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Page

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16-The Daily Sentinel

&lt;I

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NWIDE ~i~~~4!

MASON
FURNITURE

.TOMORROW
10 TO 10!

co.

· . f:.ounty music
· festivai ...B-1

'

Inside today:

New E;agle Scotit.••B-7

Along the 1Uver.: ..... : ... B.J.8
8uHIDeM ....................... C6 '
ClaleiJieds ........ : .. - .... .1).2-7
Oeaths ......................... k-41
Edl&amp;ortal ...................... A·2
Fann ............. ...... ........ C-7
8port8 ................. ....... C-1-5

Haunted ·family •••D-1
COAST
TO COAST
BORDE
TO BORDERQ

BUY
NOW'AND SAVE!

•

THAT INCREDIBLE
SALE OFFICIALLY ENDS

SATURDAY AT MASON FURNITURE!

PERSONNEL. ..

'88

$129.00

EACH
00 PIECE

Early American Sty/Ml- '
ltf/11 Ridge Tabl• by BASSETT
Brass finished hardware on simulated drawer
fronts ~~ solid wood in medium pine finish.

EXTRA DEUVERY PEOPLE .•.
EXTRA CREDIT PERSONNEL. • •
EXTRA OFFICE STAFF ••• ALL HAVE
BEEN BROUGHT IN TO ASSIST YOU
IN QUICK AND EASY BARGAIN BUYING!

SATURDAY! HURRY!

Medicare proposals
opposed by Congress
By BETI'V ANNE MU.JAMS

advisory panel wants to solve
A"""'aled ~Writer
Medicare's financing problems by
WASHINGTON (AP) -Atederal• (!)creasing the wt-of·pocket ex·

•

FINAL
12
HOURSI

~-------------MAGIC SAVINGS!

"IT BEGAN IN 1982 ••• IT CONTINUES TODAY
· ••• BASSETT PROUDLY SPONSORS , AND
COORDINATES A GRAND NATIONAL SALE
AT SELECT STORES ACROSS AMERICA
THAT AllOWS EACH · PARTIC.IPANT TO
REDUCE PRICES ON EVERYTHING! (NOT
JUST BASSETT. EVERYTHING!f

I

•
* 12 SENSATIONAL HOURS!

FAMOUS BRANDS
REDUCED!
•BASSETT •LA·Z·BOY ·
•BROYHILL •SEALY
eBUSHLINE eBERKLINE
•ZENITH
•LANE

.DINffiE
SET!
Stoneville 7 piece metal
dinette; Brown vinyl covered
chairs. Formica top table!
Table . 6 Chairs. Reg. $2.jf.95
00

'139:

Five Piece Set. Reg. $119.95

Sf9.00

AMAJOR OFFER!

WITH SAVINGS ON EVERY ITEM IN EVERY DEPARTMENT!

R~ .

la~ Z - Boy

Sf7t .OO

Solid Pine 2x6 Bunk Bed Set.
Made sturdy for rugged use.
Bed separates for use as twin
beds. Reg. S199.oo 'l29':oo

..

~;'

Bedding Extra.

hrly

Amerkan queen sill Sof• Slteptr .
8Nutlful bh»·brOW'n plaid cover.

r.., Quality!

*REDUCTIONS
PLAINLY TAGGED!
SATURDAY! THE FINAL OAY ••• DON'T MISS IT!!

'629."

•

BMutlful brown-rust plaid ~
tile sltJel)et" Th,... C\IShkln secftons
to t;lw you lhe ,..ung ~PK• you
need. Priced Right! Reg . t..SM.9S

' 439 ,N

*YOU'LL
LOVE THE SELECtiON!
HURRY! IT'S SURE TO GO FAST!

...

,...

-~. -~

R. .

II ..S. 8ut.hUM tof01. ch;llr.
! - I Cow:f't'd In lliHuiUul ..,_
d""lel IM•Id Wood 1t!e Net~
•iltt wood I'CJSI •rms. COli

*BARGAINS!
BARGAINS! BARGAINS!
ENTIRE SELECTION REDUCED FOR THE LAST DAY OF THE SALE!

••nv

O.M

R•g

....,

'"s.oo

OF COURSE!
SAVE 20%, 30%. 40% YES EVEN UP TO 60% OFF NOW!

BARGAINS GALORE!

LIVING ROOM!

WANTED STYLES!

'995."

:~'!'!~!.
~:.t11::,-:r !~:
trim and cMntal mokllng .

•

Dr....-.

Hutch mirror, 5 dra.,...
"'"'· ""''"' - d llld night

wilt! wood 1110tl Mid ff'onl r;lil rrlm .
eum llf'l ..,_ • • ••"• dur&lt;lbiUiy

SETS!

HNvy ..."' ~ •Ill\ kllll•

Queen Set """"
·
1
Full Set .......... ! 98 .~·
00
Twin Set .......... '198.

Sets OniJ

HURRY! DON'T BE THE ONE TO MISS IT!!

AMAZING SELECTION!

ROCKER!
Norwalk Platform Rockers;
the style chair that Grandma
used to have. Sits Great!
· Choice of 4 Colors &amp; Fabrics.
Reg . $259.95

ON .JftLE:I
•SOfAS!
*LOVE SlATS!
CHAIISI
llCUIIISI
*lULlS!
LAirll
DfiiK lOOMS!
IIDIOOIISI
IOCIIISI
LIVIII lOIIlS!
SUIP SOfAS!
Olllnl SITSI

*

s179.00

*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*

SAVINGS AND MORE!

Je~~~VJ~lO~,S!

·-

s:m

,.....

REVOLUTIONARY SELECTION'

GUN CABJNETI

;0

Bassett Solid Pine
Gun
Cabinets. Double Glasa
Display doors with locka and
locked storage com'!lrtment
Choice of two stylesj ~98 oO
•

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WEATIIEIUNG THE WEATHER - Two unidentified women
read Saturday as they brace aplnst high winds, 11110w and frigid
temperatui'ellln llolllon. SlmUar conditions hit much of the northeast
coutllne. (See story on A-3. (AP LMerphoto ).

'

ASTONISHING SAVINGS!

casts and
Increased ellglblllty age are "not an
acceptable solution to our Medicare
problems. We need a plan that
controls health costs, not one that
cuts medical coverage. Let's look to
those who can afford to cut medical
charges before we cut off medical
coverage or dig deeper Into the
pockets or the elderly .•.
"I'm shocked that·thls commls·
slon would make these recommen·
dations," Pepper said.
The economic estimates used by
the panel antldpate a delldt ofsaxl
bllllon to
bllllon in the Medicare
trust fund by 1~ unless action Is
taken. But many congressional
leaders have said Congress Is
unUkely to begin work on a
Medicare balloul untU at least next ·
year.
The council, headcrl by fonner
Indiana Gov. Otis Bowen, opposed
both using more general revenue
from the Treasury and hiking
scheduled payroll tax increases as
(Continued on page A3)

Englancl's t;ll ..slc Country Style Group With Solid Pine Accents I
A beautiful Country Treasure like this Is hard to find, especlaUy at an In·
credible low price like this I Irs constructed with every comfort and quality
feature possible, Including billowy wellless cushions, deep button tultlfl!l and
attached pillow arms. The cover Is In tough and durable Herculon,
beautiful accented with solid pine trim on the arms and wings. While our

Ret; . 119.95 flw drawer maple or
whlteapen stock chest. Great for the
Kiehl

Kemp oak ~ ·piece
bedroom group. Thick tops; lots of
drawer space. Dresser has 9
drawers, ~ drawer chest: vertical
mirror and headboard.

'68."

Reg .
S119 .tS
Enterttlnmant
Etagortl Honey piM IOiktl and
.,.,..,,_ Ideal for TV and com·

ponent stereo. Ev.n

1t1t

It to just

dlepley your breHies. GrNt lttml
Groot Prlcel

'138."

IIAIIGAIIIS OF IYIAY IYPI AHO OISCIIP·

TIONI SOMI AAI I·Of·A-KINO 011 UMITIO
OUAHTIIY ONLY. IYIRYIHIIIG IIIOUCIOI

$

IMPIIRTANT REDUCTIONS!

MATTRESS
SET!
Imperial 312 Coli Mattress

with matching 8Qx Spring.
Quilted top for a good nights
rest. Buy the Mattress or Box
Spring; may be bought
seperately.
S
00

.ouali

•IOOIWISI
IICCISSOIIISI
IIUVISIOISI

*
*

Concord Hall
Early American bedroom by

liiiiJ

.FURNITU'RE··CO•.
.J

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'~-

.(

.I

HlRMAN·
GRATE, OWNER.
. .· ..
...,...

....... ~-------: .............

304-773-5592 ,· '

.,

--··., --

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I

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.......--.

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wrrH SCIENCE, MATH AND ENGLIIH-

About SlUIItiWIII comelntOMeJpCelldt7IIIIIIJ'fN'M
a part of the state's Excellence In Education Funds ID
supplement the county's three school dl!ltrids efforts
loaogmentthelrEngllsh,mathand~programs.

.....-....~~.DOtmorettu.l30pacei* ... ·

WI~~ dee"*'-~. .- ·

u•.

the Southern Local School District, science ...........
such as Todd Adams, pictured here, wiD benefit from
new equipment which the school plans to purehase.

Not JeM than '10 percent can be Ulled tor lnlltructlonal

Meigs schools will receive
funds to develop programs
ment school dlstrtcts' present ef·

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
'Jbnes.Sentlnel Staff

torts in the three areas where test

POMEROY - Meigs Counly
schools can expect approximately
$5,426.40 In additional funds in May
and another $7,478.40 in the 1984-85
school year to be used for studenl
and teacher development in the
areas of English, mathematics and
science.
Russ Moore of the Meigs County
Board of Education office advises
the additional local dollars are part
of the exceUence in education
funding provided for through House
Bill 291 and Is intended to supple-

scores have shown dlftlciencies.
The ExceUence in Education
funding appropriated by the Gen·
eral Assembly totals statewide
$2,190,())) for fiscal year 1984, and
$2,990,())) for fiscal year 1985.
It Is dlstrtbuted on the basis of
enrollment and amounl s to$1.19per
student for the current school year .
and $1.64 per student enroUment for
the 1984-85 year.
All three Meigs County school
distrtcts are participating in the new
funding program which requires at

GALLIPOLIS - A feasibility study Is being
unde-taken to reorganize grade levels at Addavllle
and CheshJre.Kyger elementarles.
The main motivation for the study, accordin10o
Gallla County Local Schools Superintendent jJary
Toothaker, Is to correct discrepancies in fudent
population at both schools.
Toothaker emphasized thai no action as been
taken yet, and nothing will be done untU pu lie input
· has been considered. Two open meetings have been
scheduled for this coming week to gain that input.
The first meeting will be held at Addavllle at 7: :ll
p.m. Monday, and the second at C-K at 7: :ll p.m.
Thursday .
The dlstrtct, at the direction of the local board of
education, Is looking at the posslblllty of turning one of
the buildings into a facility tor kindergarten through
third grade; with the other fashioned into a school tor
grades four through stx.
Addavllle presently has 285 students, while C·K
fxiUseS -182, '"TOOtfliRer saut· In descrtbing the
difference between the schools. .
"There are also strong educational considerations,
In tenns otfaculty," he said. "But on the other hand, a
lot Is to be said tor the neighborhood school concept.
Those are the things we have to consider."
Both schools are scheduled tor Improvement and
expansion \!!lder the bulldlng]lrogi'am made possible
through passage of the 4-mlll oond Issue last
e

_,.
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.,

By KEVIN KElLY
Times-Sentinel Staff

MASON
-"'·';

.1' .,. • •

least 70 percent be used for
instructional matertals and equipment. with notmorethan:llpercent
to be used for in·servlce teacher
training, workshops, seminars. and
field trtps.
The crtterla for use of the funds
further specifies that any money
coming to Meigs County and used
for professional staff development
must have the teacher training
provided under the supeJVislon of
Ohio University.
Since the additional funds are
coming so late in the school year,
Continued on A·3

Gallia officials plan study
on population discrepancies
in two elementary buildings

YES! USE YOUR GOOD. CREDIT NOW· FD8 THESE
INCREDIBLE BARGAINS! BANK CARDS WELCOME!

DINEnE
SETS I

•...

A Multimedil Inc. Newspaper

BEAUTIFUL BEDROOM!
MISCELLANEOUS!

reduced
especially for this Nationwl!le
Sale. Available In 13", 19", 25"
Models. Great selection of
Space Command Models.
Zenith 13"
Extra Special
Color.
1
oo

In

,.

'198 ?tl

tfw floref ""'"" ny._ "''" ·

...,. .....•n, "*'"'· '6so.•

piece groups covered

1

a

°

'479.w
II. .. 11-0ft.OI Ttw• P"«• lrlldll'-1

G9sWcPW~BQ;91Jsl .~he

beautiful Antron nylon velvet
ot1nd. Buttt Solid. Bn10tt Oualltvt
covers. Choice of two fabric
'795.•
designs. Set Includes · Sola,
... ,...-~. --•'
Chair, Rockel', Party Qt.
MAnRESS ] ....-loman. Cocktail &amp; Two End

Sealy Comfort King I
King, Queen, Full Twin Sizes . •
' All The Same .Prlcel
King 3 piece set .... 297 .0

Cr•Hm•sltr flock

BUY MORE FOR
LESS NOW!!!

Colonial Sofa &amp; Chair with
wood trim . Choice of two
Antron nylon fabrics . Nice
sized suite for any home. Reg.
$499.95

~

gold

~

nylorl 50101 I. eMir. flor&lt;ll prln!lng

t---o---~----.* CREDIT TERMS

Maple!

penses or elderly beneficiaries,
raising the ellglblllty age to f!l,
taxing employer·pald health lnsu·
ranee benefits and hiking the tax on
alcorol and tobacco.
The pacllage advanced by the
Advisory Cooncil on SoctaJ Security.
released tonnaUy on Friday, ran
Into tmnledlate opposition from·
Congress and advocates for the
elderly.
And the Reagan administration.
whose budget proposals in the last
three years are the source of some
council recommendations, had no
lnunediate comment.
"We oppose their package. Not
only does It fall to address the root
cause of Medicare's problem, which
Is therapldescalatlonofhealthcare
costs, tt also lacks any semblance of
balancing the legitimate Interests of
taxpayers, consumers, the elderly
and health providers," said Chris
McEntee, legtslative speclaUst for
the American Association of Retired Persons.
Reps. Edward Roybal, D-Callf.,
chalnnan of the House Aging
Committee. and Claude Pepper.
O.Fia, chalnnan of the House Rules
Committee, complained that the
elderly already pay too much for
hialtb.cue f
.............,.._
Roybal said higher

BUNK BED SET!
SOFAS &amp;
SLEEPERS!

8 Soctiona. 64 Pogea 36 Centa

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, March 11, 1984

~.

EXTRA SALES

SAVE 20%, 30%, 40%
·EVEN UP TO

Vol. 19Nt. S
CappW.... l914

around Ohio..•A-3

tntinti

tnttS

•.. THE FINA~
HOURS QF
IMPORTANt
PRICE
REDUCTIONS
ON EVERY
ITEM II
PARTICIPATIIQ
STORES'
INVENTORIES
SATURDAY!
•
AS ANIOUNCED ,OI
NATIONAL NETWORK
TELEVISIO.

Record March
lows recorded

• 'I

8C£Nl!: OF SEOOND FIRE - Tndllc' 011 lower .......,.,... ....... 'Die~ ·-~ by
OltiD, Ill Q . . . QluaQ'- ......... mile« two _...... lire Ill Nweanbef, lB. Ba fien*· debris
.._ .._..,., ... &amp;•r•rn~
bou.e.
•
'l1le
roof
u
'
£
~~.Due
Sir
X
~River
1
, '· : "" .., a 1re 011 •Gar&amp;iiiAve. .n: • p.m.

lplted.._. ..........................

...._,, 'Die IJiue ..,._ Jat'CIIe.limiiMIII&amp; ol, the

RGad,- the

l&amp;rucalre.-:- (I'WI by KeviD Kell,y)

.

November. Toothaker said thai expansion will have
Impact in the dlstrtct's study.
The superintendent said considerations would be
based on the degree of work done on the buildings.
No discussion on whether Addavllle or C·K will be
converted Into a K·3 structure has been held,
Toothaker said, noting thai "we reaUy haven't gotten
that far along."
"This Is just a study, just an attempt to answer
questions," he said.
Because of an increasing kindergarten population,
and financial problems caused by the loo; of tax
revenue !rom the James M. Gavin power plant, the
district was forced in 1982 to Institute aU-day
kindergarten on certain days of the week.
Parental concern ~ver that program was brought to
the board last year, much of It centered on Addavllle
and C·K. Toothaker said that Issue must also be
studied .
"1bat's going to have to be looked a\ very carefully •
and we may not kn~ untU we have the elementary
buildings done," he said.
Finances will also be·consldered, Toothaker said, .
pointing out that the dlstrtct Is awaiting the outcome
of an appeal before the Ohio Supreme Court over the,
Gavin money.
.
After two years, a suit fUed by the school dlstrtct·
and Gallla County protesting the redlstrtbution of·
Gavin revenues resulted in a finding for the county.
The finding Is being appealed by the state taxation:
depilrtmenf.

'

�--March 11, 1984

Commentary and perspective

flag• A-2
March 11, 1984

I

'
Continued from A-1
M edrcare
.. ··---:-:-:-:;:=:-----=tax deduction.
. •

r----Weather: ---...,

n. Sunday n,..s.nttnet

The Sunday Time..Sentinel-!»age-A-3

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

ways of keeping Medicare solvent.
The council focused chiefly on the
hospital Insurance portion or the
program, which Is financed with a
portion of the Social Security payroll

Should the councll's recolllllle!l'·
datlons be adopted, the ellglbillty
age for baste Medicare benefits
would be raised gradually from 65to
01 between 1911i and 1900.

A medal for Chambers ______;J_am_es__;;J_.K_il.&amp;.O..ea_tr_~e·k.
A Division of

· 825 Third Ave., Gaillpolls, Ohio
.
(614) 446-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publis her
· HOBART WILSON JR.
: Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

•
A MEMBER of 1bc 1\...~la.tt.&gt;d Pn.&gt;ss, Inland Daily
• American Newspaper Publbiher.l Association.
'

Prt'1i..~ i\ssoclatkm wut

the

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcomed. they should be ll'8S than:.» worti\ king. AD
'etters are subjet't lo edltln~ Md must be signed with nwne, addressandtel~hone nUJTl1\er. No Wl!tped leUet-s wtU be published. Letters should be In 119od 1111;1•. addressing ls-

oues. nol per!JOftalllliio~

Eight years ago, it
was 'Jimmy Who?

WASI-UNGTON - A whole generation has grown up that knew not
Whittaker Chambers. The controversy recently revived by his
posthumous award of the Medal of
Freedom therefore may mystl!y
many persons who were only
children at the time of the trials of
Alger Hiss In 1949. The story Is a
story for all ages.
Chambers was born In Philadelphia In Aprll 1901. He spent most of
an unhappy childhood on Long
Island. Upon graduation from high
school he ran away, became a
manual laborer In Baltimore and
Washington, drtfted to New Orleans, and returned to his home just
as World War I was ending. He
attended classes for three years at
Columbia University In New York.
In 1924 he formally joined the
Communist Party.
At that 'time. as Chambers later
would write, he saw the free world
"shrinking In power and faith,
Including faith In Itself." He was 23,
a young Intellectual, already nuent

In German and French. He had
seen some or the. world from the
rallway tracks. In his Innocence,
Chambers saw communism as a
kind or universal brotherhood In
which the gulf between great
wealth and gnndlng poverty could
be bridged. He had the soul or a
revolutionary.
Chambers stayed In the Communist Party for 13 years. Most or this
time was spent In undisguised party
labor. He wrote tor the Dally
Worker and was briefiy editor or
New Masses. Then, In the summer
or 1932, the party ordered him to go
underground. He became a courier
In the Soviet apparatus or espionage, and for five years Chambers
was a traitor to his own country. He
was a spy.
His duties were to collect documents from communists who had
lnflltrated the t,J.S. government, to
have the documents photographed,
and to transmit them to his Soviet
masters In Moscow. In the course or
this clandestine work, Chambers'

principal source was AIRer Hiss, an
urbane and brilliant young star In
the State Department.
On the surface, Hiss was everything that Chambers was not. Hiss
was slim, elegant, polished;
Chambers was pudgy, rumpled,
peasant-faced. Hiss was John
Hopkins and Harvard Law, a
former clerk to Justice Holmes,
counsel to a Senate committee. Hiss
was the very model or a model New
Deal Democrat. In time he would
counsel Roosevelt at Yalta; he
would help to draft the charter of
the United Nations. Yet Hiss, too,
was a spy.
In 1937 Chambers broke from the
party. Metaphorically he had heard
the screams or the victims or
Stalin's purge. He had undergone
the kind or religious experience that
staggered Saul on his road to
Damascus. He had discovered the
existence and dominion or God.
Chambers went Into hiding for two
years, but within 48 hours after
Stalin made his pact with Hitler,

in-March, eight years ago, Jimmy Carter was sill! "Jimmy Who?" -the
sniQlng former governor who wanted to glve the United States "a
government as good as Its people."
u;' was by no means clear that he was destined to win the Democratic
pre$klentlal nomina tton, even though at this point In the primary process In
1976 he had bushwhacked his way to surprise victories In Iowa and New

Hari!pshlre.

Alterwards It would seem Inevitable. But even political writers have a
hard time recalling which 12 Democrats offered themselves In 1976, the last
time there was a free-for-all for the Democratic nomination, akin to this
year's. Here, for trtvta buffs, Is a recap.
By March, former North Carolina Gov. Terry Sanford and Sen. Lloyd
Bentsen of Texas already had dropped out.
Carter had been .beaten only once - In the Mississippi caucuses, by
Alabama's George Wallace, campaigning In a wheelchair.
Now the ~h 2 Massachusetts prtmary loomed. Nine candidates were
on the ballot. Sen. Henry Jackson finished first, with 23 percent.
Rep. Morris Udall was second with 18 percent; Wallace, 17 percent.
Carter, who hadn't campaigned much, got 14 percent.
Sen. Birch Bayh, with 5 percent, read the returns and dropped out.
The next Tuesday was F1orida, which Wallace had carrted In 1972.
Carter beat him. Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp gave up. Carter beat
WAnace agal!lln Illinois March 16. R Sargent Shriver finished third and
thi'ew In the toweL
Two days later, Sen. Frank Church jumped Into the race.
Wallace and Carter squared off In a North Carolina hattie between the
~- and old South. Carter won, easlly.
But Jackson won In New York, Carter third with 13 percent.
·Iii Wisconsin that day, Carter beat Udall, 36 to 'S7 percent.
Labor mounted a stop-Carter drtve In Pennsylvania, rallying behind
Jackson. Carter won anyway. Carter scoi-ed three victories May 1: Texas,
Inillana and Georgia. Jackson read his Indiana results- 12 percent- and
pulled out.
'Then California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. jumped Into the race. And
Church squeaked by Carter In Nebraska, 39-38 percent.
In Michigan, the following Tuesday, It was Carter 44 percent, Udall 43.
But the day's big upset carne In Maryland, where Brown won.
May 25 was that year's super Tuesday. Carter won In Arkansas,
Tennessee and Kentucky, Brown In Nevada, Church In Oregon and Idaho.
:Brown won June lin IU!ode Island, whlle Carter, In South Dakota, was
giving Udall his seventh second place finish.
Finally. June 8, carne the last round. Brown won California, as expected.
An uncommitted labor-backed slate carrted New Jersey, but Ohio finished
the season: Carter 52 percent, Udall 21, Church 14.
Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley read the returns and endorsed Carter.
Wallace released his 168 delegates. Sen. Edward Kennedy feU In line.
Humphrey ended his 20-year quest for the presidency. Jimmy Who was on
the wav to belne- Pr&lt;&gt;&lt;:ltiont rortPr .

Berry's World
CONVENTIONAL
WISDOM

Cham~

was In Wuhlngton to
Inform on his Communist -81110clates. This led Indirectly to his
testimony In 1948 before the House
Committee on Un -Amertcan
Activities.
The dramatic story of those
hearlqs, at which Chambers under
oath tdentltled Hiss as a Communist , spy, Is best gained from
Chambers' book, "Witness." Hl8J
subsequently was Indicted tor
perjury, convicted and sentenced to
prtson. To this day, Hiss remains a
hero among left-wing lntellectuala.
One of them, Philip GeyeUn of Tile
Washington Post, recently de·
nounced President Reagan tor the ,
award to Chambers. To the ultraliberal lett, Chambers to this day ts
the "wimp" who "ratted" on Alger
Hiss.
Chambers died of heart dtseue In
1961. He had given his lite - almost
literally his lite- to expose the evils
ot communism. He hads forfeited a
prestigious position as a senior
editor of Time. He had suttered
terrible vtlltlcatlon from the Intellectual community. He felt he had
tailed In his desperate, seltsacrtttclng effort to arollse the
West.
"It Is Idle to talk about the wrec;k
ot Western civilization," he wrote to
BUI Buckley In 1~. "It Is already a
wreck from witl\ln. That Is WilY we
can hope to do little more than
snatch a ttngernaU ot a saint from
the rack or a handful of ashes from
the faggots, and bury them secretly
In a Oowerpot against the day, ages
hence, when a few men begin again
to dare to believe that there wu
once something else, that something else Is thinkable, and need
some evidence of what It was, and
the tortltylng knowledge that thrre ·
were those who, at the il'l!at
nightfall, took Uvlng thought to
preserve the tokens of hope and
truth."
.
This was Whittaker Chambers. ·
No one who has received the Medal ·
ot Freedom has more richly ,
deserved it.

U.s. bankrolls COpper____
WASI-UNGTON - The grand busillng with business, has been
designs of our global strategists converted Into a charity food
often fall to take Into account dispensary. Even St. Francis
palntul human consequences. It's cathedral reCeived notice that Its
unlikely, for example, that the electrtclty would be shut unless
policy makers In Washington have hack blUs were paid.
evet given any thought to Superior,
What have the town's troubles got
Artz. Yet thi'Y have made decisions to do with_global policy? Just this:
that have just about ruined the The United States contrtbutes
hardy people who live there.
heavily to International loans to
Superior was once a booming help Impoverished countrtes decopper town. Now It's becoming a velop their resources. One resource
ghost town. The lives ot Its 4,600 that has develped In abundance Is
residents had ·always revolved copper. The resulting overproducaround the Magma Copper Co. For tion has caused the worst depresfour g~neratlons. the town's strong- sion In 40 years In the U.S. copper
backed men had worked the Industry.
Magma mine.
Specifically, the U.S. taxpayers
Then on Aug. 15, 1~. the - Including the few In Superior who
company shut down the mine. One still have enough Income to be
day. miners were taking home $100 taxed - are shelling out money to
in daily wages; the next day, they keep overseas copper mines open.
were out of work. And with the This adds to the worldwide copper
Magma payroll gone, the lew other glut that Is pushing prices down and
' companies Uke Magma to
enterprises In Superior also began causing
to falter.
close nilnes. Since 1979, 16 of
A year ago, a restaurant burned America's 25 largest copper mines
down on Main Street; no one has have shut down.
bothered to clear away the charred
In 1982, tor example, the Internadebris. The local hotel, once tional Monetary Fund handed over

$325 mlUion to Chile to expand the
operations or CODELCO, the stateowned' copper monopoly. This
raised copper production 15 percent
In Chlle at tlie sarne time that
production dropped 25 percent In
the United States. Yet the greatest
share of the $325 mJWon loan carne
out of the U.S. treasi!I'Y.
The townspeople understand that
world copper prices have been
faDing, so they don't blame Magma
for closing down the mine. Wluit's
driving them to despair . Is the
continuing uncertainty over the
company's future Intentions .
Magma , can't say whether the
closing Is permanent or not.
Just as the outlook began to
improve last year, the InterAmerican Development Bank
loaned the Chllean government
another $268 mlUion to expand
copper production. Again, the lion's
share was contrtbuted by the
United States. Now I've learned the
governments of Zambia and Zaire
are asking the World Bank tor
multlmtulon-dollar loans to stimulate copper production.

•Grey •Beige
•White •Taupe

I

..wEATHER FORECAST -

The National Weather Service

. predlcta rain Sunday bt Washington, Oregon and Idaho. Snow Is
expected bt parts of MaiJ)e and the Dakotu. Flurries are predicted

tor Colorado and parts of North Dakota. (AP LllllerphoW).

Partly cloudy today, high around 30. The chance of snow Is 20
percent.

GALLIPOLIS - An appeal was
filed with the Fourth Dlstrtct Court
Friday on behalf of the GaWpoUs
Township Board of Trustees In
response to a Feb. 8 Gallla County
Common Pleas Court decision
upholding a cable television company's authority to serve an
unlncorpora ted area tn Green
hlp
T
~~~ted with the court's
decision trustees were undecided a
month ago It they would appeal to a
higher court against Thomp50n
Cablevlsion Inc., Charleston, W.Va.
and Cablentertatnment, Inc., Point
Pleasant, W.Va .
Following a series of meetings,
Gary Bane president of the
trustees, ga~e the go ahead for
Prosecutor Joseph Cain, their legal
adviSer to ftle the notice of appeal.
The apPeal will not be heard untll
September.

Ohio Extended Forecast - Monday through Wednesday: Partly
cloudy. A chance of snow nurrles mainly In the northeast on
Wednesday. Highs 25 to 35 Monday and In the mid 30s to mid 40s
Tuesday and Wednesday. Lows 5 to 15 Monday, 15 to 25 Tuesday. and
mostly In the 20s Wednesday.

Ohio weather story...
By The Associated Press
Record-low temperatures were set over most of the state Friday
night. A 100-year-Qld low for that date was broken at Dayton.
Overnight lows of 5 to 10 were In the record-breaking range.
Record lows for Saturday were set at the following weather
stations:
Cleveland, 5, old record 10 In 1960.
Canton-Akron, 4, old record 5 In 1932.
Youngstown, 6, old record 9 In 1972.
GalUpolls, 8, old record 12. In 1944.
Dayton, 7, old record 10 In 1884.
Columbus, 4, old record 12 In 1944 .
Findlay, 3, old record 8 In 1972.
Zanesville, 3, old record 11 In 1950.
Parkersburg, 11, old record 12 In 1929.
The very cold high pressure area was over the Ohio Valley, Great
Lakes and west through the northern plains. A weak area of low
pressure was also over Ohio, Indiana and Missouri and caused
Increasing cloudiness through Ohio.
An Artie front will bring brtsk northwest winds, scattered nurrtes
and some snow squalls, especially to the northeast quarter of the
state today.
The massive high pressure area following the front will continue
the very cold temperatures In Ohio through today.

The U.S. government has usually
been able to block any International
loans It doesn't like. Then why does
It, ,permit loans that damage the
domestic copper lndiiStry? Till!
State Department- contends that
opposition to the 16ans would
damage relations between Washington and Third World countrtes, such as the muttary dictatorship or Chile's Gov. Augusto

By The A.oolaled Press

,

So the residents of Superior are
suffering personally and painfully
tor the Reagan administration's
strategic goals. Since the mine
closed, there has been a strang~! ·
outbreak or Ulnesses and accidents
among the townspeople. The Rev.
Michael Teta, pastor of St. Francis
church, believes these ha'l(e been
caused by anxiety and Insecurity.
Psychiatrists would probably
agree.

R£cord-setttng
hit theforNortheast
and Midwestcold
Saturday
the
second straight day, while a band of
snow showers spread from southern
Michigan to northern Arkansas.
The early-morning 7 below zero
reading broke a record In Waterloo,
Iowa, and It was mlnus-41n Lincoln,
Neb. Other records were set In
Buttalo, N.Y., and Cleveland, each
at 7 above; Rochester, N.Y., at 5
above; and Wilmington. Del ., at 8

•

© t9Bitly NEA

/.)A_-

3•J

lr~t ~,.)W"~

Today in history

:Today Sur.day, \'&gt;iarch 11, the 7lst day ofl984~There are 295days left In
laws."
· ·
·
The attorney at the next door
_
·Today's Hlghllght In History:
said, "Hey, Harry, will you guys
: On March 11, 1B61, the Confederate convention m Montgomery, Ala.,
hold It down? I'm trying to' catch a
few winks."
adopted a COnstitution.
1iJlrry sa'&lt;!, "This guy says
·On this date:
: In 1847, ·John Chapman - better known as the pioneer and folk hero
SOCAL Is going to buy Gult,
- Frank."
":Johnny Appleseed" - died In Allen County, Ind.
: In 19ll, former President and Chief Justice Wtlliam Howard Taft was
"So what? It's a free countrY,"
Frank yawned.
buried In Arlington National Cemetery.
.
: tn 1900; "A Raisin In t}le Sun"- starring Sidney Pottier, Ruby Dee and
·~Yes," I satd, "but It you let two
Claiil111f'McNell - Opened on Broadway.
··
. .
oil Golll!ths merge you'll be stifling
• Aild 1n 1917, the more than 100 hoStages held In Washington by Hanatl. competition."
were treed after ambassadors from three Islamic nations joined
"~t concern Is that of ours?"
Frank wanted'to knOW.
the negotiations.
:
; Ten years ago: An Internal White House memorandum revealed that
"! just thought the antitrust
President RIChard Nixon had suggested members of his start be given tax · department ot Justice shoul&lt;j be
of tormer presidents so he could learn what deductions they had
alerted. Isn't It your job to see that
there Is competition In the
taken.
·'"
•
,- Five years ago: Israel's cablnel began-an all-night meeting to constdeF marketplace?"
. ~ly-revlsed language proposed by the United States for a peace treaty
"Ypu mean you want us to sue
SOCAL
to prevent them from
with EJM&gt;t.

is

tl)e year. · · ·

Moslems

returns

I

can be carried over to the !9114-85
school year.
The allocations for Meigs County's school distrtcts first year
participation are $3,004.73 for Meigs
Local based on 2,567 students;
$1.198.33 for Southern based on 1007
students; and $1,173.34 for Eastern
based on student enrollment of 986.
Each school dlstrtct has the
responslbUity of determining how
the Educational Excellence Funds
will be used to supplement Its

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Final Pell Grant Deadline Mar. 23, 1984

Winter storm watches were
posted tor Minnesota and the
Dakotas with winds up to 40 mph
possible.
Four Inches of new snow tell In
northwestern Missouri. Snow showers were also reported In southern
Michigan, northwestern Indiana,
central Illinois, , Kansas and

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degrees.

In a talk with my associate
Michael Blnsteln, the priest spoke .
sadly ot what Is happening to his ·
nock. He told of a woman who sold ·
her radio to buy her child a pair ot :
Shoes.

In the marketplace."
"What have you people done In
the last tour years 'to stimulate
competition In the marketplace?"
"We broke up the phone company," said Frank proudly. "And
there Isn't a person In the country
who Isn't betterofffortt. Uyoudon't
believe me, just walt until you get
your btu next month."

A1)

page funds
(Continued
Moore
advises from
unexpended

JOBS

Gallipolis
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Drivers Education

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B.. . .:. .:. .uc.;. . . .hwal____;_,-d :

buying Cult?" Fral,)k asked. "What
"What about the banks?" I said.
kind of antitrust lawyers do you · "SOCAL wants a $14 blllloncredltto
think we are?"
buy Gull. That's $14 blillon ihe
"U we stuck our nose Into every banks can't loan to other types of
two-bit takeover case in· this companies that might create jobs
country we'd clog the courts with and Invest In new equipment."
work," Harry said.
"That not our concern," said
I protested, "This Is not a two-bit Harry. "Our job Is to see that the
takeover :case.
It's going to cost
antitrust- taws are not · violated.
.
/
SOCAL $13 blllion, and It won't There Is nothing In the Gulf
produce one eli)&gt; ot new fuel tor the takeover that will hurt cornjietltlon
country. You can't let oil companies
eat each other up without a light."
Frank said, "We didn't do
anything about Texaco taking Over
WHOOP~!
Getty. Why should we Interfere ln
someone taking over Gulf?"
"Takeovers are good tor bustness," Hari'y!iald."Theydrtveupa ·"
company·~ stock alid a · lot ot
lawyers get richovernlght" ·
·
"But what &amp;bo11t the public?" I
said. "How do we benefit from
competition when ~o companies In
the same business make a sweetheart deal with each other?"
Frank took a '~)tinkle out of his
dra'o)'et i.nd started nlbbllni on tt.
"U we thought the mer,atna of two of
the Ia~ lJlh:omPIJIIB .!n · ~ .
world woold lpu1 the publlc, we'd !If
In court righ(now. But a man:taae .
ot this.kind ahould benefit every!): •
ody. It cotild put a damper on thele
· ruthless ps price· wars that are
cutting Into~·· prilflts."
· Harry saki, "And It wtU be a
warning to the lnclependent sta~
to stop glvln&amp; away tree car washes
when you buy a full lank ot gas."

Meigs Schools...

In the Feb. 8 ruling, Judge
Hlchard C. Hoderick Interpreted
state law as giving the cable
television company the right to
determtoe the area It proposed to
serve, rather than the township.
State law permits township trustees to enter Into a contract with a
cable television company to serve
an unincorporated area In a
township. The area must Include at
least 500 potential subscrtbers.
A franchise was granted to
Cablentertalnment In June 1982. At
thattlme, Cablevlsion, which serves
sections of Green Township, began
construction In Gallipolis Township
and trustees In January 1983 sought
an Injunction and punitive and
compensatory damages against
Cablevlsion.
An Injunction was granted, ~t
later stayed when Cablevlsion s
attorneys !lled for a hearlngwith the
Fourth District Court ot Appeals.
The appeals court claimed udld not
have jurtsdlctlon and could not rule.

English, math and science J
district's
programs.efforts to augment the

northern Arkansas.

To sleep, to dream _____,_____,;;A~~.;,......t
I went over to the Justice
Department the other day at about
11 o'clock, walked Into the antitrust
division and found everyone
sleeping.
I woke up one of the attorneys.
"Sir. '' I said. ''I'm sorry to
disturb you, but I have some
Important news tor you. Standard
Oil of California Is buying the·Gulf
Oil Company."
"You woke me up to tell me
that? "
"! thought It could be Important.
SOCAL and Gulf are among the
largest firms In the oil business, and
the merglng of the two ·firms Is
certainly a violation of the antitrust

'®_'~~~
The 300SecondAve .
~ ShOe ea~I.e LarayeUe
Mall
3t, ~~
Gallipolis, 0.

IN OPERATION AGAIN -Atterthreecbanp!llln~over

Appeal filed in district court

·Extended forecast

,"' 1~7il

the past two years, the meat proooMIIIg plant on Texas &amp;ad In
Gaillpolls has come full circle as a sausage manufacturer for Bob
Evans Fanns Inc. See story on C-6.

Ohio forecasts

Record low temperatures
hit Northeast, Midwest areas

__:J_ac_kA_n_d~_;;_;rso__;_n

Plnochet.

Leigh

�Marcil 11 , 1984

~~~~~~~~~Ti~me~~~~~n~ti~M~I================~~~~~~~~~~~Oh~i~~~~~n~t~AH~~~~n~t,~W~-~V~a~·======:;~~~~~=========;~~Ma~~~1~1~1~91~84;~
STORE HOUR~i .
.IRI~••·· •nu". 9 •nf til 10 pm
Fri.-Sat.9 am ·tH 10 pm
· . CLO"SED SUNDAYS

rate fight
i.litensifies
CINCINNATI (AP) - Hamilton
County Prosecutor Arthur N ey has
joined the battle to prevent the
utlllty owners of the Zimmer power
station from winning "exorbitant "
ra te Increases.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.,
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. and
Columbus &amp;Southern Ohio Electric
Co. abandoned the Moscow, Ohio,
facUlty as a nuclear plant and said It
will be converted to use coal.
In Dayton, Montgomery County
Prosecutor Lee Falke has formed a
coalition of governments to fight
efforts before the Public Utlllties
Commission of Ohio to pass on to
consumers the costs of the $1.7
bUUon plant. Ney praised the
coalition and said he lacked authorIty to join or contribute financially .
Hamilton County commissioners
authorized his Intervention, Ney
said, allocating up to $2'i,OOJ for
court costs and expert witnesses.
A need to protect consumers,
Including county commissioners
who buy a lot of power from CG&amp;E,
obligated him to act, Ney said
Frlday.
"There really has been no need for
this county to get Involved In lhls
until now," Ney said, adding that
waiting might make It "Impossible
to be effective."
"There Is an effort afoot to try to
paSs this on to the consumer," Ney
said. "We know thatlt's going on."
But CG&amp;E spokesman Bruce
Stoecklln said, "There Is nothing to
fight at lhls time. "
CG&amp;E'S pending rate request
excludes Zlmmer, Stoecklin said.
He said he · did not know when
Zlmmer costs will be Included In a
rate request.
According to the state Office of the
Consumers' Counsel, about $1B5
mUllen for Zimmer has been
Included In rates by CG&amp;E, DP&amp;L
andC&amp;SOE.
Utlllties may not charge consumers for an abandoned plants that
never generate power, but regulations are murkier about nuclear
construction which Is not used In the
proposed switch to coal at Zlmmer.

'Tentative trial
date slated
GALLlPOLIS- A tentative trial
date of Apr119 has been set by Gallla
County Common Pleas Judge
Htchard C. Roderick for Maxine S.
Plummer, forme~ executive director of the Gall!a-Jackson-Melgs 648
Mental Health Board.
Mts. Plummer was Indicted by a
Gall!a County grand jury In December for theft In office and using
her office to lnfiuence a public
contract.
At an arraignment a few days
later, she pleaded not guilty.
During a hearing before Hoderick
In court March 7, Mrs. Plummer's
attorney, Dan Hunt of Columbus,
argued for dismissal of the theft in
office charge.
Hunt claimed th at Mrs.
Plummer's position with the board
was not public. He Is also seeking a
change of venue for the trial because
of extensive local media coverageof
Mrs. Plummer's activities while In
office.
She was fired by the board In
September 1983 after the board
conducted a three-night hearing on
her conduct In office, which had
been criticized In a state-appointed
re.vlew group's report.
Gall!a Prosecutor Joseph Cain
said the case Is relevant and Mrs.
Plummer was serving as an agent
for the state.
.
Hoderick Is expected to Issue a
ruling on Hunt's request lhls week . .

Steak

99¢

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Mandl.
All such weapons were banned for
wartime use under the 1925 Geneva
Protocol. Iraq repeatedly has denied using thelfl, although It has not
. said whether It possesses stockpiles.
Mandl, a doctor Involved In the
trealment of 10 Iranian fighters
flown to Vienna on March 2, said the
toxins were Identified In specimens
of urine, feces and blood taken from
two wounded soldiers under treatment at Vienna's Second University

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DAMAGED - Damage was heavy to the Pomeroy Flower Shop, 108
~ nut Ave., around 6:115 p.m. Friday when a doe deer cruhed
lhruuP a large plate pus window at the front of the llhop. 'The deer
!ravelled throu&amp;h the front part of the llhop, lmocldng over p1111ta and
decoratloal aad ~- from llhelvee. In the llhop's rear, the deer
, _ CIIUied ~- Blood marked the palh of the anlmaiiJiroulh the
~- Melvm and Nancy Van Meter were wortdn&amp; In the rear
iedloD of the llhop when the Incident OCCWTed. "It IIOilllded tike u1
!!'lplollloi•,'' Van Meter commented. 'The front of the shop WII.!J boarded
up later Friday nllht and the Van Meter famlb' began the arduous
CBIMIP Involved. (Photo by Bob Hoeflich) .

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TV

PC254

Post Off ice.

Sale Price

"Our Reg. 48.84

$4

39.
07-§J'
SllmD~n

Member: T h(' Associated Pres s Inland Dally Pr(&gt;Ss Association and the
Amer ica n N£'wspap&lt;&gt;r Publ lsh('rs As-

-aoclatlon, Na tional Adverllslng RE"·
pr('Sent utlve. Br anh am . 1717 W{'s l
Ni ne Mil £&gt; Road , Sui!£&gt; 204, ~tro lt ,
Mic higa n. 4807~ .

Standard
Pillows

Telepfione

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One w.. k ....... .. ......... ..... ......... $1.00
OnP Mont h ......... .... ........... ..... .. $4.40
OnP Y£&gt;ar ...... .... ... ............... ... S.'i2.80
SI NGLE COPV
PRICE

With delux.e polyester fill, polyester /cotton lick .
Large 20x26" size.

Dial-in-Hand wall phone, trend line style, rotary dialing.
Our 44.87 Rotary desk phone

3S CPn ls

PC200 ..................... r::l·· 37.97

No s uscrlpllons by ma ll pc'rmlt tt"d In
tow ns wh£&gt;1'(' homt' carrl£&gt;r scrvi('(' Is
avail a bl e.

Mfr. May Vary

~

.

T hP Sunday T lmes -St'nllnC'l will no t
lx' rf'sponsl bl e for a d va ncf' pay m('nts
madf' by ca r riPr s.

20x30"" Quee n Size. 55
20x36'" King $1ze .... 57

- "-1110

Goods Dept.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIOSS
Sunday Only
Onf' )'('ar ....................... . ..... $20.80
~ l x m onths ..... .. ...... ... .. ......... .10.40

(RAY·§VAC}

jJ

Dally and Sunday
MAIL SU BSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio
~2 w.. ks .. .. .. ......
. ... $.~1. 4 8
26 Woeks ... .. ..... ........ ... .......... 527.30
13 Weeks ... .. ...... ....... ............. St4.01
Ra tes Outs ide Ohio
52 W«.&gt;('kS ... ....
.. ......... .. $56.16"

. f7
. I

26 W('eks ..... .. ......... .... .. ..... .. $29.64

·I 43-oa

i3 w.. ks ..... ................... ..... Sl$.21

~

.!

38-20

.
'

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•

.

.

. Your worn out leather boots in t~ade.

' •

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LOAF .

.I

,

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I
I
lith Coupon
I
Wlfh Coup~n ,
I ··
.With Coupon ',
,GiiOd Ony At Bifr's. __: .I _ ~0011 Only at Barrs _
Good Only At Barrs

\.-

.~
-•.'·

•
Pkg.
loO Kitchen
Plastic with ties ..
13-gal. capacity.

•

Underall~

2.44
, Pkg.

Hole

Nylon panty hose
with cotton pan~l.

2.58 B
. Dynamo Liquid

64 oz. detergent.

·

199
•

Liquid Downy®

EJ

Ea.

Sale
Price

64-oz. • fabric softener lor clothes.

