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Page--1.4-T he Daily Senlinel

Pomeroy

••

l=riday, December 18,1981

Middleporl, Ohio
'

30 court cases .end in Meigs County Court
Sevenleen defendanls paid fines
and thirleen forfeited bonds Wednesday in Meigs County Court,
presided over by Judge Patrick
O'Brien.

Paying fines were James Clark,
Cleves, aiding another in hunting
deer while ~ssessing a gun, after
harvesting a deer, $150, and hunting
on private property without written
pennission, $20, and cosls; Michael
HaUer, Chillicothe, disonlerly conduel, cosls only ; Billie Stout,
Albany, failure to display valid
registration or validation sticker,
$10andcosts; Douglas Smith, Crown
City, failure to display valid
registration or validation sticker,
$10 and costs; Henry Sprouse,

Ford
·employes
lose benefits

· Forfeiting bOads were Clifford D. Jr., LOng Bottom, driving while inStevens, Columbus, driving while in- toxicated, three claya confinement,
toxicated, ·$370.50; Craig Wade, $ISO ·and costs, James Grady,
costs; Charles Hossler, Pometoy, Parkersburg, speedin.g, $40.SO;
James Brudayour, Charleston, W.
stop sign violation, $10 and costs;
Deborah Shelton, GallipoliJ!, failure Va., speeding, $39; Michael Boggs,
to display valid regl.stration or Glenville, W. Va., speeding, $45.SO;
validation sticker, '10 and costs; Rosemary Hubbard, Racine, no
Mary Cleek, Middleport, driving left valid registration, $45.SO; Gerald H.
COLuM~JUS, Ohlo (AP) - With
of center, $10 and cosls; Dwight Harden, Bardstown, Ky. , speeding, six weeka left until the application
Davis, Coolville, speeding, $24 and $40.SO; James R. Riggs, South Point, deadline, 137,000 Ohio households
costs; Evelyn Wood, Long Bottom, illegal loaded fireann, $25 and already have been declared eligible
·speeding, $22 and costs; Larry E. costs; Norbert S. Riley, Cincinnati, for a program that helps people pay
DeWitt, Route 2, Bidwell, speeding; aiding in illegal hunting of deer, · part of their winter heating bills, il
$10 and costs; Victor R. Painter, $150, hunting without pennission, state official said today.
Middleport, illegal bumper height, $20; William F. Elfers, Cincinnati,
"The 137,000 figure represents
.,10 and costs; Robert E. Russell, failure to detach temporary tag, v.:;, nearly 50 percent of the 281,183
Pomeroy, defective brakes, $25 and · hunting without pennission, $25; · households that received $14.2
costs; Barbara J . Stroud, Route I, Craig Foley, Reedsville, driving million in (Home Energy Aasistance
Gallipolis, speeding, $23 and costs; while intoxicated, 30 days con- Program) benefits last winter," said
Arnold M. Grate, Rutland, speeding, finement, suspension 15 days, $250 James A. Duerk, stale development
$24 and costs; Howard Loga_
n, and costs, one year probation, and director.
Pomeroy, failure _to yield half of driving while under suspension, 15
Filing deadline for the low-income
days confinement, $150; Earl Kauff, . assistance program is Jan. 31.
roadway, $10 and costs.
Columbus, speeding, $23 and cosls;
Gary Nelson, Minersville, failure to
display valid registration, $10 and

----

.

Duerk said the program will pay Assembly required that IS pereent of
part, but not aU, of home heating Ohio's HEAP lunda be used to pay
bills· for qualified recipients in for the state weatherization
• program and 10 percent muSt go to
December,JanuaryandFebruary.
But benefits this winter w!U be less finance a statewide emergency
because less money is available and program.
"1be purpose of the emergency
more households potentially are
eligible, he said. The subaidy will program is to try to prevent utillty
range from 13 percent of the billa to service disconnections for
40 pereenl That compares to sub- households unable to pay their
Sidles of 3l pereent to 60 percent paid bills," he said.
The emergency program began
laltyear.
Changes in state law made by the • Nov. 16. Administered by local comlegislature also will reduce the munity action agencies, Duerk said
money available for energy 1,11! households received $183,809 in
assistance, Duerk said. The.General emergency help during the first two
weeks of the program.

Vot. IS No. 45

REG. •399.95

of overtime premiwns, and change;

in formulas for computing
retirement benefits for those who
quit working in 1982, Haines said.
In a letter sent to salaried employees, Phillip Caldwell, Ford's
chainnan of the bOanl, said the
reductions "are aimed at achieving
further cost reductions and preventing further major workforce reduc-

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More ' than 300 production employees were laid off bldefinitely a
month ago at the Afton plant, which
produces automatic transmissions
for the Lynx and Escort models.

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REG. '225.95

UNITED NATIONS (AP) -Israel
'has indicated it will ignore a
·unanimous U.N. Security Council
resolution declaring its annexation
of the Golan Heights "null and
1

REG. '119.95

•

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second degree murder in connection

. with the same incident by a jury in

Wood CoitQty, has not yet been set
but Circuit Clerk Miles Epling expects Judge Clarence Watt to deliver
a sentence on Monday or Tuesday.
Young wa~ released from his
previous sentence of five-18 years in
the state penitentiary at Moundsville in March on a writ of habeas
corpus granted by a .federal district
L'OUrt judge in Wheeling. The writ
was granted apparently due to an
impr"'1t'r instruction given to the
jury by the judge in Wood County but
the state was given the option of retrying Young.
First degree murder without mercy carries a penalty of Ufe in prison,
with no chance of parole, in West
Virginia.
'
·
Prosecuting , Attorney Damon B.
Morgan Jr., following the reading of

D-1

•

POLAND:
Between East and West

132900 .
e

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ON YOUR FAVORITE STEREO ALBUM$!
OUR ENTIRE STOC!&lt; IS ON SALE
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cou11try, Pop, Religious, Sound Tracks, Instrumental, Children's.

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FELDS
·-

• •

is just and fair this time."

Before going into deliberations
Friday afternoon, the jury heard instructions from the court on the law
and closing statements from both
Morgan and Raymond G. Musgrave
and James Casey, court-appointed
defense attorneys for Young.
Morgan began his closing .
arguments by displaying the
physical evidence before the jury
and asking the jury to judge the
whole evidence in the case and to
"show John Lewis Young the same
amount of mercy he shqwed Mary
Lucille Berry."
He then reviewed the evidence the

!Continued on A-4)

.,$.&gt;Qr
'

By ROBERT E. 1\ULLER
Asspc!8ted Press WrUer

.

.TAPE SALE

News briefs.

.

SNOWY.WHITE
-This camera eye view of the Whik House
framed by the iron fence which encloses i~ shows the seasou's first
snowfall that fell on the Washlngtoo area earlier this week. tAP Lus•rpholo).

Ex-Rio Grande trustee dies
COLUMBUS, Ohio - William R. Mnich, 55, owner of WMN! and WRMZ radio stations in Colwnbus, died Friday, said a station vice
president, Martin Petree.
Mnich died at St. Anthony Hospital after complaining of chest pains
P~tree Said.
'
Milich, a graduate of Ohio University who has served on the board of
. trustees of Rio Grande College, put the two stations on the air in April
1957. He was fro!O Pleasant City and is survived by his wife, Norma
and five children.
'

Sets location for cancer center
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio Siate University's $40 million cancer institute s.~ould be built in the open area adjacent to the east side of
University Hospital in Colwnbus, says the hospital board of trustees.
Although the cancer institute build.ng hasn't been designed, architect C. Corliss Inscho said that for planning studies, it was decided
the structure would need to be at least five stories high.

Khadafy poll,

STEREO ALBUMS

REG. 1159.00

I&gt; Multim cdi ol Inc . Newspaper

lhe verdict, said, "f found the jurors
of Mason County ultimately did
decide what is just and fair ... and it

.Statewid~. T

'

SPECIAl.

SALf

Young found guilty
·By JUDYOjVEN
Special to the Times-Sentloel
POINT PLEASANT - A Mason
County Circuit Court jury convicted
John Lewl.s Young .of first degree
munler Friday in connection with
the stabbing death of Mary Lucille
Berry, the S8·year-old Mason
. businesswoman whose nude body
was discovered in bed in her home
on the morning of Dec. I, 1976.
The three-woma~ .and nine-man
jury, who heard eviiilince in the case
for an entire week, deliberated only
an hour before returning the guilty
verdict at approximately 5 p.m. The
jury did not recommend mercy.
Sentencing for Young, 37, who was
convicted in N,ovember, 1977, of

12 Sections. 88 Po1ges 35 Cents

Sunday, Dec. 20, 1981

COLUMBUS,.Ohlo (AP) -Campaign spending lor
GALLIPOUS - A successful candidate for the
Gallla County Local Board of Education was the big- and against Issu~ I, which was defeated tn last November's election, was the highest tn slate llJstory on
gest single spender In last month's ~neral election.
a
single statewide issue.
.
Daryl WJ. Saltsbury, Rt. 4, GalUpolls, maintenance
supervlso with the IIChool dtstrtct, spent $262.90, acThe $6.3 million total also Is the third highest ever
spent on a statewide ballot tssue among aU the states,
cording to his expense report !1led with the county
the office of Secretary of State Anthony J. Celebrezze
board of elections. The re~rt shows the money was
Jr. says. ·
spent on cards, posters, magnetic signs, adverttstng
CaUfornla reported $6.8 million In spending In 19ill
and gas.
Candidates In r ~e election were required by law to on a rent control proposal and $7.1 mllllon In Norue their expenses with the,board by4 p.m. Friday 45
vember 1978 on a no-smoking areas amendment, in
the only outlays that exceeded that of Issue I.
days after the election.
Camapalgn financial statements Involving the two
A close second is another candidate for the board,
·Claudia M. Lyon, Rt.l, Patrtot,.who lost the election. · issues on the ballot were fUed ln Celebrezze's office
·
Her report said $258.04 was spent on advertising, pos- prior to a 4 p.m. Friday deadline.
The insurance Industry bank;olled most of the camters and canis.
For a single issue, the Sold on Schools committee, paign rcir Issue 1, a proposal which would have let
which unsuccessfully sought the passage of a 3.7-mill private Insurance companies offer workers' compenbond Issue last Sept 29fortheconstructionorupgrad- sation coverage in competition with · the state
tng of GaUla Local's elementary schools, spent monopoly.
Overall, the Ohio Committee for Free Enterprise
$1,523.44. The money was spent on radio advertising,
Competltion
reported spending $4.2 mWlon and said it
ito cream for its booth at the GaUia County Junior
(Continued on A-4)
(Continued on A-4)

'

The resolution, adopted 15-{) Thursday, demands that Israel "rescind
forthwith its decision." The council
asked the U.N. secretary-general to
report back to it within two weeks on
whether Israel has complied.
Asked by reporter if there was
any possibility Israel would do so,
Israeli Ambassador Yehuda Z. Blum
·said, 0 That question is rhetorical,"
by which he apparently meant there
was no chance.
If Israel does not comply, the
resolution calls for the Security
Council to "meet urgently and not
later than 5 January 1982 to consider
taking appropriate measures in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations.''
The word Hconsider" is a compromise worked out by the
American delegation with representatives of Syria, which favored a
direct threat of sanctions.
Syrian Ambassador Dis-Allah ElFaltai said he ns pleased by the
unanimous vole and would return to
the council in January to "request
that sanctions should be imposed on
the s&lt;&gt;eaUed state which accepts no
laws."
The United States, as one of the
five pennanent council members
with veto ~er, has threatened to
block any mandatory economic and
~litical sanctions against Israel.
Syria asked for the Security Council action a,fter Israel's Parliament
voted Monday to aJUlel[ the strategic
Golan Heights, which overlook northem Israel and were captured from
Syria in the 11161 Middle East War.
Deputy Chief U.S. Delegate
Charles M. Llchenstein said the
United States s~pported the
resolution becauae it doean't accept
Israel's unilateral- move "as deter·
mining the status of the territory ... "
In ])amaaeUI, the Syrian government said Israel's lellon 1"11 pushing
the Middle East to the edge of nr,"

•

Jury recommends 'no .m ercy'

By KEVJN KELLY
'l'tJnes.&amp;mtlnel Staff

'

SPECIAL

'

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

LOcally. •.•

PANASONIC
.

reduCing cost-of-living allowance payments for salaried
workers. The company would
not disclose the sa vlngs it
expected.
Allis-Chalmers Corp., a machinery manufacturer hurt by a
slump in farm equipment sales,
announced It was suspending Its
quarterly dividend and its stock
price dropped $1 on the New
York Stock Exchange, io si6.50
a share. The company's stock
has tumbled more than 50 per·

cent since the start of the year.
19111, when the economy was
And Scott Paper Co., L'le giant
mired in recession.
forest products company, said it
The Commerce Department
would temporarily suspend opsaid gross national product eration of a high-technolOIY
the in!latlon-!ldjusled value of
paper machine at Its Everett,
all goods and services produced
Wish., plant Feb. 1. The com· · tn the nallon - wUI fall at an
pany said about 135 workers
annual rate of 5.4 percent
would be idled.
The Commerce Department
Those actions underscored the
also revised its estimate of GNP
depressed state of the economy . for the third quarter ended Sept.
and supported the government's
:11, increasing the annual rate &lt;1
estimate Friday that gross naga,ln to 1.4 percent from the pretional product for the current
vious 0.6 percent. The Increase
business quarter showed the big·
was attrtbuted to a buildup of ungest decUne since the.spring of
sold goods.

Campaign spending records set

·REG. '389.95

AKAI
S-TRACK
TAPE DECK

paid personal holidays, cutting
vacation time by 50 percent and

tmes·
Today's
T-S

The plant has heen shut down since Monday, the start of a holiday
layoff for all but 150 of the plani's
1,800 management and production
workers.
The normal l!klay holiday break
was extended to 35 days this year for
hourly workers at the Batavia plant,
running through Jan. 17.
Ford spokesman. Thurwood
Haines said fringe benefits are being
reduced for salaried workers at the
Afton plant and others in North
America.
The cuts include the loss of one ·
week of paid vacation next year ,loss

u:
"

Copyrighted 1911

economic times, a swkesman said.

Israel
•
tgnores
Security
Council

Humbug!"

-.

.

By ROBERT BVRNS
AP •tel, eM Wrtter
Recession is whipsawing
America's manufacturers, an(!
, the government's latest mea·
sure of economic activity foretells more trouble ahead.
The hanl-pressed automobile
industry, pegged by government estimates to lose $1.4 billion this year, shciwed more
signs of financial strain Friday
as General Motors Corp. announced it was cutting benefits
for U.S, salaried workers.
GM said
was eUrnlnating
i

,'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) - Salaried
workers at the Font Motor Co.'s
nearby Afton transmission plant are
losing some of their fringe benefits
to help the autornaker weather tough

Economic activity foretells trouble ahead

P\lmeroy, driving while intoxicated, Sheldon Capehart, . Coolville,
three days confinement, $250 and registration belonging to another
costs, 30 days license sllBjlO!I18ion; · vehicle, cosll only.

137,000 qualify for help

'

Recession whips American business

Red. trade
· Kn~C-4

A,.a
t20.35V "l· milliS
Population
35.580,000

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Polish \workers hold out
against military ·r egime
Note: matertal lrom AP correspondeat 'lbomaa W. Netter was ·
subject to censorship and may have
heen altered.
WAJ!SAW, Poland (AF) - From
the southern coal fields to the giant
Lenin Shipyards on the Baltic
Coast, defiant Polish workers are
reported holding out against a milItary regime delennined to crush
strikes and restore order.
Pope John Paul II Saturday dispatched two special enjoys to Poland on a fact-finding mission lor
the pontiff. The Vatican said It has
no direct contact with PoUsh
church olflctals, which It said has
heen hampering its diplomatic efforts to end the crtsls.
Italian Archbishop Luigi Poggi,
the Vatican specialist on East Europe, and Poiish Monslgn,or lanusz
Polonec of the Vatican foreign service left for Vlerina by plane. From
there, they planned to en.~r Poland
by tratn.
A high-level Polish government .
official told the U.S, Embusy that
strikeS are under way at 43 enter·
prtses in eight provinces, ~ State
Department said Friday,
A young miner who wu at the
Wujek mine in southern Poland
wbere·IIE!YIII ol his coworlren were
killed Wednesday related his accoont of the fighting in a report

-~

.

from Poland Friday. It was the first
olflclaUy confirmed incident in
which Polish troops killed protest·
log workers.
The man said pollee lobbed teargas into the mine entrance, then attacked tn small groups, grappUng
with chain-swinging miners. Radio
Warsaw confirmed the , seven
deaths and said !ll miners and policemen were lnj ured in the
fighting.

The United Stares has
facts to · support President
Reagan's statement that the ·
suppression of Solidarity by
the Polish governnrent is being done with Soviet
support.
There are "a whole host of
hard intelligence facu" that
led to Reagan's concltuion
that the crackdown was being done "with the full
knowledge and 'the supporl
of the Soviet Union," a senior
adminutration official 10id
Saturday.

The Communist government has
said 200 pecple have been inJured tn
clashes since martial. law was declared last Sunday and Solidarity,
the Independent labor federation,
was baMed. They blamed the
bloodshed on provocateiU'S wbo "do
not want the community to return
calmly to work.''
Thousands of demonstrators In·
Kracow and Lodz were dispersed
(Continued on A-4)

�..

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Dec. 20, 1981

Commentary and perspective

Pomeroy-Middleport~Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Cutting medical costs. . ,. .____________R_obert_._w._'alters_

P•g.,:....A-2
Dec. 20, 1911

A~STIN,

Texas (NEAl _
Resiclen.ts of this city don't enjoy any
Bpeda! llllmunlly .to Ulness, dise...,
or accidents - but the amount of
time they spend in local buapltals Is
almost 40 pereent lower than the
national average for urban areas.
Dramatic disparities in the cost
and utilization of medical services
are beginning to surface throughout
the country. It now costs twice 88
~uch, for ~xample, to have a baby
m Boston than in Seattle.
·
In Minneapolis-St. Paul, the
overall rate of inflation thas been
consistentiy higher tllan the national
average throughout the past five
years - but the increase in the cost
of health care in the Twin Cities·
during the same periotl has 6een
significantly lower thlm in other
: metropolitanareas.
COIII-conscious competition has
come to the once genteel healt!H:are
field, supplanting the traditional
personal relationship between doctor and patiem wiih an unprecedented array of institutional
.arrangements and individual ·
relationships.
Proponents of lhoae new approaches claim they offer a unique
opportunity to reduce the soaring

James ]. Ki/palrick
The graves of academe======================~====~===
WASHINGTON - Somewhere .in redistributed to the classroom
this broad land, I am advised on tead1ers. The third motion would be
good authority, are 16,000 school to elect Richard Mitchell czar of the
boards composed of 95,000 individual. whole education shebang, with
school board members. In the 50 plenary authority to clean up the
state capitals sit 7,482 state · fearful mess we are in.
leglslators. And I have a dream.
There would be some opposition to
I dream of seating all 102,482 of 1 these salutary motions, for many of
~m in the New Orleans Superdome , the legislators and school board
or in the Hollywood Bowl. I would I members are them:;elves among the
provide each of the dignitaries with' most illiterate products of the public
a copy of Richard Mitchell's "The school system, but the proposition
Graves of Academe," newly should cary comfortably even so.
P!lblished by Utile, Brown. For two And the result would be the most
hours, a reasonable silen·ce would dramatic process pf reformation'sinprevail, punctuated only by cries o! ce Luther knocked upon the
"Hallelujah!" aod " Arpen, cathedral doors of Wittenberg.
brother!" and "By George, .the , Mr. Mitchell is a professor of
fellow is right!" All hell would then English at Glassboro State College '
break loose . .
in New Jersey. He is also the editor,
Motions from the floor would be in· publisher, printer and assiStant cirvited. The flrst motion would be to culation . manager of The Unbum aU s.!hools of education to the derground Grammarian, a monthly
ground. The second motion would publication, printed on asbestos
call for the dismissal of all superi"" stock, in which he treats the
tendents, assistant superintendents, educationists of our land with the
curricu1um facilitators, counselors, C&lt;lntempt they so royally deserve.
consultants and other such super- Finally, he is author of the work at
numeraries, their salaries to be hand - a. genuinely polemical work,

imroa11 'limes - imtintl
A Division ol

A~

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qj~

-r• r"T"'Eiiii!a::t. ~

r'T"'\-....1 L.....

125 Thlnl Ave., GaiUpOils, Olllo

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 99Z-2156

(614) 448-Z:UZ

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WI !.SON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

AMEMBER of ne Atlsocloted Pretis, Inland Daily Press A.s~ocl11Uo11 aud th~ American
NeW11paper Publbchen Associ&amp; tloo.
~

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. The)' shuu.ld ~ W!iti lhlfn 300 wurds lung. All
iet1en are IIUbj~d tu t:dilinll and mu111 be ~lgued wllh name, addret~s and ltlephooe
• !-mber. No WlllgDed lellen will be publlshrd. Lettt'll!shuuld ~In good ta~le. addressing
llleM, not penu118Utln.
·
.__.__ ...--··

Sense, cents and nonseJtse.

:Save instead of cut
By WWELL WINGETI
· President Reagan was denied an opportuni~Jriast week to make another
grand gesture in his continuing soap opera hattie ,with Congress over the 1982
b_udget. Congress passed an~ther emergency budget measure which expires .
March 31 and includes tl)e $4 billion cuts he demanded. He was thus deprived
ol the opportunity to veto the legislation and shut the government down for
tbe second time with all the resultant puhlicity. Shucks!
; Perhaps by the time another budget measure reaches Congress in March, the Reaganauts will have consulted their dictionary and found another
verb than "cut." The verb is "save." I had the idea of referring them to the
djctionary while reading excerpts from David Stockman's true confessions
as printed in the December issueof the Atlantic Monthly. You, I hope,
remember David Stockman. He was the white hope of Reaganomics a
ypung man from Michigan with the knack of making the White House co~­
puters give the right answers for the administration, the wrong answers for
\h~ people.
.
, : As Stockman told reporters in an abject and demeaning apology, "My
visit to the Oval Office for lunch with the President was more in nature of a
visit to the woodshed after supper." But was he fired? Was his resignation
accepted? You know it wasn't. The administration can't do without him. He
is the only one who knows where the commas go in all that maze of zeroes
that make up the millions, billions and trillions of the finances of Uncle Sam.
He is the only one who can crank a passel of sows' ears into the White House
computer and make it produce silk purses filled with glittering guesses.
: David Stockman was - and still is - Director of the Office of Budget
an.d Management, one ·of the most important offices in the United States. He
look an oath to discharge his duties in a manner consistent with his high of.
floe. It was not a simple oath not to strike such as was signed by the Air Con·
t~ollers but an oath to perform the duties of his office to the best of his ability,
so;help him, God. Yet, Reagan, who haS'Sanctimoniously refused to give the
Ai~ Controllers back their jobs, refused to accept his resignation or fire him.
S}ockman's own words, quoted m the national magazine, convict him of
vi~lating his oath to perform his duties to the best of his ability. He per-·
fo~ed them in a way that would promote the interests of the Reagan ad·
f'Oinistratlon. Here are some of the excerpts reprinted in the November 23
i.SUeofTimeMagazine:
,
.
.
: On defense spending: "The Whole question is blatant inefficiency, poor
deployment of man-power, contracting idillcy ... Hell, I think there's a kind
ofitwamp of $10 to $20 to $30 billion worth of waste that can be ferreted out if
yo'll really push hard. But the Pentagon got a blank check ... they got so goddamned greedy that they got themselves strung way out there on a limb."
:, On Congressional reception of tax cuts: "Do you realize the greed that
~ to the foref~nt? The hogs were really feeding. The greed level, the
level of opportumsm, just gpt out of controL The Administration's basic
strategy was to rnatch or exceed the Democrats, and we did."
·'. On the Administration's spending reductions: "There was less there
~n mel the eye ... Let's say you and I walked outside and .I waved a wand
1111!1 said I've jusllowered the temperature from 110 to 78. Would you believe
~? What this ~as waa a cutfrom an artificial Congressional Budget Office
~.'that's why itlooked to big. But it wasn't."
:; On tu cuts?: "Kemp-Roth waa alway• a Trojan horse to bring down the
!Gll rate ... It's kind of hard to sell 'trickle-&lt;lown,' so the supply-side formula
&gt;(utile Ollly way to gel a las policy that was really 'trickle-down.' Supply-

~ il'trJckle.down' theory.''

.

this broad indictment he exempts of outrage against what the public
the actual classroom teachers. they ~Is are doing to our children and

.~r:'
c~. . .tr

.. •

'

-

.•

.I

0

'

C08I of medical aervices. Critics
warn that the innovations· are
leading to asaembly line medical
practices, episodic health care and
comer-cutting in dealing with
human health.
Here in Texas' capital city, a
PruCare health maintenance
organization, established by the
Prudential Insurance Co. of
·.America in October 1980, today has
more than 1:8,500 participants and
continues to grow rapidly.
The HMO concepl, popularized
many years ago by the kaiser Per·
manente organization in California,
offers participants a complete range
of medical services in return for
payment of a fixed monthly fee .
The incentive to control costs is
the contractural arrangement that
provides the HMO with only the
prepaid fee regardless of bow much .
health care a participant requires.
Organized medicine, ted by the
American Medical Association,
vigorously opposes the HMO concept
on the grounds that it is likely to
reduce the quality in health care.
But here in Austin, the Travis
County · Medical Society responded
to the PruCare challenge by
enrolling 300 of the 500 physicians

practicing in the area in its own and busiest freestanding surgical
liMo, the Central Texas Health center, where 40 to 10 routine
.,.rations are perfonned daily on
Plan.
·
In MiMeapoJis.SL Paul the He"" an outpatient basis.
Thill means that patients are sent
nepin County Medical Society,
home
within hours after their
organized its own HMO, Phyaiciarw
surgery
Is completed rather than
Health Plan. Even the Blue Cross'
being
confined
to an expensive
Blue Shield organization, another
hospital
room
for days of
outspoken critic of the concept, has
formedHMOMiMesota.
The Twin Cities has no fewer than
seven HMOs, all vigorously COf(}o
peting with each other and with
physicians engaged in the
traditional fee-for-service practice.

rec11peration, which many medical
~xperts tielieve to be an unnecessary
extravagance.
Elsewhere in Texas, cash-andcarry medical care is available at a
chain of MedStop clinics, this state's
version of the minor emergency
clinics lcicated in shopping centers
or wear busy intersections

throughout the Midwest and in
California.
How successful are these radical
new approaches to health care? The
final verdict hasn't been returned
yet, hot the initial evidence suggests
that they may be performing a
valuable service for millions of
citizens.

r-----------------------------------,

Probably the most reliable qua""
titative measure of HMO impact on
health coots is the nwnber of
hospital days. recorded per 1,000
population aMually -a figure that
stands at 1,278 nationally.
In Austin, the rate for the entire
metropolitan area ill nG; PruCare
has redUced it ever further; to about
400 among its members. Among
HMO participants in the Twin Cities,
the rate is 4~2. In contrast, St. Louis
- a city with virtually no medical
C&lt;lmpetition- has a rate of 1,753.
Austin also is the home of the
Bailey Square Surgical Center,
believed to be the country's largest

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''everybody else has to crouch.''
Professor Mitchell writes with a
trenchant wit; he cites some
hilarious examples of the tapioca
prose served up by doctors of
education; but his thesis is deadly
serious. He sees a conspiracy, at once benign and virulent, among the

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Executive order. threatens
,•

FOI

Act~~~;;===~======~=ac=k=Anderso=====n
'

WASHJNGTON - The Reagan ad-

ministration is quietly trying to slam
down an iron curtain of secrecy upon
the operations of the government.
A sweeping executive order has
been drafted that will make it far
easier for bureaucrats to sweep
their embarrassments under the
secrecy label. The overworked
claim of "national security" will be
expanded tp cover an even greater
mullitude of sins.
t .
The draft executive 'prilel\ is an
end run around Con~:re!ls. It hn be
put into effect with a simple ·
presidential signature.
Not sucprisingly, the order gives
the Central Inteiligence •Agency
something it has been unable to get
from Congress - almost total im·
munity from public inquiry under
the Freedom of Infomllltion Act.
For the spy agency, 'this amounts to
a license to kill, steal and lie just as
it did in what the spooks fondly
regard as "the good old days."
It has become routine government
practice for officials to use their
"CONFIDENTIAL," "SECRET"
AND "TOP SECRET" rubber stamps as a shield against exposure when
they're up to somethiog of
· questionable legality or potential

embarassment · poiitically. The reviewed by my associates Bob
Freedllm of Information Act was · Sherman and John Dillon. They
designed to give the public, as well found the changes in policy to be
as mdividual ·victims of the subtle but significant. Here are
bureaucrats' shenanigans at least a some of the more glaring examples:
fighting chance to find out what the
- Under the currently operative
connivers had done.
executive order, signed by President
The . administration's proposed Carter in 1978, intelligence sources
executi~e ord~r would. effectively and methods were to be protected by
ev1scerate the 1nformation act. Far classification only if it could be
from giving the public the benefit of demonstrated that disclosure would
the doubt, the order demands that damage national security. Under the
documents be classifled "if there is new order, "information relating to
a reasonable doubt about the need to sources and methods is presumed to
classify." No bureaucrat worth his cause damage to the national
•"Wive! chair could tail to think up a security."
'
"reasonable doubt" about the need
- By definition, the new order
to restrict a docwnent he has would exempt virtually all CIA
prepared - if only for the cachei of operations from the Freedom of In·
importance illenda to his work.
formation Act That's because the
Jlisl how rampant the use of act exempts from public . acceliS
classification stamps has become material classified "under criteria
thoughtful the government is made · establiShed by an executive order."
clear by the fact that the executive
Whjle few would argue that many
order has been ·reviewed by no less leg1tunate CIA activities must be
than 35 government agencies in its kept secret, it takes no great
progress through the bureaucracy imagination to conjure up a whole
Their corrunents have been for: new generation of dirty tricks that
warded to the National SeCurity would be hidden from the public unCouncll, where the order is being der the cover of the new exeeutive
whipped into final shape for order. The CIA's illegal drug exPresident Reagan's signature.
periments on Army perso"'"il and
The draft order has also been other unwitting hwnan guinea pigs,

HO, HO,
It was Christmas in the White
House. Santa Claus, who looked like
a very fat David Stockman, sat in his
chair tearing up letters from
children all over the country.
"Everyone wants a free lunch," he
saidangrilytooneofhisassociates.
ACabinet officer came up to Santa
andgotuponhislap.
"What do you want, and make it
short?" Santa said.
"I'm the head of HUD and I don't
want any th ing new. I was wondering
if you could restore my rent su~
sidies for the poor and let me have a
few dollars .to provide heating .oil for
the old and mdigent who hardly have
roofs over their heads."
"Ho, ho, ho," Santa said, "I Know
all abdut you. You've been a very
naughty boy this ~ear. !told you to
cut out all the frills and waste in
your department and all you could
C&lt;lme up with was a few billion
doll~l'3- You dese':'e a spaniung. -~ Don I come.QIIck unhl YOU sell all the
public ho'!"ing ~~~ country Is stuck
Wl.~h. Who s next.
The s~tary of Human_Resources, Santa, the assistant sa1d.

0

for example, was brought to light in
part through an FOIA request; these
programs could be kept secret under
the "ingelligence sources and
methOds"

cover of

the

new

executive order.
-Not every agency that rev,iewed
the draft order was happy with it. Incredibly, some felt it wasn't strong
enough. The Pentagon, for instance,
wanted a new caleb-all stamp that
would classify infonnation that
didn't fit exactly in\o the thn:e ,
L'Xisting categories. The request was
reject.
~ One agency did object to the
draft order on grounds that it was
too sweeping. The National Science
Foundation complained that, for one
thing, the new orderseelllS to negate
an agreement between the NSF and
the Nati~l Security Agency by
declaring that aU research in cryptology is automatically classified,
not just that which clearly involves
national security.
-

"Perfect gift for anyone who Isn't acquainted with the complete text of
the Equal Rights Amendment.''

Gifts of quiet truth....___Rus_tr_B_t'OWIJ.~ RUBIK'S CUBE
'

"Don't get up on my lap, you lousy
kid. What do you want for Christmas?"
·
,
"I'm not asking for much, Santa.
But please don't takeaway my Head
Start Program and medical researchfunds."
"Do you think Santa Claus is made
of money? You',..,lucky you're still
going to have Medicare checks to
send out. U I had my way, I'd dump
them, too. "
.
"But you promised there would be
a safety net for people who were
down and out. ..
"I make a lot of (II'OITlises I can't
keep. That's why kids, when they
grow up, stop believing in Santa
Claus. Now be,at it before I start
hacking away at your Social
SecUr-ity benefits."
"Santa, this Ia the chairman of the
largestst.l company 1n America."
"You can get upon my lap.''
"Santa, I've been a very good boy
and! don'twllllllll)'thlng"
'
"You lllllllwllllllllnetlda,...
"Well, there'll one thing I kinde

- The current executive order
requires that the public's inter~ be
a consideration in decisions to
classify information. This provision .
is deleted from the administration's
draft order:

Wouldlllce."
"What's that?"

"Another tax loophole, so I won't .

.

It is time to pack my sneakers for
Sanibel. Soon I will be making
·Adidas prints on the island beach off
Florida. San.d dollars, periwinkles,
starfish and moon shells wash up
dally and shelling and wading will be
bow we spend our days.
.
A collection of Sanibel shells
already fills a glass jar in my kitchen, but I always bring back more.
I will hold them in my hands, months
from now, and recall the tranquility
and renewal! find there.
It was Ann~ ·Morrow Undbergh
who said she found ways to live "in
grace" and iriner harmony at
· Sanibel. She took borne shells as I
do, but she did more with them. She
wrote an eloquent women's
philosophy for each that.formed the
book called "Gift From the Sea." I
tuck a copy in my suitcase and
reread it every time I go.
The book was published 26 years
· ago - long before half the women ol
this . country were workj.og and
before Betty Friedan wrote her land. mark volume, "The Feminine
Mystique." Yet, with each passing
year; the Undbergh book seems
more profound. With each
rereading, I find something new and
meaningful for now,
She wrote of the pressures on
women trying to sort out their lives,
to find a balance lletween dulles as
mothers and wives, between running
a bouse and finding time to realize
themselves in some individual way.
Ali a would-be author, mother of
flve and wife of pioneer pilot Charles
Undbergh, she knew about the

HO=========Art=·=Buch=a=ld=.
"Santa, I'm the set!retary of
Education and I need ... "
"Save your breath. I don't even
care to hear what you want for

have to pay any taxes this year."
"And are you going to build a new
steel plant with your tax loophole?"
Christmas."
"No, I want to buy the Marathon
"YO!i're a cute fellow. What's your
Oil Company with it. Then I won't
name?"
have to worry about making any' "Caspar Weinberger, and I'm the ·
more steel. n
secretary of Defense."
That's a ·sensible thing to want
"And what do you want for Christlor Christmas. Give Santa a kiss and
mas?"
I'll see y&lt;iu get it."
"I want planes, and missiles, and
"IIove you, Santa."
submarines, and aircraft carriers
Santa said to his asaistant, "I wish
and guns and tanks and an 111JC
all the kids were as well behaved as
missile system, and genn warfare ·
that~. Who'sllellt'"
shells,
and a trillion dollars.''
"Santa, I'm a governor from a big
"Ho,
bo, bo. That's a lot of toys.
Eastern state, and I waa supposed to
You're
going
to empty out my bag."
take care of aU the people the
"I'm going to hold my breath until
federal government waa reaponsible
I get them."
for, 'and you. were going to prOVide
' AD right, Caspar. I'm not goiilg
me with block grants to do the job,
to
spoil your Chrisbnas, if you've got
Now you've cut off my block grants.
your
heart oet on all these lhlngs.
What am I supposed .to do with the
Stop
pulling
on my bears. I SAID
people?"
YOU'D
GET
THEM!"
'"l'llllt's your problem, kid. If
AIIA!r Cuper stomped away, the
there is one thing Santa Claus can't
·
••i•ant
said, "He reaDy gat to .
stand it's a govemor who wanta
you."
federal money to do h1s job. Get out
"It's a weakness of mine. I can't
of my llll!hl You make rrie sick.
stand to see a little secretary of
Next."
Defense cry."
11

11

.

supennan symdtome" 'and

"bur~

nout" long before they were buzz
words.
She started writing to cope with
her grief after the 1932 kidnappingdeath of her first-born, a tragedy
that refuses to fade with the years.
She explained once, "I had to write.
II i¥as like breathing."
In "Gift from the Sea," she talked
about the multiplic'l.v of women's
roles: "The pattern of our lives is
essentially circular. We must be
open to all points of the compass;
husband, children, ·friends, home,
community, stretched out, exposed,
sensitive like a spider's web to each
breeze that blows, to each call that

QUANTirV

PACMAN

aunoNs

JUST

mask."

Anne Undbergh wished to take the
simple beach lifo home with her, but
knew she couldn't. .
Like author Undbergh, I shall
walk the beach and pick gifts from
the sea. I will listen to the waves and
the gulls - and the quiet truths that
can only be heard in solitude.

ARRIVID

Gift suggestions

tions."
I can imagine her laughing when
she wrote that ~he could understand
why the saints were rarely married
women. It has notl1ing to do with
chastity, she decided. It haa .to do
with aU the distractions in women's
daily lives - distractionS that are
not conducive to cretive, comtemplative or saintly life.
In beach living, she developed the
art of shedding - shedding clothes
and shedding pride; living in a cottage as spartan as a sea shell.

Precious
Moments
Collectible
Jewelry.
Charms,
Necklaces,
·Bracelets,
Keychains.

II
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From
PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
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Up
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li.id

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Oalllpolll, Oh..

---------------------

•'

I

Rt.

·'

I

J .

or

GHOSTS

11 PLAYEfl GAMEl - SKil l CONlR O

DIRECTIONAL CONTROL

Yet at Sanibel, she gained insight
from the shells. One was the. channelled whelk that swells like a pear
in the center and spirals to a pointed
tip. "The ~Jare beauty of the eha(}o
nelled welk," she wrote, "tells me
that one answer, and perhaps a first
step, is in the simplication of_life, !n
cutting out some of the distrac-

·r·~-;iu1H;..iiRMicv-·1

r

NEW
SHIPMENT
JUST ARRIVED

comes.''

'

i.

.

.

She welcome only those with
whom she could be completely
honest. She called that shedding
hypocrisy. "The mosi exhausting
thing in life," she wrote, "is being i(}o
sincere. That is why so much of
social life is exhausting; one is
wearing a mask. I have shed my

Starting At

...
(

hence to our country and its future.
His book echoes the outcries of other
critics - Mortimer Smith, E.
Merrill Root, Paul Capperman and
Russell Kirk. Why won't respoasible
persons listen?

colleges, the

numeraries'

He denounces the teachers'
colleges, those "nurseries of selfindulgence, unskilled 'c-reativity'
and
half·baked
pseudometaphysical incantation."
He deplores the antiintellectualism that pervades the
educational · establishment. In this
debilitating. atmosphere, old
disciplines shrivel and die. Foreign
languages disappear, to be replaced
by courses in intercultural appreci~tion . History and geography
yield to social studies. Our schools
are ruled by intellectual pygmies
whose purpose is to see that

-:: Stodunan, if he had been earnestly perfonninc his duties as Budget
should have cut the f?J)O billion defense budget by $30 billion and
leiJit up to the Pentagon to either ferret out the waste or do without. Yet the
BJ!dget office and the Praldent have resisted aU efforts to lower the Defense
bl!dlet. They prefer to cut the 80cial progr-81111 at the expense of scbool iuno:Jit-, mlll&lt; for Me!y children and food stamps for the poor. Even more cuts .
~in pi oope\.'1 for tlle_lll3 budlet which will soon be """"""ted to Congress. .
•• , In reality, we no longer have a Budget Cireclor who will be believed. Any
i'btilcull from the OBM will be suspect. Republican Senators and Represen- ·
Qlllves and a handful of "Boll Weevils" may pi'Ofesa to believe him but they·
at. fllrtlng with defeat next fall. The next few months will tell the tale. The
O(ljpnal deficit estimate lor 1112 was $42.5 billion. The latest estimate is $109
bllllln. That Is why I IUIIIlesl the administration moguls look up the very
'•i..e" in tile dictionary and apply it to the Defense Oepartmeni.
1
. Willi the po blllioo they could save there they could add the billlons they ,
prGmiled tile Boll Weevils in tu breaks for their votes and the bUiions corJJII(atiiD are aobblinll up in the tu-Iease programs. Hell, they've reJiel!ed I1
ori almOirl ttverJ promise they made the voters, so why not these?
::' AI- C~ooal wag Mid ~y. "Reagan ia snatching defeat l:k::t:;~
fr!-n the ja~ otvlctllry. !".
'
e!!:::::~~
Ol(ectar.

super· are the faceless serts ot a tellll81 emuniong · aQd · the pire, the mostly docile products of
producers of millrtoast textbooks ~me hall-wit's doctoral dlsstlr1ation
and useless gimcracks - a con- on Comparative Systems of Storage
spiracy whose purpose Is to feather for Athletic Equipment.
each party's particular nest. From · Prof~r Mitchell's work is a cry
teachers'

unadulterated by the slightest trace
of moderation. The gentleman is an
even-tempered man: He stays mad.
He scorns !bose trendy supplemen\s that suck like leeches upon
the body of honest education:
"Millions and millions of American
children would today stand in no
need of sex education, or consumer
educat~on
or intercultural
education, or any of those fake
educations, if they had had in the fir·
st place AN education."

The Sunday Times-Sentinel&gt;-Page-A ·3

Gold Filled
Sterling LOCKETS

�~

...~

...

Page-A·4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
•

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant,
Rio Grande Village CouncU candidates who flied
were Bernard E. Murphy, $21.84. W. Roger Rees,
$34.70 and Earl G. Morgan, $5.04, au for cards and

Locally
(Continued from page Al )
Fatr, posters, and pizza sales at the July 4 weekend
River Recreation Festival.
Expenae reports for the levies on last November's
ballot for the Guiding Hand School and the GalllaJackaon-Melgs Community Mental Health Center
weren't available wben the Times-Sentinel looked at
the reports Friday.
A third-highest spending candidate was Dean R.
Circle, 403 LeGrande Blvd., Galllpolls, who lost a bid
for a third term Qll the Gallipolls City Board of Education. The record shows Circle spent $231.84 on

Statewide
has debts of $1.1 mllllon.
The lfi'OUP known as Ohioans to Halt Inllatlon From
Out-Of-State, Which opposed Issue 1, said It spent just
under $1 mllllon and has debts of $5,400.
That group coO.Isted mostly of manufacturers, Ia·
bor unions, business employers and others who maintained that the state system works well, both in terms
of premiums and benefits.

Both sides received and spent a large part of their
money by 12 days before the election, when they flied
a pnH!Iectlon report with Celebreeze's office.
The other issue on the Nov. 3 ballot, also defeated,
sought a new system of drawing election districts for
congressmen and legulators.
Its proponents, mostly Republicans wanting to
strip power from the Democrat-dominated Apportionment Board, l!sted contributions of $1.2 mllllon,
expenditures of almost the same amount, and debts
of $76,766.
The Fair and Impartial Red!str!ctlng Committee
had receiVed $902,692 and spent $864,6ll8 based on
figures in Its pre-election report. ·
Almost all, 140 of 154 or the FAIR Committee's
contributors, were businesses and corporations. The
biggest donation came from the T!mken Corp., Canton. It gave $25,00J. Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.,
Akron, contributed $15,00!.
FAIR's 14 individual contributors provided a total
of $1,360.

Citizens Against Issue 2 reported receiving $94,fQi
and spending $93,967 with a balanceof$118.88. Most of
the money came from Democrats and labor groups
traditionally trtendly to them.
The biggest single amount of $21,!!()()camefrom the
Ohio House Democratic Campaign Commlttee,
headed by Speaker Vernal G. Rt!fe Jr., D-New
Boston.
The citizens committee said It made $11,494 at
fund' raiser and that ~.00! was provided by the Ohio
Democratic Party. The United Auto Workers' Ohio
Political Action Committee contributed $15,00J and
the Ohio Soft DriJik Association, $10,00J, among oilier
larger contributions.

a

Polish workers ••
Thursday by police Using water
caMons and smokebombs. Pollee
reportedly occupied the cathedral
in Lodz to prevent a special mass
:from taking plat:e.
· Mllltant workers appeared to
have banicaded themselves Inside
bulldtngs at the Lenin Shipyards in
the northern port of Gdansk, ac·
cording to reports com!ng from the
U.S. Embassy in Warsaw and released by the State Department in
Washington.
Associated Press correspondent
~·Thomas W. Netter reported that
'Warsaw was quiet Friday following
disturbances Thursday in which
young protesters were routed by

Dec.

:za, 1981

Dec. 20, 1981

Gallipolis, Ohio

Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

~

-·-.~~
0

I

'

--

•

-

...... .... . - .......

~·-.--._~

....
0

_.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

#

I

&lt;eon_tin_"""_fnlm_pq-:-e-Al)

c!ub-swtngtng police. Heeding a Solidarity reque$t, thousands of War·
saw residents turned off their
electric Ughts Thursday night and
put candles In their w!nqows to express support lor the trade union.
Armored mUltary unlts continued to patrol Warsaw streets
and police and soldiers manned
roadblocks at important buildings
In the capital, Netter said.
.
Netter's report was one of the
first out of Poland since the government restored telex communications for foreign journalists
Provided theiraccountsaresubmitted to state censors and are Umited
to first l}and observations and stale

state presented througbout the Brainard were arrested at, also said that the defense had tried
week, including the order of events testified to f!ndlng a knife hidden un- everybody who testified ezcept for
on Nov. 30 and Dec. I, 1976, as der a mattress and that Brainard John Lewis Young and charged that
testified to by witnesses including was the only one who went upstairs if the defendanl was "railroaded"
Terry Brinard, Young's nephew who in her house. The defense attorney into prison, "the tracks were built by
alleged to have been wtth him at the added that Brpinard had made John Lewis Young and Jolin Lewis
Berry home oo the night of the mUr- threats against his fonner girlfriend Young fueled the engine."
der, and Young's sister, Catherine who lest!fied Brainard said, "I'm
Reed, who said Young told her he going to kill you like Mary Berry."
killed Mary Berry. Morgan also
"H you believe Terry Brainard,
poinled out to the jury that you believe rocks grow ... you can
Brainard's testimony, which the trust him, he'll turn on you like a
defense attempted to impeach snake/' Casey said. "There was
HUTNINGTON, W. Va. - The
throughout the trial, was only one persoo there wbo could Community College ·of Marshall
collaborated by other witnesses and have (killed Mary Berry) and that's University wUl conduct &amp;prlng term
by the phy~ical evidence.
Terry Brainard," he concluded.
registration for its Point Pleasant
In response lo the defense's conMusgrave, in his closing, charged classes on Jan.l2,13,14 and 18 at the
tention that Young was intoxicated that the stale's witnesses were Mason County Vocational Technical
on the night Mrs. Berry was mur- trying to railroad John Lewis Young Center in Point Pleuant. Each
dered, Morgan told tl)e. jury there into the state penitentiary and session will begin at 5:30p.m.
was no evidence Of intoxicaliand to claimed Brainard's story was pure
The conununity college wUl offer
test!mony by Young himaelf that he fiction.
13 claBSeS in Point Pleasanl during
could not reca!i many of the events
Morgan, in rebuttal to Musgrave, the spring term.
·
Of Nov. 30 and Dec. 1, 19'16, to
prosecutor said, "(John i~~~~!;~;;:;;~;;;;;;;;;:;:~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~
Young) remembers what he ;ants
to remember ... what is convenient

During closing arguments by the
defense, Casey charged that "the
stale has woefully failed to prove
every element (of first degree murder)." He then commented on the ·
fact that only one palm print,
belonging to Terry Brainard, was
found in the Berry home and reminded the jury that one police officer
described that print as looking
"bloody."
Casey further stressed that
although Brainard claimed he didn't
carry a knife, he also said that he
had cut a sweeper cord when Young
allegedly asked him to find him
something to tie Mary Berry up with
and Violet Rose Lee, whose
Pomeroy, Ohio, home Young and

Jrunbo~ 'timn- Jrmtintt
USPS52HOO
A Mult.inwdia Nt!~papt!r

Publistit.&gt;d each SUnday, 82.5 Third
Avt&gt;nut', by U~ Ohio Valley Publh;hln)!:
Cornpany· MultimediH, Inc. Second class
posl.a;;ce paid Ill Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.·
Enh:rt.'\1 as sa-orxl clas!ltlll:liling matlt&gt;r
lit Pomeroy, Ohio, PostOf£11.'\!.

Member: The A!l.liOCialed Press, Inland
Daily Pn:Sll Assucialion lind the
Publi!ihNs

Assocliilion, Nalio1ial Advertildllf':
Rt!prcsentatlve, BranhallJ! 17111 W~l
Nint&gt; Mill! Roatl, Suite 20t, Detroit
Michi'-11:111, 4110'1~.
'

INVENTORY REDUCTION

Page-A-'5

"The li'ke figure whereunto eVen baptism. doth also now save us (not
the puttlng-away ·ot the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a gooct conscienc~ toward God,) b'( the resurrection of Chirst'' ( 1 Pet. 3:21 ) ,
T~e following argume~t is made by teachers who will ncjlt accept
Peters statement coocernrng ''baptism doth also now save u+:" ''It is
obviously only a f(gure of speech to say that Noah and eight .sQuls were
saved ~Y water. Here ~apt ism is simply mentioned as a figure. a sym ·
bol, a prcfure of salvatron. It ttoes not save!" ·
. T~ "like figure" does not signify that the salvation of Noah and
~rs family by water is "a figure of speech.'' nor is baptism used as "a
frgure Of speech" In regard to our salvation. A "figure Of speech" has
reference to "a.n eKpression using words in an unusual nonllteral (not
real) sense to grve beauty or vividness of style." The satv~tion of Noah
through water was litera I! So is salvation through water baptism
literal!
. The ·:~ike figure" does srgnrfy "a corresponding type" or "a'true
ltkeness: therefore, the crrcumstance of the flood, the ark artd its oc·
cupant~. formed a _type, and baptism forms a corresponding type.
Water '" verse 20 rs ref~rrecl to by the pronoun which in verse 21
(ASV)( and allucfes to water in general and Identifies water in this
~lause as the water ot ba!Jtism! Peter assures IJS that water in baptism '
rs a true ll~eness. (bearmg the characteristics of the deliverance of
Noah and hrs famtly from the destruction of the world) and does save
us now!
·
By the water of th~ flood, the ark was l.l fted up, delivering its oc ·
cupants from .destructron; the saved were separated from Jhe lost·
and the evil$ of the world being destroyed, Noah and his family wer~
brought Into a new existence.
By ~he water of baptism. one Is delivered from the lost state of con·
demnat.ro~ (Mrk. 16; 16); separated from the lost and the world of sin
by_cructfyrng and burying the old sinful man (Gal. 2:20; Rm. 6:3) ·ana
anses to walk a new life {Rm. 6:4).
·
'
l_n th.e Gree~i dia, which means through, is used rather than by,
makrng rt r~ad were saved through water." It was through water
Noah .a~d hr~ family were saved. Water was the means God •used in
exercrsrng Hrs avlng power. Ordinary water, iust as the kind rn the
fiOOCI,. when_ used In baptism, is the instrument through which God
exercrs~s Hrs ~ow~r to save: therefore, God forgives when we submit
t?'
baptrsm whtch rs accord1ng to His will. Baptism in water is not a
frgure of speech!
For Free Bible Correspondence Course Write .. .

SALE CONTINUES
AU CARDS &amp; BIBLES

No :~ubscriptions by ITII:Iil permitted in
towns where horne ~·arrier servil-e is

avwihtblc.

Probate and Juvenile Judge
Robert Buck advises that blood tests
are no longer required as a part of
securing a marriage license. I can't
imagine why but that's the law and
Judge Buck wanted you to know of
the change.
Glenna Sprague, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Sprague, Mid·
d!eport, will be presenting a piano '
solo, "Isle Of Joy" by DeBussy at the
morning worship services of Heath ·
Untied Methodist Church in Mid·
dleporton Sunday, Dec. 27,
Glenna Is now an . assistant
professilr of piano at Oakton College
at Skokie, Ill. She teaches applied
and classic piano.

Complete card shop set-up racks, shelves,
. tables, desks, chairs.

1:0G

-. .

Tht• Sunda)· Tim~s-Senllncl will nnt be

AU OTHER MERCHANDISE

Ev•lnt

I
'

responsible for l:ldvanct I)Mym~nt:&gt; 1111:1~
to carriers.

fltt Blblt"

O.llr·'WJEH
II:SSAM

. ....'~"!:_h! Church .wrth the MesUve••

··- ·

Six rnonth.'l ......... .. ....... , . 110.40
DllUy 11•dSunday

·-

Ohkland WeNt VIrginia

PHONE 446-1136

FORST-MITCHELL OFFICE SUPPLY
·. Across from the Post nfl';ro

Oncycar . . .. . .... . . , , , .. . , , . .. f39.00
Six month .• , . .. . . ... . ...... . .. $2(1.80
Three month:; ... .. , , , . .. , .. , , .. $12.35
Rate" Oul!ddt&gt; Oblo
aad WtMt Virgbda
.
OneyeHr • . .. ••.•. .... .........
Thr~ months

1

f+t.20

.. ... , , ..... .. ... '13.110

MAllE
YOUit RESERVATIONS
.
.
.
FOR A FABULOUS

•

·'AJ suggests-

NEW .YEAR'S 'EVE AT THE

MEIGS INN

(hl~.

tHURSDAY, DEC. 31, 1981, 6:00 P.ll.lO 1:30 AJII.

FOR

FIVE WHEEL DRIVE

lAST MINUTE GIFTS

Frocn '900

SCUFFS
81''1 ERINA

S1YL£S

'

.'17

DINNER

Free GiftWrap

10 Per

STANDARD
SELECT

$279
$289·

FIVE WHEB. DRIVE

PRIMf'RI8
OR
WHITEFISH

P~TY

fAVORS

,

.BAR IJCOLS

AVAILAliLI POl
COC:XTAU

'*'

'5M PW Ptl n lllcfld•
..!'-• &amp; 1111 If Gllllps••
"

r

';r:
..

~

3LB.

f:

individual

Bottle of
Champagne

Per Per1011.

GAWPOIJS -

The following

;! last week in GalUs County Probate

,.

.

,. Court
·'
Roser L. Caldwell, 21, Rt. I, Bfd~i well, parts 111lesman, and P~ula J.
t
Brown, 17, Rt. 4, GaWpolia,student.
::
Robert S. Warnn, 50, Gallipolis,
! disabled, and Helen F. Warren,
• Galllpolfa, nursing aide.
:
Stanley F. Thompson, 34, Rt. I,
; , Crown City; laborer, and Deborah
, Burnette, 23, Rt. I, Crown City, ,
• psychological aide.
: Donlld E. White, zt, Gallipolis,
j UlllllliPioyed. and Karen D. Jarrell,
• :M, Rt. 2, BldweD, Robbbis and
•
' MJet'lanplo,et. .
: Paul Jewell, 48, Huntington,

: · W.Va., buteadlr, and Jetllllfer
: 1pc11n, IO,Illlllpolll, wa1tra
, Edw!DL '•nce«•Jr.,211,11amp: ,,IIIII, v•., U.S. Nawy, and Unda M.
. DIJ,IO,IIamptiiii,Va.,U.S.Navy.

.,
•

'I

...'

I'"· .

'

39
79.$

'l

: • people fUj!(l for marriage licenses

~ ,,
·

'~

CAN

.,

1

TICKm MUITII PICKID UP IY DIC. 26.
POl ..IDVA TIONI CALL "2-3629

NA

.f!' Maniage licenses

PelSOR Includes

ENTERTAINMENT

1,.

From •400

ROCK SPRINGS- Wallace Brad·
ford, Bedford Township Christmas
~; tree grower, was elected to a three
~ year term oo the Meigs County
~ Agricultural Stabilization and Con·
. , servation Committee at the recent
:: COWJty convention.
. Bradford will asswne his duties in
&lt; January. He will be replacing Virgil
, ; ; King on the committee, as Mr. King
:: was no longer eligible for the com·
, . , mittee as he had served the
, : maximum three conseculive terms.
', Also elected to the committee
' 1 were Kenneth Welsh as first' alter·
,): nate and Chuck Yost as second alter,. nate
' The. committee . Is the policyl·:;l making
bOdy for. the Meigs County
·, Agricultural Stabilization and Con·
I J
.,
servalionService (ASC&gt;), which ad;~ mln!.slers many programs locally as
:: a branch of the U.S. Department of
:• Agriculture.
!~
As of January I, the committee
;~ will be composed of !joy Holter,
'• chairman; Reed Jeffers, vice chair'••, .man, and Bradford, new meml)!!r.
.,
.~;

Sixmontru; • ........... . . .. , . .• $23.40

WARM
COMFORTABLE
SUPPER BOOTS

12 OZ. CAN

Bradford
elected

R•dlo

· "Mtn•tttro.n

MAILSVBSCRIPTIONS
&amp;mdayOnly
Oneyc&lt;~r .. . ... •. ..••.. , ..• •... '31.110

it

·oYSTERS

The increase in postage rates a~r
parenlly has affected the local
Chrisbnas mail, Pomeroy Postmaster Jim Soulsby reports. He
estimates that seasonal mail
passing through the local post office
is down ahout 20 percent this year.

'(J~(

WedneiCIIy

-t~"" ...

nie Chapman; two to Mila Davidson
and three to Donna Byer.
The display will be in place until
Feb. I so you can get the holiday
season out of the way before you
visil if you prefer. If your group
wOuld like to visit the musewn to see
the display, contact Nancy Reed,
Clara Lochary, C. E. Blakeslee or
Annie Chapman.

Bulaville Road • P.O. Box 308
GI\LLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
suna1y Mornlnt • ·••
Sund•r E¥tfu.;;' ..
Bible Sluar f :JO
Wors,.lp,:oo
wo~.~'t~!.
.' . : ...

:.

Bill, Jean and Employees ~ ·
Wish You All
~.'
a Merry Christmas
19
and a Happy New Year

Mon. thru Thurs.
9 am til9:30 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat.
9amti110pm
Closed
Christmas Day

R~ C•rrier ur Mtltur Rot~k

35 Cents

Ernest Wingett, Racine, who was

· \hreetoDonnaByer.
A group of Madam Alexander
dolls belonging to Debi Buck and An·

'

of

Under the new districts, if Bransloll runs for state senate, two Of the
three metropolitan areas of this
district would be in the lOth
Cong~onal District. It was also
pointed out that, the new legislative
districts, will put live (5) new State
House DiStricts in the congressional
area and three (3) new Senatorial
districts.

He !!Bid that even in losing, the
candidate who has been actively
supported, gains new frienda, new
understanding of the political
system, and even though · he may
taste defeat, he and his group, are
well underway toward eventual vic•
tory.
Prior to · Mayor Rutherford's
speech, there was a long discussion

present in Lancaster, but had
missed a previous meeting, learned,
that he was ezcused because he waa
on a previously arranged vacation;
and by being ·ezcused, Wingett kepi
his perfect record of meetings of~
loth District PAC.
Jack Stecher, 19110 Candidate for
Congress, addressed the group
briefly.
It was announced that the nexl
regular meeting of the PAC will boi
on Feb. 17 in Logan. There will be all
executive meeting in Athens on Jan;
19.

I know how busy you must be
during the season, but you might
want to take a break and visit the
Meigs Musewn which Is having a
good display of doll houses, dolls and
tin toys of yesteryear.
The~ are seven doll houses in·
eluding two belonging to Annie
Chapman; two to Mila Davidson and

By W"liam ·B. Kughn

~fl«ftel .Yfdl ~~

of the new legiSlative districts. Stale
Representative Eugene Branstool of
Licking County, was a guest.

show potential and active candidates that they have support.

. Adding to the bright holiday
season in Middleport last week was
a trip through tile business section
by kids of Sandy Luckeydoo's
Gingerbread House. The youngsters
presented carols hither and yon as a
part &lt;i their trip and the natives
loved it!

BAPnSM NOT A FIGURE OF SPEEat

One week .. . ...•..•. .. . ..... .. . $1 .00
One Month ................... , . fUO
One year .... , .. , . •.... ,, . . .... $52.80
SINGI..E COPY
PRICE

pose of a political orJISnization such
as the Democratic Action Club, is Jo

{~.

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE. ••

to remember."

media reports.
Poland's severely depressed
economy has been reeling for the
past 1~ years from the effect of

Newspapt&gt;r

Edward Rutherford, former
Mayor ~I the City of Lancaster, was
the last minute substitution speaker.
He gave an enlightening view of the
place and purpose of party
organization how it fits into the ·
scheme of things, in the 'selection of
candidates, the campaign itself and
their election.
.
As a three-term Mayor of the City
of Lancaster he pointed out the pur·

Registration set . ·

(Continued from page AI)

Amcrh~an

LANCASTER The lOth
Congressio!llll District, Democratic
Action Club, mel recenUy here.

Old Fashion

CHOCOLATE DROPS

$119 .
LB.

light or Dark
Confectionary
LB.

.•
COCONUT DIPS

$1~B.

59e
In the Sl!ell

PEANUTS

79~B. BON-BONS

$1 t9B.

*
I"
~~
' ,I

$2l~2pz.

794LB.

$129
LB.

$It~.

Coconut

DROPS

'119

$1~.

GOOD THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 26
aluable Coupon SAVE $2.0

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
I

:· $5~!h

(oo•poll

I

L-------~~~~!t!=.r:!:·!~~!!~!~~!1__ J

~

...

4 °

Hoeflich's Beat of the Bend

Young found guiltyl!,____

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

50 %OFF
25 %OFF

Pomeroy-Middleport

'

advertising.

advertising,
Other candidates spending more than $100 lq, thetr
campalp.s were Gerald (Jeff) Pope, Rt. 3, Galllpolls,

Perry Twp. trustee, $119.25 on pens and gas; Carlos
P. Wood, Patriot Star Route, Green Twp. trustee,
$149.52 on gas, matches and l,OOJ wooden nickels;
Carl B. Waugh, Rt.l, Scottown, Gallfa County Local
Board of Education, $162.76 on adverilsing and
cards; Paul Pope, Rt. 1, Patriot, Walnut Twp. trustee, $119.25 on pens and gas; and Robert H. Massie,
Rt. 3, Galllpolls, $184.60 on cards and gas.
• All, except for Wood and Massie, won in the elec·
~ tlon. Wood and another Green trusle!!'Cand!date, Ro~ bert R. Greene, 433 Lewis Drive, Gallipolis, tied in the
Nov. 3 election. Greene was declared the winner after
deliberation by the elections board.
The board was notlf!ed 15 trustee candidates and~
v!Uage councll hopefuls didn't spend any campaign
monies. Judge James A. Bennett, Rt. 2, VInton, Galli·
polls Municipal Court, also didn't spend any money
on the campaign, as he ran unopposed. The same was
true for Pteree D. McCfeedy,ll21 Sunset Drive, and
MUes T. Epling, 626 Ftrst Ave., incumbent members
of the Galllpolls City Commission.
John C. Wlckl!ne, 20! E. College St., Rio Grande,
reellicll!d to both the Galllpolls City Board of Educa·
Uon and Rio Grande VUlage Council, was among
those who didn't fUe expense reports.
.
Other major candidates who flied reports with the
board,were Joan E. Schmid~ 70Garf!eldAve., Gall!·
polls, who spent $47 on school board candidate trainIng and gas In her successful bid for the city school
board, and Bruce S. Stout, Rt. 1, Bidwell, who put in
$54.27 for his second non-consecutive term on the
county school board.

w. Va.

~.

~

..

�. ..
-6-The

Times-Sentinel

f'omeroy - M iddlepo•I-Ga II

.,.

Dec. 20, 1981

w. Va.

Ohio-Point

10,000 file claims.
under legislation

.i'-

COLUMBUS- More than 10,000 of
the 47,754 newly unemployed persons in Ohio who filed initial claims
for bt)nefits under the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Law during
the week ending Dec. 12 did so due to
one-to-four

week

laek~ofporder~

layoffs in the auto and auto parts industry, Administrator Albt)rt G.
Giles of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services (OBESJ announced.

Giles reported that last week's
initial claims total under the Ohio
Law was down 7.0 percent from the
preceding W&lt;&gt;ek's total of &gt;1.364.
Initial claims filed last week under
all other programs numbt)red 329 for
an overall initial claitru; total of
48,083, a 7.1 percent tlecrease from

the &gt;1,762 total for the week ending
Dec. 5. Continued claims of those
unemployed one or more

WRAPPING UP CHRISTMAS-' Debi. Jones of Racine was among
; the many shuppers In downtown Pomeroy1\day who br•ved the chilling
winds to wrap up the remainder ol her Christmas shopping.

wee~

were estimated last week at 216,994,
including 214,500 under the Ohio
Law, up 6.1 percent over the
previous week's total of 204,49&gt;.
An estimated 265,077 claims ror
unemployment compensation were
reported last week in Ohio under all
programs, federal and state, a 3.4
perecnt increase over the 256,257
total for the week ending Dec. 5. The

Police cite drivers following

MOllet D300
Wlflllhlrfy ciNJnnell
~lillie public
IWYice ndl, lhll

POMEROY-Planned Parenthood
of Southeastern Ohio will hold and
evening clinic from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
on Dec. 23. Please call992-5912 for an
appointment.

