousdre~ingsm&lt;Jdt*)owwe
With real mayonnaise-.

•
' '
ll'llf1 Fit-mt and
AlllmuntttOn Pohcy

-·

... .
.,~...... ---··............
_.loc.l .._
~---

llta

Interested members of the public are. invited to tour
this new facility.

--..........
4

· Flnt let oll'rtnlt

•I(

FROM 6:30 TO 8:00P.M.

circulation Is cut ort and mold and
mildew can result !rom moisture
trapped Inside. She suggested, Instead, that well-washed cotton muslin or percale !abrlc or new tissue
paper be used to protect qullls from
dust, lll!ht and abrasion.
Glass advised against letting
quills come In direct contact with
wood or the sides o! cardboard
boxes. Attics, basements and uhheated storage sheds are Inapprop'
riate and can damage • vafuable
quills, the home economls\ pointed
out, because o! the temperature
and humidity variation,
She further suggested that quills
be rolled onto large tubes lor slorage rather than folded, first coverIng the tubes with tissue paper or
cloth.
As lor cleaning, Glass commented on various methods - airIng, vacuuming, dry cleaning and
caretullaunderlng. For stain removal, she suggested !lrst trying the
United States Department of Agriculture's recommendation:
"Moisten the stain using cotton
balls with a lew drops o! three percent solution olf hyrtrogen peroxide.
Expose the stain to direct sunlight.
Add hydrogen peroxide as needed
to keep the stained area moist until
It disappears. 11 that treatment Is
not successful, then add a lew drops
o! household ammonia ID about one
tablespoon of hydrogen peroxide.
Moisten the stain Immediately with
the mixture and keep It damp until
the stain Is removed. Rinse well."

11 qullts are to be displayed or
used, Ms. Glass stressed the Importance of repalrlng any damaged
areas to prevent further deterioration. For repalrtng quUt sections
with !rayed or broken fabrics such
as an outer edge, she suggested covering with a sheer Iabrie to prevent
lurther damage but allow the color
ID show through. Short stitches
create acute stress, she said, In recommending that all stitches be at
least one-fourth Inch long. Synthetic threads cut the materials,
she noted.
As lor replacing mlsslng pieces,
treatment Is a matter of personal
choice, but Glass said sometimes It
Is better to leave the space uncovered and let the lining show
through, ra !her than adding an Inappropriate Iabrie from a different
period. She particularly stressed
that 11 the qullt Is to be sold, then
replacing damaged or missing fabrics with new pieces can actualy
reduce the value o! an antique quilt.
Thursday's program and &lt;I!Sptay
was a time for Increasing appreciation of qullts which represent a !amUy's heritage, a craft that requires
much time and skW, and an art
form that relecls the environment
In which It was created.
The next qullt show planned lor
Meigs County wW take place at the
Senior Citizens Center May 7 and 8.
It, too, wW be aimed at Increasing
an appreciation lor the heritage of
qulltlng, the history or particular
qullls, and today's qulltlng Interest.

FocaUocloeolor tr •
DIVELOP and "INT

Our Reg . 2.97

THURSDAY,APRIL29, 1982

lty and were considered to be lucky
and able to bring friends closer
together.
Superstitious women never allowed the "wandering foot" pattern
ID be used on qullts to cover boys'
beds. A colloqual expression lor
wanderlust, the evil Influence o!
qullls with this pattern was supposedly so great that young men
sleeping under them would soon
leave their homes.
Today from cultural centers to
county lairs, qullt shows are enjoyIng a tremendous poputartly.
Thursday, a traditional qullt
show and program on quilt conservation was held at Chester Fire Station, co-sponsored by Meigs
Extension Service and Dairy Barn
Southeastern Ohio Cultural Arts
Center, o! Athens.
From that show, a half-dozen
quilts were selected lor display at
the Diary Barn's !lrst exhibition o!
traditional qullls, June 4-20. Both
new and antique quilts wW be
among the 70 quUts to be displayed
In the "Patterns Worth Repeating"
show.
More than a hundred qullls were
displayed at Thursday's show
which generated a tremendous 11)terest among Meigs women. Patsy
Glass, Jackson Area Extension·
home economist, was there tD discuss conservation, storage, use,
cleaning techniques, spot and stain
removal and how to replace missIng pieces.
She cautioned against storing
qullls In plastic bags because air

"TWO EACH"

(221)

The Meigs County Branch of
Holzer·Ciinic ltc ....
.... is conducting an
Open House in its facmty at
150 Mill Street
in Middleport on

still a tradition

I

f

:

I

·J,'lJ
IJI
'

.......... '

l.l8sox

'

r I
I ~;· i 'I

All ..... ~

- · · "- poebO .... 0#1 , . . _
, . . . , of h........ - · . . .
,...._,1M SUif oft ..twdllorn&lt;ftlt

Sale Price

:

Our 4.77

·

2.9lsAVE

Remington Thun derbt:Jit!ll 50 Tr•sh Can L!ners
. .22 long rifle.

·u

mil plast_
ic. 20·30 gal.

IUIS£1
99¢

K-Burger

Sale Price
Our
1.97

.

Quarter pounder , w!th choice
of topping.

Gumou~

13 ·Oz. Spray

Carburetor and·chcik,cleaner .

185 UPP ER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
••

•
"

QUILTING - (TOP LEfT PHOTO) Tradirimwlly,
quilting may be "worrwn'.&lt; work," but L.D. Hnrtinger has
been doing it for years and enjoying every minute. His
speciality for the Middleport Church of Chri..!t group i..!
"piecing" tops, which takes hours of cutting and .&lt;ewing
from materials which he readily admit.&lt; he "begs. borrows
or steals." He is also a quality quilter. (TOP RIGHT
PHOTO) Wednesday quilting bees hove been taking
place at Middleport Church of Chri..!t for the past decade
with proceeds going into church impravemenls and mi..!sion projects throughout the years. The many church
quilters, including the three pictured here. Daisy Saunders, Mary Bailey, and Nettie Boyer, have added hundreds
of stitches and thoU-'IInds of dollars, to the trea&lt;ury of the
Loyal Women and Men's Class. (ABOVE PHOTO) Both
of these quilts are estimated to be more than 150 years old.
Mildred Gaul, left, showed her family heirloom quilt at
Thursdaay's quilt show, in Chester. The green and gold
quilt Wll6 made by her great-grandmother Johnson and
handed down from one generation to the next. Mrs. Oma
Starkey, of Carpenter, di..!played her "one of a kind" quilt
in reds and beiges which Wll6 made by her 89-year-old
hwband's grandmother, Mary Suzanna Reeves Rupe .
(FAR LEFT PHOTO) This reproduction of an antique
quilt in the "bride's fancy" pattern made during the Civil
War era Wll6 duplayed by Ruby Grueser at Thursday's
quilty show. (LEFT PHOTO) Mrs. Letha Wood displays
an embroidered quilt she made about 50 years ago. She
de.igned the pattern, marked it herself and then quilted
it. PhotO&amp; by Charlene Hoeflich

�•
April25, 1982
Page- B-2- The Sunday Times-Sen t mel

Pomeroy - Middleport-Ga llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

The National Council of Catholic
Women are observing Counctl of
Catholic Women Sunday today to
mark the Feast of its Patroness, Our
Lady of Good Counsel.
Mary . chosen by the founders of
NCCW over 60 years ago, rematns a
model for guidance and counsel in

their program•.
A federation representing 10
million Catholic women throughout
the county , NCCW continues emphasis on the study and use of the Intcrnational Yea r of the Agtng, the
60's-Decade of the Fam1ly and 1ts
suport of Catholic Relief Service.

·-------------Coupon------------,
IS FAT YOUR ENEMY?
Want to look Better &amp; Feel Better?
VISIT THE TOP OF THE STAIRS

FITNESS CENTER &amp;BEAUTY STUDIO
" Ov er the Do'lar General Store in Pomeroy "

s1ooo SAVINGS
On a Monthly Members hip, if you regi ster with a fri e nd ,
you will both qualify for a $20.00 m e mbers hip eac h .
Regular $30.00
This Off e r Expires May 1s t, 198 2
Our beauty salon is ope n daily .
PHONE
Evenings or Saturday by appointment .
992 -6720

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

.a.....:-·
;,pnng_.n•••nmy
hcne always includes the ~rpets.

~

pc;.!rt:tnn· of one of Ohw' s hottest
~-: rou ps

musical

&lt;J t Rio (;nwde
Collegt· and Cmn1numty Cullegt•.
McCuffey l ..£t ne,

&lt;:1

popul e:~r group

from Colum bus. Will perform at 8
p .m . Sunda y

1n

Lynt• Ccntt•r on the

cullegt' l'&lt;irTipus. AdmJSsJon IS $6 for
tht· publ1c a nd lJckds will be
ava ilable 111 t:Jdvclll l 't ' e~t tht: Student
Prugramrmn~-:

Offtce

loectled

111

Allen Hall.

spokespers on. Thctr self-produced

rnrs was ooe ol111e worSI w~nter s lfl

a long IPI'lle

snow and slush we&lt;e

touring artisl'i, the spokesperson

n •gtonallcvcl alone.
Ml{;uffl'Y l .d rH.' was for·mcd 111 tht•
t·arl y 1970s as a duo consisting of
g 111 Uirist Terry Efaw and bass i.st\'ucahst Stephen Re1 s. Efi:iw won the

a drummer was essential to drive
the band's evolving sound. The percuss ion sca t is now occupied by John
Campigotto.
In 1977, the joining of guitaristvoca list John Schwab completed the

&lt; 'hct

s1x-rnan line-up.

debut album. wh1ch was released independentl y earli er thiS year . has
already sold 40,000 eo p~es on a

Atkins' llCltiunal guita r com-

pdl tlon while he was onl y 19 a nd
named lht• group after his home

The sex tet's fresh JllusJcctl blend. a

street 111 Athens, Oh1o - the gro up's
·· l·us1mc center."

tasty merger of country-folk -rock infl uences. has altraded a legion of
followers. e~ct· urdm g to d g roup

Tlw spoki'Sill&lt;:Hl sa1U that w1th the
additwn of guitarist-vocalist Bob
McNelley , thl' y bcGillll' a s uccessful

Since then, McGuffey Lane's
rareer has taken significant strides.
The demand for the group. based in
Colwnbus, spread from local clubs
to

co ll eges

area

to

conce rt

promoters throughout Ohio and into
.severa l adjoining sWtes.

Judges announced for art exhibit
(;AJ.I.JPOI.IS -- Jan Thall'r. Fren·
dl Art ('ulony dunrperson fur tht•
~ · nu n l y JUilltll' &lt;J ild St' fllor h1 gh st'110ol
junl·d Ma) ilrl t•xlubl t h&lt;t s ;:Jilnuunn·d tlw St'kl'llllll uf thnT judg,·s
for the t'\'t•nt . Tllt'y i:lrt• .l&lt;:~nt• t Byt•rs.
Gall qw l1s: Gall Eva ns. Wellston :
and Jad Slavtn. Sy r;;~cuse . All are
ad iVt&gt; ly lm·olwd 111 tilt' art culll·
lOU/lily .
B.Yl'rS has St'f\'t•d thl' FA(' 011 till'
Uua rd of trus!t•t ·s and &lt;:J s ed uc~!lwn

deparllllt' lll d1a1rperson . Sht' IS &lt;ill
art1 st wl111 works pnl!laril y w1th
st..41HlCd g!Jss a nli waterrolor. By t•r s
1s a g ra du &lt;:~ te uf Ol 11o Sl i:l lt' Wllh a
dq..;ret' 1!1 f11w art s.
F.v&lt;:Jns 1s ttw c.:reatur &lt;Hld dJn·t'lur
of tht• MJiton 8&lt;Jnk (;allt·ry 111
Wellston . ll t· r t•xiHbitwn J,! rtlh·ry
fp&lt;:Jiurt•s

Oh11J

arl1sts

~tn d

area l:lrt showl-i
.J udgtng will bt• llonl' Tuesday.
Apnl 27. Tan ya K111na1rd of Point
Pil'&lt;J sant re~ Js ten•d tht.: ent r ies

