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                  <text>Page-= 1G-The Daily Sentinel

Pamerof

Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 25, 1913

--Local briefs:------ -Oil leaders -continue e~ergency _sessions
.

Boat licenses available

PARIS (AP) - Oil rnlnlsters
ling Itself to another OPEC
from Venezuela, Mexico, Algeria
conference.
and Kuwait met here in the latest
OPEC meetings in Geneva last
series of emergency contacts
month and in Vienna In December
among major oU producers worried
falled to reach a unWed position on
about rooent price cuts by three
either pricing or·production quotas.
countries.
As the Paris meeting convened
The Saudis, repol1edly trying to
Thursday, Sauili Arabian OU Mints·
win OPEC support for a$4 reduction
ter Sheik Ahmed Zak! Yamant met
In the $34
barrel OPEC price,
in Riyadh with his Libyan counter·
might boycott a special session of
pal1, Kamel Hassan Maghur, in a
the cartel, informants In Riyadh
last-ditch effort to forge a unified oU
said. An OPEC meetiog is repon·
plice reduction within OPEC.
edly scheduled next week either In
But informed sources there said
Geneva or VIenna.
the Saudis were growing increasThe leading Saudi newspaper,
ingly skeptical of reaching a new on
Al-Rlyadh, said: " The current
price reduction acconl by all 13 . negotiations in Riyadh are the last
members of the Organization of
chance to save what can be saved"
Petroleum Exporting Countries.
forOPECandtheworldeconomy.It
For every $1 cut In the oil price,
added that the "first wave of
~the price of gasoline at the pump
recession" In a price war would
could drop as much as 2~ cents a
inundate all on ptoducers.
gallon.
·
Yamanl announced on Wednes"An OPEC meeting wtll be
day that Saudi Arabia, the United
necessary," Algerian Energy Min·
Arab Enilra tes, Qatar, Ku~¥alt,
Isler Belkacem Nabl told repol1ers
Iraq and Indonesia had agreed on a
here Thursday. "It Is Indispensable
uhtfled pricing strategy, but he
that a general consultation takes
revealed no figures.
place. We want all action concern·
Besides . Libya, the Saudis are .
lng prices and production to be
encountering reslstence from some
taken within OPEC as they have
of their Arab allies in the Perstan
been for 22 years."
Gulf, Iran, Nigeria and Ecuador.
Venezuelan OU Mlnlster HumCalderon Berti said he wt11 go to
berto Calderon Berti said the
Riyadh 'today to meet with gulf oU
once-powerful cal1el, which conproducers. Another Venezuelan
trolled the international market in
delegation will fly to Oslo for talks
the 1970s, was elq)E'rtencing ·a
with Norwegian officials following
cltffJcult period.
earlier meetings with the British, he
"It is a tt;St for our organization
said.
and we will have to prove that we
He said Mexico has indicated its
cap get out oftbeseproblems, which
wlllingness to confer with other
are shon-tenn problems," he said.
major oll producer5,inciudlng those
Calderon Berti said Venezuela
outside the cartel, and that Venezufavors a meeting of OPEC on
ela and Mexico also agree on the
ministers to discuss the current
Importance of bringing consumers
market situation but that It wants
into negotiations with producers to
"guarantees" that such a meeting
establish principles for "a longwill be sucCessful before cornmtt·
term relationship.''

The Ohio Department ol Natural Resources, Division of Water·
craft, annolinced today the 1!183 boat licenses were released and can
be obtained at the Davis-Qutckel Agency, U4 Court Street, Pomeroy, across from the courtho\L&lt;e, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . through the
week and 9 a.m. to noon ori Saturday.
Boat registrations now Include the motors and .are Issued for
three years only.
For further tnfonna tlon, call 992-6671.

a

Driver charged with DWI
The Ohio Highway Patrol cited Todd B. Grover,l7, Pomeroy, for
DWI and hitsldp in a one-vehicle accident Thursday night.
The patrol said Grover was apparently Westbound on Ohio 143,
eight-tenths of a mile west of0hlo7, at 7: 15p.m. when his vehicle ran
off the left s ide of the road and struck a mallbo'!'.
Grover was not injured in the inCident and his vehicle was slightly
damaged .
A deer ran· into the path of a vehicle driven by Arthur R. Jarvis, 33,
Pomeroy, at 6:40p.m . Thursday while Jarvis was northbound on
Ohio 684.
The collision caused slight damage to Jarvis' auto and the deer left
. the scene, the patrol reported.
The windshield on a vehicle driven by Everett McDaniel, 48, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, was shattered when the tires on the vehicle threw up a
stone, the patrol said. The accident occurred at 4:30p.m. Thursday
while McDaniel was northbound on 143, approximately two rn1leS
north of 7.

Eastern Boosters meet Monday
Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet Monday, Feb. 28, af 7:30p.m .
at the high school.

Meigs Boosters meet Tuesday
Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet Tuesday, March 1, at 7:30p.m.
at the high school.

Emergency runs .
Local units answered thfee calls Thursday and one on Friday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 4:51 a .m. Friday, the Pomeroy Unit took Louise Adams,
Mulberry Ave., to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Thursday runs
included 9:42a.m., Rutland Unit took Larry Darst, HarriSonville, to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 6:07p.m. tool( Roy Betzing to
. Veterans Memorial Hospital and at 8:14p.m., Mlddlepon took Leo
Searls, 463 S. FHth Ave., to Veterans Memorial.

I

Name omitted
The name of Bobby Moodispaugh was unintentionally omitted
from the honor roll "'!tat Rutland Elementary School.
from page
Ut ;l;t;es
~ ~ ~
... -(Continued
-----1)

sought compared to74.9 percent In
$128,03 followed by Cleveland at
Ohio.
$1.27.96.
"We ,stU! have mammoth cases
Lexington, Ky., was ninth at
pending," Spratley said. As of last $126.76 followed by Detroit, $126.16;
November, there were 12 cases
Cincinnati, $122.86; · indianapolis,
before the Public Utilities Commis·
$120.67; Fon Wayne, Ind., $116.77;
slon of Ohio seeking rate increases
Grand Rapids, Mich., $115.25;
of just over $1 billion.
Louisville, Ky., $1ll9.75.
Spratley cited the number ·or
Averagecostsforthe 14 cities was
cases, the ratemaking formula and
$128.88.
the quality of PUCO regulatiOn for
Two Ohio cities surveyed but not
boosting utility costs in Ohio.
in the listing due to population were
Consumers' Counsel staffers. Youngstown, with combined
ranked average utlllty costs in the 14
monthly costs of $131.92, and Canton
largest cttles In Ohio, Indiana,
with $117.34.
Kentucky, Michigan and PennsylSpratley's survey saldonlylndlavania. The survey of combined
napolis recorded a hlgber percennatural gas, electricity and basic .tage increase In utUlty costs last
telephone costs covered cities of at
year than most of Ohio's ·major
least 170,1XXl population.
cities.
The highest rates as of Dec. 31
Rates for average electrlclty,
were in Philadelphia, where avernatural gas and telephone consuage monthly utility bills cost
mers rose 31.7 percent In Indianapoconsumers $159.42.
lis during 1982. Akron residents
Toledo residents paid the secondrecorded a 31 percent Increase;
highest amount in the region and
Cohimbus 27.8 percent; Toll!do26.4
more than any city in Ohio percent; Cleveland 25.1 percent;
$144.~.
Clncinnati24.3percent; Dayton 21.4
Columbus was third at $136.86,
percent.
followed by Dayton at $134.()3.
Columbus consumers who use a
special small-use electlic rate were
fifthat$131.93whileAkronwassixth
with average rates of $131.92.
Spratley's comparison of com. blned monthly utility costs showed
Pittsburgh was seventh-highest at

Mrs. M: Rucker (Mary Jane) Neal
and Mrs. Carl H. (Verla Mae)
Myers, both of Cheshire, and Mrs. J .
Timothy (Betty Loul Evans of
Rodney; and five grandchildren
and six great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded In death by
a brother and four sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday in Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home, Middleport,
with Rev. WUliam Uber officiating.
Burial will be In Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call at the funeralhomefrom24and
7-9p.m. Saturday.
Pallbearers will he James R. •
Neal, David T. Evans, Jon T.
Rothgeb, Carl H. Myers, Robert D.
Huestis and Travis E . Burllle.

