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                  <text>Page-2o-The Daily Sentinel

j, December 24,1981 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Several Christmas scrooges
this year ·in Buckeye Stat~
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Delinquent mortgages, bankruptcy
filings and unemployment are the
scrooges of Ohio's Christmas this
year.
The results give Santa a mi~ed
bag of coal and toys. Witness:
- More than 12 percent of the 242 ·
state-chartered savings and loan
associations report at least one in 20
of their mortgage portfolios are
delinquent this fall.
- The Federal Home Loan Bank in
Cincinnati reports that out of more
than $31 billion committed to mor·
tgages in Ohio during October, 3.05
percent - almost $1 billion - were
delinquent. The rate ranges from
1.63 percent in Cincinnati, where $3.5
billion is out on mortgages, to 5.4
percent in Mansfield with $186
minion in mortgages, and 4.2 per·
cent in Cleveland, where the com·
mibnent is $10.2 billion.
-Mortgage bankers in· Ohio
report that 7.94 percent of their mortgages were past due in the quarter
ending Sept. 30. That group, which
has about 50 members in the state,
doesn't disclose the money committed to mortgages but it notes only
a fraction of the past-due accounts
went into foreclosure during the
period.
-The U.S. Bankruptcy Court in
Washington says bankruptcy filings
increased by 21.9 percent in Ohio
over the past year. In the year en·
ding June 30, tbe rate of bankruptcy
filings in the state exceeded 40,000
annually.
-The Ohio Bureau of Em·
ployment Services published a
reminder that November's 10.9 per·
cent unemployment was a record
high. Much of it is blamed on layoffs

in automotive and auto-related in·
dustries. Scheduled December
layoffs will put another 25,000 or
more Ohioans out of work.
!lui on the brighter side:
-State banking officers say they
aren't alarmed at the present level
of mortgage delinquences.
-The ratio of past-due mortgages
has

improved

In the spirit of the season

from 33,000 people for the 7,500 new
jobs expected when it begins work
on the B-1 bom~r.
Clark Wideman, superintendent of
the Ohio Division of Building &amp; Loan .
Association, said the 5 percent
delinquent mortgage rate for state
insured institutions is a yardstick for

in so.me areas.

Figures from the home loan bank rate.
show an improved percentage in OcWideman said it is just one method
tober over October 1980, in Parker· of looking at potential problems.
sburg·Marietta, Springfield,
"In a highly profitable
Steubenvill~&gt;-Weirton, Toledo and
association, if the (delinquent) loans
Wheeling, which includes the go over 5 percent we might not be so
Bellaire-St. Clairsville area of Ohio.
concerned, particularly if we look at
-The bankruptcy court recorded the entire community to see why it
369 fewer annual filings in the year happpened," he said. He noted that
ending Sept. 30 than in the year en- problems are scattered across the
ding June 30.
' state and said, ~~we are not
- Some developers are offering generally alarmed by this in·
fiv~&gt;-year mortgages at unusually
crease."
low interest rates, a different twist
Stale Superintendent of Banks
to builders paying a portion of the Frederick Mills also showed a lack
coSt of long-term mortgage money of alarm.
in order to keep the housing market
"I can tell you that in a general
alive.
way we've looked at delinquencies
-Economist Daniel A. Pavsek of this year as opposed to last year and
AmeriTrust Co., the Cleveland bank they are up very slightly overall, but
holding firm, said an expected slow that includes instalbnent, combut steady economic improvement, mercial and all kinds of loans," he
including softer short-term interest said.
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rates, generally will work to im·
The Mortgage Bankers
prove employment in the second half Association of America says its •I&gt;'
of 1982.
proximately 50 Ohio members
But the bad news was everywhere. report that just over 22,000 of their
In Dayton, where unemployment 277,713 mortgages were past due in
ran at 8. 7 percent, employment of· the quarter ending Sept. 30.
!ices said 15 people were applying However, only 1.29 percent were as
for every job opening. High interest much as 90 days overdue and only
rates and a slack economy caused 0.16 percent went into foreclosure
Dayton promoters to postpone a during the quarter. More than tw&lt;&gt;display of new homes.
thirds of their mortgages are in·
In Columbus, Rockwell In· sured by government agenices.
ternational said it had applications

From AP --vires

With money tight and interest
rates up, upgrading the home environment is more likely than ever
to be a do-it-yourself job.
This help:; explain why home fur·
nishings products which offer
economies by giving people a chance
to do the work themselves are en-

.joying an increase in popularity at
present. Unpainted and inexpensive
self-constructed furniture and home
furnishings kits are some examples.
Yet another home furnishings
product that seems to be in greater
demand

is

wallcoverings,

par-

ticularly the fabric-backed kind
which many people put up themselves.

Recently, a wallcoverings industry market study indicated that
nationally about 16 percent of all
American families purchased
wallcoverings in 1980. Altogether,
126 million rolls were sold - about 78
percent of them for residential use.
Economy was not, strictly
speaking, the reason for their pur·
chase. At an average of slightly over
$9.50 a roll, it is more expensive to
wallpaper a room than to paint it,
although manufacturers say the
wallcoverings last longer than paint
and are therefore just as
economical.
However, perceived value certainly played a role in the choice.

coordinating domestics from Cannon Mills. fn so doing, the company
became one of an ever·increasing
number of mass producers offering
coordination formerly available

on~c~~r~~~o~~t,'~~tt

president
John Orsak, his finn chose to lie in
with a domestics manufacturer par·
· tly because statistics indicate the
bedroom and bath are among the
mos't likely candidates for
wallcoverings. Altogether, about 52
percent of all wallcoverings pur·
chases are used in these rooms. The
kitchen accounts for another 26 per·
cent of demand.
Industry figure.!! for 1980 reveal
the average purchaser is an in·
dividual 4ll years old or younger,
with a family Income of $20,000 or
New England and le8lo1 prevalent in
the South. Individuals living in cities
with 500,000 or more in population
are more likely to buy wallpaper
than those from smaller towns and
ruralareas.
.
Consumers have a large choice of
what to buy. At any given time,
there are about ·1,800 sample books
on the market. Each sample book
has a shelf life of from two to three
years.

At least 500 new books are printed
each year and ~orne 22,000 dealers

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1981 has been our best year since starling our
business six years ago. We extend a big "THANK YOU"
for our support and an even bigger wish that you have a
• very merry Christmas and a happy New Year.

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Give us a call.

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THE PHOTO PLACE
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich
109 High St.
Pomeroy

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years ago. Daisy, the dog, runs on ahead. Werll Ill a ,
traiaer at tbe Arboria Morgaa Farm of Hickman. (AP •
Laserphotol.

DASHING THROUGH THE SNOW- Trainer Neal
Werts takes a Morgan stallion for a spin hitched to a
Portland cutter made in New England more than 100

OSP chief seeks assistance

COLUMBUS - In a statement season is moderation: when you message, Col. walsh stressed the
issued today by Colonel jack Walsh, drive that car ontb the highway , importance of wearing seat belts,
superintendent ·or the Ohio State make sure you can handle it men·
"You don't have to be travelingHighway Patrol, he asked Ohioans tally and physically," he said. "If very fast to be tin-own against a winto join together in making the 1981 your thought processes are impaired dshield or ejected through it at the
Christmas and New Year's holida.V due to alcohol consumption your · momimt of impact," be said.
the safest ever.
reactions are slower i this can mean "Wearing a seat belt increases an
"Troopers will be working on our the difference between life arid accident victim's chance of surhighways throughout the holiday death."
viving by six times; give yourself
season to promote the smooth, unin·
In summing up his holiday and your family that chance."
terrupted now of traffic," Col.
Walsh said. "Safeguarding the hi&amp;;,, ·.
-.
way· environment involves both fMMlllillOiii""'!MlO&amp;lOiillllillOiilllliiJCMMliiMMJO!illlOiiiMJO!illlO:Jillllilllll i!'
assistance and enforcement. We will
11
be helping stranded motorists and 1
i~uing citations . to traffic law
-?
viOlators or removmg them from the

Gree· ..L1ngs
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waUcoverings sold here, six are sold
in western Europe.
'· He sees this situation as an O!&gt;'
portunitynotadrawback.
"We've just got to convince

highways."
ill
Traditionally, the last holidays of I
the year become a heavy drinling 1
season with office parties and home !
celebrations in abundance, the ~
Colonel said. "Excessive drinking, 11
overeating, and lack of sleep often II ·
make up a deadly combination for I
drivers who end up losing coqtrol or !
falling asleep behind the wheel," he
said.
!
Bad weather may further com· 11
plicate the driving scene in Ohio, the ill
Colonel warned. Snow, ice, and sleet I
make driving more hazardous than !
at warmer times of the year.
11
Col. Walsh reminded motorists ill
who own CB radios to call for 6elp on !

that once people take that first step
and try some wallcoverings, they
willcontinuetodoSI'."

respond to calls for assistance.
"The key to a happy holiday

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Vol. 15 No• .u

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Copyrighted 1981

Today's

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of ,.._ Clorlet-•

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will ..ow _.,..
defllllt. n ..~~a.

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ELBERfELDS IN POM.EROY II

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Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Thereon Johnson
Leslie F. Fultz
Richard C. Follrod
Ferman Moore
Ben H. Ewing
Paul G. Eich
Fred R. Carsey
Fred W. Crow, Jr.

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News briefs...

GDC to appeal OSH~ citations

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Seven men have pleaded Innocent to
charges brought in indictments by a
grand J111'Y after a one and a-half
year Investigation of an alleged in·
terstate car thtift ring.
·
A federal grand j~ last Friday
indicted 22 people from Ohio, West
Virginia, Georgia and Florida on
charges involving 5Q vehicles worth
$1.5 miUion. Acting U.S. Attorney .
Wayne Rich said ·from 500 to 1,000
vehicles may have qeen involved in
the alleged scheme.
Rich said the remaining defendants would be arraigned Dec. 30.
The indictments allege. that cars ·
were stolen in Ohio, West Virginia,
Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Virginia,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida, and
then were sold in West Virginia,
.South Carolina, Georgia and
Florida, Rich Sllld.
Varioua methods were used in the
alleged scheme; including altering
.of vehicle identification plates at·
tached by car manufacturers, he
said.
He said mostly luxury cars were
stolen, such as Lincoln-Continentals,
Cadlllacs and Chevrolet Corvettes,

Theodore T. Reed, Jr., President
Thereon Johnson , Executive Vice President 11
I11! Paul E. K loes&amp; Vice President
M
a Roger W. Hysell, Cashier
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I John P. Karschnik, Ass't. Cashier
Evelyn G. Lanning, Ass't. Cashier
Joanne Williams, Ass't. Cashier
Addie w. Norris, Loan Officer

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11 Sections, 76 Page$ 3S Cents
A Multimedia InC . Newspaper

the areas wasn't properly handled; ·
amebiasis, isn't highly contagious
and employees weren't issued
· and ~·t a danger to GDC clients,
employees, or city and county . proper clothing or safeguards against contraction of histolytica.
residents.
Dr.. Edward . Berkich, GDC's
Histolytlca Is an Infection in the in·
· testines characterized by Qloody medical director, said in an in·
terview Thursday he standS by
diarrhea.
The citations, issued Dec. 15, were statements he made in a Dec. 10
not delivered to GDC Supt. Robert press conference, in which he aod a
Zlmmennan until noon lui Monday public health nurse, Barbara For·
- the aame time copies of the bes, said· hlstolytica was no danger
citations were hand-deUvered to the to anyone and was being treated in
Times-Sentinel and Huntington and the proper fashion,
.Berkich said claims by the CWA31
Athens news media.
employees
and clients were infected
Officials have clailped release of
weren't
true
- . 11 clients and two
the citations by the' union to the
·
employees,
one
a food · service
media are not in accordance with
manager who had been removed
normal OSHA procedures.
.
)lriefly, the citations state infected temporarily from the department bad the infection. He also said
~~~'!g;~:r~;~~tsu:: histolytica is common in state in·
dry wasn't being seprated in storage stitutions and is present in 2-10 per·
. or tnicks; laundry and mops weren't cent of the client population at GDC,
properly bagged; food -service per· and has been present at the in·
sonnet and trays were sent into stitution since its beginning abnost
(Continued on A-4)
allegedly infected areas; trash from

·$even charged in interstat~ -c ar
~eft ring plead not ·guilty

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OFFICERS
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High interest tales and recession
have been the price paid for
lowering the inflation rate.
Ail measured by the Conswner
Price ln~ex. inflation roee 0.5 percent in November after a 0.4 percent
increase in October, the government
reported.

Rio Grande man included ·in indictment

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FROM
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not reboUnd, howeVer, the Investment-information finn aid,
"the picture will be a bleak one (or
.allinduatriea."

Sunday, Dec. 27, 1981

Controversy continues
By KEVIN KELLY
Ttm...S.Uiinel Staff
' GALLIPOLIS - The point~ountcrpoint
surrounding the
existence and treabnent of an Intestinal disorder at Gallipolis
Developmental Center conlinu"l! af·
ter the institution for the mentally .
relarded received a set of citations
this past week.
Offlclals et GDC said the citations,
issued by the Occupational and
Safety Hazard Administration, will
be appealed.
· The controversy began last Se!&gt;'
!ember when the Communications
Workers of America, one of several
unions not recognized as bargaining
agents at GDC, claime&lt;l, amebic
liistolytica was present at the center
. and the administration has done
nothing to control what they said ts a
"highly contagioua" disease.
Health 'officials, however, are
standing by their -claim histolytica,
and ita apparent variation,

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a...,... .o •to• ._..,...va

~,.. to fadorlea for durable
goods, which include such big-tick,:
items as appliances and
automobiles, roee 1.1 percent in
November after plwruneting 9.8 percent in October, the Conunerce
Department reported.
Staodard and Poor's Corp. predicted relief In the New Year for three
troubled industries - construction,
aitlines and automobiles - if the ex·
pee ted mid-year
pickup
materializes. If the economy does

tmes

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potential for increued. consumer
spending as lnllaUon slows · and
another round of tax cuts takes ef·
fectinJuly.
Among other encouraging reports
this past week, the Labor Depart·
menl aid "real spendable ear·
nings," adjuated for taxes and Inflation, rose 0.3 percent in November for an average married wage,
earner with three dependents. That
COO'Ipared with a 3percent decline in
November 1980.
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more. Purchases are greatest in

Greetings

NEW YORK (AP) - In the spirit
of the season, a few kind words
about the economy :
.
, Inflation conllaues to niOderate.
and, as measured by the Conaumer
Price lnde~t, appears certain to be
contained below 10 percent for 11111,
the f1nt dip beneath double · digits
since 1971. The outlook Ia for Inflation to unwind further in 1982.
Predictions of an economic
recoverylnmid-1982 are widespread
among econornisls, who cite the

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=~~~~~ h~:~~I~;: t!e~7ho~ hour-per-day
~~:01e~c.;n~~~~:%;~n~~
~~~w:; ~
basis and officers will ~

•nay stock from 300 to 500 sample .
The industry has been making a per- books. Some large retailers may
suasive case for the utility and &gt;'lock I,000 or more books.
beauty of its products and their conNot everyone who buys
tribution to the good looks of the wallcoverings is planning to do the
installing, but it has been estimated
home.
Reorganizing wallcoverings pal· that 80 percent of purchasers will
tern books so that related colors and hang their own wallpaper. The do-it·
patterns are grouped together with yourself market has encouraged
photos of the pattern installed in a development of such products as
room and decorating ideas has pre-pasted wallpapers and sim·
. helped whet the consumer's interest. plified, less messy adhesives and •I&gt;'
In addition, coordinating plications. In addition, there are
wallcoverings to other home fur· more retailers keeping more pat·
nishings products - such as fabric, terns in stock to accommodate do-it·
curtains, bed and bath linens - has yourselfers who don't want to wait
also created interest. Today, ac- several weeks to receive their pur·
cording to one manufacturing chase. ·
Despite what some people have in·
executive, a sample book that did
not · include coordinating fabric lerpreted as a growih of demand for
would almost certainly be returned wallcoverings, the United States has
a long way to go to catch up with
by the retailer.
Recently, Sanitas introduced a European consumers. Orsak
sample book that ties in with a line of · estimated that for every roll of

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"the worst occasions." Foreclosur~
run far less than the delinquency

A few kind words .for the economy

and that one tractor-trail.,: rig 'was
amoDg vehicleS taken.
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ChaJ"MeS in the indictments include
conspiracx, interstate Iran·
sportali&lt;NI of stolen motor vehicles,
and receiving stolen motor vehicles.
The conspiracy char~es carry a
maximum sentence of five years im·
prisonmenl and a $10,000 fine. Each
count of the transportation and
receiving charges . carries a
maximum sentence of five years im·
prisonment.~~nd a $5,000 fine.
·
Former West Virginia state
policeman Michael George Lowe, 34,
of Charleston, was one of the defen·
dantS who pleaded innocent Wed·
nesday. He was charged with one
count of conspiracy, Rich said.
others pleading innocent were:
Raymond Edwin Darco, 24,
Charleston, charged with three
counts of conspiracy and eight of
transportation; Stanley Lee Dixon,
37, Charleston, one conspiracy and
one receiving charge; Nonnan
Eugene Landers, 31, Sissonville,
three .conspiracy and five transportation charges; James F. Love
IV, 30, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,' one
conspiracy and four transportation
charges; Larry James Pauley, 37,

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Charleston,
one conspiracy and one

transportation charge; Tommy C.
Williams Sr., 43, South Charleston,
one conspiracy count. ,
Others named in indictments
were:

Johnny "Abie" Mathews, 40, Riq
Grande, Ohio; Earl Edward Pugh,
30, Columbus, Ohio, now in·
carcerated in a federal prison in
Milan, Mich.; Dennis R. Cobb, 28,
Charleston; Delmar C. Eicher,
Charleston; Faye D. Eicher,
Charleston; Timothy Linn Eperhart,
25, Charleston; Clarence Wayne
Fugate, :&gt;.:i, Charleston; John Vernon
Hanlie, Savannah, Ga.;

James

Franklin "Buddy" Morris, Bristol,
Ga.; Thomas Edgar Morris, 30,
Bristol, Ga.; Glenn Purcell, Baxley,
Ga.; Ronald M. Ray, 31, Hinesville,
Ga.; Robert Wayne Sapp, Baxley,
Ga.; Major Dobby Tomberlin, 45,
Baxley, Ga.; and Chester M.
Wheeler, 23, Charleston.
Rich said the investigation, in·
volving FBI and U.S. Justice Depar·
lment agents and stale aod local
police from several states, was continuing and that he expected to
present evidence against other in·
dividuals.

..
-Richard
driveway Friday of the over Zl 111cbes of show whleb
falllag oo
Houghton, Mich., Wednesday afteraoon and eonlinued through Chrlstmaa
Day. Hougbtm, located 111 Mlclligan'a upper penlasala, has received
some '10 Inches so far this season wlthllle predpilatioo 111 the past two
weeks aceGUJ~tlng for balf the total. (AP Laserpho!G). ·

Fire guts landmark structure.
· ANN ARBOR, Mich. - A Chrisbnas Eve fire which destroyed t)le
University of Michigan's landmark ecoriomics department building

was still smoldering today, officials said.
Floors coUap:;ed in the 12S·year-old wood and brick structure,
making it impossible for firefighters to remain inside to battle the
blaze that broke out about tO p.m. Thursday, Ann Arbor fire depart·
ment BataUion Chief Robert Murphy said Friday.
Murphy said the threll-Story structure - the oldest classroom
building on the sprawling U·M campus - was a "total loss," along
with valuable manuscripts and books it housed.

Scioto fire kills youth
NEW BOSTON, Ohio- Fire officials were investigating the cause of
a blaze that claimed the life of a 7-year-old boy early Saturday.
Firefighters identified the victim as Timothy l{essinger. He was
pronounced dead at the scene by Scioto County Coroner Roy Adams.
Three members of his family - Carita Kessinger, 35, and two
sisters, Tammy, 17, and Amy, 14- were treated at Scioto Memorial
Hospital for smoke inhalation.

Solidarity calls for protest
EMPLOYEES
JoAnn Crisp
Gladys Joan Vaughan
Lois Burt
Sharon Smith
Sue Lightfoot
Jenny Smith
Richard Stettler
Dorothy Amberger

Ann Browning
Linda Mayer
Bruce Reed
Paul Reed
Donna Schmoll
Dena Neese
Christopher Yea uger

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Iris Payne
Susie Abbott
Jean Werry
Charlene Thomas
Sharon Michael
George Hicks
Stanley Bass
Kay Cullums
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The .communi

POMEROY, OHIO

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WARSAW, Poland (AP) ·Poland's outlawed Solidarity
union is urging Poles to step up
anti·martial law protests to
"strengthen the position of
representatives of the church" in
secret negotiations with the
government on a "political
solution" to the Polish crisis.
"If we display our intention to
fight against the regime of
(Premier Wojclech) Jaruzelski,
these negotiations can make
possible a way out of this blind
· aUey in which society and the
Polish stale now find themselves," said a clandestine
Solidarity bulletin clrculaUng in
·Warsaw.
The Dec. 23 bulletin, quoted in
uncensored r.ports reaching the
West Friday, disclosed that
Poland's Reman Catholic bishop&amp;
h!tve been meeting aecretiY with
top COIIIJIIUIIiat Party officials to
seek a "polltl'cal solullon" to the
criaia.
.
"Every actiOn at pnlte8t, even
the II10J8t lnldinmcan~, llrlkea a
blow apinst (the military goverrunentl and ha.aens the time at
returning the anny to the

barracks," the bulletin said.
The union's communique stop. ped short of suggesting armed
rebellion. A protest to be
emulated, it said, was the one at
the giant Ursus tractor plant near
Warsaw where, it said, only one
tractor was turned out in the first
weekofmartiallaw. ·
.
The bulletin called on Communist Party members to resign
and for Warsaw residents to
place can~ in their windows to
mourn those

~'murdered"

by the

military and pollee.
Although the government has
acknowledged ileven deatha in
clashes since martial law was imposed Dec. 13, unconfirmed
reports reaching the West say as
many as 200 have died.
.
The tract did not mention the
1,276 striking coal miners in
Piaal, who Poland's official
media said remained ' un·
derground today despite
emotional appeail from their
families to come borne.
A aimllar number of minm
from the adjoining Zlemowlt
nilne pve up their occupation
'lburlday to be with their

families for Christmas, ac·
cording to Warsaw Radio broad·
casts monitored in Europe.
·• Throughout Chrisbnas Day,
ihe·raill&lt;i broadcast appeals from
wives and mothers for the Piast
miners to give up their protest.
In a voice choked by sobs, one
woman was heard pleading with
her husband over a telepl)one line
to the Piast pit: "Come out as
soon as possible, Sylwek. Today
2IJ miners have come to the surface and they did not face any
consequences.''
Another woman pleaded,
"Come out my d,arling. I caMot
bear it any longer. I have talked
to the colonel and he told me that
nothing will happen to you when
you are out. There is no point
staying down there any longer."
The · radio also reported that
two Solidarity leaders from Lo&lt;tt
had been tried and sentenced Under summary martial law
Procedures to three years in
prlsan for inciting strikes. It was
the.mlnllnwn penalty under martial lnl that threaten punishment up to the death penally for
such offenses.

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Commentary and perspective
0

Page-A·2

Costs may exceed UOO -million

Dec.27,19&amp;1

Was the 'veto shoW' Worth
the ·price? .
Robert J. waP&amp;an·

•

The .S upreme Co_u rt.: business as usuual.~:::====oJa=mes=J.=K=ilpa=m.=·c=k
WASHING TON - Before it
recessed for tbe Chrislmas holidays,
the Supreme Court bad handed down
11 full-Ill"'"' opinions and disposed
of hWidreds of cuea with swmnary
orders. Ail an old trend-spotter, I
venture this observation: There are
onotrends to spot.
. The high court rocks along as
"SIIloolhly as those famous crewmen
the children's round, who rowed,
)"owed, rowed their boat gently down
·the stream. The 1980-81 temi saw no
great leaps in the law. Nothing thus.
far in the new term -suggests a lust
lor judicial innovation.
The only difference in the present

:ot

ierm lies in the presence on the hen·
ch of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor,
whose destiny is to go througl\life
forever hearing herself int~uced
as the first woman ever to be appointed, etc., 'etc. She bas slipped into the life of the court as easily as a
fireman slips into his boots. She bas
not hesitated to ask questions from
the bench. She speaks her mind at
the court's weekly CQn!erences. By
every accoont she is a charming
woman, but she is also a justice. She
expects, and she gets, the same
respect the others get.
As Ronald Reagan's first
nominee, it was generally expected

iunhaJl. ~imt5 - itntintl
A~
A Division of
&amp;!m~ ~'--r• r"'T""E!!!c::::tiJ=~

~v

825TblrdAve., GaWpolis, Ohio
(614) 4*2342

.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(6141992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

.-

HOBART WII..SON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-controller

•

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.4. MEMBER of'l'be Ataodated Pre111,lnlaod DaUy Pm11 AseodaUoo aDd the A.merlcao
NeWipiipef Publkbert AIIIIOC.iatioa.

LE'JTER8 OF OPINION are welromed. Tiley should be less than 3011 wonbliOftl. AU
ldlen .~ subjed to ed.Jtillg aH mu•t be sigaed with DKme, addn:tli aiHI telep~oe
...uer. N• ualped lttctn will be pablilbed. Lenen ahould be t.good taNte, addre1s1Dg
w.., oo1 penouiiUn.

•
·o

Sense, cents and nonsense.

~

Libyan hit squads

- hoped, perhaps ~ that Jusice
O'Connor would join the court's con-·
servative bloc. It hasn't worked out
quite that way, though the evidence
is inconclusive.
Mrs. O'Connor has particiP.Bted in
nine ol the 11 plenary cqses; she
dissented from the majority's
reasoning in four of them. "As a
dissenter, she has sided with the
liberals three times. the conservatives only once. None of the
cases was of earthshaking Importance. The only surprise cam ein
a Missouri case involving a suit
against state tax officials. The fiveman majority supported what might
loosely be described as a "states'
rights" point of view. It might have
been expected that Justice O'Connor, as a former state judge and
state legislator in Arizona, would
have joined the majority. She sided
with Justice Brennan, Marshall and
Stevens instead.
Justice O' Connor's maiden
opinion came on Dec. 1. Following
custom in such matters, she wrote
for a unanimous court. The case concerned certain discretionary powers
of the secretary of the interior over
bidding systems on oil and. gas
leases. Hers was no opinion for the
ages, but the issue was not immortal
either. When she is given a case with
real meat in it, we will have a better
idea of her style.
The only notale trend around the
high court is not a new trend, but an old one: The work load keeps
growing. In 19'19-80, the court
docketed 4,781 cases. In 1980-81, the
number swelled to 5,144. The total ·
will increase again this term.
Barrett McGurn, .the court's. in·

formation ollicer, has romputed
that the CQurt lllllll dispose"of CIUieS
at the rate of one every 31 minutes
during working hours. So many
cases already have been accepted
for oral 8J'8Ulllent that no new case,
unless it is a case ol compeWng importance, has a chance of being
heard before the court concludes,
oral argwnent son April 28.
Rumors regularly float around the
CQUI't's press room that such-andsuch a justice is thinking of retiring.

The only such nun0r lately ball to do
with Justice Lewis Powell. He Joined
the court following bJa confinnatlon
in December 11111 with the vague undi!rstandlng that he wished to serve
for 10 years only. But at 74, Justice
Powell is in good health - good
enough to go duck hunting over the
holidays - and he has no present intendons of abandoning a labor he so
plainly loves.
None of tt.e other graybeards
seems likely to step aside either.

.

Chief Justice Warren Burger also is
74; w~ Bn!nnan 1a 7li; lburgood

•• WASHINGTON (NEA) - II wqs while those ~g on c!vll caaea the federal wait f~. ,
political theater at its best.
were Saving property.
Nevertholees, it .~ possible to
.makeaome
guesstimates ol what the
First President Reagan hurried
But other agencies - sucb as the
shutc!own
COli(
the tupayen. The
. i~to an early-morning press briefing departments of Agriculture, ComOffice
.of
Pusonnal
Management
.to announce that he 'was shuWng merce and Health and Human Ser- ·
estimates
that
the
daUy
payroll for
down an "non-essential" federal vices - furloughed high peroperations. He was about to veto the centages .of their workers. Morale the. "affected" agencies ill $190·
congressional resolution that would reportedly plilmmeted in offices milliOn.
But the overall COflt is much
- ~)ave kept the government operating
whose employees disolvered that
higher.
Several ·congressmen ba~e
until the adoption of a permanent their jobs were not considered essential:
·
asked
the
General Accounting Off..,
funding bill.
to
try
to
come up_with a precise
But there wu eventually some
Hordes of dazed bureaucrats
figure;
but
a spokesman for.. the
,; began streaming from federal of. ·good news for those who had been .
congresSional
a~ency said that the
: flees arQund the country a~er sent home: Their time off would be
task
may
prove
impossible. The
·• \laving been furloughed without pay cOnsidered "adiniilistniUve leave,"
; until further notice. They even which meant not ollly that :they GAO ma.Y ~ able to determine the
', · created an unusual midday traffic would be paid for the time they bad exact number of workers
missed but that thOse hours would furloughed, he said, but it probably
~ jam in downtown Washington.
; Finally, after bitter debate, came not be counted against · their cannot calculate "the expense of lost
productivity."
vacation time.
· .
~ the adoption of a resolution more to
This is critical to· arriving at a
So how much ilid this whole exeri the president's liking that would
~ keep the government operating unlil cise cost? The two agencies that total cost. UWe work Was done in
• Dec. 15. Reagan promptly signed the should know - the Office ol Per- many agencie~: on the day of the
i measure, announced that al federal sonnel Management and .the Office furlough aside from figuring out who
' workers would be back on the job the of Management and Budget - are should go home and who should Stay.
not exactly falling all over them-. Thus, many offices will run up stiff
~ next day and joked that he otherwise
selVes
to provide a definitive an- overtime bills paying employees
, might have become the first
who inust make up the work they
swer.
}';president 'to take out his own garon that day or who worked
missed
The
Reagan
admlnistraiton
ls
::':bage. .
during
the preceding weekend · to
clearly
embarraiiSed
that
shutting"
~ - All II! this made a great story for
prepare
for the disruption.
·
,.down
the
goverrunent
for
half
a
day
, the network news programs.
In
addiUon,
It
will
cost
the
governover
a
spending
resolution
that
It
.
' American taxpayers bad better
' have enjoyed the show because it found excessive probably· cost the ment several million dollam just to
' cost them a bundle. But emctly how taxpayers several hundred million re-program the payroU compulel'l! to
credit all . workers with ad- .
much wiD be debated lor some time. dollars.
''There is not and never will be an· ministratlve leave for the boars they
'. On the morning of the veto,
Reagan instructed the members of absolute, precise count and there is misaed.
his Cabinet to go back to shut down no need to," said Edwin Dale, the · Sen. Alan · Crallllton, , D-Calif.,
~ all "non-essential" operations in spokesman for the Office of estimates that the president's ac.. their departments. '~Esaentlal" was Management and ·Budget, when tions cost the taxpayers at least f400 .
Josely defined as "lifesaving of asked "the cost Ill the shutdown. He miWDii. The Reagan administration
property saving" or pertaining to added that his agency would not ven officill)ly disputes that figure, bill
· national security or law en- try to calculate that figure because sources within the Office of
forcement. However, each agency the matter is "too boring" and · Management and Budget say , ·
privatelythat it might not be far off.
was Jell to determine which of its · ~yeSterday's news.'~
There is a .final twist to all of this.
Meanwhile,
Donald
Devine
of
the
operations were essential and which .
Despite
the variation in layoffs from
Office
of
Personnel
Management
were not.
agericyto
agency, at least one group
was
saying,
in
effect,
that
making
Some agencies - such as the Penof
workers
seems" to have been consuch
calculations
wail
not
the
job
ol
tagon, the State Department and the
sidered
"essential"
throughout the
his
agency.
"Our
job
is
not
to
coUect
Justice Department - interpreted .
federal
establishments.
It is
records,"
he
said,
"but
to
keep
the
the instructions broadly and sent
believed
that
not
a
single
governgederal
govenunent
working."
Thia
few, if any, of their workem home.
For example, all U.S. Attorney's of. came as a surprlae to many repor- ment official with limousine
!ices remained open on the theory ters used to rece,vtng long, privileges - and there are many of
that those working on criminal cases statiatics-fiUed news rei.._ from them in this administration - ·sent
were
in law enforcement the agencY trumpeting every drop In his chauffeur home lor the day.

Marshall and Harry tllaclanWI are
both 73. Jpsticel hiltorlcaUy are like
Cleopatra: Age does not wither
them, not custom stale tbeir tnftnlte
contrariety. Frankfurter was still
sitting.at 80, Brandeis at 83, Black at
85, and Holmes at a v-.-able 91.
Mr. Reagan, who doubless would
like to make a few more ap.
po!nlments to the court, had best be
paUent yet a while.

~~
. I

By LOWELL WINGET!'
I am alert these days for a group of evil men wearing funny hats like
Vassar Arafat and speaking with a Libyan accent. I have mislaid the phone
: nwnbers of the FBI and the CIA but I do have the nwnber of our mail carrier
: who is the only G-Man I know and trust. I will call him at once if I see them.
Ever since someone in the White House conveniently leaked the story of
; Libyan hitrnen out to get President Reagan, I have looked for them to go by
• our house any day. Florida bas 4,500 miles of coastline, if you include bays,
: inlets, etc. and Florida bas one hell of a drug smuggling problem. Each mon; th thousands of tons of marijuana and thousands of kilos of cocaine are
; smuggled into Florida, mostly for shipment to northern markets. Florida
• ~ law officers estimate they intercept only ten percent of the total. They also
; . estimated that only ten per cent of the smugglers and dealers are arrested
; and only one percent go to jail or are fined. If dope can be smuggled with
• such ease why not hitmen? There should·be big money in it.
;
· I bav~ read much about the CIA, the FBI and the Border Patrol guarding
: the Cslladian and Mexican borderngainst lhese phantom hitrnen but I have ·
; neverread of them guarding Florida or the Gulf coast from North Florida to
•. the !IOUthern coast of Texas. I am sure Governor Bob Graham would
; . welcome their help here in Florida. While an army of ClA and FBI in; vestigators are hunting for the elusive gunmen. perhaps they could give the
• Governor a little help with the dope problem. It, too, is a national problem as
most of it goes north.
,
Before the CIA or FBI calls me in for questioning about terrorists in
, Florida, Iehne emphasize ).don't know of any. I don't know if they exist out-: side the imagination of some White House Reaganaut trying to justify the
:: President's aetiCIII in loosening the reains on the CIA for domestic spying. I
; . am merely applying a little Sherlock Holmes _logic. I can,'t imagine any
: Libyan in his right mind leaving the warm sunshine of the Mediterranean to
•. face the icy blasts of Canada or to drink the dubious water in Mexico.
:
Libya and Florida have much the same winter climate. Florida has
; . many foreign visitors to Disney World and other attract(ons and a large
;: population of Spanish speaking people. To most of us. who speak only
-: English, foreign languages sound much the same, so a Ubyan w1thout h1s
:, burnoose would provoke little attention. Another attraction for Florida is its
: easy availability by sea or air from any nwnber of countries with communist
• sympathies. Cuba is only 90 miles "from South Florida and I am sure Castro
: . would only be too gladto cheer on their way a group whom he considers with
: - such worthy ambitions as the assassination of Reagan &amp; Co. "In fact, he
; : might be willing to supply a few little ole nuclear bombs which have been
-: kicked back in a comer out of the way.
;.
Both Col. Muamarr C.addafi, Libyan strongman, and-Fidel Castro,
:: Cuban dictator, have been berated fairly constantly by the Reagan team
-: over the last II months. I don't know if their revenge would go as far as
:: assassination put if ·the White House alarmi.sl!l are to be believed, .they
:; might. Those marijuana landing strips and _the many inlets •. b~ys and nve~
:- .nn the Florida coasts could be very temptmg to anyone w1shmg to land m
&lt; Florida without going through customs. II would probably take several
:; thousand federal agents to cover Florida adequately but we would welcome
;- them. With their large expense accounts, they would make U\) for the tourists
;: the state bas lost due to the drug scare.
-:
Yesterday I passed by the magazine counter in a drug store and there,
:; side by side, were Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Colonel Gaddafi. Nancy was
:- smiling her brave little smile while it appeared the colonel was shouting
:: something at her. Mrs. Reagan's picture was on the cover of Newsweek and
·; right next to her was a picture of Gaddafi, full page, on the cover of Time.
:;
It is a measure of prominence these days to grace the cover of a
&gt;magazine and the more prestigious the magazine, the greater degree of im;; portance. Ronald Reagan was responsible for both pictures. Nancy earned
~: her prominence the bard way - by marrying him; Gad~afi by irking him.
•
I don't claim to be an authority on assassination or anything else but it
:• seems the art of assassination has undergone a great change since Abrbamn
: Uncoln was fatally shot by John Wilkes Booth as he sat in the presidential
; box at Ford's .Theater in Washington, D. C. Except for a few wildeye loners
·' like Hinckley and Oswald, modem assassination bas become a party affair.
:: The more guests, the merrier, like the series of killings in Iran or the plan' ;: ling JfindiBcriminatebombsincitiesaroundtheworld.
·
·;
The hitmen story sounds like the high drama with which most of our
:• governmental affaim have been conducted this past year. Before the public
: will 100 percent buy the hit-aquad story, it may be necessary to produce
; more positive proof. Perhaps by an actual attack on ooe of \he four targets,
· .; Regan, Haig, Weinberger and Bush, but that is A bard way to prove a point.
:• Abetter way would be to capture the hit-squads, secure confessions arid then
·: _ and only then - confront Gaddafi. By recalling our nationals from Ubya
; without sufficient proof, we have raised the Sllllpicion in the rest of the world
; we are readying Libya for an attack.
•
If there is an attack on our leaders, don't ellpCcllt to be a nickel and
'; dimeaHalr. We have given Gaddafi toomuchmoneyforoU for that. A bWJon
:; dollars would so a long way toward all)' kind of murder and mayhem. Just to
be 011 the ufe side, I !IMid to stay far away from W88hlngton after Congress
: "reconvenee and aU tbe government offletals have setUed baclt to the joyous
.• 1as11: of euttiDI more froni tbe federal budget. Then, if Gaddaflla 81 bllek 81
• he Ia painted, a van, a pldrup or even a U-Haul parked near the center of
·: WaahiJIItllft could eoata1n a nuclear bomb whlch, In a second, could wipe out
: the Jllllrked men, CoiJCI'ell81111 reduce the federal payroll by thollllllda.
•
On thai cheery note, let me triah you a happy Holiday Season. n may be
·,. our Jaat for a long time!
0

On Capitol Hill: there

have ~

been good guy~=s=============Jo=a~~=~==~=o=n
WASHINGTON.- Every Christmas Day, to demonstrate that even
the meanest man in town can be suffused by the holiday ;-pirit, I salute
the members of Congreas who have
done a good turn for someone who
needed it. These acts of kindness or
decency were usually committed
with no discernible expectation of
political award.
As always, I want{to reassure my
readers that I haven't gone soft and remind the conniverS .that the
muckrake will be back in action
tomorrow.

Here are the goop deeds I have
found worthy of special mention this
year. You'll have to imagine the
sound of jingle bells and a few uncharacteristic 00-ho-hos from the
old curmudgeon:
- Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M.
Bill Prewitt of Las CruL-es, N.M,
remembers riding otf in a tank on a
seeret mission, in Ho11and during

World War II - and coming to as the
medics were stuffing his corpse into
a bOdy bag. Thirty-seven years
later, Prewitt still walks with a limp

and suffers recurring headaches and time for the Brooklyn congressman there, and he has assUred Russak's
pains in his legs.
since 19'14, butleft three years ago to elderly parents they needn't worry
He bad no memory of how he bad give full attention to his quest for a about the medical hills.
been wounded. Wh.en he sought in- legal education. Last May - two
- Sen. WiUiam S. Cohen, Rformation . from the Army, the , weeks before he was to graduate Maine.AnoverzealousVeteransAdbureaucrats refused to release his ', fnim law school at the top of his ._, ministrationemployeespottedapicservice record, or even acknowledge class - Ru.ssak swerved his bike to lure in a lbcal newspaper of a man
that he w.S ~ntitled to sev~n.!'\edal~ 1 ,,. a~ojda dog and fell 'lfl, cracking his ••-avenging bottles for deposits. The
he had soli. Prewitt's kids, mean- skull:
~
VA employee recognized the man as
while, never quite understood why
Solw-l heard that his former aide a veteran drawing disability
he couldn't lake an active part in was in critical condition. The benefits. The officious bureaucrats
their childhood games.
L'Dngressmen spoke to the hospital calculated that the vet could eam
Prewitt appealed to Domenici. administrator to make sure Russak $4,000 year scrounging for bullies
The senator's staff discovered the got the best of care and arranged for - so they cut his veteran's benefits
Prewitt's service record bad been top brain specialists from Harvard by 70 percent. The frantic veterandestroyed in a Kansas City and New York University to who actaally makes less than $fO a
warehouse fire.
ewnine the young man.
month collecting bottles - asked
But Domenici's inquiry stirred the
Solarz also made two other calls. Cohen for help. The senator got the
Army into at least partial One was to the Jaw school dean, who man's benefits restored in two ·
acknowledgement. On day Prewitt agreed to let Russak graduate in ab- weeks, instead of the nonnal twil
received a small package in the sentia. !His sister colleced . his months.
•
.
mail. It contained his seven medals, diploma for him, to !' standing
- Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif. A
including the Purple Heart, at- · ovation.) The other call was to the California cerebral palsy victim in
te;1ing to the wounds that nearly firm that bad offered Russak·a job; his early 3lll bad planned a crosi!,
killed him. Domenici is .still prod- they agl"l!ed to keep the job open for country bicycle trip to call attention
ding the Army file clerks to locate him.
·
to the lntemallonal Year of the
Prewitt's wartime medical records
Solarz has continued to keep art. Disabled. He wanted his lOngtime
-Rep. Stephen Solarz, [).N.Y. eyeonRussak'sprogress.Heflewto friend and neighbor to accompany
Jack Russak, 24, had worked part- Boston on the eve of an operation him.