IS

an art•a i:II'Li st

tht• winners will be published S un~

~~~ v•:~~;u:=~~~~kt~,·,~~~~~~v
S~cttm(lf tloes the wtlOie ,00 pro les

5Klll aNv sav•rog r ou 11me and etr011
Ovo Cli!De1 UPf!f1~ nevao use yQtH t101

group has performed before several

wat er 0&lt; !'leclriCIIy We bung only our
dea111nq wand and hose 1n10 your home
Plu$ we t arclully move your lurnii Jrl!
a&lt;KI !UIUIIl II 111 OOfl• II J Ctlilr9f: pi3CI "9

hundred thousand Ohio natives.

=~n~a~~OCIO&lt;s and wOOd bloc~ ~ ~--""'

said. During the past two years. the

For further information, contact

Call Stanley Steemet
today tor an appointment

Rio Grande College at 16141 24!&gt;-5353.

w.,....,n &lt;«om.....,nd S t•n,.y 51~"'""''
lor upnoh lery c lelnU\g . too
co mp.ln¥ , ... ~•n!J lht• ,, ,.,1
- " ""'
l or ~ ~r· o,l\1 ltv •• ' " "
D~on•· n u mlwr
~ .1m r

--

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hall or lamlly room and hi ll.
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@;

, .. lt-4 1

The carpet cleaning company women recommend.
~ .....................................................J

Ph. 446-0699

day. Ma y 2.

CLOSEOUT SAL~

1s

Model 2000
The Touch-Tronic"
memory maChine. Touch
one button and the
electronic brain makes

the proper settings.

'25000 Off
SPRING FABRIC NOW
AVAILABLE FOR UPCOMING
VACATION FASHIONS

THE FABRIC SHOP

FAC . A member of the new lyfonnl·d Bend of the Ri vl'r Art
Colony. Sbv in hCJs cxhi bit n l h1s

11s

w.

2nd

Pomeory, OH .

Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
A s Your Singer Approved Dealer

&lt;:~ nll

OhiO University, as well as in many ....L------------------------~

THE LaSALLE
137 NORTH SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

IN THE LOBBY:

Daily luncheon Specials 11-2

MONDAY-Johnny Marzetti
TUESDAY-Hot Roast Beef Sandwich
Wilh Mashed Potatoes
WEDNESDAY-Baked Chicken and
Noodles
THURSDAY-Baked Ham and Scalloped
Potatoes
FRIDAY-Baked Fish
SATURDAY-Beef and Noodles
AlsO FEATURING-Sandwiches, Side Orders
and Desserts

MONDAY-Meat Loaf
TUESDAY-Roast Beef and Dressing
WEDNESDAY-Bar-B-Que Chicken
THURSDAY-Swiss Steak ·
FRIDAY-Pork Chops with Dressing
SATURDAY-Beef Stroganoff
ALSO FEATURING-Monday thru Saturday
Steaks and Seafood
Friday and Saturday-The House Specially
Prime Ribs

ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IN THE LOUNGE
THIS WEEK APPEARING FROM 9 TO 1 "RECORDING ARTisr' DAVE DUNKLE

Call Yvonne .at 992-9917 For Reservations.
-

.,

Tht•

ca rrying the ball while I was
unable to work . I know the task

grotlln's

&lt;.~re

pi-lrents

Mrs

Charlotte Wolfe, Tuppers Pla1 ns,

and baby's breath.
Mrs. Wolfe and the groom's sister.
Julie attended the wedding . Mrs .
Wolfe wore a sea green street dress
w1th long .sleeve.s . a V net·kliue and

Hi. there'
Like the proverbial bad penny I
have ret urned . It
has been three
months since I
have written a
colwnn . Illness is
something I wish
we co uld all
escape - but no
such luck.
It is nice to be
able to be back with my Cl&gt;workers. It is also wonderful
seeing all my friends again.

was not an easy one.

and Robert SchnellJe r Sr., l.ilwren-

I wish also to extend my sincere thanks for the many cards,
nowers, and vis its extended to

ceburg . Ind. Mrs. Judy Schneider

IS

his stcpuwlher, ::tnt.! Gene Wolfe

IS

hts stepf a tlwr.

me. Thanks
everyone.

an A-line skirt.
!loth Mr. and Mrs. Schneider are
graduates of Me1~s H1 gh Sdwol. He .

Fur her wt•tltlln g, lht · IJr Hie wort' &lt;-1
blue street -lt.:ngth dress fasllllmed

il bUJil'rlll&lt;:lkt·r i:irld tht•y res ide in

The first week back was
definitely not an easy one. It
seemed I had more to do than
when I left. However, we do

cast.

manage to ca rry on.

I extend my thanks to Bob and
Charlene for pitching in and

to

each

and

1s employell w1th frl'orgw Power a:,

Milledgl'villt, (;a

I was given a poem sometime
before I became ill and was never
able to pass it on to you. I enjoyed
it so much I felt that you, our
readers, would enjoy it also.
It goes as foll ows :
" I pray that I may live to fi sh
Until my dying day.
And when it comes to my last
I then most hwnbly pray .
When in the Lord's

~real

}

I

lan-

Th ts M o ther 's Ddy. yo u ra n really pour 1t o n
Ju ~ t se nd m o m th e S how L·r~ o f Aff e c l10 n

ding net and peacefully asleep
That in His mercy I may be

judged
BIG ENOUGH TO KEEP'"

Shower Mom
With Affection.

Mr. and Mrs. Scheider

POMEROY -~- Lisa Renee Pierce

and Robert Paul Schneider Jr. we re

married in a

pri v&lt;:~ t c

lloubil'-rin g

reremon y on the evening of Apri I 9
OA~

Gallia County senior
citizens' calendar

Bouquet !r om kll· nu l d
A c lw l' rlul ,Hrdngcm,•n t n l f1esh
S pll n~ ft o W t ' l "o thd l (O in t ' lfl ll rt'd l w 0 1k
1nu w.Jt CJIIl &lt;J (.til It " a ~Jill rn o m
will use dll yec~ 1 lo ny to ::. p 1uce up
th e k1 tctwn 0 1 dll Y 1oom w1 th new
nowc rs dnd pldn b . An d II ~ d Qlft
sh E: ccJn usf' to mcl kt· h t' l o v.n
garden g1ow
So JU::. t sto p by 0 1 c d ll

lhe sho p. We ii ld k&lt;·
Cd(f ol eve rytl1my But
do tl ed rly. B c c d u ~c d lot
o l th oughtlul child ren will b e
sh owen nq tht ·u mo m ::. w1 th
allec!Jo n t h 1s M o ttw r ::. D&lt;J y

Choice of beverage served with
each meal.

" Mea ls subject to change without
nutin~ . "

Mothers Day,

"Services rendered on a nondiscriminatory bas1s. ··

Tuesday, April 27 - S.T.O.P. r;;::===========~
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness.
1: ISa.m.; Birthday Party , I :30 p.m.
Wednesday, April 28 - Vinton
STATE FARM
Nutrition Education, II :30 a.m.;
Vinton Bible Study. I p.m.;
Ameri can Literature · Class, J-3
p.m.; Card Games, 1-3 p.m .; Garden
Club, 1-J p.m.
Thursday, April 29 - Vinton Site
Crafts. I p.m. ; Bible Study, 1-2 p.m.;
INSURANCE
Vinton Blood Pressure Check.
®
Friday, April 30 - Staff Meeting,
8:15a.m. ; Yoga Class, IO a.m.; Art
Class, 1-3 p.m. ; Woodworking Class,
FOR INSURANCE CALL
1-J p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1-3
p.m. ; Vinton Birthday Party ; Soc1al
Hour, 7p.m.
The Senior Nut,·ition Program will
serve the following menus :
Monday - Salisbury stea k,
potatoes in jacket, spinach/vinegar,
roll, butter. lemon pudding, milk.
Tuesday - Ham loaf, Au Gratin
potatoes, tossed salad, cornbread,
butter, applesauc.e, mill&lt;.
CAROLL SNOWDEN
•11 Second Ave .
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
Galli'polis, Oh .
potato salad, baked beans, roll, butPhone 446-4290
ter, choice of fruit, mill&lt;.
Home•U-4511
Thursday - Johnny Marzetti ,
Like a good
shredded lettuce I cheeHe I dressing,
mixed greens, bread, butter, fresh
State Fann is there.
fruit , milk.
Stilt hi• Mti!IIIIKI Co'"'"" '..
Friday - Hot roast beef open face
Kou Ollttet 11NIIItft9t011 . lll•nt111
sandwich/gravy, whipped potatoes,
fruit salad, bread, butter, brownie,
milk .

•HYDRANGEAS
•POTIED MUMS
•HANGING PLANTERS •PLANTERS
•COMBINATION POTS •AZALEAS
•CORSAGES
•PERMANENT FLOWERS
•CUT FLOWERS
•SILK ARRANGEMENTS
WHATEVER LENA WANTS. LENA G!:"TS

~

A.,.

}m.

,. .

, ,.,.. ,_ ,, ~&gt;f&gt;l "~"•"·l ·•"· l• l o«t..,, ,

, 1 1.·1· 1\ ...

.. ,,ft,., ,.,,I,,, ,.,,,.., .,,. ,

..... . 1 , .... 1.1~

111. 1 .• Il l....

. ~~ ~ ;~:· ~:~:~:;:s

Tli.t. e3f:et 8aJr.

-

300 Second Ave
Lafayette Ma ll, Galtipot''· Oh .

POMEROY
FLOWERSHO~
"Th e Way America Sends Love"
106 Butt ernut A vl'

Ph . 9t:/7 10J9 or99 7 S71 1
We Acc e pt All
And W e

W 1re

r

P om e o r y Oh

M.11 0r Cred1f C&lt;1rd s
IOW (' n

[

Vt:rywh erc

POINT PLEASANT

Monday 4PM To Closing

We Don't Skimp On Shrimp!

Monday N. ht Is
AUfou-Care- o-Eat
Shrimp Night!

Evenin Dinner S ecials 5-8

SALAD BAR FOR BOTH LUNCH AND DINNER

PLAN NOW FOR THE GENERAL HARTINGER
FOUR STAR CELEBRATION/ALUMNI WEEKEND
MAY 28-29-30
MEETING ROOMS AND BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE.

By KATI E CROW
Times-Sentinel Staff

is the daughter of Mary Jane
Talbott, Tuppers Plains. and Frank
Herald. Middleport. She 1s the stepdaughter of Mrs. Sharon Herald.

wa th a scup nel'klint• , S pc:t ~ hettl
st rCJps , a bodit'e flount:c , and etn Alllle sk1rt. Silt' wore a nwtrhing pi t'·
lure lmt and carried t.1 bouquet of
ca rnations w1th pale yelluw lilies

neighbor,

During

who

&amp;

NO HIDOEN CHARGES

SAVINGS

spet'lalii'.cs 111 \\'Ootl sculrtu l'l'. ll1 s
tlegret' frulll Ohio Un1vers1ty 1s in
sculptun•. Sla\· in has ktught c.: ICJ sscs
111 sl'ulpture for Rio Gra ndt• cmd the

work CJt Rio Grandt• College

which were ctl'Cepted Friday a nd

Sa turda y •t Ri verby. The naml's of

E ~urvoav dttt and gr 11aS~~ "'" "'O&gt;."Jhl

lnSIOO you&lt; nome COOSiaMiy gnrl()ng
aw11h:t ca rpel l•ber s St&lt;anl&amp;y Stc-u me•

Racelnfor

dedic.:&lt;:Jkd to "bnrl l-!lll)..! t•xcellence 1n
art l o the &lt;:~re&lt;:J . " Evans is a gratluult•
of Ohio Um vt·rslty w1th a BA 111 pnntmaklll J..! . She ruts cumpletell work on
her maslt&gt; r 's 111 co unseling and
edul'a twn . Ht·r goal 1s to t'mllbllle
t'ounst•llllg and C:~rt therct py.
Recently, sl1e servl'd LI S t'unsul tan t
111 the fi eld uf 1nulti-arts fur Oh]() Ar·
L'\ Council.
Sla vlll

Your carpet Is an
expensive Investment and
should be cleaned regularly
by p(Ofeaslonals.

Their excitinK stage show has
made them a much-requested
opening act for major national

Katie's Korner

GALUPOUS - Activities for the
week of April 26-30 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at 220
Jackson Pike are as follows :
Monday, April 26 - Vinton Site
Exercises, II : 30 a. m .; Chorus, 1-3
p.m.

'

was t•me lo 5.pflf'l9 nouse cle11n 1Clltktd
Stanley Steeme&lt; They reaMy know now
kl get c&lt;arnets pr olessoonally clean

folk trio. Next to join was Stephen
Douglas on hannonica-keyboards·
vocab, followed by the decision that

ceremony for the coupl e. Thl' bntle

AS AOVEAliSEO IN ......c&gt;MAN 'S

kad&lt;ed 111 all over my carpels When 11

Country-folk.. rock group at Rio

at tht• Church of Gut.l 1n F.atun , GrJ.

0

Stmlley Ste.er gets them_.yI .1. ;
looking their llest." d ~uY-!vJ

McGuffey Lane

The Su nd ay Times -Se ntin e i- Page- B-3
Rev . Rubert Cash pe1iurmed the

NCCW observes today

RIO GRANDE - Til'keLs •n· still
av&lt;lllable for the Sunday n1 ght ap-

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-P oint Plea sa nt, W.Va.

Aprii2S, 1982

,ROOMS BY THE
DAY OR SPECIAL
WEEKLY AND
MONTHLY RATES.

the
knowing
look .. .
poNI'er®

-~

Featuring Our New Homemade~ Gumbo

Monday from 4PM to closing you can get all the boiled
shrimp you can eat, along with fries, warm toasted grecian bread,
Shoney's own cocktail sauce, and our all-you-care-to-eat
soup and salad bar, featuring o'ur great new homemade seafood
gumbo, for just $4.99. Children under 12 get a free
dessert with any dinner purchase. It's a new, nicely nautical way
we're saying, ''Thank you for coming to Shoney's:'

POINT PLEASANT
- .

SHONEY'S ONLY!
•

'

'

\

~.

'\

'

'I

.

,,

In stock, ready
for immediate
delivery.
Quality crafted
mattresses and box
•
spnngs.

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Page-B-6- The Sunday Times- Sentinel

w.

April 25, 1982

Va.

April 25, 1982
sweetheart neckline, fitted slt•eves
tapered over the hand and empire
waistline. The bouffant sk1rt had
seven ruffled liers, which continued
into a cathedral train. The neckline,
sleeves, bodice and tiers were
enhanced by re-embroidered alencon lace. The victorian style hat was
made of matching re-embroidfred
alencon lace. The bride carried a
lace bridal fan with a full cascade of
white roses, pink ti ger lilies, pink aJ&gt;ple blossoms and baby's breath.
Cathy Levy, s ister of the bride,
serv ed as matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were Beth Gooderham.
Crown City, and Sally Baker,
Patriot, both cousins of the bride.
Dresses of the bridesmaids were
styled identically to the matron of
honor's - a handkerchief dress of
rose print chiffalene, scooped neck
and split butterfly sleeves.
The matron of honor and
bridesmaids earned a lace bridal
fan wiU1 a small cascade of
sweethea rt roses and apple
blossoms. The attendant.-; wore a

tulle butterfly bow with sweetheart
roses and apple blossoms affixed.
Tom Calvert, brother of the
groom, and David Edelmann served
as altar boys and Kelly Pullins
registered wedding guests.
The groom wore a burgundy
tuxedo with a mauve pink rose
boutonniere. Steve Calvert, brother
of the groom, served as best man.
Ushers were Date Knotts and Brent
Eastman, both of Gallipolis. The
ushers wore burgWJdy tuxedos and
mauve pink rose boutonnieres.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Clark chose a floor-length gown of
daphne rose polyester and chiffon.

Former Meigs resident
marries in Florida
MIDDLEPORT - Mindy Long,
daughter of Richard Long, Middleport, and Beverly Long, Florida,
and Don Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. J. Hayfs, Toccoa Falls, Ga., were
married April 10 at Hill Street Bal&gt;'
tis! Church in Toccoa Falls.
Rev . Swayne Poole performed the
ceremony. Mary Beth Long served
as maid of honor for her sister and

r::..:.:=:::..::.:...::.:.:::::...:::::....::.::...:::::::..:..::.:::____________

Her corsage was of silk phallanopsis
orchids. Mrs. Calvert chose a floor·
length gown of old rose polyester
with a corsage of white orchids.
A reception was held in the church
hall. The wedding cake was made by
the groom's mother. Serving were
Cheryl Houck, April Curry, both
from Gallipolis, and Linda Rwnsey,
Point Pleasant.
The co uple resides in Rodney .

SPRING SAVINGS

+

Mr. and Mrs. Calvert
GALLIPOLIS - Julie Ann Clark,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John K.
Dark, Gallipolis, became the br1'de
o1 Joseph Franklin Calvert. son of
Mr. and Oct.
Mrs.
Galllpolis,
24 . Fred Calvert.
Fa ther William Myers perfonned

Given in marriage by her parent.-;
and escorted by her father , the bride
I
h
ClOse
a fonna I gown of wh·t
1 e cantill y lace over taffeta with a

G~~,~~~~~E

GIRLS
EXTRA SMALL
thru LARGE

BOYS
SMALL thru
EXTRA LARGE

SYRACUSE, OH 10
NOWOPENFORTHE
SPR lNG SEASON
•Vegetable Plants

~;;;~~~~an:~ria~~~:(;~, so%~~:"'

:~~ ~

A kneeling bench and unity candle

was incorporated into the ceremonv.

~

~

MON .
TU E5
WE 0

fli.

~

~

1Oo/c0

PERMS
AND
C0 L 0 R S

Vaudie V. Lambert Jr., Montgomery, Ala .
The groom-elect graduated from
Southern High School in Racine and
is now(/ a. senior at Southeastern
College, Lakeland, Fla. His fiancee
is a jWJior at Southeastern College.
The weddi ng will be Jul y 31 at
Evangel Temple, Montgomery , Ala.

~

'!!/

YELLOW PATIERN
YELLOW TRAY
WIRE FOOTREST

Bring This Ad In
And Save $10000
On Any Color TV
In The Store.

•AFC ... Automatic
Frequency Control
• 100% Solid State Chassis
• 1n-Line Picture Tube
• VHF Pre-Set Fine
Tuning
• Automatic Color Control
• Molded -In Handle

WE WILL NOT BE
UNDERSOLD

NOW GET EVEN MORE VALUE WITH A
CASH REBATE FROM THE OEALE&lt;l PAID DIRECT TO YOU .
FEATURES &amp; PR ICE MAKE IT A VALUE TO BEGIN WITH
QUALITY &amp; SERVICE MAKE IT A VALUE THAT LASTS . LIMITED OFFER . HURRY INi
Offer

$100.00 DISCOUNT
PLUS $40.00

$50.00 DISCOUNT
PLUS $30.00

CASH REBATE!

VINTON - Lon Lee Martin and
Wllllam Scott Wood are planning a
7 p.m. May22open-church wedding
at Salem Baptist Church.
Martin Is Ute daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Finis Isaac, Route 2, VInton,
and Larry Martin, Lagro, Ind.
Wood ls the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Spencer, PaUiot, and Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Burnett.
The brtde-elect wtll graduate
from Southwestern High School In
May and Is on Its student counctl,
yearbook staff and newspaper
staff. She ls a waitress at Bob
Evans' Sausage Shop, Rto Grande.
Wood graduated from Southwest·
ern High School tn 1980 and from
Buckeye Hills Career Center In air
conditioning and heating. He also
works at Bob Evans' Sausage Shop.

Mooel CTFl~.

'S()CII DISCOUNT
1

PLUS 40

CASH REBATE!

wa awn

fOR THE PAIR!
~
BIG CAPACITY
WASHER&amp;
MATCHING

DAVE A!
,

,,

W1tht1

Model WLW3700B

~

DELUXE 30" OVEN-RANGE WITH
BLACK GlASS WINDOW DOOR!

Moo.Po't:asoa

MOGel A8747QA

STARTS AS AVALUE
... STAYS AVALUE!

Oller valrd April 2S · May B. 1982

Offer valid only as a d1scoun1 and may not be
combined w11h any other d1scoun1 Of spec1al rate .
Of1er valid •n partiCipating areas only.

(Areas 20. 11 . 70. 40. 87)
OFFER GOOD ONLY WITH COUPON.

.POMEROY.LANDMARK.-

WEIGHT WATCHERS'·
loss
the world.

0

------WalcheQ lnterNIIDnal,·lnc.

Weight Wa!chers

~emalional

1982

"

..

·,.

•

LB.

49(

LB.

$199

MIXED

FRYER PARTS
BONELESS FULL CUT

ROUND STEAK
SUPERIORS

89(

y

_

$129

5LB.

GOLDEN DELICIOUS

JLB.

APPLES

·dAG

99(

99(
3 PIECE

S4Q8 00

s59500

3 PIECE

Diamonds &amp; 14K Gold in Stylish Trios

SUNNY MORN
-·

MIDDLEPORT O HIO

Ft\BRIC~

GRADE A
EX. LG.
EGGS

69¢

VALLEY BELL

HAl
F
GAL

BUnERMILK
HAWAIIAN

46 OZ.

RED PUNCH

CAN

Sai lc loth /Rope Trrm
· 14/8" Heel

Rupe, Lee
Mr. and Mrs Richard Rupe, 295
Wright St., Pomeroy, are anQoWJcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Laura Ann, to Randy Ray
Lee, son of Mrs. Sue Lee,
Waynesboro, Tenn., and Kenneth
Lee, Hohenwald, Tenn.
: The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate
of Meigs High School and attended
the University of Cincinnati and
Ohio University. Her fiance
graduated from Wayne County High
School in 1977 and is presently a corPoral in the U. S. Marine Corps,
~tationed
at Camp Lejeune,
~acksonville, N.C.
l The open church wedding will be
ari event of May 15 at the Pomeroy
Cnited Methodist Church.
·

·Pianists take part
~fu. OMEA contest ·

' Jlllllor high scbool aged p4ano stu-.
·
of Ml'!l. Louis R. Ford Jr. participated at the Ohio Musle

tmicatton Aasoctatton'a DlltrlcU7

¢9ntest at Ohl!l Unlversi~.Apri117.
LLaura Bnmlcardl, Dennll Jam'!'~ -aDd Claire Lyil Adams an reCeived a auperlor nitlll&amp; for ~
)iertormancea of aelectloat Jar 8ee'
thovell, Kuhlau ·aDd Bac:h.

poogn&gt;n in

/J

BAG

by~~

Model R£9&lt;17

• Uses JUS! 89 kw hours p~r month· w1th energy -saver
sw1tCh in normal posi tion • Efficient loam insulat ion •
19.0 Cu. ft. no -has! refrigerator- freezer • 13.8 Cu . fl .
fresh food capaCi ty • 5.2 Cu . ft . freeze r sec liOn • Re versible doors • Rugged Trilon II door and cab•neto
liner • See -thru meat keeper and lruit/vegelable pans

LB.

$149

$1~~

WITH RIBS

HEAD HEAD59¢ :~~;.::~.A $}29
LETTUCE
STRAWBERRIES
QUART

SJ7500

3 PIECE

FUN-TIME

AUTOMATIC

FIRST MEETING FEE.

(C)

E.XTRA LEAN

CANDY 'S- CLASSIC - COLLECTIONS
INGELS-FURNITU RE-&amp;-JEWELRY

COOK ING CONTROL'

ON REGISTRlUION AND

Aegilt...d Tradlmartt of Weigh!

BEEF CUBE STEAK

ICEBERG

Rupe-Lee

+h:rl:p..crln±-

$50.00 DISCOUNT
PLUS $50.00

29
L8 $2

CHICKEN
BREAST

For the Two of You

DELUXE MICROWAVE WITH

r$4.000FF
~ Wa&amp;chltl" ila

USDA CHOICE

FRESH

Martin

'

meet•ng and reg•strat1on lee •S $15

Tho most successful weight

LB.

GROUND CHUCK

Weekly meeltng fee IS $5 00 •n lh1s area

GOT

$179

ROUND
STEAK

LANDMARK ..

851·8800
OR CALL TOLL FRE E. 1·80D-582-t 399

II

FULL CUT

USDA CHOICE
BONE IN

WELSH
HIGH CHAIR

Pomeroy Landmark

'5()CII DISCOUNT
PLUS '40

5LB.

BAG

All YOUR BABY NEEDS

'!!/

"Ternf1c " 1s the key word here. people . At Weight
Watchers. that's how we help you look and feel.
And what better tme to get started toward that
goal than Spnng? Surel
So now until May 8 we're helping yo' with
a $4.00 sav1ngs 1n th1s area on your f1rst
meet1ng and reg1 stration fee· . Just bnng the
coupon . save money and JOin the world's
most successful we1ght·loss program. You 'll
learn to eat sens1bly wh1le still enJOying
the foods you love- and losing we1ght.
EnJOY th1s summer 1n a bathing suitlooking great. The time to start is nowl
For information about the t1me and
place of a We1ght Watchers class
convenient for you, call :

I

Gallipolis

SMOKED
PORK CHOPS

Phone 446 ·1600 or walk in , no appo intm ent necess ary . Mon .-

1/i.
~'="'~'="''="'~'="''="''="'"=""="'
F~:~~:.:~s:~::~=:::::::n:_

DOMINO
PURE CANE
SUGAR

FISHERS

~
'1.1

MAY 1st

."We Reserve the Rigf!l to Um~ Quantity''

Martin-Wood

• Bedding Plants
•Foilage Plants and
HangiNngDBAatsLk$t9s t ' l 8
OPE
'
ts
SUNDAY 1 'TIL

Offer ex1ended by popular demand!
Now you'U save until May 8, 1982.

I

430 Second

PRICES EFFECTIVE
TODAY THRU

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio Phone 446·9593

"

J

Offer good April26 thru May 19
We offer ear piercing, Natural Women Cosmetics,
Redken Shampoo and Conditioner, R&amp;K Shampoo
and Conditioner for men .

FOOD
STAMPS

f1IJ

~

Pretend
you're in
your bathing suit.
Now, doesn't a $4.00
Spri!18 savings at
Weight Watchers·
sound terrific?

'F.rst

[4] WJ fYJ
Y crJ
LA

PHONE 992-5776

ENCHANGTED MIRROR . ·v---w~
BEAUTY SALON
~
~
MO¥HE~'SeD~ay SPECI~rlipolos ~

Music fo r the ceremony was

lighted cande labrum. the bridal
procession passed through a brass
arc hway decorated with s ilk while
roses, pmk ti ge r lilies, apple
bl ossoms and baby 's breath. The
pews were marked w1th brass pew
markers with hurricane globes. Also
attached were sprays of a silk rose
with baby's breath and fresh folia ge.

Denise Hayes of Pomeroy, as the
flower girl.
Ray Andrews, Pomeroy, will serve as best man for the groom-elect
with ushers to be Greg Becker. Middleport , and Dan Edwards, Rutland .
Ryan Wildennuth, Columbus, will
be ringbearer .
(}uest.-; will be registered by Jennifer Arnold and Sarah Harris.
Pomeroy. Hostesses will be Sherrie
Osborne. Pomeroy, Amber, Minersville, and Sonia and Tonia Ash,
Syracuse .

(~~~~~~~~~~~~

~'lr- ~

__!~S unday T1m es· Sentonel- Page-B 7

_ _

WE ACCEPT

Mrs. ~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[A]~
Fla. announce the engagement oi
their son, John Mark, to Julie Renee
. -~ I A
~
Lambert, daughter of Rev. and Mrs.
.l::l
l~

UN DEROOS

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

POMEROY - Plans ha ve been
completed for the open-church wedding or Sandra J . Hamilton and
Thomas Eugene Hawley .
The wedding will tak e place a t
2:30 p.m. on May 2 at Forest Run
Un1ted Methodist Church. Rev.
Stanley Merrifield will perform the
ceremony following a program of
mus ic by Lori Wood, Pomeroy,
beginning at 2 p.m .
Shari Mitch, Pomeroy, will be
maid of honor and bridesmaids will
be Gina Thomas, Pomeory. and
Roxie Matteson, Springfield, with

POMEROY
- Fort
Mr. Lauderdale
and
Robert
K. Sayre,

GIRLS AND BOYS

and Nancy Staley.

w. va .

Hamilton and. Hawley
complete wedding plans

r-::=--::::--::::-::::-:::--:::-::=--=::-=:--:::---:-----+~~~~~~~~~~~l----------_:_--------,.----

the doubl e-ring cerem ony at 1 p.m .
in Sacred Hea rt Catholi c Church.
Point Plea:;ant.

rr!~orf~li:~ea 1 ~;ra~~~%:~~

While 1n Columbus for the wedding, Mr. and Mrs. Bartoe visited
their son and daughter, Luther Jr.

Lambert, Sayre

for

Matthews and Bartoe wed

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Bartoe announce the mar·
riage of thei r son, Joseph Allen, to
Teresa Ann Matthews, of
Columbus.
The couple was married Aprtll2
In Columbus. They wtll temporar·
lly reside In Long Bottom them
move to Florida.

John Addison of Toccoa Fa lls was
best man for the groom.
A reception for family and close
friends was held at the home of the
groom's parent.-;.
The bride attended Meigs High
School before movmg to Georgia.
She graduated from Toccoa Falls
High School.

Engagements.!
Lambert-Sayre

j

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

99(
79(
79(

PEPSI ~n~6 oz.
MT. DEW
DIET PEPSI
NESTE A

3 oz.

INSTANT TEA

JAR

HALF
GAL

M

COFFEE~A~z

$249
$179
5 99

3

ln these colors :
BLACK

WHITE
RED
NAVY
SAND

$}600

Open
Monday
Til
8 P.M.

GIANT SIZE

TOUCH

OXYDOL ~~~z..
DETERGENT

BROUGHTON'S

conAGE
CHEESE
24oL
ctn.

$119

FABRIC 33
FTENER BTLoz.

JOB SQUAD

PAPER
·TOWELS
Jumbo

Roll

79¢

DIXIETREAT
ROYAL CREST

20 lb. Bag

$259

'•

2% MILK
Gallon
Plastic

$}79

•..'

�Pa

The

Tomes-Sentinel

is, Ohio-Point Plea

Calendar

SUNDAY
POMEROY Gorl Scout
Leaders of Meigs County will host
a Heritage Tea Sunday from 2-4
p.m. at Meigs Inn. Women in
history will be honored as will be
all leaders and Cl&gt;-lcaders. All
registered adults in Gorl
Seouttng, of pttst and present,
invit e~!

!lft'

to attend .

LOWER PLAINS - A hym n
sing woll be held Sunda y at 1:30
p.m . at the Zion Frct•woll Baptost
Church, Route 682, Lower Plains,
with the Restorations of Jackson
and the Heirs of Chri s t.
Gall ipolis, pruviding the mu.siL· .

The Rev. Edd ie Boyer, pastor.
vitcs the public .

Cecil and Charles Johnson
ministers. Pastor Jeff Butche;
and the congregation invite the
public.
POINT PLEASANT
Evangelist Bobby Brown of Chattanooga, Tenn., will preach in
revival services at Grace Baptist
Church, Point Pleasant, Sunday
through Wednesday. Music will
be provided by Temple Men of

follow . All lodge
welcome to attend.

members

POMEROY - Inspection practice, 2 p.m. Sunday, for Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

MONDAY

from Tennessee Temple University , Cha ttanooga . Services will
be held at 7:30 nightl y.

MIDDLEPORT - An organlza tiona! meeting of MeigsMason Pony League wtll be held
Monday at 8: 30 p.m. at Middle-port City Hall. Those interested
are w·ged to attend.

ATHENS Dostrict 13
Deputies and Past Councilors:
Club, Da ughte rs of America,
Unoversit y Inn, Sunday. Dinner
a t 12:30 p.m. with meeting to

BIDWELlrPORTER PTO will
meet at Bidwell Elementary
School at 7 p.m. Monday. there
will also be a science and art
show.

Praise , a five--member ensemble

111-

HARTFORD, W. Va. - Revival services at Our Father's
House wtll begin Sunday a nd
continue for tloe next two weeks.
There will be singers and
preachers eac h night. Rev .
Clyde Field, pastor, Invites tloe
pubUc.
MEIGS COUNTY Genealogi·
cal Society wtll meet Sunday at 2
p.m . at Meigs Museum.
MIDDLEPORT - American
Legion's baseball sign-up will be
held Sunday at 2 p.m. at tloe
Fee n ey - Be nn ett Post In
Mlddlepor1 .
GALLI POLlS FERRY - Grub
Family Singers will be at
Pleasant View Church, I'~ miles
south of Ga llipolis Ferry, Sunday
a t 7:30p.m. All are welcome.
CADMUS - The Evangelistic
Quartet will sing at Crossroads
Pentecosta l Church near Cadmus
at 7 p.m. Sunday . The publ ic is invited .
I..ECTA - Ambassador Trio
will be at Lccta Tabernacle Sunday at 7 p.m. Rev. Wayne
Harrison, a member of the group,
will also preach. All are welcome
to attend .
ADDISON Freewill Baptost
Church will hold a 7:30 p.m. service Sunday with Rev . Lafe
Waller of Cotwnbus. Addison
Quartet will sing.
GALLIPOLIS - A pony pull
will be held on the Merle Shriver
farm on Kerr-Harris burg Road at
I p.m. Sunday.

Sports

POMEROY - Past Matrons
Club, Pomeroy Chapter 186,
O.E.S. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Edna Schoenbb.

Mrs. John L.

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
branch AA UW will hold an annual spring dinner at Meigs Inn
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Membern
may take a guest. Speaker will be
Harriett Wood, the branch's consultant. New officers will be installed .

conference room.
POMEROY - Ohio Associa tion
of Public School Employees
Chapter 17, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the Meigs Junior High School.
Election of officers and represeor
tatives for negotiating team to be
elected. Door prize will be awarded.

TUESDAY
GALUPOLIS Pembroke
Club members will meet at 8 p.m.

,t.\CROSS

William B. Kughn

Monday thru Friday
9 AM to9 PM

Saturday 9 AM loS PM

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By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Spn1B Wrtier
CLEVELAND (AP) - Seven ye-ars ago, Cleveland Browns owner
Art Modell gave Tom Cousineau an
award for being the best high
school football player In the city.
Saturday, Modell made Cousineau
the highest-paid player in Browns'
history.
.
In a complex deal involving three
National Football League teams,
Cousineau wound up with a fiveyear Cleveland contract estimated
·to be worth about $2.5 mliUon.

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COFFEE COAT'-

best linebacker In Canada," ac·
cording to JoeGalat, Alouettes'
head coach and defensive
coordinator.
Houston submitted an offer sheet
to the Bllls last Monday, giving Buffalo one week to match it or lose
Cousineau and any compensation.
The Bllls decided last Thursday to
trade Cousineau rather than sign
him because tloe prtce was too high,
officials said.
Halpern and Bills' coach Chuck
Knox refused to say exactly what
Houston offered, but the attorney
said It was " substantially higher"
than the $2 mUllan spread over five
years that had been repcrted.
"Based on the offer sheet, It
would make him the highest paid
player in the National Football
League," Halpern sald.
Halpern said the Browns could
renegotiate Cousineau's contract
but Buffalo could not because of col-

lectlve bargaining restrictions that
required tloe Bills to "sign the con·
tract exactly as submitted."
"Our belief is tloat there will be
substantial restructuring, tor the
benefit of the player and for the benefit of the team," Halpern said.
Halpern said Houston's offer
s heet called for a cash payment up
front and the rest too be paid over
the 5-year Ufe of the contract.
"I can't conceive of a nyone wor1h
his salt taking tloat klnd of money,
up front, in cash, and giving halt to
the government immediately, " he
said.
Knox said he was disappclnted
tloe Bills didn't sign Cousineau, but
he said paying Cousineau that kind
of money might have caused "re-percussions" among players ..
"Certainly, I would have Uked to
see Tom Cousineau here," Knox
said. "He is without question a
great player."

The 24-year-old linebacker spent
tloe past three years with the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian
Football League. Montreal had outbid the Buffalo Bills for Cousineau's
services in 1979 after the Bills made
him the No. 1 college player chosen
in the NFL draft that year.
"Buffalo tied my hands when I
was drafted, because Montreal's
offer was significantly more," Cousineau said. "We really didn't have
a choice. Buffalo knew what the
offer was, and 11 they had matched
it, I would have gone tllere. It

On Tuesday, at 10a.m . EST in the
Grand Ballroom of the New York
Sheraton Hotel, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle wW· bring the
proceedings to ol'der and, barring a
late trade, wW ~ead from an index
card the New England Patriots'
choice. And another Instant mliUonaire wW be created. The consen-' ·
sus is that 11 New England still has
the No.1 choice, it'll be Texas defen·
slve tackle Kenneth Sims.
It would be nice, the Patriots
think, 11 Sims does for them what
Joe Greene did for the Steelers.
In 1969, the Steelers won one
era.
1be Unlvenlty of Chicago back game and lost 13 for their new head
was the wlmler of the first Helsman . coach, Ciluck Noll. But aiao In 1969,
Noll perused the scouting sheets
Trophy, awarded by the DowntQwn
and,
to the dismay of a lot of Steeler
1'\thletlc Club in New ;lork to the
tans,
used hls llrst-round choice to .
premier coDeae player. ·He was
By BRUCE WWI'IT
AP 8poi1B Wrtier
NEiw YORK (AP) - National
Football League teams Uve and die
by the draft.
Just ask the Pittsburgh Steelers
or the San Francisco 49ers. Then
watch next TuesClay and Wednesday, when the future.of your favorite team wW be decided.
1be two-day, 12-round selection
process by wl}lch the nation's best
collegiate players are dlvtded
among 28 franchises haS come a
long way since the Jay Berwanger

One Group
lADIES

Coffee
Coats
Canlstervu
with tool caddy

downed the New York Yankees 7·2
Saturday, giving the Tigers tloelr
eighth straight victory and rookie
Larry Pashnick his first majorleague wtn.
Herndon's homer gave Detroit Its
5-2 margin In the sixth after Gibson
had walked and Riehle Hebner
rapped a broken-bat stngleoff starter a nd loser Doyle Alexander.
Alexander was making his first
appearance after returning to new
York from San Francisco In a
sprlng-tralnlng trade. Left- hander
Shane Rawley relieved him to star1
tloe seventlo, and George F razier
pitched the ninth, yleldlng an RBI
double to John Wockentuss and a
run-scoring single by Chet Lemon.
Turner's homer, which opened
the scoring in the second inning,
was a drive to right-center that
glanced off the glove of lea ping cen·
ter fielder Jerry Mumphrey and
went over tloe wall .
The Yankees lost their third
stralght.
Mets 1, Expos 0
MONTREAL lAP) - John
Steams drove In a run wltlo a
seventh-inning double, and Charlie
Puleo combined with two reltvers
on a four-hit shutout as the New

York Mets beat the Montreat Ex·
pos 1-0 Saturday.
Mets right-hander NeU Allen
earned his tttth save by working out
of a one-out, bases-loaded jam ln
the eighth Inning.
Stearns' drive down the left-tleld
line off loser Ray Burris, ().3, drove
In Gary Rajslch, who had doubled
oft the rtght·tleld wall. The hits
were the third and fourth off Burris,
who previous ly had not allowed a
baserunner to reach second.
Puleo, 2-1, overcame early control problems - he walked six and surrendered only three hits
until he was replaced by Falcone ln
tloe seventh .
But after striking out Andre Daw·
son to start tloe eighth , Falcone
Issued consecutive walks to AI
Oliver, Gary Carter, a nd Warren
Cromartie to load tloe bases. Allen
came In a nd got pinch-hitter J erry
White to ground back to the mound,
forcing Oliver at the plate, and he
retired pinch-hitter Brad Mllls on a
liner to center.
Red Sox 8, Blue Jays 7
TORONTO (AP) - Boston's
e ld er statesman, Carl Yas trzemskl, capped a five-run fiftlo In·
nlng wltlo a three-run homer, and

tloe Red Sox witlostood a tate Tl&gt;ronto rally to defeat tloe Blue Jays
8-7 Saturday.
Glenn Hoffman Ignited the big Inning with a single to center against
Toronto starter Dave Stieb, G-2, and
moved to tlolrd on Rick Miller's single. Gary AUenson chased Hoffman
home with a double tloat scored Hoffman and sent Mlller to tloird.

•

Jerry Remy's double to lett1
scored Miller, and AUenson went to.
third . After Dwight Eva n s•
grounded out, AUensor was tagged\
out at the plate when Jim Rice hlti
Into a fielder's choice .
•
Yastrzemski then followed with'
hts four1h homer of the season anctl
, 430th of hts major league career . al
line drive smash over the fence
right field, to give Boston a 6-&lt;l lead,
The Blue Jays, who lost tJoeU!
fourth consecutive game, ralUed
tor three runs In tloe sixth oft Bosto"
starter Mike Torrez, 1-1. Wayne
Nord hagen and Alfredo Grttf!J\
drew successive one--out walks an~
Damaso Garcia doubled tloem both
home. Rance MulUnlks followed
witlo a single to score Garcia before
Bob Stanley re lieved Torrez and
ha lted tloe rally .

t:{

·~.\
..

~';_~

,'..

. •·1....
.

···..
'

GETIING WORSE - Phillies' manage r Pat
Corrales watches his team work out Saturday in
Philadelphia before their game with the Cardinals. The

.

'
•

•

Phillies lost, 7-4, giving thrm a th rre win- II loss season
for the worst record in the Nationalleagur. I AP Laserphoto 1.

wasn't a personality thing."
But after tJoree years In Canada,
Cousineau decided to try the NFL.
"It was not an easy decision to go
to Canada," he said. "I was raised
on American football. I didn't know
the names of tJoe teams when I up
there. 1 didn't know the tules. But
flnanclally, I had to do It. "
Cousineau said serious financial
problems in the Monreal· franchise
contributed to his decision to return
to the Unlted States.
"The situation (in Montreal) has
deteriorated," he said. "They ha ve

" Houston playing In our dlvtslon

some problems. It's just not the
place to be right now."

1the American Conference Cen·

Alter not11ying the NFL of his Intention to play in tloe United States,
Cousineau was wooed by tloe Houston Oilers, wltlo whom he signed an
offer sheet. Buffalo had tloe rtght to
match the OUers' offer and did but only after Modell and Bills'
owner Ralph WUson had agreed
upon a trade tloat would send Cousineau to Cleveland In exchange tor
several draft choices, Including a
1983 No. I pick. ·"

tral ) did play a role In our determination to go after Tom wltlo
aggressiveness," Modell said . " We
didn't want to see him go to Houston. I very rarely want to give up a
No. I pick, but he Is definitely wor1h
tloe price tag."
Modell and Cousineau's agent,
Jimmy Walsh, would not discuss
the a mount of money involved or
other spec ltlcs of Cousineau's
contract.
The Browns dropped to 5-11 last

season after winning the dlvtslci!l
wltlo an 11-5 record a year P&gt;oriiPrl
They hoped the acquisition of
neau, a long with a strong draft
week. would help plug tloelr
defense. The Browns have tloe
pick In the first round of the
Cousineau, a former standout
Ohio State, was Montreal's
of the year In 1979, and In 1980
was na med outstanding def,ensivd
player In the CFL's Eastern
is ion . He missed most of last
due to a dislocated elbow.

New E.nglartd gets first choice in draft

40% OFF

AND

Power·Mate" vac,
OVerload Protector

PHILADELPHIA {AP) Former Phtllle Lonnie Smith
knocked In three runs wltlo a pair of
singles to lead tJoe St. Louts Cardinals to the ir 12th straight victory, a
7-4 triumph over the Philadelphia
Phlllles Saturday.
The Cardinals snapped a 44 tie In
tloe eighth lnnlng witlo three runs off
reliever Ed Farmer, 0-1. With one
out, Dane lorg, who had four ~'In­
gles tor the day, reached first on an
tnfield hit. Pinch-runner David
Green stole second a nd, after Ken
OberkfeU was Intentionally walked,
Ozzie Smith singled to load the
bases.
Orlando Sanchez, pinch-hitting
tor reliever Doug Bair, Hl, drove in
one run with a ground out. Lonnie
Smith, traded to St. Louis in the off·
season, then singled In OberkfeU
and 0zzte Smitlo.
The St. Louis rally spelled a fine
hitting effort by Philadelphia
catcher 8o Dlaz, who knocked In all
four Philadelphia runs with two hl&gt;mers and two doubles. He had
staked Philadelphia to ~ 2-0 lead In
the second. He followed a single by
Garry Maddox witlo his third hl&gt;mer of tloe year, off St. Louis starter
Joaqnln Andujar.
St. Louis reliever Bruce Sutter
pitched the final two innings and
earned his sixth save.
Tigers 7. Yanks 2
NEW YORK (AP) - Larry
Herndon blasted a three- run homer. and Kirk Gibson and Jerry
Turner added solo shots as Detroit

Cousineau bec·o mes highest paid Browns player in history

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By ED McCULLOUGH
A880daled l're88 Wrtier
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)Linebacker Tom Cousineau's deal
with the Houston Otlers would have
made him "the highest paid player
in tloe National Football League,"
Buttalo Bills attorney Ralph Halpern said Saturday.
The Bills announced that they
used their right of first tefusaJ to
sign Cousineau, the Ohio State AllAmerican picked first by Buffalo in
the 1979 collegiate draft, then im·
mediately traded him to the Cleveland Browns.
The Bills received the Browns'
top draft choice in 1983 plus unannounced picks in the next two
drafts.
Cousineau playe&lt;l out his option
with the Canadian Football
League's Montreal Alouettes three
years after he refused to sigri with
Buffalo. He was "far and away the

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71/wft~l

DOESN'T WANT TO WATCH - St. Louis Cardinals' pi Ieber Joaquin
Andujar puts his hands on his knees and closes his eyes after serving up
his second straight home run to Phillies' Bo Dlaz in fourth inning of Saturday's game in Philadelphia. St. Louis won, 7-4. IAP Laserphoto).

Suit Sale

of

Dress
Shirts

~imts· itntinti Section

Cardinals win again; Tigers
hand Yankees another defeat

POMEROY
Ladies
Auxiliary, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, 2 p.m .. Tuesday in the

VINTON - North Gallia High
School will have a science and art
fair from 5:36-7:30 p.m. Monday
followed by a spring band and
choir concert at,the high school.
There will be no charge and the
public is invited to attend.

" For The wag~s of Sin •s death ; but the gi ff of God is eter nal life
through Jesus Chns t ou r Lord" ( R m . 6 23) .
The apos tl e Paul uses two words w1 th which we are familiar " wag.~s" ~~d "gift :" T h~ first has reference " to an amount paid tor
w~rk _or some th1n g g1ven in return ," wh il e the l att er sugges ts a
H11ng Q1ven _outo t th e goodness or mercies of one's heart.
De~th IS a p~yment r~c.eived by the si nner . The sinner spe nds
mu ch_t1me labormg and toil1ng at si n and wi ll go to great lengths in
fulfill1n g the des.res of th e flesh regardl ess how painfu l i t is . What do
they _ear n for t hem se lves? Death! Every si nner who r efu ses Divine
Just1 ce and 1gnores the grace of the Heavenly Father deserves his
wages - death!
. E~ern~lli t e is the gif t of God that comes through Je sus Christ . was
th1 s Q1ft g1ven to_ the world because it deserved such a gift? If so, if
would no t _be a g11f. A thing earned is not a g1 ft but a paymen t made
due to an Indebtedness God was not indebted to th e world; therefo re ,
out of the goodness and ~ercy of the heart of God, Hi s gift has been of
fered . If God had dealt wtth the wor ld according to what il deserved it
would h~ve been destroyed before n ow . But , GOd being longsuffe r i~g
1S not will1ng that any shou ld perish but that all should com e to repen :
tan cc( ll Pe t . J· 9J .
Countless thousands are refusing to accept one of the grea test gi f ·
ts offer_ed to mortal man . Their refusal is manifested in their
d1sobed•ence to fh~ 0as tcr . Th ey will comply with the rules upon
wi11 Ctl an ea r~hly g1 ft IS off_ered, and rejoi ce over the gi ft , bu t w hen it
co m es to Gods rules and _glf t th at are spiritual and incorrup tibl e, t hey
turn th e ~r back s. In turn1ng _from the Giver of l ife, they beco me ser·
vun ts o f s1n and labor for th e ~r wages wh1LI1 i s death - eternal death'
Th ere are but two types of servan t s : Servan ts of si n unto deaih
~ nd of obedience unto righteousness ( Rm . 6 : 17, 18) The serva nts
s•n unto deal.~ " se rve th e_devi l ~hi l e the se rvant s of "obedi ence unto
righteousness se rve Cl1 n sl . If IS not possible to be me serva nts of
both (M tt . 6 . 24 ) Man 1s called upon to make a decisio n, choosi ng the
one _he shall se rve . The destinat1on ot the soul hinges upon this
dec1s10n . II calls for muc_h sober th inking Well d id Pau l say, " ... wor k
out your ow n sa1vat1on Wtfh tear and trembling '' (Phi l. 2 : 12) . We work
out our own s~lvatto n _
b y hearing and comp l ying with the conditions
(hvtng a_c cordm~ to H•s rules) th at God ha s st ipula fed in the gospel
upon _w htch t~ e Qtlf re~ts . We must prepa r e ourselves for salvation by
mee ftng Gods co ndtttons or ru les wi t h fear and trembling ; that is,
wlfh r eve rence and respect so that we witt not fai l to hear misun·
der stand and 1~11 short of doing H is wil l . May we r ea l ize how g~ea t and
powerful the w t_ll or word of God is, and how terrib le it wi ll be to refu se
''·so that we Will t_ruly work out our own sa l va ti on wi th f ea r and trem·
bl1n~ and be r_
ec1P1en ts of the gift of God . How horrible it is to spend a
ll_fe,','me wo rk.'ng and l_aboring tor Sa tan, on l y to rece i ve "t he wages of
s1n ~ dea t .~ . What k1nd o f ~ serv.;nt are you? A "servant of sin unto
dea th or a servant of obed 1ence unto righteou sness?"

~ undo~v

Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Library will be at the following
places the week of April2&amp;-30:
Monday : Ewington, 1: 15-1:45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2:30 p.m.; Adney
Road, 2:4!&gt;-3:15 p.m.; Vinton Post
Office, 3:30-4 :30 p.m.; Bidwell, :Hi
p.m.; Harrisburg, 6: 1&gt;-6:30 p.m.
Tuesday : Eno, 2:36-3 p.m.; Rece,
3:05-3 :20 p.m.; Africa Road, 3:3().
3:45 p.m.; Kyger I, 3:56-4:20 p.m.;
Kyger II, 4:25-4:40 p.m. ; Roush
Lane, 4:4:&gt;-:i :l5 p.m.; Cheshire I,&amp;6:30p.m.; Cheshire II, 6:36-7 p.m.
Wednesday : Bane's, 2: 1!&gt;-2: 30
p.m.; Smith, 2:45-3:15 p.m.; Myers,
3:3().3 :45; Mercerville, 4-4 :30 p.m.; .
Burd, 4 : ~ p.m.; Crown City Post
Office, 5:1&gt;-6 p.m.; Eurka, 6:1&gt;-6:45
p.m.
Thursday : Watts, 2: 1!&gt;-2:30 p.m. ;
Brick School road, 2:40-2:55 p.m.;
Addaville Elementary, 3-3:30 p.m.;
St. Rt. 1 (roadside rest), 3:45-4; .
Georges Creek, 4: 15-5 p.m .;
Bulaville Trailer Court, 5:30-6;
Plantz Subdivision, 6: I:Hi: 45 p.m.
Friday : Kerr, 3-3:30 p.m.; Buck
Ridge, 4-6 :06: Jay Drive, 5:15-5:45
_p.m. ; Bob MConnlck, 6-6: 15 p.m.

Tuesday witlo
Evans.

GALUPOUS Chapter OES
will hold an annual inspection
Monday at 7:30p.m. witlo Vivian
Dilley, DGM, as inspecting officer. Members should take a
covered dish.

Wages or Gift?

•.,·

Bossard bookmobile
schedule announced

CHESHIRE - Poplar Ridge
Church will hold a rev ival Moor
day through May 8 at 7:30 nightly
with evangelist Merlin Teets.
There will be singing each night.
The public is invited.

1982

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

HARRISBURG - Harris Baptist Church will host a revl\al
starting Sunday at 7: 30p.m. woth

April Exhibi t
"Nature Interpreted" - 71 pieces of art, including ink , batik, ac rylic, etching,
pastel, watercolor, serigraph, egg
tempera, pencil, oil, lithograph,
woodcut, opaque watercolor, stitchery, engra vi ng, cloth, silverpoint,
milk screen. and fiber .
April 'll. 8 p.m. - Trustees
Meeting.