88
Fresh

~

CI:SQie
Price
Glade"' Mist
7-oz.• air freshener; scent choice.

.

Mori. &amp; Fri. til 8
Tues., Wed .• Thurs.
&amp; Sat. til 5

reteive-$7-;0Q off of· t~e-regula,r-selling ·
.o pritf!l· .on a
pair of SHEBOYGAN boots
.durir""g our "LUCKY SEVEN'.' trade-in
ptomotion:
··

Bring us your old leather boots, regardless
of
condition, and we'll
do the rest.
.
'
Offer ends Marth l1 1 1984.
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1·
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I

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3 3 3Bav• 1 87

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Deluxe TvE,a\l~tr

Trade in your worn out leather boots at

$"}69 ·!I LB. $}991.
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~\c.\UOila,
YIDEO '#

Save•10

mailing ma11er at Pomeroy, OhiO,

.,. .

COUPON
. KAHN'S

I

·1-LB.$:1-39
·1
PKG.
I
I lB.·.$J99 I~
I
I
' I
1 .. With Coupon
I
1 lloOil Only AI Bar~s . , I .

THE
ALCOVE

~\c.liLDIJa,
IIHO '#
STATIOI
FRUTH
PHARMACY

Sale

·

·1 COUPON
I
I
KAH.N'S .
-.CHO~P-ED. 1}LWJEL
MEA!.fER.W.~-·.:.l"KLE
COUPON
SUPERIOR

'•

~\c,\ILDIJg,
IIHO '#
STATIOII

cond class post aRe pa id at Galli polis,
Ohio 45631. Entered as Sl'COnd class

•,

:i:· $13·
9
·
49¢ _,__________
______ ________ ___ _______ __

·-·--·-. ,~-· · ..;,..,.._

C% . ' ,

!

"

THE MOVIE PLACES

§L __

POTATOES

20LB.$.
· BAG

+&gt; ..H

II)

TODAY THRU MARCH 17

A. MuJtlmedla New1pa per
Pu blls hl'd earh Sunday. 825 Third
Avenue, by 1he Ohio Va lley Pu blish·
Ina Company· Multlm~l a, Inc . ~

MAINE

ORANGES'

lETT.UCE
COUP9N
R

I

CALIFORNIA ,

FRESH

l:-750

9::RJ·.$1 79

5

ONION

MYN ..

FOR OUR BETA FRIENDS - TDK-L750 CASSETTES
ARE PRICED AT $7.55 WHILE SUPPLIES LAST .

Open Daily I 0-9; Sunday 1-6

\VINTBD

DRESSING DRESSING

2 oz.75¢1

*TDK

Iran Oew five other litjured
· lighters to Stockholm, Sweden, for
treatment of what It said were
chemical warfare wounds received
at the battlefront In attacks by Iraq.
Four of the 15 soldiers flown abroad
have died, one Saturday lit Sweden.
Four patients being treated In
Vienna remained In critical condition Saturday, doctors said.
Mandl said lit a radio Interview
that "no specific antidote Is known"
against the toxins. "We have treated
so far according to the symptoms
and have to continue to do so.''
Doctors had suspected that acid
burns on the skin and damage to

Save 32.97

MIRACLE WHIP

oz

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ONE TDK-T-120 CASSETIE
AT OUR REGULAR PRICE OF $9 .95 FOR EACH MOVIE RENTED .

••d • J 1'i• rt - imti'1114
USPS U5·11111

~SE~TS~_L_B·~~~· ~------------~----~

TRY ONE .Of OUR
· SHAMROCK SHAKES
/AND
.
WE WILL OONATE TO

25 ¢

59

· POUND
PKG.

3
PKG.

.

YELLOW OR WHITE

SAYS ---

99¢

8-160Z.

. BTLS.

VALLEY BELL

OF GALLIPOLIS

&lt;

Sl~L~N

•

12 oz.

$149

, 2o/o
'
MILK

$}00

MOVIE RENTALS - JUST 5c

rr.=======;;;;~

the•clty center, pollee said, adding
the ' shots came from the Homan
catholic Bogalde district. Two
officers.returned fire, poUee said.
Pollee restrained hundreds of
protesters from breaking through a
cordon to enter the Bogside and
pukue the gunmen, poUee said.
'The Protestant parade 'Is to
protest a British government dec!·
slon allowing Londonderry City
Council to change Its name to Derry
City Council, a move opposed by the
city's Protestant leaders.
Londonderry Is the name used by
Northern Ireland's Protestant majority, and Derry Is the name used
the Roman Catholic minority. The
arKument over the name Is centuries' old but modem maps show the
citY as Londonderry.
Early Saturday, Roman Catholic
youths lobbed about 100 gasoline
boinbs at pollee In downtown
Lopctonderry.
Police responded with volleys of
plastic bullets to disperse the
youths, but nobody was reported
Injured In the pre-&lt;lawn violence.
pollee said.
In other Incidents, about a dozen
high-velocity shots were !Ired at a
British army camp at Fort George
In tllenorthernpartoftheclty, pollee
said.
A bomb exploded at a supermarket In Dungannon40mllessouth
of here without litjurlng anybody,

VALLEY BELL

"BONUS BUY"

JUMBO ROLL

COKE
8-16 oz. $13 9 r!~s
BTLS.
. &amp; Dep.

LIBBY'S

CAN

HI.; DRY

NICKELODEON'S ANNIVERSARY
NICKEL SPECIAL

bomb left outside a store and waited
for daylight before tackling two
others.
·

lnjllrles.

These ·c ancer Days Special Below for Wednesday Only
VALLEY BELL

rr;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

and In Newry In the southeast of the
province army experts defused one

lalid (AP ) - Gwunenopenedfireo11

Vnidentlfled
fired Ina
doafn
sho~ at thegunmen
demonstrators

MAXWELL HOUSE OR
FOLGERS

physical condition.
Mandl said the experts found a
high concentration of the polson In
the specimens which were sent from
VIenna.
•
The U.S. State Department said
on Thesday that it was known Iraq
had used mustard gas against
Iranian fighters. although the department did not know if other
chemicals had been used.

open fire
~n protest marchers

BEEF LOIN ......................... LB. 12.89

$}19

exposure to small quantities of the
gas can be survived.
Mandl, who Is not a toxicologist,
said little Is known about mycotox·
Ins, which he described as "metabolic products of tung!."
He said these poisons "also cause
damage to the human body, the
difference from mustard gas being
that they have a much more
protracted effect," making possible
a months-long deterioration of

~unmen

WHOLE TRIMMED

.Spare
Ribs

Inner organs, Including the lungs,
were due to exposure to polson gas,
but did not want to commlt
themselves without sclen"lc
evidence.
Mustard gas c~uses chemical
burns to the ~!·Jr and Inner organs,
the blood, blo...4 w· 'lUSCles and the
lungs, Mandl e"pJao.ied.
He said, based on experience
gained In World War I, that

Clinic.

PORK

HOLLYWOOD

~t\0
.
Gtt~ OPENING

thru Merch 17, 1884 .

LB.

SUPERIOR'S

SECRETSERVICEACTION-SecretServlceagentswrestlewtth
Clarence Montgomery Friday evening at a recepUon In Columbua, Ga.,
for Walter Mondale after agents noUced Montgomery was carrying a
gun. Montgomery, a juvenile court balllff, was later questioned and
released. Mondale was not aware of the Incident unt8 after he wa8
escorted from the reception by Secret Service agents. (AP Laserphoto).

VIENNA, Austria (AP)- Laboratory tests show that Iranians
flghtlitg In the war with Iraq have
been exposed to mustard gas and
"yellow rain," a doctor treatlitg
wounded Iranians flown to Vienna
said Saturday.
Tests by the Toxlcologtcal lnstl·
tute In Gent , Belgium, revealed
"with certain proof" the presence of
mycotoxlit, or "yellow ralit," and
mustard gas, said Dr. Herbert

,......,. The RlghiiO Umlt Quont~ioo'

$}29

PORK SHOULDER

The Sunday Timer.-~ntiMI Pa9e-A-5

. Iranian fighters exposed to chemical warfare

..

~ti=~

ARMOUR

I

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Plea~nt, W. Va.

JUN&amp;.Siiil MFG. COMPANY
'0. Ill zt." l .....ll, WI UOII

•

•
•

•

�*

GALLIPOLIS - Sadie Hardesty,
99, W . 1, Crown City, died Friday

morning in Holzt:&gt;r Medical Center.
Born April 11. 1884, in Lawrence
County, daughter of Solomon and
Susan kose Nance, she was a
member of Good Hope Baptist
Church at Crown City.
She was also preceded in death by
her husband, J .B. Hardesty, in 1967.
Surviving are four sons, Donald
and Lawson, both of Crown City,
Denver of Portsmouth, and Forrest
of South Point; a daughter, Marie
Rankin of Huntington, W.Va .; and
eight grandchildren, 16 great·
grandchildren and seven greatgreat-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by
five brothers and two sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. today in Good Hope Baptist
Church, with the Rev. Earl Henkle
otflclating. Burial will be in Good
Hope Cemetery.
The body will lie in state in the
church one hour prior to the service.

Lee E. McVey
. ALBANY - Lee E. McVey, 60,
Belair Road, Augusta , Ga., died
early Saturday morning at the home
of his brother, Owen McVey, Rt. 1,
New Marshfield.
Born Sept. 6, 1923, at Albany, son
of the tate Edison and Hazel Jones
McVey, he was a retired employee
of Abex Corp.. Athens.
· Hewasprecededindeathbyason,
Melvin Lee; two grandchildren;
and a brother, James Franklin.
Surviving are three daughters,
Donna Edwards of New Haven,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
W.Va .. Bonnie Althouse of Page- American OvU LliJertles Union of
town, and Tracey McVey of Ohio has asked the U.S. Justice
Carbondale; two sons, Walter of Department to investigate the death
Augusta, and Danny of Albany; four last'inonth of a state prison inmate,
grandchildren; four sls~rs. Mrs.
but state officials consider the
Coy (Madge) Higginbotham of request untimely.
Albany, Mrs. Don (lone) Knopp of
Mark Levy, ACLU associate
Ellenton, Fla. , Mrs. Alonzo (Eu· director, released what hesaldwere
nice) BeamofCarroll,andMrs.Nell copies of a coroner's autopsy report
(Sue) Derbyshire of Lancaster; and · on Jbnmle Haynes, 25, who died
two brothers, Owen and David, both Feb. 9 at Scioto Memorial Hospital.
of New Marshfield.
Levy said the autopsy "raises
Funeral services will be held at 1 questions ... concerning the posslbllp.m. Tuesday in Bigony-Jordan lty of excessive use of force" by
Funeral Home, Albany, with Bishop guards at the Southern Ohio
John Pollard otflciatlng. Burial will Correctional Facility in Lucasville.
be at Bean Hill Cemetery. Friends
Robert Urban, spokesman for the
may call the funeral home from 2-4 state Department of Rehabilitation
and 7-9 p.m. Monday.

Maude M. Sellan:ls
GALLIPOLIS - Maude Mae
Sellards, 77, Cheshire, was found
dead Friday afternoon at her
residence.
Born Aug. 17, 1906, in Kentucky,
daughter of the late Raleigh and
Matllda Coffey, she operated a
grocery in and around the Cheshire
area for several years, .and was a
member of the Cheshire Methodist
Church.
She was also preceded in death by
her husband, Ed Sellards, in 1961.
Surviving area son, Clark of West
Logan, W.Va.; a daughter, Mrs. Bill
(Wllrna Jean) MulllnsofMetheune,
Mass.; and a grandson.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Monday in Willis Funeral
Home. with the Rev. Chester Bird
otflclating. Burial will be in Forest
Lawn Cemetery, Pecks Mill, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p.m. today.

Mayor appeals merger stall
The
ability of U.S. businesses to compete
in the world market will .be
hampered unless the Justice Department rethinks Its position on
CLEVElAND

(AP)

-

proposalssu~hasthestalledmerger

between Cleveland's RepubUc Steel
Corp. and L1V Corp. of Dallas, says
Cleveland Mayor George
Voinovlch.
The Justice Department announced last month that It would
oppose the merger on antitrust
grounds, but has invited the
companies to submit alternate
proposals.
Bruce Wheatley, a spokesman for
Republic, said Friday the merger

Wreck hurts
mother, child
GALLIPOLIS - A Syracuse
mother and c!illd were treated and
released at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Friday afternoon for minor
Injuries follo\lo1ng a two-vehicle
accident on Ohio 124.
Cynthia K. Swisher, 33 and Kelly
A. Swisher. 5, were transported by
the Meigs EMS to the hospital. A
spokeswoman there said they
suffered no apparent injuries.
In the 2: 50 p.m. accident east of
Syracuse, the Gallla-Meigs Post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol reports
Swisher and another drlver, Robert
J . Johnson, 26, Oak Hill, were
traveling east on the state highway.
Swisher turned left into a private
drive. As Johnson was passing, his
car struck Swisher's car in the left
side.
The vehicles had moderate
damage.
:Cited by the patrol Friday were
John H. Eblin, 23, Pomeroy, for DWl
and no operator's license and James
A. Bennett, 43, Rt. 2, Vinton, for
assured clear dlstance.

0

March 11, 1984

with L1V was being pursued. The
merger would combine Republic
with L1V subsldlary Jones &amp;
Laughlin to form the nation's
second-largest steel firm, behind
U.S.Steel.
Wheatley said Republic and L1V
officials would meet Tuesday with
Justice Department officials · in
Washington. J~ Scheer, L1V
senior vice president, said the flmls
would present a modltled merger
plan including the divestiture of
some facilities.
'
Voinovtch, who discussed the
matter with Vice President George
Bush last week, said Friday he felt
he and others have made some
headway in educating the Reagan
admlnlstration, Congress and the
Justice Department about bnpllca-lions of the proposed steel merger.

and Correction, said thedepartmeht
has seen neither the autopsy report
nor the results of an investigation by
the State Highway Patrol.
He explained that Scioto County
Prosecutor Lynn Grimshaw has
that evidence and soon will decide
whethertotake thecasetothegrand
jury.
"Whatever recommendation the
prosecutor makes. we'll go along
with," Urban said. He said the
ACLU complaint Is "based on
interviews with two of the inmates
andoneporttonofthedata."
Prison officials said at the time of
the incident that Haynes had to be
subdued after he
tearing up
his cell. Haynes was serving an 8-to

r;=~=::;===::;;=:;r

anything.''

Sommer said Carey has numerous friends in the liquor industry and
his guests understood attendance

connecUon with the Feb. U theft Of a $3,!!00 ring from Siders and

Son's Jewelers in GaUlpolls Ferry, a spokesman for the Mason
Cqunty'Sherlff'a Department reported.
Walden Keith Davis, :n, wholle address Is believed to be in the
Charlestoa area, and Gary Skeen, 32, SlssonvUie, W.Va., have been
arrested on grand lan:eny charges, the spokesman said.
·Devil, who was being held on a parole violation in the Jackson
County Jall and faces other charges in Kanawha County, was
arraJaned.on the grand larceny charge Tue8day in Jackson ~ty.
the apokelman said.
Bond was set at $.11,(0), the spokesman added.
'I'M-~~ spokesman said Skeen turned hlrnselt In at the
·~wba County JaU Feb. '!1, was arrainged in Kanawha County
and wu released on $1,(0) bond. Skeen Is slated to appear before
Muon County Mqlstrate Paul "Snooky" Smith March 19, the
spokesman said.

r;::=:;:;;,::;:=;==:;i
@heraton Inn North
nty
1
1

I$34.95 plus tax per room. 1 or 2

Volunteer

I Adults (children Free), Includes
I use of our Indoor sports club,

Emergency Squad

NOW OFFERING

laood any ni&amp;ht',). Clip this ad
and pr~sent upon check-ln.
l ReHrvationt required, some
restrictions may apply.llot appll·
cable to aroups.
l
CALL 614-888-8230
1
Expires 3-11·14
( )
1(2)
2

FREE

Ingels extradition denied

I

Ambulance Service

8 A.M. til 12 Midnight
24 Hour Service
Saturday &amp; Sunday

POINT PLEASANT - Mason County Circuit Judge Clarence
Watt ruled Friday afternoon that his court would not force the
extradition to Ohio of Earl F. Ingels, Jr .. :n. Mason, W.Va., charged
·with the Nov. 16 aggravated robbery of the Tri-County Bank in
Coolvllle.
Mason County Prolecutor Damon B. Morgan said II Is possible
that Ohio will file for extradition again. As a result of Watt's ruling,
there are no standln&amp; warrants on Ingels in the state of West
·'VIrginia, he added.
Morgan said Watt ruled that the crtterta for granting extradition
' .were not met.

.L.-------------___=

446-83

~=====~====..l::.=.:.:::.:_:_::::.:_

~dical Equipment

2t05 Jack- Ave.

GALLIPOLIS - Three new members were voted into the Gallla
County Deputy Sheriff's Association at its recent meeting.
• The achievement award for February was given to Jamie Sullivan
r her dedication to the association.
, · The child tlng1erprlnting program was discussed. Volunteers are
• lftded for this program, the association said.
AU members were reminded to wear full-dress unlfonns for
: 'PlO!Os to be taken at the association's Monday meeting.

SALES OR RENTAL
eomo M:IIII£S

• mrr IIEDICM£

e POIJAIL£ OIYCDI

eHOSPIJM. . . &amp; RAILS
e NTIDIJ LfiS
elWEZEIMS
eWILIEIS
e COIIIIODES
e UfiOI IUI:HIIIES

WE HIIIIIILE AU. IIWIMi

VALLEY
PlAZA

WEEKLY SPECIAL

ENCHILLADAS .

99¢

(Gil

HOURS:
11 to 10 Sun. thru Thurs.
11 to 11 Fri. and Sat.

Smokanomo.llil

VEIERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

'•'

.

Don't miss these Spring
Home Appliance Buys!

LEVOLOR®R~r6E

i

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

I

'

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

•

BLIND

12"
$29"

STARTING AT •••• S
ENVIRONMENTAL GRAPHIC MURALS
ONE MONTH ONLY
Now

Put vital communications
in the palm of your hand.

50 NEW SPRING WALLPAPER PAnERNS
JUST ARRIVENAYFAIR·a YORK ••••••••••••
SAVE
UP

TO

oz. $}49
BTLS.

8

16

35%

ON PAnEINI IELECTIO FIIOII

THI LAIIIIT IILICTIOif OF
IOOKI Ill THI AliA.

TABLE FOR RENT ••

Kenmore extracapacity washer

24HOUII

763 2rd Avo.
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.
Ac,.tt

GALLIPOLIS
ICE HOUSE
709 First Ave.

1
1
1

CAROLLSNOWDEN
Oh.

Phone 446-4290
Home 446-iSll

State Farm Insurance Compames • Home Of t.ces 8loom1ngton . llhn01s

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

no~--1

I
or pay later? I
Prudential-Bache Securities presents a
I
financial planning seminar for the 80's.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
us
futlft.
I
'YYe e e

Join us on March 13th for our seminar where we'Udiscuss the foUowing
topics along with other financial issues:

0 Thx Sheltered Investments.
0 Thx-Free Investments.
0 IRA Alternatives.

0 The Stock Market for 1984.

Speaker: David &lt;;:offindaffer-Account Executive
Prudential-Bache Securities
When: Thesday, March 13th at 7: 00p.m.
Where: Hofiday Inn
Gallipofis, Ohio

Admission is free , but space is limited. To reserve your seat just send
in the coupon below or call coUect 304-342-2243 or
1-800-642-8290. Come and find out if these investments are suitable

for you.

Prudentiai-Bacho Securities. One Valley SQuare. Charl&lt;s&lt;on. W V 25301
304-342-2243
Pleue reeerve

aeat(s) for me at your Total Finanoal Planrung semmar.
0 I CIJli10t att&lt;nd. pleuo ll&lt;1ld me further infonnation.

~~L__ _ __2~~--~~~---~~~o•~&lt;~I----CIIonb._,;.e,.,..,.
c6:1ed~~-

Bring

yow

____
_.
L..---0 -

Prudential-Bache

Secuntles

Prudonlill-llac Socuritiot -

SIPC

AT LONG JOHN SILVER'S!
1'eeiJee'•••

out WALLJIAI'IIt IOOili-WI HAVI

MA23701

PAST~

STATE FARM

PIan

~:JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc~

sears

Hickory Smoked ·
RIBS &amp; CHICKEN

I
I

,

African food aid bill.

: ' GALLIPOLIS - Further review of a proposed wning ordinance
:: will be held when the Gaillpolls Planning Commission meets at7::rl
: p.m. Monday in the city bulldlng.

304 675-3512

Collect

/

See me for
car. home. life
and health
insurance.

:; Planning commission to meet

''WI.SIRVIQ A 60 MILl
RADIUS FROM POINJ PLIASANJ"'

SAVE 36.@

Like a good neighbor;
State Farm is there.

•: The office will close at 11 a.m.

eWE CAll ILSO OIID
UP lO 2500 OIIIEI ITEIIS.

funds as an amendment to an

~--------------~1

INSURANCE

·:meeting.

eOIEI8ED TAaES

TillE IIOfmi.Y OIYGEII
VISITS

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest· thlnkltwuresponslbleafteralllhls
dentReqansaylhehopesltwlllnot time to actually envision the anned
be necessacy to WJe his emergency forces of Salvador running out of
aUthority and bypass Congress to ammunition and materiel that Is
send an additional $93 million in needed to defend the country
mllltaryaldtothegovemmentofEI against the guerrillas,' ' said
Salvadorforltsbattleagainstleftlst · Reagan.
guerrillas.
The Republican-dominated SeWlth a key vote set for next week nate Appropriations Committee
on Reagan's request for the adell- decided Thursday to delay its vote
tiona! funds, the president said on the $93 mllllon request. It also
Friday, "I think that reason will voted 15-14 against Reagan's proppreval!.''
osal for an additional $21 mllllon in
However,heleftopentheposslbU- covert mllltary aid for rebels
ltyhewoulddrawthemoneyout of a battling the Sandlnlsta government
presidential contingency fund and of Nicaragua.
transfer II to EISalvadorlfCongress
The admlnlstration tried to attach
balks at his request. Reagan said he the Nicaraguan rebel aid to a blll
hoped he did not have to do that.
providing money to help the poor
pay for home heating.Slmllarly ,it Is
"1 don't see how anyone could trying to attach the El Salvador

G~IIIpolis,

: : GALLIPOLIS- Southern Ohio Production Credit Association, 228
:Vpper River Road, will close early Frtday for a staff personnel

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-7

Reagan: 'reason will prevail' in funding
r--------------- - - - -- r, - - - - - - - -

417 Second Ave.

;;PCA office to close early

eltlls
HI. EIIEIGEJICY SEIVICE e DIAPPS &amp; UIIDOPD .

NG

•.•

Three join sheriffs association

PWlnt Pleaunt

.... IEIIAIE&amp;
PIIIMJt IIISIIAIIC(

was voluntary.

.POINT PLEASANT - Two persons have been arrested in

Coming To
Columbus?

began

Celeste said, "The stated policy Is
that people can be asked to
partlclpate in a particular event but
for no type of material
consideration."
Meanwhile, Ohio Transportation
Director Warren J . Smith last week
told an aide to run down recun1ng
allegations that some state workers
and firms doing business with the
state have been solicited for political
contributions. The U.S. Transporta,
tion Department also has launched
an inquiry into the allegations.

Two arrested in ·theft

r--------------.

Celeste didn't know
·about Glenn party
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste says he was unaware
that his liquor control dlrector held a
fund-raiser for presidential candidate John Glenn to which liquor
company representatives were
invited.
Celeste said he knows of no
contact between his office and that
of Hlchard E. Carey, liquor control
director, concerning a Wednesday
night dinner party at Carey's home.
Celeste made his comments
Saturday in Washington, where he
was attending a a meeting of the
Democratic National Strategy
Councll.
However, Celeste's chief of staff,
Joseph Sommer, said late Friday
that he told Carey earlier in the day
that "as a matterofpolicy,itwasnot
appropriate to lnvltethosewhowet;e
regulated to a fund-raiser."
Twenty Uquorcompany representatives were among the 30 guests.
Carey, concerned that his invitations may have been misinterpreted, told Celeste staff members
of the guest list before the party.
Carey said Silturday.
''Thegovernor'sotflcesaldpeople
should be notified that there was no
need to give," Carey said.
·
"I invited ·friends over to dinner
and the fund-ralserwaslncldental to
that," he said. "I told all my guests
- some of them three tbnes - that
there were no strings attached.
There was no necessity to give

Briefs:--

50-year sentence from Hamilton
"Contrary to prison officials'
County for aggravated assault, theft previous assertionS that Haynes'
and burglary.
size and strength made him hard to
Theotftclals saldflveguardswere handle tor even the seven guards
slightly Injured subduing Haynes. they admit were involved.'' he said.
They later said seven guards were - - - - - - - - - - involved in the incident.
r
The autopSy was performed by
the Franklin Countycoroner'sofflce 1
at the request of the Scioto County I
coroner.Levysaldltg!vesthecause 1
of death as "cardiopulmonary· I1
arrest" due-to compression of the I
Stay at the
neck.
I

•

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

ACLU requests Lucasville death inquiry

Area deaths
Sadie Han:lesty

March 11, 1984

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

Page-A-6--The Sunday Times-Sentinel

• • ..

MA65821

Kenmore extracapacity dryer
BIG BUY

CUT .S90

*''"' Owtc ~tef

$305~t?

t-525-7090
704 Grand Central Ave.
PARKIRSBURG W. VA.
(lcr•M "'"" Or•nd

~trcd Moll !

CUT S100

1-295-4532

Gallipolis

The Beare a~ Five-Six Scanner fits in your
hand-or clips on your belt. So you're always in
touch with vital oommunications. Police, fire and
emergency calls. Even pilot-to-tower aircraft
transmissions. Features include: 5 bands.
6 channels. 8 channel-per-second scanning. Scan
delay. Channel lockouts. Patented Track luning.
And more.

ALSO IN CHAI~SlON &amp; CMIWC:Ontl, OH.

- Eb~ was riding his S~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;1
motorcycle west on Meigs County
Rj:&gt;ad 14, turned left onto Ohio 143,
lost control and overturned.
·He was uninjured and his motorcycle sustained light damage in the
11:35 p.m. accident.
An Ohio Bell Telephone pickup
t:J:uck, operated by Aloysulsa
Grueser, 42. Rutland, which was
stppped south on Ohio 160, was
struck in the rear by a cardrtven by
Bennett, the patrol reported.
The car received moderate damage and the pickup, no damage in the
8~ 25a .m. accident .
. p1J8SeS81oq charge made
COMPARE
· City pollee charged a Willow
PRICE
Wood man for possession of
&amp;
marijuana early Saturday
VALUE
morning.
Cited was William D. Wilson. 28.
Indoor or outdoor. pool or patio ...Perma-Wickere offers the look of wicker plus durability. This 4·
Qty pollee report hew as charged at
piece group includes low back spring base chair. high back spring base chair, spring base loun12:55 a.m. on First Avenue .for
J;i:&gt;ssesslon of less than 100 grams of
ger and end table. Also availabl_e is 2-seat glider and canopy swing.
marijuana.
low Back SprinR 8ase C~air. Reg. S86.65 ....................... .... ....................................................... $65
Also cited Saturday was Rudolph
High Back Spring Base Chair, Reg. $103.50 ................................................... :...................... .,... $75
r.{. Gordon, '!1, 750 Third Ave.,
Spri~g Base Lounger, Reg. $197.20 ... ,.......................................................................... :............$135
. •
driving: under suspension; and on
2-Seat Glider, .Qeg...$~00-...........,......;,.,,,;,,,,..,,.•.,,.,,,..,,i7,;,,,,,,,,,·....................~ .. ~: ~·n==•.,n•nn n uu$-149-~~ •;}!...-.
Friday, David S. Walker, 20, 2003
Canopy Swing, -Reg. $280 .............:..:............................................................................................ $189
·
Gallla Ave., !allure to yield.
End·
Table,
Reg.
$60
.......................................................................................................................
$45
. Walker was attempting to cross
Gallla Avenue from an alley in his ·
car. He falled to yield and struck a
C8!· driven by Larry L. Long, 34,
:nn ChalhamAve.,ln therlghtsldl' .
The accident OCCiiiTed at 1:3: '
. .
p.m. and tiie vehicles were moder
9SS Second
ately damaged.

Early Bird Sale
Casual Outdoor Furniture

CORf)IN &amp; SNl'DfR
fURNITURf CO.

JA23721

JA65721

.
..'

Kenmore extra·
Kenmore extracapacity washer
caPQcity dryer
· BIG ' CUT $387,9fl CUT
$29~
BUY*90.QO
White
'-'ihile

49

•so

\

&gt;

'SAVE $90
'
Kenmore
extra-

capacity washer

$421l?e
•

Washer l)as 2 speeds
and 3 cycles.

.

'

Each of these advertised items ia readily available for
sale as advertlllid

••

Prices are utalo1 prices • Now available in Dt!' "MR". "FE" aild "JA'
_to!aloa Sllppltmenb • tnllllialion edu.!.Minr-Kenml!ro models.
available in colotsat eldra.cHarae • Kenmore dryen reqliire con·
nedors nOt lnduded In price slw)wn • .Ask about Seirs credit plans

'

Sears, Roebuck and Co.

f
,

Most mtrcNndlsf lva.IIOie

lor I)!Ck·UCI wllflln
alfw diYI ·

;~tr:rta~ ·
,.

.

Just South
Of The
Holiday Inn
On Route 7

J

•
•

..••

'•'
'
• '

.

••

®

'.

SILVER BRIDGE
Phone 446-2770

.

PepnftCAT Fi,.Sit ·

,,.,
•• •
!
·;

SMrJfiC'f'IOtt GuMinfNd 01 YocH ~ Bk•

'

.

:

.-

~-·

Look for Freebee the Fish on the menu
· bo&amp;rd'at participating Long John Silver's.
-Get a Free -Fisti Flll$t when you buy-any ~
adult dinnerthat doesn't contain fish.
Offer good thru Aprll14.

.LON(JJQliN:_ S~LVEI{S~
SEAFOOD SHOPPES
State Route 7, Silver Bridge
Shopping Center, Gallipolis

.'

.

1
1

�The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio-PIIint

Malch 11 1984

W.Va.

Section~

Trumka wants
improved pact
BENWOOD, W.Va. (AP) United Mine Workers President
llich Trumka, who p!'E'vlously said
he would rPject any contract with
coal operators demanding worker
concessions. now says hP'II reject
any contract offer thai d()('sn't
improve on thf' current pact.
The sta tement represents a npw
and tougher UMW baq;aining
position for Its upcoming contract
negotiations with coal operators.
Trurnka on Friday declined to
detail what improvements he is
seeking, saying disclosure now
would weaken his bargaining
position .
The UMW will meet with industry
representatives Tuesday to set a
negotiating schedule for a new
contract, and talks should begin
within 45 days, he said . ThP current
contract expires Sept. 30.
Trurnka said his policy of walkouts at selected mines has gotten
tuu suppon from rank and rue
members in the 16UMW districts he
has visited to discuss the subject.
However, some members of the
Charleston-based UMW District 17
have complained about deductions
from their paychecks to endow a
selective strike fund . They say the
funding method is unfair because
some miners pay more into the fund
than others but would receive the
~e benefit check during a
selective strike.

Sunday March 11 1984

•.~· .&lt;;:::;~i- ·
,.

••

O:ll

;

.:~ ;;iii

ALL TOGETHER I'OW VIsiting conductor Dr. WJlllam ·
P. Baker worked with GaDia
County Local Schools All-County
Band members Wednesday al·
temoon . Baker al!;o conducted a
morning clinic at Kyger Creek
lfigh School w benefit all county
instnunental students. Baker ·
said be was pleased to find the
Gallla students so discipUned,
• working hard w do what he
asked of them. He Is a professor
at Ohlo State University.

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Crisisline topic
for Meigs Rotary
MIDDLEPOHT- Lorraine Newsome of Woodland Centers Inc. was
guest speaker at the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary meeting Friday
night at Heath United Methodist
Church.
Newsome gave a slide presentation of the operation of the center.
She spoke on the crisislineoffered by
the center which offers emergency
service, 24-hour counseling, information and on-call service.
The phone numbers for the.
crlsisline are, in Gallla Couniy
446-5554; Meigs 992·5554; and Jack·
son 286-5554. The use of the crisisline
Is encouraged by the center.
A question and answer period
followed. Newsome also distributed
pamphlets with information about
the center.
Guest was Galli a County Rotarian
Dr. Gordon Arnsbary. Dinner was
served by the ladles of the church.

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Music Festival promoting excellence,
gives students benefit of professionals

.....

By LEE ANN WELCH

!"'

~Staff

GAll..IPOLIS -

The fifth

anniJ!I! music festtval of the
Gallla Couniy Local Schools was

held t)lll past week, culmlnatl!lg
,•Jn a perfonnance before the
• publlc thursday night at North

., Gillla ~lgh School.

~ a ~ fof the festival, Dr.
· Ira Zook1 ~ate professor of
voice and director of choral
actlvltles at Ohio University,
and Dr. William P. Baker,
professor of oboe and head of
woodwind studios at Ohio State
Unlversliy, conducted clinics
and directed the All-Couniy
Band and Chorus studl!nts dur·
Ing their performance Thursday. zOok conducted the vocal
students, whUe Baker h/Uidled
the Instrumental sessions.
From 85 choral students and
175 instrumentalists who audltl·
oned, 00 chorus and 64 band
members were ch9sen. Students
attend the four district schoolsNorth Gallla High School, Kyger
Creek .High School, Southwest·

Marriage licenses
GAll..JPOLIS - The following
couples filed for marriage thls past
week in Ga!lia County Probate
Court .
Michael R. Thomas. 21. Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, dishwasher, and Sharon
M. Gray, 18. 1274 Eastern Ave ..
restaurant employee.
Archie M. Saunders, 40. 258 State
St:, ambulance operator, and
Paulette M. Nibert , 30, 258 StaleSt.,
LPN.
Steven L. Ferrell. 19, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, carpenter, and Paula C.
Pasquale, 18. Rt. 3. Gallipolis,
unemployed .
Cecil R. Miles. 40, Rt. 3. Gallipolis,
welder, and Nancy L. i•iiles, 43,1100
First Ave., K-Mart employee.
Robert E . Bethel, 17, 425 Green
Terrace Drive, unemployed, and
Laura E. Hurst, 16, 42~ Green
Terrace Drive, unemployed.

em High School and Hannan
Trace High School.
"You just have to love It out of
them," Baker said of hts young
students. "You really have to
approach them as an adult," he
iddi!d on how he gets qualliy out .
of the students.
DeSigned to give· studellts
direction from a college professor, the All-County Band and
Chorus recognizes and honors
outstanding music students
throughout Gauta Couniy dis·
trtct schools.
Cllnids held In the mornings
gave aU students, not just those
selected all-couniy, a chance to
work with the vtsltlng clinicians.
Coordinators for the 1984
Gauta Couniy Local Schools
Music Festival were Lora Snow,
Southwestern choral director,
and Cathy Mrnentrout, North
Gauta band and choral director.
"This program gives the
students In fhl1 district's music
education programs an oppor·
tunliy to participate In a program of excellence,'' Ms. Snow
said. "By combining district·

wide talent, students from the
smaller schools have the oppor·
tunliy to experience the deptll of
performance in a larger group.
"The music festival helps
music students feel good about
themselves by allowing them to
participate In a positive musical
experli!i'ice which showcases
their special talents," she added.
On '1\Jesday, aU students in
couniy . choral classes met at
Hannan Trace in the morning
for clinics with ZOOk, and in the
afternoon, he directed and rehearsed All-County Chorus.
Wednesday was instrumental
musicians' day, while all students met a i Kyger Creek in the
morning for clinics with Baker.
In the afternoon session, Baker
worked with All-County Band,
preparing them for the perfor·
rnance Thursday night.
Held at North Gauta High
School Thursday evening, All·
Couniy Band and Chorus
members showed the audience
how well Gauta County students
can perform.
ZOOk Jed students in the

I

selections: "Do-Re-Mi," by Ri·
chard Rogers, "Song of Ruth."
by Joyce Ellers. "Americana,"
by Luigi Zaninelli, "God Made
Our Hands" by Jackson and
Mlller and "Elijah Rock" by
Jester Hairston.
Baker, commended the stu·
dents saying their discipline was
first rate. The band played "The
Thunderer," by John PhUip
Sousa - which made one feel as
if a July 4th parade was passing
by- "Kentucky 18Xl," by Clare
Grundman. a popular band
composer and OSU graduate,
"Concert Overture," by Robert
G. Johnson and "Instant Con·
cert" by Harold L. Walters, a
potpourri of "name that tune"
pieces.
The theme for thls year's
music festival was "Music Is a

Sharing Experience." in honor
of National Music in 01,1r Schools
Week, and Baker echoed that
sentiment.
"You play music so someone
can enjoy it. At the same tlme,
you should get enjoyment out of
playing it."

GETriNG READY TO PERFORM -Students in Gallia County Local
Schools prepared for last Thursday's perfonnance lor quite some time, and as seen In the aoove and below photograpffi, they have practiced In
groups and Individually before showtime, making certain everything
be just right for their program at l'orth Gallia High School.

would

Emergency runs
POMEROY -Seven emergency
runs were made by local units
F.rlday, the Meigs Couniy Emergfncy Medical Service report~ .
At 10:45 a.m., Racine went to
Bashan for Charles Bissell, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 3
p.m .. llacine went to Ohio 124 for
Kelly Swisher and Cindy Swisher,
both involv~ in an ,auto accident
ahd taken to Veterans.
At 2:01 p.m.. Rutland went to
Rutland Elementary for Bobby
Wright, not transported; at 9 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains went to station 8 for
Kenneth Mays, treated not transported; at9:32p.m., Rutland went to
Ileech Grove Road for Truman
Priddy, taken to O'Bleness Memor·
ial Hospital. .
At 10:37 p.ll) .• Pomeroy went to
Spring Avenue and Main Street for
Ronald DUes, taken to Veterans; at
10:59 p.m.. Pomeroy went to
Pomeroy Health Care Center fOr
Clarence Longstreth, taken to
Veterans.

Vandalism probed
POMEROY - Po111eroy pollee
are is Investtgatlftg an act of
vandalism and a theft.
.
Brenda Neutzllng, Peacock
AiJenue, reported Friday that a
window had been broken out of her
camper traUer.
·
At10: 05 p:m. Friday, BUI Widger,
mariager of Pomeroy Cliffs Apart·
_11)€!1tB, Union AvedUe, reported that
a•ru.ndgun had been taken from hts

aPa'rtmer¥;
· -· --~--

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-~-·-··-

�\

Pomero~Middleport-Gallipolis,

French City Run registration
beginning throughout Gallipolis

ELL
We R8181Ve

Right

Umlt Quantitiee.

.

GALLIPOLIS- Pre· registration
forms are now available for the
Annual French C:lty Run, co·
- sponsored by the Holzer Medica l
Center and the Ohio Valley Publish·
lng Company and scheduled for
Saturday, May 5.
Coordina tors for the upcoming
Run are Dawn Manin and Ron
Saunders a t the hospital, along with
Paul Barker at Ohio Valley Publish·
lng Company. Those interested in
early registration may . pick up
forms at the hospital in the Medical

Tcr

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
~undly 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MAR. 17, 1984

Angela Hannon

HarmonBabbit

1/4

Pork Loin • • • • •
LB.

By Cbi.rlene Hoei!Jcb

Bacon ..........L!·•••• 79¢

Gray - Thomas
.U.S.D ..A. CHOICE

Round Steak ...L~.

$} 99

, Marte Hauck and Pauline
have returned
fi.om a three
Week vacation 1n
t'ievada and Call·
f.om1a and what a
ireat ttme they
bad. The two ac·
epnp;anled Mr.

79¢
Turkeys ...........L~
INDIAN MAID

Michael 'lbomas

10-12

LB.

.

;;ln;C;Iude;;;::4575()::::';rlg;:;ht;a;w:a~y.=;;;;;;;;=i~

.•

BUCKET

Cube Steak ••••~B~ $249
29
Ground Beef .;L2.•• $}

College plans
Lenten services
RIO GRANDE - On Tuesday
evening, March 27, the Rev. John
W. Morris, pastor of Holy Spirit
Orthodox Church of Huntington, W.
va., wUI celebrate the Eastl!rn
Orthodox Lenten Great Vespers
Service at the Rio Grande College
Fine and Performing Arts Center at
8p.m.
Gary Jindra will conduct the
College Choir In the responses, and
w.lll be assisted by Chanters Julian
Saad and Sandy MeNter of Holy
Spirit Church.
.
The service wUl be conducted In ·
F.ngllsh. and will feature three
il;lajor tiidl~ons of Orthodox Lllur·
gtcal. . Music: · Byzantine . Chl!'lt•
ana~·

C'arpatho-Russlan Chant. The choir
will begin singing Lenten Hymns at
'jlpproxlmately 7: 45 p.m, (The
·doors wtll open at · 7: ll p.m.)
•V.espers wt11 begin at 8 p.m. ;~iid ·
should take approximately 45 m!n·
ules. Followl!!g the service, he will .
_ ;!lllllwr~a lecture about the Or-.:
•lhodox Church.
'

u

L!·•••

•••

.07(1 · M.l• ·1k •••••••••••
Plastic Gallon
$}5 9
0

2

.99·
Cheese Sl1ceSt.. .. .1 .

KRAFT AMERICAN S!NGLES oz.

$.

6

Crackers ••••••• • •••
LB. BOX

R C Cola •••••••••••
6 Pak, 12 Oz. Cans

••••••••

- • '-"""1· .. .. -

-Tt.DElE-lERGE~T~.

i71 OZ: 599
Limit One Per Customer
· GoCNj Only At Powell's
Offer Expires larch 17, 1984

d.,

lf2 PRICE

s. .

MonUaa:
8ibk StiHI) 9:30
Won~lp llt:JO

~ndl) E •rt~htt :
~ o nhi p

••.,ll.!,

115 W. 2nd

Pomeory
Phone 992· 2284

. COtTONIUI '
. •
.MACA"QiiO""-CHE~se~·t l"·•
-~.- TOILET-TI'"'·- :-~
&amp;Roll
4·9 ·
Pkl
. .
5 .foR
' ..

$

Lf~lt One Per ustomer

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires larch 17, 1914 ,

' I

I

I

. " r

' '

' '

'

FLAVottfOUGAR
· :
1
•

J

$}59
..
· .· i

5 Lb. Baa ·

, Limit One.Per CUSio!!!'f .
Good OniJ At Ponll's .
'Offer Exillres lajch 17, 19i4

11 :55•.• ·

.

.

russ

c/(2c)h¥ h.us"
JUNIORS'

Sportswear

=======================-J

SPECIAL FOR W.DNESDAY, MARCH 14

FOOT LONGS

79¢

!Qtten."
•

EACH

ALL DAY LONG

TI!eWahamaAiwnniAasoclatlon
~ an organizational meeting on
~ay, March 1 ,to· begin
. preparatlonsfortliealumnlbanqqet
. . -f, lli!lleli!MIY26. Nextineetlng~ -~
ReitaurantlnNewHaven. ·
·
Wahama gradlultes·are urged to
ai1esld the next meeting to help plan
1lle banquet. Reunion
or '
atbers planning I(II!Cial events ·
iiiDuld at1end In order to coordinate
.~acttvltlel wltb th!! AlwnDI
!'~~""a..tllla....
•
. ~
~
.. . .

-~~----~·~~~~·~.N~~-®~·------~-----

·~·

k
402.Jackson Pi •
446•·16 1-1

ih~ppr
401 s~ond
446-2682

Reg. 30

SKIRTS
2 Styles
Reg. 128

BLOUSE
4 Styles
Reg. 128

0

I e~~JWhiteOnly TRIFARI
1

Reg. '2.00 Pair

2 PC. TRAVEL SET

- ·-._ _
.J

4 Pr.

1

50% Off

$500

Sizes 5 to 10
Cotton lining

'~------~-------T-L-------

·TOWEL SETS

Bath 1

2FOR $5 98

Hand

2 FOR $398

Samsonite

$3999
Tan With
Camel Trim

~~ .

3RD SHIPMENT

LAST WEEKEND'S RESPONSE WAS A ,
COMPLETE SELLOUT

Caress 11

PILLOWS

$2-.00 11Ch---

Reaular

The excitina new pillow with amazing com1911 and softness!

2f0R$198

STANDARD $399 'QUEEN
1
Rot. '1.99

:::~15. 99

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11.99

$5

$799

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

OPEN: Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sundays I :00 to 5:00 p.m.

..·
r

HoavyoutyNyton

Bachd With Durable
V1nyl llmn&amp;

Fold Up Garment Bag and Mmt Tote
Reg. 195
':

TRICOT NYLON
Jewelry
Reg. 4 to 16
-:-----:-\ PANTY CLEARANCE

Washcloth
~

SLACKS
1

40o/o Off

Recular 14 each

'

Reg. 148

BRAS
.·.- . . . ' Close-Out Styles

Recular 6 each

Enjoy

JACKETS

Playtex®·

CANCER SOCIETY

Unit of the American Cancer Society

100% Polyester
Two Colors: Natural. Deep Rose
Size 8 to 18

~----------------1

Please support the

On Wednesday, March 14th,
we will donate 5% of our
sales to the Gallia County

Sl299

Regular
&amp; 120
Sizes S. M. l
Colors: Green . Navy.
Lt. Blue, Pink and Violet

1 19

MEMBER NATIONAL BRIDAL SERVICE

' She had three surgeries In two
ciiferent· i105plta1s. But she's enQOIII'IIged about her health and says
ihe Is · coming along just fine,
I!Qiough she Is "as weak as a

'.
,r

r"'

446-192

.OOU:OONOA_,. • - -

tpr her.

a.-

.....

" Mnuaa From
Bibk ..
lblb • W.IF.H

GOOD THRU MONDAY

.w. ••

· U things really do happen In
"threes," then Opal Kloes Is
treathlng a sigh of relief.
· Febnlary was not a good month

bieheldat7p.m.March~atKenny's

Bib., Shldy
1:00 P·• ·

"l'M IIHM o\uw.n·• • WOWI.~T\1 ll • S. ...y, 1~a.a. '

Slnpr Approved Otoltr ·

KNIT TOPS

lilad to have them.
Oorts and Eber Lewis who left
here 17 or 18 years ago have moved
back to Middleport. They're living
on Page Street and are now getting
back Into some community
activities.

