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                  <text>Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 21 , 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tornadoes rip homes, farms
floods pound Great Plains
By GRAHAM VINK
Associated P ress Writer
Tornadoes sm as hed homes and
farms a nd a wlnd-blown power Une
electrocuted a truck dri ver as the
violent weather that has spawned
100 twisters a nd a plague of Ooods
pounded the Grea t P la lns for a 13th
day.
Nine teen to r na does s kip ped
through the Midwest Thursday,
towns were Oooded by cloudbu rsts
a nd a railroad line was washed ou t.
At least tour people were Injured.
And In Connectlcut . high wlnds
tha t lashed pa rt s of the Northeast
knoc ked out power to thousands .
A woman was hos pitalized In Adria n, Mo .. after she was picked up
a nd dropped by a torn ado outside

her home . Thre€ people were Injured when high wind In Pottstown.
Pa., overturned their car as they
stopped a t a traffic light, a nd a helicopte r was blown oil a ra mp by a
tom ado a t Fort Sill , Okla. , a uthorities said .
Authori ties sa id a truck driver
was e lectroc uted after high-tension
wires we re blown on the ve hicle's
root near J acksonville, lll.
Wa rm . moist air from the Gulf of
Mexico collided with cooler a tr over
no rtheast Kansas Thu rsday to
spa wn 19 twisters In- six states, said
Na tlona l Weather Service forecas ter J etf Behrens ln Kansas City .
The weathe r system was expected
to move east today Into llllnots, he
sa id .

Area deaths
Ira G. Davis
Word has been rece ived of the
death of Ira G. Davis, 76, on May 10,
a t the Eas t Liverpool Con valescent
Center followin g a lengthy Illness.
Mr. Da vis was born J une 23, 1905
In Pomeroy the son of the late Milla rd and Ma ry Roush Davis.
Mr. Roush retired fro m Crulclble
Steel In 1970. He was a member of
the First Christia n Chu rc h.
He Is survived by his wile, Phyllis
Woods Davis, whom he marrted
April 'll , 1925; thre€ sons, Keith,
Ralph , a nd Lewis F . Davis; four
da ughte rs, Wa nd a Moore, Chester,
W. Va .. Jua nita Sanford, Smyrna
Beach, F la .; Helen P a ug h, Springfield a nd Sue Anderson, Camphlll .
Pa.; one sister. Mrs. Addle Brown,
Pomeroy, seveal gra ndchildren
and grea t gra ndchildren.
F uneral services were held at
1: 30 p.m . Thursday, Ma y 13, at the
Arner F unera l Chapel, Chester , W.
Va .. wi th the Rev., William GlUtla nd olllcla tlng. Burial was In
Shadow La wn Memory Gardens.
Newell . W. Va .
Attendlng the services from here
were Mrs. Add le Brown , Phyllis
Spencer a nd VIolet Wa lker aU of

Pome roy and Mr. a nd Mrs. Lewls
Long, Middleport.

Murlie H. Russell
Murlle H. Ru ssell, 83. formerly of
Alfred , d ied this morning a t Guern sey M e m o ri a l H os pit a l ,
Cambridge.
Mrs. Russell was born at Alfred
the da ughte r of the Ia te John and
Ma ry Swa rtz Hawk. She was also
preceded In death by one siste r , Iva
F indling, two brothers, Eve rett and
Coy Ha wk.
She was a member of Ora nge
Chris ti a n Churc h a nd Alfre d
Gra nge.
She Is survived by two da ughters,
Mrs. Willia m (Roxie) Pettit, Marietta. and Mrs. Robert (Sibyl )
Har m o n. Ga lena, Ohio ; one
brothe r. Arthur Hawk, Phoenix,
Ariz.; five grandchildren a nd seven
grea t grandchtldren .
Funer a l services wtll be held Sunda y a t 2 p.m . at the White Funeral
Home In Coolvllle with Brother
Thomas Rlchason olllclating. BurIa l wlll be In the Orange Chrlstlan
Chu rc h Cemetery . F riends m ay
ca ll at the funeral home Saturday
fro m 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9 and on Sunda y
one hour prior to services .

Meigs County happenings ..
Names omitted
Tilt' nanws of Rtdwrd DeMoss
an d Ttllllll Y Todd Tillis W t' l't ' untnll'ntlOilii lly ur111tt ed fro m the lt ~t uf
students 1-! l'adua llng frurn Ml' tgs
Ht ~ h
Sdwnl. In ad dtti on, th e
Eask rn lwno r stud t·n t.. . wt·n· tr-ctnspnsl'd. Sarah Goebt·l IS till' ci&lt;Jss

sal uta lonan wh tl t• Kda Young rs
\'dlt·drt ·tonan .
Dand lct nna n ·llt ' s nctlll t' wa s utm tlt'd as t'l&lt;:t\'ln g take n pa rtmlh e Mt·Jgs
Ht l! h School gradu alwn exe rctscs
Tuesdar llt l! hl. l;mna rt'l ll as class
p tT Sidt•nt ~fi\'C

t ht,'

Wl' lcOJnl'

iJdd l'l'S.'i

a nd Hltrodun 'd uther l'la ss off tt·t•rs
as wt· ll as lht· Ht:\'. Hobt' rl M t{~ t'l' at
th e bat"cala ur e~l ll' stTV H' t'

Squads kept busy
Six emergency calls were a nswered Thursday a nd early Friday
morning by units of the Meigs
County E mergency Medical Service. Four Involved Injuries In aut omobile accidents.
At 8:23 a .m . Thursday. Leona rd
Va n Meter was transported from
an accident on Route 7 a t Bradbury
to Veterans Me morial Hospital. At
9:48 a. m . Helen Williams was taken
from he r Middleport residence to
the Holzer Medical Center, and at
10:10 p.m . Holly Starcher was
transported from the Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memoria l Hospital. The Tuppers
P la ins squad transported Ethel
Stout from her Route 7 home to
Camden Clark, at 12:19 p.m .
At 2: 18 a. m . the Tuppers Plains
squad tra nsported Randy Shields
from a n auto accident on Route 7,
Tuppers Pla ins to Camden Clark
Hospital In Parkersburg. Delbert
Huddleston was taken from a
Route 33 accident at Burlingham to
Veterans Memorial Hospital at
6: 30a.m . and at 8 a.m. the Rutland
squad transported Jimmie Qu1llen
from an accident on Route 124 In
Rultand to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Hit-skip probed
The Pome roy Pollee Department are tnvesttgatlng a hlt-sklp
accident that occurred Wednesday

at 11: 33 p.m .
Acco rding to the pollee department Sha ron Cunning ham, Syr acuse, wa s tra ve ling south on
Mulberry Ave. , when a car trave lIng north went left of center and
struc k the Cunning ham ve hicle and
contlnued on.
The depa rtment Thursday morntog a t 9 a.m . received a report that
a car s truck the side of the former
Shamrock Motel and left the scene.
The pollee department later cited
Roger Dilla rd, 24, Syracuse, to the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews on charges of destructlon
of property regarding to the Shamrock Incident.

Must pay lot fee
Pe rsons who have lots at Beech
Grove Cemetery are required to
pay $5 pe r grave for care of cemetery lots. P ayment Is to made to the
Pat Thoma, secretary for the
cem etery trustees.
It was reported also that the
cem e tery trustees are In desperate
need of la wnmowe rs. Anyone wtshlng to donate a lawn'mower Is a sked
to call city ha ll.

Veterans Memorial
ADMISSIONS---Darlene Curry,
Pome roy; Alma Young, Pomeroy;
Wllma Coon, Portland; Tina Yost,
Rutland .
DISCHARGES---Bertha Dutton,
Lula Phlillps , Eleanor Werry.

~~n______,tina vow

About 100 tornadoes ha ve htt the
Pla ins since May 14. In Nebraska,
which was buffeted with tor nadoes
for the 12th stra ight day Thursday,
a twister dam aged a farm butldlng
In Colfax County and up to 4~
Inches of ra in ca used nas h Ooodlng
In eas tern counties . Nem eha
County olltcla ls kept a n eye on the
Nemaha and Missouri rivers.
"The river s a re runnlng bank full
right now," said Don Wright of the
county sheriff's otflce. "We' ve had
ftve Inches of ra in stnce 7 p.m . If the
rivers go out, we'll have some lowla nd floodlng , but U they go out by 5
or 6 feet, we could have some
trouble. "
Flooding a long She ll Creek
briefly stopped Union P ac ific ra il
tralllc on the Nebraska ma in line,
s aid railroad spokes man J oe
McCartney. The closure was a preca ution because water reached the
bottom of a bridge . One main line
was open by Thursday aftem oon,
he said .
Cattle carcasses were found
floating In Shell Creek after at least
140 head of cattle drowned Wednesday, and slit washing down from
the hlllstdes burted some roads In
mud 3 feet deep.
The cloudbursts In Nebraska are
compoundlng flooding problems
because the soU Is already satu rated, said weather service hydrologist Roy Osugt .
1n Oklahoma , an estimated 4
Inches of rain fell In southeastern
Bartlesvllte 1n a n hour Thursday afternoon, sa id Poltce Chief Charles
Spencer . That boosted the month's
rainfa ll tota l to almost 91nches. The
cloudburst Oooded low-lying areas,
stalling cars a nd blocking roads. he
said.
A storm swept through Connecti cut on Thursday afternoon, bringIng heavy rain a nd lightning. Wind
and blowing lre€ limbs knocked out
e lectric it y In more th a n 40
communities.

'Union Jack' flies over Falkland Islands;
Frigate 'Ardent' sinks in South Atlantic;
Bridgehead prepares for counterattack

BRIDGE OV E R TROUBLED WATE RS- Gary
Hoadley of Platte Center surveys flood waters from
Shell Creek from atnt&gt; a line of ears that were pa rked in

The Meigs County Sheritf's Department Is \nvestlgatlng a n accide nt that occ urr ed Thursday
morning at 5 a. m . at Rock Springs.
According to the report Robert
Gre€n, Ctnc lnna tl, was driving an
Internationa l Transtar on SR 7
when he missed the turn a t Rock
Springs. In the process of turning
he backed his rig strlklng the front
of a Meigs Local School Distric t bus
parked at the Naomi Floyd residence. There was s llgh t d am age to
the bus and none to the rig. No citation was Issued .
Wednesday at 12:50 p.m . the de-

partment was notified of a hit -skip
accident a t the entra nce of Meigs
Mine No. 1.
Robert Grindstead , 58, Athe ns
was trave ling west on the com pany' sdriveway , leadlng to SR 124,
In a pickup truck when a n untdenti!ted 1962 Chevrolet pulled from
another parking lot a nd struck the
r ight rear fende r and wheel of the
Grindstead truck a nd continued on.
the Chevrolet was last seen headed

west on 124.
Wesley Clark, Rt. 3, Racine (Dorcas ) Informed the sheritf's department that he has two cows missing
from his pasture .
One Is a Guernsey and the other
Is part Holstein and Hereford. Both
cows have horns and are wearing
leather halters.
Persons having any Information
are asked to call Clark at949-2075or
notify the sherltf's department.

the Union Jack over the Falklands, Friday following landing by British
troop from the task force. Picture received to London early Saturday
direct from a ship with the task force. ( AP Wirephoto).

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

A car wash wlll be held at the
Eilts Sohto Station Mlddlepoi1, Saturday, May 22, beginning at 10 a. m .
sponsored by Middleport Pony
League.

Stt·phCJ ntt' Houcht ns, scholast tr
l' halle nge tea m : Brent Houdas hel t.
DECA stud ent of the yea r .
Susa n Danner , outsta ndin l! vocal
rnu si{' stud ent : Ka th y P:uk er ,
DeKalb nll'dctl : Mctrk McG uin·,
Sl'H'nt 'L' aw;u t.l ; Oa vul Huffma n CJild
Fn·d Young, outstanding sPnior
ma t h stu dents ; Cha rlott t· Lyons.
Al gc·bra I awa rd : Pa ul a Sw is her .
Algebra II awa rd : Ka rla Brown.
Randy J ewell, Ta nya Stobarl , Lon
Tanner , Sm· No rma n cmd Brad
YtJ ung, F rench I ; Shi rley McDonald .
French II : Stepha nie Houchins.
J oa n Tann er. F re nch Ill ; Len Sayre.
E ngliS h II ; Andrea Tripl ett , pe rfert
attendance, sentnrs onl y: Greg
Ta ylor, Cindy Cr"t'ks. Danforth
&lt;J wanls. juniors; Ly nnl' Oli ve r,
sa lutatory award : Da vtd Hoffman.
val edictor y cJw;.t nl; La ura Smith .

Recei ving Hwa rd.s wert' Lynnt·
Oli ver . DAR good ctti zc ns hip
a ward : Dick K i n ~-! . principa l's
scholarshtp, Hocking Tec h; Tamtn)'
Ei cl11n ger a nd Pam Crook s,
Mus kingum Coll cJ.( l' scholars hips;
Lynne Oli n •r , Ohio Board of Rege nts
scholarshtp : F red Youn g, Ph yllis
Da vis, Ma r k Clim• and Mcla me
Dillard , Ohio Boa rd of Rege nts. certifi cates of ac hi eve ment ; Robin Kitchen, Dal e Brickles and Rhonda
Barnhart, st: nwr libret ry awards.
Barba ra Chappelear, Donna Hall ,
Tina Lcark , Ca rnl' Adkms , Karla
Brown, Greg Rtft•, Kt•ith Scott, Greg
Ta ylor , Jerry Brev ick. Charlene
Swartz. Cath y Dl'l .ong, Debbie
Werry, Joy Sautcrs, Allen Kin g,
Mike Tromm. Scott Pickens, Ri ck
Edwards. Tern Thoma and J olene
Mood!Spaugh, libra rian awards;
Jeff Nash. Semper Fidelis award :
Kim Birch[ield . Vtr ki e Boyles,
Susan Danner. Teresa Dorst. Mark
Friend , Brend a F ry, Ma ry Beth
Hawley, Robin Kitchen, Lynn Kloes ,
Rtwhellt• McDanie l. Jeff Nas h, Lynrll' Oli n•r. Dan Ri ~I.!S. and Helen
Slack, St'lllor band recog nition; Fred
Young, Mark McGuire, Ma rk Clme.
Lynne Oli l c'r . Curtiss Smith and

Vol. 16 No . 14
Copyright ed 1982

- Control Tops- Sheer
Legs - Support Legs Extra Control Tops Reinforced Toe and
Heel - Sandal Foot
Discontinued Styles .

,Y:2

Today's T .s.

PRICE

Ph)·llls Da1·is. Fred Young, Mark
Ti..trn ara

E i chingL'r .

Kri stm Anderson a nd Ma rk Cllne,

class hnnorarians:
Lynne
and
Greg
Thomas. facult
y a waOli
rdver
to outs tamlin ~ seniors.
Lynne Oli ver , Ta mmy Eichinger,
Grl'g Tay lor and Rand y Murra y,
sp tnl a w" rds; Ma rk Cline. best aclt&gt; r , Betsy Hera ld. bes t al'lress ,

ti~~iiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

OAPSE Chapte r 17 wlll meet
Tuesday, May 25, at 7:30 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High . The re wlll be
Installation of olllcers.

date.
A-D, Munda y 19-ll a .m. ONLY! ,
Ma y 24; E- H. Tuesda y 19-11 a. m .

Columbus, Ohio; and James William Guthrie, 33, of Crown City,
Ohio.
Mlller was also charged In a separate Indictment wlth violation of
Uhe Mann Act for allegedly tra nsporting a 16-year-old girl !rom Huntlngton to South Point, Ohio, for the
pull&gt;Ose of prostltutton, Farber
said.
Farber said the tnvesttgatlon began after agents working on
another case learned of an alleged
child pornographjy ring operatlng

ONLY I, Ma y 25; 1-P. Wedn esda y 1911 a .m . ONLY I, M" y 26; Q-S , Thur·
sda y 19-11 a .m. ONLY! , Ma y 27; TFrida y 19-11 a. m . ONLY! , May 28.
If anyun l' ca nnot ma ke their appointed day, come in on June 7, 1982,
hours from 9 a .m. to 11 a .m. ONLY.

z.

Without water
Pomeroy VIllage, wlllh Uhe exceptlon of Lincoln Hill and Breezy
Heights, was without water Frtday
morning due to a break In the main
line.
Pomeroy Elementary and Salls·
bury Elementary Schools were
closed as well as Carleton School
located at the former junior high
bulldtng.

A
hal wl&amp;bdrawn In silence to his
pdloD ceD alter a parole board
revoked bl8 lJ8t releue da&amp;e
aod ordered the a~t~•v!n of Sen.
Bobelt F. Keaaedy to Ulldeip a

•
A Rabbit for only S599o·

peycblatrlc ltudy. For a compace IH

PMe report. -

Speclflc•tlona:
Bu-.g holglll: 7 '-8"
Floof lizo: 88~ ·w • 112"l

·
Door liH: 4\.0"W • II '.()"H

~
rx8'
---

and-·

lllber crp ' ! r wllo 1M. to
power
uplloa Ill the-

tm11 premier ol 'FJ.S.T.' 'lbe
·lim. wblcb ... leMurel Bod

l!conomlcal storage

stapr,alntaal&amp;b*oaABC.For

procranmUI details _ .

with atria.

OTHER SIZES &amp; MODELS
ALSO IN STOCK

Talle-Oae-=-·- - -

•Mfr's sugg. retai l pric.e exduding lox, Iitie, l ~e en ~. deoler prep and destination charges

Inside today
Area deaths ......... A-7
AlongtbeRiver .... B-1-8
Business ••.•••.••••• &amp;1
ClasslfledS • • . • • . • . D-3-7
Editorial • " " " • 1 • ~·Z:-3
Farm ..•. ·......••.• E-2

l..ocal ••••• •••••.A~.J).I
State-National ••••••• 0.1
•••••••••••.• C.l-11

992-3381

I

. II

In the Huntington area. Farber said
F BI agents fro m Pittsburgh , Pa .,
working undercover posed as c hild
pornography buyers.
Ma rtin , Miller and Hedgecock

I

7o Pag es JS c e n t s

are acc used of recru ltlng teen-age
gtrls from t he s tre€ts of Huntington
to pose for stlll photograp hs and
movies while engaging In sex,
!Continued on A4 1

·---·-·--

..... _..•. __

News briefs...

·----,
1

Charges pending in drug case
GALLIPOLIS - Charges are pending against five people ar re sted -by Gallipolis City Pollee fotlowtng a search of a house a t 410
Third Ave. early Saturday m orning.
A poltce spokesman said six officers, armed with a search warrant, entered the house a t !i: 19 a. m . and cotlected qua nti ties of
marijuana, cocalne use utens lls a nd approxim ately 1,000 uni ts of
"suspected" LSD.
The alleged LSD wtlll be sent off to be tes ted la ter . the spokesma n
said .
He said pollee we re alerted to the house when an olltcer observed a
party In progress. The partlc lpa nts we re a li~CC:Iy using drugs. the
spokesman said.
The officer returned to the s tatlon and notuted Invest.gators, who
obtained the search warrant. Fotlowtng the search, the participa nts
we re taken to the station.
The spokesman said charges would depend on the resul ts of the
LSD tests.

The Letart Falla area of Melp Couaty Is a beehive ol adlvlly as fanners CBI'e for their produce
crops. Above, Roger Rou8b (left) and Ed Findley acataer atakl!8 bl Rousb's field of 20,000 tomato
planta.

COLUMBUS - Albert C Ues, direc tor of the Ohio Burea u of E mployment Services, died Friday night In a Houston hospital where he
was being treated fo r cancer , a department spokesm an said .
Glles, 66, died In Herman Hospital at about 11:30 p.m ., according
to Web L. Davis, manager of the olllce of personnel services at
OBES. Davis said he did not know U death was due to cancer or other
causes.
Gov. James A. Rhodes described Giles as "one of the most Intelligent and respected members of m y cablne t. "
Glles leaves a wife and thre€ sons. A former Galli DOlts res ident . he
was Gallia County's rent control examiner during World War II.

JVSD replacement lery on June ballot
Voters are being asked to renew
the established oper~ting millage

Lil'

scct 1 o n ~ .

A Mu lt 1m C' d1a In c Ne w s paper

OBES director Giles dead

Dropping stakes

CALL DON E. MUlLEN .
992-3098

"It's some pretty sordid stutf,"
Farber sald.
Some pictures Involved In Uhe tndlctment were reproduced In magaztnes named " Little Dumpllns,"
"Women and Little Girls - A Speclal Lolltas Magazine," a11d "Teenage Fantasy," Farber said.
Charged tn the five-count Indictment are Dean Raymond Martin,
36; Teddy G. Hedgecock, 48, and
Eileen Shannon, 30, aU of Huntlngton; Christopher L. Miller, formerly of Cabell County but now of

dr&lt;:Hn C:I C:IWCI I'dS .

WIC coupon reminder

FIE RCE BATILE-Ma p locates appro ximate locati on of Friday's
fi erce ba ttle for the Falklands . Shown is the approximate locati on. according to ea rly, ske tchy reports, wh ere Argt: ntiuc warplanes sank the
British frigate Ardent, according to a n announ cement made in London
Saturda y. Britain also said its forces had established a beachhead in th e
San Carlos area of East Falkland. British warships bombarded Port
Stanl ey in Friday's a tta ck. and British jt•ts atta cked th r Fox Bay a rea.
a ccording tn British announce rn c nts . l AP Lasl·rphuto l.

Crown City man charged in "kiddy porn' arrests

of Our Bouae MWieWD and toward t!Cholarllblpe and ..other
commlllllty educational projecl&amp; For a COillPiae preview of
the
c.&amp;lli
B-1.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Sou th Atlanlrc Ocean

10

lllruclure, cbalekoudornlnlum
aod a bome of comemporary AlpiDe wiD be featured 1n "Tour of
Intereatlng Homes," to be held
June 1.3. Spo11110red by The
American AIIIOCiatloo of UoJ.
venlty Women (AAUW) of GoJ.
Upolla for the tenth year,
proceeds from the tour wiD be
dollated to the board of tru11tees

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SALE ON TOPS AND JEANS
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY. CHILDREN'S - LADIES' MEN'S - JUNIORS'- BOYS'.

He said the operat ion " Involves a
total of over 25,000 men ln ships at
sea a nd something over 100 shl ps ... At a ra nge of 8,000 m iles from
the U. K. !United Kingdom) base."
1Conti nued on A 41

tntintl

~

TOPS &amp; JEANS SALE

terence In London. Ma rine Lt . Col.
Tim Donkln said a beachhead of
about 10 square miles had been esta blis hed a t Port San Carlos , about
50 mlles west of the capita l of
Stanley.

Sund a y , M ay 23 , 19 82

• Middleport- Pomeroy- Gatlipo_tis- Point Pleasant

HUNTINGTON , W.Va. (AP) A 19-month FBI Investigation has
led to a federal Indictment charglng five people, Including two
Ohtoans, with conspiring to produce and dtstrlbut.e child pornography, U.S. Attorney David
Farber said Saturday.
The charges Involve conspiracy,
aiding and abetting the operation of
a child pornography ring and Interstate transportation of pornographlc and obscene material
Involving minors, Farber sald.

Pcmwla Crooks. Susan Danner ,
M cGuir l' ,

to the 20 lost crewmen. He said
a nother Brttish warship had a n unexploded bomb In Its engine room
that was later defused, and that
thre€ other ships sullered minor
damage.
The Ardent was the second BritIsh warship sunk since the crisis
erupted April 2 with tbe Argentine
seizure of the Falklands from Britain. The destroyer Sheffield and 20
of Its men went &lt;)own after a mlsslle
f1red by an Argentine figh ter bomber blasted the ship In the Icy
South Atlantlc May 4.
Just before the British la unched
their assault Friday a helicopter
ferrying British troops ditched In
the ocean, leaving 21 dead. Britain
reported two more servicemen
kllled, three missing and 27
wounded ln the Falklands assault
Itself.
But the Brttlsh said despite the
losses they were back on the Islands
to stay wlth a total landing force of
5,000 men,lncludlng martnes, paratroopers, art111ery, engineers, medIcs and other su·pport personnel.
This was twice the number of
troops ashore given previously.
At a Defense Ministry news con-

tmts

PLAYTEX
PANTYHOSE SALE

WHILE
THEY
LAST

By The Associated Pre88
Despite the loss of a second warship and 20 of Its sailors, Brttaln
vowed Saturday to regain the Falkland Islands and said It had 5,000
men ashore and 25,000 standing by.
But Argentlna said 1t was mopping
up about 400 Britlsh troops on the
Islands and vowed It was ready for
any new attack.
Meanwhile, the U.S. E mbassy In
Buenos Aires stepped up evacua tion of non-essentlaf personnel and
Argentlne Foreign Minister Ntcanor Costa Mendez prepared to
denounce Brttato before the U.N.
Security Councll, scheduled to convene later In the day.
Pope John Paul 0 appealed for
peace and was reported leaving It
up to Roman Callhollc bishops In
London to decide whether the escalation of the South Atlantlctlghttng
should prompt him to abandon
plans to vlstt Britain starting
Frtday.
The siJ!king of the frigate Ardent
by Argentlne jets was announced
by British Defense Secretary John
Nott, who told reporters in London
that about 30 men were wounded In
Frtday's Ardent attack in addition

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Car wash slated

An &lt;H'atlt•mi c a wa rds assemb ly
was !wiLl at M c t ~s Hi ~ h Srhuul on
May 17.

Meets Tuesday

NEED SHORT TERM HOSPITALIZATION
INSURANCE BETWEEN JOBS?
ALSO REGULAR HOSPITALIZATION
INSURANCE FOR FAMILY
OR INDIVIDUALS

a Int. The norma l banks of the stream are beyond the
lilw nf tn~t·s in the tup of phuto. Ht'a Vy rains have hil
the area for th e las t 12 da ys, and more rain is forerast
for lht• stall•. t AP LaSt·rphoto ).

Deputies check two minor accidents

Awards assembly
held at Meigs

Out• to e1 s horta ~.te tlf personnt&gt; l, the
Mt•igs Cou nty Hea lth Department
asks that rc·s idenls pick up J une and
Jul y WTC t·oupuns on the appointed

to continue fight

By KEVIN KEU.Y
'l.bJ-..SeniiDel Staff
RIO GRANDE - If the replacement levy Isn't approved by voters
1n Gallla, Jackson and Vinton coun·
Ues In the June 8 primary for their
joint vocational school district,
school won't continue on wlth less
money.
'There won't be any school at all.
A two-mill levy, passed by trl·
county voters 1n llrl'J for the con·
structlon and operation of Buckeye
Hills Career Center, expires on
Dec. 30 of this year. Voters are belni asked to sJrhi)ly renew the levy
at Its establiJhed millage, with no

additional taxes added.
And If It Isn't approved, Buckeye
Hills, a sateiUtA! facility near MeAl'
lhur, auil l8 vocational p!'OII'8lllS
and u ·c~asss wbJch bave ierved
more than 1,MXl ltUdents from Gal·
lla' Coullty' aloae since l9'IS just

won't exist.
This point Is being driven borne
by vocational staff and students as
a campaign gets uncteiWay to tnfonn the public on the levy.
"It's a very Important Issue, obviously," commented JVSD Super· .
tntendent Jerome Brockway. "The
two mills 1s the total rn!Uage we
operate Uhe school on. The school
has bad a very good track record.
Without It, there just won't be any
school."
One of the primary reasons of·
fered by Brockway 8lld ot)lers for
the cootlnued ex1st.ehce of the district !hat It provldei students to the
six school dlstrtcts an alternative If
they feel they can't make It In col·

lege preparatory COUJ'8I!II,
· In 110111e cases, Brockway' said,
It's the Ollly thing which standi between~ CODtlnuiJJ&amp; their ed·
ucatbl
clroppiJII out

"College Isn't the only mark of
exc~:llence," the supertntendent
said. "It's a viable alternative for
Uhose who want to specialize. That's
an Important aspect - to make
their contrtbutlon to society, rather
than be takers."
In some schools, nearly half of
the junior and senior classes are
enrolled In vocational education, he
added.
On the practical side, Brockway
said IndividUal superintendents
have acknowledged that while
there Is some duplication of vocational programs 1n their schools,
they can't offer the same level and
quality of education Buckeye Hills
and the recently-opened Buckeye
Valley facWty at A11eosvllle al·
ready have.

CoillleQuenuY, aU school boards
ID the JVSD bave guiEd 1'1!1101u(Contlnued on A-4)

June 8
~-

2 Mill
R c placl' tnl'nl
If 'tr

PLI'lNKC&amp;iYP:uniii-' Dr. Jerome lliockw_,, wt. llqllll'lnteDcleai
of tbe Qalla-JIICb8-VIntoD .Jolat Voc•llmal 8cbool Dlltrtct, """''

..ne upec11 o1 the &amp;wo-mll replacemell&amp; levy oa tbe .Juae 81M11Jot 'lbe

1ftJ 11 a - . 1 o1 tbe .JVSD'• prelelli rillap, wblcb •ppolta Book·
e,w IJIDICareer Ceater, a 11te'We faclll&amp;y In Vlnloac.ouaty andniiJIM!I'o
oait ....,...._ for voca*loaalll&amp;ud-A Ill the tri-couDty area.
I

\

\

�Mily 23, 1982

•

Commentary and perspective

Page-A·2
Mily 23, 1982

A dissentinge!=v~o~te~·=======J=am=e=s=J.=K=ilp=a=tr=ick
/1~

tl!m:s~

~15

A Division of
r-r"\....-1 L "-""T"'" I r-T""'e=!

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
16141446-2342

d

WASHINGTON -

I~

111 CourtS!., Pomeroy, Ohio
16141992-2 156

ROHF.HT I . WJNI;F.l- r
Publtsher
PAT WHITEHEAD

HOBART WII SON JH

Asstsl&lt;:tnt Publt.s twr-Cuntrulll·r

F.xl'cutt ve F.dtlnr

A MEMBEH nf Tilt' '"'UI'takrl l'ro ·~'· lnlarlllllail\
NI'V.l&gt; [JliJlN l'uhh,/wr-. A'.'IIH IHIIUII

l'n·~~ i\~MII. ' I lll lllll

and lht·

Amt•rinlll

1.1-:lTEfl"i Of CIPI'\1111 ~ ~tn· v.dt unwd Thn ,tluultl ht· lt·s,, thun 300 v.unl~ Inn~ All
1.-l h ·r!&gt; &lt;trt' ,UhJn t tu ,. ,lttm~ ami mu,, t lw M)(nt•d v.lth •uum·. atld n·~o .. and tt•lt•phnno·
numlwr Nu U ll\ l l:: l~~&gt;d lt'lkr-.. v.rll lw puhll,ht·d IA·I h'rl&gt; sho ~t~ld lw 111 .:und l.!11&gt; h '. atldn·Sllolll)(
,..... u .....

""''"'"'"'1&lt;111111''

Interest rates:
depressing levels
By Its own admission, the best laid economic plans of the White House
might not produce a strong recovery If interest rates remain at their
extraordinarllly hlgh levels.
Economists of almost every persuasion agree. And by their actions, so
apparently do leaders of lending institutions, industrial corporations,
farmers, small-business operators, and savers large and small.
But even more depressing Is the !allure to achieve any consensus about
the reason why rates remain so high, and the publlc exasperation and
contusion of those you might expect to understand the situation.
On alnnost any day you may find government blaming money markets,
money markets blaming the Federal Reserve, the Fed blaming spenders,
and potential spenders blaming uncertain flscal and moneta!)' policies.
According to President Ronald Reagan, money markets are not convinced the government wlll hold the line againsi lnflation and excessive
spending. Henry Kaufman, the Interest rate guru, tends to disagree.
"Why shouldn't Interest rates be high," states Kaufman "when the
growth of debt Is excessive, when quality Is more questionable than In the
past and when participants have the capacity to innovate ... ?"
Rates are high not because of inflationary expectations or economic
growth or some notion that there Is a mystical, normal interest rate, says
Kaufman, a partner in the Salomon Brothers investment house.
They are high because credit markets have been revolutionized by
deregulation tha t in turn let loose an unprecedented flow of new types of
credit instruments: negotiable certificates of deposit, floating rate loans,
zero coupon bonds, varlable Interest rate mortgages, money market
funds, NOW accounts, indexed bonds. You get the point.
Slnnultaneously, he maintains, there has been a " liberalization of credit
standards and practices," which Is another way of saying that money has
been lent to customers who once would have been turned down.
The result has been a growth of debt in the United States to$4.5trllllon at
the end of 1981, "three times the $1.5 trUllon of 1970," Kaufman told the
Association of International Bond Dealers yesterday.
Such Is the contusion about rates, however, that not even so esteemed an
observer as Kaufman, has the last word. Nobody does. Perhaps never
before have so many "experls" admitted that your guess ls as good as
theirs - bank presidents, Treasury otflclals, big borrowers among them.
What makes the situation even more depressing- and If you size up the
statements of publlc otflclals you can easUy detect the depression -Is that
there Is agreement on only one point, which ts:
U those rates don't fall, the economy may not rise at all.

Regional legislative directory
UNITEDSTATESSENATORS
Washington address : Senate Office Building, Washington , D.C., 20510.
Telephone: 12021224-3121.
Glenn, John H.IDI, Office : 200 N. High St., IRoom 6001, Columbus, 0.,
43215, Telephone 16141469- 6697.
Metzenbaum. Howard IDl . Offtce: 1240 East 9th St., Cleveland, 0.,
44199, Telephone 12161522- 7272.
UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE
Miller . Clarence E. I Rl , Office : 212 S. Broad St., Lancaster. 0., 43130,
Telephone : 16141654- 5149.
, Washington address: House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20515,
Telephone : 1202 1224- 3121.
OHIO HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Ball, Cla1re M., Jr. IRI, Office : 11 East Washington St., Athens, 45701,
Telephone : 16141593- 5591.
James, Rbnald H. , IDI , Office : Rte. 2, Box 195, Proctorville, 45669,
Telephone : 16141886- 6998.
OHIO SENATE
Collins. Oakley C.. IRI . Off1ce: 1005 Kemp Lane, Ironton, 45638,
Telephone : 16141532- 3460.

Berry's World

II

.. -

~~Today in history
. Today is Sunday, May 23, the 143rd day of 1982. There are 222 days left in
· the year.
· Today's highlight in history:
On May 23, 1960, Israel announced that former Nazi official AdoU Eichmann had been captured in Argentina - and would be put on trial in Israel.
Also on this date :
.
In 1618, the Thirty Years War began - as Bohemian rebels triumphed in
. Prague.
,
In 1701, Captain William Kidd was hanged in London after being convicted
: : of piracy and murder.
· In 1939, the British parliament approved a plan for an independent
:; Palestine by 1949 - a plan whtch was later denounced by Jews and Arabs in
: • Palestine.
I.

Sen. Rnbert
IS rCCl' lvi ng
plautllts fur h1s ''cmnprum1se"
amendment to the pending extension
of the Votmg Righb Act. President
Hcagao too qutckly embraced tht·
Dok proposal. Six of 10 Republicans
on the Jud iciary Conunitlt•e bought
tht' propm;1 t10n .
I• •I me put the matter as bluntly
as I n tn · The Dole "cornprormsl'" IS
nocomprmm se at all. It IS folly . In 40
year:-; of covering politics, I cannot
rt'l·al l a more lamentable legislative
t'ITtll' . For the f1rst tunc since the
days of Reconstruction, lhl' Dole
il llll'ntlment would institutinnalizt•
ral'lsl policies at lhl' very core of our
public life - and there was this to bt•
. . . ard of the l'd 1ct-; of Reconstructum,
that tht')' applted only to the
tlt•fea ted Southern stall's and that
tht•,· laslt·d for 12 years only . Dole's
lll·t ·onsrtleretl aml'ntlrnl'lll would apply tn t'Vl'l')' town , city, county and
st&lt;tll' m the nat1on, and the &lt;Jd would
shapt• or control our electltlns for the
next qua rter·rent ury.
Ld llll' run through tht' n•qu1red
lttany : Yes, for tht• better part nf a
hundred years after Appomattox ,
the Southt•rn stall's did mtlt-t•d offend
L! n cvously against blaek registrants
and voters. Yes, thl• Voting Rights
Ad of 1965 was fully justJfit·d by tht•
15th Amendment. Yl'S, tht· &lt;:H't has
al't'tllnplished gn•a t good . And, yes,
a rcasuni:tbl e extenswn of tlw law's
baSil' prOVISIOns WOUld Sef'\'1' thl'
publlt' lnll'rt·st.
But tlw bill alrt'ady passed hv the
Houst' - tht· bill thai would bt'
lnoLiifJt•d t'osml'iicall y by the Dole
dlllt'rHhnent - IS nut n•asnnabll' . It
1s not f;nr . Tht· act would perpl'luate
i-1 LkllH'CHllll l.! and tllllt'·COilSUinilll.!
rrnpus1t1on on !host· stall's and
lo('alt llt'S parlwularly affected by
lht' law : thest· junsdictiuns still
wuuld ha\'l' to i:tpply tn tlw Justin'
Dt•partment, hat 111 hand. for appru\·al for the slightest ehonge rn a
prt·t'lnd pollrng plal'l' - i:Hld this
wouldcontrnUl' no malter how l'lean
lhCII'I'l't'Ords 1111 ght be.
Th1Sii.Jnfa1rness - thrs unrelenting
obloquy - IS the least nf the wrongs
Dolt or Kansas still

in the pending bill. The more
profound error lies in the violence
this bill would cause to a ftin·
damcnt.HI concept of our eon·
stitutional doctrine, to wit, that !lit•
right to vote is an mdividual n ght.
Unt1l this rnoment, we ha ve had no
rnkling of " group'' rights or "class"
ri .L(hts in thl• exercise of our fran·
cilise. The goa l is that no person ,
because of this race or color, shall be
denied hts right to register, to volt•
or ttl have his vote fairly counted.
To that goa l al l of us can willingl y
subscribt• . The pending bill goes
ormnously much further . For the fir·
st lime Wl' find lang uage dealin).!
with " minonty participatiOn" and
w1th " rninonty group registratiOn."
For tile first time, Wt' fmd that no
change may be made that would

WASHINGTON - The Reagan adannounced " ti It "
ltlwanl Britain in the Falkland Islands t'unflrd has caused dama gl' to
U.S. inlt&gt;resb in Latin Amcri GI that
will take yl'ars torepa1r .
The deciston was untimely, undiplomatic and unnecessary. It apparenlly reflected Secretary of State
Alexander Haig's predisposition
toward lht• NATO allies, whose forl't's he unce cnnunanded, as opposed
to our nei ghbors &lt;i nd potential frien·
ds 111 the hermsphere.
Much has been wntten about
Pn•sident Reagan's personal ad·
mrrdtJUn for British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher as a
beleaguered fellow conserva ti ve.
Whether Haig played on this to pt•rsuade Reagan of the need for a
public announcemen t of U.S. support for Bntam is not clear.
What seems far more likely is that

"diluted."
I am aware of the head of steam
bt•himl this bil l. Before the godlike
totem of "civil nghb;" l'Very knet•
must jt•rk . But I recall what Justtce
Cardow once sa1g about both the
usefulness and the futi Iity of dissent :
" Del'P t·um·rction and warm ft•elin g
art• say m ~ tht•Jr last say with
knowledge that the caust· is lost. The
l'ttlt't' nf the majority may be that of
for'Cl' triumphcmt, nmlcnt with the
plaud1L' of the hour, and reeking ht·
lit· nf the morrow . The dissenter
speaks to lht• future, and his Vtllet' is
pitched to a key that will carry
thrnugh the years."
From the waves of thoughtless
support given to this misguided bill,
tak ing my h·xt from Cardozo, I
n•spectfully thssent.

"SALT II is dead."
That was the pronouncement of
Secretary of State Alexander Haig
last week in one of his pontifical
statements tu the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. SALT II was
the name commonly used for the
second Strategic Anns limitation
Treaty between the United States
and the Soviet Union harrunered out
1n 1979 by PreSident Jirruny Carter
and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance
and Soviet negotiators. It supplemented SALT I, "igned by
President Richard Nixon and Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev in 1972
setting limits on deployment and

production of atomic weapons.
Haig could barely keep the
exultation from his voice as he announced the death of a treaty which
had been forged after many months
of negotiations by the preceding ad·
ministration. The treaty was never
ratified by the U.S. Senate but,
having been signed by Presidents
Carter and Brezhnev, it was withdrawn from consideration when the
Sov tets invaded Afghanistan in 1980. ·
Its provisions are still being ol&gt;served by both countries.
Ha1g was both premature with his
announcement and without

authority to make it. Until the treaty
has been definitely voted down in the
Senate, it is alive as it was in 1980.
Haig, like his boss, Ronald Reagan,
looks with a jaundiced eye on any accomplishment of the Carter administration. The signing of the
SALT II creaty was definitely an accomplishment but in a year of election propaganda was pounced on by
any politician who wanted to get his
name in the paper . The year 1980
was probably the worst year of Jim·
my Carter's life. Marked by a series
of events beyond his control, the gas
shortage, OPEC. the hostage crisis
in Iran and galloping inflation, it is a

wonder he fared as well as he d1d .
The widespread demand for a
freeze on nuclear weapons has
scared the pants off the Reagan ad·
ministration, not to mention the
move in Congress to rev1ve SALT II .
They want to be remembered as the
macho .L(uys who spit in the Russian
Bear's eye. In an effort to fore:;toll
further publicity and activity,
P!·esident Beagan has proposed
Strateg ic Arms ReductiOn Talks
rSTARTI w1th the Sovtet un1un . Th1 s
is not a bad idea on h1s part as he has
mentiOned it before but only dunng
scathing c.~ttacks on the Sov1ets. Onl'

~NN ~~'PtRS RE-cYCl~

so

~i~ cow~~s .
t&gt;OO
Pi~ ~%B~ ~NP

-rnt

N~WYORK TIM~S RE&lt;iCI!S
mCROSSWORD ...
$1 CN ~~ IS -rn~
~ CC#J~IO?

' 'THI HICk WITH fHI Olin"

!'2 .- 13,. 66

HOWIVII, 11 '1 IXTIIMIU IM'OilAHT tHAt WI lfH, t AUI.ti/".-

"'

3 70

It can hap_p_e_n_t_h_e_re_______D_o_n_cr_aff

Americu.:a====Ja=ck=A=nd=e=rso=n

Hat g, slill influenced by h1s years at
NATO, simply saw a need to makt•
rlear that the United States would
stand by its NATO allies come what
may. The tiny islands in the South
Atlantic aren't even on Haig's
Europe-oriented strategic
chessboard.
Whatever thl' l'xad reasons for
thl' decision to come down un
Bntain's side, the results have been
thsastrous beyond the wildt•st
nnagrnings of the While Hnuse anLI
the State Department.
By that act alnne, Reagan and
H&lt;:ll g succeeded in givrng overnight
credibility to the murderous, ne&lt;&gt;fasclst thugs who run Argt•ntina.
When tht• Fall{lands/Malvinas crisis
first erupted, Argentina sttlod vir·
tually alone in tht• hemisphere. Ht•r
nl'ighbors, sympathetic though they
were to her clai1ns to the diSputed
Islands, . were reluctant to a li gn

tlwmst'hTs w1th th1 · und1 spult•d
Cl l'l' rt·ssor - t•stwl'la lly one run by
lflt•n WhO j. ! IVt'n 1' \ '('/l l'l )...! hf·WillL~
rnll1lary JUilla ~ a bad narnc.

T(:ldlt 'ally, tlw tlt·t ·rslon to suprwr1
Bntalll was hoth too li:lte (IIlli
prl'matun•. If U.S. intentions had
bt•t&gt;n llli:ldt · l'l'ystal dear to tlw
Ar ~' t·ntmP junta 111 advance, the in·
vasinn· rn1 ght nt'Vt'l' ha ve takl'n
place. But onn· 11 was toolatt' to stop
lht· overt rnm·e, lhl' unly sensible
cnurst• would h ~\ ' l' been to mainl.C:Iin
formal neutrality, at least all until
all hopt• of a nt'~otiated settlement
was .L(Ont•.
Had that IJt•t·n dont·, the pt•ace
nt•gntiatinns would probably bt·
taking place m Washington, mstead
of tht• United Nations. Both the
BntisiJ and the Argentines might
have been di,gruntled at Uncle
Sam's posture as the " honest
broker." But that would have passed

in time.
Now all of Latm Amenca IS united
m 1ts anger and resentment at what
it regards as U. S. championing of
old-fashiOned l'Oionialism. Always
suspect Ill the eyes of our neighbors
to the south, we have given suDstance to their historical gut feeling
that, when the chips are down, the
"gringos" will stick together.
The extent of the solidarity bt•hind
Argentina was dt•monstrated at lht•
ult'dm!-! of the Organization of
Anwrwan Stall's, when t'Vl'll ldtist
Nwal'i:IJ,!Ua t•nthusrastkally surported the Argt•ntint· junta that IS its
idt•tl!n e ll 'al blond t'nt·my.
Nit·aragua's foreign mini sll'l' ,
Mtguel D'Escut11, was tlw first OAS
dl'l ec•alt- to stand and applaud the
spet•t ·h by hrs Aret·nlint• conn·
ll'rpetrt, Nrl'anor Cu~ ta Ml•ndcz.
Cuba has evt•n nffen·d military aid
to the Argentmt· eenera ls.

doesn't have to make another per·
rnanent commitment, and you
should be compensated for 1!."
"How do I do thaJ?"
"You have to ask for Acrimony ."
" Is there such a thing?"
''Well , the courts don't recogmzt•
it, but that doesn't mean you ca n't
ask for it. I should think you would
be entitled to $1,500 a month from
Archie in Acrimony payments, as
long as you stay marned to him.
That's a cheap price for him to save
hunself from another mariage."
" How do I get him to pay iJ? "
"You go to him and say 'Archie,
unless you pay me Acrimony I'm
going to tell your girlfeiend I'm
willing to get a divorce any time you
want it."
"He'll · blow h1s top," Marylou
said.
"Let him. But when he cools down
he'll realize it's cheaper to pay you
than to get a divorce and marry
somebody else. Don't you see where
Archie is coming from now? He has

tht• hest 11( both worlds. I'll bl'! you
every tmw he tells his gi rl what an
obstinatt· dra;•on lady you reall y
an·, he's la ughing all the way to the
bt•d ."
"Do you think $1,500 is enough ?"
· " You t'Ould make .a deal with him .
For $1,500 you'II just keep silent. But
if Archie wants insurance, you could
ask for $2,000 a month, in which case
you'll promise to go around and tell
everyone that you'll only give Archie
a divorce if you want to get married
agai n. And if he wants to pay the full
Acrimony fee of $2,500, you could an·
nounce you were converting to
Catholicism and Archie could only
get a divorce over your dead body."
"He'll accuse me of blackmailing
him."
"It's not blackmail. It's marital
support. If he wants to keep you as a
wife for his own nefarious purposes,
he has to support you as a wife."
"Suppose he misses an Acrimony
payment?''
"Then you put o~t the word that
you are going to start divorce

proceedings. If he really doesn't
want to get married again he'll beg,
borrow or steal the J)'loney to keep
you from going through with your
threat."
" Do you know anybody who is
collecting Acrimony oow ?"
"I know at least half a dozen
women. They were all treated as
doormats until they ash'!! for
Acrimony. One lady I know gets
$3,000 a month, and all she has to do
is send her husband a registered letter every 30 days telling him that un&lt;'er no conditions will she grant him
a divorce. It's one of the happiest
separations I've ever seen."
"The only thing you haw to be
careful of is when you get a visit
from the 'othl'r woman' and she begs
you to give your husband up. r know
one wife who gave in, and instead of
getting $2,000 a month in Acrimony,
she was awarded $750 a month in
alirnony, and since her husband had
to rnarry the otht•r woman he claims
he can't even afford that."

.----------, DOONESBURY

Page

~ und~y Times ~ Senttnel

A·J

Lowell Wingett

-~

"So much for tackling a sticky issue."

., he

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

~-....L l'liii£S ~lll

Acrimony pa~el=rt=l=te=n=t=s======A=r=tB=uc=h=wa=ld
The latest census has revealed
tht•re are still more people who are
marned than there arc divorced .
The only surpnse was how man y
people are still marned, but are not
livmg together.
I know one named Marylou. She is
a (riend, and she told me at lunch the
other day that she and Archte had
been separated for seven years, but
had never been divorced.
"How come?"
"Because if he gets a divorce he
won't have any excuse not to mary
the floozie he's li ving with."
" Do you mean to tell me Archie is
using you to protect himself from
having to marry someone else?''
"That is exactly what he 's doing. I
heard from friends that he keeps
tellmg everyone that I won't give
him a divorce. He portrays me as
some king of vengeful ogre who
refuses to give him his freedom."
"And he doesn't pay you for
thaJ?"
"Pay me?"
"Of course. He's using you so he

w . v.1.

Premature death notice

~ "'- Gs

Tilt unites Latin
1111 mstra t ll&gt;n 's

" dilull' " equa l access to the elec·
toral proet·ss. What means this verb,
'' dilutt•''"
Tlw Dolt- amendment would
prtl\'Jdt· aviolat1on of law "tf, based
on the totality of l'lrcwnstances, it IS
shown th&lt;Jt tlll'p olrtwal proet•sses
leadmg to nonunatron or t&gt;lcctiun in
the state or pnlitical subdi vision are
not equally open to participation by
members of a class of citizens
proleded by subsection I a I, 111 that
rls members havt• less npportunity
than other members uf the elec·
torall' to partJctpatt• m the politi ca l
process &lt;inti tn t•lect n•pn•st•ntatives
nf their choice ."
What we CJ re creating by this
langua ~ t· ·is a " protected class of
citizt•ns" - that is, black utizens whost• bloc power must not bt.'

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis, OhJO- Pomt Ple,,s,lnt,

One of the more unpleasant ac· muniques and official spokesmen.
A misinformed publi c should be
lions in the Falklands war has been Both are reported more restrained
the last of the problems of the
taking place 8,000 miles from the than in the excitable first weeks of
British government. What makes
scene of military operatioru;.
the conflict and increasingly
recent developments in London so
The British press and broad- reliable.
disturbing in that respect is that
casting services have come under
The change has not yet, however,
during World War II Bntish news
critical fire for the way the war is spread to the Argentine press. The
scrv1ces - particularly the BBC being covered for home.front public is still being given a fanta"y
established worldwide standard" fur
readers and listeners. The basic war of Argentine successes and
ca ndor and reliability that continue
complaint is that London news desks Bri!Jsh disasters. Not knowing the
tu this day .
are amplifying Ministry of Defense truth, misinformed Argentines an·
I The Bntish demonstrated then
communiques and dispatches from not prepared for a settlement based
that a free society has nothing to
British correspondents in the war on the truth. And that presents a real
fea r from the truth. To the contrary,
zone with Argentine accounts of problem for the junta.
engagements.
From the media point of view, this
may represent balanced reporting.
But some official quarters see it as
something
very
different.
Something on the order of providing
aid an\1 comfort to the enemy.
The news people are bemg adviSed
to get behind the war effort. And
while the government is takmg no
direct counteraction, such as censorship, it has been suggested that
the public might take corrective ac·
lion by using the telephone and
mails to make its disapprova l
known.
In Bueno' Atres, the authorities
have no such problem. Even
asswning the Argentine media had
been inclined to provide coverage
that recognized more than one side,
"A bout your behavior at school! Please explain
it would have been unable to do so.
these
conflicting 'British!Argentinian-type'
The government has controlled the
reports!"
dissemination of information from
' the start - with some lamentable ,---"------------------------j
consequences for the Argentine
public and itself.
Unsubstantiated claims of the
sinking of British carriers and the
downing of swanns of plane" bur·
dened it with a serious credibility
problem. One that the junta apparently now realizes and is attempting to deal with.
President Leopolda Galtieri, after
having virtually disappeared from
BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13
public view when the South Atlantic
confrontation turned serious with
Call for Information
the dispatch of the British task for. ce, has been making himself
1-221-5379
available to foreign reporters,
especially British.
Pamela N. Maggied
Lee C. Mittman
The new Galtieri, who comes
A"ornevs·At·Law
across in recent interviews as the
88 E. Broad St.
, personification of reasonableness, is
Columbus, OH. 3215
not the only ev'idence of change. The
jUnta has toned down its com-

Berry's World

Fl NANCIAL QUESTIONS?
THE NEW FEDERAL LAW PROVIDES
ANSWERS.

doe:-; nut opt·n Sl' rrous negot1al10ns
by calling the antagnmst all the
names 111 the book . Therefore , h1s
START proposa l as not taken
seriously. Now he has asked for
talks w1th Pn•sident Brezhnev, a
propos&lt;-~ I so ob\'lously rncrde to coun·
ler lhl· fn·ezt· rnuvement that il-. sin·
t'lTi ty IS ljUl'Stioned by both (ri l•nds
and antagonisL,. Judging by tht·
length uf time lhe SALT agrel'ments
look, it w11l bl' many years before
;m~
CJgree rnt•nt 1s reached un
START. So111e sm1 of lrl'aty must bt•
madl' at once. PrcsiLknt Brezhnl'\'
has bt•t•n head of the Sov1l'l block of
natw ns, 1t Sl'l'llls, srncl' Hector was a
pup . Ht· hct:-; negollatl'd w1th every
Amt·ncan pn•sident s1ncc Kennedy
and ts nnt about to be out-foxed by a
Ilt'\\TOmer to tlw global SLTnt'.
Senators Edwa rd Kennedy, 0Mass .. and Mark Hatftcld, H-Ore ..
h~\' t ' 1ntrodul'ed legrsi&lt;Jtron 111 tlw
Senalt- asklll f.! that i:l freezP un thl'
produd1on of nucll'C:Ir weapons bt'
impust.'d m ll11 s t uuntr} HI Ill
Ill'I-!Oll(:lllons lw opt'ned w1th till'
So\'ll'ls to rnakt· i:l SllnJ!ar frel'Zl' .
P1·rhaps that 1s not tht• exad worduu• of tilt' pruposl•d il'J.!ISI(:I IIlln but
IS llt'i:ll' t'llOUJ.!/1 that you gl'f !ht•
1-!t'lll'ralrdt•a . Tht·y pomt out that till'
lw n countrrt•:-; are pral'tlcally equal
mnucll'ar s tn: n,~ th a nd a frl'l'Zl' now
wnuld gJ\'t' neither t'ountry i:tll ad·
van ta gt• . R1'C!f.Wil and Ha1 g struck
w1th thl' STAHT plan whtch lht·)·
dt·\· lst•d . Senator Kennedy has po1n·
kd out lh&lt;Jt frl'l'Zl' le~ is lat io n and
rwgotJat JIHl l'!I Uld be &lt;iccurnpllstwd
in lllonths while thl' START plan
rould takt• .\ l'ct rs.
Snnrlar lt'J..! ISia twn has bl'rn lll·
lrodu('t'd 111 tht · Hnu:;t· of Repre~l'll·
tatrn•s. lllany state leg rsla tures, and
111 t'liJt':-; &lt;tlld towns O\'t'r thl' t'lllll'l'
t"nuntry . Pnl ls ha v1· shown that 75
rwrn·nt of tht· jwop!t• an• m f1:1 vu r of
ct frel'Zl' . Pt·uplt• a rc worH.il'nng just
when tlw I.!O\'t'nlllh'nt of the Unrll'd
St&lt;Jh's will t'alt'h up w1th the w1shes
of liS Cltl Zl'llS .

ltHnk rl 's fi ve nunutes to ctern rty. ··
R1ght now , With fighting over the
Falklands in the South AtlantiC between England and Argentrna, with
ReCJgan and Haig openly declanng
lh1s I'OU ntry on the Side uf England
and Cuba and Russ1a fa vunng
Argl'ntma. 11 may t•\·en now be latl'r
than Wl' tl1111k . Unless the Unrtell
NC:~twns is successful 111 negotiating
Hlll'lld to the ('Onflrct, anything ran
happt·n. I wuuiJ n •commend th&lt;Jt
L'\'t'l')' one wnk tlw ir Se n;tturs and
Ht•pr, ·senlatl vt•s suprwrtJng tlw
fn •t•zt•.
Isn't yo ur lrft • worth a ft•w pnstagt•
sta r11ps''

$400
REBATE"
Direct From The
Dealer ..•

CB900 Custom

Regular 13,695
Rebate - 400 '''

'3,295

Tht' pn·sc nl adnnms lratltln , by

wonts and art1ons. has brought us
ciOSt'l"
to whol1•sall' nucll'iJI'
it has everythmg to ga m. Evt•nJf tht•
dt·va
stcrllun
llli:l ll Wl' ha n · t'\'l'f' bet·n.
news 1s nut fa vora ble, thr publrt· IS
Pn·srdt·nt
Rt·a
ean h·d thl' way w1th
prepared tu respond on the basts of
realism, not fantasy . That 111 1tse lf Js h&gt;OSl' tcrlk of i:l l11n.flod nw ll•ar war .
a massive cuntnbution to a war l'f. Hm g fullnwt•d v.. 1lll thr ~CJb nf a
"dt'lTltlllstrallon" fll'ln g of a nuclear
furl .
Far from liurtmg the Bnt1 sh d furt weapon . In tt·sllnHlll) beforl' tlw
rn this unfortunat~ war, publicalrun Sen&lt;Jlt• t'O illllll llee l&lt;i~ l Wl't'k,
of the wildly exaggerated Argentim· Senator Hatfwld sc.ud , ·· we arT· not
daims can only ha ve enhanced the runn1n g against tht' calendar . We
an· runnm g agamst ttw clock and I
Bntish reputation for reliability.
One Amen can correspondent's
n·sponse to the obstacles of n'porifunba~ ~imro • .irntinrl
ttng from the war zone surfaced 1n a
USPS 52!HJOO
rec•mt Washington Post dispatch:
A Mullimctlia Newspltpt'f
"Sometimes I just listen to the news 1 Pubhsl'll&gt;d el:lt.'h Sunday, ~ Th1rt.l
Avenue, by tl~ Ohio Vallt'y Pub!Js hmK
from the BBC, and l report it frurn
Company· Mullunrtha, Inc. Sei.'Oilt.l das.s
pos
l&lt;:l~e patti at Galhpohs, Oh1o, 45631
Buenos Aires."
EntNt•tl as St.'t.'Oilt.l dass rna.lm~ rnatter
That technique may lea ve
&lt;~I Pomeroy, Otuu. Post Offl~·c
something to be desired in the way of
Mt•lnl&gt;cr T! w ASSI)L'J&lt;IIt•d Pres~. [ni&lt;~Htl
reporting initiative, but it test1fi es to
Da1lv Prt'Ss AssouatJnn and the
Alll~l'lt ' illl
No•wsp&lt;IJH'r Pulll1 shcrs
a reputation that is not gained easi ly
Assllt'ld(Jnll , NalJ&lt;nlal AdV t'f iJsJn~
- and should never be disca rded for
Ht'prcsenlatiH, Branho.Jill. 17117 West
Nult' Mdt• Ht•iid , Smlt· 204 . O..tnul.
momentary convenience in the heat
M1du.,;&lt;l11 , 4807:.
of battle.

CB750 Custom

Regular 13,195
Rebate - 400 "

'2,795

SJOO
REBATE '.,

SUR..o,;f'J{II"TION IL\Tl':.."'

F\} Cu rrit·r ur Mulur Huult'

$1.00
S-HO
$5280

0111'\.l.l'l'k

Ollt• Mun\!1
Ont• }'t'd l
S INC;U; ( OI'Y
PHI('E
:1&amp; C't·nl.~

CB6c0

Regular 12,595
Rebate - 300 ,.

Nu :.ul ~cn pt tolb 0) tuad Jl&gt;l_'l'lllllit't.l 111
tu~o~.u:. who•n• ho•lllt' t'iUrtt•r :.crv Jt't' ~ ~

ava lla blt• .
Tht• Suud;t) Tnllt's·S..· rllllll'l wtll lltll I.K·
rcsptHIS IIJi t• fur atl vaHt't' \)&lt;1\ lilt' Ill~ lliillh'
IIJ t'oiJTll'fS

$2,295
'Re b.Ji c

MAll . SUUSCHIPTIC)NS
Sunduy Only

120 80

On c\'t'&lt;H'
' SIX

1IHmths

$10

~0

Dail y 1tlld SundH)'
Ohin and Wt·~ t \'ir,~ inia

Out· }'C&lt;If

SJ900

S1x month

$20.80
$1 2.35

Thrt't' 1111111( hs

Ruh·s

Oulstdt· Oh111

und Wo•s( Virginiu
0111'

$44 20

yt·ar

S1x uwnlhs

Thrtoc months

.

S2J 40
$13 00

.lpploc ~

These are not wrecked or
damaged units!

BETZ

HONDA SALES
Upper Rt . 1

For the Graduate

·' The Cai-Q-Ciutch
, The most amaztng clutch of
all .. a luxurious top gram

leather checkbook clutch
that has the added con·
venience

of

a

sllmline

calculator that can be used
without being removed
from the clutch. She'll use
It time and time again, day

after day .

Buxton

to pur c h.JH' proct'

Each Chipper dinner
Includes: Two golden brown
fish filets, crisp trench tries,
creamy cole llaw, and two
southern style hush puppies.
J(ltlor erplre&amp; .Me 2. 1982).

Captain
........ D's.

Ga lltpolt s, Oh.

�f "ilg e- A 4 -

r he

~ und ily

r 1111 CS

'Kiddy -pom'•.•

JVSD levy...
\Continued from pd ge AI )

tions supporting the levy. The Gal·
lla County and Wellston boards will
act on slmllar resolutions at their
Monda y night meetings.
" Our school Is really responding
to the program, a nd I'd like to see
us support the levy," said J oan
Schmidt , a me mber of the Gallipolis City Baord of Education, at the
board 's meeting las t Wednesday.
Board mem ber J ames N.M. Da·
vis concurred.
" I wen I out a nd visited the school,
and there's not a thing out there I
dldn 't li ke," he said. "There are a
lot of young people out there."
In the campa[gn , Brockwa y lndl·
ca ted supporters are emphasizing
tha t th e levy Is a renewal a nd
means no add itional tax monies are
being taken out of the county.
He also said none of the money
ra ised from the levy Is to help fin is h
the new Human Resou rce Center
adjoining the Buc keye Hills complex. Funding lor tha t structure.

May 23 , 1982

l' o m e ro y- M idd le p o rt - Gal lipo lis , O h1 o- Poi nt P lea s a n t, W . Va

~e nt 111 e l

sched uled to be opened In August,
was obta ined through the Appal·
achla n Regional Commission and
other s ta te and federa l sounces.
Brockway said the campaign Is
being conducted In a low-key fa shion, and he estima tes various
groups associa ted with the levy
have spoken to nearly 1,000 groups.
" We've received excellent support fro m parents, al umni a nd the
advisory commi ttee members,'' he
sa id. " It Indicates to me people
have been ha ppy with the qua li ty of
ed uca Uon we uUer. It's always
gra tifying to get support from pas t
gradu a tes."
Presently, the dl$trict serves 85
students from Gall la Academy, 35
from Ha nnan Trace, 62 from J ackson, 32 from Kyger Creek, 61 !rom
North Gallla, 63 from Oak HU!, 52
fro m Southwestern ; 107 !rom VInton County and 110 !rom Wells ton .
This doesn't Inc lude the 104 now
a ttending Buckeye Valley, Brock·
way said.

Rain ~

f'omero y- M iddl eport- Ga ll ipo ll s, O h 10- P o 1nt Pl c a s.1 nt , w.

There's Going To Be A

- Birthday Par ty 'I

1,

As a special thank you to a ll you good folk s
who ha ve been s o nice to us, we're giving
fr om 10% to 40% off e ve rythin g in th e
sto re.

Vow to fight •..
stay."
But Argentina's otflclal Telam
news agency said Britain m a naged
to land just 400 tnoops In the San
Carlos area, that they "are com pletely controlled" and were "beIng c leaned up" by Argentine
forces Saturday.
The British staged their attack on
the F alklands when the weather
cleared slightly after a winter
stonn.

v,, _

r h f'

~u nd .1y

~c nt~n c l -

Ttm es

P.lge- /1. -S

Officials gear for prison riots

Tribune classifieds sell

1 Continued from page Ali
Farber said. Ms. Shannon Is accused of paying the girls and allowIng her apartment to be used for the
photo sessions.
Guthrie Is named In the Indictme nt for allegedly aldlng and abetting the Interstate transportation
for sale of photos showing children
engaged In sexua lly explicit acts,
Farber said.
F arber said tha t Hedgecock, a
former U.S. Army Corps of E ngineer s/ photographer, loaned ca-

(Continued from page AI )
He said this Includes a ll elements of
the task force and Its maritime
supply line strung out across the
Atlantic. Previous estimates put
the total Brtllsh fo rce at about 5,000
men.
Asked aboul Argentine claims to
ha ve "complete control" of British
la nding forces, Donkln said the
British assault "has not been repelled, nor will It be. We are there to

M il y 2J, 1982

lflldua&amp;ed from Glenville stale CoDege In l.lM8
BDd received hermasterslromWestVIrglnla University live yean later. Sbe holds a plaque presented to
her by Hoben Bowen, left, county !IUperbllendenl,
BDd Harold Rouah, president ol the Meigs County

BONORED - Gre&amp;aSuUie,elenlealal'y~
lor Melp Couu&amp;y Scboola lor tbe pull&amp; yean, wu
boaored Friday nlpt by tbe CClldy board ol educaUoa 8lld 8&amp;atf a&amp; tbe Melp County Selllor Cltlr.ellll

YOU AREALL INVITED TO COME HELP CELEBRATE
&amp; PARTAKEOF REFRESHMENTS &amp; BARGAINS!

~

Ceuter. She's reUriDg adter 38 yean 181111 educaior .

Board ol Education.