NancyPearleFultonRothgeb,86,
died at 6:30p.m. Thursday in Holzer
Medical Center followJng a lengthy
111ness.
Born Aug. 3, 1896, In Cheshire
Township, Gallla County, daughter
of the late Rev. Samuel and
Eltzabeth Shuler Fulton, she was a
1915 graduate of Cheshire
Academy, a 70-year member of
Cheshire Baptist Church and (aught
school for several years after
attending Rio Grande College.
She rri.arried the late Otto Thomas
Rothgeb on March 27, 19al.
Surviving. are three daughters,

Consumer ...
(Continued from page 1)
monthly decline. Piices for new
cars rose 0.1 percent while used car
prices were up 0.9 percent.
•
-Clothing prices rose 0.3 percent
after registering declines in tbe
previous two months.
-Entertainment expenses
climbed 0.5 percent after a 0.1
percent Increase in December.
All the changes are adjusted for

Velerans Memortal Hospital
Admitted--Jeffrey McKinney,
Pomeroy; RubyHalllday,Rutland;
Merle Davis, Rutland; Eltzabeth
Yost, Mlddlepon; WUllam Searls,
Middleport; Sally Holman,
Rutland.
Discharged-- Harry Swisher,
Mark Proffitt. Gilbert Maynard,
Stanley Watson, Cuha Uttle, Robert
Hyseli.

Melgs .C:Ounty's three local schoOl
districts received a total of
$441,949.57in February State SclllOI
Folll!.dation subsidy payments, ·
Amounts received by each district, following deductbns · tot re- •
tirement Includes, Eastern,
$98,509.17; Meigs Local, $239,992.52,
and Southern:, $103,447.88.
:tn addition, the county board r:l,
education received a direct allot·
ment of $19,181:26.

in business circles; HUD funds may be used

REGULAR PRICE
S26995
SALE PRICE

•

$21995
•Wall mounted or free stllnding verliatility.
!Easy to light with spark ignition pie~o system .
(no more matches)
•Variable heat in put from- 6600 to 16600 BTU.
•Convenient side mounted temperature control.
•Oxygen depletion sensor (ODS) for added safety margin . .
•Automath:; Safety Pilot for gas shut off if pilot light g049S
out .
·
•Quick, spot heat where needed .
•High•efficiency and clean burning .
•A~ractive styling with warm ' glow infrared burner.
•AGA certified on LPG .
•Meets federal standards for ODS equipped unvented-ges
heaters.
•Specifications :
Approximate Weight
30 lbs .

. '
CHECKING - Yvonne Scally, last week elected
presldeat of ihe Mldcllepori Chamber or Conunerce,
checlrll detallrl of a studY done hy Reiser and A-.
claies, Alhena, 011 .-vatlon ollhe Middleport bus!, _ oeci1on In conjuncilon wllh bnprovemenls she
and ber partner, Paul DaDey, are making at lhe uSde Bolel. A resource center bas beeo set up at
Middleport VJDace Ban wbm'llllll merchani!l and buslnes&amp; IM•tlcll"l ownero can check our !IIIII s# • for
lhelr locations made by the Helaer study.

s·~

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH

take on the educational-loaner seat progra_m sponsored by the Ohio Depa11ment of Highway Safety.
With the new child restraint law to go Into effect on March 7 , Norma
TorreS, R.N., of the Meigs County Health Depal1ment Is actively seeking
some group wUling to handle the project.
The car seats, suitable for Infants up to three months , would be
available for a nominal rental fee;a part of which would be returned when_
the seat is turned back Into the loan center.
ln many countieS, obstetric hospital units are handling the KISS project making it a pan of their information for new mothers . Meigs County's
Veterans Memorial Hospital has no obstetrlc department to handle the
role.
The responslblllty of the group taking on the project would be to
receive and store the stackable seats and to have a 10 minute educational
program for each recipient. This would include a safety demonstration on
the seat's use and showing a brief fUm, "Don't Risk Your Child's LHe."
A nominal fee, probably $10, would be collected by the ~ponsol1ng
agency, with half being refunded once the child has outgrown the seat and
it Is returned. According to Mrs. Torres the ideal situation would be for the
sponsoring group to use the rental fees to purchase car seats for older
chtldren. These could then be dlstrlbuted on the same loan basis.
The new chUd restraint law in Ohio requires all children under four
years old or weighing less than 40 pounds be protected by a safety restraint
system any tbne they ride In a parent's vehicle.
A driver wt11 be cited forviolatlngthe Jaw and subject to a $10flneand

Sends LCMt"

992-2039 or 992-5721

rI~==========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===========~

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC- JEEP

Men's and Boys' ShirtB, Jackets, Women's Wear,
Children's Clothing, Toddlel'l' Sizes, Lingerie and
Junior Size Clothing.

19.77 DODGE 1 TON

Auto., air, super o:ondltion.

1979 Ply. Horizon
TC·3

1978 Flreblrd

defog

SM~ll

Battery
~ IQQ~ter

-elf---

Cab, auto., 4 cyl., good
lshiiPt·

'3799
1977

llbric,
. or.-lo-O&lt;WOOCI.

,4

3'k&lt;MIIICOiubO. (817·2B21

TRUCKS

1978 Dat1un

Cables

· Spedal-lvetor-guklta

cassette.

~at1un

spd., 4 cyl, Tapper.

··1996
RAONE

1979 Pinto ·
Pony-Real HoSI

,. .
'.

4 spd., 4 cyl .. Ecenomy Plus!

I·'•

CHEAPIE$

1979 Camaro .Z-28

ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE MONTH OR
WAIIRANnl CAu JOHN SANG, Jill

STAR. SUPPLY

4 Door, auto. trans., Tu-fone
low miles . •
'

1976 Monza
Auto., air, lilt raised whit• letter
1974 Pinto
tires.
973 Maverlcfr
'6182
1978 Camaro Z-21 970 Le Saltre
975 GronMa
Auto., VI, sport wheels &amp; tires.
976 LTD 1/W I
'5365

APPROVED CJDU) SAFETY SEAT - Here Jason Hudson,
small son of Robert and AprU Hudson, irles out a saleiy seat. Seats like
ihls wtll be required lor all children under four years old or weighing
less ihan 40 pounds on March 7 when the new Ohio child restraint law
goes lnlo elfeci.