•

wrc~...., ,

1!1 :00

I . -.·I -. - I

THE FABRIC
SHOP

'

$}

Butavillr Road • P . 0. Box308
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Be sure your name is in our Gift Registry. Our
professionally trained Bridal Consultants will
assist you in selecting your china, silver &amp; crystal
patterns as well as other gift prefe rences. Our
Bridai .Reqistry service is free of charge.

Wahama '
iiumni banquet

8 Oz.

WHEAT '

Chapel Hill Church of Christ

BUTIONS

.•

.

Sewing Machines
Our Entire
Stock of

"BEFORE YOU SAY I DO,"

1They're glad to be back and we're

~ U you bilve trouble striking up a
®nversatlon, perhaps the com:

. .

•We Have The
Widest Selection
Of Fabrics In
Southeastern Ohio
•Craft Patterns
&amp; Supplies
In Stock
•We Sharpen
Scissors and
Service all
Makes of

SALE

many
would come
out In Six
support
of 11an academic
endeavor.
of the
y.oongsters who received superior
·ratings· will now take their projects
Into dlslrlct competition this month
at Ohio University.

29¢

Ron

Paul Barker

" ' 441\ t&gt;t~

MARCH

And speaking of travelers ....
Several Meigs County couples
wtll be taking ott Saturday for a trip
to SWliiY Florida and a cruise on the
C&amp;rrlbean. The trip was planned by
Gerald and Mary Powell for the
Royal oaJc Dance Club.

BROUGHTON'S

·zESTA

official race T-shln for their event.
Pre-registration entries must be

· They spent a day at Disneyland
and See. World, another shopping at
njuana, Mexico, and a couple more
touring San Otego and Los Angeles.

Bananas...

44G-S:i05,

rtr

IJ&gt;',Howard H\liheS dUring WW2.

· With about 250 parents and
friends turning out Monday night
~the 0pe11 house at Meigs Junior
ijlgh School's first science fair,
Jesse Vall and Rusty Bookman,
science teachers, couldn't have
been happier.
It was encouragtng to school
~ that on a cold night that

KANAUGA - The engagement
of Susan Marie Swanson and Gary
Dale Cheney has been announced
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas G. Swanson of Richmond
,Ind.
Cheney Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray L. Cheney of Kanauga.
The wedding Is set Cor 1 p.m.
Saturday, April 7, at St. Mary
Catholic Church In Richmond, Ind.
They are employed by the Holzer
Medical Center.

Introductions and greetings, conve1'!18tlonal topics, the art of
questioning, finding common Interests, non-verbal communication,
talking with professional people,
and how to avoid being a "basket
case" of nerves.
To register just send your $2 to
the Washington County Cooperalive Extension Service. Courthouse,
2ffi Putnam Street, Marietta, Oh.

Strauss
of ColUJ11buS,
Meigs rr=;The;:;dlscuss;;;;;;;lo;n;top;;lcs;wtll;
.
residents,
and the fourfonner
were guests
&lt;if the Strauss' son-In-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mr. Dean
Appleman and daughter, Johanna,
at Las Vegas.
, They toured Hoover Dam and
Death Valley besides taking In
shows at the Troptcanna and The
Frontier where Appleman plays
percusslon'wlth the band, and then
went on to California for six days of
sightseeing. They visited Unlve1'!181
Studios. walked on the Holzywood
~ard. and viewed the Queen
l'tfarY and the Spruce Goose, bullt

SwansonCheney

·&lt;llliKiiOO -~(Rilsslin--cll'll!it) ;

munlcatlons seminar being sponsored by the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service Is for you.
Certainly the price Is right. Just
$2.
Gary Ingram, area manager Cor
the Dale Carnegie Training Systerns, will be the speaker Cor the
seminar to be held at the LaFayette
Motor Hotel, Front St., Marietta,
7: ll p.m. on Thursday.

'ftr-sent~De~Staff

I Jo~v. n :vl&lt;.trt in

~diHH h ·r&lt;., ;11 I"' -tLifJ rJr

TONGUES AND EDif'ICA 1'10:\
William B. Kugh n
Paul informed the Corinthian Christians that tht m1racu lous gifts
were to edify, that is. build up and promote the spiritual Krowth of the
church. He emphasized this in I Corinthians 14: "He that propheneth
speaketh unto men to edification" lv.3); "he that P"'"Phesw th edij'Wth
the church" (v.4 ); "that the church may receive edifying " lv.5); "seek
that ye may excel to the edifying of the church" lv.l2); and "let aU
things be d&lt;&gt;ne unto edifying"( v. 26) .
"Tbelnterpretatioo Of 'J'oogues":
"Speaking in .t&lt;&gt;ngv.es" could not edify , build up, or strengthen the
churchif the audience could not understand the language being spoken .
For that reason, Paul commanded the speaker or speakers saying, "If
any man speak man unknown t&lt;&gt;ngue llangauge ), let it ~ e by two, or at
the mo•t by three:. and t.hat by course lm turn!: a~ let one interpret "
II Cor. 14:27). The mterpretatwn of t011gues was one of the
miraculous l(ifts of the Holy Spirit II Cor. 12:10). If there were two or
three "spealcing in t&lt;&gt;ngv.es" when they "came together" II Cor. 14:26),
and they had "no interpreter," they were to "keep s•knce in the
church"! ! Cor. 14:28) .
_
Exposinll' The Frauduleot:
There were "falae apostles, &lt;kceitful workers, transforming
them~elves into the apostles of Chri8t"12 Cor. 11 :13). "False apo1tlea"
and "deceitful workers" were fraudulent , not genuine or true. There
were "many &lt;kceivers" 12 Jno. 7) at the time Paul wrote to the
Corinthians, as there are today.
To proteet the church from the ''fra!Uiulent" ones who abused the
spiritual gift of "speaking in t&lt;&gt;ngu.es, "God established the spiritual gift
of "t.he interpretation of t&lt;&gt;ngu.es. " There was no proof of the
ll'enumeness. of the one "speaking in t&lt;&gt;ngu.er" if he were permitted to
mterpret h1s own words. Any one could engage in erratic or
unintelligible talk and give his own interpretation , claiming it being of
God . The spiritual gilt of "the interpretation" given to another, other
than the speaker, established the genuineness of the speaker.
What some call "t&lt;&gt;ngu.es" today are not the "t&lt;&gt;ngu.es" of 1
Corinthians 14. The "tongue•" of 1 Corinthians }2 and 14 were given
to edify the church and to evangelize the world with the wor'&lt;l of
inspiration as it was revealed to the apostles. God's revelation of His
word is now complete, and the miraculous gift, "speaking in tongue1 , •
has ceased II Cor. 13:8). First Corinthians 14 does not teach that tbe
gift of "speaking in tongv.es" be used today as it was durin!!' the
miraculous age of the apostles. There is no Bible foundation for thiS gift
today! Why? The church today is edi/illd by the written word.. not
"speaking in t&lt;&gt;ngv.es"! The church today evangelizes by preaching the
word, not "speaking in t&lt;&gt;ngu.es "!
IFor Free Bible Correspo-ndence Course Writ e... )

•

:Some months good, some aren't

ph ·U• a\A.ard infrJTm;,rion.
~JW ·\IHm !-. rn.n hf· referred tO

A Meuage From Th e Bibl-. ...

tommunity Corner

RATH'S RACORN

Sharon Marie Gray

French City Run, sponsored by the two organizations.
The Run wtll be Salurday May 5. Fonns are available
at the hospital and GaDipolls Dally Tribune offices
during buslnell8 hours.

lx&gt;Th thr• '&gt;K

rJ;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;~;:;;:;:;;;:;;;:;;:;~;;;:;:;~~

available through local merchants
In Gallipolis and the surrounding
area .
Pre-registration entry fee Is $5.
This pre-registration guarantees
that each runner will receive an
• RI!:GM'RA'nON FORMS READIED - Paul
' J!Uer, left, of Ohio VaDey Publishing Company, and
. Dawn Manln from Holzer Medical Cenler stack
: reslstratlon fo1m11 and brochures for the upcoming

·t mes and an ,,ffic ial u. urse map Cor
,,nd IIJK races. Also
Tn('iudl'd 1n th1· hrrwhure Is com·

postmarked by midnight. April 2K
Three races will lx· includt-d
which are the 5K - 3. 1 mi les in
length; a 10K - 6.2 miiPs in lc·ngth,
and a one-mile Dinosaur Dash.
This year's registration form
Includes Information on all three
races, age group divisions. race

Library located on the Main Floor.
East of the lobby, or from the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company office
at 83!1 Third Ave. In Gallipolis.
Within the next two weeks, preregistration Cormi; will also be

· RUTLAND - Mrs. Pat Harmon
of Rutland Is announcing the
engagement or her daughter, An·
gela, to Lawrence M. Babblt,
Tuppers Plains.
A June wedding Is being planned . .
. Miss Harmon Is a graduate of
Meigs High School.
: Babbitt Is employed at Ken Miller
Supply, Inc., Martella.

. GALUPOLIS - Nellie and
l{enneth Gray of Gallipolis an·
nounce the upcoming marriage of
their daughter, Sharon Marte, to
Mlcheal Thomas, son of Wanda
Thomas, also of Gallipolis.
· The open-church wedding will be
held March ll at 2 p.m. at the
t&gt;entecostal Church on Eastern
Avenue. ·
: Both are employed at Ponderosa
Steak House. .

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-8-3

Ohio-Point' Pleasant, W. Va.

�MII'S·LlDliS'
CIIILDRII'S

L.C.D.
SPOI\l
WllCHlS

CDUmtY STORES

HAIR
BRUSH

2~~~$5

GALLIPOLIS I POMEROY STORES

HOLLAIID .
. ICE
CREAM
•

IIILF
UL

ISSORTIEIT

$

ARMOUR
BEEF STEW

NORTHERN
BATHROOM
TISSUE

$139

:$129

R:u99•

PRICES GOOD MONDAY, MARCH 12 THRU SUN., MAR. 18

MEDAL ,_,_
·FLOUR

..

PUll II IELF Rlllll

-~ ~at•

STORAGE
JARS
Pkg. of 3
Soft White
light Bulbs

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

ROU DSTEAK
·~:E $177
*1'!
ROUID STUK ..... .
TOP ROUID .......
*22!
*21!
BOnOI ROUID ...
LB
U.S.D.l. CIOICE BOIELESS

~ JOtoiO• 11'1 11 ..:Jpl'&gt;~

.' "lo)C) ' «:lol\

0

U.S.D.l. CIOICE

U.S.D.l. CIOICE

U.S.D.I. CHOICE LEIII BOIIELESS
SHURFIIE

SU&amp;IR

~ $149

RUMP ROAST

2Quart

CUBED

(

JY, Gattao

Heavy Duty
Muiii-Pu1pose Bowl

)

alar
Bottle

$1

Toots

u

11

TER'S DELl

LIBBY'S
Pill
SILION ·

Stainleu
Steel
Kitchen

Relrlger-

79
t
FRAIIKIES WIEIIERS ~~

$1 99 LUICHEOII MEATS ~~ $ 49
2
$2 ! jOWL BACOII

IROUID

TilE
PIECE

BEEF STEAK

r----

2

$ 29 SUPERIOR

RO~L

KED PICIIICS

$229 SMOKED PICNICS

FILTER'S SLICED

SLICED

BOILED HAM
LillY'S

18 Inch

Rolnbow
Foot her
Duster

ROAST BEEF
Pkg. Ol 4

Cleaning

JACK RABBIT

Pods

PIIITO BElliS

PIIlE-SOL
HOUSEHOLD
CLEANER

~~ ,,.

DIHO
POTATOES
~2~9 YELLOW
:~ if " ONIONS

NESTLE'S
QUI I

10
LB

$199 WHITE SEEDLESS

BED PILLOWS

aun. · ~aiE

$447

::~~:r~:IPS

UDIES SPJIII
· DESIIIER UIEL

DECIUTED

· PUYIII CARDS

J...$100

79 . .
79

RUBBERIIID
SHELFLiiER ·

$ 00

99,.
VIVA
:~
NAPKINS
y

140

cr

,1.
Y SWEETSUE
CIIICIEI OR BEEF

BROTH

3oz 99
14'/z

FOOD STAMPS

. IIRRIRS

WELCOME .

III~II~ICTS ·

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

· ·$ 00~
·

RIGHT GUARD

FISTEETH ·

SOLID

DEIITURE ADHESIVE
'.

VISTA
UTEI
WILL
PIIIIT

99~

GRAPES

FRESH
10
GOLDEII RIPE
$
4
COFFEEIITE ~~ ---~~SP:..:.:IN..:..:..:I.;..:.CH:...___oz~;::__vt=BI:.:::I:::.:AI.:.::.IS:::...,..__:.:.:.~~

ACRYLIC FILLED

PIG
OF 2

~

I

IUEsnc

VISTA
·.· UTDREDWOOD .
STill

00

FUR PI.OE

CORI·

&amp;It

, WHISIC ~"'- ·

BRUSH

· ;sn

*t•! ·

. oz2$ 88

oz $2
.' 88
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3.1
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PUR EX

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~

LAUIDRY DETER&amp;EIT

*tQ!_ .

42

oz
'

$

19
.

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�I •

•

11

w. va.

Ohio P.Dint PleaiCint,

Senior Citizens' schedule-·set
Gatli4 Countv ,

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Griffith

Griffiths observe anniversary
CROWN CITY - Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Griffith Sr. of Crown City
celebrated their 45th wedding
anniversary at their home on J an.
15.
Mr. and Mrs. Griffith were
married Jan. 14. 1939 In Greenup.
Ky. Mrs. Griffith was the former
Rosa Lou Fraley. They are the
parents of 11 living chtldren.
They opened and acknowledged
gifts. An anniversary cake was
baked and served by Dorothy
Gordon. ·

Helping them celebrate were
some children. grandchildren and
friends: Frank Griffith, Crown
City; William Griffith, Tim and
Karla Ann, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. John (Ann) Vanhorn, Rosa
and Teri. Lancaster: Mrs. Marvin
!Marguerite) Robie, Susie and
Missy, Bidwell; Charlotte Griffith.
Gallipolts; Mrs. Kitty Ferrell and
Shana. Gallipolis. and Dorothy
Gordon. Gallipolis.
Visiting in the evening were Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Griffith Jr. and
Ronnie of Cro.vn City.

Make reservations the day before
Friday - Corned beef and
will present a program featurtng a
ftlm strip "Food Dollars and Cents" cabbage, parslled Irish potatoes, you plan to attend the Nutrition
and also talk about diet needs for lime perfection 5alad, brown bread, Program meal, call the Cen,ter at
992-2161.
the elderly; there wUl be a question cake.
and answer sessions as a part of the ,
program. Physical Fitness, 1 p.m. ·
Food Coop orders are to be picked
up by 3: 30 p.m. Exercise Clas5,
Monday thru Fr'ldiiY
3: 15-3: 45 p.m.
9 AM to9 PM
Friday - St. Patrick's Day
Saturday 9 AM to! PM
Party, Games a! 11 a.m.; Dance
after dinner.
WAI.It ~~Oft (.At \ H&gt;A
AftAP"QI,.,Ir.liNT
Upcoming events the following
week will Include:
446~9510
Thursday, March 22 at 11 a. m.,
Brent Runge from General Telephone Company Speakers Bureau,
A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DESIGN "
will be at the Center to talk about

GALUPOUS - Acttvtttes for
the week of March 12·16 at the
Senior Citizens Center located at 220
J ackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, March 12 -Chorus, 1·3
p.m .
Tuesday, March 13 - S.T.O.P.
Class. 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11:15 a.m. ; CPR Class, 1·5 p.m.;
and tor 6-10 p.m.
Wednesday. March 14 - Vinton
Bible Study, I p.m.; Card Games,
1·3 p.m.; Garden Club. 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, March 15 - Bible
Study, 11 a.m.-noon; Vinton Crafts.
1·2 p.m.; Board of Trustees Meet·
tng, 1: 30 p.m.
Friday, March 15- VITA- Tax
Aide, 9 a.m.-noon; Art aass, 1-3
p.m.; Craft Mint-Class, 1-3 p.m.;
CPR Class, 1·5 p.m. ; and/or 6-10
p.m.
The Senior Nutrttion Program
will serve the following menus:
Monday - Roast beef with
gravy, boiled potatoes In skins.
broccoli, plums, bread.
Tuesday - Ham-cheese casserole. buttered cabbage, cranberry
sauce, ginger bread with whipped
topping, bread, butter, mtlk.
Wednesday - Liver with onions.
au gratin potatoes, mustard greens,
fruit, bread.
Thursday - Lasagna, tossed
salad, banana cake, Italian bread.
butter, milk.
Friday - Chicken, green beans,
beets, fruit salad, bread, butter,
milk.

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

deregulation
and changes tn the 1I"==============~------telephone system.
Friday, March 23 at 11 a.m .. Lou
Horvath from the Athens Social
Securtty Office, will talk about
Social Security changes and
information.
The menu for the Senior Nutrttion
Program for the Week ts:
Monday -Ravioli, mixed veget·
abies, tossed salad, oranges and
bananas.
Tuesday - Pork chops, mashed
potatoes, Harvard beets, biscuit,
pumpkin cake.
Wednesday - Navy beans and
ham. penny carrot salad. lime
gelatin with pears. cornbread,
chocolate chip cookie.
Thursday -Salmon patty, lima
beans, cole slaw, roll, butterscotch
pudding.
923 S. 3rd Ave.
PH. 992·7301
Middleport, OH.

0~

Fri., March 16-9:00 A.M. To 8:00P.M.
Sat., March 17-9:00 A.M. TO 5:_00 P.M.
"GET SET FOR SUMMER"
BIG SAVINGS ON TRACTORS IN STOCK

D.J.'s

TRADING POST

r;======:::===;t-;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;==;;;;;;;=:w

Choice
beverage
served
with
each
meal.ofMeals
subject
to change

Diamond Solitaires

without notice.

Meigs County

Order now and aet 100 ft. of
cable, modulator LNA cover
and $100.00 of installation.

' ' t or speaks
' aelm101Stra
R10
durtng career Awa reness 11 :~n~.'Z.: ch:~~s~~c,f~~~~~2
0

RIO GRANDE - A Rio Grande
College and Community College
administrator recently served as a
presentor for the Career Awareness Exploring Program sponsored
by the Boy Scouts of America in
Oak Hill. Ohio.
.Janet Byers. Dean of the Holzer
School of Nu.rsing at Rio Grande.
addressed career opportunities in
nursing as part oft he program. Her
presentation was held at the Oak
Hill High School.
Topics covered as part of the
gram
psychology.
psychiCareerincluded
Awareness
Exploring
Pro...,atry, laboratory technician. physt-

~~ therapy, pharmacology, and

;;";n~rstng.
~~ •~,. Byers

was one of four group
:~ussion panelists. Dr. Louis
:.': ffndra, Jim Blevins, Assistant
.. ~A-dministrator of the Holzer Clinic.
:."~d Thomas R. Mills, Senior
:::illstrtct Executive of the Chief
~gan Council464 of the Boy Scouts
:.:.\If America. were the other
~ -;:Panelists.

: ·;..; Byers discussed the nursing

program at Rio Grande which
consists of a_ specially designed
I
f
he
two-year curncu urn or t preparation of registered nurses with
h 1
· 1 dl
·
emp ass ?n gw ~g. rec 1 nursmg
care to patients wtthm a structured
h lth
tt'
h
rv1
ea care se mg w ere supe .
sion and guidance are available.
ThE' nursing curriculum provides
both
I ed !'
d
I
genera uca Jon an nurs ng
education courses. The combinalion promotes the development of
thE' individual both as an associate
degree n'lrse and as a member of

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Senior Cltlzens Center, Mulberry
Heights. Pomeroy, has scheduled
the following activities for the week
of March 12 through 16:

to 50%
On Diamond Solitaires

p.m.; Exercise Class, 3:15 to 3:45

NOW
ONLY SAVE

WAS

1250
1400
1450
1600

10 PT.
15 PT.
115 CT.
1/4 CT.

Class, 3:15 to 3:45p.m.
Wednesday - Blood Pressure
Clinic, 9:30a.m. to noon; Bingo, 1·2
Bo
p.m.;
w1lng, 1: 30 p.m.
Thursday _Ceramics, 10 a.m.-2
p.m.; PrOgram on Nutrttlon at
10:30 a.m., the Consortium for
Health Education tn Southeast Ohio

1150
S275
1350
1395

ODDS &amp; ENDS SHOP
992-6173

,

MIDDLEPORT

r~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;l1
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~

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704 GRAND CENTRAL AVE.
Across from Grand Central Mall
Vienna. W. Va.·
295-4532

763 THIRD AVE.
Downtown Huntincton
Across from Civic Center
525-7090

Here are just some of .Natur·ai-Cut
the new and exciting French Fries
menu items you will
find ¥ the Great Little
Seafood Place

M
G

LOOKING FOR THE BEST IN A

FARM CITY
INC.

Our naturak~t ftavorful french fries
not only ~e better, they're also better
for you. The potato skin is a valuable Ournew20-PieceBo~edShrimpPiate.
ll)oo'd like a'tossed salalj, or one ofthe source of Vltamms and nutrients.
New and tastier peel n' eat shrimp,
other it£ms listed below, inll£ad or
chilled
and ready for dipping. More of
&amp;-ench fiies or oole slawJist say so. Irs
them
than
ever before!
choice at Captail u'sl
Seafood
~ F~ lolled salad with )'OUr choice

~hange

AIM,

Salad Supreme

W
. h
• ie

•

Looking For The Best Price?
Looking For The Best Service?
Looking For The Best Delivery?

GENERAL ELECTRIC
HOT POINT
TAPPAN
BEST AT TH~ 'LOWEST-!

·Katie's korner
·-----

~--

.

SUNDAY
CROWN CITY - Jay Jarvis
will speak at Victory Baptist
Church, Sunday, Tp.m.
NORTIIUP - The Rev. Jim
Chapman will speak at Northup
Baptist Clrurch Sunday, 7: lJ
p.m.

VINToN - Deer Creek Baptist aturch will have the Hev.
Calvin Mlnnls speaking Sunday,
6 p.m. The Voices Unltedwlllslng
and the public Is invited to attend.
GALLIPOLIS - Services will
begin again at Edna Cbapel

Kerry p. 'Dielel

vironmental science, Rttle and
shotgun, Finger printing, Pottery,
Weather, Geology, Motorboat!ng,
Plant Science, Home repairs, Rabbit raising, Astronomy, Indian lore,
Wood carving, Flremanahip, Fish·
lng, and Computers.
Theiss, has hiked the Kanawha
Trace Tratl tn West Vlrgtnla, and
has taken canoe trips on the
Raccoon and Muskingum River.
He was tapped for the Order Of The
Arrow In 1981. He Is a member of
the O.A. Ceremonial Team and
O.A. Dance Team. He served on the
camp staff, at Camp Arrowhead In
1982. Last summer he attended
Camp Rotary in Michigan.
He as served as Quartermaster,
Patrol Leader, and Assistant Senior
Patrol Leader.
A sophomore II t Gallta Academy
High School, he Is very active In
sports. He plans to attend the
National Scout Jamboree at Fort
A.P. Hill near Richmond, Va. tn
1985.
He will be escorted in the
ceremony by Eagle Scouts Mark
Dillon arid Charles Dennison. The
public is Invited to attend.

Church on Teens Run Road,
Sunday, 7 p.m . The pubHc Is
invited to attend. The Rev.
James Queen Is pastor.

MONDAY

GALLIPOLIS - Or. Curtis
Sheets will speak at Elizabeth
Chapel Church Monday through
Saturday, beginning at 7 p.m.
nightly. There will be special
singing each night.
GALLIPOLIS - The Junior
Women's Qub will meet Mon·
day, 7: lJ p.m. Those attending
are asked to bring a snack.
GALLIPOLIS - There will be
revival services at Trtedstone
Baptist Church beginning Mon·
day and continuing through
March 16. Services start at 7p.m.
nightly, and there will be
different speakers thoughout the
week. The Rev. John B. King,
pastor, Invites the pubHc to
attend.
GALLIPOLIS - French City
GardenClubwlllmeetMonday,2
p.m. at the home of Helen
Murphy.

WE ARE NOW CARRYING
EASTER CANDY AND
SUCKER ..,OLDS

POMEORY - The Pomeroy
Elementary PI'O will meet
Monday at 7: lJ p.m. at the
school.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Elementary J3oe.
ters wU meet Monday at 7: lJ
p.m. at the school. The program
will be on "Child Find" with a
speaker on finger printing for
tdellti11callon.

ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF DIPPING
CHOCOLATE AND COLORED
COATINGS

,..,.,.-

OHIO V ALEY BULK FOODS :

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter Ill, Royal Arch Masons
will meet In special session
Monday at 7 p.m . Work In the
most excellent master degree.

514 EAST IIAIN
llon.-Sat. 9-5
Fri. 9-7

week to Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Cook
of Syracuse.
Bernard and Sylvia celebrated
their 25th wedding anniversary on
Wednesday, March 7.
Belated wishes and may you
celebrate many more.

992-6910

POMEROY ;
We Accept :
Federal Food Stamps :

RlJI'LAND - Rutland Elementary PI'O will meet Monday
, at 7 p.m. The sixth grade will
present a spring program. Babysitting will be provided and
refreshments served.

1UESDAY
RACINE- Racine Lodge 461,
Free and Accepted Masons will
meet Tuesday at 7: lJ p.m.
RACINE =1!0iilhem Athletic
Boosters will meet Tuesday at
the high school at 7: lJ p.m.
POMEij.OY Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce will
meet Tuesday at noon at
Veterans MemortaJ Hospital.
Gary Bates of General Telephone will be the guest speaker.
GALLIPOiJS - Gallla
County District Library Board of
Trustees will meet Tuesday, 5
p.m. at the Dr. Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library.

~

Time makes your kids into adults and takes
them away to lives of their own .You can't stop
time . But you can freeze memories. with
beautiful photographic ponraits. Many
mothers have them made every year so they
can remember their children just as they were
at a given point in their lives. And the price of
those ponraits is so reasonable . almost every
mother can afford to have them done .

HARRISONVILLE - HaiTI·
sonville Chapter 255, O.E.S. will
meet Tuesday at 7: lJ p.m.
Initiatory work will be exempli·
fled . All members are asked to
attend.

$1295
95¢
'i&gt;tal Package/ Dqx)Sit

Donations will aid cemetery·

By KATIE CROW
'l'lrne&amp;Sentlne Staff
John Anderson,
Coun·
e~llman Issued a
Statement ~ ·rt,daV I\•
that Is very newsworthy in that
what he and coun·
cU members are lil"":.!
telling us Is very
vital - at least to
Grove Cemetery.
. The statement follows: "Many
citizens have noticed the excellent
maintenance that has been given to
Beech Grove Cemtery over the past
year.
"The leaves have been raked, the
grass mowed, even 111m work has
been done around tombstones and
park beqches.
''The' mayorand councU would
like {o sh this good work continued
in 1984, but it appears that there wUI
n6i be Sllfflclent funds In the village
treasury to allow us to cant ract for
the maintenance.
"However, tt enough dona !Ions
were to be received it may stJll be
possible to keep the present level of
seJ!VIce.
•
·.,If you agree that tak!Jjg good
care of our cemetery should be a
priority please send your donation
to 1984 Beech Grove Cemetery
F)IIXI, Pomeroy Munldpal Bulld·
lng, ~E. Main St., Pornel!&gt;y, Ohio,
4457111."
'
Fourteen-year-&lt;lld Russell Keller
Is 9n crutcbes as the result of a
sleljhing accident last January.
Russell took a spill on his sled and
broke a bone in his leg. Russell Is
the•son of Mr. and Mrs. Hoger
Keller, SR 7, Pomeroy.
Is Russell discouraged? Nah - he
IS ~ady to go 'again.

.

Calendar

MD.
Ftorafax has granted MDA at
least $100,1XXJ. The slogan Is "Ffo.
rafax fiower power - give more
muscle to MDA."
Nice Idea.

2 (8xlO's) 3 (5x7's) 15 wallets
We select the poses. A 95q deposit required for each
photo paclcage plus $1.00 sitting fee for each additional
subject. Additional ponraits can be purchased .

TUESDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
MARCH 13th &amp; 14th

The old "bug" has hit Syracuse
Elementary.
Classes hardest hit have been the
first, fifth and sixth grade. Understand also that there has been
absenteeism at Southern High
School due to the bug.
Certainly hope everyone Is feeling better and everyone gets back
tri school.

Like to thank Dorothy Baker,

MARCH SPECIAL
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Even our creamy cole slaw tastes better
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new way of making it we know

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SERVING MEIGS-.GALLIA-MASON COUNTIES

..

Serving The Best People In The World .
614-992-2181 JACK W. CARSEY MGR • .

•

CENTENARY - Th~ Mason·
Gallta·Melgs District, Boy Scouts of
America, wUI conduct a Court Of
Honor at 3 p.m. March 18 Centenary United Methodist Church, to
promote Kerry P. Theiss to the
Rank of Eagle.
Playing organ prelude will be
Mary Johnson, church organist.
Master of ceremonies will be
Hennan Dtllon and the Invocation
and opening remarks will be the
Rev. Pearl Casto, who will also give
the bene&lt;llct!on.
The Court.Of Honor will consist of
Herman Dillon, Committee Chair·
man, Dr. Bernard Nlehm, M.G.M.
Dlstrtct Chairman, A1 Harris,
Assistant Scoutmaster, Jim Oller,
Assistant Scoutmaster, Carl Cameron, Former Scoutmaster, Wal·
ter Walker, Former Scoutmaster,
Devan Savage, and Casto.
Theiss, son of Mr. and Mrs.
:&gt;teven Theiss, Patriot Star Route,
Gautpolls, joined. Cub Pack 200 in
September 1976. In December 1978,
he joined Boy Scout Troop 200. He
then progressed through the ranks
of Tenderfoot, Second Class, First
aass, Star, Ltte, and now Eagle.
He has earned merit badges in
First Ald, Swimming, Canoeing,
Cooking, Citizenship tn the community, Sports, Camping, Safety,
Lttesaving, Personal Management,
Citizenship tn the l'!atlon, Emer·
gency preparedness, Communications, American Heritage, Rowing,
ltepttle Study, Space exploration,
;Pigeon Raising, Forestry, Nature,
Oceanography, Bird study. Per·
60nal fitness, Mammals, Citizenship tn the world, Wilderness
)mrvival, Fish and wildlife, Sotl and
_water conservation. Basketry, En·

We are sending best wishes this

Sllad, bans, or bakal potato (when
~~mar be •d!ctmiled french
&amp;Ia co1e itlaw W~~ any on~er.

or

Eagle Scout
ceremony
next Sunday

.

~hot bakal potato
~11AM-8PM)

Come to MGM Farm City at Pomeroy
540 East Main St.- 614-992•2181

••

$48

T'"'WNEY JEWELERS

d tliree dnSlas
•• Ccullry
beans

'

AS LOW AS

NOW '19 .915

WASHER
DRYER - REFRIGERATOR
WATER SOFTENER - RANGE - FREEZER
DISHWASHER - TELEVISION

0

12 DIFFERENT SYSTEMS
FINANCING AVAILABl.E

Olo"1ond Earring•; Rog. '39.96

M

.•

KLM Receiver or
Anderson Receiver

1100
1125
1100
1205

Thtse 1re 111 1ood top 1r1de di1monds.
You have 30 d1ys to comp1re pr1ce! 1lter
your purcllast. H you till '*' 011' pnce, we
w111 refund your purchase 1n lull.

K

'1195
'1250
'1295

8FT. DISH
9FT. DISH
10 FT.SISH

Save

p.m.
Tuesday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.-2
1 40
p.m.; Physical Fitness, 1 : a.m.;
Chorus Practice, 1-2 p.m.; Exercise

MGM - THE MODERN HOUSEWIFE'S ANSWER
-WATCH FOR OUR ANNOUNCEMENTuutiiiMAJIK ®

Satellite Systems

The

W. Va.

1984

®

DECORATOR ·
ARRAIIQEMENlS
IN Sill ,.

·: ~. ·' ~~ILVER
BfUDGE SHOPPING PLAZA
..
•• -- . ..
STATE ROUTE 7
.'

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FLOWE~S .

GALLIPOLIS

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�•

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Page-B-8

Beat of the bend

Managing
St feSS ( 1ass
at R'lQ Gfande

1964 reunion organizing
By BOB HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
Collecting tabs from beer and soft
drink cans Is a
nothing. Right ?
Wrong!
Ellet&gt;n Clark
tells, me that
there is a child
who needed to be
on a kidney machine. For 100 of
these tabs, the child could be on the
machine for 15 minutes free of
charge. Eileen recruited friends
and everyone started collecting lhP
tabs. The collection greatly aided
the child and Eileen extends a big
thanks to everyone who pitched in
to help. Now that's nice!

grads of Meigs High School
are being asked to attend an
organizational meeting at 7 p.m.
Monday at the home of Mr. a nd
Mrs. Dick Seyler, comer of Butternut and Seco~ streets in Pomeroy.
Purpose of the meeting is to
really get the ball rolling for a
reunion of the class this spring. All
members of the class living in this
area are asked to round in Monday
evening so that the reunion plans
can get oft the ground.
Key people for the class are
Brenda Barton Wyatt, 992-2540;
Diana McAngus Harris, 992-7547,
and Shelly Mankin Wood, 992-3166.
One of these people would like to
hear from you In regard to your
Interests in going ahead with
reunion plans.
1~

work with the Red Cross, the
Alexandria Community Y. the

1

i•

••
••
•

l
..~
•••
•

!

••
•

:•

I
I
.,;

io

~

j

For the average person, the
question of managing stress and
anxiety can appear to be a complex
one, according to Herb Spencer,
College Counselor. The Idea of yoga
and meditation Is often rejected as
Impractical In every day llfP.

1984 FLY AND CRUISE AWAY TOURS

BRITISH
ISLES
•July 17-30

SONG OF
AMERICA
CARIBBEAN
CRUISE

•May 13-20

21 -DAY
CONNOISSEUR
EUROPE
•June 28July 18

PEPSI

Marlyn Wilcox. Bank One em·
plo&gt;·&lt;'. · can't even btamP her
predicament on the ice and snow.
On one of the few nice days we've
had this year. Marlyn feU near the
Farmers Bank. Employes of the
bank. Lois Evans, Paul Reed and
Paul Kloes. rushed to her aid as did
Bank o ne emergency oriented
person. Marilyn Wolfe a nd the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad. Mar-

SIS Constitution

HAWAII
CRUISE
•June 16-23

ONE WEE:K HAWAII

8 Pack

S699

16 Oz. Bits.

•JUNE 20-27 •JULY 11-18
•SEPT. 26-0CT. 3 •OCT. 24-31

CALL~ TODAY! PACE IS LIMITED!

I!Dnt\
~

GALLIPOLIS • 360 SECOND AVE. • 446-0699
OTA0134

SERVING THE GENERAL PUBLIC AS WELL AS OUR MEMBERS

~;======================~
A TOTALLY UNIQUE DESIGN
IN MEMORIALS

VALLEY BELL

the
top of her
foot ure
andofaachipped
tyn received
a fract
bone in 1
a nkle bone. Sh&lt;''s moving--but on
crutches. Marlyn surely appreciates the people who rallied to help
her during the incident.
A photograph of the lour McElroy
Brothers of Meigs County is
featured on the cover of the current
edition of Ohio's Heritage, a
publication of the Ohio Commission
on Agi ng.
An accompanying art icle reports
that all five children of the late
Char!Ps and Mart ha McElroy of
Chester survive their parents. A
daughter, Mae. Is 80. The four
brothers pictured are Virgil, 70;
Kermit , 73: Dayton, 75, and Eugene. 78. Active members of the
Meigs County Senior Center, the
four have accumulated as of the end
of 1983, a total of 6.048 volunteer
hours of service for the center.

VITAM IN D MILK

p.m; Syracuse

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r7~:~50~p~.m~.;~Ba~um~ Ad~d~t l~on~,~8:~10.S~:40~~~P~H~.~3i88~-~86i0i3~i=i==iiiiPiHi.i9i9i2-i2i5i8iiiiNi.

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PH.992-3480 MIDDL_EPORT, .OtL

1rimta· ientiuel

He also has done some things he wasn't asked to do,
such as commit a team·hlgh 74 turnovers. But 'Evans
not only plays more but also handles the ball more
than anybody else on the team. What he has
accomplished to date this season makes Evans one of
Marshall's aU-time greats.
He currently ranks 6th among the school's
Individual career scoring leaders with 1,589 points. ·
And, It he scores just five points In Marshall's next
game, he will move up to the No. 5 spot, ahead of
George Washington.
U he should score more than 106 points during the
NCAA tournament, he would move up to the No. 4slot
ahead of Leo Byrd.
Evans' 613 points this season place him 5th in the
single-season category, 46 points behind No.4 Russell
Lee and 71 points behind George Stone.
This season, he led the Herd In scorlng25of:.ltlmes
and, although he's a guard, was the leading rebounder
In seven of tho5e games.
But, says Huckabay, perhaps Evans' greatest
contributiOn has been through his personal matura·
tlon and his personal leadership. He 5ays Evans, who
has a tremendous desire to win, has become an
unquenchable force tor the Herd this season.
Evans put It this way last Sunday, following the
Chattanooga game, "Coach Huckabay told us to
believe In ourselves, ~ we believe In Coach
Huckabay."
But, he also beUeves In Marshall's chances to reach
the NCAA championship game.
"It doesn't matter who we play orwhereweplay,"
Evans says. "U we play like we did In the conference
tournament, I think we can beat just about anybody."

HUNTINGTON, W.VA. (AP) -When Manhal1
University's basketball team plays In the NCAA
tournament this week, LaVerne Evans will be
realizing a long·standlng goal.
The goal has been to get a chance to play tor the
national championship, something almost every kid
who ever touched a basketball would love to do.
But ·how tar Marshall advances toward this
ultimate sports fantasy probably depends on the
perfonnance of this soft -spoken young man from
Lockport, N.Y. Evans, more than any other single
player, has been responsible for Marshall's 25-5
record and tor the Southern Conference championship that gave the Thundering Herd an automatic
berth In the NCAA post -season playoffs.
A look at the statistics shows why Herd coach H.lck
Huckabay thinks his &amp;-foot 4 senior gljllrd should have
been the conference's player of the year.
So far this season, Evans has averaged 20.4 points a
game and has scored 613 points, Including a season
high of 38 against liT·Chattanooga In last Sunday's
conference championship.
He has made 226 of 4:.1 field goal attempts, for a 52.6
percentage. Not only has he scored more points than
any other Marshall player this season, but he also
leads the team In foul-shooting percentage, 161 of 228
for .706 percent; In time played, :.1.6 minutes; and Is
the co-leader In rebounding, averaging 4.7 grabs per
game along with senior forward David Wade.
In addition, he has 17 dunks, 44 steals, tour blocked
shots and 46 assists.
Huckabay says Evans, who also Is one of
Marshall's best defensive players, "has become a
complete player this season. He's done everything we
asked him to do."

North Carolina upset
GREENSBOHO, N.C. (API Sophomore David Henderson sank
tour tree throws In the last 42
seconds to propel 16th·ranked Duke
Into the t1na1s of the Atlantic Coast
Conference basketball tournament
with a 77-75 victor)' CNer top-ranked
North Carolina saturday.
The Blue Devils will play either
No. 19 Wake Forest or No. 14
Maryland, who met In the other
semifinal at the Greensboro
Coliseum.
Duke will be In Its first ACC
tournament final since 198), when It
lost a 73-72 decision to Maryland.
For North Caronna, It was the first
ACC loss after 15 victories over
league rivals.
The holly-rontested battle was
tied eight times In the first 15
rnlnutesofthesecond half, the latest

Henderson added another one~-one with 17 seconds left to finish
Duke's scortng with a n 73Jead.
Michael Jordan's jumper proveed to be NorthCarollna'slastgasp
at the five-second mark. Henderson
then missed the front end of a
one-and-one and the Tar Heels
called timeout. With three seconds
left, Doherty tried a long pass to
Jordan. Theballnevergot lnbounds,
however and the Blue Devils were
home tree.

Wildcats edge Auburn
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -

Kenny Walker drilled a 15-footer

from the right of the tree throw tine
as time expired saturday, giVing
third-ranked Kentucky · a 5149
victory over Auburn In the chama~tleonMattDoherty'sjumper
pionship game of the Southeastern
with 2: 39 left. Johnny Dawkins Conference basketball tournament.
broke the knot with a 15-footjumper
The Wlldcats, 264, thus earned
with 2: 10 left, and Mark Alarie the SEC's automatic berth In the
added two tree throws with 60 ·
NCAA Championships.
seconds left to play.
It was the 14th SEC tourney title
Freshman Joe Wolf was fouled by tottheWUdcats, butthelrflrstslnce
Alarie and hit two tree throws to the postseason tournament was
bring the Tar Heels within 73-71 at reinstated In 1979 after a 25-year
the 5l·second mark, but Henderson absence.
started his string at that point .
The Wudcats CNercame a 4946
The 6-foot·5 Henderson was deficit to win In the final 4: ill after
hacked and converted a one-and- Greg Turner's layup had given
one with 42 seconds left. Doherty Auburn the three-point leed .
responded with a running oneMelvin Turpin hit one of two·tree
handerwlth 36seconds remaining to throwstocuttheleadtotwowlth4:06
cut the dettclt to 75-73.
to go ani! a turnover gave the

TAMPA, F1a. (AP) - Catcher
Brad Gulden rapped a two-out,
bases•kladed double to snap a 1-1 tie
In the eighth Inning and carry the
Cincinnati Reds to a 3-2.exhlbltlon
victory over the Philadelphia Phil·
ues saturday.
The victory Improved Cincinnati's spring training record to 2.J,
snapping a three-game losing
streak. Phlladephla Is 4·2.
The P.eds startel! their winning
rally with two out against Porfl
Altamirano, 0-1, ijle last of three
Phlladephla pitchers. Infielder
Skeeter Barnes doUbled and Paul
Householder drew an Intentional
walk. Cesar. Cedeno also walked,
loading the bases. Gulden .tl1en

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County is brought by

the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Are' . ; -lbrarles. ·
: be :anoblle schedule for Mon(lay, March 12 - Carpenter ·
(Laura's Store) , 3:10-3:40 p.tn.;
l:lexter (Church) , 4: liM: 40 p.m:';
panvllle (Church) , a::I0-5:50 p.m.;
Rutland (Civic Center), 6:30-8 p.rii :
. Tuesday, March 13 - Portland
lpost office) ,. 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letart
Falls (Effie's Restaurant) , 3:05r
3:50p.m.; Racine (bank), ~:35-6: 00

doubled to left-center tor a 3-1
Cincinnati lead.
John' Franco, 1.0, pltclied the
eighth Inning for the victory. Mike
Smith came on In the·nlnth, giVing
up a run on Tim Corcoran's double ·
and Darren Daulton's single.
Philadelphia went ahead 1.0 In the
first when Jeff Stone bunted and
Heds starter Bruce Berenyl threw
wildly to first base. The ball rolled
around the bullpen while Stone
clrcll"' the bases on a single and
three-base throwing error.
·
Cincinnati tied the game In the
sixth when Eddie MUner beat out an
Infield single and scored from first
base on Dave Parker's single, his
third hit of the game.

Nicklaus ha8 DOrl:ll·Open lead

Wildcats possession again with 3: 50
left . .
sam Bowie's stuff on an alley oop
pass from Dicky Seal deadlocked
the game at 49 with 2: 29 to go.
Freshman Winston Bennett's
steal of a lob pass got the ball back
from the Wildcats wltl1l: 41 to go and
Kentucky held It therestoftheway.

MEETS HUCKABAY- Marshall University head
baskefba!l Coach Rick Huckabay shakes hands with
longtime Point Pleasant RePier sports writer and
lonner leadJeHoach at Point Pleasant IUgh School,
Jack Rogers, right, at Citizens National Bank bt Point

Riggs, Chancey
selected on TVC
All Dream teams

By LEE ANN WELCH

tie for the lead with a blrdle-blrdle
start, then got' two In front with B;11
8-foot birdie putt on the fifth.
He leU victim to his first bogey of
the tournament when he pulled his
drive on the seventh hole and hit a
spectator, who was not serlo~
Injured. Nicklaus was shcrt In two,
Pitched on and missed a 12·15 foot
the~MonstetcourseatlheDoral .putt.
.
.
· .
. Countl")~€lub~IJI-3.UIIder-pliF-33 lind "- ·- 'l'he ~group--aH72 lneluded ·Tom ..
~lied the tum wlt!i a 45-hole total Kite, 68cy Hallberg, Wayne Levi .
of169 Ushflis.u nderpar. .
and ~ Langer of West
for tleCOnd at 111 with nine Gennany. Langerturnedln33,Levl
b&gt;lel ·to go 1n the day's play, were ln34, Kite and Hallberg In ill·
· ~MOler Gecqe Archer and
Iaao Aokl and Tonuriy Nakajima ·
~ LletlJie 'a Winner !Ut Wl!ekln · of Japan, defending charni&gt;lon Gary
•the HCIIda
Lietzke and KOch and Australian Bob Shearer
· M11lei' were out 1n 33, Archer 1n 3!1.
wm"!t 173:' Aokl, Nakajima ~··•• -~Kochreacbedtheturnlri34,Sheam
. Nlcklauspulledoutofathree-way ln37.

All Dream Team

nRsTTEAM
Player- School
m. Yr.
Nick Riggs, Meigs ............................ ...... .. ........ .. ... ...... · 6-0 12
Mike Bobo, Alexander ............................ .. .............. ...... . 6-3 12
Nelson Morris, Trimble .... .. ..................................... -.. · .. 5-11 12
Scott Gatchel, Trimble ........................... .. ............ .. ....... 6-3
BUI Wlllsman, Belpre ....................................... .. ........... 6-5
SECOND TEAM
Player - School
IU. Yr.
Brett Fry, Warren ....... .............. .... ......... .. ....... ... .......... 5-1112
Kirk Grandy, Nei.-York ..... ................... ...... ...... ........ .. ... 5-10 12
Frank Guthrie Alexander ..... ...... .. .. .. .. .. ...................... .. . 64 12
Charlie Undo~er, Wellston ....................................... .. ... 6-2 12
Terry Radekln, Vinton Co ............ .. ....................... .. ....... 6-0 .12
HONORABLE MEN'l10N
.
Player - School
.
Ht: Yr.
ScottSinnett Fed -Hocklng .. ......... .......... .. .................. ... S-0 12
Bob Knight, W~n .' .......................... .. ................... ...... 6-l ~
Ed Spriggs, Wellston ................. : .. .. .......... .... ................. 6-5
Jim McDennltt, Belpre ................... .............................. S-2 12
Mike Chancey, Meigs ................... .. ............. ......... ......... 6-3 10
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Mike Bobo, Alexander
. COACH OF THE YEAR

g

*

GALLIPOLIS..:. Adrian ffuck: ley will be the guest speaker at
the F1anne Fellowship luncheon
March 15, noon, at the Gallipolis
·. Holiday Inn. Reservatlosn for the
· luncheon, costing $6, should be
'!ftade by March 13 with Bev
• -Perkins at 446-2278 or PatO'DeD
at 446-1360. Tllere will be tree
babysitting
Grace Unlt~
·· Methodist Church .