LANSING, Mich. (AP) - When
Inmates seized a cellbock at a prison In April, state corrections o!!lclals shuddered - feartng t he
takeover would spark rtots at other
prtsons like those whic h caused $9.1
rn1111on In damage a year ago.
This time , the system held, and In
three hours, the Inmates who seized
a cellblock at the new Huron Valley
Correctional Facillty near Ypsl·
la ntJ surrendered. But the Incide nt
Aprll30 was a grlm reminder of last
May's uprlslngs at three prtsons,
which Injured about 751nmates, 68
guards a nd 10 pollee o!!lcers and
firefighters.
"Sprtng and early summer Is
your highest rtsk period,'.' said Department of Corrections Director
Perry Johnson.
Rioting broke out one year ago
today at the State Prison of South-

ern Michigan In Jackson a nd the
Michigan Reformatory at Ionia.
Four days la ter. on May 26, a nother
uprtslng began at J ac kson and the
Marquet1t Bra nch Prtson .
Now, Inma tes have less freedom
and In some cases less opportunity
for education or job training. Over·
crowding persists, w1tl1 som e prt soners a t J ackson bunking In
sta irwells for lack of cells .
Although a 1981 law soon wU I ixlnvoked for the second time to a llow
parole 90 days early for some prisoners when the system exceeds
capacity , new prtsons are still
needed , J ohnson said .
Guards were blamed lor trigger Ing the firs t rtot by tryln g to lock
down the J ackson prison to search
cells lor weapons. They still com plain about safety and Inadequate
staff levels . but dozens of officers

aN' being laid off due to cuts In the
state budget .
Johnson also has lm poSI'd a hi rIng freeze throughoul the system.
"We're below riot levels." said
Fred Parks, director of the guards'
union, the 3,000-mem ber Mic higan
Correc llons Organi zat ion. "ll's
very shaky. The prtsons are headIng Into summer very vu lnera ble."
Relat ions betw('('n priso n officials and the un ion are also strained
by a stalemate over negotiat ions on
wage concE&gt;sslnns dema nded frotn
e mp loyee '
Cov. William
Milliken.
SUll pending from th&lt;' 1!1~1 riots
a re two dozen union grll'\·a nces.
about 90 inmate law suit s a1H! ·~~e n~
than ll crimina l cases. "Thb ·lJJ
go o n fo r years," .Johnson said

FRIDAY, MAY 28, 10 TIL 8
SAT., MAY 29, 10TIL 5

SnowQ

TRUST US.FOR HOTPOINT
AND GENERAL ELECTRIC
APPLIANCES AT
DISCOUNT PRICES

SUPER TIRE SALE

4-P~Tire

CD·Diil DIRECTOR

STEEL BELTEDRADIAL
showers Sunda y for parlii of Ariwna . Nt·w Mt· xko. Ulah, Colorado.

Special - Special
20 Cu. Ft.

Wyoming, Neb raska , Ka nsas, Oklahonw , Arkansas. thl' Gu U Coast
region and thl' Slluthl·rn and Cl·ntra l Atlantic Coast region . Rain is prcdkted for parts of thl· Grt•at lakl•s rl'g imt. Iowa . Pt·nnsy lvania . New York
and New England. tAP Lasrrpholo) .

CC·DP

LOW ROLLING
RESISTANCE MEANS
BETTER GAS MILEAGE

WEATHF:R FOR EC AST - Thl' Nationa l Weat her Sl'rvi&lt;'e predids

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11'111 0&lt;1Qini i1Quoomeol ~ ,_, 011 VOU' car
Two pol~ler cord oocty plies oomOoneo:l

POLY

willl two lull-wtdlh $tell lllltt tor long
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58

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21 Cu. Ft. •
Ft.

• • •

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$204

$63

• • • • • • • • • •

$232

Set of 4

E.1c h

Setof4
~160
Save $2 3.3 2-$3 1.84 p e r set

EZ0- 14

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F78· 14or15
G78-14 or 15
A78-14orJ5

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Setof 4

~ 148
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s $52

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P215175R · 14 or 15
P225175R -14 or 15 F. ACH

15 Cu. Ft.
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DLB2650
'20

WHEEl. ALIGNMENT

95

$

ELECT

CALL TODAY
FORAN
APPOINTMENT

RONALD K. CANADAY
GALLIA COUNTY AUDITOR

:----ciWTHiscouPON _____ j

DEMOCRAT

AMAN OF PROVEN ABILITY

I

I

WHO STANDS UP FOR:
.FAIR PROPERTY VAlUATION
.THE INDIVIDUAl
•couNTY

~

PREMIUM QUAUTY II wtwlmle p!lcesl

-----~ • Frozen fruits and vegetabl es
• Fresh beef &amp; po rk
• Finest cheeses
• Ham, bacon &amp; c old cuts

I

1

DISCOUNT ON ANY ALIGNMENT

a..--~~~~~--"'1""-----l!~J~l~~!._ ____ j
'· BAnERY

.

• Oth er spec ialti es, all at who lesale prrces

DIRECTORONLY

• None sold without advance order

WHO STANDS AGA INST:
• EXCESSIVE TAXATION .
.GOVERNMENTAl WASTE
.NONESSENTIAL SPENDING

lfS WORTH

$300

PREMIUM QUALITY

~

DCC2650

• An n1ver sa r v Spectal Porta
Cool • A1r Condi tioner • 4000
B T U . 7 5 Am ps, 11 5 Vol ts .
A d 1us t abl e th er mo s t ~ t
•
Car r y1nq h!ln dl e •
Wu ic k
M oun t pa nel s • Wood q r a1n
took ModC'I K TJ04 F

$50.00
Discount

TELEVISIONS
ALL ON SALE
THE REST OF
THE MONTH.

0 Oet u~e 23 S cu 11 1el re shmen t cen·
ter w1th •CC &amp; wate r thru lhe door 0
AdtuSt&lt;IDte g1ass slletves 0 Automat iC
energy ·savc' sys1cm 0 Conyer1 1ble
m eat cond1t10ncr 0 Scaled N F1esh
fru •t / vege ta b 'e Kee pe r 0 Ro lt·o ut
wheel s
MOdel CSFZ1DA

IJ .

_J

;"'j

'

I

J

. '1
·il

SAVE ' 150

LE

FORD PICKUP SET TOE

'4295

.•

MAINTENAN.CE FPI=I=

ONLY$16 95

Satis fac lion G uara nteed

Warranty 3 months or 3,000 miles

BAnERY
QUALIFIED TO SERVE
GALLIA COUNTY AS AUDITOR

SPECIAL

17 years experience appraising Gallia County residenttal, farm, commercial and industrial properties.

AND OIL"CHANGE

·~·.
~

Majored in accounting at Ohio.University

. , TRY US -

U.S. Air Force Veteran
ORDER D\=ADLINE:

F onner fire and casualty and life insurance agent.

1-21-·12

Currently owner and operator of Canaday Realty, 25
Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio
· ··

PICKUP DATE:

Life long resident of Gallia County. Presently resides
on a fa rm in Addison Twp.

PICKUP TIME:

~aid

SPECIAL
ON
SHOCKS
AND
. BRAKES

1-30-12

WHOLESALE
FOOD SALE

us

TODAY
FOR YOUR
CAR
NEEDS

.

'
~. ~.

.... .. ._"' .

SAVE$15000

SAVEs15000 SAVE s1oooo

BUY NOW AND SAVE

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Olive a little and SMIIol - F111 tltliftry within 75 miles
Yes, Wesemc•ll JOUr locll Holpolnt Dultr
Storellolrs: 1:30 ID 5:30; MOl Closed at 5:00P.M.

tor by Candidate

•Stmna Mtip, Glllia

(

.

YES, WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

REBEnER

Senile ..... Wio . . . . . c-tlol

''

.. , ....

POMEROY LANDMARK

JICl II. toner, lp.
Orillolil1lt 114- olol-f,. Mlliooy-75Yos, .......... ,_.~ ....
Slaro Hlors: I:JIIo5:ll. M a-lii 5:tl P.l.

10:00 e.m.-12:00 noon

"ftLL

. ,j

)

Mason Counties

LANDMARK .

�p,,ge- A-6- Th e Su nday

F'omeroy - Midd le port- Ga llipoli s, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

T1mes - ~e nt1n e l

May 23, 1982

w. va .

May 13, 1Y82

discomforts.

The 169th GAHS commencement
was held In the gym due to ratn, a
stark contrast to last year's openair cen&gt;monlPs held on Memortal
Field.
Despite the conditions, the class
of 1982 wa s adv ised by State Sen.
Oliver Ocasek, D-Northfleld, to
take advantage of the estimated
$UO.!XXJ spent to educate each of
thr m and rise above the ordinary .
The vetera n leg1slator said theseniors were fortunate to receive high
school diplomas In a world tn which
the average man outside the Unlted
States gets by on a second grade
education.
"I wou ld suggest to you tDnlght
you are God's chosen children,"
Ocasek said , teillng them that If
they cannot be on top of everything,
then strtve to be the master of a
lesser goal and work up from there.
"We can't a ll be captains, we
have to be crew," he said as he concluded his seven-minute address.
Ocasek was Introduced by Dona ld Staggs, supertntendent of the
Gallipolis City School Dlstrtc t.
~ The class was presented by PrJ.
1nclpal John Ellingson. Dr. Gene
Abels. president of the city board of
education, presented diplomas . He
was assisted by James Pope, asststant GAHS prtnclpal.
Baccalaureate services were
held under the direction of the Rev.
Denny Ccbum of the Gallipolis
Chris tian Church. Anne Fischer
played the processional on plano as
the seniors entered the gym and
took their seats. Band director Rod
Tolliver led the graduates and spec·
tators In a rendition of the "AmerIca, the Beautiful."
Musical selections were per·
formed by the Madrigals.
Eillngson presented the honorary awards. This year, a record
was set when slx seniors shared the
46th Academic Key. They were
Kenneth Clark, Janice Eva ns,
Sarah Evans, Daniel Klskls, Keith

Anne Oliver and Donna Workman.
Clark was given the Science
Award, Workman the English
Award, and Klskls the fifth annual
award tn mathematics.
Annie Wiseman received the 45th
annual award as outstanding senior In music . P hllllp King became
the 46th annual outstanding senior
In athletics for men and Sarah
Eva ns was named the seventh annual outstanding female senior In
athletics .

"

Sponsors were Mr. and Mrs. Don
Robinson, In memory of their
daughter, Mallonee; Holzer Clinic
Ltd.; the Gallipolis Lions Club; the
Rio Grande Lions Club; a nd the
Gallipolis Kiwanis Club.
Clark Is the son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
James Clark. tn addition to achievIng a 4.0 grade average, he has participated In the National Honor
Society, the scholarship team, JunIor Classical League, the Thespians, Madrigals and symphonic
choir.
Daughter of Mrs. Harold Wiseman and the late Mr. Wiseman, Annie Wiseman was In marching
band, symphonic band, brass
choir, a barltone for one year,
marching band section leader for
two years, symphonic choir, choreographer for the Madrigals and
the show choir, participated tn four
years' worth of musicals a nd had
the lead In the recent production of
"Hello, Dolly."
A member of the NHS, scholarship team, Key Club, Varsity G,
J unlor Classical League, the symphonic choir and vollyeball team,
J anice Evans Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmie Evans.
Sarah Evans, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Clyde Evans, has been on
the student council, NHS, scholarship team, Varsity G, French Club,
symphonic choir, Madrigals, band,
basketball, volleyball and track.
Klskls has been on the student
council, NHS a nd the scholarship
team. His parents are Zole Klskls
and James Klskls.
Oliver served on the Galllan Business staff, was a GalllaScrlpt salesman , In the NHS, Tri-HI-Y,
scholarship team, Junior Classical

League, French Club, band, flag
corps, woodwind choir, pep band
and co-editor of the 1982 Galllan.
She's the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
J ames Oliver.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Workman, Donna Workman
has been on the NHS, scholarship
team, Volunteens and the Spanish
Club.
King participated In football, basketball and baseball durtng h1s four
years at GAHS, being all-SEOAL,
all southeast dlstrtct and best receiver In 19BO and 1981. He was also
voted best defensive back tn 1981,
and tha t year's most valuable
player.

In basketball, King was again allSEOAL, a ll southeast dlstrtct, best
fo ul shot tn 1981, chalked up the
most assists In 1982, was that year's
best foul shot and 1982's MVP. AliSEOAL and all southeast dlstrtct tn
baseball. he was MVP in 1981 a nd
'82.
Sarah Evans was all-SEOAL In
volleyball for two years and the
team's MVP. She was also allSEOAL for four years, SEOAL
MVP for two years, named to the
All-Ohio second team tn 198L the
first team tn '82 and received honorable mention all-Ohio tn 19BO.
The top 10 percent ot th1s year's
graduating class were Identified by
gold tassels on their caps. They
were:
GlnHy Adams, Linda Adkins,
Mark Allen, Clark, Janice Evans,
Sarah Evans, Teresa Hennesy,
Scott Janey, Klskls, John Moore,
Matthew O'Donnell, Oliver, Paula
Phipps, Loretta Powell , Lelsa
Schllltng, Patrtcla Sheets, Betsy
Stapleton, Robbie Syrus, Jean
Vance, Wiseman and Workman.
Receiving diplomas were:
John Wilha m A-ckerman , Ten; · lA.'t' Adams,

Gmny Adams, Eugem• H. Adkins II. Unda Sue
Adkins, P1etro Aldc n ~l Jr .. Lisa Dawn Allen,
Mark Thomas Allen, Monl&lt;'a J . Ano:l'lo, Tony Armstrong, Kevm EuKcnt• Arthur . Jeffrey Todd
Baird, Edwan.l W1Lsun BHrllctlc, Dwayne Brent

Beard and Tcrt!S&lt;l Beaver
Thonuts N. Bl·khcr , Russt'\1 Pearl Bergdoll,
Carl Husscll Bing Jr ., Mdmda Mane Boord ,
Dol\lild l~e Brown J r ., Douglas 0 Brown , Melin-

da Kay Brumfi eld, Robt•rt D. Brwnfield, Teresa

Junt• Burnette, Sl·ou A. BU!ih. Patrkk Bouvier

I Oil production reduction to continue

Area deaths

Ocasek urges GAQS graduates to
•
nse above ordinary at ceremony
GALLIPOLIS - The atmosphere was st1lllng, a thunderstorm
raged outside and cameras fiashed
everywhere, but the spllit of 213
graduating Gallla Academy High
Sc hoo l seniors overrode a ll

•·omcroy- Middleport- Gallipolis , Ohio- F'oint P lea sa n!, w . \ a .

Eftel A. FeUure

Casto, Roger Lee Ca!rto, Ca rla D. Cheney,
Donald Ray Cheney and The rill Clal{g.
Kenneth J . Clark, Brent Charl~s Coburn,
Deborah Lynn Cook, James E. Copley , Ronald
F:. Corbin, Charles Brian Corwin, John R. Craft ,
Michael Gerald Crart, Donald R. Ctalgo, Cathy
D. Crews, Tholl"'&amp;&amp; Marte Cwrunood, JotUI &amp;:'Ott
Canaday ; Mark Randall Dailey, Steve Day and
Angela Sue Ot!nnbon.
Charles W. Dillon , Shari Lynn Dixon, Lorena
Lynn Drummond, Pa ul Jacbon Duncan, Rrian
Eads, Brian Hunter Eberhardt, Rebecca Bliss
Elberfeld, Regina Eskew, Robert Jeryl Eutsler,
Janice K. Evans, Sarah lei~h Evans , Darlene
Shortridge Ferrell, Teresa LyM Feustel, James
C. Fife and D. Lori Fisher .
James D. Foley, Howard JO!itph FOti:ter,
Phillip L. Fraley, Gre,~tory l.ee Gallagher, Mar·
tin A. Glenn, Christina 1.. Glover, April Palllette
Gordon, Bradley Allen Graham, Kenneth Gray,
Amy Corlne Green, James Howard Griffin, Ronda June Halley , Kelly R. Hamilton, Roberta Ann
Hamilton and Sheryl AnnHard}'man.
Brian Harold, Srotl Alan Harrington, Debra
Lynn Hayslip, Judy L. Heck, Tere:sa Ann Hennesy, Robert Duane Herdman II , Larcy J . Hill,
Lucinda Denise Hollingshead, Donna Marie
Houck, Shari Lynn Howard, Scott A. Janey ,
James Joseph Johnston, Kelli Kai Kemper, Lori
A. Kemper and Christy Marie Kerns.
Mark Undsey Killen, JlllTieS Hamlin King,
Phillip Andrew King, Te~ Lanette King, Daniel
Lee Kiskis, Tamera Lynn Knox, Dean Martin
Kuhn, Janet Sue Kuhn, Timothy Lawrence
Lanier, Belynda Karyl Layne, Carol Jean Layne ,
Emily E. Layne, Kurt D. Lentz, Jon David Lewis
. and Vincent Todd Lockhart.
Julia Ann Love, Gina Ray LAlwery, Donnie
Elmore McCallister, Jamie Lynn ~cQuai d,
Janette Renee Martyn, Tina Alln Masten,
George Michael Medas, Benjamin P. Meek, An.L,ny James Melvan, Donald Scott Miller,
.,.even David Miller, Nancy Ellen Millltead,
Jamey Renee Mink, Danny Dwayne Mitchell and
Jolm Ot!rek Moore.
Joseph M. Myers, Ronald Dean Myers, Barry 1
Robert Nebon, Robert Dean Nibert, Jonathan
Wayne O'Dell, Matthew Tope O'Donnell , Keith
AMe Oliver, Jacqueline Kay Owens, John Kevin
Parsons, J oh n Anthony Pa:Jquale, Michael
Pasqua le. Randa ll Jay Patrick. Jennifer lee
Perkins, Paula Jeannette Phipps and Tazruny Jo

PLINY, W.Va. - Ercel A. Fellure, 85, PUny, died at8p.m. Friday Iva Keister Young
at h1s residence.
Born June 8, 1896, In Crown City.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Iva
son of the late Marton and Se- Keister Young, 89, of 726 Ninth
lemma Beaver Fellure, he was a Ave., Huntinglon, died Friday at
retlted carpenter and fanner and her residence.
attended Mount Union United
Born May 26, 1892, In GreenbotMethodist Church.
tom, W.Va ., she was the daughter
Surviving Is his wife, Edith Whitt of the late John and Marvallna WelFeUure; two sons, Hoy of Fraziers ling Keister.
Surviving Is her husband, J ames
Botlom, W.Va., and Lester of Eleanor, W.Va.; four daughters, Mrs. W. Young; a sister, Alta Camp of
Zeda Ferguson, Mrs. Hettie Ham- · Point Pleasant; and a brother,
mond and Mrs. Emma Hammond, John of St. Petersburg, F1a.
all of PUny, and Mrs. Avaline ChapGraveside services will be held at
man of Apple Grove; a brother, 10: ~ a.m. Monday at Woodmere
Abbey of Peace Cemetery, HunOval of Bellville; 20 grandchildren;
37 great-grandchildren and two tington, with the Rev. Harold E. Slgreat-great-grandchildren.
mones ottlclating. Frlends may
Funeral services will be an- call at the Kllngle-Carpenter Mornounced later by the Raynes Fun- tuary, Huntington, from &amp;-8 p.m .
eral Home, Buttalo, W.Va. Frlends today.

POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE -To the lltraiDs of Elpr's famllaF

graduaUoD theme, the llnl of the 19112 GaiDa Academy Jll&amp;b School
paduates IDee Into the GABS JY111 Friday nllhL 'lbe IIChool awarded

m

diploma&amp;

By JAMES GERSTENZANG
"-llated Press Witter
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan Is keeping "an ear to
the ground," waluDg for an opportunity to help tlnd a solution that
will end the flghllng between Brl·
tsln and Argentina over the Falkland Islands, h1s spokesman says.
But White House ottlclals were
not optimistic about the chances
that the administration could play a
role soon tn stopping the fighting In
the South Atlantic.
Reagan has decided to help the
Brltlsh effort by allowing the use of
U.S. aerial tankers by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, freeIng Brltlsh aircraft used by the alliance for use tn the Falkland
Islands effort, aecordlng to an administration o!flclal, who asked
that he not be Identified.
Pentagon officials said the U.S.
Air Force normally maintains a
number of KC-1.'15 aerial tankers at
bases In Brltaln, as It does In other
parts of the world, and that '1\e air·
craft In Britain are available for
use In helping the Brttlsh as needed.
No special brleflngs were scheduled today for the president unless
there Is a change tn the situation In
the South Atlantic, deputy White
House press secretary Larry
Speakes said Frlday.
"He'll have an ear to the ground
tor any opportunity to step In and
help with a solutlon ... lf there's any
glimmer (of hope)," Speakes said.
At the State Department, spokesman Dean Flscber emphasized the
administration's willingness to help
seek a solution. Referring to the
United Nations Securlty Ccuncll resolution calling for a cease-tire and
Argentine withdrawal !rom the Islands seized !rom the Brltlsh on
April 2, he said:
"The United States has been concerned all along that !allure to Implement United Nations Securlty
Ccuncll resolution 502 would lead to
more Intense fighting. We continue
to favor a poUtlcal solution and
stand ready to belp the parties

Jody M. PLymale, Shari Lynn Plymale, Mary
Bdh Porter. Loretta lngred Powell , John Gera ld

DELIVEIIS BENEDICliON- The Rev. Denny ColiiJm of the Galllpolls Cbrl8llan Chlll'cll clelvered the benedlclloa 8lld baccalaureate
service to the GABS padente•

Jean Vunce, Kimbt:rl~y Cecil!! VillHOn, Sherry
Ann Walter , Dumne Kay Wandling, Rene\' Annette Ward J erry A. Warren, Timothy Paul Watson Brent 'Lendris West, Anne Jane Wiseman,
Matthew Allan Withee, Jarnt.&gt;s Michael Wonn,
Allen C. Wood, William J. Wood, Donna C. Workman and Chnslinc Marie Wuerch.

•
1982 GAHS honorary key Wl-nners

OOASEK SPEAKS -IUIIIII above the Ol'IIIDu7 to Jll8lter their OWD
Uves waalbe theme ~ In a brief ~by state Sea. Oliver
Ocuek of Nortldleld

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) - The
world oll cartel has decided to continue restrtcllng production and retain Its current base prlce, potnllng
to stable or slightly higher costs th1s
summer for consumers In oilImporting countrtes.
The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC)
agreed Friday to continue Indefinitely Its production celltng of 17.5
mllllon barrels dally In hopes that
economic recovery In the lndustrtallzed West will boost oil demand
later th1s year.
But even If demand picks up,
OPEC Is unlikely to raise prlces

at Friday's IJ'llduatloa cereniOIIIes at

GB:Ila

Aaldemy Jll&amp;b 8cllooL

GALLIPOLIS -Ten cases were
ended by J udge James A. Bennett
Frtday and another conllnued tn
Gallipolis Municipal Ccurt.
Clarence Thompson, Gallipolis,
charged with lnsuttlclent funds tn
Clinton Ccunty, Ky ., case continued
to June 21 for extradition purposes.
Charged with DWI, fined $3)),
sentenced to four days tn jaU, drtvwork toward that end."
ers license suspended for slx
Speakes said that Reagan has
months and placed on slx months
had no direct contact with Brltlsh
probation was Lionel B. Trtplett, 35,
Prime Mini s ter Margar e t
Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
Thatcher, Argentine President
Samuel Meade, 22, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
Leopold Galtlert or Javier Perez de
charged with no operator's license,
Cuellar, the secretary general of
fined $25, sentenced to one day In
the United Nations.
jaU and placed on 18 months probaReagan was given an updated retion; charged with reckless operaport on the fighting Friday altertion, fined $25.
noon and atlended a National
Each ch;lrged with fallu re to
Securlty Council meeting earller In
yteld and for1elting $40 bond were
the day.
Dell Vansickle, 75, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
The president was given the reand Moutlh Skein!, 43, Gallipolis.
port after the Brttlsh announced
J effrey L. Clendenin, 21, Point
that their forces landed on the FalkPleasant, charged with failu re to
land Islands and destroyed 16 Arobey a traffic control device, for1egentine aircraft. Brttlsh Defense
lted $40 bond.
Minister John Nott said Argentina
Charged with left of center and
damaged five Brltlsh ships, two of
for1elting $40 bond was Carol S.
them severely, and downed two
Caldwell, 23, Cclumbus.
Brltlsh helicopters.
Teddy A. Bowen, 32, Rt. 1, Crown
City, charged with failure to obey a
~-------;------------------1

JANICE EVANS
(Academics)

A11JAIIIllll DIPIJ()MA -Mettt

Pulsar Quartz.
Always a beat beyond. In technology. In value.

--

... SECOND AYINUI • - -

~::==,----·

CIIIIIOCiiTY

at Frl-

DANIEL KISKIS
( Academlcs-Malbematlcs)

KEITH ANNE OlJVER
(Academics)

Tri-County News
to expand ·coverage

DONNA WORKMAN
(Academlcs-Enllab)

GAUJPOLIS- Ohio Valley Publishing Co. will offer advertisers
Total Market Coverage (TMC) In Meigs, Gallia and Mason counties
beginning June 2 with four-fold circulation expansion of its weekly TriCounty News, Publisher Robert Wingett announced ti)!W.y• ....•
Tri-County News circulation Will increase from about 3,000 to over
l4,'ooo with introduction 1'1 TMC, Wingett said. The weekly will be
distributed via the U.S. Postal System to a)! households in the tricounty with exception of those In the corporate limits of Gallipolis,
!!oint Pleasant, Pomeroy and Middleport.
"Prov.idlng our advertisers with facilities to obtain TMC, through
the.Tri-County News and our news1111pers,' is obviously a bold step in
these economically challenging times," remarked the OVPC
publisher, "But the potential benefits to area merchants convinced us
to proceed with our plans."
It was explained that the Tri-County New~~ will not be mailetl to
Pomeroy, Middleport, Galllpolla and Point Pleasant postal patrons ·
since OVPC newspapers already hl!ve over 90 percent penetration in

Joint committee _to issue signalization survey
GALLIPOLIS - Questionnaires
on the trat!lc signalization program
In Gallipolis will be distributed In
local stores starting next week to
gauge public opinion on the
program.
The questionnaire bas been prepared by a joint committee !rom
the Gallipolis Retall Merchants Association, the chamber ot commerce and the city commission.
Questions on the brlef survey ask
residents It they are pleased with
signalization, and provides space
for responses tor yes and no reactions. It also offers respondents a
choice of what they like or dislike
about the program - tum slgnals,

pedestrian safety, tines, or strict
enough enforcement.
Jan Thaler, a committee
member !rom the merchants association, said thecommltteehasmet
twice since Its Inception last month
at a city commission meeting,
when local merchants and rest,, dents complained of safety and
parking problems created when the
city removed stop lights along Second Avenue. ·
The program was Instituted last
fall alter a major repaving ot Se- .
cond was completed. The project
tnchlded the placement ot safety,
walk-don't walk signals at corners
and strtplng Intersections for tum

lanes.
The project's purpose, according
to city oftlclals, was to Improve
tratflc !low on Second through the
city.
Ccmmlttee members are Mrs.
1baJer and Dan Davies, represent'
1ng the merchants; Lester Plymale
and Donald Robinson, trom the
chamber; and City Commissioners
Howard Baker Saunders and
Pierce D, McCreedy.
Mrs. 1baJer said Friday the committee hopes to get an Idea otpubiJC
thinking to resolve compJalnts

lodged by cttlzenl.
At ODe ot their meetlnp, she said

a Third Avenue resident expressed

..

.

'

concern over poulble placement ot
parking meters In front ot residences. 1biB was also trougbt out at
the city cmunlsaloa's April 6
meeting.
The resident, she sald, was concerned becauae he and Ids De!P·
bora don't have drlvewBYJ for their
cars. Mrs. 'nlaler sald theconunlt·

tee, wblch she

exilecta

to meet

again next Monday and every otber
Monday, tocik dawn the l'l!lldellt'a
concerns and offered tome

these townS.
•.
Ohio Valley Publllhlng Co., a wholly owned subildiary of
Multimedia, Inc., publishes The Daily sentinel,-Pomeroy-Middleport;
the Gallipolis Daily Triblme, Point Pleasant Register, all !\llill!*, and 1
the Sunday 'l'lmes-Sentlnel,ln addition to the 1'ri-County News.

ll\lilll!ltliD-

The conunlttee, abe l8ld, lln't far
eDOUih ..., yet to tadlle tbe Third

Avenue

problem, · but bopl!l
within the future.

to

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,~

-r~1ilt Gtto.!AJr.
....

TENNIS WEAR

'•

by Jockey &amp;Campus

..,.
..

JOGGING SUITS

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•.
,.
.....

BIUJOLDS &amp;TRIFOLDS

'•
,_

by Kennington

'•

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••

......
....., Free
.... Gift
,.

••
'·
•••'·

.....

by Levi, Wrangler &amp; Lee

KNIT SHIRTS

by Buxton &amp;Levi

by Saturdays, Jockey,
Kennington, Campus

SWIMWEAR

CUTOFFS

by Laguna

'·
.:-

by Levi &amp;Wrangler

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.
I

.~ra~

Mark Cunningham, 22, Galli polis, $38; Thomas E. Roach,19, Point
P leasant, $39; Ronald D. Martin,
40, Rt. 1, Galllpolls, $43; Richard D.
Smith, 21, Rt. 4, Oak HUI, $43.

Saudis charged Iran with violating
Its q uota and Iran criticized Sa udi
Arabia for Its modrratc stance on
prlclng policy . the sou ra&gt;s said .
It l' known that Iran h&lt;L' ~n
exceeding Its prod uc tion limit of 1.2
million ba r n .. l.s a da y by sPvPral
hundred thousand ba rreb to help
finance It s 19 m onth old hordPr wa1
with Iraq

NOW APPEAR ! NG

STEVE YATES
BAND
Tuesday thru Saturday

9:00P.M. -2:00A.M.
NOON E UND E R 2 1
ADMITT E D

French Quarter
LOUNGE &amp; CARRYCUT

STORE HOURS:

Mon.-Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm
Fri.-Sal 9 am til 10 pm

CLOSED SUNDAYS

Superior
All Meat

daT• pwln•llce eurc~~ea at Gdla~ Jll&amp;bScboOI. Maldncthe
Jlllmdatt...ll Dr. a- Abell, ptlllldeat of the Oa!llpolll Clly Board of
Educadoa. (Ksvla Kelly phatM).

were:

/i

w~,left, -of Mr. lllld MrL

ll'nllclll "Odie" O'DoaDell of GaJ!Ipn!la, receives bl8 diploma

stop sign, forfeited $40 bond.
Forfeiting bond for speeding

For Graduates.
Watches they'll honor
at prices you'll applaud.

ADMISSIONS -'- Hollie Starcher,
Pomeroy; Delbert Huddleston,
Nashport; Rosie Searles, Middleport; Nellie Pr1ce, Middleport.
DISCHARGES - Barbara
Smith, Gary Walker, May Fry,
Mary Kauff, Darlene Curry, James
Hayes, Cheryl Kropka, Robert
Cunningham, Nona Winebrenner.

PHILLIP KING
(AtbW!ce.Male)

SARAH EVANS
(AthleUc8-Female)

Only two months ago It was far
less certain that OPEC would suc·

ceed In holding Its prtces at current
levels. The prtce of oil on the open
market was far below the level that
OPEC prod ucers charge .their contract customers. But the decision In
March to reduce and ration production c hanged the trend and pushed
prtces higher.
OPEC's secretary-general, Marc
S. Nan Nguema of Gabon, said the
lJ ministers were pleased tha t production cont rols appeared to be
succeeding .
"We reviewed the market situation and we are optimistic," Nguema said as he e merged from the
ministerial meeting. "There Is
agreement on every Issue."
Despite that public display of solidarity , sources said their was
some dissens ion among cartel
members. The sources said the
longer-term success of OPEC's
strategy was endangered by Iran's
unwillingness to abide by Its quota .
Ira n a nd Sa udi Arabia excha nged heated accusations durtng
Frtday's meeUng In The Ecuadora n capita l of Quito, they said . The

~ Pulsar: Quartz===:::-

Veteran8 Memorial

KENNETH CLARK
( Academle&amp;-Sclence)

within the next year, economic a na lysts said .
Sheik Ahmed Zakl Yamant. the
oil minister of Saudi J\rabla and
OPEC's most powerful figure , told
reporters as he left the annual
sprtng conference under he a yy
guard that OPEC In the future
would alter Its production to keep
prtces from fiuctua tlng.
"lf we ever feel the prtce will go
above $34, we will Increase our production," Yemanl said. "But It Is
our aim to defend $34 - not to go up
or go down."

Ends 10 court cases

Reagan to monitor
Falklands situation

Plantz.
Prendergast, Sue Ellen Price, Martha Ann
Prose, Pallia Jean Pullins, Rhonda Michelle
Pushkar, James Michael Rainey, Mark Rees,
William Allen Remy, Dewey Lee Rhodes, Sandra
L R~c h andShl'ila Kay Roach.
James L. Roberts, Rick H. Rockwell, Lisa Ann
Roush, Lisa Kay Roush, Loren William Rowley
II , Steve E. Runyon, Betty Rupe, Drema Leigh
Rutt , Jeffrey Ray Sa nders, An~ela Saundefl),
Le1~ I..OUise Schilling, Mary Ellen Schopls, Tandy Elizabeth Scotl, Bill Seq~tmt t~ nd Lim~ A.
Shane.
James Dorlll ld Sheets, Patncia D. Sheets,
M&lt;1rc A. Shoc•kcy, Nutalie Annl'tte Shon)o(,
Nal.l:l he Kay Simms, Wendy Lynn Simms, Tonya
l..t!t&gt; Si mpson, Tamt•ra Sue Ska ~gs, Keith Slaven.
Jeffrey T. Smi th, Kelly J . SJmth, Ll~ Michelle
Smith , Susan C. Smith , John Micha el, Jr . and
T e n~~ Stel(er St. Cla1r
Bt·tsy Ellen Stapldon, James Andrew Steele,
RJdl.&lt;lrd C. Stet!lt• II , Gary Allen Stewart, Susan
Stewa rt, Beverly Jo Swain , Bruce D. Swifl, Ro~
b1e Dale Syi"Wl, Rona.ld Lee Tawney, Ma.rr&lt;ie Sue
T~rry , Marsha Lynn Thacker, Kathleen Lynn
Thaler, Randy Thiw ner, Michael Eug~ne Thompson anti Deboruh Dilln~ Truesdell .

may call at the funeral home alter 3
p.m. today.

BOLOGNA

Su per ior DMt

SLICED
BACON

$1 S9
Lb.

�Pomeroy-Midd leport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point P leasan t , W. V~ .

May 23, 1982

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staircase Is walnut; the ste ps are oak: the newels are
walnut and the stair casing Is pinewood . Mrs. Chestnut stripped all the woodwork and completed all var nishin g and painting.

Four are.~ wm.be ~~~own dwtn,~~~e AJnerl.

Ga!Upolla, Point Pleasant brld,es.lbe Ohio River U1C1

''Tour of lntel'ellllq llomea" 011 JUDe IS. TOP
PROTO: Jncheded Ia 1be tour wiD be Olalet LouDeaD, 1n HodDe)', oa ot awe BDute sa. 'l1le cbaletcoadomllllum ..,._ hlo famlleiiDCIIIIIDwa rooms
CC1111111011 lo botb U well U lleiJU'IIte I l WAJell.
'ABOVE~ 'lbe bame of Dr. ud Mn. O.C.. W. Clark
• 8jlruce KDoll wiD allo be'• lbe tour. B II deacrlbed
•by liB ~· u CCIIItemponry Alplae 1DC1 wu dellped by Mn. Cllrke. Flun lbe frotat allbe boule,

West VJrpda Hilla can be viewed. LEFT: The
James Cheatllut bouse, 633 Second Ave., GalllpoUa,
waa built between 1881-1883 and Is of Edwardian
style. lmprovemea&amp;a UICI reaova&amp;na have been
made on the orfllnallltnlclure and a feature of lbe
bouse Is the variety of woodwork employed. ABOVE
LEFT: Our Houee M-.n, tal F'lrM Ave., Glllllpolla, wm be U8ed aa a holpftal~ center after lbe tour.
BuDt Jn 1819 of Federal style brick, lbe one-time lav·
em baa boated JeDDY IJDd and Marquis de Lafayette.

JSLANDSIDE, VICfORIAN
lslandslde Is a three-story Victorian house whlch
provides a view of the Ohio River and the small island
for which It Is named .
In 1905, Albert a nd Florence Steward completed
the home and presented II to their daughter, Flavia
and Lllllan. Thl' house was purchased In 191.1 by
Jeannette Cook Healy and was occupied by her rela·
Uves. the Berrtdges, until the late 1950s. Durtng this
period. the house remained In Its orlglna l state .
lslandslde was the firs t home In Gallipolis. Ohio's
CHE;;TNUT'S HOUSE , EDWARDIAN
Among other histortc structures on the tour will be
third oldest city, to have running water. A large lead
holding bcx on the third floor collected rain water
the James Chestnut House. located at 633 Second
from the roof and pumped II to the bath and kitche n .
Ave. The Edwardian home was bull! between 1881
and 1883 by Miles H. Brown, an Ohio rtverboat• The house was llghted by gas chandellers and the
ortglnal ones still remain.
captain.
Each of the structure's nine rooms was furnished
The ortgtnal structure had an enclosed back porch,
with a fireplace, which provided beth heat for and the
kitchen, dining room, parlor, sitting room In the front,
focal point of the room. The hall fireplace was decoand four doors .one each facing north, south, east and
rated with a cast-Iron rtgured lntertor and the music
west.
room had an elaborate cherry m!ITored mantelpiece
The Chestnuts purchased the house fn 1972 from
from England. The bedrooms utilized marble !rom
· Holzer Hospital Foundation. Since that time, the
Italy .
house has been entirely renovated.
All rooms are accented wtth cherry, walnut and
Two of the doors are now draped as windows and
oak woodwork In VIctorian design. A stained-glass
the upstairs Is comprtsed of three bedrooms Instead
of the original four, two full bathrooms and a large window was placed at the second floo r for convenient
v1ewlng from the oak stairway.
hall .
The Berrtdges left no heirs upon the ir dea ths and
Extertor renovations Include sandblasting, reroof·
lslandslde
stood vaca nt until Mrs. VIrginia Cook
lng, landscaping, a deck and carport. The house Is
Wooten
purchased
the estate In 1967.
two brtcks thick with plaster.
Over a number of years, she has completely resOther changes have been made since 1975, lnclud·
tored the original fla vor of the structure's ortglnaJ
lng the construction of a new basement, some new
ceilings. new plumbing and wlrtng. The back stair- period, preserving the architecture, furnlnshlng her
home with antiques a nd modernizing without losing
way has been open and there are new noors In the
living and dining rooms. The kitchen has been e n- authenticity , Gettles noted.
larged and modernized and Includes a dining area,
CHALET LOU·DEAN
laundry room and full bathroom.
One of the more recently built structures of the tour
There ls a bay window wlth noor to celllng framing
In the llvlng room and slate and marble mantles over will be Chalet Lou-Dean, ten miles northwest of Galli·
polls on Old State Route 35 In Rodney. The cha letthe fireplaces.
Woodwork In the house vartes thoughout. The dln· condominium was constructed In 1978 by Joel Atha,
lng room ls pine; most of the downstairs Is oak; there 't:ontractor, and designed by Arnold Farris, architect.
Is walnut, oak and pine upstairs; tl)e handrail of the
(continued on B-2)

.... .
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GALLIPOLIS - An Edwarlan home, VIctorian
structure, cha let-condominium and a home of con·
temporary Alpine will be featured In "Tour of Inter·
estlng Homes," to be held June 13, Sunday.
Sponsored by The Amertcan Association of Unlver·
slty Women (AAUW) of Gallipolls for the tenth year,
proceeds from the tour will be dona ted to the board of
trustees of Our House Museum and toward scholar·
ships and other community educational projects, according to Mrs. Beverly Gettles, Gallipolis .
Our House Museum, 432 First Ave., Gallipolis, will
be used as a hosptallty center for the tour. Once a
tavern, the museum has been visited by Marquis de
Lafayette and Jenny Lind .

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P om e roy - Middl e port- Gallipolis, Ohio- Po1nt Pleasant, W . V~ .

Th e Sund,ly T1m es ~ c nt11&gt;e l

n, 1982

May 23, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis; Ohi O- Po int Pleasant, w . v a.

(continued !rom B-1)

A tour ...
The sl 11lCture. Get tles said, Is a
n•sult uf the 2:&gt;-yea r friendship beIY~&lt;'&lt;"n Mr . and Mrs. 11m Evans and
Mr. and Mrs. Vaught SmJth. Its
n.1m1' b from the combination of
U1c names of Betty Lou Eva ns a nd
J&gt;t&gt;anl&lt;• Smit h.
Tim !&lt;vans purchased the 2~
at-rf' f.um in 1964 and the: chaJet
U&lt;'\'Uplc' the highes t knoll on the
fdlrm .

. AI the cPnter of the cha let Is an

A f1a me great hall . Ills a common
t'ntc•ria!nmf'n t room between the
tv.·o living complexes with walnuth(•am"'l ct'lllngs Intercepted by a

stone fireplace with a black marble
hearth. A kitche n area and guest
bath are also on the first fioor. Two
guest bedrooms join a balcony
overlooking a kidney-shaped swimming pooL
The apartments are 2,:nJ square
feet each a nd vary ln construction.
The Smith's llvlng roo m has a
va ul ted ceiling with beams made In
Corbin, Ky. One bath has a sunken
marb le tub with Jacuzzi.
The Eva ns' prtvate quarters Is
designed with a large llvlng-dlnlng
area acented by a red brick fire.
place a nd vaulted ceiling. A large
cedar deck on the western side

overlooks the vallev below.

CONTEMPORARY ALPINE
Bull! In 19&amp;1 by David Herbert. of
Oak Hill, the Dr. and Mrs.OscarW.
Clarke on Spruce Knoll ls also on
the tour. The home ls bull! on a site
establlshed about 1870 by John T.
Halliday, who fanned the ridge before other homes were bull! ln !bat
area . The orlg!nal farmhouse was
moved to the meadow below and
has been remodeled by Dr. and
Mrs. Louts Schmidt.
The barn and other outbulld1ngs
have been removed, but the pump
and old springhouse, the boxwood

hedge and evergreenS remain. The
setting Is considered by Its owner:
to be somewhat of a bird sanctuary
and wUdlUe preserve.
The Clarkes descrtbe their home
as contemporary Alpine and was
deslgned by Mrs. Clark taking Into

ladles' parlor, three bedrooms and
a dlvkled ballroom. A separate kltchen was built at the rear.
In 1933. Dr. and Mrs. Charles E .
Holzer Sr. bought the properly and
restored and refurnished the struclure. It opened as a public museum

consideration the cUff behind the
structure.
The angle of the front of the
house, with large panels cit glass,
affords an unobstructed vtew of
Galllpolls, the bridges of Point
Pleasant, the Ohin River and West
VIrginia hills.
A large brtck patio wa lald by
Mrs. Clarke with brtck !rom the old
Galllpolls depot. The black slate of
the entry hall and dining area ls
from Pennsylvanls and rubble
slate of the porch and front terrace
Is from Vermont. The large verlcolored stones of the fireplace wall
were obtained from Indiana Creek
beds.

In 1936 and In 1944 became a state
memoriaL It Is now administered
by the Ohio Htstortcal Society
through Galllpolls Chamber of
Commerce.
A walnut bar, salvaged !rom a
tavern In northern Ohio, Is In the
taproom. The public rooms have
been completely furnished, some
with pieces made by French cabl·
netmakers !rom this area.
The house's woodwork Is notable
and most of the rooms have the
orlg!nal chair raU and all have windows of 24 Ughts. There also are
some carved mantels. Behind the
ballroom are several illest rooms.
The homes tour will be held !rom

Thea horne's
master
hedrom
teatures
handmade
slump
brtck wall
and also serves as a display area
tor much of Mrs. Clarke's artwork.
Another bedroom, In contrast
with the remainder of the house, Is
turnlshed with antiques, Including
a Solomon Hayward bed and a ceilIng lamp that went West to Montana In a covered wagon with Mrs.
Clarke's grandparents.

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

cipal of Ra c ine F:lementary, an-

Road s..... Sup8r
comlortabMiall·purpose
shoe wilh oontemporary
running shoe
l lyllog.

MEMBERS OF THE CAST, "Let George Do It," to, be presenteil
Monday night at Southern HighSchool by students of Racine Elementary,
are, left to right, Tricla Wolle, David Amburgy and Amy Harrison.

THE
SHOE CAFE
300 second , Ga llopolo s

1'1111:11

"Summer Bride"
See our
selection of
Mother of the
Bride
Dresses.
Sizes
6-24 112

GEORGE WASHINGTON and his soldiers of Valley Forge will be
portrayed by, left to right, John McCIIntQck, Shannon Williams, David
Amburgy, Shannon Riffle and Greg Beegle. The program will be held at
Southern High School.

.

&amp;

Opened By Appointment
carolyn Wilson, Proprietor
•.;.,.~ 10'4~n·:t·4:Z81 Rt. 62 South, Point Pleasant

Observe 1Oth year
as church's pastor

7 pc. Wood

DINETTE SETS
REG . $599 .95

l~;;M
,? - SUITE
$SAVINGS
&lt;'7_

$~900
Reg. up to $199.95

RECLINERS
IN STOCK

t

~

~/ -

matching lamp

FREE

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have
service

on

BARGAINS

'hr Save '80.00

,

·Sweepers

The

Porta Power
or
Convertible

Best Yet!

Hoover Sweeper

_$,,00

Mattresses &amp;
Box SPRINGS
by

Sofa &amp; Regular Chair

EVERYTHING IN OUR
STORE IS ON SALE!
BUY NOW &amp;SAVE.
D~LIVERY_

30% Off
Any We Ha~ In Stock

'16'9

25%
off
Any Special Order
6-8 week deli¥terv

. ~~~~~g
1

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PUSH .

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FOR
FREE
RECLINER

HOOVER

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FLEX STEEL

Y20ff

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SWEEPERS
Save '90.00

LAMPS

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Swivel Rockers
wood Rockers
Wing Backs

Concept I Power Drive

Kincaid, Bassette,
Singer, Webb,
-~
Manor House
\
Lea, Kemp

BEMCOc"~
10UI

OVER 100

Items

1 Models on Sale

GROUP OF

End Tables
&amp;
Coffee Tables

Come Early
Over
Many 1 of a .. ~ 200
Chairs
Kind In Stock

Of

Chester D of A observes 48th
CHESTER-The 48th anniver- ln the parade at Middleport honor·
sary of Chester Council 323, Daughlng Four Star General James Ha rters of America, was observed
tinger, May 29.
recently with the recognition of
Others attending the meeting
seven charter members highlight- were Thelma McMannis, Nina
Ing the program.
Windle, lhla Fae Kimes, Charlotte
Attending were Letha Wood, Ada
Grant, ThelJna White, Carolyn HolMorris, Ellzabeth Hayes, Zelda
ley, Betty Roush, Lora Damewood,
Weber, Leona HENSLEY, Ada BisDoris Grueser, Everett Grant,
sell, and Joe Bissell. Esther SmJth,
Cora Beegle, Shirley Beegle, Marchairperson of the Good of the
eta Keller, Nettle Hayes, Jo Ann
Order CommJttee, conducted the
Bawn, Edna Riebel. La ura Mae
program with the charter being disNice, Sadie Trussell, Jean Frederplayed on an easeL She gave a brief
Ick, Ethel Orr, Ada Neutzling, Eva
history of the lodge. Ada Morris orRobinson, VIrginia Newlun, Mary
ganized the councU ln 1934. Prior to
Showalter, Fern Morris , Goldie
then she had been a member for a
Wolfe and Mae McPeek.
year at Theodorus Council, Pome- _ - - - - - - - -- - - roy. Mary Hazel F1oyd was state
councUor of Ohio at the time the
council was formed . In 1%9 Forest
Rose Council, Tuppers Plains, and
In 1981, Theodorus Council, Pomeory, consolldated with Chester
Council bringing today's membership to 118.
Clarice Allen played and sang
"Always" to the charter members.
Readings Included "You're GrowIng Old" by Goldie Frederick;
Tho
"Love One Another" by Margaret
one
Amberger; and "A Farmer's Wife
to see
and her Occupation" by Ellzabeth
tor oil
Hayes. AU of the charter members
your f• ml/y
responded briefiy as Mrs. Smith
Insurance
presented gifts to them.
needs.
L SNOW DE f'\
c
Members sang " Happy Birth~11 Second Ave .
day" to Letha Wood. Vases of now:
Ga l lipoli s. Oh .
ers and a decorated cake made by
Phon e 44t.· 4190
Margaret Tuttle was used on the
---..Home 446-4518
!!All IU,.
special table tor the c harter
Lik1 1
good nrit}hbor,
members. Cake, Ice cream, tea and
Sflte flfTn
punch were served by Erma Cleis fhtrt.
land, Alta Ballard;-epat Hollon,
Sl
ate
Farm
l
n
sur
~n
( e Compa noes
Helen Wolfe, and . Zelda Weber.
Ho m\" Ol! tcts: B loom•n.o!t on . lll ono•s
Mrs. Allen provided plano music.

ME Eli
A GOOD
NEIGHBOR
OF YOURS

Sonww•~~~~ nv1· r 11111 '1 ·n tt url(lrl •rl { f',lr &lt;., .1ttcr ltlP &lt; rt ' i111Qn ot Adam,
I l l!' r('c Orfl !Pi h II '&gt; oi ttw worht "o.., 1 on t drn . nrl l lOO f hf' t ru1 1 o f the evil
o rw Wrl '&gt; lt1(' l c1V OrJ1! • cl monq mf'l) S 1n pr•rnl('fll rd Ttl(' f'a rlll , covr r 1ng rt
wr trl ll lf' !)!,tnk• · t '' ' Wlf k1 •rt nr ·s s )\ &lt;:., Cnrt look ret u p on thp wor l d and s aw
li S I)P,lu l v nlilrrr &lt;t "II rf'pl·nle(1 ttw Lo r d tn;r t t1r h~ld milde miln on t he
C'clr lt l nnrt 11 or1PVPI1 ll1rn ill tw; tw.1rl " tCen 6 7r H e would d e al wr lh
tl• n • '&gt;t 'vr •r J•tv ':&gt;Wt 'PpltHt ltlf' f'ctrth W l l l1 t hf' oroom o t des tru c f ro n
H owf'vN tiH' lwn.qnant f'yes o f Gort ovf' r lookf'd n ot the qoodnrss ot

N o.lh . ttwrf'forr . Hf'

Wil ".

()011111 t o m.t k l' p rov •S1on.:. t or thf' sa tvat10n of

t11 '-. t,llnily
TIH' &lt;,.t l v.t i •On ot N o,tll conc; ,&lt;., t(l 01 tw, u twy,nq Coc1 H e we~ &lt;;, t o hu1 ld
rlO .lr k ,l iHI ,, Wrl ' . 10 tw built rlffOr CI IO(I ro lh(' p.lt l rrns o f God (Grn
1)1 lht'f"l ' wt~ c.. IJIJI nn1· cH k I t w.l&lt;. rl1rldf' 01 onr m~l t rr • ~l l . qopher
w••ntl I IJ, ., • w.l'. llU I Oi l I' wond ow .lrHI 001' ctoor ft1r ftlnl dy thnt en
trn•ft I I&lt;H I III II HJ'-. 111 r n rnm on. wr &lt;lrtnq lhr • f Mnily n,1mr They wf'rr
rtJ• I• v• ·rJ ' tl l r ••rn 11 11· lil·&lt;:,lrurtJon by tllr · qr,l c r· o t Cod . ,1nr1 11 n •qu ,rf'd
(l!) r•(i,. ·n&lt;r · 1111 tt1 o p.1rt o1 N o,t tl "And N n ,l ll dtrt rlUor d,nq un t o nil th ~t
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nctll l '\ o l 1111 · ltt ·'&gt; l l Tl w wo r lft s tCt nd s be to r r• Gael 10 rln rqno bte co n
(1111(10 . rlO(I Hr' I'&gt; l lll l nq t o de&lt;:. tr oy 11 Oil ( I ' iH iillO . b ut wllh l irf' (It Thess
I fit 1 111'-. wdl tw lhr&gt; I IIli! I di'Strucf100 Ou t . cl 5 God Wcl5 to nq suff€' r l nQ
111 t ilt • ft.w&lt;. n l No,ll t, '&gt;O •'&gt; Hf' I OdCty Ttw wor ld s rood r c~l dy nnd rrpe tor
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tl un("trl'( l ,u ut twPnTy y P,tr&lt;, " ( Gt · n 6 J 1 rt Wrl '&gt; cJur .nq lt'1 1S frm C' Tt'1i11
NO,lh tt1• · pr• •,r r tl •· r o t r o qhlf'Ou s npo;~ w.HnPrt th r world e~nd prPp.=t r e d
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tt i0'-.1' wt l(l o twv H o•. l• · rnv, ot &lt;.,, llv,1t1nn H f' t1 .1s f'"&gt; l rliJI1Shed th e ch ur ch
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GALLI POLI S. O H 10 .156) t

II&gt;&lt; \\,boo

D.odv WJ I H
ll \~liM

IS THERE LIFE
AFTER HIGH SCHOOL?

Rev . and Mrs. William Uber
celebra ted their lOth anniversary as
pastor of Cheshire Baptist Church on
May 2.
Rev. and Mrs. Uber were presented flowers and a gift certificate.
The congregation joined the Ubers
in the fellowship room for cake and
punch, following the May 2 church

service.

POMEROY - Sixteen Meigs
County quilts have been selected for
exhibit in "Patterns Worth
Repeating" traditional quilt show to
be held at Dairy Barn Southeastern
Ohio Cultural Arts Center.
The qUilt show will start June 5
- and continue through June 20.
Seventy--eight of the region's finest
new and antique quilts will be on
exhibit.
The quilts selected for display
(rom Meigs County during the county show at the Chester Firehouse
last month belong to Ona Arix, Ruby
Grueser, Margaret Christy, Maxine
Goeglein (three quilts), Clarice
Allen, Margaret Brown, Mary
Russell, Oma Starkey, Delores
Cleland, Mary Colmer, Ida Murphy,
Freda Edwards and Ruth Snodgrass
(three quilts).
In conjunction with the workshop,
Unda Baumgarten, curator of textiles at Colonial Williamsburg, will
give a public lecture free of charge
at the auditorium of Hocking
Technical College at 7 p.m. on the
topic "Antique Quills at Colonial
Williamsburg."
·
', She will also conduct a workshop
on June 12 at $5 per person on
techniques of and concerM for quilt
· preservation.
.
' . Admission to the quilt show, good,
'for three vlslts, ~$UO {or adulta, $)
.for senior, citlz'ens ~ childre!t, ani!

'llo admission charge lot children unf·
'
• The tirneB are l'to 7 p.m. on -Mon.'ilays ~ ~tlirdaya and 1 to 5.
p.m. on Swldaya.

We Believe
There Is •••

AN APPOI N I !.AI NT

446-9510

"A NEW 0/REC TION IN HAIR DESIGN "'

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;1

Make something real of your future. Give yourself the skills which
bring in a worthwhile paycheck and give you a chance to advance!
Attend a school where the sole purpose is solid business training
and career placement. Start now and avoid the Fall rush. All
classrooms are air conditioned.
NEW FALL QUARTER BEGINS JUNE 28

1

Come In and See Our Large Selection Of Pre-Owned
Mobile Homes.
1976 Oakwood 12x52 2 B. w/ c, air . .. . ........ - - .. $7195
1912 Baron 12x60 2 B. w/c, air . .... ... . ... .. ... - $7195
1970 Belmont 12x6S 2 B. . .. __ . _. ___ ............ 56450
1911 Belmont 12x6S 2 B. furnished ....• . ......... $7195
1966 Elcar 10x50 2 B .. , ..... ........ ..... •. . --- $2795
1975 Sardust 12x50 2 B. . . . ............... . . .. . . 55795
1975 Oetroiter 14x66 2 B, den model ......... .... $6900
1952 Continental8x40 1 B ...... .. . . . . ... .. ..... . . $850

CAREER TRAINING FOR
A REWARDING FUTURE

We also have a good selection of
NEW MOBILE HOMES:
This offer extended by popular demand
During the month of May, tie downs and
vinyl skirting installed on all NEW unit sold
at no extra charge,

•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL
•ACCOUNTING
•MICRO-COMPUTER ADMINISTRATION
WRITE, VISITOR CALL .. TODAY"
446-4367

SEE OUR All·NEW INTERIORS
COMMODORE, MANSION, -H.ALLMARK 14' FROM
- 111,950 ... PRICE INCLUDES DRIVERY_
AND SETUP- .

KI-NGS~~RY HO~E

;ljer six.

' .

,....r
ll .....r
~ '\tt

WALl&lt; IN ()R I AU l OA

·rr~E

1

Meigs quilts chosen
for regional exhibit

J.\CROSS

Monday thru Friday
9 AM to9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

1: .
: I
j

,:

I

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

SALES, Inc.

529 JACKSON PIKE

1100 ~Main Street, Pomeroy, Oh.
992·7034
' I

REG. NO. 75~2-04728

~

(

Wil h am B . Kughn

GRADUATING SENIORS!

Rev. and Mrs. Uber

69
YEARS

THE CHURCH AND THE SAVED

SINGERS AND NARRATORS lor the mujslcal are, front, ·tell to
rigbt, Jessica Evans, Ailsa Wllllord, Angle Hill. Angie Manuel, Jennifer
Johnson; back, Vanessa Young, Leslie Dudding, Melanie Lyons, Joyce
Barnes and Kathy lhle.

Dorothy Ritchie, councilor, pre- · L~==========-l.::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::===========
sided at the meeting. Several
members were reported ill. It was
noted that Mary Hazel Floyd Is contined to the IOOF Rebekka Nursing
Home In Ennis, Texas.
Plans were made to partlc!pa te
In the Memorial Day parade on
May 31 at Chester. Members are to
meet at the elementary schooL
Plans were also made to take part

IT'S EMPIRE FURNITURE'S

BARGAINS

strumental music director. The
musical to be presented by the
elementary students is under the
directi on of Mrs. Lee Lee. Admission will be 50 cents lor adults
and 25 ccnto for s tudents.

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

'19.95

F1owen.
v' Catering for Weddings - Anniversary Recepllons, ete.
v' CaRs For All Occasions.

OF

The instrumental program is under the direction of Joe Malesick 1 in-

Bei ge/ Powd er B lu('

"·

OVER 20,000 SQ. FT.

T im es -Se nlln e i- Page- B-3

nounced Sa tu rda y.

WOMEN'S ROADSTAR

ter the tour at Our House's courtyard and guests wUl be hosted by
Mary Allison , curator , and
members of Gallla Academy High
School's French Club.
Henry Cushing, whose tamlly
came to Martetta In 1788, built the
structure ln 1819.
Constructed of Federal style
brtck, the tavern had a taproom,
public and prtva te dlnlng rooms, a

v' Everything for the Bride except Gown

RACINE - Southern J umor High
instrumenWI stud ent.;; will present a
short program Monda y at 7:15p.m .
at Southern High School prior to the
musica l "Let George Do It" to be
presented by students of ftacine
Elementary Robert E . Beegle, prin-

r~1=to~5~p;.m~.and~;$3~tl;ck:e~ls~wlll;be~o;n;~~~~~~~~~~~
Second --ue

WILSON'S IRIDAL &amp;
CA TIRING SERVICE

~ und.1y

Music students plan program

sale at theGalllpolls Park Front the
day of the tour or may he purchased at any home on the tour.
Children over 12 years old wUl be
welcome on the tour and comfortable walldng shoes are advised, Getties said.

OUR HOUSE
Refreshments wUl be served af-

Among the lour area houses on the June 13 "Tour of Interesting Homes," he ld lor the tenth year by AAUW of GaWpoUs, Is
Islandsldc, completed In 1905 and located next to an Ohio River
L~land for which It Is named. lslandslde was the first house Is
liaiii(Kllls to have running water. Its present owner of Mrs.
VIrginia Cook Wooten, who has completely restored the threestory VIctorian structure In Its ortglnal pertod with architecture
and antiques.

1h e

"

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�May 23, 1982

f'o m e r oy - Midd lcport- G,l llipolis, Ohio- Poont Pleas,lnt, W. Vil.

M ay 23, t981

mversary on April 25 by renewing of
their wedding vows.
A reception was given following
the ceremony by their children, Mrs.
David (Debbie) Bryan of Ga llipolis,
Mrs. Rich;trd I Kathy I Morris of Findlay, Scott Lewis of Gahanna, and
Jodie Lewis, who Ji ves with her
parents.
Rev. Lewis is pastor of Salem Ba(&gt;tist Chapel in Nelsonville, and former pastor of French City Baptist
Church, Route 4, Gallipolis.

Announcement
CHESHIRE - The reservation
deadline fur Cheshire-Kyger's a lwnni banquet has been extended to
Tuesday, May 25. Reservations
s hould be mailed to Donna
Reyn~Jds, Route I, Box 384 , Bidwell,
456 14, phone ~29. or to Katie
Shoemaker, Route I, Cheshire,
45620, phone 367~583.

Elkins-Wilfong

•c omplete line of Ostomv
Suppli es
• Extensive line of Surgic a l
Dressings
*Egg crate foam bed pads and
toppers
•E gg crate fo am wheelchair
cus hion s
·
~ Air Pumps and Mattresses
·S uction Machin es
"Hospi tal Beds and mattre sses
*Over bed Tables
·overbcd tra pezes
-Sidcrai ls
· wheelchairs
· walkers , Canes, Cr utches
·Portable Commodes
·Toilet Sea t Ra isers
• S.lfety Grab Bars
·Bath sc ats
·ca th e ters and re lcited supplies
"Incontinent Wear
• Undcr pad s a nd adult di aper s
·oxygen

GAI. J.! POLIS - Mr. a nd Mrs.
Stephen Gerc rn esz of 358 Debby Dr..
Galllpolis. will celebra te their 40th
weddin g an ni versary on May 30 by
renewing their marriagl' vows at St.
Joseph's Catholic Church. Port
Huron. Mrdr., where the y were
marrred rn 1942.
A buffet meal will follow th e
re remony an d ma ss will be
h
h M

~~~~~~lteS,.'
t~ ~:~~ o:n~~(~,~~:n "wa"r~ J·;~~:.:.eSlMctr:~c~naBi r;n:~~ha:~.
Purl Huron, for which fanu!y Mich ., anJ Mrs. J ca nn t Ou r::&gt;,

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYR*CUSE, OHIO
NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRING SEASON
•Vegetable ~lants
•Bedding Plants
•Foilage Plants and
til 8

Halltn

G··IJ,·, lldlip,..~.lli.s. Tht•y ha ve seve n gra nd-

and frit•nds will attend .

A Jll&lt;:I SS will be

salllm

thl·tr honor

H~~~i~gDB:Is~~·~

SUNDAYITILS

PHONE 992-5776

~~~";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d~;;;~;5~~~~~~~~

Lower
your cost of
Uv\ng
\t up

Engagements
HunterLivengood

A gt·flt 0 f t lJ•tu de
or Dad
e

g~a

Elkins is a 1982 graduate of
Eastern High School a nd Wilfong is
a 1980 graduate of Federal Hocking
High School.
The open-church wedding will be
held June 25 at 7 p.m. at St. Paul's
United Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains. Rev. Richard Thomas will
officiate a nd a reception will follow
in the church social room.

THURMAN - Mr. and Mrs. John
Whealdon of Thurman announce the
eng ageme nt a nd forthcoming
marriage of their daughter,
Carolyn, to Mark Davis, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Davis of West
Collingswood, N.J.
Whealdon is a 1981 graduate of
Southwestern High School, and is in
the United States Air Force and
stationed in Dayton.
Davis is a 1980 graduate of
Collingswood High School and is also
stationed with the Air Force in
Dayton.

' fOPn'wJ

The weddtng wrll be held June 26
a t 1:30 p.m. at the Church of the
Nazarene in Jackson .

Jury-Nibert

Ann Wam!-ilcy, Poml'roy, cousin u£
bride, ets matd of honor.
Bridesmaids wrll be lkbbie Jury ,
sister-in-law of the gnxm1, Brenda
Shopt.', sister uf thl' groom , both of

~(' 111111 (' 1

I .ICJ( '

B

GALUPOUS - Plans for the May
29 ma rriage of Blake L. Jury and
Tina M. Nibert have been completed .
The open chu rc h weddi ng will be
held a t Grace Uni ted Methodis t
Churc h at 7:30 p.m . with Pastor
James V. Frazier Jr. officiatin g.
Attending the bride wi ll be June

SINGER
GRADUATION
COMBINATION

nv

FURNITURE
GAlLERIES

value • S1ngle low prrce

299.99

WE SERVICE All MAKES OF MACHINES
AND SHARPEN SCISSORS

!FREE PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATION j

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

Corner 2nd &amp; Grape St .
446·0332

fj I Jtl

1

•BEDSPREADS
•WOOD BLINDS
•I" METAL BLINDS

•CUSTOM DRAPERY
•LEVOLOR SHADES
•WOVEN WOODS

TUPPERS PLAINS - Mr. a nd
Mrs. David Elkins, Tuppers Plains,
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Wendy Ann, to Pet£
Wilfong, Reedsville, son of Mrs.
Lena Wilfong Jackson, Steubenville,
and the foster son of Mr . anp Mrs.
Calvin Ruble; Coolville.

I

Model6105 1324

ISAVE 10% TO ~0% I

Elkins, Wilfong

(continued on B-71

SINGER
. IS

~"

THE FABRIC SHOP
tiS

w

7nd

_;,;.~~;:;;.~· ·~

..

Pomer oy , O H
Serv 1nq M e HJ '&gt; &amp; G.1tlr.1 Co
A &lt;. Your ~ 1ng e r Appr OV I ' &lt;l DL' .liPr

SINGER
~

,

'

'

• COIDIIO~Tt
£..
Je 1asting
a a .L'V'Je·....vs4-.ee·'
D-c·'I.neT
~ I.J
] ~t£i ] .
TL
~l

BUY A LIVING ROOM SUITE
AND GET A BEDROOM SUITE
OR 3 TABLES FOR $100 MORE

®

{

1

j

Tell Dad how much you apprecrat e hrm wi th a
Fath er's Day g off tha t he will enJoy for yea rs thrs Flexsteel Room Saver Wall Recliner. It's

,.