May I , 10 a.m.-1 p.m. a nd 2-5 p.m.
- Creative Writing Workshops.
May I, 1 p.m.-5 p.m . - Hi gh
School art not accepted for display
to be picked up.
May 6, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. - Creative
Writing Workshop with Maggie Anderson.
May 12, I p.m. and 2:15 p.m. Ohio State Dance at Washington
School,
co-spo n sor~d
with
Washington School PTA.
May 16, 2-4 p.m. - Nature Art in
the Park at Raccoon Creek County
Park, Cl&gt;-sponsored with 0. 0. Mcintyre Park District.

A

W .Va.

.75%
Off .
..

ailo the. ~ ,pJayer picked In the.
ftnt NFL draft, In 1936, by .the Phi. •ldelplda Elalel; They traded his
rtptll to the CJlcaaO ·Bi!an. He lllld
Geoqe Halaa, the .OWDel' ~ the

take Greene, · a defenalve tackle

frOm North Texas State.
That year, when the draft sUU covei'ed 17 !'OUJMla (It was nidiloed to
12 In 1977), -Noll al8p ~ quar·

BeU'I aot toeetbel:. fJvet • cup ~ ~k :rerrY lfanratty, center
co&amp;e. Ha!u m.de Ill o&amp;r. Ber- JciJ Kolb llld clefelliiYe eud L.C.
WIIJIII'Iejecllid It BelwuJPr aot a.e.u*aod. · •
~ belrt ySr. be Jl~Ck4!dquarter·
- up_lllld 111ft the table (J{ml paJd the
.
back
Terry ~w lllld defen·
check) aDd plllyed pro ball.
,I

sive back Mel Blount. In 1971 he
added wide receiver Frank Lewis,
linebacker Jack Ham, guard Gerry
Mullins, defensive end Dwight
White, defensive tackle Ernie
Holmes and 'defensive back Mike
Wagner. In tloe following three seasons they were joined by running
back Franco Ranis, defensive end
Steve Furness, wide receivers
Lynn Swann and John Stallworth,
linebacker Jack Lambert and cen·
ter Mike Webster.
By then, what had been the worst
team in theNFLjustflveyearsearller was about to win the first of an
unprecedented four Super Bowls.
1be big speculation in this year's
draft is not what the Patriots wW do
but what kind of choice the Ballimare Colts wW tnaire with the No.2
1
selecUon in the first round. It all
revolws around the future of Bert
Jones, their quarterback. He is the
subject of trade I')ID'IOrs, with Los
Angeles rOost often mentioned.
.Many eXperts, tlJeioefore, expect
the Colts to select a ~k,
either Jim McMahon ~ Brigham
Young or Art Schlichter of Ohio

State.

The rest of the first-round order,
ban1ng any late trades, Is: Cleve-- ,
land, Los Angeles, Chicago, Seat·
tie, Minnesota, Houston, Atlanta,
Oakland, St.Louis, Pittsburgh,
New Orleans, Los Angeles, Detroit,
Kansas City, Tampa Bay, the
Giants, Denver, Philadelphia, Buf·
falo, Green Bay, tloe New York
Jets, Miami, Dallas, Cincinnati and
San Francisco.
New Orleans' own pick, No.3
overall, was used last year In a supplementary draft to take quarterback Dave Wtlson from nunots. But
the Saints have Green Bay's firstround pick (No. 14) in a compllcated deal in which wide receiver
John Jefferson went from San
Diego to Green ·Bay, wide receiver
Wes Chandler went from New Orleans to San Otego and Green Bay's
first~round pick, which had gone to
San Diego, was transferred to the
Saints In the Chandler trade.
Los Angeles has two picks in the
opening round - its own (No. 5)
and Washington's (No.l5) as aresult of choice-swapping In the draft

a year ago.

•

WEARY COACH-. Buffalo Bllla' bead coacb Cbuck Nox displays his 1t
weariness to re1110rters' questioning during a Saturday morning press l
couference, at whlcb the Bllla 8IIIIOIIIIced the signing and subsequent I
trade of their 1.979 first-round draft choice, Tom Cousineau to the l
Cleveland Browns. (AP Laserpboto) .

�April 25, 1982

GAHS fourth. in Mingo Relays,
Wood sets new mark in discus

RACE TO FIRST - Wahama 's Donnie VanMeter,
at left, wins the race to first base as Point Pleasant's
Steve Wamsley reaches for the throw from third
baseman Greg Willet. Also looking on Is Big Black pit-

cber Mike Potier. The White Falcons defeated the Big
Blacks 3-2 Friday afternoon in Mason in the first of two
meetings between the two county rivuls. (Photo by Tim
Davis) .

Wahama scores 3-2 baseball win
over neighboring Point Pleasant
MASON - Norm Laudermilt
hurled a four hitte r and drove in the
winning run with a fifth inning single
here Friday, giving Wahama a 3-2
victory over Point Pleasant.
The wm lilted Wahama to a 7~
record while the Big Blacks dropped
to S-7.
Wahama unleashed a 10 hit atta ck.
led by catcher George Zuspan who
stroked three hits in four trips. Don
Van Meter and Jim Powell had two
hits each.
The county ri valry featured some
dazzling defense. especially two fine
fielding gems by Nick Hardin and
Troy Duncan .
Designated hitter Aaron Vigliotti
had two of Point's lour hits.
Point Pleasant took an early two
run lead on a walk , double by Mike
Huddleston. and single by Mike Porter.
Wahama cut the lead to 2-1 in the
bottom of the first inning when
Zuspan singled, stole second then
came home on a single by Jim
Powell and a throwing error.
The White Falcons knotted the
score in the third when Van Meter
walked, stole second and scored on a
right fi eld single off the bat of
Darren Gilland .
Wahama's winning run crossed

the plate m the fifth when Zuspan
singled. Two outs later. Powell who
had forced Zuspan, stole second and
came home on a single by L..auder·

milt.
Linescore:
Pt. Pleasant
Wahama

Philadelphia trips
Atlanta five, 98-95
ATLANTA (AP ) - Julius ErvIng scored 2ll points and Caldwell
Jones nailed four tree throws In the
final 67 seconds as Philadelphia
trtmmed Atlanta 98-!!5 In overtime
Frtday night and advanced to the
second round of the National Basketball Association playol!s.
The victory gave the 76ers a twogame sweep of Atlanta In the mini·
series. and advances them to a
best -&lt;JI-seven second round confrontation wlth the Milwaukee
Bucks.
Jones broke a 93-93 deadlock
when he sank two tree throws with
1: ffl remaining and Atlanta was unable to aertously challenge after
Maurice Cheeks made a steal to
give the 76ers possession again.

The Devils were' again first place
winners In the two-mile relay.
Team members consllted ot·
Beaver, Nelson, Adkins and
Ackerman.
GAHS then partlclpaiA!d In a
sprint medley, consisting ot 110,
110, 221land 440-yard runs. The Blue
Dev!ls tlnlshed thlrd, with Wood,
Close, Ackerman and Ivan Hurt
making up the team.
In a distance medley, made up ot
440, 440, !BJ and mlle dashes, they ·
tlnlshed In ttrth place. Hurt, Doctor,
Wes Meeks and Ed Grtmn led the
ettort tor Galllpolls.
GAHS was second In the mile relay, with a time ot 3:50.1. Coburn,
Beaver, Nelson and Ackerman
took the honors In this event, while
the ; u1111ers tlnlslled ttrth In the long
jump at 42 teet, 10'r.j Inches. Doctor,
Griffin and Meeks were the
jumpers.
Coach Tom Combs said GAHS
would, take part In the Fairland relays on Wednesday and In a dual
meet at Oak Hlll Thursday. The
league meet at Ironton has.been re.
scheduled !rom May 15 to May 8.

Garber. Dean Kuhn and Brent
Coburn.
1n the 48}-yard shuttle hurdles,
Garber, Coburn. Kuhn and Jimmy
Beaver helped place the Blue DevIls second with a time of 1: 00.
Garber. Kuhn and BaiTy Nelson totalled 108 teet, seven Inches to
make Galllpolls first In the event.
The Devils were third In shot put,
with a combined ettort of ll7'r.j
Inches. Wood, Sheets and Davis
were the contenders.
In the tour-mile relay, Khozema
Doctor, Nelson, Greg Adkins and
John Ackerman led the team to
third pia~ wlth a time ot 21: ~ll.l.
Kuhn, Beaver, Garber and Paul
Close tlnlshed fourth In the 440-

Collins hits grandslam to
give Jackson I 0-8 triumph
JACKSON - AI Collins belted a
grand slam home run m the bottom
of the sixth, then went to the mound
in the top of the seventh to put down
a last ditch rally by Gallipolis to
pace the lronmen to a 10-8
Southeastern Ohio League victory
over the Blue Devils Friday evening.
The victory left Jackson in a threeway tie for first place in the SEOAL
with a 7-2 mark. JHS is now 12-3
overall. Gallipolis dropped to S-9 on
, the year and ~ inside the conference.
Jackson had a 4-1 lead after lhree
innings before the Blue Devils stormed hack to take an 8-4 advantage in
the top of the sixth inning.
Aft e r Collins ' grandslam,
Gallipolis had two runners on and
two out in the bottom of the seventh
when Jackson's centerfielder robbed Phil King of an apparent threerun homer.
One source said the Jackson centerfielder did not ha've possession of

the hall when he backed into the fence, leaped high for the catch, then
dropped it after hitting the fence.
King was lwo for five for GAHS.
including a home run. Jerry Eutsler
had a single and three-run home run.
Mike. Edelmann had a single and
double.
Lynn Sheets, playing shortstop in
the absence of Ken Russell and Scott
Slone, had two singles, walked once
and had a sacrl'iice. Sheets also
played an outstanding defensive
game for the Gallians.
King went the distance for GAHS,
and suffered the loss. Tim Shook
slarted for Jackson. He was relieved
by Collins in the seventh.
Collins paced the lrorunen with
three hits. Gallipolis will host Ironton Monday.
Linescore:
Gallipolis
010 403 0- IHI -2
Jackson
004 006 X - 1().~2
Batteries - King (LP) and Eutsler. Shook , Collins (7th) and Smith.

HOUSTON (AP) - MC&gt;leS Ma·
lone scored 2ll points and had 23 rebounds as the Houston Rockets
defeated the Seattle SuperSonics
91·70 Frtday night to even their National Basketball Association

HEADING HOME - Jim Powell (16) heads home with the winning
run, in Friday afternoon's game with Point Pleasant, following Norm
Laudermllt's single. Also pictured Is WHS Coach Gordon Spencer. PPHS
catcher Mike Porter a walls the throw. (Photo by Tim Davis ).

r

-

r

ee.

S26

• Double poly cords lor
atren~ and attblllty with
two fl rgl111 belts
• Outlined while lett.,-s

• A great tire walue

SIZE

W L R OR

Jackson
Logan

1

2

58

J6

;: i~

G78 xt 5
H78 )( 15
Ll8 x15

•

'64
• •

0

(\ I '· ·~

( .C

'49
" M 50x1 4 . ' 72
' N50x 15 '74

Nationwise 10W30
in 5 qt. Container

45

F E T 1 79 • 07 '• pi) pot v COHl tues

•One cont ai ner will do a com pl ete
oi l chan ge •Easy po ur . sc rew top
Lrmrt 2

2.88

Nationwise Air Filter
For m os t dome st rc &amp; rmoo rt Cdr •,
Lrm rt 2

FOR SALE OR TRADE

25
ft . steel
floodlight, poles
and 1,000 watt
Mercury floodlight
fixtures. Ideal for
car lot.

84Cea.

Reg 1 59

~on Resistor

Nipponden s o
~~=::::;,Spark Plugs

Reg . 94•

99Cea.

4.95

R11l1tor

from
Dorey
Tune Up Kit s

Reg . 1.18
Champion
Spark
Plugs

446-1212
.9 A.M.-6 PM

Honrla l&lt;.a ... i15.1~ • ':w:·&gt; •

For easier
starting
""=~t..,

""

and betler
perlormance!
Limit 16

4.44
Reg. 1.75
Armor All
Protectant

Jackson vs. Wellston

3.49

8 oz. Reg. 5.95

Reg. 5.25
Non·

Blue Poly Sealant
or Paste
each

1.77
oz.

·vHT

8

Reg. 2.95

Including
Nike, Zips, Converse,
Kangaroos and Grasshoppers

3.77
18 oz.

A.A.U.,

Reg. 5.79
Trigger spray

6.77
Rolltl

CHAPMAN SHOES

446-0699

32 oz.
Reg. 8.49

Nut To Elberfelds In ~omero,

I'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"

-·· ·

!Primers
Ok . gray. red
ox ide, lt . gray

249

I SP302.5 P3D3. S PJ04

Blue Poly Wash
S.vt

OYir

20%!

or VHT

16 oz. IPW75

Enamels
Red, black,

2.66ea.
Blue Poly
Primer ,. "'

Lifetime
Free Replacement
Guarantee
• American &amp; Metric Sizes

Aluminum , llat
blac k or whit e

n e~ se ts.
socke t s, open wren ches bo)
w renches, exten sr o ns. adapt
ers, unrversals. Illes. rat chet s
and SPE CIALTY TOOL S '

Sc rew d rr ve rs. pt re r s.

I SP50 1.SP5()4 .S P507
SP509.S P5 10

oPP3s

Reg. 3.95, wlapplicaror

One Step
Poly Chrome

E ump le1.
Soc ktl l
trom !. 29 Wrt ncht l ltom I 99
Pllett
trom 1.69 R11 c h11 1 lrom 8 9i

SIVI over 25% I

PAT HILL FORD, INC .
~"

1.88 Reg

Save 1/3!
#9559

Rtg . 3.59, 15 oz IPC44

..........

--

Remanufactured

Do·h · Y-..tt

.....u.

Carburetors
1 BBL.

39.95
52.95 2 BBL.
72.95
4 BBL.
A ll wlreburldable ex change

WE WILL CONTINUE TO SERVE. MEIGS COUNTY AND THE
SURROUNDING AREA WITH SALES AIIIQ Q.I!AUJ:.Y ,.URVICE.

J New

Fuel Pumps .

"ALL FORD ...PRODUCT WARRANTIES
. WILL
. BE HONORED" ..
'

.

32.88

''

~

..

'

40 MONTH

Monroe Super Struts
lrom . ....

Malotenance Free
Calcium Battertes .

41.88
50 month

I'

I'

E-Z Ride Shocks
By Monroe Auto Equipment Company

47.88
80 mon1h

St1nderd, Reg . 7.95, Save ov•r '1

Exhaust &amp; Tailpipes ... .... .... . .
For most domestic cars and light trucks

All batteries w/exchq.• avail·
able lor fTl90I cars. Never
nee~s water under normal
cOnditions

We invite you to stop by and meet Dale and his staff. Dale has
been in the · ~utomobile business for 40 years, .including dealerships in Ath~ns and_ Galli_polis. He i~ looking forward to meet.ing .
· you and servmg. you '" a manner-to su1t your needs. .
· -

Reg. 13.95, Save over '3

Natlonwlse

•BODY SHOP- PAiNT AND BODY,.WORK
•A FULL LINE PARTS AND SERVICE DEPARTMENT
•A.FINE LINE OF NEW &amp; USID CARS &amp; TRUCI(S

trom

Hoovy Duty

3.95

Reg . 10 .95, Save over '2 .
Van and Truck

Reg . 15.95, Save over '3
Ultra Air

Reg. 29.95, Sovo over '5.

' I

..
•

E70x 14 .

~;u ~ ,,~c~

3.29

'B50 x13

tion ot 3-8-7 pald $6,600.10.
' The crowd ot 3,945 bet $540,731.

WE ·OFFER:

•

G 70 x 15 . . '51

au ne w

Fo r m os t dom es t rc &amp; rmpor t u rc,
Lrmrt 2

FOR MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN

Monday's games:
Ironton at Gall ;pol;s
Logan at Me;gs
Athens vs. Waverly

&lt;t!li/f)

Choose the diet book to help you shed
.unhealthy pounds permanently.....

'54

.,62

. 1

G60x15
L60x 15

..,

'49

SALE
SIZE
F70xl4
G70x 14 . '49

e~ c e erl

Nationwise Oil Filter

mt+ +:· ·:.·:· +&lt;··&gt;·:··:··:·• •·:· ·:·• .,. ~~ m DALE R. SANDERS - General Manager
•)

G60 x 14 .
L60x 14

Oils

1.88

.NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

•)

E60x 14 .

Sale Otis Ltmtl 12 qb

FE t t • 2219

INDY 500

'Tis the Season
To be Skinny."

'35
' 40
'42
'45

20% OFF ANY TENNIS SHOES

Athens 12 M e ig s 3
Logan 15 Waverl y 5
I ron ton 8 Well ston 4

- ·

~·

..,

SALE

B60x 13 .. '44

99&lt; Q1.

Ra cing Oil s

IQWJO &gt;S lor mulater11o• aut o m o t• ·&lt;~• ri•CS"' '

SAVE ALL THIS WEEK

The fee for this year's program is
$10 for one child, $lfi for two, and $20 ..-----------~
for three or more children in the
Our 4th Annual
same fami ly. The fee includes T- ·
shirt (except where uniforms are ·
supplied I and insurance.
BY MOTORCOACH
"You need not he present, but
someone must register for you.
MAY /9-30
Coaches wiU be present to talk to
kids and help fill out forms," the
spokesman said.
·
Call
Today
To register after the dates listed,
individuals must do so at the city
building, 518 Second Avenue. Birthday cutoff date is Aug. I and
leaguegameswillstartJuneJ.New
players
will be notified at
registration as to the time and place
of the draft for each league.
For more information, call the
Gallipolis Recreation Department at
446-1789.

' 29
' 36
'37
'39

600 xt 5

A THL.ETIC WEEK
AT CHAPMAN'S

6 J 91 56
3 6 57 81

SALE

Kendall Supe Ole sei10W30

m 30 , 40 , 50W

In third.
In the final trtfecta, the combina-

playa!! series at one game each.
The llnal ol the best ot three will
be played Sunday In Seattle.
The Rockets, stunned by the running Sanies 102-87 In the opening
game at Seattle, led !rom start to
tlnlsh and overcame a brtet Sonlcs
rally In the third quarter.

7 2 77 41
7 2 57 36

Ironton
A thens

Reg. '43

• Wide grooves for good tn c·
tlon on wet pnement
• Fi"tt continuous riding rlbt
for good mileage

10W30 ·

10W40
Kendall Motor Oil

A70x13

Kelly Springfield
Super Chargers
50, 60, 70 Series

G78xt4

NORTH RANDALL; Ohlo (AP)
- Mark Salvaggio rode Lord's Image to victory In the feallired el&amp;hth
race at Thistledown on Friday;
touring the mlle and 70 yards In
1:432-5.
The winner returned $6, SJ.lll and
$2.8:&gt;.
, September Thought was second,
paying $2.8Jand$2.40, while Spread
Wings T.returned $4.llllor coming

saa

A78x 13

SIZE
B78 x1J .
E78x14
F78 xt4 .

66¢

&amp; SUPER CHARGER TIRES!

Reg . ' 3 1

84¢ qt.
89¢ qt.

YOUR COST
PER QUART
LESS THAN

Kelly Springfield
Poly Whitewalls
Benchmark 78

SEOAL BASEBALL

TEAM

Summer program registration ~E~:~~
l~
will begin Monday at GAHS r~;~~~~r~~"~i~~ol; s :·
April 29, from 6-7 p.m.
To register for a league, simply go
to the high school cafeteria and fill
out a form and pay the registration

BENCHMARK

Thistledown re~~u)ts

SEOAL standings

Ga llipolis

GALUPOUS - Youth baseball
and softball summer lea gue
registration will begin April 26 in the
Gallia Academy Ht gh School
Cafeteria, a Gallipolis Recreation
Department spokesman said Saturday.
All children, whether new or returning players. must register at the
times listed :
T-Ball - Boys and girls, five, six ,
seven years old on Monday, April26,
from 6-7 p.m.
Pee Wee - Boys eight, nine years
old on Monday. April 26, from 7,'1
p.m.
Little League - Boys 10, 11. 12
years old on Tuesday, April 'l:l , from
6-7 p.m.
Pony League - Boys 13, H , lfi
years old on Tuesday, April 'l:l , from
7-8 p.m.
Junior League Softball - Girls
eight, nine, 10, lJ years old on Thursday, April 29, from6-7 p.m.
Senior League Softball - Girls 12,
13, 14, lfi years old on Thursday,

SALE!
$5 OFF ALL

H78)( 14

Rockets even series with win

36 465 465

200 000 0-2- 4-1
100 llO X- 3-1().2

relay.

teet. Participants were Dave

LOGAN - Gallls Academy's
track team placed fourth with 39
points In the annual Mingo Relays
held at Logan High School Friday.
WWle Wood broke a previous
Mingo mark In the dlscus with an
Individual throw or 152 teet, six
Inches. The old record was set In
1973 by New Lexington's Fred An·
sel at 139 feet, nine Inches.
Logan was first In the relays with
63 points. Athens second with 45 and
Amanda-Clearcreek made third
wlth 40. Alexander was ttrth with 22.
In the discus, the Galllpolls thinclads racked up a total distance ot
338 teet, eight Inches. Bart Davis ·
and Todd Sheets assisted Wood In
the event.
lilgh jump results saw GAHS
place third with a combined total16

'HOuRS:
10.5
,Sun.
M·F 8:30. 7/
$at. ' 8:30. 6

209 Upper River Rd.
•

446-3807
'·

6.88,

�... .,

Dettwiller shines,
Rio sweeps twinbill
RIO GRANDE ~ Fre,lunan
nghlhander AI Oettw1ller p1khed
f1ve Innings of 'hutoul relief Friday
to ectrn two saves hert• as Rio Grande"s Redmen swept a doubleheader
from the Wc!it Virg ini &lt;t Tech Gulden

Bears.ll-4 a nd 9-3 .
The non-conft•rcnce win.s movt."tJ
the Redmen of Coach Larry Cook lo
fl-15 on the seaosn. 2-2 in the t ough
Mitl-Oilto Conferent'l' . West Virginict
Trch dropped to 8-12 .

In ltw ftr sl gamt•. Dettwillt•r came
nut of tht• bullpen in rclit'f of wtnncr
John Kalman and blank ed the
G(1ldun Bt&gt;Cirs on thret• htts &lt;1nd a
walk U\'L'r the final two stanza s.
Ka lmdn. the st•eond of three Hiu

Grande pil&lt;'hers.

had

held

the

vtsJturs to just twu h1ts ,:wd one walk
afte r reltt•vJng Sa rr1 Toppins tn the

fnurlh .
Enc Fra zwr . La rry Stults, l..£trry
Carter &lt;ifld

S lt'\' L'

(;n·en each hi:ld

two hits to p&lt;:tL' t ' lht Htn &lt;-Jttack Carter's tol.&lt;::ll tnl'iuded two doubles and
a pi:ltr of runs butled 111.

In lhe mghlcap. Tech JUmped out
to a qu1ck 2-0 il'at11n the ftrst in ning
unly to see the Hedmen knot till'
count 111 tilttr tlblf of the stanzct. Hto
pushed CHTOss a lce:u.l run with one
out whl'n C&lt;.~rter connected for his
fourth home run of the season .
Tech ta.·tl the contest with ct ruu 111
the second. but the Kedmen put the
g.a me aw(Jy wi th smgll' runs in the
second and fo urt h cmti four runs in
the sixth. Fr&lt;.~Zi l' r pl&lt;.~tcd Jim Frq&gt;pon w1lh the l&lt;1lly 111lhe second. and
Jeff Gnngwt&gt;r scored the fourth Hl nin g run on &lt;1 dnuble steal. The Hcd-

Tornadoettes roll over Pirates for 11th win

men rallied for four r uns 111 the sixth
when Da n Knost doubled, Frazier
walked and Stul ts scored the two
w1lh a double. Carter then walked
and both runners scored on a double
by Green. Frazier had lwo hits,
Stults a double and three runs batted
in, Green a doubl e a;1tl two RBI's
and Ca rter a solo home run to pace
the Redma n offense.
Dettwli ler pitched th ree innings
allowin~ just two hi ts and two walks
tu gmn his second sove of . the afternoon . J erry Stuver evened his
record al 1-1 with 2 2/3 in ning' of
relief SUITl'IH..Icring ~..me hi t and three
wa lks.
All three Tech runs were charged
to Hio starte r Jeff Hatfield .
In an earlier doubleheader, the
Hedmen split a pair of 4-3 games
w1lh Oh10 Pommican . Carter had a
three-run homer to account for all
three tallies in the open ing loss and
AI Azar tagged a lw(}-run homer to
left to pull out the victory 111 the
mghtcap for starter Pave Swea tt .
R10 Grande will now head into a
streak in which they will play eight
ga mes in four days. They we re
slated to host Malone Saturday in a
conference doubleheader and will
host Wals h today al Evans Field.
The Redmen wi ll lake to the road
Monday for a make-up lwinbill with
the Golden Bears m Montgomery ,
W. Va., and then host Ml. Vernon
Naza rene on Tuesday. They will
then ha ve three da ys off before
traveling to Ceda rville College on
Saturday &lt;:~nd conc luding the season
al Thomas More College Sunday.

l:orrection
POMEROY ~ lland1rap dlall·rnan uf the L ulit~s uf Ja yMar Golf

Aprii2S, 1912

Pom e roy - Middl e port-Ga llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

Page-C -4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Club is Velma Rue not Rice as was
re ported. W1nner of low pulls was
Joan Childs .

RACINE ~ Southern's Tornadoetles trimmed the Wahama
While Falcons, 12-,'i, here recently in
girls' high school softball action.
Behind a 12-hit.attack the Southern
Belle' increa,ed its record to 11-2,
while Waha ma drops lo 3-4 overall.
Winning pitcher Tonja Sal,er went
the distance, scattering nine hit,.
BeSide' a s haky second inning in
which WHS 'cored all of its run,.
Sa lser hurled six innings of shut out
ba ll. K. Tucker 'uffered the lo'S for
Wahama befure getting relief from
Yoho in the sixth .
Southern's ga ls of Coach Suza nne
Wolfe jwnped out loa 3-0 lead in the
bottom o£ the first inning. Debbie
Michael started the rally with a
boundin g double then galloped home
with the fi"l run whe n Tonja Sal,er
sinF' led. Sa lser went to thi rd on an
overthrow and later scored on an
Elaine Smith sacri£ic·r fly .
Amber Warner doubled and
scored the last run of the initial goround on an err or made on Weese's
third hit b&lt;1IL
Wahama came flying back in the
lop of the second lo lake a 5-3 lead.
The Lady White Falcons cro'Sed the
plate five times I1Tl four h1l.s and two
Southern errors. Afte r that rocky

Gain8 top 8pol
AKRON, Ohio tAP)- Defending
champion Steve Cook on Friday
clinched the top-seeded spot in Sa·
turday's title game of pro bowling's
richest tournament, the Firestone
Tournament of Champions .
He had
a 240-pin
over
Mtke
Durban
of advantage
Chagrin Falls,
Ohio.
In third going into the five-man
playoff was Dave Husted , 21, of Mllwaulde, Ore., followed by Ted Hannahs of Zanesville, Ohio, and Earl
Anthony of Dublln, Caut.

sta rt Southern's defense ti ghtened
up and allowed no more runs t~"
remainder of the game.
In the bottom half of the third
frame SHS locked the score at 5-5
when with two out E laine Smith
singled, ,toJe ,econd, and scored on
a J.aren Wolfe double. Wolfe then
sprinted home with the tying run
when Amber Warner smacked a
double.
After Sa lser quieted Wahama's
limbers , SHS stepped to the plate for

a nother three-run inning. A J enny
Bentley single, Tonja Salser double,
a n error on Carol O'Brien, and
single by Debbie Michael accounted
for the runs, Southern leading 6-5 .
SHS then '"ttled down for its e levenlh victory.
Leading Southern hitting was Tonja Sal,er, who wa' three of four with
two doubles and three runs batted in.
Amber War ner had a perfect three
of three night with two doubles arid a
single. Elaine Smith banged two

April 25, 1982

:

Meigs JV baseballers
claim two more wins

' inglf' and a sacrifice rly, .,.hlie
Laren Wolfe poked a double and .N d
two RBI',. Wahama was led by Dtli
Fowler with three smgles and It
Weaver w1lh two,mglf'.
Southern plays at Eastern on MOllo
day in Tuppers Plains.
.
Wahama
050 000 0- ~ ~
Southern
302 303 1-12-12-4
BatterJes: T. Salser and Bentley,
Missy Cummins 7th.
K. Tucker, Yoho 6th, a nd Brenda
Allensworth.

ROCK SPRINGS ~ The Meigs·
reserve ba'eball team has been enjoying success of late, picking up
two big wiris last week to rai'e its
overall record to &gt;-3. The Young
Marauders of Coach Paul Lucktenberg pulled off victories over league
foe Gallipolis a nd Eastern.
Against Gallipolis Eddie Bishop
went the di,tance to pick up the win
allowing just six scattered hits, two
walks, four runs, and fanning five.
Duncan went six innings for
Gallipolis, allowing five hits, three
walks, 'even run,, and six strike
outs. Duncan suffered the loss, but
Ellcessor pitched the last frame and
· fanned two Meig' batters.

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RIVERFRONT PARK
DOWNTOWN GALLI POLIS
SPONSORED BY THE
HOLlER MEDICAL CENTER
EMPLOYEE RECREATION COMMITIEE
AND THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
9:00A.M.
5,000 Meters (3.1 mi.)

PRE-REGISTRATION FEE $4

DAY OF RACE REGISTRATION $5

*Age Groups for 5,000
meter and 10,000 meter

*Cou rse is flat and on
city streets through
scenic Gallipolis.

races;
11 &amp; Under 12 -1 6 1720 21 -25 26-30 31 -35 36-40 41-45 46-50 5I-S5 56
&amp; Ov e r
*Awards will be given
out after the completion
of the 10,000 meter race .

*Come dressed to run .
Shower and dressing
facilities
are
not
available. Restrooms
are available.

----------------------------------------------1
FRENCH CITY RUN
I
NAME : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ MALE (
ADDRESS:
RACE:
meter ( ) I 10,000 meter (
T. -SHIRTSIZE: S M L XL

s,ooo

1I
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FEMALE (

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I

DON'T MISS OUTI

~ ---------------------------------------------~
•

both the baseba ll line-up and school
for two weeks due to illness, returned in s tyle for a two-hit ni ght at the
plate.
As t he inning continued Beegle
rea ched on an error to load the bases
before JClhn Porter singled home a
run. A boom1ng double by C. T.
Chapman to dee p rig ht f1 eld then
clea red the bases and Jay Rees·
second ' ingle of the 1nning knocked
home the seventh run of the frame
for an 11-3 SHS lead.
The Red Pevib countered with
fo ur of their own in the third on two

DETROIT (AP) - lstah Thomas, the crack rookie gua rd of the
Detroit Pistons, has been lm·
pressed by another guard, Don
Buse of Indiana, In his first season
In the NBA.
"Buse lsn·t real quick and he"s
not fast, e ither," Thomas commented. "'He doesn't Jump very
high but he sure Is smart. He Is very
aware of what l.s happening on the
floor at all times."

errors, a Kevin {.;.Jwson si ngle, and
triple by Jim Comer. the score 11-7.
Both clubs added a run 111 the next
half 1nnings. Then in the bottom of
the fourth C. T Chapman singled
home two more runs for SHS lo
make the score 14-11 .
During fifth inning action Jdf
Marple's home run c ut the score tu
14-9. sendmg Ton y Hiffle to the
mound "' relief of Beegle. Tlw
fullow1ng Jllntn g Haven s wut&gt;d
chased Rifflt:&gt; wtth thret• runs and
Robbie Cunnin~ha111 n tmt: 111 to

retire tlw Sldt• .
In the seven th, Cunmn ghwn
fanned the f1rst lwn batters on
blazing fastballs and cr good chcwge
of pace. Allh1s point Luke Schindler
tripled and wa ~ stn,.ded home by
Ke1th Ables, lhl' St'&lt;&gt;rt' 14-1 3. Kevi n

Wt l l.

Hrffle a tnpll- a nd 1-k q.: k

John Purtn ami
ded RBI S lll ~l t• s
l.inescorl'

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LAftDMARK

Lawson thl'n sJ/lgled to put ttw tytng
and WHllllllJ! runs on ba .'il', but ( 'unninghanl ruse to t111• ut ·t·a swn and
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.•

Return entry to: Ms . Beverly Jackson, Medical Library
Holzer Medical Center, P . 0. Box 280
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

Likes Don Buse

• Preclee handling . dependable

AGE AS OF S/ 1S/ 82 _ __
)

Parental Signature if Entrant under age of 18

walked next. C. T. Chapman was hil
by a pitch. and sophomore Paul
Harris singled home Porter with the
fou rth run .
South ern 's four -r un
innin g
foreshadowed what wa' to come as
the Red Devils of Coach Doug
Parri'h focused their balling eyes
for a lhrce run second inning.
Raven,wood narrowed the score lo
4-3 inlhal frame on a towering th reerun home run over the right field
fenct• by Jeff Marple .
The batsmen of Coa ch Hilton
Wolfe. Jr. reeled off seven markers
in the second innng.
Jay Rees s1ng led, Riffle rea ched
011 an er ror, a11d Kent Wolfe , who
just returned lo lhc linc• up as
designated hitter, singl ed home a
run. Wolfe. after being absent from

NEW '81 MODELS

In submitting this entry to participate in the HMCIOVP French city Run, I
waive and release any and all rights to claims for damages, demands and actions 1 may have against the Holzer Hospital Foundation dbaiHolzer Medical
Center and The Ohio Valley Publishing Company. I attest that I am physically
fit, that 1 ha.ve sufficiently trained for my participation in this event,-and that my
physical condition has been verified by a physician.
Signature of Entrant

Mason in the win .
In the 10 to 12 ye•r-old leag ue. the
Strikers downed the F ury, 3-1. Goals
were made by Jason Thomas and
one by Brian Ki el that paved the way
for the Strike".

Presents

'

All Pre- Registration Entries must be purchased no later than Midnight May 8th . All Pre-Registrations are guaranteed aT-shirt.

*Award s will be give n to
th e first two mal e a nd
female finishers in both
the 5,000 meter and
10,000 meter race s.
Awards will be giv e n to
the first
male and
female fini s he r in each
age group .

-

$1395
10:15 A.M.
Dinosaur Dash (1 Mile)

Tornados got a strong gcun e from
Derek Rose and Clint Davis.
In the other 'even to nine yea r-old
game, it wa' the Cosmos over the
Aztec,. 2-(). The Cosmoo got goals
from Tom Mibtead and Lij nce

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10:00 A.M.
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RACINE ~ In a slugfesl al
Racine, the Tornadoe' pounded out
141ul.s in rolling to a hard-fought. 1413, victory over one of West
Virginia·, top learns here Friday.
The hard-slugging Red Devils had
won eight games in six nights in
compi ling a fine 14-4 season mark.
The big victory gives Southern a 9-5
overall mark, and a 7-1 mark in the
Southern Valley Ath let ic Conference .
Southern grabbed a &gt;Hl lead '" the
bottom of the first when Joe Bob
Hemsley led off with a single. Ja y
Rees walked, and Tony Rifne tripled
them home. A sq ueeze bunt by
junior Zane Beeg le brought Riffle
home with the third run. John Porter

OOM Par~ District happenings
GALUPOLIS ~ In last week's
soccer action at Raccoon Creek
County Park, the Stings and Tornados battled to a~ tie.
The game went into sudden death,
eaeh team taking fiv e 'hots on goal.
Jared Moore and Todd Wooldridge
scored a goal each for the Sting' to
give them a 1-0 victory. The Tornado' took some 'trong shots on goal
but Slings' goalie, Casey Staten,
do,ed the door with four great 'aves
giving the Slings the victory . The

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Southern outlasts Ravenswood, 14-13

The SEOAL will be down to just
.five lealll5 after the 1982-83 sea,on.
Wellston is leaving the league after
the current school year to join the
TVC, and Meig' will do the ,;ame a fter the '82-83 season.
Waverly i' all but sure it will leave
the SEOAL to join the Southern Ohio
Conference after the 1982-83 year
and would not be included in the
proposed merge r .
The TVC currentl y has seven
members, and will increase to eight
next 'eason when Wellston joins the
league. Meigs and Miller high
schoob will be joining the TVC in
1983-84.
Current TVC members include
Alexander, Belpre, Warren Local,
Federal Hocking, Nelsonville-York ,
Trimble and Vinton County.
The SEOAL is currently comprised of Athen,, Gallipolis, Ironton ,
J•ckson, Logan, Meigs, Wa ve rly
and Well,ton.

LOGAN ~ A ccording to an article
appearing in Friday's edition of the
Logan Daily News, a merger between the Southeastern Ohio League
and Tri-Valley Conference has been
propo,ed.
Craig Dunn, Daily News Sports
Editor, wrote David ' Liggitt,
president of the Southeastern Ohio
League, and David Ritter , Logan
·High School principal, will meet
with Tri-Valley Conference officiab
May 25 to propose a merge r between
the two leagues.
Ritter, who i' heading up a committee 'tudying the league's current
problem of declining membership,
said today the propo,;al would be to
form large-,chool and small-school
· " divi,ions within the membership of
the two league,. " Thi' proposal
would make both divisions very
competitive and make the league
. very strong." Ritter slated.

TRUST THE COMPANY FARMERS TRUST TO MAKE THINGS GROWl

SATURDAY:
MAY 15th

Eastern threatened late in the game,
but made its charge too late and fell
' hori at the end.
Welker had two tw(}-run doubles
a nd scored three runs. Ghee n,
Bishop, Hobi;on , and Acree each
scored twice. Acree and Thoma'
also had two hi ts each.
Jerry Larkins went the di,lance
for Eastern with four ' trikeouts and
nine· walks. The Ea,tern hardthrower experienced some control
problelll5 and had little backing
early in the game but he and his
teammate' sellled down to make a
'erious bid.

SEO, TVC merger proposed

If you need to finance any work we can do that &amp; save you enough
money to take some of the pain out of the interest you'll pay .

FRENCH
CITY
RUN

Rodney Roush led off the lh1rd
with a , ;ogle, followed by a walk,
and error, setting up a fielder's
choice by Will that plated a run .

Against Eastern, MHS 'cored a !:&gt;9 victory a' starter Nick Bush went
five innings, picking up four 'trike
outs and six walks. Bishop hurled
the sixth frame with three 'trike
outs, and Will finished up in relief,
issuing four walks.
Meigs had five big runs in the top
of the fi"l on a Jacki e Welker walk,
a Scot Gheen single, Bishop walk,
and Hobson walk that forced home a
run. Acree singled in Gheen and

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Bishop. Bish walked, thwn two runs
scored on a throwing error.
With the score 5-l, Meigs added
four more on a n error, walk, and
RBI single by Thomas. Brian WiU
singled, followed by a fi elder''
choice, then Thomas came home on
another RBI 'ingle by Hobson, the
score 9-1.

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

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�Page

C -6

Pomeroy

The Sunday Tom es -Se ntin e l

Middleport

Gallipoli s , Ohio

April 25, 1982

Point Pleasant, W.Va.

-April25, 1982

Ray Knight helps beat ex-teammates
HOUSTON (API - Astros third
baseman Ray Knight says his single to right In the third Inning that
knocked In two runs set the stage
for back-to-back homeruns, a s
Hous1on posted a 7-3 win over
Cincinnati.
" You never know. You get a cou-

Astroc

'

ple of guys hitting wellln the clutch
and it can be the start of something," Knight said . "I hope this Is
Indicative of the way things will go
1n the future . ''

.
i~

Home runs by Art Howe and Phil
Garner Friday night gave the As·
tros a &amp;-0 lead, as Knight provided
another single , a double and two
RB!s.
Three players In the contest with
the Reds were on different sides of
the fie ld from a year a gO. Knight,
traded for outfielder Cesar Cedeno,
was one of them.
"There's no ill feeling, but you
want 1o do something special,"
Knight satd. "Sometimes you try

too hard and It just blows up In your

face. I was just fortunate !hat the
balls fell tn."
Houston added a run In the siXth
Inning on consecutive doubles, by
Garner and Dickie Thon, but tbe
Reds struck back with three runs In
theseventh.
Former Astro Rafael Landestoy
started tbe rally, and former Cincinnati pitcher Mike LaCoss fin·
!shed lt.
Landestoy's two-out, pinch-hit

.,.,

SIX- RUN INN INC - Houston Astros' Art Howe, left. shows his joy to
teammate Ra y Kni ght aftt•r hitting a three-run home run off Cincinnati
Reds' pitcher Tom Sea ve r in the third inning Friday night. Knight
kn oeked in two runs with a bases- loaded single prior to Howe's shot in the
six-run As tros' ha lf of lht• innin g. ( AP Lascrphoto).

Postlewait first round leader in OLC

USC placed on probation for violations
LOS ANGE LES (AP ) - Uni versity of Southern Caltfornla officials
we re us ing th(' weekend to collec t
them selves afte r the Na tional Collegia te Athl('tic Associa tion dealt It
a stiff. thr ee -yea r foo tb a ll
proba tion.
The NCAA's Infractions Commit·
tee a nnounced the penalties F riday
from Miss ion. Ka nsas, say ing
USC's ac tions constituted a "fl a-

play one hole with each foursome
taking part a nd each contestant will
be photographed with General Harlinge r a nd will later receive a
framed photograph as a memento of
the occasion .
Each pla yer will receive a wine
decanter inscribed with th e
general's seal and there will be other
gifts for participants.
Trophies will be awarded for the

grant" violation of the rules.
The panel banned the Trojans
from bowl ga mes during the 1982-83
and 1983-&amp;1 academic years and
prohibited television appearances
during 1983 a nd 1984 for violations
that Include a ticket-selling scheme
to funnel cash to players during a
10-year period .
The school remains e llglble for
television appea rances this season.

ORLANDO, Fla. (API -Kathy
Postlewait, a non-winner In etght
years on the golf 1our, took a 4stroke lead Into the second round of
the $150,00l Orlando Lady Classic.
Postlewait, who says she's "very
consistent" and a strong finisher,
battled trtclcy wind gusts and one of
the year's strongest fields Friday In
posting an opening 66 over the Rlo
Plnar course.
Her &amp;-under-par card tied the lowest opening round on the tour this
year and established her a solid fa vortte tn this 54-hole event.
" !don't know whv I haven't won.

I' m very consistent. I have strong
llnlshes," said Postlewait, who finIshed third In Sarasota earlier this
year after leading In the first round.

low team gross and low team net and
for the low individual gro!lS and the
low individual net.
Following the classi c, a chicken
barbecue dinner will be served by
Women's Association of the Jaymar
Golf Club to the participants and
their guests. The women's group is
purchasing new umbrellas and
chairs for the occasion and for use
later in the year and a new permanent barbecue pit is being constructed . Virgil Brown and George
Harris will barbecue the chicken.
The fee for participating in the
tournament will be $100 per player.
All of the funds collected from entry
fees will go for expenses involved in

By JO~ NEI&amp;&gt;N

When It's time 1o pop the champagne corks In St. Louts, Ozzie
'Smith says the whole world will
·know. Now. however, Is not the
time.
The Cardinals, who now own the
longest winning streak In the major
.leagues, won their 11th Ina row Friday night with a 9-2 drubbing of the
Philadelphia Phlllles.
George Hendrick drove In three
runs, two with a homer, and Smith
slugged the third homer of his fouryear career, two o( which he hit this
season. Hendrick and Smith also
had two singles apiece.
In the San Diego lor.kerroom af.
terward, Smith was explaining the
Cardinals' cool demeanor .
"There's not a whole lot ot celebratIng In here because It's still early,"
Smith said. "When the time for
cell!bratlng comes. everyone will

the General Hartinger celebration.
Golfers who have registered so f~r
include Dave Diles, former resident now a television sports personality, Larry Powell, Bill Nelson,
Eric Shuler, Horace Karr, Fred
Crow, Dale Dutton, Roger Morgan.
Richard Follrod, Don Mills, Richard
Owen, Dr. R. R. Pickens and George
Hackett, Jr., who is in charge of the
tournament.
Those wis hing to enter the cla!lSiC
may send applications accompanied
by $100 c heck, payable to the
General Hartinger Four Star Golf
Classic, to Bill childs, Jaymar Golf
Course, Route 3, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

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C:A~OLINA
',
.
AND

was restrained, Philadelphia's
game.
cracked rib April 13. He could out drlck, Dane Iorg and Smith . In the
lockerroom at Veteran's Stadium
sixth, Tom Herr a nd Keith Hernan"One guy after another Is trylni
s iX weeks .
was downright sullen. The Phillles to be a hero and trying 1o hit tbe ball
Elsewhere In the NL, San Diego dez drove In runs and a nother
now have lost 10 of their first 13
beat Atlanta 6-3ln 12lnnlngs, Mont· scored on Gary Mathews' fielding
out of the ballpark," the Phlllles
games this seosoo.
real downed New York 5-4, Houston e rror In left .
manager said. "We can't be doing
"The fans booed 1onlght, and
Bob F orsch scattered eig ht hits
beat Cincinnati 7-3, Pittsburgh out that right now, we're a bunch of
they had every right 1o, considering
s!Rgles hltters."
slugged Chicago 12-10 and Los An· In eight Innings for his third victory,
tbe way we played," said Manager
while the Cards sent Phlllles right ·
geles blanked San Francisco 9-0.
The Phlls lost their one proven
Pat Corrales, who spoke rather
The Cardinals scored three times ha nde r Mtke Krukow. 1-2. to the
home run hitter, Mike Schmidt,
candidly with hls team after the
'In the fourth on RBI singles by He n- s howers alter 31-3 Innings.
whe n he was sldellned with a
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Orioles
losing
streak
hits 9

know.''
Hendrick and Smith, who was
traded from San Diego to St. Louts
In the offseason for shortstop Garry
Templeton, each bomered In tbe
seventh, when the Cards scored
three runs. St. Louts also scored
three runs each In the fourth and
seventh Innings.
While the St. Louis locker room

By IIERSCHEL NJSSENSON
AP Spolia Wrller
It has been almoSt two weeks
since the Baltimore Orioles last
won a game, so about all Manager
Earl Weaver can do Is fantasize
how 1t must feel.
"It would be nice 1o win Ul once,"
he said after tbe Orioles dropped
, their ninth In a row Friday night,
losing 1o the Chicago White Sox 4-2.
"I'd like 1o give up just one run and
we get two. How you go about doing
that I just don't know. We score
four and they score siX. We score
siX and they score eight. I'm not
vecy happy right now."
In other American League
::
:: games, tbe Detroit Tigers trounced
the New York Yankees 9-1, tbe MUwaukee Brewers edged the Texas
Rangers 2-1, the Boston Red Sox
nipped tbe Toron1o Blue Jays ~.
the Kansas City Royals whipped
the Cleveland Indians 11-G, tbeCallfornla Angels downed tbe Oakland
A's 7-2 and the Minnesota Twins
clobbered tbe Seattle Mariners 124.
The Orlol!&gt;s are gOing so badly
these days - their record Is 2-10
and tbey haven't won since Aprll10
- that they were done In by Jim
Morrison, who bad only four hits
and a .138 ba ttlng average In Chicago's first 10 games. Friday night, he
doubled and scored on a single by
Ron LeFlore In the fifth lnntng and
,, slammed a tie-breaking trtple In
' the White Sox's two-run ninth. Morrison, who also had a bunt single,
raised his average to .212.
;'Morrison's hilling Is an example of the depth we have In our bat·
!log order," Manager Tony
La'Russa said. "He'sooretghth bat• ter, but he can hit with power and
• he. comes through when we need
:: him."
..
Harold Baines opened tbe Chl:: cago ninth with a single otf. Baltl:: more starter Jim Palmer. Carl1on
•· Fisk sacrificed Baines 1o second
aJI!l Morrison trtpled ot1 tbe wall In
lett. Morrison was out at tbe plate
on BW Almon's attempted squeeze
bunt, but LeFlore followed with a
double to score Almon.
"Palmer threw some tough
,.Jittcbel to me, but I managed to get
I ihe ball In the holes," Morr180n
) said. "The ball I hit In the ninth was
.! a b!'f&gt;aklng pitch that I pulled down

POOL OWNERS:
WOULD YOU PREFER THIS?

The Sundily Times -Se nlin e i- Pag e - C-7

. St. Louis Cards ·drub Phils, 9-2, for II th straight triumph

double was the ftrst of five straight
hits. Ed MUner and Dave Concepcion had run-scoring singles, bringIng In LaCoss 1o relleve winning
pitcher Joe Nlekro, 2-1.
After giving up a bloop RBI single to Johnny Bench 1o make It 7-3,
LaCoss struck out Larry BUtner
and went on to flnlsh the game.
The loss went to Tom Seaver, 0-2,
who gave up siX runs on five hits
and three walks In two and twothirds Innings.

Plan golf tourney in honor of Gen. Hartinger
POMEROY - A golf tournament
will be staged at the Jaymar Golf
Club near here May 30 as a part of a
weekend celebration honoring former Middleport resident, General
James Hartinger .
Named the General Hartinger
Four Star Golf Classic, the event will
be limited to 40 contestants . General
Hartinger, one of only 12 four star
genera ls in the United States, will

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

u

FOI'IICh~s seYeD·hlt pltcblq:

•

SAVE
SJQ

�Pag~- C-8 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Clippers slip past Mud Hens, 5-3

Scoreboard...
Majors
Ry1bt~rr­

NA110NAI. I.EAGUE
~n~DtvWon

W
Monln'al
Nf'W York

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12 ]
7
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6

P1ttm.u11h
Chicago

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Toronto

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Mllwauket' at Ptilladelphla. 7 ll p m. U