'

•

SPORTY CARS

tatned and are used with new carpeting and drapes.
The LaSalle has moved into six nights of entertainment at Its lounge every week and "easy to listen"
music Is being used Fridays and Saturdays at the
LaSalle Restaurant.
At the village hall, a resource center has been
established. Merchants and bulldlng owners can visit
the center and look over the suggestions made by the
Reiser finn on_their panlcularbulldlng. Employees
of the firm when the study was first released stressed
that perhaps the study would provide ideas for business people - a place to stan.
Meantime, the chamber of commerce Is destined
to become more active. The group wUI help other
area chambers In establishment of a central location
at the Ohio Chambers ol Commerce Legislative Convention to help sell the lrtlprovement of ROute 33 be· .
tween Meigs County and Columbus and a corridor ·
· road from Rock Springs to the Ravenswood Bridge.
Membership figures of the Middleport Chamber
have completely reversed. Not long ago, membership stood at 26. Today lfs 62. ·

Gallia officials to crack
down on bad check writers

$AVE

'3975

· Auto trans., air, AM-FM stereo

•4488ll

program.

1980 Chev•tte

Red, auto., air, white letter tires.

'5495

a mandatory court appearance.lt has been emphasized, however, the new
law is designed to encourage the use of safety seats rather than to punish
violators.
The only exception to the new law Involves transportation of a small
child under !He-threatening situations, or Ha child Is riding in a car owned
by someone other than his parents and Is between one and four protected
by a standard seat belt.
The Ohio Depal1ment of Highway Safety has also recommended that
drivers cited for violating the law be given the option of having his fine and
coun appearance waived by tbe purchase of a car seat before the court
date.
According to State Highway Safety Director Kenneth Cox, it is a
proven fact a properly used child restraint could prevent 70 percent of all
injuries and 90 percent of all traffic deaths among children under four
years old.
"This new Jaw Isn't Intended to punish anyone -it's designed to make
parents and other adults stop and think about the terrible chance Uiey're
, taking every time they let a child ride In a car without proper protection,''
Cox added .
He cited the success of Tennessee's law which went Into effect in 19'78
where ony two children riding In salety seats have been k1lled in traffic
accidents.
A local check of stores found the cost of approved safety restraint seats
ranging from about $30 to $90.
Through Project KISS a hundr~ Meigs County families could have
the use of an approved car seat for a fraction of that cost.
That is, l1 some organization will take on the educational-loaner seat

ECONOMY CARS

1979 Flreblrd

'4649
AM-FM, auto., sun roof, rear

Grease

SPORTY CARS

The plan is that buildings improved in accordance
with the study would be exempt from additional real
estate taxeS. That Is, l1 a $50,1XXltrnprovement were
made to a building, the amount of the Improvement
would not be added to the real estate tax s1ructure.
The mayor has also contacted lending Institutions to see what deals can be made on loans to business people wishing to !llake Improvements. Kim
Shields, loan and grant consultant for the village, Is
looking into mm funds to help with Improvements.
Things are looking up a bit In the business circles
of the community. A new television repair shop is
scheduled to open on the "T" as well as a fashion shop
for women In the former Stiffler Store location. Recently, Angle's Pizza embarked Into business.
At the LaSalle Hotel, owned and operated by Ms.
Scally and Paul Dalley, the lounge is being etilarged
and a formal registration area is being created. AI·
ready lawered celllngs have been removed from tbe
lobby to disclose the tin cetltngs of )iesteryear.
Renovation of the second floor of the hotel is
almost complete. Antique furnlsntngs have been re-

Group sought to handle 'Kids in Safe
Seats' project; Law effective ~arch 7

18\14'

PollllfOY

99'

By BOB HOEFUCH
'l'lme8-Sentinel SlaH
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport's business secton
may be taking on an "old" look that's "new" ,H the
opUmlsm of Middleport Chamber ol Commerce
President, Yvonne Scally, Is contagious.
'
. David Reiser and Associates, architects . .of
Athens, recently completed a study on the renovation
of the business district and photographs of recom'
mendatli:ms, a pai1 of the study, basically show the
business buildings as they were In days gone by.
The photographs indicate suggestions that modern store fronts added to businesses over the past few
;Years be removed. The projected Improvements
show tbe business section, while reflecting days gone
by, would be picturesque.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Is mcou,raglng
merchants and owners of business buildings wlook
over the study and get Ideas to put into use.
In fact, Mayor Hoffman has been authorized ID
organize a tax abatement committee Which wUl be
composed of several business people and off}c\a,ls.

•

'

27"

Overall Heights
Overall Width ·
Overall Depth

•

to help with
lmprovements tn Middleport
.

Flower Shop
'The Way .--ica

1980 Dodge
Omnl 0-24

. P!lgeC-2

Mayor Fred Hoffman ·says things looking up

Times-Sentinel Sial!
POMEROY - .Project. KISS - tliat's kids In safe seats -Is ready ID
provide Meigs County with 100car seats at no cost Hsome organization will

ECONOMY CARS

.Southern. cagers· advance lo district

·nnts
~-

-

Tll8

PageD-1

+

--- ........

COME IN FOR FREE DEMONSTRATION

$AVE

•
Oil pnces,
interest rates drop

Seek suggestions for village improvements

o·

OPEN
FRIDAY

. LeUer 011 Page A-2

10 Sections' 70
A Multimedia i

600~

FREE
PARKING

Why ·civil disobedi~nce?

0 ......

r;::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;;::==;====;!

SAV-E

Business .................. , ....... M
Cla88itled .. .......... : .......... D-3-7
Editorial ...................
A,-2
Locai ...................... ....... A-4-8
Stat&amp;-National , ............... , D-1-2
Sports •. ..•••...•••...••.....•.•• •C..l-7
TV guide ...................... Insert

School foundation
funds received

•Available for LP or Natural Gas

seasonal
variations.
ln all, the
Consumer Price Index
stood a,t 293.1 January, meaning
that goods costing $10 In 1967 would ·
have cost $29.311ast month.

FEBRUARY SAVINGS

-

Treasury Secretary Donald Regan said a 10 percent drop in world
· oU prices would reduce the U.S. oil
bill by more than. $10 btlllon and

Along the river ..... .......... B-1-8
Area deaths ••••••••••••.•.••••• ••• A-&amp;

ON WINTER CLOTHING

Hospital news ,

Weather
Strip
Cement

energy.''

Today's
Times-Sentinel

coul\1 increase the Gross National
Product by between one-quarter
and pne-halt percentage point. He
said a decline In oil prices "Is clearly
to be desired."