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HONDA
FOLUJW THE LEADER
YEAR-END SUPER SAVINGS!
OUR LOSS • YOUR GAIN.
. ALL BIKES LEFT IN STOCK AFTER DECEMBER 31st
WE WILL HAVE TO PAY TAXES ON. - .WE ARE
OFFERING OUR 1981 &amp; 1982 HONDAS AT

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS
OFFER GOOD THRU DECEMBER
31st ONLY.
.

ALL WAS

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NEW YORK (AP) - The stock .
market has reached the final week
of 1981 with scarcely a hint of the
traditional "yearend raUy." .
Stock prices have been slwnping
since early December. In the past
week they drlfteJtslewtylower in
the 'aboenoe- Of any inapiring

econoidlll news. .

•IDeo ._llleaStH~.

.

bringing !Ia loea for tbe last three

weells to 18.31 points.
The New York Stock Exchange
compollte index lost .78 to 71.11. At
tbe American Stock Exchange, the
market value Index managed 1 .011
gainto321.24.
Big Board volUme ·averaged 31.11
mlWon sbares a day, against 411.11

The Dow Jones average of 311 in- . mlWon the week before.
, dustriais dropped 2.31 to 873.38,
In the view of many analysts, the
DOONES~RY

,

•
'

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next couple of weeks could do much

to set the toae for Wall Street in 11112.
"The period including the last live
tradJac days of"December and the
flnl twt. trading da)'B of January
has been 1 historically bulli8b period
in this century, with the 11181"ket
rising- about tllre&amp;quarters or the
time," llld Alan Shaw and Robert
Colby, 8aai)'lll at Smith Barney,
Harris Upllam and Co., In their
weekly lnveltment-llrategy letter.
· "The put five years have gone
haywire, however, with declines
evident 111 three olthe five yearendl~
"Hiitory llhon that In many
periods when the lll8rket falla to
rally ~n~~- ~~.r-:~ therethe
were lower prices w
in
followlnl year- often aubltantlally

lower."

'; ,

'

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'

Cllendar-watchintl analyats also
have lldvanc:ed the theory of the
"JIImWl7 barometer," whlch holrlll
that !be marbt'l January perfonnanc!e ofta pniYidla a tlpolf !AI
wlllt it will do the balance ol
the year.
Same II them have liken thlaldea
a lllep further, 81111 CGIICiudld tbat
the flnt BvelradiDI clap of the ye~r
provide 1D 1¥111 -ller ·li8nal .of
wllltmaybekl-.
"Tbe leGIIIIIIJ Ia alldiDc downward at ID
llitw rat.," 8.
Jay Levy 81111 o.vtd A. ""'·
priftte - - baled In Olappaqua, N.Y.,

••urwd.

Ill 1111 llll1tll1 lllljullmR !AI ..
II,Jtltll of Social a.curtt, benellt

•.
I

engine highlight this cusiom cruiser. •·

CR 2SoR ELSINORE

CUSIOM

:· Lack of 'year-end rally'

l

~rest looks and a powerful6'!1 cc four-eycllnder

$1795

liooDe ..W ""am ... Pr•J'
IIIIIJIItlla. Tile I'III:C ef lillie . . elloer

'" It will IIIC.'OIIDtw • ....,..",....
bJrrllr Cllllll _ _ ...... 111111
mld-1•• '1'11111 ....... fGrcel wUl
be -"'«!by lhe lldiQded 11 .,..
C!llllNdtldiCIIIIn . . . . . . . 81111

'

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qtiu:r Ia 1111- .moe ef ~ 811 •IU7 Mallleell alter .._.

-u.~· feMnl

m'

•

-: : CB650 CUSTOM

caa

r----...~.o---,

I

.

A smooth riding, shaft-driven touring machine
with a liquid-cooled, 1086 CC· engine and air
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Art

•

~:;;_:;,,.....=:;..s

'3695

One of the things that CIA does is
run secnit busine&amp;Ses known as

.

.

a

"Isn't that tough?" the agent from had the yak butter goinil to the readout the only one who made a
Hong Kong, whose cover ·was chair- United States and the welcome mats profit this year for 'The .Company'
proprietaries, to provide covers for man of the Kowloon Toy Company,
going to Pakistan. We're not mind was Tablestone. Let him tell the rest
agents to "wash'' money for covert. said. "If you can't compeje, then get readers."
of you duncterheads how we ,did it."
operations and for other clandestine out of the mdsic box business. I'm
"Oh, shut up," the dl~or said.
"He isn't here, sir. He l"elllgned
operations.
. not 1Jl8king a dime on my boxes ever "Let's get to you, Brinkley. How do last month and went into bullness
Up until recently, these busineases since the Taiwan CIA Copany star- you explain the fact you still have forhimsell." .
have been very successful, but lately ted to undercut us."
:IJXI,OOO Lapland ski boots in your
"What kind or business?"
many of 'them have been losing
The director said, "Why does warehouse in Helsinki?"
"SeUtng submaclline gwo&amp;, bombs
money. So "the Company" decided everyone have to make music
"I bad an order from Harrod's in and poisoll gas canistem to the
to call everyone back to Langley, b9J:es?'"
.
London for the whole lot, wllen the Libyans. He said that as far as
Va., to see what was going wrong.
The agent running the South KGB's Finlandia factory thi-ee business was concemed the CIA
The Director of Dovert Business Korean Novelty Company said, "We times, but they keep ignoring my . didn't offer him a future, and he's
Operations was in a foul temper.
put out a Nancy and Roonie DoU for request.liow cari I run a clandestine rather strike out on 1lis own."
·
The addressed the CIA agents who Christmas and it laid a bomb.''
busineu if our peopkl won't get
were charged wi\h ·running the
The director looked over bJa com- tou&amp;h with the competition?"
"Where Is lie ~WngaU hl8 stuff?"
business covers.
pater printoula. "What happeend to · . The director said, "I'll talk to the
"The same people we get It fron~
"This is the worst year we've ever you, Danfleld? It 11ys here your arson people later. Now we get to sir."
had," he said. "Our gross sales are New Delhi Exporting Company . Bibennan. I have a report tllat yOii
"Do"you mean to say he ia telling
down by 20 percent, and the CIA can drooped fl million in the last qaar- used CIA· covert funds to cover up people he is still working for the
no longer eat your losses. Now what ter."
your losses from the Mediterranean CIA?"
the hell is going on?"
"That wasn't my fault I sent one Fruit Fly ComJ*lY."
"No, just the oppoeite. He keeps
The agent, · whose cover was million 1111draa welcome mats
"I'm suing Jerry Brown and the leWng them he ian'L But •.he more
president of the "Deutchsland Music through Oannea•'• llbtpping com- State ol CaUfornia. AS 110011 u I win he i1111sts he hils no11Ua to dO with
Box Company, said, "It's the fault of pany In Jlombay' and hl8 lllupid the caae, I'll replace the money. I .., the more our IIIJ!Pilera believe he
the hOng Kong station. They stole people uniOided them In PUialan. can prove every fruit fly we sent c1oa."
our designs and they're flooding the Anyoqe here ever try to Rei 1 Made themwullterlle."
'l1le diNctor llld, "You have 'to
U. S. market with cheap imitations. in lodia welcGme 111111 in Palllatan?"
Thedirectorllld, "Bibarrqan,you blndltk!Tibi'*-.Hul\n)'ahad
I make the best music boxes in the
Donnetler aald, "Your COIIIpllny -sdn'tlatOW llllerlle fndtlly from a
lll8ldnc 1 lilck. I wi8h I
world, bull can'tcompeteon price." got the invoices alliCI'eWed up. You
a iYP1Y moth. I - tram this
100 ITICII'e like hiin."

;,,

"I'm trying to think what Coolidge would have done."

&lt;-

No business like CIA husiness~=B=uch=wa=ld

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•

Dec. 27, 1981

Dec. 27, 1911

Pomeroy

Fire damages office building

'I

•

,.
I
I ;

'.

'
Apparenlly some residents bad some paid lull price for on Thursday,
lhey could buy at hall
&lt;ash left after. Christmas as lhey lhroaged to lhe Chap- price at this Saturday morning sale, Swisher-Lohse
mao Shoe Store In Pomeroy Saturday morning to take Pharmacy also featured a ball price sale Saturday, lhe
•• advantage of a posi.Chrlstmas sale. What shoppers day after Christmas.

LEFT -

GDC to ·appeal.
(Coniinued from page I)
'
'
; 100 years ago as the Ohio Hospital
; ; for Epileptics.
Prevention of infection can be
· done though proper washing of han. ds, Berkich continued, because infection can only occur through direct
contact with infected human waste
or plates or clothing. He insisted
water lemperalures for washing
machines were at proper levels to
kill germs and that the pool was also
being filtrated against infection.
CWA, along with Ohio Pubtic
Workers United (OPWU), which
made similar charges against GDC
nearly a month ago, said the public
using the recreational and meeting

GAlLIPOLIS - Fire 11 unknown
origin heavily damaged an office
building at 2M Jackson Pike Uite
Friday afternoon, according to the
GaUlpolis Fire Department.
The fire is . sliU -under in·
· vestigati on, a department
spokesman said, but It is beli~ved to
have started in the office of Toler
and ·Toler Insurance Agency, who
are also the building's owners.
Fir~men were called out at 4:36
p.m. and remained on the scene for
lilmost three hours. The fire ignited
the interior wall, ceiling and roof of
the insurance office, causing a total
of '-10,000 damage to the structure.
There was smoke and water
damage to M·T Constructioo, one of
the rented offices, and smoke
damage to Dave Hill Insurance
Agency and a vacant office in tho!
building. The report said 23 men and
three trucks were on the scene.
The department also' put out a
grass fire in an open field adjoining
Burnett Roarl in Kanauga at 4: 15
p.m. Thursday. The fire was caused
by burning trash, the report said,
and 13 men were on the scene for 45
minutes.
In other matters, Gallipolis City

••
'·

denied this.
"The city bealth comrrusstoner,
Chris Morris, called me when this
started and asked me two
questions,' ' Berkich said. ''One: is it
a danger to the public? I said no.
Two ; is it a danger to the waler supply? I said no. "
GDC officials intend to appeal the
citations, claiming the inspection
made by Donald C. Lewis of the Ohio
Department of Industrial Relations
was prejudicial and lhat all
medically-acceptable procedures
are being used.
An anonymous phone call last
Thursday infonned the Timesroom facilities were in danger of Sentinel Berkich's claims were "a
contracting lhe infection. Berkich bunch of bull" and accused him of
making contradictory stalemenls.
Berkich said he would welcome
holding a meeting between the
unions, the media and himself to anPOMEROY-Emergency units
any further questions on the
were ke'pl on the move with calls swer
matter.
over the holiday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service repor·

Emergency runs

MAIL T01
A GROUP TOURS· 710 ' W~LLER ST.
PORTSMOUTH, OH. 45662

-------------------------NAME _ _ _ __
ADDRESS
---=~---

· Police were lnfOI'tlk!d Friday a window on a machine shop owned by
Gary Smeltzer located al28 MadisOn
Ave. was broken out sornellme Thursday night or Friday nwmlng.
. Police investigated two minor accidents Thursday.
. The report said a vehicle driven by
David .E. Wlaeman, 22, Gallipolis,
ilrifted right on the 100 block 11
Second Avenue at 11:43 a.m. and
atruck a parked vehicle owned by
James L. Roberta, Galllpolia. There
was no damage reported to either
vehicle.

A vehicle driven by '1'betaa ,J.
Staley, 28, Galllpolia, llnlck ' a
parked vehicle owaed by Louli M.
,asquale, Galllpolla, at 11:• ·a.m.
n the 100 block 11 Third A - . Ii
raused moderate damage to Slaley's
car and slight ' to the Puqlllle
vehicle.
··
The GaUJa County Sherllf'• Depirtment said It arrested Melm o.
Sargent, 25, Kanllup, 1111 ~5
for a bench warrant. City pollee
Brian K. McDade, 11, . Rl, 4j
· Gallipolis, was cUed for failure t6
wsplliy.
:

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBI.L ••

REDEEMED BY BLOOD

of '!luid

• P.O. Box 308
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

7:10
~.

Name left out
POMEROY-The Name of Jeff
McElroy was unintentionally omit·
ted from the second six weeks
grading period honor ron of the .
Pomeroy Elementary School.

.

-

f'

..

-

...

•

--

-

Wlknown number ot Poles who Ded
bere after Poland'• Conununlst

,

l)\··.•:

..lbello
,

~ ~

P MftNtefrom

""''i*"

Dau.,.wJt: N
II : SSAM

Bill blocks grain embargoes

l

l

!

China anticipates record grain harvest

i

r::G=, ~e~onHa':::

...

.

r----'--------- - - -

M
•
k
Thomas~
Inor wrec s mar
holiday period

'

. WEu.sTON- Bertha
97, fonnerlyofThunnan, diedSatur~ris Jean Kiser ..
day in the Jenkins Memorial Nur·
1
sing Home, Wellltoo.
~ , POMEROY-Dorta Jean Klaer, 35,~
Born JIUlel8, 1884, daughter of the l
¢df the Pomeroy Healtb Care Center, Uite.Rufus Jones Leslie and Frances
! &lt;lied ., 'thursday at Veterans
Hibler L\!alle, she was married to
~ )\femorlal Hospital.
Abrabam Bays :I'J10mas, wl!o also
GAUJPOUS - The Christmas the path of ·a southbound vehicle
1 • She wu a dllugbter of the late
preceded her in death in 1968.
holiday didn't pass without the us¥) driven by Connie S. Staats, 32,
'; jreddle and Thelma Hayes Kiser.
·SurviVing is a sOn, Dr. R~rt D. quota of minor traffic accidents In Pomeroy, causing slight damage to
~ Qbe' wu also preceded in death by a
Thomas of Galllpolia; lhree grand- the area.
Beaver's car and moderate to the
llrother, Howard
.
children an~ four great· · The Gallia·Meigs Post of the state Staats vehicle. Beaver was cited for
f SUrYivlng are the following
grandchlldi'en.
highway patrol said Lawrence H. failure to yield.
llrdtben and sllters, Okey Edward
Funeral services will be held at 11 Burdell, 36, Rt. 2, Bidwell, WBB
Wal)da M. Lyall, 39, Jackson,
,. a.&amp;rles Kiser, Onle Marie · a.m. Monday in Calvary Baptist slightly injured in a two-vehicle ac- escaped injury at 7 a.m. Thursday
CliTia, James Kiser, Ill of Racine;
Church, Rio Grande, with the Rev. cident in GaUla. County early Thur- when her vehicle's engine caught
e Rippetoe, Charleston, W. William Clark officlliling. Burial sday night.
.
fire while southbound on Rt. 775,
, Pbyllla Randolph, Racine;
will be in Tynrttos Cemetery, near
According to the report, Burdell two-ienths of a mile south of Walnut
J:raiold Kiser, Uberty Center; Bon- Rio Grande. There will be no calling was eastbound . (Ill Rt. :'6e, tlbRd. 34. Damage was only to the
~e Varian, Mason, W. Va.; Roy
houra, and the body will lie in state tentha of a mile west oi CO!mty Rtl. 7, engine,lhe patrol said.
Kiser, Grand Forks, N. D. ; in the church one hour prior to the at 6:30 ,p.m. when he met a wes1:
According to the report, Donald E.
,_rbara Compton e.nd pavid service.
bound vehicle on a curve and Barlimus, 28, Inez, Ky., was east·.
Klier, both 11 Grundy, Va.,
Funeral arrangements are by the coUided, damaging the sideview bound
Rl. 124, two-tenths of a
..-ainiecesandnephen.
. Kuhner-Lewis Funeral Home, Oak mirror on, BurdeU's pickup truck . mile east of Reedsville, at 3:10p.m.
Sjjrvlces will be held at 2p.m. Sun- HID.
·
Tbe other vehicle continued· on, the Friday and struck a tree, causing
~ .. ' '
moderate damage to his car and no
report said..
.
Burdell wBB not treated at the injury.
Bradley M. Harvey, 30, Rt. 3, '
scene for his injury.
The patrol cited a driver in a two- Gallipolis, was northbound on Rl.
car collialon at the intersection of 160, two miles south of Rt. 554, al
Rt. 7 and U.S. 35 Thursday morning. 6:10 p.m. Friday when his vehicle
Rosalie F. Beaver, 37, Rt. 2, struck and killed a deer, causing
Gallipolis, was northbound on 7 at slight damage.
11:50 a.m. when she turned left into
··•.nTaiiJUJIQ, Mall. (AP) :- · tie kids at hllllll'. If we have to, we
AIIIIIarllles have llfiiPCIIded an will go back for our own peace of rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,n
.
~"""" Hard! for young Patrick' mind.'' .
The
search
by
about
35
civil
ibfdn who vanished six days ago se workers was suspended defenafter.
~. but more than 110 Volunteers simply ran out of pllices
p1ap1e who were touched by the 8to look in a liilquare-mile area
~ boy's diBappearance say
around the boy's home and school in
\lilY want to keep looldng for bini.
. '"It's been amazing," civil defense this nort!H:entral 'Massachusetts
awl! Xlnunel said ot the city ot about 37,000, Klmmelaaid.
Some workers, family and frienda
Yolantme who telepboned him 00 spent
about 15 hours oo Christmas
'Qn1mu Pay and offered their aer·
Day to look for Patrick, Kimmel
t1ce1. "B'• -ny unbellevable the
· ~ ot people who want to· said. He added that he was unsure
...... Now cl¥l1 ..,_ 8JII!liCles what areas any new volunteers
blip, aad JUit people who . might check.
"We have no pUice for them to go
....Wit lleJp CI1IIIL..
.
rilht
now," he said. "The area has
~ 'POllee aald that llthougb the hunt
11een
covered to the best pf otlr
..... ~ 'l'burlday, officers
ablllty!IOW."
.
fllllntltlllala baw a delcriptlan of
Kimmel
discouraged
people
rrom
PMtili 8lld will kelp a lookoul for
c:olllln&amp;
to
look
independently
in
the
..... wbo 11M been milling since
area because It includes abandoned
Jklo pu, rallroad tracks, a river and
' "J'w- beell tldMinc about it aD
ICbmMlllld. ''I bave two lit- a cbenllelll pllnt.

1

lr,..nl

GAI:LI POLIS
360 Second Ave.
PH . 446·0699

•

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-A-S

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

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) - "We think aU the time aboul
Poland," aaid a couple from Krakow
aa they joined other Polish OX·
patrlatea celebrating Christmas
Maal as refugees from their
1\omeland's political turmoil,
economic chaos and military nil&amp;.

·. ,Clyde J,

•

w.-. .....,.

Is.

at 10:25 p.m. treated Ruth Lewis at
her Custer St. residence and the
Tuppers Plains Unit at 11:41 p.m.
took William Grueser from Route 7
to the Holzer Medical Center.
On Christmas the Middleport Unit
at 2:04a.m., took Cllira Smith, South
Second Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and at 9:3.1 a.m. treated Mary
Martin at her home on S. Second
Ave. The Pomeroy Unit at 11:01
p.m. took Lee Roush from 122 Union
Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and
the Racine Unit at 11:50 p.m. took
Carrie Roush from Plants Road to
Veterans.Memorial Hospital. At 2:47
a.m. Saturday, tbe Racine Unit took
Edith Manuel from Route 338 to .
Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
Tuppers Plains Unit at 5:16 a.m.
· trealeed Hope Decker at her
residence on Route 681.

• ~' ;olio ... ~ .... 1lr •V:

•lllfo·.l.:

expect'..J before martial Uiw. Many Some say they do not like So~th
say they belonged to Solidarity or Africa's policy of of rac1al
government dec1lnd l!lllrllal Uiw sympathized with the workers' · separation. But they also say they
1
day at the Ewing Fw1eral Home
Cook
earn more, eat better and live In
Dec. 13, banning I1IClll civil liberties movement.
where friends may &lt;aU. Burial will
and 11U8J*1C11n11 the independent
"For me it is like starting all over nicer housing Ulan in Poland, where
GAwPOI.JS - Clyde J. Cook, 10, be in the Letart FaUa Cemetery.
again " said a mechanical engineer shortages have become a way of life.
SoUdarity unioo.
ol Ill. 1, Northup, died at 2::¥1 p.m.
"We'd rather be whiles in South
''We had no chance to improve our who ~arne here via Yugoslavia two
'l'llnday in Scenic HDls Nuraing
Africa
than treated like bllicks in
lives in Poland,'' aald the husband, a weeks ago 'With his wife and three
. c.ur, baving been in failing health Mary T. Newell
Poland,"
said one Polish inunigrant
31-year-old man who aaked not to be sons.
.. for.&amp;be)lul two years.
at the Christmas Mass.
Hundreds of akiUed Poles are named because he .feared for
LEON - Mary Thelma NeweU, 69,
· BGnl Nov. 13, 1101, at Blue Creek,
"Look," said Ken Filocha, a
Before the Polish crackdown,
relatives
atiU
in
the
country.
"We
living
and
working
in
this
white' Qldo, 1011 ol the late JlllleS B. and Rt. I, Leon, died Friday in Jackson
South Africa's anti-communist leader among South Africa's Polish
even get our own'fllit."
·1111el!a CoUJna Cook, he wBB a General Hoapllal, Ravenswood, minority niled nation, and many of ; couldn't
goverrunent had recruited skilled community. "South Alri&lt;a is anti- ·
·
The
couple
said
they
were
univerthem
got
together
for
the
Christmas
• retlrld farmer and sawmill W.Va.; following along Ulneas.
Polish workers because of an urgent communist. That's why they come
sity-edU&lt;ated
chemists
who
ob.service
Friday
at
St.
Joseph
the
She attended the Creston United
operalllr.
need to fiU jobs and a willingness by here."
tained
South
African
visas
and
work
Worker
Roman
Catholic
Church
in
He wu aJao preceded in death by Methodist Church.
Poles to leave their country.
permits
while
vacationing
ij1
Austria
one of Johannesburg's while suburSurviving is a son, Cecil of Leon .
.o&lt;bla wife, the former Bertha Spence,
Recruiting has· been mostly done
bs.
.
two
weeks
ago.
Both
were
hired
by
i unh.e 'limtt - •mtin tl
Funeral services will be beld at 1 ·
· ~ ooJuly 10, 1940, and by a brother and
through specialized j11UJ1lals and
the
state-oWned
.electric
utility,
Many
hugged,
kissed
and
cried.
~PS!i~
p.m. today in the Creston United
~ slller.
A Multimedia NewsJ}llpcr
word-of-mouth, Polish ei)Jillriatea
given
plat{e
tickets
and
a
home.
They
sang
a
special
hymn
reserved
· Publi.'\ht:d each Sunday, 82.~ Third
l Surviving are two sons, Ray of Rt. Methodist Church, with the Rev. for times 'If crials ; "God for a whole
The government says more than Say.
Avl!nue. by lhe Ohio Valley Pub lbhlng
• I, GalllpoUa and Lee or Three William (Bud) Hatfield and the Rev.
Compiltl)'· Multimedia, lnc. SL't'Oill.l clut&lt;~
Most Poles work in .South ·African
400
Polish
workers
and
their
century
guarded
Pollind,
we
pray
J)OSI.ii~tc paid at Gailipoli!l, Ohio, ~fii'JJ
Rillet'l, Mich.; two daughters, Mrs. Warren Baker offi~ting. Burial
families have emigrated here since power plants, steel mills an_d . fa\)"
·you to give us freedom again." .
Entered as second' cia ~ rnailin.: matter •
; El'll!llt (LoueUa) Flack ofRI.l, Nor· . wiD be in Creston Cemetery.
al Pmncroy, Ohio, P~t OfHcc .
Tbe Krakow couple was among an September and another 1,000 were ·tories as engineers and.technictans.
' thup 8lld Mrs. Robert (Delores)
Member: The. AssOciall.-d Press, Inland
.Ill Manafield; 11 grandDaily Prc:)li Association and tht
Hubert
M.
Price
Amcrka11 N e w~ paper Publi sht!n
: ~hlldreil and slz great·
Asll('lda t lon, National Advcrlilll nM
! ~.
.
Rcpresenlali'tlt', Branha m, 17117 Wesl
POMEROY-Hubert M. Price, 69,
Nine Mile R0&lt;1d, Suite 204, DclrOI'r
i Funeral services will be held at I a fanner teacber and school pr!JI..
Michl~an , 40075 .
While he demanded that Congress
WASHINGTON CAP) - The Reagan signed tile bill Wednesday, a
! p.m. tGday in the WUJis Funeral clpal, died Friday at the St. Joseph
Reagan ad!nlnlstration fmally has in week after it passed the House by hold the Unr on increases in com'
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
, H--, with the Rev. Jack Finnicum Hospital in Parkersburg.
By C• rrier or Motor Route
modlty price support levels to keep
just two votes.
place
the
four-year
!ann
program
it
~Iiiii· Burial will be in Ohio
One~ek, ......... . .... ,,, ,.,. $1.00
Mr. Price was a son of the late Ab- wanted- a minimum cost plan that
Protection for fanners affected by the · fann (X'Ogram's cost down,
One Month . .......... ... . ... . .. $4.40
• VallqM:emoryGardens.
ner and Erma Rector Price. He was
Ont!year .. ...... ,, ..... ,., , ,., ~1.80
accepted an embargo proteci SIS 11'8Ddchlldren will serve as . a graduate of Marietta CoUege and it says still provides a finanCial an agriculture-only embargo has Blcok
SING I.E COP Y
tion
program
tbat,
by
hll;
own
been a Capitol Hill topic since
safety
net
for
fanners.
PRICE
l ~·
was a , teacher in Weal Virginia
35 Cents
January 1980, when former estimates, would cost as much as fiJO.
While
much
of
American
l ' '
schools for a number of years. He agriculture failed to get the kind of President Carter imposed the par· billipn if it is ever triggered.
No .subscriptions by mull ~rmitttlt.lin
Gerald Fields
served as a teacher and principal of commodity price support . levels it lial ban on grain . trade with the
towns w h c1~ home carriL•r llervice 1!J
Block says he's not concerned
· uva ll abh:.
Portlsnd. Elementary School wanted, Congress gave farme.rs Soviet Union.
because he 's confident no
l. HARTFORD - Gerald Fielda, 58, the
from
11151
to
1967.
He
was
a
member
The Sunday Times-&amp;ntind will not be
The !ann-state worries meant agricultural embargo will be im·
l ot HarUoril, died Thursday at his · of the Portland United Methodist something they've demanded for
r esponsible for ltd.-l:llll'C paymcnl-. maLic
posed
by
Reagan,
who
campaigned
Agriculture
Secretary
John
Block
! residence.
two years - protection against
locar ric rs.
had to compromise during the nine- against the Carter embargo and en. I Bom July 1Z, 1923, in Lumberport, . Church.
grain
embargoes.
future
MAIL SU BSCRIPTIONS
Surviving .are his wile, Carolyn;
ded it last spring.
W.VL, son of Laura E. Kearns
With 'little fanfare, Presidenl month debate.
Sunday Only
two
sons,
Samuel
L.
Price,
lincoln,
One yea r .... . . , ............... $20.10
, J'leldl and the Uite David Fields $r.,
SiK months ......... ... , ... , .. , $10.40
Neb., and Larry Price, Cincinnati;
1 be WU a coal miner, a World War II
Dall y 11.nd Sundaly
four
grandcildren,
Tasha
Price;
Ohio and West Vlrxlnla
: veteran, a member of the United Robert Joseph Price, both of Cin·
0 1w yea r .......... ........... $39.00
l MlJie Workers 11 America and VFW clnnati; Meredith Price and Megan PE,KING (AP) -China is predicSiKIJIOI\th.' ',.' ... . ' ... ' ' .. ... $20.BO
Grai~ output has been rising by an
percent, with tobacco and tea also
Thre(: montlll! .......•.. , ....... $12.35
' PolttnSofMaaon.
R11tet~ Oulllld!! Ohio
average of 10.5 million toos, or 3.5 expected Jo ''rise remarkably."
Price,
both
of Uncoin, Neb.; a ting a 7t million to 10 million ton in·
\ SurviVIng is his wile, Clyda; a
and Wctil VJrglaiM
percent,
over
the
last
four
years,
crease
in
its
1981
grain
harvest
Last
year's
output
was
Z.7
million
One year ... . ., ...... , .. , ...... $44.20
daugbter, Brenda Brown of Wood· brother, Gayle Price, Portlan~; a
Six moolhs . . ............ , ...•. $23.40
Ernestine Price of Parker- despite a 6,4 millioll'-acre decrease Xinhua said. It did not explain the tons of cotton, 29 million tons of
Thrt.&gt;c months
......... fll.OO
1brltlge, Va.; eight brothers, Gary sister,
phenomenon,
presumably
ai·
in
the
amount
of
land
used
for
grain
sugar crops, 7.7 millioo tons of. oilsburg, five nieces and two nephews.
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m. crops, the official Xinhua news tributable to the planting of higher bearing crops and 304,000 tons of tea. - - - ---'- - - - - - - yield-per-acre strains of grain.
agency reported today.
\ WWlam of New Lellington and Monday at the Portland Uhlted
Xinhua said more land was lurned
Premier Zhao Zlyang had said
·· ----~· - .
Church with the Rev.
! Pavlil Jr. and WetzeU of New Methodist
SIOR( HOURS:
over
this year to cash crops, such as
earlier the 1981 harvest would apMark
Flynn
offi&lt;atlng.
Burial
will
j Haven; a slater, Mrs. Louiae Lorldon
cotton,
tea
and
tobacco.
•
· Moo.-lbws. 9 am Iii 9:30 pm
be in Browning Cemetery. Friends proach the 1979 record of 332 million
' of Syracuse; and two grandchildren. · may
It said the cotton crop is expected
tons. Last year's grain crop dropped
calL.ai_Jlle
Ewins
Funeral
~ Funeral services will be held at
Fri.·Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
to 318 million tons because of to be up by 150,000'tons, sugar cropa
; I ;311 p.m. today In the Foglesong Home at anytime.
10
percent
and
oil-bearing
crops
17
flooding and droughts.
CLOSED SUNDAYS
' Futtera1 HQIDOl, Mason, with the
i Rev. WliUam (B!id) Hatfield of~ !idAt1J18. Burial will be in Graham
Bertha Thomas

i Cemetery.

'

Bulavile -

On Thursday, the Middleport Unit

•

Skilled Poles flee to South··Africa

:ona.

Redeemed by blood: "In Whom we have redemption throulh Is
blood, the forgiveness Of sins, according to the riches of his grace"
(Eph. 1:7). Redeem denotes " to buy our. especially Of purchasing a
slave with a view to his freedom ; a releasing on pavment of a ran·
som." Man, enslaved to the deVil and in the bondage of sin, could not
rescue himself from the wretched state. Jesus ''humbled himself. and
became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross" &lt;Phil. 2:I) .
In order to pay the ransom price CHis blOOd) for man's freedOm
(forgiveness of sins) from the bondage of sin. He did for man whet
man could not do for himself . Redemption. being in Christ, Is in Hll
body, the church. It was paid for by the same blood thatpurchasecl the '
church. For God to deal rustly with us. we must be redeemed in Christ.
All this is accomplished by GDd in Christ through the church. ,I n ac· •
cepting all th'e provisions GOd has made for us in Christ through the
church, we must be in the church. If m~mbership is not vital, tllen one
does not have to be redeemed, does not have to be bought wilh the
blood of Jesus, and does nol have to be forgiven of his sins.
Justified by blood : "Much more then, being now iustllled by his
blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him" ( Rm . 5:9). Jusftfy~
indicates "the establishment of a person os just by acquittal from
guilt." Justifl.c ation Is the "legal and formal acquittal from guilt by '
God as Judge." Ordinarily. it could only be offered by one's complete ~
or perfect obedience to the law. This could not be achieved by man. for
man. in his own life and terms. could not fulfill the· law in perfect ·
· obedience. All that was necessary on God' s part to acquit Ciustify} •
man from his guilt was accomplished bV Him through Christ. He ·
fulfilled the righteousness of the law. and in His perfect, sinless life set _
forth the legal and formal acquittal ( itJStlfication) from the guilt of
sin. · Justification was accomplished in the death ot Christ where His
blood was shed CJno. 19:3, 34) . Justification was accompllslled In the :
death of Christ where His blood was ohe&lt;l (Jno. 19:3, 34). Being .
justified by the blood, we are saved through Christ. As the blood 11 the
bOdy, $0 is the blOOd of Christ in His body, the church. Can one be •
saved without being justified? He can If church membership Is not
essentla I! To be out of the church Is to be out of the body; to be out of ·
the body is to be sep~rate from the blooct; to be out of t~e body end
separate from the bloOd Is not to be justified; to not be justified is to
not be established ·ln tne persan of Christ where acquiHal from guilt Is
offered, and not be established in the person of ChriSt Is notlo be
establisheCI in His church!
.
For Free Bible Correspondence Lourse Write ...

~~.~, .Y(jJJ ~hute~

-

i

By William B. Kupn

CITY, STATE, ZIP,------'----:---'-PH•. ___ _ _ __ J Am Interested In Going To

...

·

Twp:

TOP OFF THE

au;n

HOLIDAYS WITH:M

IC/

•zz.z.yJOBZ.

on

IAuthorities

call

fltait
to search
..

Entertainment
JOHN. ELDER
(Return
Engagement
by
Popular
Demand )

DINNER SERVICE
6 P.M . to Midnight
Bar Open ·

I

'*

PARTY
FAVORS

'

'

dJriCt.ar

. ......

Chilled Fresh Fruit Cup
Choice Filet
or tobtter Tall .

Stuffed 8aJcad Potato

Broccoli wit~ Chute Sauce
or Bobv Belgium Corrots
Sa/ad Bar

FEAST YOUR EYES ON THESE PRIZE BUYS I
CHOOSE YOUR FAVORITES FROM
OUR LARGE SELECTION OF ROCK, COUNTRY,
. SOUL, EASY-LISTENING AND MOR!:III

PorfoH
Bread ' Butfer
Beverage - Coffee
or Tea

ALBUMS
OR
TAPES

FOR

1

•

::ii:ld

MUSIC FOR THE YOUNG 8t0Lo

j•'

PETER FRAMPTON,
BING CROSBY,
'

HITS ON K·TEL, SOUNDTRACKS.AND

..........
f-1'•"

COAT SALE

STARTS MONDAY, DECEMBER 28th

2

OFF

WINTER
COATS

GIRLS INFANT TO 14
II»YS INFANT TO 16
PRE-TEENS

cOinplat• Dinner:
Filet
SI6.9S
Lobster Tall
$26.95
Tax &amp; Gratuity not included.

SPECIAL ROOM RATES:
For dinner IIUHII ONLY, $25.00
per couple, plus tax. Newly .
decorated Klnv l..lllture rooma. 6
P.M . checkout Jonuory 1.

Doposll required for
reservltlon on check·in.

dinner

)ACK &amp; )I. LL'S
"Foolaions for llaf'
Ave.

I

.U. S. NO. 1.

,

446·43.3

·.'POTATOES

•'•

~La$229
••

oz.
Jar
.

...,......

$339 ..
With

-

CIU,on

---------·-··
at

Barr# Exp. 1·2-12 ·

l

�.... . ...... _. ___ ....... -- ...

~~

...-.,..-

- - . - - - -·- ... ·- ... - ... - - ....

....

- - - -"" ..

- - . - ..-

...

~-

- .... -···

-~-

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

.

-..

..-

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

,_

__

..

. ... . . ... -

. ·,

Pomeroy- M

.

·

-~..------· ·

Times-Sentinel-

Bob's Beat of the Bend

_Saturday--a very quiet day
By BOBHOEFUaJ

rm greeq . wltli envy of those

people who didn't have to answer the

can to return to their JObs Saturday

SlORE HOURS:

Mon.·Sat. 8 1111·10 pm

morning, aren't you.
, .
After
'an
exhallllinl! holiday it wasn't euy.
Saturday waa
quiet II lll8lly
. bll8inesses . took
an eztra holiday
and the courthouse and banks
were closed.
BOB
There just weren't too many people

.

Sundaf 10 am·lO .pm
I

·50' OFF

298 SEOOND ST.

ANY 1-LB. PACKAGE

POMEROY,O.
..
.
PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 1982

KAHN'S
WIENERS

.

stirring.
By the way, Bunky, how did your
· Christmas go?· I, most of the time,

think that the true me8ning has
become lost in the basset of
preparation. My "biggie" gift was a
snow shovel.! could accept that but I
. really thought a bottle of linament
should have come . with it. WeDperhaps, (ho, ho), the wlnler wiD be
so mild I won't have to sue it:

Li.mit One Per Customer
·Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan ..2, 1982

FRESH PO~!

Butt

.

..

$J·l9

~teaks ...•.·.!!·.

FRESH PORK

·

·

·

·SJ og

Butt Roasts ...... !~..
FRESH PORK

•

Spare
Ribs
.......
!~·..
USDA .CHOICE
· . . . $}39
Chuck ·Roast ... ~ .. ~~- ·.
Round

$ 1:99.
Steak ..... ~~·.. ..

MIXED

. ..

USDA CHOICE

.

. .

fryer .Parts.........~.A

50• OFF
1-LB. PKG.

·

KAHN'S BACON

SJ29

. .

It might have been a disappointment ' to many that after
several days c&gt;f_snow, a white Christ·
mas failed to materialize. However,
the weather did moderate to clesr
the roads of the ice and snow and
thst'a reaUy good since so many do
travel over the holiday.
You don't have to worry about
what you will do with your spare
time over the next few days. You can
spend it exchanging the gifts and
you wiU want to do that right away
slnce merchants do like to get it all
wrapped up. I hope you managed to
put away a few bucks for the
January clearance sales. They will
be forthcoming.
Among the notes that I occasionally misplace is one referririg

·.

Air Force spokesmau said. ·

3 LB. OR MORE

BONEI ESS BEEF

KRAFT MIRACLE .

.

.

$

1

.

50• OFF

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 2, 1912

Slices~~~;t···

=
I-

:incl &amp; Brown St.
Masott, w. ViJ.
Ph. 77H121

Pomeo-y, OH.

Ph.f9H795

Farmers•

•Ranchers

PRIME- RIB
OR
,
WHITI! FISH

'

.

MIRACLE WHIP
320Z.

9W.

PerCultomtr
at Powell's

'

....0

a::

Ll.l

• ••

Q
Ll.l '

-;c ..........

(,)

en

.....
L&amp;.l

t; en

.....
ca

a

~

ENTERTAINMENT

PARTY
fAVORS

. AVE Mtm DRIVE .

Individual
Bottle of
Champagne
Ptr Person.

.

.

'

IAR STOOLS
, AVAILAIU POR
COCKTAIU

·21• OFF
.
12 OZ. PKG. SUPERIOR

FUll IE
WIENERS
"'

•

'

...

..~

•

J1n. 2. ltll

j' '

-

:&gt;- Qz
..... c
:c
'i= (,)

cC

TICKnl MUST II PICKID UP .BY DIC. 26 ·
POl RHIRVAnoNS CALL 9924629

1

'

z:·•

0

•

'

:

...z

&gt;- &gt;-

.

.'1710 Per Person ·lndudes
DINNER

DOG FOOD
25LB .. BAG .
$329

.....

·c..... en

en

'

. FIVE WHEEL .DRIVE

.

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at P-tll's
Jan. 2, 1_912
Offer

'

618 E. Main

I Cll:::

en
c.:J
z:

lHURSDAY, DEC. 31, 1981, 6:00 P.M. TO 1:30 A.M.

s529 Frozen
.

Come In and have a cup of coffee with us at H&amp;R
Block and discuss the tax 'consequences of ve•-end
transactions. It could save you money. H&amp;A BlOc~
provides FfiEE year-end tax assistance a.t:

MEIGS I·NN

J"

·

.·

(

,

NEw YEAR'S EVE AT THE

. ANY PKG.

l;fiLLSHIRE FARMS

Coffee •••••••••••••••••••• •

3/·$2

cc

1.1.1
I

FOR AFA8t!UIUS
•

TORTI NO'S

gg~·

0·

. MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS

HUNrS

12 PAl
1 ot ENV.

...&gt;-z

=
LL..

Margarine....~.2/

Cheese

"

Police suspect the hour-lOng fire in
an apartment complex on the Clark
base was caused by overheated
Chrlsimas lights, the Philippines
News Agency said.
. It identlfiejl the two servicemen as
John Snyder, 29, and David Cootelra,
28, both of the 3rd Tactical Squadron
baaed at Clark, 50 miles north of
Manila. Home towns were not given.
Base spokesman Alarr Sabsevitz
said he could not release the names
of the dead servicemen or of the
young woman, whom he said had
come from the United Sta~s to visit
her boyfriend for Christmas.

'2.00 OFF

'

HOT COCOA MIX

Boy dies m fire

American woman who traveled
thousands of miles to spend Christmas here with her boyfriend died
today In a fire at a U.Jl. air \)qe, an

Carrots,.... ~.~·.......~

PINTO BEANS
00
~

''

MANILA, Philippines (AP) Two U.S. servicemen and an

Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Jan. 2, 1912

3L8.
CANS

are

STIU. MIII8ING - TIIII II a
We
~ boml!arded
pllolegrapb el e~Pt-;reaHkl
with the complaints about foreign
·cars coming into the United States · Patrldt Martla, reperted .......,
and being purchased by Americans.
liDce MOIIIIay Ia ~blllrl.
WeU-1 am sure you noticed when Mus. Pollee Aid today !bey are
you did your Christmas sh'opping illveotlpllae the poalblllly the
thst the situation isn't .limited to boy II witb 1 relallve, paulbly ...
cara.
falbet, More lhu Ill ¥011111teen
It seems to me that it's almost a aea"'b lor the boy CiorUtmu
chore to find goods made in Day. (AP LuerpboiG).
America. Articles of clothing-theoe
are name brands In many~ toofl'(tn Koree, Hong Kong, Taiwan and
o~her
foreign locations-are
NEW BOOTON, Ohio (AP) - A 7everywhere. Toys also seem to be "ye&amp;Mid boy was killed today in an
foreign made for the most part. Now early-morning fire at his home. New
what has happened to the American Boston firefightera Identified the
worker? These producls aren't victim as Timothy Kessinger. He
cheap and cerb!inly could be was pronounced dead at the scene by
produced by American workers.
There's something wrong when Scioto County Coroner roy adams.
products can he Imported in such · Three members of his family were
huge quantities and sold in treated at Scioto Memorial HoSpital
American stores at such prices In Portsmouth for IITioke inhalation.
while our own economy suffera in so, They are his mother, Carita
Kessinger, 35, and two slstera, Tammany 'directions,
·
I'm not recommending another my,l7, andAmy,l4.
The cause of the fire has not been
revolutipn right now but the thought
has en ss ed my mind. WeU-maybe detennjned and there Is no estimate
of damages.
next year. Youkeepsmilingnow.