_,.,.often mont lhan CllfOS memory lhat

~reeks

210XL

1

JAMES Ross•
BUSINESS &amp; TAX CONSULTANT f

:t

2409 Jatkson Avenue
Point Pleasant, W. Va. 25550

:)t
675-6774
. •TAX PREPARATION &amp;
'it. •COM
PLETE RECORD-KEEPING SYSTEMS
•FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
CO~iSULTATION

: ~USINESS &amp; PERSONAL FINANCIAL

529 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, 011.
Phone 614-446·2206

'3-omiR•

man, Dean of the COJJoge of
· Agriculture and Home Economics,
'l'he Ohio State University. Mr. John
B. Crowell, Jr., Assistant Secretary
of Agriculture, Washington is ex·
pected to speak on the topic, '"l'lle
SCS Washington OuUook."
In other business, at the aMual
Christmas dinner-meeting, '111ereon
Johnson was corrunended on the
vital part he played in setting ads
sold for lhe new plat books. II was
anililunced they should be ready
some time in February. A
cooperator agreement was signed
for the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly.
The district decided to sell Wildlife
Tree packets again this year. Information will b.) available to the
public after the first of the year.

Frye Leather
Boots
And

Frye Leather
Vests

Boots &amp; Vests lor
Men&amp; Women
Ladies' Handbags

Emergency
runs
•

'POMEROY-Three
.

/n-Daoh AMIFM Mu/llp/ex B·li'ack wl!h
0/g/la/-LED Time/Frequency Display
Model SS-1280

runs were
made by local emergency units
Fl'iday according to the Meigs CountY-Emergency Medical Service.
,At 2:01 p.m. Middleport took
Gladys Wines to Holzer Medical
Cfnter; at 9:59a.m. Middleport was
~ed for Francis Lulchart who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
HOspital; Rutland at 6: Ui p.m. was
cl(lled to an auto accident and took
Den Stinmetz to Veterans Memorial

· SPECIAl. ·

F•turn: Tone C()l'l!rol • On/Off Vol.. mll! Cofllrol • Baranc:111

S~de Control • Hour Set Contlol • Mlnule Set Control •
Dttrlll Olspla~ '" Door • Trick lndlcalion Lamps • st~~reo
tndlcaliofl Lamp • Front lo Rear Faaer Control • Tuning Con ·

tr?l • AMIF~ . Slid• Control • PulhllUIIOn Controls IOf Time
Drapll~/loudnttnlloiuhngiMono/Stereo &amp;fHllocat/Oistance

..,djullable Shatl

Shoe Cafe
:100 Second Ave.
· LarayeUe Mall

Gallipolis. 0.

H.~pital.

SUN. thru TUES.

6PEN DAILY 10·10; SUN. 11-6

.•

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$22995
OPEN
SUNDAY

Bearcat 5
8 CHANNELS WIDf
CRmALS
'

1 PM to 5 PM

..

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Monday-Tuesday

&amp;Wednesday

w:ol:~l':&lt;:t-IIIIIIIIIIIIWW.-IIIS!:II

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to 8 PM

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Sports • Strategy • Action
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Children's Learning • Gaming

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PLANNIN~

•

Intelligent Television
'·

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]i;i

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'2 4'~cH -

-~ ~ •

"Diamond Guarantee with Every Ring,"

No other love is like yours.
No other diamond is like this ...

Classic Solita~re

·Engagement Diarrwnd
""ct.

1'4

A Super

Christmas

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CARTRIDGES

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The Sunday Times-sentini!I-Pa

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HARRISONVILLE-A family of
11-:e were left homeless Friday when
fire destroyed their two story frame
home located in Harrisonville.
Destroyed by fire was the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Estep. They
h!lve three children. Cause of the
fire is undetermined, according to
El!!tep.
·The Rutland Fire Department was
sUinmoned. No one was home at the
tUbe of the lire; however, there was
s9p1e insurance.

BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

:Patrol cites two drivers

QrganizatiOns; plus the membt)rs of
the Ohio Soil and Water COnservation COmmission and represen·
tatives of lhe Nations~ Association o(
Conservation Districts to discuss
natural resource management
topics.
Theme for this three day con·
ference fs "Expanding District
Programs." The annual meeting
gi'ves soil and water conservation
district supervisors an opportunity
to gain new insights into local
program development as well as
learning about natural resource
management programs at the county, state, and federal level.
·
Highlights of the program will include a keynote address titled
"Research and Education PathWays
to Progress" given by Roy M. Kot(

Family left homeless

forgollen.

FACTORY REBATE 10%
D300................................'229.95
D100 ................... ~ ........... '179.95

ADMISSIONS-None.
DISCHARGES-PameiB Vaughan, Oscar Price, Patricia Cleland, Ernest Clark.

llllleaJhDel liln•!ll'•

remembera your local
/requenclea after
compeiiUve models have

You'll h - lhe
con,.,lence of ...rch
ond IIC811, prlorlly
·---,·-? . ·-

Veterans Memorial

mtR•

conttol, a due/level
dl.,fay wllh prompllng
meaaagea and a special

11np compet/llv• model.

.

,Roy Miller will be the delegate at
tbe session representing the Meigs
Boord and Tom Theiss will receive
the Distinctive Service Award.
Others planning to attend are
~vid Gloeckner, Rex Shenefield
and Opal Dyer. Robert First will
aJ.9o be present at lhe meeting.
,Four hundred forty Soil and Water
~rvalion District Supervisors
serving Ohio's 881ocal soil and water
CO!IBervation districts will join with
district employees and friends as
\VIill as personnel from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources;
Sail Conservation Service ;
Cooperative Extension Service and
other · related conservation

MIDDLEPORT--Slides were
shown by Dr. R. R. Pickens at the
Friday night meeting Of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary, held at the
Heath United Methodist Church.
Dinner was served by the ·ladies of
the church.

Bpa,car

r:t

sWCD.

Slides ~hown

morning.
when he slid on ice and collided with few minor accidents Friday.
The wheels locked on a vehiele
Johnson spotted the man between
a Coca-Cola truck driven by Terry L.
driven
by
Henry
R.
Bright,
73,
midnight
and 12:25 a.!'ll. and scared
Layfield, 22, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Gallipolis,
while
travelling
on
State
him
away.
A check showed cables
parked at the Las.t Chance carry out.
Street
at
9:44a.m.,
forcing.
Bright
lu
had
been
remuved
from a Cbt)vrolet
There was slight damage to both
collide with a parked vehicle driven pickup truck on the lot.
vehicles and Gillispie was cited for
· by Eddie T. Van Maire, Rt. I,
no operator•s license.
Also cited by police Friday were
Mason. Slight damage was reported David R. Bass, 23, Gallipolis, bt)nch
Patrolmen .said Milton M.
Houdashelt, 61, Gallipolis, pulled to both vehicles.
warrant for failure to appear, and
An ice patch at the corner Of Four- Joseph D. Clevenger, 19, Rt. 2, Bidfrom Airport Road at 12:56 p.m. into
the path of a northbound vehicle th and Pine forced Lawrence T. well, DWI.
driven by Patty Harman, 38, McGraw, 36, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, to
Rutland, causing slight damage to sli~e as he was making a right turn r - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Houdashelt's car and moderate to onto Fourth at 10:19 a.m. and collide
with the Last Chance carryout sign.
the Harman vehicle.
A passenger in Hannan's car,
No damage severity was reported.
Anita Harman, Rutland, was
Linda L. McComas, 25, Rt. 3,
slightly injured and not treated. Gallipolis, informed the department
Houdashelt was cited for failure to at 7:17p.m. her car was struck by :in
yield.
unknown vehicle sometime after ti
The .department investigated a a.m. while parked bt)hind Cox's
Department Store at the Silver
Bridge Plaza.
In. other matters, police were informed by Bill Genr Johnson,
GALUPOLIS - 1\vo people were Gallipolis, stopped on U.S. 35 to Gallipolis, an intruder on his Fren:cited in separate accidents reported make a left turn onto Rt. 325 at Rio chtown Car Co. lot at 1639 Eastern
:to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the state Grande at 7:20p.m. and was struck Ave. attempted to lake a hattery
For your convalescent lov: highway patrol Friday.
· in the rear by a tractor trailer driven from one of his car
ed ones- some Christmas
~turday
. The patrol said a vehicle driven by by Bruce L. Fidler, 23, Jackson,
suggestions:
John K. Garrell, 30, Athens, backed Mich.
Pt. Gowns and Bibs
Kodel Sheepskin Pads
from a private driveway along
There was severe damage to
Eggcrate Bed Pads and Toppers
Always the best
· Rutland 1\vp. Rd. 40 in Meigs Coun- Weaver's vehicle and slight to the
Wheelchair Cushions
; ty at 12:55 p.m. and struck a nor- truck. Fidler was cited fOr assured
Back Cushions
place to be
; thbound vehicle driven by Ronald L. clear distance.
Slant Pillows
Walker Pouches-3 styles
•.
• Lewis, 21, Rt. 2, Patriot.
New Year's Eve.
Reports on accidents on Roush
Wheelchair Safctv Belts
• . Moderate damage was reported to Lane in Gallia County and another
Heel/Elbow Protectors
)loth vehicles, and a passenger in accident in Meigs County Friday
Lap Trays
limited
reservations .
cervical Pillows
Lewis' vehicle, Linda Lewis, 22, Rt.
Make
yours
now.
Call
night were unavailable from the
Overbed Tables
· 1!, Patriot, suffered minor injury and patrol Saturday. Details wiU appear 446-9174 between 2:30 and
Long Reach E·Z Grabbers
: wasn't treated: Garrett was-cited for
Spec Caddvs
6:30 P .M. daily, except
in Monday's editions of the
Shampoo Trays
; Improper backing.
Sunday, for details.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
: According to the report, a vehicle Pomeroy-Middleport Daily Sentinel.
1iriven by Mark E. Weaver, 19,

The Adult Night Club

(POMEROY - Plans were forrirulaled lor the Ohio Federation of
sQil and Water Conservation
~!riel's annual meeting Jan. 1!1-21 .
at the recent meeting of the Meigs

.

Evening clinic

w. va.

made forSWCD convention

30 Channel
- SCANNER

GALUPOLIS - Gallipolis City
Police cited three drivers in several
accidents which occurred Friday.
The department said a vehicle
driven by Robert W. Pennell, 24, Rt.
2, Crown City, was slopped on
Second Avenue for a left turn onto
Pine Street at 8:37 a.m. when he
starting backing for a truck trying to
make a right turn from Pine.
Pennell then backed his vehicle into another stopped vehicle in the leftturn lane driven by Nancy J. Nieoff,
44, Jackson, ·causing moderate
damage to her vehicle and slight to
Pennell's auto. He was cited for
failure to use caution while backing.
According to the report, Eddie
Gillispie, 24, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was
making a right turn onto Fourth
Avenue at Pine Street at 10:30 a.m.

FRENCH QUARTER

.

.Super Buys From
Bob's Electronics

weekly average for all claims in
December of 1980 was 301,057.
Administrator Gil.es said that 2,~
unemplyed workers in Ohio
exhausted !heir benefits under all
program for the .week ending Dec. 5,
including 2,714 Wlder the Ohio 4w.

Onio-Point Pleasant,

'

Tennis
·Armor Battle
' word Fun
Auto Racing
NHLHockey '
Sea Batie
Skiing

PGA Golf
Checkers
NFL Football
Space Battle
Back11ammo·n
Hol'$e Racing
Las Vegas Roulette

.Bob's. Electronics
Upper Rt. 7, Across from the Silver Brldga Plaza

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

TV + lntellivlslon'" -- Fun!
• Versatile master component
• lxolullvo overlaY ayatem for
OGMin making gomo cloclalona
• lp.alollnput koyuetoct tho

o2111e funCIIont and maneuven

• ~aoHOniMdlont
tor lit"" Of loftohancluao

• Objoctooiillolclllc manouven
accurately In 16 dlfoMnt d ..
..otlonl tor . . IIIIo .. 11rm
• lupt~r aotlon ea11ell'

batoli

Poolbol,

:.:&amp;:•
ancllilaokjaok,
,IMIOJrtammon. m-1

armor

• lolh challoftllnt anclexaiKng
"laCII'I.....-nllld a :zltt:

Sunday 12 til 5
Monday thru Wednesday
10 AM til &amp;PM.

HOURS
. .
Closed Christmas Da·y
NO COUPONS OR BOmE DEPOSITS REDEEM.EO
NO CHECKS ACCE~D .·
.·
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�· - Marshall Beaver

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GAWPOUS- Marshall Beaver,
61, of Rt. I, Crown City, died Friday
in St. Joseph's Hospital, Parker·
sburg, W.Va., having been in failing .
health for the last four years.
Born Oct. !, 1!120, in Guyan Twp.,-:
Gallia County, son of the late Henry
and Zelda Houck Beaver, he was a
farmer, construction worker, World
War If veteran, having served in the
U.S. Army and attended the Mercerville Baptist Church.
Surviving are five brothers,
Harley, Ray, Irvin and Dale. all of
Springfield, and Rudy of Eureka
Star Route; four sisters, Mrs.
Madge Lambert of Springfield, Mrs.
Mary Myef8 of Eureka Star Route,
Mrs. Estol Dottor!f of Xenia and
Mrs. Mildred Houck of Gallipolis.
A brother and sister also preceded
in death.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Monday in the Waugi&gt;-Halley·
Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev.
James Lusher officiating. Burial
will be in Ridgelawn Cemetery, Mer·
cerville. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 4-9 p.m. today.
Graveside military rites will be
conducted by VFW Post 4464 .

, Eva M. Dailey

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RACINE - Eva Marie Dailey, 54,

1\1. 3, Racine, died Saturday af·

ternoon in Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy.
She was owner-manager of the
Steamboat Restaurant in Racine,
'loand was preceded in death by her
father, Dan Weddle, and a sister.
Surviving are her husband, Floyd;
0
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her mother, Audrey Anderson of
I Racine; a daughter, Donna Watson
of Newport News, Va. ; a son, Steve
of Racine; three brothers, Lawren·
ce, Ralph anu Bob; all of Eas!_Liverpool; a sister, Grace of East Liver' pool; three grandchildren; . three

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Christmas.

Gora C. Noble
PT. PLEASANT- Gora C. Noble,
88 of Mason died Friday in the
Pieasant Valley Nursing Care Unit.
He was born Auguat B, 1893, In
Muon County to the late Ell and
Dlama Rosers Noble. Also
preceding him In death was bill
wife, Lena Grace Noble, In 1972 arid
a son, MilrCUB, In 1975.
He was an employee of the New
York Central Railroad as a c""
repairman at the Hobaon Yards.
Surviving lire one daUIIhter, Mrs. ·
Harry (Anne) Walah of Maaon; one
son, Homer M. Noble of Mason; five
grandchildren and eight great
grandchildren.
Funeral services wlll be at the
Fog!esoog FWJera! Home In Mason
on Monday at I p.m. with the Rev.
James Lewla offlclatlnll. Burial wlll
follow In the Gravel Hill Cemetery
in Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 2 p.m. until4 p.m.
and from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m.

Waltt~r

.

Republican nomination in June's

Windsor

POINT PLEASANT - Funeral
serviL'es for Walter Mills Windsor,
52, Huntington, former president of
the Marietta Manufacturing Company who died Thursday will be held
at 3 p.m. today from the Christ
Episcopal Church in Point Pleasant.
Rev. Paul Daggett will officiate.
Burial will follow in Looe Oak
Cemetery. The Crow-Husseil
Funeral Home has charge.

.

Presenting a cross-seclion of
thought from the county, MeG hee
said he hopes to maintain the group
for input purposes if elected.
Married to the former Dona Cundiff, he has three children: a son,
Steve, at home; two daughters, Mrs.
John (Beth) Null of Rt. 2, Bidwell
(Rodney Village II), and Mrs. Steve
(Vicki) Rineheart of Cincinnati.

primary. The seat is presently held
, , by Lennie Burger, a Democrat in his
~
first tenn.
A former salesman for Landmark ,....-----~--------1
Foods (formerly the Evans Packing
Co.) in Gallipolis, McGhee, 46, has
been head of his own real estate and
auction firm for the past five years.
Among his activities, McGhee has
been master of ceremonies at
various county activities, including
the Gallia County Junior Fair, and
he also v.olunteers his time to charity
auctions.
In letters he has .sent to various
Gallia residents over the past few
weeks, McGhee said he believes
people are out of touch with their
county government, and he hopes to
bridge this gap
citizens

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through the eyes of a child

Announces candidacy
GALLIPOUS- Myron L. (Bud)
MeGh!'O, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, is the first
to announce his candidacy for the
Gallia county commissioner post in
next November's general election.
McGhee will be seeking the

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RIGHT: David Riggs, son of
Mr. and Mn. Dan Riggs,
....pecUully sllldles Jiatlvlly
figures before •eltlnR lbem up
In bill Middleport home.
BEWW RIGHT: Amy Durst,
dauchter of Mr. aod Mn.
WUlis Dunl, Pomeroy, 'has
found her favorite playtblog in
ToylaiiCI. BEWW RIGHT:
Cllriltmas pageants are a part
of a cblld's Christmas, as
tho!le three wiale men know.
Left to right are Todd Andenon, son of 1\'fr. and Mnl.
Charlet Anderson, Mason, W.
Va; Vaa Klein, ton of Mr. and
Mnl. Fred Klein, Middleport;
and Eric White, son of Mr. and
Mn. Danny White, Pomeroy.

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By JAYNE LEE HOEFUCH
Special to the Tlmeo-Sentlael
For so many, it seems, Christmas is a season of frauled
nerves and hectic days, of purchases made and money spent
none too wisely. Bu now is the time to take a moment from
the hustle and bustle of Christmas crowds and remember ...
remember Christmas through the eyes of a child.
Recall the delight of Toyland, with its seemingly endless
array of novel and wonderful playthings to choose from.
Everything - simply eveything - that could possibly be
made in the whole world was there to be gazed upon by our
curiowl and fascinated eyes. Row after row of toys, anything
you L'Ould imagine, L'Ould be found in this magical place
where your dreams were within reach. And writing your letter to Santa .was so easy after paying a visit to your favorite
toyland.
However, to make sure that Santa Claus knew exactly
what you hoped to find under the tree on Christmas morning,
you just had to see him in person. What an experience to actually sit on the knee of Kris Kringle and tell him your heart's
desire; what a thrill to know that he promised to do
everything he could to make your wish come true! Surely this
had to be one of the most exciting days of your year, when
you Could have that few minutes with jolly Santa to discuss
your gifts.
But you had secrets of your own as well. Hidden away onder your bed or perhaps in your closet, and heaven ooly
knows where else, were those surprises for your family, the
dear gifts you, had worked so hard to obtain, whether you·
made them all by yourself, or spent your precious pocket
money on them. And as soon as you could, you wrapped them
In brightly-colored paper, placing each package lovingly under the Christmas tree for everyone to see and marvel over.
There was another present also, one that you gave to the
grown-ups who came to see you in the annual Christmas
pageant, whether at church or at school. You dressed in y~ur
Nativity costume for the story, perhaps as an angel or a WISe
king from the east. Then you went out in fror.t of all th011e
people and spoke your piece as your loved on~s t'~"med at
you from the audience. 'How proud you were, and huw prou1
they were of you as you stood and sang ~~Away ina Manger,''
with the rest of your group ... maybe your robe was too long
or your halo was lopsided, but it didn't matter, not really. In
fact, the really important thing was the story you were acting
out, and how happy you were to be a part of the celebration of
the birth of the Christ ch.itd.
or course, the miniature Nativity scene in your home
was always there, reminding you of the true meaning of the
holiday, that the Son of God was born in a lowly stable to
P&gt;ecome the Savior of the worl~. How those figures, whether
large or small, were revered, s~t up with such care in a place
of honor in the household so to encourage everyone to
remember what the point of the festivity really is! When you
looked at the scene after it wsa in pace, really looked at it,
and thought about It, maybe you felt a tiny tug at your heart,
and maybe you smiled.
·rr you lind yourself being caught up by the shiny facade
of the season, your heart being hardened totl)e pure joy of the
· time search your merpory for those happy, genuine moments or' Christmases past. Let yourself once again hold the innocence and wooderment of youth, and experience Christ·
mas through the eyes of a child. Have a lovely holiday.

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ROLE X
MYRON L.(BUD) McGHEE

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Approve .issuance

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -The Ohio
Building Authority has approved
issuance of $87.5 million in notes, in~
eluding $10 million to finance land
purchase and start-up costs for a
second state government office
' tower in downtown Columbus.
The issue also includes $63.1
million to finance completioo of a
Toledo state office building and $14.4
millioo for start-up of a state office
building in Akron.

FAR RIGHT: Uberty Allll
King, daughter of Mr. and
Mnl. Tim Klag, Middleport,
gazes up at jolly Salat Nick u
she stveo him her Cbristmaa
lisL RIGHT: Tracey Grueser,.
daUJihter of Mr. aad Mn. Jim ·
Grueser, Middleport, wrapo a
Christmas onu'prise u•er the
famllytro!e.

Day-Da.te.

·
IS W90id with ntdden

clct~p bmceleT
Self windin~ tnronometer
With sa.ppl\ire cry5ta.l

Gnd ~u.ic.K-set cctlendar.
Men·~ ! 7,'\50 .
Ladie~ (wii\-w.tclo.y\ 1&gt;5,750 .

TAWNEY

JEWELERS

424

Ave.

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SALE 25% OFF

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Plaster and Ceramic Bisque
Brushes, Sprays, Paints
All Ribbon .........•.•...... 25c yard

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Finished Samples Not Included.
DEC. 21-22-23:24 AND 26

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THE DABBLE SHOP

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POMEROY, OHIO

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Dec. 20. 1981
Page-B-2 Tile Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Ministries council meets
POMEROY- Pn!sentaton of gifts
to student mlni.ste" 111111 election of
1982 officers ~biiJ)IIed the December meeting of the County Council on
Ministries of the MelgB Coopel'l!tivc
· Parish held Monday at the Chester
United Methodist Church.
Vernon Nease .,r...nted $100
checks to the Rev. Mark Flynn,
Southem Cluster ll, the Rev, Robert
Rider, Rutland cha!'le, and the Rev.
Stanley Merrifield, Syracuse
Cluster. The gifts to the student
ministers were from the educational
fund of the MeiKB COunty United
Methodist Men.
Elected as officers for the Meigs
.Cooperative Parisi! were Frankie
Hunnell, president; Thelma Henderson, vice presidfm; Dorothy
Smith, secretary; · Mlldred lhle,
assistant secretary; Florence
Smith, treasurer; and Vernon
Nease, 1982; Jamts Euler, 1982;
Thelma Henderson, 182; Maxine
Wingett, 1983; and Fa¥ Sauer and
John Rice, 191M.
Following a welcome by Mrs.
Sauer, retirillll president, the Rev .
Richard Thomaa, host minister gave
the opening devotions from Isaiah 9
and prayer. The Rev. Florence
Smith noted that 1981 is the first year
in which all churches in the Meigs
Cooperative Parish have paid their
parish askings 100 percent.
New membership drive for the
Food CD-Op for 1!182 will be underway
soon. The !leY. Robert Robinson,
social concert~~~ ~tor, noted
that the most recent Food CIH&gt;p order required an extra vehicle to expedite delivery. A donation was
received from the "5-C" CCH&gt;p in
Cincinnati tu assist with transportation expenditures for the
Parish.
·
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Rev. Rothemich, missions coordinator, noted that the Rev. Ray
Price from Albany will take part in a
missions tour of Africa in May.
Churches assisting with expenses
may arrange for a slide presentation
of U. M. MissiOIII in Africa upon his
return. The l'lliAWer also proposed
the initiation of a "clothes closet" to
assist perssns in Meigs County
having emergency clothing needs.

w. Va .

Dec. 20, 1981

Merrlflleld, right,
a check
for $100 from the Educational Fund ol the Meigs
United Methodist
Men. The group has been supportiug student ministers serving United
Methodist Churches in Meigs County for the past four years.

.[~

CLEVELAND (AP)- Five times
a year, Stanley Richlak comes out of
retirement to cook up 2,500 pounds of
turkey, 600 loaves of bread and 110
gallons of chestnut gravy.
"I don't need the money, but it's
better to work than to sit at home in
a chair and rock," said Richlak, 78,
who started his culinary career in
1916 at the Spalding Hotel in Duluth,
Minn.
He has served such iUuminaries as
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and
cooked the last meal for aviatrix
Amelia. Earhart before she new off
into the PaCific and was never heard
from again.

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RETIRING EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE HONORED - Mrs. Cordelia Bentz, outgoing vice president; the Rev. Florence Smith, treasurer;
Mildred lhle, assistant secretary; Mrs. Dorothy Smith, secretary, and
Mrs. Fay Sauer, president, were honored at the recent meeting of the
County Council on Ministries of the Meigs Cooperative Parish. Mn.
Sauer has been elected to the Parish Board of Trustees for the next three

The Rev. Mr. Thomas, communications coordinator for the
"Contact" will be the Last Tuesday
before the Last FriUy. Maiiing lists
are being updated.
. County youth are planning a swim
party in January, according to the
Rev. Mark Flyun. rblre will he a $1
charge for partjclpltlllg youth to
cover all expelllleS. The county youth
council met eancurrently with the
Cooperative Pariah Council with
s~ven youth groupo represented.
'!'he next Bible quiz wiD be Jan. 31 at
the Pomeroy U. M.. Church On the
book of Acts. Quiz sheets can be obtained from the Rev.Mr. Flynn.
Vernon Nease nported on the
county United Methodist Men who
met recently at the Asbury UM
Church. A sa~e and pancake supper is planned JGintly with the Senior
Citizens with proceeds to be divided
between the men's group and the
Senior Citizens.,

"I said to myself, 'I see where our
tires wlll go up,' but they didn't. We
got a big bonus from Raymond
Firestone, on top of our wages ..That
was some wedding, and she married
the head stable boy."

He moved to Cleveland in 1924 and .
has worked at the Union Club and
the Cleveland Athletic Club.
While iending the buffet table at
the Union Club, the restaurant was
short a waiter, so Richlak filled in to
personally serve Eleanor Roosevelt.
He said she was '"nice," just like
conunon folk.
He also worked at the wedding of
Raymond Firestone's · daughter in
Bath Township more than 15 years
ago.
"There were 1,000 people under a
silk tent, with Guy Lomardo's band
and another one, too," he said. HThe ·
tent poles were cOvered with live
gardenias. The menu was blueRichlak uses a walker to gel . ribbon steaks oft8 or 19 ounces each, .
around now and the vision in his left and the endive was imported from
eye is impaired, but when he enters France.
·
the kitchen, he's all business.
"There were enough glasses to
Armed ·with a six·pack of cold cover an area as wide as the drive to
beer, he needs lots of space and plen- the mansion for one mile. Af.
ty of quiet to tum out the vast quan- terwards, it took one day one one
tities of holiday food for McNally- night, 24 hours, just to wash them.
Doyle's Red Fox Inn in Gates Mills,
"There .were guests from every
which he retired from in 1969. He of· country you could imagine, · inten arrives at the restaurant late at ~luding Egypt,'' Richlak said. "The
night and works past dawn.
FordS were there from Detroit, and
.For the Last 12 years, he has Nelson Rockefeller was there. The
eooked the restaurant's Easter, cake was so big that it cracked when
Mother's Day, Thanksgiving, ChriSt- it was moved, and the bride cried,
mas and New Year's dinners with aU but it was repaired.
the trimmings for catered home

delivery
and the Red Fox Inn's clientel
e.

r------.,-----A check every
month ... os kng
os you live
GUARANTEED RETIREMENT
INCOME FROM

512 Second Avo.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446-8235 .
Home Ph. 388·9691

MODERN WOODMEN

OF AMERICA
Frt~lerntzl Li/r lluNr•nu
Home OHice- lock hland, lllinol•

Brandy, seU
Winetaster, set 6
Grand Noblese, set 4
Blackstem Hock, set 6

$11.00
$11.00
$10.00
$14.00

Give a toast with our wide
assorhnent of bar accessories.

Oh.
NOW OPEN FOR
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias-Sl.OO &amp; Up
Christmas Wreaths, Can·
die Arrangements, Christ·
mas cactus, Foliage Plants &amp; Hanging Baskets.
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun. 1 to 5
Phone 992·5~76

'

~

.

'

I• v J. G. DlJRA ND

.·

c}'~/

Wine Carafes &amp; Decanters
$4.00 up
Wine Racks
$12.00 up
Asst. Cheese t1elpers &amp; Servers $9 .50 up ·

Peddler's Pantry
state &amp; Third

GII'TS TO S'111DENT MINISTERS -On bebaU of the .Meigs Couaty
Thedrive
Methodist
are planning
fund
for theMen
United
Metliodista
Children's Home and the Heath
United
Methodist
Men are planning
to
cater
their church's
mother·
daughter banquet
in the
Thea
Syracuse
U.M. Men
are spring.
planning
musical event 18 wiBch the women ·
are invited.
· A symJlOBit*l a1t Cooperative
Ministries will lie held in Indianapolis, Jan. 5:7, the Rev. McGee
•oted. He allo reported ·that a $60
scholarship ia available through the
Athens District and information on
lhis can be obtained from him.
- Mrs. Cordell.a Bentz thanked the
group for their support and encouragement clurinl her tenure as
vice president of U. atanty council. .
She and her h!lr•a 'wm be moving
to Orlando, Fla. In u.rdL .
• Next meelilll II 1111 County Coun. cil wiU be Jan. ~ a&amp; the new RacineWesleyan Unl*ldMIIdmdist Cbuch.
. A~waspresen­
fed followi!W'~ II
meeting.,
Mrs. Mildred lilt Pft1111'8m chair·
man, introduced lhil,..,, ~r. Robinlao who led the l'll1sP in carol
~- Spedallllll6c was by Mrs.
Bonnie .1 " - •
sang "No
Room" aceompuled by her
busband on the piallo. The Rev. Mrs.
Smith had 1 r-11,., the Rev.
James Clark Ani "Do You Hear
What I HearT," IIIII Mrs. Robert
RobinsOn gave a ~. presentation
featuring the llafMir scene acoompanied ~~tftdill.l' Cbrilltinas
inuslc.
••
' Ref~ .... ._..ed with
Mrs. Ruth ~-r-- Betty L.
uoore a1 • I'
Cburches
;:.;presented ,._. 7 5 ut, Morning
Star, Apple a-, r •oy, Foreot
Run, Heath, Leii~Mbn. Racine,
ehester, Salelll C.W, St. Paul, En:
terprise, and..,... ,
'

. ,..
'.

I

cbedl fill' $100 to

-~th~e~R~e~v·~~;ii~~a~nd~tb;e~R;e;v;.;;~;;;;~;•tu;de;;n;t;mi;nl;;•te;rs;;.;;~jl

Last mm·ute Chri'stmas

Little Head• Rest Ea1y On
Snooa:y Sua:y

shop·PI'n~?

Shf''s n cuddly pillow doll
fillC'd with

and

pol:yc'st~r

covered

fo.1m.

with

n

polyC'ster-&lt;·otton IT'nchinc

We

wnshnbl('

case.
Nontoo. C'hf'rry
Pic. Jelly Bean nncl Pnttl
Pnt.rh nrc :\l!io nvoilnblt'.

nller~~:c- nlc,

Have
Her
Favorite
·Things.

WOOL SKIRTS

;.'

'15''

Rea. '19"

Sund11 Onl1
IX,TRA CASES

Rei. 'I"

Sandi! Onl1

'5"

Sliver Colored

PIGGY
wardrobe.

·

Olv" n highly. pollshed
mNnl piKKY bank. both

Aigner Handbags, Jackets and Accessories

lp

•

nrnnmC'ntaland pra('tk'al.
· . Com1•s In It&lt;&gt; own p:lrt box.

Estee Lauder Perfume and Gift &amp;ts

Rea. '6" ·

Lingerie by Vanio/ Fair
Sunday Only

Suits and Sportswear

slim~rut sldrl-.. Sam&lt;' lityles
"'ith sldf' slit, somC' with kick

p)C'nt . Colors : · blnck, romC'\.
nnvy. · arcy, burgundy. Si1.e!( &amp;

lfl.

Reg. 1500'
Sunday Only

lafayette mall
Gallipolio

SUNDAY

SCHOOL

United Methodist Church will be
held Sunday at 8 p.m. Florence
Spencer is program director.

THE CARRIERS of Belmont,
W. Va., will present a Christmas
program at Jubilee Christian

----

GAWPOUS Christian Church ~
wlll have a pre-Christmas
program with the choir and
junior youth at 6 p.m. Sunday.
MbNDAY
KANAUGA United Methodist
&lt;llurch youth will Christmas caro
Monday at 6 p.m. They will visit
the shu tins in the community.
Participants should meet at the
churchat5:45 p.m.
GAWPOUS 'Welcome Wagon
will hold a meeting and cookie ex-

clllinge Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Jackson Branch of Ohio
Valley Bank. Members and
Hughes, will be presented at the guests should take 2% dozen
Mason United Methodist Church · Cookies.
Sunday at 7:311 p.m. under the
direction of Mrs. Lucille
GALUPOUs-American LegiSwackhamer.' Accompanist will on Lafayette Post 2'1 will halo a
be Mrs. Lynn Kitchen at the regular business meeting Monpiano and Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt at day at 7:311 p.m. at the Post Home
the organ. SOloists are · Connie on Bob McCormick Road.
Gilland, Debbie Roush and Gary Speakers from GalUa-JacksonStewart. Narration by the Rev. Meigs C&lt;lmmunily Mental Health
Ben Stevens. The public is invited Center. Dr. Jim Altho! and Orto attend.
man HaD will present the film
"Agend Orange Search for An·
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM at swers." All members should at·
Syracuse Presbyll!rian Church tend.
Sunday at 7:30p.m. The public is
invited to attend.

THE MT. HERMON United
Brethren Church, Texas coin- ·
munity, will hold itS annual
Chrisboas program at 7:311 p.m.
Sunday. A play, "The Gate of the
Inn" will be presented by the
young people. There ·will be
recitations . and special vocal
music. The public is invited.
THE ANNUAL Christmas
program of tile Carleton Church
located on Kingsbury Road will
be held at 7 p.m. Sunday. There
will be a gifl·o:xchange folloWing
the program.

Monday
THE CHESTER United
Methodist Church will have its
annual Christmas program Monday at 7:30p.m. A reception will
follow in the church social rooms.
THE ANNUAL Christmas par·
ty of the W~ng Trail Garden
Club will be held Monday at
Shoney's ·Restaurant in Point
Pleasant. A party wiD follow at
the home of Addalou Lewis with a
$2 gift exchange.
THE MEIGS County Churches

of Christ Men's 'Fellowship will

UNITED Pentecostal · meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Cburch of Middleport will present Mlddle~rt Church of Christ.
"Mary Had A UUle Lamb," a
c:hildren's musical portraying a
new approach to the birth of the
Tuesday
Mesaiah at 6 p.m. Sunday at the
church. The public is iqvited.
POMEROY - The senior
SUNDAY services at the Grace citizens' Christmas dinner will be
Episcopal Church wiD be held at 5 held Tuesday at 12 noon at the
p.m. with the Chrillbnas Eve ser- Senior Citizens Center, located in
vice at 7 p.m. On Sunday, Dec. 2'1, the Multi-purpose building on
the evening service will be held at Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy.
5p.m.
POMEROY - The open houSe
CHRISTMAS program will be postponed last week at the Meigs
held Sunday at the Syracus~ Multi-purpose building, has been
Cburch of the Nuarene. At 9:55 rescheduled for Tuesday from I
a.m. the childfen's department to3p.m.
will present a program under the
direction ol Ora Bass, 'and at 6
Wednesday
p.m. the teen department wiD
have a
under the direcPOMEROY - The annual
tion of Debbie Triplett. ,
Christmas pi'Oflram of the Flat·
RACINE - A Christmas woods Methodist Ch~rch will be .
program will be presented by the · held on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
children of the Racine Baptist The Rev. Richard Rochemich,
Church Sunday at 7:30p.m. The pastor, invites the public.
children's presentation will be
followed by the teenagers of the
church in a musical, "It's the
Lord's Thing." Everyone is
welcome.
THE

$1999

·RACINE - The adult choir of ·
the Racine Baptist Cburch wiD
present a cantata, "The Miracle
of Lov'e," at 7:30p.m. Everyone
iswelcome.
·

WARM YOUR FEET

THE MORNING STAR
Christmas pi'Oflram. will beeld at
7:30p.m. Sunday.

, By Angel Tread1

GALLIPoLIS-United Methodist Chun:h will have a Chrilltmu
eantala at the lOtS a.m. servic;e

Wn"hoble, Pile Lined,
Fbam CW'hior\("d ' ColOrs:
R&lt;'d or Roynl. Wom&lt;'n's

Illes I&gt;M·L-XL.

~··

4

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

f'~int

OhtO

. . . . .. -

G~ COUNTY Historical
. Soeilty will 111811t, Sundly at St.

Peter's Epi1CcJP8l Ch11rch.
Speaker will be Fl'lllk IDil. Tl1e
board will meet at 1 p.m. and the
· general meellng will be at 2:80
p.m. The pabllc II Invited.

$6~9

T

VINTON:Thel'l will be a
pot1uc11 .o- at Vlatoa United
Methodllt Cb18'dl. ilaonSunday

f91lowed ., "*-' llaie linlina"

*Pill CMn WIAIIIIINO
Pilll PARKING

at 1:30 p.m. Steve Sllfty, putor,
IP!tld ... public.

Open Sunday
1&amp;00. 7&amp;00

oAWPOLJ8-(lGipel Jlap!Ut
OlurCh wiU llllld Ill ~

procramat 7:30p.m. Saujday. All

•

"
!

'•

... -

.

. . . . . .. , .

, ....

'

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...

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1'1"

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The Sund.l y T1mcs Scntinei-Page-8·3

December 211, 1981
Dreams you've harbored secretly for a long time could come true
in the year following your birthday. Many favorable developments
should come your way in this promising and adventurous period.
Make the most of them.
SAGITI'AR!US (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Friends who have been lucky for
you in the past could prove fortunate for you again today, particularly
one who thinks in large terms.
CAPRICORN (Dec. %2-Jan. 19) The secret to success tOday is to
flow with events, rather than fight them. You should be very lucky just
by letting nature run its course.
AQUARIUS I Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You are hath a competent teacher
and a receptive student tOday. In certain instances companions will
learn from you; in others, you will team from them.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 211) Joint ventures could prove very ad·
vantageous tOday. In fact, far more so than things which you attempt
on your own. Try to find way to be useful .to any who need yo~r help.
ARIES (March 2I·Aprll19) Associations tOday with affluent or influential persons should work out extremely well. Discuss areas in
which you may need assistance.
TAURUS (ApriiZO.May 211) Be ·willing to be helpful and of service
tOday, with no thought 9f personal gain. Being unselfish could 'lead to
unsolicited rewards.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) You will derive the most enjoyment
today from activities offering some type of fuil competition. Try to
seek that which challenges you, both mentally and physically.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) This is a good day to take care of all
those little d&lt;&gt;-it-yourself chores. Instead of being arduous they should
prove enjoyable.
LEO I July 23-Aug. 22) This is a good day to entertain the boss or
persons important to your business or career. It will help build warmer, more understanding relationships.
VffiGO IAug. 23-Sept. 22) It someone today mentions ways to
make or save money, .perk up your ears and listen carefully. The tips
could prove profitable, especially those from relatives. .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23). If you're contemplating launching an en·
terprise or venture, substantial spadework can be done today to get it
on solid footing. Make this matter your top priority.
SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 22) Your possibilities for material gain
are execptionaily promising today, but conditions could work out
un':lliually, whereby you're not even aweare of what's occurring.

December 21, 1981
Your prospects for the coming year look very promising
materially and financially. However, be extremely careful about
spending unwisely,and laking on long-term obligations.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. %1) Tltink twice before making
promises or commitments today. Your intentions will be good, but
something could come up later which may prevent you from fulfilling
them.
CAPRICORN (ll&lt;:c. 22-Jan. 19) Think carefully today about the
friends you put on your gift list. Although you'll want to trest them
generously, they may be put in an embarrassing position if they're
unable to reciprocate.
.
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Be on your best behavior socially
today. Others will be watching you carefully. If your demeanor is im. proper, it could hurt your reputation.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Attitude means everything tOday. If
you see yourself as the underdog, you may conduct yourself accordingly and come out a loser instead of the victor.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be careful tOday that you don't
· become involved in romantic intrigue. Stay away from one who is off·
limits and could cause complications.
TAURUS !April 20-May 201 Associates will recognize it im· ·
mediately if you try to usc flattery or guile to get them to do your bidding tOday. Be sincere and direct.
. GEMINI IMay 21·June 20) This could be one of those days where
it's easier to find excuses why things shouldn't be done than to do
them . Tasks can't be rationalized a,way . '
CANCER (June 21-July 221 Subdue tendencies today toward being
too possessive of one you love. Romance ca n•t blossom properly in a
smotl1ering atmosphere.
LEO I July 23-Aug. 22) in order to appease one for whom you care
there is a possibility ~ou could make some unwise concessions tOday.
These might worsen matters rather than imprO\·e them.
VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Get it in wr·iting rather than make aver·
· bal agreement with anyone who is performing special work or service
for you tOday. Promises may not mean much.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be prudent tOday in the management of
your finances and resources. Subd~e temptations to spend more on

yourself and others than you can afford.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Take a little extra time with your
makeup and attire tOday if you are going where there is a chance
you'll run into someone you'd like to impress. Appearance is im-

'portant.

Robbery gave name to caverns
CLYDE, Ohio (AP) -Five barns
in northwest Ohio all bear the same
message, and the message always
-leaves locals scratching their heads
- "Jesse James Hideout, Stanton,
Mo."
The history, however, goes back to
the days after World War II, when a
farmer who was willing to barter
could get his barn painted for free.
One of the barns is located just west

levels deep and were a natural for
the Jesse James gang to hide out in
after robbing a hank at Gads Hiil,
Mo.
To promote the caverns after
World.War II, a developer, Lester B.
Dill, traveled the back roads of Ohio
seeking barns to bear bis ad·
vertising. Mrs. Rockefeller says Diil
would offer to paint a farmer's barn
if the farmer would allow the sign to

of Clyde on U.S. 20 in Sandusky
County.
Stanton is a town about 50 miles
southwest of St. Louis. Sue
Rockefeller tells the story behind the
bam and the painted, white-on-black
message.
.
·
Mrs. Rockfeller works at
Meramec Caverns adjacent to
Meramec State Park in Stanton. She
says the bam draws questions from
Ohioans who drive by it and wonder
about the sign.
The Missouri caverns are five

beApainted
too. was used by the
similaron,barter
Mail Pouch Chewing Tohacco people
tospread'lhecompany;sname.
Over _l!'.t;....Years, the number of
Jesse James barns has dwindled.
Ohio has five, Mrs. Rockefeller
said, including the one in Clyde,
owned by Ruth Barber of Fremont
and one near Findlay off 1-75.
Mrs. Rockefeller says the painting
crews stiiltravei through Ohio and
other Midwest states, seeking barns.
But the story behind the message

RUTLAND
FURNITURE CO.

MASON
FURNITURE CO.

~;~i OH.

is that Jesse James and his buddies
were chased into the caverns in
Stanton after a robbery. A sheriff's
posse was posted outside, hoping to
starve the outlaws out. But when the
lawmen rushed the cavern, they
found only the James' gang's horses I
1
inside.
Locals immediately blamed the
sheriff and posse for letting the
James gang slip past them. But it.

later became clear that the gang had
taken the same advice a~
bootleggers later would- When the
front door is blocked, take the rearexit. Another way out of the caverns
was

rr.:~~~~1~~~~=r
Spring Valley Piau
446· 439&amp;

The Stare Farm

family Insurance

FOR CHRISTMAS

Cbe4M

.SPECIAL

canmake fou
fedbettir.

Only $2()00
• Emergency road ser.vice
e Bail bond · .
e Vacation plann·ing
e Trip guarantee
Call Today for Details

It's a 1ev1ew of your Insurance
co,.erages and needs. Home, car;
llle and health. And 1t doesn't
cost anythmg Call me lor aFamily Insurance Checkup today
AGFN1 SNAM[
AOORF.SS
ANO PHON(

@Gallipolis

;;me!

For Your Convenience

H

We Will Be Open
Each E~enlng Until

~~~~--m·-~~M~~M~~----~----~
A

Make

B:OO p.m. Thru the
Holiday Season, Starting
'

'

Friday, December 18th.
'

We Will Be Open
Until 6:00 P.M.

SWIMMING
.· POOLS

on Christmas Eve.

Christmas
PastA
Christmas
Present

HAPPY

.PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM

.HOI.IDA YSI.

For Your Winter Need
Call304-429·4788

)

.

THE CHRISTMAS O)LI.E( :n )R 'S
PLATE ANI) HOlJQllET

70 RECLINERS ·oN SALE

lw: 1;ttiful holiciH~ flurul urram.o.·mc·lll. • T\\11 lm•·h rc·cl ta1u •r• ·•l
\wl 11 l'ollc•f•tnr-.. l'lult- in .. •·rillt'cl nith tit, • trntlltiunal
c:hri .. tma" '''' '"'"illj.!: .. ,.,.,., .,. 1111 Eurth. ,;IHIIInill Tct~&gt;nr•l ''··n." It lui ..
till' Inn~. fc•.-1 all! I tpHdit~ nr hano(-fnrg• ··· l·:arl~ \llll'ri•·lUI IM ' nh'l', 0
Th:tt '._ uur no '\1 C:hri .. lluu .. l 'nll•·dnr ' .. ('lak anol Umuptl'l . \ lwlida' a.:il"l
thnt ~dlllw tr•'ll"lln·•l fut' ~· ·ur .. lu• ·unl• ·\\•· !'J ill "''llllllw t :hri"hllll" Buuqn.-1 almu"llm'"hc·n· in till' l .......
~- 11 .( ; 1 l:hri .. tmn" prt'"""' lhal t1ill tnn'-•· ..unu-utw ·.. l:hri .. tuw .. ,, . ,.~
\

1-a rull• ·"·

'

Ree. '10"

.......

Pleasant. W.Va.

Sunday.

*

300 Second Ave.

THE

~program at the Alfred

OW KYGER ,Church will hold
a Christn'ias program Sunday at 7
p.m. AU are welcOme.

~

Astrograph

· RETAIL

Sunday Only

$399

..
_,,,...,.,

Hanes Hosiery

Fullv·lined Dirndl liklrts ond

WITH COZY BOOTS

BANK ·

At Bernadine's you'll find a f~ll line of quality ac ·
cessories and beautiful co-ordinates to complete your

CHRISTMAS program and
candle lighting ""rvice will be
held at the Eagle Ridge Community Church Sunday, 7:311 p.m.
The public is invited.

KANAUGA UniteQ MethOdist
Church Sunday School will have
its annual Chrillbnas program
Sunday at 7:311 p.m, The public is
invited.

~ ·.

,._ . . . . . . ..

Astrograph

Procram

By Abby Michael

BUNK MATES

FREEDOM Gospel Mission on
the Bald Knpb·Stiversville Road
will be held at 7:30p.m. evening.
The public is invited.

PROSPEcr Baptist Church
will bold a Clristma8 program
Sunday at 7:311 p.m. There will be
preaentatloos by the prbnary and
junior clllsses. The public is iO:
vited. '
.

CliRISTMAS CANTATA "Joy
To The World,'' by Robert J.

Choose from our sparkling
array of wine glasses
at sparkling prices!
$11.00
Grand v in, set 6

~yracuse,

SYRACUSE FlRII'f Ohliith r'
God will present 1 aw~Jtbru,,
Cantata Sunday at 7:30p.m. Th,.
Pllblic is invited to allllnd.

event.

HERE'S TO THE HOLIDAYS!

Richiak, who "said he became a
chef so he never would go hungry,
spent 18 months studying his craft at
one of the best restaurants in Ham·
burg, Germany, working for free as
his Caiher paid his expenses.
"They were rough on you if you
didn't learn," he said. uToday, you
ask one of these young cooks to
make lobster butter, and they look at
you like you're dwnb. I've learQed
something from the young, too how to cut corners."

Sunday

Center Sunday at 7 p.m. 'nie
group has traveled through mlllll
of the ea.otem United States
. presenting gospel music. The _
public is invited to attend the

r~;::;:;:;;;;;;~;;;.;.;;;;,;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;

HUBBARD'S ·GREENHOUSE

United Methodist Men, Vemon Nease, left,

Coming events

Retired chef retUrns
to .work holiday season

~.

Middloport·-G.1IIip~los,

Pomeroy

8

... ........

l.a·Z·Boy

BOTH

ANo

Action

ROCKER REQ.INERS
WALl HOOGER
FROM

La-Z-Boy Recliner

Dr. brown nylon velvet

$}55

$299

choice

of

either

fWIH.~ IXQ'IIMINI' with ds deeply
tufted vinyl seat and beck cushior)S. A fabulous

weqistcr tor the S20 Gilt f.crt itic.ltc to be qiv t• n ,1w,1y ,.,,ch
~.,-,turdolV ,111d ,, )50 (, jft(crtifiC.lf(•fo be qiVf'll o1Wo1V Otl f'l('Ct· ! ~l ­
ber 24th

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

rocker,

recliner or wlll·hugger recliner. REG. S465

"

Lifestyle FURNITURE SHOWCASE
Corner Third &amp; Olive, Gallipolis, 446· 3045
Mon.-Fri. till I
fill Christmas

.

'

'

SHOWN:

Your

lilt' IT~

" 1 he WtlV .A:ncric.1

~ends l

~ ·H .

992:..:1039
nr992 -S721
VJc rtcccpt .111

l~;;~;x:::~

ovr•."
lOo t l t•tt• •r ltl ·t l\vc •.
• 'o•nt:rov , Otl
ol nd Wl-' Wl.rl' IIOW('ro:,

'
':loltOr

&gt;

Crl'dlt Colrd s

�•

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'

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I

Page-B-4-The

Dec.

Va .

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Dec. 20; 1981

I til

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

ByKATIECROW
Gene Boggess, Antiquity, is certainly a hero.
La•t Sunday at about 5:27 p.m. a
truck with three occupants plunged
into the Ohio
River at Antiquity.
Mrs. Boggess
witnessed the accident and immediately told her
husband, Gene.
Gene did not Jose
a minute. He
•.
MIShed to the scene and seeing the
truck with the three people in the
water plunged into the river and
aided them from the icy water.
We read so much about the bad
things that occur that it is a pleasure
to write about the wonderful things
people do that go by unnoticed.

R e m~ m b e 1 ~eve r al ye.t•' .111n .... nen w l' rnuld
·· .t rdlv !on a ~~~l .lC11• 0 pudd•r.g ""' • •I n lh.r ., liP~! I
'Tiiull.e l ,ne•ves be cause e11er yone w a ~ ~~~ ~ ' flll
:!· stacnra o e s s ens '~ rnr ru 1c•aJe has passed
· ,,w e s 11 11 11 ~t rr.at 0~ \ICto u s ll.a~ o '' "'ere s a
· enpe I at a oren 'f Htii'J' Pilllc~l• lrt~d thill
,.~ .. 11 en1o ~ 9 ' ~ ' "') as aq ott or ~ervong lam .tv and
l• oen r:l s P1epa re Pans n~ ljlr ea smq on bollom
""''; •!wo9 -s· .r•oal·pans 1hree8 ' ··~ 4 · "ll2,' .·
,11 JiiOS o· one luDe pa nl To makt bread
co mb•nt I bo• ~e ll o w

... SDA GRADE A
FANCY TRIM

ran&lt;l1frl t,;t1Pr t•I' S MtJiur o' 'olltlllle 1h1 rk .11111 '·'"til
Pout I ':! 11! tl ~l !l!l tUtu ~nt'11.llcc1 p,lltl '- o11ld
' \ DfiO~ J I! l / 2 Il l 1'11/ IJII I!J ll YI 'I

00111 tlH I ~I
) oll
batl t r 11'1 and "'JI •'l i.ll:! w1! h 'em,l!llllt• ot l •,il"fl\.1
Sit ~ t .1 1 JSQ• l UdYt') 45 S~ tni!1Uit'i ~ Ill' lube
abour 1 ,., our C•Jnl in pil n" on coo lr •lq ' ~ .: ~ ., 'a• 10
rntnures ana thl' " r ~mn~e tu lontshr.ouhi'O r' r•u• ng
15 made D•t lllmO.n on r,t ~ up r.hopped nu l'&gt; f ?t up

By CHAR LEN~!: HOEFLICH ·
If you thought you reeog~dled
those two cute kids on the CbanMI I
Christmas promotion, you proboibly
did.
They are the
daughters Of Jack
and Sherrie Kane.
and the granddaughters of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold
Blackston. Heath-

Sugar anr1 2 ro J l ~ p ( ltllhlm&lt;in
•clear
lutll! p tn .mil
t•e w•tn .J prc tll' C/l rl&lt;; tm,H tiow Wnte Ul f · ~ cr pe
on a ~ . 1 • n ,1nt1 ' '' 1n w!lh the bow' Mauv llil~t!d
qooO tcs Cdll tJ .. Q • ~t n 111 thiS manpr1
ro .Ill nt yOlo M,oy lh t QUtll1 wdt nl !I ll~ b ·1uhlul
.•e .l ~Onllr . w o !h vnu too .t ll •,l'a son"'
A sa ~ pe c• .I IQo ll wr a pth et oo r eonrr~ll •

p1 a ~t 1 t .,.ra p ~illl• rll n

a ~ w IOdl or

Lala Youn1 · ICA Ha•• Ecttnornlel

· BONELESS
LB.

SEMI:oBONELESS

La-.

99~

16 oz.
CANS

3

and his wife, Dorotha and Geraldine
(Till) Webb. All three are much improved.
The family Of those involved will
be eternally grateful to Boggess for
his efforts in thinking Of others in
their time of nee~ .
.
The action nf Boggess cortaiilly
proves that people really do "care"
about others .

Corner -

er is six and
Emily is four, and
•
their Dad, who started out with WM·
PO Radio here, is now with Chamel
8. The promotion is shown several
times during the day. ·

p.o.ao.aa ... c-•oa,OIII•.&amp;.~1t• · ••"

GREEN.
BEANS

'·

mro JOd 1 b r.l
po sr acn1 u puflll1 n9 m•~
Add 1•2 cup orla nd 1
r up ~ Ou f crPa m Beal
•,.. .a rq o ~ unc .llill lme
St1• 111 I .It 1111r ho ppetl
( a~e

HAMS

LIBBY'S

Those injured were Junior Salser

.,,.

eoN~irissRound
RUMP ROAST

LIBBY PUMPKIN

Need a last minute gift? Would a
copy Of the Meigs County piH&lt;&gt;ry
bookberight?
.
C. E. Blakeslee advises that copies
are available at both the Polll!!roy
and Middleport Ubraries for $:i&amp;, a
special price, and if yoit want ·one
mailed, the costis $29.
~

Lb.

USDA CHOICE BEEF ROUND

FULL CUT
ROUND STEAK .......... .

VOLUMES 25
27 OF
FUNK &amp; WAGNALL ~NCYCLD,PEDIA

USDA CHOICE BEEF ROUND

Boneless Top
249
ROUND STEAK........... .
Lb.

we Reserve the .

PRICES JN THIS
AD GOOD DEC. 21
THRU DEC . 26,1981

22 9

It's not always easy to get hosPital
equipment when you need it, but
several organizations do maintllln
equipment for loan.
,
One is the American Legion, ·Ell
Denison Post, rl Rutland. ·The
legionnaires are hopeful Of ·expanding what they have to offer _!lnd
ask that anyone with any type of
hospital equipment .they might fike
to donate, contact Rex Lambert' for
pickup. Any repairs needed caQ be
handled by the legionnaires.

USDA CHOICE BEEF ROUND

Right to Limit
Quijntities

Boneless Sirloin
TIP ROAST ................ ..
PENOBSCOT

~~~~~:~......................... ~.~·. 89

To those who wanted the recipe for
the 30 day cake I am sorry to report
but it will not be possible to pass it
on.
It seems as though the cake needs
what all those who have baked the

TAYLOR

to know how to make the starter or
where it really came from . lt seems
to be a deep dark secret.
Would the person whoknows the
secret please come forward?
Uke to send birthday wishes to
Cheryl Burdette, Middleport, who
celebrated her birthday Thursday . .
Belated best wishes.

•

CH.ERRY PIE ·FILLING

79~

ZIOZ.

Speaking of birthdays I -.:Ish to
send birthday wishes to our oldest
granddaughter, Lori, who will be
nine years of age the day after
Christmas.

3

f1r6

CREAM

70LBOX

PUMPKIN PIE ............ :.~J!·. 99

AJAX

6.9~

. '

::~~~R

27 Off l.llll

~~WGENT. .......~~ ..~ 1

Featuring area musicians, piano,

vocal and instrumental. Refreshments following the program at
Riverby.
December 21-January I - River·
by closed for the holidays.
January 2, 1982 - Riverby
reopens.
Januay 4, 1982 - Deadline to
register for the dance classes taught
by Cindy Nau, available for both
children and adults. Call Judi Sheets
at 440-7865 to indicate inteest in
registering for the 10 week courses.
January 5, 1982, 7:30p.m. - FAC
Interdepartmental Meeting.
January 9, 1982- Beginning Of 10 ·
week courses for children in preschool dance, children's ballet and
modem dance, taught each Saturday afternoon by Cindy Nau. Call
440-711115 to pre-register, no later than
January4.
January II, 1982 - Adult classes
in dance, taught each Monday
evening for 10 weeks by Cindy Nau.
.- Contact Judy Sheets at 440-7865 to
pre-register, no later than January

Reynold's Wrap Foil ...............~~-~.::. 49

4Roll99~
Pkg.

....

,on AnY DOUBLE
VALUE .
Manutacturer aoupon For

on Any Manufatlu'r tr Coupon

Per customer·

Per customer.

soc or Less. Limit 4 Double Coupons

~.
()\ (£}

~~

Dairy
.

'5),

IGA 2%

(~

'

MILK
-

PLASTIC
_GALLON

.

$}69

'

LIMIT I PER FAMILY

. Oet. 21, 1;11

BROUGHTON

. Aruiouncemen

COTTAGE CHEESE,
24 oz. '129

RUTLAND - Reservations for the
: New Year's Eve dance at the Eli
· DeniBOO Post, American Legion, are
to be made with Bob Snowden or Rex

lAFAYETTE EGGNOG

Lambert.
Dances are held at the post home
· every Saturday night. Membera are
reminded that dues for 1982 are
payableat$11 before Jan . ! or$13af- ·

OHerE

50
·

on Any Manufacturer Coupon For
50c or Less. Limit 4 Double Coupons·

I
I

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER FAMILY

Offer

·res Sat., Dec.

1981

HOLIDAY FRUI1 SPECIALS

10/994

TANGERINES .
CALIF. NAVEL
..
ORANGES 8/994

.

IGA TABLERITE QUALITY
$229

SWISS CHEESE..................

. The weather being a bit un1 cooperative, the Rutland .PTO postponed their "snack with Santa" until
Monday evening from 6:30 to B: 30
p.m. at the Rutland Elementary
School. Pictures will be taken of Santa with the children and there will be
a variety of toys on hand for parents
to select from.

LB.

RED GRAPES 99~

.,

RIVER VIEW
,.

'

Have a Merry Christmas'

BLUE BONNET

Gallia
.Senior
Citizens
Calendar

~ OFF REMAINING
CHRISTMAS WRAPPING
PAPER ·

NO RAINCHECKS!
LIMITICOUPONPERFAMILY
OFFE.R EXPIRES 12·26·81

ONE POUND QTRS.

I

I1
I
I
I

CUKES.

;................... ~~- 394
REO
SHES 8 OL
GR.EErt :PEPPERS 3/994
••

..

e MEDI
eWIDE
e EXTRA-WIDE

GENUINE
IDAHO .
S179
.
10 LB.
BAKING POTATOES

786 .N. 2nd

.'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

.

.-..
•

"'

IGA

NOODLES

8-9 DAILY
U6 SUNDAY

12

oz.

BAGS

94

WE SELL USDA INSP-Efuo·
•

BEEF ONLY! .

.

G 1\LUPOLIS - Activities for the
wet;k of Dec. 21-25, 1981 at the Senior
Ci';izens Center located · at 220
Jackson Pike areas follows :
Monday, Dec. 21 - rhoru• Dinner
and Party,ll a.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 22 - f. . J .t..' !~.
Class, 10:30 a .m .; Physical Fitness,
11: 15 a.m.; Chrisbnas Dinner, 12
noon; Bible Study,l·2p.m.
. Wednesday, Dec. 23 - Vinton
BibleStudy,1 p.m.; Card Games,l-3
p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 24 - Closed.
Friday, Dec. 25 - Closed.The Senior Nutrition Progran;:will
serve the following menus:·
Monday - Pork cutleVgravy,
Harvard beets, mashed potatoes,
bread, butter, baked apple, milk.
Tuesday - Ham/pineapple,
mashed sweet potatoes, buttered
cauliflower, dinner roll, cake, mint
chocolate chip ice cream, butter,
milk.
Wednesday - Chicken a Ia King
over biscuit, peas and carrois,
colO!Ilaw; biscuit, butler, peach lllllf
in strawberry gelatin, milk.
Thursday - Closed.
Friday - Closed.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal. Meals subject to change
without notice.
HServices rendered on a non.
discriminatory basis."

'

FRUIT
BOWLS
AVAilABLE

-

•

"

DUTCH .LOAF
KIELBASA lOAF
PillA LOAF~

I

-------------

Per customer.

FOODLINER

terthen.

4

LIMIT1 COU

l

4.

Following a tradition Of many
years, Santa will be at the American
Legion hall on Christmas Eve from &gt;
to 7 p.m. to give treats to the
children of the community.
A project of the Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, the legionnaires will sack
the treats on Wednesday 'evening
following their regular meeting.
That same night the Auxiliary
members, legionnaires,. and juniors
will meet for a Christmas dinner at
6:30 p.m. and then while the men
sack the candy, the women and
junior Auxiliary members will have
a party and gift exchange.

Margarine

DOUBLE VALUE
On Anv Manufacturer Coupon For

~~ -

FOR ANY SIZE
.GATHERING 992-2551
SUGARDALE SALE

SOc or Less. Limit 4 Double Coupons

wmiiiiiiiCOOiPi!ii'Ai ....

Per Custonier.

PAR1Y
·fRAYS

Sunshine Grahams ... ~ ..... ~~-~~:. 99e

DOUaE VALUE

soc or Less. Limit 4 Double ~oupons
LIMIT I COUPON PER FAMILY
1981 .

1 LB.
PKG.

Bush Chili Hot Beans, ....... 3~5A0;s gge
99 ---....:------=::
·
·
s·
·
1
·
$1
Kraft Amer1can 1ng es .. !~5~~;.,.

TYLENOl TABLETS'..... ~??.~~·... ~2 99 .

White or Assorted

nssuE

.

KAHNS
WIENERS .............

29

Pride of Spain Olives.: ..........~-~~·...894

MOUTHWASH ............ ~.~~: .. ..

·WISK...........~~-~~:.~J~:.s1
4
SAN 1-FLUSH......... }~- ~~:....79
NORTHERN
BATHROOM

~

'

Pomeroy Elementary School continues to participate in the Labels
for Education Program sponsored
by 'Campbell Soup Company. They
have a goal of 10,000 labels and need
about 1,500 more to come up to that.
Sports equipment and classroom
aids will be secured with the labels.
As it happens, the company has a
special offer at this time ... send in
500 chunky soup labels before Jan.
30 and it will award a certifl~ate ·
worth 2,000 labels. That would -pllt
Pomeroy Elementary School over
its goal. April Smith, secretary at
the school, is chainnan for the
project, and would just love to have
your labels.

REGULAR OR JUMBO

Jello Gelatin ............. ~ .......... 4~g~·Es 994

I(Jtt\1S

$189
12oz. $139

20cOFF'LABEL

49

December 20, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. Christmas Musicale at Riverby,
chaired by Phyllis Rowan, Barbara
Epling and Mickey Johnson.

8-16 oz.

. . ·: . . . . . . . .. . . . ..

LISTERINE

SAUSAGE OR
KIELBASA .................. .

CH~~~~ 69~

Kraft Miracle WhiP...................?.~}l

MENNEN 6 OZ. BTL.

39

Exhibit for the month of December - Forty outstanding pieces of
art, all by Ohio artists, assembled by
the Ohio Liturgical A•1 Guild, including all media, and in both
Galleries at Riverby.
Gallery Hours - Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m.·3 p.m.; Saturday
and Sunday, I p.m.-!i p.m.

26 oz.