I

Area deaths

Nancy Fulton Rothgeb

Britain and Norway started the
latest round of puts by s~hlng$3off
their North Sea crude, lnakb:tg It
$.ll.50 a barrel. Nigeria, the only
OPEC member to break from the
organization's official pricing struc-'
ture, had .a $5.50 reduction to $30 abarrel.
The falltng price of oil gave
investors a new confidence and
stocks soared. In Washington,
President Reagan called the price
decline "more good news for the
world economy" and said It would
spur economic recovery and "free
vast amounts to real resourCes that
previ_ously had been devoted to

,,

...,

NEW POUCY -'- _Cwillrmel's payq bJ check Ill
dowl(!hwli 01111_,.... · lltorea C8ll aped lo be
~led u the dlei:k Is wrllten with 1118ufftcleai

+·wr

1• ted bJ ihe
2 r t21e policy 1re
DOW 1111 mciltldol'l!l, 8UCh 118 thls-!nMoum!ar'a,lnc,

fundi, aeoonUna io a policy
dQo en!lrftor'• olllce. c.rdll e•:'

I

I

By KEVIN KELLY
County, you can expect to be
Times-Sentinel St8ft
prosecuted.''
The first convictiOn on the charge
GALLIPOLIS - Because the
will be listed as petly theft, a
Incidence of .bad checks tn Gallla
misdemeanor, pun[&amp;hable by six
County "are coming through
thicker and thlcker,''in the words of
months In jail. A second conviction
City Solicitor Douglas Cowles,
becOmes a felony, with a jail tennof
autborsofsuchcheckscannoionger
~lx months to five years and ·a $2,500
expect tohavetheircasesdtsmlssed
fine.
l1 the check is paid.
, "That, people are.golng to have to
. The check must still be paid, but
look at carefully," Cowles noted.
an offender now makes an appear"People have to be warned not to get
ance In coun and lffound guUty, has
the first conviction. In the past,
a criminal record.
there seemed to be a very
Radical steps, some might think,
lalssez-fatre attitude towartl&gt;-bad
rut they are necessary to reduce the
checks."
number of insufficient funds ·
But tn order for this enforcement
charges going through local stores
to work, merchants must obtain
and courts. With the establishment
proper documentation when they
or this new policy, Cowles said
accept checks. This exiends to full
efforts are being coordinated with
names , driver's licenses, telephone
city pollee to Identity and stop
and Social Security numbers and
repeat offenders.
another piece of identification, such
"Previously, we filed charges and
as a credit card.
dldn 't follow through on conviction If
"My feeling Is, merchants have a
the check was PaJd," he explllined.
hard time In a small tQWD asking for
"If you write a had check in Gallia
identification, because it's like

they're saying, 'I don't trust you ,' "
Cowles said. "I told them, J'm
willing to take the heat for I his ...
Ohio code dictates that a check
that has not beet. Pa id withln10days
of notification leads to the presumption that the au thor never intended
to pay the check.
Randy Hays, presideni of the
Gallipolis Retail Merc,hants Association, agreed merchants must take
the initiative H they want to recover
money owed them.
Presently, . me rchants have a
system of inforrnlrig each other on
potential bad check customers,
particularly if one merchant has
already been stung, or if the case ·
has gone through coun and was
mentioned in the local media.
An idea merchants have been
considering - but ll')ay not implement - is ~ check-cashing card,
· slmUartothose-used by large retail
stores such asK-Mart, Hays said.
Ina store, a customer takes out an
(Continued on page A3)

�•

A Divisi11n tif
r"T"'L-LL--r" l

8~5

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ll l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

1614 1992·2156

16141 44&amp;-2342

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Contr\&gt;l l,•r

HOBART Wil SON JH.
F.X+.'('Uli\ · ~.-·

F.dilur

A M t:M HEK uf T ht· r\~su• · m tecl Pn·~s. In laud Oai h' l'n·ss Assuduliu n Hlld l ht• Amt&gt;ri n ul
N""" ~ PIIPN f'llhlistwrs As,.nd&lt;l liun.
·
LETTER.'!! Ut' IH'I NJUI' aN· \lot'k"mtd . l'h\'\' s hllllid bt• lt •s~ t han 300 wurds l m l~ . All
1\·twn art• ~ u hjt'l' l lu t•thti n,.: anti mus t hl' si.:i1cd ~~o ilh namt•, ad1l rt&gt;S~ ami ldt•phn nr
uumht'r . Nu un~i }! n •· ,) lrllt"rs ""i" bt· publisht·d. Ld h' rs shuuld bt· in )!tHKi lash·. addrt'SSillJ;:!
i~SU t'S, fl ll l iH' rSII IWiilit·~ .

It pays to start
early--very early

WASHINGTON - You can spin
Mr. Rublk's cube all night and not
find more conflicting sides than you
find In this troublesome business of
Congress, the courts and t)le
" squeal rule." Everybody· Is
wrong, and on the other hand, everybody Is right. Let us reason
together.
What has happened, In brief, Is
that In 1970 Congress added a sec·
tion known as Tlue X to the Public
Health Service Act. Under this provision, federal funds were provided
for public and non-profit private
"family planning projects." In
plain language, the funds were provided for birth control cllncls. In
1978. Title X was further amended
to provide specifically for services
to adolescents.
A Senate committee report explained why: Of an estimated 21
· mUllan persons between 15 and 19
years of age, 11 million wete
thought to have had seirual Inter-

Any guidebook to Democratic presidential politics for 1984 would have to
begin with one simple rule: it pays to start early, very early. And no matter
how early that Is. some other candidate almost certainly will have been
there sooner.
That' s why there are four declared candidates for the Democratic
pres idential nomination r ight now. staffed, hunting money and organizing
the primary states a full year In advance of the first competition for
delegates. The list soon will go to five, then, In aUprobability, to seven or
more.
Candidates have come sooner to past campaigns, but singly. The two
prtme examples were Sen. George McGovern In 1972, and former
: Pres ident .Jimmy Carter In 1976. Both were longshots, both won the
· nomination, and the architects of campaigns since then have looked tO
· profit by those examples.
Hence !he cavalry charge of Democrats for 1984, an early start that
comes despite - and, ironically, In some cases because of- the efforts of
reformers to compress the campaign calendar.
· The Democrats who are running, and have said so, are, In alphabetical
onder, former Florida Gov. Reubln Askew, California Sen. Alan Cranston,
Colorado Sen. Gary Hart, and former Vice President Walter F . Mondale.
Sen. John Glenn of Ohio w ill join them In a month or so. Sens. Ernest F.
Hollings of South Carolina and Dale Bumpers of Arkansas may, too.
The early entries have had their agents at work In Iowa for as long as six
months, preparing for a delegate contest that won't happen until a year
from Sunday. Most eve!)' New Hampshire Democrat with know-how, or a
maillng list, or access to either, already has signed up with one candidate
or another. That first presidential primary of the season Is scheduled on
March 6, 1984.
Two reform rules, hath Democratic, have contributed tp the rush.
One is the change In the primary election system to require proportional
representation In the distribution of delegates. It took partial effect in the
last campaign, and is fully in force for the next one. What that means Is
that losing prlmazy candidates won't be wasting their campaigo money In·
suites they otherwise might write off; a respectable showing will win at
least a few delegates. That makes it more attractive, and sensible, for a
candidate to run everywhere, instead of picking the most promising
targets for primary campaigning. And it takes longer to .organize a
campaign across the hoard than one that is targeted to specific contests.
The other, Ironically, was the Democrats' ett:ort to compress the
campaign by grouping the primaries In four months, beginning in March,
1984. The result was to push the primaries and caucuses closer together,
which means that the candidates
have little time next year to ·run In
one state and prepare for the next, capitalizing on victory or regrouping In
defeat. Nearly one-third of the delegates will beselecied In a period of less
than one month, right at the start of the competition.

wlll

"'~·' ...'.

