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                  <text>Pag~:--IG-The

I

. Mrs. Hattie H. Paynter, 86,
Racine, died Thursday at her
residence.
Mrs. Paynter was preceded in
death by her parents, Henry and
Amelia Blaettnar Theiss; her
. husbaJJd, Albert, in February, 1968,
three brothers and four sisters.
Surviving are several nieces and
nephews.
. · Mrs. Paynter was a member of
Syracuse Guiding Star Council 124,
Daughters of America; the Meigs
~ty
Pioneer and Historical
~iety; the Senior Citizens .Council
on Aging, and was a member of the
·Bethany United Methodist Church at
!)Orcas.
· Funeral services will be held at
i::30 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. Mark
flynn officiating. Burial will be in
Browning Cemetery, Portland.
lrriends will be received at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
~vening and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Saturday.

George Simon
• Geroge Simon, 85, Columbus,
tather of Paul Simon, Pomeroy, died
this morning.
Services for Mr. Simon will be
held Monday at 10 a.m. Friends may
call at the John Qunit and Son
Funeral Home, Columbus, Sunday
from 2to4 and 7 to9.

Meigs County happeni.Dgs ....

Dr. Ehlinger. • •

Area deaths

.Hattie H. Paynter

.' '

(Contin.ued from page 1)
hospital maintains it is not bound by
any of the procedures of its by-laws
Richard Frazier
Richard Frazier, Bellefontaine, and rules and regulations in that the
formerly of Meigs County, died plaintiff was only granted temThursday at a Bellefontaine porary staff privileges which could
be revoked at any time by summary
hospital.
action.
Mr.Frazier was a son of the late AI
Dr. Ehlinger charges that there
and Nan Frazier. He·was born and
has
been a breach of contract: and
reared in Meigs County.
that
he
has been deprived of his right
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy; a
to
practice
his livelihood, has lost in·
daughter, Wanda Roush,
come,
has
suffered damage to this
Charleston, Ill.; a sister, Mrs.
professional
reputation and seeks
Eileen Little, Bellefontaine, and
damages
in
the
amount of $5,000,000.
several nieces and nephews.
SEEKS
INJUNCf!ON
TOO
· Funeral services will be held at 4 ·
Dr.
Ehlinger
has
also
filed
for the
p.m. Sunday at the Van Horn
issuance
of
a
temporary
restraining
Lakeview Funeral Home in
Bellefontaine with burial to be in order, preliminary injunction and
permanent injunction enjoining the
Charleston, Ill.
hospital, its agents and its employes
from suspending, terminating or in
any other way affecting the planGrace G. Wolfe
tiff's medical and surgical staff
Mrs. Grace Gilkey Wolfe, 83, Rt. 4, previleges at the hospital until such
Pomeroy, died this morning at time that action is done in strick by·
law compliance.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.Earlier this week, Dr. Ehlinger
Mrs. Wolfe was born Nov. 17, 1897
filed
a 15 million dollar action in the
the daughter of the late Frank and
U.
S.
District Court stating this his
Lillie Rife Gilkey. She was also
due
process
rights were violated
preceded in death by one sister,
when
he
was
dismissed from
Sa&lt;jie Wolfe.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital without
She is survived by her husband,
a
chance
to
defend
himself.
He also
Shirley Wolfe, and one brother,
requested
a
temporary
restraining
Howard Gilkey, Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be held Man· order against the hospital, Lewis D.
Tells, the hospital's chief of staff and
day at 2 p.m. at the Rawlings, Coats,
Walter Scott Lucas, the hospital's
Blower Funeral Home with burial in
administrator.
Chester Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Sunday from 2to 4 and 7 to 9.
GRANT EXTENSION
Upon the application of Meigs
County Auditor Howard Frank, the
and costs, overload; George Staats, Department of Tax Equalization has
Minersville, $150 and ·costs, three granted an extension on the
payment of housetrailer taxes in the
days confinement, DWl.
county.
Forfeiting bonds were Charles
Originally Jan. 31 was the
Snider, Columbus, $35.50, disorderly
deadline
for these taxes. The exconduct; Howard Searles, Pomeroy,
tension
gives
housetrailer owners
$36().50, DWl; Edgar Ashe, Old
until
March
10
to
pay the taxes.
Washington, Ohio, $00.50, failure to
display highway use tax sticker;
Gary Clark, Columbus, $35.50, ex·
. pired operator's license; Robert E.
Gibbs, Reedsville, $360.50, DWl;
Robert Glass, Middleport, John
Lehew, Gallipolis, Jerry Fairchild,
Richmondale, Lionel Hupp, Parker·
sburg and Jean Whitney, Ironton,
$40.50 cash, speed; Harold Epps,
Reno, Ohio, $30.50, speed.

Stolen car found
in Topeka, Kansas

...

DIAMOND EARRINGS:

U.S. 35 in Gallia County at 5:25p.m.
when his car backfired and caught
fire~ ·causing minor damage.
Richard A. Erwin, 16, Vinton, was
eastbound in Kanauga at 4:20p.m.
when he lost control of his car went
off the left side of the road and
collided with a mailbox, causing
moderate damage to his car.
The patrol said Jane Ann Wv•t•
18, Pomeroy, was eastbound on SR
124 in Meigs County at 12:45 p.m.
when she lost control of her vehicle
on a curve, ran off right side of the
road and collided with a guard rail.
Moderate damage was reported to
her car, the report said.
Jeffrey Peckham, 18, Middleport,
was southbound on Leading Creek

.vestigated
Series of byone-car
the patrol
accidents
Thursday.in·
. Troopers said Robert A. Nidy, 24.

Road
his car
in Meigs
went over
County
anatembankment
3 p.m. when
and overturrred, causing moderate

Syracuse Police Chief Milton
REG. 1119.75 SAVE 130.00
Varian is 'investigating a hit-skip
that occurred in the village of
FREE RING SIZING
Syracuse Thursday at 6 :~p.m.
According to Varian, a vehicle turFREE Gin WRAP
ned off Water Street onto Cherry and
struck a parked vehile owned by
113 court
Pomeroy
Donald F. Hendricks, backed up and
992-2054
struck a stop sign then left the scene.
The vehicle is believe to be a ~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==========;
Granada, silver in color and has I
damage to the rightfrontfender.
Anyone seeing this vehicle is
asked to obtain the license number
VALINTINI GIFT SUGGESTION
on the car and call Varian at 992-5183
or the sheriff's department. at 992·
3371.·

t~

ELBERFELD$

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--June Freed, Mid·
die port; Sally Lambert, Middleport;
Jeremy Ross, Middleport; Connie
Herdman, Mason, W. Va.
Discharged-&amp;ott Carsey, Ken·
nethBraun.

Ymdl have cver}•thm ~ at ~·our lu1 g~·, t1p~ ~&gt;"llh Rolf~ ~let&gt;k , new 5¥~· a~nl~ '
Clu tl:h fur wumcn . Tnple rn:;rde pod ct ~. il lrMwd cni n purse. removable
du•ckhook co\!n ami a 71ppt' r'-'d brll pndc.t&gt;l Ht' l }'Oll mMllllll.ed. And, Roll s
fuwly crafted, d.us rc lenlhtrs w1lltake ~·o u t'\'er)•wht&gt;rc Ill style . Desilolned for
your way nlliv1n~. Ro lf s alw ~tys pt•rfmrm lx•ilu lrfully. I''SPL'C IUII y m the dutch.

WEDNESDAY
MARCH 4

7:30PM
Convocation Center

tr c.·"eh on sale: Center Ticket Of1ice
urtorru.ttion &amp; CHARGE BY PHONE :
(614) 594· 5207 (Vi .. a &amp; MC acc:rpted)

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4. It's approved
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...

'

'

6

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SIMMONS OLOS-CADIUAC INC.
MEANS A GREAT DEAL
FOR YOU
1976 Chev. Caprice Wagon
1973 Cadillac Deville Sed.

unba
Vol. IS No.3

Copyrighted 1981

By LARRY EWING
GALLlPOUS - If current spen·
ding trends continue, officials fear,
budget pr,oblems may lead to the
temporary closure of the Gallia
County Jail and discontinuation of
the services of the sheriff's depart·
ment by the third quarter of this
year.
Early in January, in the wake of
an .extremely tight 1981 qudget appropriation, the board of county
commissioners issued A directive to
all office-holders and department
heads advising them to "live within
their budgets." County officials
were told there wou.ld be no supplemental appropriatlons-e~cept
for extreme emergencies-this rear.
"I may not be able to stay within
my budget," Gallia County Sheriff
James M. Montgomery said Friday.
"If we can't we'll just have to shut it
down.''
The department's total ap·
propriation for the current year was
set at $.'188,375 (the sheriff had
requested $449,000 ). Last year's ex·
penditures, including supplemental

appropriations, totaled $429,000.
In January, the department's ex·
penditures came to $44,000. If that
rate ol spending should continue, the
sheriff's budget would be depleted
by the end of September.
"We knew it was going to be
tough," Sheriff Montgomery said
Friday. "I . had planned to recoordinate manpower and equipment with the budget this year; and,
we were getting in pretty good
shape,' but then the fire knocked us
off ourfeel."
On January 8, a fire swept through
the 101·year old west wing of the
Gallia County Courthouse, causing
e~tensive ~amage to the sheriff's
department olfices and jail facility.
Since the fire, Gallia irunates have
been housed in jails in adjoining
counties.
"At the moment, with the cost of
transporting prisoners into and out
of the county ... and with the $14 a day
cost of housing them In other jails,.. !
don't know exactly how much we are
spending," Montgomery said . .
"Our cruisers logged 40,000 miles

1975

1978 DODGE D150 PICKUP

'3185

1975 Olds. Royale Cpe.

V·8, auto trans., radio .

1976 CHEV. LUV PICKUP

$2595
3695

5

4 cyl., 4 spd ., PS, AM/ 8· tra ck ; one owner . L ow mileage .

1978 RDRD GRANADA 4 DR.

1980 AMC

S~irit

Cpe.

3595

5

302 V·8, auto. trans., air cond .. AM/ FM, PS, PB.

5

1295

~95

1980 VW Rabbit

Fuel
Injected

1295

5

4395
$1295

5

~895

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC INC. You'll Like Our Quality Way Of

Doing Business

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

see or Phone: Pete Burris, Marv in Keebaugh
MiKe Anderson or Georqe Harris
Pomeroy, OH.
Open Evenings Until6:00
Except thursday &amp; Saturday Til 5:00

Ph. 992-6614

11 Sections, 94 Pages 35·Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Sunday, February IS, 1981

last month-&lt;i,OOO of those miles were
in transports-we're paying $1.21 per
gallon for gas," the sheriff continued. "It's expensive, and the
longer we're out of the building (the
courthouse) the more It will be."
"With things the way they are, it
will be two-to-three months before I
even know how I stand with my
budget,'' the sheriff added.
Sheriff Montgomery went on to
say that, even.without the problems
created by the fire, staying within
his 1981 budget would not have been
easy.
"If you want an example of the
shape this department is in," the
sheriff said, "just compare us to the
G.allipolis Police Department.''
"We have 12 road deputies
traveling 1,200 miles of highway,
protecting 30,000 people living in an
area encompassing ~7 square
rniles ... the city has more men, bel·
ter paid men, protecting a
population ofl""" than 6,000 people."
Since the first of this year, the
sheriff said, he has lost an in·
(Continued on page A3)

more bones
in Atlanta

1995

Duster Cpe.

1975 Olds. Royale Sed.

4 cv l. . auto trans .. low mi leage . Local owner .

1979 RDRD PINTO 3 DR.

P~mouth

•

entme
•

tmts

Discover

495

1595

+

Gallia sheriff may .not be
able to stay within budget

5

5

CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY.- Today, Feb. plloDS of water per minute iD a Hreftgbllng situation.
15, the RaciDe Volunteer Fire Depl!rimeol celebrates Pictured above are fire department members, left to
Its 30th alUiiveraary. One of RaciDe's newest addiUoos rtglit, Mlleb Nease, Harry Lyoos, Jr., Dave Nelgler,
Is Ibis 1973, Ford pumper truck, rated to pump 750 and Jllllior Johnson.

'W'dl shut it down '--Montgomery

5

1977 Chev. M.C. Cpe.
1973 Olds. 98 Sedan

dleport departments were called for
assistance, 'but due to lengthy travel
time, both were often too late. That
great need for modern fire protection resulted In the organization
known as the Racine Volunteer"Flre
Department in 1951.
With the help of local citizens, the
first piece of equipment. was put·
chased. It was a 1937 GMC fire
truck, bought from the Second Ward
Fire Co. of Pomeroy. Later new
hose, fire coats, and other necessary '
appanitus were obtained.
In 1956, a new 500 gallon Dodge
pumper truck was purchased. For
s~veral years it was . the most
modern piece of fireflghting equipment in Meigs County. The pwnper
is still in use today.
A Ford pumper truck was added in
1973 which was capable of pumping
750 gallons of water per minute onto
a blazing fire. In 1980, a 1978 Ford
tanker was acquired. It is currently
(continued on page AJ)

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

1978 OLD.S· 98 Regency Cpe. 54995

1974 VOLKSWAGEN BUG

see: Garland Parsons or Pat Hiii·Gen. Mgr.
Ph. 992-2 196
Middleport, OH .
S. Jrd Ave.
t

.

1977 Pontiac GP Cpe.

1979 FAIRMONT FUlURA 2 DR.

1975 PINTO STATIONWAGON •••••••••••• '1495
Perlectcond.,4speed, p.s . '2895
1977 FORD MUMANG
~II
•••••••••••••••••••
Auto., a;, cond
S1195
1974 COUGAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Auto., good cond '1795
~
1976 FORD PINTO ~ •..•......•...••••
4 Dr .. auto .. p .b.lp.s. $}395
1974 PONTIAC ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 PONTIAC LeMANS 4 DR•••••••••••• sngs
1974 MAVERICK 4 DR••••••••:";:~p~~~ .C:!. '1195
Standar.d w/ topper . SOft5
1973 CHEVY PICKUP.••••••••••••••••••••···a~
1975 FORD F150 PICKUP. •• !':~~·:~:::o~~:~.s1395
1964 PONTIAC lEMPESI •••••••••••• :.c:~. '195
1962 DODGE PICKUP ••••••••••••••••••••• s295

the mothers and wives of the
BY SCOTT WOI.$E
RACINE - Today the Racine firemen.
Previously, fire protection for tile
Volunteer Fire Department . will
Racine
area consisted of the •' bucket
celebrate its 30th anniversary. It has
brigade"
which functioned fairly
been providing years of service and
well
after
sufficient personnel
fire protection to Racine Village,
arrived
at
the
scene. Back in those
Lebanon Twp., Letart 'J'wp., andSut·
days,
every
man
and woman over 18
ton 'i'wp.
were
volunteer
firemen.
On Thursday, Feb. 15, 1951 after
Atwo wheeled, hand held cart was
much discussion, Henry Cleland and
Racine's
first piece of fire equipPutt Lyons, after blowing the siren,
mept.
The
cart, purchased, In 1898,
called the first meeting of the
provided
40
years of service to the
Racine Volunteer Fire Department
community.
At ·the tune it was pur·
to form an organization \hal would
chased,
it
was
quite a novel outfit.
provide Racine Village and the.
Mounted
with
·two
large tanks, it
surrounding area with the best
used
chemical
action
to generate a
possible fire protection.
foam,
which
was
directed
at the
Mayor Bud Wingett appointed
flames.
Later,
another
two-wheeled
Carroll Teaford as fire chief and
Lyons as assistant chief, while Otis hose cart was purchased with a por·
table pump.
McClintock was elected president.
For many years, this was the only
A constitution and by-laws were
fire
protection the Racine area had,
drawn up for the department by
which
resulted in tremendous losses
Henry Cleland, which still exist
due
to
fire
.
today. A lew months later, in May, a
Often
the
Pomeroy and Mid·
firemen's auxiliary was formed for '

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---

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1. It's more attractive
a. It's maintenance tree
9. It's worry free
10. It's guaranteed!

BE SURE TO SEE ALL THE OTHER STYLES
LADIES AND MEN'S ROLFS WAUETS
AND ACCESSORIES

. Ohio Universih Athens ·
admrssion: $6.00, $5.00
$1 .00 discount children 12 &amp; under

Racine volunteers started
service 30 years ago today

WHY PAY MORE?

ROLFS ... it ohows you care.

,Eilk~v~ie~w~,~W~.~V~a.;·~w~as~eias~t~bo~un~d~o~n~~~~;.. .._._._~;;;;-tl

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Roofing/Siding

$8995

ONLY

Seek hit·skip driver

:One hurt in four accidents Harlem .
-. One person was injured in a twocar crash on U.S. 35 in Gallia County
,. Thursday morning, according to the
• Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio High• way Patrol.
:. The patrol said Donald B. Hay, 39,
~. Ray, was eastbound near Rio Gran·
·deat9:40a.m. when he attempted to
pass another eastbound vehicle
driven by Connie J. Hill, 24, Rt. 2,
Bidwell.
According to the report, Hill's car
• then turned left and the two autos
; ~ollided, demolishing the Hill auto
: and causing minor damage to Ray's
-vehicle.
~ Ray was injured but not treated,
the patrol said.
No injuries were reported in a

ASKTOWED
,
A marriage license was issued to
Andy Oliver Doczie IV, 20, Rt. 1,
Middleport,. and Barbara An 'I ,
Haley, 17, Middleport.

CLOSED MONDAY
The Meigs County Courthouse will
be closed Monday in observance of
President's Day as will the Meigs
County Landfill.
·

The 1980 Ford Thunderbird taken
in the breaking and entering of the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
Pat Hill Ford Agency, Middleport,
•
Tuesday has been recovered in KanJUST
fOR
HER
sas.
The Meigs County sheriff's depart·
fOR VALENTINE'S DAY
ment was notified by Topeka, Kan·
"1
sas police that the vehicle had been
'!
fROM CLARKS
recovered. The vehicle was owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sayre, New
Haven.
In other activity, officers are in·
vestigating a breaking and entering
of the Rickman Store located at the
Set in either 14K white or ~"
Cr0fi1Sroads that occurred Wed·
yellow gold. This is a great
nesday night.
buy. In time for Valentine's ~
Entry was made through a back
Day.
window. Information on what was
taken was not available.

Terminate 21 cases·
Ten defendants were fined and 11
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Raymond Chandler, Colum·
bus, $22 and costs, speed; Domingo
Delacruz, Reedsville, costs only,
three days confinement, littering ;
Robert Caruthers, Middleport, $24
and costs, speed; Linda Beliveau,
Racine, $23 and costs, speed;
Richard Boring, Reedsville, $27 and
: costs, speed; Angela Ginther,
Pomeroy, $26 and costs, speed;
James Janetski, Wheeling, W. Va.,
$22 and costs, speed; Jeffrey
Crueser, Pomeroy, $23 and costs,
speed; Ronnie Eblin, Rutland, $~

Friday, February IJ, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

MORE BONES FOUND- AD Atlanta Pellce Crime Lab olftcer looks
at two boaea fouod Ill a wooded ll'tl 1outhwest ol AUaala SaiUrday
during a search for clues lo the deathl of 17 AUanla chUdren. The boaes
were ltllllld less than a mile from lbe area where 1kelelal remaiDB were
found Frldaf. Atupper rlgbt II AUanla city councllman Arthur Laagford,
Otben are uBidentlfled. (AP Laaerpboto).

Extended weather, state forecast
Sunny today,. High around 50. The chance of precipitation is near zero per·
cent.
Ohio Extended Weather - For Monday through Wednesday - fAir Man·
day. Rain possible Tuesday and Wedne.tdlly. Temperatures'well above nor,
mal with highs mainly in the 50s. Lows in the upper 30s and lower 40s through
theperlnd.

I

I

.''

ATLANTA (AP) - Volunteers
searching for evidence in the series
of child killings found what appeared to be some small leg bones
Saturday, and the police task force
llliSigned to the case was called in to
determine whether. it was the body
of an 18th victim.
.The discovery came one day after
two more children's bodies were
found, raising to 17 the nwnber of
black children believed murdered in
the area in less than two years.
Police inunediately surroimded
the area where the bones were found
Saturday, and lnvesllgators . were
called to the scene. The area was ad·
jacent to where a skeleton was found
Friday, authorities said.
About 200 people gathered for a
police-sponsored seminar on how to
deal with children's emotional
problems caused by the killings.
Parents, social workers, teachers,
youth leaders and psychologists met
at Atlanta University for the aU-day
conference designed to he~p children .
and parents cope with deep,
widespread fear.
'
"The living and learning en·
vlronment of children at home;
school and the playground may not
be psychologically safe," Public
Safety Conunissioner Lee Brown
said. "Parents and teachers are
reportedly having difficulty handling the increased levels' of stress
and anxiety exhibited by children."
Sandra Sims, director of child
development at Spebnan College,
said fears have been 14!1!11ln children
refusing to go to school or trying to
arm themselves with knives and
guns before leaving home.
Some youngsters are reporting
recurring nightmares bed wetting
and other sympto~ of acute
anxiety Ma. Slllll said.
The ..:orkahop was set up to help a
group of mt!nUil health professionals
(Contin ued on page A3)

BOILER INSTAIJ..ED- Heat was restored to tbe
UDell: of the Gallla COUDty courtb0118e early Friday
morning when a boUer IDIIU!Hed by A. J. Stockmelster,
lac., Jackaoo, was made operational. Tbe boller
replaces the ol~er unit damaged iD tbe Jan. 8 court·

b0118e fire, and Is housed In a cinder-block structure iD . •
what was formerly tbe sheriff's department property
lot. Tbe boiler was to have been worklog two weeks
ago, but work was held up by electrical problema. ·
~Kevin Kelly photo).

County reaches agreement
on units, cost will be $45,696
Building on First Ave.-because of
GALLlPOLlS- An agreement for specialize in disaster-retief housing,
the lease of eight modular units to the units are being designed to house the price and the fact the stationing
house county officilS destroyed a large courtroom, witness and jury of the buildings at the courthouse
during the January 8 courthouse fire roorns, as well as offices for the would keep county operations cen·
tralized.
was entered into Friday by the Probate and Juvenile courts, the
A clause in the contract will allow
Galtia County Board rl. Com· . c~unty commissioners, and the park
the
county to purchase the buildings,
missioners.
district.
if
the
commission should so desire,
The lease arrangement calls for
The motion to enter into the
with
the
rental expense being apsix mobile units to be stationed as a agreement for the lease of the units
plied
to
the
purchase price.
complex in the side parking lot of the passed the commission by a two-toThe
units
are expected to be
courthouse. Two other units will be one vote. Commissioner Jim Saun·
delivered
to
the Gallia County
placed in t~ front lawn.
ders voted in the negative.
Junior
Fairgrounds-where
they will
The eight units contain a total of
Commissioner Paul D. Niday said
be
partitioned
and
fitted
to
county
7,616 square feet-cost of rental will Friday he had opted for the rental of
.
specifications-next
week.
be $2 per square foot per year, or a the buildings, as opposed to other opThe modular units are scheduled
total of $45,696 over the three-year tions being explored-including the
to
be ready for occupancy at their
contract period.
rental of the Old Library Building
courthouse
locations by April!.
Supplied by Sohn and Sons, and the purchase of the Barr
,Washington Courthouse, who

lnvesti·gators study statements
.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Arson Tuesday night's fire, which killed
Investigators are trying to pin
Investigators are taking a close look eight, injured 198, and caused $10 down how three fires erupted in the
at statements by two friends of the million damage to the 2,783-room hotel after the first andlar~otest blaze
busboy held _In co~nectlon with the hotel, the nation's lar~otest.
(CQntinued on page A3)
Las Vegas Halton fare, and also have
found new evidence that will "throw
big holes" in his story, authorities
said Saturday.
"I'm going to bring Irrefutable
evidence that the fire was t~e result Area deaths ......•................•......•.•.•.••• A-7
of premeditated arson," said Capt. Business • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . • . • • • D-1
Mike Patterson of bie Clark County Classified .....•.•.•.•..•••.•.•·.•.•..•.•••.....••. D-a-1
Fire Department, chief arson In- Editorial ..... .... ... . . . ............ yf"'.. • • • • • • • •
A·l
vestigator on the case. "Our thrust Farm ....• .•...•.
C..7
now is to show this guy (busboy Lifestyle .......... .... ...... . ................... B-1-8
Phlip Bruce Cline) .~dn't set the ~cal ......•....•.•.....•..•.•...•.•.•••
A-3-8
hotel hre by aCCinent.
State-National
................................•..
,
•
, D-1
He declined to disclose the new
C.l....
evident-e, but said "What we found Sports .•.........•..•...•..•.....•...
TV guide .... .•.•........•..........•.•.••.•.• , • I.ert
will throw big holes in his story.~·
Cline, 23, was booked for investlgatlon of murder and arson in

===':======================

. Inside today.

• •

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I

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,

•••••••• I

••••• I

I

I

'(

•

I

I

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•

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•

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�.

:Commentary and perspective

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~Point_ Pleasant,

the current Human Life people of the United States, acting
Review. 8 young scholar has ar- tlirough their representatives in
ticulared an approach to the abor- Congress, wish to undo Roe vs.
'· .tion question which is a dazzling con- Wade, in which the Supreme Court
"..stitutional insight. The original idea, ruled that state abortion statutes "re
. author Stephen Galebach modestly unconstitutional limitations on a
.admits; emanated fr&lt;m Professor woman's right to privacy, all
George Carey of Georgetown, the Congress has to do is pass a simple
·.renowned political scientist. But the statute defining "life."
No one questions that, under the
careful explication and the thorough
,.constitutional analysis are the work Constitution, human life is protec,!If Galebach, a graduate of Yale and · ted. Twice: once from any assault
1
of Harvard Law School, where he by Congress; again from any assault
· served as notes editor o( the Har- by the states. The Fifth Amendment
vard Law Review before clerking reads in part, "No person shall be ...
with the U. S. Circuit Court of Ap- deprived (by Congress) of life, liber·
peals of the District of Colwnbia. His ty, or property, without the process
28-page article has 102 footnotes, of law." T)le 14th guarantees that no
where you would probably need 70 "State (shall) deprive any person of
times 102 footnotes to persuade the life, liberty, or property, without due
American Civil Liberties Union that process of law."
In Rose vs. Wade the Supreme
the phrase "the unbo\fl child" is
only one half "unborn," the second Court protected itself by the simple
expedient of saying: " People
half being "child."
But Galebach's argwnents are disagree about what constitutes
purely legal. One. could read his ar- "life." That's true. The court went
ticle straight through without fin· on to explain that inasmuch as there
.ding any justification for concluding are differences among doctors,
that Galebsch himself opposes abor- philosophers and theologians on the
tion. All he says, simply, is that if the question, when does human life

..

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begin, the court is not comP.t'lent to
asseverate when it begins.
Very well. But this does not mean
that therefore no one is competent to
judge that question. People disagree
about how high taxes ought to be,
whether a dam should be built here
or there, whether we shoitld declare
war. The question, in short, is
political. It is all very well to say and most people would agree - that
there are more important criteria
than political criteria. But it is these
that govern. We lived under a Constitution that, for four score yearS,
pennitted the institution of slavery.
We know now that slavery was
wrong; but we do not challenge that
anyone, in the dafs before the
Emancipation Proclamation, who
attempted to steal another man's
slave, was legally guilty of theft.
The Court, in Roe vs. Wade,
acknowledged as much. "If the
suggestion of personhood Is
established, the appellant's case, of
course, collapses; for the fetus' right
to life would then be guaranteed
specifically by the amendment.
Now, in the days since 1973 much
thought has been given to the
question whether life sbould be understood as existing from the point
. of conception; or even at some point
between conception and birth. It Is a
fairly safe generality that increasing scientific testimony ia to
the effect that the felull Is in most
significant biological senses as individual human life. But that isn't a
legal argument. The Court, In more

CETA . h I•dding sel

.
PagrA-2

February 15, ltll

WASHINGTON -

within reach
It is a sophisticated fonn of roulette, but a gamble nonetheless - and
President Reagan has a lot riding on the dicey business of economic

forecasting.
Tbe educated guesses of his economic advisers will be the underpinning
of the budget and tax program he presents to Congress Wednesday night.
Should those forecasts tum out to be wrong, as they generally did for
Jinuny Carter, the results the administration anticipates may be unatll!inable.
Carter always said factors no. administration could control, notably the
• soaring price of imported oil, fueled inflation and kept him from reaching
his goals. That didn't do him any good at the polls.
Reagan hasn't been in office a month yet, and his advisers airea4Y have
come up with two sets of predictions. At first they forecast a drastic drop
in Inflation by next year, to 6.5 percent- a little more than half the rate of
the year just past.
·
That has been tempered now, and sources said Reagan would be
forecasting an Inflation rate of just over 8 percent in 1982. That would be a
marked improvement, and a boon to Republicans in the congressional
elections ~t year, but it is not so ambitious a target as the original
forecaSt would have set.
Tbe problem for presidents is that when the forecasts don't pan out, and
things get worse or stay the same, it is not the economic seers who get the
blame. It ia the man who hired them.
Federal budgets and taxes have a marked effect on inflation, employment and the gross national product. But it works the other way
around, too. Tax revenues and the cost 'If federal programs vary with the
state of the economy.
Social Security and other government retirement programs are tied to
the cost of living; when it goes up, so do benefits. When interest rates
soar, so does the cost of covering the national debt. Let unemployment
rise and so will the price of unemployment compensation and food stamp
programs, while tax revenues dip because there aren't as many people
drawing paychecks.
By law, presidents publish their economic asswnptions as part of the
budgets they send Congress each year. Carter's final budget message
forecast an Inflation rate of 12.6 percent this year, slightly above the rate
.
for 1980.
Given the peril of projections that may not be met, the Republican administration is proceeding more cautiously. Reagan has to promise
dividends to have a chance of getting congressional approval for the
drastic budget cuts he seeks.
The difficult task is to keep the promises within reach.

Today in history.

• •

Today is Sunday, Feb. 15, the 46th day of 1981. There are 3!9 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
011Feb.!5, 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine was blown up in Havana harbor, precipitating the Spanish-American war.
On this date:
In 15114, the Italian astronomer Galileo was born in the city of Pisa.
In 11114, St. Louis was establlirhed as a fur trading post.
In 1m, the United States and Cuba signed an accord that called for the
proSecution or extradition of th09e who hijacked planes and ships.
In llrl8, agreement was aMounced in Rhodesta to being blacks Into key
rolealn the government of Prime Minister Ian Smith.
Ten years ago: Britain switched to decimal currency after 1,200 years
of dellllnga baaed on the 12-peMy shilling.
Five years ago: The 12th Winter Olympics came to an end in Innsbruck,
Austria, with the Russians the big wiMers of gold medals.
One year ago: Iran's foreign minister i.rlsisted the American husta,;es
wouldn't be freed until an international commission began its inveltigation of the lhalt
Today'• birthdays: Football player Ken Anderson is 32.
Thought for today: When fortune knocks, open the door. - Genilan
.
proverb.

fewer than 50 percent of the voting
age residents registered or voted in
the 11164 el~ons.
Indeed the court has gone so far
(when it upheld the illegalization of
literacy tests in· English) as to
acknowledge Congress' power to
pre-empt a possible or likely

deprivation of a citizen's right. Few
people, this side of the ACLU, are
likely to opt that abortlm does not
affect a latent right.
Galebach's essay is a stunning
breakthrough. Legislation baa been
submitted. Let us proceed to face the
question.

IntellJgence

possibility: a rapprochemellt bel·
ween the United States and Cuba. At
first blush, the suggestion seems so
farfetched as to be dismissed
outright. But stranger things have
happened in the ideolocical r.igzags
oftheColdWar.
If the implacable ~o~nti~unist
Richard Nixon could open up the
Red regime on mainland China, it is
not beyond the realm of poealbillty
that Ronald Reagan could achieve
detente with Cubs's Fidel Castro.
Normalization of relatiOIIB with
Castro would undercut the Soviets
and produce a dramiltic international tumarowtd - all at
small cost to President Reagan,
beyond the doctrinalre howls of
unrelenting anti-communist
dogmatists. And as Nixon's China
caper demonstrated, a Republican
in the White HoWle can pull off this
kind of political heresy without the
cries of " Treason!" that would greet
a Democrat who tried it.
•
Be that as it may, the whole idea
naturally depends more on .Premier
Castto than on President Reagan.
And here's where the scenario
begins to get fascinating. My sources tell me Castro is fed up to here
with his superiors in the Kremlin. ·
The youthful guerri1lil leader
whose ragtag iroops threw out the
corrupt dictatorship of Fulgencio
Batista 21 years ago is now M years
old. He's getting bald and a bit paunchy, but his massive ego and his
dreams of glory are apparently intact . .

Nuclear

\

GALLIPOLIS Regional
Manager Services Council Chair·
man Emelyn Scarberry aMounced
plans for a bidders' conference to be
held March 13.
Prospective program operators
will be told how to apply for grants to
operate federal Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA)
programs.
The conference for this region will
be held at the Hoelting Technical
College, Neisonville. Applications
for CETA f"ISCa I year 1982 wt"II be
distributed for the following
programs : Title li-D at 9 a.m.; Title
Vlat 10:30 a.m.; Title ll·B at I p.m.;
an!l Title IV Youth Employment
Training Program (YETP) at 3 p.m.
Federal regulations as of May 20,
1980, explains eligl bi I i ty
requirements for these CETA
programs. ()'ylost public libraries
have copies of such regulations.) All
appropriate eligible groups are considered regardless of race, creed,
color; national origin, sex, age, han·
dicap or belief.
·
Prospective program operators
are also Invited to a statewide bidders' conference on March 9, at 30
East Broad Street, lobby hearing
room, Rhodes Office Tower, in
Columbus for the following
programs: Youth Community Con-

vestigator, a deputy and two jailers--

as a result of the fire , two cooks have

,,

servation and Improvement
son, executive director of the Tri- Ohio Valley Industrial CQuncil
Program (YCC!P) at 9 a.m.; YETP State Fair and Regatta, will preview (COV!C) meet at the HoUday Inndemonstration projects at I0 ;30 plans for that organization's 1981 South Point, Thursday, Feb. 19, at
a.m.; and Il·B priority projects at
6:1op.m.
1:30 p.m.
The Ironton Chamber of ComTitle tr-B will provide work ex·
CLOSED MONDAY
merce is host for the meting. Memperience and related activities for
GAWPOUS - The Gallipolis
bers and interested business people
the unskilled, inexperienced and . License Bureau will be closed all may make reservations by conunemployed worker. Title li-D will day Monday in observance of tadingL.W. Pilstlat (606) 324-9539.
provide public service employment President's Day.
MAN CHARGED
and related activities for the unSYRACUSE _ Timothy A.
skilled, inexperienced and unemPOST OFFICE TO CWSE
Jenkins, 22 , Racine, was arrested on
ployed worker.
GALUPOLIS ·- The Gallipolis charges of operating an· unsa'e
TITLE IV YETP wr· ·11 provtde
· a Post Office will be closed Monday in motor vehicle, and leaving the scene
'
wide range of employment . and observance of President's Day.
of an accident as a result of a hittraining to economically disad·
skip in the village of Syracitse Thur:
vantaged in-school youth between
RECEIVES GRANT
sday evening Chief of PoUce Milton
16-21 years. Title VI will provide
RIO GRANDE - The Village of Varian reported.
temporary assistance through
Rio Grande Saturday received an
Jenkins was cited to court of
public service employment.
EPA grant of $-15,600 for one of three Mayor Eber Pickens Tuesday, Feb.
Additional information may be ob- r-p_ha_s_e_s_fo_r_t_he_w_a_s_te-_w_a_t_er_p_r_ol_·e_ct_._...:::_
17.:..·- - - - - - - - - tained from Douglas martin, special
planning supervisor, at either (614)
466-11806 or 1-$)().282-1050. Reservations for the conference must be
made in advaqce by March I. Con- ,
tact Cindie Marshall at the same
telephone nwnhers.
The CETA program is funded with
balance of state funds. Gov. James
A. Rhodes is the prime sponsor of
balance of state area which includes
Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, Athens,
Hoelting. Vinton and Jackson connties.

been laid-off.
·
"I'm afraid we're going to lose a
lot of men this year," the sheriff continued, "the real problem with
losing officers is !hut we huve to
train new ones ...olten, just to lose
them.'~

Castto has undisputed control of
his little island and its 9.6 million
inhabitants. But what he apparently
yearns for- deeply - is the position
of Third World leader that was held
for many years by the late Marshal
Titoof Ytigoslavla.
Castro's earlier dream of being a
latter-day Simon Bolivar who would
orchestrate popular revolqtions
throughout Latin America, came
crashing down in ill-starred
uprisings during the early years of ·
his regime. But he still hopes to
achieve a place in history as the
recognized leader of the 9CkKid
nations in the so-called nonaligned
movement. It's a position that would
make him a leading actor on the
world stage, upholding the Third
World's gossamer-like values In the
sordid power plays between East
and West.
But Castro has a huge problem.
Unlike Marshal Tlto, who broke with
the Kremlin three years after his
Soviet-supported victory In
Yugoslavis, Castro has slipped increasingly in debt to the Russians as
every year goes by. And, what is
worse, from his viewpoint, he has
been unable to keep his vassalage to
the Soviets a secret. Castro is widely
perceived in the Third World as little
more than a Kremlin stooge.
To a man of Fidel Castro's selfesteem, this well-deserved
reputation as a marionette who danCes every time Leonid Bremnev
pulls the strings has apparently
become intolerable. He recognizes
his lolly, and is even willing to admit
it. Last swnmer, at the first an-

niversary celebration of the
Nicaraguan revolution, Castro warned the Sardinista leaders not to
make the mistake he did by "getting
into bed" with the Russians.
What keeps Castro locked in the
Russian bear's crushing embrace, of
course, Is the billions in Soviet aid
that keeps the mismanaged Cuban
economy barely viable. Without the
infusion of •10 million • ·ay in aid
from Moscow, Castro's gvvernment
would collapse.
Soviet oil fills virtually all of
Cuba's energy needs. Two
disastrous sugar cane and tobacco
harvests in a row have put Cubs
hopelessly in debt to the Russians.
Just how deeply is Castro in thrall
to the Kremlin? I reported 18 months
ago on U. S. intelligence analysts'
assessment of his situation, "The
brash young Caribbean rebel of the
mid-1960s has been replaced by a
mature, responsible member of the
(Soviet) team ... "the experts wrote.
"The same firebrand who years ago
had not. hesitated to challenge
Moscow on virtually any ideological
tenet (now extols l the Soviet communists.''
But deep in his soul, apparently,
the old fire still burns. Intelligence
sources say Castro still sees himself
as the champion of the world's oppressed masses. "In opposing
Western 'economic&lt; Imperialism,'
the remaining vestiges of European
coloniall.vn and white minority
regimes of South Africa," a secret
State ' Department report notes,
"Castro brings to, his mission an
almost messianic zeal."

The Cuban dictator still retains his
old charisma among Lalin
America's young militant radlcaLI,
who are willing to Ignore his depeodency on the Soviet Union. He even
has a certain amount of respect
among more moderate leaden in
the hemisphere, who see the main
enemy as the military-landowning
oligarchs who have oppressed their
nations for centuries.
And so far Ca!!tro has had no dif.
ficulty finding Cuban recruits for his
military adventures abroad - ftr
the pathetic reason that a soldier's
pay Is not only steady, but an Improvement over the misery of ute In
the city slums or backbreaking work
in the sugar-cane fields.
But sources told my associate Bob
Sherman that Castro's overseas expeditions are increasingly un·
popular at horne. Cuban famlllu
with sons and huabands fighting and
dying in Afrida apparently - the
foreign campaigns as leu an
idealistic struggle than aa an attempt to fulfill Fidel Cutro'a
waning dreams of internatia
power.
And no matter how lll8DJ' Cuban
young men he sacrifices In Ancoia
and Ethiopia, Castro's hopei of
achieving the prestige of 1blrd
World ascendancy are doomed u
long as he continues to he perceived
as a Kremlin lackey. Cutro
recognizes this, but so far hun't
figured a way out of his clllemma.
Maybe an "opening" to the ftelcan
administration will strike him u
worth trying.
·

"Every time someone wants to
make an atomic weapon comparison
he 111)'1: 'This warhead packs 1,000
timel the wallop of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.' Or 'This artillery
shell will give you 30 times more
punch than what we did to
Nagasaki.'
"These slats don't have relevance
any more. Hiroehlma and Nagasaki
are part rl ancient history and have
no meaning for the people running
the world today. We have to come up
with a new yardstick to give them
Idea of what atomic weapons

.orne

cando."

"What do you suggest?" I asked
him.

"I have a modest proposal,"
Alabaster said. "We need two new
examples to demo,nstrate how
awesome nuclear war is, so it will
sober up politicians, military men
and statesmen, not only here but In
the Soviet Union."
"All right," I agreed. "What do
you have in mind?"
"We should penni! the United
States and the U.S.S.R. to fire off
their largest nuclear weapon at just
one Sov;et and one U. S. city, to
prove how powerful the weapons
really area."
"Why not?" I Biked.
"It Is without a doubt the loveliest
city in the ~et Union, with

magnificent palaces, lrreplaceeble
architecture, and one of the great
musewns of the world.''
"When the Ruaaiarll the
devastation one American weapon
has done to liB beloved Lenln&amp;racl.
they will rea1lu that the United
States is not rrtocltpiiJnc 'l'lnller
Toys.
"And in tum the AmeriC8111 wbo
have been dlacusslng IIIICIIIII' wu- u
some kind of military Super Bowl
will have second . thougiU about
solving ita foreip probl111111 with
atomic weapona. With Lenlacnd
and SanFranctxo 'outed,' we - ' t
need l:lirGihlma and Nasasald Ill)'
more to point out the da1111en of a
new war.