'

I

'

a rnan -s1zed . h1gh-back lounge chair with big
recli ner com fort . It goes from loung e charr to
lull-recline po stlton with only inches of wall

3 Piece
I

BEDROOM SUITE

.

space Flexsteel s unrqu e seat spring and
deep cush ronrng ass ure years of laS1rng qoa trty and comfort

'_j

i

HALL
TREE
SPECIAL

OFFER GOOD ONlY ON liVING ROOM SUITES IN MAIN STORE

$1888

-

)

WHilE
THEY
LAST

Q 1s rmgw shed

drmensrons. graceful.

an elegance rn warm/f)

- ~--

(}.RA'~v~~~kf
Yes. you c an get rt all on
a budget . hrgh-lashron
g ood looks. unquestroned
dependobrlily. 17 jewel accuracy

Hunter, Livengood
POMEROY - Mr. a nd Mrs.
Henry 1.. Hunter, 376!3 Texas Road ,
(.lnnounce the engagem ent and forth c omin ~~
marriage or the ir
daughter. Rache l, to Mark J .
Livengood, Berea .
Hunter rs a 1981 graduate of Ohro
State Unr vcrsity and rcs rdes in
Lakewood where s he is enrolled in
graduate studi es at Cleveland Sta te
Universit y. Her fian ce, sun of Mr.
and Mrs. Ned l. rvengood, Be rea, rs a
senior a t Baldwin-Wal lace College,
Berea . He is employed by Berea
Child ren's Home.
A June wcddrng &lt;s being planned .
1continued on B-5)

Look them over and you 'll agree
our C aravelles by Butova give you
so muc h more for so li~l e cost Now
you c an own a great watc h for os
lr~le as $59 .95

FINE l.IPHOLSTEREO A.IRNTURE

DADS COME IN ALL SIZES
AND SO DO THESE FINE
CHAIRS All ESPECIAllY
PRICED FOR FATHER'S DAY
FROM $348 to $399.

B Srt·;enone case and mode rn
lmk orace lel Black
brequelle numeral s on
'illver gray dtal

lltewets S69.95

fl~

C Go:dtone 01ess watch wrlh
g111 rmrker s on champagne
01a l 17 IBWCI S $84 .95

IT'S BULOVA WATCH TIME

il

1

l

'\

\

"~; ~ -~

,. ~,
I

.

-' 1

Litton
Microwave

Oven

WAS 1369.95

NOW

WAS

699.95

1

14 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR

$48800
WITH TRADE

·Pomeroy

7-PC.

113 Court St.
992-2054

SETS

/t..l

,,_.~41\~ . ~
Sug. Retail
$476

ThruJune26

" 'l....... -

MEMORIAL DAY
WEEKEND

~~Chicken

Dinner
Special s2.59

Shorts, Tops, Slacks
By Red-Eye and Aileen

You get the best part of the chicken.
Four Chicken Planks®-strips of
whole, whitemeat chicken breast,
dipped in our special batter-served
with fresh cole slaw and golden fryes.

IN RED, WHITE
AND BLUE

REDUCED FOR THE
FOUR STAR
CELEBRATION

(ADDRESS)

f.J 18112US

.,

..

CUU .LCTION

RECEIVE AFULL OR QUEEN
BOX SPRING OR MATTRESS BY SEALY FREE.
'

Gibson$

'

•

•Appraisals
•Gift Wrapping
•Free Engraving

1.'\till

~~~e

.r )

STORES

****
IN TIME FOR THE

·

s699's

'1 I

Gallipolis
342 Second Ave.
446-2681

I

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

FI.EXSTI-: EI ~

A. Htgh slylea sa lln llntsh
~101one case and
braceiP.I Srl ver dta l
17 1ewe1s $79 .95

~

llarnsburg, Pa .; Rl'bt•kah Warner
uf F'ort Mill'llel!. Kr., and Sar;1 Abl•ls
uf G~dltpuli s, fnclllls of thl' Undt• .

the

Spring Drapery Sale

r~ciel~e~br;a;te~d;t~h;ei;r;25;t~h~~w;c;·d;d;in;g~~a~n;-~~:~~~~~~=~=-~~~::;::;~=~=~

~-----------.j

I hi ' ~ UtHl. ly IJJlH ' \

3 ?4

446-2106

at St . Louis Church. Gal lipolis, on
Ma y 23 wrth Father Wii liarn Myers
uffrciating. A papal blessing from
Pope John Paw II will be prese nted
to them during mas~ .
Mr. and Mrs. Geremcsz ha ve
resided in Gall ipolis for 14 years, aftcr moving from Farr Hav en. Mich.,
rn 1968.
Their r hildren arc William
r.
p d
C 1-f M

W . V" .

(eonttnued from B-11

WhealdonDavis

S6S Ja cks on Pike
Hi llcrest Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio

Rev. and Mrs. Lewis, 25
NEI.SONV
II.LE - ofRevNelsonvi
. a nd Mrs.
J erry
S. Lewis
lle

P l e&lt;~sa nt ,

Engagements

The Medical Shoppe, Inc.

Mr. and Mrs. Geremesz, 40

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Porn!

Larger Family Size 42" Round Table extends
to 66" with two 12" leaves. Set includes six
heavily braced hardwood mate's chairs.

THE
IN LAWN FURNITURE
.3 Pllc8 chaise"Patio.
Plc1cage

THING
Love Seat

1\nls h

3 TABLES
For spa More .

NOW

,,,

Swivel Rocker

,., . ,,,

$26995

RECLINERS
BUY ANY IN
STOCK AND GET
UP TO '100.00
OFF AND A
FREE '25.00
VIBRATING
PILLOW

�Mil y 13, l YB1

Po1J1er0y - Moddleport- Gilllipolis, Ohio-Po int Pleasant, W . Va .

O'ilge- B -6- Th e Sund,1y r.me s -Sentonel

Mily

Fed~ral
-OPEl -~ $10 10 PJI.
...
, t 10 10
.-

Food
Stamps

We A£a11t ~ hill I

Your Memorial Day
Picnic Headquarters
USDA CHOICE
BONElESS

99

CHUCK
STEAK
CUDAHAY SLICED

CHOPPED HAM .. ....................~~:

$1

Super
Special
ICEBERG

HEAD
LETTUCE

.. .. ..... lilt 111(111 Tl lJIII' Q L '5'

Plymale-Holley

TAVERN
HAM

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs . .
Paul Plymale of Gallipolis announce
the engagement and upcoming
marriage of their daughter, Jody M.
Plymale, to Charles D. Holley Jr.,
son of Mrs. Audra Holley and the
late Charles D. Holley of Galipolis.
Plymale is a 1982 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center. Her
fiance is a 1979 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School.
An open-church wedding will take
' place at Bulaville Church on June 2
at 2 p.. with a reception following.

WHOLE
HAM
LB.

Super
Special

GOlD KIST

EXTRA lEAN

WHOLE
FRYERS

GROUND
CHUCK

LB.

FRANKIES ............................... ~ K i.·99(:

Super

Super

Special

Special

IDAHO

WHITE or PINK

lOLB.
BAG

$199

FLORI.DA
GRAPEF

5-LB.
BAG

HOlSUM SPECIAl

PEPSI, DIET
PEPSI, MT. DEW $1 ~u?

VALLEY BEll PREMIUM QUALITY

BOUNTY
TOWELS

-

.

JUMBO
ROLL

79(

•
~-

$129
4

89(

Super
Special
MIRACLE WHIP

~

Special
VIVA

GREAT LAKES
59
5
CHARCOAL ko;:·

1

KRAFT

BAR·B·Q SAUCE ................ :..... ~ o~z-Tu 79(
8

PLASTIC
'UPS

REYNOLDS
FOIL

~S'x18" $
..,

09

NESTEA

JUST RITE

3~99(

SUNNY NORN
GRADE A

EX. LARGE
EGGS
DOZEN

HOTDOG
.
SAUCE

3 oz:

'

$229

_..,

Hotdog
Sauce

10.5 oz.
(:AN

•
'

'

.

VALLEY B~LL

ORANGE
JU~CE
' HALF·
" GAL.'

PKG.

INSTANT TEA ....... ;...... ~ ...........JAR

SHOWBOAT
lSOZ.
CAN

69(

140CT.

.

Super
S)lecial

I

SOLO CLEAR

DINNER
NAPKINS

-Super
Spec·fal

'
HEAVY DUTY

HALF
GALLON

Super

?

.

ICE
CREAM

'-"

Super
Special

PORK'N
BEANS

QUART
JAR

FOR

791-

'

CT.
PAPER PlATES ....................... 100
PKG .

SALAD
DRESSING

MARSHMALLOWS,.....................

190Z.
BAG .

'

NO NAME

'
.

Deposit

KRAFT JET PUFFED

~

an

~IIITll/1 1 ~

BROUGHTON
.

COnAGE
,_ . CHEESE

..

",;•
,

'

'&lt;rrl

ROYALCRESl
· . ; 2%
MILK ~
..
'· ,. .
.~,,

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CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS

$6
$6

Our Reg .

6.96 -7.96

ENLARGEMENTS
From Your Fa••orllle
Color Negatives

3

Forlhe
Price ol

ThurSday - ·~eaiiOIIf,

1

bake~

2

(156) (157)

$}20ur R eg.

14 .96 -17 .96
Our Reg . 142 1.52

ss

Our Reg. 5.97

Treatment
Pants
Assorted
Colors.
- S11es 5-18

Golf Shirt For Men
Short-sleeved. in solid
colors. Polyester I cotton.

Our Reg . 1.97

1.47

1.27
Ctoolce of Nylon
Panty Hose
Regular ooSheer M1sses
S·M-1 Al so Queen S•zes

"8 xl0" not ovolklb'e
from 1110 negottves
Inquire abOut our
"on lime" SeMce

(158)

Baseball Cards
L•mlled [dillOn l1sue

13xl3"
1.17

SALE PRIC E

Activities for the week of May 2428 at the Senior Citizens Center
located at 220 Jackson Pike are as
follows:
Monday, May 24 - Vinton Site
Exercises, 11 :30 a.m.; Chorus, 1-3
p.m.
Tuesday, May 25 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m.; Craft Glass, 1-3 p.m.;
Birthday Party, 1:30p.m.
Wednesday, May 26 - Vinton
Nutrition Education, 11 :30 a.m .;
American Literature Class, I p.m .; ·
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.; Garden Club,
1-3 p.m.
Thursday, May '!/ - Vinton Site
Crafts, I p.m.; Bible Study, 1-2 p.m.;
. Vinton Blood Pressure Check, 11:30
a.m.
, Friday, May 28 - Staff Meeting,
8:15-8:45 a.m.; Yoga Class, 10 a.m.;
Art Class, 1r3 p.m.; Woodworking
Class 1-3 p.m.; Craft Mlni-C~&gt;urse,
1-3 p:m.; Vinton Birthday Party;
Soeial Hour, 7 p.rrl.
·
The Seniqi' Nutrition Program wlll
serve ihe (ollowlng menus:
·
Mondily - Salisage patue, com
pudding, green beans, bread,.butter,
fresh oranges, milk. , /
.' ·
' Tuesday~ Tuna saliid/cbeeseand
.lettuce, pickled beets, ca~ge slaw.
breadi butte~;. bread pqddfug, milk.
Wedilt!lld&amp;Y ~ Chicken, gravy,
butte~ ,peas, "_1118hed· .potatoes,
· muffin, butter, apncota, milk.

' sauc~,

1.07
32 Oz. Planter's
Peanut Popcorn

Oil

1.17

Bdl. Our Reg. 1.67

(1

100% Planters Peanut Oil
w1th artifiCial but1er
flavor. Greal popcorn
flavor'

601

2 AbSorbent Kitchen Towels Or 3 Dishcloths

(162)
Sale Price

1 38
•

Of cotton/ polyester terry in choice of solid colors.
Shop now and Save at K mart.

Vla.slc" Pickles
C hoose 46-oz • tar ot
Ea . Pol1sh o r Kosheo d•lls
'Ne1 w 1

Sun.·Tues.

~fjtj~~~~~
~w~

~tita~GH~~~
~~~,~~~~~~ 0
~

·C&gt;-- I'

I

~

Save30%
~ '(163)

Our Reg. 36.88

~ 23.97

creole

11-qt.lniUiated Chelf

' ·

SQfety latch. drain and tray.
Shop and save at K-mart

. Our Reg. 12,88 '

•'
Sold In
Sporting Goads Dept.

Sale Price

8··97 1ft . 14.97
40.pc.loeket

W'- and M"- dr. S.A.E.I

metric set. Meidl case.

12·pack Cooler
Holds 12 beverage cans
and Ice, for outdoors.

Our Reg. 1.28

97~

(165)

32•oz. • Glau Plus•
Glass and cabinet
cleaner; trigger .

..

Our Reg.

( 166)

68~Pkg.

Save On paper Dinner Plates
Pkg . of 80. 9" white paper plates ..
Shop and save at Kmart.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD ~ GALLIPOLIS

,, · po~ata,

~ -

,I
/

'

COLOR

Ladles'
Fashion Tops
S•ze S- M-l

. IIPin&amp;chl~l)l!.Pr, ·dirk ~d, bUtlet, r~ rrwt, milk.
,

••

5x7" or 8xl0"'

{161)

tapioco/whipped ~·
/v
. .•'
' Fri~y - Tuna pat4le/cheelt

..

7.96-9 .96

Gallia senior
citizens' calendar

b\ltter,
diilk.

$

PKG . OF 44

Our Reg .

Ladles' Woven
Blouses
S1zes 32-38

lon)atoes, fruit ~d.. cornbread,

I

~

2-bor pkg . Flip Flash. pkg . o f 6 M ag•cubes
2·bar pkg. Gr Floshbar II ............ 2.97

Meigs bookmobile
Bookmobile service in Meigs
County is brought to you by the
Meigs County Public Library under
contract with the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries for May 24-26.
Monday, May 24 - Carpenter
(Laura's Store), 3:1().3:41) p.m.;
Dexter (Church), 4:1()..4 :40; Danville (Church), 5:20oli:4~; Rutland
(First National Bank), 6:J0.8. Short
film will be shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives.
Tuesday, May 25 - Portland (Post
Office I, 2:1().2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls
(Effie's Restaurant), 3: 1~-3 : 50;
Racine (Bank), 4:35-jj:JS. Short film
will be shown I~ minutes after book'"mobjle arrives; Syracw;e (Pool) ,
6:5().8:50. Short film will be shown 15
minutes after bookmobile arrives.
Wednesday, May 26 - · Tuppers
Plains f Arbaugh), 7:25-3:05 p.m.;
Riggscrest Addition, 8:20-9. Short
film will be shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives.
Drop by our nearest bookmobile
for · free entertairunent and info~tion for people of all ages. We
have how-to-d&lt;&gt;-its on everything
from auto repair to dieting, many
paperbacks, and access to all the
libraries in the area to take care of
your information needs. The bookmobile staff will look forward to
seeing you .

(155)

Char-Broil Gas Grill
Durable Ru sl Proof cons!fuct1on
Econom1c. qu1ck coo k1n g. mob1le ba se

FllpFiash II Or Maglcubes

G. E. l·WayBulb 50·100·150 .... m

Plymale

Special

16 OZ. BOT.TLES

$99

2.37

G.E. Soft White Light Bulbs
Pkg of 4- 60, 75 or 100

Super

Super
Special

II

Ou r Reg 133 .88

Our Reg. 2.15

Super
Special

HAMBURGER DILLS...............

you 1 comparable Qvatoty
raiN reducloon on puce

20

Super
Special

OUART991a
JAR
"'

,.,.lvel

LB.

CUCUMBERS ................ ,.

.

hrm ontentJOn •• 10 I\8Ve ....."" ~•

hMd 1t4Wn on llocl&lt; CJr1 0V1

.av.rtiMd 1ltm 11 r\01 IVI~Iblt too pour
Chile dut 10 en y un lo1 eseen •eaaon
K fT\1111 ...... OS- I Ra,., Checlo Ql'l IIOQUeJI
lol lhti l'nel~ (00. ~11'1'11 01 &lt;IUOI'I
.,.. tWTW~y wanhly ) to~ puodla!llld at the
tale pnce ............,.. avaolable 01 ..,., -..11

"

8

Our

4'9

FRESH GREEN

VLASIC

Open Daily!0-9;
Sundayl·6

'