' ned

6a.uc.

at

_t

••

,I

, MJiat.cUNCEY ..
_,a,~e M " ...

bona tide green and white CI'liZ}
right now. saturday It reached all
the way to Point Pleasant.
ing Is easier when you're a winner." ·
Green and white balloons, childThat's the word aCC"lrd.lng to ren in kelly green Marsball shirts
Huck.
and grown adults decked out In the
Rick Huchbay, along with his school colors were shoulder to
players and staff spent nearly three shoulder with Huck's Herd, getting
hours at Citizen's National Bank in
autographs and having pictures
Point Pleasant saturday, and the taken with all the players and
quarters 11 ere as packed as the Huckabay.
Henderson Center on the Marshall
"We try to play hard and hope we
University campus in Huntington can please them (the fans), "
(or Hucklngton, as It's being Huckabay said. "I think winning Is
referred to now) .
more Important tothlsarcathanltls
Huckabay led the Thundering to the team.
Herd to a 25-5 season, Southern
"Here they (fans) come out on a
Conference championship and in saturday morning and I think that's
wlnnlng the SC tournament in
awfully nlce," he said of the Point
~hevllle, N.C., a week ago Pleasant showing.
recorded the best record since the
Marshall won't be playing in the
1971-72 season coached by Cart first round of the NCAA tournament
Tacy.
Tuesday, and Bell said that's good.
"Now they (recruits) know where "We wouldn't have been ready to
Marshall Is," Huckabay said. "Be- play.by then, but we wlllbereadyln
fore It was, 'did you say Virginia?"
a~week. " The hoopla Is still high In
Assistant Coach Dan Bell said the Herd Country, however sertous
Herd has naiTOWed hard recruiting practices will be coming up during
down to seven players. "We have the next week, Bell added.
one verbal commitment and two
"We practice as hard as we play,"
others close," he said Bell believes junior player Don Tumey said. "The
the youth of Marshall's staff Is a layoff won't hurt us."
great help to recruiting.
With a television set replaying the
~ of course, winning hasn't
Marshall-University of Tennessee
hurt. Neither have the Huntington at Chattanooga conference final In
tans.
the background. Huckabay said he
hasn't got any idea who Marshall
Players don't look at the winning will play in the NCAA tournament.
record without noticing the fan
"We'll find out Su~ay along with
Involvement, and Huntington Is everyone else."
'J1rnes.Sentlne Staff
POINT PLEASANT- Recruit-

POMEROY -Alexander's all-tlme leading scorer Mike Bobo was
voted the 'I'ri·Valley Conference's Most Valuable Player while
champion Trimble's Tom Evans was picked as Coach of the Year In
a voting of the league's 10 head coaches released saturdar
Meigs players named to the list Include the Marauders aU-time
leading scorer Nick Riggs to the first team and sophomore whiz Mike
Chancey to the honorable mention selection.
No school had more th;ln two selections while Miller was the only
school not getting a selectee.. Schools with two picks each were
Trimble, Alexander, Meigs, Warren, Wellston and Belpre. Coaches
were not allowed to vote lcr one of their own players.
Trimble's Scott Gathel and Nelson Manis along with Belpre's BUt
WU!sman rounded out the first team with Riggs and Bobo.
Gatchel and Chancey were the only underelassmen chosen among
the 15 honorees. Gatchel Is a junior.

TVC

Pleasant Saturday altemoon. 8eblnd Roprs Is
Jimmy Joe Wedge, Point Pleasant mayor and lonner
head basketbaB coach at Point Pleasant IUgh School
and cunent PPB! cage mentor l..arry Markham.
(Judy OWen Morgan photo) .

Recruiting easier
says Herd's Huck

Bobo chosen MVP

MIAMI (AP) ~ Jack Nicklaus
dropped a long putt, ~~leet, tor
a birdie on the ninth hole and mCNed
2 strokes In front of the pack
saturday halfWay through the third
mind of the~.~ Dora!·Eastern
Open golf tWI'I)8lllent.
Nicklaus, seeking his fl(st victory
bt 1 years, played the front side on

Flame Fellowship ·
luncheon set

Section

Long-standing dream
comes true this week

Gulden's hit tops Phils

. Meigs County

••

Limit 2

With This Coupon
Good Sun.·Mon.·Tues .. M1r. 11-12-13 Only
C. K. SUPERMARKET

6:20-7:50

GALLIPOUS- The Dr. Sam ue I
Wednesday, Ma rch 14- Chester
L . Bossard Memorial Library will
!fire station). 2: 15-2:45 p.m.; Keno
be at the following ptaoes the week (nort h side of Keno bridge), 3-3:30
of March 12 to 16!
p.m.: Success Road (near Jro60),
Monday - Ewlngton, 1:15-1:45
3
:45-4: 154 p.m.:
&lt;post
p.m.; Geiger's, 2·2:30 p.m.; Adney office)
25 5 10Long Bottom
Reedsvlll
4
2
15
VI
Po
' : - : p.m.:
e
Rd., 30
: 5-3:
pB
.mtdw
.; 11 nt5o_;; .. , !Reed's store) . 5:20-S:W p.m.;
3:304: p.m.: .
e·
p.m.; Tuppers Ptatns !Lodwick's), 7:20ley's, 6:45-7 p.m.
p.m .
Tuesday - 6:15-6::.1
Eno. 2:p.m.;
30-3 p.m.;
· Harrisburg,
HotRece, 3:05-3:30 p.m.: Kyger I,
;1:504:20 p.m.; Kyger II, 4:25-4: 40
p.m.;· Roush Lane I. II, 4:45-5: 15;
Cheshire I, II, 6-6::.1 p.m.; Cheshire
6:35-7 p.m.
Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15-2:30
p.m.; Smith, 2:45-3: 15p.m.: Myers,
3: 20-3:35 p.m.; Saunders, 3: 40-3:50
p.m.; Mercerville. 4-4:30: Swain's
General Store, 4:40-5 p.m.; Crown
,City P .O., 5:15-6 p.m.; Eureka,
jj: 15-6:45 p.m.
Thursday - Watts, 2:30-2:45
' p.m.; Brick School Rd., 2:55-3:10
p.m.; AddavUie Elem., 3: 15-3: 45
p:m.; St. Rt. 7 (Roadside Rest) ,
a: 554: 10; Georges Cr. I, li, 4: 15-5
p.m.; BulavUieTr. Dt., 5:30-6 p.m.:
Plantz Subdv .. 6:15-6:45 p.m.
Friday - Kerr, 3-3:40 p.m.;
Buckrldge, 4-5: 00 p.m.; Jay Dr., I,
II, 5: lS-5: 45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
Jtll., 6-6: 15 p.m.

9 7¢

y, Gal.

OPEN EVENING, AND SUNDAY BY A-PPOINTMENT
p.m.

$1 39 Limit 2

Plus Deposit
With This Coupon
Good Sun.-Mon.-Tues .. M1r. IJ.12-ll Only
C. K. SUPERMARKET

WITH 3 NIGHTS LAS VEGAS
EXTENSION ' 140

•

••

Spencer said the class will 1)11
offered 6-7: :.1 p.m. on Mareh 20 and
27, Aprll3, 10, 17 and 24, and May 1.
Each session will be held In the
James A. Rhod es Stud e nt ·
Community Center.
· There Is no charge for the course.

.GALLIPOLIS TRAVEL AGENCY

cancer.

Bookmobile schedules
••

RIO GRANDE - The Commun·
tty Educational Counseling Center
dt Ric Grande College and Com·
munlty College will sponsor a
"Stress Ma nagement Through
Yoga Exerotse and Relaxation
Training" class beginning March

~~~d~~-iat~.a~a h~ r~~~~~~~~~~~~~W:·~~~~~~~~~~T~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

of preservation projects.
"In every org~iza tlon where
Mrs. Smit h worked she was
remembered as a driving force.
City Council passed a resolution
recognizing hpr 'tireless service'
and her continuous contributions to
the City of Alexandria.
"Flying sparks weren't her style.
lnstPad, she brought a steady flame
of energy that burned constantly in
thp communit y's favor from the
time she sellled in Alexandria In
1947 until she died last October of

The late Elizabeth E. Ebersbach
Smith, formerly of Pomeroy, was
the subject of a highly complimen·
tary article in an ~exandria , Va.,
newspaper recently.
Mrs. Smith was a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore Ebersbach of
Pomeroy. Her mother died when
she was only two and Mrs. Smith
was reared by her late stepmother,
Roberta (Bobble) Ebersbach and
her late father. There is a sister,
Jean, surviving and she is in
Nashville, Tenn.
The article in tribute to Mrs.
The national deficit is overSmith reads, in part:
whelming. the weather is disap"Elizabeth E. Smith was a gentle pointing, the "where's the beef" ·
person wllh the ability to move commercial has reached the satumountains in every community ration point. but took, we're stU\
lucky enough to receive her service. smiling aren' t we!
"Alexandrians knew her for her

Ga/fia County

March 11, 1984

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

8 _ _..____,
L--...:.=-...-----;;_.;...;...;.;;..

USFL's latest plums
making debuts Sunday
for another two weeks. Fran!&lt;
Seurer, a rookle from Kansas; will
open at quarterback for the Express
Sunday at Oakland against the
• Invaders.
In other Sunday games, · the
Philadelphia Stars will be at the
New Jersey Generals; the Michigan
Panthers at the Denver Gold; the
Houston Gamblers at the Chlcagci
Biltz; the San Antonio Gunsllngel'$
at the Oklahoma Outlaws; and the
Btnnlngham Stallions at the PlttsburghMaulers.
. ·- ~c
The Jacksonville Bulls were at the
TampaBayBandltssaturdaynlght.
Dupree, who signed with New
Orleans after dropping out of boll)
Oklahoma and Southern Missfs.
sippi, had his crash course In PrO
young has had even less tiJT!e, football Intensified after· Richard
reporting tor practice with the Los Crump, New Orleans' regular
. Angeles Express for .the first ttme
tailback, tore a"knee llgameriflast
Friday and Is not scheduled to play Sunday against Oakland.
·

By 'lbe Associated Press
MareusDupreeandSteveYoung,
the United States Football League's
newest prtzes, make their pro
debuts Sunday with Dupree more
likely to make an Immediate Impact
than the man whose $40 million
contract tar overshadowed Dupree's paltry $6 mllllon.
Dupree, wearing the No. 22 he had
both In high school and at the
University of Oklahoma, will be the
major attrac:tlon attheNewOrleans
·· Superdome·for the Breakers' home
opener· with the Memphis Showboats. ~while he won't start, he's
expected to see some action, both
returning kicks and from a running
back position.
·

�Page-C:..2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 11 . 1984

March 11, 1914

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

Portsmouth, Wheelersburg in AA finals

!Retirement ends;Pryot
seeks major opponents

BACK IN THE RING -Fonner World Boxing
A,)Jiodailon Jlllllor welterwelpt world · champion
~ Pryor (I~) talks with mana~ Buddy
LaRosa whlle standing In a boxing ring at Pryor's

Cinclnnall home Friday altemoon. Pryor aDDOUIM!ed
his return to the ring following a self tmpoaed
six-month retirement. Pryor Is Ulldlifeated In SC fights

with 32 knockouts. (AP Laserphoto).

~.hadow pitching aids
TAMPA,' Fla. (AP) - Boxers
shqdow box. The ttnctnnatl Reds
plt~rs are shadow pitching practicing their throwing motions
without a baU.
rrs the doing of new pitching
Coach Stan WUllams.
e!tchers can ~ seen anytime,
an~ In the camp, making a
pJ~hlngmotton then going Into deep
dtseusslons with each other about
"ni!chanlcs."
·
\Vhlle the others were practicing
In the bullpen durtngC!nctnnatl's3-1
losS Friday to the Chicago White
SooG Ted Power was demonsttattng
WtlJiams' teachings on the mound
with the baU.
Power, 29, struck out four and did
not auow a hit ora walkafterhewent
In ~urlng the eighth Inning. He
fanned Casey Parsons in the eighth
tnn6lg and struck out the side in the
ntnt;h.
"~tan has corrected three things
In my delivery. He's made my
motion much more compact. He's
got J;l'le looking over my left shoulder
at the hitter and driving my hips
through the delivery," said Power.
"Sastctally, that's what he's got
everyone doing. That's what you see
everybody working on aU over the
place."
Power said the result Is a more

CINCINNATI (AP) - Aaron
Pryor, formerWorldBoxtngAssoct·
atton junior welterweight cham·
pion, sayshetsoutofrettrementand
looking for fights, particularly with
SugarRayLeonardandRay''Boom
Boom" Mancini.
"I want Sugar Ray Leonard the
most," Pryor told a news conference Friday. "Aloto!peoplethought
I was a little cocky for challenging a
great tighter like Sugar Hay. Now,
he's challenging me.
"Every place I go I see that Sugar
Ray wants Aaron Pryor. I saw him
at a roast In LA. He said, 'Aaron are
yougolngtoflghtme?'Isatd'You're
retired.' And he told me he was
coming back.
"It would be anernotlonal!lght!or
me. Idon'twant to be theguytoput
his eye out or further damage his
eye. It might be a tight that never
comes of!," said Pryor.
Promotor Donald Elbaum said he
Is examining the posstbUty of
holding a bout between Pryor and
Mancini, the welterweight cham·
pion from Youngstown, In Cleveland Municipal Stadium.
"I want Mancini," Pryor said.
"Christmas Is coming and my kids
need some toys. I would go

Reds' hurlers

lively fastball, a crisper slider and
an arm that seems to bounce back
more readUy from outing to outing.
Last year, Power was used In long
relief, short work and as a spot
starter, but Williams already has
told him to concentrate on short
work In this camp.
Power was a starter in the
Dodgers organization, but he is
pleased with the bullpen, he said.
:'Comtngtocampitwasobvlousto
everyone that six positions on the
pitching staff were taken: the four
starters Mario Soto, Joe Price,
Bruce Berenyt and Frank Pastore,
and Tommy Hume and Bill
Scherrer In the bullpen. And
anybody else who thinks they have
got a job had better be careful.
"After the past two outings I've
had, I feel more comfortable with

March 12 S.IO p.m ..COUego Rocreallon

March 13 S-10 p.m.-College Recreation
March 14 8-10 p.m.-College Recreation

March Ll S.IO p.m.-College Rocrealloo
March 16 &amp;8 p.m..()pen Rocrcatlon
March 17 2-4 p.m ..()pen Recreation

March 18 1-3 p.m..()pen Recreation
&amp;8 p.m.-College Rocreatlon

~

..

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•TriVII Gullln
•R01d l1pa
•Trip Routinl
SlrviCI

~~

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ANOTHER VALUABLE
BENEFIT OF
MEIERSHIP
JOIN ..
TODAY FOR
OUR SUMM TRAVEL PLANS

Mans. StPf'tw's e. Kirtland " · or
~ark

Cath. t&amp;, BtUwt 41. CTr

a-AA-

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&amp;&gt;lk&gt;vut Ill. Eattwood :IJ
River Val. 61, Bryan ~

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

··-......

Nt'W l...exlnRtoo

ATHENS -A pair of good Scioto
County teams who did not face each
other during the regul ar season
squared off Saturday night for the
OChhlo
University Class AA District
amplonshlp
p
·
ortsmouth shot its way into the
championship contest with a convtnclng 81-56 Stf?mplng of Alexander while the Wheelersburg
Pirates outlasted Waverly 68-60
Friday night.
The schools . 1oca ted l ust 10
minutes from each other, carried a
combined record of 39-7 into
Sa
turday's title ciash.
Saturday's victor earned the
right to represent the SEO District
against the Steubenville District
champion at the Convocation Cen·
ter Thursday night In a semi-final
regional contest.
Port8mouth-Aiexander
Some 6,1XXl fans witnessed the
Trojan machine destroy Alexander
81·56 in the lid-lifter Friday night.
Behind the excellent shooting of
Darrin Miller and Lee Hooks the
Trojans roared to a 22·5 first period
lead, stretched it to 46-22 at
intermission, and then coasted to
the victory.
The Spartans, who ousted Galli·
polls 41-40 last week, were never in
the contest, prompting Coach Tom
Smith to use his substitutes freely
against the Alexander quintet.
Miller, a 6-5 senior, scored 26
points and picked off 14 of Ports·
mouth 49 rebounds with Hooks
adding 18 points in aboUt three
quarters of action.
Frank Guthrie led the Spartans
with 17 points and 10ofhls team's29

rested," said Pryor, :II!, who was
undefeated In 34 tights, 32 by.
knockouts. "I vacated the title
because the WBA Insisted I defend It'
every six months against their'
choice of opponents. I dtdn 't want to
be beat up physically and decided a
rest was more Important than the '
title, but now I'm back."

Girls• tourney results

3&amp;0S.cond
GALLIPOLIS
Avenue
448-0811

~. klvM' VIew ~

w. HolmN 5f,, Pcrtsmwlh 44

•

Ouoonn FaDs ill. "'
Ortvt1W 53, Wamn Champion J)

r----.. .

Big scanner
features in
a shirt·
pocket
size.

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.

the noor, 36of 72, while Alexander
finished with 40 percent on 22 ol54
attempts.

Alexander hits the end of the

~~~a:~ record Into Saturday's

It's all the scanning action you can

pack In a shirt pocket. Features 6
crystal-controlled channels and 4·
band reception . Lockout switches.
· Built-in scan delay . And much more.
S
See it today I

CLOSEOUT

Pool

I.J p.m..()pen Swtm
p.m.-College Swim
S.!O p.m.·College Swtm
!HI

799

Kent State to a 57-53 upset victory
over Ohio University In first round
actlt:~n of the Mid-American Conference tournament Friday night.
Aiithony Grief, who added 16
potn)s, put the Golden Flashes
ahead for good at 51-50 with a
JumPer at the 2:01 mark. Teammate Steve Tindall added a pair of
free : throws at 1: 09 for a J.polnt
cushion.

II

lf.~"=U::...\:/1 }.i;~

Sroczynski

·===·=
·

•

•

D~
~
.
~·~ n
~ lro:§ii~Ll: ~ u

10 am (16

Lawrence J. McGraw, C.P.A.
Accounting &amp; Auditing
Tax Planning &amp; Return Preparation
Personal &amp; Business
Financial Consulting
For Information or Appointment
Call: 446-2359

u

~

o

,....,

r

F0R --- DONN Ay WEEK
a t t he sPORT ABOuT

r.8

D
·..
0
11:::1

SALE ENDS MARCH 24

U

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~

CHILDREN'S RAQUETS

~

BALANCED AND SHORTENED
TO MEET A CHILD'S NEEDS

;

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'

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~

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0

~
E)
~
~

~

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ALLGAMFS
W L P

Team
OP
Southern .......... ... 20 3 1553 1263
x-Portsmouth .. ...... 20 3 1721 1356
X· Wheelersburg .... 19 4 1536 1332
. Alexander ............17 5 1417 1249
Belpre ............:...... l6 5 1361 1168
Gallipolis .. ............16 . 7 1313 1188
Greenfield .. .... .. ... 15 7 1311 1187
Rock HUt .. .... .... .... 15 8 1529:1414
Logan ...... ............ 13 9 1425 1330
Meigs .................. 11 11 1313 00
Northwest ........... .10 11 1274 1290
Jackson ................ 9 13 1426 1500
Waverly ............ ... 10 14 1511 1532
Athens ..... .... .. .. ..... 8 13 1145 1254
Soutl&gt; Point ........ .... 7 1411941258
Pi. Pleasant.. .. .. .... .6 15 1137 1282
Ironton ................ .. 6 16 1164 1317
x-StiU in tournament.

D

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New control. New Donnay e

$2195

..••

. Price IS shown BaH prtcea atlrt

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YOu've got to drive it ·to believe it!

DONNAY
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porilon. 'ttiurm!IHge may VII\' J!op0n&lt;:illlll9ft opood, ~and trip length. ~UII hlghwioY mi!Hgo ~ ~na:
dlllgned end bulK In North Arnerlco. Source: Nlfiontll H~ 'lllflic:

ft.Al!olll ,....,.. of- fo&lt; '8:1 end '83 -

Stlloty Administrot!on.

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W~ (II) -Bradley 14-0-28;

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•Padded Contour Tongue

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CATIIOUC (II) B-2·18: Cultm 7.J.I7:
Ramirez 2.().4; Lewis 2.().4'; ' YPOger 1.0.2;
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pjjp. C.thOIIc ........ .. ...... ... 21 :It 13 ~

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ga1en Monday T~~~ Friday e~.m.-1 p.l!
Saturday I a.m.-3 p.m •
~~~~

ter &amp;0-12: Dawson 11-2·12: Northrop 2~-8:
Clendenin 1.().2; Fielder 1.0.2; Bamltz 0.1·1.

,J)

White exterior with tan vinyl interior, bench seat, 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed
trans., am radio, whitewall tires, aluminum topper &amp; only 30,000 miles.

Q
TENNIS SHOES 0

Friday's results:
Portsmouth 81 Alexander 56
Wheelersburg 68 Waverly 60

300 THIRD AYE.. AT.COURT

'9,50000

u

Cage
standings

l.nc~ ~

·Medium light cadet blue with matching velour Interior, V6 engine .
automatic transmission, power steering &amp; brakes, air conditioning, am:
lm stereo, till wheel, power windows, power mirrors, rear wln&lt;low
defog ., radial tires.

~ ~ ~ ':"" '7i~~ ln.,..,, n
l.!.JI ,_
~ u~ ~ u ~

rr:

Senior Todd Staker tallied eight
quick points In the first period as

Waverly high school, succeeding
Rockie Natoli.
Bolin, head coach at Trimble high
school in Athens County for the past
five years, hopes to bring Waverly
its first winning foot bali season In 16
years.
In his five years as head coach of
the Tomcats, he complied a 33-15-3
record, including a 25-8-1 record in
the Tri·Valiey Conference.
A graduate of Jacksonville·
Tri.mbie high school and Ohio
University, Bolin was named Ohio
Class A Coach of the Year in 1!8&gt;,
when his team went undefeated and
finally lost to Newark Catholic 21-14
in the first round of the state
playoffs.

CA'RROLL NOR.RIS DODGE

.

•,

Annt\

Bolin accepts ~
95 STRUNG
Q]
GLM-2
$}5
Tigers' post
95
WAVERLY - Ed Bolin has been
!a
GLM-2
$}3
STRUNG
employed as head football coach at

SCANNERS

5 year/50,000 mile Protectlan Plan.
\~)yager's q'!4lity Ia baCked by llmried warranties on
thli power tialn'and outer body ru81-lhro~gh tor five
· )'Hrt or 50,000 11111et. ·w!llehever comes I{rat.
Deductible applies: EJtCiudes teues. Ask lor details.
Piyn!outh.litlt bllllt! IJHt b8cljed-

=

•• ~-~
.. ... 5 11 19 Ll-56
Portsmoulh ................... .. . 22 24 :Ill~

-~~· ..............

.(4

ltL..ll

~~~~~::;:~~~~~hlsteamaleadu

OJ]B0bcats,57-53~"ams=&gt;·===:::::::::::::::::::::::
' =· ·~

ROCKFORD, lll. (AP) -Larry
Hob!&gt;tns scored 17 points, four of
thein In the final 24 seconds, to lift

ror.w1_..1.

1984

Wheelerwburg-Waverly

Waverly Tigers.
Staker, who swished 30 points in
the contest, accounted for 12 in the

p;;afa";;·c;a't-

Closed

S.IO p.m..COllege Swtm
S.IO p.m ..College Swim
!HI p.m..Qpen SWim
24 p.m..Open Swtm
I.J p.m..Qpen Swim
!HI p.m.-College Swtm

PORI'IIMOl!ftl tilt - Kyle Taylor ~2-12:
Dan Reid ~: Darrtn MUle!' 12-2-26: Alvin
Wllllarnt
f.Z.I!kPock
Lee Hookl 8-2·18: Daw Villi
1.().2: Dovld
1-I.J: nm Hal'l11 1.().2.

3+7: Craig Brown 64·16: Don
12 8
Brown U- : ""'e Duncan o.n ror.w1
2'l·~tt'Vau.Y 1•1- Dave STriddand~H7:
The box ICOres:
Jim Tr1mble ~10: Brad Breitenbach 7·3-17:
RobbleLewtsJ.Hik KevtnHan1s).().2; Andy
ALEXANDER IMI - Frank Guthrie
Klinker t.0.2: MIJuo Taclu&gt;tl 1.0.2 rorAUI
:&gt;H7: Scou Ferns O.J.I: MIJuo llooo Wl2: . . -.
Brad Jr:olrers 1.().2: Ben Bennett HI~· Ryan
By~:
Carsey 2· 1 ·~: Scolt fllcCialn 1.0.2. rorAiil
Wheelersbul'l!
..... ..22 13 18 L'&gt;-68
Wheelersburg's lead had swelled r·~
·
ZZ-=12-=M=.===·
=
===~~=W=a=ver=IY:
·
··=
..
·:·· :12:12::18:1S-OO:::;i
to 13 points, tour times in the third
quarter, which ended with the
Pirates atop a 53-42 lead.
•
Sirickland, Breitenbach, and Jim
MOTORCOACH
Trimble led a Tiger surge that
TOURS
carried them to within five points
three limes in the hectic fourth
•WILLIAMSBURG / NORFOLK BY THE SEA
quarter, but personal fouls thinned
APRIL 23 -27
the ranks of the Tigers .
•ATLANTA
CITY • APRIL 28-MAY 2
In quick succession in the final
three minutes, Craig Teeters,
eGRAND OLE OPRY /LORETTA LYNN RANCH
Lewis, and Breitenbach all exited
MAY 10-13 • JULY 19-22
via the personal lout route, and the
•NEW ORLEANS/WORLD'S FAIR
Tiger really began to die.
MAY 13·20 • JUNE 10-17 • AUG . 5-12
Forced to foul the Pirates to stop
•TULIP
TIME • MAY 15-18
the clock the Tiger defenders
•INDY
500
e MAY 26-27
watched the Pirate tree throw
•CANADA BUS/ TRAIN • JUNE 4-8
shooters connect on nine of 15
attempts in the final stanza.
•GOSPEL SING • JULY 19-22
Staker scored 30 points as he
•WISCONSIN DELLS/MILWAUKEE
swished 14 of 20 from the noor and
JULY 23-28
hit two of five at the line. He also
snared eight of the Pirates' 42
CALL ~.. TODAY!
rebounds.
~
Breitenbach, a junior, claimed 13
360 SECOND AVE.
of Waverly's 35 rebounds, and
~ GALLIPOLIS
446-0699
scored 17 points before collecting
OTA0134
his fifth personal foul at the 2:20
SERVING THE GENERAL PUBLIC AS WELL AS OUR IIEIIBERS

:~~~rs1~':l ~~~t~~ as~~~~~~ ~
.-·

Len Crystals.

ft. 5 ft., &amp; 6 ft. cut. 42"
Powered Mower, Lo&amp;
itters &amp; Grader Blades.

March 11, 1184

mark.
Wheelersburg shot 50 percent on
27of53,andconverted14of26gratis
throws.
Waverly made 26 of 66 (39.41 and
added eight of nine free throws.
The Tigers conclude their season
at 1().14 while the Pirates placed
their 19-4 record against Ports·
mouth tri the championship game
Saturday night.

T
H
E
wE
E
K
YO
~
~~k~~~ ~~~e~o~~~ut~·~a:. ~
UVE BEEN LOOKING ~

BEARCAT'"
THIN SCAN 111
FOUR-SIX

$

Waverly, touted as the "Cinder·
ella Team" in the tourney did not
' third
get on trae k untII Iate in the
quarter.
Robbie Lewis, who
h Senior
d d guard
Its
a emo hEd several teams with
his deadly outside shooting, ·had a
bad night as he connected on just
three of 18 shots during the contest.
Sophomore Dave Strickland took
up some of the stack by drlillng
eight of nine field goal attempts for
the Tlgers a nd j oi""
ncu teammate
Brad Breitenbach with 17 point
efforts.

reboun~.
r----------------------JL~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
Portsmouth shot 50 percent from
~

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

Home Alhlellc Ev- Scheduled
(Wealller PermllllnJ)
March U, Baseball lhome) vs. W.Va. State, 1 p.m., doubleheader.
March 16, Baseball !home! vs. SE Mass., 1 p.m., doubleheader.
March 17, Baseball !home) VS. W.Va. Tech, I p.m.. doubleheader.
March 17 !Track !home) Men and Women - Rio Grande Invllallonal

.
Kent
State upsets
,.

Pryor vacated his WBA title when
he announced his retirement In
October. Johnny Burnphus has
claimed the title.
"I never really retired. I just

my position here. But I can't take
anything for granted. Those were
two good outings and I'm not going r.;;;;iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii;;;;~
to downplay them, but the best thing
I can do Is look forward to the next
,
one," said Power.
Williams had high praise for
Power.
"He's blowing them down. He's
worked very hard and under !Ire he
(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)
hasn't reverted to old, conditioned
llO Sprin&amp; Ave .. Pomeroy
habits. When he gets in trouble, he
PH. 992-6101
catches himself and goes to · the
things we've worked on," said
Williams.
"I told him that athlsage he can't
afford to have a medtocreyear.He's
got to go out and get them and so far
he's done just that. I! he keeps It up,
he could be one of the real big
relievers In the game," Williams
said.

4'ne Ceftler Schedule
Week
Dale - Gymnasium
March 11 1-3 p.m ..()pen Recreation
6-8 p.m.-College Recreation

anywhere theflght'sat, even If It's In
his backyard."
Pryor saki he weighs 141 pounds,
but tseagertotrimhlswelgbtto!lght
Mancini.

