<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14092" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14092?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T01:26:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45192">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/0445d3cf3cbdb8d50b57ee786770749b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1249dc71b56d07c3ed53b6b88a615480</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44055">
                  <text>Page- 12- Th e Da 1l y Se ntm c l

l' omcroy - Middl e port, Ohio

F ridily, May 14, 1982

Rhodesurgesq~ck~a~c~b~o=n~~~~~~~~~

'

'

French City
Run winners

•

on emergency chemical bill
The bill would require the owner

COLUM BUS. Oluu 1AP I - Gov.
A. Rhodes has asked
lawmakL·rs to iJd promptly on 1:111
emergrnl'y bill aimed a t protecting
Ohi oans from sp1lls of a to xic
chenuc(l[ known a s PCB

announn·d appumtnwnt of House
conk rl'es to a pwwl tha t will work
on tht · $fi00 nulltun la x boost-

change being a House amendment
that boosted the size of the lax inl'rease by $77 million.
R1ffe said he ta lked to Senate
President Paul E. Gillmor earlier
about the conference committee, but
sa1u. " We didn 't talk about what's in
the bill."
Gillmur has sa 1d the upper chamber wilt rejcd House d umges and insist on a co nfer eiH.'l' committee.
The St•nale will gu through the formality of re j ectin g the House ver-

spe ndtng ('LJt lll eas urc .

sion when 1t reconvenes on either

The bill lt•tnpura riiy r eu ses the un('Olllt' tax by 50 jWrct•nt - fur one
year starl111 g .July 1 - cmd cuL'i sta te
spl'mhng by i-lbout 9 pt•rcent to try to

May 20 or May 26, but 1t also could

ur trans port er uf PCB to re port spills
to the sl&lt;tll' F:nv iromncntal Protec-

Ji:JI11l' S

tiOn Agt•nry ami promptly clean
spi lls.
I.A.·gtslall\'t' lt•cHkrs wt·n· not
for Jll llll l't.M att• t'UIIlllll'lll
on the gon· rn or' s ll'l tt'r .
Ellr!Jer Thursday , Huust' Spectker

Hhodt•s rnadt• ttw rL'QUL'st Thur·

&lt;-1\'i-11 \Ciblt•

ll' ttcr to legi sl(:lt JVt'
leade r s, sc ndlll ~ along a b11l tw send

sda y 111 Cl

r: H1fft· Jr. , D-New Busllm,

Vernal

would help th•al w1lh the problem.
Both

houses wt·n· 111 recess
ful luw 1n ~ Houst• approvCJl Wed ·

m•sday t•f a tct x hlkt'-spe nt.hn~ cut
btll des1gnetl to put stctl e guvern11\l'llt 's 1Juth.:et1n urdl'r .

PC!ll pulyehlnr111"ll'd b1phenyl1 "
ust•d as a lub rlt"ant un t•l t•l·trl('a l
trCJnsfunnl' rS l1ke thust• tlll powt'r
l111cs. Sm:w t.•x perts link PCH to t"&lt;:l/ 1-

l'ra sl' a $1.:1 billllln budget def1 ut.
H1fft· mdlc&lt; tktl that tlw bargatnln l.!
wtll nut bt•t!. lfll wfnrl' the fi rst of ne xt

i."l'r .

Rhod es semi ti ll' IT a n · ct bout 75 to
100 sptlls l'ach y t'(:ll" Ill Oh1o. Many of
tht•lfl 1:1re reported 111 the Ck\'el and
(!rea , wht 'f"l' n•sJdl'nts h d\'L' cu lll·
pla 111L'd about slow cleanups .

\\'l't'k.

S 1' lltlk I"Oilfl' l"l't'S Wl' r l'

llCJllll'd

t'il rill' I".
Hoth htlti Sl·:-. ha Vl' Hp pron·d the U1 ll
but 111 difft·rent form, H rn1:1jor

By The Assuriatt•d Press
f1 ght111g was repo rted around

today '"so Wt ' ccmmuve a ht.•ct d."
Hnt 1sh soJIITt'S sa 1tl the1r ~ove rn­
nwnt wa s st•t•km g guarantees the~t

the Falkland Islands fur murl' than
24 hours. but Brita1n's fure1 gn
st·netary WCt nwd ·' military ltl-

nl' goli&lt;Jl wns nn th t• Falklands'
futurl' woul d ~·o n s Hkr all upt10ns
ra tlll'r thctll t'U illll lt'lll 't' on tlw
preiiiiSt' thtl! 1\t":..! t'll li/W SU\"L' I"t 'lgllt,V
1:-. t'I\Slll"t'd .
Tht• :-.oUTT I' " s; lld tht'l"t' wa s
CI J.! f"l'l'llll'lll 111 pnnt"lplt- but nut 111
tkt,n1 about a pha st·tl. SUJWrnsed
withdrawal uf Bnt1 sh and Ar gl'n tine

l'llh'nL-; m&lt;:~ y occ ur with IIILTt:(:ls Jn g

frequl'll t'Y"
readwll

un

unless &lt;:tJ.: I"l'l'llll'llt
a

t"t'(:lSt'"-flre

;.Jild

fr&lt;:~mt· work fu r peace talks.
U.N Sec rcla r y-Gcn~ral

1s
a

Jant·r

negotJatwns ;t t
U.!'\ twadquarters f11r such an
agrt'l'llll'llt ha\"t' moved 111tu a
Pt'ITZ dt· Cuellar se-nd

("ruu;tl

U.N. llltl'f'llll ddtlw Islands.
In Wa s hllt~'. ll lll, tht• Stal l' Ot·parl·
llll'lll saul Spt•t'li-t! i\111bassa dur Vt•rlltJll W;tllt·rs \"ISikd BuenPs A1res
Ull&lt;!!llli!Uilt "l"d t' ill"ll t'r th1 s wet.·k tu
di sl' uss l il t• V:tlklanr\s IJut not to
fD IT t'S

s t~t ,.;e .

;HHI

llll ll iS i rti !I Uil of

A Bn lls;, ;-&gt;U UITl' who requt·stl'd
cuwn ynllty s;.tJd the ta lks were " nPt
prudtll"Jil g ns1bk n·sults" and thl'
dli:IIH't'S of SUnT SS Wt'rt' about 50-50 .
Tht· soUI"I 'l' scud 1\r/..! t'lltina bUtl/..!t•d
snll lt·w hat. bu t ·' tilt' J.:ap rt'lll&lt;:llll S
\ t•ry wid! · "
Pt'l"i.'Z Lk Cut·llor Sdld thl' Bnt1sh

nq..: n l litk

Tht•

T llllt'S

of London. L!LWtln g a

II IJ..! h - ranklll l.!

anti Argt•ntlllt ' rqJn•st•ntatJ \' t'S WL' IT
ha \ "lllJ..! to gt'l nt ·\\" mstrudwns fr111 11

Ht ·; t ~~t n

ad -

lllllllSir&lt;ttwn uff1nal. :-.all! W;tl!t'rs

tht •Jr governm ents I"L'J)l'atl'dl y. Ht.·
t•xpl'dl'd lll lll"t' i:!IISWl' I"S

Warning issued
Middleport Ch1..f of Puli el' J . J .

Emergency runs

Cr, •nJL'i:lll S ha s ISSUI.'d a warlllllJ! that
s huu t 1n'~

b--b t.: uns ur &lt;Jir
thl' \·ll]a)2L' wlll be
prusl'rult•d . St•\tT&lt;tl rt ·s ldt ·nts ha ve
cu111pl;u1H'd uf such 1-! Ull:- ; bt•Jn ~ used
Ill tht• t"tll ll!lltlll ll.\

&lt;lll,V I )JlL'

Norman Will of Bt•t.•ch Grnn•
Hnml, Hutland. was transpnrtl'd tu
Vet erans Ml'm Una l Hosp1tal &lt;:~t 2:28
p.m. by tlw Hutland unit uf thl'
Ml' l ~.'i County EmL•rgency Ml'dlcal
St·n-rce .
At 8:51 a.111 . Fr1day the Ra c1nc
uni t tr&lt;:~n spo rtt'd Set ra h .J&lt;Jne Congo
to tht• Holzer Mc&lt;li cal Cenll'r, and at
I 08 a.tn . llll' Middleport un it treated
J anet McKrnrl l'.Y but s hl' was nut

Marriage license

tra nsportl·d .

Pomeroy .

rlflt· s

HI

i\ 111&lt;-t!Tia ~L· ]HT il S~ wa:-. ISSUed in
Mt ' I ~S County Proball' Court to Dl'n"" Ha y Wolfl'.l:!. Hl. I . Middleport.
and Paml'la An n Eva ns. 22, Hl. 2.

ds. Story and additional photos appear on 8 - I and C-2
of todoy's edition. (Lorry Ewing photos} .

report thl' sa me day if the committee has une by then. Gillmor's offl ee sa1d.
St·na te 17ll'lll bers of thl' conference

emrumttet• will be Sen. Hll'hard H.
F in an, R-Cinc in nct ll , who will ad as
t'h&lt;-tinnan , a long with Scns. Thoma s

A. Van Meter. R-Ashland, and
Will1a111 F. Bowen, D-Cincinnat1.

I

p1esented " new 1deas" about the
sovere ignty Issue But there was no
c onfirmation of thi s from
Wash1 ngton, I.ondon or Buenos
Aires.
Brit1s h Foretgn Secretary Francis
Pylll told the House tlf Com mons
Britc.lln 's 1111 lltat)' pn·ssure on
Arge ntrna 1s dfect 1n' Sl lll'l' ·· there
a rl' s1gns tht· llll'Ssage is begi nmng

BICYCLE PARADE - The second annua l " kids'
day" parade, sponsored by the SyracusL~Minersv ill o·
Baseball Association, will be held in the village uf
Syracuse Saturday, May 15. Youngsters participating
are to line up behind Larry's Grocery at noon with the
parade to get under way at I p.m. The parade will
travel up Dusky Street to Frog Blvd., up Sixth Street to
College Road then up Fourth Street, off Fourth to
Brodgman tn the Syracuse Ball Field . Youngsters a"'

Eighteen defendants were fined
and 10 ulhl'rs fo rfeited bonds in
Mei )!s Co unt y Court.

F111ed by Judge Pa trick O'B rien
IH'n· Dand Mardis, Columbus, $10
i:llld rosts. ass ured clt•cu· distance ;

Sharun Buwt·rsux. Alht•ns. and Edward Zinn, Gallipolis. $22 a nd cusls

lluild up pressures on Argent ina
sl l'ad ily and pro gress1vly and
n ·morse lt.•ss ly,' ' Py m scHd .

Chesler. $10 and costs, no eye
prokclion ; Scott Noel , Purlsmuulh,
and Debra Searls, Shaw AFB. S.C. ,
$20 and l'Osls l'arh. spl'l'd : Bubbit• R.
Hi ll, Pn11wruy, and Willi am F ranl' is.
Ht•t•ds\" illl·. $2 1 and costs each,
spt•t·d : Leonard Kl'll y. Cleveland.
$30 and t·osts. overlength : Shawn
Sll'ck. Mt'Connelsv ille, $10 and
(·osb, speed : Da vid G r a te . R utl a nd .
$1 0 () lld rus ts. ass url'd dear dis lan&lt;T: Tum Wa lters. Middh•porl. $10

Choraliers will
present concert
Tht· Ml'lgs Hi gh Sc hunl Voeal
Choralil' r S

will

prl'scnt the hghll'r purt1 ons of the
&lt;h·partnwnt'!-i sprin g eulll'L' rt to be
held at :1 p.m. Sunday at the Middleport First U111led Pn·sbyll'rian
Chureh .
The gruup w1ll be dt1111 g a medley
from the BruadwCJy IIIU si cal ,
.. Chorus l.11ll'" as Wl' II as llw Old
Soft S hill' Song CJIId Hot'k A·byt• Your
llaby W1th " Di xit• Ml'lt&gt;dy" . All
members of tht· departnll'nt , tltret'ted by Ed Harkless, wil l present the
fmC::Il numbers of the coJH 'Prt among
whirh will be "Cmmn Through the
Hye". All alumIll uf lhl'\'oca l departnll'nt an· wvi ted to join in thl' fina l
presentati on wh1ch will be "Old
Irish BlesSing". The publi c is invited
a nd thl're is no i:ldm iss1on chaq..(e.

to have their bikes decorated, if they wish, and judging
of the bikes will be held following the parade. Bikes wiU
be judgtd and prizes awa rded for the prettiest, most
original and most unique. Youngsters of the SyracuseMinersville area are welcome to participate. Ball
games will be played following the activities. Ready to
lake part are, front, BiUy Davis ; back, 1-r, Todd Lisle,
Shawn Amott and Jason Arnott.

unba
Vol. 16 N o. 13
~o pyright ed

Court terminates
28
cases
r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

lu gel through."
" From tht.• hegum1n g of tills nis1s.
the gon•rnment has been trylflg to

o,•partm c nt' s

S&lt;tH I h1·

had been held at the Gallla County Junior Folrgroun·

vote on thl' con ferenre committee' s

Cease fire under study
Ntl

Despite the uncomfortably hot weather, more than
400 runners from the tri-state area participated In the
French City Run In Gallipolis Saturday morning . Seen
here crossing the finish line ore the winners of each
Individual event In the race. Tad Lockard of Wellston,
left, won top spot In the Dinosaur Dash (I mile} race,
Joseph Stockmol of Athens, center, wos first in the 5-K
(3. I mile/ event and Tom Stevens of Middletown , Md ..
right, vvos the first to streak In offer the grueling 10-K
(6.2 mile/ race . The event, co -sponsored by the Ohio
Volley Publishing Co. and Holzer Medical Center,
drew more than 200 more participants than last year's
race, vvhlch was the first under th e OVP and HMC co sponsorship. Previously, the race, called th e Fun Run,

l'dch.

speL•d :

Lowell

Ridenour,

anti t.•adl, failed to yie ld ; Diane

Jones, Rl•edsnllt&gt;, $20 and &lt;'osts ,
f~:~1lt·d to di s plr~ y \"alJd regis tra tiOn :
Duane Barbt'r , Reed" ille. $20 and
costs. unsafl' vl' hil'le: Eliward Duffy. Punwruy, $10 and eusls. dri ving
wron ~ w&lt;:~y on di v 1dcd highway ;
.J&lt;:~nw s Patterson, Syracust.•, $40 and
costs. SIX nwnths probation, no
moton·y('ll' ent.l nrseJJJent : Juthth
Pll'rl'c. Radl'liff. Oh1u, $57 and costs.

spt•1·d
, $250 and
rusts. : Roy
Sl'\"t•nSL't'.
dctBidwell
ys confinem
ent,
li&lt;'&lt;'llSL' suspt•ndl'd for 90 da ys, DWI.

Fooit•ltmg bonds wt•n · Jeffrey
Hamonund. Washington, W. Va ..
Hubert Boling , Athens. James
Tron tte, Jr ., Morgantown, Thomas
Welty, Wadsworth, and Charleb
Admitted : Huby Hallida y, Edgecomb, Mareois, F'la ., $50.50
Hut land : Mary Heynolds, Pomeroy; each, speed; Henry Cade, Pomeroy,
Gene Yost. Racine ; Lu la Phillips, $70.50, spe&lt;'d: Lonnie Hanshaw. Ft.
Pomeroy; and Woodrow Zw illing, Fay, W. Va ., $45.50, unsa fe ve hicle:
RichH· Blu ml'na ucr, Columbus,
Syracuse.
$45.50,
assured clear distance ;
Di scharged: Salli e Cadl e, NorMiehael
Pierce, Middleport, $72.55,
man Hysell. Oscar Imboden: Kelhe l
no dri ve r 's license; George Ratcliff,
Hatfield. and Jud y Re uter.
Middleport, $45 .50, unsafe vehi cle.

Plat books out
A new 1982 Mei gs County Pial
Book IS now bei ng disln buled by the
Meigs County Extens1on Service Offi ce and the Offiee of the Meigs Soil
and Water Consen ·alion Distri ct.
The 58-page buok has been compiled by Meigs 4-H Clubs and the Soii
and Water Conservation Office as a
publi c service. The book , 8''' by II ,
sells fur $8.

PINEV ILLE. W.Va. - A C&lt;:~llli:i County III&lt;IIl has bt•t·n •·omw h'd uf
dt.•g rt'l' rnurdl'r With lllt'rl'y Ill W ytllll lll ~' Co unt~ CIJ"I" ll l! r ourt
A g u 11t~ nrd1d was retu r ned Cit noon Fnday a ~ a111 s t .lot' \ llt.dl. 2R.
Ew1ndon. CH't'tl!"dln l-.' lo Sal unla y's t'd1 l1 on of tht · B t ·t· k lt·~ Jl ll.~t- ll n ;ll d
Hr.~ll was t'h ar ~l'd w1th murdtr 111 I'OillltTtJun w1th t ht · dt ·&lt;tt h ,,f . L 11 111' ~
l .ax tnn durlll l' a dru g !f·ddt• on W.V!t 10111 C';tlllj)U ..., 111 t\prill!IBl
Thl' casl' Wl'llt tu ttw 11· rnan, llllL'-WOlll&lt;-111 jury Thur.-; d ; r~ .rfl•·r l it H Ill
The t"tlll\"ldlnn 111eans Ha ll wlll hfl \" t• lo s pt •nd 10 .\·t·ar .., 11 1 [''"' "" ' l lwf l il"\'
bt•t'O llllll ~ t · !t ~ lblt · ftlr parult- . A ddenst· n ·q ut ·st to h;n1 · ll w dt · l· l..., , . ,, l
ove rtunH·d was n ·jer\t.·d &lt;Jilt! a St'llli.'llt'lll t' dttlt ' ha s lwt 'll . , ,.f i11r \\"1 dnt•sda y. !·It· was rdunwd to tlw W yn nun ~ Count~ ,l;1 tl
Tht • Pnst-1--IL-rald .-;a1d Hall t·un lt 'llllt•d durlll L' 011' tr 1:ti l1 1 v..;~-, 1r1
F lo ndct &lt;:~l Uw t II Ill' of 1.ax tun'.., dt•a l h

95 DAILY : 9-1 THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY
CHESTER. OHIO
J.p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Officials confirm problem

SIMMONS
Ol~~-u~~e~:~~~~~!~}. nt. Z) Il717~ ~

POMEHOY- Tlw
probh'llll " lltlll l~

With no prospect of a Triple
Crown winner this year because
Kentucky Derby winner Gato Del
Sol's trainer decided to pass up
the Preakness, the'front-nmning
Ljnkage, ridden by veteran Bill
Shoemaker, emerged as the top
coateoder·.ln Saturday's 107th
running of the Preakness.
Results of the raee, the second
leg of the Triple Crown, appear
ouC-1.

~

308 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Oh .
OPEN:
Mon . thru Fri . 8 to 9
Saturday 9 to 5

~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t

OFF SHE GOES... - An eutry In the 11th luteruatlonal Chicken Flylug Meet Is pushed out of the
traditional, outsized mailbox used as a lauucblug platform at Bob EvaDB Farms Saturday afternoon.
The event drew entries awl their owuers from all over the cooutry. Dr. Glyde Marsh of Ohjo State
University continued as the leading judge of the fastest and farthest-flylug fowl. The only area owner
to place was Sherwood Costen of Point Pleasant, whOfle Cora placed third Ia the featherweight
division. Costen's bird Lola B., who did not compete In Saturday's event, "'talos the world championship record ol302 feet, eight laches. Story appears on A_..

The cost of trying the accused
r

PHOTO SALE- Are you in this picture? Old photos such as this one,
a S&lt;'l' lll' from a past Meigs High School play, will he on sale Saturday,
May 15, in the school cafeteria from 10 a.m. un!i1 2 p.m. This "Foto" Fair
is sponsored by the Meigs Marauder staff to help pay lor the '82 yuear·
book. Old yearbook pictures will be available for 10 cents, 25 cents, and 40
cents. A limited number of '80 and '81 yearbooks will also be ava ilable for
$10 and $14. Meigs graduates, their parents, and the public arc welcome
to come to the Fair and browse.

ease accept our

a Bilco ·Basement Door.

Woa your home buiH without the uHIIty and safety of a direct baaemenl
door? Break through now and open the way lo a whole extra noor of
valuable tMng apace. A modern. oll-ateel Bllco Basement Door Ia the
link between your bolement and the great ouldoora. ~~ wtde , direct
occeu mok" storage easy, convenient. Stopa traffic through flrat noor
rooms . Gtvea you the direct route lo apace you con really uae and
!nlov to.~ recreation, hobbles and atoooge. '-lk ua too a copy of Bllco 'a
How to booklet: o r. we con arrange roo the complete Installation by
a reliable controctoo .

~.1f IJ

'•I

"
' ' '

•• '

'
'

Bond sales
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., Meigs
county Savings Bond Chairman,
reported purchased of $22,020 in
United Stales Sav ings Bonds were
credited to the county fur the first
quarter of 1982.

tat ion to attend

GOSPEL MEETING

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST
MAY 17-23
7:00P.M. EACH EVENING
SUNDAY 10 :00 A.M. - 7: 00P.M.
SPEAKER - SAM BARTRUG, LAINGS, OHIO
SERMON TOPICS
MONDA Y - " God ' s Book - The Bibl e"
TUES DA Y- " The Foolishness of God Verses the
wi sdom of M en"
WEDNESDAY-"Worship-A Gift of Love"
THUR SDA Y - ".How Can We Remain Faithful? ' ·

British
an
airstrip on Pebble Island, to the
north of West Falkland Island,
blowlug up an ammunition dump
awl destroying several planes,
the British Defense Ministry said
Saturday. It was the first time
British ground troops officially
were reported ashore in the
Falklauds sluce Argentine forces
seized them from Britain April 2.
Complete details
on I)-I.

FRIDAY - " Judgment Day Surprises"
SAT UR DAY-"The Church at Ephesus"
SUNDAY - " Fottow This Rule and Ye Shalt Have
Peace"
.
!Morning &amp; Evenong)

CONGREGATIONAL SINGING- NO NIGHTLY COLLECTIONS
MINISTER
LET US REASON TOGETHER I

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY

405 N. Secona Ave.

PHONE 992-5020 or 992-3748

Middleport, OH.
as Pope
Gregory X, the enlightened
soldlel'-priest In MARCO POLO.
The !~our miniseries Is being
pretented by NBC on lour consecutive nights, beglunlug
tonlgbt. The eplce features a
buge cast lucludlng Sir Johu
Glelpd, ADDe Baucroft awl Johu
Houseman. For c!ftaill cODBult
our area eutertalnmeat guide,
Take-ODe.

'Convenient Olf-Streit

SAVE20%
ALL SUMMER CLOTHING DURING OUR
WEEK-'END SALE
.
MEN'S AND BoYS' WEARCHILDREN'S GIRLS' · CLOTHING
WEAR- INFANTS

----

AiongtheRiver .... 8-1-8
Area deaths ........• A·5
Classified • .. • . • • . • D-3-7
Editorial .......• . •. A-2-3

WOMEN'S

Farm ..•... .•.. ..•. E-2
1Mal ••.....•.••.• A-4-8

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 - SATURDAY TIL 5 .

.ELBERFELD$ IN
POMEROY
,,

Sta~Natiooal •... ' •• D-1

..
I
~

I

Sports •••.....•..• C.l-8
,...e-One . . . . . • . . Insert

M t' I !!.S Count y W,·l f&lt;tn · Ot •p;trlll lt'lll h.t . . .t f l!t.tll• 1011
uffw 1a ls s ;.ml Sa tunla ~

Rll'hct rd .ln 1w ~. ,·ou nt y t "DII ll n lss lnl lt'l " '-"~ lwd tht· t •.il ~&gt;\\liL
S\Cill'II Wnt t 'Oilt"i.' f' lllll .l tilt' prolJklll .
'" Yt• s, I dncunfll"l n tlw fad ttw rt · 1s ;1 pr11ll lt ·111 \\1\h f111.1! 11 · ·s &lt;tl th· ·
nnml y wt•lfcHt ' dt•partlllt'llt M~ undn -, tlllt!I Il~ 1\ \\d o., IJI ••ll, 'ht ,~IJ .. ut
hy lWI I lhlll l!S.
"'N U/ll lll'r Ollt', thl' lll!Tt 'C! St· In \ht • ~l" lll "t";t] rt ·lll'f t"&lt;l ."i t ' h),Jd ;n1d 1\11 1 d

==-:----

the key to access...

,-.

CC'n f ~

first

RIGGS USED CARS

Jl .-• •t

35

Hall found guilty of murder

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

PHONE 992-5776

P.1q•· ~

A Mu lt1m C' d1.1 In c Nf'wc;p .1per

News briefs ...

FOR GOOD USED
CARS OR TRUCKS AT
LOW PRICES, SEE US

PHONE: 992-6614

10 Scc tt on&lt;o, 8 7

Sunday, May 16, 1982

Today's T-S

Probe minor wreck

SYRACUSE, OHIO
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
•Vegetable Plants
• Bedding Plants
•Foilage Plants and
Hanging Baskets
OPEN DAILY 9 til8
SUNDAY I TIL S

entinel

tmts

·Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

1982

Veterans Memorial

A mmior aecidenl on the Burger
Chef pa rking lot was investigated by
Pomeroy Pol ice. ll was reported
that Rhonda Thompson. Moundsville backed into a ve h1 cle owned
by Ra nd y Lew is. Cl ifton, W. Va.
There was minor damage to both
ca rs but. no citations.

•

By KEVIN KELLY
Times--Sentinel Stall
GALUPOUS - ll's "almost irnpossible" to calculate how much a
criminal trial costs a small county,
but a major three-day trial held in
Gallia County Common Pleas Court
last month cost the county and laxpayers roughly $15,000.
Judge Richard Roderick sa id the
costs of the murder trial lor 24-yea r·
old Russell Robinson, Rl. I ,
Cheshire, were lied up in indigent
client fees, prosecution preparation
lor the case and defendant incarceration.

Robinson was found guilty of
voluntary manslaughter April 8 by a
Jury in connection with the shooting
death of Paul E. Spencer, 24, Rt. I ,
Cheshire, last Jan. '!J.
Roderick said jurors' and witnesses' fees, in addition to court
costs, came to about $1 ,050. Because
Robinson was classified as indigent,

"In o small county lllce Golllo, If plea
bargaining did not go on and If probation
weren't granted In o great number of cases, the
county couldn't oHord the coselood... Everyone
wants fustlce and no one con really oHord It," Common Pleas Judge Richard C. Roderick
a court-appointed attorney had to be
named . The attorney's fees in this
case, he estimated, came to more
than $2,800.
Because the attorney, Ronald
Calhoun, has filed an appeal lor his
client, costs will also rise because a
transcript must be provided free of
charge to the defendant in the appeal.
"Those are the costs that stand out
in the eyes of the public," Roderick
said. " But the real expense is the
hidden costs which don't go into a
case like that. "

Since the Gallia County Jail
wasn't upen at the lime, Rubinson
was lodged in the Jackson County
Jail from the lime uf his arrest unti l
the end of the trial and his later transfer to the Mansfield Reformatory to
serve his prison sentencl'. Because
he spent nearly 80 days in Jackson,
the eost to the county was abuul $21)
per day.
Robinson also had to be taken to
Gallipolis and back to Jackson on
"at least" eight occasions for court
appearances, Roderick said, which
I Cootluued on A---4)

dlrt'l'll\t ' frtlllli!H' Sld\t • dUdl (l ll" W l ll'!"d)\ till' I "IIUil!\ l rt "i i.\ Uit 'l t "!!l tltl
lnn~t'l" ISS Ut ' a warran t on ;.rn &lt;-H't" tiUnl ttl;.; I dm·s not /;;l\T suff lt"lt'llt fun ·

ds.
" Tht• board JS 111 lht· prot ·t•ss uf a t"tlllip lt'lt· rt'\"lt ' \\" uf tilL' llli:tltt · r w1th
llw county lrt.·asunT. nmn ty \n•JLm • dl rt't' l t~r , Mwh; wl S~n'l ht · J ;rnd
tht · Sta l t• Wt·l fan · Dt ·pr~ rt ll lt'nl. II JS hnpt'(l lhat a :-.olii!HIIl In th, ·
problt•m t'Clll bt• workL·d oultn th1 · ne.-.: 1 \~ t · t · k ."' .Jnn, ...., ,·nrll" ll!dt ·d
Mlr hctt.•l Sw1shl'r. dl rl'dor nf Mt •l gs Coill ll .\ ·s Wdfa rt · ikparl!lh 'lll.
scud " Thd·t• l.'i &lt;:1 fmanl'la l probll'lll tnlht · wd fr11·,. tft-p;trllllt'l ll dut· toil
dirt'dl\"t' frnrn lht• statt• aUt htor·..., nff1n· a fft ·•·l lll! ' th• t " II\Jill~

lrt'a s un ·r."
Tht· matlt·r w1 ll lw thsc uss t•d Tth·.... d ~t ~ ttl
I "OilllfliSS IOllt 'J".'-, .

The Forecasl For 7a .m . EST
Sunday . May 16

d

lllt 't IIIII ' nf tlw

Ra1n

D

t ' D!Jill~

Snow[]

eL iiW l r·mpi'f. lhlrt ':,

N .11 11111 . 11 W o·, tllor •r ~ 1'!\11(1'
~ f)ppt n t Commf'rt

N O AA U

1

Fronts : Co ld,..... W~rm- Occ hJdf'd - SI.II" "'·"Y ••
WEATHER FORECAST - The Nalinnal Wt·ather Service furel'asts
showers lor Saturday from lht· central Gulf tn the Mid"esl antlnurthern
Plains. Showers are also forc,·ast for thl' Southwt·st. Most an·as "ill ht.•
warm. tAP Laserphotol .

Middleport to honor General Hartinger;
Native son returns for
.
MennoriallVeekend
By BOB HOEFLICH
Tlmes-Seulluel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - The Village of
Middleport - joined by other Meigs
County conununities - will roll out
its red, white and blue carpet over
Memorial Weekend to pay tribute to
a native son, General James Hartinger.
A son of Mrs. Violet Hartinger,
Beech St., Middleport, and the late
Lawrence Hartinger, General Hartinger, al943 graduate of Middleport
High 'School, was inducted into the
U.S. Anny in 1943. He ~~erved In the
infantry for three years and ill 1945
through a ·competitive field test won
an appoinbnent to the United States
Military Academy at West Point. He
, is" now one of only 12 four star
generals in the United States.
Festivities to honor General Hartinger will get underway at 6:30 p.m.
on Friday, May 28, when the Mid-

,.

dleport-Rotary Club will stage a dinner for 250 persons at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Bernard Fultz will
serve as toastmaster for the event
with entertainment provided by Ar·
mand Turley at the organ and the
"Voices of Liberty" directed by
Mrs. June VanVranken. General
Hartinger will speak. Lee McComas
is serving as chairman for the dinner.
On Satutday, May 29, a parade
will move from the area of the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge to the Middleport Conununity Park at 10 a.m.
Several floats are being prepared,
with Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of' Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority making the float
on which General Hartinger will
ride.
Other floats expected are those of
Middleport American "Legion Post
128, Middleport Chamber of Colnmerce, Middleport First Baptist

Church, the Middleport Business
a,nd Professional Women's Club, the
Middleport Alwnni Association,
Central 'Trust Co., Royal Crown Bottling Co., Bank One of Pomeroy and
the Fanners Bank and Savings Co.
Bands of both Eastern and Meigs
High Schools will be in the parade
and there will be entries by the Air
Defense National Guard. The United
States Air Force ROTC Color Guard
will lead the parade. There will be
Shrine clowns and entries by the
Syracuse Cub Scouts, the Meigs
County Riding Club and the lire
units of Pomeroy, Middleport,
Racine and Rutland. Any group
wishing to participate - and it is
requested that the patriotic theme
be carried out by entrants - maY
still do so by contacting Roger
Morgan, parade chairman, or
William D. Childs, ~eneral chair(Contluued on A---4)

HONORED- Four Star General James Hartinger, a native son of
MJdcileport, wiD be honored with a round of activities on Memorial
Weekend.
.,

�May 16, 1982

•

Commentary and perspective

Page-A·2.
May 16, 1982

One for the birdS======Ja=m=es=J.=Kil~pa=m=·ck=
11~

~m~

A Division or
r-T"'"L-JL....,..--, ~

d

If:='

~v

825 Third Avt· .. Gallipolis, Ohio
16141 H!;-2342

Ill Court St.. Pomeroy. Ohio
16 14)992-2156

ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
Publtslwr
HORAHT WI I.SON JR.
Ext•t·utt\'L' Edt tor

PAT WHITEHEAD
1\ s:-. tslant Publisht· r-Cuntrolkr

.\ MFMI\EH uf Tlw ''"iH 'tal••d l'n ·~~- lu l; uulllath l'n·" ,\,Mk •attnn ;uut tlw ,\nu·rwan
'''"'[),llp.'r l 1 uhl1 ~ ho•r\ ,\')o.III ' I H I Itlll

I FTn:tL'i OF 1 11'1 ~ 10 \' ~n· ~o~t'knnwd Thn .. hnuhl ht· k:. ~ thlln 300 ~o~nnl ~ lnng . r\11
ktto·r' an· .. uhto·d In ,•,lttmg and mu .. t tw ''1!111-tl v.llh namo&lt;, ;uldn -~l&gt; ;tnd tt·kphutw
numtwr ~ .. urL,tj!. twd lt• th·r.. v.tlllw puhlt ~ ht·d I A'llo'f' ' hootthl tw 111 gou..-1 t.u •It·. utldn·,l&gt;tlll!.
' ' 'U''' nul[H'r,ml&lt;llt!lo''

:Growing battle
over the battle

It 's just posstbll' that Argl'n llnL' ptlot dill mort• wt th hts rniss11L• than

~h·rrwltsha Bnlt:sh de:slroyer.

SCRABBLE, Va. - A couple of
~·ecks ago Roge r Tory Peterson and
three companions went birding in a
!big way. They set oullo break the
record for birds sighted in a 24-hour
period, and after a mad dash by
plane and car across southern Texas
they did it. Their new record : 235
spect es.
Peterson a t 74 is the grand old
man of American birding, il Uthor of
the defimtt ve bird books, the
ul ltmalc arbiter of disputed calls.
Hi s c l"t:W members we re 1:1. lso
professiOnals in thetr fie ld . Their
achievement is bound to sti r envy in
the hearls of eve ry ama teur birdwa tcher in the land. Two hundred
and th irty-fn•e ! F'anta ~ ti e!
As lht..•y say of play ing rugby or
l!oing into the ncwspe~ p e r ga me, you
don't ha\'e to bt·crazy to be a birder,
but it hl'lps. ll ts the chea pest hobby
in thl' world. demanding nothing
rnort• thi:lll good btrd book and a pair
of b tn ocul~:~rs . An· you a ba!ieball
fan. whnst' !wart bt•al"i wildly i:ll a
)-! r&lt;:~ nd-sla r n lwnlt..'r 111 tlw bott om of
the ninth ? Such raptut"L' rates into insJgni ft ci:llll'l' lwstdt• the mad
l'Xhilarattun of spott ing i:l pilectted
wotXIpt.:ckl•r hi:llllllll' rlll g awcty on a
h1ckury trt't' .
Eu)-!ene McCarthy. 1mprovmg
upon Alexander Pope. once decla red
that the propt• r study of tni:lnkmd is
anunals. Bt rds provide as va luabil'
e~n expt•rtt..'lln' 111 ll'arlllll J-!. Would
ytm know o£ loya lty and love? Then
wa tch &lt;:t gandt• and his li£l'lung mate.
Dtd you suppost· birds have no sense
uf hum or? Beho ld the sassy
mocklllgb tnl. You can le&lt;Jrn abou t
strt..•l'l gcmgs from lhe cow birds,
blac·k-jackded, brown-hooded, objt•ds of fear Hlld loathing .
As a political conservati ve, I suffer Ol'Ci:lsiomtl pangs of guilt a bout
lht· btrds arou nd our place in the
Rlue Ridge. Tht• uncomfortable
truth ts that we ha \"t• ncatt..•d a kind
uf sot..· taltst sottely £or them ami
rne~tlt..• lht:m clil'lll'i of a wt'lfare
slott..· . We nw tn lain thr ~t· ft.&gt;eding
s te~ l ton s - tht..• squirrels demolished

a foijrth - and the parallels with the
government's food stamp prog ra ms
cause some unease. Why am I run- ·
ning a soup line for these creatures?
None of them is below the poverty
level. All of them are capable of
working for their dinner. The feeble
answer ts tha t, well , they give us
pleasure.
It is best not to brood about such
things. On the day after the wire services reported the Peterson triumph, we sat at the big glass doors off
the kitchen and counted. Some
errands late r took me down to the
county courthouse and over a back
roa d by McCarthy's place. The unscientific tota l: 61 species. Not bad
fo r a day in May.
Images spr ing to mind . One of our
feeders has become a nunnery for
doves, gray- ha biled. The red-winged
blackb ird s are marine Corps

He met y haVl' sunk lwu Alnl'ric;:tn nuclear t'&lt;JITit'rs not yd bUilt .
The tnc tdt•nl has already bt&gt;l'n setzed upon by both stdes in Washtngton' s
t..h-bcJk on the future Navy to remforre thetr nJ.st·s .
St•n . Gi:try Hart , the Colorad o D\_'rnonat who IS tht• puml man of
congrl'ss tonal oppostl ion tu lht• $3.4 btl! ton monster t..·a rTtt..'rs Ow Rea gan adllnn tslratwn wan t~ to at..lt..l to tilt' flel't. lt&lt;.ts iit..l vtsl'd hts colleagut·s tu SL't' 111 tl
the fa te of l&lt;.tf'l.!t' surf at..'l' shtps 111 an t"i'a of dedntntt ·a II y "' smart" weaponry .
Na\·y St..·nl'lary John F. Lehrn&lt;:~n Jr. h&lt;:~s an l'lllt n·ly d1ffton·nt reatltng.
Ht• argues lltCJl the dl'struyl'r wa s lus t Un·a ust' 11 Wil S too S lllilll and unt..lert•qutppt•d dt'ft..·nst\'ely, ltkt..· the two r aJTtt..·rs 111 tht· Bnt1 s h South t\tlcHllt c t&lt;:~ sk
ftll"t't' . Thl' t\r gt..•nttnt• fi ghlL'r would nut ha\"l' gutlt..•n rwar an Anwnnm batt It·
j!rnup With tls swarrns uf planes rtlHI claborak radctr. nor wuLilt..l d smglt·
· 1:11 ss llt· ha vl' tht: same dt·\ ·aste~ting efft•t·t upun d 90,000-tunt..TUJSt..'l' .
Wt•can count un hearlll )-! lllLil'h mun · on thl' subjtTt 111 tlw l!lonths a lwad .
. And 1f &lt;t s1nglt· t..•n gagc lnenlt•ntb up rt'\'ululluntt.Jil ~ warfarl'. 1l won't bt· tlw
f1rst ttnw . In 1862. all the world's navlt'S wt·n· Jll&lt;.iil t: obsoll'lt• by lw u n·s.&gt;..,t·b
ban·ly l'apabh· uf kt•t·ptn)-! rtfluat on tht..'ll' uwn
W1lil t·art•t·rs as well as b1lliu11 S at stakt · ll1 tilt' tkbr.t lt•, 1\ rna _\· bt · sutnt·
I I IIli' ])l'furl' 1t 1s ch·ar wlwthtT tht · btg shtp or l1lt lt· s h1p ftll"l'l'S h(;l\"c e;Hnt·d
the ath·antagt· .
Rut anu thn part(s advan ta )-! ~ · t:-. tllll llt'd1a1l'l .\· apparent.
Tlwt wa:-. a F'n·nch radar-gUtdt·d nw.slt• tha t 1'0\"l'ft'd 20 r111lt•s at nt·ct r
t&gt;urfan· lt..•n·l an d llt'drly lilt• s pt•t·d uf sound tu :-.nJ t"L' tb dtrt ·d htl. For that
inatltT, 1l was launchl'd from a F'rt'lll'h-bullt plant•.
Tht• adHllliS Cl boost tu Frl'rll'h arrns :-.alt•s ;:~~ · ound till' world that aln·;Hiy
an· tl tllllJ-! \Try wt·ll. Tht• F'n•nt'h &lt;Ht' Nu. :t - b.:h1nd the Suv1l'l Unlilll and tht:
tlllltt·d Stall's - 111 &lt;:tthrt\"Jll)-! Sl'lkrs' lll &lt;.t rkd and t'lll'I' L!l'llt..'i"dly st•t:klll J-! tu l'Xpand the1 r sharl' .
lht• Exocd - ranks as a
In that llliJrkt'l. thl' !!Hsstlt..• lll ljUt ·stt tlll
rdati Vt' b&lt;Jr)-!ain CJt $200,000 t•a ch. Bus 1nss 1s t'l'rl&lt;:tl/1 tu pwk up, pctrtlt·ul&lt;:~rly
WASHINGTON - The last lime
lndt ra Gandh i vtsited Washin ~ lon ,
btt·aust' 1t appt·ars tu ha vl' no t'ompd1\1on .
Accurdtng to um• Briltsh t•xplanatwn of tilt' nnsstll''s surccss - cd th ou)-!11 she incurred the displeasure of thcnPrl'sidt•nt Rtc hard Nixon . Hts
London would undoubtedl y pn·ft·r nut to use till· word
1t was posstblt•
forl'ign poiH·y wizard, Henry not be hostile. My associate Indy
bet..·aust' No rth Atlantic allte~nn · s htps h&lt;:t\'t' dt..•\'l'luped Jltl dl'fenst· il)-!iWlst 1b
Kiss inger, had we~rned him : "The Badhwar was gra nted a ra re,
spt·ctfit' capabilitll's. Tht· Wl'apon ts Frl'lll'h . and tlw ~ an· su ppost·d to be on
ou r stdt: . The Sovteb ha\"t' nothlll l-! compclr&lt;Jblt·, e~lt hou )-! h Na\·y St:lTt'tary , lad\' ts cold-blooded and tough." private interview with the Indian
I•Jader at her Pa rlta ment House ofKi sst n ~e r might have added that she
l•·hman has tmp iJt·d they tntghl.
1s also brilliant. Aceo rdin g to secret fiee in New Delhi . During an hour of
Whateve r, 1t ts e~lso l'l' rt&lt;u n th&lt;-tl tilt' Fn·nch &lt;:Hl \"a ntagt. • ts l1kt'ly to bt· of
dtTou nL-; of lht• Gandhi-Nixnn con- free-rang ing discussion, she made it
brid dura tiOn . The olhl'r major &lt;H ill:-. prodw ·t· rs - tnl"ludt tlg Bnl.&lt;:ltn - t"an
versa twns, the lndi &lt;:~ n prime clear that s he thinks it's lime to imhe l.'UUillt. • tl upon tu duplicall' sw·h an obvw us wmnt·r for tht: tr own arsenC:IIs
min iste r ou tmane uvt..• rl·d ~:~ n tl prove relations between the world's
and for tlw lucra tJ Vl' export me~rkl'l .
two largest democracies, India and
Compl'litwn 111 that markt'l ts vutthroat. It ts a buslnt·ss war that has
uulra gt•d htm .
It has taken a decade to b rio ~ her the United States.
IJt'l'll )-!OillJ-! on a lutlon)-!L'r than the ont· tl\"ertht..· F'alkle~nds .
" That is important for us," s he
back to Was hington : she has ae·
With &lt;:1 littlt• btl of luck, &lt;i lld a lot of J-!O od senst· on the ra rt of tlw l'O illt'e plcd an invi tation from President sa id in her clipped Oxonian accent,
ba ta nls now that both have been ;obe n ·d by tlw sheddin g of blood tn qu anReagan to visi t the Whtle House this "a nd it is important for Ameri ca ,
tity, tht• Falkle~nds we~r may soon be over.
It may well bt• tha t with the pe~ ssag t· uf tiii H' it will turn out lu h&lt;:~ve been
summer. She will come at CJ time too, bec&lt;i use we are too la rge a counrn ost Significant not fur determin111g the nwnt..Tshlp of sotn (' rei:llt·sldte but
when Sovtel in vaders i:tn.~ occupying try to wish away ." But she also
Afg hanistan a nd knocki t • on the made it clear tha t she will not give
fo r tb nnpact upon tht• shapl' of na val warfc:ll"t..'.
And fn r tlw impd us gi\·en anolht·r W&lt;Jr that got'S on apprtrt'ntl y innorlht. • rn ~a les of Pakistan. But Gan- up her independence to ac hieve rapdhi has Hi ways been more suspicious prochement.
dl'ftntll'ly .
Educated in Switzerla nd a nd
of the Pakistan is than of the Sov iets.
In sornl' qua rte rs, sht• is regarded as England. Ga ndhi for yea rs was
pr iva te secretary to her late father,
a SU\•id apologist.
The presiden t can expect pla in Jawaharlal Nehru . From him and
talk of Indi ra Ga ndhi : but sht• will from old-line Fabian socialists she

se rgea nts. Sparrows arc street urchins. Swallows are the barnstonning pilots of loca l air shows.
Bluebirds Ooat past in a beauty
parade. The quai l are Southern
dowa ge rs, Daughters of the
American Revol ution, full-breasted
ladies who congregate on the
sidewalks by Constitution Hall.
We hav e undertaker vultures,
Oeet admiral bluejays, private-eye
hawks, housewife wrens, and cardinals ca parisoned as Canadian
mounties. The hwruningbirds arc
back, going from bar to bar like
Georgetown singles. The purpose
finches turned up the other day,
evenin g-gowned in crepe de chint•.
We have church hcoirs of warblers
a nd acolytes of chickadees. Tht·
Oicker's name is Pete Rose. The
dour crew, of course, is that
prohibitionist, Mr . Volstead .

What does all this have to do with a
t'Onsel"\lative view of public affai rs?
That is what I am supposed to write
about. The answer is, not much. And
yet there may be some eternal
truths w be derived from the aerial
kingdom of our feathered friends.
Our socialistic feeders to one side,
birds fend for themselves. The
strong survive, the week perish. Birds build their own nest£, care for
their own young, teach the fledglin g~
all they need to know . They dwell in
an ordered society, Oying migratory
routes as precisely as any airline
captams . God made the computer in
a grosbea k's burly head.
But why dwell upon public
philosophies and private virtues? If
you ha ve seen an indogo bunting
da ncing through a dogwood grove,
you know that Emerson was right :
Beauty is its own excuse for being .

Full

belly, dull brain

Ben Fm nkltn S&lt;t id, " A full belly
nwkcs a dull bratn ." And that ts
rPmindfu l of the congressmen who
apparentl y stuffed lhcmsel,·cs at a
fund-ra is ing t!ir.n er last December
- just prior to VOIL'l' voting themSl'lves in e~ s1waky m ~:~nner the
nutra gcous bi)-! ldx break whtch was
ca lled the Dole a mendment.
Incidentall y, Sen. Robert Dolt-

st&lt;:1ted thfft•rt..·ntlitnes that Ill' had no
inlt'nt1on of lettin g any measure
cunw up ford repeal vult..• 1lll the lax
lm ·ak. Conseq uentl y. Mr. Dole had
bdter remembe r this: When countless people go to tht· polls - they
ha\"t' nn in tcn'ti on uf volin )-! for him .
Ernest Thorn e
Thurman , Ohio

Today in history
Today is Sunday, May 16, the !36th day of 1982. There are 229 days left in
the year.
Toda y\; highlight in history:
On Ma y 16, 1770, Marie Antoinette married France's Kin g Louis XVI.
On this date:
In !932, J a panese Premier Tsuyoshi lnukai was assass inated in Tokyo.
in 1962, U.S. Mari nes began arrivi ng in Thailand to help defend that country aga inst the Communist threat in neighboring Laos.
In !969, a Soviet space ship closed in on Venus a nd dropped a capsule that
sent back information on the planet's a tmosphere.
And in !979, police in El Salvador sealed oil the capital after 10 days of
violence by anti-government terrorists took 44 lives.
Ten years ago: Treasury Secretary John Con nally resigned from the
Nixon cabinet. He was succeeded by George Shultz.
~·ive years ago: A passenger ,helicopter idling atop a New York City
skyscraper snapped a rotor blade, killing live people on the landing pad and ·
the street below.
One year ago: Kentucky Derby winner " Pleasant Colony" won the
Preakness, thus taking the first two legs of thoroughbred racing's Triple
Crown for !981 . The final jewel of the crown - the Belmont Slakes- went to
"Swnming."
Today's birthdays : Actor Henry Fonda is 77yea rs old. Baseball manager
Billy Martin is 54.
Thought for today: The tongue can no man tame; it is an unruly evil. The Bible.

" You have to be down here where
we are to get the picture. The new
lax cuts will go into effect in July
and then we'll see a complete
change. Once we can clear out these
inventories, the fa ctories will ;tart
humming again, and with the new
tax credits a nd business confidence,
we'll get the economy on ils feet."
·'Whe re is Lhe eco ~omy now?" I
shouted.
" It's stagnated down here in the
muck and mirt!, because Congress
won't pass the budget the President

wants."
HCanyousee it?''
" I can't see it. But I can smell it,"
he yelled up. "It's slippery as all getout."
"What are you going to do about
the deficits in the budget ?"
'We can live with them, providing
there is an upturn in the economy,
and the conswner gets back his confidence, and we have a good
recovery· in the second half of the
year." ·

The Democrats in congress have
no obligation to pull Republican
chestnuts from the fire but they are
proposing to do just that. Then, in
their true spirit of cooperation, the
!Wpublicans will try to lake the
credit.
Members of the Democratic controlled House have proposed a $2
billion public works and housing
program aimed at putting some of
the unemployed back to work. Half
the money would go for public works
such as rebuilding the nation's
deteriorating highway system, im-

proving mass transit and renovating
bridges. The other half would be
used to lower interest rates on home
mortgages in hopes of spurring the
ailing housing industry. With the
national unemployment hitting 9.4
percent in April, unemployment in
the construction ' industry is now
near 20 percent. The plan, announced by House Majority Leder
Jim Wright, would not only help lake
the Reaganauts off the hook , but
would provide some much needed
employment and housing. Since it is
a Democrati c plan, no doubt it will

learned polttics al an ea rly age . At

64 - though she looks yea rs younger
- she has a se lf-confidence and
realism that Reaga n, like other
American presidenls befon· him ,
will find either refreshing or
exasperating.
Here a re the major points Indi ra
Ga ndhi made in the intel"\liew:
- She bristles at any sug gestion
that she is a Soviet apologist.
Referring to the many occasions
when the Soviet Union and India
have been on the same side in the
United Nations and other tnternationa l forwns , s he said: "The
Soviets have voted with us, not we
with them. Our treaty of friendship
with the Soviets is based on the fa ct
that it should not offset our nona ligned position."
In the 1950s, she noted, India fir st
asked the United States fo r help in

"
- In response to the frequently
leveled charges that India has failed
to condemn the Soviet invasion of
Alghani ~tan , Gandhi admitted that
her government has " not been as
vociferous" as others may have
wished.

" How 'do you know all those things
if you're down there in the dark?" I
shouted.
" We know what we're doing. We
didn't make this recession . Carter
did. The only thing that has surprised us is how deep it is."
" Isn 't it politically dangerous for
you to be down there so long?"
" It's no fun, because poor people
keep falling on you all the time. But
the President wants us to report
when it bottoms out down here, and
then he can go on television and announce itto the people."
He said something else but
couldn't hear it.
" Are you all right?" I shouted.
Finally he yelled up, "Yeh, I ju;1
slipped another 10 feet down. We
may have to shore up this place with
some excise taxes and $40 bilion in
Social Security cuts."
"If you do that, you' re going to
have a lot of old people down there
with you."
" Well, we can't scrape any more
out of the military. So we're going to

have to get fill from somewhere."
" How about giving up the personal
tax cuts for '83 and '84? 1 '
"The President will never go for
it. This recession will never bottom
out if we take money away from the
people."
"It sounds like you're between a
rock and hard place. Can I throw you
a rope for safety?"
" No, if I get in trouble I have the
Laffer curve to hold on to."
I yelled down something, but once
.again there was nothing b'ut silence.
'' However, are you all right?''
A voice came up from the dark:
" Yeh, I just hit a slight depression."
1
"Are we in 3 depression?" I
screamed fearfull y.
"No, I thought I had stepped on a
place that was bottoming out and 1
didn't see the hqle. I'm okay now.
I'm holding on to a price inllicator
which shows we are on very solid
footing ."
"Thank God. No recession is worth the.loss of a Reagan economist."

.....------.....;;..._,

/IIU, EXTJ1£M5151.111U. 8t ==I
txTREM/ST5. (,jJ{/(f 71E'/

gel little support in the Republican
Senate and less in tbe Oval Office.
But it will appear la ter as a
Republican pla n. I a lways did think
we Democrats are too big hearted
for our own good!
I think suc h £orgiving
magnanimity on the part of the
Democrats is very sporting. After
all , the Reaganauts did treat them
like feeble-minded in-laws last year
when they railroaded their budget
and tax cuts through Congress. They
seduced the boll weevils to their side
by promising them everything for

told the White House it planned "a
WASffiNGTON (EPA) - The EnThe public explanation for those
reduction in effort across a ll of the
vironmental Protection Agency has proposed cuts cites '"an effort to
program elemenls" wi th onl y one
devised an imaginative tw()ostep more effi ciently schedule the work
exception.
strategy for evading its legal respon- needed." Privately, however, EPA
sibility to minimize the dangers
posed by air pollution.
First, the agency bows to the
demands of the Chemical Manufacturers Association that no federal
controls be imposed on " fugitive
emissions" - leaks, direct process
releases and other forms of industrial pollution that come from
sources other than smokestacks.
The chemical industry argues successfully that EPA should, in effect,
ignore "fugitive emissions" because
it lacks both comprehensive infonnation about the problem and the
~
capability to measure and control
f
those pollutants.
Then, to insure that it won't
~
" This ought to cheer you up, Leonid - ours
acquire that capability anytime
"
isn't ihe ONLY economy that is in a terrible
soon, EPA proposed a drastic reducmess!''
tion of more than 50 percent in its ,--------------------------- ---1
already modest budget for research,
development and evaluation of the
requisite technology.
"The effect of this decision," says
Sen. Patrick J . Leahy, D-Vt., " is to
permit new coke ovens to emit
unlimited tons of noxious chemicals
each year because all emissions
from coke ovens are 'fugitive'
emissions,"
That program is only one of 70
public health and environmental
projects identified by Leahy as
targets for delay, reduction or
abolution in EPA's proposed budget
for the 1983 fiscal year, which begins
in October.
. Nobody denies that under
President IU!agan's leadership
EPA's funding levels, personnel
requirements and resource
.
I'
availability have sustained across~board cuts of 20 percent to 40
percent. The agency's total budget
300 Second Ave.
plurruneted from $4.67 billioQ in 1980
Lafayette Mall
to ~-03 billion in 1981, a reduction of
Gallipolfs, 0 .
more than 35 percent.
EPA Administrator Anne M. Gorsuch has insisted, however, that the
.quality of the agency's work will n~;~~ t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;~
suffer because of increased ·:~
ficiency, delegation of the programs
to the states and completion of
I
·research programs.
· . But internal budget
·submitted by EPA to the Office
Management and Budget, obtained
by Leahy through unofficial ,channels, show that Mrs. Gorsuch has
THE SHOE YOU'VE BEEN
, sought lo deceive Congress and the·
'public.
· Those docwnents are replete with ·
.references to' important en,vtronmental protection initiatives '
!that "will be curtailed sharply," will
isuffer because of "a reduction in ef. ·
'fort" and will be "more limited ...

·

Murphy's Mart
Circular
In Today's Paper

r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~

Featuring

FAMOUS MAY
CARPET SALE
LEE'S CARPET

Our b est se lling carpets at thi s y ea r 's bes t pr ices. One
low price includes both a thick foam pad and custom installation.
(Minimum 18 sq. yd s.- Sale end s May 29th

FURNITURE
GALLERIES
Second at Grape, Gallipolis., 446-0332

If

The
at~ Shoe Cafe

Important Reasons Why
You Expect More
From Ohio Valley BankYour Hometown,
Home-owned Bank
Independent banking is a vital and
essential part of the American enterprise system .

Directors and officers of the Ohio
Valley Bank are fo lks with a
whole - hearted interest in the
prosperity and well-being of the area
we serve. They have a real stake in its
future . They know its conditions and
needs intimately. It is their home.
A good portion of our depositors'
funds are invested - in the communities we serve-in sound loans
to the individuals and businesses of
our banking area.

1

than in the past."
Warns Leahy: "The Reagan adminlstratlon is seeking to repeal the
envirlilmental laws passed overby

a

Night Hawk
Vantage
Villa

bipartisan ;

Jevela."

EPA's research andl ~~~:::::1
·prograM to, deal with ..
_,pollution callled by nitrogen .......,..,.1
,•
carbon monoxide and other
•
·pbotocbemlcal OJ:idlnt.s baa been
Mon; &amp;'Fri. ·
allocated almost tiU million
9:30 til8 P.M.
year. But EPA _sought only ....v,11 ,. . TUe$., Wed.,
million foc the IJI'OillVO next
"';hur. &amp; Sat.
and the White 8011111 llallhed Ul81:~-~9~:30:.;t:il.:wS_:;P~.M:·--..,;;;~~~~===
ll'l!quest to l.es8 than .li.5 mlliiOD.

,,

"elmess."
I hope
in-t
uding World
Warthey
11 andweren't
the Grea
Depression years. Things were certa inly " messed" up then but it would
be casting blame too fa r back into
history to blame the sad years of the
Great Depression and World War 11
for our present circwnslances. Yet
La rry Speakes, the press representhi s
tative, recently made
statement, " We're looking for
economic recovery by late spring or
early summer. In the meantime
we're paying the price of years a nd
years of Democratically controlled
congresses which have spent and
spent. " Hoover's prosperity was
always just around the corner.
In the 36 years since the end of the
war the presidency has been abo ut
eve nl y div ided between the
Democrats a nd Republi ca ns.

Demonats: Truman served four November when a third of the
yea rs; Kennedy a nd Johnson, eight Senate and a ll members of the
years, Ca rter, four . Republicans:
House will face the voters, look for
Eisenhower, eight years, Nixon and an all-out political war. Already the
Ford, eight years, Reagan, one and administration is trying to divert the
a half years.
public from the economy by
So for 171', years the Republicans throwin g conlrovcrsial social subha ve been in the catbird's seal, free jects into the fray . Reagan has
· to ve to any so called giveaway laws proposed constitutional amenda Democratic Congress mig ht make . menU; for a ba lanced budget and
A Democratic Congress was not in school prayer. Bills have been incontrol all those years. For instance, troduced to weaken the Supreme
a coa lition of Republicans and Court's aut hority over school busing
southern Democratic congressmen and abortion . All in all. look forward
controlled Congress during the to a lively and acrimonious camTrwnan years. For the present ad- paign .
ministration to blame the
The war started tn ea rnest when
Democrats for the " mess" IS Reagan shouted, "They can't blame
nothing less thltn foisti ng lt lie on the lli)'' to newsmen as he strode to his
average voter who doesn't follow heli copter for a session with his horhistory too closely.
se at Quan tico, Va.
In his latest Saturday radio broadThey ca n a nd they will!
east, President Rea gan look sh a r p , - - - - - - - - - - - - exception to news reports the Senate
budget bill would red uce Social
Securit y payments. In a rebuttal,
Senator Christopher Dodd, Connecticul, said the $40 !Jillion of unspecified cuts the Senate envisioned
in the ir budget version would res ult
tn a cut of $1,000 for each SS
recipient. He said. " What our
prestdent argues is that a ll our
economic troubles should be laid at
the doorstep of the Democraltc parPage 1
ly, the news media , bus iness, labo r,
DELUXE 10 H.P.
consumer groups, in fact, everyone
except his admi nistration and the
RIDING MOWER
Republican members of the Senate
DID NOT ARRIVE.
Budget Committee." In spite of aU
efforts, the budget cotruniltee was
onl y able to scale the yea rl y defic it
Limited rain checks will
lor l!Jl!J to 105 BILLION DOLLAR-S .
b e iss ued .
F rom now unti l election day in

"

whelmingly

·'

their districts but the White House
kitchen sink. Some of their tactics
would have made even the most hardened Tammany Hall warrior blush.
Then, after all tha t boasting,
finagling and promising, nothing
worked and nothing has changed.
The economy is still going down the
drain in spite of a year's assa ult on
the hcnious expenses for school lunches, children's health care and food
stamps, to name a few .
The Democrats naturally made an
outcry when the unemployment
figures for April were announced.
The Reagan policy, on his reply,
have not changed much from last
year. His reply to newsmen that
Democrats "can't blame it on our
policies and I can tell them how to
turn that around - join us in adopling the budget that was passed by
theSenateB udget Conunittee."This
GOP newest budget proposal passed
by lhe Senate Budget Committee
cuts deeply into Social Security a nd
calls for $95 billion in new taxes over
tile next three yea rs. The Social
Security unspecified cuts a nd the
new taxes are the only departure
from the budget of last year. The
figures submitted by the Office and
Management and Budget originally
was laughed out of the committee,
but the budget proposed by the GOP
Senate Budget Conunittee still gives
the president the highest peacetime
war budgetin history.
Does the Democratic initiative
mean the end of partisan politics this
year? You can bet your sweet life it
doesn't' The Reaganauts never miss
the opportunity to blame the past administrations for the prese nt

•

Congress, by refusing to fund
regulatory activities a~ realiBtlc .

Fii/IL

Page-A -3

Lowell Wingett

Placing the blame

Berry's World

building steel plants and exploring
for oil. " But the U.S. said no, and
only then did we go (for steel ) to the
U.S.S.R. and for oil to Rwnania ."
- Bitterness over the U.S. tilt
toward Pakistan lingers, and
suspiciOn of our motives evidently
will remain as long as we continue to
provide military aid to India's
enemy. Gandhi obsel"\led that U.S.
anns aid to Pakistan was always accompanied by guarantees that the
weapons would not be used against
India . " But this time," she said,
referring to the new $4 billion arms
del ivery to Pakistan, "tbe U.S. is not
prepared to give this assurance. The
U.S. is on the record saying that the
guru; can be turned in any direction

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

Cloud of EPA cuts___R_obe_rt_wa_lte_rs

Bottomin.ag===o~u~t========A=rtB=u=ch=wa=Id
All the President's men keep
say ing the recession will bottom out
ve ry soon. It is a n act of faith with
them that , tf the people would just
have pa lt cnce, Mr. Reaga n's
economic plans will work . I was
skepttcal until I spoke to one of
Rt:a ga n's advisers. He was in a deep
pit and I lea ned over the edge and
yelled down to him. " What do you
see?"
" It seems to be bottoming out," he
ye lled up.
" How do you know ?"
" l ea n sec a li ght at the end of the
Lunnl'l ."
"Wh t: re is it coming from ?"
"The latest indtcalors,'' he
shouted.
" What do they indicate' "
"Unemployme nt is going up,
which means that inOation is going
down. Once inflation goes down, interest rates will fall and the real
gross nati ona l product should rise."
I peered into the hole. It was all
black. " I can't see anything from
here."

Middleport

~

Gandhi seeks improved relations
Jack Anderson

Letter to the editor

Pomeroy

You do business with the officers of a
Gallipolis independent bank. We're
right here to advise and serve you.
There's no problem of decisions
made from a "home office" somewhere else.
W"ether you deposit or borrow or
use some of our many other banking
services, you benefit by dealing with
your hometown, home -owned bank.
Whe n you deposil. when you borrow. when

8hi~l\ii~:Yiii~"k-Four locatlonoto """' you better.

Member. FDIC

�Pom e roy

Page-A -4 The Sunday Tim es- Sentin e l

Middl e port

May 16, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

May 16, 1982

changes by the House, including a
Republican amendment whi ch added $77 million to the $481 million Illcome tax boost approved by the
Senate.
" That's of substance. That's going
to be a ma jor problem," Finan sa id,
re fl ecti ng a continuing tns istenee by
the GOP Senate majority that Ohio's
fiscal erisis should be solved mon•
with spending cuts than With new
taxes.
Before the bi II passe d l he
Demoerat-cont rolled House 5!1-39
last Wednesday, Rep. Robert E.

Brown, R-Perrys burg, won ove r-

whelming approval of the amendment which increased the amount of
thetax.
As approved by the Senate, the
withholding rate would have been increased to 50 percent for six months
starting Jul y 1, and lowered to 25
percent in the period from Jan. I,
!983 until the end of the state's bienuiwn on June 30. 1983.
Finan said another point of contention will be the addition by the
House of a new income tax bracket
for wage earners of WJ,OOO or more a
yea r.

Lola B.'s record secure
Chicken Flying Contest at Rio Grande. Dr. Marsh served as official starter for all the events.

DR. CLYDE MARSH, of Ohio State University's
poultry science department. are shown on launching
ramp during Saturda y' s lith annual International

Netzley highly respected
COLUMBUS, Ohio I API- Most of
Ohio's leg islato rs give Bob Nt'lzley
high marks for persistence, even if
they don't agree with the feiSty
Miami Counti an's conservatiVl'

they received m the last bienm wn.
The House vl'lera n of 21 yea rs
r 1ted fi gures. later challenged,
showing that the sta te will receive
$1.8 billi on more 1n inflation-fed tax

views.

ren•nues during the current bien·

Last week, when 59 rnembef' of
the 9!1-member House agreed that a
tax incrl'&lt;Jsc is needed to gl't Ohi o
out of what one ca lled "a fiScal
swamp," Netzley scud no tax in-

niurn than 1t did the last bi ennium .
The amendment proposed, w1th
some exceptions. that the imTl'ase
be di v1ded at 8 percent each to most
age ncies. with more to the critcal

cr ease is needed.

Sl' f VJcc

The 57-year-old owner of a sma ll
oil company, Netzley, R-La ura, offered an amendment whic h he
claimed would balance the budget
!l)ld still prov1de Increases for most
state age ncies - over the amount

tal retardation, higher education,
prim &lt;J ry and second&lt;J ry edu ci::l tion ,
and lastl y to welfa re - Netzley's
longtime buga boo.
Simpl e sounding enough. But his
proposa l included a !0 percent bi en-

areas of men tal hea lth, men-

nial increase for welfa re wh1ch he
conceded was $261l million short of
needs proj ect ed by the administra tion of GOP Gov . J ames A.
Rhodes.
A$16.2 milli on increase for mental
reta rdation was $40 million short of
Rhodes' budget.
On welfare, he charged that
Rhodes' welfare departme nt pads
caseloads. And he said when a ll
type~ of welfa re beneCits arc conSidered - food stamps, medica l
pay ments. and day care, for instance. as well as monthly benefits
- ma ny welfa re f£lmili es arc getting
almost 125 percent of their rnimmwn
needs.

Trying the accused...
t1 r d up onl' man a nd a car fro m the
sheriff' s dt· pe~rtme nt
In vesti ~a ti vr- wi se, Uw case was C:l
relati Vl·ly simplt• on~ fur the

sheriff's departme nt beea use Robinson was a rrested at the scene . the
jud ~t· sa u.J. Ca pt. Ca rl La ngfo rd ,
who hecH.kd the mvcs tiga tJun,
ag reed with R&lt;xle rick'&gt; analysiS.
Langford said the 5().01·-so manhours spent on the case d1d n' t include the work done by Burl'a u of
Criminal In vesti ga twn personnel
who assisted.
Both agreed another h1dden cost 1s
the amount of time wra pped up in Investigators who must tes tify dunn g
the trial. They are subpoened to appear and ofll'll must wa it a day or
two before they' re called:
'' To me. it's a must to ha vl' an Jnvc s t Jg at o r lh e r e with th l'

prosrcutor.'' Langford sa 1d . " He's
~ ut a mlll 10n things un h1s mind and
ht· nerds smneUill' to ak rt hi m tu
ma ny th ings ."
Time a nd money was also speutlJy

Langford and J oseph Ca in, Ga llia
Count y prUSl'l'Utor. 111 tal kin ~ to witnt·sses a nd prt• pCJn ng lht• t·ase.
" !I was a very th orough investi gi:l tJOn - Vt'l')' lltlit' or nothmg
wCJs missed ," La ngford sa id .
" I somet imes get upset with whl' n
people criti cize plra bu rgi::l ining or
nrgotia ted pleas thCJ t CJ rc entered Into bl'twt•e n the prosecutor a nd defenSt' l'o unst&gt;l." Rodcn ck sCJid. ' ' In a
sma ll co unt y li ke Gallia, if plea
ba r ~a ming did not go on and if
probation Wl'ren't granll'tl in CJ great
nwnber of cases, the county couldn't
afford the case load ."
In 90 percent of a ll negotiall'd

Gen. Hartinger...

1Continued

from page Al l

The distance the bird fli es before hitting ground is measured by meet officials.
A $500 awa rd has been set for any
chicken which can outfl y Lola B.
R1bbons and prizes of $25, $10 and $5
are set in the other classes.
This year, some new competitions
were added to the roster prior to the
main event, which started at I p.m.
A rooster-crowing competition was
held from !1-11 a.m., followed by the
4(}-ya rd Chicken Run for those
chickens who move faster on the
ground.
Human entries who wanted to get
in on the action got a chance at I :45
p.m. with the Ch1cken Legs contest,
in which the entrants showed whose
legs were closest to those of the
oth~ r chi ckens.

of Springfi eld. Apollo Two flew 9~ .
the longest recorded flight of the
da y.
Banta mweight di vision leader was
Barn ya rd Clocker, owned by Georg•·
Keiser of Miffl in, Pa., which fl ew 57
fel'l .
In the mediwn weight division,
Jeromino, owned and trained by
Kevin Mullins of Huntington, W.Va .,
recorded a fli ght of 7+7.
Beaker, trained by Kelli and
Frank McKimminis of Colwn bus,
flew 21-ll in the heavyweight class.
The spokesman said no locallyowned chickens carne in during all
competition.
The competi t ion was conducted in
Again, no fowl bested Lol a B., the the traditional manner : the fowl is
chicken owned by Sherwood Costen, placed in an outsized mailbox, used
Point Pleasant, who set the world as a luanching platform, and forced
record. Although Lola B. didn 't com- airborne with the aid of a plunger.
pete this year, Costen's feather- , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____:__ _:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

RIO GRANDE - With temperatures ranging in the low 90s, approximately 1,600 owners and spectators gathered at Bob Evans Farms
Saturday for the 11th annual International Chi cken Flying Meet.
Judging for the farthest-fl ying
chicken was conducted agam lh1s
year by Dr. Glyde Marsh of Ohi o
State University's poultry science
department. Entries were recorded
from around the country and from
the immediate tri-state area .
An event spokesman said late
Saturd ay a ft ernoon that 175
chickens were registered for the
event.

weight Cora placed third in that par-

ATOTALLY N~W DESIGN IN MEMORIALS

ti cula r l'Vent.
Lola B. set the record in 1979 after

fl ying 302 feet , eight inches. At la st
year's meet, it was reported Costen
wouldn't unleash his fa vored bird if
her record was threatened.
Debbie Stewart, owned by Bob
Knox of Pa rkersburg, Pa., carne
closest in 198! by flying !34 feet, two
inches.
The featherweight winner was
Apollo Two, owned by Mike Freeze

pleas. the r·ount y and tax paye rs
rt•a lize a scJV ings of approximatel y
90 percent of the case's total cost.
" Everyone wants justi ce and no one
•·a n really afford It," Roderi ck said.
Under new state law, in section
2902.02 of thl' Ohio Revised Code, an
CJ gg rt:~va t cLI m urder case - in which
murder was corrunitted dur ing the
t·omnussion or a nothl' r cnmc causes l'Ourt costs to skyrocket,
Hoder~ ck added.
Among its fea tures, the judge sa 1d
the jury panel seleclion goes from
pl·rhaps 40 to 120, with 12 chall enges
allowed to attorneys during the
se lt&gt;cti on process. ratht•r tha n the
standard four .

At 5 p.m. on Saturday there will be
a reunion at the LaSalle Hotel of the
Middleport Hi gh High School
SEOAL Championship football team
of which General Hartinger was a
. member. At 6:30 p.m., the annual
· ·. Middleport High School Alwnni
Association reunion will be held with
General Hartinger honored. Joe
Young will serve as toastmaster. A
dance will follow the dinner.
On Sunday, the General Hartinger
Four Star Golf Classic will be held at
the Jayrnar Golf Club in Pomeroy.
The classic is limited to 40 golfers
and the general will play one hole
with each foursome taking part.
Each golfer will receive a wine
decanter and set of glasses etched
with the seal and name of the
. general, along wiih other gilts.
• There will be trophies for low gross
and low net teams plus an individual
• championship plaque. A dinner will
be Served by women of the golf club.

,,

Tax&amp;

SUMMIT

'

TOILET "PAPER

79¢

4Roll
Pkg.

SUMMIT

PAPER
'Single
Roil

55¢

$}6~1
ROSS

GAY 90
BREAD
$}09

COKE

$} ~!.r.

W. Clifton Stout

Jimmy Lee King
POMEROY - Jimmy Lee King,
25, died Friday at a Gallipolis
hospital.
Mr. King is survi ved by his father.
Jimmie G. King, Route 1, Minersville; his mother, Fairy Bell
Foster, Parkersburg, W. Va .;
brothers and sisters, Michael G.
King, Minersville; Sheila Westfall ,
Belpre ; Gregory Stephans, Lisa
Foster, Parkersburg; his stepmother, Mary King, Route 1, Miners ville, and severa l s tepbrothers and
stepsi sters including Robert ,
Timothy and Pamela Lawrence, all
of Minersvill e; Nancy Gillispie,
Lon g Bottom ; Debra Drake,
Pomey; Kathy Francis, Long Bottorn. and Jo Ellen Wolfe of Florida .
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Monday at Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. Theron Durham offi cJatmg . Burial w11l foll ow 111 Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may ea ll
at the fun eral home any time.

Among the activities planned by
reports.
the chamber are an auto show, a
display of arts and crafts, a Ilea
market, park entertainment on
Saturday, games and contests concluding with a sky diving exhibit on
Saturday and possibly food and
novelty stands.
Anyone wishing to partiCipate is
asked to complete the following
fonn and get it to Mrs. Scally ,
LaSalle Hotel, in Middleport.

JUST

$8.900

ANY SIZE.
TWIN,FULL,
':'QUEEN

Pag e

A-5

tempts at theft were averted earl y
Sa turday mornmg, pollee and
depuhes reported.
The sheriff's department said persons unknown tried to break into the
Bi g Mapl e Ca rryout , 19 W. Main St.
in Cheshire, a round 3: 45 a.m.
Banging on one of the doors to tht•
building awoke neighbors, who
notified deputies.
Whcn one ofthc neig hbo rswenttu
in ve:;ti gate, he r eported he saw two
ma les fleei ng fr om the scene on foot
towa rd the river. Entry into the
carryout was ~ained by pryi ng the
lock and the hasooffthe door.

department sa1d
Ga lhpol " C1ty Polll'e we1e ale 1ted
to the presence of Sl'Vt'ral subjects at
Kotal ir l.andscapmg, 86! Second
Ave., a t 2:50 a .m . An off wrr who
went to the scent· sa1d he saw no sui&gt;jct'L'i a rou nd the Pslahl ishrnen t but
noticed a •·a r and a p1ckup tnwk
park ed nl'a rby .
In the tru ck, tht' Offl l'l' l' round t wo
whee l ba rr llW!'i,
pr esumably
belonging to Kota!tc. Another off H'cr
amved , and shortl y afte rward two
mall' ju veniles were observed neCJr
the car. Wlwn rol ict· ca llt•d out to
them, thepa1 r fk d.