Fire elaims 3

ROAST
Limit One Per Customer

SUPER VALU

The Meigs Athletic Boosters have
sent along a note of appreciation to
an cast members of the FaD FaiUes
staged recently by the Big Bend
Minstrel Asaociation for the
8ssociatlon's benefit. I want to add
my thanks to the many cut members too. You were fabuloua and a
deUght to wprk with. Thank you.

to
CarltheEdwards,
Groveport.
r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
made
firat three
points inCarl
the 1
Ohio state-Michigan game-always
THE game of the seaaon. Carl Is a
grandson of the late Norman Ed·wards, who was formerly from Middleport, and is a relative of Willie'
Maude Coates, Middleport,
· Busy Scott Wolfe who can manage
to get involved in so many projects

Limit one Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 2, 1'182

.

Tomato Juice ... :!~~-

entertained his seventh grade
basketball team from the Eastern
District with a pizza party for
Chrllllmas, a nice gesture on his part
In view of his really being busY,.

0

•

.•

�--

-. ~

\

Pag&amp;-A -8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pieasant, w. va.

Dec. 27, 1981

Ohio fartners .are pessimistic

LIMA, Ohio (AP) - afldals IIY busbell per acre, down rrOm 311 becaule rl the belvy -aiM. Many
the nation hu 5G percent mon corn bushels the )'elr before, he llid.
fannen .bid to .r.plll!l tbelr cropo
and 25 percent mon IOYbeua going
Com JI!Aii&lt;et prieelue down by Nil or tltree
into the new year than 1n 1111 coo- an average of about per bushel
Lelmbacb aaid that from April I to
tri1Jutin8 to many Ohio fa..:ners' from 11111, and soybean prices are Aug. 3, 21 lnchell o1 rain fell In the
problema.
down by about
a bushel from a . _ - JJfOre iban 7 lnchell above
Wet Weather last llpl"lng and lower year ago.
: '
normal. 'lbe IDOII cllmagiJ!C ol lhe
·llJ'&amp;ln prices mean bed times for
"'lbe lblng that bothers 111 lhll ralnlalll came In Jwte, wt.l beavy
· many IIClrlhwestern Ohio farroera, year Is th8t we have an unusually amounla leU in ahorl periQda o1 lime,
farmers say.
large crop country;llriae " Leimbach caWiing flooding and erllllon.
"Ithinlllt'sfali'touswnethere's said. ·
'
AddinR ·to the area's depreaaed
a lot of peaaimism" 8lllOII8 farmers,
Nixon estimates, his Income Ia ,off · agriculture Industry Is an 1ncreue
saidJohnNixon.
about 75 percent because of 'the In production COllis.
.
Nixon; ta,'and his 8011 , Marlt, farm Weather and the~ -lees.
"Coels bave goae up about 8 perabout a 2011 acres in ADen AIJI)alze
'lbere were few 'ields In the area cent on the avenge over the ·laat
and
counties. Nixon aaid where some acreage wun't lost year,"Leimbllchaaid.
' IIIII w~ the Worst of hl8 31 years in

'I

lin.*·

•uo

Pldnam

fic Saturday mornlllg as this picture was taken on Ute
day after Christmas.' On Thursday, traffic was prac-

tlcaUy bumpe,...to-bumper a goed portl1111 of the dBy as
resident&amp; vislt!'d the lewD to take care Ill last minute
•hopping before Chrlstmao.

.Kaiser pulls out of small town
EAGLE MOUNTAIN, Calif. (AP)
- Residents of this remote oremining town fear the economic
slwnp that is taking away their jobs
also will bring an end to their community's days in the Mojave Desert

garage, and the rent of .14.12 a week
is deducted from her husband's
paycheck. The low rent is one

benefit the company provides.
"We can't live anywhere else for
what ":e do here," Mrs. Patty said.

oec.17, 1981
The Sunday Times· Sentinei-Page-.:.

Reduced yields from an ex·
ceptionally wet planting seaaon,
coupled with bumper crops In other
parts of the country, resulted in
lower market prices for corn and
soybeans.
·
.
"We're in a pretty trying ·lime
right now/' Nixon said. "I think
we're at the bottom (of the priCe
fall). I realize it could go either way,
but I'm hopeflil we're at the IJot.
tom."
Allen County Extension Agent
Calvin Leimbach said com prOduction in the county for 1981 averaged
about 90 bushels per acre, 25 percent
lO)Ver than the 126-bushel average in
1980. Soybean yields averaged 25

.'

ANNOUNCiMINT
'
NIGHT CLINIC

AT
MONDAY • FRIDAY 5 PM • 9 PM
MAIN aJNIC FACILITY NEAR GAUJPOUS

Brad, 13 years old, wanted "a pair of new
Nlkes and maybe a couple j&gt;alrs of pants and Tshirts - stuff I need."
But thejr wishes for holiday gifts were
probably unanswered '- as most likely were ·.
thooe of the other residents of their home.
Perched on a hill off State Route 160, just outside Gallipolis city limits, Gallia County
Children's Home had seven juveniles in residence during the holiday; five males and two
females ranging in age from one to 17 years.
Serving Gallia and Meigs . Counties, the
Children's Home "houses children for a variety
of reaaons, including housing those who are
abandoned, neglected; abused, unruly, truants,
runaways and dependent children, and any com·
bination cit those," according to Beth Starcher,
executive secretary of Gallia County's
Children's Services.
Despite each one's ·reason for being at' the
home, most had plans to spend Christmas day
elsewhere - but not all. Most of the holiday
season was spent at the home, however.
With a staff·of seven houseparents, and supervisor and matron Charles and Teresa Reynolds, '
the home was decorated for the occasion with the
focus being a Christmas tree, donated by the
Jaycee.. It was trinuned the Sunday before
Christmas by the children.
"We try to get as many donations for the ·
cbildren as we CB!I," Teresa Reynolds said.
"A Pomeroy women's auxiliary gives the kids
fruit, cookies and a gift, and the Jaycees sponsor
a Christmas in July for the kids and donate a
Christmas tree each. .,_ local doctor buys a gift
for each child,.Eastern FHA gives a Christmas
party and Rutland Church members carol," ,she
said.
"The conununity has been good about giving ·
gifts to the children, although it's been slacking
off the laSt few years. I guess peOple don't _have
as much to ·give. Sometimes donations don't
come in until the last minute."
AB of a few days before Dec. 25, most of what
surrounded the home's Christmas tree were gifts
the children who lived there planned to give each
other.
Starcher said, "We won't let the kids go
without gifts. We never have. If nothing else, the ·
money comes from the Children's Services
budget.
''But this year the problem Is that the county is
out of money. I'm not sure what wil happen."

'

AT
I

.In its announcement, Kaiser cited

A
•
..
I

This chart shows how your

I

INDIVIDUAL
ACCOUNT

There are economic as well as

''

AMOUNT
You Will Accumulate

40

$ 298,667

30

$ 966,926
$3,042,435

.20

tor_,.,

I

BANK ONE's IRA (lndvidual Retilemer rt Account) provides aJ
wage Bat'l)ers with illl ideal way to shelter a portion of their income.
The Account also offers an ideal way to salt awa,y additional bids
for retirement.
.
·
Each year you can contribute up to $2,000 of your irlCOfTl!! to·
your IRA. Hyou have a non-working spouse, you can oontribute up
to $2,250. Of ocuse, if you and your spouse both work, you can
both open an IRA and oontribute 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 f'lgur!!d

Deputies check
wreck, fire
POMEROY--Meigs
County
: sheriff's deputies investigated one
: minor accident over Christmas eve.
Tl'e accident occurred at 8:45p.m.
Christmas Eve when a car driven by
Russell M. Cremeans, 18, Route 2,
CoolviUe, pulled his vehicle into
• Hawk's SerVice station in Tuppers
: Plains and cut too sharply slriltlng
: the gas pwnps. There were slight
· damages to the vehicle and to a
pwnp. There were no injuries and no
citatiOns.
The sheriff also reported by an
: unoccupied house owned by Shay
: Nobel on Homer filll Road · was
· destroyed by a fire of undetermined
origin aboUt 7 p.m. Ouistmas Eve.
'lbere was no insurance on the
house and the house was completely
empty. 'lbe Rutland Fire Department seat one truck to the acene to
· prevent fire from tpreadlnc to a
nearby field.

eachyear.
:
You c:u ctoooaa- of two Wllpto aam
your ll1leiwt at BANK ONE.
You can choose an ~1laast rate whict1 is set tor 18ITIOIIIIIS. Pnf
new funds deposiled will eam the 18-month rate in effect at the lime

W...._.r you lhlllk · . ·

qlsah• ......qourn~me
COIMI Up ftnt.

1e1ve -.nett r. 'II» IRA~ '1(¥8 ,_,
·

they are deposited. (During Deciamber the 18-f1)()1 1U 1rate Is
12.25%.) Or you can choose a variable rate plan. (The variable

rate In eflect tor'Deoe111ber Is 12.08%.)

Ac:tqulclclytoa-fthe . . . . . . . .~
Whether you s1!J1 up for a fixed ra1e plan or the variable rate plan
you will be IISIIll8d your money Is eemlt tglnftallon.proof illlaast
your I'IIII181Tl111 rt. To IT1IIlCirniH the llx-dllerred i lttirast you earn,
you ahoukl make ycut ocnlrtbulcns
pOl ,., after the
first of the ye«. You wtfl18081119 mor• Itt • 'a maulS on the status
d hi Aooount Md yw fl.l1ds are lnaured t1t an agat ICY of the

ledel'af goli811'11'T1811t

.

.

-~

for

.

BANKONE.M
. BANK ONE OF POMEROY
pPMIIIC)VoAUTLANDoTUPPIIII PLAINS

••

BOTTOM LEFT:
Located· off Route 160,
near GallipolisJ.. the
structure of uallia
County Children's Home
has always served -the
same purpose. LEFT:
The home currently has
seven. residents. They
are shown with Teresa
· Reynolds, -(back row,
left) the home's matron,
in front of their Christ·
mas tree, donated by
the Jaycees. .

·,

.IOQII.

.

'

.,

83,506

$

•• •

\

AI. I&amp;*

50

' This assumBS 1\at YQU tnlke • $2,000 ~ • hi begiming c1 ect1 )'M' ala 12'% . _ . . tllle. ll'ld twt p
Thefe ._a~,_.. penally
Mhdr8WII.

emotional considerations. The Pattys live in a company-&lt;&gt;wned, three.bedroom home with a two-car

.

•

Your IRA

She and her husband, Ken, lease
the town's shopping center from
Kaiser under a contract that runs
through the year 2000. It now •tr
pears there soon won't be any need
for a shopping center, and the
Statlers aren't sure what to do.
"It's the lack of knowledge that is
hurting most of the people," Statler
said. "... it's the uncertainty.
Nobody knows what's going on."
Martha Patty, a second·
generation resident whose hUsband
works in the Kaiser mine, said jjit's
kind of scary to think about going
·away. This is home."

Christmas.

GAWPOI.JS - Kenny, age 13, and Michael, .

,,.

the last Chrisbnas."

1S

Jil, wanted minibikes.

CALL 446-5287 IN ADVANCE

AGE
When You Open

.

- llyDEBFOX
Times-Senllael Staff

HOLZER CLINIC LTD.

,.

{

,.

sun.

risiiig transportation costs from its
inland operations and growing competition from lower-priced steel imported from Europe and Japan.
The economic crunch, Kaiser said,
also forced it to schedule the closing
of its basic-steel operations in nea,...
by Fontana. Without the operations
there, it said, it had no need for the
ore from Eagle Mountain's ranges.
Kaiser wiD retain only its finishedsteel fabricating operations at Fon·
lana and will purchase steel slabs
elsewhere rather than make its own.
Fontana, which has been diver· •
sifying its industrial base for the
past decade amid rumors of an imminent Kaiser shutdown, is expected to survive the loss of 2,000
jobs, but Eagle Mountain is not.
"We had planned on staying here
and retiring," Mrs. Statler said.
"We love the desert and the small·
town abnosphere. There are all sorts of rumors ...but surely this will 'be

.

'An·d so this

r----------------------------~~--~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
·'

"If you don't get ore and pellets
from here, what purpose is there for
this place?" asked Mary Statler, one
of the 3,700 residents of Eagle Mountain who is pondering the exit of
Kaiser Steel Corp., the company
that props up the entire local
economy.
Kaiser announced last month it
would close its Eagle Mountain
operations in mid-1982 or early 1983,
leaving 1,000 local workers -jobless
and causing an economic ripple that
could also eliminate most of the rest ·
of the jobs in this company town.
II was Kaiser that, in the
prbsperous days following World
War II, established the jobs and
even homes and shops for its
workers. But for five years, the huge
steel compnny has operated mostly
in the red and it says its mining
operations no longer pay their way.

B

.

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;••••••;;;;;;iiiiiiiii

farming.

QUIET- Pomeroy's MaiD Street was wiUtout traf-

•

\

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6

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j

·I

�•

Page-B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Dec. 27, 1981

w. Va. ·

Anniversariew---------------------------------------Golden year reached

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleao6ant, W.Va.

Dec. 27, 1981

Hollday gifts stolen

Hager and Grate marry
POMEROY - Mr. and Mn.
Henry Hartman; Chester, are annaunclng the marrlase of their
daughter, carla, to Randall Kimes,
New Haven, son of Mr, and Mn. Ar-

Rizer-Tolley
engagement

But her misfortune was told in Friday editions Of The Indianapolis Star
and phone calls offering help began early Christmas Day. Offers were
·
'
still coming in at night.
"My girl got a Barbie doll," she said. "We received gliiiles, hooks.some
stuffed animals and a lot of gOOdies. And we received plenty of stuffed
stockings."
·
A color television Ms. Blake was renting ~nd hoped to buy also was
stolen but on Friday night, a volunteer cliiile to her door and began trying
to.fix their other, broken TV.
"My daughter said she'd never seen so many people and that 'Christ·
mas turned out real gOOd,' "Ms. Blake said. "That made me feel happier
tQan I'd been for several days."

Mr. and Mrs. Preston.
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs. Edward Preston will celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniversary today,
Dec. 27, with an open house to be
held in the fellowship room at
Cheshire Baptist Church from I to 2
p.m.
The couple was married ih ·r
Cheshire and are the parents of

grandchildren, Kellie, Bob Earl and

Plan breast feeding classes
GALLIPOLIS The next C·section mother; breastfeeding and
Preparation for Breastfeeding Class the working mother; and inoffered by Holzer Clinic Ltd. to fonnation on problems that mig~t
women interested in breastfeeding · arise with suggestions to care for
will be held Jan. 28 from 7 to 9 p.m. these problems.
·.
in the doctors' dining room at the
For infonnation call Karen Wamsdinic.
ley at 446-:i278 weekdays· 9 a.m.-5
. The class includes films and

dlscussion about prenatal breast
preparation; breastreeding and the

Facilities clo'sed
RIO GRANDE - All.facililies at
Lyne Center at Rio Grande College
(gym, pool, handball court and
weight room) will he closed to the
public during the Christmas
holidays (Dec, 18, 1981 through Jan. ·
4, 1982).
A new schedule will be published
when classes reswne on Monday, .
Jan.4.

p.m., or aftel' 5 p.m. and on weekends call Bcocky Sanders, R.N., instructor, at 446-2509.

6c9 2-WAY

MAGNADYNE
· LIST$139.95

NOW ssgoo

SINGER SEWING
MACHINES

------------1
Special Discounts

· 20% OFF

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave•
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446·4290

THE FABRIC SHOP

lla.n ••••

SUit farll'l flit

"-iN Ott"' l"'-tlon

lllln•••

A,
.........

MAGNADYN

CAR -STEREO

NOW s39oo

MANY MORE
SAVINGS IN ·
AU AREAS

CHECK OUT
OUR OTHER
GREAT

NOW $49800

FULLY
AUTOMATIC

2 SPEED
CHANGER

TURNTABLE
LIST 11&amp;9.95

VCR

NOW ONLY

Model48;i&amp;

'2891'

•

.
Weekdays 10:00·9:00
Sililer Bridge Plaza sunday 1:00 to 6:00

OPEN TUES. thru SAT.
8:00 to s:oo
For Appointments Ca II:
992-7800

N

ST·740's

REDUCED
MEN'S

20%
OFF

Delillers~lng full

..-.
•

Values To$80.00

Reversible

DOWN &amp; I
FEATHER VEST
Reg.

$35.00

$}9 99

'

•''

"
*
'

Sizes S·M · L·XL .
Casual styles in poplin,
nylon, denim and corduroy.

-~

•

••
M

•

.,.,
...
-·1-·.
.
~

ONE RACK
LADIES

DRESSES
40% OFF

poww agitation,

lntenlilled by high pa!formance canister IUction.
UPIAIIHP"IUVCMA . .I

Ufl.()ff

Tool Hanger
Rides on caniatar
or henga in ~.

Power ·Pedal

SAVE '61

Values to $60.00

95
Junior, Misses
and Women's Sizes

. Values To
$42.00

,•

.

· Playtex'

. . -HOUR®

Hurry gals, it's time to save!

2QOA&gt; OFF~~·

'~

..

.,
"
••
•'

•

~

·
• Longllnes • All-ln-One •
·.:
Including 18 Hour Lovely Look" bras :
Sale enda January 2, 1982

:!

..-.
•'

••
MISSES, JUNIOR and WOMEN'S

Merchandise

SWEATERS
20% OFF

,,

.•

~

Reg. $28.00

And

Entire Stocl&lt;
1 LADIES

.___ _j
' t

$}999

COATS

First Quality
Clearance.

REG. U60.00

J\

Values
To $32.50

COATS
25% TO 50%
OFF

SKI
COATS

ENTIRE STOCK
LADIES

COATS
30%

to

Devon, Bobbie Brooks, That's Me, Russ,
DonnKenny, Aileen. Red Eye, Present Com·
pany, Beaujolais, Vicki Vaughn and other of .
our famous brands.

-----,
(

ONE GROUP
MEN'S

BOYS

owner: Myrtis Kay Parker

SPORTSWEAR
Reduced
25% to ·50%•

0

AM-FM·STEREO RECEIVER
40 WATTS R.M.S.
DIGITAL SCAN TUNING

,.

101 W. 2nd I Ground Floor)

With Powermatlc,. Nozzle

SwiiCII

AM· I'M STEREO
SUPER "A" AMPLIFIER
GRAPHIC EQUALIZER
DIGITAL SCAN TUNING
60 WATTS R.M.S.

str

Jllll'

Celebrity,.. IV Custom
Vacuum Cleaner

MGY.MULn-M*8 ..... 1AG

NOW ssgaoo

•

R-555

'*-

&gt;It

.CHILDREN'S

STEREO COMPONENTS

GAWPOUS
446-7.

t¥~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~
f
R
..,.,.A-. •

PomerQy (formerly LaMar's)

'

12" 3-WAY
75WATTS
REG. $579.95

10" 3-WAY
50 WATTS
REG. 5499.95

THIRD AVENUE

(304,..75~1244

~

-· LBFISHER

DEC. 28-31

or

ENTIRE STOCK

PLUS MUCH MUCH MORElli

JVC

MYRTIS KAfS
BEAUn SALON

CALL (614)-992~2104

..

.LIST '679.95

NOW

REG. sn9.95

-

.. . .

CONSOU

•

RE-OPENING OF

Hours by Appointment Only

SAVE '1oo.oo

6 HOUR
LIST$849.00

STEREO COMPONENTS~

~-~edon~~~I~

attheTrinilyChurch, Pome~oy, The
Rev. Wilbur Perrin· officiated. Serving as atlendants for the couple
were Mr. and Mrs. Kemy Koehler,
Middleport, sister and brother-inlaw of the bride.
A bridal shower was held on Nov.
20 at the home of the bride's mother,
Mrs. Marcia King. Mn. Koehler was
co-hostess. Games were played with
prizes going to Sherr! J~onaand
. Gall Thoma. The door prize was won
by Mrs. Geraldine Bfl!tlon. Refreshments were served as
were

·Offlc~

Puritan
arid Campus
Sizes S·M·L·XL

MAGNAVOX
25" COLOR

lOW $9800
.

.

VR-:8310

REG. 1299.95

'

••

...

MAGNAVOX

ST·720
8" 2-WAY SPEAKERS
LIST $149.95

- ..·. . --- ··I

·

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

VCR &amp; TV's

lmFISHER·
: CR-4013

KV~l913

LIST '598.00

LIST $449.95

LIST $89.95 PAl R

EAR, NOSE &amp; tHROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

SWEATER

19".COLOR
PORTABLE

MAGAN VOX

rio\it;79oo Now s179oo

ODOR
SPEAKERS

SONY

'

'

'

19 INCH
·COLOR
PORTABLE

Rizer, Tolley

JOHN A. WADE, M. ~., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
POMEROY - Mrs. Marcia King, opened.
Middleport, and Harold Hager,
The new Mrs. Grate is employed
Racine, are announcing the at Robbins and Myers, Gallipolis.
marriage of their daugber, Debra Mr. Grate ·is employed at Harold
Lynn Hager, to Michael Lee Grate, · Hysell's Garage in 1\uUand. The
RuUand. He is the son of Mr. and couple reside in Rutland.
Mrs. George Grate, Russell, Ky. ·
The double ring private ceremony_ ..---------~-1

SELECTED FABRICS

For axtnl ..vtngaln .
HCIIMOWnera Inaurance,
·call me:

1MI C1111llly Cam,lnf

~·

Mr. and Mrs. Grate

20% OFF

-

I "'-DASH
AUTO REVERSE
AM·FM-CASSETTE

NOW s15goo .

at Baer's Market in Syracuse.
The prospective groom is a 1974
graduate of Sissonville High School
and is employed by C.T. Tolley Land
Surveying, Sissonville.

ASALE FOR lHE NEW YEAR

three children. They ani James
Preston, Cheshire,; Cvnstance Wise,
Chesl)ir,e; and Sue Jarvis; New
Carlisle, Ohio.
All of their friends are invited to
attend the open house.

'

6205

The bride-elect is a 1976 graduate
of Southern Hlgb School and works

classic "Silver Bells."
In fact, a total of 99 artists have
made records of the song, which was
introduced in the 1950 Bob Hope
movie, ''The Lemon Drop Kid,'' according to Famous . Music,

TOM'S ANNUAL
DENT - SCRATCH - DEMO -SALE
. IN.
DASH
AM-FM ST. -CASSETTE

MINERSV!ll.E - Vicki L. Rizer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. ·
Rizer, Minersville, and Roger , C.
Tolley, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. T.
Tolley Jr., Sissonville, W; Va., will
marry April2 at Syraclise Church of
the Nazarene, Syracuse.

99 Bells-·.,.._- - - - - - - - - - - NEW YORK (AP)- The Mormon
Tabernacle Choir, Mahalia Jackson,
the Chipmunks and Elvis Presley
have ,something in common. They
have all . recorded the ·Christmas

'

Announcement

do."

GALUPOUS - Or&gt; Jan. 3, Mr. Joe of Gallipolis; John of Cvlumbus,
and Mrs. Bob Roberts will celebrate and Lori Roberts Skaggs of Oakland,
their tenth wedding anniversary, Calif.
They were married Jan. 3, 1942 in
Mrs. Robert is the former Ruth
CaUettsburg, Ky.
Wells, daughter of Haskell and
In observanee of the occasion, a Belva Wells of Gallipolis.
reception will be held. at Elizabeth
She is an employee of Holzer
Chapel Church, on State Rt. .218, Medical Center.
from2to4p.m,
Mr. Roberts, son of the late Mr.
They are the parents of two sons, and Mrs. R. Earl Roberts of Rodney,
RDbert H. and Joe K. Roberts; five isaretiredstateemployee. ·

.

"'edmng~--~~----------~----~--~.----~
' .
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11\'DIANAPOUS (API -An unha'ppy Christmas Eve became a Merry
-Christmas lor Linda Blake and her three children after a burglar "kicked
in the door and ransacked the house" while they were gone and fled with
all their holiday gifts.
·
Among the items .taken wu a Barbie doll for oldest daughter Tammy
Reed, 12, a toy drum for Jamie Reed, 9, and' books for +year-old Brett
Blake. ·
"They could have taken. anything," Ms. Blake said Friday, "I don't
know why they took the Christmas gifts. They left our stereo components,
but took the dolls, hooks and things like that."
Ms. Blake, 31, who has a part-time job, said 8he p~rchased the gifts
with $300 she had saved and ''after the bf'!'llk-in there was nothing I could

Mr. and Mrs. -Rbberts

The sunday Times-Sentinet-Pag-8·1

Reduced

for

50%
1

OFF

�Pomeroy-Middleport

t'age-8·6-The sunday Times-sentinel

Gijllipolis,-Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Senior Cl•..;,.....,.,
·Calendar

The -bride carried a bouquet of
yellow sweetheart roses surrounded
by baby's breath. The groom wore a
brown tuxedo and single yellow
rosebud boutonniere as did the. best
man, Don Stivers, Middleport, and
J . P. Davis, Pomeroy.
The maid of honor was Catherine
Russell, Middleport, and she wore a
floor-length gown in rust with a wide
brimmed cream colored hat. The
carried two long sterruned yellow
roses with matching ribbon.
Miss Terri Flood, sister of the

••••••••••••••••

: . THIS WEEK'S :
:

••

COKE:

•:

TAB
SPRITE ••

••• 8-16 oz '1 09

••

•
, SED
•:•· .NEW CLO
YEAR'S DAY
••
•
ICE COLD BEER,

••
•••
•••

"

Mr. and Mrs. Gardner
bride, registered the guests.
A reception followed in the church
social room. ·The bride's table
featured 'a three tiered cake topped
with a modern wedding couple and
decorated with yellow roses. A stsir·
way with single yellow candles on
each step was featured on the cake.
Sharon Russell decorated the gift
and the bride's table. Mints, nuts,
cake. punch and coffee were served.
Hostesses for the reception were
Miss Mona Johll8on, Rutland, Terri
Flood, Athens, and others assisting

were Mrs. Russell and Patti Dohelli.
The bride is a 1977 graduate of
Alexander High School and is employed at the Meigs Emergency
Medical ServiCe as a receptionist.
The groom, a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School and a 181
graduate of the Hocking Technical
College with a heat process degree,
is a member of the Middleport Fire
Department.
The couple will reside at the
V-illage Green Apartments,
Pomeroy.

•

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Plus •
Tax&amp; Dep. •

•

WINE &amp; POP

ca'me,
,__..:,::=:;~:.=.;:=~:..::::::::::..:::::......:~=::=::=...:==:::...--__;

-·:·

•

:

e
e

e
e

-·+ -,·

IZU•:• •••)• +++•:.+•&gt;t fZJ -

Sale ·
~: Sale .
Sale :
•:•
Select groups of
+
~

••••

+
•

Albums, .8-tracks, ·and
Cassette Tapes, Books:
hardback and larPe format
.

+ paperback, Hallmark Seasonals

•:• .

.•

6'

Dec. 28 - jan. 2

~.

-~·
•
•e •)

: Gallipolis Ice Co.
•

_

•

HOURS
Monday thru Saturday • ·
8 A.M. Iiili P.M.
•

DRIVETHRU
CARRYOUT
109 First Ave.

•

The Alcove
42 Court

:

• •••••••••••••••

-Community CornerBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - ''There's no place
like home for the holidays ... "
Family gatherings, fancy gifts,
and food galore marked the social
scene of the Bend area as family and
friends from far and near enjoyed
their traditional holiday fare.
Arriving Wednesday for a holiday
visit with her mother, MARGARET
BUTCHER, Middl,eport, were
Robert and Judy Garwell and
children, Gretta and Justin, Des
. Moines, Iowa. They were joined on
Christmas Eve by Jennifer and Jim
Butcher and their three, Jeff, Julie
and Jessica, Racine.
At the home of MR. AND MRS.
CARL ROACH for Christmas dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams
and daughter, Kasey, Pomeroy;
Dale Mlller, Tampa, Fla.; Raymond
Roach, Tom, Darin acd Randy
Roach, Mrs. Gertrude Miller, Marie
Francis, Pomeroy, and Marion
Francis, Middleport.
Here from Wichita, KaMas for
their traditional holiday visit are
·Melvin and Patty Circle and their
children, Marianne and Mark. Mter
Christmas dinner with his mother,
MRS. MARY CIRCLE, Racine, the
family joined her parents, CHUCK
AND DAISY BLAKESLEE, Uncoln
Heights, for a Christmas night
celebration. Jim and Jennifer But·
che~ and their children, including an
infant daughter, Jessica Christine,
of Racine were also there.
Guests of MR. AND MRS.
CHARLES ASA BRADBURY, Mid·
dleport, for the holidays are their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Bradbury, Jeffery and
Nikki, Circleville. Their holiday din·
ner was held Saturday and other
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Pat
O'Brien, Joy and Sean, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Tricia,
Wendy and Megan, Racine, and C.
P. Bradbury, Middleport.
There was plenty of activity at the
home of GEORGE AND PHYLUS ·
HACKETT over the holiday
weekend. Attending a Christmas
dinner were Bill and sons, B. J. and

27 1981

.

week of Dec. I8, 198J..Jan. I, I982 at
the Senior Citizell8 Center located at
220JacksonPikeareasfollows:
Monday, Dec. 28 - Visiting, 9
a.m.-3 p.m. ; Quilting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Dtic. 29 - S.T.O.P.
Ciass, 10:30 a.m. ; Physical F 1'tness,
11: 15 a.m.; Birthday Party, I :30 p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 30 - Vinton .
Bible Study, I p.m. ; Card Games, 1-3
p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 31 - BlOOd
Pressure Check ai Vinton Site; New

• Btls.
•

ap.m.-12 mid-

t.ge ~.pear alad, COI'IIbrelld..
butter, grapefruit, milk.
Friday,Jan.I-CIOIICI.
'11wnday- Hap~ face rout
The Senior NutriUon "'PI"'og"'r. ,mnm will beef sanchrleh/IJ'IYy, ca~
serve the lollowing me11111:
· apple slaw, wbipped potatoel,
het v
t 0 bread buUer pi•""" milk
Monday - Spa&amp; t lorna
...,..;•• _a'_:.""'.
'
sauce, meatballl and cheese, toued
•. •-.
......
salad, orange slices, Itanan ·bread,
CIJolce of beverages served witll
butter, sherbet, milk.
eacb meal.
'Tuesday _ PGrk cbop, sweet
Meela iubject to change without
pota•-·
.........
dark
bead
noli
.....,, green .....~.
r ,
ce.
b tte 1
pudding milk
"Services rendered on a non0
w~= Cbl1i ~
cot· discriminatory balls."
nighl

GALLIPOLIS .- Activities for the

SPECIAL .

Dec. 27. 1911

Year's Eve Party,

U&lt;.Ql;)

Flood,
Gardner
marry
POMEROY - Lorraine Kay Flood
and Terry Ray Gardner were
married in a double-ring candleliglt
ceremony on Dec. 5 at the Zion Church of Christ.
The bride is the daughter of Helen
J . Flood, Athell8, and Theodore
Flood, Gallipolis. Bob Purtell per·
formed the ceremony at 6:30p.m.
following a half-hour of music
provided by Julie Byers of Mid·
dleport.
The altar was decorated with candelabra and the unity candle lighted
during the ceremony, with each window having a single white candle.
Given in marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a natural
colored A·line silk dress with an
ovelay of bridal lace. It was
fashioned with long lace sleeves and
a high neckline and was tied at the
wist with a silk ribbon. Her feil of
lace fell from a headband. The dress
and headpiece were handmade by
the bride's mother.

w. va.

&lt;•. l
·:·
•

•:• :·

w. va.

1 Pleasant,

The

Ti

inmate doesn't get wish
EAST MEADOW, N.Y. ( AP) - A potentially fool·looae jail inmate
. m!~. his Christmas present because polic\e searched into the sole of

1

•

••

Authorities in this town on Lo.ng Island said they have charged Steven
~:::~ 17, wtth promoting priSOn contraband after searching 8 pair of
he brought in 88 a present for a friend and foui.l that four
pieces had been imbedded in ihe sole of one of the shoes.
The shoes were gift-wrapped and meant lor David Holtnes wbo is ser.
l!fldisclosed offense, authorities said
'
officers said they bOcanie suspicious ~hen they smelled a
odor of glue coming from the present.

Astrograph
Dec, 28, 1911
Your possibWties for achieving what you set out to do this coming
year look good, but It would be wise to have alternative pta118 ready.
You might have to change course several times.
CAPRICORN (~. 22-Jan..J,Il, ,[i)CUI.-,_- effoo IS anaenergies
today on things lllljlOt tant tO you financially and careerwise. SchellllJe
. your ilOCial activities so that they won't interfere.
. AQUARJUS (Jaa. :IG-Feb. 19) Success is likely tnday if you follow
~ugh on your plans 88 you initially conceived them. Making last·
nunute changes could prove unwise.
PISCES (Feb. 2&amp;-Marcb 20) Usually you're a very giving person,
but today others are likely to treat you more generously than you will
treat them. Keep your acounts in balance.
~IES (Mar~h 2I·April19) Treat fairly all with whom you have
dealings today wtthout putting yourself at a disadvantage. There's a
chance someone could abuse your generosity.
TAURUS (April ZO.Mary 20) This could be a very productive day,
proVJded you don't do things in fits and starts. Once you establish a
goal, persevere until it is achieved.
· ·
GEMINI (May 21-Juae 20) You have the capacity today to
brighten the lives of others. Spre~d yourself around and enjoy it, but
beware of any form 'of oveJ;indulgence.
.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) .You should do weli in •commercial
matters today, provided you follow your common sell8e and prudence.
Where you take gambles, losses are'likely.
LEO. t.Jaly 23-Aug. 22) Nonnally you're the type who stands by
·your declStOII8. Today, however, you could be a Utile too wishy-washy
for your own gOOd.
' VmGO (Aug. 2:J.Sept. 22) You'll be amply rewarded today for any
work or service you petform, but you could be disappointed if you ex·
peel more than you're entitled to.
·LmRA (Sept. ~1. Z3) You're very capable of managing dif.
ficult situations, for yourself as well as for others, today. However,
your grades for handling money may be low.
SCORPIO (0&lt;1. 24-Nov. 22) In situatioll8 which are presently run·
ning smoothly don't introduce new eloments or conditioll8 which might
gum things up. Chances are they will.
·
,
SAGITI'ARWS (Nov. 23-Dec. 23) Your possibilities for bringing
your hopes into being · are good today if you deal with matters
realistically. Wearing rose-colored glasses won't do the trick.

IGA TableRite Quality

POR

Sirloin Pork Roast...........

12 9
Lb .

139

Pork lhould1r

Boaton Butt Bon• I•••

BLADE ROAST .:..............

Lb.

179

· USDA Chotc1 a ..t Chuck

Boneless Chuck Steak.....

Lb.

169

UIDAC:hOicoBoofChuck

. Boneless Chuck Roast.....
lOA To ...Rllo Ouollty

Lean Beef Stew Meat ......

Lb.

199
Lb .

11 9

PORK SHOULDER

Boston Butt Blade Roast..........

Lb .

159

PORK LOIN

Full Loin Half Pork Loin...........

Lb.

I

PORK LOIN CENTEII CUT

RIB PORK CHOPS .................. .

179
~oi~:u~c:F.T.&lt;R RUOAST ....................11 ~
19 9
Sausage or Kielbasa........
149
1Q9
Full Rib Half P9rk Loin.....................
All Meat Franks ............. ..
PORK LOIN CENTER CUT

LOIN PORK CHOPS..................

Lb.

Eckrich lmokod

Lb .

Pork loin

.

Eckrich • 12 oa. pkg.

Lb.

IGA TABLERITE • 1 LB. PKG.

99¢

·

Franks or Sugardale Coneys .......... :.

11to11lb.o.g.

Whole Pork Loin..............

129
Lb.

Conal•t. of pork aho,. • rv..te
Cut 6 wnpp.e d
10

f...,.

¥1JUf !;PICifk.:.-tio,.,

COKE,

ROBIN ·HOOD

Planter's
DIY

·

PIZZA CRUST MIX

4

~ed or ~ z. $189
6

CocktaU Peanuts

•&gt;~oz. 99¢
PKGs.

Chef Bay-ar-d•

THEIR PRICE ..

~

OUR REGULAR PRICE -CHIC REBATE

IGA Potato Chips •PKG.
oz.
New 4 pc .. bedroom suite
which includes triple
· dresser. Mr: &amp; Mrs.
Hutch Mirror, door
' chest. ht!adbo.ard, fool· ,
board

a.,,.

HAWAIIAN PUNCH
SEA PAK FROZEN

Shrimp Cocktail

3

8/16 Ol ·

PI&lt;O.

llegul8r. B•becued or Rippled

Oranp, Grape, JIM, Tropical or Very

TAB or SPRITE

.

z•••oz.159

Cheese Pizza Mix ............ .

$}39

69 ¢

·PWS Deposit

·u~

229 '

40Z.
PKGS.

laus~tge, Combo or P-,peroni

Jeno Pizza Rolls......... :~J:

89¢

IGA TOMATO JUICE
46

Swift Hard Salami.. ........~~: $~.89
Sugardale Boiled Ham... , ~-~:2.69
Pep~r Cheese........ ~~•. 2.29
Swiss Cheese. ~ ........ ~ ?:. 2.39

New 7 pc. wood
dinette set with
table, 42x66, wjth two
leaves and 6 maple
finished chairs .

REG. $399.95

oz. 69~

SNOW FLOSS KRAUT
. 27 OZ. CAN

FRESH POTATO SALAD.~.~: 7'1
PARTY TRAYS
AVA ILA BLEI.

2/99~

PILLSBURY PLUS

'24995

CAKE MIX 79~

5AVE' SlSO

EVERYTHING IN STOCK
MARKED '
WAY BELOW REG. SUGGESTED RETAIL

IGA APPLESAUCE
16 OZ. CAN

·INSTANT MAXWELL HOUSE
CGFFEE. 10 oz. jar ......... .-............

•3"'

•

New s•iiv; Quiifeci Top,
Innerspring.
way," aCC!ordlug to Rita White, Sabbath Schoolsuperlntende.t
"There are approlimately 6,000
A,d'lentists in Finland," White said.
Educati011 in a Christian school is
the aim of Seventh-Day Advenu.ts. .
Finland haa a junior college with a
need for a new donnitory and dining
irea. The worldwide Sabbath School
offering will aid thla project as weD
as the two other projects.

FIRM .

CABBAGE

I

=- -

.

LEMONS or
LIMES
.
'

-MATTRESSES
TWIN

LB•.

RIVER VIEW
FOODLINER
.

3/99~

GLAD TRASH BAGS ..... ~-~~!.~...~}49
'

FRESH

nee.

Lb .

PORK LOIN

PRiaS.

POMEROY - Members of the
pomeroy' Seventy-Day Ad~entist
Church participated in the international outreach of their
denomination by contributing to
missioo funds
:II for tart~et
projects in nortbem Europe.
"Attention will be foculed on a
junior college in Flnllnd, an
evangeli8tle center in Poland and a
child evangeliBtic center in Nor-

11 9

l'ort. Loin Countrr Strlo

SPARE RIBS....................

6/$1 00

ONLY 2 WEEKS LEFT TO COMPLETE
YOUR FUNK &amp; WAGNALL ENCYCLOPEDIA. .
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO EVERYONE
FROM RIVERVIEW IGA.

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. AD GOOD THRU 1·2-82
WE WILL CLOSE AT

FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
OPEN 1·9 DAILY

,

5:00 PM NEW YEAR'S EVE.

11-6 SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

CLOSED NEW YEAR'S!
'

•

�"

·8- The Su

,

.,

c

•.

Coming Events

Dec. 27,1911
·
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

- .

TUESDAY
GAWPOLIS - Lafayette
White Shrine wiU meet at 7;30
p.m. Tuesday at the Masonic
Temple for a ceremonial. Of.
fleers are to bring sandwiches or
dessert.

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday, Dec.
29, at 7 p.m. There wiU be work in
the EA degree.

7-------------------------------------------~

Astrograph

will

Riverby
Calendar
· . Exhibit for the month of December - Forty oUtstanding pieces of
art, aU by Ohio artiBts, assembled by ·
lhe Olllo Liturgical Art Guild, including all media, and in both
GaUeries at Riverby.
GaUery Hours - Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m.·3 p.m.; Saturday
and Sunday, I p.m..,'; p.m.
·
December 21-January I - River·
by closed lor the holidays.

January 2, 1982 -

Riverby

reopens.

Head

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP} In 1881 a cigarette-making machine
produced 120,000 cigarettes a day.
The! was the equivalent of 4ll expert
hund rollers working 12 hours.
NoW, a century later, R. J .
Reynolds has machines capable of
producing the same amount of
cigarettes in 20 minutes. The
machines are rated at 6,000 cigaret·
tes per minute.

.

.

APPY NEW YE.A RI
The nicest thing we could wish for
you is that your New .Year's is
celebrated with lots of good friends
and cheer ... and you're surrounded
with love, happiness, health and
wealth throughout the rest of the
year! Our sincere thanks to you . .

