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                  <text>Friday. March 13,1981

PoMeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wahama takes sectional

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

,~,,. -~,

,,&gt;(,, ............

morning he was at the Middleport Elementary School
to show films and talk aboul brushing; flossing and
regular checkups.

DENTAL HEALTH- An educ~tlonal program on
dental health Is being presented by R. Craig Mathews,
DDS In several schools around the county. Thursday
I

Area deaths
Mahala Rue
Mahala A. Rue, 87, 340 - Third
Avenue, died at 1 a.m. today at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy.
She and her late husband operated
the Rue Monument Company,
Gallipolis, for several years.
She was married to the late John
0. Rue, who died in 1945. She is survived by one son, Tom, Middleport.
She was born Feb. 12, 1894, to the
late Charles B. Robinson and Mary
E. Seashole Robinson. Two grandchildren survive. Three sisters and
four brothers preceded her in death.
She spent her entire life in
Gallipolis, a member of Grace
United Methodist Church.
Funeral will he 2 p.m. Sunday at
Waugh&lt;Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with Rev. James Frazier. Burial will
be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call 6-9 p.m. Satur·
day.

Lige Shields
Funeral services for Lige Shields,
80, Syracuse, who died Wednesday
at Holzer Medical Center will be
held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
Syracuse Nazarene Church with the
Rev. William Kittle officiating.
Burial will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Mr. Shields was preceded in death
by hiS parentS, Peter Rosecrans and
Mattie Norris Shields: three
brothers, Harold A., Carl B., and
Claude C. Shields and one niece Patsy Shields Radford.
Mr. Shields was a member of the
Letart Falls United Methodist Chur·
ch."
He is survived by his wife, Eya
Shields; six step-sons; four stepdaughters, one sister-in-law, Edna
Shields, Letart Falls; three nie~es.
Mary Ebersbach, Lancaster, Eileen
Beegle, Letart Falls and Claudia C.
Roush, Racine.

J. Dale Miller
J. Dale Miller, 77, Rio Grande,
died at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the
Orlando Regional Medical Center,
Orlando, Fla.
Mr. Miller was a retired employe
of the village of Rio Grande, and was
a retired farmer.
He was born February 11, 1904, in
Meigs County, son of the late John
Lewis and Minnie Alberta
Coughenour Miller. A son, John
Robert Mjller, preceded him in

death.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Zelia George Miller, whom he
married July 25, 1925, at Rio Grande.
Also surviving is a son, George
Miller, Rio Grande; four daughters,
Mrs. Dick Thomas, Gallipolis; MrS.
George O'Brian!, Bucyrus, Ohio;
Mrs. Richard Tenney, Ithaca, N.Y.;
and Mrs. Charles Huff, USK, Wash.
One sister, Mrs. Marie Cox,
Ewington; 17 grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren.
The McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
at Vinton will announce
arrangements.

Zelia Louise Pullins
Zelia Louise Pullin, 93, S. Second
Ave., Middleport, died early Friday
at the Holzer Medical Center
following an extended illness.
Miss Pullin was born Oct. 23, 1897
in West Virginia, a daughter of the
late Seymour and Mary Jane Sheline
Pullin. She was also preceded in
deatl) by several brothers and
sisters.
Surviving are a brother, Ivan
Pullin, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va ., and
a niece, Mrs. Zelia Riley, Mid·
dlei&gt;ort, with whom she made her
home. Miss Pullin was a retired
operator for the Bell Telephone Co. ·
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at the Rawlings-Coats- .
Blower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Robert Robinson officiaiting. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after 2 p.m.
Sunday.

Accident leaves
two persons hurt
Two persons were injured in
separate traffic accidents in Meigs
County Thursday.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported Paul E.
Wilson , 19, Racine. was northbound
on SR 7 on a motorcycle at 7: 10p.m.
when he went off the right side of the
road and began climbing an embankment.
The motorcycle collided with
large rocks, forcing Wilson to lose
control and slide back onto the road,
the report said.
.
Damage was severe and Wilson
suffered injuries. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Pomeroy emergency squad, where
he was treated and released.
Troopers cited Wilson for no
motorcycle endorsement.
The patrol said Clara G. Welsh, 54,
Dexter, was westbound on Salem
Twp. Rd. 16 at 5:10 p.m. when she
.saw an eastbound vehicle, applied
her brakes and slid left into the auto, .
driven by David L. Wooten, 33, Dex·
ter.
Damage was moderate to both
vehicles. Welsh was injured, but not
treated, and cit~ for left of center.

By Gary Clark
It was by the skin of their teeth
but a win Ia a win and Its on to
Glenville State College and Ill'
Reglonala for Coach Lewta Hall's
Wahama White Falcons following a
heart stopping 48-46 triumph over
Spencer Thursday night In the
finals of the Region One Section
Three tournament.
Despite playing a sub-par game
the White Falcons managed to rally
In the waning seconds behind the
clutch free throw shooting of
seniors York Ingels and Joey Roush
to claim the sectional title and earn
a berth In next weeks ~glonal
tournament.
Spencer, coached by Jack
Greathouse, gave the Mason
Countlans all they wanted and then
some before bowing out by a
narrow two point verdict.
Ironically the Bend Area Falcona
managed to squeeze out the victory
without the services ·of their
phenomlnal alar Rainbow Gibbll
who ellted the game with 5:47 left
to play via personal foulll. Although
hla departure hurt the locals con·
· slderably seniors Joey Roush, Jeff
Fowler and York .Jngelll picked up
the slack to help give Wahama the
sectional title.
The White Falcons were slugglah
from the start but still managed to
open a ten point blllge at 211-18 with
2:44 remaining In the first half. The
Yellow Jackets however scored the
final five polnlll of the second
quarter to cut the locals lead In half
at 282-21 at Intermission.
Spencer was able .to maintain
their new found momentum on Into
the third atanza when they outscored Wahama 8-2 In the opening
minutes of the quarter to take a 2928lead. A basket by Tom Tltua with
:03 seconcla left gave the Yellow
Jaclrtets a 31-30 edge going Into the
final eight :nlnutes.

AGRICUU'URE:

HEARTBEAT ~~~
AMERICAI

JTSWMIR

progH'm to communica te
this message to ttle Ameri ·

can people.

Thursday, March 19th
Is Agriculture Day,
1981

Vol. Il No. 7

Copyrighted 1981

Plus, all vehicles sold In the next
8 days will be rust proofed for FREE,
. and FREE wash Jobs for one year.

(3) NEW FIESTAS IN STOCK

Ij

~4995111

I40 MPGI

UNnL MARCH 31st

PAT HILL FORD

Middleport· Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

A suit in the amount of $31,200 was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by John Hayes and Elizabeth
Hayes, Chester, against Roland and
Paula McDole, Winchester, Va.,
Citizens National Bank, New
Market, Va., and George Collins as
treasurer.
The suit is for amount due on a
prornissory note sucured by a mortgage. The entry stated that the conditions of the mortgage have been
broken and said note was not paid.

ELBERFELDS
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
SALE

BEDSPREADS

READY TO PERFORM - Portsmouth East coocert band director W. Roy Webb, right, gels the at·
tcntloo of his musicians momenta before they per·
formed In the annuai Dlstlict 17 hand and chorus cootests In the GAHS gym Saturday morning. East was eo·
tered In the Class C division 1330 enrollment). r-tineteen

Take advantage of the Sale Prices all over the store
during our big Friday and Saturday Gel Ready For
Spring Sale.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

DILLAC
1979 CAD. DEVIUE CPE.
. de' Elegance, dark green.

9895

5
SHARP

Sfi595

GALlJPOUS - Gallia County
area fire departments were kept on
the run almost hourly Friday as they
fought several brush fires , which
destroyed some church property and
injured a Rio Grande woman .
The Vinton Volunteer Fire Department went to Bidwell-Mount Olive
Church at 4:20p.m. where a storage
buildi~g and another structure were
ignited by one of four brush fires in
the area. Total damage was listed at
$1 ,500.
The Gallia County Sheriff's Depar·
t.ment also reported approximately
10 acres of nearby land owned by
John Hager, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was also
damaged in the blaze.
Vinton volunteers earlier fought a
brush fi re on U.S. 35 across from
Buckeye Hills Career Center with
Rio Gra nd e and Thurman

Med . Blue. White Landau .
1979 OLDS CUT. BRM, CPE•••••••••••••••••• 16595
1979 OLDS.·ROYALE SEDAN •• •• •••••••••••••• '5695

U

SEDAN .•••••••••••••••••16995

1980 CHEV. CAPRICE SEDAN.••••••••••••••••• I6995
1979 PONT. TRANS AM ••••••••••••••••••••• 16995

firefi~hters.

1979 FORD FUTURA CPE•••••••••••• 0 • • • • • • • • 14995
1980

1978 FORD PINTO STATION WAGON ••••••••••••• '3595
L ow mileage, V 6, fully equipped.

VW

'

Engineers' Huntington district has
recommended a $258 million, tw()o
lock, bypass canal system replace
the 43-year-old dam at Eureka.
However, the recommendation
has gone to the district engineer in
Cincinnati, and will then travel

through division offices until it
comes up for review by the present
administration.
This will take 18 months to two
years, acNrding to Conrad Ripley,
public infonnation officer with the
Continued on A-6

Brush fires keep area fire fighters busy

1979 OLDS.CUn.ASS SUP. CPE•.

1980 OLDS. CUT.

bands and seven choirs lDvolvlng approximately 2,000
Southeastern Ohio musicians participated. Results will
be announced Monday. Gallipolis, Meigs and Ky-ger
Creek musicians performed Friday night See ad·
dltlooal photo on~-- Sallyanne Holtz photo.

Corps official says dam review
process will take up to 2 years
GALUPOUS - Improvement of
the Gallipolis Locks and Dam has
begun its slow journey through the
federal treadmill-so if you don't
hear' anything about it for the next
two years, you'll know why .
The U.S . Army Corps of

AT

M e d. blue, blue Landau .

SPRING SPECIALS

Called to the scene at 3:07 p.m.,
firemen said Mrs. James Hall suf·
fered an Injury to one of her fingers
while reportedly helping move a

RABBIT...........................16395

The wagon tongue reportedly slipped and fell on her hand. She was
taken to Holzer Medical Center,
where a hospital spokesman said
Saturday she was treated and
released.
Gallipolis firemen assisted Vinton
volunteers in extiguishing a fire at
Bidwell-Porter Elementary School
at3:05p.m.
·
According to the rl)port, a school
janitor began burning trash in a bin
when wind blew the trash into a
nearby hay field, causing $1,000
damage to hay and a fence.
Vinton volunteers were called to
the Stanley Swick residence on
Mount Tabor Road at 5:25 p.m. in

which one acre of land was
damaged.
•
The Crown City Fire Department
went to the Wayne Call property on
Cox-Mercerville Road at 9:20p.m ..
where a brush fire of unknown orig in
was burning out of control. Gallia
deputies reported . it was ex·
tinguished within an hour.
Gallipolis firemen started a hectic
day at II: 57 a.m. when they went to
the Steven Mitchell residence on
Bulaville-Porter Road and extinguished a fire caused by a soot
buildup in Mitchel l's chinmey.
They went to extingui sh a fire at
the junction of Teens Run and Davis
Continued on A-6

Extended weather, state forecasts
Partly cloudy today . High in the low 60s. The chance of precipitation is 20
percent Sunday.
Ohio Extended Forecast - For Monday through Wednesday - chance of
showers Monday and Wednesday. Fair Tuesday. Highs in the 50s Monday
and Wednesday, and in the upper 50s to mill--60s Tuesday. Lows in the 30s.

wu~on .

1977 CHEVROLET M.C••••••••••••••••••••••• 13995

8

1975 DODGE STATION WAGON •••• ~~ .':~~'~:~~~~ ••• '995
2 Dr., rad;o, p.• .. •tandard .
1978 FORD MUSTANG ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12895
1977 HONDA •••••••••••••••-••••••• :!~d~·.'.c!'~.s2295

1976 HORNET STATION WAGON. •••••• •••••••••'1895
6 cv L, air cond .. good cond.

VW

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO •••••••••••• :.D:~:~':~. 1495
1975 FORD PINTO ••••••••••• ~~~'.9.~~- .b~~r.o~~~ •• '695
Ftat bed. standard . s.c
1968 GMC PICKUP ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• u 95
197J CHEVY LUV
1976 MERCURY
1974 F250

1977 PONTIAC G.P. ••••••••••••••••••••••••'3695 .
1
1973 CADILLAC DEVIUE SEDAN••• •••• •• •••• •• 1295
1974 OLDS. CUTlASS SEDAN ••• ••••••••• ••••• '1295

2 dr. standard

DASH ER •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11695
Good cond., red w/ wh ;Ie top, au to., P-' ~9
1966 FORD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·u 5
1974

PICKUP•••••••••••••s;~n.d::~ ••11095
•

; Dr , h;g h mileage

1976 CHEVROLET WAGON •••••••• ~ •••••••••• ,11995
1975 PLYMOUTH DUSTER CPE. •••••••••••• •••• '595

SIMMONS OLDs-cADIUAC INC.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Jl095

You'll Uke Our Quality Way Of

Auto ,. P.• .. looks&amp; run• good

Doing Busineu

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

I}J

95

See or Phone: Pete Burris, Marvin Kee~h
Mike Anderson or George Harris
Ph. 992-6614

See: Garland parsons or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
992· 2196
Middleport, Ohio
S. 3rd Ave.

Pomeroy, Oh.

Open Evenings Untll6: 00
Except Thursday &amp; Saturday Tll5:00

•'·

big recipient of the taxes. This photo was taken on
Gravel HDI Rd., facing the plant's coal yard. '!be
Gavin Plant project was announced 10 years ago last
week.

BIG TAXPAYER-Since going on the duplicate In
· 1973, the Ohio Electric Company bas paid $31,802,735.96
In real estate taxes to help Gallla County's governmental bodies. The Gallla County Local Schools are a

MARCH SPECIALS

DEMANDING PROJECT- J. W. Puckett, seated, surveyor for ODIario Pipeline and Bob Campbell, job superintendent, oo phoue, were kept
busy Thursday at their office located In the former Waguer Hardware
Building In Racine. See story page 1.

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

·.

fie~~n:~t
~::i~i~~~~e~~a~~t~f~~:i ~;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;:
Beliveau. Canada.
~
Memorial Hospital.
The Rutland Unit at 7:31a.m. took
Doug Vance from Harrisonville to
Holzer Medical Center. AI 9:40p.m.,
the Middleport Unit took Edgar
Wolfe , Grant St., to Holzer Medical
Center.

10 Sections, 98 Pages 35 Cents

Sunday, March 15, 1981

Middleport

'

ON THE 10% CASH REBATE
FROM FORD.
ONLY [!] MORE DAYS
FOR THESE SUPER SAVINGS

tmts·

Court actions filed

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Roscoe
Hollon ,
Chester; Alice Struble, Pomeroy;
Joseph Vadish, Pomeroy; Helen
Nelson, Rutland.
Discharged-Christina Haning ,
Frank Mills, Thelma Capehart, Ber·
tha Spencer, Dana Welsh, Fay
Powell, Clara Paulsen, Roscoe
Hollon, Bernice Grueser.

DON'T MISS OUT

+

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

1979 OLDS.CUn.ASS CALlAS CPE.

BASEBALL SIGN-UP
Middleport Youth League signup
will be held tomorrow, Saturday,
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Middleport
Village Hall. The registration is $6.
A child must be five before Aug. I,
this year, to participate in tee-ball.
Signups after the 21st will be considered. If there are any questions,
call Kitty Cassell at 992-7873.

unba

We are p roud to annoy nce
du1 participat ion in the
nationwide Agn&lt;:ultu re Q'ay

Wahama now advancea to Region
One action nellt Thursday niRht at
7:30p.m. against the Section Four

Emergency rims
Four calls were answered by local
emergency units Thursday. At 2:31
p.m., the Pomeroy Unit took
Leonard Hess; Monkey Run, to
Holzer Medical Center.
The
Pomeroy Unit at 7:21p.m. took Paul
Wilson from Five Points to Veterans

BUS !NV ASION - Approlllmately 50 ochool bwt~e~
from 1011tbern Ohio were
parked throughout GalllpoU.
Saturday u the Old Frencb
City played boat to the anaual
District 17 mUAic cooteata.
Tblrteen vehicles were parked
aloag the riverfront when this
Sallyaone Holtz photo was
taken around 11 a.m. Saturday.

winner In the Glenville State
Colle1e gymnulum. The White
Fall:onl oppoDtDt wW either be
Richwood or Pocahontu County
wbo meet thll weekend In the
aectlon four fll!all.

In that fourth quarter ..."rry
Gibbs hit for a three pblnt pl&amp;y
followed by conaecutlve 10111 by
Kendall Weaver and Todd Kitchell
to give Wahama a S7~1 lead.
Spencer atonned beck to within two
at 57-36 and Scott Barnltl added
another two pointer to make It 59-36
wltll5 :48 to play.
Two seconds later Gibbs picked
up hla fifth personal foul and was
forced to the sideline. The Yellow
Jackets came alive again and
quickly knotted the score at SNI.
After an exchange of bulteta Jeff
Fowler gave Wahama a short-lived
42-4llead only to have Jeff Kincaid
regain the lead for Spencer at the
1:211 mark. Joey Rolllh broke free
for an easy layup giving the locall a
44-43 edge. York Ingell was foUled
after grabbing a defenalve rebound
but mlased the front end of a one
and one following a Spencer turnover Ingell waa fouled •Rain and
calmly made two free throws giving
Wahama a 48-43 edge with just :21
seconds left.

PREPARE FOR 'ruESDAY ELECTlON-Eatll
Reeae (left), poll worker with GaiUpolls 1·8 precinct,
and Helen Trout of Cheshire precinct pick up portable
voting ~ths at the county board of elections office

'

Frtday. Gallla eountlans will be voting Tuesday In a
l~lal election lor operating levies lor the Guiding
Hand School and the Samuel L. B011sard District
Ubrary.

.....

Area J.Ieeds super project
to keep economy moving
via conveyor belt began In late 1973.
The complex's slopes are located
in the western portion of Meigs
County in the Salem Center-Point
Rock areas. Other mines are fur·
nishing coal from Vinton and Athens
counties.
According to John W. Lizon,
manager of the Gavin Plant, eight
million tons of coal g~s through the
huge facility each year. Most coal
comes from the Meigs Mines,
ho.wever, some is shipped on the
Ohio River by barges from western
states in the United States and from
the Ironton area.
Lizon is the plant's first and only
manager. He came to Cheshire from
an assisl.l!nt manager's post at the
Continued on D-6

niversary went unnoticed . last
By DALE ROTHGEB, Jr.
Tuesday.
·
OVP News Editor
Ten
years
ago,
Ohio
Power
anCHESHIRE - Another shot in the
ann similiar to the big one 10 years nounced plans to construct a 2.6
agC&gt;-the James M. Gavin Plant- is kilowatt, coal-burning power plant
needed to keep the economy moving on the Ohio River , south of here at a
cost of $488 million.
in the Tri-County Area.
The new facility was named the
Since going on the Gallia county
General
James M. Gavin Plant,
tax duplicate in 1973, Ohio Electric
honoring
a veteran director d
Co., owner of the Gavin Plant, has
·
American
Electric Power Co. and
paid $31,802.735.96 in real estate
·
one of the nation's popular heroes of
taxes.
Maybe, the multi-billion World War ll. It's located on 1,000
gasification plant in Point Pleasant acres purchased in 1967.
In conjunction with the plant came
or construction of the new Gallipolis
$11:&gt;-million
deep mine coal coma
Locks and Dam Canal will be just
plex
which
provides
coal to the
what it takes for the Gallia·MeigsPlant.
Construction
of the
Gavin
Mason area to recover from the
mining
complex
began
in
the
fall of
current recession.
1971.
Coal
deliveries
from
the
mines
It's hard to believe, but an an-

Completion of highway
vital to region--Bush
By KEVIN KELLY
GALUPOUS - Some new hope
for completion of the Appalachian
Highway was raised last week when
$1.5 million was approved by the
Ohio House Finance Committee to
finish part of the ro~d through
Brown County ,
And to one regional counci l of·
ficial, even a morsel is something to
cheer about.
" We're very pleased with the
steps whi ch have been taken," said
G. Kenner Bush, chainnan of the
ltighway use conuniltee of the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
(SEORC) .
" We recognize there are other
proj ects, but thi s is the one we've
been pushing for," he added .
The conuniltee has been urging
completion of the hi¥hway since the
early 1970s when increasingly
tighter budgets lor the Ohio Department of Transportation prevented
the state from contributing its 20
percent funding to the project.
And despite a vastly paired-down
budget for this year in which almost
no funds are available for new highway projects or improvements. a
line item inserted into the budget appropriating money for the Brown
County project was approved. A
Holl.'le floor vote on the budget is an·
ticipated for Tuesday at t11e earliest.
" It's vital to this region," Bush
said about highway completion. "It
would gi•.'e southeast Ohioans an opportunity to compete for better jobs,
it would help in rnoying coal, and it
would meet its original pur·
pose- primary highway develop·
ment."

four-lan e roads-the five-mile
bypass at Piketon to Chillicothe and
from Athens to Coolville.
SEORC has been kept bll.'ly
pushing for completion by involving
the chambers of commerce in areas
affected by the highway by convincing their local governments to
pass resolutions urging the state to
finish the road, he continued.
"We're seeking a bipartisan approach, :· noted Bush, publisher of
the Athens Messenger and a member of the Ohio University board of
trustees.
While the million approved by the
conunittee "isn't a lot of money,"
Bush said passage of a new gasoline
tax- being sought by ODOT In this
year's budget- is about the only option the state has to raise funds for
highway improvement.
"Ultimately, a gas tax increase
would be involved," he said. "The
increase would not be used only to
generate money for potholes, but
keep highways in good shape.' ~

ends near Piketon. Or at least that's
where the major part of the road en·
ds- the last of it leads into a field
near Cincinnati , the highway 's
original-destination.
The main stumbling block to completion is the state's inability to
come up witbl funding for three
project.&lt; to complete the road.
Federal money for the project was
obtained through the Appalachian
Regional Commission (ARC).
The Broll'n County project, advocated last week by House Speaker
Vernal Riffe ()).New Boston) , runs
through part of Riffe's legislative
district.
"If this were a new highway it
would be different," Riffe said at the
time . " But this is a road stretching
from Marietta to Cincil)Oati and only
15 miles remain to be built. "
With money ava ilable for the
project, two other areas need im·
provemen\, ·Bush said. Those areas
are parts of the highway which
should be changed from tw()oJane to

Inside today.

• •

Area deaths . . • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . • . • . . . • . • . • . . • D-2

Business .•. . . . • . • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . • . . . • . • . • . • • D-5
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IJ-6.9
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Commentary ·and perspective
•

Sunday Times-sentine)

-

March 15, 1981

Freedom of information:
15 questions.......______~------L-ar_rr_Ew_in_g==-=:....::...

The
Monroe
.
Doctrine,
.I
presume
?..___ _ _ _ _ _ _w_iuw_·"_'F_.B_uc_kte_r---'-'Jr.
.
.

When President Reagan the other
day made reference to the Monroe
Doctrine, it was as if someone had
rediscovered the Lost Chord. The
Monroe Doctrine had become, since
the October 1962 crisis, a fugitive
term, used only with some embarrassment by historians required
to teach atavistic United States
diplomacy. Mr. Reagan's rebaptism of the Monroe Doctrine is
nothing less than ·a spiritual experience. It is as if one couid get Ar·
thur Schlesinger to refer to the
military-industrial complex as the
"arsenal of democracy," which it
was once called; or John Kenneth
Galbraith to stop in midsentence
next time he uses the term "cold
warrior" and reformulate it into
''freedom fighter.''
Having ' given
us
the
relegitimization of the Monroe Doc-

•

trine, Mr. Reagan owes us one thing
more. In this space a few weeks ago
I committed a careless error fo~
which I have been chastised by that
eminent attorney C. Dickerman
Williams, whom I once accurately
described as the best thing to happen
to the Constitution since the Founding Fathers. I made some reference to the repeal of the Monroe Doctrine implicit in President Kennedy's promise to Nikita Khrushchev not to invade Cuba, nor to countenance aid to . Cuban freedom
fighters from the United States. I
wrote as if Mr. Kennedy's decision
were in some way binding on his successors. I was most misleading.
There are three kinds of e&lt;ecutive
agreements. The first is done pursuant to an act of Congress, of which
an example would be trade

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publication. However, IJf1 request, names will be disclosed . L~tt~r.s should be m ~otood Ulste. &lt;lddressing issue:~. not pe~onal i tieil .
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•
The AsSt:ICi~~otOO Press is e!Cl'lusively entitiM to lht' ust' fur pubhccltwn uf all Lle"'·s \IL :s p&lt;~tche
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~~ ~~~ . -..a.-

agreements entered into uder the
authority of the reciprocal Trade
Agreement Act of 1934. A second are
executive agreements made by the
implicit exercise of powers granted
to the president by the Constitution,
an example of which are
arrangements entered into by
President Roosevelt at .Teheran,
Casablanca and Yalta, while exercising his authority as conunanderin-chief.
Athird is an agreement made by a
president serving in his capacity as
chief administrative officer whom
subordinate officers are logically expected to obey. President Monroe,
our hero of the hour, promulgated '
the Rush-Bagot Agreement with
Great Britain for laying up of warships in the Great Lakes. President
Theodore Roosevelt agreed, in
negotiations with Santo Domingo
(now the Dominican Republic), to
look after its financial affairs, and
President Wilson, in the ·LanslngIshiti Agreement of 1917, recognized
the special interests of Japan in North China.
All the above were reversed by
successor presidents. The late Edwin Burchard, professor of international law at the Yale Law
School, wrote that " an executive
agreement, as the name indicates,
'binds' only as long as it suits both
sides. It normally 'binds' only the
signing executive, not his suc-

for instance, he took the occasion to
announce that the agreement was ' 'a
direction· of the Chief Executive,
which would lapse when that particular executive left office."
Moreover, if it makes any difference, the Soviet Union has In effect taken the same position. When
Lynllon Johnson succeeded JFK,
Khrushchev took to the air to announce that President Johnson

~
.

~

"assured us that he would stick to
the promises made by President
Kennedy with regard to Cuba."
Presumably, President Johnson had
the option not to slick liy those
promises,
President Reagan, who thinks
rationally, understands the first law
of logic, the law of contradiction,
namely that nothing can both exist
and not exist at the same time.

Therefore, by reaffirming the,;.
Monroe Doctrine, President Reagan :;
is bound to repudiate, or - a better ·
word - armounce the expiration of
any commitments respecting Cuba
entered into by President Kennedy,..
Thi~ doesn't commit us to anything .. ·
concrete, merely to acknowledge. .
that ~what is going on in Cuba is in ,,
violation of the Monroe Doctrine; ·
which is very much alive.

~

~:1~~

' -1¥

~·

.Times-Sentinel Op-Ed

'

On Monday, March !&amp;-the birthday of James Madison, the principal author of the Bill of Rights-the
United States will observe Freedom
of Infonnation Day.
•
Reflections on the occasion:
~What if newspapers, radio and
television stations had to submit
stories to censors appointed by the
government before printing or
broadcasting them? In Cuba and
otber countries, a governmentapproved offici a I checks the
headlines and content of the official
newspapers as the pages are made
up. .
.:;.What if reporters were barred
from meetings of city councils, state
agencies, Congress and other official bodies? Decisions would be
reported .'by official communiqu~.
wlt\ch is the way it is done in many
COllfltries.
-What if Woodward and Ber-

-What if foreign reporters were
nsteln had been forbidden to write
met
in New York or Washington,
about Watergate? Anything that
smacks of criticism of those , in given an official government
power is banned .in dozens of coun· position paper, and told they could
not enter the United States to obtries.
- What if Pentagon and State serve and report? It happens
Department reporters were for- somewhere in the world virtually
bidden to write about arms ship- every day when an American
ments or the sending of U.S. military correspondent arrives at the border.
-What if reporters were forad~ors to El Salvador? Military
bidden
to' write about shortages of
news is specifically censored in
many nations, including the &amp;*oviet · food and consumer goods, inUnion and Israel.
flationary pnces or anything that
-What if reporters were barred might lead to speculation over
from all courtrooms where justice is prices of these products? In
dispensed? It happens regularly Nicaragua, Decrees Sll and 512 foroverseas. In Texas a few days ago, a bid just that unless it comes from of·
,
judge barred a Houston Chronicle ficialdom.
reporter from his courtroom for· a
-What if law enforcement ofday becasue he didn'tllke something ficials entered newsroonns to search
the reporter wrote. Numerous desks and files for confidential
pretrial hearings are routinely material? It happens overseas and,
closed in the United States, despite . in a dozen or so instances in recent
years, in the United States.
vigorous objections.

Letter
to the editor
...
:1 have a grave warning for the
people. I have learned from a sevet
scliirce that the Rus!ians have contaminated America with a new bactill'la that infects the moral fiber of
tim brain, softening it bit by bit until
the victim becomes a Christian
passivist. This situation is critical. if
this Commie plague spreads, the

cessors."
This is not an analysis that has
been resisted. When Theodore
Roosevelt concl uded
his
arrangements with Santo Domingo,

I

GORED OX, AGAIN.

Berry's

I

United States will be emasculated.
Washington is trying to suppress
public knowledge of this crisis to
avoid panic. They hope to develop a
serum to counter the bacteria before
it infects the whole society. But,
what if they don't find the serum in
time? That's why I've decided to go

World -~____,
. '

Drug·smugglers operate with
big·business flai r. . ____-'-..---.....,J-~w_·k_·A_'_uL_er_so_'_l- - -

Iran in brief
Have you noticed anything different about Iran lately?

•

It isn't making the headlines it did for so long and until so recently. The

country and its continuing tumult have by no means dropped out of the
news, but they have slipped from front to inside pages.
It could, of course, be sheer coincidence that this has followed so
rapidly upon the release of the hostages. But it is not.
This country and the rest of the energy-eonsuming world have long since adjusted to the impact of the Iranian revolution on oil ecqnomics an&lt;i
politics. The war with Iraq is stalemated, and in their internal SCJuabbles
the revolutionaries have been repeating themselves for some time . In
short, there's not much new coming out of Iran to make news.
With the removal of the hostage issue that had brought that country's
institutionalized chaos so intensely and personally home to this country,
Americans havo with something like relief turned their attention to other
matters-to the settling in of the Reagan administration, early skirmishing over the budget and economy, and the explosive development of
a new international crisis in El Salvador.
If this comes as relief to Americans, it could also be of some benefit to
Iran. A little less publicity for a time may make it somewhat easier for
the Iranians to bring themselves to the compromises and accomodations
necessary in dealing with their manifold problems, most of which they
have brought upon themselves. The revolution has a great deal of unfinished business to dispose of.
This is a situation and a period when little news may in fact be the best
news.

Lying about the FTC
The Reagan administration has backed down on the proposal of Director David Stockman of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to
gut the independent Federal Trade Commission (FTC) by denying it fun·
ds for anti-trust enforcement.
Congress directed 67 years ago that two, not one, federal agencies
prevent monpolies and cartels in the United States. Presidents and
Congresses of both major parties have confirmed this as a national policy
ever since.
Stockman, in the name of purported efficien~y and savings, proposed to
consolidate the FTC responsibility in the Department of Justice's antitrust division. Justice is under White House control.
Since he could not repeal the law, to reward · special interest contributors to conservative organizaliqns supporting the Reagan campaign,
he propsed to deny it funds. Such is the strength of financial managers
and budget officers if not challenged when they exceed their authority.
OMB spokesmen and Martin Anderson, domestic policy advisor to the
president, deny that it was ever OMB's intention to abolish the FTC's anti-trust role. But there is in public hands a February 7 memorandum from
OMB to the FTC which describes the cut as part of a 3&amp;-month
" ... phaseout of the maintaining competition mission" and cites ;;avings to
result from "elinlination of the anti-trust enforcement in the FTC."
Like all the 'independent regulatory agencies' which are supposed to be
free of White House interference but are not because their budgets are
subject to OMB review, the FTC remains in deep trouble. But this incident should put Stockman in deep trouble, too. For however much OMB
and White House staff deny it, the facts are in the written record, making
denials of Stockman's attempted lies.

Today in history.

• •

Today is Sunday, March IS, the 74th day of 1981. There are 291 days left
in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On March IS- the Ides of March - 44 B.C., Roman Emperor Julius
Caesar was assassinated.
On this date:
In Jn6, the U.S. Congress resolved that the authority of the British
' Crown should be suppressed.
In 1944, AUied forces launched a heavy attack against the Germans on
Monte Cassino in Italy in World War II.
In 1975, Aristotle Onassis, the Greek shipping magnate and husband of
Jacqueline Kennedy, died in Paris at the age of 59.
•
In 1979, Pope John Paul II issued his first encyclical, warning against ·
the anns race, uncontrolled technological advances and materialism.
Ten years ago: A fourth round of Soviet-American Anru! Limitation
- Talks opened in Vienna.
Five years ago: the Congressional budget office warned toot further
budget cuts proposed by then-President Ford might slow the decline In
unemployment.
Orie year ago: Gerald Ford announced he would not seek the
Republican nomination for president, saying his candidacy would only
divide the party,

WASHING1'0N - Major drug
smuggling organizations are
definitely big bu,siliess, even though
they're not in the Fortune 500 list of
leading corporations. In 1979 alone,
for example, illicit drug traffic in the
United States generated an
estimated $54 billion in retail sales.
Not surprisingly, the dope peddlers have aped the corporate structure of legitimate business firms. "A
structured organization, comprised
of both legitimate and illicit
businesses, enables the traffickers
to sustain losses without having to
halt all of their operations," a
classified Drug Enforcement Administration study reports. The
masquerade of respectability also
makes it tougher for law enforcement people to separate the
legal from the illegal activity.
The classified DEA study gave a
detailed description of one largescale marijuana and cocaine
smuggli~g operation that was based
in Illinois, Georgia and Florida. Intelligenc,e sources told my associate
Dale Van Alta the information was
developed on the outfit's activities in
1977 and 1978 from both surveillance

and informants.
Here's the ~~typical scenario" for
the smugglers' high-flying illicit
operation, taken from . the DEA
report :
" The aircraft would depart the
United States, usually from a controlled airport, and either fly directly to Colombia or via one of sever!
Caribbean islands. The plane would
·land in. Colombia after dark, where
associates loaded ·and refueled the
aircraft for the return to the United
States.
" The group had access to severa l
U. S. airports and airstrips capable
of handling large aircraft. Several
hours prior to the arrival of an aircraft, a team of ground support personnel, ranging in number from
1!ight to 20, would arrive at the airstrip with multi-wheeled vehicles,
including tractor-trailers and 2'-'z ton
dump trucks.
"Electronic equipment, including
scanners, air-tc&gt;-ground radios and
CBs, would be used to monitor law
enforcement activity in the area and
to permit communications between
the air and ground crews. Upon
arrival of the plane, the ground crew

Post exchange
The Post Office is going to make
one more attempt to see that people
address their mail correctly. If this
fails, it's going to have to resort to
drastic measures.
I was informed of this by a relative
who works in the Post Office, who
said the PO was losing patience with
its customers. "We've done
everything we could to make life
easier for the customer. We've
raised the rates of first-class mail,
we've given everyone a five-digit.
ZIP code, we've put restrictions on
the size and shape of the envelopes,
and still the mail is late. We have no
choice but to take stronger steps to
preserve the system."
" How's that? " I asked.
"We're going to up the price of first-class stamps to 18 cents, and institute the nine-digit ZIP code. In
that way, the customer will know we
really mean business."
"I'm not too clear how raising the
price of the stamps and adding a
nine-digit ZIP code is going to help.
Most people have trouble remem-

would use flashlights to illwninate
the strip.
"The planes usually landed in the
early morning hours and were offloaded by means of a human conveyor system; typically, a plane was
completely offloaded in less ihan one
hour . The drugs were loaded onto
the large vehicles and transported to
severa l storage facilities and
distribution · points in Missouri,
Illinois and Georgia."
The smuggling organization's corporate structure was that of any
legitimate conglomerate. Its various
companies served as fronts to buy,
!ell and register the vehicles and
aircraft
needed . Senior
management set budgets fo; the
various activities, including
acquisition of remote farms ,
warehouses and airports .to accommodate the shipment and
storage of the dope.
"Each employee had a specific job
title and function, and a definite
place in the chain of command," the
DEA report said. The highest
salaries went - as in any legitimate
corporation - to top executives. But
those employees "directly engaged

in smuggling activities' also made
top dollar. Pilots of the large aircraft, for example - DC-4s, DC-6s
and DC-7s - reportedly were paid
$100,000 per trip, while the ground
crews got $10,000 apiece per mission.
If an employee was arrested, the
report said, a staff of attorneys
would be dispatched to get the
suspect out on bail. ·• Afterwards,
each defendant reportedly un- .
derwent a polygraph examination to :
determine if he or she was .'
cooperating with any law en- ·
forcetnent agency," the report ,
noted.
And while the DEA specifically ·
described the srnuggllng operation .:
as "not a traditional organized :;
crime group," it said the illicit corporation "employed techniques,
technical equipment and disciplines
nonnally associated with these
groups."

prove?"
"If the nine-digit ZIP code doesn't
sober people up, we have a contingency plan that will change the
entire system."
"What's that?" I asked.
" We're going to make the
customer dellver his own mail. ' '
''How are you going to do that ?''
" It will go something like this: After a person writes. a letter, he will
take it down to the post office and
Bl510t5. He 11A51118fill IN 5IJ(JI
I'W? 'iPI/1!15/N lfM5'fJI/{)~'5
/lAVING 5/KJi RJJ!IX! !W KJoQI/
lillY II&amp;

Fri.·Sat. 9 Jm til 10 pm

ClOSED SIINOAYS

a remote park in Washington, after
submitting their names and addresses? It happened in Peking last
year.
·
-What if American journalism
schools were closed for 'purification
and Republicanization' 'of the
faculty? It happened in Iran last
year--for 'purification and
lslamicization' of the faculty .
-What if Washington decided to
appoint the key editor for the local
newspaper in an attempt to curb
criticism of the government? It happened in Ghana during the past
yea·r.
- What if public records were sealed
away lind reporters told they could
not be inspected • It is done routinely
overseas, and hardly a day passes in
the United States when a newspaper
or broadcast station doesn 't have to
light for access to these docwnents.

A grave warning. ...or, you gotta break some eggs
public with my information. We · ·whether they are murdered by commust take action to protect our- munists or capi talists - you have
selves bel ore it's too late.
progressed to the second stage of the
Be on the look out for signs of in- infection. Quarantine yourself imfection in your own moral fiber. In mediately! Treatment will be difthe initial stages of Christian ficult. Get a lipstick and write on the
passivism you will come to believe bathroom mirror, " If we don 't, the
the U.S. ought to stop sending Russians will ." Stare resolutely at
military aid to El Salvador because · this message scrawled across your
it will be used to murder our reflection until you feel your moral
Salvadoran brothers and sisters. fiber begin to harden. Remember,
Resist the thought! They're killing America 's wealth depends on exCommies, not people. You might ploiting the labor and resources of
wonder if each of the 10,000 persons the Third World. We have the right
killed last year was actually a to impose "stability" even if that
Marxist. Don' t worry about it! Even means a· few thousand people must
if they weren't all Commies, they die. You may imagine you hear
were all poor! Think! Isn't it among Christ's voice saying, "As ye do-unto
the poor that the left does its best the least of these, ye do unto me."
recruiting? If they hadn't been killed Don't let it get to you! If you ignore it
yesterday, they might be long enough, it will fade away. Do
. revolutionaries today. If you ate still . not under any circumstances give in
feeting bad, go into a dark room and to the sorrow of Christ's suffering.
repeat 100 tiines, ''You gotta break a 'That would cause the infection to
few eggs to make an omelet." settle in your heart where it is very
However, you must strictly avoid difficult to treat.
visualizing mutilated bodies in the
The third stage of Christian
omelet or your moral fiber will sof- passivism is almost irreversible. It
ten even faster.
is marked by flashes of insight
If you begin to wonder why the during which the victim realizes that
U.S. supports so many dictators World War Three will kill scores of
throughout the Third World (some millions of innocent people while the
even more brutal than the Com- evil ones directing it stay safely unmunists l - if you begin to suspect derground . Some people are so upset
tllat poor people don't really care by this vision that they decide to

withhold the military portion of their
income tax (about 50 percent). It is
current government policy to simply
ignore such people so as not to call
attention to them. they ought to be
jailed. The great American income
tax collection system must be maintained inviolate. It is the very cornerstone of our military posture.
Westinghouse, GE, and the other
giant corporations will not go on
preparing for nuclear war unless we
pay them. Each citizen must contribute his or her share or the banks
won't be there when it's time to use
them.
In the final phase of Christian
passivism, the infected persons
believe we ought actually to demonstrate to our enemies that we do indeed love them. They call for C9mplete American disarmament. When
more rational people suggest that
might lead to a Russian invasion,
they simply reply, "What a grand
opportunity that would be to lvoe our
enemies face to face." I guess these
deranged people plan to invite the
Russians home to dirmer.
If you are infected and it's gone
that far, there's no hope for you .
You'll soon be writing letters to the
ectitor as goofy as this one. - Erny
Davis, Rt. I, Box 42, Langsville, Oh .
45741.

Caution:
The Ohio Valley Publishing Company Has

"TONIGHT, I'm ce/ebrating ·the possibility of an
oil glut."

--''

'Determined That Reading Can Be Habit-

'

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...
•",.

"BY THE SAME RULE"
j

was sending a check to someone in :
Maryland would pick up your letter ;
and get itto your Aunt Flora.
,
"That sounds like a great idea," I :
said. "Through rain or sleet or dark ·_
of ~ight the customer will get your ~
mat! to you . If that plan goes •
through , will you be able to lower the ;
price of a postage stamp and ;
eliminate the ZIP code?"
'
"No, we'll have to raise the postal :.
rates to 20 cents, because we'll have :
to hire more people to see that the '
customer delivers the mail properly. '
Also, we have to keep the new ZIP _
code or our stamp-cancellng •
machines won't work. The only ad- ~
vantage of the new system will be :,
the customer will be involved with :.
the mail service, and will un- ',
derstand how difficult it is to get a ·,
letter to where it's addre'l"ed ."
~
"Will the customer also have to ~
deliver junk mail?"
•·
"Certainly not. That mail is much '
too valuable to leave in the hands of '
someone who is not trained in our -,

business,"

Forming. Pick Up A Good Habit Today ..

William B. Kugbn

Art Buchumld
have the stamp canceled. Then he
·will proceed to the addressee's
house and drop it in his mailbox. If
he wants to get it there fast, he can
take a taxi. If he isn't rushed, he can
take the bus or subway, or even walk
it there. But our responsibility ends
as soon as one of our employees cancels the stamp."
" I understand that would speed
things up in the same town. But suppose someone in Louisville is sending a letter to someone in California . That wouldn't work very well
for him."
" We have the answer for that. The
person in Louisville would deliver
someone else's letter from California to someone in Louisville, and the
person in California would deliver
the Louisville letter to the person in
the town in• which he lived. For
example, if you were writing'lo your
Aunt Flora in Burbank, you would go
to the post office and after the stamp
on the letter was canceled, you
would pick up a letter from
Pasadena. Someone in Burbank who

-What if the tolls of dead and
missing and other details of the
Mount St. Helens volcano, the MGM
Grand Hotel fire and the string of
murders in Atlanta were never
reported? News of this type is never
disseminated within many countries.
·
- What if a political cartoonist
were fined for poking fun at Ronald
Reagan ? In Portugal, a cartoonist
was fined $5,000 last year for lampooning the president of that country.
- '!\'hat if terrorists routinely kidnapped, tortured ana killed journalists in an attempi to silence
them? It occurred with regularity
during 1980 in Bolivia, Guatemala,
Lebanon, El Salvador, Syria and
Turkey.
- What if dissenting journalists
were told they ·could put up wall
posters with their views , but only in

STOU HOUlS:

Mon.. ThtJfl, 9 am til 9:3(1 pm

..

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

bering a five-digit number."
"We have to make the customer
realize that when he mails a letter,
he has a responsibility for getting it
to the other end. He can no longer
just dump it in a mailbox and expect
the Post Office to do all the work for
him. We've tried to be nice about it
in the past, but all we had to show for
it were slower deliveries, lost !~t­
Iers, and lower productivity. So
we've taken the next step. The letter-writer is either going to have to
shape up or ship out."
"So you believe by taking a hard
line, the Post Office service will im-

Page-A-3,

March 15, 1981

~

DOONESBURV •
"

,,

11
"

•H

.

'"

Jesus prayed thai al l who wou l d believe on Him through the
apcstles' word be " made periect in one" (Jno , 17 ;20·231 . Paul
urged I he Corin th i an Christians to " be perfe c tly joined togetner
in the same mind and in the same judgment" ( I Cor . 1: 10) .
" Perfectly'' means' ' comp l ete ' ', and '' ioi ned togehter'' signifies
" un i ty ", ttlerefore, they were to be completely united in mind
(knowledge) and judgment (dec ision) . This unity would result
in their "speaking the same thing", doing away with " divis ion"
in the church. Pftul exhorted the Christians at Galatia and
Philippi to ma intain th is spiritual perfec;tncss at comple teness
(unity, oneness) by walk ing " according to tnis rule·· (Gal . 6 : 16 1
or "by the same ru le" CPhil . 3 : 16) .
" Rule" comes from the Greek " kanon ," having referenced
to a mettsurlng devi ce such as a st raight rod, sti ck, or a
carpen t er's line used In t es ting strai'ghtness, or an instrum'e nt
used in weav ing so as to maintain straightness. It refers to a
standard or principle that imparts !he ic:nowledge needed to
reoulate one's actions . The " word" t hl'lt Jesus gave the apostles
(Jno. 17 : Ul was from God (J no. 17 :61 . It is the "truth" by which
we are sanctified (Jno. 17 : 17, 19) and through which we are
brought to bel ieve on Christ (Jno, 17 :20) . The word , truth, or
gospel is the " nile" or "God's mesuring device" that impar ts
the knowledge of t he tru e rule by which we are to regulate our
actions in matters of sal vation or gospe l services in the spiri tual
·realm.
We are united in knowledge when it comes to the rules of
measurement, of weight, f"d of time. All of us know , believe ,
and abide by them, accept1ng 36 inches in a yard, 16 ounces in a
pound, and 60 minutes in an hour . The knowledge of such rules
does away with ignorance or opinions. Likewise, when it comes
to God's d ivine rule , th e word , we can know beyond a doubt the
plan of sa lvation. the pattern of dhline worship, and how to live

the ChriStian life. The knowledge of the " rule of faith" will do
away with ignorance and opinions . 11 we were to treat the ear ·
thly rules as we do the spiritual rule , there would be just as
much ch·aos, confusio n, and divison in the world as there Is in
religion . We must stamp out .' 're ligious division'' by respect i ng
te~ith! " God's rul e or standard
mustnotbe ch anged!
'

and accepting God's " rule of

!(J/,af'l .1(;'1/ '(/j{uor/,

o/

!(J/oi~l

Bulavtlte Road • P 0 Bo• 308
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
sundil'f' Mornin9
Billleitudyf :lO
worsl\lp 10: 30

Sun"lil'f Evening
Wor51'Up . I 00

weonudiiY

....

Eve nino

kad10
•· M•t.uee Iron,
Ull Bi!JIII"

Oally· WJ Eti
li.UAM

· "The Church with the Messoge"

For Home Delivery Call:

r---PRODUCE---.

;l~r~;~[~s

Meigs County 992-2156

Gallia County 446-2342
Mason County 675-1333
·We've Got You Covered

/' ~~- $}99

I\lfti

NESWl

I

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1

INSTANT cofFEE
$]69 Wilit

10 O~
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COUpon 1

: Good Ontv at Barr' s Exp.l/21181

1

·-------- ----------- 1

�Corp~. • •

: GUEST SPEAKER - Melvin

{I; Chapman, past stale com·

(Continued from Page AI )
Huntington district.
.
"The report ultimately reaches
the administration, who will then see
if it fits in with their budget plans,"
he said.
The plan will call for extensive
work on the dam , called an
engineering marvel when built in the
1930s and now considered " a country
road detour off a major expressway" by one of its frequent
·customers , American Electri c
1
Power.
A 1,200 foot main lock is included
in the plan with a 600 foot auxiliary
lock. The present lock at the dam is
only 600 feet long, meaning the
breaking up of coal, oil or chemical
barges in order to make what would

·. pnder of the American Legion,
.jiU·be guest speaker at a dinner
eommemorating the 63rd anafrersary of the Legion at the
Legion Home on Bob McCormick
·Road today at I p.m.

be a routine passage through other all a process of waiting and seeing her some barges were waiting more
!,201).foot locks in the tri-state area whatwiUhappen."
than100hourstomal!eapassage.
at Racine, Winfield, W.Va , and
Interest in \he dam was renewed
Public interest in improving the
Greenup, Ky.
late last year when the corps dam was eitpressed in a hearing at
Ripley said the review process will released its four-year, $2 millJon the West Virginia side of the dam in
also include further input from state .study of traffic problems at the dam. September, 1978, and again last Dec.
and federal agencies as well as Five plans were outlined and studied 18 In Huntington, in which governbusinesses and other concerns ir&gt;- by the corps, but from the beginning ment and business leaders were
terested in river traffic.
it appeared Plan B would be the united in support for the dam's im" Any stale along the river would project recommended for irn· provement.
be interested, including those along plementalion.
The only opposition to the plan
FIRST TELEPHONE
the Mississippi who would be a£Traffic at the dam has increased came from a member of the West
DIRECI'ORY
fected by river commerce," he said.
dramatically since the mid-1950s Virginia chapter or the Izaak Walton
The first telephone directory in the
Ripley noted the Reagan ad- and has caused many tie-ups since
League, who expressed concern for world was published Feb. 21, 1878,
ministration is "certainly taking then. The most serious were in May, · the environmental impact a new listing the 50 subscribers to the New
some whacks" at inland river 1977 and in November, 1980, when dam project would have on the a?efr. Haven, Conn., Telephone Co.
projects in its federal spending the study was released. In Novem'
The representetive also suggested a
slashes, but he anticipates support .--~--=-----------=---~--:.:...------------­
for dam improvement will be as
strong in two years as it is now.
" There's no way in the world to
second-guess what the administration will do," he said. " It's

Has Sprung

'

/Jrush . ..

Marcil 15, 1981

bridge be put on top any new dam at
the site.
News Plan B would be sent to Cincinnati was announced by Col.
James Higman, district engineer, at
a meeting of the Point Pleasant
Rotary Club March 4.
•

sprln9

..- .

;l:

Marcil IS, 1981

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

Page-A-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pentagon hoard proposes draft revivai:!~:::~;:~~~~:f.
·

WAS~N~TO~AP) - A Pen-

tagon. 8 V1B ry
_rd has pr~sed
revlvmg the draft .1?, a new t.ry It
before y~u buy 11 fonn giVIng
youths a SIX-months taste of nuhtary
Iafe before makmg them choose bet·
ween longer. active or reserve service.
The proposal was advanced by the
Reserve For~es Policy Board as a
way of solvmg a chrome la_ck of
tramed manpower available m the

·
eve?t of mobilization. The board's
cha1rman, Lows J. Conti, told
Congress the Reserve and National
Guard forces still fall short in
strength.
Conti called the board's plan a
"try it before you buy it" approach
to military service for young people.
His report given to Congress this
week indicated the board primarily
is thinking of drafting young men,
but at one point he left open the

.
possibility of !!rafting women, " if
mandated by Congress."
The board recommended changes
in the existing registration laws to
require classification, which is not
now carried out, and to move toward
establishment of local draft boards
to " enable the deferment process to
take place now."
The recommendations, as outlined
by Conti, did not address the
question of what kipd or defennents

could be granted.
The board serves as a principal
policy adviser to the secretary of
defense " on matters relating to the
reservei!Omponenls."
1~ hiB report, Conti made it clear
that the board was not speaking for
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger in proposing the reswnption
of mandatory military service for
the fir8t time since 1973.
Weinberger and President Reagan

registration which began last year
on orders of former President Jin;
my Carter.
As proposed by the board, youths
would be obliged to serve six months
on active duty, starting with three to
four weeks of ''military orientation," followed by basic and advanced individual training.
After orientation, the draftee
would be given the ·option of
choosing active duty of atleast three
years In the service of his choice,

NO LIMIT!
NO COUPON!

...

.... ...

Pomeroy-M.iddleport-Gallipolls, Ohio--Point Pleasant, w. Va .

Page-A-7"

enrollment in a Ready Reserve unit
or in the Individual Ready Reserve
of the Anny or Marine Corps.
The Individual Ready Reserve is
the manpower pool from which a()tive, ·reserve and National Guard
units are reinforced in a crisis.ISSUES WARNING
POMEROY - Bags of garbage
are being left on Pomeroy streets
and thrown out at Beech Grove
Cemetery, the Pomeroy Police
Department reports. Offenders will
be prosecuted to the fullest extent of
the law, the department warns. ·

THOROFARE

2%

MILK

...... ... .._.RnAILS
......._EFFECTIVE
..._ . .._ THRU
... ._ ......SAT.,
...,....MAR. 21,
,., 1981
,., ,.,..... .....

SJ79·
Gallon

AT

(Continued from page AI)

~ads at I: 42 p.m. , while additional

velonteers were called out roughly
UirO. minutes later to the Stanley G.
Ti:Jor residence on Georges Creek
R!J'!rl, where a small fire started in a
d~ective fuse box.
:~e fire was put out when firemen
i)ift~onnected the current, the report
s4i~.
-flremen put out a brush fire on
!a)a&lt;er Road near Neighborhood
~4d at 4:58 p.m., caused by bur"OJS brush blown onto adjoining
p~operty , The fire burned apJ)i!iimately a hall-acre on land
oirned by Mark Davis and Click
'WOOdward, according to the report.
'•''Meanwhile, firefighters from
srracuse, Racine, and Pomeroy
were busy late Saturday afternoon
f!khting a brush and grass fire in the
Doccas area of Meigs County.
:i\,pproximately 100 acres owned by
several property owners were in\1&gt;Ived. The Ohio Division of
F\lcestry brought in a bulldozer to
~lp bring the fire under control. .
:Several homes in the urunediate
afea were also threatened.

'.

~)une directory
'
tlt'{&gt;rcsentatives

Smeltzer's

·---------------------------SPECIAL
PINE BARK NUGGETS •••~:~-.~~!~~.'!~. s3.98
8' to 10' Reg. $39.95
WHITE DOGWOODS ••••••••••••• NOW '29.95

----------------------------JUST ARRIVED
e
•
•
•
•
•

A Truckload of Trees and Evergreens:
Pink, Red and White Dogwood .
Red, Purple and White Althea.
.
Sugar Maple, Red Maple, Pin Oaks, Tuhp Trees,
Little Leaf Linden, Sweet Gum, Red Bud.
Several varieties of Flowering Crab Apples
Mock Orange, Kwanzan Cherries. Magnolias .
A large variety of Fruit Trees and Berry Plants.
Make Your Selection Early

SWION'LOW

j::· 58c SUGAR SUBSTITUTE 95

6

TARTAR SAUCE ••.•
100-Ct. Pkg.