Emergency squads answer calls
POMEROY-Seven runs were
made by local units Friday acl'Ording to a report issued by M eq~s
County Emergency Medica l Service.
At I :08 a. m. Middleport was ca lled
for Janet McKinney who was treated
allhc scene ; all :08 a. m. Middleport
was called to the Blue TarTan for a
bomb threat; Pomeroy was call ed at

Plains was eal led at 10 :15 a .m. fur 13.
Stewart who was ta ken to Cumdt·n
Clark Hos pital; MidLIIe pt)rt was

cal led at 12:31 a .m for Paulellt•
Til' mt'Yt'f who was ta kt•n to Pleasa nt
Vall ey Hosp1tal: at 9:22 a .m. Mlddlt•port was l'CJIIed for Nona
Wint•brt•nnt•r who was take n to
VeterCJ ns Ml'morial Hospital .

and the wheelbarrows Acconilng to
the report, a 17-yea r-old male
JU Veml e came to lhl' stahon at 4 a m
Inquiring about the truck and made
a stakrnent about the inc1dent.
The juven ile was released to h1s
pCJrents CJ nd no l'ha rgl's are cx ptocted
to i&gt;e fi led.
Pol it'l' &lt;:tlso repurteLI &lt;:t client se r·
\'t'd by Bul'kt 'Yl' Cuii\IIIUllity St·r\'il'l'S on ttw Ga llipolis Developllll'ntal CPn 1t· r grounds was found
ly mg 1n a tub in lhl' sen·JL•es buil di n ~
at 6:15a. m. F nLICJy .
lJr. Dona ld Wan•hune, Gal ila
County corone r. was cal led 111 to
111akl' a ru ling and 1t was dett!rminl'd
tlw rlir nt, Jd t· nti ficd as Jinum t· L.
Kmc. was " an apparent vict11 n of
drow ning,'' the n·port said.
OffiCl'rs lw!Jl'\'t' tht· drowning ucl'Urrl'd Thu rsday night.
Mea nwlu le, po ht't' sau.l they c1ted
a Ht. 1. Chr slllrt' ma n fo r fCJliu n · tu
~wid 111 CJ twu- vdl Jc! t• at'l' Jdt:n t at
Tlmd An· nuc and Pine Sired late

F nd&lt;ty ll i ~ ht.
AtTtWLiln g tu ti lt • rt•port. Russel! A.

Th1rd while northbound at II 24 p 1h; •
He then pulled forwm d 111lo the ~n..
tersertwn and struck '' passl~ 2:
Wl'stbound ve h1cle dnv&lt;·n by Robe~
M. Burgl' r, 19, Gall ipolis.
Both aut«' wt• re moderately,
damaged and I .ucas was lit·keted Cor.
the violation.
:. :
Ea rlwr. ofr wl'rs SCJJd &lt;:t \'l' h l~le'
d rn't 'll by Nl'a! B . Cla rk, 60,
Gal lipolis, WCJS barkin g from l:&amp;
par king spC:In' 111 2'~! Allt·y at 6: 1!l
p.m .. failed to S&lt;'&lt; ' a \'t' hl&lt;'lt• bl• hinil
tum dn ven by Pa tnc1a J. RastiaO i,
H. Galli poliS , aud culildt·d
Bast 1a n1 's ear wa s sl 1 ~ ht l y
t l&lt;tmt:~,l2 t'Li l n the i:ll'l'ILi t•n\
.
Also l'ltl'd by poi H:l' Fnday we r-e
Wil liam Mullms, 44 , Ht. 2, BHiv;e ll,
dlsordt•rly conduct: .JohnS . Burk ti,
:l5. Gal lipol is, domt·stw \'IO!t·nn• :
Donal d G . Ba kenhaslt·r. '12. Columbus, OWl cmLI no n1&gt;rratur\ lin·n~'"e:
and thl' follow111 ~ fur s pt•edl!lg:
Ma rk Cunnmgham. 22. (;e:tllipohs :
HMI')' T. Stuul .Jr .. :J:J, Charleston.
W.Vit. : an d Th un1as F . Hncw h, 19.
P01n l Pit'asant.

5:
51 p.m.
Cocki
er who 1~;:========::========;::::;;;:::;;:::::;;::::::::::=::::::::::~:::::;::;::;;:::;:::;:::~
was
takenfor
to Gladys
Veterans
Memorial
Hospita l; Racine was called at 8:51
STORE HOURS:
a.m. for Sarah Congo who was taken
lo Holze r Medi ca l Center : Tuppers

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

Veterans Memorial

Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

ADMISSIONS-Michael Hewitt.
Portland ; Dorothy Brewer. Portland : Gladys Cockier, Pomeroy:
Robert Cundiff, Rutland; Nona
Winebrenner, Middleport.
DISCHARGES---Chad
Wi se.
Lillian Gress. Gladys Thomas. Eva
Shaffer. Beatrice Blake.

CLOSED SUNDAYS
ti es

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~l

-··
uae • flOod

Sl•t•F•rm

\.t,' ).. .
..

Crl/l mp

Spring Valley Plaza
Phon e 446 -4396

I; Food/Novelty
StJII FJ rlll ln U111n ce Cllll l)lnlll
Holllt Olhcn 81o0ft'Hfi910n

$1 D9

COKE
$~8~_-Pk.
Cans

SLICED
BACON

$159
Lb

PORK
ROAST

CUBE
$239
STEAK Lb .

OH 10 VALLEY BANK
r~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~l

Graduate·
GIFT IDEAS

junbav timro - Jmtinrl
tliPSS!i&gt;-600
A MWtimedia Newspaper

PubJished

1:!8Ch

Sunday, 125 Third

MILK

SUIISCRIPfiON RATES

Onew!i~~.~ ·~~~~~ ~~~..SI .OO

. One Month .

. . . .. $4.40
. . . $52.80

One year .
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

35Cents
No subHcripUons by mail prnniUed in
tOWTl!l where home carrier servit..'t? Is .
·available.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel will not be

Wagner

Del Monte .Cut

3
BEANS

ORANGE s4 oz.
JUICE Btl.

19 GREEN

responsible for advance payment, made .

HEAD

One year ,,, .. , .•. , . . ,,,,, ..... $20.80
'8iJ: moolhl . .. , ......... ., ..... $18.40

DlllyoodBIIIIdof .
•

&gt;

OllloudWetiVIfPIII

'Oneyur .. , ..... .. ... ..... .. .. pt.OO

fURNI.rt.Ji&lt;[ CO•

8iJ:- ". " "" " . """ " ... . . .

. 'l'hr&lt;e montho " " " " " " " " " $11-lt •
IIII... OodlllliOiolo

.

. 9SS Second Ave. · 446·1171'· .Galllpoll1, Ohio
HEACQUNITERs FOA I!EMCO FOSTURE• FAMILY MA~ sm.OUR FRAME Hei.PS '!'OUR ~GET A aOoo NIGHT'S SL!~'

,,

From its superbly asSembled quartz movement
to the supreme finish and fit of Its bracelet and
case, every element is pure art. Pure Bulova
Quartz. The gift of a lifetime.

JOcarrim.

·CORf&gt;IN &amp;.· s·N\'[)[1&lt;.
.

$189
Lb .

Tender&amp; Juicy

Nine Mile Road, Suite 204, Detroit, •
Michigan, .ams.

'"OhrYIUd...., ~In- -~

$} 796-PK.

CUBE
PARKETTES

Lom End

Representative, Branham, 17117 West

What a great l)pportunity! For a
.l imited time y0u can buy Bemco
Mattress Sets in Queen, • Full or
Twin size for one low price per
piece . These are fine, first quality
Mattress Sets . With attractive
designer. covers, made in the
famous · Bemco tradition of
quaiJty .'· ,

1

Superior Dart

Member : The A!lSOClated Prtss, Inland
Dally Pr~!!£!~ Association and the
American Newspaper Publishers
Association , National Advertising

CiET THE RKiHT SIZE AT THE
RKiHT PRICE. HURRY IN.
THIS IS ALIMITED OFFER.

69/x Gal.

And we are willing to pay you a 15% profit on
your pennies. For a limited time the Ohio
Valley Bank will pay you $1.15 for every $1.00
worth of pennies you bring into any of our four
offices. Hurry in while this offer lasts.

Entered as lteCOild cla.ss mailing matter
at Pomeroy, Ohio, P06l Office.

Extra Firm

ICE CREAM

WE NEED PENNIES!

Avenue, by t~ Ohio Valley Publis hi~
COtnpany- Mu.ltunedia , Jne. Second claS!I
postage paid al Gallipolis, Quo, 4563 1.

EACH PIECE:

GHONEFRH
VAll!Y BEU
PREMIUM

,,

T he Sund a y Tim es· Sentin e l

RICK PERDUE

BlllldoyOoly

69~AY

Point Pl easant , w . V a.

·'Good service,
good coverage,
good price .
lhal'sSiale
Farm
Insurance."

Type of Entry (Check areas below I ...... . . .

MAILSUBSCRIFfiONS

PLANTS

ALBANY - W. Clifton Stout, 66 ,
Albany , died Friday night in
O'Bi eness Memorial Hospital ,
At""'ns.
Born Oct. 26, 1915, in Athens County, son of the late Noah and Byrd
Merry Stout, he was a retired
General Telephone Co. employee, a
member and past master of the
Savannah Masonic Lodge No. 466, F
and AM in Guysville, the Disabled
American Veterans, Albany Grange
No. 1611 and the Appalachian CBers.
Surviving is his wife, Hazel Rife
Stout ; a brother, John of Columbus;
a sister, Nelle M. Stout of Columbus;
a nd sev eral cous ins.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home, Albany, w1th the
Rev. Willard Love offi ciating. Burial
will be in Alexander CernPtP ry .
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. today.
Masoni c services will be conducted by Savannah Masonic Lodge
in the fun eral home at 7 p.m. toda y.

.... Phone.

Address

MIDDLEPORT - A fina l wrapup
of activities being staged by the Middleport Chamber of Commerce in
conjunction with the General Hartinger Four Star Celebration on
Memorial weekend is expected to occur this week, Mrs. Yvonne Scally,
general chairman for the chamber,

CHIPS

$

GALLJPOUS - Mrs. Dw1ght
(Mary) Pulley, 82, Cambridge, died
at 3 p.m. Friday at Scenic Hills Nursing Horne here. She had been in ill
hea lth for the past three years and
was preceded in death by her
husband 10 yea rs ago.
Survivors include a daughter ,
Mrs. Lawrence (June] Bastiani of
Ga llipolis; thfee grandchildren,
Mrs. Alan (Jill) DeMachi of Fountain Valley, Calif. ; Mrs. Norman
tGayl Lanier, Medina ; and Beth
Bastiani of Colwnbus; a brother,
and four sisters, all residing in the
Cambridge area and four greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a. m. Monday from the ScottAtkinson Funeral Home located on
Steubenvill e Av e., Ca mbridge.
There will be no cal ling hours. The
family requests that in lieu of
flowers contributions be made to
t•ither St. Peter's Episropal Church
in Ga llipoli s or Wes tminster
Presbyterian Church at Cambridge.

Final
wrapup·

top

BUY ONE

Gallipolis, Ohio

IMtnou

~~

2% MILK

MASON - Delmer E. Gibbs, 63,
died Thursday in the Pleasa nt
Valley Hospital.
Born March 11 , 1919, in Mason to
the late Art h W. and Edith M. Ca rtwright Gibbs.
He was employed as a trackman
for the B &amp; 0 Railroad, he was a
World War II Veteran and belonged
to both Smith-Capehart American
Legion Post 140 and StewartJohnsonV .F.W. Post9926.
Surviving are two brothers, Al bert
Gibbs of Mason and Marion Gibbs of
Elyria, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held on
Monday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Horne with the
Rev. George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will follow in the Adamsville
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Sunday between the hours of 6
p.m. and 9 p.m.
Graveside rites will be conducted.

Arts and Crafts i I; Flea Market ( I; Auto Show I
Stand I I; Entertainment I 1

ast ~~~&amp;k

$ 09 Plus

388-8603

992-2588

If a guilt y verdict is returned by
the jury, then the defendant must
undergo a psychiatric exmaina tion
within 30 da ys and return to court at
tht.' end of that time to dt:'termi ne if
" miti ga tin g c ir c um s tan ces''
surrounding the crime outweigh the
sL·ri ous ness of the murdt•r.
All of this, including sequestenng
the same. jury for the 30 da ys needed
for the psychiatric study, 1s borne by
the county. And the end result?
" It' s estimated it could cost
$100,000, " Roderick said . "That
would bankrupt any small county ."

1st

Mary Pulley

Name ...

VINTON, OHIO
W. Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Storl' wmdows 1n Middl eport hav t'
takl•n on lht• red. white and blue look
111 pn •para tion for lhl' visi t by
C:l prog ra m
(;t•neri::l
l Ha rtinger CI IHJ large stred
will follow the parade. Making
Signs
are
to bt.• put into place by the
pn•st·ntatiuns to Genl'ral Ha rtin gt'r
Mt•it.!S
J
C~ycees
Ill prcpcu ati on fur the
will b&lt;• the MiJdil'port Chamber of
Comm erl'e, by Bob Gi lmore, l'\'l' nt. Store fronlr. ; wiH be decked Ill
prt'S ILh~ nt :
Me1gs County Com- n ·d. white and blue bunting for the
mi ss ione rs , by Henr y Wel ls, O( 'l'i:I SIUn .
pn•sidt•nt ; Cla ir Ba ll , Ohi o Houst• of . - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Representati ves: Oakley Cull ins,
Ohio Senate ; Feeney-Bennett Post
128, Arn l' n r&lt;J n Le gion , by l'rell
Hanel who will introduce Ed Bennett, formerl y of Middleport and a
World War I! CongressiOnal of
Honor winner, who will makt• the
presentation, and the Village of Middleport by Mayor Fred Hoffman .
At 12 nuon there will be a fl y--over
by the U. S. Air Force in sa lute to
·JUNCTION RT. 7 &amp;218
General Hartin ~c r .
In the afternoon there will be
Priced Good
numerous park acti vities sponsored
May 13th - May 20th
by the Middleport Chamber of Comrnt•rce, Mrs. Yvonne Scall y, chairHours: 6:30 AM.-11 P.M.; SUNDAY 8 AM.-11 P.M.
man. There will be games and contests, Blue Grass music, square dancing by senior citizens. selections by
PEPSI
DAN DEE
VAllEY BEll
the Voices of Liberty and other acReg. &amp; Diet
tivities with a sky di ving exhibition
MT. DEW
al4 :30 p.m.

(Continued from page Al l

man of the t' d t&gt;b ratiun .
At tht• r ommun ity park

Delbert E. Gibbs

FESTIVAL REGISTRATION

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

Middleport

Area deaths ,.~~!~!~!~~.~~~~m.~ye~~~~.~~ . ~~~~P~," ~

Conferees negotiate
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - Senatl'
House conferees begin negotiations
Wednesda y on a controve rsial
budget-balanci ng bill which contains
a ternpora ry, 50 percent boost in the
state income ta x.
" It's going to be a tough conference conunittce," sai d Sen.
Richard H. Finan, R-Cincmnati . tile
Senate bill 's chief sponsor who will
serve as cha irma n of the six.rne mber panel.
F inan refe r red to cxh·nsi\'e

Pomeroy

. ..

.... .,... v......

. ·.. ,. . '
........

" '

LETTUCE

59e

U.S. N0.1

POTATOES

$}
can
JOJ

Bonu s Buy

oz .
Lvs .

BREAD

$119

Heiners

DEL MONTE
CATSUP

20 LB. BAG

$259

'24oz.

Btl . .

.

�16, 1982

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Porn eroy- M idd leport- Ga II ipol i s:;'=O=h=i=o==P=o=in=t=P=I=e=a=s=a=n=t,=W
=.=v=a=.==========T=h::e::::;;;S::
u;:n::
d =a=y=T=i=m=e=s=·S=e=n=t=i=n=e =
l = P=a::::g::e= A
= -7

Locusts return to Meigs County area:
POMEROY - The 17-year old
locusts are bark. Locusts were swarming Friday morning on trees in the
yard ol Charles Corder here.
On hand to see the arrival was
John Rice, Meigs County Extension
Agent, Agnrulture.
Exte nsi on Entomolo gist Dr .
Richard L. Miller ol The Ohio State
Un iversity has compi led in[on nation on the life cycle and
habits of the cicada (locust) . His
protecting landscape plants again;t
this insect.
The last time locusts appeared in

ty egg shells are olten visible in the
punctures on the twigs.
Young, freshly hatched cicadas,
called nymphs, drop to the ground,
burrow into the soil and attach themselves to a suitable root where they
suck sap !rom the plant.
From morning to night, the male
locust fill the air with its monotonous
droning song. The sound is produced
by an organ just behind the wi ngs.
What you ran do about them?
Mechanical screens such as
cheesecloth, mosquito netting, nylon
netting and tobacco cloth can be
used to preven t females !rom layi ng

the area in 1965 they caused serious

eggs on trees.

recommendations

BACK AGA IN - On one ol the trees in the yard ol Charles Corder,
Pomeroy, Friday morning. a locust was caught by the camera as it
••merged !rom its shell. The tree had numerous locusts crawling about.

will

help

in

damage to grapevmes, shade trees,
Put the screens in place before
shrubs and many young lruit trees.
May 25, when egg-laying begins.
Damage to lruit trees, shade trees Keep screens or trees until all adult
and other landscape plants results locusts are dead - about eight
from the egg-laying slits or punc- weeks.
tures made by the female . She
fit the screens loose enough to
literally rips the twig to deposit her allow tree growth, but with no holes
eggs.
or gaps to permit females to enter
Two slits appea r to lonn a "V" and lay eggs.
with a smgle female producing !rom
Swnmer pruning ol injured limbs
fi ve to 20 egg laying slils. She may · removes nym phs from infested site
deposit as many as 200 to 600 eggs. and eliminates nymphal !ceding on
Eggs hatch in about SIX weeks. Emp- rools. These twigs contain eggs, so

ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) - Truck
driver Billy C. Conner thought the
knapsack under the bush was just a
" hip-pie sittin' there sleeping," until
he saw a tiny loot sticking out ol the
sack.
Closer examination revealed a
baby boy, 5 to 7 months old , abandoned at a rest stop on Interstate 71 .

t

" It':; a good chance he may ha ve
sa~ed

post of the Ohio Highway Patrol .

Rhodes graduation speaker

Molmar sa id the morning .cold .could.

A Coalton native, Rhodes has been
governor since 1975 and served two
tenns in the same position in 1963-71.
He was state auditor in I~ and
previously served two tenns as ·
Colwnbus city auditor and one term
on th e Columbus Board ol
Education.
He's a graduate ol Springfield '
High School a nd Ohio State University.

RIO GRANDE - Gov. James A.
Rhodes will be the speaker at the
106th annual commencement exercises at Rio Grande College and
Community College a t 2:30 p.m.
May23.
Rhodes, 72, presently serving his
fourth and last tenn as Ohio's chiel
executi ve, will address this yea r's

graduates during ceremonies on
College Green.

ESSAY WINNERS - Annie Wiseman, left, a senior at Gallla Academy
High School, and Matthew Kent McKinney, Martinsburg, W.Va., a
graduating senior at Marshall University, won national awards in the
essay contest sponsored by the Propellor Club. Annie placed lilth in the
national competition whUe Kent was second nationally on the collegiate
level for tbelr 01188YS on the necessity of the merchant marine. Both were
honored by tbe club's Huntington port Friday night at Oscar's Restaurant
In Gallipolls.

~!!!~~~[iiiii!!i!!i!~!i!!i!!!!i!!!i!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~·

required to report the actual planted
acreage on a field-by-held basis.
"Fanne rs who did not sign up lor
the program could benefit also by
certifying their planted acreage
because the 1983 base acres will be
based on the certified 1982 acreage,"
the ASCS ollicial said. Meigs County
Ianners who have not certified their
fall-seeded crops are urged to do so
by June 1and to certify their corn by
August I. The local ASCS oflire is
open !rom 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

se~~c~~~~omly checks !arms to J.;WHOL;;;;;;;;;;SALE;;~iiiiiiiRiiiET~Ajjjjl~l.-i
verify that the acreage reports are
E
·

LOCUSTS in various stages were seen Friday morning on one of the

tn•es in the yard ol Charles Corder , Wright St .. Pomeroy.

SWIM M1NG

accurate and also provides aerial
photograph for farmers to identify
their fields . "The acreage reports
will be used to determine compliance with farm programs and will
also serve as a basis ror the 1983
program base acres lor !arms," fox
said.
To be elioible for price supnort
~
loans, target prices and other

P· QQLS

PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM

12

cases

GALLIPOLIS wr rc

end in

Twelve cases

le rmin a ll·d

F' r~da y

in

Gallipolis Municipa l Court.
Mark A. Cur nutte. 22 . Rt. I ,
Gallipolis, &lt;' harged w&lt;th reckless
operation , lined $100 ; cherg&lt;·rl with
speeding, for! cited $39 bond .
Charged with no operator's liccn·
se, lined $50. six months jail sen·
tence suspended and placed on 18
months probation wes Wil ham 11
Dav ison, 22. Ri o Gr andl.' .

Robert D. Brumfield , Rt. 2, V&lt;n·
ton , charged with passi ng a stoppeu

•

POMEROY - The Meigs Count y
Shenll's Department reports an
error in the release concerning !.he
theft of a roll of pI asti c pipe Irom I ~ he
Richard Mees property at Darwin .
According to the report the pipe
was va lued at $150 and it was a 500
foot roll of one inch orange pla:; ti c
pipe.
The plastic pipe was 111 a field west
of U. S. 33 at the end of the! our lane.
Anyone seeing any vehicles in the
vicinity the first part or last wecl&lt; to
please contact his offi ce.
The department is receiv·ing cum·
plaints roncern mg dirtbikes a nd
motoreyt'les being upe ratl'tl on the
streets and roads without lirt.•:nse
plates and or operators without

DR . GEORGE W. DAVIS
--.,.---OPTOMETRI ST -- - -

II you don't want the world to
know you're wearing bifocals,
you ca n wear the kind that look
just like ordinary glasses. The
dividing line between the two se~
of vision correction is ground
down so that it's not noticeable to
other people. You' ll notice a
blurred area when you switch
!rom the upper to the lower part
of your lens or vice versa. It's all
a matter or personal preference.

"INVISIBLE" BIFOCALS
Most bifocal glasses have a
visible line separating the two
kinds of eye correction. Others
have no visiblehne, just a blending separation that only the
wearer can diScern. Which is the
best kind lor you?
Some people feel self-conscious

when they first start wearing
bifocals. for a long time they've
only had one vision problem, such
e:t :&gt;

nearsighted ness

or

far-

sightedn ess. But with middle age,
many people need help reading
because their eye-focusin g

cyek ~ ndo rsemc nt .

*******

In the inf9r &amp;s f of be tfer visio n

mechanism is not efficient as it

I rom I h e olflce ot

used to be. So they need glasses
that correct for both problems.

George W.Davts, O.D.
458SecondAve.,Gallipolis
Phone 44&amp;-2236

c

HONORED BY CLUB - Flve Gallia Academy High School studenls
and one Marshall University senior were honored by the Huntington port
of the Propellor Club for contributing to the Harold Harding Memorial
Essay Contest sponsored by the club on the necessity ol the merchant
marine. The students are, !rom lelt, Danny Kiskis, Steve Miller, Keith
Anne Oliver and Annie Wiseman. Standing behind them is Matthew Kent
McKinney, the MU student, and Sarah Evans, also a GAHS student.
ll{evln Kelty photos) .

court~i;~~~;..~rte~m~~-::"'~~~~!its~;Ss2~rarms~oro~e;~:~~r:~;~~~HOU~~DA~Y~P~OO~I.S~IN~C.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Gallia

school bus. forfeiteu$100 bond .
F'odeil1ng bond for speeding
we re:
Bobby I.. Henry, 51 , Gallipolis
f erry , $39 ; .Joseph F. Rea, 20,
Will iamstown. W.Va .. $39; Dennis
R. Stove r, 18, Rt. 4, Gallipolis , $39;
Mitchell Coleman, 25 , Colwnbus,
$40.

•·•....

·..

Cynthia L. Louden , 23, Cheshire,

,.

$40; Charles f. Jividen, GO, Athens,

$41 ; Boyd R. Snyder, 57 , Cheshire,
$41 ; Stanforu 0 . Cox , 31 , Rt. 1, Northup, $1 3.

POINT PLEASANT

Monday 4PM To Closing

..
~

THE DOCTRINE

"·

William B . Kughn

We Don't Skimp On Shrimp!

tn tile G r ee k . " feilching " •su se o ra m er Than " doctnn e. " Doc trine

m c c1n s teach•ng , ;md •s usf'd •n bot h the pi!ss iv e and ac t• ve se nses 1n
1t1c New Tes t amen t W hen I! •s usecl 1n th e pa ss i ve sen se. it ha s
r eter ence to tnd t wt11 Ch is taugtll a nd ex presses autt1 0r1ty Wt1 en it is
use d in the ac t• vc se n se. 11 denotes th e ac t oi tea c t1i ng
Pa ul U Sf" '&gt; fhP pn ss ive sen se 1n 11 T tm oth y -1 ·1. " Pr eM h the wo r d ;
be 1n stcmt in se.:t son , out of season , r epr ove, r ebuk e, ex hort w ith all
tonos uff er1nq anct doctr in e." Pa u l 1S tns lruc t in g Tt moth y to pat ien tl y
appl y t he .'"lu t hort ta l tve doctrin e (teac h tng) to ht s pr eac hmg in
f nvorabl e a nd unf cwo ril bl e Situ n t, on s, r epr ov•n o th e f al se teachers,
r eb uk1ng th e s•n ner il nd encour acpn g th e w ea k with all pati ence . Pa ul
uses th e active sen se in I T• m 4 : 13, " Till I com r , q ,ve att end an c e to
r ea d1 ng , to ex hart alt on , to doctri ne."
T •m oth y wa s to s tu dy , •ns tru c t•nq h i m se lf and be tng obed •e nt to
t ha t w h •c h he learn ed B y tak•no heed unto htm se lf 1n teac hi nq and i n
co nlt nua l obedience, he was snv 1ng h 1m se lf . Bu t i t d 1d not stop th ere .
H e w as t o go beyo nd h1m se lf A ft er i mpr oving htm se lf by tea chin g and
obr. yin q , he wa s to seek to 1mpr ove those with out him se lf , teaching
and enco ur og tn g th em to be obedi ent t o H1e doctrine. Thi s wa s th e "ac ltv e sens e" i n wh tc t1 " doctri ne" is use U. T 1m othy wa s to be f a i t h•ul in
w hat he taught b y adherin g to " th e doc tr ine " and he was to faithfully
enqr19€' 1n the ac t of teaching (doctrine&gt; .
The si n gul ar " doctrine" is a lways used when re feren ce is made to
God 's w ord . Jesu s, the Great Ma ster Teacher . as tounded Hi s hearer s
by " his doctrine" (Mft . 7:28) T he i!pos tl es 1mpe~rt e d " th e doctrine''
. ( A c ts 2 . 42 ). fillin g Jeru sal em w i th " th e doctrine" (A c ts 4 : 28) and
as ton ishing so m e wi th 'the doctrine of the Lord" (Ac ts 13 : 12 ) . "The
doctrine whic h i s according to godlines s" ( I T im . 6 : 3). is so und ; that
is, i t is co mple t e and hea lth y ( I Tim . 1: 10 ; II T i m . 4 : 3; Ti t . 1 :9 ; 2 : 1). 1t
mu st be stud ied ( I T im . 4: 13 ), taught ( I T i m . I : 3), and obeyed ( Rm .
6 : 17 ; 1Tim . 4 : 12. 16) .
The plur a l " doctrines" is a lway s used when r eferring to th at
whi ch' is not of God , but of m en, " doc trine s and comma ndments of
men" (Mit . 15 ·9 ); Mrk . 7 :7; Col . 2: 22) ; of th e devil, " doc trines of
devi l s" ( II T im . 4 : 1) , and of "s t r an ge doc t rines" ( H eb . 13 :9). " Doctrin es " are of the devi l and the wor l d . " Doctrin es" make for vain wor ·
ship, causing many to depart from the faith . •·
To transgress the doctrine i s to go beyond or aside fr om the doctri ne of Chri st . To go beyond or aside from th e doc trine is to ent er the
r ea l m of doc trin es - To enter the realm of doctrines i s t o depart from
God and Chri st . John declares. " He that abidc th in t he doctrine of .
Christ , he hath both the Fa ther and the Son" ( II Jno. 9) . We mu st now
be part of the one or ones w ho go beyond the doc tnne, teaching the doc·
trines and commandmen t s of men , devi ls and str ange doctr ines by
bidding him God speed w hen rec e ivi ng h im into ou r house . (II J no. 10,
11) .
F or Free Bib le Corr espondence Course Write..

Butav111e Road • P .O. Boll lOB

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Sundily evenmg
Won hlp 6:00

We-&lt;~nesd•r

Eveninv
1:00
Rildlo
" Meu•ve from
the Blbill'"

Dillly-WJ E H
11 : SSAM

II

Residents are reminded lihat
motorcycles must hc:tVc a Iic1 •ll Sl'
plate if operated on a public roa i:t or
property frequented by the public.
Operators must have a licens e or - endorsement. If under 18 Opl'ri::tlorsmust wear a helmet if ovt:r 18 nJUst
ha ve &lt;.-1 Yl'Cirs ex pcriPnf't' bdnn• Ihl'Y
ran ride wi thout a helmet.
Ope r &lt;.-~ t ors must use some type of
&lt;·ye protection. If operatmg a dirt

.•.~·

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

Sunday Morning
Bible Stud y ' : lO
Worship IO: lO

have killed the infant had Conner not
spotted him .
Molmar found the chi ld early Wecl..
nesday. A bag wi th bottles and
disposable diapers was found nearby.
" He was well-clothed ," Conne' r
said. " But it was chill y that night,
and for a 7-month-old baby, it could
get kind of rough.
"I thought he was dead , berau:,;e
he was a little bluish in color. I kin,d
of shook him there a littl e bit to see if
he was going to wake up. Then I
touched his neck. That jarn·d him
and he woke up. I saw his bi&lt;Ie
eyes.

Monday N. bt Is
All.fou-Care~ o-Eat
Shrimp Night!

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

TWIN SIZE

SALE

Replll Pritt '299.95 Set

FULL SIZE

p ICE
• .....•
~· • .......
.

lito ...

'

IS SEEN ON

, .... It liP!

' lito

lob&lt;'tWiol

Replar Pritt '399.95 Set

QUEEN SIZE
Replar Pritt 1499.95 Set

PRICE
SALE

PRICE

.

'149.97
'199.97

Featuring Our New~ Seafood· G.~rnho

~

Monday from 4PM to closmg 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 baJ; featuring our great new homemade seafood
.
gumbo, for j~t $4.99. Children under 12 get a free
~rt with any dinner purchase. It's~ new, nicely nautical_way
we're saying,~ you for coming to Shoney's:'

•

SALE
PRICE

'249.97

..

,_ ..,.,

... Cliocl&lt;

......
.....

~

POINT .PLEASANT
'SHONEY'S ·()NL
~I
..

....

I

,,
''

.(

.

A 33-year-olu father of three, Cc.
ner has driven for Pacifft· International Express out of R&lt;c hfield,
Ohio, for five years.
The company's transpcrtat&lt;on
manager at Richfield , Jim Noel,
sa id Conner will receivl' a "Paccsd ·
tcr" a ward, dc::;igned for thl' empl n)·ce who docs " anythtll.l:! abOVl'
and beyond his duti es."
The patrol said the baby was abant.loncd Wednesda y mornin,k:! &lt;.-~t tl1c
nor tl1bound rest stop just mside
Ashland Coun ty.
Troopers got a CB report at 5:12
H . m . that a baby had been left at Uw
rest stop. A search of the vicintty

Daman , suci&lt;.-~1 ser vi&lt;..'t' s upervisor
for the Ashland County We lfare
DepartmL'Ill.
" I just thank God I was a bi t• to gd
I)Ul (of the e &lt;.-~bt and go ovt' r lht're

Work begins on
final stretch soon
COLUMBUS, Oh"' - Ground w&lt;l l
segment of the Appalarl11an H&lt;ghway , the Ohio Department of Tran~porl.Cition said .

Thl' 5.39-•nilt.' strl'lch runs bd Wl't'll
U.S. 62 and Sle~te Routt&gt; J:\6 111 Bruwn
cmd ALiam!i counties.
Oh&lt;U' s 114-milc AppaiU&lt;"h&lt;an h&lt; gh·
wa y projed has bt'L'/Iundt•r wuy s nt·
l'l' 1968.

yielded nothing .

" That first report probabl y was
from the person who e:~bandon ed it,"
Troope r Roge r Tea gue sa id.

At 6 : 11
thehadpatrol
notified
thata .m..
Conner
found wa
thes
cluld. Thirty minutes later . thl' Ill·
[an t had arrr ved at Ashla nd
Samaritan Hospital , where he was
pronounced healthy.
Tht• ch&lt;l d, named Ryan by those
who round hn n, has been placeu nl a
foster home wh ilt• effo rb continw· to
find his n ·al motht• r, said Bob

I.

and see the ch&lt;id and ,.,. that he
m•t·d ed help ,' ' Conner sa 1Ll . '' I ' 1n just
sorry that whoeve r left hu n just
lhought that much of him. "

Alchohol deaths rise
COLUMBUS, Oh&lt; o I AP I - The
stall-'s alcuhol-relatc•u tntff w &lt;J n &lt;ths
rt llllmued to llllTt·ase dunn g I he
WL't·k L' IHii ng Thursday. lht· Oh1o
])~· p;.trtnwn t
uf Hig hw &lt;t.\ S&lt;tfdy

be broken May 26 fur till' fma l

Of tlw :10 traffic dea ths durr rrg the
wl'e k, U - nr 4:1 pt:' rcent - wnt•
rdotl'dtiH "II:t· ll nptlonof oleohul.
Till' t.ll' p&lt;i r t 111 t ·nt s&lt;:ttd Fn d&lt;.t ~ that
tlw OhHJ H1 ~ h way Pa trol nHlllnut ·&gt;
1t1 111akt: lei r gl' numiJt'rs 11f rti Tl· .-. 1.-.; f1,,
drunken dm·mg, w&lt;th li.l;t;·t pt•opi&lt; ·
ar resll'd un ttw L' hct rgc:-; aln ·;u l.' tin;-;
yt·a r.

lr:;:;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;~==~~~~~~~~

ICE COLD
BEER AND
Q

p p
STOP IN AND
REGISTER TO WIN
THIS FUN BOAT
DRAWING WILL BE
MONDAY, MAY 31st
4 P.M.

Deputies ch~eck complaints

'·

ForYourWinterNeed
11304 29 4788
a
·4 •

""

the baby's lile," said Lt. Jim

Molmar, commander of the A!)h\and

Farmers must list crops
POMEROY - farmers have until
June I to report the sizes and intended uses ol their wheat, oats.
barley, rye and other !all-seeded
small grains to the Agricultural
Sta biliza tion and Conservation Service and until August I for corn .
Crops which are not certifi ed by
the deadline will be ineligible lor
program benefits.
County ASCS offi cial, Dav1d W.
fox, said some farmers reported
their small grains when they signed
up for the 1982 acreage red uction
prog ram and some reported spring-

Trucker :finds baby at roadside rest

precautions, Dr. Mi!ler warnsbe . f ~
Spray as soon as atge no: .. ~ 0 · :
locusts are congre';:~n~ an smgmg ·
but before they 8
aymg eggs, ·:.
Dr. Miller advtses:
d
Dr. Miller ad~•:es to ~~n uc1
contmuous wale or 1ocus m ea~ Y
May and hsten ~~; ~~tr d~orung
sounds - the 111&gt;"' t
egg- aymg
is close .

destroy all prunings, it is suggested.
Sevin is the chemical recommended lor locust control by the
homeowner. Tests show that 75 per' cent of locusts die alter!our to seven
days loll owing use ol the chemical.
Proper use of pesticides is important to human and animal life.
Users are urged to loll ow la bel
directions and observe all

bike on pri vatL' propl'rty th e
operator must ha n • pt.Trm ss 1on uf
the property ownl'r .

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil

purchase necessary.
Do not hav e to be prese nt
to win .

NOW APPEARING

This Week's Specia

STEVE YATES
BAND

~~-100
$}2
9
01 ET RITE
~~u.s

Tuesday thru Saturday
9:00 P.M. - 2:00 A.M.

&amp;

8-16

NOONE UNDER 21
ADMITT ED

De

Hour s : Monday -Saturday 8 A.M .- 11 P. M .
Drive Thru Carry Out

French Quarter

GALLIPOLIS ICE CO.

LOUNGE &amp; CARRYOUT

Galli oli s

709 First Ave .

THE
FINANCIAL
CENTER
OFFERS A
NEW MONEY
MARKET
ACCOUNT
W.ITH
MATURITIES
OF ONE TO
89 DAYS.
Presenl&lt;ng Central Trust's 1m proved Money Market Account . Now you can
rnvest as little as $2.500 fo r as lillie as one day and earn high money ~arket
rales. You ca·n lake your money oul (part of it or all ol1l) whenever you d
like wilh no penally. All with the comfort ol knowing your lnoney IS 100%.
secured by an obligation of the U.S. Government or 1ts Agenc1es. So 11 you re
looking for a short-lerm investment !hat's long on returns. look to our Money
Maokel Account. You don 't need to open any other kind ol account to take
advantage of !his high rate. for complete delails. stop by any Ce ntral Toust
oflice today. It's the kind ol innovative,
new service you've come lo expecl
lrom the bank that's working to be
your lolallinancial centeo .

CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

Th1s account not insured by FDIC

-

C::..

s it

THE FINANCIAL CENTER

Member FD IC

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallip•olis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Alon the river

.

.
..

~imes·

jentintl

Section~
su

May 16, 1982

--- •"-·~~. -:--: .--;-:\,.;;.~"
"

A day at the races

•

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - It was predicted
to be hot again on Saturday, and it
was. But that didn't stop nearly 400
confirmed runners who participated
in the fifth French City Run in
Ga llipolis.
The race consisted of three events
- the 5-K (3.1 mile), lO·K (6.2 mile)
and Dinosaur Dash ( rme mile).
Despite the weather, this year's
race, co-sponsored by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. and Holzer Medical
Center, drew nearly 200 more par·
ticipants than last year's.
Tom Stevens, of Middletown, Md.,
was winner of the men's division in
the 10-K race with a time of 31:33.
Stevens, a geologist, was visiting
with friends in Point Pleasant, W.
Va., when he decided to run in Satur·
day 's race.
The winner said he placed 78th in

RACING SCENES (TOP
PH(IT()) Runners In tbe French City
Run start tbeir journey through
Gallipolis yesterday moroiDg after
tbe starting signal was given for tbe
10,000 meter event. (MIDDLE
LEFI') More tban 400 persons from
various states participated In tbe
tbree events and altbougb tbere
were
pre-regittr.antt, many

registered oa race day. (ABOVE)
Point PleatBDt resident Chris Pa,.
sons, middle, wbo won last yeats•
· 10,000 meter and came Ia second Ibis,
year, was near tbe lead ol tbe pack '
; at tbe begiDnlog of yesterday'a race.

(RIGHT) Tom SteveDB, Mlddlelolm,
wanDB d~ after wlanlng tbe
K event .u be talb to a friend. ·

(ABOVE RIGHT) Matt Maya, 11,
Pomervy, clutched b1t rlpt le« u
be made b1t way to tbe flaflb U. at .
end of. the 10,• meter. He tp.

•·'

• blmlelf 'wbeu be feU aesr tbe ·

and wu tbe JUt oi!JI ra-n
be Umped ~mill tbe ri.illt liae.
RJG8T) Wiler -

ftlllallle

JiuileiPullol tile .,.. m.n.,
. ..~ ....

···
- · .. 'tW
...e..
' .
i.

.

.

., '

'

~

•
••

• . . tllak ...

,~·....
·

Mtw'-...
,:\
'

' .

,..
'

,

. ' I·..

the Peach Tree Race in Atlanta this
past year.
Chris Parsons, of Huntington,
W.Va., last year's French City Run
winner in the 1(}.K event, placed
second, making the finish line in
32:06. His time last year was 31:53.
In the women's division of the J(}.
K, Debbie Parsons, of Bar·
boursville, W.Va., copped the title
with a time of 42:46. Judy Coche,
Poca, W.Va., came in second at
43 :14.
Joseph Stockmal, of Athens,
placed first in the men's division of
the 5-K. His time was 15:32. Joe
Barker, a runner from Ashland, Ky.,
came in second at 15:55.
Women's winner in that race was
Kim Janey, of Gallipolis, whose time
was 22:35. Point Pleasant's April
Gravely followed her into the finish
line at 22:44.
(continued on B-2 1

�Page- B-2- The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio

A day ...

Point P"1easant,

i continued from B-1)

Tad Loekard, of Wellston, placed

first in the men's section of the
Dinosaur Da sh, followed in second
place by Shawn Grant, of .Galli pol".
Kristen Cart y of Gallipolis was first
plal'e winnt•r in tlw women' s di vis wn
and L1 sa Mathl y, of Milton, W.Va .,

was in second plate .
Loekard plaeed first in last yea r' s
Dinosaur Da sh and Ca rty was

Huntington two weelu; ago.
Anotht•r participant was J erry

ha ving a race set so close to homt•.
" 1f you want to run within a ~

Fiseher, of Proctorville, who sa id he
bcg;;~n runnin g a year ago when his
employer, IBM in Huntmgton, instituted exercise prognml.':i for its
employees at the YMCA . He became
so hookrd on it he estima tes he now
runs 40 miles a week.
Lik e others. he appreciated

mil e radius of Huntington, you can
do it about every weekend," he com-

mented.
Harvey Morrison, a sixth grader
at F'a1rland West Elementary School
in Proctorville, indicated he was in
the race for competition's sake. The
youngest runner in the 10-K race at

age 12, he's been running for thr e•·
years.
Morrison said he can run the mile
in 5: 19 and regularly competes in
higher-level track meets at his
school bccaU!ie he enjoys running .
Like Fischer and Clauson, he too

was a participant in the Huntington

race.

se('ond in thl' women's section .
The rctn·s passed without incident,
;t lthouJ,! h OJH' ru nn er - l~y~e:u··oltl
.\1att Mays, of Pomeroy, - wa s inJUred when he fell less than !iO feet
from tht' f1111 sh line 111 the W-K race .
He wa s ht'lped up and continued
runn tng, tlesp1te a muscle strain and
bru1 ses. tu lht• appla use of his f ellow
runners and onlookers. Mays was

trealt•ll al the

Sl 't' llt' by

May 16, 1982

w . va .

K -c alumni plan
May 29 banquet
KYGER CREEK - Plans are
being completed for the 1982
Cheshire-Kyger Alumni Banquet to
be held May 29 at Kyger Creek High
School. Registration will begin at
5:45p.m . The meal will be catered
by Bob Evans Restaurant.

[n order to secure a rest&gt;r valion ,
forms arc at Mary Griffin's Grocery
in Kanauga, J's Mini Mart ,
Cheshire, and Post Office Lobby,
Cheshire.
Reserva tions should bt.· in the ma i l
by May 17. The eost of the m ea l 1s

Ga llia E MS

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis , Ohio- Point Pl easant ,

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs . C. W.
!Bill) Rice, Route 2, Racine, announce the engagement and approa ching marriage of thei r
daughter, Teresa Lynn R,i ce, to
Steve Duane Pullins, son of Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. i Bil}i Pullins, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
The bridc~clect is a 1981 graduate
of Southern High School and is employed by Sue's Green House in
Athens. Her fiance is a 1981 graduat t•
of Meigs High School and is em·
ploycd by Pullms Excavating Co.

Wl'l"l'

registration fonn .
For further infonnat10n, call Donna Reynolds at 388-8539 or Kati e
Shoemaker at 367.@83.

BIDWELl.

l'Xpt•ril' ll Cl'll

bc ~&lt;J n

runn1n g

munths ~t )!O when hl' rn-

JUrt·U h1s kill'\'
·"J'nr rt•ally a baskl'lball pla yer .
but tht· tlwrt;t p~ for my knl'l' wa s so
L:Ol\d, I kl'pt rt ur." ht· scud. cH.Idrn ~
lit' ran 111 llw J()...nnlt• ract· hl'lU 111

PRE-RACE - Ron Saunders, right, director of
Holzer Medical Center's respiratory therapy depart-

-

Mrs.

;.td l\'lll t':-. ft~r

ttw resr dl'nt s

uf

till'

; nTd .

lh1 s yt•; rr rrwludt• ;.r
hl'L~rrn c.
spt'tT h and lcingml)..! t'
scret·nrll t.! In lw ht'ld ;rt the t· t·ntt ·r
Wt!dnt ·~ da .' rrnm 8 a .rn . to 5 rurr.
Tht· 10-15 rnrnuk k sl s w1ll bt· 1"1111 ·
duf"lt'd IJ.\ a lll't 'll .'i l 'd SfWt'("h and
ht'H I"IIl !' prHft·s slllllal. No apEu·nls

ment, instructs participants in the Dinosaur Dash prior
to the start of the French City Run's one-mile event.

puin lr ll t'll!

1~

lll' t'th·d

unkss

an

V

On Ma y 20. Thursday, a prese~r

Anniversary -

Rrreptlons, etc.
Cakrs For All Occasions.

v

Emot1on Picture Shuw, thl' Curnrnunity M enWI He&lt;ilth Centt•r's
drarn(l t roupt•. wrtl sta gl' a IJ\'t'

After s p.m .

Settle, Sau" nd er1 s'I

t'II L!i i J..! t 'lllt'll l

Robinson

GALLIPOLIS -

dr:IUg hh·r , Che ryl Ann , lo Ma rk D.
.JL·nst·n. so n or Mr. &lt;Jnd Mrs. Dllll&lt;.lid

HALL
TREE
SPECIAL

OFFER GOOD ONLY ON LIVING ROOM SUITES IN MAIN STORE

tit-cora ted with silver bells, weddin g

ni versary of Mr. and Mrs. William

rin ~s

Distinguished dimenstons. graceful.
an elegance tn warmth

TRADITIONAL

RECEIVE AFULL OR QUEEN ·
BOX SPRING OR MATTRESS BY SEALY FREE

by Re\·. Geo rge Anderson, Aprrl 19,

and Tara, and Kristi Nibert, along
with Mr. and M rs. Michael Martin,
Fay e and Li sa Co ugh enour ,

Their children are Mrs. Sle\'e
IEarll'!ta i Henry, Gallipolis Fl'rry:
Mrs. Miehi:l cl 1 Tammy) Martin,
Chester ; Mrs. Willit• (Lori I Keefer,

Gallipolis ; Lola Clary , Gallipolis;

Gallipolis Ft&gt;rry, cmd Kristi Nibert,

were also received by the coupl e

at home.
The

from friends and r elati\·es unable to
attend .

14 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR

WITH TRADE

tlnlah
-

RI&lt;II&lt;:Ototong 0t l ~•nlt~"'g t DIOna,..,.

ma stl'r' s dl'grt't' lll bu sl lll\S.s

ad-

rn rn rstraJ!tlll

anti

111

f111ann.• a t Mra1111

)Of!'

ntt&gt; d

;
\
t
\
I
~~. !
~

'

~

!

:

'

z

'

'
:

I•

I

•
••

l

I

i
\I

=

•

t

•
'i

''• ••

I

~ ·~

~ ""Z..

"'

Qc- __ -----:-.·

The ·
Caf
Shn~
. e

~·.·:·-:- ..-·
JlllllM rond hr
1 ' 1t' \taU
t....r•
f •"
It 0

a1Tount 1111.!

Mondcly thru Frtday

9AMto9 PM
S.lltHday 9 AM to S PM
:.~

' '•

'"

.

'

.,,

•"• ·"""'' "' Mt ·,·

446-9510

r-

A N FW OIREC riON IN HAll/ 0 1 S/( ,f'V

GAll lP OI IS

UrH v t•r .s tl y

•

t •
I l
I ••

$1

unbleached. Machi ne wash . dry. 38" wide Reg
$1.49 and $1 .69 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $1
• NYLON NET. 100% nylon . Machine wa sh. d ry, 72"
wide. Reg. 6~ yd., NOW TWO YARDS FOR $1.
• INTERFACING. Polyesler lusible and non-lus.bles
from 18" wide. Reg . 6~ yd., NOW FOUR YARDS FOR $1
• THREAD. Polyester thread in many lash ron co lors
NOW FIVE SPOOLS FOR $1.

'

'~
~

"

i

\~ i
I

l

0

BARGAINS

• PREMIUM MUSLIN. Conon; bleached or

$2

i

BASICS

• "POSH" BLOUSE AND LINING FABRIC .

Necklace
$4 91

,ec:..,

4

$3cLASSICS

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

'279
Sug. Retail
$476
Larger Family Size 42" Round Table extends
to 66" with two 12" leaves. Set includes six
heavily b~aced hardwOOd mate's chairs.

Bracelel

Litton
Miaowave

machine wash, dry, 60" wide. Reg. $4.99 yd .. NOW
ONE YARD FOR $3.
• GINGHAM CHECKS. Poly/canon: mac hine wa sh.
dry, 45" wide. Reg. $2.29 yd., NOW TWO YARDS FOR $3
• THE $PORTABLES. Poly/canon denim. sailclolh
and Trlgge~ poplin. Machine wash . dry, 45" wide.
Reg. $3.49 to $4.99 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $3.
• TOUCH AND SEW BOBBINS. From Singer' Clear
plaslic bobbins. Reg. 90¢ pkg., NOW FOUR PKGS.
FOR $3

SS 97

STfVE N

Oven

WAS $369.95
NOW

Cadence poly solids Mac h1ne wash. dry, 60 ~ w1de .
Reg. $4.99 and $5.99 yd . NOW ONE YARD FOR $4
• STRETCH TERRY. Polylconon. mach1ne wash. dry;
60" wide. Reg. $5.99 yd .. NOW ONE YARD FOR $4.
• DRESS.UPS. 45" Sh1mmer sot1n s. Polyester;
machine wash . dry. Reg. $5.99 yd., NOW ONE
YARD FOR $4.
• PONGEE PRINTS. 100% polyeSier. Mac h&lt;ne wash,
dry, 60" wide. Reg. $4.99 and $5.99 yd ., NOW ONE
YARD FOR $4.

~e·~~l!~!~!:o
o
v
F
o
·
~
·
"
'
m
•
o
&lt;
A
m
"
'
"
·
'
"
'
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Shown are a few of the outstanding hand engraved
styles featured at Kmart's fantastic discounts!

,~26995

STYLE-SETTERS

• SUmNGS. Gabadreme Supe1 Flex'" and Visa·

• T·SHIRT PRINlS AND STRIPES. Polyl conon:

RECLINERS

BUY ANY IN
STOCK AND GET
UP T0''100.00
OFF ANDA
FREE '25.00
VIBRATING
PILLOW

BUY 2,
GET ONE FREE.

Locket

$9 97

o300f -'11 1""'' hJndtome
_ , , , .. hl!llwt&lt;o A•ooll&gt;ti!O '"
l ..... ..,oc;ol d lon •OI&gt; SloP
""'100.11 -II-' '"" ...,,,,.........
collocloon tor \'(IU! -

in-stock McCALL &amp;
SIMPLICITY PAnERNS

Polyester: machine wash. dry: 45" w1de . Reg. $2.69
yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $2.
• BROADCLOTH AND BATISTE. Polyeslerlconon.
machine wash. dry; 45" wide. Reg. $2.69 and $2 79
yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR S2.
• SUMMER PRINTS. Poly/conan; mach1ne wash dry.
45" wide. Reg. $2.4910 $2.99 yd., NOW ONE YARD FOR $2
• BOBBIN BOX. Clear pla stic box holds all sizes ol
bobbins. Reg. $2.50 eo .. NOW ONE BOX FOR $2

'I

Oes•on
$4.97

I F N O ANS. CALL

Sale ends Saturday, May 22nd.

: ,l'

Hand Enaraved

1PI&gt;CIIIIt-IOt C- C1tDift
lolul COC ~I .. IIO~ hH ll""f&lt;OUO

CALL 446-3915

DOLLA
DAYS

.-~

•

1

•

Neck lac•

1101• opar•

Mod ern Steamcleilnmq sys t em l or Ca rpe t &amp; Uphol s t ery
IN SURANCE WORK WATER &amp; ~M OK E DAMAGE
CARPET CL E ANIN G e FLOOR~ t HI G H SPEE D B UFF)
WALL S e UPHOL STER Y e NEWA C OU ~T I CAL CE ILING S

446-2062

DAVID

_,...., '-'&gt; _ ,.c_ - • Unoquo

·----

,

.. T

""

Pleasant. Cards and telephone ralls

t

1

tcOt oge ~· ••tn con•on..,t olod"''!

7-PC.
SETS

1\, '. ~

J.\CROSS
·r i-1 E
' ·r ••R"'
r ,...f
r
.J
--

ASK
ABOUT OUR
FR EE
SCOTC H GA R O
SPEC IAL DURING LA ST 2 WE E K S OF MAY
ONLY .

Initials Names Engraved Free

-·•1111 '"""'"" - - """ f•'....•ot
MMao-

.

ClEANING SERVICE

A special time for personalized jewelry

c-a ~o.eiY he•.p&gt; .,..PtO

· - 1\11 tfiKIOI.It

i

~

roml0f1
~"raholot~ an(J v(l lll8

ADVANCED

ra uat1on

•oom • oii MNI•"~"'""' c-.lf"t
-dol~ ! U&gt;dll .....l llblo COl'-'"'"
-

~

Helen and Loga n Ha skett, Point

6fi/IIIICf•~ c

-FREECOFFEE
&amp;

DRAWINGS OF
$500.00 WORTH
OF FURNITURE
TOBE
GIVEN AWAY.

NOW

$488

,

1·

bus.
J l'llSl'll . a 1977 t.! l'i:uluak of Ba~
Hi gh Schonl, Bay Vi llctJ..:e. graduJll'd
in 1981 frolll th1• Ulll \"t•rs i1y uf
Alabama wHI 1s wurk111 g on hrs

a nt.i cu pids trinuned in blue.
Refrt:'shnwnts we rt' !:ierved to Mrs.
Henry tuld chi ldn•IJ , Am y a nd
Heather, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Keefer

DOUGHNUTS
-FREE-

$69995

Gibson$

lnasuoveyol
players l'~ay ... meoatea

.1

;qqno,Lo Ii l ii ,"

nuuwrous grfts 1ncludmg a cake

Mr. and Mrs. N ibert were marned

WHILE
THEY
LAST

00

'"eonrvshO&amp;s

1\llssoee~er wPa•~

f~ No lloo ~Tyl&lt;•

J)t

t ilt·

:rlllllr\Jill r

,Hid

I

Hubinson 1:--. a 1!177 graduitll ' of

•

WAS
$699.95

l\illi"llll

~...,.,.tl,st&gt;Chnst.•e"s

r.-.

,Ji.!!!::!~-':::...:.!...:~~~~2':.'~~:..:.__ll~~~~~~~~~~·
ltJ I Il t &gt;l
t·l l'!llt ' lll;n .
~·~,..~·~~

Galli&lt;J Acad t'lll Y Hr}..!ll Sl'hool and
gn1t.Juatl'd w1th 11 Haclw lur uf Sn en·
l"l' tk g rt 't' 111 Lrs h1 on rrlt' IT ila ndiSII W
from Ohru S l;~lt' Unrn·rs1t y. Sh t' 1.'

e

POMEROY - A surprise party in
nbservance of the 25th weddmg an-

1957.

$}888

~

Includes: Triple Dresser,
Hutch Mirror, Cannonball
Bed and Chest
Night Stand Optional,

I'&lt;'

INDUSTRIAL• COMMERCIAL• RESIDENTIAL
QUALITY &amp;DEPENDABILITY

BUY A LIVING ROOM SUITE
AND GET A BEDROOM SUITE
OR 3 TABLES FOR '1.00 MORE

BEDROOM SUITE

Ul\

&lt;IIH

c. Jt'flSl'll, Cll'\ "t'l i llld .

Carolyn Wilson, Proprietor
~~--...-3041-675-4281 Rt. 62 South, Point Pleasant

r hildren rcn·nll y.

•

of ttw rr

Phone

3 Piece

&lt;Ill·

IS employed by Holzer Medica l Center as unit
Hill is a 1976

Opened By Ap!)('intment

eBroyhill®

Mr....

.nl .

1

$hOPS I

lll&lt;llTIIIl ''' .,f th o·ll dllll l'lii&lt;-1. K1&lt;l1·
ht •rl~ 1.~1111. \11 . l ;ttlt•'" \\-" S;lunrJ,.t ..,
11. """ .. r Mr '""I .\11s. .1'"'" .' 11
S&lt;llllll kr 'i 1lf H11 IJ \ l d ·~~~·n , H k Hll.ul
(;;dllpu ll:--..
M1.'-.:-- Sl'l!ll
.
·. ,j l!J/10 '!. ldlJ.I\1" ul

Academy High Sr houl graduate anJ.

Earl Nibert wa s gi ven by their fnur

i

and

nuunce the ell}..!&lt;tgenwnt

Mr . and Mrs . Nibert, 25

......-.....
. . i

Mr .

Earl W. Rubinso n, 515 Oak Dr. .

Steinbeck

Everything for the Bride except Gown &amp;

v Catering for Weddings -

In Chris Evert'S

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Mary Steinbeck of GallipoliS announces tht•
en gagement and forth eoming
marriage of her daughter. Karen
Fa ye, to Gregory Keith Hill. sun uf
Mrs. Charl~tte Richardson , Ashton .
W. Va .. and Delbert Hill. Huntington, W. Va . Stelnbet·k is th•·
daughter of the lall' John C. Sll'inbcek .
The bride-t•lert is a 1974 Gallla

Flowers.

Crandl' Col lt 'J.!l'.

we·nPUtvou

t·rnployl't.l by (i&lt;rylonl' s in Ctdurn·

CATERING SERVICE

IS

.lo'&gt; qlll ( :ud\\ Ill off 1\"lilllliJ..!.

Sgt. Erm.st P Mundell of Victorv ille, Calif.
Thl' couple residc!i m Las Ve j.!as.
Nev.

WILSON'S BRIDAL &amp;

pu lr ce officer . He

Tlw nH!plt· plan an opt•n-c hun ·h
28 ell tlr t· First Bap11 -, 1 t ·1wn·h 111 &lt; ;;tl lr r)l)lrs. \.\"Jill Pastor

best man ws tlw grourn's brother,

screenrng IS desrred. In- drama on May 27 .
even ts, co ntact the center at 446t•h ildrt&gt;n, ad ults and se nuw
For more informati on about th e
5500.
c·lti zl'ns can &lt;1!1 be ll'steU .
r---------------------------1
Alsn bt•rng offered &lt;H"t ' brown ba g
forums hour-long lunchlrme
St 'I IHnars. Tht·y wrll take· ple:t n· 1n the
t 't ·ntt-r 's rnultipurpose room &lt;J I noun .
TI111St' altt:&gt;nding should t&lt;Jke a lunl'h .

( ' 1ly

\\ l ·dd1n:· 1111 A 11 :' .

Sims a s ma id of honor . Serving a ~

f&lt;mts,

rlk l'ollq.;t:s and 1s a fonncr

ll ' l"

J.

t'\"t 'll lll l-!

tCJ I!on un unemployllll'lll wil l bt·
pn·sl'ntt·d by Peg Thoma s. uf R1u

Educall!lll Club.
S;llmd•·rs. 11 1975 graduatl' of
CAtL'l. &lt;Jitt 'IHkd Ri o Grande and

by tht · Ft•dt•ral Aviation
Adrn11H stra t wr_1as d!l cur tretffi c cnntrollt •r al Ind ia napolis Co ntrol Cen-

Air Force for St'Vt!n years.
The coupl e exchan)!etl vows u11
March 20 in a doubl e-n ng ceremony
at Cupid's Wetldin ~~ Chapel tn La:-;
Vl'gas. Nev . Rev. Bettit· R&lt;-~illt&gt;V officiat ed.
·
Attendin ~ the bride was Leiah

Ced(jrvi lk

t' lllpl u.\Trl

Gal l 1pu l1s.

and

stude nt at

('ulit')~l' 111 C'l'da rvilk, when· she is i
nwmbt ·r nf Ow Collt'l-! t' Chorale and

(;a]l!pull s

Mr.

Open events offered by mental healthcente
(; ALI.IPOLI S - Ma y IS Menta l
HL·a lth Month and Better Speech and
f-lt-anng Month. In (Jbst·rva nce, l'ac ll
year. tiH' Conunumt y Mental Ht·al th
('t'nl t•r, 412 Jac·kstl/1 Prkl'. spc 1nso rs

~· tlu n.t twn

( 't·d;tn

Mr. and Mrs. Mundell

Sgt . Jeffery D•·an Mundell, NL•IIIS
A.F.B. , Las Vega s. Nev., to Patm·1a
Ev ioma Cox of Goldsboro N C
The bride is the daughter ~f Mr.
and Mrs. Haymond Cox Jr . of Goldsboro , N.C. , and is a 1981 graduate of
Eastern Wayne High School. She is
l'mployed as a mother's helper.
The groom is a 1975 graduate of
North Gall ia High School, and has
been a member of the United States

li a \· t ·~r ~ o\ld

lllllt'

Church of the Nazt~ rcnc , Ga llipoli:i.
A r eception will follow ct· r ernon y in
social room of the church.

GAl , l , !polls
• •
Luk1 · Seltll' pf

Patrick Mundl'll Jr. of Btdwell announce thl' lll&lt;iniagt• of tlw1r son. S-

1\1a rk ('Iauson, uf Huntrng t on . " I
lend to b(' ('U irlpdrlr\"t', but I l1 kc to

:dJmd

Settle-Saunders

place un June 5 al7 : 30 p.m . at First

Steinbeck- Hi II

runrwr.'i
" Fn·st. 1"111 durn g rt fur fun." send

lll lll' ."
Clauson sa1d lw

The m •• hllne wil l lw Od . 9 at

Grace Umtt•d Methodrsl Churd r.

on June 12 at 7:30 p.m . at Morning
Star Methodist Church. A rece pti on
Will be held at the church fullowin ~
the wedding.

Ttw t'\·t·nt drl'w heil\'lly on \U(.'al
and out-of- town runners , must of
w h\HII tnh' n l l '\H ' d pn nr to lhl' fctlT
lhl' ~

An opcn-t.·hurch weddin g wil l take

Th e 5und .1y T•mes · Se nt,nei- Pag e- B -3

The ope n-c hurch wedding will be

f1l'I"SU1Hll'\

l!ldl\'i-d t•d

Hannan High School graduate and IS
employed by Stauffer Chem1ca l
Plant, Gal lipolis Ferry, W. Va .

Rice- Pullins

$7.75. Checks should be made
payabl e to Cheshi re-Kyger Alwnni .
Cl asses will receive specia l
recognition for 1932, 1942, 1952, 1957
and 1972.
It has been decided that all past
teachers of old Cheshire HighSchool
and Kyger Creek High School and
present staff members be invited.
Any tea chers interested should gt'la

w . va .

Priced From
$3.47 to $10.97

STORE HOURS:

Mon. thtu Sat. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
PHONE 446-7576

••

..

I .

.

/I

.'

�Ohio- Point P lea

Po m ero y- Middl e po r t- Ga llipoli s , Ohi o-P oint P leasa nt, W . Va.

B-6-T he S

SUNDAY

F isher-C oucher
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs. Olis
Layne of Cheshire announce the
engagement and apprnad11n g
ma rriage of their daughter , Debra
L. F isher, to James Ronald Couch,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Couch of
Pomeroy .
The brid.-..,lect is a 1978 graduate
of Kyeer Creek H1 gh S..·hool and is
t•J nplnyt·d at K rn c.~rt tn Gallipolis.
He r fiann·

1s et

197 4 c re~Juill l' of

Meigs H1 gh Sehool and wil l bt· a 1982
gnH.I uat l:' tlf Hocktn l.! Tt•t·lmlcrtl

WORSHIP services at Grace
Episcopal Church wi ll be held
Sunday at 12:30 p.m.

We
Accept
Federal
Food
Stamps

SUPER MARKET- OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gallipol~ Ohio
Phone 446-9593
'We Reserve the Rigftl to Limn Quantity''

POMEROY - Horse Show Sunday at noon al Meigs County Fair
Grounds. Sponsored by junior
class at Ea:-;lern .

- OPEN DAILY $ TO 10 P.M.
·
SUNDAY .9 TO 10
We Aalpt Ftdlnl Food biPI- WI a... The Rttrt To linit ~

POMEROY - Meigs County
Genea logical Society will meet at
2 p.m. Sunday at Meigs Museum.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GALLIPOLI S - Ga llia County
Historical Society will meet at
2:30 p. m. Sunday at Sl. Peter's
Episcopal Church. The boa rd will
meet at I p.m. Spea ker will be
Rev. J ames Sa nds, whose week ly
arti cles on histori c buildings in
Ga llipolis and Ga llia County appear in the Sunday TimesSentinel. Sa nds will speak a bout
" What Gallia County was like in
1892." The public invited.

Culll'gt•.

The

Wt·tldlll ~

will be Saturday,

Pr ice s Effecti ve Sunday, May 16th
Through Sat u r day, May 22nd

:vla y 22, at 7 p.m . 1n Pomt• ro) A
n ·ceplwn will follow the t't'l"t'li\Oil) .

USDA CHOICE FULL CUT, BONE IN

ROUND
STEAK
F isher -Cou cher

Marcum -Dotson

·Super

Super

Spelial

Special ·

Special

VINTON - Shl'rTy Lynn M~-:~ r t'Ull l

and

Mikt·~

William Dutson plcw an
wcddin l.! on M(ly 23 at 2
p.m . at Ytntnn Be~pll s t Church. No r1h Ma111 Stn·d. Vinton.
MG!rl'Uill IS thl' daugh tl'r uf Hunaltl
and Shiril'y Man·um. Rou tt• I. Vinton. i: l nd Dotson Is thl' son of Mr. a nd
!VIrs . .Jarnl's Dotson, Gul f Shon·s,
u pl· n~c hur {"h

Till' brnk·l'il'rl t:-.

ct

EXTRA LEAN

GROUND
CHUCK

CUT-UP
FRYERS
~~gz

ARMOUR

$

1

HOT DO~S ............... ........... 09

Special

Special

Special ·

ICEBERG

RED OR GOLDEN

HEAD
LETTUCE

DELICIOUS
3LB.
APPLE BAG

ne

FREE

M ar cum

' Shaq1 sb ur ~

- An opt•n-dlUrt"h \\ t·ddtll l' Wt il bt ·
~ llt" ld at ;\lhr~n~ Rap t1st Ch urd1 1111
~ Ma~ 29 at I p.111. !\ ren·pttu n wlll
' fu!low r~ l Htlt'k!lll' V;.tllt·y Spor!Sl!ll'll
~(;un

Club 1111 HadftJnl Road .
: f\al tl or \\ Ill lw a 1982 }.! raduak of
:Ait':&lt;a nd, •r Hll' ll St'hool &lt;:tilt! Trt·('uuntr , ) t~ltl l Vontt lOil&lt;:ll St'huol. If,.,
:r1ann: 1:-. '' 1980 t! re~duatl' of Ft ·tlt ·r&lt;:t l
J-f nl' klll ~ Hl!' h Sdlntol and Tn·County
',Jo111 t Vot '&lt; lltun;il Sdwol and IS t'lll·

Russell

WHEN YOU BU Y ON E
AT R EG. PRICE OF

Mr .. .,

H1verside in

~ thens.

A rcher-Smith

DAN DEE

POTATO
CHIP

BAG

NESTE A

Archer
POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs. Mar:shall Ray Arr her Sr., Was hington,
:w. Va. an nounre th•· engagement
·~ nd a pproac hi ng ma rriage of thei r
:da ug ht~ r . Connie "SUl'. to Mark Ed: ward Sr111th, son of Mr. and Mrs.'
:Dale E. Smi th, Rt•eds\"i lle.
: The wedding will be June 21 at
;seventh Street Uni ted Methodist
' Chureh in Parkersburg, W. Va.

Special

CAMPFIRE

8 o z.
Ja r

INSTANT TEA

MARSHMALLOWS

Super
Special
SCOT
JUMBO
TOWELS ROLL

BUTTERMILK

PEANUT
BUTTER
ROYAL CREST

COTTAGE CHEESE

Sp~cial

Special

HUNT'S

SHOWBOAT

WALDORF

TOMATO 24oz.
CATSUP BOTTLE

PORK &amp;
BEANS ~::z.
.

BELL VIEW

KOSHER
DILLS
16 oz. Bottle

KRAFT

BROUGHTON

ITALIAN OR
CUCUMBER

DRESSING
16oz.
Bottle

,-

,.

i I

ORANGE
JUICE

e

Gallon Pla~tic

'279

TOILET
TISSUE
.

9

Half Gallon

24 oz .

Ctn .

&lt;t l Ow

CAt.I.JI'(JI.JS - Allr· ·• 'I SI•·n·tl
Adu lt

Ht · t · o ~ rlltllln

Tu . ·s tl ; t ~ fru111

dt·rusa Skak

Duwt·r

1-2 p 11 1 &lt;tl Pnn-

H PU S t ·

(; AI. f.II'OI.I S

-

Alll&gt; ''' '·an

l,t'l' ltJI\ Auxlll &lt;try will Hlt't'l
Tut·:-.drt_\ at 7:30 p .lll . at tht' pusl
il iHllt", Mt·mbcrs s hould &lt;J ltt'nd .

LaSALLE
992-9917

Middleport. OH.

IN THE LOBBY
MONDAY-Stuffed Green Peppers
TUESDAY- Chicken-A-l&lt;i- K111 g over B1sCu 1IS
WEDNESDAY- Roast Beef and Mashed Potato SandwiCh
THURSDAY- Pork Chops w1th Dress111g
FRIDAY- Baked Fish &amp; Frog l egs
SATURDAY- Ham with Scalloped Potatoes
NEW HOUSE SPECIALTY - Strawberry P1e. Chocolate Mousse. Vegetanan Salad.
Peel and Eat Shrimp.

ENTERTAINMENT IN THE LOUNGE
MONDAY - THURSDAY

FRIDAY&amp; SATURDAY

RANDALL
MULLINS

RON HAYES
Organ , G uitar
9-1

OF THE lAST SHOT BAND
9-1

Rooms By
Day, Week
and Night

Plan Your Summe r
Gathering At The
LaSALLE
Call 992-9911

SALE ON ADMIRAL REFRIGERATORS AND FREEZERS
ADMIRAL CHESTFREEZERS
$469
20 Cubic Foot .
$439
15 Cubic Foot .
8 Cubic Foot .
5 Cubic Foot .