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Hos1on at Washington . 8 \0 p m , II nf•( "

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DATE - GYMNAS IUM
Apri l 25 Closed- May Day Concert
April '16 6 8 p .m ./ 101 Class
8 10 p.m ./Co ll ege Recreation
April '17
8 10 p.m ./Co ll ege ~ ec reat•on
Apr il '18 8 10 p.m ./ College Recreation
Apr il 29 8 10 p.m ./ Coll ege Recreation
April JO

f"riQy'1 GamN
F'hoerux 116, Denvt&gt;r
SI'I'1K Ut'd J.J
Hous10t1 91, Seattk&gt; 7Q, senes UOO 1 J

7 9 p.m ./Open Recr e ati on
May 1 2 4 p m / Open Recreatton
May 2 1 4 p m / Open Recreatton
.
8 10 p.m ./Co ll ege Recrea t ton

Ohioans demonstrate

8 10 p .m ./ Co ll ege Swim
4 6 p .m ./Greek Events
8 10 p .m ./ Co ll ege Swim
a 10 p .m ./ Co ll ege Swim
8 10 p .m ./Co ll ege Swim
9: 30 10 : 30 a .m ./Hannan Trace
Elementary Sc hoo l
7·9 p .m ./Open Swim
2 4 p .m ./Ope n Swim
1 4 p .m ./Open Sw~m
8· 10 p .m ./ Co ll ege Swtm

against nuclear weapons

ATHLETIC EVENTS - HOM E GA MES
Aprd 25 - Baseball vs . Walsh. 1 p .m ./doubleheoder
Apr tl '17 - Baseball vs . Mt Vernon Nazarene, I p m ./doub teheade r

2Y.t
4

National Hockey Leapt

DI""'""'Anol

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Houston 11 Seetlk', J. J) p.m .

Boston 5. Toronto 4
Chicago 4., Ba.ttimol"(' 'l
OPlrnlt 9. New York I
MllwaukN&gt; 2, Tl'xas l
Ka~Wt..~ C1ty II. Clf&gt;vt&gt;Land 6

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NY . Wander.. 5. N.Y Rangff'S 3.
Islander$ wtn series 4-2
Otkago 2. St.loub 0. OUcago wins

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By JOE B . McKNJGtrr

s]m89s

Associated Pres8 Writer

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - A woman pollee
officer who was paid $20,!XXl to pose nude for Playboy
magazine said after being suspended from her job
Indefinitely without pay that she'd be just as happy It
the magazine had Ignored her.
Barbara Schantz, 25, was In Playboy's May Issue
and appeared on national tetevlslon after the magazine came out. She was suspended Indefinitely without pay from her job Friday .

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'81 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
Atr cond . AM FM stereo, SPCCtrl1 accented two
torw pntn1 . Rrlllyc wheel s nnd much more .

th e Ohio Statehouse Friday in Columbus. The
Federdtion placed on a table the names of ovH 130,000
Ohioans who have signed petitions calling for a mutual

U.S.-Soviet weapons fr eeze. ( AP Lase rphoto 1.

POLICE OFFICER SUSPENDED - Two Police
officers pictured in Playboy magazine, Including Bar·
bara Schantz, above, a Springfield, Ohio female police
officer who posed nude, were suspended indefinitely
without pay Friday pending a disciplinary hearing, of·
flc!als said. (AP Laserphoto).

'81 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR.
Thr s family sized sedan is ex tr a sharp. on ly 14,'1 50
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A male officer who appeared In uniform ln two of
the Playboy pictures also was suspended.
"I was devastated," Ms. Schantz said Friday night.
"I would have been just as happy It they (Playboy)
never would have come down here. By exercising
their First Amendment rights, they got me In
trouble."
Of the officials' action, she said, " I think they
overreacted."
"What we've got here are not criminal or morals
charges, It's based entirely on constitutional and clvll
rights," she said.
She said that It she Is given more than 10 days'
suspension, she would appeal. She could appeal to a
Clvll Service Commission hearing and then to Com·
mon Pleas Court.
City Manager Thomas M. Bay said Friday that Ms.
Schantz, a three-year veteran of the force, was suspended Indefinitely without pay earlier In the day.
Bay, who has firing authority, said he w1lllaunch
an Inquiry Tuesday Into a finding that she violated
Clvll Service rules.
A pollee board of Inquiry composed of five pollee
officers recommended Thursday that she be fired .
Asked It he would attempt to delay or thwart Bay's
Inquiry, her lawyer, Jon Doughty said , "There Is
more than one way to skin a cat."
Bay also announced Indefinite suspension without
pay for officer Douglas Radel, who appeared In unl·
form In two of the Playboy pictures. Rade l, 24, joined
the pollee division In June 1980. The board of Inquiry
recommended that he be suspended without pay.
Bay said Ms. Schantz '¥as found In vtolatlon ot 10
clvll service rules governing conduct of officers on
and oft duty.

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StlurdiYI 8:110 UJl. 115:110 p.tl.

We ruervelhl rlghl to limit quntltles.

Sundtytii:IIO •·• · Ill 5:110 ,_ •.
BUILD-IT-YOU Sfl F liND SAVE'

•'
c r e~m exte rior wi th ~uckskin land au _top and
bucM:skin interior . Cr ut se cont r ol, AM 8 _tra ck
stereo, t ilt wheel, chrom e pl a ted wheels .One loca l

Finished in sterling silver with carmine interior
and · matching landau top. Equipped with cruise
con trol. AM ·FM st ereo, rallye wheels and much,

owner
.
WAS $3995

mu ch more.

SALE

$3595

$5495

OVER 40 lATE MODEL CLEAN CARS'TO CHOOSE FROM,

r

"Home of the Sharpest Used Car's in the Valley"

renchtown Car -Co.
1640 Eastern Awe., Gallipolis

446-00&amp;9 .

!•

Bill Gene Johnson
TiriJ Hamflloll

'

"WeApprecltlte
!our llulln..."

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

" ANNOUNCES . 'CONSOLIDATION Dllytou
· Nnrtpapen Esecutlve Editor Arnold Raleafeld, left,
11111wen questloilti f,-om slllf' meQiben Friday af·

............
r

thlngs wtll cha nge," he said .
Looney, who heads the American Friends Servtces
Committee In Akron. said the news media have not
done an adeq uate job of Informing the pubUc about
the nuclear threat. "But if they won't Inform us. wC''ll

Inform ourselves," he said .

'·

~

ANNOUNCES POLICEWOMAN'S SUSPENSION
- Springfield, Ohio CitY Manager Thomas M. Bay an·
nounces the suspension of two Springfield police ol·
licen; from their jobs without pay Friday in
Springfield. One of tbe suspended officers was 25 year·

old Barbara

Schantz. whu posed

for

....

Pla yboy

magazine. Suspend ed also wa s nffirl•r Douglas Radl'l
who a ppeared, in uniform, in two nr tht• P laybuy pic~
lures. 1AP Last·rphotol .

Dayton's daily papers
merge, combine staffs

LUMBER &amp;'HOME CENTER
~ILTOII

they know that If we use nuclear wea JXIns, we wtll die.

lfz-4x8 DRYWALL

SHINGLES

7lf-4111

"We don't wa nt just a freeze . We want reduc~onsln
weapons,'' Looney said. He said he hopes the Legislature wUI cooperate by adopting a resoluUon asking
Congress and President Reagan to go alo ng.
State Sen. Michael Schwarzwalder. D-Columbus,
one of the rally speakers, has Introduced such a resolution In the Senate, and Re p. Mary 0. Bcyle, DCleveland, Is sponsoring a similar one In the House.
Schwarzwalder said that although his resolu~on
has been languishing In the Senate fo r 10 months. he
thinks fellow senators and citizens generaUy are gel·
t1ng more Interested In the subject . He said Senate
leaders only this week promised him a hearing on the
proposal.
The Rev. Richard McSorle y, director of the Peace
Studies Program at Grorgetown Uni versity in Washington, agreed that there has been an upsurge in
anti-nuclear sentiment w1thln the past yea r
He said "you can't miss It In Washington . It 's every.
where. every da y - a half dozen events and things
going on throughout the district."
At a news conference, McSorley said Reagan and
the Congress wou ld be forced to act If a ll citizens
beca me fully aware of the dangers of nuclear
proliferation .
"If the people know the situation . It wtu change. If

Playcop says magazine
"got me in trouble'

Black on black. 318 engine, AM ·FM radio. new
Prrmtum radii! IS. wtrc wheel covers. spcc i&lt;ll acce nt

"ropes

I .' I f : I

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Asaoclaied Pres8 Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ernie Davtes, a .19year-old carpenter from Athens County, may or may
not have been typical of the several hundred Ohloans
who demonstrated for a nuclear weapons freeze at
the Statehouse.
But of all the speakers at the Friday noon rally, he
seemed to have sald the most In the fewest words to
explain what everyone was doing there - trying to
avoid some future nuclear holocaust.
Davies, his son, Charlie, 16, a nd Jay Wamsley, a
31-year-old Athens attorney, walked the 75 miles
from Athens to attend the rally sponsored by the
newly form ed Reverse the Arms Race FederaUon of
Ohio.
The event was staged as part ot Ground Zero Week.
a nationwide observance by citizens seeking a nuclear wea pons freeze by the United States and Soviet
Union.
Davies presented some citizen petitions asking the
Legislature to join the freeze m ovement.
He said he got Involved because he had a dream In
which he and his family were about to die In a nuclear
attac k, and that he had to admit to his son that he had
done nothing to try to prevent It.
"Now. It It happens, I can tell my son that l did
everything I could. But It I get old and dle)n my bed.l
can say that we did a heck of a good job, " Davtessald.
John Looney of Akron, president of the Freeze
Campa ign In Ohio, and other leaders su bmitted to
legisla tive leaders more than 130,!XXl signatures of
Ohioans who want to reverse the nuclear race.

1229 piece

'77 DODGE DIPLOMAT 2 DR.

Sk y Blue wtlh whtle landau top . cru•sr. AM FM
&lt;., l f'rro an cl on I ·~ 19 ,737 mdr s VNy nt'n l &amp; clean

,\ .

SINGING SONGS OF PROTEST - Three memben; of the Reverse The Arms Race Federation Of Ohio
lead an estimated 1.000 pen;ons In protes t songs during
. its Nuclear Wea pons Freeze Campaign rally in front of

Wl\ltt.Rnllc

VINYL_. AUiMitUM SIDIIIG

« ..

Sunda , April 25, 1982

POOL

NHL results

WE8TERN CONFERENCE

Section [g)

Closed

........ """-

Washtng1oo 103. Nf'W Jerwy 92 , Wash·
Lngton wtns M"r1es Hl
Phlladelphia ~. Atlanta !fl. OT. Pt\Lla ·
dl•lphla w1ru !l('f1(&gt;s Hl

F'rtday'11 G.,.._

MliW'!IOta 12. Seatllf'

Toledo was leading 3-1 going Into
the seventh Friday night. The
Clippers rallied with four runs In
the seventh for the victory.
In other IL action, the Syracuse
Chlefs scored twice with two out In
the top of the lith Inning for a 4-2
victory over Tidewater.
Dave Baker hit Into a forceout for
the second out In the lith, but Fred
Maruique singled to right and the
ball was misplayed. Baker scored
and Maruique went to third. A sin·
gle by Brian Doyle scored Man-

i'imts- itntin.el

LYNE CENTER SC HEDUL E
Week of April 25, 1982

Ol'C

State/ ational

mond Braves to an 8-1 decision over
the Rochester Red Wings In their
International League home opener.
Dayley walked six and struck out
eight.

rique with an insurance run.
Mitchell Webster hit a solo homer
In the first Inning for Syracuse.
Left·hander Ken Dayley scat·
tered six hits as he pitched the Rich·

F.A.'iTERN CONJo""ERENCI!:

"

""

10

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

NaUoMJ BaUetbd A.od.adoa

-

5."'-'1

7

th"

uon ol Dtc k Ta ylor . autsliiJlt baskl'tb.a.ll
roach. so tV' may bl&gt;roml' head roach a t

'"
m

MUWtHikl't'

YANKEES-Tradf&gt;d

ST LOU IS CA!IDINAI.S-Acttva\t&gt;d Km
Ot.,rldell, thJ.rd ba!t"man . OpUoned Glem
ilrJffiiT"'('f, ra tcht&gt;r. to Louisville of ~
Amt-rtcan Auocla.llon

tlh7

(lfovt•lilnd

~.M.,t

Aoston at Washington, I p.m
Philadelphia at MllwaukN'. I p m
WedDNday, MAl$
Wuhlngton at Bor;ton, 1·lJ p m . If

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

....a.&lt;km DlvWon
lO

s.wnt.ay, May I
Doston at Washington, TllA
PhlladPiphia at Milwaultft&gt;. TBA

Wa~ . nnt baS('man. to t.br AUanla
Bnlvt'!! for Soon Patwrsoo. pltcill'r 1u
signed Patterson to Columbus ol thP In
trmational I..Rag\1('

AMERICA&gt;\' 1.£,\(;n:

"''

YORK

Tucker Ashford's three-run homer In the seventh Inning helped
the International League-leading
Columbus Clippers to a 5-3 victory
over the Toledo Mud Hens, whlch
rank lowest ln IL standings.

Wm-iay'a Gune.

PhllaOC&gt;lphla at MUWi!l\ilu't'. TDA . lf

NEW
!lob

at St Louis 1n 1

[)(-troll
IJos ton

WIL.&lt;~hlngtf.lfl 111 Anll tnn. Fl: 10 p.m

""'"""

II
Garrw.
Montl"('aJ ~ - ,.._ York 4
l'ltubullj:h 11. Chicago 10
San Dk&gt;f(U 6. Atlant.a 1. 11 tnnlnx ~
Sl l..o\ili; 9. Philadl'lphla 2
Housi.Orl 7, C1nctmatl 3
I.!JI'i Angt&gt;II'S 9, San F"raf'MiS(~' 0
Sunday's &lt;iiUI'"'
~~· York at Montl't'al
St l...ouls at Phlladl'lphla
San Oll&gt;go at Atl.antJt
P!t!Sbuf'Rh at Ll\Jcago
ltnclnnatl at Houston
\ .or; Anjp:"IM at Son F"ranc-ts,_..u
Monday'• G"""'"'
l'ltUb.ifll"h at Atlanta tn,
f'riday"~

O!lcago 111 Baltlmon&gt;
CIPveland at turwu Clt)

By The Asaoclaied P..-

Milwaukee at Philadelphia. 7· 11 p m

BASEIIAU.
1\mericu Leap
MILWA U KEE
ARF.WERS AcUvated
Jim Slaton, ~tc hN Optklllt'&lt;l [)r,ug Jont"!.
pllrh.-r. to \'anrQUwr lA the P&amp;cLnc Coast

467

10

Mllwaukl't' at Plilladelphla, l p.m

Transactions

·"'"' '

W~mDtvWon

\3

Sunday'a GaroN
lbston at Toronto
Ot&gt;trolt at N€.'W York

MUwaukeE' at TeXAJ
UUUand at Cailtomla
MlnneiOI:a at Se&amp;ttJf

Pet.
GB
!Ol
6J6
]
571
l'-1

Aprii2S, 1982

Pomeroy - Middl e port- Ga llipoli s, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

•

,,

te~ after

I"OQIIIlCilli tile 11affa ol tile mol'lllllg
JCJIII'IIal Benld aDd lbe afte.-- Dally News wOuld be

"

1!9mb1Ded. Qotb )llpen, part ol tbe Cu Newspapers
chain, would eoniiDoe to be prillted but lbe editorial
slllfs would &amp;e merged Ill late BIDIDler or fall as a costeultlugmove. (APLaserpboto).

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Dayton's two large dally
newspapers are combining reporting staffs In a reorganization to keep them ott the growing list of ta iled
or struggling newspapers, management says.
The Dayton Dally News and the Journal Herald
will be produced by the same staff under a realign·
ment to take effect later this year. Ninety employees,
Including nine from the editorial statts, will be laid oft
next month.
"Our real thrust In doing this Is to ensure that we
are not In the position the Minneapolis Star and the
New York Dally News and others have found themselves In,' ' said Jay Smith, president of Dayton Newspapers Inc., which owns both publlcatlons.
The Star ceased publication this year, and the
financially-troubled New York Dally News Is up for
sale.
·
Smith said the newspapers are suffering from the
overall slwnp In the economy and tough competition
for a shrlnldng advertising market. A vl!rage linage
was down 10 percent In the first quarter of this year
tor the two papers, he sald.
The Journal Herald has a morning circulation of
I.OO,(XX) six da~ a week, up 2,!100 from a year ago. The
afternoon Dally News has a UJ,(XX)circulatlon, which
has dropped 7percenttroma yearaao, and222,500on
Sunday, which Is about a 7percentlocreaseln the last
year, the newspapers' management said.
The newspapers wW retain their Identities and pu~
llshlng times, even though the editing and reporting
functions wW be combined by late IIUJIIJ!le'r or early
tan, Columnists and editortal wrtters wW continue to
work for their 1-espeCtlve papers.

"We wUI be working as quickly as possible to plan
the new structure," said Arnold Rosenfeld, Dayton
News papers executive editor. "Although we have .
some fundamental Ideas of how to preserve the char- ·
acter of each newspaper, until further process Is completed, we will be lnvolvlng the staff In our planning."
The newspapers combined library, photography
and metropolitan reporting staffs in the last year .
Smith sald the newspapers. which rema ined competitive editorially, " have traded compeUtlon for

cooperation.''
" We've reorganized In limited ways In the past and
have been a ble to use our resources better In the
process," Rosenfeld said. "We are faced with many
of the same economic challenges other businesses
bave encountered over the last several years."
The Journal Hera ld has published for 175 years, the
Dally News for 100. Both are part of the Cox newspaper cbaln.
·
The 90 layoffs of full -time and part-time e mployees
will come prlmarlly from the advertising, clrculatlon, editorial, mainte nance and transportation departments. A company spokesman said 810 full time
and 240 part·tlme employees will remain.
The statts were Informed of the planned moves and
layoffs at an afternoon meeting Friday. Dally News
reporter Mark Brunswick said Rosenfeld's voice wavered and that he appeared very emotional during
the announcement.
"Morale here, as can be expected, Is not so hot, "
Brunswick said. "Given the marke t for journalists
these days anywhere else, I don 't think It's going to
get any better."
'•

·

:
:
·

:
:
·
•

:
•

�Page-D 2

Pomeroy

The Sunday T1mes · Sentonel

American Legion
sign-up set today
Amen~an

Lc g1on

Hall . Fourth St 111
Middleport
Boys from l!i to
18 arc In vited to
take part Oh and fathers of
boys do not have
to be Ameman
Legton me mber~
boys to partlt'ipate

111

BOB
order for the

You mtlo!ht want to remember Mr
and M1 s U S Nease of Mu1ersv illc
about the m•lidle of tlw week
they're observing the1r 65th wcddmg
anmversary on Wednesda y Nu" -

that IS a while '
You ought to know that Mr dnli
Mrs E rwm Gloeckner wc1 e 1et..:e nt
guests of the1r son-tn-la\\ dfld
liaughte1. M1 and Mrs Lan y
Bddgley m Mana""'· Va
In conJuncti on w1th their VIS it, M1
and Mrs Gloeckner attended the
Virglllla Ali.State Orchestra concert
111 wh1 ch their gra ndson, Danny. pa rti Cipated There arc 12 diStn els

ca lled rcgwns, wh1 ch compnse the
state band and a candidate 111ust
place f1rst 01 second chC:u r Ill the
regiOn to t1 y out for all-state
Danny retnk ed eig hth 111 the State
of V1rgllllCJ thereby secunng a place
111 the s tall' orchestra
Hts Jll ·
strwnenll s tenor trombone
Dann} ts a sophomore at Osbourn
H1 gh S&lt;.:huul 111 Man::t.ssas He was
a lso sel ected t11 attenli the Mid-Ea st
Cunfe1ence of Mu.s ll at Duques ne
Un1vers 1ty Ill P1tl&lt;:iburgh. Pa Dannv
1s ttlso a g r::~nd.son of Ralph c~nJ
Doroth\ Badgh•y R~une
Dr R H P1ckcns VIS ted Allegi,J
Will on fhue&gt;day at St Anthon y
Hosp1ta l 111 Columbus where she underwent sur gt•rv - ve1 y se r1uu.s
surge• y - April 16
Alleg ra's hu s band , Norman .
1epU1ls Alleg 1ct '.s LO m ebcn~ k fiun1
the operatiOn IS utterl y fanta stll a&lt;·
cord1n g to Dr P1ckcns Shr's on ,J
walker already and feeling well
W1th contmucd progress, she ma ) be
home sometlmt• ne xt week
Thjanks to all of you for 1emembenng Alleg ra She has alwa)s
remembered so many of us By the
way, the room num ber IS !i!i4
-The Middleport Chamber of Co mmerce w•ll be mee tmg at 7 30 p m
luesday at the LaSalle Hotel1n Mid·
dleport Off1eers hope for a b1g tur-

w

Gallipolis, Oh•o-Poont Pleasant,

nuut a nd Jols of enthusmsm smce the
chamber IS 111 the process of gettm ~
a ll the plans to~cthcr fOJ the ro les of
the bu!:illlc.ss hou!:ies m the upc mmn~
ll'lebratwn to honm Ge neral Jam e.s
Ha rtmgc r
Inc1dentall) . I am nut gett1ng an)
g low!nf' r l'ptlrl'\ on reg1strctn t.s for a
pa1 ade to be held 111 cOnJunctiOn w1th
the cele bration Ruger Morgan IS
he.1d1ng the pa1 a de and Bi ll Childs IS
g~.: n eral Lhatl man of the enttre observa nce If vou Ld ll see ; our Wd}'
LieC:Jr fur ::t pill a de cntr; - a
pe~tnotu theme 1s bcmg used - do
g1 vc l1oge1 or 13!11 ct nng - and now 1
You ha ve until Ma y l!i to orde1
hiStory books fro111 the Meigs Co unty
P10nec1 and H1stor l&lt;.:al Soc1ety, lnL ,
a. nd the Me1g.s Count y Gc ncalogH::a l
Souety
Larkm s, The P1onee1 HIStory of
ML•Jgs County 1s be111g offered for
$16, The Me1gs County H1stor) as
publl.shed In Hardesty's H1ston cal
and Geographica l Encyclopedia IS
IJe 1ng uffe1 ed ,,t $20 and the 1979
HIStory of Me1gs Co unty IS bemg offered at $3!i
All books are beautifull y bound 111
hard covers and the pn cc will be up
on all of them after the May l!i
dectdilnl' There ctre ord er blanks
e~vaJiable to make ordcnng ca s u~ r
And to all of you you ng folks out
there 111 rolle1 land ·There Will be
no sk ut111g program at the Rutland
Clv1c Center thiS afternoon The cancl'ilatwn IS due to fl uor work bemg
dune
Sent1nel s por bwr 1ter Sl: ott Wolfe
1s extend mg a bt g lh&lt;tnk ~ to Gene
Hudson of Middleport
Saturday mormng Scott started to
Bank One of Pomeroy w1 th h1s
payl heck The ba nk hadn t opened
) ct so Sco tt returned to the Sent1nel
nfflle A b1t later Ihe s he nff's off1 ce
phoned statmg thctt S&lt;.:ott's pa)check
had been found on a Sidewalk and
turned 111 by Hudson Wolfe p1ckcd
up the check and took care of h1s
bank1ng
Hudson 1efused any
Icwa1d for ha vmg turn ed the endorsed check ove r to au thont1es
Thanks. Gene - Scutt needed that'
I kn ow you 1c perturbed for
havm g lost that hour today
However try to look upon 1t as a one
hour repneve from hav111g to watch
the telc vt!:iiOn rerun!:i wh1ch have
started alread) Then , there are
those long evemngs of d ay ll ~ ht so
you ra n work yuUJ socks off 111 the
Above all. DO KEEP
ya rd
SMILING'

Meets Tuesday

Tuesday meeting

-POMEROY- Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority wlll
meet at 7 30 p m T\Jesda) at the
Meigs Inn
Officers wlU be
Installed

POMEROY A joint meeting of
the Junior and Senior American Legion Auxiliary groups of Drew
Webster Post 39, wUJ meet at 7 30
p m TUesday at the post home

A hospital spokesman said Satur
day morning the youth was admitted and reported In satisfactory
condition, being treated tor cuts
The patrol said Johnson was operating a motorcycle at 6· 40 p.m .,
two miles west of Galllpolls, across
the road when he was struck by a
westbound vehicle driven by Mark

GALLIPOLIS - An 11 year-old
Rt 3, Galllpolls boy was Injured In a
colllslon between a pickup truck
and a motorcycle on Ohio 141 Frl·
day night
The Gallla. Meigs Post of the
state highway patrol said Nicholas
S Johnson II was taken to Holzer
Medical Center by private vehicle

man . Pome1 O\ - Rook te Scoutmastc i Jun Oill'r. Ga lltpohs Ruok1e Cubmastc1
Scou trrs tt•cogn1 zed for thl·
orga nt zatwn of c1 new Cub Scout
pack or Buy s, out troop were Bob
Anru;, Ra y La udcnm lt an d Cheryl
l.audermllt of Pomeroy and Joanna
Cuunnl of L.tngsv liil'
Dr DaVId Ca 11 dnd Janet Ca rr
were honored for the1r or gan1zat10n
of thl' diStlld s Blue and Gold
Banq uet fur the Cub Scouts and Carl
Came1 on of Gall! poll:; wus pre:;cnted
a plaque from Tl oup 200 for ha vmg
s~rvcd as Scoutmaster
The Royal Orde1 of Siam and the

D Rees, 18, Rio Grande
The accident caused slight dam·
age to Rees' truck and moderate to
the motorcycle. Johnson was cited
for no operator's Ucense
The patrol also cited two men In a
two-vehicle collision on Ohio 124
near Rutland late Frida y
afternoon

Meigs sets registration date
to re~'"ter at Rutland
Any child whose ftfth birthday
falls on or before September 30, 1982,
ma) be regtstered for kindergarten
for the fall of 12982
Any child whose stxth btrthday
falls on or before September 30, 1982,
may be regtstered for first grade for
the fall of 1982
Parents are to prov1de the
followmg at the tune of regtstratwn
A record of tmmumzatwn - four
OPT, three Polio Sabm, one measles
!Rubeola I Iafter hrst birthday), one
Rubella I German measles I, and a
recent TB skm test I w1thm one year
before entenng school ) are required
for adJmsSion 111 the fall, the child's

POMEROY - Parents wiShmg to
reg1ster thetr chtldren for kmdcrgarten or as new enrollees 111 the
first grade I d1d not attend km·
dergarten 111 Metgs Loca l I may
registe r their children accurdmg to
the followmg schedule
Pomeroy Elementary, Monday,
May 3, from 8 30 am -11 30 am
and 12 noon-4 p m
Middleport El~mentary, Tuesday,
May 4, from 8 30 a m -lJ 30 a m
and 12 noon-4 p m
Rutland Elementary, Wednesday,
May !i, from 8 30 am -lJ 30 am
and 12 nuon-4 p m Kmdergarten age
students from the Harnsonvtlle,
Salem Center, and Rutland area arc

b1rth cert1f1catc
All parents expectm g to have
chtldren enrolled 111 the fall as km·
dergarten students or as new
enrollee students 111 the ftrst grade
are urged to rcgtsler thetr chtldren
at the app01nted ttme and places
Questwns
cunccrn mg
thiS
regtstratJOn may be dtrected to the
pnnc1pals' off1ces of the especllve
schools
Mtddleport E lementary, John Ar·
nott, 992-3387 Pomeroy Elemen·
tary, Robert Morns, 992-2710
Harnsonvlile E lementary Greg MeCall , 742-3000 , Rutland Elementary.
Doug Behnke, 742-2666 . Salem Center Elementary, Charles Hollulay
742-3113

Registration dates announced
for Eastern kindergarten
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
H1gh School D1stnct 1s announcmg
plans for kmdergarten and first
grade regJStraton for the 1982-a:l

Elementary on Apnl 30, from 9 a m
to lJ am
The children who are prese ntly
enrolled m a kmdergarten class at
Tuppers Plauc; do not need to enroll
111 the first grade
Any ch1ld whose f1fth birthday
falls on or before September 30 of
thts year, may be registered for kmdergarten thiS fall Any ch1ld whose
s1xth birthday fall s on or before September 30 thiS year. ma y be
registered for first grade thiS fall
Parents are to pruv1de at the tune
of reg istratiOn a record of nnmumzatJOn, mcludmg four OPT,
four PoliO Sa bm, one mea sles, one
Rubella and proof of a rece nt TB
sk m test, w1thm one year before en-

~c hoolyca r

Parents s hould regiSter the1r ch1ld
for kmdergarten or as new enrollees
111 the first grade Ia ch1ld who dtd not
attend kmdergarten th1s year at
Ea!:itern Local l at rollowmg t1me
and place
AU kmdergarten
Tuppers
Plams Elementary on Apnl 30,
Fnday, from8 30a m to3 30p m
New Enrollees I first gradcrs.t
Tuppers Plams Elementary on Apnl
30, from 8 30 a m to J JO p m .
R1vcrv1ew Elementary on Apnl 30,
from 9 a m to II a m . Chester

tenng school
The b1rth ce rtificate also must bl'
provided The teacher will 1equest
other mfonnaltun on a regr .stratwn
form
It IS very Important that all parcnL' reg1s ter the ir child aecord mg to
the above schedule so that plans can
be completed for the fall classes
Parents can d1reet any quest1011 to
Mrs Wilma Parker. kindergarten
teacher , at Tuppers Plams Elt~men­
tary School phone 667-33!0 or Loca l
Supen ntcndent. R1 chard I. Roberts
at 985-4292 QuestiOns concermn g th e
avaliabli•ty of nrunum zat10ns s hould
be lhredet..l to lhe Meq.~.s County
Department of Hea lth I phone 992·
6626 I or the family ductm

Antique show features 100 engines
PT PLEASANT - The Mason
Co unty Regwnal State Farm
Muse um wtll serve as host to the
thtrd Annual Antique Steam and Gas
E ngme show on May 1-2
The show IS bemg sponsored by
the West Vtrgm1a Anhque Steam
and Gas Engme A"oc1at1on, Inc ,
and w1ll be held on the Farm
Museum grounds which Ls located
four m1les north of Pomt Pleasant,
JUS! off State Route 62
Several anttque steam engmes
and nearly 100 gasohne engmes will
be on dtsplay dunng the two day
show Some anhque tractors wtll
a Iso be shown
Vanous p1eces of old farm equ1p-

ment w1ll be exh1b1ted and w1ll be
operated penod1cally One of the
steam engmes wtll furniSh the powe r
to operate an a.1ttquc Farguhar
threshmg machme wh1ch was patented m 1878 Another steam engme
will operate an old buhrstone gn st
ITilll
Some of the old gas engmes will
furn1sh power for corn shellers, gnst
ITillls and other small eqwpment
A number of the old tractors w1ll
be m operatiOn durmg the day
An added attracbon to this year's
show'" the "Culture Rtg," whtch 1s
bemg prov1ded by the West V1rgmta
Dept of Culture and Htstory The
Culture R1g travels •l• program and

Pinner recognizes area scouting leaders
RUNTINGTON - The M-G-M
Dt!:itnct of th e T1 l -5l&lt;tlt~ A1 ect C'ou ncli, Buy Scouts of Ame11ca honored
,ti; leaders at the dJStnd s annu al
lt!ader recogni tiOn J1nner relenll y
{)r David Ca rr of Pt Plea sant and
fuiy Laudenn1 1t of Pomeruy well'
awarded th e diSllicl' s hi ghest hUIIOI
the OJStmt Award of Ment Both
m~en are ve ry &lt;Jdl\ l' on the d1 str 1d
and un1t It: vel &lt;:~nd m the1r l ol!lmullltlcs
Other leaders t l'l ogmzed we re
T1cky Henson Pt Pleasant ~
Scouter of the Year Na ncy Filkms.
Pt Pleasa nt - Outst&lt;J ndmg Cubbc1
Everett Kmg Gallipolis - Outstandmg Scoutma ster Bub Work-

Apnl2S, 1982

Apni2S, 1982

va

county umt corrumss10ner. Lcwny
Tyree, Middleport, IS scout trammg
cha1nnan, and J1m Ashworth, Pt
Plt~asant, 1s cub seoul tra111mg charrman
OIStnct Members-at-Large are
Carl Cameron, J1m Otler, Larry
Boyer, and Frank DIClemente of
Galhpohs, Bob Mathews, Janet
Carr and Raymond Lewts of Pt
Pleasant, Bob Anns, Pat Wood, Bob
Workman, Cathy Workman, Danny
Will and Frank Casto of Pomeroy ,
and Sherman MJIJs of Middleport
Carl Cameron presented a
program about Phtlmonl Scout Ranch m Mextco

Wet Boat Award were bestowed on
Bob Workman and the Iron Sled
A"ard to Sherman M1lls of Mid·
dleport
Off•eers for the M-G-M OIStnct
fMe1gs, Galha and Mason Counttesl
were a Iso msta lied Dr Bernard
NJCtun, Galhpohs, 1s d1stnct chairman, Dr Dav1d Carr, Pt Pleasant,
1s cub cornim"1oner, B1ll Northup,
Galhpohs. ts scout cOITUillSSioner.
Cheryl Laudermtlt, Pomeroy, and
Becky Tyree, Middleport, are cub
scout roundtable cmnm1"1oncrs ,
T1cky Henson, Pt Pleasant, Ls scout
roundtable commissioner . Ray
LaudermJit, Pomeroy, Is Me1gs

the award wmmng f1lm
Wes t
Vtrgm1a RenaiSsance" around th e
state to en hance already planned
cOJnm umty act1v111es for youn g and
old alike
The Culture R1~ will be at the
Farm Musewn from Apnl 30 until
May 23 The f1lm wtll be shown
dunng the Steam and Gas Engme
Show
The Culture R1g's appearance at
the Farm Museum 1s bemg made
po"tble through the cooperatwn of
the West VtrgmJa Dept of Culture
and H1story and Ls bemg sponsored
locally by the Mason County
Gallenes of Interest and the Mason
County Reg wna l Stale Farm
Musewn
Another attraction for thts year's
show IS a muzzle loadmg nfle shoot,
which wtll be held on Saturday, May
1 Anyone w1shmg to partiCipate or
needmg additional mformatwn
should contact Paul Fttzgerald,
phone 675-!i225
Also Saturday evemng there w1ll
be a square dance under the d~rec·
twn of Floyd Rayburn
Raymond Zuspan wtll have an
exh1btt of baby farm ammals A
number of mustclans wtll be on hand
to entertam the crowd wtth some old
ttme mustc, mcludmg blue grass
The Country Kttchen will be open
both days of the show In addtt1on to
tis spectalty of cornbread and beans,
the kttchen wtll serve
sandwtches, hot dogs, tce cream and
pop AdmiSSIOn and entertamment 1s
free

nam

According to the report, an eastbound pickup truck drlven by
J a mes C. Blrch!leld, Tl, Rutland,
turned left at 5 :;:; p m . lntothepath
of a westbound truck drlven by
Walter A Ellis, 20, RL!tland
Birchfield colllded wlth EU!s,
ca using EU!s' truck to go o!f the
right side of the road and strike a
mailbox owned by Marie Birch·
fie ld, Middleport There was severe
damage reported to both vehicles
E U!s was cited for no operator's
license and James Blrchtleld was
tic keted for fail ure to yield
No Injuries were reported In a
two-vehicle accident on Ohio 160
near Porter Friday night
The patrol said the two vehicles
Involved - one drive n by Glen D
Hapney, 26, Rt I, Bidwell, and the
other by Step he n L Wilson, 22, Gallipolis - were both northbound at
6 19 p m when Hapney turned left
Both co!Uded as Wilson attempted
to pass, causing moderate damage
to both vehicles
The patrol reported Gary E
Toothaker, 40, GaUlpolls, was unln
jured when his vehiclecolUdedwlth
a deer on Jackson Pike, four tenths
of a mile south of US 35, at 7· 50
am. Friday
The deer continued on and Toothaker's vehi c le was slightly
damaged

Public Not1ce

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/'

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
0 E p A R T ME NT 0 F
TRANSPORTATION
Co lumbu s, Oh1o
Apnl9, 1982
Con tra ct Sa les Lega I
Copy No 82 400
UN IT P R ICE
C0 NT RAcT
Scaled proposal5 wr ll be
re ce1ved at th e off 1ce of the
D1rector of the Oh 1o De par
tm en t of Tra nsportat 1on
Colu mbus Oh 1o, untrl 10 oo
AM Otl 1o Standard T•me
Tuesday May 4 19R2 tor
•mprovemen ts 1n
Ath ens Ga tt •a Hoc k•ng,
Me1qs Monroe Morgand..
V1nto n an
Nob i C',
Wash1ngton Count1 es Oh10
on va r1 ous locat tons by ap
ply1ng pa1nt tor center.
tane and edg(' tmes
Paveme nt W1dth
Var•es
Protec t Leng th - 0 00
feet or 0 00 mile
Work Le ngth - Var1ous
fee t or Va r •ous miles
" The da te se for com
plet10n of th1s wor k shall be
as set forth 1n th e b1dd1ng
proposa l! "
Each b•dder shall be
requ1red to frl e w1th h1s b1d
a ce rtlf1 ed c hec k or
cash1er s chec k lor an
am ount eQ uat to f1ve per
cent of h1 s b1d , bu t •n no
even t more thah frfty
thousa nd dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of h1s btd
payable to the D1rector
81dders must app ly , on
the proper forms, for
QUailf1cat•on at teas! ten
days pnor to the date set
for openmg b1ds 1n ac
co rdan ce w1th Chapter 5525
Oh10 Re v•sed Code
Plans and spec •f •cat1ons
are on file 1n th e Depart
ment of Transportation and
the offrce of th e D•stn ct
Deput y D1rec tor
The D1rec tor rese rves
tohe n qht to re1ec t any an d
al t b1ds
DAV ID L WEIR
D I RECTOR
Rev81773

DR. RAY PICKENS

Dr.Pickens
top Rotarian

Ap rd 18 25

MIDDLEPORT - Dr R R
P tckens, prestdent elect for the 198283 year, has been named Rotanan of
the year by the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club
Dr P1ckens was chosen for the
honor because although he had been
a club member for 27 years, he had
never been nom mated for or held an
off•ce because of seerrungly dtsmterest However, 111 1981-82, he was
elected vtce pres1derlt and became
mo!Lvated to become an outstandmg
rotanan H1s attendanae and support at Rotary meetmgs has Illcreased tremendously and he IS servmg a!:i program cha1nnan and, tn
that posJtLOn, has secured and
presented
many
excellent
programs
Two programs have been w1th
loca l emergency med1cal people
g1vmg the club two evemngs of
tramtng and teachmg on CPR
techmques of savmg hves. He staged
the annual fam1Iy p1cmc at h1s home
m Pomeroy w1th swunrrung for
everyone and live entertamment
whtch he provtded
Another htghhght of Dr Ptckens'
programs was an eve mn~ of flymg
over Me1gs County w1th Dr. Ptckens
as ptlot There was a cookout
followmg wtth Dr P1ckens and hts
wtfe, Mary, and a catermg crew
prov1dmg the food
The Mtddleport-Pomeroy Club
sponsored a umque program to
recogmze local football players wtth
Dr Pickens prov1dmg most of the
fmances for the endea vor whtch was
well recetved m the coffilnumty

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~==-PUbliC~~~===NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OFOHlO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh10
April 9, 1982
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 12-401
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of the
D•rector of the Ohro Oep•r·
tment of Transportation
Columbus, Ohio, untll10:00
AM , Ohio Standard T•me,
/

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___ _!!!_b~£ ~!!_~e _
Tuesday, May 4, 1982. for
Improvements 1n
Athens, Galha, Hock.ng,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Nob le,
Vrnton and
Washington Count1es, Oh1o,
on var1ous .,.r:outes and sec
t1ons, by furnrshing, 1n
stall •ng and replacing
ra1sed pavement markers
and replactng pnsmat1c
retro·reflectors
Pavement W•dth
Varies
Pro,ect ·Length - ooo
feet or 0 00 m1le
Work Lenqlh - Various

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Uplof\ _

~ohce

feet or Varrous m11es
"The date set for coril
plet1on of fh1s work shall be
as set forth 1n the b1ddmg
proposal "
Each brdder shall be
requ1red to f1le w1th h1s b1d
a · cert1f1ed check or
cash1er's check for an
amount equal to hve per
cent of his bid, but m no
event more than f•lty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per (ent of his bid,
payable to the Director
B•dders must apply, on
the proper forms. for
._qualification at least ten

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11*-T• fll

Charles HeUer, Keith ADDe, Mr. 111111 Mnl. James L.
OUver and Gavin Plait Manager J. W. Uaoo. Mr.
Oliver Is a · sblft •ratiJ!I eoglaeer at Gavin. Min
Oliver pins to study electrical eogiDeerlllg at Oblo
Northern Unlvenlty. Oblo Power Is a member ol the
AEPSystem.
I

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I
SCHOLARSHIP WINNER - An American Power
(AEP) System Education Award, valued at $3,500, bas
been won by Keith Anne Ollver, a· senior at GaUls
Academy High School. Participating In an awards
ceremony In Caolotl are Oblo Power Co. President

~·

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Notice

days days pnor to the date
set for openmg b1ds 111 ac
cordcmce with Cni'Jpter 552$
Oh10 Rev•sed Codr.
Plilns and speCif1cat1ons
are on file 111 th ~ Depart •
ment of Transportat1on and
the ofttce of the D1stnct'
Deputy D1rector
The D1rector res~rves
the nght to re1ect any and '
all brds
DAVID L WElR •DIRECTOR '
Rev 8 17 73
Apnl18, 25

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh•o
Apnl16, 1982
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No 82 469
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
t PMS OOOSI2171
Sealed proposals wil l be
recerved a t the 0ff1ce of the
D1reclor of th e OhtO Depar
tment of Transportation
Columbus, Oh10, until 10 00
AM , Oh10 Standard Ttme
Tuesday. May 18, 1982. for
1mprovemen ts m
,-, Adams Athens, Brown
allra, H1 ghl and , Hock1ng
ckson, Lawrence, Metgs
Monroe Morgan, Noble
P•ke, Ross, Sc 1oto. Vmton
and Washmgton Countres
Oh10, on va nous locat1ons
by applr•ng retroflect1ve
polye s er pavement
mark1ng mater1al for lines
The Oh10 Department of
Tran spor ta tton
here by
not1f1es all b1dders that •t
will affrrmat•vely rnsure
that 1n any contract en
tered 1nto pursuant to th 1s
advert1sement, m•norrty
business enterprises w1il be
afforded full opportun 1ty to
subm1t b1ds •n response to
th1s 1nv1tat1on and Will nol
be d1scnm1nated aga1nst
on the. grounds of race
color, or nat•onal ong1nai
111 cons1derat1on for an
award
"M1n1mum 'f.I'~Oe r~tP"
for thrs protect have been
predeterm.ned as requ1red
by law and are set forth 1n
the b1d proposal "
" The date set for com
pletron of thrs work shall be
set torth 10 the b1dd1ng
proposal ''
Each b1dder shall be
requ1red to Ide w1th h1s b1d
a certlfted c heck or
cashrer's check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of h1s b1d, but m no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of h1s b1d,
payable to the Director
B1dders must app ly, on
the proper forms, for
qual1f1 cafion at least ten
days prror to th e date set
for open1n~ b1ds 111 ac
cordance wrth Chapter 5525
Oh 10 Rev1sed Code
P lans and spec lf1cat1ons
are on file 1n the Depart
ment of Transportat•on and
the off1ce ot the D1stnct
Deputy Drrector
The 0 1rector reserves
the nght to re tect any and
all b1ds
DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev 8 17 73
Apn t 2S. May 2

"'•

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f -

-~ ~~~- --

lnMemonam

-

~- --c-:-c-7-: --­

Pubhc Sale
Auction
R1ck P ea r so n , Ex ·
penenced AUC TION EER
Esta tes a nt1qu es, farm ,
house hold Lr ce nsed Ohro
WV Buy1ng ant1qu es 304
773 S78S 773 9185

8

&amp;

I

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Va

The Sunday T1m es Sentmei- Pag e- 0 · 3

iunbaJI 1'imes- ientinel

r:===================================.; )

I.

Pomeroy-M•ddleport- GaiiJpohs, Oh1o- Pomt Plea sa nt,

Youth satisfactory after Friday accident

Beat of the Bend

By BOB HOEFLICH
Do let me remmd you that SJgn
up for the annual county A.Jncn Glll
Leg10n base ball tea m play 1s at 2
p m toda y at the

M1ddleport

(MOre Legals on page 0-2)

In memory of Geotte A. f1pton
wllopmedoworApnl14 1973 '
Nme )'firs hne PHStd my loved
Suw:e thtl.otd tailed you'*''
To hvt be,und the sunset
I'll meet ,ou there I pray '
You are not lotptlen lmd one
Nonnll you mr be
As ton aas hie and memory last
We wtll remember thee
Ahlppr home we onte enfOJed
Howsweelthememorystill
Bul dealh hJS left a lonehnm
ThewOfldunnewrhll
Sadty mmed by wilt and IOYtd
ones Junit l1plon Rose J•m
!l.a._ur_'_M_"_I'_"_'t.____......J

...

L E Neat Auct1onee r Se r
v1ce
Estate F a rm
House hold M1sc We sell1t1
L1censed &amp; bonded Oh1o &amp;
WVa 367 7101

3___ Announcef!1ents _
SWEEPER and sew1ng
mach1ne repa1r parts, and
supp t1 es
P1ck up and
delrvery , Dav•s Vac uum
Cleaner, one half mile up
George s Creek Rd
Ca tt
446 0294
F1Sh1ng L1cense on sa le
Come and see our new sh1p
ment of 1982 F1s rng Rod s,
Reels, &amp; Lures Spn ng
Va lley Tr.ad1ng Co, Sprrng
Va lley Plaza , 446 8025
_ ---·--- - -- _ _
Turkey Hunters We have
mouth ca lls, slate box
ca ll s camo gear &amp; de coy s
rn stock Sprmg Val tey
Tradrng Co , Spnng Val tey
Plaza . 446 8025
PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
ProfeSsional Electrolysrs
Center A M A approved,
Doctor referals, by ap·
pomlment onty 304 675 ·
6234
- - - - - - -- - --·CREDIT P.ROBLEMS Obt
a m a Master ca rd or V1sa
No credrt check, Graran
teed, for details. send
SASE to CCC, Box 727 ,
Carrollton, TX 75006
---------4,__ __,G
,_,,-'v"ea,_w=ay!.__

_
ANY PERSON who has
a nyth1ng to g1ve away and
does not otter or att empt to
off er any other thrng tor
sale may place an ad 1n th1S
column There will be no
charge to the advertrser
Part poodle puppy, 8 mas
old To good home, had all
shots Call446 3548

CAS H PAID for clean, late
model used ca rs Smrth
Bu1 ck Pontrac. Ga ll ipOliS,
Oh10 Ca tt 446 2282
Buy1ng Gold , Silv e r
Plat1num, otd co1ns scra p
nng s &amp; Stiv erware Da ily
quot es ava1iabl e Atso
co1n s &amp; co1 n supplies for
sa le
Spr tn g Va ll ey
Tradtng
Spnng Va lley
Pl aza 446 8025 or 446 8026
We pay cas h for late modet
clea n used cars
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson
446 0069
Early An tiQU e countr y fur
n1tur e. cupboards all k1nds
of
ches t s
desks,
stoneware, etc Catl 367 ·
0138

446

GENERAL ElectriC stove,
304 882 3251
good

6
Lost and Found
Lost Fox hound female·
black, wh1te and tan No
col lar Has stnng around
1t's neck Lost m Bald Knob
area 843 3443
Lost near Portland 4 Fox
hounds If found call 843
2354
.

7 •
Yard Sate
S Family Garage &amp; Yard
Sale Typewr1ter &amp; stand,
some furn1ture, household
Items, drapes and clothing
1 112 mrles out 218 on tell
Apn l 25th&amp;26th lOtoS

- ---~--~--

OLD FURNITURE beds,
1ron, brass, or wood K1t·
chen cubbards of at I types
Tables, round or sq uare
Wood rce boxes Old desks
and bookcases W1li buy
co mplete house hold Go ld,
silver, old money, pocket
watches. chams, nngs, and
etc lnd1an Artrfacts of a ll
types Also buymg baseball
ca rds Osby Mart1n 992·
6370

--- - -- -

4 Fam•IY Yard Sale 2025
t.;hatham Ave &amp; 2018 112
Eastern Ave • Gallipolis
Designer 1eans, material, .
brand
name clothes •
g lassware, appliances 10·
2 Tue &amp; Wed

2
In Memoriam
In loving memory of my
husband Robert N. Clark
who pasSed away April 2~,
1980. Nothing can ever take
away tl]e 10'1!8 a heart holds
dear, Fond . memories
I"UIII
1
linger
every
day,
Rorri:
1-·
·~·
•,
a
berancet k~ BOb near. ,
"'
SadlY. .missed by Wife Lola',
and sdn Lar'ry and family.
'·
61 ...tt2-t11t

.DftUEROY
ID!"ARK

BABY SITTER needed m
my home, 41d days a week .
References requrr ed Calt
304 675 26 10 alter 5 00
JOB S overseas B1g money
fa s t Job off er s guaran
teed, 1 716 842 6000 E xf
2843
12
S1tuat1ons Wanted
Need r1d e to Oh10 Un1ver
S1ly !8 00 5 00) Mon F",
Femal e
Ca II 992 3390
Saturdays after 5 p m
-

~-----

Have vacancy 10 my home
for elder ly Ambu lator y
man or woman 7 years ex
pen enc e 667 3402 Tup
perspla1ns,Oh
Tre e tr1mm 1ng
a nd
removal Free eshma tes
992 6040 or 742 2573
- - - -13
- - Insurance
SA NDY AND BE AVER In
surance Co ha s offered
serv1ces for fire rn sur a nce
coverage 1n Ga lh a County
for almost a cen tury
Farm home and perso nal
prope rty coverages a re
available to meet 1n
d1 V1dua1 needs Con tac t
Ray Wedemeye r, age nt
Phone 388 8249

-

15

Cq::)are lf £&gt;
Ve nd 1ng
Bus.ness Ca ll304 773 565 1
Money to L~a_!l_
REFINANCE or purchase
your home 30 year f1 xed
ral e wva &amp; on1o Leader
Mortgage 77 E State Sf
Alhens Oil 592 lOS I

22

23

Proless10nal
Serv1ces
C&amp;L Bookkeep1ng
Bookeep ng &amp; tax serv 1ce
for a ll types of bus1nesses
Caro l Nea t 446 3862
W1ndsh1e ld broken'&gt; Ca ll
Sou th er n Glass Insurance
cla1 ms we lcome Free
mobile se rv•ce available
Ca ll446 LOt I

=:===R!!ill Estate
31
Homes fo r Sale
1972 Concord Mobile Home.
12x65 Call 446 70 15 affer
5 30p m
Sand H1ll Road Po1nl
Pteasant. 3 bed roo ms 111
doub te garage att etec lr1 c
1mmed 1a te oc cupan cy
Phone 304 675 5817
THREE bedr oom
\1 1
bath s
ga ra q e
VA
assumable 10°o toan of
34 000 15 000 down 304
675 1482
3 bedroom house Ca ll1pOI1 S
Ferry 100 X 200 II lot
$7 000 down take over Va
loan at 81• per cent Phone
304 67S 2S83 or 67S 6131

31

Homes fo r Sil le

31
Homes lor Sale
Hou';.c lor sa h.• 111 town
Pr1ccd on 1nspec t•on 3 or 4
bdr f= R 7 b&lt;l tll~ (&lt;1 11 446

Mobile Homes
lor So le
TR I STA l e
MOBIL E
HOMES G~lll•pOitS P nc c
rpdUCPCI
USPd
mo bile
homes CALL 44 6 1571

J1

3 bdr bnck house ~xc
co nd
Ene rgy efi1C1cnt
close fo Holzer C1 ty Sc hool
D• s fr 1cf 10°o 1nter cs 1 1))3
ass umable toan Catl 446
7080 or t, 75 2990
6
r house b,l Hl lu ll
basc mf'n l •n cdy l• m•Ts CLE AN USE D MOBILE
K ESS EL S
Modern home 2 bdr 5 r $27 000 Farm 6 r t10use HOM ES
MO BILE
by owner rully carpcled t)ath ulii•I Y roo m roo t QUA L I TY
well 1nsulated tnrqc tol ce llar 25 I I/ a lr rlCtor HOME SALES 4 Ml