"The county is currently in the
position of bearing the cost of
training officers for other law en·
forcement agencies... after we train
them, a lot move on to other areaswe lose a lot to the city-our $9,000 to
$12,000 pay range just isn't competitive," Montgomery said.
Sheriff Montgomery confirmed
Friday there had been talk among
his deputies concerning unionization
and the possibility of going on strike.
"I talked to them last week," the
sheriff said, "the situation with the
courthouse and our pay scale has led
to a pretty" low morale ... l can't
really say I blame them ... the star·
ting salary in Jackson County.
$11,300, is about the same as our
highest salary."
''It's a damn shame we can't pay
our men more," Montgomery ad~

The Galiia sheriff continued by ex·
RIO GRANDE- A public hearing same in the planning area.
plaining that the bsd economic . for an EPA grant for a facilities plan
Public participation program for
situation created a double-edged for the villages of Rio Grande and the Facilities Plan will 11!' presented 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - problem for his operations.
Centerville and parts of Gallia and and discussed. A discussion con"The worse the economy gets the Jackson Counties will be held Thur· cerning area sewerage problems
fewer services we can ol- sday, Feb.l9at7 p.m.
will be held and possible alternative
fer ... reduced law enforcement and a
solutions
to the sewage problems
The engineering consulting firm of
had economy leads to greater Barrett, Cargo, Withers and will be presented.
crime ... more crime creates a need Associates, Limited of Chillicothe
Input by the public is solicited in
for more law enforcement...it's a has been retained to prepare the order to assist the consulting
According to Terry Johnson of lion in floors, sidewalks, and ceiling,
deadly cycle."
facilities plan, The U.S. EPA grant engineers in preparing a Facilities Johnson's Mobile homes, Inc. it is as well as many other energyThe sheriff added that his depart- will be utilized to detennine sanitary Plan most responsive to the desires possible to save up 60% on your fuel
efficient construction features.
ment was now averaging ap- sewage problems and solutions for of the affected area residents.
bills by moving into a new siteBlankets of Owens-Corning
proximately 800 calls per week from
The next public meeting will not delivered-Friendship home. The Fiberglas Insulation, totaling 5Y•"
county residents, "We had 87 calls in
be held until the consulting savings result, Johnson's Mobile thick, lor an R-19 rating are laid in
0
one eight hour period last week."
fi
engineers have defined the sewage homes, Inc. says, from the high con- ·the 2x6 Friendship floor and
"To answer those callS-&lt;iespite
problems and developed alternative struction R-values of the pre- sidewalls, while IO'h" of Owensimmediate budget concerns-you ·
solutions for the correction of the
d
b ·1 F · dshi
Coming Fiberglas are laid in the
need manpower and equipment,"
r----------~
engineere
,
preut t
nenof an
p ceiling, which is rated R-33. An even
Home, with the added
plus
problems.
Sheriff Montgomery said. "We are
Ultra Energy Saving Package op- higher It-value, R-44, can be obtaincharged to protect and serve this
tion. This includes extra· Owens- . ed by a further option of using 14" of
·
conununity-that's expensive.''
The Meigs-Gallia-Mason chapter •
Corning Fiberglass blanket insula- insulation in the ceiling.
Last week-on the same day the of the National Association of Life •.This Vf(eelc's Specloft
tion for even higher R-values. The
(R-value represents the abiity of
budget conunission advised the Underwriters held its 1981 kick-off
Friendship Home with the Ultra the insulation to resist h!l'll flow,
county corrunission that there should banquet at the Holiday, Inn, ~
Energy Saving Package is available either out of your home in winter or
be a freeze on the purchase of equip- Gallipolis, Jan . 22 .
· locally from Johngon's Mobile into your home in sufnmer. The
ment-the county corrunlssion apPrior to the banquet, there .Was an
~
Homes, Inc. at Gallipolis, Ohio.
greater the R-value, the greater the
.,..
proved the purchase, at a cost of informal social time, followed by a
Johnson says that the 50% savings insulating value.)
$2,000 each, of four cruisers for the short business meeting.
on homes equipped with the Ultra
Other Friendship constructing
sheriff's department formerly used
The highlight of the evening was It
Jt
Energy Saving Package, as proven features contributing high construC'by the State Highway Patrol.
the guest speaker, Hennan Cam·
~()()T
in year-round tests conducted by Iion R·values and, therefore, high
pana, accompanied by his wife
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. and energy efficiency are the interior
Julie, Agency Vice President of Den· •
a major utility company, wiing ac· wall and ceiling panelings, sidewall
nis Clark and Associates, in Colum· ~ 8-16 OZ.
lttuai manufactured homes, sheathing acting as an additional
teer.
bus, Ohio.
BRS.
Plus Tax :
represents the savings over air-infiltration barrier, lh" exterior
The department is currently
His talk touched on several of the
and Dep. ,..
manufactured homes without this grade roof sheathing, polyethylene
represented by 25 active members important services rendered to the ~
ICE COLD BEER
~
option.
vapor barrier in floors, sidewalls,
with Hank Johnson serving as chief.
public by life insurance and life in· .,.
.,.
Johnson also points out that pitted and ceilings, insulated stonn ducts
Glenn Rizer is assistant chief; Dave surance professionals and the :
WINE &amp; POP
: against any existing, conventional- and caulking at all joints. Also, winNeiglerandJirnWilliarns,captains;
unique role it plays in meeting the Jt
HOURS
,._
ly-built houses, the savings could be dows and patio doors, stonn winHarry Lyons. Jr .. Doug Rees. and financial needs of individuals,
Mon.-Thur. 8 tilll
:
even greater.
dows and thermal doors arftl
Wanda Lyons, lieutenants; and Dan families, and businesses.
Fri. · Sat. 8 til12
It's been predicted thut the cost of weather stripping around doors and
Shane, engineer.
The next meeting will be Feb. 18 at It
Itheating and cooling your home could windows.
The Racine Volunteer Fire Dept. the Ponderosa Steak House, at 11:30 ,.
I IS
increase by four or five times in the
The Friendship Home is available
ha'l, been praised for its past efforts a.m. All life insurance professionals
DRIVE TH R u
next ten years. Purchase of a highly in a full range of sizes from 960 sq. ft.
and 30 years of dedication to the from the tri-county area are invited
CARRYOUT
energy-.,flicient home at this time
community, and ·hopes that Feb. 15, to attend and participate in the ac- It
709 First Ave
Jt can mean substantial savings in the thorugh a specious 1848 ft. Johnson's
Mobile Homes, Inc. says a Friend1981 will mark a new beginning in tivitiesofthechapter.
years ahead,
ship Home is available to meet all
fulfilling its original goal of ';;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:;!
Friendship's Ultra Energy Saving applicable HUD, FHA, and FNMA
providing the area with the best I
Package consists of extra Owens· and state codes for this area .
possible fire protection.
Corning. Fiberglas blanket insula·

IDtra Energy Saving Package

Available On Manufactured Homes

U derwnters
• g
hold meetin

**·*****'***********

*
·
*
ORANGE CRUSH :
*
*
!
OR

!
!

*
!

•
R 8Clne===============

(ContinuedfromPageAI )
being financed through a fund
raising drive. The tank was obtained
through the efforts of Gene Coleman
of Ashland Oil Co.
The original fire station wsa
located in the old village ,hall. In 1961
plans were drawn up lor a new fire
station and town hall. The new
facility, i!)Cated on Third and Vine
Streets, completed in 1963, houses
the department.
. The Racine Fire Department is
funded strictly by donations, fund
raising drives and programs, such
as, barbe.cues and weekly gun
shoots. All work is ,completely volun-

!
*

.$ }19

Gall'pol' 1 Co

:
:

**

*

ce . ,..
!

!

*

*

t*****************

30th ANNIVERSARY

l)~cover================
been found in the past 19
(Continued from page AIl
develop ways to help parents.
Sessions included such topics as
strengthening skills to reduce stress
in the black family and using community resources to help the
families.
The bodies of 17 children have

BARRELl HEAD
BEER

*

mont~~. Ill-

THURSDAY NIGHT

eluding two on Friday. One of those
bodies was identified quickly, but
medical examiners were working
Saturday to identify the other. It was
not known if it was one of two
children who remain missing.
.
Six bodies have been found in the
past five weeks alone.

SPECIAL•••

Investigators·==========
said: 'Tm not sure if they are now.
(Continued from page AIl
started on the eighth noor.
Patterson said the two friends
were "people who have made
statements. I won't. comment on
whether we're talking to them or
not."
Asked if the two people worked for
the Hilton, as Cline did, Patterson

They may have been at onetime."
Patterson said the smaller fires
also could have been set by people
unknown to either Cline or his lriends who "wanted to jwnp on the bandwagon."
Patterson said he hoped to ha:ve
something conclusive from the
ongoing investigation within a week.

What's Your Choice?

.

WHERE ELSE COULD YOU GET A

STUFTSHIRT SANDWlat
FOR ONLY 99• AND HAVE IT FIXED
THE WAY YOU LIKE IT.
REGOLAR '1.49

lHURSDAY NIGHT
FEBRUARY 191H

DOONESBURY

4 PM TIL CLOSING

ONE DAY

SIX MONTHS
Minimum Depoii!SlO,OOO

Earnte's checlc.lnlnavlngs plan
earns you 5'1•" Interest every

Th i!l Money Market Cer tificate
ro!lte Is effectlvt every Thursday ,

balance. Write CPltcks as you
need to. s~w l ngs account Interest

Federal regu lations prohibit
compounding
of
Interest.
Automatically renewl!lble at
maturity at the prevailing ratt.

d&amp;v on your tota l Si!lvlngs account

- ct1ecklng account convenience .
ASkfor " Earn le l "

The 11ctuat return to Investors on
Treasury' s Bills IS h!Qfler.

5.46%

5.25%

14.680%

Annual Yltl~

..... Annual Rate

THRU WED., FEB. 18

21h YEARS

3J,l YEARS

Minimum Depositssoo
Tnt rate shown below for th l$

Certificate

IS

average

o~plicable

Is rell!lted

per!od and

Help Us Celebrate Our 30th Anniversary and Save ...
Watch Each Week for Savings.

2

1/2

vteld

year

th is

to thr

ot

treas.ury secur ities . Interest Is
compoundect dally and ts paid
monthly ,
quarterly , sem i ·
annua lly , or annuallv.

11.75% 12.65%

Annual Raft

Annual Yltld

THRU WED ,, FEB. 18-......1.

uoo

Minimum Deposit
For those investors who -prefer a

longer term tl'11a certif lctte tarns
the same rate and Is illued under

rne ume- regulettons as tht 2'12

year certif icate . Interest Is com ·
• pounded dally and paid monthly
QuMterly, serni·annuallv. or 10 :
nullllv .

!!:~~~ .1.~,!~~ I
11~

THRU WED,, FE1 ..

lnttrtl' must rtmtln on deposit 1 full vur to tarn lnnual yield. Ttttre Is 1
substantial penattv for prtmaturt wlthclrawal of CtrtlfiCitt funds, Mlnlmym

Otposlt u,ooo tor Monthly lntertst.

)-

SOU .\ .

l'AIILOR
P.t

,,

Ironton
to host COVIC Feb• 19_
SOUTH POINT - Nancy Dicltin-' event when members of the Central

Gallia~========
Public hearing slated Feb. 19
(Continued from page AI)
ded.

saher-rattlin~g____Art_B_uc_h_wa_td

There is entirely too mucb talk
lately about nuclear war. First we
had Secretary of State Alell8nder
Haig testify in front of a Senate Committee that there were worse things
in this world than nuclear war. Then
we had Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger pushing for a neutron
bomb. Everyone suddenly seems to
be thinking the unthinkable.
My friend Alabaster, who Is getting nervoua about all this nuclear
saber-rattUng, baa a theory as to
what is causing it.
"The problem is that for 36 years
our measuring stick for atomic
holocaust has been Hiroshima and
Nagasaki.

( MA~ll~ (UAN

PROTEST OPENING OF NEW CHARLIE CHAN MOVIE..:... Pl&lt;kets
march iD front of the Eastside Cinema in New York Friday night as the
movie Charlie Chao and the Curse of the Dragoo Queen opens. The
proteoten said they oppose the "racist stereotypes" in the film. (AP
Laserphoto l.

Good possibility seen for
U. S.-Cuba detente~-"____Ja_ck........An_de_rs_on
sources have raised an Intriguing

·T o keep the promises

recent decisions, has upheld the
responsibility of Coitgress to interpret .its own obligations under the
14th Amendment even to the point of
gluttony. Thus it upheld a section of
the Voting Rights Act that rules that
voter quslification tests were illegal
in those states or counties in which

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A·3

•

~:8reakthroughL.~:......,_--'-----------~-~Wi!!:!:illra=·m!!..F.::...:.·.=B::.:uc::=kl:::.Ler~Jr.
In

w. va .

3S WeSt

I'OI'Ii L . Ii ~ ­

E:\Tf:H\
Second &amp; Olive

EACH OI!POSITOR INSURED UP TO $100,000 IY ·THE FDIC , AN AOINCY OP
THE FEDERAL. GOVERNMENT .

@

f.xpecl more fROm

- - - - or,· ~~.~.!~~~nk---,.. ....., 11'01&lt;:

�'

ldd

Sears store op~ns Monday
Pom

Ohi

W. Va .

t911

- - - - - - - - - - - - -·----

Clarence B. Baler
MASON - Clarence "Buzz"
·Baler, 79, Mason, died Friday at
Pleuanl Vl!lieY Hoepltal.
Born Nov. 25, 11101, at Cottageville, W.Va., bs wu the son of
the late Cbrlatopber and Mary
RldeDour Baler. Alao precediDg
blm In death wu an lnfarit
daughter.
He, wu a millwright at the
DuPOnt Plant In Belle, W.Va.
Survtvillg are his wife, Cinderella
H. Winter Baler, Muon; two
brothers, Hobart, Miamisburg,
Ohlo, and Waldo, Cottageville,
, Ohio ; two sisters, Mra. Lena
.. Thomp1011 and Mrs. Edna Ewer,
··both of Coltagevllle, W.Va.; and

Each of thue •dvertised items it required to be readily
available for sale at or below the advertised price in each
A&amp;P Store. exc ept as specifically noted in this ad.

Prices elfectlve
.
15 lhru
17, 1981. Items olfllred for
ule not available to other retail deelera or whole111lera.

.

SUNDAY, MONDAY &amp;TUESDAY FEATURES

:leYtl'll ntecea md nepllewa.

I•

: Funeral services wiU be held at
·I :30 p.m. Mopday at the Fogeltons
'Funeral Home In Muon with the
',Rev. Bennie SteveM officiating.
·Burial wiU follow In the I.O.O.F .
:Cemetery In Muon.
· Friends may can at the fwleral
'hOme from 2-4 p.m. and 7.f' p.m.
·today.

~acine couple
"'I•

..

iburt in wreck
,,

GALIJPOIJS _ A tw~&gt;oear --~
~~ .... ,
Yelp Couuly Friday lliOI'Ilinil
-·.._.111 •·•urtes for....... .........

::1n

·' ""'"'-

_,

wa"" - "

·, Clara

J. Powell

RACINE-Clara J. Bird Powell,
62, Rt. 2, Racine, died Friday eveing
at Holler Medical Center.
Mrs. Powell wu preceded In
death by her parents, Fred and
Virginia Ocles88 O'Neil, her husband
Morgan and a brother, Harold Bird.
She waa a seamstress and a member of the Antiquity Methodist Church.
She Is survived by one daughter,
Kathryn Hill, Racine; four sons,
Jerry and Larry both of Racine;
Mike, Middleport and John ol
Syracuae; 18 grandcllildren and
several nieces and nepheW!!.
Funeral services will be held Moll'
day at l p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Dsvld Harris
and the Rev. Don Walker officiating.
Burial wHI be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may can at the
funeral home anytime.

EMERGENCY CALLS
F
calla
our
were III!Bwered by local
emergency units on Thursday, the
Melg$ Emergency Medical Services

reports,
The _,Ste
SyraCWie Squad at 9:41 a.m.
artSSecondA
tookJ......,...
w ' .
ve.,
to Pleasant Valley Hospital, and at

4:08
p.m. Ave.
tooktoSally
Lambert
fi'OII) ,
Brownell
VeteraDS
Memortal
u-ltal
,_.
'
At 8:08p.m., the Racine Unil took
Gary Hart from Oak Grove Road to
Veterana Memorial and the
Pomeroy Unit at 8:17 p.m. took '
Joseph ZWilliDa fnm 106 Slate St. to ·
HolzerMedlealCenter.

HUNTINGTON - Sears, Roebuck
"' 1 Co. will open its new 231,441
·~:&lt;lre foot Barboursville store at 10
~. m. on Monday. The full-line store,
which will be located in the Huntington Mall, will also include a fully
equipped 20- bay attached
automotive center. The store
replaces the existing facility located
at 533 29th Street In Huntington.
· According to Curtis L. Teeter.
manager, the new store embodies
the most advanced concept of department - store design. "Dramatic
changes In Sears approach to merchandising in recent years has
literally brought a new kind of Sears
store Into existence," he ssid.
The store will also offer a full complement of merchandise depart,
ments, including such new additions

Lunch menus
GolllpoUI Clly

Se-

Monday, Feb. II -' No School.
'l'uudly, Feb. 11 - Hot ham sandwich, cheese
otlcb, biiU&lt;rtd peaa, sliced pears, one ha~ pint

"":'~r. Feb. 11 _ SpagheiU with meat
oauce, toosedulad, pineapple cubes, bread , but·
ter, onehaUplnl mllk.
-~. Feb. 19 - CIIIU with crackers, cole
lllaw, bread, butter, Ice cream, one half pint
mllk.
Fridly, Feb, 10- Oven fried chi cken, maohed
po101011 with sravr, sllc«i peaclles, bread, but·
ler, one hall pint mllk.
Mondi•,Feb. 23 - HO!routporltsandwleh,
'
mulled poleioea with gravy, """'' oauce,
pw~ullo, ooe haU pint mlllt.
Tueoday, Feb. 14 - Pizza, elementary; Blue
DovU ......,, with plckl.,, high school; butte""\
half pint milk:
w-,, Feb. 10 - Ma&lt;arool
and chee10,
IOuod ulod, bnod, buUer, I« crearri, ..,. haU
plntmlllt.
..,..,.,, Feb. 28 - Pizza. hllll&gt; school ; Blue
Devil burgor with plclclel, elemental')'; butterod
peu,Jello,..,. haUplnt milk.
Frldoy, Feb. 17 - BoriJocue.., bun, cole lllaw,
olkod_,-poletoclllpo, onehaUplntmlllt.

as health and beauty aids, a full line
CI)JIIlletics department, the addition
of diamonds to our jewelry department and, of course, a much expanded faahion area to include a
· Budget Shop, Teeter said.
Aside from the merchandise
departments, the store will contain
such speeial areas as the Optical
.Department, Beauty Salon ,
· Photography Studio and Key Shop ;
·other special areas include Gold and
Silver Exchange, H &amp; R Block and
Tennite Inspection Service.
Sears' Huntington Mall store will
have a "Budget Shop" offering apparel for misses', juniors' and
women's si2es with an emphasis on
value and price. Sportswear,
dresses, suits, outerwear, intimate
apparel, hosiery and accessories
will be offered in a one-stw shopping
environment.
·
Another sHopping area will be
built around furniture. Related
departmen ts surrolindin
th
· g e center
will include floor coverings,
draperies, home fashion accessories
. and home entertainment products.
.The automotive center features 20
service hays and stocks tires for all
domestic and most foreign cars and

Times-

The

W. Va .

WINTER SUPER SAVER
j Su""ay -MNtday- 'i11ei~IJ

I

~?:AIK sz!!,

• 8 golden
fried shrimp
•

2 hush puppies

•

crisp trench frie s

•

co cktai l sauce

•

cole slaw

t •"'•

ru.,..,.
In addition

Captain D's.

to all the latest concepts in retailing the new Sears
' poslti
ff ct
1 will a 1so havea
sore
vee e
th
'
b
I .
on e area s economy y emp o}'lllg
approximately 550 local residents.
r - - - . ; .'

"""'""-'•cuba.-

217 u

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

:;Radnl r.ldenta. .a:ording to the
;.GaiJia.Jiei&amp;l Plllt ol the Olllo HIP ,...::.=:.:::=:.=.:::=:.;____.,..----------1
;way PalniL ·
:. The patrol laid a car driven by

·'

"

•:Carl llelldrlc:b Jr., :IS, Pomeroy,
•.wu eulbound 1111 CR 75 west 11
' Poo111eroy at 11:40 a.m. wben the car
!lcet control.
·: The car spun around and went left
•ol center backwards, colliding bead' on with a vehicle driven by Henry
; Sayre, Tl, 1\aclne, according to the
'·report.
.; Heavy damage wu done to both
::cars and Sayre, along with two
· pauengers In his cai'-DaiJy Sayre,
; 70, and Mona Flm, 85, both o1
Racine-were Injured. They were
taken to Veteraoa Memorial
· Hl8pilal by the Melp EMS, where
they were treated and releued.
•. Hendricb waa cited far apeedlng,

11ooPelllalcL

Extra
Large

GRADE
"A"

:. 1be patnlllnveltlpted a one-car
'accident In Gallla County Friday
'morning.
:• The report laid Haakell Spurlock,
19, Rt. %, Patriot, wu westbound on
·s R 233 at 9:10 a.m. when he lcet con':trvl of hla car on a lllOW"COVered
road.
:: Spurlock's auto went off the left
slue of the road, collided with a
'telephone pole, went over an embsnkment and overturned, troopen
said.
Heavy damage waa reported to
Spurlock's car and he waa not Injured.

Dozen

•••••••• ••••••••••••••• Ctn.
.

~

••~····••ii••·····················
•• .NEWSPAPER CARRIER NEEDED
e:
IN POMEROY
••
••
ROUTt CONSISTS OF 52 CUSTOMERS
••
••
••
••
••
•

NAYLOR'$-ASHES ST.-WOLF DR. AREA
CONTACT

THE DAILY SENTINEL

••
PH. 992-2156 BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00
• •.......•......................

~

SlOR~

HOURS:

Mon.-1nu1rs. 9 am til 9:30 pm
Fri.-Sat. 9 am til 10 pm

~~;;~~=:~~=;~$~CLOSED

SUNDA__vs

_J

Stolen car found

DOWNY

136 oz.

Fabric sA~
Softener.....

GALUPOIJS - Gallla County
sheriff's clepuUee reported a car
stolen esrller this week wu
recovered olf Roush Road late
Friday afternoon.
. .
Accordlnc to the report, the car,
owned by Rachel SaWlders, Rt. 3,
Galllpoll-. hiiCI been burned. It was
reported stolen fl'lllll the Holzer
Medical Center parking lot on Feb.
10.
Depulles a11o recovered a milalng
vehicle owned by Wilmer McGuire,
Galllpolla, at 2:10a.m. Saturday,
Tile deparlment Ia allo probing
two complaints flied Friday.
I~~~~ T.;:;;;;:=:---.,ITri;n;:m.m:o.if
Hue! Ollon, Galllpolla, Informed
• deputllll abe had rented a bouH to a
• man wbo reportedly prunlaed to I~7-c::::
maiMaln the houae and grounds In
lieu of rent.
Honver, the man hill since left
the boule and Ollbn said an oil stove,
WOCJd.coal atove, heater and S800 In
lumber are Dlilllnc·
Cbester stout, Rt. 1, Northup, told
• depuUa a~ he owns on Hannan
Trice and Lincoln P1M Roads wu
forcibl)' entend scmet1me wllllill
the put few wteb.
Nothlnc .... reported rnilllnc
frnm the bouH, cleputlea said.

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ONLY '1.00 EACH

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Apple
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Exclusive maker of the

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Full size, regularly $159.95 each piece
Queen size, r egularly $389 .95 per set .

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Reg , $129 .95 Ea . Pc .

ADMISSION&amp;-Ine~

Randolph, ·
Pomeroy;
C&amp;llle Matheney,
Ewtncton; Lou Brooks, Pomeroy;
• Nanna
Pomeroy,
. DISafARGES-RandaU Adkins,
' Robert Qu.lla, Huchle Ogdln, Nellie
Carney, Brooks Lyons, Cryatal
· Wolfe, Dorothy Wright, David

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wu.on,

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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Btl.

nJND8 RECEJVBI)
• POMEROY - Slate Audilltf
Thomu E. F.-.- reported 1111
dlltrillullan crf P,III,47U7 Ill loc:al
p.-nm~~~t fund 11111111)' to Olllo'a a
counties and 4D c:Wal and villa&amp;•
levyiJII . . .

'-tua

1'111 ..... ca.n&amp;, Ta r111m

recelwdtii,MI

,.
•

~·

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Each Pc .

Reg . S139 .95

Atlthe Spring·Q-Pedic quality features plus
extra layers of upholstery to give you extra
support. So hurry and get the extra aavlngs
this weeki Other sizes proportionately priced .

. . Now Stt4.95
Now $279,95

�·Among Jongest lived was he-· Jean Bertran.;J.

Beat of
the Bend
Despite the snow and cold of the
past week - it had to happen - you
can be sure that summer and warm
weather will come. After all, it
always has.
Looking toward it is the Middleport Recreation Commission
which is now accepting applications
for positions of park ·director, swimming instructor and lifeguards at
the Middjepo'rt Park.
If you're i~terested in applying,
you can pick up all application form
at the office of Mayor Fred Hoffman, N. Second Ave., in Middleport.
The "send a mouse to college"
program of the Meigs County
American Cancer Society will again
be carried out Through the program
children help by taking contributions to their schools and the
monies are used to buy mice needed
for research. One contribution of 51
cents will purchase one research
mouse.
The cancer people report that cancer is the second largest cause of
death in the county but that one out
of three people getting cancer can be
research
apparent.
cured.
Ofiscourse,
the need for more
The local capaign through the
schools will be held from Feb. 17 to
Feb. 27 so you'll be hearing about it
through your youngsters.

February 15, 1981

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

PagE-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

parks, mountains and memorials,
there is, as the saying goes, •no place
like it.' Can you identify the states?"
See - I keep telling you there's no
place like Meigs County!
The family of Stephen Smith, 24,
Pomeroy, who is quite ill at the
Holzer Medical Center, really appredates the kindoesses which have
been extended to him - the flowers
and the cards. However, they feel it
only fair that friends be advised that
only members of the inunediate
family are permitted to see Steve at
this time and they did not want
anyone to make the trip to the center
for nothing.
Dana Covert of the J..aurel Cliff
area has been confined to the
Veterans Hospital in Chillicothe for
some five months. He's ready ·to
hear from friends now.

Families and businesses which
over extend themselves find in short
order that they have to cut back on
eXpenditures. It's called budgeting.
So why not government?' Right on,

~f

French 500

BY JAMF.ifSANDS
. whlcb bad been sc;alped. borrlbiy Frei!ChGrant with his new bride.
and the men would lJI!I away the horGALUPOUS - One of the last maagled, aDd placed Ill 1 bushel
MRS. BERTRAND .had been a
ses.
survivors of the French 500 in baskeL
mere child when the 28-year old BerAn'ERWARDS they would take
southern Ohio was Jean Bertrand,
tD stature Jean BertraDd stood trand had come to America, but off their boots and overcoats and put
who died in 1855 at the French Grant oaly four feet six i~hes tall and Jean outlived his wife by some 28 on their powdered wigs and dancing
in Scioto County.
greeted bls friends with a low bow years as Mrs. Bertrand died in 1827
shoes. Dancing would last for three
Be~and was oorn in 1762 in
and a hearty laugh that became hls . after bearing seven children.
.
hours and then dinner would be serChampaign, France (east of Paris) trademark.
Not only did Bertrand believe ~n ved: Often supper lasted for two
into a wealthy family . When Jean's
EVEN THOUGH Bertrand lived in religion bUt he also believed m hours. After thill, dancing wOUld confather died, Bertrand and his America (or 65 years, he never lear- recreation, and Bertrand was tinue until daylight.
.
brother were placed under the care
ned to speak English, Part of the responsible for throwing many of the
The men woullf saddle up the herof their uncle, who deprived the boys reason was that Jean ·did n&lt;t balls both in Gallipolis and at the ses again and make ready for the
of much of the wealth that their
associate with those who could not French Gran~. People would come departure. Bertrand would rush
father had accwnulated.
speak French. In fact, Bertrand's from all around to attend one of Jean around to make sure that everybodY ·
JEAN SPENT much of his youth children would probably have not Bertrand's affairs .
had bad enough lo eat and drink.
employed as sexton of a cathedral learned English either had it not
At dusk the guests would arrive
(Continued on page 0-3)
and as coachman to a rich family . been for brickmasons teaching the r-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==:;;~~;;;;;;~=~
Bertrand had to pick up his children as the men were coneducation in bits and pieces, but structingBertrand'shousein.1811.
despite this fact became a Latin
Bertrand was one of the more
scholar.
religious of the 500 and taught all of
.When Bertrand cast his lot with · his children the Roman ritual and
the 500, he was without possessions
the Roman prayers. It is said that
and had little to lose in trying to
one of the children once questioned
change his luck in life.
their· father about the need for
At Gallipolis, Bertrand became saying all those prayers.
the town's miller. His mill was on a
· WHEN JEAN Bertrand teamed
small stream outside of what was
that his son was neglecting this duty,
then Gallipolis. In later years the the boy was given a severe
stream would be known as Mill
thrashing. It was the only time that
. Creek named after Bertrand's milL
Bertrand ever whipped any of his
Office Hours by Appointment Only ·
IN THE EARLY 1700s Bertrand
children. Apparentiy the young lad
was called away to Marietta on
heard the gospel in a different way.
business aDd be left the mill ID
Bertrand himself observed all of
charge of hls associate. It was
the religious fasts and was quite in•
durtag this time that tDdlaDS at· sistent that the rest of the Gallipolis
OF
tacked the mill and killed Bertrand's colony do the same.
,-- ~

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

CALL (614)-992 21 04
(304\.A7R1244

f"~R~o:nn:i;e!~!~Y~o;u~k~ee~p~s;m~il~in~g~.;;;;;;;;~as~s~oc~la~te~.Be~i~li~a~n~d~foun~~d~the~bod~~Y·~-~A~bo~u~t~l802~~B~e~rtr~a~n~d~m~o~v;ed~to~th;e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiF~

One mother who has a small child
confined to Veterans Memorial
Hospital telephoned to convey her
thanks to the women's auxiliary.
Through the years, we know from
first hand experience that the
auxiliary does many things to make
the hospital better and to help make
life better for patients.
The mother was pleasantly sur·
prised to learn that the auxiliary
pays the freight at the hospital so
that youngsters can have television.

SAVE 26%-31%

, Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts is a ham radio operator.
Although only a young mari, Phil has
been active in ham radio activities
for over 20 years. He has talked to
people in 265 other countries and fin·
ds the activity fascinating. Who
wouldn't?

$
our Reg.
13.96·15.96

From Gordon Harris in Columbus
comes a page from the Saturday
Evening Post containing nine pictures taken from road maps to dif·
ferelit states.
Readers are to attempt to identify
the locations pictured. Would you
believe that photograph eight is
nowhere but Meigs County showing
the names of Middleport, Rutland,
Dexter, Pomeroy, Salem Center and
other communities.
The instruction for the quiz reads:
"East or West, North or South, eacll&gt;
of the distinctive areas above ap. pears on the road rna~ ~f a single
state. In tenns of routes, state

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Two receive
tenns, fines
POMEROY - Nineteen-year old
Howard M. Ferguson, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy; and 18-year Old Vincent
Keith Stone, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, appearing in Meigs County Court
pleaded guilty Friday to petty theft
charges. They were sentenced to 90
days in the county jail and fined $75
and costs.
They were charged with the theft
of gasoline from a truck at the Ben
Tom Corp., at Rock Sj&gt;rings early
Thursday morning. Both are confined to the county jail.
Meigs deputies were called Friday
evening by Dennis Benedwn, Rt. 2,
Coolville, who reported the front
tires on his auto had been cut. This
occurred during the Eastern High
School basketball game.
Bill Thornton, Danville, reported
gasoline was taken from tbe Meigs
Local Bus parked at his residence
sometimeafler9p.m. Thursday.

4 77
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Cushion-foot. cotton/nylon.
White or white/stripe top.

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hOld hoi or
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78

February 15, 1981 .
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

GALUPOUS - He comes in every af·
ternoon about 2 p.m. and inserts the long,
white typing bond into his machine. He begins
to type, working with such Intent and con·
centration be sometimes forgets to remove
his hat. Whistled strains of "The Blue Danube
Waltz" .and "Three.Blind Mice" mingle with
the steady hum of the VDTs and the incessant
mumble of the scanner. Finally, he stops. He
walks to the editor's desk. He has finished his
"Peeps" column for yet another Sunday. He
dons his hat- if he's not already wearing it and walks slowly out the door.
That was - is ~ J. Sll!'rman Porter,
veteran journalist, ex-state senator, college
professor, historian and author- a man who
has had a career in journalism - and
l'everything else."
Reared in Kentucky where his father served us managing editor of the Lexington
Herald, Porter graduated from the University of Kentucky in 1931 with a degree in
political science.
· ·At UK at that time, it Was not possible to
major in journalism, but Porter was
fascinated with it. He took every course offered In that field. After leaving the univer·
sity, he went to the Pacjucah Sun-Democrat in
Kentucky.
·
"The first day 1 got to Paducah, the
headlines concerned the suicide of the town
banker; it seemed I twd arrived during the
middle of the Depression." His salary there
was $15 per week.
In 1932 with a letter of recommendation
from 0. 0. Mcintyre, a national colwnnist
and ooyhood resident of Gallipolis, whom
Porter had never met, he joined the
Associated Press Feature Service, an endeavor he calls "grueling labor and b&lt;lring".
On March 15, 1933 ("A date I'll always
remember''), he awoke ill.
ITWASTB
He had tuberculosis.
He spent the next 21
montt~ of his ll!e in a treatment center for the
disease. The job at AP suddenly lo.&gt;;t some of
its mediocrity. After returning to work, he
relapsed, finding himself once again in the
center. He was tired of being sick; he agreed
to an ezperlmerital operation.
"They removed all but one of my ribs from
the rtgftt ~Ide of my chesc That caused the
chest cavity to collapse and put pressure on
my lung ... for me, it was an instant cure."
. During his convalescense, Porter finished
work on his master's thesis and received an
M.A. in political science. When he wasn't
working on his thesis, he was writing to
newspapers - applying for jobs.
One of those letters was to Harold
Wetherholt, publisher of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, who offered him the tedious job of
compiling that publication's sesquicentennial
edition. That colwnn ( called "Says Cousin
Tenyell", a play on the word sesquicen·
tennial), was short-lived, ending in 1942 when
Porter began his present "Peeps - A
Gallipol~ Diary" concurrently with the spar·
ts fare, "Touching All Bases". "TAB" lasted
for II years; the "Peeps" column (with five
in 1975 actually done on location in Gennany )
is still a popular feature of this Sunday Times·
Sentinel. His association with the Tribune and
Times-Sentinel has spanned 40 years, with a
hiatus from 1953-75. Between those dates,
Porter did "evef)lthin~ else.''
Everything else, as previously mentlonea,
included being an Ohio state senator tD-Ohio.
1958-1982) over an eight-county district. ("It
nsed to be called the 7th-8th District and in·

PORTER &lt;fOES TO COLUMBUS
About rus re1gn as senator, Porter says, "I
was angry about half the time. Oh, I had a
great time being senator, but I was so angry
because the executive branh (governor) was
continually tryin~ to persuade me - at least,
I suspected he wa! trying to persuade me- to
pass a Direct-Use tax, covering items used by
farmers (fertilizers, etc.); I introduced bills
to pass a state income tax, to lift the tax burden from those wlio could not afford it to those
who couid. I wal; on the Direct-Use Committee and kept it from getting 'out of committee.' We fin•lly compromised by increasing corporation franchise tax, which did
go thourgh. The whole busine.ss was one obnoxious hassle.''
Recalling that John Smith, senator from
Cleveland, nicknamed him the "Hayseed
Senator", Porter laughed, claiming that was
just the reputation he wanted "hack home.''
In 1962, Porter tried for a return
engagement but was defeated by Collins. Not
an easy man to keep down, he tried to regain
his seal once more in 1968; he campaigned
with his son, James Sherman Po.r ter III, who
ran for House of Representatives. Both were
defeated. His son went on to the House later
as that body's fiscal officer.
Why did he run for public office in the first
place? "Well, to tell you the truth, at.thattime
the post office was ~ political job; I had hoped
that if I got the nomination for ·the U.S.
Senate, it would be a recommendationfor a
post office position." (Such honesty; no wonder he missed getting reelected. )
Still feeling the call of his first love writing Porter wrote a weekly colwnn; "A
Capitol Idea", syndicated in eight papers
during his four years In Washington D.C.
A man of many honors, Porter was appointed a Kentucky Colonel in 1958 by Happy
Chandler, baseball commissioner, and named
Moderator for the "Presbytery of Scioto", the
last such person to be named moderator of
that particular organization wh~n it was
small. "It has since grown huge, " Porter
tells me. He goes on: "Once when I was in
Wellston, one of the Presbyterian preachers,
John Taylor, surprised me by asking me to
preach in the Sunday service. I told him to
just say I had taken his place as a speaker;
you could have hljrdly called it preaching."
After leading such a diversified life, what
did the 72,year-old ("a horrible long run," he
calls it) Porte[ enjoy most?
"Oh, !liked the Tribune and Times-sentinel

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This is' my Valentine to Mr. Porter

By Sallyanne Holtz

Lifestyle writer

{703)

UP TO 12-EXP..... 2.23

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Prepasted wattcoverlng
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K mart' ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE POLICY

fii!!iil

L:'::_J.

~IIDe&amp; Sherman Porter looks
over a copy of "Lamp of the
Hllll'', bh history of Rio Grande
Collece. Incidentally, you can
call blm Jim, or you can call hlm
J. Sberm, or you can call him
Sherman or you can call him Mr.
Peeps or you can call him ... Inset: Porter ln19611; this photo was
used In campaign Uteratureln his
bid lor reelection to the Senate.

J. Sherman Porter is not getting older he's getting more fascinating, more in·
telligent- and definitely better.
Much better.

Author Jim Porter's books,
"The Lamp of Tbe Hllls" and
"The First 50 Years", a history of
the Executive Housekeepers'
Association".

On a oppilc otion pe1 boll

OPEN OA:LY 10·9
SA UN DAY 1-6

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3.19

Porter at work In the Tribune and Times-Sentinel's

best.''

Develop And Print
Col9r Print Film.

·-

1

clll(Je&lt;l :SCioto, Adams, Lawrence, Jackson,
Gallia, Meigs, Vinton, Pike Counties,
designated in 1922. Now it's the 18th and
covers a much larger area."),
At the time of his election, he was working
at WJEH radio as News Director reporting all
the news, including all election results. He
had read the rtll!ults of the congressional
races, the governor's race and, as he came to
the senatorial race, he intoned, "Ladies and
gentlemen, you are listening to your next
state senator.''
They were. He had won the election, being
the only candidate ever to defeat Oakley
Collins in an area-wide election.

SPECIAL

pPMEROY- Glenn E. Thompson
of 39377 Rt. 2, Pomeroy, a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course at the company's Rob&lt;ll't M'. Wopat Employee
Development Center in Marion.
The tw&lt;&gt;-week course covered the
operation and repair of centraloffice switching equipment.
. Thompson is a switchworker in the
. company's Athens district. He has
:been with General19 years.
· Courses at the development center
· are designed to enhance employees'
:jOb skills. The subjects range from
· buic electronics to management
: skllls.

B

Porter--a man of titles

Photofinishing

Completes course

CLOSED MONDAY
POMEROY - The Automotive
·Deputy Regi,strar office in Pomeroy
·will be closed Monday in observance
of Prwldent's Day Sara Gibbs annOWII.'ed Friday.

1.27

. Our Reg.

..

Our hrm rnh~ ntiou I! to hove ovtJry odvurl11ed llem in stock on our shelves Non CKtterUaed lftm Ia not ovollobleiOf
purch9se cue 10 onv un!orese ~n reown. K motf ~lit luue o Ro6n ChiCk on requesl lot !he merchandlae (one Item

-

or rt.tasonoble 1om11v quonlllyJio be purct1oMtd or the salt pfk:• whef\eqr avOIOble cw wll ... you ocompo«JJ))e
quoMv II em at o cofT'CXIrQble rttW;.I.on WI pnc;e Our polk:v Ia to oN• 0\.1 cuatomenaoHIIQGfton .....,._

.

- 185 UPPER HIVER HUAU, GAlliPOLIS

(

.

·•.

19111 art ist : Ernell H. Shepdrdl

Porter (left) In 1959 with Joseph W. Bartunek, at that time clerk of
the Ohio Senate, later slate senator, aDd ·aUII later, common pleas
judge of Cuyahoga County.

�February h, 1981

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

Pagf:--t!·l-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

New arrival
..-...... -- - .
.

Winter vo-ws unite two couples locally

- ~-

--~··-

is, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

·roMEROY ::- M';.s.

Aarcella:
Casto, Chester, ' '8Dd Donald E.;
~ Ow!_to, Pilpla~ Ave., Cheshire, are;
announcing the birth of their second· .
child, Jeremy CUrtis. he weighed ro
pounds, 10 (junces and was 22 inches
iong, and was born at the Pleasam
Valley Hospital on Feb. 3.
•
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Hartman, Cheat~r.
and' the paternal grandparents are:
Mr,~. and Mrs. Charles Buckley,
M.mersville. ·~t!Jn~ greatgrandparents 11\'l·,!··Mrs. Goldia
Wolfe, Chester, ~~· Florenee·
Hartman, Lebanon,~· ,
•
Paternal great-~rents ac::
the Rev. and Mrs. "~rge Cast.z:;
Middleport, and Mr. ~ ftfrs. G!Z;
Priddy, Rutland.
'
The Castos have a.jother soli;·
Joshua, age two.
:

I

Two area couples

ite in wedlock

· · POMEROY
Bookmobile
'I!Chedule for Tuesday, Feb. 17 - ·
Portland, Post Office, S: llh'l :40
·p.m.; Success Rd., Near 39060, .l;!f&gt;.
4:45; Reedsville, Reed's Store, ' f&gt;.
S:50; Tuppers Plai!IS, Arbaugh
Housing, 6:2(1.7.
. · Thursday, Feb. 18 - Coolville,
,Past Office, 9:4f&gt;.10 :15 a.m.; Ar·
cadla Nursing Home, 10:2(1.11; Tup.pers PlainS, Lodwick's Market,
J':?Jl a.m.-12 :50 p.m.; Pomeroy
Health Care Center, 1:3G-2:30;
Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant,
3:3f&gt;.4:20; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4: 4f&gt;.5:45; Syracuse, Pool, 1&gt;-7.
...···
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
stop for the free entertainment and ,---------'--.....;;;;::
lpfonnation. The bookmobile has
.Jlllperbacks, 45 and lp records,
ll!Bgazines, large print books and
-bow to.do it help for everything from
'
..
IJittlfl,.
.,.car repair to dieting.