22.0 cu. II. Design n • The Entertainer
featuring Automatic Ice Cube and
Chilled Water Dispense~. Wlne Cellar
and MJcro-&lt;:ook lhly • Textured Steel
Doors • ABS Dura-Last 'il"' tnte nor L1ner
• Automatic Mini.Cube tee Make r • Deep
Freezer Door She lves • UrrFront DualTe mp"" Control s • Vari -Co id Dra we r
• Adjustable Tempered Glass S he lves
• Adjustable Deep Refrigerator Door
Buckets • Glide-Out Crispers w. :h Moisture Seal • Lift-Out Egg Tray • Dairy
Compartment with Serve r Tray • Door
Stops • Wheels

20 _1 cu. H. •

Textured S teel Doors • ASS
Dura-Last
lnte nor Liner • Separate
Refn geratur/ Freeze r Control s • Custom
Ice Maker OptiOnal • Glide -Out Freezer
Drawer • M•ni -Cube Ice Trays and tee
S torage Drawe r • Ju &lt;ce Can Shelves
• Van-Cold Drawer • Cantilevered W&lt;re
Shelves • Glide -Out Cnsper wi th MOISture Seal • Removable Egg Bucket
• Butter and Cheese Cornpa rtrn en ls

v.··

WAS $1299

19 Cubic Foot~
REG. '789
NOW $650

w•th Server Tray • Whe e ls

REGULAR

$889
NOW

$750

AU SALE PRICED

NS-20C7

TV'S REDUCED
~~~~~
WAS
$649
RCA
NOW
XL-100

FLEXSTEEL SOFAS
STARTING AT '569, Reg. '799

JULL

$569

25"

diagonal

4 ROLL
PAK

• L 19 h ted
Dia l
• E lec t ro nic
Tu ner
e AFT

LITS NOT FORGET TO
REMEMBER MEMORIAL DAY .
MAY 31, 1982

·,

.'

COLA
or DIET
. '.'
~ DOU8LE COLA

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP .

a:16·oz. Btts.

"The Way Amerfc~ Sends Love~ f
Ph.'992-2039
, · or 992·5721 •
t.

I

·I

•

.

106 Bullernut Ave.

-~
·,
We Accept AU Major Credl!Ca,..s,

we Wire

Model GFR 6105
OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE

Traditional sola with rolled arms, thick seat cushions and
loose pillow back, tailor&amp;d In an elegant /lora/ print.

e CUT FLOWERS e POTTED.PLANTS
eMONUMENT .SPRAY~ eWREATHS
eARRANGEMENTS IN BOTH REAL
ANb PERMANENT FLOWERS

. '

•'

•'

TIH 'Sda y

A ppt'(H IIl C

SPECIAL SERVED 11 -2 A N D 5:00 TO 8:30

*WITH ADJUSTABLE GLASS
SHELVES
*FROST PROOF
*TEXTURES
OTHER MODELS AVAILABLE IN 10, 12, 14
AND 17 CUBIC FOOT REFRIGERATORS

·,

•.

N. 2nd AVE.

NOW

Office Hours by Appointment Only

'

ICE
CREAM

Inn .

C1rl St ·out I .t·adt'l":-. and asst:-.tant
ll'adt·rs art · Ill\ ltt •d to attend an

Art· a

THE

Gallipoli s

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

HALF
99e
GALLON

:

VALLEY. BELL
PREMIUM QUALITY

GAL LI POLI S

Ava il ab le in
White or Be ige

Lafayette Mall

lunclwun

Vienna. W Va

RIO GHANDE PTA will hold a
&lt;:~l Bob E v &lt;:~n :-.
S h ~lkr H ou se ~Tu csd&lt;:~ y at 6 p.m .
Te~kl' a cove rl'll ilish and yuur
nwn tahlt' StT\" it't• .

May 10 thorugh May 29

3 for 19.00
3 for 110.25

l.afil) t'tlt·

fwm ly pic nte

Multiple Sale Event

Sizes 4-7
Sizes 8-9

Will

Will bt•
tlw Mt~ dn c al s c-md Sth' Brobt·rt uf

7:30 p.lll . at tlw Ma sonw Tt·rnple. Officers wil l rl• hearst• ftlr
suprt'ITll' inspet'llnn .

Pechglo
Promotion

"-.:. :.

-

C lub

t~ l

Vanity Fair

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAr

18 oz.
JAR

Special

'

ll11tUl

GAI.I.IPOI.!S

GALLI POLIS - The regula r
meeting of Ga llia County Board
of Mental Retardati on a nd
Developmental Disabilities wil l

'

Thm l An •., &lt;JI 7 ·30 p 111

·worrlt'n ' s

pn·.-.,·nt Snuntls of MusH' ," rt l a

Whtlt· Shnne wtll llll'd TUl·s da~

GALLIPOLIS - "The Rai nbow
Ex press." e1 con te m pure~ry
musical of the Biblical account of
Noa h a nd his ark, will be prese nted by Galli a Christian School
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Grac'e
United Met hodis t Ch urch .
Sherida n is direrting the pl•y
with Ma rta Dean.

' I

( 'lln .'i tlan

ll u l u Ja ~

,J,

Church
rev ival Wednesday through
Friday at 7:30p.m. with Ron Lii&gt;by, pas tor of Christian Life Center, Rockville, Md . Singing will
be The North Cha rl es ton
Apostolic Singers and Betty
Baker and the Joyful Sounds. The
rhurch is eight miles south of
Gallipolis on Clay Chapel Rd. For
information call 44&amp;-7649.

BELL VIEW

Super

:

TU ESDAY
GA LLIPOLIS - The Ann ua l
All-Sports Ba nquet will be held
Tuesday a t 6:30 p. m. at GAHS
Gy mnasium. Gi rls fr om the
seventh through twelfth grade

300 Second Ave .

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

Super

'

BIDWELL PTO will meet Monday at 7:30p. m. at the school for
election of officers and kmLi er~ar t en recog nition ni ght.

lw l u~ ld on Tut ·sday &lt;J I BUI'kt•y t·
Hur&lt;JI Elt ·t ·tnfw&lt;illon Cn-op. 14:!

VALLEY BELL

Special

10 LB .
BAG

GALLIPOLIS America n
Legion Lafayette Post 27 will hold
a meeting Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home on Bob Mt·Corm ick
Road for election of officers. All
members arc urged to attend .

who participated m volleyball,
basketball , track and soft ball wi ll
be honored . For more infonnation, contact Mrs. Myrle
Howard, club president, at 2459191, or Mrs. June Ha ll ey, viet·
president, at 446-2912.

JOHN A., WADE, M.D., INC.

2% MILK ~~~~~·~$16

Special

FLOUR

99~

BROUGHTON

Super

~sing wood waste

and

6

9e

SWIFTNING
49
SHORTENING $1
89e

3 Lb .

Special

Super

•

: PORtLAND, . Ore. (AP)
~Georgia-Pacific used wood waste to
·supply 90 percent of the energy
~ceded to produce 1.4 billion board
:teet of lwnber in 1981. In the energy·
J ntensiYe pulp
paper industry.
'Georgia-Pacific provided 70 percent
:OC its own energy from " wastes." ·
: The whole paper industry reduced
:tts annual use of fuel oils by 40 per..:ent, between 1972 and 1981t the
eompany reported.

16 oz.
BAG

42 OZ. CAN

100 CT .
PK G.

CROWN CITY - A famil y picnic
for employees and thei r fa m1lies will
be held by Crown City Mining and
Loca l 2150 May 22, Saturday, from 2
p. m. to dark at 0.0. Melntyre Park
sht•lter 2.
Circl ~s Resta urant wi ll ca ter the
l'Ve nt a nd there will bl' several re~ct:•s
and ga mes.
Ass istin g in the adt v tties wil l be
pa rk district employees and Boy
Seout Troop 203. All equipme nt will
bt.• furnished by tht• park dist rict ex,·ept ball gloves and la wn chairs. For
more information c•ll256-6729.

$259
Bag

Super

MARTHA WHJ
SELF RISING

WI NDING TRAIL Garden Club
wi ll meet Monday at the home of
Mrs. Wilma Terrel l. 8 p. m.

Super

OZ .

BU Y ON E, GE T ON E FREE

PAPER PLATES

ONIONS

COKE, TAB
SPRITE &amp;
$139
8- 16
Plu s
MR. PIBB BOTTLES
De posit

7 oz.

NO NAM E

N E W YE LL OW COOKING

per

POTATO CHIPS

K aldor-Russell

POTATOES~~~B-

GRAPEFRUIT

DAN DEE

2

Calendar
Clll' rnn gton, guest spe.i:!ker , will
discuss the United Tha nk Offl'r ing Program.

e- B-7

The Sun

Announcement

MAINE

5 Lb.
Ba g

GALLI POLIS - . GAHS lnMus ic De pcutmt•n t
w1ll hold a spring concert Mo nday at 7:30 p. m. in the l11 gh school
a uditori wn. The three bands w1l l
present a 90 minull' concert or
mu sic, inc ludin g m arc hl' S,
p ro ~ re~ m
mus ic and popule~r
selections. Tht' co ncert is frc~
and the pu blic is invitd to attend .
s tr u men te~ l

MONDAY

19

U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE

WHITE or PINK FLORIDA

7oz .B a g

$

ROUND STEAK ............. ~~: ..

Super

BA G

Mr . an d

CHUNK BOLOGNA ..... ~~; .

USDA CHOICE FULL BONELESS

Super

3
POUND99~
CRUNCHY CARROTS

·Stanlt'y Kaldor of Albany &lt;Hlllounn ·
t ht • l ' ll L! a ~ ~·m t •n t cmd arp ro;whlll !'
mat rli"H' ~ ' of lht ·Jr di:IU !.! htt'r . Ht' IH't
· Mtt'IJt •k. {H Wa .\'IH ' A. Husst ·ll. son of
-M1 and \IJr -.. Donald Hu:-.:-.,·11 of

99~

SUPERIOR

Super

TEND E R

:ployed at

BEEF
CUBE
STEAK

1979 gradualt·

"f North r:all1a Hi gh Sdwol ;n1d
Ruckeyl' Hil ls Caret· r C'enll'r Sht· 1s
t'l llployed by tlw Bremlllt'lll&lt;-lll
family . Ht:·r ftance works fur tht·
Township uf Gulf Shores.

I'OMEHUY

USDA CHOICE

FRESH

OAK HILL - Ca rdiff Clu b wi ll
hold its last regular meeting of
the clu b yea r at 7:30 p.m. Mo nday at Horeb Church. Evan
Dav is, Oak Hil l, will provide
Welsh music when the Welsh
wago n tra m tra\·els llw Lake
Tra il Road to Horeb Church.

MIDDLEPORT -A musical entilled "The Music Machine," the
story of fr uits of the spirt, wil l be
held at 7 p.m . Sunday at Middleport Church of Christ. Direrted by Cathy E rwin a nd Maril yn
GALLIPOLIS Business and
Wilcox, the m•i n characte rs ~re
Professional Women's Cl ub w1 ll
Chris Stewart, Sherry Coope r,
mectat 0scar'sat 6:30 p.m. MonKev in Lov ing. and Peggy
day for installation of offi eers
Brickles. Soloists incl ude Ka thy
and oricnlc-Jti un uf new JTH'Il1bt&gt;rs.
Thomas a nd P• ul Melton singi ng
" The String Song", J oey Loving,
GA LLI POLIS - St. Peter 's
Dave Dodson and J ared Stewart.
Episcopal Churchwomen will
presenting "Patience"; Sht•rry
med Monday at noon for a lunCoope r , ''Gentl eness"; Pa t
cheon·bus iness meetmg in thl'
Shrimplin and Dave Dodson,
pari sh ha ll. Mrs . Wi ll ia m
" J oy" ; Matt Erwin, " Pee~ce" ;
Amy Roush, Scott Nelson, Kay .-------=-======---~
Smit h, " Goodn ess"; Kevi n
Loving and Peggy Brickles
"Love" ; Chris Stewart, "Selfcontrol"; Sherry Cooper, "K indness." The public is invi ted.

LB.

Super

CHESTE R PTO will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at the school. A
member of Eastern Local School
District will speak about the upcorning levy and a representa ti ve
of Carleton School will ta lk about
operating levy. Si ~n-u p for room
mothers will be done at the
meeting. Third grade mothers
will serve refreshments and child
eare will be provided.

W. Va.

Everywhere

PQmeroy,Oh.

Dl
5 Piece ••••••• '99.00
• .
" AND
7 Plec• •••• ·'179.00ur

COME IN AND SEE
MORE GOOD BUYS

U.D

LANE CEDAR CHESTS
STARTING AT

$}5900

�Riverby
ca lendar

May 16, 1982

Pom e roy - Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohi o- Point Pl eas ant, W . Va .

P a ge- B-8- T he Sund a y T im es-Sentine l

Sports

K m•rt • ADVERTISED
MERCHANDI SE POLI CY

O pe n Dai ly 10-9
Sund a y 1-6

May Exhibit - 54 Pieces of Ga llia
County High School Art Work, including oil, acrylic, pencil, ink ,
pastels, tissue collage, scratch
board, ma c rame, weaving,
photography, papier mache, plaster
and ceramics.
May 16, 2 p.m. - Nature Art in the
Park at Ra ccoon Creek County
Park , co-sponsored by 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Park D1stnd and FAC.
Ma y 18 , 8 p .m .
l n-

(),o 1!tm orot .... \&lt;1" &gt;1 IO ~,_ ..,1 "1 ~~~- ~'
ltMd ~- ., stoo or" ou• ,,..._.., " • ~
ld¥e&gt;tl-' ,,..., ,1 1'0;11 1, 1d - loo IN•
e11111 (lui to 1ny ~"l oonun •tnon

II....,....,,,..,.,Ro•• C"«•""·-••
b lilt&gt; ""''tl\and!U 1 - •1.., or •nw&lt;'
.rN 1........,. quantrlylll o. put&lt;fi,U.-:1 11m.

•

11'- p&lt;O:I _

. ., 1•101t&gt;ll 0' ..,, y&lt;l
)'OU I Cl)m(l~r~ Q.... OI¥ &lt;II"' II I COf"''lll

Aloma's Ruler cops
1982 Preakness run

r.tlle&lt;eduCIIOI""'P'""

tcrdcp&lt;..lrtmcnt..:llJnl'elmg .

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP Sporls Writer
BALTIMORE (AP) - Aloma's
Ruler ,xx ridden by IS-year-old Jack
Kaenel, held off a stretch challenge
by favored Linkage, ridden by 56yea-r-old Bill Shoemaker, and won
Saturday's $279,900 Preakness,
which was run without Kentucky
Derby winner Gato Del Sol .
Kaenel, known as " Cowboy" and
the youngest Preakness jockey in
modern times, put Aloma's Ruler on
the lead shortly after the start and
he led six other 3-year-olds around
the Pimlico oval.
Linkage was fourth entering the
backstretch and third with a ha lf
mile to go. Then, Shoemaker moved
him into contention as they turned
for home, and although he made up
some ground, he could not catch the
nying Aloma's Ruler, who earned
his Preakness start by winning the
Withers Stakes at New York just one
week ago.

May 23, 1-5 p.m. - Work party for
spring cleaillng at Riverby . Potluck
dinocr at 5:30p.m .

May 25. 8 p.m. - Tru.-;tees
meeti ng .
June Exhibit - Carved birds by
McMa han ;nld drawings by
Ne1swender .

Ga llia County
seniors' ca lenda r
/\d i\'11 11' ..., fn r tilt' \\t 't'k tlf Me:t y 17·
21 ,d tht· St·n 1u1 C tll zt·rb Ct·nkr
lot';dt•d ;tl t20 .J cwk ...,nn Pikt· art• as
fnl l uw ~

Mund;' ·' Mr1.\ 17
V1ntPn S1tl·
1-:&lt;n&lt;i" ''· II :10 &lt;1 . 111. : Churu,. 1-:1
run .; BlotKl Prl' SS UI"l' Che{'k, 1: 15·
1 45p.rn

Tut •stia .' ·· ~ay IR
Wt · drw ~ dil~ .

St·nJnr Ci!tJt•ns

Ma~

I!"I -

Vtnlon

Fdu• ·a t1nn. JJ ::JO ;ur1.:
Card r;a rlll':-.. 1-:\ p.m .
Thursda.'. Mer.' 20
Vrnlon Slit '
C'r«fh . I p 111 .: Bihil' Study. 12 :J().
1. :~o r Ill : (' nun ! ~· Counri I. 1::lO n.lll.
Fnd.r ~. ;\1ct_\ 21
Yo1' it &lt;"1&lt;-lss. 10
ar n . ,\rt t 'Lt.-..:-.. 1-:l p.n r.: WoodN utnl1on

Save
32%

\WI'kl llC Clii SS. l &lt;J p.lll .: Craft Mrn r( 't•lll .... t ' . I&lt;! pI ll .: StH" I&lt;II Ht JUI". 7 p . lll.
Tht •St 'll l t• r N 1rlrrtltlll Prn l.! l illll \t·r! l
."t' l'\ t• 111t · fu ll tJWII\ 1.' llll'llll."
Mtlrrd ; r~

( 137)

Our Reg 6.44

Save

' 24%

Hl'd nuodh·. . . bnw-

t'llilhilt•t• ...., t' saut ·t·. \ ' t· ~ dablt· 1-! L'ia tl n

•

... ;.d;nl. bn·ad . IHr Ht•r. frt ·s h fnu t.
lllllk

•

.Pkgs.

diH 'kt •l\ , t' l i iiiiWI"I" ~ SiiUt't ', 111;-tSht•d

Insulated 1·gal. Picnic Jug

Tank Tops Or Shorts For Men

pnl a\tlt ':-.. ~' I'ITII bt·;rn s. rol ls.

To ugh polyethylene jug wi th polystyrene insulatio n. Spout. carrying ha ndle .

Tonk to p s in solid colo rs. p rint s. O r contrast-trimmed. sol id -color shorts. Save.

Ill

buttt·r .

il k.

pot;rlt rt·:-.. tTt ' illJJ- :-. 1 ~ It· t'orn , brttWil

8 oz . Chopped Beef Steak

br t•;rtl. lmlkr . ;rpp lt·:-.cHH"t ', lllllk .

Ser ved w ith mashed potatoes. cho1ce of vege table

Tlrur :-. d ; r ~

\' a \~

()l'an:-. ;tnt! han I ,

l'1•rk

pol&lt;J( ti/ dlt 't ':"-&gt; t'

p;ttl I t '.

i llllil ilt '&lt;ll l:-. . IJPit 'Ul\,

lnrl tt-r . pt ·ar s . n1dk

Sole Price

WINS PREAKNESS - Aloma's Ruler with jockey
Jack Kaenel up wins the Preakness Stakes Saturday at

•

(141)

Sole Price

PITISBURGH (AP ) - J ohnny
Ray and pitcher Rick Rhoden each
homered during a nine-run third inning, and Rhoden pitched eight

( 142)

19.88

11.88

( 140)

stron g innings as the Pitts burgh

Sole Price

Chaise Of Aluminum
With Multicolored Webbing
Sun yo urself o r re lax in the shade ' Fo ld ing a luminum frame w ith polypro pylene
we bbing. p la stic arm s. p o lio le g s. Sa ve ·

Kawasaki Ride 'em Cycle
Stu r d y, m o lded pla s ti c
16" k nobb y fr o nt whe el.

Pirates outslugged the Cincinnati
Reds 12·9 Sunday.
Rhoden, 2-4, took a five-hitter into
the ninth inning when Cincinnati
scored fi ve runs. He left after
yielding three hits, including a tworun triple to German Barranca, and
Alex Trevino singled off reliever

(143)

12.87

Light 'n Easy® Iron
Lightweight ste am-or-d ry
iro n w ith 27 steam vents.

Enrique Romo to score Barranca.

Mike Vail followed with a two-run
home r to make il12-9.
Ray belted a three-run homer that
chased Cincinnati's Frank Pastore,
4-3, during ihe Pirates' barrage. Ra y
added a tw1&gt;-run single in the fourth
inning for a career-high fiv e RBI.
Rhoden smacked a double and a lwl&gt;run homer in the third as the Pirates
sent 12 batters to the plate.
With one out in the third, Rhoden
doubled and scored on a double by
Omar Moreno, who stole third and
scored on a single by Lee Lacey.
Lacey stole second, took third on a
throwing error by catcher Trevino

7-Diamond Bridal Set
1 2 0 . Total. Yellow Gold

349.50

1

Save
24%

7-Diamond Bridal Set
0 . Tota l. Y(•/low Gold
I

\
Our Re g . 64e Pr.

1BRIDAL SET in

yellow gold

Misses' Breezy T·shlrts
O f spun polyeste r. Double v o r v-nec k. Solids.

yellow gold

495.00

1

scored three more runs in the eighth
with the aid of an RBI double by pinch-hitt er Mike Vail and a wild pitch
by Rhoden.
Padres 6, Expos 2
MONTREAL !API - Chris Welsh
threw a four-hitler and drove in two
runs to help the San Diego Padres
defeat the Mont,·eal Expos &amp;-2 Saturday.
Welsh, 1~. allowed the Expos' fi rst run in the second inning whe n AI
Oliver slugged his fourth home run·
of the season. Welsh look a I wo-

and score on Oliver's single.
The Padres lied the game in the
fourth after Expos starter Charlie
Lea, 1-2, had retired the first nine
batters he faced. Leadoff hitter Alan
Wiggins beat out an infield hit, stole
second and scored on Ruppert
Jones's two-out double.
San Diego added two runs in the
fifth . Terry Kennedy led off with an
infield hit, took second on a wi ld pitch and, after a walk to Randy Bass,
scored on Joe Lefebvre's double.
Lefebvre moved to third on the play
when Bass was caught in a rundown
and scored on a squeeze bunt by
Welsh.
Red Sox 10, Royals 5
KANSAS CITY, Mo. I AP) - Tony
Perez triggered a five-run Boston
outburst with a fifth-inning double
Saturday, leading the Red Sox to an
10-5 victory over the Kansas City
Royals.
Jim Rice's run-scoring double and
Perez's RBI single gave the Red Sox
a 2~ lead in the first , and Da ve
Stapleton hit reliever Jim Wright's

hitter into the ninth inning when An-

second Pitch for a solo horne run in

dre Dawson singled, stole second

the second.

and scored on Bill Madl ock's sacrfi ce fl y.
Jason Thompson walked, and
Mike Easler singled before Ra y hit
his second home run of the season.
Dal e Berra doubled and scored on
Steve Nicoscia's single. Rhoden
followed with a two-run homer , his
second of the season.
The Pirates added three more
runs in the fourth on Ra y's two-run
single and a sacrifice fly by Berra .
Ron Oester singled home a Cincinnati run in the sixth, and the Reds

(146)

Our Reg . 25 .88

18.88

Splash and Stash Swimming Pool
8 ft . x 18", durable, easy to store . High strength
plastic side walls.

Consumer Comp6ete this coupon Md along with your dlted
saleS recetpt and the cdored end penets from your PoWOid
color'*" packs, purchued between March 1 and J~ ... 198:2,
rerum rhele rtems to ltlt edciress lhOwn .OOV. A spedll
store Check lor $1 00
pack (limit two Slf'9e pedu: or one
Two Padc.l W11 be m8l6ed to you within 60 days Cllecll will
be m~ payable tc)ltllly 10 beater and lhe store where
P4JI'Chese was mM1e Vllld only rowards lurure purch.aes

TEXTURED
COLOR
ENLARGEMENT
From Your
Favorite Negatives

Save

'*

20%

!lllhll $101'8

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

Your 1\ame ~-----------­

" ' - ' "" o•u,.. ,,.., .,«~

....,,

poollrDtl..:l Ollt o no t~~~ to r"'twlll••
I~"' I l""'l o... t"-te l pe&lt; tw l l - Oflt&lt; llll" fl

Cty _ _ __ _ _ State -

- - Zip _

_

'ftkn putc:haled I I

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

Putc:huedl1e -

- - - - - - - -- -

------------------6.43
·
1112 fii'Q.,..ti i i Ortllrt o tl .. -tlllefltCI ..-...

~, Jwtr lt 1112

Kmart "'
Sale Price
( 14 7&gt;
less Factory
Rebate

-

-1.00

Your Net .
Cost .AIIer
Factory Rebate :

. , _ . . _,

Polaroid Time•Zero"'

SX·70"' Color FUni
pock. Yields 10
superwhlct)
Cle~&lt;elo!P fully In 1, min.

Kmart® Sale l&gt;rlce 8~t.
Less Mail-In •
Factory Rebate •

A ftC

..VQt.

,. ,
49 · 1~97

' Your Net Cost
. Aller Factory
•
Rebate
Qt.
cam 21!&gt; MolorOII 'Ofter .
Ye&gt;Ur choice Cam 241

10W40 or 20W50'oll"
·-&lt;llr-toY.,.,IIamCOm2

loloQnulnS2 t_ l * _

'.
,

Our Reg. 2.47

. ·Propane lome
·,Economy 'size, tor ·
sto•JI'ls. ldhte(ns. more.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS.
424 Second

Aloma's Ruler &lt;·a rned $209,900
from a pu rse of $279,900, both
Prt:C:J kness r cl'o rds, fur SLherr , a

\ered

Thursda y.

bu\

!he

fil lr

Cuperoy 's .Joy was sn olcht·d F rrda )·
afh·r cu~o wnt ·r Hubt·rlt , Pen•f
bt•rauu· upset about ttw hand ll n ~ of
hts ttrket rl'q ul'st.
Upon arri v;-d at Prrnlwu, I .t·nzrnl
had s;;u d : · '1 know Wl' an· at &lt;:r dr s &lt;~d­
van t&lt;:~gl' &lt;:~s f &lt;:~r &lt;:1 :-i prep&lt;II';Jtton rs ('tlll ce rn cd , but tilts l'olt 1111 ~ ht bt· );! t,od
t•nough to overetunc 1\. ..

Kaencl put Aloma' s Huil'r 111 the
\cad before the field reacheu \he
d ubhouse turn on the run pa st the
stands. the first tnne . and the ,·ol!
was gotXJ enough to stay lhl'l'l'.
Aloma's Ruler led Bold St)·ie . mltlen by IA·roy Moyers, through the
l'l ubhoust'

t urn

&lt;:~nd

rnt o

llw

backstrl'lr h. with Cui Away , ndden
by Jerry Bailey, lhinl and l.1nka "''
fourth . They ran that way duwn the
lxlckst r ekh an d 111tu thl' turn. then
Shnl'mctkt·r , s et•kJn ~ h1 s thrrd
Prca kness vtdury, HHJVl'd Ltnka ~ t '.

tht· 1-2 favorr tt·. up to rhallt· n ~ t·

Pimlico Race Trace in Baltimore, Md. Linkage, left,
came in second. tAP Laserphoto) .

Pollrald ~ S... SIGN Check
P.O. Boxll007
P I ily, IIA 0111110

5x7"
For 8.88
8xl0"
BRIDAL SET in

( 145)

Crunchy Potato Chips
Fo r ta sty snac king, parlies. m o re . 8-oz . net wl.

Comfort Top Knee·hlghs
Nylo n /spandex. Sanda lfool o r reinforc ed toe.

179.00

1279.00

(144)

2Pr.88e · 94e

1

BRIDAL SET in
yellow gold

in th a t di red ion Satu r day .

Cmnpll'ling the order uf fin1 sh
were Laser l.t ght, Hernvl'sted &lt;:~nd
Willer Bank . Hein vl'stl'LI was not
nomtnated to the r&lt;HT and l'ust
owner Lours Wolfson $10,000 to s upplt:ment. F. tght 3-yl'a r-ulds wt -rt· l'll-

Pittsburgh outlasts Reds,
Padres down Expos, 6- 2

With dura ble polyp ropy le ne webbing
o n weathe r-resista n t alumi num frame .
Plastic ar m s. p o lio legs. Color choice

Exceptional
Values

239.00

After Kac nel guid,•d Aloma's
Rule r !n the onc-m1 le Withers last
week at Aqueduct. Scherr said in the
winner 's circle : " Next week, WL' wJ!l
win the Preakness." And, wi th a
crowd of 80 .724 cheering him on,
Aloma's Ruler did ju.-;t that.
Before the race, Lenzi ni sa id, " I
honestl y feel that if he didn' t get
hurt , I'd have the top 3-yea r-old
right now . I stil l bel ie\'e he 's the
best. but now we have to go out and
gel it !the div ision championsh ip! ."
The son of Iron Ruler took a big step

show .

Save o n sturdy. grease-resistant pla te s

Folding Aluminum Deck Chair
Now At Pre·Summer Savings!

Compare Our Prices
Anywhere

1

F lam ingo.

Lunger , rctunwcl $2 .60 and $2.60 . Cut
Away, the longest shot 111 the field,
owned by He rbert Allen. was $6 to

139 )Our 1.53 12"x75' Aluminum Foil .

11.88

)

d r-, t·r rr rlr rr&lt;rt or .\ ba srs ·

I 4

Na tha n Scherr's colt back to the
races Ap ril 29 afte r \he colt had suffered a wrenched left front ankle
while training fur the Ma rch 6

$3.60.
Ll llkHgl', owned by J&lt;1ne UuPonl

Durable Plastic Foam Plates

20%

Webbing May
Vary According
To Area

hctkt·d

('}rllll 't ' 11f !Jt ' \ l ' l'i:I C' I' St'l'\'l'd Wl\h
t'itdlrnt•;rl . Mt·rrl :-. s ubjt't '\ \(1 rhall l.! t'
Without rH•I lt't '
··St ·r'\'lt 't'" r t·ntlt·n·d tin cr nnn-

Aloma's Rul er's Im pressive v rdory
was tra rncr Butch Lenzini. who got

Haltunort· bUIIdrng cuntractnr , and
paid h1s backers $15 .80. $4 .60 a nd

Save

;-rrr ol pt'll ll ll':-. :-.;r l;-ul. t·n lt·. . law . c·orn bn ·cnl. butkr . pt •; wh I'II SJ&gt; , JJH lk .

t

Frrdct.\

It had to be a disappointing defeat
for 77-year-old trainer Henry Clark ,
who had skipped the Derby after
Linkage had beaten Gato Del Sol in
the Blue Grass Stakes April 22.
Clark said the Derby simply didn't
fit into his plans for Linkage.
Then, Galo Del Sol became the first Derby winner not to start in th•
Preakness since Tomy Lee in 1959.
Gato Del Sol worked out at Belmont
Park Saturday in preparation for the

Belmont Stakes J une 5.
The I 1;,-mile Belmont now looms
as a showdown between Galo Del Sol
and Aloma's Ruler, who missed the
Derby because he was sidelined by
an injury .
Aloma's Ruler. setti ng the pace,
reac hed the end of the I 3-16 mi les m
1:552-5, on &lt;~ha l f length m fro nt of
Linkage, who was 6 and threequarter lengths ahead of Cut Away.
Bold Style was fourt h, anothe r two
lengt hs back .
Sha ring credit with Ka,•nel for

llllite. IIIIo lhlnt with a .Wea bUe Ia the lhlnt IDDllll of
S.lurday'• game ID Pittsburgh. 'l1le Plnlel weat oa to
ICOn! BIDe nmsiD lbe buliDC· (AP Luerpllolo).

Gallipolis

--

.

' Jl

DEATII CRASH- Race driver Gordon Smiley, 33,
of Grapevine, Texas, Is thrown backwards as his disintegrated race car slides along the track afte r it crashed

into the turn three wall during qualifications at the Indianapolis Motor Speedwa y Sa turday. Smi ley died instantly of head injuries. I AP Laserphotol.

Gordon Smiley, 33, dies
in crash at Indianapolis
race.
INDIANAPOUS (API - Driver
It look the track safl'ty t"rew abo ut
Gordon Smiley, warming up for a
10
minutes to pry Smiley fro m the
qualification for the Indianapolis
wreckage
.
500, was fatally injured Saturday
Smiley was going to try fo r h1s
when his race car slammed against
the third-turn concrete wall and vir- third start in the 500, the wo rld' s
ri chest automobil e race . Ht•
tually disintegrated.
He suffered head injuries and died qualified for his second Indy 500 last
instantly, according to Dr. Henry
Bock of the Indianapoli s Motor
Speedway medical staff.
Smiley, 33, apparently lost control
of his Cosworth-powered March race
car and slid. 280 feet sideways into
the waU. The car then went airborne
50 feet and broke into three sections
as debris new in every direction.
He was the first fatality at In·
dianapolis since 1973 and the second
driver killed during qualifications of
a major racing event in the past
week. Canada's Gilles Villeneuve
died May 8 when his Ferrari Formula I car crashed at Zolder,
Belgium, during a qualification run
for the Belgium Grand Prix.
Smiley's last previous appearance
at Indianapolis also ended in a
crash. His car struck the fourth-turn
wall during the 1981 Indy 500, but he
DRIVER DIES - Race driver
was not injured.
Gonion Smiley leans on the wing
Smiley, oi Grapevine, Texas, was
of biB race car during practice at
running easily through the third tum
when hill car suddenly veered up into " the lndiaiiBpoU• Motor Speedway
two days ago. Smiley, 33, of
the wall. Observers said he apGrapevine,
Texas, was killed in a
parently over-corrected the steering
fiery crash during a warm-up lap
after starting to loee control of the
for a qualification attempt at the
high-powered racer. lt was Smiley's
Speedway Saturday. (AP Lasersecond wannup lap before a possible
photo) .
qualification attempt for the ~ay 30

year at 192.988 mph. guod (or a sta rt
from tht· No.8 posJtJOil, but crashed

in the fourth turn after 141 of the 200
laps. He wound up 22nd amonc the 33
slc:)rters.

Smi ley

be g an

l'dl'lll ~

professrunally 111 1975. ~ atntn .e nrost
of his ea rly cxpt•nenee with the

Sports Ca r Cl ub of Anll'nca and the
Aurora Formu la I st•ri es rn En~~ la nd .
He wos &lt;:1 fo u r~ ti llll' SCCA t"hctmpton
and won th e Aurora sent's ehampionsh ip onn•
Smil ey 's first Indy-car sta 11 was
at the Onta rio 200 in Ca lifornia m
19&amp;1. He starl &lt;·d 14th and fnushed
sixth. Later that year, he quali fied
for his first Inclianapolis rae&lt;· at
186.848 mp h, the nin th-fastest sp&lt;•ed
in the fie ld. After starting 20!h, he
drove 47 laps before turbocharger
failure kn ocked him out of the race
for a 25th-place fimsh. His onl y other
championshi r&gt;-car race in 1980 was
in the Mich1 gan 150, in wh ic h he

finished 20th .
His best speed here this year was
197 mph during a fi nal practice
session Saturday .
Smiley is survived by his wife,
Barbara. His body will be ta k-·n to
Omaha , Neb., for buri al.
The last deaths at Indian.tpolis
were in 1973. when veteran dri ver

Art Pollard was killed during practice and driver Swede Sava~ e and
plt crewma n Armando Teran ·lied in

separate incidents during lh•' race.
Sixty two people have died
the
Speedway since 1!109.

at

�May 16, 1982
Page-C -2- The Sunday Times-Se ntin e l

Pomeroy- Middl eport-Ga llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

~

'

w. Va .

By Mike Rawson
PT. PLEASANT - The Point
Pleasant Big Blacks opened sectiOnal play Friday afternoon and
posted a 12-3 rout over the Milton
Grey hounds in Hurricane.
The Big Blacks collected 13 hits
while Devin Slone and Kevin Smith
limlted the Greyhounds to only four
hits, all singles, In the win.
The Big Blacks got things rolling
in the bottom of the first inning as
they scored two runs in the inning.
Mike "Poo" Porter reached base on
an error by the Mllton shortstop and
scored on a single by Devin Slone
the following PPHS hitter. Slone,

.

Local
bowling
division; and Judy Cache. Poca, second place,

J().K WINNERS- Winners of the !().kilometer 16.2
miles( race in the French City Run Saturday moming

women's division. Stevens' winning tim e was 31:33.
Deb Parsons winning time was 42:46. More than 400

in downtown Ga llipolis were, from le ft, Tom Stevens,

runners participated in the event, co-sponsored by the
Ohio Valley Publishi ng Co. and Holzt•r Medica l Center.

Middletown , Md., first in the men 's division; Chris
Parsons, Huntington, scrund plaet•, men's division ;
Debbie Pa rsons, Barbuurs,·illc. firs( plact•, women's

5-K WINNERS - Wiooers of the 5-ldlomeler (3.1 lively, In the women's division, and Joseph Stockmal,
miles) race in lbe French City Run Saturday in .Athens, and Joe Barker, Ashland, Ky., finland serond
Gallipolis were, from left, Kim Janey, Gallipolis, and place winners In the race. Janey's winning Ume was
April Gravely, Pt. Pleasant, first and second, resper- 22:35 and Stockmal's was 15:32. (Mary Rollins photos) .
~--~-------------------------

EMU has

;..

six point
lead in meet·
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Eastern
Michigan has taken a six-point lead
after six events in the second annual ·
Mid-American Conference women's
track tourna ment.
With 14 events remaining, Eastern
Michigan had rolled up 32 poi nts.
Ohio University was second with
32 points, followed by Bowling
Green, 261-3; Western Michigan,
221-3; Kent St. , 22; Central
Michigan, IS, Ball St., 14 ; Miami,lO;
Northern Illinois, 2; and Toledo, 1.
Three competitors qualified lor
the AlA W reg ionals. Frances
Daniell of Ohio U. and Elli e Hayden
ol Eastern Michigan both clea red 5foot-10 in the hi gh jump to qualify
wilh a meet record . Kathy Ca lo of
Kent St. tossed the javehn 46.33
meters to qualify with another meet
record.

Bird on parish
LINEUP FOR FIRST RUN - Ron Saunders, of

rare, the 5,000 13.1 mile( . More than 400 individuals

Holzer Medical Center's E mployee Recreation Cnm-

participated in three separate races in downtown

miltce, et&gt;-sponsor of the 1982 Frenrh City Run, issues

Gallipolis.

BOSTON I API - Larry Bird, the
great forward of the Boston Celtics,
insisl!:i Robert Parish, the..towering

instru ctions to runners lined up for Saturday's fi rst

..

"'"II

....... ~

~ --~~
•
'
••
t

-, . ..'J ·, I ·lo-;ii-Jl~

.;:'&amp;

Celt center, is the key to the team's
offense.
"You gel the ball to Robert when
he's rn position and so many things
can happen," Bird said. "His turnaround jumper with the high arc
can't be blocked. If the defense overplays him, it's a drive for a stuff.
.And if the other tea m double-teams
him. the entire court opens up for the
rest of us.''

,

For All

.....

Turf education

~

Your
Honda
Needs.

•....
,~

~

•u
....
...

Authorized Sales
and Service

446-2240

me To

BETZ HONDA SALES
Upper Rt. 7, Gallipolis, Ohio

LEXINGTON , Ky . I API - Spendthrift Fa rm, the big breedmg compil'X , has

FOR EVERY THREE GAMES YOU BOWL IN A SUMMER
LEAGUE, SKYLINE LANES WILL MATCH IT WITH AFREE GAME
OF OPEN BOWLING. THIS OFFER GOOD FOR REGULAR LEAGUE
MEMBERS ONLY- DOES NOT APPLY TO SUBS OR BLIND
SCORES. OFFER ENDS AUG. 30, 1982.

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.
Dale R. Sanders - Gen . Mgr .

three trainin g tra cks

where yearlin gs are taught the lundarn enlals of racing. One is an or-

thodox fi ve-furlong dirt track .
But the other two art· grass courses. located on gentl y rolling terrain .
Tlwre, the young horses l ce~rn about

tur-f racing and those bound for
Europea n stables are inducted mto

1981 ESCORT
2 dr . , si lver.

AM/ FM

~~~S6195

1980 DATSUN
310

4 sp . .

$5995

1980 MERCURY
CAPRI
2 dr, r ed, 4 spd .

2d r ., red , 4 spd .

~~~$4695

$4395

WAS S5295
NOW

.

1

4895

SUMMER LEAGUE MEETINGS

the left-hand turns which are so

common in racing abroad .

1979 FORD LTD

Keep your cool

1 dr ..

g r een.
tran s .. air .

PONTE VEDRA. Fla. !API Torn Weiskopf was explaining why
he intended to control his temper on
a golf course no matter what.
" I'll neve r walk off a course in

anger again," he said. "The last
time I did that, a kid came up to me
with tears in his eyes and told me,
'Mr. Weiskopf, you are my idol. Why
did you do it?' I told him I w.ouldn't
do it any more and that he had better
not do it, either."

auto

4

4495

1

1976 CHEVETTE
4dr ., Bla ck .

~~~S13

95

1095

5

1979 FORD
FAIRMONT

J·:nl2·5

St·wto

F'nday ntght to P&lt;IY
SH0.$2 .80 a nd $2.%0. Scld.lrah ·'s J l' ~·t'l fmi sht&lt;tl
sn •unJ t" pay 13.60 1:1nd $2.60. unll Ttl!' Ttw Lint•
fmt sht•d third to pay tl.60.
Tht• lOth ran· lrift•l·tH was a of l 2 t'Ombin&lt;~lion
pa,nu ~.: $696.60 tHMI won by Mi s.~ Oabf. driwn
l.arr.1 l ..~tntlun . m 2 : 03 .
A t'I'UWd of 5,284 WH~l'rt'tl $447,057.
11 1

[).IWils

F'I ..ORENCE. K) . I API - N!&gt;\'l'l l..adit• won tht•

ft•t~ I1 H•'tl nmth fan · fi'r uJct,Y ni ~ht HS l.Htonia
c•po.·ttt ·•l tlsseuun.
Nuwl l ..~t tl it• fini sht'tl tht• Hlllt'-long t rot m
2:0J3.5. r&lt;~)'IOM $6.60, $4 1:111d 53.20. Pure!\'
Pl.atnnit· wa:. St't 'UikJ, fl&lt;l)'llll! $19.20 Hncl $6.•
MIS.'! Tum Tum• w~s thu·tl, raymc $.3.20.

6d.

Tht· 4-2 tkHlblt• uf Ch u~ ·kln t~nd 01&amp;'11 Knilo!hl

flOUt( $117.80, Bnt.J lht •

ll20.85jl.

$3595

~~~SJ99S

t'Ol .UMBUS. Ohw t APt - l.ttllt• SJu, dn w n by
Dwk H1cho.tn lsnn J r .. wm1 Ilk· ft •aturl'd Pllct' 111

t'fOWd

nf 1,1&amp;5 'ol'B I!t!rl'tl

Red ,

auto.,

$3295

~~~ SJ495

~~~ SJ895

1974 MERCURY
CAPRI

1981 CHEV.
.. CITATION
~dr .,

Blue.

~~~ $6395

s3495

1973 CHEV.
PICKUP

S995

WASS99S
NOW

2 dr., While.

Wagon ! Orange .

95 5

3695

WASSJ895
NOW

1979 FORD FlOO
Blue.

Love to bowl but hate to keep · ·

3695

5

score.? Then you must try •••

1978 DODGE
PICKUP

AMF MagicScore·
.

Green.

S5995

WAS S429S

meeting 6:30p. m .
meeting 8:00p. m .
meeting 6:30p.m .
meeting 10 : 00 a.m.
meeting 6:30p.m.
meeting 10:00 a.m .
meeting !O:OOa.m.
meeting 6:30p.m .
meeting 6:30p.m.
me.eting 6 : 3o·p.m.
meeting~: 30 p.m.

. 1978 FORD
. ~AIRMONT ,

1980 FORD
PINTO
~~~ m

Sunday, May 23-Mixed
Monday, May 17-Men's Scratch
Tuesday, May 2s-.-Women's Trio
Wednesday, May 26-Women's Day
Wednesday, May 26-Mixed
Wednesday, June 16-Juniors
Thursday, May 27-Women/Day
Thursday, May 27-Men's Trio Handicap
Thursday, May 27- Mixed
Friday, May 21 - Mixed Obis .
Saturday, May 29-Mixed

4 dr ., Gr een .

2dr ., Gree n.

4 dr ., Red and white .

Racing

dr .,

tr a ns., air .

WAS S4695
NOW

1978
GRANADA

FORD
FAIRMONT

S3995

s,2HS

'2799

'

PAT HILL FORD·

SKYLINi L·ANE$.'

461 S. THIRD ST.
MIDl&gt;LEPORT; OH.
PHONE 992:2i96 - - 1
DALE R. SANDERS-GEN. MG

UPPER RT. 7
'

.r·

Ba1rll and Ful ll'r Rt•iill}' tl'alll ls tlw f1r st pl;m·
wmnt-rs for this vear.
Ma y 6, 1982 tht-rt' wa s a pl&lt;~y-1Jff fur ;;,·,·un 11
plan· lt·ams. MdklnaltJ's anJ Bub E1 :m ~ Fan 11
McDonald's lt'IUn wnn ~ 1\' 1111.! tht.·m s 1 · 1 ·o~tl pla 1•1•
forthi S)'t'a r .
Pl t!cts~· n·nwrnbN lhl' banqud fur Sk\ l mt · r ~
1 -t!~i! Ut' May 28. 1982 at V.F.W. Hall at 7 p 1.11
l....~t nt•s

Muminj;! Glnrit's

May4. 1982

Team

SUI!&lt;If Run AshlwuJ

Two's Co mp.an~
G. &amp;J . Autupcut.s
M~:~ x' .s int '.

nual French City Run in downtown Gallipolis.- Keith
Wilson photos.

~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~

Skylillt'rs LkaKUt'
~1i:ty U:, 1982

Pumt'ruy 8nwlin~o:

FREE BOWLING
UP. UP. UP - Runners in the 5,000 meter 13.1
mile 1 ra rt• pass their first hurdle. a steep hill to the Upstrea m Publi&lt;- Use Area . during Saturday's fifth an-

Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. va .

The Sunday Trm es-Se ntrn e l

Paqe-C ·J

Point Pleasant posts 12-3 sectional win over Milton

'/

'

Pomeroy

,•

....

tW.IJPOLIS; 0,.10

Sinunoh.s Old.s. Catiiii&lt;H' an&lt; I
Cht '\ .

r·,~j
:~
I~

after ·reaching third, scored on a
passed-ball by the Greyhound
catcher.
The Big Blacks scored their third
run of the game in the third inning.
Slone opened the Inning with a
double and scored on two consecutive fielder choices.
The Greyhounds managed to tie
the score in the top half of the fourth
inning as they collected all four of
their total hits in that inning .
The Big Blacks took the lead for
good In the bottom half of that same
Inning. Steve Wamsley opened with
a single, while Troy Duncan moved
him to second on a SAC bunt. Rod
Gleason then delivered a single to
plate Wamsley. Porter reached
base on a walk followed by a single
by Slone moving Porter to second.
Mike Huddleston then doubled to
score both Porter and Slone.
In the bottom of the fifth the
locals put the game on Ice by taking
a J().3 lead. Kevin Smith and Sieve
Wamsley opened the inning with
consecutive singles. Troy Duncan
then drew a base-on-balls to load
the bases. Mike Porter then drew a
walk as Smith scored and Devin
Slone followed with a single ,
scoring three runners as the ball got
away from a Ckeyhound outfielder.
In the bottom of the sixth PPHS
got two more insurance runs. Kevin

Smith reached base via a walk and
Aaron Vigliotti via an error. Sieve
Wamsley then drew another walk
loading the sacks. Rod Gleason then
hit a sacrifice (ly moving up all the

base runners. Porter was then hit
by a pitch reloading the bases.
Devin Slone then reached on a baseon-balls for the final run giving the
locals a 12-3 lead and sectional

1982 POINT PLEASANT BIG BLACKS - Shown above are the mcmbers of the 1982 Point Pleasant Big Blacks Baseball Squad. Shown above
are, first row left to right, Louie Wickline, Rod Gle.son, Troy Duncan,
Mike Porter, Steve Wamsley, Aaron Vigliotti, Nick Harden, Devin Slone,

is double elimination, but will be
single elimination in regional play.
The Big macks will play either
Monday or Tuesday, depending on

triumph.
The Big Blacks will travel back to
Milton today and were scheduled to
play Poca in a 12 noon contest.
This year's sectional tournament

·--... ... ·--

-

the outcmnt• ur Sa turda y's ga me .

..

.

·. , _;;
,. ,,.. ·
Gary Willet and Pat Stewart, manager ; second row. John Oliver,
manager, Greg Wamsley , Jeff Dunlap, Jimbu Wamsley , Kevin Smith,
U,e Holland, Mike Huddleston, Rub Albright, Greg Willet and Coarh
Dave Rawson. 1Photo by Tim Davis.)

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

r02

C. &amp; D. Pt•nn:tPII
00
High md . l!a mt• - June l..ambt·rt 202 . Jt ·an
Nortonl75 : Bl'tty Wh1lhlll'h 170.
Hll!h inti . 3-~a me s - Junt• l.cunbt·rt 517 : Bdl\
Whlllalt:h 490 : Jt&gt;an Norton 466.
·
H1 ~1l team l!&lt;llnt· - Su ~ctr Rtm A:.hland 83J
794 : Twu's Company 770.
·
Hi~&lt;!h lt'&lt;llll 3-~llmes - SUI!&lt;I t Hutl Ash l;md
236&amp;; Twt/ s Ct.mpany 2192 : G. &amp; J Autu Parts
2181.

Clements
up by one
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - If
Lennie Clements became a bit nervous on the first tee box in the third
round of the $300,000 Colonial
National Invitation GoU Tournament, the tour unknown had good
cause.
Chasing him from one to two shots
back, respectively, when play began
Saturday were perhaps the greate.i
player who ever lived, the leading
winner on the PGA Tour in 1981 , a nd
two fonner U.S. Open champions.
Jack Nicklaus, the winner of 68
tournaments including 19 majors,
and Tom Kite, leading money winner and Vardon Trophy two-stroke
average holder, were only a stroke
behind Clements.
Andy North and Jerry Pate were
just two strokes back after 36 holes
over soggy Colonial Country Club .
Clements, the last player invited
into the 102-player field, battled
gusty winds for a !-under-par 69
Friday and a two-day total of ;,.
under-par 135.
Nicklaus, who called his putting
touch "terrible," :.truggled to an
even par 70 while the steady Kite
shot 68to finish at 136.
North, winner of the 1968 U.S.
Open at Cherry Hills in Denver, notched a 69 while Pate khocked his
bright orange golf ball around in 68
strokes for 137.
None of the accomplished competitors chasing Clements had ever
played with him.
"I met Jack once at Pebble Beach
on the putting green but I don't think
he would remember," said Clements.
Nicklaus said Friday, "He's right.
But we'll meet tomorrow . We'll be
paired together."
Pate said "Clements is a good
player. He looks a lot like Ben Crenshaw. They even have the same
hairdo."
Kite joked, "I think Crenshaw
looks like Clements."
Clements' looks aside, he showed
tremendous grit Friday when he got
his score to 7-under and suffered
near-disaster in a three-hole stretch.
He went bogey, double-bogey,
bogey but righted himself to birdie
two of the last three holes.

SALE!
'5 OFF ALL KELLY SPRINGFIELD
SPORTMARKS &amp; SUPER CHARGERS

66¢ qt. 10W30

S33 I '}~S R 12

S38

Nationwise Oils

Sportmark Radials

Super Chargers

•

Metroc 11111 dt11gned l or

50, 60, 70 Series

!rn po•U

• Oouble

79¢ qt. 10W30
89¢ qt. 10W40

I

5 rib tr . .d wUil 2 hbiii,II IU

SIZE

Valvoline Oils

'''

Re g •)8

bell s
•

P o tyette• nd111 plle t

• Blecko,..Ut

t!JSSR I)
t65SR tl

.....,.,

..,
'"
..,

UI~5 Fi t4
I ':&gt;~S R I 'I

t6 SSR t')

A/Q . &gt;]

Reo ' 4 1

~ly cord• l o1
1 11engt~ end 1lebU ity •Hwo
!lbe•gtan Mill

I

Ou tlll\ttl wllllt l l l l lf l

SIZE
IALI
860 .1 )
•u

SIZE

E60 · 14

'40

Gt)l) . t 4
LbU • 14

·~•

f 10 . 14
GTQ , t 4
G7 0 • t')

G60 o l'}
lbO • t'&gt;

'I '

IALI

ETO o~ •

'62
'5!&gt;
'64

•u

' M ~o1 4
. N ~ • t'}

'' , ' •·' •'"' '

'5 1
'72
'74

"'' ....

Sale Oils Limll 12 ql s.
Oils

e~ceed

new ca1 spec s o f SFICC

1.66

Natlonwise Oil Filters
For most domes ti c &amp; import

cars, Reg . 2.29·2 .69

2.88

Nationwise&amp; Air Filters

For most domesllc

import cars

Sate Fillers Limit 2

Poly Primer

16 oz .. Reg . 395. • PPJ5 2.66
For 6 cyl GM . Reg 4 25

• wire Sets
' Manulaclurer ' s mtU ·In rtbllt l
tnlltblt

AJC
Recharge
Hose Kit
R.. •95
3.88

IAPCO

Import Car
Tune Up Parts
Ellmpltt:

il oz .. Reg . 5.95
S.nt o•tr '2! l tQwd or pas H!
IBP28 . BP38

Sa" o ..r 30"1.! wlapplo cat or t PM40

20oz., Reg 12.95

Motorcycle Spark Plugs

1.29
Dorey Motorcycle
Tune Up Kits
I rom 4.95

s... ower 1131

20 oz pump spr ay

Honda , Kaw asa ki , S u z uk1

Dlslr!D. Cops
or Rotors . 2.62

\Iii~~~ '3 Off All Dorey

Reg . 3.50

For Toyota C·3030

Motorcycle Batteries
Reg . I rom 12.95 . . .. . !rom 9.95

Spark Plugs

.)---'l

lf PC44

Poly Marine

Bleche
Wlte

Reg . 2.95 .
2.21
For Toyota C-3024

Reg . 3 59 .

s..a 2!1"1. •

Reg . 1.99

S..to.tr '1! IMB·2

Tune Up Kl1s

Poly Chrome

IS oz.,

Poly Sealant

For 6 c yl GM Reg 7 95

25% Off

Sne ow11 30 .,.. 1 w11h appl •cato &lt;

16 oz ., Reg. 5.95

S.veonr 20,_,! One s1ep po ly
sealant c lea ns . neaul •h e s ant1 p1 o
tect s ~lnyl . leather . pl a si• C &amp; mo re 1

Dlstrlbulor Caps

Reg . 5.95
4.46
For VW C -14 5

Honda , Kawa sa ki . Suzuki
and Yamaha

Wire Sets

Reg. 7.95 . . 5.98
For VW 410

Ball State

retains lead

6.88

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Ball State
has retained its 17-stroke lead over
Western· Michigan after ii4 holes of
the 1982 Mid-American Conference
golf· championship at Toledo Country Club.
Ball State has a three-round to\81
of 1,096, followed by Western
Michigan with 1,113. Miami was In
third with 1,122 going into Saturday's final round.
Othet learils and their scores were
Bowling Green, 1,136; · Northern
Illiilois, 1,138; Kent Stale, i,l4ll;
Ohio University 1,141; Toledo, 1,151;
and Central Michigan, 1,177.
·
Ball State's Brian Teooyson has a
fouf..etroke lead for medalist boners
with a 54-bole total of 211, followed
by . John Trivia'on rl We~ern
Michigan and Tom Kyff of Ohio,
~ with 215. Three other players

are,wltl\in two strokes of second.

ax le sel (2 wheels)

Relined Brake Shoes

w/exchg., lor mo st dam. ca rs,

25,000 miles rated

*24

32.88 ~0 MONTH
Nation wise
Malnten41nce Free
Calcium BaHerles

41.88 iiO Mo 47.q8 60 Mo

Sun.
M·l!

Sal

10.5

8:30.7
8:30.6

14.95

wlrebu i1dable e•change

Remanufactured

Remanufactured

Starters or Alternators

Water Pumps

Both for most domestic cars

except ln1egral and Motorola
11\ft High lorque starters wlrebultdable

All bat1erles wlexchg., available
lor most cars. ·Never needs
water under normal conditions

HOURS:

wlrebuildable exchg.

~ '~

exchg. lor mosl Chrysler and soma
Ford cars

137 Alternators
w/rebuUdable e•chg. lor
Integral &amp;
••capt high
~otorota

amp HO units

209

Upp~r

For most dom es ti c 4-6 cyl. cars

and all Chevy small block VB
1969·71
18.95 wlrebuildable exchg .
for most 8 cyl. domestic and
most _4·6 c.yl. Imports

River Rd.

17.88 Reg.
Mufflers

9.95 axle set t2 wheels)

Original Equipment

2188

Original Equipment Replacemon1
For most domest ic cars and

light lr&lt;ycks

If onylhlng goes wrong wllh this
muffler, Natlonwlse will exchange
11 FREE aa tong as you own your

Quality Disc Pads
For most domes! ic ca rs ,
25,000 miles rated

22.50

cor

446-3807

,,

.

�Page-C -4

The Sunday Times -Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

PITTSBURGH (API - Lee Lacy
looked on the bright side after a boer
boo on the bascpaths cost him the
first grand slam home run of his
em·eer.
" I'm just glad we won the game.
That's what real ly counts," said
Lal'y, whose eighth-inning blast still
knocked in three runs and rallied the
Pittsburgh Pirates to an &amp;-7 victory
O\'er the Cincinnati Rl'lls Friday
night.
What happened was that Lacy
rounded first base on a ga llop and
accidentally took a few steps past
tcanunate Ornar Moreno just as the
ball cleared the fence in right cenler.

dasped his hands to his head an
anguish as he was called out by umpire Ed Montague .
"It would have bt•en my first
grand slam, my first home run of the
season," Lacy said after the game.
" But I'll be playing for a while,
and hopefully I'll hit one again
sometime, " added Lacy, who w&lt;lli
credited with a sing le &lt;:~ nd three RBI.
The Reds, who had won nine in a
row at Three Rivers Stadium since
June 1980, took a !HI first-innin~ lead
off Don Robinson with the aid of twt&gt;run singles by Larry Biittner and
Alex Trevino.
With Tom Seaver pitching for Cincinnati it looked like a long night for

of thoSt• games we definitely should
have won," Biittner said. " We
scm·ed seven runs, and with our ?,itl'hingslafflhatshouldbeenough .
The Pirates scored a run in the
bottom of the sixth and chased
Seaver with a three more in the
seventh to rut the Cincinnati lead to
6-5.
After Jt:~sun Thompson 's RBI double in the seventh, Johnny Ray
hit a dri ve to leflcenler that was
dropped by Cesar Cedeno for an
error, scoring two Pirate runs.
With Ray at second, Reds righlfieldt&gt;r Eddie Milner then made a
di ving catch of a drive by Tony Pena
to retire the side. And Dan Driessen

make a play. Walton was safe at
third, Berra at second and Moreno
at f~rst.
. , .
,
W1th Tom Burne pltchmg, Lacy
cracked hiS dnve over the wall m
nght-center - and then made hiS
ga\Jopfrornecstasytoangulsh.

" I saw him go riJ.,\ht by Ornar. I

the Pirates. And Biittner's solo

put the Reds on top 7·5 with a solo

Ml

homer in the eighth off Ennqu&lt;'
Homo.
But the Pire~tes won it in the bottum of the eighth .
Regg1e Walton, just up from the
minors, opened the Pirate eighth
with a walk off Jim Kern . Th en
Willie Slargell rapped a pinch single

Rmno, 3-1, got tht• win, and Kent
Tekul n• p1!t'hetl the ninth for his
fourth s e~ v t •. Kern ft •ll to (}..3.
" It was one of those horrible
~ i-llllt 'S that hHppt•ns." said Seaver ,
who l'l'ITl&lt;lined at 1-4. '' From evt•ry
p• ·rspt'rlill', outside of the first inning, W&lt;' didn't do too wt'\1.

knew inunediately what had happenl'd," sa id Pirate Manager Chuck
Tanne r, whose team overcome a 5-0
first-inning defi cit.
La&lt;'y also knew inunedialely. He

homer in the sixth off Manny Sar·
mien to gave the Reds a 6-1 lead.
But the Pirates battled back to
win.
" It's not a nice feeling. It was one

Fifty-two Complete Wel•ght
program at North Gallia
VI NTON - North Gallia's annual

..
,.,_..,_,

WL'J I! ht pro}.! ram ran Jan . 8 through

Wertz to attend
Diles Tour1mment
POMEROY - How many limes
ha ve you seen that catch - Willi e
Mays of the old Nt·w York G1anLs
-ri:lcln g
bilck i:lnd ctlmn s t
miraculous ly galhl'nng Jn, over h1 s
shoultkr. tlmt tuwt·nn g dri vt· off lht•
ba t of Vic Wt·rlz '
It happened 111 the 1954 World
S.·rit•s and it brokt• tlw b&lt;-J(' ks of thl'
Cltovl'land lnd1ans and the G1anLs
wt•nt on tu w1n tht· st·n t·s conJt 's probabl y lht• must -

cCJ lt' h of basl'ball 's old rt·ru n
fanul y.

Sl'l'll

We ll , tht• mom who l11t lh&lt;Jt bC:Jills
co rmn g to lh t· Da ve Dllt·s-

Appalachla Golf ClasSie. Wertz had
a tltstJn gUi sheLI ca reer as i:l f1rsl
baseman and outfi el der w1lh the
Clt•velantl lmllans and the DelnHl
Ti ).!c rs. In rcn .&gt; nl yt·a.rs, he hds
bel'O!Jlt'

a

SUCl't'SSfUJ

and cornmurut y leader in Mi chiga n.
Ht· and lht host of tht· gulf outing,
Davt· Dilt•s, hct Vt' bl'l'fl fnt•ntls for a
lot of years and th iS will be Wertz's
ftrst t111w tn kt • 1t up 111 tht• tuurna lnl'nl .
There will be :u; n•Jebnt1es 111 tht·
f1eld . ont• for eal' h of the foursunws.
llub und Gu ry Hou sh of HIIWSidt'
Golf Club wa rnt•d It da y that Ihe field
ts fillin g fa st and n 'ITlllllkd entranb
lhalthetr applwa twns must bt· in hy
May 15. PrH'&lt;' of lht• golf und the dill·
111-r the pr('l'edJn}.! t'\'Jilg ill R u~ctl
Oa k Park " $125 .
Also e~nnuunl'ed Soturda y ets one of
ltw t't' lt•bnt1es IS fomwr lmhcma aiiAmeru.:a fu ll bat'k Tum N uw&lt;:~tzke ,
whu went un to f\' atiunC:~l Footbt:~ll
Leag Ut' pnillliflt'llt't' wtth lhl' Oetrmt
LIUilS.

bUS I!ll'SSIJlt'll

:First Meigs run
slated June 5th
POMEROY - A first for Me1 ~s
: Cu unty will bt• tlw " Mt•lg~ Co unt y
· Fun Hun " to bl' hl'id on Saturday,
5. at the Mt• i}.!s County
Fair}.! rounds.
Tlw ewnt 1s b t' IIW spunson ·d by
thl' Meigs County Heart Assonattun .
Entry ft •e is $5 Clnd pn•. n· J,! istr&lt;:~tJ o n dl'at..l linl' Js May 28. Ntl&lt;:J
Wisnisk11s the rart· t..lirectur.
Tht'rt' wili bt• a thn•t· nll k and one
milt· nH'l' begm ntn c &lt;:~t 9 tun .
Junt·

of W&lt;'l ght anti flexibility training.
P&lt;Jrtll'tpants worked nut three day.s
a Wl'L'k.
Nt·w additwns to the program
wert· t•xpanded weight room, neck
hctrnt 'S.St 'S to dl'velop stronger necks.
curl bars, 150 pounds of new plates,
lhn·t· new M&lt;tch One wall units comblllt'd W&lt;'lghl 780 pounds, three new
t · o n~ n · d low lypt.• we tght bcnchesWt't l!ilt stur a)!e rark .
A monthly weight chart was kept
ntt ·as unn g inl'I'L'H Sl' &lt;.llld dt•t'f't•asl' of
body s tt.t'.
Till' pru~rarn a lso offered
suggt·st tons tn wet ghl. gai n, and loss
as wt·ll as suggestions for physical
1111prun·rnL'nls this summer .
Partit·tpan ts were :

was

unC::tbl e to

In tht' P11·a(t• itk'kt'r room, Lacy
il was Mon·no's fault.
" Ht· should ha w }.! iven me more

sug~ t ·sted
t lHJII L"

But Mon·nu noted. " With nobody
tout. I was makin g sun· the ball
wasn't eaught. I was playing it
se:~fe . "

And Tanner sa1d, " You just don't
gd in front of the runner, but he was

t•xcitcd. ·•

Roz~ma.

being hit on the left wrist by a pitch,
the sixth time he has been hit this
season, and triggered a benchclearing brawl that lasted about fiv e
minutes. Lemon was ejected by th&lt;'
umpires and Redfern was removed
from the game suffering from what
the club trainer described as minor

Gibson, a 6-foot-3, 21!'&gt;-pound former football star at Michigan State,
said, "In a fight, people always go
for us big guys first. As soon as I
went · out there, I was sure people
were going to come after m e and

they did."
But Gibson added that the lith-

h11n to 1-2, but he headed lor llw
mound anyway .
Four players were ejected afll'r
the second f1ght, including Cabell
and Richi&lt;' Hebner of the Tige rs and
DHvis and Jesus Vega of the Twins .
One out later, Gibson hit hi s homer
off relieve r Terry Felton.
Hozema , 3-{) , pitched lht' top of llw
lith for the victory , but he was
carri ed from the field on a slrelr hl'r.
Dr. Robert A. Teilge, the Tigers' orthopt.'dic consultant. sai d Hozema
had suffl' red ltga rnent damage in h1s
ldt knee cmd would undergo s ur gt• ry
today.
Twms rook1e Kent Hrbek went 0fnr-5 to t•nd hiS hitlmg streuk at 23

injuries.

inning fight "got some adrenalin

" In a lie ball game, we're not
throwing at anybody," sa id Twins
Manager Billy Ga rdner. " Lemon
stands right on top of the plate.··
After Lynn Jones hit a OllL' OUl
single in the lith, the second brawl
of the game erupted when Twins pitcher Hon Davis, 1-3, brushrd back
Enos Cabell. The ball actually hit
Cabell's bat, running the count on

going through my body. I Jet it a ll out
when I got up to the plate the last
time."

The first brawl occurred after the
Tigers lied the seore 2-2 in the fourth
inning on Mark DeJohn's RBI
single.

The next batter, I,.cmon, charged
Twins' sta1ter Pete Redfcrh after

games, three short of the Amen can
League mark for first-yea r players
set by Guy Curtright of lhl' Chiea go
While Sox in 1943.
Brewers2, While Sox I
Gorman Thomas bdted hiS f1 fth
l:tnd sixth homers of the season as
Mllwaukct· snapped a four·gcunt•
lns tng .slretJk by beat111g Ch1 l'ago.
J11n Slaton, Hl, with relief ht•lp
from Hollte F'tnge rs, got credit fnr
the vidory. Slaton wets making hts
f1rst start of the season , repla cing
th e 111jun•d Bub McClure.
Wlutt· Sox starter R1chard Dutson
g e~vt• up both humt•rs to Thomas and
both shots landed 111 Comiskey
Park's uppl'r deck inlt·ft field .

Roi)L'I'l'i cmd Fl ynn .

MfTI\L CLAD PRf ·HUNG DOOR
• Oualiftes for Enc&gt;rl!y
tax Cred,r
• FuU11 lnsulat&lt;'!d
• Primed .

• Custom
desiened ...
any size
available.
..
•How to"

Tlfq "Ttm.k ·

Get It Together
for Under........ .

WoOQ

GENIE

GARAGE DOOR
~~~

~·

HARDWARE A\JAI L A8Lf

MANit' OTHER !&gt;lYLES AuAILA6Lf
AT CAATfR'5 LOW PRICES

plans
included.

FEEL FREE TO ASK QUESTIONS AND OBSERVE
AT YOUR LEISURE. A SECOND MODEL HOME
WILL BE OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION.

©
• q Panel q SecUon!&gt;
tNCLvo es .
• Track ,Rolftrs, Dr,p Edge
• mattrtals Lt st .
and ne,tss.ary rr.atrr1al to
• Easy lnstr uc t 1on~
butld
Z-8' Doors
• Helpful T.ps
• Posts .G1rders . G.rt,, Sktrt
• F,nlsh,ng ard ()pt •ons
Boards, Purltns . U5tngs and
• 3'• 6'-8" Pas ..agt C&lt;x&gt;r ano

• Ava•lable •n mJ-S&gt;t

popular- s•zes

9'x7'

16' X 7'

Alumtnum Roof&lt;&gt;g t Sodtng

tj

SOUD\IIfM.. SIDING

$4650

Eleven th Gr.1de
Pi!ul
H olt1nqs h ea d .
Wayne
Smn t hers. Mtke Mny s. Kenny N eal.

STOCf&lt;'\OE FENCE

•

• No. I spruce.
• 6' x 8 · section

HoMzontal White

Re)! istrHtion is at 8 a.m .

ASPHALT

tOOsq.h .

Trophies will be awardl'd ovl'rall
to mt•n and women fur the first three
plill't'S in l'dl'h a gt• }.! roup. Thl' a ge
croups ure I:\-18: 19-30: 31-40: 41 and

Fram"'9 for Doors

t@ldtsx·-- -

• Colo.- afl the way througl• Embossed finish .
• Easily installed.
• Jlla&lt;&gt;!,l Cctor.o. Available .

L .lWSOO

SHINGLES

• Standard, self- sealinQ

11\'l'l' .

shin21es .

T-sh1rls will be awarded lu thl' fll·st 100 t•ntrit·s.
Pt·rsons who wi~h to take part HrL'
to fill outlhl' form bt•low and mali to
Joan Tt•wks bury, Mulbt·rT y Hts ..
Pt&gt;lllt'I'OY' OhiO 45769.

BUNDLE
~--+----IOO
__S_Q~_F_T_.~

$788

Special - Special
20 Cu. Ft.

T-SHIHT SIZES M LXI.

'

PRE-HEGISTRAT!ON DEAD LING MAY 28
t PARENTAL CONSENT IF UNDEH 18 YEARS OLD 1
FULLSIGNATURE .

CHEST
FREEZER

$339

............... OCCU PATION .

AGE AS OF JUNE5, 1982 .................. SEX ........... ..
. . . . CITY .

the lith w1lh a sacrifice fl y.
Tt·xas loaded thl' bases w1th no
outs tn the lith on La rry Parrish's
walk, Pat Pulnum's double and Leon
Hoberts' 1ntenl1onal wal k. After
Bobby J uhnson popped out. Flynn
h1t hts gmm·· wJ;;htrlg fl y to n ght off
Hoy I"-''' Jarkson. 2-:1.
Hosken Powell 's p111l'h-lnt double
and F:rntl' Wl11tt 's ptrH'h-htl s tngle rn
thl• ninth ~ ii \ ' t' Toront o i:J :l-2lee:td . but
TeXi:JS tied tht· s t·on · tn lht•lr half of
tlw tnntn~ on stn glcs by Parnsh.

11\l\\\1111111\\\\l\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\

Between The Hours Of 3 p.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

E tghth Grild e
J('J I Sowud s. Sf eve Mi!rcu m,
Prlul L('(' . J •m Sown rd s. V.=! n E ll tS.
W rWn f' D1f1C!If' . M.=~rk Wr.=~y . B r1.=1 0
Smilll T 1m Sl f'vcns . Todd Dee! ,
ChM l('S BooT h . Edd1 c Dopl c . Dil vc
H.=~r tpc:,.-., ,
ScOT t
Dono hue . D avtd
H nn~rnon.-.. .
Dcnn1 s M r1 V. Mat!
Bowf'n
D rlrtn McFnr l and . Steve
Tll,nlon . Jr!! B oy I(' , EMI M.=~yo .=~ n d
Mtkf' Ol,l Ck
Ntnlh Gr.1d c
(!luck Er~s rer . Jn ckt(' G t .=~ ~s bu rn .
Sro ll Rou sh . T 1m Sm1H1 .. Br1c1n
H ,lwkc:,, J o(' M oo r e. Chu c k Lf'WI S,
f!, urmnn H ol1 d&lt;W. J 1m D e nny . Sher
rn,1n MM c um . MM k Foremn n. Sco tt
Wdl 1olm~on. Bil l H rlfd('n , Kev1n Bur
n(' lff' . T1m Hunl. l. Mry C r~ldwell i!Od
R ot h,l r d Boqqs
l e nfh Grade
E r•c P r n tc k . Sco TT P1 c kens. Jay
') k ,dm o rc . Mnll Kem per nnd G l('nn

Rangt•rs 4. Blue Jays 3
Dou12 Fl ynn lieU the scun• wi'- ~ o
st ngiL' in the ntnth tnrung , ltll'n won
the gH IIll' fur Tt' Xi:tS in the buttmn of

" It 's tlOt_' of those unfortunate
stt uattons. Wt· have to bounet• back ·
tuntmTow." Drit•ssen said in the
llushl'll Ci ncmnati Iucker room .

1)\onday, May 17th

ha ve agumsl the sponsors and off1cials of the Fun Hun , held Mune5, 1982
and the Meigs County Hearl Braneh for any and all injunes suffered by
mt· in sa id even t. I attest that I am physically Iii and have sufficiently
trained for this event.

•Kiln dried,

2"x 4"&gt;&lt; 16'

2"x4"x8'

OOUBlE·AIS

•545.

95

METAL ROOfiNG &amp; SIDING
ALUMINUI'il

©

GALVANIZED

HI · STftfNGTH

STeEL

AllOV

Z9 GAUGE

. ..... STATE .. ... .... ZIP .

Please make checks payablelo Mc1gs County Heart Branch.
Send all entri es to : Joan Tewksbury . Mulberry Hls .. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

:·Shares first round lead
ATLANTA (API - Julie Stanger
. Pyne knew what she wanted, and got
: it.
: · " That's why I birdied 18," she
· :Said. "I wanted to play with her for
: oid time's sake."
· · The closing birdie enabled Pyne to
:- fie her high school chum, Kelly
: : Fuiks, for tbe first round lead at 4, : under par 68 in the $150,000 Lady
;. Michelob Golf Tournament Friday,
: :pairing the two fonner Central High
·:of Phoenix, Ariz., players in tbe
round Saturday'
: :: "We had a lot of good head·tC}-head
; :jj)atches back in Phoenix," Pyne
· :said. "I probably shouldn't say this,
; ·liut I kind of had Keliy's number in
; :Coca! stuH, but she made up for it in

:'mnd

::couege."

he

By Associated Press
Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson
wants everybody on his team participating whenever there's a benchclearing brawl because it adds team
spirit. Unfortunately for Anderson,
il also can add to his disabled list.
" When something like this happens, I want everybody off the bench. It builds team unity," said Anderson after the Tigers beat the Minnesota Twins 4-2 in II innings Friday
night.
The game ended on a twcrrun
homer by Kirk Gibson just moments
after the second of two wild brawls,
which resulted in the ejection of five
players and a season-ending knee injury to winning pitche r Dave

D &amp; W1-k»mes, Invites All
Interested People To Come
By Their Lot And Watch The
Placement Of A Unibilt,
Professionally Built 1-k»me On ABasement Foundation.

ENTR't'FORM

ADDRESS .

but

The Sunday Times· Sentinei- Pag c&gt;- C·S

Anderson loses pitcher in bench clearing brawl

NOTICE I

I hl'n·by w aJ Vt' fur mysl'lf my executors, administre~tors. and
assi).!ners, and relea se a ny cmd ctll ri ghts and cla ims for dama ge I may

NAME .

Kern then fielded a sacrifice bunt
by Moreno,

i'lnd Ra y H all

t•nrolll'L'S l'umpleling the
req wn·rrll'nL-;.
AdtVItlt~s included a combinHlion

Vic Wertz

V IIl &lt;'ln ~ ly .

Don Barnes. Bob Adko ns. Ja mes Coe

~~~.,~:~r~eplaced by pinch runn·· r

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

May I w1lh 52 nut of 62 startmg , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

-

-

May 16, 1982

Reds blow five run lead, Bucs win 8-7

i

.

May 16, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

• • • Pyne, 25, said KeUy was such a

15 Cu. Ft.
25 Cu. Ft.

16 Cu. Ft. • •
• • •

21 Cu. Ft. •

• • • • • • • • •

2"x €)&gt;&lt; /2.'

1003.Q.I"T
WIDTH ~Z" NET

• • • • • • • • • •

ALSO AVAILABLe IN POPULAA C.Oi.OA5·FA&lt;TORY PAINTED
CV,TOI"! LeNGTHS AVAILA&amp;Le' AT NO f!KTRA COST!

great athlete that she talked her into
taking up golf eight years ago.
·
"She was well over 100 at first and
a year later she shot 75," Pyne said.
Fuiks, 24 , and Pyne led a duster of
21 players who broke par on the
&amp;,!~yard, par 72 Brookfield West
Golf and Country Club course to take
a one-shot edge over a trio of players
headed by veteran Kathy Whit·
worth. Whitworth is looking for her
83rd career triwnph, one that would
place her ahead of Mickey Wright on
the LPGA list of tournament
conquests.
Sandra Post, a fonner winner
bere, and Myra Van Hoose also
fashioned 69s, with Van Hoose
scoring bers despite a double-bogey
5 on No. 3 where she struck four put·
Is.

2'/, Miles East of
Ashland bridge on

Old U.S. Rt. 52

r

.

,I

I~

SIIWI

CQ\IPARE

·sheridan, Ohio

PHON£

ONl.t AREA lOCATION

.377·4327
,,

�May 16, 1982

Islanders eye series sweep Thank goodness
we won-Lacy
VANCOUVER, British Colwnbia
(AP ) - The fans at Madison Square
Garden taunted them with obscene
signs and chants.
The people at Quebec City's
Colisee waved their "Go Nordiques
Go" sigru; and sang "A Wandering
Minstrel!."
The crowd at the Pacific Coliseum
here swirled their white towels
through the a ir and said, "Kiss 'Em
Goodbye."
None of it worked.
Perhaps onl y the fans of the Ptt·
ts burgh Penguins had the right idea .
They were so outraged at the
Penguins' owner for gi.ving up on hi s
team that they had little time to
harass the New York Islanders. And
Pittsburgh won both of its home
games a'gai nst the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions.
Ever since that National Hockey

League opening round series which the Penguins extended to
overtime of the decisive fifth game
- the Islanders have been unbeaten,
while wearing their blue road unifor·
Illii .

They 've wOn six consecutive

games away from home and, if the
Ca nucks don't end that streak Sun·
day night , Vancouve r can kiss the
Stanley Cup goodbye.
It will belong to the Islanders for
the third straight year. making them
the first U.S.-based NHL team to
capture three Cups in a row .
.
The Islanders' ability to be uplif·
ted by enemy crowds - and their
ski ll at quieting down those fans helped them to three victories at the
Garden in the ir qua rterf ina I se ri"'
with the Rangers.
It also brought two victories in
Quebec in the semifinals, which New
York swept. And a 3-0 ve rdict here

Thursday night continued that
trend, as the Isles moved to the
verge of another four-game sweep. -~
"I think we were kind of thriving
on the fan interest," said John
Tonelli, one of 19 Islanders, including goalie Bill Smith, who
olayed perfect hockey in Game 3.
;,It's great for Vancouver; that's the
way it should be. However, we've
had a lot of experience with this kind
of thing . The first year we won the
Cup (!980), going into Boston the ·
faru; were very intimidating. And we
won all three games we played up
there.
.
" Yea r after year we've got used to
it. "

By JOHN NELSON
AP Sports Writer
Call it a grand-slam single - an
over-th&lt;&gt;-wall, bases-clearing, gamewinning boo boo. Lee Lacy of the Pit·
tsburgh Pirates would call it a
mistake of grand-slam proportions.
In the eighth inning of Pit·
tsburgh's game against Cincinnati
Friday night, Lacy came to the plate
with the bases loaded, no one out and
jlle Pirates trailing by a score of 7~ .
:;rze · blasted a pitch from Reds
;~iever Tom Hwne over the wall at
Rivers Stadiwn, then ac•cidentally passed teammate Omar
.,Moreno between first and second.
: Home plate wnpire Ed Montague
;called Lacy out, and he was credited
with a single and three RBI, giving
:Pittsburgh an fl..7 victory.
· · "It was a very unfortunate
'rrustake,
'
but thank goodness we
:Won," Lacy said. "You rarely see
:that. I hope it doesn't happen

fliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

·:A!ree

Why I can give you real value
In homeowners Insurance.

__ ,..
•

CARROLL SCORES - A happ)' Bill Carroll of thl'

N lH SI!ll ' l" tliHI

! .t"il :'

Jld ( IPII,il

.l,wk

llt "-lt· &lt;rdl!l l

Cll iurnllt!.'l ·1-l
~U I.\ JJJt·r . 4-2 . t'tl!t'rt ·d \IJt ·

llti t

wtlh ; 1 nn-h tlkt , IHtl h;td tlln tt kr· rttlp
b_\ ; t t t't~dttff "' n ~ It IH ldt iJ_, \\',, , 111
Han ·t T wo rrtnr ,. t 'IJ ppt•t .-.uu:l r·:-. 111
thr · tll/l t ll z. n nt · IJ_, l&gt;. utn _\ Sd un tlt
~nd &lt;~ run-'''' r ll t! :-.;tfl'l, h' Ott -..
Ntxon. dro\ ,. .\'t li .' llll'r front \ht ·
lllttUJH] Jlryn ku ptkht ·d lht · la :-- t h\''
ll'l lllll ~'~ \tlt'[ll " l i lll ~ " l"l "l lll d ~i-1\ I '

('lwr it·s \tlll !'l;rlt-d l\\tl

fn·-.,{ nff

\tt-., t ' l

bcwk - l t ~h;H

.11111

duulrk:-.

k

S lll lld l " ii lld

lUll ." rn U tt'

l.t "l\1 :--..

Sh.llll t '

4-J.

~~~

l hi L' il."

1+1l

('r;11
diHI

.t

Sl ll : ' lt· h ~ K i ll

.

I \'.r : I"!
Tlw Chatlll'&lt; ull lt' I t wu run . . 1 &lt;-Hilt '
m ttw :- . lxl\1 Hil &lt;Ill t ' l"l"lll by f1r -..: t
l.&gt;o.'it ' llldll :\ll;rr .., IJ;Ii l Hr &lt;lll\ &lt;tlld ;r 1H' '""

run htJI IIIT ln ,\n . t' ltt ! .oCr;nrdt· , !r r:--.
six th

I

dwH..' hcd around MtkL• Hrtr grove's

single had loaded the bases.
With two outs in the second . Tim
Folt singled and scored on Bob
Boone's doubl e to give the Angels a
2·1 lead, wht ch Cleveland erased in
the third on singles by Dilone, Andre
Thornton and McBride.
Ca lifornia struck again with twu

lll ~ ht.