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

~~~

~

�•
· Page-C4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 11, 1984

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

•

March 11' 1984

Lakewood St. Edward earns seventh AAA title

Witherspoon captures WBC heavyweight crown
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)- It took
him two tries to win the title, but
after declslonlng Greg Page for the
World Boxing CouncU heavyweight
crown, Tim Witherspoon says he
plans to stay Qll top for a long time ..
''I'm determined to stay · the

Eastern slates
winter banquet
EAST MEIGS - The winter
sports banquet wlll be held Monday
at 6:3Jp.m. forallEastemathletes.
It Is sponsored by the Eastern
Athletic Boosters and will be held In
the gymnasium. Tickets are $5 and
available at the door.

heavyweight champion for many
years," said Witherspoon. "I've ~t
tokeepthetitleforthree, fourorflve
years."
But while Witherspoon was mak·
lng plans for the riches a heavy·
weight championship can bring, a
dejectedPagetalkedaboutleavlng
the ring for good.
"I've been through It all, man. I
can't take It anymore," Page said.
"I've been going through hell ever
since I started fighting."
Witherspoon, who lost a disputed
split decision to Larry Holmes last
May
In hiswith
firstatryforthetltle,
wonInit
this time
majority decision
a tough 12-round fight.
Holmes watched from the au·

It Won't Be long Now Until Spring
STOP IN AND SEE OUR
NEW LINE OF
WHEEL HORSE
LAWN&amp;
GARDEN TRACTORS

dlence and declared himself unlm·
pressed with the lighters who went
after the crown heheldfornearlys!J&lt;
years.
Despite helng outweighed by
nearly 20 pounds, Witherspoon, at
220~, seemed the stronger of the
twoashekeptPagebackedlntoone
corner or another much of the bout.
Page, 239'h, counterpunched
well, but his punches lacked the
powerofWitherspoon's- a fact that
Influenced the judging.
Page, the top-ranked contender

.

i:B eaver Eastern
~eliminates Trimble
.

~Wheal

'

CffiLUCOTIIE ..- Beaver East- winner of Saturday's Peebles· Paint
em gained Its second straight trip to Valley Valley district final will
the reglonals with a stunning 76-53 meet th&lt;l Columbus upper bracket
win over Trimble In district finals winner at 8:15 p.m. following
class "A" tournament action here Eastern's game.
TRIMBLE (53) - Gatchol J.2·8; Moms,
Friday.
Hooper 142; Morrison 4-8-16; Dupler
Center Mark Cochenour poured 448;
1·3-5: Koons 1·2-4 ; F•n1s 1-24; Say•rs 142;
In 'J7 points to lead the red· hot Stegman 142; Loach 142. Tl1l'AIJIIIH7.U
EASTERN (71) - Qx:honour 15-7-37;
Eagles on a trip to Columbus'
Hattl• 1&gt;2·2; Salisbury 142; Blantoo 5-2-12;
reglonals against the Columbus Crablrt'O 4-0-8; King IHH!; Doll H3; Artz
lower bracket winner Frlday, 142; Teet•rs 142. T111'AL'I 18-28-76.
Byquoriers:
March 16, at 6:30p.m. ·
Trtmblo .
·-·- 11 12 8 22-53
Eastern, now 21·3, owners of two East•m ....
.. .. 10 19 23 24-76
consecutive district crowns, broke
open a close game with a 19-4 spurt II
at the start of the third perlod.
GALLIPOLIS
That bullt a 29-23 Eastern lead to
AGENCY
48-27 with three minutes left In the
third quarter. The Eagles' biggest
lead was 29 points at 66-37 and 7!M1.
Trimble, losing for only the
SIS VERACRUZ
second time against 22 wins, never
CANADA'S ST. LAWRENCE
found the range with their normal
NOVA
SCOTIA • NEW ENGLAND
deadly outside shooting.
MOTORCOACH
AND CRUISE
Cochenour, a 6-3 .senior, came
Into the game with a 34 points per
AUGUST 22-SEPTEMBER 2
game average and spectacular
ESCORTED BY BILL ESHENAUR
credentialS. He didn't disappoint
anyone with his sharp 15 footers and
ONE WEEK HAWAII '699
great rebounding.
WITH 3 NIGHTS LAS
Trimble's Scott Gatchel was held
VEGAS EXTENSION 1140
seven points below his average as
the 6-3 junior managed just eight
OCTOBER 31-NOVEMBER 3
markers. Tee Morrison came off
ESCORTED BY KAREN RATHBURN
the bench to lead the Tomcats with
16.
Brian Hooper, who missed the
Tomcats' opening dlstrtct win
(59-48 over Green) due to sickness,
returned but Coach Tom Evans'
crew played without sixth man
Donovan Lent who was Ill. The .

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their business go to

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Pomeroy,
~

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C'ol

Llndl'n McKinlw

JOhn Glenn 66, Rldgf-wood ti
Slt.'UbenvUif&gt; Cath. 57, Mcrgan 54

At,.....Wal&amp;e

&lt;&gt;rfoRon Strttch

7'.!. Trw 5:'1

bi, MUlbury Lake 62
At WIIT'tll M'M em Halerve
Warflt\ Kmnl!dy 73. Warn-'11 ChampiOn

.,

o;
la'aln Ca rh.

Al-

n. Wt'lllng1 on 66

pion In 1974 and 1917, was second
with 42'h points whlle Oregon
Strltch was third with Yl'h . Streets·
boro and Oak Harbor shared fourth
place with 36'h points apiece.
Richmond Heights, the small·
school state winner In 1979, l98l and
1983, surged ahead In the Class A
standings with 77'h points going Into
the championship bouts Saturday
night In St. John Arena.
Thompson Ledgemont was se·
cond In Class A with 64'h points,
Middlefield Cardinal third with 44 'h,
Summit Station Licking Heights
fourth at 38 and Columbus Ready
fifth with Z7.
l
St. Edward moved Jeff Strauss,
l26pounds; TerrenceKennedy,!38;
James Keeler, 145; Peter Mitchell ,
1.55; John Heffernan,167; and David

Held, 185, Into the championship
round. No other school ever has won

0.. A T ~a~I'IIIU1'Mft:l
AI CbtlttooiJv
Bt&gt;a\'t'f Eastl'm 76, Trtmblf&gt; 53
AI Elida

OnovU.Ie 00. ColumbJs GM'P 49
AI F - .

Akron St.V·St .M 74, LoulwiUf• Aquinas

'·
•,

~~

AI_U.O._,
Portvrout h 81 . Alelwldl&gt;r %
Wht~k&gt;nburliC EM, Wa wrl)' 00
AI .......
Ywn,;. tta)'lon ~. Cann.&gt;ld 42
At H&amp;euhmvtlk Arl!lw

Al Da)'&amp;On A.rt!Ra

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..

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M!Mif'l" 7{1, CrldPnvllW PM'y 00

'

·-,.H~IIII!!R!-"!!B~IJ.-.OI!II•IIII!!C!II!!It~• ~
•

I

IN CONTROL - Lakewood St. Edward's Jolul Heffernan, left,
confldetlt u he defeat. Columbus St. Frands DeSalell' Jeff
Hoeft!~. .. $be Ul7·pound claM for AAA schools Friday at the Ohio HIP,
School ilo)'ll State Wrellllln1 Toumunent In Columbus. Heffernan's
team dGrn1nated the competition Friday. (AP Laserphoto).

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.

2nd &amp; Sycamore

PH .. 992-3795

PH. 446-0303

Gallipolis, OH.

rI~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Fifth annual
all star game
set March 17

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MOTOR OIL

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FinalMOC
• •
statistics
released

PER QUART AFTER

Build-up that
Other Plugs
To FN Up And
Stall Out.

c-s

MANUFACTURERS
REBATI:ON

NOM-RESISTOR

PURCHASE OF
SQUARTS

RIO GRANDE - The final
Mid-Ohio Conference basketball
statistics were released Saturday
according to Conference Sports
Information Director, Jeff
Schwartz. Three Rio Grande College basketball players are listed
arllong the top performers.
Jerry Mowery, a 5-8 junior guard,
finished seventh In scoring (15.11 ,
fourth In field goal percentage
(.552) and first In free throw
percentage (.897) and assists (7.1) .
Dan Curry, a 6-7 junior toward,
finished eighth In scoring (14.2).
fifth In rebounding (7.1), second In
field goal percentage (.567) and
seventh In free throw percentage
(. 734). Kent Wolfe, a 5-9 sophomore
guard, finished the season as the
third leading free throw shooter

---

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engine with a

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229
HITCH

1999

Rio Grande as a team led the
conference In both field goal
percentage (.513) and free throw
percentage (.747) .
The Redmen finished the regular
season with a conference record of
1!M, good enough for a second place
slot, and 28-8 overall.

~at

is
.
invested and·interest
~ed is I}Ot taxed until you
withdraw It at age 59¥.!: _ ·
At Central Trust ·
we know IRAs and we have
a number of IRA certificates
available to fit your peeds.
And remember, you can
start an IRA with any amount
up.to a maximum d~p&lt;.&gt;sit of ,
$2000 a year, or $4000 if

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Me~gs winter

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1liE CENIRAL1RUSfCOMPANY.·
·

WIRE WHEEL

HRCH BALLS

· GALLIPOLIS - The annual
GAHS winter sports banquet will be
held on Thursday, March 1~.
startlilg at 6: 3J p.m. In the Gallla
. 1\cademy High School gym.
/
Members of all wtnter sports
teams will be honored. ·
Seniors are to bring meat, or a
At dish equivalent to 10 servings;
juniors are to bring one hot and one
cold vegetable; sophomores are to
bring one hot and one cold vegetable.
and freshmen are to bring twti'
desserts.
·

~

and both 'hold a
job. ($2,250 for
farriilies with one working
spotise.) Substantial penalty
for early withdrawal.
So stop by any Central
Trust office for more information. But don't delay. Because
after April IS, you will have .
missed again..

DELUXE

64 SPOKE

SOliD Slffl

Pot luck event
scheduled March 15

"n••'r&lt;&gt; married

~'-.-

El

(.824).

The__y won't
.
ope~ran Individual Retirement
Account.
If you didn't take advan·
tage of a Central Trust IRA
last year, you missed a $2000
tax deduction. You see, when
y_ou invest $2000 in a Central
Trust IRA, you're investing
in a tax break. A $1000 tax
break for people in a 50% tax
bracket; up to $800 in the
40% bracket and . $600cin the
30% bracket And all the money

•

DISHES

~Plugs

~·.:!/

132.

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

IRONTON -Graduating seniors
from the Southeastern Ohio At·
hletic League will meet their
counterparts from the Ohio Valley ·
Conference In the fifth annual All
Star Basketball contest Saturday,
March 17.
The gtrls and boys contests wlll
be played In -the new South Point
high school gymnasium and wlll
feature the outstanding seniors
from both leagues.
Gallla Academy's SEOAL Coach
of the Year, Jim Osborne, wlll
direct the SEOAL boys, while
Gordon Baker, who guided the
GAHS Blue Angels to a trl·
championship, will head up the
SEOAL gtrls In the all-star games.

-

Seven of the nine former Individual champions posted a pair of
victories each to each the finals.
They were Jeff Holy of Ledgemont , Class A126; Frank McKeon of
Ledgemont, 1.55; Bob Potokar of
Richmond Heights, A 175; Greg
Goad of Oak Harbor,AAA 145; Rich
Hartman or Cleveland St. Ignatius,
AAA ~. now 100; Dan Wlllaman of
Hoover, AAA 112, now119; and Brad
Glntert of Warren Howland, AAA

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more than tour state wrestling titles
Ina row.
Bedford Chane! , the 1983 champion In Class AA, was second In
Class AAA with 53'h points, Cleveland St. Igna tlus third with 45'h,
North Canton Hoover fourth with 41
and Oeveland St. Joseph fifth at

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Barnesville, seeking Its first state
wrestling championship, led the
Class AA team race wih 54'h points.
Columbus DeSales. the Ohio cham·

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That broke St. Edward's record of
125 points established In the 1983
meet.

Tournament results

I

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Lakewood St. Edward, with six finalists,
added to Its state record Friday
night by wrapping up Its seventh
straight Class AAA team title In the
' '•Ohio high school wrestling meet.
The Eagles did It In record-setting
fashion, accumulating 144'h points.

'

''I know every bolt beam.
Block knows every deduction
and credit.''

ment needs.
ON TARGET -Tim Witherspoon connects with a right to the head
: of Greg Page during their WBC heavyweight title light Friday night In
:.·Las Vegas. Witherspoon and Page went the distance with Witherspoon
: 'winning the decision. There were no knockdowm. AP Laserphoto ).

way he wanted to agalnlt the No.
2·ranked Witherspoon . .
Page tralled early In the fight but
came on lind cloeed the i8P by the
end of the ninth round. It was then,
however, that Witherspoon took
command.
"My fight plan was to go to his
bixly In the flll'ly rounds and head In
the late rounds," said Witherspoon.
"It wasn't as tough as I expected. I
thoughtltwouldbetougher."
Judge Chuck Mlnker had the fight
even at ll4·all, but JudieS Jerry
Hoth and Lou Tabat both had

r:go;lng;;ln;to;th;e;bo;u;t·;sa;ld;he;;fo;ug;h;tth;e;;;;~;;~;on~·~top~ll~7-;m;._,

We now have financing available
for all your tractor and attach·

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-e..s

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

.

M,,M,f/1/C

.·

ROCK

..
·,

.·

o.f:

'

.

SPRINGS - Meigs High
School winter sports banquet wW be
held Monday at 6: ll p.m. In the high
school cafeteria.
.
Meat and, beverage will be
- pi'O'ieded. GUeSts ate asked to l)rlllg
two covered disheS ot their choice.

j\

•

r

Silver Bridge Plaza - Phone 446-9335
,,

'

Bill Kelley
Manager
•J

MON.-FRI. 8-8;
SAT. 8-6; SUN. 9-5
J

�\
Page-CO- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

March II , 1984 ,

The

I

5und2 Time.-Sentinei-Page-C7

Mafth 11' 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea10nt, W. Va.

Meigs County agents corner

Gallia soil, wa;ter unit ranked among top six in Ohio

'

Simplifying income tax with a flat rate
EDfi'()R'S NOTE - Student
Ambassadors lor Free Enterprise
(S.A.F.E.) at Rio Grande College
wtll be authoring a series of 12
articles, commenting on economic
Issues and condll'oru~ that affect
Southeastern Obi ~. 1• !!. tbe hope of
the ·' Progran1 th ' •:.rough these
articles, the cltbriS " • our area wUI
become concem~d with the subject
of economics - a subject which
Imposes mll)or Influence on aU of
our Individual and community
declsloru~. This Is the fourth article
In the series.
\~

By ROBERT FRISBY
For the 11mes-Sentlnel
RIO GRANDE- Once again we
find ourselves In the middle of the
tax season. Everyone Is trying to
arrive at the lowest possible tax bUI
or highest possible refund. A new
method of Income taxation that Is
being proposed would eliminate
these problems and virtually all
other tax problems. This method Is
the nat rate Income tax.
What Is the nat rate Income tax•

\

Shelley A. Clagg

Fred L. Stokes

Area personnel file
CHESHffiE Fred L.
· Stokes, a senior production and
environmental engineer at Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.'s Piketon
, office, has been promoted to
. Operations superintendent at
·OVEC's Kyger Creek plant.
Stokes originally joined the
company at Kyger Creek In
: June 1900 as a test engineer, and
In June 1966 was promoted to
senior test engineer. In ))e.
cember 1974, he was promoted
'to production and envtronmen·
tal engineer at Piketon and was
later named senior production
and environmental engineer.
A Lexington, Ky. native,
Stokes Is a 1900 graduate of the
.University of Kentucky, and Is a
' member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
In 1979 he attended a management development program
. conducted by the Graduate
; School of Business Admtnlstra·

tlon at the University of
Michigan.
Stokes and his wife, Mickey,
are parents of two children,
ruck, 14, and Ginger. 11. They
reside In Jackson.

one
.,

...

"We're continuing to experiment
with new products, and In two or
three years, we might have somE&gt;thing new coming out of the plant,"
Call said.
U those projects are successful,
Callsaldtheretstheposslbllltym

CLOSEOUT ON

;:::~a:gd:~:=~·~~dr!:~~

DISCONTINUED TIRES

se~~:~::~~totmoursatesmen's

(SUPPLY LIMITED)

wishes," he said. "It's Uke anything
else,lt's up and down."
Heopentng of the plant has
provided employment for 24 people
at Gallipolis, while 65 are employed
at the Bidwell plant, founded In 1947.
The Gallipolis facUlty Is managed
by Rob Allen, who graduated from
Ohio State University In 1975 with a
degree In meat sciences. He started
working at Bidwell shortly alter·
ward In quality control.
Brown and serve sausage, which
Bob Evans has been marketing for
almost two years, Is manufactured
prlmarlly at a plant In Galvin, Ill.
That plant produces sausage for the
company's midwestern region.
Retooling the Gallipolis plant for
brown and serve production was to
cover markets In Ohio, West
Virginia and Kentucky, the eastern
seaboard and as far south as
Atlanta.
"To cover our other sales terri·
tory, we could either build a plant or
add onto our· other plants," Call
explained. "So we had theopportun·
ity to buy this building."
Call estimated that remodeling
the plant took nearly five months,
and said the company spent roughly
$500,roJ on equipment. The plant
Includes a kill noor, cooking and
packaging departments.

managing the plant In November
1981, but It reopened two months
later as French City Meats, with KM
Meals, Covington, Ky., as owner.
KMiaterwlthdrew!roml1lllll8gement and the plant was put up lor
sale.

Dean Saf T Bilt Tires by Cooper

Call,whomanagesthecompany's
Bidwell sausage plant.
Call explained that the plant Is

their Investment bankers would
continue discussions. BancOhio
Chairman Arthur Herrmann said
the company also would review
other alternatives.
There had been speculation that
AmeriTrust, which has banking
assets of $5.7 bllllon to National
City's $6.8 billion, might be a
potential suitor for BancOhio's
statewide operations and assets
totaling $6 bllllon.
But Jarrett said at a luncheon with
reporters that AmeriTrust wants to
concentrate on certain types of
banks In specific locations and that It
Is not Interested In BancOhio.
"I think It would be extremely
unlikely that we would be Involved In
a competitive bid," he said.
"As we can best analyze BancQ.
hio from our vantage point, we do
not think that the broad state
coverage with many regionally
oriented offices In small communi·
ties fits our strategy," he said. "That
doesn't mean to Infer that It's wrong
tor somebody else.''

than 00 people could be employed at
GaUipolls.
The plant seiVed as the basis lor
Evans Packing Co. In 1937 and
continued under that name untll
1972, when It was purchased by
Landmark Inc. Landmark stopped

'Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~--~~~o~re~~~~~-iiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;~· ·
11

didn't get underway untu late
October, explained Lowell " Buzz"

.

.

Alpha II Steel Radial

Skylark Steel Radial

Qty.

16
4
2
12
4
9
17
18
6

P185/75R13 ................................... . 30.00
P185/75R14 ........................ ............ 33.00
P205/75R14 .................................... 36.00
P215/75R14 .................................... 38.00
P225/75R14 ...................... .... .......... 40.00
P205/75R15 ..................... ............... 37.00
P215/75R15 ................................... 39.00
P225/75R15 .................................... 42.00
P225/75R15 .................................... «.00

.

31x10.50-15 4 Ply ................................. 56.00
31x11.50-15 4 Ply ........ .................... ..... 60.50
31xll.50-15 6 Ply ................................. 66.00
33x12.50-15 6 Ply ................................. 70.00
33x12.50-16.5 8 Ply .. ...... .... .... .............. 80.00

31x10.50x!5
54.00
3lx10.50x15 6 Ply ................................. 62.00

All Season Steel Radial

875R16.5 8 Ply ...................................... 73.00
950Rx16.5 8 Ply .................................... 80.00
31x10.50Rx15 6 Ply .............. ........ ......... 75.00

BILL'S
BODY
SHOP
2,
WV

Junction Rt. 68 and Rt.

273-3271

Ravenswood,

'

Ir~~~~~~~~~~~~~O~p~e~n~M~o~n~d~a~y~t~h~ru~S~a~tu~r~da~y~.8-~5~~~~~~~~~~~~

NO-WAX BEAUTY HAS NEVER BEEN

SO DURABLE!

sagoo OVER

.....

I

f=

DEALER COST SALE

'

Cl:::o

[

t:k::o

I
]

1]

--- - ·- -

89° 0 OVER DEALER'S COST

YES,

Cl:::o

ON RANGER, RANGER 4x4's &amp; BRONCO II
WITH INCENTIVES FROM FORD MOTOR CO., WE CAN
PASS ON THESE GREAT DEALS LIKE THIS ONE
FOR ONLY

·.

26th

1984 RANGER 4x4

Bench Seat, 2.:r 4 cyl., 4 speed trans ..
P.S.. Step Bumper. Radio,
Stripe Kit, 114" W.B. and More

GREAT .SELECTIONS &amp;- GREAT
BUYS
.
-.
-· -·
'

.......

~-

....;,..._

AT

461 S. Third.Ave.
'

\

..

·

.

NO-WAX VINyt FLOOR TILE

• Durable No-Wax finish that resists stains and scuffs
45 sq. ft.
• Exciting variety of.patterns and colors
.

.

..

PH. 992·2196

.

~

'3385

'

7 p.m. at the Extension Office.
' W~ay, March 14 - Sales
Committee meeting at 7:30p.m . at
the Extension O!llce.
Monday, March 19 - Meigs
CountyBeefAISoclationmeetingat
7 p.m. at Dalley's Restaurant In
Racine.
' Tuesday, March 20 - Meigs
County Extension Advisory Com·
mtttee meeting at 8 p.m. at the
Extenalon O!ltce.
Thursday, March 22- Pesticide
Training and test !rom 1 to4p.m. or
7 tolO p.m. at the Extension Office.
The regular meeting of the Meigs
County Beef CatUe Association wUI
be held at Dalley's Restaurant
starttna with a meal at 7 p.m. Uyou
cannot make It In time lor the meal,
come lor the meeting. The meeting
w111 start between 7:45 and 8 p.m.
The meal Is lor members of the
Metp County Association only and
Is being sponsored by Ralgro. The
guest speakers will be Do~ Lowrey
from Ralgro and John Neer,
President of the Ohio Cattlemen's
Association.
Please call our office at 9928 to
make reservations. Reservations
m111t be made by noon on Monday,
March 19.
Pesticide training lor persoM will
be conducted on Thursday, March
22. Any person wanting 1o acquire a
license to purchase restricted
chemicals should attend. The Cooperative Extension Service will
provide study materials ahead of
time and conduct a school on the
safety and use of chemicals. A
person from the Ohio Department
of Acrlculture wUI be here to give
the exams. Follow these basic

a

m.

__

Jones

. C:AROliN~A- I:UMDR- .
·AND

3'12, Sixth Street

on

c&lt;l'llmlsslon lor the packer and

' ..

I

' '
r · •'

. 67$·1160

Point Pleasant, W.Va. ..
$tore Hours: Mon.-Fri ~, la.m.-5 p.m.; Sat. la.m.-12 noon

~R!r,.q~

1.88

Quaker State 10W30

Fran1
Oil Filters
· Regular 2.88 · 3.95 Limit 2

Sale 69C Limit 12

For most domestic .and import cars

3.88

Fram Air
Filters
Regular 4.95 Limit 2

Save over '1

.

p~ he boUiht

. up

______

For most dome!ltiC and import cars

International Harvester Co.'s plow·
share plant here.
Details of Empire Plow Co.'s
proposal were not disclosed on
Frfday. · Harvester said from Its
Chtcaao headquarters there wUI be
no lmmedtate word on whether It
wtiJ accept Empire's offer.
Empire, which has made fann.
machinery components since 1911),
moved Into position to bid on the
· 36-acre plant alter a $3 mlllloa otter
by Temco Inc., a marketing ftnn In
the Chicago suburb or Oak Brook,
collapsed Feb. 28 when Temco's
main lender pulled out.
Mldlantlc Bank of Edison, N.J.,
Temco's leading financier In the
packa&amp;'e, decided Temco had tnsul·
flclent capital and Its prospects for
success In the venture were too lew.
Harvester had pledged to give
Temco about $15 million In business
over the next three years, having
Temco continue to make plowh·
sares for Harvester- II the sale of
the plant went through.
No one Involved would say If such
a pledge for future business Is part of
the talks between the Ohio company
and Harvester .
Harvester employed 2,:m people
at the Canton works In 1979. The
company announced last fall It was
vacating the factory and moving
operations elsewhere as part of a
drive to avoid bankruptcy.
Empire employs about 150people
at Its only facUlty In Oeveland, and
has annual sales of' roughly $10
mUIIon, said David Dorgan, Can·
ton's director lor development.

carton

SUPPLY COMPANY.

Mjddleport, OH.

POMEROY- Monday, March

12- Four·H Committee meeting at

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Donald
Seiter, Brookville, Ind., and David
.Espel, Cincinnati, have agreed to
settle federill charges of defrauding
a Kentucky rneatpaoker, the U.S.
-)Jepartment of Agriculture says.
B.H. Jones, ~ad of. the USDA's
.Packers and Stockyafds AdmJnls,
tratlon, said the two agreed Wednes·
day lo fines totaling $l5,1XXl, a ·
suspension of their. Uvestock dealer
business and a cease and desist
order.
Espel worked as a livestock buyer
lor the Covington, Ky., mcatpacker
tn 1911).8J,, when he allegedly bought
Uvestock and allowed Seiter to sell It
witbout disclosing Espel's owner·

TafketfPtodairrr
.

· PAT HILL FORD, INC.

Exten.ton AIM

Aptcullure, Melp Coupt)'

4.49

1.99

104 t

Shaler
Rlslone
Reg. 2.88

Octane
Boost

Save over S

99C

Solder

Seal
Puncture
Seal
Reg. 1.49 •M1 1-12

3.88--

per pair

AMP

AMP

Car

Jack
Stands

~.IJ.lf.!

Alt.nc:e

1.99

cam
Shaft .
Reg. 79.95 Fits

Gas Caps ·

most domestic
cars &amp; trucks

49.95

1.99

2.49 .· ·~3~:

OFF
All Dorey

Dorey '
Spark
Plugs

Motorcycle
Batteries ,,
Reg. From t2.95 , '

Dorey Flat

Motorcycle Shields
Reg. 2.95 Smoke or Clear

Fits all helmets with 5 snaps
Has snaps for visor attachments
Meets all federal requirements

Reg. 2.99 Sold in
packages ol 2 Fits

Fits Honda's
and Yamaha's ..........7.95

most motorcycles

Nippondenso

Reg. t2.95

Save over ss

Save over 13

44.88
~~
. Kenco~

Meatpackers
settle case

$8,3 85 00·
NOW
THRU
:MARCH

B)' I OliN C. RICE

CANI'ON, Ill. (AP) -A Cleveland make!' of fann·machlnery
COO!pollellts has offered to buy

r~~~.~~~ !~~~.~ . . .. . .

New Shipment Light Truck Tires
Super Stinger Mud &amp;Snow

GALUPOLIS - The Gallla Soli Water Conservation Commission;
Altizer, fiscal agent; Lawrence districts In Ohio.
and Water Conservation District John Schaeffer, Ohio Federation of
Burdell, treasurer and 1983 board
First a nd second place districts
was reCently selected one of the top Soil and Water Districts; Dan
member Blaine Taylor, Amy Vln·
w1ll receive plaques presented at
principles In pruning:
six agencies In the State of Ohio lor Conrad, assistant state conserva·
son, district program coordinator;
the Ohio Federation of Soli and
1. Remove all dead, diseased, and
Its 1983 soil and water conservation tlonlst, representing the Soil Con·
Kerry Martin, district technician;
Water Co nserva tion Districts
broken branches.
program.
servation service, U.S.D.A.; and
and Doug Pauley, district censer· Summer Supervisors School July
2. Remove the weaker of two
Theselectlonwasthe37thpartol LarryVance,chlei,DivlslonoiSoll
vatlonlst, Soli Conservation 29-3JinColumbus.
crossing branches that are rubbing
the annual Goodyear Conservation and Water Conservation Districts, Service.
First place districts w111 also
together.
Awards program, spoMOred by the Ohio Department of Natural
The judging committee said receive an all ·ex pe nse paid,
3. Remove drooping, low·growlng Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
Resources.
some of the progra ms cited tor vacatlon·study trip to the Goodyea r
branches.
All 88 soU and water districts In
The distinctive service judging Gall Ia District's program were:
expertmental farms In Arizona for
We do have more detalls on Ohio competed. Each unit submit· committee will Interview each of support from the Gallla County one of their board members and
· pruning with Illustrations II you are ted an evaluation guide w1th
the governing boards and stall Commissioners, along with local their outstanding cooperator.
Interested.
,complete report on last year's
from the following competing
businesses and community lead·
MeritAwardsw11lbepresentedto
Applying Lime and Fertilizer to accomplishments.
counties this week: Gallla, Butler,
ers; educational programs such as members of the 1983 governing
Garden Solis - A lot of Ume and
The dlsttnctlve service judging Fulton, Hardin, Licking and Meigs. Farm·City Day and the growth of board for first and second place
fertilizer Is applied to gardens by committee members selecting this
The 1983-1~ Gallla Supervisors no-till In GaUia County.
districts and to those districts'
the "guess" method. Now Is the year's winners are: Sally Van
and staff to be Interviewed are:
Winners will be announced In outstanding cooperators .
time lo take a soU test and Meter, deputy director, Ohio ))e.
Frank "Buz" Mills
chairman;
August. The state judging commit·
Gallla Soli and Water Conserva·
determine exactly what your partment of Natural Resources
Jim Baughman, vicE&gt;-chalrman;
tee wUI select two first place tlon District's annual meeting Is
garden needs.
:e_p~esenting the Ohio Soli and
Noel F . Massie, secretary; Gary districts and two second place Nov. J.
.-------------==::=:=::.....=......::::..=:.....:=-=:.:....::~.=::....:..:
....:..::.:.._:___:~-----------...:....:_...:...:....:

Extension notes••.

Cleveland
firtn bids
on plant

Aty.
8 Pl65/80Rl3 .............................. 29.00
2 Pl85/75Rl3 .............................. 30.00
4 P205/75Rl4 .............................. 33.00
4 P215/75Rl5 .............................. 36.00
4 P225/75Rl5 .............................. 38.00
4 P235/75Rl5 .............................. 40.00

PAT HILL FORD'S

..
.

May 1983
produce a
the
newplant
line ofInsausage.
Butto production

finn
banks

that a nat rate system would force
the poor and middle class to pay
more and let the rich pay less. Also,
they say, state and local govern·
ments which rely on tax tree bonds
as a source of funding would be hurt
by such a system.
Other points that they bring out
are that a nat tax rate system
would hurt the economy by not ·
allowing deductions for Interest
expense resulting from expansion ·
or home loans and that It wOUld be
devastating to charitable organlza· ·
!Ions, which depend on tax deduct!·
ble contributions lor their exist·
ence. The opponents feel that
overall, a nat rate structure would
not be In the best Interest of the
nation.
These arguments tor and against
a nat rate system are basic and
good pots. However, much more
study needs to be done 1o determine
exactly what affects a nat tax rate
structure would have on each
Income group and on the economy
In general .

rate and, making the lower and
middle Income families pick up the
dll!erent.
The other group argues that the
rich do not pay their falr share
because of all of the tax shelters and
loopholes. They say that a nat rate
system would change this by
ellmlnatlng the loopholes and shel·
ters, and would Ioree the rich to pay
their share.
Further arguments tor a nat tax
rate states that It would lead to
economic growlh because the
people would have an Incentive to
work as much as possible since the
extra Income would not be taxed at
a higher rate.
The overall consensus of the
proponents Is that a nat tax would
be much easter to understand and
more equitable than our current
system.
The opponents agree to a certain
extend that a nat tax system would
stmpllty the tax code, but argue
that this one good point Is out·
weighed by the bad points. They say

line produced loc~ly at Evans plant

GAlLIPOLIS - It s undergone
three changes In management In the
past two years, but the me~t
prcx;esslng plant on Texas Road lll
Gallipolis has come full circle to Its
firBostownb
E er. F
In
based
vans arms c. pure

GALLIPOLIS -Carolyn Bur·
rls has joined the staff of Mane
Designers by Lanna &amp; Co., 760
First A'1e.

:~Ohio holding
:~eeking more
By TIM CURRAN
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP)- The hunt
Is -on, but AmeriTrust Co. will be
Very selective about Its quarry and
the Columbus-based BancOhio
Corp. Is not on the list.
Chairman Jerry Jarrett and
President James Rode, conceding
that AmeriTrust made some mls·
iakes reading banking trends in the
wake Industry deregulation, said
Wednesdaythecompanywouldnow
l:i!come more aggressive In trying
tQ expand by acquiring other banks.
But Jarrett said BancOhio, being
~ght by another Oeveland bank
holding company, National City
COrp., does not lit Into Its plans.
. National Clty disclosed Monday
that It has offered $35 a share lor
11;ulc0hio stock In a $.}X) million deal
that would create the largest
bimklng organization In Ohio and
of the 20 largest In the nation.
: i\fter a BancOhio board meeting
1Ji :Columbus on Wednesday, it was
·~unced that the two firms and

Sausag~

GAlLIPOLIS - Shelley A.
Clagg, Patriot Star Route, recently accepted employment
with Budget R.ent·A·Car In
Dallas, Texas, alter completing
Instruction with the Boyd School
of Travel and Business Training,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Daughter of Alvin and Virgt·
nla Lewis, Patriot Star Route,
she Is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School and at·
tended Gallipolis Business
College.

A pure nat tax would be a uniform
percentage of Income regardless of
the amount of Income. All forms of
Income would be taxed with no
Pxcluslons or deductions allowed.
Very few people, II any, are
proposing such a pure nat tax.
What Is being proposed Is simplified
versions of the current progressive
tax, with the goal being to simplify
the tax laws so that they can be
understood by the average person.
Some of the proposed systems
would keep some progressiveness
and allow a limited number of
exclusions and deductions.
The proponents of a nat tax plan
of some type all agree on one major
point. A nat tax would to a large
degree, simplify the tax code and
inake It more understandable to the
average person. A second point
made by most proponents Is that It
would be more equitable, but this Is
viewetl from both sides. One group
says the taxes on the wealthy are
too high and a nat tax would
eliminate this by lowering their tax

'

Reg. 29' Replace.....artrldges

38.88
,

Chevy· &amp; Ford
Long Beds 69.95

Addon

unit

Reg. 42.95

9.88 .

Kenco
Pass Thni ~~Th· Tailgate
~,~
Protectors ··
Windows
Reg. 12.95 For
Reg. 49.95 For
domestic
truck s only

Reg. 79.95

domestic
trucks only

SdvP over ' 4

9.88

30.88

Monroe

Calcium40BatterieS
month batteries

Matic
Shocks

Maintenance Free
.

37..88.""'-50 month

6.d8 ~~~
Promo Disc
Pads "'• , , .,.. . ..,.,....

l or mos1 dome st• c Coli S

&amp; light !ruCk s 2!l 000 m1tc s
rated a ale set

.·

·

Aifliaiter~:Tcii~Tl~~
cara and .light trucks·

submlttln&amp; false invoices td nceal
· thole actions, Joaes saki.
,
In agreelllg to the order, the two
neither adrrittted ,nor denied the
cllal'gls, whlchwerecontalnedtnan
~tlve complaint tl,led last

- Jline Ulider t11e Pacien and .

209 ·Upper River Road
•

1

•

-

••

',

'

446-3807

HOURS:
Mon..fri. 9-8 :.
Sat. 9~
':
Sun. 1o-5 - -,
~

--

.

----

: · Stockyards Act.

'

,,

•'

�Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 11 1984

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

1

Odd Mcintyre de~crihed Scot who came to Gallipolis
By JAMES SANDS
Roe was the Waiter Mltty of
Special Co!Tellpondent
Gallipolis and he regularly met the
GALLIPOLIS - " Ormsby trains coming to town and wonMcTavish came from Scotland and dered what it would be Uke to be
runs the Sample Store on Couri that person. According to Odd, Roe
Street. He has
side wouldoftenmakeupastoryofwhat
whi s k e rs . His
he was doing In lite. One one
son, Treat, waits
occasion he told Odd that he had
on · trade while
just returned from the circus where
Old Mr. McTavhe was a horizontal bar performer.
The truth was Roe had never left
ish spends ali his
tim e ke epi n g
Gallipolis except to ride out to
books under a
Vinton yearly to attend the bean
coal oll lamp in
dinner.
store. Sometimes the lamp is Wore celluloid collarll
buring as late as 10 o'clock. Mr.
Peeny White ran the barber
McTavish sends out his biDs shop on State street and was the
weekly, a nd those who come and
champion horseshoe player of
Gallipolls ln 1986. "He can play
pay . up promptly get a five-cent
poke of candy. He and Conrad
tunes on peach leaves and do a lot
Schreck, the butcher, are the of tricks with strings. He was the
greatest patrons of the publlc
first man in town to wear
llbrary. At night they sit out tn front
callulold collars and has never
of the big scales at the lower end of discarded the m . In the bck room,
town and discuss llterature."
. where they play checkers, the
So wrote Odd Mcintyre of one of walls are decorated with cigarette
Gallipolls' most lnteresllngcitlzens
pictures." (Mcintyre) .
at the turn of the century. There
One of the other hang-outs for
was also Cass Cooper who was the
these men of Odd's gallery of '
son of a former GaiUpolis superin- personalities was the pool room on
tendent of schools and who slept in
the_second floor of what is today the
an old shack on the West Virginia
Wiseman Agency at Second and
side In the summer, but in the
LOcust. There were only two tables
winter transferred to Gallipolis
and Sug Hutcherson was the
where he slept on a coal float.
. attendant. The walls were covered
Sleeps tn church.
with show posters and Grandpa
Wrote Odd, ''Cass rarely works,
LeClercq seldom missed an afterexcept now and then to drive
noon there·
cows In from the pasture or do a
The house we feature today,
llttle hoelng ln gardens. Strangely
across the street from Grace
enough he attends church
Church, was a rooming house In the
regularly but always sleeps
early century and
It ·
through the service."
had its share of characters as
Mcintyre, in a piece written for
residents. A good many bachelors
the Charleston Sunday Gazette in
passed through the place. The
1923, also recollected about the
house itself would probably be
Park Central Hotel, Enoch Boggs,
pushing the 150 year mark.
the undertaker, Chut Bashaw,
In regards to bachelors we note
Peeny White and Roe Tlbbl~.
that GalliPOils must have been a
~

AT THE TURN OF the century when Odd Mcintyre was ridlllg up
and down the streets of Gallipolis looking lor an Item, this home at
Second and Cedar was a rooming house. The edifice is obviously
p~CivU War and at one time was owned by Capt. James Summers,
who operated a store with a man named Bailey In the buDding toward
Cedar that was lorn down last year.

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Dinry:

Schaefer has had fifteen
birthdays: 60 years of age
born at 10:30 a.m. on Feb. 29, 1984,
at 011 Springs, Ky. Her parents are
Eugene and Pearl Jackson.

By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOUS - Some leftovers
from previous Peeps columns
which related to "the one day
added" which makes lt Leap Year:

DOROTHY BROWN Clark
widow of Fred Clark, has fou;
chlldren, eleven grandchlldren, six
great-grandchildren ... and she
herself was born only Feb. 29, 1916.
Guess how many birthdays she's
cele brated!

FEB. 29 WAS THE birthday
anniversary "Of Norman Wyatt
Schaefer - the llfteenth birthday
anniversary, though he is 60 years
of age! He and his parents, Norman
E. and Edna Stahl Schaefer, all are
natives of Meigs County and they
live there.

wecanlma~

TERRY E. KAYLOR, 43598
Kaylor Road, Reedsville 45172 , was
born Feb. 28, 1948, and has had nine
birthdays - son of Elmer and
Helen Kaylor. He was born ln
Athens County. He is employed at
the Huntsman Chemical Corpora-

NOT QUITE. Born there, but
they reside ln Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
Norman Wyatt manied Leora
Roblnson, and their son is Norman
David. For 26 years Norman Wyatt
worked for Pittsburgh Plate Glass
but retired when lt phased out, and
now he works tor Continental Can.

Date set .tOr grange banquet

tion in Belpre
supervisor.
Married
14 years,ashea and
his wife
Llnd a h ave three children: Renee,
13; Crystal, 12; Randal, 7. An
ou t -o1-d oors man, Kaylor of course
likes hunting, fishing, and camping.

A GRADUATE of Pomeroy High
School, Nonnan Wyatt Schaefer
had served tor two and a half years
ln World War II with the U. S.
Anny's First Cavalry. Ferndora
Schaefer Story writes that " we
enjoy the paper very much."

CAROL GENE Mowery - he
was born in Meigs County Feb. 29,
1936 - is a New Haven electrician
for Foote Mineral. His mother is
Neva Bolyard, P. 0 . Box 50!1,
Bethesda, Ohio 43179. His late

HER UTTERLY serene highness
comes out inltialwlse as "hush,"
and her serene highness is the
countess Geraldine of Garfield, who
scribbled on her Valentine, " II I
were 9 and you were 9 I'd ask you to
be my Valentine." Save that for
Feb. 14, 1985. Yes, you.

father was Bert E. Mowery. Carol
Gene and his wife Dorey Uve at
Bradbury (Middleport Rt. 145760).
They have three daughters, Kim
and Judy of Middleport and
Tammy of F1orlda. He has two
sisters, Connie Casey and Dottle
Smith of Middleport

LESUE LITCHFlEW was born
.Feb. 29,1972, atLanslng, Mich., and
she's now a cheerleader tor the
Addavllle Rlnky-Dlnk basketball
team. The writing reads: " My
Dad's the Methodist preacher at the
Kyger, Addison, Cheshire, Kanauga, Methodist churches." Linda
Joyce-Jackson knows that she was

. SMITY RUNYAN quotes the
Feb. 26 column as saylng that Linda
Jackson was born Feb. 29, -1984! " In
your Leap Year formula, you came
up with a dandy - Llnda Jackson
born Feb. 29, 1984." What happened
was, the last two numbers of the
year got transposed. It SHOUW
have read 1948.

POME ROY - The Meigs county
Grange Banquet was set for
Frld
ay, April 13· at the Salisbury
Elementary School at 7 p.m . when
1he Meigs County Pomona Grange
met recently at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall.
Ohio State Grange Master Howard Caldwell will be the guest
speaker.
Tickets tor the banquet are $5
each and may be purchased from
the following grange masters: Ray

The sales are open to the public
and the seedlings selected for sale
are to control erosion, encourage
wildWe, save energy (either for fuel
or planted as windbreaks), tor
Christmas trees or to simply
beautify your home area.
Crown Vetch ground seeds are
being offered to control erosion,
beautify and to cover a steep area
that is hard to mow. Seedlings
available for Christmas trees are
the White Pine and Norway Spruce.
Windbreaks can be planted to
conserve energy uslng different
tree and shrub varieties.
Doug Pauley is district conservationist with the Soil Conservation
Service and has been doing the
windbreak planning. He will view
the site selecting proper location for
the ' · '!dllngs, then selects the
spec: .s, spacing and length of rows,
quantity needed and spacing between rows.
Planning a windbreak is a public
service provided by our district.
Good' windbreaks may consist of
white pine, Norwa~ spruce and the
shrub of auiumn oUve, these are
excellent plantings for wUdllfe food
and cover also.
Final orders must be received in
the district otllce by March ~­
Seedlings wUI be avaUable lor
pick-up on March 31 from 10 a.m .

advantages the INSIDER has to offer.

Soil 8lln'ey on agenda
POMEROY - The upcoming
compri!llel!liive 5oU sw'Vet
Meigs County wUI be discussed at a
public meeting to be held at 10 a.m. ·
Tuesday in the agriculture conference room, second floor, Fanners
Bank BuUding, Pomeroy.
A soU sw-vcy will be carried out
by the soli ~lentlsts ofthe soU
conservation district. Input and
ideas will be sought at the meeting
to help plan the order ot the sw-vey.

for

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tion Department also has started an
inquiry Into the allegations.
Smith -said Friday that whlle he
has not started an Investigation as
such, he has ordered "a survey" to
detenninethevalldltyotallegatlons
which have appeared in recent
newspaper stories.
"Two contractors have called to
tell me that statements attributed to

from the Resch home, said she
thought theklndergartnerstayingln
the Resch home just was making up
stories when she told Kay she got a
bump on her head from things
" flying around the house. "
But after hearing news stories
about the Incidents, Kay, who asked
that her last name not be used.
decided the foster chlld - one of
nearly lXl the H.esches have cared
for over the last ~ years - was
telllng the truth. Kay said she is
curious, but doesn't want to accept
the Resches' tnvltatlon to view the
flying objects.
Dispatch columnist Mike Harden ,
who has visited the Resch house
severaitimesthisweek,saldhesaw
objects move for no apparent
reason. A Dispatch photographer
snapped a picture of a telephone
apparently flying across Tlna's lap.
An electrician witnessed blinking
Ughts and erratic appliances, but
could detem .ne no reason.
The H.esches were put on the
defensive Thursday after they
opened their home to reporiers,

most of whom wrote they saw
nothlng unusual .
WTVN-TV in Columbus broa'dcast videotape showing Tlpa ~
lng ·over a lamp with he r hand.
WTVN-TV reporter Drew Hadwal
said, however, that he witness¢
other disturbances lndependent of
any deliberate action by Tina .
·
Mrs. Resch said later that Tina
admitted toppling the lamp.
"I know she was tired and did
knockitover,"shetoldtheDispatch.
After a day of lntervlews, Mrs.
Resch said Tlna "was really getting
angry and wondering what it would
take to satisfy them."
The founder of a group th4t
lnvestigates such occurrences nationwide said he's skeptical about
the case and wants to send
committee members to lnvestlgate.
"From what we've read and
heard about the case, there isagreat
deal of superstitious gulliblllty,"
said Pa ul Kurtz, founder of the
Committee for Scientific Investlgation of Claims of the Paranormal,
based tn Buffalo, N.Y. "Corrunon

them ln the stories are just not

accurate," Smith said. "I want the
full story."
Horvitz Newspapers, which ran a
series ot articles starting a ·week
ago, quoted sane of the workers and
business people as saying they
thought threatsoflosingjobsorstate
buSiness were impUed.
Smith did not Identify the aide, but

said he gave Instructions that all of
the newspaper stories should be
read and checked out Individually.
Most ot the charges have been
attributed to workers and business
people at the district level, rather
than In Columbus.
Meanwhlle, both sinlth and
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste,
through press secretary Paul Cos-

•

tello, repeated earlier statements
that anyone found to have solicited
contributions wUJ be fired.
''We need to take a serious look at
these allegations," he said. "This is
not the way this adrnlnlstratlondoes
business."
WUbur Martin of the U.S. Transportation Department's lnspector
general's office said the federal

.....• •

~

lnvestigation " has somethlng to do
with soilcltlng political contributions" ln Smith's department.
Martln said he was not free to say
what triggered lntervention by the
Inspector general's office but that
the lnquiry was started "just
recently."
He did say he was aware of the
newspaper stories.

.... . ..

ot obstruction ot justice.
- Claiborne has been an outspoken
·~·ted tor- Wrller
RENO, Nev. (API- U.S. District llgure since his appointment in 1918
: Judge Harry Claiborne goes on trial by President Carter at theUrgtngot
· Monday on charges of accepting then-sen. Howard Cannon, D-Nev.
Defense attorney Oscar Good: lrlbes from a brothel owner, but
man ot Las Vegas has argued that
· ctemes any wrongdoing and says the
: Justice Department is persecuting federal agents are seeldng'I'E'IIenge
because Claiborne, who once called
: him for criticizing Its agents.
Claiborne, 66, is only the second the Justice Department's Organ• sitting federal judge ever indicted 12Jed Crime Strike Force in Las
for crimes allegedly committed Vegas "rotten bastards" and
whUe on the bench. The first, U.S. "crooks and liars" and accused
District Judge Alcee Hastings ot them otUiegal wiretaps and arrests-.
In a prellminary hearing last
Miami, was acquitted last year of
obstrucUng justJce and conspiring to month, Goodman quoted former
Las Vegas FBI chief Joseph
accept a bribe.
Claiborne is charged with accept- Yablonsky as saying he wanted to
ing s:J),(XX) from Joe Conforie, put Claiborne's picture up In his
former owner otthe Mustang Ranch oftloe with the rest of his rogues'
lrothel outside Reno, to Interfere In gallery.
But U.S. District Judge Walter E.
, a federal vote fraud Investigation
; inVolving Conforie. He is also Hotllnan of VIrginia, whowascalled
in to preside over the trial, called
charged with taking $45,(0) from
•. .Conforie after claiming that 9th U.S. Goodman's claim of government
: Circuit Court of Appeals judges misconduct in the case "garbage."
Goodman has also critlci2Jed the
: could be bribed to overturn Con_
speed
with which Claiborne has
folie's tax evasion conviction.
Other charges Include three come to trial since his Indictment
: counts of tax evasion between 1978 late last year. He petitioned the U.S.
: and 1981, one count of falling to Supreme Court last Week for a
· record a $75,(0) loan on his financial delay.
The pi'09I!CIItion's chief witness
• disclosure statement and one count
ByARTDANIEIS

wiU be Conforie, a tonner cllent ot
Clalborne 'wllen he was an attorney.
Contorte returned fmn Brazil and
accepted a sentence reduction for
tax evasion in exchange for his
testimony against Claiborne.
Hotrman was called in to preside
aver the trial after all 9th Circuit
judges excused themselves from
thecasebecausetheyllgureinoneof
the CI\Brges.
Goodman claims the government
made "a deal with the devU" in
persuading Contorie to return, and