city schoots Call 256 6060 far m CQu 1pmcn t 1~1 r qc WEST GALLI POLIS RT
barn 900 lb tob,l CCO bilSE' 35 PHONE 446 3868
or 446 4006
$35 000 Cal l 614 446 4767 or
7S6 1773
INVE STMENl PROPER
For S.'l!(' 1965 Pren slon
TY for 5alc or rcnl 513 3rd
tr a der doub lf' tra med 3
Av e 3 units ptus 1 brd and 2 Slory Br 1c k, 5 bed roo ms bdr
n~w CMPel &amp; cJr
ba th alt have pr1vate en 2 ba t11s lul l basement 1 ta1ns stove
&amp; rpfrJQE'ra lor
qar IMqc co rner 101
trrtn ce zonP c ommprc-· ·~1 car
1
I&lt;..~I L ht:n l dlJ it_ &amp; Lll&lt;tll~ 2
~
mile
fr
om
co
ltcqe
~
4
5
could be used for bus.ness
se ts of undN p nn1 nq Calt
offi ce 2 un1ts now rented 1 97\ 3
alter 5PM &amp; ns k lor K •m
un1t for rent $150 bcdrm &amp;
379 n8 4
bath $20 per week Se t11n g Beau l1 ful br 1c k &amp; frc1mc 3
pr 1ce $35 000 Call ill IN bedr oom home w1scen1C
V1E' W wood IJu rn 1n g
6 OOPM 1 614 533 3884
U SED MOOILE H O M E
l!repiMe for mal d1n1ng
5767/ 11
ce
ntr
a!
a1r
w/
hca
l
pu
mp
FOR SALE OR RENT 65 Lan scaped
I t'lc rc lot
Gar h etd Ave GatllpOI• s 3 w/
fenc cd .n b a c k ynrd 8x4 . tr aii N 7 bdr IJr
rooms and ba th over
look1 ng Oh1o R1v e r $45 900 t 1°o hn anc. ng n1shed qood co nd Cn ll 446
park1ng beh1nd hou se rent small down pa yme nt Ca ll 9596
$125, sellmg pr1 ce S16 000 446 3766
Call alte r 6 OOPM I 614 S33
1971 R1 11 Cr a ft mob1le
3884
HALF mde out Mills tone home 3 bd roo m a tr co nd
Rd
5 rooms ba lh 31 1 lolal nalural qas front k1 t
For sa le 6 rm &amp; bath 11ouse acres ca tl afl er 6 p m 304 chen pMttally lur n1Sht&gt;d
w1 ttl 6 acres of qr ound S7 6 27 71
991 73 t3&lt;'! ilcr 5
Located 5 mile~ fr om town
Ask1nq $74 900 Crt II 446 31
Mobile Homes
198C W1nso r 14x70 new
7504
! 0 1 Sa le
co nd
delux e k.t c h{' n
l nr ge I1V1n qroo m &amp; ba th 7
5 rm s &amp; bath qas fur For sa le or r(' nl 17x60
nance storm w1ndows on bed room Budd y mobde bdr h1 dde n ul d!l y room
554 10 B1dwe tl , Oh $1 5 500 h O IIll' S t_•l up w!lll 2 or ~ Cit II J7973t 0 ilt! Pr 5
Ca ll 446 1339 or 388 93 57
lo ts q ~1 s heill rur al wa ter
ctose to town lt n~t n c. n q 1980 W1nso r l4x70 new
cond
d!"'lu xE' k1tc hen
2 room s and baTh lull SI7 C av,l lf ab le Phone 44o 1194
tar qe l1v1 nqr oo m &amp; I:Jalh 2
ba sement wllh shower 54 x
111 tot Good v1cw of r1vcr 77 14x 70 Vlll ,1 qc Park bdr h1cfdr n uld ly room
$o ladlemp
836 1 , Ea st Ma n Pomeroy custom bu•ll 3 l:&gt; dr ex tra Catl
•nsulal 1on porc11 carpo rt 1/ .60 lradcr exc el tent
992 6347
Mov1nq oul of st,l iC' Celli condil 10n (c"' ll 446 1557
Furn1 shrcl a1 r cond• t1on('d
1
J bd r oom fam il y room 2 &lt;1 5 91 16
unde rp1nn1nq sc i up on to t
c~tr qarage
new lurni'lce
•n M• ddiC' pOrl
ce ntr al a•r doubl e lo t 949 Mob1 IP home on I 7 c1c re
lo t porch .1wnH1q un
2337
1980 14 x70 LMQC' room 3
derp• nn1 nq WilS I1c r &amp; bdr
cl Od po rct1 added
Leo n Baden arf' c1 4 ycM dryer P I C Call446 4736
$1 3 SOO ownrr wdl ltnance
old 3 bedroom 1 lJt1 ll l ~
w11 t1'!o6 500 down rt nd res t rtt
r c"'n CI1 $4 000
d o wn 1973 for ch moiJ•t r home 8 perce nt 1nl S1lf nq on 7
assume 91, per ce nt loa n lt x70 Ce ntr al a•r 1 bdr
n1 ce acres lhat can bP rE' n
payments $405 pe r man wdl1 den ex cond $7 900 ted rPa so nat)ly 614 985
111 1nclud1ng taxes
1n Citll I 614 /86 S637
4395
suran cc 304 458 1587

Real Estate - General

Real Estate -

Genera!

Law n Mow1ng Sen ve, no
yard to b1g or s mall, house
pamt1ng &amp; roofmg, and
l1ght haulrng Ca ll 446 3159
after6PM I 286 S740
Will care for e lderty man
or woman on ou r farm,
pnvate room , $700 pe r mo
Cat I 446 8163
Lawn matntenance, quality
serv1ce, reasonab le rates
Ca II 245 9283

NOTICE
Lowest

employment
servlees

Need mature reliable man
to 11ve 10 w1th elderly
couple as a compan1on for
husband, who needs some
ass1stance Call 446 2697 or
949 2852

Mamta1nence Mechan1 c
must have expenence as a
lead mechan1c 1n one of the
1ndustnal trades Apply for
pos1t1on at Oh10 Job Ser·
viCe, 45 Ot1ve St. Ga llipolis
on April 28. 29 &amp; 30th, from
8 JOAM to 4 OOPM Star·
Garage Sale Fri Sun 8 to ,• ling rate S6 35 per hr
I
50 Ne11 Ave, GahpoliS

. A complete line of
shrubbery, trees
' and rose bushes.
See • us for the
lowest prices in
town.

Futl or part t1me R N or
LPN for 3 to I I sh ift Catl
Nancy Van Meter 992 6606

Busmess
O_pportun1ty
Bu s1ne ss se llin g out
Patrtot area All types of
tools, wetder mounted on
truck, cu tf1n g equ 1p &amp; etc
Tandem trader s1ngt e al( le
2 12 It tru ck beds Atso
property for sa le and tots
more 1tems For more 1n
lorma t •on ca ll379 2322

WANT tobacco leases for
Mason County only Any --- ~ ~ __ - -- - Mob1le Homes
amounts up to and m· 32
cludmg 12.500 pounds Will _ ~ _ _f_o_r _Sa_ll!_ __ _
pay s 12 per pound for
leases Phone 304 937 2589

4 Fam•IY Yard Sate Apnt
24 25. lOAM 6PM Rodney
Vrllage It Look for s1gns,
un1forms, toys, CB, color
TV, mens &amp; womens
c lothes Everythmg 1n
clud1ng bathroom s1nk

-;-JUST .RECEIVED

AVO N Be a success Sett
Avon where you work or
live Ca ll 742 2755 or collect
614 698 7111

Pnces
Ever
On

11
Help Wanted
Jobs Overseas B1g money
fast Job offers guaranteed
1 716 842 6000 Ext !528

Yard and Garage Sa le 1/2
miles out Bulavil le Road on
nght Look for s1gn Frr ,
Sat &amp; Sun 9lr l ?

Misc. Merchandice

Wan t to ge t out of the
House'&gt; Sell Avon and
make good SSS Meet fri endly peopl e Ca ll 446 3358

Schools In s !ruction
Karate th e utt1mate 1n se lf
defence a ll pr1va te lesso ns,
Ant•que oak turn lur e, Men, women &amp; chr ldren
round tabtes bookcases Instruction thr u black belt
desks, dresse rs, chests, rce Also available Karate
boxes, etc Cal l 446 3759
uniform s puch1ng an d
k1Ck 1ng bags, a nd protec
25 to SO H P outboard motor f1 ve eQUipmen t Jerry
Call 256 6640
Lowery &amp; Assoc 1ates
Karate Stu d 10
14 3
Late model p1 ck up tr ek. Burlington Rd , Jackson,
Oh Ca ll 286 3074
Ca ll446 2222
--- --BEDS IRON , BRASS. old 17
Miscellaneous
furn1ture , gold , sil ver - - -- - - dollars, wood 1Ce boxes, Car penter work, remodl1ng
stone 1ars. anttques, etc, or repa1rs, ceil tng ttle and
Complete
households wall paneling Also pa1n
Wrtte M 0 M1ller. Rt 4 tmg 992 2759
Pomeroy, Oh Or992 7760
18
Wanted to Do
-----~---Go ld , sliver, s ter l1ng , ---------The
Sdk
House (custom
1ewe lry , nngs, old co•ns &amp;
Complete
currency Ed Burket! Bar silk flowers)
ber Shop, M1ddteport 992 br1dal hn e, wedd1ng s, and
all occas•ons Call367 7566
3476
-

3 kittens to g1ve away Call
446 7266 or 446 7620
anytrme

S4

2

-~ -

Lougne cha1r and 2 pc
Early
Amer1can
llvmgroom su•te, Good
cond Call446 1865

FOUR k•llens. to
home. 304 4158 1593

_ ~~!!_ted __!o Buy
WANT TO BUY Old fur
nrturf! and Ant1qu es of a tl
k1nd s call Kenneth Swar n,
446 3159 and 256 1967 m the
even1ngs

9

Help Wanted

-~- -

Beagle and her pup ca ll
367 7743
Cat and k•ttens Call
8329

Auct1on every Fr1 n1 ght at
the Ha rtford Communrty
Ce nter Truckload s of new
merchandiSe every week
Cons 1gmen ts of new and
used merchandi Se a tway s
welcome
R1 cha rd
Reynolds Auctioneer 275
3069

11

446-2342
PHONE 992-2156
675-1333

11

New 14'' Wid-

MOBILE
HOMES
From

$9,995.00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
W1th 2 Locat1on s
Rl 93 North
Jackson, Oh1o
28~ 37S2
or
Corner 2nd &amp; Vtand
Pt Pleasant, w va
675-4424

Help Wanted

SALES SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVE

Th1s pos1tion calls on perspective and extstrng
group accounts Lookmg for an aggress1ve,
motivated and resu1ts-or1ented 1nsurance profes
1
s1onal w1th proven success record 1n group sales
and service, needed m the Athens Dtstrlct cover•
, ing South Central Ohto reg1on. Must have a
Bachelor Degree In Marketmg or equ1va1ent, ex'
perience •n ••tangible safes. Must be licensed In hie,
A~H, and hospital serv1ces or capable of pass10g
state requ.rements and become hcensed. Must
relocillte wethm Athens area or surrounding vicinity.
This pos1llon promises an attrachve compensat1on
package, Including full medical, denial and fife 1n·
~ur•nce, company c.~r, liberal sal•ry. Bonus and
commission. 11 you are qualified for this position
please send your resume to Mr. Harry Burton, Blue
Cross of Central Ohio, Human Resource Dept., 255
E. Main, Columbus, Oh. 43215.
'
1.
An equal opportunity employer. M.F H v

I

.

Opportunlly ts knockm~
If you've heen walltn~ fo r Jus\
the n~hl um e to bu y a home
you're m luck Because Jh c11·
may nevcr be a beucr unw 1o
buv than nt"m
You can be choosy.
Today. th ere's a l&lt;~rw selection
of homes 10 c hoose from Thai
m ea ns vou have a beuer ch~ nct •
of fmdmg the home 1ha1\
perfect for 1011
Tomorrow's prices
will prohably he
higher than today's.
Aftcr years of steadv maeases.
home pnces have begun to le1 cl
of( Competttton among sel lers
to attract buyers LS makmg
homes much more affordable

''""d "'"

h

But p11cf'\
l1k&lt;
IX'gl ll to c l1mh ""' '"' lx foil
ion~

Mortgagr mtcrcst rate;
have declined .
And tdlt"l .llt"' t'\tlllo,\t '1 ,,hu t
sellers ell! 1\ dhng to hdp 1\ llh
ftn.tn&lt;Lll !:( Somc· L&lt;" 111 homt
hliH'fS ·" (' P·" lllg )II ' \ II (II I ~

H.. , , 1111 II H 11 homt
llo'' . Pt ·oplt -to
i~"plt fn 1.111&lt; 111g I h ,ll , "Ill"
Lht " JJti htlj h lht hll \tl
J x rc t 111 lllH

lllOit g, tgt "

luJ .II l&lt; c· Jill IHHll&lt; 1' tllt1 h!ld
tu ..,t 01 ..,t cond mon g. 1gt" , \It 1
gc xxl &lt; x.nnp lt 1

The 1mw" ru:(hl'
Pt'oplt '' ho ''. Ill lo 1 Ill It 1t \ I
1,111 '\ IO go do\\ II Ill .!\ l11 HJ 1!J,tl

\\ hJ!t tht \

\\t II \\,111 11\ l!_ !IH

JliiC t oi dH II dr t , Ill\ he Hl"'t
oHHlnmtllll!lll

l ·~~t
time
to buy

up '-,ct .1

RI· :\I I OR ' .1 IIH 11Jix 1 o l
lOLII loullx•.utl ol
Rl . \LTOR~ ' \ RI \I I OR •
c .m ht lp
fmd th t' iHIIll&lt; \Oll

'"li

\\,till ,1(

tht

p!Hl \(lll ( , Ill

&lt;1fford

Southeastern Ohio Board of Realtors
TEAFORD REALTY
BAffiD&amp; FULLER REALTY
CANADAY REALTY
LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
WOOD REALTY, INC.
STlJTFS REAL ESTATE
CLELAND REALTY,INC.

'''!It

()f

[B
REALJOR

�p

The Sunda

37

JS

Mob tl e Home s
lor Sa le

acre SS 000

3 3/ 4 acres

tflt KITftN s I-1AN[)I!(;d:.

Cats a~e very ten-.tor-, ;;I Be
sure -to f'\Jl yov'r "Mi&gt;r't:. o-...'you'r
home 3Y1cl PoS~SSIOY1S, So oUe~- cab
W ll l::l'll&gt;()J -they bel oY1~ -l:.o 'foU

For S&lt;lle 7 lo t s n Memory
G arden $300 Crt l l 446 1391

304 516 111 1
For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trn ler s
turn shed
w nl
Co ll304 773 5651
ALL

TWO ncrt lot s 150 11

fr o ntage

c ty

41

2 bd room hou se tra il er
You pay util1t1es
un
turn1 shed
excep t tabl e
c ha 1rs and cook st ove $200
per month $100 depos1 t

367 0288

water

615 6512

bch nd 84 Lumber c i'lll 30 4

ELECTRIC

IJ

ready to move nto $8995
l0° odown BANK FINAN
(l N G AVAILABLE
304

576 1711
Brs t buy n town on used 12
X 60 Na shua 1976 model n
ex ce llent
co nd t on
2
b edroom
new
c a rpel
th oug hout $6 900
Phone
304 675 44 24

Furntshed mobil e home
$ 165 per mo plu s utll1ttes

SEVE N acr es G r eer Rd
$?0 000 or bes t o tfcr 304
675 2295 or 67 5 1304

$50 deposol 304 675 6512
TWO bed r oom furn1 shed
mobile home $185
per
m onth plus util •t, es $50
depOSi t 304 675 65 12 Cl aSS I
ft ed
ads
TWO tr aders on Hereford

25 ACRES ovcrlook.ng
Kanawha &amp; Oh•o R1vcrs
n ce tor houses or trader
park 30 4 675 1715

Lan e 304 516 1 IOJ
Rentals
44
~~

Hou ses forRent

H ouse 3 bdr
n Rodney
Vll 1qc II $200 nr o Call
l46 4416 'I l ler 7PM

n

CltPPN Mdl 3 bdr
$300
mo S150 dep Call 446 17fl 0

4 I)Cdroom centr al c1 1r and
he~1 1 c ty wa ter I rep l ace

L 1rqe hou sr for rc nt 4 bdr
Ca ll Jaa 9909

un turntshed except
c t1 en
$300 montt
ut 1 1 es
Ref er enc e
dcpos I
r equ1r e d
RC'I c tne 949 2293

SC HULTZ mobile hom e
3 bed r oo m s gas t1 er1 1 par
I ally lurnt SI1 ed
304 675
2901
1969 R tchard son qood con
dilton S3 500 Phone 304

675 ]Ill

41

Sm~111
m odern co un try
home
Specral rat e l or
sen or s Wr te P 0 Box tO
Ga ll poltS Oh 4563 1

TRfiiLER 304675 6999
Farm s l or Sa l e

Farm 76 acres
Good
house barn work sho p
small ch ck en hou se I m1 e
we st of Langs v li e on Sr
124 742 2860 afler 4 p m

3 bdr house on ClnlhJm
Ave
Galltpolts No pets
$16 5 PN mo Call446 36 17
2 bdr house tn R o Grande
$200 per mo Ca I 2&lt;1 5 9325
or 145 536 4

ATTENTION 4-H &amp; FFA
MEMBERS
FALLON BROTHERS CLUB PIG SALE
MAY 1ST AT 8·00 P.M.
Ga lh a Co Jr Fa 1r Ground s
Th1s sale ha s produc e d m a ny champ1on s
a nd reserve champ 1ons 1n the pa s t at
d1fferent fa1r s
For more 1nf ormat10n
P hon e 379 2145

CHURCH AUCTION
Rutland Church of God
MAY 8, 1982
Start1nq At 10 00 AM
The auctton tS to be llc ld at Fort Metg s The pro
ceeds w ill be u sed to help budd a new church
Item s to be auc ttoned 2 Cillves gun s (Stvcra
k nd~J a r condt lt oner ltv nq room su tc dryers
( qo s &amp; elec tr cJ ~ew ng ma chtne c ab nei 3 fuel
o 1 stove&lt;:. lune wllh tank l ,1 woodiJUI ne t and one
doub l(' oven Qa s k ttchen ~ t ovC'
Tr1e c t1Ur c r1 w shr s to extend Is !h a nk s ancf 1p
prec r~ t on to Harv e Ferrell t or the donn! on of t11 s
1 me 1nd 111f'n l
The c hur ch will ill so auct on c onstqnmen ts (per
so na l d C'mSI wtlh the und cr s tandtnq th c1t 15°o of
t11e pr oceeds will qo to the chur c h bu ld nq fund
11 you wou ld l1ke mor e 1n format1o n on co n
!&gt; 1gnment s or If \IOU wou ld like to donate any tf em
to be auc t1 oned pl ease ca ll 741 lObO 7412545 or 991
7434 or 742 2340
A full I 1st of 1lcms t o be aucttoncd w 111 be .wa ii.Jb le
on May 2

Hou ses for- Re nt

42

ktl
plus
and
In

Pomeroy
2 bed r oo m
cw ly paned and ca r
peted Adu lt s pr eferred No
pe t s
Refer e nces
and
de post! requ r ed 992 3054
N cc tw o bd room h ome on

Sp r ng Ave
Pomeroy
Stove and refrtgerator fur
nt shed hook up for washer
and d ryer
Ba ck yard
Sl or m wtndow s well 1n
su1~1 led for ced a tr furn ace
Acl ull s preferr ed n o pets
Srcur ty depos 1 r equ red
Pl1one 992 529?
Furn shed 4 room h ou~e for
r ent m Ractne 949 26 19
Tr(1t1cr n Syrac use Apar t
mc&gt;nt and
h o u se
1n
Pomeroy house n Letart
Fa ll s Apartmen t n New
H Wf' n and Mtd d lcport 992
75 II
E)( rr..-1 ntcc country home
CMPf'led natural
gas 2
tn tt1 s no ch ldrcn no pets
Lac 1tcd 11 Snowv li e 698
4040
2 bd room
un turn ts hcd
L vtng r oom k !c hen
1
bn sement n ce and c lean
So m e c arpel nq No tnstde
pr tc, De pos I rrqtJ red 992

3090
FOUR bed r oom s 2 baths
l ull basement orpo rt Rt
67 nor t h pt"lone 1 6 14 928

43]9
T H REE

$150

bedroom

mon lh

home

30 4 615 34 31

even1 nq s 304 675 3030 davs
47

Mob il e Hom es
for Re nt

FOR RENT Unturntshed 1
bdr
lrclder
atr con
d I toned loca ted 1/ 2 miles
from Ha sp tal Call alte r-

S 30 PM 368 9160
2 bdr trad er furntshed
adult s only Br qwn Trailer
Park 992 332 4

Mobile H om es
for Re nt

3 Bedroom Hou se loca ted
n Pl ant s Sub $250 a man
th plus $100 clepos1t Call
446 285 1

SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1982
10:00 A.M.
Thi S IS th e perso na l prop er t y of th e lilt c Fre da
Wyatt L ocated at 350 2nd Ave m M 1ddl eport Ohto

HOUSEHOLD
Color TV Maqnavox w / re co rd player 4 pc sec
t 1onal 1 vtnCJ room su te 3 pc ~ e droom sutte Sc ar s
Co ld spo l 17 cu It upr ght rlcf'p fr ee7f' q l r~ o;s l op cor
nc r irtbl c telephone st and 3 It ottoman van i y
dresser c hest of drawers ntght stand doub le beds
po le l tght Maytag auto wash er &amp; dryer baby cr tb
c1u to humtdtftcr 2 large round wa l l mtrrors m tSC
sm .'lll nppl ances F test a green dtshes l m 1sc pol s
prln S &amp; dt shes

MI SC
SMM mov P pro,e c tor 22 Bo l ns I Jwn mower par
ct1 ql der scrf'w ta ck 16 It ex len s on liHidN
al um nurn step ladders bnrbecue qrdl t ile cab n~l
q~vdcn tools c,c anner w / d gtl;t l c l oc k c1n d m sc
f tSh nq qeiH

OW N ER - BETTY L VA L E
C &lt;lS h
Po Siii Vl I 0
Diln Sm1th
J tm Car n:"~han
949 1033
949 2708
Not r es pon s1ble for acc1den t s or loss of proper ty

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 1 AT 10.00 A.M.
L occl t to n From R 1o G r a nd e take Rt 325 We st one
mil e Watch for- &lt;l UCfton stgn s
LI STIN G IN PA RT Sm tih etec l nc welder Smtih
culltng lor c11es w th tank s &amp; dolly lawn rn owt' r 1
HP be r1ch gr tnd er tnd uslrt a l sew tng machtne fl oor
fcl n crea m sepa rator 2 sma l l bench grtnder s hand
too ls of .'111 ktnd s mttre box elec rnc fence c harger
step la dder se t house tacks 8 HP F1restone
rotottl ler 100 ft I tn rubber hose Home ltte weed
ea ter ele c t rtc drill s 1'9 saw 8 ft tru ck toppers 2
trader axles wt lh l 1res &amp; wh ee l s 3 whtskey barrels
18 bar sorg hum pan 2 push mowers 7 lawn cha trs
drop leaf ta b le 2 wood kegs medtc tn e cabinet ro l l
cha1n l tnk fence 2 meta l yard ga tes Corntng coun
fer top r ange mang le Ileal lamp tee cr ea m
freezer milk bottles two wheel barrows harness
hames 8 ft atu m1num st ep l ad der 106 2x6 12 ft
long 34 4X4 12ft long New H oll and rak e tongue &amp;
whee l s water1ng trough 2 000 tt of good oak tum
be r w ndow fan tron bed w 1th brass knobs
Nat1onat cash re gtster r ailroad tacks tread le
sew1ng mach1ne ~ron k ettl e 2 cast .ron tea pots 2
cr ea m ca n s stone 1ar s oil lamps blue m ason 1a r s
sa d 1rons c rocks coffee gnnd er copper boil er
boxes of d•shes oak mante l 1ron sktl lets 2 st ore
counter scal es k1tchen cab1 net ca m el back trunk
bachelors chest 2 dresser s 2 farge copper kett les
wt th stands These are the most perf ec t kettl es you
will ever see 6 roll s brnder tw.n e si •P sc r aper plat
form sca les 2 se ts of cuft1 vator s grader blade set
of 2 12 1n turn1ng plows d1 sc 8N 1950 Ford trac torIn near perfect condttt on 1.4 ft a lum1 num farm
gate
Lunch Served
Terms Ca6h
Owners- RIChard &amp; May Green

SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
Keneth Swa.n Auct1oneer

adu lt s
60x l 2 turn shed
only Flatwoods sm a ll ga r
den plot available 992 5834
af tcrSpm

46

Downtown furnt shed up
s t at r s apartm en t
atr
cond $225 plu s ut.t t1es

Ca ll 446 1768
I bedroom turnt shed ap t
992 5.434 992 591.4 Of" 304 882

Apartment no 3 2nd floor
furn1 shed adu lt s on l y no
pet s ret &amp; dep req Cal l

446 0957

bd room garage
woods t ove
r efn gera tor
Sl 35
uttltf tes 514 So 4th
dleport 6143846309
further- mfo

ap t
a nd
p lus
M1d
t or

1 bd room furn1 shed 1n M1d
dl eport Ut1ltt1 es patd 992

Apa rtm en ts 67 5 5548

APARTME NT S
mobofe
hom es
hou ses
Pt
Pleasanf and Ga lli pO li s
614 446 8111 or6 l4 245 9464
Furntshed efi1 C1en cy apar t
ment Potnt Pl easa nt all
uldtttes patd Phone 304

895 ]450
ONE bedroom fu rn 1shed
apar tment
pnvate en
tr ance atr cond tttoned a ll
utdlltes pa1d
ou tsk1rts
Henderson
$235
month

304 615 6730

1 bdr fully furn shed &lt;11r
cond adult s onl y Cal l 446

t;,all "6 2512

Eff tency ap t tn pr tva te
home w 1th pr va te en

411 0

Apartment
comp l ete l y trance 304 615 3110
fum all el ec frt c 3 r &amp;
l arge porch 458 Seco nd TWO bedroom apa rt me nt
Ave
Gal ltpOII S 1 or 2 tn Hend erson phone- 304
adults only S200 per mo
615 1971
p lu s sec unty depos1t Ca ll
446 2236 or 446 258 1

Large gard en
l ocated
down R t 7 Ctly water Call
after 5 446 0571
60 f I mobile home tor renl
co upl e only Call 367 7743
1 bdr pa rt ally fu rn R t
35 Dep &amp; ref r eq Call 446

2 bedroom
unfurn 1shed
garage
ad ults on l y $150
permo Ca ll 446 4336

Space for Rent

COU r-tTRY MOBILE Home
Park Rou te JJ North of
Pomeroy Large lots Ca l l
992 1479

SLEE PING

•n M •ddlepor! Ca ll 992 1101
or 992 23 19 a fter 5PM
PASTURE for rent Phone

304 675 5110

wa~ed t ~R~nt __

47

E lderty couple want to rent
hou se and ga r den tn Me1gs
Co unty 742 3186
Tobacco leases for Mason
Coun t y on l y up to and m
cl ud1ng 12 500 fbs wil l pa y
12 cents per lb f or leases
M L M eadows Rt 1 Box

61 Plony WV 25 158 Phone
304 937 1589

For Le ~e

49

Ga ll• a County aaa lbs
tobac co quota for lease or
trade for hay or co rn Ca ll
304 736 4398

'4ercband ~

Wh i r lpoo l aut o
was her
real n 1ce Si lO GE dryer
exc cond $90 Cal l 446

8181

TEAFORD(H

WOOD REALTY, INC.

ASSOCIATES

Helen Teaford Gordon
and Sue Mur

phy

Upr tqtlt freezer like new
$225 wr1nger washer $65
36 Whir lpoo l gas r ange $95
32
elec tn c r-ange $65
Whirlpool dryer $95 Sea r s
gas d ryer $125 couch $35 3
to choose f rom over sf uf
fed c ha1r $25 love seat S25
black and wh1te TV $65
Skag gs Used App l1 an ces

446 7396
WHI RLPOOL washer &amp;
dryer apa r t m en t s1ze I
yea r old uoo 304 675 7416

51

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
was her s
dryers
refrtgera t ors
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pllan ces Upper R tver Rd
bes1de Stone Crest Motel
446 7398

54

M 1sc McrchandiCe

Exce ls1or D ol Co 636 E
Man Sf Pomeroy Oh to

992 1105
Ftal A ll s model 545 rub
be1 ttre end loade r 2 yard
bu cket
co mplclel\1 over
hau l ed Wt tll new eng ne ex
ce ll ent condi11on
B l a1ne
Ktng Rpley wv 304377

6390
TWIN WOOd Wtndow unll
alum num storm wmdow s
77 wx56 H 304 615 83 1
BABY bed wt l h mattres s
$ 15 Pl.;.ypen $15 104 882

3168
For S'lle 7 ft poot tabl e and
p1ng pong tabl e w1lh ac e
$200 10 H P 36 LUI lawn
trac tor Sears new engtne
&amp; battery exc cond $695

Call 446 11 55

54

Pl as t1 c Se pttc Tanks Sta te
and cou nt y appr oved 1 000
ga l tank pn ce $340 O ther
s1zes tn stock haul m your

56

M 1sc MerchandiCe

RI DING m ow er
8 HP
Ortggs Stati on enc11ne 32
cu t Also AM FM 8 tra ck
li!pe deck 304 675 6676

P•ckup truck Ca ll 614 286
5930 Jackson Oh RO N
EVANS E NTERPRISES

BROWN eg gs $ 85 dozen
Dcltver once a week Rt 1
Jerrtco 304 895 3J95

1975 case ' 450
dozer
tra c tor BOO hr s very good
cond $14900 Ca ll 4.:!64537

615 1210
R65 D l ch w tc h trencher
wtth d1eset engme 614 694

SS

7841

$199 95 I gas gr oll 10 lb
t ank on ro ll ers $59 00 See
Candy Ingles Ingles Fur
nllure 992 2635 or 882 2032

TROYBIL T ROTOT I LLE
RS all model s Dtscount s
lmmed C'l l e
shtpment
Trades co ns dered
Call
703 942 387 1 or
wrll e
H tckory Hil l Nursery Rt 1
Box 390 A F 1Shersv 11le VA
11939

1979 K 1ng 2 hor se trailer
ltkenew Call6 1d 115 5752
JVC So ny s c r 1 o sys tem
304 675 1513

54

MtSC Mcrc handi CE'

St

30 GE se lf c1ean1nq oven
G E fr os t fr ee r efrtQ erat orBo th wt1IIC used only 2
months cxc con d Ca ll4 &lt;~6
5131 e:-. 1 29 E ven nq 446

-~

RIO GRA ND E
Love ly 4 bedroom home d1n 1ng
r oom t replac~ full basement 2 ca r garage ce n
tr a l a1r owner Nil I fin ance w1fh down payment

• 1555
YOUR PRIVATE FARM - 43 acre, attra ct1ve
NODded country sel t1n g for th1 s btq beaut1 ful 4 BR
Co lon1a l hom e on ly 3 years old Ntce v tew
N OS28
N EAT CLEAN a nd co mfort ab le3 bedroom hom e 1n
Vt nt on Owner has ta k en good ca re of propert y so
new ow ner can move nght tnto the house V ill age
wafer good locat ton $53 000 00
WE HAVE 2 r ec rea f1 on propert1 es near Tycoon
La ke I deal for weekend retreat or ret 1reme nt
home Both propert1es have county wate r and sept c
tank En10Y your se l f tn a r et tremen t area w h 1fe Sft l l
work1ng 1

NO LAYOFFS H ERE - Family run grocery &amp;
gasoline bu s1ness Prope rt y ha s a stocked grocery
st or e and 3 bedroom mobile home on 2 89 acres Ad
ded bonus for the bu stness per son w tth a gr ee n
thumb IS a 24x40 gr ee nh ouse
fl 0040
IN TOW N - Lov el y frame home ga r age fenced 1n
tot Good rental proper t y Located at 2129 Ches tnut

St

$28 ODD

NIC E LOT - Se t up tor a mobile home county
water sep lt c ta nk 1 acre
15 SOO

2 3 ACRES Wllhtn the c tt y of Ga llipOli S Situ ated
along 51 Rt 7 among other commerc ta l propert1 es

Evenmgs Call
Patnc1a Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Nella Sm1th, Assoc. 388-8649
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
John Fuller, Realtor, 446-43~1

Pnce $30 000 00
2AC RESon Keys toneRd nearVtnton $300000
MOBILE HOM E Situ ated along F loyd C l ark Rd
near Porter $35 000 00
Wood Realty Inc
l2 Locu st St Ga f\ipolts

446 1066

HUNTINGTON TOWNSH I P
176
acres m / 1 vacant land fr onts on Rae
coon Creek &amp; the Tom G len Rd App rox
31 t1l lab le &amp; the balance woode d Under
$400 per acre
BEST BUY IN TOWN - Styl• sh 1 story
hom e was built tn 1894 and mus t be seen
to appr ec 1ate Large open toyer and
st a 1rway LR d1n1ng rm parlor com
pletely equtpped m odern k ttchen 4
BR s 2'11 bath s new Stdtng garage
near sc hoo l s shopp tng et c
RODNEY CORA ROAD - Approx 24
acres wood land located 3 m1 from
Rodn ey
cou nt y water availab l e
$11 000
OWNER FINANCING AVA ILABL E 20% down - Camps tt es 1n th e Wav ne
Na t10n a 1 Forest 5 toe acre tr uc ts wood
ed land good hunt1 ng Pn ces star! at
$3500
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Reslrocted
buil d1 ng lot 1 22 ac r e n ce wooded se t
ftng c tt y sc hoo l s $5 900
GAS ST ATION &amp; GARAGE - ll l It
front on St ate Rou te 554 corne r lot
over 3100 sq ft 5 bays presen tl y used
for auto trac tor &amp; f arm equtpmenf
repa1rs part1al f1nanctng ava ilabl e

Real Ettete - General

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - lOB acres m/ 1
located south of Merce r v ill e Appr ox 20
A ltll ab fe balance wood s lob ba se
Owner s w•ll he lp f1 nance

POODL E

5200 PER ACRE - Gr ee nft eld Town
sh 1p 84 ac r es M L approx 10 A bot
tom 35A wooded 35A str1pped sm a l l
creek
exce ll ent hunttn g
T OTAL

•

PRICE $16 BOO

Real Estate - General

pup s

n

o.

c

lh'

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS Hobsller h
Br ~f!r

OIFICE 1411003

•
LOCATED
ee l le t L shape ran c'h Ltvtng d1n1ng and
de l uxe f am il y room w• th l arge stone heat o
l ato r f1r eplace Natu ra l gas furnac e Cen tr al
a tr cond tt tontng Ctt y wa ter Let us show you
more
11 941
HA STE 1 ( No lim e to Waste) - Com e see
tht s r anch w1 th 3 bedroom s n1 ce s1ze d1mng
k1t chen co mbm ed bath ?nd 1 ca r garage
Ma nt enance tree s1d1ng and all of th1 S 1n th e
$30 s ' A rea l va lu e t or YO U 1
11982
HOM E PLUS - Doubl e wllh one s• de rented
2 bedrooms k1lchen f1v1ng r oom Tlh baths
one s•d e 1 bedroom llvmg room k1t chen
b ath oth er s1de H as been re mode led Owner
w ill hel p f 1nanC tll,g In town l ocaHo n
" 923

V• ll age of

R to

Grande Two story house .a nd base m ent Now
be1ng used as three apa rtment rental Can be
r es tor ed t o a fam1 ly dwellmg Ha s c tty
water natural gas Shown by appo1ntment •

GREAT LOCATION - GREAT VALUE IS ol
fered by tht s nea t n clean bt leve l home wtth 3
bedrooms 21h baths fireplace 1n living room
2 car garage and mu ch more would posstbly
constder land contract to qualttt ed buyer Call
now
N952
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Good relurn
on 1nvestment 2 mobtle homes rented for
$175 00 each unfurnished One modern 5 room
house, woodburner new refr1gerator other
appliances Close to Holzer M ed1cal Center
county water Callfor derails
N9R

NEWLIITING - 26acrefarm Sroomhou se
bath and enclosed porch pleasa nt sett1ng
w 1t h trees and large yard 7 acres of woods
the rest 1S t 1llable and pasture 1165 lbs tobac
co base Pnc ed for qutck sa le $24 900
N996

FOR SALE OR TRADE MODERN HOME
FOR FARM - SpaciOUS 4 bedroom '2 1! 1 bath
2 story hom e on 11!1 acres Bea ut1ful family
room w tth ftreplace forma l dt n tng full
base ment 2 ca r gar age &amp; much more a ll
loca t ed on bl ack l op road
W997

MEIGS COUNTY - Ptcture perfect IS tht s ACRE AGE - 2 20 tot a l acres loca ted 2 m1 1es
w ell ma1nta•ned 30 acre farm large barn from Vtnton Land 1s rolllnq a nd part wooded
Wor-k shed corn cnbs storage bU1 Id1ngs All Rural water run s across property A sk tng
butld•ngs ha ve bee n freshly pa 1nted Large 5 proce $4 500
w963
b edroom
modern
hom e
F1 r e pla ce
Ba se m en t G1ve a ca ll today
11926

A LOT FOR YOUR MONEY -

That s

what you get w•th th1 S l1 ke new bnck
rancher 3 BR s 1'11 baths 16x2 71amll y
rm w1th hea talator f 1rep lace 14x20 L R
eq u1 pped k ttchen
Wtfh WB stove
double garage w 1th au to opene r cent
a1r cent vacuum farge fl at l ot &amp; mu c h
more Loca ted 1n Rod ney Ca ll Ranny
Blackburn for a per sona l a ppo~ntment

446 / UI I

~f'

H~ ~IOfl

(

,., .

W.ll~r~

A \\0(
ABO!

U6

~

40 I

II

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JH \1 6

[H

TOWN SHIP

-

60

acres

2112 lois located •n the
Sewer- and water
avai lable Close to church sc hooland6tores
RIO GRANDE -

Vdlage of R1o Grande

, 0 .. ..,

LEVEl 2 ACRE LOT - Ready to move on
Has electrld, drilled well submersible pump,
ACREAGE - Located on Rt 35 near Rodney, rural water on lot New septtc tank, r 1ch land
16 acres, more or less Wooded acreage $3,500 down, 12% A P R , 10 year loan, to be
"
999
Beaut1ful place to bulld your new home N968 paid off'" 3 yrs S P $10,000

--

*

JUSTLI STE0- 0wn crrnu &lt;-.1Sf' ll N cc
4 bedr oom rc1nch ncM tow n 1 \\n sh
Elem SCI100I nreil Ha ~ 1 7 1)&lt;'1111 deluxe
ktlchen full b.1semen l filmtly r 00111
f trep ln ce &amp; qarcl(lf' N 1t llcl S h1 fll

$44 000

I
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MARTIN ORt VE- JU ST LI S TI::.D
Lovely brt ck hom e ovcrlook tnq Rt 35
near H M C 3 bedr oo m s 1 , bil th s l ull
ba sement tam l y r oom w / woodburnu
w1fe appr ovcd k1tchen n11 qas cnn t
a1 r over s1ze d 1 ca r g'lraq e &amp; over 11
acre tn a qual tty ne tqhbortwod Prtccd

t o se ll SS9 900
GALLIA CO UNTY &gt; NICEST ON
TODAY S MARKET
ln;e no t seen
a n cer 11 omc or 'l bf' tc r Sl II nq n ?3
years of se lltnQ r e'l l es t r~ t e Th s out
standtng bn ck tncludes 4 bedrooms
o ne of thr. very n1CPSI ktlchens
beauttlul l tbrary fornH I d tn nq 2 lull &amp;
2 half bnth s I replac r 3 cnr q=!ra qe
f r)t Shed basemen t and 1 lovely acres
w tt h a pond sma ll or c hard 1nd sca t
tered tr ees The cons tru c tton s ou t
s tandtng and ha s had exce ll ent c~1r e
Only 41 1 miles fr om tow n neclr H M C
For mor e detail s call I kf' W scm ~n

MOBIL E &amp; 15 ACRES - Very attrac
tt ve se t! nq 1 m lc we s t of Tllurman
11 2x65 K trkw ood mob le hom e Th e 15
acres mc tu de 2 barn s stock ed pond
some fences and som e n1ce &lt;:. ltd dL
tr ees Mu st see to nppr ec ta le $28 900
P osstble loan assumplt on

I
I

Bt 1 % AS SUMPTION - V ery a llrac t tve

PRICE REDUC TI ON
Wa s $52 000
N ow $38 500 9 room 2 story o n 1 7 nc
on the bank of th e Oil o Rve r AI
tr ac ti ve olde r home Owne r mu~t se ll
now to sell le esta te Would co n ~ td er
helpmg w / ftnanc tng

•ng rm , equ1pped kttchen I'll baths
laundry qualtty ca rpet cent a1r &amp; an
overstzed 2 car garage Located on
35 West &amp; shown by appo1ntmen1

us

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General

JUST LI ST ED - 63 1 KR I ST I DR IVE

Owner mu s t se ll th s mDS.i el-f~ roc~
br ck oH R I 35 Inc lude s 3 qoocl s 1ed
tJedr ooms fnm l y r oo m firepl ace wile
'lpproved C'QUtpped kd cl1en ? IJn t hs
nnd nenrly 1500 sq II of ltvtng Tr ied
Also nc lu des 1 car qnrage &amp; IMQe lan
dsca oed yarct Posstble 9°o

Y~J 9

• Wllln T Leadingham Realtor Ph Hom t' 446
• Phyll tsLoveday Phone 446 2230
• Joan Boggs Phone 446 3294

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

F IN D YOU I&lt; ROOTS
(Edn LoiAv l il1biL !
T llf' j.Jl rh t I
1 I hr c k
11omr 1C. n nh l 11f'r
n
NorThup lllCI II"' l l 1r 1 '-. 3
bcctroon . .,
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r o
Sf)lC ous I v n
1n1o1n
r y kT
(t1fll
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(I Jr lH
p'II IO plu&lt;, 11lU(II 1!1 01
c~1 1 1
now
HHI 1 1 uo.,
mlio. f'
you r (II 'lrll
u 51?
cO ml rrut

M F I G S COUN TY
PON IJ H rOO Ill 14 nH ( I o
11mbc 1ptl l 11 1 1 /5 l C1 111
l. r l"'l l l lr v V\1 I V 7 1 ~ 7 I l
l 1rq
IJ oc 1&lt;I u r

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W f lL F3Uil T 1\NOCOlY
) or J

f)t tl r oom~ IJJ 111 I 1r !
s put r! l or r!l Cf' nr &lt;., w
(l l 1q r cn 1 tJ 11 1ncl ( 11
( 1b 1 ( tc, F r ot 1 tn c!
nnd n 'lf Hl f' v. It
4
l(r
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Sc ll oo l c; Pr (UI n " ' m !I r
cJr!l tlc, on 11 H r l1 1nn tHI 11011

WH /\ I fl V I F \IV
Onnd n w

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lA H .£ f I HO M !

so '
l l t l(j
11 x?O 1~

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0

•••

OHIO RIVER VIEW - A pprox 8 acres
wooded land n1 ce bulld1ng s•t e county
wa ter loca ted on Rout e 7 appr ox 5 m1
south of town $6 500
AFFORDABLE FARM - 914% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - N1c e re m odeled 6 rm
&amp; ba th home WB f1rep tace stove
r etn g ce ll ar house 3 sheds 50 ac r es
m / 1 appr ox 15 A c lea r ed &amp; bal ance
wooded Lo~ ted near Eureka 1n th e
c tt y sc hoo l dts t 538 900

PLUS QUALITY should

I

Rea l Estate

n q &lt;.., p

h ome w t h exce l en! ftnan c nq tcrm c; 3
or 4 bed room lr1 level locnt ed off Rl 35
Ha s ]1 7 ba t hs woodburnf' r
dtn tnq
r oorr equtpped kti chcn 2 c c&gt;r qaraqe &amp;
ce ntral atr $59 500

LOCATION

I
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RIO GRANDE AREA - R•o Ce nter
po1nt Rd (Cherry R1dge) appr ox 75
acres wood l and fr onts o"' 2 rd s count y
wa ter ava il ab le Owner may help
f 1nance Pn ced to se ll at $400 per ac r e

descnbe th1 s lovely 3 BR bn c k ranch
Spec1al fealures are a large LR &amp; dm

Low down p;'jym en t 'lnd pilymrntc; un
ctcr $320 mo on lh tS l2°o mqt c1Ssu mp
t on RC'decor 1trd 4 hrr1room home n
Was il nqton E ll m ond Gallin/\ c 1d l my
Sct10ol D &lt;; tr ct H l S full bl srmcnl
f 1 , 1y r oom rqu pprd k tct1rn $35 600

J

BU ILDING OR MOB IL E HOM E SIT E
- Approx 511J ac r es located on t he
Graham School Rd co wa fer ove r 300
It rd frontaqe Green Gr ade Sc hool &amp;
Ga ll1 a Academy H1 gh Sc hoo l $ 10 900

3 ACRES - Rea dy lo set your mobde home
TOBACCO AND HAY FARM - Best r eturn on 2 sept1c tanks c1ty water sm a ll qarage
from your 1nves tment of any farm t know of and loca ted •nStde vmton c 1ty llm•ts Pnced
w967
for sa le It also mcludes woods and pasture 56 at $4 000
acres $22 500 4 000 lbs tobacco base t~rs t
LOOKING FOR ACREAG E&gt; 7 ac r es of
year
w946 rolling l and Barn Tobacco base Rural
GOOD FARM - Mercerv1lle area modern 2 water Se pt1 c tank Pnc ed to se ll
/1983
or 3 bedroom house 2 barns, approx I BOO lbs
tobacco base 25 t1llable acres some ol the COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1 acre more
best Fences are good S6 acres pasture 10 or less on Upper Route 7 Property runs to
acres woods L et us show you thts farm /1964 nver Ftnancmg avatlable Just listed can
!oday don tle!lhiSone gel away
W925
THIS ONE YOU SHOULD SEE - 70 acre
modern daory farm Well constructed block
bulldtng Rural water farm pond concrete
watering trough Tobacco base Green Twp
$50 000
#915

S42 600 - Buys lh s ) IJcctr oom ma n t
fr ee (alum Std nqJ r nncl1 w 111 i'l fu l l
ba sem en ! 111 c tly school d st Ownpr &lt;:,
ha v e t r.1n 'S i rrrf'd 1nrl n us1 Sf' ll now
tmmr dt'II C p o s ~c so:. on 1Qu ppf' cl k t
c hen cnr 'IW' 1)&lt;'1'&gt;1 rn1 nt co ul rl f' 'l &lt;:, ty bl
In shed &amp; n Cl &lt;:, nd y&lt;l r (l 3 1 If'.., rn 1
town

TWO MIL ES OUT STATE ROUT E saa

about 12 A til l ab le ba l ance tn t tlliber
s ty li sh older 7 rm home w1th tots of
poss•b lft fl eS barn outbuil dings Front s
on St at e Rd Ca ll f or mor e 1ntormat•on

J

ii HI

I 01 )

Mu •:.t C 11

AK C

IIIJI.IOR

- Remode l ed home tnc ludes 6 rms
and bath
ca r port
stove
refng
d ishwa sher almos t 2 acres of l and and
pr ced for qu ck sa le

PERRY

ROOM TO ROAM - Th os love l y brick
ranch offers lots of good fl v 1ng for your
grow tng f a mtly J BR s 211J ba th s l arge
k1tchen &amp; LR fat m a l dtmng rm
2
ftreplaces wood burnm g stov e cent
a1r garage full base m en t w1t h fa mil y
rm bar &amp; l aundr y Located on appr ox
2 acres on St ate Rou t e 554 between Por
l er &amp; Eno Pr ced to se ll at $59 500

I

f)O

Ot

H r tt t r
n

895 3958

PHONE 446-3643

STYL E
E LEGANC E
A WAY OF
LI FE - Ftrst t me on the mnrket for
th s I k e new co ntemporary 3 or 4
BR s 2 baths large open LR wtlh
llrepla ce &amp; bea med ce 111ngs kt tchen
tnc l udes ranqe OW &amp; r cfnq
full
basement wrap around deck cedar
Sid ng
12x24 above groun d pool
garage barn &amp; 10 acres near Eureka
Ctty schoo ls

GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 11 2 ac re farm has fran
tag e on State Route 588 Fa 1rfle ld Cen
t enary Road &amp; Vanco Fa1rt• eld Rd Ex
cel lent lor tar m1ng or deve lopment
O lder 5 rm &amp; bath ! arm hom e barn &amp;
s do 1ncluded Owners will cons1der
se ll.ng sm all er tra c ts of shor t term
ftnanc tng Ca ll f or more tn formatton

'1 lit

rcq stcred No Cl1 r cks 304

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

YET CONVEN,I ENT

LOVELY BR ICK &amp; FRAME RAN
CHER plus 76 ACRES of land •n
Ches h1re Town sh1p offers lot s of good
ftv1 ng for your grow1 ng f amily Home 1S
1ust ltke new w1 t h 1438 sq fl of..ltvtng
area plu s an a tta ched garage
2
spac 1ous 8 R s 2 bath s 8x27 L R 10x24
k !che n Wtlh ref r tg dt sp OW doubl e
ove n &amp; range washe r &amp; dr yer stay s tn
la undry L an d 1S mos tl y r ol lmg pasture
land With appro x 25 ac r es wooded Ca l l
tor appo1ntment

r o r~'llf

r ur

Real Estate - Ge neral

Great film ly home wtth 3 BR 2 bat hs
a r ge
15x27 LR w llh gas fir ep lace
modern kt tchen wllh ran ge
se ll
c lean ng oven OW and dtsp lnundry
rm wllh was her and dryer part base
men! l arge cove r ed pat 10 garagp and
over 6 acres of land at the edge of town

START RA I SING &amp; GRAZ IN G 132
acre pasture farm mostly ro llin g &amp; hll
ly grassland wtth approx 10 A wooded
l ofs of spnng s 11 , story hom e has .4
rms &amp; ba th large ba rn tobacco base
fronts on 3 roads tn Walnut Townsh1p

~9

Bernnrd puppt{ s /\KC

-----------·
WISEMAN I

COUNTRY

1531

$75 00 985 3867

6171

STROUT®REALTV Inc.

MAGNIFIC E NT CUSTOM HOM E - 5
yr old spftt leve l features 4 or 5 BRs 3
baths 30 It LR 2 t am ly rms 2 wood
burn1ng f1replaces lar ge k ttc hen and
d1nm g area 2 car garage one ol t he
county s n1ces t pool s ( 20x50) and a truly
prof eSSIOnal l andscaped l ot Located on
Debby Drtve Owner sa ys se l l so call
'Rann y B l ackburn f or a personal
show1ng You II be p leased you dtd

LlJWf ry Or q Hl J ~ f 1 tr
&lt;IS l oo l PPfiiiS I r 11 l
II mpo ( 1'&gt;'&gt; 1 Il l
r1
S/ SO c II Jfl I P/1.
IS

BRIARPATCH K [ N NE L ~
Oo 1rd t1Hl nn d qrnom •nq
f KC
Go r don
'&gt; f'IIN
I n(ll sl1 Cock I
Sp 1n r I'&gt;
( 11 3R8 9790

MARLBORO I 1 .., 11 r p
qood c ond I on 'b 7S Pt o l r
J0&lt;1 675 3510

mo

M ISC Merchand 1Ce

MUSIC 1
ln strunlt nl

~7

DRI\ GO NWYN D
CAT
I E RY
KE NN E L IIKC
C how
puppte S
CFA
Hmalw'ln Pcr c; 1~11 mel
S amcse k ll cr s
NPw
J 'l m cse k t ens C til 4 16
3844 niter 1 p m

In

POODLE GROOMI NG
C.1ll Judy T 'lylor n l 367
54

Pet s for S.1 1e

S/

Pels lor Sel l e

56

Sea rs ndtn g mower 7 hp
26• cut $300 Bo l en 650 tr ac
mower
elec tn c
tor 32 •
start new m otor $300 949

1066

Bu ild1n g Supp llto s

ButldtnQ ma lcr lc11S bloc k
brt ck sewer p p..:s wtn
dows ltnlct s etc (ICJudt
w n tcrs Rto Gr nnd e 0
Call245 5121

10 000 bt u Gtbson AC full
warrenty on ly 1 year old

T1mes Sc nt,n ei - Paqe- 0 5

HILLCR ES f K f NNE L
Board ng ~11 1 br cc (1&lt;, c lr 1n
11door ou l cloor f ile d 1 es
fl so AKC R~q
DOI)U
t1'Jns r'l I4Mi /79 5

BABY furnllur c phonc 304

Real Estate - General

THE SETT ING I S SUPERB
Beaut1ful 1 B ac r e wooded l ot on th e 0 J
Wh1te Rd 311ft fr onta ge 11x65 2 BR
mobil e home w1 th expando Pnced to
se ll a! $12 900

PROPERTY -

Mt sc M erchand1c e

OFFICE 446-7013

L OW ER RIVER ROAD Nt ce ranch With 3
bedrooms firepla ce full base m ent w 1fh garage
owner Wil l rent or ftn a n ~e w1t h down payment
fi 16"S

Real Estate - General

RENTAL

54

Hou se hold Good s

HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $700
PER MONTH.

Mobil e Home 2 bedroom
f urntshed
all e tec trtc
washer dryer hookup $175
mon thly plu s elec lr iC tty

N EW LI ST IN G
bedroom 1r c1m e home on
S! Route 124 Ex tra
qood loc al on
1 en
c losed porchf'S Stl s on
I
1cres great qardcn
spot Some furntshtngs
tnc luded Ask tnq on ly
$15 000 00
N EW LI STIN G - Far m
33 acres w 111 love ly 1
yr old home Tt1e lar qe
spactous room s tnc lude
3 bedrooms ? lul l bnths
f .'lm il y room laundry
I1 V1nq room and dream
ktt chen 2 car gMage
lh tS f arm 1S mos tl y
pastur e and loca ted on
hard top ro ad
Se l lmg
pnce 1S $69 500 00 More
l and IS negoti ab le
NEW LISTING - On St
Rou te 338 1n An f1QU1f y 2
bedroom fr ame home
w•th basemen t
New
w1nng and dnll ed we ll
One car garage Wont
las t long al $11 500 00
Ca ll today
PRICE REOUCEO Th1s house ts an extra
good buy 1' ' 3 bed room
total electnc l'h baths
w 1th country sett.ng
Owner want s to leave
st ate Look at th1s one
today Makes an ex
ce 11 ent starter home at
an affordable pn ce of
onl y S2a 000 oo
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone 742 3171
Velma Ntc,msky. A ssoc
Phone 742 3092

SWAI N
AUC TI ON FURNITUR E &amp;
PAWN SH OP 62 Olive St
Ga ll•poll s New sofa bed s
$250 used sofa beds $100
r ec ltner s $80 bunK beds
$100
bunk 1e mattresses
$40 maple roc kers $49
maple d tnett se ts from S125
to $175 bedroom su ttes
$150 3 pc ll vmg r-oom
SU fes $199 2 pc IIVtng
room su1t es $140 love sea ts
$70 ow l l amps $25 rtng er
was he r s
$75
dryers
several
refr1gerators
Uf1 l1 ty
cab1net s
mechantc s tools
beds
Sli ve r stone TV s wood
burner s stero s and lots
mor e Open l Oam to 5pm
446 3159

The Su nd a

Va

Real Ettate - General

THREE
2 bedroom
trail er s one a t Ashton
Upl'lndRoad $150 month
pfu s depostt and u l tllltes
Pt1011e 304 675 4088

304 516 2441

' Ho~ se~old Goods

"~

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446 4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Assoc1ate 446·3408

Housing
Headquarters

TWO
bedroom
un
furnt stled Ont bedr oo m ef
ft c tenc ) 304 675 2772

LAY NE S FURN I TURE
Sof a
cha 1r rocker
ot
taman 3 ta bles $500 Sol a
cha r a nd loveseat $275
Sof as and c ha~r s priCed
fr om S2 65 to $195 Tabl es
$38 and up to $109 Htde a
beds $340 queen s•z e $380
Rec loners $175 to $295
Lamps lrom $16 lo $65 5
pc d1nettes from $79 to
$385 7 pc $169 and up
Wood table w1th 4 cha ~r s
$2 19 up to $495 Desk SilO
Hutches $300 and $375
mapl e or
p1ne f1n1 sh
Bedroom su 1tes
Bassett
Cherry S795
Bunk bed
co mpl ete w 1th mattresses
$250 and up lo $350 Cap
ta 1n s beds $275 comp l ete
Baby beds $99 Mal!resses
or box sprmgs lul l or tw 1n
S5a
lorm S68 and S7a
Queen set s $195 4 dr
chests $42 Bed frames
S10 and $15 10 gun Gun
ca btn ets
$350
dm ette
cha1r s S20 and S25 Gas or
elec tn c ra nges $295 Or
thoped• c super f1rm $95
baby matresses $25 &amp; $35
bed fr ames $20 $25 &amp; SJO
Used F urntfur e bookcase
5 pc dtnett se t 3 L1vmg
room su tte Ranges a nd
TV s 3 m 11es out Bulavtlt e
Rd Open 9am to 7pm Man
thru Fr1 9am to5pm Sa t
4460322

51

w

Pomeroy

446-1066

216E 2nd St

N EW LISTING
2
houses tn Ra c tne on Rt
124 One has 9 r ooms 2
bil lh s qood carpe l tnq
natural gas furn ace 2nd
4 rooms biilh and larg e
l o t Both only $37 500
COU N T RY HOM E
N tc e loca l Jon near chur
c t1 and post off ce Ha s 3
bedrooms
modern
bnlh T P water c ar
pcttnq large ea t 1n ktl
che n full ba seme nt and
furnacP
BU SI NESS
Car wash
that tak es I lit e l tme to
run Bu ldtng and land
Good c hance for you tor
only 115 000
N EW LY PAINTED and
o ut
I n s t de
Necess ary repatr s betng
milde
lev el lo t
2
bedrooms bath porch
n cc k tc hcn w H lots of
wood
c ab1nets
and
qarnge Only $16 500
CL EA N AND MODERN
Rea l ntce 8 room
t'lome wtlh 2 f ul l ba th s
format dtntng good ca r
pet1n g fu I basemen t
garagf' nnd 2 apts A ll1n
good repatr $65 000

guaranteed Ca ll 256 1207

ROOMS and
ap t

Real Estate - General

Phone
1 (614) 992 3325

Avacodo
Speedqueen
washer $100 Magl ag 3 tep
dr yer
good cond
$90

li ght hou se keep• ng
Park Centra l Hote l

Real Estate - General

RIJI.IOR

iiouselloidGoOCis-

1982

J I t OlM

4219

VIRGIL B SR

s1

Large tr ail er lots for r ent

3190

3 bdr apt at 105 Court s t
Ga lltpolt s $215 per mo

Teaford

PUBLIC AUCTION

Apar tm ent
for Rent

Deluxe turn apart ce nt
a r &amp; heat 1 or 2 adults
on l y Ca ll 446 0338

Use d 'l bedroom 14 X oo
Mob lc horne 1973 model
we II del ver Pt10nc 304
67 5 4424

Apartm @nt
for Rent

2566
2 bdr furnished mobile
home $185 per mo plus
UftlltleS $50 depOSit 304

I

road

44

Mobtf e HOmeS
for Rent

615 6873 615 3618

WIDE
1
BEDROOM
mob le hom e sc tt ng on ot

JJ

Wnghl

I/ 4

319 1 196

MOB ILE HOM E S MOVFD
L •c cnsed &amp; nsured Call

by Larry

KIT N CARLYLE '"

$11000 5 acn: s at $15 000
Clfy school d• str c t Wdl
fin a nce at l0°o down Call

'.09?

19!il

Lots &amp; Acreage

Improved flat lots

El cona 12x65 M ob •le home
tor sa le Furn• stlcd n good
cond on co unty road I 669

il r

Apnl 25, 1982

T1mes Sentm e l

N EW LI STING -

Owner will llnclnce wllh
pvm t 3 bedroom home w 111 dtn nq
room full l)aseme nl &amp; cn t tn ktlc t1en
Lnnd lavs well cl nd has pond Fro'l l aqe
on Rl 160 sou th ol Porter
NEW BR I CK - 111 AC
Ex ce tle nl
(Onstruct on by owner who C'xpec ted to
ve here the re st of thetr 1 vcs Includes
3 bedroom s I 1m ly room w 111 wood
burrcr heav ly nsulillf'd overs ed 3
c.1r QMaQe Good ne qhborhoocl n Cf'
v tew tn Gree n El ementary $67 500 00
buy s lhts b('auty
218 1ST AVE
One of th e be st 1d
dr esse d horr LS n town Tt1 s tot lily
r enova ted c olon al CtrC'l 1860 hclS 'I
ierr f tc rver v ew and conven en t tor
everythtnQ 3 bedrooms 2 1 bi'llll&lt;:.
tnmdy r oom 7 ltreplnc es tn &lt;; ulatcd
qn s h w he.;ll Cil l l l or more tnlo