Kt so n, 2tn trouble wtth two out in thl'
.'it'\Til \11 wlll'n ht• wolkl'd Jerry Dylr

0.

L! H\

1t nsk1 curd \1i 1~ ul' l Ollont&gt; doublt•d

hun to thtn!. Hut

Oou ~

Co rbt'tt , who

!tad thret· s~t\"t' S wtt h Mtnnesota
lw fort• bl'tllg tradt·d to llw Angcb

th 1s Wt'l'k , got Toby Harrah
for till' thtn.luut.
Curlwtt went on to l'(lrll ht s ftrs l

t·a rlt er
1111

&lt;1 1~ roumkr

-.; 1\ , .

for till' An gel s.

Duwntn g led off the hull om of the
f1r ~ l wtlh et smgh· off Lar ry So rl' n.'it'll . J-2. and. afte r ct d va nnng to
~ ··t · urul

on a sac riftl'e bunt by Hod
l'a rrw. Sl'\ lrt'd on Re gg tL' Jackson's
str ll..: ll' to til' tht• ~a nw 1-1.
C"lt•\"t•l;ind grablwd &lt;:1 1-o lt.:ad tn tile

top of lht' ftr st on a .'i(l(Tifin• fly by
Bakt • Md3nde after two walks sa n-

I

Sports briefs ...
TENNIS

H AMHUHC .
.l tlltlll_\

W I'~ \ (; , • nn;rn~

C HJt ll u! ·,

rh ·faullt·tl
In ll\llt"r

"'!it'll.

dt · f t al t· d

Tttl ll.t .'&gt;

of d plfl~ tlf .'&gt; t'l"II'S lwl\lt "t'Jl lilt ' B1 urn s &lt;llld tht • Qtwbt•t ·
\••tdlqllt'."-o durtrl l' wludt O'H ,·II IY
-. tt l! ! k 1 d· ·1 t "I' And_
\ \&lt;Ill HI'! It 'IIH IIIII·.
.'-ot "\ t'll\h l 'iiiiH '

1AP t
wrt hdrt ·\\ f t t• lf l
lht · $250,000 Ct ·nn;u t Otwn. t ~·rn·
pl ;unrm· of" ft t n\ 111Jllt"~
t "tliH lor -. \\rl.'&gt; l rad n l.
'\ 11 d1 ·-.
r.ornt ·Jt•f h u; td &lt;ll n-s 1rtt ht · lrr -. : t ... t·t
of tilt' II" qu;~rkl flr l;r l 111 ;rk lr wllt·rt lit ·

·_

Ldt

ftt·ldr•r Bnan Downlllg had th rel' htl'i
and scon·d a parr uf runs tu lead the
('allfornta Angl'ls to a 5-2 vtd ory
on· r tht· Clt•\'l'la rHJ Jntltan:-. Fn da y
Callforn ra s t&lt;-~rtl'r BrtH't'

t' li

personal
service wh en
you need il.

Comprehensive Coverage
A ll th e protection you" ll
probably ever need for your
ho m e and contents.

Austin 2...fi . 7-5. i -5.

r;oi.r

FOHT WOHTH . T' ''" &lt;AI' t -

dy No rth . Pal&lt;- shol68 and Nnrth had
69.
ATLANTA &lt;AP t - Jultt· Stangt·r
Pyn&lt; ' and K&lt; ·llr Fwks eac h ftn ·d 4U~tkr- rar 68s. to sh;.rn· tlw firsl
round lea d 111 thl' $150.000 Lady
Micht·l ob Tourn ii ntt·nt .
· Kath r Whitw11rth , Mvra Vatr
Hoose ~nd Sandra Post we~l' ltt·d for
sel'lllld at 69.
HOCKEY
· VANCOUVER, Britixh Colwnbia
:·IAP 1 - NHL President John Ziegler
· ~nnouncct.J the suspension of Boston
: Bruins forward Terry O'Reilly for
· · an indl'fini te period.
Thl' aetion was It-vied for
: O'Reilly's failure to appear at a
: disciplinary hearing May 7 in Mon. ire a I.
· · The hearing had been scheduled
: by NHL Executive Vice President
: • Brian O'Neill as a result of an in··- :~ cident that occurred April 25 in the

R75365R

•

~

I

n•n .....

A

For a limited time only-May
3 to July 4-get a super deal
on a superFOx.
Buy a superFOx Remote or
a SuperFOx VIxen, and Fox
will give you 525 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.

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Av e.
Gallipolis. Oh .
Phon~ 446·4290
Home 446-4518

Malone wins
another title

Bob'sUpper
Electronics
Route 7

DEFIANCE, Ohio I API
Designall•d hitter Greg Arney
stroked three hits, including a tworun homl4 run in the fourth for thl'
gn--ahead runs. as Malone defeated
Mt.Vernon Naza rene !1-3m the NAJA
Distnd 22 fina ls Friday .
It was the seventh straight district
!tile and lOth in the last II yea rs for
Malone, 2(}.14-2. Malolll' now ad·
vances to the NAIA area playoffs
next week 111 Illinois against an opponent still to be determmed.
Lcft·hander Craig Wnght pi cked
up thl' victory with six innings of
ont-hit base ball, striking out thrL~'
and wa lking .six .

Sta le Farm Fire and Casualty Com pany Home Offict:: Bloomingto n, Illinois

Gallipolis, Ohio

NOW AMERICA'S
LOWEST PRICED
FRONT·WHEEL· DRIVE
&amp;·PASSENGER CAR
COMES WITH
THREE 5-YEAR/50,000
GUARANTEES:

$6345**

$49!!hplu5

Pdhh·l. Nnrm l .mult·rmi lt. Gl• org l! Zusp&lt;Hl, Jt•rry Spradlin g, Jim Po\\ t•ll

and Sl'lllt Litl'hfil'id. I Phot11 by Tim Dar is. I

.------------------------===============:::::::::::::::::::::::

Your Authorized
Goodyear Dealer!

Cubs 6, Astros 3

Chicago scored five of il' runs in
the sixth inning - on doubles by
Bump Will s, Bill Buckner and Gary
Woods and a triple by Larry Bowa to hand Houston its fifth loss in seven
).!ames.

Th&lt;· outburst broke up a " 'oreil'ss
pitching duel between Dickie Noles
of the Cubs and Housto n's Bob Knepper. Houston came baek with a run
in the bottom of the sixth and two
more in the seventh, one on Danny
Heep's first major league horner.
In the American League, Detr~it
downed Minnesota 4-2 in 11 innin ~s.

Texas edged Toronto 4·3 in 11 tn·
nings, Milwaukee shaded Cht cago 21, Baltimore clobbered Seattlt• 11-4,
Ca lifornia beat Cleveland 5-2 and
Nl'w York defeated Oakland 7-4 .

Today's
Best Bet?

$9988
TRACKER A·T

Size 9R · 1 5 .
tu be l ess .
(Lo ad
Range 81 Plus $3 .96
FET .

10-1 5 , OWL
tub e less .
(Load
Range Bl Plus $4 .30
FET .

RELIANT K 2-DOOR COUPE

$833 LESS THAN GRANADA 2-DOOR" •

S1 .90"federal
Excise Tax

41
EST. HWY.

New at Sears. E l ectronic Compu ter Wheel Balancing.
• Sm oo ther rtd e • Reduced front end wear • Longer
ttr e ltf e. Protect your se lf &amp; your car . We offer this on
all new tn stall ed Sea rs tires . We can balance any tires
on your car fo r on ly $4.50 per tire . Ca lf for appointment
- 446 2770 .

EPA EST. MPGt

• GUARANTEE #1 : 5 YEAR/50,000 MILES ENGINE AND POWER TRAIN PROTECTION:
Limited warranty covers engine block, transmission case and every single part inside
them ... in both front and rear-wheel-drive cars. Protects you against unexpected repair
expense . A $25 deductible may be required .

$10TO
$15 OFF

o GUARANTEE #3: 5 YEARS OR 50,000 MILES OF FREE SCHEDULED MAIN·
TENANCE: Includes oil change, oil filter, air fHter and spark plug replacement, valve
lash and drive belt adjustment. All !he Scheduled Maintenance recommended by your
owner's manual for 5 years or 50,000 miles is done witliout charge.

DieHard
Batteries

R4301R

YOU GET CHRYSLER'S 5150 PROTECTION ON AU OUR AMERICAN BUILT CARS.

DieHards · for auto .
light 'truck . RV/ ma rine. utility. motorcycle, commercial.

C.+S, CERTIFICATES
Take.a tip from us! In this
day and age, it pays to be
smart with your money!
When you deposit your cash
in one of our savings certificates, , it'll be the best
move you ever made! Just
watch your dough multiply! Stop in ... get the facts! ·

Most rn.rchandllf ~•llllbfe •
for pldc -up within a lew dii)'S

·1searsl

,.

'

.,
•

cars

Prices are catalog prices • Now In our "" R·· CU1Iog
Supplemmt • Shlpplng.lnsull•tlon extr• • Ask •bout Se•r1
Credit Plans

Bank Q

The Commerc:lal i. ·Savings Bank . "

,silver Bridge

Plaza

Ph. 446-2770
0

"ALWAYS QN YOUR SIDE"

SEARS, ROEiuc;K AND C ·

.'

•5888
88
•51
RIB HI-MILER

o GUARANTEE #2: 5 YEARS OR 50,000 MILES OF. OUTER BODY RUST-THROUGH
PROTECTION: Limited warranty covers repair and/or replacement costs for rust·
through ol any part of the outside body of your car.

p

t:

State Farm
way.

Find out how much you may save. Call:

outs 111 the fifth when Dnwninl!.

doubled and scored on a single by
Grich. Thl' Angels added a run 111 the
stxth on Fred Lyn n's RBI single and
a run tn th e eighth on Foli 's squeeze
bunt stngle.

Ll·nntt· Clt' ltH ·n ls baltlt·tl s\nrltll l-2

Opt•nt ·hcunprons Jt· r T~ · Palt ' an d An -

That's homeowners
insurance the ,----..
lloiiUIAioiCI

Two steel belts. two
r adtal co rd body
pltes Ex tra-w tde St&gt; ·
rtb tr ead w tth ltve
deep voids

. J.,Jtn

wrnrb fur Cl l·undr·t -par fl9 an d &lt;t 1s hol lt·e:ul m 1'1" J;wk Nrl'klaus ;.rnd
Tt1111 K tlt• at tlw :l6-lwlt· nwrk of t lw
$.350,000 Culonral Natron a! fm ·,t;drun
Gulf Tournarnt ·nt.
Cknwnt.-;, 25. ptblt·tl ;.r 5-wH it ·r-pal
135 tota l. Lurk111 ~: 2 shots bat"k ;t\ :~­
und l' r-par 137 \\t'f"t' fornw r U.S.

automatically.

cet $25 fOr your old
radardetectorvwhen
you buy a superFOx.

Phil Niekro worked eight innings
for Atlanta. limiting St. Louis to five
hits before he was 'relieved by Gene
Ga rber, 4-1.
Dodgers 4, Mets I
Fernando Valenzuela scattered
seven hits, and Dusty Baker
homered to help the Dodge rs break a
four-game losing streak, while ending a four-game New York winning
skein.
Valenzuela struck out six and
walked just one before 50,360, the
largest crowd at Shea Stadium smre
July 5, 1980.
Baker's homer in the sixth gave
Los Angeles a 2~ lead, and the
Dodgers scored twice more in the
eighth on RBI singles by Ron Cey
and Sil've Yeager.

Dawson, Tom Johnson. Jeff Russell and Phillip Stewart; Sl'rond row. Bob

Dulin, managt•r, Tim Jnhnsn11, Rndnt'Y Wca vt•r. Steve Lyons, Gn·g
Cullins. Brad l.;.rvm•. Darn·n Gilla nd . Chris Hash anrl Cua&lt;·h Gurdon Spt·nn·r; third ru\\ , .Nah' Davis. Dnnnit• VanMt'lt•r, Hunnie Bn.1dlt·y. Mikt•

RoadHandler
radials

I n a l llt' ll "s ft r ~ t - ro und '&gt; II IJ'It· . . nr; r\ dd t ·,tll'l l

increases . yo ur
protec tion can
increase, too ,

. · Around the rest of the National
.League, it was Philadelphia 2, San
·Francisco 0; Montreal 8, San Diego
'7; Atlanta 2, St.Louis\ ; Los Angeles
4, New York I, and Chicago 6,
Houston3.
Phils 2, Giants 0
Steve Carlton tossed "'tw&lt;&gt;-hitter,
pitching 7 2·3 innings of n&lt;&gt;-hit ball, to
hurl th€ Phillies to their fifth
straight victory and lith in their
past 12 games.
Carlton struck out eight and
walked just one. He now has a
leagu&lt;&gt;-leading 63 strikeouts. ·
Carlton, 4-5, lost the bid for his first no-hitter with one out in the eighth
when Giants rookie catcher Bob
Brenly singled. Carlton a lso yielded
a single to Johnnie LeMaster.
Consecutive doubles by Mike Schmidt and Gary Matthews produced a
second-inning Philadelphia run, and
. the Phils scored again in the third on
Bo Diaz' sacrifice fly .
Expos 8, Padres 7
Andre Dawson hit a two-run
single, and Montreal scored three
unearned ruru; in the eighth inning to
beat San Diego. Padres third
baseman Luis Salazar allowed the
leadoff man in the eighth, Tim
Wallach, to reach second when he
:fielded his grounder and threw tt into the Expos dugout.
A fl y ball advanced Wallach to

1-1.

1982 WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS- Slnown above are team mem·
bers of the 1982 Wahama White Falron Ba·seball Tl'ant. Pirturcd, first
row ll'ft to right, are John Rollins, Alan Pl:ants, Robert Edwards, Matt

OFF

"/.t ' Tuurrwrnt •rrl .
M&lt;r .\t ·r

As the value
of your home

th ere to give

1/2

Ok crr nutu I n 11111 \ "t• 1111&lt; ' lilt· \\ Ollh ' l\ 's
s t·nufnla l round uf tl~t · $200,1100 Cun-

Sarrd~

affordable.
And I'll be

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

(; t "llt " Vl&lt;t~t ·l
S111 1d
ol
C'!t •dh i:-&gt; \O\ .tkl i l l-4 i. fi-:1. li-:L Sp;lltl · ....
.J ost· Hrl.' ut ·r;r-. lt!ppt ·d t•f ;\l al.' Wil dllth-r nf S\\t 'dt 'll li-2 . t i ·: ~ .. llhll)t '\to r McNcu nar;t llf J\l l.'&gt; lr;rll:t till \\ "I I t 'd Hu sll'1
Mnttr;nt t uf Hrll&lt;tll t 4-li.li-4. 7-':J.
L UC ANO. SWitlt ·rlarrd 1 AP 1
Chn s E \ t·rl Ll11.\d ddt •, tll'll lk l1 ttd
Suktl \ ·;.r 11f CJt •t·lru.-.1 &lt;•\ dk til li--L ti-l l u
tlw ~ ~ · rnrf t tla b t•f ti H' $Hltl .OOO SHt.""
Wonwn 's Opt ·nlourn ;u rlt' n \.
KOBE . .J ap.n l 's\l'r
!';un
Shrn t'r sn ll"t'd cr 6-0. fi·2 \ rl'lo r _\ ll\"t•r
JHp;rn" s jmHPr dl&lt;lllij)liJII Kurn rku

t·h,

Inflation
Coverage

you prompt.

huwd on ; t folll -lll tlt ·r F n da _\ 111 :' 111
a :- \ ht · ( 'h,tt'l t·, lnn (' lt, Hli t• , d t' h ·;tlt ·d
J n\t•r

homeowners
insurance
more

Angels defeat Indians, 5-2

Jl t~nku t'O III -

/ ..: liT.\

I know how
to make your

pfwtn l.

ANA HEIM . Caltf. &lt;API I'OLUMB US. Uil to " \l' t

,again."

Neighbor
Service

lll'riod of NHL Stanley Cup playoff game recently at
thl' Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, N. Y. lAP Laser·

Nt·" Yurk b landt&gt;rs rt';.H·ts as hi s tt·ammah's rush to
t•m hran• him a ft n ht· S('Hrt'd for tht· lslt·s in tht• first

Charleston tops
Columbus, 4-1

Good

third, and one out later, Terry Fran·
cona singled home Wallach. A single
and a walk loaded the bases before
Dawson drilled his game-winning
hit.
The loss was the first for the
Padres in the eight games sta rted
this season by rookie Tim Lollar,
although he did not fi gure in the
decision.
Braves 2, Cards I
Bill Pocoroba belted his first
home run s ince 1980, a solo shot with
two out in the bottom of tht• ninth inning to boost Atlanta over St. Louis.
The Braves also scored their fi rst
run on a homer by Rafael Ramirez
in the seventh inning.
Keith Hernandez's sacrifice fly in
the top of the ninth had tied the score

25 Court. Street
,'/

•'·

.Silver Bl'id98 Plaza

Member FDIC
Sp~ing Valley

Size
TT, 6 -ply .
$3.14 FET.

Size
750 16

Ply
load
Rating Ranga
8ply

750 16

8ply

875 16.5

8 ply

950 . 16.5

8 ply

Type

&amp;

Rib Hi·Miler Nyl. TT

8

750R·I6

0

31 .11 .5015

8

PRICE
68 .88

No trade
needed

79 .88

3.54
3.9 7

83.88

178

89 .88

4.21

10 788

4.28

Wrangler Radial Rib
103.88
8l Tbls.
Wrangler R/T AWL PF 104.88
Tbls .

3.7 1

Work Horse Traction
Sure Grip
Hi·Miler WT Nyl.
Tbls.

lOR 15

SALE

Hi-Miler Wide Tread
WT Nyl. Tbls.
Wrangler Radial OWl
Tbls.

4.49

426 VIAND ST.
PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

�Page--C-8

I

By 11k AII»&gt;Cbllnt Prn1
AMERICAN i.bGUE
Eallrrn Div ..kNI
w l
Pc-t. GB
22 11
.667 -

&amp;:.tun
O. ·trw l
Mt lv. a uko ·o
No·w York
C'l o·1 d anJ

12
14

I~

16
17
18

613
-~

43&lt;

.,,

. 4~2

\3 19
WrMkm Olvlllllfl

406

20 11
22 IJ
18 IJ

6&lt;5
629

C'hwHcu
C'cr l rfurm t~
Ka n~ ~ (r l\

Ot~k l1:1 nd

19
17
14
13

&amp; ltunort·
1• ••••nl u

·

18
15

St ·a lt l• ·

' "

9' 7
11' 1

Mli w;,wk n · 2. Chwa 1 u I
Ru:;l un 0:1! K11n:wt .~ l' tl} , pp&lt;.l . ra1r1
!i, Ck \ diUhl 2

I altfunltil

('i~· w

\'urk 7, Ouk land 4
· l tln ~ u \' ll. St·HII h 4

Stmd11y's GMmr10
· Mmn• ·sHta et l DdttJt\
· Mll wa uk t·• .tl C"hu ih ' "
Ka n.~~

: H":-.\un al

l' tl l

f , r, nl u at To·Jta,,
, I ·,,., d a uJ .t l Ca hfou rw t
• No v. Y ork dl Oak land
at

Hd !l !l t ut r o

St&gt;a t! l t•

Duwnm~o~ . Uthfom1.11, 39: Ziak . St ·~ tt l r . 39.
OOUBI.ES : Ott!, K~tnsa s
Ctty. 13:
Whth'. Ktt~ C1t~· , 10; Mo ·RtU', KHnSI:Is

111 1

BASEBAll.
Amrrk'DD Leai(Ur

OAKLAND
ATHLETICS - Tnult·d
Hull
s hortstop, to · Uw
Mrlwaukt•t•
Bn•wtTS fur Johnny En•ns, f1r !It bl:lst··
ll)&lt;ln , und Mrkc Wam ·n, prldwr .
TEXAS
RANGERS- Piun•d
Mwk•·)
l'lt'l'llllu.

Rl \ t•rs. uulfiddt•r. on lht• diSI:Iblt•d lt:;t rl'l flldt'lt l ,. 1u M11 y 9.
N•tlonall..to•lf'&amp;u•
PHILADELPHIA
PHILI.I IES - An ·
nuunt·,·d tlw s u.! nrn ~ uf Rowl1:1nt:l Offll't' ,
uutfll'ldn . lu &lt;1 t·untntd wrth Oklaht.)!flil
Crt\ of ttw Amt•neun Al(.'ttll.'lalw•n. Rt·msU.il'd
t.~.·n
Ml:ltll!lzt·k.
thrnl
lbti.'!t·roon,
fnun tlw 2 1.tJI:I~ disrtblt'd lrst and upllllnt.'ll
hur t lu Okluhmn&lt;r City

.

.

PITCHING 14 O. •t·rsr uns 1 Ho~· t . Chr ·
&lt;'Ht'U, 7.0 . 1.000. 1.43: Bt•an l, CRt kla nd . W ,
I 000 . 1.56 : Guu.Jry. N t · ~· Yurk . &gt; I. .IIJl,
J .OO : l.ahn . Calrfumm. &gt;1. .833 . I 74:
&amp;rkt·r . Clt·1··lltnd, -t.l . 1100, 2.25 : Burns.
Chwil t.:ll. +1 , .800. 2.211 . Ha lllt') . Bvs t un . l1. 750. 3.62 : B.SL!inh·.' · Bostun. 3-1. 750.
.1 Ul . Tullnr. Br~'il ll ll , 3- 1. 750 . 3.49 . S.. u· ·tt •f. Dt•trort . 3-1. .7~ . I 84 : M o r ~all . Nt•'Ao
Yurk . .1-1 . 7~ . 3.03 : Rt•nku. Ce~ J r f ornrH . .l1 750 . 2.12: Gura. Kan~'i.H ' Cr l\ . 3-1. .750,
5 00
(I Ja ,·k.-.un . KHIL'!a.~ Cr\1 : J-1. 75(1,
4 82
J Jont ·s . Ortklund . 3-l .· 750 . 5.81 :
V~JntkB, - r L. St·ult lt·. 3·1. 750 . ~ a5 . c .autJ111. &amp; •1:11\ lt·, 3-1. 7fil . 2 00 : DHt 'Alll , To ·xa.' .
.l-1. 750 , 1.71.
STHIKF:OUTS F &amp;nor."t•·•. S. ·ot tt lo·. 49.
Gu ulr ~· . Nt''A Yurk . 42: F:rko ·r 'l t·l . Bu.&lt;ilun .
41.

i'o·r r ) . St•crtl lo·. 36 .

l5

ll\•nm . fl o·1 t'iand. l5

Bar ko·r . ·('),

I •

BASKETBALL
NaliuNIIBuUtb.ll A•awd11tlu.a
NEW
YORK
KNJCKS- Announo ·uJ
Llw
rd rn ·mt·nt uf Ro•U Holzman. ht·l:ltl t'UCII'h ,

IIHIIII 'tl hun a ,·un-.u!Wnt.

;wd

F00111ALL

Natim111l FnullliiiiiiJII.Ut'

ATLANTA

St&lt;t t'l'\
&amp;dt·y . 'A'Ith· rt·t 't'll't'l', ant.l Rc~l-(lt ' Bruwri,
runnrn l-( brH'k

lillltl.

WAS HINGTO N

York
M&lt;•l ttro·a l

HOCKEY
Nwtimwl HIK'kry ~at(UI'
Pd.

t;B

21

13

618

17

I~

531
515
500

17
I~

16
15

~t t h bUJ ' h

JJ

17

\)11• '" ..

I~

19

-

.,
.,.

"'' n t r mOr\i ~ itm

At!,ont.ct

22
16
17

II
15
li

S.t l l

15

( ',rr. mn.c~l •
" " u.' l" n

H
H

19
18
20

San Or o·~u
IA I,, t\l ll t'lt•,
Fr &lt;tll l'l~ n o

667
)1 6
:iOO

5
:, : '

w

7'.-

tl8

7' -,

~

8'

12

•
Friday'~ c;wmn
, \t .. ntr •·HI 8. S&lt;r n Orq .: u 7
, P htl&lt;ttld plll a 2. S&lt;t n F• il llt't" ''' 0
· f&gt; •tbbu r l h 8. {'tn&lt;tnllltl l 7

• Ati.J nlil 2. Sl
' l .u~

I

·1w

l.uur.-. I
Yurk I

la5 at lltll~l
J Thon 1p:&gt;.1111,
P1n ... bu r ~ h. 381 : Muro ·l1:1 rrtl . { 'hu·a1' '· 366
IUtrr~o · .-. . Monl l'l'itl,
362. Bm lur . N, ..,., York.
.l49 : R Jt~ll':-.. Sa n Ort · ~ u . lJO
llUNS
I..Suuth. St.l .uu rlo, 30 . M u rph~
Al liillloi . 29 : R Juno·.-.. San Owe". 27 : Hot ·
rh ·t . All&lt;rnUI . 24. Ktlli.' IIIH II . N o · ~ Yurk. 23
J
T h ,, rr 1 p s" n .
Prtl., hll! 1'11 .
Z.l .
K llo l llllll t lt ·l .
• 1

I t ·~

Sundlly 's GMml'!i
Oit 'L' " al Montto ·lli
&lt;rl Nt·'A' York
, .'i&lt;~ n Ft .mn."·" a\ Phr!;tdt·iphl. t
· I 'm• rnnalr 111 Ptlbburi!IJ
• Sl L"u'·' 111 Allan t.t
: ( 'hroil ! ' ll o1 l H••U.'&gt; It&gt;ll

Murph~ .

;l5J .

Mt ·llrtdt•,

( 'l o · ~,, and .

388 : Surulbo ·t r: .
F Mur r il .l . llarlri1H11'1' :150

HUNS

T, ..
~1 2

T• · KH ~ .

II Ho·llllt'rsun. Oiik i&lt;HHI. 30

Ha1 ·
f ,th . C' lt-1 .-i;Hld, 29 . Thor ntun . Cit ' • l11nd .
!fi
Dt~uo ·r .
Billltllltll l', 24. Wi!lhct n. Ka n'-·' ·' l 'tll . 14 . Hrbo.·k. M 1nno.·:-" U. . 24
• H HI . Thu111t"n. Ch•\da rrd . 33 : Md l.w.
l\. u r-.a .. l 'tl.l . 11. OL'l •l' h·. Mt i'A HUk• • . 26 .
lh t... ·k. Mmll• '"'la. 26 . BtHit•r. ( 'a lrJ,.,ntH .
24. l.un rr sk 1. C'hwot c" 24. 0 1.. . K .m~ .'
I rh . H

t·itrs ll;ul;t h. &lt; · ~ . -~ . "'"'1. 4~ ~ - , . , 1 ... ·r.
Md ,.otuk· -• .
+1.
l .o·F I.,,·, ,
C'ht, '" "
~1.
'h l • ·k Mn\ilt '' "Ul . ~0 : C.1I:N·It . Dl'l1111l . 39

M&lt;l,l

7

&lt;"OHTI.A NI&gt;- B" lr

W&lt;tll ott't·.
Sullt.l\'u it.l

An·

Atl&lt;~ntCI .

34 .

K u r ~ 11ran

NHL results
N•tlunal HoC'kry Lrwi(IW
Stanit'y Cup Fhs.h1
Bnlt of Sfovt'n
Thunday, Maly ll
NY
b ltull.irno 3. Vl:l!'lt'OU I t·r
Yur k wall.-. wru ·.-. J..O .
Sunday. Mwy Ui
N Y. blandl'r.' at VHrthlU I I'I

Atlantot .

II

l 'hu '' "'" ·
a B OtHI , Ph itiHid ph ill 8
H• ·lldt t• k. St. l.uur., , 8
SHJJ £N BASE!-\
M.. r, ·tm. l 'l ll., hur :· h.
21.
l.l1 T nw1
Phtla•h-ltlhr;t . ;!D ,
1. :\11 ulh.
St I ~ &gt;UI.,, 18: Wl l.'&gt; llll , Nt ''A y ,,k _ 14 . lt .JIIl·
, -~ . Muntr &lt;'ii&lt;. 12
I'ITClUNC
14
0. ·· ISIIlt\,, 1
f ,," h,
St.I.Huts . 4-fl.
IIKWI
t56
J,.,ll,ll . SHu
Dlt'l'tl . HI. 1.000 . 2 fi 7: Sutlull , Huu.' t"n. ).
I. 8JJ . l .66 : Gt~rb · t . Al Lt~l lit. H
600.

Rt·rl·nyL fmt rllnit lr. ~- 1
800 . 2.15
Ptlbbl.l n h. :1-1. 750 . 4 :MI . 1--til tr .
St IA&gt;tll.'\. ~ 1. 750. I 64 . Shu .... . S.t lt !Jh t ' H.
:\..J . 7:,0, 0.17
I
STHIKEOUTS
l 'a r\l t•ll
Ph t&lt;Htk •plua
6.'1
SHill, nrlt'lllfl&lt;ll l. ~7
HilL 1'1,, , Mutt·
\l •·ar , 43 . l~ 1 l li11'. S.t n Dlt' · ' '- 41
V ~Jwll ·
t u t'\;1. /~1:-. An , •·1o·s. 40

NBA results
Nllti"'l&amp;IB~IIIr.t'tball

AtltiiJ('iMilnn

('ON FERENCE F'INA[l;

S.0111 nl Stou•n
f..MIIIt'm Confrrl'nn
Wrdllt'1ldlly's G~&amp;mr
Ph rl oJd• ·lplncr 121 . B&lt;\~\nn 113. .-.t·ru ,

1·1

H.. ,r..tr

1 21.

H"1"" ·

a t Ph rl ath-[phll:l
Wl'tilrm Cmdrrl'nt ·•·

Attl.' t lt•.-.

Arh'• ·u·.,

wad ~

118. S&lt;tn Anl ulllu
~l' l lt ' ~

Tut·.-.du~· ·s
S.111
• ' \ , 11

Anlt •nu • ,tl 1.••:-.

COLUMBUS. Oh10 IAPI - Clark
Kello~g. the OhiO State forward who
leu the Big Ten in rebounding the
past two seasons, says his decision
Jo pass up his senior year is no
rdlediun on the basketball
philosophy of Coach Eldon Miller.
It was no st&gt;cret that Kt•llo ~g . who
H\TJ'a getl17.3 points and II rebounds
~n confert'nl't' ~arnt•s last season, did
hot always s~t· t'ye-llH'Yt' with
-Mill.-r's deliberate. controlled approal'h to tht• j.!ame.
Bul in announcing Friday he hatl
tledaretl his eligibility for the
National Basketball Association
draft. Kt' liO~J-! stn•ssed ht&gt; was nnt
. leavin~ the Buckeyes early becaust·
o~f any tlifferent'l' w1th the coach.
"I respl't't him as a coach and i-.IS ct
human bt• in ~ .'' K~llo~g said of
. M1lkr. whose team posted a 21-10
n •rord last st•ason and madt• tiw
NCAA tuurnament.
" It has no reflel'l wn un the ·unhapJ1Lill'ss and frustratll)n' that I wa~

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
Week of May 16, 1982
DATE -

GYMNASIUM

May 16 l

.ol

POOL .
p.m ./Open Rec r C'.=tf •on
I 4 p.m ./Open Swim
8-10 p .m ./Open RC' cr eat ion
8 10 p.m ./Open Swim
May 176-Bp.m ./ 101 cla ss
8 10 p.m ./Open Recreation
8· 10 p.m ./Open Swim
May 18 8· 10 p .m ./Open RecrC'ation
8·10 p.m ./Open Swim
May 198· 10p .m ./OpenRecreation
8· 10 p .m ./Open Swim
May10
12 :30p.m ./ RioEiementary
8-10 p.m ./Open Recreation
8·10 p.m ./Open Swim
. May 21 Closed
9 a.m . 12 noon--- Vinton E Iem
All facilities in Lyne Center (G ym , PooL Weight Room and Handball
Court) will be closed to the public until classes r esume for summer term on
Tuesday . June 14. A new schedule will be pub li shed i\t that t ime.

lfll .

l A"

J.(J

Gamt·

Al lil' l t ·~

1111 ,

,j

111 '1 ' •

~

• 1
Kellogg Will turn ProfesSlona
supposed to be suffe r m ~ at Ohio
State. My decision m no way rdl erls
those differenees that Coaeh Millt•r
and I had ...
For his part, Millt-r said some of
Kl'llogg's remarks about the Ohio
State offense had been taken oul of
conlt•xl.
"Nobody ft-cls good aboullhe1r job
t'\WY day," Miller told reporll'rs
" And Clark's honest o·nough to It'l l
you ."
The &amp;-fool-7 Kellogg rhararlt•nzed
his decision as businesslike. based
on his desire to make professional
basketball his livelihox&gt;.l .
" I just really think it's m my besl
mterest tn make the tnon· now." lw
said. "I have rhoS&lt;•n professional
basketball as a goal of mint· . It jusl
happens that Iran achio·ve that goal
t·arlier.than sum~ pl·oph-."
Kdlo,l.! j.! joins an unusually larl'e
nurnber of underdassrnl'n dt•clann~
eligibility for the June 29 draft.
Although he had bo•t•n keeping track

lii'J

Suoct.v's Gwmr
Frkta)·'s f.e~mr

\ ~"'

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP)
- Twe&gt;-time All-American Ralph
Sampson, saying "it's what I really
want to do," for the third year in a
row turned down a chance to enter
the National Basketball Association
early and said Friday he will remain
at the University of Virginia for hls
senior season.
'I did a lot of soul-searching, but 1
have decided to stay for my fourth
year," the 7-foot-4 Sampson said. "It
got down to what 1 really wanted to
do. Would 1 be happy in going? 1
wanted to come back another year."
But Sampson, spurning a chance
multi-million-dollar
for
a
professional contract, admitted his
decision was "hard because of the
teams I had to deal with - LA, San
Diego - playing on the West Coast.
It was hard because that had a lot
more to do with it."
Sampson, the national player of
the year in 1981 and 1982, said, "I
finally sat down and looked at it this
mornin~ and I carne up with the answer that I wanted to stay in

" I don't really think you Jose it
(bargaining power) because gom_g
ba
into it any way you have to rgal~
to get how much money you want,
Sampson said.
Also, he said he felt very close to
his teammates, and he admitted the
fact Virginia has not won the NCAA
championship "was in my pros and
cons about it."
Sampson met with his teammates
at 4 p.m. and told them of his
decision .
"They were pleased, 1 think. I
Wl.th them for a little while

·and then let them know really, and
once I told them, they were
pleased." he said.
There had been earlier indications
Sampson would declare himself
eligible for the June 30 National
Basketball Association draft only if
it were certain he would be drafted
by the Los Angeles Lakers.
But the Lakers, who reportedly
had offered the San Diego Clippers
$6 million for the Clippers' firstround draft choice so they could be
sure to claim ~mpson, apparently
were W18ble to close the deal.

school."
Sampson, whose statements were
contained in a taped interview with
the University uf Virginia Sports Infonnation Department, said he was
not worried abo\!t the money aspects
of turning professional because he
felt he would get what he wanted
next year.

Boosters spring
fete set May 20 ·

0.

K m l rr ~rn .

N, ·"' y,,k . 12
J Thtu llfb tu t. l'1lb·
btJrc h. 10. Hurnt·r . Allanl&lt;l . 9: Mut t &lt;illld.

AMf.RICAN LEAG l.'E
•a:i ,;t • l.~t~ls l
liu!llll'l o

C lt- ~t · lcrnol.

' ·" ·'

ur.

bilso•bu ll t'Oill'h , l't'.'\llfWli
MISSOUHI - Nal nn! Bull
:-.t:-.lilnt haskt'lb.Y JI n)ilt h

30 . Mo.ordCinll. (1) 11'&lt;H.' II , 29
1 ThtlrtiJ isun
Pr thhur l.' h
2'J
H_Dnu
l ' hr lado lph1 &lt;1 .
34 . K.Ht'l ll&lt;ll\lli'l . Sl J.••U lS,
24 S.tkt ·r. ],.•:-. An ~ · · l t•.-. . 24
lilTS
M t~ t olcrnd .
l 'h rnu u. 4 ~ . Wt lsun.
No 'A
Yur k. U : L.S rutl h. Sl L" ll b , 43 .
H.-t rn• ·" · Munrn ·a l. 42: 0. ·~ 11-t . l '1n• llllta lt.

HOME HUNS -

Leaders
.~43 .

S.1\ .

fuJ -

COU.EGE

Yutk .

Mur pl r1 .

r&lt;•!llt •.
fl ,lllith,

21 .

O ' Ro · rll~ - ,

2J

URI
No,.

S ti ~&gt; UI .'.

T1 ·1r~

Huslun Brum:;, rndl'frrutd.l f 111 fiu l ' " ilj)(WHI at H Jtst'1pluUtry lwar rn ~

'AHrt.1.

DOU RI.F.S Park· ·•. P tl bhw , !1. 10 . 0 1•
· • 1. MuniH·a l. 9. 0 Srrnth . Sl l.uur.' . 9
(;il l'lk ' l . Hous t .. n. 9. Knn.: ht , ll uustun. 9
T K··mr• ·•h . San Dro ·cu. 9
THIPJ.F.S . Wtlson . Nn• Yt•lk . :1 Ht &gt;S t' ,
Pl rrirHI• ·:phra
:1:
Ht ·tr .
St .
I AIUI.'
J:
H Hmrun·t. All;m\.a . .1
{',lfl&lt; 't'JN rutt. Cm·
··mna\1 . :1 : O.·:slt'l, CmoIJlllllll , .1

An~l' il · ~

BATTING

N HL- Su.~ ~·mlo,J

NATIONAL Lt-: AGUt:

BAl,NI.

&lt;I .

Arr c o · l· · ~ t
Nt ·w
ill " 6. liuustun l

S.111

J. "~

REOSKI NS· - S1t: n•·d

Mrkt· ( 'unr"M ·Il . runtn

J.:ad.. rn Oh·i•iun
M-' L

N· · ~

PACKERS-N cm~t · t.l
D&lt;tn·
In
d Htr o.; o· o(

assrslcml

4U&lt;tlrty t't&gt;lllrul .
PHILADELPHIA
E AGLES - S•LIIt&gt; d
Mrko· Qull'k . 'A'Ilio· 1\'t 't't l t'l' , a1h.J J nn
Fnt1sdlt . ufl, ·rL'i ll o· Uwklo·.

NATIONAL LEA GUE
~ ~ I ~ ·UI '
t'l trla tl•·lphm

FALCONS - Sr ~ nt•d

I.RF:E N BAY
Hcr nrwr SJ)I 't'l&lt;l l

State/ ational

Sampson stays in school

Transactions

Crty . 10: 6 Trt,J Wrth 9
THIPLF...S: EvHnll. Boston, 3: Mt ·Br u.k .
Clt•\ I'IHnd. 3: lim-.Jun. lktrorl . 3: Up.~ I'IMw , Turoolo. 3: Ct1wr ns . St• ~tttlt · . 3.
HOME RUNS · Thornhlfl. n·whwt.l , 10:
Hrbo ·k. MmoestJLM . 10: Atk·nll'kt•, &amp; lbrr u ~rr , 9: Harr&lt;lh, Clt•\ t•hmd . 7: Or lrnt·,
Mrh~oe~ukro · ,
7; Downrn,•. Utlr ft wnra . · 7:
Murphy, Oitklcmt.l. 7.
STOlEN BASES
H.Ht ·rrt.lt ·rsnn . Oe~ k letnd. 35 : l.t&lt;Flun·, Cllr i'II CU. IJ : IJJ[WS ,
Oaklttrlll.
10:
Mulrlur .
MrlwMUk• ·•·.
8:
Wilthttn , Ke~rt'i&lt;I S C'tl )', 8: J Cruz. St•&lt;tltll'

'

514

II

t\1111111'.'\0lil

8'1

"''

17
21

417
321
!5
300
Fr itt.y\ Gi1mt'11
01'\rmt 4. M t nflt ·~t\.cl 2. I I 111/l iJh':.
To · )l;d .~ 4. Turunt u 3, II mr11 nc:.

Tnc:&lt;t.'

'

l

Scoreboard...

Majors

May 16, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport-G-allipolis, Ohio--Point Pleasant, W.Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

l

of some of the olho-r players. " I still
ft'l'l thai no matter what they do. I
t·an still J.!tl relatively hi gh 111 the
draft," Kt•!lugg said.
Ho· said it appeared then· was a
~ ood t·hance hl' woultl go anywl1l'n'
fro om fou rth to lOth in tho• first round .
and probably no lowt·r than 15th.
" ( realize I probably would imprm·t· w1th anntht'l' year of l'tlllnt·
baskl'lball. but 1 fpJ( I was read1y to
makt· the adjustml'nt. both on anti
off tht• court. to play in the NBA. · ·
Kellogg sa1d ht· tlt•o'ltled to tum pro
" about a wet·k ar o" and !old Miller
on Tuesday .
Miller said hl' didn't try to chang,•
K&lt;'llogg 's mintl. tellin~ him, "Do
what you feel you want to du. tlo
what you feel you should do."
Hl' predicted a bright NBA ful.un ·
for his star forward .
" Any team that doo.•sn't draft !'Iiiii
is aazy.'' the coach said . " The
n·asun that Clark KeiiOI-!1-! can 't 1niss
IS that whalt-ver adjuslmt•nt he has
to make to get the job done. he will
make."
Kellogg saitl he has had no personal contact with any NBA tea&lt;'Tis,
but heard the Dallas MaveriL·ks untl
Kansas City Kings have expresHt'll
interest in drafting him. He added
his hometown team, the lovvly
Cleveland Cavaliers. had shown "a
little interest."
Asketl if he had a prefereno:e,
Kellogg said. "It really doesn't m;atter. I'd like to be drafted by a teaom
that needs my talents and where I 'II
be able to contribute right away."

GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
Blue Devil Boosters Club will sponsor the annual spring sports banquet
Thursday, May 20, beginning at 6:30
p.m. on Memorial Field.
All spring sports athletes, coaches
and parents arc invited.
During the club's final meetin~ of
the current school year last week,
President Dave Tawney announced
the boosters will conduct two fundraisin~ projeL'ts this swruner, one,
the dunking machine at the Fourth
of July festivities with Gini Garber
and Tom Jones as chairpersons and.
two, John and Janie Milhoan will be
in charge of the Lemon-Aid stand at
the Ga llia County Junior Fair.
Anyone wishing to volunteer their
services may do so by contacting
T
J · La

;.a=wn~eyu~ra=me-=·n=-e._

1lE
GUAR
................

NOWAPPE
EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT

.

AT BRIAN'S STEAK HOUSE

"The Mary lucas Trio"

Falkland Islands Saturday. following a major spt•t•rh
by Prime Minister Margarl'! Thatr-he r in S&lt;•olland.
Friday t•vt•ning. I AP Last•rphoto ).

PREPARING FOR INVASION - The headlines of
Britain's national newspapers, spcculatl' on the
possibility of a British invasion of the Argentinian-held

8:30P.M. -11:30 P.M.

BRIAN'S STEAK HOUSE
Rt. 62 North

Phone 675-6276
"Reservations Opt1'onal"

Point Pleasant

•

Frenchtown Car Co. presents

The Cream of Pre-Owned
Late Model Automobiles

By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON 1API - A prosecutor attempting to
l'onvinre a jury of John W. Hinckley Jr.'s sanity has
su g~ e s ted that a defense psychiatnst was looking for
mental illness when he Pxamined Hinck ley after he
shot President Rea gan.
" You wt•rt' trying to find evidence thai Mr. Hinckley
was mt•ntally ill ' " Assistant U.S. Atlorney Roger M.
Adelman said Friday, jabbin ~ his fin J.! er at Dr. William
T. Carpenter Jr. during rapid-fin• cross-examination .
But Carpenter. lestifymg at Hinckley's trial. held lu
his diagnosis that the defendant was mentally ill wht•n
Ill' shot the president March 30. 1981 . and was unable lo
conform his conduct to the requirements of law .
Hinckley. who is accused of wounding Reagan and
three other men outside the Washington Hilton Holt-1 .
has acknowledged firing the shoL' but has pleaded innocent by reason of insanity.
The psychiatrist, who first saw Hinckley May 19.
den it•d that he approached the t•xamination with a
predisposition toward finding the defendant mentally
iII.
"The whole poinl of the evaluation is to detennmc
whether mental illness is present" anti then to fonn a
diagnos is. said the Uni versity of Maryland
psychiatrist.
Adelman asked Carp~nter whelht•r by showing tht•
assailant a diagnostic manual. he "presented Hinckley

1981 CHEVY CAPRI
•TILT
eAM·FM STEREO
•WIRE COVERS H0-40 SEAT
* 16,954 MILES
*POWER DECK L TOR ELEASE

•CRUISE
•AM·FMSTERO

with the upportumty tu lliagnost· hilllSt'lf.· ·
Carpenter said he shm\'l'd the 26-yea r-oltl tk fto nda nt
a psychiatn c manuCJ! !Jstmg syrnptums uf 11\t'lllal
illnesses to test whether lw then would manufadun·
sy1nptomo described in thr lex!.
Carpenter sa1d 1l t'&lt;:Hl bt· ;Jn tndt e&lt;:l lton of il lnt·ss 1f a
person '' is inclim•d to a cn.: pt tlw opportmutit•s l11
tk seribL· sytnptorns. ··
As Carpenter gan· lun)-! . ra mbling an s w ~ rs to
Adelman's questtons, U.S. Distr il'L Judgt· Barn ngton
D. PHrker finally slt-pp.-d 111 and brought laughter! rom
both tll'f.-ndant and jun .
" I want you to givt· an a nswer . but with tiw th.:lailed
explanCJlions you g1\·e. we'll bl· hl'rl' foreVl'r," the
judge sa1d.
On drn•ct examination from Hint ·klt'y 's chJl'f la wyer.
Vinct•nl J. Fuller . Carpenter SHi d Hinckley was so
lnl'ntall y ill wh~n he shot R e&lt;:~ g a n that in his mind " lht•
effect upon the presidt·nt and other v1 dims was tn ,·ial.
" In his mental state lhl'y were bit playt·rs." swd Carpenter.
Hinckley is charged in a 13-count indil'Lment w1lh at ·
temptin ~ to kill the preSident and assault w1th 1nil'nlto
kill Reagan, White House Press Secretary .lames
Brady and two law enforcement officers. He could fa ce
life imprisonment if convicted .
The trial recessed until Mond&lt;:ly, when tTOssl'XaJnination of Carpenter is scheduled to rcsurnc.

•AIR
. •RACK

•WOODGRAIN
•DOOR LOCKS

•9 PASSENGER
. * 51,424 MILES

VEGETABLE PLANTS
•CRUISE
•TILT
*AM·FMSTEREO.

Smeltzer Ga~clen Center
and-Flower Shop
453 JACKSON PIKE

GALLI POLIS, OHIO
Just West of Holzer Hospita·l on U.S. 35

*POWER WINDOWS
*POWER SEATS
•38,307 MILES.

..
'
-irSPLIT60·4CI SEAT
'*REAR DEFROStER

•

•ONECAR~FUL~WNER

. BIG SELECTION OF
LATE MODEL
CARS &amp; PICKUPS
I
.

' Bill Gene Johnson

G,ib Millirqn
·~w• A!'Jtrecltlte
· YoutliiiJMII"

,

'J:angeiDaD Ualverslty Ceatei' OD tbe Ualverslty of Clo'

'

ciDDBti main campus Friday, May 14. The forum was
cosponsored by campus and professional chapters of
the Society of Professional Journalists. (AP Laserphoto I.

GOP CANDIDATES-'- Tbe lour RepubUcan candidates for Ohio goveruor 'from left, Cia~ Brown,
Setb Taft, R~rt Teater, alid Tbomas Van Meter pal'llclpated In a calldldates'_forum at tbe "Qi'eat Hall" at

Terry Hamilton

.~

'

Another Arge ntim· nulttc-Jr y rommumque held out
" little hopt•" for the t' IVIIian nll'rchant ship Isla tic los
Estados. n ·ported llli SSIIl ~ on a suppl y run to the
Falk la nds.
Argentuw tml!ta ry so u n·t·~ spt!(' Ulated that the ship,
w1th a tn •w of belwt't'n 30 a nd 40 aboard , may ha ve
bt•o•n h1l by a Brit iSh n11ssile. The Bnlish reported May
11 that a frigall' fired on a n unidentified tanker or suppl y vessel 111 the stra1l se paratmg East and West
Falkl and and had seen a large explosion . Argentma did
nul acknow ledge thai report.
Meanwhi le. Argc ntinl' Foreij.!n Mmistry spokesman
Hernan Massm1 Ezcurra tol d The Associated Press in
Buenos Aires that talks leu by U.N. Secretary Ge neral
Jav1er Perez de Cuellar " have been adva ncing in
recl•nt hours" and tha t till' government ha d "soml' uptun is m_"
" Thtngs arrn 't tnan·l'lnus . but nnw tlwre appear to
bl' better chances 11f L'lanfyin j.! so tnl'lhing," Massini
Ezcurra said. Ht: d1d not ela borate, but other gove rnment sources said additiona l Arge ntint• representa ti ves could tra vel to Nt• w York this wet·kend to offer

" new ideas" on a possible solut10n to the eonflid .
Arge ntina's official Tt•la rn news agen cy said that
Pn·s ~tlenl Gen. Leopoldo F . Gallien told a Mex1can
lt'lt·vJstun mtt•rviewer that An.!.t•ntina "su far a!:i
poss1bk has made 1b ptJsitiDn mon ' fk xible ." but will
fig ht " to thl' fini-.1 1consequences 1f Bntam IllS ISL':i on 1ls
lwll ll. ~ l' l'l ' nl &lt;:~tlltUdl' ...
Ar)-!l' ntirw Fort·ig n MtllJSLL'r Nira nur Costa Mendez
told n•purters tha t ltw return to London of BriUtin 's
U.N. cunbassadur. Su· Anthony Parso ns, " demonstrates that the responsibility for the procrastinations
or prolongation of tlw negotiations certainl y dot·s not
lit' w1th Ar ~ t · ntma . but w1th Brita Ill ."
Till' ta lks han· been hu ng up Argenttna 's Jllststt'lll't'
tha t thl' m·)-!olia tlons lead eventua lly to Argcntme
sm en •J I!. nl y un·r tlw F&lt;J i k l&lt;:~ rHis. a ntl Bntish illsJslenet•
th &lt;:~ t tlwn· bt• no pre-t'tHHlitttms fur ct truce.
Tlw So\'l l'l Unum - a rnaj ur buye r uf Argl· ntrrlt'
wh~ · at ctntl bed - du·tr ').~ t·d Fnda)' th&lt;Jt Brita in's
blowkadt· of till' Falklands wa s " unlawful." The Umkd
St&lt;:rtes has bal'ked BnL:Hn 111 tht' Falklands cn sis a nd
11Tipust•d tnt de sa nl'tlons ag;wlst Ar ~t·ntina .

TESTIFIES IN TRIAL - Dr. William T. Carpenter .Jr .. a Columbia. Md. psychiatrist. told a ft•deal
jury Friday that ac.-used prl'sidt·nlial assailant John
W. Hincklry Jr. fonsidered massafring studt•nts at

Yale, dyin~ in an assault nn the While House. sprayin~
the floor of lht· U. S. House of Rt·presentatives with
gun.fin• and trying to assassinah· Sen. Edward H. Kennedy.IAP Laserphnlo) .

Concert outdraws
political program

Fresh new bedding plants in the
largest variety of kinds and colors.

TOMATO, CABBAGE, PEPPERS,
CUCUMBER, EGG PLANT, SWEET
POTATO PLANTS.

By The As soda ted Press
British commandos blew up an arnmunit1on dump
and seve ral planes in their f1rsl ra1d on the Fa lkland
Islands, the British Defense Min iStry sa id Saturda y.
Argentina said a me rcha nt sh1p was feared sunk by a
British missile but mcrde no respnnst' to Britam 's ra1d
cla im .
Meanwhi ll'. diplomati c l'fforts a lllll'd at resul vm g the
crisis continued , with Argentina reporting " some optimism" and Bntmn's ambassadors to the United
Nations and Washington briefing the ~ o v crnrnent in
London on the latest round of U.N. peace talks.
Tht' Defense Ministry in London sa id its couunandus
raided a n a11·stnp on Pebble Island just north of Wesl
Falkland Friday ni ght. destroyi ng "a number of aircraft on the ground and a large a mmunition dump."
Tlw raiders returned to the F'Hlklands iH'Jn£tda , suffering '' two minor ra.sualties.' '
The MmJSlry desmbed lht• raul as a " limited
military action" desigm•d to enforce the British air and
sea bl ockadt• around the isla nds wht•re an estimated
9.000 Argenllnt• lroops dug in foll nw mg Argentina's
seizure of the archipelago from Bntain April 2.
Press AssoClation , Britain 's domestic news a gt'ncy ,
said Pueara lur bt&gt;-prop ground atta ck plant' S were
cunon g the Arge ntine aircraft destroyed. British
Har rier jl'Ls also Htlac ked the atrstnp at thl' Falklands
capital of Stanley. 65 miles soullwasl of Pebble Island .
Friday mght.
Ar~ e nt111a sau..l a nt1-aircraft )-! Untwr~ repel led thl' a t·
lack on the St£t nlt'Y cn rstn p, hut 11 IHttl no \ITUIIedia tt•
comlllent nn till' attack on Pt·bble l.'ilcmd , tht· first
assaull bv Bnt JS h ground for ces officiall y
&lt;H·knowll'd ged by I.om! on sllll 'l' tlw l'risis l'ruptetl.
Tlw ArJ!t'ntillt' milita ry &lt;Jisrl rl'porll'tl 20 tTl'WIIIt'n
dead . 301 lllJSSJil l! ctntl 770 l'l'St'Ul'd from tlw Gl'nerCII
Bl'l)!ran u. th l' tTUISl'r torpedul·d a nd sunk by ct Bnt1 sh
subma nlll' Ma y 2 111 H ') wa ters rwar tlw ltp of the S11uth
Amen r ctn conttrwnl .
An Argt' lllilll' llCi \'Y spokesma n s;ml n:sl' Ul' eff orts
" can bt• t·unsJdl'red tenmnated ," rHid 1ng that " tht·
t'hatll'l'S of ft1HI1n g Stllllt 'OnL' al\\'l' in a ltft•boat after lwtr
Wt'l'ks 111 th&lt;J t zu nt•a re Vl'I'Ysli ght .''

Prosecution charges
Witness was looking for
insanity in Hinckley

GERANIUMS
Fresh, new supply in a variety of
colors, variegated leaves, and hanging
varieties.

Sunda , May 16, 1982

TRAVEL DOWN MEMORY LANE WITH THIS FINE
MUSICAL GROUP WHILE DINING AT

_j~~~~~~~~~~~

•AIR
*CRUISE

..

Section[Q)
British commandos
raid airstrip
~imts- .itntintl

&lt;

...,
'

.

-

"'
'

•

.

COLUMBUS. oAP) - As four Republi can candidates
for governor pa rticipated in a forum at the University
of Cincinnati , an outdoor rock concert and "gallons anti
gallons of beer" easily outdrew the political show.
During lht• 9()-rninute program Friday, about 100
people listened to the four republican candidates U.S. Rep. Clarence Brown, Cleveland attorney Seth
Taft, State Department of Natural Hesources Director
Hobert Teater, and State Sen. Thomas Van Meter.
Meanwhile, across campus, nearly 1,000 college
students took advantage of warm, swruner-likc
weather to watch at least part of an outdoor noon·ll)midnight rock concert sponsored by the UC rugby club.
"We were up against a lot of thi~gs, such as weather
and beer "said Virginia Watson-Rouslin, UC's student
media a'dviser, who helped organize the political
forum . ." But I was pleased with the attendance, and
there was an excellent turnout of media."
The candidates maintained a friendly air with each
other.
Teater came closest to sniping at the others .
"You're an honest man to finally admit you voted for
that (25 percent surcharge) tax bill," Teater told Van
Meter during roundtable comments on taxatoon,
referring to a Senate-initiated measure designed to
balance the state budget by raising taxes and cutting

spt·nding.
But Teater soon removt·d that nt ·t·tllt ·. klltn L· tht ·
tTowd of about tOO mostly UC stutknls that " any one of
us (candidates l could sen·e well as l'tJ\'t'l'lltll'. ''
None of the candidates would directl y blame lho·
state's financial predicament on Republican Gnv .
James Rhodes. But Brown came duSt·. saying, " Wo· :
ha ve to have rnueh bt.'tter management than wt•'n· had :
al the stale level. ..
In other political news:
- Allanta Mayor Andn~ w Youn L' t·ndorsctl former
Lt.Gov . Richard Celeste on Friday at a Cleveland fundraiser attended by about 70 black ministers and •
business leaders .
" His intelligence and his inlt-grity are unmatched by ~
anybody that's presently in this race," Young said of ;
the Democratic gubernatorial candidate. He adtled •
that Ohio's "been floundering becaust• of a shortage of !
vision, a shortage of energy and a shortage of brains. ·:
You all haven't had a s1nart governor in a long time." ,.
- Cincinnati businessman Ken Keefe, lieutenant •
governor running male of Democrat Jerry Springer. :
has called for a 100 percent tax credit for companies ~
that bring a new product to market and have it '
manufactured in Ohio. He said the program would' •
create jobs and promote new industries in the state.
.;'
"·

,,

'I

�M a y 16, 1982

Ohio ACLU blames university
for racially-offensive party

Ma y 16, 1981

Po m e ro - Moddl e por t- Ga llo

3_ _ Announ ce~ ­

SWEEPER

and sewmg

machtne repa tr pa rts and
suppli es
Ptck up and
del tve r v Dav ts Vacu um
Cleaner one ha l f mtle up

Georges Creek Rd
446 0294

Ca ll

(

CINCINNATI (AP)
The
Amertcan Ctvtl Li berty Unton of
Ohto says the Umve rstty of Culctnnatt should not have pumshed a
campus lratermty lor havmg a
Ma rttn Luther Kong Trash Party"
which some blacks constdered of
lenstve
The J an uary party caused a con
lroversy tha t was deba t ed
throughout the ctty as the uno verstty
constdered what aclton to take It
ftnally suspended the Stgma Alpha
Epstlon lratemoty for two years for
stagtng the pa rty
ln vttaltoru; lor the party tncluded
what some blacks constdered rac tal
slurs The lra terntly was ordered to
perlonn pubh c servtce lor the black
corrununtty
ACLU Executo ve Dtrector Benson
Wolma n satd the ACLU has concl uded that the Um versoly of Ct n
cmnat1 has erred

' 10 suspendm,i;!.

thelraternolv'

•

He saod tl the uno verstty had un
derta ken ots 14th Amendment
responstbhty to desegregate campus
groups long ago, ot ts ltkely that the
spectacle would never have oc
curred '

A letter, da ted Fnday was sent to
UC Prestdenl Henry R Wonkler
Wolma n sa td dtsctphna ry actton
aga mst the lraternoly was wrong
no m a tter how outrageou.s and of

le ns ove tls theme - beca use tl&gt;
socto-polttocal content ts a protected
lonn of freedom of cxpresston and
assem bly guaranteed by the Ftrsl
Amendment to the Constttutoon of
the Untied States
There ts a dtffe rcnce between
suspendtng the lralermly lor holdong
an ollensove pa rty and a suspensoon
for pract Jcmg d 1scnnu nat1on m 1ts

membershtp Wolman satd
The Ftrsl Amendment rtg hl of
freedom of cxpressoon and assembly
need not be sacnloced to secure the
14th Amendment guarantee of

equaltty under the law Wolman
saod on the letter
The Umversoty of Conconnato
could and should underta ke regular
onq uo ry consostent woth due process
of law mto the membershtp practoces of all of tls constituent
orgamzatoons the letter satd
Kenneth Servoce, ass tsl&lt;mt voce
presodent for publtc a llatrs at UC,
saod the dosctpltnar) actoon agaonst
the lrateonoty was not an attempt to
proHtbtl free speech nghls
There are rules that govern all of
the student groups on campus, and
they re gtven to those groups m wn t
ten fonn every year ' he satd It

GIVING AID - Rose Atki ru;on 26 holds one of the
chtldren hurt Thursday morru ng after the bus whoch
they were ndmg stru r k a lr~e after bemg hot b) a&lt; arm

Lora m Atkmson, a volunteer riding the bus, was able
to pull many of tbe children from the wreckage ( AP
Laserphoto I

Bus crash hospitalizes driver
LORA IN Oh to IAPt -

A bus

I ht bus ""' bound fo r a Head

dr JVtJ wa s 111 t.:l Jl tc.:a l condtlton and
ont of htr 4 Har old pct sst ngl rs

Start pttschool program when the

run~tnu_l hosp tla li zl'd tod~\ afh r

d m~plt

tht'tr bus tolltded w tth r1 t dl Hnd
sme:tsht:d mto il lrt't.
1wentj h\U ot ht'r prtsthuolcl s

P cH ct

suffcrulmu10r InJUrie s 111 tiH.: " 1uk
1 hl bus drn u Cnnn1t Rut of
Luratn lAd s 111 lht. mtensl\l' carl'

( olll sttm st nt It uu ccmng 43ft t t 1nto
tl ct pohn scud

Thl\ satd the dtt\cr of t ht ca t aptl) dru\ c tn t o t hl tnlcrscd ton

of Washonglon Avc nUt and Nt nl h
Strell tgnonng the bus whtch had
lhl 11ght of wa)

l mc slt ga t or s ~oHrt

stUtll ttlg lht L t ash sa td polt&lt; c Capt

un ol of I 01dtn Comonumly Huspotal
"oth mull tplc L uls and IJt uoscs

huncs Holomuzkt

At lkka CalloY.a) 4 WrJ S 111 stablt
umd1 t1 on Hl Rainbow Babtt s and

t

Cluldrcn s Hospotal on Cleveland •f

hosp1l&lt;tl s Several ambula nt.:es m~dc
t\\o tnps

tn :-;Ul ge r\ un hu llC'&lt;..:k t.hcst cmd
IJCJt.:k offtt trJl s sai d Sht hc1d bnn
hLlltoptcl f 1o1n Com
IIIU nlh Hospttal to RHJnbO\\ .tflt' r
tht u as h I 1ttla\
Thc drn t 1 of tht l at wa s not hur t
i-l lld no thar gt s \\lfl' ftltd F 11da\
ptl]lr C S&lt;:ttd

L:lktn

b'

All three of tht Lake En e pOl l
tl\ s tmu gcm) \duties \H 1 c used

lo take the t htld t en aged J to 5 to
Offll tals at Conmtunoly and Sl
JoSI ph s hospotals saod most of the
1htldocn wett on I) shaken up
I hc r c

\\Cit

some

c uts

and

btutscs but the ktds " "e located
and rt:leased
sa td Jack Broz a
spukt.sma n fm St Joseph s
f ht trash stvc 1ch damaged l ht

bus knockong out tls front wtndow
and J a mmon ~ the front end onto the
.seats Witnesses sa1d

I was helpong pull the ktds out
and everyone got out excepllhts one
ltllle gorl who was trapped behond
the dtt ve r s seal
sa td Lance
Wcbe t who saw the acctdenl from
hts tar and slopped to help
Thts one lady pulled the seal
back wtlh her hands so we could free
the ktd Weber satd I don l eve n
know who she (the lady) was
Weber satd chtldr en some
bleedtng and others screamtng lay
on the grass alter bemg removed
from the bus whtch caughlltre
Weber sa od Ms Rtce though badly
onJured herself tned to comfort the
chtld t en
She was lry mg to help the ktds
but I told her to JUSt go lay do" n on
lht grass
rnt s.s

he sa1d

She was a

Bus driver wins riders' respect
i\ssO&lt; .a ted Press Wnlu

IRONTON Ohto IAPt - 'Ktds on
Kath) Josephs bog )cllow sehoul
bus havt: btcn LO!lsldc l ab l y qut ctt' r

swe shl ha uled 29 of them off to Ja I
aft v. weeks ago
And t he\ ha\t'n l sd hu hull on
ftrt smce t hcn c ttht' r

They rc ildmg be llu now lilt
suft spoken 22 ve~r old '-'"UJTI(j fl sa 1d
Jucn tl ]
It rmtk1 s 1t (;I Jut eas1er to
d 11 H t ht bus when the\ r c not
mg on
M 1s.s Jus~..:p h

c~rr)

d

substltut t

b w.;

dmct fm the subu rb• n Rock Htll
I ,ocal Sehoul Doslm l saod she dt dn l
t e&lt;:tiiZl sht ...., &lt;-t s gotng t o st1 r up a hor
nd s nest when s he look the 29 Rock
Ht ll Hogh Se houl students to the
l.a"rcnce Counl v She11ff s Dt patl
tnenl the mor nong of Mat cit 25
I JUst knew that they wtre
bt cak ong the l•w a nd that they wctt
t

1~ctt 111 g

i:l

dcmgcrous s1tuatwn

:sht:

sa td rcc"l long the cposode on a on
te n u w (j t ht.: r pare nt s r ura l homL
Among other lhtn~s they had been
srn okmg

on

tht

bus

w h u~ h

tilt way bat k humt she sa 1d
f hcn I put tn \ ha nd on the bat k of
om head and the smell "as awf ul It
slunk 1 I had to ge l Ill) hai r cut
Moss Jose ph had onl y been dn von g
the bus for lht cc weeks and was at a
loss to ma tnta tn dt supltne She saod

and then when they lt ~ ured tl out
some of them satd Aw she attt l
t ea lly gonna take us to the Jatl
But lh• l s exactl y what happened
I pulled up on fro nt of the Jatl and
asked one of the depultes to help Inl
gel them settled down Moss Joseph
lesltfted later My mtentoon was to
dtt '&lt; them back to the vocaltona l

but some parents were alraod that
lheo r chtldren s reputaltons would be
damaged satd school board membe r Roy Gtllespte Some of the
pa r ents wt! r e very hostile, and some
were ve ry supportove
However Gtllespte satd the
solua toon has begun to calm down
now that charges have been dropped
agaonst all but two of the students
The two a 1&amp;-yea r-old boy and a
17 yea r-old gtrl admtlled squtrtmg
the wondshteld and settmg ltre to
Moss Joseph's ha tr Lawrence County Probate Juvenole Judge Lloyd
Burwell placed them on stx months
proba tiOn, ltned them $81 aptece or
dered each to spend 18 hours on
weekends cleanmg school buses and
barred them from the bus lor the
tt•ma mder of the school year
Although there were strong
leehngs m the commumty, Mtss
J oseph satd she never took any

s1 hoo l

&lt;-~ buse fo r her ac.:t w htch w as ~up­

Instead the ktds • II 29 of them
"'" ha uled tnlo court The ft ve who
wt rc 18 were charged wolh dtsor
dc t ly conduct and the other 24 were
st nl lo JU H ntlc court They were all
he ld unttl lheu pa tents came a nd got
them
And some of the parenl&gt; we re ex
lremely upset At a board of
cducaloon meeltng the next week
they complatned that the matter
should ha ve been handled by school
oflt ctals and not law enforcement

ported by the county s school em
plo) ees uno on
I JUst got one letter and tl was
from somebody who satd I had done
the ttght thmg she saod And my
lather took a call from a woman who

on

BySTRATDOUTHAT

1s

tile gal
Well she sa td I drove them to
Jatl • ft cr somebody lht cw water on
the " tndsh teld The) had tor c h e~
my haor woth a uga rellc loghter the
day before
She sa td she smelled somcthmg
burnmg that d•y but was too busv
concen tl at mg on the h1 ghway t o g tvc

tl mm h thought
I dtdn l rea lly real tze what the) d
done unl tl I d let lhern out and was

onot ht' l drn t: r ~ave her the tdca of

tako ng the bus to the county jail and
t h~ t

l as t

straw

La m t.:

w h t: n

somebody squt rled the wmds htcld
t ht' m orn tng of Man:h 25

I dtdn l sa) anylhong to them I
JUst took them to town They dodn t
know at f trst w hat wa.s ha ppcntng

agt' nut's

Overall the coorunumly was
very support!\ e of the bus drove r

wa~ supportJ\ e '

Mtss Joseph s lather, Emory
J oseph, also drtves a bus lor the
sc hool dtslncl He sa td he knew
exactl y how she felt
Out there on that road we' re on
our own ' he satd There s a dtlfcrence bemg m a classroom and
be on~ tn that btg bus where you ha ve
the safety of 50 ktds on your ha nds"

Youth seeks SS recognition
CINCINNATI ( AP l - Robert
Ryan of Cmconnalt would hke to
become JUSt another Soctal Secunty
number tn the federal government
computer But the government
doesn't appear ve ry tnlerested
The 1&amp;-yea r-old Coleram Township
youth says he's tned unsuccessfully
lor more tha n a year to gel a nwnber
from two Socoal Secun ty Ad
rrumstratwn ol!tces m the southwest
Ohw area
Theor latlure to process hts apphcalton has meant he has not been
patd by his part tune employer and
cannot apply lor the learner's per
nut necessary to obtaon a n Ohio
drover's hcense
Smce early 1981, Ryan has been
told no less than seven tunes that hts
apphcalton for a Soctal Secunty

num ber has been lost a nd to try
a gam
One ol!oce also ma naged to lose
Ryan s btrth certtltcate, he satd
I JUS! don 't know why they can t
get tl taken care of ' Rya n satd thos
week
Hts employer told htm he
couldn t tssue him a check wtlhout a
number,' satd Ryan's mother,
Peggy Ryan He's not unwtllmg to
work He goes to work latlhfully
every day, even though he knows he
can't get patd unltl he gels a nwnber "
Dave Bockenstette - . upervtsor
at the Harml!P· »&gt;Ctal Secunty offtce, satd e2rher llus w•• ' &lt;nat he
cannot understan~ why Ryan's apphcalton was not processed any of
the stx tunes tt was !tied at the

l

Glon a Bussman satd Beaumont
who two months ago was re umled
woth the Beaver cast wes vosotong
hts oldest son Ertc 40 a college
psychology professor on Mumch
West Germany whe n he was
stncken Thursday mght
We understand tl was quote sud
den, satd Mrs Bussman who lo ves
on the Los Angeles suburb of
Woodland Htlls He was at hts son s
house when he had the attack By the
lome the doctor arnved he was
dead

About a decade ago Bea umont I
suffet ed a st t oke tha t left hts face
partoally para lyzed
They !doctors) tol d us he would
never wa lk or tal k a~a tn alter that
strok e

M rs B ussm an sa1d

B ut

he fooled them and he we nt on to do
some dtreclmg woth communtl)
lhealet groups here and on Atkcn

sc

Bea umont s youngest son Ma rk
32 lo ves tn Atken
Bca wnont a nat1vc of Law1enu.:
Ka n ts best known for hts tole as
Ward Clea\er who paltentl y guodcd
ht s

two

Beave r

so n s

I J t: l r)

Mathcos) and Wally (Tony Dowl
through lhetr aw kward yea t s
Beawnont ~ w1fc on lht.: sc n cs Junl
Clca\ er was played bv Ba rbdt"
Btll tngsle)
About two months ago Beaumon t

Clarence Nom s 23262 H1ll
Rd Raco ne Oh1o 45771 $10
for one lot SS f or 'h

rul es that would be the basts of the
dtsctpltnary adton
These groups use the um ve rstly
name and we fee l therefore that
they should adhere to the rules the
umverstly sets up
Wolman sa od the ACLU plans no
ltlogatoon aga msl the uno verso tv

appeat ed on a local telcv tston news
show wtlh several members of the
Leave It to Beaver cast They
were reuntled to re-enact a num ber
of scenes from the show whtch appea red on CBS from October 1957 to
September 1958 and on ABC from
OLlobeo 1958 to September 1963
Bea umont s !tim crcdtts onclude
F!tghl Loeulenanl tn 1942 The
Seventh Vtcltm tn 1943 Objecltve
Bunna m 1945 The Blue Dahlta
on 1946 Bury Me Dead on 1947
Raol ooaded
on 1949
Mr
Bell edere Hongs the Be ll tn 1952
Misstsstppt Gambler on 1953 and
The Mole People tn 1957
Bcsah.: s h1 .s sons Bea w non t ts su1
11\ld by hts Wtfl of 41 yeaiS
Ka th ry n and a daug hlci Knstan
37

Fa ll s Ce m etery Tru stees

CRED IT PROBLEMS Obi
am a Master card or V1sa
No cred1t check Graran
teed
for deta il s
send

SASE lo CCC Box 727
Carrollton TX 75006
4

U nder cove r

agents

coll ect ed

m

lormalton a bout a martJua na
dtslrobulton scheme by penelraltng
the nng of people who allegedl y
planned the consptracv a federal of
J octa l sa)s
Ma teroal gathered by the age nts

anyt h1n g to g1ve away and
does not off er or att em pt to
offer any other th1 ng tor
sa le may pl ace an ad 1n th 1s
colu mn There will be no
charge to the adve rft ser
3 pupp tes 2 Beagle type and
1 pa rt H uskey 8 weeks old
Have been wormed Ca ll

379 2796
5 k1tte n s 2 yel l ow 2 black
&amp; w h1te 1 black Ca l l 446

9542

r esulted 1n the rnd1 ctm ent or m ne

people on cha rges that they plotted
to dtstrobute up to 2 tons of pol m
West Vorgonoa and Ohoo U S Attorney Davtd Faber satd Frtday
Fa ber sa od undercoveo age nts
were to pped by an tnlormanl
penetrated the rong and took part m

a ru st s befon

lhl

d cll vuv

was

ma dl he satd
The arrests ""e made ThUlsda)
and Fnda) and t esulled from on
doctments retu rned by a ledeoal
grand JUr v on Wednesday sa td

Jn

ltl stale telephone Iones to do so and
tllegal possessoon or forearms the
pr OSCl UlOI ~a 1 d

The tndtclmenl al leges that the
defendants tntltally pla nned to use a
DC 3 atrpla ne to fl y 5 tons ul
ma n Juana It om South Ame roc a to
West Vtrgtnta Later however the
dec tston to fl y JUSl 1 2 tons of the
drug was made the tndtctmcnl says

Ten die in 'unnecessary' fire
BALTIMORE (AP) - Ten people
re l y m g on ca ndl es and k er osene

lamps lor hght dted Saturday as ltre
swept thetr cramped row house
hours alter the electnctty was shut
off lor non payment of an $808 btll
Seven vtcttms were chtldren mcludong a 7-month-old baby asleep on
a sofa wher e mvestt gator s be lieve

the ftre began when a candle toppl ed
over The baby s mother was outsode
and saw her da ughter on !Ire but
could do nothong to save her
It was the worst stngle-dwellong
ftre on Baltimooe htslory, satd l11 e
Capt Patnck F lynn Three people
were tnjured and all but one of the
13 ktlled or InJUred were belteved to

be 1elated
Neoghbors fn ends and offo coals
called the ltre a catasto ophe that
dodn l haveto happen
I don l lhtnk anybody should be
t ul off ltkc that wtlh a ll the money
llus country has sa td netghbor
La to y McD•no el

R 1ck.

Pea r so n

Wanted to buy sp tra l sta 1r

GeTS A
COKTRACT

li()Me I '1tJu Rj;
r:&gt;RIVING tNOUSTRV

way Call 446 7231 after
5PM

ANt&gt; TH£

MA'ft:JRS
w.vsT!TWtN'fS

penenced AUCT IONEER
Es tates ant1ques f ar m
househo ld L 1censed Oh 10
WV Bu y 1ng an f 1Ques 304

773 5785 773 9185
Auc t on every Fr 1 ntghl a t
the Hartford Co m m un 1ty
Center Tr uck loads of new
mer chand1se eve r y week
Constgm ents of new and
used merchand 1se a lways
we l co m e
R 1chard
Rey nolds Auctt oneer 275

Wanted to Bu y~-

c ...... ,....,. , ...... ~ ....... .
..... ~ ... ~ ... .

, .........

01 ond F""nd
... d~
Sao

Hd ~ O &lt;

... . . ""

IP~

t "" "" 0&lt;1

.....

n~ ..""""""" ,."

~

~

~

1 ) -. . . l -

I
oa •~•

os~

__

c,_,,

mt " ' ' ' .-

10 ••
"'~·
I ......... "

..