LLOYOJ. HARRIS FROZEN ·

~~~ . . . . ~~~~ . ~239

Riverby
Calendar

HIUSHIRE SMOKED

-

'WHIPPED TOPPING ~~~~· 89~
NESTlE'S

65~

PHILADELPHIA
•

HOLLY HILL FROZEN

~~0

BONE-IN
HAM SLICES ............. :.

KRAFT

$119
.

'1 09

IO~Ol
CANS

IGA TABLERITE QUALITY

CROUTETTES
srumNG

COLLEGE INN CHICKEN BROTH.

From all Of us to all of you a very
Merry Christmas. May your day be
one to remember.
God bless c~ch and everyone.

4

POST TOASTIES .......... !.8.~~: .... 89~

THANK YOU

or ·PEAS
16 oz.
CANS

.

SWEET POTATOES .... :.~.~~. .~.~~-

Ll BBY'S CORN

cake call a "starter." No one seems

"

The Sunday T

Community

Katie's
Korner
•

w. v~ .

·'

'

.I'.

'

•

'

.

-

�·-.
Dec. 20, 1981 ·

•

I

.......

.. .. - ., -

,..

- ·-.,.

,.....

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, w. va ,

.......

The sunday Times·Sentinel

Page-8·7

Anniversarie..a.;·;..____________________:____
•

:Bates reach 25th year

STORE HOURS:
M011.-Sat 8 am-10 pm

· THURMAN.- Mr. and Mrs. ,Mar·
yin .Bates, Thunnan, celebrated
their 25th wedding aMiversary Oct.
· 'Z1 with their three children, Debra
: Nelson, Rt. 2, Vinton, and Eugene
. · and Brian, at horne.
· Mrs. Bales is the fonner Loretta

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

50' OFF
ANY
. PACKAGE

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER
1981

HOMEMADE 100%

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell"s
Offer Expires Dec. 26, 1981

.

POMEROY - ,Bob and Esther
Attending were Thunnan Keiser,
Harden of Syracuse were sui'prised brother' of Mrs. Harden,· Mr. and
J'ecently when their children and Mrs Tim Mourning, Timmy and
grandchildren hosted a 40th wedding Katie, Ironton; Mrs. Florence Potts,
anniversary party in their honor at mother of Mr. Harden, Mr. and Mr.; .
.the Syracuse United Presbyterian Don (Mary) Lisle, sister of Mr. Har·
Church annex.
den, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Harden . were
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Biggs, Mr.
married at the Middleport United and Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mr. and
PresQyterian Church on Nov. 15, Mrs. Elwood Bowers, Noflllll Baker,
1941 by ~ .~· Henry Carr. Ice Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Paul HaP"
cream, cake, punch and coffee were tonslall, Virginia Buchanan, Midierved by those hosting the ob- dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins,
iervance, Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. ' Kimberly and Rochelle, MinersHarden, II and son, Eric, Marion; ville;· Mr. and Mrs. Sampson Hall,
Mr. and Mrs. James Harden and Janice Lawson, Linda Hubbard,
son, Jacob, and daughter, Janet, Donna Clay, Alberta Hubbard,
London: and S. S. G. and Mrs. Paul Frankie Mumaw, Icy Miller,
·T. (Deborah)· Sechrest of Fort Margaret and Sharon Cottrill, Glen·
Bragg, N.C.
na Davis, Genevieve Schneider, and
Nwnerous gifts and cards were Nettie Moore, Syracuse.
presented to Mr. and Mrs. Harden.

.

Tom Turkeys:~:~:~~;5 ~
CRISPY SERVE

.
$109
BCIC:CJn .•...•..••...•.• ~~ ••

·

.USDA CHOICE . .

$} 99

.

SUPERIOR

•

'2 OFF
00

E-z.tARVE

.WHOLE HAM
~1111

Engagement.

OFF 'h HAM)

·Fran kies W1eners

·KarcherFranklin

Round Steak ..... ~~ ..

$

USDA CHOICE

Chuck RCJast •.•• ~.L!·..
•

Cube

139
.

$

BUCKET

Stee~ks......~8~.

249

I

. Mr. and Mrs. Turner
Mr. and Mrs. Madison

40th year celebrated

..J...£_ _

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 26, 1981

12 OZ. PKG.

Van Sickle, daughter of Mr. Gilbert
VanSickle and the late Susie (Ward!
Van Sickle. He is the son of Mr. _and
Mrs. Creed Bates, Wheelersburg, W.
Va.
The couple was married in
Wheelersburg.

·Hardens celebrate 40th

HAM SALAD

FLAVORITE

Madisons observe 25th

3 LB. OR MORE

BONELESS BEEF
ROAST
Limit One Per Customer .

•

BIDWEU. - Julie Jo Karcher,
Route3, Vine Grove, Ky., will marry
Scott J, Franklin, Ft. Knox, Ky.,
Jan. 30 at St. Joho's Evangelical
Lutheran Church, Findlay.
The bride:-elect is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Joho N. Karcher,
·Findlay, and the prospective gr\)Oin
is the son of Mrs. Joho C. Franklin,
,Bidwell.
,
.
~ graduated fro111 Findlay High
School and attended Rio Gr11nde
College one year..She is a private fir·
st class in the U. S. Anny in Ft.
Knox.
He graduated from North Gallia,
Vinton, and ·attended Rio Grande
College one year. He is a specialist
fourth class in the Anny at Ft. Knox.

Ms. Hollon, a graduate of Alexan-der . High School and Hocking
Technical College, is employed by
Dr. James R. GaskelL Pack, a
graduate of Hannan Trace High
School, is serving with the Navy.
The ~oneymoon will be spent in
Aspen, Colo., and they will then
reside in Mayport, Fla.

•

says-

Give Her AGift Certificate

Triplett-

Eisenheimer

---

~~&amp;~,~-~-~~~~~~~~~=~~==~~=====·

were her sister, Leola Williams, and

Margaret Pennington, Mrs . Agnes

her daughter, Mrs. Artlemeade

Jeffreys, and Mfs. Elizabeth Carter
of South Point, and Mrs. Linda ·
Bowles and daughter, Pl. Pleasant,
W. Va., Mrs. Elaine Annstrong and
children, Bidwell, Mrs. Eleanor
Keels, Oak Hili, and M1·s. Marjorie

Charlotte Griffith.
Mrs. l'llrner was escorted to the
allar by Minister Gilbert Craig Jr.
Best man was Robert Dean Gor·
don. who was also the soloi8t.

Hollon- •
Pack

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

Payne, Bidwel.L

Office Hours by Appointment Only

CALL (614)-992·2104
or (304)-675·1244

Your Leading
Downtown Jeweler
Since 1940

Triplett

Bananas............~; 2 ~
DARI·FRESH

.

.

2% Milk........ ~~·.~.l

69

'

50~

ANY 12 OZ.
CAN OYSTERS
i:imit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 26, 19U

~ . BORDEN'S

Chunk Tuna • •• •• ••• •
6.50Z.

TIDE

tOILET TISSUE

DETERGENT

oz.

$599

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell"s
1981

,,

BETTY

~-ER

CAKE MIXES

$149

1~.5 oz.

6 ROLL
FAMILY PAK

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec. 26, 1981

'3/$200

Limit One Ptr Customer
Good Only 11 Powell's
Offer
Dec.

..

SUGAR
5LB.
BAG

$129

Cook b.'rltimel ...
or cook t':"'o"'FIt~e::tm:.:.pe=--..ra.....:.t,_u-~~__,el in the ·
Toaehmatie ..

Free Gift with every purchase of Diamond or a Watch
from Tawney's.

What's better than
a basic• •..

Sherbet .... ~·....... ~.

CHARM IN

WHILE THEY LAST

SAVE 20% to 40%

a

Lancer

'(JI;f'J:)~~

COUP"N

171

DIAMOND
SOLI·T AIRES

SPECIAL FOR CHRISTMAS

Hollon, Pack

•

STARKIST OIL or WATER

424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. OH .

GAWPOUS - Mr. and Mn;.
Phillip Un~erwood announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Brigitte
0. Triplett, Gallipolis, to Thomas J ,
Eisenheimer, son of Mr. and Mn;.
HaroldEisenhwimer, Gasport, N.Y.
The brlde-elecl is a 1980 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School in
Gallipolis and attends Gallipolis
Business College.
the groom is a 1979 graduate of
Royalton Hartland High School,
Middleport, N. Y., and is in the
United
Slates Air Foi'Ce, stalioned in
'
•' A Dec. 26 wedding is planned by Dover, Delaware.
The wedding will be Dec. 27 at Fir·
:Donna Calendine Hollon, daughter
st
United Presbyterian Church in
.of Wanda Calendine of Columbus .
Gallipolis,
The candlelight. servic.
:and Wendell Calendine of Athens,
will
begin
at 7:30 p.m. with the
·and Ronald Eugene Pack, son of An-music
beginning
at 7p.m.
' (la Pack, Athens, and Oscar Pqck,
A
reception
will
follow the service
;Cbes!Ure. ·
in
the
church
fellowship
room. The
. : ., The wedding will take place at 2
custom
of
a
closed
church
ceremony
) •.m. in the Rolling HilLs Baptist
will be observ\!d.
Chun.-11.

OFF

The Madisons were married in
Longview, Tex., Dec. 27, 1956. They
have pastored churches in Hi~hway ,
Mayfield and Science Hill, Ken·
lucky, in Nashville, Tenn., and for
more than four years here at
Gallipolis.
Their friends are invited to join
them in celebrating this occasion .

Organist was Mrs. George
GALUPOUS - Kev. and Mrs.
Grover G. Turner of Gallipolis and Gilmore. Ushers and taper lighlers
South Point, celebrated their for- were La Tanya Anderson and
tiety wedding anniversary Dec. II at. Heather Mabry,·
6:30 p.m. in Paint Creek Regular
Baptist Church.
Areception was held in the church ~;ji~iiijp;lilijl;;;;~-~·r;;;;;;;;;;~;-;;~;-A;;;;;;;;;-,They were married Dec. 9, 1941 in fellowship hall. A four·tiered cake 1·
Second Alenue
Charleston, S. C., by the late Rev. J. was decorated in pink and deep red
C. Dunbar, a nephew of lhe poet, with pink, red and while roses bePaul Lawrence Dunbar,
tween the church pillar• used for
tiers lopped with a bouquet of roses.
Mrs. Turner is the daughter of the
Serving the reception were
late•Henry and Lillie Lee Pearson of hostesses Hattie Borden, Evelyn
Huntington, W. Va. Rev. Turner is Burton, who cut and served the
the son of Minister Anderson E. Tor· cake, Patricia Craig, who presided
ner, Brooklyn, N. Y., and the late at the punch bowl, and Dorothy Gor·
Jessie M. Turner.
. don. Mrs . Sharon Anderson
'1he Gift That Always Fits"
They are the parents of one re~istered the guest..
daughter, Mrs. A. J. Gilmore of Hun·
Rev . Turner has pastored the
tington, W. Va., and one grand·
!-..
daughter, Andrew Marie Gilmore, last
yeara_.nd
Is an
employee
of.
Paint16Creek
Baptist
CllUrch
for the
· Chicago, IlL
Ma•·shall University.
The Turners · renewed their
marriage voWs with ' Rev. Lavin
Out..gf-town guest. included Mn;.
Williams presiding.
Andrew Lee, Rev. and Mrs. Madkins
Matrons of honor to Mrs, Turner of Hunlington, W. Va., Mrs.

Gilmore, and maid of honor was

Goo.d Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec.
1981

GAUJPOUS - Rev. and Mrs.
Bob Madison will c'elebrale their
twenty-fifth wedding anniversary
Sunday, Dec. 27.
·A reception will be given by their
children from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
fellowship hall in the Fin;t Church of
the Nazarene, 1103 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis.

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1

�Pa

The

Times-Sentinel

Lawsuit against facelift

decision is allowed to stand, it
will inhibit the freedom of the
American media to report on
publicfigures," he said.
Cher had asked lor $:i million in

INDIO, Calif. (AP) - Betty
Ford's facelift has a legal
wrinkle.
A$120 million lawsuit accuses a
doctor of wrongly claiming credit
lor the former first lady's new
look.
Dr. M. R. Mazaberi of Palm
Springs is seeking general
damages and an injunction
against Dr. Borko Djordjevic, a
plastic surgeon also of Palm
Springs.
Mazaheri claims Djordjevic or
others SJ!I!aking lor him say Djordjevic " performed . cosmetic
surgery" on Mrs. Ford or that he
did surgery "to correct damage
done" by Mazaheri when he lilted
Mrs. Ford's face, at a lee of
·$3,200, three years ago. The suit
was filed Tuesday in Riverside
County Superior Court.
Djordjevic denies he operated
on Mrs. Ford, that he claimed to
so or that he ever said anything
bad about Mazaheri.
Ann Cullen, secretary to Mrs.
Ford, who lives in Rancho

punitive damages and an unspecified amount in com-

pensatory damage. Judge
Manuel Real awarded $3~,000 in
punitive damago.s, $200,000
general damages and $138,000 for
corret..1i ve advertising, said her

lawyer, John Forbess.
"I'm totally satisfied," Cher
said after Thursday's ruling.

non-jury trial in U. S. District
court, wou}d be appealed. " If the

Liberpl Party leader Jeremy
Thorpe, acquitted 2t years ago of
plotting to murder a fonner male
model, plans a political
comeback, according to British
press reportaSaturday.
Thorpe, 52, Ia being considered
as a possible candidate for
Parlia'l!ent by the Liberal chapter in the southwest England city
of Taunton, local leader Ann
Wynn-Wilson said.
" His name came up along with
other candidates who failed to
win seats at the last election," the
tabloid Sun quoted her aa saying.
Thorpe was found innocent in
June 1979 of conspiring to murder
Norman Scott, a former male
model who said he had a

HAMPTON, Va. (AP) -

The
Rolling Stones wind up their 1981
North American tour Saturday
night with a sold-&lt;Jut concert. ·
The veteran rock'n'rollers. led
by Mick Jagger, have perfonned
before more than 1 miiUon people
on the tour, which began Sept. ~
in Philadelphia.
Both Hampton Coliseum shows
here, on Friday and Saturday,
sold out in less than 2t hours.

Judge considers

Thorpe plans

request for fourth trial

political comeback
Fonner

The retrial request was presen·
ted in a two-hour hearing Friday.
Judge Raymond Cardenas said
he would take it under ad·
visement along with a motion by

Everett's attorneys asking that
the boy's birth certificat~ be
altered so that Everett is not
listed as (he father.
Cardenas also gave both sides
until Dec. 20· to submit b::iefs on
another motion by Everett's attorneys - tu hold the boy, as an
unsuccessful plaintiff, responsible for all defense costs except
for attorney fees, a swn Ms. Scott
said amounted to $35,000.
On Nov. 3, a jury upheld the 45year-old star's claiin that he did
not father Ms. Scott's son, Dale
Andre Everett, after meeting Ms.
Scott on the set of his sincecanceled TV series, 'Medical
Center. "

homosexuali relationship with the
party chief. The JCandal cost
Thorpe his party leadership,

PERSONALLY
ESCORTED
TOURS
STARWARD
CRUISE
FEB. 21-28

•SLEEPWEAR--pajamas,
gowns

robes,

*BONNE BELL COSMETICS
*SPORTSWEAR-Modern Jrs.,
Faye's Closet

~- GAU.IPOLIS

"T'I'rawel Agency

*BLOUSES, SWEATERS, SKIRTS,
SLACKS, BLAZERS

360 Second Ave.

Open til/8 p .. m., till Chri."tmaH

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Layaways lnvltecl

Open Evenings Till
. P.M.. .
I

WHITE SAcKED - Dilllas Cowboys quarterback Danoy While i•
caught lryln£ to pass by lbe New York Giants left end George martio,

•MS. DEE JEWELRY

SKYWARD
CRUISE
·APR. 11-18

•

•.
•

·I

NFL titles
at stake

* _J EANS-by Calvin Kline,
Lee, Zena, Rumble Seats

TROPICALE
CRUISE
MAR. 13-20

MARDI GRAS
CRUISE
MAR. 21·28

which he quit in 1978, ond his seat
in the House of Commons in the
May 19'19 general election.

Our Gift List for Her!

HOLY
LAND
FEB. 22-MAR. 1

HONOLULU
· FEB. 20-27

C

Dec. 20.1981
·
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page--

Lafa)elte Mall
Galipolis

1982

claims il:i the father.

Defendants plan appeal

said the decision, reached after a

Stones complete tour

LONDON (API -

1

w. Va.

Sunday /People ·

LOS ANGELES (API - A ..
Superior Court judge is considering a request lor a fourth
tr~al to determine if an 8-year-&lt;Jid
boy should be declared the son of
actor Chad Everett.
Three decisions so far have
been in favor of the actor, whom
the boy's mother, Sheila Scott,

Mirage, sent a letter to Mazaberi
saying, "The surgery that you
have performed is the only
surgery that she ha s un·
·dertaken ." The Sept. 10, 198l, let·
ter is attached to the lawsuit.

LOS ANGELES (API - An appeal is planned against a $663.000
award to entertainer Cher in her
suit against the Star tabloid,
Forum magazine and a freelance
writer, a Star lawyer says.
Cher didn't contest the ac·
curacy of the material. She did
say that an iniervicw she gave to
writer. Fred Robbins for Us
magazine appeared without her
permission in Star and Forum.
Star lawyer Howard Squadron

Pleasant,

right, in the first quarter of Saturday's NFL game at Giants Stadium ill
East Rutherford, N. J. While Willi dropped for a loss. The Cowboys lost,
13-10, In overtime. (AP Laserpbotol.

NY keeps title hopes alive
By BRUCE LOWITT
AP Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
-Joe Danelo, who had missed three
routine field goals including one
earlier in overtime, kicked a 35yarder with 6:19 gone .in the extra
periOd to give the New York Giants a
13-10 victory over the Dallas
Cowboys Saturday.
The victory brightened the Giants'
hopes for their first playoff berth
since 1963, aod wiped out Dallas'
hopes of finishing the regular season ·
with the beat record in the National
Conference.
Danelo lied it at 14HO with a 40yard li~ld goal into the wind with
just 25 seconds remaining in
regulatloo play after the Giants had
reUnqulahed an early 7~ lead.
He had miased chip shots from 21
and 27 yards in the first period. And
when rookie linebacker Lawrence
Taylor rerovered a Tony Dorsett
fwnble in the opening minutes of
overtime, Danelo blew that chance,
too, his 33-yard attempt striking the
right upright and hoqncing back 3:36
into overtime.
.
Three plays later, another rookie
lin•backer, Byron Hunt, intercepted
a Danny White pass intended for
Drew Pearson and returned it 7 yards to the Dallas 25. .
An e-yard pass from Scott Brunner
to rookie wide receiver John Mistler
on third-and-11 put the ball on the
·Dallas te-yard line. And Danelo
came through.
The Giants, 9-7, will clinch the
remaining NFC wil&lt;kard playoff
berth if Green Bay loses Sunday to
the New York Jets. ll the Packers
win, the Giants sliD can make the
playoffs If Philadelphia, the NFC's
other wil&lt;kard team, loses Sunday
to Cincinnati.
·

HEAVY BUT HAPPY LOAD- New Vorl Glllola
kicker Joe Daoelo is carried from tile Glllola Stadium
field by ·coach Ray Perklaa lllld lellmmates Ed

McGleasoo (59) aDd Harry Canon after he beat" lbe
Dallas Cowboys with a field goal in overtime Saturday,
SolO. iAPLuo,rpho&gt;lol.

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
A 9-7 record isn't exactly earthshattering, but it wiD be good enough
~o get either the Tampa Bay Bucc'aneers or the Detroit Lions into the
•National Football League playoffs.
The Bucs, who won the National
Conterence Central in 19'19, journey
to Pontiac, Mich., today to lake on
the Lions, whG are 7~ at home this
year. The winner walks away with
the division crown and a spot in the
postseason run to the Super Bowl,
which will be played at Pontiac's
Silverdome.
The Bucs could have made the
game less significant by winning
last week, but they blew their chance to clinch the title when the San
Diego Chargers edged them 24-23 on
a field goal in the final minute. The
Lions bombed Minnesota 45-7 to "set
.up the showdown.
Elsewhere today, Denver is at
Chicago, Green Bay at the New York

.
.
.
CmCJnnati

ATLANTA (API - The Atlanta
Falcons close out a disappointing
regular season Sunday when they
host the resurgent Cincinnati
Bengals, who clinched a National
Football League playoff spot last
weekend.
·
"This has been a very difficult
year to say 'the least," said Atlanta
Coach Leeman Bennett as the
Falcons hope to reach the .500 mark
with a victory.
"We have had some briUiant individual performances, but it hasn't
come together as a team," he said of
his 74 club, which had been picked
as a Super Bowl colrtender in

CHICAGO (API - If you still
record of 28 blocked kicks, for i~­
think professional athletes are the
stance, pales in his own mind when
closest thing this society has to rival
he recalls watching a game film in
the legends of. Mount Olympus, try a
which a lineman celebrating a
few of Alan Page's thunderbolts.
touchdown broke a teammate's leg
-"The importance (of pro foot· . by jumping up and down on it.
ball) in this world is far out of
Page really does hear a diff•rent
proportion to what it really is - enbeat. After all; this is the same man
tertainment. I would feel as though I
who left fame and fortune after 11
wasn't being true to myself if I
years in Minnesota because the
became part of the hype."
brass insisted he carry more than
· -"As entertainers, we 225 pounds on his 6-foot-4 frame.
(professional athletes) live in a
Characteristically, the Vikings
highly .visible environment, one
viewed the issue as a question of
where the people involved live great
strength; Page, one of agility.
lifestyles," said Page, a graduate of
His credentials are extensive:
Central Catholic High School in CanPrep All-American al Canton, Ohio,
. ton, Ohio. "Because of that, most .of
Central Catholi"c; All-American.
us don't realize you can't play
defensive end on Notre Dalne's unfor•ver. In fact, the way things go,
beaten (!HH 1 1966 national chamyou end up trying to deny it."
pions; an anchor of all four of the
Minnesota Vikings' Super Bowl con- "I'm disappointed that 1 ended
up playing this long (15 seasons). I
tenders; the only defensive player to
figured it would last about five
win the NFL's Most Valuable Player
years. This is a business where you award (19'11 ), and a seasoned
professional who played 15 years in
don't grow. For me, it's been five
years of experience and theq one
a sport where the average career
spans just six, including 206 conyear of experience 10 times.
" But the first time I thought about secutive starts.
" It really doesn't seem in the 15
leaving, I real~ there was no
place else for me .to go, nothing years Alan Page has been playing,
I've been with him 13 of those. Time
much I couhl do. That's wllere the
really does fly," said Bears Coach
decisi~n to go to law ~chool canle
Neill Armstrong, IVho spent several
in."
Page, a def•nsive tackle with the seasons with Page at Minnes~
Chicago Bears, will close out his IS- before the two were reunited in
year pro football career Sunday Chicago.
"But the one thing about him that
when the Denver Broncos visit
always
impressed - and I rarely
Chicago.
u.;e
always
or never - is that I can
The moments Page says he will
never remember a game where he
remember are hardly the ones
people will ro!member him by. His didn't give his best."

Titans top Michigan
the clr&gt;ck gave the Titans a 48-47 advantage which Michigan never could
overcome.
Center Anthony Lee had 12 points
for Detroit and sophomore guard
Audie Matthews chipped in with Hi ·
for the Titans who improved their
record to 3-4.
Freshman guard Eric Turner had

a gam.,.high 16 points for Michigan,
sophomore forward Dean Hopson
had 14 and senior forward Thad Garner added 12.
The Wolverines ' record dipped to
1-4, the worsl start for a Michigan
basketball team since the 1964Hjl
season.

-~

·NFL standings
N11UOUI FGOtMU Leap~
Amtrk111CIIIIIfe~

preseason.

ElllkrD DlwlakMI
W L T PF PA

A sellout crowd of 811,748 is expected at Atlanta-Fulton County
Sllldiwn lor the 4p.m. EST kickoff.
Meanwhile, Cincinnati, which had
llniBhed last in the AFC Central
Division the past three yeilril, turned
it arwnd tlds season and dlnehed
the division title last week with a 1710 victory OYer the Piltlburgh

y-Miaml
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Detroit
Green Bay
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N.Y. JeU

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C~ntral Dlv ..la

x-Clncinnuti
Pittsburl(h
Howton

Clevehmd

Steelers.

Tile Bengals, 11-4, caD clincb the
AFC'I belt record and the home
field in the playoffs by beating
Atlanta.
Tile divisioo Iitle wu the lint Iince 1m for the llengals, .m. last
QPIII'IIICe in poll eeum play
ceme In 18'16.

Jets, Cincinnati at Atlanta, San
Francisco at New Orleans, St. LOuis
at Philadelphia, Kansas City at Minnesota and Washington at Los
Angeles in games with some playoff
importance, while other contests pit
Pittsburgh at Houston, Cleveland at
Seattle and New England at
Baltimore. San Diego · hosts the
defending Super Bowl-champion
oakland Raiders- eliminated from
contention this season - Monday
night.
The only way either the Lions or
Bucs will not win the NFC Central
title is if they tie and the Packers
beat the Jets. Then Green Bay would
capture the division.
The Jets, in search of their first
playoff berth since 1969 - the year
after they won the Super B.owl could lose to the Packers and still
qualify - ij San Diego loses to
Oakland Monday night. If New York .
wins, it will hnst the wild-car&lt;!
playoff game next Sunday.

Bears' Page to
-end ·career today

ANN ARBOR, Mich. I AP) Detroit forward Joe Kopicki scored
13 points, including a layup that put
his team ahead to stay Saturday, as
the Titans defeated Michigan 55-51
in non-conference college basket"
ball.
Michigan grabbed the lead in the
loosely played game on a pair of
Eric Turner free throws with 8:15
remaining in the first half and held it
until Jerry Davis rammed in a backdoor stoff to give Detroit a 46-45lead
with7 :08 remaining in the game.
A jumper by Ike Person put
Michigan back on top briefly, before
Kopicki's layup with 5:48 showing on

Falcons host

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Eule~DI'Iil'-

sPRINGS SPRINI&gt;S - Dalllll Cowboyl fldlback ·Currier, rflbt, ior a lint dowa Saturday at GIJoniB
Rea _Sprtqa RiPI over New Yort Gianll safety Bm Stadium In Eliot Rulhetford, N.J. ne Glanla woo, 13. 10, lllmrtlme. (AP Laaerpbolol.

..

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S.lunJay' 11 GIUD~

New York GianL'l 13,
Sudday'~

Denver at Chlcui(O

Dall t~i'l

10

Game11

Grt!t!n Bay at New York Jets
Kail~Ul:i

City at Mlnncsolll

SU.oulll al Philllddphia

Tampa Bay at Ddroil
New England at &amp;ltimore
S.n Frand&amp;.'O at New Orlean!!
Cincinnati at Atlanta
Cleveland ... s~attle
Pitl\lbtrgh at Houston
Wuhintloo al lA~ Afll(i! teli
M..... y. Deffm-rZI
O.ldand. at SIAn Diewo
, END REGUlAR SEASON

~ ol!

·

..
.....

�Plea

Dec. 20, ·1981

Dec. 20, 191i1

W.Va.

Southern remains unbeaten ~: .
with 62-53 win over HTHS ~~:

Gallia Academy in first
all alone after triumph
• ••

•

•"M

I

•

'

JACKSON - Vialtlng Gallipolis
battled Jacksoll down to tbe finll
gun, and then some, to score • ~
Southeastern Ohio 1..eag11e basketball victory over the lrorunen here
Friday night.
Tile trlwnph left Coach Jim Osborne's Blue Devlla all alone in first
place In the conference standings
with a 4-0 marie.
.
Coach Jeff Hodson'• crew dropped
to 3-linslde the league. Both teams
are ~2 on the year.
GAHS, behind the flashy play of
Tim Madiaon and board Work of
James Lane, led IU after the first
whlslle break, and 36-25 during the
halftime intermiallion.
ID Foal Trouble
Lane, however, picked up bls third
personal foul (5:31 ·in the second
period) and sat out the remainder ~
the first half.
Jackson, playing without the services of one of its atartera, Doug
Morris, ~11 senior forward (he went
to Texas with his family for the
Chrisbnas holidays) never gave up. ·
Tile Ironmen ripped off six
straighl points to begin second half
play. Lane picked up his fourth foul '
(7:23) and returned to the bench.
Gallipolis slowed the pace considerably. Occasionally, GAHS had
four guards in the cont..t to control
the tempo.
Jackson, an eX.,Iosive ball team
averaging more
80 points a
game, has been a ,~rong second half
team all year, scoring at least 30
points or more in tbe final period on
at least two occasions.
GAHS took a 41·34 advantage into
the final period.
FiDal Period Hecllc
After Tim Lanier's layup made it
43-34 to open the.final canto, Jackson
got a break when' Lane corrunitted
his fifth personal with 4:51 left in the
game. GAHS led t$-38.
Mter a tw&lt;&gt;-minute passin~ game

than

BIG JU121PONSum.rrY - Galllpollll' 11m Llllller
IU• C8IM off~ bellcb to replace James t.loe In lbe
flmllalf,ud whea both Lane aad Tim Madison foaled
oilt Ia
secODd bill, it was up to Lanier to colllrol tbe

*

baardo. He flnlshed the pme wltb five rt!bouods and
four points. Jackson defenders are Todd Davis {32)
who led the lronmen In scoriJJI with U, and Marty
Grimes {12) -Keith W0110n pbotot;.

'

•

......

,,

Madlaim picked up his fif·
th personal (2:39) and Todd Davia'
three-point pl4y reduced · Gallia's
lead to four, t:i-41.
·
GAHS alaYed In a p8B8Ing game,
forcing Jactson to foul in the closing
moinents.
Marty Glenn's free throw (2:16)
made it 46-41. Davia hlt two free
throws (2:10).11 wast&amp;-43.
Lanier canned two · foul shots
(I :&lt;13) but that w.. countered with a
longjumperbyDavia (1:35).
Gleaa Does II~
For the llf'COIId week in a rQW,
Marty Glenn's two free throws
(1:01) proved to be the game's lrinnJng points. That gave GAHS a 50-45
advantage.
- .Matt Bonzo's two charity tosses
(:52) made it ~7. Davis uncorked
a20footer (:2'1).1tw.. 50-49.
Jackson called time with 25 secon·
ds left. After GAHS missed a free
throw, JHS got the rebound and
came down court. The lronmen
called time with 10 seconds left.
After an inbounds pass, Allen
Collins attempted a 20 footer, bul
missed. Jackson's Tim Dobbins
grabbed the rebound. There w.. a
scramble. Before Dobbins could gel
off another shot, the final Qcirn soun·
ded.
Qu..uon Timer
Officials had to check with the of·
ficial timer to detennine if the final
· horn had sounded before they had
by GAHS,

•••
. ••:p •"

MERCERVIlU: -An uncann~
ability by Southern to make a tur·
nover into a quick bucket led the wt·
defeated TOI'!'&amp;does to their fifth win
~ the seaiDil, 62-&amp; here •Friday
night over Hannan·Trace.
I!OUthern Ia now 3oO In the SV AC,
while Hannan Trace Ia 1·2 In the
league. The Wlldcataare2-'!overall.
Wildcat mentor Mike Jenkins took
the · IOSB philosophically, compllmentlng Southern on aline game, ·
but expressed praise for his squad,
whicb played lis best game of the

c811ed a foul on a GallipoUs player.lt

Southern build a ~12lead.
Tile second qUarter saw more of
the same as Southern kept a 8-8 poillt
lead, with a halftime score of 36-26.
The end came in the fourth quarter .. the Wildcat&amp; narrowed the
lead to 10 points, but aggressive play
by Southern brought about a another
1~int lead with four minutes
remaining in the game.
Southern outshot Hannan Trace
from the field by one percent, 43-42,
when the Meigs countians sunk 28
out of 6!i altempts at the basket.
season.
Hannan Trace landed 18 of their 43
Senior Kent Wolfe led the Southern tries. Southern also shot 43 percent
offense, racking up 20 points In the on its free throws, sinking six of 14.
game, although the Wildcats, led by The Wildcats chalked up 16 tur·
Greg Webb's 20, managed to stop the novers and 29 rebounds, and
Tornadoes' star player during a late Southern totalled 43 rebounds (H by
surge In the fourth quarter.
Jay Reese) and 16 turnovers.
Five minutes into the first quar·
In scoring, Kent Wolfe, who has
ter, the teams batlted each other to a been scoring 20 or more points in this
8-8 tie, before ·a turnover help give year's games, was assisted by 13
Coach Carl Wolfe's squad an ad· from Robert Brown ~nd 12 from
vanta~e. Another turnover helped
Richard Wolfe. Webb, the Wildcats'

had.
.
Osborne praised the outstanding
de!enalve play ol steve Skidmore
and Marty Glenn. Skidmore came
off the bench to do a job on Matt Bonzo, and GleM had the honor of stopping AI Collins, who .,... averaging
nearly 30 pointa a game.
"It Is tough to play with your big
men on the bench," Osborne said.
"We had no intention of stalling. It
was our only choice."
Osborne felt the GAHS guards
(Phil King, Glenn, Skidmore and,
Lynn Sheets) did an excellent job~
controlling the game's tempo. "We
forced them out of the full court
press, and gave up only one .or two
full-court breaks all night," he ad·
ded.
MadlliOIISuper
"Madison played a super game."
he concluded.
The 6-3 junior forward was seven
of 10 from the field and four-for-four
frnm the foul line. He had 10 rebounds and scored 18 points before
fouling out.
GAHS had 12 assists, five by Skid·
more and four by King. Glenn jlad
three.
·
' The Blue Devils were 20 of 49 from
the field for 41 percent, and 10 of 18
at the foul line. GAHS bad 32 reboun·
ds and 15 turnovers.
Besides Davis' H points, Bonzo
Continued on C-3

PASSING GAME- Witb jlllllon Jameo La.., 1-5
center, aad Tim Madisoa, 11-3 forward hotb on lite beach witb live penooals, Gallipolis went Into a )lllll8lng
game in the final period at Jackson Friday. GAHS held

~lfllilJ.

o

OD to edge the lronmea, 50-49. Left to rtiht are Steve
Skidmore {Z3); Jackson's Mall Bonzo {11); Phil King
{21) andJHS' Marty Grim.. {12).

•------------~C~oo~t~ln=~~fr~om~~~2~----

and Collins had IZapiece. ·
Jackson hit 18 of 45 from the field
for 48 percent. The lronmen were 13
of 16 at the foul line for 81 percent.
_,Jackson had 23 rebounds, seven by

Center
closed
.
.

RIO GRANDE - All facilities at
Lyne Center at Rio Grande College
(gym, pool, handball court and
weight room) will be clos~d .to the
public · during the Christmas
holidays (Dec. 28, 1981 through Jan.
4, 1982 •.
A new schedule will be published
when classes reswne on Monday,
Jan. 4, 1982.

Davis, and 15 turnovers.
HOlt Ironton Tu..day
Jackson played un'beaten
Wheelersburg Saturday night.
Tuesday, the Ironmen play at
Wellston. Gallipolis will host Ironton.
Box score:
GALLI POLIS (50)- Bergdoll 0·0·
O; Madison 7·4-18: Lane 2·0·41; Glenn
3"3-9: King .4· 1·9; Skidmore 3-0·6;
Lanier 1-2·4; Sheets 0·0·0. TOTALS

20·10·50.
JACKSON C49) -

Bonzo H ·12;

Dobbins 2-0-4; Collins 4·1-12; Davis
S-4·l4; Hale 1· 1·3; Grimes 0·0·0;

Fenlck 2·0·4. TOTALS 18·13-49.

Score by quarters :
Gallipolis
14 22
Jackson
8 11

5 9-50
9 15-49

·1 Games postponed

.
I

.Five area high school basketball
games were postponed Friday night,
due to bad weather conditions.
The SVAC tilt between North
Gallia·Eastern was called off.
Two SEOAL games were post·
poned - Ironton at Athens and
Waverly at Meigs. The Waverly·
Meigs tilt has been rescheduled Dec.

29.
West Virginia teams were to open
Friday. The Wahama·.BuffaloPutnam and Pt. Pleasant-Sissonville
tilts were postponed.

7in a row
JACKSON - Coach Steve
Walburn's Jackson lronboys held off
a late Gallipolla Blue Imps rally in
the final period, then went on to post
a 34-28 Southeastern Ohio League
victory in Friday's pre11minary con·
The victory left Jackson .unbeaten
in seven starts. The lronboys are ~
in conference play.

IIREAit rr UP, BOYS- A brief scuffle faUowlog a Rramllle for 1
1 - llalllllte In tile pme ruffled 11411De fea!Rn on botb sides daring
Friday:• Jo~poliJ baakelball game. Brealdng of lbe melee 111
veteraa official Bill Newman.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

KING DRAWS ATTENTION- Three jackson defenders, Joha Hale,
:40, AI Collillli, 24, and Mall Bonzo, 10, walch GalllpoUs' speedy guard Phil
: KIJJI, 21, fly by during Friday's GAHS.Jackson contest at Jackson. The ·
• Blue Devils won, st-49.
•

ALL GAMES
W

L

P

OP

401
290
394
388
542
320
300

258
203
338
386
450
308
273

POrtsmouth
Wheelersbur g
Athens
Gallipolis
Jackson
Ironton
&lt;!hillicofl'le

5 0
4 0
5 I
5 2
5 2
4 2
4 3

W,averly
L:.QQan

1 4 267 272
'1 4 295 349

Wellston
Washington CH

. fileigs
Pf. Pleasant
· Fricf.•r's

Meigs

, 2 s1 128
Logan
0 o4 114 166
14 14 1064 1064
TOTALS
Friday' s results :
Jackson 34.Gall ipol is 28

5 255 347
0 0
o o
non-league result5 :

Columbus

SEOA L VARSITY

Gall ipotis

J.ickson
Ironton
Athens
W'ells1on
Logan

Wave-rly
t\tteigs

TOTALS

W L P
4 0 241

Cinc innati Walnut Hills at Ports-

Austin advances

OP

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
- Third-seeded Tracy Austin
defealed Mirna Jausovec 1~. 6-4,6-4,
and Pam Shriver crushed Andrea
Jaeger 6-3, 6-2 to move into the
semifinals of the $250,000 Toyota
Tennis Championships.
In today's semifinals, Austin was
pitted against Chris Evert Uoyd,
while Shriver, No.S, w.. slated to go
against top-seeded
Martina
Navratllova. the semifinal pairings
were decided by a coin fUp.
In the doubles , semifinals,
Navratllova and Shriver teamed to
defeat Tanya Harford and Rosalyn
Fairbank ~. 6-2, and Rosemary
Caaals and Wendy Turnbull beat AnneSmith and Kathy Jordan 6-2, 6-3.

218

1 3 219 268
0 3 154 166
0 3 145 206
14 14 1674 1674

Meigs-Waverly. ppnd .. reset Dec

2i

Waverly

2 1 131
2 I 126
1 2 156
2 2 154
1 2 105

HOUSE

Wheeler·

mouth

,Wellston 72 Logan61
Ironton at Athens. ppnd

Alheno
IrOnton
Gallipolis
Wellston

NAME

December 23 ga m~s:

1 282 231
2 1 173 145
2 1 197 169
2 2 263 271

W L P
4 0 191

a1

OP
114
121
94
135
195
131

Rt. 62 North

Point l'le1111t
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Music By "The Blue Notes" .ABil Bald And
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CHimi,OH.

I •

{

•

PATRIOT - In a contest filled
with excitement, lots of emotion and
last second heroics, Southwestern
edged Kyger Creek, 51-50 in an
SV AC encounter Friday night. ·
Sophomore southpaw Randy
Layton because the game's here
with just five seconds left, but had to
watch as a similar shot by the Bobcats' Jeff Moles went in the basket

per to cut the tbe score to 45-44 with
2:4P remaining.
SophomoreJ. D. Bradbury canned
two free throws to put tbe Bobcats
ahead, once again in the see-saw contest.
After another Layton basket, Sands connected for a 48-47 Bobcat lead.
·Kyger Creek had the ball with just
50 seconds remaining bul a costly
than came out as time ran out.
turnover provided Southwestern
Coach Uoyd Myers' Highlanders, with new life.
playhlng an aggressive floor game,
·After ·Coach Myers called a
led 1~12 at the end of the first timeout, the Highlanders' Rob Price
period; 26-24 at the half and 36-32 came through with one of his 13 poin·
going Into the fourth stanza.
Is on the night.
HOwever, Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek quickly tied it again
Bobcats, following a very cold third on Moles' basket.
period in which the team failed to
Under a pressure defense, Layton
score until the four {llinute mark, COI)IIected for what proved to be the
began to take charge.
wiMing points.
Following baskets by seniors
Southwestern placed four players
David Sands, and Tim Price and in double figures led by Price's 13,
sophomore Brent Love, Kyger· Layton's 12, Roger Wells finished
Creek, took a 42-39 lead with 5:50 with 11 and McNeal, 10. Sands led
left.
·
Kyger Creek with 17 points. Price
Paul McNeal who had 10 points for finished with nine.
the Highlanders and sat out most of
Southwestern sank 21 of 48 floor at·
the third quarter then canned a jurn- tempts and nine .of 16 at the. foul

\

I

I

nament.'

:. :

Southern will meet Trimble ·•':
home Dec. 29.
SOUTHERN (621 Richar.a ;

··=·

Wolfe 6·0-12; Scott Frederick 0-0: o; ~

Jay Reese 3·2·8; Nick Bostic 0·0·0;.'

Robert Brown 6+13 ; c . Bostick 0-Q-- :

0; Tom Roseberv 1·2-4; lane BeetJ~ •
2-0-4; Kent Wolfe 10-0·20; Allan Pape•
O+l; Rusty cummins 0·0-0; Ty ..~;
Brinegar 0-0-0. Totals 28·6·62.
. .....

HANNAN TRACE (53) -

Tqb.,(•

Sheets 1·4· 6: Greg Webb 8-4· 20; M+~e ;
Waugh 5·3·13; Kelly Petrie 0·4-41' ~
Jeff Barnes 4·2·10 ; Mike Rossitet o; •

0·0; Keith Campbell 0·0·0; Mike "
Bays 0-0-0 ; Mike Beaver 0·0-0. Totals :

18·17-Sl.

Score by quarters :

Southern
Hannan Tra ce

~

:-:
,.

20 16 18 8-62:
12 l-4 13

u-:s:,.
............'

Score bV quarters:

· Wellston

18 23 14 17- 72

' Logan

15 13 12 21 - 51

Reserye score: Wellston 41, Logan

39.

Starting late in the third quarter
and extending into the fourth period
Morgari tallied 16 straight Logan
points to prevent the Chiefs from
being blown out.
Wellston's John Derrow, returning ·
to action after a bOut with the flu,
poured in 28 points for the Rockets.
A pair of free throws by P. J.
Perkins gave WHS.the lead for gOOd,
at U, In the first quarter and the .
Rockets led by quarter scores of 11115, 41·28, and 5HO enroute to their
second league victory.
WellstOn, now :1.-2 and 3-2, shot 41
percent from the field on 2'1 of 56,
converted 11 of 24 free throws, and
grabbed rT rebOIJDds with Brad Benson claiming nine.
,
TheCbleftalns,l-3and 1-4, hlt25of
68 shOia for 37 pereent, made 11 of 21 ·
at tJMi tine, end picked off 40 rebolUJI· ·
da led by Milch Trucco with 13.
The box 111!01'1!:
WELLSTON (721 - John Oerro •. !
10·6·26; Scott Maule 2-4-8; Chn
Derrow 0·1·1; P. J. Perkin• 5-2·12 .
Barry Peters l·D-6; Bub Norris D-2·2; .
J. R. Ervin 2·11-4' R - Trace 1·11-2;·
Braa Benson 4-3·11. TOTALS 27·18·
72.
LOGAN (6_1I- Don Mc:Oa.nlel H ·

.~

'
.:••~...::,
•
..
.·.
...·.'•.
.... .•"•
..
. •&gt;'"'..•
•

RIO GRANDE - Jolm Lawhorn,
head baskethall coach at Rio (;rande
College and Conununity College,
was honored recently with a reception at Lyne Center on tile campus
for achieving his 300th career
L'Oaching vietory.
The reception was hosted by
college administrators, staff,
players and friends of the college.
Lawhorn entered the JOO.viclory
circle with a close 7~74 viL'Iory over
Pikeville (Ky.) College at Lyne Cenber Dec. 9. The Redmen stretched it
to 301 victories Sunday afternoon
with a victory over Dyke College, 79-

lines. The Bobcats hit 12 of 22 at !h.a;
foul circles while outreboundihJ( ;
Southwestern, 40-34.
: •" ~
The win gave Southwesten a I ;:f.;
over•ll record and 1·2 mark in ll1£:
SVAC. Kyger Creek is 2·1 oventlt.
and 2-1 in the loop.
The Bobcats travel to Hannan, W.
Va. Tuesday while Southwestern is
idle until tbe Galha County TOjlr·
nament at Kyger Creek.
·
coach Mark Hartman's Little
Bobcats won the reserve contest,~:
17.
: :
Steve Waugh and David Ma.tlji :
led the way. with 13 and 11 poin~ ·
respectively. Steve Pelfrey h;ld t~ :
points in a losing effort.
·: •
Boxscore:
••

Kyger CreeH (50) - Cl ark 1·0.· 2:•
Sands 7-3-17; Mol~s 3·0-6; Love 3·2:8; •
Price 4· 1·9 ; Stroud 0·2· 2; Barr 0 - 2- 2~ :
Bradbury l · l ·J and Martin 0-1· 1&gt;Totals 19· 12· SO.
• ..
Southwestern (52) - Lewis 1-0-?;:
Baker 1· 1-3; Price 3-7-13 ; Wells 5-1-..
11; McNeal 5-0·10 and Layton 6·0·12.•
Totals 21 -9-51.
By quarters :
.
12 11 8 1850
Kyger Creek
15 11 10 15-51
Southwestern

I

S200.00 Reward for Information Leading to the
Arrest and-or Conviction of Person who Shot,
Killed and Left Lying in the Creek, a Beaver on
Property Owned by Carl and Kathleen Morris . ..
985-3947' 985-4400

or 949·2219

1-------------------------------__:

. TO ALL OF OUR
CUSTOMERS
AND THEIR
FAMILIES:

a9.

Lawhorn's 19-year record as a

head coach stands at 301-113, including a 28-14 mark since taking
over at Rio Grande a year ago. Rio
Grande has compiled a i2·2 record
so far this seaosn, the most wins in
the country by a college team.

A Very Merry
Christmas
and

A Successful,
Happy New Year! !
We thank you for patronizing us In
..
'
the past year and we look forward
to serving you during 1982.

\

Dark red ext..• 5 speed trans.,
western mirrors, step bumper,
rear window defroster, high out·
put heater.

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DIKount 34071
. '6,74501
Rebat8 75000

DALE HILl - KEN RlatARDSOM BOB McGRATH - EMIL EYNON .sTEVE LIGHTNER
.

'599.5 00
PAT HILL FORD,. INC.

S.3RD AVE.

• ,.. I

•

REWARD

.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR, INC•

See: ·Garland Parsons, or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
PH. 992·21t6
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

... 992-6441 &amp; 992-2668

.·

'

8nJ;

~

The Rocket victory OVI\l'Shadowed
a tremendous individual effort by
Logan's Jeff Morgan, who took
game scoring honors with 28 points
as ~ hit 13 of 21 shots from the floor.

Chillicothe at Westerville North

l

SEOAL RESERVES

3 8 8 9-28
1 8 8 11- 34

STEAKb

sburg

-Friday's results :
'G•II ipotis 50 Jackson 49

T~AM
Jock son

Central

A GOOD

Score by quarters:

Blu• Imps
Ironboys

4; Chip Patterson 2-0-4; Dave Moore
LOGAN - With three players · 2·4·8;
Jeff Morgan 13·2·28; Mitch
scoring in double figures Friday Trucco 3·2·8,· Carl Yor~ 2-0-4; MOnte
night the Wellston Golden Rockets Monk 1-0·2; Jim Gill 0·3·3. TOTALS
whipped Logan 72-51 to move past 25·11-51.
the Chieftains into fourth place ill
the SEOAL standings.
.

cgtr.iatt'n

, Athens at Meigs
Logan at waverly
Jackson at Wells1on

o

~~~;~~~~~~P~H~.6~1~4-~53~2-~0~10~1~~~~;~~~~~

.

Ironton· Athens. ppnd
Meigs-Waverly , ppnd
December 22 games:
I ron ton at Gallipolis

3 2 330 llJ
2 3 268 256

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO • .

"THERE'S NO PLACE QUITE UKE IT"

Wellston 41 Logan 39

: Chillicothe 30 Mt . Vernon 28
, was.hington CH 52 Mil!imi Trace 26
· :Wneelersburg 73 M inford 47
: .Sissonville at Pt . Pleasant , ppnd

TE .. M

BLOOMINGTON, MiM. (AP) The Minnesota Vikings announced
that the security will he tripled for
the team's final game at
Metropolitan Stadium to discourage
souvenir hunters who might wish to
take a piece of the park home with
them.

BLUE IMPS 128)- Wolfe 1·0·2;
Dunc•n 2·4·8; Smith 0·0·0; carter 3·
0·6; Ellcessor.J-6·12; Rathburn 0·0·0;
.Garber O·D-0; Moe« 0·0·0. TOTALS 8·
10·28. •
.IRONBOYS 1341- Eglngton '6·0·
. 12; Stevens 0·2·2; Neal 0·1-1;
Gleaves 2·0·4; Poetker 4·2·10; Clay 1
1·3; DaVIS 1·0·2. TOTALS 14-6·34.

recorded the 30eth victory of bls coacblog career
recentiy ot Lyne Center on the college rampus. The
Kedmeo are currendy 1~2 110 far In 1981-82, the mo.1
winllln lite nation by a college baskelhall team.

Wellston runs past Logan, 72-61

that have oil and gas leases that are due to expire within one year.

.
'I
r--------------------------------------------1

Area cage standings
TEAM

Triple security

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE head basketball coach
John Lawhorn {Left) Ia presented with the game ball
by team caplaln Watson McDonald Ccenter) and
assilllant coach Earl Thomas after tbe veteran meotor

URGENTLY NEEDED OIL AND GAS LEASES
To fullilllulure drilling pr09rams write or call and be sure to Include
property location and acreoge that is available for lease. Also those

Box score:

aWJ::

Southwestern holds on
•
for 51-50 wrn over KC

Lawhorn
honored

test.

Coach Jack Payton's quintet dropped to ~2 overall, and 2-2 inside the
league.
'
Jackson led 7-3 after one period,
and 1~11 at halftirn.e. The home
team was on top ~19 going into the
final period.
Gallipolis pulled to within one, 2322,, with three minutes to ·go, but a
raSh of GAHS turnovers and miSsed
shols pennltted the rronboys to pull
away in the final two minutes of
play.

lead scorer, was complimented by lit;
frnmJeffBarnes.
;•
Southern's junior Tornadoes
took the reserve game away fm;
H'l', Sl·~.
:-•'
Hannan Trace travels to FatrtanJ:
Tuesday for a non-league game,
willlle at Kyger Creek Dec. ~29 f~ ·
the Gallia County holiday t~ •

·~

Iron boys
make it

Chris
paced
the Gallians
with
12 Ellcessor
points. Tom
Duncan
added
eight.
Frank Edgington had 12 for the
Ironboys. Sam Poetker had 10.

The sunday Times·Sentinei-Pag-C·l

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

�''

Page-C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentiliel

Rio Grande travels to

·Reds trade Ray
Knight for
Ceasar Cedeno
I

Dec. 20. 1981

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

Dyke Monday

,

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande's

f~r

La~ wlllllart H

Watson McDoNdd, S:O Kfrin Calllernan, and &amp;8 Tcw Julie on the front line line
wilbW Jerry Mowery and 6-G Rick
Penrod llarting In the backcourt.
Slated for reserve action are 5-6
Scott Burson, &amp;-2 Vince Wollenburg,
&amp;-1 Rlchardo Hairston, and IHI Bob
Shaw.
Penrod and castleman each
scored 11 points, Ju!Ze added 12 and
McDmald and Mowery 11 apiece In
the previous win over Duke.
l)yte, coached by LeMoyne Porter, will enter the contest with a :V.
mark. Their last win came by a 99-&amp;
score over Oberlin College two
weekaago.

Redmen, the top winning team In the

nation with a 12-2 mark, wiD 81111 for
their 13th victory of the MOftday night when they travel to
Cleveland to take on Dyke College In
a 7:30p.m. contest.
The Redmen whipped the Demons
by a 79-59 score at Lyne Center Dec.
3.
"They were a bit tired when theY,
played us the first time," Rio Grande coach John Lawhorn said. "They
played in Michigan on Saturday
night and then had to travel all the
way down here to play us Sunday afternoon. We're looking for a lot
tougher contest lhiB time around."

·:

contest

For the record.

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cin- I'll be out to beat them," said
cinnati Reds, who bave lost two out- Knight.
fielders to free agency and are in
acbooJa.
Cedeno, 30, has a .289lifetime batFollowing the gwne, Rio Grande
danger of losing a third, have swap- ting average in 12 major league
wiD
be idle unW Dec. • wben they
ped popular third baseman Ray
seasons. He bas won five gold gloves
baWe
King's Col1ep of PenKnight to the Houston Astros for and played on four All..Star teams.
nsylvania
In the opel1lDC I'OUIId of the
·veteran outfielder Cesar Cedeno.
Wagner said that Cedeno wants to '
Marietta
Shrine
Tournament. They
"You never like to give up a good play center field. The 311-year-old
wiU
batUe
elthe1·
a.rbtopher
plf.yer, and Knight's a fine player, Cedtno was hobbled by an ankle inNewport
College
of
Vlrglnla
or boat
but you have to give up something if jury last season, but the Reds gave
Marietta
the
followlnc
nlcbl
you want to get something," said him a clean bill of health this week.
Reds President Dick Wagner on
"Cesar had wanted to be traded
Friday.
for a long time, "said Astros General
The Reds had traded Ken Griffey
Manager AI Rosen. "This is
to the New York Yankees when they something that I inherited when I
RAY KNIGHT
couldn't agree on a 1982 contract.
caine to the Astros, and I've tried to
Centerfieider Dave Collins was accomodate Cesar. He's had
REGISTER
OPEN EVERY
reported near to signing with the ongoing discussions with the Astrcs
Yankees also.
about being traded."
NIGHT TIU
10 WIN
Knight batted .259 lao! season afWagner said he was considering
8:00
tradine left fielder George Foster ter taking over for Rose in 1979, batA'SW
because of Foster's contract deman- , ling a robust .318. Knight made the
ds. Footer's contract runs out after All..Star squad in 1980 when he bat.TIU
DIAMOND
this·coming season.
ted .264.
CHRISTMAS ·
"I can't say I'm shocked but I can
''He is a consistent type hitter we
RING
say I'm shaken," said the 29-year- feel will help us keep drives going in
LOGAN - David Snipes, Logan
old Knight, who won third base after the latter innings," Rosen said of
the Reds lost Pete Rose to Knight. "Of course, no one is going High Schooh·-head--{!&gt;Otball coach
Philadelphia in the free agent draft. to hit many home runs in the :.ince 1979, tendered a letter of
But he was not bitter.
Astrodome so we are looking to Ray resignation. to the . Logan-Hocking
Board of Education during its Thur"The.y (Astros) have a contending to help us with his consistency,"
sday
night meeting,
club aod a very good pitching staff.
Cedeno was hobbled by an ankle
Citing
career growth and the need
At least I owon't have to bat against Injury last year, dividing time bet·
to
spend
time with his family, Snipes
them anymore. ' I'm grateful the ween first base and center field as he
said
in
the
letter he is seeking a
Reds gave me a chance to play; now hit .271 with 5 home runs, 12 stolen
master's
degree
in school adbases and 34 runs ba_tted in in 82
ministration.
games. Wagner said Cedeno passed
"The responsibility of being a
a physical examination by the Reds
head
varsity coach makes it almost
on Tuesday.
impossible
to attend graduate school
" We were extremely pleased to be
on
a
regular
basis," he said .
able to make this trade," Wagner
"Even though I am resigning my
said. "A player with the skills that
Cesar Cedeno possesses adds so present coaching position, I will conmuch to a ballclub. Cesar wants to tir.ue to be interested In the Logan
play center field and we took upon High School athletic program anq
this trade as adding great depth to will be available to coach on a less. demanding level such as seventh
our outfield. ''•
Cincinnati obtained outfielder and eighth grade," he continued.
342 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, OH.
446·2691
The resignation comes after the
Clint Hurdle from Kansas City last
113 Court St., Po!lleroy, OH.
992-2054
week. Hurdle is expected to get a Chieftains finished a disappointing
chance to win the right field spot, season in SEOAL football, compiling
'EspeciiiOy at Chrutma5
competing with young Paul one win against Wellston, a tie with
Athens and losing eight other
Householder.
0
games.
Snipes' overall record with
Wagner said the trade also opens
up a spot for Jolumy Bench, who Logan is 13-15-L •
doesn't want to catch full time.
[1r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

•

CESAR CEDENO

Denver

Uiah

Houston
KansuCity

.

:

Seattle

GoldenStale
Portland

•

'

'

Married Couples· $4,000 if both
work and earn at least $2,000 ·
each

OPENER POsTroNED- Pl. Ple8llanl's Big BlllcluJ were scheduled
le open tbetr 1981-G baallelbi.U season at home agllllllt Slssoaville

Friday, but the lilt was pesljloned beealllle of bad weather. Members o1
the l'lnllly and junior val'lllty squads are, lint row, left 1o right, Rod Bordmall, Doolllle Jones, Todd Simpkins, Joey WaiU., Joba David, Eddie

Varlabli Rate Retirement Fund

WE WILL NOT
1BEOPENFOR
BUSINESS ON
DEC. 25 &amp; 26
FOR THE
HOUDAYS.

S'MNGSANDLOlWCONFANV

li

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

• Rate · 1.% above 90-Day U.S.
Treasury bill
'
• Rate changes monthly on
the 15th
• Quarterly statements
• 18-month term'
• Pay-roll deduction plan
Flxlcl Rete Retirement Fund
• Market rate set by Diamond
• Rate fixed ,for the life of
the account
• 18-month term
• Additions $500 minimum

992·6655

• .I

I

I

Cot
Col.
Col.
Cot
Col.
Col.

Olio Hfcll8tlioo18cly:ll Bllletblll
Byl11eAuoelo..........
,
Fridlf'• Reult•
Ada 55, Allen E. Sl
Akron Coventry 64, Revere 53

Akron Garfield 38, Akron.. Fjre~tone 50
Akron N. as, Aleron E. 51

Alllance ••• w. Branch 47
Amherst St,ele 61, Lorain Brookside ro
Arcanum at, Twin Valley S. 4l
Archbold 82, Evergreen 07
Arlington 13, Uberty Benton 64
Aaltland 69, Mans. Madison 46
A.!NaAd Crutview 54, Mans. ChrisUan
50
Ashllbllla 12., Madison 57
Ashtabula Hlrbor 78, Conneaut 67
Austintown-Fitch 82, Boardman 61
Avon 81, S. Amhent 47
Avon Lake 69, Medina 63
Badger U, Brbtol 3-t
Bay -15, Fairview Park 63
Bedford, Mich. 89, Oregon Clay !12
Belpre 68, Vinton Co. 61
Benjamin LOgan 50, Ot!Gndf Riverside

51

Berea !i4, N, Royalton GO, 20T
~gholz

Sprin)!. &amp;1,

Cnlumblanll Cresl·

view 57, 0'1'
BerUhire 78, cardinal 56
BerliP W. Reterve 40, Lonlstown 34
Berne Union t2, Logan Elm 40
Bethel 79, AnlonJ.a 77
....,.,. 61, Dublin ..
Bloomfield 118, Jamestown, Pa. 511
Bluffton 78, Colwnbus Grove 76
Bn&lt;lord 16, Tw~n Vall~ N. 50
Bret!Uvllle 61, Slr'oiiKBVUie M
Bri&lt;Jaeport Sl, Buckeye N. [if~
· BrookVille 72, Day. Northridge 56
Bryan 11, Wawseon 60
Buckeye Central 79, Colonel Crawford
5%
Buckeye S. 811, Jelfenwn Union 13
Cembridle 73, E. Liverpool 68
Campl:lt'lJ.Memorial 71, Salem 62
canal Winchester 86, Ll\ncaster Fi11.her

•

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...

Canfield 72, Petersburg Spring. 48
canton McKinley 7~. ,Elyria SO
canton South SB, N. Canton tl
'Canton Timken 18, Blrberton 56
l::antingtOil 51, MI. Gileod ~
Carlisle lfl, MUton·Union 46
Cell11.1 67, Elida ~
'
Chailrin Falls 91, Aurora 72
OlilUcothe 30, Mt Vernon 21
Cin. AndeNon !10, Cin. Turpin 40
Pn. ~lie 73, Cin. Purca!ll !10
Cin. Moeller 62, Cin. St. xavier 55
Cin. Sycamore 62, Indian Hill Sl
Cirdeville 70, MadisOn Plains 46
Cleve. Adan 18, Clev"e. South 6S
Cleve. Bnuh 88, Bedford 58
aeve. Central Cath. 74, Chane! 66
Cleve. Collin•ood at, Cleve. Glenville M
Cleve. E. Tech lit, Cleve. Marshall S9
Cleve. Hay 89, Cleve. Hayes til
CJeve. Kennedy 5S, Cleve. Rhodes f8
Cleve. lJncoln-W, 71, Cleve. W. Tech 52
Cleve. Orang!! 66, Twlll:lburt( 49
Cleve. St. Joseph tiS, Cleve. st. Ignatlus
51
Cleve. Trinity &amp;0, Gilmour 47 '
Cleveland Hll. !18, Valley For~e ar,
Cloverleaf 71, Brtlllllwlck 38
'Coldwater M, Mlrlon Local 31
pollln8 W. Reserve 72, Mapleton 47
Col. Academy 511, Jonathlln Alder ~
Col. Beechcrott 78, Col. ~ntennial 62
Col. Central 104, Col. Eutmoor 74
Col. DeSales 51, Col . WIUt!r'SOII &amp;3
Col. Marioo-Frlftklln 8$, Col. Walrlut
~e 70

Legge, Kevin Smltll, &amp;ell Rutherford, Rod Uttlefleld aod Todd Glbeon.
S..,ond row, aaslatant coach Larry Maltilam, Robbie Shinn, Jobn &lt;libel,
David Lambert, Howard Given, Brian Fielder, J. L. Perry, Brad Minton,
Dan Armstroog, maoager aod head coach Lennie Barnette. (Pbolo by
Tim Davis. I

Mifflin 74, Col. Brookhaven 56

st. Chllrle!i 63, Col. Ready 44

South 66, Col. Brig"s &amp;7
Wehrlt! 56, Col. Harlley 39
Wtst 100, Col, Independence ~
Whetstone 4G, Co!. Linden-McKinley

"
"'

Convoy Crestview 57, Delph OM Jeffcn;on

Copley 71, Norton a5 .
Cary-Rawson 74, McComb 61
COshocton 64, W~ter 51
CUyahoi.!:a tails 81, Nordonla 64
Day. duun-.Jul 72, Day. Carr.oll 58
Illly. Christion 72, Xeni&lt;J WiJSOll 52
Day. Dunbar &amp;f. Day. Belmont 62
O..y. Jdfen;on, If, Day. Fairview 58
Day. Meadowdale 6'9, Day. White 64
Dlly . Northmoot 62. Trotwood·Madi~;on
52
Day. Oakwood 67, TiPP City 60
Day. Stebbins 13, Day. Wayne 64
Day. Wri!(hl 67, Dt~y. Ki~;cr 59
Defiance 75, Kenton 67
Delta 71. Liberty Center 48
Qoyle:Mwn 61, Dalton 52
E. CJcveland ShaW 87, Gaz:ficld Hts. "7
E. Ointon 65, S. Charleston SE (')&amp;
E. Pale!ltine 45, Colwnbiana 43
Eastluke N. 76, Mentor 72
Eastwood 611, WoodtnOrt' ~
Edgerton !16, Stryker ~
Edison 61, S. Central &amp;4
El.~tin 64, Ri~edall! 40
Elyria Christ. 70, Col. Lincoln Bapt. 50
El)'ria W. SS, Lorain Cath. 60
Euclid 52, Willou~hby S. f9
Fairborn Baker 71, Piqua 69
Fairfiekl 72, W. Chester Lakota 5J
Fairless 4'1, W. Holmt&gt;s 41
Fainnont E. 66, Troy 47
Fainnont W. 57, SpriiiK. SOuth t8
Fanni!1Kton 71. Cleve. Baptist Chr. 69
Firelands 70, Colwnbia 47
Fort Frye 35, Ca.ldwell 34
Franklin 65, •Leoonon 58
Fn:1nklin-Monroe 66, Tri·Yill.al!(e 59
FrL&gt;derlcktown t4, Loudonville 42
Gahamla fl7. Col. Westland 39
Galion M, Bucyru::i. 43
G!lllipoli!l 00, J11ckson 49
Caraway 67. Highlanc.l fO
Geneva 81, ~!lhtabula EdgewOOd 30
Glen ~le 80, Loveland 47
Goshen 69, Wiii.Uunsbul)! 60
Gram.lview OCr, N. Union G4
Greenon 82, Spring. Shawn1..'t! 68
Greenview 65, Waynesville 47
Greenville 14. Dls:le 57
Hamilton 63, Kt"tterin!l Alter 49
Hamilton Badin 96, Cln. Chrh;ti.an 32
Hamilton ROllS 71, Mason 69
lkrtta~e Chr. 68, Real Lire Chr. SO
Hicksville 51, Edon f6
Hilliard 68, Delaware 62
Hilbdalll &amp;1, Norwayne 57
Holland Sprinlol. 6&amp;, •\nthony Wayne 40
Hopewell-Loudon 68, ~ew R~i~el 37
Hubbard 62, Warren ..;hampion 57
Hudllon 79, Field r.4
Huntington 65, Piketon 3J
Huron 84, Tiffin Calv~ 75
Jndepmdcnce 77, Brooklyn 54
JncJian Valley S. 54, Malvem 30
Jack.'fOII Cenl.er 110, Fort l.Ora1T1ie $4
Jolullllown 41, Newark Cath. 48
Johnlllown Northridge :n, Uckin~o: Hts.
49
Kansas Lakota !12. Gib8unburg 44
Kent Roosevdt 65, Tallmadge 60
Kenton Ridge ~, IMiefootalne S:i
Kidroo 5.1, CVCA 41
Kings Milli ST, UUie Miwni S6
Kirt1and 62, Richmond Hl.'l. 59

L.ctunan CBth. 66. Fort Recovery 57
Leipsic 83, Miller Cltr. 59
Liberty Union 82, Mdh!rspor.t S8
Liill'Oinview 59, Cridenvllht Perry &amp;4
Lisbun 62, United Local 4~
Lockland 75, New Miami ~1
London 63, Sprin)l. NortheMatern 46
J..orain 51, Fremont R065 -19
U:Jr1tin Clearvlew 45, VermJJion 44
Lorain King n. Marion Hardin!!: 39
Lorain Southview 62, Elyrha Cath. 52
Louisville 70, Mal'ilngton S6
Madeira 75, Mariemont 59
Mall.'l. Malabar 66. Ontario 66
Man s . St . Pel e r 61, Fostoria
St. Wendelin 51
Marysville 59, Big Walnut 53
Massillon Pe.-ry '16, MM~illon Jacbou
39
May£ield1 64, Maple Hta. 57
McDonald 63, MaplewOOd Sl
Medina Buckeye 89, Lutheran w. 66
4l1Medina Highland 57, Greensburg Green

Smithville 68, W. Salem NW 56
So!OO 72, Kenston 52
S. Ran11e 64, Young. 'Chaney t6
Southern Local &amp;9, Leetonia 44
Southington .7l. Fairport Harding 38
Sparla lllghland 71 , Northmor [17
Spencerville 63, Upper Scioto Val. 60
SpringbOro 64, Madison Butler 49
Spring. Christian 51, Open Door Chr, 49
Spring. North 73, Centerburg 62
Sk!ubenville Calh. 64, Mingo Jundion 57
Stow 51, Akron Spring. 00
Swanton 76, P11~rick Hen!"}' 69 .
Sylvania Northvlew 12, l.Jma Shawnl!e
fB
Sylvania Southview 91, Mawnet 81
Tecwnseh 00, Miami~burt-: 49
Tol. Libbey 72, To!. Start 69
To!. St. John 71, Tol. Macomber 42
Tol. Waite 61, Tol . Central rath. 57
To\. Woodward Sll, Strich 47
Trinity Chr. 71, E. l.iverpo·i Chr. 31
62Twcarnos Val. &amp;II, Akron Mllnchester

Mi •ldletown Fmlwick 78, Trenton-Edg~wood 49
Millbury Lake Sol, Perry~:~burg 6.'1
Mincnil . Ridge 56, Jat'k.SOII·MIIton 53,
OT
Minerva 58, carrollton 45
Mo,:adore 79, Ravenna SE 54
Montpelier ~. Tinora 62
Na.pole&lt;Jn 71, F~turia 37
New Knoxville 62, New Bremen 49
New London 72, Monf'Ot'ville 51
New, Philadelphia 71, Dover 60
N, Baltimore 98, Lakeside 70
N. Obnsted 69, Obruted Falls as
N. Ric!Keville 69, Midvie• 64
Oak Harbor 36, GenOil 21
Orrville 59, Triwa~ Jl
ottawa~landorf 78, Bath 411

Tuslaw SJ, Claymont 00, OT
Uniontown Lake 84, Canal . Fulton NW

Ottoville 68, Wayne Trace 58
Oxford Talawanda 83, Lemon·Monrot! 61
Puine11ville Harvey 66. Newbury Sl
Paln~svillt'
Rlvenide
61,
Ashtabula
St. John 38
'
PandOra-GilbOa 43, Arcadi• .JG
Park Hill~ 48, Vandalilt·BUtli!r 3J
Parkway 52, Minster 47
Parma Nonnandy 88, PanTUt 67
PaniUt Pad1111 83, l..akewOOd St. Edward

"Pettisville
61,
Pickerington

66

Unioto 16, Adena 73
Arlington 68, Reynoldsburg 5-1
Upper Sandusky 50, Norwalk ·ao
Urbana 00. Sprinx. Nurthw~tcrn 00
Utica 65, Hebron Lakewood 49
Vulleyvit!w 68. ' Day. Bellbrook Eo8
Van Wt'rt 75, St. Mllryll 73
Vanlue 66, Van Buren 6S
Wadsworth 69, MidJ,oark 57
Wapakoneta 44, Delophl)j St. John 41
Warren HowlaM 41, Nlltti McKinley 47
Warren Kennedy 17, Struthcr~ 61
•
Warren W. Reserve 7l, Wamm HardinK
&amp;6
Washington C. H. &amp;2, Miami Trace 26
U~r

10

15

14

9

u

9

6

16

....
.43:)

8

.417
.&lt;00

~~

1

.311

1

,.,.