SIJ5 000
HOU SE &amp; 5 ACRE S- OLD RT 35
Pre tt y 5 acre !ne t near Rt o Grande
Could be dtv clcd 1nto bu ldtn q lots or
used as crop or pdslut c Inc l ud es 3
bedroom ran ch wtth larqe fireplace
rural water and avntlabl e 7 ou t
bu ldtngs 1n c lu d nq small bMn $39 000

UWNERS MUST SE LL
WILL
LI STE N TO OFFER S
An illfra c t ve
cedar home th at has many qualify
teatures Ande rson w ndow s ex tr a n
sulal10n pa c kage (as mu ch ns 14 tn
ce dtn g)
Arms tr ong Std tng
(30 yr
wnrra nty ) A lso nc l udes a delux e k t
chen wt lh appli ances 3 be9room s 2 full
ba th s d1n1 ng room 24 l1vtn q room
pa tt o co unty sewer and mor e Prtced
a t $42 000 and an x1ous for offer Near
Rodney tn C1 t y Sc hool Dts t

OWNER MOV IN G NEW LI STING - Loan ass umptton
w / app r ox S4 000 down paym en t An at
tra ct tv e 3 bedroom hom e 1n LaSall e C1r
c le Has a de lu xe equ tpped kttchen ntce
s tzed bedrooms garage pat10 &amp; l arge
ya r d A must to see $48 900

OUT OF STATE
Most l ttr- ac ttv e 3
bedroom hom e n n11n l condtfton and
w 1fh1n walk 1ng d1stance of Ctt y sc hoo l s
Inc lu des a large tamlly room wilh
f•rep face 2 spark l1ng baths d1n 1ng
room and a w il e approved ea t 1n ktt
c h en
w tth
r a ng e
dts hwa sh er
r efn gera t or and d1sposa 1 Covered
p at1o tS sc r eened and offers co mplete
pn vacy 2 car garage exce ll en t v 1ew
and per fec t netg hborhood for c h1ldren
640 OE EN I E DR A ttr acttve 4
bedroom b1 level n a very good ne1gh
borhood along Rt 35 Ove r 2 000 sq ft
of li VIng ar ea 1ncludes a l ar ge family
r oo m w /woodb urner 21f1 ba th s equ1p
ped kitchen (toad s of Lab.nets) d1n1ng
room 2 ca r gara ge p lu s 1Bx36 1n
ground poo l 1n pn va te backyaro
Pn ced 10 6d s

2ND AVE &amp; MILL CREEK - IS the
locat•on of th• s r emode led 3 bed room
bnck Inc lu des a full base m ent ( c lea n )
nat gas hea t ca rport fenced ya rd
Only $22 000
LOCATION
LOCATION
LOCATION - Th 1S one tS 111 b locks to
c1ty park Well kepi 3 bedroom home
w•th basement
mode rn
heat •no
system and large ba ck yard 2 car
garage Pefect for any stze family

RI'O GRANDE - 3 or 4 bedroom homL
n ght on ca mpu s Has Jl/1 ba th fa mily
room f~r ep l ace full basement na t gas
heat ga r age plus nearly 12 ac r e Could
be used as re nt al S38 900

A FRAME MOBILE HOME You
have to see th1 S un1que 2 bedroom
mobil e hom e f you r e thtnktn g of
bu y1ng one
Rus t1 c lots of glass
bedroom 10 loft f1replac e 10 l1v1ng room
and on l y $8 000 lmmedtate possesto n
HUME &amp; 7 ACRE~ - NEW Ll 5TING 7 y r old 3 bedroom home w tfh 2 ba th s
Equipped klichen , d1nmg room plu s
30x40 detached garage ( 13 h• g h doors I
and 7 acres w1th nea rly 400 h1ghw ay
I ronI ~ge on RI 553 $45 000
MAPLE DRIVE - Topqu aloty loca!oon
10 Spnng Va ll ey Subdi v A qu ality br1 ck
r anch w1th full basement 3 bedroom s 2
baths
ftre ptac e equ1pped kttc hen
dtn1ng 10x l7 sc r eened porch 2 car
gar age nat gas heat cent atr &amp; large
al!racttvely landscaped yard Owners
anxious to offer

&lt;

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
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I

Sty li IJ C'lu ly I 1r m
I onr
I [\R
J
lnH1o...
q
f 1 n l y r oo 11 w t r f r p tt
n 1 r oom

Y o w w e n t he

set I t or you r:-.riJ M'lk t
Willk nl o Ill&lt;' pntr, nee
homes 1 Ill(' 1r1 ~1
WHATAI1UY
Rl lCiy 1oM r v ? W
101 1- urn slv cl or
ou t or rt 1 r ('tn( 1
Homr on 1pp r n
l Cr 1
111 IO\ 10 '&gt;
fencC' L kf N1 w r' r f 1tl

2 LOTS GREEN ACRE&lt;;;
Lolsrt2l 5 cleNl lk 7S x1 H1
Lo l t~ :IJ VH1'1188 l ronllt
tJy I lA I pt
SCI

~ ~

1

~
n ) ]l

M

uJ] )

~~EACEFULA REA

A hall acre m ort or css w 111 l ru ltree c, plu&lt;., 1 l hr 1
bedr oom r1 01T11 I v nq room k l c nen w Ill bu 1
cab net s ul I 1y room lu I b lSe nent an d O'lr n If'
pnr l 'l ily c onve r ted
to l Cicn \n un!
Slid n o n
wth 'I hc1 I OI 'l l or I n : plr1 Cf' N f' l tn( cl 1 y1r c1
11 l97
( nil f or dc l &lt;lii S.
W0W

1

Look w11 ~1t you c un q( I on 1 IHHI f nn l r 1 t 1 tJt&gt; "'
tere s ! Owner reduct {I ttl p Cf' S/ mo 1nn
r11 x OU S to se ll Til s I r(
I drf
con d 1 onC' cl ho l c h o.. , I 11 1o:,
v '
bu ld nq il ( 111 d WI l(lf
II I
I n
Everyth nq you nee d non pu r( 1 o.. t In r If"' n ol
d t:'.l f IL I
Iill
1 ACRE 2 BEOR O O MCO fT AGI
N cc com torl ..'lbiL I on f' w n , ( I 1r
r
concrete I ron! porc!1 !oh nl l ru I lrt o..
ct1crry plu 11 And peCK 11 111 ~ ~
Vtnes QOOCI Cj'l l dt 11 Iami 111 l1 v I I l
Rural water 7 car qnrc1q1 lu I od I
Base m ent barn i!ppr ox 16 x ? 1

?ACRE S
Wtll111l 1U 11 1 or v C I J t_ U-.Nrii CW l
I P
School Sys t em H as nooku o l or o b L t u t
Rural Water ctec tr tc ancl . ., C'pl f tank n 11 I
pole 20011 tron taq con L&gt;rrtltcttn St.. tlool Rd I
Buildtng St i es Ca l l Now

SPR IN G VA LL EY SUBD IVI SION
vacan t lot s n ce s12e bu let nq lo ts w II "'ll u l
there Lot s zc 101 8 by 171 7 Bf'llrr CIC'I un r w

,

~~6

CIT Y SC HOOLS
3 bed room ranch style home Ea t tn k t! CI1 t n t ull
basement Spac1ou s 11v1ng room Owner m us t sell
Pnced dras tt ca ll y low $?9 900
P 481
OWNER WI LL F I NANCF
Walk tn l o f ormal entrance w l!h OIJt n Slil rc 1._, r 10
th1 s lovely comp le tel y rcdecornlf d hom e l oc ~1 t~ cl n
t he c1 ty Wtfh tn walk1ny dt s l {1~ ... f' to st1opp nq MlcJ
bedrooms 2 full bath s and cha r mtnq tnrq f' k tc11cn
Spac tous lt vtng room Wtlll woodburn 1nq 1 rf'plnc c
Tht s gractou s home has a n'l tura! c1as FA. fucn M•' •
ltk e new t mmed1ate posscsS10n Were w 1 1 nq l or
your call
" 140

REMODELED CO UNT RY HOM E
In OhtO Town shtp set son 7 .1crf'S more ;:- r less ha s
al umtnum StdtnQ 3 bedroom s ~1nd 1Jr1rn Pr red
$2 1 900 See by appom t m ent only
II 473

NEWAODAtL Y

We're Out To Sell The Earth!

�.

. .

Pa
59

The Sund a

Ti m es-Se ntin e l
61

For Sa le or Trade

For Sa le Camera 's and
Case 's I 8 M M Movte. '1
Polaro•d
3
Trtpod .

GRAVLEY

mower ,

wilh

needs

&lt;lO "

mt nor

Pro, ec t or C dl l 997 6154
rtf fer 5 or week ends

A l o t of dtffNent

pans

t or

71

'} yr old pony 51 1n ll1qtl
IMI!er broken 991 7473

L t VQs t ocH

pon y. $100 304 773 5092

tnter.or

PrtlC wtnntnq

perfect 747 3063

Nubt~n

Nnn

POATI
. ....

Round I) OIE's of tl ay for ':&gt; i11f'
C rlll 4&lt;16 4036 or &lt;146 6566

FiJRB=SUJl)ll5

.n Gi!llta Cou nty , 4 yrs old
Qf'OIIe . $71':; 00 (r111 304 !J6

A-l.IY5tDCk _

4398 co llec t

61

Farm Eqti tpm e nt
i' G1drOI •as cow &amp; cni'-'L",
Ci11 1?56 19?7

I set of John DeNc &lt;l bot
tom 16 ' sem• mount pl ows .
I Hillsbor o

l r t r"'IXIC QOOSC'

neck 18' trailer
/56 6534

70010 pony 10r 5rl ll· 6 y r "&gt;
Old (&lt;111756 1578

Crlll 614

Ourlrlt·r hOrSf' QUPid1nq .
1981 -1 H Chomp, on . Con test
D1V1S10n Al')o sm &lt;'lll mM e
WI"&gt; IP rn
pl e~o s ure .
J H
pro1ell S1nCf' 1979 !3oth M f'
qentlc nnd welt lr r11necJ
Ca ll HS 5257

Ford 2 Row Corn
Planter . nev er bern used

N ew

379 2468
John Deere 4 row corn
pla nter . $1150 Cil ii2S6 6205

Req,c;;tered polled hPrf'lord
hprcJ 1 bull , 9 cows . 13
c nlf 's
Poo l e r 's
Polled
HNcl ord 's 9B5 4107

Gr &lt;"'vely r1d1nq t ractor . 17
HP ,
1 Cylinder
W1lh
llydrr~ul1c
l1 ft . 50
1nch
mower and dozer blade
19Bl modPL n('w. $4100 1987
list pr1ce 1S $5750 Outdoor
E qu1pment Sr1le s. Jet Rls
7 &amp; 35 , Gr~llipOII S Ph 446
3670 Wrekday s9 to5 . Sa t 9

Hor se·c;; and c oil s. form
wagon . 8 wk ole Walker
Pups . can be reg,s!Ncd
Arthu r Spen cer . 9B5 JB91

1

71

TRACTOR . J ohn Deere
1010 gas &amp; bru sh hoq Cull
304 67 5 1121 Aller 5 00 . 304

675 1043

Rea l Estate -

74 Co uqar XR7 , e)(C cond.
v ery shMp. $1,500 77 Mon
l eqo, qood runn1n q mo l ar ,

19/9 Ct•cvPtte 4 clr . J spd.
n('w radt,ll5. 40 .000 m1
c x c co nd. $3 ,200 Crlll J46

Fo r -,,llf' or trrl de 1977 O ld s
Cult.=.ss Su pr C' mC' . 160 V B.
A I . rl lr . VGC. $2 ,850 00
((111 388 8769

ctrlt nn 6 c yl . 77 MPG . 7
r on top s. $3 375 C.1ll 7J5
911R
19 Crlcl,\l l iC D 'E icqanc e. A
l &lt;.o ndil ,on. fu ll y IOclded
rrq Qrl S, 27 MPG . 68 .000
fOrlCl mil es. $7,475 Cal! 245
91 tH

N Ew LI STING - Older t nrrn ~~ orne on 10 acre s. 11as
Of' W actd 111QO lllOI r on bf' more I1V1nq Spil C£' Or (')( Ira
1nrOIIl l' rl0(lrlll1(&gt;nl , ) c ar llrHclQC' , barn . r1nd Ot her
nu tbu dchnqc;; Pr ,vn lf· nnd pf'.lCeful OwnN will rw lp
11 nC~nrP qu,1 1d1f'd buyer $7 000 d own ilnd 10°o ,n
t f"'rr~,t on b,l l ,ln C!' 1\sk•n(J $36 .500

RcHir1t'

01 1 Own• •r wdl lwlp

J BEDROOM BR I CK H OME
L 1V11lq r OO il1 ~1dS
woodiJurn,nq f,rrpl rlU'. 111 IJrlOl. !1nrrlwoocJ fl oors ..
wpl l (ons trU l IN! rl n rl trlS UI.li C'CI A"ik1nq S35. 000

Real Estate -

General

Jumbles LYING ERASE BRIDLE CUDDLE
Answe1 ObviO usly not a lly·by-n .ghiTHE EARLY BIRD

8546

General

JNTERST AT 9'/,%
Payments of $350.00

3 BEDROOM HOME
Direct ions: Loca t ed off Rt. 7, 1st r oad lo
the le ft , Town sh ip 289 o ut of Tuppe r s
P la ins , ap pr ox. 1 mil e o n ri g ht .

CARS AND TRUCKS, mosl

Jim O we n &amp; Co . Inc.
REALTOR

Bob &amp; K •tt y landrum
696· 1081
Shery l M lll er - 592 5771
M ildr ed Perry

698-6529

906A East St at e Sl
A !h ens, Oh .
Pt1. 594 ·3543

Real Estate -

7145690241 E&gt;f

direc tory on how IO pur ·
ch ase

Real Estate -

General

446-4782

p .m 304 675 1849

N EW LI ST IN G - IN POMEROY - Two sma ll er
lo ts w 1th a 10')(50' , 1965 mobile hom e. eQUipped kif
ct1en. cou ld be good •n vestment S9.000

Real Eatate -

N EW .LI ST IN G - N EAR POMEROY - 11; story
remode l ed home o n nppro)( 1 ; acre. baseme nt ,
many features Wilnt $35,000

General

Real Estate -

General

er Auct10net •r

tN ~U RANCf

4 17 1 mo

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

General

" Bea utiful, Cus t om
Built Garages "
Ca ll for free siding
es timat es, 949 · 2801 or

VACA NT LAND

949·2860 .

W e hav e sevNil l parce l s

No Sunday Ca ll s
We hnvc sevNnl

FARMS -

BUSINESS
FOR SALE

HOME S - We hnvc Sf&gt;VPrill.
CO UNTRY HOM E entry . $49,000

Garfield Barbequ e
1,000 sq . ft . equipped as
restaurant - tavern . Will
tr an sfer 0 -2 lic en se . Lot
SO x lSO, includes 1100 sq.
ft. hou se suitabl e for
ownfr occupancy or
r ental and r ented 3 RM
furni sh ed hom e.

Real Estate -

We have seve r al
r~ ll

:

today

992-6191
9~9 - 16 6 0

99B692
9n2259

A

lB

'.

245-9375
General

REAlTOR

Real Estate -

I

MINIATURE
GOLF COUR SE
Ravenswood , w . Va.

1

hp11ts M1y IS.

___

Ohio

W

CARPET
BINDING
SERVICE
Small &amp; L a rg e
Carpet Pi e c es Bound
Room Size and Area
Rugs Bound
Carpet In sta llation
Rea sonabte Rates
For more information -

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water-Sewer· Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Rou sh L an e
Cheshire, Oh .

CONTRACTING
backhoe
euava ting
se ptic system s
A water, sewer
&amp; ga s lin es
• dump truck
• lim es tone

tr (1ns terrt·ct c1nd must sell lh1S 3 BR ran ch . Close to
town •n c l uctC'S delu)( e 18)(36 1naround pool Cil ll lor
iln ilppo,ntrncntroday!

3 29 tf c

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs . Experience

eMobife
• water &amp; Gu Lines

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

• Spring Developments

"Small Jobs A
Specialty"

JIM LUCAS
PH.

2 261fc

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
St . Rt . 124 Pomeroy , OH .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992 -7121
J 24 ti c

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R I. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .
Ph . 6 14 - 8~3 - 2591
6 15 tic

CONSTRUCTION

And Hom e Mainfe nance
• Roofing of a ll types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e10 Yrs. ex p erienc e

We sell beautiful things
12 acre estate with a "Dallas" flavor. Rail fence S,sfabTe~ swimming pool,
garage/ workshop surrounded by beautiful level land . Visually exciting brick
home. Sunken gathering room, family room with glassed shelves and fireplace,
elegant formal dining room. Four bedrooms or three plus a study . 2'12 baths. A
kitchen that promises to turn a novice cook into a pro. Nutone work center,
double ovens, dishwasher, range and breakfast booth custom designed by Chan·
dlers. Custom drapes, plush carpet. Attached 2 car garage. Expensive? Yes, but
;mpossible to replace for the asking price.

Custom kitchens and appliances ,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

TOM HOSKINS
Ph . 949· 2160 or 949-1311

OO·tf c

FRYE'S PENNZOIL
Salem St.
Rutland, Oh .
TUES. Ihru SAT.
9 AM. to 10 P.M_
SUN. 10 A.M. to 6 P.M .
Phone 742-9575

· 16 YEARS EXP.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Custom Alarm
Systems

BMR 413FJ
M1n1 farm locn tcd ,u s t off the Ap
Prllcl c tl ,an t11Qhwny ncar Jockson . 31 1 acres m / 1
willl c"'n ol der two BR home, several ou f bUild1ngs
1us! r iqh! tor lc •sur e t•me or lull lime livinq .
SUPER RANCH
move in condition. 3 bedr ooms,
family room, wood burnin g stove. ther mopane w in
dow s, 2 ca r garag e and for Summ er fun , 16'x32'
pool. F enced ba ck yard Loan Assumption Kyger
Creek ar ea . $59,500 .

Racine, Ohio

Tire sales &amp; repairs . gas
&amp; groceries. We now
have new American
made Mopeds in stock .

S39S Plus Tax
4·18-1 mo.

247-3534
Free Estimates

OOtfc

LOAN ASSUMPTION
OWNER SAYS SELL NOW!

ST RT 125 - Farm ::&gt;'"o" t :o· ac r es of n1 ce f la t to
rol .l in g l·a nd . Modern 3 t
I. 1 farm home

S

All types of roof work,
new or repal r gutter and
downspouts, .

FAIRFIELD ACRES - Mru·•ern J bedroom ranch.
Lorqe kitc hen. li ving n S(ll0 1g le car garage.

w,

SUBUReAN TWQ STORY .. . 3 BR, formal dining,
large living .room , super wood deck ... very nice

area tor fam ily . Kyger.Crek Schools. $42,000.

..

bedrooms,
'r~\.lt
n kitc hen, built· in ster eo
syste m , p a tio~ ~ ~~ • 9 doors . L oan ass umption
possible . Mont .. . y payment of $215 . 14 per month
payment! Cen tr al air .

544 THIRD AVE .
You don't want to spend lots on " fi x ing"? Then thi s
lovely older hom e is tor you . Co mpl ete new ki t c hen
&amp; eat area . Formal dining &amp; living r oom . Family
r oo m with woodburner , J bedrooms, n ew viny l
si ding &amp; storm windows. Completely insulated Full
basement . Si ngl e ca r garage.

Enjoy hoi Summer days in

cool comfort . This immaculate r anc h is ready for
Summer . 3 bedrooms, nice formal living room,
equipped eat-in kitchen . Low
mainten a nc e
aluminum siding . Large lawn . Just a f ew m iles
from city . S45,000.

BMR 41"6 -

want a nic e 3 BR ranch style home with

a top of the ground pool , including a possible 8.50%
m ortgage assumption, if so, cal.l now.

BMR 417F - We are offering one of Gallia County's
finest farms. Consisting of 218 acres . This fine farm
is in good produc tion . .40 acres c ropland , eKcellent
pa sture, and lots of buildings . Also a fine old farm
home. Ca ll now for more details.

TWENTY ·SEVEN ACRES - Mostly le.vel, good
producing land. 3 bedroom home has two sun porches, wood 01nd coal burning stove, new furnace,
bath and water system. Alum;num siding. Barn
plus other outbldg. Rural water. Located fust oft Rt.
160. $54,000.
TH.E SMALL FARM you've alweys WBF\ted. Only 8
miles - from town, Kyger Creel&lt; Schools. 2
· bedroomhome, 1 yr.otd furnace, storm 'windows.
Born, other outbldg. Price $32,000,

'

of

Phone 94n29J
or 949-2417

Call Howard
949· 2263
949· 2160
2-2Hic

Pa ss

Ope nmg lead

+2

By Oswa ld Jacoby

a nd Alan Sontag
Master point mfl at ton ts
as hrgh as any today When
Oswald Jacoby became the

Autos for Sale

79

Motor Hom e
&amp; Camp er s

1966 FORD Fairlane, $600 .

304 675 4848 .
1947 FORD Coupe, good
resrorab iP condition. pri ce
neqo tiable, 304 ·675 ·2207.
Truck's for Sa l e

72

1975 Ford F 100 p ic kup,
$800 . Good work tru ck . Cal

388 81 52

1979 Motor home.
mi leage, exce ll ent
d1 fi on . Ca ll 245 5238

low
con

1975 Starcra fl pop up cam
per , s lee ps 8, hea ter. ice
bO)(, sfove, double fu el
tank s. awninq &amp; many (')(
tr ~
I owner . e)(C cond
Pr1ced to sell . Call 446 1641
all er 5 cnll 446 7076

78 Ford PU sll ort bed, 6
cyl . 3 spd ., 21.500 miles.
Call before 2· 30 PM, 446

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U .S. Rt . so Ea st
Guy sville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deale r

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
l·l lf c

CANDLELIGHT INN
PH . 992-9913

Rt. t, Cheshire, Oh .
St. Rt. 7
OPEN 7 DAYS

A WEEK
Open Mon.·Sa t .

12 :00 p.m . to 2:30am .
Sun . 12a . m .- 12 p .m .
Carryout Beer
Available
Bands Every Fri . &amp;
Sat. Night

THIS FRI. &amp; SAT .
LONE WOLF BAND
Coming Ne)(t
Tranzit

.

538,000 -

.

t op.

il.675 .00, VGC
8769.

I

',

ONLy $5,000 DOWN :_ Ba.l ance at 12%, 20 year
term, $220.22 montnly payment. 3 bedroom home on.
2'h lots in 1/lllage 01. (:heshire. 'Home has vii)YI
siding , forced air gas furnace. 2 car garage. $25,000.

==i~:::,r«orwook
-'IIHftbiftlllld

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR
Call Bill Ward
At Ward's Ke111Nrd

1-446-4312

1979 Truck Ram Charge r , 4
4 gr een 1nfer1or , ex
ce llrnt co ndit ion Cont act
M•ke Sargent.
Ci tizen s
N at1onal Bank.P ! P leasan
X

I

74

Motorcycles

19BO Honda CR

250, exc

cond . $1. 100 . Ca ll 388 8659
1980. 250, on or ofl , Ho nda
b•ke w1lh helmet , S800 . Ca ll
256 66 40 or 446 209 4.
For sa le 1977 Vesoa moped
good cond . Call a ft er 6, 446

AND EVERYTHIJtG IN -EN
fH,.tft-IJa 01' , . .• • '

'

'

·,

I

fex lur ed ce dmgs com
mcr c1a l and res,denltal ,
tree es t1 mo tes Call 256

1182
PA INTIN G
i nl er 10r and
(')( t er.or,
plumb1nq.
roofing , so m e remodellnq
?0 yrs exp . Ca ll 388 9652
Marcum
Roof,ng
&amp;
Spouting
30 years ex
per 1ence. spec,ai1Z1n&lt;.J 1n
bud! up r oot Ca ll 388 9857

1980 CX500 Honda, lik e
new, low mileag e . Ca ll614

French
City
Pa 1nting
reside ntial &amp; com m ercial.
interior, ex terio r . paper
h ang in g,
&amp;
t e)( tur ed
ce il 1ngs. Call 367 7784 or

1977 H onda Gold Wing · lOOO,
full dress, low mi leage.

HD

73

SPOR TSTER .

Yamaha 100, 53 Ford tra c
tor 8N wi th end loader, 3
b1cyc l es . Fry e's Tru c k
Au to. Open 9 to 5. Closed
Sunday and Mon day . 741

For

sa le 19 75

Suzuk i

GT

380

motor cyc l e.

Call

985 4422 or 992 7165.
1951

HARLEY

Clav id son ,

1973 Hond a 350, 30H75·
1780
1973 750 HOND A, exce ll ent
condition, S llOO .OO , 304· 67 5·

4848
1979 RM 400 Suzuki dirt
bik e, new p;art s. 304· 773

367 7160 .
C r ea t ive
wood
dC'cks.
press ur ized pine. cedar &amp;
redwood
Free cs timnt e
Ca l1388 9762
Specia l Mar c h and A pril
only . Gene's Deep Sl ea m
Clea n ing . Scotc11 Gau r d
Free es tim ate . 997 6309
RO N'S Television SC'r v .ce .
Special i zi n g in Zen i th and
Motorola , Quazar, an d
hou se ca ll s Phone 576 2398
or 446 2454.
F &amp; K Tr ee Trimm1nq .
stump rem ova l 675 1331

RIN GL ES'S SERV ICE ex
per ,en ced mnson. roofer .
ca rp e nt er,
e l ec tri c ian ,
ge n era l
repa1rs
and
r emod elin g . Phone 304 675

2088 or 675 4560 .

on l y 2 months. li k·e new,

$450 00. 30H75·7416

Wate r we ll s. Commerc1al
and D om es t ic T es t hol es
Pumps Sales and Se rv1cc

30H95 3802 .
75

Boats and
Motors for Sa te

1979 Starc ra ft 15ft. tri hauL
80 HP Mercury , €)(C. cond .,
skiing equipm ent . Cal l 367

0394
For Sale : 1979 St are r aft l8
F T . Fish and Sk i boat, l.tO
hp. Mer cury motor with
power trim and stainless
s t ee l
prop .
Mercury
thruster trolling
motor.
Humm i ngbird d epth finder . Two batteri es. Drive
on trail er with auto· lube
bearings . 7 ti fe ja c kets-4
se ts of water sk i s. S4,500 .

Call992-3083 .

152 Third Ave.
6U -446 -17 16

J

Bill's

Nu -Pnme replacement
wtndows
Storm Windows &amp; doors
Alumrnum &amp; v•nyl
s id1ng
How met Pat1o Covers
Howm et screen rooms
Mobile home awn1ngs
Aluminum uf•ltty
bu1ldings
691 M1ller Onve
446 ·2642
Free Est1milfes

ti c

li e

OS

McCALLA UNION 76

General Haulmg

447 Second Avo .
"44b- 2924"
Comp lete Auto &amp; Truck Center

JO N ES
BOY S WATER
SERV I CE Cr1ll 367 7.t7l nr

367 0591

• "· .• .. •• ol"\\&lt;(1•

• f ....... ~ ,

VVIII hauld1r!ol
nny k c;;,
1nclor
any1t11ng
I'IS.c wdfl
nqil'
axle
dump
tru c k
Recsonablr pr1 ces
C.1ll
Leroy CalcJwcll. 4116 4851

•• !I'""
,.,.

• U• l '"·""'' 1\

"fl

fln,,lvl+ ' l

1

&amp; .... .

• '·' •' I'" 1• P• 1''
\

~• · I

k

..,,,.!I,

I 'V O"I V hHH' Ufl

• 1 ' ' ·"

t'•

1. 11• •

ho b•

• l • l •.••· •(i "'"''" ",,.,,.. ,

OWNER : MIKE McCALLA
Mechanic on Duty : 8 AM . to9 P.M .

L1mes tone hrlU1 Cd l riictor
r1ncl tra il er 15 to 35 ton
l 1m 11 992 5?75 or 74 ? 71.53
JIM S Water Srrv 1rC C.1ll
J1m L.:~ n,er , 304 6/5 7397

SOLUTION

If you neC'cl you r lrn sll
haul ed away . c,o ll Hr1rpcr
304 675 5868 beiWCf'll I PM
nnd 5 P M LFJwn mow£'r
rcp a1red

~ ~ __ _ - - - - - - - AUto Pa-riS-- -·-

6754 5

&amp; Accessories
Tail

ga te

for

73

to

81

Chevrolet PU . Ca ll 2566309.

Auto Repair

STARK 'S t r ee a nd lawn
se r vice, tree fertiliz er wi th
a nnu a l ca r e,
insured .
Phone 304 ·576 ·20 10.
BU IL DIN G &amp; re mobe l ing,
carpentr y, roofing , plum
bing , conc r ete work . 304

675·2440.
Plumbing
~ _H~a !if!_g_

CARTER'S PLUMBING
Aii:D HEATIN G
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446 ·3888 or 446-4477
8~ __ _ _§!_~a ~!!.~JL

Gallipolis Divers ifi ed Con ·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates . Call us tor free
estimates. 446·4440 .

84

Electr;cal
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs,
service . Authorized Singer
Sh~rj&gt;en

Duality Autobody &amp; Paint

Sales &amp; Service

work . Professional custom
paint work vn motorcycles.

Pomeroy. 992-2274.

Scissors.

Fabric

Sliop.

Electrician

licensed

master,
lowest
rates
Camping
around. Phone 304-895-3826.
Equipment
1971 10 FT Sycamore truck · &amp;s- -Generiilia-ulii\9- camper, gas stove. hotwater heater, 2 way Need something hauled
refrigerator, shower &amp; away or something moved?
commode, excellent con- · We'll do it. Call 446-3159 or
dition, $1,000, Phone 304614·286-5740 after 6..
773-5187.

78

M . H . Repa1r

Mo o ile
Hom e
Srr 1vcr·
Rooilnq pn,nl,nq , btock,nq ,
&amp; tevf't1nq Escort SPr V•(" f'
Llll7 45 951&lt;1 rl flcr 5PM
Upho l stery
TRI STAT E

UP HOLSfERY SH OP
1163 Sec Ave . Gall tp ot.s
446 7833 or 446 1833
MOWR E Y S Uph olc, l rry R I
1 Box 1211 PI Plf',l Silnl , 304
675 &lt;:1154

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
I Clim b
6 Fragment s
It Gnll
16 Tard ier
21 AQuatic
mamm al
22 Marsh b1rd
23 St1r
24 By onesel t
25 Much-used
ar !lcle
26 1066 and
1660
2B Around
30 Melal
tastene1
32 Scale nolfl
33 That man
34 Never . m
Berlm
35 Brunch
36 Mill:
37 Ma1 sh
313 Thea1e1 Sign
40 So1l
42 C"m son
43 Post
44 Planet
45 Nega11 ve
47 Str amer s
49 Actor Blltby
50 Everybody·s
uncle
5 r Say1ng ll tlle
54 Harvest
55 Dull one
56 Brook
59 One. no
ma tter
Wh!Ch

&amp;0 D1v1ng b1rd
62 Unproductive
64 Chel
65 NH 's nc1gh

bo'

82

14FT john boat &amp; trailer , 20
HP
M e rcur y
motor ,

76 -

ADVA NC ED
Seam l ess
Gu tt er · Door s .
Of feri n g
co ntinuou s
gu tt eri ng ,
sea mless siding. rooting,
ga r age
d oors,
fr ee
es tim a tes, 614 698 B205 .

Auto Trim Center, 446-1'168.

your car's getting
control-it's .a

L

l ndustnal
Co mn1 erc,11
Res •d ent 1,11
De p endable. 8 year\ c,
penence . We do care~

PASOUALE
E LE CTRIC

,,,

,1-~ !!-1PROVEME NTS

d ~1 mag e

47 fl . Work ing H eight

CAPTA IN STEEMER Ca r
pe t C leaning featured by
Haff el t Brosthcrs Cu stom
Ca rpe l s. Free es timat es

Ca ll 446 2107 .

11

IL-======--!illl

ADVANCED
CLEAN IN G SERVICE
446 -391 s
N o Answer 446 2061
Modern s team c le.ln111g
t or carpet &amp; uphol stery
( .ns.uranC(' work I
• Sco l ch gu ard JM
• Wa ll s. ft oon.
w1ndows
ewat cr &amp; smoke

87

8ft. F 1BE RGLASS truck

'

FROM «;;NCRETE :rO ROOFI~G

STUCCO PLASTER IN G

7443

Pomeroy, Ohio

9-30·1fc

35 Co urt St
Gall ipOliS, Oll1 0
Co111446 ·J89b
446 3080

Co li 388·8623
lf c

EL LI OTT
L en no JC" Heat1ng 3. Air
Co ndrf1 ?nin g. A ll Tvp es
lnsu ta t,on . E l ectrica l
W1ri n g.
Col li 446 ·8515 or 446 · 04~S
011ter~ :JO p . m
tic

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERV ICE

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

&amp; EXCAVATING IN C
Backh oe and doz er wo rk
by th e tob or by th e
hour . A l so l ice n sed se pti c
fank s .n stall ed.
Dump
truck .
Free

RUSS AND MAX

86

Hom e
Improveme nt s

73,000

Ca ll 388

tro lling
, ca rpet,
1I~~~~~~=~~~~~ swive
l seamotor
t , livewell.
304-

CAN HELP YOU
·:BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Constructillf!
and Remodeling.

Bea uto ful voew of the

,

Addofts aad ttiiNNWinc

1

Weds. - Gent. Night

CONSTRUCTION

Ohio and only a few miles fror:n c ity . Immac u late
brick ranCh, fully carpeted . larqe eat · in kitchen
with double oven rarlge, flicc front porch and pati"O , ·

blacktop drive, storage buildin9 . &lt;;,ity schools.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Thurs. - PooiTourn.
3·24 ·tf c

M&amp; T CO NSTRUCTION

VVdl do qeneral h,l1J I1nq ,
qr ;wel , l1111 es tonr. snnrt
and fill d1rt JOJ 8R7 2A67

PU. 302. V 8, AT, PS, PB . 81

ca mper

.---~~~~--, 1

~os l once

.

4 :00-6:00 p.m .

Frank Ro se Cans t . Co.
Remode ltn g rep.11r . n ew
con structton , ,1 11 t yp es.
Free est imat es, a ll work
fully
guar&lt;lnlt•ed .
Rcs,dent t al ,
co m ·
m ereta!, indu s tr~oll ilnd
m1n1ng, el ec lr1 c work.
BS H A Cert. 446 ·4627, lie

For sa le or trade 1974 F 100

~======~=~~========~[-~~~:-;:;;:~--~
topper,phone
AM-FM,
&amp;·track CB
LAFF-A·DAY
radio,
30H75-ol004.

Grande Colleg e. G'od investment for co ll f'qe
student, buy instead of paying r e nt. Ni ce.2 BR , p,,
baths, formal dining. Williamson for ced air fur·
nac e . Gar:age. Garden space .
-~

l'a'ls

2081

YOUNG'S

!foot £stiotattsl

Reasonable Prices

~io

kiVER VIEOW -

J NT

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Mon. - Keg Night
Tues. - Ladies Nigl'1t

eloclriut ""'

Free Estimates
AIR CONDITONED -

RIO GRANDE- 530,000 - Within wa lk •nq

LOW DOWN PAYMENT
OWNER MUST SELL- HI&lt; tol\', ~IS YOUR GAIN!
- 1980 BAY VIEW 'ol"\)\" ·•1 4 ft . ex te nsion, 3

gutter

cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.

shuttered windows.. sheltered
mak e this home more than
a 3
ranch. Spacious combination family room , kitchen .
Double windows in living room 1 Ceramic tiled
baths. All the w oodwork is stained and varnished .
Nec1r city. Low interest. loan assumption . $49,500 .

I ';'""
I' a"~

Ca ll446 0648 after 5PM.

Happy Hour
Mon .- Thurs .

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

A FRIENDLY AIR - Clean .

I NT

1981 SUZ UKI RM 60. rode

Service

A trramC' s.tu~lled on il be.:~ut, tul woodrd
v'tt,mt. you w 111 love ttlC' atmosphere Owner II nan
c 1flrt tor qualli1f'd buyers Low 30's

BMR .t15 - Ju st Li sted! Extra ni ce bi · leve l , in·
eludes 3 bedrooms, lg . f a mil y room wi t h brick
f irep lace, 18x2 1 li v ing room , eat -in kitchen , !g .
utllify room, and gar age. Situa ted on l arge l o t . C1ty
schoo l d1 stri c t . Call for detai ls !

Soulh

5170

only . $96.000 00 .

You can move in (us! i n t ime to en(oy t he summ er
ond pool. 18'x36' . Landscaped ground s. n ice patio
area and qas qri ll Beautiful home. f or m al dining
r oom. entry &amp; hving room with w .b . firep lace .
Fc'lmil y room on mdin floor Large rec. roo m and
w .b f i r ep lace 1n basemen t A quality built home in
exce ll en t con d it1on .

Easl

379 2417 or 614 379 2641 .

820 lfc

O'Brien Electric

BEAUTIFUl LINES! A nd inside so m e qenuine
delights . Lik e a 14'x2 4' l iving room with tr~diti o n a l
fireplace . Enormous mas ter suite . For easy liv1ng,
an effi c i ent kitchen with lot s of co unter spa ce. built
1n oven , stainl ess steel count er top range and dish
washe r . 3 baths. Cen . air. 2 ca r atfached Qc1 rage
plus 24'x26' sto r age buildinq . Shown by appo tn tmen t

North

Doter &amp; backhoe service, water, sewer, ponds ,
foundations,
reclamation .

3·3 tf n

C. R. MASH

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

AM R 410

BMR 414 - 12)(60 mob il e hOme situated on a 1 acre
1 lol . includes furnitur e, ha s rear pat1 0 w /c ovcr,
co vered fr ont d eck, 12x24 guraqc with s torage

w.. ~ t

71

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

Ph .992-2174

BMR 407F
C{1m p Si tc Potcnt,al 1 31 ac res m / 1w 1t h
trnntr1af' on Rnccoon Cr ns well as fr on l r~qc on
IJI&lt;Kk top h1cthwoy

TIP TOP SHAP E !
Jus t .=~ l illi e pre fl 1er than so many Modern 3 4
bed r oo m br 1c k hOm(• Formal l1v 1nq &amp; d 1ning room .
Lar ew k 1l chen Ful l baserYlt'nl . Lnroe 2 car garage
works~1op &amp;. bMn S1 tl&lt; nQ on 58 acres. more or less.
of landsca pect qrou nds Sp r,ng will be breathless
t 1en·~ Owner will help f 1nanc e: l0°o l_
n t Rate

Vulnera ble Both
Dea ler South

4 9 1 mo.

Siz es from~ to 6 and a ll
wood building s 24)(36.
Insulated Dog Hou ses

Licensed &amp; Bonded
PH. 992-7201

Pomeroy, Oh .

1oc at1on

GET READY FOR SUMMER' Owner

2

•••
+

JIM LUCAS
Ph . 7~1·1753

BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION~
Two s tory
ll fnlw presen t ly bctnct used ns a dupl e x, co ulct be

BMR 398

~

SOUTH
.A(.) l OA

zero t emper a tur es.
• Spr ing Developments

Utility Buildings

Radiator Specialist

BMR 402F - CHE CK O N T HI S ONE
37 acres
willl t4011b tObi'ICC.ObclSf', 30)(30bMn Call todny!

1.1 AC R ES
NewcontemporMy brtck&amp; cc ct.Jrr&lt;Jn
c t1 wiltl a mlll•on dollar Vlf'W' IOJ• tnt rillf' (to be
nssumcd! Quolily bu1ll hom r E&gt;:cc l lrn t loCr1 110n
Wll {lt C' lse co uld you wnnt1n rl nome'

+ A9

Sizes start from l0x24 ''

•
•
•
•

From
the
Smallest
Heater Core to
the
Largest Radiator .

BMR 139 - OWNER F IN ANC IN G~ Two stor y home
on Sf'cond Avr. 3 or 4 bedroom s REDUCED! Bet
tr r srr th 1s one

BMR 389
TI11S !lnr home hrl S 4 bedrooms r1nd is
toutlf'cl closr to town You will h(we n Iarew l o t w•th
,1 co unt r '~ ,ltmosphPre c1n ct 11(wr all lhC' C ! I Y con
v c n1f'nccs C.l l l now !

.QIOB32
• J 6
4 A7 6

• (,J 1 5 ~

sub

I 7 1 lf c

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

BMR 412 ~
Oldrr 11ume loc n tcd 111
Thu r m,ln Con l rlHlS 7 room s rllld ba th , 2 lireplo ccs.
protcss,onrl l ly 1n s t,l l led woocl burner. forcecl •l •r fu el
t urnacf' Ou!Si Cir IPolurr"i a C!M rlCie ~1nd a scr ee ned.
summer k11Ct 1rn wllh built 111 Qrdl Call l or ap
po,ntrrwnt

BMR 391 - REDUCED!
Owner want s I! so ld
now! Mobilr 11ome locn tC'd on r1ver front lot

EAST
• ti 4

• No Energy Need ed .
• Water Available at

Ron Canaday, Realtor 446-3636, Audrey Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636

BM R 409 - OW NER FINANCING
Th1 S spl1l
to yer homf' 1n cl udes 3 bedroom s. 2 full bath s. larqe
ctr n wdll !lr Pplacc . heat pump Sef' th1s fully car
pctrd home now Loc,llf'd .n Cr own Cily!

A 98
~ J 3

WEST
• 97 2
• JB

~I

I
I

P h. 367-7560

J&amp;F

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·31

BMR ,111
3 br ctr oom hcml"' 3 m 1IC'S from c lly
OwnN will rons c1t •r li1An CIIl ct SII Urllf'cl on larqc flal
lot Vtnyl sodtll(l &amp; n,1!ur &lt;11 Clil':&gt; l ll 'rll (,:arporl wi! ll
'&gt; IOr&lt;'I(!C' arcn Crllllor CIC' !,liiS '

:~~~~; ~~~~~;;:~~ ~~h~~~~q~a:t;~: '~r t ~n~; cc

•

..

~~---

Located across from the
Shopping
Plaza
at
washington Mote L
1
32~~!!;.J

1--

t

The Automatic
Freeze-Proof Water

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

• K74

K 10 3 2
+K 10 4

.------------I
C H E~RY T~EE

~ - H·U

NOR Til
.KJ ~.1

Doz ers
Back h oes
Dump Truck s \'1
La-Boy
Trencher
Wa t er
Se w er
Gas Lin es
Se ptic Sys tems
large or Sm all Jobs
PH . 992 -1478
.t 11- 1 mo pd

1n one year. tt wa s 1963 In
198 1. 15 pl ayer s scored
more th an a 1.000 a nd thref'
ove r 2. 000
ACBL pr es 1d ent J1m
Ztmmerm an f1m shrd e1ghth
w1th 1.358 JJm IS a vt• r y"hnt•
player mdeed as rna)' be
S('en from th1 s hand
North ra1sed Jtm nght to
thrN· no-trump. 1nstead of
us1nK Stayman and ftnd1ng
the 4-4 spade ftt
Jim ran off four spades
and noted East's dJ srar ds of
the ~ - :l of hea rts and WPst 's
of the d('uce of r l ubs
Now hf' lf'd a club WPsl
took ht s ace and Jed a second
c lub J1m had to attack d1a ·
m o nd ~ and tPd a d1amond to
dummy 's ace and returned
th(' mne Wh('n Easl"s Jack
appea r ed hf' took tu s k1ng
and led a thtrd d1amofld to
w1 nd up w1t h fl vc no-trump
It was a Vt'ry gnod scu n ·
smce I he best a spa dt'
decla r er could do was to
makr t hat same f iVI' odd
Hr had turned out to be
lu cky If West had held
qu('rn . Jark . fo urth of
dram onds. J1m would have
made JUSt four no· trump .
but he had taken thr best
pcrccn tag(• pla y at h1 s no·
!rump contract and 11 p.111l
off

=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~-t:=====================~~==========::::::::::::~_:f•~r:st~m~a~n~t=o~sc~o~re~o~v:•r_:I~.O~O~O"i~'~"~~w_s~r-'~"~E~II~E~N~T~'~"'~''~":''~':'~~"~'--1

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

446-3636

REALT O R'

• Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SERV I CE
4 5 tfc

tltp ThiS Ad tOf J free
GJme w1th I pJtd GJme.

The Su nday Times -Senttnei - Page- D-7

Services Offered

9472

REALTY

-lB

ors

PH. 614 -992-7848
4 12 I mo pd

General

CANADAY
~t., ~Jalllpolis,

All Makes

Near town. one acre, new split

REALTOR S
HE NRY E. CLELAND,JR ., GR I
JEAN TRUSSELL
OOTTI E TURNER
OFFICE

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

• washers
• Dish was he rs
• Ranges • Retrigera1 ·

Now Open Weekends
1 to4P .M.
Weather Permitting

3 II lfc

Call 446-2476

a

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

OLDER HOM E - Needs some repa~r but has two
large lo ts. Four or live bedrooms. ba semen t, co uld
b e c'l rC'al n1c e hom e tor $20.500

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY -

l IF f

·178 ~eco nd Ave
C l ii.J 46 0552 Any llllll'

CALL COLLECT
GALLI POLIS, OH.

POMEROY
Th 1s pr operly shold be so ld LOOK
HERE - four tots, tnree bedrooms . basemen t ,
fireplace, large 17 ' )(17' I1VInQ room. new d1n1nQ area
and k1tchen . All .n good cond1 tion and dll on o ne
fl oo r St ea l thi s a t $24,500

FARM FOR SALE
26 ACRES
House, barn, other
outbuildings, lob.
base.
$18,000
256-1579

FOR SALE
Hou se in city
w1 fh
co untry privacy within
w&lt;l lk i ng di stan ce
to
sc hool and c ent er of
town . 3 mile s from
ho spita L l bedrooms,
larg e living R . wi th
ca th edral ceiling, dining
R .,
ea t · in
k1tchen ,
family R. in red wood
p.l ne ling,
bath , lull
ba se m en t with business
p oss ibiliti es,
2 ca r
garage, large open por ·
ch
ove r l ooking
Gill lipolt s.
E)(ce ll e nt
co ndttton .

PRICE IS RIGHT

PH. 992-2259

$5 495.00. Ca ll before 1:00

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

POMEROY, OHIO

Va .

Master point inflation

SAVE IJ.OO WITH
THIS AD

General

w.

BRIDGE

1855 lor

608 L MAIN

FM .8 tr ac k s tereo, wire
whe e l
covers.
powe r
stee ring, power brakes. air
cond iti oni ng , 16 ,000 mi les.
e)(celle nt
co ndition ,

25 LOcust

1\ro~

Business Services

makes and m ode l s unde r
S200 . Sold thr ough local
qovernment sa l es . Ca ll 1

2:00 TO 5:00P.M.

CA LL US TO BUY OR SELL
As~oc . il t l'

par ts.

$650. Call 3792469

1979 COUGAR XR7. AM

[X I I] r XI XX]

OPEN HOUSE TODAY

THI S ONE HA S CLOUT - 4 IJf',lLi dul lw cl rooms. 3
l ull 1Jr1ths. clouhiP ra r q&lt;H ,lliC'. c Mpetf'd thr ouq tl oul .
IOvf'ly "if' ll tn(l on f'".&lt;lrcl ln rq p lot lrl Sy r dCU'&gt;I ' L rl rcl('
c1r y th t&lt;.,Prnl n tt or i•xtrcliiVillll SPrlCPn r lam dy room
l\c.,k1n(l S67 .500

PH. 843 2075

AN

197 5 Chevr o let Impala, 4
cloor. clu tomal, c, PS, PB.
a1r. 51.000 mile s. very good
conct One owner Ca ll J46

Rea l Estate -

J BEDROOM HOME - 11 .· llld!''&gt; ou t of Mld Cllf'OOrl
on 2 ncrPs Rt•nt,ll 1ncomf' fr om troll er on property
, 1 1~0 All !t11 ':. tor SJL .OOO

Niln cy Jii spers -

Now arrange the etrded leners to
torm the surprise answer, as sug ·
gested by the above cartoon

Autos l or Sa le

71

MUST SE l l - /l. lm o&lt;, t A Cl &lt;\l l'rl WilY Rt ·c!U CI'{! no,l •rl
1 rn m S 17 .000 10 S 10,500 F 1n,1nr 111q !tVcl tl.)hiP
1n

[]

5UI56E5TED THA&lt;
HE WAS PROUD OF
THE FAGT IHAI HE
WO~KED LE55 THAN
ANYONE EL5E.

(Anewers Monday)

ves tera ay s

for

1974 Chev. PU, Reese Hit
c h , new brakes. U joint.(')(
ce ll en t mechanical c ond ..

HART S U sed (drs, New
Haven Wes t Virginia Over
20 less ex pen s1ve cors in
stock .

tJ

I

Answer here

Ramb ler

Real Estate -

1

XJ

2350

1959

$75. Ca ll 245 9263 alter 4

lipolis, Ohio--Point Pleasant,

Po m e

Autos for Sa l e

71

Aut os for S.o-l c

·~­

rJ

r :1

$300 C,lll 446 9380

General

CENTRAL REALTY

..... ·-

Auto::. forSalt!

RN pslrred nnd qrayrd llOr
ses. excel len t 4 H pro,ect
Enq l,sh ilnd w es tern sad
cverv lh1n q
clles.
,maq,nable 1n hor se equ1p
men! and s. uppl1e s. also
r 1d1 nq lesson s clnd tra il
r 1des and hor SC' tra1n1nQ
Hoof Hollow 61·1698 3290

1

J F L AT ACRES I tllcln( l'

--

15 TR6 ConvNiibl e A 1 con

Bol1n's r1d1ng tra c tor plu s
n t1a c hment s, \600 Call 4..46
)9 14

to

TraR5):1ertafion.

Polled Herf'ford bull

.

62,000 mil es. 99H3ll.

DESET

ny Goa ls$40 Cr1 11 ?56 6582
Rcq

1976 Plymouth Volare . 2
door, $1,300 . Fair cond .

I... -[J

Hay &amp; Gra m

M

71

Autos for Sa l e

20 fl . boat tra il er , 1975
D odge Charger , PS. PB.
AC, excellent condition ·388 ·
9755 or 446· 1642 ext. 332

Unsc1amble these lour Jumbles.
one 1ene1 to each square. to form
tou r orclinary words

PALAMINO milre, 7 year s
o l e!. S500 I Dapple Gray

Reg
Polled Her ef ord
bull 5 18 rno Olcl to r sate
(rlll 446 7 109

350 or 400 engtnes Also PM
ts tor 74 lmpaln

63

'

April25, 1982

lrv es tock

rC'p&lt;'ltrs, $ 175 304 675 1480

sp ltCN. ofher rtccessortes
4

63

-

..

iddleport- Gallipolis, 0

Pom

Farm Equtpment

·'

66CaH - a
day
67 lllumma ted
69 Growmg out
70 Cav1l
7 t Maglle ot
base ball

72 Openwork
labr1 c
/4 Loca t1 ons
76 Small bud
77 Pre-Easter
penod
78 F1replace
part
79 VICIOriOU S
62 Four wheeled
duds
64 Fac1al
lea t u1e ~

65 War god
66 Veh1cles
68 Transpolted
w1t h delighl
69 Joumey
90 Jom
92 Holy place
94 D•sce1 n111g
9B Wmg s
99 Escape
100 Ok lahoma
City
102 Challenqe~
IOJ Cover
104 -· de deu•
105 Dance. s o1,,
104 Acr oss
t06 Dex lerlly
108 P;nccl at
land
109 Ea1th
goddess
110 USMA gr ;:ad
Ill Toss
112 lnsecb
114 Sp1de1 's
trap
116 SIOU~ Coty
g1rl
117 Weude1
119 Proh1b!l s
120 Smg le 11 em
122 Rasc al s
124 Money ol
yore
125 Prum1sc
126 Mud dles
128 Neither s
compamon
129 Sort
1)1 Rela ted

132 Con lend
133 M1&gt;: . as
Uuugt1
135 Gu100 noll'
138 Female rutt
139 Alle1 d1nner
1tem
140 Man s luckname
14 1 And
14 2 A Smo !l1
143 Cooled lava
14&lt;1 AlleC110ili"ll('
14~

Par sonaqe

!47 Flat
149 Presrdenl1.JI
n• c kn&lt;~me

150 PICVIOUS
t ~2 Run away to
marry
tS4 AI llla t
t~6 Ardenr
t5H Bre;l!llfl
s l~ep

DOWN
Insect s
2 A(ldttiOil,ll
3 Southwf'S.I
p rn lnd •an
4 Compass
pi
~ Art empl
6 Sea ls
7 Rellq,ous
d1ssen 1c1
6 f.ede1at
agcy
9 Italian II~CI
10 Nahoor
1

1t

12
I]

14
15

16

VO I C, I/1 0

II I I owel wurcl
4 .! f- eel
l o•

r~·qt~' l

&lt;1 1 Murt

4&lt;1 HI S day I~
At..llll ?5th
48 Aaii OI

111

I S9 EvaludiC ~
160 Conecr
161 Smaiii•SII

B9 Sp.esa ....
90TypP01
syrup
9 1 M&lt;~k c )Oy l rl

9? Undf'IQar
93

R~&lt;lii Ct

9S BlaCk!)ll(l
96 Fa&lt;;luon
9~

ren u ng

99

Co1111'1~

~. w o 1rh

37 RL'flOWil
39 Sore
40 SJCI II &lt;I Il

46 ra, o•·

r tar.P

loudly

17 Everyone
t8 SUit
&lt;l r
19 Stage
dHCCIIOII
20 Clle c k ~
'!f f" ormer
Span1 sh
queen
29 lnsecb
31 Be 111

~0 C ea s,~
~

1

~:·

\ 0? C. ro~ nl "'•' ' r1 l
\ 1 l IYIIII I'
It / Pno'l
l l J Kllld () I

t r S I of'
I tb C l •fi. JIIl
1 18 L.i....._ U
I t9 lit' ' '
I J I O rlt •l '
I ?J l'r (1 r •·•·11

fillc tor

J:)S

44 Dowr1

12&amp; ( &gt;()dh

Woru w1111

12i W,llhlll '

llllf' or lOLl-.

1:'9 Sn. ll('•,
t:JO l onq !i• r

Sprmq
bloom•,
55 ACfld
56 ClaSSl ly
!J7 W•th t o1c ~ ·
~3

SA

101 nt·h• l r('
10~. tnt" '•'' )
IQ6 \JJS;.l oil!ll

0Ph os t ~

51Km spar1 ·
neo

f'10d1Q •o

Ml'T,il
IJ? ClrllltJ•II')

1:11

pl. il l] ~
tJ ~

Kmd o1 Vd t~ ·

1:16 I .10

137

W ~d ~ ·. tw &lt;l kJ •

r]Q

Arlt!llll lll ,l l

63 MW S'l t)ucr
64 Con t.llllt•r 'i

I &lt;10 f~I'(.1Ht1

68 lns1ru cro1
70 DomJn;:uH
71 En thuS,&lt;tSm
73 Crowns
7&lt;1 P1111i.lil tlurk
75 r r .lp

144 Ouf•(•n
,, n,y
1,15 W•lly

''d ~ ilv

&lt;;llf&gt;P.I)

17 R,m

Wrdl'
Delt!&lt;l1
utlelly
Away
biSI S
Soup
•ngiCd&lt; CIT!
Den

78 CI051.'
80 [gQ nn
81 Pre l" w 11h

t4h

d

Grt' t' ~ lt:l lt•t

t4? ML•,Jdow
t&lt;18 Frt••H 111•lu
loll ,Ifill h•

1&lt;1'1 M.ll w"
151

l t ·u ~"

IS]

SLdi L'IH\It•

twr o v••fl

pacl-. O•

plane

1fl

Wily

8J C lla11

~ ~~' Hunllllll ll!

8d Mt•ll Ill tJh H'
87 V1p(•1 o..

1 '• ,I

O..OUilL'

r .II IV Ill

�.. .

Pa

0 ·8- The Sunda T,m es-Sentin e l

I

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gal

K. Jones

PT. PLEASANT · Mrs. Serena

Keefer Jones. 66. 1420 Lewis St..
Point Pleasant, died Friday at 8: 15
p.m. at the Charleston General
Hospital.
Born Sept. 15. 1915. Leon, she was
the daughter of the late Rev. J . P.
Keefer.
She owned the Elmer Jones Milk
Tank Truck Company. She was a
member of the Point Pleasant
Church of Christ In Christian UnJon
and the Order of Eastern Star.
Chapter 75 of Point Pleasant .
She Is preceded In death by her
husband, George Elmer Jones.
who died July 23, 1974, a son. Paul
Edward Roac h, who died June 24.
19TI a nd a brother. Doyle E.
Keefer.
Surviving are her mother, Mrs.
Irene Cordle Keefer. Point Pleasant ; two daughters, Mrs. Frank
(Patty) Beard . Columbus. and
Mrs. Lloyd tBetty) Mayes , Point
Pleasant ; three sons. Rev. George
Elmer Jones 11 amd Richard
Camde n Roach , Gallipolis. and
Jack William Roach. Point Plea sant ; two brothers. Eugene Keefer,
Grove City, Ohio and Ralph Keefer,

Mrs . Josephine White. Kansas
City, Kan .. Cretorla Robinson, Charleston and Mrs. Pa u·lcla Higdon,
Falls Church, Va.; 17 grandchild ·
ren and four great-grandchildren .
Funenil services wtil be held 2
p.m. on Monday at the Church of
Christ In Christian Union In Point
Pleasant. Revs. James L. Bunn
and Warren Foxworthy will officiate. Burial will be a t the Suncrest
Cemetery under direction of the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
Friends may call at the deceased's home after 2 p.m. Sunday.
An Order of Easter Star memorial
will be held at the home at 6 p.m.
Sunday.

Freda Wyatt

~

..... -

w . Va.

A pm~.:wood derby l'a r 1s st•ven int'hcs Jon).! a nd wei ghs no more them
fi ve oun ces. Ec:lt'h boy a nd his father
des ign th e ca r to their own
s pt•c tfi ca twns. This produces a
variety of difft•rent Jouking Gl rs.
The top winners 111 the e ight -year
old category we rt•, first pli-it.'l', Tat.Jd

Ohio: and fourth place. Chns
Ratliff. Pack 204, First Untied
Presbyterian Church. Ga ll ipolis.
Ohio.
The ninc•yea r olds placed as
foll ows : ftrst place. Scott Miller.
Pack 256. New Haven Recrea twn
Founda tion. New Haven, W. Va .:
second place. Mtchael Bush, Pack
204 . Fi rst United Presbyteria n Chur·
ell. Gallipolis, Ohio; third place.
Bcngy Perry. Pack 203, Centenary
Un ited Methodist Church. CentePary. Ohio ; fo urth place. Chns
Nibert. Paek 248. Ordnanee PTA . Pt.

Wuoldnd ge.

Plee~sa nt.

HUNTINGTON - II was nun-slop
CAd ion as cub scoub frorn Meigs,
CaliiCJ and Mason Counties par-

tlctpall'd 111 the 1982 M-G-M l&gt;tstnd
P111ewuo&lt;l Derby race . Earll buy had
t• ntt•red ht b huml' nktde ca r vy ing fur
Lop honors.

Pcu·k

222,

Bidwe ll·

Porter PTO. Btdwell . Ohio ; second
pla,·e. Don Saxon. Pa ck 2o:J . Centenary United Methodist Church.
Ce ntenary. Ohto; third place . .Ja111es
McDaniel. Pack 235. Slinderella Dtet
l'lass and Chester PTO. Chester.

We need
a few
good
boys and
girls!

who had rcsJdcd

st n&lt;·c 1980. dtl'd Aprtl 14
VIa

plan•. Dwight Evans, Pack 20:!:
second pla ce, Charlie Young, Pack
:&gt;O:I: U1ird place. Chris Burnette,
P&lt;tck 20:!: fourth place. Robbie
Polryn. Paek 204 .

Sht' wa s a res kluranl ow ner and a

nH·tnber of Middl eport's First Bapltst Church. Sun•tvors inc lude a

da ughter. Mrs . B&lt;'ltv Va le of Sanford. Fla .: a son . Paul C. Holter of

El Paso, Texas: four sisters, Mrs.

Man on, Texas; five g randchildr~n
and fi vt• g real ·~nJnd cil i lt!re n .
Services were m c· har)ol,l' of

Luanna Bost ic, Ft . Pierce. Fla.,

&lt;:ramkow Fune ral Home at Sanford .

mower was s tole n s ometime dur·
lng the winter from Its storage area

at Roberts' residence on Georges
Creek Road .
Kenneth Bloomer. Ga lli polis.
said the battery In a car Impounded
by coun order was s to len durlng its

Impoundment . It's believed the
theft occurred between last month
a nd this past week.
A 10-speed bicycle was reported
stolen after unknown persons entered properl y owned by J ohn V.
Mullins. Rt . 2, Vinton, on Keystone
Road near the Jackson County line.
Time of the Incident was un·
known, the report sa id .
Verlln Swain. Rt. I. Crown City,
satd a two-Inch wa tcr pump and
portable battery cha rger were removed from his garage In Crown
City sometime within the past
week .
The department Investigated two
traffic accidents Friday afternoon.
The report said a vehicle driven
by Beth L. Peck. 25, Bidwell. was
northbound on Jackson Street In
VInton at 4:35 p.m. when she al·
legedly made a U-turn and sideswiped an oncoming vehicle driven
by Pamela S. Short, 30. Vinton,
causing severe damage to Shor1's
vehicle and slight to Peck's auto.
The repor1 said Shor1 went left of