~

It ~o

•

-~

'~·~·~

so""'

,,.

hiAtUh&lt;l"&lt;n

lll~&gt; I. At · ll•ull•oWo.n..,

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

. , _...............
t)l"..
....N

11.~

mu""""'
............. ...,

....•J•E.,..,_"'"""'
"""..... "'..,........
.. '"' ....
~-...

I

-· .

"'~ .....

"' '

JVO" '

M&lt;: """""'

u '""' ""~"Pil

s,~

'"""'
.......... "''"
~.

ct...r(W-d /Mife. cover

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

_,_
,_

~

oE""...,...~

II

... M 'o&lt;

J .. _ . . ..
ll

I

11 ( 1 V I.Aoa
A ~"'""

OFo"'f~W,.....n

'""'IK&gt;•

OJ Won
•l
.......

..... •c.."
•1-&amp;Fo

follo~ rlllf

WQ

1763

LOVEABLE 11 monlh old
black ha lt Cocker halt
Sprtn ger Span1e l 1n need of
good home loves ch il dren

ca ll 304 675 1737 or 675 3123
AKC Cocker Span1el b lon
de m a le 21 m ont hs old

phone 304 675 411 4
CAT

1409

Kanawah

Sf

CASH PA I D for c lean late
model used cars Sm •th
BUICk P onti aC
Ga lli pO li S

Oho o Ca ll446 2282
Bu y tn g
Gol d
Stiver
Pl attnu m old co ms scrap
r1n gs &amp; sil verware Da il y
q uotes availab l e
A l so
co tn s &amp; co 1n supp l1 es for
sa te
Sprtng
Valley
T ra d1 ng
Sprt ng
Val ley
Plaza 446 8025 or 446 8076

304 675 5019
Lost and Found

882 3546
L OST Keys t urned m t o
Pt Pl easa nt po ll ee dept
tden t 1f y a nd pay for ad to
p tck up

- - - - - --- -_-_- - - -l

We pay cas h for l ate model
clea n used cars
Frenchtown Ca r Co
Bill Gene John son

446 0069
-- ----~--

Go l d
Sil ver
st e rtm g
1ewe lr y r mgs o l d co tn s &amp;
curren cy Ed B ur ke tt Bar

ber Shop M1dd leporl 992
3476

..

tron brass or wood K tt
chen cubba rds of a ll t ypes
Tabl es round o r squ ar e
Wood tee boxes Old des k s
and book cases Will bu y
compl ete house hold Gold
Sli ver o ld m oney pocke t
watc hes c ha tns nn gs and
etc lndt an A rttf ac t s of a ll
types A lso buy 1ng baseba ll
ca r ds Osby Mar t 1n 992

------t n l ov tn g m em ory of m y
da d
Cha un ce y
E
Ha rn so n w ho pa ssed
a way 3 years ag o today
Noth1ng could be more
pr ec1 o u s
rha n
th e
m emor y I have of you
To m e you were very
spec1al God mu st have
thought so too
For
m any y ea r s you w er e
both my mom and dad
a nd a grea ter Dad no
one ever had I II a lway s
th e
t o nd
c h e rt s h
m emon es from
my
chtldhood w 1th you Ttll
God ca ll ed you aw ay but
we w ill meet aga tn
so med ay

Old books letter s d tarys
doc um ent s pa1n ttn gs No
paper ba ck s or sc hoo l

•"" .,...

~.,

..,p_- ......... . .
"'"'......_...

" h u • ""

.. (I«

II GfAt

••

o

~

ou "''

..... c - •

...--------The w •f e and t am1t y of
Osc ar C D ye r WI Shes to
thank th e doctors and
nur ses
at
H o l zer
M edtc al Ce nter
who
took care of our fa ther
and hu sband dunng h1 s
las t 1llness Th e ne1gh
bors and fn ends who
mad e contrtbuflon s tur
n1 shed food a nd stood
bes td e th e fa m1f y wttl
a lways be r em ember ed
w tth l ove and g ra tttud e
Co r .1 B Oyer chtldr en
rtnd grandchildr en

::-~~·

~~~

Mt-¥11&gt;*&gt;
"~• ·o­
rso-CHrr-Oiu

~~

l&lt;l l - l $

.. .._,. ,.., a,

··-

'"

- · ...

I Upi'IOI&gt; •

IJ~

0 l&lt;•O&lt;O

..

UpiO IWOf"'

• Wo.n...,IOII•n
~

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The a nnu a l r eport F orm
990 PF tor !he K 1bble Foun

dalton Bernard v Fultz
T rust ee tS av a ilable for
publt c 'nspec t1on at Ber
nard V Fult z L aw Offt ce
11 Jl/:2 W Second Street

Hanulton offtce Ryan also applied Pom e ro y Oh10 45769
durtng r egul a r bu smess
once at the Cmcmnalt Soctal hour
s for a penod of 180
Secunty olftce
days
subs e qu e nt
to
" I've never seen a case hke this publtcat1 0n of fh1 s not tGe
before," Bockenstette satd "I really (5) 16 17 18 19 20 21 23
l ie
can t explam what happened "
PubliC Notice

Bockenstette satd Ryan's latest
NOTICE T;j
apphcalton - filed Dec 23, 1981 CONTO:ACTOR S
STATE OF OHIO
was found m a rmscellaneous file
DEPAR TMENT""
drawer where tt did not belong OrTRANSPOPT .. TION
Col!.. tt~OUS, OhiO
dman1y, he S81d, the P..:muTton office
May 7, 1982
would ~VP. =cut the apphcation t~
Contract Sales Legal
Copy
No 82 558
W·=:ungton by computer
UNIT PRICE
"In this c8SP - c made three tranCONTRACT
Sea led proposals w111 be
sm•'" . ... - the last one bemg Jan rece1ved
at the off1ce of the
14, ' Bockenstette added "After D~reclor of the Oh1o Oepar
of Transportation
that, the fale should have gone mto a !men!
Columbus Oh1o unli l 10 00
holding ptle while we waeted for a AM , Ohio Standard T1me
June 3 1982 for
reply, but tn this case at got Thursday,
tmprovements m
nusla1d "
Gallla, Hock1ng Me1Qs

and V1nton Count1 f"S Oh1 o

on GA L S R 2331 0000 37!
- Stat e Route 233 tn Ga l It a
County
HOC S R 664
(1662 23 411 1- Sfale Roufe
66.4 tn Hock mg Count y
MEG S R 338 (4 97 15 361
- Stale Route 338 '"Me,gs
County
ME G S R 681
110 49 17 55) Slafe Route
681 m Me1gs County VI N
S R 160 (0 001 (3 90 8 58) State Route 160 1n V nton

County and Vm S R 160
13 36) 13 69) - Slate Route
160 m !he V1llage of

Wilk e
ti e / tnton Coun ty
r. a pply1
a b1tumtno us
surf ace tr .?a tm ent
Pave m e nt
W td th
Vanpc,..rot ec t and Work L eng t h

I

_,_"'-_
Wo

.,, _ _

(_

0..00.0

.-..

IJDU

__ ...................

I DO

T" ,....,.,

, _ ...

• Ooy

ktll

the proper
tor ms
tor
q ua hft ca fi on n t leas t ten
days pn or to the date se t
for open1n g b1d s tn ac
cordance w tf h Chapter 5525
Ohto Rev1sed Code
Pl ans and spec lf tcaft ons
are on ft le ftl the Dep ar t
m en,t of Tr ansport att on and
the off rce of the 01strt ct
Deputy D1rec tor
The D1r ec t or r eser ves
the n ght to r e ,ec t any a nd

tor a nd mower
1 wr 1ttng desk
Te rms of the sa le are
cash and the board rese r
ves the n g ht t o r e tect an y
or a ll b•d s
Oh1 o T w p Trustees
Juantta Cratg,

DAV ID L WEIR
DI REC TOR
Rev8 1773
May 16 23

ARRDURERMIHIS

Pubhc Nolice
------

PUBLIC NOtiCE
r equtred to ftl e W1th ht s b1d !hal !he Board of Ohoo
a ce rt1f1 ed c heck
or
Townsh1p Trustees on June
cash1er s check for a n 5,
1982 a! 1 00 o'clock woll
amount equal to ftve per
offer al publiC auction al
cenl ot h1s bid, bul on no !he
town house on
even! more !han flflh SwanOh10
Road, Roule 2,
thousand dollars or a bond CrownCreek
C1!y
, Oh1o the
for ten per cent of hts bid, fotlowmg personal
proper
payable to !he D~reclor
ly
Btdders must apply, on
1 Super A Farmall !rat
Each bidde r shall be

1 ._ ..

Publtc NJttce

228 570 tee! or 43 29

m 11es
The date se t f or co m
p letlon of th1 s w ork sha ll be
as set forth tn the bt ddtng
proposal

rl hN

, ..........

Publt c Nottce

May

ell b1ds

NotJce 1S her eby g1ven

3

SUNDAY MORNING 10 AM.
SUNDAY NIGHT thru THURS NIGHT
7:30P.M.
Speaker IS Roger Rutter

...

th- loton

..,

VDIO I•Ofdl

.. MH ~fila

Bedwell, Oh

.. .. c_ ..,
. . _ " ...........

.... _ ( t

Clerk
Rl 2
Cr ow n Ctfy Oh1 o
7
14
15

spreader Ca l 379 2605

BEDS IRON

f urn1 tu re
go l d
s1lve r
doll ars wood •ce boKes
stone 1ars an t 1ques etc
Comp l e t e
househo l ds
Wn te M 0 M 1ller Rt 4

ATTENTION
MAY 22 &amp; 23, 9 to 5
There Wtll Be A

WEEKEND FLEA MARKET
For cars, trucks, motorcycles, vans,
b'oats, campers, etc , located at the Old
Thaler Ford parkong lot, Jet of old 160 &amp;
Rt. 35, Galhpohs, Oh Conveneence for
both buyer and seller For mformateon
call 446-3044 or 367-0675

Flowers for Memonal Day
Next to Bank ,n Mid
dleport 9 a m lo 8 p m 7
days a week

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL
Professional Electrolysis
Center A M A approved,
O&lt;tl:tor reterals, by ap
polntment only 304 675
6234

WHOLESALE Tl RE
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
Avaelabll! for Southeastern Oheo area- No
tmmedeate mvestment requtred_ Backed
by one of Eastern ' Untted States' largest
trre 1nventory and retread plant. Free
promotional and marketing assistance.
GUARA~TEEDSUCCESS

For appomtment calll-304-755· 0185
Wes Medley, Wholesale Tire Co.
Poca, w.

va_

'•

Hou (
M H1 Jwhruul( Ad
&lt;II on J h•d r oun1 tu n ly
rOufll W Ill I fl pi H
( 1 ll

P ana tun nc1 1nc! r P"~ r
U tn c Dan cis Aso:;oc =i l t a t
Brun c ard s
C t il pul ..,
ilnd Cunn 1nqhrm 1 ~ Alht n&lt;,
742 79 51 or 992 108?

Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760

E m piayment

se r vl t (!s

fo il FREE 1 8006423619
Ma ntence person f or apa r
t ment comp lex Cat l 675

5104 or 675 5386
H elp Wan t ed
Female
combined sales and Off1ce
work Mus t be able to work
we ll w1 t h th e pub l1 c and be
ab le to t ype f il e ope r at e
cas h reg1ste r and other of
f1ce
dut1es
Sertous
1nqu1res send resume t o
P 0 Box 343 M •ddlepor t
Oh Include phone number
and age

surance Co has offered
servtces for ft re 1nsurance
coverage tn Ga ll 1a County
for almost a century
Farm hom e and pe r sonal
pr ope rt y coverages arc
ava il able to meet •n
diVtdua l need s
Contact
Harry P 1tchford
agent

Phone 446 1427
15

12

Weld 1ng gas and etec fn c
ft eld or shop Phone 304

675 3677 affer 4 P M

CITY CAB

Th e Sdk House {c ustom
f lowers)
Complete
Silk
br1da l line wedd1ng s and
all occas ons Call 367 7566
Lawn Mow ng Se r ve no
yard to b1g or small 1 ou sc
pa,n t tng &amp; roollng an d
light hau li ng Ca ll 446 3159
after 6PM 1 186 5740
Wil l care for e l derly man
or woman on our farm
pr1vate room $700 per mo
Ca ll 446 B163
Wil l do w1ndow clean1ng for
homes or bus ness ex
penen ced Ca ll 388 8198
Ca r pe nter work Repa~r s
and r oom remodllng watt
pane lm g and ce1ilng til e

992 2759

WA SH &amp; wax CM S $12 00

32

wn r
1J

s r rtr

tiOMf
r1 &lt;IU(

U

Be&lt;'!u l lui br ek &amp; tr 1n1
beclroom hornr w 'ire n r
v1ew
woo d bur l nq
firepla ce form 11 c n nq
centr al a r w hPl l pump
La n sc ~1ped
I
lf r
lot
w/ fenced n b =iC k y(l r d
0
$45 900
ll o
I 01
small down p 1ym0 1
4&lt;6 3766

CLEAN UP DAYS
50

Gu ft eld &amp;
Eas t ern Ave
Sl 7S
Chtllt coth c Rd
51 50
Texas Rd
Sl 75
Hos ptta l &amp; Shopptng
Center R t 7
S3 00

Lc r n&lt;::.•d&amp;
lJ l S/ 6)7 1

Bu s ne ss or' stor e room
Park Ce ntra Hote l

n

Lawn Mower &amp; Garden
Trilctor Sal es located at
Junct• on of Rts 7 &amp; 35 111
Kan f1uga
don g
qood
bu s ne ss Owner wc1nt s to
r et r c Call446 3670

WHOLE SALE
N

E

P ART
R

S

HI GH INCOME CALIBER

Nal1onal Company seeks
QUMI I Cd
1nd V Clual
to
beg n mak1ng del vcr es to
r ela ler s n th e G 111 pols
arcil
Mu st hnv c tran
spo rt ~1110n S4 500 to $74 000
1nvcn t or y preferred
No
fran c h se lees or r oy 'Illes
1nvolv ed
Call
(404)957

ulll n rr&lt; tJf' dr oo m
t 1 11 pari 111y t ur
1 l l d )0 4 MS ?907

IY!)
11

I

f , { t
I IJ It

SPECIAL TOOL SALE

NEW EQUIPMENT
plam and

6 and 7 ft rear blades
4 and 5'12 6 7 rear blades

Potato plows
Seeders
1 and 2 Boflom Plows
Fteld Cufltvalors
N H Chopper, 770
Bumpers

Boom Poles
J•;, ft Kmg KuHer Mower to r small tra ctors
Woven wtre 10 47

USED EQUIPMENT
830 Case Dsl
MF50 P S
8N , 9N Fords
Ferg 30 s
Farmatl H's
8000 Ford
1066 IH
Ford backhoe w loader
Hay rakes 3-P and pull
OtS~ 3 P and wheel type
MF 12 baler
J 0 Lawn mower
501 Ford mower

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT aNTER
35 w.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Phone
446-9777 or 446-3592

IliN J I){ dr oom L b&lt; rty
l !&gt;./0 ~1 1 000 f )( ( cond
t)J v 30 4615/ 1/1 or
l( I ~16 ?&lt;1&lt;,1( l ll f'r I 30

I I&lt;

l idO

IUo

GE NDIX

J I c r uurn
W I '&gt;ll t u r

1,.;/J
!

d• s fr 1hu rc r s h p
ava.t ~lble tor Southeas tern
Ohto See d1splay ~1d 1n
cla ss I cd scc t on

19r

1

l t

(t

t

1A

p

o1

JOO or u n
800
JO 1 887

~~

t

'!.I )ll(

Ftr u t /O)I ! ':.o'lll
Olylp
D~l&lt;
S!')OO

New loq tlOmt on r vt r
fr ont In M1deiiC'POrl 146

.l.JO

}6()}

?:..o5

1114

C

C1qare lt c
Vcnct nq
Bus1n css Ca!l 304 773 565 1
OWN your o wn Jean
Sportswecl r 0 1 11 I tnt
Pretee n store Lad1es Ap
p C~ r r \
(al so
S HOE

SHOE

STORE )
Olit.:r nc1 all
N at 1onal l y known brands
such as Jorda chc Ch 1c
Le e
Lev
Vanderbil t
Wr angler
Ca\v n K le1n
over 200 un t:: r brands
$7900 to $ 19500 ncludes
bC9111n1ng 1nvcntory a1r
tar e f or 1 to Fa sh•on Ccn
ter
fra•n•ng
f1x fur es
G r a nd
Open ng
Pr o mo! ons
Ca ll
Mr

THINK FEnERlY
The
For Galha Co
Comm1ss1oner

PUBLIC NOTte£
We are try1ng to kee p the cemetery
at l el a1 t fall s Ill 1ts present con
d1l1on but must depend on your
1nlmst and help to msure lhat
your lot w•ll be kept clean lhts
yea• Please send check cash or
money order lo Clarence Noms
23262 Htll Road Awne Oh1o
45771
~ 10 For One lot

SS For ' lot
THAN KIOU
The letart fa ll$
Cemetery Truslets

~ k rlnt

sa.wo

neluri nq un

I

1&lt;.

304

1152
l

3lJd r oa n 11o m

U/

nclr

THR E E bedroo m lloU"(
b 'lSemf'nl
]1 I
H r &lt;,
ground 30.J 675 3/79

t&lt;

h JU'&gt;

I 7

17 I

Fnrm s f or S.1 1e

r ...,

'

"

7166

11

1t r
c '' ll(l
t

&gt;l

ro~1 CLO~u RL

SAL E
lh'\IL[R
LOI
IN
J Y \VILLE
0
IN( ROU N D SW!NMING

POO L

1WO I ( r
I ron! tq

to\ 150 It r oau
( !y
w~l l t r
I) 11 n(! H4 Lurnbr r c 111 30 d
tJIC., 6H/J 6/5 J61H
C RF&lt;.., ll rl(k l op ro'let
r 1n r
( r 1r Rd
l
~ 1! 000
f)llO nr

HOU SE &amp;
ove rl oo k nq
K 1
n An br O'&gt; 1
R vrr
even nqs 304 67J /5 11

~0
MATIRESS
&amp;BOX
SPRINGS
AT
CORBIN &amp;
SNYDER FURN
Second Ave

44611 71

ICE

Sealed bids will be received
until 12:00 Noon, May 22,
1982, for the purchase of real
estate of the late Winifred F.
Knight, located at 126 First
Avenue, Gallipolis, Gallia County, Ohio.
No bids of less than
$150,000.00 jappraised value)
will be considered. Executrix
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids.
Property may be seen by appointment only. Call 446-0287.
A. Jacqueline Knight, Executrix
of the Estate of
Winifred F. Knight, Deceased.

CO NCRET E

Ff\ 1 10
( H /I. IN
LI NK
f(N(IN(
1 MALL
HOU '-&gt; 1
ALL
UliLilY
1-H)Q I\lJP \
P H O N E 6 14
Ml J II~

APJ\RTMEN f bu 1ft nq
PI Pl rasnnt S400 1 mont h
nco m c phont
304 675 7SAI

4S769

nl &lt;, w lhn r1 w atcrr osr
ty n h S.J 850 00 Coli

1 16 1/'V 1
I

HOU SE on ont H"
down p ~1ymenr ~/)(1
month bl 1ck. top 1 &lt; 1 t
cvt n nq s 30 .J 67S I I

8 7 P E RCENT ,1c,um1blt
Joan one ye;ar otcl 1r I&lt; Vl l
Meadowland
Es ldl ls
$67 500 Call 304 6/5 1579 11
tcr 5 p ml

00

4

Loh &amp; Acreage

, 1 1

677H

6o6J 111 r

"u

S'ln clh 11 Road 3 l)t &lt;In om
1 -. t)a th s dou t)lt &lt;I r
rnn•rct
or eup 1 ( 'f
Clf'Cir c 30.J6l 5~H I /

773 3070 or 3))

t1rrn l o r Sl iC one

1 1 I ron '&gt; I l it r ou t 7 C 1\
7~o

t I

HOU'&gt; I $500 ltld tn tit r l l '&gt;
to te"l r I down Pt Ol! JO t

11

"!

PropNiy lor '&gt; 1
L ew s
Str c( 1
Pl ec1sant
Pllont

Post hole doggers
hays ode

~~

6691

DISC Slf:t and 61/2 It
1 and 2 row cultivators
4 S 6 ft Krng Kutters mowers -

lJ~ [ f)

"'

C, ~

rr po&lt;-.'&gt;PS'&gt;&lt;'d
mob l e
ll( n '&gt; 8 1 mobl~.;'&gt; StP at
K&amp; K M oh C' Hom 0-; S~1 cs
Jl JHklOnAv£

T rt

ATHLETIC

Ca ll

~

1 ..,

d

n&lt;,u r cd

cl Sf!

htJr ld n()S I )( r '&gt;
rura walf'r n1 "lr &lt;.,C iloo tc,
Mer ce rv I c lf C'l C 1 1 756

HOME

Otll N

MAY 21 &amp;22
Tr as h T o Be
Pocked Up
Should Be
P lac ed A I Th e
Cu r b By 10 A M

rD MOO ILF

6 rm s

Came
&amp;
Pro
1ec: I or
~==;::;::;::::::::;:~:==:::;-tr===========;j
Repat rr a Any
make
or It
m ode l
Pho t ographiC
AODY SHOP&amp; '1
HELP WA NrFD
Repatr Se r vce Bobby Er
RENrAL TRAIL E R\
Es t lblt&lt;;hecl
bu ~ 111 '&gt;'&gt;
w tn 130 Bas t 1an1 Dr Cal l
Be vour own boss In
ne ed s quCJid t d Iron!
446 4884
etude s 220
11r com
e nd
1 1 qnrnf nt
pre ssor be ll &amp; d1.-.c
SpCC i l h SI Mus ! bl lblr
s 1nder qnndcr m 1ny
to m s t r~ ll ~ h oc k '&gt; 1nd do
Out std e house pam t mg and
more lo ots
RI
2
ot h e r
fr o nt Llld
pl umb1ng Have ref s &amp;
Gl lh po ll s Ferry w V il
m ec h an t cll
wo rk
ex p F RE E est cal f Bob or
Ph 67S 68~1
Trc1111 tllq
lvil ll il bl c
John 446 8695
Base pily plu '&gt; co mm1 s
so n
Qulllf l f'&lt;l
1p
ph cilnf.} on ly nt t:d to
lpp ty Send credent 11\
Hld refenmc cs to I 0
Alternative
Box 534 Pom er oy Oh

St ops
SOc
Wa 1t1n9 Tt me 1 hr S8 00
VmeS t to

U

MOBILE HOME S MOVE D

MCl13 l [
I L\
Q U {\I I f Y
M l) !I I L l
HOMf
\\t f
I
Ml
v\:1 \ 1 (:
111()11
h'l
JS I Hl)NI !If'\ IHM

c

6376

JO 1 675

Mnrlttr

Ill p(

l
(1

500

516 /Ill

j {) f

Mob ll H om
l or S lll

rf&lt;'

3

c

1 11 c lr

S/

Y97

70

x

I.!

10 11 1

f ur

Bus m ess
Opport un tt y

21

Kostccky 16121 432 0676

VINTON VILLAGE

$1

WI LL clean ba se men t s
garage s odd 1obs &amp; l1ght
laundr1ng 304 675 373&lt;1

5537 9AM 7PM

Eff ec tt ve M"Y 17 1962

G5 1

Wan t ed to Do

Wa nted t o Do

18

people
selli ng

S1tuat1on s Wanted

School s ln stru ctt on

Kara t e the ult1mate 1n se I
defence al l pr1vate lessons
Men women &amp; c h ldren
lnsrruct ton thru bl ack bel t
A l so availabl e K arat e
u nifo r ms pu c h1ng and
ktCk 1ng bags and protcc
t1ve equ1pment
Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
A ss oc ates
Karate
Stud10
1 &lt;~3
Burl1ngton Rd
Jack son
Oh Call 286 3074

FULL OR PART TIME

4464612 ex! 76

18

13
Insura nce
SANDY AND BEAVER In

co uples and 1nd1V1duals for
bus1 ness or your own
Local Amway D tstrtbu tor
trat ns you for sple nded op
portun1 t y No expenence
necessary For 1nter v 1ew
send name and phone num
ber to P 0 Box 3.:tl R10
Gr ande Oh .:t5674

The 0 0 Mci n tyre Park
D tstnct ts st ill accepttng
appl tcat1ons for a summer
sw1m m1n g 1ns tru ctor Ap
plt ca nt mu st have curr ent
Water Sa ft ey Instr uctor s
card an d be ab le to 1nstr uc t
ages 2 t o ad ult F or mor e
1nform at ton ca ll or stop tn
the Pa rk Dt st rt c t offt ce a t

S1tuatt ons Wa nt ed

Home s lor S liL

3I

304 675 2517

6146987 11 1

Avon Ca ll 446 3358

-

H ave vacancy 1n my hom e
for elder ly
Ambulatory
man or woman 7 yea r s ex
pe rt ence
667 3401
Tu p
pe r sp l a1ns Oh

Start at the top Sell Avon
We re the world s la r ges t
d1rec t set1 1ng company
Call now 742 1755 or co llect

$$$

I .;
I I

po n tnwnl Pt1on•
3)70 111 r 4 n m

C f 1\ N
H OM I \

RealE'slale

H1 gh Sc hoo l Gradua tes &amp;
Sen1ors you can earn over
$550 00 per month while
learn 1ng a va l uable sk1 ll
like compu ter r epa1re r
sheet meta l worker or
r efngera f 1on P lus you w ill
have a secu r e par t t me tOb
w1 f h th e Amry Nat 1ona l
Guard
afte r
SChOO 1ng
Bene f its 1nc lude a $ 1 500 00
e nl tst m ent
bon u s
$35 000 00 li te tnsura nce
and f ree tu1t1 on to an y
co ll ege or t rade sc hool m
West Vtrg 1nta Inter est ed
persons may ca ll (304) 675
3950 or tn We st V tr g tn la ca ll

I ke

! Jr
()O T

(j

Pnon•

t

Ouddy

197t

1)(1 room

l lOill &lt;., ( \l L 416 h/

H elp Wa nted

People who
make good

!)

I

CL

1910 C r f' qor y tr a te r 17x65
7 bNtroom a1 r cund un t
porc11 &amp; awn.nq
good
cond
w t5hN &amp; dryer
sp1u '£5 000 Lo t "' so tor
r n1 ?97 6093

71 4

}t./

H OU'-J I

for i'l111ypes of bu s nf .-..~ , s
( M Ol Neal
.tlb 3867

Mob il e Homes

for Sa le

1r 1qr
12
1 e r r~
010 11 olr vtrl r on
1 m
1hovr Anp tc
11w
Grovr 01 o ~3/ 500 Will
&lt;on'&gt;l(h 1 11 Hh tor llOU5t
'lnfl tot ul tqu 11 v 11lJ 6 \4

1
IJl'&gt; n1
!0.J6/'ll "J!l

Protess10nill
SPrv1ce s

C &amp;L Bookk f' p nt
Bookk ec p,n g &amp; 1 ~1x. se r v

BRASS old

6 II yard rakes

Announcements

Golf Lessons &amp; Club repair
John Teaford, Chesler Oh
985 3961
'

SIMP $ 1

Have land? Want 10 t)u lei?
Noth1ng down l ow I Nr~t
no paymen t for 6 mar t11s

23

books 1 593 891 5

CHURCH OF CHRIST

,,.,

-·- .·-l-,..t_O.....
--·..........._
-...

o Ao~o

Au

E

J2

H( J'&gt;

11

OLD FURNI TURE beds

6370

telephonfl u cluu•6u

Be&gt;o a. Mo 0&lt;
1 Au o Po
a. o

~~~OUT '

Good used sma ll ma nure

GOSPEL MEETING
!{~ .... ,~ ..... .

n

A !hen s Oh 591 3051

614 592 3053

WA NT TO BUY Old lur
446 3159 and 256 1967 1n fhe

AVA NELL E

...C.v•-•
_... ....... ..
, ........

Mortgage

Hom es lor Sat~

31

your ilome JO year I xccl
rate wva &amp; 011 o Lender

Good used car W1 ll pay $400
to $500 Mus t be tn good
runn mg cond Ca ll 446 8278

12
Ex

eventngs

-

CHARITY STARTS AT

- - - --

Shor t H a1red pup wh1te
wtth tan spots Call 304 458

Sm a ll w htte ter n or 1n New
Haven VICIIlt ty answe r s to
nam e of Henr y Phone 304

us 1n ~

Wf: PAY TAXeS llet&lt;e'

n::&gt;;YN ~IRM

Public Sa l e
&amp; Auc t 1on

ntture and A nt1 Ques of a ll
k mds ca ll Kenneth Swa 1n

hkt ly pc ndmg r ei east• of &lt;-~ second

m a rtjua na

Mon ey to Lo tln

R E FINANCE o r pur ctl a'ir
ANOVT C\1'

11

4 kt ttens Mot her has tong
ha tr 742 2460

scaled mdoctmenl
Charges conta tned tn the tn
doctment mclude consptracy to
distllbute

22

Ca ll 245 5055 or 446 1052 or
446 2801

day 9 !Il l 0

9

Ga ll ipOliS Call 388 881 0

He saod more arresl.!; ate

They'll Do It Every T1me

Wan ted swarms of bees

Yard Sales Corner Sm1th
and L ocust St ree ts Hen
der son Fnday and Sa tur

pupp1es Call388 9839

da nts wen• £rom Ohw

had lx't: n wo 1k1 nJ..: on thc tast f 01
m or e than six mont hs madl' lht

9 5 4'h

7 on Eag le
far m past

Ya rd Sa le Fn day and
Sa turday 2320 Jeffer son
Po1nt P leasa nt W V

3069

F•bet

Stall and !ctlct ,ol offouals who

mtl es off Rt
nd ge
F1rst
church

2 wh1 fe Pers1an k 1tfens 2
pa rt Boxer &amp; part col 11e

medtngs and telephone ca lls wtl h
the ddt ndanb Nom nf t he dd1 n

sa1d

191h lhru 22nd

ANY PERSON who has 8

LOS T R 1ng at W as hm gton
Sc hool Resem bl es a wed
d1 ng ba nd w 1th one sm a ll
d1a m ond Ca ll 446 273 1

The plan was to obta on 1l111 South
Ameroca and fly tl up here to a
Ntcholas County att sltt p Fa bet

Stdewa lk Sa le w h ole leng th
of V tne St 1n Racme May
20 Numer ous 1t em s suc h
as clothes d tshes l1vmg
r oom sutte cha trs color
TV stor m door s u tt lt ty
table et c Free Coffee

Wanted t o B uy

Gtveaw_!y _ _

LOST
Br own1s h b l ack
Billfold
los t •n v1c tn 1ty

Federal agents bust drug ring
IAPl -

9

lot

Thank You The Lelarl

6

CHA RLESTON W Va

Yard Sa le

Rumm age Sa le May 17 21
at
Ltttl e
B ull sk t n
Towe ho use 9 ? Ba by &amp;
children s c lothes H and
m ade queen SIZe qu 1lt

was the v10lab on of certa m of those

'Beaver''s dad dies in Gennany
LOS ANGELES lAP ) - Hugh
Bea wnont, a clergyman tu rned
actor who played a stern fa ther on
the popular televtswn senes Leave
It to Beaver,' has died of an apparent heart attack at age 72 hts
stsle r satd Fnday

PUBLI C NOT ICE We are
t ry mg to keep !he cemet ery
at Letart Fa l ls tn tts
pr ese nt condt fton but m ust
depend on your tnter est
and help t o tnsure th at your
lot w ill be ke pt clea n t hts
yea r Pl ease send check
cash or money or der to

7

It s, Oho o-Poonl P leasant W Va

v nnt•:,JU 4 61J/'lll

,------------~

1-- - - - - - - - - - - - 1

THE OlE CAR
ClUB INC

!&gt;I 71:1800/IM ONTH
S~ llOOAWrEK

1o/.t75 A0AY
On 1 l Olli Cl\ 11 o ufl1y
ol '!IJ 51:1) 00 you c 1n
CO lli! Ol
S1 ~SO 00
1 outr
ot h•qh r.: 11 nFng
VL ilc1 rl(j
lllChltlf \
l V I I 1hl1 to I lllllCtllty
l l '&gt; I)Oil Sibl t
HHl iV dul l '&gt;
\ t l kllt&lt;jl \ ll { y(' ltlqh
(A SH Hl COtllt
w th
I Ill llllllUin ( I lltnl 1/Hl
tllOilt y ltl Vt~ l rl Dl ll
W I Ill
111 &lt;; I 11li1 \ IH d 5
yr 11 olct &lt;o rnpln y C 111
toll I•' t

l Oll prOfit Of Qlll

/1

" t

1

v nq

Iii

ct

111

n

Il L
19
11
lhl
1..11 IJtlOUH H Pi!tl ~ I
C llllpol \ We u e '&gt;etk
nq don 111 d llr Ill \ 10 be
HI( I !Hlld
PrOClld S qo
1n tu lp .-, ponso r lhr An
111 I ( l f '&gt; how A I q I I
ncl loc1 l ch1r I t &lt;, N o
11 11~
pl e lst'
Wt pro
V HI
ill! pCkUp
( 111 1 om cr oy F t 1nk
r 1'&gt;1 '1'17 7BH M l '&gt; On
K n Nr l l 173 So/ 9 Pl
J

I !lOU Ill I lll!Hl
/1 k fo r &gt;p ' llor ltJ
W&lt; I
(flfU O l &lt;, rRII \U f O R\

1

m

1

H on

00 n

t. 7 ':1

~

V1 11 pI &lt;,
01 v 1cl
oy
.J 16 4911
I 16 1:1~ 19

INC

YI SO I'Hh)ht! IN Otlh
I 1111 Il l'&gt; I llk f- l JJ'Hl~

I ':1 J

Me
or

PUBliC AUCTION
5 22 82 PERSONAL PROPERTY 10 30 AM
ESTATE AND GUARDI ANSHI PSALE
D ttCIIO O'&gt; fr om C til poll s ') t11 f' Route 160 N E
pl '&gt; t Hollt, H oc; plllllurn 1 qhl on Sl1t c R ou l 1 31S af
v n l on co nt111ur lP IHOX t
m lc s Stgn s wil l be
po sit cl
W 11 ul t
~~ lr ntH
w l11 ul ll iJit 6 w II n u t c t1a r s
w u1 1 11 v n w 1 1 lm
p 1on r H k Lhc rry l ilbiC'
lllll rt '&gt;k f llp
(! ". I Wl l U1 drt~SN Wlllu l
• ':&gt;1
'"' lr .., r b1c.,
lk ~ qh char V' VI'r 11
"
111 llh c, 1c 1.., r f ne t r
(&lt;.,O tnl olcl
l =i lP':&gt;
v.. 1&lt;., 1 I) W lflrt p I t I r S 1 7 PC (JU II nq irlnll ~
tr un k IOUWII ( Ill r V kl t (I) 1
Vd5f' S&lt;'W nq
t1rl C, kl I onr n!) t '&gt; k I p 111 rn ff qllSS o I lam p Oil r
ql'lS') ClHllrc, l r k '&gt; &lt;,m ca ll p tr11 r br1 ss b1rc1 c~ Q('
I rl&lt;H r I Hll p I u W
lock hit Wll (Il l "&gt;"&gt; f'qq l f'l k(' l
I f' tJOWI sp
( l11&lt;; t rc '&gt; t hIt ur l df'prf'~"&gt; on c 1.-l S~
1 ell c, l r k &lt;, 11 t)N 1111 p 1 t otrtr
con d mC'nl
!111 ({ "'
I I c, d1 c, t 1 I J tl '"
11 I l Sl c k ~
l lr&lt;H r o 1'&gt; 10n i p tc t 0r SC'Vf r :o nlrt book'&gt; mu s c
t ll)n!IOUILI "&gt;&amp; OUILT TOP S llllf lflf'Qt11 n
111 All 1pp01r to br n cxc 1 lit n t conch! on Mnc.1 1rr
vf'rf nlcl
J nnv
I nff hO I I ll
tJo x of Rov 11
Clp(nt 1q n t, I)('&gt; S LVff.l GARS n lk q 1'&gt;"&gt;
p l l I r ! 1 l
!1 1
v 11JO t l ol
I mp
1 t (! t IJ
l p&lt; 1 1p1 Dl ell t n
r rl c V( r
n 1p1 clr &lt;:. l v11 1y 1nd tH 1(
IJnnkl'l c; l c, t
c,c vrr 11m scc ttanrous twusr not cl t1 cm&lt;-. NOTE All
tlousetlolcf ! em s l tstecl nr r n qood cond ton Lilwn
mow er 3 5 hp E lec tr1 c lru1unc• 1cl q clcc UHl C!f'
fl oor model Zcn1fl1 T V 12 q 1uor Rem ngt on doul)lr
barrel 12 r fi e SS.W 32 p stol Sc ar s ss I S r ct nq
mower Cratt sm 1n 3 1 c 111 n c, r~w ~cars upr qhl
fr eezer motor c1nd qrl ndcr lncl ctcr s 8 &amp; 30 rlec
sande r Several sma ll tools
ooughlas M Cowles A tt orn ey
Guard 1an for charles W Daft
Probitfell' l 7139
Sa te co nducted by
Bud McG hee Auct1on Co
428 Seco nd Ave
Gtl lltpolt S Oht o 4563 1
H 1m l1 n c K tng A ttor ney
l or th e es tate of E ve ty n
L Da ft Pro bate.017 1J8
Au ct tOnee r
M L Bud McGhee
Te lephone (6 14) 446 0552
TERMS Ca!". h or check w tlh orooe r I D A It tt em s t o
be pa1d for b efore re mo ved f ro m th e ar ea Buye r tS
res pons1ol e f or a l l ttem s purc hased

�e- 0-4 - The

Tom

Rentals
41

41

Houses for R ent

3 bdr hou se. ap ts. com
mercia! htghwa sy Iron
tage Ca ll 304 675 5104 or

675 5386

odd
Houses tor Rent

Apartm e nts. homes, offr ce
spa ce, small bustne ss ,
r oom s f or rent Clea tand

Realty , 992 2259

New redecora ted 3 bdr tn
Ctly
Re fer ence and no

N tce furnt slled m ob il e
hom e, ce ntral atr 1 mt
ct t y ove r tooktng
rtve r . ad ult s on l y Call 446

Mobtle Homes
for Rent

Sma ll hou se unf tn town.
QUtet stree t. 2 bdr , e lcct n c
range. gas hea t atr cond
S200 mo Call Earl Tope
446 0690 bus hrs. or 446 0161

eve
Older fram house tn Rto
Gra nd e a r ea Ca ll ~46 325 8
or 446 3888
4 bedr oom, cen tra l at r and

hea l. c• ty water , ltreplare.
un fur n1shed except
k.tt
chen
$300 month plu s
ufilllt es
Refer ence and
deposll
r equtred
In
Rac tne 949 2293
P o mer oy '}
bd room .
remodeled. 408 Sp r1ng
Carpeted. sec urtty depost t
$100 Rent $195 Call aft er 6
p m 99? 2288

205

Sp,ng

Ave N• ce ftv e room house
w1th two bedroom s, bath ,
ltvtng room , d tntng r oo m ,
kttc hen w1th stove and
r efr tga tor f urntshed Ba ck
yard Storm wtndows , tn
sut ated , forced a•r furn ace
mak.e ufiltftes low du r1n g
he at1n g se ason $165 per
rent.
secu rdy
m onth
deposll $100 Ad ult s, no tn
Stde pets Phone 992 5292.
affer 5 weekdays, anyttme
weeke nds
2 bedroom unfurn1 shed.
L R , ktl chen. ba se ment.
nt ce &amp; c lean, so me ca r
pettng, rang e 1n k1t c hen , no
•ns•de pets. Dep req 992

3090
3 bd room cou ntry home
98 5 384h

tJJ08 32

446 4225 or 446 0756

WEST

EAST

.853
.J962

.K764
.7

tA4

tn

+J 109 4

+117111

12 x65 modern &amp; clea n. 3
bd r , furnt shcd , utd tt. es pd
exce pt for elect r tc Con
vente nt locat ron on(.'. Uppe r
R1v er Rd
across fr om
John Dee r e Tra ctor Sa les
Sec dep r eQ Ca II 446 8558
after5

Dealer North
Wn1

Norlll

Easl

Soul

Pass
Pass
Pa ss

Pass
lt
:;t
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
4 NT
s•

Tratler ~ dnd AJJarlm enl fo r
rent . a1 r cond Beautiful
rtve r vtew tn K ana uga
PHone 446 1602

Furn 2 bdr mobile home
tn Crown C1 t y Ca ll 256

6520

+A

By O.•akl Jacoby

2 bdr trade
forkdr en
t Call
after
5 wr ee
ays
or
anyt1m e Sa l &amp; Sun , 446
1052

2 bdr . u nf , mobile 11ome,
12x60 . w• l h expando, on Rt
35 Call .446 4229

enough for his forcing two
btd but the game was rubber
bridge and the players were

Apartment
for Rent

44

F urnt shed apt 1 bdr , nt ce,
$235 Ult1tt es pd
adults
Call446 ~416 after 7PM
2 bdr apartm ent tn Vtn l on
Clean , conven rent locat•on
Ref &amp; Stove tu rn, $135 mo

Call2455818

mile ou t San dhill Road ,
Po.nt Pleasant Ph one 304

Apartmen t. 2 bdr , unf , no
pets Ca l l 446 3937

NOTICE

JUST RECEIVED
A complete lm e of
shrubbery, trees and
rose buses See u s for
the low es t pnces tn
town
1 U sed Whtrlpool
Copper ton e
Refngera tor
S200

POMEROY
LANDMARK

1 bed room furntsh ed apt
Tw o or 3 bed r oom m obtle
Homes. Furn1s hed or un
fu rn1shed Phone 30 4 675
1371 or 675 3811
O N E bedroom
hom e. 30 4 675 4154

992 5434 992 5914 or 304 882
2566

614.992·2112

P a rl tally
furn tshe d
r ooms and bath 992 5908

~

mob tl e

Farms for Rent

PAS TU RE for r ent, 40 head
cattl e, no hor ses, good fen
ce abu ndan ce water &amp;
gr ass, 30~ 675 1269

Apa rtm ent s 675

55~8

APARTME NT S, mobile
h o me s,
h ouses,
PI
Pl easan t and Ca ll•poi1S

Furnt shed apt
1 bdr ,
adult s, $200, etect r 1e, water
pa•d Cal l 4~6 .4416 a ft er

7PM

Furn 1shed apt 3 bdr , $195
Children acceptable, w a ter
pd Ca14.4644 16a ft er 7PM

Furn •she d one bed r oom
apa rt ment , ex tra n• ce,
adult s only No pe ts Ph one

New 14' Wide
MOBILE
HOMES
From

$9,995 00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
W•lh 2 Locatton s
Rt 9JNorth
Jackson, Oh10
286·)752

or
Corner 2nd &amp; V rand
Pt Pleasant, W Vi)_.

675 4424

Real Estate -

General

May be pur

chased for $5, 000 or $10 ,000 down payment o r land
contract Very lovel y ran c h, 3 bedroom s, ftreplace,
11'1 car qrlruqc, !arqc lo t , no r easo nab le offer
r efu sed
/1 1148
NO LAYOFF S HER E - Fi!mtly run grocery &amp;
gasoltne bu s•ness Pr operty tlas a stoc ked g rocery
store and 3 bedroom m ob il e home on 2 89 acre s Ad
ded bonu s for the b ustness perso n wt th a green
thumb •s a 24x.40 greent1ouse
II 0040
ASSUME 8lf1o/o LOAN - Lovely ranch at the edge of
tow n 1s prt ced to sell a t $49,900 Fe atur es ar e 3 BR .
Jl 1 ba ths, l arge L R w rt h WB firepla ce. modern ktf
chen &amp; d1n1ng area , laundry rm , gara ge &amp; gas heat
Ca ll t or appo1ntm ent Ca ll RANNY BLACKBURN

AT STROUT REALTY - 446 0008
Reel E.tate - General

-;;;;~;jj;;j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

J

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066
Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Ev~- Ph. 446-4618
.Ken Morgan, Realtor, E've. Ph·_446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408

TWO
bedroom.
un
turn tshed One bed room el
lloPn cy 304 675 2722
Small apartm ent tn Pt
P leasa nt furn •shed ultlttt es

pa'd 30&lt; 895 3450
Two bed r oo m f ur n ts hed
apa rt ment w tlh ca rpet
Thr oughout,
loca ted ~n
R tpl ey
R easo n ab ly
pr1 ced 304 273 30 78 or 37?

CUSTOM BUILT
HOME
Fully carpeted , 5 bed rooms, 2Yl batht, living
room with woodbumlng
fireplace, dining room,
femilv room, utilrty room,
furnished kitchen. attic, 3
porches. 4 acre lot very private On lincoln Hill
Shown by appointment.

you a r e thtnk.tng about se lling your hou se let u s ta ke
th e burden fr om you We have co nt ac l w•lh
QUaltfted b uy er s evey day Perhaps w e can se ll
yours nex t week 1

RESIDENTIAL

DR

COMMERC IAL

properly

ONE FLOOR ST URDY brt c k homP ( full ba se meniJ
St t uat ed wt hl tn c rt y of Ga ll tpol •s La r ge garage tn
r ear Use f or r es1 dent 1al or comme r c 1al
3 BEDROOM COTTAGE st tu aled rust ou t .o f C1 l y
ltmtl Larc~ e ga rd en a r ea a nd co nv ent ent to c tly
C• I Y wat er . pnced 1040 s

CANADAY
REALTY
Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
-Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-363G
25 Locust St, Gallipolis, Ohio

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Nella Smith, Assoc. 388-8649
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162
John Fuller, Realtor, 245-9473
Real Elteta - General

TEAFOR

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

EXPENSIVE BUT WORTH IT! Elegant 4 BR, br•ck
ranch tlome surrounded by twelve beautiful acres
2'12 baths, formal drnmg, famrly rm with frreplac e
Equipped k1tchen 1:!esrgned by Chandler's 2 ca r
garage. Horse barn . Roger Hornsby statnl ess st ee l
pool. Shown by appointment only
SuPER RANCH . move 1n cond1t1 on 3 bedrooms,
family room. woodburn1ng stove, thermopane ,wrn ;
dows 2 car garage and for Summer f~n, 16 x32
pool. FenceP back yard, Loan Assumptton Kyger
creek area.M9.SOO

wdl buy a nearly new 3 bedroom ranch

home, tully carpeted . Carport. On over an l!Cre.
Kyger Creek Schools. Call soon for an appointment.

THREE ACRE AND MOBILE HOME- - $16,000 or
mobile home and 25 acres - $34,500. Two bedroom

I

mobile ha s eat· in kitchen with range lrelrig 10x26
porch City school s.

ONLY $5,000 tllWIN ~ Balance at 12%. 20 year
term, $220.22 11)0111hfy payment. J bedroom home on
2'i' lots in vHiage of Chesh ir e. Home has vinyl

TWENTY-SEVEN ACRES - Mostl( level, good
produ c1 ng land 3 bedroom home has two sun por·

siding. forced air gas furnace . 2 car garage, $25.000

ches wood and coa l burning stove, new furnace,
bath'l. and water system. Aluminum stding. Barn

SUBURBAN TWO STORY ... 3 BR , formal din,ng,

plus other outbldg. Rura l water. Locatod just off Rt.
160 $54,000.

large living room , super wood ,deck ... v,ery nrce

area for famoly . Kyger Cn•k Schools. $42,000.

For Lease

lease, 2300 lbs 15 ce nts per

Whtte elect rr c stove, exc
cond , new ltving room

1b Mason Co

couch

TOBACCO

allotm ent

for

Phone 304·

Ca ll

446 ·3945,

even•ngs

HERE ' A CREAM PUFF
Au t he nltc o ld br1 c k 3 bedroom r&lt;1nc h
Wtltl &lt;1 la rg e be autiful f amily room. 2
ful l cc r amt c ba t hs. wtfe appr oved bu•ll
.n ktf Cilen and d 1n1nq arC' &lt;l Two ca r
Qar rl Qe nnd a ktn q's v •cw ot t11 c c tly ond
Oh10 R •ver Vnlley Tt11s hom e tS very
n tcf' l y decor il tNI ilnd ha s had th e bes t of
ca r e The owner tS mov•nQ ou t of state
and dcstrcs il Qut ck Sillc Locat ed •n
!ow n gracle sc hool ch tl drcn can walk to
schoo l

May t ag w rrng er was her,
GE dt shwasher , fuel otl

MerenanBise

l ank Call379 2435
51

Household Goods

Ray 's Used Furntture, Ad ·
drson, Oh
Oak swmgs

GOOO
USEO
AP
PLIANCES
washers,

$18 .95, coppertone kitchen
cab,net $35, chest $45,

dryers,

refrigerators,

ranges

Skagg s

pliances, Upper Rrver Rd .,
bes•de Ston.e Crest Motel

dresser $35, LR c ha•r $125,
swrnging cradle S25, break·
f ast set $35, antrque hutch
$150 Open 9 til 5 Ca ll 367

446·7398

0637

GE heavy duty washer
$100 Kenmore coppertone
dryer, like new , $100,

1 hosp bed , bla c k &amp; wh1te
fl oor model RCA televrsion
Ca ll446 6322

Ap ·

guaranteed Ca ll 256·1207
GE au to wastler , lik e new,

1.4 cu It Whtrlpool avacado
r efrigerator . ntee cond

$125 Ca ll446 8181

Cal l446 1909 or 446·9160

Real E•tate - General

FARM FOR SALE

26 ACRES. SM. HOME
2 bedrooms, living rm. w / fireplace,
w / kitchen, ex. water well could be piped
in. 6 acres tillable, rest woods and
pasture. Fruit trees, large barn, many
other outbldgs including tie house and
cellar, 1,440 lbs. tobacco base. Secluded
yet on county road. Near Mercervile.
$18,000. Call256-1579.

APROX 14,000 DOWN
BELOW MARKET INTEREST RATE
owner s moved to Ky mus t sell now•
Attr a ci 1Ve 3 bed r oom home 1n La Sa ll e
Ctr c le (Gree n G r ade Sc hool) H as a
nt ce larg e ktt chen equ1pped, bath olf
master bedroom , el ec t heat . garage
an d l arge yard $48,900

'

Real Ettate - General

ming pool , new 2 ca r
garage, 2 shady lot s, lar ge 7 room hou se w1th Ph
baths, modern kttchen , nat gas F A furna ce, ca r
petrng , foy er , and f ormal dtnrng
NEW LI STING - 8 room o lder hom e tn good con
dt l ton Ha s Jl/1 baths, dtntn g, nat gas F A furnace,
2 car garage, large s hade trees, flowers and one
acre Can you beat $22,500?

Brok er · Auctroneer
Ll FE
IN SURA NCE

428 Second Ave.
(.1 11 446 0552 Anytrme
BMR 411 - 3 bedroom hom e 3 mtles from City
Owner will co ns1der ftn ancmg Sttu ated on large flat
tot vrnyl stdtng &amp; natural ga s hea t Carport w•th
storage area Ca ll tor detatt s •

on Second Ave, 3 or .4 bedrooms REDUCED! Bet
ter see thr s one
BMR 402F - CHECK QN THIS ONE - 37 ac res
wrth 1401 lb toba cco base, 30x30 barn Call tod ay !
BMR 399 - GREAT LOCATION! - Two sto ry
home pre sen tly be1ng used as a duplex, could be
easily converted to single famtly Chorce locat ron
nea r wash rngton Sc hool Call for detatlsl

DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR SS

BMR 409 - OWNER FINANCING - Th1s sp ltt
foyer home 1ncludes 3 bedrooms, 2 full bath s, large
den wrth frr ep lace, hea t pump. See fh tS fully car
peted home now . Located m Crown Ctty!

One of the best home va lues we've had to offer.
Owner ha s dropped the prrce of th•s one con ·
Stderably Good ftnan cing terms . You ca n move tn
1ust rn trm e to en tOY this su mmer and pool, 18'x36' .
Landsca ped grounds, n•ce pat to area and gas grrll
Beaut1ful home, formal drntng room, entry &amp; llv1ng
room wi th w b frrep lace Famr\y room on matn
floor Large r ec room and w b f1reptace in
basement A Quality burl1 hom e rn exce ll ent con
d1t1on

BMR 391 - REDUCED! - Owner wants tt so ld
now! Mobile home loca ted on rrver front lot

REMEMBER SENIOR
CITIZENS DAY MAY 18th

TlP tOP SHAPE!
Just a ltltle preftter than so many Modern 3·4
bedroom bnck home Formal hvtng &amp; d tning room .
Large k•tchen Full base ment Large 2 car garage.
Work shop &amp; barn Srttrng on 58 acres, more or less,
of land sc aped grounds Spnng will be breathless
here! Owner will helpfrnance, 10% tnt Rate

Just $28,000

BMR 389 - Thrs line home has 4 bedrooms and ts
located c lose to town You writ tlave a larg e lot w1th
a country atmosphere and have all the crty con·
Yeniences Call now!

SPECIAL FINANCING Sm a ll down payment wdl

BMR 398 -

buy thts 10 room home tn Ractne Gas furnace,
woodburnrng frreplace, mod ern bath, large tot wtth

transferred and must sell th1 s 3 BR ranch Close to
town rnc ludes deluxe 18x36 tnground pool. Call fc.r
an appointment today!

REDECORATED - This one realy looks nice Has 7
rooms, modern bath , por ches, carport 3 car'
garage, and large leve l lot fo r a garden or other use

hobby shop of 24'x42' Only $32.SOO
POMERY - Two for one frame Homes 2 garages, 2
baths, al l utilities and level lots Asktng $28,500
Want an offer .

ACRES - New contemporary brick &amp; cedar ranch with a mntton dollar vtew! 1Q3;.. Int. rate (to be

assumed) Quality built home. Excellent location.
What else could you want in a home?

GET READY FOR SUMMER! Owner

~MR 407F - Camp·srte Potentral! 32 acres m / 1wtth
frontage on Raccoon Cr as well as fronta ge on