acted illegally by reducing his
sentence from five years to 15
months.
The charge of obstructing justice
concerns an alleged attempt by
Claiborne to get Conforte attorney
Stan Brown to lle to a federal grand
jury investigating Claiborne.
Brown's testimony In last month's
hearing cost Claiborne a defense
attorney, John Squire Drendel.
Brown said Drendel met with him
to convey amessagefromCialhome
asking that Conforie not testlfy
against the judge. Chief pi'09I!CIItor
Steven Shaw ot the Justice Department said Drendel should be
disqualified from the case because
he is a potential witness.

·~

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By CIIEl' CURRIER
AP~Wrlter

:
:

NEW YORK (AP) -'- Whenever
Paul Volcker opens his mouth to
speak, Wall Street holds its breath.
That basic principle was demonstrated anew this past week, when
the chalnnan of the Federal
ruiserve Boa.ro made what be later
characteriZed as some "very ordlnary" obsei'Vations about the
.

Volcker

it

said

Ute

federal

budg"t deficit continued to raise
vexing questions about future
prospects.
Neither of these points might
quaUty as any sori of su~
revelation. Nevertheless, they
lmocked both the stocl( and bond
.markets for a loop.
, "When Paul Volcker· talks, everyone listens and, In the cutrent
nervou.Smarketcllmate,alsosells,''
said Newton Zlnder atE.F. Hutton&amp;
Co. "Tiils seems to be true even
when Mr. Volckersaysnothlngnew.
"VIrtually everyone is aware that
the economy is strong. But when Mr.

r

~-

-~

;

.•. .
-·- ....
...._
"' _,..
~

·Quantico, Va., Friday. Three dark clad agents disarm
a man who pretends to hold a woman hostage. FBI .
employees play the part of terrorist and victim in the
training exercise. ( AP Laserpholo).

JUST .IN CASE - Wltb. an eye toward the
pol!l8ibWiy of terrorist &amp;Uacks at the Summer
Olympia~ in Los Angeles, lhe FBI's new hostage
reecue teun llot'J8 tbrouJh 118 pace8, giving their first
public dernoostratlon at the FBI Academy in

nmp~~~r · ·
Charleston, W.V. 25301
. ~- _ __ tllldtaaablka,...... httll.
.._IIIII:

..

The New York Stock Exchange
composite Index dropped 2. 73 to
88.94, and the American Stock
Exchange market value Index was
down 5.61 at :&lt;ffl.14.
Big Board volume averaged 79.47
mUllon shares a day, down from
94.64 mUllon the week before.
The stock market's recent woes
"did not necessarily signal 'reces. sionahead.' although that could turn
out to be true at some point in the
future," maintained R&lt;tymond F .
DeVoe Jr. ; an analyst at' the firm of
Legg Mason Wood Walker Inc.

- i982, whiii illlil'Ftlllllf'12 muuim: -- p)Jr.ts- tosel'!l-outpaceq-galliers by .. that-tile economyls expanding at a
The cMUan unernployJnent rate · peoplinvete joblesl!.
about 15 to 3 on the New York Stock. · brisk pace, posing a threat of higher
'I: fell to ltsJowelt level in 2'r.! years In
HoweY~!!", tlie Febl:uafY sign of Exchange.
Inflation at a time When the massive
•\febn!arY as a record 103.9 mlllloll economic ~ aiso was perIn February, some'lOO,OXlAmeri- federal budget already is keeping
, •Arnertcans . .held jqbl, the Labor celvedu ne&amp;!ltlvllforlnterestrates. cans found jobs.
upward pressur&amp;on interest rates.
·; : DepartmentsaldFrlday.
'lbeatock~cloeedoutaweek
the jobless rate has fallen 0.2
Reagan and Senate Republican
: ; The Jobllss ralll l1lP,ped to 7.8 •of broad tosses with another decline percent in each of the past three leaders met again Friday to
trqn 8 percent in January, ~Y- . . .
months to a level sllghtly.above the assemble a deficit-reduction pack':andhu tumbled nearly.3percen·The Dc1.v Jones . averaee of~ 7.4 percent rail! of Jail~ 19111, age, and participants In the talks
• /tqepQU!tatrorn ltJ post-~ Induatrlals dropped 7.33 to 1,139.76, · when Reagan took oftloe.
-and other sources s8ld Reagan has
•~ qt 10.Tpercent in November briJiilnllts losS tor the week to31. 72
The report was another Indication accepted the Idea that attacking the
,

Suite 1130
one va11ey S&lt;IQ&amp;re
·

Volcker said it, it bad a slightly
different ring to it, like a llttle
monetary tightening might be
around the comer."
A day after his initial comments,
Volcker seemed to dismiss the Idea
that he was hinting at a more
restrictive t;redlt pollcy. He said he
had been ~·a little pu221ed" by the
markets' behavior.
But by then the mood was set tor
tile week on Wall Street. _The Dow
Jones average ·of ~ industrials
tumbled 31.72'to.l,l39.76, wiping out
Its net gain of 22.61 points over the
two preceding weeks.

Rather, he suggested, investors
might have been adjusting their
sights to take lnto account the
lncreaslng prospect of a tax
increase In 1!1!5. "It could also be
somethlng as simple as a traditional
correction ln a contlnulng bull
market," DeVoe added. "But nowadays it is customary to reject the
simple for something much more
sinister."
In any case, the bellefls still held in
some financial quarters that the
economic strength Volcker spoke of
wUI soon diminish, lessenlng fears
that the Fed wUJ clamp down on

credit.
Wall Street's close wa tch on
Volcker and the Fed wUlcontinueup
to and through the last week of
March, when the cent ral bank's
policy-setting Open Ma rke t Com mittee is scheduled to hold its next
meetlng.
By tha t time, said Allen Slnal,
economist at Lehma n Brothers ·
Kuhn Loeb Inc.. "enough new
information should be available for
the Fede ral Reserve to decide.
whether to nudge interest rates
higher or not."

iNati()n.al unel)lployment tumbles, stocks have poor showing

r . l'jl'fie "-:Jtlii!dPl'e.l - ·

.

-- 7.ip
.
.

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

tbe fOCIII of reports of DylnJ objecta 8lld electrical
appllancee aciiDJ eJTallcally but the lamlly has left
lhe
boule for two clays of media altentlon. ( AP
hserpllolo)

BySUECROSS
Aopoctetffl Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Since
a farnUy complalned Its house was
beset by the supernatural or a
strange force , the public has been
wavering between skepticism,
scorn and just plain curiosity.
John and Joan H.esch say strange
occurrences - blinking llghts,
moving furniture and flying objects
- have plagued their suburban
home since last weekend. The
Instances apparently center around
their 14-year-old adopted daughter,
Tina.
The Resches kept their Identities
secret for two days after their story
was published Tuesday ln The
Columbus Dispatch.
But neighbors guessed who the
stories were about even before that
and have joined reporters and
others trying to figure out what is
happening in thetwo-storyhousethe
Resches bull! 14 years ago on
farmland .
Kay, the crossing guard at the
elementary schooi across thestreet

·Federal judge denies
•
:chm,:-ges, claims he's
•bei~g persecuted

' strong pace, but that
··j.

. LEtr
E F. H It

u.s.

looked as trough economic activity
1
1 was still forging ahead at a· very

..... . .

s••••

·Smith has told an aide to run down
fi!CUlTing allegations that some
state workers and flnns doing
• business with the state have been
· soilclted for poUtlcal contributions.
Meanwhile, the
Transporia-

'', econornr.
Specifically,

IJ Yea, I plan to attend your lnveatment Seminar. Pie~ reserve

. j

·-~·-·--- ­

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Transportation Director Wan-en J.

:
· •
;
.•

Talk to E. F. H~on. Face to face.
'

Sect.

Reserve chairman's observations rock Wall Street's boat

This odvertilement1e not on offerinc. No otrerinr ie mode ....pi by 0
proepectue filed with tht Oeportmtnt of Law of tbe Stale of New york ond
lhe _Bureou of ~fiiiH, Deportment of Law and Public S.fety olthe Stale of
New Jersey. Ne1ther the Attorney General of the Stale of New York nor the
Du~IU or &amp;curiti~ or tho Stale or New Jersey hu poued on or endorsed the
mtflla or lhll orr.......

OVER 150 CARS AND TRUCKS TO
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DATE: Thursday, March 15, 1984
TIME: 7:00 P.M.
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addreu t. B&lt;&gt;x 92,
Cl k b
Oh 10
' 43115
ar '
•

I1-~====:::::====~ - - - - - - - - - - -

Tickets must be purchased by
Aprll 8, 1984. Eldon Barrows was
appointed membership chairman
and Opal Dyer was ap pol nted
public relations chalnnan by Porn,....,..
ona Mas t er Robert ._.,,

This is all
you wear!

ational

determined to eat u many ulbey·

U:

1rr!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!i!i!i!i!i!!ii!ijrl

Tree seedling sales undenvay
By AMY VINSON
Gallla SWCD GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Soil and
Water Conservation District is
offering a wider variety of seedllngs
again this year ln its annual
seedlings sales program.

Midkiff, Star Grange; Eldon Barrows, Columbia Grange·, Zlba
Midkiff, Hemlock Grange; BID
Radford, Rock Sprin"" Grange,· or
.,...
No~man Will, Harrisonville
Grange.

hard place for bachelors to survive'
particularly In leap years, as ~
Gallipolls Journal made It a publlc
service to print a list of the town's
bachelors with their q\18lltlcatlons
for matrimony. An example of the
1~ edition follows:
"WWlam Brosius is a sweet
gushing child of nature fat and
fair; marketable and ~ot at a
discount; his affections are not
pre-empted; Will will."
"Tell Barlow is the uptown model
of manhood· is a good fellow
genuine to ~t; is a star catch, and
If he doesn't get half-soled soon we
will put him on the retired llst.:'
Talk about women
Women were probably at lhe
head of lhe Ust of convenalloa
when lhe men sat down 1o eat
supper at this roomlnJ boule
'Jbere wu even an lrreJUiar '
column In the Tribune Ia UOCI
enlllled "Bacllelon and Widowen" and how lhey gat alone
without or witb women.
Ooe of lhe "war'' lltorlf!e involved
two mea who decided 1o poollhelr
reeources 111111 do their OWII cooldaJ.
118eeii1S lhat they houJhllO pounds
ot beans and flgul'ell that wu,about
riJhl for lhe two .of them.
'l1ley found a biJ kettle water
111111 a slab of bacon and set'lhem
cooking 011 the fire. Meaawldle, lhe
pair worked oul 1a lhe prden.
By afternoon when they returned
beans were going everywhere. ~
u nat to waste beaaa they were

..peroent
i

~

•

.

'

.

•

.

-

"

-

deflcltwUI requlretaxincreases and
restraint In miUtary and domestic
spending.
However, no final decisions have
been made and Reagan's recommendations for large Increases in
the Pentagon budget remain a key
sticking point.
Speakingwithreportersasheleft
the White House to fly to Camp
David, Reagan said in response to a
I

.

question about cut1lng the Pen lagon· s budget that "we're looking at
everything."
In other developments:
-The average federallncometax
paldbylndlvlduaisdroppedsllghtly
In 1982 to $2.922- the first decline tn
12 years, the Internal Revenue
Servlcesald.TI)e$78 iower average
chien~ reflected the reduced tax
rates and the liberalized tax br~ak

�..
Page-D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-t,\iddleport-Gallipolis, Ohi-Point Plealant, W. Va.

The

W.Va.

Local business publishes magic -volu·m e
By BOB OOEFUCH

Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - "The most lmpor·
tant book on magic published in this
century" is just one of the com·
ments from crl tics concerning the
latest publication of Lee Jacobs
Productions, Pomeroy, "Great Ma·
giclans in Great Moments."
On Saturday, March 10, Jacobs,
president of Lee Jacobs Produc·
lions, was present as this work was
honored by the Academy of Magic ·
Arts and Sciences at the Magic
Castle in Hollywood, Calif. Recogni·
tlon by this academy is considered
one of the highest honors in magic.
The book is a collection of the
photography of magici a n·
photographer, Irving Desfor. Desfor and Jacobs met in Palm Beach,
Fla., over two years ago where
Desfor shared 50 years of his life in

...

magic photography with Jacobs.
After two years of work, the
results are that Desfor's life of
capturing the moments of history in
magic have been preserved for
postertty. The book has received
positive critical reviews from publi·
cations all over the world.
The Associated Press column
accompanying this article is just an
example of the response to this
major publication by Jacobs' publishing firm . Over 2,000 newspapers
currently carry this column and the
story of local businessman, Lee
Jacobs.
Jacobs' Pomeroy firm is known
for the publication of books for
magicians and professional enter·
talners. Called "The Poster King"
by those Involved In magic, Jacobs
has preserved the history nf stone
lithography by reproducing numer·

ous posters of famous magicians
Including. Houdini, Blackstone,
Thurston and others. He Is also
exclusive distrtbutor lor many
ortginal posters Including those ol
Doug Henning.
Jacobs established his now Inter·
national publishing company 25
years ago while working for his
lather, the late Robert Jacobs, In
the family-owned Ben li'ranklln
Store In Pomeroy. He worked to
build the company while complet·
lng several degrees In English at
Ohio University and teaching at the
university. Jacobs has performed
extensively as a magician ever
since he was a student In the
Pomeroy schools.
"The publishing company has
allowed me to combine two of my
great interests in life- magic and
English," Jacobs comments.

• •••••••

B

Auotlon every Tu11d1y
night, l't. l'l1111nt, WVe.
Auot. Lonnie N111. Youth
Ctlltlf lid,., Cemdtn lt.
814·117·7 01. '

"Since I was a small child and
saw my first magic show in the
audltortum ol the old Pomeroy
Junior High School, I have been
Intrigued by magic. I am pleased
that I have been able with Doc
Deslor, to preserve a very lmpor·
tant part of the history of magic and
the Ameli can Influence on the art,"
he says.
"Great Magicians in Great Moments" is just one of tbe many
Jacobs' publications. The finn
currently dlstrtbutes a mall order
catalog of over 150 pages.
According to Jacobs, "The only
people who really understand the
scope of our business are the very
helpful people who work In our post
oftlce. U It were not for the
assistance of these resourceful
professionals, we would not be able
to service our many national and
International customers."

1

ing Desfor," published by Lee
Jacobs (another magician)
Productions.
Shortly thereafter the book arrived on my desk. The first photo
of a magician at work was of
Blackstone. Doc shot it from the
audience in 1938, and my interest
immediately caught fire.
When I was a very little boy
my parents took me to see
Blackstone perform at our local
theater in Johnstown, N.Y. I
became a volunteer to help the
great magician on stage. I.
remember his chan~ing a paper
rabbit to a real rabbit for me. He
then changed that to a jar o~
candy, which was my reward for
helping him.
There are 157 photographs in
the 208-page book, 14 in color.
Some 150 magicians are

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
winning number drawn Friday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "TheNumber,"was48J.
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the win·
nlng number was 6231.
Ohio Lottery oftlcials said Friday
one of six winning jackpot tickets in
the "Ohio Lotto" game has yetto be
claimed and is worth $277,582.

Legislator pushes for
limited prison terms

Canttr for their c:n and
kindntss to him. For 111 the

CINCINNA'n (AP) -State Sen. where an lndlvlj:lual recelved an ·
Stanley J. Aronoff, RC!nclnnati, 11-year sentence from a Hamilton :
says he will Introduce legislation to County judge on a multiple-count
remove a cap that l!rnlts prison indictment.
terms for felons who have been
Some of the charges carried
convicted of multiple climes.
1~-year sentences, he said.
Aronoff, joined by Hamilton
"Many thnes, consecutive sen·
County Common Pleas Judge Fred tenclng is SOO!ething that is done to
J . Cartolano at a Frtday news satisfy the 'bloodlust,' " he said.
conference, said that since the Ohio "This guy was given a long
Revised Code was rewrttten in 1974, · sentence, he will return to society
people convicted and sentenced with his problem unaddressed, and
consecutively for multiple crimes nothing has been solved.' '
a!'ll released after serving 15 years.
Brown coOO!ded that the cap
"Themostnotortouscaseisthatof probably should be revised upward.
Dr. (Edward Franklin) Jackson of Fifteen years in many cases Is not
Columbus, Ohio, who Uterally went long enough to adequately protect
on a rape spree over a long period of society from SOO!e crtmlnals, he
time. Stili, he will be in prison for no said
more than 15 years," Aronoff said.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Ar·
"In 198l, I had a multiple rapist thur Ney Jr. said he supports longer
llied and convicted for eight rapes sentences for those convicted ol
andalilcouldsentencehlmtowas15 violent climes.
years," Cartolano said. "Basically
the time comes when a crime is 'On
the house.' It Is a terrible situation."
But defense attorney Allen Brown
says the Legislature placed the cap
on consecutive sentencing because
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Agrt·
judges were abusing that power.
will be among the top
culture
"One habitual cr1mlnal, con·
half
-dozen
issues in this year's
vicied for petty theft, wasgivenallfe
sentence after his fourth convlc· presidential elections, the cotion," Brown said. "Another guy chairman of the National DemoIssued bad checks. The judge cratic Platform Committee says.
"Usually It's number 37," the
convicted him on a check-by-check
co-chairman,
Jim Hightower, joked
basis, made the sentences consecu·
DNC
hearing
Frtday. Hight· . '
at
a
tive and sentenced him to life in
is
Texas
commissioner
ol
ower
prison.''
agriCulture
and
chairman
of
the
Higher courts eventually over·
turned those sentences as cruel and DN~'s agrtculture council.
He said the RepubUcans "have ·
unusual, Brown said.
Brown said be recently had a case turned their backs" on farmers.

bllutlful 110111 offtritlp,
food, IIIOIIIY. cards, ttlt-

, _ lnd telephone mes-.s. To Rev. MoMs Cuifit. ltv. .limes GltMI lnd
ltv. GrcMr G. T11111r for
their consoli!W wonts, the
llllllltlm. Ill$ . .lollll1
Bas lnd Mrs. Lori Birl:hfitld for fii'Rishi~W the
music, the Lldies of the
.llcbon Christian Church
for tht lovely dinner end.
EiU*IIIt F1111111l Home for
their efficient SIIViee.
Y0111 kindness will be fcqolten tnd lillY God
Bless IICh of you. ·

The F1111ily of Charles
H. (Tiny) Hliward
2

Farming priority

,·/,; , ~Trl

Gone from this earth but
will never be foraotten.
God only knows how we
miss her.
Husband John, dauehter
Dorothy A. Leach and
family, son Carl R. Veith
and family.

In Iovin&amp; memory of Lowell A. Greene, who departed this life, March
16, 1978and Wetltha G.
Greene, who departed
this life, March 10,
1980.

'®_~~~

~ Sh

2Jt,

The

Rllister - 675-1333

:100 Second Ave.

Mall
Oe ea~1.e Lafayette
Gallipolis, 0.

_-

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ESTEE LAUDE~

t -w-.... ,..,

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brings you a special offer

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A 40.00 value.
Yours for 10.00 with
any Estee Lauder
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purchase of 6\50 or more '
•Tender Btu,her
•Estee Super-Cologne Spray
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•Beauty Mirror
•Re-usable Tray

ESTEE LAUDER STARTS YOU ON YOUR WAY TO A GlORIOUS NEW
LOOK, A GREAT NEW FEELING, A BEAUTIFUL NEW SEASON.
300 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

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fnllmt·inf{ l t&gt;l l'fl hu nt• r .tdtnlll(f!J ...

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IU - AttiiiiOitl

IM- Gorf..,DIII.

SWEEPER end -lng m~­
chlne repeir, peril, end
oupptlea.
Pick up end
deliv_ery, Do~lt \lecuum
Cleenor, one haH mite up
Goorgeo Creelt Rd. Cell
61 4·441·0284.

171 - 1'1 ,.. .....
IM - U.n

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247 - LIIMf...

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1400

U,14IIW•H .. lloM, fn Mnkln

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~ TAKEONE
1

Vacancy: Jutlo'i PorooMI
.Coro Home. Formerly
Morcer Convelucence 8 Lo1t and Found
Home. 18 yearo experience.
Clifton. W.V. 304-773- 2 femele -BNglea. Loot bo·6873.
!.4ngovllte end DIM·
.. Racine Gun Club htt die· ·ter. 1 bleck ·wlth light ten
hNd. 1 derll ten heed end
COntin ued Gun ohoott until I.ma.tly
white with . blue
1
~~Se=pt=em:::.:::ber=··=::r.:=== coller._Celll14·2121.
Loot on Horner Hill hi'lclplo
4
GiV81Way
-- - Twp.;..b..Own black • Whitt
~----..,-..,.--.~~Lmln · thephtrd dog.
Name· Skippy. Laet on
Female Slemeoo cet approk. · feb. 24, wNrlng red qon.r.
1 yr. old, to good 'lome. Cell Rtwtrd for ~urn. Cell Jim
448•32 10 efttr 4:30 EYilnt,_,_I14·742·2300;
wHkdeyo.
':::1~7-----:----'~
I
.
FQI,IND woman's gleooHin
1 yr. old moleBeogleto.good bro.wn cooe. Phone 3Q4home. c.ell' e14·843-11 1114, ' 11711-7748:
'

... "".,

..

.. ''
'.

CLASSIFIE D
AD

~

•100

... THEY WILL
CALL YOU IN
THE. MORNING.

.'

.
7

Yard Sale

-····· c;aiiipoiii~ ···---··
&amp; Vicinity
......... .. ._ . ~.. ............. ......

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

·'

'

Auction every Fri. night 11
the Hartford . Community
Cantor. Truckloo~a of nh.

,

merchandl1e every week. ·' •
Con11gment1 of new lrid · 11 , :

uled merchendlto'l atwaya
•
Gigantic Yeid Sell . Morch . wotcomo. Rlc~erd ~oynoldo , · '
9th, 10tfi, ,~ 1th~AMUnili At!1:-tllflfl'ir.''3 -2·-n:-~ -:
dei11. Rein or. ahtne •. under 3089.
. ::
ellillter.. Going out of floe '.
· ·•
merllotbull-andmovtng Mt. Alto Auction, :evo,Y ,· ;.
ulo. T9olo, le!olfn mowera, Saturday 8 p.m Conalgn· ·· \ •
plotfonil eCIIH, rot~ller, ,.r,ontoocceptod 1 :'00iil~iafe ,t1::
brMIIfeat 111; chelrt, dlohto,' 11'11•· Emm• Bolt auctioneer.' ,, ;
ona, b'l'W~w,,.,.ndineny 4288177 Uc., 429·84. ,.. . :•

0

r.tem1 to numeroua to men-

.

-i

t~~~~odthts, l~~ the

tnd
For wt that ere Stvtd shill
llthlm.,.ln . .
llesstd Ire thiY thlt dleln ,
tilt Lord, · ,
I
dttply loved and udly l

=
so

.'' 1:

•

tlon. Teke R.t. 141 fiom tnvontO&lt;¥ Reduction Auc· , ,, ,
Gelllpolio go to"'lt. 1111. tlon. :Fri. ~ Merch . 18ttr.:•• •
~oi1t"llll dog,""" C!lihu~ Wetoh f9r· 111n1, .110 tO'" ;HI:OOI ~M. Boon ttme, .lf!f.-'7:
hue, bright yellow· end ·Patrtot Cedllllil Rd . ..,um· omelt .lloma. Bldtro Equip! -~' ' '
Whht. 304·882·~538.
___
_;__....:,..___ . right. -houN .on the right.' rnent Co.,' Honderron,
. . : ~·. Vo!
··t· ~•;::
......

=rt.t:.=:~.
end 1.11111: lmltlltr, 1111:

fl""

J

j

~·
'

'

'

,

..

'I

./

In Lovin&amp; Memory of
llicheel Euaene Henry,
born March 12, 1951: de·
c11sed June 22, 1977.
God understends our sor·
rows,
He sees our fellen leers,
And whispers, ''I em with
thee.
filter not, nor fetr."
He uhderstands our lone· .
lnas.
Our d11pest &amp;riel He
shares. ·
Then' let Him betr our bur·
dtns,.
For God understends tnd
cares.
Sure, we'll miss his smilinl
face
And his lovlnl werm tm·
brace,
Because, of death he had to
teste.
He's totally inmtd by
G.od's araee
And thoulh 1b11nt from
our el&amp;llt .
Ht has won the Christlen's

slltln,

T

- '; t
.

.ltnet, lwlft,
Satldfl: rtlltlvts

tid.

Home• for Sale

32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

We ply 011h for lett modtt
olttn uetd oera.
Jim Mink Chlv.·Oidt !no.
lill Otne Johneon
441-1172

Wanted Bi -C8 nitennlll
dre11e1 aize 1 2 to 14. for uae

piece or complete houae-

BORDMAN'S
Repair
Recrtp, Refinish, Rnheft
All Types of
Repeir Avtllable

8

hotda. Atoo complete Aucti·

in Muaeum . Call 676·1992
or 676-3330.

oneering aervlce. Call

Rodnay Howery 614·698·
7231 .
3 Announcementa

11

Soli the best, aetl AVON . HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Below market rates .
up lee. Celt 614-446-3368. Fixed conve ntional FHA·
March Special - a low start·

12

Athens. cottecl 614 ·592·
3051.

Situations
Wanted

Will care for the elderly in my
home. lots of references .
Men or women . Call 614-

Help· Wanted

667·3402.

Americ1n Cancer Society
needs aomeone· to do home
telephone recruiting . For
more information call 446 -

WINTER'S
AUCTION SERVICE
Since 1973

7479.

Now Bookin1 Sales
For 1984

lembtr of W.V. AvctionMra Ann.

Edwin Winter-Auctioneer
Millwood, WV

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

,...~......,~~~~==~=---------"""111

AT
AUCTION

Legion Bldg.
Racine, Ohio on St. Rt . 368

THURSDAY NITE, 7:00P.M.
EVERY WEEK STARTING MARCH 15TH

Sellin&amp;: Fresh produce from south every sele. Truckloads
of aood merchendlse to be sold every euction. You can see
enythin&amp; et euction. Come join us - Door Prizes. Spon·
sortd end food smed by Americen Leaion - 614-367·
7101
· AUCTIONEER - LONNIE NEAL

10:00 A.M.

614-949-2686.

Need a lady to live in my
home in Guysville. Ohio to
help take care of' my invalid
wife . Room, meals, personal
uee of laundry room and a
aalary we agree on in return

entertainer for your party or
social group7Why not have a
magician entertain you . For
more information call 614-

lor wort&lt;. Rev. H.L. McDo·
niet, P.O. Box 46, Stewart,
Ohio 46778 or catt 614662 -4880 or 614 -662 ·
6626.

AN's needed to do insurance
examinations for Our Company in Gallia County part time. Must have a car .
Pleau re1pond to P.O. Box
6086 , Cincinnati. Oh

46206 .

614·378·6263 on March
13 and 14 between 10 a.m.
and 3 p.m.

Trainee for small business
leading to manager position .
Contact Job Service in

person. 226 6th Street,
Point Pleasant.

MEN-WOMEN Career posi·

Tum Your Surplus Equipment Into Cash

mo. with unlimited poten tial. Thia could the one your

portunity. Up to $1,160 per

looking lor. Call between 9
and 6 for interview. Interviews will clou March 19th,

3:00PM . Catt 304-675 ·
6899.

1

INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE
SIDERS EQUIP. CO., HENDERSON, W. VA.
U.S. ROUTE 35

10:00 A.M.

BE ON TIME, NO SMALL ITEMS

HUNDREDS OF ITEMS

Help Wanted

Information for history re·
search, Everett Berry &amp; D.
A. Barton, who were druggists in the late 1800's &amp;
early 1900's at the corner
of Second &amp; Pine, Galli·
polis.
Call Carrol E. Waugh

446-4050 Evenings

FARM EQUIP.
BUSH HOGS
TRACTORS
MOWERS
PLOWS
DISC
BACK HOES
BALERS
BUY WHOLESALE
NOW &amp; BEAT THE HIGH PRtCESI
ED WINTERS

PUBLIC AUCTION
.

10:00.A.M.

liS.

Applicants ' shoold be qual·
ified tu llllehiSUCh courses as
School Heath Services; Com-

mmunlty

lltlltll:

lltl~h

lltthods for EltmeritafY and

~ .Education lnd
Adaptlltive Physical Eduea· I
ton CIIUI'SIS for exetptionsl
students. This' posttion will
be ,.quirtd to c:olieh &amp;iriS lthlttlCs. Applicants ' should.
send .letter of tpplieatlon, resume, offieill tnnscripts end
111111 retnnces btfort tht
lfllllieatl011 dtldlint of llln:h

16. 1984 to:

priced regular tunings discounts to Senior Citizens.
Churches &amp; Schools. Ward 's

Keyboard. 304·676·3824.

Real Eslate

people you know, and NOT

to 1end money through the
m1il until you have investigated the offering.
For Sale or lease, Country

Corryout&amp; Doli, Upper River
Rd. Gettipotis. Ohio. Colt
614-446·2192 or614-446·
9171 .

llo lhndl cOitillllll COtftnut.
i1J eoa. IIIII Equl! ~

ktloti

·rm•.

diately Call446-9416 .

Homes for Sale
1979

Home Must Selll Outstand ing Buy! Deal! Deal! Deal!

Five bedroom. 2% baths.
one acre. pool, childrens
playground equipment,
large living room , garage,
stove. refrigerator . dis ·
hwasher, washer &amp; dryer.
gas heat. Must sell. job

move. 992-3543.

Porileroy, 2 story home. 2
bedrooms. living room. fam -

ily room. $18,000. Catt
614-427-9B86 .

7 rooms and bath by owner
in West Columbia. W.Va .
Having work in other state
will sale at reasonable price.
Will be in on weekends or
can be contacted at 412 -

614-379-2668. anytime.

452 ·4468 .
Albright.

Open a beautiful jeans
sportswear or childrfn's
shop. rFree brochure. Top

Four room house on corner
lot at 2330 Lincoln Avenue .

for ule.

Call

brends, low prices. $13.976
to &amp;16,975 to completely
sot you up. Catt 1·404·469·
4438 .
11

Help Wanted

COORDINATOR OF
. INFORMATION
SERVICES

Ow~er

Gallipolis . Oh 45631 .

79 Bayview. 12X60 with
large 12X8 expando . stove.
refrigerator, 2 BR. 1 bath,
ex. cond .. newly carpeted.
Central Air. anchored &amp;
underpinned •. also included

Renlals

Owners must sell imme -

building , $26.000. Call
446-3624 alter 6PM .

t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommends

House that needs repair in
Gall1polis o r Gallipoli ~
Township . $15,000 or less.
Write tQ P.O. Box 533.

large 16X8 Utility building .

House for sale in Evergreen ,
newly remodeled 5 rooms ,
garage, 24x40 newly built

Business
Opportunity

·

Real Estate
Wanted ·

36

$6,300. Catt alter 4 and on
weekends. 614-256·6618 .

PIANO TUNING Lower

fully

John

41

Houses for Rent

underpinned.

14x70 3 bdr .. 2 lutt baths.
approx . % acre. well shaded

614 ·256 -6035 or alter
6PM . 446-8251 .

Mobile home for sale priced
for quick selling . Call 446 -

1052 .
14x70 Windsor, total elect ric . CA. front &amp; back awnings, underpinning. 2 bed room , like new . Call

614-245-9326 .
Used 2 bedroom mobile
homes, furnished . 1Ox 50
and 12x52 sizes . Your
chance to own a comforta ble home. Browns trailer
Court. Minersville. Oh . 614 -

992-3324.

Holly Pirk with expando on
living room . furnished I. r ..
washer. dryer . equip . kit chen with dishwasher . Nice
yard with paved parking.
New carpet and vinyl skirt ing. Syracu se area. Call

614-992-6737 .

Mobile homeforsale, 14x70
Bayview, 2 bedroom. den.
a.c., underpinned . $10,500.

Celt 992· 7360.

5 room house for reot at 44
Oli ve St ., inquire at 918
Second Av e.
Small 4 rooms &amp; bath,
furni shed. loc . 735 rear 3rd.

Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 446·
3870 or 446 ·1340.

2 bdr . in city , full basement,
gas furnance . carpeted .
adu lt s. no pets. Call 446 _.

095B .

2 bedroom with fireplace .:
refrig . &amp; stove. on Raccoon
Creek . $225 per mo . with-

tease. Call 446 -0795 or
446 -0093 .

Rem odeled w ith new ca rpet.
&amp; paint . Thi s 2 bedroom has ·
deck and washer-dryer hoo kup . loca t ed 1 miles Nourth'
of Silver Bridg e. Call1-304-. ·
273 -9745 ·leave message. ·
House for rent 2 or 3 bdr. in'
Pom eroy, nice. Days 992 -- ·

2381 , eve . 992-2509 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x60 2 bdr . modern fur-·
nished trailer. convenienf
location , Upper River Rd •. ·

deposit req . Catt 614·446B55B .

Phone 304-675 ·3435.

54 Misc. Merchandise
54 Misc. Merchandise

READY TO FINISH FURNITURE
CUSTOM FINISHING
HAND·CRAFTEO ITEMS
GIFTS.

,.ao:~

.ao

2506 GUND CENTRAl AYENUI
VIENNA, W.VA. 26105

aMo2ts.a1n

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
GENE WHALEY - RT. 681. DARWIN, OHIO
992-701 3
NEW Chev. Truck Fenders ('73 thru '80) ..... 176.95
New Chev . Truck Doors ('73 thru '80) ......... 1 149.95
New Chev. Truck Chrome Bumpers (73 thru '80) ....169.95
New Chev . Truck Hoods ('73 thru '89) ...... 1 174.95
New Ford Truck Fenders ('73 thru '79) ......... 169.95
New Ford Escort Fenders ('81 thru '84) ... ... 1 64.95
New ford Mu stang Fenders ('79 thru '84) .. ..... 174.95
WINDSHIELDS
Chev. Truck Clear w/ Antenna ('73 thru '80 ) .... 176.95
Chev. Truck Clear. no antenna ('73 thru '80) ... 169.95
• Installation Available •Experienced

·
- · ""'"''
frl. IN
Y-.,W
.... ,Iet.IO.S

ALSO OTHER WtNOSHt ELDS AVAILABLE

Horse
QUALITY PRODUCTS AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
Garden Tractors

The Coonlinator's primary
mponsibilities will include
directillltll internal and external communication pro&amp;fllnlS; devilopilll and publishilll various collep publi·
cations and ISSistilll the fa..
culty and administntlive staff
in mtetilll their. publishing
needs. The Coordinator reports directly tu the Prest.dent of tht Col. . . Sllary is
C0f111111111Uflti with the position tnd tht eendidtte's qualifications,

Rear Engine
.Riclers
8-19 hp Models Available

..

• Office of Persqnnel
Box 969
Rio Gilnde Collect
Rio Grlnlfe,lJiilo-mn

~y;Affiniiellwt

Professional
Services

$1 .00 hr .. lull time. Cal!' &amp;54,995 . Catt 446-4426.
446-7020.

Rio Gntnde College and Community College invites letters Of nomination and appli·
cation for the position of
Coordinator of Information
Services. Qualifications in·
elude successful experience
in writing and editing insti·
tutional publications; famili·
arity with institutional marketing tac.hniques; and a
solid racord of experience in
journalism and information
services. Abachelor's degree
is required with an advanced
degree prefemd.

AUCTIONEER LIC •334•14

23

1 4x70 Kirkwood 2 bdr.
mobile home. Central A ·H,
carpet, underpinning . Call

21

2340 or 949-2571 .

1977 12x60 mobile home. 2

3 bedroom. 2 bath, central
air, basement garage. re creation room , large kitchen
&amp; living room. green school
district, close to Holzer.

F1nanc1al

Lot s for sa le. Racine. Reduced prices. Call614-949 -

bdr .. furnished . good cond ..

18 Wanted to Do
Babysitting in my home,
weekdays . Vicinity Rt . 218 ,

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
iTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 614-4467274.

tot . Mid S20 's. Call 614 ·
388-9957 alter 5:30PM.

Rio Grande, Ohio 45674

located between Rodney and Gallipolis, Ohio on
State Route 588.
This will bt 1 short sale. You will hive the opportunity to
buy Slvtrtl Items of very nice, well'med for household
·Items. le on time. .
.
.
Sofa, very nice living room tables, several' decor pictures,
maple family room furniture, ash dining room includes
hutch, table w/2 ·leaves, 6 chairs; oak BR suite, 6 pc. in·
eludes corner desk with lots of storage space; maple BR
suite, Sears Coldspot refrig. w/freezer, chest type freezer,
Oasis dehumidifier, Hotpoint auto. washer, Kewnore dryer,
CB radio, Markel elect. heater, bOx fan, outside spoHights, II
HP elect motor, misc. elect. supplies, Texas Instrument
99/4A Keyboard w/2 games; one year old; ~ireplace insert
w/glass doors, gun rack, blond desk, alum. porch furniture, .
partible B&amp;W TV, pl~nic table, fireplace set, wood lathe, jig
saw, bttiery charger, old time drill press, wood wall cabinet,
1 few misc. tools.
•

she will tell you how much
you could save.

TRI -STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446-7572.

Middleport . Catt 614-992·
6941 .

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

PHONE: 675·7421
PHONE: 273-3447
TERMS: Complete Peyment Dey ·of Slle ~Y cash or Chack.

MAR. 17, 1984

S42.500 Call 446 ·8038.

304·676-1293.

AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOSS OF PROP•

PERSONAL PROPERTY

Harper's Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for another
resident. elderly person . Call

bu1ine1s

WANTED:

AUCTION

Attie et 614-379-2789 and

31

Complete Chimney Sweep

L-----.;.P,;,;H~D.;.N~E~2~7.;;3..;-3;..4;..4.;.7_ _.;.•3;.;3":4·8;..4_&amp; 11

BUTCH SIDERS

992-7362.

that you do busine11 with

tion with management op-

SANDYVILLE, W.VA.
Home Phone 273·26 1 1
Sele Yerd 273-3700

FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1984

MAGIC SHOW. Needing an

3 ladies to work full time for
fastelt growing skin care
products in America . Call at

Farm Machinery, Industrial Equipment
Trucks and Trailers of All Sizes.

McCAULEY TRACTOR SALES

Interior and exterior paint·
ing, sandblasting, waterblasting, paper hanging and
drywall finishing . Free elti·
mates. fully insured. Call

able at 518 Sacond Ava ..
Gattipotia.

-CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
SAT., MAR. 17

Mercer's Riverview Personal Care Home has vacan ·
ciea for elderly persona.
Betty Mercer owner. 304-

Did you get your real estate
mortgage during the high
interest rate period? N.L.
Stevens &amp; Auociates have
saved home owners thoulands of dollars by refinanc ing to one of their low
interest programs. Call Jeri

773-6882 .

Ttle Gallipolis Parks and
Recreation Dept . is taking
applio.ation1 for Summer
Tenni s Instructor and
Summer Playground Supervisor. Applications are avail·

Turn your person•l property
into cesh in ont day '1ha Auction Wa('.
lictnsld 1nd Bonded
In Ohio 1nd W. ¥1.

Investmen t property in RiO ~
Grande. apartment building. :
1 yr . old. 3·2 bdr. apt ' s. ~
Goo d monthly income , •

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

VA . Leader Mortgage .

Empl oym ent
Se rv; ce s

Public
• Auction

SALES IGR.

111- llllo-

117- C........._

IJ.LIMI*"'

·~

·3 Announcem1nt1

Sadly mised by dauahters
&amp; arandchildren.
Irene Shaffer &amp; Family
Naomi Wilcoxon &amp; Family

A-CH• IU

Ul - ~t

,, .... __y....,
.... a.....

IH-111.-....

fllff( f'.t i' UI 'f'f //it•

1114e......., ' ·

•-c-11•

~

Ann 111111 c1: 111 1: til:.

•Age-Controlling Creme
•Polished Performance
Liquid Makeup
•Luscious Creme Mascara
•Polished Performance Lipstick

A happy home we once
enjoyed
How sweet the memory
still,
But death hts left a loneliness
The world cen never fill.

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

Wenttd To Buy

AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER

"Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992·2156

"·-.. ____

8

In Memoriam

In Lovin&amp; Memory of Do·
rothy Veith who God
called home two years
aao on March 16, 1982.

MEN'S

-

YO:U've got the beautiful advantag¢ with this success-bound col·
lection of all the things you need
fo~ great looks right now.

We wish to express 011
linc:elt thlnb to OIIIIIII1Y
friends, neilhbon Ifill .....
lives for all their ICts of
kindntSS duri!W the Nlness
lnd dNth of our lovtd one.
Special thinks to tht
stiff of the Emetpney
Room, the Ctnlie Cllt Unit,
lllni~W Stiff of Four West,
Or. (\IIIII of Holar lltdieal

fl"S'l'JIII WAY, GEORGE -OhloGov.RicllardCeleste, right, has a
few private words wt111 Clevelabd ~or George Voloovlch after
Friday's groundbrealdng for a bridge project In the city. The state of
Ohio OOI!trlbuted 1o the $12 m1D1on project. (AP Laserpholo).

TURBO

\

Publlo 8111
• Auction

luylng dally gold, atlvar
1 Ox80 moblto homo 2 bdr ..
oolne, rlnge, jewelry, etarllng
pella, ohod, oet up on 2 toll, 12x60 2 bedroom 1868
lliok l'etraon AuotlonHr
were, old oolne, lerge our·
river vllw, cioN to 1tort1 troller lor oat e. U .700, goo
lti'Yioe, lllott, Perm, An·
renoy. Top prlo11. Ed. lur·
ond gao elation. Air cond .. furnac e . No Sunday calli,
llque • llquldttlon lllet.
kelt lerbtr lhop, 2nd . Ave.
prlot 18,800. Celt 882· 814-367-0121 .
Middleport, Oh. 114·112·
Uoenoed • bondtd In Ohio•
20211 .
WVt. :104-771·171&amp; or Wanted to buy uetd ooel • 1-_;
3471._______
1974 . 12&lt;6 4 Cameron
304·771·8111.
wood httttre. lweln furnl· Ctlh pet~ for fenoy l.ron or
3 br home, large lot, garden trai le r, 2 bedrooms. air- .
turt, 441·311111, 3rd. • heavy Iron bodo. 1110 ond
apot. 2606 Linootn Ave . cond 87 ,700 00 firm .
Olive 81., Goltlpollo, Oh.
up for certoln Motgo Co.
852,000. 304-675 ·5047 Good cond 304 -458-1826.
9 Wanted To Buy
otono ]oro. Old tlmo cup·
after
6 p .m .
•
A 1 976 Nashuh on rented
Homoo &amp; board . coli 1·304-882·
Wentod to buy oquaro dane·
2711
Tralttra.
14x70 '81 model . 2 bed· lot Has underptnni ng , alto
304 -675 lng otothea. Slzo 10, any
rooms , bath and 314 . ready t o insulated good
type. Cell 446-4537.
1367
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLOS
live in . K 8e K Mobil e Homes
Wont to toaoe Hunting righto FURI\IITURE. Beda. iron.
304-676-3000
wood, cupboards, chairs,
on approx. 800 ecrt
Farms for Sale ·
che1t1,
b11ket1
,
di
shes.
Witt do bobyllttlng in my
t5 roo m house. 1 acre on land 33
15
Happy Ada
ltone )1r1, antiques, gold
homo. Cell 44e-0028.
co ntract . 304 -675 -7541
and silver . Write · M . 0 .
114 acre farm on Roush _
evenings .
Goneret Houllng ond Traoh Mltte;, Rt.2. Pomeroy. Ohio
Holl ow Ad Has house. barn ..
removal Service. Rallabte 46769 or call 614-992·
It's the Big 50th
FOR SALE BY OWNER · sil o. oth er buildings . Call
and dependable. Coli 446· 7780.
Meadowbrook Addn . 3 bed - 514 -388-8525
Harold Lee Kemper 3169 between 9 ond 6.
room , 2 baths. finished
Wonted· old plonoa. Poylng
ba sement , fenced backyard. 70 acres M -L. 8 rm s., 2 ful~
Members of the Halo
Approx. 1 ocro, wooded tot 120. ond, 140. each. Flrll
patio. Exc. co nd ., conve · bath s, barn . 5 mi. from Rio
Gan1 wish you a
In GeiUe County. ouitobtelor floor only. Write giving
nient location . Shown by Grande . S69. 900 Catt 614.'
building new home, mull ·dlroctlono. Witten Pianoo.
appointm ent only 304 ·675 · 245 9570
Happy 8irthday.
have rural water available. Box 188, Sardla Oh 43946 .
4339 . Pri ce d in 60 's.
Colt 446 ·7616 balwaan Celt 814·483-1806.
9AM-4PM .
73 12x60 Cameron 2 bdr
34
Business
18 Wanted to Do
Combination torch . Call t':::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::~r;;~::;=:=:::;:::~=:::~ with tip out lot s of extras
Bui ld ings
Wanted to buy. New, uood &amp; 614-892·3844.
11 Help Wanted
22 Money to Loan
304-675 -64B4 alter 5 and
antique furniture . Witt buy 1
anytime weekends .

CARD OF THANKS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Board of Regents has delayed
action on a .multlmlll!on.&lt;Jollar
capital Improvements package,
voicing concern about the potential
Impact on operating budgets and
student fees.
The panel is revlewlng requests
from state-assisted universities and
colleges for $900 mllUon· worth of
renovation and conslnlctlon projects during the next two years.
It faces an Aprtl 1 deadline for
submitting a sca~-down prtortty
list of projects to Gov. Richard
Celeste for Inclusion in the capital
bill he .will send to the General
Assembly.
"What we·re very concerned
about is that our operational funds
remain at a certain level," Regents
Chairman Richard Krabach said.
"Our Whole goal has been to reduce
the 44 percent student tuition
percentage. We were hoping to get
to 30 percent eventually."
The !lgure represents the student
share of educational costs.
"U we go too far in the capital
fund, tl)at's going to be taken out of
the total pie and you won'thave that
money avaliablefor operations," he
said. "Sowho'sgoingtopaylt?Well,
the student's going to pay It because
his tuition's going to go up."
Board members, who beld a
closed-door meeting late Thursday
to discuss the matter, were tight·
lipped about how much the i'egents'
staff had recommended cutting
from the $900 mllUon In school
requests.
The regents scheduled a special
meeting March 23 to act on the
package.
Whatevertbellnalshape,ltwlllbe
subjeCt to review by Celeste's Oftlce
of Budget and Management, which
will incorporate requests from
education, natural resources and
other agencies into tbe bill.

represented, most during a performance. Along with each photo
are
delightful
personal
reminiscenses by both Doc and
Lee Jacobs that help to humanize
these great performers, bringing
the pictures and magic to life
again. .
In his letter, Doc ·acknowledges some photographic
bloopers which helped make the
photos.
"For instance," he says,
"there's an accidental double exposure on page ~. I couldn't
have planned it better!" It shows
the magician Milbourne
Christopher recreatiJlg on stage
an old Houdini act debunking
fraudulent spirit mediums. The
double exposure makes it appear
that ghostly spirits are floating
around on sta~~e .

8

Golf Club

delay
•
action

MAGIC TRIBUTE: In his bbok -"Great Magicians in
Great Moments, " "Doc" Desfor pays tribute to the
many young female assistants of magicians who appear in a flash from barrels, cabinets and trunks when
the magician says ''Abracadabra." This young lady
worked with Milbourne Christopher and appeared on
March 16, 1962.

Cerd of Th1nka

ht tmlly of Elmer
Stover would like to thank
eYtryone who helped In
any wey durlna the Illness
•nd
dttth of our
ftthtr /husband. Special
lhtnks to 111 the staff at
Holzer Medical Center,
Dr. Sattler, his nurse,
Wtu&amp;h·Htllty·Wood Fu·
nertl Home, the minister
and sin1ers and all
friends and family for
food and flowers, prayers
and kindntsses shown.
All were lrtttly appreciated.
·
Thank you.
The wife, ch[ldren,
arandchifdren, nieces,
nephews, brothers

R~gents
By SANDY COLTON
AP Newsfeatures
For 31 years, up until4'f.o years
ago when an auto accident forced him to retire, Irving "Doc"
Desfor wrote this colUliUI.
Doc had three great loves in
his - life his family,
photography, and magic.
During his lifetime he
somehow has accumulated some
40,000 photos of magicians at
work, a collection now residing
at the American Museum of
Magic in Marshall, Mich.
"There has never been a collection comparable to this in the
history of magic," says Robert
Lund, who conceived and
created the museum. "It is not
an exaggeration to sar. the
Desfor photographs constitute a
national treasure."
I last met Doc in Cologne, Germany, at Photokina almost two
years ago. We had dinner one
night during which Doc began to
confound us with his magic
tricks.
Soon the waiters, the cook and
the rest of the patrons became involved, too. The cook, it seems,
also was a magician. Dinner
waited as Doc and the cook competed with each other to the
delight of all of us.
Years ago, Doc combined his
photographic talents and magic
to come up with a photo-magic
show which he put on for audiences around the world, including many benefit performances at haspitals in tile New
York area through the Volunteer
Service Photographers, a group
in which he was very active.
At 76, he's still goinl! stro"ll· In
a recent letter he satd I nught
have trouble reaching him by
phone during the morning
because he'd be on the tennis
courts!
In that same letter he proudly
proclaimed,· "I've become a
father! My book was born!" It's
a book he's dreamed of doing for
years ''Great Magicians in Great
Moments, a photo album by Irv-

Publlo 1111
• Auction

SALES PARTS AND SERVICE

-.

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT

"' ioute 2,

Box 248

- .... · . Gallipolis, Ohio. 45631
PH . 614-446-1675

.,!---_,.....-__..n....-.-.-----.--~ - ..

�Page-D-4- The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. trailers, no city taxes.
beautiful river view in Ka nauga. Fosters Trailer Park .

Call446-1602 .
2 BR mobile home. Call
446-0390.
2 BR , unfurnished. 1 2X60,
on Rt. 36, Dep. &amp; Ref.
required . Call 614 -446 4369 or 304-676-9760.
1 or 2 bdr . furn . or unfurn .•
nice &amp; cleanm, adults only,
V1 tank fuel oil free, dep_: req,
w~

Call614·266-1636
fore 2PM .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Real Estate General

APARTMENTS , mobile

3Bedroom all brick ranch
home on landscaped 1
acre lot in Rodney. Heat
pump. wood stove, 2 car
rarage, full basement. 2
baths. 9% assumable
mortrare. Serious callers only after 6 P.M.
Musl see to apreciate.
$64.500.

homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant

and Gallipolis . 614 ·446 8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income

3 bdr. all electric. 14x70,
fum. trailer with washer &amp;
dr\er. on private lot with

gordy 1pot, S200 mo. Plus
utlllt(u, dep. req . Call614 266-1 393.

of

less

than

$12,300. Renting lor 30
percent of adjusted income.

Phone 304-675 -6679 .

245-5884

676-22 18. 8 tillS .
first

floor,

rooms. bath . washer and
dryer hookup. Exc . cond .
and neighborhood . Ref . re-

quired. 304-676-1962.

45

Furnished Rooms
house keeping

ties paid . Share bath, male
only. Range &amp; refrig . 919

2nd. Ave.. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 after 7 PM .

WITH OPTION TO BUY, 14"
Space for Rent

2 J»edroom unfurnished, pri -

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

vata lot, in Burdette Addn.

Pomeroy. large lots. Call

UOO plus utilities. deposit
references. 304-675 2,64.

614-992-7479 .

200 ACRES
Paradise lake, old lash1oned
charm comes w/ 3 BR farm
house. Harrison Township.
95 ACRES
located in Meigs County, St Rt.
124.

MEIGS COUNTY
BREATHING ROOM on 20
acr~ Sectional home wllh
family room, 4 bedrooms and 2
bath~ Kingsbury Rd. $35,000.
TALL TREES and privacy
make this spl1! level home
with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths
and I acre plus msistible.
Scipio Twp. $48.500.
Tl MBERMAN you may be 1n·
terested in 168 acres and 323
acres on Scipio Twp. Rd. 142.
Properties are adjacent Asking
$290/acre.

Wanted to rent , Hay bot·
toms in Rutland area. Call

614-742-2925.
F~miohad

efficiency. $1 46 .
UtRiti11 poid. Shere bath.
887 2nd. Gallipolio. Call
.,6-4418 otter 7 PM .

49
For Lease
--------FOR LEASE approximately

J~CKSON

ESTATES
A)'ARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has

20 acres of hay. Phone

1 -304-676-428~ .

one and two bedrooms: rent

Merchandi se

111'iorting 11 S1 57 for one
t.edroom ond S1 93 per
month for two bedroom,

With UOO depo1it located
Volley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Coil 448-2745 or leave
n\elloge.
Attic opt. fumiohod s 176.
Ulilitios poid . Share bath.
niion only. 919 2nd . Ave.