Januay 4, 1982 - Deadline to ·
register for the dance classes taught ,
by Cindy Nau, available for both j
children and adults. Call Judi Sheets
at 448-'1815 to indicate inteest in
registering for the 10 week courses.
January 5, 1982, 7:30p.m.- FAC
Interdepartmental Meeting.
January 9, 1912 - Beginning of 10
-week courses for children in preschool dance, children's ballet and
modern dance, taught each Saturday afternoon by Cindy Nau. Call
448-7885 to pre-register, no later thun
January4.
·
January 11, 1982 - Adult classes ~;;!!!!!!!;;!;;!;;!;!!!;!!!;!!!!!;!;!!!;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~;:-~
· in dance, taught each Monday 1· •
THE STAFF OF
eveniug lor 10 weeks by Cindy Nau. I
Contact Judy Sheets at 448-7865 to
pre-register, no later than Januar'y
4• .
The hair place
Really rolling
for everyone

•
~·

to Uml

PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SATURDAY,
JANUARY 2, 1982
'

December 27,1981
Keep your shoulder to the wheel this corning year. Achievement
lies in not giving up. Though you may be tested, the tough times
serve to strengthen your character and resolve.
CAPRICORN (~. !2-JIUI. 191 This is not a good day to request
favors from mfluentJal contacts. Your possibilities lor being rejected
are stronger than for getting a "yes."
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. It} Associates wiU put considerable
stock in what you have to say today, so be careful about offering advice on matters on which you lack expertiBe.
. PISCES (Feb..2&amp;-March %8} Business and pleasure make a poor
uux today, so try not to blend the two. Keep social situations strictly
social. Discuss commercial proposals later.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 You're the type who enjoys
challenges, but be careful today or you may become involved in
something which you can't handle.
TAURUS (April2&amp;-Aprlllll} Try to lind ways to priSe coworkers
today rather than criticize.their shortcomings. A wrong choice of words could cause them to lay down their tools.
GEMINI (May 21-JUDe 20} Avoid negative companions today.
They could turn activities which should be fun into something serious
and dour. Seek instead those who are lighthearted.
CANCER (June 21-July ZZI Skirt issues today upon which you and
your mate disagree. There is a possibility small discords could be
blown way out of proportion.
·
·
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22} Before telling others !hat they should do
things a certain way, be sure you're not guilty of the same infractions
yourself or your advice wiU be ignored.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL ZZ} Be able to distinguish today between
bemg prudent or just plain stingy. If you expect friends to treat you
generously, loosen your pursestrings likewise.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23} Usually you11 blend over backward to
treat others fairly, but today it may he very difficult to appreciate the
other guy's position.
.
. SCORPI? (Oct. :!4-Nov. ZZ) Don't worry about matters today
wh1ch haven I yet happened and chances are never will. When and if
any problems arise, you'll be able to cope.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. za.o.,.,. 21) Be doubly protective of your
chenshed possessiOns today. Don't leave items ·unguarded which
could tempt one who has taking ways.

.Qu.arters

Welcomes
RETA EDWARDS

BOSTON BUn

PRODUCE

19

FRESH GREEN

CABBAGE

12~

29
LB.

YELLOW

LOIN END

COOKING
ONION'S

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
· - ~orth ·Carolina, spurred by the
front-court performance of James
Wlll'lhy and
Perkins, preserved
its No. I college basketbaU ranking
by defeating Kentucky BU9 Saturday.
It was a matchup of unbeaten
teams, top-ranked North Carolin~
and No.2 Kentucky, but in the end, it
bec81110 a uuitchup of Tar Heel
• power vs. Wildcat speed. Worthy
and Perkins, representing tbe
power, won out.
Worthy was the high scorer of tbe
game with 26 points, and Perkins
helped the Tar Heels bresk open a
close contest early in the second
half.
North Carolina, leading 311-35 at
halftime, scored the fin! six points
after intennission, and, in the first
4:17 of the second half, outscored
Kentucky . 10.2. .That gave the Tar
Heels a 48-37lea.d with 15;43 to play,
and the game was out of reach for
Kentucky.
Perkins, a 6-foot-9 sophomore, was
matched against another
sophomore, 6-foot·ll Melvin 'I)lrpin,
who has been substituting lor the in·
jured Sam Bowie. Kentucky sorely
missed Bowie's muacle ill this contesi. Perkins blocked three Turpin
shots ln. the first half, and in the
second half, the long-armed Perkins
scored 17 of his 21 points.
The Tar Heels went into their
famed four-comer spread with
about five minutes left and up by 6355.MdKentuckyfellintothetrap.
Perkins hit two free throws and
Worthy slashed through the spread·
.out Kentucky defense for a slam
dunk. Perkins hit for two more and

freshman Michael Jordatl got an
easy baaket. North Carolina ·outscored Kentucky 84, and the Tar
Heels led 71-$ with 2:49 to play.
North Carolina's largest lead was
15 points; at 57-12 with 11 :14 to play.
Jordan, a high-leapiug · guard,
scored live points in a 3;25 span

Sam

·

CHICAGO (AP) - George Halas,
owner of tbe Chicago Bears, announced Saturday that he would
retain tbe services of defensive coor·
dinator Buddy Ryan and the defen·
sive staff lor the 19112 season.
The 86-year-old Halas made the
amounceme.nt at · a morning news
cOnference, adding that be arrived
at th!l- decision without consulting
general manager and vice president
Jim Finks or head Coach Neill Ar·
mstrong.
The terms of the contract ex·
tensions signed by Ryan, defensive
line coach Dale Haupt and backs
coach Jim LaRue were not
disclosed, although Halas they
would receive raises.
The future of both Finks and Ar·
r.urtrong has been the cause of considerable speculation in light of the
Bears' disappointing 6-10 National
Football League finish. But Halas
had said in advance that be would
refuse to discuss the fate of either
man.
.
. However, while ailmittiug it was
"unusual" to make such a move

PORK
•

Phqne 446·2673 L;

SLICED QUARTER

RED DELICIOUS

•

••

PORK LOIN

•

APPLES

1.8.

CENTER CUT

RIB PORK CHOPS

1.8.

39

•, ••

CENTER CUT

LOI'N PORK CHOPS

NewYear's Eve·
Breakfast Menu

'

24 oz.
Cllt.

3
2• 5

1. 1\m eggs, SCRAMBLED, bacon or sausage,
biscuits and hashbrowns.
·

$ AU

2. One egg, SCRAMBLED, bacon or sausage,
biscuits and hashbrowns.

$

3. 1\m eggs, SCRAMBLED, country ham and
red eye gravy, biscuits and hashbrowns.·

VALLEY BEU

All.i5
2

2% MILK·

$4:89
$)AUi9

4. 1Wo eggs, SCRAMBLED, 8 oz. sirloin steak,
biscuits and hashbrowns.
_

•

GALLON PLASTIC

•

'

•
r,

•

$
. 129
.

SCOT TOWELS
· JUMBO
ROLL

PEPPERORI; SAUSAGE,
CHEESE,
HAM BUlGER,
CANADIM BACON

PfltLADELPIUA ( AP) - There
are many who think the New York
Giants have the momentum to upeet
the Philadelphia Ea~ Sunday
when they meet in the first round of
iJ\e National Football league playof·
fl.
The Glanla, 9-7, won lour of their
111at five pmes, ,includiug a 13-10
triwnpb over the DaUas Cowboys,
winner of !hi! NJ!tlonal Conference
Eat Dlvildon_.
Meulwblle, the Eagles, 1~, lost
four of tlle1r last live, Jlliappinl a
. flliJl'PllllloliDC'streak with 8 ,38-0
victory over the St. Louis Cardinals
in their regular season finale. ·

Stan Wallen, now in ·his lOIII year
11 an offenlive tiiCkle in lhe

NFL, Ia
inclined todllcount momentum.
. "lt'a plafaft time now end we've
been there before," aald Walten.
· w~ lllld the Gianl.l may tb1nk
w1Jinlna four of their la8t five give

tben11111 advantage.
: "There 11 more to .it than thai,"

-~~~decllreiL
-Tile ~

•••

Walters said he

~tab aperlence over momen-

tum en,ytlme.

· '"ltley'n jlllt leamlng what it's
to dell wllll !JIIpih r.ctAn like

t . . - al . . .

~ a _pi8Joff
pn~,"w.lllhald.

GITONI

•

assistants.

A

· I'

•

ustr1a .laDS Will

PASSING OFF - Derrlcli: Hord (32} of Kentucky North Carolllla duriDt Saturday's game at Meadow!a.
passes tbe baU 81 be is gu~~rded by Malt Doherty of do Arena. (AP werpbotol.

Sooners take Sun Bowl with ·.
40-14 victory over Houston
'

MELBOURNE, Australia lAP}_
Robert Van'! Jiof stu-'ned Tim
Wilkison 6-3,6-3, I-6, 4-6, 6-3; while · EL · PASO, Texas (AP) traveled 60 yards with a short pass .
Peter McNamara of Australia toj&gt;- Oklahoma quarterback Darrell from quartetback Lionel Wilson
ped countryman Ron Carter IHI, 6-2, Shepard, banned by the NCAA from
only to fwnble through the Sooner
6-2 in the first round of the $400,000 playing in postseason games at the end zone lor a touchback.
' Australian Open.
University of Houston, burned his
Oklahoma quickly charged 80 yar·
former tean'lmateS With two touch- ds behind freshman fullback Fred
down runs Saturday to . carry the Sims, who ran lor 22 yards, and
Sooners to a 4().14 victory over tbe Shepard, who reeled off a 42-yard
Cougars in the 47th Sun Bowl.
run.
.
Shepard, a senior from Odessa,
After Shepard scored his second
Texas, who transferred to Oklahoma touchdown, Keeling kicked a 49-yard
after the Cougars were placed on
field goal, Sims ran 30 yards lor a
probation in 1978, ran 34 yards for a . touchdown and reserve Ron Mills
touchdown in the first period and scored from 2 yards out.
.
sneaked a yard for another in the
Oklahoma rubbed it in in the last
fourth.
two minutes when end John Truitt
The victory . by Oklahoma gave
lumbered 28 yards for a touchdown
both teams season-ending records of on an interception return.
7-H. It was the first time the Big
Oklahoma j wnped to a 7-ll lead in
Eight Sooners and the Southwest the first quarter on a 34-yard touchConference Cougars had ever met.
down run by Shepard, who broke two
Oklahoma took command of the tackles on the score.
game alter Michael Keeling broke a
Houston tied the field goal favorite
1·1 tie in the third period with a 32· Sooners late in the first half on a
yard field goal.
Wilson-engineered 63-yard drive.
Houston's Robert Durham

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) Oliver Luck, the Cleveland, Ohio,
native who has received as many
honors for his off-the-field ac- ·
complishments 81 he has for playing
football lor West Virginia U~iver·
. sity, has another award to add to his
the first period of their game with the University of
trophy case.
Hoosteo ill El Paso's Sun Bowl Saturday. Houston
Luck, the Mountaineers' se•ior
players Calvin Eason (38} and Weedy Harris (51}
quarterback,
has been named as
frame the opeiag for Shepard. (AP Laserpholol.

.

Can Giants keep
their momentum?

&amp;,Ol..
99'VALUI

Pt. Pleasant, w. va.
,,

7-UP
DIET
l~~~

IUY ONI·

It's our way of saying, "Thank you for coming 10 Slloney's"and wishing you the best for 1982. Happy New lbrf

. Halas said his decision to retain
Ryan was in large part prompted by
a letter he receicved earlier this
month from the Bears' defensive
players. The letter, dated Dec. 9,
stated the players recognized the
team had a disappointing season,
but wanted to express their concern
over . the fate of Ryan and his

'

.

' at his
With a gusty 12-mph wind
back, Wilson completed passes of 11
yards to Lonell Phea and 8 yards to
Allen Polk before defensive back
Elbert Watts was flagged lor interference in the end zone.
Wilson sneaked over from the l·
yard line on the next play for the
tying touchdown. The Cougars'
other score came late in the game
when reserve Don Jordan ran 1 yar·
ds.
'.
Oklahoma lost Stanley Wilson with
a rib injury late in the second period.
He gained 87 yards on 14 carries in
the first hull. Sims, his replacement, ·
gained 181 yards on 15 carries in the
second hull.
The game drew 33,816 fans, second
largest in the classic's history but
some 1,000 fans short of capacity.
Shepard was voted the back of the
game, while defensive tackle Rick
Bryan was named the most valuable
lineman.
·
-

West Virginia's arrulteur athlete of
4Je year lor.l98!. Luck, who won the
award in a runaway vote, will

receive his trOJlhY at the state sports
writers associatioo's annual Victory
Awards Dimer in Morgantown on
Sunday, May 2.
.
Luck !las broken nearly every
exisitlng Mountaineer

passing

record and becomes the 22nd WVU

athlete to win the award ill its 46year history.
.
The recent weeks have brought a·
number of awards, honors and
recognition Luck's way. He was
s&lt;'lected as one of two stale candidates for a Rhodes Scholarship
and also was named as one of the
finalists for . he Today's Top Five
scholastic awards by the NCAA.

'

POTATO CHIPS

Regular Dinner menu items avallabic:. No othcr.bn:akl'ul itc:ms will he: ~~erw:d, All C8(1.~
will be scrambled &amp; served with bis~· uits &amp; hashbruwns. All bn'cr!IFI addlclonal.

'

•

FROZEN PIZZA

It's the best way to relax and dine with friends after Nc:w ~'s
excitement. Choose from four hearty breakfasts prepared fresh 'With real
country e~ and our own old-fashioned, homemade biscuits.
•

328 VIand St.

$

•

Served 11 P.M. until3 A.M.

Oklaboma quarlerback DerreD Shepard (81 finds a big hole up the
middle and scampers for 34 yards and a touchdowu ln
SUN BOWL TOUCHDOWN -

HALF

days."

Luck receives another honor

QUART
CTN.

BUTltRMILK

without consulting his general
manager, Halas conceded he expected Finks to remain in . his
'present capacity in the future.
As to Annslrong and the offensive .
coaching staff, Halas said a decision
"will come later. Maybe in abOut 10

1.8. . , , .

'

BROUGHTON

during which North Carolina outscored Kentucky 7-2 for that 15-point
bulge.
,
Jordan added 19 points for the Tar
Heels, IHI, and Charles Hurt led the
Wildcats, 6-I, with 18. Kentucky
guard Jim Master had 14 points, but
only two of them in the second half.

Halas keeps three coaches;
ArmSlrong
·
'S future unknown

3-LB.
, BAG

Stop in for a Free Merele norman Consulttion .
• "Merle Norman Cosmetics"
&lt;U State Street
,Gallipolis, Ohio

.1

-·- - ·• - · ·- -

Formerly of " Across the Street"
SHE .WELCOMES HER CLIENTEL E
"WALK · INS WELCOME"

'

Nuinber.1 Tar Heels
·dump Wildcats,82-69

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30p.m.
85 .Vine Street
Galipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-9593

"We Reserve the

·-- ~

.

. Tbe .,... .,. In lbe playoffs lor
ltfti!D«&lt;lalnJabt ~· 81111 W_altel:a..
'

I

' I

~

feels their ability to deal with all the
flak surrounding ~ postseason game
is an important element.
The Giants and Eagles are
meeting lor the third time this
season. Philadelphia won 24-10 in the
season opener and New York won 2010 iQ a November game that started
Philadelphia on its four-game losing
streak.
Most ezperts predict a low scoring
gatne, with two of the league's best
defeiJIIe881thekeyfactor. TheGianls are last In offense In tbe NFL,
,.tille the EaRles ~ year, despite
the losing streak, produced their
second best offense in club history .
Quarterbacli: Ron Jawonkl completed :1110 of 461 paaaes for 3,096 yarda with 20 lnterceptioos. He threw Zl
touchdown pasaes. Wilbert Mon. tgomeiy.gained 1,402 yards rushing
and boosted hia five-year career
total to &amp;,1186, best in the history of
the franchise. .
.
Jawonkl throws malnly to wide .
...celver Harold c.rmlcbael (61 catchee lor ·1,021 )'ll'da), Mantgomery
(49-491) and Olarley Smith (3U84).
T1J117 Fral*llD II • for Sl on field

.,.~ Bcoll Brwuler,

who
rtplteed the illjured l'NIIIlnimlllve
~JIIO,dirlclltbe New York of.
fenle, ar- hu CGftlllded Clll 79
of 110 lor f/1 yarda end fi\111 TDa.
He's had 11 IIUI'Cepled.

Buffalo has ·speed;
Jets offer defense
NEW YORK !API - The New
York Jets had the most sacks in the
National Football League this year,
66. The Buffalo Bills allowed the
fewest sacks, 16.
.
And in the team's two meetings
this year - a 3Hl romp by the Bills
at Buffalo on opening day aod a 33-14
victory by the Jets at home six
weeks later. - the Jets managed
only three sacks.
Who wins the battle along the line
of scrimmage probably will go a
long way in deciding who wins the
American Football Conference wild
card playoff game between the two
AFC East teams Sunday.
The Jets' quartet of linemen "the New York Sack Exchauge" is well known, with Joe Klecko and
Mark Gastineau at the ends and Abdul Salaam and Marty Lyons at the
tackles.
Bu\ the quintet of Bills who protect
Joe Fersuson so well labor in
relative obscuri!Y, no longer known
as the "Eiectrl~ Company" which
openell the holes for. O.J. Simpson
during the 1970s.
For the record, the five men who
have kept Ferguson's unlfonn so
clean thia year are, !run left to
right, tackle Ken JCJ!1e9, guard Jon
Borchardt (relieved on oc;casloo by
Tom Lynch), center wm Grant,
guard Conrad Dobler (or Jim Kit-

cher} and tackle Joe Devlin.
Klecko and Gastineau, both of ·
whom broke the Jets' single-season
sack record, hold their opponents
across the line in high esteem.
"I voted for Jones for AU-Pro "
Kiecko said of the six-year veter~n
from Arkansas State. "! was surprised not to see hil]l on the list. I've
played against him foilr years now
and it's a total change. He was an
adequate pass-blocker. Now IK-'s
outstanding."
And Gastineau, stopped by Devlin
in both games against the Bills this
year, called him the best tackle he's
faced in 1981 and almost echoed
Klecko when he said, ''I was shocked
to hear he didn't make All-Pro."
The matchup of Dobler vs. Salaam
could be pivotal. "Conrad's
dedicated. He puts his heart into
what be's doing," Salaam said, not
without .a hint of sarcasm. Dobler
has been flagged mDl'e than a lew'
times for what might be called overexuberance. He was caught leg.
whipping a couple of times in .a·
nationaUy televised game this year:
and is a master at balling opponents
into losing their composure.
·
"I'll be aware of my game plan,":
Salaam said. "You. don't l011e your.·
temper qalnst anyone. Your mall(
interest la to carry ,_., your ·
strategy."

�------------~--..,..----

Ohio-Point

W.Va.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

For.·the record.
JIA.I4
Super Box XVI. AFC champion vs
NFC champion. Pontiac. Mlt:h., A

East.,.,. Conference
Atlentlc Division
W. L. Pct.GB

. 20 5
Boston
20 6
New York
12 14
Washington
9 IS
New Jersey
9 16
Central Qlvislon
Mllwaui&lt;ee
17 8

.100
769 'h
.&gt;462 8'h
.37S JO'h
.360 H

Indiana

15 11

.571

ChiCIIOO
. Detroit
Atlanta
Cleveland

12 15
12 IS
10 15
6 21

"" 6
·"" · 6
400 7 •
.222 . 12

Philadelphia

p.m.

2112

At El Paso, Texas

Gator Bawl

Plfrick Division
~
W. L. T. Pis. GF GA'
NY Islanders 20 9 S ol5 148 118
Philadelphia.
21 11 1 ol3 131 121
p.m.
.
Pittsburgh
15 13 6 36 129 128
Hall of Fame Bowl
NY Rangers
12 17 4 30 116 137
At'Birmlngham, Ala.
washington
10 22 2 22 131 141
Mississippi State (7-4) vs. Kansas
Adams Division
(8·1), I p.m.
Montreal 17 ·8 9 ol3 1'" 100
Peach Bowl
Boston
19 10 3 42 122 101
Al AllaAta, Ga .
Buffalo
17 . 10 8 42 134 108
West Vir'ginia (8·3) vs. Florida (7·
Quebec
18 14 l 41 171 161
4), 3 p.m.
Hartford
8 16 9 25 lOIN 111
Friday, Jan. 1
Campbell Conhtrence
CoHan Bowl
Norris Division
At Dallas. T~tnn,
W. L. T. Pis. GF GA
Texas (9+1) vs. Alabama (9·1-1), I
Minnesota
13 10 11 37 loiS 121
p.m.
ChiCago
lJ. 11 9 35 1.54 141
FieSia Bowl
St. Louis
15 16 4 34 127 137
AI Tem--" Ariz.
13 16 7 33 135 161
P~nn .State (~21 vs. Southero Winnipeg
Toronto
9 15 . 9 27 142 154
California (ll-2),1:3ilp.m.
Detroit
10 20 5 25 120 148
·
Or•nge Bawl
.
' At Miami, Fla.
Smythe Division
Edmonton
23 8 6 52 211 140
Nebraska (9·21 vs. Clemson (11 ·0}, B
Vancouver
"13 i6 7 33 132 126·
p.m •.
12 15 a 32 141 159
· Calgary
Rose Bowl
Los Angeles
13 19 2 28 147 170
At Pasadena, Calif.
Colorado
7 23 S 19 91 172
Iowa (8·3} \IS. Washington (9·2). S

at

Tampa Bay at Dallas, 1 p.m.

AFC
San Diego at Miami, s p.m .

Jan. 3
AFC
Buffalo or the New York Jets at
Cincinnati, 1 p .m.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) Add the name of Joe Morris to the
list of big, bruising running hacks
who have come out of Syracuse to
terrorize linebackers and defensive
backs In the open field.
Morris big? Not like fonner
Syracuse stars Jim Brown, Ernie
Davis and Larry Csonka. ,Morris
falls five inches short or being a six·
footer and weighs only 182 pounds.
Morris bruising? Yes. And he
proved it here Christmas Day in
helping to lead hjs Blue squad to a
21·9 victory over the Gray in the 44th
annual BluH&gt;ray All.Star Football
Classic.
Morris rushed for 49 yards in 11 at·
tempts and pulled In seven passes
for 69 yards and one touchdown ear' him the game's Most Valuable
nUlg
Player award.
~ ·Running the baD, no, I don't feel
uke I had that good a game," said
Morris. "Catching the ball, yes, I
t1!ink I had a pretty good game."
Morris said it "means a lot to me
to come down here and represent my
sChool so well."
·

.

-

Pt!iladephia or the New York

Giants at San Francisco, S p.m .
.
Jan. 10
AFC and NFC championship
games. Sites will be held cities of

teams with the best record . Starting

Named the most outstanding of· lead in the third quarter by sneaking
fensive perfonner for the Blue over from the one-yard line, capping
squad was San Diego State quar- adrivethatbeganonhisownao.
terback Matt Kofler, who passed for
The first score of the game ocone touchdown and ran for another.
curred in the second quarter when
Kofler, who hit 13 of 23 passes for Kofler lobbed a pass from four yard§
12? yards and only one i!lterception, out, hitting Curt Grieve of Yale in
sai'; he didn't know whether he the comer of"the end zone.
d.....?.ed the offensiv~ award.
Morton Anderson of Michigan
"I don't think I really played a State connected on all extra point at·
great game," he said. " I don't know tempts for the Blue.
if · I deserve it. The offensive line
' The Gray squad was held to three
played a great game. The offensive points until late.In the fourth quarter
line was very talented."
- that a 38-yard field goal in the
Blue offensive coach Mike White second quarter by Eddie Garcia of
of Dlinois praised Kofler and Southern Methodist.
·
Michigan State's Bryan Clark, who
With . less than two minutes
shared the quarterbacking chores.
remaining in the game, however, .
"The quarterbacks did a real nice Maryland's Charlie Wysocki
job with ball control-type passing,'' plunged over from the one for the
he said. "We used a variety of Gray's final score. A'two-point cor&gt;passes and the execution was good."
version attempt failed.
Clar~. who gained 116 yards in the
The Blue defense smothered the
air on 12 completions, engineered an Gray offense throughout the game
insurance touchdown for the Blue· intercepting Gray ' quarterbac~
late in the fourth quarter, hitting John Fourcade of Mississippi four
MO!Tis on an eight-yard scoring times and Mike Kelley of Georgia
strike.
Tech three times.
Kofler gave the Blue squad a 14-3

a

Wales Conference

Wednesday, Dec. 30
Liberty Bowl
At Memphis, Ten11.
Ohio State (7-4) vs. Navy (7·3-1). 8

Jan. 2

times will be announced at
da.te.

.

.. .'

NHL

(8·H,9p.m.

Philadelphia (10·6), 3:30p.m.
Divisional Playoff

Bruising back Joe Morris
paces 21-9 Blue victory

Stars.

AI JacksDnvme, Fla.
North Carolina (9·2) vs. Arkansas

NFC

..

East AII·Slars vs. Wnt All·Stars. •
Saturday, J1n. 16
.1
Senter Bowl
.1
AI Mobile, All.
.
North AII·Stors vs. South All· '

..

Oklahoma (6·4·1) vs. Arkansas (8·

Oec. 27
AFC
Buffalo (10·6) at New York Jets
(10·5· 1). 12 noon.
NFC

tsomery, Ala. Christmas Day. The lmeoded """'lver,
Orlaodo McDaolel, moves In to top Dean alter the luterceplfon and defensive back Pete DlclemenU of
Oklaboma State prepares to block for ltls Blae leatlf.
mate. The Blue won, 21-9. (AP Laserpholo).

.

East All -Stars vs. West AII·Stars.

Monday. oec. 21

(9·7)

· .~

Hull Bowl
. AI Honolulu

ll.9p.m.

· NFL Playoffs
Wild Card Game

LEAPING FOR LEA111ER- Defensive back Ver' 11011 Dean ol San Diego picks off one of seven Illte.-.epllons thrown by·Gray quarterbacks In the 44th
annual Blue-Gray AJJ.Star FootbaU Classic In Moo-

p.m.

Sun Bowl

San Diego at Los Angeles

NFC

At New Ortuns, La.

later

Bob Evans
night
•
slated Jan. 16
at Lyne. Center

' PLAYER OF 11IE YEAR -Ridt8rd ,....,;.. (1), "' . . . , . ~
· · preaeuls trophy to player of
year Feraudo Vtd-la, "' tbe LA.
))edgers. The presentation Will made eerller this "moath. (AP Luet-

*'

photo).

RIO GRANDE-'- Bob Evans Far·
College is Saturday, Jan. 18, when
the Redmen cagers take on Ohio
Dominican at 7:30p.m. in Lyne Ceoter on the Rio Grande College Cam·
pus.
Gallia County Bob Evans Fanns
Restaurants 'are distributing free
tickets to the basketbaU game. They
can be picked up . at the Sausage
Shop oo the Boh Evans Fann near
Rio Grande or at the Steakhouse on
Eastern Avenue in Gallipolis.
A drawing will be held at halftime
and various prizes given to 40 Rio
Grande fans, rangint!·from a special
prize to be announced at the game to
free canoeing at the Boh Evans
Fann, meals at the restautanf and
sausage samplers.

.e

Commercial &amp;Savings Bank
Central Trust Bank
Gallipolis Savings &amp; Loan
Ohio Valley Bank

JACK ROUSH MOTOR CAR SPECIALSIII

I

..........

lndQ,ev.

. 26-2.
J

C.ondD.I'ollnltll

b

,a

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.

6 0 485
6 1 554
6 I 475
6 2 442

Pt. P leasant

they double-team him, and we go to
(rookie wide receiver Crls) "Collinsworth, (tight .end) Dan ROllS. or
someone else. U they double team
Crls, we can go with Ike."

Although Curtis trailed Roas,
Collinsworth and fullback Pete
Johnson In number of receptions,
and Roas and Colllnsworth in
111!8.1011, his 16.~
recelvillg
yanlsper
this catch
yard
average
waa tops
among the Beagals' regulars.
The IG-year veteran from San
Diego State established a reputation
as a fast .and elusive receiver in his
early yeal'S. Although he sUpped out
of the spotlight, Curtis said be didn't

..

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~iiil
W
. HCJI

FSN

f . RETAIL

SWIM M1NG
POOLS

=~·oo:! re::Cu~u:!nt,!:

. PORTA8LE

seasons before 198t.
"I just kept ·going, and I wasn't
thinking of quitting," Curtis said.
"Butltmakesyou-appreciatewbat

For Your Winter Netd
Call 304-429-4788
HOIJft&amp;V

small
group
that'sThere's
gone through
we have
thislefttime.
still a
the problem yean, but we came
back out of tbat. ..
Curtis was Cincinnati's No. 1 dfall
pick In 19'13. He holds Bengals'
career records for paaa receptlOIIS
with 340, p,a111 ~lvq yaf!ls with
6,1180 and touchda.n receptl0118 with

AMessage to All Wage Earners:

SOCIAL
•

INSECURITY·?
.

.. COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS BANK
·IRAs HELP YOU PLAN FOR A
FUTURE THAT'S . TOUGH TO
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An INDMDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
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you deposit money in a C&amp;S IRA tOdsy.
the amount from your tauble income. And as
early as age 5912, or at retirement, you may
begm to wttbdraw your deposit plus years of accwnulated Interest.
,
Thanks to new rules lor IRAs, as of Jartuary
I, 11182, anyone with earned income can contribute as much as 100% of earned Income or
$2,000 a year (whichever Is less). $4,000 if you
and your spouse both work. $2,250 for married
couples with one wage earner. Even if you're
covered by another pension plan, you can open a
C&amp;S IRA. You'll be building a substantial "nest·
egg" for your future.
Wbftever amount you place into a C&amp;S IRA,
you can deduct from your taxable income.
What'1 more, your deduction may lower your
overaU tax bracket, so that you pay less tax on
all your income.

Deduct

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LOOK UKE AMILLION
It's difficult to predict where interest rates will
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•

.

nual deposit, a COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS
BANK IRA can return more than a million
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A CS Bank IRA is a secure investment, backed
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IF ITS SAVETY YOU WANt, CALL ANY C&amp;S
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c 8rS

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1980 V.W. PICKUP

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Lilt a&amp;OOII acilllber,
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387
432

Portsmouth at Mifflin
· Wheelersburg at SOuth Webster
· A-lexander at Wellston
~ Nelsonville· York at Logan
· M~igs at Waverly (makeup)
· Circleville at washington ·CH
(inakeup) ·
· December lO game :
- Portsmouth at Athens
" January 2 games:
Wellston at waverly
Athens at Jackson
Gallipolis at Meigs
Ironton at Logan

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L

W~dnesday 's results:
Cincinnati Western Hllls 97 Ports-

1·980 LINCOLN TOWN. COUPE

for 111 ctiiiMI
primlrUy
dltrtnc
tba
lint two . . .
M'LII
177; Connltll&gt;oolll71.
of
school,"
Sellen
saki.
"""' . .............. - J - Lllmllm ...
ConrileHyootll•;-II&lt;Laorllllo414.
•
As lor Watldna, be waa lhlaklnc ol
home
011 Cltriltmaa nlghL
and t"f~Mo, lr!; IIU'J lac. •; SUnmana
Oldl
Codllll&lt;
QldllloriOdUIOY. 711.
·
"I've been lryiJw to eall borne
cadillar and Orl. 2212; No. 6 21111, Mu:'1 Jnc. tonight,'' he said, "but the linea we
21..
..
•
1111 tied up." ·
11
lnd.~pme- ..... ~ 112; Carole

W

Wheelersburg
Portsmouth
Chillicothe
Jackson
Ironton
.
Washington CH Waverly
Logan
Meigs

Local howling

Mu'llne.

TEAM
Athens
Gallipolis

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)- Tile first Christmas away from home is a
very lonesome time. Just ask some
of the lreslunan college basketbaU
players who are here for the Far
West Classic college basketball tournament.·
"It really didn't seem like Christ·
mas in a way," said &amp;ott Roth, a &amp;foot-7 Wisconsin freshman from
Brecksville, Ohio.
"I was getting a little homesick
when I knew Christmas was coming
around and I was getung calls from
friends _who would be'going home,''
Roth sa1d. "My family isn't tbat big
but we usually bave a lot of cousins
over. I made a lot of calls to them. It
was sort of sad, but In a way it was
nice knowing we would be making
this trip out here."
: ARTFUL DODGER- Wide receiver Ron ingl'8m o1 Oklahoma Sbtte
Chip Watkins, a &amp;-foot~ starter for
~eludes a Gray tackler in the Blue's Zl·!i victory over the Gray In the 44th
Pittsburgh, said he and the other
.annual Blue-Gray AU-Star Football Classic here Cbrlstmas Day. (AP
freslunen bad known since school
:Laserphoto).
.
started that they would spend
Christmas away from home.
"I really wanted to be at home, but
I knew I couldn't,'' said Wafklns
who is from LoUisville, Ky. "I got
prepared for it at Thanksgiving. I
couldn't go home then, either."
Some of the teams im"lved for tho
Tunct.y,Trlplltlte
Classic
early Christmas Day, while
Dec. I, 1111
.TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Peter
some came on Thuraday and others
Steblyk's goal with S:33.left in the
were scheduled to arrive today.
""·
Meigalnn
11
gfUlle was the game-winner as the . orThe teams held special Christmas
stat Supply Co.
M1
Toledo Goaldiggel'l edged the FUm
No . 5
~
.
dinnellonFridsy.
Jlm'sGulf
58
Generals 5-4 Friday night In an In- Forat
"Around 12 o'clock, aU of the
Run Block
t2
ternational Hockey League game.
CandSPftvttoil
31
freslunen
on the team got together In
High ind. pme - June Lambert 211; carolyn
The Goaldlggers rallied from a 3-1
Ba~hner. 118, 184.
the hotel room and .jlllt talked,''
diticit to go ahead 4-3 as Brian KinHigh aeries - June l..ambert ~: Carolyn
Roth said of his CllrisbJI-. Eve at a
bll; Edna Ables G3.
solla, Jay Fraser and Mike Labian· · Bachner
Portland motel. ···out that was about
Team high game- Meip Inn~.
Teahfhiyh series ..... MeipiM 1472.
cj scored In a I :57 span of the second
it."·
wtod.
. Brad Sellel'S, a 6-11 WlacGMin
· -Earlier In the perlnd, the Generals
freshman from WarreJ1811111e
hild taken the lead on goals by Ber- ' Toam
•';e Helgbtl, Ohio, saki he didn't llllnd
G.andJ. AutoPartl
nie Gallant, Barry Ziegler and Larry No. 5
~ being away lrom home beca•·he
No. 3
Gould that came within 2:03 of each Sl.mmonl
Oldl, Cldllllc
was too billy preparing 1ctr the
:Dave Falkenberg . of Toledo
opened the ICOI'ing in the flnt period
8lld Flint's Mike Clarke made it 5-4
!lite In the game.
;Toledo boollted Its recwd to 21-1U
8lld Is tied for flnt place with the
Milwaukee Admirals. F11nt fell to 1•

.

doonnats.
.
· In retrospect, It Is apparent the
turnaround was IIPIJITI!(l by the
. Browns' first g~ of the replar
season, a 44--141088 to San Diego In a
nationally televised Monday night
contest, Modell aald.
"Losing to San Diego as we did, I
am convinced, r.oat us more lh8n one
game," he aaid. "We got wiped out
on· national televiaioo and I doo't
1hink we ever fully recovered from
the shattering effect. I didn't realize
it at the time. I thought it waa an
aberration, that's aU.
· "But, it was as bad a season as I
can recall, and I want to stress this
because I know It hurt (Coach) Sam
(Rutigliano) every bit as much allhough some people don't think so
because he doesn't wear his heart on
his sleeve. We both were devastated,
though he perhapl not as much as I
beca- I've been here longer, and

•

ALL GAMES

at Christmas

other.

not anticipate any changes In the
coachintl stsff for next seaaon.

Area cage
standings .

very lonely

Goaldiggers edge
Flint Generals

.

CINCINNATI (AP)- Isaac Curtis
,didn't smash any personal records
in -1981, but the Cincinnati Bengals'
·.wide receiver is ranking it among·
his best.
"I consider "this one of my best
, tears because of the overall success
,of the team," said the four-time Pro
;Bowl player. "I'm not as close to my
}best years statistically, but we're
•!riMing and that's the overall
tthing."
; : Curtis, 31, grabbed 37 passes for
yards and four touchdowns as
the Bengals won the American Con' ence Central ~vision tiUe lit 1981.
· iThe figures pale in comparison to his
~7 catches In 11178, his 843 yards
}eceiving as a rookie in 1973, or his
Jll touchdown catches In 1974.
· But Coach Forrest Gregg .said
'Curtis' contribution to the Bengafs:
12-4 season can't be measured In his
P.,rsonal statistics alone. The
Bengals' pa8sing game enjoyed a
loeblrth this season, and Gregg gives ·
'Curtis a measure of credit.
0
'
He's one of the reasons we're
)Where we are,'' Gregg said. "He
jllays hurt. He's suf(ered a broken
jaw, a broken finger and other
things this year, ' but lie hasn't
missed a pmctice.
·"Besides all that, he makes the big
play and just being out there he lnJiuences the defense. · Sometbnes

r--~-~-----;--_j_!~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

Frosh cagers

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Buckeye Building &amp;loan

...

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1981 campaign
good for .Curtis

All Gallipolis Financial Institutions 'will. Be
Open Thursday, Dec-ember 31st" until 3 P.M.
This ·includes Main Offices, Branches and
Drive-In Facilities.
Closed Friday, January 1st (New Year's Day)
and Saturday, January 2nd.
·

ms Family Night at Rio Grande

Rutigllano Is "ooe of the nceptional
coaches in the NFL." and he does

I've bod tho gOOd and the bad."
Modoll emphaair.ed he beUeves

"blenlng r-------------------_.;.-------------..,.--

Pittsburgh ( 10·1) vs. Georgia (10, .
1),8p.m .
Saturday, Jon.t ·
East-Wnl Sllrlllf Golne
AI Palo AHo; Calli.
East All-Stars vs. Wnt All· Stars, 3

Saturday, Dec. 26

Seattle at Portland, night
Sunday's Games
· ChicagoatMIIwaukee
Philadelphia at Phoenix

Ycrk · Giants

• I
Sufllr Bowl
At Pasadeftll, C1lif.
Iowa !8-3) vs. Wasltlllillon (9·2l. 5
p.m . .
So91r Bowl ·

.

9

Friday's Results ·
Los. Angeles 104, Phoenix 101
New Jersey at New York, night
Indiana at Washington, night

CLEVELAND (AP) - Tho
t1eteland Browns' linll National
FOOibllll..eague (I8Jlle ofl911, a 4221la.atS.Uie, wu a
In
dlllluile.': says llrolma'"owner Art
Modell.
"U we badillille off with a victOry,
the tendency would be to aay, 'Oh,
1'- other pmee were nukea, All
we .-1 are ooe or two new
·playen,'" Modell saki aa he looted
back oo his club's poor 1&lt;11 .mwtnc
this seaaon. "But no, It doeell't WGrt
tbat way. ~t bappenod waa a
sbodrer, a I'Ude awakening.''
Cleveland turned the ball over 10
times In the final (18Jlle, cappintl a
8081011 during which lumovel'S,
penalties and Injuries cooverted the
American Cooference Central
.DIViaion defending champions Into

p. m.

COLLEGE BOWL
Sunday, Otc. 20
Tangerine Bowl
At Orlando, Fla.
Missouri 19. SOuthern Mississippi
. 17
'
Friday, Dec. 25
Blue-Gray Classic
At Montgomery, Ala
North All-Stars 21, South All · Stars

.680

Modell feels loss 'blessing in disguise'

• •

&gt;

NBA

New

.

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Pomeroy

PaQe-C-4- The Sunday Times-sentinel

Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio

North Gallia High

S~hool

Pirates

Player
Bob Blackburn
Gregg Deal
Eric Holle
Paul Hollingshead
Matt Kemper
M ike Mays
· Jay Moore
Kenny Neal

Yr. Ht.

12 5· a
12 6· 0
12 6· '
11 5·11
10 6· 6
11

6· 4

12 6· 2
11 5
9

12
12

David Roberts

6· 5
Bruc:e Shriver
5· 10
Coach Wilson; Assistant Coac h,

Ron Twyman.
Hannan Trace High School
·

Wildc:ats
I

Player
Jeff Barnes
Rick Barnes
· Daniel Bays
~ Mike Seaver
Robbie Brumfi eld
Keith Campbell
Randy James
Kelly Petrie

Yr. Ht.

10 5· a
11 6· 0
11
11

Rossiter
11 5·10
Toby Sh.eets
12 5· 11
Mike Waugh
12 5-10
Gregg Webb
12 5· 11
Coach, Mike Jenkins; Assistant
Coach, Dave Cole.
Kyger Creek High School
" Bobcats
Player
Yr. Ht.
Tim Barr
12 6· 0
J. D. Bradbury
10 6- 4
Keith Clark
11 5- 9
Brent Love
10 6- 2
Ron
Martin
11 6 · 1
11 ·6· 1
Jef f Moles
Tim Price
12 6· 3
David Sands
12 6· 0

Roger Slroug

11 5·10

Coach, Keith Carter' Assistant
Coaches, • Mark Hartman. Tom
Weaver.
SOuthwestern High School
·" Highlanders''
Hr. Ht.
Player
11 5· 11
Gary Baker
10 5·11
Randy L ayton
12 5 11
Scott Lewis
Paul Me Neal.
Rob Price
12 6· 0
Charles Stewart
12 5· 9
Kent Walter
12 5·10
Roger Wells
10 5·11
Coaches : L . L. Mvers. G. Layton .
Previous Winners
1924 Cadmus
1925 Cadmus
1926 Cadmus
.
1927 Gallipolis 44, Pine Grove 10
1928 Rio Grande 20, Cadmus 11
1929 Rio Grande 32, Cadmus 17
1930 Vinton
1931 Cadmus 49, Vinton 33
1932 Cadmus 46, Vinton 19
1933 Bidwell -Porter 44, Centerville

23

5 7

5·10
10 5·10
12 5· 9
12 5· 9
12 5·10

51

53
54
40

BAY

· su.AYt .IAIMIAIIY 24ttl82
POIIIIACt IKHIGAII

1962 Southwestern 64, North Gall Ia

,.

1963 NorTh Gallia 58, Sou t hwestern
1964 Southwestern 66, North Gall ia

3

1965 Hannar Trace 60. Southwestern 56
1966 Southwestern 70, Hannan

Trace so
. Trl:~; 70Kyger Creek 93, Hannan
1968 sourhweslern 72. North Gallia
64
1969 Southwestern 62, Hannan
T ra ce 48
1970 North Galli a 71 , Kyger Creek
63
1971 North Gallia 81, .Hannan
Trace •1
1972 North Gallia aJ. Hannan
Trace60
1973 First Holiday Tournament.
L yne Center, Rio Gran de College.

Bengals look for playoff victory ~
· CINCINNATI- In 10 days the

Cincinnati Bengals will be try~g- to
accomplish something no other
Bengal squad has been able to do in
the 14-year history of the franchise
.- win a playoff game.

NewYorkJetsandBuffaloBiU...
It will be the fourth playoff game
for Cincinnati since the franchise
Willi formed in 1968. But Cindy's
previous three playoff games have
been busts.