.200

12

.ts2
,!lOt
....

2

COll.EGE

~o.'0.1ch.

WEST
VIRGINIA
WESLEYAN-An·.
nOIJC•&gt;d the r-e!ignatlon or Sam Rou, 1lh- ,

3
3
4

.~

letic 1irector. Named Kent Carpenter Interim 1thleUt' .director.

1-------------

.m m•

Free gift with every purchase of a diamond or watch I rom Tawney's.

Callfenda Onqel Prleed

14's .......... 20' 11Ch ...... !1011 per box
'
IO's........ ,.16' uch ,.....!1011 per box
Ill's ••• .- ......13' uch ......!1011 per box
'

H&lt;JrtfonJ at BufCalo,
New York Islanders at Detroit,
Pltl.libun;~h at Phihu.lelphlia,
Wa~hin~~:to n at New York Ra.ngcr.!l,
Toronto at Chicago,
Calgary at Edmonton,
St.Louis al Willllipeg,
MtDdly'NGamell
No games !ICheduled

N. Central 52
Westervllle N. 64, 20T
Plymouth 56, Lucat~ ISS
Poland Seminary &amp;'!, Glrlrd 62
Port Clinton 71, Clydt! 69
Ports.. Ea!ll 71, New 84ltlton ::.&amp;
Racine Southern 62, Hannan Tr1ce 5J
Reimar Road Chr. 19, Temple Chr. 60
Ridunond O.lt! SE st. FlaMet 56
Ridgemont 54, Fairbankll 52
· RidgewOOd 80, Jewttt...scio &amp;3
Rittman 611, Waynedale 63
River Val. 63, 1 Mohawk f8
River View 58, Tri·Valley 49
Rock Hill 81, Oak Hill 10, CYr
Rocky River fl, Westlake t5
Roow.lown 84, Crestwood ~
Rossford 59, Bowlin~ GrL&gt;en 48
Rus.sia 69, Sidney F;~irlawn ·63
.St. Henry 76, Mendon Union 38
Sandusky :i9, Fldnlay ~
Sa n d u s k y
Pcritins
56," Fremont
St. Joseph 511
Sant.lusky St. Mary 64, Margarelta 58
Sandy Val. 64 , E. canton Sl
Sebrilll( McKinley IS. Stanton Local 60
Sene..."R E. &amp;2, Beltsville 37
Shaker Hltl. 68, Lakewood 58
Shelby 59, Bellvue 53, OT
Sithwy 65, W. Carrollton 51
Sidney L.ctunan 66, Fort Recovery a1

..·
"

'

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Need a Super Gift?
You can't Beat a
Canon SURE SHOT!
e Automatic focusingSUbject iS alwayS sharp!
eAutomafiC exposureadjUStS fOr the light!
B , It .
I
•
Ul ·10, aU OmatiC pop·
up flash! ·
A
. d.
•
UtO·Wtn lOg-motor
advances the film after
h
h t
,
eac
S 0
SO
YOU re
always ready to shot
again!

Frlday'wSpKWTI'UIIlai'!lklwl

, ....

Meyer,

•

NEY STUDIOS

ftH
424 Second Ave.
G a II "1p0 I,IS, Oh •

"

•'

.•:

'.'

liT
ACIII:E.
While every other bank in town is

spreading the good news about the
Individual Retirement Account's
upcoming eligibility changes,
Central lhlst is spreading the best
news. Options. When ytiu invest
in an IRA at Central 'Ihlst, you may
select from four high-interest
.options to best suit your needs.
That means, while you're working
your way to retirement, you could
be depositing savings in a Central
'Ihlst IRA and, earning premium
mtes of interest.

RAtE II'Ill
With this option, the interest mte

on the entire aCCOWlt balance will
be subject to change on a monthly

AceordiJJ&amp;IJ

h.AiA. The initi11l interest r11te uf ·
1#.50% i• effer·tive f)erember 1,
198111ntl iHI(IUirllnlr•ecl until
}HniUiry 4, 1982. There is no de-

· TANGERINES
176 count • 95' doren '13.50 per box

posit minimwn and no limit to the
frequency of deposit on this plan.

120 ct. (large) • 'i 11 doz. '14.98 per box

-...nl fiiBJ Rm 111111

EXTRA FANCY

With this option, an interest mte
Is determined on the date the
original deposit Is made. All deposits made in the subsequent 18
months wfJ1 be paid at the rate
Initially c1etennined. The account
wfJ1 renew for like 18-month periods
and the account wfJ1 be paid at the
CUJTent
interest mte.
There is no
minimum and
no limit to the
of deposit
on this
interest ·

ied Dllclous - II size - 24' eich - '18" per boil
led Delicious - 100
22' uch - '17"
box
each box

79'

'

~.

Size (count per box)
Price
4/5 Bush. Box
36 · huge ....................... 2 for 75' .................!12.98
,
48 • extra
large ................ 3 for 85c,.................I 12.98
64 •.large .......................5 for 99' ................. !12.98
80 · medium .................... &amp; for 96'~ .•.......... :... !11.98
100 . small .................... .12 for '1" ............... ~10.98

•

Swada)''8Game8
lA!! Angeles at Boston,

SURE SHOT ~ :.

•

TRIA TS fROM 808'5 MARK IT
FLORIDA NAVEL ORANGES

.

......

Canon

WlleiCoafeftlce
Patrick Dhblun
WLTGFGAPill
Philadelphia
19 II I l2l 114 39
NYbla.mk :-•
il
; lJJ 112 39
Pittsburgh
1 ~ j~
t
lu : lb. 1:
NYRanii:ers
12 16 ~ JOG 129 27
Washington
9 211 2 J7Il 132 20
Adam1 Dlvbluu
Montreal
16 7 9 157 93 41 ·
Buffalo
16 8 8 lZI 96 fO
Boston
17 9 ~ ll7 94 38
Quebec
16 14 5 1:J!I 158 37
Hartford
7 15 8 98 IZS :!2
Clllmpbei!Confertnce
N11rri1 Dlvlllitln
Minnesota
IS 9 9 Ill Hl4 Jfl
Chicago
12 9 9 141 127 33
Winnipe~o:
12 13 7 122 139 31
St. LOuis
13 15 4 1l!i 132 lO
Detroit
10 t7 5 114 13&amp; 2!i
Toronto
7 15 8 127 145 22
Smythe Dlvi!OOD
Edmonton
21 7 6 191 127 f8
Vaneouver
!3 14 8 127 121 32
Calgary
10 I~ 7 12::&gt; lfB 'II
LooAngele::;
12 17 1 128 m 2S
Colorado
6 21 a 81 157 17
Colorado 3, ~:o::~e':'fe ' '

ByTbeAIMriakdPr.et~l
BASEBALL
AmerkiD tapr
OAKLAND A'S-Signed Dan

'

' COLORAOO
STATE-Named
LOult, .
l..ubick offe11aive coordinator 1nd rwmJ.nc .
back caach.
•
UTAH-AnnOUilced the reti11:r11Um o(
Tracy
Tripucka ,
assl.stanl
basketball,

r-W~o~te~d~oo~83~,:!_W~oook~idt&lt;~e~10~----~lh~im~~bo~""~'"'~n~,~IO~a~lh~""'~'"~'~'~~n~l,~act~·~_l:==========~

•'

lb.

~

..........

Each deposit recorded in the
account will be paid at the then
current 30-.M onth Money Market
Certificate rate. No minimum
deposit or Hmit to the frequency
of deposits on this plan.

'•

Iiiii
This option requires a $10,000
minimum deposit and the account
Will be paid at the then current
6-Month Money Market Certificate
rate. No additional deposits are
permitted to this option.

liT
A•10 IlEAl
Evely year. until the funds are
withdrawn~

you may declare a tax

'

-~

·'

: ''

deduction of up to $2,000 from the
gross income on your tax retwn.
H you're married and your spouse
is empl~ that amount doubles.
Meanwhile, Central 'Ihlst's highinterest options will be helping
your deposits grow into a valuable
retirement nest egg.

•

IITA.UIIAI..

•

Hyou're a working person with or
without a pension plan, IRA's can
be a valuable asset to a more secure
retirement. Central 'Ihlst IRA's
provide you tax benefits and greater
security. plus four high-interest
options to make yotir money grow.

. If you'd like to open an IRA, or,

receive more infonnation, visit our
main office. Hi~h interest
options on IRA s are good reasons
w~y you ought to open one
WlthUS.

'

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•

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..

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.-.
:~

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U.S. Rt. 33 Mason
i .

WJNNJPEG BLUE BOM"BERS- Sijlned
Steve Plsarkiewlcz. q~ck, to 1
one.year
eon&amp;ract ..
HOCJ&lt;EY
Natloul Hockey Leque
• .•
NIIL--Swoendod J-y Marui, ..... .
wing, WinnJprg Jell!, for three pmee Jlld"'
f•ned him $6110 for shoving Uftttmln Gord. ~
Bro~eker
in
a w:ame Oec .l. , ,

New York 121, Chlca~~:o 106
lhdlana Hl9, Cleveland 13
Boston 99, . Wllllhington 98
Houston 112. Dallas 93
.,boeflix Hll, San Antonio lot
Kall.98.s aty 100, Utah 95
New Jersey 100, Milwaukee 88
SIUMIIy'11 Glmi:
Atlanta
at
l.os
Ant~eles
Mllllll8)''1Gamet1
No ~ames :u:hedule&lt;l
.

High school cage results

'

CHOOSE FROM:

!lat . •.•

CaudlaoF...,..._

N1Utul Heckey LAe11pe

TANGELOS

Earn money market rates on your taxdeferred contributions through pay
roll deduction or lump sum deposits.
Stop by any one o.f our convenient lo·
cations for more Information.

216 w. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Tax-deferred IRA contributions:
IndiVIduals- up to $2,000 or 100%
of compensation
Spousal IRA · $2,250 for married
couples if only one spouse receives wages.

14

Friday'• G•mn

Now, Fbr .the First Time • • •

.

10

n to

Phoenix
San Diego

'

.

13

PMclfk Dlvbdua
11
1
1~
B

' l...oe:Angele:~

•

'

10

9, . 211
"

Dallas

:

A EOFAKIND ·
DIAMOND RING IN HER
FAVORITE SHAPE•••

EVERY
WAGE
EARNER
CAN SAVE
T
DOLLARS

Midwtllt DM1klo
lt
1

San Antonio

.

One-:l,.a- kinJ woman

Expanded tax laws affect EVERY
wage earner. Beginning January
1, 1982, every wage eaner, (EVEN
IF YOU ARE COVERED BY AN
EMPLOYER-5PONSORED PLAN
WHERE YOU WORK) can make
a tax-sheltered contribution to
an Individual Retirement Account
(IRA). Your IRA contributions
will accumulate, tax deferred,
with compounded interest until
retirement.

, ..._.,_u,_.,.

WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Sia"ed C•l·
vln Clark, Oefeaslvt end. Ptl.ted. ·ou..,
WOf\sley, fullback, oa the injund l'fiMf'W ~ .

WES1UN CONn:RENCil

Mann suspended
MONTREAL (AP) - Right wing
Jinuny Mann of the Winnipeg Jets
was fined $500 and suspended three
games for shoving linesman Gord
Broseker, the National Hockey
League announced.

HOUSTON ASTRUI- Trldltd CHir C.
deno, outfielder, 10 the Cindnnali Redlr
for R1y ltn~:rrd buemu~~.

-

THE

Snipes steps
down as
grid mentor

Nlu...ll.aipe

Nau..llllllrl:llld A..n.U.
ll}'n.t 4
I I J,.,._
&amp;\ST£IIN CONn:UNCE
Atlad&lt;DIW L Ptl. GB
.. 5
.192 Phllaololphla
11
5
.713
\1
Newvork
12 11
-~22
6'&gt;;
Wuhi..,.ton
I It
.HI
9~
NewJerse~
1 1B
.304 11~
Ceatnl Olvblloa
Milwaukee
17
1
.7(1
Indiana
l4
11
.580
3"'Atlanta
10 12 ! .~
$
0\icaKo
11 14
.+tO
6'1:
1Rtr01t
9 15
.ns a
Cleveland
!i 19
.n 12

Porter will slart &amp;-8 \Ylllle J~
and 6-3 .W.D PbiiJlpe at the forward s1ota with &amp;-2 Micball Rulblon
and li-t James o-at the prde.
The fifth starter will pnlbHiy be .... :
Kim Carrington.
Owens scored 13 points, Johnson
and Rushton 11 each 8lld PhiWpalO
In the first game between the two

• •

773-5721
' I

\

�I

Page-C·6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

-

Dec.-20, 1981

Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. II a.

Ohio-f'oint Pleasant,

New sports cable seroice to f~ture Cleveland baseball
CT .EVELAND (AP) - A new sports cable television service will
feature the Cleveland Indians
baseball team beginning with the
pre-season in March.
Six Indians pre-season games
from Tucson, Ariz., and 20 regular
season contests will he telecast on
Total Entertainment Network: a

subsidiary of Ted Stepien's Natio,..
wide Advertising Inc.
Stepien, who owns the Cleveland
Cavaliers basketball team, is
paekaging TEN programming for
sale to existing cable outlets in the
Cleveland area. The network is the
first regional sports network of its
kind In the country, Stepien said.

aw~n:a~~:!o!:: :~~

llfWIIJ.I.UI R.IWUWID

event.

. AP 8plril Wrlllr
It Ulllally llllllllll u., t man tbln
- thing went wraog wholl • 111m
that hu been wlnnina 70 percenl ol
Its amna 1 - at home to 1 111m
that hu been wlnnina 110 perttlll at

"One thing about cable televlaioo
that I've been told is, 'Don't think
you know anything abOIJI It."' Paul
said. "I'm not going to leam 1boutlt
either. I've got prol~onals for

that."

1181!111l11L .
That proved to bi! trill! Friday

night when nearly everyane had 1
different reason why the New Jeney
Ne18, 7-16, beat Milwaukee 1DNI
Friday ni&amp;ht, snapplna a niJ1e.pJ1II!
National Ilalketball .woctatlon ·
winning streak lor the 17-7 Bucka.
"Milwaukee didn't shoot that
straitlht, and that gave ua a chance
to run," said. New Jersey CoaCII
laiTY' Brown, who saw hls team
outrebound the Buckl56-33. "We got
some eaay basketa oft .the break.
That was the big difference.''
'!be Bucb led 47-42 at halftime,
but the Nets ou~ Mllwaukee
26-17 in the third quarter to .Vertake
the Bucks.
In the final minutes ol the third
period, the Ne18 staried a »4 surge
that left tbem ahead M).66 midway
through the final quarier.
Junior Bridaeman scored 19 to
lead Milwaukee's scoring.

PRICES SLASHED FOR CHRISTMAS
, SERVING MEIG$ • GALLIA ~. MASON COUNTIES

YOU WILL
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HOTPOINT
APPLIANCES
AND
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YOU WILL AT POMEROY LANDMARK
~

I · YES

We Deliver an·d Service What We Sa IIIII, J

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

HOTPO,NT

I

Discontinues race

1

I
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SPECIAL
CLOSEOUT

PRICE

I

perFormance
TELEVISION

DISCOUNT ,

.
19 11ctlogonaiCOlOR
N-19

'reams.
Thls year, after the Indlanopolls
GOING FOR THE BASKET - New Jel'l!ey's Ray Williams pot In a · 500, CART threatened to impose a
6(klay suspension on any member
shot on a fast break a• Milwaukee's Quinn Buckner (Z1) and Sidney Moudriver participating In the USAC.
crief (t) wateb during first quarter National Basketball Association acorganized Pocono 500, and only 20
Uon Friday night in Mllwaukee:(AP laserphoto).
cars showed up for the race.

Walnut llnish on high impac t plastiC

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MICROWAVE
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IT OFFERS ASHORTER WASH PERIOD, &amp;USES
UP TO 24% LESS WATER THAN ITS OWN LOW-LEVEL SETTING!

In oilier NBA game~, lkllton
Wublllclon - . t1ou1tm
burled Dlllal llHS, "'-lx trimmed San Ant41nlo 1-.aM, New Yorlt ,
nllaped ~ lll·lll, XnM
City upended Utab ltNI IDd Indiana cltU 11111 Clllveland 111&amp;-73.

edced

CellltiN,IIIIIIeCI.
'
Robert Parllh IICGnd 1t points in
the foUrth period CtR7..for-7 shoollng

u Bolton IIJOiled a Wastmgton

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:
By JOHN NELSON
,
AP Sports Writer
' Jacksonville Coach Bob Wenzel
Iiad just witnessed his basketball
team score 91 points - not a bad of·
lensive effort, by college standards.
:the only drawback )Vas, he also had
just seen hls team lose by 16 points.
"I believe we met a Utile bit better
liilm tonight," Wenzel said after the ·
DolphinS bowed, 107-81, to secondtanked Kentucky in the first round
of the Kentucky Invitational tourliament.
Derrick Hord scored 17 points for
Kentucky, now !HI, and six other
players were in double figures as the
Wildcats led 50-37 at halftime
, "It was one of our better 'overall
efforts," the Kentucky coach said.
"We didn't have a letdown 1n the
· second half. Some of the players actoaUy played better in the second
half "
&amp;ton Hall defeated Utah state ss.

,

Parilb IICGnd :11 ol his 32 points In
the second half, when the Ce!tiar leU
beblnd
after leading by 15 In
the f1rat half.
·tarry Bird ocored 21 lor the
Celtlca, who broke a three-pme
losing streak on the I'Oid. Jeff
Ruland scored 20 points for the

•n

pollitUtahlud.
'!be Kingt, who led by • many as
If slier, took the lead for good at
fWO with 4:11 left on a Pbll Ford
jumpshot.
.
Adrian Dlntley IC&lt;lnldZI points to
lead the Jazz, but had mly two In the
final period.
Roeketa 111, Manrit:U a
MooeaMalonehadU Ofhla13poinIa, three reboundl, three atea1s.
three 11111111 and one blocted shot in
the tNrd quarter to lead a Hou8too
arrge over Dllllu.
'!be Roclreta, who have WilD three
in a row after a 7·1511art, extended a
seven-point halftime lead into a 2:1In the flnal

Period. .

DaJJu rookie Jay V'-ltled all

~~CWWSwithtllpolntl.

Robert Reid, returning to the .
lineup after a loll~ ablence
Of 11 dayulldtlvtP"'", ICONdlO.

. . . . ltt,Caftllen'll
Indiana 111111 a club ~ for

fewelrl

JlOill'l allowed .. it banded

Cleveland ita 19th lOIS In :II g&amp;ml!ll

"

Mlb ljaniAm and Butdl Carter
scOred u· pa1n11 eadl ta lead the
Pacen' balanl:e altadL

..

uu-.

'!be Clvallel'l WeRt more than 6t
milllltea Without.a flllld 1081 to 11art.
tho oecand half and fell behind by 33 •

Bullets.
S..HI,SpuiiN
Trudl Rablnloa acored a high 38 points, includln!! 14 In the
fourth quarter as Phoenix raWed
fnlln a seveft:.point deflc:lt midway
through the period to beat San Antonio.
Dennis Johnsoa, who acored lt for
the Suna, blt two free throws with
4:01 to go to put PhoeniJI ahead to
stay, 101-99, and RobinPI followed
with two baakets lor a 11J5.101 eda•
with 2:25left.
.
George Gervin scored 23 points lor
the Spurs.
Knleb Ul, Ballo W
Campy Ruaoell scored If Of his
game-high 22 points In the first quarter, when New York took control of
the g&amp;111e and went on to heat
.Chicago.
BIU Cartwright also scored 22 for
the l(nicka, including 10 in the fourth
quarter when the Bulls twice closed
to within seven points of New York
alter trailing by as msny as 21 in the
first half.
David Greenwood and Artis
Gilmore both scored 18 to lead the
Bulls.
Kings 1110, Jau 15
Cliff Robinson scored 29 points,
eight of them In the final quarter
when Kansas City erased a seven-

Kentucky humbles
Jacksonville
n

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• 100\ Solid Slale Chassis
• In-Line Black Matrix

• In-line Picture Tube

FIRST. COME
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'1QQOO

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VARIOUS SIZES IN STOCK

I

LONG POND, Ps. (AP) - Pocono
Internstional Raceway, whic~. was
the focus of a struggle belw..n rival
racing organizations, haa dropped
the U.S. Auto Club's annual50(knile
race, the racetrack said.
The. "Pocono 500," one of three
events considered part of auto
. racing's Triple Crown, baa been run
at Pocono since 1971. But in 1979 and
this year, the track was caught In a
power struggle between USAC and
its rival, Championship Auto Racing

~

RANGE
HOODS

1

-7

Nets end Bucks win streak, 100-88

talk allow fonnat with an evening's
teleeut bued around a main spot1a

agreOment between TEN and the I,..
dlans was reacbed when the cable
agreed to air silt exhibitlan games In
March.
TEN wW package a pnlll'8Jll from
6 p.m. to midnight seven days a
week, said Carl Foster, exeeullve
vice president lor the ftedgUng
operation. Each program wiU be in

"This concept looks like it's going happy to be a newborn infant ... a
to be a winoer," said Mike Fetchko, baby that's going to grow and
recently hired by the Cleveland 1,.. grow," lndiall6 President Gabe Paul
dians as director of broadcasting. said.
"There's gold In those hills, but you ,
have to be educated when you get into it."
regulilr seaaon In addition to 70,
"TV and radio rankings are games already contracted with
among the top in Cleveland. We're WUAB, a free TV outlet. The

w. \Ia .

TROUBLE FROM BEHIND - wj,. heW f-...1 ~e
McGkmll (31) bendlcwerlo pntect lbe llaiJ u Cln&gt;elaad Cllaller ceater
BW l.almbeer (ript) triello reach In d1lriq lint qaarter actloa of their
NBA baskeU&gt;all game ill IN! laM polio Friday night. ( AP Laserpboto ).

SUN. thru TUES.

O.PEN DAILY 10·10; SUN.ll-6

in the other first-round game to just before halftmle. Iowa took a 48set up a Saturday meeting of un- 28 at intemuss•on, and the ~
heaten teams.
Buckeyes were never ~lly m
Dan Callandrillo scored :IJl points trouble. Arnold had 15 pomts and
to lead Seton Hall, 6-0. The Pirates Buyle 14.
. .
hit 16 of 24 fr.ee throw.attempls I~ the
Iowa meel8 Houaton In Saturday's .
final nme JIUnutes, Without sinking a championshi~ same. '!be CIN(Sra,
sing!~ field goal.. to beat winless 6-1, got 23 poinl8 from Rob WiUJama
Utah Stale.
and some key haskel8 from 7-foot
In other games involving the fr~~ Ako;em Abdul Olajuwan of
ranked teams, sixth-ranked Iowa ' N•.gena late m the game to wallop
downed Clemson 80-68; No. 10 San . Misslsslpp1Sta~96-19.
Francisco defeated Rice IIIHI9; No.
Guard Qwntm Dalley scored 24
16 Alabama-Birmingham whipped points and John Hegwood added 20
Southern Mississippi 71-56, and 20th- to spark undefeated San Francisco
ranked Oregon State c)obbered Pen- over Rice. ~ Dona, ~· took ~
nsylvama 102-M.
lead for good, 18-16, on a tipin by K
The.Top Tea
McAilster midway in th first half.
Iowa scored a relatively easy vic- Ricky Pierce Scored 20 polnla for
tory over Cle~on, despite the a~ Rice,
sence of S&lt;:Oring leader Bob Hansen,
Iona earned the right to meet San
to move into the final of the Kettle Franciwl in the final of the tourney
Classic at Houston. Kenny Arnold by beating j..a SaUe. 95-71. Gary
and Kevin Boyle filled in olfe~ively Springer scored 24 points and Steve
after Hansen rein jured his left foot Burtt had 221or Iona.

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·- -· ··

There is still time to open your fRA Ac ·
count this year- Save money on your 1981
tax bill.
·
Nowdays, saving for retirement
makes more sense than ever and savings
with an 1RA account makes the best sense
of all. Get the facts today explai'ned.

Jack
Carsey, Mgr. ·
·
Drive a iiHie and save a lot-Free delivery within 75 miles ·
Yes, we service at your Ioca 1 Hotpolnt Dealer
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill Closed at 5:00 P.M.
Serving Meigs,
and Mason Counties.

,,

LOW
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•

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Silver Bridge Plaza

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fHVFH R(H\D, l.iAI LIPOLIS

•
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•
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•

•
'•••
••
•
•

•

'!•

�'
0 0

Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middlepori-Gallipolis, Ohio--Point Pleasant, W. Va.
'•

BYU holds on
for 38-36

•

•

.;

••

•

w

FINAL
PRE-CHRISTMAS
MARK DOWN:

•

•
'

..'

cia sallied

•

•

Justice.

II

searched homes ID

Bericl Hills.

•

..

r
KIDNAP SUSPECT SOUGJIT-Itallao poUce are
lookiJIR lor a youag maa who realed lbe van Wled to
carry U. S. Army Brig. Gea. Jameo I. Dozier after his
abdudloa fram his Veroaa, Italy, bome ThW'Iday.
Pollee releued tbi8 tdleteh Friday of the maa IIIey
believe reDied the blae Fiat gelaw8)' vao that was
fuuDd only a few llmdred yards from the lddllllp site.
(AP l.aserphota) .

..

!Package
.'
.
!ckal f~ils
•••

..

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,
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~

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1

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - All travel
agent Don Pelz wanted to do was
take care of some regular
customers. Instead, he was accused
of scalping tickets and ripping off
sports fans.
Because neither Ohio State nor
-Michigan was playing football in the
"Rose Bowl this year, Pelz wanted to
'come up with a substitute travel
package lor football fans who normaUy head west in January.
So Pelz began advertising atravel
package this week that included a
•ticket to the Super Bowl in the Silver
·nome in Pontiac, Mich., plus round
trip charter bus transportation for

• '$335. '

.'

•

"•

..."

..

!·

'I
I

I
·' 1

,I
:

fare.

1•

Pelz said several local companies
• lihad used the Rose Bowl trips as
:·sales incentives lor employees. The
Jtravel agent said be thought his com. , !JlBny's Super Bowl package might
., •serve as a sub,tilute.
: : ••we thought We were offering a
1~rvice to some longtime clients,"
' I ifPelz said. "We *'ver expected this

I

I

I •sort of reaction.'~

I
:FE
I

~ ·He said ticket brokers begin lining
~up Super Bowl tickets from National
· ~Football League players early in
, !training camp "and by the time we
· : !get to them, they have been through
or lour hands" and marked up
chtime.
1
In Detroit, Don Kramer, public
relati0!19 director for the Detroit
·Lions, said the National Football
~gue has complete control over
,l ~bution of tickets to the game in

I

•
I
1

~80,1100-seatstadiwn.
Each competing tearp gets 18,000
uper Bowl tickets, Kramer said,

~

Deti'Oit area ticket brokers that
• say they have llclleta quote single
seat prices ranging from $250 to
f300, with ho guarantee on seat
location.

•

·-

..

0

AND.

•

....

'

•'

"'.

...

~

AT THE
BANK ONE's IRA (Individual Retirement
Account) provides all wage eamers with an
ideal way to shelter a portion of their income.
The Account also offers an ideal way to salt
away additional funds for retirement.
Each year you can contribute up to $2,000
of your income to your IRA. If you have a nonworking spouse, you can contribute up to
$2,250i Of course, if you and your spouse
both work, you can both open an IRA and
contribute up to a total of $4,000 to your plans.
And any contributions you make to an IRA
can be subtracted from your income before
your taxes are figured each year.
You can choose one of two ways to
eam your Interest at BANK ONE.
You can choose an interest rate which is set
for 18 months..Any new funds deposited will
eam the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During December the
18-month rate is 12.25%.) Or you can
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in effect for December is 12.08%.)
Act quickly to get

the best tax advantage.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
or the variabie rate plan, you will be assured

TIME.

.,.

..,..

~

•

your money is eaming inflation-proof interest
for your retirement. To maximize .the tax- .
deferred interest you eam, you should make
your oontributions as soon as possible after
the first of the year. You will reeeive monthly
statements ori the status of the Account and
your funds are insured by an agency of the
federal government.

,,,,

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COlli II up flnt~

Member FDIC

•

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AMOUNT

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$ 3,()42,435

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$ 298,667

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BANKONE,M
BANK ONE OF POMEROY
''

••

''ill« ~V'E YOIJM ~~TWiT~ l&gt;@.tt-IS1'1'Wt W~U.? ~D WHY \11\\'11 'WSI'IOO-D UP IIU.1\It0t\fRS?
. AND~ AR'S 'b.! ~lNG l!P1HE 100? ~D Wt« DID 'l'ool'tU.~R'(OWE TO CL"EAR'M ~ ...

said the United States should nOt take rnUltary actlclt
against Libya, compai-ed with only 6 percent woo_
said there should be a milltary ryponse and 7 percent
who were not sure .

Pending the outcome of Investigations Into the reports, Reagan's principal response was last weekend's announcement of a ban on travel by U.S.
citizens to Libya and a reqiii!St that the estimated
1,500 Americans now working In Libya return to the
United States. · .
' Among all respondents, barely bait sa'ld they bad
heanl or read abuut Reagan's recent actions with
regan! to Libya, but those people were more than
4-to-1 In favor of the president's ban on travel to
Libya.
Respondents who said they favor the travel baa
and those wbo say the threat to Reagan Is serious
were more likely than other respondents to say the
United Stales should stop buying Libyan oU.
And RepubUcans were more likely than Democrats or Independents to saY the United States sbould
stop buying oU from Ubya.
As with all sample surveys, the results of AP-NBC
News polls can vary from the opinions of all Americans because of chauce variations In the sal"ple.
For a poU based on about 1,600 InterviewS, theresults are subject to an error margin of 3 percentaae
points either way because of cbance variations. 1bat
Is, I! one could have talked this past wrek to aU Amerl~
cans with telephones, there Is only I chlu!ce In 20'that
the findings would vary by more than 3 percea~a&amp;e
points.
.
Of course, the results could differ from other po111
for a number of reasons. Differences In the exact
wording of questions, dit!erences In when the Interviews were conducted and different methods oflnlel'vlewlng could also cause variations.

Auto leaders get
Reagan assurances

~-

..•.

40

January.
Eighty-seven percent of the poll respondents who
had heard or read of the assassination team reports

"

This chart shows how
your IRA can grow.

$

:

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.'

·50

world, currently Is producing about tiOO,OOI to 700,!XXl
barrels dally, according to industry estimates. That
is down from about 1.7 mlillon barrels a day In

NEW YORK (AP) - Americans !amutar with re'
ports that Ubya has dispatched an assassination
team to kill President Reagan are overwhelmingly
'opposed to U.S. mWtary action agalnat that country,
according to the latest Aa&amp;octated PreiS-NBC News
poll.
'
The poll, however, also said there Is strong support
for President Reagan's ban on American travel to
Ubya aad for ending U.S. oU purchases from Ubya
u a result of ibe reports. --.·- ': · "'· • • · "·
Telepllone IDtervlews with 1,600 adults, selected In
a nationwide scientific 1'811dom sampling on Monday
and Tuesday, were the basis for the poll.
U.S. officials reported earlier this month that Col •
Moammar Khada!y, Ubya's ruler, had assembled a
team of killers to assassinate PresldeDI Reagan and
other top American of!lclals. Khadafy denied the accUsations and challenged the Reagan 'administration
io prove the claims.
Reagan said Thursday that he had "complete confidence" in the reports and that It would be "foolish" to
relax the Increased security around him.
In the poll; !19 percent said !bey think the threat to
the president Is serious, while 22 percent thought It Is
not, and 19 percent either were unsure or said they
had not heard or read of the reports.
Among those who said they were tarnUlar wllh the
a8sasslnation plot reports, 57 percent said the United
States should stop buying oll from Ubya, 27 percent
said the United States sbuuld connllnue buying LIbyan on and 16 percent ivere not sure.
.
The State Department's energy otfl~ estimates
the United Stales Is currerttly importing 150,001 barrels of oU a day from Libya, or aboUt3percentoftotal
U.S. oil imports. Estimates from Industry analysts
r8Jiil! from 150,000 to .m,!XXl barrels a day ,
Ubya, wlloee oU pi-tees are among the highest in the

..•

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'IIMII'IIA

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Stop by any BANK ONE office for details.

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POMEROV•AUTLANOoTUPPERS PLAINS

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. . . . . . you think

1

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host team gets 12,000 tickets and
t . each of the 25 no~H:Dmpeting teams

I ·: have 800 seats.

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ohe uted Red Brlpde lerroriJIIII for the relllra af llor •
h1111baad. Italian pollee dellerlbed the 11e11rch f..- lite •
kldoapped geaen~l as the largest manhunt oa -..rd. (AP Laserpholo~.
;

·Poll says Ameri.cans _favor stopping Libyan

'"

I • Two affiliated Toledo travel agen-

·cies, Central Travel and Ticket Inc.
• 'and Elite Travel, offered the
I package in advertisements
, :published in The Blade, Toledo's
! 'daily newspaper.
; • By mid-week, Pelz was calling for
1 a truce and decided the package and
~ price tag were disasters.
Pelz, executive vice president of
Central Travel and Ticket, said the
firm got many negative calls accusing the company of attempting to
1 make " outrageous" profits by
•j •stalping' the tickets lor the Jan. 24
• game.
Pelz said he agrees that $335 was a
lot of money lor a chartered bus ride
'and tickets that were selling lor $40.
'But be added, "We didn't stand to
, make much out of it. We were
1 ·buying the tickets from a California
: "ticket broker for $290 apiece."
: · "Callers thought we were buying
I 'the tickets for the laL'e value and
boosting the prices ourselves," Pelz
said, "and that just isn't how it
Worked.' '
•
Pelz said the same company in
: California also put together Rose
Bowl trips to Pasadena lor Ohio
State
University and Michigan foot1
ball fans in previous years . .
In those cases, the priceS of a $15
Rose Bowl ticket was raised as high
~ as $90, a small part of a $700 to $900
: package that included charter air

APPEAlS TO KIDNAPPERS - Mn. Judith
Do'lier, rigbt, wile of kidaapped Amerkall Brig. Gea.
James L. Dozier, holds bandll with daughter Cheryl,
Saturday, at a aews con!ereaeeln Verona, Italy, where

.

''
'•
•

ELTER.

.

It was Italy's biggest manhuntonrecon!, theysal4.
But officials said the kidnappen got a three-hour
bead start before th~ abduction of Brta. Gen. James
L. Dozier was reported to pollee, and could easily
have fled this ancient walled city 60 miles west of
Venice.
A NATO spokesman said Dozier's abduction Thursday from 111s Verona apartment was the first kidnapping of a U.S. military olflcerslnceWorld Warn. The
50-year-old general is lhe top ranking Army officer of
the North Allantlc Treaty Organization's Land Forces In Southern Europe.
"We claim responsibility lor the kidnapping of
hangman of NATO, J8Jt)I!S Dozier,"' the Red Brigades said In a telephone call to Italy's ANSA news
agency Friday. "He Is closed in a people's prison and
will be lrled by proletarian justice."
The kidnappers made no immediate demands for
the general's release.
In Washington, President Reagan called Dozier's
captors "cowardly bums" who "don't have a cause
that justifies what they're dolng.''
Reagan said the United States was doing every·
thing It could to secure Dozier's freedom. The DefeJIBe Department said ltosent a six-member liaison
team to work with Italian authorlties investigating
the kidnapping.
. Italian pollee said they were lOOkiJlg lor a young
man who rented the kidnappers' blue Flat getaway
van Dec. 91n Milan using a forged passport as Identification. The van was driven only a lew hundred yards
from the abduction site and abandoned.

'

•

'

,,.~D -1 .

Authorities set up hundreds of roadbloclts aad
Verona, Padua, Mestre, TreviSO,
Margbera, Vlcenza and along Lake Ganla and the

VERONA, Italy (AP) - Pollee u.s1Di bellcoplen,
hunting dogs and armored v8118 scoured nortbem
Italy today for the llideout ct Red Brlpdel terroriJtS
Who say !bey are ~ a U.S. Anny general captive In a "people's prllon" to face "prolelartan

•

Dec. 20.

Police hunt" kidnappers
of U. S. Army general

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TRIM &amp;
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The changes they are pushing for could mean a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Auto lnduotry leaders say
savings
of $80 w $.100 per car- enough, they say, to
they have received aasurancea frOm Presldeat Rea·
boost
sales
by 300,000 cars a year. _
gan that he will help get auto emilaloD atandards
Fon! Motor Co. Chainnan PhUip Caldwell said the
relaxed under the Clean Air Act.
·
group disCussed Japan's program of restricting auto
Top executives of the nation's biggest autocompan-·
eXports to tbe United States.
tes went to the White House Friday to live Ragan
Caldwell said Reagan was asked "to consider the
the message they gave House leaclenhlp eartier In
total competitive sltuattoh" of the U.S. market.
theweek.
.
Smith said the Industry leaders came asking ''not
AutornaJ&lt;ers say action will have to be taken ooon
for a handout but a band."
on the emJsalan standards I! they are to have any
However, Iacocca said he suggested giving tax
Impact on the 1!83 model cm.
credits to car buyers to stlrnulate business.
"We were very encouraaec1 by the president's atReagan made no col'llll1ltment on thatldea, accordtention and h1a undentandlng, and we are looking for
Ing to White HoUSe spokesman Larry Speakes.
help from him, particularly In the revlsloaa 1o the
Pralslng the administration's economic program,
Clean Air Act," Raaer Smith, chairman &lt;t General
the executives said the biggest boost lor the Industry
Motors Corp., aald following the White House
would be an Improvement In the economy and a drop
lunc'-1.
In Interest rates. now !'liMing at IS'%.
The ~lives outUned their problema and told
Iacocca said the problem for the Industry Is to get
Reagan they are COIIllllng on h1a help In puJ1ing the
Industry out oflllllump.
· by until a turn-ai'OWid. ''Things maybe !Jetting a Utile
wone for the next three to six months, hilt hopeflllly
Reagan "reecwntzel fully we are ID a dloaster
come July and AUIUSI when the next 10 percent lax
area," said Lee A. lacocca. chalrmlll ct Chrysler
cut klclts In, things wU1 start to pick up steam," he
Corp.
"The IOUih part II p!tllng from hare to there."
said.
f&gt;fore than 211,(0) auto wor1an are • ~at the
AlsO
atleJICIIDg the White Houle lltll'dng Wl!l'e
11w lilajor campllllel. Iadullry ~ IIIIa )WI' are ·
American
Motora chairman Gerald Meyer-. ·and
expected t1o filial
1IIIIIIID.
James
McLernon,
ptealdeDt of VolkBWapn of
Alla!d If Raaaalllldlarapecllle Jl t
1814, "Hll belp • lilt Cilia Air Act wulbe l1lfllll we America.
Cabinet ~ joining the talks Included Com(0!+1. . fllr lilt IIIDIL"
merce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige, Treasury SecreEadllr IIIIa Willi. aDID - l l w l aut a promlae
tary
Donald
T. Regan and Transportation Secretary
trom!'-llpMI... 'J'ItomaiP.O'Nelll tbetbewwld

au

II)' 10 ilt ... llded Clelll Air Act ...

lbmllll Ca4fll

"''·Smith

Drew U!wls.

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Atrro INDV8TRY HEAD8 - l'nlldeat RM8Id
Reapa meeta Ia the C.blaet Room of dte Wblle nwtlb auto laduatry eseeatlvn. From left life: Rocer

Smllb, GeDenl Mot.n; Requ • • Pldlllp CILIJall,·
Ford Mollr pre~ldeal. lAP I:.HI'(IItoto).

.I
---~----------

�-----1981
Page-D-2-T. ..Sunda Times-Sentinel

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

w. 'va.

Dec. 20 19 1

Nurse's strike in ·17th month
,\SHTABULA, Oblo (AP) Striking nunea frcm Aahtabula
General Hoapital would get their
pre-strike jobs baclt Wider a new
hospital propoul 10 and the nation's
longest nurses' lltrlke, but the union
has deferred a vote.

"What we're dOin(l q working on
getting it set up,'' laid Mary
Runyon, president of the 'Aahtabula
Nutses Association, The 1111 RIU'IIeS
from the private, non-profit hoapital
in northeast Ohio walked off their
Jobs July 21, 19110. The union Ia in
search of ita first contract with the
hospital. .
Mrs. Runyon said the hospital's offer, which resulted from a daylong
meeting ·Thursday, is nearly identical to a propooal ,made by fedeFaJ
mediator Ken Evaris before Evans
disqualified himself from the
negotiations in September.

"NUI'IIel baelcelly acceptecl' that

Pi OfM8) In September and udiaturbs 111 thai only- Ia the hoeplial 01fertng It llke it's aomething new,''
she &amp;ald.
Barbara McClintock, a
spokeswoman for the hospital, said
the offer was made lifter a review of
nlll-le staffing at the 234-bed
holpital, The faclllty has been
operalin8 at a limited capacity since
the otrlke began.
"The chief concern is for our kldB
who have been in here working," sbe
said. 11 We II8SUJ1le we'll have more
staffing than we'll actually need. We
do not Jr:now just how ~Y nurses
will come back .until that day
arrivos. We're prepared to absorb
the extra staff for the Ume being."
Mrs, McClintock said a financial
package offered .in May that included raises of abOut 12 percent is

still oa the table.
The hospital contln- to GppOee 1

~~n~on shop and aald ON~ GppQiitlon

to using Ucenoed pt'ldll!ll,.._ •
the hoepllal will be refemd to. nurses advisol')' ccmrniltee.
A contempt of court bwltrc for
the striking nurse~ Frldly WIIJIGI&amp;-

poned until Jan. 29, Mn. ~
Said. The complaint, flied Iller •
nurses' rally last mantb, WOUld be
dropped if the contract Ia rallfled,
shesald. .
'
If accepted, the conlt act will run
for 17 months, ezpJrinl in May 1113. '
"It iB our hope that the ONA wtt1
proceed with a r.attficallon vote
within the next few daya," holpital
administrator Floyd Farley lllld in a.
prepared statement.
Mrs. Runyon said a vpte WOUld be .
delayed while attempls are made to
contact all union members,

CLEAJUNC: 'J1IB WAY- Sisler Rose Ann Van
Suren, prWdpal tl a.ly Name School in Columbus, exchang.. gu tf'lp with cross country skier Mary
Rafalowskl ~ IIIOming In Columbus as she clears
her wlodoWII 18 '-1 of the school. Rafalowskl, from

North Canton, was on her way to the Ohio State University campus. Central Ohio !lrlvers and skiers fonnd a
light blanket of new snow on the ground Friday morning, after Thursday's first big snowfall of the year.
(AP Laserphoto).

Reagan assures Detroit
of Clean Air relaxation
in a disaster area," said Lee A.
By ROBERT L SHAFFER
lacocca, chainnan of Chrysler Corp.
Associated rr.IWriter
More than 211,000 auto workers
WASHINGTON 141') - Auto inare
on layoff at the five major comdustry leaders ..,. they · have
panies.
Industry losses this year are
received aSSUI'IIIICa from President
Reagan that he will help get auto .expected to total $1.4 billlon.
Asked if Reagan made any·
emission standards relaxed under
specific pledges, Smith said, "His
the Clean Air Act.
•
· Top executives of the nation's help on the Clean Air Act was the
biggest auto companios went to the thing we were looking lor the most."
Earlier thls week, auto executives
White House Frtdq to cive Reagan
the message they,, pve House got a promise from House Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill that he would try
leadership earlitr . . . week.
Aulomakera say lldkm will have to get the stalled Clean Air Act
to be taken 110011 ·Ill the emission revisions moving through Congress.
The changes they are pushing for
standardB if they
lll'bave any lincould mean a savings of $80 to $3011
pact on the 111111 model cars.
"We were Yei"J eAeOUraged by the per car- enough, they say, to boost
president's allentiGn and his un- sales by 300,000 cars a year.
Ford Motor Co. Chairman Philip
derstanding, and WI! are looking for
help from him, J*'licularly in the Caldwell said th~ group discussed·
revisions to .the Clean Air Act," Japan's program of restricting auto
Roger Smith, chainhan of General exports to the United States.
Caldwell said Reagan was asked
Motors Corp., said fQJJowing the
"to consider the total competitive
White House lunchecn
The executives outUned their situation" of the U.S. market.
Smith said the 'industry leaders
problems and told Jleacan they are
counting on 1111 help In palling the in- came asking "not for a handout but
a hand."
dustry out of Its slWII!l.
However , Iacocca said he
Reagan "~ fully we are

an

suggested giving tax credits to car
buyers to stimulate business.
R ~ r~'!:-Jn

made no commitment on
thal 1dea. a~t ·.-..~c~illi to White House

spokesman Larry Speakes.
Praising the administration's
economic program, the executives
said the biggest boost for the industry would be an improvement in
. the economy and a drop in interest
rates, now running at 15 percent.
lao&amp;cca said the problem for the
industry is to get by until a. turnaround. "Things may be getting a
little worse for the next three to six
months, but hopefully come JUly and
August when the next 10 percent tax
cut kicks in, things will start to pick
up steam," he said. "The tough part
is getting from here to there."
Also attending the White House
meeting were American Motors
chairman Gerald Meyers and James
McLernon, president of Volkswagen
of America.
Cabinet members joining the talks
included Commerce Secretary
Malcolm . Baldrige, Treasury
Se.cretary Donald T. .Regan and
Transportation Secretary Drew
Lewis.

Says .PCB regulation weak
CLEVELAND (AP) - · The top animals and to skin and internal
federal and state environmental of- disorders in hwnans.
"The chemical is poisonous and
ficials in Ohio say Jaws regulating
pOlychlorinated blpllenyls, or PCBs, dangerous and can induce a variety
are too weak to prevent the toxic of adverse effects on the health of
chemical from threatening human hwnans," Adarnkus said. "We don't
have to wait until somebody dies
health.
The positiOIII ol
S. Nichols, from PCB consumption. It's imdirector of the Ohio l:nvironmental poriant that we act now."
Nichols added: "We are parProtection Ageni:J, and Valdas
ticularly
concerned that they can get
Adamkus, rep ;a! chjef of the
into
the
food
chain." PCBs are very
federal EPA, _ . I t I lime when
stable
chemicals
that do not decomthe mood in Wlllllliigton is against
pose
or
dissolve
in
water.
stricter envlrenmeolal regulations.
Reps.
Ron
Mottl,
IHJhio, and
Nichols and Adamkus testified
Doug
Walgren,
D-Pa.,
conducted
Friday at a CO!IIfeSilonal subcommittee hearlnc in Cleveland on Friday's hearing, which was prompted by recent publicity abOut spills
the dangers oll'CBI.
Until they were buned in 1979, and leaks from capacitors and tranPCBs were widely ~ in tran- sformers in the Cleveland area and
sformers and eapaciiOrl by electric more serious spills at Bingh!lmton,
utility compal... The lndustcy has N.Y., and San Francisco.
CEI owns the equipment in the
abOut 2.8 mJIU011 PCB capacitors
Cleveland.area that malfunctioned.
i!lill in use.
: Such equiJIIlelllil fGIIId on utility . The company is involved in a
'JlOles and in lll!llWia PCBs have progra!Jl to replace equipment containing PCB.
:~n linked
1 Ill laboratory

w.,.

11!,1•
•

..

GE) vice president John Mislc
testified that CEI has . reduced the
number of PCB units from 9,900 in
July 1979 to fewer than 7,600.
CEI and the EPA have been
negotiating since AUgust oo ·a consent decree which would govern
reporting of spills and clean-ups.
Adamkus said the agreement might
be completed within two weeks.
Both Adamkus and Nichols said
current regulations are not strict
enough. The federal EPA is revising
regulations governing PCBs and
must have ·them completed by
August 1982.
Also testifying was state Rep. ~
FISher of Shaker Heights, who has
mtroduced legislation in the Ohio
House that would speed up the
replacement program by all utilities
in Ohio.
"To my knowledge, only one
utility - CEI - has committed to
the accelerated replacement
schedule. The seven other (Ohio)
utility companies have remained ·
silent," Fisher said.

Amounts distributed in the last
fiscal year totaled $572.9 million.
Regents chainnan Richard L,
Krabach said the board had li!Ue option but to use a distribution formula
prescrtbed by the General Assem. bly.
"Our responsibility is to follow the
law, J1.ol write it,'' Krabach said.
He said regents could seek
legislative approval of amendments
to correct the formula or applv for

Controlling Board fun&lt;IB.
President Richard Ruppert of the
Medical College of Ohio at Toledo
told the board that the subsidy his institution would receive under the
distribution formuln was about 5
percent below a line-Item amount
spelled out by the Legislature in the
state budget.
'
"We're so far out of line ... we
don't understand It," Ruppert said.
Duane R. Rogers, regents fiscal
expert, said the budget contains
$7,665,000 for the Toledo institution
this fiscal year, Under the formula,
the subsidy is $7,2117,1111.
Regents' Chancellor Edward Q.
· MOUlton said other colleges also
complained.

Although the budget contains a
specific figure for each school, it
requires the subsidy to be based on a
complex fonnuln taking into account student enrollment.
Some non-credit college courses in
~dull
continuing education

programs also came under fire at
the meeting. ' ·
Moulton said attempts to win state
funding for ceriain other clasaes,
such as professional refresher Courses, had been unaucc:essful. One
reason, he said, waa Jeglslative opposition to recreational-avocalional
classes such as cake decorating,
square dancing and scuba diving.
"I'm not sure they're doing the
image of the lnstll!Jtlon, from an
academic standpoint, any service,"
Moulton said. "The public's perception is they are all in that same
reabn and they're not."
Questions about the claaaea were
raised after regents were briefed on
a survey which showed that Ohio institutions are offering a variety of
classes to thousands Of adults
through non-credit continuing
education,
The self-sustaining classes are
financed by student fees.

Time chairman slams censorship
CLEVELAND (AP) - Attempts
at censorship. are jeopurdizing the
future of cable television, says
Ralph P. DavidBon, chairman of
Time Inc.
"I'm sounding the alarm bell,''
DavidBon said Friday in a speech to
the City Club.
DavidBon Said the New Yorkbased non-profit group called
Morality in Media Inc. "has singlehandedly raised this as a serious
problem,"
The group has launched a drive in
35 cities to build support for cable
·
eensorship, he said.
"Its fund-raising letter enclOt!es a
postcard to mail to your mayor advocating local censorship to -and I
quote - 'keep your living room from
becoming a pornographic palace,'''
hesaid.
.
'• It has also drafted and circulated
mndellegislation which has figured

in numerous censorship attempts
already. You don't need a crystal
ball to foresee the dozens of censorship attempts made so far
multiplying rapidly.
"Tile(le would pit single-minded
local activists, backed by this wellfunded national organization, again.st cable. operators whose business
future depends on a locally granted
franchise," he said.

Evelyn Dee, . asSistant to , the
president of Morality in Media Inc.,
contested DavidBon's assertions in a
telephone interview from New York.
"We certainly are. not checking
renewal dates on franchises," she
said.
The group, founded by Jesuit
priest Morton S. Hill and two other
clergymen in 1962, believes cable
television should come under thoi
same regulatory rules as broad-

casting, she said.
She said the group has drafted
suggested cable legislation and has
been handing the draft out to group~&gt;
in various states. The legislation
would attempt to ban telecasls containing representations of sexuaJ.aclsornudity.
.
"I ttjJnk this speech (Davidson's)
is a lot Jl)Ore ominous tha.n we are,'f
she said.
Davidson said e-fforts to have the
government control what viewers
"can see in the privacy of their
home" are clouding cable's future.
"There's no one who can censor
what you read or hear better than
yourself,.. he said.

He said Time Inc., which operates
a nwnber of cable systems, is not
defending pornography and does not
provide X-rated filmo to its viewership.
·
·

Veterans return to Thailand
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) _: they ~till had not received an
Four American veterans of the Viet- itinerary from Vietnamese
nam war have arrived in Hanoi to authoritie•. It was also not certain
begin what they hope will he a whether they would return on Christ"soldier-to-soldier" dialogue on mas Eve on a flight from Ho Chi
such issues as the use of the Minh City, formerly Saigon, or from
defoliant Agent Orange and the fate Hai10i oo Christmas Day.
The leader of the group, Robert U.
of U.S. servicemen still listed as
.
Muller,
told reporters here that he is
missing in action.
seeking
Information on the JongA Vietnamese Embassy
spokesman here said the men - the tenn effects of Agent Orange.
first all-veterans group to visit Viet- · The defoliant was sprayed by U.S.
nam since the war - arrived in forces acl'll88 Indochina during the
Hanoi Friday aboard. an Air Viet- war and some veteran groupa have
been pressing the U.S. ~ovenunent
nam flight from Bangluik.Before leaving here, the.vets said to recosnJze that ellpollii'C! to the
controversial cllemlcal

war damsged them physi~ally ·and
caused genetic damage among their
children,
'
Muller, a 3&amp;-year-old lonner
!.Iarine, lieutenant and the t'llm!nl
executi.ve director of Vietnam
Veterans of America, was paralyzed
from the waist down in 1tlll8 when a
bullet severed his spinal cord in a
battle near Con 'lblen. He iB confined
to a wheelchair.
The group is also seeking i,.
formation about some 2,500 U.S. oe..:.
vlcemen unaccounted for in VIetnam and Its two clooe Indochlnllll"'
allies, Cambodia and Laos.

testifies· in trial

PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP)- Acmurderer 011r1es Hnghos
says he wu jii
ed into accompanying caa\'lellllldller Walter
;Gale Steinhorst • ·• deetlly drive
·lhrongh the Flolrt* Plnhandle four
:;.ears ago, wblll ,._ people who
:happened .,.. ' a marijuana
~smuggling 1 "•-..- slain, the
'-Seven Mil~,
. . told a Bay

;cuSed

- .-.... ...tv
~\..AIUI-1'

~ Hugheli, 1(1'

ilefenae ol ,...

••
• .. '

"' ..

~

.

.,.,.

""ww.
Frtday in
r dtt charges

sle!tlminC frWtllilllllllt'ed 1977 Sandy Creek ~ lllluggling

operation. Two t 11 111 girla and
their male c t 7: : .-ere killed,
their bodl.. , .. " ' ... bottom ol

l

..

my

VAN WERT, Olio (AP) - When
~-~v bllwlblft • 1 Boeden IDe.
_..
an ert. Laale lkCray
fi&amp;ured ~ Wll -Cit the lucty - :.':et_~ thavetolqfwworftnext

· "For guya
aae, they're bur- bepn laying them off. .
tin'," said Chrla Reichert Sr., 49, a
In addition to Uederkranz, the
Borden llllfJio7ee for 22 yean and CllRiflliiY also pnlduced American
the prealdenlllf Local 1SJ88 o( the chetle in individually wrapped
U.S. Steelworltera, reprmnllng sllcos and cream. Borden has a
plant employeea. Reichert · lllld similar plant in PlymoUth, Wis.
lbout haH the employees at the plant
Company spokeswoman Betty
wereover40.
Garrett said from the firm's corftelchert said other plants In the porate headquarters in Columbus
Van Wert area, mostly related to the that It was not economically feasible
auto induatry, are havinllayoffs of tooperate·both.
their OWD. Few bualneuea in the
Harold Steinke, vice president for
area are blrtng.
consumer producta at Borden, said
"There'snotalotlcandountilthe thecompanyhopestoselltheplant.
holidays, hot then I'll have to start '
"We gave some infonnation to
looking for work," lllld Reichert, a slate officials for them to distribute,
lnlck driver for Borden. ''For most
and we're talking to some Interested
of these people, I gueu it will be a
parties, but nGthing .is being conpretty bleak Olristmas."
sldered finn," he said. He would not
Robert Proffitt, assistant per- divulge the names of the interested
some! manager for the plant, said
parties or the usking price for the
up wllil August the operation em- plant.
ployed about 300 workers. and then

.

ThednlgBorden Inc. plant cloeed at
ml
ht Friday, idling IIIli worltera
and shutting.aft the only IIUpfl}ier jn
~orld Of robust Llederkranz
, , •
tlie I guess you~ say I'm one of
lucky ones; said McCray, 82, a
44-year employee 1t the plant and
!l"C! of the roughly 45 worltera who
could lake an early retirement. "I
to lake thlnp pretty May and
. all the flahinc I can when better
l'e&amp;ther gets here."
. B~ the balance of the employees
won.I be ao fortunate. With the plant
~!Oiling, unemployment in Van Wert
willl!e over 11 percent.

:a

.

.

..

Judge R)chant Roderick of Gallia
County CO!JIJIIon Pleaa Court has
released 120 names for the grand
jury and 500 names for the petit Jury
for next year's jury sessions.
Thellll'tlelare:

l

Simplon Peti, Rt.l, Bidwell; Luther L: Burpett1
Patriot.; Clara H. ELliott, Rt. I, ~atriot; Jolin F .

R....it Cox, Rt. 3, .. ... 4811, City;

Luello

M.