BAKING

~~~:~c:u~~ 2~ij9c

Best man will be Brian Jury,
brother of the groom. Ushers will be
Kent Miller of Worthington, Ky .;
Stan Line of Harrisburg, Pa .;
Charles Fortney of Kenosha, Wis.,
and Todd Nibert of Gallipolis,
brother of the bride.
Carla Evans of Gallipolis will
register the guests.
A reception immediately following
the ceremony will be held at the Elks
Lodge of Gallipolis. All friends of the
couple are invited to attend.

SUPERIOR BONELESS

Super
Special

SUPERIOR

69

I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Prices Effective Sunday, May 23rd
Through Saturday, May 30

Super
Special

t' omrroy - Middl e port- Gallopolis, Ohio- f' oont Pleil Silnt , '1&gt;- . v.1 .

(continued from B-5)

Accept

'We Reserve the RigM to Urn~ Quantity''

l9B2

Engagements

We
SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gal6pol&amp;. Oh~ Phone 446-9593

n

'

. " ..

~.

&gt;-.

\

�'

~-. n m p rr• v - IV\ 1ddl ep( rt -

Astrographs

SUNDAY

May 23, 1982
In the yt·ar follow1ng your birthday you'll far e best when you undertake enterprises or ve ntures that do not require a partner. Acting independently . you'll fmd fewer obswrles strewn in yo ur path.
GE~IINI I May 21-June 201 St•lect an acti vity today that you enjoy ,
and that s fun for yo ur ma te as well. Un less the choice is pleasmg to both,
tt could be Cj bumme r .
CANCER iJum· 21-Jul y 221 Hat her than delega te responsi bilities to
people who "a n'! ha nclk them. 1l 's best to do the extra work yourself
!&lt;&gt;.lay. The1r accomplishments may need redoing .
LEO !July 23-Aug. 221 It's fun when socializing wi th pals to try new
places. but thiS may not be the da y to do it. Go where you are well-

TUPPERS PLAINS - Joppa
United Methodist church will host
a revival with Rev. Thoma Sunday through Saturday . Rev.
Robert Sanders will preach
Tuesday and Wednesday. Rev.
Carl Hicks will preach Thursda}
and Friday with a Saturday concert by The Thomas Family . Tht
public is invited.

received and know what to expect.

MIDDLEPORT - Slides of the
Holy Land will be shown by Ollie
McKinney Sunday at 7:30p.m. at
the Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport. Public invited .

VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 You will handle matters that a rc
meanmgful tu your sccu nty or status wt th confidence t oday, but there's a
possibility you won' t use

~II

your s marl':i in other area s.

LIBRA IS&lt;'pl. 23-0l'l. 2:11 Even though you may 1w1t agree with
another's philosophy, you'd be wist· not to make an issue of it today.
Nothing is ap t to be resolved. Hard feelings could result.
SCORPIO lOri. 24-N ov . 221 Sometimes much mon• is dt•manded of us
than wha t we g&lt;·t in return. This might be one of those days for you. Ar&lt;'ept it grarious l) . You'll gl'! your turn.
SAG ITTARIUS I Nov. 23-De&lt;'. 211 Try not to bt•corne too closely mvulvcd tnd0:1y wt th om: who. L'Xpenence tells you, ca n bt' very bossy and

Inspection practice for Mary
Shr ine 37. Order of the While
Shrine of Jerusa lem will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday with the
Gallipolis Shrine at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. All members
are urged to attend.

dtctatonal. l-11' l'ou!d rum your s t&lt;Jy.

CA PRI CORN IUec. 22-Jan. 191 If there is something important you
to &lt;H'&lt;'U IIlpilsh today, don 't let outside distra ctions get you uffcoursl'. Har till' doors to tntruders.
AQUARIUS !Jan. 21l-Feb. 19 ) Today, instead of heeding the counsel of
one who has your best mtl'rest at heart , you may g1ve more creden ce to
the words of anu Uwr who hasn' t.
PISCES I Feb. 21l-Marrh 201 II matter un which you and your male do
not St:'l' eyL·- to-L'Yl' can be worked uut to tht• satisfaction of each if both will
rnakl• a s lllt ' t ' f' l' effort to do so .
ARIES IMarrh 21-April 191 Someone who is ca ust1 c and difficult to
get along with may cro" your path today. Instead of mirroring such
behaviOr, steer thi s )Wrson into line with ktndness.
TA URUS IApril 21l-May 201 If you are hav ing work or a service perfo rmed today. shop around until you are absolutely certain you're getting
the best pnn•. You 'll be sorry if yo u don't.
WISh

GALUPOUS Pembroke Club
will meet Sunday at 6 p.m. with
Mrs. K. R. Brandeberry .
GALUPOLIS - Students of
Vi vi an Kirkel will perform at a
piano recital Sunday at 4:30p.m.
at St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
The public is invited.
GALUPOUS - Rev. James
Diggins will hold services at First
Church of God, 109 Garfield Ave.,
Sunday at 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m. A
" pitch-in dinner" will follow Sunda y school in the fellowship hall.
The public is invited .

May 24. 1982
As lll lll' twks on. yo ur fwanc1al pros pects will grow more encoura glllg th1s l'OIIllllJ.! year. Bl' opt11m st1 c rega rdin g your materia l affa irs and ad likl' thl' WlllnL'r yo u will be.
GEMINI IMay 21-June 201 You're good at makmg quick decisions
today, but ) "OU llll gilt not be equal ly adept in actmg upon tl1em. Although
you' r L' nwnl~ tll y alert. yo u could be phys 1ca lly slugg is h.
CANCER I.Jun&lt;' 21-July 221 This could be a rather demandi ng day,
with rlauns fllt•d on yuur lunl' fro111 fam ily membe rs a nt.! outsiders alike .
T&lt;tk t· t'&lt;Ht' of the homl' front f 1rst.
LEO !July 23-A ug. 22111 Sllua tJon a bout which you are rather hopeful
could take some confusmg tur ns toda y. Don't let what oecurs rattle you.
You're lucky 111 the long 1·un .
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 221 Yuu'n• ca pable of accomplishing that
whi cll you sl'l out tn do today, but onre yo u gl' l a gnp on the situati on yo u
may let go uf yo ur own voli tio n.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0rt. 231 You' ve heard the adage: "The harder you
try. "The harder yo u try. the luckier yo u get." Th1s will be true for you
tud ay.L'SJWt'!ally Ill finl:inna l or ca reer matters.
SCORPIO IOrl. 24-N uv . 221 Dame Fortune has he r eye on you toda y.
Though she 1111 gilt not work thin gs out accord1ng to your blueprint, she'll
do a far better job for you on her own .
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-De&lt;'. 211 In important on l't&lt;~on e relationships today, 1t's essential that you make an extra effort lo the fair and
cooperatiVe . The tliv1dends wlil bt• worth the gestures.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan . 191 An opportunity ma y present itself
toda y to make a fri end of .someone you know merely on CJ business basis.
Respond when opportunity kn ucks.
AQ UA RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 In order to advance your position in
life. it may be necessary to wke a calculated risk today. Do so, if the odds
are ttl ted 111 your fa vo r.
PISCES I Feb. 21l-Marrh 201 Even 1f obstac les arc placed in your path
toda y 1n what normall y should be a smooth ve nture , don't let this disturb
you. Th1 s will open a door to something better .
ARIES I March 21-April 191 You will be more effectiVe in presenti ng
your ideas today if you don 't be labor your JlOints . Tell what needs to be
told and no more .
TAURUS IApril 20-May 201 Put fmancial matters firs t on yo ur agenda toda y anti lend to them wlu le you're fresh and alert. Your posSibilities
for turni ng a profit lesson as you tire.

Announcements
SCIP IO -

De&lt;.~dline

vations to the annual Scipio Alumni
Banquet and dance is May 26 . Admission to the banquet and dance IS
$6 a person . Dance only is $2 . Reservations ma y be made by conwctmg
Joy Clark, 102 Park St.. Middleport.
Ohio 45760 or phoning 992-3690 or 9927830.
The guest speaker will be Wililarn
White . former teacher. Soloist will
be Julie Spencer. Music for the dance will be provided by " Nashvi lle
Image."

POMERY - Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion. will host a
parade prior to the annual Memorial
Day services which will be held on
the parking at 9 a.m. Those wishing
to participate in the parade are to
contact Joe Struble at 44&amp;-3424.
Providing music at Pomeroy
Alumni dance, following the banquet
on May 29 will be "Dynasty." Over
the past 11 years Dynasty has
presented its vast repertoire
throughout the east coast perfunning for conventions, dances,
country clubs, cla&amp;s reunions and affairs of state, including numerous
performances for Kentucky Governor John Y. Brown.
Under the leadership of Jay Flippin, a professor of music at
Morehead State University, Dynasty
prides itself on being able to play top
40, big band tunes, 50s hits, pop country and a wide array of ballroom
dance tunes, including Latin, waltzes and polkas.

•

LEer A - Rev. E rnest Baker
wi ll hold services at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday at Walnut Ridge Church.
POMEROY - A picnic will be
held at Krodel Park at I p.m. Sunday for all single persons, divorced or widowed, and their
fami lies. On May 29 a dance and
covered dish dinner will be held
at Ripley Fire Hall at 7 p.m.

MONDAY
POMEROY- " Let George De
it ," a musical , will be presente~
Monday at Southern High School
at 7:30p.m. under the direction of
Mrs. Lee Lee. Admi"ion is 50
ccnb for adults and 25 cents for
stud ents. Presented by students
of Racine Elementary.
GALUPOUS Campaign
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
a revival Monday through Friday
at 7 p.m. Singing will be held each
night and Rev. Miles Trout wiU
be evangelist. Pastor Charles
Hively invites the public.
MEIGS Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, picnic, Monday, 6:30p.m.
at horne of Loretta Tiemeyer,
Hobson.

t 'lhtS.llll.

v

'II

.-1

rts

Riverby calendar

Calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at 7 p. m. at
the La Salle Hotel. All interested
persons welcome.
MEIGS COUNTY Republi can
Women will hold meet the candidates night Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. at the Meigs Inn. Bring
covered dis h. Meat, beverage
and table service wi ll be
provided . Public invited.
POMEROY - Joint meetmg
junior a nd senior American
Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webs ter
Unit 39, Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
post home.

GALUPOUS - A CelesteShoemaker campaign picnic will
bt' held at Fortification Hill
Shelter House Tuesday from :&gt;-7
p.m. Rep. Myrle Shoemaker,
candidate for Lieutenant Governor, will be prese nt. Entertainment will be provided by
Charlie Lilly and the Poorside.
The menu will include hotdogs,
baked beans, powto chips and
drinks. The public is invited and
there is no admission charge. For
more information , call Ra y
Matura at 44&amp;-8263.
POMEROY Past Matrons
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the horne ui
Mrs. Alfred Crow, Racine .

MEIGS Area
Holin ess
Association will meet Tuesday at
the Danville Wesleyan Church at
7:30 p.m. The Rev. Thomas
Collier, pastor of the Raci ne
Church of the Nazarene, wi ll be
the speaker. The public is invited.

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet
Tuesday . June I , not Tuesday,
May 25, as was reported to the
Sentinel.

MIDDLEPORT Lod ge 363
F&amp;AM Tuesday at 7 p.m. Work in

fellowcraft de~ree . All members
are asked to attend. Refreshments will be served.

May Exhi bit - 54 Pieces of Gallia
County High School Art Work, including oil, acrylic, pencil, ink .
pastels, tissue collage, scratch
board, ma crame, weaving,
photography, pa pier mache, plaster
and ceramics.

POMEROY - The Ladie.
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m . at the hospital
cafeteria . A products party will
be held. Members are reminded
to take toys for children.

May 23, 1-5 p.m. - Work party for
spring cleaning a t Riverby . Potluck
dinner at5:30 p.m .
May 25, 8 p.m. - Trustees
meeting.

KANAUGA United Methodist
Church will have Bible School
sta rting Tuesday and running
through June 4 from 6 to 8:30p.m.
The theme this year is "Come
Follow Jesus." There will be
cla sses for four-year-olds
through high school. Also, an
adult class will be offered. The
director, Florence A.! en, and
pastor. Joel Harlow. invite all to
attend .

Sunday

STATE FARM

INSURANCE

®

POMEROY - MIDDlEPORT
Lions Club will meet Wednesday
at noon at the Meigs Inn. All
Lions are urged to attend.

Spring Valley Plaza
Phone 446·4396

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

SLIPPING AWAY - Boston Red Sox shortstop Glenn Hoffznan,
right, reaches for the ball after he dropped a throw from Jerry Remy
which allowed Fred Stanley of the Oakland A's, left, to slide safely into

Slllt ,.,. lftsultiKt (Dftlpt~ · u
Komc OlloUI Blobfn on91DI'I . Uhnool

second base In the second inning at Boston's Fenway Park Saturday
afternoon. Hoffman was charged with an error on the play. 1AP Laserphoto)

Bird-defense
•
18 key

SPE(IALS SERVED 11-2 AND 5:00 TO 8:30
MONDAY- Beef Stew
TUESDAY- Swnt&amp; Sour Pork
WEDNESDAY- Roast Beef &amp; Dressing
'THURSDAY- Lasagna
FRIDAY- Baked Fish &amp; Frog Legs
SATURDAY- Roast Beef &amp; Dressing

ENfERTAINMf:NT IN THE LOUNGE

WHOLESALE - RETAIL

SWIMMING

MONDAY -THURSDAY

FRIDAY - SATURDAY

DAVE DUNKlE

lONE WOlF

9-1

9-1

PARTY CATERING
AND LIMITED NUMBER
OF ROOMS AVAILABL£
FOR MEMORIA[ 4 STAR
CEL£BRATION

ALL AREA ALUMNI
PLAN TO MEET YOUR
CLASSMATES AT
THE LASALLE

POOLS

. PORTABlE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM 1
For Your Winter Need
Call 304-429-4788

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

TRIO AT INDY - IDdy 1508 rookie nee driver
Dale Wbllllllgloo ( ztgbt) receives a coogralulatory
alap oalbe back lrom brother, BD1 Wbi&amp;Uzllioa, after
be qualified for lbe Memorial Day race and put bl8

~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_J

t

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Rookie
driver Phil Krueger suffered a
sllgllt concussion Saturday when
his race car struck the fourth-tum
wall dw1llg practice at the Indiana·
polla Motor Speedway.
He was treated at the Speedway's Infield hospital, then transferred to t1le downtown Methodist
Hospital for further observation.

special

FLOWERS. FOR REMEMBRANCE •••
*arT FlOWERS *WREATHS
*MONUMENT SPRAYS
POnED PlANTS
*ARRANGEMENTS IN BOTH REAL
AND PE~MANENT FLOWERS.

*
OR. GEORGE W. DAVIS

OPTOMETR Isr·----

family in lbe JndlanapoiJs Motor Speedway record
boob. Dale Joined brothers, Don. 98, and BDI, 32, to
quaiHytng for lbe race and became !be flnt sibling
tdo to nm at Indlanapoll8. Both older brothers ran bt
two previous races. ( AP Lallerpbolo)

Rookie Krueger hurt in '500' drills

VVe look back on Memorial Day to our friends
and loved ones who have given us so much to
remember with pride and gratitude.
Remember this special day with
flowers from Pomeroy Flower Shop.

Krueger's crash occurred dw1llg
a break in Saturday's scheduled
qualification period !or the May ll
Indianapolis 500.
Krueger, 30, of Fullerton, Call!.,
lost control o! his Chevy-powered
McLaren race car as he entered the
fourth turn. The car spun 1 ~ times
and sUd a! f~ strtklng the wall
backwards. He then skidded along

the wall another 40 teet and spun
again 440 teet Into the ln!leld.
~ The car suffered extensive dam·

age~e rear section.

Kru er was able to get out o! the
car wl out help.
A
k earlier. driver Gordon
Smiley as killed during a warmup
lap be!ore qualifying when his car
struck the third-tum wall head-cn.

*******

from the ofllce of:

.POMEROY. FLOWER s·HOP
''THE WAY AMERICA SENDS-LOVE."

Geoi'Je W. Dllvll, O.D.

--- - --------·,

..

----

•

"'·

HOPPING HOME - Atlanta Braves pitcher Larry McWilltams (27)
hop8 over the baseball Saturday, racing to cover home plate after his
wild pitch enabled Garry Maddox of the Philadelphia Phlllles to score.
1be Phlla woo, 11-2.-(AP Laserphoto.)

Southern game postponed
CJIILLICOTHE - Saturday's Cll\88 A District championship basebaD
game between Southern and South Webster was postponed, due to wet
grounds. 1be coolellt was teolatlvely rescheduled for Monday, either at 2
or 4 p.m., according to Tornado Coach HUlon Wol!e, Jr. The game Is
schednled to be played at Zane Trace High School, on Stale Route 1!19,
noriheut of ChDDcothe.
1bls was the second time the coolellt was called nff, due to rain. The two
teams were originally scheduled to play last Thursday.

trom Wlsconstn-8uperlor;
Marc Seguin, defensive encl from

.

lliaAx.\'I'JCI(;;;." !' . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

·! ....,.. 11- If-. _,. JI!IIIIJ - • . ,
·j ' ... _,..,....a,..•naln'*' h!Jiecl~ll
I

-

"

-~1

PITI'SBURGH (AP) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers announced Saturday the signing o! 10 more free
agen!s, bringing the National Football League team's total to 32.
The latest 10 will join the 14 draft
choices on Monday for the Steelers'
annual mint-camp.
The 10 free agents are as !ollows:
George Cooper, linebacker from
Michigan State; OWen Costello,
linebacker from WUUam and
Mary; Ken McCulloch, punterplace-kicker trom Arkansas;
John Powers, offensive guard
trom Michigan; Don Purtfoy, defensive end from Tulsa; .)ohn
Rodgers, tight elld from Louisiana
Tech; Eric Sams, running b'ICk

,'

458 8econti ·Ave., Gallipolis
Phone 44jl:2238
. ,.

BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Celtlcs were trying to avoid
thoughts of their past postseason
comebacks against Philadelphia as
they prepared to meet the 76ers tn
Game 7 o! their playoff series
Sunday .
The Celtlcs defeated the 76ers 8875 at Philadelphia Friday night to
tie their best-cf-7 National Basketball Association playoff series 3-3.
A victory by the Celtlcs at Boston
Garden on Sunday would clbmax a
comeback trom a 3-1 series deficit,
a !eat they also accomplished
against the 76ers last year and tn
1968, each time In the Eastern Conference !tnals. The two previous
comebacks by the Celtics from 3-1
deficits are among only !our in
NBA playoff history.
"The only thing Important now Is
the seventh game," Boston Coach
BW Fitch said. "Nobody ·NtiJ remember Game 1 or 3 or 6."
"What happened in the past Is history," Boston center Robert Parish
said. "The only thing that matters
Is Sunday."
"The 76ers are capable of winning Sunday," Celtlcs forward
Larry Bird added. "Each team has
shown It can wtn away from
home."
Bird and Parish, who each
scored 14 points and combined for
30 rebounds Friday, led a Celtlcs
de!ense that held Philadelphia to a
record-low 't1 points In the second
halt alter Boston traDed by as
many as 15 points tn the flrst
quarter.
The previous low was 28 points by
the Los Angeles Lakers at MUwaukee on April 7, 1954.
"Defense will be the key again
Sunday," Bird said. "Uwe play the
same defense In Boston that we did
tn Philadelphia, we'll be In shape."
The Celtlcs did not get their flrst
lead In Friday's game unw mid·
way through the !ourth quarter, but
they never lost It again.

Steelers sign I 0
more free agents

have a n eye examination. Any or
all oflthose symptoms mentioned
could also be from other eye conditions. Only your eye specialist
can determine the cause. If the
diagnosis is cataract, an EARLY
examination is desirable. Later
on, the more advanced cataract
will make it more difficult to look
into the pupil and examine the
back of the eye. Other impairments may go undiscovered.

In ll:ie Interest of beHer vlsfon

by a pitch a nd Gary Gray singled
home two runs. Todd Cruz followed
with an RBI single.
Dave Henderson got on when
shortstop Robin Yount fumbled a
grounder, loading the bases, and
Maler lined Lerch's fi rst pitch Into
the left field bleachers.
IWd Sox 7, A's 4
BOSTON !API- Dave Stapleton
punched a run-scoring single to
right to snap 4-4 tle and Boston
rapped three doubles In the eighth
Inning as the Red Sox beat the Oak·
land A's 7-4 on Saturday.
Stapleton' s hit follow£:1 a double
by Carl Yastrzemskl. Rich Gedman doubled to score Stapleton and
a double by Rick Miller scored
Gedman.
The tle-breaktng hit came off A's
starter Bo McLaughlin, 0.2. who
Orioles 6, Blue Jays 0
TORONTO (AP) -Dennis Mar· took the loss.
Bob Stanley, 4-1, got the victory.
tlnez pitched the Orioles' third conHe pitched 8 1-3 Innings In rellef of
secutive shut out , and John
Bob Ojeda, who was hlt for three
Lownsteln homered for the second
day In a row Saturday to lead Balli· runs In the first.
more to a 6-0 win over the Toronto
Phlls ~. Braves 2
ATLANTA (API - Pete Rose
Blue Jays.
Lowenstein drove In three runs, drilled a two-run double to cap a
two with his ninth homer of the sea· three-run fifth Inning as Philadelson and another with a sacrifice fly, phia defeated the Atlanta Braves
backtng the six-hit pitching of Mar- 5-2.
tinez, 4-3. Martinez struck ou\ six
The !'hUiles' Mike Krukow, 4-2,
was the winning pitcher and Ed
and walked two.
The loss went to Dave Stleb, 2-5. Farmer got the save.
Larry McWUilams, 2-2. was the
Mariners 7, Brewers 1
loser.
MILWAUKEE (AP ) - Rookie
Rose' s double off McWilliams
Jlm Maler slugged a grand slam
scored Krukow , who had singled,
homer to cap a seven-run rally In
a nd Bob Demler, who doubled.
the third Inning as the Seattle Ma ·
Rose came home on a single by Bo
rtners delea ted the MUwa ukee
Dtaz.
Brew~rs 7-1 Saturday .
Atlanta's Glenn Hubbard was
Gene Nelson, 2-6, was the winthrown out at the plate by Demler
ning pitcher, tossing a four-hitter .
When he trted to score on Dale MurRandy Lerch, 3-4, took the loss.
Seattle broke a three-game los· phy's single In tl'e first and Ra!ael
Ramirez was nailed tn the second
lng streak and 11 was the Brewers'
Inning
by Gary Matthews when Raeighth de!eat In 12 games.
In the third, Bud BuUing hit an mirez tried to score from second on
Brett Butler's single. Murphy
Infield single for Seattle, Paul
slugged
a solo home run In the fifth.
Serna bunted on, AI Cowens was hlt

DETROIT (AP) - Jack Morris
pitched five no-hit Innings and
teamed with Dave Toblk on a twohi Iter to pace the Detroit Tigers to a
5-1 victory over the Call!ornla An·
gels Saturday.
Morris, 6-3, allowed only one
baserunner, on a second-Inning
walk to Reggie Jackson, unW short stop Ttm Foil homered for the first
time this year on the first pitch of
the sixth Inning.
Morris was replaced at the start
of the eighth Inning by Toblk, who
earned hls first save. Morris had
complained of a stiff shoulder.
Lance Parrish provided the o!fenslve spark with a two-run triple
as the Tigers won for the ninth time
In their past 10 games.

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY - All members o(
Drew Webster Post 3~. American
Legion, Pomeroy. ask that aU
members who ca n to be at Beech
Grove Cemet•ry Wednesday at
6:30 p.m. to place flags on
Veterans' graves.

M ay~~' tYH~

Detroit
defeats
Angels

DAYl982

EARLY CATARACT
DETECfiON
Cataract is a clouding of the
lens which lies just behind the
pupil. The s ymptoms are
blurring or clouding of vision, often beginning in one eye only.
You may see multiple images or
experience glare in bright light.
Images may appear brighter
with one eye than with the other.
The most corrunon cause, by
far , is something we all experience - the process of aging.
Fortunately, it can be corrected
by surgery (if needed). Then
when the properly prescribed
glasses or contact lenses are applied you should be able to see as
1 well as you did before.
If you are experiencing any of
th~ ~v~. symp~o~,.~ou s_hould

~imts· ientintl Section

ORIAL

Go Bass or
Go Barefoot

to rnake reser-

SYRACUSE - Homecoming at
the Sy ra cuse Church of the
Nazarene will be held on May 30 at
10 :30 a.m . Dr . J . Witmer Lambert
will be the spea ker. The Holly famil y
and Singspirations will be the
singers. The Rev. James Kittle invites the publi c.

(,,l lltP " It 'i, Ohtn- t ~r· tnt

I) .

_,., •

ltlce; Wlllle Sydn(l', wide reoelver. ..... Clllllllllhnldti.O..IIolt .. lllewateftPouaoJ'• "'*aiuwa b w ~ IWiard8J I

lbGiilbc·

ldck returner from SyracUJe; and
Tom Tabor, defensive tackle from
Baylor•

INTO SECOND ROUND -

Nancy Lapez tees off during second

round of the Chrysler-Plymouth Charity Classic golf tournament Saturday at Wykagyl Country Club In New Rochelle, N. Y. (AP Laserphoto I

�f',lge- &lt; 1- I he Sund.ly l1rni'S ~cniiOPI

Moly 23, 1 Y82

t 'omrroy - Middtcpori- Gollhpohs, Ohio- l' oinl f'IColSolnl, '/1 ' . Vol .

Mity 23, 1982

Kicks wind up soccer league play
this year unbeaten, unscored on

Celtics victory
away from title
~HILADELPHIA

lAP) - The
Boston Celtlcs, who made Philadelphia' s offense and Its oncefonnldable series lead disappear
on the same day, are one victory
away from completing their second
straight miracle playoff comeback
against the 76ers.
The Celtlcs held Philadelphia to a
record-low 27 points In the second
half F'rlday nlght and posted an 8875 VIctory to even the Nationa! Basketball Association semifinal
playoff series at 3-3.
The 76ers, who blew a 3-11ead In
the Eastern Conference finals
against Boston a year ago, wlll
sutter the same late again unless
they can beat the Celtlcs at the Boston Garden In Game 7 Sunday.
"We can't overlook the fact that
this Is still a seven-game series,"
Boston Coach Bill Fitch said. "We
still have to go home and play
hard."
Fitch said he felt no sense of deja
vu regarding this series and last
year, saying: "I have enough trouble with English without trying
French."
Some of the Celtlcs players said
they didn't believe last year's
, comeback would help them
•• Sunday.
"This game (the sixth) and what
'· · happened In the past Is history,"
satd center Robert Partsh, who
scored 14 points and pulled down 13
rebounds for the Celtlcs. "The only
thing that matters Is Sunday."
But forward Cedric Maxwell

added, "It's not over, but II the
76ers said what they really !eel Inside, they would say they had lost a
golden opportunl ty to end the series
at home."
"I'm so tired of hearing about
last year," 76ers Coach Billy Cunningham said. "We're down, but
we'll get a good night's sleep, practice some tomorrow and then go up
to Boston and try to win."
The 76ers shot only 35 percent lor
the game, but their offense was espectally Ineffective In the second
hall, when they hit only seven of 34
shots lor 20 percent.
The 27 second-half points was an
NBA playoff low since the league
adopted the 24-second clock In 1954.
The previous record was 28 points
by Los Angeles against Mtlwaukee
on Aprtl 7, 1974.
The 11 points scored by the 76ers
In the fourth quarter tied the playoff
record low held by three other
teams. In the ftnall8 minutes of the
game, the 76ers had lour field
goals, and two or those were on
goaltendlng calls.
Philadelphia guard Andrew Toney, who scored 39 points In one
76ers' victory and 30 In another durIng the series, scored three points
and was a nightmarish 1-for-11
!rom the field.
"Offensively, we couldn't generate anything In the second half, "
Cunningham said. "When we had
good shots, we didn't make them,
and the Celtlcs were very effective
at blocking shots Inside."

FOLLOW THE BOUNCING BALL- Philadelphia 76ers' Julius Erving, left, and Boston Cetttcs' Larry Bird appear to be playing follow the

By HANK LOWENKRON
i\P Spolta Writer
Janet Guthrte, the female pioneer at the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway, gives the second
woman to drtve at the 2~-mlle oval
no chance for victory In the 1982
race.
"Desire (Wilson) Is a very good
driver but there's not a prayer she's
going to win this race this year,"
said Guthrte atter the car she drove

CINCINNATI (AP)- Radio station WLW, which has broadcast
Clnctnna t1 Bengals games since the
franchise was created In 1968, wlll
not do so In the upcoming season.
The Bengals announced F'rlday
that their 1gj2 National Football
League games w1ll be ortglnated
and broadcast In Cincinnati by radio station WKRC.
The club gave no of!tctal reason
lor the switch, but has complained
tn the past about WLW's policy of
pre~mpdng early-season football
games with Cincinnati Reds
games .
Meanwhtle, the Bengals an-

.
.

In becoming the first woman to try
and quallty here was presented to
the lndlanapolls Motor Speedway
Hall of Fame.
"Desire doesn't have the equipment to win at Indianapolis," said
Guthrte, who failed to quall!y for
the race In 1976 and then made the
field the next three years. "It'sdttftcult to convey to the public the Importance of equipment In this race.
The public seems to think the

nounced they expect 50 veterans,
seven 1982 draft choices and two
free agents to be at their Spinney
Field training facility for a threeday mini-camp starting Saturday.
The defending Amertcan Football Conference champions wlll
have workouts at 3 p.m. Saturday,
10: 30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Sunday and 10
a.m. Monday.
"This camp Is mainly concerned
with conditioning," said Coach Forrest Gregg. "We get a good took at
guys and start them thtnktng about
the
coming
portant
threeseason.
days."It's a very lm-

OFHR GOOO THROUGH JUNE 6 1982
Stock N 448

..........

NOT "AGAIN"- Philadelphia 76ers' coach Billy Cunningham watl'hes in disbelief as his team collapses during fourth quarter action against the Bostic Bel tics during an NBA playoff game in Philadelphia Friday.
I AP Laserphoto ).

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
- Longshot Frtar Anselm took first
. In the featured eighth race at This. · Uedown on Frtday, coveting the six
· furlongs In 1:112-5.
The winner paid $67, $16.80 and
$5.80.
George's Gem finished second
and paid $3.80 and $2.80, whlle How
To Know returned $3.20 for finishIng third.
In the final race trl!ecta, the combination of 4-7-1 paid $4,027.50.

helping you to your
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1981 FORD ESCORT L
3-DOOR HATCHBACK
Dark spr uc e metallic, 1.6 liter eng ine, 4 speed overdrive
transmission, rear window wiper/washer, deluxe sea t
be lts, white sidewa ll tires, power steering, bumper rub
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Guthrte, 44, stlll hopes to return to
Indy as a driver.
"I have someone working to put
together a package lor next year
and that person Is optimistic, so I'm
optimistic of· retumlng," she said.
The turbo-charged Voilstedt
Guthrte drove was presented to the
Museum Frtday.
"I had not planned to come back
durtng the pertod of the race but
when Bryant Heating (her sponsor
In 1976) called about donating the

make the car go faster ."
Guthrle said she hoped Wilson,
who .w as her teammate earlier this
year at Sebring In an endurance
race, would be able to make the
33-car field for the May 30 race.
"But I don't think her success or
!allure at Indianapolis w1ll have
any effect on my hopes for Indianapolls. Desire Is capable of wlnnlng
at Indianapolis but her problem,
and mine, Is money. You've sbnply
got to lind the funding to put together the type of program used by
the winning teams," said Guthr1e.

car, I was delighted," she said.
"The car brtngs back a tot of

r-..;;~;.;;;:;;;;~g·

drtver Is the only thing that

matters.''

memories."
Guthrte, whose best flntsh at lndl·
anapolls was ninth In 1978, has
mixed emotions about her debut at
the track.
"It was a very trying pertod of
time because of all the comotlon,
hostility and scepticism," she said.
"But It was also a rewardtngperlod
of time because or the IJE!SlPie I was
working wlth ... the car owner, the
chief mechanic and the sponsor.
We all worked together to try and

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PAT HILL

FOR D

-

Fury had their hands full and just
squeezed by the Chiefs by a score
1-0. The chiefs played one of their
best games of the season in an e!!orl
to stop the Furys' bid lor a possible
first place finish. Andrew Sattler
had the game's only goat to give the
Fury the win.
The Stars' bid to knock the
Strikers out of first place was
spoiled in the last two minutes of the
game. Down 1-0 with two minutes to
go, the Strikers got a pair of clutch

1978 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC

Latonia planning promotion
FLORENCE, Ky. (API - Latonia Race Course has plans to draw
the daytime thoroughbred fans to
Its nighttime harness racing.
For the next three weeks, a losing
"sbow" ticket from nearby River
Downs In Ctnctnna tl Is worth free
admission to Latonia.
"We'd like to Introduce the harness sport to the thoroughbred people around town," said Corwin
Nixon, general manager of the Ohto
Valley Harness Association. "This
Is a perfect way of getting Introduced - and the price Is perfect.
We hope to see a large number of

River Downs patrons on this side of
the (Ohio) river."
River Downs operates In the afternoon, and Latonia at night.
The promotion lasts through
June 15, but the Latonia harness
meet continues until Aug. 15. River
Downs operates through Labor
Day.

McDaniels named
McKinley coach

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - McKinley High School, winner of the Ohio
High School Athletic Association
Division I football playoff last !all,
has promoted assistant football
Coach Thorn McDaniels to head
coach.
He succeeds Terry Forbes, who
posted a 22-2 record In two years13-0 last year - before quitting this
sprlng to become defense coordinaPORTSMCUTH - Gallipolis ten- tor at the University of Akron.
" nis players performed welt in secMcDaniels, 33, Is tatdng on his
;:tional tournament play here Friday.
first head coach job. He served two
~ Gerry Prendergast advanced to
years as Forbes' assistant, was an
• the district in singles action while
assistant five years at his alma
~; Brad Johnston-Kev Carty advanced
mater, Onvtlle. and an aide three
: to the district in doubles play.
years at Mansfield Madison .
; Prendergast beat Dave Clark of
He received a bachelor's degree
; Vinton County, 6-1 and 6-1; Todd
at Clarlon (Pa.) State College and
; Cummings, Hittsboro, 6-0 and 6-0;
Is doing graduate work at Walsh
; then No. 2 seeded John Lee, Bishop · College here .
• Fiaget, 2-&lt;i, 6-3 and 6-3. He battled
: Tyler Terriits, Washington CH, in
·; Saturday's district action at Por- Top fillies to compete
:·t:;mouth.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Some
! Johnston-Carty downed third: seeded Kerry Ward-Randy of Ohio's top 3-year-otd pacing tu• Christian, Wellston, 6-4 and 64; No. lles wlll compete In the second leg
,; 2 seeded Scott Crenshaw-George or their Ohio Sires Stakes series on
:~ Hill, Portsmouth, 6-2 and 6-2 and May 28 at Northfield Park's halfmile track.
'~ Saturday, battled top-seeded Kim
Willow Mother, Quiet Time and
· Huetett-Chris Taylor, Waverly.
: Other GAHS tennis players gave a Melsota are each coming off a vic: good account of themselves. Tonya tory In their opening serles race,
' Sattler lost to Joe Molnar, Bishop which was contested In three heats
: Flaget, 2~ and~; Brian Wilttost to at Lebanon Raceway.
The field w1ll compete In a total of
~ Ben Anfone, Greenfield, 6-1 and 6-1.
.; In doubles play, Paul MacKenzie- five series races and wlll be earning
. Angie Shelton beat Ann Dotty, Greg points and purse money In an at,; Hastings; Portsmouth Clay, 7~ and tempt to qualify lor the $lOO,IXXl
Carnation Pace championship In
~ 6-2, then lost to Jamie Bryan-Dave
September.
-: Collins, Hillsboro, 2~ and 6-7.

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Jason Cremeans. In the sudden goals from Jason Thomas to prescr·
death overtime, the Cosmos got ve the win and remain the champs of
goals by Tommy Milstead and Lan- the 10 to 12 year old league. Stars'
ce Mason. The Comet:; were held to goal was scored by Chris Bailey.
one overtime goal !;Cored by Chri.s
The Rowdies ended the season on
Bolden .
a winning note as they stopped the
Express by a score of 2-0. Doug
The Kicks wound up the season
with an unblemished record as they
Wilkins and Brandon Curtis
stopped the Aztecs 9-!1 . Sean
provided the scoring punch lor the
Deckard scored a hat trick !three rowdies each scoring a goat. The
goals ) and Tom Hause and Jason
Rowdies got a strong game ofGordon added a pair of goa ts each. !ensively !rom Newt Jones and a
fine defensive effort by goalie RobBrandon Janey scored one goal and
in an official ruling Kim Betz and
bic Frank.
Kristi Brownell both got credit for
In the seven to nine year old
one goat as they kil!ked the ball into
league, the final standings are as
the net at the same time.
follows: Kicks, 7-0; Sockers, 6-1;
The Kicks finished the season with
Cosmos, 4-3; Tornados, 3-3-1:
a -7-0 record, the only undefeated
Comets, 3-3·1; Stings , 2-5;
team in the teague. Goalie Chris
Hurricanes, 2-5; Aztecs, ().I.
Plymale finished a fantastic season
In the 10 to 12 year old league, the
final standings are as follows :
USING HEB HEAD- Ann Naberhaus of Schaller,
for him and his defensive unit as the
using a strap on umbrella. Ann's sister Mary Jo
Kicks recorded their seventh Strikers, 6-1; Fury, !;-1-1; Rowdies,
Iowa keeps the rain off her head as she watc,hes her Nabt:rhaus came in third In the lA division of the
· ht s hut ou t goong
·
the en1·ore
4-2-1 ·, Express, 3-4·, Stars, 2-5 ·,
s t ratg
sister compete to the discus competition at the Iowa
dis&lt;'US throw. I AP Laserphoto) .
season without giving up a goa t.
Chiefs, 0-7.
High School Girls Track ~nd Field Championships by
In the 10 to 12 year old teague, the~=======--------~::::::..:::.:::=._:.::_:::_::..:_:.::_.:;::_:_:.::_:::_::::.::::.:::::::::::_::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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YOUR COST

GALUPOUS - The Gallia County Youth Soccer League, cQsponsored by the 0. 0. Mcintyre
Park District and the Gallipolis
Recreation Department, came to a
close last Saturday .
In the seven to nine year old
teague, the Suckers and Stings battled to a ()..{) tie at the end of
regulation time. The game went into
sudden death overtime (each team
taking live shot:; on goal! and the
Sockers came away with a 1-0 victory.
Overtime goals were scored by F.
J. Hastwell, Brent Simms, Lori Skidmore, and Travis Gillespie lor the
Sockcrs.
The Stings managed three goa ls
on Socker goalie Todd Hilton who
played an excellent game. Stings
goals were scored by Jell Ratliff,
Todd Wooldridge, and Curl Brown.
Casey Staten also played an exceptional game at goalie lor the
Stings.
The Tornados went out in style as
they defeated the Hurricanes by a 90 count. Josh Williams, Derek Rose,
Tod Napara, and Clint Davis all
scored a pair of goals lor the Tornados. Anthony Morris added one
goal to round out the scoring.
In another overtime thriller, the
Cosmos beat the Comet:; by a score
of 2-1. The game was tied 1-1 at the
end of regulation time. Cosmos' goat
was scored by Tommy Milstead and
the Comet:;' goal came on a shot by

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Lea

Sports briefs... I

blanks
Reds

•

'

NO DELAY FOR RAINES - Cincinnati Reds' catrher Alex Tn•vino tunts to ta g Montn·al Expos' hasr
runner Tim Raines as Raines slides ac:ross home plate
with the first run of a game, Friday night in Ci ncinna ti .
After a two- hour rain delay. Raim·s jumped on Rt·ds '
pitcher Mario Solo's first pitch for a doubil' . He was

tho•n sacrificed to third on a bunt by teammate Terry
Fra ncena. a nd then sco red on this pla y, a saerificc fl y
by teammate Andre Dawson to right field . The throw to
lht• plate o·ame from Reds ' rightfielder Paul
lluus holder. !AP Lascrphoto) .

Cards stop Dodgers, Astros top
Mets; Braves, Padres, Cubs win
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP SJM1ris Writer
ln Na tional League baseball action Frtday night, It was St. Louis 6,
Los Angeles 3; Houston 5, New
York I; Atlanta 7. Philadelphia 6;
San Diego 7, Pitts burgh 5; Mont rea l 2, Cincinnati 0 and Chicago 6,
San Francisco 4.
Cardinals 8, Dodgers 3
Ke n Oberkfell drove In three runs
with three sing les and Steve Mura
scattered five hits In 81 -31nnlngs as
St. Louts beat Los Angeles.
The Cardinals overcame a threerun Dodger flrst Inning, knocking
out Los Angeles start e r Jerry
Reuss In the sixth, when they
scored three Urnes. The loss was
the third stra ight tor Reuss. 4-4.
The Ca rdina ls scored twice In the

fourth lnnlng on Oberklell's twoou t, two run slngle. St. Louis Ued It
In the tlfth when Ozzle Smith
doubled with one out, took third on a
grou ndout and scored on a wild
pitch.
St. Louis broke the tie ln the sixth
whe n Reuss walked Lonnie Smith
wlth one out, then gave up succes-

sive singles to Tlto La ndrum .
Oberkfell a nd Glenn Brummer.
Mura, 4·3, wa lked three a nd
struck out two before needing relief
help In the ninth from Bruce Sutt er,
who gained his 12th save.
Astros 5, Mets I
Don Sutt on scattered slx hits In
elg ht Innings a nd became the first
N L pi tc her to win seven games t hJs
yea r Ln Houston 's vic tory over New
York.

NAILED AT THE PLATE - Houston Astr011' Phil Garner is out
trying to score from second base on teammate Craig Reynolds' base hit in
the second inning Friday night in the Astrodome. New York Mets' catcher John Stearns (121 made the ta g after taking the throw from LF
George Foster. (AP Laserpholo).

Sut ton. 7-1, struck out seven and
walked three In posting his flfth
straig ht victory against New York.
Frank LaCorte pitc hed the ninth Inning tor the Astros.
AJa n Ash by drove In two runs tor
the Astros, one with a sing le ln the
fourth a nd a nother with a sacrifice
Oy In the sixt h.
Mike Scott, 3-3, was the losing
pllche r .
Braves 7, Phlllles 6
Chris Chambliss drove In the tyIng run, then scored the gamewinne r on third baseman Mike
Sc hmidt's error In the seventh Inning as Atlanta beat Philadelphia.
After trailing ea rly by five runs,
the Braves rallied tor tour runs In
the tllth Inning a nd a noth er In the
sixth before Cla udell Washington
led off the seventh with a single. He
was sacrificed to second and scored
on Chambliss' single to tie the
game 6-6.
Chambliss took second on Dale
Murphy's s ingle, reached lh1rd
when Bob Horner filed to center
and came home when Schmidt
bobbled Bruce Benedict's
grounder.
Reliever Steve Bedrosian, 3-0,
gained the victory, holding the Phillies scoreless over the final three
Innings.
Padres 7, Pirates 5
R uppert Jones hit a pair of runsco ring singles and San Diego used
some shoddy Pittsburgh fielding to
beat the Pirates. The Pirates made
two errors, leading to three un·
earned San Diego runs.
John Montefusco, 2-4, hurled the
first six Innings and got his first win
since Aprll21 with relief help. Pittsburgh starter Eddie Solomon, 1·5,
gave up nine hits a nd three runs In
the fi ve Innings he worked.
Jones had a n RBI single In the
first Inning to extend his hitting
streak to 10 games and another runscortng hltln the ntth, whe n the Pa·
dres took a 3-0 lead. The Padres
scored their eventual winning runs
In the eighth

By JOE KAY
AP SJMiris Writer
CINCINNATI ( AP) - Charlie
Lea 's light arm took him from
glory to misery last season.
The Montreal Expos' right·
bander became famous when he
tossed a no hitter against the San
Francisco Giants on May 10, 1981.
Just before the mid-season strike,
however, his right elbow started
hurting a nd he finished the year as
ma inly a spectator In an Expos
unl!orm.
But Lea recorded a victory over
the Cinc innati Reds on Frtday night
lha t Indica ted he mlgh I have come
full circle from the elbow arthritis
tha t prevented him from throwing
last year.
"Charlie Lea was a wful good,
wasn' t he•" Expos Manager Jim
Fanning raved, alter Lea went
elght Innings In a 2-0 victory over
the Reds. "He's been good e very
game, hasn't he?"
Lea, 2·2, gave up just two hits, a
one-out single to Dan Driessen In
the sixth and a lead-off single to
Drtessen that chased him from the
gam e In the -ninth. Woodle Fryman
pllched to three batters to gain hts
second save.
Lea has been used as the !Jfth
starter on the Expos staff this season, despite a foreboding medical
diagnosis last year.
"The doctor who examined m y
elbow told me I wouldn't pitch
aga in ," Lea said. "He said to find
another way to make a living."
The right -hander said his performance Frtday night, alter rain delayed the start ot the game by two
hours and two minutes, reminded
him of his brilliant no-hitter.
"In the no- hitter I wa lked four
guys and got In jams I had to get out
of," Lea said . "I had to do the same
things tonight, so It reminds m e of
that ga me."
Lea walked two batters In the
third a nd le t the Reds load the
bases In the seventh on a walk, a
throwing error by second baseman
Tim Raines on a grounder, and
Driessen' s solid single to right. But
he got the next two batters on called
third strikes to prese rve the
shutout.

TENNIS
ROME (AP) - Fourth-seeded
Eliot Telt.scher of the United States
crushed fellow countryman Eddie
Dlbbs 6-2, 6-2 to reach the seml!lnats of the ~.(XX) Italian Tennis
Open.
Unseeded Pablo Arraya of Peru
upset Polish veteran Wojtek Flbak
2-6, 6-3, 6-2; Mats Wtlander, a 17·
year-old Swede, reached the semlfl·
na1s with a 6-1, 6-1 victory over
Tomas Smld of Dechoslovakla;
and Andres Gomez, 22, of Ecuador,
eliminated Spain's Jose Hlgueras
6-2, 3--6, 6-J.
BERLIN (AP) - Two Ameli·
cans and two West Germans ad·
vanced to the semifinals of the
$100,00) International German
Women's Tennis Championships.
In quarterfinal action, Bonnie
Gadusekscoreda7·5,6-3upselover
Czechoslovakian Hana Mandllkova; American Kathy Rinaldi
ousted Mirna Jausovec of Yugoslavta 4-G, 6-3, 7-5; Bettina Bunge
glided to a IHJ, 6-1 win over Duk Hee
Lee of South Korea; and Sylvia
Hanlka of West Germany downed
Andrea Leand of the United States
S-2, 7-5.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Kathleen Cummings of Colorado upset
No. 1 seed VIcki Nelson of Rollins
6--4, S-7, S-2 durtng a quarterfinal
match of the 1982 NCAA Women's
Tennis championships.
The No.2 seed was also defeated
when seventh-seeded Mlckl SchiJJig
of San otego State defeated Louise
i\llen of Tl1nlty 6--4, 6-J.

GOLF
ATLANTA (AP)- Larry Nelson
LEA EYES A WINNER - Montreal Expos' pitcher Charlie Lea eyes
the plate as he prepares to deliver a piiCh during a 2-0 shutout win over
the Cincinnati Reds, Friday night in Cincinnati. Lea gave up only two hits
through eight innings, both coming off the bat of Reds' hitter Dan
Driessen. After Driessen's second hit, a lead-off single to start the ninth
inning, Montreal reliever Woodie Fryman came on to nail down the win.
I AP Laserphuto I.
·
" There's not a lot you ca n say,"
said Reds Manager John MeN a m ·
ara. "Lea pitched a hell of a game.
He had real good breaking stuff."
Reds starter Ma rte Soto, 3-4, took
the loss despite strtklng out 11 bat·
ters In seven Innings. It was the
fourth time In 10 starts that Soto has
fanned at least 10 batters.
The Expos scored a run In the
first on Raines' lead-off double, a
sacrifice bunt, a nd a sacrifice fiy by
Andre Dawson . Warren Cromartie
doubled In the second and Lea hit a
bad-hop single over Drtessen's

Another award added
to Diles Tournament
POMEROY - There'll be lots of
trophies - and no speeches - al the
fourth annual . Da ve Diles Appalachia golf outing and dtnner.
And -there's a brand new trophy added to the list this year. It 's the "B1g
Jock" award and will be given to one
of the 1982 guests at the June 9 dmner at Royal Oak.
" It's a humorous award," said
Dave Diles. Hbut it 's a mean ingful
award, too. We're going to give illo
one of our guests who's gone out of
his wa y to be ve ry ni ce to us and who
appreciates what we're trying to accomplish for the Bend area."
In addition, the trophy selection
commiltee has already chosen the
recipi ents for the coveted "Good
Guy" awards - several of which are
given annually. Trophies will be
awarded, also, for low individual
gross and low net, we all as for the
low team gross and low team net.
Ernie Shuler and George Morris,
who head up the awards committee,
announced there will be honors for
the longest drive and closest to the
pin. " We'll also have smne other surprises this year, too," said shuler.
" We plan to present a couple of
distinguished service awards, and
some outstanding ac hi evement
plaques. One thing is certain, though
- we'll get the program over in a
hurry as we a lway.s do. We want to
111a ke sure our go Ifers arc we II
restc.J for the tourname nt lhe

head at first base tor tbe other run.
Fanning had decided to remove
Lea If the Reds mounted a threat In
the ninth.
" He threw 134 pitches. He threw
very well, but I had made up my
mind that If there was any little
problem In the ninth, I was going to
brtng In a fresh a rm," Fanning
said.
Lea was happy just to be pitching
comfortably again .
"I don't want to have to sit and
watch the team play, like I did last
year," he said .

Bucks top Gophers, advance in playoffs
CHAMPAIGN, ru. (AP)- Keith
Gonya and Eric Pfaff hit home runs
Friday to lead Ohio State to a 5-3
victory
overofMinnesota
the second
game
the Big Te nInbaseball
playoffs.

ter field leading oft the eighth Inning to give OSU a f&gt;-3 lead and
pitcher J eff Aurentz pitched out of a

bases-loaded jam In the top of the
ninth to save the victory for Doug
Swearingen, 9-0.

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

The Buckeyes, 44-J().J, met defending champion Michigan, 44-8,
In a second-round game Saturday
In the double ellmlnatlon tourna·
ment at liUnots Field.
Minnesota, 28-2(}.1, and llllnots,
4!1-22, played In a losers' bracket
game Saturday. Mlchlgandeleated
liUnots 4-2 In Friday's first game.
Gonya slugged a two-run homer
In the lh1rd Inning, giving Ohio
State a 2-0 lead, but Minnesota ·
scored once on the fourth and twice
In 'the seventh to take a 3-2
advantage.

followin~ morning ."

OSU's Tom Woleslagel had an
RBI double In the seventh Inning to
tle the score at 3-3 and Minnesota
pitcher Jim Francour walkedln the
go-ahead run with the bases loaded.
Pfaff hit a home run to dead cen·

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department, Ohio State Univers ity ;
Jim Shewak, Pittsburgh, Pa ., and
Eddyville , Ky., tel evision producer .
producer of " The Jackie Sherrill
Show": Bud Tice, chief trainer, Buffal'o Bills' pro football team; Bill
Uzelac, Southfield, Mich., PGA pro,
Plum Hollow Golf Club; Vic We rtz .
former all-star outfielder, Cleveland
Indians and Detroit Tigers , and Dick
Weber, Florissant, Mo., bowling
champion and member of Pro
Bowlt-rs' Hall of Fame.

ADVANCES TO DISTRICT Meigs Freshman Amy Ervin advanced to Class AA District track
competltlou last week with a fine
performance fn the sectlonals.
She was Southeastern Ohio
League champion In the 200 yard
dash ea rlier this year at Ironton.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Baltimore Colts line backer Mike Woods
ha s su11ered a "severe degree ot
paralysis" as a result of a gunshot
wound, and II Is doubtful he will
ever play football again, a doctor
said Saturday.
Dr. Melvin Shafran. c hief of the
division of neurosurgery at Mt. SIna l Medical Center here, said
Woods, Tl , was ln "stable but serious" condition.
"He does have some movement
In his right shoulder muscles today
which was not there yesterday,"
Shalron said . Asked U Woods could
play football again, Shalron said ,

Rangers, Giants
post loop wins
Mason Rangers 6
MiddleJMirt Braves S
MIDDLEPORT - The Mason
Rangers edged the Middleport
Braves despi te being outhit seven to
five he re recently in local little
league action. J eff Nelson was the
losing pitcher with seven strike outs
and six walks. B. Decker picked up
the win in an outstanding effo rl of 10
strikeouts and three walks .
Leading hitters for the Middleport
Braves were Steve Cassell with a
single, David Smith two tripl es and a
single, J eff Nelson a single, Joey
Loving a single, and Luke Burdette a
single. B. Decker led Maso n with a
tripl e, while Smi th. Zuspan, S.
Russell, and T. Russell each singled.
Powell's Giants 4
Syracuse 2
POMEROY - Powell's Giants of
Pomeroy pulled off a thrilling 4-2
victory over the Sy racuse team with
a three run fifth innin g. Chad
Taylor, and losing pitcher Shawn
Cunningham combined to fa n seven
and walk three, while Bnan Tannehill went the distance with hel p
from Artie Hunnell posting nine
strikeouts and se ven walks.
Bill Brothers, Brian Tannehill ,
and Shane Simpson each doubled for
Powell's, while Don Dorst and Artie
Hunnell singled.
Syracuse hitters were Shaw n Cun·
ningha m and Barry McCoy with two
singles each, a nd Shawn Arnott,
Todd Lisle each with singles.

Fencing
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The
head team physician tor Ohio State
University says It will be at least~
days before doctors know the extent of the permanent Injury to
Buckeye lacrosse player Brtan
Hanson.
Hanson has been hospitalized at
Mansfie ld General Hospital since
sustaining a fractured neck In an
accident May I.
"The bone ruston of the area of
the fracture Is healing well," said
OSU team physician Dr. Robert J .
Murphy. "He has Increasing tunc·
tlon of his upper extremetles. As
yet,. he has no movement of his
lower extremetles."
·
Murphy said Hanson wlll be
transferred to Dodd Hall on the
OSU campus June I tor
rehabllltatlon.

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Colts General Manager Ern I&lt;• Accorsl said Frtdav night that the club
was "very conrPrncd" about
Woods' condition.

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hlllld •••

linebacker tor the first seven
games last season. HP was then
placed on the team's Injured reserve list with a knee Injury a nd
missed the rest of the season.

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"It Is very doubtlul."
Hospital spo keswoman Lois
Cooper said the bullet traveled
through Woods' spina l cord a nd
was lodged In his body. She said no
surgery to remove the bullet was
planned .
Pollee said Woods . of suburban
Sha ker Heights, was shot In the
neck during a burglary at hi s father's Cleveland home.
Pollee said the assailant escaped
with three gold rings, a gold a nd
diamond walch, a gold neckl ace
a nd a pend a nt. The s tole n goods
were va lued at $3,150.
Woods was the Colts' sta rting

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Dolt-, Was hington, D. C.. furono•r a llpro playe r, Was hin gton Redskins:
Dun Nchlen, Mor ga ntuw~. W. Va ..
football coa c h. Wes t Virgi nia
Uni ve rs ity: Toon Nowatzke, Dearborn, Mi ch., form e r all-Big Ten
fullback at Indiana, running back,
Detroit Lions; Danny Lee. basket ball coach, Ohio University: J im
Northrup, Detroit, Mic h., form er
outfi eld~r. Detroit Tigers, membe r
of 1968 world c hampions hip team .
John Punt, Oxford, Ohio, form e r
a ll-star football pla yer, Miami of
Ohio, fo rm er coac h-athletic dire ctor
at Yale, and Northwestern, and Indiana ; Will Perry, Ann Arbor.
Mich., assistant alhlelic director,
University of Michigan ; Dr. Charles
Ping, president , Ohio University,
Athens; Sonny Randl e, football
coac h, Marshall Uni versity ; Eddie
Ro se nberg, Detroit , Mi c h. ,
prcsodent, Fro e ndship Builders;
Tom RL•ed , football coach, Miami
Uni ve rsity ; Chris Schenkel, Lake
Tippecanoe, Ind., sportscaster, ABC
Sports; Chuck Stobart, football
coach, Univers ity of Utah: Art
Schlichter, quarterback, Ohio State
University and No. 1 draft choi ce of
the Ba lli more Colts.

v . 11.1 .

Baltimore Colts linebacker
paralyzed as result of gun
wound; grid career doubtful

Following is the celebrity list. as
of May 18, for the Diles Classic
slated June 20 :
Hank Aguirre, Franklin, Mich.
former Detroit Tiger and Cleveland
Indian lefthandcr.
Bob Atha Colwnbus Oh1.0 State
'
'
kicker and backup quarte rback ; ~---·---------------------~
Brian Bijrke, football coach, Ohio
University, Athens; Earl Bruce,
Colwnbus, football coach, Ohio
State ; Jimmy Cqun, sports director, WCMH-Television, Columbus;
Gale Catlett, basketball coach, West
Virginia University.
Dan Devine, former Notre Dame,
former Green Bay Packer coach,
now executive director of the Sun
Devil Foundation, Tempe, Ariz.;
Brad
Dusek,
linebacker,
Washington Rcdskins; Dave DeBol,
center, Hartford Whalers, Natio11al
Hockey League , former al lAmerican at Michigan; Bob Evans,
Rio Grande, founder, Bob Evans
Farms; Rick ForLano, former head
coach at the Naval Academy, former head co:ach, Detroit Lions, now
ABC Sports commentator; Joe
Ferguson, quarterback, Buffalo
·Bills; Ned Garver, former pitching
great, St. Louis Browns, now a
if
it
resident of Ney; Archie Griffin,
Columbus, two-time · Heisman
'trophy winner, now running back,
'Cincinnati Bengals; Darrell Hedric,
'Oltford, Ohio, basketball coach,
DWO
:_fdiami University; Kaye Kessler,
·~JMirts writer, Columbus Citizen
1
Journal.
· .~ Spanky McFarland, Fort Worth,
~'rexas, actor,.performer, member of
r:9w' Gang" and "The Utile
'Rjiscals''; Ray Maguire,_PGA golf
J!rofessional, Binningham, Mich.;
·~Oat Mcinerney, president, Mcl!lerJie.y Inc., Bloomfield Hilla, MU:h.;
. ~~~on Miller, basketball ~ch, Ohio
' 7
;atate· .'Univel'llity (diiiJ1tlr only); ·
·
Upper Route
:J,Iirold McElbaney, Athens 1 athletic .
· ~alllpolls, Ohio
:\htector, ·Ohio Univel'lllty; Ron Me-•

NOT

Write for Free Brochures showing memorials in fuf~ color
. with sizes and prices listed.

turned In a f&gt;.under·par 67 to take a
one-shot lead at l'j3 over Scott Hoch
after the second round ot the
~.(XX) Georgta-Paclflc Atlanta
Golf Oasslc.
Hoch put together his second consecutlve 67 before Nelson began his
round over the 7,007-yard, par 72
Atlanta Country Club course.
Larry Wadkins had the lowest
round of the tournament, a 64 that
left him with a 36-ho!e total oll36,
just three shots behind.
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP)South Afrtcan Sally Uttle shot a 4under-par 68 for the opening-day
lead In the Ladles Professional Golf
Association $150,® ChryslerPlymouth Classic at the Wykagyl
Counlly Club.
Amy Akott Is one stroke oft the
pace with a 69 while Donna Caponi
and Cathy Morse shared lh1rd
place with 70s. Kathy Hlte and
VIcki Tabor follow with 7ls.
BOWLING
TORRANCE, Callf. (AP)
Charlle Tapp match-play win
streak ended at 12, but he Increased
his lead to 129 pins In the $125,00)
AC-Delco men 's pro bowling
tournament.
Tapp, who has never won a Professlonal Bowlers Associ a tlon
event, has a J.3.3 match-play record
and total pintail of 7,764 tor 34
games.
GU Sliker of Nallusa, N.H.,
moved Into second place with a
7,635 total, followed by Pete Weber
of St. Louts at 7,629; Larry Laub of
Santa Rosa, Calif., 7,593; and
George Pappas of Charlotte, N.C.,
fifth with 7,514.

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M ay 13, 1981

P om c roy - Middl e port- G il))ipo li s , Oho o- Po ont P lc a s.1nt ,

AP Spona Writer
CHICAGO (AP)- Manager Tony
La Russa of the Chicago White Sox
called It a perfect "example of umpire lntegrtty," but Cleveland Manager Dave Garcia wasn't all that
thtilled with tbe decision.
Bill Almon had doubled home the
tie-breaking run In the seventh Inning Friday night to give the White
Sox a 3-2 lead over the Cleveland
Indians.
Then came a rain deluge which
lasted for more than an hour and
flooded much of the field.

SLIP P ING UNDER THE TAG - Cleveland India ns' J oe Cha rbonea u slips under the glove of Chicago
While Sox shor ts top Bill Almon to take second during

fifth inning action in Chicago Friday. Ball got past Sox

wrong as his Texas Rangers were
losing 19 of 23 games.
Boy, w as he wrong.

Frtday nlght, the Ra nge rs made
It 20 of 24 . while being shut out by
the Ka nsas City Royals 3-0. Dennis
Leonard started the shu tout for the
Royals, but Da n Quisenberry had
to flnlsh up. The Royals rellef ace
entered the game when Leonard's
right ha nd was broken by a llne
drlve- turned.&lt;Jouble play In the sev·
enth lnnlng .
" For the last fi ve days , I' ve la id
In bed thlnklng thai I' ve seen every·
thing happen ... ! reall y couldn' t
come up with a new one. Tonight , I

18 hi ts, Including a run-scoring sin·
g le In the fourth Inning by Jeny
Remy that gave Boston the lead for
good and culminated a ra lly from a
4-1 deficit.
The loss was Oakla nd's fourth In
a row. Rick Langford, 3-6, gave up
14 of Boston's hits In 51·3 Innings.
Tom Burgmeler, 2.{) , was the
winner In rellef.
Orioles 3, Blue Jays 0
Lefl ·ha nde r Mike Fla nagan a nd
two rellevers combined on a sevenhitter, and John Lowenstein drove
In a pair of runs as Baltimore won
three In a row for the first time this
season . One of Lowenstein' s RBI
came on a solo ho mer.
Fla nagan gave up just five hits
over seven Innings, despite getting
hit In his left bleep ln the third lnnlng with a Une drive by Bany Bon-

ne ll. '?he arm did not st111en untU
the seventh lnnlng, when Tim Stoddard came on. Tippy Ma rtlnez
worked the flna l lnnlng.
Angels 9, Tigers 7
Bobby Grlch and Bob Boone hit
two- run homer s, and Calllornla
broke Detroit' s eight-game win·
nlng streak. Gtich's homer came ln
th e third lnnlng, a nd Boone hit his
first of the year In the fourth.
Tim Foll contributed a two- run
single In Calllornla's three- run !11th
Inning. Ken Forsch, 4-3, got the victo ry with rellef he lp from Doug
Corbett.
Brewers 4, Mariners 1
Robin Yount singled ln the tlebrea klng run, and Ted Simmons
cr acked a two-run double as MU·
wa ukee scored three times ln the
sixth Inning to bea t Seattle .

sa w a new one," Zimmer said .

"Brea k a pitcher 's ha nd and
come up with a double play. Tha t 's
a new one . That's one I hadn't
thoug ht of," the Texas Ma nager
said. " Instead of belng down 2-1
with the four, fi ve and six hit ters
comlng up, It 's a double play a nd a
broken ha nd."
Leonard had given up just one hit
and led 2-0 when Mike Richardt
opened the Ra ngers seventh with a
double . Buddy Bell followed with a
smas h up the middle that Iicoch.eted off Leonard 's tight ha nd his pitchi ng hand - to second
basem an Frank White.
Not knowing whether the ball had
hit the ground, White threw to first
baseman WUlle Aikens.
" I thoug ht the ball hit the top of
the mound and floated out to m e at
second ," White said. Then, White
said he heard teammates George
Brett a nd John Wa than holler that
the ball hadn 't touched the ground,
"and I yelled a t Willie to throw It
back to second."
Aikens fired back to White, and
the Royals had doubled off RIchardt, who was standing on third.
La ter, X-rays showed tha t Leonard, now 5-3, had broken the first
two fingers on his right ha nd and
would be lost to the team from six to
eight weeks. It was the 18th lnca·
pacltatlng lnjury susta lned by the
Roya ls this season.
In earning his lOth save, Qutsenbeny allowed another two hits, polIshing off a rour·hltter. Amos Otis
drove In two of Kansas City 's three
runs with double and a sacrlflce Cy.
In the rest of the Amerlcan
League, New York clobbered Minnesota 12-1, Boston edged Oakland
8-7, Baltimore blanked Toronto 3-0,
Calllornla downed Detroit 9-7, Chicago trimmed Clevela nd 3-2 ln a
raln s hortened gam e a nd MUwa ukee defea led Seattle 4-1.
Yankees 1.2, Twins I
Bobby Murcer , Oscar Gamble
and rookie Mike P atterson homered to power the Yankees to
their third straight victory. New
York scored Its 12 runs - the most
)Ills season - on just 11 hits.
· Rudy May, 1-2, spaced eight hits
iwer seven Innings, and Roger ErIckson and Shane Rawlley pitched
an Inning apiece.
Gamble's two- run bomer In the
third gave New York a 5-0 lead.
)'.furcer's pinch homer, a three-run
shot, capped a six-run sixth lnnlng ,
&amp;nd Patterson's solo homer gave
the Yankees their final run ln the
~Ighth Inning.
•
Red Sox 8, A'• 7
Boston won Its third In a row belllnd home runs by Jim Rice,
Dwlghl Ev.ans and Carl ~ast­
l'2ll!fllsld. The Red Sox pounded out

By STEVE HERMAN
AP S porta Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Oefendlng cha mpion Bobby Unser Is
staylng In the pits this year ln the
lndlanapolls 500, thanks to young
Josele Garza .
" J osele has a treme nd ous
a mount of talent, but he's very
young and lacklng In experience,"
said Unser , who sa id Friday tha t
his commitment as tea m manager
fo r the 23-year-old Garza will keep
him from d efend ing his Indy t!Ue
this year . ·
That ma kes Unser the fi rst
d river In 25 years not to defe nd his
championship In the Indy 500.
Unser , whose 19 previous Ind y
starts ranks second only to A.J .
Foyt's 24, ended specul a tion tha t he
might step lnto another team's
backup car to make a qua llllcatlon
attempt this weekend for the Ma y
30 race. He said Garza offered to
release him from his com m itment ,
but tha t he fell obllgated to fin ish
what he starled with the d ri ver,
who was las t year's Indy Rookie of
the Yea r .
" [ could have qu it," said Unser ,

The umpires, headed by Bill
Ha ller, wa lled untll the rain
stopped, had the tarp removed and
ordered the ground crew to get the
field ln shape. After nearly an hour
of work by the ground crew, Haller
Inspected the entire field and finally
deemed It unplayable.

first baseman Mike Hargrove ; Cha rbonea u he aded for

second. IAP Laserphoto) .

Bad luck continues, Texas drops
20th encounter in past 24 starts
By J OHN NELSON
AP Sports Writer
Ma nager Don Zimmer was thlnk·
lng tha i maybe- just maybe- he
had seen, heard or even Imagined
everyt hing that could possibly go

Brennan, who allowed but one hit
after retlrlng 12 ln a row, departed
after the siXth a nd Dan Splllner
took over .
Splliner walked Harold Baines
with one out and then uncorked a
wUd pitch, enabllng Balnes to take
second. Balnes scored on Almon's
double seconds before the rains
came.
Britt Bums, 5-2, went all the way
for the Sox to pick up the victory but
he would not have continued If the
game hadn't been called.
"It was just too da ng'erous to
play," said Haller. "We walled because we would have played once
the rain stopped If the field had
been
. But It was too wet,
espi!Cially ln the out11eld."

show after the ga me ," said a White
Sox omclal, "and we didn:t want to
walt too long for fear of disturbing
the neighborhood."
Garcia responded, "That was
k1nd of Iidlculous but we're the visIting club so what can you say."
Marc Hill, playing ln place of
catcher carlton Fisk, who has been
troubled with a stltt back, slugged a
two-run homer In the second Inning
to put the White Sox ahead.
The Indlans, getting brilliant relief work !rom Tom Brennan, tied It
In the sixth on a single by Alan Bannister, a run-scoring double by
Toby Harrah who advanced to
third on an ln1leld out and scored on
an Infield single by Joe
Charboneau.

The decision gave the White Sox
their fifth straight triumph and 13th
In the last 16 games while the Indians sut!ered their third straight
defeat.

CHOOSES NOT TO DRIVE- 19811ndy 500 winner
Bobby Uns er, from Albuquerque, New Mexico, talks
with driver Josele Garza ( ri ghtl during practice Thursday at the lodlanapolis Motor Speedway. Unser, a

" You can't have a better example of umpire Integrity," said LaRussa. "They gave the Indians
every opportunity and did everything possible to get the field ready.
But It was awfully wet out there."
Before calllng the game, Haller
spoke to Garcia .

"lf they would have told us to
take the fie ld, we would have
played ," said Garcia. " There's always the posslbllltyof someonegettlng hurt and I wouldn't want
anyone to get hurt."

Ga rcia a ppeared more rankled
over the White Sox shooting off fireworks durlng the raln delay.
"We had promised a fireworks

OUT STEALING - Cleveland Indians' shortstop Jerry Dbyzinski
prepares to put the lag on Chicago While Sox' Tom Paciorek as he attempl!i to steal second base during sixth inning action in Chicago Friday.
The White Sox got credit for a 3-2 victory when the game was called after
six and !wt&gt;-thirds innings due to rain. lAP Laserphoto).

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Rio Grande opens the league
season Ja n. 8 when they hos t Ohi o
Dominican at Lyne Ce nter . They
will battl e defending Mid-Ohio Conference champion Wa lsh College at
Lyne Ce nter J an. 25 a nd aga1n m
Ca nton F'eb. 19 and will ba ttle defendi ng NAI A District 22 c ha mpioin
Cedarville College a t Cedarv ille
Jan . 2ll and at Ri o Gra nde F eb. 22 in
the ir season finale.
A new additi on to the sc hedul e in

!982-83

is

F a irmo nt

Sta le,

a

Ri o Gra nde i:; comin g of£ an im-

pressive 26-7 record in 198HI2 - the
most wins in th e state by a college
team and the sixth highest win total
in the count ry .
In the process, the Redmc n won

two tourna ment titles and pulled off
one of the biggest upsets in colle ge

basketba ll when they upended the
top ra nk ed small coll ege tea m in th e

country in Decem ber .

ATLANTA (AP)- LaiTY Nelson
had his goal In mlnd, and was
pretty much on target haltway
through the $300,000 GeorgiaPacific Atlanta Golf Classic.
"I told Jeff Thomsen what I had
In mlnd was 24-under," Nelson said
Friday after filing a 67 for an 11under-par 133 total and a 1 shot
edge over Scott Hoch.
"It would be a new tournament
record," Nelson said, "and I figured It would win."
Nelson, the relgnlng PGA champion, said he feels good about his
chances.
"It's k1nd of Uke you're walling
for something to happen," he said.
"I didn't play very well today and
shot 67. I hope that's an Indication of
things to come the next two days."
Hoch, currently No.6 on the PGA
money Ust for this season, had
posted his 67-134 before NelSOn began his round on the 7,001-yard,

par-72 Atlanta Co untry Club
course.
Nelson said that being 4 down
when he statied could have a negative e!fect on a playe r " If you try to
get It back In four holes.
" But I felt If I shot even par I'd be
only 4 shots hack," he said. " It was
kind of a relaxing day."
Nelson moved Into a house adjacent to the 18th falrway on th1s
course three weeks ago.
"I'm a member, but I don't have
a handicap yet," he said.
Nelson said one of the reasons he
bought a home at ACC was because
of th1s tournament. He said, however, he had been able to play only
two rounds here before tbe start of
the tournament.
Nelson appeared to be In position
to tum It lnto a route when, while
playing the hack side first, he went
to the 18th hole with a 10-under-par
total.
But, ~ duckhooked his tile shot
and took a bogey 6 and regained

that shot on the first hole when he
birdied from :Ill feet. He took the
lead by sinking a Hooter on No.7.
Nelson's tront side was a n experience. He had two 1-foot birdies ·
and also scored !rom 12, 35 and 10
feet. He bogeyed the 13th w hen he
3-putled from 45 feet and saved par
from a bunker at No. 10.
Lanny Wadkins had a torrid 64
despite bogeying his first hole and
was alone ln third place a I 136.
Three players were tied at 137 Peter Jacobsen 69, Wayne Levi 68
and Roger Maltbie, who capped a
67 with an eagle 3 on the final hole.
Defending champion Tom Wa tson had a 70 and headed a quartet at
70 that also lncluded first round coleader Keith Fergus, wbo had a 72.
Gibby Gilbert was ln the group with
a 69 and 1981 Canadian Open champion Peter Oosterhuts of Britain got
there with a 71.

a nd

thrf'C' time c ha mp AI

Unser. Bobby's younger brot her ,
qu a lified In thP six th rnw.
The flrsl d rlvl'r sc ht&gt;dulrd lo
make a q uallflcatlon atu•m pt Sat -

urday was tl vear&lt;J id Oalt• Whil
tington, t hr youngf's t Pn tra nt for
Ihis year 's race a nd lhe lhlrd of "
trio of brot hers w ho ap!=K1ar UkP!y to

ma ke S[X'f'dwav hlsiOrv.
Whl tllngiOn's two older brolht'"'·
Don, 36, a nd Bil l. 32, qualified Ia &gt;~
wee k. If Da lr qua lifies- a nd It's c1
prell y good bel he wi ll . bas('d o n
Thursday's practi ce speed al
nea r ly 199 mph - the Whl l llng1ons
would become I he fi rst brothe r Iri o
rver In thP sa me (nd:-.- racr .

Browns trade
Goode to Raiders
CLEVE LAND (AP) - The
Clevela nd Browns have traded left
outside linebacker Don Goode to
the Oakland Ra iders for fut ure
draft considerations, the Na tional
F'ootball League tea m said.
Team spokesm an Chuck F isher
said Friday the draft choice wou ld
be determined on whether Goode
ma kes the Raiders and how m any
ga mes he plays.
The 6-foo t -2, 240-pound Goode Is
the third vetera n from the E\rowns'
1981 tea m to go to the Raiders. Half·
back Greg Pruitt a nd defensive end
Lyle Alzada earlier were shipped to
the Raiders.
Goode, 30, Is fro m University of
Kansas a nd played for the Browns
for two seasons since belng ac·
q ul red fro m th e San Dlego
Chargers.
He started all 16 games last year
and played a ll 16 games In 1980,
startlng three. ·
Chip Banks, the Browns ' fi rst·
round draft choice In the recent col·
lege draft, wUI lnherlt the starting
role, Fisher said .
Goode has 10 Interceptions s ince
being drafted In 1974 by the
Chargers. He was the second of San
Diego's two choices In the first
round a nd the 15th player ta ken
overall .

GA RZA AND HIS MAN AGER - Ra&lt;'e driver JuSt· It• Garta ilt·ft I and
his team manager , thret· time Indy 500 wirult'r Bubby Unsn. dJsC'uss
proble m s with Gana's race ca r du r ing pra d ift.·_a t tht· ln~liar~a pol.i s Mot4~r
Spt•t-dway. Unser a nnuum·cd F rida y tha t ht.· Will nut dnvt' 111 th1s yt•:Jf s
ra re. 1AP Lase rphotu ).

VOTE
THE MAN WHO KNOWS HOW TO BRING TAXMONEY
BACK INTO GALLIA COUNTY

VOTE

for

MARLIN WEDEMEYER
Gallia County Commissioner
Republican
TAKE THE FIRST STEP TOWARD
A PROSPEROUS GALLI A COUNTY
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' 5 years or 50,000 inltes, wtik:he't'ltr comes first Excludes trucks and imports.

tUse EPA estimated mpg for companaon. Your miteage may vt11y dependinQ on SPeed. trio leooth and weather '
condhlons. Highway mileage~ less. ''Manufacturer's suggested relail price. Title, taxe's extra.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

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

27-28.

Rutherford qua llflr&gt;d In the fou rt h
row:

BUY 4 GAllONS OF ANY OLYMPIC"PRODUCT, GET l MORE FREE.

26

40

tfNV

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERG~ST

and the Muskingum Holiday Tournament in New Concord , Ohi o, Dec.

fro nt r ow: M ctr lu 1\ndrl'ltl a nd Gor
don .Johncoc·k Parm&gt;d Sf'COnd row
sta rt s; three -tlm C' w\nnl'r Joh nn :v

1982 Ptvmouth Hor1 ~u 11 L.uslom

~ ~~~f~f

•. . , . . . , .EST

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAr

Lions Club Tour-

nam ent in Anderson . Ind ., Dec. 3-4 .

will battle the F'alcons at the Fiester
Center in Fainnont on Dec. I I.
Fa irmont has won the WVI AC titl t•
nine of the last 11 years a nd have
won 20 or more games in 18 of the
last 20 seasons under lege ndary
coach J oe Retlon. Retton is the wmningesl ma jor or sma ll college in the
country.

Bcsldf'S MPJrs. thP \979 w tn nf'J.

'6608'"
1982 Plymouth Reliant K SE Wagon 1982 Plymouth Aehant CuSiom Sedan

Cl 11\YSI.EI\ SEE 'YOUR atRYSLER-PL.YMOUTH DEALER FQR FuLL DETAILS.
Plymouffi

CARROLL NORRIS - -Gallipolis,Oh •.

I

four ·tl me champion i\ ..1 Voylqua)
!fled last Wt'&lt;'k on the uul slde of the

MPGI

'.7.642"

1982 Plymouth TCJ Tu r~smo

(

two days of time t1ials las l Wf'&lt;'·
kend . Excepl fo r Unser, all ol the
500's former winners who are still
ac tive In !'i.l Cin g havr alivad _\'
qua lified .

EST EPA
HWY EST

EST

*8592"

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

the Ande rson

Virgini a Conf cr enc~. The Rcdm en

with the Garza family and agreed
to do the best thai I could trying to
further J osele's rac ing.
Unser , a three· time Indy winner ,
mlghl ha ve accepted a n offe r to
drive had Garza qua lified last
week. But tne young Mexlca n
driver c rashed his primary car In
pr acd ce, the n had a lot of trouble
buildi ng speed In his ba c kup
mac hlnc .
Garza ·s best effort In practice
this past week came Friday, whe n
he record('(! a lap at 194.510 and
gave a lot of c redit to Unser.
Unser woul d become the 171h dl'fe ndlng Indy champion to pass up
the race the followi ng year. The last
to do It was Sam Ha nks, who an·
nounced h.ls r etireme nt from Vic·
tory Lane afte r the 1957 ra ce.
Unser Indicated he will dri ve In
ot her cha mp car races this season
after the Garza team Is running
smoot hl y.
Led by pol e~ position winner Ri ck
Mears· track record fo ur ·lap aver·
age of 20'7.(XJ4 m ph, 22 of the 33 sta ri .
lng spot s were fUied during the firs t

88498""

MPG I

r---- - - - - -- - - - - -- -- - -- -----1

EPA

MPGI

nam ents on their schedule i ncluding

traditi ona l powerhouse in the West

48. "But I took on a job last year

1982 ChrysltH Ltt~I OO 2-0r

HWY

IT TAKES TWO - Oakland A' s lint baseman CIHI Johnson, right,
steps in front of his second baseman Davey Lopes, left, and grabs a popup off the bat of Glenn Hoffman of the Boston Red Sox In the seventh inning at Boston's Fenway Park. Boston defeated Oakland &amp;-7. (AP Laserphoto) .

26

WY EST

1982 ChfYSie&lt; Co&lt;oooo LS
EST

EPA
EST

t-fNY

Ltm tted warranty cover s repatr and/or replacement s costs
lor rust-th rough of any pari of the outstde body ot your car

1982 Plymouth Honzon M•se•

26

Co llege, a nd Defia nce I Ohi o I
College.
The Redmen have tw o other tour-

Nelson 'feels good' about chances
in Georgia-Pacific Atlantic Classic
AP Spona Wrller

[II 5 YEAR OR 50,000 MILES ENGINE

35

RIO GRA NDE - Bouts wi th
traditional ri vals Ceda rvill e und
Wa lsh and the addition of small
college powerhouse Fairmont IW.
Va . ) State highlig ht the 1982-83 Ri o
Grande College basketball schedul e
r eleased rece ntly by the sc hool 's Offi ce ol Sports Information.
According to a school spokesman,
the Redmen will open the season
Saturday , Nov. 13, when they battle
Dyke College ol Cleveland in the annua l homecoming game at Lyne
Center. The bout is slated to begin at
7:30p.m .
Coach Lynn La whorn 's Redmen
will re main at home for a Nov . 16
bout with Alice Lloyd I Kentucky I
College before laking to the roads
for the Maple City Classic in Sienna
Heights, Michi gan , Nov. I ~20 . Other
learns in tha t affair will include hoo.t
Sienna Heights. Hillsda le I Mich. l

By ED SHEARER

WITH EVERY NEW '82 AMERICAN-BUILT
CHRYSLER OR PLYMOUTH CAR, YOU GET:

r-

three-time winner at Indy, announced early Friday
that he would not dri ve in this year's Memoria l Day
Class ic. Unser is team captain for Garza . I AP Laser· photo) .

Fairtnont will battle Rio Grande
next year, announce Redmen card

"He cam e over and told me the
field was too wet and he didn't want
anybody to get hurt, " said Garcia .
"I said a few things to him but I'm
not golng to say what I said.

I tw '.tt11C1.l y l t ll H!~ ~f' nt u wl - ~ ' .l &lt;W

Bobby Unser will not race
in Indianapolis 500 this year

Chisox make it five straight
with 3-2 victory over Indians
By JOE MOOSIDL

w . 11 .1

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CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
' 312 Sxith-StrHt -

675-1160

Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

Point Pleasant

�P~gc -

Pom e roy - Middleport- Gallipoli s, Ohio- Poont Pl easa nt,

L-8- The Sund~y Times -Sentinel

w . v.1 .

May 23. 1982

Donna Caponi, winless in 10 events, may be over slump
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (AP)-

Donna Caponi, winless after 10
events following a banner season

last year, may be out o! her slump.
Caponi shot a 2-under-par 70 and
Is two strokes behind leader Sally

Little after Frtday's openlng round
or the $150,lXXl Chrysler Plymouth
Classic on the Ladles Professional

Scoreboard...
Majors
ByThl'~P,....

,._,,.,_
W

L

"""""
"''"'"
Mllw•Wtt&gt;f&gt;

26

Nf'W York
llal""""'

18
17

16
1!1

Pet.

.667

1J
lJ
17

u

XI

GB

7

4.59

8

29: Evans, Bomn, 28: Leflcn, OUcqo.

'Z2
1l

Cl

9~

28:

2.'1

u

'II

H
16

2l

:xJ

21
2.'1

11

u

10
12 Yl
F'rtd8y'l

b.lrih,

19

10

676
6!!9
.:168
ol8ll

-

.e

10~

.294
2fl6

o.,.,..

t

IJ~
1~~

&amp;!timOn' 3. Toronto 0
Boston &amp;. Oakland 7
Caillornla 9. De1rotl 7
Nt'W York 12, Mlnne-lota 1
Chkqo 3, Ofovt&gt;le.nd 2. 7 Lnnlnp. raJn

RBI : McRae. Kanau Qly, 37; Thorn·
ton. Oeveland. 36.; Luzl.nlld. Chkqo, 29:
Baylor, California.
~. Bolton, 'IT;
Di:IIV\e, Mllwaullere, 'IT: Otla, Kanau Oly,
'IT
HITS: Harrah. Ck&gt;Yeland. 56; Cooper,
MUwaukee, 50; LeFlore, Ollc.qo, 48;
Herndon, Detroit, 47: Garcta. ToroniD. 47
DOUBLES: Otil. Kanau Oly, 1.5;
White, Kan~&amp;~ CHy. tJ: Evant, Boltoo,
11: McRae, K.ansu City. ll: Cowens.
SH.~. u .

K.ansu Oty 3, TPXIUI 0

TRIPLES
Herndon, Detmtt, ~ :
G.Wrtjttll. Texas, t ; Ev..u, Bo-too, 3,
McBride. C'le'Yl'land, 3; Yount, Mil·
waukee, 3; Upaflaw, Toronto, 3: Morriloo.
Qtlc.qo, 3; Cowe-ns, Setottle, 3.

M11w•WwE&lt; t , s.e.ttlt&gt; 1
SaDik)"a Gamm

Hrbek, MJnne!IO(a , 10: Roenlclu!, Baltl·

'""""""'

HOME RUNS: Thornton. ~ 11 :
rMre, 9; Harrah, Cleveland, 9; l..oYmuitn,
BaltimOre'. 8: Murphy , Dakland, 8.

Ba.ltJmon&gt; at Toronto
caillomla at Dfotrott
~at New York