OnSunday,Jan. 3,inanAmerican
In 1970, in just Its third year of
Cooference divisional playoff game, existence, Cincinnati won the AFC
the Bengals will host the winner of Central division and traveled to
today'swildcardgamebelweenthe Baltimore .to play the Colts in a

l

AU10

NATIONWISE PARTS
IS COMING TO GALLIPOLIS
WE NEED

FULL TIME SALES PERSONS

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

IN lHE GAI.LIPOUS AREA

We offer an..excellent wage and benefits package
and unlimited career opportunities. ·

CAll LARRY SELBY . -BILL SHULL - 4468
SUNDAY DEC. 27 10 AM·5 PM &amp; MONDAY, DEC. 28, 9 AM-4

FINANCIAL
INDEPENDENCE
in your retireme'nt years
Call Garland M. Davis
512 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.
Ph. 446·8235

Home Ph. 388-9691

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
Frll/trtu~l

Lift lnmra11c,,

Hem• Offk• - Rock IJI011d, lllirioi s

SAVING OPPO&amp;'-&amp;

!L·

614

I

'

7252

I

Send to: IDS

I
l

Gallipolis, Oh. 45631

P.0. Box 984 ·

I1

NAME

I·

ADDRESS

WJllle e\'el')' other bank In town Is

I

(

...._. ...
. Each depOsit recorded in the
account wfll be paid at the then
CWTeDt 30-Mooth Money Market
Cert1Jicate rate. No mfnlmum
dqlosit or l1mlt to the frequency
of deposits on this plan.

spnladlng~v!:,~aboutthe

Individual
Account's
upcoming eliglbllity changes,

Central'lhlst Is spreading the best

news. Options. When you invest
In an IRA at &lt;;entral1hlst, you may
select from four high-Interest
options to best suit )'OW' needs.
That means, whlle )'OU're working
your way to retirement. )'011 could
be depositing = I n a Central
'lhlst IRA and.
premfwrt

-......

Here are a few queslions we've been hearing about IRAs (Individual
Retirement Accounts), along with the answers:
Q. Exactly what is an IRA?
A. It's a tax shelter for working people, a tax-deductible iiwestment.
You pay no taxes on the interest it earns until you retire, when you're
likely to be in a lower tax bracket.
Q. Am I eligible?
.
·
.
,
A. Just about eve~ne will be eligible in 1982. In 1981 you're only
e~g1ble if you don t participate in an employer retirem~nt plan or
a government plan.
Q. How much can I contribute?
As of January 1, 198~, yol! !:an C?ntribute up to $2000 a year from
mcome you earn. If you re eligtble m 1981, you can conmbute 15% of
earned mcome up to $1,500 now.
Q. How do I open an IRA?
r----------------A. It's easy and simple. All
y~ I'd Uke complete information obout
you have to do is invest a
1 how JUS can help me cut ...., and build
Wid.~s~o~ ~~;~aunt.
CAU.iremm~ in(come w)i•h&amp;82an
IIIA.

I
I ...

GETA

mtes of Interest.

FOREVERYONF:

'

playolfgame.
~
The young Bengals faced a quat"
terba~ llll1led Jolmny Unltu ,_;
aild the COlts won 17-G. ClnclnnaU'it
offeRII!l was so inept that day that It
never gol any clooer thU 42 yardS
from the Baltimore soai.
In 1973, the Benpls again made
the playolfs- and ••••• wen shut
· at Miami,
down. This time it was
andthellolphinawoneasily,M-18.

~--::;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~---·----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-

......

With this option. the interest rate
on the entire account balance wfll
be subject to change on a monthly
hnRjA, The initi11l intere11t r11te of ·
l4.50'7r is effertive lh!fember J,
19/llllnd i•lliMI'IIntf'ed until

]llnllllry 4, 19112.

...a...

This ..-~- requires a "lO,OOO
~..,.......
,.
mhWnum deposit and the account
· wtll be paid at the then CUJTettt
6-Month Money Marlcet CertUlaite
tate. No addfUonal deposJts are

There is no de-

............
::::.:r:on.

P.OSit mlnimwn and no llfnit to the

frequency of deposit on this plan.

GETA·TII-

.
lET A. . IIAI..

Ul.

1 "i'criTTYv----:-----J

I s~n

~

IPHON£

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goals In the last·45 seconds gave the
Nets a narrow victory over New
York. Ray Williams, who helped the
Nets rally with 12 fourth-quarter
points, led all scorers with 24, while
Sly Williams paced the Knick&amp; with

team.

-,. 'I'Ili!Y

showed their versatility
, · Friday when they played without
• their leadJnB man and beat the
;. Plloenia: Suns 10HOI with a speed- 22.
.
:1Oriented Uneup.
The ·victory for the Nets,
f! "We sent all five men to the boar- struggling to get out of the Atlantic
;, da because we are quick enough to Division cellar, was their fourth
;' set back defenalvely, anyway," said · straight and marked the Kniclrs'
;: ·Laker Coach Pat Riley after the fnurtbconsecutiveloss.
Bullets 115, Pacers 98
1 National Basketball AssoclaUon
f' game. ''We 'showed a lot of poise and Rick MahOrn scored a season-tugh
~ : that is a testimony to our talent. ·26 points and Greg Ballard had 24 to
~ NGnn Nixon, Michael Cooper and
lead Washington over Indiana.
' , Jamaal Wllkes kept us in the game." Ballard scored 12 in the first quarter
: . While Jabtlar wu sidelined with a when Washington establiBhed an
: strained tendon in his right ankle, early comma_nd after scOring the
' Cooper finished with a game-high 30 game's lnitial10 points.
j: points, Nixon had 23 and Wilkes 22 The Bullets built their lead to :IS-a
r' .tor the Pacific Division-leading late in the opening period lind In' , l~ers, now 22-7.
diana never cut the gap under nine
'. 111l!lic;ally, the Suns were beaten points the rest of the way. While
__deiPite .holdlnB a 41!-41 advantage in Ballard was connecting on nine of 12
rebounds, iilcludlng a 211-11 bulge on shots in the _first half, the J&gt;a~
the offeosln boards. ·
were mlsslng two of every three
"We did a better job of blocking shots they took. Indiana made only ·
out~ aJin1 them off In the J!ec()nd
II of 54 .field goal attemgts (33 perhalf,"saldRIIey.
cent) before lntermlsslon, and '
In oilier NBA actiori, It w:u New trailed 58-41 at the half.
Jersey 98, New York 95; Washington
"These kind of games are a lot
11'1i, Indiana 98, and Portland 99, more fun,'" said Ballafd, whose
Seattle 94.
Bullets were involved in four
Trailing 00-65 at halftime in the straight close games before Friday
nationally-televised game, Los night. "There's not as much mental
Angeles used nine third-period poin- pressure iii a game like this."
ts from Nixon to Cl~~~M: the deficit to
TraD Blazen 99, SuperSoalcs 94
8:Hil entering the final quarter.
Jim Paxson scored eight points in
Nliton then rattled off four points the final 2'k minutes to lead Porbefore conaecutlve baskets by tiand over Seattle, snapping the
Cooper gave the Lakers their first Sonica' sis-game winning streak.
lead Iince the opening period at 88-a&amp; Pauon, who managed just four
wlth7:29remaining.
points through the first three quarAfter Phoenix fOI'J!ed ahead 91.00 ters, scored what proved to be lhe
on f.......,t Alvin Scott's free throws wlming basket on a layup with 36
at !he five-minute mark, ·cooper second&amp; remaining.
JIOJiped In four points In a 59-second
Portland blew a 2f&gt;.point first-half
111111 fGr a 8M1 Los Angelea lead. lead u the Sonlca rallled to take a
The Llllren nalled It down as Nbton 91-al advantage m Lonnie Shelton's
sanhj~30aecondllater, cen- · jwnper with 2:44left In the pme.
ter a1111 Brwer addecl a stuff shot, After Passon and Seattle'a James
;.and WiJkea contributed four free Donaldson exchanged free throws,
thrOws clown the atretch.
the POrtland guard converted a
• Center Alvan Adanll and guard thr'!e-J)Oinl play and followed with
~Dennis Johnlon each had ~9 points the layup that proved to be the
:rorPhoentx.
gam•·winner.
!
Netllll, Kulclli 15
Blazers . rookie Pete Verhoeven
; , Rllerve center James Batley scored a career-high 28 points. .

.

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scored seven of New Jersey's last
nine points and his final two field

.·
B)'TbeAIIoelaledl'rea
; ":. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the cen~.tet piece, but the Los Angeles ·
; t.kers are by no means a one-man

•'

-

you ougbtto open one

LA Lakers have
::~~ersatility plus ·

- w

an Interest rate
Is
on the date the
· lf)'OU'!ea WClltdligpea&amp;OD with or
orfCinal depoeit is made. AU dewfthout a peaildoa piau. IRA's can
posits made in the subeequent 18
beamuabJelllettoamcn~~eC~~re
montlla wtll be paid at tbe rate
retirement. Ceutull 'lhlllt IRA's
Initially~ Tile account
Piovlde)'OU tubettelltaaadlteata

I

e _ b Friday......_ (AP t:.uerplloto ).

'

'

ie:e'!::.:f"" Into a valuable

wfll•euewtbrllkel8-molithperloda . eecurft¥o plufbJrbfib--mteacat
and the ICCOWit wfll be paid at the
options to meke ,our 1I10Dey ~
CUJTeDt
rate.
I
1
There Is no
mtnlmum and . If you d like to open~ IRA, or,
no Umft to the
. receive more infonnatlon, viait OUr
on thfa
The
main office. ~interest
.
0118 on IRA 8 are good i'easons

' lioll_l}l

HERALD
OIL AND GAS CO.
'

•••

EveJy yau; until tbe luDdll are
~you may ctec!•~~e a tax
deduction of up to $2,000 ftom the
gross fDrome on )'OUr tax return.
lf you're llllll1'ied 111111 )'OUr spouse
Is emploYed, that BIIIOLlnt doubles.
Meanwhile, Centl;al'lhlst's ~- ·
Interest optfona wtll be helplug

~E- IAI AlliiN LUer lorward Kart~ dairies (llllll
Ptal I llulll forward Jeff CooiJ; drawlq a foal cJuriDC fttlt baU NBA ac-

·- - -------.

•

,

permitted to this option.

~TOHELP~I ~~-----------

I.

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newspaper said.

HAS CHANGED--IDMAKE.THEMA

Then the pitcher and the
youngster talked sports for about 15
minutes.
O'Reilly, the son of Matthew
O'Reilly, president of the ·New York
a wide variety of invest •
State Supreme Court Officers from
ments, including mutual funds,
, AIIBOCiation, was operated on last annuities, and investment
· week to remove 90 percent of his in- certificates. We can help J'!&gt;U
. testines in an effort to contain the select the one or several IRA
' cancer. When It was detennined investments that best meet
, :another operation was needed and your financial needs.
the yoJ111881er became depressed
You probably have more
. about that and the fact he WOuld be · questions, so we l!ope you'D
· ill the hospital on Chrislmas, the
Call us or send this. coupon.
. boy's father, who had decorated the We've got the answers.
· hospital room with Yankee
~
. manorabllla and clothing, liked
Jolm tot.lk to J-.
A holpltal spokesman said the
~
seccnd open1tlon Willi~·
~-·

to the confrontatim with the ~
Razorbaclta.
"We're going to have to play a
very balanced game against Arkansaa because they're very b81anced,''
Crum oaid. "TheY proved that by
beating Texas 4H Anybody thai
can handle Texas like that has to be
a pretty good football team."
And In Miami, Orange Bowl oldtimers say No.1-ranked Clemson
will have double trouble keeping its
eyes m the Cornhuskers' twin 1backs.

Together, they accounted for 182
of the Huskers' 333· yards rushing
per game.
"It's not a quick offense," Craig
said Chrisbnas Day. "You can't
take oJf like in the WiBhbone or the
Veer. There are no quick bunts, but
a lot of reading. You really have to
discipline yourself to take_your time
and be patient."
Craig Willi a high school hurdler
and runs out of ·the backfield u a
high-stepper. But Rozier has no such
distinctive mannerism. "Call II a
giide, call it whatever you want. I
just run. "

QAUAS

MJPLiBOWLXVI

'

: John's call
OF SPECIAL INfEREST
important
to youngster ~OWTHENEWTAX

' sure :' OU will, too.••

Some say the auccess ol No.4nuilted Nebraska'• I-baclta in recent
years rtvala that of Southern CaWornia taUbaclta.
Roger CraiB and Mite Rozier, the
cUr-rent 1-baclta, are a contlnuaticln
of the line of succesaful baclta which
in recent years has included Jeff
Kinney, Rick Berns, I.M. Hlpp and
Jarvis Redwine.
Craig, a ~oot-2, 21~ junior,
has . gained 1,181 yar$, while
averaging 8.1 yards per carry.
Rozier, a f&gt;.ll, ~sophomore,
has gained 943 yards for an average
of 6.3 yards per carry.

each day."
Crum Baid balance will be the key

JAN. 2

JAN.-2

j

NEW YORK (AP) - New York
Yankees pitcher Tommy John gave
a 9-year-old boy at New York's
Mount Sinai Hospital a Christmas
thrill he'll never forget, according to
a story in today's New York Daily
News.
Jesse O'Reilly, who is suffering
from cancer, was only hours from
undergoing his second operation in
two weeks when he received a
telephone call from the Yankees lefty Wednesday afternoon, the story
said.
John wiBhed the youngster a
Merry Christmas and told him nol to
worry about the operation. The pitcher spoke about the worries he had
;last-swruner when his son, Travis,
fell out of a window and had to he
hospitalized.
11
Travis came out okay/' John
reportedly told the boy, "and I'm

''•

TA. .A

Officials seek agreements
on hunting, fishing rules
INDIANAPO!JS (AP) - Officials on the river. Also being investigated,
from Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio, the newspaper reported, is giving
having settled disputes over their the three states' law enforcement ofOhio River boundaries, are now ficers concurrent jurisdiction.
'Indiana and Ohio are flexible,''
seeking agreements to cover fishing,
Daily said. "They may he willing to
hunting and boating, officials say.
The Louisville Courier-Journal adopt the Kentucky hunting and
reported no official decisions were fishing standards."
He said, however, that some
reached during talks held earlier
boating safety problems may be
thiB month in Cincinnati.
"But like they always say at sum- more difficult to work ouL
"I suspect that some legislation
mit conferences, things are going
well," said William E. Daily of the will be required," said Dally, chief
' counsel for Attorney General Unley
·Indiana attorney general's office.
Ohio's representatives were asked E. Pearson. "But much can be
to prepare a summary of the worked out by regulations."
No date has been set for another
meeting - including the areas of apmeeting.
parent agreement - for submission
The stales are also expected to
to officials of the three states.
seek
agreement in other areas , the
Each state now has its own laws
newspaper
said. It reported that ofand regulations covering boat
ficials
from
the three states were exregistrations, watercraft safety,
pected
to
seek agreements on
hunting and fishing. However, the
regulations are not the same in all taxation, mining, fiood control and
water use.
.· three states.
Inqiana officials indicated a
,. Among the topics being diBcussed
·: in the tri-state effort are producing preference for agreements, rather
;:identical regulations for all three than formal interslate compacts,
:states and making a fishing license which require approval by the state
bought in one state good anywhere legislatures and by Congr~ss, the

College football teams preparing
In Florida for their paliday bowl games spent a quiet Christmas
Day in babny temperatures.
The North Carollna Tar Heels held
their fifth practice Christmas Day in
preparaUon of Monday night's Gator
Bowl matchup with Arkansas,
North Carolina, 9-2, worked out for
an hour and a half Friday in
Daytona · Beach, tllen left for
Jacksonville. They wtll hold regular
practices today and Sunday.
"We had another good .workout,"
·said North Carolina coach Dick
Crum. "We continue to get better

10.1!182

1961 southwestern 65 , North Ga lt'ia

6

1934 Cadmus 44, Bidwell -Porter 31
1935 Cadmus 36, Centerville 27
1936 Centerv il le 47, Cadmus 19
1937 Mercerville 47, Vinton 18
1938 Cadmus 42, Cheshire 29
1939 Mercervi l le 34, Rio Grande 33

The

College teams enjoy qUiet Christmas

NFL Piayoffs

1958 Rio Grande, Sout hwestern
1959 Southwestern , Rio Grande
1960 North Gallia '57, SouthWestern

46

w. Va .

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

• •'

1940 Rio Grande 62. Bidwell17
1941 Rio Grande 56. Mercerville 27
1942 RioGrande32, Vintol'l23
1943 Mercer ville 19, Rio Grande 16
1944 Rio Grande 17, Mercerville 15
1945 RioGrandeJB, Vintol'l25
1946 Cadmus 28, M ercerville 27
1947 Cadmus 32, Rio Grande 31
1948 Rio Grande
1949 Rio Grande . 63, Bidwell ·
Porter 31
1950 Rio Grande 4S, Vinton 42
1951 Cadmus 47. R:io Grattde 38
1952 Rio Grande 34, Mercerville 24
1953 Rio Grande 5S, Vinton 38
1954 Vinton 54, Cadmus 53
1955 Rio Grande 87. Vinton 46
1956 Rio Gr-ande. Cheshire
1957 Rio Grande 75. Southwestern

Mlk~

'

Dec. 27. 1tl1•

Point Pleasant, W.va .

Gallia County basketball
teams will battle Monday _
CHESHiRE - Mter an eight
years' absence, the Gallia County
Holiday Tournament will be
resumed here Monday night at
Kyger Creek High School.
Hannan Trace and Kyger Creek
meet in the opening contest at 6:30
p.m. while Southwestern and North
Galtia battle in the 8:15p.m. game.
The consolation and championship
games are scheduled the following
evening at the same times. Admission iB .$2 for adults and '$1 for
. students.
Following the tournament,
coaches will select an all tournament team and most valuable
player.

.

•'

27%
Off

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Genuine walnut veneer finish.
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''
'

•"

'

~

Salle
Accompanist

·

PI'IICEBIM'f' Vlllff AT

I

�w. Va .

..

•

Agriculture and
•
' OU~ commumty

Pag~C-6

w. va,

State sets deadJine ·for f~e refunds
COLUMBUS - Dec. 31 Is the last
day the Bureau of Motor Vehicles
can accept requests for partial
refunds of registration fees paid
· during 19110 for vehicles that q\ullify
as non-commercial trailers.
According to the state law which
went into effect in October, 1980,
"any trailer, except a travel trailer,
· having a gross weigllt of no more
than 3,000 pounds and· used exclusively for purposes other than
engaging in business fc:ir profit" is

,pow reglstered as

a

"non~

cdtnmoccial trailer."

That law also provides a license

tax schedule for thb new category of
norHmUnerclal trailers and allowa
for refunds of~ difference between
the registratiop fees paid In Iteo and
theiowerfeesllelngcollecteddurlng
1!181.
Dean L. Dollison, registrar of the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, explained
that 1980 registratioo fees for moot
types of motor vehicles were raised
by the state legislature in order to
provide additional revenues for road
repair projects.
"Many trailer owners believed the
lee they paid ffd' tbetr boat or motor·
cycle trailer wu excesilive and

llllni8008hle, IInce their 11
senerally Umfted to the IIWIII'IIel'

rnoatlw," Doiiiion said. "Same
tralllr owllell were ~ mon to
reglllertbelrtrallerltwlforlhecar
that pulled 11, and they CCIDpllined."
"Alter dial lncreaae, the

Gallia County F.x.len•lnn A~:t"nl

leglalatare decided to create a new
noil-cornmercl&amp; trailer category, to
lower the ~oo rateo to those
paid In 1179, and to refund tl,le dif·
terence between Uce~~~e tax lees
paid iD 1980 and the reinotated fees,'' ..
Doiil8on continued.

Bryaoa R. Carter
ExleD. AceDI, AG a CNRD
GALUPOUS - I hope you and
your family had a very nice Christ·
mas. It's a special time of tile year
- a time for happiness, feeling good
and·a time to remind those around
yoo that you like them. Merry
Dlrislmaaand Happy New Year.

URGENTLY NEEDED OIL AJI!D GAS LEASES
To fulfill futuro driiHnt _..ama write or Clllilnd be sure fo include
- r t y lou- 1nd ocrN. . 111111 11 avallallle for lease. Also those
IIIIII hive oil and psiH-111111 aro auato oxplre within ..,. yeu.
.
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
P.0. Box 74
PH. 614-53Z-IIG1
Ironton, Ohio 4~:18

Now, here's oome lnformatilln on
_two comng evento.
On Jan. 6, we're having a Farm in,come Tax meeting, 8:30a.m.~ 3:30
p.m. at the Columbus and SI1Uthern
Electric Co. building, corner of
Second Avenue and SycamoreS~
in Gallipolis. Speakers will be BiU
Smith, Delores Wall and Glenn
Graham. Anyone in Gallia and
neighboring counties is welcome.

END OF
.4 DAYS ONLY

Our annual · Crop Production
School Is coming up JBIL 13 at the
Hallday Inn, Kanaup, 9:30 a.m.· '

MONDAY, DECEMBER 28th
lHRU
lHURSDAY, DECEMBER 31st

TIEMPO

c

SIJI'ER SENSITIVE SCALE- lnstant-plclure units are welglled oa
a opeclaloeale at Easlmaa Kodak Company iD Rocheoter, NeV., to e•
IIUI'e that tbe precise amount of developer llald is eonlalned iD each prlaL
The seale is so seaslllve tbal a plaollc dome II needed to prevent air CUI"

rents from slriklog Its ourlace and distorting tbe meaoaremeuts.
Laaerpboto).

ADIAL

(AP

R&amp;Mrecords
sales. loss

ALL SEASON
It mav be all1he fire you'll ever need

. DAYTON - Robbins and Myers Uy depressed consumer spending
experienced an earnings loss and a and distributor reluctance to carry
decline in sales for the fiscal first inventories becall8e of higher inquarterendedNov.30,FredG. Wall, terest rates," he said.
president and chief executive of- · Wall nevertheless remained opfleer, said today.
timistic about the ceiling fan
For the three-month period, the market. "Even though the season
company had a loss of $879,000 or 37 · sales pattern has changed, our
cents per share, compared to net in- studies indicate the market will concome ol $3.1 million or $1.32 per tinue to grow.
share during the comparable period
"In addition, I tbW&lt; we are in ex"of fiscal 1981. Sales for the 1982 first cellent position to take atlvantage of
quarter were $42.8 million, com- an economic recovery when it
. pared with $55.9 million in the com- comes," Wall said. He further inparable 1981 period, a decline of 24 dicated, ''Even with the growing WI·
percent.
certainty regarding an economic upWall noted that the previously in- turn, 1982 is expected to be a good
dicated decline in earnings and sales year in total."
w due to greater seasonally in
In commenting on the company's
ceiling fan sales, stifled capital other divisions, Wall said they have
spending and a seriously weakened been affected quite differently by
.economy.
the recession. The Electric Motor
. He said the second quarter is also Division showed a significant in;expected to he off fi'OOl the previous crease in sales and earnings over a
year - "though improvement from year ago when it wsa in a loss
the first quarter is expected."
position. The Fluids Handling and
; The principal factor in sales and Materials Handling Divisions, ser·
•earnings decline was the per- ving depressed capital goods
.:fonnance of the Comfort Con- markets, are about equal to last
"ditioning Division.
year with no immediate signs of iJn..
"A lack of capacity and pent-up provement.
demand in the ceiling fan industry
Robbins and Myers serves specific
spurred shipments last year in what segments of growth markets with inwould normally he the off season," dustrial and consumer goods, in·
.wall said.
eluding fluids handling equipment,
· "This backlog has since been electric motors and controls, com·
satisfied and the indus! -y has fort conditioning products .and
;reached.a more normal sales cycle. materials handling systems.
·The program is worsened by curren-

Kaiser acquires.
Filtrol stock
CHARLESTON, W. Va. - Kaiser clay division makes absorbents used
Aluminum and Chemical Corp. primarily in filtering edible oils at
today said it has completed its · plants in Jackson, Miss, and Winpreviously announced acquisition of · nlpeg, Canada. The Filtrol catalyst
the atock of a restructured Filtrol and clay operations employ about
Corp. for $92 million in cash. Filtrol, 600 persons and had &lt;Ombined 1980
a Los · Angeles-based diversified sales of $87.3 million and before-tax
manufacturing and mining concern, income of $12.5 million.
~as previously a wholly owned sulr
Kaiswer Chemicals sees the
sidiary of Ashjand Oil, Inc.
Filtrol acquisition as a natural ex·
: The •cquisition involves Filgrol's teasion of its existing buslnesaes~ ex·
catalyst and clay products activities plains vice president and general
which will be operated by Kaiser manager Donald F. SMith. He said
Chemicals, Kaiser Aluminum's in· Kaiser ChemicalS, a producer of
dustr'.al chemicals division, Ashland both specialty and commodity
retains Filtrol's coal and cement chemicals, already produces
Oper-ations. ·
materials for catalytic and ab: Flltrol's catalyst division sorbent applications. In !teo, Kaiser
produced catalysts for petroleum Chemicail reported sales of $168.7
relinerl at planto in Vernon, near million and before-tax income of
l,.os Angeles, and Salt Lake City. Its $22.5 millioo

3:30 p.m. Three main topics will be
I) Which Grain Crop Should I Grow
in !982 to Get the Most for My Money
2) -Lime and Fertilizer lor Corn and
Other Grain and ·Forage Crops ·3)
Where Does Alfalfa Fit in Livdtock
~lerprlses and No-Till Seeding of
Alfalfa in Small Grain Stubble.
There wiU be a free roast beef
meal and farmers in Gallia and
neighboring counties, including
those in West Virginia are welcome
to attend. Call in your reservation by
Jan. 8 (614-446-700'1).

• SNOW TIRES -

•

. all year round! Has smooth·ridlni;i
polyester cord bOdy, double _steel
cord belts. Specially compounded
tread rubber for sure grip in anv
weather . .. wet, drv, hot or cold .

Whitwall
Size

Fits

Sale

F.E .T.

P155/80R13
.P165/80R13
P185/80R13
P185/75R14
P195/75R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R14
P·22S/7 S R 14
P205/7SR15
P215/75R15
P225/7SR15
P235/75R15

METRIC
METRIC
BR78· 13
· CR78·14
ER78·14
FR78·14
GR78·14
HR78·14
FR78·15
GR78· 15
HR78·15
LR78·15

39.00
44.00
49.00
53.00
56.00
59.00
61.00
62.00
60.00
62.00
65.00
69.!)0

1.51
1.68
1.95

2.06
2.23

Burley tobacco prices reached
record levels during the fourth week
of sales, reports the' Federai.,State
Market News Service. Only minor
changes were noted in quality compared with the· ' previous week.
Volume decreased at several
market&amp; toward tile end of the week.

2.34
2.49
. 2.62 ,
2.46
. 2.62
2.79
2.95

. FREE MOUNTING

WMHINGTON- 1be U. S. Small
Buslneas Adminl8tratioo (SBA) said
regulations wlll permit more
soctally and economlcsUy dlsad·
valllaged 1111811 ~ to take
part Ill the.p!cy'a&amp;{a) prGp'IIIIL
'l,'lle I(a) proeram, lllarted 11.1•.
dllllnela IIGIICOiql8tltlve federal
(lllllnc.1ll to 1111811 fJnnll owned by
(.

socially and economically diJJad.
vantaged pei'BOIIS. Moet of such com.
panles are Ul1l'llt!d by minorities. The
8( a) JK'OII'am, so called after a aectioo of the Small BwlinMo Act, a11o
provideo management, ~
rnartettng aild finandallid 10 llnnl
In tile program.

,

Receipla "of the Burley Cooperatives

continued. light. Thunlday was the
last day II 118leo before the Christ·
mao break. Auctions are scheduled
to resume Monday, Jan, 4, 1982. By
the latest crop eotimate around 72
percent of 1981 Furley . production
has beell sold.
GIWI llalell for tile week ending
Dec. 17 totaled 1~, 421, 512 pounds
and averaged $181.30 per hundred-

up 53 cents from the previous week.
Pre-Christmas sales stand at
571,850,187 pouncta averaging $180.211
per fwndred. Season •verue to date
for Ripley stands at 1177.12 per hundred; Huntington $177 .112; Maysville
$178.14 and Morehead $179.65.
l-exington is$180.78.
During the first lour weeks last
year 486,~1,493 pounds were auctioned for an average of $165.92.
R2sales totaled :i3,337,115 pounds
(21 .5 percent of •leal this week and
56,689,413 pounds (9.9 percent) for
tile season. N-lldi011 reported to
date totals abnoet 30 million pounds.
, Averaileo Increased bY mainly $1
or $2 per hundred for almost tW"'
thirds of the grades with moot otll'ers
unchanged from last .week. Several
grades averaged $114 per hundred
pounds. Tobacco of comprable
quality ,... whether tied, baled or
loose in sheets, Is bringing about tile
sameprice.
.
Qaallty of marketlago was very
"similar to the week before. By
group, flyings accounted for 6 percent ·of sales, cutters • about 12 per·
cent, leaf • 38, tips • 7, milled • 29,
nondescript- 4 and various no-grade
about 4 percent.
Tbe Burley Coopel&amp;tives received
98,4418 pounds of·tobacco this week
and 73li,133 pOunds for the season.
For the same period last year 14,532
pounds were placed under loan.

·Homemakers'
• }·
·C
. lfC e .. ·
lt•aturlng

Alllllt_Aaybcllly. _

·'

Ry BF:'ITIE CLAJU(

ExleDIIIOD Agent.
Heme Ero'nomir~

to hang on your tree is fine. But
before trimming the tree, spray that
garland with clear shellac or
DON'TPROVHJE '
urethane. Then it won't be tempting
CHRJ8'lliiA8 PARTY
to mice, or other rodents. Another
FOR MICE
. G~IJS - VIsions of sugar advantage Is that" once coated with
plwna may be dancing in your head shellac or urethane, decorations can
at this time of year, btit UJ1(ess you ~ !19Ved for !lllolher year;
store those holiday goodies wisely,
So don't let pesly mice and
· you could bave mice dancing in your roacheS catch you off guard this
home. The secret is not to have any Christmas season. If you are careful
to have no food available, you won't
•
. foOd available.
Pack cookies and candies in cans have any problem. ·
with tisht-filting lids and never
leave food sitting out all night. Card. board boxes may make nice gift
boxes for tboee hOliday goodies Egg production up
but they're just not a guaranteed
barrier frllm tboee pesty mice and
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
roaches. Also, don't leave food gills nation's hens produced an estimated
under the tree where they are sure to 5.82 billiOn eggs last month, up
serve as bait.
sllgbtlyfi'OOla year earlier, •ys the
Be careful about food decorations, Agriculture Department.
too. Ma)'b!! you Uke the old·
As of Dec. I, there were about 291
fashioned christmas tree look. But miUion hens in tile egg flock, down 1
instead of hanging real cookie son percent 11'001 a ·year ago, officials
the tree, make dough of flour and 'Bald Monday. Their rate of .Jay
sail. Then shellac tile fake COOkies, averaged 87.5 eggs per 100 hens,
compared to 68.1 oo Nov. I and 68.2
or dip in urethane.
stringing popcorn and. cranberries . 00 Dec.1,19110.
Belrlle Clark, Ext. Ageat
Home Ecollomleo

-

'23
...·

t- -- ~

• Hard-Pulling deep·eeated
tread cleats
.
. • Effective in sluah. enow. ·and
hard pack '
·
• Built tough to reaiat the
~zards of winter

ARRIVA RADIAL

'3995

F.E.T.

0

PllSIIOR13 WhlleWIII, ·
plus $1.51 F.E.T. and
old lire
• Fuel·sa"'ng rldlal pit construer.on

• For all season year round seN•ce
• Tough steel belts IOJ long bre hie
• For cars w1lh front 01 rear wheel
Clnve

•35.00
lJR7h 11 Whlh!Woltl
ptuHUI'il FE'T •1ntl

.

OltJ llrC.

• Wet·weather dependability.

POMEROY - .._ We!Ped Ia
Set -Saturday, Jan. I frllm 10 a.m.
to 12 noon has been aet to weigh all
steer projects. Tbe weigb In will be
conducted at the Horace Karl' Fal'lll
(Royal Oak) near Five Points. If )'Gil
know cl lntereoled In
tailing 1 steer project ·this year,
.please mention the weigh In to them.
Has tile Crop Reporting Service
from Columbus called you? They
are condul'tlng a random survey b)'
telephone. They may ask yoo how
many animall you have, death lou,
etc. II is aligltirnale survey.
TuSeminar Set- An income tax
·seminar, C&lt;HipOflSOred by the Meip
County ExtensiOn Office and the
Pomeroy H &amp; R Block Office WIII be
held Wednesday, Jan. 6 at tile Metp
seminar
· focus
oo record
Inn. The will
public
is invited.
The
keeping, the new tax laws, correct
tulormsanctlilingdateo,ahdothar
tax infotmatloo. Special emphasia
will be given to new tax laws regllf'o
ding investment tu credit and the
new depreciation laws.
·
Care of Your Poinsettia - Some
basic rules to molle your pGinseWa
last Ianger. Place It nea• a sunny
window where II wiD get tile moet
aV8ilable sunligiL A window that
tai:es south, east .or west II better
than one facing north. Do not let any
part of the plant touch tile window
pane because this will Injure it.
Tp-keep the plant In bloom, maintain it at a temperature of 85 to 70
degrees F. · during the daylight
hours, and if possible, move II to a
cooler place at night. Because root
rot diRase Is more prevalent at tern·
peratures below 80 degrees, don't
put the poinaettia in a room cooler
than this.
Avoid exposing the plant to hot
and cold drafts tbat may cailse
premature leaf drop.
Examine the soil dally. When the
surface is dry to the touch, water the
soil until water runs freely out tile
drainage hole in tile container. A
wilted plant may drops Its leaves
prematurely, so try to keep tile pl8nt
well-watered. If wilting does occur,
water the soil twice within a fiveminute period.
Garde!! Calendars - The 1982 gar·
den calendar is off the press and
available through the Cooperative
Enension Searvice office in each
yours • CaU us so we can order
cotiJity.
In addition to dally tips oo I)Qwer
ahd vegetable gardening, landscape
care, canning or freezing and
nwnero~· cithers, tb!!re are maps
showin.ii when first and last ldllng

Food supply
plentiful
WASHINGTON (AP)
In·
ventories of major food Items are so
large tbat ·"holiday feasts needn't
end In December," says the
Agriculture Department
"There'll be plenty of grapefruit,

fresh winter pears, fresh apples,
chicken, turkey, red meat and pork
to bring in the new year,'' the depar·
tmentsaidMooday.
Turkey supplies in January, for
example, will continue at record
levels, up II percent to 22 percent
fi'OOl year-earlier levels and 22 per·
cent to 211 percent more than the
1979-8laverage for the month.
Production of broiler chickens,
pork and beef will be "nearly tile
same or slightly less" than last
January, the report said. Even so,
there will be "ample" supplies for

conswners.

to keep bird feedent filled, and other turkey sheds. They alJo differ In
timely Jobs In January, a time when their willingness to retw11to an u-ea
we are notthiNWII abOut thole can- alter being dioturbed.
Great-horned owla are large blrdi.
ned goods we put up dunag the summer but maybe llhauld be. A. v that · Many of the adulto pnmr ~
have spoiled llhauld be removed wingspreads. They . have 11rGtJ
fi'Gill tile lllorqluia. Bealdelo, yoo · beaks and are able to slice the IIOIId
probably ftlll to lulow what is left , frnm a victim bird aa large ao a 10.'
pound turkey or an ad!llt Peklqg•
and what baa beM .-1. ·
I thought tbis article was in- duck. They kill by severing the head,•

1rwta riiay be expected in the spring
and fall. Too, there is a list of mCllt
vegetabla 8J'OWII bY tile home gardener that tells when to- or plan~
depth Ia lnebes to~. seed per 100
feet of row, days to maturity, dlstance ~-...,....and between plants
and eltimated yle_ld per 100 feel of

row.

other informatitlll includes a gar·

tereatinc and wopid Ulle to share
parts of It with JIIIL Great-horned
owll are again becllmlnl• nuisance
to Ohio poullrymlll, accanllng to
Glyde Manh, DVM and Extension
speciallat, Poultry Scleace, 1be Ohio
State University. , _ .predators
differ from many others in their
willlngnell&amp; to enter buildiJI8B, Mar·
sh Mid. They do not fear cage
houses, poultry growinc facWties or

c1en1ng vocabulary, a fruit grower's
VGCabUiary and a cbart showing

when varioullruits ripen.
The publication Is available for a
srna11 fee through county Extension
oftlces,
In January, the calendar
dlscussea 1982 All America ••1ow~r
and Vqelable Varieties, including
All America Rose Selections. And
there are such things as reminders

then lllripplng the neck down to 111tf.
body. If the carcass is not removedf
they oven return to their ldll,
sometimes within a few hount. That
are not strong fliers and usually tit.
not attempt to carry their prey. ,...:
moral o! the story is - don't
up like a chicken and set on a
:
You might get your lbroat cut.
:
week we'll take a look at 1182. HaYI•
aHappyNewYear.
·'

a·

r;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~;~~;;;;;;;;;~~;.'
1981 OlDS CUJ).ASS SUPREME, 2 DR. HT.
' '

''

Air cond., cruise control, custom cloth interior, landau padded top. V·6 eng.,
rallye wheels.
·

.SALE '7999

WAS '8495

1979 DODGE
MAGNUM

1974 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

2 dr., HT. air, cruise,
rear defroster, AM-FM.
Locally owned. Only
28,230 miles .

Runs out A-OK .
Locally owned.

1978 VW RAQBIT,
2 DR.
4 spd., AM· FM, 8·track,
3-1,416 miles, roof rack,
locallY owned.
WAS $5495

4995

1

WAS$5295

Air, PS, PB, locally
owned, only 59,557 ac·
tual mile&amp;.

WAS
$1295

'4795

1971 OLDS
CUTLASS 4 DR.

'995

WAS ,$1195

'895

I'

Many More to Choose From
Bank Financing Available

RENCHTOWN CAR CO.
1650 Eastern, Galipolis

Bil Gene Johnson

446 0069

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1

l.

h&gt;'l

IF

·OF

ON

SOCIAL SECURITY
·vou WITH JOY.
FILL IN THE BLANKS

I

'•••

I

.,.I
I

~

'I

~

t

fc
I

:;

•

~

ShOuiOer·IO shoulder lrachon

• The sn,ngth and stab•llty ol steel

.••
•
•
.

cord belts

• RICie-smoolhlnQ POlyester cord
!lady

DON'T

~

Please 88lld me inrormatlon on lndMdual

AND SEE OUR SEUCIION
' .
.
.
·OF FRONT WHIEL DRIVE PONTIACS .&amp; IUIOC:S.
. SELECTION AND A VIRY
, WI HAVE A GOOD
GOOD PRICE. SO SEE US AT1 .
.

.

MOTORS

Aetiremel1l can be abetl,rlilulll*w;j. Kyou
can a!loid H. Kyou don1 haW a l'ltlnlmant
pian, or Wyou ww11 to~tha plan
you_haW 81 work, 111rt now. Will en
lndMdull ~ Aocounl (IRA) from "
Ohio VrJ1WJ Bank: You can put Am
AMOUNT up to $2,000 I y.- i1lo en IRA,
~ a1 the III10U!1I of ywr income, or
$U50 I year Wyou lnducte yo.ll
non·waldugapouae. And Wyou bolh work. . '
eec:h of you can IIIMI up to $2,000 a year.

.•

.
,,'·•

A tcta1 of $4,000. Arid whatever you put in is
talC dalened lJ1111 wlll1drt1Yjal. Your acoount
111111111 inlllnl8t a1 current market rates.

hIIliiest that remains tax.free until you retire.
A, time when your inoome and your talC rate
wlft be a lot lower. Hetplng you gain financial
sequrtty In yt&gt;.11 rl!lllement years.... Another
reason you can and should arcpect morn
from Ohio VrJIWJ Bank.

•
. 1.

'.•
•

7hHI,..... /IM~,s dO ttof Neome ellectJ~ urlfil J• nu1ry ,1,
rPU, buttomt In nowlfx filii pi rffculnand eddiria!lllnfcrmatiOn.

·'

~·

f'HONI ,_.~J7• ~;. 992·2175
t:ON:OO SAT. 9:0o.5:00

-

'

Retirement Accoonll. Malt10 OhiO Valley Bank.
420 'Third Allenut, Gaillpqlla, Ohio 45831
~ttentlon : Rk:hatd Scott

WHY NOT

•Whitewall Styling
•Buill for winter tract!.., on
or snow covered

•

~DORESS

.

~

1-

NAME

BE STUCK
.IN
.
THE HOUSE THIS WINTER!

'

.R ules allow participation

a, JOHN C. RICE

Ky RRV~IN R. iBUPI CARTF.R

IIr;;;;;:=:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;

Tres In Stock

Meigs County agent's comer

Valley

Po• loc8tlona to aerve you better.
flllember. PDIC

'

',,

•- •,
' '•

'

�Sunday T

.

Review period ends January 15
By ROBERT 1.. FIRST
Moiga SoD c-. Servl&lt;e
Dlltnd Coalervatioallt

and targeting a greater portion d

POMEROY - People from
throughout Ohio are responding to
the propOsed national soU and water
conservation program llutline by the
Secretary of Agriculture, reports
Robert R. Shaw, Ohio state conservationist for the US Soil Conservation Service (SCS). ·
When the review period ends .on
January 15, the responses will be
summarized and a report prepared
for the Secretary.
The SCS won't begin SUmmarizing
the conunenta until after Jan. 15, according to Shaw. He noted that
responses are coming from aU parts
of the state.
"I'm pleased with the nwnber of
responses we have received so far~ "
be said, "but I expect and welcome
more. It's not too late to corrunent."
During a review of earlier drafts
nearly· 5,000 people in the state
responded.
The main features of the proposed
national conservation program are
increased roles for local and state
government&amp; in conservation work

areas.

YEAR-IItD CLEARANCE
.
USED BIKES

iesponse fonn.
If you would Uke a copy of the
response fonn to fill out just stop by
the Soil conservation Office at 221

USDA dOllars and staff to critical
soil and water resource problem

is the USDA response to the Soil and Water Resource

.

West Second Street, Pomeroy,
second floor of the Fanners Bank
building or can 98'J.$147.
The office also has a reference
copy of the fuU report of the
program and draft envirOnmental
impact statement.

The program

, Conservation Act of 1977 (RCA). SCS
offices throughout the stale have a
supply of the leaflet that swnmarizes the program and that containa a pre-addressed, postage-paid

·.

HERE ARE JUST

market, down 8 percent and 12 percent, respectively.
The report, isaued Tuesday, said
the 1981 pig crop - those farrowed
during the year which began Dec. I,
1980 and eruled Nov. 30, 1981 totaled 93.8 milliion head, 8 percent
below 1980 and 9 percent below the

WASHINGTON (AP)- The lateat
Agriculture Deparbnent surveys
show hog fanners may cut production later this winter by more than
they had indicated three months
ago.
A3 of Dec. I, the Inventory of aU
hogs and pigs was estimated at
58.7milllon head, down 9. percent
from a year ago .and 13 percent
fe)l'er than two years ago.