TETLEY TEA BAGS • . •

$

1.9

1
::.·

9 CHAIMIN • 3 VAl.

BATHROOM TISSUE

DEL MONTI

$1 1ft
4 Pack
•
'2

.

14·01.

KETCHUP • , •• , •• ·• Bot.
500 ./ffdrso11 t\o H•rlrins
=-' ( ' ( )

t 1
. ' '""'

.
ORTHO

C

59c

ROSE BUSHES

98
93
DOG FOOD
MASHED POTATOES i~~c SOn CREAM CHEESE~::
c
$
DELEMONuTEPINEAPPLE 15 '~~ol. 59c A· 1 STEAK SAUCE • • • 39
_ HEINZ GENUINE DILLS 1• 28
88
79
99
STRAWBERRY JAM J·!~· •
APPLE SAUCE •••• ~~~~c FROSTING MIX •• ~s.;:t·
c
VITS

15.5-ol.
5-Var. , , Can

SMUCKER'S

2

22C

$1 .

BIG TATE INSTANT

1

PlliLADELPHIA

10-oz. Bonu

$1

46-oz. JAR

Mon•s NATURAL

BETTY CROCIER - 2Vor.

2

FERTILIZERS &amp; GRASS SEED

INSECTICIDES &amp; FUNGICIDES

••

!GALUPOLIS - R.L. Polk I Co.,
\fh~ compiles information for the
qallipolis city directory, has three
!teal people going door-to-door
~llecting data for this year's
,ilblication.
j They are Cindi Miller, Brenda
Wilson and Cathy Layne, and all
tftree carry proper identification.
· ; The directory is updated every
'!J!ery two years, the, firm advised.
'their local phone nwnber is 44tfJlil2, with an office located at the
!Tark Central Hotel.
: Citizen help in cooperating wit,h
t:Je three representatives is apIteciated .

'

DIXIE • 5-0Z. CUPS

About everything for your L.awn and Garden needs.

KITCHEN REFILL CUPS

63
~:~·
c

5

w•~f?J~•w•

SMELTZER'S
GARDEN CENTER AND FLOWER SHOP

PILLSBURY CRISCENTJ

B·ol.

DINNER ROLLS ..•• Tube

79c

GREEN BEANS ...•

I

sale in town !

BUY ONE BONELESS - WHOLE 7 TO 9-lb. AVG.:

THORN APPLE VALLEY HAM

&lt;'

.

AT ONlY 11•It A POUND AND
on A 1·•· ,.G. or SliCED

•
•

'

VALLEY BACON

FREE

..•

$1 69

GROUND CHUCK •• 111.

•

GROUND BEEF ••, Si•• "'•· lb.

•'

...''.. .
..••
'

BRISKET.

.

.
'

•

I .

SLICED
BACON . • • .

.,.
I.

•••
I

r:

2.19
$1 • 69
5

l-Ib. Pkg.

I -

.

• ••• b_

1-lb. Pkg.

I

t;' ' ..

DAY SPECIALS"

CORNED BEEF

.

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PATRI~K'S

SELECTED STYLES OF INSTEAD . BRAS
PLAYTOPs·· BRAS AND FREE SPIRIT ~ BRAS,
GIRDLES AND BODY BRIEFERS

SKINLESS
$
WIENERS • . • •

HOURS 1:00 to 6:00
WEEKDAYS 10:00 to 9:00
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ·

POLISHmLISMOKIDSAUSAGI ... ,,: 1~.•1.19
RING BOLOGNA
1~. 1 1.79
FRANKIE$ .... or Beet . . . . . . . . . 12-11. !'k1.s I. 29

,....,.GMic: ........

BONELESS

lb.

•

GUNSBERG

Corned Beef

Bris•et
~UNDAY

SUPERIOR BRAND

1• 39

s2
HALF HAMS

~·

''TOPS IN VITAMIN A"

Fresh Crisp

79

U.S. GOVT.INSPEaED • EXTRA LEAN $1

·'

"St.

19

Carrots 2-lb. aaa

•

U.S. GOVT.INSP. SIMIIer Pkg1.

...·--~----­
,....... ..,....
...,,.._
CIIIIII'IINCIM CUll OP

lb.

U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED
LEAN s-lier Pkg1.

..•

'
'
'

GOV'T. INSP. FRESH

$

II ,..,PAIIImll filii COUPOIO. UMif ...
VllllftltUSAT., UI. 21.1911.

'' .

•.

09
•

~Z)t#9"

"FAMILY PAK"
5-lbs.
or
More

•

...
...

$2

Ground Beef

,•

..

HERSHEY KISSES • •

I

~S.

.-

,'

14·oz. Pkg.

,w•~f?J~~w •~f?J~~w•~O(J~~w

Phone 446·4848
Open 9:00 to 7: 00 Weekdays
446-6681
Sunday 1:00to6:00
Just West of Holzer Hospital on U.S. 35
4Sl"Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio

.i ~It's the biggest

-lb 43c

DEL MONTE CUT OR FRENCH STYLE 1
con.

JUSYRINI

$1

GROUND BEEF •••• lb. •

29

FOR MEAT LOAF- U.S. GOVT.INSP.$1 .

GROUND BEEF &amp; PORK1b. •

35

�lis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

The Sunda

~ Two

EVERYDAY

persons ·hurt in Meigs wreck

GALUPOUS - Two perso,Js
were injured in a two-car accident in
Meigs County Friday night.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said the drivers
were not treated for their injuries.
According to the report, Virginia
E. Hartley ! 70, Rt. I, Middleport,
was northbound on SR 7 at 8:55 p.m.
when she stopped to make a left turn
and was struck in the rear by a car
driven by Tanuny L. Daniels, 19,
Pomeroy.
. Hartley's car was slightly
damaged and the Daniels car suffered moderate damage. Daniels
was cited for assured clear distance.
The patrol . is also investigating
another crash in Meigs County in
which the driver of a wrecked auto
left the scene.
Troopers said the vehicle was
eastbound on CR 30 at 6:30 p.m.
when it lost control on a curve,
collided with a fence and overturned.

A hit-skip accident in Gallia County Friday night is also •nder in·
vestigation by the patrol.
The report said Richard A. Long,
34, Gallipolis, pulled off the right
side of SR 160at 8:33p.m. to allow a
vehicle with bright lights to pass
when the other vehicle stopped and
backed into L&lt;mg's auto.
Long's ca r suffered slight damage
and the other vehicle left the scene.
A Gallia County Sheriff's Department cruiser was moderately
damaged in a one-car accident early
Saturday morning .
The patrol sa id the cruiser, driven
by Alva L. Sullivan, 4t, Gallipolis,
was parked at the Save More gas
station on SR 7 at t a.m. when he observed a southbound vehicle being
Sullivan then backed up the
cruiser to give pursuit and collided
with a pole owned by the state, the
report noied .
Troopers investigated a two-car
crash in Meigs County early Friday

:Incident draws jail sentence

· Gallia ·s Henry chosen
'employee of month ·
JACKSON - Buckeye Community
Services, a Jackson-based agency
which serves persons with mental
retardation in seven Southeastern
Ohio counties, has selected Walter
Henry as its employee of the month.
Henry is employed as home services worker of the Gallia County
Sponsoring Ho me Netwo:k
Program, and has been employed b)
the agency since J uly of 1979. Henry
receives this award due to the excellent level of care for the residen~
of his home, his understanding of
developmental disabilities, and his
willingness to put forth "extra " ef·
forts such as Network Chainnan,
Secretary, Employee Council
representative. Walter is a definite
asset to the agency.
Walter, his wife, Marjorie, his
daughter and foster daughter reside
in Addison.

March 15,1981
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

AT JOHNSON'S

charging vandalism.
The vandalism charge is the result
of Elkins allegedly breaking a glass
in a sliding glass door at the home of
Pat Wessels as well as the glass in
the window of the sheriff's crusier.
Vandalism is a fe long charge with
a possible sentence of six months to
five years and or a fine upto$2,500.
Elkins appreared in Meigs County
Court Friday afternoon and was sentenced by Judge Patrick O'Brien to
serve five days for trespassing, :«1
days for aggravated menacing, 10
days for resisting arrest and was
fined $375 plus costs.
[n other activity Meigs County
sheriffs deputies investigated a car·
deer accident on county road one.
Ernest L. Richmond, 30 , Rt. 1,
Rutland, was traveing south when
the deer ran into the path of hiS
pickup truck. There was moderate
damage to the vehicle.

SAVE'

RIO GRANDE - The ligures are
reminiscent of creatures of "Close Encounters"or "Star Wars"; they loom
cautiously in the atrium of the new building,
reflecting mischieviously in the glass that
surrounds them. They are alike, yet not the
same at all: one has a missing leg, another no
face, yet another, no hands. But these are not
ghostly apparations, sent to haunt the halls of
Rio Grande; they a re the sculptures by an OU
artist - fiberglass figures come curiously ·
alive.
The fi berglass work of John Baldwin takes
on qualities of heavy metal, caused by mixing
bronze powders with the medium. These are
not sculptures you look at; they are sculptures you feel - full of anguish, despair, little
hope. They have form yet they are without
form. They are a freestanding corrunentary
on the state of human dignity and the world.
John Baldwin, in his 25th year at Ohio
University, has, by his own explanation, been
influenced by Greek art. Taking a sabbatical
in Greece in 1967, he came back influenced by

HOLIDAY POOLS -

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HOLSUM SPECIAL
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20 oz.2~
LOAF
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-

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..--------------J--------------l

------.==:...---1

..

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

THE OFF' ·ICES
OF
.

STORY &amp; STORY

VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMISSIONS-Kenneth Imboden,
Middleport; Grafield Pauley, Portland; George Oiler, Racine; Ge()rge
Greene, Hartford ; Cha rles Jones,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES-George Moore,
Teresa Dorst, Charles Williams,
Warren Reeves. Vickie Morrison.

RED DELICIOUS

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236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Form erly Meigs Gen . Hospital)
Office Ph . 992-662q
Home Ph. 992-3523

·1···
,
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ORANGE JUICE

89~

liz GAL

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9

The magnlllcanl pieces vary In size as well as In
Color plays a parlin some of the sculptures.

8-16 oz.
BOTTlES

A nORNEYS AT LAW
Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story

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We've more than doubled the number
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successful at our Jackson Pike office .

And
She is our automatic teller that works
around the clock making cash withdrawals, deposits, giving account balances , accepting loan payments. All.it
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an account at Ohio Valley Bank and
your own, personal Jeanie card .

The Mini-Bank's enlarged lobby also
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And of course, we continue to offer
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hours in town . rre1 ••6·26J I. E" 501
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7 VARIETIES

EX-LARGE EGGS CTN.·

FAMILY MEALS
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JUMBO
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__:_ MORTON ,_

Lifestyle writer

DOL 79~

GRADE A

DURKEE
BLACK PEPPER
BOX

1-----r---------------------,

HILLANDALE

99~

.,09

The exhibit of John Baldwin's sculptures will be open
for public scrutiny iD the atrium of the Floe Arts Cenr-T"--~ter, Rio Grande College, Sundays (March 22 and 291, 1·
3 p.m. and weekdays, M-Th, March 16,7,18, 19 and 23, 24
25 a~d 26, 2-4 p.m.

JAR

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In Memoriam

RA.GU ·
SPAGHml fAUcE
32 oz. .

CRISCO SHORTENING

. CRISCO OIL

'l,

aunERMILK

.,1

pri ce- they range from $7,000 to $800 each.

99~

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lfz GAL
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KELLOGG'S
.-----------------------------VEMCO
CORN FLAKES
1-LB.
18 oz.
•
BOX
BOX '
DOWNY
-F-ABRIC
--SO_nENIR

18

the mythology and the culture. . His work
changed. The influence of the human spirit
remained .
"The work begins," said Leo Hill who is in
part responsible for the el&lt;hibitio~. "with a
fonn made of paper or some other medium.
The fiberglass is mixed with a catalyst and
applied- very quickly, to avoid setting." It Is
a flexible agent, undoubtedly more so than
the ceramic and bronze with which he once
worked.
Trying to write about works of art without
having ever interviewed their creator is, at
the very least, an awesome responsibility and a dubious one. I know not the man and I
know very little about his work. To bring a
tired cliche out of its deserved retirement- 1
know what I like and I like John Baldwin's
creations. From them, I feel I would probably
like the man.
The sculptures, a lone army standing in the
atrium of the Fine Arts Center, reflecting
upon themselves in the · semi-sphere of
seemingly endless glass, compel me.

ti(AD·.

868 CAMDEN RD.
HUNTINGTON, W. V.
429-4788

1

Fiberglass Fantasia--OU professor creates sculpture

SAVE

lnground
and
above
ground pool kits of any
type.
Filters • Chlorinators •
Motors and Pumps • Safety Ropes • Pool Ladders •
Lights • Pool Games •
Pool Base • Filter Sand •
Automatic Pool Swee ps •
Vacuum Hose • Cleaning
Equipment • Pool Paint •
Poolside Furn . • Chemical
Heaters • Solar Covers •
Winter Covers • Skfmmers
• Diving Boards • Slides •
Lin ers.
Buy all your needs from
local warehouse and save.

B

Inanimate life forms ·

driven in a reckless manner.

'

POMEROY-David L. Elkins, 38.
Albany, arrested on six charge~
following an incident near Snowville
Thursday evening was to appear in·
Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court
Saturday on a bill of Information

LOW
PRICES

afternoon.
According to the report, Paul F.
Smith, 76, Rt. 3, Racine, was attempting to make a left turn into a
private driveway on SR 7 at 12: 15
p.m. and collided with a southbound
vehicle driven by Brenda K.
Co~ghlin , 31, Lancaster,
Coughlin was attempting to pass
Smith when the collision occurred.
Both autos were moderately
damaged.
Roger E. . Massie. 32, Barboursville, W.Va., was traveling on
U.S. 35 in Gallia County at 7: t5 p.m.
when his tractor trailer collided with
a deer, which left the scene. The rig
suffered moderate damage, . the
·
report said.

With r.oc.PC~n &amp;

Looking like heavy metal because of the bronze powders mixed with
the fiberglass, they are actually very light to Wt.
Easy to photograph beeauoc of the alternate ploy of shadow and
light over their textured surfaee, the art pieres have a surreu l air.

.• ·79
Fine detail accents Jobo Baldwin's fiberglass work.

�Pomeroy

Pape-B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport

Gallipolis,

Ohi~r-Point

RECIPES USING
GIRL SCOUT PIIODUCI'S
CAMPER'SCANOES

4mediwn to lar_ge ripe bananas ··
f Savannah, Thin Mint or Chocolate Clip
Cookies, coarsely cn&amp;Jhed
32 to 40 miniatw-e marshmi Uow:~
Cut ball.lrw lengthwise through top !Jeel,

IPAving about ooe-half inch incut at bottom and
1eacl1 end. Press ends toward center to open.
Sprtnkle one crushed cookie evenly . into each
banana; arrange eight to 10 marshmallows over
crushed cookie, pessing down slighUy. Wrap in
aluminum foiL Cook over ash-covered coals or
l~s about five inches from heat two to four
nunu.tes or bake at t25 degrees F . for 10 to IS
minutes or until banana 1:1 hot ·and mar~
shamallows melt. Sesrve immediately . MAKES

4CANOES.

.

MICROWAVE OVEN OIRECI10NS: Omit
alwninwn foil ; place ooe prepared banana on
plate, paper plate Gr napkin. Cook at HIGH about
I"!! rrunutes or until banana is hot and marshmallows are puffed. Let stand one minll\e

before serving. Repeat with remaining bananas.
·

SNAPPY SNACilllfiX

4 slice! bacon
2'k wpa Girl Scout Golden Y-angles
2 cups thin pretzel sticks
One :J.ot. can French fried onion rings
~cup coarsely chopped walnuts

or ~ans
2,tablespoons butter or m&amp;rgarine, melted
I teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Heat oven to m degn!eS F. Cook bacon until
crisp, reserving two tablespoons bacon drippings. Drain bacon on ablorbent paper; set
aside. Combine baCOII drippings, crackers, pretr.el sticlta, onion rings, nub, butter and Worce:stenhire sauce; mil: well. Bake in 15x10-inch

jelly ~ pan at 325 degrees F . for ·18 to 20
minutes, stirring OCCHsionally . Crumble reserved bacon. Add to cracker mixture ; mix welL
MAKES ABO liT 6 CUPS.
PEPPERMINT ICE CREAM

rnusr,

SQUARES

1% Chocolate and Vanilla Creme Cookie:;
2 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted
PEPPERMINT ICE CREAM '
\-1 cup peppennint candy
~ gal . vanillaorchorol.ate ice cream.
For crust, line eight-inch square baking pin
with aluminum foil, extendtns edges of foU over
!ide! of pan. Place six cookies tn blender container ; cover. Blend about one minute or unUI

finely chopped; repeat w1th remaining cookies.
Combine chopped cookies and butter; mix weU.
Prt:S!I firmly·onto bottom of prepared p&amp;n.
For peppennint ice crea m, place candy in
blender conta iner; cover. Blend until finel y
chopped. Combine chopped candy and ice
ctw~.m; mb: w~l l. Spoon over crust ; ~~~ unlil
firm. loosen ed~es of ice cream from sides nf
pan; relll()ve foil and ice cream. CUt into squares
to serve. MAKES 8- lNCH SQUARE PAN OF

dinM:: sprinkle with reeerved cnunll rnbtu.re.

fiUingmix

ChiD about 4 hours or overnight, u du.ired ; cut

4'-t: cups milk
2 cups sweetened whiwe&lt;f cream or prepared
non-dairy whlpped topping.
~ 4 cup toasttd slivered almon,ds or cOConut
Une 2'-1:-qt. Mlas:s bowl with cookies; layer
remaining L'OOides and bananas ln bow\. Combine pudding mix and milk in ).qt . .saucepan;
brin~ to a boil over mediwn heat, :!ltirrinat
frequently. Pour pudding over cookies and
bananas; cOOl. Cover; chill until puddin~ is set.
Spread whipped crema over puddlng mixture to
cover; sprinkle with almonds. MAJG:s 10 TO 12
SERVINGS

DESSERT.

VARIATION : .Substitute ~ g11l. of your
favorite ice cream for vanilla ice cream; omit
ca ndy .

into ~;:s to serve. MAKES llx'J-JNCH DISH
OFD
RT.
MICROWAVE OVEN DIRECI'IONS: For
l'rust, cook at HIGH about 3m.inutes, roating onefourth tum after each minUte of cooking. Cool
thoroughly. For filling, prepare as recipe direct..
ICE CREAM SUNDAE PlE
CRUST:
llo\ cups finely cnl'lhed DLM'CH 'N SUCH
(about 17 CQOkies )
3 tablespoons butter or margarine, melt~
FIUJNG AND TOPPING :
~ gallon vanille ice cream, softelled.
2tablespoons chopped walnuts or pecans
2 tablespoons ca ramel flavored topping
For crust, heat oven to 375 degrees F. Combine
all ingredient, ; mix well. Pnss evenly onto bot·
tom 1uld sida ill very lightly oiled 9-inch pie
plate. Bake at m deg~ F. for6 to 7 minutes .o r
Until edge:!! are light golden brown; gently pn!.SS
CI'Wil back into place while still wann lofilh metal
spatula, if neeessery. Cool; freeze.
For filling and tapping. spoOn softfned ice
cream into prepared crust ; freeze several hou..n
or until finn. Let stand ut room temperature
about 5 mi.nut.es before serving. Sprinkle with
nut.s ; drizlle with topping, MAKES9-INCH PIE.

PUOOIN ' YOGURTPAIIFAITS
One 8---oz. carton I I cup favorite flavor yogurt
I cup milk
·
One 3;~-or.. pkg. vanilla iru;tant puddin~~: and
pfefilling mix
l!SavanMh cooll:ies, t:ruslwd
Combine all ingredients except cookies in
small mixinS bowl; beat t~l low speed on electric
mixer about 2 mmutes. Layer pudding mixture
tmd «UShed cookies in 4 ~rfait glasses or
dessert dishes. Chill; serve Wlthinl to4 hours af.
terassembling. MAKES4 SER VINGS.

MOCHA MINT MALLOW
PIE

CRUST '
32 Thin Mint Cookies
I tablespoon butter or margarine. melled.
cool&lt;ed
FIWNG '

" "'r.

mill&lt; cocoa
2 tab espoons
I tablespoon instant coffee powder or crystals
One 10-ot. pkg. mar:dunallows (l:lbout 37 mllr-

shmallows l
1 cup hetwy .cream. whipped or 2 cups
prepart!d"nun-dairy whipped toppinx.
For crust, place nine CfiOkie~ in blender cOntainer. Cover; bl.end about 15 JeCUnd.~ ur until
fipely dlo~ped . Empty _into small bowl: repeat
with addit!Of\il 9 coolues. reserving 14 whole
cookies. Combine chopped cook1es and butter.
mixing we ll: finnJy press ·onto bottom of well
oiled nine-inch ~-: l ass pie plate. Ba ke at 37~
del(rees F. aOOut 5 l)tinulc!l. Cool about lS
minutes; arrange resen-•ed cookies around inside edge of pit plate to fonn side crust, pressing
cookies gently into bottom crust. Chill.
For filling. heat combined milk, ("(lC08 and cof·
fee powder in 3-qt. saucepan over low heat,
.stirring occa:sionally until cocoa and coffee are
dissolved . Add marshmallows; continue cooking
over mediWll-low heat. stirring e-oll.'lLI:tntly, Wltil
mixtu~ is sm ooth. Remove from heat; pour into
large bowl. Chill 30 to 40 minutes or until sllghtly
thickened, stirring occas ionally, or plat:e howl in
pan af ice water about 10 rrunutfs or until slightly
thickened, stirring occasionally. Fold In whipped
t.Team; pour into chilled crust. Freeze at least 8
hOurs before serving: ~a mis h with whipped
crea m, if desired. MAKES9-INCH PIE
MICROWAVE OVEN DIRECTIONS, Foe
crust. cook at HIGH 11.-z minutes. Arrange reserved cookie~ around in.side edge of pie plate to
fonn side crust, pl"essing_coolties gently into OOttom crust: chill .
For filllng, cook coinbin ed rn11k, coroa and cof·
fee powder in 3-qt. ~ lass bowl at HIGH about 1
minute or until cocoa and coffee are dissolved.
Add marstunu\lows; C'Ontinue L-ooking at HIGH 2
to J minutes or W"Jtil mixture is smooth, sUrrin~
a £ter each minute of cooking. Chill 30 to 40
minutes or untll slightly thickened. ~ti rring occ:asionally, or cool about Sminutes ; place bowl in
pan uf iee w1:1ter a!Jout 10 nLinut~ or until slight!)'
thickened, stirri ng occasionally. Prut'et'd as
rec1pe directs.

SCOUT S'MORES
Cln.'Oiate Chip Cookies or Scot·Tea Cookies
Peanut Butter
Marsturudlows
For each servlnl!:, spread 2 cookies with peanut
butter. Spear l marshrnallo~A' on long stick or
fl)rk ; toast over campnre or gas range.· Safl.
dwich marshmallow between cook ies. MAKES 1
S' MORE.
VARIATIONS: Omit pea nut butter; substitutl'
Thin Mint Cookies for cookies listed in recipe.
Omit peanut butter; sandwich one l-inch
.square milk chocolate candy and taasted marshrnallow between 2cookie:;.

CHOCOTORTONI DELIGH'rS
I cup marshmallow creme

2 tllbl~pooos milk

I teaspoon almorn:l ettr11 et
1 cu~ heavy l:!re, whipPed or 2 cups prepared
non-daary whipped toppmg
9 Chocolate Chip Cookies, coarsely broken
Beat together marshmallow creme, mllk and
almost extract ulnil smooth. Fold in whipped
c--eam; fold ill cookies. Spoon into 6 clessert
dishes ; free&amp;e seveal hour.~ or until finn .
MAKES6SERVINGS.

OIOCOLATECHlP

FOUR·LA YER DESSERT
CRUST :
One 8-oz. pkg. Chocolate Chip Cookies (II

CRUNCHY PEANUT 8U1TEII
BAWl
6 Sava nnah Cook.ies
I cup sifted confectioners' !lll~a r
1 cup shredded or naked ct)('OOUt
1 cup raisins
1ft cup chunk style peanut butter
2 tq 3 tableSJ)OONJ mi lk
PU!ce cOOkies In blender cont.alner; cove r.
Blend about I minute or 11Rlil fine ly chopped.
Combine remaininiJ ingredients, l1"lWng until
mildure holds t011:ether. Shape to fonn thirty linch balls; roll in t.-ookie crumbs. Chill; slore in
n!frlgeratqr. MAKES 21ot OOZEN NO.BAKE
COOKIES .

cookies )

3tablespoons butter or margarme, melted
LAYERS '
One !klz pk~ . frmen nun--da iry whipped tOppiJlK. thawed
One 8-m. pkg. cream cheese, soft ened
leup l"tlllfet.'l.ioners' sugar
3cupsmilk
Two3~ to 41.-,:--uz. pk gs. instant pudding and pie
fillins mix. any na vor
Fqr rrust, plae1! 8 cookies In blender container.
COver ; blend ~bout 15 seconds or until fi ne ly
choppt&gt;d. Empty into mediwn-sized bOwl ; repeat
with remaining l'OOkie.s. C&lt;lmbine chopped
cookies and butter; mix well. Reserve 2
tablespoons mixture : finti.ly pres! remaining ont!J bottom of ungrea:;ed llx7-inch baking dish .
Bake at 300 de~rt'ts F. about 6 minutes. Cool

COLUMBUS _ Mrs. Vl' rgtrua'
·
Covert and Mrs. Pat Parsons visited
the Home and Garden Show l·n
Colwnbus, March 7,
The ladi
es S8l'd 1't Was 8' 'de lighUul
breath of spring" that came their
way as they visited t"~
. ,
'u:: many
exhtbtts. The area landscapers and
florists had designed a variety of

For filling, combine I cup whipped toppins.
cream cheese and sugar in sma ll rruxin~ bowl;
beat al medium speed on electric mixer WJtil
smooth. Spread evenly over cooled crust. Combinernilk and pudding mix in small mixing bowl ;
heat at low s~ on electric mixer about 2
minutes or until thickened and ~nooth. Spread
e\'enly over c ream cheese murture. Spread
remainlnM whipped topping ev~nly over pud--

BANA NA PUDDIN' TRIFLE
One 10--ot. pkg. S«lt-Tea Cookies !about 57
cookies!
4 rnedlwn-~itL'&lt;i banarws, shced
Two 3 t/kz pkl( ' 'amlla pudding: and pte

•

PORTSMOUTII - The Area Agency on Aging District 7, Inc., Nursing
Home Area Training Center is sponsoring a 36-hour training program
for Nursing Home Activity Personnel. The program will be held at
Scioto Memorial Hospital from 9
a.m. tot p.m. onApril7and8,20and
21, and May 5 and 6.
Conducting , the program will be
Jean Alsop Pinder, M.T.R.S. and
Ethel S. Levy, M.S.W., both of the
Columbus area . Ms. Pinder is a
private nursing home consultanVinservice trainer and is
editor of "Activities for Long-Term
Care." She has a bachelor's degree
in RecreaUon with an emphasis in
therapeutics and a master's degree
in Gerontology and Counseling. Ms.
Levy is a Social Gerontology and
Social Work instructor at Columbus
Technical lnstit~te and a consultanVinservice trainer in a number of nursing homes.
Registration fee for the six-day
course is $75 for the first person and
$50 for each additional person from
the same facility. Registration is
limited to 30 persons. Deadline for
registraUon is April I.
Participants attending all six days

Visit Columbus show

tho,oughly.

,

Experts to speak at cardzac symposzumc:s~:~a~:~8~~~~!'t:s~~t
CHILUCOTHE . - Nationally hazards of drug therapy in rarrecognized experts on the car- diovascular disease, and acdiovascular system and diseases complishments that have resulted
that affect it will speak at the 31st from heart research are 3111ong
Annual Cardiac Symposium, ac- topics to he addressed during the
cording to G. Howard Wood, M.D. of symposium. In addition, Dr. Leo
the Ross County Heart Branch.
Krall from the Joslin Clinic in
The. symposium will be held on Boston, Mass., will speak about the
Apri19 from 7:30a.m. to5:30 p.m. at problems diabetes creates with the
the Veterans Administration . cardiovascular system, and Dr.
Hospital in Chillicothe.
Ralph Lach will review Per·
Congestive heart failure, potential cutaneous Translwninal Coronary

I

Film critique

This character-so deeply concerned with the exploration of the
mind's full potential and in quest of
ultimate truth-is presented, in
BOIIlething like an ape suit, running
through dark alleys deeply concerned with keeping a dog from
chewing off his foot and in quest of
something approaching the ultimate
meal-he eats 8 sheep, raw no less.
In a final cataclysmic sequence he
becomes 'ONE' (this guy does
everything in capital letters) with
the universe and makes one bell of 8
me&amp;S all over his laboratory.
Becoming one with the Wliverse, you
see, apparently involvea turning Into
a blob-like sublltance and reeking
havoc on your general surroundings.
In aU fairness, 'Altered States'
does have · some interesting
photographic effects-that's as fair
as I can get. Basically, the film suffel'll from terminalsllline88.
Is the U.S. government keeping a
bunch of really (Ujllly looking ship-

:

EHUNGER, D.O.

•• Office
Located On
Mulberry Heights
•• Pomeroy, Ohio
••
••• OFFICE HOURS
•
MON. &amp; TUES.

wrecked aliens in a shoe box on the
top shelf of the Joint Chiefs of Staff'&amp;
cloak room?-That's the sort of
timely and burning question asked
by the low-budget thriller HANGAR
18 ( PG ).
Don 'I be fooled by the promo-this
is a SWJ International Pictures
release. SWl International is that
film company so well known for
making movies at a total cost of
$12.85, while spending millions on
television advertising.
'Hangar 18' is a hype-film-it's all
show and no go. Adirectionless little
movitH:ssentialy a compilation of
all those headlines about UFO' s you
read while in the check-out line-that
doesn't even bother to answer the
pointless little questions it asks.

••

9tollandlto5

:

WEDS.

•

••
•

:

e

FRI.
9tollandlto5

PH.

992~3

Please Call For Appointment

:

••
••
•

:
•

•••••••••••••••••

The only
deduction or crec:IH
you can claim for
your children Is the
per~nal exemption.
D True D False
fALSE . For example. if yours is a IWo income

houst:hold, and you incur chilcJ care
cxpenst:S, should know What Fnnn 2441 means
10 you, If you don't, Hll&lt;R Block docs. Wc'lltakc the
rim.t necessary to understand your complele
situation, because if you qualify you may be ellglble
for up to an 1800 tax credit for child care.

WINTER SPECIAL

SAVE

'201
REG• •
SPECIAL

$599

Write for brochures showing memoria Is
in lull color with sizes and prices listed. ·

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
p,,m ,-Mason Bridge
992-2588

1980taxes
ha

Diamond
IRA.

Before you file your 1980
tax returns, talk to Diamond
Savings about an Individual
Retirement Account.
You can qualify for IRA if
you are not Rresently participating in any other retirement plan. Each year, you
may contribute up to $1500 or 15% of your earned income, whichever is less. If your spouse is unemployed you may set aside up to
$1750. Best of all, the contributions you make to your IRA and the
interest you earn are tax-free until the account is dispersed. And
you can contribute right up until you file your tax return. That means
there's still time to reduce your 1980 tax bill. (Tax returns must be
filed by midnight, April15, 1981 .)
Diamond Savings IRA's pay up to 12% interest. ~ith 365/360
Conttnuous Compounding, you'll earn 12.9378% annually.• That's
the highest annual yield allowed by law. So start building that nest
egg and saving on taxes today. Visit the Diamond Savings office
near.est you.
"A substsn111111ax and mtereM penalty tS reQuired to1 early withdrawal

DIAMONl SAVNGS
AND LOAN CONFIANV

H&amp;R a• ·OCK

618
E . MainOH.
St.
Pomeroy,
..,
• 2nd &amp; Brown St.
Ph. 992 -379S
Mason, W. Va .
Open
. I
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLF
Ph. 773 . 8128
9 a.m. o 6 a .m A
.
t
Weekdays
·
pporn 1men s Open Tues., Thur.
9 to s Sat
Avallaole
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Mon.

thru Thurs. 91116
Sal. 9 til s

People Count ... the Diamond Difference!

Jt MAIN ST.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
-

Phone 446·0JOl

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"'

Bookmobile schedule for Monday,
March 16 - Carpenter, Laura's
Store, 3:10-3:411 p.m.; Dexter Church, 4: 10-4 :411; Danville, Church,
5:20-5 :45 ; Rutland, Bank One, 6:207; Rutland, Depot Street, 7: ~7:45 .
Tuesday, March 17 - Portland,
Post Office, 3:1~:411 p.m.; Success
Rd., Near 3906C, 4:1:&gt;-4:45; Reedsville, Reed 's Store, :&gt;-5 :50; Tuppers
Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6:20-7.
Thursday, March 19 - Coolville
Post Office, 9:4:&gt;-!0: 15 a·.m.; Ar:
cadia Nursing Horne, 10 :20-11 ; Tuppers Plains, Lodwick's Market,
11 :20 a.m.-12:50 p.m.; Pomeroy
Health Care Center, 1:3(}.2:30 p.m.;
Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant,
3:3:&gt;-4:20; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4:45-5 :45; Syracuse, Pool, 6-7.
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
stop for 'the free entertainment and
infonnation. The book has paperbacks, 45 and lp records, magazines,
large print books and how to do it
help for everything from car repair
to dieting.

I

, I

GOOD CITIZENS - Angela Houchins of Meigs
High School, April Parker of Eastern High School, and
Charlotte Pickens of Southern High School, left to
right, were honored at the annual Charter Day Luncheon of Return Jonathan ·Meigs Chapter of the

POMEROY, OHIO

992-'655
Mon.·Wed. 9·4
Thur. &amp; Sat. 9-Noon
Fri. 9·6

Daughters of the American Revolution. Mrs. Wilma
Sargent, right, the Good Citizen chairman for the chapter, presented plos to the three senior girls. Pictured
with the group Is Mrs. Gene Yost, chapter regent.

women who served their country.
POMEROY - The Good Citizens the name of Molly Pilcher ;
Mrs. IngelS announced that the
M
a
rgaret
Corbin,
the
first
woman
to
of Meigs County High Schools were
April
meeting will he a luncheon at
receive
a
government
pension
for
honored at the Charter Day lunthe
Meigs
Inn, 12 :30 p.m., with
war
service;
Sybil
Ludington,
the
cheon of Return Jonathan Meigs
reservations
to be sent to Mrs. A. R.
counterpart
of
Paul
Revere,
who
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Knight
by
April 6. The Point
enlisted
the
aid
of
soldiers
to
repulse
Revolution, held Friday at Trinity
DAR
members will be
Pleasant
the
British
;
Deborah
Sampson,
the
Church.
guest.
first
woman
to
enlist
in
war;
and
Mrs. Wilma Sargent, the ChapWomen of Trinity Church served
Mary Smith Lockwood who helped
ter's Good Citizen chairman, in·
the
luncheon with Miss Eleanor
organize
the
National
Society
troduced the three senior girls, April
Smith
and Miss Lucille Smith
D&gt;1ughters
of
the
American
Parker of Eastern High School.
charge
of arrangements.
Revolution
to
honor
the
men
and
Angela Houchins, Meigs High
School, and Charlotte Pickens, r-:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;~~
Southern High School, and presented
them with DAR pins from the Chapter. Each one also received a book
1"1..
.
on Women in . the America n
Revolution.
The seniors spoke briefly on their
career pla ns. Miss Parker plans to
attend Ohio State University where
she will major in civil engineering.
Miss Houchins will attend Hocking
Tech at Nelsonville and study nur(il\'c your nld Jewelry un exciting
sing, and Miss Pickens plans to purnew look b)· hu\ing your stones set
sue law at Ohio State University .
Recognized were their mothers •.
tnt o one of onr f rcc - f(ll'ln or smu rt Iy
Mrs. Howard Parker, Mrs. Steve
tullorcd remount settings. \\'c huYc
Houchins. and Mrs. Carol Pickens.
u wide mricty of designs to choose
Mrs. Sargent told the girls that
fm ·m und our expert-s will usslsl
they will receive ce rtificates of
award at their respective school
you In sdcctlng the one right lin·
awards day programs. She said that
you .
being a good citizen is the mark of a
good American and paid tribute to
I.e I us gi l"l' \'Ill! r old jnn·lr,· Ill' w
their mothers .
Other guests at the luncheon
lil'c and s purldc with nur solid gold
meeting were Mrs. Elizabeth Cuilcr,
n.: m o unts! Stup in soon tu SLT our
Mrs. Nellie Brown, and Mrs. Pal
collc c l iol!l .
Barnett.
Mrs. Gene Yost, regent, conducted
the opening ritual. Mrs. Clyde
Ingels, vice regent, introduced the
program with Mrs. Nan Moore, a
direct desce ndant of George
Washington, giving a review of the
lives of five women of the American
Revolution.
Listed by Mrs. Moore were Molly
Pitcher, a servant for a physician
who joined her husband at the Battle
of Monmouth where she ca rried

F' -'SHJQNABLE

CONTEMPORARY
REMOUNTS

~::~:~was

given

NEW KARATE CLASSES
BEG I Nf\j lNG THURS., MARCH 26, AT 6 : 00P.M.
AT THE BUDORYU DOJO
ass Second Avenue
• Excellent Physical &amp; Mental Conditioning
• Acquire Practical Self-Defense Skills
• Excellent Collateral Conditioning for other Sports
•Opportunities for Competition on Slate &amp; National
Levels
These classes are open to all persons age 7 years
a.nd above, both male and female.
Tuition Fees: $3.00 Per Week
To enroll for classes simply come to class on March 26 at
6: 00 p.m . (wear loose clothing) , or call 24S· S488 after
5:00p.m. for more information .
Learn TaeKwonDo (Korean Kralel It's a Kick!

8H

AY • .

Ph•"• AA6· UOS

Cotli,oli•

Far a Great
NightS
-Geta&amp;reat
$pring-D-

Mallress

Check our Spring Air"' SDirincJ-0-Pe!dic
Extra Special Features:

Twin Size, Ea. Pc .

Reg . $139 .95 Ea. Pc.

~~::::::::::::~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~~J

SUIPBETTER

~

GALUPOUS - Bethel Ladies Aid
met March 4 at the home of Marita
Baker at 1 p.m. with' Marita B~ker
presiding. The meeting opened with
group singing of "Blest be the Tie
That Binds" and " Near the Cross."
Mary Call read the sixth chapter
of Romans for the scripture. Eva
Gilmore will read the scripture at
the next meeting. Roll call was answered by each giving a Bible verse.
Esther Davis, secretary, read the
minutes of the last meeting. There
were 19 sick calls reported and it
was voted to send flowers to Goldia
Caldwell, a patient in Holzer
Medical Center. A donation was
received from Ora Brumfield.
The following readings were
presented : " FaithM is He Who Has
Promised," read by Vera Ross;
"Tax Assessor," read by Florence
Ragan ; 11 Why Worry?," read by
Gladys Church; "Don't Quit," read
by Melissa Caldwell; "The Valley,"
read by Virginia Fisher ; " Mighty
Lucky Fellow," read by Mary Call;
"We Can't, but God Can," read by
Ruby Saunders; a reading from
"The Upper Room" by Elaine
Baker: I Peter 1-4 and a poe11) by
Marcella Baker; "A Prayer for Ash
Wednesday" from the "Lutheran
Prayer Book," read by Esther
Davis.
A closing prayer was led by Eva
Gilmore and refreshments were ser- .
ved to II members and five guests.
The next meeting will he at the
home of Eva Gilmore,

UVE BETTER

.'{'·
~~ ·

'

Exclusive maker of tt'le
- - -- - - -.,----' Back Su pporter · maHress

Yes. Spu ng A11 s Spung·O·Pedtc sleeps as good as 1t looks' It's scienlifically consrructed w1th extra comfort delarls like double layers ol upholslery and Ihick layers of
urethane loam And you'll gel extra support lrom hundreds ol extra lirm coils and
Ihe larnous Postur-Cenler· m1d-sec11on Top 1t11s w1th I he extra beauty ollhe elegant
co•ers and you·ll say
"lh1 s IS extra value" S"ve on th1s great maltress now'
F u II size. reg ula riy$179 .95 eacl1 pi ece
Now $119.95 Ea. Pc.
Que en size, regularly$419 .95 per sc i
Now $289.95 Set

REMEMBER TO ORDER
EARLY FOR EASTER

• Potted Plants • Dish Gardens • Terrariums
• Silk &amp; Permanent An:angements
• Cut Flower Arrangements

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
"The Way America Sends Love"
Ph. 992· 2039
106 Butternut Ave.
or 99~ · 5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We Accj!pt All Major Credit Cards, and We Wire
Flowers Everywhere.

I

OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 8 P.M.
For extra luxury _
Spnng-0 -Pedic '
Twtn S1ze

-=

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;

GROUP TO APPEAR
PARKERSBURG - The Hopper
Brothers and Connie of Madison, N.
C., will be at the North Parkersburg
Baptist Church, 310fl Emerson Ave.,
March 20, at 7:30p.m.

Aid meets

--~

P()MEROY-Ms. Norma Torres, with Ms. Bonny Chapman in charge. )
nursmg supervisor of the Meigs At the April 14 meeting of the SCEO
CoWJty Health Department, was the hook fair will be beld and the
guest speaker at the Tuesday nominating and auditing com-·
meeting of · the Salem Center mittees will give their reports.
h
Educational Organization.
Ron M. Drexler mentioned the ··o'l
An outline of the various programs . need for volWJteers to help with the l~
available free of charge to children T-ball, pee wee league, and llttle ' :O:l
Wider 21 was given by Ms. Torres.
league baseball teams being· ' l
Plans were made for a spaghetti organized. The baseball field and ·•.1
supper at the school on April 4.
backstop needs work he noted and '"'
Charles Hollidayan0ounced thatthe asked for volunteer~ to help 'with..ru
new volleyballs and nets have been that.
. 01
ordered and should be received later
The room count was tied by the fil: ,!J
this month. A book fair will be held th and sixth grades with each to'.b
at the school on April 13. 14 and 15 receive$5.

j

water to

WE'll MAKE THE TAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

27 ..SYCAMORE SJ.

VINTON, OHIO
W. MainS!.
JIH60l

POMEROY , OHIO

Page-~ -~

Good Citizens honoree of luncheon

•

•.9 to 11, 1 to 5, and 7 to 9e•
••

PLAN TOUR
POMEROY-The Winding Trail
Garden Club will tour the Bamltz
Greenhouse March 16. Members are
to meet at the Ohio Power Co. office
at 6 p.m. Following the tour the
group will go to Shoney's for dinner.

The Sunday Times-SentTnel

Torres speaks to SCEO

REGIONAL NURSES
TO MEET
GAlLIPOLIS - The Regional
Nurses Association Will meet on
Thursdsy, March 19, at 7:30p.m. in
the multi-purpose room of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Compan~ building. It Will be a
business meeting to dlacusa
nominations of officers for the
coming year along with poulble
projects to undertake. All R.N.'s and
L. P. N.'s are invited to attend.

••

•

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohi&amp;-Point Plea.sant, w. va .

Shongat~ .

your
••
•••
••
••
••

Pomeroy

will be awarded 3.8 continuing
education Wlits fnm Rio ~rande
CoUege. Endorsements have &amp;lao
been applied for from LPNAO, ONA,
and R.A.P.
.
For further informaUon contact
Geraldine McKinnlss &lt;I' Joyce

r------------L------------------------

:··············'
: DR•.NORMAN J. :

Altered States,
Hanger 18
By Larry Ewing
ALTERED STATES (R) is the
story of how one man regressesthrough the use of drugs and sensory
deprivation-.to his primordial,
savage 'self.'
Through the use of all sorts of
flashy photographic techniques, the
viewer is allowed inside the bead of
this really dull college professorresearcher intent on experiencing
his total being.
With the aid of some hopped-up
Meltican gruel and submersion in an
isolation tank, this character trips
off into a series of 'never-never lands' in search of 'Reality'-with a
capital R.
The film really starts off rather
well. His first hallucination is kind of
interesting-packed with Christie
symbolism, self-sacrificing tendencies and a full-blown guilt trip.
When 'Mr. Reality and Total
Being' discovers that while
hallucinating he is actually,
physically regressil)g to his basic
primitive, pre-verbal, hairy self,
however, the film degenerates as
rapidly as the character.
The audience is suddenly transported from a discussion and exposition of the 'True (also with a
capital) nature of man's inner self'
to a l!IIIO's version of 'Pre-historic
Monster on Campus.'

The VISitors also enjoyed the
decorated model rooms, saw the
latest in home improvement ideas
and materials.

Angioplasty versus Coronary
Bypass.
This program meets the criteria
for eight hours of Category credit
from the Arperican Medical
Association and the Ohio Academy
of Family Physicians.
Registration cost is $40. For more
information or to register for the
symposiwn, contect the Central
Ohio Heart Chapter, Program
Department, P. 0 . Box 739, Columbus, Ohio 43216 before AprilS.

March IS, 1981

Nursing home care
topic of workshop

Girl Scout Week winds down yesterday
...ALUPOlJS - With yesterday
came the winding down of Girl Scout
Week (March 11-14) and many girls
in Meigs and Gallia Counties and
their leaders have done a lot of work
to help commemorate the event. The
last of several articles honoring Girl
Scouts Week concerns the cookies
the girls sell each year to help raise
money; here are a few recipes using
those cookies you ordered, soon to be
delivered.

· March 15, 1911

Pleasant, W. Va .

Suprl'~ m e

sg495 Reg . $159 .95
Each Pc
All the Sprmg-0 -Pedtc qu al!ly fea lures plus
extra layers of uphol stery to g"e you extra
support So hwry and gellhe extra savings
lhiS week' Other SIZes proportionately pnced

,. . ,
'

..
'

~·

..'

.

' '•;
·~

.'

,.,
.,,

�Pape-8·4-The Sunday Times·Sentillel

Pomeroy

Middleport

March 15, 1911

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.va.

Times·Sentlhel-

Vietnam veteran rap
group formi~epl.C!oPi!llrbeingcl-

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rottgbt

Mr. and Mrs. Nomtan Fisber

GALUPOLIS- In order to meer
the needs of Vietnam combat
veterans a "Monday evening rap
group bas been formed at the Com·
mWJity Mental Health Center in
Gallipolis. The group is led by out·
patient therapist, Jim Altho£, Ph. D.
"In the group we talk about daily
living problems as weU as the com·
bat experiences," said Altho!. He
pointed out that many men have
never talked about their experiences
in Vietnam, and that many
behaviors that show no apparent
connection to Vietnam are related.
Some examples he cited include :
"temper problems , marriage
problems, drug ·and alcohol depen·
dence, job problems and lack of good
friends. Some group members are
doing well but njle(j the group to
have a chance to rap, " said Altho!.
For some men with combat
related experience feelings and
emotions buried for years may sur·
face suddenly . The divorce,
alcoholism and suicide rates ol Viet·
nam vets is much higher than for
other men their age. '' Vietnam
veterans may be having trouble

The reception will be hosted by
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
their children, Alice Wamsley and
Gerald Rought, Lincoln Hill,
ber husband, Bob, Pomeroy; Tom · Pomeroy. will celebrate their 25th
Fisher, and his wile, Helen, Cam·
wedding arutiversary on March 29 at
bridge; and Louis Smith and her
their home with a family obhusband, Jim, Baltimore, and the
servance.
grandchildren.
The couple were married in RichFriends and relatives are invited
mond, Ind. in 1956 by the Rev. Mid·
to call during the 'reception hours of dlestreth while Rought was serving
1:30to3:30 p.m. II is requested that
gifts be omitted.

Children for A CS raise
over $3,000 in funds
POMEROY - The Meigs Chapter
of the American Cancer Society ex·
tends its thanks to the children of
Meigs, Eastern, and Southern
:School districts for their recent su~
·port In the "Send a Mouse to
College" program.
The children of Meigs County
collected a total of $3,293.60. The fWl·
ds received will purchase 6, 458 mice
·for cancer research.
Listed are the total contributions
received fl\liTl each school in the
district and the names of the
children who received T·shirts.
In the Soulbem sdwxll district the kindergarten children turned in $2&amp;1.13 with T-shirl!i
goins tu Michelle Stobart (afternoon class ) and
Carrie Morarty (morning cl.ass); the Racine
Elementary children collected $2~ . 89 . T-shirts
were awarded to Leslie Bogp;s (grade 1), Brent
Rose (grade 2), Brenda Zirkie (grade 3), Steve
Grady (grade 4), Paula Justis (grade $1 and
Allen Maynard (grade 6).
Portland elementary :!bxlenls collected 196.45.
T-shirt.s were given to Jeremy Rose (Hntdes I
and 2) , ~Jla Lawson (grades 3 and 4L Anette
F\tch (grades a and 6), Bryon Weaver CL D.
class) and David Lawson (special education ).
SyracWJe Elementary had a total of S246.t8 in
contributions. T·shirta were awarded to Amber
CUmmings (grade 1), Joetta Pizzino (grade 2),
Jemifer Graves (grade 3), Amy Patterson
(grade 4) , Lois Davidson (grade 51 and Chris
Deemer (gradeG I.
Letart Fallil elementary had 11 total of $167.02.
T-shlrts were glvt!n to Brenda Hunt (grades I
and 2) , Tracy Noi"Tis (grade 3), Tracy Beegle
(grade 4) , Joey Rowh (grades 5 and 6), Bryant
Young (special education) and Denzil Hudson
lL.D.)
In Eastern School District·River¥"iew Elemen·
tlry collected $145.86, T-shirts went to Terri
Whtte (grade l l. Susie Kimes !grade 2). Serin.a
White (grade H, Traci Newlun (~: rade :II Hnd
Michael Randolph l l.(rade 6l.

..

Tuppen; Plains elementary rece ived a total of

1167;79. T·shiru went to Richie Causy !kindergarten ). Mary Ann H11wk {grilde I l. Kristin.H
Schultz {grade 2), Michael Welsh (grade t) ,
L.orri Burke (gradeS) and Lisa Lanse (grade 61.
1

Chester Elementary collected $24 .10.
Meigs Local School District tuld the following
T-shirt winners and total contributions: Bradbury children collected S186.H. T·sh.irts were
awarded to Pmney Clark Bnd Stephanie English
(grade ~ l. Dawn K~ and Michelle Stcvei'L'I

(grade 6) and Tom Bucktey (EMR/l..D ).
Harrisonville children eontributed 1121.36. T-

shlru went to Bobby Vance (grade l ). Usa
Morgan (grade 2l, Wayne Howard (grade 3),
Brian Durham (grade 4), Eddie Gilliam t ~rade
~ l arxl Terri Gilliam \grade 6 ).
Middleport elementary collected 1369.42 . Tshirts were given to &amp;:ott Moore and Tony Davis
(morning kindergarten), Penn}· Lewis (aftemooo kindergarten ), Dodle Cleland a11d John
BechUe (grade 1) , Jamie Pettit and Ken Van
Metre (grac.le 2), Heath Richmond , BllckyGilkey
and fUiny Duff I grade 3f, Tammy Holley and
Todd Hood (grade 4).
Pomeroy elementary children contributed
$54JU4 . T-shirt5 were presented to Rach.ael
Hawley (kindergarten), Jos h Bartels and
J eremy Dean (grade I), Tedd Wtles and Robbie
Field:! (grade 2l, J ohn Michael Logan and Terry
Werry (grade 3l. Kenda Kloe5 and Carolyn Elam
1 grade 4 ). Kim!Jerly Calvert and Lisa Pattersnn
1grade 51, Greg Fields and Ruth Powell (grade
6 1, Eugene Aleshire (LD.l and Dee Shane Robin
Qualls I E.M.R. ).

Rutland children coiii!Cted $301 .81 . T-.shirts
were given to Sheryl Thoma (moming kindergarten ), Tommy Pennington (afternoon kir"r"
dergarten), Larry Vance (grade 1). Ronnea
Davis fl!rade 2), Usa Dust f grad~ 3), Si!brinH
Wibion (gradt! 41 , Jtlt'y Snyder (!S rHdt! 51, Eric
Priddy (grade 61 , Richa rd White (Special
education and Beth Swearington 1L.D.I.
Salem Center students collected 1125.6-i. Tshirts were gi ven to Candy Hensley (grade I),
Crystal· Brown (gnule 2), A. Turne r (grade 3).
Tan Clark {grade 4),1..aurieShenefield (grade
$), Michelle Barr lgrade 6l.
· Salisbury elemenLarJ ch.ildnm collected
$307.97. T·shirt!l went to Mindy Carson (grade 11.
Jennifer Ta ylor Igrade 21. Kelly Douglas 1grade
3), Michtlle Klein (grade 4J, Lisa F"rymeyer
1gretde 51and Tim Knotts (ts rade 6).

------Honor roils announced·----Millard Ca&amp;!lidy, principal at Hannan Trace
Elementary School; would like lo annCJun« the
fourth .six weeks honor roll. All capital letters irtdicate all A's.
Fourth grade - Timmy Ryan Brwnfield, OI.Hd
Oary, Jason Jones , Brian Montgomery, Todd
Not!le, Brent Unroe.
Filth grade - Andrea Barnett, Valerie Dillon,
Alicia Houck, Mark Jenkins, Chrts Petro, Terri
Queen, Suumne Rupert, RICHARD STITI',
Tanya Mitchell, Kent Saunders.
Sixth grade - Missy Hally, Janet VanScoy.
Seventh grade - Phillip Bailey, Oaphile Bar·
nett, Derrick Barnes, JULIE DILLON,
EVELYN MOORE. Rita Randolph, Holly
•Whitl~ey, Chana Moore.
E:ishth grade - Teresa Brace, Melva CLagg,
· KeUey Halley, Holly Lambert, David Lockhart,
Kathy Rose, Tanuny RGS.Siter, Diane Stapleton,
STEVEN SI'IIT, Sonya Swain, Lon~ Whitley.

HDIKH" roll 'for the fourth sixth weeks at Addavtlle Elementary is announced by Ronald E.
IPutoo, prinCipaL
· Fourth grade - Penny Beaver, Tr11cy
~teton BUJy Hager - :1, Rachel l.asseter,
~ t.e'ach, Shelley Mingus, Teddy Perry.
t Fifth grade ·_ Tammy Bates, Christina
JCarroU, Curtis Casto, J~l Drwnmond, Tr.ena
.Gardner, Nina Haaer, Eileen Harbour, Musy
IKJtcbon, Todd Wooten.
1 Sllth grade- Jaequeline Beaver, Duane Bing.
tJoey Bradley Paula Brown, Holly Cannan,
'Todd Casto tim Gordon, Jodi Hall, Angela Hit1chcocll., Ri~hard Hudlon, Stephanie Leifheit.
:Krist! Lemley, Faye Newsome, Krl.tt!na Nor·
tthup, Chris Poleyn 1 Mare ReB~S.!I, Debbie
'Rwnh!y Rlchael Saxon, Shaun SWlsher. ·
: I·~ straight A$.