Gellipolil. Coil 446-4416
aner 7 PM .
sW,au efficiency apart., cantril air • heat, 1 pro.fassional

tiPe gentleman only. 4460338 .
Fijmi1had aot .. near HMC . 2
bdr .. $236, utiltile1 pd .. 243
Jackson Pike, Gallipoli1.
Cjl1446-4416 after 7 PM .
Furnished Apt.. with large
lifaploce, jull1 overhaulad,
idul bschelor opt .. 1 64 First
AYe .. t225. Call 614-4461~43 or 814-446-1616.
2- bdr. opts .. newly decorlted, utilies part. paid, axe.
tc¥:ation. Medium income

f""'llieo . A-One Real Estate.
Clrol Yeager Broker. How-

aU:~ l. Yeager Ill salesman.

Coil 304-875-6104 or 3048:[5-15386 .
F;m . efficiency apt., with

privoto both in rio Granda.
C'J!II446·0167.

61

Household Goods

electric dryers, auto
washers, gas &amp; electric
ranges. refrigerators, TV
sets.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigera tors . ranges . Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.

614-446-7398.
Couch 8t chair good cond .

$200, coffee table &amp; end
table $25. Coil 448-7687.
Sofa, chair. refrigerator. gas
range, upright freezer. Cor-

bin &amp; Synder. 956 2nd.
Ave .. Gallipolis. 446-1171 .
Refrigerator and cabinet

T.V. Call &amp;1.4-992 -3958.
Custom dreperies. 1" venetian blinds, vertical blind,
Roman shades. Samples
shown at your home. Free
estimate. P. A . Sayre. 304-

468-1078.

PUw 2 bdr. apts. unfurn .•
fNtuip. kitch . 6 miles out Rt.
1"41 . U25. Call 446-4477
of 446-38BB.
1• bsdroom Apt. 8196 . mo.
hfcluding utilities. Equal
HPusing Opportunity. Con toe! Villoge Manor Apts.
&amp;:14-992-7787.
Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Senior

&lt;;jilzens. e130. Equal Hous-

iRg Opportunities . 614 -

992-7721.
FUrnished apartment for
rent in Syracuse. Call after ·

p.m. 992-7689 .

Aj&gt;t. for rent, call 614-992·
~08.

rent . Call

c_leland Realty, 992 -2269.
F-;,r rent, 3 room furnished

"''artment . Call 614-949~53 .

44

or

~&amp;":.

---

b cholfloo

-*Milt
~·
QPfflltd

446-2206.

Real Estate General

...

•sa.,

446-3643

Looking for something unique? Tired of high utilities and neighbors too close for comfort? J.hen
you may want to consider this secluded, low
maintenance, rustic cedar with architect-designed
passive solar room located on 25 wooded acres lh
mile from city. 1800+ sq. ft.; 2-3 bedrrns., 2
baths, built-in bookcase, woodburner, decks, garage, 16x20 barn, organic garden and all attractively landscaped. City schs. 70's.

no.

Call 446-7828. No realtors, please.
Real Estate General

Broker-Auctioneer

· ~utf

Call 446-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245-9507
Steve McGhee
'R,enlts446-1255
BMR 442 -OWNER SAYS REDUCE! 1974 Shultz mobile home
(J2x65) Tip Out includes 3 Bfls. new carpet awning &amp; patio.
s~uated on 1acre m-1.Washer &amp;dryer included. City schools. Was
$20.000, now $17,900. Call lor details'

M~GHEE

BMR 426- OWNER SAYS SELL-~ haP• 1ssumableloan wrth
only 9\?%interesl W• ""l'l·"p
. cMt)\MG clean, 3BRhome
situated on nice flatSE
...!io,, u11ented neighborhood. RE·
DUC£01 $3,000 down and assume loan!

REDUCED $10,000 - OWNER NEEDS TO
SELL NOW! Route 35 West location. Close
to hospital, grocery, shopping. 3 Bedroom
tri-level. 1% baths, den, formal dining, cus·
tom made cabinets in kitchen, family room.
Cedar lined walk-in closet. 2 fireplaces. Attic fan. Natural gas heat. 2car garage. Don't
miss this buy!
W542

5 ACRES wrth expanded trailer-added 10' ~ 1 6' bedroom, IO'xl6' hvmg room,
and add1tionat room. Nice
private sett1ng, large
wooded yard, long road
frontage, 2 wells, 2 septic
tanks, south facing building
site, I mile off hardtop road.
$12,000.
43 ACRES, south facing hill·
side with over 1.600' Iron·
tage. C.R. 7, Sec. 31. Scipio
Twp. land contract to qualified buyer. Partially fen ced.
. great bulding site. $18,000
land contract.

Apartment
for Rent

Well landscaped, 9.75 acres
with 3 BR ranch style lmle. If
you like your pnvacy call
Tanya.

""'""'"i l! .

••
••
•••
••
·r

fiRED OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS?
LET 'US PAY THE BILLS!

TWIN RIVERS TOWER
Pohit Pleasant, WV

RIVER BEND PLACE
New Haven, WV
Housing for the Elderly, disabled and .han.
dicapped. Renl is 30 percent of adjusted Income
to qualified tenants with an income of less than
• $12,300 per year .
,

Phone

742·3171 ·

G53 - Clean as a pm, ready to
move in. 3 BR ranch lmle on
5 rolling acres. (p)d road. Only
$39.800 Ask Zelia.

River Bend Place, New Haven, WV.

882·3121
Twin Rivers Tower, Pt. Pleasant, WV

675-6679
:OFFICES WILL BE OPEN ON SATURDAY
=·AND· SUNDAY Mareh lOth and 11th
- .•
and· March -17th ·and 18th
12:30 p.m. till 4:30 p.m.
•

'

WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA BALE. Reg. t489.
8111 1374. 81VI t 1 25.
hrms t10.00 down;
U2.00 1 month. 304-67153775.
•

chlne, torch and gauges.

Plows. roll hog wire.

2

Firewood 130. pickup ICNid
dellvered. 304-6715-11863.

Building materials
block, brick, •ewer pipes.
windows. linteh , etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All -breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa -

UnSCtarnble theM four Jumbles,

0 . Call614 -246-6121 .

one lettlf to each square, lO IOfm
lour ordinary words.

My attorney will
communicate with you!

Shipped Direct - lowest
Cost. You build It or we will .
24x48 garage or barn

I REWFE I

KJ

miK .. Rt. 218. Coil 6142116· 1581.
10 opeod bike, hog croto6tl"x38"x30", heovy duty,
now. Coil 614-2156-111&amp;1 .
Woter bed for oelo. Coil
614-2611 -611311 .

t1 .850. 2 bdr. wilderneu

I

home

I.

I

Control

INUBONII
rJ I

"THIS 15 "TE~~I5l.E­
I!IUT A LEITER

WOUL.D MAKE
IT l.E6AL..

Fruth Pherm1cy, J1ckson

Pike.

Now arrange the ctrded lett.erl to
fomt the sur'pffM enawer. as sug·
gestod by t h e - cortoon.

Prlntanswerhere:

hunger and 1oM

rI XXI J
(Anlwtrw - y )

Yesterday's

I

See

our

Now open for buainen.
Mountain State Block . Rt .
33, New Haven . Complet e
masonry supplies. 4". 8 ".
12 " block. Delivery service.

K

weight with Now Shope 01111
Pion ond Hydrex Woter Piil1.

•3.950.

model. 1-614 -886·7311 .

Goldblott Trowellne mo - h·~=~-::-:::-;
chine, 5 horMpower, 36 ln ..
hoo combinotlon blodes.
trowel blode1, ond !loot
ohoeo, 111150. Coil 61 4-24&amp;91104.

Jumbltl OWING PRIZE COSTLY MUSEUM
An~WeF :

..

" WI"Ial do you serve l"lere? -

Phone day 304·882 -2222 .
evening 882-3239 .
66

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. tieated
indoor -ou4-dd'or 18cilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:

Stud Service. Call6 14·4467796 .
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call

614 ·367·7220 .

1,000 gol. underground fuel

Regittered chocolate male
toy poodle puppies. All shots
and wormed . No checks .

t1nk axc. cond . Would avan

Cali 614-992 -2607 .

1--- - - - - - -

" SOUP TO NUTS"

Pets for Sale

61

Farm Equipment

Troy -Silt tillers Check our
apeci1l price before you buy
any tillers . Swisher lmple·
ment Co St. Rt .7 N . Galli-

cilitiel. Engli1h Cocker Spaniel puppie1. Call614 -388- polio,OH
0476 .
9790 .

'
.
•

Call 614 -446 -

Oragonwynd Cattery ·
Kennela . AKC Chow pup pies, CFA Himalayan. Per sian and Siamese kittens .

Farm all 140 with cultivators •
&amp; aida dreaser &amp; more Call

F.ail614-44e-3B44 alter 6.

Used Ford hay baler, 2 hay
rakes , mower. cultivator.

614 -446-9485 .

belt offer. Coil 614 ·992· ·
7062 alter 6 p.m.

57

Musical
Instruments

8 in . turn plow, 825 ; cultiva ·
tor . t5 ; hitch e6; old disc
S5 , works on small garden
tractor; aet Clarkes Com mentary books . Call 992·

Wurlitzer fun maker. 2 cus·
tom digital music syttem 7453.
organ, like new. Oak . Good - - - -- - - buy . 304-676-1882.
Tobacco balers. call 304-

676-2864 after 4 :00 .
Spinet -Console Piano Bargain. WANTED : Responsi ·
ble party to take over low 6 3
Livestock
monthly payments on spinet - - -- - -- - piano. Can be seen locally . Save 1 0 % on Chickl, Feed.
Write credit manager: P.O . SuppHes. Order by March ~
Box 33 , Friedens . Pa . 31 . Boso Agri -Center, Inc.

15641 .

Call 446-2463 .

meke 1 good culvort t3110.
Coil 448-4153 7.

1---- - - - - -

2-8:75x1 6.5 tubel111 retroodo wllh otudo UO eoch.
Aloo six 8:50x1 6.6 ceslngs
ouitoble for rocoppjng 8 ply
roting 12.60 eoch. Coil
446-41137.

1---- - - - - -

Mobile homo supplloo: nontoxic ontlfreozo-15.50 per
3 ploco llvingroom suite 1.11111'10n. Woter heotlng ellgood cond. Cow with coif. mon... woter hoollr, otopo,
304-896-3319.
wlndowo, doors, fouctts,

8izo 12 blue prom drou,llze
13 light bluo prom drou.
olzo 8-10 prom dreu Wko
new. Two hoopo. Goa cook
stove ond Spead Queen
dryor. 2 clolrntto good cond.
Phone 304-4158-115711.

~THAT ICIWIIU!D WORO GAME
~ ~ I,NW.!J~ ·
by Henri Arnold ond Bob Let

'flf}I)N} ffi'il

electric fancH . Lots more

breakers.

etc .

Real Estate General

BLACKBURN
REALTY

HotPolnt

haovy-duty eloctrlc dryors,
this month only 1279.
Kingsbury Homos Porta ond
Acce11ory Sttlre. 900 E111
Moln St.. old Bookmobile
building In Pomeroy or coil
892-5587.

446-0008

1-----

COUNTRY OAK FURNITURE; Cupboordds, Pia
Safe1 , Round Tobl01,
Firewood for ulo. Come ond Chairs, plus mony mora
got 120 1 lood. 130 doli- more ontlques. misc. Poul
vorld. Coil 304·8711-2881 . Conkel, Rt. 7, Tupper Plo!n1.

- Beautiful home setting on CNf!l 2 acres of land
Only 2 miles or less from tnwn. Fe;ot•-c.()O '181 entry, liVing
room and dining room u..C~i:\) t\£l,;~_
1ty room wj.b.
fireplace 3bedn.oc\)\l l. _ .,'Tuos&amp;show~. 2car~rage.
1.6 acres could b~'.':cv as an extra biJilding srte, has awell ooll An
81 /4% int rate assurr.able 10 qualified buyer. Give us a call for
more details.

....

OF ITS OWN ... describes this lovely white
with 3100 SQ. It 3 or 4 bedrooms. 3
20x40 FR. dinmg room k~chen w/ fYN,
. microwave and trash compactor. ~ntercom.
air. 2 car garage, utility bid&amp;. deck and a
20x40 pool. Beautifully landscaped.

Real Estate General

Ill ACRES, approx. 1 mile from city limits, city water, lronts on I
.Neighborhood Rd. Buy now lor $20.000.00.
I
• PPROX. Y, ACRE with 2 bedrm. mobile home. Fenced yard,I

1

.Bidwell·Rodney Rd. Some young trees. Owner will sell now for only
.$14,000.00.
•

30 ACRES M/ L HARRISON TWP.- $27.0001 '?
sliXY home offers 3 BRs. bath. d1mn&amp; llv1ng.

kitchen w/range, alum. ~d1ng. 24x60 barn. mobile
home hook-up and 1100 lb. tobacco base Call for
an appomtrnenl

GOOD STARTER HOME OR RENTAl PROPERTY -locatetJ,r,
c1ty. 2 story. 3 bedrooms. hvmg, family and dmmg rooms.
Kitchen has new floor covermg and wallpaper. Extra large
lot. Priced at $21.500
2 ACRES M/ l located on St. Rt. 35. Good bwldmg srte. Has a
mo!Jie home hook·up. Well wale~ also a water tap and astorage
buildin&amp; City schools.

Real Eatate General

l m ACRE FARM With nice house and eqwpment shed.:
.$86.000.00.
•
.CONSTRUCT£0 DURING 1870. ren111ated dunnR 1970, 3 •
bedroom, 11oft, Federal brick home within Gallipoli~ Formal dininR •
living rms., ibrary, family rm., j w.b. fireplaces, 2\\ baths, cent.
IA.C., New O~eans courtyard.

...

I&amp;

.E . ~In

I PERFECT LOCATION for family or retirees, 2·3 bedrooms: across 1
etrom new court house. 2 full baths, I w.b. fireplace, cent air, 1
ldetached garage, partially finished basement Price In 80'~

POMEROY,O.

992-2259

I

NEW LISTING - lllcine Approx. 1 acre building site or
mobile home lot T.P.C. water
tap, septic syslem partially
completed. Electric available.
Includes 15 It camper triler.
Good shape. All lor only
$5.00000

I.

· tNEW LISTING - Near city schools. locust st, 3 bedrnt, older
home. 2 baths, 2 kitchens. nat gas F.A. furnace. detached garage,
rice lot. Price $42,500.00.
1

I

:NEW LISTING- Addison, near P.O., 3 bedrm. house and 3 lots. 11
lot with mobile home "hook·up". l~ metal bid~ w~h two-carl
• garage. Fenced yard. $29,000.00.

NICE RANCH - Excellent condition. 3 bedrooms. garage,
lots of storage, 2 lots, good price.
#2399
INVESTOR'S SPECIAL - Two bedroom home with alumi·
num siding, level lot. Out of town owner says to sell immediately. $6.500.
·
·
·
CLOSE IN- Very clean and cozy home in town. 3pedrooms,
large eat-in kitchen, living room, bath, as furnace, $20s.
H1028
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Beer and Wine Carryout, C-2
license, all equipment and stock, located on Rt. 7. Ftrst party
wi.th $5000 bouys this/business.
Nl005
'

THIS ONE HAS IT ALL! - Exceptional home near
town features 2 fam1iy rooms. onew1th large stone
LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOME IN COUNTRY! fireplace and pabo doors. other has a bar. 3 BRs.
This one sliXY frame home can be yoor s lor just dream lutchen has cook tp. m1crowave. eye-level
$21.000. Two bedrooms. living room. kitchen oven. fYN.disp and range 14•24 llvmg room.
w/range, very nice large wood burning fire~. d1nette. carpeting. and 2 cat garage
concrete block ~rage. Fronts on Raccoon Creek
LOTS OF POTENTIAL - GREEN TOWNSHIP on 2.97 A. m/1.
180 acre farm located in Northup area. Two story
BEEF CATILE COUNTRY - 132 acres. mostly frame older home Wllh seven rooms and bath,
clean hill pasture, good fences. 1I? siiX'f home. coonty water. 16x60 concrete glo, corn crib. eQUip.
large barn, tob. base. fronts on 3 roads near shed. milk house &amp; bam. On paved road.
Mudsock. Price reduced 10 $56.900
FHA·VA SPECIAL - 3 bedroom. ma~ntenance
OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE -In the w11demess tree home. (Veterans. no down payment) (FHA
c1 the Wayne National Forest 5 to 9 acre tracts of buyers. approx $1.250 down). l ocaled '"Rodney
woodland now available, adjoining trousands of Village II.
acres of pernment land. Public hunting. fish'"'
and camping permitted. Prices start at $3500 wrth
financing available.

I
BEDRM. IN SECLUDED VINTON COURT -lot 45';78', nat gas I
heat cent A.C., fenced·in yard. Pnce $39,500.00.
I
:SIT ON THE FRONT PORCH and en;oy the character of this 8 rm.I
home. Nice lot which extends from 4th Ave. to 5th Ave., 2 k~chens,l
• 1\? baths. $60's
I
I MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME near Ho~er Hospital. brick front, I
• attached garage, city water and sewer. Immediate possession.•
l$50's • .
•
I
!SWIMMING POOL w~h 3 bedrm. home, I ~ carfl!lrt. lamily room,

:3

NEW LISTING - Hemlock

Grovi- Great starter home!

1'2x60 mobile home with 2
add-on rooms. Excellent condition. Barn, shed, nice patio,
on 'qo acres. Includes ref ..
rt· , washer, dryer, wood·
bun ,r, part basement. Just
$22,900.00.
~EW LISTING -

l.e~ville

• -Near Mine #I -;- 2.5acres

w1iving rm., adapted lor woodburner, Madison A~. $46.900.00.

olland with 3 bedroom home.

I EUREKAII 2 bedim. cottage, 2 baths, located in "Dowmtown
• Eu11ka" close to Gallipolis dam site. Price only $22,000.00.

$22,900.00.

~r. &amp;arden space, fruit trees.

a~~ fri~ndly Vinton Ave. Nice 101 wrtn A

PRICE REDUCED - Rustic
Hills - A neat 3 bedroom
~me. Electric b.b. heat hard·
!IOod 11oots &amp; carpelifl' Fully ·
insulated. carport. Barpin at

•• 2 BEDROOM HOME located
2 car garage. Price&lt;j tor $32,uoy.OO.

GIOC£11Y/SEIMCE SIATIOII,ICARIIYOUT - RIGHT COMBINATION FOR
UMJ!Il!TED GROWTH AMPLE PARKING. LMNG QUARTERS ON

PREMISES. HIGH TRAffiC AREA OWNER WIU OPEN BOOI&lt;S TO SERIOUS
BUYER
FIX UP AND SAVE$$$ ... 3BEDROOM FRAME RANCH. AITACHED
GARAGE. LEVEl lAWN. NICE COUNTRY SffiiNG. CITY SCHOOLS.
$29,700.
BEAUflFUL WOODWORK, OI'EN STAIRWAYS. NOOi!!i AND
CRANNIES GALORE. AHOME YOU AND YOUR FAMILY Will lOVE.
3 BEDROOMS PlUS POSSIBL£ FOURTH IN AntC, FORMAL
DINING, DEN, LG. EAT-IN KITCHEN, NICE FRONT AND BACK
PORCHES. ALSO SUPER SIZE GARAGE APT. WITH 3 BEDROOMS,
LG. LIVING RM. AND REC. RM. IN CITY. $75.000.

BEAUTY IN THE WOODS - Attractive bi·level 6
nestled on a 1.21 acre rol~ng tract 1n the Kyger
Greek School District. Features are 3 BRs. bath.LR.
kitchen and dmmg area. range, washer. dryer. roce
carpet and WB stove. 9\?% klan can be assumed
witll approx. $11000 down.
·
JUST RIGHT FOR YOUR MOBILE HOME -Large
lot for sale. 1acre or more localed on blacktop road
in North Gallia school district Gallia County rural
water available.
01110 RIVER LOTS FOR SALE - located 3 miles
below Eureka Oam. Ideal tor campin~ building or
mobile homes.
BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Greal INVESTMENT for
the buyert located on Graham School Rd. Each
un~ offers 2 Brs.. bath. living room. krtchen
w/stove. refrig., fYN &amp; disp.. laundry, large carport,
cent air and storage area.

-::::~=

MAKE THIS YOUR NEW ADD RES!i
Drive. Th~ ranch s1yle home offers . bed'roo"lS·
10x10 dining room. k~chen. large I
room.
laundry, two storage rooms. attached garage,
carpeting and centa~r.
1

ewt HAVE SOME VERY NICE commerc1al properties -Can today!!! I

I

u\udhetj Cartaday CReaQ toh'
25 ~ust gt11eet, QaQ~lpoQtr. ~-h~o

P34 - 10 acres m/1, Vinton
Co., 3 miles south of Wilkesville
on Route 160. 3 BR~ 2 bath~
deluxe features, sliding mirror
closet doo~ fireplace, con·
crete front porch &amp;rear patio.
For more info call Worley.

GUYAN TOWNSHIP _ 108 acres more 01less
located south of Mercerville. Approx. 20 A. bllable.
b1
woods tobacco base. Owner w1ll help
aance
·
finance.
JUST GREAT FOR A LOG HOME' 12 acres m/1.
approx 720 ft level road frontage Rural water
available. aose to town. Call for mote ~nforma!lon.
ADDISON-DAVIS lANE - I'? story Ita me home
(eatures 3BRs. l 'h baths, kitchen. LR. Remodeling
undeiWay. New ~nsulation. wmng. plumbing.
w1ndows and furnace. Skylights'" bedrooms. pabO
doors. sundeck. carpeting. KC school d1stn~t

ST. RT. 35SlOne fireplace and large.patio doors
compliment this large country style krtchen. Aformal dmmg room.
Modern h~ng room. 1\? baths. beaubfully wallpapered with
gleaming tile contrasts. Th1s home has been nev.1y decorated with
carpel pamt wallpaper. A possible· loan assumption. Priced
$52.000
OWNER HAS REDUCED this bi-level for aQUICk sale. 4 bedrooms,
2'? baths formal living. dining room. modern lutchen. large rec.
room. 2 car garage, deck off dining and krtchen area. lots of plants
and shrubs. Use of club house, basketball court and sw1mm1ng
pool. Kyger Creek school d1strict Priced 1n the m1d 60s.
8.6 ACRES - More or less. in Kyger Creek distnct. 12x65
Shull mob1le home. 3 bedrooms. nice livmg room . k1tchen
and d1ning area . 2 xtra mobile home hookups for an .addi·
tional mcome. Priced in the 20s.
HOME. BUSINESS AND EXTRA BUILDING LOT or garden
space. all lor under $20.000. Busmesss was usec1 as gas sta ·
lion and grocery. Cozy 3 bedroom home. hvmg room. mod.
eat-m kitchen. Wood burner. Th1s 1s a good buy
STATE RT. 218- 3 bedroom home. 2 balhs. k1lchen.lormal
11vmg room, dining, fam1ly room l1v1ng space 1.920 SQ. it.
Large carport and a covered patiO w1th carpel and sl1d1ng
doors off patio. Stora ge building. 1.590 acres moteor less. In
city school distnct. Immediate possess•on
LOVELY 4 BEDROOM HOME IN CITY - Excellent loc ahon.
MOBILE HOM[S: ·
1981 KINGSLEY MOBILE HOME w1lh h24 e•pa ndo. L1vmg
room,. W.B fireplace, formal-dmng pat1o doors. k1tchen. all
appliances, 2 bedrooms. laundry rLom. 2 lull baths. gardden
tub. 2 showers. Total electnc. central a~r. All und eromned.
Large covered patio. Extra nice. $16.500
1977 14x70 ECONO MOBILE HOME - 2 bedrooms. l1vmg
room with new woodburner, and porch. Pnced m the low
teens.

..·•

. ·$29,900,00.

'II'MfER HOlliE or 111l1tllllllt

. _;_ ALLUJJLITIES. INCW.DED IN RENT

: Call•
.

8 . • R. WOOD SHOP. Polio
furniture, picnic tobias ond
novoltlos. Cell 304· 675154011.

Hond tool1, welding mo-

G54 - Almost Heaven Silting
high on Pamters Ridge, 33
acres, lovely 3 BR bnck
home. 2\\ baths. loads of
cupboards in a large country
kijchen, quality carpet dry
basement, minerals are included. $79,000. Ask lelia .

Only.

PlANTZ SUBDIVISION - Easy terms available. You could
assume this 12%mortgage with payment of $315 per month.
including taxes and insurance. Ranch with 3 bedrooms, full
basement, woodburner, carport. Only $28,900.

M. L. "Bud" McGHEE
Broker
Cheryl Lemley.
MeiiS County Associate

Colemon Prooldontiol Elec.
furnoco, e146; Mogle Chef
rongo. elect. 1911; 'h h.p.
ohollow well pump e125; y,
h.p: dHp woll pump. 195;
40 chonnel CB, 148; Coli
892·6524.

a1 trade ln.

66

C8 - Meigs Co. mifll farm.

Century 21 Southern Hills R.E., Inc. ·
Real Estate General

Mink Stole. Coil 614-992·
11070.

Built on you lot 1 now homo
you con offord. over 1 •100
oq.ft.. e room• I bsth,
corpetod, roody to move
Into. tztl,l500. Also gorogoo
&amp; boNmento. Coil Potrlot
Homeo Bulldors 446-8038 .
Will con1ldor mobllo home

66 Builaing Supplies

Ph. 594-3543

10

Four Bedroom brick home with
Chandler kitChen, custom drapes,
plush carpet, attached 2 car garage,
situated on 12 acres with stable, rail
fences, swimming pool, ~arage­
wori&lt;shop. Immediate posseSSIOn.

446-661

off -tho-shouldor Southern
Bello Style. Worn onco. Call
614-742-31b4 oftor 15 p.m.

Mlec. Merchandlae

&amp;

Century 21 Southern Hills R.E., Inc.

For Sale By Owner
Phone 446-8221

PRICED REDUCED FROM $59,900 to $54,000
- OWNER WANTS THIS HOME SOLD! Over 5
wooded acres. 3 bedroom ranch. Cathedral
ceiling and fireplace in living room, equipped
kitchen. Formal dining area, 2 full baths, walkin closet off large master bedroom. 2 car attached garage. Heat pump, central air. Deck.
Immaculate inside and out. Call for an appointment today!
#526

Prom Dreaa. size 11 , le vendar. lace on taffeta,

64

~21.
Jim Owen Co. Inc.

WE NEED LISTINGS

MEIGS COUNTY

Misc. Merchendiee

Real Eatate General

BMR 389 - OWNER SAYS SEll TODAY! Your family will enjoy
the roominess of th~ house. lnclues 4 BRs. 2 baths,LR, DR, buiH-in
k~chen. S~uated on large corner lot aose to town in city school
district (Green Elem.). Call to see th~ one!

~

64

Real Eatate General

BMR 436 - EXCEllENT STARTER HOME w~h 2 BRs, LR. Dh.
nioo k~chen, utility and new bathroom. Carpetd throoghout.
Screened patio, carport large lot Call for appointment

Andy Sylvia Realty
Rt. 2, Box 203
Albany, Oh. 45710
614-698-6356

UNci Furniture -- 8tr • 2
111ooll, rongeo. chelro, dry·
en, refrlgerstoro end TV 'o. 3
mH• out Bullville Rd. Open
8om to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri ..
Som to 5pm, Sot.
e14-4411-0322

•

Real Estate General

Cell 446-4671 .

for

.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Solo, choir, rock or, ottomon, 3 tobloo, (e•tro heovy
by Frontier), t6815. Solo,
choir 1nd IOVOIIIt, 1276.
Sofoo ond cllolro priced from
121111. to t8116. Tobloo, 1411
ond up to t1ZI5. Hide·•·
bodo, t440 . ond up to
111215., Roclinero, t175. to
1375 .. I.Aimps from 128. to
1711.11 pc. dinettes from
t88., to 4311. 7 pc. e1 89
ond up. Wood toble with six
cholro t4211 to *7411. DHic
t110 up to tz211. Hutchas,
ttltiO. ond up, mopte or pine
finloh . Bunll bod compl~o
with mottreeMs, t2150. end
up to 13811. Soby beds,
t110. MottreoMo or box
opringo, full or twin,
firm, ees. ond *78. Queen
..... · t1911. 4 dr. cheot1,
142. II dr. chell1o, ttl4. Sed
!romeo, UO.ond tZIS.. 10
gun - Gun coblne... t350.
Gu or electric rongeo 13715.
lloby man-. 1211 I .
1311, bed fremeo
tzl5,
• 130, ldng frame tl50.
Good Mlection of bedroom
oult01; cedor ch01to,
rockero, motol cablneto,
swivel rockero.

storaee

For Meigs Co. Listings Call: Chetyl Lemley 742-3171

eace and deposit required .

Apartment

CaiWomia Ranch Brick, 2200 sq. ft., with beautWul woodWOIIt, la11e livi~ room with filtplace, adjacent dini~ room:
family room with btliK in barbecue in stone wall: 21'1 ctramic
baths wHh gla$5 shower enclosu11 dool$; 3 spacious bed·
rooms (one with built-in dedl-cabine1 area): all electric
kitchen with new cabine1 and formica top which includes
dishwasher, disposal and refricellltor. A 15x20 ft. !)ltiowith
slate tile and new aluminum awni111 with WIOUiht iron posts
and 1atJ1 Warm Morni~ Gas Grill. A RIIUiation Bldminton
Court, 27x47 concrete stab, idN for badminton, basketball,
shuffle board, etc. with larp outside li&amp;ht for ni;rt use.
wonshop and
area in basement with metal Bilco
doots. Central air conditionirw, Thennopane windows, 12"
insulllion in ceili115 and 6" insulation in exterior walls.
Carpeti~ throl.llhout house except one latp bllllroom. Gallipolis City Schools and excellent nei&amp;hborhood which has
Nei&amp;hborllood Watch. One of Sprirw Valley's nicest homes.

Real Estate General

btdroom . Adults only. refer-

~30

wrlnrr Wllhlro, TV'o, dry·
oro. slloeo. Coil 614-441131118.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
Ave.. Gallipolis, 61 4-4461699.. Spin washero, gos &amp;

Ftlmiahed apartment, two

for

APARTMENT FOR RENT - 1bedroom, kitchen ,living room,
furnished , $150.00 month, water. sewage, you pay gas &amp;
electric, deposit required .
To Buy or Sell
Call Nancy Jaspers
949-2901

..

Real Estate General

ni-r Foodland and Spring

r•tas

NEW LISTING - Well kept 2 bedro~m ~9me, U-shaped
kitchen, basement can easily be made mto family room, 2
nice size porches, I car garage, level lot. Call for deta1ls.
don't miss this one. Asking only $21,000.

!.:~::- i . ..... ·- -

47 Wanted to Rent

Houaehold Gooda

Knouff Firewood Pickup or
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE Dellverod. 12"-22" stocked
82 Olivo &amp;t;, Golllpollo. New ·In yord. HEAP vendor.
delivery. 614-2116 &amp; uNci 'Wood • OCNIIII1oveo, prompt
.
6 pleco wood living room 112411.
1ulte wllh II Inch flot orm1
1388, bunk bldo comploto Umtotono, Sond, Grovel.
with bunkleo e188, 2 ploco Dolivorod In Mooon. Melg1.
ontron llvingroom oult11 Oolllo or pick up 11 Richordo
e188, ontron rocllnero t88, &amp; Son. Coil 446-77811. ·
other rocllnero eao. mople
dlnetto soto e1 79, box Will cut and dollver fire ·
springe • maHreaa twin or wood. Coil II 14·2116· 11528.
full t 1QO Mt regulor-flrm
• 120, mople dinette cluolro 3 pleco whito conopy bid1311. wooh 111ondo 134, room 1uit. Double bsd, Iorge
mople rockero 1118, 7 ploco bsd. lorgo dreuer, ch111 of
chromo dlnetto 111 e148. 5 droworo . Coil 814-949 ploce dlnetto Ml t911, uNci 2270.
bsdroom ouitoo, refrlgerl·

Real Eatate General

Apartment
for Rent

~ecial ·

CENTRAL REALTY

734

o~d

41

61

FOR SALE BY OWNER
ALBANY

located 1n a beautiful grove of
pme trees. come take a look. 3
BR ranch. den. ~!chen w/ eat·
ing area, king ~zed LR
overlookin g pond. WBFP
w/ Buck stove, AC. 5 acres.
Possible klan assumption.

46

Real Eetate General

The

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

tore, r1n ..a. cheat, dre11ars.

388·8826

and

light

11 1984

· Real Estate General

WHISPERING PINES

Sleeping room $115. utili·

move into. $200.00 down
S176 .00 MONTH . 304 ·
676-2711 .

446-1171 or 446-1818

REAL ESTATE
If you want a substantial home

Call614 -446 -0756 .

wide all electric mobile
home. setting on lot ready to

nance.

Virginia L. Smith

For rent Sleeping Rooms

Racine . Call 614 -3677148.

Call 992-6868.

338 Third Ave.
2 full bathrooms, kitchen,
dining room, living room,
larp back yard. Immediate
possession. Will help fi.

March 11 1984

3

rooms . Park Central Hotel.

home for rent in Racine area.

FOR SALE
4 BDR. HOUSE

Real Estate General

Mobile home for rent , in

1 Ox 50 2 bedroom mobile

Real Estate General

Nice one bedroom apt ..
unfurnished. phone 304·

Apartment

2 bdr. ~C4'ile home for rent.
Call 44{i'9669 .

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

,

moo

1..:.. Old Rt 33-'1acl1

·2 ~ home with
kitchen, bath, utiliiY. other

outbuiklinp. Only $12,200.00.
•'
REALTORS
r H1nry Cltllnd, Jr.

LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Has 4,000 sq. ft. wijh
additional storage overhead, living quarters in back with two
bedrooms.

· nz.e111

, iJo\tlel•mer 992·5692

·Jean Tr1111tll !149,2160
Jo Hill 915-4481

!.
.,I

w·

I .

�"\i.........

·"F'

Page-D-6--The
83

Uveatock

P.O.A. Roglatered Appolou
stud hofll, ~ood aolor. Coli
814·387·0812 oftor I .
Polled Cherolols bull, 1 yr.
old, vory gentle. Coli 814·
387·7178 .
Polled Hereford cow &amp; 2 wk.
old Hereford colt, U21. Coli
814·218·1427.
Reglaterod Angus bulls. 1·3
yrs. old, oxc. blood llnos.
Slate Run Farms. Jackson,

Oh 614·286·6396 or 614·
286-1787.
LaBonte's Quail Farm now
taking orders for eggs &amp; day
old Quail . May delivery on
eggs . June delivery on
chicks. All orders pay in

advance. 986·4346 .
Hay &amp; Grain

64

Northup King corn. alfalfa &amp;
grasa seed,

other farm

seeds. Cell Vaughn Toylor.
614·246·5084 or814-246·
5816 after BPM.
Hey for ule. Coli 814·266·
6634, If no answer 614·
258-6011.
4000 bales of hoy, olfolto,
clover, timothy, &amp; orchard
grou. f1 .50 per bole. 614·
843·5138.
Hoy for sole. $1 .60. Coli
992·5266.
Good condition hoy for ule.
Coli 614·949·2870.

March 11, 1.984

Times-Sentinel
71

Ohio-Point Pleaaantr W. Va.
71

Autoa for Sale

72

BRIDIE
OIWIId Jacoby alld Jamee Jacoby

711 Camoro, needs aomo
work, below whol-11. Coli
982·8181 or 1182·37117.

Signaling the count
W11t Ollelltd the ~ck of
bllrts. Jrut followed with
the deuce IOd South toot hl.l

1977 Chevy Monti Co~o
Landau. Fully equipped, low
miles, like new. mull oee.
Coll614·949·2181 ,

••n
+u

1982 Oldl Firenza. Cen toko
over payments. Call 614·
992·6607.

~~ ' ~.
!'AJ 1085 ••n

' 77 Monte Cerlo. one
owner. low mileage, good
cond. 304·676-2668.

78 Short whHI boso Ford 4
wheel drive, good condition.
79 Hondo Civic 4 cyl .. 4 good point. f3000. 304·
apd., tunroof, axe. cond .. 876-1848 or 675-8813.
62,000 mi ., 82.950. or best
offer. Coil 446·1012 or 1973 Chevrolet Camero, ps.
446-1968.
automatic, nlco. 11995.
304-882·3258 otter 6 p.m.
1974 Volkswogon Bug,
good ohope. Ceil 814·949· 79 · Ford LTD Lendau .
2234.
f3,000. 304-676·11492.

~JI7Z

tQIOU

+Jlot

~~

SOOTH
+QJI

•xQ

+A Itt
+AQt1Z

Vulllerable: llolh
Dealer: South
West

Norlll

l!ul

Poa
Puo
Puo

3+

Paa
p. .

JNT

'J
1.___ _ _
I

OpeDIDc lead:

1

club to

=

.-.J

iBy Onlld Joeoby
,ud Jomes Joeoby

i It is IIWa)'l I pleasure

led

dummy'1 kinl IOd • club
bock to hl.l 1ce. Tbeo he led
the lick olapadll.
11est paused lor 1
momeat, r.. with hl.loce of
spadeo llld promptly laid,
crown hl.l ece of burilu the
starter (or lour burt tricb.
"How were you 10 aure?"
lilted South.
"No problem ot all,''
replied Well. "My partner
pli:ved the deuce of hlartlat
triCk - to lell Die he bod
an odd number of beu1a. I
wu looklnc at live hearto.
There were three ID dummy.
Tbet left live lor ,oo llid
Eut. You hid reopcndecl
three diamonds to your
por~Der!s 811)'111111, eo you
Could not bold lour hearto.
Heoce ,oo held Jllll two, llld
my PIJ1ner euctly three."
'I1Ua Kelley band IDtroduces the mulm: "Help
wtthdel- by
a!
cllllrlbuUoo.'
e a a fervent omen.
Teod to hiP.low wtth an
evea Dumber llld low-hl&amp;h
wtlh an odd number.

tlt154

78 Olds Delta 88 Royole, 4
dr. Sedan, clean through·
out, no ruat, good rubber.
1978 Hondo Accord hatch· good condition. Call 992·
blck. good gla mileage. 6786, P~ced on lnopoction.
priced to soli. Coli 446·
2056.
1976 Ford F1 00. outomotic.
VB. P.S. , 98,000 miloo,
1975 Chevrolet Monte $2,000. Coli 992·8328 .
Co~o . PS, PB, oir con d.. new
wheels and tires. dual ex- 1958 Chevrolet, 4 door,
haust. oir shocks, 81 ,500 67,000 orlglnlal miles .
firm. Coil otter 3PM. 614· $800.00. 304-896· 3838
448-4392 .
after 5pm .
1977 Buick Regal many
options. good condition,
priced below wholeaale at
82.200 . Coli 614· 245·
6078.

~uth

•tw.

NORTH
tlt71J

to

watch a skilled partnership
m operalloo.

(IOIIIIPAPDIImiiiPRJI&amp; ......)

Truoka for lila

New truok tendere a doore. Truok 77 POftl plokup, ,, 00,
Chevy fendera •14 .... a IDMd, low inllttlte. 10•·
ChevY doore ,,,., ~ 112·11~.
fendere 171. ltd 11111r1
lUI. Cell 1,4·211·UIO.
73. V1n1. 4 W.D.
1171 POftl PU ftlr oond.,
,,,100 or beet offer. Cell ,111 Qhlvy ~ ton ven, a
., •• , •••• 811 .
apd., AM·P~ tiPt, reel nloo,
t4,481. JQ!In'l Auto Ioiii,
1181 ChevyC· ,OPU, Icyl., lullvllll lid, GaiNpolle. Oh,
stond., with topper, 11. roor 448·4712 Open tH dirk.
window. Pl. Pl. Cell ettar
111M, 114·2411·1111.
77 &amp; 78 loout 4 wheel
drlva, V·l, outo,..tlo, 2100
aoch or malle offer. Coli
1183 Ford PU 8 cyt .. 3apd .. 814·371·2171.
stonderd, good tlroa. i l bettery, good wood tNok.
Call after SPM. 814·241· 71 JHp Commendo. Y·8
'1 179.
angina. P.l.. P.B.. auto·
matlo. tall. Call 11 4·
7423·2121.

, 110 ICaWINid, , 100 lhlft

l

ood oonclltlon. Coli I, • ·
12·7110 lftor I p.m.

78

E S. V Body Shop Custom
pointing , A· C welding ,
Georges Creek Rd, 448·
9304.

11110 111 tt. loy"- with 10
HP Mercury enalne, ell olda
•equlpmtnt lnaluded. Mull
Ill. Cell 448·1311.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

1978 Chavy Luv with
topper, 71,000 miiH. 1700.
Coli 448·8322.

I
I
I
I
I
I
II

Judy DIW"tlt, lltoltor. 388-8155
J. lltnill Clitlr. llllltor, m-2114
Btcly ._, Alsoclatl, 446 0451
c:athy Popo, Aaoclltl, m-2748 .
lbrprtl Bryant. Assoclltl. 245-9277

Trdn sporLill un

PutNumberl

TOP CASH poid tor late
model used cara. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eoot·
ern Avo., Gallipolis. Coli
614-446·2282.
1978 Chrysler Cordoba
$2, 195. Coli 614·367·
0541 .
1964 Dodge Dart Sedan.
good cond., 8350. Coli
446-7687.
1974 Chevy Impala.
2dr.Custom Cpo.,PS· PB·
AC, Cruiso, Radio &amp; Tope
Player. 714 2nd Ave. Roar.
Coli 814-446-1345.

IMPRESIVE INSIDE AND
kept and beaut1lully decorated. 1900 sq. II. of hv·
ing space. 2\\ baths. equipped kitchen. family
room, garage. low monthly heating budget. Cen·
tral air. Nice lawn . Rt. 35 locatiOn.

1979 Pontiac Grand Le·
Mans, 2 door, auto., air
cond . • AM · FM stereo.
cruise, tilt wheel, 306 Y·B.
~~i;~OO. Cell 304-676·

1977 Lincoln Towncor, just
completely reconditioned .
Priced below wholesole for
quick sole. Phone 304· 773·
5146 or 773·6694.

CENTENARY AREA - Neat frame ranch with
bedrooms. bath, lam1ly room. kitchen. utility
room, natural gas heat with low heatmg b1lls. All
lloors carpeted except krtchen and utility. large
size lawn fenced on one s1de. Home pnced in the
30s.

TEAFORD
Phone ·

1-(614)·992-3325
YOU'll FALLIN
home w1thin mmutes
bedrooms, basement Um1tta1:hed 2 car garage.
40'x30' metal barn, ch1cken house. 47 acres. C1ty
school d1slnct. Call lor an appointment today'
#521

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bed·
room home on Mill St. Has
bath. furnace. lg. enclosed
porch and storage bldg. For
$21.000.
POMkROY - Nice 2 story 3
bedroom home with full ba·
semen!. Hot water lurnace
and modern kitchen within
walking of stores. . Only
$39,000 . .
SYRACUSE - 2 level lots
with a six room, one floor
home. Bath, utility, carpel·
ing and .nice kitchen. Just
$25,000.
POMEROY - Hot water gas
fired boiler, 2 full baths, din·
ing, lots of closets, stove, re·
frigerator and birch kitchen.
Asking $29,500..

...

MfY\hlng _you wWd

heatina

112.95 ACRE FARM - Thts older couple would
cons1der lradmg for a nice ranch style .home. Par·
t1ally remodeled home. 2 large barns. machinery
shed, 3 other buildings, all in exc~llent condrtion.
2670 lb .. lob. base. pond. 30 aores bottom land.
#474

LIVE IN ONE and rent the other. Tv.o 2 bedroom
mobile homes. Complete with furniture. Set up on
one.-half acr.e lot. Underfinned, storage building,
pat1os. W1thm 3 m1les o Gallipolis, Priced in the
20s. ,
·
#50!
GOOD CONDITION is this I 1!. story frame home.
ACREAGE - 31 rolling acres. Partially wooded.
located near lhe. KanauJa Drive-l~ Theater. 2 or 3
City school district. Build lo suit. Priced at
bedrooms,
I 10 baths, llvina room, nice kitchen
$15,550.
and dmlna area. 2 car earaae. 2 mobile home hOo·
#507
· kups. Priced mid:40s.
'
·
'· . ..
. #523
BEDROOM RANCH - I I! baths, shower, mo·
2 BEl)ROOM FRAME·- 3 year old ranch with ap·
kitchen, divided ·basement, landsC!J!ed
Cheshire area.' Priced rlglif:.;..l ow ~OS.
• --. prox. I acre lawo. Amenities inolude; full bath,
k1tchep, dmmg room, llvmg room, front porch;
. #460
, sliding glass doors off' dining area. Possible loin
aSSU!Jiplion with Jqw.interest rate.
BE IIIDEPEII!IENT by ow~ing your own home.
11514
Take a look allhis 3 bedroom ranch. living·room,
JACKSON COUIITY - 105 acre farm. 2 story
kilchen with dishwasher,• bath, utili~. garale.
olde~ ho1J18, 3 bedroomsi baih, k~chen. wlh buiR·
Woodburner. Approx. l . acre. Chain link fence.
in range and oven, dishwasher, llvmg room..
Priced in the 20s. _
"
Barns, cellar aod cellar bouse.

IIlli,_

'

- ...

'

t

--.

.

#449

\...

'

-506

Build yqur dream home ·on
this ·attractive lot. Baum's Addition. Water tap in.
eluded.
MEIGS COUNTY - Collins Road. Older.! II story
home in ineed of repair. Siluated on 14 acres,
more or 'leSS. Priced at $1.0.000.

'

.

#499

DOII'T MISS THIS brick arid iluminuf11 siding'
home loeeted in the RuUand area. 3 bedrooms·
'full tiasement;16'x32' in·arouna)ool. ·Alii his end
more s~uated on .89 ol an acre. Priced in the 40s.
'
• 11491
4 ACR~S OF NJC£UND to build on. Nice ho~es
in thearea. Very aood location •. Within J·miles of .
Gallipolis. Buy all and use for building lots or build
your own .special home. •
.

,. -

~

.

'

~

·

'#461

".....

\

'

.

.1Aa10ftl_laii8~0WNID.M~

'.

" .

.

.

Stork's Tree &amp; Lewn Core.
Leodocaping polio, awning
ond underpennlli(j. Backhoe
work. For cornpleto llwn
cora. Call 304-678·2010,
ineured.

86

General Hauling

'!IIJidlflll

691 Miller Drive
446·2642

JONES BOYS WATER SER ·
VICE. Call 614-387-7471
or 814-387·0691 .

Free Estimltts

Need something hauled
1w1y or aomething moved?
Wa'll do it. Call 448·3169
between 9 ond 6.

RUSS AND MAX
ELUOTT CO.

llnnox He~tinc &amp; Air Condi·
tioninJ. Ali T~pes Insulation.
EIKtnul Winne.

Drive Wlya - LimeJtone
hauled &amp; spreed. Coli 814·
379· 2133 or 814-379 ·
2808. Chorles Ehmen .

Call 446-8515

or 446-0445 lie

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lenier. 304·676·
7397.

87
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gollipolis, Ohio
Phone 814·448·3888 or
814·448·4477

.'

SHEET METAL WORK
We make custom duct
work. We Repair Fur·
naces and Heat Pumps.
GAWA
REFRIGERATION CO.

Upholstery

.

.

614-446-4066

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Ave .. Gollipolis.
614·448·7833 or614-446·
1833.

SOLUTION

.....

.'

GOOD LARGE OLDER HOllE - With almost 4 acres ol
land localed on Neighborhood Road. Only 4 miles lrom
Clly. l ois of n1ce s~ade. Qu1el location

,."
. '

..'·,

ranae

'*"

MULTI PURPOSE PROPERTY
on Ohio Rt. 7 near Gallipois. Walk·in cooler, display caJi.
• ,•.,.~ .. ... ..., rental mobile homes - income now $660 per month.
6 room brick home plus 2 rooms for business - whayou have in mint( Flower shops, snlllt rocery store, carry·
out. etc. lois of uses. Pllone for appointmelll
live in partbu~ness In other part Renl mobile homes. Great opportunity! ·
.
#SID
NEW BRICK APPROX. I YEAR OLD
White brick front 6 rooms, 3 bednlOms, 2 bltl\s, nice modern srep.
saver k~chen, elec.·heat pllmp with A.C. Two car garage. Nice
landscaped shady back yard. Beautiful home. You must see this

one.

#581

WHAT A DEALI $27,000, LAND CONTRACT
Come see for yourself. Cozy 6 rooms and bath, dishwasher, refrigerablt', woodbumer. allike new. Storage building and 2 car car·
port Kyger Creetl Schools.

· --

~

-

mz

~ ~~n~~~~~::C~AJM~P~
·water,
BY BLUE
septiCLAKf
sy'Stern, electric.
·

concrete pad, Great Fishing!

#584
·LOW DOwN PAYMEIIT, OWNER FINANCING
.
Are you lookinc bra 2 bedroom home overlooking the Ohio·River
with little l!llintenance. Beginner home Or retiiertlent home. We

have it

IACIES

Within 10 lninute drive ID downlown. GlllipoliS. CitY School Sysllnf. HIS hOOI!uP for molilt homt Gallia Rulli Wlllr, tiledric and

lll*c lank. N&amp;frt 11;11 on pole. 200 fl. f1on!11e on Graham $d1oOJ
Rd. Timber. B4Jildlnc Illes. Call now. .
· , ..
l

'

~477

132 Twtst

70 Legume

133 Vehicle
134 Rocky hill
135 KIU&amp;d
t37 Goddess of
discord

plant

ance.ieads
lead to hu•e
billsP,o~n m
on a;l\1 acre
movifl&amp; to Columbus.

r

LET YOUI IMAGINATION RUN WILD! - Qu1et. peace

I
I

lui se,~in' i" a 4 ac. woodsleaves you completelr. sur·
rounped '" a shady nalualist paradiSe. W1lh a lit! e En·
glish flavor the 4 bedrOQm 3 balh home w111 make you
feel ~ener each 11me yoil turn inlothe d11ve. Includes a
larg('kilchen, huge lam1ly roomand lireplace. stora ge
building, and large patiO area. Perfect place tor children
Cily schools localed near R10 Grande.

I n Al:RE FARII - .IIOBILE HOllE &amp;RENTAl HousE Onl!139,500, it's r'buylor anyonewanlmgpnvac yand
soni4 nice crop land, pasture and woods plus an exira
incoll)e lrom lhe 2 bedroom renlal house The mob1le
home is 14x70 and 1n good condition Has tobacco base
and jols ol road lrontage on bolh Sides of road Appro•
I 10 m1less from lown

I
I

''

I168~CRE FARII -

•
•

•.

'.
'

$48,500 - [ xcellenl buy on thiS
larglacreage w1th aremodeled4bedroomhome Aprox
10.20 acres crop, with balance 1n woods and paslure
Has )ome buildings and barns. Home has l~replae. car·
I porr1and garage. 011 Rt. 554

l

123 1CRE FARM - I ll story home located m th e
subprbs of Mudsock. Oh1o, wh1ch mcludes 2· 3
bedrooms, lull basement, eal·in kitchen, and ul1l·
ily Qlom. $33,000 VA loan. Pnced at $35.000.

,

JU~ LISTED - 74.5 ACRE FARM -

'

'' .

·..;-

&gt;
::
•'

Th1s 1s one
that will' catch your eye. En lOY a mce walk along
lhe j:reek, explore the ca ves and 1usl en1py the
thi s farm. There are 6 acres of wood·
. tobacco base. all minerals m·
i also an older but liveable 3 bed·
of paved road frontage and 400'
JrOn!a~e . I m1le ofl Rl. 7. Many poSSI·
1.500.

WA~DNG

•.
. ·.
•

..

.

• ' ••

••
'.
~·

. -~
'·'

...:,.
;"

PICTURE BOOK HOllE - Only 2\l yearsoid 1 roomsin
all. well decorated. well planned w1lh much storage
space Ut11ity roomw1th aocress to backyard.

2 COUNTRY ACRES ... Go along Wllh the 5 yr old bnck
In-level. Very clean. almost new home in a peacefu l

counlry selhng Includes 3 BRs, I \1 baths, large k1lchen
and 2\l car garage l1ving room, family room With lire·
place Heat pump Modestly priced al $59,900

COSTS IIONEY - Now ISthelimelo buy. Of·
brick ranch'" lown Well bu11t home w1th
I~!',Wl~:~~~~! dinmg orom, breakfast nook. living room
..;
AHraclive arched doorways and large at·
work outside took alot of lime and elfort to·
design. Gas heat, hardwood floorsand well
DEiiriiiiNG - You won't feel like you areclose to town
neighborhood, but you are only a Slone's
Very roomy house. 3 BRs lw/ hardwood
living roq.,.dining rooin area. eaf.in
erilr!nte, a·nd new fa1ly room addillon
wl\tt!lonl fireplace. Gas heal and central air and there
storage. Asking $53,000. Owner needs1lsold 1
RUIUCI;P.oN·OIIE,OF NICEST HOliES ON THE
lo'good roads and shop·
. large lwo car garage
&lt;lor,.e·orea. Also slorage bulld1ng.
at reasonable rale. Was

1101 TEOOORA - A honey lor the money in tile ci!~
Fine condition, 3 BR. living room, lam1ly room, ul11i
room new alh changes. c~ain hnk fenced back an
front' lawn. Reduced lrom $46,500 down to $4.4.900.
Desires ofler. Part11l 10'11 loan assumptiOn fl0551ble.
HERE IS A 2 BEDROOII HOllE - On 9\1 At onl1l mile
!rom crty limits, 2 bedroom w•th luli basement Nal. gas
furnace and 2 car garage Raiseyour own beel and veg.
garden and be close to everythmg. $49,900.

Solo

73 Sowed
75 Senl forth
77 Hif&lt;e
78 Surfetts

80 Slogo
whiSper
81 French tor

"summer "
82 Punctuatton
marks

84 Sell·

WE'RE GEniNG ANXIOUS TO SEll THIS -

centered

bnck ranch wtlh entrance foyer. formal dmmg, 3 Dt: ...
rooms. very mce kttchen and 2 car garage, 1h mtle !rom

person
86 K1ng of

Holzer Center and convenient lo shopping, city school

England

Loca ted on a QUtel str eet m good netghborhood Owner
wtll hsten to an offer

87 North
Amertcan

OVERlOOKING GAlliPOliS - You'll en1oy lhe cozy li·
replace and apprectale the large wmdows as yo_u gaze

reindeer
89 Greek ~tier

budt-m refngerator, tndoor BBQ or charcoal oven, bUI!tln oven and lots of cabmet space. UmQue floor plan al·

95 Avoid
98 Word of
sorrow

92 Showy
flower

over Gatl1 polis lrom lhe lo~ed lam1ly room th iS Alpme
styleln·level has looiler Theheadchelw1ll go w1id over
the k1lchen whiC h has center ~ i a nd wlslove. custom
lowslor 4 BRsand 31utl bathsto be\pac10usenough101
alarge family w1lhout beingtoo large lor asmaller one I
car garage plus carport w1lh overhead deck. Unbelie·
vably pnced al $64.500.
SHADY lAWN SETTING ON THE Hill - 5 BRhome. 2
baths. lar ge mod ern k1 !chen. knotty pme sta1rs. fire-

place. wood deck porch. flat gardenarea, 2acres onSR
325. 5 m1les S of R10 Need an offer.
18 ACRES AND A KIJG'S VIEW - ThiS lovely rust1c

RIGHT PRICE- You'llenioyl,~i ng 1n thencest house1n
the ne~ghborhood 11 you purchase thiS 3 BR home.
loealed~on corner lot which proVIdes a n1ce play yard, 2
luli baths\ livmg room w1th fireplace and lam1ly room
w1th firep ace so _you won't get cold 10 wmter. Dmmg

m/ 1 of mce lawn and real produ ctive garden area.

RIVER VIEW - From remodeled k1tchen w1ndow. New
balh, wmdows, siding, watls, ceilmg, all good work. l ol
lronlageon Rt. 11n Aad1son. Tra1ler space being renled
Jusl one olthe n1cest remodeled 1n tasteolder ~om es on
lhe market. All lhis along with good locatiOn makes 11
well worth the $32,000 .
JUST liSTED ~ RT. 35 - The owners are anxious to
sell this spacious 4'bedroom bi·level at the corner of
Jerry ST and Rt. 35. You'll enjoy the attractiVe lam1ly
room, large dinmg room, w1le approved k1lchen fully
eQUipped. 2\1 baths, nat. gas heal. central air, 2car gar·
age and city water and sewer. One year Buyer Protec·
110n. $55,009.

141 European
capital
143 Observes

t45 Cloth

measure

146 Shadllke
fish
148 Vegetable

150 Handcuff
152 Setaceous

153 Pungent
154 Otherw~se
156 Squealed

on: sl.
157 Worms

t58 Wooden
vessels

159 Slender
160 Nu1sances

DOWN

28 E~ible
seeds
31 Vast ages
33 Ra•sed
36 Expired
38 Back ol

neck
40 Southwestem Indians
41 Tte
43 Arrow

45 Defaced
46 Painter

47 Body ol
water
49 Baker 's
products
51 uncanny
52 Merchant
53 W1necups
54 Uml of

Italian

,currency
56 Delights
59 Making
ready

1 Denude

60 Reward

ocher

storehouse
4 Soak

61 Asian oxen
63 Accurate
65 For tear that
67 Dutch town
69 Symbol tor
gold
10 Y1eld
72 Protecttve
Shteld
74 Roman

OVERlOOKING THE OHIO RIVER NEAR ADDISON AltractiVe 4 BR tn·level on Upper RIVer Road 1n Kyger
Creek School 0151ncl. S1luated on over 3acreslh1shome
1nctudes a fully equipped k1chen. lam1l! room, I \!
baths, c ar ~~ plus a 9\1% assumption. $53.000.

program
106 For 1nstance
107 Pair abbr

108 D1llseed
110 Large bard
111 Height·
abbr
11 2 Baker's
products
113 Exact
115 Cooled lava
117 MICrObe
119 Greek letter

120 Melody
121 Decide

5 Short jacket
6 Symbol for
calc1um
7 High

mountaan
8 Actual
9 Breastwork
10 M1htary

student
11 Poems
12 Foothke

part

drawers

79 Cry
83 F1sh eggs
85 Nonmetall •c

14 Separate

element

128 Raged

130 Formally
precise

chanot
20 Great Lake

SOMC8

gods
76 Compass
po1nt
77 Cash

13 Printer's
measure
15 Arabian
garment
16 Locate
17 Gir1's name
18 Ancient

124 Servant
128 Reveal
127 Church

YOU CAN TALK ABOUT FINE COUNTRY HOIIES .....and
then there is thisone. You don'llind homesin I he coun·
try like 11 for sale very often. It's built as good as an1
home and jut listen lo the features: 41argt bedrooms, 3
lull baths. eat·mkitchen with built·in BBY ..Iormal d1ning
room w1th cuslom·llld solid oak floors, living room w1lh
l11eplace. family room w1lh fireplace, overSized utility
room. Plu~ all closetss are cedar lined, wrap·arouna
deck with l sliding glass doos (one off masler bedroom),
16x36 ln·Rround pool, built in gun cases. and inlercom
system. T~e house is brick and lrame, well Insulated!
healed and cooled by heal pull)p and 311replaces. Buil
by owner. Houseand lot $112,000. House and 40 acres
$135.000. Well worth 11

140 lmpresston

27 Grownups

2 Seesaw
3 Arms

105 Food

MOBilE HOllE - 1.03 AC. '- Owners lransterred out
ollown. Th1s IS an attractiVe 2 bedroom 12x60 mobile
home w1lh a·detached garage• c9vered pallo and large
llal rard Wllh garden area . • 16,500. New listin g Don' w111
.

139 Urge on

23 Mound
25 R1ver in
Germany

to cat

104 Yellow

1S threeyears old and lealures 31arge bedrooms. 2spar·
klin g baths, a homey lam1ly room. largestone firepl ace.
a Iron! porch, and lots of good fresh air and country at·
mosphere II deserves your atten110n Priced $89.500

Located. 1n W1lkesvitl e. Pnced $28.000. Call Clyde
WJiker
.

99 VISIOnS
101 EnthuSiasm
103 Command

room. uWity and shop room Close toshoppmg, excellent
neighborhOod. Pnced to sell at $44,000

ranch ISsittmg on a QUiet knoll overlookm gth e bea ut1lul
countrys1de m Green township. ThiSoutstandmg home

UNIOUE HISTORIC OlDER HOllE - II you like space,
creafive workman ship such as mside wooden shutler~
etched glass over and each side of Iron! door, curveu
open lronl stalls, while marble fireplace, 8 rooms and
balh, ~arl1al basement. forced air furnace, 2 barns. 2 A

...

~ ~.~

. US ACRES VACAIIT LA Jill OFF RT. 35
. ,
~~~~ lind -' Beside akl U.s..III;Jway 35. In an sift that is de.·
l'lllolinR flst'Rt ~Slut dilance weslllf GelllpQIIs. Get KIIOw:
'
'
. 11544