--

--

Attend meeting

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Nelson

Mr. and Mrs. Paul deLamerens
CHESHlRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Lynn Thompson, Cheshire,
announce the marriage of their
daughter, Theresa, to Paul A.
deLamerens, son of Dr. and Mrs. J .
A. deLamerens, Gallipolis, The wed·
ding took place Feb. 7 at the Trinity
Episcopal Church, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
Sherry Harrison was the maid of
honor; David Chronis was the best
man, Wendy Thompson wsa her
flower girl and Cassandra Thorn·

MIDDLEPORT - In the presence sleeves. The gown was fashioi1ed
of family and close friends, Ms. with a full skirt, and her ivory veil
Deborah S. Garrison and Roger L. and gown were edged with matching
Nelson recited their wedding vows chantilly lace. The bride carried a
on Nov. 30 at the Bradford Church of dozen yellow roses and baby's
breath.
Christ.
'
Mrs. Ruth Cottrill of Syracuse was
The Rev. Robert E. Purtell perConned the double ring ceremony · matron of honor for the bride and
before the altar decorated with she wore a light pink two-piece suit
lighted candelabra trimmed with and wore a single yellow rose with
gr,eenery and while ribbons.
baby's breath. Carroll Ray Nelson,
The bride is the daughter of Mr. brother of the bridegroom, was best
and Mrs. Harold L. Pierce of 222 N. man. For her daughter's wedding,
Wall St., Wilmington. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Pierce wore a pantsuit with a
Carl Nelson of 655 Sycamore St., yellow rose corsage.
The new Mrs. Nelson is a 1977
Middleport, are the parents of the
graduate of Meigs High School and
bridegroom.
Music was presented by Jarie Wise was employed by the County at the
with selections including "We've Meigs County Tuberculosis and
Only Just Begun," " Oh Promise Health Clinic in Pomeroy. The
bridegroom is a 1975 graduate of
Me," and " The Wedding March."
Given in marriage by her lather, Meigs High School and is in the U. S.
the bride chose a gown of ivory with Air Force working as a heavy equipa Queen Anne neckline and long full ment operator and stationed at Mac·
Dill Air Force Base in Tampa, Fla .

pson was the ringhearer. The bride
was given away by her father. The
ceremony was attended by the immediate family.
Mr. deLamereliS is a student at
Marietta College and Mrs.
deLamerens, a student at Rio Grande College. They will reside in Vin-

ton.
There will be a wedding reception
in honor of Paul and Theresa,
February 21 at 7:30p.m. at the Utile
Kyger Grange Hall. All friends are
asked to attend.

Katie's Korner
Where our

tax

By Katie Crow
Staff writer
This is where our tax dollars
This week the
Cotmty
Commissioners
received some in·
fonnation that is ·
not only difficult
to . believe but
hard to swallow.
Published weekly by the County
Commissioners'
Association of
Ohio is the County Infonnation and
Data Service. What appeared this
week is unreal. Let me enlighten
you.
Appearing under "Fleece-Of-theMonth" award were the following
,
ex pen dit ures : SpeD t bY the offIce Of
education was $219,592 to teach
college kids how to watch teleVision;
spent as part of a CETA award,
$398,948 to count the cats, 00gs and
horses in Ventura County, Califor·
nia; spent by the Federal Aviation
Administration to study the body
measurements Of 79 airline stewar. t b
dess t ra1·nees was $57 ,80() ; spen
y
the institute Of mental heallh, to
learn why bowlers and hockey fans
smile was $76,000; spent by the
National Institute of Alcohol Abuse,
to decide if sunfish that drink tequila
are more aggressive than sunfish
that drink gin was •102,000.
't'
The above is the amount spent
over the entire United States. Now
can you believe that our government
l]as been spending tax dollars in
such a manner?
Talk about cuts that should be
made- the above and then smne.
Eleanor Robson, county recOrder,
no matter how she feels, is always
remembering others.
Friday, Eleanor supplied a
beautiful birthday cake lor her
assistant, Debbie Grueser.
Everyone that stopped in the recorder's office was treated to a piece of
cake.
Congratulations to Debbie and to

•

dollars go...
Eleanor, you are a beautiful person.
Speaking of birthdays Karl
Grueser, Minersville, marked
another birthday this week.
May you have many more.
The American Red Cross Blood·
mobile will be at the Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy, on Feb. 25 from
1:30to6p.m.
Mark it down on your calendar so
you will remember.

,...,, - ..""Y coni, DavW Frymyer.
Stewe MarUa, Lori Hayes, Tan Humpbreya,
Saady Laodaker, M1"Y Laa.h, Tom k••"•·
Amy ROUH, Kriltea .Slawter, Kriltea StaDiey,
Moate SwlndtU, JeiUiller Tayhlor, Amy Warth,
Pam.Wbt5ey,StacyYtuq.
Trod Banelo, Melaok u..11, ,
Heidi Corwlhon, Kelly 0...1Lio. Wolly HaUield.
Joy Humobn:yo. Kri•Uo
Manho KLI1,
Mike Pari.er, Aaroo Whaley, Sandn Whalley,
Jo.. """Wllllom•.
Foorlll grade - NI&lt;O King. Wesley '""'"

Charlotte Hart, Audn H~Mtashelt. Kt"vlo o.
King, Kevta v. Klag, Sh.o...,o Slavta, Aagela

"What The (Bleep·)
.Do Yo·u Mean, You're
Fighting Mad?"

SHONEYS, HOT

COUPON FOR
COLD

. Sioea, Tamra Vaa~t' .
Slltll '""' - Todd Cullamo, Phillip Klag.

r~Brio~a~La~yb~,~B"':Ddo
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•

RIO GRANDE
COUEGE
COMMUNITY COUEGE

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Rio Granrfa. Chio

•
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Do taxes make you fi ghting mad'.' You're not the only
Even George Washington fel t that way when Britain imposed new crushing t axes on the colon ies in 1767 .

REMAI.NING FALL
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G.W. said , "we're already

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The :wos(·~oml . \ve. ~.
• ~·
~ :Ji ~ Shoe Cafe '&lt;~~~i~~~W~~~~~~ ~]1

payi n ~

eno ugh for her &lt;Bri-

tain) to acq uire our whole subSt a nces!" He wa s, of
course, a leader in fightin g unfa ir ta xcti long before the
re\ro luti on.

Today the best way to "light"'taxcs is to make certam
yo u are taking every po"si ble legitimate deduction allowab le. But, yo u can't do thi s thoroughly o nd effici ently

1

How wil l you handle the preparation of your tax returns this year? Wi ll you scurry around picking up the I
latest books on the subject. and just hope you ma ke the I

....
.

prope r inte rpretation s of the laws? Or, will you do it th t:
'easy wil y this year : have a pro{t•ssionaf prepare yo'ur

but it's still got to be done and, it is to your advantage
that it be done right!
We still have a few appointments available. Call.
today, before t he deadline gets any closer.

i

.Bob Lane's Complete Bookkeeping &amp; Ta x service,

Sp~1ng Valley Plaza, Gall ipolis, 4.46·7600 . Hours : Mon. and!

Fri. lO to 8; Tues .• Wed .. Thurs. and

Sat.

tO to6.

I

BASS I JOYCE I TROTTERS I FRYE I LEVI 1

tt
"

•
••
•

unless yo u are fu lly acqu ain ted with all ofthe rece nt tax •
l;tw cha nges. There ca n be no guesswork in ded uctio ns..
. NO WA Y·!
I

returns?
Like Geor:ge, you may be mad about the who!o ~ hir.e,

II

Mr. and Mrs. jack Teichman

Mr. and Mrs. David Moore

l,;;;;;;;;;::;;~;;;:;:;:;:;;;;:;~==~j

Honor roll
announced

Times·Sentine

THANK rQY FOR qOMifiO .to,,·.•

m VIAND sr.

.,
·'

•
•
•
•••
••
••
•

.

:TUPPERS PLAINS - James W.
Perry, Jr., and Mn. Sue WesUall
wish to announce the .marriage of
their daughter, Judith Kathleen
Perry, to David Allen Moore, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Moore of
Cheshire.
Rev. Freeland Norris and Rev.
Richard Thomas officiated the
double ring ceremony In the St. Paul
United Methodlat Church of Tuppers
Plains.
The bride, ushered to the altar by
her father, wore a white gown of
Cameo design. It was made of
organza and lice with a ruffle,
chapel-length train. Her veil was rl
white nylon lice and we on a
Cameo Design Crown; matching the
gown. A Cameo pin was worn at the
neck, a gift made and liven to her by
Mrs. Bess Weblter of Tuppers
Plains.
Attending the bridal party, attired
in long blue gcnrtlland carrying can·
dies covered 1rith hurricane globes
adomed with white roee and blue
daisies were Mra. Jemy Crum of
Lexington, Ky., matron of honor,
sister of the bride, Barbara Perry,
Parkersburg, '!f. Va., maid ol honor,
sister of the bride, Dee Dunn,
Piketon, Barbara Hutchins, Columbus, and Teresa Ervin, Racine, ser·
ved as bridesmaids. Edith WesUall
of Vienna, W. Va . served her sister
aa.junior bridesmaid.
Misses Donna and lAura Balder·
so~ of Parkersburg, W. Va. served
as flower girls.
Registering the guests waa Mrs.
Vickie Major of Huntsville, sister of
the groom. Dlltrlbuting rice bags
was Angie Buckley of Parkersburg.
Serving as best man was Don
Wothe, Rlo Grande. Serving as
groomsmen were Jeff Moore,
Chf:. ~•re, brother of the groom, Tim
M.;\:artney of Akron and Marty Me·
Cartney of Waverly, coll81ns of the
groom, and Charles Calaway of Tuppers Plal111.
Scottie Moore of Cheshire served
his brother as the rlngbearer; he
wore a while tuxedo matching the
groom.

I

.

Adorning the altar were two
O,ndy Frances Casto, daughter of
seven-branch candelabras and also
Mr.and Mrs. Lester Casto, 2413 Mt.
a 21 candle heart-shaped can·
Vernon Ave., Point Pleasant, and
delabra, and palm branches aith
Jo~ Charles "Jack" Teichman,
bouquets of white roses, carnations
son of Mrs. Pauline Teichman,
and blue daisies .
Portsmouth, Ohio, were joined in
The traditional wedding music
ma!l'lage on Dec. 28,2:30 p.m., in a
was played by Mrs. Edith Ross of formal ceremony at the Main Street
Gallipolis.
Ba~st Church.
Merlyn Ross sang "I'll Waik With
Dr. James Stinespring perfonned
God"; a duet was sung by Merlyn
the 1double ring ceremony, with
Ross and Steffie Puree!, "Sunrise,
Do~a . McGuire, Gallipolis, as
Sunaet." Mrs. Purcell sang "One
piaaist, and David Robinson,
Hand, One Heart," "We've Only
Gal.polis, vocalist.
Just Begun."
Tl\e church was decorated with.
Organ solos "Wedding Song,
poinlettias in the windows and at
"Hawaiian Wedding Song," and the the lltar, and candelabras.
"Twelfth of Never" were played by
Tte bride, given in marriage by
Mrs. Ross.
her .parents and escorted to the
Dee Penn sang "The Lord's alta~by her father, was attired in a
Prayer" while the couple knelt on whitx own !)f qiana, fashioned with
the white prayer bench. Steffie Pur· a l
lace neckline and long
cell sang "You Ught Up My Life" slee .s, which featured lace insets.
during the lighting of the Unity Can· Her ~ell of sill&lt; illusion was at·
die.
tach to a matching lace cap, and
A reception followed in the social the Ide wore a single strand of
room of the church with the United pearl(.
Methodist Women's Society serving
s~M~;Lcarded a nosegay of white
the cake and punch.
roseSIDa~y's breath and greenery.
Adorning the bride's table covered
Md I Sue Handley, Point
with blue and white lace was a three Plea~t, sister of the bride, served
tiered cake over a blue water foun- ,as matron of honor. She wore an
tain highlighted with cherubs. Two aqua gown with lace bodice and
smaller cakes decorated with bells, short . , eves. The gown featured a
hearts, and roses were at the sides.
Mrs. Moore is the. granddaughter
of James W. Perry, Sr., and the late Conce.~.'lion stand opens
Kathryn Perry and Mr. and Mrs. W.
POMEROY - A concession stand
H. Whiteside, both of Parkersburg,
ll be Vl"ned by the Meigs Local
W. Va.
,
nd Boosters during the aU-day
Mr. Moore Is the grandson of the
wrestbng tournament to be held at
late Mr. and Mrs. Seldon Moore,
Mtigs High School on Feb. 21.
Cheshire, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Workers are needed ·and volunteers
Kerwood of Gallipolis.
an; ask.ed to contact Carolyn
The new Mr, and Mrs. David A.
Gneser, 992-3853. Donations of pies,
Moore are now residing in
cales, fudge and cookies are also
Gallipolis.
nee'/ed and should be taken to the
.
. schr at 9 a .m. that day.

~

F&amp;AMTOMEET
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 183 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday,
Feb. 17, at 7 p.m. There will be work
in master mason degree. All masons
are invited to attend.

V·neckline and a self-tie waist. She
carried long stenuned red roses.
Jim McGuire, Gallipolis, served
the groom as best man.
The bride's mother wore a street
length burgundy dress with
burgundy and pink print bodice,
and a white rose corsage. The
mother of the groom wore navy
blue slacks with a navy print blouse
and a white rose corsa~e .
A receptlon was held at the home
of the bride's parents following the
ceremony. The bride's table
featured a three tierred wedding
cake, topped with a miniature bride
and groom, and baked by the
bride's sister, Mrs. Sue Handley. A
red Christmas tablecloth adorned
the table.
Serving at the reception were
Terri Weier. Gallipolis, and Janice
Bergdoll, Gallipolis. Registering
guests were Terri Weier and Susan
Stanley. both of Gallipolis.
Mter a short honeymoon, the
couple is now at home at 202 Spring
Valley Drive, Gallipolis , Ohio.
The bride is a 'graduate of Point
Pleasant High School and West
Virginia Career College, Hun·
tington. She is presently employed
as assistant manager of the Con·
venient Food . Mart in Gallipolis.
Her husband attended Shawnee
State College and is employed at
Southern Ohio Coal Company's No.
I mine.

MEETS MONDAY
Southern Local Board of
Edij,ation will meet Monday at 7 ·
in the school cafeteria.

•

Rupe speaks on Africa
Richard Rupe was giles! speaker
on South Mrica when the Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority met Tuesliay night at the
Meigs Inn.
Rope and his family spent a year
in Mrica on an employment assignment. He related experiences of
their time .there . Also speaking at
the meeting was Nancy Hammond
of the Meigs Heart Association, who
passed out envelopes to the members who will be soliciting on Heart

Sunday, Feb. 22. Patty Pickens and
Unda Paul had the cultural report
and introduced Rupe.
Vicky Ault, social chainnan, announced a •·alentlne party to be held
Feb. 21 at ..;~e Meigs Inn for members, their husbands and friends.
Also pnnounced was the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter valentine dance
to be held at Royal Oak Park from 9
p.m. to I a.m. at$12a couple.
A ,heart-shaped birthday cake
baked by pledge, Sharon Stewart,
was presented to the sponsor, Lois
Kelly.

New arrivals

MEET

Elladene and Leroy Watson, Jr.,
Minersville, are announcing the bir·
th of a grandson, Branden Lee born
Feb. I. The baby, son of Kitty' and
Jinuny Lee Watson, Columbus,
weighed eight pounds, six ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William Isiac, Columbus.

' t:OLO\) · .

POMEROY - Major Glenna
Rwrunel (Retired), Shirley Lan·
oors, and the Rev. Chuck McPherson attended a missionary
meeting at The Salvation Army in
Portsmouth Saturday.
Major Rwnmel was the speaker
with the other two assisting in her
'Presentation of "Indian, God's Call
and the Gospel." She wore an Indian .
. sari and showed curios and snapshots.
Major and Mrs. Alvin Clark are
the Corps officers there. Major
Rwrunel reported that there was one
aeeker at the altar and two hands for
.prayer.

TheSu

--.

RASNAKE
Mr. and' Mrs. Scott Rasnake,
Route 4, South Holston Dam, Bristol,
Tenn. are announcing the birth of a
son, Christopher Scott, born on Jan.
14 at the Bristol Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Rasnake is the lonner Kim
Sebo of Pomeroy.
GrandJl'!rents are Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Rasnake of Abington, and
Mr. and Mrs. Johl) Sebo, Lebanon,
Va., fonnerly of Pomeroy.

A GOOD
NEIGHBOR

OF YOURS.

Tho
one
to see
lOti II
your family

lnsutance

I
C. K. S,.OWDEN

noeds.

417 Second Ave.
G•llipolis, 0.
Pttcme 446-42'0
~-.....
llall , •• "'

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il fiiJfl'""'
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Home Off ic es : Bloom ington. Il linois •

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CHECK O(JR OVTSTA.NDING I FIATION.
FIGHTER.
PRICES
•
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odel

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1981 WALDEN SECTIONAL
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VAL LE Y

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shingled roof, gutters and downspouts, delivered and set u on your lot.
CHECK THIS LOW, LOW PRICE

$1 90000

We Abo Have Gre•t Buys Ora
1981 Venture Villa
1~x60, 2 bedroom. g••· furnished,
raised roof. carpet, s vr. protection
plan, delivered

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Other

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• 1,995

Bigger 'n Belter Than Ever!
Our new expanded Mini-Bank, with
easy access to and from either Third
or Fourth Avenue , is now open and
serving Ohio Valley Bank customers .
We've more than doubled the number
of drive-in stations by adding the
speed and convenience of three re·
mote teller units, which have been so
successful at our Jackson Pike office .

And
She is our automatic teller that works
around the clock making cash with·.
drawals, deposits, giving account balances, at:cepting loan payments. All it
takes to enjoy this wonderful service is
an account at Ohio Val ley Bank and
your own , personal Jeanie card .

Th~

Mini-Bank's enlarged lobby also
prov1des complete customer service.
And of course, we continue to offer
the most conven· r------....,
ient CUStomers MINI-BANK HOURS
hours in town.
(Tel.446-263t.ExtsoJ
Makes you be· Mon. lh&lt;OThurs. BAM · 6PM
Fr1day
8 AM-7 PM
lieve our Mini is sa~u•day
a AM ·• PM
really Maxi!

There, Too!
If you're not an OVB customer, can you
think of a better, faster,. more conven ~
ient reason to become one?

G)hio Valley Bank
Fo u t l o &lt;.tlt~n~ l o \N\11!' y o u
Mt•mhl&lt;~

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RACINE- Mr. and Mrs. Curtis'L.
Hunter of Pilot Mountain, N. C. and
Mr. and.Mrs. Clarence Roy, Racine,
announee the marriage of their ·
children, Gail jind Rex, on Feb. 2 in a
privatelceremony at the home of the .
Rev. and Mrs. Freeland Norris,
Racine.
The new Mrs. Roy·attendetl !lln"'h
Carolina schools and the Surrey
Commulllty College, Dobson, N. C.
She is presently employed at the Ben
Franklin Store in Pomeroy. Mr. ROY
attended Southern High scliooi and

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

-

~ Waugh

Roberta Gilbert
and Thomas Gibbs

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SAT., FEB. 21, 1980

Social Calendar
MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Bosters, 7:30 p.m.
.Monday at high school band room.
MEIGS COUNTY Churches of
Christ, Men's Fellowship, 7:30p.m.
at the Middleport Church of Christ
Monday evening.
'

· St. David's
Day celebratio
in March

$}59

Ground Chunk ...~~ ..
'

$} 99

HOMEMADE

Sandwich Spread •••••L!·.

ggc

••

$
229

BUCKET

Cube Steak ..·......~~ ..
FRENCH CITY.

W1eners ............ :!~· .. 89
•

12

oz.

' .

ICEBERG ·

,.

HEAD LmUCE

MISSES

Gilbert-Gibbs
Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Gilbert of Cheshire are announcing the engagement and approaching . marriage of their
daughter, Roberta Kay, to Thomas
Wayne Gibbs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Clarke, also of Cheshire.
The bride-elect is a senior at
Kyger Creek High School. Her fiance is a 1980 graduate of Federal
Hocking High School.
AJune wedding is planned.
CHES!llRE -

Kennedy-Stephens

.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kennedy of
36103 Loop Road, Rutland, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Susan Jeannette, to
James Edward Stephens, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Stephens, Ruble Road,
Belpre.
The bride-elect graduated from
Meigs High School in 1978 and the
Hocking Technical College. She is
employed by Columbia Gas at
Columbus. Her fiance graduated
from Belpre High School and the
Hocking Technical College and he is
employed by Columbia Gas Co. in
Charleston, W. Va ,
The wedding is planned for May

•

Laywe/1-Be/ton

Lettuce .............H~ 3
••

I

2?('7 i

DARI FRESH

'

2% Milk ......... ~~~"-~}

69

VALLEY FARMS GRADE A
JOAN OF ARC

Large Eggs•••••••••••

.d
·
B
·K1 ney eans...~~ ..

DOZEN

400Z.

Ice Cream ....... ~.~~...

Pie Filling .......:

10
• : ••
COUPON

LUUPON

MAXWELL HOUSE

·3LB.

~

171

$699

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 21, 1981

;; ~ ;~

; ;

i

crnJPrJN

oz.

BOX

.~

$529

[ lllJP()N
1

,•

CAMPBElL'S
CHICKEN NOODLE

DETERGENT

COFFEE

$} 29

BORDEN'S ELSIE

THANK YOU CHERRY

HUNT'S

SOUP
10.75

4/$1

oi_

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 21, 1981

..

~.!!

CATSUP
240Z.
·JUG

2/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Feb. 21, 1981

LARGE
GROUP

Five couples
to wed

23.

~---(4
-25
---.----- - ---·:

. '

$}29
Jayne Wade

Round Steak..•...L~~

Exhibit (or the month of February
- . A Selection from '79 - An
exhibition of 35 works produced by
seven 1979 recipients of the Ohio Art
Council's Aid .to Individual Artists
:Fellowship Awards. Made available
through the Ohio Foundation on the
·Arts, Inc.
: Gallery hours - Tuesday and
.Thursday, 10 a.m, until 3 p.m.;
Saturday and Sunday, 1 p.m. until5
p.m.
F~bruary 17, 8 p.m. - FAC In·
terdepartmental Meeting, River by.
February 24, 6:30p.m.- Meeting
of the Membership Drive Committee
with Jean CUrtis who is chairing the
1981 Membership Campaign, Riverby; 8 p.m. - FAC Trustees Meeting,
Riverby,
February 26, 6:30 p.m. - Social
Hour .. 7 p.m. - Dinner and Annual
Meeting of the F AC, Oscar's
Restaurant. Program will feature
award winning watercolor artiSt
· Polly Trumbore of Ashland, Ken·
tucky with a watercolor demon·
atratlon. Reservations $10, including
.~ · and tip. Phone ~1819 or~
3834 for reservations.
: March - Exhibit for March will
be a jutored photography show,
chaired by Susan Clarke and
a.brieUe Sattler, for amateur
pbotographen to enter. Details
ivallable by calling the French Art
Colony and In news releases.
March 2-14- Annual Membership
Cbairman, chaired
,, by Jean Curtis.

Sunday and
Monday
OnlyI

Groun d Beef...... ~•..
(73% LEAN)

USDA CHOIC.E

: OAK mLL - The annual St.
bavid's celebration will take place
tn Oak Hill at the Presbyterian Chur·
~ on Saturday, March 7 at 6 p.m.
with D. Merrill Davis of Jackson as
illrector for the singing of Welsh and
English hymns throughout the
evening. He will be accompanied by
Mrs. Margaret Thomas of Thurman.
Rev. James A. M. Hanna will be
toastmaster for the evening and a
quartet from Jackson will present
three Welsh numbers. The members
of the quartet are R. Lynn Boothe,
Don Leedy, Paul Berridge and
Wilbur McCormick. They will be accompanied by Rick Utton and Stevie
. Jarvis.
There will be some brief impromptu speeches by well-known
(M!rsDRS at the gathering and the dinRef will be catered by Dean Circle,
Gallipolis.
: Tlc~ets are for sale by contacting
D. J. Joe Humi&gt;hrey of Jackson,
Eleanor Weaver, Marcella Lewis
Mildred Bangert at Oak Hill orB~
Call at Rio Grande. Tickets may be
reoerved and picked up and paid for
at the door, but all reservations
must be honored by payment.

'

WHOLE
· HAM ·

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
SUNDAY 1:00 TO 6:00

: COLUMBUS - Kimberle Lyn)lette Waugh, soprano, will be
pn:senting her senior voice ~ital
Fnday, Feb. 20, at 8:15 p.m. m the
l'oledo Room of Bexley Hall, Capital
;University, Columbus.
• Waugh, accompanied by Marcia
:Walck, will present vocal selections
fly George S. Handei, Ernest
Chausson, Ludwig Van Beethoven,
:Julio Osma, Richard Hageman,
J(urt Weill and others.
·
: Waugh, a 1977 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, is a senior at
l::apital University with a dual major
In voice performance and music
education. Miss Waugh is a student
of Gene Allen and the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Waugh,
Eureka.
The public is invited to attend.

i

't'

SUNDAY
GALLI A CO. Historical Society, 2
p.m. at. St. Peter's Episcopal Church; 1 p.m., board. Speaker, Clifford
Wig, Oh\o Genealogy Society.

to

?j

TAVERN

Remember Calendar

ON DEAN'S LIST
COLUMBUS - Laura June
Eichincer, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, has been named to the fir·
st semester dean's list at Capital
University.
'

James Sfe.phens,
Susan Kennedy

is employed at Kaiser Alwninum
Ravenswood, W. Va.
'
The couple resides on Cherry
Street in Racine.

present
voice recital

I

T

Announce marriage

Va.

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm .

Kimberle Waugh

Ohior-Point Pleasant W.Va .

COLUMBUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Laywell, 3966 Carlton Ave.,
Columbus, are announcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Donna
.Fay, to ROger Scott Belton, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. Bellon, 5127
Stonerldge Drive, Springfield.
The bride-elect is a student at the
Northeast Career Center in Columbus. Her fiance is employed at Four
Seasons Healing and Air Conditioning in Springfield.
Tbe bride-elect is the grand·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L.
Plants of Gallipolis and Mrs.
Dorothy Morris of Bidwell.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

AND

!

HALf SIZES

DRESSES
'

40.10
OFF

Ronda Ash
Ash-Ketchum
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ash, Minersville, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Ronda Jean, to Roger
Allen Ketchum, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Ketchum, Hockingport,
The open-church wedding will be
held on Feb. 22 at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church. The Rev.
Stanley Merrifield will perform the
ceremony at 6:30 p.m. following a
half-hour of pre-nuptial music. A
reception will be held in the church
social room immediately following
the ceremony.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Southern High School and the
Hocking Technical College. She is
presently employed at the Guiding
Hand School in Cheshire.
Her fiance graduated from
Federal Hocking High School and ·
the Hocking Technical Colleae. He is
presently employed as postmaster
in Hockingport and is also selfemployed.

POMEROY - The Ladies Home
League of the Salvation Anny held a
shower Tuesday at the hall on But·
ternut Ave. honoring Rhonda BarWade-Grafentin
nhart and Mark Proffitt who were
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. married there Saturday.
Avalentine theme was carried out
Jerry Wade of Gallipolis are announcing the engagement and up- with League members and their
families attending, Edith Spencer
coming marriage of their daughter,
and Eloise Adains furnished
Jayne Ann, to Tim J. Grafentin c1
decorated cupcakes and other
Columbus.
refreshments. Mrs. Ray Wining did
Miss Wade attended school In
the decorations for the party.
Hilliard until her sophomore year,
Loretta Laudennill made the
when she moved to Gallipolis with
valentine
box and distributed the
her parents. She graduated from
cards. Gifts were presented to RhonGaUia Academy In 1975 and nursing
da and Mark.
school in 1979; she is now working at
Rhonda has. regularly attended
Mt. Cannel Medical Center as
The
Salvation Army since she was
Registered Nurse.
eight.
She joined as a Junior Soldier
Grafentln Is the son of Mr. and
at
10,
and
became a Senior Solder at
MrS. Gerald Grafenlln and is em16.
She
is
active
in the Corps and has
pjoyed as a Data Center Support
attended
band
camp
and several Y.
Technician at Borden's Inc. c1
E.
Councils
In
Cincinnati.
She Is a
OOlumbus .
Corps
Cadet
(Bible
student)
and at·
An April wedding is planned.
tends Meigs High School.
Thursday evening Mark was
honored
with a party in c~lebratlon
SOUL FINDERS TO SING
of
his
l~th
birthday. He lives in
The Soul Finders will be at the Ash
Racine,
attends
Meigs High School,
Street Free Will Baptist Church in
and
has
been
attending
meetings at
Middleport at 7:30 Saturday night.
.
The
Salvation
Anny
with
Rhonda,
The public Is invited,

BROUGHTON'S

'189'
29
COTTAGE CHEESE iT~~ '1 .

Lots of Styles to choose
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VALLEY BELL

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JENO'S MR. P.'s

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AND HALF SIZES
14% TO 241/z

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VALUES TO '130.00

SIZES 38 to 46

ENTIRE STOCK

SOUP
10.5 oz.
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...

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. "~
r ./ s~\ 1

'

DRESS SHIRTS

Values
To 120.00
Sizes 14'12 to 17

1L3
7~

OFf·

··149
Plus Deposit

5-LB.
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Times-Sen1inel

\

ASTROGRAPH
February' 15, 1111

Although the sailing may not be aU
smooth, you can attain sucee115 by choosing
new targets In the year ahead. Discard those
which no longer have any appeal for you.
AQUARrtJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You're normally pretty good about lending others 8
helpi~ hand. but today You may rel!lent
' be~g ~~ upon and refuse to c:ome to
their 8M111f.anct!. Find out more ol what lies
ahead for you in the year following your birthday by sending for your ropy of AstroGraph. Mail $1 for each to Astro-Graph Box
489, Radio City Station, N. V. 10019. Be' sure
to specify birth date.
PISCES (Feb. 2&amp;-March 201 SQmeone in
your social circle may try to pull off
sanething cute today and make you the fall
~y. lfyou're alert they won't get away with
II.
ARIES (March Z1·AprU 1!1) To avoid
domestic grumbles today , don't bring up old
issues· which you and your mate couldn't
agree upon. They still have sparks left in
them.
TAURUS (April ZO.May z.l) If you feel it's
necessary to talk at&gt;out others today try to
find nice things to say, becawe what yoo say
will be repeated fo r their ears.
· GEMINI (May !1-Juae 20) _Rather than
being content with your lot in lire today you
may compare what you have to that of
another, whom you think has more. Your
analysis is wrong.
CANCER (June U·July %2) You ha\•e
adequate ambition an€1 drive today, but you
may not accomplish aU that yo~ hope to
ov.1ng to a tendency to divide your forces. ~
smglerninded.
LEO (July !3--Aug. H) Instead of dealing
with the ''now,".you may dwell too much on
past events today an€1 let old experiences
prohibit you from attempting the new .
VIRGO (Aug. %3-&amp;pt. ~ } Do not 11Uempt tu
make friends over in your image today. Try
to accept them for what they are even if
they don't measure up tq the stan~rds you

set.

LIBRA (Sept. z:J..Oc&amp;. %3) Your goals today
may not be in harmony with that which is
truly best for you. It 's important to know
~ why you want what
want.
SCORPIO (Oct.
Ul You're ex-

treinely imaginative today. 'nlill is good, but
you may dwell un neg11t1ve thughtJ rather
than un positive ones. Reverse the order.
SA.GfiTARIUS (Nov. U.Det. !1) Don't
involved tn any type of financial
JOtnt venture today witb indivldua ls whose
character is questiona ble. The deal may be
cast in the same mold.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ZZ-Ja1. lt) You could
e•perience a bit more stress in your one-tc&gt;
~me

~ rel11tionshlps today than usual . Quickly
fmd a common ground upon which to 111Zree.

February 11, ltll

This coming year may contain mon than

which you once used to successfully lumdl~
somethlng may a~ain be applicable today .
Draw from your e1perience and repeal tl\e
perfonnance.
SAGITIA.RWS {Nov. %3-Det. Zl) Une•·
peeled ch&lt;lnl!eS tend to work for your
ultimate benefit t'oday. Don't let sudden shif~
!-'disturb you. Ju.stfiow with events.
CAPRICORN tim=. ~Jaa. l9 l An opportunity may rlse today lli show a friend
wOO doubted yoor allegiance just how loyal
really are. Respond when you see the

e\•en If they seem a bit weird to others.
VIRGO !AuJ. !3-Sept.. tzl Make your
needs known to friends you can count on
toda~ . One or them may help you to accumpUsh something you've been unable to
dooO.)'J)Ur own .
LmRA (SepL 13-&lt;k&amp;. t3l Be persistent
todHy in things which can enhance your
status or add to your resou.rces . 11lruul!lh
ingenuity And effort, your goals will be
achieved .

·

SCORPIO !OeL !4-No~ . tt) A method

.

Buy Times-Sentinel classifieds

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its nonnal amount of surprises for you. lm- .

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· AQUARIUS Uaa. z:t..Frb. 11) Where 'yoW"
work or career i.5 C(lncemed, something out
ol the o_nlinary is stir"r~t!: and, whtn it finally
sorts 1~lf out, tt should prove quite
beneficial fur you. Find out min of whal lies
ahead for you in the yea r following your birthday by sending for your copy or AstroGraph. Mail Jl for each to Astro-Graph, Box
489, EWdio City Station, N. Y. 10019. be sure
to specify birth' date.
PISCES (Ftb. ZO..March 20) You could be
in for a pleasant surprise today wben you
leam that someone whom you felt never
thought too highly of you shtJws you're A·l in
his or her book . .
ARIFS ( ~rch tl·Aprll 19~ A potentially
profitable situation coold develop today, but
It mn• :,e acted Upon promptly Or it might be
\

wn af :;ii.\idenly as it appeared.
·
1AURUS (April JO.May !0~ You may not
be allowed as much time as you desire to

DENTED AND DISCONTINUED SIYl£S.
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60" BOUCLE
60" WOOL
QIANA 60" &amp; 54"

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OFF

GEMINI IMay Zl.Jwte zt) There is firumdal opportunity around you today but it's
like:ly to be fleeting. Don' t put off shuations
CANCER 1J•oe %1-July %%) Get out and
move around a bit today and, if yoti have a

chance, visit some or your old haWlts. You
could ruri across e friend you haven't Ren
lately.
LEO IJaly Z3-AII4· =~ YoW" best ide.u
may not be aloog log1callines today , so don't
ignore your hwaches or Wlusual concepts,

ALL FRAMES IN STOCK ARE AT LEAST

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GOOD THRU FEB. 28 ONLY

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
SPRING VAU1Y PLAZA

THE FABRIC SHOP
15

w. 2nd St.

-

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.

.

February 15, 1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page-C -1

.

MSU tops Michigan
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) Kevin Smith hit 28 points and led
Michigan State to a 7().66 Big Ten
basketbaU victory over 13th-ranked
Michigan Saturday.
Smith hit 10 of 14 from the field
and was 8 of 10 from the free throw
line.
Jay Vincent, the Spartans big
power f~rward, added 18 points
before fouling out with 4:23
remaining. The Spartans also
played most of the second half
without senior Mike Brkovich, who ·

suffered an ankle injury at the end of
the first half.
Mike McGee lead the Wolverines
with 23 points while Johnny Johnson
added 14 for the Wolverines who suffered their second defeat in three
days.
Michigan jumped out to a ~ lead.
early in the game and ooth teams
exhcnaged baskets until midway in
the first half when ·the Spartans outscored Michigan ~ in a two-minute
span to take an 18-15 lead. Smith hit
six points in the last two and a half

minutes to give the Spartans a 3&amp;-30
halftime lead.
The Spartans shot 67 percent in the
second half, and they lead by as
many as 12 points using a zone
defense that effectively kept
Michigan out of the middle.
With Vincent out of the game,
Michigan coutscored the Spartans 82 in the last two minutes of play but
was unable to overcome the deficit.
The Spartans improved their Big
Ten record to U and 1~11 overall.
The Wolverines feU to 7-li and 16-5.

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CLOSED MONDAYS

Pomeroy, Ohio

Falcons top_CMU, 90-80
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich. (AP)
- Colin Irish hit 25 points and four
teammates scored in pouble figures
to give Bowling Green a 9IH!O MidAmerican Conference· basketball
victory over Central Michigan on
Saturday.
The Chippewas had a seven-point
· lead with five minutes remainiiw in

the first half, but the visitors from
Ohio outscored them 14-6 to take a
41-40 lead at halftime.
The teams traded baskets for the
first 11 minutes of the second half
before the Falcons, 12-10 overall and
7-li in the league, started widening
their lead.
Marcus Newburo scored 20 points,

David Greer added 14, while Joe
Faine and Ernzer Shurelds had 10
each for Bowling Green.
Gary Tropf and Mike Robinson
chipped in 15 points each, while Rob
McQuaid and Ted Anderson each added 14 for the Chippewas, now 1~12
and l-9.

Broncos retain MAC lead
KALAMAZOO,. Mich. (AP)
Mike Kabat sank two free throws in
tbe final minute Saturday as
Western Michigan remained atop
the Mid-American Conference
basketball race with a 7l-71 victory
over defending champion Toledo.
With Western Michigan clinging to
a 70-69 lead after two missed free
throws by Toledo's Jay Lelunan,
Kabat made ooth ends of a on&lt;l-andone opportunity with 16 seconds left.

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP ) Ci11cinnati's Junior Johnson sank a
pair of free throws for a three-point
lead with 14 seconds remaining and
the Bearcats survived a last-second
scare to hold on for an ll}-79 Metro
Conference basketball victory over
Florida State Saturday. .
Johnson's free throws boosted Cincinnati, 12-10,5-4 in league play , into

an 80-77 lead. Florida State's Bobby
Parks drove the length of the court
for a lay-in to close the margin to one
point.
Cincinnati's Bobby Austin was
fouled on the inoounds play with five
seconds remaining and went to the
free throw line for a on&lt;l-and-one opo
portunity. He missed the first shot
and Florida State reoounded but the

Seminoles hopes were dashed when
Parks missed a desperation shot
from mid-court.
The victory was the fourth
straight for Cincinnati, while
Florida State fell to 12-9 overall and
:;.sin the Metro.
Florida State's Mickey Dillard
scored a gam&lt;l-high 28 points. Elvis
Rolle added 16 and James Bozeman
15 for the Seminoles.

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5

iseum Saturday alternoou. St. JohDB' Waysse M.,Coy
(55), Kevlu WUilams tm, aDd Larry Wublqtou (2U
are on the short eud of ihe rebowld. Oregoo WOD. tAP
Laserpboto)

REBOUNDING - Steve Jolmloa (33) of Oregon
Slale University comes up wltb ball durtugllrst haU
actloa against St. John's University at the Nassau Col-

I;

BySCOTIWOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS. In contrast to
the usual 'Friday the 13th' superstition, the Meigs Marauders ended
its string of bad luck by scoring a 8055 victory over the Wellston Rockets
here at Larry R. Morrison gymnasiwn Friday evening.

Judge, Ohlinger, Smith, and
Wayland, while a twisting drive by
Britt Dodson put the Marauders on
top to stay with 2:43 remaining.
Although Meigs stayed on top the
final seconds were beetle. Wellston
missed several attempts to lock tbe
score and Meigs made several nerve
racking turnovers. Kevin Smith and
Chris Judge hit one of two fouls to
give Meigs a four point lead at 57-li3,
but Jeffers narrowed it to two on a
l~ng jumper the next trip down the
court. Finally, an Ohlinger foul shot
put the game out of reach with 15
seconds remaining and Meigs won
60-55.
Meigs hit 20 of 'JI from the line for

54 percent, while Wellston canned 9
of 15 for 60 percent.
Meigs dominated the boards 4G-18
led by Ohlinger's 13 and Jeffers' six.
Meigs had 16 tunovers, 16 personal
fouls, nine recoveries, and five
assists, while Wellston was whistled
for 27 personals, had 18 turnovers,
and had five recoveries.
WELLSTON -55) ~ Jeffers 10· 3·
23; Peters..0-0·0; Norris 3-1·7; Erv in
1·0·2; Derrow 5·2·12 ; Massie 3·0·6;
Parsons 1·0·'2 and Perkins 0-3·3.
Totals 23·10·55 . .
Meigs (60) - Oh li nger 5-4-14 ;
Judge 2·4· 10; Wayland 2·6·10; Smith
3· 2·8; Ashley 3· 2·8; Dodson 4-0·8, and
Miller 1·2·4. Totals 20· 20·60 .

By quarters :
Wellston

Meigs

6 17 23 '1-55
13 u 15 18-60

The second round saw Meigs
maintain its seven point advantage
most of the way, but in the latter
stages of the period, Wellston hit a
torrid hot streak to pull within three
at the half, 27-23. Ohlinger paced the
Marauders with eight markers the
first half, while Jeffers netted 14.

COMPLETE WITH BEDDING
UP TO

'Friday the 13th' proves
lucky for Meigs Marauders

Wellston's John Jeffers scored a
game high 23 points and collected six
reoounds, was joined in double
figures by John Derrow who netted
12.
Meigs' consistency from the flour
proved to be one of the underlying
factors Of the game as the local
Marauders canned 20 of 56 from the
flour for 36 percent, scoring baskets
when they counted. Wellston hit 23 of
50 from the floor for 46 percent, but
struggled through the first and last
quarters.
In the initial canto, Wellston hit
onJy. two of 12 field goals, and in the
last only four of 13, sandwiching a
pair of 67 and 69 percent hot streaks
in between.
Behind a good team effort, Meigs
came out smoking and played a
sticky defense to lead by seven at the
first period buzzer, 13-6.