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I/
I w..
I
SOO SECOND AVE . - 446-3643
I
~~~~~~~~~~~!"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I ~...
1
--==:;;::===================;:==========~~
1
1
STROUT~ REALTV, Inc. I
I
v1ll ~ Amwiica
I
OMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH I
PTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO l
ncrc
ND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200 I
g~;~cn~tll
I
PER MONTH.
I
ov
I
8
2
I
I
I
I

SPR ING VALLEY ESTATES

MAPLE DRIVE

Top Qua l1t y brt ck ra nc h bullt wtth l he
bes t of ma ter ta ls You ha ve 10 see to
app r ect ate lh c T L C builder took
w hil e bulldt ng H as 3 bedr oom s, d•n• ng
r oom . fir epla ce . 7 ba ths, lull base
ment, screened por c h , equ1ped kt t
ct1 en '1 ca r garnqf' anrl benutdul yard
M ak. e us an off er

Yes, what a place to live - It's romantic, it's conven1ent, ot 's
outstanding structurally, it's been completely rebuilt and will
be purchased by someone who knows a good buy when they see ·
one . Call Ike Wiseman for an appointment to see 1t at your con venience.

, TODAY 'S BEST BUY Owne r s moved •
to P a Anx 1ous for 1mmed•ate scr lc r1 nd

Good hom e site and well . 800 lb tobacco base. Some
timber . Owner will sell on land contract - 10% int.
rate . Low down payment!

baths, cel')tral heat, family room, gf)rage, and large

~

4 bedroom modern home. 2

lot. Needs a little repair but, a good buy.
MIDDLEPORT- Modern kitchen, 3 or 4bedrooms,
2 baths; gas central heat, small basement, front por·
ch and level lot. Asking only 519,500.

rancher offers 3 R 's (master tS 16x22),
3 baths, 15x24 LR wrth frreplace, 13x25
family rm .. tormat 0 1nrng rm , ga lley
kttchen tncludes double ovens. cor nrng
type counter top range , OW &amp; dtsp , gas
heat. ce nt arr. attrc fan &amp; mu c h more
Located tn town on Spruce St Ex
te nston Call Ranny Blackburn tor a
personal shOwtng .

HUNTERS PARADISE -

48 ac res mi l

on Raccoon Creek near Ewrngton, ap
prox 10 A trllab le, balance woods, 1111
story log cottage, cellar house, 12x l5
meta l building, extra nrce 14x70 2 BR, 2
bath mobtle home . All th1 s for the
asking pnce of $39,400

NEAR CADMUS -

Forty acres. ap

pro x •t J tillab le and
story farm hom e tn
barn. sheds, f ronts
f1nan ci ng available at

'h wood s, old 2
need of reparrs,
on 141 Owner
10%

GAS STATION &amp; GARAGE -

131 It

front on State Route. 554, corner lot,
over 3100 sq 'ft , 5 bays, presently used
for auto, tractor &amp;' farm eQutpment
r eparrs, partral f tnanc rng availab le

THE

SETTING

IS

SUPERB

Beautrful 1.8 acre wooded lot on the 0 J
Whrte Rd, 311 II frontag e, 12x65 2 BR
mobrle home wtth ex pando Prr ced to

sell at $12.900
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should

AFFORDABLE FARM- 91 &lt;% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - N'ce remodeled 6 rm

highway

12x60 mobile home situated on a 1 acre

lot. Includes furniture, has rear patio w/cover,
covered front deck, 12x24 garage with storage.

MIDDLEPORT

PRICE REDUCED TO $69,500! BUY
BELOW REPLACEMENT COST Over
2100 sq. ft
ltvmg area Th1s all brrck

BMR 413FJ ~ Mono farm located just off the Ap·
palachian highway near Jackson 31i 2 acres m / 1

+

bedroom ranch. Call for more details.

NEw ON MARKET
LOG HOM E &amp; 10 8 ACRE 5
Tht S •S an a ll ri! Ct• ve 11 1 story A yr ole!
l o&lt;r home w• th 3 bee/ r ooms. f •repiMP
eQu1ppcd k tt ctl cn.
11 •
hrl 111
f ull
b ase m ent &amp; woodb ur n• nq lurn rlCC
w ooded 10
lot On ly $39 900 ~1 n ct
l tni'ln cc w•th $6 .000 down

BMR 410 - A-frame srtuated OIJ a beautiful wooeled
setting, you will love the atmosphere Owner finan·
cing for qualtfred buyers Low SO's

blac~top

BMR 4r4 -

QUICK OCCUPANCY
ONLY $2,000• DOWN PAYMENT Monthly
payment of $353.17 Wtlh taxes and ins. 2'i ' yrs. old, 3

have
ord1n
Over
1700 sqpnced
II ofhome
lt vtng acc
a r ea
hagty
s a large
f amil y r oom w/ ftreptace, 2 ba th s. w tf e
appr ove d
kdchen ,
n• ce
S1ted
bed r ooms. 2 car qa rage and l and
L
0
scaped , 1 i! C
ya rd
91 1 o
oan
Ass umplt on $6 1. 000

describe this lovely 3 BR br•ck ranch
Spec tal features are a large LR &amp; dtn
tng rm , equipped kttchen, Ph baths,
laundry, qua l ity carpet, cent . a1r &amp; an
oversized 2 car garage Located on U.S.
~5 West &amp; shown by appointment

with an older two BR home, several outbuildings
just right for leisure time or full time living .

6 ACRES MORE OR LESS

TIME FOR A CHANGE I ~TOP PAYING RENT
Withon only 52,500 down payment you can buy lhts
beautiful 3 bedroom brick ranch. Sitting on 3 acres
of scenic woodland. Nice pond, all fenced . Only 9%
Int. Rate You can't beat a deal like this one! South·
western School District.

218 1ST AVE.-WHAT APLACE TO LIVE
What a place to hve - the view ts outstanding all day long but espeeta ll y 1n
ftie eventng when the nver's rtppling current reflects the golden moonbeam
wtth a soft cool breeze blowmg and all you have to do rs st l and en 1oy tT
What a place to hve - when the chrldren Ciln wa lk to school. the ball gam.cs
or the playground , and you can do all your shopprng or tak e .1n eve ntn g strol l
through the park and go to church and nev er need a car
What a place to lrve - You get the best locatron rn town i! nd one of th e ltn e
older homes that dates back to somewhere around 1840
What a plac e to live - when you can buy a home that so m eo ne el se spent B
months remod eling, repatnng , rebutldrng and r edecoratrng Puttrng on a new
roof , repamng floor s, tnstallmg a beautiful new oak krtch en, cl new J zon e hot
water heatng system , 2 new bath s, all new e l ectr~ea l w trrng w 1th 200 ilmp ser
vrce, new plumbrng throughout and, of course, new carpct 1ng and floor
coiJenngs.
What a place to ltve - when the owner rs wrlltng to sellrt tor less than he ha s
tt bec ause his employment requtred h1m to move out of tl rea teav mg h 1 m 1n tt
bind but gtving you an opportuntty to bu y an ou t standrng proper.!.!
•

Reel Eltete - General

Wood Realty , Inc.
32 Locu st St ., Gallipolis·

LUXURY SIZED spirt lev el offer s a well zoned
layout Ltvtng, dtntng and kttchen on ma•n leve l, 3
bedroom s on upp er level offers prrvac y, QUtet
Recreat1on room ant.t' garage downsfatrs Very ntc e
coun try se lltng , ex tr a lar ge tot $65,000

no,ooo -

19 75 Case 450 , dozer
t rac tor . 1,800 hrs , very
good cond , $14,900 Ca ll
.4411 4537

pets. Call 446 7781 or 446
7377

1- 614

on ly $96,000 00

A FRIENDLY AIR - Cl ea n si mple lines, hip roof ,
sh uttered w tndows, sheltered entry all combine to
make th1s home more than JUSt a 3. bedroom
ranch . Spac tous combinatron tamrly room, kitchen.
Double windows in living room. Ceramic tiled
baths. All the woodwork is stained and varnished.
Near ctty . Low interest loan assumption . $49,500.

RON

Good Chnsttan f amtly of 4
needs to rent a house, no

Phone

MUST SELL THIS MONTH to se ttl e es tate Thts
very nt cc brtck ran ch off er s over 1900 sq If of
mod ern ltvtn g PLU S a n ovc r s•zed 2 car gara ge
F ea tur es are 3 BR , 11 ? ba t hs, LR . l arge k.tfchen &amp;
d •n •nq arca w dh butlt tn ranoe. oven. OW &amp; d •so ,
l)x27 t am tl y rm wtlll fir epl ace, ce nt at r , cen tr a l!
vo &lt;.. uunt o. d tarqe fl at lot near Rod ney $59.500 Call
RANNY BL ACKBURN AT STROUT REALiY 446 0008

0 J WHITE ROAD - S49,900 - Br•ck, colon tal ran
ch 3 BR . 2 full baths Fully equtpped kitc he n, lots of
ca btnet s, dtntng area Beautiful plush carpet
Drapes. ftrep la ce, 7 c r~r garage Pleasant country
surroundtn gs

Jac k son . Oh

EVA NS E NT E RPRI SES

Wanted toRe.!!!_ ~

47

BMR 139 - OWNER FINANCING! Two story home

BEAUTIFUL LINES! And instde !:Ome genuine
delights L tk e a. 1.4'x24' lt v1 ng room w1th trad1t 1ona l
ftrepla ce Enormous master ~ u•te For eas y ltv 1ng,
an eff tc ten t kttchen wtfh lot s of counter space, built
tn oven, sfat nless steel co ·Jnter top t ange and d•sh
wa sher 3 baths Cen atr . 2 r ar att ached garage
plus 24'x26' st ora ge butldtng Shown by appo.nt m ent

77 Che vy p1ck. up 7.4 M.n1 Pa na so nt c A M FM casse t
mot or home 77 Mavr•ck . 16 tP c ~r st ero. auto r eve r se.
f t. se lf cont atned camper
Do lby , new. $150 Call 446
Ca ll 245 5034
9472

5930.

6167

4 BE OROOM HOM E nec1r R to Gr&lt;1nd e N eeds so me
work Owner w dl e•th er ren t or se ll l o Qui'lldted prr
son Ca ll l o r more 1nlor milltOn

CALL 992-6149
AFTER 6 P.M.

~-­
.J
.

Misc. Merchandice

54

-~----

FOR RENT 7 Apl s (2 bedroom S/ , sttuat ed near
qol! cour se I ap t dow n and I up Adult s on ly, no
pet s

446-1066

General

T ER Poo ls sa le, supp lt es &amp;
rnstall at i on 403 2nd Ave ,
Ga lhpol tS, Oh Ca ll 446
6579
In ground Ab l ove
ground

-----·

TRAILER lot, 90 x70, Pear

675 2848

4

Real Estate -

On e used

RATLIFF 'S POOL CE N

Misc. Merchandtce

Pla stt c Septt c Tanks Stat e
an d co unty a pproved 1.000
gal tank , pr• ce $340 Other
St les •n stock , haul rn your
ptck up tr uc k Ca ll 614 286

Real Eltete - General

BMR 412 · Older home located rn
Thurman Contatns 7 room s an€1 bath, 2 It r epl ace s,
professional! y in stalled wood burner, forc ed arr fue l
furnace Oul srde features a garage and a screened,
summ er krtchen wt th butlt 1n gnll Call for ap
pmntment

General

BTU's,

54

5

so n
Tratler
Court,
Ga llipoltS Fer ry , 304·675

10 ACRES - Beaut• fu l pla ce tn the co untry , over
half woods. se pt tc tank , wa ter avtlab le
!1 112S

24 Washmgton Sf
Albany, OH

hnd a 3 bedroom r anc h
)«dh basem ent, on 1 J
ac r es for $34 000. but we

Pnvate mobrle home lot tn
Centenary. Call446·4053

49

2 STORY HOME on Ptn e Sf , owne r will e tlllN r ent ,
or se ll pr op er t y for $13,500 00

ROBERTA
HUFFMAN
REALTY

WE KNOW 1l's tough to

----

Space tor Rent

LOT IN RODNEY - Se t up for 1 mob il e home pad s,
patt os, wat er &amp; sep t• c tank. , both sp aces ren ted,
good tn ves tment property
# 1085

3 BEDROOM COLONIAL hom e l oca ted ap prox 2
mil es from Ga ll tpolis Over 160 yea r s old 1 1q w/ b
fir ep la ces, 2 acres ol land Owner w ill e tlher r ent or
sell Ca ll for more 1nforma rton

Real Estate - General

bedroom home w / 16
acres 3 large bldg s
Acr ea qe fronts S R 1.43
tn Harr 1sonvil le $55,000

18 ,000

65,000 BTU ga s floor fur
na ce, On e used ce ntr al atr
condt ttontng sys tem 30.000
BTU , One full st ze mat
tress, One use d etec tr •c fu r
nace Phone 304 67 5 3099

Misc. Merchandice

Pa

----------

REAL ESTAT E

M EI GS CO UNTY
LI STINGS
'· 5P IC N SPAN "

so le . Co uld be fi xed or used
l or par ts .446 4173

54

T1m es -Sentonei-

THI S IS A BARGA IN - horne w1lh 2 bedr ooms,
alum•num s• d•ng , tn town . o n ly $8 ,500 ,

WE NEED LI ST INGS•! WE NEED LISTINGS! II

General

h&lt;'!vc o n e

Reel Eatate -

home . S89,900
Ph 446 2459

46

304 675 1386

6778
Real Estate -

LARGE 1
STORY
BEAUT I FUL BRIC~
COLON IAL
6 years old, I acre tot to

E~r_pment

Thr ee used wi ndow un•l a•r
condtfton e r s,
4,500 9,700

304-773-

-----~---

-~-

CB, TV , Radro

304

RCA Sol'd State 100 Con

Rooms wtth cook in g, cab le,

alf, $40 a week
5651.

OFFICE 446-7013

OWNERS DESPERATE TO SELL -

locil t ed tn downt own Ga llt polts Can be used as two
ap artm en t s or offt ces $38, 000 00

614 446 822 1 or614 245 9484

Apartment
lor Rent

Del ux e furn apart , cent
at r &amp; hea l 1 or 2 adults
only Ca ll .446 UJ38

Lowest
Proces
Ever
On

General

Furnt sned ap t 3 room s &amp;

bath 992 562 1
43

Real Estate -

apt.,

The Sunda

,n Middleport Call 992·2101
or 992·2319 after 5PM

(NEWSPAPER ltN'I'II:RPRISE ASSN.)

Mtsc Merchandice
- --·--

housekeeping

52

Household Goods
Phone

w. V a.

Large trail er lots tor rent

songleton heart, West could
take the first diamond and
give hi! partner a heart ruff
{o beat that slam also

. . -:'"':'"-==-=-i

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

Reel Eatatte - General

trlck.s.
West cashed his ace of
diamonds at trick one and
walted for his trump trlct.

675 3834

Household Goods

Poont Pleasant,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992-7479

would beat him several

S4

Mob tl ~

31

positive resrooae

I~~==:;=:;:====1-:---::"

2 bdr tr ailer furnt shed,
ad ult s only , Brown T r ader
Park. 992 3324
) 4

30 acres, more or less, remodeled farm
house, large barn &amp; tobacco base, quick
sale. 556,000.
304 -675 -5166
On Rt. 35, Southside, W . Va .
Mason Co.
15 miles from Gallipolis

actually have wound up wlth
a profot II East ooened his

and Alu Soot.l,

Ohio-

Park Central Hotel.

There was no score since

Openong lead

S1

FARM FOR SALE

South's 100 honors made up
for the tOD-polnt penalty.
Had South bid the slam in
diamonds East-West mlltht

South didn't really have
2 bdr tr a il er , $150 Ca ll 379
2435

Furntshed 3 r wtlh prtvute
ba th
8.45 Second Ave,
Ga lltpOI IS Call446 21 15
Hom es
for Sa l e

tQ
Vulnerable Both

tddl e port- Gall

General
light

drove South craay. No ooly
did he bunt right Into Blackwood, but after North
!bowed ao ace, South bid the
slam in hearta with no Idea
if Nortll held even one heart.
West had made a proper
decision by not doubling He
expected to beat ab hearts,
but for all he knew they
might run to sll ,.,.trump
and find it a lay down. Not
that it would have been.
South would be declarer and
a jack of clullo lead by West

SOUTH
t A 10 9

May 16, 1982

SLEEPING ROOMS and

far from the npert class.
North bad a rather doubtful band for a pooiUve
response, but he dld have
eight blgb card points
including an ace

The

tA5

.AKQ104
+K Q 9 6

44
L arge sta l ely unfu r ntshed
country home tn Ea stern
Sc hool Ot st r •c l N tce lawn ,
garden , Ctly wat er . garage,
bla ckt op road $275 mon
thly for small family , so m e
uttl1 f tes patd Accep t able
references and secu rtt y
depostl r eQu •red E vent ng s
61.4 9916747

~ ~ ~~~

• 8~3

0338

Homes lor Rent, Lease or
La nd con tract tn town or
c-nun tr y
Call
Str o ut
Rt•alty . 446 0008

POM E ROY ,

41

Real Eatate -

West makes wise play
NORTH
+Q J 2

Mobil e home for rent Ca ll

pets Cal l 446 1158

BRIDGE

THR EE bedroom house,
nt ce Ical ton, 304 675 1384

F or rent 3 bdr hom e wt th
ba se ment. firep l ace. 2
wood burner s, 2 ca r
garage, 3 acr es near G r ee n
E I em , S300 per m o
Wt se man Agency, 446 3643

May 16, 1982

W.Va .

alii

BMR 415 - Just Listed! Extra nice bHevel, in·
eludes 3 bedrooms, lg. family room with brick
fireplace, 18x21 living room, eat-in kitchen, l g.
utility room, and garage. Situated on large lot. City
school distroct. Call for details! '
BMR 416 - want a nice 3 BR ranch style home with

a top of the ground pool, including a possible 8.50%
mortgage assumption, if so, call now.
BMR 417F- we are offering one of Gallia County's
finest farms. Consisting of 218 acres. This fine farm
is in good production. 40 acres cropland, excellent
pasture, and lots of bulldjngs. Also a fine old farm
home. Call now for more details.

&amp; bath home, WB fireplace, stove,
refrig .. cellar house, 3 sheds, 50 acres
m/1, approx 15 A . cleared, &amp; balance
wooded . Located near Eureka in the

city school dis!. $38,900.
BEST BUY IN TOWN -

pletely equipped modern kitchen. A
·BRs. 21f&gt; baths, new siding, garage.

BR I C~

FRAME

&amp;

RAN ·

CHER plu s 78 ACRES of land 1n
Chesh1r e Townsh•P off e r s lo t s of qood
ltvrn g f or your grow1nQ f a mily Home tS
jU St lik e new Wtlh 1438 S Q II Of 11VIIl9
ar ea plu s an attached garaq c 2
spa CtOUS BR's 2 bath ~, 8x27 LR . 10x7 .4
ktl chen w1 th r efrtQ . d1sp . OW , double
oven &amp; r anqe, washer &amp; dr yer stay s tn
l aundry L and tS m os tly roll tnQ pi! slure
land wtt h approx 25 acres wooded c ,1 11
for ap potntm ent

GREEN TOWNSHIP -

CENTRALLY

LOCAT ED - 11 2 acre farm ha s Iron
tage on Stal e Route 588 Fa tr ft eld Cen
tenar y Road &amp; Va nco Fat rfleld Rd Ex
ce ll en t for larmtng or deve l opment
Ol der 5 rm &amp; ba t h farm home, barn &amp;
sil o tn c luded Owners wtll co ns•d er
se lltn g smaiiPr trac ts of short term
ftnan c tng Call for m or e t~fo rmatt o n .
COUNTRY ; YET CO NVENI ENT Great f a mily hom e wllh 3 BR , 2 bath s,
15x27 LR wtth ga s hrep lac e, large
modern kttchen writ• ra nge. se lf
c tean1 n g oven. OW and d1sp, laundry
rm wtth wa sher and dryer, part ba se
m ent. l a rge covered pat to, garag e a nd
over 6 acres of land at the edge of town

GUY AN TOWNSHIP -

108 acres mi l,

loca ted so uth of Merce rvtlle Approx 20
A tillable, balan ce woods. tob ba se
Owners wrll help ftnance
S200 PER ACRE - Greenf•eld Town
stlip, 84 acres M ·L , approx. 10 A bot
tom , 35 A wooded, 35 A. stnpped, small
creek , exce llent hunttng
TOTAL

PRICE $16,800
BEEF

CATTLE

.
COUNTRY -

132

acres m / 1, mostly clea n hrll pasture,
good fences . 11h story home, large
barn. tob base, fronts on 3 roads nea r
Mudsock Prtce r educed to $64,000

Gt;NTLEMAN'S FARM - 33 acres mi l
on State Route 160 near North Gall1a
High School. Mostly clean rolling

grassland, stock pond, 3 BR ranch type

$1,000 DOWN PAYMENT on this OhiO

available.

Owner

may

help

River View property . Approx . 8 acres

wooded land on Route 7 and 5 mi south

l

\37,000 - LAND CON fh'A C r
LOCrlted at cornf'r ot Cl.1 y &amp; Ct1crry St
•n V1n ton N•ce 2 story 3 bedroom t1omc
Ha s 1' ~ brlth ftr cp lrlCe. k tl chen . dtntnq
r oom. l ull ba sem en I. 2 cnr qar aqc ilnd
l arqc y.=1 rd A lso has mobtl c hom e 1100k.
up l1°o ,.nnnc.nq

I
l
I
I
I c;~r·
1
I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I v..
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

PINE ST , RIO GRAN D E
Ju st l• stcd th• s very ntce 4 bNtroom
hom e t hat has ,, deluxe equtppect kt t
c t1cn. ftre p lncf', dtn tnQ r oo m
full
b as ement wt lh ftrf'pli! CC. nel l Qil&lt;; lleil t ,
2
qarilCif' Nnd mtJrh morr Only
$.49,900
LAND CONTRACT
SS,OOO DOWN - LOW PAYM E NT S
ACRES_ Pond _ Larg e road fr an
3
t age on 2 pav ed road s, 3 bed room
ran ch. dtntng room, fu11 baseme nt
own e r s anxtous to se ll lmmedtafe
posses ston $39 ,000

&lt;1

bcoroom lrt tf've t SI IUaTC'd on

m or
C:.f'
lt e C.1 11tor m()r c 111 fn Own ers m ust
liTH AVE .
G

UNU SUAL NEW LIST IN
owne r moved to Tex as and mu st se ll
th et r re Sid ence at 678 4th Ave Wt lh
rent a l untl on Sth Av e T he n 1ce old er
hom e has 4 bedrooms and tnc tu des
form al d•n•ng, large kttchen , family
room . 7 ba th s and full baseme n t Ren
tal tlOu se ha s ltv1 ng rm . kit chen ,
bedroom b~ fh and ca rport Rent s tor
$'}0000 Buycvery l htngf or$69 ,500
OAK DRIV E
BELOW MAR KE T INTERE ST
Owne r s m oved. m ust se ll now Onf' of
the area 's fi nest netQhborhoods Con
venten t to to most everythtnq and ex
ce ll en tt or childr en &lt;1 bedroom bt level
1nc ludc s 2 1 ;
baltl , f am ily room ,
fir eplace. dtntnQ room , cQutpped ktt
chen, dec k ,? ca r qara ge ond co rn e r 10 1
$69,900 l mmE'd lil t(' possess to n

R E OUC E 0 TO 152,900

F &lt;~m tly SI ZCd 3 bc cfr oom hom e nea r
Rocln f'y Th1 s unu suii iiY sl y led nome of
ters fam il y room woodbu rn er, 2 bn111 S,
ea t 1n j(,~c twn. ut1 1 room 16' ma &lt;:. ter
bf'Cfr oom w l bcl f h. c lr c t hea l. 2 car
qnra q e clnd 1 1 i!C yM ct Milke us a n ol
l .:r

E VERYTH ING YOU · LL NEED

APR I CE YOU CAN AF FOR 0
You mus t see all the cx l ras th 1s ft ne 3
bedroom home off er s Loca t ed 1n c 1 ty
sc hool d• str 1ct. tt1 1s ran c h has a
heau t 1tul k 1 tchen vnlh quill1ly cabtnc l s,
r.1ngc &amp; ove n dt shwa shcr &amp; co m
pa ctor t 1r epl ace 1n l•v1n g room . 11 ;
bath , full basement famil y r oom.
qaraq e and 18x36 tn qround pooL huqe
cove r ed dec k and J.~ ac On l y $53 ,900

SJ0,900- VA AQUIRED HOME
ANyone ca n buy• $1500 down and 30
years mortgage to Qualifi ed buy er
N 1ce 8 yr ol d 3 bedroom r anch •n qood
OWNERS WILL HELP FINANCE
cond 1 t 1on and loca ted ofl Bul av dl e Rd
Well kep t 4 bedroom hom e on Rt 160 Na t gas heat . fa mtly room &amp; n• cc St Z
owner s have bought another home ed flat yard
and mu st se ll Includ es nt ce k1t c hen.
d1n1ng room. sew 1ng room and bath JAY DRIVE ~ Own er s moved out at
Deta c hed gara ge, large butldtng and state You can buy lh•s J bPdr oo m
J
ac
l a nd
marnt enan ce free home fo r only
OWNERS ANXIOUS TO SELL
$51,000 H as famil y room , It r ep lace. 2
DROPPED PRICE TOS3s , 6oo
baths , eQ utpped k ttchen, nat ga s hea t
Attracttve 4 bedroom hom e tn town and 2 car garage
Washtn qton
Has full basem ent, famtiV r oom, E lemen tary
equipped kttchen, drntng room , nt ce
carpe t , nat gas heat and loca ted tn a v RURAL SETT ING- CLOSE TO TOWN
fam 1ty neighborhood
Low tnt ere st Ntce well matnfa• ned a nd redecorated
loan assumpt1on
2 bedroom home 2 mrtes from t ow n
Ha s an eQUipped kttc hen. full base
88 CHILLICOTHE RD .
ment, tamrly room , woodb urner . e lect

VA ACQUIRED PROPERTY

heat (low b' l lsl. large attached car

I
I
f
I
II
I
I
I

1I
1
I
1
I
I
I
II
I
I
I
I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
II
I
I

ANyone can buy! S1400 down payment port, detached garage, some turnttur e
and 30 year mortgage that Will keep 1ncluded 1 2 acres w / fruit &amp; shade
your payments low 3 bedroom home trees plu s garden area $39.500
has bath, k1tchen, l1 v1 ng room and
basement. New patnf inside, new H/ W
PRICED TO SELL!

heater . wlfong $22.400.

NEW LISTING_ OWNER
TRANSFERRED TO ALABAMA
This attractive split level " about as

I
I

of town . Owner will finance balance at

10%.

1
I
OWNERS TRANSFERRING
I
$44.000 4 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch close I
I
I
gas heat and large yard
_ I
Thts one will be hard to matc h for

MOBILE HOME &amp; 15 ACRES

very pretty location west of Thurman
on Rt . 35 HAs pond and land lay s
perfect Home has 2 bedrooms, ktt
chen, etc Pnced to sell at $28,900

nice as we have .seen for $62,000. Very
good construct1on and excellent ca re
like this always makes a more
desirable hom~ .. 3 bedroom , 1'11 balM,
ice kitchen drnrng combrnatlon, famt ·
y room &amp; fireplace . Large basement

to town and rn Washrngton Elem .
school dtst Ha s equrpped kttchen , full
base m e nt,
large
tam rly
room
w/ heatolator fir epla ce, garage , nat

JUST LISTED
OWNER PURCHASED NEW HOME
Must sell this charmmg Cape Cod 1
block from H M C Very nicely ar ranged 4 bedroom with country krt ·

chen, formal dinmg, 2 baths. full base·
ment and large garage. Lovely rn ·

ground swimming pool w isc reened on
lounge. If you need low fuel bdls and •
bedrooms see thos one Nat gas. c'ty
water and seyver City schools.

I
I
I
I

U-------------------~

,

••
,•

LOV E LY

RIO GRANDE AREA - Rio Center·
. point Rd. (Cherry Ridge). approx. 75
acres woodland, fronts on 2 rds .• county
water

A ttr aclt ve 3 bedroom brt c k 111 n very
qood ne1qhborl1ood Ha s f amily r nom
ftr ep l.:~ c e de luxe k tt cllen 2 ba th s ? cnr
quaoe. n 1 ce s17 ed lot and be low market
Interes t r1V a tln blf" for f tn an cl n Q Pr tcecl
nt $53. 500

LIFE - Ftrsl ttrn e on ltrc rna rke l lor
tht S ltk. e new co nt emporary, 3 or &lt;l
BR 's,
bath s, l arge open LR wtth
ftrepla ce &amp; bea med ce tltn gs, k.rt c hen
tnctudes range, OW &amp; r efr tq , full
ba semen t , wrap a r oun d de c k , cedar
Stdtn g, 12x2.4 above groun d pool,
garage, barn &amp; 10 ilcres nea r Eu r eka
Ct ty sc hoo l s

Out of town owners says SELL.

, flnaqce .•Priced to sell at $400 per acre.

644 CEN"fER ST

A WAY OF

home with ·full baseme nt, good barn

8MR 418 -New Lisilng- Brick &amp; frame situated on
Includes 3 BR's1 2 baths, lg. familY room
with flrepface and· wooaburner, lg. living ·rpom,
~lnl.ng room and deluxe kl~hen . Call for details.

••

ELEGANCE

near schoOl&amp;, shopping, et~.

s acres.
'0

Stylish 2 story

home was bUilt in 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate, Large open foyer and
stairway, LR. dining rm .• parlor, com

RIO GRANDE

STYLE

L .l rtlf'

nvf' r 4 nrrf'S ncar Rod npy F tr epl rl Cf'. l
I'Qu•OPI 'CI k.l! cnf' n 3 t),l th s, huqe lnmtly
&amp; re r r oo rn c; ? CM ()rlr rlQf' &amp; mu ch

area, shady lawn, very good
neighborhood, city schools &amp; water.
Near hospital on Martin Drive.

I

�Pomero
54

Misc . Merchandlce

Doo rs tor sal e exter,o r &amp;
'ntcr,or
OS I8

doors

Call

446

Lawn mower 20' cu t. 4 HP ,
se lf propelled Call 446

78SS

'N' C ARLYLE '"

Pets for Sale

56

rt- Gallipolis, Ohioby Larry Wright

St i ver g ray ,
m 1na tur e,
male poodle , 8 mo old,
worm ed , a ll ':&gt;ho ts, house
broke . Regts fcred,
and
loves c hildren 446 1023

P OODLE

pups.

For sale l1ke new d1nette
446

Ga llipo hs, 446 0181

AKC

89S 19S8

Of-\J I !XlNT ~-1 usr Fe1..:r t.iKe

3114

Lawn

Boy

mower.

Mll S ICill

In strum ents

qood

c on d ,f, on. $75 Cal l 367 7671
or 367 7 560

71 chevy PU . good cond,
pr1ce $600 76 (h('Vy PU
wtlh se ll con ta,ncd Sl1 d1ng
ca mper . sleep 5 $ 1 700 1
row t ull1va tor. S65 Co li

A 5f&gt;.i..M&gt; FoR
l-UNC.H .

Sptne t Conso l e
P1i1no
Barqatn Wan ted Respon
s 1ble pe r son to take over
low monthly payment s on
sptnet p1ano Can be see n
locall y
Wille
Credll
Milnilger
P 0
Box 33.
Fr tedens. PA 1554 1
58

G C\ SO I 1ne n nd hca t H"'Q fuel

Cilll
prtn

Exce lsiOr

Q, l

v 614 99'1 nos

Com

For Srl le lonq bed topprr t o r
c ompac t Truc k . 2 se t s too l
ooxcs. S1de moun t 8 It 2

Rei
Sweet pota toe plnn ts 7 dt f
fcrent vart f les. Robert w
Lew•s . Rt 124 . Rac1ne 843

742 2S1S

Yea rli n g
Farm Equipment

Nlndow a1r co ndtl loners.
10x70 awn,ng . V 6 black

59

Max
Ol.•lboard 17 5 HP
motor boat and tr rt~lcr ,
14:.. 7 4
St urdy
H ouse
I) Utldtnq J04 675 44 /4

A Jot of dt lf erenf pdrt~ tor
JSOor 400 eng,nes Also par
t c; for 74 Impala tn fertor
per fec t 1.11 3063

ForSaleorTrade

For sale Used br tc l&lt;. . doors
'f' xter•or tnfertor
wtfh
f ramC's hardwM c.
oak
sfatr S, QlclSSed oak. mr~n fl e.
wa te r
heater ,
wC'I f e r
pressure oump mot or , steel
beams. stor age cab •nets, 10
speed b•k.c , 3 speed btke,
wroug ht •ron love seal.
c'ISSO rt cd tools 997 6254

55

Bu tldtng Su ppli es

Met a l Shee ts 4'x8' thru
4'x l ?' Pr• ces $7 60 to S9 60
Ex l ce llenr
bulldtng
mtllertal.
por ce l•n e,
rnomct woa ted won' t rus t
If\ to 2'2 qouqe 614 66 7 3085
TuppN~ Plr~tns . Oht O
56

P€fS l or S&lt;l le

DRAGONWYND

CAT

IERY
KE NNE L AKC
C tl o w
puppteS ,
CFA
Htmillayan . Pcrstan rlnd
Stfl mese k.tttens C.;ll 446
38 4.t n lt er4 p m

H ILLCREST

KENNEL

Bo(lrdt n g all br eeds. clean
tndoor ou tdoor
fn c d t f tes
Also A K C Req
Dobe r
man s Ca ll 446 7795

RRIAR P ATC H KENNELS

1977 Sea r s Lawn tr ac tor
anc1 mowe r $500 Phone 304

67S S789
94 1 B Catap di M
f'nd
loader . good condtfton . 304

4SB IS42
63

63

Jumbo Bob Whil e Quail.
egqs a lso availabl e La Bon
te'sQ u il tl Farm 985 4) 45

7 Pal om• no hor ses a nd colt ,
Stmco sn ddle and bnddte
tn c lud ed 304 895 3450
TEAM work hor ses wt th
harnesses One Semt nole

bull 104 882 1219

104 67 S S9SS

61

cc

Farm E qurpm enf

1 set of J ohn Deere 4 bo t
tom 16' scm • mount plows.
1 Htll 5t)oro tr• ax tc qoose
nec k 18' friltiN Ca ll 614

2S6 651J
1963 model G1avc l y I r ile
tor . $400 00 Call 446 6637

' SPR IN G

CL Ef,N UP

SALE ' J tvtd en's Frlrm
E qu •pm ent, 446 167S
Lono tr ac tor s. Vrrmeer
bale r s &amp; hay equtpmc nt ,
b al e m overs, ro ta ry till er s.
d•sc. post d1gger &amp; d r•vers ,
seed er s, r ot ary cuner s
Blad es, gn tes. &amp; tr onf end
loc"'der And see us to ge t
your p art~ &amp; co mp lete ser
VIC('

For sa le 2 yr old pol led
Her eford bull . $550 742

6 14 98S 388 2

104S

-

USED EQUIP
IH Hydr o 70, 9N Ford. 7000
F ord. 550 Ol1ve r . MF 65.
JO M , Long 460 4X4 Wtlh
loader. elise
culf1va tors .
plows .
JO
manure
spr eader . F ord 50 I mower ,
1979 Dodqc Ram Cha r ge r
4x 4, 1978 Oodqe pt c k up

"'
WE

1974 Olds Cutlass exc
cond . , l ow miles, new t1res,
new ex ha u st Must se ll bes t

N EW LISTING - F1ghl tnflilft on or loss of 10b by
loo k 1nq •nfo th• s •ncome proprr 1y T h •s c iln ei!Stl y be
t wo r('ntills or a t1omf' for y ou rl nd rcntnt •ncome
fr om thp Sf'cond dwell•nn Asktnq Prtfe SJ/ ,000
OLD E R FARM H OME on 10 ncres. ha s new ad
dtf•on th at ca n be more lt vtng spa ce or ex tr a 1ncomc
apa rtm ent. 1 car gara ge , barn , and ot her ou t
butldt ngs Pr•vatc and pea ce f u l . Owner will fl elp
f tnnnce qu,llt f tcd buye r S7,000 down and 100 0 1n
t crc~t on balance Askt n g $36 ,500
OUIET STREET and qood netqhbortlood Wl1at else
co uld you ask tor. w 11 en you c an have low cos t
houstng and c le&lt;ln, we lt k ep t area Thts 2 b edroom
tr ader. par!tal!y furnts hcd, undcrp.nned, ilnd a
wood st ar aqc bu lid• nq has ask •nq pr. c e of $11.500
MUST SE LL
Almost a Q•veaway Reduced ayatn
fr om Sl7,000 fo $10.500 F tnancmq av ntlable

3 BEDROOM BR I CK HOME -

Ltvtnq r oom hil S
woodburntnQ ftreplrlCe. Jl 1 bath, ha rdw ood floors,
well constr uc ted and 1nsula ted Asktnq $35 ,000

1976 Monte Ca rl o tilt w heel .
cr ut se con tr oL ntr Ca ll 446
4002 a fter 5
MF 245 t ra c tor. Ford 50 1
mower. p l ow. pot a toe pl ow
Wrll se ll se parate. Cal l 446

7l22

bull

CB r adto, $2,SOO Ca ll 742
2997

-

Ag r, cu lfur a l
fe rtiliz e r
del ive r ed &amp; spread or
de ltv ered &amp; dumped or
p1 c k ed up at pl ant Bi en
dtng service hour s 8 to 4,
Monday thru Fnda y, ot her
hour s r eq uest on sprea der
buggy r entals A comp lete
tndepende nt bu sr nes Farm
Equtpm ent se rtvce. Cit!
ford W
Snyder own er ,

maf• c. $2.9SO Cal l 446 7521
1977 Ca pr1 w1 t h sun roo f.
$1. 300, good cond Ca ll 256

HART S Used Car s. New
Haven West Vtrgtnta Over
20 less ex pens i v e cars in
stock

Reel Eatete - General

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
N EW LI STING - FI VE POINT S - Approxtma l ely
CtQ h t yea r s old C'ln d tS a beau tifu l split entr y typf'
home w tt h th ree bedroom s. family room . 11 7 bc1fhS,
tw o ca r qa raq e, dec k . and mony more fcil tur es OnC'
ncre o f ya rd B te nd ed rate avatlnbl e n l $49 ,900
N EW LI STIN G - CH ES HIR E - A 1' 7 stor y fr ilnw
home Wt l h seve n r oo m s. thr ef' bedrooms . stor,1qc
butl d tnq . good Qafden Wlfh berr t('5 r1 0d qnp('S
.:: 1.900
(
IM MED IATE PO SSESS I O N
o f liltS Two ht' rlroom
home wlfh ex trnS IVC r em odc ltn() . l oc at Pd neM tt tr
m tncs n nd h as 1 1/ 8 ncrcs ot grouncl o f wh1ch pM t 1S
l enced Blended r a te av atlabl e $22,900 00

BUY USED EOUI P

11 9'1 6191
992 · 5692

949· 2660
992 2259

rn

Nancy J as per s- A ss ocrate

P H. 841-207S

PRICE REDUCED!! Excellent starter hom e.
3 bedroom total electric
r anc h, l lf1 baths . N1 ce
country setti ng . On l y

$28,000 00.
Call us on these proper-

ties today. Let us help
you find financing with .
as li•ne as s~ down or
some even no down

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

U.S. Rt . 50 East

FRYE'S PENNZOIL
Salem St.
Rutland, Oh.

SlrenQ l h ol c hMac ter
&gt;UP ER LI ST I NG
c'Hld berlu l y •s to hP l ound .n th•S r us l •c rnnch
3 brclr oo ms . 7 lu ll h&lt;~ths . Ccll hcclrtd ce, ltnq tn
l tv1nQ room. kii Ch! •n comp tf' l f' Wtll1 d tSh
w,l shw r r F trPpla rP Crn tr ,ll .1 1r G nrilllf' 5
woodf'CI acre s A ll orcl ntJiy pr 1ccd
P 987

New Holland , Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·ffc

9 AM . to 10 P .M.
SUN . 10 A.M . to6 P .M.
Phone 742-9575
T&amp;re sales &amp; repa.rs, gas
&amp; groceries. We now
have new American
made Mopeds in stock .
\39S Plu s Tax

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949· 2160 or 949·2322

4· 18 · 1 mo .

4-20 lf c

~=========~~~=======~=~-t;::========~~
~

YOUNG'S

BEST BUY ANYWHERE
1800 SQ . FT . CHARMING TRI · LEVEL

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Large ltvtng room w rth f•repl ace, drntng room
w• th s l• d •n g doors to conc rete pa tt o, modern ea t· rn
k•tc he n , large recrea tion room on ftr st leve l Uttli ·
ty r oo m , 3 b edroom s wtfh plent y of 'c loset spa ce,
211J ba th s, a •r co nditioned w i t h s torm doors and
wtndows 2 ca r fi ni shed garage, level tot JOO'x 300',
lo ts more R edu ce d to $58 ,900 Ca ll for tnf orma #465
tt on

C. R• MASH
CONSTRUCTION

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;

Custom kitchens and ap·
pliances ,
custom
bathrooms , remodeling ,
plumbing, electric, and
heating .

REPAIR

FARM LISTING Modern home, full
hase m ent. all m odern c onv enien ces Rura l
wate r , barn , co rn c nb R OII tn q qround , np
p r ox 30 ncr es qr a ss, 10 woods, 2 farm p ond s
One of th e bell cr ones Ca ll l or more drtr~il s f/

9

7

3

77

Autos for Sale

Nova , n ew 400 en gtne, 4
speed on the fl oor . c utla ss
whee ls, c utl ass 1nterror ,
c amp tuned up W 111 se ll
w 1th ra ci ng ac cessor res 69
mod el Call
and
well
worth
Sl495
742306
3a tter5
.
1975 Fo r d Gfan Tor•no 2
d oor exc c ond , one owner ,
tow mileage, $1.295 1973
Chevy 117
tru ck . Good
co nd , p s , p b , h eav y duty

spnngs $49S 614·667 ·108S
1978 Pontrac Phoeni x, vt n y l
top , v 6, 4 dr , autro , arr ,
46,000 mrles, new battery ,
tires &amp; front shoc ks w 1th1n
th e las t year
Rec ent ly

SCER AMIC BU SIN ESSS - Be your ow n boss.
m ee t new fr•end s &amp; earn a pr ofit. too ! Got ng
,, , below mnrkc t cos ts Ow ner ftnan c tnQ
nvil tl i!ble Cil lll or mo r e de ta il s
t1 955
COMMERCIAL -

- .
~

-~ -""r"'!'!!••

Ap prox 7 a c r es Gr een and

Sprtn gf te ld Twp Loca ted be tween Rf 1S dnd

PRICE REDUCED a nd owne r w ill dO lhe

Old 35 at Rodne y Rural water , l ar ge tap patd ,
n atur a l gas Fl a t lot. one of th e bes t
IJ 979

A PLACE TO START! Sma ll 2 bedroom home
wi th h v •ng r oom , k•t c hen, matn bath and 1
outburldtng Extertor f r am e wit h shutter s and
si tu a ted on 1! 1 acre loca ted on Route 218 11981

STARTER HOME OR INVESTMENT -

I' ,

story, 3 bed room , plenty of storage, new ly
r emodeled , ga r age . Lots of trees Possib le
s~ecial financrng
(1948
HIERE IT IS! and warftng for you t o burld the
home of your chotce 2.13 wood ed ac res . Rura l
water C1ty sc hool s.
(1109
3 ACRES, SJ,SOO. Utiltf1 es 8V811abl.e. 2 septic
tanks, nice garage and c1 ty water . Located rn

Vinton .

*967

LAND CONTRACT - 10x 48 metal bulldtnq
Wt fh sm all 2 r oom ilpar tm ent 1 il c r c of
qround and ha s mobil e h om e hookup Loco ted
8 miles from the park
' 97\
fmanc tng on th 1s well marntatn ed mobil e
n om e and I J,,. ac res 3 bedrooms. dtntng room,
f a mily r oom, cove r ed patto , qorage Cc llilf
Ni ce garden area
11 995

HAPPINESS FOR SALE -

1 bedrooms. 1'h

baths, shower , super famly r oom , realty an
eye catcher, tn c ludes stone f•replace, heat·o·
Ia tor, centra l a tr . de l ux e k 1tchen, we ll kept
home . If in teres ted , ca ll any of our qualified
Realtors.
~ 110

OWNER FINACING

Don' t worry a bout

fi'nanc1n g on thi s 22 acre farm . 2 older homes.
Tobacco barn All miner a l rtght s. S22,000 .f/944

MOBILE HOME and .48 acre . Rural water
avai lable . 2 bedrooms, livin9 room , bath, kit·

chen, fue l oil furnace . Call today .

1969

REDUCE 0 TO $28,000. A real buy on this 1977 GREEN TOWNSHIP - 69 acre farm . Close to
14x75 home with l arge family room added
Home i s completely furn 1shed, 2 bedrooms 2
bath s. Patio, walks, septic tank, coun'ty
water, central air, good carpet, woodburner

and 1 acre of lawn.

Gallipol is. Exce ll ent block buildings Tobacco

barn. 2300 lb. base. Large pond , government

s Js7 or 1o•

1968 Vo lk eswagen . Phone

1978 M ustang II . 4 cy L
au tomat•c. power stee r i ng,
br ak es, AM FM
power

water available .
1958 $50,000,00 ..

P~sture ,

woods, lots. All for

Wtnnabago tn exc

cond

Ca ll 446 2201.
27' Av •on trave l trad er , ex

co nd Ca ll446 17S8

s erv 1c.e:-:81

Hom e
Improvements

lnt er tor &amp; E x tertor Pa tn
;rng N ee d a ne w root or
gutter s?
We gtve lr ee
es trm a tes, r efer ences Ca ll

446 7677
Mar c um
Rooftng
&amp;
Spout1ng
30 years e )(
pertence, speoa l izt n g •n
built up roo f Ca ll388 9857

CA PTAIN STEEMER Ca r
pe t Cl ea ntng fea tured by
H a ff el t B rosth ers Custom
Ca rpet s Fr ee es t 1mates

167 7160
Creat r ve
wood
de c ks ,
pr essurtz ed ptne ce dar &amp;
redwood
Fr ee es l tma te

Ca ll 388·9762

KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRICT

1966

IMP ALA

SS

Con ·

v eritable , $1200 o r will con ·
s1der trade on m o tor c ycle.

ph one 104 67S·2SOB .

r ool • ng ,
Pa•nftng ,
c hrmn ey
pl as t er rng &amp;
r eparr
Ca ll 1888198 for
free es t• mate
PAINTING
tnf en or and
ex t e r1or ,
plumb•ng ,
roof.ng . some r emod el tng

20 yrs ex p Cal l 188·96S2

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

Ph. 614-843-2591
6· 15-ttc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl&amp;

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES - $47,000

6ACRES,7ROOMHOME-BARN
3 or 4 bedrooms, tobacco base. electric range,
built-in wood burner, fuel oil FA furnace, lots of
fruit trees. grape arbor, strawberry patch. 3 acres

f fl &amp; ~ oll B,lnd!t
Ormh &amp; Drown 10·7

Ounng

Ont y
P1IChcr Bt&gt;er

e.:~nd

\ un - Pur&lt;' &amp;

4 30 l! r

_ ~~t~~£Y.£.1~s__

1980 Harley Da v tson F X
WG wide g l tde. lots of ex
tra s, 1,700 mil es, exc cond .

1979 Honda CBX . 6 cy l. .
&amp; sport t a tnng ,
$3,000 Call446 1724
header

1981 Harley
D av id so n
SturgiS 742 ·2501.
1981

Harle y

Spec tal March and Apr il
only Gene's Deep Steam
Clea ntng
Scot c h Gaurd
Fr ee estrmate 9n·6309
Gene ' s
Steam
Carpet
Clea n-Scotch Gaurd Free
estimates sprtng spec ta ls

Gene Sm, th , 992·6109
Hou se patnttng, rooftng,
con c r e te work 992 2836

mint cond , 980 m, Lots of

$1,500

• excavating
• septtc systems
• A water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
•dump truck
•limestone

247· 3534

licensed

or $1,700

OO·flc

1978 K awasaki 400 , ex·
J40IJil '
ce ll ent condit1on,

mdes. $9SO, 882·2616
1980 KAWASAKI
$400.00 104·67S·2526

KDBO,

F &amp; K Tree Trimmtng ,
stump removal 67 5 1331

R IN GLES'S SERV ICE ex
pert ence d mason, rooter ,
carpenter,
el ectrtcian,
general
rep a ir s and
remodeling Phone 304 675
1088 or 675 4560.

. - -- - -

$1 ,000. 67S· 1232

&amp; Bonded
3·29-ttc

- .•. - - -

Wa ter wells . Commercial
and Domestic . T es t ho les
Pumps Sa les and Service

104·89S·3802 .
ADVANCED

1981 Honda ZSOR hke new,
$400. 1977 Co leman cam
per . sleeps stx, crank up,

PH. 992·7201

Free Estimates

RON 'S Te levrston Serv 1ce
Spec 1a l• z• ng tn Zen tth and
M o torola, Qu azar, and
hou se ca ll s. Phone 576 ·2398
or446 2454

Da v idson

l.OOOcc sport. Blk . stock.
Chrome

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial
Racine, Ohio

ThurJ.· Frl.·$.11.· Sun.
May IJ-14· 15·16
CROSSOVERS
Drtnlt &amp; Drown c1tl nights

Thun.·Fri.-SVn.

.,

May 20.21-2H3
CROSSOVERS

'

21-2Hf.30

..SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

CROSSOVERS

Drink &amp; Drown all nlthts

NS14

MONTH OF JUNE

Frlelay aftd SahtrNY

1 BUY THIS HOME

MARSHALL TENNEtfT

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph.H2-2174
2·26·tfc .

country RCMk
· Note: Crossovers, Thurs. &amp;
Sun. tNnd starts P: JO, ends
1 11 :H . OtMrnlfhb,ltto2.
Carryout IHr Awillable. brinll
&amp; Drowet durlnt laM! Nit*' I.

CANDLELIGHT INN
..
· PH.

' st. Rt 7 .·. I

Rt. 1 ctMtshlr•• Ohio

m-"u ·
·

.. _ _ l-'
..

/

4121/Hc

Call Bill W1rd
·AI W1rd's Keyboard

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Drink &amp; Drown c1ll nlihh
Thurs.·Fri.· S.I.· Sun.
~y

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Rldlator.

WILDWATER
Country Rock

and In city schools. Listed in the mld·seventies.

1:

Hr 4 11 Oaltv
Mon - Keg Ntght8 1
lue ~ - lo\diCS Ntqhr 87
Wl'd - Drmk and Drown
Air you c;~n drmh 8 7
f hu r \ - Pool To urn .l m c nh
a 111 ovt'r

16 YEARS EXP .

COMING BANDS

bldg . If you ~ave a farm and want in town, come
in and let's talk trade.
NS24

Phone 742·3092

1 lOPM 1 lOAM
OAIL 't S N C l tll ~
11 .1 pp y

• backhoe

FRI ., APR . lO., MAY 1

All the city convenience . 1 car garage or storage

NEW"ADDAILY"

FOR sa le , 1979 Jee p CJ s,
$5000 00. lot s of ex tra s. ca ll
104-67S 4610 after 1 . 00 p.m .

Masonary work , Lo~u e
Co nlra c trng,
Rt
1,
E w•ngton Call388 9939

Sea ml ess

Gutter -Doors
Off ertng
continuous
guttert ng,
seamless Std.ng, roofing,
garage
doors ,
free

e stimates. 614·698·820S
1975 SUZUK I 100 dirt btke,
5400 . Honda zso, $200. 304·
67S·2848 .

- - ----

STARK ' S tree and lawn
service, free fertilizer with
annual
care,
insured .

Phone 304·576·2010.

tillabl e . Assumable loan . Phone for"more details .
8503 '
IN GALLIPOLIS-WILL TRADE FOR FARM
6 rooms, 2 story home, Natural gas FA furnace ,

Chorryt Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742-3171

m iles 104 771·S1SO

Call446·7781 or 446·7177.

J&amp;F
O'Brien Electric
Service " CONTRACTING

Fret Estimates
Rtason•blt Prices
Call HO'fY•rd
949-2263 .
949-2160

K37B

bedroom cottage within S"mlnutes of Si l ve~ Br.iqge,
Shopping Plaza.
' ", •~ . ,
. '· 1.260,

-

1980 CHEVY Sco ttsdal e, J;,.
ton 4·wheel ·drrve , P S, AM
FM, regu l ar gas, 30,000

assume loan . Call 797 ·3218
after 3 p m .

All types of roof work,
new or ripalr guHer and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work gu•ranteod.

o
L ovely brtck and frame ranch home located on '
state hrghway large country style k 1tchen w 1' th
lots. of bui iHn cabinets,
bar,
range,
a nd
~etrw erator . Three ~drooms, 2 baths, formal din·
1ng room , and largi living room with ·fireplace

payment. if you qualify .

Vans&amp;4W
- .
-.D.- --

Exper t remode lr ng, ad
dtfron s , a ll form of ca r
pentry Call 446 7376 for
free es t tma te , Monday thru
Thursday only

OPf NMO NDA Y ~ UNOAY

4/29/ 1 mo.1

H. LWRITESEL
· ROOFING

#511

Ohto Sf. Rt. 7
PH . 992-9913

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7 583
or 992·2282
4·29· 1 mo .

_A HOME FOR YOU - $49,000

IH 1, Cheshire, Oh

•1 nsulation
• storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
•New Roofing

•Electric work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
•Roofing work
14 Years Experience

NI ce 4 room frame house wtth a b a th Eat 1n kit ·
c hen with metal cabinets and doub le s mk Fue l or I
heating stove Located on nlce c ity lot ne ar
c hur ch

CANDLELIGHT INN

Aluminum Siding

New Homes ex·
tensive remodeling

3 bedrooms , Jlll bath home with lots of ex tra n1 ce
features, built -in ca binets, se lf·c tea n rng rang e,
dt shwa sher, garbage drsposal and large dintng
room , Kyger Creek Schoo l s.
NS01

FROM OWNER WITH 52.500 DOWN

Also Transmission
PH . 992· 5682
or 992·7121
3·24 -ttc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

73

74

8505

And low Interest rate Or) balance with owner. 2

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36.
Insulated Dog Houses

949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

1976 Ford 3/ 4 ton pi ck up.

good con d . Call388·8769

Sf. Rf . 124 Pomeroy, OH ,

Utility Buildings

3· 11 -ttc

GOOD TASTE AND GOOD BUY
Crouse-Beck AreaBeautiful3 or 4 bedrooms, two
and one· half baths, 2 car garage, extra large kif ·
chen leading . to a sundeck. Family room with
fireplace, extra lot, plus more . Superb condition

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Sites start from 30x24 "

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free sidmg
estimates, 949· 2801 or

K452

engineered round watering , trough , county

Motor Hom e

1182

i7~o~9~8104 m

&amp; Refn~cratton

App l ta n ce
se r vtce
on
re fri gera t o r s ,
fr eezer .
wa sher s. dr ye r s &amp; ele c tn c
ranges Call 446 8295

79

72 DodQe Dar t 318 en g• ne,
VB. $400 104·1168

wor d. 7o.ooo mtl es. $1700

RUSS AND MAX
EL LIOTT

E lectnc a 1

Lenno)( Hea trn g &amp; A rr
co ndrt1 0ntn g A ll Typ es
In sulation
Electr1cal
Wtrrng .
Ca ll 446 ·851 5 or 446 ·0445
attcr4 . 30pm
li e

r

446· 2642
Free Est1mates

PASQUALE
E LECTRIC

JO NES BOYS WATER
SE RVI CE Call 367 7471 o r
167 OS9 1

614286 S740 alter 6

35 Court St
Ga lltpolr s, Oh to
Ca ll 446 J896
446 ·3080
11 r

M&amp; T CONSTRUCT ION
&amp; EXCAVA TING IN C.

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SER VICE

General H au lrng

away o r so m e th tng moved?
Need some th 1nq hnuled
We' ll do 'I Cal l 446 11S9 o r

Furniture Stripping
and refinishing

f--- - - - - - - - --+- - - - - - - - - - -

47 ft . work rng Hetght

tex tu red
cet ltn gs com
merc•a I and r es •dentt aL
free es t •m at es Ca l l 256

Graciou s co lonr al home wrth 17 ac r es of rolltng
land, 5 bedrooms, l ar ge f amil y r oo m , modernized
sunn y ktt c hen, 2 por c hes Ha s alummum sidtn g
and owner h as added extra •nsulafron . 2 barns,
c ht c ken hous e,
stor age building
C lose to
Ga lltpolt s, tn th e c rt y sch oo l sys tem Ca ll for more
de tails
f/3 89

Call for your appointment now

84

85

~ ~amp~rs

Bill's

Nu-Pnme replacement
window s
Stor m windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awntngs
Aluminum ufilrty
buildings
691 Mrller Onve

li e

SSBO

SEW IN G Ma c htne r eparr s.
se r v rce Au th or •zed S•nge r
Sa les &amp; Se r vtce Sharpen
Sc i ssors
F ab r1 c Sh op .
Pomeroy 992 2284

STUCCO PLASTERIN G

Cob
Good
runn.ng
78 ra
FOR
0 Mu
s t an g conI I
dttton , nee d littl e body

446· 3915
No An sw er 446 -2062
Mod ern stea m c leanrng
tor carpet &amp; uphol stery
( m surance work 1
• Scot cguard · lM
• Wall s, floor s,
wrndow s
• Wi'lt er &amp; smok e
dam ag e
lndu strr a l
Co m m eret a I
Res rd entr al
Dependab l e, 8 year s C)(
pen enc e We do care!

Lawren ce S•dens tr •cker
Backhoe Se r v ice Ca ll 675

Auto Repair.

Fr e n c h
Ct t y
Pa 1nlt ng
res td ent•al &amp; co mmer c •al.
tnten or , ex tenor. paper
h a n gt ng ,
&amp;
t ex tured
ce thng s Call 367 7784 or

IN CROWN CITY
REDUCED! Owne r ha s reduced the prt ce
ove r $5,000 on tht s mind a rm 3 bedroom r an
c h nom e on l y 5 years o ld Ove r 13 ac r es
Tobacco ba se 20x 60 tObi'lcco bitrn
Ap·
proxtma tel y 8 mil es from tow n Kyqer C r ee k
sc hools Pn ced •n the $30' s.
, 962

Ga l ltpo l •s D tve r s rf• ed Con
st Co Custom doz er &amp;
ba ckhoe work
Spec 1al
f ar m ra tes Ca l l u s f or tree
esttmat es 446 4440

L

)l'i:-l_MPROVEMENTS

ADVANCED
CLEA NIN G SERVICE

151 Th1rd Av e

614 446 ·1716

li e

Bac k h oe and doz er wo rk
b y th e 10b or by the
hour A l so lt cen sed se pt• c tank s 1n sta ll ed
Dump
t ruck
Fr ee
es ftmat es Ca ll J88·862J
or 446 ·94 59
li e

~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~
..,.,4*~""'
a:-1 Ill!"; t=.-:t5! ::I@ •#; 1-:;~=-.....
011 "'""""""'"""

Now H au l •ng 11mestone 1111
d 1rt top so d gravel
Free
esttmates Call367 7101

SOLUTION

JIM S Wate r Serv tCC Coli
J•m Lanter. 304 675 7397
If you need you r trns11
haul ed away. call H Mpcr
304 675 5868 betw een 1 PM
and 5 P M L nwn mower
r epa tr ed

86

M H . Re patr

M obil e H ome
Scrv tCf' .
Roof patnltny , 1Ji oc k1n q &amp;
leve1 1ng Vee Escort Sc r
v1ce Ca ll 145 95 14 r~ llcr

SPM
87

Uphol s tery

TRI STATE
UPHOL STE RY SHOP
11 63 Sec Ave. Gi! lltpOi tS
446 7833 or 446 1833

Ca ll446·2107

Step into one of the c leanest farm s in an 1deal
loca t1 0n Three good sized bedroom s. large living
room , sunny eat -in krtc hen and bath Tobacco
ba se, gas lease and free gas all go wtth rt Large
ba th , ce llar house and c hrck en hou se Call today
for many more extras.
11483

OWNER FINANCING - 4000sQ It cxec utiv e
ll omc w1th 4 bedr oo m s, 3 17 baths , HU GE
ltvtnQ room &amp; f c"' m!ly room w tt h 2 WBFP For
mol d tn •nct w• t h de lu xe k •tch en . bc"' se ment. 'l
cnr QMnqc A ll on 2 ac r es of beil ul,fut trees
Plus a 20)(4/ tnqround poo l
11 976

Exc_avaftng

Oualtty Autobody &amp; Parnt
work ProfeSSIOn al c ustom
pa1nt work on motor c yc les
Au to Trtm Cen ter , 446 1968

tun ed up . $2.89S 98S 4242

SJ,OOO Phone 304·67S 1 186
or 67S·2808

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST
84 ACRES MORE OR LESS
(Free Nat , Gas)

L E A SE Wtlh OP l tOn Sllnrp new bt leve l Wtlfl
&lt;; pitt en try tormnl dtntng, !tvtnq room . brt qh t
ktf Chf'n and 2 lull bc'lf hs on upper lf've l Lower
levcl not ftn •shc d Wtl h I cnr qrlrflQC 1 ac r c ol
nt cc lawn
"977

'?

~-FRUIT EXERT DROWSY SPRUCE
Answer lne1Hd o1 I~ creamJ. ANcuree might "go
, ..... thlo-"PURE JC~sr.·

104 88 2 1219

LIKE NEW BRICK HOME -K INEON OR .
PRICE REDUCED- OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE

Idea l for boating , fi shing and pt c nt c ktng at you r
backdoor . Enioy thi s spacious c heerful hou se wtth
3 bedroom s, 1111 bath s, large Ir vi ng room , eat · rn
k•t c hen , 2 frrepl aces, full ba se m ent, 2 porches,
c h arn link fence, plus mu c h more . Ca ll today to
m ake an appotntment to see tht s lovel y year
around hom e .
SPRING TIM E - 3 l arge bedr ooms , ran c h
st y le hou se, ove rl oo krng b e.lu t1ful gree n
Vil ll ey Ha s illmost f'VPry thtng OR , FR , ')
bath s, 2 showe r s, 1 car gar.1ge, 2J acre s Hea t
pump, centrill .1 1r R 5 rat1ng tn suliltton Must
see to apprec1at e
11 980

TWO APPL.E5
SOUND AL.IKE

TUES . thru SAT .

And Home Matntenance
• Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experi ence

Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,

LO VE AT F IR ST ~ I G H T
rH A T tN FLA TION 8 •.1vo t&amp; SS UMPTION
(11,1 rm rlncl QUil ltt y Wtll b e vour s tn th•c;, i!ll hrtck 3
IJf'ftroom I10illr L&lt;l r rf(' l tvtnq roo m rtncl torm.11
rlt~tn{J rocuT' wt fl1 lnrqf' ptcrur wtndowc; ovcrlook tn&lt;r
Tl lf' 0 11•0 R•vN 3 11,1111&lt;;, li'l mt l y room . 2 fa r ClilfilQC'
w1!11 ctoo r opf'n er . il llt C ? l trep iMcs. cent r n l il tr ,
l,trn r h ..l~rrnrn 1 ilncl over I rlcrr of bcnu td ully lan
rlv rliWCI ct r ouncls C lo&lt;&gt;c ro 1hf' c 1 f y For more dr l ilt i S
(,lllfOdrlY
/:1 513

Velma Nicin~y, Assoc.

•

Go~lllpohs 614·446·2096
Parkersburg . W. V. JG4 ·4U· S434
Murdoch Av . &amp; Lakeview Dr.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BEAUTIFUL WATER FRONT
ALL BRICK HOME- CITY SCHOOLS

IN VES TMENT
on
Mulbf'rry
AvPnuC'
,n
P om N OY Thrrc ·s il 4
oedroom
home .
11.
bnfh s. d •n1n q r oom A l so
4 room qaraqe a pr1r t
ment Look al lh 1s one 11 could be seve r al ren
to ts or off1 ce spilces
u sc
you r
ow n
tmi!Qtnatton
Se ll s f or

pr ice to on ly $28.000.00

71

BOGGS

P ICTURE BOOK SETT IN G

39 ACRES MORE OR LESS

General

R ac m e - Large 2 story ,
4
b e dro o m
hom e
srtu a ted on large lot
F a mil y
room ,
r ec
room , dinrng
ki tc hen
co mbo 2 full baths Ttlts
is a lot of nrce hou se and
w e have r educ ed the

•

~==========+~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~.o~f~t~h~e~M~a~l~ln~e~x~t~to~l~·~l~~&gt;~~

T1ll ab le pastureland , some timber , plent y of spr ·
in g wa ter , 1h mil e frontage on Pros pec t c hur ch
Road Phone for full details
11497

AKC Yo r k.sh•re t('(rtor . I
1/1 Yf'rl r old 3 lbs $215
Ph one 30 4 576 1757

S3S.OOO 00
PRICE REDUCED!! -

vesllt~day's

_

u n.qur tll r f'c or four bedroom br• c k home •n mtnf
concl1 t ton Li!rqc ltvtng r oo m tlnd lamil y room , botll
bilths Front por c h nnd back p a t•o K trc hen tS
eQU• PPf'd wtt h bu ilt 1n st ove. re fr•ger iltor . lreeze r ,
clt shwi'l sher Clnd food ce nter MC'I sre r bed room ha s il
prtv,l tC d r ess •no room wtth s ltdtnQ doors leildtr)(l to
prlii O n nd pool B en ut d ull y decora ted Ca lltOdi!Y for
morr dC' til il s
/:1 521

onlyll4.900.

17S7

83

WHEN DO

~-~

factory Dealer for
Compact, Hoover. Eureka, Regina,
· c Vacuum .
Panasonl
RAINBOW-The Amazina Water Machine

Phone 949·2293
or 949· 2417
1·1 ffn

3 Br, full base m ent, white aluminum sid rng , fu el
oil FA furna ce, 30'x40' barn, shing led roof, lot s of
young peac h and apple trees A l l thi s r ed uc ed to

StilrTlese ca l . 9mon th s old .
l em il le $40 Phon e 30 4 576

ON .n Mtddl eport
T h •S home ha s had lo ts
of tend er lovi ng care 3
b ed r ooms,
f o rmal
d 1n1 ng r oo m . 1 full ba t h
and l aund ry r oom h as a
p tl rftal
ba tll
Ex tra
large lo t Mus t see lht s
home 1t tS con ve n te nt
and we l l worth our
asking
pri ce
of

Authorize&lt;~

Licensed &amp; Bonded

DRIVE A LITTLE , SAVE A LOT

104 887 1596

$:!0 .000 00
EXCEL LENT LO CA IT ·

ITERRAth
II
J

....

3 BEDROOM S - 3 ACRES M. OR L

Sil ve r
Phone

PHONE 7411033

I I I :D

MR. VACUUM-:r AYLOR DIST L.....L~~...L.....J
VACUUM SWEEPER EXCHANGE &amp; SERVICE
Answer here: (I I I)"( XIII)"

Dozer &amp; backhoe ser·
v1ce, water, sewer, pon·
ds,
foundations ,
reclamation.

Mob tl e home 14'x 70 ' 1976 Freedom , 11/J bath s,
und erprnnmg, lots of bu rlt tn ca btnets, ra n ge,
r efrt ge r a tor , dtnette set. Atr condtt1 oner and other
furn 1tu re . Rural water , n•c e land f or gard en All
th ts for only $22 ,500
11425

Chow Chow pupptt' S. $ 150
C r~ll 446 137 4

GeorgeS Hobslell er Jr
Broker

Frank Rose Con s f . Co .
Remodeling repair , new
construction, all types .
Free est1mates , all work
fully
guarante e d .
com R es tdent&amp;al ,
mercial, tndustriat and
mining, electric work .
BSHA Cert 446·4627 . ti c

K379

GROOM IN G
Cit II Judy T nylor a t 367
1720

HOBSTETTER REALTY

I PEGRI ~

Call742· 3195

Modern 3 8 R ranch hom e approx . 4111 y r s old
Thermopane w 1ndows, storm doors, FA furn ace,
Wtfh ce ntral ai r , ktt c hen has builttn c ab1nets,
s; a. nless stee l dbl s tnk and dtntng ar ea Full base
m enl wtlh pat10 door s Rural water sy stem ,
garag e Ca ll n ow

RLiliOR

-,so

1

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

Loc at ect •n ctfy
of
Gn ii•P Oit s.
closr
to
supermor k e l s
and
IJUStn e~~
':&gt;Cl I tOn
10
rooms. 3 or 4 bed r ooms.
modern kt tchcn wt th
lOTS Of cab 1nCI S. d tSh
WilShc r
oarhncte
d• SPOSrl l . r lec lr •c · tabl e
Fo rmnl
t op
r nnrw
clintnq room. I Am tly ,
rrcrra t •on room
Jus t
to ts ot room CC'ntrtl l
r1t r , nMu rrll qtlS FA fur
n,Hr .
c f' nlr i!l
PA
c,yc; tem. ftr ep iMc p l r~ n
I Pr 1n 11Qmr YounQ il p
p lr nnd pr rlC h tr r('S,
I tower~ iln d sh ru11s
c'IIOf morP MUST SE E
TH1 SC t fY HOME 11' 39 1

" GONE WITH THE WIND "
WITH THE CHARM OF THE OLD SOUTH

POODLE

Reel Estate -

WHAT A
BEAUT IFUL
BRICK HO ME

LOOK OF
LUXURY
Excrlle nt deStQn tn a
hom r
lh it; could be
yours St yl e pl u s co m
l or t
nll
comb•ncd
Luxurtous
m.1ste r
beclr oom wt t h p rtvrlle
bi'ITil &amp; Willk 1n CIOSC'I
EQ u.pped ru s t• c st yle
kt! c iH' n wt th brenkfnsr
nook Larq e rccr en tton
&amp; l fl mily r oom wtlh
open
stone
ftr ep tilcr
plu s lor mil l o.n.nq r oom
&amp;. l• v•n q r oom Walk. out
ot l ' ntrrlnce l oycr to an
rxcrp t ton~lt
( ourtyrlrc!
Ac;,sumble loan
r1 51~

Page- 0 · 7

I one letttr to e60h IQL*e, 10 form

IMAIWpj
r===~;===;t~~~~~~;;;;;i
r

CO ULD BE A MAN SION - 3 4 I)Cdrnoms ltvtnq
room. TV room . f,lmdy roo~ ottt cc . count r y kif
chen . ] 1 1 bil t hs, and rl ce l l ar
n two tMoc lo ts Oors
need some wo rk As k•nq $35.0
H en ry E Cl eland , Jr , GR I
Dottr e Tur n er
Jean Tru sse ll
Oflr ce

• lour ont1nory

1 7 tfc

6 r oo m s. 3 bed r ooms, garage , rm m edrate posses·
Stan, natur al gas furn ace, centra l atr. All c loset s
ar e cedar lrned TH1 S ts one well bullt brt Ck home
You c an see the quality in thi s hom e Ca ll for a n
appo rn tm ent
#515

Qoa r d tnQ and oroomtng
AKC
Gordon
se tt e r s,
E nqltsh Coc ker Spa ntel s
Cl ll 388 9790

PUPPIES. AKC
Mtna l ure Pood les

PH. 9U-3S43 or 992-2316

J..-.

Unocromblo ihoM!out

The S unday Tlm es - Sent.nei-

Services offered

~WJMIDM!*'~~cu:

l.:s;..U-~

For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN

SYRAC U SE Encrqy c lt• c•c nt •s one wdy ro
descr•be th ts 1 3 bed r oom homC' wl!h new c~1 r pcr .
new r emode led bath And.; n1 cc If' vel lor Ass um able
loa n rWil tlabl e Now $75.500

CA LL US TO BUY OR SE LL

MFNT 1

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

1768

REALTOR S
THI S ONE H AS CLO UT - 4 bea utdul bedr ooms, 3
til ed ba th s, cnrpe tcd throughout . double car
&lt;J,lrcll.lt.:' . tovrly &lt;;,(' ll•no on f')(fr,l l,uqr lot 1 n
Sy r acuse F ull basemen t tor ex lrc'l l•vtnQ spnce of
f amtly room As k.nq $67,500

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
New Construction
and Remodeling.

• Phyllis Loveday, Phone 446· 2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446· 3294

For Sa le 1976 Mu s tang II ,
good co nd Contac t Cec il
Queen nt 446 0056

•n Ractne , Oh Ow ner wtll help

ft nrlnce

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

1969 Cheve ll e SS 396, 4 s pd

1978 H ond a Crv •c. H onda

CENTRAL REALTV

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

• WilliS T . Leadingham, Realtor, Ph . Home 446·9539

Ca ll 446 66l2

BLENDED

BU LK

;===~:;::::::::=::=~:::::::::::1::=========~~

off e r Ca li 67S 6S08

Seed &amp; Fertilizer

65

Reel Eatete - General

1 FLAT ACRES

Ch aro l a• s

Ja c kson. O H. 286·4981

1 pure b r ed poll ed Her el or d
butt 4 years old We1ght
1800 pounds plus Phone

Filrn£5Dtlime3 =--

Chevro le t Cheve tt e, 6
mont hs o ld, l rke new, 8,000
mi Call 446 7053 af ter 9
p m
or tnqu.re a t Shoe
Wor l d .

1977 E l Cam tno, AM FM,

Three quar ter hor ses Cal l

livestock

cond Ca ll 188 87 69

Livestock

or 997 S816

:&amp;i.~k=

Butldtng materta l s bl ock,
tJrt c k. sewe r ptpes, wtn
rlow'l. ltnlels, e tc Claude
w.n trrs , Rt o Grande. 0
Cel li 74) ) I 'l l

887 1719

Eg qs, 50 pe r cloz for any
amo unt
Mr s C !tfl ord
Le tfh e d .
Rock sp rtnqs ,
St R I 33 Pomer oy 997 3446

)79]9
AMF Head Edge tennts
rtlCQUC'I. 304 675 4/ 15

Reg Standard br ed m ar e,

614 698·1290

One 880 O ltver Ot ese l Row
Cr op Trac tor Phon e 304

fROYB I L T RO f OT IL LE
RS , All models Otscoun ts •
lmmedtale
Shtp m ent,
rrades cons•de r ed
Call
703 947 3871
or
wr tie
Ht cko ry Hil t Nurseu , Rt 1
Bo:.. 390 A, Ftsher SVt l le , VA

0181

112 Quart e r $100 ca ll 188
9770

M or tgua ge lift er tom ato
p1,1n ts $1 00 doz Cll ar les
Bec htle . upprr F•vr Mile

61

Open Frtdny
Sn turday ,
Sund ay
1 00 7 30
pm
O N LY. Snm Somerville's
Warchou~e . 7 miles Eas t
Ravenswood, J un ct•on 1n
clepend an ce Road Rt 11,
New Era. Su rplu s Rental
C lolhtng,
Army
Camouflaq(',
Com bat
boo ts. ,unq le boo ts. 14 oz
den•m tetlnsS IO 00, P acks

Reg .
Quar t er
h o r se
yea rltn g ge ldin g, exce ll ent
show prospec t , show n sue
cessfull y a t h al ter
Dan
Beam, Ga lltpoll s, 614·446

Reg 1ster e d and grad ed hor
ses, exce ll ent 4-H protec t
Engl tsh and western sad
dies
every t htng
•m a g•nab le •n horse equtp
men ! a nd s upplies. a lso
rtdt n g lesson s an d trait
rtdes and horse tra1ntn g
Ru th Ree ves, H oof Holl ow

241 2

1976 Gra nd P fi x, PS , PB . &amp;
atr, 65 ,000 mrles. ve r y good

dard br ed yearlt n Q mare,

Fru tt
&amp; Vege tabl es

Business Services

Auto s for Sale

81

6 yrs old , $ 1,000 1/2 Stan

167 12]8
For saiP or lr dde Dav•s 700
tren c her
and backhoe.
CJOO(I cone!. Call 256 1216

71

R EG QUARTER HOR SES

Ca l l

57

Livestock

Tratn1ng ,
s h ow tn g,
breedi n g, sa les an d boar
dtng. Contact Dan Beam ,

reQ•s fered No Che c k s, 304
se t , des k . &amp; biCycle

63

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

Point Pleasant, W . Va.

. ,.
,'
I/
..
__
.
.
....
,
YOuRNttDf
.;r;~.n

~

I'

71h Horsepower Sears out·
board E)(cellent . $275 . 388·

8801.

JIMS Pest Control Call us
anytime for your termite
prob l ems .
Free
in ·

specttons, VA &amp; FHA forms
available. Licensed &amp; in·

Visa 1-446-4372
Master Charge 4·9· tlc

1979 Starcrafl 15 II. tri ·
haul, ski &amp; fish ing boat, 80
HP Mecury, ski equipment,
exc. cond , Call 367·0394.

615·3536,_304-675·-4603.

Classified Ads

14 11. John bOat with 40 HP
John
motor,
electric
trolling motor, plus extras.
Asking $1,300. Call-146·2948.

BUIL.DING &amp; remode ling,
carpentry, roofing, plum·
bing, concrete work. 304· .
675-2440.

76

82

you
extra cash
for
ahopplnll sprees
brln11

"Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories
Different parts for 350 and
. 400 Chevy enQine. Tr.ans.,

sured by Ohio &amp; WV , All
word done by a qualified &amp;
trained service man . JCM·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

carb., gas and water pum·
! Phone 446·3888 or ~4477
ps, etc. 742·3063.

MOWRE YS Uphol stery R t
1 Bo)( 124 , PI Ptra sn nt. 30 4

67 S 41 S4

I

SUNDAy PUZZLER

ACROSS
t Stupefy
7 Support
t20fWalt~s

17 Matures
2; Wipes out
22 Arrlcan
tribe
23 Common-

place
24 Soccer
score
25 Chinese

mile
26 Apt tests
28 Certarn
pupils
30Calm
32 Conjunct ton
33 Knight of TV
35 Burden
37 Sprtng
bloom
39 Transact ron
40 The Ebro, or
Grande
&lt;41 Erbium
symbol
43 Peel
45 Substance
47 Exists

48 Cry
49 Certatn
train
52 Aematnder
5&lt;4 Noddtng
56 Fish story
tellers
57 Gets up
59 Linger
61 Aleutian
tal end
62 Tumble
63 Take one's
part

64 Hebrew
+eller
66 Rubber tree
67 Golf gadget
68 Heavy staN
69 Samarium
symbol
71 Part ol foot
72 Rabbit's
relative
74 South

Amencan
anrmal
76 Unusual
77 Haggard
hero me
78 Tin symbol
79 Harbrnger
8 I Zod iac sign
82 Dantsh
1stand
83 Mast
84 Simple
85 Skill
87 Knots
89 One way to
fi x egg s
90 Walks on
92 Fuel

94 Epte tale
95 Drowsy
96 Peruses
97 Ct~:&lt;~ hrm
99 Wheel track
tOO Carrots'
compantons
10 1 Hostolrles
102 Stalemates
103 Pub offenng
105 Weirder
t0 7 Ed 's concern
109 HousehOld

pel
110 Brtck carr•ers
111 VIper
113 Anow
114 Sound !rom
t09 Across
ItS Meine
meas
116 long lor
t 17 USMA grad
118 Organ of
heanng
120 Scale note
121 Venus de
t 22 Parcels ol
land
123 Harvest
124 Antlered
antmal
126 Deater
128 Breaks
suddenly

130 Dark red
t32 Cease
134 Ftnrshed
135 Conlatners
136 NJ 's ne•gh·
bO&gt;
137 Flatltsh
139 Wasle metal
141 Ci ty l ratn
142 Devour ed
143 Greek Ieit e'
145 Ptgpens
147 Evergreen
trees
149 Worm
152 Anothe'
3 Down
153 Fetgn
155 K1lled
! 57 Small va lley
159 Greek letter
160 Vas! ages
162 Threefold
164 Chemtcal
compound
166 Prevtous
168 Cut
t69 Passover
meal
170 Acts
171 Cyttnd ncat

DOWN
1 Stnp of
leather
2 G r eat Lake

3 New Eng
state
4 Ship at&gt;br
5 ArCtiC

ammal
6 Bar legally
7 Ter btum
symbol
8 Tattered
cloth
9 Stngle tlem
tO Play The
banJO
11 Morose
12 Ton . tor
one Abbr
13 B1ttec vetch
14 56 Acr oss
outpul
15 G1bra1tar .

eg

16 Parts of feet
17 Mature
18 Proceed
19 Stmpter
20 Sat lmg
vessels
27 German
dtS!fiCt
29 States ol
aflatrs
3 1 Compass
pi
34 DeTermme
36 Allr acted
38 Idle chatt er
40 Actual
42 Foundahon
44 Jacob 's
brother
46 Tard y
48 Tnck
49 Endures
50 Hunter con stella! ton
51 French
art tete
53 Ttp
55 Greek tell er
56 lntertwmc
58 E)( tras
60 Atve' duck
62 Game al
cards
65 Ttme per•od
68 Planet
69 Keen
70 Jolly
72 Flocks
73 Passes . as
ttme
75 Footllk e
part
76 Told
77 Secret
agent s
79 Ch1el s
80 Frock
82 Debat e
83 Cu t
84 In tended
86 Greek lell e'
88 Bern s
nver
89 Ratn and
90 Ruse

91 Of fhe
kidneys
93 Camas
95 En thus1asm
97 Helps
98 Htgh nole
102 Hurl
104 Pteces (ou!l
106 Sheep
107 Fracas
108 Epee
T10 Stnk es
111LOOkS
prymgty
112 Has a snack
114 Cenl er
tlfi Cteantng
toots
T17 ffans·
grasses
119 Roden ts
121 Lton s pnae
122 Pa th
123 LA s stat e
125 Ou ldOOI
game
T27 Scale no te
128 Fr tgh tens
129 Coun try
130 Rtpe
T3 1 Nabbt!d
133 Aemunerat ed

t36 NUisa nces
t38 Pester
t 40 Botant st s
concern
143 College deg
144 Among
146 Locat•on
148 Wtld plum
150 Barracud a
15 1 Father
153 Snake
! 54 Compass
pi
156 Ac tor Beau y
158 Transgress
161 NtCkt11
symbol
163 Teu ton •c
de1 ty
165 Calcutta
COinS Abb1
167 Anol hef
3 Down

�Pom eroy- Middl e po r t- Gall ipolis, Ohio-Point Plea sant,

Ma y 16, 1982

w. va .

Undercover agents infiltrated ring
turney Dav id Faber said Friday.
Faber said undercove r age nts
were lipped by an informant,
penetrated the ring and took part in
meetmgs and telephone calls with
the defendants. None of the defendants were from Ohio.
"The plan was to obta m it m South
America and fl y it up here to a
Nicholas Count y airstrip," Faber
sa id.
State and federal officials, who

CHARLESTON, W.Va . iAPl - Undercover age nts eollectcd in·
fon nalr on abo ut a marijua na
distributi on scheme by penetra ting
the ri ng of people who all egedly
planned the conspiracy , a federa l ofrictal says.
Malena! gathered by the agents
resulted in the indidmen t of nme
people on charges that they plotted
to disln butc up to two Ions of pot in
West Vi rwma and Ohio, U.S. At-

had been working on the case fur

dictm ent

more than six months, made the
arrests before the delive ry was
made, he sa id.
The arrests were made Thursday
and Friday and resulted from indictments returned by a federal
gra nd jury on Wednesday, sa rd
Faber. He said mort.' arresls arc
likely, pending release of a second
sealed indictme nt.
Charges conta ined in the in-

distri bute marijuana, using mterstale telephone lines to do so,and
illegal possession of firea rms, the
prosecutor sa id .
The indictment all eges tha t the
defendants initially planned to use a
DC-3 ai rplane to fly 5 tons of
marijuana from South America to
West V1rginia. Later. howeve r, the
decision to fl y just 1·~to 2lons of the
drug was made, the indic tment says.

incl ude

conspiracy

to

~imw ~entintl Section ~

Business

M a y 16, 1982

Realtors outline various methods
to finance new home purchase
GALU POU S
Contrary to
popular belief, prospecti ve horne
buyers don't have to pay the
published double d1git interest ra tes
for horne mortgages, according to
Winnie Blair, president of the
South eastern Ohi o Boa rd of
Rea ltors.
" In fact," she sard, " the nw11ber

10 die in row house fire
BA LTIMORE I APl - A fr re swept
through a row house early Saturday
at IL-asl 10 people onl y hours after
n.'stden ts lwgan us mg ca ndl es a nd a

dies we re burning when it t•rupled .
Ms. McG riff sa id she was silting
on a porch when the fi re broke out.

kerost·nt· lamp bt.·ca use their clee·

lhuse sleeping mside, she sa id .
Flynn sa id 7-month-uld Mra
McGriff was the youngest vrctim to
dlt' in the blaze. The othe r dead ineluded Mia's 3-yca r-old brother.
Lt•wi s, and 5-year-old srster, Anthfya; Williams and his wife,
Delores, 38 ; three of the ir chi ldrt•n,
Anita. 12, Theresa, 11. and Michelle,
5; and Ja mes Brown, 28, and his
brother, Antonio, 7.
Tht• fr re spread to an adjoining
horne, but officials sa id all the dead
were residents of the horne rn which
it sta rted.
Aflt•r the fire was brought under
control, firefi ghters srfted through
the srnoldermg debrrs insrdc the twostory brick building in search o[

Her three c hild ren

trr u ty was shu t orr , a uthorrtres sa rd.
or the 10 confrnned dead, th ree
we rt' adul ts ct nd seven children, said
pulr cc offi cer R.M . Gaston. Three
people were rnj ured, he sa rd.
The blaze broke out at 12:30 a.m.
rn l ht• cit y's northeaste rn st•ctr on
&lt;:~n tl was dt·l'l cued under cont rol ont·

ENTERTAIN ING - Ja&lt;'k Morgan took time out from directing the
Russ Murga n Ra nd a t tht• Rutl and Civil Ct· nter T hu rsday eve ning to pose

for this newsphoto with Gerald and Mary l'owt•ll who head the Royal Oak
Ball runm Da JH't' ('t ub whirh sponsored Uu· wt'll-rt:tTivt:tl appea r ann· of
the Morgan Ba nd.

Beat of the Bend

Fantastic music!
BOB HOEFLICH
Tilt' musu· \\iJ S fan ta st ic - just
1ny k1nd . 1' 111 Sfll'&lt;tklng of tht• musJL"
provlth'd Thursday nJ J,! ht at the
Hutl;rrHl
('I\ 1r
Ct' r1t1 ·r by tht•
Hu :-;:-;
Mtlr ~ ;;~n
band
Tht· nr dwstra pla y1·d a ll
11f lilt• oldiL'." an d I
fl)

do ntt·an all. TIH·~

a
brt•ak ;rn d t!w
ltlt"dl dann·rs BOB
an d l)t'ht·\ ,. llll ', tn;rny we n · on hand
n ·all ~ d&lt;J iltTd up ;t stll rt ll Tlw ~IJ&gt;­
pt ·al·;ut l't' of tl11· band now tl tr l'dt·d
IJ~ .l at"k Mo r ~ .tn . :-;tJil of t ht·l &lt;:rlt· Hus...,
Mnr gan
w;r.o. ; s po n s t~rt • tl b~ tilt'
Ht l ~i !l Oak Ha ll rn1•11t Ddtlt"t ' Club
touk

:-;,·ltlnt!J

Tl tt·

Hutl ; ttHI ( ·1\ 11

C1·nter \\&lt;:Is ;111

~tkal spot

for Ow dan t' t'. Tlwn• w&lt;:r s
for l;rbles a round till'
da nr t ' floo r \\ 1!11 h \\ fts ab u ltllWI '
th.~n a dcqUt ilt- lu h l\t " t"\ t'l"~ orw pll'n·
ty 11f t"tuJ!ll lt~lrlp tilt· II hill f&lt;Hltctsl w
t\tltla /l ov.'t' l l Bl;-w kwuod ;-ttld I
\\t"l"t ' plt•; tsn l wr· kth'W ;-il l of !lit·
son l.!." !Itt· IJ;uld pl.t~t · •l. Anll&lt;t .
ItO\-\ I '\ t'l . lhiiU).! hl 1! \ \ aS sad tlwt I
ktlt '\\ a ll of tlw \-\onl.. . tw J Slw n ·a ll_\
got a jt dl wht·n I 1nfurrnl'tl hc·r t hat r
al.st~los t • 111 ~ t·ar all of tilt' ttlllt' .
AI f1rst. Anni:l thnul! hl tl 11 s \\a :-; 11k
h t 't'd tl:'&gt; t ' S i lt • SOI III'IIIIlt'S loSt 'S hns a t
l.trl..' t· ... l10pp11H' n ral ls Huwt·\·e r . s ill'
thou ).! hl 1t wa :-; n · .rll~ s;rtl that I t"i:l.ll
lust· JJ llllt ' ur t Cuurt St 111 Pttllll'rny. I

.. .-art pt•oplt•. Tht· Bt·nd 0 ' ti re Rrl'er
i\rts C'oun t·tl wt ll ha \·t· a d 1 s pla~ ,
Huth n·po rt.o..; , &lt;:I Illi .Jcwk Slctnn Vtrll
bt· dt · nt nns tr ~ lllll l.! art st·ulpturt· &lt;-it
At 'l' Harth\'i:trt · 111luwn M1ddkpurt.
Mrs Cos n e~ ;tnd othl'rs wrll bt ·
dl -" flla ylfl /.! thl'll' "nrk at lw r a nliQ Ut'
shup at 24 Nort h St' L" t&gt;IH I A\"1'.
Thu:-i t' llt 't't li n ~~ crny 1n fon na t wn
II Iii~ t'tlll lad Mr:-; ( ;oSlli'Y a t 992-6796
or you c·an wrrll' llt'r 1.! 1\"llll.! dd e:u ls of
~ our t•xhlbtl.
lncrdt·nta lly , Osby Me:rrl1n has
don;-rlt'd 10 boot hs lll s H!to uf h1s store
H!l North St•t 'lllld and lht'St' wtll bl.'
t t·nll ·d for a flt 'iJ 111a 1 kt'l frotll 9 a . 11 1.
! 11 ~ p 111 both tl;;t ~ :i . J&gt; rot"l't'ds W i ll ).!o
to t ht· M1 tltlkport Chaltlbt•r of Cornlll t'lt't' Ttw Mart111 hu tldHll.! will bt·
lt wkt·d &lt;:tl lll t.: hl lt J Jnsun· safety of
\ llllr 1\t 'lll s
Spat t' s that art·
;n cttl;JIJI, · ;m · about null' b~ 10 ft •t•l.

plt·nt~ of rno111

had rnlt •rJtlt-d nn

that I dn lost·

llt'\t ·r

lt_•llrn ~ ~uu

t·ar but Bn ·mld

111 ~

Vat1M1'!1'!" Slntlt•r and Rose S1ssun
th(lu ~ ht

I ttU ~ 'III to t'unft·ss - su
I h;t \ t ·.
Mt·anwhtlt ·. hrtt 'k &lt;:tt tilt' dant"t' - I

H~t · rt · .

n mg rotula t wn s
tlu · pt'ilplt • ;tl Hlllland wht l het\l'
dnllt ' S UI"h &lt;t tl t'Xct'IJe nt jOb Ill
l"t '..., (OI"II W tlw nutl;rntl Gymnas tUIIl ,
!UI"Illl l!' 11 tn llt !Ill' llt'W 1"1\"ll' t'l'llli'r.
t·an'll'Xlt'IHI t'tltiU I.! h
\ 11

Tht '_\ 'vt·

d oth '

;-r

f;;tbuluus JUb

111

restonn g ti lt' aiJust·d but ldmg. It
rnust ])t' a sour n · of t"tJJl111l Uillty

prrdt'

[or

all of

Hutla nd.

ln-

c·rdt'nlal ly. I dnn 't undt'rst&lt;Jnd tl but

lhl' at'OUSIH'.'i Ill tht· l't'lltt'l" fnr tilt'
Huss M or l!all B&lt;tr td Wt'!'l' lnLTt•tl rbltdt· sp ilt• the· h1 gh t"l'llm g Ill lh t· :ilruclurt·
I.! ITal sound . It m ust hm·c·
tak t•tl CJ lot of good I ndtall .S to du the
JOb tn ).! t'lting lhl' CI\"H ' Cl'll tl'r
l'St.ab lts hcd. I wan t to l'O il ).! ra tula lt•
Hlld th&lt;:lllk t'iH'h Ulll' of thl'tn .
You've dorw t'xt·cpl lonally Wl'll.
Han ~· n g ht 111 tlwn• and kl't'p yuur
J.! Oild work gorng. I'm proud of you r
&lt;Kt ·umphs hrnt·nt 1
Ctllllt' on out. all of you l'raft

I r tT t'l\ t•d an un:-;rj.! nt'll not~_· ~ t'l qu1k d f t '\\ uf lht·nr
f t 0111 ttllt'
palrttn llf tht • Mt · l ~s Ltwal Sl'itool
Dr... lrt d whtl ft ·lt ba d l~ bt'l'iHJSt' tilt'
IIIUSit "&lt;:rl uf Mt ·lgs H1 t! h School wa s
not bt'ltt·r ctlll'lllkd .
Thl' wnlt•r sartl tilt' mustt ·;rl wa s

\\t •ll pn ·st·ntnl and rl'p!t 'St 'll lt ·d a lnt
11f hard\\ ork and pra drn ·.
I, too . a rn sorT_\ th&lt;J t tlw publtt·
tlrtl rt't tu r n out bl'l!t'r 111 :-; uppurt nf
lilt• ntus h.·;;tl. Ttw shuw was pn ·st·nlt•tl to otht'r studl'n ls dun ng th e
da yllltlt' hours and that . uf l' tl urs t·,
would cut down on 111 1-! hl atk ndiJtH"t'.
M&lt;:~ybt • &lt;:~pa t h~ , llw t'L'unmny or ollw r

fctdo r:-; affl'dl'd tht• li ~ h t 1'\"t' nln g
now ds. Too ha d !
Spt ·a klll g of lll U:ill'a ls J ewl'l Bla kl'
of M t'I I.! S Co u nt~ h&lt;Js unL' of lht• ll'ads
111 lh1· Urbcuw Colle ~ e presenta t io n
uf ' Anlllt' Gd Your Gun" lo bt•
:-; la l! t'J tltl Ma ~· 20-22.

tl y avai la bl e . These funds re rna m

I'm back

ava ila ble, she sa id, beca use they tap
into two trillron dol lars' worth or
home equ iti es.
The foll owmg are SOllie or the
ways people a re prese ntl y fl llCI Il l'lllg
their horne purchases, Mrs Bla rr
said .

"th

WYI

mort• victim!:i.
The three inju red victims we r l'

the home , wh 1c h was occup1ed by the

taken to Union Memoria l Hosprta l's

famrly of James Williams, 40, said
the lm rr p had been extingurshed

emerge ncy room. Two we re treatt•tl

ho urs before the frr e, but t wo ra n-

Marriage licenses
(·ouples
for -rn;:HT
ia)..!t'folillce
nses
GALLIfiled
POI.IS
The
owing

thrs past wet•k in Ga llra County
P roba lt• Court .
F.dwrn Z. Pike, 4:1. Ga rnesvil le,
Fl&lt;-i ., dH la process i ng , dnd Ma ry B.
H al l rda~ ,
36, Ga llr pu lr s, cu rn-

and released whr lc a thi rd was listed
in good condi tion with fi rst-and
st•cond-degrt·e burns ove r his back
a nd s houl de r s. a hus prta l
spokeswoman sa rd .

BOOKMARKS
POSTCARDS
POSTERS
ll c",
BOOKS c tlcsto f &gt;ccourse.
J

The Alcove
La fa yett e M a ll
Ga IIi polis , OH.

.-==~=~=~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

'82 BUICK REGAL

JJI Uilll'&lt;:t l JOrt s consult&lt;J nl

Carl Lambt'l't, 36, Pa trrol. lt'rnporarrl l' di sabled, and Sy lna E.
Chapman . 38. Rt. 2. Palrr ol ,
Wa~· m·

student.

Hurlbu rt. 22. Wo rthington,
&lt;:~nd

Tnsh1ko Mtk l. 27, R1n

Gr&lt;:~ndt· , st udt•nt.

Da m ll.. McGluthrn. 30 , Rru Gra ndt ·, ordt•rly. a nd Con.sta nct• L.
Huush, 25. Gall1pult s . lin·nst·U practwal nurst·.
Jt· rry 1.. Sa nders, 25, Rt. 2,
Cht·sapt·akt•, '-'X t l' r rnr na tur, a nd
Debb11• S. WH rTt'n. 20, Rt. I, Crown
C1l_\, Ru1Jb 1ns an d Myt· rs t'mpl oyel'.
Duant · 1.. Bowman , 23, Rt. 1.

Tinted gl ass, a ir condition e r , sport mirrors, whitewal l tires, AM -FM s te r e o, plu s
a lot m ore . Br a nd new. A lso 12.8 G M AC finan c in g. ,

TOTAL
PRICE

Stock No. 767

Crown Crly , self-t·mp loyt·d . and
Mane C . Hedr11·k. 2.1, Kl. I. Crown
Crty. unt ·mployed .
Kl&lt;'k A. Grt•t•nt•, 20, Rt. 1.

Don't be misled. New cars !B.E. selling and inventories are dwindling fast.
Buy now while there is a good selection.
12.8% financing ends May 31.

Galli polis. Sa n1tary Commercml
St ·n ·in•s t'lll ployt•t•, an d Mct ry E.
M~· e rs.

17, Rl. I , Ga llr pol is. wai tress.
Ro nald Hatfi eld . 20. Rl. 1,
Wall'r loo, laborer, an d Vt r~i n ia L.
Slaton, 18, Rt. 2, Vrnton, student.
Konn11· V. No rthu p, 27, Rl. 4,
Gall ipolrs. unempl oyt•d, and Lori C.
Mrl ler, 19, Rt. 2, Vinton, salesperson .
Davi d W. Barker, 29, Gallipolis,
!'lt' rk . and Slwrri D. Ba rker, 21 ,
sa lt'S d erk.

r e r emony.

RIO GRANDE - The Buckeye
Hill s Di slribulrv e Edu ca ti on
program recently held its seventh
annual employee-employer banquet
in the Buckeye Hills Career Center
cafteria.
The banquet is held each yt•a r to
honor area businesses for hirrng
students during the school year.
Employ er app re cia ti on ce r·
lificates were presented to Kroger
Co., McDonald' s and Robbins

flestaura nl, al l of J ackson; The
Wonder Was h, Smith Cham bers a nd
Fruth 's Pharmacy, of Wellston;
Kali 's Pizza of Oak Hill and th"
foll owing Gallipolis busi nesses:
Shoe Corp. of America. Ca rolyn's,
Inc., Scenic Hills Hills, the Bastille,
K-Marl, Gall rpolis Foods , the cha mbe r of I'Ornmer ce a nd Rax Roast

Beef.
Buckeyt• Hrlls Can·cr CentPr a nd
Coa ltnn sc hools were a lso pa r-

CINCINNATI - Ralston Russell ~ t,, ha ~ received an honorary life
mem bership, the Am e ri oa n
Ceramic SOI'iety's highest honor, at
ceremonies at Cincinnati's Convention-Exposition Center as part of
the American Ceramic Society's
84th annual meeting and exposition.
A native of Pomeroy , RtJ.&gt;sell is
professor emeritus of ceramic
engineering at Ohio Stale University.
Russell received his bachelor's
degree in ceramic engineering and
M.S. degree from Ohio State in 1932
and 1933, respectively.
Following employment at AC
Spark Plug Division of General
Motors Corp. and General Ceramics
and Steatite Co., he joined the
engineering experiment' station at

Ohio State in 1937. He earned his
Ph .D. in 1939 from Ohio State.
Russell joined Ohio Stale in 1946 as
professor of ceramic engineering
and was awarded the professional
degree of ceramic engineer by the
university in 1949. In 1979 he retired.
Russell served as president of the
society during 1975-76. A fellow a nd
emeritus member of the society, he
has held all offices of the whilewa res
di vision, the National Institute of
Ceramic Engineers !NICE ) and the
Ceramic Educational Council. In
1970 he received NICE's Arthur
Frederick Greaves-Walker Award.
A past chairman of the society's
Central Ohio Section, he recei ved its
W. E. Cramer Award in 1974.
Featured at the society's annual
meeting, the theme of which is
" Ce ramr cs: A Spa ce Age

trcrpanL&lt;in the DE program .
Oub la ndrng student of the yea r
awards were presented to the
f ollowm g DE students: E a r nestmt•

Blac kburn , No rth Gallia; Don
Wa ugh, Vrnton ; a nd Tarruny L11w ry,
Wellston .
DE instruc tors and co-op eoo rdrnaturs are Dick. Detty and Jack
Rw hards, .se nior ms tructors, a nti
Jan Rada baugh and Bt•cky Rothgeb,
jun tor tnstr uctors.

effecti ve lowe r mler est loa n dun ng
the ea rl y yea rs of a rn orl l.!age.

ClE VELAND lAP)
Dyke
Coll ege, a Cleve land busrncss
school, plans to open an accelt•raled
deg ree program aimed at helprng
un employed worke rs 111 northeastern Ohi o become aLcountan ts .
To be eligi ble, a student must have
been laid off from a job in industry
for at least 10 consecuti ve weeks.
J ohn C. Corfias, Dyke College

college courses succcssfuJl y .

A symposium entitled " In-

materials.

p.-rr ud.
Till' !oat\

IS

rns ured by tlw Ft•dt Tal

Hous rll l.! Adlllllll sl rat w n and ts
ass ume:t ble.
Cn nt ra t'l sa l1· - T lus stall's ti lt'
dl'ed wtll be dell vc rt•d at .soJJh ' futurl'
date, a fler a cerla 1n nutn bt·r nf
pcty men ts hc~ v e been lll &lt;:H.lt• or othl'r
co ru.Jilt lll lS lll t' l So ltlt' nwludt·
t•xisllll l-! r&gt;ayutents, w1th tlw bu ye r
need1 ng to refi na ncl' the Juan at a
SJ}l'l'tftetl pcnotl of th r t't', fn·t• tll'
eve n lD yt·a rs.
Here . lht· st•ller usui:ill y l!l'ls ;t
lower duwnpctyntent than w t~ uld bL'
requtred by a le nd ing tnstttut1un .
and till' Jll lt' n ·st ra lt• ts lttWL'r than

~ trt u t1un .

The d uw npdy rrlt'lll. llu\-\t'\'1'1". n1ust
t'll\'L' r thl' ' '4UII ~ buill up lJ~ rnur·
!gage pa yrnt·nt s cuuJ llw IH gher pn tT
tlf tilt' hulllt'. If tire dov.np&lt;r) ll lt'll l
rt•q urrernr·nt t "a llrl nt be ll ld . :-; unw
s t · llt· r ~ will pr m'ldl' thr·rr lm~t·r :-; w1th
Sl't"OtHJ lllorl ga gt':i for ;r short JH'rrud .
Tlw bu yt•r &lt;:tbo cu ultl gl'l ;r ~~ · t · orrd
rnurt gagt' tlln lul,! h a lt'llLh: r.
Ble nds
Through reludann · to
a SS UIIIt ' a IIIOI"ll,!agt •, &lt;I blt&lt;Htil•d l"i:l[l'
bt' 1\t').! tl(tatL•d (il l"!lllJ.!. h \\ IJ I" kii W
wrth tl w IL·ndn . The be:llcc~nt"t' uf tilt·
t•xrstlll J..! ]H;rn IS t·xtendt•tl to tlh ·
buyer at .t ln ghn r;rlt • th;u l rl \\.r:-;
urrg1nally v.nll t• rr, hu t lt l\\t': thdll
l ht · t'U!Tt'lll ralt·
Mrs. Bl;m semi th a t v.1\h .t htlpnl·
for drop 111 lll gh ll llt•n ·st rdk...,_ prrt t's
111 the hurnL'- bUylll J.l 11r.rrkd \\ill ht·
d,r1 ve n up Thert'fure. prnspt•t 11 \ t'
hulllt' bu yt· rs an· adnwd tu fullt1w
sornt• of till' abovt· rnl'llwds 111 pur-

l llrl)'

t"lwsrng tlll' ll" lHHtlt'. r ;rtlwr than
postpon1 ng lht' dt 'CI SIOt l

be trained for
careers in accounting by school

in the program will be recrur ted next
month from those jobless, bl uecollar workers who had taken

ternational Trade and Technology rn
Ceramics.' '
- Presentations of some BOO
papers on ceramic engineering and
technology .
Ex hibit s by ce ra mi c
orgamzatrons from the U.S. and five
for ~ i g n countries.
The Ameri can Ceramic Society ,
founded in 1899, has served to assist
scientists, engineers and technicia ns
and to promote use of ceramic

After lhe ttll llal pt.·nnd, CJ nd
presUt nabl y when thL' bu yt• r's tilcome has intTcast•d ctnd l ' CHl hct ndlt·
ht ~ h cr pe:tyments, lht• inlt•rt·sl ra te 1s
adjusted tn tht• preVC1t ltn )-! rail'.
Gradtw!t'd pa yrnt•n t rno rtgogt• Si milar tn a hu y-dnwn 111 !Ita! 11
lnwers the nwn thly p&lt;:t)' ll h' tlls durr11 g
tlw early years uf the t n u rl ~C:iJ.lt',
payment.&gt;:; tll lTt•a st· to tlw spt&gt;cl flt'd
yea r a t whH"h 11 rt'll t&lt;:tlll:i fur ttw
d ural ttltl nf tlw ye&lt;H' ove r a a-10 yt·e:t r

Ass utn&lt;tb lt- loans a nti t ' tiiJlbtnat tons
In i:l ll &lt;J s:-. untpltwt . thl'
buyt'r :-. nnpl~ takt·s ovl'r lht· t• xts\tng
nwrt gagt• at tls on ~-: tnal r&lt;Jlt·. h)
il).!f'L't'lllt' lll w1tli tht· lt•ntlill t.: Ill·

U~employed may

president, sa id the first 25 studenb

Technology," arc;
- A symposium entitled " International Review of Materials
Processing Space, " at which Space
Shuttle Flight No. 3 Pilots Jack R.
Lousrna and Charles G. Fullerton
and Bunnie J. Dunbar, NASA comme ntator for CBS participated.
-

Buy-downs - The seller pays till'
lender a h•c for grving hrs buye r Hn
Beca use b&lt;&gt;rrowers qualrfy on the
first year's payment, having a buydown rather than a traditional mor-

Students thank business

MARION - General Telephone
Co. of Ohio's $27 million rate adjustment granted April 26 will mean
an average increase of six cents a
day for residential phone users.
The · company said today the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
approved its revised tariffs recentl y.
The new rates take effect immediately, the company's first increase in seven years.
·Pay phone calls go from 10 cents((}
20 cents, the first increase since
1953. Other boosts affect seryice connection charges and business terminal equipment ( PBXs, key
systems, etc.) .
Allen W. Hughes of Marion, vice
president-general manager, said the
adJ!JSbnent will increase General's
BJ)llual revenues by 11.9 percent.
ru~. h,oweve,r, will consume about
half the additional revenues.
"A 'significant change in this case
separates the telephofle instrwnent
ftom the basic exchange rate for
blisinesa and residential users," said

PREMIUM QUAUTY 81 wlwhhci-&lt;Jrlel. .
-___,_.-,.frozen fruits and vegetables
• Fresh beer &amp; pork

of .. Ann tt· Get Your Gun" l o be

• Finest cheeses
• Ham, bacon &amp; cold c uts
• Other spec ialti es. all at who lesale prices
• None sold without adva nce ord er

PREMIUM QUALITY
Satis fa ction Guaranteed

ElectiOn day is approaching again
and the political posters arc beginning to appea r on trees, utility poles
and elsewhere. That fellow, Harltn~e r, is on ma ny of them - even in
store windows. Guess I'll vote for
hun. Do keep smiling.

•
... ·

Delegates chosen for heart session
trustees. Featured luncheon speaker
will be Ohio native Jacquelyn Mayer
Townsend, Miss America 1963, who
suffered a strike at the age of 28 and
is now fuully recovered. She will address volunteers stressing the 1m- ·
portance of their work in advancing
the fight against cardiovascular
disease, this nation's leading cause
of death.

area who hired distributive education students !rom
Buckeye Hills Career Center prior to a recent awards

uwnin~ e1 htll llt' .

lilt• r)l"t '\' i.ld lll).! ral t' .

He said some laid-off workers may
have attended college at one tune,
but because of famil y

pr es~ ur es

or

the lure of paying work never
finished studies.

Receives award
ATHENS - Clyde Jarvis, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Max Jarvis of
Gallipolis, has recently received the
Million Dollar Club award from Cen. lury 21 of Southern Ohio.
Jarvis is employed by Century 21Pioutz Really in Athens.
During the past 12 months, Jarvis
listed and sold $1,161 ,500 worth of
real estate.
Torn Elsass, regional president,
said Jarvis' achievement made him
one of the top salesmen in the
district and southeastern Ohio. He
was honored at a recent ceremony in
Marietta.

Tht· )"t'a r -r ound progra m , whil'h
wi ll takt• a bout thrt't' yt•ars to t'U lll ·
plett•, wr!l lead to a bus1ncss a d·
rn uu stra twn dl'gree wtt h a mctjor tn
ii CCOUlll ill l.!.
AlltlOUI.! h Uw frrst program \\ti l
t'oncentn th' on turn1ng out al't'nunta nts, Coriras s&lt;Jid subseq uent
prtl )..! rct nts wuul tl ht·lp Jo bless
wo r ke rs bt't"HJIH ' grmluctks m other
b u s t n C&gt;ss
iJ ill l
profe ss ron&lt;JI
Spt_•t:ta lllt'S.

Ht• sort! fl'dt·ra l and :-;kill' fmannal

aHI p ro~ra rr t s art· l'Xpt'd t·tl to ht·lr
pay fur III UI' h of llw esttrnatt·d $.1.50C
&lt;:t nnual cost , dL· pentl tn g un the nt·l'd

o[ the student.
Tht· college mlt: nJ ~ to offl' r ~ p ee l iii
c·o un.selrnJ.! and tuto ni::ll i:IS.S tsti:l lll'l'

for thl' jobless students to help them
adjust to thetr nt·w a"Cctdem rc
s u r ro undrn ~s.

Corfi as sa id es tn ttetlt•s &lt;Jrt' that
sornt• 50,000 peupl t· m nortlwastl'rn
Oht o steel, cw to CJntl rubbt•r Jn·
tlustn es i:l rr unemp loyed. Spt·cial
n ms tdl' rat ron w1ll bl' gi\Tn t r~ thost·

jubll'SS who ..rn· lundttlll' rt•std• nts
111 norlh t•a .-,tnn Oh 1u .tnd lhttst· wtlh
li lt It· wn 1 o rr t ~ who art · lt_• ast l1kl'l~ tu

Retires recently
I. H

CHESH I HE

F111 d

.lr .

plan t Jttan ; t ~~ t'l" ;rt Ohto Valh-_i 1·] 1·c·
tnt · ( 'ttrp.'s K ~ ~· t · r ( 'n ·t·k pla nt. ha s
a tlll tiUIH"t 'tl till' rdr l"t 'll lt' lll of nth ' of
I ht · pl,tllt \ \ d t"l"ill I t ' lllplu~ n ·~
.J ohn W Cu ut•ht· rwu t rl'lrrt d f1 11111
OVFC' un M.t~ 1, aftt·l rrtort · \ ht~n2ti
~ t·ar s of :-. t·r \ ll"t ' wrllllht· t t llll p, u \ ~
l-It JUltlt·tl Ky i.! t'l" Ct t'l'k 111 r\u ~ u s t
1!155 d s a 'nal lland lt·r ttl lilt · ~ ; trd
dt·parlntt ·ltt. l ito Wllrkt •d 111 \.trt •tu.o..;
pnsJ{I ons 111 tha t dt'part rnt·nt .rrHI in
.July 1972 \\&lt;I S prurrw tt·d to t'(IJl\"e_\"l'l'
npt·ra tnr. tht · posttton ht • ht •ld untrl
r dlrt 'lllt'lll
i\ ('!Jt·:. hlrt · ll i J\1 \ "t ' . ( 't iUt! ht •tHIUl
_.., ,.n ·,·d Wl lh lht · U.S. Ant i_\ rn I!JH -·Ifi.
Ht •"s ;r I! H'tHbt ·l uf lilt' A ll lt"l"l t "&lt;tll
l.c 'L'IO!l and a :12nd 1kl' n'l' Mason I It-

Area phone utility explains
features of rate increase

Speaki nJ..! of lll USil'als, Jl' wel B l e~ k t'

Do ld rne advrse you that personnel of the Me igs Motor Vc hrcle
Registr" r wil l be rn Lancaster Monday to attend a school of rnslruction.
Consequentl y, onl y drrver's perrmts
and tlri ver's licenses will be issued
" l the Meigs establishment on
Mul berry Aw. on Monday.

THANKS LOCAL BUSINESS - Jerome BrOI'kway,
Gallla-Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School District
superintendent, thanks businesses in the tri-couoty

Pomeroy native honor~d
by ceramics organization

htlrnt·rnak t·r .

of Mergs Co u nt~· has one of the leads
111 tlw Urbe:tna College presentation

wtll help weil'ome Gcnere~l J a rn es
H a rt m ~e r back hmnt· on Me rn on al
Wt•ckend.

or

lending rnstituti ons has been a
negligible pa rt of the mortgage
market. "
Mrs. Blarr pointed out that home
buyers have been taking adva ntage
of fle xible financ ing whi c h is curre n-

Elt·l 'lltltl da) ts app roadun g e~ga 111
a nd the pnlrt 1ntl pos k rs a rt• beglllmn ~ to a ppt·&lt;-u on trees, utilrty poles
and t•bt•wht·n •. T hat fell ow. Ha rltll ). ! l'r , 1s on rnan! of them - l'\'l' ll rn
ston · wtndows. Guess I' ll vote fo r
him . Do kel'p smtlr ng .

staged on M" y 20-22.

GALLI PO US - The Gallia County Heart Branch has named Gladys
Grant of Gallipolis and Lena
Pleasants of Gallipolis as delegates
to the Central Ohio Heart Chapter's
(COHC) annual meeting Saturday,
May 22 in Columbus.
Delegates attending the meeting
wiU be representing the 47 counties
the COHC and will elect new
members to the chapter's . board of

nf new mort gages from conventi ona l

D 11 ld rr lt · adn st· yo u that per·
sttll!ll'l of llw M1·it!s Motor Vd1 irle
Heg1strar wtll bt• in Lancctster Mu nda y lo attend a sc hool of tn.struclt on.
Cunsequt·ntly , unl y d ri ver' s perrm ts
anti dnn·r's lrn ·nst·s wi ll bt• tss tt l'd
.rt lht· Mt•l gs t•stablrshmcn t on
Mu l bt'IT~ A\"t· . on Monday .

;wupil' . and add \'our brt to the Mrddi ~Jort Co11ununrty Feslr val whrch

Talented Rut h Gosrll' y is heading
up the craft dis plays fur the weekend
and sht' as ks all of you artists and
t•raft peop le to jurn the throng.
Displays wrl l be set up at va rious
locations throughout Middleport
from 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. on May 28 and
29. If you just wa nt to display, you
ca n do .so free of charge or you ca n
sell your wares from a booth [or a
fee of $10.
All ga rden clubs are being invited
to ta ke pa rt as well as artists and

huur la ter. said Fi rt· Ch ief Francis
Ti!'hil .
Till' fr re. the most deadly row
house blaze rn the city rn at least 30
) t•crrs. may ha ve bee n 1gnited when
a kPrcrs t•n t• lru np lipped nvt' r , said
fr n• dcpa r t rr ~t• n t spokesman Capt.
Pa trr ck Flynn . The famil y's eleclrr city had been shut off at I 1 a. m.
Frr day beca use of nonpayment of
brlls, Flynn sa rd.
But Doris McG n ff . a resrdenl of

we re among

t;.!aJ,!e could rtJ&lt;Jkt• till' drffen.&gt; nr t· bl'l ween owmn)..! a hm nP and then not

'

~

LAlli PI".
WHOLE SAL~
FOOD SALE

'

.

,

ORDER DEADLINE:

1-21-12
~ICKUP

DATE:

1-30-82
PICKUP TIME:

10:00

The PUCO also approved gradual increases in installation charges. They
are scheduled to take effect Oct. 1,
1982, 1983 and 1984.
Reclassification of 59 exchanges
into higher rate bands also was approved by the PUCO. The IOI'al tollfree calling areas of those exchanges had grown since the last
rate action in !975.

Dlf. WILLIAM PEGG

Begins residency
GALUPOUS - William M. Pegg,
son of Mr. and Mrs. E. William Pcgg
of 441 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, will
begrn a three-year residency in
fami ly practice July 1 at Niagara
Falls I N.Y.) Memorial Medical Center.

Dr. Pcgg graduated in 1976 with
honors from Morehead Stale University with a bachelor's degree in
biolofy and chemistry.
He was awarded a graduate.
assistantship at Morehead and
graduated one year later with a
master's in physiology. While at
Morehead, he was elected into the
school's honors pro~ram , the Blue
Key Honorary Fraternity and the
Phi Kappa Phi honor society.
Pegg was chosen best pre-med
;student for 1975 and was selected in' to "Who's Who in American Colleges
and Universities."
, He received the doctor of medicine
degree last Oct. 14 at the Universidad Central del Este School of
Medi~ine
in the Dominican,
Republic.
Pegg is a 1972 graduate of Gallia
Academy Higl) School and attended
the First Baptist Church of
GaDipolis.

J!ughes:

--

-

$4 ; premises wiring, $4 ; station handling, $4 and premises visit by an installer, $9. A customer can avoid the
latter three charges by using
another supplier or dealing with a
GTE Phone Marl.
Hughes said the changes in installation charges are designed to
associate actual costs more closely
with users requiring the servi ces.

POMEROY LANDMARK
·~

;~

JICfl II. Co!ool, lltJ.

-·111-fne
,..........
111,.. ........., 1litlrio
....7S -

Drill llillllaH

~

' Sllrt "-': I:JIII5:ll.. a-M at5:11 P.l,

Sonilc ........... c.till

Called unbundling, it is a move
associated with FCC-ordered
deregulation of. the · telephone lndiJ8trY1 he . noted. It means a one- ,.
~Y customer cal) purchase a .
:piione ·Qr lease one from the com-.'
piny. A user OWning a phone saved
$1.50 on~ monthly phone bill. ,
Irj addition, service Cj)llilection
(installation) chargee . were raised
rr,n ia. flat rate ol. ~ · to a multi- .
eteinent c!)arge 'tot.aling f33, But a · .
caatomer IIOIJ ·~ pay· only for•in-

at811atioruervlces required. ·
the . connection

charges,

..,....ted· lnto ·five elementi, ire: .
,initial service order, $12; Une cop111dton (tq switdli!lg eq~nt),

..

~·

'

.

SALESIUN HoNORED - ftlcbael Allde1'11011, left, of S!mm"!! Oldl~~c Iii Pomeroy wu receaUy boaored ._Ales
aeldewmeat by tile Oldlmoblle dlvllloa of Geaeral Moler C..,. ., . .

, ua. ~·:n~'ia:- Bf*tt. the dealenblp'sgeaeral .......~: '

.

'

DALE E. LEAR

Lear entry gets
honorable mention
GALLIPOUS - Dale E. Lear of
Lear Photography recentl y attended
the 29th Annual Profess ion al
Photographers of Ohio Convention
and Exhrbition which was held at the
Hyatt Regency in Columbus.
Over 1,000 photographers from the
major studios in Ohio, Indiana, West
Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky
and Michigan attended and competed in the regional print competition judged by rnasler
photographers from all over the
Unitl'tl Stales. The Professional
Photographers of Ohio Convention is
one of the top three in the country in
size and caliber of work presented.
Prints are judged for their technical
excellence, composition, posing and
li~htin~ and the resulting exhibit is
an example of the finest
con-

if

i

te1npnrctry plt n lt iJ~ ra ph y .
All th ret• of thl' pnnl-.; t•nltTt•tl 111

r mnpclit1nn by OiJlc Lear WtTt' ael'l'pled £or t•x hlbtlt ll ll , nne of whll' h
received an hntlllriJ ble mcnt1on for
c•xl'ellclll'C 111 p tl rl r(;lll u n• .
Over 15 p n t)..! l"i.I IIIS on porln:111urc,
co mm e r c ial CI IHI i ntlu s tn a l

photography and pnnt frn rs hrng
tet•hniques Wt 'l" t' prese nted durtng
the fi w·day ••vent by natronall y

known

J&gt;ho\t )graphcr s.

O.·t·r

60

exhibitions fc&lt;:t lured lht· latest in
equi pment , .s uppli es a nd se rvices fnr

the professional photographer.
Dale Lea r 1s the owner nf Lea r
Photograph y which is localt•d in
Sprin~ Valley Plaza. Gallipolis.
Lear Pholog\aphy has bet•n in
operation for six yea rs.

'

�Page-E ·2- The Sunday Times -Sentine l

County agent's corner

Figures said
'tentative'

Meigs plat books arrive
By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY - The 1982 Meigs
County Plat Boolci have arrived .
They are available 1n the Farnwrs
Bank Buil dmg and tht• Extt•ns1on Of-

firt• . They

cont;~~n "

listing of all lan-

downers in Meigs County with fi \'c

or mort' tiCn•s. They sl'll fu r $8.
The Di v iSIOn of Rt.&gt;clamat~nn of lhL'
Ohio Deparlllll'lll of Natural Rl'sources IS How compiling a list of
n:clamat10n projects to be s ub-

mitted to the Fedt•ra l Off1ce of Surface Mimng. Inclusion of prpost•d
sites on this list wil l make lht•se sites
elig 1ble to rt•t• t• tve fund1ng tn ftsral

year 1983.
A series of publlr me dJngs an·
bt'ing held throughout lht• roal
regwn in Ohw in Ma y to d1sruss and

explain these projecl&lt; now on the ltsl
and to obtain mforrn&lt;JtiUn on C:~ny &lt;H.i-

ditiunal Sill's lhHl should bt~

Ill-

eluded . The I1st now lllt'ludes four 111

tht• Meigs

C:lfl'C:I . Tht&gt;y

CJre mi ne s hCJf-

ls llest nUt•d C:I S the Lt'Wis/Wolft•

Dnve, stnp rmne ci:!lled Mei gs No.2.
and strip lllltlt' known as tht·

Snowv ille

projet'l.

The

meeting fur our &lt;li"L'i:l wil l bt·

pubilt'

ho.st planb art' dried up j s hort roc.x.J
supply I, rn1h·s ma y mvade humes
\ ' let vt•gdatwn nt.•a r the house . They
&lt;H'l' Urnulatc in protected places ( undt•r sh1nj..dcs, SlthllJ..!, behind window
and door cas111gs) ctnd sonw ente r
tilt' homt•. Dunng l'U()] Wl'ather tht.•
rrutes bt•conw 1nattive. As tt'lllpt·ratun·s l'l .'il'. tlll'y bt·•·omt.• at"t11.:e,
lt·avL' their llHJtng plaet•s and
l'Oil.l!l"t'.l!CJtt• 111 sunny &lt;Ht•as.
t'S Pt'l'lally CJl thl' south. so uthwest.
a nd so utheast expos ures .
Rt·ddish eg~s are la id singly or 111
m&lt;:~ sses on host planL-; durm g latt·
s ummer or early fall. Mites develop
through fi vl' stal-!t'S: 'L'J..!J.!, la rva, two
nymphal sta ges. and adult . St•vt•r&lt;il
gt•neratlons occur t•och year 1n Oh1u.
Control meo sures: Non-chcmil·al
t'ontrol: - It has bt'en reported that
llw ust' of a \·acuwn t'leane r at·
tat·hment to n·nwvt• mitt•s from indoor surfacl'S has bt•cn sw·cessful
w1thout rrushing lh t•m .
If pnH:tu·a J. successful ('Ontrol
rrll'asun·s mvol ve rem ov mg the
g ra ss • \·egd.atwn J leav1n).! a bare
!'tnp 18--24" Wltlt• around the t•nt lre
huust· foundatiun . Mitt•s will nul
cross &lt;i strip of ba.re, loosl' soil
rw;rrly as readily as a )..! r&lt;.1ssy arcu .

WASHINGTON I APl - If a new
"'"'lysis by the Agriculture Department is acc urate, farmers may not
sce much change 1n gra in pri ce::;

duri ng the yea r ahead.
But officials n iUtioned

lhHl the figures "are highl y tenand

tatlvt!"

could

vary widely

because of U.S. and globa l harvests

throug h Congress last

sevcrc financiaJ problems facing

federal payments to farmers who

American producers.
" We must take a seriu"' look at
our farm programs to determine

n~ uested

fort to reduce price-depressing gr&lt;1 in

relieve what is

becoming a n economic tragedy for

porb a nd dom t!stil' use of key comllludilies.

"Global gram suppl1es art• likely
to incre&lt;Jse, des pih' a smaller U.S.

t'rup, parlil'ularly if Suv1cl product ron reco ver s from last

y~a r 's

poor
ou t-turn and acreage expands in
IIIaJOr exporting co untries." the
report sa id .
The t•arly rndJ ca t10ns. it said, point

to J't'l'Ord 1982-83 world harvestsuf
whectl and coarse gram:;, wh1d1 tnt'ludt• •·orn. oa ts. ba rley and

two consecutive years and is ex-

peeled to fall agai n lhi' year,'" he
sa id . "There IS grea t and
widespread concern a bout the
econo mi c pi ight of American

Wurld rkt• out put " is expcctcU to

group of farm-state House mem-

t he Athens Cuopera ti Vt• Extens1un

nnn1as. rn&lt;:~n g ulds , ch r ysanttwrnurns, sa lvra, or roses which are
un &lt;-J ttnH ·ti \'t' to clovt•r mitL•s.
Cht•rmcal trev tmmt indoors:
Thl' usc of rt conktd spray or
press un zt• d spray 1&lt;H'rosol I conlarnln g rna \a th10n 1prcmiUIIl
c rvt..le 1. prnpoxur (Bay gun). or

82, the report said .

bers. They clauned the fann price
support package Block for ced

located on

the Athens

County

Fair12 rounds.
Wha t's Buggmg You ? Is 1l clo\'er
m1tes? Clovt• r mites on:aswnctl ly Ill-

vade homes. These l111y I smaller
them a pmhcaJ Ill size, CJbou tl /30 In-

p)rt'lhn ns plus p1peronyl butoxide

GAI.I.IPOI.iS -

w1ll ('tHl lrolrnJtes ins1de lht' housr'.

f'&lt;ll'llH'rs han·

Cht'lllrra l ln:a l111ent outdoors : A spray lrt·atme nt eJppl1ed li S a
barrit'r on thr · soli and lawn 10 fl&gt;d
frurn lht• housl' foundcttwn should
n·dut't' a nnk lnfl'skl ll on. Hepeal
ttw appllcat1ull cts tllrt'l'kd on th•·

liil:wl. Spra1· lht' ban· slnp. lawn .

Fa ll-o..;t•t•dt 'tl ''~" '' P·" wh1d1 art · llll l
t"t ·rllflt'd h~ 1lh · dt ·iidllllt' wlll ht •

prunanly by l ht•lr prest'llt'l' Cllld

and s hrubbt'l")' ctl tht· r&lt;Jtt· of one

llh'iH'I h k f11r pnwnllllill'lll'fi i S.

tn:ml'ndous numbers. Mllt•s nwy be
found aro und windows. doo rs. un
wHils, fu rnilu rt', 111 bathtubs, elr . It
IS almosl impus:;iiJh- tu n•rnovt• tht•st·
m1tes Wit hout aceidentally crush111g
tht·m . tTect tm )..! an undt·sirctbltbrownl sh-n·d .s tain .
Clover m1ks brL"ed and fl'L'd in
grasses. clun•r. C:llld other plants.
l'SPt'Clal ly Ill IWW l&lt;:~wns heav ily ft.•rtJ!izt•d . Dunng ttw &lt;i Ulumn, or &lt;iftl'r

g;tllun of fllli Silt'd spra y per 100

\11-Kt•fl/lt '. Ct~Uill _,
i':Xt 'l' \111\ t' Dlrt't 'lt•l" tt f \]H • (;;IIlia
(",IJtl(_, 1\S('S tHi n ·. sa1d :-illlllt' f&lt;~r ­
l ll tT ~ n •pt •rlt'd lht·l r ~ 1 11 &lt;-r l l :.'f'aHI~
\\ ht'll !lit·~ . . l ~' llt·d up f11r the 1982
;wn ;~ ~ · · · n'thll '11nn pr"l'l' and Sill! II '
rt'JHif'l t•d spnil t.:-.'i t'l'(lt·d l'l'liJl:-i .
t\S('S l'iHldtillil ~ dh•t •ks f&lt;HII l~ \11

Ull\Jl ,f llllt' J

111\ t'lldt"d

on those

fi~lds

whl're the growth is

heavy enough and desp1le the dry
weather you ha ve somethin g to cut.

Alfalfa - orl'hardg rass ha y cut
Ma y 15-20 will be of high quality tota l pounds of ha y, however. will be
lower tha n fur tht• sa me ha y cut five

days later. Cutting ea rl y may result
in some loss of alfa lfa slant.! particulCJrly on fi r st .vea r meadows.
Keep lirnt• and ft·rtility level high .

You ma y have to cut now due to the
alfalfa weev1L
If you ha ve Red-Clover-Timothy
meadows then we're talking :-~bout
culling May 24-June 5.
Grasses provide a re liable .l!Uide to

proper tuning of ftrsl cut JegwnL'
grass mixtUres. Ha rvest ){~'asses _as
hea ding begins. Lcgwnes should be
harvested in bud, to ea rly bloom
sU:tgt•.

A brood of the 17-year cicHdas
(locusts l is due to cmer,l!e in the

Volunteers sought

J);n ttl

squarl' ft•et of are&lt;J . Apply drl'nch mg
spray to lht· huusl' foundatiOn whl'n'
nH ks arc at-rurnu latnl. Thorough
aprlic&lt;JtiOns when: mill'S c rawl or
con)2:rel-!att.·. sut"h as purch t·s an d
lwuse sldt•s, w1ll reducl' enlra !l('l' intn the hnnw . Chcl'k tht· pcst 1ride
labt'l. Sornt· pt·st lt'ldes rna y kaw &lt;Jn
unattrdn·t· n ·srlhu.·. Dn not ust• nil
!'i olutJUns. Avu rd plant Injury .

pllt~\njTaph s

By BETIIE CLARK ,
Ex te nsion Agent,
Home Economics

Gall1a County will be aff ected .

Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - For some reason,

Sma ll trt·es i:ind s hr ubs can bc

protected by covering th em w1lh
some type of cloth s uch as
c ht•L·sec loth . mosquito netti ng,
tobacco cloth or ny lon netting.

Any other type of screening may

cloth m place as soon as lht• ad ult
t' IL'adas begin to appear.
The insecticide carbaryl I Sevi n I is
t'ffeclll'e for controlling the adult
cic&lt;i da but tht•rt' arc th rt•t•
precautions you must k~ep in mind 1f
you use this material.

1. Sevin will ause fruit thinning on
apples and should not be used on apple trees within 30 days of full bloom
dru~

p1ng of the fruit. This isn 't true of
ulht•r kinds of fruits.
2. Sevin is a bee killer and you
should do everything to protect those
bees.

J. Repeated use of Sevin may
ca use &gt;pider mites to build-up. It
woul be advisable to mclude a

lw tpcdt · 111 til t· 1982 Jli"II IT&lt;I! I'!'i rtrt •
n·qu1h·d !11 n·pt•rltlw ;tl'!ua ·l plantnl
&lt;IITt'&lt;-l: ' t ' Oil

a fw t d -b~·- fl t' ld

])(1 :-i lS.

Farnwrs whu did nul sign np for
tlw prnJ,! ra m ruuld ht· nt·rit also h~·
t · t •r lif~· in g
lht·ir phurh·tl ant's
ht•t·aust• lht• 198l hast• ac-rt·s "ill tw
hast•tl onlill' t•t·rtifit·d 1982 a.-n·agt·.
Till' lPt'&lt;-t] ASCS 1tf£11't' IS npt'll
frn1n R &lt;1.1 1'. I• • 4:30 p.11 1.. Mnnda_\
I hrnut•h F1 ula ~ .

must be applied two or more limes.

~

•.

r

;

0

• -; ...

o .!: u" - ·
E " ·;::: .t: ~

...o
•o• ·j _. .
·za.
.liiC ..,
"
=i~

~ i~ : i
';..!:! ·;.: 1
-s ~ ·!

·... t:.a.=

-~=i.fi
.C_..cu•

=:;g .~
1:~

~ 0

Cl., . ....

... ·i :

:r:

~:..:.a A.
·-=~=c:E
• .: g
u j!::!

;i

g

·- ""

~

~ t=j
~ ~~
~~~~
~~!~