Karen Steele.
7-B - Ronda Dotson.
S.A - Chuck Lewu, Allen Dotson.
S-8 - Otnm McMe«han, Jamie Call iha n,
Jeny D. Colley, Tim Green, Jim Culeman,
Gerald~. Beth Adkins, Eric Ritt er - x, Kim
Price, KalliY Morrison , Senit.a Morris. Ann Mar-

cum.
x· Denotes all A's.
Vinton Elementary School announces il.s four.lh six weeb honor roll:
Fourth grade - Christine Andryk~Wich ,
Melody Atchison · x. Tom Campbell, MeliMB
Cline, M.11t)l Farley · x, Shant Hampton . Chester
Hess, Susie Kinney · x, Sh.awn Law!Wil, Usa Marcum, Stephanie McKenzie, Tammy Northup.
Ron Oiler, Ronnie Petrie, Todd Petrie -x, Cheryl
Russell, Tarruny Swick, Peggy Ward, Melody
Wri~ht, Bobbi Young.
Fifth ~rade - SWilln Booth, Bdh Channell · x,
Til'll:l CriSp, Russel! Sowards.
Sixth grade - Jayne CampbelL
Seventh grade - Till!l Blackburn, Lei Ellen
Brown, Todd Deel, Wayne Diddle. Scott
Oonlhue, Edward Dople, Roberta Gt&lt;lrge, Lori
Holle, Diana LaRue, t ondra Price · x, fimothy
Stevena.
Eighth griKi e - Angella McComas, Todd
Ragan .

Waller Stower.s, principal ol Centervjlle
Elementary School ha 11 released the honur roll
for the fourth sll: week ~~:rading period.
Fourth grade - Glen Arrowood, David Banks,
Usa Ehman, Held1 Erb, Holly Pope, Seleesa
Stover, Jennifer Doelfer.
Fifth grade - MWy Adkins, Anit.a Arrowood,
Angela Lambert, Tony White.
Sixth grade - Kelly Arrowood, Lori Arrowood,
Justy Burleson , Tina Corner, Johanna Donta,
Matt Hoover, Naru:y Miller, Karen R05e, Tina
Silvers.

aliA's.
Tbtrd grade - Tumela Dod.'!OO, Mellnle
iloody, Frank Price.

~ourtll
~ - Healtl Jenkirul, Bobby Lucas,

Ritl McMeeehan - x.
,
- Anatlo Alelclic, Pam CamjlbeU, Dovld
,R
w, llori&lt;ne Hurt, ShiWT\1 Lancfoni,
I '!flllll)' Lemley, 8aoon Loobdo, Eort Mayo, Bondy ..,.., I...i.la Siuon, Cr~ S.nl.th • I, Steve
: Thuton • :1, Briln SmJth, Stepr.nJe Sprague· :1,

MJDDlEPORT-Plans lor hosting
the Buckeye Girls' State tea were
inade when the Lewis Manley Post
363 American Legion Auxiliary met
recently at the home of Mrs. Helen
Harper.
The tea will be held on Ap,ril 28 at
I: 30 p.m. at the Mount Moriah Ba~
tis! Church with Mrs. Margaret
Drake, government director for
Girls' State, to be the instructor.
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith reported on
·
money·making projects. A thank
Pvt. Wells
you note was read from Mrs. Fannie
West and son, John, and Mrs. Luia
Hampton thanked the Wlil for help
given her at the death of her son.
GALUPOUS - Pvt. Harold Wells
Energy pledges were distributed
Jr. has been selected to return to the
to the members and the legislative_
Gallipolis area to assist SSG Frank
bulletin was ordered The can·
Cox in recruiting in the area.
didacy of Mrs. Norma Frazer of Por·
Pvt. Wells has just completed has
tsmouth as treasurer of the Depart·
advanced individual training at Ft.
ment of Ohio, American Legion
Leonard wood, Mo., where he studied
Auxiliary, was announced Mrs.
Combat Engineering. He is a 1980
Florence Richards gave a report
graduate from Kyger Creek High
from the Firing Line on anti·
School.
American activities.
The bulletin from the Eighth
District president was read. This in·
. eluded the announcement of the
Junior Auxiliary conference to be
held April18 at the Feeney-Bennett
Post Unit in Middleport. Also anOn Tuesday evening, March 10, nounced was the Eighth District
the Eno Grange met in regular fonn. project of providing draperies for
During the business session the the new headquarters of the Depart·
Home Economics Chairman was men! of Ohio in Zanesville.
voted to drive for the Penny March.
Mrs. Clinton Jones was reorted ill.
The new password was given out
since was the last meeting this year
due to the nu and icy roads.
The program theme was "The
Wearing of the Green." "America"
was sung. Georgia George gave a
reading " The Growing rl the
. Green ." A poem by Donald Palmer,

'

jason Neigler

Ftt: grade- Mickey Gilbert, Vanessa Johll'
son, Blll)l LOvedly, Stephanie Pennington • J:,
Janet Stiltner· x, Becky Thomas.
Sixth grade - SheU i Aeiker , Greg Belcher,
Sheena Harrison, Dan Lovedly, Susan Milam,
Roy See. Annette Thomas, Kelly RO\Uh.
lntennedilte Jndivldualiud Jnstructioo Raym&gt;nd Cochr1111, Stephen Schartiger, Brenda
Stewart.

=-......,-------''-''----------· ~---···.

" March

Dream . "

•
•
•
•

LANGSVILLE - S. Sgt. Daniel R.
Midkiff, son of Ray and Bernice
Midkiff of Langsville, has returned
to Camp Lejeune, N.C. after a six
month Mediterranean Cruise with
the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines , 34th
Marine Amphibious Unit.
While on the ship USS Saipan, he
visited Africa, Spain, England,
Italy, Norway, Diego Garcia, POr·
tugal, and the Suez Canal. S. Sgt.
Midkiff joined the Marine Corps in
1973 . He and his wife, Cindy, and
children, Danielle and Christopher,
recently visited a few days with
relatives in Ohio.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHROUGH SAT., MAROt 21

Sentinel
Social

SUNDAY

READY TO
11'1 ·' •

t ., tl &gt;'I'INf, fl.l Of' ' l"f1 l L
• 14

ll

~'Q ~

'189

ASSEMBLE

r&gt;i !."' S•b l'
"

ol Ill

Cl1• 11l

~ ,1.

'2900

Also available, unfinished Chests, Bookcases,
Desks, Vanity and Corner Cabinets.

.BAKER FURNITURE

'·

Middleport, Oh. ·
9·5 P.M. Daily-Evenings by appt, 992·3307

~.

COUNTY-WIDE prayer meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday at Chester Church of
the Nazarene with Glen Bissell,
class leader.
DISTRICT 13, Daughters of
·America practice SWlday 1:30 p.m.
at Syracuse Grade School for March
21 spring raUy. ·
CHICKEN BARBECUE Sunday at
Racine Fire Station beginning.at II
a.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Genealogical
Society Sunday at 2 p.m. at Meigs
Museum. Work session is planned.
MONDAY
REVIVAL at Hysell RWl Holiness
Church, county road 15 off SR 124,
Monday through Saturday at 7:30
p.m. nightly. Norman Taylor will be
the speaker. Pastor Theron Durham
Invites the public.
BAND BOOSTERS at North Gallia
H. S., 7 p.m.
PLANS FOR spring carnival on
April 4 will be finalized at a meeting
ol Racine PI'O Monday at 7:30p.m.
at elementary school.
MEIGS MEN'S FEU.OWSillP,
Churches of Christ, chili supper
prepared by Pomeroy Church of
Christ men at 6 p.m. at Pomeroy
Church. Special music, devotions.
All men of Meigs County invited.

Holiday Inn
9:00·5:00

COIN

REVIVAL SET
POMEROY-A revival will be held
at the Ireland Conununlty Church
beginning Monday, March 18.
Evangelist Is the Rev. Eddie Boyer.
Serives are at 7:30 p.m. nJaltly.
Pastor Is the Rev. Ed Hlclunan. The
public Is Invited to 1ttend.

CENTER CUT LOIN

$

FRESH PORK BUTT

USDA Choice Boneless

69
79

$}19

·

$ 69 Steaks or Roasts•.•.• ~~ ••.

.

Chuck Roast....... ~.. l
USDA Choice Bucket

Cube Steak.........~.~2
(73% Lean)

G.round Beef.......1!~~.1

29

39

Carrots..........~.~.4l$1

Annom1ce change
POMEROY- A change In classes
by Sllnderella has been annoWJced
by JoAnn New!(mle, lecturer.
The Chester class will be held on
Monday night at 7:30 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple behind the post of.
flee in Chester rather than on Thursday night at the fire station.
The Tuesday night Pomeroy class
will move to the Pomeroy MelhodW
Church at 7:30 p.m. The Tuesday
morning Mason class will remain at
St. Joseph's Catholic Church at 10:30
a.m.
At the Mason class last week,
Shirley Tucker IeiSt the most weight
and received ber 20 poWld ribbon.
Francis Oliver was runne!'.up.
Three new members were taken Into
the class.
Diana ·. Johnson lost the most
weight at the Pomeroy claas and
there was a tie for rWJOer-up bet·
ween Delores Surface, Betty Dill,
Mona Russell and Sheila Erlewine.
Four new members were taken into
the class. Myrna Carpenter and Connie Rankin lost the most wel&amp;ht in
the Chester class with one new member being welcomed.

$

Pork Chops........~~ ..l

EDNA CHAPEL Church, Teen's
Run Rd., 7:30p.m.; special speaker
and singers. Everyone welcome.

BEDFORD TOWNSWP Trustees
meeting 6 p.m. Saturday at home of
clerk.
SIGNUP FOR youth wishing to
participate in Pomeroy Youth
League summer basebaU program
Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
•Pomeroy Village Hall. Registration
fee of S6 per person required at lime
·
ofsignup.

CENTER CUT RIB

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

SUNDAY
LEGION Post 'll, 63rd birthday pal'
ty, I p.m. at hall; bring covered
dish, table service.
GALLIA COU.NTY Historical
Society will meet at St . . Peter's
Episcopal Church at 2 p.m. Board, I

MIDDLEPORT - Jason Jay
Neigler celebrated his first birthday
recently with a party at the home ct
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Neigler, Route I, Middleport.
A Wirutie-the-Pooh cake was se~­
ved with ice cream, mints and Kool·
Aid. Others attending were his gran· dparents, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wooda
and Mt. and Mrs. Ralph Neigler and
granddaughter, Jennifer, Mrs.
Cheryl Imboden and ShaWl, Mrs.
Rosalyn Stewart and Shannon and
Brett, and Melissa Wooda.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Wooda and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Davisandfamily.

READY-TO-ASSEMBLE FURNITURE

Anise

had a reading, "A
Ch~rished Friend," and " These, My
Friends" by Harley Denney. A
reading by Clinton Jones was "I'll
Only Be Gone a Few Minutes." Earl
George had a poem on "Likeness."
AI the close of ihe meeting, a
potluck supper as served with Marie
Thomas giving grace.
The next meeting wil be March 24.

Jurored

·Tribune ·
Remember
Calendar

UNFINISHED

Thomas gave a reading, " My Sugar
Pail Girl of '09" . Ruth Palmer had a
poem " Thank You God lor Little
Things". Iva Denney reada poem,
"Shamrock

-

-Clarke and Gabrielle Sattler for
amateur photographers,_ including
:.black and white as color pictures.
•: March 17,7 p.m.-9 p.m. - Lecture
:•on good picture taking by Leo Hill,
1
art Instructor at Rio Grande CoUege
' and Community College, and a
professional photographer. He will
•.use a slide presentation and will be
emphasizing composition in picture
itaking. Pni-registralion required. A
fee of 50 cents for members, and f1
.'for non-members. Call Janet Byers
Iat 446-1903 to pre-register.
': CREATIVE Movement Class, 4
and 5 year-old children, March 9 :!,.;!
· p.m. Judy Sheets, Instructor; $12.

Returns to area

Eno Grange
meets March 10

Exhibit

"~holography show, chaired by Susan

SAnJRDAY

"Think it Over" was given. Maurice

L. L. Myers, principal al Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary School, announcfl'l ~ honur roll
students for the fourth gradlng period: :1 denole!J

1

with the U. S. Air Force.
The couple have three children,
Mrs. Brian (Gen·i) Hamilton, Mrs.
Wesley (Stephannie) Barnett, and
Kellie Rought. They also have one
grandson, Wesley Barnett, Jr.
The couple plan a trip to Florida
sometime this swnmer.

Auxiliary
plans Girls'
·State tea

o-

Young man turns one year

Two couples celebrate anniversaries
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs . .Nor·
man Fisher will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniverSary with an open
reception on Sunday, March 22, at
the SenecaviUe United Methodist
Church, SenecaviUe.
Mr. Fisher and the former Helen
Crary formerly resided in Meigs
County. They were married on Jan.
4, 1931 at Middleport.

.,.

to their families," Altbof said. Ef·
fectiYe ways of dealing with
problems are counseling or rap
groups with other Vietnam veta," he
noted.
The veteran's family may be
having trouble too, pointed out
another Community Mental Health
.::enter therapist, Jim lansford,
A.C.S.W. "When the Vietnam vet is
just beginning to let his experience
and feelings come out, the family
may need special help, Wl·
derstanding and coping" be said
Specialized COW!Seling Is avaUable
lor partner and families of troubled
Viebtam vets and if enough Interest
is shown, a group for the partners
will be formed.
Referrals to the Veterans Administration will be made In some
cases. "Some individuals may be
eligible for veteran's disability
payments because of problems they
are experiencing due to Vietnam "
said Altho!.
'
For more information, caU the
Center at 446-5500.

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I

�Pa e'--B-8

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

It was noted that deadline for the
The Rev. Richard Thomas reported on the recent establishment of next issue of Contact is March 31 at
the food bank under the auspices of 10 a.m. Articles are to be sent to the
the Social Concerns Committee. It Meigs Cooperative Palish, Box 207,
was noted that a total of 21 out or '1:1 Middleport.
Tbe communications committee
United Methodist Churches in Meigs
County participated by contributing will meet to draw up guidelines for
canned items brought in by the chur- news items along with proposals for
ch members. Requests for emergen- better communications for the local
cy food are to be directed through churches. A report on the comthe county niinisters who will super- munications workshop at the conference was given by the Rev.
vise distribution.
Reporting for the Youth Com- Robert McGee.
Vernon Nease announced that.the
mittee. was the Rev. Mark Flynn
who noted that the first Bible bowl County United Mthodist Men will
held Feb. 22 at Porilaod was well begin meeting quarterly. A sausage
received. A second one on the book and pancake supper has beeri set for
of Mark is set for April 26 at the March 24, 4 to 7 p.m. at the Heath
Alfred United Methodist Church at 2 United Mthodist Church in Midp.m. Eight youth groups have in- dleport. All proceeds will go to the
dicated interest so far, the minister student ministers' fund. Jack
reported. Others may register with Bechtel is coordinator foe the supper
with tickets being $2 for adults and
the Rev. Mr. Floyd at 94!1-2895.
The week of July 27-31 was an- $1 for those under 12 years old.
It was noted that the Rock Springs
nounced for senior high camp and
also confirmation camp, both of Charge has a new minister, the Rev.
which will be sharing facilities at Richard Rothemich, who assumed
Camp Francis Asbury. The Rev, his duties today. He will be moving
Robert Robinson will be in charge of to the county soon, it was reported. A
student at the United Seminary in
the confirmation camp with the Rev.
Mr. Thomas to have the senior high · Dayton, the Rev. Mr. Rothemich
will graduate in June and then
camp.

Movie to be shown

_~

Maria Hansen
and Rick Boone

WEEKEND REVlV AL
POMEROY - A weekend revival
:w ill be beld at the Faith Tabernacle
Church, Bailey Run Road, March 20,
:21, and 22. Evangelist will be Noah
:chafin of Chesapeake. Pastor is Emmett Rawson. The public is invited
~oattend.

Election
of Officers.
Members,
for
Ceremonial,
Annual Reports
and
bring potluck for refreshments
following the meeting. dues for 1981
are due.

~

~
( )

responsible for coordinatin~ ali tund
raising activities ·for the society
throughout .Ohio and implementing
crusade policies in accordance with
the National Society. Under Baxendale's leadership in 1980, the society
topped the $9 million mark in contributions and legacies for the first
time in its history. These funds will
be invested in the society's
programs of research, education
and service to cancer patients in
Ohio's 88 counties.
·
Baxendale is a graduate of Bob
Jones University. He and his wife,
Esther, and their two children reside
in Brunswick.
·

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dryers; laundry pairs priced for your budget.

STATE FARM
WE STILL HAVE A FEW OF THESE
SETS LEFT IN STOCK BUT

HURRY I

INSURANCE

®

For insurance call
Caroll Snowden
417 Second Ave_
Gallipolis, Oh_
Phone 446-4290

WE CAN'T ORDER ANY MORE.
• Many Kenmore models are available In colors
at an extra charge • Kenmore dryers and ranges
require connectors not included in prices shown.
Each of these advertised items is readily
available for sale as advertised.
IncludeS Deliv-ery &amp; Normal Hookup

ISears I
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own special seasoning.
• Golden brown French fries,
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•lOasted Grecian bread
•Tartar sauce and lemon wedge.
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..

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TILL APRIL 30TH.
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Provacative
Creations

ANNOUNCEMENT

HOLZER CLINIC LTD's

THEY ARE GOING FAST AND

NIGHT CLINIC

Bolton-Bowen
POMEROY - Miss Cathy Jo
Bolton became the bride of Philip
Anthony Bowen at 6:30 p.m. on
Saturday, December 13, at the
Sciotoville United Methodist Church
in Sciotoville.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.

9AMto9 PM

S•turd•y BAM to 6PM
WALIIIN Ofl CAll~

"N Af'POINTMENT

SlRErf
" A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR

MAIN CLINIC FACIUlY NEAR GAU.IPOUS

446-9510

Dfi-··

CALL 446-5287 IN ADVANCE

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

and Mrs.·TbeGilbert
of
Sciotoville.
groom's Bolton
parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bowen of Tuppers Plains .
Rev. Robert Rider oFficiated the
double-ring candlelight ceremony. A
musical prelude began at 6 p.m..
with Mrs. Helen Basham, pianist;
. Willard Basham, organist, Mark
Williams, soloist; and the Portsmouth East High School Madrigals
select chorus.
Candles trimmed with light ])lue
., bows and white poinsettias
decorated the altar, the windows,
~ and lined the aisle of the church
: which the bride was escorted down
UIIU . .
: by her father. The bride wore a
~ white knit gown wlth an empire
PoTAToEs
~ waisUine. It featured a Queen AnI
VEGETABLE
4 PM To I ROLL &amp; BUTTER
: ne's neckline, long fitted sleeves,
•
a cathedral length train ex~ tendlng from the back yoke. Vernise
: lace adorned the bodice and sleeves,
uand edged the bottom of the dress.
: lier cathedral length veil was also
: e~tged with V.enise lace and it was at.,tached to a Camelot cap of Venise
4 PM TO CLOSING
• ROLL &amp; BUTTER
•
: lace. She carried a silk bouquet of ::i~--------------------------------------------------·--·----~:P
: !white poinsettias and blue and white
: rosebuds which was attached to her
•mother's and father's weddihg
sAvoRY DREssiNG
~Bible.
: • Miss Dianna Bolton of Sciotoville,
4 PM TO CLOSING
: ~~~~i~~~E
ROLL
•
· :.mter or the bride, was maid of
llonor, while Mrs. Sandy Bowen of
:,Parkersburg, W. Va., sister-in-law
:'Ofthegrooin, was bridesmaid.
• Tbe attendants wore identical A·
AP~ETIZER SALAD
gowns of colonial blue velvet,
4 PM TO CLOSING
ENTREE ROLL VEGETABLE
•
~with empire waistlines and lon~
DESSERT &amp;EVERAGE

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Ev~n•ng SPECIAL-Sill
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THE

MONDAY · FRIDAY 5 PM · 9 PM

straight sleeves. They had blue
shoulder length veils attached to
colonial blue velvet headbands. To
complete their outfits, they carried
candies trimmed with white silk
poinsettias and blue silk rosebuds
and blue and white streamers.

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133()99
.

- Melodie Dawn Angela Larkins, the bride's
Miss Jamie Shanks of Baltimo;c, Brian Bowen of Parkersburg, W.
Larkins and Randal Wayne Forbes daughter, was the flower girL They
cousin of the bride, was flower girL Va., nephews of the groom. Adam
exchanged wedding vows in a wore matching gowns in yellow She wore a floor-length gown cl Gee o£ Wheelersburg, cousin of the
double-ring ceremony at 7:30 p.m. fashioned with high necklines, short colonial blue velvet trimmed with bride, was the bearer of the ·
on Aug. 29 at the Heath United sleeves, and flared skirts. Miss white lace. The basket she carried marriage license. They all were
Faulkner carries a rose and haby's
Methodist Church, Middleport . .
was trimmed with blue and white dressed in dark blue velvet suits and
Tbe brid~ is the daughter of Mr. breath bouquet, and the flower girl a
silk rosebuds which matched the colonial blue shirts. ·
and Mrs. Eugene Eskew, Lincoln small white basket of rose petals.
Mrs. Marcia Noga of Columbus
.
Serving as best man was David hairpiece she wore.
Hill, Pomeroy, and the groom is the
was
at the guest hook and Miss BerThe groom's father and Steve
son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Forbes, Theiss, Columbus, and the ushers Bowen, of Parkersburg, W. Va ., nita Wessel of Nelsonville, cousin of
were Paul Forbes, Jr. and Mark
Sr., Minersville.
brpther of the groom, were best the bride, distributed programs.
both brothers of the groom.
Forbes,
Tbe Rev. Robert Robinson perA reception was held in the church
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. men. Joel Fisher and James Noga, social room irrunediately following
formed the ceremooy following a
college roommates of the groom,
program of organ music by Mrs. Eskew wore a navy blue gown and a• hoth of Columbus, served as ushers.
the ceremony. Mrs. Sue Bender,
Joan Robinsoo. The altar was corsage or yellow and pink roses,
Jolinda
Coriell, Mrs. Kris Liles and
The men of the wedding party all
decorated with bouquets of pink and while Mrs. Forbes was in a pink and wore dark blue fonnal tuxedos and Mrs. Janie Rowe served as
maroon ensemble and wore a pink
white gladioli and carnations.
colonial blue shirts, with the groom hostesses.
Escorted to the altar by Mr. rose corsage.
The new Mr. and Mrs. Bowen are
A reception honoring the couple wearing dark blue tails and a white residing at 2034 1-A Sturburdge Dr.
Eskew, the bride was attired in a
shirt.
gown of ivory chiffon over satin was held in the church social room.
Ringbearers were Matthew and in Columbus.
fashioned with a flared skirt which · The bride's cake was three tiered
dipped to points at ankle length, and and topped with the traditional l;;!iiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;i;i;i~~1
a fitted bodice with rounded neckline miniaiure bride and groom. Crystal 1
Riclunond, sister or the. bride,
· and sheer slit elbow-length sleeves.
She carried a bouquet of pink roses registered the guests.
The groom is employed with the
with g~nery and baby's breath.
Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
Her blusher of illusion fell from a
Mrs. Forbes has been working at the
satin and chiffon covered cap.
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Miss Elora Faulkner, sister of the
Several out-{)f-town guests attended
bride, served as maid or honor and
the wedding and reception.
PO~ROY

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'I

ELECTED PRESIDENT
Helen Sharp, and his two brothers,
HAMILTON - D. Russel Lee of Richard and Jake Lee, both live in
Hamilton has been elected president Racine.
A sister, Wilma L. Harrison
of the hoard of trustees of Fort
Hamilton-Hughes
Memorial
resides in Gallipolis. Lee has other
Hospital Center.
sisters, Rose L. Clarke of El Campo,
Son o£ the late Dale and Lillian Texaa, and NormaL. Tassian of CinLee, he is married to the former · cinnati.

~

Home Phone 446 -4518
WHITE SHRINE
TO MEET
GALUPOUS - Lafayette Shrine
No. 44, Order of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem will meet Tuesday, March 17, Masooic Temple, at 7:30p.m.

Tbe PTO voted to sponsor the cub
scouts, boy scouts and Brownies
again this year. Tbe fourth grade
won the Campbell's Soup label contest and were taken to the Syracuse
Dairy Bar for a party.
It was noted that the new MerryGo-Round has been purchased and
will be erected when the weather
pennlts.
The room count was won by the
sixth grade. Max McGee, a
representative from the Community
Mental Health Center, presented the
program.

SYRACUSE - New officers were
elected and the Pl'O agreed to
donate $50 to the Southern Junior
High School book fund when the
Syracuse PTO met Tuesday night at
the school.
The money in the book fund, it was
reported, will be used to purchase
new science books for the school
next fall.
Elected foe the 1981..!12 school year
were Sharon Stewart, president;
Marsha Russell, vice president;
Judy Pape, secretary; and Janice
Usle, treasurer .

~

SAVE .
'30 to •so

Mr . and Mrs. James C.
MacKnight, New Haven, are announcing the forthcoming marriage
of their daughter, Debra Kay, to
Gary Tyrone Roush, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Roush, Mason.
Tbe bride-elect is a 1980 graduate
of Wahama High School and is employed at · John Hancock Ins,,
Pomeroy. Her fiance, a graduate of
Wahama in 1980, is employed at G.
0. Roush and Sons Construction and
the Riverside Golf Course.
The wedding ceremony will take
place on Aprilll at 7 p.m. at the New
Haven United Methodist Church
with the Rev. John Campbell officiating.
The gracious custom of open church will be observed and a reception
will follow at the Riverside Golf
Clubhouse at Mason.

Four persons marry in local vo_ws

~

Betrothals announced
GAILIPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
James H. Hanson, 19 Edgemont
Drive, Gallipolis, are announcing
the engagement and forthcoming
wedding of their daughter, Maria
Ann Hanson, to Richard Roy Boone,
426 Read Ave., Tuscaloosa,
Alabama, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Boone, 114 Mabelene Drive,
Gallipolis.
Miss Hanson is a 1973 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and a
graduate of the Nationwide School of
Beauty in Columbus. Richard is a
graduate of GAHS and Ohio Univel'
sity. He is currently a graduate
student in clinical psychology at the
University of Alabama. Upon
graduation, Richard will accept an
officer's commission in the U. S.
Navy. The couple will reside in
Washington, D. C.
The wedding will be held Satur·day, May 30, at 1:30 p.m. at St.
.Peter's Episcopal Church,
:Gallipolis. The gracious custom of
·open church will be observed.

PTO donates to
Southern book fund

--..
..

A CS director to speak

_....

Times-Sentinei-Pa

Ohio--Point Pleasant, W.va.

.

.

POMEROY - Paul Baxendale,
crusade director for the American
Cancer Society's Ohio Division, will
be guest speaker at the Meigs County unit crusade kickoff at 8 p.m.
Thursday at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
All American Cancer Society
volunteers with Erma Cleland and
Opal Hollon serving as co·
chairpersons for the door-t&lt;Hioor
crusade in the county during April
are asked to attend the meeting.
Baxendale has been the Ohio
Division Crusade Director for the
past four and on.,.half years. He is

1981

J1e door.. Another movie will be
securedbythePl'OforApril24.
I
RUTLAND - Showing or the
The Lord's Prayer and the pledge,
movie "Hot Lead and· Cold Feet"
led by Doug Behnke !IPI'ned the,
Friday night was announced when
meeting. Fathers' Night was 00.
become full-time at the three chur- the Rutland pro met Monday night served with theroom banner' go~
ches here.
to Mrs: Danna Jenkins' fifth grade.
at the sehoo1.
.
Membe rs were reminded tha t the .
It waa noted that serving will
class.
Rev. Carl Hicks will celebrate 50 begin at 6 p.m. with the menu to inA basketball game between the
years in the ministry oo March 29. elude corndogs, pizza, pop and pop- fourth and 'fifth grades followed thC
Next staff meeting will be March 20, com for those who have reserved
meeting. Refreshments were sel'9 a.m. The Athens District Con- _!!ti£;ck~e~ts!:_._!Ti~·c~ke!;!l!~s!w~ill~be:.!av~a!!!il:=;ab~le~at:.__v~ed-::_
. ---------ference will be held May 31 at the r
Athens First United Methodist Church with the pension prngram to be on
the agenda.
Three men have registered with
the Rev. Mr. McGee for Purdue '81,
an event of the National United
•
Methodist Men, July 11-12. The Coun'
cil approved the purchase of space ·
M'
in the Meigs County Fair premium
"",,
hook and also a hooth at the Fair.
In other announcements, it was
noted that Pomeroy area churches
"
are holding midweek services each
Thursday during Lent with a three~
"'"' ·"~
hour Good Friday service set for
NOW'561.98
PAIRCUT'70
April17 at the Pomeroy Church.
•
•
The meeting opened with group
singing accompanied by the Rev.
•
Mr. Thomas. The Rev. Mrs. Smith.
led devotions from II Thessalonians.
Refreshments were served by the
••
Apple Grove women. Next meeting
will be April 13 at the Minersville
••
Church, 7:30p.m.

April is membership month for food co-op
POMEROY April was
designated as membership month
for the Meigs County Food Co-op
with a meeting being planned to
·review policy of operation when the
County Council on Ministries of the
Meigs County United Methodist
Churches met Monday night at the
Apple Grove United Methodist Church.
· Fees for the Food Co-op were set
at $5 for persons under the age of 60,
and $3 for those 60 or older.
During the · meeting a teacher
cultivation event wa$ announced for
·Aprll 25 at the Asbury Church in
Syracuse, 9 a.m. through lunch.
Resource persons will be on hand to
work with Sunday school teachers
toward a better understanding or
their tasks. The County Education
Committee, under the leadership or
the Rev. Robert McGee and Mrs.
Mildred Ihle, will be coordinating
the event.
Tbe Rev. Florence Smith solicited
ideas and suggestions from the
group on an evangelistic undertaking. She expressed concern
for outreach in the local churches
with county-wide emphasis also
being of concern.

March 15 1 1

Galli olis, Ohio--Point Pleasant, w. va.

•

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WARM," or "DEF.COOK·WARM" at the tap of a single
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Delay/Stand function, and Defrost settings. COOK-A-ROUNO
Magnetic Turntable automatically rotates food as it cooks.
Two-level warming rack. Multifunction digital clock/readout.
Clear-view oven door. Included cookbook and Auto Sensor
cooking supplement

:.
NOTSUPERStrnOUS
~ CINCINNATI (API - A Cin:dnnati family isn't too superstitious
~about Friday the 13th, In fact , it's
:becoming something of a tradition to
:be born on the supposedly unlucky
"day.
'
•• Lois Brauntz was born on Friday,
13, 1946. She gave birth to July,
~!'er first Friday the 13th daughter,
; on May l3, 1974. On Frid~y, Mrs.
~Brauntz had her second Fr1day the
::13th baby, daughter Beth.
, ,
~ And, Mrs. Brauntz's obatetncran,
. Dr. Richard Solman, was also a
~JI'rlday the 13th baby .

:Pee.

l.::l'~-- --- -

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ALLISON ELECTRIC CO.
We Service What We Sell
· 218 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

�Page-B-10

Pomeroy

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Corrtmunity Corner
By Charlene HoefUcb
Lifestyle writer
Genial Diana Eberts who ha~
been Meigs County's extension
agent, · home
economics, for the
past three years
has resigned and
will be leaving at
the end of this
month. Her innovative programming will be
Charlene
missed.
Diana isn't taking another job.
She has just decided that she
would like to have more time for
her toddler, and that's commendable. But we'll miss her.
Meanwhile, her last program
here will take place Tuesday at
the Senior Citizens Center. It's
titled "Current Issues in Food,
Drugs and Cosmetics" and will
feature Ruth Weisheit and
Theresa Hoog, consumer affairs
officers with the Food and Drug
Administration. It's an all-day
program beginning at 10 a.m. and
ending at 3 p.m: with an hour out
for lunch.
While the Meigs County food
co-op cut down to one delivery a
month, there is still plenty of
room for families to participate.
The co-op, sponsored by the
Meigs Methodist Ministries,
operates through the Senior
Citizens Center and that's where
the orders are taken.
Roack·a-thons are in as fund
raising projects, and one took
place Friday night at the Mid-

dleport Church of Christ. Twelve
yoWlg people rocked (in rocking
chairs) for 24 hours to raise
money for the new classrooms in
the church basement.
Are you ready for the swing into spring!
And did you know ...
- that special colors dominate
spring hosiery fashions,
- that the ankle bracelet, so
popular years ago, is making a ,
comeback,
- that hems are up and heels

are down,

Middleport

March 15, 1981

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Astrograph
Mom:h iS. 1981
Enterprises or mvolvement.s whit-h yuu
have this coming year that cater to the
public 's needs should prove quite furtWUite
for you . Search for the right opening - then
fill it.
PlSCF.S lt'eb. %0-Marcb !8~ OtlM!N find
)'0\1 appealifll! and attractive to begin .wilh .
Today, )'OUr luster wlll have even more
~l.&gt;en, especially with members of the op~ite seK. Find Ou t rn~re about what's m
l!tore for you for the year following your birthday by sending for your A::itro-Graph. Mail
U for each to Astri&gt;Graph, P. 0 . Box 489,
Radio City Station, New York, N. Y. !0019.
Be sure to speci fy birth date .
ARIES I Ma"rch !l·Aprfi 19 I This is like)y to
be &lt;1 more enjO}'able day if you while away
hoors with your family instead of pctr·
tkipatillM in activities with outsiders.
TAURUS CApri120-May tfll Try to gel out
fllld move around a bit tOOay rather than
plop in the easy chair tu watch TV . Visiting
old friends would bell good idea.
GEMINI tMay 21-Junt&gt; ZOl Even tllou ~ h
you may feel llke gettin1! Hwav frum tht&gt;

to your benefil to involve )IOUI'Ielf in joint
vtnturt'§.
CAPRICORN lOt&lt;' . Zlo-Ju. 111 Don't
dodge difficul.t decisions today. You're able
to think better on your f@ft than you n111y
~ive yourseU credit for.
A.QUARIUS (Ju. ZO..Ji"eb. ltl Relax ~tnd
enjoy yourself today, but also keep a
weather eye peeled for ways ll.) add to your
income. Something out of the o~ry may