69 Sea •n ASia
71

=Y· . .

•

·CI1~84 Ceo~ a1 Real Estate Cqrporltlon ~~--~drtllf NAF. ~and~~otc.ntW;zuie.li.W:t~.'~lltl~ u.s.~. EquaJ n01111118 ~111 ~ ,.

w/ prolessionallandscapmg surroundmg 1t

ProJectiOn

GEnJNG FINANCED IS NOT SUCH A BIG DEAL
- We have a really nice roomy three1bedroom
home w1th full basement and garage m the city
school d1stnct that I bet you ca n buy. Call us. we
w1ll help you own this house now. Includes wood·
burnmg fireplace, good neighborhood, hardwood
floors. and tust a mmute or lwo from lown.

5\1 ACRES. 14'x70' PATRIOT HOME
M usual* land, 3 bedrooms, IIIIth. stonn dooll and windows.
Nice, just 111e new.mddem lilchen with built~n calinels, ps
and relrigelator, nnl water sysl!m. Nice storage bui&lt;lnt a1 rtJi.
neral riglits Jl. Must see this set·up.
#601

.
HOME - 2 ACRES IN .THE COUNTRY
7 room house with 3 or possible 4 bedrooms, kitchen w~h buitt·in
cabinets. storm windows and doors. large building, appi'OII.
32'k60',1ocated on State Higllway. Call for your appointmerit now.
.
#364

MEIG~ COUNTY -

RINGLE' S SERVICE expo·
~anced roofing, Including
hot tor applicotlon, carpen·
ter, ellctriciln, meson. Call
304· 878· 2088 or 876 ·
41180.

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STE~MER . Weter ramovel.
fumlture ciHning, free Hti·
met11. 304-878·22911.

Nu-Prlme ropllcement
wl1
Storm windows &amp; d-•
Aluminum &amp; vinyl ·
siding
Howme1 Patio COYtrl
Hawmot scrHn rooms
Mobile home ownlngs
Aluminum utility

SEWING Machina repairs,
11n1ica. Authorized Binoer
Sales &amp; Servica Sherpen
Sciuoro . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 814 -992·2284.

SUNDAY -PUZZLER

#600

#45~

there's3BR. 2baths, very

formal d1nmg w1th bUilt-In

11517

Screened in lront pocth, 2 baths, 2 bed1110ms, 12'x60' mobile
home, setting on approx. II acre of land. Blli~4n cabinets, gas
range, rural water system, fuel til lotted air furnace. All ol this for
only $6.000.00.

64 ACRES - OWNER FINANCING to qualified
purchaser. Older 3 bedroom home. Barn. Tobacco
base. 2 gas wells. Aaaison 'Towns~lp.

Peoquole Electric Co. all
phe- of alectric work, all
work guarenteed. Aerl1l
truck rental. 814 ·448 ·
4088.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
ramoval . Cell 304 ·878 ·
1331 .

Wator Wells. Commercial
end Domestic. Tell holaa.
Pumps Saleo and Service.
304·896·3802 .

Refriger~tlon

IHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, Rt. 2 Neal Road.
Point Pleaunt, W.Yo. 304·
876-6420. Ucen11d and
Insured.

wart

'f• ACRE. 1969 MARRIOTT HOME

#465

&amp;

RON'S Televlalon llenricl.
BpecleHzlng in Zanlth and
Motorole , Queur, and
houM aalla. CeH 304·1178·
2388 or 814·448·24114.

Business
Services

Electrical

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 31111, Galli·
polis. Coli 814·367·01178.

Priced at $59,900. Phone now!

msee.

53 ACRES HOMESTEAD - located at the edge of
Gallia and Jackson counties. Acreage is almosl all
tillable. Older 4 bedroom country home. Barn. To·
bacco·base. Road lrontage. Take a look today.

84

HARD TO BEAT - This new listin&amp; of Q~tlity b~i.fl, mill!
conditioned, 5 room home plus SiliCIOUS ut1lity and
bath. 1car garage attached plus large concrete areo .lor
2nd car ~il&lt;ing and 20'x30' separate garage bUilding
plus8'xl1' storage area JOins. All thiS on la.rgelotlor Pfl'
vacy gardening.llowers and lawn. locate 1n Clly JUSI off
Eastern Avenue. Priced to sell al $39,900.

i
lull basemen! i ·
en111nce, wondertul kitchen that
mat enlrance hall. lormal dinine.
l1re·
place, 2 car &amp;araae plus much more!
really
lanljseaped. nice and provides ma11mu p11vacy while
still be&amp;ln within a mile ol downlown Don't let anyone
ea11ou to this one. Can today'
llti~N ••111n~ WILL NEYER I lOW THIS HOUSE AWAY
bnck ranch perched on a I 75

mo

. ATTEIITION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses? See the fenced.in pasture with 4 acres more or less
including a three bedroom home, just a few rnies 110m Gallipolis.
Excellent land for farming as welt as new home construction. large
bam plus two storage building5, pond stocked with calfish, bass
and bluegjlls, large concrel! drive: Call for a showing and be sur·
prised. .

NEW LISTING explains this 3 bedroom ranch. ·
ing and kitchen combined, bath;
car garage, maintenance free, nice
Priced in mid 30's.

Home
Improvement•

Plumbing

WE NEED LISTINGS

saver kitchen with eat·m bar, and
I roomwith slonelireplace There's atso
I basement and 2 car garage Pl US n~ce ,..

#598

LARGE VACANT LOT - Perry Township. County
water and electric available. level lot. Hard road.

MOVE IN QUICK - Immediate possession. 1038
Second Avenue. 2 bedrooms, living roQm, lormal
dining, bath, fireplace. Aluminum siding. Garage.
Nice lawn.

Appliance Sarvice all makas
&amp; modele rofrigortoro.
weah1r1, dryera. r•noea.
compactora. dlshw1aher1,
microwavaa. Heeling &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Matol Work.
Gallia Refrigeration Co .
814-448·4088 .

81

system. lias abcM

'*

COME TO THE COUNTRY and get away from it all.
3 bedroom ranch, I\! acres. Woodburner. Storage
bu1ldmg Only $21.500.

Dick Fuller Homo lmprova·
menta. Corpontry·Piumbing
and Elect~cal . Formerly D S.
F Contrectors. Call 448·
3313.

GENE'S DEE P STEAM ,
C ARP E T CLEAN ,
scotchguerd-water extrao·
tion. deoclorlura. FREE Htl·
metoa. Re11onabl1 ratos.
Gena Smith. 892·8308.

With sprin• time comes home buyers. It is
the best time of the year to buy a house.
NOW is the best time to put your house on
the market; before the sprin&amp; thaw floods
the market with other homes. Give us a call
- One of our professionally trained real·
tors will be glad to work with you. List your
house with Gallia County's Leader.

room,

IIIIth, and fWI blsemeni.
3 car praae. Good bonn approx.
30'x40' plus chii:tlen ""'-'appn~~. 12'x30'. Approx.IOacres lilall1d 20 aaes''paJ'Wih Ia pond. Beitulifullocation with ll
mile fnlnlaei! on IUektoJ) Stale

m5

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. Now inotolling rubber
roofo. 30 years axporience.
specializing in buNt up root.
Call 814·388·98117.

Home
Improvement•

&amp; Heating

Besides a wonderl ul v1ew -

30 A. Mil. QUALITY HOME I BARil
Top quality 9 room liiusl! with 7 rooms carpeted, 4 bedrooms,

SHINY &amp; CLEAN - This 3 bedroom ranch with
aluminum siding and bnck front is almost mainle·
nance lree. Large eat-in kitchen, living room,
bath. garage. Flat lawn fenced in back. Priced in
low 40s.
#519

PLASTERING • Naw end
repair commerclol and reoi·
dontiol. tree ellimatoo. Call
814·284· 1182.

81

I

:·.-..-:.c·.-.·, -

.
IN CITY
3 bedrooms, storm dooll anc! windows, 611l0m ranch style with no
upkeep, vinyl sidir~~ Nal gas furnace. Nice modem kitchen. Price
only $29.900.00.
'
#590

REMODELED OLDER HOME - Th1s 2 story home
is 80% remodeled. Approx. 3,000 sq. II. olliving
space with living room. dining room, 3 bedrooms,
full bath, hardwood floors. fuel oil furnace plus
Kmg wood and coal stove. Priced at $29,000.

'

: f, · 1rfr{11.Jrter :.

NEW LISTING - 40 ACRE FARM - Approx. 2
m1les lrom Rio Grande and approx. I mile from St.
Rt. 35. Modern 4 bedroom. 2 baths, recently re·
modeled home. Young fruit lrees, tobacco base.
Fenced. Rural water.
#533
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - This 3 bedroom
ranch style home is looking for a new owner. liv·
mg room, dining room, family room, kitchen, fur·
nace room. Forced air oil lurnace. also wood·
burner. Barn. tobacco base. 6 acres. $25,000.
#537

Jl

1- - - - - - - - -

Home '
lmprovemenu

IN REAL EST ATE
SALES IN GALLIA CO.

lUI ~ I1ICe
IQ!IIort DorCh. No UPkeeP.
Nice 11gB liont porch. ,., upkeep. Na lafee shade trees.
low taxes. Home you shoUd
check on.

own Wiler system (driled well).
Buck siDve healer, plus electric

#535

''

Housing

JUST LISTED - MINI FARM - 14 acres. New
buildings. Modern 7 room house. 1500 sq. 11.
large rooms. kitchen exceptional, all carpeted.
Bnck apron, vinyl siding. 2 new barns, running
water, approx. 1500 lb. tobacco base- basic
quota. 4 level productive acres. City schools.
#543

ASSUME LOAN - Very SPic:!Oui
home· 2 baths. attached 2 car garage. Over 1800
~· wrth additional 640 sq. II. to be finished.
N1ce carpet throughout. large level lawn. C1ty
school district.
8495

BURD En E CAMPERS:Tho 1-::-o--,-,..-----ell new 1984 Stream luxury 79 Motors Homea
motor homes con now bo
&amp; Campara
IHn on our lot. We h1ve the
29.32 &amp; 34 footars in stock
now. We alao offer for your BURD ET T E C AMP ER
camping plaaoure, tha quai· SALES &amp; SERVICE. U.S.
lty built Yellowstone travel Rt. 80. Coolville. Oh 814·
trailore &amp; mini-homos. Our 887-3388.
•took ~nitsara 22·32ft. long
&amp; include 28ft. mini motor 1974 Champ ion Motor
home. Plan now to let us Home. Exc. Cond. 448·
help with your Reeso hitch a. B288.
Clrefree awning &amp; duo
therm 1ir contltloner need1. ·
Si! rVtt:I! S

81

Wiseman Real Estate Agency;

rooms.

by 3211.2 car llf'lll83211. by

32 fl. a1 under one roof. 2acres
more or Ia 400 fllrtintllee by
21611..deep, .. il!ell*. "NeW
home n« COil1lllt*IY finished.
His a garden bath lub - its

SPRINGTIME SPECIAL- 24'x44' double wide. 7
years old. 3 bedrooms, bath, living room, family
room carpeted, fireplace. Rural water, septic sys·
tem. LP gas heat. central air. Shade trees. Near
Southwestern H1gh School. $27,000.

CHESHIRE - lg. level gar·
den spot. 3 bedroom ranch,
natural gas FA furnace. oak
floors and ntce kitchen. Ask·
ing $39,900.

In Glllilds. walk ID shop
dowllbtin, 6 rooms. 3 becl-

F_.

175 ACRE FARM - HARRISON TOWNSHIPPasture and hay farm. Suitable for cattle and
sheep. Some productive levelland, tobacco base,
over 2,000 small Christmas trees. Spring develop·
ment. 2 story, 3 bedroom house. Some remodele·
ing done. Good barn and other buildings. Call now!
#532

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 r. . 2nd St.

RUTLAND - One floor, 2
bedroom home. Bath. gas
heat and 2 lots near school.
Only $12.000.

towo~foryou:

uuoo.oo

1728 sq. ft. Jivq space plus 2
bltlrooms.
b1semen1 unfinsihed. Front pon:li 15 ft.

JUST LISTED -VINTON VILLAGE - 3 bedroom
Jrame home wi.th kitchen, living room, bath, 2
"'liCChes. mce s1ze lot. Priced to sell at $16.500.
#536
Bi·LEVEL HOME - Bnck and frame extenor wrth
3 bedrooms, nice kitchen, livmg room, family
room. I full and I half bath, 2 car attached gar·
age, I I! acre lawn. located Addison Township.
Pnced m the low 60s.
#505

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING Near
schools in Middleport, 3
bedrooms. I \! baths. new
kitchen, dining. level lot.
For $23.500.

11011£
AIID 2 M:RES

NEW HOME PLUS ACREAGE- Approx. I year old
brick and frame bi·level. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
car garage. Can be purchased with 4 acres dr 35
acres. 27x36 metal building. Within 9 miles ol
town. Take look today'

1979 Thunderbird town
Lendeu fully optioned, ex·
cellon! condition, $4,495.
Cell 446-0577.

REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE

IIICE COUIITI't

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E.r INC.

~utos for Sale

71

Burdette Camper Sales. US
Rt. 80, Coolvlllo. Ohio.
814·887·3386 .

II REAL ESTATE BUSINESS IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS

1179 Ford F-1110, 302
automatic, PS. PB, IIIINO,
good condition, •4.291.
Call 814-2411·9104.

446-6610

Seed Sweet potatoes. Coli
614·843-6332.

Camping
Equipment

r-------------·------------·
I

Corroot Croft &amp; Ski lu·
preme, temHy lkl balta.·
New • Ulld, Ptrklrlllul'fl,
WV 304-422·8433 or 304·
422·2317.

••••••

86 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Auto ~epalr

71

Boeta 1nd
Motore tor 81le

Ground eor corn $8.50 per
100. Bring own contolner.
304·875·3308. No Sundoy

Mixed Hoy, t1 .50 bole,
304·8711·6579.

78

Auto Parte

&amp; A'c;ceuorlea
'

Billy Lee'a Tires ond Bettery
solos. Naw ond u11d tires.
oloo, tire ropolrs. 1803 Jaf·
farson Ave. Point Pleount.
304-871·11401. ' Now open
24 hrs. a dey, machanio on
duty.

drtvt, U,OIO mMn. VtfY

The Sunday Tirnft.Sentinel Page 0.7

·Pomeroy- Midd!-port-Galllpolis, Ohio-Point Pleaeant, W. Va.

t p

78
Autoa for Sale

1877 Comoro looded 111711 Trona AM T·to:r,, ~
f2.000. 11178 Volkawegon she p ~
n 111 • C1 1
Robblt, e1 ,100. Coli 448· _4_48_·0
r _' 1_7_.r,_ _
' _•_
423o.
1881 Chevy Chavotta 4 dr.,
auto.. air, 13,1911. 1981 ·
Chavy Chovatto 2 dr., auto ..
13.198 . 1979 Chavy
Chevette 4 dr.. 4 spd., ·
$2,095 . 1980 Renault
LeCor 4 spd .. olr, full oun
roof. 82,496. 1979 Ply·
mouth Horizon 4 a pd ..
82,395. 1979 Buick Sky
Hewk auto air, AM·FM
$2,496. John's Auto
Buioville Rd. Gallipolis,
446-4782 Open til dark .

March 11 1911

86 W1feof

Zeus
87 Money
88 Landed
89 Parent
colloq

9 1 Send forth
92 Viper
93 Weaken by
exertion
94 Note of
scale
96Wet
97 Case for
small
BrtiC~

100 Latin
conjunction

....

102 Abound
105 Sand hill

109 Snare
112 Scorch
113 Trial
114 Mastakes
116 Emmets
118 Mud
120 Goals

121 Dismal
122 Sea sold1ers
123 Lampreys
125 Leads

126 Wind
instruments
127 Female
hor se
129 Judge
131 Forage
grass
132 Plague

133 Coffeehouse
134 Frutt cakes
136 Have on

..
'

one's

per son

138 Wanter
vehicles
140 Unmarned
woman
14 1 RecreatiOn
area
142 Part ot

..

..

window
frame
144 Break
suddenly

147 Sorrow
148 Equahty
149 Greek letter
15 1 Devoured
153 Symbol for

.'

tantalum

155 Pnnter 's

90 Stings

..

.'

MOBILE HOME - 2 bedroom Kinsley 14x70 w1lh 7x24
expando. All electric, 4x6 porch, 8xl6 melal buildrng. A·
1 cond. Call Clyde Walker.

...·•''
..,.
. .•

c,·C_,;:"

446·3796 .
446·7811 .
245·5~76

446·U40

~3.796

"

.'

�·Page
D-8-The Sun da y r·tmes-Sentine I
.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio--Point Pleatanl, W. Va:

March 111 1914

..----Ohio Briefs:.----. Cases ended, continued in .muni court sessions
Contract negotiations continue

GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis
Municipal Court Thursday, James
W. Batey, 40, Addison, was sentenced to three days in ]all for OWl
Batey was also fined
given a
60-day drtver's Ucense suspension
and 18 months proba tlon.
Debra L. Luzradder, 31, Point
Pleasant, entered a not guilty plea to
DWI, was placed on ~ recogniz·
ance bond and was continued for a
March 19 pretrtal.
Charged with assault, Wetzel
Klngery, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was placed
on ~ recognizance bond and his
case was continued untU March 15
for plea entry. Jimmy D. McGuire,
Galllpolls, charged with placing
earth on a publlc highway, entered
an innocent plea, was placed on $100
recognizance bond and continued
for a March 19 pretrtal.
John C. Stevens Jr., 21, l{t. 1,
Galllpolls, pleaded not guilty to
speeding and was scheduled for trtal
on March 22. Keith H. Pettie, 28,
Point Pleasant. pleaded no contest
to drtving under suspension and will
face sentencing March 23.
In other traffic cases, Jack J.
Kerwood Jr., 18, West Columbia,
W.Va., forfeited $40 bond for failure
to control; Barry D. Halstead, 22,
Leon, W.Va., was fined $12 for no
muffler; Byrd M. Leonard, 27, Point
Pleasant, forfeited $40 bond for no
operator'sllcense; MonaE.Hanlon,
28, Letart, W.Va .. forfelted$40bond
for failure to obey a traffic control
device.
Alta C. Stone, 49, Sandyville,
W.Va., forfeited $40 bond for failure
tostopforastopstgn; LeoJ.Hur~.

CLYDE -Almost nine months after the city agreed to recognize a
city workers' union. the two sides are still Oytng to reach a first
contract.
The negotiator for the workers, William Fogle of the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said this
week talks toward a pact may be only halfway finished.
Fogle said the state's new collective bargaining Jaw. provisions of
which take effect April!, will not affect the Clyde talks because the
two sides reached agreement on bargaining format last year.
The 32 employees represented by AFSCME unionized and asked
for council recognition last March. Council voted in June to recognize
the union .
"The first contract is always the hardest to negotiate." Fogle said.

s:m,

Tax bills distributed
PORT CLINTON - Ottawa County residents enjoying a break on
their property taxes will see the hiatus end next week when tax bills
go in the mall.
The bills, for the first half of 1983, should have been mailed by Jan.
1, but a sertes of computer malfunctions and programming errors
delayed their preparation. county Auditor James Snider said.

Court okays D WI law
TOLEDO - The Sixth Dlstrtct Ohio Court of Appeals has ruled
that the city of Oregon's drunk-driving law Is constitutional.
Oregon had modeled Its law after the state statute, which has
withstood numerous challenges in state appeals courts.
Under the Oregon ordinance, a person with a blood-alcohol level of
0.10 Is considered too intoxicated to drtve.
Defense attorney Jeffrey Goldstein contended the inability of the
average citizen to understand the ordinance without consulting
experts made the ordinance unconstitutional.
The appellate ruling Frtday upheld an Oregon Municipal Court
ruling against Denny Lemons, '!/. Lemons was arrested March 27,
1983. A test showed a blood-alcohol level of0.206percent, aCcording to
court records.

BGSU dorm fees stable
BOWLING GREEN - Trustees at Bowllng Green State
University have decllned to raise dormitory fees for the first time in
seven years.
·
The officials determined that enough of a surplus existed in school
accounts to make a requested $58 a year hike unnecessary.
But the trustees Frtday approved a $20 a year increase in board
rates, meaning the typical BowlingGreen student next fall will pay
$1,888 a year in combined loom and board. ·
University spokesman Cliff Boutelle said the figure Is the lowest of
any state-supported college or university In Ohio.

992-2174 .

25,Mlddl~rt,forfelted$40bondfor
f u

a ure to Isplay valid registration;
Roberta L. Smith Oller, 19, Middle- w.
port, forfeited $40 bond for failure to
obey
a trlitflc control device;
Do
nald Wrtght, 42, 450JerrySt., was
fined $13 for speeding; Jettrey W.
Mishler, 18, Fort Bragg, N.C., was
uo.
fined $54 for speeding.
'
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
GALLIPOLIS _ A prellmlnary
Gary Potter, 32, Charleston, W.Va., hearing has been setforMarchllin
$32; Roger L. Romage, 41, Patas- municipal court for a Cheshire man
kala, $41; Roger W. Wllson, 39, charged by the .GaWa County
Rl_lanoke, Va., $38; Rickey L. Sheriff's Department with theft.
Salley, 31, Fairborn, $39; Wllllam
Darrell L. Craycraft allegedly
Burnam, 44, Sprlngtfeld, $42; Mary stole money from Susan L. CrayJ . Essig, 25, Columbus, $39.
craft on Jan. 13, the sheriff's
Charles D. Carter, 91, Rt. 2, complaint said.
Patrtot, $40; Donna F. Thomas, 27,
In other. action, James C. Dennis,
Rt. 2, Vinton, UO: John B. Persian, 18, Rt. 2, Bidwell, pleaded guilty to a
24, Columbus, $39; James T. reduced charge of attempted esMeador, 47, Dunkirk, $41; Judy G. cape. A sentencing heating was
Hammond, 39, Matewan, W.Va., scheUuledforMarch21.
$40; Freelan Davis, 53. Wllllamson,
Also continued in court were a
W.Va., $43.
theft charge against R. David Bass
Arthur N. Pennington, 64, Win- Bldwell,tobeheardMarch16,whll~
chester, $39; Jon S. Terry, 40, DWI and drtvlng under suspension
Cincinnati, $38; Paul A. Lee, 24, charges against Mark M. Davis, l),
Wheelersburg, $43; Jacob L. Chap- Eureka Star Route, were continued .
foraMondaypretrtal.
man, 50, Hurrtcane, W.Va., $37;
Marsha L. Thacker, 19, l{t. 3,
Charles F. McComas, l{t. 1,
Gallipolis, $41; Herman R Coe, 48, ProctorvUle, forfeited $73 bond for
Martetta, $41.
open container. In traffic cases,
Robert G. Shirley, 58, Columbus, DarrenP.Bernard,18,Addlson,and
$38; Brtan L. Marcum, 18, Rt. 2, Ro~ K. Toscano, 21, Gallipolis,
Vinton, $41; Charles A. Thomas, 43, each forfeited $40 bond for left of
Columbus, $38; Ellen K. Luster, 19, center.
Jackson, $38; Darren L. Gahm, 18,
Cynthia A. Sexton 31 Rt 2
Rt: 3, Lucasville, $38; l{a)ph J . Bidwell, forlelted
~nd ·to~
Coleman,35,PatrtotStarl{oute,$39. assured clear distance. while !{an•
BryanA.Aiexander,Tulsa,Okla., dall C. Caldwell, 23, Eureka Star

I

uO

Route, forfeited $40 bond for no
registration.
Forfeiting bond for speedlngwt!f~!
Kenton L. Adkins, 46, Rt. 2,
Galllpolls,$38: Morris F. Blazer Jr.,
24, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $38; Michael A.
Sexton, 22,. Rt. 3, Chesapeake; $38;
Roland L. Helms, 47, Vinton, Va.,
$3!1; Hamel D. Yoder, 58, Welt
MUton, $39; Tina M. Allen, 18,
Syracuse, $41.
Karl L. Best, 46, Wllllamstown,
$41; Bradley L. Gould, 32, New
Haven, Ind., $41; David A. Warner,
36, Haskins, $41; James V. BroderIck, 32, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $42; James
B. Pettit, 33, Pomeroy, $44; Tom J.
Potgusser, 53, Leslie, Mich., $44.

Veterans Memorial

Admissions - Paul Justis, Ra·
cine; Charles Bissell, Long Bottom;
Gladys Davis, Dexter; Darin
Roush, Syracuse; Charles Dill,
Pomeroy; Gerald Bennett, Dex1er.
Discharges Ltdla Hyllell,
·Nicole Mount, Nelson 'I'hoolu,.
Thomas Weston, Michael Hubbard.

.,

aily

f
li

Vol.32, No.2U

t.pyrlfhtool 1914

1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme Drouarla

Need A Special Cake?
Call

VAUGHAN'S BAKERY

Middleport, 011.
We do cakes, pies, cookies, for
1ny occ1sion, birthdayt, annlwrsary, holid•Y,•· "Wtddinp M
Our Specilly. 'Wtddina CIU top1
·lnd novelty Clke lttiiiS Oft dil•
play.
PH. 992-8&amp;48

WASHINGI'ON- Democrats on the House Budget
will be putting the ftnlahlng touches on
lbelr own p!an that wJJ1 be pn!lt!llted to a meeting of
all Houle Deuoczata on Wednelday.
·
The election-year push tofashlcn a deftdt·reductlon
packqe of tax lncreaaes, mllltazy spending restraint
~ dornestlc spending cuts also wJJ1 continue this

biUion plan.
The Republican-controlled Senate Appropriations
Committee Is scheduled to conilder a bill on Tuesday
providing food rellet for Atrlca, and Sell. Robert
· Kasten, · R·Wis., wJJ1 propose tacking $93 million In
eruezge11cy military aid for El Salvildcr to the bill.
The Senate Is likely totakeupamajorrewritectthe
IJM!l1Uill!llt's commodity price support programs tor
the next two years.
The Interim changes
being sought by the
admlnlstratlon and a group of Fann Belt lawmakers
as a way to trtm election-year budget deficits and
appeue farmers who are dlssatlsfted with administration fann policy.
Meanwhile, a vote on Edwin Mee!ie ill's
nomination as attorney Rlf!lle!'BI cunes before the

are

llJ DONALD M.JWiiiiiii:RG

1981 Buick Skylark

-

'

.

Over 140 ·N·ew &amp; Used
Cars In StOck

•

.

&gt;

.'

'

-'I

~

r
I

.1 982 Pa.t sun Pickup

. .

5 speed trans., diesel engine;slfort paint, one owner, wtth only
24,000 miles.
·
· .
·

I -

-

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

Pie•••

Win would add new strength
to Glenn's campaign-Celeste
the House Democratic Caucus, and
much of the general session focused
on the $Dl bllllon deficit. Celeste
was critical of President t&gt;..eagan's
actions on the problem.
"When the president says 11\- the
governors, 'We must face basic
structural change ... but we cannot
do that untU after the election,' what
Is he saying? That the only way you
can deal with a $Dl bllllon deficit-

AP J'l Mral Writer
Four Deuocratlc presidential
canctldates foraged for votes In the
SOUth today after a debate In which
the new troot-runner, G;ey Hart,
W81 attacked as naive and .Inexperienced by rivals despel ate to blunt
hll drive tor the nomination.
Hart changed his schedule to
spend an extra day campalgJilng·ln
the SOUth, and a poll taken Sunday
showed him drawing even with
Walter Mondale In Georgia. Hart
canceled plans to fly to MaSSachu·
setts, wherepollssayhehasastroog
• lead going Into Tuesday's preslden·
Ual prtmaJy.

Senate Judiciary Committee this week, and even bll
most voctterous opponent concedes the Republican·
run panel -appears ready to approve PI i!lldeat
Reagan's choice.
Seri. Howard Metzenbawn, D Ohio, Is the Wlilte
House counselor's chief opp •)flit on the CUI'II1IIttel!.
The senator argues that Meeae Is notoftt for the &lt;tllcle,
chaigtng that the ptesldentlal adviser hal not beeD
completeb' candid wltll Congress~ the ileeitngs
and wJJ1 be unable to cut his long-time polltlcal ties to
the president .
The senator concedes that his probe has not Jllalie
much headway . among the members i1 the
Republican-run panel and the full chamber.
"With 55 Republlcans In the Senate, I llave to be a
realist," he ob!lerved.
The corruillttee, which delayed the vote on the
oomlnatton last week, wscheduled to take It up again
on 'Ilmsday.
Meanwhile, the full Senate wJJl spend the week
dellaling a p1 oposed constitutional ameodment to ·
permit organized prayer In the nation's scbools. The
chamber coold have Its llrst test vote on the p1 opoeed
amendment, but Sen. Lowell Weickez', P..-Coon., has
vowed to delay action on the measure for months If he ·

can.

Alabama.· Fiorlda and Georgia
also hold prtmarteson'I\tesday, and
they were where Mondale, John
Glenn and the P..ev. Jesse Jackson
were spending today.
George McGovern left the region
and flew to Massachusetts where he
hopes todowellenougb In Tuesday's
prlmaly to keep his candidacy alive.
Atter the' 00-mlnute debate Sun·
day sponsored by the League of
Women Voters In the Fox Theater In
Atlanta, Hart, Mondale, Glenn and
Jackson all said they were pleased.
Hart has won four straight
delegate contests entering "SUper
Tuesday." when nine states hold
primaries or caucuses. His winning

of cuts and taxes," Celeste said.
Several weeks ago, Celeste and
other governors met with Reagan
and other top administration ofll·
clals to discuss the budget.
"He (Reagan) wants to buy
polltlcal popularity with boiTowed
money," Celeste said. "He wants to
pay for ·tax cuts with boiTowed
money. ~t'swhathe'sdolng.And
that's wrong."
Rep. Glllls Long, 0-La., who
helped draft . the Democratic
agenda, said the blueprint ldenWles
three primary nattonal concerns: a
decUne 1n u.s:competltM!ness, an
escalation In the JIIICiear 8mis nice
and "towering" long·tl!lnl denctts.
Celes~ said almost eveiY Democratic governor IW : had to go
throogll the painfUl process of
budget decisions, With no ~·room to
wiggle onlt."
.
"I believe we have a practical ·
answer for those whb say that the
DIIICUIISIOI'i - Waltit Mtillillll!.
Democra'- c:an QIIIY 'tax and spend left, BACUTAGE
1111!1
Gill')'
Bart, eulddn forlbe Delnocratlc
- that We have made the kind rJ.
PI I hill, Iaiii ........1'! at .llle Fllx
declstoni tbat this admlnlstratlon Is 'l1lea&amp;re ID farAll8llla
.8llidllJ prior tq 1be debate
Nl\nlna away trun," Celeste said.

.-*•"'"'

councll met Saturday to
review a national agenda drafted by

streak beJan with an upset vlct&lt;a')'
In the New Hampshire primary and
continued through Maine, Vennont
and Wyoming. The Atlanta debate
was the first candidate forum since
the Colorado senator forged to the
front of the Democratic lleid.
In Atlanta, a poll takenrJ.350llkely
Georgia voters on Saturday and
Sunday showed Mondale with 35
percent and Hart with 34 percent;
with a margin rJ. error rateofpluscr
minus 5 percent, the result was a
virtual dead heat. Glenn had 13
percent and Jackson had 9 percent.
The poll was conducted by
Atlanta-based Darden Research
Corp for WXIA·TV In Atlanta.

liWIWialbe lYe Democnllc ~atee MDIIda'e II
pa&amp;urlllc wl&amp;h hlllluuld In 1roat or Han's race. ~AP
. . , !rphlto).

Meigs native· chosen as new wildlife chief

.

.See Bob ~rickleS, Harl~nd Wood, -Ji.mCOc.hran or ~reg Smith T9day!-·
_"Where se~fce ~Mal£e,&amp;tne· -

,•

alteraooa. Huckabay ud ~benoltlle Manllall
n.taidetlqBerd were peaiaolllleCW nNalllal
Balik at PalM
Manball wiD play Vllluo¥ia
Friday In the NCAA Tvunwnenl at MJiwad'ee,

The

•,

. ·

receft-e 111 autocnPh from Manllall Ualvenlty bead
bM'tdbd' coach ~k Huckabay, rllfll, Saturday

Ready .For ·oet.ivery!

,,

!f- ·

ofPDWI'Ie....aMayar ud lurmer blpllchool cap
c.dlllmmy .Joe Wedce, left, pill readJ to~ and

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Gov.
Richard Celeste says a presidential
primary victory for John Glenn on
"SUper Tuesday" would be sure to
Inject new strength and credlblllty
Into the Ohio senator's campaign.
Nine states, Including Georgia,
Alabama and F1orlda, are holding
prtmarles or caucuses Tuesday.
Glenn tared poorly in the Iowa
DemocratiC caucuses and the New
Hampshire primary.
"I think In order to be as stroog
8nd as credible as I'd !Ike to see him,
he really needs a primary win next
Tuesday," Celeste said Saturday
during a meeting of the Democratic
National Strategy Councll.
Asked whom he was prepared to
. support should Glenn withdraw
from the race, Cl!leste said: "I've
watched a lot of my friends who've
etepped out of a marriage, get right
· Into another marriage. It never Is a
· aooc~. 1aea. I think ru take some
time."

4 cyl., auto. trans., air, P.S., P.B. , silver with blue interior. auto.
SHARP wtth only 37,000 miles.

One local owner, 6 cyt, auto trans., well equipped with P.S., P.B.,
a1r:

..

.•Ano\her meeting between Plesldent Reagan and
.wr Republican II!IIBtors was expected as early as
today 81 they tJy to agree on an approximately $150

rrH

1979 Dodge .Aspen S.E.

I Section, 10 ...... 20 CAnll
A Mull'"*"- Inc. He u 1 p r

Canml~

8 toe

A
·
·
·
30 . nn.t versary Sale

One local owner, fully equipped with power seats,
&amp;
doors, white with beautiful burgundy interior. "EXTRA SHARP".

enttne

Democrats work
on budget plans

%

Pomeroy, OH.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 12, 1984

White Sale

•

See lllltol1ad Notee Oil Pap.

story 011 Pap 4 ·

AUl'OGBAPHSEEJCER-~Wedce.-

.

·Bald Knob
Community

Portsmouth ousted

· o~tR-

I

IMorJ, photo 011 P-ae 5

See chart, ~tory 011 Pap 4

icaRt believe ifs aginlle· Ginlle

USED CAR SALE

'

Girl Scout Week

NCAA tournament

~- -

Smith-Nelson Motors

500 E. Main St.

•••: J onathan 0 . TI!omas, 21, Point
Pleasant, $45; . Dixie L. Ollver, 39,
Leon, w·v a., $40; Adam H. Payne
Jr., 58, Rt. ~Thurman, $40; Richard
Hannab&amp;ss, 22, Moneta, va.,$38;
Verbon S.' Gidley, 38, Heflin, Ala.,
• .,.. J amesL.Lunsford,21,QakHW,
..,.;
$45; Ross E. Zahner, 33, l{ushylva·
nla,$39; MaxlneV.Tabor,75, Crown
City,

52, Galllpolls, forfeited $40 bond for
1mproper backing; DarreiJ.Drake,

COLUMBUS - Ueutenant Gov·
~ Myr!H. Shoeni8Icer, Director

of1!1e'OIIlO~tofNituril

·Retow't'ft, has -announced the
appollitmentof Max E. Duclcwu'th
of Akron 81 Chief ot the Dl~ rJ.
Wlldllfe, DI!CkWOrth. Wildlife Distztct Three Malll&amp;er since 1078,
repl8ciel Rlchar4 Francia effective

.

=

!!, aliln ~~auve Of

,

llela'

,.,.. career auployee

rJ.tlle~afW!Idllfe, wlthCM!i'
30 yeen of llf\'lee. He bepD hll
'

career with the Dlvtalon ot WUdUfe
In 19M, a~ the prne protec·

"Duclcwu'th hal a belanced vieW the 1!111 and wlldiUe bloloiiiJts must
of wtlcillfe 1118J1811!1111Cl. It II be much more a part of our
--lbn'tFallllltllehoolthat~.Alter eaeJitlalJbatwehaveleaden 111. decision-making process," he
comjJ'etbll lchoOI, lie Jmiled .the the Dlvtslon that reGeCta•a PI'QP8l' ltated. · - - - -. - · ·· ·
u.s. MariDe Corps and lleM!d 16 combination of acli!Dtlftc l'lllllll&amp;e- "In addition," Shoemaker stated,
moptbiiD Kane. it. rwcetved three ment, entorcement. educatlonllld
"It Is -~ that we work much
' brlimle lltiflwhlle 'II\ Korea.
·
reeearch. ·llld Mix •u.biCrlbn to · lllCft clolely with the Wildlife
"We ,ire wry pieelld to name that pbJ!pioplltY."' ~ llld. Cowlcll. Tllatbodylsti!IJIOIIIIbleby
Max Dlii*WIII'th M Ollef," llld
"[)uckwll't.lf II Comlnmed to tile
law for policy cl4'ecilon In ftlllllld
"He II well .._ ~t tile Work ot pme 11111 1!111 . wlldllle ~t , and they
r~lld llalii'Dide llld oulllde 116ttkc'll.l- eDd ~ ~~~~..,... rJ. have a 1111 rOle to ~ In that
til&amp; Dlipefft 1iaf Neturai Re1tJur.- tile
iiltbt nelkill .... II 1 vttal i-t,pnL We wllJIJe.wwiiiJi, Cllolei)L
ceallldiiii-UlalllldfMeUbt part of Wildlife · mens 16(1," will them u they exercise their
.....- 111!1 illw r&amp;pollllblllly.
Sboemlller added. ."'l'be won 'rJ. . z•poNtllllltlee."

Dlrecllai-·........_..

'-'t

· ented the Conservationist of the
Duckworth was assigned to the Year Award by the Stark
Akron area after completing train· Federation of Conservation Clubs
lng ~ u a law enforcement · for working-ln-the..fteld of wlldUte
agent. He wu promoted to Law
. manqement, fish management,
EiltorcementSupervlaoratDistrict .law enforcement and education. In
Four In Athens In 1964. He was . 1!B) he received the Conservationtranafened back to Dlltrlct Three Ist of the Year Award tmn the
In Akron to the Law Entorcement Game Reserve Association
Supervllor position In l9QI until he
wu promoted to Akron Wlldllfe leadership and work In the fteld rJ.
wll4llfe lfllll!l8ll!lllt, fish manaaeDlltrlct Three Manaaer In De- .ment..law enforcement arid educa·
cember, 19'18, the posltiOII he now tlon ID Dl8trlct Three.
holdl.
(Continued on page 6)
In ms. Duckworth wu pres-

Counv

far

v

~

' ,.l

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