BERKLINE RECLINERS
1

ANGLE DRIVES FOR TWO- Logan's Jim Angle night, many on driving layups. GAHS defenders are
scored 16 points agaiMt visiting GaUipolls Friday Kent Price (rear) and Todd Nibert (41). GaUipolls
won, 53-51. See story on C-2.

A good team effort that placed
three men in double figures ooosted
the Marauders to their fourth win
against 13 losses. Meigs picked up its
initial win in the SEOAL, while
Wellston dropped to :HI, and 9-10
overall.
Meigs' Steve Ohlinger led the
Meigs attack with 14 points and 13
rebounds, while Jeff ·Wayland
poured in 12 points, Chris Judge netted 10, and a trio consisting of Kevin
Smith, Bob Ashley, and Britt Dodson
added eight each to round out the
well balanced attack.

SAVE $50· $100

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high II reoounds.
Harvey Knuckles scored a careerhigh 32 points for the Rockets, while
Dan Boyle had 13, Mitch Adamek
had 12 and Lelunan had 10.
Western led 44-33 at halftime and
enjoyed two 11-point bulges In the
opening three minutes of the second
half.
Western is~ in the league and 148 overall, while Toledo i5 7-li and 157. Western is now two games in front
in the MAC.

Cincinnati posts 80-79 victory

WOODEN DINETTES

3 PIECE EARLY

Lehman came back to score with
10 seconds remaining, but Todd
Dietrich made a free throw for
Western five seconds later. Toledo
had a turnover and was unable to get
off a final shot.
Walker D. RusseU had 22 points
for the winners, while Melvin Maxwell and Dietrich added 18 and 10
respectively. Kabat played 22
minutes in a reserve roll and
finished with 8 points plus a gam&lt;l-

''

Ip the third round, it appeared that
the third quarter plague had again
. infested the Marauders, as Wellston
continued to rip the nets at a hot
pace.
Wellston, at one point, built a ten
point lead at 44-34.
A pressure defense and slow tempo allowed Meigs to play its game
and the Big Bend "club came fighting
back. Coach Gordon Fisher's ooys
settled down and pulled within foW'
by the time the third period horn had,
sounded, 48-42.
Carrying momentum into the last
round, Meigs started a gallant
c01neback attempt. Jeff Wayland
first tied tho SC«•• at 48-48 witl\6:35
left. Overall the score was tied on
four different occasions and the lead
changed hands four different times.
The Meigs comeback was
highlighted by gr~at efforts by Chris

CAUGIIT IN BETWEEN- Britt Dodson (25) and Kevin Smltb (31)
seem 10 be praetlciDg baseball's run down play early~ WeUstou's Scott
Massie ( 10) Is caught iD between both players. Meigs won Its first SEOAL
cutest this season, 60-55. (Scott Wolfe photo.)

�.

February IS, 1911
February 15, 1981

~ standings I

..._CHESHI~- ~o doubt about it· we championship game of the
Southern V~lley Athletic Conference
will be decided Friday night when
Southern travels to Eastern for a
: heackn clash,
"
SOulbern basketball Coacb Carl
Wolfe UliOIUiced Saturday ad.
diUOlal Udell bave been made
ava&amp;blefor Friday's cbampiOIIBbip
li8Die II Eutern. Earller, Southern
bad jut been allocated 300 tickets,
IIOW 51111 are avallable, 275 adult
llckeii·IUIII 1!5 studeats.
Cheerleaders and players may otr
lain ticket.. for ·their parents and
families Monday. The -remaining
tickets will go ori sale at 9 a.m.

Friday's non-league results:

Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg, pp· ·

nd .
,
Chillicothe 56 Columbus Westland
,j6

Madison Pla ins 6;1 Washington CH

Wheerersburg 65Lucasville 48

TEAM

SEOAL VARSITY

Athens

Gallipolis
Ironton

W L P OP
12 1 . 833 674
10 3 733 628

a s

Well.ston
Logan

GALUPOUS - Meigs defeated
Galllpolis seventh grade, 4!&gt;-25, Monday. Shank and Wise led Meigs with 18 and 14 points.
For Gallipolis, John Strait, Sean
Call, and Danny Angel scored eight,
seven and six points respectively.

4 9 69'1 747

4 9 761 85&lt;1
Meigs
1 12 659 805
52 52 5950 5950
TOTALS
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 5.1 Logan 51
Athens 511 Waverly 40
Melgs60 Wellston 55
Ironton 81 Jackson 89

Jackson

GOOD 'D' - Gallia's Rick M.rtln (CSC) IUid Tim
Slldmore (Ill) clooe In on Logan's R. D. Woltz (%1)

c1ur1D1 Friday's SEOAL cage battle ID HWIGp Gym •I
Logan. GARS came from behind to wiD,

53-51. - Bren-

da Wilson photo.

GAHS edges Logan, cops
second place in SEOAL
LOGAN - Although Gallipolis had

just defeated Logan, 53--51, for the
19th time in 24 starts under Coach
Jim Osborne (eighth time in 12 years
at Logan) there wasn't much joy in
the Blue Devils' dressing rooin after
the game Friday night.
Before the Gallians hit the
showers, word was re&amp;ived Athens
had knocked off host Waverly, 58-40,
to capture its first undisputed
Southeastern Ohio League basket·
ball championship in 11 years.
"Our game up there Friday (at
Athens) will be for pride now," said
Osborne following Gallipolis' 13th·
hardwood victory in 18 starts this
winter.
Cllncb S..,nd Place
Gallipolis, S-3 !lfl the road and 7·2
at home, clinched undisputed second
place in the 1~1 conference standings. GAHS is 10-3 in SEOAL play_
It's the fifth time in 10 years and first since 197~78 season the Blue
Devils have finished second in the
league under Coach Osborne.
Coach Mark Shaw's Chieftains
suffered their seventh consecutive
loss Friday_ Last Chieftain win this
winter was ~. over Marietta on
Jan. 10. The Chiefs dropped to 7·12

overall and 4-9 in league action.
It was a close battle all the way in
Hilltop Gym. The lead changed hands 12 times. The score was tied twice
during the 32-minute contest.
Logan led 13·11 after one period.
The Chiefs built up their biggest advantage of the night, 31·22, with 2:10
remaining in the second period.
Larry Roberts, Phil King, Kent
Price and Todd Nibert pulled the
Gallians within one, 32-31, just
before the halftime intermission.
Nibert's layup off the s~nd half
jwnp put GAHS on top, 32-31. The
Chieftains led 41-38 after three
periods.
Price Gets Hot
Kent Price's two tipins opened
fourth period scoring. The lead
changed hands six times before
Price's layup (4:25) put the Gallians
on top to stay.
Todd Nibert's layup (2:59) gave
GAHSa52-49advantage.R.D. Woltz
hit a long jumper (1:48) to complete
~an's scoring.
Price's charity toss with two
seconds left clinched the victory for
GAHS.
Gallipolis hit 24 of 54 field goal attempts for 44 percent. The Devils

Imps trip Logan Papooses,
claim reserve loop crown

SEOALRESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Gallipolis
11 2 537 361 .
Ironton
9 4 499 474
Waverly
9 4 563 471
Athens
7 6 569 559
Logan
6 7 402 416
Jackson
6 7 516 520
Wellston
2 11 474 63&lt;l
Meigs
2 11 455 5114
TOTALS
52 52 4015 4015
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 20 Logan 10
Waverly 37 Athens 36
Meigs .o Wellston 38
Jackson511ronlon47 (oil
Tuesday's gilmes:

Millon at Pt. Pleasant
East Clinton at Washington CH

were five of 10 at the foul line for 50
(lercent. GAHS had a season lqw 18
rebounds, seven by Price. Tbe win·
ners had 11 assists, five by Phil
-King.
Gallipolis had 12 turnovers.
Three Blue Devils scored mdouble
figures. Nibert and Price each had
17. King had II.
Logan tilt 23 of 47 field goal at·
tempts for 49 percent. The Chiefs
were five of seven at the foul line foc
71 percent. Logan had 27 rebounds,
11 by Dave Bell. The Chiefs had 23
turnovers, seven in the final quarter.
Jim Angle and Bell tallied 16 points each for the Chiefs. Woltz added
10.
RegUlar Seiuon Ends
Gallipolis ·will conclude its 1~1
campaign at home against pt,
Pleasant on Feb. 21.
Logan will end its regular season
at Meigs Friday night.
Box score:
GALLIPOLIS (53)- Martin 0-00; Nibert ·8-1-17; Price 8-1-17; Skld-

1~5.1

13 18 10 11)-51

Logan at Meigs

Chillicothe at Groveport
Miami Trace at Washington CH
Northwest at Wheelersburg
Greenup at Portsmouth

Feb. 21 games:

(36 • 15 • 68) .

Ironton at Portsmouth
Pt. Pleasant at Gallipolis

• 5 lpi&lt;:IOUI Olltl•..

44percent.
GARS had 19 rebounds, five by
Mike Edelmann. Galllpolis had nine
turnovers.
Bcmscore:
GAHS BlUE IMPS (20) - Skid·
more 2-2·6: Sheets 3-2-8; Lane 0-0-0;
Edelmann G-4-4; Madison 0-0-0;

.,.,LOGAN PAPOOSES [10)- Monk

Clark

.o-o-o;

Isaacs 1-0·2. Totals 6-

3-G-6; Murtha 1-0-2; Trucco 0-0-0;
Helber l·G-2; Frazier 0'0-0; White oG-0; Johnson 0-0-0. TOTALS 5-G-10.
Score by qua rlers:
Gallipolis
1 7 8 4-20
Logan
4 4 o 2- 10

I

• ,

• Quollly conlllnoctioon I

~

..

• Otcorator colors

GAHS frosh defeat
Logan for 8th win

.'( ) .'.

.

GAWPOLIS - Coach Jack
Payton's ' GalliPolis freshman
basketball team defeated visiting
Logan, 52-29, in a makeup game here
Saturday morning.
Tbe win left Gallipolis 11-4 on the
year. Logan dropped to 5-8.
Gallipolis will play at Logan Monday, at Athens Tuesday, and conclude its 1~1' campaign In the
JaOikson Freshman Tournament
Wednesday and Thursday.

• .
ox score ·

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To~• 1 17 ·1:-47 ·.
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19 20 22 11)-71
Kyger creek
9 14 11 13----47

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"LARGE'" PANTRY

~-----------------------------------------------------~
Logan's Papooses scoreless 12
minutes - midway from the second
period unW 3:30 left ln the final
quarter,---- enroute to a 20-10 victory
Friday night.
The triumph gave Coach Rick
VanMatre's Blue Imps their second
straight Southeastern Ohio League
'B' crown, and the school's first undisputed reserve title in 26 years.
Jackson knocked Ironton's reser·
vea out of the title picture with a 51·
· 47 overtime win at Jackson Friday
night.
Tbe Blue Imps are now IH on the
year. With one loop game left at
Atbens Friday, the Imps are 11·2.
Logan dropped to 11-10 overall and 1&gt;-7
Inside the league.
It wasn't one of the Imps' better
gamea.
Logan led 4-1 after one period. M·
ter taking an '-3 lead midway
through the second quarter, Logan
failed to score again until Matt Murtha's goal with 3:30 left in the game.
By that time, GARS was on top, 11110.
Lynn Sheets paced tiM. winners
with eight points ""' six came on consecutive steals to start the third
period. Steve Skidmore added six.
Monte Monk had six po¥lts for
Logan.
The Papooses held Gallipolis' 6-4
sophomore center, Jamie Lane,
scoreless for the first time in league
play this winter. GARS was a cool
sil of 27 from the field for 22 percent.
The Imps weren't much better at the
foul Urie, hitting only eight of 18 for

theS~ACh:~w~~~~a~~yand

~a~o Sa~urda

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Gallipolis at Athens

11

i
po
re;rct ~Y· k l&gt;-ll
ll d G-9 •
yger ee
overa an
m

18

Todd Slone and Steve Wilcoxen had
two each.
Gallipolis led the first quarter U .
At the remaining quarter marks, '
Meigs led 23--19 and 37·20.
Gallipolis will conclude its season
Tuesday,Feb. 17, at Athens.

Friday's games:

Logan
Gallipolis

=~g~i';:d ~o~~;rtd:!~

r---------------:......----------·----------------------------::::-

Jackson at Waverly
1ron ton at Wellston

Score by quarters;

11 19 9

eight . points, McNjckle added six, with a~ exciting 49-48 victory ov7r
and Kent Wolfe, four. Rob Waugh the , Little Tornadoes. The · wm
led KC with five points.
avenged an earlier two point loss at
Kyger Creek outscored Southern, Southern.
Jl-10 in the final quarter as Jeff
Southern trailed the entire game
Moles led the way with seven points.
but was close to within one point
Four Tornadoes finished ln double with just 13 seconds left in the con- 1
figures led by Teaford's 19 points. K.
test.
W_olfeadded16;R.Wolfe;12andMcFo~owingatimeout, ~shotforthe
N1ckle, 10. Porter led KC with 11 wmmng basket was f!llssed. Freshpoints while Sands canned 10.
man J . D. Bradbury came down with
Southern hit 32 of67 floor attempts the rebound for the Bobkittens, but
while KC connected on 17 of 38. The
was fouled. He caimly stepped to the
Tornad~s grabbed 35 rebounds.
line and canned both ends ofla one- ·
KC J\esesrve WID
plus situation sealing the victory.
Kyger Creek's improving reserve
Bradbury paced Kyger Creek with
squad extended its record to 12-4, · 17 points wblle Brent Love had 10.

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LOGAN (29) - Dennis 5-2-12;
Hasler 1-0-2; Myers 3:4-10; Blythe 01-1; Davis 1-2-4. TOTALS 10-9-29.
GALLI POLIS [52) - Wolfe 2-0-4;
TOTALS 24-5-53 .
LOGAN C51l- Bell 6-4-16; Mad- Smith 2·7-11' Duncan 1-1-3; Carter 4dox 0·0-0; Berry 2-1-5; McDaniel o-o- 2-10; Ellcessor 8-0-16; Meek 1-'0-2;
0; Morgan 1-0-2; Moral -0-2; Woltz 5- Garbero-2-2; Rathourn 1-0-2; Bostic
0-10; Veidl 0-0-0; Angle 8-0-16. 1-0-2; Painter 0-Q-0; Mullen 0-0-0;
Tope0-0-0. TOTALS20·15-52.
TOTAlS 23·5·51. '
Score by q1.1arters:

nad~s· one-two scoring punch_. Dale
Fnday mght, Southern defeated Teaford and Kent Wolfe, the VISitors
Kyger Creek, 71-47 while Eastern jwnped into a 19-9 first period lead.
dumped Hannan Trace, 74-60 thus
Teaford bad seven points durlng
settingthestageforashowdown.
thestanzawblleWoUec;aonedelgbt.
Going into the championship con- Ri~nl Wolfe jolued in the scoring
test, both teams have e-1 records. piiJ'Bde lu the secollll period as
Southern's only loss was a one point Southern extended its lead to 39-23 at
affair to Hannan Trace while the~.
.
.
Enstern's loss came at the hands of
Richard Wolfe had e1ght pomts on
the defending champion Tomad~s.
outside shots; Terry McNickle had
Friday night at Cheshire, Coach four and Teaford, four.
Carl Wolfe's Tornadoes were in conTim Barr, David Sands and Terry
trol from the opening tip. Midway Porter each netted four points for
through the periOd, Coach Keith Car· the Bobcats. Southern wrapped up
ter's Bobcats lied it at 7·7 but that the contest behind a 22 point · third
was lt.
_period. Teaford led the way with
Behind the shooting of the Tor-

UP, UP AND IN - GaliU.'a
Dave Bell (45) ud R. D. Woltz (!1) for a
i'rldllf'a buk&amp;
hall game at Logan. King had five uaiiiiB, fGW' ate.ls aDd 11 pobD for the
victorious Blue DevllB .

more2·0·4; King 4·3·11 ; Gillespie 0·0·
O; Glenn 1-0-2: Roberts 1-0-2.

Gallipolis
Logan

Tue~y at~thern High Sch~l.

Meigs seventh graders triumph

757 69'1

8 5 741 728
s 8 761 815 &lt;

Waverly

The Sunday Times·Sentinel-Page-C·3

:Southern romps,_ready for SV AC showdown Friday

ALLGAMES
.
TEAM
W l P OP
Chillicothe
18 0 1026 814
Athens
16 2'1170 982
Wheelersburg
16 2 1209 984
Portsmouth
14 3 1276 1082
Gallipolis
13 3 1019 882
Waverly
11 8 1093 1074
1ronton
9 8 961 917
Wellston
9 10 1112 1190
Logan
7 12 1094 1128
Washington CH
5 12 838 1025
Jackson
5 14 1156 '1290
Meigs
4 13 n«l 981
Pt. Pleasant
2 13 770 992

60

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

.OPEN 9 5
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• olv1s1oN oF TANDY coRPORAl toN

�-

&lt;

•

February 15,1981

-

students from schools on a semester assume responsibility for decoding
system. Rio Grande College is on the the ambiguous NAJA regulations
concerning terms of attendance.''
quarter system.
Brown further stated that he
Rio Grande College Director of
signed
the eligibiliiy form in
Admissions and Records, Dean
question
pre_cisely on the inBrown, stated, "Transcripts of ·
terpretation
of the regulations and
students
(including
student
he
maintains
there is no violation of
athletes) from a school using the
the
"24
credit
rule" as presented in
semester system who enroll in Rio
the
regulations.
"I further mainGrande College are immediately
tain,1' Brown said, "if a violation
evaluated in terms of quarter
exists, it is a violation of 'practice'
hours."
as opposed to 'policy' ."
Brown added, " An evaluation is
Dr. Clyde Evans, Rio Grande
made of the transferability of courCollege
Provost, stated that the Rio
ses and hours, and the accepted
Grande
College Faculty Athletic
t'&lt;lurses and hours become part of
Council in a brief preliminary inthe student's accumulative record,
vestigation, issued the following
and the eligibility form is prepared
statement:
from the cumulative record. i only
" It appears as though the NAJA
certify credits and fortunately do not
regulation~ are ambiguously written

and it is evident that the interpretation by Mr. Lawhorn and
Mr. Brown is logical. Mr. Lawhorn
and Mr. Brown's interpretation was
made in good faith and Mr. Lawhorn
is directed to appeal the decision
through the guidelines outlined by

the NAJA."

Chicago St. 101, NE Illinois 8.2

Washburn 68, Pittsburg SL 43
SOUTHWF.ST

Princeton 55, Dartmouth 44
St.Joseph's, Maine 61, Castleton St. 64
U.S. Inl'l 68, Fairfield 59

Yale 76, Columbia ~
SOlJ111
Florida A&amp;M ~, S.Carolina st. 86, OT
N.C!:trolina A&amp;T 71, Bethune-Cookman

...

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Te~~:a s

Lutheran 73, E .Texas Baptist 72

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Gamr:3
Supersunics " B" (11 ) - J . Barnett U : T . Bar·
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Athens36.

LIMIT 2

SPECIAL
11 ARR ifl J

I It ll

'·

and collected 27 rebounds .12 by
Milburn.
·
'
Box score:
I RON TON (81)- Chris Barnes 13
6 32; J eff Ja ckson S-2-12 ; Brent

1~16

I
I
I·

Wilcoxon d-2· 10 ; Rick Fritz 4·2· 10 ;
Mark Fields 3· 2·8,· Jimmy Morris 3

I

1-7; Jay Wolfe 1-0-2. TOTALS 33 · 15·

I

81.

JACKSON (69 ) - Rick Milburn 10
6·26; John Morrow 5·4·14 ; Matt Bon ·
zo 4·2·10 : Al len · Collins· 3·0·6,· Mark
Fcnik 2-0-4; John Hal e 1 2-4; Mike
Davis 1·1·3; Todd Davi s 1· 0·2.
TOTALS 27·15-69.
Score by quarters :
Ironton
21 18 21 21 - 81
Jackson
10 8 14 27- 69

1
1

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'

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..·'

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Logan Monument Co. Inc .

Pomeroy, Ohio

Vinton, Ohio

or

45688
)Please send me FREE booklets showing memorials

4S769

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992-2588

rottefl®

The Meigs Marauder Junior Varsity of Coach Mick Childs handily
defeated the Wellston Golden Rocket
reserves, 43-38.at Meigs High School
Friday evening. Randy Murray led
the winners with 14 points, Rick
Chancey poured in ten, Roger
Kovalchik seven, Rick Edwards
four, Mike Edwards three, Greg
Taylor two, Brian Whaley one, and
Mike Miller one. The Wellston club
was led by Bill Allison's 10, Bill
:,· Norris had seven, and Brad Benson
had six.
Meigs plays at Wahama tonight in
a non-league bout.

.

r---..:-------r:OUPON-----------.

Meigs' reserves win

Ord l cloth with co tton pod

patte rns and colors

ATHENS (58)- Brian Lavery 2·2·
6; Steve Bruning s-:2-12; Kevin Swar·
tze l 0-2-2; Brad Neff 5-0-10; Mike
Groci 5-2~ 12 ; Scott Riggs 4·6· 14; Matt
Stenson 1-0-2. TOTALS 22-14-58.
WAVERLY (40) - Rick Teeters 32·8; Chris Smith 2·1·5; Rodney Pen·
delton 1·0-2; . Eric Brietenoach 8·3·
19; Joe Brown 2· 1·5; Joe Branum 0-11. TOTALS 16·8·40.
Score by quarters:
Athens
12 14 15 17- 58
waverly
s 13 10 12-40
Reserve score: Waverly 37,

/

JACKSON - Chris Barnes scored was joined in double figure scoring
32 points, including 15 in the first by Jeff Jackson with 12 and Brent
quarter, to lead the red-hot Ironton Wilcoxen ahd Rick Fritz with 10
Tigers to an 81~ smashing of each .
Rick i'f!ilburn tallied 26 points to
Jackson Friday.
The Tiger win, combined with lead the Irorunen. John Morrow adWaverly 's loss to Athens, enabled ded 14 and Matt Bonzo 10.
The winning Tigers hit 33 of 61
Ironton to move into a tie with
Waverly £or third place in the league , from the floor, 15 of 27 free throws,
standings with just. one contest and had 29 rebounds with Jimmy
remaining. Both teams show an 8-5 Morris grabbing eight.
Jackson connected on 27 of 48
mark.
Friday's contest was simply an old fielders, made ·15 of 23 free throws,
fashioned shoot out with the Tigers
taking a 21-20 first period lead.
Ironton outscored Jackson 18-8 in
the second quarter to stretch its
margin to 39-28. It was 61H~ ufter
three quarters.
Barnes, the league's top scorer,

1''

LOW
OUR
pi!Cl

25°/o.,,

Box: score:

SAVE '26000

iD the event were, front left to right, David Rollrod,
Randy Stewart, Roger Cotterill and Ben Cotterill;
back, James Acree, Brian Nltz, Brian Tannehill, Brian
Korn and Brian Willis. Others taking part but not pic- .
tured Included Tirnmy Cassell, Brian Hicks and ·
Charlie Whittington. The Meigs Boxing Club Is sponsored by the Meigs County Jaycees.

Ironton in third after win

lowe I 12;,. 12' washcloth

Reg

traditional net cutting, but Waverly
school officials and police put a stop
to this.
This resulted in some shoving and
shouting, but no damage was done
as the nets remained intact and the
Bulldogs made the long trip home in
a joyous rnood.

;ws::

nament held al Jacksonville Trimble High &amp;hool. Winners of the event, age If and up, will advance to the
Gardens Regional One Final at Cincinnati. Taking part

TIMD® WATC.S

figures, led by Scott Riggs' 14points.
Steve Bruning and Mike Croci added
12, and Brad Neff 10.
Waverly's Eric Brietenba~h took
game honors with 19 points and was
the only Tiger to reach double .
figures.
In clinching the title Athens shot 48
percent on 22 of 46, made 14 of 22 at
the line, and grabbed 33 rebounds
with Steve Bruning getting 14.
Waverly finished w(th 31 percent
hitting on 16 of 52. WIIS converted
eight of 11 free throws, and claimed
35 rebounds, nine by Brietenbach.
The Tigers are now 8-5 in league
play and share third place with Ironton.
Following Friday's victory, the
Athens team hoisted Kevin Swartzel
onto their shoulders for the

Regular Price

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Pag-e-s

WINTER SALE IN PROGRESS-SAVE UP TO 30%

REG. 49'.......

Lar~

NEW 1981

•

J67

lATH
TOWEL
REGULAR

FARWFST

Davis7.

With only a home game against
Gallipolis next Friday, the Bulldogs
don't have to worry about a championship. they will, however, seek to
avenge their only league Joss (at ·
Gallipolis, 6()-57, on Jan. 9) when the
Blue Devils roared from 16 points
behind to upset the champs.
Friday night the host Tigers took a
2-il lead but Athens quickly went on
top 3-2 and stretched it to 11-2 before
finally ending the first period on top,
12--5.•
In the second stanza, the Bulldogs
gradually built a 22-7 lead. It was 2618 at halftime.
Throughout the final two periods
the Tigers were never closer than 13
points as their seven game winning
streak came to an end.
Four Athens players hit double

field resulting in a 511-40 win.
The victory hiked the Bulldogs'
league record to 12-1 and returns the
SEOAL crown to Athens for the first
time since the 1969-70 season.

,

GOLDEN GLOVES PARTICIPANTS - Eleven
Ylllllll! men of the Meigs Bo~lng Club took part Saturday and today In the Golden Gloves BaKing Tour-

Chi('(l St. G:i, Sacramento St. 62
Coli. of Idaho &amp;7, E.Oregon 43
E.Washingt on 94, W.Washington 14
~ ontana 79, Idaho St. 62
..
~011tana St. 60, Weber St. ~7
North Dakota 69, N.Colorado &amp;7
N.Montana 91, Rocky Mountain 75
Pepperdine 102. San Francisro 99, OT
San Francisco St. 71, Cal-Davis 64

Gamel
Hawb "8'' {8}- B. Unroe 5: Spencer3.
Trotters ' 'B"- C. Finley 4.
.
G1me!
Crusader:!! '' A' ' (45) - Spencer 18; Seaman 11 ;

Gam~ I
Knicks (9) -Casey 9.
Stt.rui (20)- J. Sigmon&amp;; Rocchi 4.
Game!
Warriors (21 )- Jackson 13; Robinson a.
•
Lakers (36}- Ault 22; Harrison 14.
• Game3
Warriors (14 )- Saller6 ; McQuaid4.
Chargers (121 - Shaver4: Meadows 4.

Southeastern Ohio League basketball champions.
This was determined Friday night
at Waverly when Athens held the
heist Tigers to 31 percent from the

DAY

REGULAR2••

Beloit 72, Cot M

Fairleigh Dickimon 82, Vermont 78
Penn 73, Harvard &amp;3 .

URPHYS
.pow••••
POilTAill LAIIIIRI

MIDWEST

Friday'• CoUege BasRIJ..IISc-om
EAST
Brown 43, Cornell 42

~

•
,~

.

WAVERLY After · being
knocked out of at least a share of the
hardwood title two years in a row,
Coach Fred Gibson's 1~1 Athens
Bulldogs finally reign as the

MURPHY'S

I

umiY

College results

Gallipolis, Ohi~r-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Iawhorn said he will appeal the
matter. Lawhorn added, "We want •
to be helpful to the NAIA concerning
this matter and we are willing to
subject ourselves to any kind of investigation that the NAIA officials ~
deem necessary to clarify !be . ,
situation. We have insisted and we
will continue to insist, that our
athletic program be maintained at
the highest level of ethics and integrity. "

Reasons to Shop
RAIN, SNOW, SLEET OR HAIL - Bad weather does not stop
trainers of harness horses In Meigs County from doing their thing. Three
trainers, Burdell McKinney, Brooks Sayre and Roger Spencer were
working out horses on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds track Friday afternoon. The track was snowy and Icy. Pictured is Roger Spencer, retired
Middleport businessman, working out with Julie Show, a two year lilly
which will race this summer. The filly Is owned by the Spencers'
daughter, Debbie.
'

Middleport

Athens humbles Waverly, claims undisp,u ted crown

Lawhorn will appeal ruling
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
.College Athletic Director and Head
Basketball Coach John Lawhorn
Saturday announced three Rio Grande College basketball players, Watson McDonald, Kevin Castleman,
and Ricardo Hairston have been
declared ineligible for the remainder of the 1930-31 regular season.
The National Association for Inter-Collegiate Athletics (NAIA )
District 22 officials informed
Lawhorn the players do not meet the
"24 credits for transfer hour"
requirement set down by the
association .
The problem stems from a dispute
regarding the procedure used in
calculating a student's credit hours
in the transfer process. The Rio
Grande College players are transfer

Pomeroy

W. Main St • .
James o. Bush, Mgr.

388·8603

Open
Sale price

WEDNESDAY

MARCH 4
7:30PM
Convocation Center
Ohio Univer~it) Athen!O ·
oHhtH.,.,IOI1 :

$6.00 , $5.00

$1.00 cli~cotmt ch lldten 12 &amp; undet

on '.title: Cente1 Tid.et Office
BY PHONE :
f6141 594 5~07(\fi..,a &amp; MC .trC'epted)

lt r~t·t..,

Sports transactions
C1udtan Fooolbllll Lua:ue

.,.

MONTREAL
•

1nfo11th1fion &amp; CHARGE

Dickie

Harri!,

ALOU ETTES - Pl11ced
comerb.ll.ck, on w&lt;~iver:~ .
COI.LEGE

FORDHAM- Named Dave Sc;arpinu of·
fenslve t'OOrdinator and Dick Paladino defemlve t.'OOrdinalor .

BEEN SHOPPING FOR H
1980 FORD THUNDERBIRD

s7395

302 eng., a·utomatic overdrive trans., p. windows, vinyl roof,
wire wheel covers.

1979 FORD FIESTA

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399

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Cushioned bottom.
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~ACKAOIS

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1979 FAIRMONT FUTURA 2 DR.

End of season
savings
S1tUt off

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1974 VOLKSWAGEN BUG

(while quantity lasts)

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lOX OF

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199

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~

'

1976 CHEV. WV PICKUP

'2595

The wood / coal fireplace insert

4 t.y l.. auto trans., I?W mileage. Local owner .

In case you didn't know:

1979 FORD PINTO 3 DR.
4 cyl. , 4 spd .. PS.

••
'•
'

A~/8- track ,

S3695

one owner . Low mileage .

1978 FORD GRANADA 4 DR.

s3595

ILMI•'S®IAPI
SCNOOLRUI

302 V·B, auto. trans., air cond., AM/ FM. PS, PB·.

RE~~AR

'

~~=====
PAT HILL FORD, INC.
See: Garland Parsons or Pat Hill-Gen. Mgr.
Ph. 992·2196
Middleport.. OH.
S. 3rd Ave.

-- -

UMIT2

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I ...

•
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•
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AIIIT LYIIA'$® IIAn I IRIIAII·IC-Y 1
YISTIR • • YAII I 4-PACI LIHT IUS I
I IIIGUlAI
I
I REGULAR
I '1,69
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SK.
I 441. u. 1s
I
I 70 yd. ske1n~. 1.6 ounce eoch.
or 100 WAn LIMn 2 PACK I

33C

97 c

16.0UNCIIAG

AVAilABLE AT MURPHY'S DOWNTOWN STORE, 348 2nd AVE.

·-

Motherly
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Motherly

is manufactured right in Hunt i ng!Wl.
is custom built to fit 99°/o at today's firep lace s.
burns 8 to 12 hours of your day or night.
con be installed in 5 to 10 minutes.
heats standard 3· bedraom h ome~
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is built wit.h a ll 1 /o~" Plate s teel.
.
has an unconditlngllifetjme gugrg otee for the or iginal own er .

World

All Other Stolves Up To s 100 Off

307 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Come see Kristi at:

""'""'

MASnl ~AlGI

IIOURS: SUN. 1-6 MON. 9:308

The
The
The
The
The
The
The

TUES. 9:30-5 WED. 9:30.5 THURS. 9:3().5 FRI. 9:30-8 SAT. 9:30.5

Tri•State Stove GFireplaoe Center
4448 Piedmont Rd .

(304) 429-6868

Huntington, W . Va.
\

,,

�.
February 15, 1981 '

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

~~::~;;~~~~~::::~~====~=======:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~O~h~l~o-~P~o~in~t~P~~~~W~-~V~a=·========~=,~==-==JT~h~e~~~~~~~~~:J~~~;r, _

. ounty agent s corner

.Highlanders top Pirates, 66-55
PATRlOT
Southwestern
parlayed a wide lead into a victory
Friday over North Gallia, 66-55,
despite a swift Pirate comeback in
the fourth quarter. '
North Gallia, tied with the
Highlanders (45-15) at the opening of
the fourth quarter, allowed its
renewed confidence to sit back on its
laurels while double-&lt;ligit scoring by
Southwestern's Dale Newberry and
Scott Russell gave Southwestern its
victory.
The game had begun somewhat
sloppily for the Pirates, as they
scored only six points in the first
quarter while the Highlanders, un·
der Coach Uoyd Myers, jumped into
a l~ advanta£P

Billy Blackburn led the visitors' ef· Gallla Is 4-13 overall and 1-8 in the•
fort with 15, assisted by Keith league.
The Highlanders face Wahama's .
Payne's 12, and eight points apiece
White Falcorui at home TuesdaY and
by Tim Lee and Greg Dee!.
Both teams had 43 rebounds, while the HalUlan Trace Wildcats Friday.
North Gallla plays Kyger Creek at
Southwestern has 14 turnovers and
home
Friday, with the reserve game'
NorthGallla 20.
In the reserve game, South- scheduled to start at 6:30.
western also trlwnphed over the Littie Pirates, 54-41. Leading scorers ' SOUTHWESTERN (66)
2·2·6; Burleson H -4;
for Southwestern were Steve Forgey Sizemore
Russell n -15; Newberry 10+24;
with 19 and Tom Neal with 11. North Baker 5·2·12; Sterrett 1·3-S. TotalS
Gallia's Mike Mays had 14.
26·1~·66.
NORTH GALLlA (55) - BlockThe win left Southwestern 5-4 in burn
6·3-15; Payne 6-0· 12; Shriver 2·
the SVAC and 7-9 overall. North Q-4; Lee 1-6·8; Queen 1-Q-2; Howell 2·
Gallla Is 4-13 overall and 1-8 in the 2-6; Oeel3·2·8. Totals 21·13·55.
Score by quarter$:
league.
Southweslern
19 15 11 21-66
The win left Southwestern 5-4 in Norlh Gallia
6 13 18 1&amp;-55
the SVAC and 7-9 overall. North

But the Pirates, under Coach Paul
Pettit's guidance, sensing 11 d&lt;H&gt;r·
die situation, played vigorously,
narrowing Southwestetn's lead bit
by bit until the fourth canto tie-up.
"Then we sort of ran out of gas,"
Pettit said later.
Southwestern attained 48 percent
of its field goal attempts, 26 out of 56.
North Gallia hit 34 percent with 21
out of 58 tries.
Southwestern also shot 66 percent
of its free-throws (14 out of 21) and
North Gallia 4li percent (13 out of
28).
Leading scorer for the Highlanders were Newberry 24, Russell 15,
and Todd Baker 12. The Pir~te•'

Robinson rough on Morgan at first meeting

DEFENSIVE STANCE- ~ott Howell, North Gallla seulor, gets in
:his defeoslve slance agalosl Southwestern's Mark Sterrett during
:Friday's SVAC contest at Southwestern. The Highlanders woo 11&amp;-55.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Frank me, 'Watch out if Robinson is on firRobinson was an established major st. He'll take you out.' That was his
league baseball star when he first attitude, the way he played the
ran into - quite literally - a young game," Morgan recalled. "It's th~
infielder named Joe Morgan.
way I learned to play, too.
"I remember that ·when I was a \ "I've always believed that a team
rookie he almost killed me once at is a mirror image of its manager,
second base breaking up a double and if that's the case here, we're
play," the 37-year-old Morgan said ahead of the game already."
The Giants gave Robinson, the
after signing with the San Francisco
Giants, the team now managed by Cleveland Indians' manager for zt
seasons, his second major league
Robinson.
"I can't remember the play, but
managerial job last month. He sucI'm sure it happened. Joe is a second ceeded the fired Dave Bristol. He
baseman," said Robinson. who con- takes over a club that finished fifth
sidered opposing infielders targets in the National League West last
to be knocked down when they were season and has made extensive
trying for double plays.
roster changes since, including the ·
"Before my first game against signing of free agent Morgan la.st
Cincinnati, another infielder wamed Monday.

"From what I've heard about last
season, working on fundamentals
has got to be the No.I concern in
spring training," said Robinson,
whose team opens camp in Arizona
next week.
Some of the things he heard about
the 1980 sea.son were sad stories, including the one about Mike lvie
allowing a run to score by dropping
the ball to the ground after making
the second out of an inning. The first
baseman thought it wa.s the third
out.
But even if he hadn't·heard such
stories, Robinson added, work on
fundamentals would be the Giants'
No.I priority.
"Fifth-place teams don't play
good, hasic baseball," he said.

"They're the teams that don't hit the
cutoff man, throw to wrong bases,
don't back up bases, make all the
mistakes that cost you games.
"So we'll go to spring training and
work on th011e things, repeat a thing
until it becomes automatic. And
we'll continue the work during the
season. I think that's where ·some
teams fall short, by stressing fundamentsls In spring training and
then kind of forgetting about them."
Morgan, who played his first big
league game in 1963 and has won two
Most Valuable Player Awards,
knows the importsnce of solid fundamentsls. But, he said, "There's a
lot of cliche talk about fundamentals. Attitude is the most im·
portsnt thing."

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the IRS sends you
in the mail. ·

•

•••••
•

D True D False

••••
••••

Your fin;u~cial circumstanc~ l'hange from year
to year. The form you ~,~Sed last year might
oo! be the right form this year. H&amp;R Block c-o1n help
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Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9· Noon
Fri. 9-3 &amp; S-7

H&amp;RBLOCK
Tt&lt;E INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E . Main
~omerov. OH .
, ... _991 -3795

Open 9 t~ . m . ·ti p .m .
WEEKDAY~

9·S SAT.
Appn1n1m~nt Av.1il.1ble

2nd" BrownS!.
Mil~On,

P~ .

Formerly Athens County Savings and Loan
216 W. MAIN STREET
POMEROY,OHIO
992-6655

WE'LL MAKE THE TAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

W. Vit,
773-9121

to use restricted chemicals such a.s
Tordon !OK, Paraquat, Phosdrin,
etc., must be certified or Ucensed by
the Ohio Department of Agriculture~
In order to accomplish this Gallla
and Meigs Counties have combined
f
t
t
. 'de
orces o presen pestic1 training
for
whofirst
would
like to take the
testthose
for the
time and also for

WINS CONTEST- F'rul (Bali) M1111, aboWD here,- umed wiD- el the Jilt~ Cbemkal Compuf'1 Coalemillau No-Till Corn
Yield Celltelt. MJIII' wt.iDC yield wu lte hubela per •ere. The Mllls
filially farm Gnvel HBI Farm -Ia laealed-.- Crowa City. The Gallla
8GII uti Water .Ca•lnallea Dlllrtd will ....,.. a -uu contest fer
etn. diller ear tr lllelled, mUlL Flnt pl8ee aw•nl Ia $1.., - - ' , $58,
..i tldrd Ia ._ The Gdl8 Soli and Water c-rvallea District Ia
IMilllble for btftll'lllatlaa or -lltuce 01! the CODiell rales. For more IDf.,..llau coaflct the Gtlllla swm office .11 U9 Ja~on Pike or call ...

••

Agriculture and:
•
our comm.unttv
•

By Bryson R. fBud) Carkr
Gallia County Extension Agl'nl
GAWPOUS - Jim Wells, Ohio
State University Extension Tobacco
Speelalllt, will be with us again this
Meeting. It will be held this coming
Tuelday evening, February 17, 7:30
p.m. at Hannan Trace High School in
Mercerville. He will be discu8sing
planlbed and field management,
problems to watcll out for in 1981,
and tobacco marketing. Control d
"Blue Mold" will be one of his main

subjects.
Bring a friend or neighbor - visit
with Jim and enJOY a bam sandwich
and soft drink or t.'Offee afterward.

hours) for e..d1 category.
The three (3) houz re-training that
I'll be conducting here in Gallla
County will help you meet the
requirements for the following
categories: General or Core, Grain
and cereal (I), Forage - Tordon
(2T), Tobaeco (38), and Livestock
(8). We'll also have an extra agent
or two around to re-certify you in the
other categories (such a.s 3A 9&amp;10)
but you may have to get with us at
another time if you have more than
four (4) categories or ones I haven't
mentioned.
Remember, you can re-take the
exams rather than participate in the
re-training If you would like. You
can also drop some of the categories
from your card if you don't need
them.