center in an attempt to avoid the
accident.
A vehicle driven by Jennings Gil·
lenwater. 20, GaiJipolls, attempted
to back from a parking space at
Buck Ridge Apartments at 5: 5J
p.m. and struck the passenger door
and front quarter of a parked ca r
registered to L. Albert Holt, Addison . There was slight damage to
both vehicles.
The department said It cited on
Friday John D. Morri•on, 18, Rt. 1,
Bidwell. and Christy Schultz, 26. Le·
tart, both for disorderly conduct at-

includes 3 Bal Gameo. overnight at Holiday Inn. dinner at FOIMI Voew
IGia.Oonl,, fl 09 per - · double occuponcy.

/

!

This Week's

:

!,.
!,.

Specials
DOUBLE COLA

!,.
!,.
**
!

*
!
lt

~

16oz .
btl s.

$}19

INSTALUI NEW TElLERS- FIII'IIIID Baiak and
Savlllp Co. of Pomeroy ha8 lnlitaued automatic
teDen Uke the one above to help Improve service to Its

ROYAl CROWN COlA

8

160 '-

$}19

P lu s ta x

btl s.

&amp;dep .

!
COCA-COL.A
! 8 $}39
!
PEPSI &amp;7-UP
!* 8 16 $219
16oz .

&amp;d~

•

,.

oz .

P lu s ta x

Btl s.

~;:

!lt
!
:

&amp; d ep .

ICE COlD BEER,
WINE &amp;POP

•,.*
lt

!

*

DRIVE THRU
CARRYOUT
709 First Av e.

5 PIECE WOOD

JOIN US AT THE ElKS LODGE IN GALLIPOLIS
FRIDAY AND MEET

ROCKY SAXBE
"CANDIDATE FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL" *
OHIO'S CHIEF LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER
·•(unopposed in th e primary w h ich is to say tha t he will be the
Republican Candida te in the November E lection) .

To reserve luncheon tickets phone 446-0855 or
tickets may be pitked up at Hamlin King' s
Law Office, 512 Second Ave., Gallipolis. Price
is $15 per ticket. - Tax Deductible.
Paid for by Citizens for Saxbe.- Haml in King, Galli a County Chairman

media tely into ct c ustomer account,

saction . incl uding the account nwn-

keeping the balance current. The
inquiry capability of these new
machines makes it possible for a
teller to check the stat us of any ac-

ber.
With the addition of the teller
1nac hines, each customer will eventually b€ assigned a new account
nwn ber that represents all of the accounts in their name, including
saving and checking accounts, certificates of deposit, loans. IndividtJ;Il
Retirement Accounts and Christmas
Club accounts.

The liank processes· about 5,000
items each tlay and converting to the
system enables them to increase
their efficiency and accuracy.

another department ur leave the
teller window .
The screens of the machines are
positioned to insure the privacy of a
customer's account 11nd to keep any

E:

DINETTE

!

..•
~

Reg. $409.95

;:

*

$197

wnong six clerical occupations sur-

veyed last February varied from a
high of $7 .53 for secretaries to a low
of $4.48 for file clerks. Among three
professional and technical jobs
reported, electronJcs technicians
earned $9.98 hourly while drafters
received $8.99 per hour.

I "!'

•

'

to phone

I

)

'

~

r~

JOiJchines print a complete descrip-

.1

tion on the receipt of each tran-

Machin e ry
maintenance
mechanics, averaging $10.67 per
hour, were the highest paid of 14 blue
collar jobs contained in the current
survey report. Truckdrivers
received the lowest ave rage pay,
earnin~ $6.81 oer hour.

."'·
'"

~I

•

I

'

\

'

-~

._," _-~.: ~~
~

'

Bureau of Labor Statistics by 57 firms employing 17,860 workers. These
companies were chosen to represent
127 establishments with 24 ,657 employees in Adams, Gallia, Highland,
Hocking, Jackson; Lawrence, Pike,
Ross, Scioto, and Vinton Counties.

!

lt

*
5 PIECE FRONTIER

l ONlY
BRAXTON
2 PIECE

LIVING
ROOM

SUITE
" SOFA &amp;
LOVESEAT

$300

FAMILY ROOM .

'397

•Sofa
•Chair

•2 End
MATCHING LOVE SEAt.!l87.
Tables
ROCKER ..................~127. •Coffee .
.OTTOMAN ...................'77. Table
END OR COFFEE

TABLES
Reg.
'119.95

$57

EA.

COLUMBUS - Bane One Corp.
reported the highest earnings in its
history for tbe first three months of
1982, at the corporation's annual
shareholders' meeting held recently.
Net operating earnings before
securities transactions &lt;i $12.6
rnJIIion exceeded last year by 39 percent. Per share earnings of $1 .35
were II.~ percent above the $).21
reported in the first quarter of 1981.
Net income per share after
securities transactionli was $1.33
compared to $1.21 last year.
John G. McCoy, vice chalnnan of
~nc One, commented that the first
quarter operating earnings
~presented an annualized return on
sharehOlders' ·equity capital of 18.5
percent. this it the highest quar:terly
raturn In the corporation's history.
Ill! also noted that quarterly earlljnga have exceeded the prior year's
every quarter for the last 10 years.
·All directors were elected and an
&amp;qtendment of restated certificate of
iitcorporation to ~~~crease the numliilr of authorized shares of common
l¢!ldl'anll of preferred stock was approved . .
~ As of March 31, Bane One reported
tOte)· assets of $4.54 billion, up. 57.8
. percent from last year. total
pf ~.60 billion represent an
41.1 ~nt Increase, , while net
lQw
4a.i. percent to ·. ~-211
bljlloa. ~ slgnlfl~ iricl'ellle8
tllll larg~ly ~ result of the COlli- ·
nWion of~ lnajor li1itk affiliates

panies with 50 or more employees.
The hnal three-pages report contains the mean, median, and middle
range as well as distribution of
workers by earnings intervals.
Copies of the Portsmouth Chillicothe - Gallipolis Area Wage
Survey are available from the
Bureau 'O f Labor Statistics, 230South
Dearborn St. , 9th Floor, Chicago,
Ill. , 60604.

National Bank of Youngstown. With
resources in excess of $780 million as
of Dec. 31, 1981,Jhese banks adqed 34
offices to th~ .corporation.
At March 31, Bane One operated
191 offices in Ohio through 23 affiliate banlls chartered in Akron,
Ashland, Athen s, Cambridge,
Colwnbus, Coshocton, Dover;.•Fairbotll, Fremont, Kenton, Mansfield,
Marion, Middletown, Milford, Mount
Sterling, .Pomeroy, Portsmouth,
'Ravenna , Sidney. Wadsworth,
Wapakoneta , Wooster and
Youngstown.

TIP

pr~gram

GALLIPOLIS- Three representaUves ot the Gallla County Conser.vatlon Club - Jim Burns, ~oyd
Simmons Jr. and Phil i&lt;oebel- recentlY attended a meeting Iii Colwnblli explaining the beneftts of
the Till (TUrn !D a Poacher)

progl''l'll1 TIP Is a lll!wly-forined group

ot

rltb;i-.tl2 mOnths.

By turning In a poacher, the per• '
.
.
son may receive a cash award
based bD the coovlctlon of the per~ or pencm ~vee!. Tile
imc)ulit would be determJDed by
~ .ertbulllela of the vlplatlon•
\ 'nlla lllnd of PfOII'Rlll, 011 a sta~
wide b8.1., Is atint In Ohio, accord-

. .bjl Match 1, 881, ~be' ~ compfi!tellalflllatlonl W!~ tl)e f.lreetone
~tant• In Akroli and ,the Union

'

,.

..

' '

In addition, it now has affiliations
pending with six other independent
Ohio banking organJzations. These
organizations have total assets of
approximately $444 million .
The approved amendment of
restated certificate of incorporation
permits the corporation to increase
the number of authorized shares of
corrunon stock, without par value,
from 15,000,000 to 25,000,000 shares
and increase the nwnber of
authorized shares of Preferred
Stock, without par value, from
200,000 to 5,000,000 shares.

•
Three tri-county msurance
men
receive awards at recent meeting
GALUPOLIS - Three members
of th e Mei gs-Gall ia -Ma so n
Association of Life Underwriters
were honored for outstanding service rendered to the public at the
April meeting of the association.
Rick Bowersox, district agent for
The Prudential Insurance Co., was
presented on behalf of the National
Association the National Quality
Award.
·
Th e uniqu e citation was
established in 1944 by the National
Association of Life Underwriters,
Washington, D.C. and the Life. Insurance Agency Management
Association, Hartford, Conn. It goes
to those underwriters who are so out-

standing in their service that 90 percent of a stipulated number of
policies sold over a tw&lt;&gt;-year period
remain in force - thus fulfilling the
personal and business financial ol&gt;jective for which they a re designed
to meet.
Garland Davis, F.I. C. Insurance
and Financial Services, Gallipolis.
and Gene Riggs, special age nt, John
Hancock Mutual Life, were presented the National Sales Achievement
Award, both of which during a calendar year. excelled in placing a sul&gt;stantial amount of life insurance on
a large number of lives.

NSAA supplements a lready·
existing awards within the life insurance business.
Also present were Don Thomas,
Indianapolis Life; Walter Grueser,
Midland Life; Ron Toler , Toler Insurance, who presented Rod Myers,
district field representative for
Columbus Mutual.
The next meet ing of the
Association will be held at the Down
Under Restaurant in G&amp;llipolil; at 6
p.m. May 20. For further information. call Bill Hussell,
president, at 773-5942, or Bill Quickel
at 992-6677.

down on wildlife violations

.18

. . .

nored lor outstanding service at the Melp-GalllaMason Aasoclatlon of !Jte Underwrlten. The p1aque
recipients are (from left) Garland Davis, F1C lnsu-

ranee and Financial Services; Gallipolis; Kenoe(b
(Gene) Riggs. John Hancock IDIIuraoce, Pomeroy;
Bill HU88ell, Natloowlde Insurance, Muon, 1880Ctatlon president; and Rick Bowersox. Prudential IDIIurance, Gallipolis.

seeks to cut

citizens 1n Olljo w11o seek to ald 1n
wlldJUe enforcement to protect
OhJ9'1i wiJ(IIIIe, game ·flld nonpme
.

·stew

INSURANCE SALESMEN HONORED - Three
trl-county area losuraoce agenlll were recently h&lt;&gt;-

The survey was limited to com-

The Por1smouth - Chillicothe
Gallipolia Area Wage Survey is one
in a series of similar studies conducted by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics to provide local pay data
for jobs common to a wide variety of
manufacturing
a nd
non manufacturing industries. Over 160
urban areas were surveyed in 1981
as part of this program.
Figures for the latest study are
based on illforljlation provided to the

Bane ~ne reports highest-ever
annual earnings to shareholders

******************

CAMPAIGN LUNCHEON
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th
12 NOON

information confidential. As an added convenience. the telle r

count without ha ving

CHICAGO Results of a
February 1982 survey of occupational wages in the Portsmouth
- Chillicothe - Gallipolis area have
been issued by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. •
The new survey contains straighttime average hourly earnings for 23
selected office and blue collar jobs.
William
Rice, regional commissioner for the bureau in Chicago,
reported that hourly earnings

*
HOURS
*
• Monday thru Sa turday *
8 A.M . t ill I P .M.
*
,.!• Gallipolis
*
Ice Co. !

•

thereby upgrading the quality of
their service.
The new teller machines memo
post deposits and withdrawals im·

return on investment. Management
hopes that in the future, customers
and shareholders will benefit from
the apparent weakening in current
inflationary pressures. These factors. combined with continued strict
coot-&lt;,ontrol policies, provtde a solid
basis for continued earnings gro..1h.
On March 31, the finn had repaid
all short-tenn borrowings. This was
ac hieved through the issuance
during the first quarter of $22.5
million of subsidiary company longterm bonds, commilments for which
were obtained in the fourth quarter,
and fmancing nea rly 100 percent of
first quarter capital expenditures
with internally generated funds .
Mid-Continent. the Ohi&lt;&gt;-based
telecommunications holding company, has operating subsidiaries in
13 midwestern, eastern and southern
states. Mid-Con tin ent se rv es
Coolville. Chester. Little Hocking
and Reedsville in this area .

.,.~~

CUBtomen. By convertlug to a computer sy&amp;iem, the
bank's new teDen cab handle almoiB any rouline
lransadlon, Including ' deposits, wtlhdrawal.s and
check cashiDg.

POMEROY - The Fanners Bank
and Savings Co. of Pomeroy has
moved into the age of automation by
addin~
new a ut oma ted tell er
machines at each teller window.
The machines allow every teller to
handle any routine transaction including savings deposits and withdrawals, check cas hin g and
deposits, and interest updating.

parable period last year, while
revenues were $295,637,000, a 14 percent increase over revenues of
$260,058,000 for the same period a
year ago.
"Earnings are continuing the
momentum established in the
second half of last year, " said
Weldon W. Case, Mid-Continent's
chief e.ecutive. "The results are
particularly gratifying g~ ven the difficult economic conditions."
The firm looks forward to the
positivei mpacl of ils diligent pursuit
of rate relief and accelerated capita l
recovery programs. Currently Mid·
Continent operati ng companies have
$34 million of local-service rate
requests • pending before state
regulators. These rate requests,
filed within the last six montha, are
necessary to offset the effects of in·
flation on wages, costs ol materials
and capital equipment, and interest
rates, and to provide an adequate

·Releases results of wage study

;

P lu s tax

/

New tellers help to streamline
Farmers Bank -transactions

~

Plu s Ta x &amp; Dep.

~-

THE DAILY SENTINEL

*****************t

8

Earnings of 59 cents per sha re in
the first quarter were up 16 percent
from 51 cents a year ago, or three
percent more average common
shares outstanding. Mid-Continent's
net income for the first quarter increased 15 percent to $8,206,000 from
$7,140,000 in the first quarter last
year. Revenues increased 14 percent
to $76,831 ,000 from $61i,575,000 in the
quarter a year ago.
For the 12 months ended March 31.
1982, revenues, net income and earnings per sha re were up 12 cents
from the $2.42 earned a year ago, on
three percent more average common shares outstanding. Net iry:ome
increased 6 percent to $34,835,000
from $32,901,000 during the com-

-

992-2156

Gallipolis City Pollee looked Into
an accident at the junction of Mill
Creek a nd Farm Roads early
Saturday .
Officers sa id a vehicle dri ven by
Cathy M. Tomlinson. 22, Rt. 2.
Crown City, was westbound on Mill
Creek at 12: ()7 a. m. when a deer
walked Into the path of her vehicle.
Tomlinson swerved to avoid collision, losing control of the vehicle
and strlklng the bridge at Farm
Road. There was slight damage to
he r vehicle and no Injury reported.
Clted by pollee Friday were Thomas L. Belville, 25. Rl. I, Crown
City, theft; John E. Kenney, 34, Rt .
2, Vinton. falluretoobeyared llght ;
and Lester J . Casto, 32, and Nancy
S. Fowler, 35, both Gallipolis, both
for failure to dis pl ay valid
registration.

,.*

HUDSON
Mid-Continent
Telephone Corp. today reported sul&gt;stantially improved financial results
for the first quarter and the 12 months ended March31 ,1982.

CALL

ter warning.

lt

Mid-Continent Telephone lists
good year, ~ pays off loans

BATTING GLOVE DAY

Deputies probe thefts
GALLIPOLIS- A rash of minor
thefts were reponed In the latter
part of the week to the Ga llla
Coun ty Sheriff's Department.
Deputies said they were In·
formed Friday by Paul Rober1s.
Rt. I, Gallipolis. that his lawn

A rii2S, 1982

To join a special group of specially selected and trained junior
people to deliver the nametown
newspaper throughout our
community . Handle real respon sibility while earning spending
money!

REDS, MAY 1 &amp; 2

Sa nford.

SeCtion~

~imts- ientintl

W . Va .

Florit!CJ

111
111

Business

Ten-year old winners a rc: first

SANFORD. Fla . - Mrs. Freda K .
W;·att . 79. a fonnt·r Mtddleport
ntli.L' Il

-~

Pinewood Derby winners .

Area deaths

Sc~na

Ohio- Point Pleasant

-

.........

_.

~·

...

\.

,

. , .,

lng to Kenneth Tomltnson, Gallla
County game protector. U as successful here as It's been In other

states, It wUI have a great effect In
lowering the number o! wtldllfe vto-

laUons In the' state.
Tile organization wUI be funded
by lndlvtdual.s and club&amp; having an
Interest 1n the state's wfldllfe.
Thole organlzaUons which would ·
' be helped by the TIP program wUI
be bird club&amp;, the Audobon Society,
tlpOI'taman's groupe, garden club&amp;,
tarmlni organizations and any out-

d®,r sroups.
.
· Thole seeldJii more Information
about the pl_'OII'&amp;III may contact
Burna, Slrnniou; Keobel or Tomllnlcm. ContrtbuiiOM may be made
to TIP, Bulk One, P.O. Box '11,
Wadswo1th, Ohio 44281

W.R. (DICK) BROWN

Receives· status
GAU.IPOLIS - W.R. (Dtck)
Brown, CLU, was recently
awarded Exl!cuUve Oub status at
the annual Nationwide awards ban- ·
quet at the Lafayette Hotel In

Marietta.

.

' Tile preeentaUOO was made to
Brown by
J&gt;lehl, vice 'president
lor his outstanding m!ll!l-IIDe sales.

tea

\.

MAKE8 DONADON - Junea B. Wlllluna, left, .......... a1 tile .
GallpoiW .,.._. al O!ll&amp;nl 'l'n* Co., pr
I a clleclk tit WCNNIJ
Pllllil al tile
AreaJ.,_to ..... tlle.l.,_lalll*cbWe
fGr a "Jaft al Ule" eJdnelloD device. 'fte device will be baap&amp; w1111
prooeedllrom tile drive aad wll be
by area._ aad

o....,...

_ . . . , uallll.

lftered..,-

'

�idd

-2- The Sunda Times-Sentinel

I 1\.tM

Agriculture and our community

By Bryson R. Carter
County Agent, AG &amp; CNRD
GALUPOUS - Eastern tent

Since the caterpi llars eat so much

caterpillars are a conunon prob lem

Seven, Sev imol , Dursban, Orthene

for many property owners even

and Methoxychlor ha ve been singled

foliage, just about ttny insectic ide

will kill them. The insecticides

when the pests arc not devclop tng in

out beeause they are m os t readil y

their landscape. The ca terpillars

available and effective against this
pest.

ty in hordes and arc a considerabe
nuisance. Beca use the caterpi ll ars

seem to be scattered everyw here
over everything there is no good
practical solution to the problem at
that time . The best tact1c is to anticipate the problem and control the
pests before tllcy get to the
migratory stage .
Control Measures
Non-chem1cal - Where trees are
small and onl y a few involved, the
eastern tent caterpillar can be
brought under control without the
aid of insecticides if a person will apply any one of the following
techmques :
II Hand des tructi on of webs and
larvae.
21 Burn the webs w1th a flame on a

rag on a pole.
31 Prunin g

out

webs

and

The greater hazard in the use of
pe!&gt;lic1dcs is to the

applicC:~tor

- lhe

one one who actuall y opens the container of concentrated or formulated
mate ria l. mix~s it, and applies 1( to
the target a rea. Unfortunately, he
ma y be the one who is least concerned. ei ther because uf a lack of
infonnation or because he has
become compla cent from repeated
use.
We're in one of the heaviest farm111~ seasons of the year and 1t's the
season when most chemi cals arc
used. It is essential and now
required by law that pesticide
workers not unly know U1e ef-

fecliveness of chemicals in controlling pests but also the potential
health haza rd involved in their use.
Very toxi c pesticides can be used

destroying them .

41 Destroying egg masses before

safely but one must know how to use
them.

.spring.

51 Removing wild cherry trees.
Any one of these methods, if done

Labeling laws require that warnings and preca utiona ry statements

thoroughly, will help reduce the tent

relative to the toxicity of he for-

cat erpilars .

mu tated pesticide be conspicuous ly

Chemical control - The best time

printed on the label. Watch for these
word

and

to co ntrol tent caterpillars is while

k ey

they are small and before the leaves
are lvllf open on wild cherry trees. A
good applicatiOn of insecticide at
thi s time ca n completely elimu1atc
thiS insect. Most people wait until
tents appear 10 the trees before they
attempt to apply control measures.

sta tements.
Read the label ca refully and
foll ow directions explicitly in handling and applying all pesticides.
In general. herbicides and
fungicides a re less toxic tha n many
of the other types of pesticides.

preca utionar y

WASHINGTON (AP) -A new
Agriculture Department a nalysis
of tlle world's cotton situation Indicates producers and the Industry
are still being plagued by a large
buildup In suppltes and poor economic conditions.
"World cotton consumption over
the past montll has showed further
signs or weakness, as prospects for
recovery In 1~ have weakened In
tlle face of a sluggish world economy, " tlle department's Foreign
Agricultural Service said last
week.
The world output of cotton In 1981821s estimated at a record 70.6 mil·
lion bales. Altllough that figure Is
down 200,000 bales from last
month's world estlmate, lt still Is up
sharply !rom 65.6 million In 1981}1ll.
However, prospects for cotton
consumption have declined further
and now Is expected to be about the
same as last year at approximately
65.7 million bales .
Officials said the latest consumption estihlate Is down 400,&lt;XXJ bales
from a month ago, which reflects
"worsening foreign consumption
prospects In India and Western Europe. In addition, U.S. textile mill
prospects continue to deteriorate."
With production larger a nd cotton use remaining about the same,
tlle world's stockpile by Aug. lis
expected to total about 27.5 mtillon
bales, compared to 22.6 million last
Aug. 1.
About 75 percent of tlle world's
carryover Increase of 4.9 million
bales will be due to larger U.S.
stocks. Those are now projected to
reach about 6.4 million bales on
Aug. 1, compared to 2. 7 million
bales last Aug. 1.

RESUME WORK - Here, workers are pichlred

Soil test only correct way

only correct wa y is to soil test. The

time has come that we cannot afford
to guess . In my opinion, we never
could afford to guess.
Le t' s examine a soil tes t. What

does it tell us' A standard soil test
tells us the status of calcium (lime),
phosphorus,
potass ium,
and
magnesmm. These are major plant
nutrients. Nitrogen is a major plant
nutrient but we do not test for it.
Why' Nitrogen through commercial
fertilizers does not stay in the
ground, to any great extent, more
than one year. There is no reliable
quick test for plant-available soil
nitrogen.
Once we know what is in your soil ,
the crops you want to grow, and your
yield goals we can make very good
fertilizer recommendations. A soil
test costs $4.50; but can save you
hundreds of dollars through correct
fertilization if you farm large
acreage . Soil testing doesn't cost it pays!

Accure:tte

!SOil

By MARY ANN ROZUM
Soil Conservationist
Soil Conservation Service
GALUPO!JS - Reclamation constructi on was reswned recently on
the Hobart Darst property on Storys
Run Road in Cheshire Township.
Five mineshafts were drained and
filled and old coal tipples are being
removed. Approximately two and a
half acres will be regarded and
seeded to prevent excess erosion .
Darst was one of the first "1&gt;pli cations in the count y for

der the Rural Abandoned Mine
Program I RAMP I.
Participation is voluntary and funding is received through a coal
severance tax. The soi l conservation
service administers the project
locally and provides engineering
ass istan ce. Twenty-e ight applications have been received to
date in Gall ia Count y.
After seeding. the Darst site will
be used to test experimental plants
for reclamation use. Sawtooth uak
trees are one variety that has had

reclamation assistanc~:: provided un -

success un dry rnine spoib. They

sampling is a must.

Winter wheat in
good condition

Page E -3

grow similar tu white oak and

produce a heavy crop of large acorns that are eaten by deer, grouse and
turkey . as well as squirrels.
D(:jrst i.s also experimentin~
privately with a nwnber of pines and
eve rgree ns in stripmines. He has
had very good results with Scotch
pi ne and

C:J

va riety known as Serbian

spruce.
This type of spruce comes from

Russia a nd grows well under severe
L'O nditions.

Engi neering plans have been completed on another site and plans are
underway for a third site in the
Kyger Creek area. However,
Congress has not appropriated funds
to continue RAMP projects in 1983 at
this time .
Approximately 7,000 acres of
abandoned mine land still remain in
Gallia County.

Have your Excess Cash Automatically Invested In One
of Three Money Market Funds, Including a Tax Exempt
Option, While You Maintain Unlimited Checkwriting Piivileges.

WASJ-llNGTON (AP) - Winter
wheat was In "mostly good condition" as o! rrdd -montll, and corn
planting was edging Into tlle Corn
Belt. says the government's Joint
Agricultural Weatller Facility.
com rows, wet areas, severely
Altllough some areas were too
eroded places, dead and back wet for field work, "The area from
furrows, animal droppings, etc . tlle Great Basin to West Texas and
Take samples at the right depth. The north over the Great Plains recorrect depth is considered plow mained dry," tlle report said.
depth (six-eight inches! for most
The facility , which Is operated by
crops. Th e only exception is tlle departments of Agriculture and
bluegrass lawns and pastures. Take Commerce, said last week tllatdurbluegrass fields three inches deep. lng tlle week of April 12-1.8 "corn
Take several cores from each field planting started In southern areas
to make up a sample. Soil tests take of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio on a
limited basis ."
about 10 days.
Termites - About this time of
"Across tlle South, planting proyear termites start swarming. Swar- gressed rapidly and was generally
mers have wings and are black. ahead of average for this date," the
Don't confuse termites with ants. report said. "Emerged plants were
Anls have a segmented body - ter- In fair .to good condition."
nutes do not. If you are in doubt,
Cotton planting In the major probring your termites mto our office. U ducing states was 11 percent comyou fear you lutve termite::;, have a pleledby the end of the week,
pest control company inspect for compared to 25 percent a year ago,
signs of damage and infestation. If tlle report said.

bring to us ( one--ha U pint l is a very ,

yourtermites,
home hasJim
never
been of
treated
for
Sargent
Ohio
State University, thinks it's a good

The Money Management Account From Central 'Irust.

Choose One of Three High Yield Money Market Funds

•··4

•

Fund
Dreyfus General Money Market Fund
Dreyfus Government Securities Fund
Dreyfus Tax-Exempt Fund

GARLANDM.
DAVIS
512 Sec . Ave .

•

4411-8231
Home PHone

388-9691

•
MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
Fral~nul

Uft l"s11rnu

• Home Office - lod! hlaM, lllinoi1

DEBRIS is cleared from shaft entrance to install drainage.

flijlijlijlijlijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~F.~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~iiiiii~

i(lns

would pay for similar new mer-

chandise. Investigate carefully for
wear or irreparable dama~e

Here are some tips to help you shop at the discount store when price
is important and at more elegant
become a better shopper.
Comparison shopping pays big stores when you need their services
dividends. You may save as much as and selection.
Don't let discount spending get out
50 percent. So, shop around for all
of
hand. "It is so cheap I just can't
the things you buy - prescription
drugs, insurance, cosmetics, cedit pass it up" is nil! a valid reason to
puchase things you do not need. All
and services.
· However, shop more thoroughly items .at discount stores are not offor expensive purchases than for fert.&gt;d at true discount prices.
Before you buy merchandise on
small items. It makes no sense to
sale,
consider why it is selling at a
shop at three stores to ge the best
lower
price. Is it out of season, out of
buy on frozen foods, and then buy the
date, out of style, worn, faded or
first and only food freezer you see.
Consider ·au the possibilities when damaged? Is it taking up room
you shop. Use these sources when needed for new things? Is there a
buyiJfg (or selling) children's significant markdown' Think over
clothing, camping gear, car parts, the characteristics and then decide ·
books, baby needs, pets, antiques if it really is a bargain.
Adopt the motto "Do not buy at
and furniture.
Call-in Radio Programs, second- full -price if you can avoid it." Plan
hand stores, rwrunage sales (or . ahead, shop, choose, and then wait
yard: garage or patio sales), neigh- for a sale. It ll!kes nerve and patienborhood bulletin boards (at shopping ce, but you'll get significant results.
Also learn to keep an eye out for
centers, grocery stores, launbargains,
and know a sale when you
dromats, radio), classified
SCIIl
one.
Everything that is adnewspaper advertisements, unvertised
is
not on sale. So, then in
claimed freight ouUets, SalYation
Anny and Goodwill stores, second- doubt, comparison shop. And never
buy· anything you don't need just
hand stores.
'
However, remember to buy because it's ''a bargain."
cautioUsly. Compare what you

INTHE
ONTHE
AEKM: THE GROOND.

•

ORANGE TAG
SPECIAL

i

1

•· .

Dunng our spnng sale you get your choice of any o'ne of three

gardening attachments with the purchase of a Gravely 2-wheel
•rartor. You can choose between our rotary plow. rotary cultivator
or tdoiholder w1th tools. No matter whiCh you choose. it Will
1 make your garaemng a pleasur1!.
-V Ve~le. Gravely tractors ar1! pnced anb s1zed1o nanale all
garaemngJObs. But.the tractor IS JUSt the beginning. The Gravely

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sweep. furrow. cultivate. plow. doze. haul. rl!move
snow . . aojust atJout arly JOb imaginable.
Huny. Come by and see the Gravely 2-wheel
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SALES and .SERVI

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Nffine ________________________________________

ON'AN A~ lENS
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· •.

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Mail To:
Centrafi.md
P.O. Box 192
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Am Interested In:
DGeneral Money Market Fund
D Government Securtties Fund
D Tax Exempt Fund

'---------------------------------·------------~

CENTRAL TRUST

QffiER (3000 AT, PARTICIPATING
P'IENS ~RS ONLY
•

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_________________________________
Telephone ________

..

' . CH~~. OHIO , .

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Save 00 Mens Garden 1hlctors
d!Jilng ~lENS ORANGE TAG

. SPECIAU

Yield
13.65%*
12.24%*
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• Seven day average ending April 11. 1982. For more ro rnplete infonnatimt about Drevht:, General Mot tev Markt·t Fund. Dreyfus Govem
ment Securities or Dreyfus Tax·Excm pt Fund. including rhargcs and cxprnscs. srnd the coupon brloV.· or v.'Titc for a prospectus from
the Dreyfus Corporation . 767 5th Avenue. N.Y.. N.Y.. \0 rsJ Head al l infonnation earrfu ll ybefore you In vest or send in any money.

investment.

tenors and narrower selection. So,

'

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

very small amount of the soil in that
fi eld but it is supposed to represent
that field . Take your soil samples
carefully. Stay out of unusual areas.
Unusual areas are old fence rows,

Do not be afraid to shop at "exGAL!JPOUS - All of us fmd it
easy tu spend money. But, it's a dif- pensive" stores. Shopping is not
ferent story when it comes to rea lly eqUivalent to buying! You may find
getting your money's worth . The reasonable priced merchandise and
ability to earn money is valuable. big markdowns . Also, shop for ideas.
but an equally valuable skill is the They're free'
Be aware that some stores have
ability to spend it properly . Often
hard-earned dollars are lost by higher prices to cove r their extra
unifonned or foolish buying. Thus, services, special interior decoration ,
the careful spender with a moderate • and wide selections. Discounl'stores
income may be better off than the -usually have lower prices because
poor spender who starts out with they offer fewer services, simple in-

more.

w. va.

Just think - the amount of soil you

Get your money's worth
Home Economics

Gallipolis, Ohi o-Point Pleasant,

Resume reclamation work
on Hobart Darst property

Homemaker's column
Betti Clark, Gallia Co.
Extension Agent,

Middleport

removing old tipple structure to prepare for regrading
and seeding.

County agent's corner
By JOHN RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculhlre, Meigs County
POMEROY - What fertilizer do I
need ' Huw much should I apply' I
want to get the most for my dollar.
These questions no doubt ha ve
crossed your mind many times. The

Pomeroy

Cotton
industry
hurting

.Anticipa~e problem
by controlling pests

migrate in from neighbo ring propt!r-

April 2S, 1982

'

THEF.w.CEITER

.
,.

c~~~~~
,__.,,_

I

I

I

"

'

l- ' . .,

.

Banrorporation

'

�leport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The sunday Times-sentinel-r"

Commitments
running high
in Meigs

Hoboken
no longer
big joke

POMEROY - A quarterly report
has been 1ssued by the office of
Me1gs County Prosecuting Attorney
f'red W. Crow Ill for the first quarter of 1982. w1th some dramalic fin·
dings.

HOBOKEN. N.J. I AP I - Ask any
editorialis t. pli:lywnght or cmmc
who ever chucked Hoboken's chin :

the Cleveland and Buffalo jokes
come and gu, but the one-liner
spnngs eternal in Hoboken, the
pt&gt;renmal punchbne tu lht' national
snicker that goes by the name of
New Jersey .
"Hubuken? You wanna talk about
Hoboken''" HunJware store owner
• George Massarsky trei:lted himsdf
to e1 bit of Vi:IUdevilll' at the expense
of his cit y.

The nwr\ er of persons appearing

in Common Pleas Court for fmal sen·
tenciRg sin ·e January was 22, with

18 of those entenced to pnson, for a
COITUllltme t rate of 81.8 percent.
This IS an ng the highest rates of
corrunilme 1t in the entire slC:tte.
Of the 98 sentenced, 15 we re

/
~

disposed of through b1lls of Jnfonna n. The remaining three
we mdicted by the grand jury but
entered guilty pleas before ever
going to tnal.
Nine receivt&gt;d rnulttple 1 cun·
secutivt' l sentences . Charges
resulting in persons being sent to
pnson included. theft of drugs.
passing bad checks.

kidnapping,

felomous assa ult, breaking and en·
tering, receiving stolen property and
aggravated 1armed I robbery.
Two of those sent to prison went on

probation revocations. having failed

to meet the terms of their probation.
e&lt;.tses re s ult ed from tn·
vest1gat10n by the prosecutor's office, the Me1gs County Shenff's
Department. the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and Identification, the Meigs County Welfare
Department and area Jaw en·
forcement agencies.
Five people sentenced to prison in·
vulved crimes where a firearm was
used .
This, accord1ng to Crow, pointo up
not only the Increase in the volwne
of crime. but the seriousnes.'i of it
and the potential for VIOlence.
Dunng the f1rst quarter of 1982, the
number of felony cases was approximately 35 percent more then
for the same period a year ago.
Moreo ve r. in the first quarter uf
1981. none of the offenses were
cnmes of vwlence or crimes involving fircanm;
)n the first quarter of 1981. no drug
cases were brought. In the same
period of thiS year, four persons
have been arrested for trafficking in
drugs. More than 20 pounds of
marijuana , having a street va lue of
$8.000 to $9.000 was confiscated under search warrants obtained by the
prosecutor's office and a 1976
Chevrolet Blazer used in a theft of
drugs case was forfeited to the county.
A second vehicle - a 1977 f'ord
four-wheel drive pick-up - was
rece ntl y fmieited to the county 111
yet another drug case.
In add1t10n to felony cases. the
prosecutor's office handles all
cnmi nal prosecutions in the co unty
court. In the first quarter of this
year. 446 cases were filed. These in·
eluded traffic cases, wildlife cases,
sheriff's cases and citizen-initiated
complainto.
A complete breakdown on county
court act1v1ty will be released 111 the
near futun•, according to assistant
prosecutor I. Carson Crow, who
represents the state in all
misdemeanor cases.
The

49.99
Reg. 69 .99

Johnson Minn Kola
Two Speed Electric Motor

3.88

Th1 s mo101 olfers yoo many outstlllldmg
features found only m the more expens1ve
model s 2 speeds w1th h1 lo speed control
sw1tch 1n head. 7 pos1110n ad1ustable

SET

Res. 5.29 Set

Anchor Hocking 8 Pc. Tumbler Set

brackets w!!h smgle clamp mount1ng
Perfect tor l1sh1ng

Bla.11lwl 12 01 decorate~ btweragoe glust! •n 1 1e1 ol 8

SPORTS DEPT

HOtiSFWARE DEPT .

5x7... .. ........

2.99

8xl0 ............

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Picture Frames

Turtle Wax
Resin Glaze Polish

~7 . 99

Bonds onto yOU/ car"s flmsh to prov1de long
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Academy 7' x 7' Three-Man Wall Tent
L1gllrwe•gh1 coeted n~lon complete WITh ro11u. alum111Um poles and stakes Nrlon
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Includes nylon carrv bag Tre down Storm flaps

Reg. to 9.99

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

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Jur11or dreue5 rn poly -crepe. spun poly or hnen
labocs Assorted styles Srtts 5 ro I !i

Deeply Textured polyester knrt panels wrlh open
wtiYI styling. Constructed ol IOD% polyester tor
eur care Choose hom nsoned colors

CLOTHING DEPT.

DOMESTIC DEPT.

1.99

EACH

1 Reg. 2.48 Each

99¢

22.99
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1.66
Req.
Reg. 28.98

Rag. To 1.62 Eac:h

Hip wade~ ol vulcanized rubber with
cleated sole and heel lor stability
Available tn olive drab color.

• Chest waders feature molded boot
with steel atcll and cleated sole and
· heel. Suspenders not included . Ohve
drab color. A great accessory for the
fisherman!

SPORTS DEPT.

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Rubber Hip Waders

Rooster Tail Fishil)g lures

The Mepps Comet® Mrno looks. feels and mo~es
lrke Tile real thrng Mmo can be easrty removed and
rep I aced rf desrred

Na1Ural colors and actron make the rooster tarl on
ol the •best lures for !foul. bass and other game
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SPORTS DEPT.

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Mepp's"Comet Mino" lure

__

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J.99
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Ladies' Junior Dresses

Internship
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2.44

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Tough remlorced hose wrll pro~rde years ol
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HARDWARE DEPT .

HARDWARE OEPT.

mo~e

easrty fo r srrnpler

RIO GRANDE - Studento in the
distributiOn and marketing program

at Buckeye Hills Career Center will
soon begm the1r annual Internship
Program. Origmally begun in the
Spnng of 1981 , this umque Internship
Program gives students the orportunity to receive actual on-thejob training in a variety of retail
jobs. No wages are earned , but the
experience gained serves as the
studento' "pay ."
Through the cooperation of local
and area businesses, the students
•re assigned to various businesses
ranging from fast food establishments to furniture stores. The
students experience fitst hand all
aspecto of retailing from unlocking
the doors, turning on the lights and
taking out the garbage to ordering
supplies, stocking shelves, serving
customers, making change, han·
dling minor emergencies, dressing
windows, getting along with their coworkers and locking up at the end of
the day.
The 1981Internship Program was
a complete success. It not only ser·
ved as an invaluable learning ex·
perience for the students, it also
promoted good public relations
among Buckeye Hils Career Center,
the participating students and the.
lOCal and area retailers.
It is hoped the Buckeye Hills
Distribution and Marketing Internship Program will be a yearly
event. The !982 Internships will
begin soon. Any local or area merchants wishing to take part in this
Internship Program are invited to
phone Buckeye Hills Distribution
and Marketing Instructor Becky
Rothgeb at24~.

I

"We could talk about Hoboken."
amiably. '' But there's
always so little to say."
But seriously, folks . There 1s plenty to say abou t Hoboken these days.
and to the 42,000 who live here, et
tlll'rt' 2,000 yi:irds frolll New York,
much of !I seems far frnm funny
A deci:lde ago, i:l new breed of
sut'tal sc1enti st desct&gt;mled upon
.. Amenca 's Urban Laborator y." as
Mayor Steve Capiellu dubbed his
citv. ttl conduct i:lll experiment
ci:lilt•d ui·bi:ln renewal
Tht· expl'rirnenl hall succeeded
elsewht•re, Hl Wash!ndon's Ca patol
Hill . Philadelphia's Queens Village,
Brooklyn's Park Slope . But
Hoboken? HOBOKE N?'&gt; There was
plenty of reason to wonder.
How bad was Hoboken' It was so
bad that there was talk of turning it
intn a highway . So bad that city of.
ficials once barred photographers
from tak1ng pictures of it. So bad
that jokes about how bad it was
becctme stuck stuff fur every Borscht Belt comic strug gl ing to make
his way out of the Catskills.
flut thiS tune, th1s once. Hoboken
li:lughed last. The experiment
worked, and the ci ty has been transfonned - frum a place people we~n­
lt•O to lt•;.tvt• 1t1tll d place people want
to Ci:lll horne .
Alon g with tnmsformmg Hoboken,
howt•ver, some si:l y urban renewal
did sutnt't hin g else. It tTcttted "a
Frankenstein" 111 the view of
resident Steve Block, who says
" m&gt;bndy thought about what harpens when tilt' middle class actually
cu1nes back nnd takt·s over.''
Hubokemtt's are givmg thi:lt lots of
thou ght, now that the lax base has
dw111died. unemployment tops 16
percent. nml pnor people rlatm
tlw y' re being pushed out of town .
·Hnbokt•n!" used furntture dealer
Rock\' Muselli:l mourned rec ent ly.
"YDu. sho uld' vt• seen Hoboken when
Hoboken was Hobukt•n ~"
Hobukt•n was Hoboken when
Muselli:l was ~ row1n ~ up , ndlll/;!
scuolt'rs. stectlin g apples and
t.lodging cops on ib ga ud y, grilty
streets. Today. hl' sees those strecb
sprouting gourmet food shops and
antiques stores. i:lnd ht•'s starting to
ft&gt;t'l like a stnmger .
A walk up Washington Street. tht·
main t.lrct g, leaves no doubt : the
Rodney Dangerfield of cities is
s]tlwly but steC:tJ.ily gmng uptown .
Oh. you can still get a cake shaped
like Puerto Rico at Valencia Bakery,
Italian figurines on lay·away at II
i''aro fti:llit:HW, CUltJ an ctrgument
from the dry clei:lner when you bring
him i:lll itl~tn he insists you can wash
yourself. " Whatayawan na waste
money for ?"
But you can also munch chocolate
!Tlnusse cakt' at Lesley's Delicacies,
order veal sweetbre.ad!-i with lobster
anti cream sauce C:tt the Brass Rail
ant.l dress up in antique finery from
Second Performance .
The old and the new collide on
almost every block. transfonmng
the shopping district into a surreal
hash of dry toast and crurnpeto,
baked beans and eoquilles St.
Jacques.
It wasn't that long a,~.;o when there
was very little hope for Hoboken.the
c1ty where Amencans lapped their
first 1ce creCIJJl cones, brewed their
first beer and attended the nation's
first recorded baseball game.
"There was even some talk about
turning it into a highway between
the Lmcoln and Holland tunnels."
recalls nerghborhoud prescl-vettion
director Sal Santamello.
It' s hard lo pinp01nt when
Hoboken hit bottom. but some say
the late 1930s and early 1940s were
among 1ls lowest ebbs.
lw Si:lll1

1.89

Rog. 2.49

ladies' Visors
Choose form assorted styles and fabrrts Terl)'.
COitOII 01 ITIIW

CLOTHING DEPT.

1.09

""" 1.39

Cannon®
15" x 25" Terry Kitchen

Towels
~

towels !01 the kttchen. Anoned terrv
prints to mateh your kitchen decor.

UIIIIESnc iDEiiPTIII.•••II!!!!~~~~~~

1.26

Reg. 3.59

Cannon® Velour Print Bath
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Beaulrvul lloral ponrart prrnl bath ensemble lrom
Cannon®. These sol! and absorbent 11rry towels
have coordinatrng hand towels and wash cloths.

Reg. 1.98

Lustroware
Lettuce Crisper

Hand Towel ................ 1.89
Wash Cloth ................. 1.19
DOMESTIC DEPT.

2.88

1.99

R~ 2.10

5 Oz. Cascade

;l:lqbbermaid.®
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Rubbermaid®
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Sptcral long-lastrng materral.heavy
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HOUSEWARE OEPT.

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HOUSEWARE DEPT.

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88¢ 2.99
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Turtle Wax®
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Rog. 3.47

Removes rL 1 ·rom bumpers
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restores orrgrnal luster Easy to
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Handsome ceramrc design Will tnharrce 111y
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AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

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COSMETIC DEPT.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol Isn't changing its stripes but Is changing the
color of its 900 patrol cars.
To cotnctde with the patrol's 50th
anniversary next year, lt has
started changing from white squad
cars to metallic sliver autos.
' Capt. James Prather satd Wed·
nesday It will take about two years
to complete the changeover.
Prather said ll sUver crul.sers aJ.
ready are patrolling the highways.
Those were assigned to officers
who have been named troopers of
the year tn thetr lndtvtdual