...
Q
~

=fl)~

i

f~i

u~o

rn

30' x 40' x9'8" CLEARANCE

....gou
0

~

l - l5'x9' Sliding Door , l - 3'x6'8" Service Door, 6x6
Pres . Trtd . Timbers, 29 GA. Painted Steel Siding
(choi ce of 12 colors) with 5-year warranty , 28 GA Gal ·
volume Steel Roofing with 20-year-warranty, 4 Sky lite&amp;.

ici)R'..~~~l
o ~·~

0

IJ)
(/)

2
c

~

-'0

"'

~&gt;i

•

$5,440 TOTAL ERECTED PRICE
Price Includes Tax &amp; !Jltllvery
Many other building sizes and~tions
available.

.-4

~

u~

..

~~
~,

1-

~"

c

a.~
0

:;)

e- ! ..
0

co
I!] co
:;~:i

-..••.

.... !;:
-&lt;
:!:l

•

E

•

- e

5-=
Ou

- ~~-~•

::J·-

·- 0 - !
~g

.
E- ~
~
-U"'
"'
A.
U.Et:a

~~ ';i-o~ "'
~0 ...:; ~ ~

·a:C"') .!:;ea.S

=:wo•_g:~
....
~iii =:i a
Q

c:J~ !ii.i"OlC

IRON HORSE BLDRS.
15140 MIDDLEFORK RD.
LAURELVILLE, OHIO 43145
614·332-9745

lht• malenals you'd need to buy or
p_·nt.
For in,tanee, if you're thinking of
painting a two-story house, consider

safe ladders. Will you ha ve to buy

alternatives. You'll want to include
lht· time needed from yourself and
others ri ght along wit)). the prices of

miticide in with the Sevin spray if it

rnalt!r ials a nd possibly one or two
thesl' " tools" or can you rent or

borrow them ?

While you're looking at this d"ityuursclf job, consider the lime involved fur famil y members. Will you
need to cal meals away from horne if
everyone i' too busy painting to
cook? What other "jobs" or ae,;uilies will family members have to
give ''P fur a few days? Do they involve additional costs?
Looking al all the costs and
benefits is just conunon sense - but
a step we often skip.
Take the time to try it before you
tackle your next big project. Take an
honest look at the job and its costs in
terms of the lime as well as the
money involved. The benefits and
costs of an y deci&gt;ion you make will
be experienced by both you and your
family . Thinking about the resources needed before you begin a job
may 'ave you the frustration of
wasted lime and money .

lJNF.Ql)\LED Pr:Rt:n:

IN THE GRolJND.ON THE GROUND.
APDIE THE GROOND. .

We'll give you a free gardenlrw;J attadment tO JltM It

en•

During our spling sate you get your ctloice of any one of three
garde!ling attadlmeots with the purchase of a Gravely 2-wtleel
!r.ICtOf. You can cnoose oetween our rotary plow. rocary cultivator
or tooiholder wttll toots. No matter wlliCh you choose. it will
I . . I make your gardenrng a PleaSure.
llarutlle. Gravely tractoo are priced an!l s1zed1o handle all
,·
.
gardening jobS. But the tractor 1sjust the beginning. The Gravely
System of over 20 attachments lets you mow. till. floe.
-......~~•sweep, furrow. cultivate. plow. ooze. haul. remove
snow ... OOJUSt aoout anyJOb Imaginable.
l""iJ~I1s!:::::;:'J..__-:;
Huny. Come oy and see the Gravely 2-wtleet
'
":faCtor,; soon. The special free
otter ends J one JOih .

&gt;iJ.

~

•·

N

JOHNSON &amp; SON
·ALUMINUM

Peter C. Myers, chief of the department's Soil Const&gt;rvation Service,

WINSTON.SJ\LEM, N.C. (AP) In 1981, R.J. Reynolds Industries increased its purchases from minority
vendors in the U.S. and its
territories by 54.3 percent, or $28.4
million, over the prior yrar.

(lit •i r fit•ltls " Till ' Qt'1"l'&lt;ll ' t' n·p"rl :-.
bt • \ISt'd (o dt'ltTIIlllll ' 1'11111pJ1a 111 ·1• wrl h fann prOI' I'nrns an d " ·II I
al st• st·n ·t· as cr has1:-. for lht• 198.1
PJ"I tl..' ralll IJa St' ii t Tt' ~ ft •l" ft-II"IIIS."
MI'KI ' Il Z II ' .'it-l id
TP 1)1' t•IJ j' lblt• fnr p!lt 't' SUpfWI'I
11•&lt;-lll .'i.
ktr·:·t'( pnt'l' ~ ;-Ji ld nl/lt'r
pr,,~ nnn llt' rh'ftls . fannt -r.o..; \d l" par·

of us to ~et the " fix-up" urge. But
bl'forc you plow headl ong into pain-

formation a bout the costs of yo ur

-

•c

\\"JJl

fet..•lmg the warmer weather and
heanng the birds s in ~ ca uses many

bl'llefil analysis of the job.
That's just a fancy name for
looking at the pros and cons of all the
possible ways you might get the job
done. Fur exampl e, you could use
lhi' a pproach to decide whether to
rt'painl or stain the exterior of yo ur
house yo urse lf or to hire
professiOnals to do the work.
One be nefi t from hinn g
professiona ls is that the job would be
dune quickly and you would not
spend much t1rne on the project.
Howt've r. if you or your family enjoys working outdoors together , the
lime spent doing the work yourself
t'uuld be a " bend it. "
Try to gather acc ura te in-

.., -o..,•

"

that you may need to spend more
than just what the paint costs. You'll
a lso need suitable brushes, clean-up

tin g your house, addin g a room,
fixing up thl· basement or some
other ambitious project. do a cost-

bt.• used as long as the hol es in it are
small enough to keep lht• egg-layi ng
fl'rnalt·s f r nrn going through it.
It is ve ry important to put the

West.
Western potato stocks totaled 34.1
rnilliQn hundredweight or nearly
three-fourths of the im:entory
tabul"ted in 15 major producing
stales. That wa' 3 percent below
May 1, 1981 , the report said.
Idaho's inventory, at 19 million
hundredweight. was down 12 percent
from a year ago, while holdings in .
Washington and Oregon were up 12
and 11 percent, respectively.

CIQ r

Things to think about

pusctlly onl y t he north ern part of

en
..9( j en
•
d

UTILITY BLDG. SPECIAL

f11 r fannns tu Hl t ' llllf~

eastern part of Oh1o 111 1982, SUJ&gt;-

s inn· it ma y ca use excessivt•

were up from a year ago in the
Eastern and C~ntra l r eg ions but
down from yea r-.·arlier lt·\·Pls in the

Homemaker's circle

resour c~s.

Minority vendors

W

\ t'rlf~ !h;.d l ht• l HTI ' ..II ' t ' l't '[l"r{s &lt;11"1 '
;!l't" Uralt · ;nH l .tlso JH'II \' Hh-s ;H·r tal

WASHINGTON i API - Thou,ands of vol unteers are bei ng sought by
the Agril'Uiture Department to help
save the nalion 's soil and water

said Tuesday that the volunteers will
nul be paid but " they will find it is
satisfying and interesting work."
The new volunteer program was
authorized · by Congre:ss in the
Agriculture and Food Act of 1981.
Volunteers will be able to work in
a wide range of activities, such as
helping with field surveys and layout
of conservation projects; and
assisting in conservation education
prbgrams in schools, churches and
clubs.
Those interested can contact local
offices of the Soil Conservation Service or the local conservation
dil.trict.

IJ .'it ':-.

!'t'f&gt;tlf'1 1ht• SIZt'!-1 and
co f lllt·lr wlwa t. lli:tb,

\ lt"t'

It's hay making time
believt· but il' s time to be makmg

(t•

hctrlt·y. r_
, ,. and t~ 1lu · r f&lt;ill ·st•etlt·d
.., rr lil!l gr;1111S !11 11w AJ..! I"IC'Ultural
S l t illl lil. a1~t • n iilld ( 'tlll :-i t'n·a11 tlll St·r-

Agriculture and our community

ha y here 111 G•llia County - at Jea'1

The Crop Reporting Board said
Thursday that May 1 potato stocks

Certification
deadline June 1

ch long). brown 1sh-n•d, t•J ght-leggt•d
ITl'aturrs are most truublesOIIll'
durin g the &lt;-1utumn cmd spring· month!:i. They do nut b1te hunwns, spread
di !-ieast:. or ft·ed on houst·hold fu rms hmgs nr human food .
These mites neate iinnuyann· and
di scumfort t n tilt' hmm·ow ner

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - It's diffi cult to

les:; than in ventori es of two years
ment

match lht' record " harvest of 1981 -

Off1re, 280 WPsl Unum
St reet m 1\t ht•ns. T hi s offit"e 1s

WASHINGTON {APl - Potato
stockpiles as of May 1 were 46.1
million hundredweight, 4 percent
more than a year ago but 23 percent

The proposal, which has been
viewed critically by Agriculture
troduced last week by a bipartisan

The Congressional Budget Office
has projected·that passage of lhe bill
probably would save the federal
treasury nearly $900 million between
1983 and 1986.
Block has said previously he will
not make any change' in the fann
price support program previously
announced for the 1982 crop. And
whi le he has not commented on the
bill 's other proposa ls, he opposed
many of them when they were
proposed during the price support
debate last year.

Stockpiles up

ago, says the Agriculture Depart-

Blo&lt;.:k, was in-

liccs.

fostering soil co nservation prac-

ag ri culture. ''

su rghuJJI. Thosl' are feed grai ns in · Secreta ry John

the Un 1ll'd States.

under this year's acrt!age

reduction program as part of the ef.
surplu'"s.
In fo llowing years, 1l would set up
a system of cunlinued acreage conlro)s in return for higher price supports a imed at keeping commodity
supplies in line with demand while

ca n help

some producers,' ' Rep. Kika de Ia
Gana, [).Texas, said Thursday in a
statement.
De Ia Garta has scheduled Reagan
atlrni nistralion officials and others
to comment on the bill next Tuesday
and plans to put the measure before
the full committee for action the
next day.
"Farm income has declined fur

bl'llt•fit £rom some ge neraleconornitrecovery" which could stimulall' ex-

idle more land than Block has

we

ths a head.
For t-&gt;xarnplt•, the report said

has failed to bring agric ulture out of
whatthey ~ai l ed a rural depression .
The bill would provide direct

whether there is any effective way

&lt;:t nt.! economi c conditions in the mon-

world and U.S. demand "should

Decem~r

WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Holllie Agriculture Committee wi ll
take action this week on emergency
farm legislation intended to ease the

Th1s bare stnp could be planted w1lh

25.

Servu·t·

•

Tue~day

Committee plans ·action

1982 Hl 7:30p.m . Tills wil l be held HI

ITlC:I)'

May 16, 1982

Pomeroy-Middl eport-Ga llipolis , Ohio-Po int Pleasant, W.Va .

Rt. I , Bulaville

Gallipolis, Oh.
446-4741

We
a re
co mplete
home
remod e ling contractors with
over 25 years experience .

WE ALSO DO:
Room Additions
Roofing
_Beautiful Metal Posts
&amp; Railings
Shutters
Window Awnings
Trim covering
Porch &amp; Patio Coverings
for Mobile Homes
Gutters &amp; Down Spouts
Storm Windows &amp;· Doors
Mobile Home Underpinning

SPECIALING IN
VINYL AND
ALUM. SIDING
PATIO 'AND
PATIO COVERS

NEW·SPRING AND
SUMMER HOURS: ·

...._

llol..frl t.f.O.S:il

·.•

•

CW) ~~~1111

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

SALES AND SERVICE ...
.

··· NO ONE CAN OR WILL DO A BETTER .JOB OF REMODELING· YOUR

~~~- .

en !I~~
' •. •Jl &amp;

204

I

•' '

.

'

' '

. • I

'

.

.· ' . Man~lrlt, Roush, Owner ,.:&gt;. •.•. · , 'f.,.,\
St:
Ph. 992-2975 ··.
Pomeor.v, Oti •

_._,.....

__

�.May 16, 1982

•••••••

Pomeroy

Ry JAMES SANDS
Sperial Cnrrespondent
GA LLIPOLIS - Fur many years
the area of 215 Third Avenue
covered by the
Char les Ma c k
Hnme. Mack. a
prnminent Gallip-

...::a
"'.......
z
I

HlR THE F'IRST 20 nr sn yt•ars nl this building's histnry,
automohih•s wen· snld ht·rt·. In 1946 r;allipntis' first Kai~er dealt•r, Ed
.rudy, was luc·ah•tl at 215 Third A vt'I'Ut'. F' rnm 1947 to 1959 tht·v suld Buil'k.."i
ht•rt• and hitt•r Ramhlns. Tnday. SWntlard Plumbing and Hrating is at
215 Third Avt• .. l.allipn1is.

PEEPS, a Gallipolis diary:

Review column's topicchancefor'bare'pun
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - This Sunday the
column's topic is a book review as
well as a great opportunity lor a
" Bare" pun . The book is "Facts,
Scribbles, and Scraps," a nd the
author is Beulah Baer, just one
variation of " Bare" - the book was
lent to ol' Sam Peeps by Dora
Bellomy Bare, the wile of Eugene
Bare, Rt. 2, Gallipolis rNeighborhood Road - Bellomy Lane).
Dora lent Peeps the book on April 29
and only now i~ review is seeing lht:
light of day .

you ma y look at it. Dora mi g ht wurk

up some sa les ol1t thiS way.
FRANCES HIXON and Ma ry J .
Hi xo n, 3289 Peters burg Rd.,
Jackson, Ohio 45640, makes an announcement about the first printing

of " Cemetery Inscriptions of
J ackson County, Ohio," by the compilers, Frances M. and Mary J .
Hi xon. In Gallia County it was Mrs.
Richard James who did this work " L·uuntiug

of

sht•

gravestones,"

ca lled it - but here it was a booklet
printed for each township, all but
Ull l' finished now .

DIVIDED INTO parts Instead of
chapters, this big book reight by
eleven inches and 349 nwnbered
pages) treats with Beulah Baer
chronologicall y: first singer's glen,
~ecund

history

or singer s glen, and

third· the farm . Part IV is
Washington, D. C., where Charles
M. Pepper intro&lt;luced the author to
William Jennings Bryan, a t that
time secretary of state.
PART V is New York, but it told
about tra vel. Part VI relates to the
Patterson boardmg house.
PART VII had to do w1th passports
and people and, 11 1s this chapter
Part VII which has 0. 0 . Mcintyre in
it, first appearing on Page 131. Also
in Part VII are Elsie Janis, John Me·
Connack, Geraldine Farrar, Fannie
Hurst, Marion Da vies, Mary
Margaret McBride, Dorothy and
Lillian Gish, Gloria Vanderbilt,
Senator Kenneth McKellar, Peter b.
Kyne, Jesse L. Laskey, Norma and
Constance Talmadge, Ray Long
( whom Peep s and . oth er
Gallipolitans met in Ma ybelle Mcintyre's backyard back in 19401, Will
Roger~. and hundreds of lesSt'rknown folk .

.. ":0
-....
.c
...
"'
! ...

c::L

~

i

~

...
"0
,." ~a

"0

C)

-~

i

Sl [

~

-&lt;&gt;
-&lt;&gt;

N
•

en
en

The Sunday T im es-Sentinei-Page-E-7

L. Claude Miller brought first Kaiser from Ed Judy

-n

pa~

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

'

m e r c hant ,

olis

~l~i'~
g.f; . n~

Middleport

BEULAH BAER'S " little old
place" is Part IX, and .. At the
Plaza" is the title of Part VIII . Part
X is the Department 01 Justice immigration and naturalization service and also Ellis Island. Part XI is
" My Little World of Art." Part XII is
"Out of the Past, " and the book ends
with just old clippings and an
epitaph. 0 . 0 . Mclntyr~ takes up all
of pages 131, 132, 133, and 134 in this

book.
'LAST FEW PAGES of the book
have clippings by and of 0. 0. Mcintyre and others. Local Gallipolis
historians must have this book . Caii
Dora Bare at 446-J!JtJ'I ana asK ncr 11

THE JACKSON COUNTY collection of na m es and dates r equired ap-

proximately four yea rs time and is
as complete a listing as was possible
to obtain . The (; allia County
Histo rica l Society has published
cemetery books lor 14 of the 15 townships of Gall1a County. With the
,·ompletion of Perry Twp. in the near
future they will ha ve completed 403
t'cJncleri es.
THERE ARE 211

public a nd

private ccmt:teries in J ackson

Co un~

ty which include approximately
50,000 names and dates. These
names and dates are included in a
twl}-volume set of 1,224 pages
alphabetized according to towns hip,
cemetery, and name. 01 the Gallia
County Historical Society's completed 403 cemeteries, . 384 are in
Gallia County, and 10 in Jackson
County. (The extra 19 were copied
because of their nearness to the
county line and close ties with Gallia
County families.)

resided there until
191 2 when he died.
Maek's wile lived
here fur several
SANDS
more yt•ars .
In 1945 Colonel H. B. Ecker and
Carl Myers bought the Mack house
and had it torn down in order lo erect
a building r with a brick lrnntl and
rent it out to some business. I believe
that part of the disassembled Mack
home was used by the Shnne Club.
ECKER AN D MYERS' new
building was completed in 1946 and
the first tenant was Ed Judv . who
sold hm· in 194S Willys J eeps and
Kaiser automobiles. The first Kaiser
bought from Judy was by Claude
Miller .
The history u[ the K a i ~e r ca r
bt·gan officially on August 9, 1945,
when Henry J . Kaiser Ia successful
shipbuilder! and JoseRh M. Frazer
''""' time head of Overland-Willys I
furmed in conjunction with the
already ex isting automobile corporatit)n of Graham-Paige, the
Kaiser-Frazer Corporation .
FROM JANUARY 1946 to April
1946 over 260,000 orders lor Kaisers
were pl aced around the cnuntry . In
1946 the company lost $19 m1llion.
But by 1947 Kaiser-Frazt•r had tur·
nt•d the corn er and that yea r the
prnfit ma rgin was $19 millinn. In

Attends
conference

1948 the company made $10 million .
In 1949 an internal disagreement
~~ween Ka1ser and Frazer hurt the
company and by 1950 losses were $13
million . In 1951 they lost $12 million .
Mt•a nwhilt&gt; Kaiser-Frazer was
pionecrinl! in the use of colors on

their cars. Kaiser offered a gre&lt;lter
r hnice of cnlors than a ny nf th~ f1ig
three.
THERE WAS dubonnet , Oa &lt;,
caribbea n n &gt;ra l, a nd saddle bronze
just In nanu.· a few . Kaiser wa s a lso

a head of the field with saM ydevices
like the padded dash, pop out wmdsllleld, safety lighting and oversize
brakes.
1
In 1947 the Gra ham-Pa1ge part nl
Ka iser was dissolved from the auto
busines~ . It is interesting to. note
when Graham-Pa ige became a
closed corpora tion in1949, it entered
real estate development and IS the
compa ny that buill the present

information

as

Ynrk City.
IN 1951 KAISER introduced the
Henry J., tht&gt; so-ca ll t&gt;t.l '" pt&gt;opll•'s

rar." But K a isl' r sa les continued to
lag , t• ve n thou gh motor ca r critics
continued to ravt' about Ka ise r's innnva tin ns. In 1955 the la&gt;1 300
K&lt;:tisers wen• made in Toledo, SJhio.
The finn had moved fro111 Detroit to
Tnll-dn in 1953 when Kaiser bought
nut the Overland-Willys Co r -

Alh-r 1955 Kaiser-Frazer continued tht· pro&lt;ludion of W1ll ys
Jet•ps. In 1970 Kaiser was bought ·by
A111cn ca n Motors and fur lht' last 12
years AMC has made the jeep.
ONE AUTO CRITIC remarked :
" II tht·y would slap a Buick
nameplate on the Kaiser. 11 would
St·lllike hot •·akes." In 1947 Ed Judy

Standa rd J.! Ot.'S ba1 ·k to 1921 when
H. W. 'Ot·x kr for nll'd ttw eornpany.
F11r 111anv \"t'CJI"S Ot•Xlt.•r. whn was
lwrn 111 N~l\"~ 1 Scot ta. nperall'd out of
504 St·l· und Avenut . In la ter years
lilt • fll"ln "s ll(ltllt' was c llan gt.•tl from
Dt•x lt •r to Standan l.
If ynu wan t to writt• to Jamt•s San·
ds . ~u tdrt·ss ynur pustcJic·ard 11r your

t· nnlupt• tni'.O. Bnx 92, Clarksburg,
OhinH115.

FINANCIAL QUESTIONS?
THE NEW FEDERAL LAW PROVIDES
ANSWERS.
BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13

Call for Information
1-221-5379
Lee c. Mittman

Pam ela N. Maggied
Attorneys-At-Law
88 E . Broad St.
Columbus, OH. 3215

RE)'ORT OF CONDITION

GALLIPOLIS - On April 23, 24
and 25 Mrs. Jean Clark, R.N ..
Gallipolis City School District Nurse . attended the eighth annual Ohio
Association of School Nurses Conrerence at Deer Creek State Park
Lodge in Mount Sterling, Ohio.
on.,.hundred and fift y school nurses from the state of Ohio participated in the workshop. While at
the conference, Mrs. Clark attended
~ e v era l
work s hops, including

The Central Trust Company, N.A.
of Ctnctnnali In the slate ol Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1982 published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under Title 12, United States Code, Sertion 161.
Charter number 16416 National Bank Region Number 4.
ASSETS
Cas h and due from depository in::;titubons .

. .... $ 194 ,184.000
U.S. Treasury securities
. .. 51.908 .000
Obliga tions of other U.S . Gov 't. agenl'ies
and corporations . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . .. ......... . .. .. . .. . .... . . . .
. . .. . 65,604 .000
Obligations of States and political subdi VISIOns
in the United States ..
.. .. . 151.610,000
.. . . . 594,000
Other bonds, notes, and debentures
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock
1.915,000
Trading account securities .. .
. . .. . . 1.715,000
. .. . 49.100.000
Federal Funds Sold .. . .... .
. . . . $653.523,000
Loans, Total (excluding unea rned income I ..
Less: Allowances for possible loan losses
. 7.680.000
Loans, Net ....... . ... ..... .
... .. ..... 645,843.000
.... 83,011.000
Lease financing receivables ......... . . . .
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
. . 23,786,000
other assets representing bank premises
.... ... 1.400,000
Real estate owned other than bank premises .
. . . 998,000
Customers' liability to this bank on acceptances outs tand1n g
Other Assets ..
. . . . . . :19' 002 ()()()
. . $1,300,670,000
TOTAL ASSETS . .. ..
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships.
$ 250,897,000
and corporations
Time and savings deposits of individuals.
. . . 510,549,000
prtnshps., and corps.
. .... . . .

'· Ne urolog ical A~~essment'' prese n-

ted by Janie Zwigard, R.N., F .N.P.
lrnm Riverside Hospital 111 Columbus, Ohio and ''The Nurse's Role in ·
Child Abuse and Neglect," an inlunnatlonal presentation by Jan McCleary , R.N. , P.N.A., from
Children's Hospital Abuse Center in
Columbus, Ohio.

Deposits of United States Government
Deposits of States and political subdi visions
in the United States .
Deposits of commercial banks . . ... .
Certified and officers' checks . .... .
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN OOMESTIC OFFICES . ... . . . . .
Total demand deposits ... . . ... .
Total time and savings deposits .. . . . .. . .. . . ... . . . ... . . .
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN FOREIGN OFFICES
TOTAL DEPOSITS .. ... .... . .... ...... . .
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase
Interest-bearing demand notes (note balance I
issued to the U.S. Treasury
Other liabilities for borrowed money .
Bank's liability on acceptances executed and outstanding
Other liabilities .. . ........ .
TOTAL LIABIUTIES . . .

How soon college!
Will you be ready
when they ore?
Life insurance can help.
Call Garland M. Dilvis
512 second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446-8235
Home Ph. 388-9691

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
fraltrnnl Lift lnsurnn(t
Home Offict - Rock lllond, lllinoi1

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Conunon stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,500,000
b. No. shares outstanding 1,270,237 ( Par Value I .
Surplus .. .......... .. . .. ..
Undivided profits
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
..... .. .. ..... ..
TOTAL UABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .

SENIOR CITIZENS

. . .. . 4.114,000
94.875,000
17 ,423,000
13,584, 000
. . $891.442.000
...... $292,284,000
.. . . . $599,158,000
$ 21,117
... . . ... 912,559,000
216,824,000
19,556,000
.. . 20,095,000
1,004,000
. . ....... . 26,594,000
... . .... . $1,196,632,000

........ $ 12,702,000
. 46,447,000
44 889 000
..... I 104,038.000
. ... . $1,300,670,000

MEMORANDA
Amounts oustanding as of report date:
Standby letters of credit, total to U.S.
addressees (domicile) .. . . ...... . .
. . . . . .. 53 .534,000
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of$100,000ormore ............................
. . . . .. 192,283,000
Other time deposits in amounts of $100,000 or more
..... .. .
. . ...... 245,000
Customers'liability on acceptance outstanding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... ... .. . . . . .. . . .. 998.000
U.S. addressees (domicile) . .. . . .. . .. . . . . . . .. .
.. .. . .. . .. .... $ 95,000
Non-U.S. addressees (domicile).,....... . .. .... . ..
. .... 903,000
Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date :
.. . . ....... . 167,957,000
Cash and due from depository institutions .. ..... .. .
Fed. funds sold
98,102,000
655,383,000
Total loans
Time certificates of deposits in denominations of
198,000,000
$100,000 or more
Total deposits .................. .... . . .. ... ... . ... .. ... .
... 875,361,000
Fed. funds purchased and securities sold under agreements
to repurchase .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. .. .. .
. . . . .. . . . .. . 209,403,000
Other liabilities for borrowed money .. . . .. . .. . . . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. . . . . , . 33,111,000
TOTAL ASSETS ...................................................... $1,297,989,000

IN HONOR OF

-

111 a\ 2: 15 Thml.

Avt•nut• .

did that in a way . Hl' s top~d se llin g

Attention

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY

£~ 1 2 1 5 Th1rd

Frmn 1954 tn 1959 Vau., ht Snoth
sold Buicks at 215 Third A \" t'llUt.' . In
1959. Slllilh mnvt'tllo 48 SI&lt;Jit• a nd 111
1966tu Easll'rn Avt·nut• .
THE KAI SER tll-a h·rsh ql 111
Gallipolis from 1947 tn 1951 wa :-;
lut.'a lt'd CJI 141 5 Eastern Awnut· and
was run by Robert ond Hol11s Qut•t·n .
Tht• Qut•ens hcul at otlw r lilllt' S 111
Gallipolis" lustor y ope rated lht•
Qut·en Bet· Hnt.-1. Qul'en Jewelry.

poratiml.

to

prepublicatiOn cost may be obtained
1! the inquirer writes to Frances M.
Hixon, 3289 Petersburg Rd. , Jackson
45640. In Gallia County the complete
set of books will contain 659 pages
with about 50,000 individual listings.
The first cemeteries were copied by
Mrs . Ri chard James as early as the
spring o£1973.
The Gallia County Historical
Society was organized in 1975 and a
genealogy committee funned with
Mrs. James as chainnan. This committee took over this project and
published the first book in September, 1976: These books are
available from the historica l
society.

Buick

Madison Squan· Ge~rden in Nt: w

AVAILABLE AS a set only,
" Cemetery Inscriptions" of Ja ckson
County may be obtained alter some
di ckering :

a nd tlw Catalina Ht·sta ur&lt;Jnl
In 1951 R. 1.. W••stlall took tilt•
Th• · Bu1ck has bl't' n loved by
K&lt;:tlst•r deakrs lup anti hm.llob ii i 948
Ga llipotitans for 111a ny years and Hl
a 1914 survt• y uf &lt;:t il Ga llipolis c&lt;:~r s. · St•t'tlllll and un Vnlt' Street.
SHORTLY AFTER Va ught Sn1ith
till' BUi ck wets nwned by murt0 people
ldt T111nJ A._·,·n ue 111 1959. lhl' adthan any tllhcr car with t wn exdress becalllt' the htlll l t' of G&lt;:t lilpolis
l't•p tinns - Ford ct nd Maxwl'il.
Rw nbh·r . whtdl n·tnatnt•d ht.•rt· 1nto
THE EARLY retai ll'rs o[ Bull'k 111
lht• 11\HI-SOs. It was about lhat I nne
Gallipolis Wl'rt' WoiJit•ldmif e~nd
that tlw pn·senl ucr upanls. Sta nThomas alltl la ter Wallt·r W ist•.
Fnun 1947 In 1954 Ed Jud y s nltl tlw di.Jrd P IUlnbm).! and Healmg ll Hl\' t•d

Katst•rs &lt;JIHJ began''' st·ll Ruicks.

THURSDAY
MAY 18TH

WE WIU GIVE IN ADDITION TO THE 10% GOLDEN
BUCKEYE CARD DISCOUNT, AN ADD,ITIONAllO%
OFF .:.: ATOTAL OF 20% OFF ~NY PURCHASE IN
OUR-STORE TUESDAY, MAY 18TH ONLY. AGREAT
TIME TO BUY AND SAVE 20% OFF FOR ONE 'DAY
ONLY.

I, Fred H. Gardner, Vice President &amp; Comptroller of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Fred H. Gardner
April19, 1982

..

. We, ~ W1dersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We delare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
Joseph D. Landen
James K. Lewis- Directors
James E . Mounijoy

...

'.

·-

�Page-;-E -8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Ga llipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Florida's nudists seeking
help from tourism groups
MIAMI (API - Sun worshipers
who believe it's better to bask in the
buff are hoping that a pitch to

MiaJni's tourism-conscious officials
will help preserve one of the Sunshllle State's nude beaches.
" I'm optimistic about our chances
w1th the city," .aid Ga ry Bryant,
head of the pr&lt;&gt;-nudism Florida Free
Beaches. a sU!tew1de organization .
''We're offering a viabl e a"ct.
"Nude bathing is an accepted
norm for th e people in cosmopolitan

areas. Europeans and American
tourists arc spending their money in
the Caribbean islands, which have a
lot of areas designated for nude
swimming. Why not bring those
tourists here'" Bryant reasoned.
The Miami City Commi"ion is
deciding whether to convert Vir.ginia

Key's beach into a public park, and
Florida Free Beaches was to present
i~ cast' to the conunission today.
South Florida's nude sunbathers

already ha ve lost another mecca,

Primary should
decide control
OXFORD. Oh1o 1API - A Jongsinunt• ring dispute O\'er control of
loca l schools comes to a vote June 8
- and 1f res idents of three sout hWl'sh:rn Ohio townships choose to
fonn their own loc·al school district,
1t could be the f1rst such ven ture 1n
OhiO.
'These are uncharted waters; this
has never been done 1n the stale,"
sa 1d Eugene Griffith, supennlendent of the Talawanda Local
School District, which sl&lt;lnds to Jose
more than half its 3.500 students.
But Robert Evans. an as."stanl
Oh1o superintendent of public instru ction . isn' t

S UI'l'

a split

h~Jsn't

happened before - although his offi ce ca n' t find any l'Vtdcnce of one.
"That's possibly true, but I doubt
tt's a landmark case." Evans satd.
"Evl•r's a Jon ~ time."

The Talawanda dislnct Includes
the city of Oxford , along w1th 140
square m•les 111 Oxford. Milford,
Reily and Hanover townships in

Butlt•r County and a sma ll parcel in
Prebl•; Co unty.
The Sl'l't'ssiomsls. who want to
spilt away from the Talawanda
distrid, i:lre a group uf parenl.o:i in
rural &lt;-treas who ha ve st:ve ral gripes.

They betievt· that:
- AdminiStrators 1n Oxford .
wht·re Talawanda Hi gh School IS
located. return too little tax money
to schools in the outlymg townships.
- Their children are getting too litlie basic education and too much
liberal philosoph y - spilling over,
they say, from Miami {)niversity.
- Enf ra ncht sed Mtami students

should not be allowed to vote in
sc hool elect ions, particularly
revenue tssues, when they ha ve no
real sta ke in the outcmne.
" I don 't like to say 1l lilat way,"
said Linda Mahlerwein. a Re~ ly
Township farm wife and mother ~~
three whose Committee for Independence favors creation of an Independence Local Sehoo\ DIStrict.
She refuses to cross swo rds verbally

with her opponents.
" The opposing group IS very outspoken, very emotional," she sa id .

" My group feels that it's not'" the
best mterests of the ch1\dn•n to put
down another group."
She prefe rs to Jist the advanl&lt;lges
she sees in forming a new school

district encompassing the townships
ouL&lt;~de Oxford.
" We feel a smaller syskm can
produce better leadership trainmg,
opening opportunities for all of our
children rather than a smal l group

of kids,'' she said.
"We can be more responSible for
our financial planning, and not be
extravagant. We ca n have more con-

trol over our local elect1ons. A
smaller school system would create
a much closer tee:~cher-student
relatinship."
Dan Hannon, a biological researcher who lives in Reily Township, is
chairman of a rival group called
Save Our Children, which wants to
keep the Tala wanda district inl&lt;lct.
"! think people realize that not
that much is to be gained by splitting
the district, and that it would be very
costly," Hannon said. "I have seven
children ... and I feel all their needs
are being met."

Political maneuvering by bot~
Sides resulted in the referendum .
The secessionisb, after months of
lobbymg, conv inced the Butler
County Sehoul Board in January to
spli t the distri ct. That would have
been accomplished if Save Our
Chi ldren hadn't reacted with suffi cient petitions to put the matter on
the ballot.
Only residents outside Oxford are

w . Va.

May 16, 1982

.

North Palm Beach, where visitors
who shed their clothes these days

••

may receive misdemeanor s wnrnonses.

Last Monday, rangers at John D.
MacArthur Stah- Recreation Cen ter
confirmed three arrests had bet.&gt;Jl
made on the beach over the
wt•ekend .
The secl uded stretch was popular
among nudists for 25 years as local
authorities looked the other way.
But last year, the state and county
bought it from a foundati on for use
as a " famil y-orie nted" pork .
Rangers passed out 30 warnings to
nude sunbathers during a twt&gt;-week
" grace period"that ended May 3.
or those a rrested this weekend,
one was cha rged with indecent exposure. which ca rri es a maximwn
penalty of one year in jail and a
$1,000 fine, and tw o ot he rs were involved in a "lewd and lascivious
act," said Ranger John Fill yaw.
Florida Free Beaches ga thered

•

"COMPLETE TAN" - Geron Kramer works on
his tan recently on Virginia Key, while Miami officials
are to decide Tuesday if ~etting an all-over tan is

2.000 signatures on petitions asking
for part of the park to be designated
as "l'iothes-optional ," but local
rangers told them to present the
petitions to Department of Natural

Resources officials i1i Tallahassee.
In Miami , city offic•als plan a
cleanup of the 700-acrc Virginia Key

ille~al on the Key. Meanwhile another nude bathing
beach in Palm Beach has declared the practice
unlawful aod issued three citations last weekend. ( AP
Laserphoto).

beach area. and hope to open it this
swruner as a family park .
The nudists who had the beach to

themselves for years would like to
have at least part of it designated as
'' clothes-optional."

el~iWetov~e~thei"ue,w~chis I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

Need To Move F.urnlture
At New Haven Furniture

1n the longer tenn ... and the consequences e:~ r e nut worth thl'

bother," Evans said . " If we had our
druthers. wt· would hope 11 would not
spilt ."
A poll by The Hamilton JournalNews showed rcsidenL&lt; opposed the
spilt by a 2-t&lt;.&gt;-1 margin. Opponents
l' ited prc.tctica l reasons for maintaimng one district. Proponents

noted philosophical differences in
" social and intellectual goals," a
" mon· responsible outlook on life
without th e influence of Miami
Unive rsity" and " bt.'cause Oxford
people never accepted the rural
people
they arc only after our
du~ la r . "

Griffith sa 1d that Oxford, which
has 45 percent of the stud ents and 55
percent of the l&lt;lx base in the current
district, would fa re betlt•r than the
townships if there's a split.
" It would seem to me it would cost
them a lot more to prov1de the same
quantity and quality of opportunities," he sa id. " It would not
make a grea t deal of difference in
the co urse ofrcnngs in the
rTalawanda I district."
That eurrieulum is at the center of
the dispute.
"They ha ve more than is needed
for a good educa tion," Mrs. Mahlerwcm sa id . " The trend now is to go
back to basic reading, 'riling and
' rithmati c. The extras aren't

STOP IN AND SEE US WE NEED TO REDUCE
OUR INVENTORY AND WE'RE DEALING
DO ITI 'HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES •
STOP IN AND LOOK US OVERI
DMI

Bedroom

1

1

289.' Was 187.
•

Suite

Suite

NOW

$697.

Reg. '849. Was '597.

11

NfM$397

I

Save
MAPLE OR PINE

25%

Twin Beds

Hide-A-Beds
Reg. '779.ts

Was $549.00

$397.

EDITOR'S NOTE- How do you
prepare for the ultimate
catastrophe? The city of PlatIBburgh In upstate New York
thought about the untbinlmb1e and
came up with one of the best
evacuation plans In the nation. Yet,
theft's some doubt about surviving
a nuclear attack. Some stili consider
tbe best plan is to get as far away as
possible- and hope for tbe best.

By PETER COY
Associated Press Writer
PLATI'SBURGH, N.Y. (AP)
This city of 21,000 people has a
wallpaper factory, a college,
bathing beaches for vacationing
Canadians - and an air base with
Strategic Air Command bombers
carrying nuclear warheads.
Within 10 minutes of launching
from a Soviet submarine, nucleartipped missiles could turn Plattsburgh Air Force B8se and the city
into a flaming, irradiated ruin.
Perhaps as compensation for the
city's Category I vulnerability, the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency has helped Plattsburgh
establish what officials say is the
nation's best plan for evacuation in
case of an attack warning.
But while President Reagan has
proposed quadrupling the federal
budget for nuclear attack civil
preparedness to bring other cities up
to the Plattsburgh standard, officials ln this northern New York·
city doubt their ability to survive a
nuclear war.
"It would certainly raise particl!lar hell," James P. O'Connor,
PlattSburgh's civil defense director,
said recently. "Our plan is to get as
far away as you can and hope for the
best.''
The Defense Department
estimates about 30 percent of the
American population would survive
a nuclear attack on both military
and urban-industrial targets. It says
an effective crisis relocation
program might increase the surviv~I rate to about 80 percent.
Many scientists challenge those
figures, saying that with long-term
effects such as worldwide depletion
of the owne layer, a nuclear a lUick
might cause the extinction of the
hwnanrace.
O'Connor, a retired insurance
agent, rejects any argument that
civil.defense planning is futile. But
he says a nuclear attack would turn
his_city into a "crater."
bf&gt;eople would have to lie living in
tents. All industry would be
destroyed. The more you think about
it the worse you realize it would be."
Nevertheless, O'Connor has tried
to prepare for · catastrophe by

-

Bush. Kevi n Arthur, Brent West,
Smith, Loretta Powel l. Mike Craft,
Vincent Kanniard, Tammy Skaggs,
KPOneth Gray, Sandi Roach and
Teresa Beaver .
Southwestern Seniors
David Davies, Duan~? White, Lon·
dell Browning, Scott Lewis, Henry
Bartels. Sam Hale, Judy Davies,
Jeff Seagraves. David Hunt. Drexel
Salyers. Roger Crews. Tim Miller.
Roy Dummitt, Lori Carpenter
Smith, Marsha Shriver, Becky
Gregory, Cindy Speirs, Usa Green,
Brenda Zinn, Connie Perry, Tracy
Hall. Donna Shato, Ronald Darne ll ,
Rona ld Trout, Terry Mi ller, David

-$167

Pelfrey,

·'397.

$7,395
$7,395
$7,39S
$3,450

ASK AIOUT THISI HOMES AT OUR
•LPRILOT
1973 SHEIIAIIDONI12J60 ............... ....... - . . . . $5,500
1970 BUIIDY12J52 .. .. . .. . .. .. . .. .. .. .. . . .. . .. . . .. $3,495 .

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
POMEROY, OHIO

Lq.V.E SEAT

'187•

•lOCKER

'127.

Mary

Sublet,

Richard

Mil ler, Teresa Legg Parsons,
Shirley Blackburn, Keith Wil l iams
and Rosalie McPherson.
Hannan Trace Seniors
James Jimenez, Carolyn Me·

ER

Combs, Darrell Campbell, Carolyn

•$0FA
•CHAIR .
•2·END TAaLEs
•COFFEE TAIL~
~.
...

When our scheduling

de~rtments~aan

Whitti ngton, Jack NQrthrup, Can·

dace Porter, Danny Brumfield, Tim
Stan ley, t,.adawanna Carter, Janith
Thomas, Kenneth King, Tammy
Wri'g ht, Teresa Taylor. Tim Angel
and Jay Catdwe11.
·
Kyger Creek
Terry Diltard, Bruce Lucas. Todd
Rothgeb, Douglas ~und, . Brian
Tav.lor, Kelll Lemley, Mike Wallace,
Steve ·Ke lley, Mark Brown, ·c hris
Fetty, Helen Wilson, Timmy Spires,
Steve Hays, Kevin Wal l and Brenda
Taylor.
. North Gallla seniors
Barbato Cavins, Ronnie Jones,
Don Smith, Bobby McMillian, VIckie
Caflipbell Lucas, Anita Canaday,
Terry Ootso~. Becky Jones, Cindy·
&lt;;ollee, Linda ReYnolds, Joyce Glb·
son, Cheryl White, Terri Wolford
Mount, ·Michele Mount Baldridge,
Pa~la Brown Cal~~lt, Walter Ed. wards; Robert Caldwell, Barry
Drummond, Robin Stinson, Earoestlne Blackburn, Barry Marcum,
Anna · Gibson, Herman Theiss,
Teresa' Rpach,· Jell warner. Kathy
~rls and Yvonne Jacobs.

·.,

*
!

il inaatllatlon day with you, &gt;t
: we'll be there. In fact , you

:

Reg. '319. Was '224.~

FAMILY ROOM

***GUARANTEE*** .

Pasqua!. Bobby Brumfield, Carl

Mark Rees. Eugene Adkins, Ke ll y

***GUARANTEE***

*
!

l&lt;
•
l&lt;
We draw our house
l&lt; diagrams to scat&amp;-that way*
you're aura of getting the
il correct amount of carpetl&lt;not too much, not too little.*

!

rottmg crackers to Clinton Co unty
fanners.

we don't Install on time.

*a

!

Single knob electronic

•

tuning
Delu xe cabmelry

•

AutomatiC f1ne tun1ng

···**************

TllPPJlB 30" GAS RANGE
•

sg 95

You'll love it!

$14 VALUE

•
•
•

Ansell
. ., .

Low Profile
Saxony Plush
Reminiscent of wool-with It's soft
lustre and warm earthtone colorations.
100% continuous heat set nylon construction for long life and great beauty.

se

95

il
f.

Our Installers guarantee
their work lor the life
of the carpet.

!
*
*

!

:
Our s.ale people attend
il frequent manufacturers' It
il training schools to stay It
!abreast of the newest trends;
it in colors. styles and Iabrie It
il
construction .
•

··***************

.,

UNDERCOUNTER
DISHWASHER

- ~

! re.:nove all scraps, and then

•

Mu lti· cycle wash ac ti on
Dual sproy arm
No-heat drymg sw•tch
Porcela1n enamel
mterwr

..;..;.+-.,.- •

•thoroughly vacuum each job
il
upon complatlon. .
•

•
•

$23~0$495

r.mw.::n

Gibson
AND

·

WHITE
WESTINGHOUSE
REFRIGERATORS
&amp; FREEZERS
CHESTS. &amp; liPRIGHTS

GRASS TURF

'solids, Stripes and Tweeds

HQliolt

IN SIDE BY SIDES,

GET YOUR PORCH OR PATIO
IN GREAT SHAPE FOR
THE SPRING &amp; SUMMER

~
~

Whirlpool

LAUNDRY PAIR
WASHER
•

VALUES TO s8 oo
CASH &amp; CARRY ONLY

~~

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•
•
•

Whirlpool
MICROWAVE

N o1ma1 a rod Ger"!l le
Cycles
1 wash and Spo n Speed s
Super Surgilator Ag•tator
Counter· Batanced Sale

DRYER
•

:GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 446.;&amp;390

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

·Wh_irlnool

•***GUARANTEE***
Our installers review,

' ~- ·!. !

COMiSSEEOUR

•• * * * * * * * * * * * * * ••
l&lt;

19" COLOR
PORTABLE

GR~T· COLLECTION
~OF

···**************
***GUARANTEE***

Fast flexible top
burners
Big 25" all
porcelain oven
Liftoff oven door
Rollout broiler.
adjusts easily

•••GUARANTEE***
!

Z!NirN
.r

, ~ .

A beautifully constructed low profile
styling in many colorations and perfect
for most rooms in the home. The An so IV
label means NO static shock,excellent
soil and stain resistance, and easy care.

***************

$11 VALUE

•

*

Anso IV

Tawney, Dwayne Beard, Mi cha el

Complete With Bedding

5 PIECE

ULTRON 'R

il
don't pay lor the
il lnsatallatlon ol any carpet

Scott

J.jing

about seven yec.trs a~o it threw lht.&gt;
stale medicine away ;md gave the

COLOR CONSOLE

$895

$13 VALUE

:

Canaday.

" Very clearly, no one is in a
position to provide an iron-dad
guarantee that this kind of time
would be avai lable," a Federal
Emergency Management Agency
publication admits .
Moreover, buildings across the
country which are designated as
fallout shellers - including those in
rural Clinton County - are not built

planners envisiun

bulldozers to plow earth agamst the
walls and windows. But there would
be neither enough time nor enough
bulldozers to accomplish the job .
" That is admittedly a weak pa11 of
the program." says Herskowitz .
Plattsburgh used to stuck tht•
shelters with crackers, phenobarbital, penicillin and asp1nn . but

~NITNCONTEMPORARY

A versatile pattern made of tough
durable Ultron Wear Dated nylon.
A
beautiful and practical· style In lovely
tone on tone colorations that will give
years of elegant service In your home.

«

Scott

planners say .

to protect against radiation. Civil
defense

Sunday
12:30-6:30
Mon-Sat
10am-9pm

High Style in Ultron

GAHS Seniors
Jonathan O' Dell , Phillip Fral ey ,
Kevin Parsons, Monica Angelo.
Brian Eads. James Foley, Rob
Nibert, John Craft. James Cop ley,

Shockley,

York's Adirondack Mountains.
It would l&lt;lke at least a week to
evacuate cities like New York City,
Los Angeles and San Francisco,

Over the years people have come to expect low prices from
Hatfield &amp; McCoy and because of this they expect to pay by
cash or check. However we can now offer you the convenience of VISA®&amp; MASTERCARD" . Now we've got the best
of both worlds-name brand quality at discount prices AND
ease of payments. Extra service at NO extra charge-that's
Hatfield &amp; McCoy.

were:

Bing, William Remy , Sue Price,
Teresa Burnette, ~ Paula Pullin s,
James King, Charles Di llon, Jody
Plyma le. Regina Eskew Harold,
Randy Thivener, Jon Lewis, Joey
Myers,
Keith
Sl aven.
Marc

themselves would become tombs.
Surprise is another problem. Planners theorize that in a period of
heightened international tensions,
the enemy would begin to empty its
cities and the United States would
begin doing likewise.
Plattsburgh could be evacuated in
a day and federal planners say 95
percent of the nation's population
could be relocated after three days.
But some people would have long
trips - more than half-a-million
Connecticut residents would be expected to make their way to New

work on civil defense plans in all 50
states.
Pentagon officials say the Soviet
Union spends $12 a year per person
on civil defense while the United
States spends 56 cents. Seeking to
redress the balanct, Reagan is
proposing to increase the U.S. sum
to $I.IO a year per person.
Uncertainty is a critical problem
for civil defense planners. Plattsburgh plans to evacuate its
residents to schools and firehouses
in towns outside the predicted "risk
area," but if the attack's strength
exceeds expecU!tions, the shelters

Carpeting
Color TVs
and
Major
Appliances

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills
Career Center seniors receiving
their vocational certificates during
the Seventh Annual Certification
Ceremony Thursday in the Buckeye
Hills Career Center Amphitheatre

10

67%'

publishing evacuation instructions
in the Plattsburgh telephone directory . The four pages include a map
of routes to reception centers, 15 to
25 miles from the city, and a list of
things to bring along, such as extra
socks, credit cards, a crowbar and
the family will.
The Reagan admi ni stration
proposes to double civil defense
spending in fiscal year !983, to $252
million. Spending on nuclear attack
civil preparedness would rise at a
faster rate, from $I1.6 million this
year to $46.2 million in 1983. Already,
!50 federally paid planners are at

BHCCholds
certification
•
ceremomes

Greg Gal laher, Jim Roberts, Ronald

Minimum

ALL TRADE-INS ON MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
THIS AREA.

I

15

$147.

Reg. '1199.00 Was sa34.00

MOBILE HOMES

1100 E. MAIN ST.

Living Room

1

LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN, PRE-OWNED

1971BELMOIIT 12x65 ..............................
1972 BAROII, 12x60, CENTRAL AIR •.................. _...
1976 OAIIWOOD 12x52, furnislled with untrahir Ctlllditlonlne .....
1967 ELCOIIA 10x50 WITH TIP-OUT IN LIVING ROOM ...........

2 PIEQ

Desks

5 PIECE

needed ."

Hannon Said his group estimates
that township residents would see
their taxes increas e 32 percent to
support a new school district, which
would have to build a high school.
"They're sayi ng they' re willing to
pay more money in return for the
local control, " he s.aid. " I don't think
they have a case there.
"There are some philosophical differences .. . but America is made up
of a melting pot and to have the
chi ldren ~xposed to those different
points of view anJ lifestyles is important, rather than isolating them
from those differences."

The Sunday Times ·Sen tm el- Page E ·9

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

How do you prepare for the ultimate catastrophe?

the fonner ''Air Force Beach" in

opposed openly by the Talawanda
board and discreetly by the Sl&lt;lte
Department of Pub\ ic Instruction.
"As a public school adm inistrator,
I believe it is not in the best interest
of lht• bO)'S and girls to split this
diStrict," sa1d Griffith, a ca reer administrator for the last 31 years. " I
don't thmk they would bt• in a positon
to provldt· the same ca liber of
educatiOn now bemg offt•red ... in the
school diStn ct.''
Eva ns said the slate wants to sl&lt;ly
nut of the election, but "some people
are attempting to work with them to
•ndicale what cou ld happen ."
" I don't think we're trying to wke
a posi tion unt' wcty or the other, but
ctn• tryin}.! to say wha t the consequences or those actio ns would be

May 16, 1982

•

FOR THE
PAIR

1 Oryong Temperature!&gt;
E •tended t1me dry•ng
cycle
Full s•ze 'nte11or lot tes s
wr•nkles
Steeve-type top access
l ontl•ller

• 30-Minute timer
• Separate defrost cycle
• Sealed-in ceramic shelf

�May 16, 1982
~~.--

Page

E · lO

The Sunday Tim e s-Se ntin e l

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-'-Po1nt Pleasant,

May 16, 1982 .

w. va.

Graham participates in peace mission

'

By Associated Press
The most eloquent voices of
Russian history have rung with a

religions of the world , including 25
from the United States, had been invited to Moscow for a peace con-

powerful

ference

r e li g ious

not e,

a nd

although the country has been officiall y atheist lor the past 65 years,
faith perseveres there.
Some of it, no matter how overshadowed by corrununist government policy, was refl ected in a
remarkabl y broad lorwn this week,
ranging from U.S. evangelist Billy
Graham to Russia n Orthodox
Patria rc h Pimen.
About 480 leaders of various

on

preventing

nuclear

disaster.
While evidence has indicated
Soviet government attempts to
manipulate Russian church leaders,
they nevertheless remain public
symbols of a persisting faith among
the people.
It is a deeJ&gt;-rooted thing; a part of
an engrained memory, of a Russian
"soul" that has pulsed through the
works of Russian literary greats, of

the 19th century Dostoevski and documentary journal, Religion in
Tolstoy , of the contemporary Communist Dominated Areas.
Some experts on the situation have
Alexander Solzhenitsyn .
.
said
that believing Christians in
He himseU, now in U.S. exile, has
Russia
outnumber Marxists despite
maintained that Christianity 's
greatest strength, forged in fires or attempts to eliminate religion ever
opposition, will eventually emerge since the Bolshevik Revolutron of
in Russia when it is free. Even under 1917.
No reli gious statistics are
present circumstances, recurrent
reports indicate an increased tur- available on the Soviet Union, but
the fortni ghtly. Christianity Today.
ning to faith .
current estimates that about
cites
"Religious belief Is growing
amazingly, despite intens ifi ed half the 268 million Soviet citizens
atheist propaganda," says the Rev. are non-reli gi'ous, about half
Blahoslav Hruby, editor of a religious.

MEMORIAL PICTURE- C. E. Blakeslee, presidt·nt ol the Pioneer
and Historical Society, is shown holdin~ a wry large memorial picture
that was donated to tht· Meigs Museum by Thelma Barton Campbell. The
memorial lists the name ol Stillman Carter Larkin, writer ol the history
book, " The Pioneer History ol Meigs County ." The writer \I' as the ~reat­
unrle ol John Larkin who now lives in Rutland. George Larkin, who
published tht· book, is John Larkin's grandlatht•r. Mrs. Barton who
donated tht· mem'nrial pictures, lives in the old Larkin homt·.

13-year old suffers
from rare disorder
NEW YORK f AP I - On a recent
aft ernoon at the Hospital for Special
Surgery , Dr. David Levine showed
13-yea r-old Melissa Gruber two Xray pictures or her back.
She glanced at the films, looked at
the fl oor for a moment , propped one
sneaker-clad loot atop the other and
sa id weakl y, " It's getting worse."
Her spine should ha ve shown up as
a broad, white band runni ng straight
up and down through the middle of
the X-rays. But what she saw instead was a while band twisted to
the right in an S-shape, marking the
curva ture of her back. In the
preceding yea r. the curvature had
become worse .
The problem is one consequence of
a rdre genetic disorder called
familial dysa utonomia . The word
"dysautonomia " mea ns failure or
the autonomi c nervous system.
Melissa is one ol perhaps onl y a
few hundred Americans with the
condition, also known as Riley-Day
syndrome. It's sometimes referred
to as an " orphan disease, " a disorder so uncommon that it has been
mostly overlooked by medical
researchers, federal health agencies
and charitable foundations.
The disorder strikes one in 10,000
Ashkenazi Jews, a group of central
and eastern European ancestry . One
in 50 Ashkenazi Jews is a carrier.
Melissa is beset with a variety ol
curi ous symptoms. When shP cri es ,

she sheds no tears. She is scarcely
able to !eel pain, or to tell between
hot and cold . Many ol the taslebuds
that should cover her tongue are
mi ssing.

Buy This Hi-Fi Stereo System-Get 31% Off!
By Realistic
• Realistic STA-110 AM/FM Stereo Receiver'
With Exclusive Auto-Magic®FM Fine-Tuning
• Two Nova®-5 Walnut Veneer Speaker Systems
With a• Woofer, 2" Tweeter, Tuned Port and
Decorator Lattice-Work Molded Grille
• LAB-290 Belt-Drive Automatic Turntable With

Some ol the problems shared by
Me li ssa a nd other s with
dysa utonomia have been traced to
wha t's called the autonomic nervous
system - the network that controls
the body's glands. internal organs

R~~~~!~~~~FE~fra~=e~~etPau$se,

iJnd certa in muscles. Those nerves

seem not to ha ve d eve l o pe ~
properly.
Beca use of the fai lure of that
system , Melissa has had trouble
swall owmg since she was a baby.
When she was younger she had no
gag refl ex - she didn 't cough.
Her feeding problems became so
severe that she did not grow. Food
nften became trapped 111 her lungs,
spa rkin g rec urrent cases of
pneumonia .
Throughout IJC r short life she has
been plagued by bouts of vomitmg,
last111g from three days to three
weeks at a time. For a time she had
trouble talking and walking.
She has almost completel y overcome those coordinati on problems

ARTS AND CRAFTS FAIR
Friday, May 14th • 1 p.m. • 8 p.m.
Saturday, May 15th · 10 a.m. · 8 p.m.
Sunday, May 16th · Noon · 6 p.m.

By Realistic

Save
$30080

Allan Poe's ''The Raven."

899

Reg. Separate
ltems1199.80

t 80 watts per chllnnel, mtntmum rmalnto 8 ohmo
from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.03% THO

Sale! Liquid-Cooled
Loudspeaker
Mach One by Realistic

Save sao

159!,

•11 0 0 0 11111

Reg. 239.95 Each

Save
$120 .

159~

Great hi-li doesn't have to be expensive! Features our
exclusive Auto-Magic system that automatically finetunes FM stations and locks _them in. Ten-level LED signal strength indicator, lighted slide-rule tuning dial, tape
monitor facility. #31-2093

• Masslvt15" Woofer With
32-0unce Magnet
• Sectoral Midrange Horn
• Heavy-Duty Tweeter Horn
• Genuine Oiled Walnut Veneer
Price slashed 33% on this "wall-shaking" system! Midrange and tweeter are ferrofluid-cooled to increase
power handling and protect voice coil for improved response. Adjust sound with built-in treble and midrange
controls. 28'1• x 17'/e x 12". #40-4029

5-Band Graphic
Equalizer Improves
Any System!

*HOME COOKING *DAILY ENTERTAINMENT

By Realistic

Sponsored by
Point PleasaHI·Mason CouHty
Chamber of Commerce

None of them, you see, had ever
been to his nightclub act where his
magic-mathics are just one part of
his routine, a ·routine that is often
hilarious, closing with "The
Raisin," a wonderful spoof of Edgar