Oakland a t Bolton
~land It Chic&amp;iO
Seattk&gt; a t MUwaukl!e
Tuas at K.ant.u Oty

......,,.,_

NA110NA.L LEAGUE

W L
2:1
1~

21

New York
Phllnlphla
MontI'M I
Otl&lt;'IIO
PltubuJ'Ih

Pm.

18

6Z:I
5JII

GB

l~
~

19
19
17
19
17 ll
15 21
WMem Dlvt.loa

500
4i.2
..:JS
.t.17

,.
.,
19

.f£1

-

"'
"'
"'
Cl

11;
11;
91;

Atlanta

"" DioJ!o

"""'""
1...oiJ

19

An.if'it'5

""""""""'
"""""'
u

17

16

13
17
71
21

lJ

"

6
7~

8

'" ,

9~

f'rtday'a G.,._

Montretat 2. anctnnatl 0
Atlant.l 7. P'tilladPiphia 6

Ho.uton ~. NP~N 'r'ork I
San ()kogtl7 . Plttaburah ~
St . t...ou1J 6, Loti Anaelel 3
OUcliO 6, San F'randiCO 4
s...kt• Gamm
Ph11&amp;dPiph1a at Atlanta
Montreal at Clnctnnatl
Chleaao a1 San f'ranctJro, 2
St. UN!J Ill Loll 1\.ng{'le
PltUburgh at San ~
Nrw York 111 HOU!Iton

STQl£N BASES: R.Hendenon. Oak
Land. :tt: U!FlOre , 0Ucaao. 14; Moli tor,
Mllwallke!. U : Lopes, Ollkl&amp;nd, 11 : Wathan, Kan11.t Qly, 10.
PIT'CHING I~ Oec!alon.S) : Hoyt, 01.1·
caeo. s.e, l.llXI. 1.g: Guidry. NP~N York.
6-1. .lm, 2.~ : Tudor. Bostoo. f-1. ..am.
3.216; Renko. Caillom1a, 4·1, .!JD. U16:
Gura, Kanut City, f-1. .10), • . 17: Beard,
Oakland, H .JDJ, 2.96; Clancy, Toronto,
~2 . .n,, tn; Zahn. California. ~2 . .n•.
2~: Burru, Chicaao. ~2 . .n( .778: Ban·
nille', Seattle, ).2, .nt 3.19.
~l!I'S: F.Binn!lter, Seattle, ~
Petry, SNttle, C9: Ecltenlt!y. Bc»ton. t7:
Guidry, NfW York. t6, IRnny. Ck&gt;Yriand,

...

NA110NA.L LEAGUE

BA.mNG c ~ at bat.ll : J .Thompaon,
P\ttaiJurrh, .3!!8; Mortland. Chk:qo, ..116:
Ballor, N- YOI'k. ..147: RJones, San
Dqo, .3.16; GUPm&gt;ro, Lot ~lea, .J'l7.
RUNS: L.Smlth, St.Loula. 37; MWlJhy,
Atlanta, lt: Horner, Atlanta. J}; R .Jones,
San ~. 29; DaWIOn , Montreal, 77;
KinllJTWl. New York. 'IT: J . 'Ilxl~ .
Pltuburvh. 'II .
RBI: Murphy, Atlanta , 37; Kingman.

S'IULEN BASES: Moreno, PltutiW'Ifl,

Dermer. Phllildelphla. n: L.SmJth.
St.Loull, 18; wu.m. New Yorlr., 1.5: Rain·
es, Montreal, 12.
23:

auc.,o.

52,

NPW York, 52; L.Smlth. St.Louis,

~2;

"'·"DOUBLES:

you want it ...

CamPI' ,

you·ve got it ...

Houston.

13;

~.

m, 2.l4; R..Jona, New York. ~2.
.m •. 3.1.5; Puleo, New York. ._2, .667,
17'2; Garber, Atlanta, f-1, .66'7. 1.67: Ber·

H

eny1, anctnnatl, f-2, .fHI, 3.:r.; Welch,
A.n&amp;Ns. f-2, .667. J.n : Rosen, Mon·

u.

trea.l. s-.3, .62!1, 1.66.
S"JlUKEEl!I'S: Soto, Clnctnnlotl. Tl ;
Cuiton. ~ 11 : Roten. Men·
!real, 51; Lollar. San OkoiO. ~ : Sutton.
Howton, U ; Va.lenzuel.a, Lot An&amp;elet. C .

Transaction8

.......... ._..
IIA8II:MIJ.

NEW YORK Y ANKE£S...-RP&lt;:aUed Mike
Pattenon, ou~kl!r from Columbus of

the lnb!omatkmal U!que.
SEATTLE MARINERS- Purchased

...

cootract of Rlck Sweet. catcher. from the
New York Met.l; called up Gary Gray,
flrat bueman. from Sail l...alte Qly ~ U..
Plt'ltk: Cout LeaauP
TORONTO
BLUE
JAYS AM&lt;&gt;unoed
the &amp;l.inlni of Kuh BNuctwnp. out·

"'""'·

I'&lt;)(JnAU.

N.aao-1 Foadlo&amp;l LMpe

anCAGO B£ARS-.Slined Dukr Ft'r·
it'f'ICWI and nm ()ark, wkiP recetven:
Pat Dean, defensiw llnPm&amp;n; Jlm Bob
H.arrts. ~atety: and Bob ~ and C&amp;J.

NIU1ln&amp; backa.

vtn ThornaJ,

Q.EVELAND BROWNS-Traded Don
GoodP. outaid! ltnebaclter, to the Oakland
RAlden

rc.-

tut~

ttratt

~.lklnl.

_,_
.......

NBA results

"After 18 years on the circuit, It's
tough to be ready every time out,"
said Caponi, who last year earned
$192,916 but managed just $35,841
this season. "And for me to take a
month orr Is really something. Last
year, I skipped j:wo tournaments In
a row, and before that I never
missed more than one week."
Little, this season's leading m oney winner with $125,1*, was a
stroke ahead o! Amy Alcott after
her 68. VIcki Tabor and Kathy Hlte
are tieq for fifth at 71.
Kath~ Whitworth, the defending

course I had a bad shot. When l
champion, was at l-over-par 73.
The Hall of Fanner surpassed finally decided to lake a vacatiOn l ·
played only six days of golf In four
Mickey Wrtght on the LPGA Ust for
weeks,"
she said.
most tournament vlctortes last
Caponi
said the layoff helped. ·
week by winning her 83rd title In
"My mental attitude Is better,"
Atlanta.
A pro since 1965, Capon! last sea- she said. "This Is my third tournament since returning, and l wai
son won five tournaments and beeighth In the previous two. Today, I
came one of the LPGA's three
had a dumb bogey on the lOth hole.
millionaires, joining Whitworth
Stlll,
I played a solld round.
and JoAnne Carner. This year, Ca"I'm enjoying golf more," Caponi has not finished higher than
poni added. "I have my own prtvs.~
fifth place.
plan - aim to be In the top 10 every
"I started the year with a bad
attitude and couldn't get self- week and you can usually finish
fifth. And If you do that, then you'U
motivated," said Caponi, who
win a lew," she said.
claims her attitude changed after
taking time off following the Dinah
Shore Invitational In AprU.
. - - - -, - - - - - - - - "Things were getting so bad, that
even before I would get to the

Honor Bengals coach
with cancer award
WASHINGTON (AP) - In recognition o! his success!ul recovery
!rom skin cancer, pro football
coach Forrest Gregg has been
awarded the Amertcan Cancer Society' s annual Courage Award .
First Lady Nancy Reagan made
the presentation Frtday to the head
coach o! the Cincinnati Bengals.
Gregg was presented a plaque
signed by President Reagan citing
him for "his personal courage In his
battle against cancer and lor the
hope and Inspiration he gives a ll
Americans In the light lor We a nd
health. "
Also on hand lor the prtvate ceremony at the While House was actor Kirk Douglas, chairman or this
year's national cancer crusade. ·

The society said Gregg learned In
1976 that he had melanoma, the
most sertous form of skin cancer,
when he was coaching the Cleveland Browns.
"When Gregg discovered a
change In the appearance of a mole
on his leg, he Immediately reported
It to his doctor," the society said.
"Alter undergoing surgery,
Gregg today Is In good health and
free o! the disease."
Other sports ligures who have received the sOciety's annual honor
Include former Cleveland Browns'
quarterback Otto Graham, pro
golfer Gene Littler and Jack Pardee, former coach o! the Washing·
ton Redsklns.

•
GARLANDM .
DAVIS
512 Sec . Ave .
446· 8215

Home PHone

.-.....

CLEVELAND (AP) - The light lor the Democratic nomina tion In the newly formed 19th Congressional dlstrtct has taken a bitter turn, as three rtvals
lor the job have found a common enemy: U.S. Rep.
Ron Mottl.
Mottl and the three others, a Useeking their party's
nomination In the dlstrtct, debated at the City Club on
Frtday. ·
Cuyahoga County Commissioner Ed Felghan,
Mottl's chief opponent lor the nomination, has been
the congressman 's most outspoken critic , but he had
plenty of help !rom two other candidates durtng the
forum.
Melvin Drlmmer, a history professor al Cleveland
State University and a candidate for the Democratic
nomination, criticized Mottl's conservative voting
record.
"The m ajor Issue In the race ts Ron Mottl. For the
first time In eight years, he's being forced to come
before the Democratic Party lor a n eValuation. He's
been spending aU hls time with his light against busIng under the guise o! community control. We know
It' s nothing more th an old-fashioned Jlm Crow,"
Drtmrner said .
Mottl Is sponsortng a constitutional amend m ent
that would ba n busing to achieve school
desegregation.
Candidate Arnold Gletsser, a high school rrlath and

science teacher, said Mottl's alignment with Reagan
administration foreign pollcy has helped change the
United States !rom "one o! the most loved and respected countrtes alter World War II to one or the
most ha ted and !eared today."
The 19th dlstrtct, Including suburbs of Cuyahoga .
Lake a nd Geauga co~ntles, was formed after Mottl's
23rd Dtstrtct was dropped durtng redistricting.
Friday's debate heated up after Mottl responded to
his attackers, saying Felghan had been put up as a
candidate by Cuyahoga County Democratic Party
Chairman Tim Hagan .
"Boss Hagan Is the same man who first suggested
to Ted Kennedy tha i he run against Jimmy Carter,
and that more than any other factor led to Jimmy
Carter's defeat In 1980;" Mottl said.
Answertng an a udience question about falling to
achieve support from big labor, Mottl said Martin J .
Hughes, cha irma n o! the Cleveland AFL-CJO and an
In ternationa l vice president o! the Communication
Workers of America, had led the opposition.
Hug hes, In the audience, Jumped to his feet and
called Mottl a "liar ."
From then on, Mottl appeared flustered. The crowd
la ughed when Felghan handed Mottl a check for $59,
returning a polltical contrtbutlon Mottl made to
Fclghan's campaign for commissioner In 1001.

8KadQ'• Game
PhlladPiphllo It &amp;.ton, Cn l

May 23, 1982

Dear Voter :
Are you satisfied with "ONE DAY A WEEK"
county commissioners?
Shouldn't the candidate you support in
th7 June 8 primary be in a position to give
thls important office more time than that?
Will his first priority be his obligation to
his present job or business, with the county
business coming second?
. Consider_a man who is under no obligatlon to any JOb or business. A man who
believes the office of county commissioner
is a FULL TIME JOB, not a sideline.

fr•ttrtllll

/AZ"'}&lt;rt??
~~
Marll.n G. Kerns
Route #4
Gallipolis, Ohio

45631

•

f
•

backed fis cal 1983 federal budget Friday evening on
Ca pitol Hill. The vote on the spending plan was 49-43.
lAP Laserphoto).

CLEVELAND (AP) - The aud!ence sat In the
darkened room and watched the close-up !llm footage
of powerful rockets Wting the Columbia space shuttle
off a Houston launch pad.
"It's an unbellevable feeling of power and motion,"
said the voice !rom the podium. "It's an incredible
way to get out of town, I'll te ll you."
Col. C. Gordon Fullerton, pilot o! the most recent
space shuttle !Ugh!, continued his narration of the
!lim by describing the Intense physiological pressure
on him and Col. Jack Lousma as the rockets Wted
them out of the earth's abn9sphere.
"Right about here, I was trying to remember when
It was that I volunteered for this project," he said,
Invoking a laugh !rom members of the Cleveland
Advertising Club .
As the audience watched film o! a we ightless Fullerton floating while putting on his trousers Inside the
spacecraft, he quipped, "This Is In case anyone tells
you astronauts are !Ike any other men. You see, they
don't put their pants on one leg at a time."
Fullerton was In Cleveland and Dayton Frtday as
part of his publlc relations tour for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

After his speech, he talked to reporters about the
possible military use of the shuttle. "Space Is a n area
that Is accessible to our enemies and we would be
foollsh to Ignore It," he said .
However, he said, NASA doesn 't Intend to "mount
guns on the orbiter and go around shooting things - tt
wasn't built for that purpose. The shuttle Is meant to
transport things Into space."
The U.S. Air Force officer said the shuttle's mll·
ltary use probably would be limited to launching reconalssance satellites.
He said he was delayed In hls arrival to Cleveland
because o! "a little excitement" on the flight !rom
Houston In a T -38 jet.
"About 30 miles west of here, I ran Into a moder·
ately heavy rain," Fullerton said. "Suddenly, It felt
Uke a howitzer had gone o!f Inside the cockpit and
there was a brilliant flash o! llght - as strong a light
flash as I've ever expertenced In my life."
He said the lightning bolt knocked a small part out
o! his aircraft's vertical tailpiece. He was forced to
arrange lor other lransportatlon to Dayton while the
jet was repaired at the NASA facility at Hopkins
Intern a tlonal Airport.

This compact sized pickup is extra sharp·
&amp; out. Topper, ac·
cent stri es, 5-speed, one local owner and on ly 16,080 mi les.
1979 MERCURY
ZEPHYR Z·7
Ftre engine red with wh•te
landau top &amp; matchm~ in·

terror .•m. small V-8. destgner

wheel covers.

'7499

'4499

1981 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME
Black on black with carmine interior V-6

cruise, AM-FM stereo1 Rallye wheels:

power antenna and sport stripes.

COIIPAREAT

1980 CHE •
MONZA

miles.

•

Sm~~~"!&gt;.~ s~ee~!~

311

e
•

cond .. wtre wheel covers. lan·
dau lop 1nd only · 38.753 . ~

4 cylind01. 4 sP«&lt;i. pow01 ·
steerina. air cond., sport ,
wh&lt;el ,.,.,. and onlv 16.479

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'42H

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1978 POWTIAC
GRAND PRIX

Two-tone silwe; 1nd carmine interior .
cru1se, tilt. AM-FM 8 track, sport wh&lt;el

CIIIIPARUT

1979 FORD

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'7699

{1."·

GETTING A LAUGH - 19th congressional district
candidate Ed Feighan gets a laugh out of passing a
check to incumbent Ron Mottl at a debate Friday in

~

'31M

Over 40 late:modeJ sharp tal'$ in stock.

· · . ·c c. ,
,.• ,, rene
t
- .,h·..ow~. . ar . (}.

Clevdand. Mottl had .. ohtributcd to Fcighan's cam·
paign for Cuya hoga County Co mmissioner last year.
Feighan re turn ed thl' mom•y. ( AP l.Atst·rphotu 1.

This locally owned 2 d1. couP. IS sh11p
i~side_ ' o~t. Medium eotd wrth matchine
~n~l tnlenor, 301 enaine,,air. AM·FM 8
track. tilt wheel. Rall,e II wheels: See it

now.

Bill Gene Jo"nson
Hamilton
GibMilliron ·
... ,
Terry

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In a bit of a turnabout before fin al passage, conser va tive Democrats offered an amendment which projected a ba lanced budget in 1985 - a plan hinging on
tax increases or $146 bliUon and reductions In planned
Socia l Securi ty cost-of-living Increases .
With obvious reluctance. the Rep ublican leadership led the move to table, and thus kill, the plan 7().21 .
Republican leaders, faced with defections. were
forced earlier in the week to drop a n unpopular plan
for $40 bliUon In unspecified Social Security savings.
Meanwhile, the House began preliminary consider-

atlon of more than a half-dozen competing budget
plans as leaders of both parties lobbied to build a
majortty. Votes on lhe plans and amendments wtU
begin Monday.
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr.. 0 -Mass ..
predicted the preside nt would be less of a factor In
this year's House budget batlle tha n a year ago. "!
don't think he could be successful'· appeall ng dlreclly
10 the public again, O'Neill said .
O'Nelll and other Democratic leaders also formally
threw their support hehlnd the budget plan approved
by the House Budget Committee. It ca lls for tax hikes
of $147 bllllon over three years. cuts I he defense bulldup by $39 billion over three years a nd cuts less !rom
spending tha n the Senate plan .
Its main contenders for votes a re a plan drawn up
by House Republican leader s and a proposal by a
small coalition of Democratic and Republican mode rates that many members describe as a " fallback."
In the Senate. Republicans c h.lded Democrats for
offering "budget -busting" a m endments "designed
for the November elections. "

=======================;: ;:

•· ..,_

stereo. Rallyt wheels. low
miles

..,

Fullerton stresses
shuttle's peaceful uses

1981 FORD COURIER PICKUP

~w~~!E p~~l~FM

'

!

environmental cleanup.

A red car with lots of eye appeal. Equipment includes air cond.,
Rallye II wheels, AM -FM cassette stereo, hatchback, and only
38,4191ow miles. Another truly exceptionally nice automobile .

!u.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The Republican controlled Senate has passed a 1983 budget blueprint.
supported by President Reagan, calling lor $107 bll·
llon In Increased taxes over three years a nd projectIng $273 bliUon In deficits over the pertod.
The !Ina! 49-43 party-llne vole came Friday night
after a week o! consideration during which the Senate's GOP majortty turned aside virtually all Democratic attempts to restore money for domestic
programs ranging from 2nemployment benefiiS to

1 77 PONTIAC VENTURA

1981 CHEV.

~

•

Uf• l•ntr••u

This Monte is immaculate throughout. Only 44,690 actual miles.
Equipped with air cond., AM·FM 8 track, Rallye wheels, and lan·
dau top. This locally owned automobile is trul one of a kind .

!

·h

HonHI Offic• - loclt htond, llllnolt

•

Vote for MARLIN G. KERNS and receive
full time representation.

~.

!

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA

--·

•:
••
••
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••
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•••
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f.l

Senate passes
Reagan-backed budget

AFTER THE VOTE - Senate Majority Leader
Howard Baker of Tennessee, right, congrdlulates Sent.
Peter Domenici, R· R.M.. who chairs the Senate Budget
Committee, after the Senate passed a White House-

=
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1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

NlHI

fl

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~

M~

388· 9691

cARS

3.

Sunda ,

Mottl criticized
by primary opponents

roNFEREN&lt;Z nNAl.S
,.,.,.,., Oamo
Boston Ill, Philadelphia ~. Je11ea Ued J..

~imw J-tntinei Section fQ)

State/ ational

NMioolull...,.._.~

wn.on.

Knlaht. HOUlton . .S: Guerrero, 1...oiJ Angl&gt;-

I~
Dreclslonl ):
Forwch,
l.(DJ, 3.86; Sutton, HOUIIon,

PrJ'CI{[NG

St.Loull,

New York. 3:1: Morriand. Chlcaao, 33;
J .Thomp801\, PlttJburgh, J};
B.Dlaz,
PhiladPiph!a. 28.
HITS: Morf"l.anct.

11; Horner, Atlanta, 10: Hendr1ck.

SL Louil, 9: Guerrero, Lot Afl&amp;eloN, 9.

Wathan, Kanau Oly, :2B.

:m:

7

ruw.

Phllad@lphla. J: Hen, St. Louis, 3:
RRamlrez. Atlanta, 3: Concepdon, On·
dru\atl, 3; Oster, anctnn.tt, 3; Gamer,
Houstm. l ; l&lt;nJ&amp;tlt. Houton, 3.
HOME RUNS: Klqm.an, Ne-w York. lJ;
Murphy, Atl&amp;nta, 12; J . Tbompeon, Pttt.

XI

e

New York. J :

BATITNG 1m at bat.tt : Bonnell. Toronto. .m: Harnh. CleYeland. .m.
McBride, Cleveland. .3'18; E .Murny, Sal·
tirnore,
Proctcrek. Qdcaao. .:ws.
RUNS: R.Kendenorl, Oakland. l6; Har·
rah. ~. 11: Thornton. ~

.:r.o:

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wuaon.

TRIPLES:

.54.1
8

WM&amp;em DlvWaa

Qtlcqu
Cailtornla

Kniltlt. HOLaton, 11.

AMERICAN l.EAGUZ

AMERICAN l..EAGUE

out."

T.Kennedy, San Dleeo. U: 0 . Smith,
St. l...ou1s, U ; L.Smith. SU..oua, U ;

Leaders

Golf Association tour.
Caponi, who was tied with Kathy
Morse, gives much or the credit for
her better play to a month orr she
recently took to "clean the cobwebs

+ '"
.'

•. ,

Slrbau B. Slrllilu,
of Seo. Robert
.
p~ DEND;DllaymCIIId BrowD, cbalruWI pf callfanla's Board ol ·F. Kenuedy, s~ould aoUJe grau~ parole Ia 1984 as
·PrisOn Terms, allllOilliCed-la Sacr;ameuto Friday that .scbeduled. (AP Laserpboto ).

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SHUTTLE ASTRONAUT - Space Shuttle Colum·
bia astronaut C. Gordon Fullerton answers questions
at a press conference after he spoke at a luncheon for

the Cleveland Ad Club. Fullerton was the pilot of the
third and most reeent Shultlt• launrh which went up
March 22. lAP Lascrphutul .

RFK assassin 'tired'
after parole revoked
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - A "despondent"
Sirhan Sirhan withdrew In sllence to his prison cell
after a parole board revoked his 1984release date and
ordered the assassin o! Sen. Rohert F. Kennedy to
undergo a psychlatrtc study.
Ray Brown, ,chalrman·of the CaWornla Board o!
Prtson Terms, which on Friday canceled Sirhan's
parole date, said the board wanted more ln!ormatlon
on reports that he remains the same "loner" he was
before shooting Kennedy on June 5, 1968.
The decision followed two weeks o! hearings earlier
this month.
'"Prisoner's pattern or withdrawal appears self·
lm~ to suit his own purposes," the board said,
ask!nk prtson psychlatrtsts to analyze Sirhan before
he comes back lor another parole heating In six
months.
Los Angeles Dlstrtct Attorney John Van de Kamp,
a candidate for state attorney general who launched
the drtve to keep Sirhan bl:hlnd bars, hailed the
decision.
"Peoplli In this country and ·aroirnd the world can
breathe a sigh ot relief that Sirhan wUl remain In
prtson," he said. "The message has to be sent outthat
polltlcal assassination ts not going to be tolerated_In
this society."
Jln) Esten, a spokesman !qr the Correctional Train·
lng l!'aclllty at Soledad, where Sirhan Is Imprisoned,
said the convict "was not overly agitated and .._.dld not

appear angry " alter learning of the board'sdecls lon
In a phone call from his attorney, Luke McKissack.
Esten said Sirhan, 38, appea red to expect the nega- .
tive rutlng, but refused requests by reporters for Interviews and "sort of waved me away. He was lying
down In his cell. He a ppeared tired a nd drained."
McKissack, who was In the state capital for the
announcement of the board's decision, told reporters .
Sirhan "seemed merely despondent .:.He didn't even
use a curse word : which surprised me ."
Mc Kissack, who commended the board lor "an ·
exemplary job" In running the hearings, said he felt
the board acted under public pressure to' keep Sirhan ·
In prison.
The board said It decided to keep Sirhan behind
bars because of new !acts pointing to hls contlDued
propensity lor violence.
'
The members of the panel - Brown, board ..
member Loretta ColUer and hearing of!lcer Wayne ,:
Estelle - said they belleved board members who set ·:
Sirhan's 1984 parole date In 1975 would have acted :.
dlf!erently If they knew about "significant ln!onna- :
tion" not shown to them.
That Included death threat letter s to his former :.
attorney and a prtson omclal, as well as verbal :
threats to "tum the Arabs loose" to break him out o! ;
prtson.
··
Sirhan, a Jordanian Immigrant, planned to move to :
an Arab country If granted parole.

�t ' ,,g , - D 1-

th e Su nd ,ly r,mcs

~c ntm c l

May 23, 1982

F'o m croy- Mtddl e port- Galllpolls, Oht o- Po tnl F'tcasanl, W va

May 23, 1982

Pomeroy - Mtddleport- Galltpoils, Ohto-P omt Pleilsant, w va

r 11e &lt;.,unday r1m cs

~e nltnel - f 'a g c-D

W.:J nt ed to Buy

11

3

Police look into thefts, wrecks
GALLIPOLIS - The theft of a
p;th of tennls shoes from SkatPS
ville USA was reportPd to city po-

llre late Ftlday night
l'hP shoes, belonging to Wendy
B; adbury, Gallipolis were re
tr.ovro by the owner at the skating
rink i1 t 7 p m when she went skat
lng
' II'hen she returnPd a few hours
ldt(' J she found the shoes mlsslng

fmm where she had placed them
unde t a chair

Brian Arthurs, Gallipolis, re
t-.&gt;o t1rd to officers he wa s driv ing
d011 n Ware hime Road at II 30 p m

f'rlda y when his driver' s side wtn
do11 g l &lt;~s s shattered
Art hut s said he bellevPd the win
clow was shot ou t No tracks

we~

fou nd near the scene, officers said
Pollee cited a Rt 1. Gallipolis
ma n for Improper backing In a two\ dllclc collision at Second Avenue
ond State Street Friday nJght
At cording to the reporl, Mark A
Brmm 18, stopped for the stoplight
on Second at 9 36 p m , began to
b.tr k up and struck a stopped vehl
' 1~ behind him dri ven by Bonnie J
Kempe r 42. Northup
Moderate damage was reportPd
to Ke mper's vehic le In the

accident
Two minor accidents were also
probed by pollee on. Friday
Officers said Deborah K Har
mon. 26, Rodney, backPd her vehicle from a driveway on Nell Avenue
at 9 51 a m , fallPd to see an approaching vehicle driven by Earl
W Robinson, 45 Galllpolts and
collided
There was slight damage to Har
mons vehicle and moderate to the
Robinson car
Patricia L Hallhlll, 19, Rt I, Cheshire, was backln,g her car from a
parking space near Duff's RPSta urant In the Sliver Bridge Plaza at
11 17 p m and struck a p;arked car
behind her registered to Michael L
Miller, Rutland Slight damage
was reportPd to Miller' s vehicle
The Gallla County Sherl!f's Department Is also looking Into two
thefts reported on Friday
Lee Western, Rt I , Gallipolis,
sa id a console stereo turntable was
removed from his residence at the
Green Ga bles on Ohio 7 sometime
between 6 and 10 a m Friday
WPStern said the apartment was
locked and forceable entry was apparently made

A vehicle owned by Chuck Fenwick, Jackson, was reported stolen
!rom the College H1ll Motel Ill Rio
GrandeearlySatunlay, the depart,
ment said. The car was later discovered wreckPd In Jackson County
at 3:07am.
In another Incident, deputies
were also lnfonnPd a car was found
burned on County Rd. 57B near Rio
Grande at 12:54 a.m. Saturday. The
department Is still probing the car's
ownership.
A CB and spotlight were removed from a pickup truck driven
by Dean Rees, Rio Grande, at the
Redman Inn on U S. 35 late Fr!day
nlght
Rees Informed deputies subjects
got the Items after reaching
through a slidln.g glass panel In the
truck
Also cited by police overnight
were Julia M Caldwell, Eureka
Star Route, !allure to yield; Mark
S Mooney, 24, Rt 2, Galllpoll.s, assun!&lt;! clear distance; Patrick A.
Cochran, 23, Rt. 2, Gaillpoll.s, fallore to display valld registration;
and Jim L Duke, 18. Rt. 2, Crown
City, speedln,g

4

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SA TURDAY , MAY29, 1982- \0 OOA M
OWNER MR TOM SAUNDERS,
PHONE 1·614 446 4145

MARK R FOWLER
Salutatorian

least two hours a day. There wlll be three teller windows, drive-up facilities and ample parking for at least
J2 cars It will be a modem designed building ballt for
fuel conservation and it w111 be a brtck structure, Wolfe
noted. There wlll be two and possibly three employes
dally. Wolfe stated that the branch hank would have all
the fac111tles of a larger bank including safety deposit
boxes. The hours of th~ bank have not as yet been
determined but Wolfe indicated that it would probably
open at 10 a.m. and close at 5 p.m. daily.

BRANCH BANK - A braneh bank of Racine Home
National Bank, Racine, to be known as Syracuse Branch, Is being bullt In the village of Syracuse. The hank is
located next to the Syracuse Post Office on SR 124 The
ground was purchased by the bank from John
W!Ulams. Tom Wolfe, president of Racine Home
National Bank, reported that they w111 attempt to haw
all fac111ties that a large bank has. Wolfe did say that
there would not be a full-time loan department
However, there would be loan off1cer at the bank at

Va lrdlc torlan

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
~Iated l're8ll Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
legislators are to hear testimony at
hearings this week on a handful of
bUJs dealln,g with home weatherization, campaign financing and grain
elevator !allures
But drawtn.g most a ttentlon w1ll
be continued attempts to work out
House-Senate differences over a
bill allegPdly brtnglng the state's
CHARLES M. STODOLA
Honor Student

'-'!ASON -

Jatk Wilham Hayes

dlld M,nk Hrt IJdrd Fuwll'r will grve
tht

\ .1ll'dH Lurrdll i::ln d sti lutatmrr~n

uldr t ·s~ es &lt;.~ t WcJ h&lt;J IIICl H1gh Srhool's
ClllllU&lt;i J

lOIIlf ll t!rH_l!ffiC rlt

CXL'f( ISC S

lllt'sd&lt;~l
ll lj~ }l ~ ~

Ma} 25, at 7 'lOp m . tn the
houJ g\ fTlll,I SIUfl1

Valedt ctonan
Hayes
and
s,tlutalonan Fowler are among 96
sen10r s who w11l rece1ve their
dtploma s Tuesday evemng Two
othe t honor stud ents , Rtchard
Flry.tn Fry and Charles Mtchael
Slodola wtll also be recogmzed
Ha yes. son of Bt lle J une Hayes,
22~ Joan Place. New Haven. and
Hobrrt F.ugene Haye s. Ghana ,
i\fnca mamtamed a perfect 4 0
gr ade pomt ave rage whtle at
ll'ahama He "as a member of the
drama club, the Nattonal Honor

Soctety, Key Club and served as
vtce prestdent of the semor class
He plans to attend Marshall
Umve rstty to maJor m computer
sc1ence
Fowler, son of Donna Fowler, 203
East Anderson St , Mason, and the
late Rtchard S Fowler, was a threeyear member of the National Honor
Soctety and served as prestdent of
that orgamzat10n thiS past year He
was also a member of Key Club, a
three-year member of the Wahama
Htgh School golf team and attends
Mason Untied Methodtst Church
Upon graduatmg from Wahama,
"here he mamtamed at 3 923
G P A , Fowler plans to attend the
West Vtrgmta Institute of
Technology and maJor m computer

sctence

Releases funds

Fry, son ofDonald and Mary Fry,
Rt I , West Columbta, attained a 3.8
average to be named one of two
honor students A member of the
pep, stage, marchtng and concert
bands at Wahama, he was also
named to the all-area band, was m
chorus for one year and was a
member of the drama club, chess
club, Future Busmess Leaders of
Amertca and the National Honor
Soctety
He also attended American
Legton Mountameer Boys State.
Ltke Fowler, Fry plans to attend
West Vtrglnia Tech where he will
major m electncal engmeerlng. He
plans to eo-op with a power plant In
the area to get work exper1ence and
hopes someday to get a master's
degree m hts chosen field
Stodola, the other honor student,
ts the son of Paul and Marilyn
Stodola, Rt I, Mason. He will
graduate With a 3 897 average.
While at Wahama, he was a
member of the Key Club, chess
club, National Honor Soctety and a
four, year member of the golf team.
His future plans call for studylnfl
computer sctence at the West
Vtrgtrua Institute of Technology.

Conclude 18 city
court cases

IIAHTINGER FAMILY - Ptctured is the Hartmger family taken in
IIH' 1960s while the family was m Middleport vtsiting family and friends .
fl.H'k, 1-r, hts late wtfe, Susan, and Jtm; front, sons, Mike and Jlmmer
o~nd

daughter. Knstt.'n

Hartinger to speak
MIDDLEPORT - General James
ilol linger wtll be the pnnc1pal
speaket at the Fnday mght banquet
to be held at tile Masm11c Temple
sponsored by the Mtddleport-

banquet on Fnday mght
The speech IS about the defense of
North Amenca of whtch he ts com,
mander and chief He also recetved
a doctor of rrulttary sctence degree

PIJ!I1Croy Rota r y Club

from Norwtch

Gen

Hartmger gave the com-

mence ment address at Norwtch

Umverstty, Fatrfteld, Vermont thts
pa,st weekend The speeeh he
delt v~red al NorwtCQ wtll be the
saine speech he wtll deltver at the

The Rotary dmner chamnan ts
Lee McComas Ttckets, whtch are
$7 50 each, may be purchased at
New York Clothmg House, SwiSher
and Lohse Drugs, Bahr Clothiers
and Mtddleport Department Store

F;nd marriages,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Actions for divorce were tiled by
J udith Lynn Hoscbar, Route 3,
Pomeroy, against Thomas Wllllarn
Hoschar, Mulberry Apartments,
Pomeroy, and Raymond E .
Maxon, Reedsville, against Frances B. Maxon, VIenna, W.Va. Mrs.
Hoscbar charges gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty. Charges
against the defendant In the Max·

son divorce action Is habitual dnm·
kenness, gross neglect o! duty, and
extreme cruelty.
A reciprocal action on tlllpport
payments has been tiled by Sara
Marte Diddle agaln•t fJchard D.
Seyler, II.
A divorce has been granted Cha·
rles E. Patterson from Betty
Pattenon.

EightEen cases were tennlnated
Thursday In Galllpoll.s Munlclpal
Court.
Clyde C Wllton.g, 46, StatesvUle,
N.C., charged with DWI, flnedUil,
sentenced to four days In JaU, drlv,
ers license suspended for six
months and placed on one year probation; charged with reckless operation, fined $100.
ChargPd with OWl, tined Ul),
sentenced to fOur days In Jall, drivers license suspended for llx
months and placed on six months
probation was David A. Hutchln,
son, 24, Rt. 1, ProctoiV1lle.
Lots L. Haynes, 39, Zebulon,
N.C., charged with !allure to register, fined $:1).
Charged with no valid operator's
license and tined $1!1 was Mlcllael
R. Hopkins, 21, Rt 2, Patrtot.
Forfeiting bond for !IP""''Di

were:

Wllllam J. Aretz. n, Charleltun,
W.Va., $38; Thn J. Baninger, 2!1,
Dayton, $38; Joyce G. Rumley, 33,
Rt. 1, GalllpoUs, S38; Delmer R. Sal·
yer, 29, Lynchburg, Va., ~

Gregory N. Welu, 29, Wllllam&amp;vllle, Ky., $39; Jacquellne K sWagert, 26, Columbus, $40; Jarne1 R.
Mowry, 42, Petersburi, W.Va.,tG:

Howard Hahunontree, 38,
tramck, Mich., $43.

Ham-

Mlc~IE.W~.D.~

$44; Ronald J .IJvl!ly, 2!1, Rt 2, (W.
llpolli, M; 1CenDetb L. Lee, M, CeJ.
llpolls, 1M; wuu.m
~ fl.
Rt. 2, Patriot, $12.

w.

recession-drained budget Into
balance
A six-member joint conference
committee Is to hold Its second pubHe session on each chamber's version of measures that would raise
taxes and cut government spending
In an attempt to oHset a projected
$1.3 btlllon deficit.
The measures generally differ In
the size of the Income tax boost and
the severity of budget cuts to be
1m~

Hayes, Fowler lead exercises
for 1982 Wahama senior class

HouM:&gt;hold GOOds
51 CB TV &amp; RadoO EQu opmenl
~I

SJ

POMEROY - The May State
School Foundation Subsidy payment of $89,023,019.19 to 613 Ohio
city, exempted v1llage and local
school dlsll1cts and 87 county
boards of education, was reported
Saturday by State Auditor Thomas
E . Ferguson.
Breakdown of state subsidy payments to each school dlstlct and
county board of education In Meigs
Olunty Is as follows: Eastern Local
School Dlstrtct, $91,921.10, Meigs
Local School Dlstrtct, $172,254 10;
Southern Local School Dlstrlct,
$91,m 60; county board of educa
lion, $17,671.81

Makes distribution
POMEROY - Governor James A
RhodPS announced Saturday that
the Bureau of Motor Vehicles has
the fourth dlsl!1butlon of 1982 license tax revenues totaling
$19,399,728 25, ready for disbursement to local governments. It Is anticipated that these checks w1ll be
ready for ma1lln.g to each county
auditor by May 28.
Meigs County w111 receive
$68,617.83

Will meet Tuesday
The Meigs Area Holiness Association w1ll meet Tuesday, May 25, at
7: :Kl p.m. at the Danville Wesleyan
Church.
The Rev. Thomas Collier, pastor
of the Racine Nazarene Church w1ll
be the guest speaker The public Is
Invited to attend.

Plan joint meeting
There w1ll be joint meeting of the
junior and senior Amerlcan Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Unlt 39,
Tuesday, May 25, at 7: :Klp.m. at the
post home.

Tickets on sale
Tickets to the Racine Alumni w1ll
be on sale at Custon Print Shop,
Pomeroy, unW Tuesday. It was announced today.

Emer.rencv runs

POMER't5Y - ~ve emergency

runs were made by local units Friday, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service rewrted.
At 2:18a.m., Tuppers Plains was
called to an auto accident on Ohio 7,
They took Randy Shields to
C8mden Clark Hospital; Mlddleport was called at 3: 36 a.m. for Joe
Kropka, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy was
called at 6:23a.m. for De)bert Hud·
dlestoo, who was taken to Veterana; Rutland was called at 8 a.m.

tor Jlmn!Y QuWen, who was taken

to VeterJna; at 3:17 p.m, Mlddleport wq called for Nellie Price,
who wu'takeu to Veterans.
In otber inattera, 1lle Middleport
Fire~~ wu called at8:!13
p.m. Friday to tbe Tom ~rest·,
dence1 Rt 1, MJddii;POrt. wller'l!

lf&amp;bt1lll bid IlNck a ps well ·
There was no 11amaae to the
I..mahome.

Ohio senators are scheduled to
hold a voting session Tuesday at
which they will reject House
changes In the budget bill and ol!lclally appoint the conference panel
which has already been meeting
Informally.
No House floor session Is
scheduled
Members of a Senate panel are
expected to wrap up work on a bill
requlrlng at least 15 percent of federal funds received under the
Home Energy Assistance Program
be used for weathertzln.g low-

Income residences
The House-passed measure Is before the Senate Energy, Natural
R esources and Envlronmfi'nt
Olmmlttee.
Sponsored by Rep. Ronald H
James, O-Proctorv111e, the blll
specifies that the annual state plan
tor spendln,g Ohio's allocation Include the 15 percent set aside. It
also says the plan In effect when tbe
bill becomes law must be promptly
revised to Include the requirement
Ohio received $96 mUUon In
HEAP funds for the winter of 1981·
82. Its allocation for next winter has
not been determined.
The program helps low-Income
Ohioans who meet certain criteria
pay part of their heating bUls durIng December, January and
February.
Also Tuesday, the Senate Agriculture, Commerce and Labor
Committee Is tD open hearings on a
House -passed blll to protect
farmers from grain elevator !allures and strengthen regula Uon of
the facilltles.

Memorial Day services set
GALLIPOLIS - Memortal Day
w111 be observPd on Monday, May
31, according 00 a spokesman for
Galllpoll.s Lafayette Post No. 27 of
the American Legion
Individuals or groups plannln,g to
participate In the Memortal Day
parade should contact (by wrltlng)
the Memortal Day Parade Chairman, P.O. Box 528, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631, or by ca1lln.g Dovel Myers,
446-7009, Clift Dixon, 446-4900, or
Frank Hamilton, ~143.
The spokesman said open-top
vehicles are nePded for this year's
parade

American Legion
Post No 161, VInton, w111 hold Memorial Day services In VInton Memorlal Cemetery on Sunday, May 30,
beglnnJng at 2 p.m
Guest speaker w1ll be the Rev
Alvis G. Pollard, associate pasror
of the First Baptist Church of
Ga111poll.s.
Pollard Is a graduate of Pledmont Bible College, WinstonSalem, N.C., and has served the
Gallipolis area for the past eight
years.
He resldPS In Galllpoll.s with h1s
wife, Brenda, and three children.
VINI'ON -

Files for marriage licenses
GALLIPOLIS - The followtn.g
couples f11Pd for marriage llcenses
this past week In Ga1lla Olunty Probate Olurt.
John W Simmons, 21, Bidwell,
student, and Rita A. Nolan, 21, Rt
1, Point Pleasant, student.
Eugene E. Gloss, 21, Gatupolls,
engineer, and Barbara L. Laufer,
20, Rt. 3, Galllpoll.s, student.
Matthew G. Well.s, 22, Rt. 1, Northup, food service, and Judy A.
Hively, 19, Rt. 4, Galllpolls,
dietician.
David W. Pope, 23, Rt.1, Pal!1ot,
teacher, and Linda K. Henderson,

23, Waterloo, secretary.
Edward Goulart, 56, Hartford,
custodian, and Erma Jean Relt·
mire Goulart, 44, Hartford, janitor.
David L. Smith, 29, Aurora,
Colo., sheet metal mecbanlc, and
Marte A. Grose, 25, Rt 1, Cheshire,
registered nurse.
Noah L. Dulaney, 38, Rt. 3, Galllpoll.s, operator, and Lavada S. Harvey, 43, Rt. 3, Galllpoll.s, nursln.g
aide.
Bradley R. Dye, 26, Ollumbus,
packer, and Cheryl L. Ryan, 26,
Crown City, secretary.

0

KODAK CJISC 4000
Camera
Reg . $67.50
Sale 1
Pnce 52.88

OuiJIIIncludlng film

• Fully
automattc

-:::::::;__...L-_.,• No setttngs
to make

0

\

31 Homes tor Sale
32 Mob1 te H o m ~s tor Si!ll'
l3 Farms lor Sa le
J.4 Busmess Bu tldmg~
l6

Real Estate Wanted

-

fUM

12 S1tuahon Wanted

Pentecos tal Church

IJ

424

Ave.

Gallipolis

II

Due to the s•ze of thes sale a pre vtew of th•s collec
w•ll be held

Fnday, May 28, s 00 PM to 9 oo PM. - The public

thts spec1al show1ng.
Owner's note Th1 s c olle-ct•on of ant •ques spans th e
years 1800 to 1900 The fu r n1ture 1S pnm1tlve, coun
1s mv1ted to affend

D.nsmlth
~ ~I

..

~:- Jhll

'
Not rtlponslltlt (tr ecckltnts or I

....,.,'

c.,.....
'

:au:::::

Cr1t s &amp; kllt r n s 99? 5740 or

t n1a tc 8 week o td k •fl en
L• lf C' r tr,11n ecl 99? 7406

61 Farm EQUipment
67 Wanted to buy
6J Lcvestock
64 HayS. Gram
65 Seed&amp; FN!ololl'f

S m n lt m+x c d tJ r ecc1 d oq
tovrtb lc &amp; docs t r .c ks K 11
te n
pos s •bl y S•arrH'Sf'
Eve n on q s 985 17 17

.t6 S pa c~ lor r ~n t

47 Wanted to Rent
48 EQuipment lor Rent
1 l e m HI('
l u l l bl ooctcc!
S1ilmf' Sf' Cel l &amp; h\ r 10 month
o le k•llcn 7J1 '}]7 4 o r 74 1

40 " ' " " ' ...... ~

Clauified pages cooor the

try Shera ton, Emp1re, ea stl ake , and golden Oak
Most of the pr•m•f•ves are handmade and held
toge ther w •th p e gs or sq ua re na ll s and date before
the Ctv ll War Seve r a l pr eces h ave b ee n'" stor e and
a re rn as found ' condrrton, many need reparrs
The g lassware rs made u p of ea rly pr eces, a lo ng
wrth Amer rcan pattern g lass
Mr Saunders has been a co ll ec tor a nd loca l
hrst orran
for
many years
Spectallztng tn
m e mor abtl ra of loca l rnte rest Thrs auctron contarns
artrfact s fr o m h1 S co ll ec tr on that r e late to the
h ts tor y of Gallta County Many of the tfe m s hav e
desce nd ed fr om some fo th e ea rly fllm tlt es of th ts
c ountry Severa l are from ftrm s that have been out
of b u s rness for ftfty to o n e hundre d years The coun
ty re lat ed ma t e nal off ered co mprises the ftn est
coll ec t ton of s uch a na ture .n Ga ll Ia County
The follo w mg wtll be offered

t4tHU

41 Houses lor Rent
Mob•le Homes tor Rent
.0 Farms lor Rent
44 Ap.1rtment tor Ren t
4S Ft~rno shed Rooms

0

Insurance
lA Business Tramong
15 Schools Instruction
16 RadiO TV II. CB Repaor
11 Misce llaneous
18 wanted To do

fton

PR IMITIVE S W ei stand ca 1860 Pop Meal Ch•sl Cll 1840 S~ t 5
arrowbiiCk C ll&lt;~ rs ca 1870 Wal orop teat table (6 ISJO Mag Hep
plewhote dr op teat tilble Cil 1000 Wal Br!'aklront cupboard ca
1850 Wal HPpptewhote ~ l and wdh drawl'r ca IBOO Pop Cupboard
ca 1860 Pop Cupboard Cil 1830 Wa l trundle bed Ctl 1010 Pme
lull dov!'taot bt,l nket chest wdh de£'d bo11 and mdk paont ca 1810
Pop blil n ~ f' l Cll f' ~t woth motk pn onl ca 1860 Wa t table Wal CUP
board ca 1870 7 roc kers cord bed wal stilnd w/ drawer Cil IBGO
Arrowba c ~ rO&lt;: ker
1 arrowba ck chaors w th or1gmat ~tenCIIS ca
1810 Maple&gt; cannonba ll cord bed ca 1e10 Lo t arrowbi!Ck chars I ne
wal He!lpl"wh It ca 1810 Wa l Country Heoolewho le chest t a IBOO
Pon!' sian! lop d!' ~ l Hpppll'whote ca 1810 Wal cupboclfd ca 1830
Pop cupbOiH d ca 181{1 Pewter Cupbo,ud ca 1810 (needs work ! 1
t1ork nrv ~ntot en.. ,~ w.. l warliroh{' ca U!O wdh l)('w tt&gt;r hardwarr1
Maple bl,11lker cnest wotrl C&lt;tnnonball teet Cit 18~0 and Pop Cup
board C&lt;l 1860 COUNTilY SHEilA TON Wal swonQ lop card tabl!'
ca 1810 unuw 11wal poe ~a l e buo I to re~l' mble chest ot drawN~ ca
1820 cherry &lt;. IH•st td 1870 Cnerry stand w1 1h drawer Co'! 1810 wa l
standwllhdrawer ca 1870 sm cherrystandw•lhdrawer ca 1810 1
wal drop INti labll's and cherry C he~ t woth D•amond Keyhole o nlav ~
ca 1870 EMPt llE il l sw.ng top card t&lt;tble ca 1840 Wdl day b!'d
C!'fller table Cil 1840 1 ~o l a s lg mon or eii.C!'ptoonal three pol"Ct'
drop lront sec rearv ca 1840 EASTLA KE Noce two P•E.&gt;Ce che~ t nut
drop lronr secr&lt;' til ' Y ca 1875 rwo poece wat parlor organ ca 1875
se t tour w~l ct1&lt;1 rs wa l clock sne ll woth rwo drawvrs wal Brrak
tronr book cil se wom tour arawer ~ ca 1875 Fme Wal marblf' top
table ca IBI S Fone wal martlle rop table Cll 1875 and Wal Fern
Stand OAK NICf' lobrary tatlLe ')et tour Bentback chdors knock
down wardr otw tneeds doorsJ St&gt;t 8 Ben ttlac h cnaor§ set B e11
ceploonill pressback chaors love teQ hMvest table woth l!'aves Ote
Ma n ot ltll' Mountaon pr{'sSback roc ker set tour noce pressback
cha ors and m11Chor1g rocker Cllo((l s pr essback hogh cna r rocker and
table gl&lt;tSS claw loot organ stoo l and n ce tove seill Cil 1900 PAT
TE RN Gl ASS 011er l olly poeces s uc. h as Lodded Compotes open
compotes spooners creamers cake plales bvtterdoshes temon~dt&gt;
set p1tchers p1 ckte castors celery vases and over thortr goblets
Some arl' ~e t s
on such pallern~ as H&lt;'Jild Ball &amp; Bar l 09 Cabon
Loop Cry ~ tal Weddmg Good luck Fou r Fru 1ts Cup•d &amp; V{'nv~
Waler L•llv Dakota Swan a nd others
GLASSWARE Compotes se t 5 tumb lers sel l I tumblers m1lk glass
cake plate lour sandw och bowls (1930s) ~a it dtps 4 Shllvong muqs It
hdrldleless cups o nkwell ~ Silltl pepper s se ls shol gt&amp;Sses set 15
uoll liops anli mASIPr ~all 1 r up pltlle ~ ApOIIlec.llry t!HS wnosker
tug rollonQ pon pockle dopper several poec.-s mtlloloca br~act
plates de&lt;i'm ter 1876 Centenn1al Independence Hall gtas~ bank
bowls do shes and manv lmaiL dem s CHINA Tootnpock mustard
pot plni!N S Qrilvy boats P•IChers CliP and saucers COII't"fed
dtshes cllf'ese ke{'per 3 Early plate!&gt; Early AS C plate Ca rno11al
ABC pl;~tc ~ oap d sn set nand paon ted salt d ps ~nd sev ~ r~l pi&lt;Jie s
IRON ST ON E l!'apot compol {' covered d1sh nnd lureen FLO
BLUE 6 platl:'S 1 bowls 3 snucers tray large &lt;up ilnd saucer set
cup Silucer pl&lt;tle potcl'lt&gt;r and 3 plate:. LU STE RWAR E 4 )U(jdt
boWls 1 po tcners se t ot plates
TEA LEAF Rare compo te truot bowl buttrr dosh wavy and
vnoer p1a e suyar oowL 9 butter pals soup pLate 1 ser11 nq
dtshes I dl"ssert 9saucers three 10 plai{'S none9 lates and~pa t
lers !r om smilll to turki'Y S11e CAS T til ON Mon oron and tr v{'l 6
Eagle sectoon fence du tch 011en 1 sk tlle ts woth lids dated 1925 gnd
dlf' sadlfOfl loreptace set sm pot Wllod washbOtler oval roaster
and cornbread pan Stl VEilP LAT E Sugar bowl butter dosh copper
bol Arl Nou11eau tewe lry b011 copper meat rr ay l~rve ornat e
shromp dosh brodes basket lrame many p1eces of tabl {' serv1ce and
servong pot'ces sterling sa lt &amp; pepper Mid 1 sets Bone handled
kn•ves &lt;'lnd torks LAMPS M1n lam p 2 longer ri ng tamos Aladdon
brass lamp (electnl•edl Rayo tamp over 12 gtau tamps some are
laney one •5 da ted 1914 PO LITI CAl ITEMS MCK1Il l l'~ Sm1 th F
Roosevelt Carte r Kennedy Stevenson Ike Humphrey and Nann
buttons lt~ l t plate Bryan mug Gart.e ld lumbter L•ncl)ln
paperweoqht (damaqed) Eosenhowf&gt;r paperwi'UJhf W.ll llclce otems
Dewey and Wot son pamphlets
STONEWARE Inkwell 5 Clay p1pes Jar Jas Benjam in Conn 0
crock J p ggy banks Rockongham cow creame- r (damaged I 1ar
dated 1891 10 gat tU9 w1th free hand ntCe bul damaged J tU9S
marked Roycroll lollow ong are blue ttnd wnott Sl!ll otuedwarCtoves Holder grease 1ar spongcware m•lk p otc~ r Ia re.o l beautvl
ton{' bowl and pdcher se t Rose Trellis paflern p1Tcher dosh 5m
bowl lar g{' bowl toothbrush holder sa lt crock and soap d• sh
CLOCKS BLcKio. mc'ln lel blue and while delft type 1 clock c a§e~ 2
oak k•tchen c locks Orna te cuck oo w111 ca 187S mvch mla y (net&gt;ds
work) and 3 pocket watches WOODEN WAllE Larve butter bowl
'11 gat wooa tlarreot Mortor ouner paddle patllo masher 1 Towel
holders butter ~ t amp 5 butter molds and spoons 11001&lt;5 H Al9{'r
Bufla lo Bo ll Jean Stratton Por ler MOdel T Ford Inter Harvester
Co Cent ot Reaper 3 McG utleys Story of the A1rshlp 1931 l!oy
Scouts 1911 Empr ess Joseph1ne 1860 W1ll ROdgers History ot C1vol
War 186A and man~ others Th1S IS t1 parfla ltlsllng
COINS Li ncoln He-ad CenTbook No I conla •ns AI coins Lincoln Cf'nl
No I contams 63 co•ns lincoln Cent No 1 contaons 6-4 c om ~ 9 Buffalo
Nrck tes 1919 lo 1937 78 ncckels 19AO s IS Steel Pennln 19~ 4 Stiver
quarters ~ hall aouars 196.4 9 nocke ts 1939 roll 1963 pennies un
orculated 2 Mercury d• mes 19" and 1936quarter 1926 19" 42 ancl «
haH dotlan IS silver d1mes 3 hall dollars 19 pennies 1909to 1919 24
1930s pennoes A8 war mckets 6A 19~0s penn•es and Ill 195(h penn•es
GAlliA COUNTY IT EMS Group marked cigar bOxes com
memorttl111e c'lnd pollical r1bb0ns 3 d1shes - Ourdorff II. Poore
toolhp&lt; Ck~ Adm Bldg OHE
glass cardholders marked Btdwe-11
vi~ and adverhstng plates 0
H Ramsey Ct..shtre, GaiiiOOI&lt;S
wharf front H11rros Church Harrosburg covered brld(je Vonlon
Melh 1961 Muster Day plc'!te Pl!mphlet The Hanglno Of JamH Lane
1890 CentennHt l H1story of Gall .poll s 1 1965 Centenma l plates Grc'!ce
Mettt Md others BOTTLES C R Niday C 0 Kerr E lincoln
Neal Or Lewis Bean Gallipolis Bottling Works, J Jones, Henklno
Bov•e S• lverman Levte C C M&lt;nk Colema n Oetry Bull er DlllfY
Spronoh •ll Ga tllpclos Dalfy Carle» Niday , Baker Datry STONE
JAR'S Stockhofl Bros E L Menager Ur lg I. Sfockhotl 7 tfem s
from L11tavette Hotel cook stove marked Trusure Stove Works
~ever at hcts !rom Ga iiiPOI s tounderles, 2 tea kettln marked F W
C&gt;ages ster 11n9 spoon adm bldg OHE , business and tracte cards
bllsoness letterheads old newspapers olve awav type tdverllslng
nems sterling spoon Gallipolis &amp;II the complelt works ot w G
S1bley The ltfe Of 0 0 Mc intyre autographed bV tnt author, all Of
0 o Mcintyre s books several tlems retahn; lo 0 0 M . all the
~s htvl! Deen autographed by Mrs 0 0 Mcintyre. 1174 lan
dOwners Atlas Of Galt Ia Co 1882 Hardestys Atlll Of Gall Ia Co , both
books are orl gmafs and In OOOd condition, covtrtet sloned J A Van
Vleck done In red while and blue (This Is a rare Item - one Of lhese
11 on display at lher Our House) .Manr of theM hiYtbeen loaned tor
cef1fenn lal and library displays .M ise old 71 records, oil palf)tlng Of
member of Riggs famtly , ca 1160, Quilts, postcards. vatenllnes, gins
Piper weight marked " Nash" . daguerrtotypn, pencil box, old bot
tlfl, 2 metal krtuf cutters datfd 1911, uuwoe mill, Art Noueaux
statue, trunk , J woOd cash drawers, hickory split bnket, elder prHs
(matal paris only) picture framts, wOOd kraut cutttr, hm oak. file
boltes sm modern shOwcase, lot oak furniture trim. lot walnUj trim
and knobs, several sets oldturntturt brtss. sets furniture easton, tot
gingerbread trim, tot wrecked furnlturt SIIIYIQt: wal oak, pop
cherry use•bte for repatrs lap Mosk 2 wa lnut ntaol'tell. several Olns
Ol lsey chLrns and parts, old tin Items; pewter teapot, cal 1120, lS"
Prwter tray, dated 1154 lot o.k table teavn. H V R R lock ,
H.V RR glObe. R R key, ltrfltl colt~tlon of dlfttrent type keys, *P'
pit
20 gat copper ktfllt In fine tondltlm; Ofd miQaZIMJ,
col lection old buttons end other lttms telo numtrOut to mention
1
Plan to Spenclttte Dav •• This It a L411'91 htt
All fltml must bt RtmOYN 1M Day Of tiM llttt
AUCTlONE.RSt

Help Wanted

A NY PERSO N wt10 ha s
anytht n g to g•ve away and
doe ~ not off e r or r"ltt cm pi io
o il e r an y o th e r lhtnq tor
s n tc may plil ce an il d .n lh •s
co lumn Thcr r will be n o
c h a rqe to th e adv c ri1 SN

Autos tor Sa te
n Trucks lor Sa le
n vans &amp;AWO
1A Motorcy cles
7S Boals &amp; Motors
16 Auto Parts&amp; Ac.cessones
77 Auto Repaor
711 Cl!mp1ng EQuopmt&gt;n•

7056

11

foUollling teleplwne ezc/unge&amp; · ·

--

G•ll•• County

Met9s Count,

Are• Code 614

ArNoC~414

---VH&lt;I....

ou-c.......

__.........

Mf--R•clM

•Js- pt Pte.awnt
45a--Leon

m---

..,_NewH•"""
" s--lff•rt
tll - Bufl•to

742-- Rut~lld

)79-Wo~~lflul

"1- CoolviUe

CCl t 5 &amp;

k.tt c ns

C &lt;llt H6

0808
5 kllt e n s 4 m .1tcs t fem a le
6 wee k s o ld I p u pp y 8
w ee k s ol d hcllf co tt• c &amp; h,1!l
Ge rmnn
Shcpt1crd
949

lA 00

words per hneJ

3 b cil u t d u! k t!h'ns to q ooct
hOm C'

L• tl f'r t ra• n cd

997

753 1
O nf' male k lt c n ~11 1 bln ck
wt th lo nq lln •r 997 35 77

NOTIC E TO
CONTRACTOR S
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Co lumbu s, Oh10
May 7, 1982

TO q ood hO me
p lr"ly l ut
you n Q m ate cloq cxccll f' n t
t nrm cl oq 304 89 5 3614

CARD OF THANKS
We would ltke to thank everyone that helped m any
way dunng out recent ktdney hansplant We app1ec1ate
the money we 1ecetved to help on ou1 expenses, the
beauttful flowers, ca1ds and lettm, and espectally you1
love, support and praym. We thank the doctors and
nurses at the Untverstty Hospttal , Columbus, !hat wed
for us, but we g1ve the pratse and glory to God, the
great phystmn. Only wtth the wtsdom and knowledge He
gtves could a muacle hke a ktdney transplant be a sue
cess We p1ay we wtlf hve ou1 liVes to be a biessmg to
others. May god bless each one of you

Co ntra ct Sa les L ega l
Co py No 87 558

UNIT PRICE

CONTRACT
Sea te d proposa ls wt! t be
r c ce tved at t he Off tee of the
DLrccto r of 111e Oh10 Depa r
t ment o f Tran s p or ta ti on ,
Co lu mbus, O ht o, unttllO 00
AM Oh •o S tanda r d T tm c,
Thursday, June 3 1987 fo r
rmprovements 1n
Ca lha , H ock tnq Me1q s
and V tnt on Coun t tes Ohr o

DELORES FRANK AND CATHY SPENCER

on GA L S R 733 10 00 0 371
- St a fe Rout e 1JJ, rn Ga ltta
Cou nty
HO C S R 664
116 67 73 48 1 - State Route
664
tn Hock rn q County
MEG S R 338 (4 97 IS 36
Slate Route
V IN
S R 160 10 001 13 90 8 581 -

778 570 lee I or 43 79

m tl es
'The date s e t t or com
pl e t 1on o f th rs work shnll be
as se t forth tn t he btddrnq
proposal
Eilch h1 dd er shall be
req u tred to f ile wr th h•s b •d
a
cl' rlr fLe d
c h ec k
or
cash tcr s c h ec k lor cl n
amount equal to fi ve pe r
ce nt of ht s btd , but •n no
even t
more tha n
ftfth
th o u s and d o ll a rs o r a b ond
fo r te n p e r cent of h• s btd ,
payab le to the D•rec tor
Btdders mu s t a pply on
th e
proper
to rm s
lor
qual rf rca lion a t leas t ten
days prror to th e d a te set
for o p en tn c;~ t:Hds •n a c
co rdanc e w tth Ch ap ter 5525
Ohro R evtsed Cod e
Plans and s pect ft ca t.on s
are o n ftle rn th e Depart
ment o f Tran s portat1 on and
th e o ff1 ce of th e D• s t rtct
D e pu ty Dr r ector
The Otre c t or reserves
the r tgh t to retec t a n y and
ill I bLdS

DAV ID L WEIR
Dl RECTOR

R ev 8 17 73

May 16 73

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING

Card of Thank s
T h e C tty o f Ga lltpoJ• s rn
te nd s to apply t o the Ohto
The l am ly o t Owen
Department of Econom •c
( Poss) Ander son w o uld ltk c
and Comm unrt y Develop
to
men t for fund rng unde r th e to expres s !h&lt;1nk s
Fu neral
H o me .
Sma ll C ttt es Communtty C(1sto s
M c m o r .a l
Deve lopm e nt B lock G ra n t V e lernns
Hos prt al Dr Wllhcrc l t Dr
Program a fede r a ll y fun
ded program adm1 nr s t e r e d Peterso n al l our f n e nd s
by the Stat e Th e C rty ha s a and netg t1 bors for r~ lt th e tr
S23 .tOO formula n ltocil t• on s upport dur•nq o ur t.me ni
to wht c h t t 1S e ntttl ed, qrte l
prov td tng the C tt y mee ts
appl•cab t c
program
requrrement s
Announce m e nt s
A publ tc hea rrn g wtl t be 3
held Thur s day
June 3,
1982, at 7 30 p m rn th e Buy te rm 1n suron c e and •n
Munr c 1pat Court Room , 5 18 vest th e rest No obltgat1on
Second Avenue, to prov tde anatys1s
Ruml e y
tn
r es1de nts a n opportun tt Y to s uran cc Agen cy 446 3320
s ubmtt the tr v tews and
proposals and to mor e full y
ex platn th e progr a m Th e
22 ca l1be r Bu ff a lo Scou t
program c an fund a broad
r a nge of ac t1vttres
tn r evo l v e r p ea rl h and les A
c ludtng
eco nomt c 3/ 4 rrft e barrel 6 s hot '12
s h ort s or tongs
$59 95
deve toment
pro1ect s
s tr ee f.
wafer
s uppl y, Sprr ng Valley Trad•ng Co
dra tn age
a nd
sant t a r y Sprrng Val ley Plaza 446
sewer tmprov e m e nts, par k 8075
acqu rs rtt on
and
rm
provem e nts, demo lttr on of 1 oz
999 Sd\ e r Fathers
un sa fe
st ru c tur es
Day bar
$ 10 00
Sprong
r e habt11tatton o f hou stng,
n et gh6o r hood
f aet l 1t 1es. Valley Trad 1ng C o Spnn g
and the ltk e Th e ac ft vt tt es Valley Plaza 446 8025
mus t b e des tg ne d to benef•t 1
1
tow mod e rate tncome pe r , P e rf ec t Father's Day qrft
5o ns and to e lrmtnate or 1 Wh 1t c s metal de fec to r 15
prevent s lum s a nd blight
% o ff
S prtn g Val le y
Pl ease
a tt e nd
th e Tr adrng co Sp rr ng Valley
mee ttng June 3 a nd h e lp Pl aza 446 8075
the ( tty plan th• s prog ram

I

May 20,73

Publtc Nohc e

3

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
T he r e wtll be a publt c
h ea rrng on the proposed
u se of revenue s hanng for

the 1983 budget for the C1ty
of Ga tltpott s on Thursday ,
June 3, 1982 al 8 00 p m m
the Munt c lpal Court Room
The ctty manager wtl t
conduct th1s public h eartng
for
th e
purpose
of
provrdtng publtc rnput tnto
the utlltzat1on of revenue
sharmg funds

May 20, 23

Public Not1ce

PUBLIC'NOTICE
The annual report Form

990 PF for the Ktbble Foun

dat1on , Bernard V Fultz .
Trustee , is available for
publiC mspect10n at Ber
nard V Fultz Law Offtce ,
lllt/1 W
Second Street,
Pome~oy ,

Ohio

45769

dunng regular bus1ness
hours for a penod of 180

days

subsequen t

to

Announcements

- - - -------

SWEEPER
and
sew1n g
machrne r e patr , parts, and
s upplies
Pt c k up and
det 1very , Davts vac uum
C leaner, one ha lf mtle up
Georges Creek Rd
Ca ll

446 0294

Ra ven 25 auto P•Sio l $&lt;!7 49
Case sharks too th knrf e

$50 00

Spr~ ng

Trad•ng Co

Vall ey

Spr .n g Valley

Plaza. 446 8075

71c

7533
P U PPY &lt;; ma l l pr1r t Gf'r
m n n S twpllc rd l crnn le JC l

675 73 17
Yar d

S&lt;~ l c

) F.1m dy YM CI Srll (' 81C!
w r• tl Rodn e y Ref 1011 72 &amp;
23 Do Sh(' S boo k !l v o n &amp;
r lo ttw s lo ts rn o r r

446 8075

Reel E1t1t1 - General

O'BRIEN-CROW
REALTY

446-3021
437% 2nd

Gallipolis
Steven Holmes

Lrtll e kool r es t tCe c hest by
Ig loo, t rave lt ng re fr es h
m e nt ce nter $74 00 Spr1ng
Vat tey T ra dtng Co, Sprrng

Valley Pla za. 446 8075
Play B1ngo lo r C ha r1ty
Watc h tor open •ng d a te
R od n ey
C r a n ge
H a ll

Ga llt a

Co

Brq 4 family yard s ale May
79 30 31 4 m il es c c1st o l
Tuppers
Pta.n s o n 681
to wrtrd Rf'ed s vdlf'
Loo k
9 dclrk
Mos t
fo r s oq n s
d (' m c;, S I 00 or Irs c. S• Vl rn!
rom t o rtc r c, r~ nc l onp b un k
11f'd
FO U R i amolv y,1 rc! o;;,,l iL'
M,w 74 9 &lt;1 Ill 5 p n1 50 I
F r &lt;; l St
PI
Ptp,l &lt;; nnt
C IOtlliiHI rtll "o Z! C,
T wo ta mol y ya r ct c.,,1ll' o ne
M dr tr o m Y to p o l Drilct
rTl t'ln s
c urv r
Rl
7 PI Pl c ,lsnnt E v f' ryll1 nq
Frt c!&lt;ly SHiurd a y
tN S! DE Sr"ll c new &amp; u sed
n w r c ha nd ,se a t 7 12 Wr~ !n ut
S tr ee t He nde rso n s tnrt.nq
M il y 24
YARD s nt c Mon clf!y M ~w
24 9 3, 111 L ib C' rty S tre e t
LO IS Of f' VNyl h1nq c hc np

YARD SALE
Left on old 160
Fur nttur e, ch il dr e n s
c lo th es, mt sc
Monday , May 74
9 00 to 5 00

8

Public S,l iC
&amp; Auctt o n

R1ck
Prar so n
Ex
pcncnced AUCTIONEER
E s t a te s
ant•qu es
ln r m
household Ltccn sed Oh•o
WV Buy1ng ant1ques 304

773 5785 773 9185

Ntght c r awlers $ 1 00 p e r
doz S prrn g Val ley T rad 1n g
Co
Spr.ng Va ll ey Plaza

Vol untee r

Emergency

PERMANE NT
HAIR REMO VAL
Profess ton a l Etectrotys1 s
Center A M A approved,
Doc tor referal s, by ap
potntm e nt o nly
304 675

6734

pubttcatton of th1s nottce
,(5)

"o W,l rl n&lt;; Oi hC'CS
(,ti l }4) 5055 or 446 105 2 or
I 16 /80 I

S l,"lnch nq lt mb('r &amp; Ford
Oron co w r crked o r l)iown
f 1)(1111(' (cl ll 388 9906
S t,"l n tr':&gt;'&gt; s tee le m rlk c an n
cond C al l JR8 8801

P,"ly c ,,c, ll to r rn . n mo tor
llom •' .n qood cone!
79
morh 1 up prf' INt'CI C all
756 6/ !J
I ohMro p lan t&lt;, o r
liN I C.1ll 3R8 H5 I J

w h o iP

B E' DS 1RO N

ORASS o ld
q OI(I
&lt;:,1 1vrr
riOII ~ r " w oo rl I( 1 b o xe s
&lt;.,1(1111 i•lr S r"lll l iqtH C, (' ! (
( o rnplrl&lt;'
IIOU SC'Ilotd&lt;&gt;
Wr il f' MD Mlih' r R t 4
PonH r ov 0 11 Or ~97 1760
l u r no~u n'

(jul( l
C.1 l vr r
'l l r rt .n q
1 WI' II V r nq s OICI CO til ':&gt; &amp;
r urr . nc v Erl 13u rk r tt BM
111 r SllOn M•rlclkpor t 992
) l/6

16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 71. 23,

MIDDLEPORT ALUMNI
A"ention a11 M.H.s. Alumnt! We need
volunteers for decorating Friday,
May 2S, 6:30 p.m. • 8:30 p.m. This tS
your alumni Please give us your
help!
Any Alumni wishing to reserve a table
, for the dance should stop at the Meigs
Jr. High May 28 between 6:30,8 : 30.

Au c tt on every FFt ntqht HI
th e H ar tf o rd Comm un 1ty
Ce nt e r Tru c kl oa d s o l new
merchand1se every week.
Cons rgm en ts o f new and
u sed m e rchandtse a lwa ys
we l come
R• c hard
Reynolds A u c f•on ecr 775

3069

FL EA MARKET , at Krodel
Park tn F o rt May 27,'18 29 ,
daily to Am 8PM , Booth e
s p ;!Ce availab le, l oad and
e n ter tatnment
Ca ll 30.4

675 1814, 675 1071 or 675
1876 a ft e r 5 PM Sponsored
by Mason County Chap ter

A'A RP
AUCT ION , a dv a n ce noti ce,
Sa turday June 5, 1982 All
day sa le, ra1n or s h.n e See
Lt st .ng next week Mt A lto
A uc t ton Sales

9-

-w.n~iiil loliuv - -

oLD FURNITURE , beds,
tron , brass, or wood

Ktt

chen cubbards of al l types
Tables, round or square

Wood Ice boxes · Old desks
and bookcases Wilt buy
comp lete household Gold ,
Stiver, old money, pocket
watches, cha1ns, nngs, and
etc. lndtan Artifacts of all

types Also buymg baseball
cards

6370

Osby Mart rn

- - - ---·- ---

992

Help Wan t ed

M,'l ,nt e nce per s on for apa r
tm p nt complex C all 675
S I04 0 r6 75 5386
SOmC' OnP tO IIV (' tn WI Th
qr ntt c man 69 yr s o ld Rei
rrq Cc"l ll 446 7445

EXPANDING

MUST BE

AB LE
TO
S TART
IM
M E DI A TE L Y Bec ause of
ou r
un 1qu e
ex pans1on
proq rr.m wP are htrmg rn
Ul f'
G nll•pOI• S Pome roy

I S tnrr nq c:,otory of $1 000
mo nth
b a Sf'd
on
per
i or rn.l ncf' l o r t hosc who
q uat• l y
1
W f'
o tf r r
pa•d
tlos pl!atl/ai •O n ilnd p r ofit
&lt;; har.nq
J N o lay o tt s n o s trd&lt;,f'S
Mnn n q e m cn t pos lf •on s
~1va.t~1b t c

5 H 1qh Sc hoo ! cd u c at.on
cl nd cn r requ•red
F or c onhdcn l cll 1nlerv•cw
ca ll b('twecn 6 14 446 2096 1
I w ee kday~ and !0 1 S at
Wc1nt ed e lderly l e~dy to care
tor an elderly Indy Latt
4.16 t53 7 or 446 2158
Nrr d femaiP he lp '" home
tor 7 w ee k s nt le a s t To
carr l o r 7 c hildr e n a l ter
m o thN h ~s s uro c ry Call

388 8705
NEWS RELEA SE

The

G &lt;~il• rt

M e rq s
C o mmunr t y
Ac i• On
A rw ncy
C E TA
p ro qr,"lm rs c urr e n tl y .3C
cc pl tnq applt c at. o n ~ tor the
Su mmer
Y o uth
Em
pl o ymcnt
Pr o q r am
(S Y E P)
EI•C!•b lllfy
r c qu • rcmen t
1
cco n o m .c ally
d1 Sad
vn n taq c d ? 14 to ')I yea r s
ol &lt;lQC'
A p p l tC ill1 0 n~ iiC
rr pt ed
M o nday F rtday
R 00 -1 30 r~ t th e C A A ot
I cc 417 l /2 ?nd
Ave
Grt ll . po l c; On 446 4612 ex
tcns• on 63 M e• q s C ounty
cld drr ss CAA Olf• ce at 11 7
?nd Ave
P ome ry Oh ,
"1'1'/ 7] I]

c 1 c, t1 t or

lOm •C"&gt; \),l lt r cl rd s
(,
ll fl '&lt;,
op p o&lt;, 1 1
l lll C..clPI ,"lk. f' 0 11 10 II 6 30
PM pxc r p i ':)unll,lV cli1Cl
W('{l!ll &lt;,Cicl (

Public NOtiC e

I 10 49 17 551

681. tn Me tgs Coun t y

S ta te R ou te 160 rn Vtn ton
Cou nty a n d Vt n S R 160
(J 36) (J 69 ) - S ta te Rout e
160
'" the Vtl taqe of
Wtlkesv Lit e, Vtnton County
hy ilpplytnQ Cl n.t u m.nou s
s ur lace lr ea t ment
Pavement
Wrdth
V(1rres
Prowct and Work Lenqth

O N E !lldll' lJitt Ck &amp; Wllll('
lon q 11a r e d kitt en 30 1 675

l F ~"l md y Ad u l t c'HlCI bnby
c to l hf'S o tct bot tl e .., lf' c"ln'&gt;
m•c:.c
11 0
4th
AVP
Grt tl.p o l rc, Mrty ?A 79 JO
9 OOAM

- S tate Route 338 rn Me,gs
County
MEG S R
681

Wt p tty c n &lt;, !l lo r In I f' mode l
c 1ro ,1 n uc;r d c nr c:,
F rrn c !1f own CM Co
Bil l Gf' n P Jo tmc,on
&lt;146 0069

r ~~

Sltll

S1 00

13uy•rHJ
Golrt
Slive r
P!,l T•num o l e! coons c,c r,lp
r no"&gt; &amp; &lt;; tlv rrwnre Dady
q uo !! c;
nv ,"l rtal) l('
A lso
cO IIl ':&gt; &amp; ro tn c, uppl lf'S tor
c;,llf'
S pr •nq
V,"ll l cy
I r.lrlonq
Spr .nq
Vil ll ey
Pl,"lh"l 1&lt;16 8075 o r 446 8076

W lll i C&lt;!

7805
Up lol5 words Oneday
om.et"1ton
Up to IS woros Three day ,nserl ton
up to IS Won:b Snc. dtr
of'tSC'rloon
1Average 4

CA"! H PAI D l or Clf'iln la te
m :xlt I U5C d Coli" !:&gt; S moth
13 tHr k P on t •M
G .111 p o l•s
Oll1n C.l! l .M6 1781

CIOOd

576---~GnY~

247- Letart F&lt;IIIS

ls.-Gur•n Oist
MJ-Aro1bia Olst

K t lf f' n S to (j iVf' tO
h ome Cnll446 417 3

wv

ArN (ode ...

m-Middlepor1

lU- Rio Grande

81 Home tmprovements
87 Plumbing &amp; Heat1n9
8l E11.cavaflng
94 Elecrlcal &amp; Relroger atoon
95 Genera l H&amp;ulmg
86 M H Repaor
87 Upholstery

M.uot~Co

446----Galllpolis

U1- Chesh,,..

W A NT TO BUY O ld tur
not u r f' u nd 1\nttQ Uf'S o i all
k 111Cb t .tll KC'tl!l t II~ S wc11n
4t63 159r"l n d 156 1967 1n the
f'VI'ntnCI '&gt;

6QIIIIi!S_:-

I li

Sf Rts 160 &amp; 3S, four m•l es west of Gall•poh s,
Oh10
Lunch provided by th e lad•es of Calvary

9

997 7597

lS Lots&amp;. Acreage

*l'r•

TAWNEY STUDIO

A niiQue~

SA M•sc Merch.tndiSf.'
S5 8U!Id1ng Supplle-!o
S6 Pels lor Sa le
51 Musoa l tnstru mt•nts
58 F'ru o!s &amp;. Vege ll bl~s
59 For Sa t ~ or Trttdr

Locat.on Gallla County Jun1or Fa1r Grounds, J et

Legislature continues budget
balancing efforts this week

JACK W HAYES

71 Bvs•ness Oppor tu n•t~
n Money to Loctn
Tl Profess•onal Servoces

1 Card of Thllnks (p.,ld on advttnce)
2 Card of Thanks (p.lod '" advance!
3 A nnounc~ m ent s
4 G•veaway
s Happy Ad s
6 Lost and Found
7 Yard Sat~ (pa•d m adll'ance)
8 Rub he Sa le
&amp; Auc t1on
9 wan t ~ to Buy

G tveaway

11

H e lp Wa nted

F UL L O R P A RT TIME
CO Up lf'S c"lnd 111d1V1dUCli S lor
n us •nc ss u r
your own
Loc nl Amwny D s tr rb utor
1r ,11ns you to r c, p! p nd c d op
por tu n• IY No cx pe rrence
nrccssa r y
F o r . nt e r v•ew
C.f'ncl n n m e c"lnd ph one num
111 r to P 0 B ox 341 Rt o
G r rlncl r Oh 456 74
1 orne on y ou r 11r1nds') M e et
n1 r f' Pf'Op lc r arn QOOd $$S
Avon P A RT T tM E &amp;FUL
L T IM E C all 446 3358
H1qt1 S~._ hoot G ri'tduat e s &amp;
SP n o r s you c on earn o ve r
S550 00 per month whrlc
lr arn .nq (1 v aluable skil l
repa•rer
lilc,f' co mpul e r
s t1eC' I m e tcll workC'r
or
rrlr rq c r at ton Plu s you wilt
11nv r cl se c ure pnr t lim e 10b
wLI!l tt1 c Amry Na l •onal
G u .Hcl cl ilf'r
sc h o OILnq
BPnet.t c, tnc ludc il $ 1 500 00
f'nl•s tmcnt
b o nus
$35 00000
ttf c
.ns urance
and t r ee tullt o n to any
c oi iN !C' or tr ild C' sc h oo l tn
\1\r s l 1.. rq1n1A
tntC'rcstcd
prr sons ma y c all (JQA ) 675
1
3950 o r '" '\lcs t Vt rQ tnta c all
tol l FR E E I ROO 64 7 3619
H ct h s~ tlOOI Gro=~dun l f'S &amp;
Sr n o r e.; you c r~n Ctlfn over
S550 00 per mon t h while
lf'&lt;"lr n onq a voluf!b! e s kill
td&lt;C' c ompulpr rc patrer
s hcC' I meta l w o r ker
or
r f' ir ,q crat•on Ptu s you wil l
ll .wt n secure pnrt 1trnc tOb
w il!l 1!1e Amry Na l rOfla l
SC il OOI•nq
G uc1rd
a ft er
Be n e t II :. rn c ludc a $150000
C' n i • S im e nl
bo nus ,
.ns urance
$35 000 DO Id e
~1 nd
t ree tu•t•on to any
c otle4e or tr ade sc hool 1n
V'ic s t VrcQtn tn Int eres ted
per s on s may c all (304) 675
3950 o r 1n We s t VtrQinta c all
loll FREE I BOO 647 3619
Job s Overseas B •9 money
l a st Job off er s gua ran
teed
17168426000
Ex t

7578

"'-

Coc klad waLi r e ss wan ted
.mmc d • ate
p os d•ons
ava il ab le
full and part
trme Apply 1n p e r son or
ct:T tl for a ppo•n lm en l The
En t er latn er
Potnt
Pleasan t, WV 304 675 6700
EARN money a t hom e No
f ace to fac e
or
phon e
se lling
Wrtte
Sandees,
P 0 Box 923 1. Huntrngton ,

wv 25704
OUTSTANDING

Ca reer

Opportuntty fo r the am
btttous sa tes or.ented p e r
son Professwna l t ratnmg
a nd
co mpr e h ens•ve
beneftts
provtded
Unltmtted tncome pote nt1al
wtth mtntmum travel For
co nttdenttal tntervtew ca ll

16141

374 8306

r esume

Hughe s

to

or

Charles

Sr

send
E

Agency

Manager, Woodmen Ac
c tde nt and Ltfe Co , 536 -4th

St , Manetta, Oh 45750

NC'cd cJ 1ob'l L•k. c IO be your
own boss ? Ex ce llen t op
po rt u n . ty ful l o r PM! l1me
OICi t' Wo rtde Inc w rt l trarn
,m et he lp slart your own
bus 1ness
For .nterv1ew
'. Pnd your r es ume to 202 1 '
E Man St Pomeroy O hto
Wilnted person fa !tve w.th
elde r ly
la dy
L tght
hOu s eho ld dutres Reter e n
cc nee ded Restdence R T 1
Lo nqbo lfom
Oh
Pl ease
ca ll or wnte R K Brown
15 7
Whaley
Place
Chdl• c othe Oh•o 45601
NN•rl f'x trrt m o n r y? Be a
toy &amp; q1ve dem o n s tr a t or
11 c, 0a s y &amp; prot. tab le work
vour own hour s T here s no
Ci'!S tl •nvestmen t fo r sam
pic kd &amp; no cott cc t . n g or
d C' Iov('ronq Call Fr .e ndl y
Ho me Parlies now 991 356 1
Al so book no pc1rtre s

11

Srtuatton s Wi!nted

Ho u s e pa•n l1nq
roat.ng
concrete work 992 7836
Any odd 10b Have plum
btnq
e tectrr c
c nrpenlry
f'l&lt;p C' rtence 304 675 5918
13

In sura n ce

SANDY AND BEAVE R In
s ur ,1nce Co
h as o lf e red
se r vt c e s lor lire 1nsu r ance
covcraqe 1n Gall ta County
tor
almost
a
ce ntur y
Farm home and oersonal
p roper t y
covcraqes are
nv~l lc"lbiC'
to
mef' t
n
n f'ed s
Co nta c t
d v•du&lt;ll
HMry P• tc hlord
ttgen t
Phon e 446 1427

15

Sc hool s tn s tructton

KMa tc t11 c ul t tmate •n se lf
def e n c e all pr1vat e lessons,
Mf'n wome n &amp; childre n
l ns truct•on t hru bla c k be lt
Kara t e
Als o ilvatlab lf'
uniform s
pu c htnQ
ilnd
k1 c k •nll brtcrs an d protec
l rvc
rqu •p men t
Jerry
L o wery
&amp;
A ss o c 1a les
K cHc"l lf'
Slud1 0
143
Bur !• nqron Rd
J a c kson
Oh C1 11 786 307 I

17

Mtscenancou s

H,"lv•nq a part y P• Cn•c .or
home c om.nq why not have
a
m.:JQ •Ctan
tor
en
ter lntn mcnf? ~ o r i!ppt c all

997 7352
18

Wanted to Do

The S d k H o u se (c u stom
:&gt;Il k
fl owers)
Com pl e te
br rdat tt ne , weddrngs, a n d
all oc c aston s Ca tl 367 7566
Lawn Mowrng Se rt ve, no
yard to b•g or s mall house
p ar nt rng &amp; r oofmg , and
trght haultnq Call 446 3159
a ft e r 6PM 1 286 5740
Carpe nter work R e patrs
and room remodllng , wa ll
paneling and ce1hng f1le

992 2759

Trash co!lec t1o n &amp; hautklg

Ca ll 446 4480

E tec tn c &amp;
12 years ex
p e rt e n ce, all work guaranRes•dent1at

teed Call256 1748

�f'o m eroy - Moddleport - Ga llopolo s, Ohoo~ roont P leasa nt ,

Page- 0 -4- T h c S unday Tom es -Sen ton c t
W&lt;~nted

18

Sp,.. tnQ

to Do

ctra n tn g

Jl

n nd

h ouse k eeptmt
r easo n abl e
r n tes Ph onf' 30 4 675 7 107
WI L L CM L' tor 7 e l d Niy
p enp te t t t my t1ornC' O y t h e
Mont i ~

or

W('C k

30 4 675

7610
N CPd your lrlwn r ul
'l 446 7971

\1,

Cnll

Busmess

Bu.-.tnC'S"&gt; or s torC' r oom rn

GOLF

COU R SE::.
Pro l e&gt;S~ 1 0na l
B u dd ers
Ou tdoors
1n
doN s h n.1nr 1nq 1. 4 900 up
Mrn1
Gol f 707 B rr dqe
Jt"&gt;SUP PA 18 ~ 3 ~ (7 ! 71 489

8671
Own your own tC'&lt;"ln shop ,
lddi {'S wenr or c hddrrns
store
Ov r r 700 t) r nnds
nv,lil i!b lc 1. 1~ 850 111 c lu des
ri1VL'n l or y
h x tur CS
et c
Co rn pf r tr ~ t on Cn l l 1 BOO
874 .H 80 I'&gt; I 31

Sl ,788 00 A MONTH
S447 00 A WEEK
S74 25 A DAY
On a to ta l cash ou tl ay
of $3,585 00 you can
control an S11 ,950 00
route of htgh ea rnmg
ve ndtng
m ac hrn es ,
a'o'a tlabl e to f.nanCialfy
responstble 10d1 V1dual s
seekt ng a sa fe, vet h1gh
CAS H tncom e w tfh
a m.ntmum of t1m e and
money mv ested Deal
w tfh an esta blt shed s
yeJ r old company Ca ll
toll free

1 800 814 7888
CARE DI STR IBUTO RS
IN C
91SO 49th Streel North
P m elt as Park , FL 33565

/l l l f N liO N 11 0 M I Mflk f ~~ ~ ·
M f I&lt;' Ill Mf-. (
rl f' &lt; II\
WV I &lt;&lt;I I

on lh&lt; \ .lt t'o1 I',J&lt;I y
p l,o n 1 •Pt'flfl1(t' 11Nf'\\,ny C.1r
,\ nil phon&lt; noNl&lt;&lt;I (. II\ loy\
I&gt;O m t
dcrOf N o onvt, lnH n o
df'hVt'&lt;Y COI I{•(I+nQ Al\ 1&gt; h&lt;flll Q
o.mo n\ 11,\101 \
( ,!11 If&lt; (
\u p c r&lt; ~O &lt; \

90 11

Money to Loan

'2'1

R fF IN A NCE or purOl(lSe
yo ur t1omr JO yf'M lr X('d
r &lt;'! IC WV&lt;l &amp; 01110 LCcldcr
Mort q,1qe 71 E Stil k St ,
A t hen'&gt;, Oh 597 3051
H ~wf&gt;

la nd? Wrln l to budd?
N olh1n q down low 1ll l f&gt;rcs t ,
no paym en t for G mont ns
6 14 591 3053
PrO f l'S~ IUil.JI

13

and b ar n c. f=.:~ l! 446 7599

3

tl ouse

q ~droorn

tn

Serv1ccs
C&amp; L Bookk f'eprnQ
Book keepr nq &amp; filx SNV1Ce
f or a ll types oltJusrncsses
Cn r o l Neal
&lt;146 3862
P rr"lno tunrnq ona r ep d rr
L n ne Danr c l s Assoc 1ate of
Bru nrc ard r's
Ga ll rp o l rs
and Cunn1 nq hn m'o; A t hen'&gt;

74 7 795 1 or 9977087

Po ml!r oy V tn yl Stdtnq &amp;
lir (' pl ilCC
Nt Ce IOC&lt;'I Ito n
P r tced t o sC'It q91 7446

Furn1shed apt , 3 bdr ,• $195 ,
water pard Call446 44 16 af
ter 7PM

tn Ril ctn l' Ollto on Br o a d
way Roctrrtrk Grnnm 5
r ooms
11 ,
batll, tar qc
biiSf' nlf"l l It rt:p lnce 949

IH' ctroorn

Furnt shed af}'f , 3 bdr ,
adult s, S175 Share bath,
utrlt1 es patd Ca ll i\46 4416
after 7PM

t1ousr

L 1llle house 1n town , qu1 et
St , 4 room s, balh , laundr y
Ca ll Earl Tope 446 0690
weekda ys, 446 016 1 e..,e &amp;
Sunday

Home. au to . etc as down
pa y men!
887

Pome r oy 304
7 4 66

Pa rtral l y
furnr shed
r oo m s and bnth 992 5908

House M c,ldowbroo k Act
d1tr on 3 bcclr oo m tamlly
room v.rltl lirepl ace cen
tra l arr . bf"lseme nt Ph one
304 675 1547

32

CLEA N USE D MOBIL E
H O M ES
K ESSEL'S
QUAL I T 'v
MOBI LE
HOM E SALES
4 Ml
WES T. GA LL IPOLI S, RT
35 PH O NE 446 3868

Mobile H om es
for Sa l e

Ca ll Sk1 dmor e tor m obil e
homes m oved Greenlaw n
Tran sport
Cal l 446 27 83
da ys
446 34 79 eve n1ngs
Lrce n se d &amp; 1nsurcd

1981 Baro n l4 x60 hou se
trader w / tot drill ed well ,
septr c &amp; sewer C rnb Creek
Rd Ga ii•POi rS Fer ry , WVa
446 D 40

Prr ce r edu ced For sale or
12x 60 7 bedroo m
r ent
mob il (' home wrth 2 lots
G(1s t1ec1 t
rur a l w~1 1 e r
Cl ose t o cr f y lr m rls Cal l
446 1?94

1980 Wrn 50 r l4 x70 new
df' l uxe k llc l1en ,
co nd
lar Qf' l1vrno r oom &amp; ba t h 2
bdr ll rddcn u trl rty r oo m
Cull 379 73 10 &lt;1 ft er 5PM

Beautrful brr ck &amp; frame , 3
bedroom home w /scenrc
v1 e w ,
w o o d bur n 1nq
f •rep l ace, formal d rn 1nq,
c en tra l a1 r w / hea t pump
La nsc aped , I acr e lo t
w t fenced rn ba c k y ard
$4 5,900
11°o l!nan c rng ,
small clown payme nt Ci!ll

For Sr"l iC' Oll rce tr ade r
17x 45, f uel orl t1ca t n/ c, one
l ull billh , $2, 000 Call 446

411 9 7 004 30
12 · 60 tr ,1il c r , exce ll ent
co nd ll ron Ca ll 446 1552
F ur nrshed , rur con d rl 1oned ,
undcrprnnrnq , Sf' ! up on lo t
rn Mrdd lcpor t

NOTICE
Low es t
Proces
Ever
On

Cus tom bu il t tu r n 2 BR
m obile home on r ented
rr v cr I ro n! lot rn M aso n All
elec cent AC W D :: ptd
por c hes
mr~ ny
r xtr os
S t o r ~1 q e bldq
w rth work
bench A I cone! Mu st sec
to f1 ppr cc r&lt;11(' 304 773 5680

New 14' Wide

MOBILE
HOMES

I Y/ 6
mobrle
eludes
ch. and

$9,995 00

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.
Wtfh 2 Locatton s
Rf ~J North
Jackson, Oh10

14 x70
P a rkw ood
horn e. 111 bath tn
undf'rp rnnr nq, por
al urn rnum bu ildtnq

186 3751
or
Cor ner 2nd &amp; V1a nd
Pf Pleasant, W Va

510.500 997787 1
US ED M OB I LE
S76 1711

67S 4414

HOM E

MOBI LE HOM ES MOVED 35
Lot s &amp; Acreage
L rc cn sed &amp; rnsured Call
30 4 57677 11
T WO (1cre lot s ISO II r oad
lr ont aqC',
c !l y
wat e r ,
behrnd 84 L umber . c al l 304

675 68 73. 67 5 36 18

1973 , l4x 70,
bedroom,
mobil e 11 om e Wrll sell f ur
n ts hedf f or $7,300 , or un
lurnr shcd $6 ,800
304 88 2

132 A Ma son Co near
Roc k c oslle and Mt Olr ve
c hur ch Trmber and qa s
w ell on land Surlable tor
hunt rnq
and camp1nQ
$500 00 per acr e Phone 304

1810

458 1893

1972 Shult z 12x65 . gas heat.
3 bedroom s, parl•ally fur
nr shcd 304 675 2907

Real Estate -

General

446 3766
73
H ouse s 4 brd , 3 bdr , 2
bdr , 9°o rnter es t owner
frna nc tng
Cilr ol Y eage r
Realtor . - 675 5104 or 675

5386
For sale 3 bd r h ou se 1n
n e w! y
Me r cerv rll e
remodeled On acr e lot
By ("lP
Mrd tw en t1 c s
porn t ment only Call 256

1464
Countr y
Lrv1 n q ,
3
bedroom s, centr o! a rr , full
basement qaraq c pond 2
barns. afltht s on 10 ac r es of
beautrful rollrnq
land
Prrce r edu ced tor qur c k
sa le
By owner, $6 5, 000
Ca ll 145 9105
Neat 3 bdr , br rc k home,
112 baths, qu1 el nergh
borhood 10°o assumabl e
loan Call4.46 7080
N ew log hom e on rrver
fr ont 1n Mtddlcport 446

1552
3 bd room large garage, 2
acres, 2 bd room Rental.
tak e car m obile home tn
trade
Johr'l Sheets. 3117
mtl es Soutll Mtddleport R
7

IT' s GETTING LATE but

TRAILER ,

wa shcr ,dryer, new c ar
pe t rnq Wrll se ll partrally
furnrsh ed or un fur n•shcd ,

HOME

FOR SALE

$6300 304 773 5503

Ntc e 6 room , bath ,
bungalow w1fh 11 , acre s
of ground, two story
33
Farm s lor Sa l e
barn , m good cond1f 1on ,
Fnrm lor sa le by oNner
loc at ed on Rose Htll,
114 acr es on Rou sh Hr•lln,w l tu st off Sf Rt 33 near
Rd Ci111388 8515
Pomeroy
Pnced at
S26,000
Call 742 2003
George
Hobsf efter .
34
Bus•ne ss Bu1ld1ng s
Adm
of Vtrg1e HobBudd1n q
w 1t h
acl tv e stetter , Dec , wtth Will
lu cra t1 ve bu s1ness Ou 1ck
Annexed

sal e $35.000 997 3142

Lots &amp; Acr e&lt;lg&lt;!

Prr ce reduc ed 2 tots w rt h
rur al water c lose to c rty
lrmtl s $4.450 00 Ca ll 446
1194

Real Estate -

Real Estate -

Delux e furn apart , c ent
arr &amp; hea t I or 2 adu lt s

Furn1shed apt 3 room s,
$195 uttltftes pa td , adults

Call446 4416 att e r 7PM

unf

H omes l or R ent Lease or
L ancl contra c t tn town or
co untry
Call
St r ou t
Rea ll y, 446 0008
Ce ntenary 3 Bdr 2 ba th,
new br 1c k , adu l ts, no pets
Ca ll I 643 7644
Ref &amp;
dcpos 11

5

r
hou se on r 1v er
bea utiful v1ew , prrva cy ,
$275 pe r m o plu s depos rt
Ca ll 446 4912 afl c r 5 30 o r
wee ke nds

367 -7692

Hous e on L rncoln H gts A \I
ne w
parnt
D e posit
r equ1 r ed No rn srde pets

992 3090
6 r oom hous e. unfurnt shed,
extr i'l clean
r emnc!Pied
.=~ dull s only Pomer oy $185
permo 304 882 2466

Reel Eetate - General

One bedr oom
fu r nt shed
apartm ent. u t rl 1t1 es pa1d

M obil e hom e for re nt Call
d46 A125 or 446 0756
N rce
furnr shed m obrle
home , ccntru l .11r, l mr
bel ow c1ly ove r IOOkrng
rtver , adul ts on ly Ca ll 446

Park . 992 3314

HOME FOR SALE
20 Plus Acres, Cedar and Stone Home.
3800 sq. ft . approx. Overlooking Ohio
Rtver. Tennis court, woods, pond. City
schools .
Also
5
Ac .
butlding
site
overlooking Ohto River_

446·3554 or 216-238-7633
Owner - Agent

2 bd room
t ra1ler
1n
Raetne Dep os tl r equ•red
949 2726

TRAILER 101, 90x70. Pear

A P A RTM E NT

on

6167

PI

Pl easan t , 614 446 8221
Sma ll
Apar t m ent tor rent

Call

304 67 5 5968 att e r 5 PM

• With• T. Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446-fll9
• Phylti• Loveday, Phone 446· 2230
• Joan Boggs, Phone 446-3294

BEACH

MYRTL E

be dro o m

mobile

home . 304 675 4154
Mob1le

Hom e ,

Pt

Pleasant 614 446 8221

Real Estate - General

44

Apartment - - -

_____for_!l !_n~ _ __ _
APARTMENTS,
homes .
Pleasant

mobol e

hou ses,
PI
and Gallipotrs

b edr oom condom111 1Um .
ocen n vrew , pool s•de un.t,

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

$400 a wee k 304 273 3689

area. This all bnck rancher

3 BR's (master is

Oh

16x22), J baths, 15x24 LR

fireplace, 1Jx25

s

room house, bath with
shower in Middleport.

family rm ., formal dining rm ., galley kitchen includes double ovens, Corning type counter top
range, ow &amp; dlsp., gas heat, cent. air, attic fan &amp;
much more. Located in town on Spruce St. Ex·

Could park 14x70 trailer.

tension. Call Ranny Blackburn lor a personal

Pnced right 992·72.44.

:ahowing. STROUT REALTY, 44,·0008.

bedrooms
On State
ap
H rq hw ay .
prox1mately 1700 sq ft
t1 vtno spa c e Concrete
block ce ll ar wtth frame
smoke house Larqe tool
shed . l a rg e
block
work shop V.'l th 2 Car
carpor t wtth concrete
floor Four lot s - over 1
C'lcre of leve l IC!nd All
lor on ly 14 1,900 00 .SIJ

MAIN'l'ENANU FREE HOM E
IN GALLIPOLIS
(r l y co nv f' nr encf' S nrdr thr s 1mmac ulatr home.
n•ce ly lnnd ~ cilp(' d, lnrqe lr vrnQ room 4 bedrooms, 2
hii Hl S liHl1ily room fr on t porch, t.n1 shed full
hA C.f'mrnT 7 r M ClilraQf' w 1th o pener Sl ('(' l S1d1ng ,
q;Js llf' at and rlr r condi•r on CC!II today f or n per sonal
+ 464
sll0w1nq
(Extra Lot Available)
The per fec t all br. c k home 1S r.ght he r e 111 N orthup
and features 3 bedrooms , JI ! J baths, spa c tous ltvmg
room , dtnrn q area . cheery kttchen 2 c ar garage,
Pilt1 0, plus much more Call now and let us m ake
your dreams come tru e
1J 512

WELL BUll T AND COZY

THE

Co lta qe

WE EKENDS

bedroom ,

.. 0016
W ILl F IN ANCE - Pn CC' hil S tU St bee n
by S5 000 Larq e ran ch ovcr l ookrng th e
mil es below town , llil S 3 bedrooms,

NIC E - CLEAN

# IS9S

IIIJa s.errJe nl. Qarag e

6 room house, bath, cell a r , 2 storaqe budd1nqs, own
wa l er sys tem . n tce country atm osph er e, n1ce
qround, tots of sh rub ber y , larq e l eve l qarden area
and pr rced only $29,900 You mu st see th1 S one
f/516
Phone

IN TOWN - Lov ely fr~l rn f' hOmf' qnr aqe, f enced rn
lot, 1nc lu des lurnrture good r e n t al proper t y
Locat ed at 2129 Chestnut St
S18,000

DUTCH COLONIAL

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Nella Smith, Assoc. 388-8649
Bob France, Assoc. 446-1162

range s

Ska ggs

to S295 • Lamps from S 18 10
$65 5 pc done11es !rom 179 .
to 1385 7 pc. Sl89 a nd up
Wood table With 4 c harr s,

$219 up to $495

Des k 1110

RATLIFF'S

BRIARPATCH KE NN E LS

Oh

6579
In
gr ou nd

ground Ab l ove

Queen sets, $195 4 dr
chests, $42 5 dr ches ts,

S54

Be d tram es. 120 a nd

S25 , 10 gun Gun cab 1nets.
$350 , d1nette chatr s $20
and S25 Gas or el ect n c
range s.
$325
Baby
matresses. 125 &amp; 135. bed
frames $20. $25, &amp; 130 Used
Furn1ture
bookcase,
ranges and TV 's 3 mil es
out B!Jiaville Rd Open 9am
to 7pm, Man thru F r • , 9am

IO Spm, Sat
446 0312

dan
c e dresses
srzes
Pnce
negolra bt
e on38 42
a ll
rtem s

NEW SPECIAL
LOW PRICE
ON ALUMINIM
ROOFING

675 -3818

Boardrng and gr oo mrnq
se tt er s
AKC
Gordon
Eng l1 sh Cock er Spanr el s

21 cu ft chest t ype freeze r ,

good cond Ca 11446 7736

"4-H2-2112

9395 $50 wrth an tenn a
Gasoline and hea ttng fue l
Call Excetsror Oil Com
pany 6149922205

Also

7198

RS. A ll models Otscounts !
sh •pm ent ,
Trades con s1der ed
Ca ll
703 942 387 1
or
wrr t c
H1 ckor y Hrll Nur sery , Rt I
Box 390 A , F1 shersv ille, VA

55

174 pte ces brow n un
derp1nn1ng f or a mobrle
home used 1ust I year A
seven &amp; one half fee t by 58
tnche w1de m ult• co lored .
brarded ova l rug Whtle
unrforms (p an t su rtsJ three
d1ff ere nt styl es. s1zes 9 10
A roy a l blue (Sabre mak e)
portable typew rrt er . green

Call alter 4PM. 446 3065