districts.
The last color change was tn 1967,
when the patrol switched from
black to white.

�April 25, 1982
Page-E-6- The Sunday T1 mrs -Se ntin el

w. Va .

Pomeroy- Middl eport-Gal lipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Census returns from one In five
Ame ricans .
The study contains a mass of statistics, some new and others con·
fl rmlng trends previously reported.
Of the 23 million Amertcans talk·
lng a language other than English
in their homes, 48 percent are
speaking Spanish, the report said.
Asians, according to the 1\m census, had a median family Income In
Ihe United States of $22,075 a year.
The median famil y Income for
wh ites was $20,840. Hispanic families had a median income of $14,711

and blacks had a median Income of

$12,618.

ach Itself to people trying to raise
children a lone."

The median household Income
for the country as a whole In 1979
was U6,830, up 98.3 percent from
1969.
The percentage of people ·uvtng
In poverty decllned from 13.7 percent to 12.5 percent during the decade ending 191ll, with the largest
decllne In the South.
"A high percentage of people In·
poverty are women raising chlld·
ren," satd Census Director Bruce
Chapman. "Poverty seems to att·

Chapma n documented the
wtdely reported growth In the
number of women In the work
force, commenting that the way for
a famlly to suCCI)e(l economically Is
lor the womafi to work.
Between 1970 and 19ffi, the
number of working women jumped
58 percent, whlle men In the work
force Increased by 42 percent, he
said.
"This Is a mllestnne report,"

'
Chapman
said. "What l! Is, Is a

r"'

CINCINNATI (AP) _ Mass
marketing of health care· was unknown ID hospitals a few years ago.
But Wllltam M. Copeland, president of St. Francis-St. George Hospital In Cinc innati, says his
hospital's large-scale marketing
Program might txl Its salvation. ·
"Within 10 years, almost all ofthe
hospitals In the country will be part
of a proprtetary chain," Copeland
predicted. He said cuts In federal
aid and other proposed changes In
financing threaten the existence of
many hospitals.
Hospitals that operate for-profit
are something of a rartty now In
Ohio, where only three hospitals
are run on that basis.
But hospitals across the state are
preparing for big changes In the
health care field, according to Thomas Oberltesen, vice president of
planning and environmental servl:
ces for the Ohio Hospital
Association.
The marketing program at St.
Francis-St. George Includes a planning department that surveys the
community to find out how to lm·
prove or create programs and services. Once a service Is developed,
a publlc relations department promotes !t.
"If we put on a marketing seminar today, we can sell every
seat," Oberllesen said. "I think
times are going to get harder for
hospitals. Hospitals are being
forced to be more competitive."
Mary LDulse Shaver, who developed the marketing program for
St. Francis-St. George, said hospl·
tals have always had a "we know
best" approach to providing
services.
But Increased competition has
forced them ID make surveys and
studies to see what the community
needs, and "You begin to taller

-The use of central alr conditionIng Increased 225 percent between
1970 and 191ll.
-There are now 5.8 mllllon oneparent farnllles, or 19.1 percent of
all tannllles with children. That's up
from 12.3 percent In 1970.
Non-famlly households, that Is
people living alone or with nonrelatives, Increased TI.9 percent
during the decade and now constitute more than one-fourth - 26.7
percent - .of all households. At the
same time, households made up of
lamllles Increased 15.7 percent.

snapshot of the country."
Other major findings Included:
-Amerlcansuslng publictransportatlon to get to work declined to 6.3
percent In 1~. down from 8.9 percent a decade earlier:
-For the first tlme more than
half _ 66.3 percent_ of all persons
aged 25 and over have completed
four years of high school.
-About 17 percent of Amertcans
have completed four years of college,. up from 11 percent In 1970.

Grange
•
remains
strong
FREEDOM, Ma111e 1AP I- Dona
Ingraham baked a creamed OJllnns
casserole, Ma tti e Hot ha m &lt;t crock-

pot of ye llow-eyed beans . ViOla
Greeley brought blueberry cakl' and
molded sa lad .
" Grange members du likl' tu eat."
says Florence Overlol'k, helplllg nut
on the uld 10-burner stove as uth er
women trooped in w1th more desser·
Is and hot dishes.
There's always plenty of food and
lot.-; of good convers(:ltiun at putlul'k
supper at Dm1goGranJ,;t', No. 98.
It was a good turnout th(:lt mghL. ;1
special oecasion m(:lrkmg the VJsJ t uf
officers from tl1c Slcttc Gr(:lnge, (:llld
45 people sat shuultler to slmu lder on
the dining room benches. swapp1ng
stories or catching up un news frorn
neighbonng towns.
But mos t of ihuse al the suppl'l' ,
and the busmess Jllel'1 1ng that
followed. were 1111ddle-aged and
older, a worry to rnembers wh1J wonde r if the Grcmgt• can still atlral'l
yo unger people to its ra nks.
"' It's too b&lt;.~d there aren't rmw y
more young pcoplt' who want to
join," says Ma llie Hut han , lamenting that the younger generation
seems to find the Grctngt• um·xcltlllg.
'' You know the young people tuday ,"
she says.
Fur mun: them a century, tilt•
na tion's rurHl virtues hc:tVe been ernbodied in the Grange, a fraternal order rooted in ag riculture and the
timl'il•ss patterns of country life. It 's
conservati ve and pat n otJc refleetln g the outl ook of a sturdy
yeomanry th~t long &lt;.-~gn out numbered the nati on's c1ty fo lk.
But times have changed. There
are fewer fanners, and the Gnwge
has dropped in membership. Now.
there is ta lk of a resurgence, prompted by changes in Ame rica's values
and a revival of rural life.
In 1981 Mame reco rded its first Illcrease in G rc:~ nge membersh ip 111

At Hatfield &amp; McCoy it's " raining
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nea rl y three dtx.:a de~. a ~ain of 34

over the previous yea r. ·· It
was small, but at least it was an increase," says State Master James
E. Shores .
Mern~rs h1p 111 the St&lt;:tle Gn111ge
has dropped from an all-time ln gh of
63,000 in the ea rly 1950s to its current
level of 18,200. The trend is s11mlar
nationwide. Membership h1t the 1
million mark around 1680, and nwnbered 700,000 three decades ago
before dropping to around 450,000,
where it has remained rough ly the
same for the past 10 years.
"In the Vietnam era, people were
antisocia L They didn 't wa nt to JOIIl
anything, th ey didn 't want to belong
to anything . Now, there seems to be
a ~reale r interest in community a nd
family, " says Shores.
Shores, one of the state leaders
visiting the Grange hall in Freedom,
says that the ord er traditionall y
does well in hard economic tun es
when lack of money forces people to
give up more expensive pleasures
for the s impler ones.
Leaders also see ca use for optimism in demographic trends
showing a movement away from the
cities and back to rural areas. While
the 1980 census showed near 1y a 11 of
Maine's large cities losi ng
population, some of the mos1
dramatic gains were recorded in
small towns.
In Freedom, for example, the
pOpulation went from 373 in 1970 to
453 a decade later. But there has
been no letup in the decline in fam il y
fanns . and more townspeople make
their living in the mills a nd offices of
Waterville than by tending dairy
herds or raising chickens. ·
." When the Grange started, it was
stiictly agriculture. Now it's the
fraternal aspects that keep it
tog~ther. It's not just farmers now.
There aren't enough of them left,"
says Shores.
The Grange, known formally as
uie Order of the Patrons of Husbandiy, traces its origins to 1867. Its
fO)IIIding father was Oliver Hudson
Kelley, who came up with the Idea of
a lraternal organization, made up of
farmers, that would promote
agriculture and help heal the scars
caused by the Civil War.

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ATHENs

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Friday:
6 p .m. until I 0 p.m .
Saturday:
I I a .m. until 9 p.m .
Sunday:
I I a .m. until 5 p.m .
Admission : $2.50
Students: $ 1.00

April 30, May 1-2
45 dealers featuring American country antiques and
Americana for the -beginner and the advanced collector.
Ohio University Convocation Center Athe ns, Ohio
Manager: Jim Reynokls - 614 /885 -389 1 or 888 -7173

LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN, PRE-OWNED

ALL TRADE-INS ON MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
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1971 BELMONT 12x65 . . . . .
1972 BARON, 12x60, CENTRAL AIR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1976 OAKWOOD 12x52, !urnished with cenlral air condit ioning
1967 ElCONA lOx SO WITH TIP-OUT IN LIVING ROOM

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"

POMEROY, OHIO
9927034

SEE AND HEAR
HOW TO MAKE YOUR
ADVERTISING WORK HARDERMeet The
Expert ••••

SPONSORED BY:

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
The Daily Sentinel
THESE INFORMATIVE SUBJECTS WILL BE
COVERED TO MAKE YOUR ADVERTISING PROGRAM MORE EFFECTIVE AND
PROFITABLE .
How a 5 -Minute Timing Check Ca n Put Y0u
on the Road to More Effective Adver ti sing.
Why Does So m e Copy Pull
Whil e So m e Fall s Flat?

AREAL COMPUTER!

Its Head 011.

Kevin
Kane
of
the
Newspaper
Advertising
Bureau in New York City
will be the featured speaker
at th e Retail Advertising
Clinic at 8 :30 a.m .• April 28,
at
th e
Holid ay
Inn ,
Gallipolis. He will advise
loca l m e rch a nt s on how they
can increase th eir sa les and
profits through a mor e effective advertising plan.
Mr . Kane is in charge of
Retail Sales Development
for th e Eastern Region of
the
Unit ed
Sla t es and
Canada for th e Newspaper
Advertising Bureau .
Mr. Kan e ha s oeen with the NAB for eight years
in a number of capacities, including working with
manufacturers, whol esa lers, a nd retailers, as well as
working with n ational, regional a nd loca l adver ti sers.
Hi s major areas of op era tion includ e working with
ad ve rtis e r s in an effort to improve their advertising
a nd copy la yout s as welt as th e e ff ectiven ess of lh e ir
a dv erti si ng doll ars . In thi s latter in s tance, Mr . Kane
he lps advertisers estab li s h a dv erti si ng budg e t s w h ich
are d es ign ed t o provid e maximum response and
readership at th e leas t dollar inv estment.
Mr . Kane is a graduate wi th honors from tona Col lege wh ere he majored in Adverti s ing and Com ·
municat10ns .

/

Kevin Kane
Conducts the Clinic.

INVEST 120 MINUTES OF YOUR TIME.

PLAN NOW
TO ATTEND

How Advance Planning Can Sa ve You Time,
In c r ease Your Traffi c Vol um e and Profits.
Plus Co-op Advertising Workshop .

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

Make your ~eservation Today!

.--.........
:

Please Reply No later Than Friday, April 23rd.
Join other progressiv e, profit-minded bu siness m en at Th is
very informative clinic.

"\

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The Clinic is FREE of charge, but we would appreciate you send ·
ing a reservation form.

• Keep Track of
Your Budget

.
''

"They went Into this many years
ago to help the needy and provide a
need that was not provided . They
see It becoming blg business," he ·
said. "Religious communities are
asking, 'Is this what we want?' The
Incentives for remaining non-profit
are becoming scarce."

1;;;;;;;;;;;;___;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;.,;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Is Your Advertising Layo ut Chasing Readers
Away?

.....

sa.vo.

s13VA

·'

Page

MOBILE HOMES

70

_GALLtPOLIS,
. . OHIO-~. -

. ALLAT PR

a private club. I won't say where it
is, but the members include doctors
and wealthy coal operators. The
cl ub pays taxes and hires security
people to see that there are no
drunks a nd that -nobody gets out of
line; we treat each oth er with
respect."
Mahon maintains that rooster
fighters are carry ing on a noble
tradition thousands of years old.
"Why, we've had presidents who
ra"ed ga m ecocks. George
Washington loved rooster fighting."
Mahon also loves it, with an open
and unabashed passion.
" I always loved to fight ga me
chickens," he says. " When I was
just a little boy, I used to hoe corn all
day lon~_so I c6uld ea rn 50 cents and
buy me a Blue Cornis h rooster a nd
fight it. When I was 19, a Freewill
Baptist minister gave me my first
real ga me rooster and I've been
rai::;ing them ever ::;ince."
In the arena, the roosters are
equipped with steel spurs a nd they
fight to the death.
" A fight usually lasts from between 30 seconds to two minutes," he
says. "Some people say it 's cruel to
fight chickens, but I don't think so.
You know those eggs you eat in the
morning? Well , they probably carne
from hens that had had their beaks
cut off by the growers; now, that's
what I ca ll cruel. I'd never do
anything like tha i to une of my

a certificate of need from the Ohio
Department of Health. The deartment closely regulates hospital
growth In the state.
Still, Copeland said. It doesn't
look encouraging for retlg!ous organizations that have supported
hosp itals over the vears.

Don't Let That Ad Run Unt il It 's Passed T hi s
"Quick Quiz"

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
VE GOT CHESTS
AND UPRIG'HTS AVAIJ.ABLE

The Sunday Times· Sentinel

How Can You M ake Sma ll e r A d s Stand Out?

• LeamHow

auyFooos
FREEzE 0 1Vsi1LE•

w. va .

don't treat the same kind of patient
you treat In an emergency room.
They don't run 24 hours a day or
provide sophisticated services of a
modem trauma center. They are
attracting the gravy that have a llowed emergency rooms to operate
viably over the years."
Mrs. Shaver said the hospital has
found an area where It can work
with the center. The hospital has
opened a laboratory services facll ·
lt j next to the center to provtde for
the a nalyses of specimen.
"We decided we could take that
and make It an opportunity," she
said.
~
Oberllesen said that once a hospl131determines a need lor a new service and before It can develop or
market that service, It must secure

How Better Responoe from In d ivid ua l Ads
Reduces Your Sel ling Cost.

.

CASH AND CARRY ONLY

Ansoll

Point Pleasant,

Item Selection: Key to P lus Readership . Extra
Sa les.

«

A FREEZER I

RAGLAND, W.Va. (API - Amon
Mahon has devoted much of his
spare time over the past 20 yea rs to
raising thoroughbreds that wou ld
rather fighl than run .
Mahon doesn't breed race horses,
however. He raises roosters.
"Yes, and these definitely are
thoroughbreds," the disabled coal
miner says, as he S\lf'Veys some 50
gamecocks strutting about in the
s ide yard of his rural Mingo County
home. "I've devoted a good part of
my life to de veloping these
chickens ."
Mahon beamed in discussing his
feisty feathered friends, each of
whom resides in his very own converted oil drum. Doors have been
cut into the drums, which are
distributed evenly about the yard .
"Each chicken is tied to a length of
string, and the drums are spaced so
thai they can't reach each other," he
says. "If somebody would cut the
strings, these roosters would have
each other torn apart within fiv e
minutes."
Mahon realizes many people don't
approve of cockfighting. It's illegal
in West Virginia and leads to
periodic crackdowns. One last
February produced more than 50
arrests in neighboring Logan County.
But Mahon argues that " the
media" consisten tly dwell on cockfighting 's "most negative aspects."
" I do fight my roosters, but not in
West Virginia," he says. " I belong to

• insatallatlon of any carpet

:

G ·a tlipolis, Ohio

Callender said. He doesn't share
Copeland's belle! that for-pro!!t hospitals wlll take over t,he market In
10 years.
"It becomes very d!tflcult for a
not-for-profit hospital to become a
lor-profit hospital, but If we assume
every (finance) proposal becomes
law, than (Copeland's statement)
would be pretty true." he said.
"The lear assumes we will stag·
nate. The hospital Industry wlll not
be stagnant. We never have been."
Doctors recently opened an
urgent-care clln!c near St. F'ranclsSt. George. Copeland said he fears
that a for-profit center of Its type
could take emergency-care business from the hospital beea use the
clln!c can operate more cheaply.
"It's a threat," he said. "They

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your services more than ever before," she salcJ:
John Callender, vice president of
flnanclal services for the Ohio Hos·
pltal Association, said new marketIng concepts wlll mean more
advertlsllng for hospitals.
"I hope we don't advertise with a
blonde walking down the street
with a tight pair of pants on and
then flash a hospital sign, but we
wlll show a half-full glass to advertise an alcohollsm program," be
said.
The main goal of hospital advertising Is to tell about services that
people In the community might not
know about, said Calle nder, who en·
dorses hospit a l marketing
programs.
Callender said proposed cuts In
the Medicaid program would most
affect the state's large hospitals
and chlldrens' hospitals.
"I'm a flscal conservative, but I
don't bellj!ve In beating an 8-yearold kid over the head because of a
budget problem. That 8-year-old
kid doesn't know anything about
supply-side economics," he said.
Another threat to hospitals Is proposed cuts In tax-exempt financing,
Callender said. That financing aJ.
lows non-profit hospitals ID afford
ca pital Improvements.
Callender said cuts are planned
because large corporations use the
financing to bulld stores or restaurants, and "It wlll make It more
dltflcult for non-profit hospitals to
ge t financing for cap it a l
Improvements."
He expects that trend to boost lor·
profit Institutions that might want
ID locate In Ohio.
It has been dltf!c ult for tbe for·
profit hospitals to locate In Ohio, In
part, because Blue Cross was not
permitted to fund for-profit hospl·
tais until three or four years ago,

Retired miner
raises fighters

Sunday
12:3(}-6:30 - ::
Mon. &amp; Tues.:
10am-9pm

OR
MEDITERRANEAN
COLOR CONSOLE

Middleport

Mass marketing may be hospital salvation in long run

Asians now enjoying larger incomes than Americans
WASHINGTON (AP I - Ameri cans have a new sell-portrait, and
It's not a picture of "Ozz!e a nd Har·
riel" or "Archie Bunker."
Asians are enj oying larger Incomes than whites ln the United
States and 10 percent of the people
In thJs country are speaking a language other than English In their
homes. One of every eight Ameri·
cans Is poor.
The new self-portrait, painted In
191ll and un velled by the Census Burea u Monday, shows that America
Is more a melting pot than ever.
The report was based on long-for.m

Pomeroy

April 25, 1982

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play exciting computer gan..,l

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Yes, I plan to attend th e RETAIL ADVERTISING CL INI C a t th e Ho liday Inn
April 28, 1982. 8 :30A.M .
1 .wi ll n eed - - add itiona l reservations for other advertisi n g personne l ot my
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MAIL TO: GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
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�Page-E -8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

States That Have Laws Prohibiting
Drinking While Driving
Law I~;;;:
No Law

latltl

DD C

UKIVING AND DRINK ING LAWS - This rhart

illustrates which states prohibit dri vers to drink while
drivi ng. I AP Laserphoto I.

Fed up Americans request
action from legislators
concerning DWI violators
By Associated Press
How many auto acc idents do we
hear about that are blamed on
drunken drivers? Think about It.
It seems every time someone Is
In a serious acc ident, It's because
someone was driving drunk. Ca me
barreling through a red light.
Crossed the center line. Couldn 't
stop
It's so common we almost take II
for gra nted . An act of fate, like getting hlt by lig htning. Accidents, In·
jury and death ca used by drunken
driving sometimes seem a price of
modern motor travel.
But across the country, people
are saying th ey are not willing to
accept that price. They are no
longer willing to be lightning rods.
Americans are doing something
about drunke n driving.
They are pushing and prodding
legisia tors, writing letters to editors and speaking before school and
civic groups on the horrors of
drunken driving. Pollee, prosec u·
tors and judges flnd themselves
under new prPssures to crack
down .
In the last year, 22 sta tes have
enacted new drunken driving laws.
, 11nd tougher measures were pro•,posed In 261eglslatures this year, an
Assocla ted Press s urvey found .
They are making It easier to a rres t,
convic t a nd ja il drunken drivers.
President Reaga n has appointed
a na tiona l commission to study the
problem, a nd Congress Is thinking
about a computerized national driver's register so repeat offenders
ca n't avoid stiller penalties by movIng to other states.
The federal legisla tion would require first offenders to do g) hours
of community service a nd make second offenders spend 10 days In ja il.
"For too long, drunk driving has
been socia lly acceptable and even
condoned as part of our American
·macho' Image," says the sponsor,
Sen. Clalrbome Pel!, D-R.I., who
has had two staff members kllled In
drunken driving acc idents.
Macho, Indeed. Ninety percent of
those arrested for drunken driving

arrests each year for drunken drivIng: Johnny Carson and F. Lee Sal·
ley on the same recent weekend In
Callfornla; 41,!XXJ In tiny Vermont
last year; 31,!XXJ In F lorida the last
six months.
But the National Highway Traffic Safety Admlnlstration says that
lor every drunken driver who Is arrested, 2,!XXJ others are not. One of
every 10 drivers on a ny given Fri·
day or Saturday night Is drunk, the
government says.
And It gets worse. The chances of
going to jail or paying a fine are
even less tha n the chance of being
arrested.
In Oklahoma City last October
charges.were reduced or dismissed
for 170 of the 175 people arrested lor
drunken driving, a study showed.
Of 7,gj2 people arrested for driving
while Intoxicated In San Antonio
from 1978 to 1900, only 14 were convicted of felony offenses - this In a
city where last year at least 78 traffic deaths were due to drunken
driving.
In &lt;Ui states, the legal bloodalcoholllmlt lor drivers Is 0.10 percent, but a study In Georgia says
the average person arrested has a
level of 0.17 percent, the equivalent
of eight drinks for a 1&amp;J.pound man
ln an hour.
The same study showed that people arrested lor drunken driving
the !lrst time admlt to doing It at
least 15 times belore.
Yet 25 states do not even prohlblt
drinking while driving. In La·
layette, La ., there's a drive-In bar
called the Daqulrl Factory, where
motorists pull up, grab a drink
through the window and roar off
without leaving the car . A house
specialty Is Jungle Juice, made
with vodka and 190-proo! grain

alcohol.
The AP survey shol'/ed a wide
dlverslty In state penalties for
drunken driving. In Kentucky and
VIrginia, the maximum penalty Is a
S::~ fine and a six-month license
suspension; even If the judge wants
to, first offenders cannot be sent to
jail. In Massachusetts, however,
you lace up to two years In jail, a
one-year license suspension and a
$l,(XXl fine.
Indiana's maximum for the first
offense Is a year on probation, a
two-year license suspension and a
$5,!XXJ fine, whlle Wisconsin has a
m aximum six-month license suspension, a $.llO fine and no jall tlme.
Several states have mandatory
minimum sentences - a day In
Arizona and Washington, two days
In Call!ornla and Iowa, three days
In Ohio. 10 days In Oklahoma - but
MADD and RID say prosecutors
routinely take plea bargains to
lesser charges. and judges routinely substitute attendance at alcohoi abuse classes lor jail
' time.
Some states now are considering
what Kentucky Gov. John Y.
Brown calls a "slammer blll," requlrlng everyone convicted o!
drunken driving to spend a dpy or
two or three In jall. Including first
offenders, no exceptions.
At the same time, states are tryIng to make It easier to make

,

The

Unemployment, economic concerns,
•
•
topic at recent Democratic
session
POMEROY - Democratic candidates £or the U. S. House or
Representatives, state House of
Representatives, and state central
committee spoke during the regular
meeting of the lOth Congressional
District Democratic Action Club las t
week at the Meigs Inn.
Chuck Overby, Athens, candidate
£or Congress, and Mrs. Ralph
Barrett, representing her husband,
whu is seeking the same office, both
expressed 'concern about unemployme nt a nd lhe economic
situation. Overby also was criti cal of
the nuclea r arms race and the defense and social policies or the present
administration.
The two candidates running in the
J une 8 primary £or the Ohio House o£
Representatives from the 94th
District I Athens, Gallia, and Meigs
counties), Jolynn Boster, Gallipolis,
and B•ll White, Athens, were intnxluced a nd spoke briefly.
Marga ret Yeager, Marietta, running unopposed in the 9th District
IMus kingum. Washington a nd
,. ' rgan counties! spoke or her concern a bout the serious condition of
the economy in Ohio and the school
system.
Four candidates are running for
Democratic · state central committeeman. Three of these were
present and spoke : Dean Kahler,
Amesville; William A. Lavelle,
Ath ens; a nd Don F . Moye r .
Za nesville.
For Democrati c state central

WHOLESALE - RETAIL

committeewoman, two a re running.
One, Mary Gallagher, Ironton. was
present and ga ve a short talk.
Representati ves for candidates
£or Governor, Ohio Attorney
General, and OhioSecrewry of State
spoke or the merits of their can-

dictates. Leon Levion, Za nesville,
Muskingwn County chairman a nd
president of the Democratic Action
Club conducted the meeting.
O£ficers or the club will be elected
at the next meeting, June 16, at
Marietta.

tore the strlkr," says Donald End·
chief of the CATCC, which Is
believed to be the busiest of the nation's 20 control centers.
About ll,!XXJ members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization . . all government
employees, struck last Aug. 3 and
were fired by President Reagan.
PATCO since has been decertlt!ed
as tbl! otrlclal 'bargaining agent tor
air controllers.
Before the strike, about 700 persons worked at the center. Now,
there are :114 workers, 55 percent ot
the pre-strtke Ioree. Of!tclals say 24
more will be added soon, bringing
the personnel strength to 4al.
The scores o! controllers, computer technicians and meteorologists
Inside the center, located on the
east side of this small college town,
are responsible for about 69,!XXJ
square mlles of airspace.
The area, which resembles no
particular shape, Is bounded
roughly by Syracuse, N.Y., to the
east, Clarksburg, W.Va., to the
south, Fort Wayne, Ind., to the west
and north Into Canada.
F11ght controllers work much
Uke football quarterbacks running
hando!! plays. A controller at one
working position works wtth a
plane tor as long as lt occupies hts
sector of airspace, then electron!·
cally gives the plane to another controller whose responslbiHty Is
another sector of airspace.
nw center's operatl~ differs
!rom airport control towers In that
lt has no dealings with planes on the
ground. The final banda!! made by
a controller returns the plane to an
airport approach controller for
landing Instructions.
Duties at the CATCC have not
changed since the controller's
strtke, but the work week Is consld·
erably longer tor everyone
Involved.
"We're trying to get to a point of a
44-hour workweek," E.ndm said.
"Because we're on a two-week pay
period that would mean everybody
works-a six-day week followed by a
five-day week."
That won't be easy, he 98kl, because attrttlon and Illness play
llavoc wtth schedules. The center
!lopes to guarantee each controller
-week of paid vacation this year
but that, too, Is Iffy.
"When the strike occurred, a lot
of tblngs look place out here," Enders sald. "In the months after the
strike, morale was very good. People were working very hard, but
arowx1 Chrlstmas tt became evident that the morale In some people
mtpt be hard to sustain."
Enders said he Ia not sure when .
the full ef1ect of the strike hit
workers at the cenller.
"It' was some months after the
strike," he said. "People started
seeing tlevelopmentals and traJ.
nees coming and there was a reall·
zation that people had been fired."
Part of Enders' job was to cany
out those flrtngs. He said he signed
398 notices of dlsmlasal after Presldellt Reagan ordered striking controDers to either return to work or
forfeit their jobs.
' Since PATCO' 1 displacement at
tile ceuter, tbl! Federal Aviation

cet $25 for your old radar detector
when you buy a superFOx.
For a limited time only-May 3 to July 4get a super deal on a superFox.
Buy a superFox Remote or a SuperFox
VIxen and Fox will give you $25 for your old
radar'detector, no matter what kind it is.
Don't miss out on this super deal for the
slyest most sophisticated Super-Het radar
detector on the road today. come in today
and ask for full details.
·~·

BOB'S ELECTRONICS
"Across From The Silver Bridge Plaza"
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ISe

•••

Look whats cookin'at
~

Have Their Social Security
Checks Deposited Directly!

Administration baa . Installed sev·

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•

In this day and age. anvwhere you can save
yourself time, and in effect money, is so
Important! If you give a hoot. you'll have
your monthly check deposited directly into
your account. where it will stay safe and
sound until you decide to use it! See us!

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employee IIJ'(evance mecha-

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B1nkine

•

Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

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POMEROY, 0.
'
PRICES IN EFFECT THRU MAY 1, 1982

ers,

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

Lobby B1nkine th1t is . •
open Downtown until
1
1
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STORE HOURS:

"We're nmnlng about 85 percent

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I

April 25 , 1982

at the traffic today that we dld be-

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w. Va .

ELL

OBERLIN, Ohio (AP) - The
parking lot at the Cleveland Alr
Trame Control Qonter Ia usually
about oDe-third lull, but Inside, the
na.tton's !arRest fllgllt control operatim buz2les with actMty.
At radar screens where diagonal
line&amp; tept-at fl1ght paths tor dozens of aircraft, air tral!lc con- .
trollers ply their trade, giving
Instructions to planes represented
by small lnfonnatlon blocks that Indicate flight nwnber, altitude and
alr speed.
The only dlfret'!!IICe !rom nine
ITlOIIthS ago Is the volume of air traf.
ftc controlled. Many radar screens
that weft In use a year ago.., now

In Illinois, a new law has reduced
the amount of time It takes police to
make a drunken driving arrest, and
arrests have gone up.
"Previously, a drunken driving
a rrest took lour hours," Larry Layman, a Peoria, Ill., o!!lcer says.
"Now we can do It In as little as 30
minutes, so we're more wUllng to
make arrests."

Wake up with a smile to our popular
Country Breakfast! Two fann fresh eggs, topped with
melted cheese, and served with golden
hashbrowns and real country ham. Plus hot buttermilk
biscuits'-- made from scratch every morning.
It's a great way to start off your day. And another way we

Ohio-Point Pleasan

vacant.

SWIMMING
POOLS

'

E -9

Business
buzzing
at center

arrests.

are men.
"We are U. lklng about a crime
tha t kills more than homicides, a
crime that Injures more people and
more seriously than those who
commit assaults with deadly weapons, a crime that does more property damage than the forgers,
burglars and robbers all added together ," says Candy Lightner,
whose 1.3-year-old daughter was
klllled by a drunken driver two years ago.
Alter lea rning that the driver
who killed her daughter had been
a rrested several Urnes previously
for drunken driving, Mrs. Lightner
founded Mothers Against Drunk
Drivers (MADD) In her home In
Fair Oaks, Call!.
Today, chapters of MADD and a
group known as Reduce Impaired
Drivers (RID) are In the vangard
of the movement against drunken
drivers.
About 26,!XXJ Americans - one of
every two people klllled on U.S.
roadways - die each year In ace!·
dents Involving one or more
drunken drivers. One mllilon more
people are seriously Injured or
crippled. Properly losses run Into
the billions of dollars.
"Drunk driving Is probably the
most Important public bealth problem facing our nation," says Vln·
ceut L. Tofally, president of the
National Safety CotmcU.
'Illere are more than 1.2 mllilon

April25, 1982

w. Va .

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

IUPervlsors.
Enders, 011ce a PATCO member

.

·'

,,

himself, sald be never had prot&gt;~ dealing with the union.
'"'llere are many, thiDp J can't
control .as chief of the factllty ...
Workweek, pay, but I think that
tliet!e things-I do havt! COIItrol&lt;Mlr I
want to bear from the work fora!

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Potatoes ........~o.L~-.s!~ ••.249

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about.
"I met replarly with the union
Biders," be said. ''I thouiht we
t!

,,

Member FDIC ·
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Spri11g Valley

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bad a good wOrkltli relatlonlhlp.''
One r1 Eudera' chief &lt;!Utlell_.la
tbe tralllltl&amp; organization for the IJI.

Cllllllllll

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llilout ae - ' lltlrct• .v~e~nm,
time ,., bier ... tbe IIIIGUIIt r1
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Page-E · 10- The Su nd ay Times ·Sfnli ne l

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

Creighton Ghrist retires from top
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOLIS - Creighton Ghrist
w&lt;:~s

A spa rkling interview,
because of the subject'

perhaps

the winner of the music key HI

the commencement exercises or
Gallia Academy High School in 1947.
and now 35 years later he has retired
from the top - Creighton ha s been
the top man at EHOVE. the
voca tional sehou l for Enc, Huron,

CREIGHTON GHRIST " relit his
ever-present pipe," it reads, as he
looked back on the " worst day of his
professional life," Sept. 16, 1968, the
date EHOVE was to be finished and
opened for students who want a

and Ottawa Counties.

vocationa l education. It iurned out

Creighton and his family were 111
Gallipolis for a few da ys after IllS

to be OK, after all. He got his
bachelor' s degree fr om Ohio
Wesleyan and took on the band
dircrtor's or music te&lt;:~c her's job in
Delaware County; in the early 1950s
he was responstble for f1ve different
l1lg h sehoul:;.

retirement March 31, visiting h1s

mother, Mary Ghnst. 530 fourth
Ave.
He's 53 years old now , Gtccurding
to several a rti cles in the Sandusky
Reg ister and one in the Lore~ in Jour-

nal, and he's got 30 years of that life
tnvested in education . The Register

has a feature pa ge like the TimesSentinel's " Along the River." and
there's a huge pen-and-1nk sketch of
Cre1ghton Ghrist by Ste\·e Gamble.
The article is by Tom Twitchell. and
the dale of tht• paper 1s Feb. 4. 1982.

WHEN WORLD WAR II took a
band director away from Calha
Academy High School, Creighton
served as band director one swnmer. He gave private music lessons
to severa l people in Gallipolis,
sr parately.

AFTER EIGHT YEARS as a band
director, Creighton became a high
school principal. four yea rs as principal led the way to Monroeville.
where he became suP.,rintendent of
schools - the writeup reads " new
superintendent."
GHRIST HAD long been concerned about the plight of high
school students who did not want to
go to college I and those are the
exact words used by Tom Twitchell
in his scintillatin g story on the exGallipolitan I. Creighton was hired
by the newly-created EHOVE board
in July, 1966, nearl y two yee~rs
before the school opened.
ALMOST SINGLE-HANDEDLY
Creighton got the levy passed. He
made 200 speeches for it throughout
the district, set up booths at the
fai rs, sold popcorn galore, and the
result of his silve r-tongued eloquence was the construction of an edifice

worth $2.9 million. Since then,
Creighton has added th ree more
structures.
THEY QUOTE Creighton Ghrist
as saying that he has found his
vocational students to ' be just as
smart and just as well-behaved as
students in the conventional schools.
One photo in the newspaper shows
Ghrist with a huge card containing
three pages of signatures.
AT GALLIA ACADEMY High
School Creighton served on the

MR. AND MRS. JOHN CREIGHTON (JOAN SHAMBLINt

(

,-~G!!H!!R~IS~T!__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

student counci l, the glee club, four
years in the band, four years as a
cheerleader, sa ng in the choir three
years, on the Gal han four years, on
the press club, in dramatics, two
yea rs in the government club, two
yea rs in Hi-Y .
There cerU!inly is one Gallipolis
boy who made good dsewhere in
Ohio, fondly ni cknamed " Mr.
EHOVE."

EUREKA ESP UPRIGHT
This Eureka Upright has the power to
make your cleaning chores easier.

Produce houses at Third, Grape
By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - So far as we can
tell, the main part of the building
that now sits as
-~
Willis Tire Co. at
~
- ·.'
201 Third Avenue
was buill in 1908
for the H. M. Harding
Prod uce
Company . Some
of the foundation
t n the present
SANDS
s truc:ture may
even date baek to 1860. It was in that
vec:lf· that Reuben Aleshire erected a
flo ur 111111 r later ca lled Eureka Mill I
on this corner.
Eureka Mill burned 111 1903 and the
following yea r J . W. Hutch 1nson
buill a stable and H. M. Harding "
produce ho use on th1s corner. In 1908
Harding's build1ng burned and it 1s
likely tha t the build1ng Hard1ng had
ereded 1n 1908Js the edifin' nnp sees
there toda v.
_. .
H. M. Hardin!!, was born ill~ 111
Kyger and was U1e brother of Arthur
Hanhng who ran a prosperous fur
busint:.•ss in the Kyger-Cheshire
area . Arthur later became publisher
uf the Gallia Times as well as star·
ting in GrJllipolis a magrJzine known
as " Trader · Trapper · Hunter."
About 1904 Arthur ha rding moved
his rna gaz ine to Colwnbus". Ohio.
where 1t 1s still publislll'd ulld• ·r the
na 1ne ·· Fur-FJsh-Go nH· . ··
In 1911 Gallip•&gt;lts liad llm•e of the
largest produCt' hnuses 1111 the Ol11u
Hive r - Gill Produce. F . B. M1lkr
Produce and Harding Produce . In a
typ1ca l week in 1911 over four
mii!Jon eggs we re shipped out of
Ga ll ipolis by these three businesses.
AIs&lt;&gt; departing by rail and boat that
week were: 45,000 chicks, 700 veal
calves. 500 hogs, and over 7,000
pounds of bu tter.
Just before Thanksgiving 111 1909
the shipment of one Ga llipolis
produce house cons1sted of: 3,600
turkeys. 10,000 chickens, 5.000 pounds of ducks and geese. and II
ca rloads of walnuts.
AFTER MILLER Produce's large
operation at 236 Second bu rned to
the ground in 1916, Miller's took over
at 201 Thi rd until thei r new building
at 236 Second was built that same

year. Tha t particular building on
Second is still standing and is oc·
copied by the Ga llipolis Motor Company .
From 1916 to 1929, the Studebaker
ga rage was located off and on at 201
Third. Studebakers dated back to
1852 wh e n He nr y a nd Clem
Studebaker began maki ng wagons in
South Bend, Indiana. By 1903 the
Studebakers had turned their attention

to

gasoline

dri ve n

automobi les. The first Studebakers
sold in Gallipolis were called the
Flanders and the E-M-f .
SOMETIME IN THE 1910s Earl
Moore of Bidwell met a Studebaker
salesman who had been traveling
through Ohio recruiting persons to
serve as Studebaker dealers. Moore
sold several Studebakers out of his
hume before he decided to move to
Gallipolis and in association with
Frank Rarden opened up the
Studebaker ga rage.
In 1918 one test driven Studebaker
traveled 500,000 miles in six years.
Many people had great confidence in
the car. When Earl Moore started
the Gallipolis Motor Company in
1925 to sell Chevrolets, frank Rarden continued to sell Studebakers at
201 Third. When Rarden died in 1929
Earl and his brother Jake Moore
aga1 n briefly took over the

Studebaker garage.
In the 1930s John Harrison sold the
Studebaker at Third and Court and
at 143 Third. After World War II the
Studebaker garage was located at
Second and Grape and run by Paul
Haskins.
ABOUT
Produce at
began
using
part1924
of Gills
the building
201
Third and by about 1929 they had the
entire building. It was probably the
Gills brothers (A ustin, John, and J .
Everette I who added on to 201 Third
and changed the front to the w~y it
a ppears today .
John and J . Everette Gills were
also two of the organizers of the Ohio
Valley Livestock Company on Vinton Street which dates to 1930.
Others involved in that venture
were : James Caldwell , W. A. Lee, C.
T. Robinson, and W. T. Haskins.
Colonel Howard Titus was the first
a uctioneer.
TOWARD THE END of the 1930s
more of Gills' time was taken up by
the stockya rds business arid at least
briefly Hagen-Ratliff Produce used
the facilities at 201 Third. About
World Wa r II the Gallia County CoOp took over the Third and Grape
building and rema ined here to about
1960 when Johnson's Grocery was
located in the building .

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAr

I'jijiiiiliiiiiiiiil

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

$2988

Look your very best for this special
occasioJ1 . Choose from many styles
and cofors. We have a complete selec ·
lion of accessories.
Celebrate your prom night on t;~askins
Tanner . Register for three FREE
prom celebrations when you order
your prom tux at Haskins Tanner .

1st Prize
2nd Prize
3rd Prize

Dinner for Two at the
Down Under Restaurant,
Free Tuxedo, Free Corsage for your date.
Dinner for Two at the
Down Under, Free Corsage for your date.
Dinner for Two at the
Down Under.

ible tor drawing all orders must be placed by 3 p .m.

.;.~----...1..-'--.:..:..:;;.;;;.:.;.;~ 1 30th- Need not be present to win.

OPEN MONDAY l'IL '8 P.M.

actiVities and events,
April25 thru May 1

•Triple filter system for dust
free cleaning .
•Vi bra-Groom~ II beater bar
brush roll loosens deep grit
and ground-in dirt.
•6 position Dial-A-Nap® cleans
carpets from low naps to
high shags.
•Bright headlight to see in
dark areas.

KeOU\.Pt::

current taxes
while setting
aside
retirement
money...

A guide to area entertainment
Includes complete

now juat about neryoM
an with Sute hrm'•
Individual Retirement

Faoetoils
. cofl

'

I

......_,.KLEEN£11')
oUALE...-

Now $14995

RICK PERDUE
Spring Valley Plaza 1
Phone 446·4396

.&amp;.

wlrHrooLs

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

•••••••u

Office Hours by Appointment Only

FROM

I,

50°/o Extra
Suction Power

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAl AllERGIST

TUXEDO PROM RENTALS

FREE

A ~de to area programming,

REG . $219.95 WITH TOOLS

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.

When you place your prom
order with us you will
receive

During the 1960s and the ea rly
1970s the Western Auto store was
here. Today the structure is used to
retread tires.
If you want to write to James
Sands, the author, his address is Box
92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.

100% WARRANTY
Here it is. Simple, concise, easy to understand.
If within a limited 60 days or 2,000 miles from the time you
take delivery on any labeled used vehicle from Smith
Buick-Pontiac and there is any mechanical problem or
failure, Smith Buick-Pontiac will fix it at NO COST TO
YOU, parts and labor. No arguments, no questions asked .
Our only limitation is that there be no evidence of any
willful damage or neglect on the owner's part.

-

OUR 100% USED CAR WARRANTY ALSO HAS FREE
LOANER CAR PROVISIOttiS FOR THE DURATION OF THE
WARRANTY.
BRING THIS AD FOR A FREE GIFT

81 CHEV. IMPALA
Qu ali ty, local one owner. New
Bu ick trade in . Fea tures
automati c. factory ai r , crui se
control, two tone brown ex ·
terior with lu xury Beauville
package. L ow miles . 100%
Warranty.

1981 OLDS CUTLASS
2 Door . Extra sharp brown ex·
terior with contrasting saddle
top. Features V -6, factory air,
Rallye wheels, cruise control.
100% Warranty .

'79.95

Sedan, air, AM ·FM stereo,
power ..vindows, r ea r defog·
ger. Immacu late cond . 100%
Warr~n t y .

WAS$7995

AM ·FM stereo,

landau top, plus more. 100%
Warranty .

WAS $6995

Honduras Maroon with mal·
ching
c l oth
interior
Automati.c V·6 economy and
.factory air. 100% Wartanty .
"Compare Our Pfices"

$6995

800LDS
DELTA 88
Tudor, air,

1981 BUICK
Century 4 Door . Finished in

$6295

80 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX
'

Air, AM· FM stereo, rear
defogger, tutone silver. 100%
Warranty.

WAS S6995

..

listings

\
I

Soap Opera Review
Page 9
TV Mailbag
Page 2
Area Events
Page 15

--

Fame
Page3

AdamsVille recreated•••page 8
Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

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