~~~~::.a~~~c~~~:t ~~EDT Magnetic
$

•
Save4995
· '30 ··
.Sav•&amp;995
'10!·
fltg.
Reg.

79.95

Attach it to your stereo system to
bring out the "hidden" sound few
· TV sets can reproduce! For VHF
channels 2-13. Fine-tuning and out·
· put level controls.l31·1950

79.95.

"Tailor" sound to suij your )astes or
room acoustics. Ten-precision controls boOst or ct.it
by up lo
12 dB. EQ bypass tor instantcom-

response.

pariaon to lnput.l31·1988

By Realistic

Save·
Reg. 129.95
· Prot~~ttnd

. Qlaplay Your
Stereo Syeteml

Handsome rack rolls on heavy-duty
casters. Jntemal shelves ·hold three com'- .
ponents, bottom holds LPs. Use top tor
lumtable. Easy lo assemble. Walnut vinyl

veneer. 1142·3023 · .

NEW YORK (AP) - F'aster than a
speeding microchip (sometimes ), a
consummate sho)V-off (always) , a
crack backgammon player (compulsively ), Arthur Benjamin is also
somewhat of a lyricist, a magician,
a comedian, and a master of chutzpah .
Thi s 21 -yea r-old cluster ol
hyperactivity is a senior at Carnegie-Mellon University where he's
studying mathematics - and the
school is studying him.
Arthur ("You can call me Art")
Benjamin, it seems, can multiply 462
times 318 (or any other three-digit
combinatiOn times a three-digit
combination) faster than a
calculator. He can also spout out the
square of a three-digit ·number in
about one second and grinds down to
30 seconds when he's asked to come
up with the square of a four-&lt;ligit
number.
All, of course., without pencil or
paper.
His mother, back in Cleveland, once told a reporter Arthur was a
genius and he still grimaces about ·
that, apparently unaware of a
mother's inalienable right to label
her first born as such. Arthur insists
he is not a genius, but having been
interviewed once or twice already,
has learned to say "no comment"
when pressed about exactly what his
!Qmightbe.
He was' in the top I0 percent of his
high-school class and remains there
at the more competitive CarnegieMellon.
Arthur came to be studied when a
professor in a cognitive psychology
class began lecturing about " lightning calculators," people who can
perform amazing mathematical
gymnastics. Some of the stunning
acrobatics of the mind - such as
telling the day of the week of a given
date centuries ago in a matter of
seconds - are simply tricks. Others
are true lightning calculations.
The professor asked if anyone
knew any tricks.
Arthur didn't do tricks. He did real
lightning calculation, multiplying,
dividing, squaring any numbers his
classmates hurled at him.
He wowed them. Or, as the everreserved Arthur put it : " It stood the
class on its ear.''

• Raalletlc STA·2080 AM/FM Rece'ivert With
Front-Panel Dubbing and Monitoring Switches
For Control of Two Tape Decks
• Two Mach One®Liquid-Cooled Speakers
With 15" Woofer, Sectoral Mlcfrange Horn,
Heavy-Duty "Bullet" Tweeter Hom, In
Genuine Oiled Walnut Veneer Enclosures
• LAB-440 Direct-Drive Turntable With

Admission '1.00 - Children 12 &amp; Under FREE!

Rt. 62 North Point Pleasant

Items
579.80

25% Price-Cut! _High-Performance Component

46 BOOTHS

National Guard Armory ·...,_.-.......,

se:~~te

8 ohms from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more
than 0.08% THO

Because of her success in over·

MASON COUNTY

399

• 22 waHe per channel, minimum rms Into

with the help ol therapy.
coming her physical disabilities,
Melissa's symptoms are not readil y
apparent. She smiles often, with a
little g1rl 's shyness, she is able to atlend school and she seems to understand and to be abl e to cope with
her affliction .
The curvature of her spine is the
only immediately viSible sign of her
conditi on. Once or twice a year, she
visits the Hospital lor Special
Surgery, where orthopedic surgeons
led by Dr. David Levine conduct a
monthly clinic to evaluate the bone
and back ailments or dysa utonomia
patients.

Save
$18080

Math wizard
bigshowoff

.. ·

Arthur's career began when he
was 14 and billed himself as "The
Great Benjarnini." He did magic
shows for kids.
"I would make them scream and
laugh," he recalls. "Not screaming
in fear, but in glee. I would tell the
story of 'The Thuee Little Pigs' and
they would growl like the wolf. It
doesn't take a wizard to be able to
confuse&amp;- and 6-year-o1ds.
"To make them laugh, that's the
magic," says Arthur.
The eldest of three children, Arthur was a real "pain in the neck"
kid. He drove Mom crazy with
questions, mostly about relationships between numbers and
geometric figures . Once he got to
school, he took to correcting
teachers.
Arthur was given medication to
slow him down some, but his
memory never rested. He figured
out, for instance, that if he
multiplied the numbers on the dart
board above his head in any way,
they always came out to 3,628,800.
He memorized the states' names
and can still say them in one word
that
starts
out:

ELL
STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 arh-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
NEFFECT THRU MAY 22, 1982

WIN A TRIP
FORTWOTO oil

HAWAII

CASH

NO PURC HASE NECESSARY Get a tree game
ttcket and collector card at any par1 tCipahng s tore
You may also recetve a free game ltcket and,or
collector card (please spec1ly) by mathng a sell addressed , stamped envelope to Fabulous Fortune
of Pnzes. P O Bo~t 26272 . l:ilfmn·•gham. AL 35216
Ltmll one ttcket per request, one requesl per per son
per day Each request must be mat led separately

-

PH il£
V.O.IUf

"'VlolllfR Qr
P R ttrS

· ·~

"",, I
,

,

St"1)1y punch out the perforated sechons on the
game ticket to reveal lour game markers to play on
your collector card Some game hCke ts contam a
marker whtch states ·vou QUALI FY FOR GRAND
PRIZE DRAWING. II you Obtam one ol these
markers you are ehgtble to enter tho Grand Pnze
Orawtngs and the chance to wm one ot s1• tnps tor
two to Hawau or $3 ,000 cash Two Grand Pnze
Drawmgs will be held All vahd entfi OS rece1ved by
May 27 , 1962 wtll be ehg1ble tor the hrst draw1n g on
May 28. 1962 Thr ee Grand PnlOS w•ll be g•von
away at thiS time All valid entries roce•ved wt!h1n 14
days after game ends wtll be ehglblo tor the second
drawtng . Three more Grand Pnzes wtll be awardee!
tn the second draw1ng

'3,000

IOI .O.l

I

'"'

·~
,~

·~

-~~

II) 8 11)

~~=--:-c--

ooos r()ll

ooos r oH

ouos •ull

I('.A.Iol(
11':1((1

I)GAiol(

;&gt;t,(,Aiol l
ToCo. rTS

'"'ljij ~ J

'"

.,.,
'"
'" · ~
... '"'"

..

1)9'&gt;11 j

IIC O.(l ~

..
.... ,,'"'"
.. "'
.... 10

...... "'"'
.... "'•

'J/

I 0 1~

I (P l

'"

Jbl

"

Odcls v ar')' Oltpend•og on tr.e 'lUmDe• ol Game I &gt;eke Is you
oota.n fhe mo&lt;e yOu collect the bene• .,.our ct1 ance s ot
w•nn. og Odds to oota.n Gr aJI(I Pn1e D•a w•ng marker ar&gt;(l Qu&lt;~h ty
101 Or&amp;W!I"Q(SI a•e I '"52 Odds 10 ""' " G•anO Pro111 Dr a"" "9'5 1
""II depend 011 !he 11umt:Jer o&lt; Quahl141! ~
FabulOus FOflune ol Pn n s Seroes I WMS;&lt; •s

t&gt;e+ng

~a ye&lt;! ·~

159 stor es OCalecl m OhiO lrl&lt;M na Moch•gan Y&lt;rlj "''" West
and Kentucky

V~rQtnta

Scheduled lermtnahon da le ol lh•S pt omol•on •S July 16 196;1
however . Fabulous F011ur.e ol Pn1ii'S olh : .ally onds .. hun all
game !1Ck81s a re cl•s1nbut80

99¢
W1eners .......... ;:~z~~K=~
89¢
FRE.NCH CITY

TASTEE TREAT CHUNK

EICll()~llCI ............••• ;~.

$249

BUCKET

Steak..................L~~.

WHOLE CHICKENS • • • •
SPARE RIBS ...... ~ •••• ~B

COUNTRY STYLE

$1

79

FRESH PORK BUTT
LB .

STEAK OR ROAST

'' Alabamaalaskaa ...''
As a result of his classroom
displays, Arthur was introduced to
William Chase, professor of
psychology at Carnegie-Mellon. Arthur is now his research assistant
and subject. Chase was interested in
how Arthur's brain worked as the
numbers came pouring out.
The first thing Chase discovered
was that Arthur could retain 18
digits, well -above the normal seven
unrelated digits a person can
remember. This was explainable by
a system of mnemonics. Arthur
assigns letters to numbers, thus
creating words. So if you give him
your Social Security number,
followed by your telephone number,
followed by your age, Arthur can
spit it back for you.
But Chase figured that would not
allow him to perf01;m the kind of
calculations he does. And Art)lur
had been doing it for so long, he
couldn'texp1ain it. He just did it.
· Chase asked him to square five
digits - something he had never
tried - and then tell him what he
was doing. Arthur calculates from
left to right, which he maln!ains Is
·the more efficient way. It takes a lit·
tie longer to learn, but It's better in
the end, he says.
"I figured 011t a lot f!. rellltionships
'-with numbers before I was
prejudiced by school," he says.
'

$399

MAXWELL HOUSE

Insta11t Coffee.;~~z~ ..

TOMATOES • • • • • • • • • •LB.•
FLAVORITE IND.

12 Oz . Pkg . $119

CHEESE SLICES • • • • • • • • •
BROUGHTONS

LIBBYS

39~

ORANGE JUICE

, , Gal.

••••••••

BORDENS

SHERBET • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 59~
.....
•• COUPON"• •••
•. COUPON". ••
•••
Qt .

COUNTRY TIMES

LEMONADE
lOQt. $199
.
Size
(Offer N4M0~- 3-30+7)

-- · •

- ~ •--nr .

Limit On~ Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
22, 1

GOLDME,DAL

CORONET DELTA

CHATEAU

FLOUR

TOILET
TISSUE
4 Roll

BLEACH

sLb.
Bag

89e

Pkg.

69e.

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires May 22, 1982

•••••••

Gal.

59e

�Page- E -12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

you want it ...
you ·ve gotit ...

Laboratory born eagle
under watchful eyes
CLEVELAND !API - Two large
dbapproval as Dennis Case gingerly
places a fuzzy little eaglet into a nest

pairs. That accounts for 4 percent of
eagle production in the state, said
Case, who report.s no failures.
Case said his effurt.s appear to be

of !:iliclc; high up in ct cottonwood tree

working .

along Lake Ene.
With an offen ng of a fi sh and just
the n ght timing, Case hopes the
male and female eagles will accept
the little bird as their own. The
eaglet was born abou t a month
before in a laboratory in Maryland
and brought to Ohio under the sta te's
bald eagle preservation program ,
designed to bolster depleted ranks of

"cautiously optimistic."
The number of Ohio's nesting
pairs - a male and female who
mate for life and produce eggs each
spring - W'dS five in 1980, six in 1981
and seven in 1982.
" The result of the program and

lhl' majesti e bird .

pesti ci des and the environment get-

~._• agles

hover ovt•rhead shrieking

Si nce the 1970s, America's symbol
ha s been an endangered spec ies.
" We were Iusing nesting pairs and

nut gettmg replacements. So we try
to increase production in nest.s by
taking young eag let.s and putting
them 1n," said Case, a fi eld biologist
for th&lt;· Ohio d1v1sion of wildlife and
head of the state's eagle program.
The program, sta rted in 1975 ,
helps eagles do what should be a
rwtuntl prol'CS.'i - reproduce cmd
fledge healthy eaglet.s. Many have
not bet·n able to bccaU!ic pesticides,

particular ly DDT, have become cun&lt;'r ntrated in eagles through their
pnncipal suurre of food - fish . That
has caused females to lay eggs with
thin shells.
" The shells would break as the
eagles were hatching them or else
the levels !of pesticides) would be so
high they would cause the embryo to
die," Case sa id.
DDT has been banned si nce 1972,
but it takes a lung time for the
chemical to work it.s way out of the
food chain and out of the eag le's
system, Case said. So the problem
n •rnains.
Loss of forest land also has driven
the eag le away and many are killed
in coll isions with hi gh-voltage power
lmes.

" We' ve had a steady decline in
nt_·stin g pairs in Ohi o since the late

1950s," said Case. "In 1959, the first
year acc urate records were kept, 15
pcurs of eagles were nesting in the
state . That declined to only four
pa 1rs 111 1979."
F'ostering was begun 111 Oh io tn
1979 and so far, four eaglets have
lx·o•n successfull y adopted by adult

May 16, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea san·!, W. va.

Bu t

for

now ,

he's

the general trend nationa lly is to see

improvement in productivity in bald
eagles as a .result or the banning of
ting cleaner,"Casesaid.
Case estimates Ohio's total bald
eag le population at 29, most of them
along the western shore of Lake Erie
·or ncar other bodies of water. There
are bel ieved to have been 250,000
eag les in the count ry at the turn of
the century. The National Wildlife
Federation, which began counting
eag les four years ago, says there
now are about 13,400.

Severa l other states are actively
tryi ng to protect eagles, including
New York, Maine, New Jersey,
Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Arkansas and Mississippi. Case said
Tennessee began a program, but no
nest.s were left and, therefore, it
cuuidn't fostereaglet.s.
"We sta rted before we lost all ownest.s," he said.
Another method is hacking, in

which an eaglet born in a zoo Ui' lab
is raised uut.side a nest until it is old
enough to be set free.
Case spent his first several years
in the program loca ting and
stud ying eagles. The large whiteheaded birds nest only when ready
to reproduce. Two eaglets are
usually fledged per nest. Eggs incubate fur 35 days with the male and
female sharing responsibi lity for
keeping it warm .
He sa id eagles generally use the
same nest each year although they
are apt to have an alternative nest in
the same breeding area if the old
nest or e n v ~romn ent is disturbed.
"When you foster a young eagle into a nest, you're either dealing with
a situation in which the eggs are infertile and don't hatc h, or only one

Because fostering is such a
delicate procedure, understanding
the eagles' behavior through observation is crucial.
Case scouts the nest.s from a
helicopter and observes the birds
from the ground through binoculars
or a spotting scope.
"Starting in late February, we
watch all breeding territory to see

DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler
Corp.'s effort to convince consumers
its cars are well made by offering a
five-year warranty on ma jor engine
part.s has stepped on the toes of a
company that has made money
selling insura nce against breakdowns.
And the president of that company
doesn'tlikeit
Marv . Cowdrey, president of
United Dealer Group of Phoenix,
Ariz., says the Chrysler warranty
takes away one lJf the most
profitable sources of income for
dealers and wiil not help sell cars.
But Chrysler says ils dealers
haven't complained and adds that it
intends to stick by the new plan to
lure customers to showrooms.
"They (Chrysler) should have
kept the rebates," said Cowdrey .
The Chrysler program requires
dealers to honor the warranty,
denying them the chance to offer
similar programs from United
Dealer Group and other independent
warranty finns - which guarantee
the dealer a profit when the warran·
ties are written, Cowdrey said.
Chrysler's program dues not offer
a profit for dealers.
" I believe in free enterpriSe,"
Cowdrey sa id. " In today's times, a
dealer should be allowed to go after
any profit-making area he can get"
Cowdrey told Chrysler Chai rman
Lee Iacocca just that in a full-page
letter printed in an April issue of the
trade journal Automotive News.
Chrysler spokesman B.F. Mullins

COBRACB

when they're incubating eggs,'' Case

'

LIMITED QUANTITIES~
WHILE THEY LAST '

Cobre19LTD 40 Channel AM Mobile. Emergency
Channei9Switch. PA Function.SwitchableANL
LED Channel Readout. Variable Squelch Control

Cobra 146 GTL AM/SS B Mobile with LED
display, variable squelch.. swilchable
NB / ANL, voice loc k, lummaled SI RS
meter . Transmit indicator .

11J9.95

Cobre 39LTD S.O.S.
Emergency CB Outfit.
Self-Contained
Storage Case Holds
Radio, Plug-Jn Power
Cord, Magnetic Mount
Telescoping Antenna
and Red S.O.S. Flag.

Cobra 29L TO Deluxe 40 Channel AM Mobile
with RF Gain Control. Emergency Channel9
~Switch . Dimmer Control. Delta Tune. Sw1t·
chable NB and ANL. Dynamike control.

'13995

ltocUo. 111 ct1J1

.llltUU11...

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

'

"EVERYTHING IN JWO.WAY RADIOS, ANTENNAS &amp;ACCESSORIES"
UPPER RT. 7• ACROSS FROM THE SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
GAUIPQLIS, OHIO 45631
PHONE 446-4517

I~~~~~~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SCREAMING BEAUTY · . Miss Arkansas, Terri Lea Utley
of Cabot screams with ex·
'dtement as she was named Miss
. USA Thursday night at Biloxi,
Miss. The ~year-old beauty has
- brown balr and brown eyes. (AP
· · Laserphoto).

1-

Install a beautiful

Armstrong tile ceiling
and t your first Easy Up..

are tryi ng to establish an income tax

says

Iacocca

for
a proven leader,
farmer and
business man.
VERLIN SWAIN

·. ' WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)
~Tom L. Freudenheim has been ap:polnted director of the Worcester
;Art Musewn.
' Freudenheim currently serves as
;director of the museum program at
·tile National Endowment for the Arts in Washington.
· He will assume his new position on
a full-time basis in September.

Republican Candidate for
Gallla County Commissioner
P aid f or bY t nc C(1nd1da t e

How can I §SlU!
0

--

'

~

.... .
' '

Easy Up is the easiest way ever to
install your ti le cei ling . Easier than
wood furring strips. And right now,
you can save on Easy Up by gening
your first kit free .

May 16, 1982

Dear Voter :
Are you really satisfied with the way your county
tax money is being spent? Shouldn't the candidate you
vote for in the June 8 primary actually have extensive
money management experience?

'

,

...
•. . . ...
_ '

·

~

.•.
~

and desen&lt;e a good deal ," but adds
that dealers in his area , the south-

com es

wes t and Rocky Mountain states ,
have complained their showroom

•
t

___) . '

".

· So, now's the time to install a

' ...,

beautiful Armstrong ti le ceiling.
And do it the easiest way ever . . .
with Easy Up!
' Act&lt;XJI installation of 150 sq&lt;X&gt;re feet will

.,..

'

'

5 Ft.
'2.15
5% Ft.
'2.35
6Ft.
'2.55
6% Ft.
'2.75
7Ft.

'2.

~..
'

..

~

@mstrong

,, ''"

·.

~

'

$3295

. -- ---~·

1

•

Mit e

W~r e

'7.95

so Lb. White Block

'3.10

10ft. ' ' ' . . '' '' '' '' $43 .20
) 2ft. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' 48 .50
14ft . . '' ' '.' '' ' ' ' ' ' 53 .85
16ft.
, ,, , , , ,,,,,, 64 .05
16'x52" Callie Pa ne l
$2 0.95

ElECTRIC FENCING
48ln. Post

'5.15

•'

as~

Insulators

50 lb. Farm &amp; Kennel
25 lb. Old Yeller
50 lb. Old Yeller

50 lb. 8-D
50 lb. 16-D

Galvanized Staples

MAG
OXIDE
50
lb.

$1225

Pt.
Qt.

.....

J' t A'Iolo

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

Certificate pays 1/4°/o -more than banks.
For more Information cali the Diamond Savings
Investment Hot Line toll free 1·800-472·9588
or visit your local Diamond Savings office.

' '

...
........"

'
'

Washable.
Acoustical. Fireretardant. Wall-towall look-no bevels.

'

'

.....

Gal.
'7.35
FLY SPRAY
1
7.95
Gal.
FLY SPRAY CONCENTRATE
1
26.95
Gal.
ECTRIN EAR TAGS
1
32.95
Box ot 24
ATROBAN EAR TAGS
Pkg. of 10
FLY -A-REST AEROSOL
1
12.60
21/z lb.
HOG &amp;CATTLE DUST 11b. 11.80
CATTLE DUST
5 Lb. 17.95
CATTLE DUST
15 Lb. '10.90
R.O.L BLOCKS
1
6.00
331/J Lb.

16 oz.

'2.50

2 GAL POLY
3 GAL POLY
160Z. HAND
32

ARDEN

..

•"'!"''

,.

DIAMOND

-_.
~T . !I.

!l'"""r-11.

~··

I

~ ..... »'

.""'
·""'"

SNINGS AND LOAN COMPANY

--...nr.w:

CAROLINA
_LUMBER
,
..... 'AN·D. ·.

"''"

...:::

,

,

'

I

..3l2~ ~J~ Street . . , 675-1160
Point Ple1unt·
Store-liours:,Mon.-Fri. ·s a.m&gt;s p.m., Sat. 8.a.m.·t0 12 hoon .

Paid for by the Candidate

'

'

I
. •.

.1

Copper Dragon

'1.49
25 lb.
'7.75
Dust 4 lb. '2.75

25 lb.
4lb.
251b.
SEVEN SOW.............................. 2 lb.
LIQUID SEVEN. ............... .. ........ . Pt.
LIQUID SEVEN .......................... Qt.

'12.75
'1.60
'9.95

Fruit Tree Spray..........................1 lb.

'3.20
'8.50
'3.50
'2.25
'3.75

5% Seven Dust

41b.

MALATHION DUST.... .............. 41b.
MALATHION SPRAY............... 8 oz.
16o:z:.

'6.85
'3.80
'6.25

'

TOLL FREE 1-800 -4 72-4 744
"Serving Ohio with 48. off ices across the state"

~

.l~llttij

SUPPLY COMPANY

Blue Dragon Dust 41b.

.

~~ ·

22.60

FLY CONTROL
BEEF &amp;DAIRY SPRAY

~·-

45631

1

50 lb. 1W'

SPRAYERS

'2.95
'4.95

Lawn &amp; Patio Aerosol

-·~

-......

'16.95
'16.95

Super Weed No More

· ~-

Vote for MARLIN 'G. KERNS and restore some sound
money ' sense to ocr County Government.

=-

7 RAIL PIPE

' ' ' ' . . ' . ' ' ' ' ' $21.25
'' '' ' ' . ' . . ' ' ' ' 24.95
, , .... .. . , .... 32 .35
" " " " " " " 36 .15
'' ''' '. ' '' ' ' '' 40.75
'' . . ' . . ' ' .. ' '' 44 .35
'' . .... ' '' ' ''' 52.35

80 lb . Water Softener

\"--=

r !".&gt;.·Ao

Mar lin G. Kerns
Route #4
Gallipolis, Ohio

lllf2 ga. Barb Wire

'3.35

)0( (

-=~.. PAYS
.........
-·-New 91 day high yield, short term Savings

Consider a ma~ whose entire working lifetime has
been spent in respbnsible and prudent management of
tremendous sums of money entrusted to his care.

$2595

SO lb . Water Softener

~

o•

~

··~

15lfz ga. Gaucho Barb Wire

SALT

P .:

""

... .. 1

" better than 60 percent" s ince lhc
new program begaJl .

pa nels for the same peri od and a

4 fl.
6 fl .
8 II .
10ft.
12ft .
14ft .
16 fl .

I •• -

~·-·

traffic and business have been down

outer

5 PANEL

~ .

~

rw;ting on

La:E

. l....

require the purchase of six additional kits .

forat ion from

says " c ustom e rs w:mt

_.;:?'

....

... ~ ·

domes ticall y

$.

• ll.U&lt;.:I

~

on

produced autos.
It includes a warranty against per-

Steel
Posts

-/~)~

•••

~

firs t.

transaxle,

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

~\

r. ... •

Cowdr~y

drive axle and axle shaft for five
years or 50,000 miles, whichever

~)
0: .
- y

]-.:::::::::-:.J \,_______,,,

.
,, ... ..

transmission ,

free maintenance progra 1n.

turer, we have the right to extend
the best warranty possible to our
customers."
Chrysler's program, begun April
11 as a substitute for rebates which
the No. 3 U.S. cannaker had been
running for nearly s ix straig ht mon-

0

Right now , buy at least 150 square
feet of any Annstrong ceiling tile,
ond get your first Easy Up
Insta llation Kit free* .

ths, offers a limited warrant y on the
engine ,

more,'fa-le~

and faster too?

to write

intends

Cowdrey, saying " as a manufac·

VOTE

Director named

lnsta lotion Kit - FREE!

check-off procedure aimed at
generating $1.2 million annually.

The Sunda y Times-Sentine i- Page-E -13

Warranty steps on firm's toes

N111

SAVE ONA

young is hatched in the nest," Case
sa id.

said. "Eagles are nut very tolerant
to disturbance by people. If they're
disturbed during late February or
during early stages of incubation,
they're likely to abandon their
nests."
"The parents will either be taking
care of existing young or incubatin g
bad eggs," Case explai ned. " We
dimb the tree, put the eaglet in,
remove the eggs and just get out of
the area as quickly as possible. We
also leave a whole fish in the nest
with the young, especially if there
are incubating eggs. The eagles
would not be used to feed ing young
at that point"
Case said fostering is easier when
there is one eaglet already in the
nest because the adult.s have made
the transition to bein~ parent.s. He
said it could be a shock for an eagle
to leave the nest and come back to
find a month-old eaglet
Often, the parent.s perch nearby
and watch. They become agitated
and make a noise Case describes as
"rapid, high-pitched clucks." But
they will not a tack humans, he said.
One recent attempt in Sandusky
was ca ll ed off because Case
discovered after climbing the tree
that the eaglet al ready in the nest
was too old to have a month-old
sibling. When there is an age gap
between the young bi nb, the
smaller ones lose the competition for
food .
Ohio's
eag le
prese rvation
program currentl y is financed
through the sale of hunting and
fishing licences. That provides about
$50,000 a year and wildlife officials

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,w. v a.

218 Weet Main Street
P?meroy • 992-8655

AGRI-CENTER
Third &amp; Sycamore, Gallipolis

�May 16, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, w . va.

Page-E -14- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport~Gall

New campus press lord descends upon Icy League colleges today
the hackles of liberal academics .
Supported by traditionalist pundits William F. Buckley Jr. and
William Rusher, and bankrolled by
grants from corporate foundation.s,
conservativ e newspa pers a re
making their presence felt across
pres tigiou s Ivy ca mpus es,
criticizing liberal student editors,
professors and administrators in
much the same way the "Berkeley
Barb" attacked the establistunent in
the lurbulenll960s.
Conservative publicalions have
appeared at Harvard, Princeton and
Dartmouth and arc planned at other

New York Times and the New York
Review of Books .
Author John Hersey, adjunct
professor of English at Yale, says
the 1nagazine "has become more of
a political journal than a literary
magazine, but since the First Amendment is so important to us, we can't
condemn it entirely on this ground.
But it calls itself 'Yale Literary
Magazine,' and that's the problem in
my mind. It doesn't seem to be what
it represents itself lobe."
"The campus mood is more
amenable and oriented towards conservative ideology," says John
Goodwin, a Princeton University
senior who is publisher of the
Madison Report, a monthly tabloid
named in honor of President James
Madison, a 1777 graduate of the
uni versity who espoused lim1ted ,

universities.

gove rnm ent

Even the venerable Yale Literary
Magazine - "The Old Lady in
Brown" to generations of Yale undergraduate writers - has turned to
the right. Bought 3t yea rs ago by
Yale graduate And rei Navrozov,
whose father, Lev. is a writer who
ned the Soviet Union in 1972. the Lit
has been filled recently with articles
blasting the Soviet government , The

terpretation of the Constitution .
" What's common on a lot of ca mpuses, and especially here at Princeton, is that students are bothered
by the entrenched liberal orthodoxy
present in the daily press on campus
and also in the school administration
and fac ulty . The academic envi ronment as well as the journalistic

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (API - In
button-down shirts and blue blazers
instead of jeans and T-shirts, a new
breed of campus press lord is
descending upon the Ivy League.
promoting conservatism and raising

and

a

strict

COLUMBUS. Ohio 1AP 1 - Tile

Will I"' lhl· kt'ynott• srcakcr th "
mon th e1 1 a rn et&gt;lmg of The
Assuct&lt;:tit·Ll Prl'SS Society of OhiU.
NPwsprt rwr CTt&gt;dtbilit y will bl' ttw
theml' when tht• society, conststtn g
of Ohio newspapers that &lt;ire IOf lll·
be r ~

of Tht• Assocwh•t..l Press, mel'ls

111 Col umbus Ma)' 22-23 .
sJl y, w1ll dl•livt·r tht' addn•ss at a

bdnquel Salunlily n1ght. May 22.
Gl'l'l'll was un It-a Ye of abst·nce
frolll thl· Dukt · pos itiOn tu st·n..- a:-;
ombudsman at Tht&gt; Wi:is hnll-!{on Po~1
wht· n the hoa x story, wntlt'n by furrncr OhiO lll'WSWtllllall Ja nl'l cOoke.
was Clwanlt-d Cl Pullt1.er Prizt• l&lt;-1 st
yt'a r.
As ombudSill&lt;-111 , Gn-c r1 was nn tht·
Post staff to rt 'l)l't'st·nt the publ1 r. Ht•
WCIS askt·d by tlw Post to Y.Tite an
. analysis of the tlo&lt;-tx st11ry and Ill ·
lt·n ·i,•wcd
l'\'t• r yo nt·
crt
tile
nt ·wspapt•r who had a role in lilt'
story. Tlwn hl' wrnlt• ;m IR .OOO-wnrd
anal ys1s for the Post lhatl'XaJJl irlt'd
how and why th e inc1dent utTUITt·d
ami who was to blame .
H1s crillqUl' called newspapt'l'
tTetilb llit y intoqul'slwn .
M1ss Cooke , whu IS fr01n Toledo.
n ·signed fro111 the Post a ftt ·r adrmllim• s ill' fC~bn ca ted (j story C~bout

point of view.~'

The Madison Report stirred some
controversy on campus by opposing
the use of endowment funds to pay
for student abortions and by supporting an anti-abortion group
organized at the university.

The Harvard Salient, on the other
hand, is more of a "think piece"
journal with lengthy articles and
editorials on economic policy,
foreign affairs and other issues.
By far the most biting and
provocative conservative campus
publication is the Dartmouth
Review, a one-year-{)!d newspaper
that has already drawn fire from the
administration, faculty and student
groups at the Hanover, N.H., university.
Last spring, the newspaper
published parts of correspondence
and membership files from Dartmouth's Gay Student Alliance, much
to the chagrin of those students

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

TRUST US FOR HOTPOINT AND GENERAL
ELECTRIC APPLIANCES AT DISCOUNT PRIC
BARNYARD POLITICS- President Ronald Reagan leans through a
fence at the farm of Leon Wilkinson, right, in Landenberg, Pa. Friday to
pet a cow held by Agriculture Secretary John Block. Reagan subsequently new aboard a helicopter to Philadelphia for an afternoon of
political campaign appearances on behalf of state politicians. lAP Laserphoto).

was addrl'll•d tu ht·roin . Thl' Post

Othl'r highlights of the AP meeting
on Sdlurday will incl ude apJWar~nces

l'Xlt•ns ive dl'a lin~s w1th lht&gt; rwws
11\l'Llla wht'n their so n Steven was
rtl llt&gt;Jll..! the hostages St' lZed in lri-:111 .
Thrt'L' represt·nt(:tlJves of major lll·

to d1 scuss
whdht •r fl l•wspapers art• farr 111 the ir
n ·pnrtrng about industry. They &lt;lft:'
E&lt;HI Hoss. pnnt nwdi (j managl'f for
the Amencan Petrolt·wn Institute 111
Wash1ngton . D.C.: Dtm Gran·,
a ....;sJstant vil't' prl'sulent for public
pal1t'l

[':l] Easy- lo-c lean 30" range w11h oven window
d oo r Eil Surlace un11 "ON" l1ghl tllJ Aulomati c
oven t1mer tll] Removable tnm ring s/ pans OJ
Famous Ca lrod® surface heating un its .

r.·JaliiHlS w1th Oh1u Bell 10
l'h·n·land : and William G. l.oflus,
St'lliUr V H 't ' presidl• nt fur public (:Iffairs for AJ ne rit·an Elert n r Powt~ r .
Boll Schulman of Luuisv1 IIC. K y., a
fnl•dia critH' who ha s been cJt ·ti vl' at

$50 Discount
MODEL NO. RB747 A ••••• , •••••••• '50 REBATE
INIOI&gt;EL NO. RB 7476 •••••••••••••• '50
NO. RS7766 •••••••••••••• '1

both loeal and national levels. will
oren the program Sillurtlay With hiS
obst•fV(:ttiuns from O\'t'r tht' years
about newspapl·r credibility .

El Quality 3-cycle
i3 Permanent Press a nd Knils/ Delicates cycles
[] 3 WAs h ac tion selections !m Malch iny dryer with up to 90 minute timer
· 0 Up -Iron! f11t er GJ Porcelain enamel
finish drum .
00

Hubert H. Wills. ed1tor of Th•·
Sen lilll'l. wlll spt·ak

Mllwtlllkt•t•

abou t ch(:tn ~ es newspapers al'russ
tlw cuuntry h(:t \'l' mat.k to build

s1nn· thl'

Cookt·

story .

W1ll s sun·cycd editors national ly for

$50 Discount
REBATES
WASHER &amp; DRYER

llrt• Anwncan Sot'll'ly of Newspape r

Etl1turs.
The 111t'.-l1ne. al the Marriott Inn
No rth 111 Columbus. cnndutks on
Su ndoy.

ballistic missiles
WASHINGTON 1API - For a
while there, Ronald Heagan sounded
l1ke a pcacemk .
He talked of ouclear war by acci d ~ nt .

slratl' glc · bornbl'rs, &lt;'rui se missiles

and other weapunry in which the
United Stales holds the advantage after dealing w1th ba llistiCmissiles.

mi ss ii l'S

''That is the missile sitting thl• re in

:va ulting from their silos al l he touch
of a button with no defense, no
recall , only de vastatiOn w1lhin

1ts silo in which there could be the
possibility of miscalt-ulation," he
said at his news conference Thursday night. "That is the one that
reopk know that once the button is
pushed there is no defense, there is
no recalL And it's a matter of
minutes and the missiles reach the
other country ."
While, as Reagan said, the United
Stales and the Soviet Union each ias
about 7,500 strategic missiles reedy
to go, the Soviets hold the margin in
gia.1t, land-based missiles. And that
margin would have to be cut if both
sides were to reduce their arsenals
to about 5,000 warheads, as Reagan
propuses.

of

t errifying

minutes.
Such are the !:ipl·ders of Llestruc-

. l1on told by doves, 1nvoked by those
who ar~ue thallhc nuclear arsenab
of the superpowers should be frozen
. where they sta nd toda y. They con·lend that is the wa y to reduce the
risk those weapons will be used.
But President Rea g(:tn is no dove,

: and he spoke that langua ge to make
his case for a tough and relentless
.U.S. arms policy, saying that will at
)east induce the Soviet Union to
·negotiate a cut in its

mas~ive

force

:or land-based intercontinental
ballistic missiles.
"One of the reasons for getting at
: the ballistic missi le- that is the one
that is the most destabilizing," he
;said, "that is the one that is the most
·frightening to most people."
: That also is the one in which the
Moscow holds the lead that most
: disturbs American strategists who
: fear giant Soviet warheads could
: diminish or even undermine U.S.
:retaliatory power.
- Reagan wants ballistic missiles
:atop the agenda for arms reduction
:talks he seeks to · begin with the
: Soviet Union by the end of next mon; th. There has been no official respon: se from Moscow, although com.. ments there have been skeptical at
·best.
: The president said he would be
. :willing to negotiate reductions in

'20

WASHINGTON
( AP)
Agriculture Secretary John R.
Block, a big milk drinker himself,
says the government's huge dairy
surplus would fade if everybody
would drain an extra glass or two
before going to bed.
Meanwhile, however, Block says
he will ask Congress for
discretionary authority to set milk
price supports beginning Jan . I.
He added llhat if he gets such
puwers, he does not anticipate the
need to cut dairy supports by more
thim 8.4 percent from what farmers
are currently guaranteed.
Block said Americans should
drink more milk. To illustrate, he
poured a glass full and drank it
down.
"I drink milk every day," Block
said. "I take a glass of milk to bed
with me every night ... and if more
people would do this we could
straighten this dairy problem out
over night."

1•81 CHEVROLET MALIBU 4 dr. sedan. V-6. automat1c. air
condtttoning, power steering, power brakes. AM rad1o , it. blue
metallic. good family car.
U80 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 18 4 Dr. Sedan. V-8. automat1c .
air condtttoning. crutse co ntrol . rear wrn dow delogger . w1re wheel
covers. whtte w/ blue v1nyl top. super clean w/ low miles.
1U' OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME 2 Dr. Coupe. V6. auto. air. cru 1se. w1re wheel covers. it. blue metall1 c. wi lt . blue
cloth mtertor , landau vrnyl roof.
1U8 BUICK REGAL 2 dr. sport coupe. V-8. auto .. a11. trlt
wheel . cr uise. 2-tone cha~coa l wl silver. cloth mte11or . clean car
w1th good lmes.

U7S PONTIAC CATILINA 2 Dr. Coupe. V8 auto .. tilt
wheel , cr u1 se. AM -w/8 trk . I al ly wheels. so lid body dk. green
w/ full vmyl top

STOP BY AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE IN
DEALING WITH PEOPLE WHO CARE!

Free-arm Model5528 w•th

e.ght buill·1n stitches lor all
your sewing needs The
Universal• pressure system
lets you sew all weight labncs

· However, Block told a news conference Wednesday that recent
figures show farmers are beginning
to hold down production on their
own, with March output up only I
percent from a year earlier. Milk
production· gained 3 percent over all
of !981.
Even so, Block said that without
the proposed legislation the cost of
the program still will be about $1.94
billion in the fiscal year that will
begin on Oct. I, and that it could cost
an additional $4 billion in the
following two years.

w11h no special adiustments

(OPEN TIL 9:00P.M.)

SIMONS

. Sale Good Thru
May 29

OLDS. CAD. CHEVY, Inc.
THE FABRIC SHOP

Pomeroy, OH.

308 E. Main St.

PH. (614) 992-6614

11S W. 2nd
Pomeory , OH.
Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

Anytime
By Appointment

Mon. -Fri.
8:00 to 9:00

Saturday
9 : 00 to 5:00

DCC2650

$2500

SALE
SALE STARTS MAY 16-8 A.M.

95

.

liD 7 Cycle bUill -Ill d1shwasher Iii Pot washer w1th Power-Sc ru b' cycle l!l
Energy-saver dry cycle li:J Revers1ble
color Jronts l!l Short Wash cycle rill
C1ystal Clear 1M fl nse d1'spense r llil So li
lood d1 s poser fiil Sound 1nsulat,on.

.!
~;::! , l

BIG, BIG, DISCOUNTS

$3

A ~ ~n 11111. COIT\plltlt~ woth

MAINTENANCE FREE

.,..

dry foecllt'ktiOI'I . omCJK~aro Dr\1"' mot-

f

Potyester cord- lull tour ply const•uctron
tor 1on g mrteage ana sarety su•vs rouno

·:

&gt;.

SAVE$100

00

.(

.

P185175-14
P195/75-14

.

.'

$51

set of 4

sl921Ml
A78-13
878-13

Save 515 to S27
Set of 4

$

58
$63

EACH

Set of 4

Each

$40
gz&amp;-14
$4700
$52

Set of 4
Save $23.32 -$31 .84 per set

Each

S232

F78-14orl5
G78-14 or 15
A78-14orlS

SaveS10toS51
Set of 4

Set of 4
Save $26 .16 to S35 per set

C78-14
078-14

SaveS20 to$29

EACH

P235/75/R-15

$252

L78-15

$188

Setof4
Saves 16 .28 -$37.96 per set

Each
Each

s208

Set of 4
Save $38.96 per set

Above prices include Federa l E H tse T;u: &amp; Moun ·

ED WHEEL BALANCING
.

SALE PRICE

•3 50

Wheel

ALL TIRES CA-RRY A ROAD HAZZARD WARRANTY
ASK OUR COMPETITION -MOST OF THEM DON'T

TR:Y·US - . WE'RE BEnER
"

EACH

P205/75R-14 or 15
P215175R-14 or 15
P225/75R-14or15

CALL US
TODAY
FOR YOUR
CAR
NEEDS

31 -

$48

P175/80R -13
P185/80R-13

warranty 3 months or 3,000 miles

SPECIAL·
. .
ON
SHOCKS
AND

WHITEWALLS

doesn I 1111 spot or t hump

ONLY $1695

·3~95

POLY

- ·· I&gt;!NMllh runno~~g. •OO&amp;I•nl -tor

FORD PICKUP SET TOE

$4295

CO·OP

t&gt;Q~p!fltnl bm on your car
Two po~yes..- cOI'tl body pl.., comD&gt;ned
with two lull-wldll'l · - l»&gt;tl l()f tong

!.----~~~~~~----.,-~·~~------~pir~J~l~l~~-----J
DIRECTOR ONLY

•

!he ongone.l

I

00

DISCOUNT ON ANY ALIGNMENT

BAnERYSALE

SAVE '50

lfS WORTH

·

LOW ROLLING
RESISTANCE MEANS
BETTER GAS MILEAGE

:----ciiP~scouPON-~---i
1

4p~uIJ 11·ra
113 p [j]f

ca·aP DIRECTOR

STEEL BELTED RADIAL

CALL TODAY
FORAN
APPOINTMENT

DMA

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

Model5528

crease pr&lt;XIuction.

American nwnbers are greater in

bomber, submarine and cruise
mis siles , weapons Reaga n
suggested are more benign. He said
they are conventional, slower,
vulnerable to interception.
So he pressed his argument for arms reduction talks and for a tough
nuclear defense pulicy in the meantime. The meantime could be a long
time; it took seven years to
negotiate the strategic arms
limitation agreement Reagan spurned as nothing more than a
ratification of the arms race.
Reagan never had any use for the
SALT II treaty. He said during the
1980 campaign it should be scrapped, arguing as he had for years that
it would only build in a Soviet advantage.

1

1U7 CHEVOLET '/, 2 WD PICKUP, V-8 auto ., AM
radio, good solid truck . Priced to sell.

$

SAVE '150

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Merce
Cunningham has been selected to
receive the 1982 Samuel H. ScrippsAmerican Dance Festival award.
The $25,000 award was created to
honor and to call public attention to
modern-dance choreographers who
have made a significant life-time
contribution to dance.
Cunningham will receive the
award at a special presentation June
16 at Duke University here.

1•80 FORD F250 % TON 4 Wheel D11ve. V-8 auto .. lock1ng
hubs. cab lights. slidrng rear wrndow . ex tra heavy duty. good t1res.
low miles. good body.

The dairy price support program
is costing a record $2.2 billion in the
fiscal year that began last Oct. I .
Under law, the Agriculture Department must buy surplus butter,
cheese and non-fat dry milk to help
prop up prices paid to farmers for
their milk. Government stockpiles
have grown sharply in recent years
because farmers continued to in-

Discount

ALL ON SALE
THE REST OF
THE MONTH.

Dance festival

percent bad; and 14 percent said
they did not expect to surv1ve in farmin~ or ranching ."
The council said that one-third of
the callers puinted to high interest
ra tes as " the single greate~t ca use
of agriculture's economic slump"
and 93 percent urged action by
Congress or the Federal Reserve
Board to reduce th" ratt's.

CIAL GRADUATION
GIFT COMBINATION

WHEEl ALIGNMENT·

Ill Deluxe 23.5 cu . ft. refreshment center with ice &amp; water lhru the door Ill
Adjustable glass s helves 1111 Automalic
energy-saver sys lem 1!1 Convertible
meat conditioner 1!1 Sealed 'N Fresh
fruil/vegetable keeper Ill Roll-out
wheels.
Model CSF(WA

E -15 .

'20

WLW5700

TELEVISIONS

Times -Senlinei-Pa

DLB2650

WLW3700

:Reagan wants
·priority on

The Su

U77 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT 4 Dr. Sedan . 4 cy l. , 4 speed.
a11 cond .. rear w1ndow defogge1 AM -FM . cru1 se. champagne meta.
w/ maroon velour mte1or.

'Americans should
drink more milk'

by E ugene and Mm·ga rt't

l.aukrbach. an Ohio couple who had

tTt·dJblllty

WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmland justments in the land market."
But, he added, no general convalues declined so sharply in some
key states last year that the U.S. clusions should be drawn on the
average dropped for the first time basis of a one-y·ear decline and that
since 1954, says the Agriculture as the economy improves - including lower interest rates - land
Department.
Officials said last Wednesday the values should rebound.
The report said farmland in Ohio ·
decline occurred during a 12-month
period from Feb. I, 1981 to Feb. I, dropped the most, declining 15 per1982, following increases of 9 percent cent from a year earlier, followed by
and 16 percent in the two previous . Indiana, 13 percent; Delaware, 10
percent ; Illinois 9 percent; and Penyears.
The average value of farmland nsylvania and Georgia, each with 8
was $788 per acre Feb. I, down from percent decreases.
Tel&lt;lls led the gainers with a 17
$795 a year earlier. Two years
earlier, on Feb. I, 1980, the average percent increase, followed by
California and West Virginia, both
was $725 per acrr.
But the decline was not uniform up 10 percent.
Even after the report was
across the country. Of the 48 contiguous states surveyed, 26 showed released, its news was so sensitive
increases in farmland values while that several experts - two of whom
expressed fear for their jobs
22 had declines.
·
The decline in farniland values declined comment to repurters or
was another indication of the else refused to give their names.
The 1\_agan administration has
growing financia l crunch among the
nation's farmers, many of whom been under fire because of declining
have had to borrow heavily on their farm income, which is expected to
be down again in 1982 for the third
property to stay in business.
straight
year.
Although the repurt did not
In
a
related development, the
elaborate, one official said the
primary causes of the decline were Agriculture Council of America said
higp interest rates and the squeeze an estimated 4,000 farmers and
on farm profits over the past two others participated Tuesday in a 12hour call-in project aimed at airing
years.
complaints
and proposals about the
"Land values in the decade of the
sagging
agricultural
economy.
'70s rose at an annual rate of 13 to 14
" Three-fourths rated th eir
percent, which was far above the innation rate," said the official, who economic futures negatively," the
asked not to be identified. " I think council said . "Thirty-two percent
we might be .seeing .some ad~ called this period the worst ever; 30

In a recent issue, the Review
poked fun at a sociology professor
teaching a course entitled " Identity,
Self and Society," and recommended an award for those able to
translate the course description into
English. More recently, one Review
columnist said he was considering
undergoing a " race change
operation" because he was having
trouble getting into the law school of
his choice.

rdurned lhl' Pulllzt·r Prr ze.

w. Va.

Farmland values decline

ridiculous."

an 8-yl'a r-okl mtlnt•d Jilfuny who

tlustn es will be on a

Wil liam L Gn ·t•n , now diredor o f
un in· rsi ty re lations (:tt Dukt· UrHn·r-

going to be progressively more
biting and provocative."
Stona J . Fitch, chairman of the
established student newspaper, the
Daily Princetonian, says "a Jot of
people find it amusing when they
take a very snide attitude." Students, as he sees it, find Madison Report
"either amusing or offensive, depending on how seriously they take
them .. . But they do offer a different

whose names suddenly appeared ln
prtnt. The Review has sharply
criticized Dartmouth's affirmative
action, women's studies programs
and courses it considers "truly

in-

Editors to ponder
own credibility
jDurnali s l whu illlalyzcd The
Wa.shtnd un Pu.st's handling of a
hoax story tha t won a Pulitzl'r Pn zt·

media on ca mpu s both are
dominated by liberals. We want to
offset and neutralize that dominance," says Goodwin.
In its first editorial, the Madison
Re port acknow le dg ed that
liberalism is still a dominant
politica l force on America n college
campuses and promised to "search
for alternatives to the Kennedy
liberalism that is still pervasive at
Princeton and other Ivy League
schools."
Goodwin says if the Madison
Report and similar publications are
to be successful, they must present
"d istinctly conservative views
which bi ~e with sarcasm. We're

Ohio-Point Pleasant

:

POMEROY.. LANDMARK SERVI-CE STAT ION
'

r __......,.-It

~-.,

r·

...

-~

... ,

~

•

" '

. _,. ' ·,

.

,· .

OPEN

.

EAST MAl.. ST.

,.
•

. -'

4

I

•

'

' ' ~-·

•

.I
•

•

- 7 DAYS A WEEK -WE
,, .. NEVER CLOSE

�Page-E-16-Th·e Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middlepori-Ga.!!_!polis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. va .

Former Columbus eyesore
now grand program model
By SUSAN CHICOINE
Associated Press Writer
Pt!er Politas and his wife,
Virginia Mayle, set out to buy a
house for a dollar and won one with
aristocratic battlements.
The battlements merely added a
touch of distinction to the brick
thrct•story duplex in Columbus. The
building. vacant for four years and
ravaged by vandals. was a neighborhood eyesore.
Politas, Ms. Mayle and the home
had been linked by a lottery for the
federally funded Urban Homestead
Program. Today the home in the
historic Olde Towne Ei!st neighborhood is one of the program's
grandest products in Ohio.
Homesteaders buy the houses for
$1 on condition they bring them up to
local codes. mami&lt;Jin and occupy
them for a fixed time.
The houses, which had federallyins ured mortgages that were
foreclosed. have been acquired by
IOt·a l governments with federal funds. Local programs regularly conduct lotteries to award homes to
homesteaders.
For Politas, an accountant. and
Ms. Mayle, a claims superv isor for
the State of Ohio, household
renovation became their second jobs
for more than two years. They sanded and varnished the noors and
woodwork, patch plastered and
p;1inted walls, refinished and hung
nearly 40 interior doors.
" Any task that came up we would
gd the book and try it. If it seemed
beyond us. we hired someone," said
Pol1ta s.
who deferred to
professionals for plwnbmg, clectncal and roofing work .
Polil&lt;ls and Ms. Mayle's mortgage for their duplex IS nearly three
times the $15,000 loan of the typical
Columbus homesteader. But their
investment in time and energy is
co1runon for the city's program that
has become a model for Ohio and
elsewhere.
1n Columbus two targeted innerCity neighborhoods. half of the
residents earn Jess than the area's
median income a nd at least half the
houstng needs repair, said Ken

Angel , Urban Homesteading coor-

dinator. The average homesteader
in Columbus earns between $13,000
and $14,000 a year, he added.
· As of April, Columbus Jed the state
with 371 homes in its program.
Toledo followed with 138, Ci ncinnati
had 129, Dayton 109, Cleveland 41,
Montgomery County 29, YouniJStown
21, East Liverpool 17, Akron 12,
Warren and Athens 10, Xenia 7, and
Piqua 2. With six homesteads,
Springfield last month became the
14th Ohio entrant in the program
begun by the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development in
the mid-1970s.
Ohio is tied with New. York at $2.1
million for 1982 allocations to cities
for acquisition of the homes. Ohio
leads the nation in the nwnber of
participating ci ti es, said Sam
Gresham, community planning and
development representative in
HUD's Colwnbus office.
Neither Gresham nor the local
program coordinators view Urban
Homesteading as a panacea to urban blight.
" Most Urban Homestead areas
are in transition up or down or are
stabilizing . They tend to be in Community Development Block Grant
areas where other things are going
on," such as public improvements
as well as homeowner rehabilitation
loans and grants, Gresham said.
In a program of this kind, Angel
said, " ft' s difficult to assess your
success. It's like asking if the
chicken came before the egg.
" I've seen a drastic change in
these neighborhoods. Did these
other people fix up their homes
because of Urban Homesteading
homes? We're c.~lso working with
people on loans and grants to fix
their homes." he said.
Urban Homesteading helps reverse the "snowba lling effect" of
neglect corrunon to neighborhoods
with abandoned homes, Angel said.
The program also makes home
ownership more than a dream for
many young adults and low-and
moderate-income people.
" I'd been saving as much as I
could and lookin g at houses.
Everything I could afford I didn't
like," sa id Carole Pope of Columbus,

a postal clerk and single parent of a
teen-age son. She rehabbed an Urban Homestead home with a $19,400
mortgage.
In Springfield, newlyweds Earl
Taylor Jr. and his wife Jan, both 28,
had felt priced out of the housing
market. " I'm from Youngstown and
I know a few people who won homes
there. It's a good program," said the
head track coach and assistant football coach at Central State University in Xenia.
The Springfield program requires
homesteaders to occupy the home
for at least four years, one year
beyond the minimum HUD
guideline. Given the insecurity of
college coaching, the Taylors
already have decided Mrs. Taylor, a
special education teacher, will stay
in the house if he must switch jobs.
Cincinnati's homestead program
lacks the impact visible in Columbus, city program director Mel Dutton said, because the housing stock
is fairly stable. The Cincinnati
program targets nine scatteted
areas of "beginning blight," but is so
well known that pre-lottery orientation sessions are standing room
only, he said.
Like Columbus and several other
cities, Cincinnati permits people to
enter the lotteries only if prescreening shows they can afford to
rehabilitate and maintain the home.
Likewise, prospecti ve homesteaders
must attend pre-lottery open houses.
In both Cincinnati and Columbus,
lending institutions release loan funds to homesteaders in increments.
after city inspectors certify repairs
were done satisfactorily.
Cleveland launched its program in
1978, but held no lotteries until last
fall. Rick May, the city 's program
coordi nator, sa id the revived
program is more efficient and
focuses on a smaller eastside target
area, to avoid competing with
rehabilitation efforts by nonprofit
groups, May said.
Cleveland's low-intere•t CASH
loan program, a partnership between lenders and the city, makes the
program accessible to low-and
moderate-income earners who can't
afford conventional rates, he said.

.CI.als beli·eve
Postal
Offl
patrons should understand
various services offered
POMEROY - When you need to
send va luables or important papers
through the mail, the U.S. Postal
Service rccommenchi patrons un·
derstand what registered, msured
and certified mail can do for them.
By becoming familiar with thece
scrv1ce options offered by the Postal
Service, mail will receive the best
handling and the most cost-effective
delivery . Registered, insured and
certified all g1ve you the customized
Sl'I"Vil'eS needed fOr mailing that
special letter or package.
Registered mail is the safest way
to send valuables. It offers special
handling for yo ur letter or package
mailed at the First-Class rates.
Users receive a receipt when you
take the material to the post office.
Then, the movement of that piece is
monitored from the point of accep tan ce to delivery. All
irreplaceable articles. regardless of
v" Jue, and all items worth more than
$400, should be sent by registered
mail.

J ewelry. stocks a nd checks or
money orders for large amounts are
good candidates for registered mail.
This type of service provides protection against Joss or damage. The full
value of the mailing must be
dcclart&gt;d when mailed for security

articles arc insured for more than
$15, a receipt of delivery is signed by
the recipient and fil ed at the
delivery p~t office.
The insurance enables customers
to receive payment for domestic
mail that has been lost, rifle'(( or
damaged.
Certified mail is the best buy if
patrons are sending important letters, insurance forms, contracts or
bids for business contracts mailed at
the First-Class rate. At 7:; cents plus
the charge for postage, certified
mail costs less than registered mail.
It should be used when the sender
requires a receipt as proof of
mailing. The coupon receipt is postmarked to establish the date of
delivery. A record of the delivery is
also kept at the addressee's post office for two years, but no record is
kept at the office from which you
mailed the material. You may
request a return receipt or restricted delivery with certified mail.
Certified mail service is provided
only for first-class or priority niail
coni&lt;Jining no intrinsic value, and insurance is not available:
Certified mail labels, which can be
obi&lt;Jined from your local post office,
must be completed by the customer
for this type of mail.

and insurance purposes. The
registration fcc includes immrancc
protection up to $25,000 for domestic
mail.
The fee s for registered mail
depend upon the value of the
material being mailed. For instance, 1f the value of the package is
from $101 to $500, the cost is $3.60.
A return receipts costs 60 cents extra, but it will allow the sender to
have a written receipt of when and to
whom the item was delivered . For a
return receipt indicating to whom,
the date and the address where the
item was delivered, the fee is 70 cents. Restricted delivery service is
also available with registered mail.
It allows delivery only to the addressee, or to someone who is
authorized in writing to receive mail
for the addressee.
Insured mail is a good bet if people
arc •ending birthday, wedding or
other gifts or fragile items. FirstClass Mail, priority, third and fourth
class mall may be insured.
Insurance, . available for merchandise only, can be purchased for
materials mailed which are valued
at less than $400.
Insurance rates, like registered
mail rates, vary according to the
value of the material being sent. If

REHABILITATED HOME- Peter Politas and his
wife, Virginia Mayle, spent nearly two years restoring
their urban homestead house in the Olde Towne East

neighborhood of Colunilius, Ohio. Before they acquired
the duplex, it had stood vacant for four years. (AP
Laserphoto).

8,000 metal socket lamps being recalled

·

SeleCted Popular Styles

::.~:~ ~~dt~:n~:ta6n~e~o~::~e~a~:~

received a serious electric shock
using the product. The recall covers

~~~~:a~~~/!id~a~~n~i~~

since March 1981 in retail and har-

NEW ENGLAND
SEPT 1 1 1, 82
•
•
5

'

&amp;

W

'

~lf:D\ · GALLIPOLIS

'Cl:Sf

Traw AgenCY

I

Departing:
Gallipolis

Phone446-06"

$ r(l/!}@@@@ r(l/!} r(l/!} r(l/!} @}@}@} 8

Sale ends: June 12, 1982

ELBE·RFELDS ·rN POMERO-Y
j

•

·.

~

listings

'f. •

,,

12
ll9

I ·I

,.,. .- ( ~'

I
8

j

Soap Opera Review
Page 9

TV Mailbag
Page 2
I

I
This stately 2 Dr . hardtop features a metallic silver exterior with a dark blue Jan·
dau top . Loaded with factory options such as diesel engine, air condition, power
window, seat and door locks, reclining passenger seat; and much, much more.
·
Driven. only 5,896 miles, balance of new car warranty .

$11,900

WAS '15,128

Area Events
Page 15
Fame
Page 3

Appalachian c.logging... page 8
Seroing Gallia, Meigs and Mason ·Counties

2:

Including all Super Look® panty styles

..

l_dwa_re
sto_n·s
. o_nlyr_nodo'ls-with...!.____ _ _ __

,SAVE

·

Includes complete

®

Cross Your Heart
Sale

20°/oOF

A guide to area entertainment

metal soc~cts arc being recalled . the place of purchase or directly to
POMEROY - Selim J. Blazewicz,
The
Mid-State identification appears the manufacturer for a free
M.D., Health Commissioner of
on
a
cardboard tag on the product replacement. Send the unit to : MidMeigs County Health Department in
State Mfg. Corp., 1111 Aldrich
curd.
cooperation with the Accident
Avenue, North, Minneapolis, Minn.
Consumers
should
irrunediately
PrPvcr.tion and Product Safety Unit
55441.
stop using the product and return to
of the Ohio Department of Health
has announced the recall of ap- , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - proximately 8,000 metal socket
111:111\ 111:111\ 111:111\ 111:111\ 111:111\
111:111\
IIOill\ IIOill\
utility clamp lamps by the Mid-State r(l/!} '&lt;H&gt;' '&lt;H&gt;' '&lt;H&gt;' '&lt;H&gt;' '&lt;H&gt;'@
'&lt;H&gt;' @ @ @ '&lt;H&gt;' '&lt;H&gt;'
Manufacturing Corp. of Min~
SIT
fJ&gt;.
neapolis. Mmn .
~
• VI
~
The reca ll is being conducted
~
beeause of a potential shock or elec&amp;
~
trocution hazard from an electrica l W
~

This 78 13uic~ Regal 2 Dr. hardtop has air condition, cruise control, tilt wheel;
AM·FM stereo, and much, much more. This car has never been titled . We have
owned it since it was new. Driven only 19,281 miles. Expect the best:

Playtex®

A guide to area programming;
activities and events,
Mayl6thm2%

.This 77 F_ord Thllliderblrd. ~r. Hai'dtc(p ,,s equlpj)H ~Jth mosr Fq,rd options.
Such as atr cond., power wtndows, AM-tUVI stereo and 'E ..T.C. Local doCtor's wife
on new Riviera. Drivet;~ oi)I.V
trade
'
. 31;236 miles. lmmaculatecol)d.
.
. .. ·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="146">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2730">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44057">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44056">
              <text>May 16, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="163">
      <name>gibbs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="470">
      <name>king</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6852">
      <name>pulley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