Sheet.ll, Rt. I, City; ArUsJ. Bunch, Rt. 2, J1•trtot;

R&lt;ln.illdMonroe Potter, Rt. 4, Oak Hill ; Waniia J.
Mullen, Rt. 1, Gallipolls ; Arthur Allen Nibert,
Hankinti, JIB Brentwood Dr.; Ira C. Welllhlln ,
Silk st. Eat. : I..UIIIer W. Hille, Rt 2, Bidwell;
K!"R, Gallipellill; Cbllrles Arthw Tho1ruts, Rt. 2,
Dwight D. Wooda, ~atrlot Star Rt. •. City; Lewis
E. Woodyard. Pilri&lt;&gt;l Slar Rt .. Ctty; Jol&gt;t D. B•d~U; Dorothy Irene Gordoo; 133 Fourth
Ave .; Ma~ L. Smith, Boll27, Bidwell; Gene f:.
, Bym, KMR:, Gallipollli; Ma41!:e T. Francis, &amp;SI
Blankenshtp, Jr .. P. 0 . ~ 581. Rio Gnnde:
Upper
River
Rd.;
Cheryl
)hatton
Kingery,
.
Sharon £a Tawney, 17 State St.; Minnitl FlorenPalrlotStar Kt.,t'lty ; Mll'y fJdean leylor, Rodt.~ Dolla, 711 Third Ave.; John M. WilliiUI'l!l, Boll
ney: Howard Blazer, EWl!kl Star Rl, C1ly;
105, Crown City: Lewis F. Westfall, Jr., RL J,
Wanda Lee Martin, Rt. 2, C'I'OwriCity; UDJa Kay
GMJIIpoiili; Orvillto £ar1Bntton, Rt.l, C~hlre;
GRAND JIIIIOIUI
Shriver, Rl. .2, GaWOOUB: Erma B. Rwmion, Rt.
Chridy Mt.-Garler, 'RL 2, Patriot; L~ndcll E.
Brenda L. Blllich, ZO Grape St.; Karen Miles
3, GallipoliS; Mary 'W. Ghrlat, 630 Fourth Ave.;
Hanu~ond, Rt. 4, O&lt;lk,HIIl; John HobertSdunoll,
J......, R~ ~ Cllv; Unda CfldwoU Glllalher,
Ray Kenneth Shaver. R1. 2, GaUipolllf; Mary
910 Fu11t ,A.ve.; Emnw Jl!all Lewili, Oltk Hill:
Sylvia Dr., Cit}'; kenneth ~ Frazer, I3S
Bernltt Croo, Route l, Patriot; Patrlci11 FenOtho Burdette, Jr., Lower River Rd.; Ed!icl
Second Ave.; O.vid H, Mobltr, Redney; Ted
derbolch, Rt. 2, GalllpOII&amp;; carol E. Clonch, Rt.
CHRISTMAS CARD - This Is a reproduction of a the Right to Keep and Bear Arms" publication. The
Franklin Johnson, R~. 4, Oak Hill; Claren~~ E,
Lewta Lawhorn, BidweU; Sl1u J. Hamihon, Jill · 1, CitYi.~ohn Mark Hal(Kert~, Rt. 3; City; Mary
Sheets, Rt. 2, Patriot: Eleanor ~dg~ Millli,
SunJet !!'·;_.!lora Helen w-u. 437
Christmas
card taken from a "Citizens Committee for lobbyist group sent the card to members of Congress.
Dew!U, Rt. 2. Bidwell; BeUlah Adkins
EV!U\11 Hl!l. ; Earl E. Roll:l, Rt. I. Patriol; Arthur
Bl•d.; ......,. Lola Slaiier, QuoD Creek, City; J.Tltotnas,
Rodney; Shor&lt;t11 R, Beebe. 258 Debby
tAP Laserphoto).
E.
lsallc,
Rl.
2,
Bidwelh
Joe
Neal
Clark
419
Vora Olllt Wa~a~h, Rt 2, crown City; Gail H.
Dr.; Sharlene S. Pickens, Rt. 2, Bidwell. ·
(~lie Dr.; Oor'is Jt&gt;an Bt'ck, Patriot Slllr' Rt., ·
Bryant, Rt. I, BidweD; Den R. SaJiabw'y, Lower
Sharlene S. Pldc.eJJa, Rt. ~. Bidwell: Margaret City; Emogen~: Swain, Rt. l, Cruwn City: DillnH
River Rd., City; Don .Ruben Spriecel, PlltriOt
S. Davll,- Rt. 2. Bidwell; WIUiam H. Sharpe, Rt. JOhnson Clonch, BlMer Rd.; Carla Ann kaset!,
Slor Routo, Clly; Annio
Tabar, l'llriot
2. GaWpoU.: Dwl8hl N. Sievers, Sr., Rt. 2, Rl. 2, Box 363, Cit)': Lewi.s H. Davis, !~at Jack.&lt;~on
Star Route, City; Keith Fred Ra1* MeCormlck
Pike.
Gallipolll; Timothy LewiJ Dayton, 1112 Adrian
Rd., Cllv; Audroy G. llllvlo,ll\0 s;;;;id .,.. ;
Ave.; OGu&amp;)u G. 8tNfiock, Boa; 2$8, City:
Ralph Edward Fellurt, ' RL 2, Bidwell:
llotlby G. Madison, Ill Bu11oDJ Dr.; Janet
Valillht Smith, Rltdttey; llar&lt;tld Lee Kemper, Rt.
Katherint Lee Hatflekl, Rt. 2, P•triot; Hayden
IJoin&lt;an, R~ ~ Clly; Unda B.lloel, Rl 2.
1, Viltoo; Renee C. Ward, Rt. 2, Vinton; James Miller, Rt. 2, Patriot: Patricia Kirby Miller. Rt.
_ , Albe~ S. DuM. Jr., Rll, Ewtngtoo;
handgun is one way of doing that,''
Rece, Vlnlm; J.Jo)'dJ. Smith Jr., Rt. 2, City.
2, Patriot; Jackie Lynn Waugh, Ht. 2, Crown
WASHINGTON (AP)- A pro-gun been unwrapped and their contents he said. "It's very proper to give
...odie 8eldw, Rl.
Ba,.
Glem
Ray
Johnloft,
117
Mlbellne
Pr.;
Sarah
City;
Marcella
L.
MOS!I,
Rt.
I,
Crown
Clly:
Bonbara C. f'aTell. D Henkle Ave.;
L. S.wtlobbyist, saying Santa Claus might scattered around the floor, one is Santa the chance to protect himself
'Hall Molhler, 2M Find. Ave.; Marie b. Denney,
nie K. Horton, 493 Ollk Dr.; John Slal'k, Rt. 3,
dtn, Rl.l, City; Marilyn J. Fllhtr, Rl... City;
Rt.
I,
Bil.tweU;
Edfth
M.
J1cbon,
70.
Second
City;
Jeffery
W
.
Dennison,
Rl.
1,
Crown
City:
Willlam H. llroy, II While A&lt;e.; A1m1 R.
need protection these day• "against probably supposed to assume that
Ave.: Hayden Lirwia Hanunond, Rl. 2, Patriot ; Marjo\aretta Williams, 73 Cedar St.; James
Sllyton, Northup; Gt-raktine Ev- Miller, 33
robber.! and muggers," has sent the figure who is about to take San- against robbers and muggers."
John Lee Swliher, RL 2, VInton; ~rlene R.
Richard Silruns, 321 Jaclwon PJke; Betty JotmGorfleld; llorold Loe ~!wool, Rl Z, Bld..ll;
Bllllard, EurekaS&amp;ar Rt., Clly; Anna D. Lemley, aon Carter, 46 Vine St.; Pamie Ma e Carler, 46
Syl'ril Jurutll Day, ru. 2, Cl~; Palt)' B. Stutes,
members of Congress a Christmas ta 's slug in the back is stealing
Rt. 2, Bidwell; Roy Speant, Rt. Vinton; J11mes Vine St.: Rachel Hall Campbell. Rl. 2, VinlOl\;
Rt. I, 1burmul; Tamle Lyrin Martin, Rt. I, BidSnyder also maintained that strict
card .showing Santa pulling a han- presents from under the tree.
G"''lory Hw..t, Jlt. I, Crown City; Raymond Frank A. Pl)'ln&amp;le, Lower River Rd.; Stkllvla
well.
·
Earl Myers, Neighborhood Rd., City; Clinton JeauAdkins,lGl BurKer St.; &amp;:lie R. Lee, KMR 1 . dgun on a thief stealing presents.
"Obviously, this Santa comes gun control Jaws, like those in
Edward Stanley, Rt. 2, Bldwllll; Ri ...ilart.i A. City; Glenn M. Milam, KRM. City; .BcVt:rly
from the 'shoot first, ask questions Washington, D.C., and New Yorll
Carol Faye Rupe, 206 Batiani Or.; Joe Tim
George, ,Dol. 1113, Bidwell; )van R. Mayo, Rt. 1, Dieb WilkiiUi, Box. 284, Rio Grandt! ;· W1llard D.
Wallace, Rl. 2, City; Blllne 0. Halley, 2106
City, would bar Santa - a nonBidwell; Otho G. Mitchell, Rl. 2, Bidwell ; Sid Call, Rt. 2, Bidwell; Beatrice M. Hale, Rt. 2. VinThe card, from John Snyder of the later• school."
Chltham Ave.; Donald Rol&amp;OO S.pp. IOl Upper
Vantt, Rl 2, Vinton: Leslie Jat.'k Stapleton, ton; James M. Slone, Eureka St.Hr Rt., Citv;
resident - from possessing a gun
Citizens
Committee
for
the
Right
to
Snyder
denies
his
gun-toting
Santa
River Rd.; Larry 8. Otuon. Crown City; Hester
Crown City; Ruby Puckett S~o~~indeU, Rt. 3, City;
Nina P. Bias. Box: 17'75, Che:lhlre; Rog~rStew&amp;rt
and might even prevent him "from
B . - 3&amp; BtnMrl Lone; Shar&lt;IJ C.
Carolyn R. Caldwell, Box 3, Bidwell ; Brtnda M. Harri.!l, Box 41, Rln Grande; James V.
Keep and Bear Arms, was promptly intendB to shoot the intruder.
Moles, Rt. I, City; 0ecnre lAo Gardner, Rt. 1,
Howell, Rt. 2, Bidwen; Shirley L. Skaw, Rt. I,
Glati!iburn, R1. 1, Bidwell; Ethtl Ma)'llard, Box
"The gun's pointed toward the being able to carry out his Christattacked as being in "bad taste" by
Cheollire; Allen llldlonl
iiOt 00 Dr. ;
City: Mildred E. Edwards, Rt. 3, City; Thelma I. 1&amp;4, RiO Grande: Ewretl R. Mt.ilanlel, P. 0. Box
Eloise M. MUier, Rl. 1, Patrtet; I.JUII'il!ll E'mest
Hanington , Rt. I, HidweU.t, TIITll L. Baird, $42 33. Vinton; Clarabell R011ch, 121 Third Ave. ;
Rep. Jon~than Bingham, D-N.Y. , guy, but it's not pointed at him," he .· masduties.''
Lee, tOOl "nllrdAve.; KfilhGralt, Rl2. Patriot;
~ st. Ext.; 0\arley ~rp. 1818 Chatham
Donald J. Wrijolht, 4$0 JeiT)' Sl.; Nancy E.
The card hears the greeting, "Best
said. "Santa's trying to stop the
who backs strict gun-control laws.
Marion Francis Kemper, Rl. 2. BidweU; Jacklyn
Ave.; BenlanlE. Murphy, Jr., Box ts, Rio Gran- Crouen, 419 Jacbon Pike; Mild~ M. Carter.
wishes for a sale Christmas and a
H. Killen.IOI Clrde Ave.; Jama Pbillipl...ulher,
de; Freda P. Rou, Rt.l, Palriot; Mury Stewart
"I really object to this kind of guy."
Rt. 2, Patriot.
Rl1, Crown City; Robert W. Kahn, 131 PortaW~ R~. I, Crown City; Cheri D. Mokry, Rt. 1,
Robert D. Walker, Eureka Slllr Rl., City; Verviolent imagery," Bingham said.
Snyder argued that with robberies crime-free New Year."
mouth Rd. ; Ellie M. Pleuant, 8oJ: a, Bktwtll;
GallipoliM; Jabez Denver Parsons, 282 Jacklion
ba Alke Wallat.-e, Rt. 1, Crown City; Richlrd N.
Two years ago, Snyder's com.
S.rah Renna Walker, Rt. 2, CUy; Jane Anne
Dr.; William H. Howard, Rt.2, BklweU.
The card "pictures Santa, hiding increasing in many parts of. the
Sterretl, Rl. 2, City: Scheryl J . Saxon, 4G4 Jt!rr~
Floyd R. J11dtaon, Rl.l, PllriOt; James Allen
Layne, Rt. 1, ()own Ci~;
Rebecca S. G. Mt,t.
St.; Barbar~~ C. T•ylor, Rt. 1, City; Rou Bell
mittee
sent members of Congress a
behind
a
Christmas
tree,
peering
country,
it
is
fitting
lor
Santa
to
theWII, Rt. 1, ct.hire;
el.eopolez Wilson.
Hod, Eureka Slar Rt. , City; Pamelll Sue
James, Eureka Star Rt., Cit~: Sand~ S. Bright,
Christmas card showing Santa
GeGrJ!:es Creek Rd.; Meg t: en Thantu. 425
Slayton, 2111 Third Ave.; Cathy B. CC!Gj)l:!r, Rt. 1, Rt. 1, City; James D. Mitchell, 81 Spruct St.;
through his handgun sight and carry a gun.
IAwUo Dr.; EleaDor B. Maoell, Rl. I, City;
Chelhin; Jon Michael BLP'!W, Rl. 2, Clwshire:
Glenna Opal Cox, 638 'Third Ave.: Paul I. A.Lha,
"Obviously, someone like Santa holding a gun that he apparently was
taking aim at the liack of a figure
Lawrence S. Alrors, Rt. 3, Qly; Eorl ReynoiW.,
RufWJ A. Waugh, Bmt 111 Crown City; Thelma R.
Rt. 2, Patriot; Glent'lllrd Davi~. 122 Jaclulon
RL 3, City; Rita'S.• t...ynl, Rt. 1, City; James
Reese, Rt. 1, Cheab1re; Shiron M. Cardwell, Box Pike: Clyde Edwanl Ramey, Rl. l. Vinton ;
Claus
who's giving presents to planning to leave under the Christkneeling before the fireplace,"
132. Vintoo; JMephine Qark Rl~, 20tGien Dr.; 'Margaret W, Knotb, 6&lt;E Maple Dr.; JHck B.
Mlllonl Pnt1, Rl. I, ~- E.
everybody would like to prevent mas tree as a gift for a child. •
Bingham said. "Since some of the
El.li... , Rl. lliCIIy; Slet&gt;hoD B. Millo, .... 101, . SUsan Kay Glou, ' Halliday Hll.; Sandra M, Matthew!, 497 Magnolia Dr.; Rlt!hllrd Rllt"~. Box
Blackburn, Rl3, CJty; Norma Kathryn Masale,
packages from under the tree have
those presenis from being stolen. A Bingham also criticized that card. · '
252, Rio Grande; Chester Bla!l, ,Jr., Crown City;
City; Robert • CoMno,!~it Rt. I, City; Cborles
lill&lt;hoelflarN. R1.
C i t y ; - ......
htriOtSUir Rt., City; HelenM. F. Buah, 4950ak
R011er SwaM, Rt. %, Crown City; Jane Eileen
PltiDlpo, Cl'own Cltf; l"rannl
Rl
Dr.; Roy OU. Rou, RL 2. INdWl'lll; WJIUam Aalr Young.lo30hio Ave.: Eiizabethi. Hill, 855 Buhl1, City; Donna Lee Holle)', Rt. 1, Bidwell; BUley
worthCaaey,141 T'tUrd AVe.; Lillie A. Rot~sh, Rt
Morton Rd., City; Terry J. Hannon, Rl, 'J , City;
........... Halley, Rl. I, C...... City; EJiJabolh
2, City; R.hondl Elllne Martin, Rt. l, Cbeahlre;
Ct!lestine Marie Sklnnt~r. Rl. 2, City; Jo)' Ann
Robert D. HerdmaD, R&amp;. 3, CUy; Orville ~
E, Shepherd, Patriot ..
Waugh, Box 8, Crown City; Geor~e B .
111011, Box Jlf, City; Wade MUier, Jr., Rt. 1, Krlllikamp, Rt. 2, Vinton; Rottllr L. Barnett, Rt.
L8rr)' Gene Speeo, 1010 Flnt Avo.; Roanie C.
Patriot; PaW C. Rolssiter, 8oJ: 12, Crown City;
2, City'; Larry Pickett, Rt. I, Crown Cit~; Carroll
Wauah, RL l,Crown~y; Lui HlleWaugh,57t
Boyd Crow Clark, Rt. 2, Crown City; Bessie E.
R. Shet!t.s, ~ J2.1, Bidwell; Jerry l..tle Shelton,
Overmen, Sol 17, ·Crown City: lktty Jean
1075 Set..'OOd Ave. ; Cllirence McLaui.!hlin, 1 Neil
&amp;m YaUe&amp;:'~; Bomta Lou Drwwnond, Rt. I,
current registration , forfeited $35 toDec.23.
GAL!JPO!JS - Twelve cases
Looden, Rl. 1, Cht!shire; Jackalene Garrett Hall. Ave-.; Freddie Umley, Jr .. Mill Cnoek Rd.;
Bktwell;
I AM~. Rt. 3, Cily; Bernard
Scott D. DeWitt, 25, Gallipolis,
Rl. 11 Northup; Ge-rtrude S. SbnpkinJ, Rt. I,
bond.
PcgKY S. Blai11e, Rt. 1, City1 Wllliam J . Rhode~.
E.M~. R~ I,~; G~ EUW.M~
were terminated and three conScottOwn; ThOilWI M. EVIIOII, 539 Third Ave.;
2145 Eastern Av~ .; ThnrnaliChapman EvHns, 20!i
Cormid:, EUh!U Slar Route, aty; ban Lynn
with DWI, case continued to '.
charged
Charged with possession of
tinued Friday in Gallipolis
John Edwin Baldwin, Rt. 1, Crown City; Rlchllrd
Stanley, Rt.l. Patriot; Jamn D. Moody, RU,
Glen Dr.: William E. Grirrith, Eureka Slclr Rt.,
H. NOf!!le, Box 22. Crown Cll~; Ann E . Owens, Rt.
City: Samuel Clarence Gray, ROdnc~ ; Ollve Iv y
marijuana, Ronald E. Neal, 20, Rt. Dec. 22.
l'hell1ire; Teresa Ann 'lbeia, Rt. 1, Bidwell:
Municipal Court.
Robert 0e'fty Olborni,IU. 2, Vinton; Norman
1, Patriot; Karen S. Pat."t!, Rl. P11triot; Sylvan
Swain, Rt. 2, Crown Cit)': Ell:uabeth Youn~. Rt.l ,
Forfeiting bond for speeding
2, Bidwell, forfeited $65 bOnd ;
Each charged with DWI, fined
Handley Gardner, 110 Kineoo Dr.: Glen Darrell Vlpt.on.
G. J..,eget, RL S. Otr; Jean Meore, VInton:
·
charged with reck!eS.'l operation, were:
Cardwell, Rt. 2, Crown City; Ruby E. Johll¥00,
Charle!! Vernon Kuhn , Northup; Karen T.
Gewtte E. I'Gpe, RL , V - ; 'l'ltomu Glenn
$300, sentenced to four days in jail,
191S Chatham Ave.: Phrlll!! 0. SWwart, 151 U~
Sllunders, Northup: Loui:Je Willa Burnett. Rt. 2,
~r, Rll, &lt;::Jdlire; Shennan McGuire, Jr.,
Joe
L.
Ball
Jr.,
36,
Dayton, $39;
forfeited
$75
bond.
drivers
licenses
suspended
for
six
per Rlwr ~; BonnieGa,1 Plert.-e, Rt. I, City.
City; Mary Ludll~ Neff, 1113 Teodora Dr. ; BonRl.l, at,.; LOuile M. Vnt, Box367, RloGrande;
Robert W. Lee, 18, Racine, $39;
Larry R. Hounshell, 44, Dayton,
Wlllia10 Eugene Gnhllm, Box 6, Addi110n:
nie B. Bowcott. Rt. I. City; Clara B. RW:!llell. Rt.
Karen Gale Ferguson, Rt.l, City; Chlrlea Allen
months and jllaced on six months
RuseU I. Jobn11011, Jr ., KMR, Gallipqlill.; Zd~n~k
1, Bidwell; Alta D. Daile)', Rt. I, Crnwn City;
Baker, 0, J. While Rd., CitY; Brenda K. S.r~nt,
charged with improper tagging of a Bruce E. Milbarger, 29, Colwnbus';
probati~n each were Rowan D. BurJal'ltil, KMR.'Gallipolia: Carrol Jea~i"{!all." Rt. 2.
Fn'ida KiiKOre Browning, Rl. l, Patriot; Faye A.
KMR, City; Darlene R. P"rtc.. Rt.. l, Cheuhlre;
$39; Loretta J . Young, 23, Dayton;
deer, case cm1tinued to Jan. 6.
Crown City; Early E. Hayll'lan, Rt. 1, Bidwell;
WriJo(hl, ~ Jackson Pike; Elbert D. MeGhee, 30
n~tte, 21, G@llipolis; Harold · -E.
K~Ul W. Bolter, • Seeond Ave. ; Mlchltl
Laura J. HaJ.t;er, Rl. 1. BldweU: Brendit J. While,
N~il Ave.; Robel 1.. Barthmw, Rt. 3, City;
Lynn Trowbri~e, Rt. l, Ci~y: David Allan
$39.
'
Charged
with
possession
of
Newell,
44,
Gallipolis
Ferry;
and
Rl. I, Bidwell; Danald lAe P..nl!l, Rt. l,
M!cbael M. B&lt;tin.J, Rt. J, City: Bre11L1a Roberts
Cla:!lg, Rt. 2, City; O.le T. Ruaell, Rll; BidSharon C. Clark, 36, Dayton, $40;
shotgun in the field while hunting
Gallipolil; Gel'llld 1M Jobt11on, Rl. z. Crown
Mor~o~an. Rio Grande; Lount.lltla C. Dllvili, 1537
well; o.ille)' C. Ray, Rt. 2, BJdwell; Robert Mill'
Randall K. Yates, 24, Rt. 2, Bicywell.
Cit)'; Raer;ina Saunders, ll3 Gllrflekl Avtl.; MllrY.
Ea!item Ave.; David K. Bo!ll:ic, Rt. I. Patriot;
tin Gl&amp;aburn, Box.,, BklweU; Chlrle. F. HunMarvin N. Cantrell, 49, Columbus,
Betty J . Tope, 49, Rt.3, Gallipolis, waterfowl and holding more lhan
1... SmiUl, Rt. l, City; 'Dennill Oliver Jt'rale)', 82i
Qalvin Wil\iauw, Jr., Rt. 2, Crown Cityi
ter, 1456 Eut.ern Ave.; &amp;ymond L. GIWI1, $13
$40; Arthur Coyne, 46, Beckley,
S«Md Ave.; llthltulel Gil~!e, Rt. :z, City;
katheri~ Haislop Ellioll, Rt. 2, Pt~tri~ ; Bob I£C
charged with failure to display three shots, the case against Dan
Hilda Dr.; Davkl Wl)ey Fife Lower River Rd.~
Ruaell PoU.., Rl. 2, Vintoo; Ullte Otlvill Hill, Rl.
lftlliam B. Priddy, Rt.l, aklftn, J...-quolineS.
Drwrummd~ Patriot S\ar Rl .. Ci~y; Goldie
W.Va.,$41.
Steele, 21, Gallipolis, was continued
3, Gt~IUpolia; Rachtl Corinne Day, Rt. 2, Crown
Cremearn~, Rt. I, Cit~; Barbarll F. Eplln)t, 626
Vance, Rl. 2, Vlnlon; JerrY Dean Slambo, Rt. 1,
City;
A.nni.sGrat.'\!'
C~trttr,
Rt.
2,
Gllllipolbs;
Doris
First Ave.: Gl~nn Ivan McGuire, Rt. 1, Crown
BNtwtll: Henry Gordon 'J'hrapp. Rl. 2. Bidwell;
M. Rudy, 648 Firat Ave.:, Brian Undtunood. 1002
City; Gam~tt. I. Uitrun, Eureka Star Rt .. City;
H&lt;rbeJ1 ........ Cordel~ Fourth St., Bidwell;
Robert Kennoth 'Ptoia, Rl, I, CltHitite; _,.
Spring ~alley Gl'ft!n ; Loue~la A. Shephlll\li Rt: 1, . Shirlt!Y 8. Engle, Rt. 3, C.ity; Lucille Boster, Rl. '
PatriGt, Thomllll R. Gw.!h, KMR. Gall poliS:
2, Crown City: Mirhaellrvln Hardwuy. Jr., 100
1.. ......,hii Rl. 3, Clly; Sklla Smith Gi-, &lt;82
Rebet.u Mile Sloat, Rt. 2, Gallipolis; Ruth Ann
ChiUit.'Othe Rd .; Ret:«ca L. Ellioll, Rl. 3, City;
LeGrande&amp; vd.
Green, Rt. 1. GaiUpolia: HHrokl M. Saundtlf'S,
Ro,.tL"'' D. Carter, &amp;S3 third Ave.: Mal')' L.
'
Mearidl C. Eddy, Rl 2, BldweU; Helen W.
Eureka ~lar Rt., City; J,onnit' L. McCombs , Rl.
H~rrt!IOR, Rt. I, City; Clarence Edward Johll."ion ,
l. Northup ; K11theri n~ Y. Wcketl, Plltriot St.ctr
Sltleldl. 301 fora Aplo.. - ; llel&gt;tnh A.
Rt.l . City: Biddie Alrn11 Proven~. Rl. I. Patriot;
Publisher Rupert Murdoch, an
NEW YORK (AP) - The Dally on Sundays. These ligures have been
I'Or1&lt;r.Rt.I,Cily; BeC1&gt; E.Sondont,RI.2,City;
Rt., City; Deloris Eloi.le ~mley, Mill Crt.&gt;ek
OOilald B. Spim, !802 11: Eastern A.\'e,; Clemm
&amp;eck)' AM Brcnrn. Rl t, BidwtU; Lollll D.
Rd.: Shirlt!y M. MarUn, Rt.l, ~ahin=; A.licl! C.
Delmlaon flukln~. Scottown; Cynthill C.
News, a tabloid known for its witty rising in recent months, according to Australian who bought the Post five
Wi!te, RL. 2, Plltriot; Dorlndl J. Rader, Rt. 3,
GilmOre, Rt. 2, Bt\iwell; Karla Rake! Paul~cn,
Finley. Rl n-own CJtr: a-u D. Rwnle,,
head:ines and lavish pict9rial the newspaper 's advertisements. years ago, said he had no conunenl
Galllpolil; Elbe M. Debllle, l.ibby Hold, City;
599 Jay Or.; Ermalie Strah~ht, S4 Gr11pe Sl.;
R~ I, City; Jorry Loe Rl. I, Clly;
Cboryt T. Ettyorl, Rl I, BldwoU; Ronald L.
Ntva Barron Turner,l$3 Garfield Ave.; Oliver
Albert 1•. Harris, 487 Kathy Dt.; Aubrey Ray
displays, is up for sale as its parent Only the Wall Street Journal, a on the announcement. He has said in
Lewl.o, Rl. 2, Patriot; Opol M. IJctyd; Rl. I, City;
W. Adltl1111, «:6 Jerry St.: Joyce Ann S..undens,
Holmea, Rt. 2, City : Daniel R. Berry, Rt. l, City.
the past that he is not interested in
company seeks new capital to shore financially oriented daily, has .
Junitl L Spurlock, R1. 2, Patriot; Robert Dale
Rt.l, Cheshire. '
Seth Huntley, Vinton; Joan R~~lna Beman ,
buying the News.
Wallill 1114 'FIM Ave.; Delli White Gern:tlwn,
Thunrllln; Mark VIncent Bryan, Patriot Star
up the nation's second-largest greater circulation.
J)Orothy Wheeler, Rt. I, Vinton; Ellu Wm .
PatriOiSiarRI., Clty;'Rklttttd R. C."""ll, Rt. Z.
Rt.; JO)'t'e Arm Kl~er, Rt. 4, Oak Hill: Gina BarPea. Jr., +II Jackaon Pike; Sue A. Bowman, Rt
The News grossed $330 million in
The
Daily
News
is
locked
in
a
cirnewspaper.
soUl, I&amp;W,. Eaateni Ave.; Orland M. Taylor,
3, C.Wpolb; Cllra J_ Day, Rl. 1, Vinton ; Ro~er
Y,lnton.
2027 Chatham Ave.; Bess t. Weinl.Jer~ ~r. 438
The Tribune Co, of Chicago, which culation battle with the New York 1980, the third-largest newspaper
L. Okllcte, 1811 Chatham Ave.; Timothy E.
HaJHewood Dr. ; Alexandra Wilhelmine Harder,
Gllielpte, a SiJr¥c.'r St.; Kevin W~yne Jacklton ,
started the Daily News in 1919 and Post, an afternoon tabloid, which revenue in the country, but it said
IOOGarfield Ave.
711 FOurth Aw.; Lenlce A. Waugh, Rt. 2, Crown
geared it successfully to a working- publishes Monday through Satur- revenue was eaten up by the costs of.
City; 11lomal Edpr Dunlmon!, Ml Fourth
Anne F. FisCher, ll3 Set.'Ond A.,·e.; Ctlcil Ray
Ave,; Ednl· Paulifte Fulb, Rt. I, Crown Cily;
energy, newsprint, ink and labor.
Miles , Rt. 2, City; Avery Adk in!l, Vinton:
class
audience, announced Friday day.
o-. p, Mttrroy, 411 Lorial Or.; Lawll L. Pamela N. Franklin. Rl. 2, Cily; Sanllrll L.
The Daily News survived the turThe
Post's
circulation
was
689,000
that
it
was
trying
to
get
out
from
un,
Glulbunl. liM Secand Ave.; Unda Bundy
Ste~l\ll, Rt. I, Patriot; James Albert Ham~. Sox I, Crown City; Loulae R. KutJhn ,
mond, 135 Kineoo Or. ; Elmer N. Vant.'t!, Rt. I.
der
a
deficit
of $11 million lor this lor the six months ending March 31, bulent 1960s when the growth of
EMil. Gollf.llll; Robert S. Painter'· Rt. 2, BidPatriot; Connie Man.:wn, Rt. 2, Vinton ; Billie C.
according to the Audit Bureau of Cir- television news and the exodus Of the
year.
well; Jam . Halfell, Rt. 2,CJ'OWBC1ty; Edna J.
Ultle, Rt. 1. Bklwel\; Nt'lllll R. Sllunders, HI. l.
Demey, R1. 1, City: Bruce E. Caldwell, Rl. I,
Patriot; John Mantle Et.lwanlll, 260 Port.omouth
culation. However, Peter Faris, city's middle-class population to the
''We
have
been
approached
on
a
MldcBeport; Miry Lou Grtoene, Rt. 1. Crown
Rd .; T:errY Lynn Hamilton, Rt. 2, Cll~; Fa~e E.
editorial
manager of the Post, 'said suburbs forced four other New York
nwnber of occasions in the recent
Cl\1; ltkhard E. EIUOU, Rt. 2, Bidwell ; Enrill
Young. Rt. 1, Bklwe\1 : David It Allizer. Rt. 2.
Morie Fittlty,Rt.I,_!Jrown Cily; Virt!IJilll Ballty,
·
Pltrlot; Robert F. BW'Ill'tt, 2!16 Ea~l~rn Ave .;
in
August
that the current cir- dailies to !old.
past by people expressing an inE....U Rl., c'ty; Jom01 Edward Ralle1,
E\1Pr I.. Rutherford. 434 Jackl!on Pik~; Th01nali
culation
was
"
in
excess
of
730,000."
terest in the Daily News. The answ.er
Northup; Glerta J. Solllldet&gt;, li llt!lmoot Dr.;
Ia' Belville, Rt. I, Crown City; Jimmie D.
Charlea Wllllam Lupton, Rio Gnmde; Charlet
ShaW, Hennan Northup. City; Kathryn Bonll1:ut·
has always ·been no," said Stanton
RObert Shaw,,~~Q N. Attwood Or., Rio Grande;
1«, i5 M.adJ&amp;Oi'l St.; Robert I~ Jenki~ , Rl. l,
Cook, president of the Tribune Co.
~1 G. Au111, Bi!Jwell; Ja11W11 0, Nlber1, Rl1
Northup; Betty M. Koehler, Crown City; Marlin
I, GttutpOU.; I&lt;GJtetot t. CttiMII, Rt. I, Clly;
· Franklin Jamd, Eureka Sl.llr Rt., City; Mildred
"Today,
we are saying that. we
Willlom Roy Blontoo. Rt. i, Vitttoon Alice
- ~!.":' •'t"!l - . :-::fl. Jeilkln.s. 101 Klneon Dr.
would
now
be receptive to serious ofVirMinil lArkin, Box til, ruo Grande; Vlrainla
Dete IL&gt;e Workman, RL 2. Bidwell; Elt.!r 1..
·, .
Sleeker. 508 Second Aw.; l.eota iWbet..'Ca
Bradbury, KMR, City ; M:ichllel R. Saxon, Rt. 1,
fers."
.J::dirq[ton, 191 Mill Creek ; Debbie L)'M CarCity: Cliffoni Orr, Box 12. Rio G111nde; Jack E.
Charles Holcomb of the public
dwelf, Rt. I, Crown City; Jaftt!t Beaver Hiv•ly.
Caldln!IJ, 214$ Eu~m Avt.; Helen Irene
311llllrtin ..... tlly.
Jenkins, Rl. 1, Bld~U ; Leon B. Jeffers, Rt. I,
relations
firm Adams &amp; Rinehart,
Wo1tor L. Lant, Jr .. Rt. I, City; llwi~ht D.
.Patriot; ()ana Ray Halfhlll , Rt. I, Cheshirt!;
which
handles
publicity for the Daily
~- Rt.l, O&gt;eotltire; Vello Moo Coli, 2233
Troy Bartley, Vinton; Wayne M. O.vl¥, 113
Chotlnul81.; Mlcltttel Wo,.. C.molttU, Rt. 1.
Brentwood Or., KMR, City; Grat..'t! J. Whtaldon.
News,
said
he
does not know of any
Bidftll; Lonn E. M-.IGCedorSt.; Raymah
Rt.l, City: Gary Adrilln$po:ncer, Rt.I, Bidwell;
prospective
buyers
and does not
Jean Haft, Ml Fourth Aue.; Venedl &amp;a Wiar,
FraTICft M. Tucker, Addison: Jerri Ellen
RL 1, crown City, Robert Elttloote Owtlap, Rt.
Gllbtlrt, Rl. 2. Vinton ; Debra Ann Aker, KRM,
know what the Tribune Co.'s price
l'ltrlot; llelt""
31 Smithers St. ; RAty D.
Clty; Pauline E. HIWtlSby, Eureka Star Route,
for the morning newspaper would
MortJn. RL I. er-t City: J - S. KJ.._ 411
City; Dotty Dunn Zlnn, .11!35 1'1 Chatham Ave.; .
!lullteny Dr.; llllmle W........ Rl. I, Crown
be.
.
Chriltlne lllrtrks, Rl. 2, Vinton; Carl L ifoMp,
C1ty; a-Id L. Aleoltlro, Rll, l'llriol,lllorrill
Jacbon Pike; Beverly Ruth Bennett, IM
_11 ..·11-;r:
George
McDonald,
president of ,
Rt.l, PatrlGI;- w.
DeeNeDr.; A.lber11 .F. Ra:oer. Rt. 1, City ; Floyd
r.
Bluer,
Rt.
l,
City;
Ella
J
.
Horrlngtan,
KMR,
·!he
Allied
Printing
Trades
Council,
GontrallltU&lt;ery ftodne1; Joltrt- - ·
Eunlrl Slar Rl, CJ!r: Niil'iliO t. Han-loon, Rl.
City; Sarah J. M~ulre, Rt. 3, ctty: Sharon A.
II
IS
sai~ he was shocked by the anClly; Edwanl Lee Cadit, Rt. I, Patriot; Evo
Cntacn:Uia. UII·JackJOn Pike ; ROHer S. BnunGlontto llomoo,llll Tltlttl Ave.; l.vdlo R . II
15
fltld, Rt. t, City; Thelma B. Sc.......,er, KMR,
nouncemertt
and
called
an
emergenII, Ri,l, Nartlittp; Robtrt_Sto......_,
City; Bolly Attli Slewa11, flt. 2, Patriot; Judltltr
II II
• 114
cy meeting for today of the
UIZI Ave.; Lllllon Corier, IIIII Tlldon
GaR Leonard, Box 110 kerr· WtWam J . Meek,
Avo.; e~o ..... E.
KMR. GttitlpOIJo;
0 , II
Ill II!
Rt. I Bidwell; 11&lt;11 W
. Cd_ Rl, ~ Bldw•ll ; newspaper unions that form the
II. Bailey, Ill. t lll&lt;i..U; Rldtonl E.
-11. )lorry, Rt. Z. Btdwtll; Mlll')l Brown
li 11
Ill 113
council.
1ntttl, RI.I,Mclrtlqo; WalllrR. N":.:l Rll, BlclBay1, Petrtala.r 8L. City; James R. ROlle, Jr.,
Rt.
t,
att:
Melvin
E.
Jtlffle,
City
Jail,
Cit)':
The Dally News employs about
11111; llonrly
JU. ~· llorold

.

LeO......,

a-

Christmas card in 'bad taste'

Zi!:!i'";

z.

Arllloart'!!J

z.

D.-.,,

Judge ·concludes 12 cases in court

z.

Famed tabloid on sale block

z.

a

z.

Com.._

a Taylor County sinkhole, after they
surprised smugglers hauling bales
of marijualll from a shrimper anchored at the mouth Of Sandy Creek.

degree murder in the Hood and
McAdama slaylngs and third-degree
murder in the Slml' homicide.
John Daniel, Hughes' Panama
City attorney, rested bJa case
Harold Sims, 39, was shot In tfie Friday. Daniel has maln!ained
chest. Sisters Sheila McAdams, 16, throughout this week's proreedltlll
and Sandra McAdams, 14, and ,before Circuit Judge lArry Bodiford
Douglas Hood, 21, were shot in the . that his client wu merely one of the
back of the head.
lllliUgglen and tblt Stelnhol'lit was
All four o( the victims, res1dents Of the triggerman.
Springfield, Fla., aoutheaat of
Hughes told the panel Friday that ·
Panama City, were fPUnd by divers he had returned to shore with a lGad
at the bottom of a sinldlole aeveral Of marijuana when he waa apmontha after the Jan, 23, 1977, proached by David Goodwin, now
smuggling operation. Their bodies 8I!I'Yinl! a life term fdr his part tn
had been weighted with concrete Sandy Creek. Hqhea told the panel
blocks.
that Goodwin told Sleinhont's order
Hughes is charged with first- to come Jnunedlately.
¥

Shuts down Ohio Bo~n .plant

·--·
--

~

~Ohioan

Ti

Draws n.ames for jury duty

Regents check cash complaint ·
By JOHN W. CHALFANT
ASIIOCiated Press Witter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Some
college officials say their schools
aren't being given as much state
money as they should get, and the
state Board Of Regents is b~ng
the Legislature.
The objections surfaced as the
board al'Proved allocation Of $620.8
million Friday to state-assisted In·
stitutions durtng the rest of the
current fiscal year.

The Sunda

W.Va .

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z,

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II.

c. ~liM;llortlyn
J-

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D. , . , . ,

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111-Dr.;
; llovldil.
ta. 4, Oil RID;

ll.iiiiiii

t,n••••:Don-

......
-_Rt.l,
tL'=ItQfii..,JIIINndwOidDr.;
W.lloorttorry, Rt. . - . ,

Owo..m

I

• ;.

...

M-.

l)o!WD.lilo£...._711FiftltAw.
Ray Alloo
Tlturmu; Cbor.... F.
-· lllor Rl•• Qly; Eiit!IDf E.
Gt.. ltaiiWl1 Hta.; ctndy SUe MWrr, U3
, _ Avo.J ...., ..." Lin&lt;Oin PYle;
BeYer1J J. Cltapmott, PalrloC..., R~; Cloren&lt;e
1t. lhllhnM. RL J.. _ 1M, Clty ; Audrey Rose
Wllllomto. ......... Ave.; Sondn Elolne Hut&gt;
ttr, __. ,.. . . Ave.; Rlftl Robl~, 11 Vlnloli Ill.; O.,te Plonb. Sltolloli Rd., Rio
OrwU!: c;roverw. ONeil, Crown City; Flmwn
J.rwil&amp;rwnfllld, Rt. t, Crown City,

t,OOO people. · • ·
The tabloid, founded by Chicago
Tribune publisher Col. Robert McCormick as The Dluatrated Dally
News, hit il4 circulation peak of 2.3
milllon following World Warn.
The News llsts a clrculaUon Of 1.5
milllon daily.and more than 2 milllon

WIND CHilL FACTOR- This cbart listing the Wltld Chill lode
for member use as d.. Ired. (AP Lalterphoto ).

�Pag&amp;--0·4-The Sunday Tomes Sentonel '
Pomeroy Moddleporl Gallopolos, Ohoo-Poonl Pleasant, w Va
Dec. 20,1981
-~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~==================

:Classifieds
U111111i{ied JNI/lf'ff mver the

Meigs Co Area Code
614
992-Middleport

Gallla Co Area COde

".

44t-Gallipolis
l67-Cheshire
311-VInlon
245-R lo Grande
256-Guyan Dn;t

P~meroy

985-Chester
343-Portland

247- Letart Falls
949-Ractne

"3-.Arabla Dtst

742-R uttand

667-Coolville
Mason Co. W Va
Area Code 304

675- Pt Pleasant
458-Leon

576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
895-Lelart

..'

937-Buffalo

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In h1etgs County

In Galha County

446-2342

992-2156
In Mason County

675·1333
3

Announcements

9

SWEEPER ahd sewmg
machtne repatr parts and
supplies
Pick up and

delivery

Dav1s Vacuum

Cleaner one half mtle up
Call
Georges creek Rd
4-'6 0294
TRAPPER We have a corn

plete lme of trapptng sup
piles Traps dye wax and
lures
Spring
Val ley
Tradtng Co Sprtng Valley
Plaza 4-46 8025
For bulk deltvery of
gasoline, heating ott and
d1esel fuel call Landmark
992 2181 Pomeroy Oh
Gun Shoot Ractne Gun
Club Every Sun startmg
at 1 p m Factory choke
guns only
~actne

Ftre Dept sponsors
a Gun Shoot Sat ntghts
6 30 p m Bashan Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun
Flea
Market
New
Opening 7 days a week
The Heart of Mtddleport 20
N 2nd Sf formerly Martm
General Store 992 6370
We shll have plenty of ap
pies at F ttzpatnck Or
chard SR689 Phone 614
669 3785
Racme Gun Club dues are
due $25 00 Must be patd
before tan 1 1982
Batley s Shoes Mtddleport
wtll be open Thurs pee 24
&amp; sat Dec 26 Closed for
vacatton Dec 27 to Jan 3
1982
Gun Shoot at the Rutland
Amencan
Legton
12
o•clock Sun Factory choke
guns only

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
nlture and Anttques of all
kinds call Kenneth Swam
256 1967 tn the eventngs
CASH PAID for clean late
model used cars Sm lth
BUICk Ponftac GAllipolis
Oh10 Call &lt;146 2282

GET VALUABLE tratn1ng
as a young bus•ness person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the eltglbllltv list at 992
2156 or 992 2157
RN's
LPN s NEEDED
NOW to fulfill requtremen
ts of 1 C F Certtftcdf•on
Salary commensurate w1th
tra tntng and ex penence
E)(tens1ve beneftts '"
eluding
patd
hospttallzatton rettrement
program no penalty Stck
leave 3 week vacatton to
start More contact Per
sonnet O~rector (304) 675
3230 or wnte Lak• n
Hospttal Lak1n wv 25250
RN s immediate openmg
day shift part t me I V
nurse team expertence not
Call Veteran
necessary
Memor1al Pharmacy 992
6297EOE
R N 's LPN s NEEDED
NOW to fulftll requ remen
ts of 1 C F Cert1f1catton
Salary commensurate w1th
tratn.ng and exper.ence
Extenstve benef1ts •n
cludtng
paid
hospltlatzatton rettrement
program no penalty Sick
leave 3 week vacatton to
start More Contact Per
sonnel Director (3041 675
3230 or wnte Lak•n
Hosptfal Lak1n wv 25250

-PERMANENT
- --- HAIR

REMOVAL
Professtonal E lectrolys s
Center A M A approved
Doctor referals by ap
potntment onl y
304 675
6234

------------------4
G1veaway

4 cats 6 months old half
Angora N•ce for Chnst
mas Call 379 2307 If no an
swer call back after 5 00
PM

6 wk old pupptes Call 446
3797
Old English Shephard &amp;
Coll1e mtxed A wks old
Call256 1352
RABBIT dog reddtsh tan
w•th wh•te call 304 675
2816
TWO 6 week old pupptes
304 675 4219
3 PUPPIES 8 weeks old
halt terrter half beagl e
304 882 2996

- - - - - - - --

6- - losij.ndFound

-

FOUND Large white dog
Long hatr, brown ears Has
collar appears to be hurt
Oale Warner residence
9'12 2724
Found
Female German
Shephard W 2653 Young
dog

• 9
..
..
..
•;

wanted to Buy

Weldtng outftt
tanks
guages torches MuSt be
reasonable
Room sfze
bratded rug 742 2395

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF l·iiOES Gene Hines
' , Rt I, Amesville Oh .448
(,747. Buymg raw fur after
; Dec 12 Dally 6 PM to 9
• pM, closed Sundays Also
•closed Dec 24&amp;25

•1----------------

t Raw furs hides scrap
r metals
batteries
~ radiators ginseng yellow
r yoot, and merchandise
r 'brollerlng Harper Halste
Salvage companv, 300
-Eieveftth SII'HI 675 5168
~lso Flea Merkel open
&lt;dolly
Open
Monday
]Frld.\Y 1 5 pm

.:act

.

J

Gold
St l v~r
sterlmg
1ewelry rtngs old cotns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop Mtddteport 992
3476

AUTOMQBILE
IN
SURANCE
been
can
celled'
Lost
your
operator s Llcc:nse' Phone
992 2143
wanted to Do

Butcher s Shoppe Custom
butchenng &amp; processmg
Call 446 2851
Gallipolis
Oh
TV serv1ce calls Call 992

empieyment
ser.jEes
11 -=:=._ Help wanted
WANTED
Full ttme
Heallh Serv1ces Supervtsor
( R N) Must have a current
l tcense to pract ce tn the
State of Ohto Send resume
Pmkerton
to Cectila
Yocum
P0
Box 604
Jackson
OH
.45640
Buckeye Commun1ty Ser
v1ces ts an Equal Op
portuntfy Employer
Part ttme secretary Send
re sume
to
Box
501
Gal11polls Da1ly Trtbune
825 3rd Ave GalltpOIIS Oh
45631
Student page needed for at
least 12 months at Bossard
Memonal L brary after
school
weekends
&amp;
hol•days $2 35 per hr tn
terest tn books &amp; ltbrarys
helpful Bas•c duhes m
elude shelv1ng books
checktng •n books &amp; erran
ds Must be 16 yrs old
strtct
four
week
probattonery penod Call
446 READ
Someone part lime to help
wtth a home care pat•ent
Some
a de
tra1 ning
preferred
but
not
necessary Cal1446 1200
Need extra money for
holiday btlls? Artcraft con
cepfs now seek1ng coun
selors Tra1n now Start m
January No tnvestment
No delivery No collecttng
Coli 256 6572
Carpet men needed Soft
hie and co base
tools
necessary Call 256 6605
Part time Communtty Ser
vices Worker to work With
boy handtcapped with men
tal retardation )\ htgh
school degree tS required
and experience in worktng
with person with mental
retardatton tS preferred
Please call marie Hobbs,
379 2639 between 7 00 9 00
PM Buckeye Community
Services Is an equal op
portumty employer
DEPENDABLE babysitter
to care for small child, 1
day week, 1n my home 3o.
675 6275

32

203A Also used color TV for
sale
Baby SltftnQ 1n my home
675 7827

FIRaeejal
22

Money to Loan

Columbus Ftrst Mortgage
Company FHA VA Ftnan
c•ng Loan Rep Cook1e
Krautter (304)675 3473
23

Professtonal
Serv1ces

Piano

Tunmg Let your
sound pretty for the
hOlidays only $30 00 Call
Btll ward 446 4372

P•~no

&amp; L Bookkeeping Com
ptete bookkeeptng and tax
servtce for bus mess and m
divtduals
Carol Neal446 3902

$5 d1scount for p ia nos tunett
before Chnstmas Call Bob
Grubb 446 45251

M &amp; M Eiectrtc All electnc
work guaranteed &amp; Donded
304 675 2236

Mololle Homes
for S1le

Homes for Sale

BY OWNER 4 bdr spl1l
level ltvmg room &amp; dtnlng
room combtnatton eat tn
k ttchen lg famtly rm 2
112 baths located tn Tara
Estates Club house and
pool pnvtleges $75 000
ftrm Kyger Creek School
D•stnct Shown by appt
only call 446 9403
Or rent 3 bedroom fur
ntshed home on Bud Chat
ttn Road on tug level lot
576 2711
THREE bedroom home, 5
acres ground, 10 miles
from Pt Pleasant 304 67S
6597
House Meadowbrook ACI
dltion 3 bedrooms family
room wtth f1replace cen
tral alr basement 304 675
1547

6 ROOM house

1 acre
along Kanauga R 1ver at Pt
Pleasant 1 614 263 8322 or
263 2669

'

Sl

TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOMES Gallipolis Year
end sale price reduced,
used mobile homes CALL
4-46 7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
I&lt;ESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES
4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE 466 31168
1965 General mobtle home
12x65 completely ready for
setup
includes cement
blocks &amp; skirting $4 800
For more tnformahon call
446 0511
1980 Windsor 1Ax70 m brand
new condltton
Large
deluxe ktfchen &amp; living
room 2 bedrooms large
bath W1th htdden uttl1ty
room Call 379 2310 after
3 00 PM
1971 Oarlan 12 x 65 3 L-----...;,.____
bedrooms
1972 Crown 1
Haven 1J. x 65 with 8 x 10
expando 3 bedrooms 1973
Utopta 12 x 65 2 bedrooms
1972 Invader 14 x 70 3
bedrooms 1972 Nashau 14
xs60 2 bedrooms B 11.- s
New 198114' Wide
Sales Inc 2nd and Vtand
Sts
Pt
Pleasant wv
Phone 675 4424

NOTICE

'

Pnced to sell Three used
mob1le homes 2 bedrooms
can be seen at D and W
Estates formerly K anr.l K
Rl 62 north Pt Pleasant
wv

Calllmmedoately

25 acres Ntce lane on
CR25
Pomeroy 614 992
7284
Lots &amp; Acreage

20 ACRES tn Pt Pleasant
no down payment phone 1
614 263 8322 or 263 2669
NICE nver lot at GlenwOOd
w•th 14x60 all electnc
tratler work shop $18 SOD
304 576 2866

41

New 3 bdr home wtth 1 1/2
bath &amp; garage between
Gallipolis &amp; hospttal Call
446 0390 or 446 71 00
2 bedroom well tnsulated
house near Rio Grande
College S225 per month
plus uttlthes and $100
refundable
depos1t
References requ~red Call
245 9325 or 245 5364
3 or A bedroom home .n
town good locatton SJOO
mo 3 bedroom ranch w 6
acres Kyger Creek Schools
$250 mo 2 bedrool'[l ~Ollle
on Lower R1ver Rd 1 3
ac $250 mo 3 bedroom
home w famrty room tn
Northup 275
mo
.s
bedroom tmck m R•o Gran
de very ntce S350 mo 3
bedroom home m R10
Grande
$195 mo
3
bedroom home w 1700 sq
ft and lam rm $350 mo
Call fhe Wtseman Agency
446 3643
Modern 3 bedroom home
garage 6 ac wooded lot 6
mile town 3 ml Holzer
S2SO 00 Extra niCe 3 or 4
bedroom
1 1/2 baths
basement garage quiet
locat1on edge of town
$300 00
Wiseman Real
Estate 500 2nd Galltpolls
446 36M
Small 2 bdr 104 4th Ave
Gallipolis
Suttable for
couple only Call446 2957
~

House 5 rms and bath
newly remodeled tnStde l
n1ce garden space located
110 4th Ave
Gallipolis
Call 446 3870

·1

2 BEDROOM apartment,
kitchen furnished
HUD
program. utilities pa1d 1f
qualified
304 675 5104 or
304 675 7~

(J1m Elliott)
Rt 93 North
Jackson, Ohto
286 37S2

3 rooms w•th pnvate bath,
845 Secono Ave Phone 446
2215
Furmshed A'pt 1st floor,
uttllhes furntshed
Ref
requtred No pets Adults
preferred Call at 631 4th
Ave

41 _ __,H_,_,o"u,s,e,_s_,fo,r_,R"e"n_,tc__.
2 bedroom house Sprtng
Ave Pomeroy Carpeted.
remodeled Call after 6
$195 month not mcludtng
uttltfles 992 2288
Unfurnished very n1ce 2
bedroom house St Rt 248
985 4244
Beauttful country home for
sale or rent to qualtfted
persons
2 or
more
bedrooms
depostt
requtred Located tn Flat
woods area Phone 614 446
2359
Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr and 3 bdr mobde
homes Call446 0175

Houses for Rent

Mobile home In cit C'entral
air and heat adul(!t only
dep 466 0338

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.

lots &amp; Acreage

2 1 acre house lots om 554
low downpayment
land
contract
rural water
Columbus and Southern
Electnc Call 256 6413 12
pmto9pm

2 bedroom ell electric ran
ch style home 1 mile from
Racme
References and
depos1t requ•red Avatlabte
Nov 15 Call610949 2849

House trailer a~ults only
no pets 322 3rd Ave Call
44637-18or2561903
Modern ? bdr furmshed
12x70 tratler Conventent
locahon sec dep &amp; ref
reqUired uttlittes paid ex
cept eiectrtc Call 446 8558
after 5
Look.• 14)(70 mobtle home 3
bedroom
Rodney area
Call collect 1 304 736 1471

----- - - -

Tra11er •n ctty ltmtfs S2SO
uttllttes patd
securtty
depos1t couple only ref
requ1red no pets Call 446
8252 afler 5 466 2491
Mob• le home for rent Call
446 0508
2 bdr tratler tn city adults
only no pets $150 secur1ty
depostt &amp; $150 month Pay
all ufthttes Call 446 4051
1 bdr trailer 2 m11es from
Holzer Hosp off 35 Call
446 7525
2 bdr
pnvate
B1dwell
$100 dep

mobtle home on
lot Vmcln1ty of
Oh $135 mo plus
Phone 388 8887

2 bedroom trailer tn
Syracuse 1 child accepted
Depostt required 992 3625
2 bedroom tratler Brown's
Tratler Park
Syracuse
992 3324
construct•on
work&amp;rs
tra11er for three Phone 304
773 5651 Mason
Mobile home with ac, com
pletely furnt&amp;hed washer
and dryer
carpet, on
pnvate lot In Mason No
pets 773 9520 or 773 5751

3 Bedroom 5 room house
and bath and utility room
Ntce and clean ~ 1519,
992 2430

ONE bedroom trailer fur
nlshed, adults only, you
pay utilities Phone 304 675
2535

CLEAN, 3 room furnished
coHage utilities fJJrnlshed,
adults, no pets, deposit
30&lt;1675 7812 or 675-1510

TWO bedrooms furnished
except 1 bedroom S175
mcwoth plus uiiiiiiH 3CW 675
3015

2 bedroom home, cflnlng
room,
ntce kitchen,
b11sement nice yard 182
2«15, 882 2447 or 675 55AO

Furnished 1 bedrqom
mobile hOme, all ulllllas
paid, ou,.klrts C!f Hen
dtrson S230 month 675

6730
Very nice 3 bedroom home,
two and half ballls, family
room. 2 car garage heat
pump, good location 112
2ol05, 882 2447 or 675 55AO
HouH or mobile home, fur
nlshed, Sl.!O per month PIUI
ullllll" Employed - •
only 1 child el New Hoven

882 7ol66

2 bdr apt , 2nd Ave .. largo
living room, kltcllan. INoth,
completely turn • ali' tlec

trtc, newly Cltcorltecl,

dtjiOilt •

m.s month

olol6-2736

•

$85,
male,
bath

Furn1shed
roo
utlhttes pd stngl
range refrtg sha
446 4416 after 7PM

Small furntshed house
adultoonty Call ol46 0338

1973 GRANVILLE 14X70 3
mobile home
bedroom
parttally furntshed or un
furntshed 304 882 3433

35

1

sg,295

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70 un
derp,nned 675 4064

JS

1r;;~~~;:;::;::=;:~~~
44

2nd floor
flency apt
Gall•polts
Adults only

"'

requl ......

call ..,...,,.1 or

furntshed ef
729 2nd Ave
Call 446 0957
no pets

3 &amp; 4 room apt rent par
t 1ally furntshed
adults
only Call 446 3733, eventng
4-46 0171
Apartment for rent
4-46 0390

Call

Apartments for rent
992 5908

614

3 bedroom apt m Mtd
dleport $150 month 992
5692
In Middleport 2 bdr fur
n1shed apartment
one
small child I 304 882 2566
Altracttve 4 rm and bath
apartment
over double
garage
n Mtddleport
New I y decorated
car
peted
fully tnsulated
Adults only
No pets
secur•ty depos•t requtred
$190 mo 992 5292
In Mtddleport 2 room ef
f•c•ency apt Call 304 882
2566
~---------

Five
room
apt
tn
Pomeroy Available now
$125 plus utilities Adults
no pets 992 3201
Apartments 675 5548
APARTMENTS
mobile
homes
houses
Pt
Pleasant and Gallipolis
614 446 8221 or614 245 9484

BRIARPIITCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming
At&lt; C Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels
Coll388 9790

.

54

",
,

Houaholtl G -

GOOD

USED
AP
PLIAN~ES
washers
dryers,
refngerators
ranges
Skaggs
Ap
pltances. 1918 Eastern
Ave 446 7398
CB,T\1, Radoo
Equipment

New Robyn T 241&gt; D
mobtle tube type CB
with antenna coa)(
WM 1000 watt meter

boss
rad•o
and
$100

675 5768
53

Pt Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street S200 month plus
deposit I 614 263 8322 or
614 263 2669
Efftciencv rooms by the
week on Matn Street
Mason wv 773 5651
- ~~

'1 - - - - - - - -

Tw rt stngle large rooms
ancl yard Pt Pleasant
Oepostt and reference' 1
614 263 8322 or I 614 263
2669
For rent 3 room turn apt
adults only no pets Call
675 2453
TWO apartments tn Hen
dilrson, furnished 304 675
1972
Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt
Park Central Hofel
Weekly rates available S60
and up In Ctrcles Motel
Coll446 2501
46

SfN!Ce for Atnl

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route :D, North Of
Pllmeroy L.orgo loiS Coli

Anttgues

Mise Merchandlce

~--'=======-

3 8 ft showcases w1th
lights 1 large bedroom
sutte. double dresser and
chest 2 ant1que clocks 1
meat slicer and mise
grocery store equ1pment
Call 256 6413 12 p m to 9
pm
L:aFont wood spl1tfer 25
HP engtn~ battery start
tratler mounted split logs
tn ftve pieces Ph 245 5478
Exercycle wtfh pep untts
wtth cushioned seat brand
new $1,200 Call 614 466
3912
1980 Coleman camper, 1977
harley Davtdson 1200 AKC
Springer Spaniels liver &amp;
whtte Caii4A6 8234

----bulldtngs at factory

New
all parts accounted for All
structural steel. carries
full factory guarantee
Buildings 10 000 sq II to
the smallest 1,200 sq It
Must sell 1mmed1ately
Wtll sell cheap Call toll
free I 800 248 0065 or 1 800
248 0321 ext 777

________,

For Sale Kttchen table and
2 chatrs $25 See at 769
Brownell Ave Mtddleport
Restaurant
equtpment
reconcl!floned by RADCO
Hgln
Call 304 523 1378
WVA
New wood stove half prtce
never used S350 Can con
vert to furnance Call 256
1216 Gallipolis

51

us,

F ~rewooct 1 lo.d
4
loads $100, 10 loads S200 '
Call 256 1471
614
6624

or

71 BUICK SKYLARK ••••••.

Whtrlpool washer 18 lb
tub
real nice
SilO
Frigidaire dryer, A 1
shape
guaranteed
$90
446 8181

$3000

V 6, atr cond, tape NADA Prtce 13300

au

77 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
78 FORD THUNDERBIRD
AC P W lape NADA Pr\ce S4500

One 3,000 Ford DSL used
grader blade, 6 &amp; 7 It Call
446 3592

80 FORD PINTO

GE washer, runs
$110 Call388 9794

1/ot t()fl std NADA Pr1ce $4300

good,

$3300

AC Oape NADA Pr~~e 13700

Firewood seasoned har
dwood, S35 pickup load
delivered Coli ol46 4176

$4100

79 FORD FUTURA

$4300

AC cru1se NADA Price $4600

$4500

AC auto P S NADA Price 54900

79 FORD PICKUP ••

$3800

RIVERSIDE TRADE CENTER

Sale for month of Dec
Mbtle hOme wood burner,
S459 Through the wall In •
sulated vent ktt $149 Hot
po1nt heavy duty washer
and dryer S599 Kingsbury
Parts and Accessories Rt
124 Mtnersvllle Ohio
Plano tn storage respon
s•ble party may take on low
monthly payments Call
cred1t manager collect 614
642 5180
Grave Blankets 992 7320 or
949 24J3
Men's hiking boots $39 95
pr , Boy s, $33 95 Bailey's
Shoes Mlddl-rt

PH 446 9740
1220 Eastern Ave

GalliPOliS Oh

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446-1066

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446.0971
Muse CanterbuiJ, Associate 446-3408

$35 truck load,
$55 a cord 843 2933 or W
4831
Yashtca 35 mm carmera
telephoto. wtde angle. ex
culustve v1ew finder elec
trontc flash $250 61 Mttl
Chanucey
797 2423
anyttme

7S gallon No 1 fuel oft
Plymouth • Fury I
Mvers sump pump
Plymouth Ill parts
2963

1972
$150
1969
8J.3

Used roll away twin s1ze
bed Wtth mattress GOOd
cpnd 992 3690 $25

New Army field jackets
$36 Combat leather boots
S29 Sam Somerville, ~75
3334 Pt Pleasant lm
med1ate deltvery
Automatic wastter Warm
morntng heater 1975 Ford
stat1onwagen
1212 Oh1o
Street 675 2048
All stzes den1m 1ackets
reasonable. US Armv field
1ackets, combat leather
boots
government
spectftcattons Sam Somer
ville s Warehouse 7 miles
East RavenswOOd s new
brtdg,. Rts 56 21 Open
Wednesdays through Sun
days 12 to 6 pm Coil In or
ders 675 3334 PI Pleosono
F~reWOOd $20 pickup load
Robtnson Run Road 675
5266

King heating stove 2 yeara
old w1lh blower SIOO 895
3436

-Real eState- General
--

LIFE
INSURANCE
428 Second Ave
Caii441H1552 Anytime

=~"action
lrlrrenrifle:m11ltlttlh
lhot

tall-1735
Couch far ule, axcellanl
o:Gndltl.. ....... ..,.._Jtoll trafllman 10' T IIIII lOW
lfllr5p m
Cellolol6-1735

000

LARGE LOT - And a
1V2 storv frame home
Wtth 3 bedrooms drntng
room kitchen and bath
Does need remodel.mg
AsktngSI:J 000
RIVERVIEW Con
ven1ence IS the key word
for locat1on of thts 3
bedroom
1'12 story
frame home w1th new
roof and new s•dtng Has
' a full ba$ement and an
att•c $35 000
CHESTER - Beaut1ful
almost new ranl:h style
home on 2 3 acrs of ntce
laymg land Tnple tn
sulatlon lush carpet
patto
l'h baths
3
bedrooms and rnore
Adtotnmg farm land
may be purchased
$49 900

949 2660
992 2259

Prlntanswerllere

(

Yllterdtyt

JumiMtl BATCH

I Antwtr

BMR 404 - LOW XI s - Ctty schools newly car
peted and painted Thts 3 BR home •s a great buy on
today s market
BMR 389- Th1S fme 4 bedroom home •s located tn
the c•fY school system You will entOY a large lot
w1th a country atmosphere and have all the C1ty con
ven.ences Call now'
BMR 400- aARGAIN- For only $11,500 you can
buy a two BR w/rural water and bath City school
d1St
BMR 403- NEARLY NEW 1 1981 mobtle home on
rented lot SlO 900 owner anx•ous to sell
BMR 402F - CHECK ON THIS ONE 1 37 acres with
1..01 lb tobacco base JOxJO barn Call for detatls 1
BMR 139 - Two story home on Second Ave 3 or 4
bedrooms REDUCEDT0$22,500 Seethlsonenowl
BMR 399- OWNER FINANCING- Two story
home presently betng used as duplex could be
eas11y converted to stngle family Cho1ce locat•on
near washtngton School Call npw 1
BMR 391- OWNER transferred and must sell thts 3
BR ranch Close to town Includes detached 26x26
garage plus 18x36 tnground pool
BMR 391- owner wants 1t sold now• Mobde home
situated on nver front lot REDUCED T0$8 000

614·992·2181

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating 011.
A'SSUMABI.E LOAN ONLY $1,000 down
lnt rote Payments S3S3 71 Including
taxes and '"' Modern 3 bedroom ranch, larglt
lhlenv room and kitchen and dtntng area On IV
2'12 yeonold $33,700

9"''-

o

Sf"-

Pt,.lor51ta - :_-

POODLE GROOMING
Call JudY Tlylor al 367

7220

---"

DRAGOI!IW fNO
CAT
TIRY
K.NN.I:. AI&lt;C
Chew 111111!ft," C:F:Iil

=rue

Hllllllaylft,

k~

•

lncl

,..,.._

•"-" • p "'
•
------•

f

WAGER PACKET SMUDGE
Arct\ery mlaht bl an lnttrtatlng sport but 11
hll 1th~a-ITS DRAWBACKS

OWNER Wl~l. HELP FINANCE I - Lovely home
&lt;JYertqoklng the river 3 bedrooms living room,
mac1ern kitchen lull basement Nice familY room
with wb II replace In ground swimming pool all '''
110111 on an acre of ground I

ONE OF THE FINEST - Abs.olule
one of the p~st homes in
area
Superb location edge of town on 21!, ac
grounds 2 story 4 bedroom home has
lovely c:herry h'tm
2 f~replaces
ftn1shed basement glass enc porch 2
full and 2 half baths den fam ly room
garage and workshop Has had
one owner would cons•der some

m

ancl

s;&gt;actous 2'12
hom•
tn town Has 2ft
room
den formal d.n1ng 21h
rut 1
basement nat gas cent
Ex
cellent constJ"uct1on and care could
easily be adaptable to professtonal of
flees Call for 1nformatton

CENTRAL REALTY

NF w LISTING - Qu ct ::.treet tn Ractne NICe 2
B R trn 1cr 1ilrQe ~~v nq room cat tn kttchen n
cluc1cs r~pp\ nnct&gt;s Otfercd~t Sll 500
UNUSUAL HOME - 3 floors ot 1 vtng space on 6
ncrcs Chlrilqe &amp; root celiM Home t enfures brtck
mdoor g, outdoor bilrbccuC"s f p hcnt a lator two
r edwood decks 2 cement pat1os A s1td1ng glass
doors to d~cks &amp; pnt•os. 2
baths carpeted
thrJuqhout ma.ntcnance l rcc Ask ng $73 000
BF:AUTIFUL BRICt&lt; - Home hilS 3 8 R s p,
bnths lnundry o"ff k. •tch r n ftrcp1.lcc storm wtn
dows well constructed =tssume s.mall cqu 1t y B. take
over 10°Q mortQr~qe Ask..nq S35 900
39 ACRf-5
ask nq 535 900

All m1nernl

nght~

ltv;:~b l6'

home

J ACRES - Ccln be bouqht 1n R'lctnc nrea on
cqntracl A~k t nQ S35 900

Rentals tr.v.11to1blc
I

~omcttmcs

WII.L HELP FINANCE
Over 2 000 sq tt of l!vtng space In th'
AT
- SECLUDED Bl LEVEL - brtck &amp; frame home Has family room,
Nestled •n over I acre of trees thts dutch 2 fireplaces equtpped k1tchen full
style home has 3 beclrOC)ms 21h baths basement central atr garage &amp; 2 3
famJiy room 2 large unftnished rooms acres C•tv schools
•n lower level large wrap around Oeck
and 2 car garage outstanding locat•on
$67 500

"'

:II&gt;·

• :.4.•...

l c:~nd

OF:F.R HUNTER SPF.CI.O.l - 1 ilcrc 1 8 R fur
n1shcd t r{1 t1er w1fh c ty welter '" LonQ Bottom
SB 000
$100 UOO Rrmgc

CALL USTOrlUY OR SELL
Nancy J.lspcrs-Assoctiltc
PH 841 2075

STROUT REALTY, Inc.
All~~
HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROOM STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.