U.s~

It needn't concern
I am writing this Jetter for the
purpose of explaining my feelings
tow'ard the situation with Chris
Zimmer.
I feel that we shottld allow Mr.
Zimmer to continue with his Job.
I al90feel, since Mr.Zinunerwas
on hls own time and this Incident
bad no bearing on the Head Start

us

Center: It really needn'tconcern us.
I do not feel that It woulll be
harmtul to our children to keep Mr.
Zimmer as director to the GaillaMelgs .Head Start PI'ogram.
Rosemary Lambert
Second Ave.
Gallipolis

'Zimmer shouldn't be fired' ,
I have ~ children In the Gallla
Head Start tar the past eight years.
I teel Chris zammer has done a fine
Job as directOr these past years and
hope he has a chana! to do so In the

'
future.
I feel Cltrts Zimmer
shouldn't be fired due to one mls·
take on his pari.
Roland L. Dovenbarger ·

wrongs?· The Issue presents a pain·
tu1 and poignant conflict between
theory and reality. In theory, sex
services."
education, Including education In
Pursuant to this 1~1 amend· contraceptives, ought to be a paren·
met:~t. the secretary of health and
tal responslbtllty. In theory, young
people ought to go as virgins to the
human services last month laid
down what has become known as
marriage bed. The realities are
"the squeal rule." The regulation SOmething else entirely. The re~l- ·
requires the federally fund.ed clln· ties Include unwanted pregrumcles,
lcs to' notify the parents of anyone venereal disease and botched Uves.
aged 17 or younger whenever presOne reason for the demonstrable
cription contraceptive drugs or depromiscuity; so Ills said, lies In the
vices have been (rOvided to the decline of family authority, The
minor.
1~1 amendment was Intended to
On Feb. 14, U.S. Dlsirtct Judge strengthen these traditional values.
Henry F . Werker In New York The secretary, In Imposing his rule,
ruled that the regulation was Inconreasoned that a 15-year-old gliJ
might decide to avoid or postpone
sistent with congressional Intent.
He ordered enforcement of the reg- sexual relations rather than have a
illation suspended. Judge Werker's
federal cllnlc report her visit to her
Injunction has put everything In
parents. In this fashion, It was suplimbo pending appeal. (Two other posed, the nwnber of teenage preg·
couliS have made slmllar rulings.) · nancles might be r~aid
.. Any
j,l'i
Where are the rights and
adverse consequences' f the rule
were merely "speculative."
To Judge Werker, that notion
11

said, dictates but one conclusion:
The regulation would not diminish,
but rather would Increase, adoles·
cent pregnancies. The secretary's
position, said the rourt, "Is nothing
more than an exercise In
sophistcy,"
It was strong larigUage. Such
terms as "fatuous" aremttennsof
Jurisprudence, bu! of editorial writ·
lng. We do not appo!Jit life-tenured
Judges to Impose their own notions
of "common sense," but to expound
the hiw - and a large body or Jaw
says that administrative rules, like
statutes, shottld not be voided with·
out compeillng reason.
Anyhow, that Is where the matter
stands. I'm sorry the !eds ever got
Into this area, bu.t gjven the facts
and the Jaw, I have to go along reluctantly witti Werker's Injunction,
despite his flamboyant language.
Bad as the situation Is, t)le squeal
rule wottld serve only · to make
things worse.

;

Dinner for

'Rita Lavelle, recently dis·
charged as head of hazardous
waste at EPA, has lun)ed over her
appointments calendar to congres·
slana! committees. Many entries
indicate Ms. Lavelle had lunches
and dinners with company officials
of chemical companies who were
under Investigation for dwnplng
toxic wastes.
According to EPA, Ms. Lavelle
may have ignored a long-standing
policy at EPA against meeting.
much less breaking bread, with potential defendailts In agency en·
forcement matters.
Reporters who checked the people Ilsied on the calendars were In·
formed. almost unanimously by
Ms. Lavelle's hosts, that no bus!·
ness concerning hazardous waste •
and their companies was
discussed .
. Most said thb dinners were only
held to "get acquainted With Ms.
Lavelle and to discuss chemical
matters In general."
Unless someone can come up
with other evidence, I believe them.
I prefer to believe a typical
dinner with a chemical executive
went something like this: .
"That's a vepo attractive outfit
, you have, Miss Lavelle. Is It polyester or orion?"
"Thank you. No, It happens to be
acetate."
"Your hair Is beautiful. What
kind of spray do you use?"
"I use a non·ael'0801 spray that
doesn't . contain chlorofluorocar·
bons. I'm very concerned the mix·
ture of nitrOBl!ll emissions and
carbon dioxide could produce a ca·
talytlc reacllon that might affect
· the awne. Shall we order? I'm
famished ."
"Of course. What Is your

slmllar agreement with Israel tn
1974 following the y om Kippur
War. It Is generally acknowledged
In the Pentagon that the 1974 agreement provided extremely valuable
Information .on Soviet weapons. .
Arenswastoodlplomatlctobling
up a partlcttlarly sore point: the deliberate misrepresentation by administration officials - Including
Weinberger himself- of the agreement's provisions.
Weinberger told a congressional
committee last week, for example,
that the United States wotUd be forbidden to share Information It
wottld get from Israel with Its
NATO allies. Unnamed adrnlnlstratlon off1ctals leaked the same
charge to favored reporters last
week to explain why Weinberger
was scrapping the agreement.
What Weinberger and the anonymous leakers evidently were ref·

Jack Anderson
erring to was a clause In the
memorandum that requires "sulta·
ble restrictions" on transfer of lnformation or equipment to ihird
parties.
The Department of Defense
"may sell and-or transfer any
newly developed or substantially
u .s.-modl!led equipment and tech·
nlcal data thereto, derived wholly
or In part from exploitation Uilder
the MoU (memorandum of under·
slandlnt). If fonnal alllarice arran·
gements already exist bet\reen the
u.s. and the recipient."
1f words have any meaning at all,
this clearly applies to our NATO
paliners, with whom ''!annal al·
llance arrangements" have exl$ted
for more than ll years. Yet Wetnberger has dellblirately created the
false impression that NATO Would
be cUt out of the deal, presunuibty
at Israeli lrlslstence.
.

WASHINGl'ON (AP) - Pres~
dent Reagan, sensing weakening
opposition, Is expected to a,sk
Congress soon to lift all price
controls on natural gas, aCcording
to an Energy Department source.
The source, whospokeoQ!yonthe
condition that he remain anonym·
ous, said Friday night that the
president could make the announce-

•
. ·•

pants In Title X programs to Include their famtlles In counseling
and Involve them In decisions ahout

was fatuous." Common sense, he

terms months to hammer out Pen·
tagon officials flow to Israel atleast
tWjc.e \O Inspect .some of the captU1i!d hardware and documents
that were to be Included In the
Information-sharing arrangement.
TheU.S. armedservlces-particularly the Air Force- were enthusiastlcally In favor of the agreement.
Finally, on Nov. 25, the memorandum was Initialed by the lsraelis and 'a Pentagon lnteillgence
expert, Andrew Marshall. It was
sent to Weinberger for approval. ·
But earlier this month, the de·
tense secretary rejected the agreement. Arens wanted to know why.
Weinberger coldly but politely
told the ambassador that there was
really no ·need for such an agreement. To the astonishment of thers
In the room, he went so far as to
suggest It had been a mistake for
the Nixon administration to sign a

.

_____, Reagan seeks end to gas price controls :·

2l.._ l.¥113"

James]. Kilpatrick

rejects Israel's info

Why civil disobedience?