~~~~~~~~~~~~;
HOBSTETIER REALTY

Call379 2671

Bu1lding Supplies

18 10 21 gauge 614 667 3085
Tupper s Pla1ns. Ohto
Pets tor Sate

POODLE GROOMI NG
Ca ll Judy Taylor at 367
7220
Dog

Groomo ng Call6 14 388 8547
and ask for Santa

pups,
AKC
reg tster ed No Checks. 304
895 3958
POODLE

455 Olds motor &amp; other par

AKC black and whiteStmplrctty rota ttll er $110. Cocker Span1 el. mal e, 7
and electrt c swee per $25, months old. ISO 304 675

good cond Ca ll756 1371

BRIDGE

S Hobs tettl~ r Jr
Broker

Farm Equt pm ent

I set of John Dee r e 4 bo t
tom 16' Sf'm t m oun t plows.
I Hil lsbor o l r 1 ~nt~ qoose
neck 28' t r~1 t1 e r Cr~ll 61 4
256 653 4

Unscramble these tour Jum~s
one tene&lt; to each square to IOfm
10u1ordrnary WOldS

I DOGUR

I·-·-I .--·-I
· ---

USED EOU I P
1H H ydr o 70 9N F o rn 1000
Fo rd 550 OI 1VC'r MF 6~
JD M
Lonq i\ 6~ l x 4 Wi ll i
looctt&gt;r eli se
cu iii V,.l tor c,
pl ows
JD
m.-1nur1
sprc~dcr r orct 50 I rn ow c r
1979 Doclw· Ram Cll,lrqn
4xd , 1978 Oml rw p re k up
WE 11UY U SE D EOlJrP
ME N T1
For ~~l l f' pu l l typ1 l rrn(
sp r f',lCi cr C.1ll ;~o 1?06
1'157 AC lr clC tor pl ow r!l'&gt;(
&amp; m owr nq m~lc h 1n1' qood
cond11t0n ~I 000 C l l l l·lfl

I
~
I&gt;..LL
J _j__l_l__D

tSLIZZE

GIXNIF
I

[J

Answer THel

I rJ

II

WHAI I HE Y
CALLED THAT 6 16
NEW ~~ I DoSE .
Now arrange !he CttCied tenors to
lorm ftle surpnse answe1 as sug
gos ted by lhe above cartoon

r r n oF

r

"[1 I I

(Answ&amp;rs Monday )
vusre1dil y s

9711

I

DELUGE PARLOR
Jumbles AXIO M FOU Nl
Amrwer So ·unm spmng - !hal chopped-up meat -

'TAME '

Jut'l1bM Boo!&lt; No HI cot~talnlng 110 puoles Is n1U1ble !Of Sl 9!! ~tplild
tromJumble do lhll newiP&lt;t!*'. Bo•l4 Norwood N J 07 6.48 tnch.KM your
name, addrwst, : lp codt 1nd mak• check • payable lo Newspaptlrbo&lt;*•

Real Estate - General

Reel Estate - Genera l

CANADAY
REALTY

7

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
-Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

M&lt;d

_----

$35.000 00
FARM - 33 acrf'S w !lh
spa c rou s 2 yr
old
home F eat ur es la rcl('
lt v.ng room w dll b tW
w1nd ow . A l so 7 bc1 rns
Call for appo rntm cnt
~

RIVER FRONT - M• d
dleporl Two s tory tour
b edroom ho m e
Br q
lrv1nq
room
wrlh
fireplac e, lar gC" c1111rng
room . ea1 1n krt c t1 en,
utd •ty
r oo m . bnth
Relax
on
p o r c h c&lt;
ove rl ook~n q th e rr vcr

MA KE US AN OF F E R
Ask•no $26 500 00
FARM - JJ ac r es wlfh fl
SpaCIOUS 2 yr
Old
home
Feoturc s larq e
11 vrng room wrth buy
w rndow
delu xe
k rl
c hen, f ormal d1n 1nq
room ,
lr~rqe
family
room , 3 b1g bedroom s,
2 fu ll baths and 2 c ar
gar aoe A lso 7 barn s
Ca ll for apporntm en t
Velma N1c1n sky, A ssoc
Phone 742 3092
c neryl L eml ey, As soc
Phon e 742 -3171

•. t lf' F P R AN C H
mOv! rtl r onrt• l or• ltu rfrnf)ll
t, 1n dv r oo1n, woocll)urn.no c., Tov• 1111 rr •1111 1111 "·on
f lOW '-. J ( Ci r lli1rrl&lt;lf' ,1 nr1 to r .,ur •1PH r 1u11 l(l • Jl

446-3636 ANY HOUR

d leport Larq c tw o
stor y home , wrtll
_:~
bedroom s, bil lto , l• v• nq
room , d 1n 1nQ ro o m .
family room , b rq kif
chen ( wtlh a ve w of
n vcr J full ba se m ent I
c ar qaraye a nd n 1cc
ba c kyilrd
t De al
l oc at1 0n t o r
r e t~r ccJ
c oupl e
As k1n c1

have

Sant a's Professtonal

:&amp;'L tves to~Jc 61

$15.000 00
CORNER LOT -

M etal Sheets 4' x8 ' lh ru
A'x 12' Pnces $7 60 to $9 60
Ex f c e ll e nt
butldrng
materrC'II,
porcel1ne,
ename l coa ted won't ru st

S6

cF:ar-m-~lles

7606

124 - Ju st off
Nrc e tw o stor y
home 4 bed r oom s, ba th ,
l rvrnq
r oom , d rn1 nq
ro om .
ktl c h e n
a nd
utrtrty room
Natural
qas heat Low utrlrt res
Sl l uatedon 1 ?9 r~cr es

Ca ll 745 5171

304 675 3807

CLEAN UP

SALE
JrV!CIPn's F r~rm
Equr pm f'n t, 4&lt;16 1675
Lonq t r,lc tor s, VPrmf' (•r
balNS &amp; ll ,W r qurpm en l
l) ,ll f' m ovC'r s r oTnr y f 1 II Pr ~
drsc . pos t d rqqe r &amp; dr•vNS
Sf'f'ders. ro t ary cu tt er "
Bln des, q,l l cs , &amp; lront c ntl
IO&lt;ldN And S f'f' US to qc•l
your p.1 rt s &amp; co mp! PII ' o.,p r
Vl(t'

4X4

E lec tr1 c gurtar w 1th amp
$60, P1oneer r ec revcr 190
wa tt s w!lh
s t cro ac
cessorres $300
C1 fl 367

Rt

Bu!ldmg materrals b loc k ,
bn c k. sewer prpes, w1n
dows, lint el s, etc Cl aude
W1 nt er s, R1 0 Grand e, 0

trees

' SPRo N G

ST RT

va nefy of
&amp; flow er
plants . located 1u st
pass North Galila H1gh
Schoolon nght on Rt
160

I mmed1ate

A lo f of d!ll cr enl pM ts tot
350 or 400 enq mes A l ~o PM
IS tor / 4 l m pa lil rn trrror
perf ec t 74 7 3063

57

$45,000 00

veqet&lt;~ble

TRDYBILT ROTOTILLE

For S.1 1e or Trad e

Call388 9790

1.1 mr off N ew Llmi'l Rd
a u ~lrly
buill
ra n c h
home
la r ge lt vr nq
or om. formal
d1n rnQ
room . 3 bed roo m s. 7 full
b athS
full ba se m en t
c arport wrth s tor aqC"
Clnd utrlrty bldq All on 2
n rc c ac res
As krnq

POTTED LIVE
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
FOR MEMORIAL DAY

model . good cond Call 245

59

CO UNTRY SE TTIN G -

POMEROY
LANQMARK

Stand •n g Walnut
Phone 304 895 3647

Ve getabl e P1 an l s. red
y e llow prnk
toma t o£&gt;S
broc co lr bru ssr l l spr ou ts
75 cent s dozen Pepp er s
PhonP 304 67 5 J05t.

For sa l e 1981 Fo rd frclli Or
model 1700 4 wtt f'C I ctr 1V('
d1 ese l 5 11 br ush ~1oq 17•n
post 11 o1r drQqcr 4 It by 8
II chevy uldd y tr ailer 992

MUSICill
Instrum en ts

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE
by Henn AmokJ and Bob Lee

6_!_____£ arm Equ1pment

PHON[ 7411003

3FT WIDE
All S1zes
In Stock
New cash and
Ca rry Pnces

Call 446 7762

1S Call 245 9564
E lecfriC 23,000
General
BTU arr c ond1t1oner 304

446

Kohler &amp; Ca mpbe ll sptnet
pra n o, S500 Blue &amp; gol d
hNeed couch. S50 Squar e

Couch. r ock1 ng cha .r , easy
chatr &amp; autuman, coffe and
end
taol e all match.ng

Early Amencan couc h,
chatr &amp; swtvel rocker , ex
cond Call 446 7736

Ca ll

Wh tr lpoot ar r cond1f roner
10.000 BTU , wtndow moun
ted , 26 to 38 1nches 11 0
volts Ca ll 446 1570

Bedspreads,
curt a tn s &amp;
shams a ll match, ex co nd

BABY bass1net. pad S15
Baby bo ttl e ster llt ze r set.
$4 00 Bed sp r rng fu ll $5 00

and 178

POOL CEN

Ga llopo l&lt;s,

M1 sc M e rchand1ce

S1SO and up to S395 Cap

$58 . form, $68

Ca ll

TE R Pools sa le, supplr es &amp;
1nsta ll at ton 403 2nd Ave,

CB, TV, Radoo

17939

Fru 1f
&amp; Vege tables

KENN EL

446 4537

good cond . $14,900

G~1ge

Hutches, $300 and $375 ,
maple or ptne ftn1 sh
B edroom suttes
Bassett
Cherry, $795
Bunk bed
complet e w tth m attresses,
ta1n's beds. $275 compl ete
Baby beds, $99 Mattresses
or box sprrngs, full or tw tn ,

Chow
pupp1 eS,
CFA
H 1ma l ayan . Per s1an ond
S1amese ktften s Call 446
3844 after 4 p m

Board rng all br eed s. cl ean
t ndoor outdoor
I ac 11 II 1es
Also A KC Reg
Dober
man s Call446 779 5

25' B &amp; W Zen1lh T V, leg
Sofa , cha•r, r ocker, ot
taman , 3 tables, (ex tra
heavy by Frontt er), $685
Sofa, chatr and lovesea t,
S275
Sofas and c hatr s

DRAGONWYND
CA T
TERY
KE NN EL AKC

HI LLCREST

446· 7398
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

RO N

197S Case 450. dozer
trac t or , 1,800 hrs . v ery

Ap

pt.ances, Upper Rtver Rd ,
bes1de Stone Cr es1 Motel

...

•

A FR I E NOLY A I R
Ctr,ln &lt;.. rrnnl! • l1llf'"&gt; ll •l) rno t
shufl f' r cc1 w• ndow&lt;;, "&gt; hf'llr'rPCt 1·n try ,11 1 r oP1h1nr to
m,1k c 1t11 S t1 onw m or f' 111,1n 1u&lt;., T o 3 tv flrnorn r,lrK il
Sp nc rou&lt;&gt; c om b1n,1 t ron I n m 1ly roo r1 1 k 11 1 t11 ' 11 Dnulll•
w rnctows rn l •v rnq r oom (f'r,ltn r( l i ii'Cil) rl lll &lt;. 1\1 1111•
w ooctwo rk •S &lt;:. tnr nrd nno v~Hil1'-. I H'd N1 ,1r ( 11v L11v.
•n l e&gt;rf'&lt;; l IOr"'n .1&lt;;,sump110n 'il l\ ~ 500
0 J WHITE ROAO - \ 4q ,900
I\ rock fntonodl r .1n
Cl13 BR 2 l ull ba th'&gt; F u lly PQUri)PI '(! k. 11f llo n 101' Il l
ca b rnr l &lt;; clinrno ,HPa Br,lu l du l pl u&lt;;,n (.-11\)t •
Or apf'&lt;;, l •r f'pl,l(e 7 r il r qd r &lt;HII' Plf',l&lt;.rlrll founTry
&lt;;, u r r oun ct ,nn&lt;&gt;
FREf GA C.
SupPr moh rlr 110!1H
1979 r1 10fl1 1
t4 x70 p lu s 7x7 4 Ex p,l ncl o 3 l'}('drcom&lt;., 1qu l f) f" rl k ot
c ne&gt; n p lu s car prt C urt .11n~. ,1n0 (Jr~P I "' rf ,n, 111 &lt;.1'
6 c"lcrl' K yor r Cr f' f'k M f'il A &lt;;, tf'i'l l ill 'ill 900
S30 ,000
woll huy ,1 tlf'il ri Y nrw J IJ p(1rOO!ll rdtl f II
hom(' tul ly CM Pf' ted CM IJOrl On ov1· r o~n ol ( r.
Ky Q('r (rf'f'k Sc tmols l ,111 &lt;;, OOn lor ,1n ,,pnoln l r&gt;ll n t
RO UT ES 375
nPclr R ro Gr ,lnCif' Nr MIY 01
df' "&gt; lrilbl f' M r.:t tor buil clrn q S'J? ~()()

I' r1 '

TWO ACRE S - $6,000
Sri! ' ( lr .1r 1(I (lr ovt flllJ
76 'xJ6' poured toundul ro n 400 conrrl' l t' !Jr l( Kc..

ooot F• nrf'd back y,H(I Lo.1n ,\•,&lt;.tJr' 1 1
( r, k ;ort',l $59,500

~

HI

'1•'

SJO 00 0
R IO G R A N O f
or k' •O c r ,)!l(l&lt; Colli q,• ' I Hill &lt;11 '&lt;,lr•h•nl 1\lf (&gt;II&lt; &lt;I•
&lt;.. 1\Hh'lll 11\JI 11&lt;.,!. II' Ol Od( IHI '' 111 N (•) j I•
lid !ll', \() r rn,tl ( 1&lt;1111•, \f,.!l I' &lt;•I I ~,,1'
&lt; 'J1
o\,)&lt;
I ,)r t(j•
&lt; ,II 1b II' I ,1! •
o

r , ,,
'!.I J 'lOO
t I N I I Nl• h' Y
I, 1111 ' 111( ! 1 ( 0/ ./ I II' I I I I fll1il' I 1 ° ' I &lt; I '
lo1\; + 1! 1 • I ~ 1/ 1)1 \ I i 111 1 ,1 lltH II ) f l I 111 1 I '
1 ~(1111( olllp!il' N&lt;oill fll11 • l1d\ If I

1

Y
I 'I

',

"

1-/ I V f h' 'v l f W
~]tl 000
)I &lt; 111 1 1111
1)11o() ,11'1' only
11 •,', 11 II•' trno•
I,
Il l ( k I ,IIH 11 l Ull f .II P• II " 1,• ,, ' ,I
VJoll1 tiOlJPif' lhll II I olfllll fl&lt;l • I • !ll1' I' •I
IJI,i&lt;klPPIII ,, ' 101 l&lt;i• 111)111' r,q I l1'.

' "

,,

(\,'&lt;&gt;' 11'
jiiCl(l\lt IIHI l,l !HI j I)• (11()()1)1 II(J&lt; ll&lt; I I I'
II r
, 111 &lt;, WOO(! &lt;liH I (( I II I1UII l 1!1 I Ill••
'' ' 1 I' '
IJ llh rlll(l w ,l !l r &lt;.,y'-. !1 Ill 1\IU IT11!lU&lt;'I &gt;il l II&lt; I /1,1! I
plu&lt;;, 0111• r nu llliCIII Ru1 ,11Wd l t 1 l 0' ,n,!! ou 1 1 II r-.' 1
l '\(1 .,..,_, 0{1(l

lS~IICR f ' .

S/9 , ~00
OnlttJI'1&lt;1&lt;'1'''
&lt;., j),J&lt;., IUI &lt; rt &lt;, I lrfll ll t' r 11000 11.1' II I'
1I1S H If I (,QOtl lt1V t'\ )lll1 Il l
.t t

C Hilli C O T Hf

ROAD

'II\

I ,

I "I I

fl

') 13 000

Hl(l i)l !ll iQ II,H il Ill 1' ,- ft Ill 11 1 I OIHi iliH I
1rlllll l .II HI I 1(&lt; 11 \ IO! &lt;1&lt; 11 !ll!ilrl rl I
In&lt; ,1!1 nn

~ I I
&lt;.

IIIII'

\I I ,

'o

r !

1076
Rea l Estate -

Real Estate - General

General

Real Estate - General

NORTH
+A 10
• 10 9 7 I
tKH
+K7S4

WHAT A BUY
ReadY to Mov e? W e've got tust what you are looktng
for' Furn 1shed or unfurn1shed Great for start 1ng
out or r ettrem ent Extra mce 1979 Mod el Mob tle
Hom e on approx 117 acre leve l lot w1th cha•n ltnk
fence L1ke New Prrced 1n the low 20's
11518

Real Estate - General

AP

PLIANC ES
washers.
dryers,
r efrrg er a tor s,

Sty l e, beauty, cha rm . comfort- all desc rrbes th1s
home. 4 BR . 2117 bath s. equrpped eat-rn ktfchen ,
famtly room w rth f~replace, forma l ltvrng and dtn
1ng room You won't be l teve th •s home un less you
see 11 for yourself Mak e your appotntment today to
walk tnto the entrance of one of the most 19vely
hom es m the area
II 31J

John Fuller, Realtor, 245-9473

EAST
+87652

WEST

.K

+KQ9l

•As

t A 95
+toe&gt;

tt01612
+VII

sourn

rn

NEW

lo se ll
PEACEFUL AREA

5

Ask onq $25,000
-

8

room one fl oor modern
hom e
Bath
w1th
shower, equtpped ktt
chen, ca rpetrng and 2
niCe le ve l lot s tn Tup
pers Pla1ns for $31.500
INVESTMENT - 2 houses 1n Ractne. One has 9
rooms. 2 baths, nat gas F. A . furna ce, carpettng,
storm windows, and a 4 room home a s a rental or for

morher Ju s t $37,500
INVESTMENT - Let your money work for you on
f ht s very little work needed to operate busmess
Co ll ect the money 1n the even1ng and open the doors
tn the morning " On l y S15,000
COUNTRY - Fresh air and privacy when you move
into th1s one. Garden space, new large basement
w tth woodburning chimney for up and down. Over

Nrcf' com fortabl e hom e W1th nrc e larqe shade trees.
concret e front por ch, lots of,trurt trees (~pple ,
cherry , plum and peach), qrape arbor , ra spberry
vmes , qood garden lan d, all levrt In Green Twp
Rural w atc r , 1 cor garage, fuel otl F A furnac£1
Bilsement, born approx l6'x2 4' Prrced 1n thcS20's

•

Want
with

very tittte upkeep . Welt
i one is in A -,1 shape
a l arge front porch,

central
air, lull
hot water
plce carpeting and
lets more. Asking only
$65,000.

un ·

SUE
MURPHY,
HELEN
A'ND
B~UCE.
· TEAFORD, ALL REALTORS. AFTER HRS,
~-3~U5,C?R 992·3325.
' . ·• .

Ho11sing

Headquartm:,-

491
8ACRES

Wrthrn 10 mtn dr1ve to downtown Gall•pot 1s (tty
Sc hool System Ha s hookup for mobdf' hc1me, Gall ret
Rural Wafer . elec trrc and septrc tank , n1te I!Qhf on
pole. 200ft frontag e on Graham Sc hool Rd Ttmber
Bur ldmg s1tes Call Now
·
11477

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. niCe stze buildtnq lots w1th al l utll1t 1es
there Lot srz e 101 8 by 171 2 Bettf' r get 'urn now

• 456
CITY SCHOOLS
3 bedroom ranch style hom e Eat in kt •c hen full
basement Spacious hv1ng room Owner n'ust' sell
Proced draslicatty tow $29,900
~ 482

one acre of land. $30,000
n1ce

492

WOW!
Look what you can get on a land contract at 9% .. ...
ter es.t Qwner r educed the pnce $7,900 and is
anx tous lo ·sell Tht s three tedrcvm spc.tlcS ;,, air
condtt toned home ha s J. baths. lrv1:1g s1orage
budd•ng, heated ga rage, all turmture mc luded.
Everythtng you need rn one purchase In Ctty schoo l
dts tnct
/1407

1 ~CRE 1 BEDROOM COTTAGE

NEW LISTING hom e w1th 2 8 acres
Lots of frutt trees, bath , nat
gas furna ce.
car petrng , garage 1n the basement and pnvacy

XURIOUS -

~

Call tor detaols

OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk tnto forma l entrance wtth open starrcc.se to
th1s love ly comp letely redecorated homP tt\cated in
the c1ty Within wa lking distance to shopping area 3

bedrooms, 2 lull baths and charm ong large kitchen

Sp~cious liv1nQ room with woodburn tng fireplace .

Th1s grac 1ous home has a natura l gas FA furnace
l1ke new Immediate possession. We're wcutmg for

it 146

our call
REMODELEDCOUNTRYHOME

In Ohio Township, sets on 2 !tc'res more or tes'l, has

atumonum sldong, 3 bedrooms and barn. Priced'
S21,900. See by appointmenr onty .
1141~

MAKE US AN OFFER!

• Q7

+AQJ

w334-NJJ3

A half acre m ore or less w•th fru tt trees plus a three
bedroom home, llvtn g room . kttchen w 1th bu tlf rn
cab rnets, uttlrty room, full basement and garage,
part•a lly converted rnto a den A n unftntshed room
wrth a heatol ator firepl ace N tce fenced tn yard

LI STING

LISTING

.QIIIII

L ol #21 S1dewatk, 75'xl48'
L ot 1123 Vacant 99' F ronta qe by \48' depth Prrced

yr old 2 bedroom home
Bath ,
carpe t1ng ,
ba se m ent , 1nsulat ed,
garage. 2 rK&gt;rches, 2
acres on good bla ck t op
road Sc hool bus and
matl routes $45,000

!NEW

+H

2 LOTS IN GREENACRES

VIRGIL B. SR.
R[AlTOR
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone 1-(614) 992-3325

furnished . One bedroom ef ficiency . 304-675-2722.
For rent 1 bdr. turn ., a~t .
$175 per mo., SSO dep., 6
mo. lease, utlhties pd., no
cHildren, on pets, in city.
Call446-3667 alter 5.

In M1nt Cond1f1on
3 or 4 bedrooms w tth large c losets One bedroom
tS perfect for offt c e or sew tng room Lt vtng room .
drn1ng room , bath and ea t •n k1tchen w1th built tn
c abtne ts Fron t and back porches, full basement
and ga r age wtth 3 1• ac r e mor e or less, 1n Ctly
Sc hools Pr~c ed 1n the m1d 40's Ca ll today for
de t a il s on the c harmrng hom e
If 519

on

U SE D

H1de a bed s,$3 40 , quee n
stze . S380 Rec liner s. $175

I

OFFICE 446-7013

GO OD

Jack son, Oh

SB

Pe ts lor Sale

EVA NS ENTERPRISE S

so le Cou l d be fixed or used
for parts 446 4173

proced !rom $285 to 1795
Tables. S38 and up to 1109

Mf i GSCOU NTY J'JSACRESMorL
POND 8 room rf'moctelc d country home ber~utrlully
lrl nci.,c opec1 flll J 25 ncre s mowed Garnqe wrth co n
uc tf' clr,vC'W&lt;"~Y 'J 4'x'J7' f Amily room wr lh fr rep la ce
Lr1ro e bl oc k storn qe buildm c1 Frud tr Pes Been
r N iu cf'c1 ovrr $17 .000 You mus t SN' thr s c oun tr y
hnmf' Pll onf' now for nn ,,ppor nfmen t
11 507

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

model near the Pic Pac
info. K1ngsbury Homes,
1100 E . Matn St. Pomeroy,

Wanted to r ent wa rehouse.
s torage bulldrng or large
ga r age rn c1ty of Gallrpotr s

ATTRACTIVE OLDER
HOME
We11 k ep t , 9 room s. 5

Beauty
s hows
and
qualrty 1S where 1f coun
ts 1n t h1S well k ept
beau tiful
a ll
b rt ck
hom e. tn one of the bes t
loca tt ons Lrv1nq room
wr t h wa ll
to
wall
f rr eplace, dtnrng ar ea .
well equ1pped k1tchen , J
bedrooms , 2 baths, 21h
car qa r aqe w1th opener
F r on t astroturf po r ch,
Iaroe
brtck
pa t1 0 ,
storaqe room . wood bur
nr r Clnd a1r condrtoncd
Pr •ced to sel l at $69 ,900
Show n b y apporntm cnt /J
s
1
6

Real Estate - Generat

304-67S· 1386
TWO

Wanted to Rent

po ck up truc k Call 614 286
5930,

Eq_u~ment

a1 Sl1,900 STR OUT REALTY, 446 -0008

Furn tshed "'one bedroom
apartme n t, extra nice,
adults on l y No pets Phone

Y BELOW
sq. ft. of living

47

56

M1sc M erchand1ce

P!ast1c Sep tt c Tank s Sta te
and county approved 1.000
gal t ank, pnce $340 Other
srz es tn stoc k, haul m your

PAWN SH OP 62 Olt ve St ,
Ga llrpOII S 3 prece ltvrng
room su tfes co uc h l ove
sea t ch a1r $199, 2 prece
l •v •n o room suttes from
$140 up. l ove sea ts from S70
up, mapl e d 1net se t s from
$99 to Sl 99 , wall hugger s
SI OO , rec liners sao, maple
rock e r s $49 , bedroom
sur tes $ 150 , varrety of table
l amps, marb le top stands
$30 and up, box sp rrngs &amp;
mattress
(new)
$100,
seve ral utrltt y ca brn efs , ktt
chen cabtne ts wood &amp;
metaL baby beds, chests of
dr awers S25 t o $60 , 3 way
recliners S100. gas &amp; elec
tn c ranges . rcfngerators.
wash s tand s, bunk bed s
comp l ete wr th bunktes
$170, several dressers, hall
trees, bed s, brass head
boar d beds $35. book cases,
smokers, Hoover sprn dry
washer , wnnger
type
washers , hutch, coal &amp;
wood heate r s, televtSIOns .
fan s. new too ls of all ktnds .
vanety of Silverston e cook
ware Ca/1446 3159

51

something

PRICE
REPLACEMENT COST.

spa c es

54

Household Goods

SWA IN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;

54

614 446·8221 or614-245-9484

See our

trail er

Mason 304-773 565 1

LO CA TION• PRICE!
9% ASSUMABLE
LOAN

Furn1shed Mobile H om e 3
bedrooms, washer dryer
On prtvate lot N o pets
Depos tf requ1red 949 2253
ONE

Space for Rent

rAerebandlse

0338

2 bd r trade• lurnr sl1 ed,
ad ult s on ty , Brown Trailer

46

so n
Tra ile r
Cou rt ,
Ga llipoli s Ferry , 304 675

304 675 1897

TEAFORD

Mobile Hom es
for Rent

5651

5782 a lter 5 30 p m

Furnrshed house Ad ult s
only
No pet s 949 22 53
Depos rt requrred
&lt;12

Rooms w 1th cook rn q, c ab le,
til r. SAO il wee k 304 773

Rtver lots t or rent Call992

67 5 5386

Fo r r ent 111 Ra c1 ne n1 ce '}
bd room house Comple tely
furmshed , w1th (11r cond ,
c"l ll ulr l rlres pard $300 per
month 949 280 1 or949 2860

ap t ,

991 7479

pe ls Ca l1446 3937

3 b drm house, ce nt a ~r , 2
l1r epla ce s
qood nc rgh
borhood Col t 675 5104 or

Po mer o y 'l
b et r oo m ,
r e modeled
408 Sprrng
c~1 rp e t ed, securd{ depos1f
$100 Rent $195 Call af ter 6
p m 991 2188

lrght housekee pm g
Pa rk Ce ntra l Hotel

Park, Route 33 , North ol
Pomeroy Large lot s Call

FIND YOUR ROOT S

4 bedroom , cen tr a l o rr and
hec"l t, C1ly wat er. frr C' pla cc,
krl
unlurnr sh&lt;'d exce pt
c t1en
$300 m on t h plu s
u trl rl tes
R el er en cc and
d cpos !l
r eQu rr c d
In
R ac1 ne 949 2793

51

Furn1shed Room s

CO UNTR Y MOBILE Home

no

12 x65 2 BR m obtle hom e wtth ex pand o Pnced to se ll

675 5386

Low down payment,
owner w111 fmanc e 3
year old 8 toom on I S
acr es wtth trees . Kyg er
Creek School Dtstnct.

Furm shed 3 r wr t h prtvate
bath
845 Second Ave .
Ga lt1poh s Call446 2215

THE SETTING IS SUPERB- Beaulofut 1.8 acre
wooded lot on the 0 J Whtfe Rd , 311 ff frontage ,
Hou ses for Rent

LARGE 2 STORY
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
COLONIAL HOME
6 years old, 1 acre lot,
close to HMC .
S89,900
PH . 446 -2459

HOUSE FOR SALE

10 ac r es at R1 0 Gr a nde on
Cc n te rpo1nt
Rd
Rural
wa ter 614 262 5916

41

F1rst Ttm e Offered

on ly Ca ll446 0338

Apnrtm ent, 2 bd r

45

SLEE PIN G ROOMS a nd

Fo r sa le one and ha ll acres
more
or
less ,
ap
pr o&gt;om ately 600 I t r oad
on
C o ra
f ro nta ge
Ce nte rp ornt Rd nec1r Ce n
l erporn l $3 000 00 Phon e
68 2 6944

3 bd r house, apl s, com
m er c ral hr qll w asy Iron
1.:-.ge Call 304 675 5104 or

Real Eatete - General

General

RCA So lo d Sta te 100 Con

General

year 2126 hou ses w1ll be
budf •n the state of Ohto un
d er farm home rural
hous1ng
program
the
r em ainder of 1982 Th ese
homes will be frnanced
wtth no down paym ent and
payments Wtll be low as

I

Apartment
for Rent

May 13, 1982

Real Estate - General

6520

ween $9,000 and $15,000 a

Market on R T SO, W
Athens or catt 992 7034 lor

44

May 23 , 1982

Ca 11446 3159

Furn 2 bdr mob •l e home
111 Crown Cr t y
Call 256

you can still have a hom e of
your own tf you ea rn bet

$125. per month

JS

ApMim cn fs 675 5548

v.1 .

From

1970 Grec10ry lr ar1e r 17x65
2 bedroom ar r cond unrt.
por ch &amp; &lt;'lwn rnQ, QOOd
cond
was ll(•r &amp; dry er
spa ce $5 000 LOI dbu fur
r r nt 99 2 6093

1810
Hom es for Sa l e

Mobrlc Hom es
tor Sa le

l R I S T AT E
MOBIL E
HOM E'S
USE D MOBI LE
HOM ES. CA R S TRUCK S
GALL I POLIS
CH EC K
OU R P RIC ES CALL 446
7571

IOCr11cd rn PI
H OU SE
Pl c &lt;l Siln l J be dr oo m s ce n
tr a l ar r , l ull basem en t 8
percent h nancrn g, we wrl l
consr d cr
tra dr nq
l or
p ro pert y or taktnQ m obile
hom e l or dow n pa yme nt ,
an y r £&gt;aso nab le off er con
srdr&gt;rcd Cal l 30 4 894 3444

32

4

2 bd r oo m apt , furnt shed.
utrl 1t1 es pa• d
N o pet s
drunk s
or dope
John
Shee ts, 31 1 m 1 South M1 d
d lcport R 7

8 1 1 PERCE N T asu m ilble
toa n. one yeM o ld tr 1 leveL
MPado wt ancl
Es ta tes,
$6 7 500 C(111 304 675 1529 af
lt.&gt; r 5 p m l

1976 ,
l 4x70
BENDIX
mobil e ll orn e 3 bedr oo m s,
exce ll ent co nd rlr on , 304 67 5
31

7PM

17x60 7 bd r Mobile hJm e
Cnll 4,16 4797

A&lt;iok lor OPN&lt;ltOr 26
or wntc

\~ J

-- ----

r emode led
Will se ll on
l a nd con t ra c t w .t h Mobil e

Prtrk (pn!r ,ll HOif'l

I 800

Apartment
for Rent
--Furnr shed elfr crenc y $135,
utrltres pd
Shar e bath,
adults Ca ll 446 4416 aft er

14 1 ac re filrrn qood house

J

Opportuntty

MI N IATURE

by Larry Wright 44

7B 34

Financial
11

KIT ' N' CARLYLE ••

Hom es lor Sa te

w

Vulnerable Eut-West
Dealer: South
N~

Wat

Eall

,.

S..

Pus~

Pus.4•

Paa

Pau

Pass

N•cely remode led home IS situated on over 6 acres
on State Route 141 less than 1 mtle from the c•ty
hm1fs &amp; offers 3 Brs, 2 baths, 1Sx27 LR, large
modern k1tchen, gas heat, cent a1r, garage &amp; large
covered paf10 Call RANNY BLACK BURN for an
appomtment to see Owners may help ftnance

quatitoed buyer. STROUT REALTY, 446 -0008.

By O.wold Jacoby

ud AJoa Soatac
North's

JUmp

to

three

spades was one o! those limit rai.oes tllal are now !ound
in most expert boddong kots
It was stron&amp;. but not !arcing and South moght well
bave paued In spote o! that
slstlt trump, Sooth's openong
bid was a minimum

with

ntne o! Its 13 hlgb card
points on queens and jacks.
Tbe contract was a !airly
good one. With a club or diainGIICI lead South would bave
bad Ume to knock out the
ace or diamonds and get to
dilcard hillooiD&amp; spade. But
West opened the king o!
spades and South was look·
lng at lour qalck 1ooers. two
\rumps, pne spade and one
diamond.
Un!ortunately lor East
and W., South was a pracUtioller o! bride• magic. He
round a way to make a I~
InC trick disappear Into thin
air. A little luck wao
ufrod aad South riol&lt;ed

down an extra trldt,
.ludt wu \ben.
SOiotb aimpl)' played out
hll ate-q-~ aDd jack of
-ctulil. He owrtook the jacll
wtito dummy'• klDI and the

C::t..

. ~ w11 oet lliDCe clubo bad

brc11181s-s. 1

·

·

• - · ... leil /tummy'i tut
,c:tab' and ei1ICUd hil tolil1l
111\ld\1'1 matter nidi

*'*"·

clef- - ....

-'' !PA••eat 1.roffed. Tbe
down to:
- . ...,,,
'""" ol Ilia,..,....
Ud'jloe)ltllllJIIrldl.

ne

opaiiiJ'~ · 11a11 . -

ll~'r ·

I '

room 110U &lt;;, f' ~lnd tw o
' l•'&lt;trn(lln
1l10b oll ' l101nf'", (100CI (()tl(!IIIO !I 111&lt; &lt;,o n !lf &lt;t n
11 d SIIS 00 ))1 r tnonll1 (n un lf ~'.d l&lt; 1 I " ' ' '
•!IOlJ IHt CIO&lt;&gt;o' TO H O&lt;-.r&gt;ol or 1n1• 1\h PT.rl 11 . .rlln
L1 'nt. ·r Po&lt;.,&lt;.. dlll ' 10.1n .r&lt;. ',1JI ' 1' 1 llll f'·,, 1• rn

Real Eotato - Gonorol

Operung lead· tK

.·' ·

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

&lt;, I I~)?

~ ~"
-~

Russell D. Wdod, Reallot. Eve. Ph. 446-4618
, Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-0971
Mose Canterbury. Associate 446-3408
WE NEED LISTINGS!! WE NEED LISTINGS! lf
you are fh tnk tng about sell tng your hous~ let us take
the burden from you We have contact w1th
qualif•ed buyers evey day Perhaps we can se ll
yours next week!

RESIDENTIAL

OR

COMMERCIAL

property

located tn downtown Ga lltpolts. Can be used as two
apartments or off•ces $38,000.00

1

GOOD FARM - Mer crrvrllc area modern 2
or 3 bedroom hou se , 2 barns. appr ox 1800 lbs
tobacco ba se, 25 tr ll ab lc acres, some ot thf'
best F ences ore qood, 56 acres pasture , 10
acres woods Let us sllow you th 1s I firm 11 964

3 BEDROOM COTTAG-E sotualed iUS! out of coty
llm1t Large garden area and conven 1ent to ctty .
Cttv water , priced 1n 40' s

~STORY HOME on Pine St ' owner Will eother rent,

or sell property lor $13,500._00
FOR RENT : 2 Apts (2 bedrooms), sotuated near
golf course. 1 apl . down and 1 up Adults only, no
.pets.
.
4 BEDROOM HOME near Rio Grande. Needs some
worK . Owner will either rent or sett to qualified per, sori. Catt lor more Information.

.. -

• ,12

,.

• 1,

RENTAL PROPERTY -

Voltage ot

Roo

Grande Two story house and basement Now
be1 ng used as three apartment r enta l Can be
restored to a famtly dwell ing Ha s c rty wates,

natural gas Shown by appoontme nt

w965

Asktng

; 963

11i'
) (I • '

t·''

(! '

111

ul"''' &gt;111,
1 , 1. 111&lt;. ,
111 ,, 11 I) 1, 111

lOOkiNG FOR A CR f f C.t ) I ,,rr ,~· '"
rotl rno IC'Inr1 Rn r n
I nh,lr r n n,,._,,
1'&lt;' 11' ·"
wC'IIer Srpl oC l rl nk P rrC • nIP ..,, II
11 98J

PRICE REDUCED -

OWNER FIN~N C ING

4000 sq ft exec uf1 VC home wr th 4
bedrooms 3'17 ba th s, HU GE l• vrnQ room &amp;
family room wtth 2 WBFP Formnl clrnrnq
w 1th de l ux e k1tc11en. basement, 7 · ar Qarnrw
All on 2 acreS of bea utifUl tr ees P IU S il 70 x 42
rnground pool
_
~ '176
STARTER HOM E or re t rn n q N rce&gt; 313R rJn

Rural wc1ter runs across Property

RIO G RAND f
n 1UI

ACREAGE - 2.20 tolal acres loca ted 2 moles c h wtth all the ex tr as Lq f ilmlly room , lt vr nq
from Vonton . Land os rolling and part wooded room, pat1o and large lot Ce1n be bought
price $4,500.

0

L fVfl J /~ ( Rf lOT
Hn&lt;&gt;f' lf( ! r ll ctr• ll lff Vv 11
r ur ~11 w.11r ro n 101 Nr w "
$3 ~00 clow n 17° o i\ f' t•'

AND HAY FARM - Bes t return
from your .n vestm ent of any f arm t know of
for sale It also 1ncludes woods and pasture 56
acres $22,500 4,000 lbs toba cco base first
year

11 946

FOR \Alf OR TR fln r MClf'l t h N rH1nl
r OR FARM
~Prl( IOU '-. -l 11• /)(()1 1\
7 &lt;., tory tro rn1• nn 11 .' 11 ,,
r' • .111 t1 r 1
~~
roo m w rlll I H f' pl,l(l
J, '' l 1
f)~lC.,f 111 1 n t
) (.lr (l,')r,l II .'\, '\II !1 '&lt;'
tnc ,l l f' fl nn l)lrl f K Ton rn •II
Voii&lt;HII' ot Roo (,r~lnc!o
.,, VI.&lt;" ,l!l&lt;'
ilV&lt;l rf~l t1 h ' ( 10"&gt;1' 10 I /lur1 II '-f 11(1(11 .o•i fl

1996

3 BEDROOM COLONIAL home located approx 2
miles from Gallipolis. Over 160 years old 2 lg w/b
fireplaces, 2 acres of l and. Owner wi l l etther rent or
se lL call for more informatton

MEIG'S COUNTY - Prcture perfrc t rS lh' ~
well marnta1ned 30 r1cr e l ("lrm IM Cif' hM tl
work shed corn crrbs stort"lQC' bu il clr nq&lt;. Al l
bu rl drnqs have bC'rn f r es hly p C1 1n tNI LM Cl r' 5
bedroom
moctcrn
homf'
F r r f'p lrl ff'
Basement G1ve A call todilY
II 926

NEW Ll STING - 26 ac r e fnrm 5 room
house. bath a nd enc losed porch, pleil sant
wil h trees and larq e yard 7 acres ol
the r es t rs t illilble nnd pa stur e 1165
ba se Prr ced for qurck s tale

ONE FLOOR STU ROY brock home (lull basem e nt),
situated w•h1m c tfy of Ga llr polts Large garage •n
rear Use for res1den t1a l or commerctal

~&gt;'!6¢&gt;

'iOO

se ver a l way s Call for the det ails

HOM£ t'LU~
OouhiP w ' "CHI •, {lo r• ,, ,
2 bf'droo m~ k1 I Chf' n l•vri\
nn
'' l•,l tt ·
onr ~•Ct f' I bPctroo rn l rV1111 rnn•11 ~ Tr•• ,
b,1tt1 ollwr \ rete H,,., h• r n r. 'II(' &lt; r r • , ,,,
Wrll llf' lp lrnfln Cf' In tow n In• cl i oOn
11 ~}I

ACRE AGE
L ora ted on R1 3=&gt; 1W,1r k'Q(Int y
16 acr es, mar(' or lf'SS wooftco Mrca1w
Bf'r~ utlful place to build your new honw
11 Y68

�P;, g e61

63

Farm Equ 1pm cnt

NC&gt;w H o l ln nd 66 BrtiC'r 949
1609 or 949 nJ 1

F 1rmnl l C wll ~1 0 boll om
plows 919 2063 n !t er 6 p m
A

N

Pomeroy - Moddl e port - Gal lopolos, Ohoo-

D 6- Th e Su nd ily Tom es Se nton e l

Forn

Tril c l or

N ew

f)r"'11n l md qood l•rrs Sl 650
Jo tl n D('l rc 3 p t corn p1~1n
!N $JS0 J pi 6 II blnde

L1 ves tock

63

REG QUA RTER HOR SES
T r cHn . ng
s h ow • nQ
breed•nq sales and boar
d•nq Con tac t Dan Beam
Ga ll p o l• s 446 0 183

Rru Poll ed Herclo rd bull
App I 600 lbs $850 00 or
tr ndr f or
o oo d use d
hilyrc!kP plu&lt;; hoo t Ccl ll756

ViR I

ry ~lil Y rilk C'
whef'l ty pe 3 pt
Ho&lt;lkup l1kf' new $d00 &lt;ll
•&lt;r5pm )0 lB877819
"&gt;• d(

Rr Cl s trrrcl r~nd qradcd hO r
sec;, C'xcel lenl 4 H pro 1cct

E nol •s h and we stern sad

dlrs
d{ I VI

..,po~~.(

Jumbo Bob Wh il e Quail
Eqqc;
r~lso
ava11~1ble
La B ont e s Quart Farm 985

evcry lh •nQ

•m raq•n ab le '"hor se eq u•P
m en!

a nd

supp l• cs

u iSQ

r•d nq lessons and tr a•l
r•des and hor se tra•n•ng
Rurt1 Reeves H oo f Ho llow

61 4 698 ) 790
Real Estate - General

1980 CHEVETTE

4 door

ha t c hback

304 675

$3975

Prq 5 Ph one 304 67 5 3308

198 1

6S

BULK

BL E N DED

Aqrrcu ltur al

t cr lllrz er
spread or
del ,vf'rcd &amp; dumped or
pr&lt;kC'd up dl pl ant Bien
lh nq scrv1ce hour 5 8 to 4
Mond(W 1t1ru F rrday other
hour s r eque st on spreade r
t&gt;uqq y r en tal s A co mple te
1ndepcnd en l busrn C'S Farm
Equ•p m en t serrVCC' Clr t
taro W
Sny der ownC'r
JilCkSOn OH 286 &lt;1983

etc I •vercd

CH EVETTE

ex

c e ll e n t co nd Ir on
one
ow ner d spPed lots ot ex
tra s Call 304 675 7521 after
Sp m

Seed &amp; Fer t1h zer

WISEMAN
lkt' Wl \f moln s~oller ••• JJ96 E "t'
Jim C ochro~n AHOC tol lf 44.1111 Evf

co nd Ca ll388 8769

1975 Old s Omega 1 dr
a1 r trlt
HT
p s
p b
w heel good cond $1 395
W1 ll ac ce pt tr ade 61d 667

oil er Call675 6586

308 5

640 DEENIE DR
A ttr ac tr ve 4
bedr oom br leve l 1n a ve r y good nerg h

1981 Cheve lle 7 door 4
speed (')(( cond Mu s t se ll

1968 Mu sta ng 289 aulo V 8
w •th K eys tone c l assrcs 991

7422143

5434

CENTRAL REALTY
N EW L I STIN G
Frgh r 1nfla lr on or loss of 10b by
took n 1 n to I Ill':, n om( f)roper ty Th1 s ciln eas ly be
tw o rr ntrlh or tr homr l or you nnd rcntnl nco mr
lr onr 11 r c,rcon(l dwrl l nq Ao;,krnc1 prrc e $37 000

PhOne JOH7 5 3186

or 675 1808
74 CHE VY Bclar r Sl &lt;l l ron
WilCIO n good r unnrng co n
drl •o n S650 72 Pl ymoutll
s t .=~ t 1 o n Naqon
run s qood

NEW LI ST IN G -

borhood along Rl 35 Ov er 2 000 sq II
of hv rng area •nc l udes a large f amrl y
r oom w / woOdburncr 2" J bdths, equrp
ped k1tche n ( l oads of cab 1netsl d1n rng
room 1 c ar garage pplu s 18x36 m
ground poo l 1n pr 1vate backyard
Prr ced tn 60 s

QUIET STREET r~nd good nerq hborhood What e lse
coulct you rrsk tor wh en you ca n have low cos t
t1ou srnq and c le&lt;ln w ell kept Mea Th1S 2 bedr oo m
tr nriC'r par t Mlly turn shed underprnned and a
w ood storn w build nq has nskrnq pr c e of $11 500
MUST SELL
Almos t .1 QrvcawrlY Red uced •lCI&lt;lln
!r om Sll 000 to \ 10 500 Frnan crnQ clV nrlab lc

3 FLAT AC RES

1n Rn c nc

0 ~1

Ow ner wrl l

NEW

LI STING

BUS IN ESS OPPORTUNITY -

-

MIDDLEPORT

A

PR ICE REDUCE D -

A

PH 84 3 2075

PR I CE REDUC ED -

TUPPER S PLAINS -

REALTORS
Henry E Cl el and Jr G RI
Dott• e Turn er
Jean Tru sse ll

rn
RE.ALTOR

Real Estata -

General

STROUT®REALTV Inc.
uill~~
OMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200

Orokcr Auc t.an ur

Lt F r

I NSUR A N(r
.J 78 !.,econd Av r&gt;
C.l ll446 0552 Anyt1m c
BM R 41 1
3 bed r oo m h ome 3 mr les fr om c rt y
Owne r w1ll co nsrder lr nnncrng Srtuated on large f lat
lot V1nyl s•d• nQ &amp; natural qa s Ilea l Carpor t w th
s tor age nrea Call tor detail s'
BMR 411Old er home located 1n
T hurm an Con tarn s 7 r ooms and ba th 2 f i r epla ces
pr ot ess onal ly rnsl &lt;'l l lcd wood burne r for ced arr fuel
f urna ce Out s df&gt; features cl CJ&lt;'!raQP and a scree ned
&lt;., ummer kr! Ch(' n v..th burl! 111 qr1 ll Call tor ap
porn l mcnt
BMR 139 - OWNER F IN A N CIN G 1 Two stor y nome
on Seco ncl Avf' 3 or 4 bed r ooms REDUC E D' Bet
tcr $CC lh s one
BMR 402F - CH EC K ON TH I S ONE - 37 acre s
wrlh t&lt;l011b IObd cco ba sc 30x30barn Ca ll today'
BMR 399 - GREAT LO CA TION• - Two sl ory
nom e pr rsf'n ~l y ber nq usPd as a duplex could be
r&gt;as rly co nvert ed to srnq le f amily Cho rce locnt ron
nea r w.::~ s lr nq ton Sc hon I Ca ll tor de tculs 1

BMR 409 -

OW NER FINANCING -

Th' s sphl

royer home rn clu&lt;le s 3 bedroom s '} l ull ba t hs lnrae
den wr1h trr r p tace heat pump See f h ts ful l y car
pri ed t\Drne now Loc n ted rn Crow n Crty'
BMR 3q1 - R E DUC E D'
Owne r wan t s II so ld
now' Mob If' twme loc ated on r1vcr fr on t lot
BMR 389 - Tt11S lrne hom e ha s d bedroom s an d •s
toea ted close ro town You wt lt have a large 101 wr lh
a c oun ~r y atm osphere an d hav e al l th e c 1ty con
ven1 ences Ca ll nay., 1

BMR 398

GE T REA DY FOR SUMMER' Owner

tr i'lnsl c rr ed cmd mu st sel l thrs 3 BR ran ch Close to
town tncludes delu xe 18xJ6 1nqr oun d pool Ca ll l &lt;.. r
an appotn tment today •
BMR 407F - Camp slfe Pot en t• n l 1 32 acr es m / 1wr lh
fr ontnge on Ra ccoon Cr as w e ll as fr on t aqe on
b l ac k l op hrghway
BMR 410 - A l rnme s.• tu atPd nn a beautiful wooded
se tt• ng you w1 l l lov e the a tm osp here Owner f 1nan
c1 ng for qual1f1 ed buye r s Low 30 s
BMR 413FJ - Mt nt f ar m l oca t ed ,u s! oft th e A p
pa lac htan h1 g hway near Ja ckso n J';" acres m / 1
w1 t h an older two BR hom e seve r a l outbulld •n gs
,ust r1gh t for le1 sur e trmeo r fu ll ttm e ll v •n g
BMR 414 - 12x 60 mob 1le hom e s•tuated on a I ac r e
+ lot Incl ud es furn1ture has r ea r patto w /cover
cove r ed front dec k 12x24gar age w1th storage
BMR 415 - Ju st L• sted • Ex t ra niC e b• leve l, 1n
elud es 3 bed room s lg fa mrly r oom wr th bn ck
fireplace 18x2 1 llv1ng room eat rn kitc hen lg
ut 11tty room and gar age S1tuated on large lot C1ty
sc hoo l d1 str1 c t Ca ll for detail s '
BMR 416 - Want a n1ce 3 BR r a nc h st y le home w 1th
a top of the ground poo l. •nclud1ng a poss•ble 8 50%
mortgage assump t•on, 1f so ca ll now
BMR 417F - We are offen ng one of Ga lh a County ' s
f1nest farm s Cons1 Sf1ng of 218 ac r es Th1 s fme farm
1S 1n good produ c tron 40 acres c ropland , exce ll ent
pasture, and lots of bUJidmgs Al so a fme old farm
home Call now for more de~ail s

BMR 418 ~ ew Lostong - Brock &amp; frame sotuated on
5 ac r es Includes 3 BR ' s, 2 bath s, lg famil y room
w•th f~replace

donong room

woodburner, lg

llvrng room,

kotchen Call for details

ELE GA NCE

A WAY OF

LIF E - F1rs t tr me on the m a rk et tor
111 s 1 Ke new con temporary 3 or A
BR s 2 ba th s l arge open LR wt t h
trrrpln c e &amp; beam ed ce rlrn gs k ttch en
rncludlS r ange OW &amp; retng
l ull
t:rnc.f'me nl w r ap around deck cedar
s1dr nq
12x24 nbovr&gt; gr ound pool
qarE!QC barn &amp; 10 acres near Eureka
Crly sc hools

LO VE LY

BRICK

&amp; FRAME

RAN

CH ER p l us 78 AC ~ES of l and 1n
Ches h 1re Towns h• P off er s lots of good
lr v.n g for your growr ng fa mrly Home IS
,u sl l 1ke new w1 th 1438 sq ft of lr v 1ng
area p lu s an a tt ac hed garage 2
spa c 1ous BR s 2 ba t hs 8x27 LR 10x1.d
kt tc hen w1th r efrt g d 1sp OW double
oven &amp; range wa sher &amp; dryer stays •n
l rwndry Land IS mos tl y ro l li ng pa s lure
lftnd wr th approx 15 acr es wooded Call
tor rl PPOintmcnt

GREEN TOWN SHIP - CENTRA LL Y
LO CA TED - 11 1 acre farm tl as f ro n
tilqe on Sta te Rou t e 588 Fa1rtreld Cen
t cn~~ry Road &amp; Vanco F a .r..f1 eld Rd Ex
ce ll enl tor f arm ng or deve lopmen t
Older 5 rm &amp; b ath f arm home barn &amp;
s110 1nc lud ed Owner s w1 ll co nsrde r
SC'II 1nq sma ll er tracts of shor t ter m
tr n r~ n c rnq Call tor m ore rnform at•on
BU IL DING OR MOB IL E HOME SIT E
A pp rox 5' 1 acre s loca ted on the
G raham Sc hoo l Rd co wa ter ove r 300
fl rd fron tag e Green Gr ade Sc hool &amp;
G&lt;1l lt a Ac ademy H 1gh Sc hool $ 10 900

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Re mod eled hom e rn c tudes 5 rm s a nd
c arpor t
stove
refr•g
d1sh
bath
was her m ob il e hom e pad a lm ost 6
acr es on 58A 2 m • f rom town $30,000

WALNUT TOWN SHIP -

Beef ha y &amp;

gr a1 n f a rm 80 acres m / 1 appro x 35 A
good crop l and 10 A woods ba l ance
pas tu re , good fences 9 rm / bath hom e
was buil t 1n 1872 &amp; has been parttally
re mode led 50x50 ca ttle barn w 1th c on
lar ge silo w rth auto
c r ete fl oor

un loa der
sprrngs
ow ner

sever al sheds

large pond,

st and 1ng crops go

AFFORDABLE FARM-

to new

91 &lt;%

LOAN

ASSUMPTION - N1 ce r emOdeled 6 rm
&amp; bat h hom e, WB fir eplace, stove,
r efng ce ll a r house, 3 sheds 50 acres
m / 1 approx 15 A c lear ed , &amp; balance
wooded Loca ted nea r Eureka 1n the
c 1ty sc hool d1st $38,900

BEST BUY IN TOWN -

Stylosh 2 slory

HUNT ERS PARADEISE -

48 acres

m / 1 on Ra cc oon Creek near Ew •ng ton
ap prox 10 A tillabl e ba l an ce woods
1'11 story log cott age
cel lar hou se
12x 15 m et al bu rld1n g ex tr a n1 ce 14 x70 2
BR 2 bath mob rle hom e A ll thr s for the
asktn g pr rce of $39 400
A SS UM E 8lt1% LOAN - L ove l y r anch
at the edg e of tow n 15 pn ced to se ll at
$A9 900 Fea tures r e 3 B R l 1h baths
l arge LR w 1th WB frrep l ace modern
k ttche n &amp; drnrng area l aundry rm,
garage &amp; gas heat
Ca lif or ap
po•ntment
ROOM TO ROAM - I tn1nk you would
sa y tha t thr s sprawt1ng br.ck tr1 leve l •s
one of the n1cest cou ntry hom es you ve
eve r see m Thrs bea uty ts Stfuated on
4117 ac res of land abou t 3'17 m 1l es from
Rod ney Wh y not let your fam d y en1oy 5
BR s 3 ba th s large l1 v1 ng and d1n 1ng
r oom co mplete k•tche n, f am rly room
wtth stone t•repl ac e and 2 ca r ga r age
Be the f, r st to see th• s one

HUNTINGTON

TOWNSHIP

1760

acres m / 1 vacant l and front s on Rae
coon Cr ee k &amp; th e Tom Glen Rd A pprox
31 t1 l l abl e &amp; the bala nce wooded Under
$400 per acr e

RODNEY CORA ROAD -

Approx 24

ac r es wood land ,l ocated 3 mr from Rod
ney County wa ter ava il ab le $12,000

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABL E 10% down - Camps 1t es 1n th e Wayne
N atton al Forest 5 to 8 ac r e trac ts
wood ed l and good hunfrng Pr1 ces start

al $3,500
MU ST SELL THIS MONTH to se ttl e
est ate Th1 s very n1 ce bn ck ranch of
fers ove r 1900 sq ft of mod ern llvm g
PLU S an overs1zed 2 c ar ga r age
Fea tures are 3 BR , 11!2 baths, LR large
k1 tc hen &amp; d 1nrng area w1fh bu•tt 1n
range, ove n, OW &amp; d 1sp , 15x27 famrly
rm w rth a frrepla ce, cent a1r, central
vac uum &amp; a larg e fl at lot near Rodney

$59 500
GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 ac r es m / 1
loca ted south of M er cervi ll e A pprox 20

A l ol lable, balance woods lob base
Owne r s w1ll help frnance

exc ellent

hunf•ng

T OTA L

PRI CE $16,800
BEEF

CATTLE

COUNTRY

-

132

Pro c.e reduced to$64,000
GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 33 acres m/ 1
on State Route 160 near North Galloa

pletely equ opped modern kotchen, 4

grassland, stock pond, 3 BR ranch type
home woth full basement, good barn

BRs, 2112 baths, new srdrng
near sc hools, shopp1n g etc

LOG CABIN -

garage,

Ver y unoque, old hand

hewn log beam s, sleep1ng loft, larg ~
stone f1replace, modern barn, 14 acres

woods, located on the Wayne Natoonal
Forest, 20% down

Mostly

clean

rolling

Out of town owners says SELL

$1,000 DOWN PAYMENT on thos Ohio
Rover Voew pr9perty Approx 8 acres
wooded land on Route 7 and 5 mo south
of town Owner will finance balance at
\lli!W '

OLD RT 35 -

Prett y s acre tr ac t nea r R10 Grande
Coul d be drv 1ded rnt o bu tldrng lots or
used as c rop o r pasture Inc lu de s 3
bedr oo m ran ch w d h large frr epla ce
rur al ater and ava1tab te 2 outbud d1 ngs
Incl uding sma ll barn $39 000

LAR GE RIVERV I EW BRICK
E NERGY EFF I CI ENT RAN CH
one of th e n1ces t you I I see on Lower Rt
7 w 1th a ternf1 c v1ew d bed r ooms 2
ba ths famrly room f1replace equ tpped
kit chen formal d1n1ng basement 1 car
gar age ex tr a 1n su la t 1on (6 1n wa ll s)
tr rpl e wrn d ows h1 ghes t elec t bdl S65
and owner w tll frn ancea t 12% $79 900
OWN ER WILL FINANCE - W1 th less
th an 20% down payment and 11% 1n
teres! 168 ac r e farm off Rt 554 A p
pro)( 20 25 ac r e c r op balance 1n pa sture
and wgods L os of p1ne (red &amp; w h1te&gt;
barn plu s mod erni Zed 3 bedroo mh ome

60 s
WOOD S MILL RD -

VA Ac quored

proper t y ~ $1700 down pay m ent
Anyone cn n bu y 3 bedroom r anch w•th
full
ba !\emen t
Famdy
room
w / f1replac e eQUipped kttc hen &amp; 112

acre $32 900
100 ACRE FARM -

NEW LI STING IN

RUTLAND - Prod uc t• ve fa rm 1n cor
po ra t1on l1rr1d s o f Rutland Qu a l tty hay
&amp; pa st ure Nt t h good gr ass cove r ap
pr ox 45 ac woods 50 x56 barn 14 x40
shed 111 good r epa 1r L ar ge rd fron t age
on Rt 124 &amp; Free gas ava 1labl e tor
house (h as ga s w e ll) Th e hrstorrc hom e
has 10 r oo m s 4 bedrooms 1 f1repla ces
&amp; garage Cal l for m Or e 1nfo $85,000

MARTIN DRIVE -

JUST LISTED -

~~

d 19 I m o

'\':.O.:~~c~R

CONTRACTING

From

He•ttr

JUST LISTEIJ
OWNER PURCHASED NEW HOME

bedrooms foreplace, ea t on kotchen, full
basement

r ec

room , fftmrly

room

garage deck &amp; fence d back yard on
nearl y &amp; acre Good tocat1on

older we ll kepi 3 bedroom , 2 story
hom e
Ha s equ1pped k itchen, 2
firepl aces, family room, Ph bath,
bea uty shop nat gas hea t 2 car

garage

16x32

on ground

pool,

al l

LAKE DRIVE , RIO GRANDE - 9%
MORTGAG,E - F east your eyes on thos
lovely Cape Cod brock home &amp; you will
want ot for sure Beautiful decorating, 4
bedroms, 2 full &amp; 2 lialf baths, famoly
room, deluxe kotchen woth bar, full
basement, foreplace that heats entore
hou ~e &amp; 2 car garage S1tvated on cor
ner lot Prrced tn 60's

to

the

u

&amp; Bonded

r

N

MONOJI Y

~U N O/I

1 )0 I M 1 lO

Pomeroy, Oh
Ph m 2174
2 26 tfc

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Y

JIM

OJI IL 1 ~ I I ( lJIL ~
H lppy Hr ~I&gt;D ~•IV

And Home Mamtenance
• Roof1ng of all types
eS1d1ng
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yn expenence

Mon - I&lt;IQ N1Qh117
l ld 1'\ Noqhl 8 1
WPd - O~tn~ md Drown
Ji ll you c 1n dnn~ 17
1 tJI' \

21
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I hur ~

P oo l I O&lt; rn • m • " ' '
8 I li ll Y! r

1r1&amp; ~

O r~n~

\ un

1

H1 nd &gt;

TOM HOSKINS

&amp; Drow n 101

Durmq B•nd Onlv
I 111,. &amp; I tiChtr Seu

Ph f49 2160 or 949 2321
4 20 lie

4 )() l h

W

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AND
CONSTRUCTION

Vonyl &amp; Alumonum

complete remodeling,
roofing Of all types
Worked
home area

on
20 years.