A very attracttve well kept 4 bedroom
home tn one of the area s f inest netgh
borhoods Has 2V:z baths eqUipped ktt
chen
dmmg room
family room
w/f1replace nat gas cent air 2 car
garage plus a lovely landscaped corner
lot
Low mterest loan assumptton
ava•lable $69 900
RIO GRANDE - 3 or 4 bedroom home
right on campus Has 1'/:z bath famtly
room ftreolace full basement nat gas
heat garage plus nearly 3t.t~ acre Could
be used as rental S38 900
ROONEY Thts attract1ve tudor
home ts located m a top quality netgh
borhood and must be sold as soon as
poss1ble 3 bedrooms 2 baths fam11y
room wlwoodburner large equtpped
kttchen and 2 car garage Flat 1h acre
yard $54 900
22 VINTON AVE - ItS hard to fmd a
home •n town tn as gOOd cond1t1on as
th1s 3 bedroom home Equ1pped k1t
chen d1ntng room gas heat 3 a• r cond
pat to plus 2 lots Can buy wtth one lot at
$39 900 Won t last long so ca ll today

18 ACRE- EDGE OF TOWN- Ex
cellent locatton for this ntce 3
bedroom ranch on Rt 508 18 wooded
acres w1th barn House has 2 baths
famtly room 2 ftreplaces full base
ment nat gas and garage Need of
fer

BEST BUY ON TOWN
home was built tn 1894
to appreciate Large open fover and
statrway LR dlntng rm parlor com
pletely equipped modern k1tchen 4
BRs 21/:z baths new std•ng garage
near schools, shopping etc CJII Rennv
Blackburn for an appotntment
LOVE~Y BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN
CHER plus , 78 ACRES of land In
Chesh•re TownshiP offers lots of good
1tv1ng for your growtng famtly Home 1s
lUSt ltke new w1th 1438 sq ft of llvtng
area plus an attached garage 2
spactOUS BR S 2 baths 8x27 LR 10x24
kttchen With refng dtsp OW double
oven &amp; range washer &amp; dryer stays '"
laundry Land 1s mostly rolltng pasfllre
land With approx 25 acres wooded Call
for appotntmcnt

GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED - 112 acre farm has fron
tage on State Rout~ 588 Fairfield
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fa•rfteld Rd
Excellent for farming or development
Older 5 rm &amp; bath farm home barn &amp;
silo 1ncii.Jded Owners Will consider sell
lng smaller tracts of short term ftnanc
lng Call for more tnformalton

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5
yr old spilt level features A or 5 BRs 3
baths 30ft LR 2 famtly rms 2 wood
burntng ftreplaces large k1tchen and
d•n•ng area 2 car garage one of the
county s n1cest pools (20x50) and a truly
protes~tonallandscaped lot Located on
Debby Onve Owner says sell so call
Ranny blackburn for a personal
showing You II bepleasedyoudld
LOT FOR SALE- Guy an Twp Rocky
Fork Rd \ well septtc tank tdeal for
mob1le home Asktng S1 500
PRICE REDUCED TO Sl7,900• Ntce 3
BR low mamtenance home tS less than 3
yrs old and features large LR dtntng
rm
k1tchen bath part basement
utility butldtng and almost 2 acres near
Route 218 C1ty schools
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
acre pasture farm, mpstly rolling &amp; hi I
ly grassland wtth approx 10 A wooded
lots of springs, l'h story hom~ has 4
rms &amp; bath, large barn tobacco base',
fronts on 3 roads In Walnut Township
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE Remocleled home tncludes 5 rms &amp;
bath carport stove refr~g
dJSh
washer mob1le home pad almost 6
acres on 588 2 m• from town S30 ooo
NEAR CADMUS prox 1;2 t•llable and
story farm home •n
barn sheds fronts bn
ctng available at 109"o

Forty acres ap
'h weods old 2
need of repa irs
141 Owner fman

FARMERS FARM - One of Guyan
Townshtp s tmest 106 acre m/1 ap
prox
45 A
ferttle bottom land
baJance pasture &amp; woods Nice modern
kll &amp; lamdy rm 14x18 LR attached
garage mam barn ts 56xlOA also tn
eluded ts 20x24 steel garage workshop
&amp; several sheds Owner •s retiring &amp;
w•ll help f1nance
BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
- Approx 5'h acres located on the
Graham School Rd , co water over 300
ft rd frontage Green Grade School &amp;
Galha Academy H1gh School $10 900

VA ACQUIRED PROPERTY - 2,000
down VA wtll f nance balance for
qual1f1ed buyer Ntce 3 bedroom home
wtth family room utll room eat tn k1l
chen &amp; flat yard Nat gas heat LocateO
minutes from town S39 500
THERE LL BE A SCRAMBLE FOR
THIS HOME - 4 bedroom trt level With
loads of ltvtng space Stone ftreplace l
baths famtly room equtpped kttchen
re c room woodburnher 2 car garage
Plus 4112 acres of lovely P•ne lan
dscapmg A real f1ne home pr 1Ced at
$83 900
STONE lilANC:H A spacious 4
bedroom home over ooktng the nver
Owners have pnced well under market
value Has tamtly room, ftreplace 3
baths d~ ng room nat gas cent cur &amp; ~
car garage A must to see

___.,
'
&amp; SMALL ACREAGE

r--~F:AR"::":~M~S~--LA--R-G_E
-

COUNTRY Y~T CONVENIENT Great family home with 3 BR 2 baths,
15)(27 LR w1th gas ftreplace large
mOCiern k•tchen wtth range self
cleantng oven ow and dtSrJ laundry
rm Wtth washer and dryer part base
ment farge covered patto, garage and
ove{ 6.acres of land at the edge of town

Blllld~ng molerlots block
brick, sewer plpea, windoWs, lintels, tiC. Cloudo
Wlnlers, Rio Gl'ande,
Call 745 5121

_

r XX)( XI _,,
I ]

~MR 409- OWNER FINANCIN.G 1 Thts spill foyer
home 1ncludes 3 bedrooms 2 full baths large den
with ftreplace heat pump for year round comfort
See th•s tullY carpeted home today •

lANDMARK

5 , - Bulltllnt Suppltal ~

I!JEIN&lt;S A
e&lt;)0C7 c:&gt;ANCE~,

BMR 388 - OWNER FINANCING - Three BR
large famtly room wtftl ftreplace Natural gas heat
avg bill S32 00 month last year Call now'

,POMEROY

&amp;

Sprlngtlllld 27aulo rifle 12
.-ugo!Mrrlnglon A lchOJd
1011 ""'lllun with Deere

r

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP
176
acres m/1 vacant land fronts on Rae
coon Creek&amp; the Tom Glen Rd Approx
31 tillable &amp; the balance wooded Uf1der
SAOO per acre

PRICED RIGHJ.

"1'WW THIN~ THAT
Kl! P'T HIM FR'Qtl

Real Estale-General
INVESTMENT PROPERTY or ltve tn downstatrs
and rent upsta.rs apartment Centrally located tn
downtown Galllpolts wtthtn easy walkmg dtstance
of churches grocerv and bustness area Pnced for
only $37 ooo 00
Wood Realty Inc
32 Locust St, Gallipolis
446 1066

Chnstmas Trees for ~le
cutyourownSSOO Call367
0135

Firewood
Slacked
delilltred Coll2o45 9764

I SIBOPHj

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef hay &amp;
gratn farm 80 acres m/1 approx 35 A
good cropland 10 A woods balance
pasture good fences 9 rm /bath home
was bu1lt 10 1872 &amp; has been parttally
remodeled 50x50 cattle barn with con
crete floor
large s1lo wtth auto
unloader several sheds large pond
spr.ngs standtng crops go lo new
owner

200 Mercedes dteS@I ~ng1nt,
18 HP Evenrll&lt;fe oulboard
1 steel chalnsaw Call 446
%311

PHONE 446-3643

I KJ

t)

8 J Hlirt* Aasec 4IHMI . . .
ClydeWIIhf AM!!' Ht-N,.

000

IOACRE FARM - Near
R&amp;c1ne Wtfh a 2 story
frame house that has
been newly remodeled
approx SO acres are tn
hay and It liable wtth ap
prox
30 'n woods
$60

llltWIMMin BI'Her ~J1fll!vt
JimCGCiwlft Au.c:laM .... 7111 lwt

PITED

HERE'S ONE
EVERYTHING Fireplace nat gas f a furnace a c ; .f bedrooms
f.nlshed basement paho 18 x32 1n ground sw1m
mtng pool Located tn M1IIS VIllage and prtced to
sell $75 000 00

back carpet $50 992 2•20

FIREWOOD split oak 540
a nck $70 a cord, call 304
675 3137 anytime

NEW LISTING - Over
6 acres of vacant ground
with a dr.lled well tn the
Meigs School D1strict

Jean Trussell
Off tee

New approximately 9x12

AM FM 8 track, new con
d11i0n $75 304 895 3375

NEW LISTING- All on
one floor tn Mtddleport
WIth
2 bedrooms
garage patto sto,-age
bldg ,. carpeted and
paneled ancl a large tot
126 900

992 5692

4 large truck wheel.s 985
3565

SNOW blade for John
Deere riding mower, like
new 304 895 3665

[) I

POMI!ROY, 0.
992·2259

$11

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

GITHE

E.Ma.....

REALTORS
Henry E Cleland Jr
GRI
992 6191
Dottte &amp; Roger Turner

Rubber
Stomp
Shop
ususally one or two davs
servtce
Dismuke's
405
2nd Ave Gallipolis 446
0474

1-65,000 BTU electric fur
nance &amp; dUct work, OOOd
sl!ape, SIOO I old c ..l Iron
ball1 tub good sl!ope, S25 1
1•' plow $150 1 new hoovv
duty holst rolalls S1 971
01klnv leO Coli367 7871

•

F~rewood

--~---

Fireplace Insert, heo~y
1/4' steel plate, with
Large trailer lot for rent on bi!)Wer Requires oponlng
143 742 3122
32' · Wide, 20' dtep Only
three to ull at W10 ea
MOBILE horne lots, water O u - Equipment Salts,
&amp; oewer furnished Everel Jet RIS 7 &amp; 35, GeiiiJ!OIIl.
le 5chwarlz, phone 304-675- Ph ..,.._3670 Cl- Dec 72
IIIIJan 4
1076

---

coat stoves while 111pply
last Gallipolis Block Co,
1231/2 Pine St, ol46 2783

Pre-Holiday Specials

ve,-y plush cream color 1ute

997 709

. .. ..

\'5%
- -d- lscou---n-1--on-WOOCI
--&amp;

1 12 guage Botto over &amp; un
de,- Modtfted and full $150
992 7212

Anttque Home Comfort
woodburn1ng cook stove
whtte porcelatn Phone 245
9241
54

MIK M...:Mncllca

1408 bttween t oncl S

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
So&amp;a, chair, rocker, o}
loman 3 tables SSOO Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275
SOlos and chairs priced
from $285 to S795 Tables,
S38 and up lo S109 Hide •
beds S340, queen size $380
Recllne(l S17.S to S295,
Lamps from $18 lo Sl&gt;.5 5
pc. dlfenes from $79 , to
S385 1 pc SIB9 and up
WOOd table Wtth 4 chairs,
$719 up to $.195 Desk $110
Hutches $300 and 5375,
maple or pine finish
Bedroom suites
Bassett
Oak $675 , Bassett Cherry,
S795
Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250 and
up to 5350 Captatn's beds.
S275 complele Baby beds.
S99 Mattresses or bO)(
springs full or twin $511,
firm. U8 and S78 Queen
sets. S195 5 dr chests $.49
4 dr chests 542 Bed
frames, $20 and $25,10 gun
Gun cabinets., S350 , dmet
te cha.rs $20 and S2S Gas
or electnc ranoes S295 Or
thopecllc super firm, $95,
baby matresses S2S &amp; 535,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; S30
Electric ftreplace
gun
cabulet Ltving room sutte
wood table &amp; .. cha1rs
Used
Ranges
refngerators. and TV s
3 miles our Bulavtlle Rd
Open 9am to 7pm Mon
thru Frl 9am to Spm Sol
4-46 0322

52

HILLCREST KENNEl.
Boarding all breeds clean
tndoor outdoor facilities
AI!IO AI&lt;C Reg
Dober
mons Callolol6-7795

Lump Coat S32 per ton
Zlnn Coal Co, Inc Call ol46

2 bedroom twm stngle In

45
31

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

They'll Do It Every Teme

42

18
Stolen Property AnttQUe
kttchen sate
Ant1que
d1ntng ro~m cab1ne1 Two
rocktng chatrs
Other
tfems Anyone know1ng or
seemg thts furntture betng
hauled 1n the v Ctntty of
Flatrock WV on October 10
or later a liberal reward ts
offered 675 1302

Help Wanted

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER BABYS I TTER
10
my
pay.ng CdSh for anythtng home day Phone 304 675
stamped 10K 14K 18K and 3256 even1ngs
dental gold Class rtngs
-==~=.:;==.;;==;=o;==
wedd1ng rings sliver coms 12
Sttuatlons Wanted
or
anythtng
stamped
sterhng Clarks Jewelry Elderly lady would ltke to
Store Gall1polis 446 2691 or have an elderly lady to 11ve
992 2054 '" Pomeroyl
wtth and share expenses
Call 367 7196
Buy tng
Gold
S1lver
Platmum old cotns scrap Out of Town owner needs
nngs &amp; stlverware Oatly family or person lo hve '"
quotes avatlable
Also large 2 story house tn v.n
COIOS &amp; COlO SUpplies for ton
Very
nexpens.ve
sale
Sprtng
Valley arrangements availAble
Tradtng
Spnng Valley for responstble person
Plaza 446 8025 or 446 8026
Ret r eqU tred Call 614 359
5769
Wanted to buy motor for
1976 Honda CtVIC Call 256 Tree tnmm1ng &amp; removal
6652
Free esttmates 949 2129
992 6040
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars
13
Insurance
Frenchtown Car Co
SANDY AND BEAVER On
Btll Gene Johnson
surar.ce Co has offered
446 0069
serv1ces for ftre nsurance
coverage tn Gallla County
BEDS I RON BRASS old for almost a century
turntture
gold
stlver Farm home and personal
dollars wood tee boxes
property coverages are
stone tars ant1ques etc
available to meet m
Complete
households
d1V1dual needs
Contact
Wrtte M 0 Mtller Rt 4 Kad Burleson agent Phone
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760
446 2921
CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter 10
on largest
end S12 50 per ton Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
Del•verd to Oh10 Pallet Co
Rock
Sprtngs
Rd
Pomeroy 992 2689

WISEMAN -...
•

11

fulfm~inK telephflne ext'hllnf(el&lt; ..•

..

LAND-LAND-LAND - Crop Pasture- Lots of woods - Tobacco
Base- 217 acres S300 per acre Call
for more tnformahon
OWNER WILL FINANCE - Wtth less
than 20% down payment and II% 1n
terest 168 acre farm off Rt 554 Ap
prox 20 75 ac crop balance tn pasture
and Woods Lois of ptne (r ed &amp; whte)
barn plus moderntzcd 3 bedroom
home 60s
101 ACRES - Owner wdl f tnance at
very reasonable rates to qttaltfted
buyer Excellent Land for hunftng hor
ses or a few cattle Mostly woodland
Also older 2 stor'y nome 1n livable con
dttton ~0 s
ACRES

NEW LISTING old t1me 2 story home
II
4 mtles from town '" Green
~~~~gf~_c•~Oist House has 3 bedrooms
If
dtntng room glass enclosed
Very scentc location wtth
trees 1 mlle off Rt 7 Low

~~~~·~;~~;~,,~

ACRES - 2 STORY HOME - A
lh&lt;&gt;me wtth character on lower R t 7 4
2 baths
fam IY room
2 car garage
acreage A real eve
561 000
&amp; 6 ACRES - Located Off Rt
of R•o Grande 2 bedroom
need of some mmor repatrs
Has wOOCI
1 rural
1
water
wtll help ftnance

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - You
better look now or you'll m1ss the buy of
the year 1n Rto Grande An unusual 4
bedroom 2 story brtck home th~t's only
2 years old Has 2 h baths. famtly room
f treplace 2 efftc1en1 heating systefns
(one Is wood) full basement and 2 car
garage S60 s 9'12% assumphon Wtll
rent
DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME ON
TOWN? - Then lhiS one " perfect
Cozy and modern 2 bedroom 1 floor
plan Has brand new kotchen dmlng
room ltvmg room detached garage
and n1ce flat yard Make us an offer
30 s
PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATE:~ You Wtll en1oy the care th•s attracttve
:&gt;nck home has been gtven 1m
Tlaculate tnstde and out Plush carpet
lOVely tlfeplace 3 b~drooms dtn1ng
room equ1pped kttchen nat gas cent
air 2 car garege and corner lot $59,900
WHAT YOU WANT AND WHAT YOL-1
CAN AFFORD - are 2 d1fferent thtngs
UNTIL NOW 1 The house and locatton
are tdeal Owners hate to sell but have
to Need the money to buy home out of
state W II sell at a very reasonable
pnce (assume low tnterest mtg )
House tn move
cond•l•on and has
everyth ng that really matters
3
bedrooms 2 baths famt ly room
t1replace 2 car garage pat10 over 1700
sq tt Much more Only $61 000

,n

MOVE IN CONDITION - Owners
are gone and anxtous to sell th 1s
older but well kept 2 story brick on
Rt 588 3 bedroom 1112 bath family
room woodburnmg furnace full
basement and Ph acre yard $51 ooo
WASHINGTONE ELEM. - Cozy 2
bedroom home located 1n city school
dtst Has fireplace tn Uvtng room larg&amp;
ktfchen, 1h ac yard 911:2% assumption
20 s
539 900 - This attracllv~ly decorated~
bedroom home Is located at the edge of
town owners must sell (have bought
another home) Has fam 11y room
dmtng room full basement nat gas
heat &amp; low equ ty low 1nterest mor
tgage

JUST LISTED - An attractive and
spactous 4 bedroom home on Rt 160
Th1S brtck home has l'h baths large
formal d1ntng, equ1pped ktfchen full
basement W1th huge f amtly rOOm
fireplace workshop etc 2 car garage
160 ACRES - Former datry op.e~&lt;lti&lt;&gt;nl Assumptton at 11%
near Rto Grande SO 60 ac
pasture balance in woods
S2S 000 - LAND CONTRA(T - A good
tobacco base gas lease plus
buy on this 3 bedroom home on Central
remodeled 4 bedroom home
Ave tn Rto Grande Has full basement
nat gas heat large porch &amp; ntce s•zed
on 3 roads mcludlng Rt 325
yard Make us an off er
NEW HOME AND 2 5 ACRES
Modern cedar home wtth 3 bedrooms
NICE HOME -GOOD LOCATION
loft woodburner and nice kitchen Rural
- You 11 be pleased when you see
water Located off Rt 554 532 600
thtS tmmaculately kept 3 bedroom, 2
story home tn town Has family
8% LAND CONTRACT - Owners
room, woodburner d•ntng room l'h
must sell nowt Large 4 bedroom
bath, natural gas cent..-al a~r and
riverfront home wtth basement
fenced yard S40s
famtly roam etc Appro)( 1 4 acres
with nverfrontage $39,900
SS1SOO down- 10% INTEREST$27,000- You cant beat ftgures like
36 ACRES- $16,900- O..Vners very
these when you are buytng a home
anx1ous to sell t111s 2 bedroom home
Thts could be an excellent starter
,n cttY school dist Home needs some
home or rental located In R to
repa1r Has tots of woods and coat
Grande 2 bedroom remodeled home
seam r1ght out your back door Off
In good location
Rl 218
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.,_ _,bedr"c,OSrnCHDOLS - RT 218- Modern
3
EXCELLENT
LOCATION
ranch Sttuated on over 1 J
BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME - An eye acres
large ltVI,!'l room, k tchen
catching 3 bedroom home situated on 1 bath ba~ement woodburn• ng furnace
acre on Rt 588 Nearly 2,000 sq ft of
Priced
tlntshed ltvtno area Includes a large kit
chen 2 baths 2 ftrepaces fam•IY room
9'11"' ASSUMABLE MTG _
rec room basement 11nd 2 car garage
roomy b1 level wtth 3 bedrooms
Must see
baths. ~am1ly room w/f~replace very
MAKE US AN OFFER- This could be
nice equtpped k1tchen nat gas cent
your chance to buy a ntce home With a
tur and garage Nearly lh acre Wlpoot
low equity 91/ot% mortgage Newer 3
Near town
s
bedroom ranch w•fh fireplace and 3"acre yard Better hurrv Rt 218 11700 DOWN 1:1% INTERE&lt;;T - A
$40,900
30 year mortga9e wllh payment$ unclo"1
.,_ LAND CONTRACT- OWners must $350 mo A 6 yr okl 3 bedroom malnt
Stll now• Large 4 bedroom rlv,rfront free home near ROdney l-Ias garaa&amp; &amp;
home with basement. family room, fenced yard An excellent opportun 1ty
Approx 1 4 acres wtth river fran that rna~ never be avaelable eoeln
Only $34 000
$39 900

~f~~ Z's~~~~a~~::\~~~guf

so

••

�-

. I

Pa

I

tine I

llipotis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

- - -Pets
- for
- St1te
- -· -

56
"PelsforSale
-~-

56

R:eq , labrador
Retriever
puppies,
9,
weeks. shots, wormed.
Sl2~ ~
Exc. temperment,
614-682-7417 .

Registered
Golden
Retriever;. puppies. Si50.
Buy now for Christmas.
Ready mid J&lt;1n. 142-2951 or
742·2143.

TwO AC K Reg. Doberman
pups, 1 black, 1 red, wor·
med &amp; sho ts. Ca ll 388·9848
before 3.

AKC Registered Doberman
pups. 3 ferf1ales red and
rust, will deliver Christmas
Eve. $100. 992-7888 .

1 AKC Reg. Poodle, cream

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2~13
Jackson Ave.. Pt.
Pleasant. 675·2063. Mon.,
Thurs., I Fr_i. 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed ., I Sat. ·11 to 4. Check
our Fish &amp;pecial.

AKC

male. Call446·7&lt;111 . ,
AKC Reg , Boxer puppies, 8
wks old, $125. Ca ll 446·3870.

-· -·-----AKC Reg. black male

l.abador 1 112 yr. old. Very
' good with chi ldren . Ca ll
367 :7481.
HOOF HOLLOW HOrse~ &amp;

pon i es .
Everyt hing
imag inable in horse equip·
ment . Also belts. boots . 698·
3290. Ruth Reeves.

--------

__
....... .....
, .. ,.,,
,,

61

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

F.arm.Equipment

1976 Malibu, 4 dr., p.s.,

p.b., e.e., 350 2 bbl, new
tires and pail)!, 61,000 mi.
S1900 . 416·2888 anytime. .

63

Livestock

Registered Quarter Horse
filly ,
Registered Ap·
p.11oo_sa. 4 yrs. old and good
blOOd line. Cali 256·6413, 12
p.m . to9p .m.
Willi s T . Leadingham, Realtor, Ph. Home446-9539
Phyllis Loveday, Phone 446-2230
Joan Boggs, Phone 446·3294

.F resh &amp; Springer Holstein
heifers, milking good. Call
286·2496.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

71

SALE or trade· 1966 ~I
Camino. 6 cyl. standafd.
new engine, new pa int, new
interior, $1500. 304·576·286.5.
1978 PLYMOUTH Salon, 4
door sedan, 318 cu. engine ,
excellent, clean, phone 30&lt;1675·1296.

Lake Dr .
in Rio Grande
75% .completed, 545,000,
9'2% interest. S4,00D
dow11. litnd contract.
Monthly payments SlSO
mo. 245·5439.
011

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

BAIRD &amp;FUUER
REALTY.
.
PLANTS SUBDIVISION
Beautiful new
d_oublewide, 3 bedrooms, 2 fUll baths, woodburning
fireplace. fully car~eted, air cond., nice fot.
111045
RT. 554 - Nice 1972 12x.a5 mobile home with 2·
bedrooms, bath w~th shower, furniture stays. fl 1016
MAKE US AN OFFER - ·Frame home with nice

kitchen, basement and garage. In town, owner wan ·
ts sOld before winter, price reduced..
il 0185
INVESTMENT PRPPERTY - 2 liice lots with 4
rental mobile ho!Tie pads. all are rented, each pad
has concrete runners and patio, located in Rojney .

1973 Olds. Delta 88. Runs
good. New landau top. Ex·
cellent am · fm
radio.
Reasonable. 985·4225.

12155
VACANT LOTS -

Large tract consisting of 3 fu'u
lots and 5 partial lot~, in city on Chestnut St. $20.000

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars In
stock.

2lf2 ACRES ..:._ Good building site or mobile home
site, Blazer Road, Addison Twp,
$6,000

. Evenings Call
Patricia Smith, Assoc. 367-0228
Darvin Bloomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

72 CHEVY Chevelle'wagon,
good condition, $550., 350 V8, automatic, 304·576·2866.

-·-··-· ···--

VIRGIL B. SR,
216 E. 2nd St.

-

.;

----

~-

·-·---

·· ·

·~-

'

Phone
H614l-992·3325
NEW , LISTING 117
acres 'in Lebanon Town··
ship with all minerals.
Old farm buildings,
woods and wf1dlife.
Good for the sportsman
and someone · that is
thinking of his future .
Need only S35,000 ..
¥1DDLEPORT- Nice
older insulated home.
Hot .water furnace, gas
baths, full basement,
large front and ·side por·
ches. Garage, carport
and large corner lot.
Only S40,000.
SYRACUSE
2
bedroom trailer, bath,
range-refrigerator, car··
petlng, 2 family rooms
and woodburning flue.
Level lot 50x100. JUST
$9,600.
POMEROY .
.
Reasonable 3 bedroom
fully insulated home. St .
Windows, Drs., patio,
. nice .carpeting on quiet
street with view of the
Ohio River. May take
trailer or smaller home
in tlade. S32,500.
POMEROY
Want
somel_hlng
very
reasonable. yet well
worth the price. This
has 5 rooms, bath, all
city utilities, · family
room and 3 lots for
. $12,000.
•
RANCH

~• 6

·lovely rOOms, nice car·
peting, equipp~d birch
kitchen with range, wall
oven, refrigerator and
di~posal .
Central air
and natural · gas F .A.
furnace, full basement
With large family room
and
woodburnlng
fireplace. Will consider
your place in trade.

$75,000.

Ht IUS'ifl(!
}if IU\/lid!(t

Real EStale-.::Geriefal _ __ ___ - -· -~
-·
-.. - ·-· ..

we .. tile IMst and ser·
·vtcetllerosl.
On Rt.33W.
Ri~loy, W.Va.
Ph. !3041 37HI75
or 11041 372-5479
12·18·1 mo.

J"')

ENTERTAIN EASILY or hide out In your second
storv bedroom with a good book. Exceptional fever
~as bridal. s!alrcase ... powder r'OOm. Spacio\Js liv·
1ng and dmmg rooms. Kitchen has lslanjj r'enge,
built· in oven. breakfast nook with view of brit:ked
courtyard . Peaceful environment in the heart ot the
city, .BuY with SS.OOO doWn payment, balance on
land contract at 12% for 20 years. Monthly payment
5484.49. NEW LOW PRICE $49.000.
.

Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
7:30 TIIIIO:OO
Sunday 2:00 lo4:30
New Year's Eve
7:30 io 1:DO
Private Parties
Available

VISUALLY E)&lt;CITING- A fireplace opening into
the living· and dining rooms guarantees a cozV atmosphere. Family room with wooelb~:Jrn~r that

PH. 985·3929 '

could make .you took torward'tpwinter. 4 bedrOQms,

or 985-9996
12·16·1 mo.

2 full baths. Basement with reams of stor~ge. 2 car
attached garage. $92,000. Assum{lble mortgage.

SUNRISE

HfAnNG '&amp;

A VERY

SPECIAL cozy home with lots of, r1Jce
. touches. Family room has fireplacewHh $fat~ hear·
th·, soft plush carpet, custom plant window. ,Eat,jn
kitchen with range and di-s hwasher. Full basement.
gels heat. Cent. air cond. City schoQIS. Owner will
finance on land coqtract with $6,000 down payment .
20 yr. term at 12% interestJrate. MOnthry payment
5363.36. 539,000.
MITCHELL ROAD II,AN ~ANT RD .. 545,000 --.!.. Gre: t location S40,000 - . ., Eighty-six
... near shopping, Holzer acres, 5 BR: fi-ame · 2
Hospital. 3 year old story home. barn and
brick ranch o, one -half other
outbldg.
All
acre lot. r- \..0 kitchery mineral rights sell with
fully eqS.~~ed . Fully this farm and . there
carpeted.
Attached have been several sue·
garage. Electric h_eat cessful wells drilled in
pump. Highest electric this area . •
bill .lastwihter. $5'9,000.

COOliNG

Tappan Recuperative
Furnace. Colemen Air
Condiliolng, Arl\la·Ser· ' •
vel Gas Air. ·cofldllion· ·
1ng, ShHI Metal Work.
'
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rl. 2, AIIMny, OhiO
614-698-6791
11·.16-'lfn ..

HARRISON
1V SERVICE

i,N Cl~~· :_ . ZONED
COMMERCIAL 'S42,"900 - Larpf! 2 story ·
frame. Preserl,tly used
as rental, 4 apartments.
Could be nice family
home or beauty shop,
etc. Only 2 blocks from
city park.
,

NOW

--· -,.

REESE
TRENCHING

-

,liut
Pua

P•

SNT

•

Goo Line-Ditches

Water Lint Hook·up•
Stptic Tanks
County Ctrllfitd
Roush Lane
Chtshlrt,Ob.
Ph. 367-7560
1-7·1

.toctrlaCWOII&lt;

~Eofl-ft)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 Sor ft2·'1J111
JIOI!lwoy,Oh~

·---lit.

'lit dl1a't tl1iDt YII'J muoh

-::.:r-

overealllare ma4t lime and

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
.ap-

AU.STEn

BUILDINGS
30x24" .

Sizes start from
SMALL

NOVA 304-675-6&lt;145.

- Custom kitchens and
·Piian·ces,
cusfom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin, electrie. and
heating. .

Utility Buiklinas
izes from 4 to 6 and all
wood bui1dinigs24x~'·

Insulated 001 Houses

74

PLYMOUTH
Gold
Duster, ' Will trade for
pickup, 304~7·5·4323 or 675·
S17,2.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

P&amp;S BUILDIIGS
Rl. 3, Box 54

Racine,Oh.

Auto·for sate

11

73 OLDS 81J, 455 motor &amp;
transmission. S150.. 304·
895·3608.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Useci Color TV Sets fOr
Sale.
.
NEW PHONE NO.

992-6259

I

276 Sycamore.St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21·ttc

-· -··.

•Backhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• Water. Sewer
Gas Lints
• Dump·Truck

SIDING CO.
"auuttful, Custom
lull! Gor1111"
Coil ·tor tree . aldlnl
os11ma111, t4f·2101 or
94t-2NO.
No lundoy Calls

•

Ford Truck, 250 camper
special, with new stake bed
and dual wheels. Call 256·
6413, 12 p.m.to9 p.m.
1976 Ford Courier, while
spoke rims, with camper
top, Sl.IOO. Call 388·9354.

Ph. 992-7201

,.

Trucks for Sale

72

Licensed .&amp; Bonded.

1977 Hail ton Ford FlOO ..
power steering, new tires.
$2300.304-675-5147.

'Finest Quality
Excellent Service

. Koep Thio Ad for

1977 •12 ton Chevrolet
pickup with heavy duly
springs, gOOd condition
$2800. 304-675'4506. .

Fish· Game Head·
Life Size Mounts· Ptus
Hidl!!' Tanning

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PH. 742·2225
2033.

' PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
•Wa&amp;h••

THE

1971 Ford truck with ldp·
per, ~ood shape. S695. 895·
3997.
.

•!?rf•rs
•Rangn

•Dispoaol• ·
: •Dithwath•rs
•Hat Water Tanks

KWB

9-S.tfc

ClOCKS
FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Availabl~
Made from Cedar,
Crpress, Walnut &amp;
Churv.

1978 Jeep CJ7 Renegade.
Hard topr quadratrack,
p.s.; auto. trans., Levi In·
t~rior, very good cond. 1985·
355.1. Evenings 985·3828.
79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
wheel-drive, 29,000 miles, 8
c;yl. call after 3 p.m . 30..675-389fl.

all ages

71 FORD Step Van; 6 cyl.,
automatic, good condl.tloo,
right hand drive, small,

*Repair: Cleaning,
refinishing, new gripS
length change,
weight change
• Fast service
• 6 Fr~e lessons
drawing

From $34.95
. To$79.95
PH. 991-3269
12·3·1 mo. pd.

Vans&amp;4W.D.

73

Chester, Oh.
Order Now for
Ghristmas:
• Gills for ~offers
*Discount Prices on
Shirts, Windbreailers,
Sweaters, Socks,
Pants, Shoes
• Short g~me practice
*Prop-Gem lessons for

HANDCRAFTED

3·11·Hc

~-576·2Wo

79 JEEP Renegade; hard
lop, 29000 miles, 304-576·
2325.

-:::::::::=::::::::-1.:::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::~78JEEP
Renegade,~.
:_
phone 304-675·3628.

MEIGS COUNTY 3,25 ACRES Mor l
POND . 8 room re-mOdeled country hom·e beautifully
la n dscaped ~ al /3.25 acres mowed . G.a rage with con·
cre te dri veway . 24'x21' fa mily room with fireplace.
Large block storage build ing. Fruit trees. Been
reduced over $17,000. You must see this country
home. Phone now fo r an appointment.
N 507

·ReuphOistery
SPECIAL
HEY "NATURE LOVERS"
Put 'tiOur -oreen thumb to work on this
4.340 acres. Enjoy country living 1n this
J bedroom h'ome located on !•ate
toigh.wav. Other attractionS are et 30' by
45' Wicks building, tobacco base, plus
more.
1802

Bar S.loot•
125.00
Truck Seats
$100.00
Labor &amp; Material
Effective Dec. 15th
Thru Jan. 15th

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY

IN MIDDLEPORT
Nice. could be 100 Year Old home in nice cMdition.
Solid, rt " has 7 rooms, .a bedrooms, J1h: baths,
ba sem ent, modern kitchen, fam ily room, fireplace.
All city uti lities. Carport . Shown by appointments
only . Phone now .
11504

&amp; Trim Shop
Raclne,Oh.

PH. 949·2202
12·15·1 mo.

8 ACRES
Within 10 min. dl"ive 1o downtown Gallipolis. City
School System . Has hookup for mobile home, Gallia
Rura l Water. electri c and se pt ic tank , ni te light on
pole, 200ft. f r ontage on Gri!ham School Rd . Timber.
Building si tes. Call Now.
N417

YES- THIS IS TRUE - Comfortable 5
room hoUse an.d two room apartment..J
BRs, bath, built· in kitchen, oil furnace- ·
aluminum siding, fruit trees, onl;
$18.000. 'Owner will help finance. Ne&gt;ct
door to 'Tara Estates.
#898

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
vacant lots, nice size bu ilding lots with all ufilitie~
there. Lot size 101.8 by 171.2. Better get ' urn now.
N456
ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME .
Well kept, 9 rooms, 5 bedrooms, On State 'Highway
approx imately 1700 SQ. ft . living space. concret~
block cel'tar with frame smoke house. Large tool
shed, large block workshop w ith 2·car carport with
concrete floor . Four lots - over 1 acre of level land.
AllforonlyS41 ,900_. po.
N51l

ACREAGE

'MEMORIES LINGER. in tl11solder 1'12
story home in need of repairs. Some
outbuildings . 6 acres total rolling to
flat . A very good buy priced at$13,.500. 11
9
1
9

RESIDENTIAL

5 ACRES, "'ore or less - Has rural
water,seplictank,barnandwillselloo · -sPRAWLING SPLIT LEIIEL land contract .with small down pay
Discover
thls
beautiful
home
ment. Listed forS8 ,000.00
1901 oyerlooki_ng the Spring Valle-v Pleza.
Huge dintng. living and family rooms. 3
or ,. bedroom.s. electric heat. 2
NEED LANO? - 30 acres of vac.,nt fireplaces. 2 baths, 2 car OM"aQt. Can be
land . 15 acres wooded. IS acres Of purchased with 2 or 22 develOping
rolfing pasture. City schools. No acres.
IM
restrictions. $15,500.
N819

CITY SCHOOLS
3 bedroom ranc:h' style home_ Eat· in kitchen, full
basement. Spacious living room. Owner must selL
Priced drastically low. $29,900.
N412

l ACRES - Most ali level, tlllabl1'?
ground, some suitable for cabin or
house. $3,000. ·
1127

OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk into formal entrance with oPen stairCase to
this lovely completely redecorated home located in
t,..e city. Within walking distance to shopping area 3
t&gt;edrooms, 2 full baths and charming ~arge kitche0
Spacious living room with W~burning fireplace'
This gracious home has a natural gas FA furnaci
!Ike new. lmme91ate possession. V,:e're waiting for
your calL
·
11..

WOODED ACREAGE
GREEN
TOWNSHIP - Approx. 2 acres. Over
900 ft. road frontage. County water
aVailable. 4 , miles from Gallipolis.
Priced II $8,000.
1921

ACREAGI
LAND CONT1UCT- Owner will do1tlo
financing onjl'ilt 22 •eros. 2 older
homes. 3 ....,.,. T~o ' baH. All
mineral rigllft. OWner will pouibly
consider lradlflll. $22AQO.
#126

BOGGS
U.S. Rt. HEist
I Guytvlll4t, Ollkl
AutMrlziCI.tafln DHre,
,.._ Htll.... , IUIII Hot

r

hr• lquiPiftHt

on•.,

UIMJQUIPMENT

MOBILE HOMES

PAITI&amp;II.YICE

I

TOP OF THE STAIRS
Fllll ESS S11JIIIO

CERTIFIED GAS
Our Specialties

t02•12 E. Main. St.
Ph.·992~720
Just In Time for
Christmas: Member•hlp Gill Certificate•.
Rates
ptr
visit
available.
Come in &amp; see what we
ha~e to oHer.
"Get In Sflape for the

Cig1rettes
62c pack
Cartons
S5.95 &amp; S5.85
Open 7 Days A Week
Oper1 Mon.· Thurs.
'B.m. to 10 p.m.
Open Frt. au a.m.
lhru Sunday at t p.m ,
OPEN 24 HOURS
FRJ.·SUN.
We 5ell Pepoi, R.C .. &amp;
Coca·Cola Products by
" " 6 &amp;I PICk •'lnd·also in
liter bottles.
AUttharized Sunflower
Dealer. Sell ar Rent
These Signs.·
12· 16-lfc

. Holidays·. "
12·11·1 mo.

. OHIO VMI.EY

'SAlE$ &amp; SERVICE

baths,
l(itchen.
basement,
porch and front porch.
~crewlth Iaroe 2 story
Southwestern schOOl
water.

ROOflttG ·

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

SOLUTION

Auto Repair

Duality Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Insurance work
welcome.
Sunroofs Auto
In·
otalied from S2CJ0-$230.
Trim Center, ~ - 1968.

~;~~~=~~;;~~

'1-

Home
Improvements
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
-146·4208

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilif"gscom·
mercia! and residential,
free . ~stimates. Call 256·
1182.

PAINTING · interior and
e·xterior.
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yr&gt;. exp. Call 388·9652.
French CitY Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging,
and tex.ured
ceilings. Ph. 367·718~or367·.
7160.
Call 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
eslimates,sBill Thomas.
GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and 'Dec. only . Call
now and save. 614·992·6309.
LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service; Cawl
882·2079.
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or &lt;146-2~4.

.

F &amp; K Tree . Trimming,
_stump removal. 675-1331.

1975 HONDA XL l25, gOOd
condition. $350., phone lOA·
195-3375.

. 7'

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced m'ason, roofer,
carpenter, . electrician.
g~neral · repairs
and
remodeling. Phone 304·6752088 or 675 ·4560.

CARPENTRY
&amp;
remodeling. electrical and
plumbing. 30•·576·2989 or
576·2587.

AutO Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, ~uto repair,
wrecker · service, buy
automobiles, radiators and

!.!:=========~ bl1H~rioo.

And Home Mai•ttnonce
•Rootlnt ololl.types
•Sidlnt
•Rtmodtllng
ostlmues
Yn. txperlence

416·7717.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
. UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., GallipoliS.
446·7833 or 446·1833.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

,._
·-..........
·7D--- ,,_
....-

82

71-ln
Dl
...

n

.....,
·..- ---Dtr
17-..,..·,. ,.,.
·=..LID
·---""' ,._·1.------'" ·--,_
-- ··-·---71CJirofl.lglll

..... _,

81C

•'

..... I

I

...
til

11ml"

1111!-

IIPW!oto

1liS-

1114=-

101T_,

151"""""'

.T...:.,:.,
•

-II I I

.
tor

1117..--

,,,_
...-

112-1117
111

117111-

110 ll1*1lod

DOWN

2"""*'1

1111

4AIIIor
5Eirllht

I

115 ........ tor
nO I . . .

117,__.. ...
11llnlla.•a

10-al

tt Qwauacw.,

121111110

a.IIIIo-

11Qa $111
pt.

Excavating

EleclriCII
&amp; Refrigeration

REFRIGERATION
&amp;
molor household appliance
rePair
service._ Also
ouihort~
WosttngllOUit
Hrvlce d9eler., C.~ City
Fumllure .,.._, H 1 304·
675·2608. Aller 6, 614·416-

l
'

141r-.
143 .........

141 .... -

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air c:onc:Ution service.
commerciel, industrial.
Phone 18~·2079 .

..

131llfllt--

lliO~

8295.

I'

a

..

SEWING Machine rol&gt;airs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; service! Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 992·2274.

...

I

llfT-

t.tgptrt

CARTER'S PLUMI;IING
AND HEATING
Cor, Fourth and Pine
Phone 416·3888 or 446·&lt;1417

'14

at

114-

. _.__._

Ph. t4t-2161 or ~,_2412
I 7·5-Hc

I

.,

88-

M-.y
t&amp;awu•Oilttid

tea-.

nt-- 13126.,.._
- ""'
.............

Gallipolis Diversified Cart·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work. Special
term rate5. Call us for fre,
estimates. 446· 4440.

-a

I

·,aa.___

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83

•1'-

e

110C
112

11M07

ExPerienced carpenter
available for home or
business remodeling or
new structures.
Free
estimates. References. 304·
675·2440.

Motorcycles

87

111godo

n FORD Bronco, good con·
74

NOW HAULlNG house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.·
Cali for estimates 367 ·7101.

MOWR EYS Upholstery Rl.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car· 1 Box 12&lt;1, Pl. Pleasant, 304·
pet Cleaning featured by . 67H154.
.-.affelt Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
Call 416·2107 .

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304·895·3802.

dillon. 6&lt;1.000 miles. $3900.
304-675-4323 or 675-5172.

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Cali 367·7471 or
367·0591 .

i980 cHEvY Scottsdale, 3!..
ton, A·wheel·drlve, 4 speed,
PS, AM·FM, 28000 miles,
reg. gas. gOOd shape, call
304-773-5150.
.

10M HOSIUIS

WILL TAME TRADE IN toward
property . 1975 12x70 Penthouse mobile
home, partly furnished. v, acre lot and
located on Blue Litke. A ·Very gOOd buy
priced at,$19,500.
. 1913

INFLATION BEATER I For S9,000 YOU
can awn vour· 0\11\ homr. MObile home
with approx: '12 acre, Completely fur ·,
nlshed. Storage bultdin~. Underpinned.
R~r al water. (!tty KhOOis.
I 918

77

1977 Monte Carlo, ps, pb.
till wheel, am·fm tape. ex·
eel lent condilon. $299S.
Take trade. 8112·2466.

SHOP

e.

·. BISSELL

BR~NO NEW!!! Owner financing
ava•lable. Custom built 3 bedroom
home. 2 baths. k.ifchen·dining-familv
combination. Woodburner. Heat pump
Wcfl insulated. 2 car garage. All ap: ·
pli;mces included Best grades of carpet . County. 1.32 acres. Must see! (1920

_ __:&amp;::A~cess=or"i"es
76
Auto Parts,___
FOUR 13" Crager rims
with 2 wide tires on back
ones, Sl150. 3bH7S·1.189.

85

lHE
TAXIDERMY

Nu·Prlme replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinYl
siding
Howmet Pallo covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mabile hame awnings
Aluminum utility
buildints
691 M i Htr Drive
446-2642

35 Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Call 446-3896 .
or•46· 3080

992-7656
8·20·tfc

Ph. 614-143-2591 ·
6·1S·Ifc

Bill's

Furniture $trippina
and Refinishina

atl!olt 'Wiit'a ~de ewer·
eall. SWI, Wttt not
have
PDIDII
bla II
lAIIt &amp;DIIsacb

51 CHEVY o;,· ron flat bed·,
1-----------1 new
oak bed &amp; parts. good
condition, S40j). JIU·B82·

VInyl• Aluminum
SIDING

LOAN.ASSUMPTION LOW INTEREST
- Move in now. SpaCiOus· tri·level. ~
BR, LR, family room, large modern kit·
chen, 2 baths, natural gas heat, central
air, deluxe fireplace, two car garage. ,
SuPerior location . Close to hospital. .
#897

Gold: tnYIIliOI marktd
1111, 1611, 1111 I clan
rint•• dtnlall. silver
coins or stertine. Brlnt
1o Tope fyrn. Ask for
Tom, Top III'ICII tYtrV·
dayi Or IN NITS Coins,

OpenlDc llld: . .

SERVICE
Wlt.... st-·Eieclric

OPEN

1ACRE2B~DROOMCOTTAGE

'·

.A

It
Vum.ab'-: Nellller

Scout Camp Rd ..

'N ice com for tabl e home wfth nice la rge shade
concrete f ro nt porch, l~t s of fruit treoe"',.~:,"!,:i:~l
cherry , plum and p·each-i.
rr
vines, good garden land. a l
Rural water,' 2 ca r garage, fu el oi l F.A . turnace.
ea seme nt , barn approx. 16'X24' . Pri ced in th e

•••

....

_t&gt;lumbl~ ond

\

tQIIUI .

11 ·19· 1 mo.

_c:;,...;;.n.

til: I
.IOIUI
10111'11
.II:H

81

... - ·- -

-~--- . ..:.··--·

'!

Ph. 992~7583

remodeling_
.Joollng anil '"""'

urr

1972 NOVA SS, good con·
dillon, tlOO. Rebuilt 350,
small block. 5350. Both
----------f-----~----t--------'---1 $&lt;100. Phone30H95·337S.

GOOD TIMES - Country kitchen with ~diolning
family room is perfect for Informal entertaining,
family fun. Four large bedrooms including a master
surte with a walk· in closet and private b_ath. Familv
bath. Formal dining. 2 ·car attached garage. 11112
acres. very private location near Rio Grande .
$79,500.

COZY COMFORT -~or
singles, young married
or retired couple. 2
bedroom, c;lining room,
k!tchen·and parlor . A lit·
fie . work . and
Imagination ca'n make
this
home
·your
"castle". Deep lot goes
to the water's edge. In
city , 516.000.

QIU

Experience
GretRoush

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

ELE~TRIC

152Third Ave.
614· ..6-2716

I
I

METAL BUILDINGS
FOR SALE
Farm, commercial
Garages, Storage
Order now for spring
delivery and avoid '82
price inc rene.
Call
ROBERT5
CONSTR. CO., INC.
256·1160
6-tP.M.

SEPTIC TANKS
INSTALLED
• Water
e·oas
• E lectrlc • Sewer
Lines Installed.
Ph. 367·7560

.Q7
.QIDID

Hll

14 Years

Clll742·3195

· ' SKATE-AWAY
Ope~~

tutnl

A lUll

REESE TREICHIIG

AERIAL BUCJ&lt;ET
TRUCM SE.IIICE
47 Fl. Worltlnt Helthl
PASQUALE

!S-IMI

.J7

• E t«trlca I work
• R ooflng work

Ltl Gtor.. Mllltr
check your - · • tloctrlcalayaltm .
Rtsldtnllal
&amp; Commtrtlal

-Addon6ond

BRICk

142 ACRES - Good home with 4 bedrooms, bC!th
with shower, fully carpete&lt;l, 2 large barns, tobacco·
base, 12 acres bottom land.
11009

SURPLUS CARS, JEEPS,
ANI:l
TRUCKS
now
available thru local gover·
nment sales, call 1·714·-569·
02&lt;11 for your directory on
how to pUrchase. Open 2&lt;~
hours.

New Homes - extensive remodel·
Int.

For 111 of your wlr·
lngllftda.

Real Estate- General

l'«rruson tn-

.,
•Att

NORTH

FAIIPUII TRACIOI
IIC..

n

- - · R·ea1 EStale:_:-Gene-rili - ·- - - - - -

1980 Oldsmobile Toronado
Brougham Coupe. Real
leather interior. Ziebart
protected, many extr'as ,
Will sell for less than
wholesale if cash deal or
will consider · trade. 992·
3491. This car was ad·
vertlsed last week end and
deal didn't go thru. Those
who called, please call
again.

2 LOTS IN GREENACRES
Lot if 21. Sidewa lk, 75'X l 48'
Lot if 23, vaca nt 88 ' fron tage by 148 depth . Priced to
se l l.
~ 334 - ~ 333
DUTCH COLONIAL
StyiQ, beauty , cha rm, comfort - a ll descri bes this
ho me, 4 BR, 2112 baths, equ ipped eat·[n k itchen,
fami l y room with fireplace, formal living and din·
ing room. You won' t believ~ thi s home unless you
see it tor you r self . Ma ke your appointment today to
wa lk in to th.e entr ance of one of fhe most lovel y'
hOmes in the area : Priced in the $80'S.
. f1 322
WOW!
Look what you can ge t on a land contrad at 9% in·
ter est . Owner reduced the price $7,900 and is
anxious to sell . This lllree bedroom spotless, air
conc;titioned hOme has 2 ba lhs, living storage
bu ildi ng , heated ga rage, all furniture i ncl~ded.
Everything you need in one purch·ase : In city school
N407
di strict .

eChtLIMs
eiiHIIC SVslet!ls
Ll't9t or Small Jlllls
I'H.,2-247l
12·20-1 mo. pd.

dU-1 Equipment.

full basement and large fenced 'lot, low utilities.
Only
$29,500

.

eLolor
eT..-w
e,._eSowtr

MatHY

NEW LARGE
7ROOM .
BRICK HOUSE

GOOD CITY LOCATION- Cozy 3 BR ranch with

WHAT A BUY
Ready to Move? We've go t i ust wh ql you are looking
for ~ Furni shed 'o r unfurnished . Great for sta rting
ou t or re t irem ent. Extra ni ce 1979 Model Mobile
Home on appro x. 112 acre leve l lot with chain link
fence. Like New . Pr iced in the low 20's.
w518
FIND YOUR ROOTS
(Extra LotAvai'lable)
The perf ec t all br'ick. home is r ight here in Northup
and feature-s 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths, spacious living
room, _p ining area, cheery k itchen. 2 car garag~.
patio, plus much more. Call now and let us make
your dreams come true .
# 512
NI CE- CLEAN
6 Room house, bath·, ce ll ar, 2 storag e buildings, own
water sy-ste m nice country atmosphere, nice
ground , tots of shrubbery, large level garden area
and pr ice-d only $29,900. Y.ou must see this one.
Phone.
· # 516

AutO for Sale

OFFICE 446-7013

'517

eBock• DuiiiP Trucks

1977 Dod~e Aspen. • door, 6
cyl., automatic with air.
·LOW miles, Will sell for
wl!ole•ale. 992-3.91.

Purebred Short Horned
bull calf, snow white . Extra
good blood line . Born in
July, 378·6152.
•

REAt"CLOSE TO
WELL BUll T
GALLIPOLIS
AND COZY
p.. brick hOme that you
In Mint Condition
can, get with . a small
3 or 4 bedrooms with
down pr~ym e nt and low
la rg e .closets .
One
in terest rate. 6 rooms, 3
bedroom~.
basement, , bedroQm is perfect for
office or sewing roOm .
and ga rage, one floor
Livil')g r oom, dining
plan Nice landscaped
room , bath a nd eat-in
lot
natUral Qas, F.A
kitchen wi th built-in
f urhace . Like new.
cabin et s. Fron t and
Don't delay. cal l today.
qack
por c hes ,
full
basement and garage
w ith 3 4 acre more or
LOTS ON BLACKTOP
te ss, in City Schools.
ROAD-57,500
Priced in the mid 40's.
We have 2 lots si tua ted
Call today fqr deta ils on
on Bu l avil le Porter
Road . Approx . 'h acre
the charming home.
·each . Ca ll for details.
! 519
1510

.o-n

auto. 985-~&lt;46.

P'olled Charolais bulls . 9
mo. old reg. purebred, ,ex·
cellent polled lives. George
Woodward. Cal1379·2597.

~

PIWNS
.EXCAVAnNG

1969 Plymouth wagon. 318 ·

Ir~=:::========;::==========:w

..

•

1977 ·cutlass Supreme
Salon, ' PS, PW,
PB,
reclining buckets, T·Top,
velour Interior . Like new.
$.4150. 614-992·6362.

1066,

·Services Offered

Business SerVices

CANADAY.
REALTY

58 Jetp, metal topr runs
IIQOd. $750.00. 256·6769.

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle , International
Olive,r
pups, 304-895·3958.
1850, ~ohn Deer:e &lt;10·20, New
Masste Ferguson 285, John
AKC Dobermans, red &amp; Deere ·wlng disC, John
Deere,. &amp; 5 bi)"Om plows, .a
ta n, JQA-675-691~ .
row pl~ters anfii other
FINCHES and Golden m-a chinery. Russ Brother's
Farm Machinery, 6 miles ·
Pheasants, 304·895·3972.
South of Jackson on St. Rt.
139. can 286·2731.
Tractor
live new
PTO,
new
and Freg,
used tools,
6
ft. blade~. $150. Camden
Farm Equipment. 446·4641 .

Aula lor Solo
19l9 ANIC Concard otallon·
4 lpHd trans.,
22.997 miles, tow mileage,

The Sunday

· ll eal Estate-· General

71

A·l &lt;ondition. Call :z.l5.5294.

1675.

Ohi-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

1981

w-.

Jividen's Fmrm EQUiP·
ment. See the hay equipment of the future, new
from Verm%r·· also a full
line Of equipment from
Long, Kuhn, Kelley &amp;
many others. Wit!l vour
selectior,t of parts &amp; com plete servlc. Usea Hydro 70
tH tractor Oike new&gt;. 1 445
LOI')g tractor, 2 rakes,
hayf:11nd , New Holland
round baler, bus·hog, disk
&amp; cultivators. Check our
prices &amp; compare. Ca-11446·

Real Est&lt;1le- General

'

by Larry Wright

w. va.

17 8

Vlid

Ill I oclc

fll Poid """""
IIOBrooma
91 Blr logelly

92Sumup

Wllllngo

113 Looked

21&lt;k"'w-.of

lnlonlly
114 TIJ)O of

211-

-t

- 118--...... . 21 Cl!lmiJing
:~~..-

31

u

1

...-

33Chi1Ruu

lnfl

81 Qllll onct

40-r:lly
41TIIal

43-

,.

41147-

... cw.....,

Allbr.

sec..,

lor one

97-

too Dipotho~og
102IOIMiloT-

"""'

IIIIIDioturbon:o

1t211rd
tt3i)Ove'l

114 Pounding

"""""'*''
....

1180pon
II&amp; a....

Konoo.etc.

120Break to

51 MllillOII&amp;ida

,__ ....
ac , noe•OI

51-

-tta-ai..-.
·-·
..
_
,__
=·.,_,_ ··121 Contw
122t23Actor

.....

Knight,

54Roglon

M-

MOI!glntl
IIIT-'o

11-'lnofgbbor .

Alluno

17Hodpluno

70 Pl'll:*ly-

12~-I
74PI

77PI tna"
711RidO&lt;

125 -lllgg«128Tiil

127 Hill
t29 Want
131 Colonize
132knlloaoo
133-

134 Alliltants
138Aw138140 l..lbot.oe
141-or

,

142-duck
147 Ac1or
Wlllocto
1411 Old

CGnf

149

A ll-It&amp;t

Ceo""""

151PicoW:153Ela:lomotlon
155Mam

I

�Times-Sentinel

W

va.

·.

Camp Conley residents defeat issue
Byi.MI'"Ip'IJef
CAMP CONLEY - The incorporation of C8lllp Conley was
defealed Friday when 205 registered
VGIIIn cut tlll!lr decisions on the
illue which lint evolved when a
group of citizens petitioned the
County Commission Of Mason County lnJuuary.
_
- Tile -votes, which were tallied at
the old 82 Alllo Sales In Camp
Ceally, showed 1sti not accepting
~poration as opposed to 70 who
flmlred II.
Josephine 0 Tommy" Hanes,
county clerk, reported vote• were

fully taWed ataboutl0t).ID. J'rldly.

Sbe ll1cl the ~ ctmr'dx
IIIII the Muon Cwnty a.rd at
Electi'llll will cbeck fw "c!wl!enge
hallotl," IUch U voles NCeiwd by
nonruidenta or nonrqiltered
voters In the Camp Conley pnclnel
Spokumln Keith
who
represents Camp CoaiiJ Nlldeat•
for lncorporatlon,llid lhll morning
he felt the election wu unfair.
"The.I'I!IUIII weren't unupecled
considering the county llovem-

B.....

menta' handling of the election and
thole partic(pelilil! !rom outside
Interests," he said. "We would like

to seeiiiiOther another vola lpbl."

be lddld.

Diecrtblq tbe tumaat u "a·
ceutve," BliP IIGted 411 blllall
were 011 hand wlllch -'d Jllftlllt 1
20 percent • - vote, cletmtnl
more votes would be aeeepted
above those cuted by tell*red
voters.
"The people up bere are a·
pectlnJI to get a fair coantlng," he
lllid. "We jut Willi a fair 111d
unbiased elaction."
Last nl11ht'a election waa
previously scheduled for Oct. 8, but
was delayed at that time when a

without mentioning names of an-

nounced or prospective candidates.
State Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey, whose Office currently is
beset with embezzlement and other
investigations, was present as p
member of the state committee.
She did not speak, but received
wann applause when recogni~ed by
Tipps, along with the party's other
state officials who were on hand Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson and
Secretary of State Anthony J.

Celebrezze.
Tipps' remarks about endOrsements came when he announced the upcoming appointment
of a special "candidate identification committee" and said it

wiD make recommendations to the
executive corrunittee.
Democrats have a long lisi of candidates .for state office, especially
governor. Mrs. Donahey, at least until recently, was regarded as an
almost certain candidate lor reelection.
She has said she will consider her
political future during the holidays
while vacationing in Florida, as a
special audlt and prosecutor's prope
of her office continue.
So far, no leading Democrat has
suggested publicly that Mrs.

WASHiNGTON !API- Robert J.
Myers, one of the nation's leading
Social Security experts, quit the
agency in 1970 with a parting shot at
what he said were liberals who were
driving the program into fiscal ruin.
Now, after nine months in the
Reagan administration, Myers is
resigning again from the agency

with a blast at the Office Of
Management and Budget for what
he calls its "disastrous" meddling in
Social Security's affairs.
Myers will leave his post as deputy
commissioner for -programs on Jan.
8.
.
In a resignation letter released
Friday, Myers endorsed President
Reagan's efforts to restore the
program's fiscal health and the
"vast majority''

or

the specific

reforms Reagan proposed earlier
this year to curtail the growth of
benefits.
But Myers, Social Security's chief
actuary from 1947 to 1970, sharply
criticized the way poliey is set by
Social Security's parent agency, the
Department of Health and Hwnan
Services, and "higher organizations

such as" OMB.
In his letter, he said OMB and its
civil servants draw up policy '
"without regard to the social and
economie aspects of the Social
Security program - and even the
poUtical aspects. ••
"This was well exemplified by the
disastrous results that · occurred
from the proposal to eliminate the
minimwn benefit for all persons
currently on the rolls and also from
the proposal to sharply increase the
early retirement reduction factor,"
Myers wrote Health and Hwnan Services Seeretary Richard S. SchweiKer.
Reagan withdrew the sweeping
Social Security refonns he proposed
last May because of the uproar over
his attempt to slash early retirement
benefits for 62-year-&lt;&gt;lds from 80 percent of full benefits to 55 percent.
OMB Director David A. Stockman
and White House domestic adviser
Martin Anderson reportedly played
the decisive roles in pressing for
those cuts.
On Wednesday, Congress preserved the $122-a-month minimwn

benefit for 3 million old people. The
elimination approved last sununer
had been scheduled to take effect in
March.

•

relnatitiMd .. ortcml .• ....,..

mlle ol land In mld-Octabtr llld
Mason County Circuit Jadte
Clarence Watt dllmlaaed the
petition.

Myers, 69, said in an interview
' that he expects to he more effective
in pressing for Social Security
-refonn from outside government.

POMEROY-Kevin · Knapp, 20,
was cited to Syracuse
Mayor's court as the result of a hitskip Wednesday at 10 p.m. in the
village, Of Syracuse that was not
discovered until Thursday the Meigs
Countr Sheriff's Department reported.
According to the sheriff's depart: ment Knapp was traveling west on
Water Street at the Intersection of
Bridgeman when he reportedly went
to sleep. Knapp's vehicle went Off
the highway on the left and struck a
veltlcle owned by Jean Hall.
Hall's vehicle sustained moderate
damage to the left front fender and
the right rear side. Knapp's vehicle
had moderate damage to the left
front fender.
Knapp will appear b1 court
Tuesday evening.

·c

OAK Hli,.L - The A. P. Green
Refractories Co.'? u. s. manufacturing plants have set an•r safety
record wtth the complellon of one
million aafe 11\an-houra ol operation,
a company first
In late November, the Green company'• 20 U. S. plants surpassed the
1,000,000 man-hour milestone
without a lest-time injury. The local.
. A.P. Green plants here contributed
to that record achievement.
While individual A.P. Green plants had aceeded the million hour
mark previously, this was the first
lime In the hlatory of the company
that all ollts U. S. plants had put
together a consecutive periOd ol one
million safe working hours.
The aafely streak was started on
A\111. 2. The 20 U. S. plants of the
Green company have operated continuously since without a lost-time
injury.
M. D. Lowe, director Of manufac-

.

ane~rtte

o fne VvCif~t
con cos . .

oullrte1r1atheGreen~~~··~~

·

Missing car found
UNCOLN CITY, Ore. (AP)
Police said on Friday they have
traced an •abandoned car to two
missing teenagers from Newton
Falls, Ohio.
Uncoln City Pollet Chief Michael
~olden &amp;aid the missing youths are
Cynthia D. CloTier, 19, and Robert
Kralik, 17, who disappeared from
Nj,wton Falls on Sept. 10.
Holden said Miss Carrier's car
wal. found in lhe parking lot Of North
Uncoin Hospital in this coastal town
on Nov, 14 when crews were
sweeping up stonn debris.
Pollee _searched the car, which
contained clothing and toiletries.

Save on quality merchandise all over the store. Selections are good.
We'll gladly help you with your shoppl"f. -Santa Claus will be In the
store Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 6 rJO to 7:30.

RFELDS IN

jury." .
Also In Mexico, Tex McFarlane,
group manager, says he ~ very
pleased with this record and would
Uke to personally congratulate each·
'¥0Pioyee for the part they played in
making lhll rteord.
··
MacFarlane added, "records like
this are earned one hour at a time by
conacientious employees working
together safely."
The A.P. Green Refractories Co. is
a leading manufacturer and
marketer of heat-resistant
materials and installation oervices
for industrial furnaces.
Its 20 U. S. plants are located in
Besaemer, Eufaula, and Kimberly,
Als.; Uttle Rock, Ark.; Pueblo,
Colo.; Macon, Ga.; Troy, Idaho;
Morris, Di.; Fulton and MeXico,
Mo.; Woodbridge, N. J.; MassiUop,
Ohio; Pryor, Okla.; Climax,
Philadelphia and Tarentum, Pa.;
and Freeport and Sulphus Springs,
Texas.

lANDMARK DmECTORS - Seen here are members of the new Landmlrli: beard of dlreclono, elected
after their recent reatructortnc meeting In Columbus.
RepresentiDC tlleir districts are (from left, aeated)

Consumer panel seeks members
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Office of
Consumers' Counsel is conducting a
search lor qu&amp;Wied candidates to
serve as a representative Of the
pubUc on the Ohio Power Sjting
Commlsalon.
The only statutory requirement
for consideration of a candidate Is
that he/she must be an engineer.
The Consumers' Counsel wiD submit the names Of three candidates Of
Gov. Rhodes in January. The governor will then, with the consent of the
Senate, appoint one 01 the candidates to serve as the public
representative on the power siting
commission for a four-year tenn.
The power siting commissioo was
established to review the location Of
11Wity facilities such as power plants

·

·biiBUlOVA

tt 'tUlJI' taste In v.Qr~hes

Of(~rs ~~~
•
service

""" hlghe( lhOn """ budgel,

come see ou Cacvelles.

.. k . . .ld uv.rtcn
wt 1 ~111 briCIIII
u~n~~s

. - ..,......,....u
jeWs . ...

C. SilwlnMt Clll . IH""-1 w.t

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

Seeing Is belle'VIng .. so stop In soon.

LCielcltonlt~~~~~~

: : . :· - " " ' 17)1wts

II ~ dill,

17 jnlla . ...

~

Au1iM11tit

8ul0oolllll"""" , • •

w.• ano
...............
dill.

ij:ow to cut_you-r .
taxes--and save

EVANSVILLE, Ind.- Credithrift
Financial, which operates
Credithrift of America offices In this
area, has · initiated a new commercial lending service aimed at
businesses and individual large
borrowers.

....N

LSMa.l. lttgM~

lhey loolr mogOWI&lt;;enl. WO&lt;k e&gt;&lt;:epllonally well Ol'd
stay occurote tGr vears and yeas. Corovelle bv
1!UoYa pub II c&gt;l,logelher at a price !t-all o lroclion of
what vou'd expect to pay fat o watch as nne as this.

and transmission lines planned for
-An ability to make independentconstruction in Ohio after &lt;Xtober, .· minded judgments and an ability to
1974. Part of the duties Of the com- stand up to special interest
mission Include detennining the ac- pressures;
tual iieed for proposed new facilities,
- A judicious regulatory temas ·weD as detemrining the com- perament with an ability to work on
patibiUty Of the proposed prOjects athreememberpublicbody; and
with the environment.
- An awareness Of the conThe public representatjve ~&gt;oil .equences of regulatory decisions.
receive as compensation fo•· id-&gt; serAU interested applicants should
vice on the commission $5,000 per send their resinne to Mr. Thomas
year, pius on-the-job expenses.
Katzenmeyer, at the Office of ConIn addition to the requirement Of sUmero' Counsel, no later than
engineer, the Office Of Conoumers' December 28,1981.
Counsel will be screening applicants
Interviews will be conducted at
for:
the January 12, 1982, meeting Of the
-A commitment to open decision- Conswners' Counsel Governing
making, including lull public ex- Board in Colwnbus.
ploration of the Issues involved;
- Mr. Thomas Kalzenmeyer, Office
- A sensitivity to consumer in- Of Conswners' Counsel, 137 E. State
terests;
Street, Coiwnbus, Ohio 43215.

--

•

(}RAVE~. .·~;
.

Darl R. Rlndfus1, T.W. Smilll, Robert Hesteraod JIJim
H. ZIUDbetlle; (&amp;taDtllac, lrom left) Andrew J. (Joe)
Blhl; WIUlam H. Kyle, Norman H. Smith, David 0.
Miller, Donald E. Beoorhneider and Robert L. Stewart.