Does your pesticide applicator
e~~~ire at the end of February
11111? You will need to acquire at
leut three (3) hours of recertification training prior to March 31, New People
1911 (the date has been mended) ... •
We have set up a Pesticide
or re-take the ellll!IS if you wi.sb to Training and Certification session
stay certified. You'll need three (3)
for new awlicators on Wednesday,
March 4, at the Colwnbus and
hoan even If you're just certified in
ant (1) category. If you took some Southern Electric Company
tralninC last year, then this will Building in Gallipolis. You may atcount tonrd the hours you need for tend ellber the I p.m. or 7 p.m.
cards that expire in 1!1111.
session. Someone from the Ohio
We'll be giving this re- Department &lt;it Agriculture will be
certlflcaUon training at the Colwn- there to give you the necessary tests.
You can take your exams when you
bus •nd Southern Electric Company
Building in Gallipolis, on Thursday, first arrive or after our training is
March 26. You can attend either the presented.
In either case call us at 446--7007 for
1-4 p.m. aesaion or 7-10 p.m. session.
You need only attend one session. If material to study ahead of time.
you chose to re-take test., then you'll You'll need toteU us in whatareuof
need to come to the session for fanning you will be using chemicals
"new" awlicators which I'll explain so we can help you select your
categories. For example: com
later.
If you're certified for more than growing, hay production, multiflora
four (4) categories, then you'll need rose control, spraying cattle,
an additional one-hall hour &lt;it spraying grain bins, tobacco productraining (beyond the mlnlmwn three tion, etc.

card

Anticipate sharp upturn
in grain output this year

Meigs and surrounding count!~
Weaning of Feeder
with feeder calves, we have found'
Calves Prior to
that 1 that hi! bee ·
•
ca ves
ve n given cer,~
Tbelr Being Sold
tain shots and are on creep fee4!
Many of us do not wean feeder prior to weaning will not suffer any~
calves prior to their being sold: loss of weight. The demonstratloli;
There are several reasons we do not showed that calves gained about q •
do this. One 1s because of the bother,·
ll after
an1ng
period'
we
we
as any
'
another is because of inadequate prlortotheweanlng.
:,1
facilities to hold the calves; and we
The sickness and death loss to the
say that we cannot afford to lose the buyers was si~"
... · 11 Y 1ess. Only .
pountls that a feeder calf will lose one calf of the pre-conditioned'
through weaning.
·
· calves died which was a loss of 0.2
Many of us are not satisfied with percent and the sickness rate was 6.4 ·
the price' that our. feeder calves percent. The non-vaccinated, nonbring. We also know that calves that weaned calves in the same feedlots~
. have not been weaned and are sold ha'd a sickness rate of 30 percent and '
are put under a tremendous amount a death loss of 4 percent. This !ni1
of stress. Imagine how you would foi'Jil8tion 1s based on 595 calves. · :
feel being taken away from your
Perhaps we need to conside;
mother, put in strange surroun- weaning our calves prior to theif!
dings, probably hauled and kicked being sold. You can say yes, but!
around, and then given a totally new they're not my problem after the;f~
type of feed to eat. The setback and are sold. However, remember thal'
the death Joss sometimes becomes youneedabuyernextyear.Aiso,we:
rather high.
are fin"'nd that buyers
willin' t '
g 'I·
Through some demonstration pay the~-.;
additional costare
of the preo'
. work that has been conducted In conditioning.
;~
·
or gain.

'lllAINING SCHEDULED
POMEROY - Anyone who wants

year for our Winter Tobacco

Pay·by-Phone/
•
mi
m ~balance.
charges.

READY TO SHOOT- Wayne Sizemore (101 prepares to lake • short
jump shot against two Pirate defenders, Bruce Shriver (11) and Scott
Howell (33) during Friday's SVAC conteslal Southwestern. Tbe Highlanders won lf.55 to move into a lblrd place Ue wllb Hallll8n Trace In lbe
league slandlogs. (BIIIBahrphotos).

BY·JOHN C. RICE

H

BY DIANAS. EBERTS
Extenaloa Agent
Home Ecouomics
. Meigs County
HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS
those who nCild to be recertified.
WORKSHOP
The.firet training in Meigs Coimty
POMEROY- Here's your chance
will
be March 3 and will be for those
to learn how to do minor household
people
who would like to add
appliance and electrical repairs
categories
or are taking the training
without calling a repairman! You'll
for
the
first
time. The training will
have the opportunity to try doing
be
held
at
the
Extension Office from
some of these repairs yourself at our Ito 4p.m. in the
afternoon and also 7
workshop on Tuesday, February 17, to 10 in the evening. You need only
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon in the activity room of the Multipurpose Cen- attend one of these sessions. A perter on Mulberry Heights in son from the Ohio Department of
Agriculture will be !lere to give
Pomeroy.
.
examinatons in both the afternoon
·oave Boothe, Jackson. Area Ex- and evening. This same training will
tension Supervisor, will be demon- be '"ven in Gallla County on March
e•
strating how to complete minor
4.
repairs on various appliances and
Those pereons who need to be
electrical plugs, switches, outlets recertified wlll need to attend the
and light sockets. Suggestions for training to be given on March 25 in
proper use and care of appliances to Meigs County at the Extension Ofavoid the need for repairs will also fice from I to 4 p.m. or 7 to IIJ p.m..
be provided.
No tests will be given on this date.
This program Is free of charge and This recertification training .will
pre-registration Is not necessary.
also be given in Gallia County on
''WHAT TO DO WITH
March26.
A LEMON?"
Persons wanting to take training
Did you forget to sign up for our in new categories or to take the test
,
letter study series on consumer com- for the firet time should call our of,
plaints and concerns? You still have fice at 99U696 for study materials.
still have the following Items at
timetodoso! Call992~96toreceive If you have any questions regarding
~
this free series.
pesticide training, please give us a
the
unbelievable
prices
listed:
.1'
t
ENERGY CONSERVATION:
call.
.,
'
FURNISHINGS
,
Oil and Gas Leases
.
5
One challenge Of our winter is
Within the past year there has
feeling comfortable at 65 degrees in- been quite a. flurry of oil and gas
5
door temperatures. Warm air is lost leasing in Meigs County. Most of us
to the outside through the ventilated that lease for oil and gas only do this
crawl spaces under our floor, about once in a lifetime. It is difficult
,t
through uninsulated walls, and our for tis to tell if a lease says what we
I
windows. The layering effect of a think it says. Paul Wright, who is an
'•
ALL LAWN AND GARDEN EQUIPMENT
carpet pad and a carpet which traps Extension Economist and has a law
the air between the two layers can degree, has written two articles on
•
(Simplicity &amp; International) IS BEING
~
be a significant way to cut down oil and gas leases which were
warm air los.S through the floor. To published in The Ohio Fanner. The
OFFERED BELOW CURRENT DEALER PRICES.
prevent heat loss through our win- first one is in the January 17 issue
dows, use storm windows, caulking, and the second article in the early
and weather strip around the win- February Issue. I think it woUld be ·
STOP BY SOON WHILE THESE
dows. But also, either use close fit- good for all of us to read his comUng window shades or draperies ments and, as always, it's the fine
BARGAINS ARE STill AVAILABLE.
that have been closed off at the top print that says sOmething else.
by using a cornice board or valance
Mislake on IRS Form 1797
that Is closed between the drapery
Yes, believe it or not, IRS ean
rod and the wall. To be most efmake
mistakes too. On Form 4797 in
ficient in cutting down heat loss,
the
loss
column (column G) on Parts
draperies should be sealed at both
•
I
and
II
the Instructions are not
•••
sides and have a four inch overlap at
PH.
992-2176
correct. Please use the instructions
•
the center.
3rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Persons who occupy crowded in the Gain column (column H) . to
rooms with overstuffed furniture detennine whether you have a loss 1~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
using wann colors and rough tex· unless you also use warm fabrics to ~
lures will sense a four degree higher cover it up.
The placement of furniture is also
temperature than those in a sparsely
going
to be lmportsnt. A crowded
furnished, light colored and cool
room
looks warm. Grouping furcolored room. Warm colors such as
niture
in cozy arrangements
red, orange and yellow give a warespecially
around a fireplace will
mer appearance to rooms. Fur·
add
to
psychological
and physical
niture style and upholstery can also
warmth.
Keep
furniture
away from
set comfort. Winged chairs are warhot
or
cold
air
registers
so the air
mer than open armed chairs
can
move
freely.
Also,
keep furbecause they give protection from
niture
away
from
windows
or outdraft. Materials that are associated
side
walls.
with warmth include the darker
wood finishes, brass, velvets and
other soft, fuzzy surfaced fabrics.
and savin_gs so that there will he
To be most energy conserving, you some means for providing for future
would probably not want to use needs.
glass, chrome or plastic fumiture
The necessary amount of savings
ultimately depends on the circumstances of the individual family.
No set formula fits every situation.
Each family is going to have to
carefully consider its need and
resources and develop a savings
pla!l to fit its situation as well as the
prevailing ecm10mic conditions. For
nlmiiCWIII
emergency purposes, a general rule
HOMELITE"' SUPER E· Z
of thwnb guide Is to have a financial
e16" Power Tip guide bar and chain
"BUILDING A NEST EGG"
reserve equal to at )east three moneAutomatic and manual1=hain oiler
GAWPOUS - It seems that in- ths' income.
• ~ubber cushioned handle bar
flation callll!s everything to rise _
Families need to begin the task of
•Compression release
·
prices, . tension, tempers, anxiety establishing a savings plan by set• Rugged 2.5 cu. in. engine . (40.9cc).
and fear. The one exception to the ling up reasons for such a plan and
• Chromed chain
rule appears to be personal savings. then establishing some tactics for
Even so, an effective personal reaching the savings goals as well as
savings plan remains the key to your developing plans for making the
family's financial well being . savings grow. U you need help
"Saving" means putting money making financial plans for your
aside from present income in order family you might like to enroll in our
to provide for some need in the letter study course. There will be six
future.
.
lessons.
915-3308
CHESTER, OH. '
Future needs may either be planContact the county extension of!
ned or unexpected. A planned need r-fi_ce_f_o_rd_e_ta_ils_._ _ _ _ _ _.....!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~

-•can

INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER CO.
HAS EXTENDED OUR DEADLINE 10
FRIDAY,_FEB. 20, 1981 10 SEll ANY
INVEN10RY ON HAND

,

,

We

l-584 TRACTOR 52 hp ••••••••••••• 10,200
4-425 HAY BALERS ••••••••••••••••• 3985
1-80" SNOW BLOWER •••••••••••••••• '975

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WASHINGToN (AP)- Although demand, but even more than usual
CIIUUonlng that it Is too early for on crop size and (stockpiling)
finn predictions, government poUdea in export competitor counanalylll are weighing the possibility tries.''
The report said export --:Joepects
ol a sharp upturn in U.S. grain outfor U.S. corn and other coa~ grains
put this year.
The Agriculture Department "may be somewhat stronger" but
noted Friday thai winter wheat plan- will "hinge more on economic
Unga lut fall for the 1981 harvest developments and crop outturns
were the largest on record and thai• ,than wlll wheat exports."
harvest of about 5 percent more gain
than Iaiit year Ia (IOIIIIIble.
"A recent severe, but short, cold
WASIDNGTON (AP) - A new
IIIIIP hu·caUiell some cOncetn about
government
report says cattle
potlllble winterklllin the lower Midfeedlot
Inventories
In the major beef
welt and in the Southwest where
states
totaled
7.51
miiUon
head Feb.
anow cover Ia light," tlie report IIBid.
I,
down
6
percent
from
a
year ago
"Concetn remains over moisture
and
down
14
percent
from
two
years u
could
be a payment
special family
goal such
a down
on a house,
or it
shortagt~ in some winter wheat
ago.
could be a personal desire to leave
areas.''
The Agriculture Department said an estate. However, people must
Tbe report, by the department's
Friday
1r was the smallest Feb. I alao plan for the emergencies that
Foreign Agricultural Service, 3dcattle
inventory
In aix yeara.
ariSe in all of our lives such as
tied, "U.S. spring wheat and coarse
Marketings
&lt;it
caWe by the lllnesa, death or the possibility of
grain (mainly t:Om) acreage II also
ellpi!Cied to relpOIId to the biplr lftdlots last month, at US mBllcin · unemployment of the breadwinner.
1. .1 prices and eiJ*Utlllll Ill head, -nre dOwn 9 percent from In these times of inflation the trend
January 1'*1 and down 19 percent has been for families to save less
favorable world prieea into 111111-12.
from
two years ago.
"Although aome Increase In
and less.
Placemel1ta
d new cattle in the
On the average, Americans
domeltic grain 1111! Is likely in 1981·
liZ, atrons esport demand will be 811 fattening pe111 were 1.28 m1lllon· in · traditionally have saved only aboqt
Important element In maintaining Jouary, down 5 percent and 19 per- five percent of their disposable Inprices with the expected lar11« cent, respec:tlvely, from 1980 and come, including contributions to
lf'lt.
' pension and retirement fund.!. The
cropl.''
The ~tea •ecount for about current Inflation has lowered this
E8rly lndlcatlona "continue to
tllree-fourtha ol the naUoo's beef percentage to the point where many
suggtlt further growth in world
families are not saving at all.
grain trade" In the 1tal-82 supply.
Feb. 1 feetllot Inventories and
People find little incentive to save.
marbtln&amp; period, thhe report laid.
"Thill growth potential would tbelr pereenlagel of a year earlier, Given the declining purchase power
by staiee,lllclutled:
of lhe dollar and the 'rising costs of
to be IOIDIWhat lllronl• for
AriiOna, 408,000 head Feb. 1 and products and services, many feel
coane gralnl than for wheat,
eapeclal1y If the Soviet UniGD II able ·lOS percent of a year ago; Califor- that all Income should go for current
to lhlft more ol Ill lmporta over to nia,1121i,OOO and H; Colorado, ao,OOO expenses 110d debt repayment. This
•
coane grainl and Cblna decreuea mU3; Iowa, 1,&amp;10,000 and 92; Kan- Is dangerous I
sas,
I,OSI,OOO
and
89;
Nebraska,
The
chaUenge
for
all
farnilles
is ttl'
iturheat lmporll.
'
1,11110,000
od
101;
and
Teaas,
find
a
suitable
balance
between
"PrGipeda for u.s. wheat aport~
1,720,000_and 93.
• current spending, debt repayment,
will depend not only 1111 world Import

l

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THIRD &amp; SYCAMORE

GALLIPOLIS

I
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:~

�Page-c-e~ The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern downs Wildcats,
to face SHS for crown
By SCOTI WOLFE
EAST MEIGS-Behind a good team
effort and great second half performance,
Coach Dennis
Eichinger's Eastern Eagles scored
an · important 74'60 SV AC victory
over the Hannan Trace Wildcats
here Friday eveing.
·Eastern Is now 14-5 overa!! and is
tiM with Southern at 11-1 for the
SVAC lead. Hannan Trace drops to
!Hl overa!! and 3-1 in the league.
,Eastern placed three men in
double figures, led Tim Ditl with 25,
Gene Cole with 19, and Rick Long
with 12 points. Three Wildcats al,,o
hit double digits as Greg Webb. ripped the nets for 16, Craig Chapman
II, and Rodney Pack with 12.
Eastern jumped to an 8-() lead
before Coach Mike Jenkins called
time with 4:26 remaining in the
period. Kelly Petrie put H. T on the
board first at S-2, Tim Dill gave
Eastern a 10-2 lead, then behind the
efforts of Greg Webb and his
tremendous outside shooting, Han·
nan Trace tied the score at 10-10.
Craig Chapman put the visitors on
top at 12·10, then after switching
from a man to man to an effective

zone,Hannan Trace opened up a 2013lead at the quarter.
As in the first quarter both clubs
used a pressure defensive press and
utilized a 2·3 zone on the defensive
end of the court. In the second round
Dill, Bissell, Cole, and Mathews
pulled the Eagles back to the lop as
H.T. went cold from the outside
shooting.
Eastern maintained a two point
lead throughout the remainder of the
period and took a four point advantage at the half when Greg Wigal
swished a jumper at the buzzer.Eastern lect31-27 at the half.
Despite a great outside shooting
performance by Greg Webb, the
second half was all Eastern· s.
Hannan Trace stayed in the game,
but Eastern slowly pulled away In
the latter stages. During the third
period Eastern built up four, nine
point leads before breaking it open
in the final part of the fourth canto.
Statistics show the game was
definitely won at the foul line as
Eastern hit 30 of 35 from the line for
86 percent, while H.T. could manage
only 10 of 15 for 67 percent. Gene
Cole was perfect at the line hitting 9
of 9, and Tim Dill hit 9 of 10 most of

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-D·!:

.
.•
classified

which came in the final quarter,
boosting tht Eagles to victory.
Waugh, Chapman, and Pack also
had good games underneath for the
Wildcats as did teammate Webb.
Eastern hit 22 of 65 from the floor
for 34 percent, while H.T hit 25 of 65
for 38 percent. Eastern won the hat·
tie of the boards41·221ed by Cole's 15
and Dill's II . Pack grabbed seven
for the Wildcats.
Eastern had 17 turnovers and 12
team fouls, while H.T. had 13 ,
miscues and 23 persoruils.
· Eastern claimed the reserve tilt
53-:lll!ld by Bryce Buckley's 13 points and Deron Jewett's eight. Robbie
Brwnfield led the Hannan Trace
reserves with eight.
Next week Eastern will host the
Southern in the season finale and
championship game for the SVAC
title.

DOUBLE TEAMED - Eastern's Brei Matbewo
(201 and Greg Cole provide a tight dele- agalnat
Hannan Trace's Kelly Petrie during Friday's lm-

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Mat hews 1·2·4; Cole 4·11 ·19; Wigal2·

1·5; Bissell 2·0·4; Sprague 0·2·2, and
Dills-9· 25. Totals 22-30·74.
By quarters :
Eastern
13 18 17 26-7&lt;
20

7 14 19--60

Limited Quantities••• So Hurry In!

..

Voinovich, Kucinich
debate

portent SVAC oontesl Eutem
74-tO to remala Ia a
flnl place lie wltb Seutbern for tbe SVAC cbampiOIIIblp. '!'bat Ulle wt11 be decided Friday nJsbl at
Eutner. Don Eichinger pboto.

LIZ INVITES YOU TO STOP BY AND

Hannan Trace (60)- Jones 3-2-8;
Pack 4·2·10; Chapman 4·3· 11; Petrie
4·0·8; Waugh 0·3·3; Webb 8·0·16;
Sheets H ·4. Totals 25·10·60.
Eastern (74) Long 4·4· 12;

Hannan Trac e

va .

•

\I'BUil;ll\1'

, &lt;: n i \." l' s

Pomeroy-Middieport-Galllpolls, Ohict-Poin.t Pleasant, w.

f'ebruary 15, 1981

Reg. sr,o

CLEVELAND (API - There were no holds barred
when fiery Dennis j_ Kucinich, fonner mayor of
Cleveland, finally got a chance to verbally take on
George V. Voinovich, Cleveland's low-key Republican
_mayor.
The political rivals met Friday night in a live local
television broadcast to discuss a proposed payroll tax
. increase. The issue will be decided Tuesday in a
special city electioo.
"You know that this money is needed," Voinovich
told Kucinich. "! will never understand why you oppose this' tax, because in your heart, you know that it is
needed."
Kilcinich said to Voinovich that the mayor's campaign for the lax boost "is telling people on the one
hand that if the tax fails, the city is going to die , and on
the other hand, if it passes, then happy days are here
again.! don't think either premise is true."
Kucinich, 33, had one two-year term as mayor before
being,defeated by Voinovich in 1979. During that time,
the city went into default and Kucinich gained national
attention.
The Voinovich administration ended default in 1980,
and the mayor has campaigned intensely for the
payroll tax . boost, which he says Cleveland needs
desperately.

Voter approval would increase the current lax from
1.5 percent to 2 percent. Nearly all politicians and
public institutions in the city of 573,000 people support
the tax increase. Kucinich is the only public figure to
oppose the issue.
Voinovich had hestitated to take on Kucinich. But
both men accepted an invitation to appear on the live
telecast on WKYC-TV.
I
Kucinich Said a 1979 payroll tax increase from I per·
cent to 1.5 perce~t is still adequate lor city needl!
because it added $45 million in revenue annually.
Kucinich, who is working on a book while employed
as a part-time instructor in communications at
Cleveland State University, told Voinovich, "You're
conscientious, somebody who really cares. Ii seems to
me the problem is from the time you got into office, you
really haven't tried to operate the city with the considerable amount of money you've had."
Voinovich said~ adminslration found plenty of leftover bllls from the Kuclnich years, but still brought
the city out of default in 1980.
"The services weren't all that great during the two
years that you were mayor, " Voinovich told Kucinich.
"The only ones Opposing this increase 'this time are
you, some of the United Auto Workers and a lew of the
councilmen."

FRIENDLY ADVERSARIES- Cleveland Mayor
George Voinovlcb, right, shakes hands with former
mayor Deonls Kudnlch, left,. al the &lt;!oncluslon of a
local TV lalk sbow Friday. Tbe spirited discussion ceo-

-'

tered around Tuesday's election to raise the city Income tax; something which Kuclnlch opposes whlie
Voinovlch and other city leaders say Is necessary to
survive, (AP Laserphoto).

NOW

'Jules Verne' over India

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Choose from Filet Mignon at f8.15 or bam, minute oteau, port chops or 3 pie~ of corn ponechieken at
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Rt. 62

PACK LAYS ONE IN - Rodney Pack goes up for a
layup against two Eagles, Paul Sprague and Tim Dill
during Friday's SVAC contest won by Eastern, 74-«1.
With the vi&lt;tory, Eastern remains in a first place tie

lor the league crown with Southern. The chamPionship
will be decided Friday when the Tornadoes invade the
Eagles' den.

BRAKE
SPECIAL

We install new front brake pads,
resurface rotors, repack front
wheel bearings, inspect master
2 WHEEL FRONT DISCI cyclinder,
brake caliper, and
bra~.e hoses, bleed system and add
11
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Check suspension parts for wear
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and safety. Parts extra, if needed.
No extra charge for air-condi·
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Call for an appointment now.

OIL CHANGE
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Point Pleasant

It was the best of times,
it was the wotst of times,
it was the age of wisdon1,
it was ·rhe age of foolislmess,
it \vas tl1e epoch of belief~ ~
it \Yas the epocl1 of increciulity,
it was the season of light,
it was the season of darkness,
it was the spring of hope, ·
it \vas the ·

·
( :11:1rb llic!-l·n~

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SAVE 510.00

We install new factory recom· ·
mended spark plugs, new fuel
filter, ·adjust timing, set idle
speed, check air filter, p.c.v., and
road test.

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.

OVER NEll' DEUU - Balloonists Maxie Anderson aad Don Jda were ellpe(!ted to be over New
Delhi, India, early Saturday morning, according to a
spokeswoman for the Bedford, Mass., tracking station.
Shaded zone represents most probable path of the

"Jules Verne," their ••tory·bigh balloo•ln wblch tbe
two adventurel'!l took off Thursday lrom Luxor, Egypt,
in their bid to make the first nonstop, manned balloon
flight around the world. (AP Laserphoto Map).

NEW DELHI (AP)- Two balloonists trying to make
the first nonstop, manned balloon flight around the
world reportedly touched down in northern India, a
weather tracking station aidi.ng the project said today.
"We have a report that.the balloon is down about 150
miles northwest of New Delhi ," reported Dee
Schelling, spokeswoman for the tracking station in
Bedford, Mass.
A usually well-informed source in New Delhi who
asked not to be identified told The Associated Press
that the balloon, which had traveled approximately
3,000 miles since taking off from Egypt, touched down
near the town of Kishar, about 90 miles northwest of
New Delhi, the country's capital.
The source said he did not know if the balloon was
leaking gas, "but something obviously happened." The
source said \here was no report that the balloonists
were in any danger.
Ms. Schelling, who said she had no more infonnation
on the fate of the balloon, said the last direct radio con·
tact the station had with the balloonists was at 5· p.m.
EST Friday.
'
Before the report of the descent, Ms. Schelling said
the balloonists, Maxie Anderson and Don Ida, were approximately 25,000 feet in the air and traveling at 65
mph. Air temperatures were approximately minus 40
degrees Fahrenheit.

Anderson, an Albuquerque, N.M., mmmg·
investment executive, and Ida, a Boulder, Colo., tree
nursery operator, took off Thursday from Luxor,
Egypt, in their 20-story-high balloon, named for the
19th century French writer whose fictional hero
Phileas Fogg went around the world in 80 days.
The two are trying to make the trip in eight to 10 days
on a route that will take them south of the Himalaya
Mountains, across China and Japan and then over the
North Pacific. Their course then passes near Alaska's
west coast, sweeps southeastward across the United
States, then crosses the North Atlll'ntic and Europe to
Egypt.

HOME ON THE RANGE- A berd of rare desert
the San Andres Mountains of
bighorn sheep that
southern New Mexico was nearly wiped out In 1979 by a

scabies epidemic. Game ~flicials say they have the
disease under control now and the future of the herd
looks bright. (AP Laserphotol.

In Massachusetts, Ms. Schelling discounted a report
from one of the balloonists that the voyage may have to
be abandoned because the balloon was leaking.
"Maxie said today he wasn't sure that he even had a
leak. And if there is one, he said it is down low in a
position where it wouldn't create that much of a
problem," she said.
·
"They're on a good trajectory right now and very
much on target for what we had projected," she said.
"They're staying at about 22,000 feet, traveling at 70
miles an hour."
"It's 'cold outside the gondola , though - minus 22
degrees Fahrenheit," she said.

Effort to save bighorn
ALBUQUERQUE , N.M. (AP) - Desert bighorn
sheep have roamed the rugged San Andres Mountains
of southern New Mexico since the Ice Age. But a little
more than a year ago, the rare animals' future looked
bleak.
The herd was being wiped out, killed off by tiny scab
Illites. By Novemher 1979 a scabies epidemic had
claimed two-thirds of the herd, and state game officials
said many remaining sheep were so weakened by the
disease they would not be able to survive the winter.
Today the efforts of the state Game and Fish Depart·
ment to save the herd appear to be paying off.
"It looks pretty good," spokesman Jess Williaf11S
said. " We've got about 37 sheep we know of up there on
the rnounlain. We feel we've got the problems of the
sheep pretty well in hand. The outlook is for a good
race of bighorns in the San Andres.
"We have a man. a biologist, working full-lime up
there with the sheep. We're going to watch them very
closely, at least for the next two to three years."
More than half the sheep now on the mountain are
wearing radio collars•for monitoring. When any of the
animals die, "then we can lind them and find out what
the problem is," he said.
The problem in late 1978 was scabies, infestations of
barely visible parasitic mites that made the sheep itch .
Their hair was falling out and their appetites were
falling off. Gradually, the animals grew weaker and

more susceptible to illness and the elements.
When the scabies outbreak was first discovered that
winter. the estimated population of the herd was 250.
By Thanksgiving of 1979, it had dropped to between 70
and 90 because of the disease, Williams said.
"We had no lambs and the sheep were very, very
heavily inlected 'with scabies," he said. "That's when
we took action to captl¥"e those. We said, 'We've got to
do something to try and save them.'
The old treatment method involved dipping animals
in vats of insecticide to kill the mites. That was the.first
method tried with the San Andres sheep, but it was dlf.
ficult - first the animals had to be caught.
Using helicopters, dart guns and nets, 49 sheep were
captured and airlifted out of the mountains in November 1979.
But 21 of the animals died due to stress, accidents or
reactions to the drugs used to stun them, Williams said.
Two of the remaining 28 were taken to New Mexico
State University for tests and the others were moved to
·Red Rock Wildlife Experimenlal Area to be treated
and held until they could be returned to the San Andres.
But tragedy struck the little herd. The sheep
languished and sickened in captivity, and only 12 sur·
vived until they could be returned to the mountains last
month.
Williams said the deaths were unexpected.

WE USE SUN ENGINE
PERFORMANCE ANALYZER
VE $ $ $
SAVE GAS

roam

·'

Dublin fire disaster

TRANSMISSION
FLUID AND
FILTER CHANGE
AND CHECK
95
'29
We will change the· fluid, replace
CARS

.Times.. .,

·'. /-"&gt;

the filter, inspect the linkage and
seals, Road test for proper per·
formance.

'I ht'St' times demand ·nu~

.
Gallia County
Phone 446-2342

Meigs County
Phone 992-2156

DUBLIN FIRE DISASTER - Fire olflclab view
lhe Inside el ~Stardust nightclub In Dublin Saturday
morning after a lire destroyed the converted
warehouse and killed at least 45 people during tbe early

1

morning houn. About 700 youq people were attending
a disco dancr contest when tbe lire broke out. (AP
Laserphotl).

DUBUN, Ireland (AP) - A flash fire blackctl out a
is in his parliamentary constitutency.
..
Dublin dance hall-and turned a Valentine's disco con.
The Fire Department said the blaze apparently star· ·
test into a smoke-filled inferno early today, leaving 45
ted hehind canvas partitions sealing off part of the dan·
young people dead and 127 injured in a stampede
ce floor and near slacks of chairs.
toward doors and windows, some of them reported
"Nobody should have been in that area at that time,"
barred.
one survivor, Eamon Quinn, 23, said. "Somebody
It was the second worst disaster in Ireland since the
pulled up the shutters to get at the flames and then the
Republic was founded in 1921.
lights failed." He said many of the people had to feel
Survivors said the failure of the lights started the their way through the darkness and some walked blin·
panic because the exits could not be seen. The! also dly into the flames.
said most of the doors were shut and some windows
were barred to keep vandals out of the Stardust
Disc jockey Colm O'Brien said, " It was pure panic.
Cabaret, a converted warehouse in Dublin's northern the smoke seemed to come across the ceiling, and
Artane quarter .
everybody was trying to get out. I shouted, 'Don't
"It was everyone for themselves in the hail and I saw
panic, don't panic,' but it was no good. People were
people trampled on," one survivor said.
pushing and pulling and there was a lot of screaming.''
Others said they heard rumors the fire was set on
Authorities at first reported 56 dead in the lire but
pw:pose, and police were investigating. But Prime later revised the count. "There were so many bodies
Minister Chari., Haughey said he had heard nothing · and such confusion it was hard to gel it right," .a
about possible arson, adding: " It is too early to say spokesman explained.
anything about the cause."
The city's ambulance headquarters reported that at
Haughey pledged a "full, thorough and complete least 30 of the injured were "horribly burned" and in
inquiry" into the fil-e, when he visited the scene, which se~ous condition.

�February 15, 1981

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

Page-D-7-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

••
1981

business &amp; finance

Call for unity in Ohio River I;Jasiri
COMMI'ITEE TO MEET
GALLIPOLIS
.
First
organizational meeting for the 1981
River Recreation Festival will be
held Monday, Feb. 23, at 7 p.m. at
the Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce office.

Goodyear notes earnings up in 1980
AKRON - The Goodyear Tire and
Rubher Co. capitalizing on outstanding results in the international
fi eld, established overall record
sales and earnings for 1980, Board
Chairman Charles J . Pilliod Jr., announced this week.
Total corpOrate sales reached a
new high of $8,441,015,000 eclipsing
the 1979 record of $8,238,676,000,
Earnings of $230.7 million surpassed the previous record of $226.1
million in 1978 and climbed 57.8 percent above 1979's $146.2 million. ·.
While both sales and earnings in tbe
domestic operations were off, reflecting the recession and in particular
the low level of activity in the
automotive industry, this was more
than offset by record results in the
foreign field. Total earnings
represented $3.18 per share compared to $2.1Yl in 1979.
In the 1980 fourth quarter, total
·sales reached a record $2,213,517,000
compared to the previous high of
$2,074,821,000 in 1979; and net income reched $78.9 million - 82.6
percent greater than the $43.2
million in the same period a year
ago. The previous fourth quarter
high was $71.6 million established in
1978. Earnings per share in the 1980
fourth quarter were $1.0!1 versus $.60
for the same period in 1979.
During i980, " we continued to emphasize quality and innovation in our
products, and this

wR ~

the marketplace," Pilliod said.
"We also made progress in improving the balance between
productiction capacity and market
demand. This paid off, particularly
in Europe where industry overcapacity and pricing constraints had
hampered profitability in earlier
years.
"Utilization of foreign tax loss
carryovers resulted in an ex·
traordinary credit to income of $24
million," Pilliod said. In addition,
tighter controls led to reduction of
inventories which unde the LIFO Accounting Method increased net income by $22.3 million after tax."
Overall, Goodyear's record income in 1980 represented a return.on
sales of 2.7 percent compared to 1.8
percent for 1979. Foreign sales were
$3,859,292,000 in 1980 - 15.8 percent
higher than the year-ago record of
$3,333,699,000. Net foreign income
for the year was $165.8 million more than double the previous
record of $75.5 . million in 1979. .
Foreign currency translation losses
in the year were $33 million dollars
less than in 1979. Inventory related
effect of foreign currency rate fluctuations included in cost of goods
sold were losses of $35,739,000 in 1980
and $37,962,000 in 1979.
In the fourth quarter, foreign sales
exceeded $1 billion for the first time,
reaching a level of $1,014,847,000.

r PflPf'fPii in

CHESHIRE - L. R. Ford, Jr .,
Plant Manager of Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek Plant, is
announcing the recent retirement of
two of its veteran employees.
Wilbur A. Dennis retired from the
company Feb. I, after more than 26
years with OVEC.
He first joined the Kyger Creek
plant in September 1954 as an
Assistant Shift Operating Engineer
and was later promoted to Shift
Operating Engineer, the position he
held until his recent retirement.
Before joinint OVEC, he worked
for the Central Operating Company
in Philo, for a total of nine years,
giving him more than 35 years In the
electric utility industry.
A native of Crooksville, Dennis is a
memher and deacon of the Faith
Baptist Church in Gallipolis. He ser-

Earnings for the same period were
$39.8 million, also a new record.
Reviewing 1980, Pilliod said all
three foreign regions - Europe,
Asia-Africa· and Latin America showed improvement.
Europe rebounded sharply from a
loss in 197$ to a profit in 1980, i n- ·
eluding a turnaround in England. In
Asia-Africa, substantial profit improvement was recorded in South
Africa, Australia, Indonesia and
Malaysia. In Latin America, the
profit improvement in Mexico offset
pricing difficulties in Brazil and
productivity problems in Venezuela.
In the U.S., the recession and
lower sales in the automotive industry severely hampered
profitability in both 'the original
equipment and replacement
markets, Pilliod said.
The effects of the reduced tire
markets, however, were softened by
emphasis on controlling plant
operating costs, improved
utilization of plant and equipment
lower inventories, he added.
The chairman also reported
significant sales increases were
achieved by Goodyear Aerospace
which, in addition to its engineering
and manufacturing of space and
defense products, is in the process of
establishing facilities for the
manufacture of centrifuge units for
use in uranium enrichment, "and we
expect to share in thf' f•1tu'"~ ~· ·

-·

..;

said . "As a result, we feel we are

well-positioned to capitalize in all '
our fields of business as the U. S.
economy improves."
He said that while the U. S.
recession may well continue through
the first half of 1981, there should be
a modest recovery in the general
PROMOTED - Eugeae R.
economy and the tire and rubher in.
Steele
baa been promoted 1o
dustry in the second half.
r
Ullstant
cblef cbemiJI at Obla
The foreign field , he sald1
Valley
Eleclrlc
Corp.'s Kner,:
" represents a mixed bag, as one ·
Creek
plant.
He
began
wlldbii
might expect, with the slowing of till
for
OVEC
In
Jt51as
a
guard
In the
economy in Europe on the one hand
JIUIGIIllel
department
aod
was
and an expected general impromoted
to
chemist
a
I~
years
provement in Latin America and the
:later. He hi a graduate of Gallla
Asia-Africa region on the other." '
Academy High School and
Viewing the change of adresides with bls wHe and three
ministrations in Washington, Pilliod
daughters
at 1919 Maxwell St.,
said he anticipates a more favorable
Point
Pleasant.
business climate - especially the
promised business and personal tax
relief and a serioUs review of federal
~egulations - including the "costly,
confusing and misleading" . tire
quality grading system - "all of
which will be of assistance ·in improving the U.S. competitive status
in world markets."

......

40 Gallon ·

•

Prompt,
CIBtm SOf\'IC"e" plus

our trltd•t•ontJIIy

Jowr/JtesllddlltJ to
a real nomoo wnerl!l
lfi$U}illltl'! Vi:lllM'

See

mt!

lUI dt'la tl:;

LETI'IJCE BOYC01T BILLBOARD _ Cleveland Coach brand le•tttu~cc;e~~· lt:.::~':J~~ all three major supermarket chaiDS b
the boycott through most
ck In the stores- henba
brand
Is
th
f
1980
o
• e
ce Friday's detooastr111on by about 30 supporters. (AP
Laserphoto) ·

.

'

area aapporten cr1 the Ualted Farm Worken form
what they called a "bumaa bWboanl" oa the Detroit·
Superior bridle leadlq lnlo dowatowa Cl!Weland
Friday exhorting afteraooa commuten to boycott Red

RICK PERDUE

·'

~pring ' Valley Plaza

GallipOlis, Ohio
Phone 446·4396

Nixon's
speech
'an
I
.

1

i

Like a good neighbor.

State Farm is there.
liUI ••••

--

•

52 Gallon
Electric

i

Gas

Expire 2/21/81

-

Expire 2/21181

I

•

CAROLINA LUMBER .
AND

SUPPLY COMPANY .,
Point Pleasant

675-1160

312 Sixth Street

noon

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

....
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SALE PRICE

ONLY

ALL WINTER

'1995

BIRD FEEDERS ·
&amp;
BIRD SEED

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BOOTS...
POMEROY
LANDMARK
E. MA!N JACK W. CARSEY.
992·2181
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were.
Gillmor said he wanted to invite
I Nixon in the belief he would draw a
Ibig crowd. "No matter what he has
done,

he's ·an attraction," the

·I senator said.

. Van Meter made a stronger defenof the committee's choice. " I
11don't think he is as unpopular as
\many people think he is," said Van
Meter, who criss-crosses the state
each week in preparation for a 1982
'~id for governor.
The Ashland lawmaker said public
~iticisrru; of the committee don't
!lmse him at all, and that he thinks
be GOP should save their fire for
1. se

~mocrats .

He said he realizes Nixon is a contiOversial figure "but he is
klowledgeable in foreign affairs . I
ah glad that he accepted our invtation from the stacks of invtations he gets to make speeches."

..

BICYCLES

ONLY

All At Closeout -Prices ·,
s19 blse~ll#s

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REPOSSISSEDI
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MANY OntER ItEMS. cALL US

FOR All YOUR NE£DS '

.

'

.

•.

• While investors were preoccupied
wtth the course of interest rates and
President Reagan's preparations of
budget and tax cut plans in the past
week, the stock market tumbled.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials finished the week at 931.57,
down 20.73 points, witll declines
every day but Tuesday, when there
wasa mild 1.45-point upturn.
The New York Stock Exchange
composite index fell2.03 to 72.80, and
the American Stock Exchange
market value index gave up 8.12 to
339.31. Standard and Poor's 50().
stock composite index fell 3.62 to

126 . ~.

Bll Board volume averaged 37
millen shares a day, against 45.34
millon the week hefore. It was the
lowe;t daily average since the week
endw Jan. 2, in which there were
fourlrading days . For a period with
five rading days, it was the lowest
aver~e daily volume since the week
ended May 23, 1980.
~oghue ' s Money Fund Reports,
a rnf.vsletter, said the average
seveJi.day yield of money market
'?ut~l funds was 16.62 percent in
ended Wednesday, comwith a maximwn return of
14.4;B,jercent on a six-month savings
currently available at
institutions in minimwn
of$10,000.
market mutual funds pool
participants to invest in
instruments like
bills and jumbo ceru~~~~of deposit, which tra'de in
n
denominations of $100,000.

Classified

junbav 'mimts- itntintl

They'H Do It Every Time

Announcements

3

Public Notice

Racin e Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a ·
shot gun &amp; r ifle match
every\Sat . night 6 :30 p .m . ~
at then- building in Bashan . Factory c hoke 12 guage
shot guns on ly . Open sights .
22 rifl e.

LEGAL N6TICE
TO BIDDERS
Not ice is her eby qive n
t ha t sea led bi ds wil l be

r eceived by
th e C i ty
Manager , of the City of
Ga llipoli s, Ohio at hi s off ice
i n th e Munici p al Buil d in g

for water meters.

Bids wi tt be received at
th e above na med off ice un
t i 112:00 Noon.t, loc al ti m e o n
Thursday , ~ e bru ar v 26,
1981 and publi cly opened

Ta x ser vi ce, federal, state,
&amp; quarte rly taxes done by
appointment . See Wanda
Eblin, 41000 Laurel Cliff

and r ead at t hat bour and
pla ce. Bi,d fo r m s m ay be
obt ained in the Offi ce of th e

45769: 992 ·2272.

City Ma na g e r , 518 Second
Ave n ue , Ci t y of Ga ll ipo lis,
Ohio.

Road,
· AN/7 WHOS' '?H..JT ~ttY G/3TTIN&lt;?J
OUT 0&amp; 711E MINICA R ?
~ .. JOI4NA ·M(; NAA1ARA ,
901 CJV\NKt.IN A&lt;IE- .,

F e b . 15,22

•

l
'"
...

'

..

...

Prosecutors had sought the
maximum llfe sentence for Garwood, but Lowe urged jurors to exer·
else their option of overturning their
guilty verdict.

In a statement read to the jury
Friday by a defense lawyer, Garwood asked to be allowed to remain
free and try to heal his "shattered
life." He said he could not explain
his actions 12 years ago in Vietnam,
but said he believes he "could never
knowingly violate the law in the
ways charged."

The

conviction resulted
"camp cat" incident. ForDavid Harker testified
t~:t pa rwood tnt him lightly in the
ribs 1
guards discovered that
PO\\'s had killed the prison comrnanlant's cat for food.
Bit on Friday, in a statement read
to tie jury, Harker said he didn't
wart Garwood sent to prison on the
cha~ge, which carries a maximum
perulty of six months in prison.
G1rwood's brother, Don, of In·
diampolis, said of the verdict: "It's
goo( in the !act that he didn't have to
go I&gt; prison. It's bad in that he
sh~tld have heen acquitted on all the

prosecution never denied
testimony by former POWs who said
Garwood acted Ill a guard, informed
on other prisoners and served as an cha£tes."
interpreter for the Vietnamese. But
G1fWood still faces charges in
defense attorneys argued that Gar· nea~y Jacksonville of sexually
wood was driven insane in captivity moli ting a 7-year-old girl last fall .

Among longest.\ ..

(Continued from page A-6)
jury could have sentenced
Bertrand
always insisted that his
Gprwood to life In prilon.
guests
have
a good time, which they
"'Knowing ... the military, I reaDy •
usually
did.
tliink they crucified him. Hen Is our
WHEN JEAN became luo uld for
sicrilice for the Vietnam War," said
the
orchard business (at which he
a :Sympathetic Navy senior petty ofhad
made his living at the French
liter and Vietnam veteran who
Grant)
neighbOrs would see him out
aSked not to be named.
In
the
early
morning hoeing in the
Defense attorney John Lowe said
garden.
At
10
a.m. ~ean would go inthe legal battle II not over .

:the

e

.

:cAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) rfarine Pfc. Robert Garwood, convicted of collaboration with the
enemy in VIetnam, wtll go free after
begging the jury of Marine officers
fir mercy- lllt his fight ill not over.
:The same jury that last week cono,1cted Garwood of collaborating
ltlth the VietCong and of UAulting
ajlother American prilloner of war In
Vietnam voted Friday not to send
him to prison.
:The jurors - all VIetnam veterans
...: instead demoted the 34-year-old
· I6diana native to private and OJ'
d~red his dishonorable discharge
f(Om the Marine COI'pl.
;They also ordered him to forfeit
o(le week's pay that had accrued slnCf his conviction. The govenunent
. hfs held •147,000 In pay that Gar\\Wd accwnulated during his 14
-years AS a POW. The court-martial
lacked tbe authority to require him
td forfeit that money. Garwood's
ll(wyers have filed an action In the
U:S. Court of Clalma -king

Pomeroy,

Ohio

ME IGS MUSEUM open by
appointment January-March. 992·2264, 992·2802, 992·
2360 or 992·2639. Histories
for
sale
POmeroy ·
M iddl eport Librari es.

Wii..LIAA\Sfbl'.l'T, Pf:I.I"'A ·

AAhBUAE!MI!R.fS

(;arwood
spared prison
..

rt~~~yment.

Drive A LIHie- Save A Lot ..... 'Free Delivery within 75 Miles. We Service Your
Hotpoint Appliances. Store Hovrs: 8: 30·5: 00. Mill Closed At 5:00. .. ·n ' .• ·•
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Masort'C ountles.
'" '

tual equity (stock) investmenl
Nevertheless, the magnitude of this
reserve has to be impressive,"
Idleman says'. "So, as the market
exhibits continued nervousness over
inflation, taxes and interest rates ,
armchair generals can take heart
that the ingredients for waging successful warfare are falling into
place."

.
WASHINGTON (AP) · - A (growth over 100 percent)" under · region .
The study estimated that 867,000 to
federally financed study says three of the scenarios presented.
The study was ordered by the 6.1 million bushels of three selected
economic stagnation could develop
in the industrial Ohio River 'Basin · Senate Appropriations Committee in crops - soybeans, com and wheat unless connicting factions such as 1975 after some residents of the Ohio were lost in 1976 in the ORBES
environmentalist groups and in- River Basin voiced concern oyer ex- region because of air pollution from
dustrial growth · advocates are pansion plans announced by utility utility plants. While the study ofcompanies in the wake of the Arab fered no bushel comparison for the
brought together.
oil embargo.
future, it estimated that under
The Ohio River Basin Energy
ORBES covers all or parts of the current pollution control Jaws, the
Study - representing four years of
work by researchers from eight states of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, loss between 1975 and 2000 would
universities - concludes that "if Ohio, West Virginia and western total$9.5 billion in 1979 dollars.
Pennsylvania. In 1975 the region had
In the mid-1970's, which is taken
there is any single finding (of the
about 36 percent of the nation's coal as the hase period for the study, 26 ·
study) It is that steps toward both
fired electrical generating capacity, percent of the electricity generated
clean air and economic growth in the
and the utilities' sulfur dioxide in the Ohio River Basin was exregion ·can be taken only if ways can
emissions constituted 52 percent of ported. In the wake of the oil em- ·
be found to unite the various facsuch emissions in the entire coUI)try. bargo, utilities announced plans to
tions. ''
,·
Along the Ohio River, the En- build 68 coal-fired and 13 nuclear
Failure to do this ''could result in
vironmental Protection Agency says fuel generating units in the ORBES
economi.c sta gnation and accompanying social problems
high concentrations of sulfates in the region. More than half the new
air cut visibility to an annual generating capacity was planned
capable of draining much needed
vitality from the region and from the average of less than 16 kilometers, along the main stem o! the Ohio
nation, .. the report warns.
compared to 112 kilometers in a River.
,
However, Lowell Smith, director
While it has not been released of- southwestern U.S. region that enjoys
of the ORBES project for the EPA,
ficially, a draft of the $4.3 million- the highest visibility in the nation .
study obtained by The Associated
Annual average sulfur dioxide says that since the study started,
Press raises many questions but of- concentrations in the heart of the demand for electricity in the region
ORBES area measure' 18 to 24 has declined as a result of higher
fers few answers.
A major question concerns health micrograms per cubic meter, with prices and other factors affecting
effects of air pollution from one of gradually decreasing con- theenergypicture.
"Many fewer power plants will he
the heaviest concentrations of utility centrations through belts that extend to a lo'!: of two to 5.9 built over the next decade than
plants in the nation.
While emphasizing that the sub- micrograms per cubic meter off the previously planned," Smith said in
ject is controversial, the study says East Coast, through the deep South hisintroductiontothestUdy.
some researchers report growing:
and into the Plains States.
The report says researchers
evidence that exposure to sulfates,
"The movement of air pollutants
discovered
that the Ohio River
"or something closely related to across state lines is the single
valley
is
"more
diverse than they
them," is linked to death rate among issue ...that could produce the most
ha&lt;l
suspected
and
probably more so
persons suffering cardiovascular . confiict," the report said. "It
most
public
officials
realize.
than
diseases.
triggers emotions that are easily
"Failure
to
recognize
this diver- ·
Under the worst scenario por- translated into political consity
most
certainly
will
doom to
trayed by these researchers, it is troversy.''
failure
any
attempt
at
basinwide
inestimated that air pollution from
Ohio, described as "the state ,;ith
stitutional
innovations."
,
utility plants could cause.as many as the highest sulfur dioxide emissions
25,000 deaths a year in the six state in the United States," contributes 3
As an example of the problems, ·
area covered by the study.
to 4 micrograms per cubic meter to the report cites two groups, one
For reasons of comparison het- air pollution in the states of Pen- called Save the Valley, " the
ween the various scenarios, the nsylvania, Maryland and West organization responsible in part for
report arbitrarily takes a " median Virginia, the s!udy says:
·the ·study," the second called Save
value" for a possible mortality facIt says sulfur dioxide emissions Our Valley.
tor and comes up with estimates that from electrical generating units in
air pollution could cause from the six ORBES states contribute
The first group, centered around
10!1,000 to 218,000 deaths between about 50 percent of the annual sulfur Madison, Ind., hetween Cincinnati ·
1975 and 2000, depending on which dioxide and sulfate concentrations and Louisville, opposes industrial
utility industry scenario is followed.
estimated to occur in southeastern development of the area, saying
The hest scenario from a health Canada.
. they don't want it to become
standpoint would be the use of strict
Looking at cost factors, the study '' another Gary, Ind., or a·
air pollution controls and the worst says that under any of tlle scenarios Youngstown, Ohio."
would result from noncompliance presented consumers can ~xpect to
with environmental controls.
Most members of the other group
he paying considerably more for
live in the Youngstown area and are
The report says anticipated in- electricity by the year 2000.
creases in electric generating
Under present laws, the projection primarily concerned with encapacity by the utilities could bring is that average rates will rise from couraging industrial development to
a boom to the region's coal mining 2.58 cents per kilowatt hour in·l976 to preserve jobs.
It will take some " social and
industry.
4.64 cents per kwh in 2000.
" It is projected that at least 79 to
The biggest jump - to more than . political imagination" to work out
88 of the !52 ORBES counties with a 5.5 cents per kwh - is projected for solutions to the area 's problems in
concentration in coal mining would a scenario of high utility growth to view of the divergent factions , the
experience boom-town effects export more electricity outside the report says.

•

M

Good Supply Of

ICE SALT
77~

'

ALL OF THESE MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING MERCHANDISE - NO !REASONABLI0)FFER REFUSED ON··AB Vr ITE~
'

governor did not say what they

t

: By STEVEN P. ROSENFEW
•
AP BuiDeu Writer
~W YORK (AP) - Cash has
lien pouring lnto money market
riDltual funds at a furious pace In
rtt:ent weekS at the expense of bank
~unts and the stock, bond and
~odlty markets.
::.f!ut some analysts view the stock~
~e of money in those funds as a
fiure source of demand for stocks.
:•All generals know that you can't
fllht a war without plenty of supJGies, particularly ammunillon. For
tJ1! stock 1narket, the ammunition is.
&lt;JSh," observe.s Lee H. Idleman of
Ill! Investment Committee of Dean
\VI.tter Reynolds Inc.
~n the past six weekS the asaets of
tlie nation's 100 money market funds
live surged by a record•16.2 billion,
allding about t:~.9 billion in the latest
ICfk, to raise their total to a record
'Ill .8 blllion, according to the In·
"Ptnnent Company Institute.
"'Obviously only a small portion of
this money is eannarked for even-

MID-WINTER CLOSE-OUTS. AT POMEROY LANDMARK

· .. Of
-~

will raise more than twice as much
money as a fund-raiser they staged
in May 1979 when former President
Gerald R. Ford and comedian Bob
Hope were the top attractions. The
corrunittee made $70,000 On that
event, he said.
Van Meter and Senate President
Paul E. Gilbnor, R·Port Clinton,
who were instrumental in getting
Nixon to come to Columbus, said
they were not bOthered that some of
Ohio's ranking Republicans have
been critical.
. State GOP Chairman Earl T. Barnes disavowed any Involvement- by
him or the official party
organization. A former state and
national chainnan of the Republican
Party., Ray T. Bliss of Akron, said in·
viting Nixon was "a mistake."
GOP Gov . James A. Rhodes
declined to comment on the matter,
but said he would not attend because
he had other commitments. The

. .

.-.

!

(Reg. 513500 )

.

-o'"

A Van Meter, said the Nixon event

1\futual fund deposits i.ricrease

State. The Kentucky Department of
Energy will also provide assistance
for the project.
The agreement authorizes commencement of a twC&gt;-year project
work program including sitespecific environmental, health,
safety and sociC&gt;-economic impact
studies, capital and operating cost
estimates, developing a . financing
plan, engineering studies to determine optimum plant size, product
slate and negotiation of contracts for
coal and other resource requirements. Separate from the DOE program,
a large scale gasification test rl
Illinois Basin coal at a SASOL Plant
in South Africa will he conducted by
Tri-state.

ALL WINTER
~~JACKETS •'~o\)~

By ROBERT E. MJLLER
Asaoclated Prell Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Republicans in the Ohio Senate appear immune to criticism aimed
their way for getting former
President Rlcllard M. Nixon aa their
speaker at a fwxl-raiBer in Colwnbt,l on WednesdaY night.
!'hey are in It for the money, for .
o10e thing, and regard the
W.tergate-scarred fonner president
~ ·an attraction."
:lt week's end, Republicans 1111id
IllY had sold more than 300 tickets
afll expected to sell more than 500 to
a :reception and a later banquet at
wllich Nixon will deliver a speech on
"G.s. Foreign Polley in the 19Ms."
l&gt;rices are tsOO a couple and $300
fcii individuals for both events. For
tilt banquet only, it is $200 for
cG~ples and $lii0 for indlviduala.
::J' spokesmen for the Senate
Rrpubllcan Campaign Committee,
·senate President Pro Tern Thomas

---

Signs agreement for
Kentucky synfuel plant
HOUSTIN, Texas- Tri.State Syr&gt;!uels Company (Tri.State ), a
general partnership composed of affiliates of Texas Eastern Corp. and
Texas Gas Transmission Corp. said
an agreement has been signed with
the United States Department of
Energy (DOE ) covering financial
assistance for a cooperative
agreement work program under the
DOE's synthetic fuels commercialization program.
The work program, estimated at
$45 million, is designed to move the
project to the point of a decision to
proceed with the construction of a
plant which will be located in Henderson County, Ky. Of the total, $22.4
million will be funded by the DOE
with the remainder financed by Tri-

pansion of the nuclear energy field.
" Goodyear ~oves into 1981 f~m a
year in which we placed oonsiderable emphasis on the improvement of our product lines and
production facilities, as well as on
increased activity in the research
and development areas," Pilliod

DO YOU NEED TO BUY
A NEW HOT WATER TANK?

ved with the U. S. Army Medical
Corps from 1941 to 1945, where he attained the rank of Technician 4th
class. He and his wife Louise reside
at 455 Lariat Dr.. Mills Village,
Gallipolis.
Lewellyn W. Rou.&lt;jh retired from
the company Feb. I , after having
been with OVEC since November
!954. H~ first joined Kyger Creek as
a tractor-diesel operator. he worked
.in various positions before being
promoted to yard supervisor, the
position he held until his recent
retirement.
Anative at New Haven, Rouih served with the U. S. Army Parachute
Infantry from 1942 to 194~. where he
attained the rank of Private 1st
Class. He and his wile Avalon reside
at Patriot Sta~ Route, Gallipolis.

1-Pa

Ti

iddl

'

side ~nd get one of his books and sit
' one of his many trees reading
Rousseau, Voltaire·.
li
~~J~~f'B':;1~r~~!~and
Gil Blass.
seven children
made their homes at the
- so much did they
sr~~rG me~r father 's love of the Ohio
Henry Bertrand moved to

NEW!

Card of Thanks

NOW TAKING
. LEASES

---

1 WI SH to 1hank th e Orange
e m.e rg en cy
T ow nship
sq ua d . Holz er M ed ica l
Staf f and nur ses, Dr . Abi es,
Dr . Berk ic h, a ll the chur ·
ches, neig hbors, and fri ends, f or thei r cards, help.
and pr ayer s after my ac·
cidc nt and inj ury . Ga rland
Ca ldw e lL

WE WOU LD' l ik e loexpress
our sincer e apprec iat ion to
all our r ela ti ves, friends,
e~ n d neighbor s for all your
pr aye r s and your many ac·
ts of thoughtfulness durin g
th e illness and dea th of our
Gr a ndm other , Elsie Wa rd .
Spec ia l th anKs to Rever en d
and Mr s. Arthur Ouh l. Or .
a nd Mr s. Bru ce Pax ton.
and Hughes Fun er al Home.
L arry and Linda M ontgomeroy .
~

W E WOU LD l ike to express
our sincer e appr eciat ion
a nd thank s to a\1 at the
M iddl epo r t F i re Depart
m on t , all th e churches and
every one wh Q donated
cl othi ng and m oney. Also to
a ll our fri ends who helped
in any way when our house
wa s destroy ed by fire .
M ik e Powe ll and family .
TH E M A R Y SL OTE R
f amil y w an t s to thank
everybody for th e v isits.
c ard s, pray ers, fl ower s,
food duri ng her illness and
death. Thank s to Rever end
Walker tor his con soling
words and to eve r r one w ho
helped in a ny w ay . Y our
kindness wi I! never be
fo rgol te n. Bu zz Sloter dnd

daughters, M ae!' Clel and
(M oth er ) and sons.

3

PAY highest prices
possi bl e for gold and silver
coins, r ings, jew elry , etc.
Contac t Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, M iddleporl .

RA CINE GUN SHOOT ,
Rac ine Gun Club , ever y
F riday ni ght starting at
7:30 p.m . Fac tory choke
guns only .
YOUR
PIANO . "To o
valuab le to neg lect . expert
tunin g &amp; and r epai r . Lane
Daniels, 742 2951 or 992·
2082.
Put a cold nose in you r lif e.
Cal l the M e i gs count y
Humane

Socie ty

at

992-

6260.

--------

ATTENT IO N ' I need l en
hom emaker s to train as
fashion stylist s. No ex·
per lence n c c es ~ar y . For
per sonal intervi ew : 992
394 1 or 669· 4535.

INVENTORY
REDUCTION SALE
Culloden Nursery, West
Virginia ' s
largest
ma i lpfd(!r
nursery .
Oward &amp; Standard fruit
trees, flowering &amp; shade
tree s, evergreens . Send
25 cents f&lt;lr complete
li sting on nursery stock
to culloden N urserv,
P .O. Box 35, Culloden,
W. Vrt.2SS10.

MINI WAREHOUSE
ROGERS
PAWN &amp; COIN SHOP
601 Main St.
Pt. P le 0\ So1111, W. Vi! ., old
s tat e liquor store .

675-4378

20')(30' Bays
Convenient
Economical
Secure
For information call
446-9624 . 7: 30-4 Monday
tnru Fridav .

X-RAY TECHNOLOGIST
Immediate opening for a full time X-Ray
Technologist. Must be currently
registered or eligible. Prior experience
not necessary, excellent salary and fringe benefit program. Apply to Holzer
medical Center, Personnel Dept., 385
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH . 45631 or
call614-446-5105.
An affirmative action / EEO Employer

NOTICE

WANT TO SELL YOUR CAR?
If so, call Smith Nelson Motors.
we will sell your car for you, or we will '
buy your car. We also rent cars cars for
$15.00 a day. So for all of your automotive .
needs, ca II or see:

SMillt NELSON MOTORS
Ma&lt;n St.

Ph. 997-'2174

. Pomeory, Oh.

�IS, 1981

Februa

Ohoo-Poont P

hio-Point Pleasant,
l

t:=:]i!!~~!]!~==" lll

Announcements

SWEEPER and sew1ng
mach1ne repa1r, parts, and
suppltes
P1ck up and
delivery. Oav•s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m11e up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
olo46 0294

GOLD IOk, 14k, 18k, dental
gold and gold year pms
Call675 3010
WE WILL PAY you cash
for your dtamonds, wed
dmg bands. class rings,,
pocket wa1ches, dental
gold We also buy s•lver
and gold co1ns, anyth1ng
that IS 10 14 18 K gold We
sell Krugerrands Tawney
Jewelers -422 Second Ave

PIANO tuntng and serv tce
All makes and models Call
Bob Grubb at olo46 4525, lor
merly.
wtth
Wards
Keyboard

$CASH'
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE ~ULL
COME TO
42 OLIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL
olo46 4775
OPEN9T05

MYRTI S Parker of MyrtiS
Kay's Beauty Salon an
nounces the closmg of her
own Salon ahd has
relocated at the Fashton
Beauty Shop 113'12 E
Second St, Pomeory,
owned by Mrs E ltzabeth
Vaughan For appt call
'1'12 2702

4

WANTE 0 Used baby bed,
call256 6453
OLD COl NS, pocket wat
ches, class nngs wedd1ng
bands, diamonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Com Shop,
Athens, OH 594 4221
Wanted to Buy class nngs
weddiOg bands, anythmg
stamped, 101&lt;, 141&lt;, or 181(
gold Silver corns, pocket
watches Ca l l Joe Clark at
992 2054 at Clarks Jewel ry
Store, Pomeroy , Oht045769

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anythtng to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad m this
column There will be no
charge to the ad~Jerttser

CASH
Gold a nythmg marked
JOK , 14K , 18k (class
nngs, dental ), Sliver
coms or sterling Brmg
to rope Furn Ask lor
rom
MTS Co•ns ,
6 30 8 30 fhur Eve Top
pnces everyday'

THREE PUPS
Half
beagle and half collie Call
olo46·8274
MALE Doberman
pups, call446 3324

and

PUPPIES 6 wk old black
and wtt•te m1xed breed
puppres, call367 7506

11

LOST black cat w1th stub
ta11 1n vicimty of
Buckeye H1lls Career Cen
ter, 245 5881

tor

GET VALUABLE tra 1nl0g
as a young bus1ness person
and earn good money plus
some great grfts as a Sen
t10el route earner Phone
us nght away and get on
the ellg•b•l•ty list at 992
2156 or '1'12 2157

GLASSES Stiver Wtre nm
Titmus 53.4" Found 1n for
mer Gall 1a county Otstnct
L1brary temporary off1ces
at Thtrd Avenue and State
Street Call &lt;16 4612 , ext 76

WANTE D for teleV ISIOn
ass•stant to mag•c,an
Wr1te Dr
Bloch, the
Mag1c1an, 920 East 6th
New York, NY
Street
1000'1

Wanted to Buy

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
t old furniture, desks, gold
nngs, 1ewe1ry, S1lver
dollars, sterlmg, etc , wood
tce boxes, 1ars anhques,
etc Complele households
Wrrte M D Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760
WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS , RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC
I TEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OHIO 992 3476

IMPORTANT
Lad1es
fashton
co mpany
ex
pand.ng 10 people needed
to work 10 hours per we ek,
S10 00 per hour For per
sonal mterv1ew phone 992
3941 or 669 4535,9 6

S1luattons \\anted

WILL DO babys1tt1ng or
house clean• ng 9'92 3641
HAVE VACANCY
for
elderly persohs who need
board, room and laundry
Eat 10 dmmg r oom , men
and women have separate
baths, pnvate rooms and
sem1 pnvate. available
Pn ces to f1 T rncome 992
6022
13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURA NCE
been
can
your
celled'
Lost
operator's license? Phone
'1'12 2143
Wanted to Do

Furnace repa•rs. electr• cal
work , plumb 1ng
mobile
home or r es•dence 992
5858

WANTED TO BUY 2 to 5
acres w•th butldmg stte In
Chester Townshtp Send m
format1on
to
J
R
Etselstem. 4918 Durrett
Road, Onent, Ohio 43146
Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

1160 Second Ave

Terms Cash or ck w/ pos. 1o

Lunch avatlabte

LANCE RUSSELL, OWNER
Ph. 614·797·2108
C.E, SHERIDAN, AUCT.
Ph. 614·448-4263

Insurance

SANDY AND BEI!I.'ER In
surance Co has offered
serv tces tor f~re tnsurance
coverage tn Gallla County
for almost a century
Farm , home and personal
proper ty coverages are
ava ila ble to meet in
d•v•duat needs Contact,
T F Bur leson, your ne1gh
bar and agent

Money to Loan

FHA VA conYenttal Home
Loans, Columbus FirsT
Mortgage
Co ,
loan
representative,
V1olet
(Cookte) Vters. 463 Second
Ave, Gallipolis, Oh , 446
7172

Schools Instruction

TH IS IS IT OUR ANNUAL
SALE get $100 savmgs on
the World
Book En
cyclopedta now for a few
days only at $299 $15
depoSit and $20 a month,
ca ll Henry or Cook•e P1er
ce, D1strrct Manager, 675
3775
16

22

Rad1oTV
&amp; CB Repa.r

RON 'S TV SERVICE
Spec1ai1Z1ng •n Zentth
House Calls Now servtc1ng
Motorola Quazar Call 1
304 576 2398 or 446 24.54

mortgages,
mortgages,
retonance
Call Com ·
Mortgage Ser-

:~·~~~s a1tn4~~:~'f7ohs,
•more
ontormatoon
:and your appoont1ment
Jt-

&gt;*"************J
23

Profess1onal
Servtces

I NTER I OR
pa1nt 1n g ,
reasonable rates Phone
145 5050

CALL
US for
your
photographiC needs Por
tra1t , passports, com
mereta ! and wedd1ng
photography
Tawney
StudiOS, 42-4 second Ave

WOULD l1ke to do babySit
tmg 1n my home, tn B1dwe 11
areal UO per wk Call 388
8547

INCOME TAX &amp;
BOOKKEEPING

18

Wanted to Do

1973 Crown Haven , 14 x 65,
three bedjooms, new car
pet 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet
1972 Champ ton, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 &gt;&lt; 60, two
bedrooms, all electnc 1971
Sky!me, 12S)( 6), two
bedrooms, bath 8. 113 new
carpet
1970
PMC ,
12 &gt;&lt; 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet B x S Sales, Inc,
2nd
V1and Street, Po•nt
Pleasant, wv Phone 675

Homes for Sale

LEA
NOW C1ty Con
Sider uytng later large,
pnv te ,
beautifully
deco ted, 3 bdr , 2 full
bath~ome w1fh reasonable
rat
Jmmedtately
avatl ble, w1thm walking
dtsta"e of schools and
dowijown Call 446 0186 or
245 9118
Tra•r:r tot tor sale, 55,000
Mod tar home lot on Route
7, tree bedroom farm
houst, loca ted on Route 7
992 2i71
Bealltful three bedroom
ra nd bnck home '" Baum
Addd1or\ Pomeroy , Oh10
Gas ~ea , ce ntral a1r Call
992-2571 r 1 687 6429
FOR S
doubl e
style h
reasona
leve l a
Ra cme

LE seven room
IOSulated ranch
e, total electnc,
ly pnced on three
es one mile from
hone 949 2706

COM
2 bath,
kiTChen, ltViOQ
room , n1ng room , off•ce,
full ba ment, new heat
system w•th cen tral atr,
unatta hed garage
2
blocks rom school 992
3443

1971 Dan an, 12x65, 3 bdr
1972 Crown Haven, 14x65w
Bx10 expando, 3 bdr
1973 Utop1a, 12x65, 2 bdr
1977 Bendix, 2-4&gt;&lt;48, central
a•r, 3 bdr , 2 full baths
1973 Bonanza, 24&gt;&lt;-46, 3 bdr
B &amp; S SALES, INC
2nd &amp; V1and St
Point Pleasant, WV
Phone675 ,j.l24

FOR

ALE Seven room
doubl
•nsu l ated ra nch
style ome tota l electnc.
wood burner 1n fam 11y
room gas available 3
bedr oms
l'n
baths,
reas ably pr.ced on thee
level cres one mile from
~ Phone 949 2706

33

. OVER $500,000
IN INVENTORY
Large
selection
of
K1ngsley
R ed m&lt;~n ,
Bayvtew, Fnend shtp
and Untbtlf Homes
PAYMENTS AS
LOW AS Sl40 ~0
per month wtth low
down payments and up
to IS years to pay
11% Interest
FHA avatlableat lS'J:l%

Mob1le Homes
for S.ale

32

'·-

See Bob for your com
plete Boot&lt;k eepmg
Income Tax nee ds We
can ta1lor our cookk ccp
mg and tax serv 1ces to
fir your bu s1n ess s
needs We oiler com
putenzed bookk eepmg
an d
financial
sta tem ents to tho se who
des.re 1t we also have
been
hand ling '"
dt VI dUal InCOm e t.Jx
returns now for 9 years
m thts area Gl't'e u s a
call today - Let us h&lt;tn
die your mcome tax or
bookkeepmg &amp; tax pro
blems
Boll Lanes Complete
Bookk ee pmg &amp; Tax Ser
VICC
Sprtng Valle'r'
Plaza ,
Gallipoli S
446 7600

t~R~~~~:IJ3
16 E Second Street

Phone
1-( 614 ) 992-3325
~ec t

on

d':!

~ou sev. then JOin lo lotm llowet

Quill

la~y

no tmm g

mt~•lm

make Pattetrt / 210 palch pat
te1n o•ece ~
Go the class1c w a~ w lh a sutl
tl~ htteo blaw that slides over
sk~rt s and dresses as wt&gt; ll as I he
S1de-J1pped pant s m th e oaf!ern
P11nted Patte•n 91 34 M •sse~
S11es 8 10 11 14 16 18 Sue
11 l bUSI ] 4) [atket 1 J 8 101
45 111 pants l 11

SoN bows draw e1es to lhe
charm of the new shl sleewes- a
b•ee1y deta•l fo• a bas1cally s•m
pie dress Choose a flowery prmt

a solid color

polka dols

Pr~nted Pattern
S11es 10 ~ 12 ~

9427 Hall
14 \1

16\1

1811 2011 Sue 14 \1 (busl Jl)
takes 2 118 yards 60 mch fab11c
$2 00 lo• each patlt~n Add \0 1
lor each paf!e1n lo• fHSI class
arrma I hanal•ng seno to
QUICK 'n' US~ PATIEANS 170
1J1W 18SI NewV o•k NY 10011

fosh10n C•t•loi

I Si S)
DHII"'' Cotolo1 # 36

t 911 Needle C.taloa

$1 00
I 00

I oo

All CIIAn lOOKS $1 71 mh
lllf11S111011 Home Qu1111n1
I 21 PIIJI Quilb
124 Eosy Gilts 'n' Otnomrnb
12) Shieh n' Patch Qutlls
122 Stuff n P•H Qlnlts
Ill CtO&lt;hot with Squ...s
117 [ISJ M ot Netdltpotnl
116 Nrlty ftlty Qlnlls

WE WI L.L. be having 2
homes for rent or lease In
the near future
Each
require 1 month'S rent In
advance plus a security
deposit, personal and
credit references Strout
Realty olo46·0008

Lots &amp; Aerugo

LOT City school district,
l'h m11es out of city limits
Call446 9437

FOR RENT OR LEASE
Modern 3 bdr ranch, carpet, garage, S275 per mo
plus deposit. References
required Strout Realty ,
olo46-000I

TRAILER LOT for sale,
$4,000 00 992 2571
8 65
ACRE 5
Pomeroy C1ty
$2.501A 949 2652

borders
Llmlta

5 rm. house In Eureka, ful(
basement, fuel oil furnace,
garden plot available Call
256-6547

ReRtals
Houses for Rent

Real Estate

Pavments as Low as
Only

General

42

AMERICA'S IIIMID 1
TOPSU••.

PRI
mo
Ira
MO
""6

ES REDUCED used
le homes and travel
ers
TRISTATE
ILE HOMES CALL
72

196
PMC 3 bedroom
tra• er 12x60 992 3954

I -1971 V IKING Mobile Home.
12&lt;65 1n excellen t con
dnon
underplnn ng 1n
elUded 15500 00 247 3942
1'/IP BAYV IEW tor Sa le
1bl7o w•th 7x2.4 expans•on
A replace, bay Window, gas
hut, block, electric pole
a1d porch
Below book
volue, 115,300 Ca ll 446
«&gt;94

2 bedrooms,
bath, loft knotty p1ne
kttchen elec baseboard
heat and level lot on fhe
nver
LARGE - 1620 sq It of
floor space 8 rooms , A
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
gas furn ace W1fh wood
burner, btrch kttchen.
full
basement,
carpet tn g, 2 porches ~nd
dbl garage
FIREPLACE
AND
DEN ~ Very n•ce 2
bedroom home wtth
perma stone
sid1ng
Furnace bath new k1t
chen, detached garage
and 3 lots
TRAILER LOT - On
Rt 124 near coat mtne
Dnlled well
sepTIC
tank , elec tr ic and 1 66
acres of nearly level
land Only $6.500
GARAGE APT . - Ntce
ly ca rpeted 2 bedrooms,
bath, gas furance, dbl
garage
all m good
shape Close to stores,
school and pool On I v
$16,000
I 62 ACRES Near
town on Rt 7 Four
room frame home w1th
c •st er n waler,
2
bedrooms, half balh and
front porch for just
112000
NEW LISir iNG 14
acres ncar Forked Run
Lake
M1ner a1s and
wildlife S12,('11)()
NEW -

no

o(

SUt.: CCSS

2 BDR

trailer washer,
dryer, 10 miles from HMC
and town, also 2 rm apart
ment with utilities pd
Preferrably
working
couple Call416 4063

as a

Profess iOnal"•

Housing
Headquarters

1nterest

lmmed1ate Ftnancmg
Up to IS Yrs

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.

Rill Estate

RACINE AREA - 3 BR s, large llvmg room , also
lam ly room storage bldg , carport Pnce Cut,
$36 ,000
COUN rRY HOME
37 acr es, 3 or 4 BR s Located
close 10 Rt 7 Ask.•ng $aO 000
GOOD COUNfRY LIVING - Country home, large
11v 1ng room k•tc llen and den Includes 3 BR 's, laun
dry area . and ou fs•de bulld•ng tor storage &amp; car
Ask•ng uncter S30 000
CALL US ro BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Assoc~c1te
PH 843 2075

-

----

-

Real Estate- General

(B
''"W''

JUST LISTED - Extra n1ce ranch, 3 bedrooms.
bath with shower del'}, cenf ral a.r, carport, tocateed
I 1014
close to Rodney !n c1 ty sc h d1st Call today
VA LOAN ASSUMPTION - Good home. care free
alumtnum Sldtng, 3 bedrooms, bath with shower,
woodbun11ng stove, garden space, $26,000
I 0062
1N TOWN - Good Older br~rk hOm e, new gas fur
nace '2 or 3 bed room s, large carport, good buy,
loc aled at 1225 Second Ave
# IOOJ
BEST BUY - Ran ch with a brick front , only 3 years
old , 3 bedroom s, full y carpe ted, garage, large lot
Only $38,000, on state road
#lUI

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 ni ce lots with
rental mob1le home pads, all are rented,
has concrete runn ers and pat1o, loca ted In Rcidney~
nACRES - Vacant land, good ~~;~~~ t:;;;~~d
fy, some timber , alt mineral rights,
dtSOn Twp

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Wf.! fet&gt;l sort of gUJII y ahoul
bU)olflg a foretgn t.:ur Is there

150 ACRES - Good I arm, beautiful rolling
barns. tobac co base, pond, Rt 1~1 1

Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367.0228

Darvin Bloomer, As.. 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

IN VINTON - Mobile
home w1Th 2 lots has
carport and porch 2
bedrooms, 2 baths Th1s
Is nice property and you
can have 1t for S25.000
NEAR
EUREKA
Well
kept
nome
overlooklrg lhe Oh 1b
River,
3 bedroom ,
100 x325 '
lol w•th
several jleallhY trult
trees Detached garage,
you must see this home
to apprec1ate Ca ll for
more information
NEWLY RENOVATED
3 bedroom nome •n
Gallipolis. 4J x174 lot
with plenty ol garden
space
N{'w
nal
oawater tank and ktt
chen and bath
1m
mediate
possess1on
$29,500 00
2 OR 3 BEDROOM COT
TAGE In city close to
shopping and schools
Owner anx lous to sell A
real bargain
for
$24,500 00
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY
Located
along 2n'd Ave In c1 1y , J
renrals, all in good con
dltlon Call for more In
tormatton
WOOO AEALTY.INC
32 Locust Sl
GitlllpOhS

2 BEDROOM apartment n
Mtddleport No chtldren 1
304 882 2566
•WIIhs T. Lead1ngham
Realtor Ph Hom e. 446 9539

Real Estate- General

*Joan Boggs, Realtor Assoc,
Ph Home 446 3294

17('d ?

Apartment
for Rent

44

3 AND 4 RM furn1 shed ap
ts Phone 992 5434
---~--

FEMALE to share 2 bdr
apart, call245 9558

CANADAY
REALTY

Our Buyers Come
From All over
The World

• Euntce NIChm, Realtor Assoc
Ph...,Home
446·1897
..___
________
.fr

We Cover Over 7
Mtlllon M1les to 1
F•nd
You
A
Home.

General

lkCW IS!!ITioln BrOiil!r 4463TU E~til
Jrm c.othriln As-.odilte U6 1111 Eve
O&lt;lnEv,m5 A ~$oc 18Sii111 , Ev~

AGENC~

!I J H• lruon Auoc ••• 4l40 Eve
Nancy Smllh, Auoc, ~46 4910 Eve
Clyde Walker Auoc HJ 5276

Tom HGiste•n Asoc Ut 9760

PHONE 446-3643

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BUY THIS HOME
FROM OWNER WITH
52,500 DOWN
And low tnterest rale on
balance w1th owner 2
bedroom cottage w1th1n
5 m1nutes of Sliver
Bndge Shoppmg Plaza
# 260

DEENIE
IVE - $69,900 - "Everything IS
Beaut1ful ' 1n th•s 4 BR ranch, equipped kttchen, 2112
baths, family room W1fh wood burntng stove.
beautiful carpet, drapes Full basement, 2 car
garage Come summer you'll l ove the 1B'x36' lighted
pool Call for an appo1ntment soon

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REDUCED TO $65,900 - Must sell
now• A qualtfY stone r es 1dence
overlook1nhg the nver near edg e of
town 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, stone
ftreplace, family room, nat gas ce nt
a•r detached 2 car garage 8. much
more Call for appo1ntment

....
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44. 4'4.. , ..

JUST LIS TEO- NEAR TOWN - Thts
3 bedroom ranch 1S located lUS t off
Bulavllle Rd m a good ne ighborhood to
raise your ch1ldren lncludees an ellt 1n
k1t chen l'h baths, FA nat gas heat,
c1ty watyer, pat10, plus 112 ac yard
w/chaln 11nk fence $.:1,500

~~:~~~ ~~ii~i:.E,;E~~~sEH~wc~~~ ~NN:~o~~~~

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NEAR GALLI POLlS- $53,900- Cathedral ceiling,
balcony overlookmg llvtng rm , ftreplace, screened
d1n 1ng porch , .c B R, 2112 baths, wooded deck, very
pr1vate back yard Gas heat Just outs1de c1ty

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GALLI POLIS- S30,000 - I mmed1ate posseSSIOn 3
BR frame w1th alummum s1d1ng Famt ly room
EaT In kttchen w1th range Located w1thm wa lkmg
d1stance downtown
SIXTY NINE ACRES - $37,500 - Nearly pamled
50 xSO barn some till abl e land mostly pasture
t1mber owner wtH ftnance w1th $2,500 down pay
ment plus month' s payment m advance 9% mterest
rate

" NOW" IS THE TIME
26 Tr ave l Trailer ~ N1 ce l evel lot wtth water
sewe r , and electnCtty , With Harns Flote Bote (Pan
1oon Boat) 6 h p Mercury motor, shelter house,
s x12' red barn storage bU1Id 1ng Located by Blue
Lake and Raccoon Creek What else can you ask
, 444
tor? All of thI S for ONLY $12,500

VAN ZANDT RD - SSO,OOO - E1ghty SIX ac r es, 5
BR , basement, 2 -4 acres Wood burner. range and
refng Barn C1fy schools

cou ntryhome, " '" acres, 5 mtles from Gallipolis,
part1al basement, fuel 011 FA furna ce, rural water,
Gallt polls School D1 st Garden space, frontage on
Ra ccoon Creek
# 458

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VACATION HOME - En ooy t llose su m
mcrs or anyt•me of the yer~r .n th1s
10 x50 Grea t Lakes Tra•l cr or fht S 1 ~acre
tree setting on Tycoon Lake Eq ut pped
kitchen, most all furn1ture •nc luded, 2
bedrooms, bath &amp; a1r conditioner 3
mllesN of RtoGrande $11.500
219 ACRES - Rolling cattle farm w•lh
approx 40 acres crop, 60 acres pasture
and over 100 acres woods 2 1arge barns,
"
Also
1400 lb tobacco base oo sprtngs
modern
4
bedroom
home
and
1300
of
1
Paved road frontage near Gage

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COZY 3 BEDROOM HOME - " • ACRE
A re al good locat 1on on a fla t l ot at
th ecor nerofRt 554&amp;160 Thehomein
eludes an equ•pped eat •n kitchen, dm
1ng room, ba th w/s howE:f~ carpeted, full
basemen I and garage ,&amp; carport N• ce
garden space $45 000
REDUCEDT0$32,900 - MAKE USAN
OFFER - Owners desperate to sell
ta st Must sacnf•ce 4 bedroom br1ck
home w•th off•ce space or plumbed for
beau ty shop Good toca110n on 2nd Ave
across from A&amp;P 2 baths, nat gas
heat new root Excellent loan assump
lion Call now
PRIVACY FROM IN TOWN - L.nrge 7
room bnck retnch s1tuated on a l ovely
landscaped ~~~ acre yard 3 bedroom , 3
balhs, fireplace equipped kitchen, for
mt~l dining, e&gt;&lt;lra large mast bedroom
Has 2 walk 1n closets, nat gas, cent
air Ownerowns2 Mu slsell
COUNTRY LIVING - JUST NORTH
OF RIO GRANDE - Ideal locat 1on on
old Rt 35 west of Buckeye Hills Career
Center Well bud1 3 bedroom home has
f ireplace Wtfh hea r\lator , eat !n kitchen
&amp; bath 2 stora ge bu i ld ings and 5 acres
ol very niCe laymg land $40'S

on R1 7
WE ALL HAVE DREAMS, BUT
Th 1s
spectacu lar home tS only for the ex
ec ut1Ve
2400 sq
ft
of
tas tefu l
decorating on one floor 4 bedrooms (26'
master), double stone fireplace
separat1ng tam1ty room &amp; formal d•n
m g room , full eq upped khchen &lt;custom
made cabtnets), double door foyer , 3
baths, fult fm•shed basement With a
huge rec room. 2 car garage, heat
pump and 1t 's all s•tuated on 2 l and
sca ped acres With courtyard I year
buyer protection S94,SOO
GOLD MINE FOR SALE _ An 1n
vestersdream 4rentalhome s (//1) IS
newer 3 bedroom home With basement
gar age &amp; lots of msulat 1on {I/ 2) 1S a
n• ce older 2 story bedroom home, (# 3)
•d 5 12 x 6s Shultz mobile home Ul .tl 1S
10xSOmob 1lehome Allaremvcrygood
cond ltton 4 5 acres n ice tay1ng land
Could produce a total ot $800 $850 mo
rental1ncome Celli for detatls $64,900
196 ACRE DAIRY &amp; 'T HE WHOLE
WORKS" _ Gr"ade "A" da.ry operat1on

located 5 mtles east of V1nton Includes
7 houses (1 •s a slyl•sh oldt•mer), large
barns, silos, 5 good tractors, complete
line ot modeP'n equipment, 50 H olshf.in
cows, 8 heifers, 1.000 gill tank, m tl ke~
etc Call us for more •nformat •on

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JUST LISTED - RIVER FRONTAGE
- Two story 5 dedroom home loca ted
on l'h acres of river front south of tow n 1
Large kitchen , dtnmg room, s1Udy, 2
encl osed por ches, fu l l baseme nt
garage, c t~rpet rural water &amp; J storage
bud d•ng s Scvcretl fruit tr ees &amp; qarctrn
space Barga 1n pncod at $29 500

WE NEED LISTINGS

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. . . ..
, .

WANTED!! 1
A new owner to prov1 de lovmg care for a 2 story

FARM - $78,900 - Me1gs County, 148 acres, 55
ttllable 4 BR, 2 story frame home, barn, other
outbldg All mtnerat rig hts sell wtth farm

Real Estate

We're Out To Sell The Earth!