Furthermore, If we MkliQWiedge
God's sovereignty, we will test the
behavior of lndivldu.als, corpora·
lions, and nations against God's
law of love. If they serve God, If
their function Is to express God's
Ipve, we will want to be In complete
cooperation with them. But It they
are not submitted to God's sover·
·etgnty, If they would kill for their
own sovereignty, then we must proclaim their tllegltlrruicy. It Is our
dutY to unmask whatever evil we
see.
Why civil disobedience? Because
nuclear weapons ;u-e so outrageously evil, so completely Intolerable, and so absolutely Inexcusable. ·
Why provoke arrest? Because people are still cooperating In the production of nuclear weapons; still
obediently paying taxes to purchase them, and are still quietly tolerating their exts!ence. Why rtsk
jail? Because I don't know of a bet·
ter way to call people's attention to
this, the most Important Issue of
our times.
Erny Davies
Langsville

~IV

THE OIL 1tJ®RE

WASHINGTON - On Feb. 15,
Defense Secretary Caspar Welnberger had an unpubllclzed meetlng with Israeli Ambassador Moshe
Arens, who had jWii been deslg·
nated to succeed Ariel Sharon as
defense minister.
The tone of the meeting was rordial. Weinberger was even jovial at
times; there was one of the persana! animosity that marred relatlons between Weinberger and
Sharon.
But the smiles faded when the
two men got down to cases. Welnberger was asked why he had personally rejected an agreemen\ that
wottld have allowed the United
States to share Invaluable military
OK to threaten to sacrlllce the Jives Information the Israelis had ac·
of hundreds of millions of innocent qulred during the Lebanon war.
The agreement, In the form of a
people to defend national sover"memorandum
of understanding,"
eignty? ls It OK to rtsk the destruc·
had
taken
U.S.
and
Israeli defe!l.se
lion of the entite"w.p;.it(to-defend
national sovereignty? Of course
oot!

•

·,.---Weather~.

iPage-A-2

•

Letters to the editor
Why civil disobedience? Why
provoke arrest? Why risk jail?
Ever since I was arrested Ash Wed·
nesday for trespass)ng at the
Atomic P!ani'I've•had ~d deal with
these questions. Well, I have an
answer. But fir st I'd like to ask one
more question. Why were we ar·
rested? Considering that we didn't
damage any property, or threaten
anyone's safety, or even get In
anyone's way - why were we
arrested?
The answer Is, of course, very
simple. The people who serve Goodyear Atomic (the management
level employees, the guards, tne
sheriff's deputies, etc.) are required to acknowledge and defend
that corporation's sovereignty over
those !acUities. It's what they're
hired to do. We challenged thatsoverelgoty and we had to be brought
Into submission to do it. Otherwise,
It wottld not be sovereignty.
Why ctvil disobedience• Why
provoke arrest? Why rtsk Jail?
That's also simple: To· proclaim
God's sovereignty. Isn't there a bet·
ter "'ay to do that? Not that I know
of. But, what· about property
rights• Doesn't evel)'body have the
right to control and defend their
own property? Perhaps, but there
are limits. For example, how far
can one nation go In protecting Its
sovereignty against' another? Is It

course. TweniY percent of the eight
mUllan 13- and 14-year-olds report·
edly were sexually active. Approxl·
rnately pne mUllon teenagers were
getting pregnant every year. In
1978, roughly 544,000 unmarried
women gave birth to children; of
these 240,000 were between 15 and .
19 years of age. Another9,400 were
under 15.
In 1~1 . when the 1978 act came
up for renewal, Congress further
amended the law: "To the extent
practical, entitles which receive
grants or contracts ... shall enrour·
age family participation on proJects assisied (under Title X) ." A
conference commlttee report con·
tatned this statement: "While fam·
lly Involvement Is not mandated, It
Is' Important that familles partie!·
pate .In the activities authorlzed by
this title as much as possible. It is
the Intent of the conferees that
grant~ will ericourage parl.lcl·

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3
'

Commentary and perspective
On the squeal rule

Pom-y-Middleport-Gollipelis, Ohio-Point Pl.a111nt, W. Va .

. February 27, 1983

Birth of the yellows

.......

~'iUde~i=:S"iiilii:itiarvT-

-

WI!:ATHER FORECAST- The National WealllerServlcefore-

casts showers for the West Coast for Suuday1 Feb. %7, c~glnJinto
rain for the western Rookies. Additional showers are predicted for
pans of Texas and snow Is forecast for Mlchlpn's upper penln•nta.
( AP Laserphoto ).

.

Ohio forecasts
Mostly sunny and warmer today. High in the 40s.

Extended forecast
Extended Ohio Forecast - Monday through Wednesday: Fair on
Monday. Chance of showers Tuesday and fair again Wednesday.
Highs In the upper 40s and 50s. Lows In the 30s Monday and Tuesday
mornings and mld·20s to low 00s Wednesday.

· DETROIT (AP)- In 1883alocal
· printer In Cheyenne, Wyo., ran out
of white paper, so he made use of a
supply of yeUow paper to print the
telephone directory.
But, ihe Idea of printing classified
advertising on yellow did not catch
on until 1906 when the first Yellow
Pages directory, featuring class!·
fled business advertising, was
Issued for Detroit by the Michigan
State Telephone Co.
Today, the term Yellow Pages
has become synonymous with
classified advertising not only
throughout the Bell System but
throughout the lndustiY. Detroit, by
the way, has the largest single
volume with 2,232 pages.

application and the store checks complicated prtJcess," he said.
with the customer's bank to "Most merchants, unless they know
determine if his or her checking the. person. don't take out-of-state
account Is in good standing. If not, checks wl!hout gaining Information
on the ~rson . "
the application Is rejected.
"We couldn't make a subjective · Juage James Bennett of Gallipoopinion on that because the assocla· lis Municipal Court said. "dozens of
lion Is nota store," Hays said. "lfwe the stlly things" have been flledwlth
set up a system. It would only be for his court. When cases now come
Information. But thEm who will keep before him. he said the offender's
the flies? Who will update It? It's too past hlstOIY will be examined, In
much of a bookkeeping headache. · addition to his or her wtlllngness to
repay.
It's not the answer."
For the possibility of an honest
Both merchants and officials
agree a regular problem with no mistake, the court Is considering
easy solution. is prosecuting bad afternoon sessions on checkbook
checks from out -of-state. If under balancing. but !3elmet} said nothing
• .· ' ·
s.m.the charge Is only a mlsclemea· Is definite. ,
"We're
not
allowing
the
defend·
nor and not subject to extradition.
ant
to
pay
the
costs,"
the
judge
said.
If It Is more than s:nl. Hays said
"An
appearance
must
be
made.
and
the case must be reflled as a civil
. every case will be examined on Its
action in common pleas court.
"lf you refile It as fraud, It'll cost merits."
you more. and It's a much more

Probe theft

~·

I&amp;~;~a· . ~z:;
.
·!
3
I Slzw 135, 110, 121 end D11c.
C-41 po em. ...._ 311 • :Ill ...-.
1 Umit 1 roll per coupon.

I

I
I
I
I

CoUpon must

~ny

Expires larch 31
Redeem II

'----

Tawney Jewelers

order.