G. f'IWIK RICHARDS

•'*~~

CARLS. HUNT

•
R&amp;M makes three promotions
GALLIPOLIS - Three position
, changes In the _local and national ·
management Of Robblnl &amp; Myers
have been recenUy announced.
At the Galllpolls plant, which handleo electric motor productloo, have
made two promot1111111 tn· the design
eng~ne«~ng group, according to Bill
Van Dyke, department held,
Promoted are G. Frank Rlcha~.
factory cOntact speoiallst, and carl
~unt, drafting supervisor.
The Richards' have lived on.
Shoestring Rldl!e Road In Gallipolla
for the laat five years. His flmlly lnciudts hli wife, Unda, and two
daughttn, Laurie and Sara. He is a
member ol the I!Odety of American
Value Engineers and the In'
teroatlonal Association of Quality
Circles.
Hunt and his wife Debbie have
Uved in the Gallipolis area for the
pis! 13 years. They two children: a ·

son, Spencer, and a daughter, Jody
Sue.
·
At the R&amp;M office in Dayton, it
was announced recently that
Stephen Sorak baa been named
general manager for AC Motors Of
the electric motor division.
James T. Sakal, R&amp;M vice
president, said SOtak, In his newly
crealed position, will be responsible
for all AC motor and geannotor
oparationa In Springfield, Gallipolis
and Tlllahaasee, Fla.
"The creation of this position will
provide a stronger focus on our AC
motor business," lle said. "Equally
ImpOrtant, it will provide more effective manasement direction
toward long-range opportunltlea for the division in 111!1' markets."
Sorak will he 1espo118ible for AC
motor planlllng, 1111rk~ and
aaleo, manufacturiftll and design

· engineering and financial functions,
'he said.
Electro-Craf.l Corp., an acquired
DC motor unit of the divlsloin, will
continue to manage its operations
from. headquarters in Hopkins,
Minn.
Sorak comes to R&amp;M from
Dlsston, Inc., Greensboro, N.C.,
where )Je wu senior vice president
for their Industrial and consumer
· divisions and export affiliate,
Dlsstilll, Mexico. His experience in- ·
eludes product development and
manufacturlntl alartup opetations
for transformer., DC motors, battery chargers for power tools and
lawn care equipment. He is a
graduate of Renanelaer Polytechnic
Institute, troy, N.Y., wtth a
bachelor's de8ne In mechanical
eilgineering. He will ~ relocating to
the Dayton area soon.

By SHEILAH KAST
In 1982, beeause Of a change in the
tax law, ail working Americails will
(Last Ina aeries)
NEW YORK (NEA) - One Of the be able to pen suxh tax-deferred
greatest tax shelters for working retirements accounts. And they wiD
people, whether they are employees be able to enjoy greater tax breaks
or self-employed, ill to create their beeause they will be able to deposit
· own retirement fund and postpone larger amounts in those accounts.
paying taxes on it.
The major types of accounts we'll
It's a tax break for doing diseuss are Individual Retirement
The linn will noW he able to make
available large loans throughout the something you'd probably like to do Aceounts (called IRAs) for ·emanyway- prepare for retirement.
ployed peopie.and Keogh Plans for
-United States.
.
These plans let you take part of self-employed people.
your income and stash it away in a
This year, if you are eligible, you
separate
account.
Whatever
you
can
set aside into an IRA aceount
The same service has been .
either
contribute
to"
plan
in
the
course
Of
a
$1,500 or 15 percent of your inprovided at Credithrifl's national
becomes
deductible
on
tha~
come,
whichever is less. Your
year
headuqartero here for a number of
year's
income-tax·return.
spouse
who
works ean do the same
years. Thill represents the finn's fir·
thing
in
a
separate
account.
Since
you
have
reduced
your
inst effort at a larger marketing
come
by
saving
for
your
future,
this
If
you
have
a
spouse
who does not
scheme.
means you are being rewarded for work for pay, then you can set up
being thrifty. It's as if Uncle Sam what is called a "spousaii_RA." That
were
adding $1 to each $2 or $3 that means that you set up twin accounts
· · Commercial loans are loans made
you
saved.
that ean shelter a total Of $1,750, half
for other than peroonal, famii1 or
of
it in each account.
That's just Benefit No. i. Benefit.
howJehold purposes, and are norNext year you can set up an IRA
mally made for busineos r~asons to No. 2 provides that none Of the inc&lt;irporations, proprietors or other terest earned on your retirement even if you're already covered by a
typeo ol businesses. Commercial nest egg is taxable until after you · c'Ompany pension plan or taking- part
lendinllls unregulated and the tenns ·retire and start to withdraw it. (You in a profit-sharing P.lan.
Or, if you don't want to set up an
and conditions of a loan may vary to will be penalized if you withdraw
IRA, you can make extra voluntary
the extent which Is agreeable to both any money from your IRA before
payments into your company penyou tum 5912; you must start withparties.
. drawins in the year you tum 7012.)
sion plah, up to eertain limits, and
i!helter that income from taxes.

'

OU class inspects GDC pperation

land and around parlll of Ohio on Friday 11 !emperllturea dipped to the low teeu. (AP Laaerphoto).

SPICIAL SALI PRICES ON
CHRISTMAS 'GIFT ITIMS
CO~TINUIS ALL -WIIK

congratulated employees for
achieving the aafety record. "This
record must be ohared equally by
· each employee in our U.S. plants, he
said. "I am J11'0U4 to be a part of a
team with so much Interest in
safety."
A.P. Green plants now have one of
the best safety rectli da in ·the refractories industry and also for aU industry, according to Corporate
Safety MallllJler David McCumber.
He lllid for the past six consecutive years the Green company's
corporate aafety rating lias improved eaeh year. In 1975, there
were 1011 lost-lime injuries at A.P.
Green plants. This year the nwnber
of lost lime Injuries has been .
reduced to.only 10, '
Joe Frank, manager of A.P. Green
plants at Jackson and Oak Hill said,
'.'I'm very· pleased with the record
and particularly proud of local employees who have worked more than
420,000 hQIU'S without a lost time in-

•

s.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

The regional cooperative achieved
nearly a bllllon dollars in total sales
volume in the 1980-31 year.

.

N. POMEROY

WINTER FROLICKING- Melody Clay, her ooa,
Chad, t, 11111 Agusto Villa lake a late laD frolic billie
ctevelaDd anow. Heavy onow coolillued lo faD In Cleve-

.users.

1

The department Is investigating
the theft of a semi-aatomatic rifle
that was taken from a pickup truck
owned liy Tim Gillian, Coolville
while parked at a nigth .club lat~
Friday evening.
Entry into t!Je truck· was made by
breaking the wing on the driver's

door.

ply and marketltlg cooperative
headquarted In Columbus. The
reponal Landmark - aucb 88 the
one In PooJeroy - serva locallyowned and 1oc•l1Y·Ioverned
cooperativea tiJroUjJhaut Ohio by
provldlnJI wholelale purchulng of
!ann suppllea, fertilizers, feeds,
seeds and petrolewn ao well by
marketing grain and eggs.
The Landmark llyslem Is considered the largest marketer of ·
grain and eaaln Ohio, ao well 118 the
lat~est manufacturer of livestock
feeds aiid one ol the largest Slippliers of fertilizers, !ann chemicals
and petroleum to !ann and rural

Green Refractories set record

Deputies charge. driver in mishap
Syrac~.

COLUMBUS - In a recent special 0t -I locally-owned and Jocallydeleptes ~ling govemed lAndmark 88110Ciation
local member cooperative wu elllllble to run for the board. In
IUClCIItiona nOminated and elected addltlclll, one board member Is a
the board of dlrecton ol Lindmark, ' public member narninaled by the
Inc.
Ohio FIUill Bureau.
The apeclal meeting and election
~ling Dlatrict I will he Anproceu wu COIItinued pi11Jil'e88 in drew J. (Joe) Blhl ol Wheelenburg.
the tellructur1ng of the Lindmark The dlalrlct c:overa the Athens, Fairboard ol directors, startinJ1 with a field and Rella countlea' Landmarks
board proponal several weeU IJIO.
and the Melp apd Scioto area FBThe landmark board ol directors .CAa.
had been made up of 36 farmers
lmmediat.ely following the elecelected from their home areas. The tion, tile board met and elected
board also aerved a dual role as the Robert Heater of Trenton as
board qf ~for the Ohio Fann president and Robert Stewart of
Bureau Federation.
J~ett 88 vice president. Heater has
l.lnder the new structure, there are served as Landmark president Jince
nine board members nominated and 1172 under the previous board struc·
elected from districts tlJrouJI)Jout ture.
Ohio representing local Landmark
Landmark Is a regional !ann s~
cooperatives. Any fanner-member
meeting,

Riven lllollr Co.
.
Tile commlulon . eventuU,

Parting Reagan appointee blasts -liberals

.

'

lllablladiiiJID...,. 'l'llole. .
calbleb ,,...,. . . . . . . . .
plant, the Palllt Pin d lel"d+
Inn, C1t7 Ice U'lel and the 'rwo

Donahey - who has not been acAt that time, he said the full comcused of wrongdoing - .should atep mittee wiD decide whether- to enaside. Last week, Tipps said this dorse at all, whether to endorae for
would he premature and that most Of all or just some offlcea, and finally
the people of Ohio haven't even star- whether to back . .iflc Candidates.
ted thinking about the 1982 el~ions.
If there are endorsements; they
But in a his brief speech at the will be tnade hefore'the Candidates'
meeting, which preceded Ohip filing deadline, which falls in late
Democrats' annual Christmas par- March.
ty, Tipps said, without mentioning
Fergllson is expected to run for renames, that "our party is not a party election, while Ceiebreae ill looking
to force people out of races, and we at the race for attorney general.
are not going to do that now."
•
He said so far as he is concerned
Attorney General William J.
"everyone who says they are a can- · Brown will run for governor, along
didate is a eandidate."
with fonner Lt. Gov. Richard F.
He said the special committee, Celeste. Others considering the top
which will have about IS members, job include House Speaker Vernal G.
will begin meeting early next year Riffe Jr., D-New BQston, along with
and probably will make Its recom- fonner Cincinnati Councilman Jerry
mendations to the full committee in Bp~nger, Cincinnati . businessman
February.
·
Marvin Warner, and poasilly others.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag-

Landmark restructures board

rr. ·

Democrats won't force candidates off ballot·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
Democrats will not try to Ioree any
eandidates 'Off their primary ballot
next year and may or may not make
endorsements, state Chainnan Paul
Tippasays.
'
He made the comments Friday
night at o meeting of the State
Democratic Executive Committee,

Dec. 20, 1981

•

potltlln llled Ill llpt. • by
.......... tlaaqM;&amp; 'lee IDd
1*1 '~•clbac•'t ,.....,.
to
eablla . ,. .,
the lllltlal propGiad 111'11

••nrte

0

lloftiiNN

Cot,,. elfltl IIJitrJftlll and
tour obiiiR 1t1 a1·'1t WW
High, Lolt, lllfiiJHII public

..me. bttllciL

GAWPOLIS - l)r. Sally Schaaf
ol Olllo University reCently lleld a
day-IOIJI -ion • Gallipolis
De¥alopmental Center in partial
fulfillment of the course
requirements for the advanced
"'•'~• of the nature and Needs of

tbt IWa'I.Y Relardntl.
8anll · Wlntlh, ODe

prGgrarn

dlnlltor, 81..,...... questions of the
dun lfler vtiWIIII• tape documenlinl elllldlu- at QDC prior to

IRIII'IMEIIDS

••mt

~flvtytii'IIJIO.

FOIIIIwln8 the

~ the claa

-t.er.

bepn ·a tour Of Ull
Bub
Scl&amp;tt, Unit A IIIIIIIJIW, -'ad tile
ct.. liD Unit A wlllreiUeha!'lf Cook
and 11erm1n Parelll demoriiRIIated
JII'GFII'III and WWirad quallana
cAnC?IIIill the lllldallflha m11Jilply

~~===

·tMill In lldPNJihl. lilt prlerilf
naeda to l'tlllllllatt• lhroutlb

Jli'OIII'IIIIID.
.

,

The clua next visited Unit D,
home of cllenta with the hil!heot funclloatng level at the developmental
center. Jean Willon, LPN, on duty at
All•lr relidenee, answered
queallons COilCel'lllng the npeclal
!oedlcal needa of mentally retarded .
people•
Following lunch, Nancy .
Wedemeyer, Unit C1111111J1er, joined
the clua In lollrinl!lwo Uvtnc areu
in her unit, No. 6CL!II and No. 13-J.
Wedemeyer explained · the
~ of eacb cllellt'a tnlnlng
by the lnlkiiiC down of annual
soaJa iMo IICMII)' objectiVII, Since

each cllalt'a Individual aeedn an

dlffl7

I, 1 lqiiUticated l)'lllnln of
~ - IIIUII ha followed to
defllll J111111• or a need for

?:::::~ Sehaaf

............ NCiptiM 1181H7
Drive Ia Unit 8, where the
clllnts enlertalnad the claaa 118 their

Bt"*"'

'I

guests as a part ol .IOdallzation
programs. The 1111111 were sin-vel~
refreshments, viewed a llllde'llhow ol
the put IIWillllll''l actlvitiea. AtlendiiW thllr reception, auwerlntl
apeclflc qllllllullf the clua, were
the followinl! ODC atafl: Luella
Henry, Darotlly Rippey, Jerry
Mulle,and Eva Meeoy.
Pam M11ur1 of Gllll'dlaa·servtees
Lid. apob brlell,y with tile •
Go

~ thai Ohio 111ha ani)' " ' "

which

provides

IUirdlanshlp
GSL
with no reiatlveo. She

throltlh an Of'lllllzl!tion auch u

tor c111nts

to the claa ell•
plal•'ll .,.mceo a client wtu. GBL

(II'IIVidld literature

racelvea.
Uvltli area Iliff on IOI'IIIadleye
Avtau., who JII'GII'IIII U.. clltltts
and manal!ed thla Innovative
IOCilllutlm P1'1lJ11'811l are Edna
Rodpn, Florence Clay, Judy
Warren, Dorothy Drummond, and
Until Harper.

\
HOU8BPAYII
1taldn ...- ._ ..... ll.ae Ia lib IV m, lllcll.
recelllly. Weld, I , _ Cilryller Celp. wldte collar

• • • llu .._ allwallnll to meet tbe . . . .m.th
_.... paJIIIUIIIIIDce be wu laid off IJ month•
ap. CAP Luerpltoto).

�•

.·
Page--F.-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Dec. 20, 1981

Dec. 20, Jtll

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaHipolis; Ohio-l'oint Pleasant, vv. v a.

. Pomeroy-Middleport-Gilllipolis, Ohio-Point Pleuant, w. va.

•

•

.

'

WASHINGTON (AP) The
Agricalture Department uaed nearly
three tons ~ IIUJI'lnnarbt food enough to feed a family ri lour !or a

By BRYSON B.IBUI)I CARTER
Gallla Cuunty Ext.nsltm -'K••t

for quality and nondescript" wiih- fiss
GAWPOLJS. Burley tobacco remained strong second and third quality. By group, year - to dramatize Its new yearduring the ll&gt;ird week of auctlons, flyillf!S accounted for around six per- book.
To the dellsht Of pbotographers,
l'1!pOrts the Federal.State Market cent of sales, Cutter -14, leaf- 38,
officials
lllaged the colorful exhibit
News Semce. Most grade averages tips - seven, mixed - 29, nonof
hams,
eggs, bread, mUll, cereal
were slightly higher or remained the descript - three, and variOWl noand other food to highlight the year. same as last week. Quality was a lit- grade about four percent.
book's title - "WiD
Be
tle lower. The amount of tobacco
The Burley Cooperatives received EnoucbFood?"
placed under loan was relatively
210,703 pounds of tobacco this week
If certain things are done, such as
small. Although a majority (){ which raised the season to 638,665
safeguarding
the nation's soil and
markets held full sales the entire pounds. For the same period last
water,
the
outlook
is optimistic, its
week, a few reported light volume. year 10,409 pounds were placed unauthors
said.
But the December crop report, der loan.
The yearbOOk, an annual news
around 60 percent of this year's
The U.S. Crop Reporting Board in media event at the department, was
Burley production has been sold.
the December release sets producGross sales for the week ending tion of Burley at 719,755,000 pounds. underlaken as a food-and-farm
· December 10 totaled 147,484,047 This would represent an Increase of project on orders from Agriculture
pounds and averaged $180.77 per 162,200,000 pounds over last year's Secretary John R. Block soon after
·he took office last January.
hundred - up 57 cents from last production.
Block told reporters and others
week. The season figure stands at
gathered
near the food exhibit that
463,363,1J3 pounds averaging
The 1982 garden calendar is off the
a
"couple oi clouds" on the
there
are
1$80.02. For the first three weeks last press and available through the
horizon
but
that tlioae can be dealt
: season 384,976,732 pound' $165.94.
Cooperative Extension Service Ofwith
by
protecting
the nation's
· As of December 10 season average fice. Priee is $1 plus tax. We're open
"
resource
base"
and
by more ata
per cost for markets of interest of 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through
tention
to
conservation
and researGallia CountiaRS were: Ripley Friday at 1502 Eastern Ave.,
ch.
$176.74;
Huntington $177.73 ; Gallipolis, OH.
Maysville $178 and Morehead
In addition to daily tips on flower
$179.36.
and vegetable gardening, landscape
Resales totaled 19,900,266 pounds care, canning or freezing and
(11.5 percent of sales) this week and numerous others, there are maps
33,352,298 pounds (7:2 percent) for showing when first and last killing
the season. Non-auction reported to frosts may be expected in the spring
date totals around 22 million pounds. and fall. Too, there is a list of most
Fluctuations in grade averages vegetables grown by the home gar. amounted to only $1 or $2 per hun- dener that tells when to sow or plant,
. dred in most cases, with a few more depth in inches to plant, seed per 100
: gains than losses. Top average held fc&gt;et of row, days to maturity, distanat $184 per hundred poun~s. The c&gt;e between rows and between plants
lowest average for a supported and esthnated yield per 100 feet of
Holiday Food Safety
grade was $156 per hundred fo N2G. row.
GALUPOLJS - The holiday
Tobacco marketed in sheets and
Other information includes a gar- season is special to all of us. Family
. 'bales is bringing very close to the dening vocabulary, a rruit grower's and · friends gather to share in
· price paid for tied.
vocabulary and a chart showing traditional celebrations. This season
: This ;week's volume consisted of wl~en various fruits ripen.
may mean preparing ~ meal for a
· more tobacco classified. as fifth
crowd. And we want to be sure that
the food we serve at these special occasions is safe.
Let's consider some of the ways
~e can avoid foodborne illness, parbcularely over the holidays.
vulnerability of farmers to swings in
: WASHINGTON ( AP)
Of course, bacteria in food can
· Something that economists call the net income is worrisome.
cause
illness at any time of year.
"The result may be that the good
: "vulnerability factor" is making itFamilies
may enjoy meals every
• self felt among farmers who are un- . years are going to be better, and the
without
problems. But on
day
dergoing financial hard times, says .bad years may be worse," he said.
holidays
when
large groups get
"An important question is how you
the Agriculture Department.
together,
the
rich
foods and large
)Ileal Peterson of the department's transfer Income from the good times
quantities
present
different
Economic Research Service said to the bad."
problems.
You
may
not
have
enough
Not all farmers are hurting, Pete!"'
: swings in farm Income have exposed
refrigerator
space.
Bacteria
- even some usually well-off farmers son said, but many of them arF in 8
growing In unrefrigerated foods can
severe cash flow squeeze" because
: to severe hardship.
make
the party-goen very sick. ·
: "One of the major virtues of our production expenses have risen
Often
the symptoms are much
family farm system has been its faster than cash receipts for the
11
stomach
fiu" or virus. DiaiThea
ability to absorb low Income years second consecutive year.
vomiting,
stomach cramps and
"Some farmers wiU go through the
and bounce back without serious
other
unpleasant
effects can last a
wringer and cut back their
: hardship," he said.
few
hours
or
a
few
days. Elderly
"But this assumes high equity, operations or get out of farming," be
people
and
children
may become
: relatively stable costs of production, said. "Those who don't wiD pick up
dangerously
ill.
· and diverse crop and livestock the resources (such as land) the
What can we do to prevent these
mixes - not an altogether accurate others will lose."
illnesses?
In the past, Peterson said, such
image of the current farm
First, plan menus with care. Be
pressures resulted in farms getting
situation."
sure
that there Is room to·refrlKerat•
fewer
but
larger,
with
gains
in
_ Peterson's was included Monday
all
perishable
foods. Pum~kin piec,
overall
income
and
production
ef- in a new lssue of Farmline,
seafoods,
and
dishes made with ·
ficiency.
: published monthly by his agency.
eggs,
meat,
fish,
and poultry must
"I
don't
see
any
benefits
in
today's
' The department has predicted
·
be
kept
very
cold
(that
means under
.that net farm income this year will weeding-&lt;&gt;ut process because it'B not
40
degrees)
or
very
hot
(over 140
improve slighly from last year's just the so-called inefficient
degrees).
Bacteria
grows
best in
depressed level and that 1981 may be producers who are suffering," he
lukewarm
foods,
so
never
let
these
said. "The biggest losers are apt to
even tougher.
foods
stand
at
room
temperature
for
Peterson said the new be those carrying the heavii!M debmore
than
two
hours.
Second,
wash
ts."

There

.

'

Two Of the yearbook'a 30 aathon
- one per chapter - point 011t "a
ll'OWiDI gap between agricultltral
produdioo and uae overseas," Block
said.
"Thia could mean that by 111115 the
world may depend on the Unlled
States for 1~ percent of 1111
agricultural supplies, compared
witb 2 percent In the early 1150s and
11 percent In the late 111'108," he said.
"To meet this demand, U.S. (arm
exports would bave to Increase 8 to I

16,1'10 In the WubiDgtan area.lt eanllsted of 1,141 pounds of produce

percent 1 year."

The value of tti,l78 placed on the
food exblbll compares with $2,'198 a
family Of four gets as a tnax1mwn
food 1tamp aBowance, according to
the department's Food and Nutrition
Service.
Besides flu Pont and Safeway,
Sea-Land Service Inc., a division of
R.J. Reynolds Co., exlllbited a cargo

Questions about justifying the
yearbook's cost at a time food stamps and other federal programs are
being cut back were turned aside by
Block, who aa(d the publication "is a
traditional program.... We feel that
it is useful."
The huge pile of food was provided
by two companies - Du Pont and
Safeway - and was to be donated
later to the Washington area food
bank for dilltribution to needy
families during the holiday season.
Safeway Stores Inc. said the 5,548
pounds of food had a retail value of

Homemakers'
Annl• Anybody
Circle ft•aturlng

Most farmers in cash-flow squeeze

11

By RETTIE CI..ARK
Ext.1111lnn Agent,
Hnme Ernoomk'H
hands, ule!lsils, and cutting boards
very carefully while preparing food.
Don't spread bacteriH'from one food
to another on your unwashed bands
or soiled carving knife.
Finally,.if you doubt the safety of
any food or can't be asbolutely sure
it was Blored properly, nmow rr
OUT! It jusl isll'l worth it to have
somebody sick!
Holiday meals are fun but need
careful planning. How•many people
can you aafely serve? How much
Iinne will it lake to prepare the food?.
Don't try to feed more people than
you can handle. Consider the size
and quantity of the cooking equipment you bave, your supply of eating
utensils and dishes. Figure out how
much refrigerator space you wiD
need to aafely store the foods.
FI!IIowillg these guidelines can
help ~ holiday. meals both safe
and enjyable.

Bunny
COLUMBUS, · Ohio (AP)
Snowball, a r•bbil, probably thinks
she's a dog. She has a dog house and
wears a dog collar and chain.
She shares a corner lol with two
canines. A neighbor says Snowball's
contpanlons protect her.
Snowball'~ owner, Rosemary ·
Jessing, does not carry the canine
theme.for Snowball too far. The rabbit enjoys a bunny's traditional diet
of·greens and an occasional slice of
bread.
'

WASHINGTON ~AP)- The Allan
region rnallll ~ largest foretcn
market for Amerlean fann jli'OCiueta, witb Japan IIIII far in the lead 111
the tarcest slngleo4:ountry tutGmer.
In the flscal year that eaded Sept.
30, total
farm t!XpOitll'Gie to
their 12th conaec:utlve annWll
recurd. The 11180-11 figUre was fU.8
biiUon, up I pe1 cent from 540.5
billion In 19'19-80.
An anal)'lll by the department's

container flllld wltb .ftlod ciNtlned
for ovene11 ~ and •
moblle,lll-80inllabaratorJ ueed to
~ wbat occun IJIIIde Maled

wortb . . '2, 1111111 worth t3,!00.24
llld,._yltemlwortbtz,I0'/.13. ·
· According to the deplrtmenl, the
exlllblt waa bued 111 the average
food COIIIUIIIJIIIon ~a family of f01r
In 11180, although "the actual quanlltlel of food In the Du Pant-Safeway
dllplay VII'Y somewhat from the
Ditlonal averages In order to
preM~t IIOille of the variety of foods

shlpptnc contalnerl.

Olhen InVIted to participate In the
Ceremonies lnclndecl·.
-WWJam Howard and IU r.tber,
Olarles P. Honrd, Of Eutan, lid;
who head • 11111111 expartiJic flmi
called Couta1 Jntematlallal.
-Mr. and Mn. Wllllam B. .
Jr., Henrico County, VL, and tblir
chlldmL A picture taan 01 Burlee
operallnt a tractor wltll the Rlebrnond sllyUne as a bec:qround II on
the cover of the yearbook.
-Mr. and Mrs. John Scllneldotb,
their ehildren and Jolin's parents,
Mrs. and Mrs. Hugo Schbeldotb, who
own and operate a .family corporation in Scott Coonty, Iowa.

eaten durin~ the year.''

u.s.

BIGCRACKINAMERICA-Spauqe ... hdoiYbuUD&lt;o'"'~a ·
JIIM!-dt- tile t.ceof
loealed. above map. Tile CI'IICk,
l,l'tO llllles loac, be&amp;IM Ia W•,.._ltate ... ataetelles amu
-I~~~~ Mill IWii to llle 'WIIIt.. lip of file A; 1 Jaeldaa Mwtaia
,,. .._.t, 1t Ia II miles- ud t!llloada deep IDle lite eartb'a eruat,
aceenlwc to Aueelale PI oleaaar Raymaad Anldion al WaablagtAoa
Ulllvenlly. (API..uerpllotO).
•.
·

Ama-,

A

i:conomlc Research Service shows
that, exporta to Alia totaled alrnOet
$16 bllllon 1aat year, up 13 percent
from SIU billion In 19'/NO.
Sales to Japan totaled f8.7 billion,
up 17 percent frool f8.76 blllion in
18'/NI, the report said.

United States not about to run

Meigs coun.t y
agent's corner

,o ut of food according to .s tudy
WASHINGTON (AP) -

A new

private study ..ys that contrary to
scary headl1nes the United
States "Is in no danger of running
out of food because of disappearing
farmland."
., Moreover, II said, the pressures to
switch land fM!ID crop productloo to
non-agricultural uses are -likely tO
lessen in the comlng years.
' The stu!ly was acheduled for
· release today by .the Populauon·
, Reference Bureau, a private, non' profit educational orcanlzallon
located here.
Michael Brewer, an agricultural
economist, is author of the report.
He was research director · of .the
National Agricultural Lands· Study,
' an 18-montb project that reported ita
, findlnp 1aat January, just before
the Carter admlnlstratloo !ell office.
The N.AL8, as II was called, said
chanties In government poUcles are
needed to curb the los• of
agricultural land to urban sprawl
and other non-farm purpooes.
It said the United States has been
lOlling agricultural land In this
fashion at the.rate of about 3 rnillloo
'. acres a year, inoludlllg I million
' acres from the nation's cropland
baae.
.
. Brewer, aald the N.AL8 figure "Is
·' mialeadln(l" Iince It d- not refer
:, solely to croplaDd or even fa~
, "as many preu stories have reported ..It Includes land that never was
and never could be used for cro'p
' production.
"It Ia true that the U.S.
agricultural land scene is
changing," he said. "This was
inevitable wltb the 'rural .renatssan' ce' Of the 19708, escalating internatloaal demancl for American
. grain and ,the drive to replace some
costly imported oil witb gasohol ·
derived partly from home-grown

some

By JOHN C. RICE
reach the food - !11 just go
Estelloloo Alent •
elsewhere for ' dinner. And If a
Agriculture, Melp Couty
pfedator attacks, I expect the feeder
POMEROY - I recently read the
to be open enough for me to escape
following article put out by Tom
easUy.
Stockdale, one Of our wildlife
"Squirrels are bird food glUttons.
specialists, and thought I would like
Keep them outby hanging the feeder
to share It with · you. It's 'entitled,
or placing It oil a post wltb an in"Dart-Eyed Junco's Request."
verted cone underneath the feeder.
Also, please locate the structure
''Hello, I'm a dark-eyed junco and
where
it is protected from wind and
a trequent winter vililor to your bird
neighborhood
cats.
f~. Now I happen to like snow
"I have to wam you about
and cold weather, but things get
somell&gt;ing dlaastrous that can haptough when It comes to finding food
pen ll&gt;is winter to me and my frienthistinneofyear.
ds. If you should stop fllling your
"UsuaUy, food produced during
feeder alter I've become used to
thepastgrowingseasonisabundant.
eating there, I'll starve until I find
That Includes weed seeds, grains,
another food source -If I find one.
berrjes, fruibl, nuts and almost any
"So, please keep food available ·
other edible plant part that is
until
winter is over. I'll reward you
available.
by
comlng
back as often as I can
"But that's just the probleot. Food
and, I hope, by bringing lots of enisn't always available. Snow, sleet,
joyment to you and your family."
driving rain and wind knock much of
Remember the teri'lble winter we
the supply to the ground, where It
had
a few yean back when
ge.~ burled under a blanket of snow
motorists
were stranded in very cold
So, anyll&gt;ing you put out for me
·
weather?
This
lllallst of emergency
· ~ my frien!l&amp; ts appreciated, paritems
you
should
carry In your car.
ticularly in our visits to town, where
Two
blenketll,
waterproof
matches
natural food supplies are not so plenand
candlea;
extra
clotblna,
parUful . .We like all kinds of things - ·
ticularly
overshoes
and
mittens;
cracked corn, sunflower seed, other
and a steal shovel, sand and rope or
gralna, bread cl'UIJIIIa, shelled and
broken peanuts, c:ut up fruit,
cord for a lifeline (in case you get
cracked nuts; suet and table aeraps.
.
stuek)c
We also eat seed mixtures, which
Also, one should have dry
YO!t can buy at a garden supply
emergeocy rat10111 such as ra1s1ns
store, supermarket, OJ) hardware
nuts, candy or a jar of jleiiiiUI but:
store.
ter; flashlight with 1lpal'e batteries
"A fancy feeder Is nice to eat at
and flares; two garbage biCI for inbut I'm malnlr there for the food:
sulation against the wind If you are
Homemade feeders are ~ as are
forced to get out Of your car; metal
COiliJillll'clal ones. However, be sure
coffee cana for storing small items
the structure is covered to protect
and to. melt snow for drinking; and
the goodies from rain and snow.
water 10 a plaatlc container.
:·Don't make It hard for me to
Have a Men-y Cllrlstmas!

r----------------,__....;_____:
ANNOUNCEMENT OF SPECIAL IN'rEmsr

COMl."

The changes do present "pa~
. . ticular regiOIUJ and communities
with problems that can be acute," he
said.
·"But ... these problems do mt add
up to a naUonal crisis to be solved
\Oftb a bwnper sticker campaign to

.

.

..

to 4o is invat a
summa IRAKCOunt.
IDS you can d.oole
from a wide Y.lfiety oi invest. ments, ~utual funds

·

:r::;:: ~
.~
twar

10

more

MILLER'S FI.TNESS CENTER

MILLER'S FITNESS CENTER
r~sa;t;·d;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::::::::::::G~a;l;li:p:ol:is:·:O:h~i~a;·!

;,

'

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'

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'.

I
I

ll-.,

Send 10:
P.o. aox

..

Gllllpotll, 011; 45631

''

Aii•-iiimar-~----

I

...:--~ -~~

lJiM ... Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio•

JliWiil'lia--''-_..:,'iiiPir_ _ __

~------~---------•

'

-Arrow•
fiomCiue!&lt;

The first great designer la~l worn by half the men In America.

"1

hiilNII

'

,.

I
I · ·

I

)'OU'U

wneaac - .

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

'

All Gallipolis Financial Institutions Will Be
Open Thursday, December 24th until 1 P.M.
This includes Main Offices, Branches and
Drive-In Facilities.
Closed Friday, December 25th (Christmas
Day) and Saturday, December 26th. ·

.

me

c:.s
&amp;x I
==edl .. . I·N~~·

Local animal
recei~ first
place honors

Ohio Valley Bank.

1 ....... .....,.wilh•JM.
I f'AII ' (61.1\• ~7252

wu.

~ U.S. dollar t!lidlaJice rates In
many Importing countries, strong
cumpetltloo fnm Braall and rerord
11111 U.S. eropo contbined to advenely affect nport volume and
price levels dlllinR 191Nl,'' the
report said.
But In other regi0111 of the world,
U.S. fann exports generally were up
last year, according to the report Included in a new Issue of FATlis -

procluetl appean to have the
rnomentwn to sUIIatn anGther
decade of exp81l81on," Coyle aald In
the current laaue ri Foreign
Agriculture.
·
"The gains may not be as 1!811)' •
In the 111'108,'' he said. "U.S. trade
wiD continue to be lnlluenced by
Japan's strong protection for its
domestic agriculture, alongside ef·
forts to diversify sources rl. supply."
Coyle said that "on the plus side"
for the United States, however, are a
nwnber of factors that wiD bear
upon Japan's future import needs,
including:
- Further population and income
growth.
'
.
-Continued wes\ernization of
Japanese diets.
-A gradual tendency toward
trade liberalization.

·Gallipolis' Savings &amp; Loan

r----------------II ~I'd
libL..I"?,mplet• """'-ion obour
IIOWms .... ._,. CUI- ond build
I

previOUI year.
Sales to Elllt«n Europe a1ao were
down, fi.M billion agaiMI f2.2&amp;
blWon in 19'19-80. ExportB to the
SOVIet Union, at $1.57 bllllon, were
upfromfl.41 biWon In 19'/NO.
"Sluggish --'d ecoao.nlc growth,

Foreign Agricultural Trade of the
United Ststes.
Exports to African nat10111, at
$2.79 billion, were up28 percentfrom
$2.18 bllllon in 197Hil, and shipments to Latin ·America and Caribbean countries l'llSe 26 percent to
$6.87 billion from $5.48 billion the
year before.
Canada imported $2.02 billion worth of U.S. agricultural products In
1!11111-81, up 16 percent from $1.75
billion. Further, $1.13 billion worth
of corrunodities went to Canada for
transshipment to third counties
during the year, up 10 percent from
about $1.03 billion in 1979-80.
In another analysis, economist
William T. Coyle, takes a look at
Japan, the leading foreign Jll81'ket.
"The Japanese market for U.S.

Central Trust Bank

· ~~{~le aifboul ~ryone ':"ill be ~ligible in 1982. In 1981, you're on(¥

A. lt'a easy and aimple. All

fl1 .3
liiUon tnJm more !ban $121i1Uon !be.

Buckeye Building &amp; Loan
Commercial &amp;Savings Bank

Here are a few qualions we've been hearins about IRAs (Individual
Retirement Accounts), alona wilh the answen:
Q. Exactly what is an IRA?
A. It's a tax shelter for~rking P,OOple,,a tal\-deductible investment. .
'(ou pay no.taxes on the mterest 11 earns until you ret~ when you' ...I

you don t panJCipate m an employer retirement plan or
a pernment plan.
r
Q. How much can I contribute?
,.. A:s of January !~1982, you can contribute up to S2000 a year from
~~J you cam. u you're ~ble in 1981, you cart contnbute 15% of
OCIIIIKU IIICOIDe up to 11,500 now.
Q. How do I open an IRA?

ped. peicelllln valae

pattems and colors. Mtttche:d center p leat and two matched
pockets. For all leisUre activities, outdoors or 1ndoors. Come 1n
and make your selectioo t~ Long sleeves $16.00

•

'

to·-

E1lporta to Wllltem Europe, dnlp-

'Save OUr Farmlinds'," Brewer water projects.
GAUJPOLJS - Weeks Ayr
Brewer noted that buslnesa and in- Jack's Audrey, a registered Ayrsaid.
Usillg 1977 statistics gathered by dustry may continue to expand in shire heifer owned and exhibited by
the Soil Conservation Service, the rural areas, both 'taking over land Andy Plymale, Rt. 3, Gallipolis, was
latest av~le, Brewer's report directly and attracting newcomers judged first place senior yearling
said that of 1.3 billion acres of non- who Increase the pressure to convert and junior champion of the 1981 Ohio
National Ayrshire Show and Sale
federal asrlculturalland, the United fannland.
But this "has also helped maintain held recently on the Ohio State
States had 413 million acres shown
as cropland, plus 127 million acres of many small farms" by providing Fairgrounds.
other land with "high" or jobs to supplement the incomes of · The shoW, which attracted Ayr"medium" potential for conversion many farm families, he said.
shire breeders and exhibitors from
toci'Gpll.
New Hampshire to Iowa, locluded 85
Between 1981 and 1975 - the Iinne
selected
animals. In the sale which
Further, high Interest rates could
frame used by the NAI.S project dampen non-farmers' eagerness to followed he show "Audrey" was the
·.
Brewer worlled on previously - the speculate In soaring farmland fourth lop selltng animal in the sale.
amount of this type of land con- prices, another source of recent
Plymale is a freshman at Ohio
verted to "urban, built-up, tran- pressure on land. As much as one- State University and s exhibited
sportation and water uses" was third of the farmland sold in 1979, for Ayrshire catlle at the Gallia &lt;;ounty
875,000 acres per year, he said.
example, probably went to non- and Ohio State Fairs for a number of
That rate Is "likely to decline,'' farmers, Brewer said.
years. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
· Brewer said. But even if it doesn't,
Exports of grain and other com- Uster Plymale.
the loss of 975,000 acres a year by the modities are putting the main Food production
year 2005 would mean that'less than press~ on agricultural land, in
4 percent of the potential U.S. large part because the revenue is climbs 3 percent
OPINING UNDfR NEW MANAGEMENT
.
cropland base of 540 million acres needed to pay fill; the escalating
WASHINGTON (AP) - World
would be gone, he said.
COllis of imported oil, he said.
food
and agricultural productlon
The remaining land in the
But even that pressure might be
climbed
to a rerord in 1981, up
cropland base "would be ample to eased in the future, Brewer said, if
nearly
3
percent
from the average of
meet even the highest of current national strategies are developed to
DONNA FISHER • MANAGER
the
last
three
years, says the
proJecllona of domestic and ln- achieve or approach self-sufficiency
Agriculture Department.
ternationall demands on American in energy.
Opening Monday,
But lhe preliminary report, issued
croplands In the year 211110," Brewer
Competition for water, rather than
December 21
Tuesday,
indicated
that
population
said.
land, is agriculture's main threat
still
is
outpacing
food
production
in
Women's
Hours8:30-7:00
Brewer cited several factors to from energy activities, especially in
much
of
the
world.
Overall,
it
said,
Men's
Hours
7:00-10 : 00
support his contenlion ti\at the the arid West where Irrigation ii
per
capita
food
output
this
year
fell
Monday
thru
Friday
pressures on cropland are likely to essential for any significant crop
about!
percen•
from
the
three-year
I&gt;ATES
eaae:
productlon, he said.
$2.00 Floor Use Only
average.
-A reduced need for housing.
S3.~ ~loor Use &amp; Spa Facilities
The "world" figures did not inDuring the 10'108,. some 4 million
30 VISits for I· yr. SSS.OO .
Brewer said technology, policy elude China, which so far has not
Sgl. Couple
more people moved into rural areas
1 mo.
decisiOIUJ
and other developments
provided enough statistical material
S30
s so
than moved out of them. Rural areas
,Jmo.
1S
135
to use in the annual report, said
may continue to gain more residents makes him feel "with unflagging~
6mo.
130
225
timism"
that
the
U.S.
agricultural
·
Cecil
Davison
of
the
department's
1 yr.
than they lose In the lllals and 19110s,
250
400
Gift Certificates Available lor
Economic Research Service.
but the gain lllllkely to be less and ente.,mse will endure beyond' the
Christmas .
' Production In centrally planned
the need lor new housing tbus year 2000.
" If higher prices signal that
countries "remained at the 1980
reduced.
suitable
land
for
growing
crops
may
level"
as the third consecutive poor
-New highways and reservoirs
be
in
short
supply,
U.S.
agriculture
harvest
in tbe Soviet Union offset
also are likely to preempt less
wiD
pursue
new
ways
of
productlon
·
gains
In
Eastern
Europe, the report
417 Second /lve.
agriculturaaalland than they did in
the '80s and '70s. The interstate highyields,'' he said.
way system, which c0111umes 41 thatconservelandandiocreaseland
''Systematic Investment in researacres of land per mile of road, ts virtually completed. Reservoir con- ch to increase agricultural producAUOW100% COl ION FLANNEL SHim
structlon Is likely to slow, with most tivity as an integral part of national
.America's cool weather favorites
of the better sites already utilized agricultural pblicy may be the best
· and "the lhcreasing success of en- way to ensure that future demands
Traditional, maniy plaids that offer the solid comfort of pure
vironmental groups" in blocking on U.S. agriculture will be met."
cotton. Soft, brushed fmish in a wide assortment of exceptnJnal

•

likely to be 10 a lower tax bracket.
Q. Am I eligible?
...

Page E-3

Asian .region .still. largest foreign .
-market for American fann products

Officials say coat .o f agricultal'e
Agriculture and
•
'our community department's ~etD yearbook justified
I

1

. The Sunday Tim~s-Sentinel

I

�•

Ohio-Point Plnsant, w. va.

Sunday Times-sent.lnel

~:.~~~,.~~~=-===================-============~~~~~~~~~~~~~O~h~i~~P~~=·~n~t~P~~~sa~n:t~,:w~.~v~a~.~~========-=~r~he~su:nd~a~y~~~~~~~~~~-5~

.OIJio .T urnpike trills rise

Fertilizer industry
hit hard by crunch
WASHINGTON (AP)- The crunch on lann lnccme is being felt
throughout the llgribusiness world,
including the fertilizer industry, a
new Agriculture Department report
indicates.
Total U.S. fertilizer use in the 1981·
82 marketing year that runs through
next JWie 30 is expected to be about
23.4 million tons or "close to last
year's level," the department's
Economic Research Service· said
Wednesday.
But if the financial outlook improves by next spring the overall use
of fertilizer could be boosted I per·
cent to 2 percent from last year, the
report added.
"The fairly stagnant outlook for
fertilizer use arises from reduced

U.S. agricultural imports may shape
up. Those countries, in turn, buy
American farm commodities.
There were no figures to indicate
total exportable supplies of coffee,
meaning the quantity producing
coWitries have available for export
after deducting their own domestic
needs.
Officials noted that the latest
estimate was up slightly from the
95.3 million bags indicated for 198182 in a similar report in September. ·
"The improved outlook in major
African coffee producing countries
is largely responsible for the upward
revision," the report said.
·

Milk production up over last year
Milk output through the first II
months was reported at 121.6 billion
poWids, up3 percentfrom the first II
months of 1980.
Production per cow averaged 943
pounds in November, 16 poWids
more than in the same month a year
earlier. Total milk cows were shown
at 10.9 million head, 1 percent more
than in November 1980.

LAUGHJNG IT UP- Space abuttle uu-o-111 Joe Ea&amp;le, rflbl. ud
Richard Truly laugh It up at a recent aewa coultreace durlag a short \'lilt
to Cleveland's NASA Lewis Research Center. Tbe two astroDBulll, who

diiJ8.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Increased
tobacco production in the United
States, China and Cuba will push
world production to more than 5.8
million metric tons this year, up 4
percent from 1980, the Agriculture
Department says.
The department said the large
crops in those three coWitries were
more than enough to offset produclion declines in Zimbabwe because
of marketing quotas, Turkey
because of limited production in-

Prod!Jction down
WASHINGTON (AP) .- The an·
nual garlic report by the Agriculture
Department shows that production
declined this year in all major
producing countries except India.
Total production was put at less
than 1.7 million metric tons, down 14
percent from 1980, the· department
said Wednesday.
South Korea's' garlic output dropped 39 percentto 154,000 tons "due to
drought-reduced yields and a 30 percent drop in planted area," the
report said.
In Spain, drought also reduced the
crop 30 percent to 218,000 tons, the
smallest since 1971. And in Egypt
farmers turned to more-profitable
vegetable crops, with garlic production declining 19 percent to 162,000
tons.
But in India, the report said, this
year's garlic crop, estimated at
240,000 tons, is up 6percent.

AnENTION!

centives and Brazil and Venezuela
because of poor weather.
The 1.4 million metric ton crop in
China, up 22 percentfrom 1980, is the
result of a 47 percent increase in the
area planied with flue-&lt;!ured tobacco, the department said. That
production jump was prompted by a
20 percent increase in leaf tobacco
prices.
Cuba brought its blue mold
problem under control after seeing a
1980 crop of only 5,000 tons. The aclion has returned this year's crop to
the50,000-tonlevel.
U.S. production at over 919,000
tons is up 13 percent from last year,
prirruirily on the strength df the
largestfluM:Uredcropsince1964.

EARLY BIRD SHOPPERS
GIVE THE GIFT THAT GIVES
ALL YEAR LONG

@ MEMBERSHIPS
~K ABOUT OUR 20/20 DISCOUNT

GALLIPOLIS • . oh.
3&amp;0 SECOND

AVE.

Ph. 446-0699

Complete Tr•vct Sl!rvocn For Memben
And The.&gt; General Pu111111:

,--=-----------+=================;;::======

THE HOLIDAY SEASON'
·1s A MAGICAL .TIME•••
AND AGREAT PART Of· THAT nME .
SHOUlD BE
ING lliOSE GIFTS
. SELECI'
.
THAT YOU KNM Will MAKE YOUR
LOVED
ONES SO VERY
HAPPY.
.
.

SO, WHY SPEND.BlAT ENJOYABLE TIME
SEARCIUNG FOR A PARKING PLACE IN
ACROWDED BIG Cln PARKING LOT•••
1HEJ1 .HAVING 10 JOSLE YOUR WAY
'
TtiROUGH A
SHOPPING 11M1.
ONLY 10 RND 1HAT 1HE PRICES ME
100 HIGH.

MONDAY NIGHT

sHoP THE FRIENDLY MERQWITS.

8 PM TIL 11 PM
WATCH MONDAY'S

)'el.llenews
a••·rmlf
Jllllevw 2at1111 per mile CGq~N
to u cen11 c:ilupd ealbe ,,.••

.

"'1'1111 11 aat • illtlatiDD broulbt
abaul bf IIIJiecl ~ erw~
haft ciriGteti - - 1"11 tffortl
· Ill ~ r- to ~ bridle
deeD to tile point whent 111111Y
re.nble ~ldhhd !pills," Ra~era
uld. "But lbe llmple filet II ibal the
CCIIICrele '- WNriDI aut frllm the elrecti of age, heavy lrafllc, weather
and salt."
·
Elfeetive Feb. 1, 1-. Rogers
said, can.lnwllng lbe llqtb of the
lqbway wiD ~)' tf.tiO, eompued

Toll rta.d ..12.4 . . . Clltbe ,..
M)'lvallll 'fllnlpiU, !lUI' adjolniDc
lisler 1'1*11."

Roser~ Nklao ....Wve llludy b)'

lbe tumpille'a -.1t1ac q'men,
J.E. G....- Co..()No, ilbowed ibal
the dleb ou• oflbe lllrnplile'• •
brldpl will nqulre "repl•cemenl,
overlay, or Giber l5lljor res-lr"
wllbln tile nm four,_,. at a COlt of
millloa, Ro.dway J'llllll'faclng,
with
cbarted by the In- renovation of aerv1ce pluM and
dependent llale CllllliDlsslon aince replac:emeal pf equipment Ia projec-1111.
ted to COlt en !lddltlonal. . m1W011.
Bued on average lelllllh of tumThe tJ3U mtJllalllljll!lle wwld
pike 1r1pa -18 Jlllles for 1:81'11 and 90 CGIIle 0!1 top ol rta*r operallllc'
mllellloremiMaadalvehlcles-the a~ of 101118 .. - miWon a
b ad
ol''--•r'·BI~•-,..MorleyudSoltboth,;ork
·•-••••
SNOWP.uutiNGZOJiiE-TIIIIMorley,rlg l,a
...,.,,...
w
new toll r.tel -·'Aadd..
""""'
.., centato year, Rogen1 said• ......
- -• - . .
lor...__
;,...,.
•• .........,._
Ope-11- ..._11ment of lbe ulvel'....
•
irs ould become
ore
C.lllySolt,bolbatadelllut'!wM•DBUDivenlty,putlbe
-·-••
-....,. average J118181111• car 'lrlpand ,or
repa
w
m
ted 08 the
all)' 11111 poe the car two reallltle lea tares- a parkiDI
011
t:l-07 to the average comnierclal use, frequent without the new plan, be
llaaHouebel a . _ iciiiJIIare IIIey erea
..,.. aDd ..,.., ••.lle•elw. ( AP Laserpbolo).
....:Rotl~•:"':sa::ld::..- - - - - - - · :•:_::ld:::.•_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:.,___
ruao
__...,...,:_...:,'_Thllnda
_ _...:.Y'_r._n_ow_lllg";-tbe-f_lrs_t_ma_J•_r_•_oo_w_
· ____
...._.,..,..
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

..,.4

•uo

Iunday 1hN lhunday Sale

Open Dally 10-10
Sundays 11·6

AKRON, Oblo IAPI -

An

14-

lnlemallw.lllnJale by an
Aulln1lan c:oaple lr)'IDc to remove
tbelr Mt..,.,... fram a t"'lg!OIII eult
bel ,..,..!llecl Ill lbe yoang wcman
aane~ng to mum home with ber

JIIQillh

i*fellts.

.

.

'4

Angela Bamersley, 20, will leave
the country with her puenll, Jolm
8lld Julie Hamenley, said A.D.
Moyer, the U.S. lmmlgratloa Service admlnillrator Ill Cleveland.
Tbe Hlmenle)'l apeat more than

Dreamy

steps as she moved aer~~~~the CCJ!1Do

(302)

long ·

gowns ol softly
flowtng nylon ,

try with the Unification Cburch,
whole memiJm are known as

accented w•th

"Moonles."

or nocon cows

emt:lfOtderv. lace

Pastels. more Mrsses. !uti figure 4248

They fiDal1y found her In the
Akron area, Dvln&amp; Ill a MOO!IIe c:ornmunlty In aa.ton Heights and

WOildiC ..at.. • lJJiifkl'IIO!I Chureb
atoreeaJied Art Sawn.
Moyer~ Mill Hamenely to
C1evelaJid ,(Ill Tbunday from a
psyehlatrlc tllllijlllll IIIII' Akron,
whent she had~ admiUed under
1 CGWt order. Meyer said abe entered the Ualted Stales .., Sept. 21,
lllll, 11 a villtor, bul had llayed
without a vlaa and Illegally held 1
job. Her vlaltor's llatus expired lui
Aprii3G.
"She bas made that
.... will
for AaltraiJa In the
next coapJe of da)'l. She said that aD
abe W111t1 to do II go blet to
AUIIralla with ber ~renta," Moyer
aaid. Tile WOIII8D was releaaed oa

r:IICII:III

For Chrl1tmas

f15,000 1n1c:1nc their ct.ughter's

••••
..aaaa
•••
••••
••••

CU Oot

Mt-·~.Puu
Figure IIOWM

Our Reg. 12.88
(300)

Our Reg . 8.97
Your
Choice

5.971303)

Crayola Arl Sets

Pock•t·llze 8·dlglt Calculator

Drawing desk, crayola caddy or
delu~e art kit.

Fedtures memory. percent key and square

root ltflCtlon Compeer. ecsv to handle

II
07881

dePart

13041
5 Davs

GE · Iron

10• 97

Steam and
dry 25 vents

8.47

berownrte"'P''••nce.
Tbe Hamenleyl had en1illed the

oaram-

help of lilwyen and • dept
,_ from Arizona. Tbey believell
she J.d been brainwashed by lbe
cull
"We don't waDt to Ioree her home·
jUII becll- .. want her home,"
Mn. Saauet oP)' said. "We want to
see herfnl- freeotblnldng. ''
'l1la Hamen1e)'l put Ancela In
Falllvi81Y Iller Summit County
·Probate JudJe Bill Spicer alcned a
ll'll'l'llllto eammlt her basec! on hls
lltldlap !bat her behavior was
erratic.
.

24.57

Presto Qunlt Healer
Elficient.
intra · red
quartz heater saves
energy. UL tested.

13.97

t&lt;·mart
FM Pocket

(305)

Radio
Tun 1nq

Ice Cream Freeier

: :

Makes 2 to 4 quarts.

.._: /

trot, telescopic
anc~
~trt~p . DC .

,,nrcnnrt

91/ bAffcrv not

her to them, Falllvl~ IUj)eM. leRdeDI Mculle Meaebem said.
Should IIIII Hamanley fall to
lewe the UnitedSiafee, abeiiiUitap,_. at a deportalloo bearintl In
C1evelaJid • Ju. 14, Mcl)'lrsald. He
said cfi:!•ll would Ia-. when abe
'-"" beca• she IIIUII hand over
doewr.entaat her point al departure.
Tbe Samtnle)''l Mrch bepn 14
IIIOIItbe ago when Anpla caUed
them Ill Perth, AIIIINIIa, from S.n
FranciMO lalllnl them lhe had met
10111e olea people wbD ulled her to
stay Ill AlllerieJI, .
"lbe . . '*7 V811111· But she said
ihe'tl wri.... I leiter aplellli .. II
aDudwe'd...,. t•'lfllbea,"Mn.
Sfllaillll)' said. ... lllldld that In
the rea.r, 111o
Aaaela pw
an • • • ..._. ClUt to be in

au ~ev. z.u

·-

llllll'iWr t

••tbal'l

•t•wbut-.
what m•de

'** ...

me

I ..p

t
l!lld. . •
. . AntlrioiD relatml, tbe
. . JAnlld that the lllllbwaof • ......._. ..... by the
Maonlel. '!Ill
went 19 .
8111 ,...~........ tried to CGIIVInee

................
lllimil*..,.

=~

li

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(31))

Sllllerstone
mt a nor
polished alum. urle uor

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1.

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OoniiOI ,.., ......, NyiOf'l Lvcra • spande11 ·
panty has cotton panel

•au_...,.

till

2.37

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7

1313)
Per Roll

focal· AliA 100 Color Print Film
Br111tant. hfehke colOr •n o 20·el(posure
rOll of 110. 126 or 135. 5rlop 01 Kmort

( 314)

2.376

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focal· Maglcubes

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•

con

5-aov Sole

UlllflniiCII Cbureh membera
aslald hlllpilal olllclals to release

vaaue.

DAILY TRIBUNE
FOR BARGAINS GALORE!
·cy

"We ..U. 1111 rate 1Dcr1u.

nigl&amp; - -"IIAIJiwllld. ......

Australian Mooni~

.

Tobacco production :up 4 percent

•·

,,

-•·*'

COlli of tile
....,.U.
'-nl tile ledlnl lllltdlll1l fan.

111-.ID.

this year."

Coffee production sets mark

WASHINGTON lAP) - Milk
production continues to b&lt;· ' hove
year-earlier levels, according to the
latest Agriculture Department
statistics.
Production in November was
about 10.3 billion pounds. That was 3
percent more than in the same month of last year, the department's
Crop Reporting Bllard said.

Olio
5 ........ be
"'I .. _. to be
.,.. r 1 to 1111 Ohio
TuqlltaO" 1' I
,
, . . . . . . . ID-mUe tollway,
,....,... h hi jlll't of lbe lllt1nlate
llillbwu
,..,_IJO, il&amp;ettiJW U.llnit llllllbll!t -40 jill Clllllor
can ud • ,_CIIIllor CO!IIIIIoercial
toeb'dw
n. -: 1• :-Dililt, miHie nay llr Cllle Turnpike Cammlalloa
Cllllrmln Cllrwa D. Rocen Jr.,
. . . 1 1hhllba -uam1na ibal tbe
~. wblcb a
nortbem
ONe illd linb with PelqylvaDia
aad Indiana tolhrays, Is
dolllkltilllllc faller u.n once wu
thqiiL
'1111 OIIJo Turnpike Act requires
lllltt!lfC'ODMRIP.._..pullhehlgb~.-..., __,,..,_prl
'11111 ,_
_ _ . . ~...... _, or
............ It
....... Stale ... Oblo
to =-C w""'
"'
UpGII nllnmenl o1 the nma1n1ac
•14.4 mmtoa etta~ miWm 111 eaoltnlelllllt'boadlilllled In the 1tl101.
CIJmm!P..,.n have projected the
bOnda WGUid be retired by Dec. I,
liM, cr lll&amp;it yun ahead of the
orf&amp;laal rildnJe But Ill order to
lllrllllll blclnriJ- to the llato in
the letlaiiJ llllpualed condltloa,
Ropn said, lbe upcraciiDc lull
IIIUit be llllliiNIIen qllick1y•
In"at'e, be said, II drivillg up
COlli at • tlmt wbea - - bave
~ flat. To help Clllh!O!I fwther
turnpike ear '· ~ added,
the state eJLti6C1w to aeeltto apply the
... ,

creases.
Compared to phosphate and
pntash, nitrogen prices could show
the biggest year-to-year jump by
spring, up by asmuchas!Opercent.
"Supplies of fertilizer materials
will be adequate to plentiful," the
report said. "The domestic industry
is coming off its second consecutive
year of high production and lessthan-expected use of phosphate and
potash."
Analysts said above-nonnal inventories carried over from last
season and production currently
"could easily supply expected use

"Nitrogen supplies will likely
remain adequate, because producagricultural commodity prices, tioll from available capacity and imwhich will not encourage either ports will offset modest increases in
significant expansion in crop. demand,'' the report said.
acreage or increased application ol' · The stagnant U.S. fertilizer
fertilizers,'' i( said.
situation is in contrast to indications
"Interest rates on farm produc- that world use will probably intion loans are expected to remain
crease 5 percent this year, rising to
relatively high during the planting more than 124 million tons.
season. As a result, there's iiiUe in"World supplies of nitrogen,
. centive for farmers to greatly ex- phosphate and potash fertilizers ·
.pand input use."
should be sufficient to meet exThe analysis said fertilizer prices pected demand through 1985-86," the
paid by farmers, overall, could report said.
average 6 percent to 7 percent
"Still, nitrogen supplies are
higher next spring than they did last forecast tighter than other nutrients
spring. They were up 7 percent from tahrough 1985-ll6," It added. "The
a year earlier during last spring's nitrogen supply-demand balance
suggests that some additional
planting season.
:However, the report said "above- (production) capacity wiD he needed
nonnal inventories of phosphate and if farmers are to avoid a large price
potash" could help dampen price in- rise by the mid-1980s."

WASHINGTON (AP)- World coffee production in 1981-112 is estimated
at a record 96.9 million bags, up 15
percent from hist season, says the
Agriculture Department.
The department's Foreign
Agricultural Service said Wednesdaythe latest forecast is up 12.6
million bags from a revised estimate
of 84.3 million bags harvested in the
I 980-81 season.
A bag of green, unroasted coffee
beans weighs 60 kilograms or about
132.2 pounds.
Besides informing . Americans
about one of their favorite
beverages, the periodic coffee
figures play a role in assessing how

""*'- CIIIID lAP! - ,_

•

'- '

�..
F'omcroy-Middteport-Gallipolis, Ohlo--l"oint Pleasant,

w. va. ·

Dec. 20, 1981

Dec. 20, 1981

t · om~roy-Middleport-Galtipohs,

•

Ohio-f'oinl f'leuanl, W, Va.

1he

~undAy

Times-Senlinet-Pag-F. -7

Farm trade with Iran increases
By DON DNDAIL

AP,._WIIW
WASHINGTON (AP) -Although
Iranian and U.S.IIplamall continue
to Ignore lldl other Gn an official
level, Iran lll'lduall¥ Is returning to
the fold as a lucrative market for
American farmers, says an
Agriculture ~rbnent expert.
The estimated PIID miUion in commodity sales to Iran this year compares to about $II mllllon worth of
U.S. Iann gOOds that reached Illlfl in
1980, said John B. Parker Of the
department's Economic Research
Service.
However, the projected 1981 sales
remain significantly below the
levels established ' prior to the
seizure of U.S. hostages in Tehran
two years ago.
Even though the Iranian government had begun to wind down p~r­
chases of U.S. food before Iranian

mlUianll took

ema..,

IJII'IIIMII

bclltqe Nov.f, ltrlt, aiel IIIII
totaled $4llllllllkll IIIII ,_.
"They haven't ntwuotl filly to 11
as a IUJipller of aa,t111ac but
wheat," Parker llld Thunday In a
telephone interview.
The U.S. hoolllgea were releued
last January after more than 16
months of captivity. Prealdent
Reagan told Congras last IIICillth•
"It appears that full oormallzatiGn
of conunerclal and diplomatic
relati0111 belweea the United States
and Iran will require more time."
His assessment was contained In a
lllellll8ge informing Ccngrea he was
keeping in force a declaraiWn of
emergency Issued by then-President
Carter after the hostages were
seized.
Parker said he expects U.S. wheat
sales to 1ran this year to be around I
million metric Ions or more, com-

pandtoi0,811ton.luty-.811,0011

IA&gt;nl In 1f'lt and U miUIGn ton. In
It'll.
A1tlloulb Iran Is ovenbldowed by
other countr1e1 u a buyer 'of
U.S. comraodllie1- lbout a !ben
buy tl bllllaa wwt11 or more each .
year~ It Is~ a valuable
mirket.
Parker aid Iran's food bnporta
frllm alliiOUI"eeel- the United States
andotherCOQJitries-"arereallyup
· in the air" and may reach a record
13.4 biiJlon this year.
"A lot Of peopi,, WGnder bow they
pay for It, bat If you loot at their
pelroletim upclltll WI! aee that thole
wiD be In the vicinity of S13 billion
thlayear,"hellld.
Ina does not have a large trade
del!clt becau.e Its total bnport bill
for an 11ems 11 "not much more than ·
they're getting tram petrolewn,"
Parker llld.
"The t3.4 bllWon for food items

IIJP81'I!IItly ia not as bi&amp; a Jll'(lllllm u
JJeOI* thought It ...... he llld.

"l'r!lmbly the Joailtlro Of paper
- t and beaU II more lila prGblem

than the money to pay for it."
Many American non-farm
busiM8es also would like to seD
their producllin Iran, but only a lew
have resumed dealiJip there. No
ligures were available on the extent
of non-farm trade during the past
two years.
U.S. rice sales to Iran this y~
may total about 100,000 tons, Parker
said. None was sold Jut year, hut
2115,500 tons went to Iran in 19'111.
Wheat and
make up about 10
percent of the food sales to Iran,
with com, sugar, corn oU and a
small quantity of cheese making up
most of the rest, he said.
Iran . formerly waa a significant
buyer of U.S. soybean oil blit turned
to Brazil the past couple of years,
Parker said.

POINSEniAS
IEAUnFUL

rice

FOR CHRISTMAS

EA.

-For
yean S.nllo
Children's Hospital Medical Center Ia CiacimlaU to dlltrlbule preeeull to
thooe children wbo have to spend the hoUIII!y se880D Ia lbe •oopllaL Lllllt
week, he again made his visit, and is showti here glvlug a gift to llls-yoorold Margaret Masur. Through his 21 yean of glvlug, lbe bearded geotleman has been known only as Santa Claus. (AP La..rpboto).

which transh1tes ,Into some
besitation on the part of raw co11on

COIIIUI'DII'S. ,,

'

fi'Ojectl0118 indicate that the world
cotloo atodtpile, which was about

A metric ton is about 2,200 pounds
and is equal to~. 7 bushels of wheat
or 39.4 bushels of corn.
Under the agreement, the Soviets
are pledged to buy at least 6 millionmetric tons of wheat and com an-

89!.

22.7 million bales on Aug. I, would
riseto26.8million by next Aug.!.
That would include · U mllllon
bales of U.S. cotton, compared 102.7
miWon in the Inventory last Aug.1.

the risk in any ·miUtary response,
even a symbolic one.
Economic sanctions are a mor.e
likely option but Jimmy Carter applied them without success after
Soviet Ioree moved into
Afghanistan.
Past administrations bent . on
punishing Moscow have talked of
suspending negOtiations on one front
or another. But Reagan has just
gone to lengths to position his administration as the advocate of
nuclear weapons cutbacks in
Europe. With NATO aUies restive on
the whole question of nuclear
weapons, any U.S. break in
negotiations on that issue probably
would hurt Washington more than
Moscow.
So far, the administration response to the Polish crackdown has been
to suspend food shipments. But that
is not likely to cause grave concern
at the Kremlin.

'·

TV (not lnclttcJ.d)·

The wl'lltlle TRS-10 Color Computer Ia • ldNI

FLORIDA _

I

~ad1e/haek
. A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

SUPERa
lAVER~

HONEYSUCKLE

HAM
WHOLE HAM

TURKEY
ROAST·RITE

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YOUNG
TURKEY

$ 59·
GOL., KIST

MIXED FRYER. PARTS

DOZ.

'I
l

~
I
I

ROASTING HEN

FRESH POlK

SUPERIOR

STEAK
PIONEER
PURE

LIBBY
PUMPKIN

•.1

miUion for otlseeds.
AU sales and shipments must be
completed by Sept. 30,1982, he said.

29 OZ. CAN

·z••..
•

Last minute Christmas shoppers:
'Hic1..,.
-·
:1 D..--~......:n
nanlll!l euu has de::azens of
great gifts Co dtoose from. .