A FEW EXAMPLES
MANY MORE NOT
AOVER.TISED

19'19 crop.
Looking at future prospecla, the

Those included:'
-7.84 milllon hogs• for breeding,
down 14 percent from last year and
19 percent below two years ago.
-50.8 milllon hogs being raised for

1980
CHEVY
LUV
PICKUP

1982
CHEVY
ROCKWOOD
CUSTOMIZED

VAN

4 wh. dr.
21,000 miles

"BRAND
NEW''

WAS

Our Last
New '81
Model

List
Price
$16,900

$6395

DISCOUNT
PRICE

NOW

List$10,312
Discount

14,900

5

9000

5

81 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME
Air cond ., 16,000

WAS

IS

S7600

mll~s.

cruise, Rallye
wheels, burgundy, stereo, imr'nacutate.

81 'CHEV. CITATION SEDAN

S75Q0

Air, cruise, Stereo·cassette, wire wheels,
replacement cost SlO.OOO . Low miles .

81 CAMERO

.
1982
FURY .SEDAN
BUICK
MURA
ELECTRA
~~~ms $2300
w,:~~,995 $1380 ~~~
s3500· PARK ·
79 FORD PINTO
78 PONTIAC
78 OLDS
AVENUE
LeMANS, Brown with saddle top,

air,

chrome

·, "We went In p5ce and we met In peace, and I think
tor me and for aU ot us, the war 1.s really over,"
,Michael Harbert, a former Air Force sergeant from
New York City, told reporters at KennedY Interns·
.Ilona! All1lort Friday.
; "We are very pleased with the events of our trip,''
'l8ld fonnerMarlne Lt. Robert 0. MuUerofoixllllls.
N.Y. "We accompiJshed more than we Intended. We
started a genulne.dlalogue, not as polltlctana but as
fonner soldiers."
Vletname8e governrlll!nt officials agreed to help
reeolve the fate of the 2,500 Americans still listed as
.miBslng In acUon In Southeast Asia, saldMuUer,exec·uUve director of Vietnam Veter11111 of America.
He .-Jd the government agreed to allow visits from
IICien11sts and doctors Ill gather Information on the
etfects of Asent Orange, the deadly polsol) spread by
U.S. warplanes to ldll vegetatatlon and Ull(llask hldlllg places of enemy t1'90PS·
Some U.S. veter11111 Sa.y the chemical has made
them seriously ill and caused btrth defects among
their children.

second car. ·

sharp .

s7900

Showroom new.

WasU99S

NOW

'

Air, cruise, stereo, GM factory official's

car.

Air, one owner, 33,500
miles.

Air, V·6 economy, radio,
blue~ new Prem tl res.
Was $4495

NOW

$3480

Black,

$1980

al~.

spt . wheels.

Was Sl295

NOW

SEDAN

60-40 seats, ·

$4480

Air, silver with burgundy Interior, one owne~ -

~~~4495

$3280

77 SPRINTER

78 CAMARO

MOlOR HOME

Z28,

26 ft . Dodge chassis,
15,000 m·nes.

wass15,90o

NOW

.

S4880

Was$5410

NOW

factory of·
ficial's car,
loaded.- 3,700
miles.
List
$16,550 '
SALE .

76 FORD
MUSTANG II

ctmASS

SUPREME

Automatic, yellow spt
Wheels.
•
·

Air. white with black
lanclau top, loaded,
47,000 miles.

S2980

~~~1995

81 FORD THUNDERBIRD
Air, cruise, 14,000 mites. new LeSabre

SKYHAWK

PACER

Automatic, air, AM·FM
white with matching in~

4 speed. burgundy. .

trade.

terior.

81 BUICK REGAL CPE.

~~~2695

S1980

:~~199s

S1280

:~:Vs3295

A(Vt·t-M,

custom

Interior,

IS

SS980

80 PONTIAC PHOENIX CPE. L·J
Air, buck(ltseats, spt . wheels. Sharp.

80 BUICK REGAL CPE.
..

SS980

........

SS680

&lt;cylinder. Sharp.

80 BUICK CENTURY SEDAN
Air, FM, Drive-r's Ed. car. Nice.

·

S2480 t::-:::-:~'::':::"::":":::-:"'':'""~~-~-+-...;;..,1---­
Air. navy blue. spt. wheels, shoWs ••·

cellen.r care.

81 MONTE CARLO

'6999

Air. V·6 economy, radio, spt. wheels,
burgundy.

MARQUIS
BROUGHAM

lORINO

BlllER

2 Dr. Hdtp ., burgundy,
loaded .

Little r-oogh
'edges.
·

on

kidnapped man's family .:1,.
.;
••
:~

.'·

•• ...___

1

VERONA, Italy (AP) ....: Judith Oozier spent Christmas with r~latives and four U.S. military officers and
their families. Her husband, U.S. Anny Brig. Gen.
James Dozier, spent it with his Red Brigades. kidnappers.
A3 police combed northern Italy in search of tbe
"people's prison" where the ultra-leftist terrorists say
theY were holding Dozier, Mrs. Dozier, 47, attended 'a
Christmas service in the lllilitai'y chapel at the NATO
base where her husband was the highest ranking U.S.
officer.
·
She was accompanied by the couple's grown
children, Cheryl and Scott, and Dozier's younger
sister, Joan Townsend of HousJ!?D, Tex.

. Mrs. Do-tier "wanted everything that was scheduled
before the kidnapping to go ahead," said Col. Luc'Dalcheggio, spokesman for the NATO base.
He said she wanted "it all to he nonnal, a~
with U.S. traditions and family parties just as if Gerl.
Dt:r.derwere home.''
D&lt;l'lier, .50. was kidnapped Dec. lB. Dozier's captan
have made no demands and circulated no evi.._
such as photographs or tape recordings to prove be 1o

'.•'

1•

·:
'•
•,
~

:1

:,j
,,
"

'.

alive.
.
~
The Red Brigades, Italy's most feared tel'l'llrilt :
group, kidnapped and killed former Premier Aldo ' ~
NJoro in 1978. The group claimed the Dozier kidnaPIIfal ::
as part of ita attack on the North AUanlic 1Wat,y :. 1
Organization and the United States.

.·'••••'

~ ATrEND MASS -:- Judllb Dooler, wife Brlpdel Terrorists, with ber sen Scott (I) and her
ol U. S. Ge&amp;eral James Dolier, kidnapped by Red daupler, Cheryl, leaving lheir home logo to church to
. •lleada.tialmlis Ma88. (APWirephoto).

•

St. Peter''s Square sets .
scene of Christmas address
1

.

, ' VATICAN CITY ~ Pope John Paul II appealed for ·union Solidarity.
; : freedom In hia Christmas measage to the world Friday,
"We cry out to governments, to heads of state, to
f saying 8GI)Ie governments are enslaving their people in systems and societies, that everywhere the principle of
,l concentration camps. He sent a special blessing to hiii religious liberty may be respected," the Pope said in
·• Polim hameland.
his Italian language formal address.
;''• The Pope'a meaage, delivered in 42 .languages,
"That people by reason of their faith in Christ may
•; came in his annual Christmas Day "Urbi et Orb!" (To not be discriminated against, subjected to prejudice,
• : the City and the World) adclreasfrom the balcony of St. deprlved of the fruits of their merits as cltizena," said
·;..Peter's BaslliCll to 1 crowd of about 150,000 in the Pope John Paul.
: :·1111uue below.
.
"Tbal the members of the Christian conununilies
Jolin Paul was 1IIWIIiiing and solemn when he sleJI' may not lack pastdn, places of worship. That they may
pad onto the l;lalcony, but grinned broadly when he saw not be intimidated, plit In prison, condemned.
.
about 150 feUow Poles waving red and white Pollall
"Ihal the Catholic churches of the East may enjoy
•,flags and a banner of the independent Polish trade the same rights as their brothers and sisters in the
'
church of Uie West," said the Pope.

'

•

CIIIUSTMA8 ADDRF-'18 - Pope Jolm Paul D BasWe.. In lbe haokgrouad St. Peter'a Sq1111'1! ~
deUven his "UrblaiOrbl" (totheCityand lhe World)) med with 50,000 Ro1118118 aDd pllgrilllli and a view Ill
Christmas blessing from the haleooy o1 SL Peter's Rome. (AP Wirephoto I.

,.

•

•••

'.

First famit,~ celebrates
..
:'
Christmas in Washington ·'•.
•

72 FORD

76 MERCURY
MARQUIS

SEDAN

.4 speed. radio, 7,200 low miles. Silver, wor·

mmore.

Just a gOOd "ole" ca,-,
Worthmore:
'

81 QIEVETJE 4 DR.

6

~yl., rough and rea".

_. speed, radio, 10, 100 miles, . maroon.
Shows excellent care .

.

Local doctor's trade.
Wosl1310

NOW

S0Qft

·uvv

•
•

79 TOYOTA PICKUP
A speed, 2A,l00 mlln. Blue.

79 111011E CARLO
Air, burgundy, 39,000 miles.' opt. wheels.
cnec~ IIlia.

•

•

''.
••
••

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Instead of buying Christmas
lor aach other. President Reagan and his
wife, Nancy, will buy something for their California
ranch as a 30th wadding anniversary glfl, a While
House~eemansays.
Over the years, the fteapna have became "more
pni:llcal" In their glft giving, said spokesman Mark
W~rg. , 30th
l.s Ma-"
.... Reagan s
versary
~"·
a
. mi

,.=.~;"=~
a.J.::.C:.~

I

"C•••• In &amp;

~;

'••

'

preHnts

•

.'.

•'

81 CHEVETTE 2 DR

'

~~••

..

Air, navy blue, cruise, AM · FM. This
every year,
customer
trades
.
.

•~t, •

••
'•

E•P41ttthe best.

81 BUICK SKYLARK 4·DR

1911 Eastern

.

~~•

,,••

.

Air, driven only 10.820 miles. V·6 eco,..mv.

·'•'
••

.'.'

.

80 CHEV. MALIBU STA. WGN.
~e

.

NOW

V·6

am-

Christmas day empty for

ONE OWNER.

.$4990

economy, worth more.

\leal to Vlelllam to dlaCUS» U. S. seldlers still I 1 1
ln .Soutbeaol Asia 8lld the effects of the defoUaat,-.Orange, ~~prayed on jungles to reduce the
of • :
cover lor Cl'mmnnlsl troopo. lAP Loserpholol.
•I

•

4 SPD.,
. .
BlACK

SALE

S7500 t--:;;;-:::::::-=-t----:=-:::~~f----=:..:.=.::..t
80 OlDS CUTlASS LS. SEDAN
77 MERCURY
75 FORD
73' CHEV,

1 12.000 miles. white with QurgUndy in·

COMING HOME - Wbeelebalr-boulld VIetnam
veteran Robert Muller Is Interviewed on his retum
lrom Vletuam at New York's Kelllledy airport Friday.
Tbe former Marble lieutenant and lhe oCher veteraos

$5995

$1380 1-::e&lt;:::on~o:m:"y:':~~~~

Burgundy,low ml:es

.

WAS

Air, landau top, custom interior. V·6

MIDGET
CONV.

City.

· "We ball an opportunity to go wllere ~ wauted to
~ Our boats greeted us In a friendly and receptive
manner," said Muller, who Is confined to a wheel·
chair with a spinal wound sutlered dw1ng the war.
Tenano said the trip meant a lot to him because 11
occurred aJmast nine years to the day after be lefi
VIetnam. He said be found "no arilmosuy," adding,
''The people Wei" very hospitable, very friendly and
open to us."
Blrll said he also found the people "very peaceful, ..
very friendly, very cooperative and very eager to talk ·
to us as former soldiers."
MuUer said the lour were "totally exhausted" from
what he described •.s "a whlrlwtod trip" and needed
Ume to digest the events of the past 10 days. The
planned .a news conference Monday to' elaborate on
their visit.

•

-...;..--t---+---'t:J;U $7500 t---:
_7::6-:BU:-:-:':'ICK':'::'-+--.-76-AM...;;;;;C~~I--7-7-M.;;;-G;.;;;.;:~ ~. ~~~~~:,~.~= !~A:.tomatic.
NOW

with ~ conimliU!eS and Foreign Mlnlater
NgUyen Co Tbach. nie other vetllrans were John
Terzano, a fonner seaman fr'om Washington, and
To(n Bin!. a fonner Infantryman from New York

.

List
$9305 .

13 990

Air~

Muller and Harbert, mVtted to visit by the Hanoi

a o - t with two other American veterans.-sald
the qreemeats were made In a aeries of meetings

1978
.
. BlAZER

WAS

Sl

~~~3995

GM

5

Air. lady driven, loaded .

. 77 OLDS

76 PONTIAC
GRM PRIX
tilt wheel.

2 dr.,

SUPREME

J2000
SEDAN
"DEMO,.

495

CU11ASS

S2980

78 CHEVROLET
MALIBU
TUDOR

Was S279S

81 CHEV. IMPALA SEDAN

•

•

. STA WAGON,.
PONY

1982
PONTIAC

69,000 miles, air, nice

wheels,

Air, burgundy, AM -FM,

Air. cruise. stereo, driven only 4,900 miles.

FORD
FAIRMONT

76 PLYMOUJH

·A&amp;alt Qranp.

chaJIIe, Muller said.

GMAC &amp; BANK
FINANCING AVAILABLE

POSSIBLE FULL FINANCING.

·1

· Tile Vietnamese also agreed to receive more deleptloal of veterans and taU part In a cultural ex-

PRICES GOOD THROUGH
DECEMBER 31, 1981

LOAN VALUE OR LESS. CHECK WITH YOUR BANKER FOR

76 BUICK
REGAL

'

(1) 79 CBX (6 c:yl.)..................... S2495

INVENTORY
REDUCTION

D

vets say return
visit opened doors

~an~ tor Aml!l1caDa mtaalni In
110' uiMit and II'II!UIIJ'Ina the effects of the defoUant

UPPER ROU'J;E 7-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO :
•

Dec. 27, 1981

Vietna~

(1) '81 CR 450R ......................... S1295

MOST OF THE CARS LISTED BELOW ARE PRICED ABOUT

1981
CENTURY
SEDAN

classified

NEW YORK (AP) Tile tint U.S. veteranatovlslt
Vletllam liDce the war eJided there have mumed
witb pramilel of c:oap!l atlon from the communist

·BETZ HONDA SALES

'350,000

•

'

IS YOUR GAIN
On January 1 we have to pay
personal property .tax on all
cars In Inventory Rather than
do this we are closing out our
Inventory and passing the
on to

•

(1) '74 IIHIDA 750 .................... ..'1-195
Your '995
(2) '79 400
•••••••••••' Ctloi,CiJ .

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DEC. 31st ONLY

report said surveys show fanners in
the 14 major states - .which have 87
percent of the hogs and pigs - intend to have 2.28 milllon sows farrow
during December, January and
February, 6 percent fewer than in
the same period of last year.

:·'

.

. ALL USED BIKES IJRASJICALLY REDIJCP) FOR Cl£ARMCE

Hog fanners to cut hack

..••

And Patti, the fteagans ' daughter, received 8 (llllir or

~:

~:ti gave her mothcl' an exercise suit and let ,...... . ~
mers and Ron and Doria gave the president and ftnt :i
lady special neck piUows.
•!
The first lady's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Loyal o.wlo, :~
sent their daughter a necltlace that had hel 1 J .. •
Mrs. Reagan'siiJ'BDI!tnother and a pair of ean
had belonged to Mrs. Davis.
;:
Later Friday, the first family hosted a ~ ;
dinner ol turkey with chestnut stuffing, candJ. :

e• • :

I

K.. :;

~~.::':O':u~~":/:f.:;?"is~::~ !:

the second floor Uving quarters olthe Wb1ta House.
•
Tbe Ragans gave son RAin,• portable atereocuaette For dessert, there was 1 frozen "Chriatmu 1
player.with eupbones. RAins wile, Dorta, received a plstachlofllling.
OC
pair of earriJl&amp;&amp;
'

• •

'.

•

�Dec. 27, 1981

Pa.-0·2-The Sunday T imes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepori-G;IIIiooll~. Ohio- · Poinl~&gt;leuant,

w. Va.

DIC, 27, 1911

Kidnap victim spends 30 hours in trunk of vehicle
'

CINCINNATI (AP)- Robert MJn.
ton saya he did a lot of thinking wllile
spendlnc 30 hours bound, gagged
and locked in the tnink of tbio car.
"I tholqJbt about Christmas a lot,"
the kidnap victim said. "It's all kind
of mixed up, you know ... You begin
to think of Httle things, llilly things.
I'd heard of people dying from carbon monoxl~ polaonlng, and I woodered if that would happen to me."
The suburban Nortb Falnnount

house painter said he considered
hlmseH lucky to be home for Christmea after the bizarre robbery and
abduction that began less tban three
miles from his borne about 8 p.m.
Tueaday,

"I waa on my way home from
Christmas shopping. I'd been having
problems witb tbe battery of my car,
and It died. I was working on It,"
Minton said.
As he tried to scrape the battery

I

.

contacts clean, Minton said two men
offered tlleir help.
"One of them started helping me
scrape the cables," he reCalled,
"and tbe other hit me from behind."

, The blow left a bump an hll head,
but Minton said be Wa&amp; cooaclou.s aa
!be pair bound his handund ankles.
Minton said the two men took $3
and tbe title to his car, then pgged
him and pitched him into the trunk.
"I kicked, and I siM&gt;ulod all the

time," he said, eq&gt;laining that tile
cloth in hll mouth prevented him
!rom forming words but not from

maklngnoile.
The l'll\!ll alternately drove the car
and parki!d II. Minton said he JOlt Ida
voice from calltng for help and d018d
occaaiollally "from wearillg myseH
out like that."
To keep blmseH going, Minton
said be hwnmed songs and "tried 1o
thlnkaboutotharthings,likegettlng

•

my hancia free, or l»w I could Ill the
lalch to the trunk open 1rom lbe ~
L~L-red ~·~- ..,'.,..
"'•1 ...,...,
,........, •..._,
though, 1188 the lack of altenllon he
got frGm Ida attacka'l. even tholqJb
be safll they drove Ida car "aU over"
duriiJI the 30 lloun.
Flaally, tllemenleftthecarldllng
'wilb Minton still in the trunk.
Dlatrlct 4 pollee offtcet Charlt!S
Fulhnan and partner J~~~~B Scl&gt;-

a1:;::_

mldt fallld It ail a dty 11re•ht2: II
a.m. Tlawalda~'afler · - heard .
MlntiiiP"""""''.... calledpallee. ·
Fullman 111k1 he. .... Schmidt
pulled Jbe duecl Mlnlan fnllll the
trunk after 1111)' !Gn:ed open the
lock.
"He 1188 bouDd .... gagged and
layiDgllatonhiiiiiOmacllwitbarag
sluffed in his mouth, " Fullman lllkl.
"Hla feet and hands were tied behind
him." .

PRE-I-N VENTORY SALE
.

'

AVE UP T 5
.

.

PRICES GOOD NOW TO JANUARY 5
'

SOME ITEMS NOT EXACTLY AS SHOWN

BUNK BEDS

BRASS HEADBOARDS

_Starting At 525000 Complete

%OFF

CU-RIO
CABINETS

COFFEE &amp; END TABLES
SAVE UP TO 50% ON
'
3 PIECE SETS

CLOSE OUT PRICES
SAVE
BROYHILL

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

WOOD
ROCKERS

lh PRICE
OUT
'

GUN
CABINETS
8 GUN CAPACITY
• •

I

- .

'

REG. 1229 SALE •139.95

10 GUN CAPACITY
REG. '299.95 SALE '179.95
10 GUN CAPACITY
SOUD PINE :.

·

•

.(Slightly Damaged)
REG. 130()

LIVING ROOM SUITE CHAIRS
REG. '299 . '499

NOW ,gti . '139'5

LOVE SEATS.
REG. '299 · '699

NOW 1125 • 1199'1

GAUJPOLIS- One of Gallipolis' part of It II stlllllanding aa It only
oldest and most respected tasted aa a reHgioua organization WIbusinesses passed from the scene In . til about IIIIJ. .
In 1865, Moses Frank left
1981 - tbe McKnight-Davies Company Inc. located at t3 Court.
Galllpolis and the cJotiBng store was .
'11lis company as flnt organized in taken over by Northrup and Smitb.
111211 by Lehr Davies and William In later years Abe Moch (also froni
McKnight The two purchased tbe Alaace) and Harry Frank operated
hardware business of Haskins and clotlling stores In the building.
John Dages remained at 41-42
MOOney. Davies and McKnight
operated tbe businesses unlil about Court from 11163 to i889 when he
11148 when it was sold to Hayward moved to Columbus and opened a
Luman and Loren Howard. In 1958, large shoe factory there. While In
D._Kermeth and Bartera Morgan GallipoUs Dages made shoes In tbe
took qver·!be store and operated it building at 41-43 Court and sold them
Willi July,1981.
.
here retail aa well as wholesale. By
The building which baa housed 1889 Dage8 had one of the largest
McKnight-Davies all of tbese years shoe wholesale compantea on tbe .
baa a rather interesting history. As ·Ohio River. When he left Ross
one can ea11Uy detect from an alley Williams operated a wholesale boot •
view 41 Court and 43 Court are a part and shoe business here until about
18117.
of the same building.
.
It was in 1!101 that Marshall Colis
That slructure was built in 11163 for
M001es Fran!!, who ws one of the four organized the Ohio Valley Laundry
Frank brothers who came from which took over at 43 Court. Colis
to E. W. Sanns, Julius
Alsace to Gallipolis. The other tbree SOld out In
Franks were Harty, Henry, and Kaufman, M. F. Merriman and P. T.
Leopald. The Franka came to Wall. Merriman was editor of tbe
Gallipolis in the 11!40&amp; as peddlers Gallipolis Bulletin and Kaubnann
and soon had buill up quite a ran tbe Gallipolis Theatre from 1895
business. Moses . was the first suc- to 1919. These ·men later sold out to
c'essful brother and in 1858 he built a George Tabll who at one time owned
store at Third and Court. He found a lol'of bulldinga in Gallipolis inhimself too far from tbe center of cluding the Lafayette Hotel. Tabit
town add so had the -building at 41-43 once !"ffillrked: "Money is to be
made in buying and not in selling."
Court erected.
In 11163, Moses Frank ran a In 1924 Tablt sold out to J .. H. Taylor
clothing emporium in one part of the of Huntington and it was about this
building and John Dages ran a retail time that 43 Court switched 11'9'"
$oe store in tbe other part. Moses being a laundry to a hardware
·
Frank's motto in 11163 was: "quick house.
The space at 41 Court in the 1890s
sales, prompt pay, small profits, and
was the A. P. Menager Grocery
Jow prices."
In the upstairs part of tbe building · Store. In the first decade of the 190&amp;
tbe SOns of Temperance lodge met. tbe Wellston Brewing Company
This was an organization that had its hrought their barrels here and bot·
roots in tbe 1830s and was dedicated lied up beer in the building under the
to the proposition of geUing people to ·supervision Or J. H. Grate. Since
use less whiskey and more beer. To beer kept better in barrels than in
thai end the group ran tbeir, own bottles il was common practice to
By DON KENDALL
. cholesterol.
lavern where tbe Womeldorff· brew in one place and bottle in
AP Farm Writer
AccoJ'lling to department sources,
anotber.
In
that
same
era
Gallipolis
WASHINGTON
(AP)
A
longwho
asked not to be identified, the
Thomas building now sits. I~ 1865
tbe fl!vern was moved across Third had . two other beer bottling standing battle may he warming up · final decision on whether to proceed
operations. The Gallipolis brewery between nutrition advocates and witb Food 2 baa not been made and
Street and later destroyed.
Also meeting in the Frank building closed about 1895.
!bose who think government should that tbe lal~holesterol question is
The busi~ room at 43 Court has not be telling people what to eat.
Wll8 Gallipolis' Jewish community to
&gt;1iU being reviewed.
also
served
as
a
meat
market.
In
which tbe Franks belonged as well
Meanwhile, four private consumer
Livestock producer groups,
aa several other GallipoUs residents. more recent years it has been· the generaUy, have bristled at whattbey organizations tbis week protested
Thanks to the generosity of the borne of Nortbrup Food Market and consider iU·fOWlded clalma that fat what they understood to be tbe
.Frank family Gallipolis Jews erec- D&amp;J Supply. We should also note and cholesterol found in meat con- Agriculture Department's decision
ted in 1889 a synagogue-temple in that lor many years in tbe 1800s St. tributes to heart dlseaae and illher "to delay; perhaps indefinitely"
town. E. Strauss served as tbe rabbi Louis Catbolic Church held their an- · disorders. Meat industry represen- publication.
The groupa included: The Center
but we are not sure jf he Hved in nual Christmas bazaar on -!be third tallves also have been critical of
some !be government's diet work.
for Science in tbe Public Interest,
town. Nor are we certain of' tbe floor of tbe building at 41-13 Court.
location of the temple and whether a
The latest episode Involves a new Community Nutrition Institute, Con·
Agriculture Department pubHcation
sumer Federation of Amrica, ·and
that bas been in tbe works for some
time, Food 2, which waa to have of.
fered recipes and nutrition advice,
includin~ a section on fat and

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - After
having to enact a general tax increase this year, .Ohio's lawmakers
will be faced witb another knottY
problem in_ 1982 - an insolvent
unemployment trust fund.
With joblesaness at 10.9 percent
and 562,000 workers drQwing
benefits, the state fund already baa
had to borrow $600 million from tbe
federal government and tbe picture
may become even bleaker.
The Ohio State Advisory Council
for Employment Security baa made
some strong recommendations to
Gov. James A. Rhodes and the
Legislature.
Without dissent, · the seven·
member panel said tbere are few options: increase assessmenta against
employers who pay for the program,
cut benefits, Or botb.
The fund waa drained in September 1980 and the federal IQan was
obtained so that belleflts could be
continued at eslstlng levels. The ad·
vlsory council said it is likely that
· more w'IU have to be borrowed in
1982.
Meanwhile, the council proposes a
pemianent Increase from 2.8 per· '
cent to tbree percent of baae payroll,
along with an emergency
assesament of 0.1 one-percent which
would remain in effect until the
federal debt is repaid.
The yield from tbe permanent and

ALL UPHOLSTERED

.. ROCKERS

. MARKED DOWN FOR
CLEARANCE

·SAVE 30-50%

9 PIECE FAMILY RQOM GROUP . BROYHILL LIVING ROOM SUITES
SAVE UP TO
SOFA, ROCKER,
'60000
CHAIR, FOOTST9QL,
COCKTAIL OITOMAN,
.

'I

I

·-

....._......_::;,-_.__._..,·.••..

·- .:;:•"'
••....

.••••.•

CLEVELAND (AP) - Young
residents rl a drug aDd alcohol treatment center apent tbriltmaa .Day
learning how 10 feel good about
thanwelves by lll!lJq others.
They llhowed up 12 lllrang at the
Harbor lJcbl Complu, operated by
the Salvation Army, whare 1111)' 1111'ved plates of fried eldcken to the
lonely, tbe lOll, tile dNIIIute.
The young halpen Hve at New
Oirecllona, • drllll and ileohol treat1111111 , ctater In IAihurban Glenwillow; Funded In part by the Ohio
Department ofliealth, II opened in
Februaeyl...
"'l'IUIII""M'NDC- fllr tham,"

REG. '1299.95

SALE '69995 ·
..

for challenge

EVERYJHiftG·

..w ,_ ()'.......

•

JII'IIIIUI
diNeta' fw Ntw DlrectiiiiL "We're
daiiiC a ..nee far alhan aa well aa
.

.........

"I'm
laid.

leelirw ezcellent now," he

Ms. O'DcJnotlllut laid villtlng Harbor IJihl ~ lllr realdenla put
~own problema Into petapecllve.
''Oar ldlls 111ft ... gone down ..
fer .. _ , tllbele people at Harbor IJ&amp;b&amp;," • laid. "It baa been

qailaiDIIWallllilll.''

'!"- wbo- tw tbe free ineall

..,........s jo llljll)' tbe lfiiCial. treat-

ment.

I•'

•w

•

•

·~

lt'l, ~
~

~·f

Block was asked specifically ~: :
publish Food 2 witbout deleting or '
revising the section on fat ancl ·•
cholesterol.
• :
However, tbe consumer group&amp; ;
told Block that if the decision is
made to change tbat section or to · :
delay indefinitely tbe magazine's ..,
publication, " we urge you to releaoe ·•
the original manuscript so il can 1M: •
p~9,!j~hed by non-governmental ·;
or!!llnitations."
: ,
According to tbe consumer ad, ;
vacates, the department's official _:
excuse for the publication is the tight :;
federal budget. Tbat is not tbe c""'!, .:
!bey said.

Climbs towers

temporary taxes would bring in an
additional $57.I million a year, tbe
council said.
It also proposed halting tbe
payment of henelita now granted for
a one-week waiting period preceding
CINCINNATI (AP) - Climbing a
,·applications lor benefits. This would · J,OOO.foot tower might not appeal to
lower the outflow of benefits to the most people, but David Estelle can
tuneof$27.6millionayear,theCOUJi.. . name several reaaons for keeping
en said.
his part-time job.
Further, the group recommended
"Sure it haa its inherent risks, but
. raising what it said is an unrealistic the money is decent and 1 guess
ligun;of$20aalheamount0fweekly · tllere's a challenge involved," ilaid
earnings required to qualify as a
Estelle, who changes lights on the
credit week in tbe computation ct
tops of radio antenna towers.
benefits.
Estelle, 32, is a full-time tower
This should become a percentage
repainnan for 'Mcr, a microwave
of tbe average weekly wage In Ohio.
communications company. In his
Based on a suggested formula, tbe
part-time job, Estelle replaces tbe
council said the minimum sbould be 11211-watt beacons perched on an·
$43. This would compare to $45 in teMa towers that can reach 1,000
Illinois and $40 in Indiana.
feet Into the aky.
Hiking tbe credit week would 1111ve
Climbers are paid $75 to $100 for
the fund $7 million annually, tbe
each 250-foo.t segment climbed.
council said.
Estelle said that's incentive to keep
These changes, al~ng w~tb a series
him in a part-time joh that nearly
of suggested adminiStrative moves,
cost his Hie.
·
would restore tbe fund to solvency .. . Estelle said he waa seriously in·
and keep tt at safe levels In tbe
jured while climbing a 1110-foot tower
future, tbe group said.
in Xenia in 19'19.
It added that the recom"The tower came down," be said.
mendations would "maintain tbe
" There .waa one mud puddle in that
prillclple of merit rating In tbe caae
entire Jl).acre antenna field and it
of contributions and the original purjust happened to be where I came
~ of paying benefits to unem'down. How I came down In that mud
played persons substantially at·
puddle, 1 don't know. It stuck me in
!ached to tbe labor market." ·
up to my waist."
EsteUe said be broke his left leg,
got .his nose and moutb stuffed witb
mud and suffered a severe concussion. A partner removed tbe mud
One realdent of New Dlrecti'!flS, from EsteUe and got him breathing
Dale Hector, 18, found the ex· again.
EsteUe said he baa no memories of
Perience lfltllying.
the
ac:cldent. He doubts that he
"I say Merry ~ to them.
would
still be climbing if be did.
It's neaL It •es me feel good to
EsteUe
c!Jsobeyed a pbyslclan's orhelp lham out ..
den
and
made a climb just four
Dale laid he bed been at New
montba
after
the accident.
Dtrectlona for more !ban two montha
"Kind
of
stubborn,
I guess," he ·
after lb!'ee other lhorWerm stayaln

trealmellt cellterll.

National Consumers League.
In a letter to Agriculture
Secretary John R. Block, the groups
said that he had reversed an initial
decision to publish Food 2 because of
strong opposition by agricultural
lobbyists whose pfllducts are high in
fat and cholesterol.
"The meat, ·egg and dairy
producers have fought tooth and nail
to undermine and obstruct the efforts of health experts to encourage
Americans to eat less fat and
cholils\erol," tbe letter said. "We
have watched these groups labor for
years to mold public health policy to
serve tbeir own economic needs."

..

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

JG-ABB lABBICS'

SAVIIO% !0 80% orr
Sa.. -

Salurday, January 2nd.

• ENTIII STOCK WOOUNS. Wool c;md blend solids

10%
orr

and novelties, from 54" wide. Reg. nom $8 .99 yd.

• ENTIII STOCK QIANA8 KNITS. Qlana" nylon
•
solids . Mochlmi' wosh, dry, fiom 48" wide.
Reg. $4 .99 to $7.99 yd.
• INTIRE STOCK IIWING LUKnS. Wood, wickerloeb and more. Reg. $7 .95 to $45.00 eo.

• INTIRE STOCK CORDUROY. CoHen/polyester.
Machine wash, dry, 45" wide. Reg. lrom $4.99 yd.

·• INTIRI STOCK PUN FUR. Acrylic blends. Machine
wash, d.y, 60" wide. Reg. $7 .99 yd.
• INTIIIITOCIC TRIMS. Braids, lace$, rulfllngs,
eyelets ond more - our regular pnce coliecllon!

SCh.
orr

• INTIRE STOCK QUILTS. Single or double-lace.wilh
patyesler ftll. Machine wash. dry, 45" wide.
~eg.

Select group
offabrtcs
and notions.
We know you appreclo.l e a bargain. and
this is one bargain
VQU can't a"ord to

pass upl Choose
fiom a wide selection
of fobrtcs for

sportswear. kids'
wear, crafts and

more. Huny In loday,
and save!

fiom $4.49 yd .

• INTIRIITOCK SHIRTINGS. Polyester/ conon.
Machine wash, dry, 45" wide. Reg. fiom $3 .49 yd .

• HAPPY TIMI AJIPUQUII. Florols, juveniles,
denims and more, lor spOil or dress wear.

• CRIPE AND PONTE IQIIITI. Polyester double knits.
Machlrie wosh, dry, 60" wide. Reg. $3.49and $4.49 yd.

. Young help lonely persons

TWO LAMPS, TWO TABLES

•

'

Another problem
faces. Ohio Iawmakers

'

10 GUN CAPACITY
'499.95 SALE '299.95

· 8 GUI CAPACITY ·
OAI

IN STOCK

REDUCED FOR lHIS
SPECIAL
INVENTORY
CLEARANCE
SAL£!
ODD PIECES

REG. '439.95 SALE '250.00

REG.

CHAIRS

..

' DESK .

NO PRoFIT ITEMS - WHOLESALE PRICES

•

ALL BEAN BAGS

APPLIANCES

EXTRA ·SPECIAL SPECIALS

Cpmpany Inc. much.

Food groups rally against new publication

ROCKERS;t~~~;;m-IAriLL~,.~~~N~~~~wuiFL~A~T~T~O~P~

1h PRICE

.

STARnNG AS 1DW AS

VALUES ID·'60.00

REG. '249.95

.

CHINA CABINETS

&lt;

CLOSEOUT
PRICES

~ CLOSING

SOLID MAPLE DINING ROOM

· ·2500 .

30-50%

..

1•

EVERYTHING IN STOCK

•

McKnight-Davies
respected old business
.

'

.. ..

'

The Sunday Times-Senlinei-Pa.-D·3

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

• INTIIIITOCIC IIILOUR. Acetate/nylon: lrlocelate/
nylon.Mochlne wash, dry, 11om 45~ Reg .fiom $3 .99 yd.
• SILICT HIICULON8 UPHOISTIRY FMRICS.
Plaid$,~.

80%
orr

solidS, 54" v.lde. l!eg. $5.99 yd.

.

• ftANNL Palyesler/coHon prinls and solids.

•

Machi,. walh, dry, 45" v.lde. Reg. $2.29 and $2A9 yd.
lHIIUIDI ...... Polyester IOMdl. Machine WOih,
dry, ftom 48' . Reg. !rom $5A9 yd.

• CHIIIITMAIIIIIMMINQI. Holiday tapes, "'u'"''·,or.
croll and gilt rlbbOnL
anorlments wiU 110ry.

Oft1ef noHons, too:

said.

Most television towers are
similar, 'he said. They're generally
1,0110 feet tall, with the antenna tbe ·
lalt ll!giiiiiiL Some have aa many aa
16 .smaller ~way network8 that
lrequenlly need attention.
The ladder on the main tower
.... at about 1,000 feel with nothing
but llbqlailllllcb 1111 either sl~
Ire tlllniO the peat, he said.
"VIlli lllnddle the pole to climb
the pega," Estelle said.

Silver Bridge Plaza

�•

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•.

.__=.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Ga,llipolis, Ohlcr-J&gt;oint Pleast~nt, w. va.

Page-0·4-The Sunday Times-SentineL

Thousands attend an~ual
Oklahoma charity dinner

• DAY

21

KIT 'N' CARLVLE"'

111ver. sterling,
1.-trv. rllll1a. old coiM 1o
currency. Ed lhwkolt lar·
ber Sholl. Mlddlapo. I. 992·
3.176.

I

'

LINING UP -Some 5,500 people ale turkey and all
die trimming•. Friday at Ibis year's Red Andrews
Christmas dbmer. The late Okl,.homa City legislator

"Anybody who wants to can come
8yfteAa1elltedPreu
hel'tl and eat. That's what it's for,"
The Highway Pairor said that
said Betty cassu, one of the dlniler's
hoHday-nekend acctdenla. 011 Ohio
organizers and Andrews' neice. An·
roads have killed at least six people.
drews, a former legislator and . The patrol began counting holiday
boxing promotOr, began die dlniler
traffic deaths at 6 p.m. Thursday
more than 30 years ago.
·
and will continue the tally until mJd..
Ms. Caul! had been concerned night Sunday.
that there would not be enough
1bedead:
. money to pay for the dinner,
FRIDAY
estimated to cost nearly f4,500. A
GEORGETOWN- Robert Savage,
plea to the public Monday quickly 54, of·WIIliamaburg, in a tWo-car acremedied this year's shortfall, ·
cident on U.S 50 in Brown COunty.
"By Tuesday momiug, they were
TIFFIN - Timothy J. Bouillon,

began dishing up tbe meals more tban 30 Christmases
ago. (AP Laserphoto).

Study:
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Having varied ooly slightly in their marital
.
a retarded child doesn't hurt adjustment.
But differences surfaced when
marriages and can even help them,
fathers were studied separately, he
two Ohio State University resear:
said.
chers have concluded.
bver~ll. lathers of retarded sons
Former graduate student Randy
.
scored
the highest on the adjustment
Williams, now a vocational
rehabilitation counselor with the scales, Williams said. They scored
Ohio Bureau of Vocational
higher than fathers of retarded
Rehabilitation,
and
Patrick
daughters or mothers with retarded
McKenry, an assistant professor of children of either sex, he added.
family and human development,
The study also indicates that
devoted a year-long study to the subfathers of retarded sons apparently
ject.
are. more well·adjusted in marriage
than fathers with normal children.
Using a standard sociological test,
''The husband may seek ·support
Williams questioned 30 parents of
from the wile, and this could
normal children and 30 parents of
strengthen the marriage," Williams
retarded children about four areas
said. "Or the stress that is put on a
of marital ~odjustment. Perents
family when parental expectations
rated closeness .of spouses, ~mount
of agreement between ·spouses,
for normal family life are not met
may pull the couples together."
overall satisfaction id marriage and
, expression of affection.
Also, McKenry said, uThe presenWilliams said that taken as a
ce of a retarded child could restrict
the father and mother from social
group, parents of retarded children
activities, and this may pull them
and parents of normal children

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -,. Carl
TurjJin says he plans to reswne sport
parachuting despite an accident
resulting from a parachute malfunction.

Turpin, 22, woke up after a

•

parachute jwnp Nov. 28 on top of a
railroad boxcar with a splintered
ankle and his left thigh slashed to the
bone.
"I can't wait to get back up," Turpin said from his East Side apartment, where he is recovering. 11 If it
happened again (the chute malfunctions), I think I could handle it. It
was probably my fault."
Turpin spent four days in the
hospital, where doctors put 35 slit·
ches in his thigh. He had tom c~r·

,,

~

@

.

two.

Public Notice

CORRECTED
NOTICE
TO BIDDERS

SPaled J)roposals will be
received at the

~

•
•,

"I thought I could get it open," he
said. "I used my brake, but it didn't
work. By the time I realized I
couldn~t get it open, I was too close
to the gro~nd to cut away (his main
chute) and deploy my reserve."
"I remember my right foot hitting
the side of the boxcar, and that's all I

remember/' Turpin said. "I don't
remember anyone being with me
when I woke up. Everything was
real fuzzy. The guys I was jwnping
with said I was unconsciOUB for 20
minutes."
"My leg was bleeding bad, and I
remeinher the emergency squad
lowering me off the boxcar and
taking me to the hoapital."

DIVISION
OF
REClAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAl RESOURCES
FOUNTAIN SQUAREBUILDINGS
COlUMBUS, OHI043224
until January 14, 1982 at
1:30 ~ . m . EASTERN
STANDARD . TIME and

•,;; Dpl!l1ed thereafter, tor fur·
the materials and
" perfcrmlng the labor tor

'"' "''"''ng

: t"e execution and con• structlon of:
J. R. COAl
·•
FORFEITURE PROJE ·
• CT C·917
GAll lA COUNTY
' • RECLAMATION PROJ·
ECT NO. 018
, In accordance with the
plans and specifications

'" pr~red b~ ttie DEPART·
• MENT OF NATURAl
• RESOURCE~ OFFICE
• OF CHIEF t:NGINEEA
and on file In the Division 01
Reclamation,

COfutnbuJJ,

chfleiO.

we want to thank each
and every one· ·tor the
gifts and cards we .
received on our 50th An·
niversarv.
we ap·
preciate th'e m very
much. Special thanks
and appreciation goes
out to our children for
having 1his celebration
for us.

Douglas and
Edison Johnson

mental problems, had been working
m a sheltered worbhop at Dial Industries in suburban Bedford
Heights until they were released this
fall. There, they had a chance tQ
earn money, build self-esteem and
sell-eonfidence, learn good work
habits, make friends and get the
coUnseling and ailslstance needed to
Public Notice

deal with their emotional probl~ms.
"The ·IrOny Is that we have this
new facility which the state has paid
for, subcontract work to do, a topnotch staff and an accredited
prugram, but we just can't get the
funding to keep these people
here,"sald· Bob Nazarini, Dial
~eneral manager,

Public:: Notice ·

Ohio. Bids will be o~ned in .requirements

the third fjoor conference

rom of Bui ding 8 ·3 of the
Fountain SQuare offices of
the Ollio Department of
Natural Resources. The
estimate for this proJect as
determined by the Office of
Chief
Engineer
is

ot Section
153.54 of the Ohio Revised
Code.
.

CONTRACTORS ARE
ADVISED THAT IN AC·
COROANCE WITH THE
PROVISIONS OF THE
JANUARY 27, 1972
EXECUTIVE ORDER, BY
S170,430.00.
THE
GOVERNOR OF
COP.ies of the Plans
OHIO,
EQUAL EM ·
spectficatlons and proposal PlOYMENT
OP ·
form! will be forwarded PORTUNITY
CON ·
from the Division of DITIONS ARE
AP ·
Reclamation, Department PLICABLE TO THIS BID.
of Natural Resources, upon WAGE
RATES
receipt of a check In the ESTABLISHED IN AC·
amount ot S4.00 made COROANCE WITH SEC·
payable to the Department TION 1'513.18 OF THE
of Natural Res.ources.
REVISED CODE ARE
Plans and .speciflcflflons ALSO APPliCABLE TO
become the proQertY Qf the THIS BID.
.

pros~ctlve bidders and no
refunds will be made.
Additional
infor.mation
rnav be obtained from the
Division of Reclamation,
Department of Natural
Resources,
Fountain

.

Bids are to be sealed and

addressed to:
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION
OF
RECLAMATION
FOUNTAIN
Square, Building 1!, Colum· SQUARO-BUILDING B
bu$, Olllo 4322~. &lt;t'h, (6241
COlUMBUS, OHIO 4322~
265-66331 ..
bl-r moy wtthdrhl
Each bid must be ac· hisNobid
within sl•ty (dOl
coml!anled by a BID days aHer
the actual date
GUARANTY, metllno th~

Public Notice
of the opening ft\ttr'eof.
The Director of Natural
Resources · reserves the
right to reject any or .all
bids, or to accept the bid
which embrases svch c.om·
bination
of
alternate
proposals as may promote
the best Interest of the

in memory of Earl Hart
away Decem beru 1980..

who p~ssed

Gone but not forgotten.
Charles Pyles Family, Don
and Joyce Manuel Family.

lhe eligibility list at 992·
2156 or '192-2157.

TIIUJ1iiDAY NJGHT
CLEVELAND- Mary Falensky,
88, and Helen ~ott. 88, both of
Cleveland, pedeltrlana struck by a
car 011 a Cleveland city atreot.
CANTON - Irvlug J. Hendershot,
39, of Canllln, in a two-car accident
on OhjoatJO tn Slarll Coullty.

3

I have a 1¢ of Code Symbols from cans &amp; packages;
If anyonl! is collecting them
for charity or club. Call304-

614
446-Gallipolls .
.367-Cheshlre
388-VInton

do light delivery work.
· Must provide economical

transportation. Apply 1o

Jackie Carsey, 380 E . 2nd

St.. Pomeroy, Oh on Mon ,
day Dec. 28. 9am ·II am and
6pm·Bpm. E.O.E. M·F.

SWEEPER: and ' seWing
machine repair. parts', and

Pick up and

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. ·one half mile up

Georges Creek Rd.

.ul'0294 ..

Brown, black and white.
Dark circles around e'yes.
Answers to Rheanana . Has
collar with rabies tag.
Racine area, 3rd St . .61.4·

Call

For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
dieset .fuel, call Landmark,

Gun Shoot Racirie Gun
Club. Every Sun . .starting
at 1 p.m . Factory choke
guns only.
Racine Fire. Dept. sponsors

a Gun Shoot, Sat. nl~hls
6:30p.m., Bashan. Factory
choke 12 guage shotgun .

.Fie'a
Market.
New
Opening. 7 days a week.
Tne Heart ol Middleport. 20

N. 2nd St. lormerly Martin
General Store. 992-6370.

We still have plenty o1 ap·
pies at F llzpalrlck Or·
chard, SR689. Phone 61~·
669·3715.
Bailey's Shoes, Middleport,

will be open Thurs., Dec. 24
&amp; Sat.. Dec. 26. Closed for
Va'-tlon Dec. 27 to Jan. 3,
1982.

Green

Gables,

;===iiT,:=;;;:::===
Gl-w•y

THE D ARTMENT ~
OF NATU Al RESOUA· ~--=="""'--­
CES
· ROBERTW. TEATER ;PUPPIES, to
Dec. 27
~5-225A.

Need dependable babysit,
ter to live in while mother
works some evenings. Free
room and board. 1·30-1·773·

614
1192-Middloporl

5186.

915-Chesler
343-Porlland
247-Letart Falls
742-Rulland
667-COOIYille

works, some evdnings, tree
room &amp; board, 304·.773-5186.

Grove

13
tnsur•nce
SANDY AND BEAVER In·
wrance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallla County
for l!fmost a century .
Farm.
and personal
coverages are
to meet In·
Contact
agent. Phone

·bedroom home ·In
Racine. 1'12 baths, full
basement. Perma stone
e)(terior. 2 car garage.

BEDS·I'AON, BRASS, Old
furniture, gold, sliver
dollars, wood let! boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households.

Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. ~.
Pomeroy, Oh. Or9'12·77d0.

CHIP WOOD. Poles rna..
diameter 10" on largest
end. Sl2.50 per lon. Bundled

sltb. SI0.50 per ton. '
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet co.. '
ROCk Springs ·Rd .,
Pomeroy. 9'12·2689.
BUYING DEER ' AND .
BEEF HIDES. Gene HI""
Rl. 1, A'"'""'lllt, Oh .....
67~7. Buying riiW tur ..,.,
Dec. 12, Dally 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sunctoys. Also
closed Dec. 2~1.25.
UHCI hcMIMIIOid furniture
end appllencea or enyttUng
- r lhon clothing. Will
take conslgnmenll. 61&lt;6-698·
~-

.

RIIW turs, hldfl, scrap
metal$,
-balltrlaa,
radiators, gin-. yellow
rool, end merthlndllt
brotterlng. Harptr·HIItteed Salv- &lt;:ompeny, a
Eltwnlh Strftl, 675-....
AIIO PIH Merkel QPin
dally. Open MondayFriday 1-5 pm.

SYRACUSE -

$39,900.00.

Havin9 repossessed the following listed equipment
from Pickaway, Franklin and Fairfield County
Farmers and Contractor. the Columbus Productlori
Credit Association has ummissioned Meadows
Auction Service, of Carroll, Ohio, to sell that equip-

mental ABSOLUTE AUCTION.

BY

OWNER: . ~

bclr .. split·

level, living room &amp; dining
room . combina,icn, eat· in
kitchen, lg . family rm., 2
1/2 baths,' located _in Tara
Estates, Club house and
1 privileges. $75,000
. Kyger Creek School

CLEAN USED MOBilE
HOM~S
KESSEL'S
QUALI'fY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 ML
WEST. GALLI POLIS, RT
35. PHONe .ul·3868.

Priced to sell. Three used
mobile ,homes, 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at o and W
Estates, formerly K and K,
Rt . 62 north, Pt. Pleasant,

Dl!;lri•:t. Shown by appl.
.ul·9403.

Or r-ent-3 bedroom fur·
nlshed home on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big level lot.

576·2711.

wv.

191J5 General mobile h'ome 1973 GRANVILLE 14•70, 3
12x65, completely ready for bedroom, mobile home.
setup, includes cement . assume !oan, 304·882·3433.
blocks &amp; skirting, $.1,800.
For more Information call
1972 mobile home, 2
446-051L
bedroom, furnished, like

new. Coii67S·3741.

12X60 2 bedroom Buddy

House· Meadowbrook Ad·
dition. 3 bedrooms, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement . .304-675·

1542.

mobile home . ..Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan·
cing available. Phone 446·

1974 CAMeRON 12x60,
,$5000 ,, 30H75·2S60.

1294,

bedroom · home, con·
venient to shopping;

Nice lot . $19,750,00.

·

SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- Approx. 13 acres of
vacant woode~ land
With elec:tric and gas
available. $8,000.00.

TRACTORS, 2 COMBINES, 6 TRUCKS,
BUlLDOZER and AUTOMOBILE

SOUTHERN DISTRICT
-

AC 210 diesel tractor w/cab, wfe, turbo &amp; duals ·
HJ66 Int. diesel, turbo, cab &amp; wfe; 756 Int. dielfol, tu~­

bO&amp;wte; H. Farmall; N.

H.l400dleselcom~lne

~00

13'

grain· drill 23-7"; Lely IS' 3 pt.

Roterra; Multi· Hitch: L.ely fertilizer saddle tank!$·
Int. S50 semi niount P10w 5·16"; AC semi mount

Approx . 2'1:: acf'es

land with 2 bedroom
mobile home. $11.000.00.

grain head &amp; cab; N. H. 962 4·row narrowcornh~ad ·
Int. 815 diesel combine. \2' grain head &amp; c~b; 1ni.
743 4·row narrow corn head; Bush Hog 18' ·hydro- ·

, fold disc; JD

OVER 6 acres of vacant
land with a drilled well
in the Meigs School

District. 511.000.00.

..

REAlTORS

plow 6,16"; AC 14' fold up disc; JD 894A 8 row .
planter. 30" dry, NR; JD 1250 6 row planter, 30" 11 ,
quid; dry bOKO$ for 1250 planter; Int . 153 6 row 3 pt.

Henry E."Cieland, JR.,

G.R.I.

992-6191

DGIIi' &amp; Roger Turner

cultivator; 20' HarnM'gaton Bush Hog 18' Her·
rowgalor; Massey 12' diesel plow 3 pl.; NH 256 hoy
rake; farmHand 810 grinder mixer. NR; JO 4 row
rotary hoe. pull type; Int. -430 wire tie hay baler· 3

99H692

Jean TrOSttll

Ollice

pt. 8' heavy duty blade; 3 pl. King Kutter 7' rol;;ry

mower; N.l. ground driven manure spreader; 2 Me·
curdy gravity waoons, 8 ton gears; l&lt;ilbros gravity
wagon·, 8 ton gear; McCurdy gravity wagon; 2 hay
wagons; JD wagon gear; snowco grain cleaner; 3
pt. Speeco ~~hole digger; large water tank on RT

·2

'

Sl.SOO.DD

down, 14% Interest, 60

paymenlsof 581.4.5.
WILL TAKE TRADE-

3 bedroom frame home
In excellent repair.
Basement, kitchen has
range, refrigerator and
birch cabinets. Large
lot with clfy water and
sewer . .

949·2460 .

992·2259

Nice 5 room home. In
Tuppers Plains. Forced
air furance, carpeting,
TP water. large level
acre. Garage 42xJ6 on

Rt. 7. Only 32,500.
340 ACRES ,- 10 room

home. 2 full baths, free
gas.
furnace,
5
bedrooms. large family
room. and 2 large porches. May . sell · lust the
house. and one acre, or
trade.

3 ACRES -

College, $225 per month

plus utilities and SlOO
refundable deposit.
References ret:~uired . Call
24H325 or 245·5364,

2 bedroom trailer. Brown's
Trailer P4rk, Syracuse .

992,3324.

--------·---

Construction
workers
trailer for three . Phooe 30-t·

773· 5651. Mason.

2 bedroom, furnished, all
electric. S12S plus utilitieS
and deposit. 675·4088.

area.

nished, 2 bdr., like new,

675·3741. .

Gallipolis.

Suitable

for

couple only. Call 446·2957.

LOCATED in Oak Hill. S
rtn. ho4se, vedry nice. Call

682·d01D.

2 bedroom all electric r-an·
ch style home. 1 !nile from
Racine. References and
deposit required. Available

Nov. 15. Call614-949·2849.

2 bedroom house. SprlnQ
Ave., Pomerov . Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after '6.
$195. month not Including
utilities. fY.'2·2288.

.

Broker-Auctioneer

LIFE
INSURANCE
418 Second Ave.
Ci111446·0552 Anytime

8MR .4 09- OWNER: FINANCING! This split foyer
home includes 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den
with fireplace, heat pump for year round comfort.
see this fullY carp,e ted hOme today!

shaped

large bedrooms,
Built·in kitchen, 2 full
basement. 3 car
garage . Sitting on 3.2 acres. Be one of the Best Ad·
dr~ssed People in Town! Pr'lced in the 80's!

ASSUMABLE LOAN ONLY • SJ,OOO down,
4):14% Int. rate. Payments S3S3 .71 including
taxes and ins. Modern 3 bedroom ranch , large
living room and kitchen and dining area . Only
2112 "years old. $33,700;

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE!- Lovely home
overlooking the river. 3 .bedrooms. living ro•m. ·
modern kitchen. full~ ba's emcnt: Nic~ familY roo.m
with wb fireplace-. ln·ground sw1mmtng pool all S1t·
tlng on an acre of ground I

ASSUMABLE LOAN- ONlY $2,500 DOWN
- 9% Int. rale, 27 yrs. Asking only S54,000.
Want peaceful seclusion? See this lovely 3 ·
bedroom brick home surrounded by 3 acres of
privacy, cozy living room with w.b. fireplace,
kitchen and breakfast tulr.

BMR 404 - LOW 30's - Citv schools, newly car·
peted and painted. This 3 BR home is a great buy on
today's market. .

BMR 389 - This fine 4 bedroom home is located in
the city school system . You will enjoy a la.rge lot
with a country atmosphere and have all thectfy con·
venlences. Call now!
BMR 400- BARGAIN - For only \8,500 you can
buy a two BR w/rural water and bath. City school
dlst.

BMR 403- NEARLY NEW! 1981 mobile home on
rented lot. $10,900 . Owner anxious to sell.
BMR 402F - CHECK ON THIS 0NE!37 acres with
14011b. tobacco base, 3.0x30 barn. Call for details!

BMR 139 - Two story hOme on Second Ave .. 3 or 4
bedrooms. REDUCED TO $22,500 . See this one now!

BMR 399 -

OWNER FINANCING- Two slory

home presently being used as duplex. could be
easily converted to single family. Choice location
near washington School. Call now!
BMR 398 - OWNER transferred and must sell this 3
BR ranch . Close to town incluOes deta~hed 26x26
garage plus 18x36 in ground pool. .•

On g -

country road. Will sell
one or all.

HOT WATER 'HEAT-

BMR 391 - 0/..tner wants it sold now! Mobile home
situated on river front lot. REDUCED T0$8,000.

You can't beat thiS one
for price or condition.
Also has 2 incomes, 3
bed'rooms, insulated,
c'edar closet,
nice

Ron Canadaj, ReaHor, 446·3636
1
Audrey Canaday, Realtor
t?EALlOR .• 25 Locust Sl, GaiUpolis, Ohio

:I· D :.

Real Estale-General
.
. ..

~ud·

area

CANADAY
REALTY

Small '2 bdr .. 104 4th Ave,

large family room with fireplace. Natural gas heat
avg. bill $32.00 month last year. Call now!

lAND CONTRA~T - :i
1·evel lots for house, dbl.
wide or trailer . E lectrlc,
and Leading Crk . water
available .

2 bedroom well Insulated
house near Rio Grande

BMR 388 - OWNER FINANCING - Three BR.

LAND CONTRACr -

-

MIDDLEPORT

LOCATED: Meadows Sate Yard ori U.S. Rt. 33 just
14 mile north of Carroll, Ohio, ts miles s. E. of Col·
umbus, and 9 miles N.W . of Lancaster.

4

Ranch

type 1 room house with
basement, 3 bedrooms,
t)ath , dining room, 1 car
garage .. Large lot.
Beautiful
condition .

FARM EQUIPMENT
SATURDAY, JANUARl 2, 1982
,10:30 A.M.

Smith

~-0069.

$49,900.00.

PUBLIC AUCTION

CASH PAID for clean, late

We pay cash for late model
cl.ean used cars.
.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene JOhnson,

1973 3 bedroom 1.4 x 70, un·'
derpinned. 675-4064.

H 614'1-992-3325

Public Sale

I

nlture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256·1967 in the evenings.

6652.

446,7572.

PhOne

675·1333

wanted to Buy

wanted to buy motor for

Homes fOr Sale

31

end sale~ price reduced,
used mobile homes . c;:ALL

VIRGil B. SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

992-2156

back
of&gt; Clifton.
on
collar.
773-5684.Name tag tr========&amp;=A=ucti=on=========,

1976 Honda Civic. Call 256·

Gallipolis,

TV service calls. Call 992·
2034. Also used color TV for
sale.

1n Mason County

LOST Female Beagle dog

Trading, Spring Valley
Pl~za, .ul,8025 nr .ul·8026.

0146,2851,

304-675·2236.

'Real~

STATELY- 2 story , 3

wedding rings, sliver coins
or anything stamped
sterling . Clarks J~welry
Store. Gallipolis .u6·2691 or
992-20541n Pomeroy1

Butcher's Shoppe custom
butchering &amp; processing .

M,&amp; M Electric. All electric
work guaranteed &amp; bo,,ded.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

M~GKEE

5397.

BUYING GOLD&amp; SilVER
paying cash for anything
stamped IOK, 14K. 18K and
dental gold. Class rings,

Wanted to Do

TRI , STATE MOililE
HOM~S . Gallipolis, Year

1972 1nvader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
xS60, 1 bedrooms . B v.. S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and VIand
Sts . . Pt. Pleasant, WV .
Phone 675-4.424.

32

In ,._.,eigs County

446-2342

1&amp;2 year old, in vlncinity of
Owl Hollow Rd. an~ San-

Bulck'Pontlac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call.ul·2282.

II

Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.

TO P,LACE AN AD CALL.

lQST Red Irlsh SeHer. 1

model used cars.

1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3
badrooms. 1972 crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
toxpandO, 3 bedrooms. 1973

Real Estate- General

In Gallla County

Rodney

Call collect 1·30H36, 1471.

Call
on.

DEPENDABLE baby sit·
ter to live In while mother

ENTERTAIN EASILY or hide out in your second
story ~rOOrf! with a good book . Exceptional toyer
has bndal sta.rcase ... powder room. Spacious liv·
in~ a!"d dining rooms. Kitchen has island range,
bU1It·m oven. breakfast nook with view of bricked
courtyard. Peaceful environment in the heart of the
city. Buy with $5,000 down payment, balance on
land contract at 12% for 20 years . Monthly payment

S•8• .•9. NEW LOW PRICE $,9,000.

VISUALLY EXCITING- A fireplace opening into
the living and dining rooms gu,arantees a cozy at·
mosphere. Family room with woodburner that
could make you look forward to winter. 4 bedroom s,
2 full baths. Basement with reams of storage. 2 ca r
attached garage. $92,000. Assumable mortgage.
I

GOOD TIMES - Country kitchen witt\ adjoining
fam ily ro,om is perfect for informal entertaining,
fam ily fun. Four large bedrooms including a master
suite with a walk-in closet and private bath . Family
bath. Formal dining . 2 car attached garage, 11'1~
acres. very private location near Rio Grande .

$79,500.

A VERY SPECIAL cozy home with lots of nice
touches. Fai"niiY room has fireplace with slate hear·
th, soft plush carpet, custom pla'nt window. Eal·in
kitchen with range and dishwasher . Full basement,
gas heat . Cent . air cond. City schools. Owner will
finance on land contract with $6,000 down payment.
20 yr. ter m at 12% interest rate. Monthly payment

$363 .36. 139,000.

COZY COI\1FORT- tor singles, youn_g married or
retired couple . 2 bedroom, dining room, ki tchen and
parlor . A little work and imagination can make this
home your "castle" . Deep lot goes to the water's
edge . In city . $16,000.

IN CITY - ZONED COMMERCIAL - 142,900 Large 2 story frame . Presently Used as rentaL 4
apartments. Could be nice family home or beiluly
shop, etc . Only 2 blocks from city parK .

carpeting, 2 lull balhs,
full basement. formal
dining and garage .. ASk·

lnu

$69,900.00.

welcomed.

Offer

Can move

right In:

.

wagon; 3 pl. blade. NR; Int . 8' PT disc; JD 290 PT 2·

row planter; JO PT. 2·14" plow on St~l; Set 18·4 x
34" T·rail duals; Gravely tractor. w/30" rotory
mower; Gravely rota tiller attach .

&amp;FULLER

1979 - JD 450-C Diesel Bulldozer w/rop cab 1 a way

blade (1400 nrs.); 197V Chev. 1 Ton Doolle 454
automatic; 1977 Ford F250~4 VB aulo. )ong bed; 61
Int. 18~ Loadstar va, 5 speed and 2 sp. axle wtfo•
dump bed; IJ7 Ford C850 Tandem axle automatic
air brakes w/16' graln beet and twin hoist; GMC 2.soO
Sierra Grande flat bed pickup VB auto; 76 Chev.
Monte Carlo VI auto.

SALE BY ORDER OF; THE COlUMBUS
PRODUCTION CREDIT ASSN. ·
AlSO lhe following equipment :. OWNER
· MEADOWS IMPL.EMENT: 1971 .. ton club cab
Ford, auto. pickup; IN Ford tractor w/manure

loeder; 3 pl. Ford 2-1~" plows; 3 pt. Int. 6' gr•der
blad•; AC dO PT combine; AC · Roto round baler;
Blackhawk How planter; J D190 2 row lllanler; roll
new woven wtre; tandem axle PTO manure

spreader; Oliver hune drawn mllnure spreader·
siWI wheel hay rake; large land roller; NH slckl~

· ...-r; tuel oil lank; Int. 2 rrM mounted ptcktr
snapper MH 20; lnl. IPR I row picker; chain
blndaro; top links; alunl.scoop sho.. l· other mise
EVERYTHING MUST SILL RI!G,UDLEISill .
TERMS: Cosh.-IIIIOCIChtck WIIIIINillilvoiO
LUNCH
'
SALE CONDUCTED 8'1': MEADOWS AUCTIO!f
s•ltVtCI, U.S. Itt. n, CII'I'OII, OH., 1"11. 614-Hr~

'

REALTY

~

OFFICE 446-7013
NIO::E TO CONII! HOM.E TO- Nice biick &amp; frame
ranch with 3 bedrooms. family room with fireplace.
beautlf~l carpctf, 2 car oaraoe.
·
1149S

NEED ~0 GIT AWAY FROM IT
ALL?- Enjoy the peoce and quiet
of this 3 bedroom ranch . Includes

R10 GRANDE - Atlr~ctlve home with~ bedrooms,
wile epproved klt~heir. dining room, living room

building. Cellar. Mid SJOs.

with fireplace, nat. 'gas, central air. 1 car garage.

'

15550

MAKE US AN OFFER - Frame home with nice
kitchen, basement and garage. In tqwn. owner wan·

. IUOid before winter. Price reduced.

·

Eveninp Call

. . QOOtt PIIIZE, DfU;WING AT I•OI·it.M.
•
Not ~~~~~ ftr ••ll••t• or ort~$~ 11ft otter
.., .................. "'""~- !ll!flid fC1r
NOT... T"CIItrl. TNCU IIIII ~ 1i11 et .,...;..
IMIIWI,hOIP,M. ·

Pllridl Slllilll, Allie.
. 367.0228
.

.

-~ ------

. '

IOIU

YOIIII PRIVATE FARM - 43 'acres; allractlve
WOOded country seHin~ lor this bl~ beaullful ~ Bit
COlonial home, only 3 yeersold, nlee vieW.
I OSII

.IIUCTIDNI!IE!tl:, 8111 - - . , Cllllrtta Et111

w• ...,.._.

1

lOOk I 14K70 mobile home, 3 1972 mobile home, fur,

RESPONSIBle woman lo
live In Wllh elderly lady, lri WILL CARE for elderly
Ravenswood. Call 304·273· ,
.4216after6p.m. orweek'en· ' man or woman in our
home. S900. per month.
ds.
C~l1446,8163.

949-Racine

576-Ap~le

A~reage

bedroom,

9pm. Apply to Jackie Car·
Bl LE
IN ·
sey, 380 E. 2nd St.,
been can·
.,omeroy, OH on Mon . Dec
Lost
your
28 9am·lla.m and 6pm·8pm.
E.O.E. M· F.
~~~~~:~···s License? Phone