workatby v.·orlrl today , yvu 'd ~ wise to
follow rhrout.:h on sitllHlion:; which could
cllhcr boost your CHrt"t!r or add tv )'our in·
~~~
.
d' 'd
CANCER !June 'l t-July 221 Try to !VI e
)'OUr hme tOdl:l)' equally Uetween
pleasuruble pursuits and that ~· hl rh ) '?U fHI
to be productive. You can somehow fit both
into your schedule.
LEO (July !3-AUI· !11 You are lu(•ky in
situations today where you have a chance to
take somethlnR that another has already
started t~nd add your perSonal touches to lt.
VIRGO iAUII · :!::J.StpL H) You have Q
1miq11e Ullent today fur putting deals
tllgethcr betwe.!n pet:~plil who don't quite
kn ow how tu tie the loose ends together them·
selves.
LIBRA ISI'pt. ~L t31 Be nex.iblc tiXIu)'
when&gt; your ,wools are {'{l~« med. Your
original plans euuld gel stynued. Hang loose.
You'll l'Ume up with e\•en bri,whter a!terrt&lt;!lives .
SCORPIO t Ott. :!:4-Nov. ttl Not only are
your 1dcus r11ther ir~enious today . More im·
portantly you 'll f 1~u re nut ~·Hys to put thern
to immOOiate profitablE' tL~es.
, SATITIAR IUS \NO\'. !3-Del'. W Later .in
the day you'll be abil' to exp~~ }'Our m·
dependence, but earlier it could prilvf more

popup.
Mareb IC. IMI

Thi.s comlfl¥ year will be a bua)' one for
you. In fact, you could even take Oil severa:
unrelated lnvolvernenU in order to add to
your resources or to raiae your stalion in life.
PISCES (Feb. 2t-Miirch ZIO) Sometimes we
do things whe~ the proper rewards are
denial us. This won't be your cue today.
The better the job, the bigger the bonus. F'lnd
out mon: about what's in :~tore for you for the
year folluwint: your birtht.lay by sending (or
yuur Astro-Graph. Mail $1 for each to Astr~
Graph, P. 0. Bmr: 419 , Rsdio Qt)' Station.
New York, N. V. 10019. Be sure to specify bir·
thd.Yte.
.4RIES \Man!h 21·.4prU 191 New ideas or
&lt;.ooce~ w!ll hold a stronH appeal for you
today. You may even sUddenly ~~erap plans
wh.ich you spent coruiderabJe time working

- that short hairstyles are in
for spring,
- that the "broomstick" skirts
of the 40s are hack,
- that completely washable
suits for men are on the market,
~ that the "redder than red"
and hot pinks of lipsticks in the
forties are back on cosmetic
counters along with the blue-reds
of the fifties. and the pinky-beiges
of the sixties,
- that the look for women is
feminine but casual,
- and that pretty pastels,
creamy whites, delicate pin
stripes, and soft plaids dominate
the color scene.

March 15, 19e1

out
•---·"TAURUS IAprO ... May Ill ~·~•~•B

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

profitable may develop today, but It's likely
to be c( a fleeting nature. If you~ to reap
lt.s benefits, be prep1red to move swihly.
GEMINI I Mly U.Jaae ft) Beclluse you
have the ability to handle problem people or
difficult sltuaUON toda)', you can tum
situ.ltiON around and make tlE adverse
beneficial.
CANCER iJo.. U.JIIIy 121 BogiMlll&amp;
today it's possible you'll find way• to add
new twist~ to your work, thus tncrusin&amp;
your prodlldlvlty and, perhaps, enllrglng
~our

strongut and m011t favorable tmpresstons,
howeve r, will be made on persona whO meet
you for the first Urne.
\IIR~ [Aq.. 23-Stpt. I!) A way ~y be
found today to resolve a problem which appean!d to have no solution. 'lbe answer could
l'Ollleas a nasn of bupiralion.
LmRA lSept. ~t. !31 New friends with
frestl ideas may start entering your Ufe ~t
·this time . You could become mvolved m
projects or enterpr!Jell which you never tried

ADVHITI SED Eoch of th. . odvertiMd ltomo lo required to be roodily
tor oalo ot or below tho odvol1iood price in eech
ITEM POliCY ovolloblo
A&amp;P Storo, ..copt oo opoc:lllcolly noted in thlo ed .

before.

va.

The Sunday Times · Sentinei-Pag~B·i1

EARLY WEEK
.. FEATURES
SUN.·MON. &amp; TUES.

your income.
I..EO (July Z&gt;Auc. Ill Today, others will

admire lhe way you conduct yol.lfMlf.

w.

Prices effective Sun., March
thru Tues., March 17, 1981.
Quantity Rights Reserved.

,,

•
l.
'
.,.-.:
'
..1
•. . ,'.. ..,'•'··...,i.:l'!:
.

.

,

. . v

Again this year the Senior
Citizens Center will be having a
day of recognition for Meigs
COUiltians 100 and ·over. Right
now Center personnel are trying
to update their list of centenarians but need your help.
Just call 992·2161 if you have a
friend or relative who has
reached the century mark.

Reedsville UMW meets
REEDSVILLE
Reedsville Alice Bise with prizes give~ . .
: U.M.W. met with Mrs. Sandy Rober- Refreshments using a St. Patrick's
: ts Thursday evening with the Day motif were served by the
opening given by the president, Mrs.
hostess assisted by her daughter.
: Dolly Reed. Lord's Prayer in unison Tammy, and Lisa Rucker, to the
• followed by Mrs. Reed reading John following : Mrs. Virginia Walton,
: 15.
.
Mrs. Mary Alice Bise, Mrs. Erika
' During the business session, dues Boring, Mrs. Barbara Masters, Mrs.
: were collected. Thirty-two shul-in Pauline Brewer, guests, and Mrs.
: calls were made. Get-well cards
Pat Martin, Mrs. Marlene Putman,
: were signed for several friends. The Mrs. Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Lorraine
; workshop to be held in Belpre was
Wigal, Mrs. Vivian Humphrey, Mrs.
: announced . . The group planned to Sandy Cowdery, Mrs. Violel Sat·
: visit a nursing home at a later date. .terfield, Mrs. Dolly Reed. Mrs. Ver·
• " Call To Prayer and Self-Denial"
na Rose, Mrs. Connie Rucker, and
: program was. conducted by Mrs.
Mrs. Lillian Pickens. members.
:Sandy Cowdery. She gave a reading,
The next meeting will be with Mrs.
: also two poem prayers by Helen · Rose and Mrs. Douglas in the church ,
: Steiner Rice. Closing prayer was by
basement. Mrs. Satterfield was
: Mrs. Vivian Hwnphrey.
a warded the door prize.
Games were ·led by 'Mrs. Mary

!
I

PTOTOMEET
SAUSBUR
Y - The Salisbury
1
i PTO will meet at 7:3() p.m. Tuesday
i at the Salisbury Elementary School.
:Refreshments will be served
• following a program by the
; Salisbury scouts.

OMISSION
SPRINGFIELD - Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Walker. Springfield, are
the great-grandparents of Rachel
Renee Reeves, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Randell Reeves, bom Feb. 6 at
Holzer Medical Center. Mrs. Reeves
is the fonner Angela Dailey.

30th ANNIVERSARY
THURSDAY NIGHT
SPECIAl.• ••

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Pa9e-B-12-The Sunday Times·Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

Ohi~Point

Pleasant,

w. va.

March 15 , 1981

March IS, 1981
The Sunday Times· Sentinei:-Page-

Riverside Study Club hears informative
speech on development in the world
GAIJ.JPOUS - Mrs. Donald
Alexander as hostess greeted
members of GFW Riverside
Study Club at the Down Under
Restaurant for their regular
meeting Tuesday afternoon.
Following the club collect, led
by the chaplain, a dessert course
and social hour was enjoyed. The
present then called the meeting
to order, thanked the hostess, and ·
read a poem entitled "Spring
Planting." Get well cards were
signed for two members and a
letter from Mrs. Elaine Rouse,
who has been on an extended trip
abroad, was read by Mrs. Elliott.
At the conclusion of the
business session, the meeting
was turned over to Mrs. Florence .
Wickline who presented Mrs.
Wilma Pikkoja, who had the
program for the afternoon . The

topic of Mrs. Pikkoja 's talk was
"Industrial Development."
Interdependence to technology
is typical of almost every aspect
of life in the modern world.
" When we start a car, or press
a button in an elevator, or buy
fuod in supermarket, we give little thought to the complex
devices and systems it takes to
make the car move, elevator rise,
or fuod to appear on the shelves,"
she said.
Eight inventions ushered in the
technological age : the computer,
the production line, the atomic
bomb, teleconununications, the
airplane, plastics, the guided
rocket, and television. These
were the innvoations that also
altered civilization, and man's
relationship to nature.
" During this centllrV WP tt;we

Simple solution to baseball blues
By PETERJ. BOYER
AP Television Writer
WS ANGELES (AP) - I see that TV producer Chuck Barris is
trying to buy the. Philadelphia Phillies. Hmm. Perhaps the develop.
ment lli not as orrunous for baseball as it might seem.
Indeed, we could have here a simple solution to baseball's problems
and it might help television, too.
'
Barris, for those of you blessed with memory-erase spent the 1970s
as television's circus master. He made shows such as "The Gong
Show," "$1.98 Beauty Contest" and "Three's a Crowd," programs
. that suggested clever parody but delivered sleazy humiliation.
"Gong Show" was a mock amateur talent show that invited the
studio audience to yield to its mob instincts. The crowd exhorted a
"celebrity pa':l"r' to gong the performers, whose talents ranged from
ghastly Elvlli urutat10ns to rendering "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" on a
set of burning candles. It was fun, until it got depressing.
"Beauty Contest" skipped the fun stage. It featured a lot of ladies
you wouldn't take home to Mama (at least, not before covering up the
tattoos ), many of whom betrayed~ their lonely talent the undulating
gnnd of the ecdysiast. Skin and rtdicule were served up in heavy doses
here, televtston's lowest point.
'·'Three's A Crowd" was a short-lived variation on Barris' 1960s hit
"The Newlywed Game" (which also came back in the new Barris era'
in seedy version). "Three's a Crowd" asked·a secretary and wife t~
compare notes on the man they shared, e.g., "Where does Jim like to
be tickled?" The secretary would invariably yield some lllnt or intimacy, which mctted the wife, and a fun time was had bv none.
Now Barris wants to buy the Phils, once known as tiJE: Phutile Phils
but now the reigning champs of all baseball.
How could that be good? Consider:
The Phils are for sale because the club's owner Ruly Carpenter is
fed up with the place baseball has come to a 'place where sw~t
associations of the summer game are smothered by the stench of
greed.

Now, Barris doesn't strike me as the type who'd foster an atmosphere of quiet professionalism. Say, for example, that a .140 utility
inftelder comes to owner Barris at the end of the season demanding
renegotiation. He wants $350,000 a year, and a no-cut cont;act.
Barris says, "You gotit, baby! Uh, there's one thing. You gotta play
in a rubber suit, and every time you boot a grounder or botch a double
play, your wife comes out on the field to spank you. Yeah, yeah, I like
that. What do you say•"
The Phillies would soon be shed of prima donas, I'll bet, and the effect rrught be felt throughout the bigs. That playing baseball for a
quarter-million-a-year isn't such a bad thing would soon become a
common sentiment.
· In turn, baseball owners would bring back such lost amenities as the
fl6.cent hot dog, the 71kent beer and the $3.50 box seat.
As for television's benefit, well, you can hardly expect a busy sports
magnate s.uch as Barris to produce any more TV shows ...

become increasingly dependent
on the products of technology. We
can neither feed nor clothe, nor
keep us warm without it. We live
surrounded by objects and
systems that we take for granted
. and that affect the ways we
behave, think, work, play and in
genral conduct our lives and
those of our children," said Mrs.
Pikkoja.
The production-line style of
manufacturing has increased in
its effect to our lives.
The inventive output of
Western technology can be said
to have occurred in three major
surges : The Medieval Industrial
Revolution; Seventeenth Century
- when the sciel)tific community
began to make use of printing to
exchange ideas on major scale;
and Nineteenth Century develop.

ment of telecommunication.
" We are aware of the need to
asse!l.'l our use of technology and
its impact on us. Science and
technology have immeasurably
enriched our material lives, we
must learn soon to use science
and technology to enrich our intellectual lives," she concluded.
The preceding thoughts were
James Burke's taken from his
book " Connections," published in
1978, which was the companion
volume to the 10 part television
series, produced by BBC, and
broadcast over the Public Broadcasting system in autunnn, 1979.
James Burke, a graduate of
Oxford University, was the BBC;
chief reporter of the Apollo
missions to the moon. He lives in
London.

Knox assigned

~

DePaul

TEXAS - Airman Betty E. Knox,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L
Knox of Route 1, Ewington, has been
assigned to Brooks Air Force Base
Texas, after completing Air Fore~
basic training .
The airman wiU now receive
specialized instruction in the
medical services field.

'\
.
'

More
Comfortable
Than Ever

Welcome
Back!
Eggshell, Med. Brown,
Burgundy

CHESTER COUNCIL
TO MEET

Airman Knox

CHESTER - Quarterly birthdays
will be observed at a meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, to be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

The
Shoe Cafe

JOO Second
Gallipolis

'

PROVIDEN CE, R.I. (AP) - Dan·
ny Ainge scored 37 points and led
Brigham Young on a !:&gt;-point tear
that starlet: late in the first half as
the 16th-ranked Cougars upset No.IO
UCLA 73-55 Saturday in the first
round of the NCAA East Regionals.
The victory earned Brigham·
Young a shot at the winner at Satur·
day's second first-round game,
Notre Dame, in this weekend 's
regional championships at Atlanta ,
Ainge scored the last eight points
· of the first half and his 17-foot jump
shot eight second before the buzzer
~ave BYU a 31·22 halftime lead. The

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Cougars scored seven straight poin·
ts to open the second hall and take a
38-22lead with 17:51! to play.
The Cougars stretched that lead to
as many as 24 points on two fou l
shots and a basket by Greg Kite late
in the contest.
The Bruins managed to get within
12 poinU!. 58-46,
Fred Roberts added 17 pOints for
Brigham Young and Kite had 12.
Mike Sanders had 14 for UCLA,
and Darren Daye added 12.
The victory raised Brigham
Young's record to 24-0, while UCI.A
dropped to 20-6 .

69-66 in final seconds

HP.GARDEN

,.

WICHITA , Kan . (AP ) - Darnell
Valentine scor ed 15 points and Johnny Crawford tossed in two free
' throws with 22 seconds remaining to
lift Kansas to a 6~ win over
Mississippi Friday night in a first
round game of the NCAA Midwest
regionals.
In a later first-round game,
hometown favorite Wichita State, 236, took on Southern University (I.a. ),
17-10.
The Hebels, making their first appearance ever in the NCAA, fought
hack from a 12-point, second-half
deficit and got within two, 64-02, on a
bucket by Elston Turner with 29

seconds remaining.

Seven seconds later Crawford,
fouled by Cecil Dowell, sank a pair
of free throws to give the Jayhawks
a four-point advantage . Roger Stieg
made a tip.in, Tony Guy made a free
throw for Kansas and Turner sank
another bucket that made it 67~6
with four seconds remaining.
The Rebels, lli-14, fouled Guy with
two seconds left, and the Kansas
guard hit bOth free throws for the
final margin.
Turner led all scorers with 22 points and Stieg had 17. Guy had 14 for
Kansas and Crawford had 12.

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FRIENDLY HUG- Actnlll·comedlenoe Gilda Radner receives a
hg from singer John Davidson after a performance of the Broadway
cOmedy "Lunch Hour," at the Barrymore theater In New York Thursday.
DavldJon Is In New York on a short vacation. (AP Laserphoto) .

Astrograph
SCORPIO tCkt. t._NU\'. %2) Yu u'n• Cll·
tering 1 periOO where conditlun.s should be
rnroe fa\lorable than u.sual whert your work,
n!pUtation or finances •re cunccnlcd. Be
alert for Wlique upportwlitie:J.
SAGmARJUS I Nov. %3-Der. U I Mure
lfll.nlous and better WBYS nwy ~ foun d
t.odly to advarn_~ your self·in te~:; L:i and per·

SIJII IJi ~ IJHi S . )

uu I ~ IJ II .,; , &lt;I l lt.\IIIJ• II/1 . l1ou 1._,,
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CAPRI CORN H&gt;t'c. U•Jau. 19 ) There's j;j
dumce you could tum a litly prufi t ltxlu;· ~!11
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discard . Pick up the piel'es .
AQUARIUS Uao. 21-.... b. l!t J l .&lt;~dy I.uek
tends to look favorably' un yuu h11lay 111
.situations where· the n • &lt;Ire p11r tner !il in·
yuJved, especiall y if yHu r t•ollt!d Jve en·
terprlse~s a bold one.

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WINNER - St. Joseph's forward John Smith Is
hugged by teammates and coaches after soarlpg a
basket with seconds to go to pull out a 49-48 win over

DePaul in al&gt; NCAA second·roujnd tourney game In
Dayton Saturday . AP Laserphoto 1.

Notre Dame advances, 54-45
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Tracy Jackson and John Paxson
ea ch
hit
thre e· point
plays m the ft~al 5''' rmnutes to help
seventh-ranked Notre Dame hold off
James Madison 54-45 in the second
round of the NCAA East Regional
basketball tournament.
Notre Dame, 23·5, will meet 16thranked Brigham Young in the East
Regional semifinals at Atlanta on
Thursday. Bngham Young upset

lOth-ranked UCLA 711-55 here earlier
Saturday.
·
The Duke~, 21-9,clawedtheirway

to wtthin 40-37 on a shot JWnp shot by
Stev e Blackmon with 7:24
remaming. The Irish, however,
scored the next five points, capped
by Paxson's layup and foul shot, to
lead 4:&gt;-37 with 5:30 to play.
.Jackson's three-point play gave
the Irish a ~1 lead with 2:53 left
and Notre Dame held on for the vic·

tory and stayed in the running for its
first national title .
.
Jacksonscored21pointsandKelly
Tripucka added 13. Blackmon and
Linton Townes each had 12 for the
Dukes, winners of the Eastern
College Athletic Conference's
Southern Division.
Danny Ainge scored 37 points for
Brigham Young in the opener and he
said afterwards that all signs of
ea rlier hack problems had disappeared.

Indiana humbles Maryland, 99-64

Kansas nips Mississippi

00
TRACTOR

State upset ·

UCLA knocked out
by Cougars, 78-55

Tractor Days~SUPER
SPECiAL
.I

Oregon

the tempo of the game to play with
DePaul. But in the end, the Hawks
forced Depaul into its style of play.
St. Joseph's traded baskets with
DePaul most of the first half, content to let the lead go back and forth.
But when DePaul went ahead by 4,
the Hawks began their delay,
holding the ball the final four
minutes, scoring just before the half
to trail by 2 points.
St. Joseph's tried to repeat that
strategy after intennission but could
not keep pace early in the half as the
Blue Demons stretched their lead to
7 points.
When St. Joseph 's fought back to 3
points with just over &lt;ive minutes
left, the Hawks went into a zone
defense and DePaul shifted into its
slowdown game.
A steal and a basket by Warrick
with 411 seconds left narrowed the
gap to 1 point, as DePaul was held
scoreless the final 6 minutes of the
game.

By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - St.
· Joseph's of Pennsylvania knocked
off top-ranked DePaul 49-48 on a
basket with three seconds left by
John Smith in a second-round game
of the NCAA Mideast Regional
basketball tournament Saturday.
Smith's basket was set up by a
Hawk fast break off a rebound when
DePaul's Skip Dillard missed the
front end of a one-and-one free throw
possibility with 12 seconds left.
It was the second loss of the season
for the Blue Demons, 27·2. St.
Joseph's moved on to next week's
regional at Bloomington, Ind., with a
24-7 record.
Smith finished with 12 points for
the Hawks. Bryan Warrick also had
12 and Tony Costner added II .
Clyde Bradshaw was the top
scorer with II points. All-American
Mark Aguirre was held to 8.
St. Joseph's knew it had to slow

•

PEACE OFFERING - St. Louis Cardhwls' Bruce Suiter and New
York Meta' Dave Kingman have a reminder o! Chicago press problems
with a writer. Kingman Is the lee bucket man. Both were traded from the
Chicago Cubs. (AP Laserphoto).

1

eaten

St. Joseph jolts
Demons at buzzer
on Smith's goal
ATTEND OHIO ASSEMBLY LUNCHEON - Pictured are State
Representative Ronald H. James of lbe 9ZDd Dlslrlet aod 8Gatheast
Regional VICA Presideat Karen Jacllson at lbe VICA luacbeon In Columbus. Karen, the daughter of Mr. and Ml'll. WWiam Jacllsoa of GaiUpoU.,
Is a senior In the Cosmetology program at Buckeye Hills Joint VOCilllonal
School. She wsa elected Regional Pesldent in the 30,1100-member
organization iD October. VJCA Is a national organization for students
training for careers iD trade, Industrial, tecboologlcal and bealtborelated
occupations.
·

c

DAYTON, Ohio (APl - Senior
Center Ray Tolbert scored 26 points
to lead Indiana to a 9lHl4 victory
over Maryland in a second-round
NCAA Mideast Regional basketbaU
game Saturday.
The blow-out vi ctory by the ninthranked Hoosiers over No. 18
Maryland wa s a fa r cry from the
conservative game earlier in the af,
ternoon in which unheralded St.
Joseph's of Pennsylvania stunned
top-ranked Depaul 49-48.
l.andon Turner had 20 points, lsiah
Thomas had 19 and Ted Kitchel 13
for the Hoosiers, who controlled I he
run-and-shoot tempo thoughout the
game.

Albert King led the Terrapins with
22 points. Charles " Buck" Williams
added 16, and Ernest Graham 14 for
Maryland , which ended its season at
21-10.

lndtillla moves on to the regional it
will host at Bloomington. Ind., with a

22·9 record.
Indiana shot 65 percent from the
field in the first half en route to a 16point lead a t intetmission and increased its ma rgin throughout the
second half, finishing the game with
reserves.

Toledo faces Michigan today

.

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP ) _ ' The Rockets have beaten
Michigan Coal' h Bill Frieder says Mi chigan in their last two meetings
his team was " super defensively" in and are commg. off an nnpresstve 91 defeating Duquesne, but the 83 ftrst-round v1ctory over Amencan
Wolverines will need more than University on Wednesday.
defense to get past Toledo in the
Michigan, which has won only
second-round of the Nati onal In- twice in its last nine games, had an
vitntion Tournament tonight.
uninspiring 74-58 triwnph over
Duquesne on Thursday.

WS ANGEL.ES (AP) - Senior
giWrd Rolando Blackman connected
on a 16-foot jump·shot from the riglt
baseline with two seconds remaining
Saturday, giving unranked Kansas
State a ~ victory over second·
ranked Oregon State in a second·
round game of the . NCAA Tournament's Western Regionals.
Blackman gave the Wildcats of tbe
Big Eight Conference their only lead
with hl., l(ame-wiMing shot. The
triumph boolted Kansas State, 23-a,
int o ~'o. Western Regional
semlfil...lo apinat the winner of
Saturday's I«&lt;nd game at Pauley
Pavilion between Illinois and
Wyoming.
The upstart KSU Wildcats, who
had come from 12 points down to
beat San Francisco GUO in a firstround game Thursday night, trailed
Oregon State 26-19 at halftime and
39-28 with just under 14 minutes to
play before they surged back.
Two free throws by J:;d Nealy with
3:23 left made it 411-48 all, giving the
Wildcats their first tie since the
game's opening minute.
Oregon State center Steve ~ohn­
•on, who led the Beavers 16 points
and six rebOunds, fouled out on the
play .
Oregon State finished its season at
26-2 and lost its NCAA tournament
opener for the second straight year.
Blackman led the Wildcats with 14
points. Forward Tyrone Adams added 12 points for the Wildcats and ·
Nealy finished with II points and a
game-high nine rebounds.
Guards Ray Blume and Mark
Radford added 10 and eight points,
respectively, for the Beavers, who
lost their second game in a row.
After winning 26 straight games,
the Beavers had been beaten 87~7.
by Arizona State in a regular-season
finale March 7.

LSU wallops
foe, 100-78 .
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Senior
forward Durand Macklin scored a
season-high 31 points ana collected
16 rebounds Saturday to muscle No.
4-ranked Louisiana State University
to a tiJ0.78 victory over outclassed
Lamar University Saturday.
The triumph advanced the Bengal
Tigers to the NCAA Midwest
Regional finals in New Orleans
Friday.
The Southeast Conference champion Tigers, ~3 for the year, got 26
points from sophomore Howard Carter and 18 points from freshman
Leonard Mitchell in the runaway
over the Cardinals, who finished ~5
for the season.
Lamar, which upset Missouri 71~7
Thursday night, trailed 55-43 at halftime and saw the Tigers rip off nine
straight points to start the second
half.
The Southland Conference cham·
pion Cardinals were led by senior
guard Mike Olliver, who scored 29
points.

48 footer
tops Cards
AUSTIN , Texas (API - Senior
guard U.S. Reed's 48-foot shot from
beyond the midcourt line &lt;II the final
buzzer Saturday gave the No. 20ranked Arka nsas Razorbacks a 74-l.l
victory over defending NCAA cham·
pion Louisville in the second round
of the Midwest Regionals.
Arkansas advanced to the reg ional
finals in New Orleans against No. 4ranked Louisiana State, which
slaughtered l.amar University liJO.
78 in the first game here,
Arkansas was all but dead after
junior forward Derek Smith con·
nectcd on an ei~ht-foo(follo w shot
with five seconds to play. The Razor·
backs had trouble inboundin~ the
ball, and Reed wa s hounded by two
Louisville players as he neared the
midcourt line.
In desperation, he launched a line
drive missile that whisked through
the basket without touching the rim .
Reed, who finished with 19 points,
kept Arkansas in the game with his
free throw shooting down the strut·
ch, as did center Scott Hastings, who
was6-for-&lt;l from the charity line.

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32

KEEPING TIGIIT - Indiana guard Isaiah
Thomas keeps a light guard on Maryland forward
Albert King us King looks to get off a pass In the first

.,~
I

half of Saturday's NCAA second-round tourney game
In Dayton. Indiana won, 99-64. (AP Lasel-photo).

.

�Pomeroy

Page--C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

s,

Johnson nets 29, Bucks
wallop 76ers, 120-104

., ..

t

-

EARNS FIRST PLACE TROPHY - Hannan
Trace Junior Htgb Cheerleaders were awarded the !II'
st place trophy at the Junior HJgb BastetbaU Tournament recently. Suzy Reiser is advisor. Pictured

above, back row, 1-r, are: Tammy Rosslte~, Sonya
Swain, Beth McGuire and Melva Clagg. Front, 1-r:
HoUy Whitley, Angie Maynard and Dafney SwaiD. Not
pictured- Julie HaUey. - School photo.

Hockey heroes accept Owens award
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Like the
gold of their medals, their ,enthusiasm hasn't tarnished - even
now, a full year after 20 men turned
an ice hockey arena in a tiny New
York mountain village into a dazzling storybook achievement of the
sporting world.
Captain Mike Eruzione and teammate John Harrington accepted The
Associated Press Male Athlete of the
Year Award Friday night on behalf
·of the United States hockey team,
gold medalists of the 1980 Winter
Olympic Games at Lake Placid,
N.Y.
The award, the Jesse Owens
Memorial Trophy, was named this .
year for the first time in honor of the

Indians
briefs. ..
TUCSON, Ariz . (AP) - Utility infielder Jack Brohamer, a nine-year
Major League basebaU veteran,
says he will definitely no longer be a
member of the Cleveland Indians'
club after Sunday.
.
Brohamer's contract allows him
to become a free agent on that dale,
and the Indians have not been able to
trade him as he had asked.
Brohamer said that if he is not
picked up by another club after he
leaves the Indians, he will return
home to work with his sheet metal
business in Vista, Calif. .
The left-handed hitting infielder
spent the first four years of his
career with the Indians, then had
two years with the Chicago White
Sox and two in Boston before the Indians bought his contract from the
Red Sox last June.
Brohamer helped fill in at second
base in 1980 following an earlysea!lim injury to Indians' regular
Duane Kuiper.
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)
The
Cleveland Indians have evened their
Cactus ~.&lt;!ague record at 2-2.with a
pair of victories over Manager
Maury Wills' Seattle Mariners.
Left-bander Rick Waits hurled
four scoreless innings as the Jildiails
shut out Seattle 9-0 on Friday. The
triwnph came on the heels of a 7-2
decision Thursday.
"I thought Wails threw better than
his first lime out," said Cleveland
Manager Dave Xarcia, referring to
the shelling .Waits absorbed in an
earlier spring outing versus the Hanshin Tigers of Japan. " But he can do
better than he did today."
Walls allowed two hits, while
reliever Eric Wilkins gave up one hit
in two frames. Mike Paxton allowed
a pair of hils in two innings, and Gordy Glaser pitched a hitless ninth.
Shortstop Tom Veryzer's threenul homer in the sixth was the big
blow ol the day as Cleveland collected 14 hits.
Brian Allard was the loser for
Seattle.

late track star who etched himself
into Olympic records in the Berlin
Games in 1936. Owens won gold
medals in the 100 and 200 meters, the
first leg of the 400-meter relay and
with a shining performance in the
long jump, with a 26 feet, &amp;-inch
mark that stood until1960.
The AP' s Female Athlete of the
Year Award went to four-time winner Chris Evert Uoyd, the country's
tennis sensation for this year, who
won the U.S., French and Italian
Opens and was runnerup at Wimbledon.
"In my opinion, any time an
athlete can get linked to men like
Jesse Owens, it's a great thing,"'
said Eruzione, who scored the
climactic goal of the Games - the
wiMing score in the U.S. team's 4-3
upset of the Soviet Union.
·•we were just 20 hockey players
who brought out the pride of a country just like Owens did and it's very
special to us," he said.
Harrington, who had an assist on

that goal, said he didn't think the
team reaUy "grasped the importance of what we did until later

on."
··we 'd been playing hockey so long
and been in big games. I think it just
·
tookawhile .(torealizeit) ."
· AP Sports Editor Byron Yake Introduced Owens' widow Ruth to
present the award and moderated a
film clip of the hockey performance
in Lake Placid in February 1980.
Following a traditon started 50
years ago, Yake said, the award this
time went to "a band of kids after
the gold ... with an average age of 22
... with diverse backgrounds and
with one purpose - to represent the
U.S. at the Winter Olympics.
"They made us smile and gave us
new heroes," he said, noting that it
was a grim time of inflation and the
hostage crisis.
"Their c.pach, told them if they
lost, they'd take it to their graves.
He didn"t tell them what winning
would mean," said Yake.
·

Tournament scores
Ohio H.S. Bvvs Basltdball
District 'I'Ournam~nLs
Friday's RHUUa
Clau AAA Toumam~ ntll
At fkrea
Cleve. Mar.~hall &amp;&lt;1 , Lakewood ~
At Lo111LD K1n11
U:lrain Soulhvie"'· SS , Medina 50
At Euclid
aeve. St. Joseph 67, Mayfield 65
AIMarttUI
t hillicotht 57, Cambridge 38
SteubenviUe 67, Athens 50
AISirUIMn
Warren Harding 83 , Young . South 74
At Copley
Wad5worth ~ . Akron N. 43
AtColwnbaa Collarum

Co!. Northland 75, Col. Centra l 67
Newark

~.

Wdrt.hington
AtOiford

~9

Day. Roth 76, Fairborn Pa rk Hills 72
Hamilton 93, Cin. Wilhrow &amp;t
Clu1 AA Tottn~.amenu

· At Canton Flrldhowl;~
Ornrille 55 , Canal Fulton ':'tlW 45
At Salem
Youn~ . Rayen 61 , Roots town ~
AI Warren Western Relerve
Warre(l Kennedy 64 , iUh1.abulu Harbor

At Elyria

Ei}'r la

Ct~t.h .

72, Brwltlyn 52
AI S~M•vllle Areoa
COshocton 59 , Buckeye S. 57
Tn-Valley 56 , Frontier 54

At Atb!DJ

Hil lsboro 64, Portsmouth :;&amp;
Ironton 68, Warren Local 52
Obl11 H.S. Girll O..ak.e'tt.ll
Re:&amp;looal Tou1'1111JMDll
Friday's Reslllll
CUSSUA
A1Sudual&lt;y Hlp S.bool

Mans

Malabir 69, Brecksville 49
ToJ. LJbOey 40, Lakewood 21

At MauWoa Perry HIP Stbeel

E . Cle\leland Shaw 49, Barberton • 7. OT
Salem S5. Mentor M
AI Ollio Wesleyan
Col. Northland 60, Cuyaho~~:a Falls 4!i
Col Watter"3on 48, New Philadelphia 36
CLASS A
At CoUtJt Q( W001kr
Map ~ to n 47. Maru. St. Peter 36
Wmdhcun 52, Berbhire 37
At Ftadlliy Colle1r
Ada 51, N. Baltimore 3!1
Edgl.'rtDO 60, DelphcJI St. John 53
AI Otkrbela CoUe1e
Buckeye Tra1l 61 , Oak Hill 33
c ana l . WindleSler 59, Brid,.:eport 49
At lJuJ\'en:lt)' ol Dayloa Fleldhoute
Anna 62, Ports . Clay S.
Geo~etown U. Middletown Fenwick 42

ByALEXSACHARE
AP Sports Writer
Marques Johnson found that a
visit from the Doctor was just what
he needed to overcome a lingering
case of the flu.
Johnson, who had missed two
games in the past week because of
illness, scored 29 points and grabbed
10 rebounds Friday night to lead the
Milwaukee Bucks to a 120-10&lt;1 vietory over Philadelphia despite 25
points bY. the 76ers' Dr. J, Julius Erving.
"It's definitely the same kind of
excitement it always was, just being
on the same court with him," Johnson said of Erving. "It's always a
chaUenge and I try to respond as
positively as possible. He may score
40 on me the next night, but I'm
going to cherish this one tonight. ' '
The victory was a big one for the
Bucks, who stiU harbor hopes of
overtaking both Boston and
Philadelphia and finishing with the
best record in the National Basketball Association, which would give
them the home-court advantage
throughout the playoffs.
Milwaukee, which has clinched
the Central Division title, has a :&gt;4-20
record. That's four games behind

Cleveland
rookie big
surpnse

hang in there and compensate.
Tonight we just got beat by a better
team."
:

'Knlcks 1%7, Bulls 117
Ray Williams broke out of a slumP'" '
with 27 points, including 17 in the
third quarter, and handed out tf""..':
assists as the Knlcks clinched a~
playoff berth for only the second""":.
time since 1975. The loss trimmeC::;
Chicago 's lead over Washington t![;""~~
two games in their battle for thc:::j.:
final Eastern Conference playoft;,t
spot.
.•,

At Dayton AreDa

Carlisle 66 , Cin, Greenhil ls 63
Cln. McNicholas 52, 0a)·. Kiser 51

· STARSHOOTERs- Girls League cbamplo118 of tbe GaiUpolls RinllyDIDII League honored last Tuesday•were: Back row, ~r, Tina Barsotti,
Teresa Comb!l, Kim DWoo aDd Coach Lygia WWiams. Front row, 1-r:
Jackie Muncy, Tresa Barsotti, MIDdy Jobnaon and Vanessa Kieser. More
than ZOO athleletJ were honored. Approximately 500 persoDS attended. The
eveot wu spoosored by tbe GaiUpolls Recreation Departmeol. RecreaUon Department pbo&amp;olt.

Rio Grande, Ohio ·

..

--

....-.

CLAY CRUSADERS - Senior League chanlploos of the GaiUpoUs
RIDIIy-DIDt Basketball ~.&lt;!ague honored durlog last Tuesday night's annual banquet were: Back row, left to right: Coach Bill Davts, Eric Barlll!lle, james Davis, Joel Spencer, Scott Smith and Coach Bob Erwin.
Froot row, left to right: Erich Seaman, Robl Young, Jeff Flnley.

·-·---

-.

. .. with a

Says Tug McGraw, ace reli ef pit cher for
th e World Cham_pion Philade lphi a Phi ll.ies.

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...

THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1981 -

HURRY/

M8j., Leape BatHIU Es.IUbiUoa &amp;:om:

Friday'sC..:amet
P!Ulodelphia 6, New York tNLI I
Detroit 7. Booton 6
Pltlaburih i . Chicago {ALl 2
Minne3otl 3, Loe Angeles 1
New York (AL) 3, AtlantB I
Toronto 8, Hou.llon 6

.'

Texas 9, Tokyo Giants 4

Texas (SS) vs. Montreal, ppd., rain
Cleveland 9, Seattle 0
Oakland 14, Mllw&amp;ullee 6
0Uca1o (NL) 6, San l''rancisco 0
SaUl Diego I , Callfonda 5
K.anau City v.s. Baltinwre 1t Miami ,

'

Fla.. ppd, rain

II

DALE HILL

16
IJ5
455

43

73

(b)

34

8

(a )
174

46

Sov1e l U nion

60

8

205
13
IJ I
12
71

4

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
x Chilli co th e
ll 0 1190 935
Athens
20 3 1457 1245
Portsmouth
20 4 1815 1466
Wheelersbu rg
18 3 1404 1139
GallipoliS
15 7 1226 1094
Waverly
13 9 1276 1261
x · lronton

14 10 1446 l305

Wellston
Lo9an
Wa!h lngton CH
Lancasle r

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15 1044 1173
3 19 1052 1414

M- Still In tournament .

Friday' s results

Chi l li cothe 57 Cambridge 38
Steuoe nv i lle67 Athens

Ironto n 66 Warren

so

Local 52

ooo

Hillsboro 64 Portsmouth 58

RICK PERDUE

March 19 games

CLASS AAA
Last
night's
Steubenvil le ·
Ch ill ic othe winner vs. Canton win

Sprmg V.llley Plaza
Phone 446· 4396

ner , 7: 30p.m .. at Canton .
,
March 20 games
Ironton vs. Hillsboro, 9 p.m.', at
O ~lo Un iversity .

.'

'

W1t h t.J c amer m th e trav el tn d us lr y , you c a.n get
pa td fo r pac kt ng The ln ng e b e n fl f t l ~ o ft en
t n clud 1 ~ fr ee p?!.sses rmci reduced l ares

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Southern Ohio Division

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N at1 o n al Tr rwcl an d A trim e Ca reers can I ram you
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United States
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FOR A 10 ' x 15 " ROOM

RIO GRANDE RASCALS - JUDior League champions of the
Gallipolis Rtnky-Diot Basketball ~.&lt;!ague honored last Tuesday were:
bact row, left to rtgbt: Head Coach Don Colley, Assistant Coaches John
Hauldren and ROller Rees. Middle row, 1-r: Brandon Curtis, Shane
Hogan, Joe Owens, Tom Hauldren aod Alan Nolan. Front row, 1-r: Tim
Rees, Robbie Imboden, Zane Colley and Mike Walker.

w&lt; lh purchase of any Ford A •de• Mowe r Trnctm'

Exhibition scores

T~1
EOI S!

.....

• Our Nation's #1 Industry-assets of $927 billion.
• Our Nation's #1 Employer-over 15 million people.
• Our Nation's #1 Inflation Fighter-productivity growth 5
times greater than non-farm industry over past 5 years.
• Our Nation's #J Exporter-$40 billion In 1980.
The efficiency of U.S. agriculture helps make it possible for us to
spend less of our after-tax income on food and earn food items in
less time than consumers in other nations around the world. Just
look at how these comparisons stack up:

'

1-6

orVIaa.

TROY·BILT®

Take a minute on this special day
to think about agriculture:

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AND GET A FREE
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307 Upper. River Rd., Gallipolis, OH.

-

See for yourself how much Joy gardening can
be with a Troy-Bill Rota Tiller-Power Composler. Easily prepares a beaut iful seedbed.
builds beiter garden soil and makes Summer
cultivating a breeze. Handles so easily. you '
simply guide it with jus! one hand. So make
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AGRICULTURE DAY:

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Offers

...

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wl!h purchase or any Ford Lawn and Ga rden Tractor '

RIO GRANDE
COLlEGE
COMMUNITY COLlEGE

Electronic
Technology

Jackson

I

TO SPONSOR LEAGUE
GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
Recreation Department is sponsoring spring co-recreational adult
volleyball and would like all interested teams to contact the department at 4-16-1789 as soon as possible.
Teams must be made up of equal
members of men and women and
will have games and practices at
Gallia Academy High School on
Tuesdays and Thursday beginning
in late March.
The entry fee is $75 p,er team.
Game balls, officials and supervisors will be provided. Anyone interested may call the recreation
department be(ore March 20.

~--

AGRICULTURE:·::
IT'S YOUR
rr=====================::;-1
HEARTBEAT AMERICA! ··~
62

.1

. I

Pleasant, W.Va .

Nels 140, CavaUers 125
--:;
Maurice Lucas scored 26 poinl.!o· -~
and the four other New Jersey star::;.....
ters each added 20 or more as the....~.
Nets handed Cleveland its nint!C
straight loss.

Save Time, Energy
and Frustration ...

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - An even
dozen of the 13 batters who have
faced Cleveland Indians pitcher
Gordy Glaser iq games this · spring
have come away from the plate
disappointed. The 13th walked and
was stranded at first .
Only two of the 13 have swatted the
bail past the infield.
" Maybe he's lucky ,·· says
Cleveland Indians Manager Dave
Garcia.
But on the chance that the rookie
prospect may be lor real, Garcia
said, "He's going to get more opportunities to pitch this spring than
we had planned on earlier." ·
Glaser came to the Indians' camp
this year with confusing credentials.
At Class AA Chattanooga last year,
he was excellent, compiling a 6-4
record and 2.61 earned run average.
He moved on to Class AAA
Tacoma at midyear, and his ERA
was a miserable 6.43.

•

Pacers 101, CeiUca H
Guard Johnny Davis scored 12 of
his 24 points in the final four minute3
to lift the Pacers past Boston. The
victory, the Pacers' fourth in their
last five games, reduced Indiana's
magic nwnber for · clinching a
playoff berth to two. The loss w&amp;B
oniy the Celtics' second in the last 10· . '
games - both at the hands of the ,
Pacers.

;--Gardeners!

0

COU NTRI ES
PLAN TOURNAMENT
MIDDLEPORT - A !&amp;-team
men's invitational basketail tournament wiU be held under the sponsorship of the Middleport Alumni
Assn. at Meigs High School.
Deadline for entry is March 21.
Teams interested should contact
Gene Wise, ~224 or Celeste Bush
.at 992-5943.

Philadelphia, whose 58-16 log is the
best in the NBA.
Boston miSSed a chance to gain
ground on Philadelphia in the Allan·
lie Division chase by diopping a 10194 decision to the Indiana Pacers.
Boston, 56-17; trails the 76ers by It
games.
The New York Knicks, . meanwhile, became the seventh team to
clin.ch a berth in the 12-team playoffs
by snapping a three-game losing
streak with a 127-117 decision over
the Chicago Bulls.
In other NBA games, the New Jer·
sey Nets outscored the Cleveland
Cavaliers 140.125; the Houston
Rockets beat the Portland Trail
Blazers I26-104; the Atlanta Hawks
edged the Denver Nuggets 119-117,
the Seattle SuperSonics trimmed th~
Detroit Pistons 102-100 and the Los
Angeles !..akers defeated the Kansas
City Kings 11&amp;-101.
The Bucks, ahead 67~1 at hal{
time, held the 76ers scoreless for
nearly the first six minutes of the
second half and ied 93-74 after three
quarters. The 76ers sank only lour of
18 shots in the period.
" I can't use excuses," said 76ers
Coach Billy Cunningham. "Good
teams have to make adjustments,

Ohi~Point

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
312 SIXTH STREET

675-1160

POINT PLEASANT

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

�•

r

For the record.
Nati...:l Buk~tha.U A110elaftoo

W L
..
..
13

3S "'
22
CeDtnl Dtvlllou

•t

r:::ukee .

11

37
29
2$
15

Atlanta
Ceveland

Detroit

:

~

OUcago

4t ·

47
56

We.trra Collferacc

BASEBALL

....
.473

23

.301

35~

14~

.7ll
.554
.500
.397
.347
.243

13
17
7A 'rt
211
36

.fi30
500
.479
.411
.306

-

Midwest Dlvblon
~:..S.n

46
37

'lJ

Kall!IU City

Houstm
Denver
Utah

"'
ll
26

38
43
47

12

61

Antonio

Dail.u

'!1

.164

Pltlfle Dlvl.tloll t.·Phoenix
53 22
.7f!l
l.·l...os Angeles
48 24
.667
~d
M 36
.514
Golden Stele
36 '!I
.493
S..We
33 41
.4&lt;6
San Diego
32 41
. ~38
y~llnched · divi.!lion title
x-dln&lt;:hed playoff berth
Friday'11Games
Indiana 101, Boston 94
New York 127. Chicag() 11'1
Atlanta · 119, Denver 117
New Jersey 140, Cleveland 127
MilwaUkee 120, Philadelphia 104

9"-.t
11
16
:ll

J4
~

3'&gt;

14'&gt;
16
19'&gt;

:ll

· Houston 12ti, Portland 104
Los Angeles 116, Kp.nsas City 101

SWidly's Games
New Jersey at B011ton
Olicago at Kansas City
Seattle at Milwa uk ee
Philadelphia at New York
Cleveland at Washington
Hou.1ton at Denver
San Diego at Los Angele!l
San Antonio at Golden State
Dallu at Portland
MoiM;ily'sGam~s

No games scheduled
Natloul Hockey LeallJe
Campbell Canfrn:uct:

Patrick Divbloo
N.Y. Islanders
Philadelphia
Cal,gary

N.Y. Rangers
Washington
1...St. Louis
Chicago
Vancouver
Edmonton
Colorado
Winnipeg

W L T GF GA Pts
41 17 11 3)(1 230 93

:11. 21 10 282 21 8 86
. 36 22 12 290 248 114
24 34 12 275 293 60
22 Jl 16 249 281 60
Smythe Dlvltlon
41 14 ~~ 312 235 97
Zl~\4266

25
22
20
8

281 68
28 17 2!)0 262 li7
34 12 270 287 68
38 \0 222 299511
50 12 214 3&lt;2 28

" 'ales Coof ~~ncr
Montreal
lj)s Angeles
Pin..o..,.gh

Hartford
Detroit

Norris Dlvislou
39 19 tl 294 198 89
37 22 \0 282 24i 84
27 32 9 263 30063
18 34 17 2:14 321 53
18 33 16 214 276 52

Buffalo

Dlvi.11lon
ll 16 19 273 2011 1!5

Minnesota

Ji 23 16 250 224 78

Ad&amp;;mli

Boston

• •

American League

Pet. GB
16
.784 17
.7ffl
1~

ll

1

Friday's Sport11'raJll.llct:lolll

EallB'D.Coaleremee:
Atlutk Dlvtlloli

32 25 12 278 241 76
Quebec
24 30 14 2&amp;4 281 62
Toronto
2J 34 11 'll3 JH 57
1-Clinched division title.
• Friday's Games

Booton 7, Washington 1
Buffalo 5, Winnipeg 2
Vancouver 5, Ch .:ago 3
'
Suoday's Gatne11
Hartford a t Boston
Toronto at Philadelphia
Colontdu lit Quebec
Chicago at Wirmipeg

Edmonton at Calgary
Mn1Hby'1 Gamt
~ Pittsburgh at Edmonton

CALIFORNIA

ANGElS- Announced

that Rick Burleson, short3top, had rome
to

te~

si:~t·year tontrt~ c t.

on a

BASKETBALJ..
National Bask@tball AuodaUnn

CL.EVELA"'D

CAVAI.IERS ...... Named

Bill Musselman \'Ice president and assist·
ant to the president . Named Don Dt&gt;laney
interim head coach.

NEW JERSEY NETS-Cl aimed Bob
McAdoo, forward, on waLVers from the
Detroit Pistons. P\ace:l
Rory . Sparrow,
~uard, on the injured list.

FOOTBAU.
National Football Leagye
LOS

March 1S, 1981

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

Page--C::i_ _The Sunday Times-Sentine.l

ANGELES

RA~tS- Anm1unced

the .·

resigniHiOrl of Jack Teelt! , Viet' president
nf 11dm.inis tr ation.

Cauadian Foolball Lea~
M 0 NT REAL ALOUETTES- Signed
Mike Hameluck, offensive lineman, to a
three-year contract .

. Sports
briefs. . •
TENNIS
OLDSMAR, Fla. ( AP l - Sixthseeded Butch Waits overpowered
unseeded Sammy Giammalva ~. &amp;3, &amp;-2 to move into the semifinals of
the $75,000 Robinson's Tennis Open.
Second-seeded Mel Purcell
cruised past unseeded Chris Mayotte &amp;-3 , &amp;-2 in the other qua rterfinal
· match to join Waits, No.4 Tom
Gullickson and Jeff Borowiak in the
semifinals.
DALLAS (AP l - Virgi ni Ruzici
beat Billie Jean King &amp;-3, 6-2 to ad·
vance to the semifinals of the Avon
Tennis Championships of Dallas.
In other quarterfinal play, toi&gt;'
seeded Mart in a Navratilova
defeated Mary Lou Piatek 6-2, 6-2 ;
third-seeded Pam Shriver edged
No.6 Kathy Jordan 7~. 7-ii; and
seventh-seeded Mirna Jausovec of
Yugoslavia. was ousted by unseeded
Bettina Bunge 6-3, 6-2. ·
BRUSSELS. Bclgiwn (AP l West Gennany's Rolf Gehri ng
defeated Vi jay Amritraj of India 6-2,
· H. 6-3 to advance to the semifinals
of the Belgian Indoor' Tennis Cham·
pionships.
In . other action, Brian Gottfried
ousted Peter Rennert 6-4, 6-3; Jim·
my Connors ousted Fritz Boehning
&amp;-3, 7-5; and Gene Mayer won by
default a fter Kim Warwick of
Australia retired because of illness
after trailing 4--1 in the first set.

OSU hockey team in 2-2 deadlock ,

Hillsdale ousted
in NAlA tourney
Hills(!ale was operating under a
handicap most of the night after
Da le Allen, a 6-foot-ll senior forward ·
who leads the team in scoring and
rebounding, left the game with 11:44
to go in the first half.
Allen was hurt when he feU after
heing knocked off balance as he
went up for a rebound. He was taken
to a local hospital with a possible
concussion and was to stay in the
hospital overnight for observation.
Despite his early departure, Allen
tossed in six points and hauled in
three rebounds.
After battling to a 33-33 halftime
tie, Hillsdale took a 48-13 lead with
Bethany Nazarene, J!Hi , for the
10:53 left. went into its delay game
National Association of In ·
but missed a series of easy shots.
tercollegiate Athetics title on SaturAlabama-Huntsville took a 5ii44
day.
lead
with 6 minutes to go and led the
In the earlier sentifinal game,
of the way although Hillsdale
rest
Bethany Nazarene downed Wiscou·
got
within
one point several tinles.
sin-Ea u Claire, 62-54 .
George Tol'l'es pumped in 17 points
The Blugolds, 28-5, will take on
and Rod Allen sa nk seven crucial
Hillsdale 28-7. for third place.
free throws in the fina l 8 minutes as
Ted Hauptman, who set out most
Bethany Nazarene upset second·
of the first half with three fmuls,
seeded Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 62.,)4,
pwnped in 15 points. Bob Fodor
snapping a 211-game Blugolds ' win·
tossed in 16 a nd Gary Pool canned 10
ning streak.
for Hillsdale.

KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) James Dwnes poured in 17 points
and Ricky Knight rattled in 14 as filth-seeded Alabama-Huntsville n6t·
ched a 6!&gt;-60 win over tenacious
Hillsdale, Mich., which saw its top·
player leave the game midway
through the first hall Friday night in
semifinal action of the 44th Annual
NAJA Basketball Tournament
Kmght also pulled down II rebourr
ds and Ben Mitchell chipped in 12
points and grabbed seven rebounds
for Alabama-Huntsville.
~leheme-Hunt•ville .
~IHl.
met

Association champiot'lahlp finala.
MARQUE'ITE, Mich. (AP) The league championship, decided
Paul Pooley scored at 17:22 of the
third period Friday night to lift Ohio . by total goals in the two games, was
State to a 2-2 tie with Northern slated for Saturday.
After a scoreless first period,
Michigan in the first game of the
Larry Marson tallied for the
Central Collegiate Hockey
Buckeyes at 14: IS of the second
period. But Jeff Pyle scored on a
SWIMMING
power play for Northern Michigan at
VICTORIA, British Columbiia
18:49. Steve Bozek put the Wildcats
(AP) - Alex BawnaM of Canada,
2·1 with a power-play goal at
ahead
swam to a world best time of four
11:23
o1 the third period before
minutes, 12.67 seconds in the men's ··
Pooley
knotted the game.
400-meter individual medley at the
Ohio
State is 24--11-3. Northern
1981 Canadian short course winter
is 2&amp;-22·3.
Michigan
national swimming championships.

IT'S YOUR FUTURE
MAKE IT DiE BEST
ATTEND

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IT Will COST LESS AND

YOU Wll!

GET ON THE JOB SOONER

Boxing team leaves
for regional meet
POMEROY - The Southeast Ohio
Golden Gloves Boxing Team left
Friday morning ·for the State
Regional Tournament at Cincinnati.
The five-man team is made up of
James Acree, Charlie Whittington
and Randy Stewart, aUof Pomeroy :
Mike Thomas of Zanesville, and
John Joev of Glouster. Acree, Whit·
tington and Stewart are memhers of
the Meigs County ·Jaycees Boxing
Club.

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION-DEGREE
EXECUnVE SECRETARIAL-DEGREE
ACCOUNTING-DEGREE

Also attending from Meigs were:
Brad James Acree, Jr., Harold
Willis, Brad Robinson and Bryan
Willis. The va n used by the Meigs
boxers and the boosters was
provide&lt;j by Cleland Realty.
The five-man team competed
Friday and Saturday at Cinci nnati
Gardens. The tea m is coached by
Sal&lt;t Jones of Glouster ; he is
assisted by Roger Stewa rt of
Pomeroy.

LYNE CENTER SC HEDUL E
Week of March 9, 1981

Date- Gymna si um
Mar . 12
810p .m ./ Coll ege Re c.
Mar . 13 7 9 p .m ./Open Rec.
Mar . l4 CLOSED
Mar . 151 4 p .m ./ Open Re c.
7 9 p . m ./College Rec.
Mar , 169· lO : JOp .m ./Coll ege Rec

Mar . l 78 · 10p. m .ICo HegeRec.

Mar . IB7·9 p .m .ICo ltege Rec .
Mar . 198 10 p .m ./ College R ec.
Mar . 20 7 9 p .m ./Open Rec .
Mar . 21 CLOSED
Mar. 22 CLOSED

ENROLL NOWI
SPRING QUARTER
CALL NOW -

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
A PROFESSIONAL COUEGE OF BUSINESS
CAREER TRAINING

529 JACKSON PIKE

Pool

8 10 p. m ./Col lege Swim
7 9 p.m ./ Open Swi m
CLOSE D
1 4 p .m ./ Open Swim
7 9 p . m ./College Swim
9· 10:30 p.m ./College Swim
6·10 p.m ./College Swi m
7·9 p.m ./Col lege Swim
8·10 p.m./College Swim
7·9 p .m ./Open Swim
CLOSED
CLOSED

446-4367

March 15, 1981

Pomeroy

By Associated Press .
Three years ago, the tJniversity of
Alabama-Birmingham didn't even
have a basketball program.
Now, they're bouncing around in
the thick of the NCAA playoffs .
The virtually new-born Blazers
advanced to the second round with a
surprisingly easy 93-68 victory over
Western Kentucky in the Mideast
.
Regionals Friday night.
GleM Marcus scored 22 points for
Gene Bartow's up-and-coming team,
as the Blazers earned a berth against eighth-ranked Kentucky in Sunday's game at Tuscaloosa, Ala . ·
The Bla2ers' victory followed a
Mideast opener in which Boston
College edged Bail State 93-90.
In first-round action in the West
Regionals at El Paso, Te~.. Pittsburgh defeated Idaho 7().69 in overtime and Northeastern nipped
Fresno State 5:&gt;-53.
In tl1e East at Charlotte, ·N.C.,
Villanova routed Houston 96-72 after
Virginia Commonwealth put down
Long Isla nd University ~9. In the
Midwest at Wichita , Kan., Kansas
.:dged Mississippi 69-&amp;i and Wichita
&gt;tate routed Southern University 9fr
10.
Dwan thandler and John Bagley

each scored four points in the final96
seconds as Boston College overcame
a late seven-point deficit and
downed Ball State 93-90. Bagley
scored a team-leading 19 points for
the Eagles, who will meet lith·
ranked Wake Forest Sunday.
" It was the kind of game you feel
sorry someone had to lose," said BC
Coach Tom Davis, who saw Ball
State's last shot at victory bounce off
the rim when John Williams missed
a lfrfooter with a second left and his
team trailing by one point.
Dwayne Wallace banked in a 1().
foot jwnp shot with three seconds
left in overtime to give Pittsburgh a
71Hl9 victory over Idaho. Pittsburgh
earned the right to meet sixth·
ra nked North Carolina in the second
round Sunday .•
Chip Rucker hit a layup with four
seconds left to give Northeastern its
. upset over Fresno State and a berth
in Sunday's second round against
14th-ranked Utah.
Led bv Alex Bradley's 22 points,
Villanova raced past Houston's
Southwest cMmpions and headed
for a second- round showdown with
Virginia .

Kenny Stancell scored 22 points as
Virginia Commonwealth whipped
LIU and earned a shot Sunday at
15th-ranked Tennessee. The Rams
held a 17-point lead, 5fr38, at the
·12:03 mark of the second half hefore
holding off the Blackbirds.
Darnell Valentine scored 15 points
and Johnny Crawford tossed in two
free throws with 22 seconds
remaining to lift Kansas over
Mississippi. Cliff Levingston and An·
toine Carr combined for 42 points to
help Wichita State whip Southern.
Kansas meets Arizona State and
Wichita State takes ohIowa Sunday.
Second-round play in the NCAA
tournament
begins
with
doubleheaders at four sites Satur·
day.
. In the East Regiona l at Providen·
ce, R.I., it's Brigham Young against
UCLA and James Madison ys, Notre
Dame. In the Mideast at Dayton,
Ohio, St.Joseph's, Pa. faces DePaul
and Maryland meets Indiana. In the
Midwest at Austin, Tex., it's Lamar
vs. Louisiana State and Arkansas
against Louisville. In the West at
Los Angeles, Kansas State meets
Oregon State and Wyoming tackles
Illinois.

DETROIT ( AP) - Keith Connor's
world record perfonnance in the
triple jw11p and recbrd-smashi)lg
victories by shot putter Michael Carter and weight thrower Robert Weir
sp urred surpns1ng Southern
Methodist University to a commanding lead Friday night in the
NCAA indoor track and field championship.
The Mustllngs, who had fi~ished

only fourth in the recent Southwest
Conference championship, piled up
79 points after the first seven finals .
The remaining II finals were held
Sa turday at Joe Louis Arena.
In addition to the victories by Connor , Carter a nd Weir, SMU got a fir·
st-place finish from Sammy Koskei
in the 880, a •econd from Richard
Olsen in the weight throw and a sixth
from Conner in t~e long jwnp.

Connor, a junior from ~Iou gh,
England, and the fourth-place fin·
sher in last year's summer Olympic
Games in Moscow, increased the
world indoor record in the triple
jwnp to 56 feet, 91&gt; inches, on.,.
quarter inch fa1ther than the mark
of 56-9 and one-fourth set earlier this
season by Shamil Abbjasov of the
Soviet Union .
Weir, a frestunan from Bir-

%{!·'

"If'

- ..;

'J&lt;o"

4'"•"

' .

"'*''"..•.
"

,(./

.''

•

CLOSE FINISH - Peter Lemashoo (585) of UTEP
clocked 2:08.84 to take the fourth heat ill the 1,000-yatd
trials at Friday night's NCCA Indoor Track Cham·
pioushlps at Detroit's ~oe Louis Arena. Others are :

mingham, England, com pctmg m
the 3frpound weight throw for only
the third time, hecame the second
aU-time performer in the eve nt with
the fourth-best performance, 73-7.
Only 1980 Olympic hammer throw
champion Yuriy Syedikh of the
Soviet Union has surpassed Weir .
Syedikh has three throws over 75
feet, aU on March 10, 1979, when he
set the world mark of 76-11 and three

Watkins, Floyd

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

share Dora/ lead

APPROVED FOR TRAINING OF VETERANS
FINANCIAL AlD AVAILABLE

MIAMI (APl - Lanny Wadki'ns is
.on one o( his streaks, but even his
scoring heroics couldn 't shake a
detennined, confident Ray Floyd.
" We all know what kind of player
Lanny is," Fl oyd said. ''He's a
streak player. It's either feast or
iamine with him ."
And Wadkins, breaking out of a
long slump, is feasting on the 7,065yard Blue Monster course at the
Dora! Country Club. In three days,
going back to Wednesday's pro-am,
he's scored 19 birdies and two
eagles.
" I just hope I have that many
left ," Wadkins said after posting a&amp;under-par 66, whi ch Included e1ght
birdi es. in Friday's second round . It
gave him a 36-hole total of 134 - 10
shots under par - and a share of the
lead with Floyd, the defe ndi ng
champion in the $250 ,000 DoraiEastern Open Golf 'Fournament.

St. Reg . N 75·02-04728

BUYING • SELLING
TRADING • APPRAISING

AT THE HOLIDAY INN, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
•

'':at
.,.':''
f"~,

'

.

. ·~

·'

Julian Spooner (473) of Richmond with 2:08.87, Owen
Hamllton (547) of Texas and John Hunter of Villanova.
( AP l.aserphoto i.

Cameron in the 440, in 48.23, and
Micheal Musyoki in the three-mile,in 13:25.03.
..
Despite SMU's impressive point.
total, the Mustangs do not figure to
improve much Saturday as their
only remaining competitor is Dennis ·
Brantley,
Texas·El Paso, seeking its second:
straight championship and sixth in. ·
the last eight years, collected 32·
points Friday and was in second
place. The Miners still have several
athletes left in the competition, including Tanzania's Suleiman Nyambui, winner of the mile and two-mile
in each of the past two years.

fourths at Montreal.
Carter, a husky sophomore from
Dallas , won the shot put for the
second consecutive year- breaking
the meet record with a toss of 69-S'h,
a persona l hest.
Koskei, a iOphomore form Kenya,
took the 880 in a I :52.2\l, holding off
Brazili a n Olympian Agberto
Guimares of Brigham Young.
Meanwhile, University of Houston
sophomore Carl Lewis feU only onequarter inch short of breaking his
world indoor long jwnp record win·
·. ning with a meet record of 27-10.
The other opening night winners
were from Texas-EI Paso - Bert

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614)-992-2104

or. (304)-675-1244

OH-KAN COIN SHOW

GOLD AND SILVE~ BUYERS
ARE BACK

SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 1981
(j}

STERLING SILVER
GOLD SCRAP

All OF THESE MAKE

- 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

C.&amp;S.

SILVER
COINS
•

....

.,.,. • . I' .M'I~'Ifl

BREAKING TilE TAPE - Chris Mares (95) d Others are Henry Klmalel of Rlchmoud, second with
Drake hits the tape with 2:05.95 to win heat two of the 2:10.14 and Michael Watso~ t234) of Jarkson Stage.
1,000-yord trials during }' rldu y nlght's NCAA Indoor ii\P l~serphoto).
Track Championships at Detroit's Joe Louis Arena.

Spotlight still
on racing rules
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Boston College, Blazers

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WILL BE

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - The
powerful Fonnula One cars have hit
the strcelq of Long Beach again, but
the spotli ght remai ns on the rules.
The Grand Prix teams came here
for Sunday 's race wilh a steady flow
of speculation over the effects of a
new rule eliminating side skirts ·
from the cars.
Defending world champion Alan
Jones took Ute rrovisiona l pole
~'ridoy at 89.877 mph in his Williams
FW07. That was considerably slower
than last yea r's pole speed of 93.598
by Brazilian Nelson Piquet, who
went on to win the 1980 race.
Most of that loss of speed is being
attributed to the elimination of the
skirlq, which help stabilize the cars
in Ute turns as part of the
revol utionary ground effects
aerodynamics of the past few years.
Colin Chapman, the wily E nglish·
man whn oversees the opc1·at1 ons of
the Lotus leom . spent much of the
day Friduy closetL'&lt;i with tho men
who oversee the rules . The Lotus
1'88, which Chapman claims utilizes
two separate chassis, made its first
appearance on a Grand Prix truck
Friday .

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�March 15, 1981

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

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Syracuse ousts
Marquette team

Kasser wins I 18th match .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Jamey now lf&gt;S, moved within one victory of
KaS$er wasn't concerned about his repeats.
opponent as much as he was with
Jeff Mey of Vermilion, an all-state
himSelf in the Ohio high school football halfback last fall, was
beaten in the Class AAA 167-pound
wrestling meet Friday.
" I was too nervous. I was thinking quarterfinals by Tim Lestock of
about my streak. I had butterflies. Cleveland St. Joseph 8-6. Mey had
But I knew I could beat him," the won the 155-pound crown a year ago.
Sununit Station Licking Heights'
The Jordan brothers from St.
Paris .Graham, 10:i-pound Jeff and
star said of his opening Class A bout.
Once he controlled his nerves, 119-pound Jim; won twice in their
Kasser carved out an easy 16-2 vic· bids to keep their Class AA chamtory over Scott Sweress of In- pionships. Jeff was the 98-pound
llepndence, an . opponent . he had. champion, while Jim won at 105
crushed 44-1 in an AAU state potinds last year.
The 14f&gt;.pound championship in
freestyle bout last summer.
Kasser followed · that with a Class AA tonight will match two of
semifinal pin of Gary Gantz of Liber· last year's state champions, Tim
ty Center to run his streak to 118 vic- Tinunons of Highland and Carlos
tories. The 112-pound star, the state
champion at 105last season, now has
lost just once in his last 156 matches.
The team competition went as expected, too, with Lakewood St. Ed·
ward wra11ping up its fourth straight
Class AAA crown and Class AA
Medina Highland clinching its
second title in the last seven years.
St. Edward, matching Maple
Heights' all-time record of four consecutive championshi~E ( 1966-&lt;i9),
has five wrestlers in tonight's finals
in St. John Arena. The Eagles have
accumulated an insurmountable
1121&gt; points to 59'» for Cleveland St.
Joseph and 48'» for Stow Walsh
Jesuit.
Highland, advancing 1 three
wrestlers to the finals, rolled up 88
points with Oak Harbor second with
49'-&gt; and Marion Pleasant third with
In .Class A, Bluffton was on top
with 631.2 points. Licking Heights,
the champion 1976 and 1977, had 46.
Both had three finalists. Richmond
Heights, the defending champion,
was third with 35 points.
Two defending Class AAA individual titleholders, Don Horning of
Stow Walsh Jesuit, the 93-pound
champion now at 112, and Paul Bartolone of Cleveland St. Joseph, 14:i,

Dead heat forces

Mincheff of Oak Harbor. Timmons
won at 138last year, while Mil\cheff
stayed at the same weight this
season .
' John Potts of Akron Ceventry,
trying to give his family six state
titles among three brothers, fell in
the Class AA 167-pound semifinals to
Ed Difeo of Akron St. Vincent-St.
Mary 12-5.
Besides Kasser, defending Class A
titleholders in the finals were Tim
Hanson 'of Richmond Heights, 112,
now 119; Ed Young of Norwalk St.
Paul, 119, now 12ti; Mark l!'alk ci
BlUffton, !55, now 167; Todd Wycoff
of New London, 185, and
heavyweight Bill Nye of Orwell
Grand Valley.

Summit Station IJcldug wresUJug tounley iD Columbus Friday. Kasser In- .
Helgbts wrestler Jamey Kasser, top, moves to get a creased his record to 55-e winning over Sweress. (AP
better grip on Independence wrestler Scott Sweress ln Laaerpboto).
a 11.2-pound quarterfinal match in the stale high school'
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1981 V.W. RABBIT DIESEL

dead heat in the second race at
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The 6-5 combination of Speed Show
and Linda 's Red paid $27.20, and the
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Love returned $96.
Rodeo Clown captured the
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Attendance was 1,919 and the
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TAMPA, Fla.(AP) - Mario Solo
was a teen-aged catcher in the
Dominican Republic who couldn't
hit. The prognosis was not good for
his dream of a major league
baseball career.
A coach with foresight decided
that if Soto had any chance of
making it to the majors, it wouldn't
be while wearing a chest protecter.
The coach took Solo's powe.rful right
ann from behind the plate and
unleashed il on the mound.
"I couldn't hi(. That was my
problem," said the Cincinnati Reds'
right-hander. "So, my coach said
'Do you want to be a pitcher?' I said
okay and started practicing and
practicing.
The coach's wisdom and Solo's
practice paid off last season when
Cincinnati baseball writers voted
the 24-year old Solo the Outstanding
Reds Pitcher of 1980.
When the Reds signed Solo to a
contract at age l 7, they considered
him a diamond in the rough. Within
11

42 Highway
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-9800

Pastore now feels at ease

By The Ass~taled Press
three times we had the ball when we
Marquette played in the NCAA were a point down, but something
Basketball Tournament the last 10 always seemed to happen."
West Virginia also wasted a numyears and Syracuse appeared in the
last eight. But tl)ere they were in the ber of opportunities; but managed lo
National Invitation Tournament outlast Penn. The winners mis.•ed
Friday night, with SyracuSe posting three key free throws in the final
an 1!8-81 victory before a crowd of minute but overcamo: a 4-point
deficit after blowing a 16-point lead.
20,123 at its Carrier Dome.
As the NI'f co,npleted its opening . "When you hav~ athletes and you
round, two other home teams also have a good team and yop're up 4
won. Tulsa trimmed Pan American points With 2\'z minutes to go or so,
61-71, while West Virginia shaded you shouldn't lose it," Penn Coach
Bob Weinhauer said. "We did
Penn67-'4.
Tony Bruin led Syracuse with 26 everything we shouldn't have done.
points and the Orangeme~ took the We turned it over and just gave it to
lead for good on Danny Schayes' them."
"For the last two minutes we conlayup after 13 minutes en route to a
1:1-point bulge two minutes later. But trolled the tempo of the game, and
Coach Jim Boeheim, sore at being that is the position you want to be
overlooked by the NCAA, was far in,~~ said West Virginia's Gale
Catlett.
from happy.
Despite the Mountaineers' late
"There was no time ,when we had
misses,
Greg .Jones and Diego Mccontrol of the game, not at all, even
Coy
converted
free throws in the
when we were up 10 or 12 points," he
final
minute
to
secure
the triumph. •
said.
With
West
Virginia
hohling
a 6~2
Marquette pulled within one point
WINS CLEMENTE AWARDlead,
Jones
sank
one
of
two
free
late in game but could come no
Steve
Garvey, the Los Angeles
throws
with
17
seconds
left.
Three
closer and Bruin put the Warriors
Dodgers'
first baseman, was
seconds
later,
after
a
Penn
turnover,
away with a dramatic slam dunk.
named
the
winner Thursday of
McCoy
converted
two
foul
shots.
Erich Santifcr contributed 18 points
the
1981
Roberto
Clemente award
The second round begins today
for Syracuse and Schayes added 17.
the
player
who
best exem.
as
Glenn Rivers led Marquette with 28 with Dayton at Purdue and Toledo at
piUles
the
game
on
and
off the
Michigan. On Monday, Minnesota is
and Oliver Lee had 20.
field.
1
AP
L.aserpboto).
"I really thought we were going to at Connecticut, 'South Alabama at
get them. I really did," Marquette Georgia, Te.as·El Paso at Tulsa,
Coach Hank R.aymonds said. "We Alabama at Duke, West Virginia at
had great opportunities. Two or Temple and Holy Cross at Syracuse.

Change benefits Reds' Soto

POWER STRUGGLE - Beachwood wrestler Mike Gcldberg, left,
moves to get a betler hold on Casstown Mtaml East wrestler Jon Laugbman in the Class AA 138-pouod quarterfinal round of the state high school
wresWng tourney in Columbus Friday. Goldberg woo the match with a
pin in the third period. ( A1&gt; Laserphoto ),

daily double payoff

The Sun_day Times·Sentln!li-Page-C-1

l11rce years of entedng the farm
system; Solo climbed to the Class
AAA farm dub at Indianapolis,
making a name fur himself with his
blazing fastball.
His 1977 perfonnance at Indianapolis - 109 strikeouts in 123 in-.
nings and an 11-5 record - earned
him •the first of three midseason
promotions to the big leagues.
"I knew I would pitch. I knew that
someday I'd do something good,"
Solo said.
By mid-1981, however, Soto was
having trouble. getting batters out.
He was 1}-3, with glwn prospects for
remaining In CmclhnatL
In his last appearance before the
All-Star break, Solo pitched 6 2-3
scoreless innings in relief. It was a
turning point.
Pitching short relief, long relief
and an occassional start. Solo was 1}5 with four saves and a 2.29 earned
run average in the second half of lhe
season. He struck out 15 in one game
against Atlanta.

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Friday, Pastore overwhelmed
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first spring exhibition game, against
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1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

· "The pitchers who are trymg to
make the team have to throw too
hard too early in trying to Impress. I
can go at my own pace and the
results will be better in the long
run," said Pastore, who had a 13-7
record in 1980, but was out with a
finger 1injury through mid-season.
Pastore believes he overtrained
last season when he opened with a
shutout over the Atlanta Braves and
was 8-2 with a 2. 73 earned run
average by July. From July 6 to
Aug. 23, he appeared in only one

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"I try to pitch more with my head
than my arm. I think a lot of people
think Tom Seaver's complicated and
I'm complicated because in explaining pitching to laymen, you
have to explain a lot of things that
are unspoken between pitchers,"
Pastore said.
Pitching · Coach Bill Fischer

believes Pastore could be a 20-game .
winner this season if he stays
healthy. Fischer also chides Pastore
for his continued attempts to im-·