14

If this is your case, conaider

lenses.
No matler what your spor~.
good vision iB essential. And since
.many Individuals have tess than
,pmfect vision, some fonn of
corrective lenses are called for.
Eyeglasses are a common
solutWn- bat not for everyone.

won't pop out - even during the

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comfortable right !rOm the llart.
Every day more aod more
athletic eyecJau waren are enjoying the new freedom and confidence . that tram converting to 80ft contact 1 - .
Whatever your I[JOI't. 80ft contact
lensea will help you see better,
play better and look better.

_uiRA
HOUSE

EGGS

INSTANT

OPTOMETRIST----

soft contact lenses. They're soft
and pliable which III8QI they

HIUMD''
EGRAD£ A
.

•

DR. GEORGE W. DAVIS

SOFr CONTACI'S AND
HEAVY SPORTS
It was tbe final set of the tennis
match. Sally as hot, nervous and
tired. Her glasses kept logging
and sUpping down. How she enVied her opponent who did not
have to contend with this
problem. What Sally did not know
was that her opponent WAS
wearing glasses. Not the visible
spectacles- rather, soft contact

HUNT'S

10 oz.
JAR

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VALLEY BELL
FESTIVAL
ICE CREAM

· FRUIT
COCKTAIL

.'

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UQUID.·
•
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BUmRMILK
HALF

GAU.ON

99e
.

CHIP &amp; DIP or
SOUR. CREAM

HALF GALLON

PUMPKIN

CUSTARD $}59
PI~ oz. PIE
.

418SecGad Ave., Gelllpnlls

~. ~ 2%!LK$}79
PLASTIC

COCA-COLA, TAB,
SPRITE &amp; MR. PIBB
8-16 oz.
8011US

SELf.RISING
5LB; BAG

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r

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DINNER

BROUGHTON

FLOUR

G IDfll W. O.YII, 0.0.

.'

ROYAL CREST

$}39

MAR11IA rtii1E

''om th• oHIC. of

·---

89

BAG

VALLEY BELL

15 OZ. CAN

*******

-

oz.

PKG.

-..CTN.

COFFEE

And if you'd like your gifts
If you're down to the wi~
sent out, we11 gijldiy handle ali
buying your ChnstmasJllfts,
the delaiis.
·
hUil)l over to H1c~ory Farms.
.
So
spend
a
few
minutes
We've got over 100 different
shoilllinl at Hickory Farms.
kinds of gifts. With plenty ol
Arid you won't end up
choices in almost every price
settiinjl
for second best at the
rBOJII' you're after.
laat nunute.
Our rifts are filled with an
incredillle variety of tallY de•
lights, includig things like QUr
famous Beef stick' IIUftlmer
We'll_give ycu a !aile
saiiiiiJe, cheeses, jams, jellies,
d old·~ rounb}' goodo esa. N
and more.

In the lnterftt of beu~ vltlon

- - - - - - - - - ------

APPLES

MRS. SMilli'S

r:============::::::;:;;:;::::::::::::;i

"-

12

WITH 110.00 ADDITioNAL PURCHASE

SNOW BLOWER- Unduuled by ta ....,.•• llrsiiDOWIIGrm lui
,...._ a street m•lclu on tbo Mlcblgaa Aveuae bridge In Cldeqo c.
tlnues biowlnB bls suoplione 1D Cblcago, rlpt lD time will lbe weather.
~ AP LaserpiiDto).
. .
·

RED DELICIOUS

LB.

79eLB.

FRANKIES
5 LB. BAG

BAG

HB.

BOILED HAM

SUGAR

DIOO

4-,c
I

49L&amp;

or CHIPPED

BAKING
POTATOES

lOLB.$139

GOLD KIST

I'AICI!S MAY VAAY

IDAHO

79~.

SElf BASTING

LB.

176 CT.

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RAinG SHACK
COMPUTER CENTER, STORE,
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

YOUNG

USDA CHOICE

TANGERINES

Clulllt;wglft. 11'1 enllrtllnlng,lduct~tlonll, and lully
IIPindlble. Andira not (lilt lOr fun arid pmee-you can
plan 1 IMidgat, INch J01W klcla 1111111, 111m lo progl'llm
1nc1 muoh mqral ... It toclayl
.

I

59'

TURKEY

~$129

lnGII &amp;..o.dlng
Paog;am PaD
• Eight VIvid Colora
Wlih Sound Effecta
• A&gt;tttliiCIMhwoa to Ally

I

CELERY

..

YOUNG

c

.

t

.I

•

I

manager,
the sale
package
include•
$35
mi!Uionsaid
lor the
of wheat,
tl~
million lor feed grains aod $85

THEM I

RED GRAPES

• u-o-2o

nuaUy, and if more than 8 million is
wanted they must consult with U.S.
officials.
The United States earlier this fail
told the Soviet Union it could buy up
to 23 miUion tons of grain this year,
15 million more than the pact
guarantees.
Officials also announced that
credit guarantees of up to $200 .
miUion have been approved lor Portugal to buy U.S. farm commodities.
Alan T. Tracy, general sales

SUPER
-OPEN DAILY I SUN. 9 to ·9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Galipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-9593
'We ·Rnane the
to · um~
PRICES EfFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26

WE HAVE
FRESH
OYSTERS

EMPEROR

Soviets buy additional wheat

I.

' ·1'!. .,,!

ORANGES
•.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Soviet Union has bought an additional 100,000 metric tons of U.S.
wheat for delivery in 1981-82, the sixth year of a long-term grain
agreement.
Agriculture Department officials
said Thursday the sales raised to
nearly 10.8 million tons of grain 5.76 million wbeat and 5.01 million
corn - that Russia has ordered for
delivery in the year that began Oct.

DROPS

FLORIDA

Christmas 1981: .
Freedom at stake
WASiflNGTON (AP) - President
Reagan drew the parallel: This
Christmas it is Poland, two years
ago it was Afghanistan. That was a
time of stem U.S. warnings to
Moscow, too, followed by !"'Onomic
sanctions.
But Soviet soldiers still are in
Afghanistan. And on the western
flank of the Soviet Union1 the government of Poland is crushing the
Solidarity reform movement.
Those episodes - one of direct
Soviet inter\Tention, the other of
Polish government action that
Reagan said must have been sanctioned and supported by Moscow point to the dilemma of an administraiion trying to deal with
Soviet interventionism.
Gunboat diplomacy doesn't work
with superpowers. Besides these
days the gunboats come equipped
with nuclear weapons, heightening

.

WASHINGTON (AP) :.__ A new percent to 66.5 miUion bales, an inAgriculture Department analysis dication of underlying strength of
says the world outlook for cotton 'emand for cotton· or cottoo-blend
"remains guarded" due to "con- ~e products, especlaUy In c:entinued poor economic prospects~· traUy planned economies," the
and the record crop that is hanging department's Foreign Agricultural
over the market in 1981-12. ·
Service said Thllrsday.
World production is estimated at
"It would seem that during the
nearly 71 miUion hales, up from 65.4 current period of plentiful suppUes
million in 1980-81. The U.S. crop, at and subsequent low prices textile
15.6 million, is up from ll.l million manufaclurers might lind themlast year.
selves in a favorable pooition," the
· "In spite of the current situation, ~ report said.
' however, consumption during 1981".The essential element missing Is
82 is expected to increase nearly 2 dei&gt;\lndable short-tenn demand,

·CHOCOlATE
.
.

ORANGE SLICES

World outlook for cotton ,remain_s guarded
.

ION IQNS

BIG CHIEF

LIGHT BROWN
SUGAR
2LB.
BAG
BIG CHIEF

.

CONFECTIONER
SUGAR
2

LB.

UG

I

�,

ACTIVITIES

OPIN DAILY TIL 10 P.M.
SUNDAY TIL 7 P.M.

Dec;. 20, 1981

·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OhUr-Point Pleasant, W. II a.

F"
1

State work force layoffs less than industrial
cuts
.

SAL£ STARTS SUNDAY DEC. 20, 1 P.M.

PRICES lfl EFFECT 1HRU TUES., DEC. 22
WHIL~ QUANTITIES LAST

COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP)
Allbougt the number of people e1 ,.
· ployed by Oblo stale ~ l
haa dropped during the put, fiNU •
the wotltbce haa been apu-ec~ t;.o•
direct layoffa thai plague the state's
private COIIIplllliel.
There were 10,896 full-time
equivalent llale warken In Oc.ober
"1181. '11111 totai*upped to 11,'180 by
October 1111, IIIII WOllam p, Keip,
director of the office of budget and

SX·70
3500

Your Choic.e

111811&amp;gemenl.

DOES NOT
INCLUDE
SLEDS
WHEEL
GOODS
BICYCLES
TRICYCLES
OR WAGONS

.

'l'lllt totalla IIIII grealer thallthe
56,441 stale 'liiJrkers ~In ()c.
tober 1974, before Bepubllcan Gov.

34.88each
Reg. 84.U Each
Polaroid Pronto Sonar or Auto
Fo.cus 3500 Cameras '

'Jill* A. Rbodel lAid! over fnm hla · of employes pcu~ by a Jack of
Democratic predecaaor, Johp J. llale fUndi. There are eaceptlona,

Glllipll.
Rbodea'

administration bas
fiOU8hl to avoid direct layalfs,
~ lllllead to trim the payroll
by attrition - not repladng employeae wbo voluatarlly leave their
jolla.
. .
Followin8 an altrlllon policy Ia
lea CClBIIy 1D the llate lleca- It
does not have to .,-y the unemployment tUJljiilllilljon !hat. layoff
WOUld lriger, olfldalasaid.
Kelp, the govemlll"a top fiscal of·
fleer, aald there have been no layoffs

however, lllch aa tiiOie state agencies wllh ICIIIIt emplayeea who are
paid b)l federal money that haa been

cutback.
, ''We will continue our policy of at..
trltlan. Our taaes are dowri and just
like a COl J!OiaUGD we nut tighten
our belt," ltelp ald.
"Our p i dearly is to prevent
lafolfa," .. Mid, llllllnll that the
General .w.ubly had aet aside a
opedaJ fund to belp agencies with
tight· op8rat1ng budgets avoid emplo,eelurloughs.

ments to absorb the remainder of
the 1ncreue1 by reduclq their ems
in oeller ways, again auch aa at-

civil aervlce today is a myth."
Evans said. He said there were
trition, thinnln&amp; the raalts of govemprocedures
under which the state
mePI employeea II a matter of con·
lritillll.
.
could
eliminate
thousands of jobs if
cern for Artbur L. Ev1111, executive
"What's
more
oerious
in
govern..
director of the Ohio Civil Service
It wanted to do ao.
His aaaociatlon is the largest state
Employeea Association.
ment right - is the state's trend
toward
contracting
out,"
EvaR!l
govenunent
employee union.
"There's been some redudlllll In
the .,ork force and it's done iD a · said.
In signing the state bud8el last
He said that in addition to at· month, Rhodes said the ad·
nwnber of different wa)'ll," Evans
ritlon, jobs in some agencies have mlnlslration had reduced the state
said. "The majority of thole who are
going to bl affected wiD· bl alter """n abolished while private COil- payroll by 3,D jObs. He called for
tractors ~ IUed to provide aer- the program to continue ao that
January."
He aald that in addition to tight vices that state employees could when the budget expires June 30,
111113, the total number of jobs
agency bud!leta, legislators "did not perform.
"{Job) Security and protection in eliminated would exceed 6,500.
fully fund a recently-enacted employee pay raise. That left depart·

Whather by direct layoffs or at-

•,

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every 1.5 seconds . • Never needs bat-

Ebenezer Scrooge·becomes
aware of 'Christmas Day·'
.

.

teries. At least 40 per store.

JEWELRY DEPT.

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USA. Limit ooc per lamilv of company. Coupon vola'wrrere resfrlctea bV law. caupon

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SOME ITEMS NOT AT ALL STORE$

••

.!

By BARBARA MAYER
AP Ntwlleatllrell
There ia
place like home,
t!llpeCially In the winter lime. These
days when darkness sets in at 5 p.m.
are perfect for making a list of
things that need doing around the
house and then perfonning chores,
one by ooe.
What sort of projects! Here are
several ideas cullecL .(Nun tt1c
thoughts of home furnishings
decorating professlonala. Some or
all of them are bound ID make your
home a more comfortable or
organized envirorunent.
-Take an Inventory, room-by·
room, Of furnishlnga and acceaaorles, including appliances and
home electronics by brand, model
and aerial number, aa well aa ailver,
artwork and other valuables.
Eatlmale the coat of replacement
and make sure your '-ranee is
adequate to .cover it. Instant
pholosraphl of valuables like antiques and artworkl are useful In
case of fire or theft. Keep two copies
of the llat- one in yourpo~~~esslon at
llama and one in a place oulllde the
houae.
Malting up such a Ifill Ia alao •lloOd
method of taklnii&amp;OeL ~you
have IGIIIIIhlng valuable that )'011
never uaa and equid ..U.
-While you're getting your house
In order, find 1 place to centralize

oo

'

.

,.

NIGHT WHITE HOUSE Cbrlstm,as
preparallona - r tbe Wblte H_. continued thla weel&lt;
:al workmen decorated the NaiiOIIal Christmas Tree.

The l;hrtlllmas Pageaut of Peace Includes tbe 35-foot
tree ond other attraclloDB. The Natlooal Christman
Tree was UIDec.l7. (AP Laserphoto).

What's Christmas without a tree?
By EARL ARONSON
APNewafealnre8
What would Chrislmall be like
without a tree? The tree really
signals the beginning of yuletide
festivities.
Firrst, ,you have to coll!jder
whether to choose a·freshly cut tree
for your living room or a live tree
that you will plant in your yard after
the holiday season.
When buying a tree, measure the
space where you'll put it. Know
el8clly how high and wide the area
is; don't guess. Decide what type of
tree you want. Douglas fir, spruce
and Scotch pine are good varieties.
They hold their needles better than
most. The tree will bl more fragrant
if freshly felled.
Study the tree for shape. Buy one
that tapers well from a single tip.
Check the color of needles. Dried-up
areas indicate lhst needles have
fallen off.
Rub your finger across the bottom
of the stwnp to test for sappy
moisture, another sign of freshness .
Test branches for sufficient finnness to hold up ornaments.
When you get tile tree home, cut
an inch or two from the bottom and
set it into a pall of cold water,
sweetened with a cup of sugar,
molasses or syrup. Or set the tree in
wet sand to preen! It from drying out

- to keep it fresher. A good, freshcut tree may drink a quart of water
daily. Moisture will also help
fireproof the tree.
While a living tree may cost more
lhan a cut evergreen at the start, it
Is an Investment lhat will continue lo
grow outdoors, increasing the
blauty and value of your property. It
will screen out uildeslrsble sights
and some sounds.
If you have a living tree, each year
the Christmas trees of past years
will take on a special meaning,
perhaps with a special story to tell.
Be sure, however, to plan ahead to
where you will plant the tree and
prepare the hole . ahead of time.
(Cover the hole so no one will fall intoil).
If y.our living Christrru.s tree
arrives balled or in a tub you may
wail until wanner wealper to plant
it. Keep it cool, moist and protected
untilthen.
If you live in a tiny apartment
there is an evergreen named Norfolk
Island pine, a native of the South
Pacific Norfolk Islands 2,000 miles
southwest of Hawaii. Grown as a
landscape tree in tropical and sUbtropical countries, it is used indoors
as an accent plant. Our little Norfolk
pine grows slowly in its pot. II is
durable, thriving in a moderate light

den area. You'll enjoy it year·
around.
At Christmas it can be our yuletide
tree, on the floor or on a table
depending on its size. II is fine' gift
plant for friends or hospital and nursing home patients.
Here are a few tips on recognizing
some evergreens: Scotch pine has
whorled branches, needles 11&gt;-3 inches long, blue or gray-green color·
Austrian pine branches are smooth
and lighl brown, stiff needles 3-7 inches long, dark green; "spruce
needles are shori and sharp with a
guadrsngular cross section; white
&gt;"Pruce has blue-green needles
nearly I inch long; Norway spruce
needles are dnrk green, 'k·threequarter.; inch long; Douglas fir has
short flat needles, dark yellowgreen; and balsam fir is dark green
w1th rounded, notched needle tips.
(Any queries about gardening
problems must be accompanied by a
stamped, self-addressed envelope.)
(Earl

Aronson's

1

'Associated

Press Guide to House Plants "
would be a welcome gift for ga'rdening and houseplant folk. Send $1
and name of recipient to HoUSe Plan·
Is, AP Newsfeatures, 50 Rockefeller
' Plaza, New York, NY 10020.)

Home: good place during winterti~e

OFF
SWEATERS COATS
HATS JACKETS
GLOVES
" AND . ·
MUCH MUCH MORE!
ALL SALES FINAL•·

By HUGH A. MUWGAN
Rudge" already behind him; he was characters out of the chilling fog,
AP llpeela1 Correspoadeat
at the height of his creative powers.
finding just the right gloomy
On Christmas momlng, 1143, in a
And although he didn't realize it buildln8 for Scrooge's lonely digs,
rundown factory dlatrlct of London,
then, this versatile writer, who year- the melancholy tavern where he
.a window •uddenly new up in t!)e
ned all his .life to bl a great actor, took hla melancholy dinner, tracing
aecond-lloor nat of a drab brick had .just penned a masterpiece in Tiny Tim's crutch marks in the soft
building otherwise occupied only by miniature.
new snow, capturing the slight but .
a lew scraggy offices and a wine
"The ·cart\!," as Dickens always splendid detail about the thawed
merchant'scellar.
referred to ,it, was written in less blotchofwetonthestreetabovethe
"What's today?" cried the lone than a mooth, to satisfy his baker's oven, "where the pavement
tenant to a small boy in the street creditors. He was deeply In debt. He smoked as if the atones were cooking
below.
had borrowed heavily against in- too."
"Today? Why, Chrlstmaa Day,"
surance policie! 11nd taken • large
By the softly Olckering light of his
"Christmas Day!" exulted the advance from his publishers. His
hearth
fire, Dickens played host to
wan-eheeked, needle-rqed old man
wife, Kate, was ••peeling their·flfth
his
own
ghosts of Christmases past,
at the window. "I haven't mlsaed It · child. ~e waa alao suJIIIOI'IInli hla
present
and yet to come, intently
afterall."
slater-In-law, Georgina, hla younger
watching
the shadows of hla own
Ebenezer Scrooge, fiction'~ most
brother, Frederick, and hla jilways
career
march
over the walls and
famous regenerate villain, had come out-of-pock~ "prodigal father," the
across
the
.
ceiling
In gaunt
to tenns with Christmas and hsd not lovable, voluble spendthrift who
procession.
missed it after all.
provided the blueprint lor Wilkins
'
AI almost the same hour on that Micawblr in "Davf&lt;it:oJlperfield."
very same morning in a more
On top of that, sales of "Martin
Some readers may shudder to
respectable section of London' known
Chuzzlewit," appearing in serialized hear this, but Diclte119 was Ebenezer
as Regent's Park, an upstairs win· fonn, had fallen off drastically, par- Scrooge, "a squeezing, wrenching,
dow new open in the neat red-brick
ticularly In America, which it grasping, clutching, covetous old
dwelling that stood at No. !Devonsatirized. Dickens had feuded fier- sinner." He drove a hard bargain ·
shire Terrace. A fair, smiling'young
cely with his publishers over money with his publishers, quibbled over
man, hla eye agleam with "a moist matters and now feared they might every. cent of royalties, ran out on·
invoke a contract clauae allowing aeveral contracts, fired. two artists
and oystery I~ leaned out to
greet the postman.
them to take back a percentage of without warning and was practically
His name waa Charles Dickens
his advance.
· responsible · for the suicide . of
and he had not n\lssed Christmas
To get back on hla feet, DickeR!! another.
decided to publish "The Carol" aa a
Uke Scrooge, he was capable of
either.
The morning mall brought the
private venture on a commlaslon the utremes of benevolence and
~- · jubilant· nrq lhllt "A Christmas
baala, risking all the lolles in hopes malevolence. A soft touch tor
Carol," the eveMellghlful chronicle · of pOcketing most of the profits.
• panhandlers, especially down-atof Scrooge's ghoatly conversloo, had - The idea for a ghost story about the-heels actors, he kept a close eye
aold \lUI all 8,000 copies on Its first
Christmas occurred to him In a on family budgets and made scenes
day of publication and a aecond and railway carriage en route to Man- over hotel bills. A fond and af·
a third edition already were on the chester for a speech in mid-October. fectlonate father, he was a vain.
presses.
The plot fascinated him, but the . tyrant of a husband who, at 48,
The bearer of these glad tidings
writing did not come easily,
ruthlessly left the· wife who had
was rewarded with "a glass of
The numerous strikeouts, given him 10 children, to have an af.
whisky and a cheery blessing." The crossovers and· margin jottings in fair with an 18-year-old aclfess. He
recipient rewarded himself by the original manuscript, which is put never saw Kate again and was livid
celebrating the remainder of the on display every Christmas aeason when any of tho children went to see
Christmas aeaaon In a bubbling, in New York'~ Pierpont Morgan l)er.
'boisterous faahlon that would have Library, indicate that he .worked
Gregarious, extroverted, egocenonce again aet to "winking" the harder on this slender volwne than tric, childish to the point of allamazingly agile toes of old Mr. Fez· on any previous work.
surdity, he had aU the actor's vices
ziwig:
The cozy study overlooking the and few of the writer's. He lived for
"Such doings," Dickens wrote to a brick walled garden at Regent's applause, cultivated the crowd,
friend, "such dancings, such coo· Park became a dreary dungeoq. made a fetish of never reading his
jurings, such bllndman's buffings,
"Men hsve been chained to hideous critics.
such theater-goings, auch kissing out walls and other strange anchors ere
of old years and ldaslng In of new
now," he once described the throes
While Scrooge waa baing haunted
ones never took place In these parts of authorship, "but few have known by the ghost of his business partner
before. ••
such s~ring and bitterness at one Jacob Marley, Dickens was baing
Uke Scrooge reborn, Dickens felt time or other as those who have been visited by the ghosts of his alter ego,
"light as a feather, happy as an houhd !I&gt; pens."
Ebenezer Scrboge. And Serooge's
angel, merry as o schoolboy, giddy
Nil!ht after night, "when all soblr Christmaa conversion, duly ratified
aa a ilrunken man." At31, with lillie
formal schooling, but with. "Pick· folks had gone to bed," he walked IS ovec a bOwl of "Smoking Bishop,"
max have symbolized Dickens'
wick Papers," "Oliver Twist," to ilo miles through the dark streets
"Nicholas. Nicltelby," "Old of the &lt;;lid City, then as now London's , own.resolution to reform.
Curloelly Shop" and "Barnab•· financial district, picking his

••

home office chores such as bills
paying and storage of papers.
You will need a used or new file
cabinet, a desk or table to write on,
some drawer space to store writing
utensils and other supplies, a source
of light and an office chair. Keep aU
family reccirds including warranties, bills and recipts, tax records
and birth certificates in the file
cabinet, arranged alphabetically.
Spots for a home office include
fayers, the muter bedroom, a corner of the dining room or family
room, the kltclien or even a walk-in
cloaet if you have one to spare.
-Refinish or repaint an attic
"lind." If you don't have aomething
with character in your own attic or
cellar, golhopping for one at a,nunmage sale or second-hand shop.
Some possibilities - a mirror with
an omate frame, a clothes tree, an
old dry sink or a 8111811 table. You
can get a book out of the library to
learn how to do 11. (Isabel O'Neil's ·
"The Art of the Painted Finish for
Furniture ahd Decoration" is a good
one:) Or tall:e an adult-educatloo
course that allJlWI you to work on
your own piece In the clasaroom.
-Rearrange your bOOb according to subject. Wbile you are at
II, take all the booka out of the book·
cue, dust thoroughly and examble
their condition.
-Redo the worst cloaet In the

house - the one you can hardly
open. If that is too big a challenge,
'choose the closet in the foyer or hall
where company coats are hung.
Replace the tiny dark fixture with
one that provides b&lt;:tter light, or
change the bulb. Repaint the closet
or, bitter yet, wallpaper it in a pat·
tem compatible with the room.
Buy some matching storage boxes
for the closet shelf or do 11 the inexpensive way by covering plain boxes
with. decorative stick-on paper.
Coordinated hangers also give the
cloaet a pretty look. r
If )'OII've no mirror In the foyer,
mount one on the interior of the
closet door. Below the mirror, try
h8nging one of the new wire storage
• bins for guests' gloves and scarves.
-Reframe some pictures, or
frame something you bave ·beeo
meaning ID hang for a long time. Investigate the do-lt-yourself frame
shops which are open in many
localities.

for which there are no jars, toothpicks, parts of appliances long gone,
pieces of paper containing messages
and unexplained keys can be discarded out of hand, Utensils you rarely
use, extra pots and serving dishes
and ~nused electric appliances may
reqwre more thought. Try giving •
these items to a friend who will lend
them back if you ever need them.
- Repot some plants. Choose one
kind of pot- a traditional red clay is
inexpensive and widely available in
many sizes - and group ali the plan·
Is together, if possible, on a tray
covered with pebbles. The pebbles
absorb excess moisture after
watering. The water slowly
evapOrates, keeping plants comfortable In the dry heat of winter
homes.

- Go hunting for new table accessories already in your possession
and stored perhaps in a closet or '
drawer. An interesting accessory is
a
mirrored perfwne tray. Set it on
-If you have a fireplace or wood
the dining Ia ble with a collection of
stove, cook a meal 011 the fire and
dine by candlelight. A pot of soup or bud vases or spice jars, each with a
stew, breed belted ahead of time ond single flower. Miniatures also make
fresh fruit are simple and delldoua. · excellent table decoraUons grouped
-straighten out your kitchen together on a mirrored surface. Or
drawers, discarding anything you put a coUection of marbles In a glass
,
haven't used for sil months. Jar·lids dishorjar.

�.·
!' Page-F-2-The Sundily Times-Sentinel

r ·omcrov-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohi-Point Pleasant, w. va,

. .i .•. .

'

81' Torrt C m1e
Tbe lllbway ear oc.-hed
to a bait aad an uausually
cbeerful ~ piped: "IZnd
Street, Jaeban llelgbts -

of

twlalallal
1 ou•·

criwa

1M aWIIII, lormlail arelall
of llan apialt tlie dart

and Merry Christmas,
everyone!"

Mn.JIIIawMalridow
Uved alaDe Ill 1-8. llbe
wu. beam . . wllo loved
to llop NlilaDta ID'IIII labby
to cbat - nl' b. More
than GIICI llhe'd IGid me
._.. tllan I ilraD'*I to llnow
about her . _ prdal and
FeiiK, her._ cal
'l'llouP ...
• kind
womaa... -.,. if/',
me ·

inC IIIII - . tiM -.lldl of
Cbriatmaa caroll floated
tbroucb the lir. I tud:ed my
bead UDder tiM laood of my
coat to block out tbe lilbll

.

Women and children
clung excitedly to colorfuliy
wrapped bons Ued with lhi·
ny rlbboal. Men chatted
merrily. exchanginc boUday

and IOUIIdiii'OIIIId me. Tbey

only made me more

Lilbt flurries of . -

Tbe festive ocene was
unlike the uauai somber subway rides. Tonight was
Cbristmu Eve and tbe air

swirfed · opinlt me aa I
qulckeoed my pace. I'd ooon
be borne.
Crooalal the otreet. I saw
the bll eburcb on the ~­
It waa aglow wltb loll of
eandlea bul'llinll brlgbUy
inside. A Ufe-ilxe crecbe
'Stood on the lawn with
Josepb and ·Mary looking
down at the Cbrilt cblld in
the manpr. A lilbted lign
next to It road: "Please join
us for mfdnipt m111 on
Cbriatmu Eve."
A lear oUDDed dowD on
my clleek.--J4Li.ilcb, m111
wu a tradltloa oar family
IIIVW mlaaad. We alwayo
went to cburcb loptber on
Cbriatmaa IM. To 10 without them would aaly add to
the palo I already felt in
being alone. ..9ihy," I
thouDt. "did I have to be
a,OCMf !Dileo from home this

was electric. For' everyone,

that is, but me.
Tbis waa my first. Christ·
maa In New York City.
Leaving my family and
frlenda back In Hawaii, I
bad moved bere several
montba earlier - a young
woman curious about the
"Big City."
II promised to be an excitIng life, but It waa sometimes a '-ly one, and matinc lriendl waan't -Y· I'd
hoped to lpi!Dd the holidays
with another JOWl&amp; woman I
bad met In my apartment
bulldiJic, but abe bad been
unexpeetedly calted borne
for·Cbriatmu. Now, having
no other friendll living nearby, I wo.uld spend Cbrisbnas
alone.
AI happy ?'trill escalated
around me. felt more and
more homesick. "Tbis is
to be a family
ce ebraUon," I kept telling
myself. uHow cau I celebrate Cbriatmaa without my
family?"
AU I could lblnt of waa
the empty roam waittnc for
me, the televlllon aet my
only company.
I olushed through the
buildup of snow on tbe sub-

eo1t, vquely

~d.
to her
nellbbors u "'"""'
U., came
home.

Uke

mu II

I thought,
room1
Cbrist

abou~"

:'PreparfDI

m my heart."

My mind ra

.t •
•

back over

I d=

t1aen I could mete room tor
othera. . Maybe Chrlltmu

wouldn't bave to be lonely

''lfn. J!!lla," I llld a a
llllllle a CBI hDJ ' - , "lllllr
..W you UP lo 10 to mldolclat mau with me
loliiPt?"
.
Aepttnled by peon I In from

THE

G~TS

I'AMILY

CHIIISTUAS BOOK. Cop,;1ghl ·

(D)1110 by Guldlplllla..._
Inc. Clrmll, N.Y. 10112.
'

lamnlor voice

No cme waa there. I
liltened curioaaly. "Let
earth receive ber king ... "
I poked my beld into tbe
streel No one. I looked at
the Intercom unit on my

One of the first orders of business
was picking a name. Tile Pizza
Queens? The Sausage and Pepperonis? Tile Double Crust Quariet?
Tiley decided on Calamity Jane
because, as Ms. Rose says, "She
didn't fit the mold ... she was cool ...
she was no Miss Polyester."
TI!ere will be no hot and spicy
image with sexy outfits or heartburn
from suggestive lyrics.
"I don't want to rely on that for an
image," Ms. Fielder says.
•
"I wanlto be respected for what I
do," Ms. Moore says.

..

• CIEVEL.AND (AP) - Despite aU
: the technological advances since
man first orbited the Earth, space
Shuttle astronauts Joe Engle ~nd
Richard Truly are sUU most
fascinated by Uvlng In zero gravity.
Speaking Thursday to workers at
NASA's Lewis Reaeareh Center, the
two joked with an audience of about
400, telling them the fun of living In a
weightless envlronmenl.
"It's amazing to me that the
human can be deUvered into zero.
gravity and go right to work," Truly
said, after showing a flbn of his and
Engle's exploit. aboard the Colwnbialutmonth.
"I felt quite heavy after lbe landing and a UWe tired. But all-tn-aU
quite normal for a 350-pound man,"
Truly joldDgly lllld.
The two Aid they ·acomplished
everything dley wanted to In the
million, sharlened by three daya
bee I liM of alatd cell fallare.
"'118 - • alls,.tJ million
...u,. n - ...
1aa1

"We have enough pride In our
music to get attention this way,"
says Ms. Kennedy.
"We are musicians first," Ms.
Rose says.
They sing rock-orienl,ed country
music, much of it written by one of
the four. Various members sing
lead. No one sings bass.
"We can take the assets of one
singer and be four. time8 as good,"
Ms. Rose says. "And the fact there
are four of us gives the assumption
that we speak four time8 as strongly
about a subject- like love."
"We try to be fresh and differen~"
says Ms. Moore.
The four, aU unmarried and aU under 30, say there are several reasons
why there bas never been a female
country music quartet with a
national following: It's bard to
arrange music for four women.
Women are just · now becoming
career-Orienled.
"Tile craft was not encouraged,"
Ms. Fielder says simply.
Tiley say there will be no problems
agreeing on career matters.
"The fact that we are mllllcians
and writers is a bond between us,"
says Ms. Rose.
"We like each other," Ms. Kennedysays.
"We're not hell-bent on being
superstars," Ms. Moore says. "This
is fun lor us."

For example, you can learn a lot about handling money being a
newspaper carrier. You do your own collecting from your own
customers, and keep your own cash records. You're on your own:
You can also learn a lot about people, and the way they behave in
various situations. And about yourself, and the way y_QJj behave .
in various situations.

to

lrlolplballlllllltlllJIIVII'UIIon
. . lhle dlln .. • . lila till 11ft

t.ned mlsldCII.
"We figured we could llleep bact

Whether you're planning to be president, or
just want to earn some extra money, we'd
like to talk with you about your becoming a
part of our team of carriers. Drop by in
·" ·
person, or call.

The villi by the two shtitlle

was the llnel stop on a three-week
good wiU tour that began in Canada.
The ~dlans dellgned the robot
ann of tbe Colwnbla that waa tested
during the.__ million.
Aller the hol'ii111p, they will go

"Wtlllllwllllld 10- br Lnll
aad I&amp; WM julia af IIIIa II

___....... .._ ..... ·t ..lbn'•alllot

'l'niiJ- - ..... ......
while Ill . . . . . . . . of lba ......

No matter what you do in later life, this kind of experience
gives you a good start. In fact, 17 former newspaper
carriers have gone on to -become presidents of the
United States.

astronauts and their wives to LewiS

yeaMid .....-ell center. Pnllldeld
Relgan ill IIIHinc f1 blliiCIIin fur..
ther cuts and !Awla'1 •
miUion
badpt II a t.rsit.

aaid.

•

Sportswear
Coordinates
Delicately Bloused
in ruffles, ribbons
and lace...

·-

MISSES SIZES 8 to·l8
JUNIOR SIZES 5 to 13

At lint, Joo aays, he tried to give
conducting instructlono in English,
French and Italian. He had defected
from Hungary In 1118. But his native I'~illlp..-,~
language returned to hbn. He found
many old friends In the orcheslras
and lust! many w~ reunlono. The
two orchestras are good, Joo says. ,
TI!ei• problem II that of a country - - - - - - •
which has seen ftrs and
revolllllons. Some fine lnstrwnenll •
were destroyed and aome players
are using leu than wonderful onea.
Joo is one of lill children, all of
whom beeame professional
musicians. Flte defected from
Hungary and tour Uve in Western
Europe. He Uves in Canada.
"My mother look me to a concert;
I muat have been 3. I told her I want
to be that guy who waves his band
and makes this magic sound. When I
was 4or 5 a conductOr told me If I'm
really serious I have · to play a
keyboard lnstrwnent and a stringed
instrument very well. I studied
cello."
When he was 12, he did conduct. "I
bad curly hair and was little. I had a
good mind. I could learn scores and
beat four. 1 had enonnous publicity.
Then ZOitan KodRiy and all my
teachers came dowu JD my parents
like a ton of bricks. They said most
of the child prodigy conductoi's don't
make it. You can be injured lor life.
"lmmedlatel~ they stopped
everythl!lll and aald I wu not going
to touch a baton until! was 20. I was
cruahed. I remember crying for
weeks.Illked'tolland in front of an
orchestra and conduct.
"I itarted practicing the piano like
crazy and started ~ some
cqnpetltlono and started having an
international career as a pianist."
Joo was a protege of Kodaly.
Kodaly had big cluHa bul only two
protegee, Joo and planllt Thomas
Vuary. He geve eec:h of them a
Stelnway grand plano, witb the
stipulation that they never mention
It or thank him. Both planoo are in
Hungary. VIIIIJ'Y Uvesln London.
Kndaly died in 1967 and a Jallllard
SchDol profeuor had helrd a _Joo
concert in Budapeat and told him a
scholanhiP ad be pGIIIble at the
Jllllllard. So, on Alii· 11, 1888, Joo
arrived In New York. It wu a
'
humid, dlamal ... But Jon, who
uaed to look · - lbe hUla of
Budapeat and thiDk thai America
lay beyond ·there for lUI, reca1la
thinldJI&amp;, "I'm &amp;oinl to make It here.
Thll II my C01111trY. '' Ill llllt bia
moll*, In whom he llad IIOt caoflded. a pollteard from New Yorll.
Be attended tha J~ a year,
major1nC in plano IIIII 1.t111Dc caocluctiDC c~ tben Willi to Indiana UnlvenitJ' for a muter's

.

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ollllr IIIII - ·111 1111 wwtd Wda)'
aad .. dcll't plu " Jlllb .....
- . . a t Gil lblt lltber," ll:ncJe

the gifts·she ·loves to get.

give her dreamy lingerie...

here on Earth. AU we missed was
the opportunity to look out the window at the Earth more often," Truly
said. "They (NASA) sUD owe us
three days."

bact on lbe road, ~ other
NASA lnatallatlona.
.
Truly Aid It wu coincidence that
brought them to NASA-IAwla whUe
IJudset dllculllanl In Wuhlngton
are ,...,.1111 onlbe future of the ._

WI'S ~RetQsu.

listen.''

Shuttle crew can't
•
•
•wru.t to go aga•n

'

water

ml•tnc my fami!J and
frlendl. ADd In Ill)' laaeU·
nea bad
heart
u lflbt u a c
Oat.
To really celebrate
Cllrlltmu meant I WOII!d
have to open my heart -

'hrrfl'' ... cbfmed beet lo

me.

arouad.

1982.

•

a iplalll of cOld

oo my f-. Pnpare bim
room. ..
"Why thla II wlaat au-ut-

the Jut few ....... Bad I
_.-eel 111m _ , No, I
badil't. I had flee too baly

linCIDI: "Jf11 to tbe world,
the Lonllleome... "
I ltoDDed and looked

. NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - If
four singer-tongwrlters hadn't gone
to a pizza restaurant together last
swnmer, country music probably
wouldn't have its first female quar·
tet signed to a major record label.
Tile four frien&lt;b were enjoying a
pizza when a eustomer asked them
to sing. They did, CBS Records art
director Virginia Team heard them
·between bites of her own pizza, and
was impreaed. She recommended
the four to CBS ollecutlves and they
soon signed a reeording contract.
Mary Fielder, Mary Ann Ken·
nedy, Linda Moore and Pam Rose
made their first professional appearance Sept. 16, and now have
their first record out, "Send Me
Somebody to Love." Their initial
albwn should be released early in

..,.,.. £IIIII -

Hunprtan compoaer ldlcxnatlc:ally,
we have to spend- time aad u-·
plain What il hapPening. Many
Western orchestras can do an Incredible job. To a Hungarian o.rchestra, itcomesnaturaUy."
Joo, which ls a Bumgartan, not an
Oriental, name and II ~
Yob, explains about a ae1 of
~ of llartok's major orchestral works being recorded in
Hungary. He conducted the
Budapest Symphony in such works
·as "Concerto lor Orcheatra" and the
Budapest Phllhannonic, which also
is lbe orchestra lor opera, in •uch
works as "The Mlraculoua Mandarin." He aaya, "We matched the
works with the proper orcheltra."
Tbe albums, on Sefel Records,
also are lor aale separately.
J08eph Sefel, pnoldent ·of the
record company, alsp Hungarian,
decided he wanted the highest
quaUty lor his Bartok project, Joo
says. So be got the belt digital recording equipment he could lind, hired
an ezperienceil producer and
engineer from England, and made
sure of tbe pressing, the quality of
the vinyl and lbe design of the album
paqe. Uner nole8 are by a
Hungarian musicologist who is a
Bartok speciaUst.
·
"It was really moving io see the
pride and interest tbe musicians
took in the process of recording,"
Joo aays. "I'd go to listen to a
playback and practlcaUy the. whole
orci!Utra followed me, sacrif!cing
their intennission In order to

Now I could plc:tare ber

ne ....... a!'¥""'"' me

Wmt. ML .RJI _

"Weotem orcbeatru have a
tremendoua feel of lllllllc spiWng
over bar linea, ilpl1llJIII 1111 and on.
That'l wonderful for Brlhml and
TchalkOVSky. II you want to play a

llttiD&amp; aa till WG a1r stool
next ro 111a vo~ee • 1n bor
kltdlen, ber wlrJ, all-llalr
touoled IDio a tiua atGp bor

Quartet oWes its
•
career to pizza

""'*

'

otop cbaU..

~ the entrance way
to my bulldlnc I fumbled for
mr teya. Tben 1 heard it. A

••cpooed

-

._uy, I blw 1111 waa
IOne!y,'llllt I jult dkWt Ute
IIIII tfme to lllte to her IIDII-

AI I llltated' my body
UghteDed. Her YOice _ .
' oot: "Let Wry heart .prepare b1m room..!~

Gil WUPPIIIG

CAMPBI!IL .

cbictell II!II'J' - Au co
whiD ... IIIIiiNIIIIiiii!IOu
- I Ud flee aul''ftl ber

bomellck.

greetin&amp;a.

BE£

8J MARY
AP NewN..... Writer
Wbat II not1ce1b1e about hll accent, Arpad Joo aka, hltUng !be lui
word Ac-.t Instead of ACCENT?
"Invariably, we put the accent r··
the !!rat ayUablet tbe llungariB'
born conductor saya. "Americ••·•
put lbe accent on the .., Jnd
ayUable. And we put the musical a~
cent Cll the downbeat - the first
syUable,lll!lllcaUy ....Hing.

who

~ tiM Uttle lllopiiJn..

Wrappinc my scarf
around my neck, I lUred at
the happy laces &amp;lowing
under tbe brigbt 111bway
lights.

8lrlllli
11111&amp;
d.....,

I

digital art

ri111t. aad IIIIa I u ' I a
11ie volee WM
ua .,,...__or I .1111fnmIt
befanpd to lin. Jllla 011
the Utll n-.
.

way ,Utt«m aad

The ~undav Times·Sentinci-Page-F·3.

itPOiis, ·

Joo conducts

·.

She had ·to. 'make room' fOr Chris
=
::.~=·

-·

Dec. 20. 1911

Dec •••

.

LADIES'
'

I
....

�..

rn. ..._ Be!zl i
Tbe blcydi, wa beautif111
llld bnad - · It wullllder
lbe CllrillmM lne """ •-•
l b e - of my
my brotber llld m,.u onll
We aaw notbiJ1c elle. I wu t .
yean old aod couldn't
beUeve ll
.
Tbe year wu lt40 and lor
liS, like so many other
people, 1be Great Depresslon wu ltlll aot over. So
tbe lift was almoot beyood ·
oar linallllaUon. A friend of
Mom and Dad bad glvea It
to ua and we were thrU1ed.
We cUmbed on It, over It,
danced arouad It - 811 four
of 111 try1q to ride II
tbroup tlie Uving room at
~ IJame ume. Snow hadn't
f~en yet that year, and all
morning lona we rode It ue

By
0.,

.Ia

u •

Ck111mu

ana..:: to-:: lt.~

two--

fcrr

IIIII Giaudma
, ..........
.fcrr t'llrlltma ~ bJ baa.
'!'bore bad .._a lime, lZ
years eerller, wileD tba'e
Wen! M'ftllll IIIII a ...of.
leUr and two creat ....,_

aod can. 'I'M Depr

len

toot it all; IIIOI'Ipps , _

dooed,.llnally tbere were 10
of 111111- 1111111._ aod
oo ~·
·
Grandpa wu a very
proud man. He bad beeD
I'JVI!I'IIOI' of MuucbUietts,
prelldent of Ita .....UtutlonaJ con..,Uon - aod .IIOW be
WU ro::u- He WU Ill btl
tate Oa and very proad, bat
on tbla day evea biiM fare
wu borrowed.
'~re comlag,

=
.

;:~~~ :;';u!~.u~~~

=~ ..:l~, ~;: flpres

Ume.

\
I

.

.

.

.

f'omeroy...:...Middleport~G~~jlpolis,, Ohio.-;.P.qi~t Pleasant,

Page- F-6-T.he Sunday Times-Sentinel

By

I

·.getUng off tbe bus.

We_.. Ualt t. ~oat
willl 1M ....., ... .....,
my 1st II
. . . . . le me,
"llldetMIIID,qld&amp;"
I dldD't wdoa I ' Tllal.
Jootllll Gilt 1111 wlsthw, l
uw Cfraadpa wu wlllellq
• bleycle - ..._ blat,
bealal, bat frelllly Ud bad-

ly J)Uited~~:f. It
Onad
wu lbe
1111111 ud

Ill ,..,._ Orudpa
wallbd laD u If dllplaJIDI
a pria.w1JmiD.I r11cllioue.
'rbe four of 111 laaUd at
each otber, and myllrolber,
wlt~oat UJiDI aaotber.
word1 •• quietfy CIIITied 1be - DIU of lilt eerly momiDII dowD to tile cellar. TbeD
we ru out to~ tbem.
''GDMI wiiO W. II far!" ·
Grandpa llld. .a cbellt

·-

w. Va.

Dec. 20, 1981

· elt,llllt.."
"We loft It, · ~

ADd I kDow - llllt wu '
tbe 1111t ~ n -'d bllve

::1.:"t:.r..tm..
t -"' .

~

-ClriiMDL
Por or
be .
aever
looUd
taller

fK .......

.,.

U:,!':;bid
oi. !loud uc1
••••• •" ,_ ol111 lrled to

boots In bOoks, letters and press

releuaabautsolaroenergy ~•.
Today I am belOf! engulfed in data
about log-cabin hcrnes. The avalanche of information includes
everythlnc available on the varloUB
sisea and ahapea of log cabins, but
Jlllllt of it concerns structures to
wblch you contribute ali or part of
the labor.
While most of the log-cabin companies once were principally In the
bullnesa of bulldlnc and selling such
houles, many of them these days are
putting out dn-11-yourself kits. We
supply the materials, they say, all
rrnillsured, cut and marked - and
you supply the elbow grease. Of
course, they add, W. will handle as
much or BB little of the construction
asyouwant.
.
One company, Indian Creek Corp:
of Rochester. N. Y., says slightly
more than half of its log-home sales
are to people who do all the construction wotk themselves, with 20
percent having the houses partly
erected and then finishing off the
remainder. Another upstate New
York company, Llqcoln Logs Lid. of
Chestertown, even tu.rns out what It
calbl paaaive solar log homes.
All this renewed activity in log·
cabin houses is a result of the
housing 'squeeze that has been
generated · by high mortgageinterest rates and increased priceS;
both of which have shown some
signs of backing off very slightly in
recent months.
Young couples finding it difficult
to get into the housing market are investlgaUng every possible avenue in
the hope of discovering a solution to
t1lelr problem. At first, their efforts
were directed towards sD-i'alied
creaUve financing; that Is, the many
new forms of loans being offered
these days In phice Of conventional
mortgages. But oo matter how the
mortgage loan is sllced,, it must be
paid back at a high rate of interest.
The alternsUve Is cheaper housing.
.,lJ In ihe case of the Indian Creek log
cabins, the logs are hand-peeled In
such a Wily that the exterior suriat:e
remains rounded but with a reduced
curve.lnaide, the logs are macl\ined
flat, fanning a horizontal paneled interior.ln place of the Oldatyle heavy
mortar between the logs Is a double
tongue-and-groove. The solid,
!lliB&amp;ive, white-pine log -is
engineered to be self-leveling and
self-seating.
In the case of lbe paaaive solar
energy lllf! house, it does not rely oo
separate rollectors; storage units or
machine equipment. Logs themselves are natural solar .coUectors,
the manufacturer points out, storing ·
heat and releaslnl! it only as temperature drops. . Thick hollow·
masonry walls Ia~ with bricks,
stone or other dark. coaUng, plus a
concrete floor and an underlying 14by·l&amp;-foot rock bed, work together to
absorb and radiate heat through
daylight hours and start releasll)g it
when the temperature falls alter
sunset
.

Alpr"•lllid by pwiiidJIICJu from

THE

~~ride ll Tbe !raat
tire weot flal We nnmpecllt

Q~1l9

FAMILY

CHRIS11AA8 fiOOIC, COI¥'Itlht

(c) ,1110 by G.olclofl •• - .
alai, InC.&lt;:-. N.Y. 10512.

r-

up.

APN~Iuel
Afew yea~ ago I wu up to my hlp

diiWII to
from
GnMala I aproa pocUt
. . qalllly wiped .a.,.. .

llld ,_..._ wltll b

--.-

By ANDY LANG

pwdwlllu ..... llebeat

lllolen
' - Ia, ~ Gnad-

~~~~.:a~ t=. C

.O
. n the set with Burt Reynolds
.

HOlLYWOOD (AP) - "I figured
it was Ume to get away from
' Smokey,"' Burt Reynolds explained
about his new movie. "I had been
doing a lot of comedy in recent
years, and people had forgotten
about 'Deliverance.'''

Reynolds hadn't forgotten .
' 'Deliverance," the haunUng 1973
:mm -.bout violence on a southern
river, remains a career milestone in
his mind, so much so that his com·
pany is called Deliverance Productions. Reynolds has played so numy
_good 'oi' boys in recent years that
·fi!mgoers may be shocked to see him
·as a crook-hating cop in "Sharkey's
Machine."

The Orion-Warner Brothers film is
getting wide release during the
holiday season, and Reynolds has
more than his usual interest In Its
:s uccess. He also directed
.. "Sharkey's Machine."

He talked about . the movie between scenes with Dolly Parton in

"The Best Utile Whorehouse In
Texas." He recalled with a grin:
"When Clint (Eastwood) was going
to do 'Every Which Way but Loose,'
be sent me the script for advice, since he hadn't done a comedy. I gave
him some tips but I told him, 'Now
that you're getUng into my territory,
I'm gonna do 'Dirty Harry Goes to·

ture with you." Said Reynolds; '' He

was the key; after that It was easy to
get actors." They were mootly those

who had worked with Burt before:
Charles Durning, Earl HoDlrnan,
Bernie ~y. Henry Silva, plus Vit·
Iorio Gassman as the ringleader of
the narcotics-prostitution
organization.

Atlanta.'"

Reynolds found just that in a novel
by former Atlanta newsman William
Diehl about an over-zealous detec,
live demoted to the vice squad who
uncovers underworld corrupUon
reaching to high political office.
"Sidney Sheldon sent me the
novel, and I found it highly
cinematic," said Reynolds. "I liked
the idea of working in Atlanta,
where I have spent a lot of ~ime . I
made Deliverance; 'Smokey/ 'The
Lopgest Yard' and 'Gator,' my first
fiim as a director, aU In Georgia."
The first actor cast was Brian
·Keith, who said, "I'D fiU!ke any pic1

"Sharkey's Ml!chine" starts out
'
with a slam-hang shootout-chase
and ends wi,th one, with several in
between. Reynolds has no paUenc•
with those who decry fiJm .vJolence:
'When cr!Ucs see it in 'The Deer
Hunter,' they say it's 'brilliant' and
'authentic.' When they see It in pic- ,.::.....::...._ _l ___________________:__:___--:----,_.tures with me or Clint, they say it's

'wmecessary.'
"In my picture the good guys win
and the had guys, the dopers, lose.
That's Important to me : I don't like
dopers. I get mad as heU when I hear
that studios are coddling actors who
are always high on cocaine."

SWISHER-LOHSE
PHARMACY
PRICES

EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY
and

·MONDAY
ONLY

YOU
SPECIAL CHRISJMAS HOURS:
OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9:00
lliRU DEC. 23rd
DEC. 24th 8 U.-6 P.M.
DEC. 25th CLOSED
DEC. 26th 8 A,M .-9 _
P.M. ·

r h~ Sund~y Times-sentinel-Page F -7

Log cabin
home data

bllre.

IIIJ ....... lllc ~n;:;:!
btl n $ i . . . . . . .

ma

1911

I

I

Here's the answer
By ANDY LANG
APNewsfelltures
Q. - Will you pleaae diacuss in
your column how to lake apart the
aluminum frme on the glass insert

for aa aluminum storm dtior? The
frame on each corner has 1¥ dimples. Do I have to lake apart \he cornerS where the mitered comen are?
I have to replace the broken glass.
A. -The corners are not meent to
be aepan~ted. On the side O!JpOiite
the dimples, you will find a rubber or
p1aat1c material a fi'IICIIon ol an inch
wide. It Is lilted In around the edges
ollbe glass and Is slmilar to lbe put·
ty lound around the glass in a
wooden frame. Remove it, replace
the glass and put back the moulding·
like material or buy a new piece of
it.

TIMEX. · .
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e

· RCn COLOR CAMERA &amp;
Quasar Portable 6 HR.

e

30·Minute timer
Separate defrost cycle
Sealed-in ceramic shelf

&lt;-~

Whirlpool

VIDEO.TAPE RECORDER
CAMERA
• 3 : 1 manual
zoom control
• F 1 .8 lens

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Electronic

l

S1Q95

ln·line

maskpictur~tube

PORTABLE OR
UNDERCOUNTER
DISHWASHER
•
•

Multl·cycle Wash a .. tlon
Dual Spray Arm

•
•

No-Heat Drying Switch
Porcelain Enamel .
Interior

HEAVY
DUTY WASHER

viewfinder

R:.;,;E.:;;C~O""R""oE""R,-• Top line special
effects rncluding
slow mot'ion.&amp;
frame by frame
advance
o 90 min. battery
oac:k

YOUR

COMPLETE

CHOI~E

$ 24

CHRISTMAS CARPET SAVINGS!:
MULTI· LEVELS
PLUSHES AND FRIEZES

Sculptures, cut &amp; loops, traceries and more· in
solids, multi-colors and tone-on·to.nes. Many new
styles all at sele prices!

Q. - Please tell me how to get rid

I

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HOLIDAY VALUES ON
CAfiPETING, COLOR TVs,
·a MAJOR APPLIANCES·

THURSDAY
1 oa-:n-4pm

of clOudiness In crystal decanters
and g~~aa. 1 have tried ammonia

Rich, velvet plushes and highly teKt\)red
friezes in solids and tweeds.
Beautiful and durable stylings that
c_ompllment contemporary homes .

VALUES TO $23

and vtnegar .with tea leaves. Neither
worb. Can you help?
A. - Credit my wife fcrr the ar&gt;swer to this one. She aaya that since
abe toot the stopper out of the dec8Jio
ter and lllored lbe glauel In the
cablnel open lide upwards, the
cloudiness has tf\S8ppeared.

NOW$7 To$16

95

95

VALUES TO $25

9
NOW$5 ~o$19s~~.

SAXONIES .
Q. - The wall of our

bedroom

betlllll to sweat 1n the ran and wtater
monthl. W)rat ca,_ this? It Ia an
oullide wall •

A. - Tben IJIIIIIfl to be JIIOiltlln 1n lhat room wbidlll CQIIo
~ 0111 ca1c1 wall. Ia It a mullr
bidltlCIIII wbldl .., a Jlri.W
lllttatlCIIIIT If ao, tbeil the ftilm,
IIIDIIt air .. 01111111111 ,._ the

').

J

i

tOll

p'..,

:$1.47

TIMES A WASTIN'I Thll II your l11t opportunity to
. tlike edvlntligl of ltorewlde Chrl1tm11 uvlngl on
Cerpetlng, Color TV1, end Major Appllencel.

SILVER·BRIDGE PLAZA
.

VALUES TO $19

GALLIPOLIS, OHI~

batiJrGCim. '1'17 Gpllllna till wiDdolr
IIi t111t room • trlllt, ..,.....u, rdllr

· · - Gr

In a tremendous range of colors, weights
and yarn system&amp;, including Antron' s,
Anso's and continuous filament nylons.
A color and palt.. rn for every p'a rt of your
home.

'

PHONE 446 8390

bl'fd•. An abaltlt

faa wwld beevtll ......

I

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_ NOW$6 95T~15s~.~D

�h

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Page-F-8- TheS

Times-Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasa

J'om

uec . 20, 1981

w. Va .

CharleS Mack family ran th~ee stot"eS on Third ave.
· ware, silverware, sJunare, lllld
By JAMES 8ANil8
GAUJPOIJS - Olle hundred m1bemrare. Midi aceepted u
years qo one family ran tllree dif- payment for Ida gaadl butler, 111181.
feathers, raga, D=ud, oats, beans,
ferent otores on Third Avenue
dried fruit lllld sometimes chickens
Gallipolis. That
well as cash. .
family was the
The bosi..- grew, and in •l8'14
Mack family
Mack bought the white building that
headed by father
Allison f:lectrlc has called home for
Charles Mack.
the last several years. That building
Tile elder Mack
was
built around the CivU War
wuborninl83lln
period by Charles Creuzet. Here
Friedberg, GerMack sold his queensware, glassmany, the son of
ware, lamps, chandeliers, tinware;
Henry Mack.
SANDS
YDWlg Charles was educated in Ger- stoneware and wall paiJer. The store
many and inunigrated to New York across the street continued to sen
. about 1854. He worked as a clerk in drygood&lt;iand produce.
ABOUT THIS SAME time Mack
New York and as a sawmill laborer
took
his son Chris C. Mack Into thein West Virginla before coming to
business. Chris had gone to al(peCial
· Gallipolis In 11155.
Almost bnmediately Mack began commercial college in New York
clerlting for S. T. Langley and ·Son, and brought many new ideas to the
who operated a large drygood&lt;i business. Chris was also one of the
house about where G. C. Murphy's first Ga!Upplia businessmen to use
stenography on a regular basis.
downtown store is located.
The Mack business grew so fast
In 1864 Mack opened up his store
by 18111 Charles decided to build
that
on Third Avenue opposite present
day Allison EII:Cirtc. The building the largest department store in
where Mack began is no loilger stan- Gallipolis history (to that point).
ding. Mack sold dry goods, notions, The contract was let to T. S. Ford
boots, shoes, chinaware, Bohemia and by the Christmas season of 1881

the Macks were open far~ in

Tannery on Vine Street which w811
about where J--.'a llore now
sits. Chrla Mack - put In chars• .
niture.
and some new equipment lnsQlled. ·
IN HIS ADVERTISJNG Mack was Mack placed a large contract with
often given over to nta olllllteraUoo an eastern teatber CCliJIIIUY which
as one ad announced Mad[ to carry ran for a few yean. But iD 1903 the·
cbevlols, checks, cottonalea and contract wu cancelled and the laJI. :
c8asimeres. Later he advertl.iled nery had to declare bankrupty. '!be :
tha\ he had a new oupply of "per-· year before, Mack's lint store on
splratlon catchers." One plctore.s Third burned to the Jli"OUnd.
tiny little bockets that are placed UJ)o
CHARLES MACK continued to
der the annpit. Actually what he Operate the other two p1acea on
was selliog was a handkerchief.
Third until aboot 11120 when Harry
In later years the . Macks also Stockhoff look over one·bulldlng as
opened up a branch store In Vinton grocery store. Mack soon. retired
that operated for some years. Ir&gt;- from the department store u well,
cldentally, Charles Mack had and it, too, served in other capacities
married Minnie Vollbom and had tllrooi!h the years.
eight children. All of them were
.Both Charles and Chrla Mack were
reared in the German Lutheran civic minded having served on the ·
church that stood just below the city council and some charitable
present-day Ohio VaUey Bank.
boards. In 19011 the Mack family had
IN l8t3 THE Macks built a large helped to organize what becarnO!
ice shed in hack of their department known as the Gallipolis Manufae- .
store and here were kept over 400 turtng Company whoae purpoll&lt;i
toils of Ice. In that same year· seems . to have .been to promote
Gallipolis had over 20 Ice houses that Gallipoiis business by encouraging
could store that much lee or more.
people to buy at home.
In 1894 the Macks took a bold step
James Sanda' address is Box 92,
when they .bought the Ufermann Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
three locatlona. TbtJ giant department llore DOW . _ Ball Fur-

. as

MACK F'AMILY RESIDED In part of the three-story building obown
here at 218 Third Avenue In Gallipolis, ,T. s. Ford built this edHice for
Charles Mack Ia 1881, who, upon Its completion, could boast that be bad
Gallipolis' largest department store. Charles Mack also owaed the white
bolldlng which In 1981 housed AUison Electric Co. but was In tile process
of liquidation, likely to cl""e In tile spring of 1982. Charles Mack used It for
queensware. Aero" the street Mack also ran a produce house from 1864
tol902.

t t PS... ~

lli'lallipoli!S

lltarp - - ,

Historical society hears
reminiscent lecture

a

•

Metzenbaum asks for investigation
of review. program
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. Sen.
Howard M. Metzenbawn, l).{)hio,
asked last week for an Investigation
of what he said is an overly tough
review program under which the
.Social . Security Administration is

taldng away disabllity benefits .from
many persons.

percent of the cases that it has
reviewed In Ohio, Melzenbaum said.
"I have received lnfonnation that
In our state, the Social Security Ad·
ministration ~ not.paying adequate
attention to medical histories and is

Under a "massive, accelerated

eligibility review of current
disability insurance beneficiaries,"
the agency is halting benefits to 47

rushing through the review
procedure," he said.
"In Cleveland, admfulstratlve law
Judges have reversed the dectalon ol
the "sta.te agency In half thoae caaea
1n· which recipients were denied
benefits;''

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,.----------~-----

A schedule··of area programming,
activities and events,

•

December 21 thm 28
'

A guide tQ
'

area entertainment
.

Includes complete
W. E. CURFMAN In Marine
dress uniform back whea he was
a corporal. He was a sergeant at

Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,1941.
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALlJPOlJS - The Gallia County Historical Society will hear a
reminiscent lecture at 2:30 tllis
(Sunday) afternoon in the banquet
hall of St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
The "lecturer will be Frank Hill,
wh0:m some oldtimers around here

have called the P. T. Wall of the
1980s. 01' Sam Peeps. in fact, a few
· months back had occasion to write
something about P. T. Wall. How did
we identify P. T. Wall1 Simple. We
said that P. T. Wall was the Frank
Hill of the pre-1932 era of Gallipolis!
REV. W. E. CURFMAN, Turkey
Run Road near Cheshire, was a
Marine sergeant with the 18th
Marine en~ineers building a training
camp on Oahu, Hawaii, Dec. 7, 1941 .
He had been in the Aleutian Islands'
Dutch Harbor, Alaska, and was sent
to Pearl Harbor where, in May,l941,
he was in charge of the cement
works. His job and that of the other
Marines was to set up a '' C' 1 fonnat
between Hickam Field and the
Marine barracks right beside the
docks. He had entered the, larines
in July, 1940, from Bidwell, and
because of prior trning skipped the
boot period and went directly to
Alaska.
NEEDLESS to say, Curfman was
not a reverend when he went into the
Marines. The Curfman family came
to Bidwell from Cottageville, W.Va.,
with two teams of horses pulling an
old wagon and utilizing a ferry to
cross the Ohio River. It ws 1925 when

W. E. CURFMAN is shown as
he appeared tbls week in the
newsroom of Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.

FILL

T

the Curfmans came to Gallia County. ABaptist, Rev. W. E. Curfman is
a volunteer . chaplain at Holzer
Medical Center and has been since

listings

1968.

Fame,

THIS GALUA Countlan saw the
Arizona blow. up on Dec. 7, 1941. He
saw the Oklahoma turn over. He
watched the West Virginia sink. Curfman had a clear view of all this
tragic pummeling until the
Japanese strafed Hickam Field;
then he was caught in the crossfire
between Hickam Field and the harbor.

page 14
SOap Opera Review,
page 1s

CURFMAN LANDED in the
hospital paral)'"led from back and
spine Injuries, but got his medical
discharge from the Marines in September, 1943, and they judged his
military ~ord as "excellent. 11
Before he volunteered for Marine
duty in July, 1940, Curfman had served at the CCC camp in Downey,
Idaho. He made sergeant at the3-C
camp, and this experience helped
him when he entered the Marines.

Area Happenings,
page6
•

CURFMAN HAS been a Baptist
clergyman since July, 1945, and in
that time he has served as chaplain
of the Disabled American Veterans
post in Gallipolis. However, he has ·
suffered four strokes and·four heart,
attacks since he became a preacher.
He remembers that Day of Ir&gt;famy. He was in bed in his tent in
Tent City; he looked out the side of '
the tent, and what was going on out
there- he knew it was not a game!

'

NAME --------------------~
ADDRESS --------~--------~

Perceptions of Christmas,_page _8
.·

Please send me information on Individual ·
Retirement Accounts. Mail to Ohio Valley Bank,
420 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attention: Richard Scott

Serving Gallia,
Meigs ~nd Mason Counties
.
..
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A total of $4,000. And whatever you put in is
tax defened until withdrawal. Your account
earns interest at current market rates,
Interest that remains tax-free until y0u retire.
Atime when your Income and your tax rate
wil be a lot ~- Helping you gain financial
· security in your 1etirement ye8rs.... Another
reason you can and should expect more
from Ohio Valley Bank.

Retirement can be a beautiful thing. Hyou
· can afford it. If you don't have a retirement
plan, or if yoU want to supplement the plan
you have at wor1&lt;, start now. With an
Individual Retirement Acoount (IRA) from
Ohio Valley Bank. You can put AtN
AMOUNT up to $2,000 a year into IRA,
regardless of the amount of your income, or
$2,250 a year if you include your
non-working spouse. And Wyou both work,
each of you can save up to $2,000 a y~.

an

TheH new lilA regulallone do not llec:OIM tftecUve until January 1,
!1182, but come In now for lull palflculatl ~d addlllonel lnfonnalion.

Expect more·from
BABY JE8U8 FOUND- Elyria, Oblo palke 811- Bru~ Mce.rten,
reiii8Vel8 . . . . olllle llllbJ J - ,.._ .. dey IIIMid • llu lillie elty
tut 'l'lllnd8y. 'l'lleffpnwa Uba !rem &amp;NtduwNd-rlty - • •
...... ea1llq IIHif
Reva.u-ry Army nplrll dly ...........
lower lallea,
mid bderat rate. u . - . - far tile llatna. (AP
Laserpboto).

lbe....,..
Jell....,

'Ghost Story',
page2

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I

-Valley Bank··

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Pour lOcation• to aerve you better.

•

Member: FDIC

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