773-Mason
882-New Ha ve.n
.895-Letart
937-BuffiiiO

small lype beegle dog.

TRAPPER We hilveacom·
plete line of trapping sup- Buying
Gold,
Silver,
plies. Traps, dye, wax, and P.atlnum, old coins, scrap
lures.
Spring
Valley ·rings &amp; silverware. Daily
Trading Co., Spring Valley quotes available. Also
Plaza. 446·8025.
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale.
Spring
VaHey

the

Olan Mills has several Im mediate · openings for
t~lephone
appointment
clerks. No experience nee·
cessary. We train . May
work 9am·lpm or 5pli'l-

Mason Co., W.Va.
Area Code 304
16ZS-Pt. Pleasant

' --=
Lc:oos:::lc:•::cnc=d,
.F_,o"'u"'nd,__
Lost : strayed or stolen,

Moder., 2 bdr . furnished,
12x70 trailer. Convenient
location, sec . dep. &amp; ref.
required. utilities paid ex·
cept electric . Call 446·8558
after S.

'192·60«1,

Olan Mills needs people'""

Meigs Co. Area COde

458-Leon

Ohio

furnished,

Memorial Pharmacy. '192·
6297. E.O.E.

Pomeroy

245-Rio Grande
2'56-Guyan Dill.
643-Arabia Dist.

Lots &amp;

Tree trimming &amp; removal .
Free estimates. 949·2129,

accept

nurse team, experience not
necessary. Call Veteran

CHIWCOTHE- Jay A. Arlectge,
36, of Londonderry, in a two-ear accident Oil u.s, 50 In Ral8 County.
.

Gallta co. Area Code

.ul·3741 or 256·1903.

RN's lmmecl1ate • opening
day shift part·tlme 1. v.

fnilfiWiRI( telephone exrhHII/(f'll •••

576,2169.

Announcements

supplies.

Situations Wantect

a 51111·

111

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

(;IHIINi/it&gt;d INII(eB .Niver the

WANT TO BUY Old lur·
In loving memory of
Lester D. Roush who
pilssed away 3 yeilrs ago
today, December 27,
1978. Loved and missed
by wife, daughters and
f01milies.·

CONTRACTOR shall make Gallipolis, Ohio.
~verv effort to ensure that
certillca,te
minority
PERMANENT HAIR
business subcontractors REMOVAL
al'ld materiEmen par· Profesolonol E lectrolliSI$
contract.
llclpale In
of IIUb· center. A.M.A. a n ·
The total va
apcontrac:ll awarded to and · Doctor referalo,
-67J.
materials •nd oervlcesi&gt;Ur· poinlm11111 ontv.
chased from mlnatity 623.1. ··.
'
bull,.._ sllall be at Ml
forth In the~cifications.

Phone 992·5106.

9

Stale.
'
As rrovlded in Section
123.15 of tne onto ReviSed Rock In your New Year
Code and Administrative with Tranzit. New YNr's
Rule 123:2·15·02 of tne Eve. Friday lo Saturday at
Oepartmctnt
of
Ad·
mlnistratlve Services, the!'

some great gifts

will

bclr .. wall 10 wall carpel,
Mobile Homes
42
nat. oas heat. c::entral •lr.
for Rent
Call .ul·lol09 beiWeen 3 to
2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile 6pm .
nomes. Caii '44H17S.
House trailer adults only,
no pets1 322 3rd. Ave . Call

216-3752

GET VALUABLE 1ralnlng

Rodney

Beautifully

Estates, Inc.
Jo~ckson,

2 bedroom mobile homo ot

children &amp; pel$. 5 miles
from hOSpital. Call .ul·
Mabile homes for rent In 0157.
Gallipolis and pt. Plenant
areas. Call.ul-~2 and 675· MOBILE HOME with ex·
JOOD. K &amp; K Mobile Homes. pando. larve lR. 16 x 19.

(Jim EIIIOIII)
Rt. ~3 North

21, of New Riegel, In a three-car accident on aSeneca County road. ·

~=:::;;;;;;,;;;;;;:=:' dhill Rd. Reward offered,
'i___l 7n ~M~•~m~o~r=i•=m~·_
famil'( pet. Pearl Cole, 615·

--·---'------

'

'2 Border Collie puppies.

949·2097. .

992-2181. Pomeroy, &lt;)h .

.

-

Marie and KimberlY Blr·

offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiSer.

2 bedroom house with stove
• -refrigerator. One and a
hill m1111 from Pl.
Plea11nt on Rt. 2. 675·3914.

0

•

2 bclr. unfurnished on Rt .

35. Ret. &amp; ctep. required .

Call446·ol229.

•

Ca Ill m mediately

~

.does not offer or attempt to

We want to thank the
RUtland
Volunteer
Firemen. also our friends
and neighbors in their help
controlling the fire of our
·house, ana the cleanup.
Thanks Again, . Howara,

''Also, most of tbe previous studies ,
were based largely on im·
presslonistic observations and in·
volved selected populations," he
said.
Williains said his interest in the,
impact of a retarded child on the
farruly came from counseling work
he did with parents of retarded
children. Many Of the people he
worked with were divorced,
separated or considering one of the

4
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and

Card of Thonks

1

'

Mentally ill lose out

CLEVELAND (AP) - Lack of
funding has forced a non-profit
rehabilitation agency to "ter;: minate" 30 of the former mental
"' patients In the workshop, and it must
.~ soon let another 16 return to lives
limited to their living rooms.
The 30 people, each hospitalized
an average_of five times for chronic

::

tilage in his right knee and splin·
tered bones in his ankle.
He said that at the time of the accident he thought he could land
safely even though he was falling
and spinning at about 50 mph.
·
Turpin was jwnping from about
2,700 feet. It was his second jwnp of
the morning and S2nd jwnp since be
began parachuting three months
earlier.
'When he cleared the plane, he
said, he opened his main canopy. As
the ·chute unfolded , Turpin noticed
that only six of the square
parachute's seven cells had o(lened.
The end cell was collapsed, causing
Turpin to 'Spin as he fell. ·

'"

closer together."
Most previous studies indicated
that a retarded child was a negative
factor in a marriage.
Williams and McKenry believe
that the lack of a controlled study
could explain the conflict in resear·
ch results:
"It is .l!ard to find a controlled
study of this kind," Williams said,
noting that a control group made the
difference in their findings.

Parachutist will ju~p again
~ despite recent accident

'

.. '. ...............
.... . ...
-·····

91H2".

'9,295

\

Classifieds ~unb~~~mts-ienihm

Retarded children
may help marriages

Unturnllhed nrv nice 2

NOTICE·

as a young business person
and earn good money plus

HOVItlftrRIIII- -

-aom house. St. AI. 2&lt;18.

NIW 1911 14' Wide

Six die on Ohio highways

company.

41

lorSIIt

o••--·

earner

•'

Tne

Moltllt-

Gold,

just bombarding ua"·with dOIIatlons, prepared die meal, which included
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - The
invltaliOII waa largely by 1f0l'd.clf· Ms. Caull uld. "Tbis Is really gQing 2,000 pounds of turltey, 1,300 pounds
mouth, but It wu eiiOU8h to draw , to be the greatest ooe we've had. I of drealug, 20 cues -of green beans,
more than 5,500 people to the llllllual just wiah Red coald !lave seen Ibis. 15 C8lel of mubed potatoes, IeVen
It's gotten a lot bigger than Red ever Cll8e8 of canned ham and 25 gell~n~
Red~ t'lu¥tmu dinner,
anticipated.,,
of giblet gravy.
.
And delpite worr1e1
this
AprOII-CO'Ief@d
VOlunteers,
IIJIIOI1g
Alocal radio ataUon donated hams
week, there waa plenty of food.
diem
Mayor
Patience
LattbJ&amp;
and
Each chUd also received a Christ- for the dlnlter and a local florist
her
famlly,
walled
111110111
the
diners
donated 411 polnaettlu for the tables.
. mas toy and a sack of candy.
Chefs in the Oklahoma and offered soft drinlrl, coffee and
Although many who attend can't
affQrd a comparable dinner Professional Culinary Society water.
elsewhere, need is not a
requirement. Those who aUend the
dinner should just enjoy the food and

'

Pleasant, w. va.

Oh~Polnt

DRt . . . . ltllllrr, 446-25t9
.lalla Ftllr, . . . 441 4327

mast of furniture. 1 acre. Plus 2
bedroom mobile home. Storage

1160

iNTEREST RATES HIGH I -LOOk at
this. 2 prJme acrftS set up for mObile

home. IIQ.OOD. owner will finance wlln
~1ooli down, 12'i. A:P:R. lor 10 years.
., 1.74 per month. Rtllnei\Ce In three
years.
• 1904
MOTIVATED SEllE~ . ANXOUS 1o

move out of state . OWner·respon,lvel to
special finl'n(Jng . Over 41 .,,..., 2

•lory, 3 bedroom nome. 16 tillable

ttcros. 1800 lb. tobacco base. Larg,
llll&gt;occo ~arn. S4D.OOO .
w116

LOOKING TIME IS OVER- Buy·

vou

lng time 1$..1ler.e.tAs.soon as
see
this sharp 3 bedroom home . Equipped kitchen, fami IV room, woodburner, well insulated. Rural water .
Flat lawn . Low$40&amp;.
~INl

CHESHIRE - KYGER AREA - 2
bedrooms~

·living room, kitchen and

bath. vood condition. Appro.. 20

yrs. old. Hardwood floors, rural
water, fuel oil furnace, natural gas
Is available. G~d area, priced
reasonable.
1111

HASTE! (No time to Wasto! - Come
see this ranch with 3 bedrooms, nice
srre dinlng ·kltchen combined, bath and
1 car garl!ge. Malntenanc• free siding
and all of this in the $30's I A real value
lor YOU !
1179

READY
FOR
YOU
is lhis
2 bedroom .ranch pn approx . •;, acre.
Plenty o'f kitchen cabinets. Built ·in
range and oven, di shwasher , disposal.
Carport. Concrete drive . Storage
building. Priced in the S40' s Roush
~ 906
MOVE IN TOMORROW ·when you can Lane. .
have Immediate possession of this 3 VIEW OF; THE RI Vf R - .Two
bedroom cloUblewide. ,Complete kit· · three ~carooms, tam lly room
· c:hen. Woodburner. permanent faun· sliding dOOrs, garage. natural
tots. All this overlooking the
dotlon . Large lot, $24.500.
~ 899
River. Newly paint~d . VerY clean .
TAl&lt; E ONE LOOK and you Will be sold
011 this 3 year old ranch 3 bedrooms. l'h
baths, basement. Vinyl siding. Over 24
acres partially woOded. Give a Call
today to see this one.
i/881

VACANT AND VERY SECLUDED.'
Older 2 story hOme. g~ condition. ·
3'12 acres and prlcecl In the $20s.
Home nesfamiiY room, living room,
dining room, kitchen, ~ bedrooms, I
bath and utility room. Located on
Route ~33.
#115

tOday . LOW $3D's. ·
0912
MAKE HASTE - This 3 bedr001n
home could be yours. LR, FA balh
kitchen, front porch, garage; work
shop. Over 3 ac~es setting, shade
trees, well established. Exceptional
ex,tra lots. All Within 3 miles of

Gallipolis.

lilt

�--·--~

----

••

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

2nd. floor
flency apt.
GallipOlis.
Adults only,

..

·--- -

furnished et·
729 2nd. Ave.,
Call "*0'157.
no pets.

Apartments for rent. 614·
992-5'101.

I

$85,

mate,

bath.

3 bedroom apt. In Mid·
dlepOrt. $150. month. 992·
5692.
In M iddlepOrt. 2 room efficiency _apt. Call 304-8822566.

Small furnished house,
adults only. Call ~ - 0338.

Apartments. 615·55.48.

3 rooms with private bath.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses.
Pt.
Pleasant and GallipOlis.
614- ~·8221 or 614·245-944.

845 Se&lt;:ond Ave. Phone 446·
2215.

Furnished Apt. 1st floor,
Utilities furnished . Ref.
· required. No pels. Adults
Efficiency roorhs by the preferred. Call at 631 4th
week on Main Street, Ave.
Mason, wv. 773 ·5651 .
45
Fumish~ROoms
Twin single, large rooms ~LEEPING ROOMS and
and Yard. Pt. Pleasant. light housekeeping apt.,
Deposit and references. I · Park Central Hotel .
614-263-8322 or 1-614·263·
2669 .
Weekly rates available $60
and up in Circles Motel.
For rent 3 room turn. apt., Call,.....2501.
adults only. no pets. Call
675-2453.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

•

I

I

CHARMING
GOOD TASTE AND
TRI·LEVEL
GOOD BUY
180050. FT.
(Crouse-Beck Area)
PLUS REDUCED
Beautiful 3 to 4
Large living room with
bedrooms. two and onefireplace, dining room
half baths, 2 car garage,
with sliding doors to
extra large klkhen
concrete patio, modern
leading to a sundeck,
eat·in kitc hen, large
family room with fire·
recreation room on first
place, extra lot, plus ·
level. Utility room , 3
more. Superb condition
bedrooms with plenty of
and in city schools.
closet space, 211:2 baths,
listed in the mid·
air conditioned. storm
seventies.
NS14
doors and w1ncfows. 2
car finished garage.
level lot 100'x300' , lots
more. Call for info. # 46S
39 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tillable pastureland, some timber, plenty of spring
water. 112 mile frontage on Prospect Chuf'ch Road.
Phone for full details.
BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES S47,000
3 bedroor:n s~.l 1/2 ba th hOme with lots of extra nice
features. built·in cabinets. self-c leaning range,
clishY•asher, garbage disposal and large dining
·
room . Kvger Creek Schools.
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME
Located in city of Gallipolis, close to supermarkets
and business section. 3 or A bedrooms. modern kit·
chen with lots of cabinets, dishwasher , garbage
disposaL electric table top range. Formal dining
room, family , recreation room . Just lots of room .
Central air, natural gas F .A. furnace , ce ntral P.A.
system, fireplace, planter in home. Young apple
and peach trees, flowers and shrubs and a ,lot more.
MUST SEE THIS CITY HOME .
N 391
C-0-U·N·T·R-Y
R'emodeled .4·5 be'd room home with fireplace
located on 53 acres of tillable and pasture land,
pond, barn, large meta! building, tobacco base. All
this for the low. low pnce of SA2,900. Call for more
details.
N479
6 ACRES, 7 ROOM HOME- BARN
3 or 4 bedrooms, tobacco base, electric range, bu ilt·
in woodburner, fue l oil F .A. furnace, lots of fruit
trees. grape harbor, strawberry patch, 3 ' acres
ti llable, assumable loan . ~hone for more details.
1503
3 BEDRODMS - 3ACRES M . OR L.
Mobile home 14'x70' 1976 Freedom, Ph baths, un·
derpinning, lots of bullt·-ln cabinets, range 1
refrigerator, dinette set . Air conditioner and other
furniture . Rural water, nice land for garden . All this
1425
for only $22,500.
ATTRACTIVE ALL BRICK HOME!!
Eniov the beautiful Ohio Rive'r from this spacious.
cheerful house, 3 bedrooms, 11h baths, .large living
room, eat· in kitchen. 2 fireplace5. full basement, '1.
porches, plus many extras. Phone today for details.
#
sos
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
•
L.ooking for that perfect home? L.ook no more. Four
bedrooms, ~ 112 baths. 23'x18' livinv room, 20'xu•
family room, extra nice country kitchen with all the
latest conveniences. Gracious living with Approx.
3450 sq . ft . living space plus a beautiful pool on 3.2
acres of wooded land. Much more, call tor your ap·
pointment . #
504
IN CROWN 'CITY
Nice 4 room frame house with a bath. Eat· in kltcheri
wlln metal cabinets and double sink. Fuel oil
heating stove. Loc.,ted on nice city lot near church
and grocery. Priced to sell II
1511
KYGER CREEK SCHOOL DISTRI-CT
Modern 3 BR ranch home approx . 41h yrs. old. Ther·
mrpane windows, storm doors, FA furnace, with
central air, kitchen has built· in cabinets, stainless
steel dbl. sink and dining Jrea. Full basement with
patioctoors. Rural water system, garage. Call now.
#379
BUY THIS HOME
FROM OWNER WITH $2,500 DOWN
And low Interest rate on balance with owner, 2
bedroom cottage within 5 minutes of Silver' Bridge
Shopping Plaza.
1260

LIKI! NEW BRI~K HOME -_KIN~_!l!l,~~·
3

bedrooms, · ga'rage. Immediate
furnace, central air. All
This Is one well built brick
see the qulally in this home. Call for
ISIS

DRtVI! A LITTI, lA VI! A LOT
3 BR, full blo-t, Whitt elumlnum Sldlng; fuel oil
F.A. turnec:e, :ID'x.40' blorna, hilllllod I'GOI, lots of
young pe.,;h end epple trMI. All lhla reduced to onlY $14,900.
I 4ft
y

Lump Coal 132 per ton.
ZlnnCoal Co-, Inc. Clll"*
1408 be-n 9 1nd 5.

IQJ

'KlOOS

all."
West

lOW'--.. . . . .