prove his pitches.
·
"He's a Thomas Edison. He likes
to experiment. Sometimes he's not
satisfied with throwing a good curve
ball. He wants to throw a better one.
That's where you can get hurt," said
Fischer.
"I expect to get the first hitter out
I face. After that, the next hitter. i
don't have any influence on winning
20 ball games, but I do have an influence on getting that first hitter. If
you're so concerned about what
you're going to do in the future, your
concentration is not in the present,"
Pastore said.

George has gone off the deep end. • • •

~

•

(

"This is the first spring that I had
an opportunity to work at my own
pace because .I was not under
pressurre to make the team, The first time I went out to throw batting
practice, I concentrated on throwing
all strikd. Then I worked on my
. breaking ball," said the Reds' No. 2
starting hurler.

game. But he finished the season
throwing a three-hitter at the San
Francisco Giants.
"I'm not going to peak too early or
too late this time. I' u nave Four starts down here and by my third start
I'll be ready for the season,"
Pastore said. His first exhibition appearance is scheduled Monday
against the Houston Astros.

~, ' '\, ~" ~~~~~·r ~,'f ,.,_~ ''lf' 1'~~111~"'''~''"'"~"'"W't' nr~rN~

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�Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipt)lis, Ohio-:- Point Pleasi!nl, fl. va.

Agricultu:.:e and
•
our community
By Bryson R. jBudl Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent
GALUPOUS - The most recent
information that I have on the tobacco disease called Blue Mold, came in
March 9, from North Carolina State
University. The report states " Blue
Mold will most li~ely occur in the U.
S. and Canada in 1981." The disease
was reported in plant beds in countries to the south of us (such as Cuba
and Nicaragua ) during January.
Reports of those countries suggest
Ridomil is doing an excellent job in
providing protection.
No reports of Blue Mold have been
received from Florida. About 95 per·
cent of the Florida growers have
used Ridol1')iL
·All tohacco growers are encouraged to use either of the
following two plans as a suggested
control action in plant bed.
. The Ridomil Plan is the most ef·
fective. This plan involves application of Ridomil as a soil in·
c.orporated treatment at time of
seeding. Ridoll\il, applied at one
quart per acre (I fluid ounce or 2
tabhespoonsful mixed with two
gallons of water per 150 square yar·
: ds) provides protection to Blue Mo!d
and Pythium damping off. Ridom:l
does not control anthracnose. This
disease can be prevented with three ·
applications of fungicides containing
ferbam, zineb, rilaneb or metiram.
. The first application is suggested
when plants are the size of a dime to
a quarter ; second, two to three
weeks later; and the third , near time
of transplanting.
The Preventive

Plan

involves

spraying or dusting once or twice a
week with fungicides containing fer·
bam, zineb, maneb or metiram.

Treatment application should be·gin
when plants are the size of a dime
and continued until transplanting to
the field is complete. Correct use
should provide protection to Blue

Mold. damping off and anthracnose.
Treating plant beds as just
described will ensure healthy transplants, reduce build up of the
casual agent and less chance of
damage from the systefliic form in
the field. Plants in the old bed sites
should he destroyed inunediately
following transplanting.
Control action in the ·field involves
either of the new two plans :
The Ridomil Plans is the most ef·
fective. Thts plan involves application of Ridomil as a preplan\
treatment (broad·c ast and in·
corpora ted in soil I as rates or one or
two quarts for flue-cured and two
quarts per acre for Burley and other
types. This method should provide
full season protection.
The Foliage Spray Plan involves
application of fungicides containing
maneb ( Manzate 200, Dithane M-22
Special. and Dithane M-151 or streptomycin sulfate (Agri-Mycin 17 or
Agri-Strep D). Growers that select
this method can hold off first applicaiton until advised by Blue Mold
Central or apply within one week
following transplanting. Treatment
should be repeated at least twice a
week (every three or four days ) and
continued until threat has passed.
The manufacturer does not recommend using Ridornil in the setter
water. As near as I can tell one of the
problems seems to be the possibil ity
of crop mjury. The other is a
possibility of poor control of the
disease. Read your label on the container ca refully and be sure to follow
directions .
If I can be of any help to you with
Blue Mold or other tobacco
problems in 1981, then contact me at
our new office location on Route 7,
just below Bob Evans Drive-In, or
call us at 446-7007.

BY DIANA S. EBERTS
Exte~ion Agent
Home Economics
Meigs County

r

UPDATING YOUR PERSONAL
PROPERTY INSURANCE
COVERAGE
POMEROY - If your family's
cameras, watches, jewelry or silver·
ware were de•troyed or stolen,
would your insurance coverage be
adequate to cover the loss?
Essentially, there are two reasons

to renew your insurance coverage on
personal household goods. The first
relates to the limits of coverage on
these types of items in many
household insurance policies. These
limits can be rather low by today's
' economic standards.
The second reason is inflation. If
consumers have not reviewed their
household insurance coverage in the
last year Or two, they may be in for
some big surprises and even shocks.
Many special types of personal ar·

ticles such as jewelry and silver·
ware have increased substantially in
value and the policy limits may be
far below the value of the items.
Additional coverage is obtainable.
by purchasing what we call personal
articles floaters. These Ooaters
provide the additional coverage
needed for a variety of specified
items such as silverware, jewelry,
furs. cameras, stamp and coin ·
collections and antiques.
The cost of the floaters will very
according to the type of item
covered and the location of the insured policy holder. As an example,
however, silverware Can be insured
Wlder a personal articles noaters for
about 20 percent SIOO of value in
many localities.
There may be limits to the insurance coverage of the floaters.
Some floaters do not automatically
cover newly acquired property.

Homemakers'
""'.. "'"''.......
Circle

_
--

... hlil't

IYKntiCLlU

GALUPOUS - Poison preven· or the doorbell.
3. Store medicines separately
tion is a year roWJd responsibility
other household products.
from
but once each year. we .try to give
4.
Keep
items in their original conspecia l attention to this problem.
tainers.
Poison Prevention week is to be ob5. Leave original .labels on all
served the week of March 15 through
products,
and read the label before
the 21. The theme for I 981 is
using.
"Children Act Fast - So Do
6. Always leave the light on when
Poisons." The theme would indicate
gi"ing
or taking medicines.
that young children are most often
7.
Avoid
taking medicines in front
the victims of accidental poisoning,
of
children
since children tend to
and the highest number of acimitate
grown-ups
.
cidental poisoning occur in children
8.
Refer
to
medicine as
Wlder five years of age.
01
·•medicine"
not
Candy" when
Children under five years of age
medicating
children
.
are in a stage of growth and develop9. Clean out the medicine cabinet
ment where their need to learn about
periodically,
and dispose of all u·ntheir world is very great. They are
needed
medicines
when the illness
curious about everything, which
which
they
were
prescribed is
for
means they are constantly exploring
over.
and getting into things around the
10. 'Finally, use safety packaging
house. Children learn this way, but
pt·operly
- by closing the container
some areas should not be explored.
use.
securely
after
Children will climb, reach for, get
Even
though
families follow these
into things and since one way they
10
rules
of
prevention
and have new
learn is by tasting everything new
packaging
on
products
that make 1t
they will put anything into their
difficult
for
children
to
open them,
mouth. This becomes a hazard if
we
still
have
accidents
happening.
hannful things are within their
So, it is important for the parents
reach. The family must take steps to
prevent accidents that might happen of young children to know how to get
in contact with a poison control cenfrom their experimentatiOns.
You might need to take some time ter, or doctor , or hospital for
to "poison-proof" your house if you eznergency information and advice.
have young chi ldren in the home, or Check your phone book or doctor for
even young visitors. This could the telephone number of the nearest
mean taking a look at any cleaning poison controlt:enter.
If your child should ingest a
materials, medicines, pesticides or
any other substance that could be poison, you should determine the
dangerous if used in any way other substance ingested and then contact
than the reconunended wa v and a poison control center or your local
being very sure these matcrilils are doctor. They will want to know the
substance and amount ingested, plus ·
secure from curious youngsters .
Below are some general rules you the age and weight of the child .
might follow to prevent accidental Follow the instructions received
with your doctor of the Poison Conpoisonmg :
I. Keep all household products and trol Center.

ttlJRR\' \ ................. .

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MONTE CARLO

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tr a shar p .s cyl, .1 spd
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SPCCial 's po r t str1 pes. spor t
wheels an d r a1 se d le tter
trres.

F ac to ry arr, V o ec onomy ,
AM FM St ereo . 60 40 Iron !
SC&gt;d l , tilt wheet , ratlv e
wh eels ~ l00°o w1;1rr anfy .

'6995

'6995

1979 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLES

1979 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

Cert il• cale is appl iub le th i!&gt;
Pl'r •Od and ts rl" l r~led to m e
year J&gt;•e ra ot
dv erage ' '"
tnJasury secur• tres Interest is
compounoed aall'l' and is pa• d
m onthlY' ,
quarl&lt;!r l y, se m t
&lt;~ nnuall v , or anm,M IIv

11.75% 12.65%

Annual Rille

Annual Ytcld

THRUWEO ., MAR

Jf - - - ' •

11.75%

12.65%
Annu.11 Y1t&gt;ltl

··3595

GENE JOHNSON
'
GREG SMITH

1976 CHEV.
BLAZER

1976 FORD
F-100 PICKUP

1974 CHEV.
VEGA STA. WAGON

A uto I ran -;, p !:.l eer, lonq
OOd 1 V 8 N I\. OA r i' I Arl S?~l'15 .

4 cylinder auto . trans . Good

InTeres t musT remarn on deposrt a lull vur to urn ,annu•l v•eld Ther~ •t •
~ ubstanl ral penalty for premature wrthdrawat of CertrfiuT~ fund s. Minrmum
Oei.IOSil IS,OOO lor Monthly Inter est .

R efa11 SJ695
OUR PRICE

EACH DEPOSITOR INSU~EO UP TO SlOO, OOO 8'1' THE FDIC. AN AGENCY'OF
THE Ff:OERAL G&lt;JVER"--MENT.

HARLAND WOOD

fUY

'1795

SALE

it. ..

Earlier, Andrew Wiessner and his wife, Charlotte,
testified they had sat at a table near Miss Burnett and
her party that night.
Both testified that while there with Wiessner's paren·
ts for a celebration they had indeed shared Miss Bur·
nett's baked Alaska and she had shared their souffle.
But they said the swapping was the idea of Wiessner's
mother. The exchange was made by the waiters and
Miss Burnett did not get up with her dessert, they said.
Kissinger, speaki ng with reporters after giving a
speech at the Century Plaza Hotel, said Miss Burnett
came to his table that night and was introduced
politely.
·•we exchanged a few words. and she left." Kissinger
said.

l

CELEBRITY SUIT - Entertainer Carol Burnett
looks over at her attorneys as jurors file out of the courtroom during an afternoon recess Thursday in Los
Angeles. Miss Burnett is suing the Nalloosl Enquirer

for $10 million for reporting that she ud Henry
Kissinger had an argument In a Washington
restaurant. ( AP Laserpboto).

Reagan relaxing in NYC

Thoswcll kepi T Bird
iS arc l ic whife with
green v i nyl landau
top and 50
c ustom
interior , air c:ond .
New
Pr e mium
Ra di al s .
Double
Sharp.

so

'3995
1973 CHEV.
CAPRICE
CLASSIC
2 Dr., runs good.

'895
IN NEW YORK - Preoidenl Reagan and his wUc
Nanty are planning two big nlgh18 on the town thi•
,_end In New York City. Their ochedule lnclud""
tUJnc ID a Broadway musical Saturday night and

.,u.,

.•

" I was given the information orally to be checked
out," Lyon said. "He (Walker) said there had been
some sort of altercation and to check it out."
Lyon said Miss Stewart told him that Miss Burnett
had had a good-natured talk with Kissinger and had
shared her dessert with several people.
He said : " I didn't use the word 'traipsing,' and
neither did she. She said she couldn't confinm anything
about the spilled wine."
Asked by Miss Burnett's attorney whether Walker
expressed concern about publishing the piece, Lyon
said: "Yes. I told him what I could confirm and what I
could not confinn. I got quite upset with him. He was
pushing me to tell him whether Or not he should publish

Was S129S

Our Pncc

---(i)h~ 'Vc.'ueyBank-n• ••
..... kt• •Uun•tv
~'"'"'"" ' f ,..~

economical transportation .

LOS ANGELES (APl - Henry Kissinger says Carol
Burnett acted in a "perfectly ladylike fashion" when
they met at a Washington restaurant. but says he has
no plans to testily in her $10 million libel suit against
the National Enquirer.
The Enquirer published a gossip item which said
Miss Burnett and the former secretary of state had had
a noisy row.
Kissinger, who has given a deposition in the suit
against the Enquirer, told reporters Friday that there
was "no conunotion of any kind going on" during their
January 1976 encounter.
Earlier FMday, a Conner Enquirer reporter testified
that he was unable to verify the item published in the
tabloid.
Greg Lyon. ca lled as a witness at the Superior Court
jury trial of Miss Burnett's suit, said he was working as
a reporter for the Enquirer at its Lantana, Fla. ,
headquarters in February 1976 when he was asked by
Brian G. "Mike" Walker to check out an item for the
gossip eolwnn Walker was writing.
The a'rticle, carried in a March 1976 issue, alleged
that Miss Burnett had a noisy run-in with Kissinger at
the Rive Gauche restaurant, traipsed around offering
everyone a bite of her dessert, and knocked over a
glass of wine.
"It was 10 a .m. on Wednesday and I had one hour
before deadline to check it out," Lyon said.
He said he called rylary Jo Stewart, then public
relations director of the restaurant.

This fam i ly sized
sed an Is e xtra cl ean
rns idc and out. Sma ll
v 8, a ir c ond t f lonin g,
AM FM S te reo and
cus tom
c loth
in
terror. Only 141 705
low mites . Was S5995 .

1977 FORD
T·BIRD

4 Wtwc l Drt\I C, au to ,
PS, PB , bod y fll'l'fl!:.
some w o rk
N AOA

- - - r H N U WE D . MAR I I _ _ _

1979 MERCURY
MARQUIS 4 DR.

SEE
BOB BRICKLES,

NOW

For !hose Investors who prefer i!
longer lerm this cert rf icate earn ~
lhe same rate dnd is issued under
the same regulatrons as the 7'h
Vt'M cer l rt rcate lntere~t tS c om
pounded dellv and pttrd montnty .
QUctrterly . sem1 "nnuilll\1'. or iln
nuttllv
-

Fctc tory a rr . AM FM , local
one own er . Whil e exten ar
Cil rmin e inl err or . Wit ~
15995 N ow

'5995

40
MORE
CLEAN USED
CARS-TO
CHOOSE
FROM

ra ctro

31h YEARS

dows. 100° o warrrtnly, qood
1.(1m il y srzcd four &lt;1oo r
sed ans, ec onomrcal 30 1 V 8
Scvcr.:t l to c hoose from

Two tone g o ld . v 6,
co n d . , 16, 76 1
mllcs. Wa s $6495 .00 ..
Pr iced to se ll .
a 1r

'5695

Thi s C'co nom v ca r
tr am Ch e vr ole t hl15
the 4 c yl in der ()nqr nc,
4 S p~ ed lr.:m s &lt;ln d A M

Minimum Deposit uoo

Ar r , tilt Wheel, power w1n

1980 CHEV.
MALIBU 4 DR.

'5495

Wds S399S

--~--2J,l YEARS
Minimum Deposit $500
The ra te shOwn below lor th1!1

$$$$

1979 CHEV.
MONZA

•
lHRUWED ., MAR It___.

",J

'5995

SAVE

13.677%
..___

con

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wh eels w rlh ra ised
te ll er l 1r es
Spccra t
acce nt str i pes, ami
o nly 12,036 m 11es

Minimum Deposit 510,000

Annual Rate
Annu•l Yield .o1
_
. . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.....

c rur se

t ro l.

Th1 s Money Marl(et Cerlrt ic.tte
r ate Is efh'!C IIIJf! every Thursday
Federal regulat ions prort •bit
c ompound i ng
ol
Interest
Au tomat ic ,lly ren ewable .tl
maturi ty at 1~ preva1hny r.tte
The actual return to mve.,r or s on
Tre r~::.urv · s Bills is hlotwr

'perfectly. ladylike'

".,;,

BON\J~-

4 Wheel Drive

stereo.

SIX MONlHS

BAITLE FIRE - Chicago
firemen step to buDding openings
to get a breath of fresh air during
a morning fire at a fOIII"-story
apartment buDding on Chicago\
north side, Saturday. At least 17
were killed and 11 were Injured In
the fire. (AP Laserphoto~.

0 •••••

. ..... ..... .S700 L:ASH

Bl ac k on bla c k .

ONE DAY

rear stairwell, where it traveled up to the third and
fourth floors, according to Fred Stone Morgan~ a
deputy district fire chief.
The blaze was extinguished shortly after 5 a.m.,
nearly two bours after it erupted.

•••

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.............
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What's
Your
Choice?
,...

•

CIDCAGO ( AP) - A smoky pre-dawn fire swept the
upper floors of a four-story apartment building on the
North Side early Saturday, killing 17 people and injuring 12 others, authorities said.
Police said that although it appeared all rooms in the
building had smoke detectors, many did not fWJctiOJI
properly. "Some were without batteries," said Edward
Waltman, a deputy district fire chief.
The latest bodies were found in a fourth-floor
hallway and on a stairway, he said, while most of the
others were found in rooms.
, "Everybody panicked," said ·Michael Vest, 23, an
unemployed welder who had lived on the building's
fourth floor.
He said he had gone down to the first floor a short
time before the fire broke out and got some soup from a
vending machine. Vest said he returned to his room
and a short time later smelled smoke.
"I went to ring the buzzer (fire alann) in the
hallway, but it didn't go off," he said. "About two
minutes later, all the lights and the electricity went
off."
" People were panicking and smoke was
everywhere,'' Vest said.
He said he escaped by breaking out a window and
going down a fire ladder.
A spokesman at Weiss Memorial Hospital said 12 vic·
tims had been pronounced dead there just before the
·
latest body was fotmd.
A short time before two other bodies were
discovered, Fire Commissioner William Blair, who
was on the scene, said, "We're not sure how many vic-tims there are. It's 11 or 12."
Red Cross spokesman Ray Carmichael said at the
same time that as many as 16 residents of the building
remained unaccounted for. He added, however, that
"we are hopeful offinding them" alive.
th side. The fire, of undetermined origin, has left at
The cause of the fire remained undetermined, but a
leastl7 dead and lllnjured. lAP Laserphotol.
preliminary investigation indicated the fire broke out
in a first-floor laWJdry room then spread quickly to a

Carol--

'4495
1980
TRANS
AM
Specral Edition

Day March 19

0

D

Apartment fire kills 17,
injures 12 in Chicago

owners. Oil buyers must provide.in·
formation for this return to royalty
owners by March 31.
Fonm 6249 - Copulation of Over·
paid Windfall Profit Tax.
Fonm 6249 A - Royalty Owners
Credit for Overpaid Windfall Profit
Tax.
Document 6671 - An IRS Fact
Sheets on this credit. These forms
are brand new. The only one we have
in our office is 6249 A.
Want to rent pasture? How much
should you pay or ask for? Pasture is
either rented by the acre or per head
per month (mature cow equivalent).
I. Rent by the Head per month This is a common way of renting
pasture. A typical range in charge is
$4 to '$8 per month per adult cow
equivalent. Demand for the pasture
is the main factor affecting the
charge rate.
II. Rent Per Acre Per Season Quality of pasture and demand arc
the main factors in detennining
charge.
A Improved Pennanent Pasture
- $2tl to $40 per acre. this means orchardgrass, fescue, timothy grass;
very few trees ; limed and fertilized
in the last three to four years; and in
general. high quality pasture.
B. Un-improved Permanent
Pasture - $10 to $20. This means
bluegrass. very few trees, no lime or
fertilizer for last four or more
years.(Excessive weeds or very low
production potential would have
even a lower charge.)
We have further details on this if
you are interested.

•

ec on omy
t ar
speed. 4 c v t1ndc r

Agriculture

·~

POMEROY - Tuesday, March 17,
24, and 31 at 7:30 p.m. at the Extension Office - Keeping Farm
Records. Know Your Valuable
Papers, Insurance Needs and Recor·
ds , Household Budgeting, and
Preparations for Wills. These
meetings will be geared toward
couples. EverY-one is welcome .
Wednesday, March 18, I :30 to 3:30 .
p.m. at the Wayne Upton Fann Open House for a solar swine
farrowing and nursery house .
Wayne Upton's fann is located between Tuppers Plains and Reedsville
on State Route 681. Signs will be
posted. An excellent chance \Q sec a
modern farrowing and nursery set·
up that is heated by solar energy.
Saturday, March 21, all day, out.of
county beef tour. Don Moody's in
New Concord, Muskingwn County,
and Bob Misksell's in Coshocton
County. This should be an excellent
tour. Call me for details .
Wednesday and Thursday, March
2!i and 26 - Recertification to buy
restricted pesticides. On both dates
the meetings will be from I to 4 and 7
to 10 p.m. March 25 will be at the
Meigs County Extension Office.
March 2ti will be in Gallipolis at the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company. Anyone who needs
recetification has to attend three
hours of training . Please call and
register if you plan to attend.
Friday, March 'll - Polled
Hereford Show and Sale at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds.
INCOME TAX
$1.000 credit for small royalty

The Sunday Times·Sentiflei-Page-D·l

classified

llelalsleave the scene of an early morning fire at u four
story apartment building, Saturday, on Chicago's nor·

Thus. recently purchased property
. must he added to the Ooaler policy if
coverage is desired. Silverware. by
the way, is one e•ample where this
limitation applies.
How can consumers determine
whether they need to purchase the
additional personal property
floater?
First, they need to update their
personal property inventory and
determine the current value of
special it.ems such as cameras. wat·
ches, jewelry and silverware. This
may take some time and telephone
calls but can be well worth the ef·
fort. Then, the consumer should
review their current insurance
coverage with their agent to deter·
mine whether additional coverage is
warranted. and if so, the amoWJt of
coverage needed.
In some cases, the insurance company may require that an item be
professionally appraised to deter·
mine value. A copy of this appraisal
as well as the purchase receipt for
·the item and a photograph of the
property should be securely stored
away from horne , preferably in a
safety deposit bo•.

w. va.

BY JOHN C. RICE
ExleoslonAgeilt
Agriculture, Meigs County

2. When these products are in use.
never let them out of your sight even if you must go to the telephone

Orange w ith sadd le
On ly / ,370

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohia-:--Point Pleasant,

County agent's
corner

use.

i nter ro r
mrl es ·

Earn •c 's chec krng Sil¥ • n~s plan
eoJ rn s you .S ' . , .nterest t&gt;verv
day on YOu r total Sd'lings ac count
ba ldnce Wr i le chec tc.s as y ou
net&gt;d to Sav•ngs account interesT
cnecl( lng a ccount conveni ence
A Sf~. tor " Earn. e! "

'

March 15,1981

medicines out of reach of children , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - preferably. locked up when not in I

Will observe

GALUPOUS - On Thursday,
March 19, people all across the
·· United States, will take time to
recognize and salute the story of
what agriculture means to America,
accor~ing to Carl L. Webster,
President, Federal Land Bank
Association of Gallipolis.
" It's all part of the nationwide
'Agriculture Day' observance which
will ·unite volunteers in all parts of
tile country in a coordinated effort to
communi cate the • message "Agriculture: It's Your Heartbeat,
America! " - to top decisionmakers, the news media and urban
audiences nationwide, " said Webster.
: Webster explained that for the fir·
st time since its beginning in 1973,
Agriculture Day has been officially
proclaimed a national observance.
House . Joint Resolution 560
designating March 19 as "National
Day" was passed by the
'' Agriculture
U.
S.
Congress,
and signed into law
•• by the President Oct. 9, 1980 .
· Webster pointed to the following
facts illustrating the vital role
agriculture plays in the U. S.
economy:
· - Nation's No. I Industry
assets of $927 billion.
. -Nation's No. I Employer - over
15 million people.
· - Nation's No. !Inflation Fighter
- productivity growth five times
greater than non-farm business over
'( past
five years.
1
- Nation's .No. I Exporter - $40
I
' billion in 1980.

, March 15, 1981

seeing their son dance with the Joffrey II ballet company Sunday night. Pictured with the l{eagans Is vic..
presldenl George Bush. ( AP Lallerpbotol.

NEW YORK (AP) - President Reagan, capping a
week in which he proposed more than $48 billion in
federal budget cuts, is relaxing in New York City this
weekend in a $1 ,700-a-day suite in the posh Waldorf
Astoria Hotel.
.The president and his wife Nancy are planning two
big nights on the town, including taking in a Broadway
musical tonight and, for the first time, seeing their son
dance with the Joffrey II ballet company Sunday night.
Since Reagan also is meeting with some New York
Republicans today, the tab for the weekend is being
picked up by the Republican National Committee in·
stead of the taxpayers.
Reagan's schedule this afternoon included lunch in
"Little Italy" with Republican Sen. Alfonse D'Amato
and a reception for the New York GOP leadership.
Noting that, Deputy White House press secretary
Larry Speakes said the three-day journey had " heavy
political overtones" and so the bills would be paid by
the conunittee.
Every president since Herbert Hoover in 1931 has
stayed in the four-bedroom presidential suite at the
Waldorf-Astoria, according to the hotel's publicity
dircctor.-Franccs Borden.
While she refused to say whut floor the 11\-room suite
is on. for security reasons, Ms. Borden did volunteer
that it has four marble 'bathrooms, Georgian
mahogany furniture, coral velvet on the living rooin
walls, a separate dining room, and a turquoise master
bedroom with a large dressing room.

It .also has a private lobby, so Reagan won't be
bothered by autograph seekers, and a private elevator
complete with operator.
Ms. Borden referred to the elaborate suite as a
"White House away from the White House," and said it
features a desk used by Gen. Douglas MacArthur,
whose widow still resides at the hotel, and a rocking
chair used by John F. Kennedy.
Reagan arrived here Friday afternoon, but his first
public activity was not until this morning' - an interview at the New York Daily News.
Afterward, he was to attend the Little Iblly rally with
D' Amato, which a spokesman said the senator hoped
would be attended by thousands. Lunch was planned at
Angelo's Restaurant.
Reagan invited Mayor Edward Koc!\, a Democrat, to
meet with him in his suite this afternoon. A
spokeswoman for the mayor said he was bringing his
budget director and planned to discuss "the presi&lt;lent's
proposed budget cuts," which would severely curtail
federal aid to the city.
If Congress passed Reagan's budget, for insblnce,
New York state would lose $100 million in mass transit
operating aid by fiscal1983. Most of that money goes to
New York City .
After his meeting with Koch, Reagan was to attend a
reception for the New York Republican leadership.
Reagan and his wife had tickets for the musical
"Sugar Babies" in the evening and planned a post·
theater dinner in a local restaurant.

�Pagi!-D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Gladys French

Veterans Hospital at Bay Pines, Fla.
Mr. Haskins was pr.!ceded in
death by his parents, Henry and
Surrilda Haner Haskins and his
wife, Sarah Denham Haskins.
.
He was a retired pipefitter; member of the Cheshire Baptist Church,
Lafayette Post, American Legion,
Gallipolis, Meigs Chapter 53 DAV
and Steamfitters Local, Huntington.

ZANESVIUE - Funeral services
and burial were held Saturday at the
Bolling Funeral Home here for
Gladys French, 83, a fanner
resident of Gallia County, (Eno
Conununity) who died Wednesday in
a Zanesville nursing home.
She was the daughter of the late
Hennan and Kate Strawsbaujgh
He is survived by one daughter,
1llaxton.
Mrs.
L. A. (Virginia ) Fusco, ArSurvivors include two sons,
cadia;
one brother, Noah Haskins,
Charles French of M~oMelsviUe,
two grandchildren, and
Middleport;
and Dorus French of Buckeye Lake,
several
nieces
and nephews.
Ohio and several grandchildren.
will be held WedFuneral
services
She was preceded in death by two .
nesday
at
I
p.m.
at
Ewing Funeral
sons and a daughter.
Home. Burial will be in Grave Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
Ebner S. Haskins
call
at the funeral home Monday
POMEROY-Elmer Sherman
from
7 to 9 and Tuesday from 2' to 4
Haskins, 85, 803 E. Magnolia St., Arand
7
to9.
Cadia, Fla., died Friday at the

Senators issue
clear warning
WASHINGTON (AP) - Several
influential senators are sending a
clear warniRg to President Reagan
tbat Congress will not support any
increase of U.S. military activity in
El Salvador tbat might lead to a
repeat of what happened in Vietnam.
"We are not about to retrace those
steps tbat led us into the longest war
in history in Southeast Asia," Sen.
Mark Hatfield, R-Ore. , said Friday.
He said he and other members of
the Senate Appropriations Committee gave administration officials
tbat message Friday during a closed
briefing.
Hatfield, the committee's chairman, said, "they were given very
clear statements by many members

Congressmen expres.s
concen1 over SS cutbacks
He warned tbat could leap to
WASIUNGTON (AP) - As federal
safety experts and Amtrak officials manufacturers losing an incentive to
protest planned cutbacks in their design safety features into their conalloc.ations, administration budget sumer products.
Administration officials tried to
officials are facing congressmen
counter
Amtrak's clalms tbat the
concerned c*er proposed Social
passenger
rail system would have to
Security cuts tbat would affect some
limit
its
operations
to the popular
3 million households.
Northeast
corridor
under the
President Reagan did pick up one
would cut
Reagan's
plans,
which
budget victory Friday when the
$993
million
budget
Amtrak's
Senate Environment and Public
to
$613
million.
request
Works Committee voted to cut
Robert W. Blanchette, chief of the
programs under its control by
Federal
Railway Administration,
roughly the amount Reagan wanted.
told
a
Senate
Conunerce sul&gt;However, Stuart Statler, acting
col'lllllittee
tbat
anywhere
from $150
chairman of the Consumer Products
million
to
$250
million
would
be
Safety Conunission, complained to a
available
next
year
to
provide
serHouse subcOmmittee tbat the administration's proposal to cut the . vice outside the heavily traveled
tiny agency's budget by more tban Boston-New York-Washington runs.
Budget Director David A. Stock25 percent would "mean severely
limiting" some of its most important man, meanwhile, ran into some intensive questioning from skeptical
functions.
'
Democrats on the House Social

Charge 3 in coverup

of the committee ... tbat they will not
get ~upport" for U.S. military
escalation in El Salvador.
He said the officials responded by
assuring the committee that El
Salvador will not become another
Vietnam-type situation.
" I think that is excellent assurance and we are undergirding that
assurance by this kind of a hearing
today," Hatfield said.
Reagan's No. 3 man at the State
Department also conlinned after
the briefing that an international
package of about $140 million in
economic aid, $63.5 million of it from
the United States, is ·being worked
out for El Salvador. ·
Undersecretary of Stale Walter J.
St.oessel said those figures,
originally cited by congressional
sources, are " in the ball park." He
refused to be more specific.

OBTAINS FUNDS
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) -Newport
Steel Inc. haS obtained the final
necessary financing and wiD pur- ·
NO PAYDAY
chase two steel pipe-making plants
ONONNATI (AP)- About 1,100 •
here March 26, according to at- workers of The Cincinnati Elec- .
torney Bernard Beck.
Ironies Co., in suburban Evendale,
Beck, who represents the new
did not receive their paychecks
steel company, said Friday tbat $17
Friday.
million in operating capital and
Company employees said they
credit bave been provided by A.J .
were told tbat the First National
Armstrong Finance Co. of New
Bank of CinciM&amp;ti had seized the
York,.
assets of the radio and electronics
The loan, plus private investment,
company.
an $8 million federal grent and $4.1
Neither the bank nor the company
million from the state, completes the
would comment. CinciMBti Elec$43 million needed to buy the tronics had less !ban $50 million in
operation from Interlake Steel Inc.
sales last year.
of Chicago, Ill.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Arrest
warrants were have been issued for
two administrators and a teacher at
a Cleveland high school accused of
trying to cover up the beating of a
sophomore at John Hay High School
last Monday.
Chief police prosecutor Jose C.
Feliciano said Friday he decided to
charge the three because top
Cleveland school administrators
bave not responded to police demands over the past few months tbat
crimes committed on school property be reported.
John Hay High School sophomore
Terry Jones, 17, was badly beaten at
the school last Monday. He was in
satisfactory condition Friday at MI.
Sinai Hospital.
.
Warrants were issued forr principal Roland E. Morton, assistant
principal Richard W. Cooper and
teacher Edward Olszewski. They
are each charged with a fourtndegree misdemeanor count of failing
to report a felony. If convicted, they
could be sentenced to 30 days in jail
and be fined $250 each.
RECORD Dt:PQSIT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Attorney General William J. Brown
said Friday tbat his office deposited
a record $29.27 million in delinquent
taxes and claims into the U.S.
Treasury last year.
That's up $699,S58 from last year,
Brown said.
The attorney general's ch1ims section collects overdue and unpaid
taxes and debts owed to more tban
40 state agencies and departments.
Claims are certified to the attorney
general by the state auditor.

28Stlbt!fln,.
..
~~._.
...

FLUSHING, Ohio (AP) - Five
City Council members walked out of
a heated meeting, saying they quit in
a dispute over Mayor Carol
LaPosta's efforts to suspend police
Chief Richard Sigler.
The sixth member ot·council was
not at the meeting in this eastern
Ohio village, and the action left city
government and Sigler's status in
limbo. Councilmen had argued the
issue through most of an eight-hOur
meeting before the five walked out
atabout3:30 a.m. Friday.
The dispute opened Feb. 12 when
Ms. LaPosta wrote council that
Sigler was' 'guilty of inefficiency, insubordination, neglect of duty and
misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance of duty." She made 22
·allegations tbat Sigler either had not
performed Certain tasks or had perfanned certain duties without
notifying the mayor in advance.
Sigler in tqm charged Ms.

LaPosta with using city and government funded workers for personal
tasks such as clearing snow from
her walk and drive and I'UIIIIlng personal errands for her.
The vote to suspend Sigler was 4-1.
But his lawyer, Edward Susterslc,
said votes of three councilmen were
invalid because they were appointed
to office, and not elected, as
specified in state law. The two elected members of council split their
votes on the issue.

FUNDS DISTRWUTED
POMEROY - Gov. James A.
Rhodes has announced the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles has the second
diatribution of 1981 license tax
revenues totaling ,U,999,935.49
ready for disbursement to local
governments. Meigs County's share
of the total is $52,432.43.

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BY JAilfFS SANDS

Ofthe Bend
By Boh Hoeflich
There's much cooking with the
vocal music department of Meigs
High School. Under the direction of
vocal music supervisor, Ed
Harkless, students this year will be
domg a musical entitled, "Frankenstein's Follies." It's a switch from·
the traditional Broadway musicals
done by the department over the
past several years- and far less expensive. Harkless outlined some of
the plot and music to be used in the
presentation and it sounds interesting, to say the least.
The choir - some 70 members wiU be going to West Liberty College
this spring to take part in a music
festival and of course, the choir this
year did get beautiful choir robes.
So - choir members will be hOJr
ping about in various fund raisi ng
projects this spring to help with UJr
coming expen,ses - not to mention
the debt on the robes.
For the first time, a vocal music
boosters club has been formed and
that group will stage a public
spaghetti supper on Saturday, March 211, beginning at 5 p.m. The club is
asking all parents and choir friends
to donate food, lime and effort
towards the project. All funds raised
will be used towards the purchase of
the recently acquired robes. Persons
interested in helping are asked to
call the high school, 992-2158, or to
send word to school with their
children.
Tickets for the supper at $2.50 for
adults and $1.50 for children 12 and
under. Tickets may be purchased
from members of the choir or at the
Rutland Department Store. Residen·
ts may send their ticket money to Ed
Harkless at the high school and he
will see tbat you receive them.
Are you overwhe~ned with your
job and getting only a smail part accomplished each day despite ex·
pending all of your energy?
In today's world, this is called bur·
nout. Symptoms are absenteeism,
high staff turnover, carelessness,
and low empathy among workers.
If you feel you are suffering with
burnout, perhaps you will want to at·
tend a burnout seminar to be held by
the Meigs County Department of
Health. The idea of the seminar is to
teach you healthy ways of coping
with job related stress.
Speakers at the seminar to be held
Monday, March 30, from I to 4 p.m.
in the east-west dining room rl
Veterans Memorial Hospital, will be
Roma J . Blunt and Beryl A. Whitten,
management consultants. There is a
$3.50 fee for the seminar.
Incidentally, since announcing the
seminar, health department per-

FORT MYERS. Fla . ( AP) - If
Florida promoters have their way,
Americans will soon be turning ,the
tabjes on " Jaws."
Shark meat, it seems, is delicious,
nutritious, inexpensive - and it
doesn't have any of those tiny bones.
" It's a novelty item now," said
Sally · Patrenos, a shark meat
promoter for the State of F'lorida,
but more consumers are catching
on.
State leaders are so convinced
about the potential of the fledgling
shark meat market that they 've
launched promotional campaigns in
36 U.S. cities and in Canada, Mrs.
Patrenos said in a recent interview.
Florida is circulating shark
promotion pamphlets - complete
with recipes - and marine officials
are extolling the virtues of the toothy
animals to food editors across the
country.
Florida marketing officials have
appeared on television shows as far
away as Salt Lake City, and the
state's home economists have
traveled to dozens of cities to give.
viewers tips on preparing and
cooking shark, said O.B. Lee of the
Department of Natural Resources.
What's more, said Lee, " when our
people are traveling, we like to drop
In and see the. managers of the
grocery chains to tell them about
shark meat."
Lee said shark has always been
plentiful In the Atlantic Ocean and
seas throughout the world, but It has
become much more available on the
retail level' in rece~t year~ because .
of Improvements in freezing
methods and transportation.

sonnet indicate !bat response has
been outstanding and they now fear
tbat it Will he a standing room only
situation. Since seating wlil be
limited, you are asked to phone Norma Torres or Franklin C. Petrie, Jr.,
and pre-register for the seminar.
By the way, did you lmow that the
services of Becky Nease Anderson,
who loves home decorating, are
available to · you free of charge
through Elberfeld's these days? ,
Becky only recently started to
provide her touch to redecorating at
the store and has carried out a number of projects already. She offers a
variety of services in selection of
wallpaper, accessories, carpeting,
furniture - whatever - and does
make a visit to your home to discuss
matters with you, if you'd like.
It's a new service and the first
such service offered at a local store
and no doubt, Becky is going to be
kept pretty busy. And lest we forget,
Becky is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Nease.
Alumni groups have to resort to all
sorts of activities every spring to
raise funds for staging their
reunions. The price charged to attend the reunions just won't cover
the costs involved.
An im10valion for the Middleport
High School Alwnni Association
fund raising this year will be a men's
invitational basketball tournament
to be held at Meigs High School.
The first 16 teams registering will
be accepted for the tournament and
the deadline for entry is March 21.
To register call Gene Wise, 992-6224
or Celeste Bush, 992-5943.
On Tuesday, March 24. the annual
sausage and pancake supper of the
Meigs County United Methodist Men
will be held at Heath United
Methodist Church in Middleport, 4 to
7p.m.
All proceeds will go toward the
education fund for student ministers
in Meigs County. tickets at $2 for
adults and $1 for children, under 12,
are available for any member of the
men's organization or fron1 the local
Methodist ministers.
Orange juice prices have gone up
39 percent - as a conservation
measure and this is a problem since
we'll all been advised again and
again Uwl it isn't just for breakfa•t
any more. We've been drinking cof·
fee by the gallon and now we're told
that it causes cancer. Woe is me even breathing is dangerous. What
with all of these new problems, do
keep msiling.

GALLIPOUS- In recent days we
have discovered an old letter from
Robert Safford . to the Ironton
Register newspaper tbat sheds light
on several points of early Gallia
history. ·
The letter .confinns tbat Safford
was the first white man to cut down
a tree at Gallipolis. The tree, a six
inch wide maple, was cut by Safford
near the present day bandstand on
June8, 1790.
SAFFORD STATED that he
remained in Gallipolis along with 30
other men under Captain McMann.
These men were to provide the town
with fresh game. Safford and others
were allowed to keep the skins and
furs from all the animals tbat were
killed. other dulles of Safford at
Gallipolis were in mending moccasins, cleaning and repairing,
guns, and, of course, preparing the
skins.
One day while hunting just outside
Gallipolis (near the Ohio River),
Safford shot at an object tbat was
falling out of a tree. The animal was
EMERGENCY RUNS
POMEROY-Two emergency runs
were made by local units, one
Friday and one Saturday according
to the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service.
Friday at 3:32 a.m. Rutland's,
EMS went to Meigs Mine Nilmber
Two for Roger Smith who was taken
to O'Bleness Hospital and Saturday
at 3:49 a.m. Racine went to Vine
Street for Maggie Gilmore who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Kissinger testifies

shot in the lung and fell into the
river. Five of Safford's dogs jumped
In after the beast and struggled with
it for some time, until the shot
animal lay dead. On examination
Safford found tliat he had shot a 10
foot long panther.
THE LETrER also conlirms \bat
Safford was a hunting companion of
James Burford and of Daniel Boone.
Safford wrote tbat on one occasion
near Vinton, the three hunter~ had
trapped a wolf. For some minutes
the three amused themselves in watching the wolf jump, only to have the
spring on the trap pull it back.
I
When evening came Boone and
Safford wanted to return to the
previous day's camp on the Raccoon, but Burford refused and said:
"I won't go back to that camp
tonight for all the fur in the Northwest Territory."
LATER THE three learned that
their camp had been under sur-

"BUT TIRES

_- ------·-

426 VIANO STREET
•'

--- ---

AU WE ARE"

675-3930

-·---·--·- -·-- .

.

-- ..

t~niahawk.

"Old Isaac" had a rather interesting history of its own, even if it
did not come from Boone. The giant
trap was twice captured by Indians.
The first time it was stolen Safford
found it in another part of the county
with a beaver in it. The second time
he found it among friendly Delaware
Indians.
THE TRAP became the property
of Safford's son and then his grandson. The latter exhibited the trap at
the Gallipolis Centennial in 1890 and
it was one of the most sought out
exhibits mainly because of its
believed association with Daniel
Boone.
In !892 a historian visited
Gallipolis to write a history of some

of the early frontiersmen, especlally
Dal!iei Boone. The historian asked to
see "Old Isaac" and was allowed to
keep it over night for further iJl.. •
spection. The next day the historian .
had skipped town with "Old Isaac." ·.
The trap was later placed in 8 Cincinnati museum where thousands of
persons paid to see one of Daniel -&lt;
Boone's old traps (so they thought). ' I
·l
FAMILY MEMBERS were frantic , 1
to get the trap back. Through the ef- .,
forts of Dr. Levisay of Ironton, the •
historian was traced down but as far '"
as we know the trap was never retur- ,
ned to Gallia. It would be interesting ~ ­
to know whatever became of the
tomahaw, ax, and small traps tbat
came from Boone, as well as "Old ,
Isaac" which was stolen because it :;
was wrongly believed tbat it, too,
came from Boone.
Address of James Sands is Box 92,
Clarksburg, Ohio43115.
!

-;:============:::============~ ·i

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fonner
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
said Friday that Carol Burnett acted
in a " perfectly lady-like fashion"
when they met at a restaurant, con- ,-------------i
tradicting a National Enquirer
report that triggered a $10 million
You've got to see the special deals and savi"'S we offer for
bu)'irr&amp; )'OUr Spartan pooi ... NOW ... durinflourEarty Bird Sale.
libel suit by the comedian.
Pre·seuon orderirrg malws the difference. Come in and look~ QIK.
1
•
I "f'tlll I •
The · Enquirer article, which aJr
~s selection of Spartan pool sizes, shapes, and ace uno in.
peared in March 1976, said Miss Bur·
Uett the combination you like best; ~·s just like Cl.lstom desilninJ ~r
nett and KisSinger had a "loud '
own pool, but not at a custom price. Place your order, and your pool will
NOW
SHOWING
argument" at the Rive Gauche
be delivered when )'OU want it.
restaurant in Washington D.C.
Start en~g the Spartan Good Lite to ~s fullest. Order y.The trial of Miss Burnett's libel
Spartan pool durong ""r Early Bord Sale and save. lt'a tile best-..; eo
suit is in its third day in Los Angeles
btcome a Happy Stay-At-Home.
a.EJII•
·
Superior Court.
Kissinger, talking to reporters afStop inorcoll4n5339todoy.
.i_"'7i"'·""'··c~
:--,·
ter giving a speech at the Century
&amp;_ SPARTAN POOLS_ FIM•' _ ¥
Plaza Hotel , said he has given a
deposition in the case and does not
.., AEGEAN POOLS, INC. ' - expect to testify in person at the
Open
2906 WASH. BLVO.
trial.
7 Days
BELPRE, OHI0423-5339
He said Miss Burnett came to his
A Week .
Across from Redwood Restaurant
table and · was introduced politely.
" We exchanged a few words, and 1---------------''-------------------------she left," Kissinger said. He said he
has "the highest· regard for Miss
Burnett,'' adding that she spoke in a
"perfectly civilized manner .... "
There was, he said, ~' no
motion of any kind going on."

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lion is made by Safford tbat "Old
Isaac" came from Boone. He does,
however, say tbat Boone gave him a
number of traps, an ax, and an old

veillance
by had
Indians
for some
The
Indians
delayed
killingdays.
the 1
three until Boone, Safford, and Burford had caught enough game.
Safford related in the letter how he
trapped wolves and beavers. To trap
a wolf, Safford placed meat in a
hollow log. Near the. entrance he
would place a trap covered by
leaves. A beaver trap was always
placed under water. Bait would be
placed on the end of a stick near the
bank. The trap was placed by the
foot of the stick. Safford cautioned in
the letter that a good bever trapper
had to be quick to check his traps for
fear tbat the captured beaver would
gnaw his own foot off and escape.
IN MANY OLD histories it is
dairiled tbat Daniel Boone gave Saf·
ford a trap called "Old Isaac" that
became a historical artifact in the
county. The letter reveals that indeed there was an "Old Isaac" but it
was made for Safford by a· Van·
Bibber of Point Pleasant. No men-

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Safford's 'Old Isaac' trap not gift from Daniel Boone

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No. 2000
SPEAKERS

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"--'

ATHE;NS - Southeastern Ohio
Legal Services attorneys, Anne
Manley and Jon Sowash, has announced tbat a toU-free telephone
number has been installed between
Gallia County and their Athens office. This will allow the Legal Services program to better serve the
cientele of Gallia County who qualify
for free repesentation in selected
civil cases.
SEOLS is a federal grantee of the
Legal Services Corporation in
Washington, D. C. which provides
legal representation to low-income
residents of Galla County and 23
other counties in southeastern Ohio.
Interviews must be pre-scheduled
through the Athens office by calling
446-0915.

Councilmen leave heated session

9 qt.

~

19" .

Toll free number
available to
Gallia Countians

Security subcommittee as he defen- the subcorrunlttee that the
ministration planll ooe change
ded proposed cuts that would
. eliminate or reduce benefits for al" would benefit retired people wbo
proximately 3 million receipients of still work par;t-time - repealing the
$5,500 ·limit on the amount a SociM
various Social Security programs.
Security
beneficiary can receive
Rep. James M. SbaMon, D-Mass.,
without
a
reduction of retlremeilt
questioned whether the adbenefits.
ministration realizes what its
That would affect an estimated 1.1
proposed cuts would do to people.
million people and add rr billion to"'
According to government figures,
the administration's planned phase- billion to Social Security COlts. The
out of student benefits would affect • Washington Post reported that twoabout 772,000 college students, its thirds of the people who would
reduction of minimum Social benefit earn more than '17 ,500 a
Security benefits would reduce net year.
On a related matter, Stockman
government. payments to about 1.5
million, changes in the disability assured the subcommittee that the
program would affect about 55,000 administration has no plana to ask
people and the loss of burial benefits for a reduction in the cost-of-living
. increases now provided to SociM
about 700,000.
Stockman acknowled~ed before Security recipients.

Full·tlme
edge cleaning

.--Je•L

~

March 15, lftl

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

~

ALL STYLES &amp; COLORS

�Pom e ro y

March 1S, 1981

Middle port Gallipoli s, Oh1 o- Point Pl easa nt, W. Va .

business &amp; finance

ASK TOWED
GALLIPOLIS - Filing lor a
marriage license last week in Gallia
County Probate Court were William
Baugess, 43, Gallipolis, ca~nter,
and Lois J. Haynes, 38, GaU1polls,
unemployed.

Judge ends 13 cases

GALLIPOUS - Thirteen cases 126: !.ester J . Casto, 31, Gallipolis,
were te rm ina ted Fr iday in $26; Ric~rd D. Mason, 32, BarGallipOlis Municipal Court.
boursville, W.Va .. $27 : Cla ude
Beverly D. l.ewis. 34, Rio Grande, Mays, 71, Vinton, $27.
charged with DWI. fined $300, sentenced to 10 days in jail , driver's
license suspended . for .six months
and placed on six months probation.
Charge d · wit h cri mi nal
trespassing, Roger Johnson, Thurman, fined $25: charged with petty
theft, fined $50. six months jail sentence suspended and placed on six
months probation.
Roge r M. Williams, Gallipolis,
charged with disorderly conduct',
fi ned $15.
Charged with no registration, J imDELUXE 19" push
my C. Kennedy. 26. Vinton, fined $20.
• The Lawn -Boy for· the budget mrnded
Jackie L. Kerwood. 19, Gallipolis,
• 19 ' cut makes thrs an rdeal
charged with failure to display front
tr1mm1ng mower·
license plates, forfeited $35 bond.
•
Our et under-the -deck muffler
Charged with no operator's license, Bill H. Thomas, 49, Vinton, foro Lrgllt WBight
fe ited $30 bond .
• Frr lger·t •p "tar trn g
N0&lt;1l E. Lambert, 47, Gallipolis,
~""'"'" • Patenterl Lawn -Boy safety
charged with failure to obey a traffi c
featur es
control device, forfeited $35 bond.
Charged with insecure load, Jeffrey A. Cook, 20, Gallipolis, forfeited
IN
$30 bond.
Toney Allby, 29, Newport News.
STOCK
Va ., cha rged with failure to yield
fr om a ·private driveway, forfeited
AT
$30 bond.
Charged with high rear bwnper,
Ronald A. Pitchfo rd, 21, Bidwell ,
forfeited $25 bond.
Forfeiting bond for speeding
9,85-3308
Paul D. Bradbury, 43, Gallipolis,

Mergers dot business scene

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

a ..
NEARS COMPLETION - Members of the Bra~
ford Church of Christ have labored with love over the
past months in building a new church. All of the labor
has been donated with the exception of the electrical
work. The exterior work, except permanent steps. has
been completed and interior work is progressing

n~n~RS

COLUMBUS - Secretary of State
Anthony J . Celebrezze; Jr. reported
Saturday articles of incorporation

I

rapidly. Pictured Is the sanctuary of the new building.
The basement will house two classroom s, a social room
and a kitchen. Groundbreaklng wa s held one year ago
this month and the project is expected to be completed
about mid-summer.

By ROBERT BURNS
AP BuiDea Writer
NEW YORK (AP) ~ It's no coincidence that just seven weeb after
the poUtica! climate cqed ln
W&amp;lblngton, a row ol multibilliondollar merger deals &amp;mOll!! naturalresources. concerns hu cropped up
on Wall Street.
The Reagan admlnlatratlon's
pledge to give big bualneas a freer
hand did not escape nOtice in the
esecuUve offices of the country's
caal&gt;-rich oil companies.
Just tills past Thursday, Standard
Oil Co. (Ohio), awash wtth money
from Ita Prudhoe Bay Field, announced. a definitive agreement to
. buy Kennecott Corp. for $1.77 billion.
Kennecott is the nation's largest
producer of copper.
A day earlier, Joseph E. Seagram
x Sons, loaded with cash from the
sale of oil 88Sela last year, bid $2
bllllon for St. Joe Minerals Corp., a
lead producer with huge coal
holdings.
And Standard Oil Co. of California
hu offered ._. billion for the 80 pe~
cent it does not already own of
AMAX Inc., the largest U.S.
producer of molyJxlenum and the
owner of immense coal deposita.
The Socal·AMAX deal, which
would rank as the biggest corporate
merger in U.S. history if completed,
was &amp;nnOWlced March 5. It was • fit·
t tlng coincidence that the an·
nouncement carne on the 8ame day
that the Federal Trade Commission
1 disclosed II had ended ita five-year
: anti-trust investigation of the
! automobile Industry.
'! The Reagan administration has
ordered the FTC to cut its budget S

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

11·1po 1-1·s,~s~~~·~~~,~
~n ~ru~ ~~~~~ riQ~u~
~~k~del~-A~ve.,D~oo~Ga~a~~~R~
- -~a~t2. --w~e~re~·~~~~~~~~~~r~~C~h~e~s~t~er~·~O~h~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~
Secon
1·s th e agen

Colwnbus by Davi~u ick el . Agency
Inc., Pomeroy. Incorporators. are
Donald E. S~nlev . Willia m C.

I

Reasons to Shop

•

MURPHY'S

URPHYS

!' - •••with

NOW THRU SAT., MAR. 21

I

~allipolls

ByCHETCURRIER
AP BuiDea Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - WaU Street
hu come down with a new case of
• merger mania in the pBS! few days.
: · The condition is by no means an
: • unfamiliar one. Its symptorm were
: rampant In the 1980s, when ravenous
1 conglomerates
"grew" by
swallowing up other companies.
l It cropped up again frequently ln
, the 1970s, when many a company
! with cash to invest concluded that
: the best buy avallable was the
: depressed stock of some other

.l

By J. Samael Ptepl

home of his father-in-law. "this
Thursday morning, March ?:1, 1902,
at 10•15 o'clock, after an illness with
typhoid lever lasting eight weeks."
This story called him a lieutenant
without explanation, city editor of
the Gallipolis Journal, special
correspondent of the Cincinnati
Enquirer, representa tive of the
Associated Press at Ga llipolis,
member of the Knights of Pythias,
and BPOE, page in the Ohio General
Assembly. Charles Johnson. his
lather, also died In his 26th year.

l

3-PAII PIC,.
MISSES' IIIIIEFS
Our pop u lO! au~ T OIC
· r 1CO I

V'/ h11 e

~nln r~

lo ·

•

" THE MOURNING dove is a
priceless bit of our natural heri~ ge
which can be preserved only through
an aroused public conscience before it 1s too late." Thus thunders
the voice of Grace Thomas.

JAMES T. JOHNSON was one of
Gallipolis' better newspapermen ...
and one of the youngest. He was 27
years of age when he died in 1902.
His career was with the Gallipolis
Journal, and now a Washingtonian
who once lived in Gallipolis is going
to write his biogra phy - she is Keith
Ann Stiverson Ccnnamo, 3206
Wisconsin Ave., N. W. Apt. 22 ,
Washington, D. C. 20016.
0 . 0 . MciNTYRE got help ea rly in
his own career from Jiri1 Johnson , a·
cousin by marriage. Keith Ann says
that Jim Johnson married Pea rl
Kerns, the aunt of Keith Ann 's grandmother. on Nov. 8, 1899, but we
could find no writeup of that
marriage in the microfilm files of
the Gallipolis newspaper. Inasmuch
as the Journal was a competing
newspaper, it's possible that they
omitted this news because it advertised the opposition.

i

PEARL KERNS J ohnson died at
not quite 24 years of age in 1900 only
nine months after she was married.
It says on the front page of the SaturdBy Tribune lor Aug. 4, 1900, that she
was the wife of the city editor of the
Gallipolis Journal - unafraid tu
IIIIJle the opposition here - and the
•·•Her
Hon. and Mrs. A. W.
Ketns. It also says that she died
Friday evening at 6 o'clock, and they
moved the body from her house on
Front St,. to her parents' house on
East Second Ave.

'

JOHNSON himself cti.:.1 at the

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REG . '2.54

Sue'&gt; 37A tn 40(

REG .

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REG . .....

:,.. business. ·
1
In the most recent outbreak, the

------------L------------~-------------r-- ---- -----I
I

CUTIJl '
OILY
lltOLISII
RIMOYIR

2

dove.''

GRACE TIIOMAS is a humorist,
too, and she uses the device of r~uc­
tio ad absurdwn cleverly. Grace
takes notice of the argwnent that
" shooting the doves would ·improve
the stock by weeding out inferior "nd
aging birds." Grace sees as the only
way they could achieve this would be
for " the hapless bird to proclaim his
own inferiority by hoisting a banner
bearing the appropriate inscription,
such as 'rm a senior citizen. Shoot
rne' ."

•2

IIO·••o11 caossov••

WALDEN ROUSH , former
superintendent of Mason County
schools, helped promote yesterday's
(Saturday's) soup supper to benefit
the Mason County Regional S~te
Fanri Museum. Peeps hopes it went
over big.

SII.. CAIE

2

BOXES

BOTTLES

$1

BOX OF
88

HfLDA WELCH of Claremont . N.
H., got her copy of the Gallia County
family history book. She wrote
"The book more than meets my expectations - I know a lot of the folk
and was happy to read about them."

40UNCE
BOTTLE

' would-be buyen in the spotlight
have been oll companies. And their
targets have been mining companies
with metals and other natural
resoun:es in the groWld.
It began on March 5, with Standard Oil Co. of California bidding for
AMAX Inc., a producer of copper,
lead, molybdenwn, coal, potash,
cobalt, Iron ore, nic.kel, lead, zinc

....
$1 l

, ,

10 OUNCE
BOTTLE
M O•!o lvr •J ong
lo 1 •O r&gt; l o r
hu n d !) ho..1-y

.

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OeD~IOf0111
so ap
,., .t '~ ol oor\

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SHEETS AND SWISHER. Those
are the names a t~c hed to Walnut
Twp. cemeteries locati on of which
the Ga ilia County Historica l Society

~

is s~ekin g. Mrs. Richa rd J a m es says

$1

.,... $3

Fn• boh " '

f»OP·UP SHEETS

1t1 ltl\

11

3 GRAM TUBE
(. 1 0 OUNCE )

Bo.)lxh

111111 p:xo~

1CfiOI'I

w per fu"&gt;&gt;

76

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PHIUP HOBE RTS, county
engi neer of Meigs County. is a ham
radio operator who listens to voices
on the other side of the ea rth and , of
course. talks back to them. He came
into this newspaper office the other
day tu tell us that he reads the Peeps
colwnn and recalled the Peeps
paragra ph which had these lines in it

and tungsten, not to mention oil BDd
gas.
This past Wednesday, Seagram
Cn. Ud., the big liquor distiller that
had recently sold off oil and gas
properties for more than $2 billion,
went after St. Joe Minerals Crop.,
the largest U.S. producer of lead and
zinc.
Then, a day later, Standard Oil Co.

(Ohio) agreed to acqnire Kennecott
Corp. , the coWltr)'' s biggest copper
company.
Analysts said companies Uke
Socal and Sohio were evidently min·
dful of the fact that while oil prices
are historically high at the moment,
prices of metals such as copper are
depressed. Thus, tbe target companies might be seen as potential
bargains, presuming that Inflation
continues at a rapid rate.
Also, said Ronald Schorr, metals
and mining analyst at Bear, Stearns
&amp;Co., "There is the sense that the
Reagan administration will not
come down hard on anti-trust."

Unlike Kemecott, AMAX and St.
Joe were unreceptive to the
proposals Involving them. St. Joe
blasted Seagram's bid as "grossly
Inadequate," touching off a court
fight.
But in all three CBIIel, the stocks of
the target companies soared. And
the visions of big money being made
sent investors scrambling after
other natural-resource IssUes in particular, and stocks in general.
Buyers bid up such other metals
and mining Issues as Asarco, Phelps
Dodge and Newmont Mining; stocks
of gold and sliver companies; some
of the leadinl! forest products
shares; and the oils as well.
'The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials posted a 21.15 gain, to
98:i.77, in the pBSt week, reaching the
threshold of the 1,000 level briefly on
Friday for the first time since early
January.
The New York Stock Exchange
composite index rose 1.86, to 76.32,
and the American Stock Exc~nge

market value index was up 7. 75, at
344.41.
Big Board volume averaged 58.62
million s~res a day, up from 46.60
million the week before. Friday's
session, with turnover of 68.29
million shares, was the ninth busiest
ever at the exchauge.
While It injected considerable life
into the stock market, the latest
takeover wave also brought fresh
notice to a penistent problem on
Wall Street- the potential for
nilsuse of inalde infonnation.
In the Socal-AMAX case, a
Chicago firm, O' Connor &amp;
Associates, filed a suit charging that
some investors tried ·to profit from
advance knowledge of Spcal's offer
by purchasing options to buy AMAX
stock before the bid was announced.
On Friday, the Wall Street Journal
reported that Thomas C. Reed of San
Rafael, Calif., a businessman whose ·
father is an AMAX director, bought
500 Amax options the day before
Socal's annoWJcement.

101 percent.
The board also voted to declare •
pany earned t40.'7 million, or •1.68
General Tire posted fourth- ,. per share, In 1980. That compared to
- A regular quarterly: dividend of
quarter earnilli!S of f3(1.6 million, or • $2.3 billlonln sales and f80.2 million, $1.25 per share on $5 cumulative
$1.27 per share, on sales of $644.7 orf3.31 per share, in profits In 19'19.
preference stock, payBble March 31
million. In the fourth quarter of 19'19,
to
shareholders of record as of MarThe effects ol non-recurring ilelll!
it reported earnings of $15.2 million,
ch4.
1
Increased net income per share by 33
or 63 cents a share, on t619 million in
A
quarterly
dividend
of
~7
.5 cencents in 1860 and by 24 cents In the ·
sales.
ts
a
share
on
30-cent
par
value
comfourth quarter of 1980, the cbmpany
On sales of $2.22 billion, the com- said, without desert bing the costa.
mon stock of the Company, payable
The average number of common Feb. 28 to stockholders ol Feb. 6.
-A two percent conunon stock
stock shares outstanding in 11180 was
dividend
on common stock ' payable
24.1 million.
Chalnnan T.F . O'Neil will stand on March 13 to holden of record
lor re-election u a director but not Feb.6.
The company reported that its
88 chalnnan 1t the cornpany'a annual meeting In March, the company stockholders at the company's Marsaid. But a company satement said ch meeting will vote on the election
the board of directors expects O'NeU of directors, authorization of the
board to change !be number of directo aeswne the additions! duties of
tors and the duties of the chairman
chairman after an election In Marof the board and president.
ch.

ENGINEERS
WE'RE COPELAND CORPORATION
A progre~siv• multi-million dollar manufacturer of

ale :
...........
e&amp;.A•• :
•

,

- Koufouri villagt• ncar Lufi,
P.N.G.; no, · Peeps doosn' t know
whatP.N.G . means, do you'!- Concerning Nena Maxine Wells'
live weeks abroad. Phil Roberts said
that P.N.G. means the na me of the
country • Papua NewGuinea.
GEN. GEORGE E. Bush,
president of the Gall ia County
Historical Society, will be the
speaker at 2 this (SWlday 1afternoon
lor the regular meeting in St. Peter's
,Episcopal Church banquet hall. The
General has done some research on
canoe-delivered U. S. Mail on the
Ohio River between Ma rietta and
Gallipolis and other points. You're
invited, whether you're a member or
not !

mo

C

________ "t ___________ _

Nn OH'''

--------------L- ----~

AKRON, Ohio (AP) Un·
favorable economic conditions and a
drop In automobile production are
cited by The General Tire &amp; Rubber
en. 88 the major reasons Ita 1860
profits were down 49 percent.
The Akron-bued company aald
the profit drop came despite a strcng
fourth quarter when net earnings,
compared to 1 year earlier, were up

lhtrt'' SIPII tl. AHISIYI

DAYTIMI IIIAMI!IIaS'
BOX OF 30
REG .

WEI ONES ' SOFI CLOTH
MOIST TOWEUTTES
CONTAINER OF 70

· prime lending rates on Tueaday to 18 the funda 1 which have drained them
percent, and Chemical Bank, the of bllllolis in deposita.
nation's sixtb-largest, trimmed Ita to
- IIA!presentatives of business and
1'1.5 percent on Thunday. No other labor called on the government to
majOr banks foUowed Chemical's put preuure on other countries, inlead, but analysta said the lower rate cluding Mexico, to reduce trade
would spread througb the industry restrictions that they said threaten
American jobs. The group comwithin days.
John McGillicuddy, chalnnan and plained about " performance
chief executive of Mal)ufacturers requirements" that are imposed by
Hanover TruBt Oo., predicted Friday foreign governments on American
that the prime rate would drop to lnveotors.
about 15 percent by IUIIllller as the.
-Mitsubishi Motors Corp. said in
econon1y weakened.
Tokyo that It would increase producShort-tenn Interest rates dropped tion of cars and trucks for Chrysler
sharply late ln the week as bond Corp. because of a recent imprices rallied. Wall Street
provement In sales in the United
economists said investon perceived States. Pu-Ysler Chliinnan Lee A.
the Federal Reserve Board had lacoeca, meal)while, said in an Ineased Its tight-money policy terview with the New York Times
somewhat by allowing federal fWlds
that his company had foWld possible
to trade below 15 percent.
savings of about.l50 million in its efIn other business developments fort to accwnulate a $300 million
this past week:
nest egg to belp it endure sales slwn-'The Commerce Department ps without further government
reported that Its lnventory·t&lt;rsales ll&amp;'listance.
ratio dropped sllghtly In January, to
- OPM Leasing Services Inc., a
1.36 from 1.37, a healthy sign for the
leading computer leasing concern,
economy. The ratio Is designed to filed for court protection from
show how many months it would creditors under Chapter II of the
take to sen an inventory at current federal Bankruptcy Act. The
sales rates. Business sales were up
petition was filed after three finan1,9 percent In January after an m. . cia·! Institutions filed lawsuits
CI'l!BSe of l.1 percent ln December,
alleging that OPM obtained
multimillion-dollar loans by drafting
the department said.
- Money-market funds pierced the bogus computer leases, A slate of
$100 billion mark In asaeta, marking voting trustees is expected to be
the loth consecutive weekly m. chosen in 30 days.
crease. The asaeta roee $3.17 billion,
- Tbe Commerce Department
to$101.21 billion, according to the In- reported that. retail · sHies in
vestment Company Institute. Since February rose.0.9 percent, Blthough
the beginning of the year, their
analysla said the increase reflected
asaets have soared about35 percent. the success of automobile rebates
Bankers, meanwhile, escalated rather than strength in the contheir campaign to persuade swner-goods area.
Congress to lmJI!liiC reotrirtl()fl• on

General Tire 1980 profits down by half

BARS

,

that the Society is trying tu complete
its survey of Walnut Twp.
cemeteri es , an d al l known
cemeteries have been surveyed with
the exception of the Sheets cemetery
and the Swisher cemetery. Members
of the Society have not been able to
locate the whereabouts of either
cemetery or anyone who knows the
location. Ca ll Mrs. James at HS-1547
or He1my Evans at 446-1 775 if you
can help.

percent this year, 11 percent below
what the Carter administration had