M Exp.
31 eq,.

perdloc

1* ro1t

549
per

signed by many plpellne rompan les
after the rough wlnw- of 19'lG-T7.
Those agreements reQUire pa~­
ment for the gas whether lt 'susedoE
not, so pipelires keep on taking It
while dropping their cheaper suppll·
ers as demana has f~ during t~
recession.
·:
Another reason Is the !Witch 0(•.
many industrial CUSIOIIII!!" S to lu&lt;!l
oil. leaving the Iar~ fixed
distribution costs of pipelines an¢
local distriutlon companies to be
spread over a smaller customer
·
base.

OPTOME TRI ST-

POMEROY -The Meigs County
Sheriffs Department Is Investlga·
lion thl&gt; theft of a tire and wheel
taken from a vehicle at Ray Riggs
Car Lot, Chester. The theft was
reported to th(' sheriff's depariment
Saturday morning.

COLOR PRINT 11Exp.

duled for 1985. But older gas,
roughly half the nat.ion' s supply.
wassupposedto bekeptunder prtce
ceilings.
Even though there are a growing
number of shut-in wells and falling
prices on the spot market, ronsu·
mers have been faced with prtce
Increases of ~ percent to40 percent
this winter. ·Any administra tion
proposal Is expected to contain
measures aimed at easing the
bul'Qen on them .
One reason for the higher prices Is
SCH:alled " take-or-pay" contracts •

OR . GEORGE W. DAVIS

~------------------~
299 B 1

I
I

-''.(;allia... _ __:___~::.·:·_·'·_rc_·o..:it:...:fP::...u_ed_:_~_am_P.:.·ag~e-Al_)_ __

·ment as early as today.
Earlier this week, Reagan heard
a l'Eplri from Energy Secretary
Donald Hodel that concluded that
Congressional leaders probably
would go along with such a proposal.
Energy Depa rtment staf f
members worked late Wednesday
night putting the finishing touches
on a draft bill.
Reaga11 campaigned In 198!.on a
pledge to drop all price controls, but
the adminlstra tion has not tnQVed
before this because of opposition In
Congress. White House aides say
the president believes that opposl·
lion has softened.
Under a 1978 law, controls are
being removed In stages fr6m gas
discovered after April 1917, with
complete prtctng freedom sche-

~

2

WHEN YOU NEED

People who have two kinds of
vision problems can benefit
from bifocals. They're a lot less
trouble than having two Pair of
glasses.
In a bifocal lens, the top pari Is
used for viewing objects nearby
or at a distance, depending on
the correction needed. If you're
farsighted, it sharpens Images
seen far away. And tf you have
an astigmatism or double-focus
problem, It will bring things into
focus no matter how close or far
away.
The bottom part of a bifocal
lens Is for reading. This part of
the lens compensates for an In·
ability to use the near-focusing
msucles of the eye. This happens

- --

BIFOC~

to most people as they approach
middle age and bevond.
Until you tl)' them yoorself )OU
may think bifocals are difficult to
use. but most people SOOII ~t
used to them quickly and find ·
them more practical than hllvlng
two pair of glasses.
We usually look down when'
we read and look up to see ob- .
jects at a distance. Bifocals are '
designed with this In mind.

*******

,, ,:,,.. . l&lt; 'r• '" ' otl~f&gt; tt(• r
'r rm'

l1 lf '

11 1 ~11

o tfire ol

George w.Daxts. o.o.
453 Second i\ w .:j(iallipolis
Phone .h(,. ~

Rotorians briefed
on school
Bass said the paycheck received
MIDDLEPORT - Mark Bass,
director of the 169 County Board of
Mental Retardation, was guest
speaker at th e Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Friday night held
In Heath United Methodist Church.
Bass spoke on theeducational and
vocational programs that are being
conducted at Carleton School In
Syracuse.
sass noted It was important .to
make students In the program feel
they are productive. He said
students need . to be given an
Incentive.
Presently. the school has a
contract with R.C. Bottling Co. to
repair wooden crates. The students
and the school will be paid for work
done.

by the students Is an incentive. It Is

hoped that vocational training they
are presently receiving wW enable
them to secure employment In the
conununlty.
The school is presently attempt·
lng to obtain contracts from various
companies enabling students to
work and beCOme more productive.
111 other business. It was an·
nounced that Hank Cleland Is
presently 'taking orders for Ma·
rauder flags. A flag and pole sells for
$~. Those Interested In purchasing
a flag may rontact Cleland at
Cleland Realty .
Dinner was served by the ladies of
the church.

. NEXT, THE FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT IS GOING TO
. WITHHOLD TAXES FROM
YOUR SAVINGS INTEREST
AND DIVIDENDS....

•.

twoll:====;============A=rt=:=Buc=hwa=ld=
.

my jurisdiction."
pleasure? "
"How do you feel about love, Miss
" Perhaps some fish, providing It
Lavelle?
"
comes from an area that has not
"That ' s a . ,·ery per.so'nal
been polluted by methylene chloquestion."
ride or benzene."
"I didn't mean love, as In love. I
"Good, I'm sure we can find
something on the menu.·Hmmm. meant the Love Canal."
"Ugh. Do we have to talk about ·
the oysters sound very good."
Love
Canal while we're eating?"
''I don't eat oysters. They tend to
':
Forgive
me for bringing It up.
bloaccumulate PCB In their
I:.et's talk about the weather,"
tissues."
"I can't taik about the we,~ther. .
"How do oysters do that?"
"I can't discuss It any further. We We're doing a study on companies
have several cases pending against responsible .lor acid rain, and I'm'
PCB polluters that we're trying to not allo~NW to gtve away their trade
settle quietly."
' secrets:•
"Have you seen any good movies
"All light How about ·a Dover
·
lately?"
sole tram England?" ·
·
"I saw the 'China Syndrome,' but
"That wottld be nice. It's out of

since we're Involved wltb, ·nuclear
waste dumping, I'd rather not say if
I liked It or not."
"I can understand thaCA.ctually
the purpose of this dlnnllf Is jUst to
get to know you and become your
friend. How's your sole?"
"Delicious. We don't bilve too
many complalnll! about~- Our
biggest hazardous waste f."Pblems
have to do wllh-llileuqSh. ' ~
''Well, lt'a ~·~even·
'
1
'
.
lng, Miss Lavelle, and ~·re a deJight1ul dinner rompaniop."rd take
you to a disco, but I ·haVIi'lu! early
breakfast meeting tomoltow wtth
my 11!-WYI!rs about·our S1:4QplloW
Acid Pit problem."

"I know."

The recently passed tax bill will require us to withhold and _forward to the
Internal Revenue Service 10% of the interest you earn on depository accounts,
certificates and dividends. Jt will require unnecessary paperwork, and your
personallo~s of these funds during a critical time in our economy.

19" PORT ABLE _SUPER COLOR
REG. '399.95

NOW

A vigorous campaign to convince Cong;ess to ~peal ~s 1~ withholding
tax is urgently needed. '10 be successful, this campaign will requrre the help of

$279° 0

-,_

••
'

·MAGNAVOX 25" COLOR CONSOLE
. REG. '698° 0

NOW

each and every one of our valued customers. .
Our b~nk ~ong with financial institutions across the _Dnited ~tates, is
working to cha~ge the law. We feel.t~at it is un?ecess~, u~arr, and U!1JUSt: The
federal government is already receiVlng all the mfonnatwn It needs to curtail tax
cheating.
·
~ urge you to join our (!fforts by writing letters to your representative in
Congress and to the two senators from.this state. 'Thll the~ you want the 10%
withholding tax repealed, because it would impose an unfarr pen~ty on savers
like yourself.
For assi§tance in contacting your representative and senators please ask
any of our bankers. lf we all act now, Congress will_get a clear message from the
voters back home, and they will work to repeal this needless law.