REDUCED

TO

540,000 - ' Own er s

mov ed t o Oklahoma and mu st se ll
A lum S1ded 3 bed room ranc h loca ted 3
miles from town on Rt 141 ac ross from

House has full

basement that could b e frn1~he d , equ•p
ped krtchen &amp; qar age
tmmed•ate
possess ron

2 ACRE LAKE ESTATES -'- Owner s
moved to Callforn •a Must sacnf1ce at

sever-al thousand dollars below market

Water Sewer Electnc
Gas Ltne D1tches
water Ltne Hook ups
5ephc Tanks
County Cert1fred
Roush lane
Chesh1re, Oh

vice, water, sewer, pon
ds,
foundattons ,
reclamatton

•
Locensed &amp; Bonded

Ph 367 7560
I 7 I lfc

Phone 949 2293
or949 2417
3 3 tfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
S1zes start from

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

l0x24'~

Utility Buildings
Sozes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buoldongs 24&lt;36
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Racone, Oh
Ph 614 843·2591

Free estimates
Call 843-3322
5 117 mn pd

6 1

BOGGS

locatoon

RANDY'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

unper

Truck' s for Sa le

For sale 1977 Ford 700 se r
c ab &amp; ctlass• c very good
co nd• li on S4 000 Call 4.46

Guysvtlle, Oh•o
Authonred John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dea ler

Farm Equopment
Parts &amp;Servoce
I 3 lfc

AL TROMM
BUILDING &amp;
REPAIR

1978 Ford p1 c kup s tandard
Stl1fl V 8 would con srde r ed
tr nde rn e-x cond Ca ll d46

40 53

"Btautolul, Custom
Built Garages"
Coli for free sodong
estimates, 949 2801 or
949·2160.
No sunday Calls
3 11 lfc

4 29 1 mo

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kttchen s and ap
pltances ,
custom
bathrooms, r emodelmg,
plumb1ng, etec tnc , and
heatrng

O'Brien Electric
Service

EXCAVATING

16 YEARS EX P
•Resodentoal
•Commercoa I
•lndustnal
Rae one, Ohoo
247·3534
Free E sto mates
4 20 li e

-0o1ers

-Addens aad remodeling

·Backhoes
· Dump Trucks
· Lo-loy
·Trencher

-Rooflncand autter WOfll
-Concrete WOfll

-water
-sewer

-Piumbintllld
electrical wort
1Free Estimates)
PJo. 949-2609
949·2234
RACINE, OHIO
5 19 1 mo,

•I nsulation

- Sephc Systems

5-20 1 mo

•slorm Dooh'

•Replactm.nt

WlfldOWI '

H. L WRITESEL
RQOFING
Alf " " ' tf roof work,
new rw NtNfr IU"tr and
gutter

CIOWII,.UII,

•Storill Wl,._s

,

1

I

•New Roofing
·t=ree Estimate

JamesKees_.

, Ph.m-2712

Thur ~ Fn

Drink &amp; Drow n •II n•gh h
~ ~~ ~

Sun

cliltllltl' 11111 Pl1nllng,
All Wtn t,uar'lllltHd.
(
,_ PI'M lallmatH
••--••IIPrtcn
ca=:;~

.....,.

CROSS OVERS
Onnk &amp; Drown • I I " '9hl ~
MONTH OF JUN E

Friday &lt;1 nd Sa turd•y

MAR SHALL TENN ENT
CDUntry Aock
Note Crossovers Thurs &amp;
Sun b•nd slar i J lO ends
11 JO Olhern 1ghls 10to1
C•rryoul lifer Av•1l1 bl f Ormk
I Drown dunng Ba nd N1ghl

CANDLE LIGHT INN
R l I Cht&gt;S hirf OhiO

PH tU f411l

St Rl 7
4/2 4/ lfc

PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR
Call Bill Wild
AI W11d'1 Kepoerd
2
14
c

:MV

Auto Parts
&amp; Accesson es

o

Furn1ture Stnpping
and refimshing
35 Court Sf
Gallipoli s Ohro
Ca ll 446 3896

D1fferen t part s for 350 a nd
400 Chev y en g •ne Trcu l ~
c Mb gas and walcr pum
p s etc 741 3063

446 3080

Hnn shaws U sed
T 1res
Lu c a s
Lan e
P on t
P lensa nt 30A 67 5 7360
Auto R eparr

77

78

II c

w• lh top

p~1one

30 000

Motorcycl es

80 Yamaha Suprr spec •al
QOOd cond r eii SOn clb le R
J Brown1nq Cal l 99'1 7685
1975
Go ld wrnq
1000
cfre ss ed
exc e l len t ccr
d•t •on $1600 00 6 000 n .. tes
o n enq .nP Cf'lll 745 5197 af
lrr 5PM

16 P UL L campe r slr&lt;' ps 6
or 8 see at 307 Holl oway St
H en derson wv
1963 TROTWOOD C;Jmper
16
sl eeps srx
eleclr c
brn k cs $800 304 773 5657
Mot or H om e
&amp; (;tmpc n.

Wrnnabaqo m oto r ~10me
e xc cond Ca ll AA6 /7 03

LennoK Heat1ng &amp; A 1r
Cond1l10nrng All Typ es
ln sul a tr on E l ec tr.c a l
Wrnng
Ce~ll 446 BSI S or 44 6 0445
aft er 4 30 p m
tf c

PASQUAL E
ELECTRIC
I 52 Th.rd Ave
614 446 1716
lt c

H om e
Impro ve m ent s

Z:

To all concerned lhe Tuppm
Ptar ns Cemele1y Fund tS nearly
depltted we must hare yotu con
lrrbvhons 1n 01det lo keep up
lhe ce melerJ Make parments lo
RUBAL CALDWELL Trusure1 Old
Route 7 Rtedsv1lle Oh 45772
He• res•dence one m1l e south of
TupperJ Pla1ns on Roul e 7 II IS
up lo you 1f the umeler, IS to
bt kept m beauhful cond1tron
W£ MUST HAV£ YOUR HHP

1182
P AI NTING
tnl cr •or and
f'XI € r 10r
p l umb ng
rool rnq so me r emodcl rnq
20 yr s ex p Ca l l )fiB 96 57
M cHC um
Ro o l rnq
&amp;
Spout rn q
30 year s C)(
perr ence
spcc •al1trnq rn
buil t up roo t Ca ll 388 9857

CB

360 Honda
low
e-xce ll ent shape

Crea t1 ve
wo ocJ d ec k s
pre ssur1l ed p•ne et:d dr &amp;
redwood Fr ee es t rmd l e

Cal l 388 976 7
Ex pert rem odC' Irnq
rtd
dr lr ons a ll form of ca r
pcnl ry Cal l 446 737 6 for
tree es t •m at e M ondny t hru
rtr ur sday on l y
M.lsonury
w ork
Loq uc
Con tr acl•nq
Rt
1
E wrnqlon Ca ll 388 9939
S pecr~1 1 March nnd Ap ril
only Gene s Dee p Steam
C lca nrn q Scotch Gaurd
Frcec slrmat c 9916309

F &amp; K Tr ee Trrmmrnq
s tu mp r emoval 67 5 133 1
R IN GLES S SE RVI CE e)(
prrr cn ce d ma son root er
e l ect r• c•an
c arp en t e r
ge n era l r cpa1rs
and
remodel1ng Ph one 30 4 675
2088 or 675 &lt;1560
Wat er w ell s Commerc1a l
o nd Domeslrc Tes t hates
Pumps Sales ond Se rv rce

304 895 3802

$450 )04 576 2866

ADVA NCE D

198 1 H ARLEY OclVIdson
Sport ster 304 67 S 48'1A

G utte r Do ors
Otfer1nq
co nJ 1nu ous
g u tt er1 n g
sea ml ess s•d•ng roof1ng
garaq e
doo r s
fr ee
es t• ma tes 614 698 8105

1981 Kawaskr K OX 175 ex
ce tl ent co nd1t1 on $ 1000

Sea m l ess

H O NDA 90, needs m1nor

r epaors $85 304 675 1480

675 3536 304 675 4603

cond•tr on S225 phon e 304

1978 YA M AHA GT 80 gOOd

675 2955

RAWliNS CAB
446-4675
Slops
Waolin g peo ho
Von e Sl lo GSI
Coly lomols on
Garlield
Easlern Ave
Ch1ll ocolhe Rd

Plumhulq

A ND H EI\T1 N G
Cor Four ttl .1nd P rn1
P rronf' 146 J8AA or Jll6 1177
E)(C,lv.l tm g

63

Gel II polr &lt;; D ver &lt;;r l 1 d Cnn
c. I Co (u&lt;,lnrn ciO/( r &amp;
hilckfloC' work
Spl tr ll
!a rm raft &lt;:. [,111 u &lt;:., tor lr Pt
f'"&gt; li!nn !rc, JJ6 IJIO
L~1v.r0 n cr

!1,l r ld1 0f'

) I

S or&gt; n &lt;, l llf kt r
rv ( ( ( 1 I 6/'J

J O N ES
OO YO Wf i [R
Si:=RV ICE Clll36l / 4/ 1 or
)61 O'iiJ I

Nt 1 (I
nnl• II Jrn q
ll1tJII (!
lW 1y nr &lt;,Om t llr 11 1 rr1nv1 rP
Wt 1 d o 1 (lll.l l n1 1 ~9(r
6 11 /116 'l/ 10 1111rf&gt;
NOW t-i IUIHHI I !11 &lt;, It Ill
(!r rl 101) \Orl ti l l Vt l r
1&lt;,~1m 1t .., C 111 J61 /101
H f1U I Nt
VI I &lt; rfl(l

84

{ Jl
I t 11 II

/4/ /)0

f( l I

Ill I ( I

1y

!0 I fl/ ~ '&gt;HbB
rncl ') P M
n p lrrr cl

$1 75

$1 50

1r

11 o.. l
Pt

tl lW

$1 75

It

IH

SE WIN G Vtnclrrn P rc' P&lt;"Ir':&gt;
se rvr c e Au t hor 1N 1 Srnqrr
S,1 1es &amp; \rrv, r r Sn.1r p1 n
Sc I"&gt;&lt;&gt;O r s
F ,1hr 1c Sh op
PomN OY 992 /784

$1 50

I II

JrMC, \l\ll l &gt;r &lt;..,I I VI
I dl
J 11\l 1111! 1 jl) l(l /'l , , ,

Etec tr ca l
&amp; Relngcr.lll on

50c

$8 00

Tem Rd
$1 75
Solveo Brodge
Plaza
$3 00
Hospotal
$3 00
10', off base fare woth
Golden Buckey e Caod

\SAO

I

l

r

Upho l \ h r y

I PI &lt;.., 1/\ 1 f
rl f'II O &lt;..,1f f.(Y '-. !l OP
lltJ '1 t 11\.!
( dlqJ(JI&lt;,
1 11'1 !t\ II 1r I 111 IR 1 l

1 l

H lf! r !

I WI I 1 I PN
l .1wn !!11&gt;Wt 1

!) i

M UI/v f..'F Y '-. Upl nl 111 f Rl
1H1 • I/ l 1'1 Pli r&lt;,lH 304
l'l/') !I 'l l

I

rr==========~===========±===========-

SUNDAY PUZZLER

ACROSS
t Fisherman s
basket
6 Fu ture oak
It Lessen
16 Chalhmges
2 1Gun
22 Actor smger
David 23 Las!
24 Pointless
25 Brunch
26 Overwhelm
rn a way
28 Unit s of
power
30 Prochv11y
32 Cooled
lava

33 And La!
34 Soul 1n
Pans
35 Footll~e

part
3fi Golf cry

37 S1amese
com
38 Crony
40 ChiC
42 Chck beetle
43 Nods
44 The sweet

sop
45 R•ver srand
47 Warted on
49 Jumps
50 FrUit dr1nk
51 Trade
54 Judge
55 Storage
areas
56 Aromas
59 Sum up
60 Soup of a
sort

62 Hermrt
64 Twirl
65 Never Sund ay
66 Belloldl
67 Everyone
69 Entices
70 Foray
71 RA depol
72 Unit of
energy

J IM S Pest Con tr o l Ca ll us
anyt me for your term1te
probl e ms
Fr ee
1n
spec lion s VA &amp; F H A for m s
availab le L• ce nsed &amp;. 1n
sured by Oh1 0 &amp; WV A ll
word done by a qua l1f 1ed &amp;
fr amed se rvr ce m an 304

Phone 304 882 242 8

li e

Nu Pnme rep lace ment
wmdows
Storm w1ndow s &amp; doors
Alummum &amp; 'lrnyl
s1 d1ng
How met Patr o Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobtle home awnrngs
Alum1num ut•lrty
burld1ngs
691 M1ller Orr ve
446 2642
Free Est rm ates

)67 7160

1979 Y am&lt;lh a X S 1100 E xc
c ond Fully dre sse d Lo ts at
ex lras Low mrleaqe 991
5 170 or 992 6'188

7&lt;1

J

Bill's

S1gned
Board ol Ttustees

STU CCO PLA STE RIN G
! (')( lur e d ce ilrn qs com
mrr cral r1 nd re s rdent nl
t ree es trmate s C nll 256

l ndustrral
Commer c•al
Res td enl•al
Dependable B ye an e-x
pcr •c ncc We do care•

"'~IMPROVEMENTS

C•IR I ER 5 PLUMBI NG

RO N S Televrsron Se rvrce
Spcc •a lr 7rnQ rn Zrn rl h a nd
M otorola
Qu n Tar
and
hou se ca lls Ph one 576 2398
or A46 2454

da 50 2 speed Ca ll 304 675

4&lt;16 ]915
No Answer 4 4~ 2062
M od ern stea m &lt; l earung
for carpe t &amp; uphol stery
( rnsurancc work )
• Sco tcguard JM
• Wa ll s floor s
w1ndow s
• wat er &amp; sm oke
dcJmag~

Pub li c Nott cc

1&lt;1 se ll con tarned c~1mper
$ 1 600 Cel li A46 191/

Ge ne s Sl f'clm
Ca rpel
C leetn Sco tch Gclurd Free
es t1mn tes spr 1ng 5pcctals
Gene Smll h 991 6309

466 2 alter 5 p m

ADVANCED
CLEA NING SERV I CE

Camp rn g
E qu1pm ent

198 1 Harl ey Oavrd son
1 OOOcc sport Btk stock
mrnl co nd 980 m Lo ts ol
Chrome $3 500 or $1 700
a ss ume loan Call 797 37 18
~1 1t cr 3 p m

E xce ll ent co ndrtr on Honda
C R250M Yama l1a 80 Han

Back hoe and doz er work
by th e tob or by the
hour Al so lr cens ed se p
t1 c tanks
1n s t a ll ed
Dump
truck
Free
es tim a t e~ Ca ll 388 86j3
or 446 94S9
1c

47 ff Workmg H e1gh t

PUBLIC NOIIC£

81

Fra nk Rose Con st Co
Remodcl•ng repa rr new
co nslru ct• on a ll t y p e~
Fr eees lrmat es all wor~
fully
guarant ee d
Re s rd ent1al
co m
mercra l .ndus trr a l a nd
m1n1ng el ectrrc work
BSHA Cer t 44~ 4627 lf c

RUSS AND MAX
EL LIOTT

1978 Starcralt f olddown
ca mpe r Phon e 304 6151753
or 67 5 4015

79

M&amp; T CON STRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVAT ING INC

AER IAL BU CKET
TRU CK SERV I CE

Ouc1l1 ty Autobody &amp; Pa1nl
work Profess1ona1 custom
p(1 rnt work on motorcy cles
A u to Tr rm Cen ter 446 1968

SOLUTION

!&gt;un

May 1011 111J

CROSSOV ERS
Mily 11 11 2f lO

Large or small Jobs
PH. H2·2478

I

'"

Thurs Fn Si' l Sun
May ll 14 I) . .
CR OSSOVER S
Dnnk &amp; Drown .111n1gl'll ~

Thun Frl

· Gas Lines

Aluminum Siding ·

.

MAY I

W I L OWAT ER

('"""

76

CAPT AIN STEEMER Car
pet Cll dn rn q fect lured by
1J
va ns &amp;4W D
H nlf cll Br os t hNS Cus t om
Sale or trade 19 79 CJ S C.;rpets Free es ltmales
Cnll 446 1 107
Jeep
e~m f m
c ct sse tt e
a lum s lott ed w~w e l s 19 000
mrl cs As krng $4 750 446
F r e ne h
C rl y
P n 1nl 1nq
0347 or 4d6 9450
re
s,dcn
l
,a
l
&amp;
co
mmerc
,alr
rn tNror
ex ter 1or
po pe
an
q
rng
&amp;
t
ex
tur
ed
h
1980 CHE VY Scott sdale J4
c erlr nqs Call 367 778A or
t on 4 wtlcel d r rvc PS AM

mtl~aqe

APR JO

1972 Honda 350 mo tor c ycle
ex cond $450 Ca ll 367

30 4 675 1751

74

or foxed w e can do
II
742· 2328
RUTLAND

Services offered

&amp; H e.1 tmg

1973 DODGE Vcln c an bC'
seen at 307 Holl oway St
H ende r son W V P r1 c ed to
se ll

If you n eed ol buoll

I h e ~ und.1 y Tnn cs ~en tm r l - r'ilqe - 0 7

87

8 1 DATSUN Tr uck

u S Rl 50 Easl

FR I

Hill , Lak

p11ced
1

72

3818

COM ING RANDS

ki tchen w/ brkfst nook , ' dlnong room,
foreplace, 2 car garage &amp; 6'1/j' lake Iron
Charolars

N ova new 400 cmpn e 4
spee d on the tt oo r cul lass
wheels
cutl ass rnler•or
c om p tun ed up Wrll sell
w1 th rac1ng acce ssones 69
model and wel l worth
$ 1&lt;195 Ca ll 7d/ 3063 aft er 5

81 Toyola dre sc l p1c kup s
spee d
eHellcnl
lu el
mdea q r
Ph onf' 304 675

~~===~===~~Pr==~=====~~=========~
PULLINS

bedrooms, 2 baths, fam1ly room, deluxe
pn

7322

79 CH EVY Luv

:j

thos lovely ranch woth well over 2,000 sq
fl at a proce you can afford 1ncludes 4

Prestogoous
$70,000

au to l 1ke new S41 5000 78
Mu stan g 4 spd $1 000 00
78 Dodge &lt;1x 4 PU sharp
$2 600 oo 78 Cad ill ac Coupe
D ev ill e Loaded 75 Ford
PU super cab auto w 1a1r
c ond n1 ce S1 950 00 B &amp; 0
M otor s St Rt 160 d46

1977 E lect r a glr dr c l aSS IC
low mileage very c lean
mus t sec to apprc c ral e 591
586d Athens

value A very rare opportun1tv to buy

tage ,

co nd

1975 Dodqe 0200 &lt;lub cab J o1
to n V 8 ~l iJi n
p c;
nPw
p a 1n l $ 1 600 4&lt;16 0342

HOME &amp; 3 ACRES - P1ctu r esq ue se t
t1nq on old 160 nea r Port er 10 yr ol d 2
bedroom hom e w rth garaqe f ull 1n
su iC'1110n &amp; th erm o w1 ndow s Has pond
qood qarden ar ed shop pl us rln old
farm hou se tht coul d be r emodeled

to sell at $38,500 and located on town

exce ll ent

Vil

1978 Honda X R7 5 Cal l 446
31 10 ca ll a fte r 4PM

411 9 7 00 4 30

Complete gullet work,

Dour &amp; blckhoe ser·

Nrce welt matnta•ned and r edec or ated
2 bed room hom e 2 mil es fr om town
Has an equrpped k1tchen full base
ment, family room woodb urner , elec t
heat (low bill s), l arge attac hed ca r
port. detached garage som e furn•ture
rncluded 1 2 acres w / fru1t &amp; shade
trees p lu s garden area $39 , 500

res I Col y Sc hool Do sl $10,600

69 VW runs good r ece ntly
ov er hauled good t• res.

F M rcqular Q."'S
mrles 30 &lt;1 773 5150

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

·

LO W INT EREST ASS UMP TO N
5 1
yr old 3 bed r oom hom e wrth ov er 1500
sq tt of l rv1nQ F ully equ pped k1t chen
t am rl y room 2 ba lt1 s cent a1r p lu s 10
acres of land (a ll c lean 16x36 bar n r~n d
l ar ge rd front age 1h mil e off R t 160

Green Grade Schoo

Pnvate locat•on on th1 s

Smallest

.sMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

PH 992 9913
0 1

LOCATION - Th1 S one rs l' l 1 bl ocks to
c 1ty park Welt k ept 3 bed room hom e
w 1t h ba se m e nt
mod e rn hea trn g
sys t em and l arqe back yard 1 ca r
garage P ef ec t f or any s1ze f amily

INCOME PROPERTY - Hom e offr cf'
&amp; re nta l h ouse Owner anx 1ous to se ll
and w ill f1nan ce at 11 % and tak e la nd on
tr ade f or down p ayme nt The hom e has
3 bedroom s bath (c ould be 21 I1 V rm
&amp; krtchen B ase m en t of hou se •s on
street leve l a nd •s u sed for ott• ce &amp;
lounge If you need low fuel boll s and 4 storage (NJ ce l y decor ated w rth •11
bedroom s see th1 s one Nat gas, c1ty bath ) The r enta l hou se ha s bedroom
water and sewer C1ty schools
l rv rm , k 1tc hen co mbo &amp; bath Pr1 c ed

Brock &amp; frame r anch

Core

Rodlator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
Yrs. Experience

Ohw St Rt 7

Owner mu st se ll tht s m os t attr ac t •v e
bn ck off R t 35 Inc lud es 3 qood s tzed
bedr oo m s t nm rly r oom f•r ep tace w1te
nppr ovcd equ1ppe d kt tche n 2 bath s
and nlclr l y 1500 sq ft of l1V1n q ar ea
A lso 1nc lud es 2 car garnge &amp; l arqe Ian
rise aped yard Poss1 b le 9% assump l 1on

Must se ll thr s c harm•ng Cape Cod 1
block from H M C Very nr ce l y ar
r anged 4 bedroom w1th country k 1t
chen, formal d•ntng, 2 baths, full base
m ent and large garage Lovely rn
ground sw1mmrng poo l w/ ~creened 1n

JUST LISTED -

tht

Larvest Rodlator

CA NDL ELI G HT INN
Rt I. Chesh1r e Oh

8 1 ?% ASS UMPTION - Ver y attr ac tt ve
home w1th exce ll ent f 1nan cr nq ter m s 3
or4 bedroom tn l evel located ott Rt 35
H as 1 ' baths woodburner dr nm g
room equrpped k•t chen 2 car garaqe &amp;
cen l ral a 1r $59 500

$39 000
RURAL SETTING- CLOSE TO TOWN

3142 or 446 2235

qood new
coltrC'
nd1l1S0n
00
~=========~+~======~~::::~~==========~ per
new $7575
sli cker
304 773 5503

83 ACRE S- Ve ry pr etty locatro n just
mrl es nor th of R •o Grande Lo ts o f
prnes so me t •mber r eport ed Excell ent
tor hor ses some c rop &amp; pa stur e l and
Good burld1ng tots S41 500 C1ty sc hool s

LOCATION

to

_

cedar ho me th at ha s many qua lit y
f ea tur es Ander so n wrndows ex t ra rn
su latron p ac kage (as m uch as 14' 1n
A rm s trong s•d•n g, (30 yr
cerl1 ng)
warranty) A lso 1ncludes a de lu xe k1t
chen w1 th appliances 3 bedrooms 2 full
ba th s d.n1ng room 24 lrv1ng room
pa tro co unty sewe r and more Prtced
at $41 000 and an x10us for offer Nea r
Rodne y rn Crty School D1 st

LOCATION

EUGENE LONG
Supenor Sidmg Co.

COMPLETE

J&amp;F

OWN ERS MUST SELL
WILL
LIST E N TO OFFERS - A n allr ac l, ve

JUST LI STED - 631 KR I STI DRI VE -

tl ow

Fo r sale 1974 Cama r a w llh
1976 400 engrne new c arb
new parnt new 1 r es new
chr ome srd e prpe s Ca ll 446

PS

The ma chrne of tomorrow Tooav 1
Soarrng Ahead Natures Wa y
Curtou ls your house dust problems
U P 5 service
Galllpalts614 4461M6
Piirkersburg w v 304 48S S4l4
Murdoch Av &amp; Lakev1ew Dr

Greg Roush
Ph 992-7583
or 992·2282

R E OUC ED TO S59 500 - Defrn1 te l y one
of today s be st mark e t buys Ov C' r 1700
sq ft of I1V1ng area mclud es 3 krn g
s1z ed bed r ooms lar ge family room
w / h r epl ace '1 bath s n tce lor qe k•lc hen
&amp; drn1nq a r ea 2 car garaqe f oye r &amp; 1/2
acre yard 1n c1ly sc hoo l d1st Assumab le
9111° o mor t gage

L ove ly brr ck home over look 1ng Rt 35
nea r H M c 3 be drooms 1'h ba th s full 1132NDAVE ~ L a r gere dec or a t e d4or
basement family room w / woodburn er 5 bedroom hom e rn qual1t y netg h
w d e appr oved k1tchen nat gas, cen t borhood H as 2 frreplaces famrly rm ,
a•r ove r s•z ed 2 car garage &amp; ov er 1h d1n1ng rm , arched doorways, ba y wm
acre tn a qualit y ne•gh borhood Pr1ced dow s,
10 "
•n sulat•on, l'h
bath ,
lo sell S59 900
basement nat gas hea t plus mu ch
2ND AVE &amp; MILL CREEK - IS the more 60 s
1oca t1on of th1 s r emodeled 3 bedroom
br1 ck Includes a full base men t (cl ea n) 2 5 ACRES - Located near R1o Gra nde
nat gas heat carpor t fenced ya rd off Rt 325 H as 28 x48 basem ent and
subfloonng f•n rs hed You ca n burld the
On ly $22 000

Situated on approx 1 ac 60' s

nome was bu•lf m 1894 and must be seen
to apprec 1a te Large open foy er and
starrway , LR. dmrng rm, parlor, co m

School

HOU SE &amp; S ACRES -

IN TOWN -

ac r es m, mostly clean hill pasture good
fences, 1112 story hom e, large barn, tob
base fronts won 3 roads near MUdsock

H1gh

II
I

JU ST LI STED - ONne r s have rece n
tt y put a tot f o wor k 1nto t hr s attr act •ve J
bedroo m brrck 1n K C Sc hool D1 st
Nea rly 1600 sq ft ol l1v1ng ar ea 1n
elu des 1lv1ng r oom w •th frreplac e (B uck
stove rn se rO I ' l l ba th s lar ge krt chen
utll rm
11h ca r ga rage a nd 3 acres
w 1t h fenced yard 80/o ass um ab le m t g
Pn ce d •n 50 s

on

U 000 00 80 Da tsun 2 dr

RAINBOW-The Amaztng Water Machme

• E lectnc work
•Custom Pol e Bldgs
•Roof ing work
14 Years Expene nce

3 29 ti c

on Rt 141 tu st 2 miles west of town 3

$200 PER ACRE - Greenfoeld Town
shop 84 acres M L approx 10 A bot
1om, 35 A wooded, 35 A stropped, sma ll
cr eek

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
II
'II

d1 r cc t v ry
pr ucha sC'

1855 l or

80 GM C PU 6 cyl sland

REST

PH. 992·7201
You m ust see a ll th e ext ras th1 S fine 3
bed room home off er s Loca ted 1n c 1ty
schOO l d1str1 CI
th s ranch has a
beaut•tul k rt chen w •th q ual1 ty cab rn ets
ran ge &amp; oven di Sh washer &amp; com
pac t or f rreplace 1n l1v rng room l'I J
ba th
ful l ba se ment famdy room
ga r age and 18-x36 rn g r ound pool huge
co ver ed dec k and 3 &gt;~ ac On ly $53 900

For all your worong
need s,
furnaces
repaor servoce and
onstallatoon
Resodentoal
&amp; Commercoal
Call742· 3195
J 7 lf c

WE SELL THE BEST AND SERVICE THE

New Homes - ex ·
tensove remodelong

Licensed

EVERYTHI
LL NEE
A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD

714 569 0242 Ex I

.VA

backhoe
excavaftng
sephc systems
A water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
• dump tru ck
•limestone

9926191
992 S691
949 2660
992 225~

Olf• &lt;e

19/l
O LD S Cfullass
Sup r eme powl' r ~ I P{ r lrrlJ
powrr br(1kes nu to,malrc
r11r ro ncJil 10n nq AM F~
rnd1n
45 000 mil es C'x
ullrn t condr l1 0n
phone
301 675 :1039

STY L E

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

•
•
•
•

thr cf' bed room double w1de wrth full basem ent on
1,1rcw lot A r eal value at $18 000 Now reduced to
$16 200 A barqa•n'

CA R S and Tru cks most
makes and m odel s under
$100 00 Sol d thr ouq h local
qovernm ent sales Call 1

----------+----------+-----------1 $900 Ca ll aller 5 &lt;46 8328

A

PER MONTH .
Real Estate - General

5 21 I mo

.~~I'• •

,.Jt

" i;

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

speed
s &amp; Shop
rally
r •m s Bnew
ehmwheel
d Cus lom
pe 1n Hend er son

w

Mot orcyc l es

03 50

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Call 992-6259

Also Transmoss1on
PH. 992·5682
or 992· 7121
3 24 lfc

Now$16 800

I nrln C'

CALL U S TO BUY OR SE L L
Nan cy J as pers - A ss oc1at e

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

PR I CE REDU CED
On t hr S cut e three bedroom
home rn
Syracuse
Lo t s o l
r e mod et rnQ

HARTS U se d (M5 Nf'W
Havt n Wes t V rq n .::~ Over
?0 tess C' )(pens ve cnrs 111
stoc k

L•v1ng r oo m has
woodhurn.nq lrrepl&lt;'!cc 1' 1 billh ha r dwood fl oor s
well cons truc ted clnd 1nsutu ted Ask ng $3S 000

Sf Rt 124 Pomerov , OH

tt1r ee bed r oom ran ch home w1 t h c arpor t se par ate
u t rl rl y s10rage buddrnq Red uced to $18 000

75 Veq a A T
ps
lrlt
w tll"f'l 4 cyl bO)( f'd 030
crPme
c nm
mnllory
~ 1 eacJ N
ilm fm t ape maq
w~le e l s ex t r.J shar p Good
qracJun t1 0 il qrtt $1 150 30 4

3 BED ROOM BR I CK HO ME -

9% ASS UMPTION - A very attr ac
t 1ve se ft1n g wtth an unma tched v1 ew of
Rto Gra nde w 1th 6 1/ 1 a c A lov el y 3 yr
old c ustom bult 4 bed r oom home has
fu~ l base m en t 2 woodburn ers lam d y
r oom I full &amp; 2 ha lf bath s 2 c ar ga r age
2 5 ac r es of land co uld be so ld .n lots
Ca ll f or more 1nf o

IWO

TUPP ERS PLAIN S -

'

NORAMI CV I EW - 6 SAC

bedroom one story home new car pelrnq te nced
ba ck yard gas heat $22 500

~l c lp

TH I S ONE H A S CLOUT
4 ocou t l ui bedr oo m s
t led b.l th ~
cr~r petf'd
tnrouqhou t
doub le cnr
q,1r 1qr I OVf ly &lt;.,( It no on 1 x tr r IJrq t 101 n
Svrn cuse Full /) c'I Semen r l or ex lrCI l•v•nq spCICL' ol
f rlm d y room Ask•nQ $67 500

Owner s moved mu s t se ll now One ot
the areas f tnes t neig hbor hoods Con
ven tent t o to most ever yth 1ng and ex
cell ent for c h1ldren 4 bedroom b1 leve l
•nc ludes 1 1h
bath
f amily room ,
firepl ac e d1n1ng room equrpped krt
chen deck 2 ca r garage and c orner lot
$69 900 l mm ed1ate possess10n

'~ 1~)

Furnrture R eiilil eq u pm ent bu ldrng and nven
tory Cntl l or de tar ls

$)50 304 576 7866

88 7 1466
OLDER FARM HOME on 10 acres ha s new ad
d il1on mat c(1n be more I v1 n g Spi!ce or ex tr a 1nco me
ilpa rtm en t 7 ca r qaraqe bnrn and ot her o u~
buddrnqs Prrva te n nd peacef u l Owne r w1 l l he l p
lrn ('lnce qualdr ed buyrr $7 000 down and l0°o rn
ter cs t on balancr Askmq $36 500

II

OAK DRIVE
BELOW MARKET INTERE ST

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992·2259

1969 PON TI AC Bonnev1 ll f'
fu lly eQ Uipped wr ttl a1r
cnnd rl1 onrn g
qood
con
d1 t 1on p rr ce $650 phone
61&lt;1 4&lt;1 6 4630

Genera l

WI

Au tos f or Sa l e

$3 000

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

74

73 EL CAM IN O lor paris
Molor 350 lransn" ss' on 4

0-----------,r----------,.----------~

HARRISON'S
TV Repair
&amp; Service

A~tos for Sa l e

71

~"CeS
Y ,1,

I

H6 4140£ Wf

1 4~ ~Hl

$3 100 614 667 308 5

197 4 Olds Cu t lass ex c
cond low m rles new t 1res
ne w exha ust Mu st sell bes t

19 8 Mu s tanq It 4 c yl
clUI Omil ii C pow er SI Ce rrnq
power bra k es
f,M FM

Real Estate -

AUOC

1979 Chevy Cheve tt e 4 dr
ha tchba c k
4 speed
ow ner low mil eage ex.c
cond W1 1i accep t tr ad e or

8.

1

LOCATIO N P LU S QUALIT Y should descr rbe th• s
l ove l y 3 BR br1 ck ranc h S p e c re~l fea tur es are a
IMg e LR &amp; drnrng r m eq utpp ed krt chen 11 1 bat hs
1.1u ndr y qua lit y c.1r pet ce nt a rr &amp; a n over srz ed 1
crtr garage l oca ted on U S 35 We st &amp; shown by ap
po 1ntm Pnt Cl ll RAN NY B LACK BURN a t STROUT
REALTY 44~ 0008

II

romeroy - Modd l e port- Gallopolos, Ohoo- Poont Ple&lt;1Silnl

,&amp;,

I
I

Real Eltate - General
71

f\ J Hollr\10" AUO(

( l y d ~ Wol lk ff

PHONE 446-3643

992 7683 afler 5

1976 Grand Pt1 x P S PB &amp;
arr 65 000 mrl es very good

.
e
s
.
Busm Ss e

May 23, 1982

I

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Sa le by owner 1981 Olds
Br ougham
SUpr eme
D •ese l , '1 dr
e)(c
gas
ru s t proo fed
m il eage
cru1 se co ntrol
a.r con
d t1 on•n g am fm stereo
r ad 10 casse tt e tape pl ayer
Call 99 ? 2J d1 before 5 and

5733 304 675 6628

G R ADE mar e wr Hl lrll y
co lt 3 yea rs o ld 11 crl l s t.::~n
dard br eed &amp; r eq•s l ered
Ouc1rl cr mare 30 4 675 5812

._1_1....-·-----,

lrade 992 5170

197 2 MERCURY Marqu •s
4 door o c good co nd1t1on
See AI rggs or call 304 675

JO' 675 3818

May 23, 198 2

V;,

198 1 Chevy C1ta t1 on 17 000
m il es New co nd Will con
Sider 4 wheel dnve on

4345
4 yC'ar o ld Appn loos(l mnre

w

!1••--11111111 _ _ •• _,__

Autos for Sa l e

71

Autos for Sa l e

1615

9)03

&gt;171161350' 3
( d'-&gt;C H rlyltOC' 9 II i)SO 985

71

Liv es tock

Po onl P l easa nt,

74 Fldo s toes
76 Seine

77 Lrnger
78 Mast
79 Feelrngs
62 Sea nymph
84 Supportmg
stake
85 worthiAss
teavmgs
86 Parts ot a
loot

88 Old
Port uguese
CO inS

89 Prevarrcato1
90 Arrrves
92 Cla ndestine
94 Occu mng
every
30 years
96 War god
99 Qurck twr sl
100 Chmese
pagoda
102 ProjecHng
teeth
103 Stalemat e
lOA Eth10p1an
1111e
105 Brought ml o
ex1stence
106 Ou1el
108 Vacahon
place
109 Samanum
symbol
110 MO s ne1gh

cor
1tt Bakery
purchase
1t 2 Ollhestar s
tt4 P1gpen
116 Winter woe
lor short
11 7 Take warn

'ng

11 9 Ursrne
anrmal
120 Employed
122 We!fder
124 InqUire
125 Desert
dweller
126 Strck to
128 l•melable
abbr
129 Spnnt
131 Bridge term
132 - Day at
a T1me

133 Pu l oH
135 Weak en
138 H•gh moun
larn
139 H•ghland
garb
140 HousehOld

pel
14 1 Rear ol
vessel
142 Gradua le
deg

143 NC s nergh

oo•
t44 Oanrsh
ISland
145 European
black t}Hd
14 7 Dress
protec lor
I 49 Vas I ag e
150 Eur opean
land
t52 Brrel
t54 Arab1an
ch1ettarn
156 Krng ol
buds
158 Amount s
owed
159 Break s
suddenly
160 Separate
t61 Heavenl y
berng

DOW N

I Cra wl
2 Lasso
3 Newt
4 - C•d
5 ConduCIP.cJ
6 Sou lh
Amencan
serpenls
7 Crrnged
8 Possess
9 CT s nerg n

bor
tORecenl
11 La ter
12 Small
amnunls
13 Reply Abbr
14 Bye
15 Jomts
16 Ea t
t7 Cookout

dropm
Sun god
19 Growmg Oul
20 Chatrs
27 Sheep
29 Foo!less
3 I Brller ~e t c h
36 Dudes
3 7 SolaJ d1Sk
J9 Cook mg 111
40Walk
4t Loblolly
42 Degradl
43 Treal 101
Rover
44 Yemen
port
46 G•ve
to
!B

"'m

48 Part of
speec tl
49 S!rrk es
50 Sou r
5 1 Bundles
52 Wor shrp
53 Domams
55 Tart
56 Frrep lace
pari

57 Sum
58 Ttap
61Towar d
shell er
63 Appearance
64 Declare d

68 Lamp
70 Dned
grapes
7 t Enlhu sl,tsm
73 Lrllle

creatures
SUI IS
Invent ory
Trap s
Bndge
Three n
Toledo
8 I We1ghl Ol
lndm
83 Soak
84 Tran s
7&lt;l
75
77
78
80

greSSAS

87 Hunlrng dog
89 Envoy
90 Cemral
Ame11can
ndran
91 Pope s ve•l
92 Withered

93 Do

a

gumshoe s
100
95 Headgear

96 Passageway
97 Noc turnal
mammal
99 Funn y story
10 1 Re le• to
105 Yelp
106 P ~erce
10 1 Whrp
I 1 I Rea dy

money
I 12 Juncture
113 Oboe tor

one
115 T1me periOd
116 Evergreens
11 8 1nsec1
119 Unruly Ch! ld
12t V1sronary
I 23 Aml rak
125 Apporlron5
126 Po ke•
stak e
127 A!templ
129 Nrven at
Hollywood
130 Wrnged
131 Gutnnes5
htle

132 Ferllle
spo l5
134 Co mmon
lalm abbr
136 Soap plant
137 Jur y lt51
139 Openers
140 Apex
I 44 In muSIC
hrgh
145 Money ot
yore
146 Meadow
147 Black or

Roo
148 New
Zettlan t.J
parrot

t49 Urge on
!51 Hebrew
month
! 53 Pnnte• s
measure
155 Member ol
Parli amen t
Abbr
! 57 Arlrcle

�Pilgc- 0 -8- The

May 23, 1982

f'o m ero y- Middleport- Gallipolis , Ohio- f'oinl Pl eilsa nt , v- ·. Vii.

~ undilY T ,m cs - ~cnl'"e l

....

Friday accidents injure four
GALLIPOLIS - Four lnjwies
wasn't treated at the scene. Tile andsllghttoLane'scar,andYarOO.
were reported In separate accl·
tractor trailer was moderataly rough was ticketed for !allure to
dents Investigated Friday by the
damaged and Young's car was se- yield.
"
Gallla-Melgs Post of thestate hlgh·
verely damaged.
A series of one-vehicle wrecks
way patrol.
In Meigs County, the patrol said a
also occupied the patrol on Friday .
A 'tractor tratler rig, driven by vehicledrlvenbyJarnesW.Qulllln,
Harold Clark Jr., 21, Rt. 2, AI·
Delbert W. Huddleston, 39, Nash· . 17, Rt. L Mlddleport, was eut·
bany, was northbound on Ohio 684.
port, overturned on Its side after bound at 8 a.m. when his auto weal
eight-tenths of a rntle north of Ohio
slldlng down an embankment off off the right side of the road, thell
143, at 12: ~a.m. when his vehicle
U.S. 33 near Pomeroy at 6:10a.m. swerved to the left and struck a ut11went off the right side of the road,
Troopers said Huddleston was lty pole on Ohio 124,161 teet west of
struck an embankment and overturned, causing severe damage.
southbound when he lost control, the Rutlancl vWage Umtts.
drove off the lett side of the road
The driver and a passenger, PaThe report said a deer was killed
and struck a guard rall. The rig trick D. Fitch, 16, Rt. 1, Rutland.
at 10: 23 p.m. after being struck a
were both hurt, but not treated.
vehicle driven by Edwin R. Patton,
then went down the embankment.
Huddleston was taken to VeteThe patrol cited Stanley Berta,
31, Fort Wright, Ky., on the U.S. 35
rans Memorial Hospital by the 17, Cheshire, !Dr' DWI following a
bypass. Patton's vehicle was
Pomeroy emergency squad, but one-car crash on Ohio 554 early · sllghtly damaged.
the hospital refused to release any Saturday.
Carl 0. McClung Jr., 18, Rio
lnformatlononhls treatmentSatur·
Berta was eastbound at 1 a.m.
Grande, escaped Injury when his
day morning.
when hi$ auto went off tbe left side
vehicle went off the left side of
The patrol said Eugene C. Ma· of the road and Into a ditch, causing
Bulavllle-Porter Road, two-tenths
of a rntle south of Bulavllle-Addlson
thews, 35, Thomaston, Ga., pulled severe damage.
his tractor traller off to the right
A citation was Issued In a twoRoad, at 11:20 p.m . and struck a
shoulder of the U.S. 35 bypass at vehicle accident on Gallla COunty
tree.
Gallipolis at 11:45 a.m. due to poor Rd. 1 I;rlday atternoon.
McClung was cited tor excessive
visibility.
According to the report, Clara V.
A vehicle driven by Gertrude R. Yarborough, 40, Bidwell, was
Young, 64, Mason, attempted to southbound atl: 25 p.m., two-tenths
slow down, and then sUd and lost of a rnUe south of Ohio 160, when she
control. Her vehicle then struck the made a lett tum 1n front ot a north·
rig In the rear, continuing on and
bound vehicle driven by James G.
striking a guard raU.
Lane, 17, Galllpllls
Injured was a passenger In
Lane's car collided with the rear
Young's car, Gorma Gardner, 70, of the Yarborough vehicle. There
New Haven, who apparently was moderate damage to her car

~im...- $-ttdintt Section ~

Business
·ft

f

r.Aay 23, 1982

•

Automobile Club offers new
legal protection for members
PORTSMOUTH
The
Automobile Club of Southeastern
Ohio is setting up what its considers
to be a lega l milestone this month by
sponsoring the Family Legal Protec·
tor plan for its 65,000 members.
It's one of the first Automobile
Clubs, nationwide, to provide its
members with a legal plan to protect
all fami ly members. The club is also
offering a free simple wi ll I one a

year per family I as part of the
program.

THIS WEEK'S
SPECIALS

CONGRATUlATIONS FROM TRUMAN- Then·
Corp. Edward Bennett of Middleport receives congraiUlatlons from President Harry S. Truman In a
White House ceremony In 1945. Bennett was honored

by the 33rd chief executive lor meritorious service In
World War D. Now a major, BeooeU wiD return to
Middleport thlll Friday to honor another of the village's military sons, Gen. James Harilnger.

Maj. Edward Bennett to return to
Middleport for celebration
Bennett was honored dunng half
tnnc of the Middleport-Jackson foot·
ball ga nw in September of !945. Maj.
Whipple. who accompanied Bennett
to Middll'port. said. "The only
monument Wl' cdn erect to Ed Ben-

Bennett, who now resides in
California. plans to attend Friday's
Rotary dinner, participate in the
parade and festivities Saturday and
attend the Saturday night alumni
gathering.
The fact Bennett 1s coming a ll the
way fr om Ca lifornia to help honor
Gene ral Hartinger shows the esteem
Genera l Hartinger holds all over the

nl'tt 1s &lt;:1 just &lt;:~ml honorable peace .''

nCJtion.

President then said. "I would much

Hy LIONEL BOGGS

ra ther h&lt;:~ ve that meda l around my

For tht.· Timl·s-St' ntint.•l

nl'ck than be President of the United

MIDDLF.PORT - Maj. Edward

SI.:-J!I'S."

A. Renndt will rl'lurn to M1ddleporl

Fnday . May 28. to twlp honor Gen.
J(lrncs HarllnJ.!l'r .

In Vl'bruary of 1!145 PFC Bennett .
a M1ddll'port na tl\' l', wnn the
Conf.( re ss1unol Medal nf Honor whl'n
ht.• s in,.;le-hand!'dly dt•rtlll~d uu\ a

German strong p0111t by wieldmg a

HERS
'19.95

HIS
'39.95

For Today and
All Your Tomorrows

GJJiamond
GJJridal
SETS

knifl' . nfll'. nfle butt and piStOL

-

the natwn 's h1 glll'st &lt;:~ward till the
then-Curp. Bennett 111 thr Rosl' Ga rden at tlw White House . The

-

We Have The
Perfect Gift For The

h

•

Sets bond
GALLIPOLIS - Bond for Billy
A. Campbell, 20. Kerr. was set at
$50,1100 Friday tn Gallla County
Common Pleas Court
Campbell , charged with attempted breaking and ent ering, was returned to Gallla County Thursday
night by Sheriff James MontgC&gt;mery after he waived extradition In
LoulsvUie, Ky ., earlier last week.
The defendant had been held by
authorities there since last weekend . Judge Richard Roderick
Issued an arrest warrant for Campbell last month when he failed to
appear to testify In the breaking
and entering trial of Donald E.
White. 24, R1. 1, Gallipolis.
Both have been charged by the
Gallla Coun ty Sheriff's Department In connection with a break-In
at North Gallla High School In October 1981.
Ca mpbell had not posted bond by
Friday afternoon and was lodged In
the Gallla County JaiL
In other matters, a money suit

rn

1.'1
• • • • • • • • • • •' ""'
&amp;.;.J ,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

President H&lt;:trry Trum&lt;:m p11lnt'd

•

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•i•••• High School Graduate •1•••
•!•.... Attending Colle?,e •••••••
•!•

Choose from:

•

TI)e American Heri1age Dioionary

matc hed f01 ever. .. g1ve each

NewC:ollegeEdirion ..... .......... ..
. $12.95 · · ·
••• The Randofl\ House College Dictionary
•
With Bad Speller's Dictionary Free ................ ...............$14.95 •
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other the lOY ol perlectty matched
bndal jewelry that are also forever.
Choose from these - or many
other - classiC new looks . Each

•

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-

INGELS FURNITURE
and JEWELRY
Middleport

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~

ELBERFELD$

POMEROY - The theft of cultivators from the Hill !arm at Letart
Falls Is under Investigation by the
Meigs County S h eriff's
Department.
Don R HW said the Items were
taken sometime between Monday
and Wednesday An Investigation Is
continuing, the department said .

':

mond: each quality crafted in 10
kt. white or yellow gold
Featured at

••••

The Alcove

Probe theft

GALLIPOLIS - It was lncor·
rectly reported In Friday's Gallipolis Dally Tribune that VIcki L.
Fisher, Missy L. Fisher and James
E. Fisher, all of Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
were Injured In a two-vehicle accl·
dent In Addison Twp. Thursday
night.
The Injured were all Identified
Friday as VIcki L. Cain, Missy L.
Cain and James E. Cain.
They were travelling In a vehicle
driven by Edward T. Cain, 37, Rt. 1,
Gallipolls, which collided with a
vehicle driven by Gordon G.
Fisher, 58, R!. 1, Gaillpolls, at 8: 20
p.m. Thursday on Georges Creek
Road.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
state highway patrol said Fisher
was cited for left Qt center tn the
tncldent. The Tribune regrets the ·
·error.

brought to life with a stunning d1a·

•.+ 42 Coun Sr

wasfUed
Frldaytncourt.
Dr. Robert
H. Jennings, Hunting- 1
ton, W.Va., claims In the suit Karen
Beam, formerl y Karen Saunders,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, signed a financial
agreement with Jennings on Dec.
15, 1979 to pay for any professional
services delivered by Jennings to
the defendant.
Jennings claims Beam owes him
$00). He seeks that amount as a settlement, according to the suit .

Correction

Now that your lives are perteclly

.:.

Only 8 Days Left
for 12.8% Financing
Ends May 31
1982 B ICK R GAL,......_...

\'\1J

two 3-packs of Hanes

men's or boys' underwear.

Make this Father's Day one yo.u will both
remember. Dad gets his favorite top·quality
Hanes underwear and you get
$3.00 back by mall. Choose from
the entire Hanes linesty les and fabrics sure
to please any Dad!

Quality That Lasts
Offer expires July 9

In

Get your Free Mailer and particulars
Me.n 's and ·
Boys' Dept. on 1st floor. Sale includes all men's and
boys' Hanes Underwear-.

ELBERFELDS IN POM

.
glass, air conditioner, sport mirror~, whitewall tires, AM· FM. stereo, plus
a lot more. Brand new. Also 12.8 GMAC finan~ing .
·

Stock No. 767

•.9197

TOTAL

PRICE

25 more Buicks &amp; ·P onti:CICi
.~t~ ·

· .: · .l, ble .savl-ngs·
'.

TO REOPEN SOON - The Gallipolis Pennylare
s&amp;ore, vacant since mid-April, wiD reopen Its doors In
the near future under the auspices of Ohio Valley
Supennarkets, doing bwilne88 as Ohio VaDey Food·

land. Local Foooflanc! 11181U11er Bob EaaOnan said
the Point Ple8881111 Pennylare wiD also be opeued
again as a Food! and outlet. Both s&amp;oree clo8ed when
their owners, 'lborofare, 801d Its stores In a bid to get
ou~ of the grocery bnslce88

·Local Pennyfare stores to
reopen under Foodland banner
GALLIPOLIS - After more than
two months of speculation , it's now
official: Ohio Valley Supermarkets,
doing business as Ohio Valley
Foodland, will reopen the Gallipolis
and Point Pleasant Pennyfare stores
under the Foodland banner.
Bob Eastman, manager of the
Gallipolis Foodland store at 520
Jackson Pike, said the reopenings
will be scheduled as soon as
redecorating on both stores is complete .
The manager said some details on
the lease of the Point Pleasant store
have yet to be worked out, although
he indicated they would be settled.
He said remodeling on the Gallipolis
store was expected to start in the tal·
ter part of this past week.
Eastman, a Meigs County native,
has been managing the Foodland
establishment since its opening in
March 1980. He was the Kroger store
manager in Gallipolis in 1969-70.
Both Pennyfare outlets have been
closed since mid-April, a month af·
ter it was announced Thorofare,
Peimyfare' s Youngstown-based

owner, had sold the majority of tts 52
stores throughout Ohio, West
Virginia and Pennsylvania. At the
time, a Thorofare official said "we
haven't been making any mon ey in
the grocery business for the past
year."

The firm closed 10 of its stores in
Ci ncinna ti in 1981.
In March, Eastman confirmed he
had been approached by Fox
Grocery Co. of Pittsburgh, to whom
Thorofare reportedly sold most of its
stores, about the possibility of
acquiring the Gallipolis store.
Fox supplies the Ga)lipolis
Foodland store from its Milton,
W.Va. warehouse.
Although the Point Pleasant store
was announced as one of the few
which had not been sold by
Thorofare, it still closed . The lease
owner, Pleasant Valley Hospital, announced no plans for the building.
Thorofare said in March it had
acquired Wii..Car Enterprises, a
wholesale distributor of health and
beauty products. The firm felt the
change would be more profitable to
them than the grocery business.

"We believe we are offering our
members a product that will be as
valuable to them as their medical
cove rage," according to John Irwi n,
club president.
"Our members now can fi ght back
at large firms with faulty products,
at dishonest landlords or at other
people who are trying to take ad·
vantage of them, " he continued.
"Club members now have the ability
to fight back and win w1thout the
high cos! of lega l representation ."
For one low, annual fee of $69 , the
Family Protector plan provides a
club member with unlimited easy

CINCINNATI -,AP I - About 30
farmers in southwestern Oh io,
southeastern Indiana and northern
Kentucky are wondering whether
they ever will be paid by Queen City
Grain Inc., which has filed a petition
for bankruptcy.
The grain company, once Cin·
facility, filed for bankruptcy in U.S .

cin nati' s

second-largest

gra in

stock cle rk to ma na ger of severa l

Bankruptcy Court in Cinci nnati on

stores in Ohio, Kentucky and West

May 6, leaving the fanners and

Virginia. He was later zone ma nager

about 70 other businesses unpaid.

of 13 Kroger outlets in the southern
part of the Mountain State.
The Foodland store, which em·
ploys around 35 people, opened two
years ago with a line of fresh meats,
produce and dairy in addition to
other grocery items.
Eastman said he and his wife.
Sheila, who also manages the store,
returned to Gallia County becaitse
they felt there were good business
opportunities in the area.
" We' re appreciative of the
customer's support and plan to be
active in continuing community SU()port," Eastman said.
In Gallipolis, the new Foodland
store represents the second store
reopening this year. The A and P,
which closed down last December,

The company listed debts at $2.7
million and assets at $248,249.
Of the $2.7 million in debts, $1.3

rei ncarnate~

Reserve Board.
The common stock of Union Commerce is traded on the New York
Stock Exchange. The preferred
stock of Union Corrunerce is traded
over-the-counter. The tender offer
would be made only after the filing
of definitive offering documents
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
The agreements also provide for a
merger whereby Union Commerce
will become a subsidiary of Central
Bancorporation. As a result of the
merger, Union Commerce common
stockholders whose shares are not
purchased for cash in the tender of·
!ice will receive for each common
share a $19.'Z!i combination of Cen-

adeq uatd y handled phmle, the •nat·

nwnber of family dependents. Some
of the program's highlights are :
- Members may use a toll-free
nwnber to call their "family at·
turney" and obta in help on any
covered legal matter.
- A "Fami ly Proteetor Attorney"
is on ca ll 24 hours should a covered
indiv idual or h1s or her dependent
rc'quire inunediate legal advice that
can't be deferred unt11the next da y.
- Covered individuals may submit
simp le 12·3 pagel standard

kr will be rderrL'd to a " pcmel &lt;:~! ­
turne y" who's " rt.•asnn&lt;:lbly dos(•" to
the covL·retJ individual .

doeumcnts and contracL"i to their

famil y attorney fur review .

- The family attorney will plate
phone cal!s or write letters to a lh trd

party in behalf of a covered indi vidual when the feels that such action will resolve a matter promptly .
- P repa ra ti on of a simple will is

included in the plan cost. For ot hers

million is in SL'l'U rcd claims, and $1 .4
million involves unsecured claims.
Som e asset.-; haVL' e~lrea d y been

seized by Fifth Third Bank of Cincinnati,

sa id

attorney

Thoma s

Geygan, who has been appointed
tru::ilee for the cor poration 111 l ht•
bankruptcy proceedi ngs .
The second secured cn•ditor 1s

Queen City Grain Co.. which

IS

owned by Je~mt• s Bobb. H1s wife.
Geneva, ts listed on federal papers
as president and director of QUl'l'll

City Gra in Inc.
Queen City Grain Co. IS not thl'
same as Queen City Gram Inc. and is
not involved 111 the bankruptcy

PLEASANT - Dr
Gt·or l! lann&lt;-~ T. Burns wllll)l' npl·IHJl L'
lwr pral't\l"l' Ill pl'dlat r ws ;tt
Pleasant Valky Huspital on Jul v 7.

In this featun' of the program. all
fees, eosts and exJicnst.•s uwurred by
the panel attorney CJI"l' to be paid by

the covered individual. Pwwl attorneys have agreed to work fur
eovered individuals at 25 JWrcent uff
till' eusto111ary fl'l' for sud1 legal
matt l!rs.
lrwtn semi this i:Jilows ttw dVer&lt;Jge
AAA lllt.'Jllber to nnw t.'XI'erc•se the1r
legal righL'i dt a lnw I'Os1. Sldt1stics
havt.• shown that 80 pcreent of illl
legal prubh·ms can bt.• su lved before
they become 1naj ur issut's.
·'We expect the plan to save our
Jnl'mbers muncy by preventi 1 1~
costly expenses whl.'n the settlement
ntn

bt.•

made

Ill

the

initutl

negotiation slagl', ··he sa1d.

pnx.·eeliings.

Some businesses had outstanding
bills ranging fro111 $22 to $302,000 .
They incl ude ulil1ty compamcs,
other gre~in companil's. printin~
eompanics, deli very firms. tru&lt;.' k
&lt;HH.i tru ck-r epc.-ur businesses &lt;Jnd acco unting firms.

The farmers wen· owed p&lt;JymL•nts
ranging frum $307 to $58 ,948. for a
total of about $553.000 .
Some of the f&lt;jJ"J1!Prs whu stored
gra in w1th the gra1n company said
they don't know how they will pa y

their bills.

h~rth

lu 16

yt· ar ~.

ApptHilllnL'Ilb c·an

lw 1Jl&lt;:lll1 · b!· 1·al\mg 675-1095.

Dr. Burns is a nati ve of Wcn·ton,
W. Va., and is il g rad uall' of Wes t
Vir,L! inia Unt Vl'rsity and Wt·s t
Vir!.!ifli(l Univl'I'Sity Sl'hool of

Medicine.
She cnmplt·tcd hl'r inlt'rnsiHp Cit
Wl'sl Virginia Unin.'rsty Hnspll.ctl
Dt&gt;partnll'nl of Pl•til&lt;i tr ws Junt· 30,

in April as a Pi1..:.

1980. Sh&lt;' also will havl' &lt;'OIIIplell'd

Joins staff

tral Bancorporation 15.25 percent
convertible subordinated deben·
lures and cash if available under the
terms of the merger agreements .
The proportion of debentures and
cash will depend on the number of
shares purchased by Central Ban·
corporation in the tender offer.
Preferred stockholders of Union
Commerce whose shares are not
purchased in the lender offer will
also be entitled to receive the same
combination of Central Ba n·
corporation debentures and cash.
The agreements penni! Central
Bancorporation to elect not to cancel
the Union Commerce preferred
stock and would remain out·
standing.

price prt•v :-~i l s, regardless of the

torney.
The plan el iminates the guesswork
of where to KO for help and hnw

PO INT

CAROLYN MeCOMBS

CINClNNATI- The Central Ban·
corporation, Inc., a $2.5 billion bank
holding company headquartered in
Cincinnati, recently announced that
its board of directors and the board
of directors of Union Commerce
Corp., a $1.6 billion Cleveland based
bank holding company , ha ve
unanimously approved agreements
pursuant to which a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Central Bancorporation will make a cash tender
offer of $19.75 per share for 51 per·
cent of both the outstanding corrunon
and preferred shares of Union Commerce.
The offer is subject to certain conditions, including approval of the
purchase of shares by the Federal

much it will cost. The same low

111 the fami ly, the prcp&lt;:tritlwn of a
simple will can bt· oblamed Hl a
spec tal r cdw..·t•d cost of only $30.
- If the attorney Lktermines th&lt;Jt a
il'gal nwtler l'Xl'L'l't.b the plan's
l'ovcragl' !units and cannot bt•

Dr. Bums to join PVH

Pac establishment.
The closing of the Point Pleasant
Pennyfare meant local shoppers had
no major retail outlet left in town.

Holding firm offers to buy out
leading Cleveland banking firm

to their own personal plan

" Family Protector," or program at-

Leading grain finn bankrupt

Eastman, who spent 23 years with
Kroger's, worked his way up from

was

acce~

GALLIPOLIS - Ca rol yn Me·
Combs, Rt. I, Northup, has joined
the staff of Rap hael 's Hair
Rt•medies al44 Court St., Ga llipolis.
A recent ~ raduate of Buckeye
Hills Ca ret•r Center, Carolyn has
completed the required number of
hours ~nd fini shed second 1n her
class. She intends to furth er her
education in the cos metology anti

hairstyling field .
Additional tra inin g will be
provided at Raphael 's by Cindy Sexton, the manager, "nd Kim J ackson,
ass istant manager.

her two-yt•ar residl'lli'Y prugra111 Ill
llt'dia tri cs at llw West V1l'J1 l!lla
Un i\' t•rsity Hosptlal Dt·partmt·nl 1lf
Pedte~lricians on Junt· 30.

Slll' ts a Ca ntl1d&lt;Jtl' Me mllt'r of Iht •
Anll'rican Acctdemy uf Pediatri1·~.

Burns' offi tl' hours wiJI be 9 a.lll.-5
p.lll . Munday , Tuesday, Wednesday
ami Friday CJlll! 9 a.m.-9 p.m. un

Thursdays. Shl' will sperializl' n1
J)l'diCJlric and adoksn•nt t.'CJrl' from

Passes exam
POMEROY - Scott E. Woodring,
138 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, was
among Ohioans who recently passed
the qualifying exam of the Hearing
Aid Dealers and Fillers Li censing
Board and are licensed to pracl1ce
hearing aide dealing and fitting in
the state.

NEW CHAIRMAN - Dr.
Jack Balles, Gallipolis optometrist, has been appointed chairman of the public health
committee of the Ohio Optomet·
ric A880Cia&amp;lon. The committee
works with the state publlc
health 8880Ciatlon to ell8ure
Ohioans' v18ual needs are cared
for by city and county health
clll!le5. Balles Is also a member
ot the optometric association's
pubUc lnfonnatlon IUid awiU'ds
committees.

Selected to
committee
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Brig.
Gen. RS. Kern, division engineer of
the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers'
Ohio River division, has been selected to serve on tbe Board of
Engineers for Rivers and Harbors
(BEIUIJ at Fort Belvoir, Va.
The seven-member board serves
as an Independent review agency of
water resources projects for the cor- ·

ps.

Its reconunendations on pr06pective projects are forwarded to the
chief of engineers f(l' further
proceasing by the Secretary of the
Anny, the Office of Management
and Budget, and Congress, for consideratlO!l.
As division engineer of the Ohio
River division, headquartered in
ClnclnnaU, Kern is' responaible for
corps ·water resources activities In
the Ohio River baaln, and mj)itary
construction in the states of Ohio,
Kentucky, Indiana, _Illinois and
Michigan.
',
A native of Richmond, Ind., Kern
ill

•lso a member of the Mjssisslppi

River COmmission.

. ,\

- --·-,--

a--

CJIECK COLLitC'DON BY A$- I.IVmenBuk
11!11 Savtap
Pemeloy, ... h III Jkl
vice ""'.....
ai lime ....... to ClCIIIeti
ciJeclra a • I , . de111 tiT II&amp; tile biiJII. A ,a- JII'O'
Wled "' BepcOHp NalhuJ ...... (Wumbna, col-

ce:,
'the---

Jedll 'dJeeltl .._ Fumen .U. c1111J for furiber
pt« '•&amp;IDO!I!!mb-. oftey IN.._.~

W.llm'aft Co biiiJb tiJrou&amp;llou&amp; Ohio and the COUJitry
for~ ft'a- ol JJJa1Q' aervlcee the ballk wiD

llllopt In the 11811, MlOOIIIIal Co Theodore Reed, bank
pr dfe!i .. tbe above,._.,, Reed, aecond from lelt,
llala cl!ecb Co Jollll Doney, BaacOhlo vice pl'flll.
cleat,

u tile GIIJ!a.Melp J1ePoaa1 Airport.