proposed for flscall982.
David Hea1y, a securities analyst
at the Investment finn of. Drexel
Bllrllham Lambert Inc., beUeves the .
budget cuts at FTC will mean less
emphasis on antitruat matters. And
some corporate exeeutives apparently share that.view.
" The general Impression Is that
these conglomerate mergers won't
be challenged," Healy said, largely
because of a " more benign attitude
in Washlngton."
All three of the natural-resources
merger proposals are expected to be
studied by the Justice Department
because of their size, but the department has indicated no special concern with the concurrence of mining
acquisition bids.
· Aside from the hands-off policy expected from the Reagan ad·
ministration, natural-resources concerns are buoy~ by the president's
pledge to open !~era! lands to new
mining exploration. And the administration's defense spending will
increase the demand for metals in
weapons and technology.
After the Sohl&lt;rKennecott deal
was made public on Thursday, the
stock market took off, eridlng the
day with a galn of more than 22 points on volume of ~early 55 million
shares.
Analysts said the rash of mergers
was a shot in the arm for the market,
but It may not have beyn the
overriding Influence on traders.
'There also were signs this past week ,
that Interest rates may be on a
sUBtained decline.
Major banks nationwide cut their

c.nts

more seen on Wall Street

:

Jiiarp
GALUPOLIS - Rio Grande's
literary sisters ~ve brought their
big guns to bear on the annual
proposal to put the mourning dove
on the game bird list in Ohio. Ruth ,
who's on the faculty at Rio Grande
Colleg&lt;&gt;-Community College, is the
cheerleader in THIS enterprise,
while her sister Grace tries to shoot
down the proposal.
Grace can find " nothing sporting
about the deliberate killing of
anything so · helpless and so
exquisitely beautiful as a mourning

_The ~ unday Times-Sentinei- Page-D-5
Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipol is, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va ~
March 15, 1981.

I

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PLASnc

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are

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G.C. MURPHY CO. • TH• FAI.NDLY
341 2nct AVE.
AVAILABLE AT MURPHY

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For lmmedi1ta consideration, send resume In-

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• Letter First Class

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1970·Subaldlzed 25%
of Operetlft9 eo.ts
1980-Subsldy
dloptJidto4%

7475 781911
~
POSTAGE-RATE COMPARISONS- Graphic sbows postnge cost for
a letter, lint class from 1163 wben a atamp was five ceuta to March 22
wbenastamp will go up tn II cents. (APLaserplloto).

Blame GSA for silver
dollar sales failure
WASIDNGTON - The General
Services Administration (GSA) is
guilty of poor management and
failed to follow proper procedures in
the 1960 sale of nearly one million
Carson City silver dollars, a House
staff study bas charged.
The coina were the last of three
rniltion 19th century silver dollars
discovered in Treasury vaults in
1964.

In releasing the study, House Consumer Affairs and Coinage Sub. committee Chainnan Frank AnnWJZio (D-Ill.) said, "This sale is one
of tile most horrifying examples of
governrnentnlismanagementlhave
seen in my 16 years as a Member of
Congress. At nearly every turn GSA
made critical errors that contributed to the many problems with
the handling of the sale."
The study contends tbat even
though GSA reduced the .lllllllber of
coins each individual order could
receive, lower limits should have
been set.
As ·a result only 36 percent of thi,
customers received any coins,
although there were twice as many
coins available as there were orders.
The intent of the legislation
authorizing GSA to dispose of the
coins was to encourage t)le widest
possible public participation. The
study discovered that GSA's own
calculations indicated t~t the limit.s
could have been cut in half and still
~ve assured a sellour within the
sale budget.
GSA guidelines promised that or-

'

ders to be filled would be chosen ran- :
domiy. The staff study found the or- :
der selection process followed by :
GSA resulted in a non-random selec- •
tion process. The lack of adequate ;
controls in processing orders ~
resulted in 3,865 orders being lost for t
a month without GSA's knowledge. ;
GSA procedures caused long and ;
unnecessary delays in the return of :
unfilled orders. In some cases •
customers' checks were cashed and •
,
the funds not returned Wllil six mooths after the order was received.
'
A review of GSA check cashing !
procedures found them to be in no
way consistent with government acCOWlting policies or procedures. The
GSA check ~ndling procedures
resulted in hundreds of individuals
receiving ~th coins and cash refWlds worth over $1 million in exchange
for bad checks.
· 'The agency compounded the
problem by withholding infonnation
about the bad checks from the public
and even issued explanations that
were at best inaccurate and
misleading. Eight months after GSA
first began mailing coins, over
$200,000 remained uncollected.
The study found that GSA
published a toU·free telephone number t'hat did not work in Virginia. It
also found that GSA failed to have
procedures that guaranteed that no
employee could covertly give their
own orders preference, and that toplevel management during the :;ale
was inadequate.

i

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P115/BOR 13
P185/80R13
P185/75R14
P19S/75R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R14
P225/75R14
P205/75R15
P215175R15
P225175R15
P23S/7SR1 S

:

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47.00
59.00
63.00
68.00
11.00
72.00
76.00
71 .00
75.00
76.00
81.00

ed, aflardaDlt lifestyle while being just a short
dlstonce from 1 number ot maior metropolitan
cities •

•••

I
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ond

rertger1tor industry. Due to our rapid e•pansion,
we are sHklnt engineers tor our Corporate Heid·
qu•rt•rs In Sidney, Ohio, a City that offers a relax-

Cost of M8111ng

John Mangan,
Corporate Executive Recruiter

44.00
.4.00
61.00
62.00
73.00
76.00
79.00

Copeland Corporation
GIVING THE INDUSTRY A BOOST- Tbe blgnt celebrity at tbla

':"" year' I GeaJe Awarda, Blll1 Lalnlter U)'l be came to give !be Claadlan

Sidney, Ohio 45365

f

An equal opportunity employer m/ s.

IDdultry 1 boaaL LaDeuter u)'l, "Tbe euadlu IDduatry ~
relltlvely aew bat It' a be11Ju11i1C to bargeoll aad I feel a retpe•lbUtty to
~ -. help It beCOme a~ucceu. " (AP IMerplloto).

• rum

..

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

�Page--D-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis,

Ohi~t-Point

March 15, l9ll

Pleasant, W.Va.

I Pleasant, W.Va .

r

l.

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High unemployment, welfare cut into tax revenues
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
leaders plan to intensify work this
week on Ohio's 1981-1983 budget bill
although it has been cut in half and
the funding of it remains a questwn
mark.
House Speaker Vernal G Riffe
Jr. , J:&gt;.New Boston, ordered up a
spending plan for only the f1rst year
of the b1enniwn because of the cloud
that hangs over the natwnal and
state econorrues.
High unemployment and swelhng
welfare rolls already have cut mto
tax revenues for the current f1scal
year, which ends June 30, to the tune
of about $600 million.
Riffe said the months ahead are
uncertain enough, without trymg to
make revenue projecbons for 19821983. He said the House, which normally holds floor sess1ons three days
a week, will meet only on Tuesday
and Wednesday this week and next
to g1ve the finance comrruttee all
day on Thursdays to work on the
budget.
"We want to have the budget on
the floor on April 8," Riffe sa1d. If
passed at that tune, the Senate
would have nearly three months to

act pnor to the deadline of m1dn1ght
onJune30
Meanwh1le, the House is
scheduled· to act Wednesday on a
separate, one-year budget for the
financially-strapped Ohio Department of TransportatiOn (ODOT) It
IS extremely light at $679 m1lhon,
and calls for almost no new constrocbon. The measure w11l not contam a · long-discussed hike m
gasolme taxes to help mamtam and
improve the state's detenoratmg
road and bndge system.
The Senate already has started
hearmgs on a proposed hike and 11 1s
possible that the tax Will be 10cluded
m ODOT's budget when 11 reaches
that chamber. However, Senate
President Paul E. G1llmor, R-Port
Clinton, said the tax won't be added
without support from Democrats as
well as Repubhcans
Riffe resisted efforts by some
Democrats m the House to msert the
tax boost there. Three to 4 cents a
gallon, on top of the present 7 cents,
IS talked about most often The
speaker Insisted that the Senate
must b1te the bullet first.

Repubbcans m the upper chamber
could pull ' the rug from under
Democrats if the House were to go
on record first, he said.
Almost all of this week's acltvtties
wtll be in the House as the Senate,
except for two conunittee sesstons,
takes the week off.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee wtll meet Wednesday to conSider a sweepmg btU to restructure
taxes, mcludmg a boost m the state
mcome tax, and make maJor
revisiOns m Ohio's pubhc school funding
A subcomrruttee of the Senate
Judictary Coffimltlee also meets
Wednesday to consider a package of
gun measures which m variOus ways
would mcreases penalties for cnmes
comrrutted by persons m possesswn
ofhreanns
Judiciary Chairman Pail E
P!etfer, R·Bucyrus, sa1d the subcomrruttee will see if the variOus
proposals can be consolidated mto a
smgle bill. There IS strong anticrune senhment this year m the
Senate which already has sent the
House a measure restormg the death
penalty in Ohio

Announce voting spots for election

'

'

... .

r• .
•

GALI.JPOUS - The Galha County Board of Elections has released
the following list of voting locatiOns
for each county precmct 10 the March 17 special electiOn.
The electiOn IS for operatmg levtes
for the Samuel L Bossard Dtstnct
library and the Gwding Hand
School.
The locabons are
GAWPOU5-1-A, Willis Tire
Co.; 1-B, Washington Elementary
School, 2-A, City bwlding, 2-B, Bob
Saunders Quaker State Serv1ce Center; 3-A, Washington Elementary
School.
3-B, Lodge bwlding (corner of
Third and Pme Streets), 4-A,
Richard Miller, CPA, Evans
Butldtng (across from Tope's
Lifestyle Furniture); 4-B, city

garage , 4-C, Central Soya Co
GALUPOLIS TWP.-Park Central Hotel ; Kanauga, Jaycee
building
ADDISON TWP - Bula v11le
townhouse
ADDISON
PR EC IN CT- Townhouse.
CHESHIRE TWP -Commumty
bwlding
CHESHIRE
PRECINCT-Bradbury bwlding
GUY AN TWP - Townhouse
GUYAN PRECINCT-V11lage
CLAY TWP -Oay Elementary
School
CLAY PRECINCf-Clay Elementary School.
HARRISON TWP. - Townhouse.
HUNTINGTON TWP -G range
hall
' C!NHUNT! NGTON
PRE

CT- Townhouse m village.
GREEN
TWP .-G r ee n
townhouse.
GREEN !-Rodney commumty
bwlding
GREEN 2-Green Elementary
School
GREEN 3- Rodney community
bwld.ing
GREENFIElD TWP. -Gallia.
MORGAN TWP.-Morgan Center
OHIOTWP - Townhouse
PERRY TWP - Townhouse.
RACCOON TWP - RIO Grande
Elementary School
CEN TERVILLE
PRECIN CT-Vtllage hall.
SPRINGFIElD TWP.-Townhouse
BIDWELL PRECINCT- BidwellPorter Elementary School
WALNUTTWP.-Townhouse

2

Ellsworth Dill who d1ed

five years ago March 14,
1976 We all loved you and

miss you
Wife, ch1ldren and grand
children

'

"

'·
.,

f

return.
Located at the cross10g of Ohto 3
and 303, Hinckley IS about 20 m1les
south of Cleveland.
Last year, the first buzzard, com·
plete With heavy-vemed w10gs,
shriveled neck and head skm. was
not sighted until 3:28 p m. But the
Metroparks Rangers will be on site

Gal1ia oonncil
supports levies
GALI.JPOUS- Twenty-six members and guests of the Gallia County
Human Servtce Council last Thursday, heard Martha McKenzie of the
1
- • ·· ·
Gallla County library Comrmttee
and
Loren Phelps of Guiding Hand
' r ...,
School explain levies to appear on
the March 17 ballot.
Mrs McKenzie noted that because
of the loss of intangible taxes the
library's budget had been cut She
also explained servtces that had to
be cut because of the levy to pass m
November She noted the serv1ces
that would posstbly be restored 1! the
levy passea. She stated that up until
the time of the tax cut and the defeat
of the levy, the Bossard Memortal
library was open more hours than
any other library 111 Ohio. She urged
the support of Counctl members for
the library levy.
Phelps solicited support of the
Gwding Hand School Levy which
will appear on the same ballot. He
explamed the reasons for the loss of
income for~ school and stated the
possible consequences should the
'
''
levy fat! this time
The Gallla County Human Servtce
•'
CounCil went on record as supporting both the library levy and the
Guiding Hand School Levy.
Sherry Toothaker, director of the
Rio Grande Counsehng Center,
briefly explained the background of
the counseling center and the services that one would fmd at the Center. She said services were available
to the community as well as to the
college students. She intfO!)uced
Herb Spencer, who is also a counselor at the Center, and Peg Thomas
who is in charge of the Career
Develoment and Placement portion
•
• of the program. She asked Council
' members to ll8e the Center and ex•'
plained her desire to coordinate ser·
•'
VIces.
'•

..

......

I

'•

Iii

..

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

State bar president
to address attorneys
ATHENS - Loren E. Souers, Canton, President of the Ohio State Bar
Assoc1ahon, will address the annual
meetmg of OSBA D1str1ct 17 m
Athens, Saturday, March 21
OSBA D1stnct 17 represents 133 attorneys from Athens, Morgan,
Hockmg, Washington, Meigs and
Noble Counties
Souers will speak at the evemng
banquet on "Are Lawyers an Endangered Species? "
Richard D Brooks, Jr, Athens,
OSBA D1stnct Execut1ve Commllleeman , w1U pres1de during the
afternoon meeting, which mcludes a
ftlm on how to build a law pracllce
Douglas Roberts, Columbus, Will
speak on comparative negligence
and W1ll1am K. Weisenberg, Columbus, OSBA Director of Government
Affairs, wtll present legtslallve 10formatton. An address on the new
Ohio Rules of Evtdence Will also be
given durmg the afternoon meeting

Animal waste clinic
to be held March 19
GALUPOUS - The Galha Sod
and Water Conservation D1stnct and
Sod Conservation Servtce will sponsor an Ammal Waste Chmc Thor·
sday, March 19, at 10 a.m at the
PCA Building.
The afternoon sess1on Will be held
at J1m and Jessie Boggs' fann near
Btdwell.
There wdl be numerous top1cs and
speakers to mform farmers on planmng systems to fit the1r needs.
The Boggs family tnstalled a
system last year and weather permilling, Jim Boggs will agitate and
pwnp the lagoon m the afternoon
sessiOn

Trustees to consider
two important items

COAL WADING DOCK - The James M. Gavto
Plant at Cheshire uses eight million tons of coal a year.
Most of the coal comes via the plant's conveyor belt
system from the Meigs mines. However, some Is ship-

Area...
(Contmued from page AI )
Cardinal Plant 111 Bnlhant. OhiO He
now has 31 years with Amencan
Electnc Power systems
The Gavm Plant prod uces
1,300,000 kilowatts per hour Its supply goes to the AEP System for
distnbutton throughout the Umted
States
Currently, 370 people are employed at the plant 111 var1ous departments mcludmg ullhty. coal yard,
ma111tenance, operations, performance, store room , accountmg,
personnel and acbmmstratwn.
Company employes hav e
established two records thus
far-producmg the most power
durmg a one hour period, and ha vmg
the longest continual umt m
operation-seven months without a
stop

ped to the facility by river barges. Thfli coal loa~
dock is located on the Ohio River across from tbe plant

on SR 7, south of Cheshire. -Kevin Kelly photo.

GAVIN lMPACT
Although not directly responsible,
constructiOn of the Gavm Plant led
to numerous other prOJects which
added greatly to the In-county
econom}
Shortly after the system was under constructiOn, housmg and commcncal proJects sprang up across
Galha County
'
Almost overmght, housmg pro1ecIs started eve rywhere, new
restauranl.s were bwlt and shoppmg
centers began to surface
Jack Blazer, the first contractor
on the Gavm Plant, began building
the Silver Br1dge Shopping Plaza
at Kanauga and later the Tara Apartment Housmg Development at Addison. Later, apartment complexes
were built on U.S 35, west of
Galllpoils Numerous hous1ng
proJects followed m all parts of the
county.
Another shoppmg center was bUilt

onUS 35, one mile from the Holzer
Medical Center
In recent years, two nursmg
homes have been bwlt and the Galha
County Metropolitan Hous1ng
Authority has completed 100 urut.s llll
Buck Ridge Road, west of Gallipolis
The Gavm Plant construction mdirectly led to the consohdabon of
the Galha County School system
which until 1974 conststed of four
separate diStricts
Although consolidation was
somewhat forced by the Ohio Deparbnent of Education, it was done In
order to divtde the wealth of the two
power plants south of here, Gavm
and Kyger Creek.
W1th the passage of a tax levy two
years ago along with tax revenues
generated from property taxes and
those of the two power plants, Galha
County Local School District has a $9
nulhon plus operational budget this
year

POMEROY -state AUditor Thomas
E. Ferguson
offtce reported
Saturday
the first 'sadvance
distr1but1on
of

sewing

machine repa1r, parts, and
supplies
PICk up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georges Creek Rd
446·0294

Call

FRIENDLY home loy par

best mother God ever gave
Please God hold your

1ov1ng arms around her ,
keep her m your lovmg
care . To all of you who still
have mother cherish her
with care and love for you
Wtll never know heartache
till you find she •sn ' t there

Lovingly remembered By

daughter, Mrs
Thelma
Cox, grandchildren, Dav 1d

and Robert

NEW GARAGE OPENING
Automat1c transmiSSIOns
and all sorts of mechan1 ca1
repatr and mator and
m.nor auto body repair .
See James Sm1th or Tom
Masters or ca ll 446 7757

BLACK AND WHITE lox
terr1or ,
and
a
dachshund, m•xed

367 0108

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
Weallha G. Green, who

RO GE RS
PA WN &amp;COl N SHOP

Greene, who departed
th1s hfe March 16, 1978

Pt Ple.u~ont, W V&lt;l • old
stil tc hquor stor &lt;J

601 M.1111 St

10, 1980 and Lowell A

nor torgollen,

away,
But we hope to meet you
aga1n someday

Somet1mes the cross
gets m1ghtv heavv.
And 1t seems so hard to

bear,
But we know 1n that land
of sunshme,
You'll bOth be wa1t1ng
for us there

Loved and mtssed by
Daughters, Sons· m-law
&amp; Grilndchaldren •
Announcements

1 PAY htghesr p r •ces
posstbl e for gold and sliver
cotns, ri ngs, 1ewetry, efc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middl eport
RACINE GUN SHOOT

G1veaway

4

2 to 3 year old male border
colltes, 1 red, 1 black and

Lost and Found

6

Tick Lost VICinitY Gold
Ridge. 68 1 west Anyone
f1nd1ng phone 992 6341

Public Sate

8

AUCTION
Large farm
eQIJipment auction Sat ,
Mar ch 21st
at Siders
EQutpment Co . on u S
Hwy ,
35,
Henderson ,

AUCT ION · Large farm
eq u.pmen t auct•on, Sat ,
at Siders
M arch 21st
Equ1pment Co , on u S
Hwv
35.
Henderson,
W VA , call for det ails 675
3440 Sat M ar ch 21st 10

•m

F•re
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifl e m atch

Mar

ch 992·2264 , 992 2802. 992
2360 or 992 2639 H lslor~es
to r
sa l e
Pom eroy
Middleport L1branes

LOCKSMITH

Serv1ce .

Maste r
Key•ng , Com
b1nat.ons, Bonded Ca ll
New Hav en , W va (304)

882 2079

Decorated cakes for all oc
cass1ons Character cak es.
sheet cak es, and wedd1ng
ca kes Call9926342 or 992

2583

---

, .....

TICKET S toMemon a l Golf

Tournament. May 18 24
Call 992 5574alter 6 p m
SOME part l1m e iObs 1n Pt

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

198! motor vehicle registration fees
totaling $2,199.684 65 to Ohw Counhes, cihes, townships and VIllages.
Of the amount $34~,570 46 went to
71 counties and or their
muntclpahlles that unposed an adPubhc' Notice
Public Nohce
dihonal $5 levy on each set of hcense
plates sold m 1981.
NOTICE OF
lEGAL NOTIC E
PUBLIC SALE
The counties rece1ved 47 percent
CROP ACREAGE
Not tcc ts hereby given
of the remainder or $871,433 67 while
TYCOON LAKE
on Fnday March 27,
that
WILDLIFE AREA
the municlpahltes shared 34 percent
V acres arc ~lVatlablc tor 1981 ai 10 oo A.M a public
or $630,398.82 on the hasis of vehrcle croppmg on th e Tycoon sal e wtl l be he ld at th e of
hccs ot The Cen tra l Trust
count. .
Lake W•ldllf e area , bcgm
Co , NA at Mtddl eport, OhiO
n1ng
Mar
24,
198
1
B1d
for
Under the comphcated fonnula by
to sell for c ash the
which motor vehicle license money ms ttrc available from K en follow• nq colla fC'ral towd
nc th romlinson Rt 2 Box
I 1978 Ford Couner PU
1s apportroned to the local pohbcal 165. BtdWCII , Oh iO 4561 1
Sc
No SGT BUY14719
subdiVIsiOns, the cow•ties rece1ved Phone 245 52f:l9 Otds to bf' Ther Centra
l Trus t co , N A ,
ope ned J 00 PM March 24 Mtddlcport. Oh10 reserves
most of the funds, Ferguson said.
1981
.
the nght to btd at thiS sa le
Metgs County received $15,165 t9 .. Mar 12 13 15
MM IS 16 17

Public Notice..,._

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Notice •s hereby gtven
that se aled b1d!. w i ll be
received b'r' the City
Manager, of the City of

Ga llipolis. Ohio. ar his of
flee In 1/le Muni cipal
Bu•ld•ng for plumbing sup

Card of Th•nks
THE family o1 Chari .. V
Adkins woold like lo soy
thank you and to give their
deepest appreciation to all
the friends, neighbOrs, and
ret•llves lor ali the food
and the beaulllut flowers
We want to thank all ollhe
1

doctors. nurses, and nurses

aids ar 1-totzers for
plies and fittings
B1ds wil t be received at everything that was done
lor him while In lhe
the above named office un
td 12 00 Noon, local time on hospllol Thanks to Fred
Joan wood for
W ed nesday, March 2S, and
1981 , and publiCly opened everylhlng. A very special
thanks lo Rev Darrell
and r ead at that hour and
Mollohan
Rev Junior
plac&lt; Bid lorms ay be ob Birchfield and
for the oervlce,
tamed m the Off1ce of the
lo Re~ and Pauline Unroe
City Manager, 518 Second for
the singing, and lo uch
Avenue, GallipoliS, Ohio
' ot the pallbearers. Thanks
Mar 8, 15
to each and everyone.
Macet Adkins and family

45769 Or Roselawn, IN 46372

New, used , and ant1que fur
ntture No 1tem to large or
to small W1ll buy one P•ece
or complete households
Mart1n's General Store at

992 6370

Now buying gold and
srlver, old pocket wat ches.
chams, diamonds, s•lver
money and corns Martm's
General Store, Middleport

992 6370

·-----anyth1ng marked

IOK, 14K, 18K (class

nngs, denta ll, s1lver
coins or sterl•ng. Bnng
to Tope Fum. Ask for
Tom Top pnces everyday! Or see MTS Coins,
rs. Eve.

ser.lees
1l

HelpWanted

stained glass, 1f you can
work 12 hrs per week, call
for mterview , after 6 and

weekends 256 9363

BOB EVANS SAUSAGE
SHOP now accepting ap·

II

Swain, Auct
Corner Th1rd &amp; Olive

K~nneth

9

Wanted to Buy

WANTED TO BUY
GOLD ,
SILVER ,
PLATI NUM, STERLINGCOINS, RI NG S.JEWELR
Y, Ml SC ITE MS AB
SO LUT E
MARKET
PRICE GUARAN TED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT .
OH I0 992 3476
OLD COI NS, pocket wat

T i red of penny p.nch •ng''
Hausew1ves and mothers
change spare t i me 1nto 5$$$
Flex•ble hours, excellen t
earnings, tree wardrobe
Two evcnmgs a week For
more 1nformat•on cal l 992
3941 or 669 4535

Pleasant come with a
$1,500 bonus' Plus free
college futt lon 1 If you are
age 17 or older, a 1untor or
sen1or In h•Qh sc hool , or a
h1gh
school , diploma
graduate, you may qua ldy
The West Vtrgint a NaT tona l
Guard is no ord tnrt r y part

11me Job! Good pay , good
benefits• For dctalls call

SSG O'Neal Cal1675 3950
8

1·304 675·2210

BABYSITTER

NEEDED

tn my home on Bulavilie
Porter Rd. for 2 school
aged
children
Tran·
sportat1on
provided
Even~ng shift
Call 446·
1!97

ACCEPTING
AP
PLICATIONS lor career
opportunities, route work
1nvorved Good pay, pd.
hasp and dental plans.
Untforms prov1ded , m
terv1ews Tues ., March 17 at
7 UP Peps• warehouse , Rt

7, Cheshire, OH from 1 00
tel 00

SUBStiTUTE Bookmobile
Dnver Cl erk
Occ as.onal
work on short nottce to
dnve bookmob•le, do s1m
pie clencal tasks, and work
w1th the publ 1c Must have
h 1gh school dtploma, valid
chauffer's l1cense, and ex
p er.ence dnv1ng large
tru ck P1ck up or wnte for
10b applicatiOn at OVAL
Bookmobile, 922 E Ma•n
Sf , Pom eroy 45769
Restdent Manager couple.
part t1me. small apartment
complex m the Middleport
area
No
exper •en ce
requ1red , wtll tratn Apart
m ent and uftllt1es pa1d We
are lookmg tor a mature
marned G:ouple Th ts tS an
excellent opportunitY tor
the ret1red or semt ret~red
couple look.ng for ad
dtt1ona1 lmcome 1 614 864
7186 from 9 4 on ly

II".:=========::JL::~====...:::===~

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE

every Sal n1ght 6 30 p m

J~1nuary

musl&lt;. Interested people

Old furn•ture, des ks, gold
rtngs, 1ewel ry,
Sliver
dollars, sterling, etc Wood STEWARDESSES - (18 251
•ce boxes, tars, anftques, for corporate let
free
etc complete households train1ng · call (219) 345·2000
Wnfe M 0 Miller , Rt 4, or wnte Jetstar, Box 2000,

sell •F'Ythlnt for
•nybodv •f our Auchon
Bun or in your hOme For
1nform1flon .and Pickup
1ervlc.e ull 2S. ·I967
S•l• Every Sllurd.ay
NIGht 1-lJ p.m

----Rac me Volun tee r

MEIG S MU SE UM open by

TM following

IRON AND BRASS BEDS

Grande, OH

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

2082

appointment

WANTED

must have their own equip·
ment. Serious parties call

4rld 4775

--=--====::...::'-fl person
and bus, personel
Apply In
Bob Evans, R1o

Too

at their bulld1ng In Bashan
Fa ctory c hoke 12 guage
shot guns only Open stg hts
22 nfle

ployer

OPEN9T05

W~

P IA NO

mental retardation IS
preferred Send resume to
David Milliken, P 0. bo&gt;e
604, Jl!lckson, OH Buckeye
Community Services Is an
equal opportunity em ·

musicians to form a rock
band Lead gu .tar, s,econd
guitar, organ or piano
player, drummer, trumpet
player, tenor sax. Must be
able to play rock and soul

pllcattons for kitchen prep

r

valuable to n eg lect, ex pert
tunmg &amp; and repair Lane
Dan1els, 742 2951 or 992

slramenlal i111tructor Rod ToWver sened u ebalrmao. Adjudicaton 11 ere Peter eo.~ama, Clleryl
Grabam, Leoa Broob, Aoth011y VtoU, Tim DlmcaD,
June Weboteralld Het1011a Lanoo. Tbe eveat waa beld
uDder the aulborfty of the Oblo MWii&lt; Education
Assoclalloa.

$CASH!
FOR YOUR FURNITURe
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
420LIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL

W VA , ca ll for details 675 ~--==c==c=....__
3440 Sat March 21st 10 PARTT IME help wanted,
teach1ng
macrame ,
am
needlepoint , rughook1ng,

guns only

MORE TIIAN 2,000 Sootheastem Ohio high school
musicians tovaded the Old French City Friday and
Saturday to participate in the annual District 17 baud
aDd chorus cooteots. Results of the two day eveat,
which was held at Gallia Academy High School,
Gallipulis, will be announced Monday. GAllS iJt-

sell Krugerrands . Tawney
Jewelers 422 Second Ave

Gold

MALE 8 month old Blue

7 30 p m Faclory choke

replaced a fire hydrant. City water CWitomen have
been subJeCt to shutoffs in certain sectloDJ wblle plug!
were replaced. Further work Is expected by the dty
water department.

We also buy silver

and gold coins, anything
that is 10 14 18 K gold We

wh 1le Cal1446 1260

Ra cine Gun Club, e'Verv
Frtday mght start1n g af

YOUR

gold

11

675 -4 378

"Mom and Dad", you ' re

We m1ss you n1ght and
day ,
Lite's not the sa me,
smce God took you

11
Help wanted
KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"
by Larry Wright
Help Wanted
WANTED · Part l1me (20 GET VALUABLE training r---------------'--"--~
hrs. wk .) Fac111IY Director' as a young business person
and earn good monev plus
to work wl th persons han
'\tli't£ .~w,
dlcapped With mental some great g1fts as a Sen·
t1nel
route
earner.
Phone
MVfftl~loN
WE WILL PAY you cash retardation m Bidwell , vs nghf away and get on
Otuo A soc1al work reiatec:;l
for your diamonds, wed
1\E'.R lufF~r... ··
the el1glbiltly list at m
ding bands, class rings , degree Is required and ex
2156
or
992 2157
perience
W1th
persons
w
i
th
pocket watches, denial

9
Wan led'" Buy
GOLD. 10k. 14k, 18k, denial
gold and gold year pins
Call 675 3010.

Pomeroy, OH
call 992 7760

departed th1s hfe March

In the stillness of the
n1ght,
we ot1en see your face ,
And there wtll never be
no other
On thts earth can take
your place.

FIRE PLUG WORK CONTINUES-A Gallipolis City
employee Is seen at work at the corner of Fourth
Avenue and Locust Street Friday as city crews

toy
Call

&amp; Auction

MARIE ITA Board of
Trustees of the Area S1x Health
Systems Agency, Inc. (ASHSA) will
be meehng Monday at 7 30 p.m . at
the Hotel Lafayette In Marietta. The
board IS scheduled to act on two Certificate of Need (CON) apphcatwns.
Buckeye Community Serv1ces has
requested a CON to convert five of
Its group homes for the mentally
retarded to ICF/MR designatiOn
Good Samantan Medical Center has
apphed for a CON to establtsh a Pam
and Stress Umt The review comnuttee of ASHSA has already recommended approval of both apphcallons
Also on the agenda IS a discussiOn
of the proposed acbrumstratwn fudmng cutbacks and the unphcatwns
of the cutbacks on the agency
ASHSA 1s the federally des1gnated
health plannmg and resource
development agency for Athens,
Belmont, Coshocton, Gallta, Guernsey, Hamson, Hockmg, Jackson,
Jefferson , Lawrence , Me1gs,
Monroe, Morgan , Muskmgum,
Noble , Perry, V1nt on and
Washmgton Counties.

$15,165.49 in taxes

and

t1es now 10 our 26th year, 1s
expandtng
and
has
Lott1e Collins who passed openmgs for managers and
away March 7, 1980 You dea lers P~rty Pl an ex
can only have one mother,
helpful Guaran
so kind and true, for a l l her penence
teed toys and g1tts No cash
lovmg k1ndness she asks mvestment, no collect1ng,
nothing In return so all 1 delivering. Car and phone
can do, clear mother, IS go necessary
Call collect,
and tend your grave, to the Carol Day, 518 489 8395

--

.
The

Meigs County receives

Announcements

IN LOVING memory of

3

25-square mile borders and moved
inward to r1d the area of predatory
anunals destroymg local fann stock
The unwanted game froze durmg
the wmter but by sprmg a thaw and
the subsequent smell attracted the
buzzards. For the last 30 years, March 15th has been the destmatwn date
observed by the scavenger turkey
birds.
Though Keeble said many of the
5,200 townspeople In Hmckley don't
care for the publicity and crowds attracted by the buzzards return,
many others are very mvolved.

3

beloved
husband
and
father and grandfather

'· 1 !

muchearher
The Hmckley Chamber of Commerce wtll beg10 1ts 23rd annual all·
day pancake breakfast at 7 a m
Hawkers of buzzard T-shirts,
decals, patches and postcards will
push their wares throughout the day.
lf the weather holds w1th partly
cloudiy sktes and temperatures m
the mid-40s as predicted, some
50,000 buzzard watchers can be ex·
peeled, Krebbe said.
Traditwnally, the buzzards return
IS thought to be a harbmger of
sprmg When the bmls return to
their spr10g and summer home, the
worst of wmter IS said to be 10 the
past
Legend has It that the flocks ftrsl
were attracted to Hmckley m !818 by
tons of decaymg game k1lled m the
Great H10ckley Varm~nt Hunt of
Dec 24
On that Christmas Eve, 475 men
and bOys hned up along Hmckley's

In Memoriim

IN LOVING Memory of our SWEEPER

·;. Ohio community ready for buzza ...n
HINCKLEY, Ohio ( AP) - Spotters Will take thetr place 10 the
wooded area of the Hinckley Reservation shortly after dawn Sunday
walling for the llrsl gwde buzzard to
make his way hack home and keep a
30-year tradition alive m this northeast Ohio ctty of 5,200
"Lt James French of the
Oeveland Metroparks will record
the first s1ghtmg," sa1d Bruce Krebbe, president of the Hinckley Cham·
ber of Corrunerce, which plans 12
months for the one day when the
large, rather ugly btrds of prey

Classi ieds

(hes, class nngs wedd.ng
band s, d1amonds Gol d or
st 1ve r Ca ll J A Wam sley,
Treasure Ches t Coin Shop.
Athens, OH 59.4 4221
w anted to Buy c lass nngs,
wedd•ng bands, anythmg

stamped, IOK, 14K , or 18K

go ld S1lver cot ns, pock et
watches Call Joe Clark at
992 2054 at Clark' s Jewelry
Store Pom eroy . Oh•o 45769
CHIP WOOD Poles m ax
d1ameter 14" on largest
end $11 SO per ton Bundled
sl~b
SIO 50 per ton
DCIIVCr ed to OhiO Pa l let
Co . Roc k Spr i ngs Rd .
Pomeroy 992 2689

Help W•"ted

Faculty Poslt•ons
Ava1lable September 1. 1981
Automohvet D1ese1 Technology Instructor
M.n qua l li1cat•on bachelor's degree and 5 year s'
ex pen ence tn re la ted f1 eld Pref erence g1ven to l ac
tory pump schooling, repatr and c al 1brat1on ex
penence { 11 month pos•t•on l
Instructor of Nursmg ( J pos1t1ons)
To teach and superv•se studen ts 1n c l•n• ca l l ab ex
pertence •n area hospttal s and agenctes Mtn
quallft ca tiOns
R N (OhiO). B SN and 1 year
clln1 ca1 experience as staff nurse M SN and
teac h.ng e)( penence at A D level pref erred (9
month POSttiOnS)
Instructors m Bustness Admmlstration ·
9 month pos1t1ons
Accounting Instructor wtth master's degree tn ac
count1ng, or bus.ness adm•n•stratton wtth accoun
f mg emphas.s; C P A preferred
Computer Instructor w1th deg rees •n busmess ad
m•n•stratton an.d computers , one degree at
m aster 's lev el Oper-at ton of computers essent1al
Instructor 1n Health and Phystcal Educatton
In addition to teac htng ass1gnments Wtll serve as tn
tramural director and baseball coach, w 1th sOme
student teacher superv•s•on Mtn qua11f1cattons are
m aster 's '" physt ca l ed ucat•on w 1fh teachmg and
coach •ng expertence Mast er s 1n health and educa
lion preferred
Instructor •n Soc tal Sc1ence ( L1beral Arts Dept )
To teac h tntrodu ctory courses •n sooa l sc1ence, an
thropology , and sociology Mm qual•ftca t1on •s
ea rned doctorate 1n r eleva nt ar eas College
tcachtng e~e.per tence preferred
Compensation IS based on faculty salary scale w1th
educat1on and experience factors . Employer pa1d
1nsured fr~nge benef1ts
Application deadline 1S March 23, 1981. To obta•n ap
phcahon forms and procedures, send letter of m·
terest and resume to C9ord1nator ot Personnel , R1o
Grande College, Bo• 969, RID Grande, Oh104S647
An eq ual
e mploym ent f al flrmahv e act1on
employer M1norlttes and wom en are encou raged to

$185 00 to $500 weekly domg
ma1l1ng work
No e)(
perience required
AP
PLY C1r cle Sates, P 0.
Box 224 0 , R1 chmond Hill,

NY 11418

plus free wardrobe tor
those who
qualify
Management opportun1ty
open For free •nfomat,on
please phone 992 3941 or

Want lo buy

JUNK cars

388 9303

Car salesman
Se nd
res ume' to Box 179H, c o
1
The Dally
Sen1Pomeroy,
nel,
Court
Street,
OhiO 45769

PubliC Sitle
&amp; Auct•on

FARM MACHINERY
AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1981
10:30 A.M.
Located on State Route 248 East of
Chester, OhiO on Stale Route 7.

Professtonal

23

AAA LOCK &amp; SAFE SERVICE
AUTOMOTIVE -COMMERCIAL- RESIDENTIAL

FRIENDLY HOME Toy
Parttes now rn our 26th
year, 1S expandmg and has
open1ngs for managers &amp;
dealers Party Pl an ex
penence helpful Guaran
teed toys and g ifts No cash
rnvestment, no collectmg,
dellvenng Car &amp; phone
Call co llect,
necessary
Carol Day 518 489 8395
Babysitter wanted

my

10

LOCKS REPAIRED - SECURITY SYSTEMS

Some p art t1me 10bs 1n Pt
Pleasant come w1th a
$1,500 bonus! Plus free
colle9e tu 1t1on• If you are
age 17 or older, a 1Un1or or
sentor m h•gh school, or a
h1gh
school
diploma
graduate,youmayqual1fy
The West V1rg 1n1a Nationa l
Guard 1s no ord1nary part
t1me tab• Good pay , good
benef1ts• For deta11s call

STARKS Tree Trimm tng &amp;
removaL 1nsured, call

SANDERS

The lollowmg

Tractors, Farm Mchinery. Watch for
complete listmg in next Sunday's paper.
OWNERS: LARRY &amp; ALICE CURTIS
AUCTIONEERS
Jim Carnahan
oan Smith
949-2708
949-1033

GLASS &amp; CHINA

PRIMATtVES

Cast 1ron pots &amp; pan s. old hand tools. plows, horse
saddle. moose head , lanterns, lard press, p1tcher
pump , ftrepla ce cove rs , single treet, old bicycle,
b a by cradl es. old chalkware , and other
m tscP IIaneous Item s too numerous to ment1on

PIANO TUNING &amp;
REPAIR Will accept V1sa

and Master Charge, For
appointment cnll
B 111

Ward, ward's Keyboard ,
(614) 446 4372

mus1C1 ans to form a rock
band Lead gu1tar, second
gUttar, org an or p1ano
player, drummer, trumpet
player, tenor sax Must be
able to play rock and soul
mus1c Interested people

Radio TV
CB Repair
RON'S TV SERV ICE

18

12

WANT to bull,d tobacco
barns, free est1 mates on
s1ze Call after 6 p m 256

S1tuat10ns Wanted

TRIMMING

removal

and

949 2129 or 992

6040

742 2288

W1ll ca re for t he el der l-y m
our home Women, men, or
coup les Tramed and ex
pertenced 992 7314
Have vacancy f or el derly
Room and bbard, laundry,
Reasonable 992 6022
Repa~r
or r e modehng
work Floors , doors, wall
panel•ng , ce111hg t1!e,
S1d1ng and pa •nttng 992

31

Call 446

2759
13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv1ces tor f1re msurance
coverage 1n Galha County
for almost a ' centurv
Farm, home and persona l
property coverages are
available to meet 10
dtv•dual needs Contact,
Lew1s Hughes, your netgh
bar and agent
IF YOU are a non-smoker
you may qua l 1foy for spec1al
discounts
on
your
homeowners pol1 cy Call
446 2300 or see Ray Hawk
for a free est1mate

Made to order,

Furnace repatrs, electncal
work, plumbtng, mob1l e
home or residence 992

k1ds ca
They
taken
re of

Money to loan

FHA VA Convent1al Home
Loans , Columbus First
Mortgage
Co ,
loan
representat1ve ,
V•o let

(Cookie) Viers, 463 Second

Ave , Gall1potis, Oh , 4.46

7172

PubllcSale
&amp; Auctton

AUCTION
LANDMARK
OAK HILL, OHIO
SATURDAY, 10:00 A.M.
MARCH 21, 1981
Located 1n Oak H1t1, OhtO at the LANDMARK
STORE who closed the•r doors December 1, 1980

" HOUSE &amp; FARM ITEM5"
Green Hot Pomt el ectnc double oven Stov e. Hot
Pomt Tra sh Compactor, W1nco 20 K W . PT O
Generator, 150,000 BT U Space Hea ter, Nat l Bm &amp;
Scales, Secunty N 1ght L1ghts, 12 rolls 4 foot w•de
Mulching F11m, Plywood , Mason Board, Gutter and
Roofmg, Wood and Plast1c Moldmg , Nails , Snow
Fence, Ba r b Wtr e, Salt. Roof Coattng, Bu•ldtng
Paper, Drum s of Oil, Anti Freeze, Sail and Mineral
Feeder s, Snow Blade, 16 ft P last• c Pipe, Cellmg
Tile, Push Water and Floaters, Roll Electnc Fence,
Screen W1re, Roto Tdler , 15. 18, 20, 24 and 10 ft
Alummum Culvert, appro• 175 round Fence Posts,
6, a and 10 mch Clay Ttle, Prtme and Barn Sid mg,
Tongue and Groove Lumber, 1x3 10 and 12 toot Ftr
r ing Stnps , 200 rol ls lnst~latfon , Clear Board 2x 12, 4,
8, 10. 12, 14, 16 and 18 foot Alumtnum Farm Gates, 14

tt 2x6s, 275 gal Fue l 01 1Tanks, Ladders. 400 to 500

gallons

of Qt

and

Pts

Pa•nt . Egg

Cartons,

Driveway Se• ler and MANY , MANY ITEMS too

Numerous to Mention

CASH
Dam Sm1lh,

POSITIVE I 0
EATS
Phone9~9 - lOll Jim Carnahan, 949 ·1708

"Nnt r t!s oons1ble lor

~cc•dents

DOUBLE

cond

WIDE

mobile home, exc

cond ,

call 446 4051

tn level home tn exclUSIVe
subd•vls1on, 3 bedrooms,
21!2 baths, garage, familv
room, parttal bnck on
front, city school d tstnct,
close to town F manclng

furn. and underpinned Call

3

BDR

home

Wllh

basement,
complete! v
redecorated,
at
Mid

dleport W1ll help finance
$17,500 Call 304 882·2466
IN BIDWELL

allraciiVe

home by owner, 2' bdr ,
bath, hard wood floors,
fireplace, new gas furnace
for hot water system,
stornt w1ndows and doors,
garage, tool shed, and 2

rots. Call 388 8653

1970 BUDDY 12x60 2 bdr,
446 9313 , before 5 Call 446
1617

SALE or rent, furn 2 bdr
mobile home, 10x.50, call

367 7167
1975 VINDALE

14x70

3

bdr , total elec ., central
a1r , underp•nning, good

cond., catl446·304-4

1978 GOVERNOR 14X70, 3
bdr , Ph baths, f~replace ,
new drar:es, appliances tn
eluded, otal electnc, only
$11 ,500 delivered Finan
clng 1S avatlable, for a
lim1ted time ontv we are of
tenng a $1000. rebate on
th1s home which may be

applied

to

lhe

down

payment
Call Johnsons
Mob•le Homes, 4-U. 3547

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

It"

8

PubliC Sale

Will be wel l 1~F:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;===&amp;i;Ai:u:Oc:Ot:O'o,;;n•=~=o~=o=;;;==-,

Flnanelal
22

a~r,

OFFERED by owner, new

Street ,

and have had
expenence
babysltfmg.
1 am
24 years
old I love to take ca re of

with

remodeled Call 446 9681 af

24x60

Homes for Sale

256 1558

Will do babysttt1ng seven
days a week, days or
evemngs •f nefessary
Ages from newbqrm to 12
years old Mv ~c1dress 1S
Brie~

LOT

furntshed , plus

5 RM house to be moved
from proper ty , $2,000 Call

5858

12

PR IVATE

mobtle home in city, quiet
neighborhood, w111 sell w1th
new mobl ie home or sec
t1ona1 home Call Johnsons
Mobile Homes 4.46 3547

$5,700 388·9767

avall•ble Phone 46 3547 or
446 4028

Call388 9342

Pomeroy , Oh1o 45769
Phone number IS 992 3587
ask for Debb ie You can
c all anyt1me I w tll be
takmg care of the chtldren
1n my own home I ' ve have
a babys1tters course, and
used to be a nurses a 1de

388 8596

ler 5 p.m

Real Estate

CUSTOM garden plowmg,

106

Moving to Flortda, must
sell battery bus1ness for
safe, furn•ture and other
1tems for sale 14X70 Calt

12x(&gt;5 MOBILE home, 2
bedroom, 2 baths, part1a11y

6307

Ceram•cs

1974 NASHUA tra1ter
3
bdr , 1'12 bath, $10.SOO

"Jack" New Haven , WV

(304) 882 2079

2300
Work '" davt•me helpmg
elderly people Rutland
Pomeroy M•ddlepo(t area

Phone 675 4424

1970 NEW MOON 12x65
Wllh expando, comp letely

Wanted to Do

Gall1poi 1S area

SerVICe ,

2nd. &amp; V1and 51
Po•nt Pleasant, WV

Commerc 1al Restdent1a l

Bdnded, Dependable Call

Spectal•zing 1n Zenith
House Calls Now serv1ctng
Motorola Quazar Call 1
304 576 2398 or 446 24j4

must
the 1rpart1es
own equ•P
men t have
Serious
call

I 304 675·2210

LOCKSMir H

&amp;

traders
TRISTATE
MOBILE HOMES CALL
446·7572

1973 Bonanza, 2-4x~, 3 bdr
B &amp; S SALES, INC

Decorated to order, wed· INCOME TAX AND AC
dmg and all types Cal1256· COUNTING SERVICE
1206
Call 446 -7068 tor ap
polnlment alter 4 30 p.m
and Sat call9 to 3
13
'Insurance

16

PRICES REDUCED - used
mob11e homes and travel

1977 Bendl)(, 24X48, central
a.r, 3 bdr , 2 full baths

CAKES

AUTOMOBIL E
IN
SU RANCE
been ca n
your
ce ll e d'
Lo st
operator's lice nse? Phone
992 2143

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

1973 Utop1a, 12x65, 2 bdr

COMMERCIAL and 1n
dust"al
photography
Phone 446 2909 or 446·7226
alter4p m

'-"--- -...:.:.:===- -

ac res Terms 992 7741

8x10expando, 3 bdr

1160 Second Ave.
Gallipolis
"YOUR KEY TO SERVICE"
PHONE 446-1826

SFCO'Neal6753950
WANTED

PR I VATE
setttng,
3
home on S R 7
near Memory Gardens 2'12

1971 Darian, 12x65, 3 bdr
1972 Crown Haven , 14x65 w

INSTALLED

home 7 30a m 6p m Call
collect, 1 304 576 2010
a tier 6 30, 992 6233

LIQUIDATION AUCTION SALE

Several pteces of dlsconttnued I G glass, Fenton
wh1te milk glass, severa l p1 eces Occup1ed Japan,
depress ion glass, art glass, lea d crvsta l, old bottles,
political badg~s. other pteces o~ glass &amp; c hina
Baseball ca rds, old tunny books Oil lam ps, mercury
glass vases, 1ron stove, and ot her m1scellaneous
Items

1n

I'~=====:::===:=:=:::=.:::::::::::::::::::::::::~bedroom
"'

WANTED 3 people to sell
Avon Call 742 ~354 or 742
2755

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

2 pt ece Moha wk ll v tng room su.te, oak mantel, old
ra dios - console &amp; table models, n tce w• cker baby
buggy , 2 sets table lamps, clocks, octagon table ,
dresser w•th large round m1rror , several stand
tables, old stone tar s (so m e wtth blue wntmg&gt;.
crank butter c hurns, large banqu et tabl e, several
rockers, .ron kettle w1th stand, 1 color TV, old
Player P1ano (player m1ss•ng&gt;. severa l beds, old
Coca-Cola mach•ne. 2 gas stoves 2 gas ra nges. 8
ladder bac k cha.rs, 6 Bentwood chatrs, several old
pi ctures &amp; fram es

t1 c, 3 room basement
Pomeroy 992 7001

1 12 acres $52.500 1 614
678 2513

111 r;:::========Se:r:•:•c:e:s=========~

9

FRI., MARCH 20 AT 10:00 A.M .
20 N. 2nd St ., Middleport, OH .
At : MARTIN'S GENERAL STORE
Everything must go, wall to wall.
FURNITURE

7 rooms &amp; bath, lull ~ize at

669 4535

5050

wtth or Without motors, c all

or 1 687 6429

Rose H 111. attract 1ve s1x
room house With a
detached
garage,
workshop, full basement

Average $10 00 per hour

T IQU E furn 1ture Call 245·

8

992 2571

5 year old ranch style
home, 3 bedrooms, equip
ped
kttchen,
garage,
basement, l arge lot Pnce
negot1able 992 7841

Attractive part t1me work
for
well
groomed
homemakers who love
pretty fashtons and want to
keep up on current styles

AN

Wanl lo buy USED hot
waler tank , ca ll367 0632

Beaut1ful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Add1t1on, Pomeroy, Oh10
Gas heat, central air Call

65 acre farm. 6 room house,
out bu1ld1ngs, barn,
pasture land, farm land,
good t1mber.. Located on
good gravel road $50,000
949 2589

dpply

WANT TO BUY

Homes for Sale

LADY or girl to l1ve 1n. 992

2686

TREE
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
&amp; COMMUNITY COLLEGE

31

or loss nf prnpertv"

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SATURDAY, MARCH 21 AT 10 00 AM.
LOCATION · Corner of 3rd Avenue &amp; Olive Street tn
GalliPOliS Oh10. One Block Off State Route 7.
L1sfmg 10 Part W•cker Arm Cha.r, Dough Cab.net,
Oak HtQh Boy Chest W1th Mtrror, Brass Bed , Maple
H1gh Headboard Bed, V1ctonan Chest, Walnut H igh
Headboard Bed , Walnut Marble Top Wash Stand, 2
Oak wash Stands W1th Towel Bars, 6 Drawer Oak
High Boy with Beveled M.rror, Oak Serpentme
Wash Stand, 2 Walnut V1ctortan Marble Top
Dressers . 3 Gallon &amp; 4 Gallon Juqs w1th Fancy
Wntmg , 3 Sect1on Oak Bookc ases. Oak Sptndle
Ba ck Rocker, 2 Oak Matching Serpenttne Dressers
w1th Fancy Carved M 1rrors, Onental T-ype Rugs,
B~rds Eye Maple Dresser, Oak Pressed Back Spm
di e Rocker , Oak K1t chen Cabmet, Iron &amp; Brass Bed
Very Ornamental . Oak I ce Box 12 Gallon Stone Jar,
3 Aladdm Lamps, Ra yo Lamp , Rolls for Roll Top
Desk , Oak Squar.e Stand Table. 2 Oak Dressers
H•ghly Carved, Wall Te lephOne, Oak Ice Box ,
Mohooanv H IQh Boy w1th M.rror . Oak Low Rnv
Dresser, Oak Flat Walt Cupboard, Large P1e Safe,
K•tchen Cupboard. Wagon Seat, Small Oak Ice Bo)l;,
2 W1cker Sot as, one Is e&gt;e tra n1ce. Oak 4 Leg Table , 2
Sets of 4 Oak Cha~rs, Oak Secretary, Marble Top
Table, Several Pieces of Bra ss F1gurmes, Oak Ftle
Cab• net, Prem1ttve Wa sn Stand, Round Oak Table &amp;
6 Cha~r s, Large Oak Stdeboard With Twtn LIOtl
Heads, Large Oak Ic e Box, 6 Drawer Spool Cabmet,
Butter Fly Drop lea f Table , Walnut Full Marble Top
Dresser , Oak Ooublewtde Secretary w•th Twm Lion
Heads, I ron Bank. 2 V• ctorlan Chest Marble, 5 Leg
Oak Tabl e, Prem1t 1ve Dry Smk, Ox Yoke, 2 Large

Oak Wardrobes, Oak Buffet, 2 Kitchen Cab1nels

w1th Rolls, BlanKet Chest , Oak Table w1th 5 Fancy
Leg s, Oak High Boy w1th Claw Feet, Hooster
Cabtnet, Vt ctonan Chatr , Oak Rocker, Smocker,
P1neappte Bed, Brass Bed Par-ts, Oak L1brary
Table, Camel Back Trunks We have 4 Tall Mantel
Clocks that are 1n f tne condtt1on &amp; all running, 2
Mantel Pillar Cocks, 2 Very Old Wall Clocks, one
Old We1ght Clock, Weller Vases, Ironstone P1tchers,
Tobacco Advertfsmg Signs. One Lot of Glassware,
Round Oak Table, Oak C1gar Showcase very Rare,
2 Small Marb le Top Tables, T1n Tra in, Parts, Large
Picture Frames Several Ston e Jugs, Oak Chtna
Cab1net, Otnner Bell , Oak Round Table w1th 6 Mat·

chmg Chairs . C~1flerobe, Oak Bulle! Th1s Is Only A
Parttal L1stmg
Terms : Cash or Checks w1th Proper 10

SWAIN AUCTION BARN

kenneth Swam

Auctioneers

Gallipolis, Oh10
Phone (&amp;14) 256-]9!_7

R1ck Pearson, Appr.

Mason,§, va.
Phone (304) 773·!185

�w. Va .

Ohio-Point PI
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,

35

41

Lots &amp; Acreage

TRAILE~ LOT for sate,
$4,000 00 . 992 2571

Six room house and bath
wtth utility room. C1ty
water and gas. S1SO.OO per
month wHh SSO 00 depoSit
Located on Nye Ave . Call
367 7811

three bedlooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champ&lt;on, 12 x 60, twa
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60. two

bedrooms, all electric 1971
Skylme, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/J , new
carpel
1970
PMC,

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

ca rpet B x S Sales, Inc .•
2nd X Viand Street, Pomt
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
4-124.
1969 PMC 3 bedroom
tra oler. 12x60 992 3954

Acr ~a ge :

One acre and one

noll of ground located bet
ween old R t 33 and new Rt
33 fac1ng
the
Me 1gs
Fairgrounds $4000 00. 992
2571

1973 House tra11er, 12x60
1113 acre ground Sll ,OOO
742 2208

41
1971
H ollcrest Mob de
Home
1st trailer on
Harr~sonv r lle Rd

1f fliji~ fi)~

~

\!!)

Unlc:!lmblt trlflt lour Jumblet

large selection of
Krngsley ,
Redman,
Bayview, FrtendshiP
and Unibtlt Homes .

WE WILL be having 2
homes tor rent or lease 1n
the near future . Each
requ~re 1 month' s rent in
advance plus a secunty
deposit, personal and
credit references. Strout
Realty. 446·0008
FOR RENT OR LEASE
Modern 3 bdr. ranch, car
pel, garage, $275. per mo.
plus deposit References
requored. Strout Realty,

SMALL unfurnished house,
adults, newly decorated,
cali446 1232.

PAYMENTS AS
LOW AS $140.00
per month with low
down payments cmd up
to 15 years to pay.
17% Interest
FHA .avatlable at 151 1'~%

Johnson's Mobile
Homes, Inc.
2110 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OhiO
(614) 446·3547

MOBILE HOMES
Payments as Low as
Only

$149.55

Wtndsor,
Fa1rmont,
Baron, Fuqua, Norns,
Bavv1ew, Untbtl1.

17%

Interest

lmmed.ate Fmancmg
Up to 15 Yrs

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.
(Jom Elliott)
Rt. 93 North
Jackson, Oh10
286 3752

33

•

Farms tor Sale

FOR SALE 6 acre farm.
With hou~e and tobacco
base 12x60 tra1ler in Crown
City area $15,000. Call 256·

6307.
LARGE farm house on 1
acre w1th outbu1ld1ngs, call
256· 1781 .

HOUSE · 5 rooms and bath
in Eureka, $200 . mo plus
dep and ref . Call «6 7878.

HOUSE for rent, rettred
only, tor sale on March 13.
446·3059

Real Estate - General

16 E. Second Street

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
HOW ABOUT A 9''2%
LOAN? Th rs ranch style
3 bedroom. all electnc
home'" Eastern d1Stnct
ca n be yours w1th a
down payment and a
9 112% assuma ble loan
Excellent
buy
at
$34,900 00
TWO ACRES - and a 2
bedroom ranch home
w rth range , retng
erator,
and
wood
burner Also n1ce block
garage 524,900 00
JUST SIX YEAR.S OLO
- 3 bedrooms. krtchen,
dmmg area, all on one
floor Could have full
basement 1f f1nrshed
$19,500 00
OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE Thos 3
bedroom homeon ap
prox . I acre lot 1n coun
try Close to the mines
Need a small down pay
men! S13,500 00
MINI FARM - W&lt;th ap
prox 15 acre and a 2
bedroom home w1th
range and carpetmg
Electnc
baseboard
heat $24,000 00
AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN ApproK. 6
acres and a 11h story
home wtth 3 bedrooms,
tam11y
room,
out
burldmg, hot water heat,
and a water softener
$29,500 00
REALTOR
Henrv E. Cleland, J r,
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussell949·2640
OFFICE 992· 2259

NEW LISTING 6
room house on level lot
Bath. nat gas F A fur
nace, wcxx:l cabmets 1n
kitchen , and garage
Only $18 .500
NICE VIEW - 9 acres
1n Pomeroy w1th v1ew of
the nver Has all crty
ut1 ll ties
HUNTING LAND
Good locatiOn for hunt
mg cabin w1Th 1-4 acres
Lots of game and as
close to Forked Run
Lake as poss1ble
70 ACRES
ALL
MINERALS - Leased
w1th good wells dril led
w1th1n one mile Good
fen ces and several
burld1ngs
Bedford
Township
HARDWOOD FLOORS
- A lovely home w1th a
famoly room, 2 bed
rooms, 2 fireplaces, full
basement, 3 lots, and
unattached garage Th1s
you w1lll1ke ·
TRAILER
LOT
Almost levell21J acres of
land, dnlled well , Oh10
Power, ut11Jty bU1Id1ng
&amp; pad, an Rl 124 West
Asking fUSI$6,500
WANT TO KNOW THE
\IALUE OF
YOUR
PROPERTY? ASKING
FOR AN APPRAISAL.
WANT TO SELL? ASK
US CALL 992·3876.

Housing
HeadquartP,r'\

Real Estate- General

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
s 25 L.or.ust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

'

KYGER CREEK AREA- $54,900 - Suburboa at ols
best! Owner has been transferred and must sell th1 S
very eye pleasing home 3 BR , 2 full baths Plush
carpet Full basement, family room w1th f1replace
plus wood burn1ng stove. Nearly 2 acre level lawn
has nice garden spot Mo-ve tn cond
DEENIE DRIVE $49,900 " Everything os
Beautiful" In thiS 4 B R ranch, equ 1pped krtchen, 2111
baths, family room W1th wood burn 1ng stove,
beautoful carpel, drapes. Full basement, 2 car
garage. Come summer you'lllove the 18' x36' lighted
poet . Call for an appoontment soon

•'

••

i
I

'
j

I
•

I
I

•

;

•f'
I

I

••

NORTHUP - 553,500 - Brock, 3 BR , 1'/ 2 baths
Range, refrlg , washer and dryer 2 car garage lm
preSSIVe
GREEN ACRES SUBDIVISION- $45,000 - Brand
new hOme nearly completed 3 BR, 2 full baths, full
basement, garage plus space for family room
Choose your favorite ca rpet colors Fmancrng
available w1th 5% down payment for qual1f1 ed
buyer
TRAILER PARK NEAR RIO GRANDE - $40,000
- Over 6 acres. 5 lraoler pads. one 1970 12' x65 ' t ully
furniShed, cen ~~r Offi ce bldg Good 1nvestment
Will sell on land contract woth $12,000 down pay
ment
GALLIPOLIS - $20,000 - Buy th is 3 BR, 2 story on
land contrCI!Ct With $~,500 down payment N1ce lg
lot Immediate possesSion.
fO ACRES - Nearly 2.000 rd frontage, 55 acres
pasture. 20 acres of timber. rest to liable $74,500
FARM - $72.900 - Meogs County , 20 pasture 20
tillable, 4 BR , 2 story fr ame hom e, barn, oth er
outbldg All m1nera1 nghts se ll w1th farm
HOMESTEAD .. SSJ,OOO - Forty acres, 20 pasture.
20 tollable 5 BR frame home has alum Sldong, new
ty remodeled Inside and aut All mineral roghts sell
With property Very private neighborhood Just
listed I

gesttd by tl'1e abOve cartoon

. . A'TIIIIJ"tiXI)
I

Jumbles BEGUN
Answer

DAISY

FALTER

Hurry awa y ! ro m Atl'1ens- '

CHORUS

41

Houses for Re!'.!____._.

OLD house in the country
cati67S·2295

HASTEN

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BDR FURN mobole
home 1n Crown Coty Call
256 6474

2 BDR 12x60 mobile home
1n R1o Grande, call 446
0157.
2 BDR

mob1le home at
Eve ~g r een Call446 7032

TRAILER tor rent on 58
acre farm Cal 1367 7226
MOBILE home for rent, In
town , small
depos1t
requ1red, «6 0318
Real Estate- General

REAL ESTATE
Large,
attract•ve ,
mamtenance-free home
located '" excellent
res1dentral commun 1ty
Modern krtchen, tour
bedrooms, tamrly room,
two ~ths , ba sement,
garage and large shade
trees on acre level lot
Many extras
Owner
fmancing
Ph, 992 7727

Anoti&lt;IIIJ ,

4461181. Eve

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

2 bedroom Mob~ le Home
Adults only
Brown ' s
Tra1ler Court, Mtners~o~llle .
992 3324

3 AND ... RM furnished a!&gt;'·
ts Phone 992· 543~ .
Unfurnished one bedroom~
apartment for rent Ren-~
ters assistance available
for sen•or citizens. Contact
Vtllage Manor Apartments
af992 7787.

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housel&lt;eeplng apt ,
Park Central Hotel .

~------. .

Three room and bath apar·
tment 1n Pomerov. 992~
5621.

B J H•lrsto., Auoc: , ••• 41.0 l!n

Clydll
Wilker, AAuoc •
,H'",.,'.,"'
Tom Halileln, sot,

2 BOR. unt Holly Park
mob ole home. dep req Call
446·4229

Rio

1 BDR
partially furn
trailer on pnvate lot in Bid
well Garden spot avatlable
and water, SISO. mo plus
deposit Cal1388 9684

100 AORES holt land, 1 mole
from crty hm1ts, old house,
water for cattle, S300 per
year Cal 1446·0239.
44

I
I

Apartment
for Rent

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
4 ACRES of \Ja canl land
on hardtop road 1dea 1
bu1ldrng S1te or tra1l er
lot
2 ACRE 5 on hardtop
road All ut1llt1es 1 mile
from Middleport
2 STORY dupleK Close
to schools, shopping and
poet,
2 STORY OUPLEX .
Close to schools, shopp
1ng and pool
2 OR J BEOROOM cot
tage WITh, 2 acres of
land, 1ust off Rt 7
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr
Phone 992· 2S98

TWIN RIVERS
TOWER
APARTMENTS
FOR THE ELDERLY

NOW RENTING
200 Second St.

Pt. Pleasant, wv
675-6679
Equal HOUSing
OpportuntfY

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR FREE REFERRAL St.I(VIGE
'

Ranny Blacl&lt;lmrn, Branch

Mana~,er

a

complete with mattresses
$250. and up to SJSO. cap:

USED

20'kl0' Bays
Conventent
Economical
For

Secure
tnformat•on

call
·~~6·962~ . 7· J0·4 Monday
,"thru Froday .

. ... _, ....,,,' ...
.............
. , . ....
~

Household Goods

i,.ARRY WAYS I DE New
location, 2~1 Third Ave ,
Mon. and Frl 9 to 8. Tues
Wed. · Thurs
Sat 9 to 5
~Ofa·Lov"'eat Chair, brow·
n plaid, $699 95 Sofa and
chair, gold velvet, $299.95.
~a and chair, blue and
brown velvet, $499 95
Q~een
size hide a·bed,
$399 95. Wood table and 4
dla Irs. Sl 89 95
Coffee
tible,
$59 .95 ,
Eureka
$Weeper. 549.95
Swivel
fJ!cker , S119 95 Wall·a·way
recliner, $179.95 Canopy
~. twin or full. $59 .95
FtJII size bedding, $179 95
"'· s pc. bdr. suite, S240 00

NEW LIHING - TRHEVEL - 27
- Thrs Is a top quality 3
oedroom hom e tn a very good locat10n
on Bulavlll e Road Th1s nome has for ·
mal l rvtng &amp; dlnrng rooms, eQUipped
kttcnen w/ snack bar, family room,
f1replace , r ec room, 2 bartls, 2 car
garage, 2 car carpor t &amp; much, much
more Also mcludes several mobile
home spaces presently rent•d Call
about th1s fine hOme~foday
"~~c:::.

THINKING OF WOOO
HEAT? I have a complete
line of stoves, furnaces,
f ireplace onserls, at good
prices 1 also install stoves,
relme chimneys, clean
foreplaces . Call the Chom·
ney Sweep Call 373 6057 .
FIREWOOD · SJO load .
Sp l1t ,
stacked,
and
delivered Call245 5478

Ranges,

53

Anttques

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOUI Will
pay cash or cer f1f1 ed check
for ant,ques and collec
t1bles or en t1re estates
Noth ing too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and
co1n collect1ons Call 614
767 3167 or S57 3411
54

Real Estate- General

ALL UTIUTIES
INCWDED

MINI WAREHOUSE

$EARS Portable dish
washer, aold, like new,
$100
W1ndow air con·
~llloner, $100 Call367·0044

LOCATION MEANS EVERYTHING You ' ll have to apprecli!lte the locatton
you'll have 1n th1s attract1ve cedar
ranch 3 bedrooms, l'h baths, lovely
f1replace'" t1v1ng room . Parquet floors
New 2 car garage and 83 acre 1n a very .
good ne1ghborhood SSO' s

Sofas and chairs priced
from $275. to S695 Tables Corn 992-7625
$38 and up to S109 Hode
beds,$340., queen soze. $380
BURROUGHS Bookkeepln·
Recloners, $165, S295
Lamps from $18. to $55 . .5 g machine, $50 Call 446pc. dinettes from $79., to 2342
$365 7 pc,. $149 and up
Wood table and 4 chairs 8xl4 fl . floatong dock, n~w
S199 Table, 6 chairs, SJso floor, trap 1n center for live
and S375. Hutches, $300. bait $100 Call 367 7428
and $375., maple or pine
fm1sh . Bedroom suttes . Stoker and lump coal, ca ll
Bassett Oak, $595, Bassefl 446· 1408
Cherry, $695 . Bunk bed

GOOD
USEO
AP
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refngerators ,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap
pliances. 1918 Eastern
Ave, 446·7398

' NCM TAKING
LEASES

51

58

ACRES w&lt;lh 2 bdr
trader, furn , S275 mo, no
ut 11 pd , wiJOd or coal bur
n1ng stove or fuel furnace
heat Movmg out of state
Only honest, dependable
and clean person need to
apply located between Porter and Kyger
Call 367·
1226 or 367 7431

SSO 00 each. Contact Pearl

cha•r and loveseat, $275 . Garnes at 669 6041.

446 0322

-

Farms for Rent

43

ot·

rocker,

electric ranges, $285

NEW!

Millhanise

fom.an, 3 tables, $500 Sola,

refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavdle Rd
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Pn , 9am to 5pm, Sat.

MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

MISC .

Quoits , $25 .00 each ;
crocheted bedspreads for

TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Chesh1re , Oh .
99;1 3954

~pUNTRY

1:

NEARLY COMPLETED - Nice new 2
bedroom home sti ll under construction
Rustle f1n1sh - energy eff1clent Well
arranged k1tchen, dm1ng room , utility
room plus 2 6 acres off Rt 55-1 Only
$34,900

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

992 · 7~79

~755.

1:

S4

lain's beds, $275. complete
Baby beds, $89 Mattresses
or box. springs, full or twin,
$55. form, $65 and $75
Queen sets, $185. 5 dr
chests, $49 4 dr. chests,
S42 . Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gvn Gun cabonets
S~SO, dinette chaors s2o'
and $25. Tappan gas or

OFFICE space, 1400 sq. II.,
~l'cellent
condition, for
more Information call 446·

1:
1:
I'

2 BDR house trailer for
rent Ca ll446 1052

MOBILE Home, in
Grande Catl446 01S7

RENT OR LEASE
Business bldg, , corner of
court and Second Ave, Call
446·1615 or call AAA 446
()699

'I
I
I'
I.
1:

Household GOOds

Sofa, chair,

Space for R en!

1:

NEAR RACCOON CREEK
LISTING - Almost new 3
home with over 1450 sq ft of livmg
space Includes family room w1th wood·
burner, large bath, eat 1n k1tchen
w / bar &amp; utility room, electr rc heat,
br1ck &amp; vmy l extenor plus 8X16 storage
bldg and nice flat yard on Northup
$49,900

for

Sleeping rooms; by the
week.
Kitchen,
and
televlsron lounge. Carryout
store and restaurant w ithin
500 feet 992-6370.

Four room apartment for'
rent. 992·S908.

PHONE 446-3643

NICE Mobile home , also 4
rm house Ca II 446·0571 af
ter4p m

51

SLEEPING ROOMS
rent, Gall Ia Hotel

Generol

llll' Wt sem.an 8rolt er. 4i nm 6v• ,
42

Furnlshod Rooms

4J

REAL ESTATE AGENCY(

(Answers Monday)

Yesterdays.

Apartmtnt
for Rent

----------~----·
WISEMAN r

Now arrange the ctrcle&lt;l letters 10

torm !he turpnse answer as sug·

RACCOON CREEK FARM - 50 acres,
38 A bottom , 11 A. pasture, tovety
modern bnck home w1th 3 Brs , 2 baths.
cathedra l cedJngs, frreplac e large sun
LOG CABIN - Very unoque , old hand
deck and lots of other extras. new metal
hewn log beams, sleep1ng loft, large
pole barn . crib, load1ng chute, approx
stone fir eplace, mOdern barn , 14 acres
1700 ft cr eek frontage , located 4 m r
woods, locatd rn the Wayne Nat1onal
from Mergs Mme No 3
Forest. 20% down
PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acr es 15 A
Si
mms Creek bottom , balance roll ing
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE pastur~ &amp; woods, n1ce modular home,
20% down - Camps1tes 1n the Wayn e
large barn , several other bu1ldtngs, tab
Netrona l Forest . 5 to 8 acre tracts wood
base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
et1 land , good hunt1ng Pnces start at
WOOdS Rd
53,500
426 DEBBY DRIVE - L Shaped ran ch.
PERRY TWP. - 60 acres, about 12 A
4 BR . 21/z bath s. LR . foyer . large equ1p
tillable. balance 1n ttmber. stylish older
ped ktt chen, nat gas heat , cent a1r , f ull
7 rm home wiTh lots of posS1bll lt1eS,
basement, 2 ca r garage, 16x32 heated
barn, outbuildings Fronts on State Rd
pool &amp; large corner l ot Shown by ap
Call for more 1nformat10n
·
porntm ent
L SHAPED RANCH - 3 BR , 3 balhS,
large d1nmg rm &amp; equ ipped k1tchen, 22
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - 10% LOAN
ft LR .44 ft fdmtly rm With WB
ASSUMPTION - Plants Subdov , 3 or&lt;
t1repla ce, re c rm , sun deck &amp; garage
BR 's, 14K30 LR. 12x30 family rm &amp;
Green School Oistn ct
much more. 1mmedlate possess1on
Cal l for appomtment
JOHNS CREEK ROAD
Near
M er cer \J tlle &amp; Crown C1fy M1nes. 1973
1
EVANS HEIGHTS - Assume 9 11,_o
Duke Crown Royal mob1le horne
Loan - Nice 1'11 st ory home otter s 5 14'x65, 2 BR . wood burn1ng stove. flat
rms , bath, bdsement , c arport &amp; nat
lot w1th wel l, bargam pr iced Call about
gas heat Be me f1rst to see thiS one
th1s one
ROOM TO ROAM - ThiS lovely bn ck
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should
ran ch offers lots of good l1 v1ng tor your
describe 1h1S lovely 3 BR bn ck ranch
growmg f amily 3 BR 's 21 1 baths, large
Spec1al features are a large LR &amp; dtn
kitchen &amp; LR , format &lt;:11111ng rm, 2
mg rm , equ ipped kitchen, Ph baths,
frrepla ccs. wood burnrng stove, cent
laundry , Quality carpet, cent air &amp; an
i\ lr , garage , full basemen1 With family
overs1zed 2 car gjJr~oe Located on U S
rm , bar &amp; laundry Located on approx
35 west &amp; shown by apporntment
2 acres on State Route 554 between
Florter &amp; Eno Priced to sell af $59,500
LAKE FOR SALE W&lt;lh appro x 40
MORGAN
TOWNSHIP - Small but
acres vacant land . Ideal recreat10n pro
n1ce,
2
BR
hom e 1s only 1 yr'5 old &amp;
perly, located in Clay Twp near
clean as a pm Perf ec t lor a small tam1
Eureka Asking S26,900
ly week end r etr ea t or huntmg lodge
Stt
uatcd on 36 acres of Morgan L ane
1
PRICE REDUCEDT0$59,500.00 1 10%
Rd
fmanc ~ng ava1lable, L shaped ranch , 3
ApproK 73 acr es,
BR ' s, 1'11 baths, L R with f ireplace, den INGALLS ROAD
w1th fireplace, formal dmrng , equ ipped 25 A Raccoon Creek bottom land ,
balance pasture &amp; woods Ol d house &amp;
k1tchen, gas heat, corner lot
bu11d1ngs.

'

Want Ad

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

Real Estate

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restncted
bo ldong lat. 1.22 acre, noce wooded set
tong, city schools $5.900

.

APART · 5 rms and 2
baths, dep. req Prefer
moddte aged or elderly
people. If Interested call
446·3587

1 BEOROOM apartment,
no pets , adults only ,
deposit, 122 "hAve.

tNEXPE ~IENC:ED

EUREKA · 2 bdr. frailer ,
also 1 bdr trader, nver
front lots, ref and dep
Adults 1 643·2644

Phone
H 614 )·992-3325

UPSTAIRS apartment,
furn, eff1c1ency, adults
only, no pets, call446 0957

AN

tTEACKS±
J I K J

2 BDR unf apart, In
crown City , 1 ch ild ac
cepled. Call256· 647~

DELUXE 5 rm . apart. In
town Call 256·6506 or 256·
6413.

FOOTeALL PLAYER'.

General

t~~~L~.~~t ~~
_

a'

IUNROADI

41

Housing
Headquarters

[]

44

Apartment
for Rent

Jim C~&lt;:hro~n ,

SMALL FURN
house,
adultsonly Call446·0338

HOUSE and s acres, $75 .
mo Call446 0239.

call446 1232

CKI

5 ROOM house in Eureka
fuel basement fuel oil fur·
nace ,
garden
plot
available, call256·6547

Houses for Rent

Real Estate

I

.._

Apartment
for Rent

adults, private entrance,

lour ord1n11'\' wordl

I VAHNE

44

2 ROOM furnished apt,

CIMf ltfttr 10 taCI'I tqUitl IO form

«6·0008

OVER $500,000
IN INVENTORY

~ THAT SCAAMBL.EO WOIIIID O.w•
~~ 1
C)' Htnn Arnokllnd b LH

5 room house &amp; bath on
good roads W1th ground or
without ground 843·2791

SEVERAL choiCe bulid ong
lots, Eastern Dlstrict.Tuppers Plains Chester water
Owner will help fmance.
992-5869
1h acre or more lots
Located at Portland, Oh
992-7330

Houses for Rent

'

The

Ohio-Pomt

M1sc. Merchand1se

BOLEN riding mower. 10
h.p , mower, double d1sc
plow, lay·off plow, snow
blade cultivator, very good
condo lion, call245 9212
DOUBLE barrett shOtgun ,
call 245 9212

STEEL SHEETS · 20 on·
ches wide, SO It lang , 18
gage tor sale, Will cut to or
der Gallipolos Block Co
123'h Pine Sl Gall ipoliS,
OH 446 2783
METAL trailer steps, 27S
gal oil 4684
drums on stands
Call446

BRIDGE

S4

Some general principles
By Olwald Jacob)
and Alan Sonia I
Almost everyone know5
ttlat m dcfendmi agamst no
trump )OU should atlack m a
long su1t 1n the hope of setung
up w1nners In defendlnjj,
aga1nst su1t contracts. the
ume priRCiple arpltes
although not w1th equa force
Just bear m mrnd that 1£ you
do attack dummy s long su 1ts
you may well develop low
card \\ mners for declarer
When you attack short !'&gt; UJts
with your stde's long ones you
can only develop your nwn
low cards
In general try to avo1d
opemng new suit!; The late
Hal S1ms once sa1d. Everv
lime you break a new smt
from decl arer s left you lose
half a tnck on the average '
Leadmg throug h dec-!an•r
and up to dummy s weakness
Js far better You probably
tend to gam when you do that
In stgnalllng strength, Signal \\llh the highest card )OU
can spare. but never s1gnal
w1th a card that may be an
1mportanl wmnt•r 1f you hang
on to 1t
Remember what lhc btd ·

2 GRAVE lots Vets section
Memona l Gardens. 80 ft .
V1k1ng camper, fold ·out,
800 moles . Cal l 367-0157 for
more 1nfo

LETART - 3 BR , hardwood floor s, 112 baths,
ltrcplace., brrck. ex ter•or plen ty ol shrubbery Can
assume at 10% Owner leav tn g, says sell $39,900

LIKE new 11 H P. rldong
mower. 36 inch cut, heavy
duty chains. snow blade
never been used $1.050 C.
H Burnette. Jr Phone 614
446·2415.

RACINE AREA - 3 BR 's, lar ge hv .ng roo m , also
famtl y room . stor age bldg , carport Pnce Cut.
$36 ,000

HAY call446 3374
2
S UNBURST
In
ternational
suntann1ng
booths, complete 6 mos
old Buy cheap Call 304
675 3994 or 304 675 6633

If you want to get a real run for
your muney, buy a Gravely.
Every tractor and mower
IS bUt It to last a long,
long tnne.With features
like sturdy steel
construction, all·gear
trallSilliSS IOns, and
dependable Bnggs &amp;
Stratton or Kohler
engmes. No wonder
some Gravely tractors are
still going strong even after 25
years of hard labor.
Come test dnve one soon.

MQBRAWiDIION

jNf W ~PA I't'H. ~ NTEHPH IS!!: ,6.SSN I

CENTRAL REALTY
RACINE

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r~d~on=g=h=a~s=b=e~e~n~A~s~s~oo~n~a~s~yo~•~•=:::==::======-1

SEARS Lawn and garden
tractor, 10 H.P , 36 mch
cut, electnc start, 2 yrs.
old, $500 Call 367 0644

DISTANCE

st•c the dumm\ add -.:our and
dummy ti high' &lt;.·ar d po1n01 to
when declar~r hc.s :sho~ n ilnd
•try to hMure how many HCP
your partner can hold Then
see 1t vou ran figure out tht&gt;
exact cards thO§e points may
represent
.
Try to &lt;.ount rver~ ones dts·
mbuuon If you &lt;:an and rnt~kt'
It a pomt to protect Jacks. tens
or even mnes when It appears
that th£'\ are Important
Then wht le th1s ma y seem 1
far-fetched and IS hard to
understand. don t throw low
cards from nothtng when 11
seems that declarer m ay have
to work on that su 1t later on
As an enmple Dummy
shows kmg-Ja&lt;.'k tert tn a s tde l
su11 You hold 4-3·2 Don't
throw one or 1wo of those
cards a w~:~ y carelessly If your
partner happens to hold the
queen. you may be show mg
dedarcr where 1t ts Let htm
guess--don t draw ct d1agram
for hun
Of course there IS the
converse If you are declarer
and have to hnd a queen,
beware the mgenuous d1seard
of a deuce Maybe th at player
holds her ladysh1p

1,,.,,/,J/ 111/

I oiii' o/1 i~"'NI

ilh{' llf .ul 1-Joll,,