IAKU
EAST

II lUI II
'P72

•u
IHI

•u

lito ..,. of

Alborl'l

lloued wlllo the .... ID lplte

~~~11111111~..,

+108842

•Q•oa

.... obv1oul to Albert 1111t
West W&amp;Died • dt•mMd ruff
aad 1111t If bold lite
hMrt ace Ilion -ld bo no
waylq-'IL
No 1._......... play wu
av.U.ble, bat Albeit found
that bait ....... plly.
He oubod dllmnw's ace
aad klQI of clu.. aaol'nlffed
a club. Now bo led a trump.
East tool! bll ace aad pve
bb pan-11111- diamood nlff, bul tile bait ....

SOUTH
I AI&lt;
'PQHIS
.Q ..

SM111
l'P
o~•

+A

O~nlnglead :

os-N

dlamoaoll .,.._

182

Ill
VuJner•bJe: Neither
Dealer: North
Wesl Nortll tbt
11
P111
Pass S"
Pass
Pass Pw Pass

illalnletlve

llbolteriUooo..,.playal

•xJ7

WEST

moot

Derek
RlmiDitOD
deacrlbaa It wl" the
..........~. "lloJI ....... play

lJ.IWI

play bad deftloped.

.

spades, two bearta. two diamond! and lhree clubs so be
- .... left with ~ but
spades aad bad 1o lead away

By Oswald JacM)'
aad A1U Soala&amp;

from b.il kUla.

Albert Dormer is besl
known u a writer, but iD
1952 when he was just a

bridge player, be

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. ot·
toman, 3 tables;$500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and cha irs priced
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·•·
beds,$340., queen size. $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65. S
pc. d lfettes from $79 ., to
S38i. 7 pc., 5189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
S219 up to 5495. Desk 1110.
Hutches. $300. and S37S.,
maple or p ine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassefl Cherry,
S795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
S275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, S195. S dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. thesis, $42. Sed
lrames, $20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, S350., dinet·
te chairs $20. and S25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
thopedic super firm. $95,
baby matressei, $25 &amp; $35,
bedframes$20$25, &amp;$30.
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living rocm suite.
wood table&amp; 4 chairs.
Used ,
Ranges.
refrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri ., 9am to Spm, Sat.
~- 0322

USED Tappan Gallery
range, 30 ln. with warming
tray. Call 446-1171.

1.1% dlacaunt on wood &amp;
coal stovn whUe supply
last. Galllpotla Block Co..
123112 Pine St.. -2783.

· Note thall!:ut eould bave
led a spade 1o opoil tbe ead
play, bill ID thai CIR there
would be .., diamond ""'·
!NEWSPAPDI Dr'I'II:RPIUII: ASH.)

Household Goods

GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges.
Skaggs Ap·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave .. 446·7398 .-

... ._Itt an..................
MCICIIraAIMIN... ....,.IIwt.

C~---·AMif-lftiDt ,

NEW PHONE NO..

992-6259

Jill~~ . ·
HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
OP.TION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
AND THREE BEDROO.JY' STARTING AT $200
PER MONTH.
.
BEST BUY IN TOWN - Stylish 2 s tory
home was built in 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate . Large ope n foyer and
stairway, LR, din ing rm .• par lor, com·
pletely equipped modern kitchen, 4
BRs, 2112 baths, new siding. garage,
near schools. shopping, etc . Cal l Ran ny
Bla ck burn for an appointment.

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME- 5
vr. old spl it· level features 4 ors BRs, 3
baths. 30ft. LR, 2 family rms., 2 wood·
burning fire places, large kitcnen and
dining area, 2 car garage, one of the
couhty's ni cest pools {20X50) and a truly
professional landscaped tor . Located on
Debby Drive .. Owner savs sell ... so call
LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN· Ranny blackburn for a personal
CHER plus 78 ACRES Of land in .showing , You'll be pleased you did.
Cheshire Township offers lots of good
living for your growing family . Home is LOT FOR SALE - Guyan Twp., Rocky
just like new with 1438 sq. ft . of living Fork Rd .• well, septic tank, Ideal for
area plus an attached garage. 2 mobile home. Asking Sl,SOO.
spacious BR 's, 2 baths, Bx27 LR, 10x24
kitchen with refrig .. disp., OW, double . PRICE REDUCED TO 137,9001 Nice 3
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; dryer stays•·i n BR tow maintenance home is less than 3
laundry. Land is mostly rolling pasture vrs. old and features large L.R, dining
land with approK, 25 acres wooded . Call rm., kitchen, bath, part basement,
utility building and almost 2 acres near
for appointment.
Route 218. Cltv schools.
GREEN fOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY
LOCATED- 112 acre farm has fron· START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
fage on State Route 588, Fairfield acre pas lure form, mostly roliii1Q &amp; hll·
ly grassland with approx. 10 A. WOOded,
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd
Excellent for farming or development' lots of springs. l'h story home has 4
Older 5 rm . &amp; bath farm home, barn &amp; rms : &amp; bath, large barn, tobacco base,
~Jio Included. Owners will consider sell· ' "onts on3 roads In Walnut Township.
!ng smaller tracts of short term financ ·
. OWNER FINANCING A'o AILABLEmg . Call for more information.
Remodeled home inclutles S rms. &amp;
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef, hay 8. bath, carport, stove, refrlg,, dish·
grain farm . 80 acres, m/1, approx . 35 A. washer. mobile home pad, almost ' 6
good cropland. 10 A. woods, balance acres on .588 2 mi. from town. $30,000.
pasture, good fences. 9 rm./bath. home
was bUilt in 1872 &amp; has beenj partially NEAR CADMUS - Forty ~eros, . OP·
reinod•ted. SOXSO cattle barn with con· prox. 'h tillable and '12 Woods, old 2
crete floor, tatge silo with auto. story farm home in need of ·repairs,
unloa&lt;:ler, seve,at sheds, large pond, barn. sheds. fronts on 141. Owner finansprings, standing crops go to new cing available at 1Mb.
pwner.
FARMER'S' FARM - One of Guyon
176 Township's finest. 106 acre m/1, aJ)HUNTINGTON TOWNSHiP acres m/1 vacant land, fronts on Rae· DrOK . 45 A. fertile bonom land
coon Creek &amp; the Tom Glen Rd Approx balance pasture &amp; WOOds. Nice moderri
31 tillable &amp; the balance wooded. Unde~ kit. &amp; family_ rm. l~x18 LR, attached
$400 per acre.
garage, main barn Is S6)c1Q.4, also In·
eluded is 20K2A steel garage, workshop
COUNTRY, YET CONVENIENT &amp; several sheds. Owner is retiflng &amp;
Great family home wllh 3 BR, 2 baths
will help finance .
15l&lt;27 LR with gas fireplace, larg~
modern kitchen with range, self· BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE
cleaning oven, OW and dlsp., laundry - Approx. 51':1 acres located on '"rm . with washer and dryer, part base· Graham School Rd., co. water, over 3110
men1, large covered patio, garage and fl. rd. front-. Green Grede School •
over 6 acres of land at the edge of town.
Galila Acodemy Hl~h School. 110,1100.
MAKE US AN OFFER!II Ownershalie
- n transferred &amp; Will sell on a LAND 1971 FINANCING AVAILABLE -, :IQ%
C:O'NlRACT with a reasonable down down, 10% Intern!, 3 BR, INtth, LR,
payment. Lovely 3 BR ranch Is located flmlly rm, Witl1 Chimney lor woaQ bur·
next to Cloy School &amp; Is In excellent con· ner, kilc"-n. leundry, lerge baCk pOrch,
dillon. Cell Rany Blackburn for en ap· na.tUrel 011 liNt &amp; • 1o111• 1111 lot
lotalld on Bolavllll Rd.
•
·
_pontment.

fotm . . .....,.. -

HANDCRAFTED

.-~

aas

SALE$. Itt.&amp;saSERVICE
Eafl
~ . s.

GIIY••nte, otrio '
N"' Hollen&amp; lush Hot

Farm Equlpm•nt

Dell•r

\

We will be closed at
12:00 Noon on Dec. 241h
thruMon .,j)oc.211h.
Wt Wl$h YOU a Very •
Merry Chrlslmas agd A
Happy New Year.

F

513 2ND AvE. - Very attractive and
spacious 2112 storv 4 or 5 bedroom home
In town. Has 2 fireplaces, family room
den, formal dining, 2112 baths, fuli
basement, nat. gas, cent. air, etc. excellent construction and care. could
~asily be adaptable to profetislonal of·
fices. Call for information;

163.000.

lng

All mo._

BUILDINGS

Utilltr Buildinp
"l

' ....,
~·· ',

SKATE-AWAY
DpeftWed., Fri. &amp; Sit.
. 7:30 TllllO :DO
.Sunday a:DOto4 :30
New Year's Eve
7:30tol : OO
Private Parties
Available

985CJ929
or985-9996

·PH.

·

PLEASANT VALLEY

12·16·1 mo.

ESTATES

ACRES - Owner will finance at
reasonable rates to qualified
Excellent land for hunting, hor·
a few cattle. Mostly woodland.
2 stotv t!_ome in livable con·
ES NEW LISTING ~•• ~'"';;,;; old lime 2 story home
..c ~ m lies from town in Green
Dlsl. House has 3 bedrooms,
room, glass enclosed
scenl~;_location wifh
of shade trees. 1 mile off Rt. 7. Low

-Addonsond
ramodaHnO

_ Roofing onG gutt•r
work

54

Misc. Mtrcha!KII._

NEW buildings at factory.
All parts eccounted for. All

_ Concret WQrk
Jlumbing and
tlectrial work
(Fr" Esllmatea}
P~,0hlo

Finest Quality
Excellent Service
Fish· Game He1d •
life Size Mounts· Plus
Hide Tanning

PUWNS
EXr.AVAnNG
eDozerl
• B•c kh011
•eLo
Dump
BoyTrucks
e Trencher
.ewater esewor
eGas Lines
• Septic Systems
LargoorSmaiiJobs
PH.H2-2471
12·20·1 mo. pd.

:Jrlck home ha$ been given . lm·
'Tlaculate Inside and out. Plush C!ilrpet,
lovely fireplace. 3 bedrooms, dining
room, equipped kitchen, nat. gas, cent.
air. 2 cargaraoeand corner lot. 559.900.

J&amp;F

TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS STUDIO

CONTRACTING

2G21t2 E. Main St.
Ph. 992-6720
Just In Time for
ChristJnU: Membership Gl.f l CerHflcates.
Rates
per
visit
available.
Come In &amp; see what we
have to otter.
"Get In Shape for the
Holidays."
12·11-1 mo.

eBeckhoo
el!xcavatlng
• $epllc Systems
eWator, Sower&amp;
GasLin,s
eDumpTruck

WHAT YOU WANT, AND WHAT YO~
CAN AFFORD- are 2 different thlorgs,
UNTIL NOWI The house and locallon
are ideal. OWners hate to sell but have
to. Need the money lo buy home out of
state. Witt sell at a very reasonable
price &lt;auume low interest mto'.).
House In move· in condition and . has
everything that really matters. 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. family room.
fireplace, 2 car garage, patio. over 1700
sq. ft. Much mor-e. Only $61,000.
.

Licensed &amp; Bonded

f

MOVE IN CONDITION- OWnen
are gone and anxious to sell this
older but well kept 2 story brick on
Rt. 5111. 3 bedroom, 1'12 both, family
room, woodbumlng fumac:e, full
basement and llh acreJard . $51,000.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

TAXIDIRMY

Custom kitchens ~nd ~P"
pliances. · custom·
bathrDDms. remodeling,
plumbin. eltclric, 1nd
heating.

~-

•
Gajne

e

M~untl,

.'
I

N..,eltles, Custom Tannl ... Fast Deliver.,.
•, 614'-915·:1133
'
ortiS-3364
·~
11·25-lmo.~ ...

&amp;Aluminum

'

~ '
~•..mul, Cullom

'
•

..,
''
I

I

1

Stomp Shop.
ususaiiV one or two days
service. Dlsm~ke's , 405
2nd. Ave ., Gallipolis, 446·
0474 ·
~-TUBULAR fireplace grate
with fan blower. Call ~0562 .

· luUIINraln"
5!.(_~~ lrM 1fdln1

;;;;;ra•

Nt•HOl

or

; .iHUuftllay Calla
3·11-lfc

Firewood $35 truck load,
$55 a cord . 843·2933 or 843·
431.

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds~ clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. DOber·
mans. Call ~- 7795 .
KENNELS
grooming.
'AKC Gordon setters,
EngliSh Cocker Spanl•ls.
Coll388-9790.
AKC Reg. BOxer puppies, 8
wks old, $125 . Call &lt;1-46·3870.
AiREDALES,
AKC
r~lstered, shots. wormed,
vitamin f&amp;d, ready to go.
Eight weeks old.
Proc·
torville;61H86·8540.
AKC registered Shetland
Sheepdogs (ShellieJ), 9
w~s old, 2 rnales. Call
~-2152 after 5pm .

Racine, Oh•
PH. 9•9-2202
12· 15-1 mo.

pickup .
Reasonable .
Mason, Hartford, New
Haven area. call 3G4·882·

'
Golden

AKC Registered DOberman
pups. 3 females red and
rust, will deliver Christmas
Eve.l100. m -7888.
Fish Tank and· Pel Shof
2413 Jackson Ave., ~ .
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon. ,
Thurs.,/ Fri. 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed., I Sat. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.

-POMEROY
614-992-2181

63

·For
Farm
and
Home Delivery ol
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT.

CHEROKEE, four3.5000 miles,
,a luminum wheels, &amp;II lin·
ted glass, radio, · bucket
seats, excellent condition,
$6000. Phone 304-675·1932.
Auto Part~

76

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker -service , buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446·7717 .
Aula Repair

17

Quality AuiObodY &amp; Paint
work. Insurance work
welcome. sunroofs In ·
stalled from $200·$230. Auto
Trim center, 446~ 1968 .

Llvntock

Reoistered Quarter Horse
filly,
Registered Ap·
paloosa, 4 yrs. old and I700d
·blood line. Call 256-6413, 12
p .m . to 9 p.m.
·
TWO Polled Hereford cows
brad to a 7/8 Slmmental
bull . Double B Farm, 367·

m1.

-~~- --··,.......__.~

SEASONED oak fireWOOd,
call 304-675-2757 alter 4
p.m.
' 7~1_ _JA~U!!Io!!..lor!!!__!!5a!!la!__
1976 Malibu, 4' dr.. p.s..
.llghiH large edverlising p.b., a.c .. 350 2 bbl, MW
algn wllh alldlng· leflers on tlrn and pelnt, 61,000 m!.
stoOd . ...._ Phone 576·2602. $1900. ~- 2888 enytlme.

•

72 Ponllac excellent cond.
Con be seen at 107
Chillicothe Rd., GallipOlis.

W'-LKING. loUIIIIl, exer- 196f Plymouth wagon. 311
SNrw, · newf $75. auto. 985--1346.
. , . _ :IIW-576-2196 •.

clter,

-

i:
136 French
article

19 Place
belore

Argce

7-4 Declare
76 EValuate
77 Femala ruff

137 Skid

7 Amau,ts

78 Conjunction

139 Soil

20 Harvested .
27 Paddock

owed
12 MDfoccan

78 Stripe
81 Man's name
82 Dopotlls

141 Tellur6um
symbol
142 Selrtet
143 Greek leltat
145 FountaJn
treats
147 ·Oiivter's tlllu

ACROSS
1

capital
17 Wlngljke
21 Salem's

state
22 Lifeless
23 By
oneself
24 Meralrube
25 IN's nei gh~
bor .
26 Kind of
cheese
28 Leading
play.,-a
30 Sharp, local
pain

Home
1mprovements

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com·
mer"'lal and r-esidential ,
frel estimates. Call 256·
1182.

32 Dad
33 Curved

IaUer
35 Healing sign

37 Mideast
noble
39 Pintail duck
40 Cover

-41 Part ot a qt.
43 Pine, for

one
-45 Set lhe
speed

47Near

PAl NTI NG · Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call 388-9652.
City
Painting
Residential~
commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and texured
ceilings. Ph. 367-7784or 367·
7160.
Call .u6·2101 for termite,
roach. bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estlmates,sBIII Thom~s.

ssyeuow
ocher

87 Pounding

Instrument

149-NaNa
· 152 Call L-a

day

program
159 Teutonic

46 SaJid hill
48 Bread or

dale
95 Ceremony
96 Slmlllar

dotty

97 Fused
99 Ship
channel
100 Toward

160 Equal

shelter
101 Scolds

166 Empower

162Groupot

tlweo

-

1&amp;4 W.Ord
168Time

102 Army meal
103 Vessel
105 Punctuation

mark
107 Senor's
l&amp;ntju&amp;ge:
Abbr.
109 eom~ner
110 Time t~one

t69 Vapid

t70 Goller
Slmamln'
Sam

17t.,.,._

OOWN

84"And~-

bllld"

· ee cao~&lt; ·

-

87 Anger
88M"*al

MD

71P~

72' Palnlul

120 HebreW
letter
121 Leg part

122Male123 Scentol
ftnt miracle
1li4Approacll
126 Expel from a
coon1ry
128 Bogin
130 Relund
132 Slrlko
134Cuoloma
135C..Ior

GENES
CA.RPET
Cleaning. Special rates for ·
Nov. and Dec:. only. Clllll
now anc;t save. 614·H2·6309 .
RON'S Television service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house callS. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

W•ter wells . Commercial
end Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps $Ilea and Service.

304-195'31102.
CARPE .NTRV
&amp;
etectrkal and
plumbing. 304-576-2989 or
576-2587.
.

•-ling,

LOCKSMITH
Service .
RHICitnlltl, automotive.
EmerttentY service. -Call

882·2079•

•

bor

53 Burden
55SIIw!r

symbol
56 Learning
sa Twtttera. for
one
60 Grafted, In
Heraldry
62Witly
remarks

Bights
90 Mr. Claus
91 Unedorned
93 Parting
95S-ad
97 Direction
98 Spaniel

102 Spar

1G4 Gull..flke
111rd
106 Corded

clolh
t07SI108 Trouser&amp;
110 Separate
111 watarwaya
112 ExplrM
114 Coastlines
118 Fat
117 Hllsllgltny
tt9

liat.--

121 Blemish
122 Workman
123 Cerium
symbol
125 Shore bird
· 127 Printer's

.........

128 Band of
color
t29 Seesaw
130 Sharp rely

68 ltallon

140 Attempts

5Bulhy
Clumps
61Mkelmo

70Shadool

t43 Suppollng
that
144Solo

7 Chartle's
prl......

75mount!Un

8 USNAgrad.
90-lolter
tO Hobo

76Told
J7SangOI)d
d..... eel

117 Container of

118 TeaM: Sl.

tHie
50 Regions
51 NA's neigh-

89 Fatmland

68 Doteol

58 ~an eallly

• type

muffin
49 otd Turtdsh

middle

131 Whirlpools
133 Urge on
136 AttiCs
138 Conaumed

1 Cupola

by

115 Arllde ' '
116 Final .

61 Jewelry Item
62 Addltlonal

1om

36Chlme
38 Withdraw

155 Sallpetar
157 Food

patron salnl
54 Reciprocal

combat
Boundorv

god-.
MButter or

92 Evils
94 Poet Teas.

52 Sailor's

~9

31 Earth

&lt;tO Record, in a
way
42 Camp Blg~1
44 Send forth

3Eml

57Piecafor

' bOnds

153 At1emDt

113 Cozy rooms
11~ Roaort

rind

dweller

29 Stoeka and

~Lances

89 Tasle

2 Olscold
gockloos

49Removes

63 Chair
French

83 ROCkfiSh

84 S~:~ec:e

111 Living lllce a
canary

48 Crate

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car,
pet Cleaning featured bV
Haftelt Brother-s Custom
Cafl 1ets. Free est I mates.
Call ~ - 210? .

RINGLES'SSERVICE ex·
perlenced mason. roofer.
carpenter, · e-lectrician.
gener•l repairs and
-.modlllng. Phone 304-67520el or 675·4560.

3182.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

wheel - drive~

AMANA
radarange
microwave oven. Sawmill, 4 horse stalls for rent. Call
excellent condition, 3 414-742·2050.
block. Rollerskates, brand
niw. Call304·576·2940.

UPRIGHT froezor, In good
canclitlon, S200. 304-195-

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt .
1 Box 124, Pt . Pleasant, 304·
675·4154 .
.

78

F &amp; K Tree Trimmino~
atump removal. 675·1 331.

9638.

Upholstery
TRISTATE
UP110LSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .• Gallipolis.
~- 7833 or 446·1833.

11 FOR.O _Bronco, good con·
dition, 64,000 miles, $3900.
304-675-G23 or 675·5172.

Purebred Short · Horned
bull call, J110W While . Extra
good blood uno. Born '"
July . 378-6152.

1 steel ci\ainsaw. Cali ~-

87

811 Ceo'laln

LANDMARK

~;;=~==~~~~F========;:~ 200Mercedesdleselenglne;
11 HP Evenrudt oulboard.
CERllFIEDW

PS, AM·FM, 28000 miles,
reg. gas. good shape. call
304-773·5150.

HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
poilles.
.Every th I no
imaginable in horse equip·
men!. Also belts, boots. 698· 81 .
3290. Ruth Reeves.

Registered
Retriever puppies. $150.
Buy now for Christmas.
Ready mid ~an. 7..C2·2957 or
w-Ith ,H2·21ol3.

------ ---LUMP coal delivered by

..1

&amp; Trlna Shop

1980 CHEVY Scotlsdale, 'l4

&amp; Accusories

FIREWOOD·spllt oak. $40
a rick~ 570. a cord. call 304·
675-3137 any lime .
·

Reuphoistery

Our Specilltles

ton; 4-w11eel·drlite. 4 speed.

Rubber

Complete front axle' for vw
·Beetle, $35. Long royal blue
velvet evening dress worn 2
limes, $15. Call 304·4581997.

am ·fm
radio.
985-4225.

Reasonabl~ .

DRAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY ·' KENNEL. AKC
Ghow puppies, C FA
Himalayan, Persicin and·
Siamese kittens. Call -646·
JB.Uafler4p.m .

Purebred , New ZNiand
white rabbits. 675·3945.

SNODGRASS.
UPHOLSTIIY

cellent

79 DODGE pewerwagon. 4·
wheel ~ drlve, 29,000 miles, 8
cyl. call afler 3 p , m. 304·
675-3898.

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and POodle
pups, 304:1t5-39S8.

Bar Stools
\25 .
Truck Seats
S1M.H'
L•bOr ., Material
Elfectlve Dec. 15th
Thru Jan. 15th ·

ISSEI.I
j:SIOING CO.
I

Misc. Morchandlco

FR'EE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992-7656

SPECIAL

SIDING

•, .

54

1973· Olds. Delta 88, Runs
good . New landau top. Ex·

Peta for Silt
POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220:

~~~;P~H~-~;;2·;2~2;2~5;:~ .BRIARPATCH
Boarding and

Ph. 992·7201
==i~~~~~~~~!;:~~i~~~~==n sink,
US_E_D
c.;..
- n-le-r - lop304-675-6773.

I

2 STORY HOME - A WASHtNGTONE . ELEM. - Cozy 2
on lower Rt. 7. 4 bedroom home located In city -tchool
family ·room, dlst. Has fireplace in living room, lergo
2 car garage. kitchen, 112 ac. yard. 91':1% assumption.
A real eye- ·20's.

74

Aulo for_,s,o"'le,___

71

Buildings 10,000 square feet
.Electrical
to the smallest 1,200 square HARTS Used Cars. New ~ feet . Must sell lm · Haven West Virginia. Over- _ _!&amp;~R~e~lrC!:IPoce!!r~at!!lo!!!n~mediately . Will sell cheap, 20 less expensive cars in SEWING Machine r-epairs,
Call -toll free 1·800·24·01)65 stock .
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servlcel Sharpen
or 1-800-24·0321 . Ext. 777 .
74 · PLYMOUTH Gold Scissors. Fabric Shop,
ss Building SuP~!!•
Ouster. will trade for Pomeroy . 992-227 4.
pickup,
304-675-4323 or 675·
Building materials block.
sm.
JACKS REF•RIGERATIO·
brick, sewer pipes. win·
N. air condition !loervice,
dow!. lif'ltels, etc. CJaucte
commercial, Industrial .
Winters, Rio Grande, 0. 7..2'--_,T.-ucks tor Sale
PhOM 882-2079.
Call24~·5121.
Ford Truck, 250 camper
special, with new stake bed
Sheet metal . Flat 20 to 24 and gual wheels. Call 256· 85
General Hauling
gauge. Porcellan enamel 6413, 12 p.m . to9 p .m .
coated . Sizes 4 It by 8 fl.
JONES BOYS WATER
thr 4 It by 12 ft. Many
SERVICE . Call 367·74i1 or
367·0591.
bulldi11!1 uses. Prices $5.60 7"3'----~V:oo•!!ns._.&amp;~4~W!:·~D.,_.__
to $8.00. Tuppers Plains, For sale 1979 Jeep CH, v- NOW 11AU Ll NG house coal
Ohio. 614·667·308S.
8, excellent condition. A lot
&amp; limestone for driveways .
extras. Call-..6-2445.
Call for estlmates367·7101 .

56

'

l=========~f!.:========~
;

You will enjoy the care this attractive

OWNER WILL FINANCE - With less
than 20% down payment and 11% Inacre farm off Rl. 55~ . Apac. crop balance in pasture
wO&lt;Jds. Lots of pine (red &amp; white),
I~;~~~ .
modernized 3 bedroom

lHE
TAXIDERMY
'
. SHOP

-992-621S 114' 992·731-f

Ph. 614-843-2S91
6-15-tfc

room, living room, detached glraoe
•net nice flat yard. Make us an offer.

l'olassev Ft!11Uaon Industrl•l Equipment.
We sell the best and ser~
vice the rest.
On Rt. 3tW.
Ripley, W.va .
Ph. C304) 372-9175
or (304) 372-5479
12· 18·1 mo.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Rt. 3, Box 54
Rae in,, Oh .

DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME IN

LAND-LAND-LAND -: Crop Pasture-Lots of wOOds- Tobacco
Base- 217 acres. S300per acre. Call
for more information.
•

.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

•

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Siz8s start frem 30~e24"
SMALL
Sizes from 4 to' and all
wond buildings 24x36. ·
Insulated Dog H0u5es

SAlES, INC.

Water:SIWtl"llec:trlc'
Gas Lfn.. Dflchea
Water Line Hooll:· ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Chnhlrt, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560

Caii74H195

TOWN? - Then this one is perfect.
Cory and modern 2 bedroom, 1 floor
plan. Has brand new kitchen, dlnino

30's.

rltedl.

Let Georgt Miller
check your pr·! Kent elec·
trlcllsVitem .
Rnldtntlal
&amp; Commercial

..

18 ACRE - EDGE 01' TOWN- Excellent location for · tills nice 3
bedroom ranch on Rt . .501. 18 wooded
acres with barn. House has 2 baths,
family room, 2 fireplaces, full basement, nat. gas and garage. Need of·
fer.

of· your wlr·

For all

rliRP•
• ..
,..• .....,
r1
I.C'1
n 1"""I u 1

REESE.
. ·
TRENQtiNG
SERVICE

SERVICE

RT. !II - SECLUDED Ill-LEVEL Nestled In over 1 acre of trees this dutch
$lyle horne has 3 bedrooms, 2'h bloths,
family room, 2 large unfinished rooms
In lower level. large wrap around deck
and 2 car garaoe. outstanding location.
.$67,500.

THEIIE'LL BE -A SCRAMBLE FOR
THIS HOME- 4 bedroom lrl-lovel with
. loads of living SJ»Ce. Stone fireplace, 3
DELUXE SPRING VALLEY HOME- baths. family room, equipped kitchen,
A very attractive well kept 4 bedroom rec. rQOm, woodburnher, 2 car gan•ve·
home in one of the area's finest netgh· plus . C1h acres of lovely pine lanbor.hoods. Has 21h baths1 equipped kit· dscaplrig. A real' fine hOme priced at
chen. dining room, family room S83.900.
wl'fireplace, nat. gas. cent. air, 2 car
A spacio~s 4
garage plus a lovely landscaped cor.ner STONE RANCH lot. Low interest loan assumption bedroom home overlOOking the river.
OWners have priCed well under mark•t
available. $69,'900.
value. Has ••mily room, fireplace, 3
RIO GRAN'D E
3 or 4 bedroom· home baths. di(ng room, nat. gas, cent. air &amp; 2
right on campu1. Has .11f:a bath, family car gar~ge. A must to see.
room . fireolace . full basement. nat. gas
heat. garage plus nearly a.4 acre. COOI(f
OWNERS WILL HELP FINANCE be used as rental. $38,900.
Over 2,000 sq. ft. of living space In the
RODNEY - · This- aftracllve tudor brick &amp; frame home. Has family room,
home is located in a top quality neigh- 2 fireplaces; equipped kitchen; full
borhood and must be sold as soon as basement, central air, garage &amp; 2.3
possible. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family acres. City schools.
room w/woodburner, Iaroe equipped
kitchen and 2 car g.:,rage. Flat 'h acre MOBILE HOME &amp; 5 ACRES - '1970
yard. $54,900.
. Hallmark 12x65 3 bedroom home., Has
:i2 VINTON AVE.- Irs hard to find a an equipped kitchen, covered patio, air
home in town in as good condition as cond., rural water pus 5·6 acres of nice
this 3 bedroom home. Equipped kit· laying land with lof1of trees. $19,900 .
chen. dining room, oas heat. 3 air cond.,
pello plus 2 lots. Can buy wllh one lot at
FAST FOOT RESTAURANT - 'Make a
$39,900. Won't lalt long, so call today.
gOOd living, be your own boss. GOOd
r--~:0::~~-------- locatioo in Centenary. Includes 24x24
brick bldg., equipment, Inventory plus 2
large lots. $65,000.

-'LARGE
AC8EAGE

lWR E1ECTR

-·•..

Frank Rose CanSt. Co.
Re'model lng repair. new
construction, all types.
Free estimates, all work
fully
Quaranteeg,
Residential, c()mmer· .
cial, ingustrlal and min·
ing, electric work .
MSHA Cerl .
446·4627

534 9

rom
· 5
To$79.95
:1
PH. 992-3 69
12-l·l mo. Pd.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~:=:=5:=~'
~~~~~~;::==~===~ struCtural
carrIn full
r
factory steel
guarantee.
is a real bargain.
selllm·
mediately. 3 bedroom brick home with
full basement. nat. gas heat, carport
and fenced yard.

· • lUI•

FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Available
Made from Cedar,
Cypresst Walnut &amp;
Cherry.

AufhcwiiMJDNtOHr•.

FARM EDU I PMENT
PARTS I SERVICE .

AER:ALBUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47Ft. Working Height
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Third Ave.
6i4-40H716

...

· BOGGS

New wood stove, half price,
never used, $350. Can con·
vert to furnance. Call 256·
1216, GallipOliS.

STROUT REALTY, Inc.

__...-___..

216 Sycamore st.
Middlt-'• OhiO
9·21-tfc

Restaurant
equipment
reconditioned ~Y RAbCO.
Call 304-523·1378. Hgtn.
WVA.

--=~~. =-===--==-===-=R~~!~~e-~~~e~~ =~ ~~=-= ==-=~~==-=-=-

35Court 5),
Gallipolis, OlliO
Call"*31t6
or44HOIO

. OPEN

For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs, $25. See al 769
Brownell Ave., MiddlepOrt.

..

and Refinlshiil

Uaed Color TV Sets for
Sale .

P.m.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY or live fn downstairs
and rent upstairs apartment. Centrally located in
: downtown Gallipolis within easy walking distar,ce
of churches, grocery and business area. Priced for
only $37 ,ooo.oo.
wood Realty, Inc.
32 Locust St., Gallipolis
446-10"

Furniture -pin&amp;

1V SERVICE
NCM

$howceses with
lights, 1 laflle bedroom
suite, double dresser and
chesl, 2 antique clocks, 1
rneat slicer end misc.
grocery store equipment.
Call 256-6413. 12 p. m. to 9

HERE'S ONE
HAS EVERYTHING Fireplace, nat . gas f.a. furnace, a.c: .• 4 bedrooms,
finished basement. patio, 1B'x32' ln·ground swim·
ming pool. Located in Mills Village and priced to
sell. $75,000 .00.

I

HMRID

l· 8 fl.

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan1 _Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446.0971 ·
Mose
446n3408

The Sunday

Services Offere"'

UMIU~•

I .J. ....,._.__....,_Ive.

har·
iwood, $35 pickup load
Jellvered. Call446·4176.

WOOD REALTY, INC.
·446-1066

·~fiMI_flli1M,IC
·-·QI.II
1.!1
., ___
...,...

Business·Services

~lrewood·seasoned

METAL BUILDINGS
FOR SALE
Farm, Commercial
Gariges, storage
Order now for spring
deli•1ery and avoid '82
price increase.
Call
ROBERTS
CONSTR . CO., INC .
256-1560
6-9 P.M.

w. va.

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West bad bam dealt six

51

*Willis T. Le•dln1Um, R-ealtor, Ph. Home 446-tSl•
• Phyllis Loveday, Phone446·2230
• Joan ~oggs~. Phone 44~-.~94

'

NORTH

young

5 room apartment, yard,
stove and refrigerator. Pt.
Pleasant. 1·6U·263·8322 or
1-614·263·2669.

'

~~ a

Mablltllome in city central
air and heat. adults only,
dep .......03J8 . .
2 BEDROOM apartment,
kitchen furnished, HUD
progri\1)!. ulllllles paid. If
qualified. 304-675-5104 or
304-675-7364.

Ohio-Point Pleasant.

Ute half an end play

___:.:;:__

Apartment for rent. Call
&lt;1-46-o:JW.
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72 Boullquo
73Simplao1

79 Satwetes

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146Wilherod
t40Bu0kyol ·
baseball

150 SUCCOt',
151 W8fgod
153 Bitt&amp;r vetch
154 Hindu
cymbals
1581nlel
158 Okl salt
161 Bab~lonian

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187 Prefix Wl!h
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Safford-wed one of French
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GAWPOIJS - The descendants
of RObert SaffOrd · are also the
descendants of·the original French
Five Hundred. On JW1e 8, 1790, he
was amoog 40 young men who landed at what Ia now Gallipolis to build
the 10 Jog cabins and the stockade
for the emigrants from France.
ROBERT SAFFORP. stayed on
and married Catherine Cameron.
She had been bom In France April
. 24, 1'168, and had come over in 1790
with the 500 French: She was about
six weeks older than 'her husband,
who was born July 1, 1768, at Har·
dwick, now a village of 200 souls in
abnost the exact geographical middle of Massachusetts ~ only: it
wasn't the state of Massachusetts at
.that ttme. Eve!')'body calls him Col.
Safford; in the War of 1812 Robert
Safford was C!llonel of the second
' regiment of Ohio troops .or Gen. E.
W. Tupper's brigade, and he was 44
years old at the time.
WHEN HE WAS 82 years of age
Col. Safferd told a writer that he
"claimed the notoriety of having
felled the first tree on the present
site of Gallipolis." The writer to
whom Peeps refers here is included
in the "History of the Upper Ohio
Valley," published in 1891 by Brant
&amp; Fuller of Madison, Wis. "I give it
in as nearly the exact language of
the relator as, at thla distance of
time, I can now recall," the
scrivener said. (Note it's relator,
and not realtor!)
COL. SAFFORD came to the Northwestern territory at the instance
of Gen. Rufus Putnam and Gen. E.
w. Tupper of the Ohio Compatl)l of
New England; which made the first
organized settlement in the area,
unless it be that of the Moravians.

years. They have seven chlldren.
Through Robert SaffOrd, Jr., I~
1865, there are nwnerous descen·
dants, and one of them is Fred Saf·
ford Beman, (onner chairman of the
Galiia County Republican executive
committee, who resides at Center·
ville. Fred is a grandson of Col.
Robert Safford's great-grandson,
the late Alonzo C. Safford. A grand·
daughter of CoL Robert:s grandson.
Lewis M. Safford, is Bertis J.
Halley, the wife of Virgil Halley.
BOONE, KENTON, and Wetzel
were intimate friends of Col. Robert
Safford. They patrolled together the
distant frontiers and bivouacked at
dusk around the same campfire, exchanging tokens of remembrance
which became treasured relics in
their families long after the Indian
wars had ceased. Boone's tomahawk
and small-ax were preserved by Safford's family and were on exhibit
during the Gallipolis centennial of
1890. There also was a wolf-trap in
possession of the Saffords, another
gift of Daniel Boone.

After ! had married 11nd setled !~ere a Cew
yea1·s, I 11.'0nc\udN no~ only to remain permanently here but I desired · to have the
assa..·iales of my eo~~;rly day11 as t'OinpanlonS
around me - particularly tho:re of my im- ·
mediate family.
.
Accordingly, wiUl sudl a view ill the sp[-ing o[

1797, I bid adieu to my family, consisting of my
wire and two children, mow1ted my horse and
made the long and difficult journey tb~h
pathless rorests and over mountaii\S and
brldge!es.s Slreams to my Old New Engli.nd
boyhood's home in Vermont, where my mother

and my brothel'll then re~~ided, having moved

there from Hardwick, Mass.

WHEN IT HAD BEEN determined
to Jay out a town for the deceived
and discontented French emigrants,
Major John Burnham was selected
to perfonn the practical work of the
undertaking. Upon the arrival of the
forces at the initial point of the work,
and while the surveyor was adcalculating
variation and
of
justing his the
instrument"
magnetic meridian, the thought happily suggesting itself to CoL Safford,
who was one of the party, to make
the first mark in memoriat of himself. He hurriedly unhelted his
tomahawk and vigorously attacked
an adjacent sapling, which soon lay
prostrate on the ground. The act
would, probably, have remained un·
noticed by hla companions had he
not proclaimed the fact that he was
making history, and had secured a
memorial to himself by cutting the
first timber on the site of the future
city. That's what a scribe recalls of
an 1850 conversation with the
"Father of Gallipolis."
COL. ROBERT SAFFORD died
July 2fi, 1883, and is buried on the
highest point in Centenary
Cemetery, hack of Green Local
School. He was 95 years old. His wife
preceded him in death ,bY nearly II

The~

again I met, after an absence of more
than 12 years, my delighted mother and friends
who have mourned me 85 one lost to them
forever; for Jn those days commWlicallon by

mail or transitory persoos wU so aeldom lhat It

was literally burying one'sllelf in the wilderness.
By rt&amp;!lon of the savage inh&amp;blta.nta or the
forests, and lbe eqaally-to-be-dreaded brigands
who had ned from dvililation to escape pWJish-

ment Cor

~;!times.

and

of~~

couunltted, ren-

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an hand

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~ oftbe Delaware Rmr.

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The band of men J11111111C u 70 ea.
linentrl Anny 10ldlen ru li1D 110 . LIM- RIYW, Flllbaritlll Ffld
obstacles IIUdl u lui JUr'l, ..._ llltada/.
.,_. ..... ltlll l'llkrc Oil "
drought forced them lo • ._.,,..
CCIIItrol ....,. . . , Clll ......... tCIII
their ~ bo.ll and llllll!e tile 1'u:cmcw ;rt ed &amp;
croulag from Pennaylvania lo New
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Jeraey by bridge.
,._ bolnlllll 1111 ...... Colli

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Washlngtoo wu playrd far the fiE.
th straight year !IY Philadelphia ctb'
Councilman Jobt B. Kelly Jr.,
brother of Princess Grace of
Monac0.
·

•

Col. Safford had no occasion to use
the paper, for he returned safely to.
Gallipolis in the autwnn of I797.
TWENTY..QNE YEARS later,
Robert returned to Vennont and
escorted hla mother (she was 78 in
1818) on horseback from Vennont to
his home in Gallipolis. She lived with
him for 10 years, dying at 88 years of .
age.

COL. SAFFORD'S public service
ON MAJOR BURNHAM'S SUBincluded these:
SISTENCE roll of workers to conState senator 1928-29 and 1830-32; struct the 80 Jog cabins and the
state representative 1810·11; · stockade is the name of .22-year-old
associate judge of Gallia County Robert SaffOrd, with hla pay for 20
11103-22; recorder of GaU!a County; days listed as $5.20. His hoine is
justice of the peace 1796-1803.
given as Woodstock, Vt.
IN 1850, OCTOOENARIAN Robert
Safford told this story:

Re-euacte hktol'Y

THE LETTER OF Instructions
from Rufus Putnam to Major Burnham orders him to proceed "to a
place on the Oho ll!!lt Chickamaga"
-that's the way he misspelled II! "creek, /which will he marked out
and shown to you by Col. R. J.
Meigs, Sr.... The object is to erect
four blockhouses IRd a nwnber of
low huts ... and clear the lands ...
You will remember thai I ~on't expect you will lay any floors ... Plank
for the doors must be spUt and
hewed and the doors hung with
wooden hingell; as I don't ezpect you
will obtain any stone for the backs of
your chimneys, they must ba made:
of clay first, molded into tile and
dried ... "

Keliy anrl hi. L•'eW
river in 15 minute$.

e~

the

George Washington crossed the
Delaware on Christmas night with
2,500 troops. Gnce acrou, lbe tGree
marched to Trenton IRd l'ei!OUIIdingly defeated the Hessians, takln8
-1,000 prisoners.

Six days later, Washingtl'llled the
anny to an important victory in the
Battle of Princeton.
.

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Gulrd catlin IIIII he!! ; I a . -

I!Mrdllnl tar lladlla Ill lbtiq " ..... ...... liiO mllalllllut oiQuellec at,.
FCIIII1IIen oflbe 11 - - - .

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cauahl fire early hlday, 1'1• ;lift

Omede aald. The baat Cll'l'ild a11out
..... t.mll of '-'7· cr-.· aiL
Cllw!e ollhe blue-.. not llnown, '
fiuno!VCII'!! told 1'rllnaport l)egecle
itfidala tbat three l8l1on may !aft
died aboard. Tine l1lhln wen
mllalnc and the body olllllltber victim fouDd • mile fram the alip.
OftldaJa llld an en... IDIIIIben
were Cepecl'e• but released nO ·
II!UIIe8.

The Cout Guard llid lbere waa
UUie cblnce IR)' c:outd have 11W'"
vlved In the

RFELDS 'IN POMEROY

A schedule of
•

SLEDS!

area programming,

activities and events,

Dec. 27 thru Jan. 2

FOR FUN IN THE SNOW

A guide to area entertainment

• QUAUTY FI.OIBI£ FLYERS

• 6 FT. ll)BOGGANs .
lnclrul&amp; complete

• STEEL OR PlASTIC SNOW SAUCERS
,•

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

rr~~~;;~;;;;;;=;;;=========;;;;;;::;-l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=:=;:~=====~===~
,..,..'b
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Entertainer
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DECEMBER 31

9:oo-·m

listings

'
&lt;

Kew Y•'• £ue PMfv

Fame,

0 .... '10.00 lJ Ce rt. 'IS.!Jd
C.ll 675-6700 for reservations. All .....,..
vations must be IIYde no later than
Mancley, Decam!Mr 21th. Music will be
provided ·by "Bustin' Loose" · from
Louisville, Ky.

•

.page 14

,

Soap Opera Review,
page 15
Area Happenings,
page6

•

END-OF-THE-YEAR

TV Mailbag,
page2

SALE
AT

Youth howling, page 8

POMEROY LANDMARK
Special Prices On .
. All Gen·e ral Electric

Serving GiJllia, Meigs ahd Mason Counties

· Televisions

HOTPOINT APPLIANCES
WATER SOFTENERS

RANGE HOODS 174!5...........

..........~!!.q!!

2 UKE NEW tioTPoiNT REIRMiEIAlORS (Repo).·~·········
1 KnatEN-AID DISHWASHER

·-

The excitem8nt of a
The mind af o ··

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