�Page-E-2

Agriculture and our community

Center 100 years
old this• year
By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
Gallla County
GALUPOUS - In 1982, the OhiO
Agricultural Research and Development Center w1ll be 100 years old. To
corrunemorate its first century of
service to the p€Ople of the state,
nation, and world, the OARDC 1s
planning a four-Jay open house at
Wooster June 17-20. Research
faciliti es, laboratones, and fi eld
plots w1ll be open for mspcct10n w1th
many achvlhes planned during the
special observance. The four-day
Op€n house w11l be ca lled Centenmal
Showcase. All Oh1oans are mv1ted to
participate in the celebratiOn .
The Center's headquarters ca mpus at Wooster will be open to
visitors from 1 to 8 p.m. all four days
of the Op€n house, mclud1ng Saturday and Sunday, when spec1al
displays and acllvllles are planned
for urban consumers. Walking tours
of the central campus and wagon
tours of nearby research umts and
fi eld plots w11l be sched ul ed
throughout Centenmal Showcase
hours each day
If you're lookmg for a new 1dea on
electric fencmg, then talk to
Lawrence Burdell out 1n Raccoon
Township
I saw Lawrence and h1s dad the
other day along U.S Route 35 JUS!
west of R10 Grande installing a new
electric fence around some f1 elds
along the n ght s1de of the highway
as yo u go west from the JUnction
there at 325.
Lawrence told me the fencm g 1s a
new development from New Zea land
and 11 is of the h1gh tensile stee l type.
The charging umt can handle up to
t5 miles of fence.
The fence cons1sts of three strands
of smooth w1re and Lawrence explained that the m1ddle wife serves
as a ground wtre.
A Jot of people ha ve had bad exp€n ence with electnc fence, but
La wrence te lls me he hasn't ove r th~

better success w1th th1s new lyp€ of
fence .
Several folks are settmg tobacco
this week and I want to remmd you
that we have a good llstmg of the
Umversity of Kentucky Weed Control Recorrunendat10ns for tobacco
fields ava ilable through the Gallla
County ExtensiOn Office. Everyone
doesn't use chem1cal weed control in
tobacco f1 elds, but 1f you do you may
want to look at th1s list of six
chem•ca ls, the weeds they control ,
and instructions and suggestions for
their usc .
While you're at it also ask for our
ilstwg of msect icide recommendations for tobacco beds and
f1elds, we'll be gald to send you a
copy of that too.
I' ve Inspected several tobacco
plant beds m the last few days and
received many, many phone calls
about tobacco plant bed problems.
The most corrunon complamt is
plants are turning yellow 10 portiOns
of the plant bed . I feel there's a
strong likelihood that much of what

g1ving hearty wa terings like 300-500

ga llons of water p€r bed and you're
still hav mg th1s yellowmg problem,
then I thmk you could rule out fertilizer damage.
I'm seemg a Jot of cold damage
that occurred several weeks ago and
th1s 1s md1cated by the cuppmg of
the leaf - usually cupp1ng upward
and you'll fmd some browmng of the
leaf margm

In surrunary, •f you're ha vmg
tobacco plant bed problems I would
first make sure that you're getting a
good thorough watering of that bed
and if that has been the case I would
use e1ther F'erbam or Streptomycm
to help combat d1sease problems.

yea rs and 1s look1ng forward to even

Foreign diseases problem
WASHINGTON (API- It seems
every time you turn around the
Agriculture Department says It's
battling a new wave of foreign diseases and pests which could pose a
threat to the nation's livestock and
poultry.
In separa!f annoumcements on
Tuesday,lh?'department said:
-Baby )'ellow-naped Amazon
parrots once again havecarrted exotlc Newcastle disease to southern
Calltornla.
-An outbreak of screwwonns In
Mexlro Is threa tenlng Texas livestock and pets for the !lrst time In a
year.
-The Urdted States, Mexico and

Canada are helping Halt! eradicate
Atrtcan swine fever to prevent tts
spread.
Offtctals satd two baby parrots
bought by a shopkeeper from a
peddler were foumd to have exotic
Newcastle disease and that all150
birds In the store will be destroyed
to keep the virus !rom spreading.
The disease can cause high death
rates among poultry flocks If It
spreads. It poses no risk to humans
who eat eggs or poultry, although
the virus can cause an eye Infection
In people who handle diseased
birds.

Breeding areas must be eliminated
in order to control pesky mosquitos
GALUPOLIS - Who would not
ag ree that rnosqu1toes are pests ?

Gerald E. Vallee, M.D., rermnds
everyone that mosqwto bites arc not
only Irritating, they can ca rry
disease such as encephalitis
To help reduce the mosqwto
popul ation, eliminate breedmg
areas around the horne. Mosquitoes
usually breed m water, but do not be

misled . Even puddles as small as
those formed m footpnnts can
produce a crop of mosquitoes 111 ju't
four days
Eluninate standing water. Get nd
of old t~res, cans, bottles, buckets,
drums and other contamers wh1ch
allow water to stand. Repair leak y
plp€5, outside faucets and other
causes of water puddles. Eaves and
gutters should be kept free of debns

1n order to dram properly
Wadrng pools should be ernpt•ed at
least weekly and clean water added.
When not m use, they should be
stored. empty, inside. Water bowls
for anunals should be empt1ed and
refilled dally Scrub b1rd baths and
refill tw1ce weekly .
Notify the hea lth department of
places where water stands such as
road d1lches, storm sewers, p1les of
cans. t~res and other trash. or pooled
water from septic tanks. Unusually
h1gh numbers of biting mosquitoes
should be reported to the health
department also.
Literature about mosqUitoes and
the1r control is available from the
Gallia County Health Department at
446-4612, extenswn 4ll.

-

Soviets not buying ~ny grain from Argent~a
By DON KENDAU.
AP Farm Wt1ter
WASHINGTON (API - American farmers nnay not see any slgnlflcant benetlts In their grain export
situation as a result of the Falklands Islands crisis, according to
one Agriculture Department
expert.
The Soviet Union has halted at
least temporarUy Its purchases of
grain !rom Argentina.
But James Parker of tlle department's Foreign Agricultural Ser.vice said Tuesday that the Soviet
Urdon has not bought slgnl.!lcant
amoumts of grain !rom Argentina
since January. Argentina Invaded
the Falkland Islands on Aprtl 2.
For that matter, he satd, the Soviets have not bought any grain
!rom the Urdted States for two
months.
"It's got a lot more to do with
their buying strategy than anything
related to the Falklands," he told
The Associated Press.
Parker, deputy director for analysts In the agency's grain and feed

division, was asked to comment on
a British Broadcasting Corp. report
that the Soviet Urdon has temporarUy stopped buying grain !rom Argentina, possibly as a result of the
Falklands crisis.
Less than half of this year's expected grain contracts have been
signed by Moscow, the BBC said.
It noted that this was "probably
of more Immediate economic concern" to Argentina than Common
Market trade sanctions protesting
the Invasion of the Falkland
Islands.
,The Soviet Urdon Is the largest
purchaser of Argentine grain.
Parker served as U.S. agrtcultural counselor In Buenos Aires before returning to the Agriculture
Department last December. Prtor
to his assignment In Argentina In
February 1\m, he was an assistant
U.S. agricultural attache In
London.
One reason cited In the BBC report for the lull In Soviet grain buyIng could be the cancellation by
Lloyds, the International insurance

Homemaker's circle

Patterns worth repeating
By BETTIE CLARK
Extension Agent

we are seeing 1s due to fertilizer in-

JUry brought about mainly by the
dry weather. If you have been giVIng
your plant beds frequent light
watenngs I would susp€ct this even
when you have fertilized prop€rly . If
you fertilize prop€rly and have been

Ma y 13. 1982

May 23, 1982

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Home Economi~s

Gallia County
GALUPOUS - The hours of stitching and the creativity that go into
the makmg of a quilt result in a
valuable piec·e of needlework . Just
how valuable a quilt can be came as
a shock and surpnse to many of
those who attended the Quilt Show
on Thursday, May 3, 1982, at the
Ga llipolis Christian Church on Rt.
588

Among the 60 some qu1lts
exhibited many are valued at $1 ,000
or more. We estimated there was
well over $10,000 worth of qmlts m
the exh1bit.
It could not have been an easy job
for the judges to choose fi ve quilts to
be mcl uded in the Quilt Show in
Athens from June 5 through June 20
This show will be at the Da1ry Barn
wh1ch IS located on Dairy Lane 1n
Athens, Ohio, just one-half mile
from the Ohio University Inn .
The show will feature 78 quilts that
have been chosen by the judges from
all the nine counties of the Jackson
Area Extension Service. Admission
to the show in Athens is $1.50 for
adults and $1 for semor citizens and
children. Children under six years
are admitted free. Each p€rson who
exhibited a qu11t, for comp€titwn, m
the Gallia County show w11l receive
a Jetter from the dairy barn that w1U
admit them to the show free.
The judges, Virginia Allaire Beals
and Susan Loughridge chose Janet
Ludlum's "Trip Around the World"
quilt, Bermce Wood's ''Japanese
Lantern'' verswn of the Log Cabin
Design , Georgiana Jenkins' applique qu1ll, Darlene Russell's "Old
Maid's Ramble" and Mildred Haris'
"POinsettia" qu1lt to be included in
the " Patterns Worth Rep€ating"
quilt show.
An 1mportan! part of all the Quilt
Shows m the nine count1es of the
Jackson Area was the Jesson given
by Miss Patsy Glass, Area Home
Econom1st on storing and ca ring for
quilts. Her talk was most interestmg
and mformative. Following are
some of her suggestions.
Quilts can be stored flat or rolled;
sp€cial attention should be given to
how and where they are stored. Use
well-washed cotton muslin or percale or new tissue paper to protect
qui lts from dust and light. Avoid
plastics, cardboard boxes, and unsealed wood such as the interior of a
cedar chest. Old pillow cases make
good covers.
Quilts should be stored within the
hvmg area of the home where little
variation in temperature and

umderwrtters, of war risk coverage
on any ships trading with Argentina or satung In the South Atlantic.
The cancellation takes effect May
'n.
However, Parker said the British
war zone annoumcements have
been "very careful about what that
Implies for commercial shipping"
between Argentina and other
coumtrtes.
"Grain shipments continue very,
very heavy," he said. "Aprtl shipments were a record for the month
of Aprtl, and shipments In tlle first
half of May have been very
strong."
Asked In the telephone Interview
whether the Soviet Urdon will continue to be a good customer of Argentina and the Urdted States,

Irrespective of the Falklands crisis,
Parker replied: '"There Is no reason to doubt otherWise, unless the
military aspects of the situation

balloon drarnatJcally."
The Soviet Urdon, which has been
plagued by three poor harvests In a
row, Is expected to Import a record
43 million meb'lc tons of grain In the
International marketing year
which will end on June 00.
According to cun-ent Agrtculture
Department projections, the United States will provide about 1.5.3
million tons of the
with Argentina supplying 12.7 mllllon tons.
'
In 1981-&amp;, by comparison,
U.S.
grain shipments to the Soviet Union
totaled 8 million metrtc tons, and
Argentina's shipments 11.2 million,
according to the department's

!?tal,

Conhay's Landing-Do you know where it is?
County Historical Society, was chanColeman doesn't say 1! was south
neled to Henny Evans.
from or north of Ga lhp o h ~. but J1m
Myers says that if 11 was across the
JAMES C. COLEMAN, 4547 Ohio R1ver in V1rgm1a 1! would be
Lassassier Drive, Pensacola, F'la ., the mouth of Crab Creek 1f across
32404, wrote:
from Chambersburg. If e1ght miles
north of Ga lllp o l ~&gt; or east or west.
Ourtng fh e Ctvil War my great
g randfath er, John James Cratg , J1m Myers hasn't f1 gured 11
m oved

ht s

f am d y

fr om

( raz1n~ llOW bl'lllg l' UilS Hit'IT~l)

ONE MOilN JNG 011 the way to
S('hool I took a sl1ght detour and the

seal uf lilY pants t'aUl!h t 1111 thl' bcu·b
of a ft'IH't' as I lT&lt;Jwlt·d through,
l'&lt;:.IUSIIl~ a lllilSSIVL' ll'Gil (~dl lllg Ulll&lt;-lll~]t•d and usu1g tile safdy p1n that
lw ld Ill\ .'&gt; illrt f1 ont tu)..! dht·r tu ptn
tilt' tt"&lt;~r Jll&lt;tdt · lnt· a ft·w nunuks lct lL'
to t'lass Upu11 l'lllt ' llll l! tht · ruom I

Nt c hola s

County tn western Vtr gt n ta (now
t/Ve-st V 1rginial to Ohto Th ey li ved tn
Ga lli a Co unt y from som e t• me •n
1863 to ar ound August, 1865, w hen
th ey returned to N•ch olas Co unt y
We ar e told that the:/· llved on a farm
a t Con hay 's Landmg about eight
miles from Ga llipoli s.

F'rom A. Don Pope in Orlando:

SOME GOSSIP m;;-y already h;m• !u·ard M1 ss (;lt •tlfl rt'Jtt .trk , · I Sl'L'
told you th1s. I was m M1ss Glen11's ;. tlu'rL' a IJI!ll' bt·lllnd " M,\ rdorl
second grade 1n the bUlldmg I razed I \\as · Yvu \\(lllldn't 1f I 'd h;-td dnoltwr
that was next to Washmgton School safdy pill "

figures.

F'OOD HAS HAD a big part to play in this building's history since it
was put up in 1862. During the Civil Wa r two different restaurants were

located here. Many old-timers will recall the names of Grube Grocery
and tht• Roosevelt Ca fe, which were also located at 39 Court.

of the House Agriculture Committee called upon Blook to "reverse
and repudiate" the policy.
Rep. Kika de·la Garza, D-Texas,
said that unless Block scrapped the
checks "the Agriculture Committee nnay need to thoroughly explore
this Issue and the threatltnnaypose
to effective research."
'
Alter he learned of Block's order
to stop the checks, de Ia Garza said
It was "a wise decision and I commend Secretary Block for acting on
the Issue."
There had been published reports
about the department's new poUcy :
of trying to nnake certain that ap- :
polntees to Its sclentlllc grant review panels were ordy people
whose "philosophical views" are
compatible with those of the Rea- .
gan administration.
'

Court Street structure
erected in 1862

hwnidity occurs. The area should be
cleaned regularly and checked for
insect infestation. Insecticides may
be used in the storage area but must alrlng.
not come in contact with the fabric .
But Block on Thursday ordered
If you have a problem with moths on an lrrunedlate end to the checks ala wool quilt, your County Extension ter a stal! meeting In which It was
Home Economist can provide in- decided a Wrong Interpretation had
fornnation on t'reatments that will been put on a federal rule governnot harm the quilt.
log advisory committees.
Qmlts can be rolled onto a large
Gene Hemphill, an aide, said that
l fi vc~inc h diameter) tube covered
the Office of Management and
w1th cotton fabri c or tissue paper . Budget had Issued "some kind of
The quilt should be rolled loosely, corrununlcatlon" last year which
with no wrinkles, and with the top to related to review panels and how
the inside if it is a pieced qu1lt to nominees should be checked out.
prevent strain on the connecting slit"Our people here, admittedly, I
ches . Use a tube longer than the wid- guess, Interpreted this to mean that
th of the qu1lt, and do not fold the besides security checks, the polttlqmlt before rolling. Protect with a cal backgroumd checks would be
taken , too," he said.
cotton dust cover.
Folding a quilt for flat storage
But Hemphill added that of the
causes stress on the quilted fabric , scientists named to review panels
WASHINGTON (AP) - Corn '
stitches, and batting placement. You so far "you can't find any correlaplanting In the major producing
can lessen the strain by folding as lion at all between party lines. states by mid-May was 69 percent •
,
few limes as possible, padding the There's a significant number !rom
completed, 5 percentage points
folds with crumpled tissue paper, both parties. "
ahead of progress a year ago, says ·
and changing the folds as least once
Block, he said, asked whether the
the government's Joint Agricultua year. F'old off-center and in a dif- political background checks had
ral Weather FacWty.
,
ferent place each time. Use wide any bearing on the scientists' quail"Progress was ahead of normal :
shelves placed close together to flcatlons to serve on the panels, and
In all states except Iowa, Kansas, 1
avmd stackmg heavy quilts on top of If not, why are the checks being
Minnesota, Nebraska and South ·
each other. Cover folded quilts with pel1ormed .
Dakota," the !acWty said Tuesday
a cotton fabnc dust cover.
"Nobody could give him an
In
Its weekly report. "Rain on the
· qu1'Its· for storage 1s
· no t answer," Hemphill said. "So he
Han~mg
Great Plains delayed planting and
recorrunended, even on a padded said, 'lets's stop doing tt."'
pushed progress behind schedule."
illlr, because it creates severe strain
Earlier In the day, the chairman
on the quilt stitches.
.-------------------------Display
Although quilts were meant to be
use d and displayed, some
precautions should be followed to
prevent damage . Avoid direct
PLOW . CUL I IVA I UK . :JU UK 4U IVIDWlR
sunlight, constantly lighted rooms,
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
and extreme temp€ratures and
hwmdity. Do not display a quilt on
WHEN YOU BUY A GRAVELY WALK
an outer wall or near a heating vent.
BEHIND TRACTOR AT 1~81 PRir.FS
Never hand a quilt by nails, staples

Hy JAMES SANDS
GALUPOLIS - The buildmg at 39
Court Street that today houses
Jimanetti's Pizza was erected in
1862 for c harles ,
Simon, who was
a n Immi gr a nt
.
1
from that part of '
_, - ·
Germany that
was claimed by
both France and
the Gennans.
SANDS
Simon left Europ€ about 1857 and
by the time he had arn ved at Buffalo, New York, he had the clothes
On his OOCk and a quarter In hiS
pocket. Charles walked all the way
to Pittsburgh where he was able to
work his way on to a flatboat that
took him to Gallipolis later ml857.
SIMON IMMEDIATELY went to
work for Chnstopher Llchtenfelt
who ran a bakery at Second and
Locust. A couple of years later
Simon opened up a grocery store at
37 Court where he remained m
business until h1s new bui lding at 39
Court was put up.
The first floor of S1mon's new
building sold 1ce cream, wmes,
'· groceries, fru1t and confectiOnery.
Toward the back of the f1rst floor a
family lYfl€ restaurant was located.

SOME OF' THE offices of the lodge
were : "Grand Hi gh Cracchus
Fausta," "Amputator of Rhetorical
and Philosophic Research," "High
Grand lmaginator of the Inner
Chambers of Apparitions," and
"General Comforter of the Downtrodden and Distressed."
Sometime around the turn of the
century Henry Grube opened a combination grocery and saloon much in
the fashion of his two predecessors
Moch and S1mon. Grube, a native of
Wa lnut Township, came to Gallipolis
m the 1980s to work for Frank
Ulsamer.
IN THE 18905 Grube was a noted
b1cycllst and has the d1stinct10n of
bemg the first Gallipolitan to cross
the OhiO R1ver and back on a
b1cycle. Grube perfornned this feat
in 1893 while the ri ver was frozen
over. After Prohibition took effect m
the 1910s, Grube changed his
operatiOn to stnctly a grocery store.
One could buy here food packages
under the " Pure F'ood" brand as
well as D. M. Ferry bulk seeds.
Grube's ads often times ended with
the expression - "Nul Sed" - short
for enough said.
GRUBE DIED IN 1927 and the
business passed into another family.
After the repeal of Prohibition in
1933, the address of 39 Court was
taken by the Hugh Black Cafe. Later
m the 1930s the name was changed to
the Roosevelt Cafe. Upstairs was
located during this p€riod the
Primrose Beauty Shop.
Sometime after World War II, 39
Court beca m e Ma g nani's
Restaurant. In the 1950s "Slim's
Place" was located here and in the
1960s the address became home once
again for Magnani's Restaurant.
F'or some years in the 1970s the
buildmg stood idle, finally being
taken by Tony's Pizza which has

-o ·

Ill' -

Rain delays some
planting of com

e

" On the second noor Simon put m a

saloon which he also rented out for
parties and such thmgs. The family
lived for some lime on the third
floor.
SIMON'S TWO resta urants were
probably the best m town dunng the
Civil War and it's likely that many of
the high ranking Umon soldiers who
paSsed through town :casted at
Simon's tables.
Simon held the building at 39 Court
until his death in 1887 and operated
here under the same format as
previously descnbed all those years.
When Charles died it was estimated
that he was worth $100,000 - not bad
considering he started w1th 25 cents. g 1ven given away to J1manetti's Piz·
SIMON ALSO owned at his death za.
Mailing address of James Sands is
the building on Second that today
houses The Hub and Dan Thomas Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115 .
Shoes. Here Simon m partnership
with a Mr. Shank Op€rated a furniture store.
Shortly after Sunon's death 39
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (API - The
Court was taken by Moses Moch who
Civil
War "resumes" next July
was also a grocer. Moch's store was
when
a Union gumboat in the
characterized by a huge rubber tree
Mississippi
River engages in a duel
plant that greeted customers upon
w1th
a
Confederate
cannon on the
their entrance into the store.
bluffs
overlooking
Memphis
.
WHILE MOCH owned the business
here, one of Gallipolis' strangest
Visitors to Mud Island, a $63lodges met on the second floor_ The
million,
5()-acre education and enfraternity was named the "White
Lily Order of Stags." Their aim was tertainment center, will get the full
to "down the Elks." Actually their impact of the battle.
Visitors will find themselves
aim was to poke fun at the newly
aboard
a full-size reproduction of the
organized Elks Club.
gunboat
under simulated fire. They
We quote from an article of 1889
will
hear
what Union sailors say betdiscussing the beginnings of the
ween
explosions
as they receive and
White Lily.
return the fire . Later, they will find
" The imtlahon 1s expt&gt;cled to be l! randly Im- themselves on the bluffs, looking
pressive; and will be conducted by H1.s Ex- down on the siege and listening as
cellency Grand Fulminutor Glumfun~u.s
HomerlctW Brown of Mt. PernaMWI, Nova
Confederate soldiers talk about the
Scotia, assisted by Princes, Kni~ht.s, Dukes,
Counts, Nobles and Grandees, all of fore1gn ex- battle.

=
-

GET A FREE ...

§
.,.
;
_
....

E
i:

or pirL'i. This creates severe stress in

small areas, often breakmg threads
and causing rust spots.
Several methods for hanging a
qu1lt are possible. One of the most
common is to sew a casmg along the
top of the quilt. Use large stitches
I at least one-fourth inch) to baste a
double layer fabric strip from side to
side. A rod can be slipped between
the layers of casing. This method of
hanging a qmlt will support tbe
weight evenly over its entire width.
Quilts are an art fornn, deservmg
special attention in their use and
care. When we conserve a quilt,
whether it is newly made or a family
heirloom, we are preserving a
valuable textile for present and
future generations. Quilts are an important part of our national
heritage.

fil e &gt;u nd.1Y T 1m CS ;p nlln f' l- r,1gc f -3

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOLIS - Conhay's Landing abopt eight miles from
Gallipolis ; if you know where it is
please telephone Historian Henny
Evans 416-1775, who said a Hay
family did settle on the riverbank.
The inquiry doesn't say Conhay's
Landing· was above ·or below
Gallipolis, nor does 11 say it was west
or east. James C. Myers, who knows
Gallia County geography as well as
he knows the back of his hand, never
heard of Conhay or Conway either.
The letter , addressed to the Gallia

Block orders end
to .'checking views'
WASHINGTON (AP) - If Agriculture Secretary John R. Block
hadn't halted a practice of checking
the "philosophical views" of scientlsts before they are named to Agrtculture Department review panels,
the whole nnatter probably would
have been given a congressional

Pomeroy- Middl e port- Gallrpolrs, Oh10- Po rnt Pleasa nt . W . Va .

:;•.
;

~- ·

IN THE GRoUND, ON THE GROUND.
APDJE THE GROUND.

..r;

We'll glw you a free gardening attadlment to J1tM It

!:

o1

:
"
•

•.

War resumes

•
::
::
"

Our1ng our spring sale you get your chOice of any one at th!!e
gardening attacllments with the oun:hase of a Gravely 2-wlleel
tractor. You can choose betWeen our rotary plow. rotary cultivator
i
or tooihOider wtth toots. NO matter wllrch you choose.rt will
make your gardening a pleasure.
. -1 Vtrutlt. Gravely tractors are pnced ani! Sized lo hanclle all
gardemngjotls. But tne tractor ISJUS! the beginmng. The Gravely
$l/51l!m of owr 20 attachments Jets you mow. bll. hOe.
~.r......,~~..__
sweep. furrow. cultivate. plow. doze. haul. remove
snow . oo lust abbut any job imaginable.
Huny. Come 0y ancl see the Gravely 2-wlleel
T.~Ctors soon. The speoal lree
offer ends June 30th.

·;A

1~1

~

f
"

•~
:
:
"

£

t

..••

r-----------------------------1

:
;
..

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RIO GRANDE - The public is in~- vi ted to attend the celebration of the
building mortgage retirement of
Simpson Chapel United Methodist
Church in Rio Grande.
The celebration wlll be held on
Sumday, May 30, .lleglnning with a
workshop service·bt·l0:30 a.m., to be
followed by a covered dish dinner.
The service will include special
songs of thanksgiving by members
of the church. A sennon of
celebration will be gi.vim by the Rev.
Hughey r.:·-Joqe;-, Admii)IBtratlve
·Assistal)t to Bisliitp Dwl81!t E.Ifx~er
of The West Ohio Conference Of the
United ~ethodist Chureh: ;PI~
bring a i:OVered dish and place set·
lings for the dinner that follows.

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F'aqe- f -4- The ~unday Time s -Sentmel

t'omeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis , Ohio- Point

Ple~sant,

v.:.

va .

May2).1982

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Poinl Plea s ant ,

Dayton
people
different

w. va.

T1 m rs -Se ntin e l- Pa g e- E -S

~Flamboyant'
A 10

Rubin name
well known

DEPOSIT
'~

' ''I

- -~

-

OPENS lOUR LAY A WAY ACCOUNT
--

1,1

-

-~--

MIAMI I API - The kidnapping
suspect, arrested ao he stepped off a

DAYTON, Ohio I API - Woodrow
and Goldie Mae Smith ha ve lived in
Dayton for more than 35 years but
they still feel different.
"The people here '" Dayton are
different from us, .. says Sm1th. a
retired crane operator. "They la lk
different and th1nk different.
They're not like Wl' are . You know
they're not. "
The " we" he refers to are the
people of Central Appalalchia. In the

plane fr om Cuba. m ys tifi ed
everyo ne by dernanthllJ.! : · 'G l'l mt•

1-:llio Hu b111 ."
That was 29 years &lt;Jgu .. Nowa da ys,

hardly anyonl' has lo ask "E ll iS
who"'"

Hubllt f1rs1 apj)L'i:H"t'd tn tl"lr
natwn&lt;J l It! II• : :.t 111 1952. wlwn tll'
saved that :-,uspt.'( 't , Charlt·y W
J ohnson, from a po~sJI.Jil' dl•ath ~t·n­
tence by provin g the k1d rwpp1 ng uf &lt;:t
wt."althy Miarnt jewelt:r 's sur1 hadn't

nearly four decades since the end of

World War II, hundreds of thousands
of these " bnars" and " hillbillies"
have mi gr C:~tcd from their rugged
hills and hollows m search or JObs in
the urban, Industrial centers of the
M1dwest.
According to the Appalachian
Regional Cmrumssion , 3.3 rn1ll1on
people fled the sprawling, Ill-state
regiOn between 1950 and 1970, when

been a kidnapping at all .
Jlub1n, ~l. has kept ht s nanJt· tl ' the
tH·ws ev t·r si ll("l', frorn 1950s tlldt

Conunums t nusades. tu h1 s "' TV tntoxtra tton" rnsa nity ddt.•nst.• of let Itage munkrer Ronny 7..t:~mura, to un SLJ('cessfu! forays 1nto polrtics. lo
lawsull'i against the National F'untb~ll l.e&lt;-Jgue, &lt;J loe&lt;Jl judge &lt;-~nd eVl'/1
another lcnvyer.

t he Appalu chian coal mines werl'

mechanized

and

miners lust tfle1r

thousands

of

ju~ .

As in the 1930s exodus when the
"Ok1es" fled the dust bowl and
flocked to the West Coast, these
unemployed hillbillies came to Midwestern industrial ci ties such as
Dayton, Detroit and Chicago. Like
the hapless folk s in John Steinbeck's
"G rapes of Wrath," they came in
their dilapidated cars and battered
pickup trucks with their meager
belongings piled in the back and
their wide-eyed kids peenng out the
ll!lndows.
Many of these Appalachian
migrants found what they were
lniJ!Iing for in the Midwest; they
found better li ves than the ones they
had left behind in the hills.
Then. in the ea rl y 1970s, fa ctories

Asked

'Mustard

AclM'"SIOM_

24.9

Reg 8 80

10 Lb. 11 Oz. Tide

laundry Detergent
u~e e •rra

awon f1de .. Ameuca sf a~oute
G~t~ whites and col01s cl~an and bught
HOUSEWARE OEPT

"

Reg. 29.96 Eoch

M·attel lntellivision Game
Cartridges

Mattei lntellivision TV Game

Assorted game caf1nOges from Mattei Awon
packed and made to be a challenge
JEWELRY DEPT.

began laying off worker~. assembly

16.97 23.97
TO

Reg. 289.96 ·
MtHel"s lnll lliYISton TV Game offers

sp~rt s. slrll eg~ .

iCIIOn. cl!!l!ttn' l leammg. gamtng end t•coremtnl tor

rhe whole lam1ly Futures an orality wt11ch fits
d1rec1ly o~er the hand conuol lo1 easy s1mple IJime
play dtc•s10n1. and speml 1nput keys lor 115y g&amp;me
select1on . srde mountad 1ct10n butrons 1nd 1n obretl
control d1sc that 11Jows obrects to be m1nuevered m
16 d1llerenr d1rect1ons lncourliiJU m1nt1l and manual
delteflty ar1d a totally un1que game upener1ce Eech
unr1dge sold separately

Rag.

To 29.96 E.eh

Activision

Atari TV Game Cartridges

hett1ng new game canrrdges lor Atan TV games
Choose from many chalhtnging gamiS such as
Freeway, Kaboom. Stampede.Barnstorm1ng and
Gran Pm. AU Tilles may not he m every store
JEWELRY DEPT.

44.88
~~et. IUI

PAIR

Western W1ter Skis
Wltlf tun lor the summer. low puced f1mrly
combo p1ir. lightweight tor usy control and
10h cushion rida. New widtr shlpt tor auitr

sterts and grtlter tift Poty~rtrhlnt finish. Side
adjustment binding.
SPORTS DEPT.

16.44

Rtl 14.99

Keller Brown Acapulco
Web Chaise Lounge

Keller
Brown Acapulco Web Chairs

Strong tubular aluminum frames with

Weather res1starlt p Jlypropylene web!Hng

1Upj)Of1ing spr11der bw and color coOtdinated

accents the StUfdy stable alum1num frame
dn•gn Top quahty workmansh•p
HARDWARE DEPT.

plastic arms .
HARDWARE DEPT.

w1th

th e

~ationtll

perlect compliment !Of bologna. hot dogs. etc
Convenrent squeele bottle rs great lor prcnrcs

and outmgs
FOOD DEPT.

Be A Poilroid Double
S1n

'""'
K.ID - 587

hillbillies ha vl' been forced to join
th1s new mi~ration.
" If you sec a young man hit-

4

BOXES

$1

3 Oz. Jello Gelatin
Cool and dellc10us light

des~en

m assoned

lla~ors

There"s always room 101 Jell ·o
FOOO OEPT.

himself a

99.99

88¢

Reg. I 29.96

61h Oz. Star Kist Tuna
fresh. nulfltiOus tun11s grear tor san(lw1chn and

goodman endless
spr1ng water

FOOD DEPT.

vtuet~

li

ot 1ec•pu Pachd m011 m

Kraco AM-FM Stereo
Cassette Car Radio
Oeluu lnturas rnctude. Sllfeo l'ld1cator hght t fld
pu$hbunon ch~nflel nlec:ter Canute has auto
stop. last lorward. auto ettct and pltybtcl

JEWELRY DEPT.

Rtl· To ZL99

Ladles'
Maternity Oresl8s
ldul tu!lton for thll! mothtr ·ll ·be
Choose !rom USOI'ted Uyiu 111 poly·
tonon, poly -spun Ill' pll·wuh den1m
S1ru 6 to 16

CLOTHING DEPT.

who want the1r jobs back, a Cuban

Save~

stowawa y who W&lt;illls to stay in thl.':i

n""" •lh o.. low Polarolll color him priUi. ••••

19.88

Rot- 21.H
Crestline
w..on S.r-B-Que Grill

Ont piect dttp drawn 11111 body. 300 sq 111Ch plated
grid, swing out lire pan, li11~• edtu~tl to 4 htat lntll,
st11 t 1tg1 wth 5" ~~rflttll llld lafge botlom ,,..,
IWUIWAIIE DEPT.

country and a form er Dade County
fireman who 's d y ing
in operabl e heart di seasl'.

r:Poletold---------------------,

I along w1th your
1
Pf!Cks,
.t.
I
I
I

S.Vw SIGN Checl&lt;

Consumet: Complete 1h11 coupon arn:l
dated ules recefpt •nd
the colored end panels from yoor Polaroid
color film
(purchased between
March 1 and July 1982) return these
nems to the ~... shown above A
tpeeiel store check tof $1.. 00 per pack
(limit
PM=kll or one Two Peck)

two_...to

will be maiMMI you wlthm 60 ctavCheclc wNI be mtde peya~e jolnf/y to
you and the store where purchase .,...,
mao., end Ia valid towarda future

----

P.O. Bo• 11007, PMbod), MA 0111110

Your name
Address -

-

-----------

C1ty

Stete _ _ _ Zip - - -

Film purchased 11
Purchase date
Roo•&lt;ltnto of US..O. only llt&gt;•&lt;l .. ~••• o•o'"b•!.., One• n&lt;&gt;l Of&gt;PlocaNe
IO "'&lt;lutln.l llloma L"'"l 0..... cllec:O. pet CU ilOtnet 0 11.. Upotto July'
••2 Aequutl to• .,.,. o lft• 1011101 be fK.,.tcl bf July )1 . 1M2

1
1
II

I
1

of

an

On March 19, Rubin threatened to
park that e li en t . Dale l.ott , on the

119.97

Rt1.

steps of the medica l center at the
University of Utah and watch hun

uua

diL' 1f hospikll offiCials wouldn 't con-

G. E. AM-FM Casaelte Boom Box

s ider giv ing LoU an artiftcial heart

fnturts two·WI¥ dyntm1c spubu Jysltm. 5'"
wooler 111Ci p1110 IWUIII 5 Ullmtnl lEO melt!
wtth SW1tcllable 3 way lunch(H1 rer.ord / pl11 1ud10
te~elmd1UIOI. AM and FM tufllfliJ Cush1on IIIC I

change tts cntcria fur 1rnplant1ng
the heart su thatlllopcrab!t• pclti enb

Rubin has as kl'd the university to

JEWELRY DEPT.

likt· Lott would be eli gi ble to receive
II.

pun:l'la,.a at that store

Other

ellt.· nl'i

an · Waterga te

burglar E . Howard Hunt , Bay of
Pi gs vt.'lerans. a toun st-a ttra ctiun

opt.'rator who sdl.s s nakl' venom to
reliL•ve arthnt is, Broward Co unty

21.88

rrrm

PENL
=toll
~

tax

Re9. 30 .99

....

protesters and Cuban

and

Nicaraguan exiles who co nduct co m···

save lrne Sta1nless strel shafl

mando-type exrrn s e s in tf1e.. ·w·
Eve rglades.
Rubin has represented blacks ln
Key West who want a black on the
school board and whites in Brow~rd

SPORTS OEPI.

Co unty

Johnson Freedom
Spin Cast Reel

Jives,'' says Maloney, who left hi s

most of them as factory workers.
Some, especially the better educated
migrants who came later, during the
'60s, have managed to enter the
white-collar, professional class and
have scattered through the city."
" And, then," he says, "some have
become the inner city poor."
Maloney says more than a million
Appalachian migrants remain in
poverty in the inner cities of Ohio,
Indiana, Michigan and Illinois.
' 'They have become the newest urban minority group. And, as such,
they have the lowest status, the
highest poverty and unemployment
rates and all the accompanying
social conditions such as drug and
alcohol abuse, family breakdowns
and crime."
The current economic slwnp has
not. only solidified the lowest-rung
position· of these poorest of the poor,
but has also threatened those bluecollar migrants who. found factory
jobs, he says.
"A lot of stable blu~ollar
workers are being displaced from
the automobile industry. There may
be as many as a haH a million Appalachian workers who now are
going to have to pull up and go
, somewhere else in sear~ of work."

IS

And tht'r e seem to bt.' ample o~
portu ni!les fur thai. HIS l'hents ln-

It!" ..N" hlaror4 Jlndl ,ou I lpttlll ~II S51~1 Clltd 101 II 1 p~el Olttt 000411-dl lu11111
,wdlllts ot Po1Jf014 !~111 Of a'l'l Ollief !llfidlll'dilt on
our 111111 U11 t:ou(l(lfl btiOVI

years, some of tht' transplanted

majority hav e improved thei r lives,

He makes a SIX.· ft gun· tnl'urne
representin g such peopk. but says
he hates to charge them a nd w1shes
he didn't h&lt;:~VL' to n•jed any cast•. H1s
biggest successes, Rubt n says, &lt;:t f r
four well-ad jus ted ch tldren .

rlut.ll' fired atr-lraff rc cont rollers

thousands of jobs in thr past five

native Breathitt County in Kentucky
nearly 20 years ago to attend college
in Cmcinnati . " But for some il has
been a disastrous experience. In the
Cinc1nnati area, for example, the
greatesl nwnber of downwardl y
mobile people are Appalachians."
A socia l worker and c1ty planner,
Maloney ,;ays he has found that
ass nnilation has been slow and painful fur most Applachians. The
migrant.-;, often stereotyped because
of thcll' distinctive speech and manners, have tended to intermarry and
to band together in their own, lowerclass neighborhoods.
·· However," he adds, "the vast

~sta bl ishment ."

ne\"l' r so happy as when he' s filtng
su1b and tryi ng cases on c&lt;Juses that
llaven't been ex plored before and m
ways th ey haven ' t been heard
before. He slrll celt.•bra t es a b1 g victory with inter vtews a nd prl'SS
relt.·ascs .

Sun Camera Film .

Register. Frigidaire and General

As such, Maloney,

Tangv and deh ctous Fren ch's mumrd rs the

PoltfOid.l 11111 ••pansM camerl lor 600 lllljh
spud P'cturts f 1•td lens locus lm 1h11p p•cttHts
hom 4 to '"''niiY !flash to 10 '1Spec 1al sfide 1nlens
!Of ctOU ·up shOts

Motors have elilll.inatcd tens of

nat1 ve of rural Kentucky, has
become one of the roremost
autho rities on the Appala chian experience in the Midwest.
"The story, basically, is that for
the millions of Appalachian people
who left the hills, migrating has
been a way or improving their

the

guy can come to and hope tn buck

Rtl· 44.12

Cash

chhikmg on Interstate 75 these days,
the odds are that he's an Appalachian migrant on his way to
Florida to look for a job," says Mike
Maloney, a Cmcinnati socia l worker,
who until recently headed that city's
Urban Appalachian Council.

Squeeze Mustard

that I'm lht.• guy that maybt.' the !tttle

16 Oz. French's

Polwoid "Ami&amp;o" Instant c.-a

rnigranl':i arc bcmg forced to leave
the h1lls once agam . This tune.
however, lht•y arl•n't going to
Day ton or Detroit . Instead . they' re
headed for the Sun belt.
And. 111 Dayton, where major mr~ s

59¢

of my ti mes. I'd ilkl' to lea\'e thiS
r\;..~( '1' ;..~ littlt• hl'ttPr th;.1n I found tt. I
th ink I'm contributing. I would say

39.99

Appalachian

l'cunomy al low ebb, ml:lny of these

du.stries s urh

" I th1nk the press 1s n-ry at·-

In h1 s work , though, Rub1n

squ eeze.

Now,

R:ub 111

" I lik e t o participate rn th e Irvin}!

R... 24.98

lines began to shut down and, suddt•nly, the industrial Midwest was no
longe r a have n. Thousands of them
went back home to the coalfie lds.
then 111 the throes of a short-l ived
boom created by the Mideast oil

t.ksnlbt· hunself.

eurate" on that. he says " I don't
deny 11. I don't lilink 1t's ba d. And rll
d1d th1nk it' s bad , what could I do
abou t it '

"'

Poi•

to

chooSL'S a word that appears
frequently bdure ill s name tn news
ston es: " fl a mbo yant."

P~ t en t ed drag won 1 break or 1-!. J',T
lrn e Easy no blackla sh fr ;hr ng l nw

lii C! IUO &lt;.!!ranuc p1d up p1n

and j! u•dt'

who

don ' t

want

their

children bused to integrate the
srhool s. He represe nt.-; a Miami

couple, Mark and Eileen Johns. ernbroiled 111 a complex international
battle with a Mex1ca n woman for
custod y of the :&gt;-yea r-old glfl they
claim to ha ve adopted .
Whe ther he's running for offi ce he' s trit'd unsm'Cessfully nillL' time
for posts ranging from mayor of
Nort h Miami Beach tn the U.S.
Senate - or prepanng a new bloekReg. 16.99 Elch

Cross Chrome Pen
and Pencil Set
Wfi!IOR

In·

ENTER NOW!
You could win a valuable prize. lf you are
_
between the ages of 8 andl6, you canparticipate
ln Heek's/Zebco Take A Kid Fishing Contest. 'fo
enter, simply fill out an ent~ blank and ~rop 1t
in the con tamer·at an,YHeck s store sportmg
goods department in West Virginia. The drawing
will be held May 30, 1982, in each Heck's store
for a 1245 Rod and Reel Combo (total of 42 to be
given awi!Y· need not be prese!lt to win). Each
winner wlil then go to Burnsville Dam,
Burnsville, West Virginia, on June 12, 1982, for a
fiSh-off. Each winner will also receive a Zebco
cap and patch and a chance to fish with a Big
Brother Bass Fisherman in his bass boat from
11:00 a..m. to 2:00 p.m. The &lt;;&lt;&gt;ntestant catching
the largest fish of the day Will be awarded a
11,000. scholarship towards college from John
Moses of the Frank Carter Company, Zebco
representative for the state of West Virginia. So
Hurry! Entries must be received by May 29,

1982.

GLUm
PRIZE•lOOO"
.
· ·
Toward College
Sehol~hip

buster case, Rubin cou nb on pt.•uple

remembering him.

That 's

why,

he

says,

lhe

newsmakin g cases keep coming 1n.

" I think the kmd of caoes that
come in here a nd perhaps the WCIV
we handle them dues cause publi c i~­
t c re~ t and thus publicity,'' hl' .sav~.
"Some people and some causes ·do

require publicity. These people have
no other voice.

" Public 0p1nion IS still ver r influential in this country. If I h;ve to
use public opinion to win a case for a
cause I think is right, I'll do it. within
ethical standa rds."
But that publi c opinion isn't
always of the sort Rubin would like.
His investigations of the Communist Party in Florida dunng the
1950s earned him the unofficial title
of assistant attorney general in
charge or anti-communism for the
slate and the appellation "smallbore McCarthy" from the late
Washington colwnnist Drew Pearson.
"If he didn't have that passion for

publicity, he'd be a very good
lawyer," says N. Joseph Durant, a
fanner Dade circuit court judge who
recently switched to juvenile court.
Rubin has sued Durant, claiming
''judicial malpr~_ctice.''

�P~gc - E - 6 - Thc

Sunday

Tomes - ~e nton c l

Po m eroy - Middleporl- Ga llipo li s, Ohoo- Point Pleas ;~nt,

w. Va .

May 13, 1981

May 23, 1982

Fire escape
plan pushed
COLUMBUS, Ohio

(AP)

PVH names

emergency
physician

- Shelly

and Missy Gable attended a !!reed-

ucation seminar at their Belmont
County village firehouse last Feb.

POINT PLEASANT - Samuel P.
McNeill, M.D., a speCialist in
Family Practice, has been selected
Chief Physician of the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Emergency .Department.
Dr. McNeill, who has been practicing at Pleasant Valley Hospital
since July 1978, is a native of Point
Pleasant, a graduate of West
Virginia University and West
Virginia University School of
Medicine. While a resident, he
received the Meade Johnson Award
for Graduate Education in Family
Practice from the American
Academy of Family Physicians.
This award was based primarily on
leadership in the field of health care
education and training.
Dr. McNeill's new appointment
will be elfective July 1.
Moving into Mr. McNeill's office
at Pleasant Valley Hospital will be
Georgianna T. Burns, M.D. Dr. Burns is also a graduate of West
Virginia University School of
Medicine and completed an internship and residency in pediatrics
at University Hospital in Morgantown. She will begin seeing pediatric
patients at Pleasant Valley Hospital
on Wednesday, July7.

16.

The 12-year-old twtns may never
know It It saved their Uves. Fire 67
days Ia ter killed live ot their relatives whUe the twins ran tor help.
Fourteen days later and 1.25 miles
away, six chUdren died In a house
tire In Columbus. Ann Salter,
mother o! five o! the chUdren, cousin o! the other, Jumped !rom a
porch root and survived.
The !Ires had some slmllatitles,
and !Ire ot!lclals say that following
a couple o! simple rules could have
saved aUeleven.
Terry Weber, chle! o!tlre prevention tor the State Fire Marshall's
o!11ce, urges every person In every
house to have a tire escape plan and
practice It.
Dick Hagen, !Ire prevention educator tor the Gable twins, put It
more succinctly.
"The only thing Important Is to
get the hell out," he said o! house
!Ires. " U you are In your birthday
suit, run. We'll put a fireman's coat

. ,, ' .

Memorial Day Weekend is coming up soon and
Hatfield &amp; McCoy is begining the celebration rig ht
now. We' ve got tremendous values throughout
our 9 stores as well as FREE BONUS ITEMS with
most every purchase. At Hatfield &amp; McCoy you
always get the most in quality and value. Come see
us today.

•

SUNDAY 12:30-6:30
MON.-SAT. 10am-9pm

24.

The twins' mother, Paula Salm,
sent them to a neighbors to call !Iremen. She stayed behind to rouse the
rest of the famUy : her husband VIctor; their daughter, VIckie Mane,
8; Mrs. salrn's son, Howard Gable,
9; and Salm's brother, Leo Salm,
20. All gathered In a second floor
bedroom, directly over the hottest
part of the fire that kUied them.
Mrs. Salter was In a second floor
bedroom on the phone to her husband when her three-year-old cousin called from downstairs that
there was a !Ire. She dropped the
phone and found her two-year-old
son asleep In a chair near a burning
sola. Her tlny cousin sat on the sofa
scant Inches !rom the names, smlllng In chUdllke Innocence.
She grabbed the two, returned to
the second tloor where tour other
chUdren slept, and told her husband
the house was on !Ire. She was dialIng the !Ire department when the
phone tine went dead.
As smoke thickened, Mrs. Salter
opened a window and gol onto a
porch roof tor air, planning to return tor her chUdren.
By the tlme she could breathe It
was too late.
She jumped to the ground, IgnorIng a ladder lett propped against
the porch by house painters.
"II was klnd of Ironic," said Columbus City Fire Inspector Dan
Moncrief, who said the blatt apparently started from a burning cigarette perhaps live minutes
before Mrs . Salter heard the
youngster calllng. ''U she had gone
on out the front with the two kids,
she could have gone up the ladder to
get to the others"
"We see people who have no Idea
what to do It a house catches on
!Ire," said Weber. "You've got to
know what to do ahead ot tlme, how
to get out It a main exit Is blocked
by !Ire ...
"U you don't know what to do
there's a good chance you wiU do
something wrong. There are plans
and !Ire drU1s In aU the schools, but
then the kids go home where nobody knows what to do."
Weber, Hagen and others say
everyone thinks a !Ire will happen
to somebody else.
"But then It happens and people
want to stop to look tor clothes or
shoes or caU the !Ire department
!rom a burning room and some
even try to flght the !Ire," said Hagen. "The only Important thing Is to
get the hell out."
"She went to wake up the others," Burdock said of Mrs. Salm,
"and they were aU found In the
same room. It you jump out a win-

17" COLOR
PORTABLE

RCn

25" DIAGONAL XL 1 00
TRANSITIONAL CO._:L~O;;iRiiiiiiiij
CONSOLE
til
•

S1 ngl e _knob erectrOn1 c

on you."

The Gable twtns were among 74
people In the audience when Hagen
conducted a !Ire salety seminar In
the !!rehouse at Barton, Ohio that
cold winter ··night. He thinks their
mother was with them but can't recall tor sure.
Barton Fire Chief John Burdock
said the !Ire In the old church the
famlly lived In had the markings o!
a "sale" fire:
-The twins should have had !Ire
salety ln!orma tlon fresh In mind
from Hagen's seminar.
-The structure had two smoke detectors and both worked.
-The detectors' noise awakened
the famlly In the wee hours of AprU

lunmg
•

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* * • • • • * .* * • • • • • • • * * ••

ncn 19" xL1oo

STORE HOURS:

Mon.·Sat. 8 am-1 0 pm
Sunday 10 alfl-1 0 pm

298 SEOOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES IN EFFECT THRU MAY 29, 19S2

WINATRIP
.
FORTWOTO oll S),OOO

HAWAII
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Gel a free game
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You may also rece•ve a tree game tiCket andtor
collector card (pktase specity) by matting a sell·
addressed stamped envdlope to Fabulous Fortune
of Prizes. P.o BolC 26272. 81rmrngham . AL 35216

l.Jmrt one ticket per request. one request per person
per day . Eactl request must be marted separately
Simply punch out lhe perforated sechons on the
game uc ket to reveal /our game markers to pl ay on

your collector card. Some game ltckets contatn a
martter which states ·vou QUALIFY FOR GRAND
PRIZE DRAWING" II you obta1n one of these
marilers you are ehgtble to enter the Grand ~ri:ze
Dfawings and the chance to wtn one ol SIJC tnps lor
two to Hawwr Or $3,000 cash . Two Grand Pnze
Drawings will be held AU valid entnes rec81ved by
May 27. 1982 will be ellg1ble lor the first draw1ng on
May 28. 1982. Three Grand Pnzes wrll be grven
away· at thrs lime All valid entrres receiVed w1lh1n 14
days aMer game ends wtll be el~glble lor the second
drawing. Three more Grand Prizes wtll be awarded
in the second drawing

CASH
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~ar'l' oeoendong on the nvmt&gt;e• o1 Game ! o&lt;:e Mel s )'OU
ootiJI'I The ffiOflt you coltec! the Den&amp;r your chances ot
-vllf'IQ ():XIs 10 oblal&lt;l G•aO(I Pn1e Draw•ng &lt;narlle&lt; ana Qvauty

Odds

tor drllwtng(a)

are 1 on 5:&gt; ()(las to w•n Gran() P"re Ooaw•"QISI

Will Oepend 011 ltlfl number

p,.,,,,

ot

Quahhers

FaDuloul Forrune ol
S•.,.es aWM 'i? •S f)ft'"'9 ~a~IIO on
t S9 1tores tocateo m ()l'loo. lr.d•ana M•ch•gan V"9'"'d Wast
VWQII'lll and Kenlucky
Scheduled terrM\iltl()l'l date ot th•s promotJOn •s Jui ¥ 18 t 98;&gt;
hOwev.... Fabulous Fon ..ne ot f&gt;fllfl5 oltocoally aoc:~s
an

game

""he"

are d•stnbuled

t&gt;ei&lt;G\5

'Cap Beatty
lived like
Huck Finn

*.

DIAGONAL COLOR
PORTABLE

~

Whirlpool
MICROWAVE
OVEN

RCA

-

Xl-100

• JO· Mmut e t1m e r

• Separate defrost c yc le

o Sea led on wa m' c s$

19"

WHITE
WESTINGHOUSE

234

** * * * * * ** * * * * • • * • * • • • * * * •

Gibson

**

•
•
•

5,000 to 18,000 BTUs
All AT

TRPPiln MICROWAVE OVEN ,
•

CINCINNATl - Life was a
Huckleberry Finn adventure for
. William Campbell "Cap" Beatty, a
captain, boat builder and crane
operator who spent most of his 95
years on the Ohio River.
Beatty died May 12 and was buried
last Monday in Ironton, where he
was bom in 1886.
Beatty's grandfather, Samuel,
came to the United States from
Ireland in 1837, traveling with a man
who was to become the father of
Mark Twain. His friend, William
Chimens, named his son . Samuel
Langhorne Clemens, in honor of
Beatty.
That son later adopted the pen
name Mark Twain for his novels and
reminiscences of river life.
Relatives said Cap Beatty built his
first boat in 1907, a narrow vessel
made for noatlng logs.
His son, John L. Beatty, owner of a
marine salvage business in Warsaw,
Ky., said he will always remember
his father's love for the river.
"One of his old sayings," said
John Beatty, "was 'We used to have
iron men and wooden boats. Now we
have iron boats and wooden men.' "
Beatty built many more boats,
which he piloted up and down the
Ohio with loads of merchandise, logs
and building supplies.
"Nothing ever stopped that man,"
his son said, recalling that he once
navigated a laden boat in extremely
shallow water. "Imagine boating in
21 inches of water. It's unheard of.
Today we're boating in at least 12
feet."
Beatty once said that he'd take
two men with him in the early years
of this century to tow lumber from
Parkersburg, W.Va., to Ironton.
"I'd get ttl each for them -$96 for
seven days. Two men, feed 'em and
give 'em 75 cents a day. Lots of black
coffee; white beans and sowbelly
bacon. And people talk now about
hard times and wages."

Super Accucolor Picture Tube
Automatic Fine Tuning
Color Correction Circuitry

15 M inut e ti m er
Remova bl e glass tra y
Se e lhtu wind o w

19
* * • • • * • * * • • • • • * • • • • *

cs-€&gt;

Whirlpool

----·
Whirlpool

14cu/ft REFRIGERATOR :
""iiiifoine=:=!!!!"· • 0 n Iy 2 8" wide
Energy saver switch
Completely frost free
• 3 .45 cu/ft freezer space
• Steel-plated adjustable
slide-out shelves
• Magnet ic sealing doors
• Seperate temperature
controls

•

•
•

LAUNDRY PAIR
WASHER
•

•
•
•

"'\~~~~~~~
i
•

UNDERCOUNTER
DISHWASHER

$397

"!~~

b:

•
•
o

•

Normal and Gentle
Cyc l es
2 W as h and Sp1n Speeds
Super Surgi l ator AgotaiC&gt;r
Co unt e r· Ba l anced Sare-

ty L1d e Tra nsmi SS IOn
Durabl

DRYER

Mulh· cycle wash
action
Dual spray arm

•
•

2 Ory1ng Temperatures
E x tend ed t im e dry1ng
cyc l e

•

Full s12e mte rr o r l or l ess
wrrnkl es

•

Sleeve-type top a cce ss
lint filt e r

No- heat drying
switch
Porce lain ename l
interior

$243

FOR THE
PAIR

EXPLOSIVE CARPET VALUES!
CUT and LOOPS
VALUES TO $23

Nowsg 95 T0$1

795

A tremendous range of colors, weights and
yarn systems Including Anao IVs, Ultrons, and
Antronsln solids, tone on tones, and tweeds. A
color and pattern for nearly every room In your
home.

VALUES TO $24

AnsoJI ULTRON'jj
~II

PLUSHES

•II •• 1"'1' ljlt llti

Rich velvet looks and breathtaklng, lustrou
pencil points. Beautiful and durable atyllngs
that compliment todaya contempory homes.

;
;

•

;
:
•:

;
.:

COLUMBUS- The Board-of the
Ohio Retired Teachers Association,
repesenting more than 30,000 retired
teachers, has reaffinned its position
to strongly oppose the coverage of
Ohio's teachers and other public employees by Social Security.
In inaldng this announcement, the
president, Donna Stanley of
Jackson, indicated the Board feels
that a mandatory extension of Social
Security to cover au public em- ,
pl9)'ees would be an invasion of .
St8tes• rights~ would be a41atinct
disadvantage to approximately 75 .
percent of Ohio teachers already
covered by Social Security who have ·,
paid 'for Coverage uncle!: I?Otfl Social ·
Security and the State Teachers

~ RlitltementS~•••

GALLIPOLIS~
OH.O
'· .

Fryer Parts...... ~;.
!ATTI~S $179

Chopped Slrlom.~~·.
GRADE A
5
Whole Chickens..
LB

U. S. D. A.

-

lB

Bnls. Chuck Roast...................... ~
Cube

$1 59

BUO&lt;ET

Pork

Teacher group
opposes coverage

$895 T0$1 895

'..; ··

4

MIXED

SAXONIES

Traceries, multllevels, and more, In solids,
multlcolors and tone on tones. Great looking
practical new styles to beautify any home .

dow and break a leg, then big deal;

It can be !!xed. The thing Is to get
out"
Residential !Ires In Ohio killed 243
persons In l!BI, and Weber said
smoldng tobacco was the most
common cause, accounting for 16
percent of fatal fires that year. It
also was tile leading cause o! dweltlng fires In which 1,196 Ohioans
were Injured that year.
The second most common cause,
Weber said, Is children playing.
"Almcet always It Is chJldreD playJog with matches or a upter," he
said. "Generally It Is a male child
playing In an upstairs bedroom."

The Sunda y Times -Sentine i- Pagc- E -7

·1

•

:''1 O"liGJ~ Utf b •

WE NOW - - C E:'~T.. :_ ;.,

~

daWI'Y

coverage w0ul4 ~bly

"OL

·'; reduce benefit. undet the STiiS, .a
tuarla1 .,.., '11!11 woul!! . .

-

A·.ND

In 'a

...

virtlty."' -~ ol .

-~.,

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-

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.:lbldentl

tater!Dc and plauil!&amp; , Pre' · .._...__. If&amp;; IJM· tar lid!"' .
.~ I. .,....-~ The ~-l...a~
""tul--t~ ·
-~- J.
I ( ' r i l Ill M 'laiifv illy
I

.,.,.t.w. .' ,.
'

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LB.

IIOUGHYON'S

24

11

COUPON

••••••
• •••••

COFFEE

IIMnlbei\
of1be ORT.\ ·
"'•. Iildlvldull
'
,.

:• . . .tbtpUIIJ!cldiOC!II.~·

2/$1
oz $1 Q9
Co~ge Cheese ~ .... ~ ............. ·······~
oz. 59(
"ttl15 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.
PARKAY

~f11CJFII1Et •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

MAX!'_ELL HOUSE

: · ~to~pdempJO)'~'

Le.Huce ••••••.•.• •·••··•·••••••·•••··•···••··2 I $1

•

;...~ .....
..:.· ,.._.ling
on a *lUnd
ac- ·
rill-··
....,--increiJe

VJSA®-

l~RM
. ~

Mrs. Stanley also itated ~t Jll8ll"

Pringles.....~~:!~.
.HEINZ
. .
$109
CatsUP. .................
12 oz.

3LBS.

-$599

�. i Tr'
I

FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE!

I

I

I.

EXTRA SPECIAL GIFT TO FIRST 75
LADIES THAT STOPS BY OUR
BIG MAY SALE.
COM E EARLY!

You'll Love the S
Touch of Delicate
Carvings in Our
"FOREST PINE" Group!
tn tnca te oela11ea c a ~mos ana tn e r~ c h e arthy brown
c olor o ! Foresl Pme wil l adO a s1mple bu t elegan t atmosphere l o an y decor Conslfucled ! rom authen tic
Appalach ian wh il e p1ne limber and vene ers, these
beau t1!u1accenl table s are bu1l t tor !u nc t1 0n as welt
as beaut y EntOY spec1 a1 s a ~ 1 nQs no w 1Quali ty b urH
by Broyh ill's super1or cra t tsmen
~

·~·
Comfortable PiBow Arm HighBack With Burnished Wood Trim/

SAVE

A Country Classic H~gh Bock group With gracefully
curved wng bocks and p1/low onns that a re trimmed 1n
Solid Woeid' Couered rn plush Anlron Nylon Velvet
With contras nng welt

ltioo,se Neck Platform Rockers
suppl y '" factory se lect
! T h es~ a r e bac k by po pular

lden1a nd .

LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE
SAVE UP TO 50%

Sa ve 50 pe rcent

Reg . Pr ice $199.95

May Sa le Prr ced

sgg95

BIG SAVINGS ON
SEALY AND IMPERIAL
MATTRESSES &amp; BOX SPRINGS

don 't ha ve to pay S1800.00 for nice sol id wood

suite, we ha ve the m as low as S89s . ·ta S129S ., other
suites as lo w as S499 .9S. Free Bo x s pring and mattre ss
includ ed w ith suites.

created a Golden Opportunity for
you

a ne w bedroom at special Savings. r-=~=::::;:;:::;::::;;;::;;;::;;;:;:::;;=:;;:::=;

{Or QWn

_-·

••• - " - · ......
••
.......
......... ................
......
........
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,_,,_ .... --·
. ... .............- ,, '_,"'
---····-·
"·-' "····-·"
...........
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-',_.,·-....
.......
,_ ... .·-· ..... ·- -'
-·~ :..:·::: · ~:-:.:::).... ..........
., .. .., ·c....

PRICED FROM$7300 EACH PIECE &amp; UP

,

"'"~'

-

00

Reg. 379'
1

1

-,.o, M o M_.,

-·'•

ow_.......,-"~"~
~

May 23 thru 30

-~ ·

~

-~

DINffiES SALE-PRICED

Aschedule of area programming,
activities and events,

w oodha ven
. ._

7 p1cce map le fin is h, wood din ett e se t .
Chec k Pnccs anyw here you ca n' t bea t thi s buy .

-

ON ALL SUITES

ALL BEDROOM SUITES ON SALE
Yo u

2 &amp; 3 Pi ece Suites as low as $399.95 fo r So fa , Lov e Sea t
a nd Chair .

$} 00 TO $600

-~

· ~ ,. , , , ....,,

p .

A guide to area entertainment

$25995

Includes complete

Choose from ove r 20 se ts in a ll new fini shes whi ch include
Sa lem Mapl e, Oak , Nutmeg Ma ple, Hone y Pine a nd Dark
Pine. Avai la ble in s &amp; 7 pie ce set s.
lrtl 1 '" lOIII( hi~
l&lt;l w~ ' ' '~ " t cnh

'"

r,.w,

'fiW " \

•n

.n "41•onw •o• p rr t

~· e nce IBn'd on 1 NO !•Otll l •u•...ey

n • •na

conou~''

ooh.tc ll

o o ~n.(l

ot

•nl'lr• tn.y·a hke 10 own1

• lon&gt;"'+- t ( o1 Uy Pl OW II '" WII lr,., O( r

liulld « f• • Ge nllr '"" '10' r rt ocoero t
d"'·" ~ to• pr•m1roe ro1 ptr" 1nd 1 11 ot
Aul o -Ory
1M '""'Control\ • 8 11 l O.CI O. um
"" ' \\ flbto,, • (ie( lfot\OC

J

ECONO·MISER
WASHER~

&amp; DRYERS

SAVE '8000 ON A PAIR

listings

Herm1n Gr1te

SIJS

Soap Opera Review
Page 9

Now Is The
Time

To Sne

C h ai r ,

Rocke r And
3 Ta bles .• •

TV Mailbag
Page 2

$799
REG.

$999
REPEAT OF A SELL OUT!
1
Reg: ........
49'5 ........ ..
BRASS &amp; WOOD FLOOR LAMPS .... .......

s2995

REG. 129915

·" ·

" COMPLETE WITH BEDDING "

Save 50%

Fame
Page3

50% OFF

Early American Versatility .. .

WAGON WHEEL

BUNKS

ROOM DIVIDER I ETAGERE 1 ENTERTAINM ENT CEN TER

turns you
on!

3" Hardwood Stock

!n Maple Finish,
On Comstructionl

$}" 19 9~
·Bedding Extra

Earlv American
TABUCOlUC/lON

REG.

Mode l RT21 Fl
BIG VALUE ON A BIGGER REFRIGERATOR
-Adjustable Cantilever She lves
-Factory Installed Rolle rs
-Textured Door Metal Finish
-Full Width Freezer Shelf
-Reversible Doors
1
-Frost Clear
Other mode ls to choose
1
fro m at lo w prices14 cu . fl ., 17 cu . fl . 19
c~ . ft. on sa le.

, Colonial cl'lomt. COUP!"' ~mth .

SALE
1398
MAY SALE
PRICE
$377
11

· Reg. 799
Trade 15000
Sale 1649"

N1990W
=:;~~~~~~~Mod;e~l
table color TV! Dark

Brown with Nickel-Gold color
trim. Tri-Focus Picture Tube .
Triple- Plus Chassis , Elec Rtronic Power Sentry . Super
Video, Range Tuner . Picture
Control ; AFC. lighted dial.

19~JI~IrN

COLOR.TV

Th e quality goe&lt; m

·

Exquisite yesterday, even more so today!

1-" ' "-•. . ,

In

T~&gt;tot-to-ofloom

Oo•oo.tl( l.,wtn.,tao-

-

Area Events
Page 15

$24995

Need a Chair, We ' ve got one for You!
Si x s tyles to choose from in beautiful
velvets . Regular prices range from $239 .95
to

Gibson$ the tv that
21 .0 Cu. Ft. Fros t*Ciear
Refrigerator-Freezer

Ma p le fini sh color with
countr y colonial hard wa re . TwoJa rge storage
dr awer s .

C.ft!., ,..,

ul•lul ~--~~ ..., JpaciOIIJ ~
00,..11. -

•~tot .. ,~ ~. -~'""' .... ,
• •• •Idle ·~ h t11 A.....,oc.,. "'N '"''"'

)'0111 " " " " -

''""'c'""~

Doric Kn olly Pine

KNOnYPINE

"'"'h

. ... 3JO~
. ,;. $13995., ·..,
REG.

S249" · ,

.

2S~ tf'

- ·

PLANT STAND

Boat show••.page 8
Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

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