~~~fii,."II' IP/,}&gt;/

•lUll (!fl/,•1!11/J.!III"UI!&lt;IIoo

"''" /It'

/1111/ •1

M Inn \ f, "'

RAVEL Y TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Owner"

"Manning Roush210 Condor St.
Ph. 992·2975

Pomeroy , OH .

Lot se t up for trall ~r As krng S4 ,800

COUNTRY HOME - 37 acr es, 3 or 4 BR s Located
c lose toR I 7 Askmg $40,000
GOOD COUNfRY LIVING
Country home , large
lrvmg room , k1tchen and den 1n cl udcs 3 BR 's, laun
dry ar ea, and oufsl(le build1nq for storag e &amp; car
Ask1ng under SJO,OOO
CALL US ro BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - As soc1ate
PH 843 2075

5HP
TILLER

Massey Ferguson 8 h p
ndmg tractor w1th mower.
elec tn c start SSOO 992
7663
FIREWOOD
$30
load
Spilt &amp; delrvered 992 5248
ALL STEEL clear span
budd 1ngs' 24'x44'x 10' for
$2 ,995,
30'x48 'x l2 ' for
$3,992 ,
40 'x 72 'x 14' for
$6,339 , 48'x96'x 14 ' for
$8,881 Call CO I I ~?Ct today 1
614 294 2675 til8 p m

55

BuJidmg Supplies

ALL TYPES of buildong
materials, block, bnck,
sewer pipes, wmdows, lin·
tels, etc Claude Wmters,
Roo Grande, 0 . Call 245
S121
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
mdoor-ou tdoor f ac 111 t 1es
Also AKC Reg Dober
mans Call-446·7795

POOOLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor at 367
7220
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL , AKC
Chow Chow dogs CFA
H1malayan, Pers1an and
S1amese cats Ava ilable
now,
wh1te
Pers1an,
H1malayan and cho and
lilac S1amese k1ttens Call
446·3844 after 4 p m

Real Est ale- General

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JS AC FARM - 516,900 - Loca ted I
m1le off Rt 219 m C1ty Sc hool Dlst
Older 2 bedroom home m need of
repair The land has some pasture but
mostly wOOds Coal seam showing, tru 1t
trees plus a 2 car garage won't last
long

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BLDG . ON 3RD A\IE.
I -COMMERCIAL
Large block &amp; wood bu ilding m a
tocatoon Excellent for storage
I good
46x861ot Only $20,000
I WANT TO LIVE LONGER - Nobody
guarantee you Will but here ls a
I can
remedy that Will help
Take one
treed acre lot near Raccoon
I beautifully
Creek where a1r 1S fresher and an at·

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tract1ve 3 bedroom home w 1th i!!ll the
extras for easier living , such as full
basement. large rooms. gas hot water
heat, large carport M1x 10 your own
fresh garden vegetables tor health and
entOY the serenitY' of the country Side
and the price of $.0,500 makes, al l this
easy to take

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I 40 ACRES - · PRIVATE LOCATION nice 1ay1no farm located
I offThisRtIs141very
The house IS remodeled rn·
3 bedrooms. new k itchen, dining
I eludes
room, 1nsulat1on new w1rlng Approx
lS acres crop, balance In pasture
I woods
Also Includes a small orchard
I targetobacc ~ase Only S39,500
I LOW CONTRACT - LOW DOWN PAY ·
- LOW INTEREST - Why pay
I MENT
the high Interest rates when bu1 l d1ng a
home The builder of this home can
I new
put you 1nto 1t an unbtevable terms
sq . ft ., 3 bedrooms ( all are
I Over 15502 bafhs,
family room , beautifu l
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PRIVACY FROM IN TOWN - Large 7 ' • t.
room bnck ranch s1tuated on a lo-vely k
landscaped 1/ 2 acre yard 3 bedroom, 3
"'
baths, !.replace. equ ,pped kitchen, for
QUALITY BRICK HOME ONE
mal d1ning, extra large mast bedroom
OWNER - Th1s lovely .4 bedroom home
Has 2 walk In closets. nat gas, cent
1S only 2V,yrs. old and 1ts owners must
a1r Owner owns 2 Must sel l
sell now Thev hate to part w ith their
large equrpped ktlchen, and the1r 14x15
LANO CONTRACT ROONEY master bedroom wlfh walk· on closet
Convenient location on corner lot on Rt
and rh bath, not to ment1on the cozy
588 This 2 story home has alum s1dmg, family room with a warm wOOdburning
J bedrooms, 2 baths, family room , 1n
fireplace . Tnere are 2'12 baths, central
sulated, new wiring and carpet Home arr , '2 car garage. 24x2.4 pool and 91h %
m good cond Will consider land con
assumable mortgage A really well
tra c t to qua11t1ed buyer $40,900
pl anned home $70's.

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ian~gl

k'ltchen area , 2 car garage &amp; heat
pump Over 1 flat acre In Green School
area 559,500
PRICE DROPPED 55,000 - OWNER
WANTS OFFER
Your family will
love thi s pnvate res1dence Situated on
near ly 3 wooded acres wolh pond off Rt
718 The spjacio\Js bn ck home otters 5
bedrooms, 2 baths 2 t rrepla ces, 2
patios, huge fam ily room , hea t pump &amp;
c.rcular dnve Call for more Info CtiV
schools $72.800 · 9'1•% mtg

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196 ACRE DAIRY &amp; "T HE WHOLE
WORKS" - Grade " A"dalryoperatlon
located S m1les east ot V1nton Includes
2 houses (I 15 a styi&lt;Sh otdl lmerJ. lar ge
barns, silos, 5 good tractors, complel e
11ne of moder!l.eQu1pment, 50 Hotste1n
cows, 8 helferftll ,OOO gal lank, milkers,
etc Call us for more tnformation
RIVER FRONTAGE - Two story 5
bedroom home located on l lf1 acres of
riv er fr ont south of town Large kll
chen, d &lt;nlng room , study, 2 enclosed
porches, full basement, garage, carpet,
rural water &amp; 3 storage buildings
Several fruit trees &amp; garden space
Bargaln pri ced at $39,500

HOME &amp; 2 AC . - NEAR RIO GRANDE
- Just lrsted th1 s 3 bedroom home on
Rf 554iUStsouthofRloGrande Thlsl2
yr old home rncludes an equipped kit
chen, woodburner m II\Jtng room ,
carpeted. fu ll basement , garage plus 1
acres w1th mobile home spot ( elec.
water sewer&gt; Low hcatrng bills C1ty
schools $39,900 Owner may help
f•nan ce
WESTBROOK VILLAGE
NEW
Ll STING - Get started oft rt~hl In thiS
very, very clerm well maintained 3
bedroom home between town and
HM
Includes an equtpped eat In klf
chen, new carpet &amp; floor covering,
alum stdlng, nat gas heat, central air.
c 1ty water &amp; sewer, garage plus J... acre
lawn 1 year Buyer p,.otechon $42,900

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E Main St

992· 2181

Pomeroy

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Our Buyers Come
From All Over
The World.

o Willis T. Leadongham
Realtor Ph. HQ1!1e. ~46 ·95J9
*Joan Boggs, Realtor Assoct
Ph. Home : ~46·3294
eun1ce Niehm,
Ph, Home ·

NEW
WHAT ELSE DO YOU NEED?
Nothrng 1' Th1s attra c t1ve 3 BR ranch
has 1f .;~It Fam,ly room , recreation
room, 21n baths, firep lace, prates·
SIOneJIIY landscaped l awn and much
more C1ty sc hool d1stnct G1ve a ca ll
today
N694

COUNTRY LIVING with llaor on lhiS
smartly decorated 5 bedroom b1 level
Formal dtn rng, ltvlng room , k.1tchen
complete wrth appl1ances
Family
room . recreat•on room. utt11ty area
Central a1r E lectnc heat Garage
Large lot C1ty school d 1stnc t
W020

WE LIKE THIS ONE , very clean, wel l
marntamed 2 bedroom home K 1tchen,
LR , carpets, drapes are all eye cat
chers F1n1shed part1al basement. FA
propane gas furnace Rural Wl!!lter
Deluxe garage , ut11Jty bldg 1 1 acres
level land Shrubs and shade trees
Located 5 miles from GallipoliS on
blacktop road If thrs 1s what you are
look1ng for. It 1s sure to please
N 645

THE RURAL TOUCH out of the c1ty,
but 1ust a short drstance 4 bedrooms,
l1vmg room , bath, k1tchen , utll1ty area.
t1repla ce, fuel oil heat Situated on 53~
acres County water , 24x.30 ou tbulld1ng
S3S,OOO
N587

we cover Over 7
Mrlhon M1les to
Ftnd
You
A
Home.
• Phyll1s Loveday
Realtor Assoc .
Ph. Home 446 2230

(,litH (

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ntmty'11 ,.11111f'fllf I •"''"''"R Hf•NI I .I'll lilt· . lu,•tr• l

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

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ENJOY I ENJOYI
This splc &amp; span 12' x60'
3 bedroom Academy
Tra iler . Also 3 out
buildings, •stove, re
fr lgerator, all goes on
61 acre lot for the low,
low price of $12,900 Call
and see today
~ 481

COUNTRY Ll\11
AT ITS BEST
84 Acres More or Less
(Free Nat Gas)
Step tnto one of the
cleanest farms 1n em
1deal locat 1on
Three
good Slled bedrooms.
large hvmg room , sunny
ea t 1n kit chen and bath
Tobac co base, gas tease
and fr ee gas all goes
wrth If Large barn,
cel l ar
hou se
a11d
ch 1cken house Call to
day for many more ex·
tras
N483

2 LOTS GREEN ACRES
LotN21 , Sidewalk. 75'xl48 '
LotN23. Vacant88 ' frontage by 148' depth Proced to
Sell
034 NJJJ

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101 ACRE FARM- 5~1.900 - Country
l iving In a mOdest 3 bedroom home
located 1 mile off Rl 35near Thurman . •
The home has family room, fireplace,
bath, ce llar &amp; gas heat The 101 acre1
onclude 12 acres crop, 25 pasture and
balance In woodland, 2 b&amp;rns ,jllnd 3
small sheds At th1s price It's hard to
beat

CHARMING WORK SAVER - You' ll
agree that this 2 bedroom home is a real
bargain at $39,000
tmmacuate
housekeeping, quality construction and
could be easily expanded tor future llv·
lng space Include• eat In kitchen, large
pantry , roofed patio, electric heat,
detached 1112 car garage plus ne•rly 1
acre flat lawn Make us an offer, ow:lr
leaving area

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~LANDMARK

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219 ACRES - Rolling ca ttl e farm with
approx . 40 acres crop, 60 acres pasturet
and over 100 acres woods 2 large barns,
1400 lb tobacco base &amp; springs Also
modern 4 bedroom home and 1300' of
paved road frontage near Gage..
WILLOW DRIVE An exce llent
neighborhood 1n town to ratse your
fdmily dnd an ilttra ct rve bt leve l the en
T1re family Will love J bedrooms, new
carpel , lovely HI W floors , kitchen &amp;
d1nlng room , t•n baths, family room '"
firepla ce, tots of storage area Nat gas,
central a1r, garage &amp; new deck Nice
landscaped vard S.SO' s

POMEROY

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NEARLY NEW HOME - J ACRES A n1ce 4 bedroom bi leve l 1n a quiet,
counTry location 1ust 21!, miles from
town Includes a large k1tchen, 2 full
baths, fu ll ftn1shed lower level with
family room &amp; rec room, wOOdburner,
1ntercom . washer &amp; dryer . heat pump &amp;
cent air , and rural water Also includes
197'2 14x65 J B R mobile home ( presentlv
rented) , 101/7% assumable mortgage.
Best of all it' s a pretty settmg In Green
Grade School area S60's
KIDS CAN WALK TO SCHOOL - Just
tosted thos 1980 24x52 double wide on 1
acre near AddiW1IIe School Th1s nice
home has 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, 1tv1ng &amp;
family
room c omb ination with
ca thedral ce1img, dinmg room, equ ip·
ped kotchen and laundry area Very
ni ce location 539,900

1 ANTIQUE walnut bed
dresser. SlSO , 1 chit
(iirabe to matc h, S7S 1
single bedcomptete, $65
Call 446 3287.
t~d

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B ACRES
Within 10 mm . c'rive to downtown Gallipolis, C1ty
School system Has hookup tor mobile home, Gal lta
Rural water, electric and sept1 c tank , nlte l 1gnt on
pole, 20011 frontage on Graham School Rd T omber
Building sites CALL NOW
MAKE US AN OFFER
Three bedroom home. This home features
aluminum siding , utility room , complete c~rpet mg
and lovely modern kitchen Elec tr ic furna ce and
wood burner Call for more detail s about th1s 1m
moculate home In the country
M4!9
ORICK RANCH
Three bedroom brick ranch wlth 1n walkmg d1stance
to Hannan Trace Schools. Th ls home has a large
back yard, some fruit trees. bUilt 1n k1tchen and d1n
lng room , carport, front and back porch and 1S
reasonably priced
~ 432
SPRING \/ALLEY SUBDIVISION
vacant tots, nice size building lois w&lt;l~ all util ities
tnere Lot 51Ze101 8 bY 171 2 Better get um now
N456

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WP're Out ro Sell The Earth!

Lt::l ThE ::tUN SHINE IN thiS 2 story
well kept home J BR , Ph baths, l1vlng
room , f1reptace, formal dln.ng room,
del uxe k.1tct'1en , basement , fuel 01 1 FA
furnace. front porch, one of th e best
Large level lot for garden and recrea
tl on Convenoent, church, bank close by
Rural woter Start the new year off
nght Be the proud owner of thrs hom e
N6JB

NOT THE LAST WOR 0 IN STYLE but
located m a warm and tnendly village
Enloy the com forts of modern day !lv
rng m th1S older 3 BR home, w1th drn1ng
room , k1tchen, l1ving room. bath , car
port, plus a front porch
N579

J\CREAGE

HERE IT IS - One of th e fine st farms
ln tn(' ara Ill acres 1nclud 1ng 40 acres
t1llabl e, 50 acres pas ture surrounded by
fence that needs no r epa 1r 2 barn s
Modern nou:;e WITh ca rpet, washer &amp;
dryer, natu ra l gas h e ~'lt and also a
woodburner 2 cdr garage C1ty sc hool
d1stn c t
flus

NEW LISTING - 110 acres of land
located along SR 7 near the Oh10 R1ver
Some t1mber and a real hunter's
parad1se Cal l for more detai ls, before
It's too late
11598
VACANT LAND - 66 ac res, a large
port1on IS new wov en w1re fence Water
available tor ca ttle . Pasture, wood
land, approx 10 acres ttllable Harr1son
Twp Fronts on Lincoln P1ke and Carter
Road Listong proce 525,000.
N6S1
A PERSONAL AD
1 bel1eve th1 s tand to oe prrced
reasonable, 56 acres Over half t1llabl e.
Heavy grass sod Some trmber , lots of
fire wood Home site, concrete blocks,
electrrc, sept1c tank and c istern Tobac
co.base quota 1891 lbs , for 1981 1t 1s 378 1
lbs. Pr rccd for S22 ,SOO Th1S, 1 teet, 1S a
fa1r market valu e
II '46
NEW LISTING ACREAGE S
acres, more or less, R10 Grande Ex·
cellent bu1ldtng s1te Water tap Bu1ld
your new dream home this Spnngl Call
today'
U84

"MOBILE HOMES
CORNER LOT - MObt le home 1n goo&lt;..
cond1t1on Extra lnsulat1on. new vmy l
stdmg, '2 BR 1 FA fuel 011 furn tKe, eJoCira
coal and wood burn1ng stove Dnll ed
well. low maintenance Extra mob 1le
home hookup Level corne r tot $15,000
N 648
NEW LISTING - l acres, flat to roll
mg , some woods Ldrge 2117 car garage,
perf ec t tor that ma ch1ne or welding
shop Al so, 2 trailers L 1ve '" one and
rent t he other Ca ll Tod ay • Owner
wants a fast sa le
N 69'6

FARMS

WHERE YOU ' LL LIVE TOMORROW
- 7 room r emodeled house F eatures 3
BR , large baH1 , 2 good il r ep laces, new
FA fuel oil furna ce, energy sa v1ng , well
1nsu tated 90 acr es, more or l ess. pro
duct1 ve land Good fences Building s
well taken c are of 1800 lbs toba cc o
oase Good all around farm pn ced to

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RESIDENTIAl.
LOVELY AND NEAT - Starter home
for young couple 2 bedrooms 11v rng
room wrth f1r ep lace, k1tchen, bath,
enclosed porch and 1 car garage. Out bulld,ng for storage and n1ce lawn Call
today for more mformat1on
11 640
BUDGET PRICED Ia meet your needs
Older re modeled frame 3 bedroom
home located 1n Crown C1tY Llvtng
room , k1t chen, bath , nnd lull basement,
whrch ca n be used for a garage
S1tuated on smal l lot Pnced at $12 ,500
~ 641
MINI FARM - Gr een Town shrp, 3 Br ,
vrnyl srdrng, storm dl'W'Irc. ~.,d wmdows,
7 41 acres C REDUCEQ.cres woods,
pond, barn. lv.,,. IDS. tobacco base Less
than three miles from Gallipolis. ~ 495

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LOTS FOR SALE
DO YOU OWN A MOBILE HOME or
plan to butld") If so, you ' ve found JUSt
th e tot tor 1t Th1 s 64 ot an acre 1S readv
·Iter you Th e tr a iler hookup IS already
there, CJ iong w1t11 the elec tn c, sep t1 c
tank , rural water , and compl etely
es tabl rs hed lawn You also get an 8x l 2
littl e r ed burldtng along w1th ano ther
storage bUJ idmg Close to schools,
church and groce ry stores
11666
BUILOtNG LOTS
IS tot al, all
underground sewer lines Located oft
Upper Rt 7 SS,OOO eac ~
1 68S
NEW Ll STING - 3 Acr es, more or less
Rodn ey area C1ty conventence cou n
try atmosphere Don ' t let th1 s one get
itway Call todayl
N697

AMERICA'S

PRICED TO SELL IS this 2 oearoom
home Large storage room Garge New
s1d1ng and new wmng Excellent
garden area . $21,900
N673

VA ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE - Large
two story hom e Som e of the amen1t1es
are two story , 4 bedrooms , 11, baths,
FA natural gas furna ce, f1replace, cr ty
water , c1t y sewer Con1Jen1en t to chur
ches, stores, bank , etc Loca ted on 557
ac r e lot. Rutland
~ 644
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE NEAR Cl ·
TV - Th is one you must sec to ap
prec1ate Modern bri ck ran ch w1th fu ll
base ment 4 years old, less than two
miles of GallipoliS 3 larg e BR , 1112
baths. deluxe kit chen, most of the ap·
pllances 1ncluded
2 car garage,
f1r eplace, heat pump, centra l atr Many
more features a long w1th 25 acres of
cletln land fo r Income or your en10Y
ment Th ere are s1gns of Sprmg, cal l
now'
11 680
NO FINANCING WORRIES - Owner
1S w 111 1ng ro t1n ance th1 s home w1th
r'ert sonabl e down payment 2 bed rooms,
baTh , basemenl N 1ce v1ew of rive r
$13,500
M674

PRICE IS RIGHT 1f you l tke a moderh 1
home close to town w1th 5. acres fenced ,
•n Home lea'"""·u ·c E 0 R. FR . fulll
basementR ED
.. "'" k&lt;lchen.
natural ~d~ furnace, lllllw c1rcutar '
driveway, lf1 mile from c1 ty I 1m its II 616

RESIDENTIAL
jusT LISTED - Along SR 7 15 m on ·
from town 5 room house W1th full size!
basement s1tuated on 3 acres. Good •
barn, beautiful V1ew of the Ohio River
$3/,500
N S97
CONVENIENT LOCATION - 2 BR
hom e full basement, hardwood floor s. ~
c1ty 'w ater and sewage gas heat 1
$26,600
I 586
PRICE REDUCEO - Thospretty brick
ranch home has many amen 1t1es. 3
bedrooms, 11!, baths, sunny den, forma I
dm mg room , large 2 car garage , full
srze partly f1n1shed basement w1th a
workshop. family room, f 1replace and
cellar room all situated on one acre of
lawn . Best ye t , assumable FHA loan at
11'!1% mterestwith down payment 11624

WE NEED QUICK SALE. Own er s are
being tr ansferr ed Bnck ran ch, 3 yrs
old 3 SR . 11 :~ baths, formal DR , super
kitchen, most all appliances rnc luded
Clean, excel lent condrtron Over 2 acres
land over look.mg th e Oh10 Rrver Thi S
must move, pl ease ca ll us now
N 667
FINISH THIS ONE located on a quiet
ne1ghborhood on 5 91 acres House srze
30x51 ft 11v1ng room , kitchen drn1ng
combmat1on , fair ly wel l f1n1sh ed, 3 BR ,
bath , servrce area, storm windows
New aspha lt shmg ted roof Owner oc
cup1ed $25,000 gives you deed to rt all
~ 642

MOVE IN
CONDITION, woth
ma1ntenance free bnck ex ter 1or, 3
bedroom home, ma rn bath, large eat· •n
k1tchen , ll vmg room , uttlrty area and 1
ca r a t1a ched garage Over 1 acre of
l awn w1th a garden area Th1 s 1s a good
nerghborhood for chr ldren
11683

1 TOP SELLER, aNTURY 21™

�Pom

Two
AKC
regJstered
cocker spaniel · puppies.
Black females. After 6 p .m .
call992·7471.