General

Real Estate

Genera,_I~-----

STR6ut REALTY, In¢)
Ali~

I.__RE_A_o_T_H_I_sA_o_~.'----------------------_.1

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IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
(Only SIS,500)
Home needs so me lovmg care Ranch house wtfh
two bedrooms, 11v1ng room ~ eat 10 kttchen, and
bath Located 10 Crown C1ty Excellent extra lot tn
eluded Make a great begmntng by callmg for
details
N443

INFLATION FIGHTER• $35 500 lnc1ty, 2 BR frame
has vmyl std•ng, hardwood floors, plu sh carpet 1n
l1v1ng room Carport, lg fenced back yard Low gas
budget Excellent cond 5% down payment for
qual 1f 1ed buyer•

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MOBILE HOME - very mce "x70 MOBILE HOME ACREAGE mobile home 3 bedroo m s, 2 baths, fur
Located 1ust a few I'Jltles north of Rto
ntshe:d, equtpped kiTChen, bun, W1ne Grande, th•s 12x65 furn1shed mob1le
rll!ck &amp; more Does not tn clude land
!lome has 2 acres wtth pond Up to 32
Call for In fo
acr es available, mobile &amp; 2 acres are 1
13 BEDROOM HOME IN TOWN - , .,, Sl 8 500
story 6 room nouse at 62 Lmcotn 5 1 In BUILD YOUR HOME ON RACCOO~
eludes k1tchen w/ ra nge, d1n.ng room
REEK EntOY the park ltke a
so me new carpet , gas heat &amp; nlc eyard ~osphere 1n thts profess1ona ldly pta~~~~
w1lh storage bldg $19 ,500
...
hborhood ChoiCe but 1 •ng
S28,SOO - N1ce 2 bedroom home located ~e~~erground ut•lltleS, rural w~ter ce;~
7 miles east of Jackson off Rt 35 New tral sewage, b0ndfedc~~~~a~~tt6~e fo;
balh , utd 1ty room &amp; k•f chen Storm wm
several acres
Clly
sc hool s
~~~~s &amp; Insulation Ideal ~omc &amp; loca ~ee~~~~~~~~ntor ~~~~protectiOn Located

90 ACRES PLUS 2 YEAR OLD HOME
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, l1vmg room d •nmg room wtfh
moder n k1khen, 6'x24 sundeck on side, S'xB'
sundeck 1n front, 12 'x20' basement N•ce barn type
11 6' K13 6 slorage buldmg A ppro)( 69 acres pature
som e large t•mber All m1neral nghts goeS Will sell
house and 21J2 acres or 89 at res of vacant land Call
for details
N 462

UPPER RIVER ROAD - $55,000 - Large 2 story
home w1th vtnyl s•dmg, conveniently located on Rt
7 House has 4 bedrooms, modern k1 tchen , d.nrng
room , fam1ly room , ltv lng room with f•replace, 2
baths, and nat gas F A furnace Prtce also 10
eludes extra lot w•th 3 ca r garage plus good storage
bulldrng Owner would cons.der tradmg for small
farm

IN FINANCING THAT WILL MAKE YOU GLAD YOU

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Style, beauty, charm,
comfort - all descnbes
th 1s home, 4 BR. 2'h
baths equ1pped eat tn
kitchen, family room
w•th f.replace, formal
11\/mg &amp; d1nmg room
You won't believe th1s
home unless you see 1t
for yGurself Make your
appo•ntment today to
walk mto trie entrance
of one of the most lovely
homes 10 the area
~ 322

I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
N 1ce comfortable home w1th n1ce large shade trees,
concrete front porch, lots of fru•t trees (apple,
cherry, pl um and peach ) Grape harbor, raspberry
•v•nes Good garden land all level In Green Twp
Rura l water 2 car garage, fuel oil FA furnace
Basement, barn approx 16 x24' PRICED IN THE
$20 s
N304

NEW HOMES - 3 BR , 2 full baths, 1 or 2 car
garage, full basement, heat pump, cen atr cond
Quality construct1on Select your favonte carpet
co lorst 5% Down Payment for qual •f•ed buyers •

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271

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4 BEDROOMS - $34,900 - N1 ce 1am11y
home off Lower R1ver Road Thts well
built home has a large eat m kttchen,
livmg room WITh fireplace. 2 bedrooms
down &amp; 2 up, some new carpet, knotty
pme T&amp;G, full basement &amp; garage
Owner amuous to sell
lmmed•ate
possesston

KYGER CREEK AREA - $54,900 - Suburbia at 1ts
best• Owner has been transferred and must sell th1s
very eye pleasing home 3 BR, 2 full baths Plush
carpet Full basement, tam•ly room w•th ftreplace
plus wood burntng stove Nearlv 2 acre level lawn
has ntce garden spot Mov e1n cond

PRICE DROPPED $5,000 - OWNER
WANTS OFFER - Your family Will
love th1s pnvate res•dence Situated on
nearly 3 wooded acres with pond off Rt
218 The spac1ous br•ck home offers 5
bedi-ooms, 2 baths 2 ftreptaces, 2
pat1os, huge fam1ly room, heat pump &amp;
c.rcular dnve Call for more tnfo C•tY
sc hools $72,800 91h % mtg

K
ER CREEK SCHOOLS - 4 YR .
OLD RANCH - A very n1ce well kept 2
bedroom home on Bulav•lle Addison NEW LISTING - TRI· LEVEL ThiS IS a top quality 3
Rd Th1s home has a good S•zed k1J chen ACRES wtth bu•lt n ca biOefs, !1v1ng room with bedroom home 1n a very good tocatton
built m bookshelves , bath w/ shower, ,on Bu la'vll le Road Thts home has for
laundry ar ea, walk •n pantry a huge mat ltv•ng &amp; d1nlng r oom s, eqUtpped
roofed pat•o (could eas 11y be enclosed kt•chen w/ snack bar , family roctm,
for 2 extra bedrooms), detached Jl h car ftr eptace, rec room, 2 baths, 2 ca r
gar age, 2 car carport &amp; much much
garage plus nearly 1 acre flat ya rd
$•0 900
more Also tn cl udes several mob1le
home spaces presently rented Call
about th1 s ftne hom,e today

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INCOME PROPERTY
- Downstairs busmess
locatton on Yine St
upsta i rs 5 roo~ apart
ment ,
w l tu b
and
shower , a lso J room cot
tage In rear S38 500 00
10% flnanctng available
to qualified buyer

Real Estate- General

somt' way 10 ha\c !1 naiUral

REAL ESTATE

Wussell D Wood
Realtor-Broker
Evenings 444·4618
Ken Morgan
Realtor• Broker
Evenings 446 0971

NEW LISTING - You
will like the conventence
of be1ng only I m1le
from the
city
3
11v1ng
bedrooms,
lg
room
w / gas
l og
fireplace. lg
garden
area, extra building lot,
c1ty water and sewer,
small barn
Pr1 ce
$70,000 00
RANCH STYLE 3
bedroom,
carpeteif
home,
ci ty
school
diSTrict, county water,
situated on 75'x120' lot ,
970 sq It liv i ng space,
attached
garage ,
12' x24', approved buyer
may assume ~b land
contract
Pur c ha se
price $39,000 oo

Apartment
for Rent

44

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General

BUILDING LOT 1
acre lot located along
Kemper HOllOW Rd
Rural water available
Prlce$4,000 00

NICE HOME WITH RENTAL - Nice ranch, w b
f.replace 10 living room. full basement, 2 car
garage, also 2 bedroom house I 76 acres
I 0051

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FURNISHED EFF
$160
Uttllttes pd , adults Call
446 4416 after 7 p m

LE rART - 3 BR hArdwood floor s l'h bat~s .
hrcpla cc, bnck e)(ter•or, plenty ot shrubbery Can
assume a t 10°o Owner leavmg, says se ll $39,900
Lof set up for 1ra11er Asking $4,800

The Sunda

----------.,
WISEMAN

REALTY INC.

CENTRAL REALTV

Apartment
f.or Ren1

NEW 1 bdr apart, prl
Dr , stove and refrlg furn
Dep and ref req Call 446
4782

FURNISHED APT · $200
UtilitieS pd , steam heat,
adults 1 bdr , Call olo46 4416
after7p m

Real Estale

WOOD

Locust St G•llipolls
(614) 446 6610

EXCELLENT BUILDING LOT Budd your
dream home on th is lovely tot Conta1ns 2 acre~
front IS flat &amp; cl eared w ith str eam &amp; woods In bac~1
q ty sch diSI , ClOSe IORIO Grande, $10,900
N11111

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BEDROOM mob1le
tor re nt, ut1l1t1es
John Sheets, 3'h
south of Middl eport
7

2 BDR and 3 bdr mob1le
homes, call «6 0175

446·3044

992·2259

LB

1 BEDROOM apartment,
no pets, adults only,
depostt, 1224thAve

1975 VINDALE 14x70 3
bdr , total elec , central
air, underpinning, good
cond , asking $11,000 Call

POMEROY,O .

TOR
enrv E Cleland, Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
&amp; Roger Turner
992-5692
Trussell949·2660
FICE 992 2259

pets, no children, 1150

sec dep Call446 &lt;1051

Climb th e ladder

OFFICE· 44~7013

DOORS, bay
large foyer,
1n
c h 1na
some of the
1ng features of
bedroom home
wan t to see?

2 BEDROOM mob ile home
furniShed Avatlable 1m
rned1ate1y
No pets or
Children Depostt 992 2749
TWO
home
palc;t
miles
on Rt

w. va .

2 BDR
unt apart, rn
2
Crown C1ty, 1 child ac· HALF of a double
bedroom completely fur
cepted Call256 6474
n1shed Available 1st of
month '1'12 27~9
UPS TAl RS apartment,
furn , efficiency, adults
Four room apartment for
only. no pets, call olo46 0957
rent '1'12 5908

NICE furn apart, cent
air, hea1, exc locatton, 1 or
2 adults only Call446 0338

3 BEDROOM Home, Storys
Run Rd $200 plus depos•t
367 7811

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BDR. troller, $150 mo,

W1nd .. or,
Fatrmont ,
Baron, Fuqua, Norns,
Bayvtew. Un1b1lf

R AC 1N E -

44

Unfurni shed one bedrOOm
apartment for rent Ren
t ers assistance av.allable
for sen tor citizens Contact
Village Manor Apartments
at992 7787

2 BDR mobile home In city
limits, $250. mo, all uttl
pd , ref and dep Call 446
2491 after 5.
..

THINK BIG.
THINK
CENTURY 21®

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY
NEW
LISTING
CLOSE IN - off bypass
Newly constructed one
~ bedroom house
Needs
' Pa •nf
tns•de and
carpet1ng 1112 acre lot
wtth
l arge garage
$19,000 00
NEW LISTING - Ap
50 '&gt;&lt;1 00 tot 1n M1d
wlfh
all
Has sma ll
to f•x up or
from
sde

Mobtle homes for rent, fur
ntshed, very nt ce Call 992
7479

Apartment
for Rent

TRAILER &amp; trailer space
at Racoon Trailer Pl!lrk,
working couple, ph 379
2&lt;169

Nt' tghborhood

tJ•m Elliott}
Rt 93 North
Jackson, Ohto
286 3752

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2 bedroom trailer Adults
only
Brown s Trailer
Park 992 3324

RENT OR SALE · 1976
mobile home, 2 bdr , $200
rental. Includes water,
sewer, and lot rent or sell
for $7,950 Exc cond, In
Addison area Call 367-0.0.SS

CEIITUIJ21''

J149.55
17%

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 RM house with bath Call
olo46 2223

Johnson's Mobile
Homes, Inc
2110 Eastern Avenue
Galltpohs, Ohto
(614)446 3547

MOBILE HOMES

42

HOUSE for rent 'rms and
bath, VInton Ave, Can be
seen by apt. Call V101et
Dav, 1104 340 3979

HOUSE 7 roomsand bath,
partially furnished, $175 .
mo plus utilities Call olo46·
2211, 91Hth, Ave. beside B
&amp; GMarkel

ATT!ACTIVE home on
two and one half acres
Pn vJte settmg on St R t 7
by Nemorv Gardens Ter
ms 2 7741

ousing
Headquarters

lASY Stull eac.tr

FOUR BEDROOM brick
home In Middleport No
pets
References and
deposit requl red 992 3457

FOR SALE - 6 acre farm,
wl th house and tobacco
base 12x60 trailer In Crown
City area $15,000 Call 256
6307
35

Houses for Rent

6 room house on Nye Ave
5200 month plus deposit
367-7811
•

Farms for Salt

41

BE

4 BE ROOM house
5
m tl es from Ravenswood
bndge Portland Oh 843
2561

41
1968 ALLEGHENY mobile
home, 12&gt;&lt;60, carpeted,
fireplace, fa~r condition,
$2800 f~rm Call 367 01.11

Ret I Estate - General

Sew jOd sawe $$1$

1977 FOR 0
7700 01 ESEL TRACTOR w/ 80
horsepower &amp; only used 830 hrs , 1967 Ford gas tra c
tor~ 4,000 w/ a f~nt end One Arm Bandit Loader,
880 Gehl Haybme W/ 9 It cut, Whtte 4/16 Sem1
mounted plows, White 10 II 20" blade diSC, AC 140
bu manure spreader w/PTO NH 717 chopper 48'
Gehl blower, 2 row Ford planter , Ford culttvator
w istde dresser , JO ft hay or corn elevator, 6ft cut
Bush Hog , Herd 3 pt hitch seeder, Fords d rake,
Burr Mtll (.._ runs by PTO shaft, Ford Rotary Hoe, 6
ft blade, 3 stlage wagons, 2 corn wagons w/ gravttY
beds. 2 hay wagons wlflat beds, 4 hole &amp; 8 hole ptg
feeders , 70 gal water tanks for p1gs and cows pr
23" 1 30 t rac tor t1res mtsc

13

Mob1le Homes
for Sate

4424

31

"YOUR KEY TO SERVICE"
PHONE 446-ISU.

fill!, qu1l\!ng Fun dnd laney to

Follow Rt 33 N of Pomeroy, Oh toRt 13 (JUSt N of
Athens), follow Rl. 13 fo the light tn Jacksonv1lle,
turn rtght onto C27 and go 2 mtles to top of 7ltll.
GOOD, WELL CARED FOR MACHINERY ready to
go to work for you thts sprtng. No small ttems - BE
ON TIME.
o

A WEC"K .

Galltpolts

SWAIN

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 10:30 A.M.

eX INIT~I-IC61?:

INSTALLED

Wt sell anythint for
anyiNdy at our Auction
BArn or m yovr home For
Information and ptckup
service call 2~- 1"7
S.le Every Saturday
Ntghtat7p m

FARM AUCTION
OF MACHINERY

~Ra: ~lR.S

LOCKS REPAIRED - SECURITY SYSTEMS

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

Kenneth Swain, Aucr
Corner Th1rd &amp; Olive

6® fOR DKt.Y

AUTOMOTIVE -COMMERCIAL- RESIDENTIAL

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auchon

AUCTION SERVICE

Ct*:KE:SS IS

LOCK &amp; SAFE SERVICE

BABYSITTER wanted ,
downtown area, 10 your
home 12 to 5, Man thru
F n , olo46 7044 or 256 6002
between 9 and 5
8

I..BSoN:

Wtll do paneling, ce ll•ng WANT to build tobacco
floor til e, plumb•ng Fr ee barns, free estimates on
esttmates Fred Miller at SIZe Ca II after 6 p m 256
992 6338
6307

NEW ·HAVEN Un1ted
Methodtst
Church
•s
seekmg part t1me Dlfector
of Mus1c
Contact Dr
James Lockhart (3041 882
3136 or Reverend John
Campbell at (304! 882 2624

USED FURNITURE Gold
&amp; Silver, class nngs, pocket
watches, cha•ns, dtamonds
&amp; so on Copper brass and
batterres, ant1que ttems,
also do appra 1sals, com
plete aucttoneer serv.ce
Over 30 years experrence m
bustness Will buy com
plete estates Osby Martm
General Store, M1ddleporf,
Oh '1'12 6370

8

12

WANTED People to sell
Avon 742 2354 or 742 2755

STRAY OR Lost dog
Needs good home, large,
shaggy, tan atredale type
Fnendly but would make a
good watch dog 667 6143

9

Help Wanted

AH, AN

IM~TANT

1S

IS

Lost and Found

6

&amp;

I NC0/1\E TAX AND AC
COUNTING SERVICE
Call 446 7068 for ap
1
potnt.,ent
after 4 30 p m
and s" ca ll91o 3

Challengmg opportun.ty
to appty your creattve
and professiOnal skt lls
1n
res1dent
care,
management ,
staff
development,
public
relattons
Hours are 8 30 am to S
p m and can be flex1ble
Benefits 1nclude health
msurance, pcud vaca
t1on, holidays and s1ck
pay Send resume or
ca II to
Mr G M Jevn~kar
Pmecrest Care Center
555 Jackson P1ke
GallipoliS, OhiO 4S631
Equal
opportunity
employer

PAYING a holf dollar each
for com •c books that I need
Condition
tmportant,
Would pay more for 1ssues
before 1965 Call 245 9125
for details

23
&amp;

DIRECTOR
OF NURSING

STANDING FIREWOOD
call ""6 7795

J&amp;C San.fat1on Serv1ce will
haul trash for rest dents and
bus•nesses In VIllage of
Mtddleport Also ava tl able
to
clea n
out
a1ttcs,
basements and garages 1n
the area Pnce upon In
spect•on of volume of trash
to be hauled 992 5016 or
992 7505 any t1 me

by Larry

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
and Commun1ty College 2
secretarial pos1t1ons open.
applicants Will register
Wllh 0 B E S , for Skill
test.ng 1n typing and shor
thand, evtdence of spelling
and proofread•ng sk1lls
preferred, entry rate, SJ 50
hr , pa1d benefits Present
letter of tnterest and
resume for application for
ms and proceedures before
2 20 81 to Co ordmator of
Personnel. R1o Grande
College RIO Grande, OH
45674 Equal Employment
Afflrmaftve Actton Em
ployer

WANT TO BUY
AN
TIQUE furniture Call 24.5
5050

NOW DOl NG hauling,
mov1ng robs
pamt.ng
houses t ns 1de or out
Basement, att 1c cteanmg,
also carpet cteantng, yard
work, etc Phone 992 3849
Ask for Velma and leave
name and number and we
wtll return the ca ll Free
est• mates 1n M etgs County
area

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

HelpWanted

32

446-0008
RACCOON CREEK FARM - 50 acres 38 A bol
tom , 11 A pasture, love ly modern bn ck home wtth J
srs , 2 baths, ca thedra l ce1 1tngs, f~replace, large
sun deck and lots of other ex tras new metal pole
barn, cnb, loadrng chute. approx 1700 ft creek
fronta ge, l ocated 4 m1 from M etgs Mlne No 3

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - - 10% LOAN AS SUMP·
TION - Piants Subd1v, 3 or 4 BR s 14x3 0 l:.R , 12x30
tamlly rm &amp; much more 1mm edtate possess• on
Call for appomtment
GEORGES CREEK RD - l ot for sa le, approx 185
f1 frontage, co water, su•Table for bu•ld•ng or
mob•lehome

ASSUME 10% LOAN - Kerr Bethel Rd 3 BR ' s,
bath. al undry, n1ce stze k•tchen &amp; LR, WB stove &amp;
carpo r t 1mmed1at e possesstan

INGALLS ROAD - Approx 73 acres, 25 A Raccoon
Creek bottom land, balance pasture &amp; woods Old
hou se &amp; bUtld1ngs

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISDN - ThiS lovely L shaped
nmch offers lots of good llv.ng for your grow•ng
family some of th e f1ner fea tures are a large I...R
With WB ftrelace forrnal d 1n1ng, n1ce modern kif
chen w•th a range, 2 ovens and DW, den Wtth WB
I .replace 3 BR. Ill:! baths gas hea t part baement
pqt1o carport and a targe co rner lot

GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP - Remodeled 2 story
home 1ncludes A SR ' s, LR, fam 1ly rm, k1tchen d •n
mg rm, J we fireplac es &amp; 3112 acresot land $25 ooo
426 DEBBY DRIVE - Lshaped ran ch 4 BR 2b
baths LR , toyer, large equ.pped k1tc'hen, nat gas
heat, cent a.r, full basement, 2 car garage 16x32
heated pool &amp; large corner lot Shown by appotnt
ment

40 ACRES NEAR VINTON t1mber reported, $2,000 down

Apout

I( J

NEW Lt STING - Lovely redwood ranch must 1&gt;9
seen to apprec •ate Very un•que fam i lY room 1S
f1n1shed 1n cedar Large LR , k1tchen bath, 2 BR ,
l aundry and over 1 acre 'Of rolltng land Barga1n
pr,ced at $29,500

clear some

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588 -

PRICE REDUCED TO S67,9()0••• Brand new Tn
level features 3 BR s, 21h baths, large LR, equ.pped
kttchen, formal dlmng, large L shaped family rm ,
ut1l1ty rm &amp; 2 car garege Located tn Clearv!ew
Estates Call ST ROUT REALTY at 446 0008 for an
appol ntment

Remodel

ed home tncludes 6 rms and bath, carpor t, stove,

refng, dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land pn ced
tor qu1ck sa le
' CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restncted bild1ng lol
I 22 acre, n1ce wooded settmg, City schoo ls $5,900
PERRY TWP - 60 acres, about 12 A tdl ('l ble,
balance 1n t1mber, sty lish older 7 rm home wtth l ot
at posstbll•t•es, barn, ou tbuildings m•nera l r ghl s,
tront s on State Rd Call tor more mformat1on

0

LOG CABIN - Very untque l old ha nd hewn log
beams, sleepmg loft lar ge stone ftreplace, modern
barn 14 acres woods, located 1n the Wayne Nat tonal
Forest, 20°o down

NEW LISTING l...lke new 14X70 Wil'lc;fSor
mobllehome w•th expando Th1s beauty 1S complete
ly furntsh ed &amp; has a bUt It 1n stereo, radar ra nge,
WB stove 1 co vered patio &amp; all set up on a larg e
shady rented tot in the Green School Otst

JACKSON COUNTY FARM - 106 acres M I L, ap
prox 30 A tillable, balance pasture &amp; woods, nt ce 2
story 7 rm hOme, new 40x80 metal barn, seYeral
other build ings, must sell soon Call for other
deta i ls

BABY FARM NEAR TOWN - Approx 13 1h acres
on Kelton Rd. mostly pasture . n•ce 5 rm and bath
home, basement, barn other butldmgs, assumable
loa n

LOCATION PLUS QUALITY shoU ld desmbe this
lovely J BR bn ck ranch SpeCial features are a
large LR &amp; dmmg rm, equ1pped k•tchen, 1112 baths,
lau ndry, quality carpet, cent a•r &amp;: an overs1zed 2
car garage Loca ted on U S 35 west&amp;. shown~. ap·
potntment

EVANS HEIGHTS - Assume 9112% loan - N1 CC f1 1
story home otters 5 rms , bath, basement, carport &amp;
nat ga&amp; hea t Be th e firs t to see thiS one

LAKE FOR SALE wittt approx 40 acres vacant
land Ideal recreat1on property located m Cla'i
Twp near E ureka Askmg $26,900

HUNTIN GT ON TOWNSHIP - Approx JB iKres,
mosfly wooded, all m1ncra ls •ncludecl, ncar Ew
lngton, ask mg 515.000
MORGAN TOWNSHIP - Small bUI nice, 2 BR
home 1S only 2 yrs old &amp; clean as a p•n Perfect for a
sma ll famtiY, weekend r etreat or huntmg lodge
51 1Urtlcd on 36 acres ot Morgan L ane Rd

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE - In the wilderness
ol the W ayne Nat10nal Forest 5 to 8 acre tracts of
woodland now available, adto•nmg thou sa nds of
acres of government land Publ iC hun.ng, f1Sh1ng
and camp.ng permllted Pric es start at $2500 w1th
fman cmg avaHable

..

�15, 1981
1981

Pleasant, W.va .
~4

·

Apartment
for Rent
2 UNFURNISHED 2 bdr.
aparts , across the road
from The Honda Shop on
Rt . . 7. 5210. mo. plus
deposit. Call ~- 9380

OFFICE SPACE

FOR RENT
M1dern su• Tes ,, t .1lt•ces,
1200 SQ. tt. gnund t111r ,
11er.ted ,1nd .11r c .1nd . •
l t1 rg e Wi\1t1ng rJ ,l m,
r€!cept b n n ,1m, 4 :')lftce

3 ROOM furnished apart·
ment, utilities paid, 9-4
Locust St 5195. a month,
call ~ - 1340 or ~-3870 .

r 11m s,

2

re&lt;it

rr&gt;.:&gt;m s,

w.1ter llunt.ltn. 4 bhck s

tn m d 1WOf1Wil
Cn ll 'f 1pe F urruture

UNFURNISHED 3 room
apartment, utllitres paid,
adults only, no pets, ph

446-0332

~- 3437.

SMALL furn . apart., nice
lor 1 adult, all pr ivate. Call
~- 3356 .

FURN . APT. · 3 rms. and
bath, ref. and dep. req. No
children, or pets. 602 4th.
Ave, call after 4 p m.

47

Wanted to Rent

WANT to rent, lot with
trailer hook up, call 675·
1499or 675 2667 .
4~8!._-!E:!q~u'!Jip~m~e!!nt-cl~o~r~R~e!ln~
l_

Need a P.A . System for a
day or week? We rent them

at . Tom's Stereo Center,

243 3rd Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
446·7886.

ALL UTILITIES

49

INCWDED

For Lease

FOR LEASE · 3 or 4 bdr. tri
level on over 2 acres
overlooking river, $300 .
mo. plus sec. dep. Call the
Wiseman R E. Agency, 446 3643.

lWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR THE ELDERLY
NOW RENTING
'
200 second
St.
Pt. Pleasant, WV

LEASE NOW · City Con·
S1der buy1ng later · large,
private ,
beautifully
decorated, 3 bdr., 2 full
bath home with reasonable
rate ,
immediately
available, with 1n wa lking
distance of schools and
downtown . Calf 446·0186 or
2-&lt;5·9118.

675·6679

MINI
WAREHOUSE

Equal Housing
Opportunity
45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS
rent, Gallia Hotel.

NEW!
NOW TAKING
LEASES.

lor

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.

20'x30' Bays
conven1ent
Economical
Secure
For Information call
446-9624, 7:30-4 Monday
thru Friday.

ROOMS TO RENT · to
young man wifh clean
habits, T V ., phone, down·
town, modern private
home. Coll4-46·3643.
SLEEP! NG - Room
575.
Utilities pd., single mole
preferred. Call 446·4416 at·
fer 7 p m.
Sleeping rooms for rent an
Main Street in Mason.
Cooking laciltlles, table.
$40.00 per week Phone 1·
304-773·5651

46

Household Goods
"-- ======'---

51

USED FURNITURE · Plat·
form rocker, maple coffee
table,
electric range,
bridge tables, all dining
chairs, lounge chair and ottoman Call 4-16· 1171.

Space lor Rent

Household Goods

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, ot·
taman, 3 tables, S500 Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275 . to $550 , Tables,
S33.·S60.·S75. and 585. Hide·
a·beds,$300., queen size,
$325., &amp; UP . Recliners,
$125 .. $150., 5160.; $175 , and
S225. Lamps from Sl8. to
S.SO. S pc dinettes from $79 .•
to $335. 7 pc ., 5149 and up.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$235. Table, two leaves , 6
chairs, (high backed). 5375 .
Hutches, $300. and $3.50 ,
maple or pine tin 1sh .
Bassett Oak, $550 . , Bassett
Cherry, S675.
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses,
$175., $250 .. $275 . captain's
beds, $275 . complete. Baby
beds, $85. Mattresses or
box springs, full or twin,
$55 .. fi rm, S65. and S75
Queen sets, $185. 5 dr.
chests, $49 Bed frames.
$20.and $25 ., Gun cabmets,
$195., dinette cha irs SIS.
and $20 . Tappan gas or
electric ranges, $285.
USED . Dressers, . Ranges,
refrigerators., TV 's, head boards and beds.
~ miles out BulaY1IIe Rd.
Open 9am to 8pm , Mon.
thru Fri. , 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446·0322
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washe rs,
rs,
refrigerators ,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pl1ances, 1918 Eastern
Ave , 4-16·7398.
TAPPAN dishwasher , good
runnmg order. cal l 2459118.

53

Antiques

A TTENT I ON :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUl Wi ll
pay casn or cert1f1ed check
for antiques and collec
t1bles or ent 1re estates
Noth1ng too large A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coi n coll ect1ons, Call 614767 3167 or 557 3411
54

Misc. Merchanise

WINCHESTER 12 guage
pump shotgun, model 1200.
Call446·0562 .
LIMITED SUPPLY of Car·
ter · Reagan knives, a
collectors item . Call 4.461615.
ELLIOTT e\leryday tow
prices · Whirpoo/ 2 speed, 3
cyc le
washer
S329
Whirlpool 2 temp dryer,
S249 . Elliott Appliance 446 3733.
FIREWOOD ,
split ,
stacked, delivered . $30. per
load, 145·5478 .

RENT OR
LEASE
Business bldg ., corner of
court and Second Ave. Call
~-1615 or call AAA ~ 0699.

USED
appliances ,
refrigerator, $125., range,
$100. butlt- Jn dishwasher,
580. Call ~ - 4141.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.
TRAILER spaces lor rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Dh.
992·3954.

51

'ftftij!N} fii}1} 1ja THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

by

Unscramble lhese lour Jumbles
one lener to each SQuare 10 IOfm

Henn Arnold and Bob Lae
Stay

lour ordmary words

-~

cool

Ovation Acoustic
electr~c
country art1st
mOdel 162H with hard
case. Retails lor $720. Will
take 5495. Call 256·6092
Crown City .

O~t:'El'i:

TO
WF't i'TE' MU5 1C .
Now arrange the Circled lerters to
form the surpnsa answer, as sug

gested by the above cartoon

r XI X I X I

J'

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles QUEEN

LOOSE

ELEVEN

MALADY

Answer !n th•s kmd of show no dress rehearsal IS
reQIJlred-A NUDE ONE

Misc. Merchandise

USE D hospital bed, call
669·4191.
Ml XED Hay tor sale Phone Pearl Denney, 245·
5546 $1.00 per bale .
8 FT . sea r s pool table and
accessories, 2 yrs. old, like
new, all for 5350 . Call 256·
6753
2 BTU Suntan units, tan·
ning area a11d dressing
room, works off a 110 watt
outlet. " Keep a tan all year
round ." Buy units together
or separate After 5 p m
ca ll675-6633 or 675·3994

54

Misc. Merchanise

Firewood for sale, Mi xed
types of wood $35.00 per
PI Ck -up load. Del1vered ,
will stack for Sen 1or
Cit tzens. 843·4951 or 843·
2815
SPECIAL
DISCOUNT
price s on furn1Ture .
Reupholsteri ng , Jan . &amp;
Feb .. 1981
Mowrey's
Upholstery , Pt . Pleasant.
W .Va . I 304·675·4154
F1rewood, $35.00 a truck
load, S60.00 a cord . All har·
dwood, split, &amp; delivered
8d3-4831 or 843-4734.

"
World Book Encyclopedic%
L
im
ited
number,
1980
HOTPOINT 40 in. elec .
range, used 1 mo , exc. lecJiitor sets. Save $100.00.
month. El1zabeth
cond , ca II 2.56·6282
I C•&gt;lhnatn. 949·2592.
ROYA L
manual
rypewr 1ter. Call «6·3682.
8 track stereo, 256 1120, call
after 4·00

BROWN vinyl couch 1n
good cond111on
5135.00.
Phone 992 1363.
SEASONED FIREWOOD
for sa le. $30 00. Phone 992 5240 .
LAD IES J·d1amond nng,
to tal we1ght 111 karat. Ap·
pra1sa1.
$1025 .
Will
sacn fice for $600 . Diamond
stick pin, appraisal $425,
sell tor 5200. 992·3283 .

1 H Cub With cultlvllltors, 3
yrs. old, like new, call ~ 3417 .
ALL STEEL c lea r -span
building sale!! 30'x48' x12'
lor $3,992 00 - 40'•72'• 14'
for $6,339 00 - 48' x96'x 14'
lor $48,881 .00 - 60' •100' •16'
lor $13,993.00. Call collect
today at 6·614· 294'2675 til 8
p.m

BOXED COAL , 40 L ll
Wc. ':'T
, VIRGINIA
CHUNI&lt;.o . Get more heat
for the money , -t-46·2783.
WOOD BURNING ·add·on
furnace. Auto Thermosf~T ,
fire brick li ned, air tight
un1t, fen and water heater
coil available, still in fac ·
tory carton. $350. FIRM
Call 256· 1216.,

62

=========:: :!. .

ss

Building Supplies
ALL TYPES of building
materlals, block, brick,
sewer pipes. windows, lintels, etc . Claude Winters,
R io Grande, 0 . ,Ca l l 2~5 -

63

Livestock
REG . polled hereford
heifers, bred cows, young
bulls. Best blood lines,
pri ce d
reasonab le,
delivered free. Don Cox at
Patriot. Call 379 2671 .

5121.
56

Pets tor Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220

R1cling

Mowrr
1- Good TrA iler Approved Wood
Burner SI0\111 wltfl blower
1- Goocl Gas Rilnge
1- Coocl Holpo1nt Wufler
1- B " GE TV

11

Retn9e ro1tor
•
All ol rne abon item5 m e• ·

1976 PONTIAC Grand Pri•
SJ · a.c., p s , p b.. all
power, am·fm , 8 track,
bucket seats, take over
payments. $2800. Call 256·
67511 or ~ - 7814 .
1975 TORINO · ~ - dr. , auto.
trans., p.s., a.c. , call 446 7629 .

1979 TRANS AM . Fully
equ ipped, all power, exc .
cond 56200. Ph 245-9197 al ·
ter5p.m .

AKC
REGISTERE D
Cocker Spanie l pUpp1es.
Born 1·5·81. $100 00 inc lude
worming and f irst shots.
992· 75•3

ceuent cond 111on All lire procen
to se ll i mm ecl, a t tl~ . see u s 1o-

Musical
Instruments

AT TN: Guitar pickers, 1f
your guitar is hard to tune,
POMEROY
or dischords call Roland at
256·6092, lor e•pert ad·
LANDMARK
j.ustments
and
minor
......,... .
992-2181
repairs
Crown
C1ty,
•
I
•
w
~!;!&gt;a!_!!!2:!'--~~!!!!!.J
1
eveni
n~"~s
.
L!

BOdy Repair - Insurance
work· Collision Repair.
EKpert painting, bOdy
work, pinstriping &amp;
vlnyllops,
Free Estlmat•s
C•ll 992-3421
Klngobury Rd.. 2 mi.
west Co. Rd. II.
Pomeroy ,Oh. 4576'
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European Cars &amp;
Trucks.

1975 BUICK
Limited,
loaded, new t ires, no rust in
A -1 condition. 992-3288.
1974 PLYMOUTH Valiant,
6 cylinder, automatic ,
power steer ing, new ba ttery. Runs good . $450.00.
Phone 247·2192.
1977 PLYMOUTH Road
Runner, 31 8, air con dltJonmg, power steering,
in excellent condition Also
1964 Dodge Polara, 318.
Phon~ 949·2171.

1977
DLDS
Cutlaos
Supreme, 14,000 miles, AC ,
PS, PB, tilt wheel , cruise,
AM F M stereo 8· track,
$3,900 . call ~ - 1990 :

d.1~ .

ANTIQUE 1951 Hudson
Hornet bOdy, straight, no
rust out, runs, worth $2,000.
Layed off, must sell $800 .
Call256·6092.

0~90 .

• Dozers
· • Backhoes
Hourly Contract

1974 PONTIAC Catallne · in
good cond.1 call after .c, 379·
2658.
1979 PONTIAC Firebird
with 23,000 miles, exc.
cond , $4,950. Call -4-46· 2376.

small jobs ,

~

f

Sl
1971 FO RD dump truck in
good con dition Wi II con·
Sider trade . $3500.00. 985
&lt;f.l95 .

73

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1979 FORD BRONCO · 4-W·
D, a.c.. am·fm 8 track,
stereo, auto., trans., p.s ,
p.b ., call 379·2320.

8 fl .
new
gas
call

1

z~s rom4x61o12x40

BMR 375 - Nice brick ranch, includes 3 bedroo ms,
Ph baths, equipped kitchen, 2 car garage.
BMR 376 - Located m Ewington near mmes, J
bedrooms, living room. dining room, kitchen .

1'12 story frame home includes 3
BMR 378 bedrooms, living room, dimg room and eat 10 krt·
chen. City school district. $38,500.
BMR 379 - E•tra nlcel Brick ranch includes ()
bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and 2
car garage. Natural gas heat with central air . Call!

BMR 38DF - Bare land 100 acres, more or less,
mostly clear. Call for complete details !

8MR lUF -

Land contract, 69 acres more or less
vacant land includes barn and small tobacco base.
BMR 312 - In Cheshire, 4 bedroom home with full
basement, carport, Jl/2 baths, kitchen and dining
area, Situated on large flat lot.
BMR :liS - For Lease - 4,800 sq . ft. lor light In·
dustry, warehousing with retail or wholesale possi ble. 1
BMR :186 - New Ltsttng - E•cellent buy for less
than S30,C~ 3 BR home equipped fo·r woodburner ,
like new k ttchen, also Includes 20•20 lofted barn .
Call for complete details!
446·0552
446-0552
446·95C17
446·0552

e Roofing work

Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook-up•
Septic Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph . 367·7560

CHARLIE' S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
service, buy

or 992 _7314
oh

H&amp;R .BODY

1.n 1 mo

1976 G.M .C. Jim my · " High
Sierra", same body as
( Blazer). 42,000 miles, 1
owner, 4-W·D, new paint,
large
t1res,
Emers,pn
Evans co r , SJ.OOO . Call 446·
7910 or ~ - 399~ .

·

HAMMONDS BODY SHOP

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Racine, OH.

9402049
~

t\

..,~ ~
"'J~~o("

RESIDENTIAL

eOry1r1
eR ~~ ..,

PRICE IS RIGHT tt you ltke a mocern
1'1ome close to town with 5 acres fenced
in . Home te•'""·u ·c -E 0 R, FR , full
basemeniR ED
~ ··'-'"~ kitchen,
natural ~d~ turna ce, ~w circular
driveway, lh mile from city limits. N616
FINISH THIS ONE loca ted in a quiet
neighborhood on 5.91 acr es House size
30x5 1 ft . l!vmg room. kitchen - dining
combination, tairty well fi nished, 3 BR ,
bath, servi ce area, storrn Windows.
New asphalt sh1ngled roof Owner oc·
cupi ed $25,000 gives you deed to it all .
~ 642

WE 'RE NOT KIDDING! You ' ll have

PR 1DE in home owner ship and be very
proud of thi s 3 bed room ra nch. Ga ra ge,
chain link fenced backyar d. Steel
siding Ci ty school distr ic t. Possibility
at loan assum pt ion . $38,500 .
N632
THE RURAL TOUCH out of lhe city ,
but iust a short distan ce, 5'1• acres. LR ,
4 BR , bath, kitchen, fuel oil heat. 11 587
JUST LISTED - Along SR 7. 15 m 1n.
from town . 5 room house with full size
ba sement situated on 3 acres. Good
barn, beaut1tul v1ew of the Ohio River .
$37,500
097
CONVENt E N'f LOCATION
l BR
home, full basement , hardwood lloors,
c1ty wat er and sewage, ga s hea t.
$16,600
N 586
LET THE SUN SHINE lN th is 2 stor y
well kept home . 3 B R. 11/2 baths, living
room, fireplace , formal dining room ,
delu xe kitchen, basement, fuel oil FA
furn ace, front porch , one of the best .
Large l evel lot for garden and recreation . conven 1ent, church, bank close by .
Rural wttter . Start the new year off
right . Be th e proud owner of thrs home.
N638

AMERICA'S

NOT THE LAST WORD IN STYLE but
located in a warm· and friendly v i llage .
Enjoy the comforts of modern day tiv ·
1ng In th is older 3 B R home, w ith dining
room, kitchen, living room , bath, car·
port, plus a front porch.
t 579
LOVELY AND NEAT - Startefllome
for you ng couple. 2 bedrooms, l1v1ng
room with fir ep lace, kitchen, bath ,
enclosed porch and 1 car garage . Out ·
budding for storage and nice lawn . Call
loday for more Information .
"640
BUDGET PRICED fO meet your needs,
Older remodeled fram e 3 bedroom
home loca ted m Crown City . Livlng
room, kitchen. ba th . ~nd fuH basemen!,
wh1CI'1 can be used tor a ga r age.
Situated on small lot. Priced at $12. 500.
041

MINI FARM - Green TownShi p, 3 Br .,
vinyl siding, storm dnnr~~t ,..,d w indows,
7.41 acres. CREDUCED..cres wood s,
pond, barn, 1 &lt;~l'Y IDS toba cc o base Less
than three m tles from Gallipolis. N495
VA ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE - La rge.'
rwo sto r y home. Some of tne amenities
are: two story , 4 bedrooms. 1111 baths,
FA natural gas ·furnace, f ireplace, ci ty
water , ci t y sewer . Convenient to chur
ches, stores, bank , etc. Loca ted on .557
acre lot , Rutland .
~ 644

FARMS
HERE tT IS - One of the finest f arm s
in lhe ara l ll acres including 40 acres
tillable. SO acres pasture surrounded by
fence that needs no r epa1r 2 barns
Modern house w1th ca r pet, washer &amp;
dryer , na tu ral gas heat and also a
woodburner . 7 car garage . C1ty sc hool
dist ri c t
fl 635
WHERE YOU ' LL LIVE TOMORROW
- 7 room remodeled 1'1ouse. Features 3
BR , large bath . 2 good f ireplaces, new
FA fu el oi l furnace, energy saving, w ell
insulated. 90 ac r es, more or less, pro
ductlve la nd . Good fences. BUild ings
well taken care of 1800 lbs . tobacco
base Good a ll around farm pnced to
~ II

N~

ENJOY THE ABE LINCOLN LOOK In '
th is origmal log home along with 51
ACR ES . 3 BR, bath , gas lurnace. Good
fences, tobacco base, barn, lots of
virgin t imber, and plenty of water , t 485

RESIDENTIAL

·SERENE BRICK RANCH on l ac re ot
lawn Home fea tures 3 BR , 1'/:z baths,
LR , sunny den, f orma l OR , nice bu11t 10
kitchen w ith sto\le &amp; r etrig , 2111 car
garag.e, full basement with rec . room ,
f1replace. workshop, ut il ity room and
cell ar. Lots of room and ex tras in th1 s
love ly hom e
# 624

ASSUME 91f&gt;'lf• LOAN - You' If be lm ·
pressed with the space and comfortable
atmosphere of thi s qual ity bi ·leve l. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, fam 1y room, bllt·in
kitchen , fireplace. natural gas. Garge.
Above ground pool. Convenient loca·
tion .
N631

ASSUME 9'h'lo LOAN - You'll be tm
prf!si ed with the space and comfortable
atmosphere of th is quality bl ·level. 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, fam 11y room , built
io k1 tchen. fireplace, natural gas
Ga rage Above ground pool. Cnnvenlent
localton.
#631

WE NEED QUICK SALE. Owners ore
being tr ansferred. Brick r anch, 3 yrs.
old 3 BR, p;, baths, forma l DR, super
kitchen, most all appliances lnc ludeq
Clean , exce llen t c ondition . Over 2 acres
land overlooking the Oh io River This
must move. pJease ca ll us now.
NU7

I TOP

NEW LISTING - 110 •eros of l a~d
located along SR 7 near the Ohio River .
Some timber and a real hunter' s
paradi se Call for more deta11s. before
ll's too la te.
N591

' '''"'""""'

"'. . ."'~"tPr-rn"
. ,,. H....li O WI\trl

... M~~~ou.Ha .... P.. k•

•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
•CORPORATIONS
H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

ARD
AVA TORS

CNillt

S0"-20· 30 'H.P .
HA 60"-25, 60 H. P.

-.

2096

·

FOR ALL your e• ·
terminating service, call
extermital Termite service. Your local man that
lives In the county, free
estimates .
Will i am
Thomas, ~-46· 2801 .

SANDERS CARPENTRY
SERVICE
Home im·
provement, Interior and extenor. 15 yrs. experience.
Ca II 4-16· 2787

DAVE DOBBINS JR . Con
Tracting - No job to small or
to large. Coli 388·9964.
HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors · Bul td, siding,
remodel, concrete, roofing,
free estimates. Call col. ,
614·259·2814 ask for Charles
or M ike .

&amp;.ASSOC.

'

A PERSONAL AD
I believe t h is land to be, pr iced
reasonable, 56 ac r es. Over ha lf tillable.
Heavy grass sod . Some llmb.,r, lots of
tire wood. Home si te, conc r ete blocks,
electric, septic tank and cister n . Tobllc co base ~ucla 1891 lbs, for 1981 It is J781
lbs. Priced l or 522.500 . ThiS, 1 feel, Is a
fair market value.
# 646

•Siding •Insulation •Roofing •Storm Win·
dows • Concrete Work • Septic Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck •Remodeling
•New
construction
•Guttering
&amp;
Downspouts
I

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

YOUR OWN PRIVATE WORLD lhat
presents privacy and bea uty . This 11
acres, more or less, already has a ll!ne
leading to the building site Rural wafer
tap and lots ot trees. Ta ke a look TO·
DAYI
UU

All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
•nd down5pauh, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guuanteed .

tOTS FOR SALE

Free Estlmi11es
Reasonc1ble Prices
Call Howard
949· 2862
,49· 2160

C&amp;W
CONTRACTORS
Home ImprovemenTs,
Exterior &amp; Interior.
vinyl sidmg and SoffiT
roofing and gutter work.
Residentia I and commert~oal.
Work fully
guaranteed and insured .
Call Collect anyt1me,
367-0194 or 367-0141 or
367-0427.

2-4· tfc
U

40625 St. Rt. 681

Motorcycles

1981 B .M .W. · motorcycles,
now In stock •• Ramsay
motorsport, St . Rt
7,
M•rlett•, OH . Your
authorized B.M .W. Dealer,
caii614·373·547S,

Vans&amp;4 W.O.

1910 JEEP CJ·5, 6-cyl., ~ ­
spd,, e•c . cond ., call ~1211.

i

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone ~ - 2735

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery , Call 256·'
9368 any t ime.
•
NOW HAULING house coal '
&amp; I imestone for driveways.
Call lor estimates 367·7101 ;

- D&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Home Wiring,
Restdentl.ll &amp; Commercial. ·
Licensed electricians
Guaranteed Work
446·3458

DILLARDS
WATER ;
DELIVERY Service. Call .
4-46·7404.
87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis.;
446·7833or4-161833 .
.

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOT T
Lennox heating and air
condition ing. Rapco Foam
insulation . E lectrical work ,
call 446·8515 or 446·0445 af·
ter 4: 30.

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
PhJmbing · Heating · A ir
conditioning. 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph. 446·1637 .

MASTERCRAFT UPHOL·;
STERY SHOP
Com· ·

~e;r~~~)(~~~i;~~~~e2!i11 1~ :

2301 or 446·4971.

85

General Hauling
BROTHERS UPHOLSTE· ·
RY, Gallipolis, Ohio, 256-:
1562, all work completely .
guaranTeed.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE, call 367·7471 or
367·0591.

STANDARD
Plu mbing-Heating
215 Third Ave .. 446P82

SOLUTION

SOUTHERN
SERVICE
co. - Heating - mobile
home furnaces, electric hot
water tank repa ir. Call of · '

83

Excavating

REESE ~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Wlte~ -Sewer-E\eclric.t.

Line-Ditches

WAf!! U"E 1(]01(-UPS
SlPTIC TANKS

COUNTY CERnmD

ROUSH LANE

1978 BLAZER , 22,000 mileo,
no rust, 992·2178 .

ACROSS
1 Hurls
6 LJeS
10 Immense

71 Italian coin
73 Closer

14 Balance

75 Makes SUII·

2 1 Olllseed

motorcvcle, . cotor
Call949·2649

blue

Boots and
Motors for Sate

GLASTRON GT 160, 16 ft .
Mercury, 150 H. P., coll-1-46·
3691 doyllme, or 4-16·7365
alter 6.

INSULATION
Blown Ctlulose
Insulation
Estimates Free
GALLI A
REFRIGERATION CO.
PASQUALE ELEC.
446·4066 or 446·2716

Jr'

'

• W.llh , ll oor , wmdow -.
eW .Jt cr
d.
· m o~('
,f,l lno1qP
lndu .., tn.11
I.'P .!dt•lll!. l l

. , '" '"" '"'''''' bl c, 8 VColr ', C).
• Wc c1oc •• r C''

end•ng

93 Tradesman

94 conunent :

28 Twisted

Abb&lt;.

3 1 Masr
33 Melody

96 ·Memoran-dum
97 Clout
100 Tellurium

36 Tears

38 Stalk
40 European

140 Church ser-

4 1 Shallow ves-

81 Affirmative

viCe
141 Unkempt

24 Payments

82 Harbingers

143 Partner

109 Near East

duo
26 Pittsburgh

84 Baby birds

86 Commands

45 Glossy paint

112 Poses

tootballer
28 Smashes
29 Goal's cry

87 Reprimand
89 Time gone
by

145 TOll
146 Kettledrums
148 Tangled

4 3 - tment
46 Harangue

113 OaniSf'l

30 Cobblers
32 Vendlllons
33 Withered
34 Robert E.

92 Brazilian

Mix
Snoozes
Small rug
Baptismal
baSin

Geralnl's
wtte

47
48
50
52
53
55

palm
95 College
heads
98 Margarine
99 Substance
101 Viral organs
103 Pack away

104 An&lt;:lent
105 Church pan
106 Scate note
107

Man's nickname

150 Brutish
152 Sell to con~
sumer
153 Alp
154 Lamb 's pen

name
t 56 Alrican tty

157 VIsion
158 Supplicates
159 Luge
160 Alleviates

DOWN
1 Sluffs

symbol

t05 Slmlons

sels

47 -

102 Slcldded

gp.

Sand·

isllnd

buo-g

114 Prevent

116 EgYf)tton

49 Mountain

lake

alloy

5 1 SeUiea
debt
52 Prejudiced
53 Source of
water

118 Junc:ture

120 Having

madeawll
121tnoc:tcs

54 Great Lake
56 Meal

122 Sewing

59 Goul

123

60 Tie
61 Emmets
63 Clutched
65Weakens
67 Arid

126 Expert
127 Soviet..-...
agcy.

Implement•

Thailand,
once

125 Benefits

Jargon

108 Storage bin
110 Greek HUlet'
1 t1 Tantalum
symbol

Quarrel

112 BarriiCUda

5011111« -

72 Houston

132 Whlol&lt;.,..

Delivering
Rubber Pronoun
Plefce

113 Oriental
nurse

8.Scale note
7 - and outs

74 Football

134 LOv.d onea

46 Shade

r;~'~==~==~~~;:;:=~ e ~.co t c: tlq ~t.l l"(t

1341ke
135 ptanet
137 Form
139 Superlative

92 Exclomatlon

78 Fewest

41 Free Ucket

Modern -. tt:o. l m cl c,qunq
tor c.1rpot &amp; IIPhOI'-Ii 1 r y
i tl1 'o llrolll(f..' wo r~ )

statesman

23 Fruit cake
25 Oceans
2 1 Kite

80 Suitably

riC

74
Motorc cles
1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650

133 Roman

premium
23 Zodiac sign

42

35 Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Cafl446·3196
or 446·3010

able
77Sh0rthit

132 Food fish

22 EKchange

Fret Estlmiltes
388·9759

ADV AN C t 0
(I t: At-JitJ C. ~LW V I C t-:
446 -3915
No An o., wer 446 - ~06 7

tener

19 Complain

Roofing, siding, gutTer,
bulld·up roof, home
repair.

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

range

70 Metal fas·

44 Glossy lab-

2· 13· 1 mo. pd .

75

SUNDAY PUZZLER

35
37
39
40

PH. 992-7119

74

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

LIMESTONE, gravel an&lt;(
sand. All si zes. At Richards
and Son, Upper A:(ver Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, Call 4-46'
7785.

ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toaster s, rro ns, all sma ll
appliances. Lawn ,mower.
Nex t to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

QUAL I T.Y
MAIN TENANCE · Electrical,
plumbi ng, heating, and air
COnditiOning. Call 388-9698.

BILL'S
Home Improvements
Nu-Prime Replacement
Windows, Storm Windows and Doors. Patio
Covers,
Carports.
Mobile Home Accessories .
, Free
Estimates.
691 Miller Drive
446· 2642

992· 7544
VA loans no money dawn
Federal Housing 3% on ns,ooo
S% on balance.
conventional Loans5%
down
can for ln"formation
992-7544
1 21 -tfC •

B4
Elec,trical
_ _"&amp;-'R,_,e,_,l,_,
r i"'g"e,_,
r a,_,t_,
,o,_,n,___
SE WING
MACHINE
Repairs,
serv i ce,
all
makesl
992 · 2284 . The
Fabr~c
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Smger Sa les
and Service. We sharpen
Sc 1:.sors.

Frank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction~ a II types.
Free estimates, all work
lulfy guaranteed. Res Idential, comm1ucia I,
industrial and mining,
electric work. MS HA
Cert.
446· 4627

Mortgage Bankers

and new hou se 75°o complet ed with a
30x60 barn All locat ed on SR 554 close
to Porter . Call tor more information.
1 623

CENTURY21™

60"-45·80 H . P,

.

CUNNINGHAM

45 ACRES fl at to rolling cleared land

DO YOU OWN A MOBILE HOME ... or
plan to build? II so, you ' ve found lust
the lot for it. This :64 of an acre Is ready
for you . The trailer hookup Is already
there, along with the eleclrlc , septic
Tank , rural water, and completely
estab lished lawn. You also get an 8xl2
litt le r ed bu ilding along wltt1 C'nother
stor aqe bU1Idinq . C l o~ c to st hools,
church and l.) rocery stores.
~ 666

Cleaning
· Call In
Smeltzer's
FOR BEST
Carpet
Steamwoy . Call 614·446·

Pomeory, Oh.

IIPAIII ClllolnL loflollhlllt

VACANT LAND - 66 acres, 8 larg•
portion IS new woven w ire fence . Water
available for ca ttle . Pltsture. wood
land, app r ox . 10 acres tillable. Harrison
Twp Fronts on Lincoln Pike ond Carter
Ul1
Road L isting pri ce $25.000.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

DOZER work · exca vating,
land cleari ng. Call446·0051.

clean
w111s,
most
upholstery, pump flood-'
ed basements, strip
wallpaper .
All at
reasonable prices. For
th'e best~n cleaning call :
Smeltzer' s Steamway

STUCCO
PLASTERING,
plaster repair, commercial
and residential. Free
estimates., call 256· 1182,

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

IAofl(fl CNo... -

12

NOW OOING hauling,
mov ing jobs, painting '
houses inside or out,
basement attic
clea ning ,
also carpet cleaning, yard
work, etc. 992·3849. Ask lor
Velma and lea\le name and
no . Will return call. Free
est imates in Meigs Co 1
area.

We steam
or
fOil m cle•n cilrpets.

Home
1mprovemtn t s

11

GOII CLUIS:
lltw ' lllltl
LUIONI

""' '*'

BUDGET
CONSTRUCTION CO.
All
typ e home
lm
provements - e~terior and
interior. Free esTimates.
Mike Marcu m, 388·8636.

DOZER · backhoe, dump
truck. Call446·4537

M&amp; T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING, INC .
Backhoe and dozer
by the lob or by
Also, licensed
tanks insta
truck.
Calf 381·862lil

• Dllln•••lltrs

•BUSI~ESSES

618 E . Main

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and siding. 30
years experience . Free
estimates . Remode ling ,
Call 388·9857 .

J&amp;C Sanitation Service.
Trash p1c kup available In
Village of M i ddleport.
Phone 992·5016 or 992-7597
anytime.
:

•Ho! Wat..-Tankl

BOOKKEEPING SERVICE

KWB

PAINTING · Residential
and commercia l. Interior
and exterior , mobile home
roofs. F ree estimates. 17
vrs. exp. with refe ren ces
ca 11 367. 7784 or 367. 7160.

General Hauling

85

WATER WE LL Drilling
and cleaning. Pumps sold
and installed, Call W.T.
Grant, ..46-8508 .

fh,ll rll\1 Sl~ ct IUJ

1

THE
KOUNTRY

Gene' s Carpe t Cleaning,
deep st ream e)(tract1on.
Free
est1mated,
reasonable r ates, scot·
chquard. 992 6309 or 742·
2211 .

ExciJvatlng

PH lfil-7560

22 FT . filth wheel camper
and hitch, call ~ - 3682 .

ALL MAKIS
eWII~IJfl
e DllfNU I\

on Entire Stock

2· 13· 1 mo.

ACREAGE

Southe.l stern 1nsu1,1t10n
&amp; Con st. Type s: blowing , celulo se . Free
c s t1mat e.
Work
gu.udnteed &amp; msure d
Al so home Improvem ent. D elve Hager &amp;
Jay Hancock, Owner s.
446·8605-446·2637

' IIMdl l lblnh'"

(4 Bags Limit Per Week)
PHONE 992-7802
or 992-14~3

RESIDENTIAL

1

915-3561

10% to 20% Discount

,§"!·,..'!~o':t."'

~

•

Call Ken Young

'b"b

Weekly Pickup

CORNER LOT - Mobile home in good
condit ion . Extra insulation, new vinyl
Siding, 2 BR . FA fuel oil furnace, extra
coal and wood burning stove . Drilled
well, low ma intenance . E)(tra mobile
home hookup Le\lel corner lot . S 15,000
1641

General Contractor
Rcs•denrtal,
Commer·
cial . New construction,
additions, a Iterations,
excavating.
Gallipolis
Diversified Const.
11601/2 lnd, GalliPOliS,
Oh, 45631. Ph , 446·4440.

mini homes, like new, well
equipped, Inquire at Apple
City Auto Sales, Rt. 6 bo•
42, Jackson. OH . 45640 . Tel.
286·5700.

APPLIANCE SERVICE

83

Times-

emergency
367-7131.
lice,
446 no.
·3008
n tg hf.

Visit our showroom and see
the 1981 Coachman Com·
per, equipment, Saturday
thru Friday, Ph Jackson

PARTS AND H•VICI

Reedsvlffe, OH.
Ph. 667•6485

Flatw~~:s Area

mainta ined 2 bedroom home. K 1tchen.
LR , ca rpets, drapes are all eye cat
cher s. F1nished part ial basement . FA
propane gas furnace Rural water
Delu xe garage , ut!1 1ty bldg 1.1 acres
level land Shrubs and shade tr ees.
Located 5 m iles from Ga ll 1polis on
blacktop road 1f this 1S what you are
looking for , it is sure to please.
1645

11

~~~~~~~~~~~i

Chevy truck, 5325 _Caii38&amp;933 It 6
u er p.m.

K.. ,nls,t.dt$1"~" or•ll•t•••nc•

10 lb. Chocolate

O&amp;F CONTRACTORS
Home Improvements,
room &lt;~dditions, siding,
elecTncal &amp; air condi·
tioning, and in surance
claim repairs.
Guaranteed work. Free
Estimate. 446·3407.

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC.
Box 89, Bidwell,
388-9877.
s!:~~1:El~~~
driveways,
satps,
etc.
...
resldenllal

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. All types of repair.
Upper Rt. 7. Call ~2445
days and ~- 4792 nights.

1

WIN

ss.oo Per Month

e

h

~=;====~1~-7=·t~fc~~========~~====~======;:2·:8:tl=c~2-86
_·_57_oo_._____________
2 USED 22 ft. Coachmen

-;

::d~d~o~!~~ip

smartly decorated 5 bedroom b1·teve1.
Formal dining, living room. kitchen
complete w1th appliances. Family
room. recreation room, uti1 1ty area
Central air. Electric heat . Garage
Large lot. City school district .
N620

'.:========:::::;:.

Auto Repa~r

11

~18~-l~m~o~.==~~======·2~5=-l=m=o=.~±======~··~·~"=~
~====1~·HART'S
Til-COUNTY

EXTRA INCOME PROPERTY or
room for a ll the famdy , acres of land,
3 mobi le home setups, one 12x60 an
electric mobile home, older house and
bcirn, 2 septic systems . Located off Up·
per Rt. 7 and'" the Kyger Creek Sc hool
D•sfrict
N622

~ - 4208

~~;;;~~~~~~~

ca 11742. 31 95
or 992 . 7680

Ph. 992 · 7583

Improvements
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning

A TOP for Chevy Blazer,
SlSO ; a small Mopar
rearend With springs, $100.
Auto. trans for small block
Mopar, $ 95 , 992 _7354 after 6,

Body Repair - Insurance
Work . Collision Repair.
Expert painting, body
&amp;
work, pinstriping_
vinyl tops,
Free Estimates
Call992 •3421
Ktngsbury Rd., 2 mi.
west Co. Rd. 18.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Domeslic, Japanese &amp;
European
cars &amp;
T
k
rue 5 •
4 1
l · l · mo.

Greg Roush

tNEWSPAP I-.K FNTE R PR I~E ASSN )

&amp; Accessories

your present electrical
system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

12 Years
Experience

may
be costing
yourselr
ruff
if
declarer
holds
Q·J-3.a You
Will probably be breakmg
even Jf declarer holds somethmg hke Q-10-x or might
even gain if declarer holds Q10-x·x.
Fmally if there is reason to
suspect that declarer holds A·
J-x you sure dop't want
declarer to duck and partner
to continue.

t:76::::::A::ut=o=P~o=r~ls::::~l[a~l::::::~H;o~m~e::::::~

0

....,....,_
''~
"~ ~ o-

•
WE LIKE THIS ONE , \lery clean , well

that you also hold the jack.
Let's take one more exampie. It IS a heart contract.
Partner leads the king of
spa des. Dummy shows up
wtth 7-6-2 You hold 8-5
Which card should you play'
Most of the time r lay the
fave to discourage him. You

Hampaint, $129.95
;=========~fr=========~~========~~ plusSandpaintandmaterials.
.J....j ~
ROUSH
MIllER ELECTRIC monds Body Shop. 379·2782.
REESE ~- CONSTRUCTION
SERVICE
78
camping
TRENQIING
• New Homes . ex - For all of your wir·
Equipment
tensive remodeling
ing needs.
TRucK
TOPPER,
SERVICE
• Electrical work
Let George Miller check
~~!r 1':;· ;;~thtf ~~t ~;

~(,
''!h."

COUNTRY LIVING With flair in th is

BMR 732 - Floral shop includes building equ1pment
and inventory plus rental properties. Owner will
help finance .

Backhoe, snow plowing,
excavation, water-gas·
sewer lines, certified
septic systems, dump
truck, stone-coal, etc. ·
General home repair &amp;
carpenter work. Springs
de•eloped 1 ponds
cleared.
Rt. 2 Pomeroy
Ph. 992·7201
1.25· 1 mo

Free Estimates

BMR-383- - Small 3 bedroom home that cou ld be
used as rental income proper:.ty . $15,900.

BMR 371 - Restricted build ing lot, 2 miles from
Gallipolis. Call us now.

-Addonsond
remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbintand
electrlcill work
(Free Estimates)

10-7-tfc

8 H'd•
arm u lngs

Rl.l,Box54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591
6· 15-flc

BMR-384- - Well cared fbr 3 bedroom home near
town. This home has equipped kitchen, large family
room w1th f1rep1ace . All electnc, central air and 2
car garage . Green School District Call about this
home10day .

.

SERVICES"

v.c. YOUNG II

J&amp;f
ENTERPRISES

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

78 GMC PS, PB , 4 speed,
350 , 4•4, assume payments,
256· 1443
1979 FORD F· 150 · ~.-.
bed, 6 cyl., 4-spd .,
radial t ires, good
m11eage, e&gt;&lt; c. cond .,
367·0334.

lowest. Thus, if partner leads
low and dummy follows low,
you play the 10 from Q J 10,
etc. However, if you hold Q 10
9 8, play the queen. (Unless
dummyboldsjack ) Don'tgive
declarer a chance to sneak 1n
With that ca rd
When partner has led a high

the case may be. A high C'ard
asks h1m to continue, a low
to shirt. Count and suit
preference signals may be
used here, but that wa)' hes
madness and ..trouble unless
JOUare a great expert playing
w1lh your special partner
r
There is one time when you
do show a doubleton You do
this When
partner has led

CARPEN~R

992·5682

J

Utiity Bu 'lldm'as

1979 FORD F 150 pickup.
Call 446·3682.

Broker-Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000
Commun1ties
428 Secon·d Ave.
Ca11446-0552 Anytime

EVENINGS
STEllE McGHEE, ASSQC,
DONA McGHEE, ASSOC .
BETH NULL, ASSOC.
BUD McGHF E, ~roker·AuctionPer

ALL STEEL

Trucks tor Sale

1977 DODGE lour wheel
dnve, 8 f oot bed U'J QOOd
condition . S2600 .00 . Also
1974 .Scou t, 6 cylinder, two
wheel drtvc, $1275.00 . 992·
6323 .

high card
Suppose partner leads the
king and you hold Q 7 Thts is
one time wh en Jtou should

Callradiators
alter 5, ~;;;;;;;~;~~~~~~~~~~~j~;;;;;;;·;;;~ batteries.
automobiles,
and
7717 .

"From 30 x 30 .,
SMALL

Real Estate - Genera I

BMR 366M - 3 Bedroom mobtle home on 2 large
lots. 2 storage buildings.
BMR 370- BUilding site 2.33 acres more or less on
Route 325. Call for details I

12 Park Sf.

t Oh
M 't ddl epor.
•
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph , 992· 2772

qu~~ do this by playmg your

Last week we potnted out
thai when playing from equals
you play the highest when just
following, so that the play of
the ~ueen denied the king, etc.

te!r:;~r~0 '!v,!:-.P~~~ngth! . ~:=~ o~h~he~~:~ toe::~~~n!~!

.HEATING

• Storm ooors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

Ph. 992· 2478
11 - 20 ·3 mo. pd ,

..,...&gt;

BMR 339F - .30 acres in Rio Grande w1th 2 story
home that needs to be finished .

AND .-

Repair
-Transmission
.
R epatr
Hrs .: Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M .-5:30P.M.

Large or

45631

BMR 139-$29,900 - Large 2 story home on Second
Ave. includes 3 bedrooms. family room. living
room, dining room, and kitchen .

.~~~ur:!~~~m Siding

--

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

PUWNS
EXCAVAnNG

1972 DA TS \IN
510 St.
wagon. new tires, call 446 243 2
__ · - - -- - -- -

PH. 614· 446- 1171

BMR 336 - OWner anx 10US to sell fh1S home. Th is
home has 2800 sq ft of liv1ng space . Family room
with firelace. Allfh1S on 6 acres.

PWMBING•

;

955 Second A venue
Gallipolis, Ohio

Call for complete deta1IS!

INSUlATION
Vt' nyl &amp;

-Auto and Truck
1969 CHEVROLET · In
good cond , $350 . Call 367·

KAUfPS

======2=-1=5=-l=m=o~.~~=====1=·~28~·=1=m~o=.~~==~;;;;2~·;1-=l~m~o~-~~ him
card toyour
first duty
to ask
continue
or toissb1ft
as

FURNITURE

BMR -344 - Assumable loan ,____ Brick ranch includes
3 BR's, FR with fireplace, l V2 baths, neat pump.

J&amp;l BI.(MN

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

the king against a suit con.
tract a nd dummy holds the

The

Heme
Improvements

81

More about trick one play
By Oswald JaC'!Ob)'
aM Alan SoataA:

1979 CHEVROLET Chevef·
te, 2 dr. hdtp. Standard
tra ns.• radio. pulse wiperS;,
good t ires. Please call 614992·3381 during daytime
hours, or 614 992-1405 after

72

77 MONTE Carlo Landau,
silver &amp; black, 305 eng.
good gos, PS PB AC cruise,
tinted glass AM·FM 8·
track , chrome spoke rims,
price to sell , call 245-5279
after 6 p.m.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor -outdoor fa c ilities.
AlSO AKC Reg. Oober·
mans. Call"-46·7795.

57

Autos tor Sale

1979 CHEV~TTE, 4' Cyl., 4
spd, 25.000 miles. Call ~
7414.

ORAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan , Persian and
Siamese cats. KIttens are
here, Hlm•layans.
Call
4-16·38« after 3 p.m .

1- U cu lt. Hotpoln l

1975 NOVA Hatchback.
Good cond. 741·2421 .

~Ius

.AKC reg . Dachshund 2
months old. Call~ 4051 .

1-1 1 Hone Power

Wanted tQ Buy

CHIP WOOD. Poles max
d1ameter 10" on largest
end . S12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. SIO per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 1,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS
Boar di ng
and
grooming . AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
SpanteiS. Call446 - ~191 .

10 SPEED bi cycle · am·fm

ONE HORSE trai ler and
two horses ; one paint mare
and one registered Ap·
pa loosa 992 ·5449.

6o_21'.__!:
F~a~r!!m!_2E:;q'!'u~l.l!p!!m!!e!!!n~t­

BRIDGE.

Business Services

Autos lor Sale

6.

THINK I f'G OF WOOO
HEAT? I have a complete
line of stoves, furnaces,
fireplace Inserts, at good
prices. I also install stoves,
reline chimneys , clean
fireplaces . Call the Chim·
ney Sweep Call 373-6057.

TR:ANQUILIZE
YOU 1&lt;:5EL.F IN

1

&amp;SNYDER

NEW

~ - 1408

Print answer here : "

54

71

Stoker and lump coal , call

-..

IKAMBER I
Yeste1day s

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin·
g mach ine, SSO Call .446·

floor , trap in center for live
bait. $100.1Call 367·7428

I KD

1

Musical
Instruments

57

Bxu ft . floating dock, new

IMEEBOCI

rJ

Misc. Merchandise

23~2 .

I.....I-----.. r ....
SUMIC I
~

54

llipolis, Ohi~t-Point Pleasant. W . Va ,

57 College deg.
58 Gull-lik e
bird

59 Ventilates
60 Co llege deg
62 Energy unit
64 Transgresses

66 Dr
68 Slate: Abbr
69 Russian

115 Slate Abbr

117 Drinks slOwly
1 19 Lal!n con-

lunction
120 Bound
121 Alacrity

124 Profound '
, 26 NY baseball
players

2 Chargewilh

gao

--

3 Ankle Ills

69 Abo,.

129~

4 StaterNte

70 Throb

131 Gratify

8Wagors
9Fumod
10 Manservant
11 Matures
12 Knight

poo.
76Wl&gt;ile
77Reveals
79 Also
83 Commun1st

13 Pr-oposiliOtl

85 Frohckod

14 TopOl head

86P87et88 Girrsname
89Near
90 Europ8111l

15 Away •
16 European

land

127 Pivot
128 Sea nymph

17 Most oertaln
18Worms

130 Cavil

20 Emer aid isle

133 Hail

136 Let It st8nd

138 Telt•out

1411 Crit&gt;Pie
141 Catctt

142 Shout
144 Actual being

91 Mountam

t47~'scry

148Diooooo
149 Elcpft

151-oge
153 Tuborculollo(ob&lt;.)

155 PM:~ notice

"""""'
•

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

Pag10-tJ-8-The SundaY Times-Sentinel

Two B&amp;E's under
•••

•

Jitarp
•

l- 1926artisf : Ernesf H_,Ji ~epardl

GAt.IJPOLI:; - A native of
Gallipolis who died in December,
just a couple of months ago, has
been honored in Grove City, which
named its service
complex after
him.
By order of
council, it's now
the Ronald K.
Harrison Service
Complex. He was
director of the ·
department. He
Harrison
worked two and a half years for the
City of Gallipolis under the Austin
Cotton administration as an in~pector, and he accepted the position
of assistant director of the street and
water department when he moved to
Grove City, and then he served as
the director for 15 years. He was
married to Barbara Luikart.
Ronald's father, Bert Harrison,
died before him, but his mother,
Ethel Harrison; brot)ler Donald;
and sister Wanda Harrison Burlile
reside in Gallipolis.
WHY DON'T you try to come out
to the regular meeting of the Gallia
County Historical Society at 2 this
(Sunday) afternoon in St. Peter's
Episcopal Church's big Sunday
·School room? The speaker, whose
subject will be ·'How to Do
Genealogy Work," will be Clifford
Wig, for the last two years past
president of the Ohio Genealogy
Society.
Henny Evans, Dr. Charles A.
Weed, and James C. Myers ar~ the
moot prominent geAealogists in
Gallia County - at least, they are
the most prominent to come to
Peeps's mind as he types this midFebruary column - and Peeps
hopes they're present to exchange
wisdom and techniques with Mr.
Wig.
Dr. Weed and Myers have written
genealogy books; the Weed book has
been out a long time, but the Myers
book is just out. Henny Evans helped
with the Cherrington Family
History, and so did Susie
Cherrington, and it, too, was
published a long time ago.
You can help preserve your family
history, also, and Clifford Wig of
North Canton - today's speaker may be the man. who can get you
started on the right track.
MRS. · ROBERT TUITE, 33427
Orangelawn, Livonia, Michigan
48150, is engaged in a form of
genealogy: Her letter dated Feb. 10
reads: "Do I have any distant
relatives among your readers? My
local families are Donaldson, Sims,

and Cheeseman.''
There are no telephone book entries by the name of Donaldson or
Cheeseman, not in the Gallipolis
phone book, anyway. There are ten
people named Sims, and a dozen
named Simms. There's one Sims in
the Meigs phone book.
Mrs. Tuite - her name is Betty says that Alexander Donaldson
married HaiUiah Sims July I, 1860,
in Gallia County; he died 15 years
later of accidental injuries while
working as a licensed steamboat
engineer. In !BIIO Hannah married
Gabriel Comer. .
Hannah's parents, Joseph Sims
and Elizabeth Cheeseman, were
married Aug. 18, 1842, in Gallia
County. Elizabeth's sister, Emily
Susan Cheeseman, married
Washington Glassburn.
ANONYMOUS LETTERS to the
editor are a thing of the past in the
Times-Sentinel, but what does an
editor - or a columnist - do with a
complete newspaper marked with
one word which expresses an
opinion ? We'll print your letter to
the editor but we'll also print your
name with it. By mail we get a white
envelope bearing two Everett
Dirksen stamps, postmarked Toledo
4:i6oo Feb. 5. The address is in such
detail , even down to the 825 street
nwnber on Third Avenue, that it had
to be done by someone who knows
his way around this part of town .

GALIJPOIJS - A theft from ·12:43 p.m. when he lost co.ntrol of his
Clark's Jewelers, Gallipolis, is still car and slid off the nght side of lhe
road.
under investigation by city police.
Carter's car then came back on
Neal Clark, store owner, informed
the department the theft occurred the road and went off the left side,
sometime between 9 a.m. and noon travelling 30 feet and colliding with
several small trees, over an emThursday.
Clark reported he had six or eight bankment and came to rest next to a·
customers in the store and did city sewer.
Carter was not injured in the acbusiness with ~nly two at the time of
the theft. Missing are a ring display cident and slight damage was reporcase with 36 wedding bands, another ted to his car.
display case and a ring that was on . Officers said Barbara A. Vallee,
the counter when the theft occurred. 43, Gallipolis, was attempting to unP~lice are also probing a break-in· park at the Silver Bridge Plaza at
at Ward's Keyboard, Gallipolis, 12:55 p.m. when she collided with a
westbound auto driven by Carla J .
reported Thursday.
Officers said two guitars, two Swain, 31, Rt. 1, Crown City, causing
guitar cases and an amplifier, total slight damage to the Vallee auto and
value $860, are missing. No further moderate to Swain's car.
Cited by police Friday were Barry
details were available Saturday.
Police investigated a possible hit· Lanier, 18, Rt. 2, Point Pleasant, and
. Jeff Jones, Rt. 1, Point Pleasant,
and-run Friday nigtJt.
Donnie Saxo)l, Gallipolis, was both for open container; Donald E.
reportedly hit by a car on Vinton Woodie, 48, Rt. 1, Northup, for runAvenue at 8:30 p.m. and taken to ning a stop light; Chester R. Elliott,
Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia 28, Point Pleasant, for failure to
EMS, where he was treated and obey a traffic control device; and
Fred A. Harrington, 68, Rt. 2,
released for a leg injury.
Two traffic accidents were in· Gallipolis, Daniel B. Harris, 29,
Gallipolis, Robert D. Bloch, 19,
vestigated by officers Friday.
According to the report, Steven J. Gallipolis, and Timothy R. SaunCarter, 28, Rt~ 2, Proctorville, was ders, 19, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, all for
westbound on · ChiUicothe Road at speeding.

feited $65 bond.
Gerald E. Burns, Gallipolis,
charged with littering, forfeited $35
bond.
Charged with DWI, Morris D.
Harris, 3(1, Oak Hill, fined $300, sentence&lt;! to 10 days in jail, driver's

February 21
m11t

li!·,' '

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - Ohio
officials say les.S than half the applications expected to be filed under

Fires kill
five people

lieense suspended for six months
and placed on six months probation.
Ricky D. Sargent, 22, Vinton,
charged with left of center, forfeited
$30bond.
Forfeiting bond for s.,eeding were
Gary D. Cheney, 19, Kanauga, $25;
Henry W. Elliott Jr., 18, Point
Pleasant, $28; Bernard A. Lyons, 33,
Charleston, W.Va., $29.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

the Home Energy Assistance
Program have been received. The
scheduled deadline for applications
is two weeks away.
Because of the slowness in
receiving applications, the state
Development Department will ask
the state Controlling Board Tuesday
to extend the present March I
deadline for up to 3(1 days.
Latest tallies show 187,150 applications have been received out of
an expected 550,000 from the state's
low-income residents.
Meanwhile , a four-member
federal team is to spend next week in
the state to complete what James A.
Duerk, development director, says
is routine monitoring of the $90
million program to help the poor pay
their winter heating bills.

Duerk said the four-member team
plans to visit at least five of the 51
local groups which have contracted
with the state to help administer the
project.
It is designed to provide a 20 percent to 60 percent subsidy of heating
costs for the months of December,
January and February . The
maximum benefit per applicant is
$750.
Ohio officials have been the target
of criticism for their operation of the
federally-funded program, including
delays in its implementation and
problems in notifying potential
reci pients of their eligibility.
Duerk said the federal team is to
arrive Tuesday and spend four days
in the state. "This is a routine
monitoring the federal government

r~
I

!I

l

~

Make Income Tax or
-

··-·

- '•
- •,••

Checkbook Calculations
The Easy Way With An

ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR
BARGAIN
FROM ELBERFELD$
SPECIAL PURCHASE PRICE
LIST PRICE "249

'10995

WHILE THEY
LAST

·~uble

Zero Key

•Non-add Date Print Key

•Uses Standard Paper &amp; Ribbon
•Independent Memory

•12 Digit Capacity

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
·I

makes of all such progranns," he
said.
The group is expected to visit the
Columbus Metropolitan Area Community Action Organization; the
WSOS Community Action Commission Inc., in Fremont; the Akron
Metropolitan Housing Authority;
Akron American Indian Center, and
La Raza Unida de Ohio in Bowling
Green, which helps enroll migrants
for benefits.
In addition, the panel is expected
to visit Columbia Gas of Ohio, one of
eleven utilities particpating in the
program.
An Ohio Senate committee
examining operation of the program
is expected to release initial recom·
mendations soon.

1979 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 DR~

.
Monit«,
.

Bright red e&gt;&lt;terior, auto. tr ansmission, power
steer ing, econom ica l 4 cylinder engine .' Only
1,831 miles .

Bright red exterior with black custom cloth
bucket seats, 4 spd, ~ cyl., special accent
stripes, rear luggage rack, and only 4,765 tow

PRICED TO SELL

'5195

STATION WAGON
Dark burgundy exterior with ca rm ine in terior .
V·6 engine, luggage rack , e)(tra clean Inside and
out. Only 20,270 actual miles.

'5995
25,779 miles.

PRICEDAT

J~EP

4

Connie Stevens, Dean Jones and Louanne (cq) will guest star in the special two-hour
ABC-TV's new hour-long romantic/comedy/adventure series, ALOHA PARADISE, a1nng Wo•rlno&gt;&lt;rl.ov
February 18.

CHEROKEE S.W.
4 Wheel Drive

Dark brown metallic with buckskin vinyl In·
terior . Loaded with equipment like air cond .,
cruise control , ti lt wheel. AM· FM CB radio, new
rad ial tires and chrome wheels . Local doctor' s

'5995

lrade.

4 Wheel Drive
Classic black, auto. trans., P. steering, cruise
control, AM FM, air con d. and new tires on white
spoke wheels.

'5

This family sized sed an is one of a kind . Dark.
burgundy finish w i th t: armlne viny l Interior .
EQu ipment includes air , pewer windows, power
sca ts, power doorlock s, cruise, tilt wheel and
am-tm stereo radi o Only 47,781 miles. This loca l
one-owner auto has it al l.

.,

'

1978 PLYMOUTH TRAIL DUSTER

Two· tone, white with burgundy, 4 wheel drive ,
auto. trans., P. steering, rallye wheels and only ,

.

'4995
1979

1979 PONTIAC LEMANS

. '.;:

. ,..,

1980 CHEVY MONZA
miles.

page '12.

•5995

1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

1976 CHEV. CAPRICE ClASSIC 4 DR.

FEATURES:

,.

Smith Buick -Pontiac has made a special purchase of 1979 Pontiac Bonnevilles
from a nationally known executive leasing firm . The cars are equipped w ith a ir
conditioning, tilt wheel, AM· FM stereo, and power windows . Mileage range is
between 18,000 and 26,000. All are in immaculate condition and all carry Smith's
Special 100% Warranty .

1979 CHEVY PICKUP

00

'·

r•·----------------li!iiiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiii~~~---~~---~

ONLY A FEW TO CHOOSE FROM

(

.,\)

OVER 100 - Miss Belva Groce, Long Bottom,
honored In
recognition of her 101st birthday aonlversary Friday .at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center. She was presented roses from the center staff and
carnations from the Pomeroy Flower Shop. Her birthday anniversary
date was Feb. 10. Miss Groce has a br~lher, Stephen Groce, of the Tuppers Plains area. Miss Groce is In relatively good health.

HEAP officials expect additional applicants

Fires raced through homes in
IN THE LOWER right-hand cor- Columbus and Belle Center early
ner of Page One of The Bryan Times Saturday, killing four children and
for Feb. 4 is a story on a former . an adult.
Stryker High School principal who
Joel Neutzie, 12, was killed about
got two years' probation and was 2:30 a.m. when fire struck his norfined $1;000 for grand theft. The thwestern Columbus home.
headline reads, " Place Parks on
Fire officials say the · youth approbation,' ' but the one-word opinion parently died of smoke inhalation.
is written in ink immediately after
About 10 hours before the fire, his
that line: "Why? " Peeps takes that father, William, 46, had been ad" why'' to mean that the sender was
objecting to judges' putting culprits mitted
to Grantfirefighters
Hospital for
possible
heart trouble,
said.
on probation instead of jailing them.
Battalion Chief Ray Trucco said
This specific defendant changed his the blaz~ started in a wastebasket in
plea to guilty, and agreed to make the kitchen and spread through the1
restitution totaling $!) ,000, of which the second floor where the youth was
$1,570 was admission proceeds and sleeping.
$1,200 concession stand proceeds. A
In Logan County, three children,
Toledo photo studio gets the al112 years of age, died in a fire at a
remaining $230.
home eight miles north of Bellefontaine.
. DELLA QUEEN was her name
The three young victims were
through many years of residence in identified as Jenny Prater, Shirley
Gallipolis. Widowed, she moved to Dysert and;Julie Mobley. On adult
Columbus and comes back to her was also killed in the fire. She was
home in the Old French City as Mrs. Collllie McMillan, 22.
Della Longenbaker. Her name's in
The cause of the fire remains un·
the phone book thus, in two cities. determined, according to the Logan
Dick Longenbaker is a tall, County sheriff's office.
distinguished-looking man.

Judge ends eight cases
GAL!JPOLIS - Eight cases were
terminated Friday in Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
Gerald J. Swisher, Bidwell,
charged with petty theft, fined $50.
Charged with indecent exposure,
Stanley Harrts Jr., Oak Hill, for-

•

Investigation

~allipolis

By J. Samuel Peeps

•

1975 DODGE CORONET STATION WAGON
It you need a wagon - here If Is . Small V-8, auto .
trans., 9 passenger.

Special

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"

•

�</text>
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