Int. tractor, 986. 304 -675-

BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS.
Boarding
and
grooming . AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniels . Call446·4191 .
Musical
Instruments

51

LOWREY Super .Genie
organ. Sears rota-tiller,
Sears rid ing mower, lawn
roller. Bolen grader blade,
farm wagon . Call446·7508.
58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

APPLES for sale, call
Tot by owens 379·2502 .

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Farm Equipment

CULTIVATORS for cut
tractors, call 446·3417 or
446·7322 .

2245.

1 HOLSTEIN COW · Due to
freshen in 30 days: Call446·
4053 .

n'

Easy

COWS for sa le. 388 ·8592 .

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Real Estate
KUKER 400 gal. spray, Int.
540 4x16 in. plow~, M .F . 13.5
ft . disc ., Fert . auger, 1 set
snap on 15 .5 x 38 dual tires,
N.H. 367 Manure Spreader,
Dunham 14 ft . Harogator,
Int. tractor - 986. Ca ll 30-4·
675·2245.

1972 98 OLOS · $1 995. One
owner , fa ctor y a1r, c.-!! 1446·
3384.

A· l Appro)(imately 18
acres m/ 1 in Pom~roy .
Located on North St .
jUst off Lincoln Hill.
Sewer &amp;. water avail
able . Owner financ ing
possible.

A·l
POMEROY 3 1·"2
acres. Good buil di ng
site tor l or more
homes . Owner financi ng
possible .

8 9 CARRYOUT Pri ce
inc lu des . business &amp;
eq uipment . I nve11tory to
be purchased separate·
ly Owner willing to
negotiate lease with or
without upstairs apa r t·
ment . Real Estate ca n
be purchased also if in·
teres ted .
We are r'low interViewing for tull time sa les
agents in Meigs Co.
Area. Call for appoint·
ment, 594-3543.
Bob &amp; Kitty landrum
7'l7·2096
Ralph &amp; Vickie Coe
797·2096
Paul Perry - 797 ~ 2280
Zelia Ploghoft- 593·5244
Casev Noblick-797-2757

Appalachtan Power Company offers for sale on a
sealed bid basis the surface of a tract of land located
approximatetv Jl1 miles north of the Sporn Power
Plant on U. S. Highway 33, in Mason Countv. West
Virginia .

Stutes Real Esta1e
Bonnie Stutes·Reattor
446-4206

IMPROVEMENTS - One-story bloc·~ restaurant,
1860 sq . ft ., conta ining kitchen, walk up ser-vice
area, dining room and two (7) r es trooms,
baseboard heat, fluorescent lighting, three (3 ) w in·
dow air conditioners. Included is the restaurant
equipment located on the premises.
Brick Dwelling- three (31 bedrooms, living roam
with fireplace, kitchen and dining room combi ned,
bath and half, foyer and hallway , full basement and
attached two·car garage.
Land - 610ft. of highway frontage , and runs t 6 Ohio
Ri ver . The land is at three different e l e~Jatfbns, with
approximately 7.5 acres being on grade with the
highway , and embraces all improvements. These·
cond level e)(tends for appro)(imatelv 1200 ft. to a
stream ; the rema ining land is at a lower elevat ion
than th e two previous areas

PORTERBROOKE
owners moving Ott t of
1own and '"' ~· c.E 0 ave
nome
!his c. 'R
beh in\.. . une of the bes t
constructed homes 1n
the area .
THE ULTIMAT.E IN
ELEGANCE - Rest ing
on beautifully elevated
tree shrouded grounds
that stretch to an impos·
ing 1 1 2 aces . The owners
of th is dominating home
are blessed with a most
pictureSque
g;
fascinanng
vi e w .
Modern cedar
features a forma t dining
room &amp; living room.
Large master bedroom
with
slid i ng
door
leadi,ng onto a deck.
Familv rm . has wooden
plank flooring &amp; beam·
ed ceil ing , also leading
to a deck . Modern com ·
plefe kitchen also w ith
beamed ce iling . 2 wood
burning fireplac es, 2•'1
baths on main level.
Fu ll basement w i th
alarge rec . room . 2 car
garage with electri c
opener . Beautifullly
located in The Rio
Grande area. Shown by
.!!ppointment ontv!

e.o\t . . ,,

The minimum ' bid acceptable for this propertv Is
S156,700.00.

All interested parties should assemble on the pro·
pertv on Tuesday, March 24, 1981. between 10 : 00 a.
m. and 2:00p.m. for conducted tours by represen tatives of Appalachian. For further information call
Appalachian Power Companv, Charleston. West
Virginia, (304) 346·5728 or write P. 0 . Bo)( 1986,
Charlesto~. West Virginia , 25327.

Real Esta1e- General

..

BMR 371 - Restri cted building lot. 2 miles from
Gallipolis . Call us now.
BMR 375 - Nice brick ranch, includes 3 bedrooms,
Jlh baths, equipped kitchen, 2 car garage .
BI\1R 376 - Located in Ewington near mines, 3
bedrooms, living room , dining room, k"chen .
BMR 378 - 1112 story frame home includes 3
bedrooms, li'Ving room, dining room and eat in kit·
chen. City school district . $38,500.
BMR 380F - Bare land 100 acres, more or less,
mostly clear . Call for complete deta ils!
BMR 382 - In Cheshire, 4 bedroom home with full
basement, carport, 11h baths, kitchen and dining
area. Situated on large flat lot .
·
BMR 31U - Excellent buy for less than $30.000. 3 BR
home equipped for woadburner, like new kitchen,
also incfudes 20x20 lofted barn .
BMR - Just Listed - In Crown City - Well ca red
for 3 BR ranch style, /g. living room. family room.
eat-in kitchen . Situated on 2 lots. Ca ll for further
details!
BMA JBI - New Listing! Very nice 3 BR home .
Features a lg . fa milv room w ith fir eplace, and big
yard . Call for comple te detailS!

•

•

I

EOIENINGS
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC.
DONA McGHEE , ASSOC .
BETH NULL , ASSOC.
BUD McGHEE , Broker·Auct•oneer

446-0552
446·0552
446·9507
446·0552

new

0515.

1975 MATADOR stotlon
wagon, $1200. or best offer, ,
388·8891.

1979 CHEVY Monzo, 2 PIUS

1978 FORD Fiesta . Front
wheel drive. 35 m .p.g. Good
cond. 992·5170.

------~···

p.s., disc . brakes, am -fm · 1978 HONDA Accoq:t, S
radio; call 446·7340 after spd., a.c., radials . S4500 . · 1
Call 446· 7195.
4: 30 .

1973 Buick. Transmission
completely overhauled.
$100. 98.5·4351 .
1972 Chevy lmpalo, 2 door,
white, 3.50 engine, auto.
trans. $395. 992-7403.

"

...

UNI

ILPI

l'illl ""

b&lt;g

I " ~-~111~ (.) Nl ) Jl
bnr.,ht•d dtt vl•t ~ 0111

llt't!Chi\ rlll\l

bulky
moh,u•

i •lr n

Wd lrll"'ll

Ji i j

11

n1.1 ~e.

Olll•'li-lrlu'

1111 1:' ''"'

..

f

f

\

tnt'

197.8 Chevrolet

~~ICLe\~

w11 n lop 1n
te1~~t t:n}p LOll ar s dl d rrnm~
ol

~a" ~ ~e "'

tur: k:-.

I'

•h

5.8 ACRES Br ick
ranch, 4 bedrooms, lor
mal liv 1ng room &amp;. din
ing room, large k itchen ,
full basement , 2 car
garage. Barn and a
workshop. Owner Wtll
help fin ance . 10°o Int.
Rate!
ASSUMABLE LOAN LAND CONT~ACT
INT. •-;:; o:::NOI

~ p..\...E

,.. ""·

s ~ · ••C r10W .

TO

Free fee]mg an d socom lortab lt&gt;
~ she II ... ant ever t ¥er sron lm sun
dm and eve&lt;v da,' Sa~e Ill
sew tlrest' QUI C ~ cu t outs m p1
~ que g•ngh1tm seersucher !1• (11

Monte carlo, loaded.

1 d H111.Jd

LISTINGS NEEDED!
are selling prC)perty
·
I, Farms &amp;
needed .

ROOFING
•.

• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
6
$4800
1979 Pont1ac

IIJ

Gran Lemans,

) ()UIU 'n' EASY P!nERNS 170
~

?J.' W 1 8 ~ 1 1-te~t~t 'T U' ~ iH lUOII

~ Fastnon C.1111og tSJS1 \1 00
~ Ot51gntr C1blog
If]~
I 00
1 1981 N"dlo Cotator
1.00

"Specializing in
Re-Roofing"
• Small c~upenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer
PH . 992·2882
992·2606
992-7861
3· 11 ·1 mo. pd .

cyl. wagon .

1976 Dodge •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $2600
4 wheel. J;, ton .

121-Potol Quilts
124·hsr Gitb 'n' Ornamenh
12J.St11Ch 'n' P•tch Qu&lt;lts
122-StuH 'n ' PuH Qu1lll
ll8·Crrxhtt •rlh Squ11n
lll·EJSy Art ol Neodlopo&lt;nl
I 16 -N&lt;fty·f&lt;11y Qu&lt;lts

For all of your wiring needs.
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
or 992·7680

GRAVELY TRACTOR

&amp; SERVICE

SALES

GRAVEL.V ~ w.r..

J&amp;F
ENTIRPRISES

•
•
•
•

RIVERSIDE TRADE CENTER

Backhoe
Exnrvatlng
Septic Svstems
W1ter, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

-

Real Estate - General

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

EASTERN AVE.
PHONE

(8
·I

"' 'l~'

GALLIPOLIS
DUMP TRUCK
Ph.992 •7201
3·S· l mo.

446·9740

~

WOOD REALTY, INC.

~•

1

~
]

n..oE
'"
"OIJNTRY

.

~.

"

'., M
''' .
l
·
..

~- '·1·. ..

~~l~~..

.,... •.•~.
...
.',::·.·.k

l

SNApPE~

reasonable

rates;

scot-

WILL DO ALL kinds of car·
pentry work, including
paneling , ceilings, repairs,
etc. Experienced, with
references. Phone 992·3941 .
Will do carpenter work and
interior or exterior painting. Free estimates. CALL
992·6190 or 949·2614.

t:;==~=:;;::;:;:;;:::;;::=::-i
Vans &amp; 4 w .o .

.

1980 JEEP CJ ·5, 6·cyl., 4·
spd., C)(C , cond .. call .tt46·
1211.
1971 JEEP WAGONEER,
42.000 miles, air, PS, PB,
rear window defogger,
power rear window, .tt
wheel drive, exc. cond.
S..195. Call 388·9334 after
6pm .

83

•;;;;o:,•:o;."~"!~'

,.,.1,..

twrn•• •ltd , .. ,~,.,, '"'"'

•llO c•"Y • c•mJ!II• Unt ol l ro .. n
,,..,,., Geodt

WHERE YOU'LL LIVE TOMORROW - lovely
· br ick &amp; frame ran ch with 4 bedrooms, tor m a l din
ing , family room with f ir eplace &amp; above ground
pool. owner wants t ast sell , outstanding buy c lose lo
hospital. 911°o Loan Asst .
/flOSS

t
SPRING IS ALMOST here and this 3
bedroom nome is vearning for you to
co me see now well it's arranged.
Carpeted lg. liv . rm ., 2 bedrms., kit .,
din . rm ., utility rm ., and bath down . 1
lg. bedrm . up, '12 basement, nat . gas
heat . You mav want to consider
divid i ng 1 acre lot into smaller lots.
Conveniently located on Rt . 160. Pr iced
In the 60 's .

Very well kept cedar ranch home
in one of Gallia Countv 's finest subdivisions. 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, 21 00 square feet ot living
space, f ir epalce, free pool and cl ubhouse.
110947

2·26· 1

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING
All types ot root work ,
new or repair gutters
.lnd downspouts, guner
deo1nmg o1nd painting .
~II work guaro1ntccd.
Free Es.tlmate s
tle fuon.:~ble Prices
C.11t Howard
949·2862
9•9·2160
2 4 tt c

NEW LISTING -

j·

I I
.
you're I
ng
a beautiful view, thi s
carpeted, I yr . old home is
along Upper River Rd . in th e benD of
!he beautiful Oh io. Kyger Creek School
Dist .. modern and wel l insulated . This
has i ust been put on the market . Look at
this and buy for $.45,000 .00.

I

"·

l" l'

PACQUALE

•

•

,...
..

EEPS
consider this 2 bedrm . home across
from Pennyf ar~ Grocery . Sell your auto
and en joy the extra money and comfor t
from living close to the shopping, school
and enterta inment i!lrea . Thinking of
retiring some day . Buy now, rent and
move in when vou ' re ready .

• Heat Pumps
• Electric Heating
&amp; Wir ing
IndustriaL Commercial
and Residential

I I

lHE DABBLE SHOP

NICE TO COME HOME
ck
irame
ran ch with 3 bedrooms, family room with firepla ce
beaut iful ca rpel. 2 ca r garage.
~ 149.5
EXCELLENT tONDITII' ' I
1977 Kirkwood 14X70
mobile home; 3 bect.'"Q\..0 _c ntral air. n ice carpet,
located in Park La1';) ... urt .
#0041
s. ACRES ,__ Nice wooded land, excellent building
s•te rn th e countr y only 3 m il es from town .
11 1()20
EXCELLENT BUILDING LOT - Bu il d your
drea m home on th is lovely lot Con ta i ns 2 acres
fr ont is flat &amp; clea r cd·wr lh str eam &amp; woods in back '
C•IY sch . d ist.. close to R1 o Grilnrlf!, 110 .900
11 ,108

Call

1\.'iSQC.

DarJin Bloomer, Realtor,
John Fuller, Realtor

YOU WILL LIKE THIS carpeted 3
bedrm., modern ranch style home
located betwee n Gallipol is and Rio
Grande. Atta ched garage, com fortable
vard . Possibility of assuming e~isting
9°o land contract. Pr ice d In the 30's .
INCOME PROPERTY - Downstairs
buSiness location on Vine St., upstairs 5
room apartment , w/ tub and shower ;
also 3 room cottage in rear. $38,500 .00.
l0°o · fin anci ng ava ilable to qualified
buyer .

AlL.AS- TUien

weeoEATE~-aru,ncvner&amp;
tnmmen

SfiHL.- 8rusPI

cutten I trom

men
'fALOO- H• ·whnl mo1111en
W11111nm:e wnat we still

Snuu Engones- Our Sptc l o~lt\1
70 .. Condor St .

Pomeroy, Oh .

"YOUNGS

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for tree siding
estimates. 949·2801 or
949·2860 .
No Sunday Calls

KAUFPS

PWMBING

AND

HEAnNG
12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
3. 2. 1 mo .

I'IRPENTER

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

SERVICES"

!~~ ~~~~t'i~;~~·:;;:fr"

WI

Add

d
- rem:l~~~v
-Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrotework
- PI um bl ngand
electrlcll work
I Free EsllmaltS)
V.C. YOUNG II
992 '215 or "2·7314
4

ALL ST!'EL
Farm_ Buildings
Sius
"From30Kl0"
SMALL
Util"" Bu1'ld1·n•

r

n1

Sizes trom 4x61o 12K40

Rl. 3, BOK 54
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614·143·2.591
6· 1S·ffc

NOW OPEN
0 ALONG Lower Rl,er Rd .,
I POlls Dam. BeauTiful lot with
many fruit frees. Detached 2·car
garage, 3 bedrms., lg. 1111. rm ., newly
remOde led kit., patio . This one vou will
want to see . Priced In the 40' s.

.

::..
..

BUILDING LOT - I acre lot locat ed
along Kemper Hollow Rd. Rural water
available . Price $4,000 .00.
IN VINTON - Mobile home with 2 lots,
has carport and porch. 2 bedrooms, 2
baths . Thi~ is nice property and you can
nave it tor $25,00.00.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • eM ·
tensive remodeling
• E lectrica 1work
• Roofing work
12 ye:trs
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
2 23·1 mo.

K••P Tllil Art

lor Futur• ~tlerenu

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

Expert painting, body
work, pinstriping '
vinyl!ops.
Free Estimates
Call992·3421
Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
18
west Co. Rd. · 45769
Pomeroy,Oh .
Domestic, Japanese
European
Cars &amp;
&amp;

DOZER · backhoe, dump
truck. Call -146·4537.

1979 YAMAHA

d~essed.

llOOXS .

miles,
tully $3,500. Call446·7654.
only 1250
i980 650 HONDA Custom,
3,500 miles, $2200. Call 446·

om.
1979 HA~LEY Davidson
Electro Glide, 3000 miles,
exc. cond .• call 446 ·0038 af·
fer 3:30.

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE
Free Estimates
KEN SOLES

245-9113
2-19 tfc

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE
Water·Sewer· E lectric
Gas Line· Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
Countv Certilied
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367· 7560
1·7-tfc
ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

i

Mon. -Wed. 10 : 00· 9:00
Tues.·Fri.·Sat.
lO :OO·S:OO
Closed Thursdays
Stop in and see our lin~
ot plasttrcrafl. You can
tniovmakinavourQifts
and help fight intlatlon
located next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor In
Pomeroy .

~"DPiitS

PARTS AND SERVICE
AL.l MA.,; E§

Quality Products
Reasonable Prices

ewnn•n

• Dli,Oiah

e Or)' IrS

e Olillw•llltrt

eR.angu

•HotW•t•rTo~nk"

Rtp.ttrlnt Since lUJ

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
College Rd .
svracuse ,
Oh .
Ph . 992 ·3804
2 23 1 mo.

"'Spec••• H•t•s For "'
..- Coin L.~undrin

Prop•rll•s
.,.. Apt. Hous•Owntrs

... J!tnt•l

..- Mobl lt Hom• P•rkl

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;ASSOC.
Mortg age Bankers
992 · 7544
VA loar,s _
no money down
Federal Hous.ng 30..oonS25.000
5Cfilonbi'llance.
convc-ntioniiiLoans down
5~
c.1 utor 1ntorm4ltion
99 n 544

76

Rheem, Amana
&amp; carrier
AIRCONDITIONERS
&amp;HEAT PUMPS
Ph . 614 .992 . 7031

ARD

AVATORS

J&amp;C
SANIT'ftA'fiON'

SERVICE

WOOD REALTY, INC.

Trash Pickup in

}

7

..

All MOdels
Ava•lable
LEO MORRIS
Rl. I Side Hill Rd .
llutland. Ob .
'} Q

The Village Of
Middleport, Oh.

If(

Ph. 992 · 5016
or 992 · 7505
3 11 1 mO.

CHAIN liNK FENCE
FREE ESTIMATES
Ken
245·9113

QUALITY
MAIN ·
TENANCE
Electrical,
plumbing, heating, and air
conditioning. Call3889698.

Soles
Rio Grande

..

General Hauling

..

NOW HAULING housecoat
&amp; I imestone for driveways.

DILLARDS
WATER
DELIVERY Service. Call
446·7404.

Electrical

Auto parts,service,
outo repair,
wrecker
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries.
Call after 5, 446·
7717
.
OLDSMOBILE SPINNER
hubcaps. Call446·3513.

lnsta
lie
County
Certified
Ph. 367·7560

!·;=========~
Stripping

monds Body Shop. 379·2782.
78

Camping

Equipment
TRUCK
TOPPER ,
f iberglas. with sliding win·
dow for 61J2 ft. GMC or
Chevy truck, $325 . Call388·
9334 after 6 p.m.
NEW WINTER HOURS .
Apple City RV Center,
OH o
J k
ac son,
'
pen only
Wed .• 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sat .
9 a.m . to 5 p.m. New 1981
Coachmen ca mpers on
Call 286-5700 or

2 USED 22 fl . Coachmen
mini homes, like new, well
equipped, inquire at Apple
City Auto Sales, Rt. 6 bo&gt;
42, Jackson, OH . 45640. Tel.
286·5700.
28 fl. 5th . \'Vheel CAMPER ·
self contained, roof air
cond ., hitch included. Call
367·7822.

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning • Call Smeltzer's
Steomway . Call 61~ ·446·
2096 .

Frank Rose con st. co.
Remodeling repair, new

emergency no. 367·7131 .

PAINTING · Residential
and commercial. Interiorand exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free estimates. 17
yrs. exp. with references
call367 ·7784 or 367-7160 .

CALL 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird , rodent,
spiders. fleas and other
small insect control. Free
estimates given . A local
company
locaed
In
Gallipolis
area .
Bill
Thomas.
N
I STALL fireplace fa cing

446·4627

ACROSS
c&amp;w
CONTRACTORS
Specializing in Concrete
Rooling &amp; Remodeling
Home Improvements
Exterior &amp; Interior
Vinyl siding and. Soffit
roofing and gutter work .

BILL'S
Home Improvements
Nu·F'rime Replacement
Windows, Storm Win~
dows and Doors. Patio
Covers,
Carports .
Mobile
Home Ac cessories.
Free
Estimates.
691 Miller Drive
446·2642

M&amp;TCONSTRUCT
&amp; EXCAVATING, INC.
Backhoe and dozer work
by the job or by the
hour. Also, licensed septic tanks install~d .
Dump
truck.
Free
estimates. Call 188 8623
4

No-Prime replacemenl
windows
Stormwindows&amp;doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
How met Patio Covers
I·~~~~:~:;,•~::~·;~;~ rooms
I
homeawnings
Aluminum
utility
buildings
691MillerDrlve
446•2642

ADVANCED
F..A NINC SEWV1Cf::
446·3915
No Answor446· l062
Modern -ttc,,m c1e,1n1ng
tor c. 1rpef &amp; uphol srory
( 111 wro1n c:c work J.
• )cotchqu.trcl lM
•WAl l,, tloor ... , wmdow ...
.w.tt t• r
d.
:. mok c
" ·' "'·'9"
lndu &gt;tro.ll
· ComnH.•t·c•·''
wu .. •dunh.ll
IWilL' nd.lbll~. 8 ve.lr~ Clf ·
t)I..'I'U~ I1CL' . Wt.! do c.ue!

..........._~--

A. I . DUTY &amp; SON, Home
builders, specialize in
small convenient homes.
available, modeorate
free estimates, 614
1352.

16 Dinner

6 South

American

streetcar
70 Vehtcle

132 Affection
133 Tumbled

roden1

71 Sandarac

134 Plunge

20

73 Suppli"cah:t

135 Spoken
137 Small group

23 Some
ottspnng

..

,,

Run

~39

Exist
140 Clue

25 Approach

78 Ringworm
80 Pamphlet
81 Seine

141 Leaks

28 L1ghl rain

66 Dwell
8 7 Sanctuary

30 Dregs

89 88'olerage

3? Challenges
33 Fork prong
3-4 Knight
35 Walch face
37 Surfeit
39 Sunburn
40 Free tlckel
41 Brake. e .g
42 The sweel -

sop
44 Wireless
se1s
46 Ctan

47 Oreadlul

48 Devours

82 Long step~&gt;
84 ManeuveJ

troops

92 Home -run
king
95 Thick
98 Padd les

99

53 Steamship

{abbr .)
55 Enlrance
57 Compass

58 Hollow
59 Town map
60 Stale : Abbr

156 Rare
157 Clarine!$ ,

e.g.

ways

101 Ermines

160 Worms

103 Cicauhl
104 They : Fr.
105 Bridge
106 Near
107 Ql . part
108 Soaks
110 Man 's name
111 French artl·

cle
112 Cad
113 Aroma
115

117
119

1?0
121

62 Fall behind
64 Macaw!.
66 Calc1urr
symbol

Passage ~

1-43 Bearing
145 Cha
146 Heavy
downpour
1-48 Sponsors
150 Ambushers
152 Ascetic
153 Diminish
154 Wander

156 Pilcher
159 Taun 1

SO Typify

52 Unruly chrld

E~tptres

75 Oil source
77 Aabbi1

23 Mute
24 Sure
26 C!ergymen
28 Dressmaker
29 Transgress

pi

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC.
Box 19, Bidwell,
311·9877.
Sldew

128 Gasped
130 Plunder

cC'urse
t7 All
18 Sine!

image

'

Scale note

69 English

14 Walks m
water
19 Oemean.tnJ
2 1 Bulgarian
22 Sacred

~~~

68

1 Wrinkled

10

m~rcial . Workand
insured
.
Residential
com·
!67-0194 or 367-0427

t I.

HOWARD &amp; PISTOLE
Contractors · Build, siding,
remodel, concrete, roofing,
free estimates. Call col. ,
614-259 -7814 ask for Charles
or Mike .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

r~===:;:~~==~~

wall,~~;;~~~~~~;;~~

plaster, stucco, free est
chimney,
Simula'ted
brickdry
or stone;
~~~g Burdette, call 675·

WATER
WELLS .
Domestic and commercial.
pump sales and service.
Tom
Lewis
Dr i lling.
Seasonal discount on pum·
ps. 1·304-895·3802 or 1·304·
895·3641.

~.:=========:J

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
~46- 4208

SOUTHERN
SERVICE
CO. • Heating
mobile
home
furnaces,
electric
water tank repair.' Call hot
of ·
lice , 446 · 3008 night,

Free estimates,
work
construction,
allitlltypes.
fully guaranteed. Residential, commercial,
Industrial and mining,
electric work. MSHA
Cert.

SOLUTION

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing · Heating · Air
cOnditioning. 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph. -146· 1637.

and Refinishing
35 c
s
71
Auto Repair
ourt t.
Gallipolis, Ohio
ROBERTS B' ROTHERS
Calt446·3896
GARAE . 24 hr. wrecker
or446·3080
service. All types of repair. 1,::==========:.,
Upper Rt. 7 Call 446·2445 ~
daysand446-4792nlghts.

THE ARK · Electric, air BROTHERS U PHOLSTE·
conditioning, heat pump, RY , Gallipolis, Oh io, 256elec . furnace work·. Call 1562, all work completely
446·0463.
guaranteed.

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446·2735.

Septic Tanks
d

Furn~ure

JONES BOYS. WATER
SEWING
MACHINE SERVICE, call 367 ·7471 or
Repairs,
service,
all 367·0591.
makes! 992·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales 8,_,7_ _ _u=p,_,ho:::l::•c:le:::rC.Jy' - - and Service. We sharpen
TRISTATE
Scissors.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave., Gallipolis.
ELWOOD
BOWERS -146· 7833 or 446· 1833.
REPAIR
toasters, Irons, all srr1all'l MASTERCRAFT UPHOL·
appliances. Lawn mower. STERY SHOP
Com·
Next to State Highway mercial and residential. 32
Garage on Route 7, 985· years experience . Call 446·
3825.
2301 or 446·4971 . ·

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

O&amp;F CONTRACTORS
Home Improvements,
room additions, siding,
electrical &amp; air condi tioning, and insurance
claim repairs.
Guaranteed work. Free
Estimate. 446·3407.

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

REESE TRENCHING

Auto Part$

&amp; Accessories

GAWA
REFRIGERATION
INC.

82

1979 HONDA XL 250, exc.
cond., $900. Coll446·0515.

§~~§§g2~2~3~t~m§o:.~~~;;~~~=;~1 ~2~,·~t;tcfrr===~~~3~·t:':.':m::o:.~or

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Located along 2nd Ave . In city, 3 rentals, all In good condition. Call for more
Information.

32 LocustSt.
Gallipolis

85

,,

Call for estimates 36H101
DOZER work · excavating,
land clearing. Call-146·0051.

DENNY

Trucks .

985-3561

367~228

446·2599
446-4327

-O&amp;F ELECTRICALComplete Home Wiring..
Residential &amp; Cammer·
cia I.
Licensed Electricians
Guaranteed work
446·!458

WATER WELL Drilling
DEPENDABLE
and cleaning. Pumps sol~ JIM'S
and Installed, Call W.T. water delivery. Call 256·
9368 anytime.
Grant, 446·8508.

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Residential &amp; Light
Commercial E lectrico11

Ph_ Pomeroy
614· 992-7038
3 11 ·1 mo.

E the newness of th is 3
bedrm ., 2 storv home . New carpet . new
kit chen, new furna ce. new bath room,
fully modern . Priced in th e 20' s and
possibilitv of some financing. Call for
more information.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

OQzer work . Small jobs a LIMESTONE, gravel and
sand. All sizes. At Richards
specialty. 742·2753.
and Son, Upper River Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call -144·
83
EKCIVallng
7785.
'

84

286·1068.
========~=~~========~~+~~~;;;;;;;~display.

YOU CAN
I the co mforts of
city li-ving just over the boundarv line of
Burkhart Lane. 3 bedroom , liv . rm .,
din. rm ., 24' x24' fami ly rm ., full base·
ment , 1g. garage- w/ auto. door . You ca n
have all tnis plus furniture. Call to see
thi s one today . Priced in the 60 's.

Excavating

COMPLETE · sever in stallation &amp; backhoe· service for Racine-SyraCuse
sewer district. Dozer work
if needed. 949·2293 .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Pvlh I 'ell pro .

-

§pe(•..,"'

1111or• .
Ptunllll9 Ill"
""""' DOOII l.tio l'ro ' ""' 9011, uw• t
1110\II!NlJitG

~;~o ;th ,

STANDARD
PlUmbing-Healing
215 Third Ave., 446·3782

Cleaning,

chquard. 992·6309 or 742·

SANDERS CARPENTRY
SERVICE
Home lm ·
provement. interior and exterior. 15 yrs. e&gt;Cperlence.
Coli -146·2787.

mowers, r ldong tr,utors.

P&amp;s BUILDINGS

Patricia

Carpet

84

He~ting

&amp;

2211 .

. Sand r!!nd paint,
===========~~==~P~o~m~o~r~o~y~,~O~h~·==~~~~~~~~~2-~1~5-~l~m~o=.~HAMMONDS
BODY S129.95
SHOP
plus paint materials. Ham-

Office 446-1066
Russell D. Wood-Realtor-Broker
Evenings 446-4618
Ken Morgan-Realtor-Broker
Evenings 446·0971

Evenings

Gene's

ceilings,

free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

73

Plumbing

82

Home

Improvements

com· deep stream extraction .
merclal and residential, Free
est)mated,

~=========~~==~==~~~~~i~====~~~~=~

Blazer 4-wheel

1220

mowers .

lSimo

1975 Chevrolet ••••••••••••••••••••••••••$2500

--·

MillER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

PH . "nus

fu1 L• l•lot' o11n0 DOOl\ DIU\f '0 0
! ~ ' Ulll lor
ho11ndl rn 1

--

1976
CHEVY
van,
customized. good con dillon, $3,000. or best offer.
Call-146· 1026.

llePiincl
&amp;
rtCirng tr•cton., Pv1tt &amp; nil· pro.

l u~l 1 l d ~~
~ eflCI

handhni

1969 INTERNATIONAL 2
ton 1600 series truck, also
1971 GMC 2 ton truck . Call
367 ·7533.

11

STUCCO PLASTERING

textured

=
~======1=0·=7=·t=fc~t=~~;:===2~·~8-~tf~c~t======~3~·t~l=·t~fc~~

Gran Prix, air cond

1 S•tes l 4 6 8 Sw: 6 sundre\IS
~ I ~d -15 111 rr.tll Sff'l
~ $2.00 1!.11 l'd lil Ddl lt'HI AOO ~0.
D ~ tl t rn IDI

1979 DODGE D50; like new
cond. $4,600. 992·2882 .

Home

Improvements

MUST SELL, Make me on
offer 1980 Jeep CJ 5, 6 cyl, 4
spd, low mileage, canvas
top, will trade, call-146·1211
or 446·3594.

p.s., disc
. brakes,
am-fm,
8-lrock
stereo.
I nslde
lock,
camper top, · 40,000 miles.
S..,300. Coll379·2632 after 5.

992-5682

:
$5400
1979 Pontiac•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~ "' •t11 ern brotdely ru lll es
~
Prnl!t~O Panern 9082 Ch•ld c;

PORTER HOME
Featu red 1n Be t! er
Homes and Garden
Needs. A special fam ily
ro gi ve thi s hom e so me
T.L.C. Owner w ill help
l lnance 10°o Int . JO 40
yrs . Call tor more
detail s!

3
large
room

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon. -Fri.
9 A.M .·5: l0 P.M.

·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

4

RANCH HOME
com pl etely fini sh
3 bedrooms, modern
kit chen, L R ,
unt ini 5hed
Single cetr
Pnced in lhe

GARAGE

S4600

1

lo1 eM t1

ROGER HYSEll'S

Bobcat, 4 cyl.

TIME GOES ON you
will be pay 1ng more &amp;
more ren1. Why not buy
a home? Loan assump
tion , payments Only
$387 .00 inc lud ing tmws
and insurance. 1017°o
per ce nt i nter es t. 3
bedroom ran ch, l arge
ea t in kit chen. I1V1ng
room Home com pletely
carpet ed . Very n1cc.
Single ca r garage Nor
thup
area .
Pr iced
i n th·~ 4o• s.

DAIRY FARM
135 acres mar e or less, 4
milkers with automattc
, 800 gal. bulk
7 SilOS {800 tons
)
W i th si lo
lc&lt;nl&lt;,ac ing auger . Struc
ures : 40xao m etal ,
7h:40 m rlk house with
room, 40x 170 con
slab feed lot .

...

1979 Mercury•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $3900

tabnc

i

~

Trucks for Sale

8)

7._,3c___ _,v"'a'-"n'!.s'-"&amp;c:4!.:W~,D~.,...__

1978 4x4 CHEVY ·truck,

72

.......LAFF-A-DAY
_____ _ .... ........

CHEVY Scottsdale 20
series, 4·W·D, 1978 model,
exc. cond., call -144·7927 af·
tor 5:30.

&amp; Refrigeration

·

Pmlleel Pa1tern 9U7 M :s~ e~
) S&lt;ie&gt; 8 iO 11 !4 lo 18 '"'
~ \2 1b115l ~ 4 1 la ~ PS J y dfd~
l 4 5 111ch

Trucks for Sole

Red w / white inter ., tape .

po•~ed ~1cnoen1ess

se ru~~

•

1976 Oldsmobl.le ••••••••••••••••••••••••$3000

P,l ll •'lll

~ dbOH' the dee11 poilt&gt; ,\ th

1974 Chevy tmpat~, 350
auto. First $700. buys If .
Also 5 h.p. Brlggs-Straten,
new last spring, side shaft
~- 2nd trailer on the rlghi
Wolf Pen Rd . Off 143.

72

Business Services

nrotd&gt; ttl" lit H I~

It ha&lt;, thdl look ol

71
Autos lor Sale
19 76 Plymouth Valore
wagon, air conditioning,
etc., very nice 11500 00
Glen Bissell at 949·2801. or
9-19·21160.

•

•

cun BOOKS 11.11 "'"
1:!~~~~~~~;;;;.I~~ All
IJJ.fnhi011 Momo Qu&lt;lt&lt;ni

BMR 370 - Building si te 2.33 acres more or" less on
Route325 . Call for deta ils!

p.b.,

1974 Plymouth •••••.•••.•••• :;:~--~~::e: sg95 ...

Approximate!·; 1
acre in town . Grea l
locat ion for commercial
use on St . Rt. 33 &amp; Rr. 7.
Possible owner fi nanc
ing .

FOR SALE
DWELLING, RESTAURANT
&amp; 39.7 ACRES OF LAND

BMR 339F - JO acres in Rio Grande with 2 story
home that needs to be fin ished .

6384.

p.s .,

A-2

Real Estate - General

BMR 139-529,900 - Large 2 story home on Second
Ave. includes 3 bedrooms, fam ily room , living
room, diing room and kit chen .

radia ls, exc. concL call446·

auto .,

Elite $1,900.

4

BMR 336 - OWner anxious to sel l this home. Th is
home has 2800 sq . ft. of living space . Fam iiV room
with f ireplace. All th is on 6 acres .

1980 Honda Clvfc. 1,700
miles, S3,8.50. 1979 Pinto
24,000 miles, $1 ,7.50. ·378·

SEE US FOR A GOOD DEAL

Athens, OH . S94 3S43

· 5750.

.
1915 CHEVY Nova, 6 cvl .,

2 Hatchback, V·6, auto.,

4

1953 (301 FERGUSON trac·
tor, new (5 11 .1 Bush hogg
with stump jumper . New 7
ft. grader blade, all in e)(c .
cond., cal l -446·9487 . Price is
$1600.

BMR J44 - Land contract possible on a lovely brick
ranch. Includes fam ily room with firep lace, Ph
batnsand much, much more . Call now .

1977 OLDS Cutlass
Supreme, 2-dr .• p.s. ! p .b.,
a .c., new tires, SJ.250. Call
367 0644.

1973 MAVERICK
call 367-!1541 .

JimOwen&amp;Co.
REALTOR

$75.
7 FT . PLOW
Rototiller( $250. for Bolens
garden tractor, both for
S300. Call 446·9465 after 6
p.m.

BMR 383 - Small3 bedroom home that cou ld be us·
ed as rental income property . $15,900 ,

Autos for Sale

after 6.

1C#r-rrr21.

2 FARM tractors and all
farm machinery . Call 367·
7533.

BMR 384 - Attractive 3 BR ran ch in City School
Dist ., includes family room with f irepla ce and built·
in bookshelves. Equipped kitchen plus more. Call
for further details!

71

1974 MUSTANG. good con·
tit i on ,
runs
welt ,
automatic , PS, PB , best
reasonable offer , 675-6053

General

~

454 International Gas trac ·
tor
baler,
mowing
machine, wagons, other
farm machinery for sale.
Call446·3111 .

Broker· Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving o,ooo
communities
421:1 Second Ave.
Caii446-()SS2 Anytime

Autos for Sale

~

Kuker 400 gal. spray ; Int.
540, 4X16" plows : M .F . 13.5'
Disc .; fert. auger; 1 set
snap on IS.SxJB dual tires ;
N.H . 367 Manure Spreder ;
Dunham H ' Harogator ;

~

Come get a beautiful puppy
from
-;our
Humane
Society. All sizes, labs,
collies, poodles, setters
looking for homes. 992·6260.

Tim

124
126

127

Three~IOeC

sloth
Judge
Theron
symbol
Hrghway
Making
ready
Plump
Ltquel}·
Prophet

27 E~tpunged
31

Headline

33 Diplomacy
36 Conduct
38 Paradrse
40 Shut up
41 Decree
43 Portico
45 Madder
46 Ooitecl
4 7 Small drink
49 Marsh bird
5 1 Surg•cal
thread
52 hpiOSlOns
53 lath

54 Hin du gar -

DOWN

ment

I lfllertw1ned
2 f:uropean
penmsula
3 Tell
4 Superlatwe
ending

5 Transaction
6 Letter abbr.
7 High moun ·

lain

56 Predac1ous
59 Gave
60 Peel
61Wargod
63 Male geese
65 Agile
67 High. Mus
69 Video: Abbr
70 Rhythm

72 Spools

8 Pasteboard

74 01phthong

9 Fher

76 Pronoun ·

10 Gotten up

11 Perlorms
12 Race o f 1e1 ~
luce
13 Printer ' s
measure

14 Broad
15 -

Baba

77 Conceals

79

Uker,·

83 Free o!
65 Jumpec
86 Bellow
67 Oir:
88 Hearl'¥
89 Man s me~ ·

name
90 Chief
9 ~ Bar regally
92 Snake
93 Reach

94

Artifi callan~

guage
96 Seasoning
97 Emerald isle
100 T1n symbol

102 Walk
105 Chai r
Vend
112 Pit
113 Russian city
114 Sword
116 Preposihun
118 Debatable
120 Turn back~09

ward
121 Stone
122 Harmony
123 Microbe
125 Baggage
carriers
126 Sullen
12 7 Dispalched
129 Plallorm
131 42 gallons
132 Anon
133 Superior
134 Hinder
136 Camera pari
138 Desert
spo ts
140 Layers
,41 Aahonal
142 Winter woe

144 Keen
147 Crimson
1.. 8 Mau!

149 Capuchm
monkey
151 Dance step
153 Pronoun
15 5 Mount

18bb•

..

�March 15, 1981

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

Page-D-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Rally dramatizes walkout
conceptuaUy, we're in agreement/' substitutes and somein Younptown,
MARIEMONT, Ohio (AP ) day 16 of a strike by 1,000 public
said Richard Schneider of the Ohio
Striking teachers and sympathetic Education Association, who has
school . teachers, passed with some
area labor lea&lt;!ers planned a rally been working with the teachers sintalk between the school board and
here Saturday to dramatize the ce before they walked outlast Nov.
representatives for the Youngstown
seven-week-old walkout.
Education
Association. The two
12.
Tom Eich, president of the
sides
met
to
go over the school's
Ravenna School Superintendent
Mariemont Distr.i ct Education James Coli, meanwhile, said he
financial bOOks.
Association, predicted several hun- shared the optimism, but not the
Elsie Dieter, president of the
dred teachers would turn out from opinion of Schneider. "There has to
school board, said schools may be
Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana for the he an understanding on the issues."
I'IK!pened next week if police protecevent.
·
tion
can be assured for pupils and
The lone remaining issue is
Teachers ' strikes continued, money. The teachers want $11,600 as
teachel'll wishing to cross picket
meanwhile, in Rav ~nna and an annual starting base . The board
lines. The 36 schools were open in the
Youngstown.
first
week of the strike, but drew
has offered $11,300. Schools in the
Teachers in the I ,:18&amp;-student 3,700-pupil district have been open
oniy about 5 percent of the district's
suburban Cincinnati system walked throughout the stril&lt;e, staffed with
17,000 students in the second.
off the job Jan. 26 in ail effort to obtain a master contract with wage ,-------------~----------­
negotiations and other items. Fifty
strikers were fired five days later
for failing to return to work .
Glenn Miller, spokesman for the
Mariemont District Education
Association, said about 10 terWe install new fro.nt brake pads,
mination hearings had been held by
resurface rotors. repack front
Friday for the 50 strikers. Five
wheel bearings, inspect mader
1 wHEEL FRONT DISC) cvclinder,
brake caliper, and
hearings were held with teachers
~raKe hoses, bleed system and add
represented by an attorney, and five
new fluid, then road test the car.
w,ere "ramrodded through" without
M OST AMfRI(AN CAR S
a lawyer present, he said.
The hearings were to have been
completed by this weekend, but
many have been continued and will
I~ r.'
,' ,.l
J.
'
proceed through May, Miller said,
In Ravenna , the chief negotiator
' .. ' .
11
. for the striking Ravenna Education
Association said he was optimistic .
SAVE 110.00
SAVE '1.00
for a settlement in the nation's
We install new factory recomWe' I! set caster, camber and toe· in
longest teachers' strike, which hit its
mended spark plugs, new fuel
to ~anutacturer's specifications.
filter, adjust timing, set ldlt
7oth school day Friday.
Check suspension parts for wear
speed, check air filter, p.c . v., and
" If we can figure out a way to put
and damage, e~lso tires for wear
road test.
and
safety
.
Parts
e~Ctra,
if
needed
.
down in words that we trust each
WE
USE SUN ENGINE
No extra charge for air·condi·
other ... mercy, we' re done. That's
PERFORMANCE ANALYIIR
tioned (:ars, or tor's ion bars.
why we're so optimistic, because
Call for an appointment now .
SA VI

'49q

PllOGilESS- Extensive grading has taken place
on Middleport's Powell St. in preparation for the
88SembUng of Stone Woods, a f().apartment seolor
eiUzens housing complex. The modular units will

arrive witb all of the finishing details Including
covered walls, ldtcbens, appliances, carpeting, built-In
bookcases and other accessories.

Ohio Division of Forestry
suspends burning permits
TUPPERS PLAINS - In accordance with Ohio Revised Code
1503.21 the chief of the Division of
Forestry, Ohio Department of
Natural Resources suspends for the
period of Jan. I, 1981 through Dec.
31, 1981 the forestry burning penni!
to kindle fires, as required by the
Ohio Revised Code.
Counties involved are Athens,
Belmont, Carroll, Coshocton, Guer·
nsey, Harrison, Hocking, Jefferson,
Meigs,
Monroe,
Morgan ,
Muskingum, Noble, Perry,
Tuscarawas,
Vinton
and
Washington.
Purpose of this suspension is to
test the effectiveness of the burning
penoit in reducing the occurrence of
wildlife within the counties indicated.
Anyone planning to kindle a fire is
reminded to consult local and Envirorunental Protection Agency
regulations, not to burn on dry , windy days, and to take necessary
precautions (burn in a cleared area,
burn after 4 p.m., slaY with the fire
until it is out) to prevent fire from
escaping.
Penoitting a fire to escape to any
woodland or brushland is still
punishable under Ohio Revised Code

1503.18.
Jim Milliron, forest manager at
Shade River State Forest, issued the
following statement concerning the
measures taken mentioned above .
"Burning penoits will not be
issued during high hazard fire mon-

~it
..,...'
t '\.!. '
•

... ,

I

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

ELECTRONIC
IGNITION
TUNE UP

Listing For J\1arch 15- March 21
Supplement
to
. '

This week on

'

~mtb~

•14"
&lt;MOSTc~~E51i•IC·•HI •39 am.,'tc~~cm. ~~~~r~

r

.

and ~

.·

..

t':Dl

· .·Il-l
",n .···~t
\ ':

29'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
....,........

'·'

/'

·~~~·
.,j ; '=~

ths of March, April, May, October, to open burning.
"District 5, comprised of the
and November of this year.
WILL STOCK TROUT
state's
southernmost counties, will
''The requirement is being dropFILTER atMGE
ATHENS
, Ohio (AP ) - The Ohio
continue
the
burning
permit
ped for a year as an experiment 'to
Department
of
Natural
Resources'
program
and
will
be
used
as
a
con~
AND CHECK
test the effectiveness of the burning
Division of Wildlife plans to stock
pennit program,' and as a cost- trol by which to compare the results
1
1
MOST AMERICAN CAR!
rainbow trout in 10 southeastern
cutting measure. Forestry Division of suspending the program in
We will change the fluid, replace
Ohio lakes.
is trying the experiment under the Districts 3 and 4.
the filter, inspect the linkage and
The fish are to go into Rose Lake
If anyone has additional questions,
seals. Road test for proper perassumption that permits are net
in
Hocking County, Barnesville City
Forest
please
contact
your
nearest
really effective in preventing the ocReservoir and Belmont Lake in
currence of wildfires. People who or District Office."
Belmont County, New Lexington
District
10
Office
(located
at
360
E
.
get permits don't generally cause
Reservoir in Perry County, Forked
State
St.
.
Athens,
Oli)
,
593-3341;
Gif·
the problems.
Run Lake in Meigs County, Monroe
" Printed notices are being posted ford State Forest, 554-3177; Shade
in Monroe County, Wolf Run
Lake
River
State
Forest,
378-6116
;
Zaleski
throughout a portion of southeastern
Lake
in
Noble County, Dow Lake in
State
Forest,
596-5781
;
Barlow
Fire
Ohio that the Division of Forestry of
County,
Jackson City Reser·
Athens
District,
6711-2651;
Hocking
State
the Department of Natural Resourvoir
in
Jackson
County and Turkey
forest,
38S-4402
and
Perry
State
ces has suspended the requirement
Creek
Lake
in
Scioto
County.
Forest,
342-2640.
for obtaining free pennits to kindie
fires in Districts 3 and 4. Permits r;:;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;:::::::::;:;:;~~~~:::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
previously were needed during the
spring and fall forest seasons.
" While the permits won' t be
required for 1981, we advise persons ·
who start fires for the purposes of
eliminating brush and debris to use
caution. We recommend that they
' .
, . •'
burn in a clear area, burn after 4
;
p.m ., and not to burn on dry, windy
days.
"In the state's three fire protec•
tion districts, covering the
southeastern third of the state, grass
and brush fires destroy from 3,000 to
4,000 acres per year.
" Permitting a fire to escape to any
woodlahd or brushland is still
punishable under Ohio Law. State
and federal Environmental Protection Agency regulations also apply

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Offer. special courses
RIO GRANDE - For the fourth
consecutive year, Rio Grande
College and Community College, in
cooperation with Bob Evans Farms,
will offer an opportunity for individuals to learn Early American
Homestead skills. Purpose is to
preserve and pass along to future
generations, skills developed by our
forefathers that exemplify the heart
of our cultural heritage.
Some of the region's finest expert
artisans have been selected to teach

in the "school."
The following courses will be offered on these dates : Homestead
Living, June 11).19; Coloni.ai Style
Metal Lanterns, June 15·19;
American Antique Glass, June 2226; Blacksmithing, June 29-July 3;
Basket Weaving, July S.10 ; Fun·
damentals of Horse Care, July 1).10 ;
Pottery, July 13-17; Chair Caning,
July 20-24; Wool Spinning, July 2(}.
24; Stained Glass, July 27-31; Advanced Blacksmithing, August 3-7 ;
Tole painting, August 3-7 ; In·
traduction to Weaving, August 1().14;
Intermediate Stained Glass, August
17-21; Introduction to Antiques,

August 18-20.
Workshops

.
have

limited

For further information concerning the School of Homestead
Living, please contact Bernie Mur·
phy, Director of Continuing
Education,
Rio
Grande
College/Conununity College, 241).
5353, extension 202.
A special Math course will be of·
fered at Rio Grande College and
Community College providing there
is sufficient interest.
The course , Math Methods 485,
will be held at a special time, ~
p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays,
and will begin with the regular
Spring Quarter on March 10.
This Math course will demonstrate and explore the usage of
Cuisenaire Rods and Fingermath,
both of which are relatively
unknown methods of counting and
computing in the American culture.
For further information regarding
this course, please contact Dr. Jerry
Dale Jones, Rio Grande College, 241).
5353, extension 335, or the
Professi~nal Education Department, 245-5353, extension 245.

Announce coupon dates
POMEROY - Residents participating in the Meigs County
Department of Health WIC program
are to pick up their April and May
coupons on the following schedule: A
thruC, FridaY (&amp;-11 only), March 20;
DthruH, Monday (!HI only), March
23; I thru M, Tuesday (9-11 a.m .. 1-3

MEETS WEDNESOA Y
PGMEROY-The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club will meet in
special session Wednesday at noon
at the Meigs IM. All officel'll, directors and Uo1111 are urfll!d to attend.

.F~
.... , ,.,.
~~es

enroi~nent and are filled on a first·
come, first-served basis.

p.m.), March 24; N thru R, Wednesday (9-11 only), March 25 ; S thru
T, Thursday (9-11 only), Mdrch 26;
W thru V, Friday (9-11 only), March
'll.
These dates are for April and May
Coupons . Make-up day is April 8
from 9-ll only .

TO MEET TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, will meet
Tuesday for a birthday dinner to be
served at 6:30p.m. for all membel'll,
auxiliary members and families.

•

Mtd.:M:miu
Instead®Bras
Body Language"' Bras &amp; Panties
Playtops"' Bras
Free Spirit"' Bras,
Bottoms &amp; Body Briefers
Super Look" Panties

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Featuring NEW Playtops
Cotton Blend Sports Bra
by

Cross Your Heart®

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P~legrino (Vincent

S.etta. left) and State's Attorney Kenneth Dutton (Cr. . T

l().year-old girl, in THE CHICAGO STORY, a powerful contemporary drama on 'The Sunday
Event, March 15 on NBC-lV.
·

I
I

Public De.tender Lou

Nellon) listen to a point of law dunng the trial of an illiterate Chicago man accused of ~hcllllii"

'--

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It's the perfect time to try NEW Playtex styles &amp; save on your favorites!
Sale ends April11 , 1981

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
--

·-·---

Covering Meigs-Gallia-Mason Counties
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