'

'

.

'

'

(.)

..

$49800

Commercial &amp; Savings Bank
Ohio Valley Bank
The Central Trust Co.

''

..

�Pag-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel' .

Fellruary 27, 1913' _

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

Grant injunction against cable television firm:
GALLIPOLIS - A Charleston,
W.Va. cable television firm has
· been omered to cease construction
and service to Gallipolis Township
residents.
Judge Richard Roderick made
the ruling against Thompson Cablevision following a lengthy hearing in
Gallla County Common Pleas Court
Friday.
The decision apparently ends
legal haggling betWeen to\\'nship
trustees, Cablevlsion owner -Allen
Tliompson and Ralph Cash. his
partner, over what firm has th&lt;:'
right to service to township resi·
dents. Trustees . h~d granted· a
franchise to Cablentertainmenr. the
company now servicing Gallipolis.
In June 1982.
Roderick omered Cablevlsion to

stop f\lrther construction and to
remove all apparatus they have
erected within the township, This
includes removal of service to those
rustomers Cablevision has begun
servicing.
In its place, Roderick said
Cablentertalnrnent is to provide one
month of free service to those
customers until Cablentertainment
is able to fully sen1ce tlte township.
Thompson and . Cash have aiso
been onlered to pay Clerk of Courts
·Louise Burger any revenue paid to
them by those customers presently
being servi~. including the installation fee. Payment is to be done
\\ithln 10 days. Cablentertalnment
is to supply a written account of
costs incurred for service.
RoderiCk said this answers trus-

tees' request for"" Injunction, but
_ trustees rejected Thompson's
not their claim '·ur payment of service proposal and granted fran·
punitive and compensatory dam· chlses to the other two companies.
ages detailed In·a lawsuit filed Jan. Gallta Cablevlslon never acted upon
19. The matter has been conllnued its franchise, trustees said.
for another hearing, the jud,ge said.
Cablevision had obtained pole
Failure by Thompson and Cash to rights In prior to the hearing, and
complywithRoder!Ck'sonlersmay claimed it had the right to service
result In a fine of $500 per day, a customers due to a grandfather
contempt of court citation and a clause contained 1n a 19'79 Ohlo
possible jail sentence.
attorney general's opinion on cable
Trustees Gary Bane, Clyde companies. ·
Burnett and E&gt;avid McKenzie flled ' Trustees disagreed, and said
suit after warning Cablevislon to Cablevlsion's continued construe·
stop construction In the area, which tlon In the area prevented CableDwould have serviced residents te::tainrnent from fulfilling obllgaprirnarily in the Ohio 160-Bulavllle- lions of its 15-year contract with the
Porter Road section ofthe township. township: Trustees alleged this also
1n a May 1982 hearing with three
prevented the township !rom col- ·
cable.firms- Cablevislon, Cablenlectlng 3 percent of all revenues
tertainment and Gallia Cablevlsion

Agreement near
PriTSBURGH (.l li') -The chief
negotiator of the United Steelworkers union says a contract

agreement with seven major steelmakers could be reached on
Monday or Tuesday.
"There are Ingredients for a
se"lement there," Joseph Odorrich, USW vice president, said after
a breakfast meeting Friday with300
presidents of union locals.
But Odorcich reportedly told
USW local presidents later that
bargainers went. "nose-to-nose"
Friday over I he companies' desire
to eliminate cost-of-living pay.
The union leader assured the
grotip the USW wou ld not become
"the first major unlon to give up"

ID

cost-of-living pay, the Pittsburgh producers or steelmakers not
Post-Gazette reported In today's covered under the coonllnated
editions.
agreement.
Odorcich said a meeting Monday
Odorcich said more negotiations
of the Basic Steellndustry Confer- are needed before a setllement, and
ence (BSICi, made up of local implied some issues remain
presidents, "might end In a very · unresolved.
short time." He said the meeting, to
consider any tentative contract
Odorcich has been meeting
settlement, could last a day or two.
behind closed doors With J . Bruce
Both sides have been pushing for a Johnston, vice president at U.S.
settlement by March 1, a deadline Steel Corp., the nation's top proimposed by some major customers ducer. Odorcich is conducting
who say they must place steel
negotiations for USW President .
onlers next month. The current
Lloyd McBride, who recently undercontract expires In August.
went a pacemaker implant.
An early settlement could lessen
Debate over cost-of-living pay
the chances that steel buyers would
reportedly Is the biggest unresolved
take major .omers to foreign
issue.

Jiwe

clfy.

But a lab technician solved the
mystery afier recalling a 1979
medical report about a man who
suffered Parkinson-like symptoms
after injecting artificial heroin that
he had manufactured in an underground laboratory.
The man, a graduate stUdent,
kept meticulous notebooks abouthis ·
chemical formulas.
Langston· theorized that the
graduate· student, as well as the
person who made the substance
us.?d by the six in the San Jose area
last year, had mistakenly mixed a
chemical with properties similar to
artificial heroin put highly toxic.
He said the symptoms in the most
recent victims seem to be permanent and are being controlled with
strong'doses of Slnemet, a. medication used on Parkinson's victims.
Another four or five people took
Injections of the bad drug and
suffered partial effects, he said.

service

chlse to.
Green Township,
with a tower on Buck Ridge Road .
being erected to provide service tor .
potential customers In Green. ,
Ga llipolis and Springfield,
townships.

Parker said.
"Each week-long space project
costs approximately $70 million,
puttlng·thecost at$10mllllonaday.
If the crew of a space fligbtlsslck for ·
even haif a day; $5 mllllon Is lost."
For his "provocative motionsickness tests," Parker has a
graduate student sit In a spinning
&lt;;entrifuge, moving his head from
· side to side. to create the illusion of
rotation. 1n another, a graduate
student spins around rapidly and Is
suddenly stopped,whlle watching a
stationary l;CI'een.
Parker began this motion sickness project in 1973 for the National
.,
Aeronautics and Space Admlnlstra·
tlon. He's convinced that motion
sickness Is caused by sensory.
"•
confllcts between the Inner ear, the
· ; GALLIPOLIS - James Willi· skin and the eye.
·ams, chairman of the Gajllpolls
"Imagine being In the cabin of a•
&amp;ea Chamber of Commerce memTheshlpls
bership drive, has announcell · shipdurlngahugestorin.
bobbing 20 feet or more, yet your
selection of three coaches· for this
eyes are looking at something
'year's event.
' A klckotf breakfast will be held at
.8: ll a.m. Monday at the chamber
oftlee, 16 State St., for selection of
"·
'membership
prospect lists.
A. Mulllmedla New ;t~
• :Coaches are C.H. McKenzie, Bill
Publlshed each Sunday, 825 Third
Gray and Ike Wiseman, who will
Avenue. by the Oblo Valley Publishing
COmpany • Mu ltimedia, Inc. Second class
oi-ganlze their teams, divide prospostage paid at GaUipoUs, Ohlo 45631.
pl!cts among their players and
Entered as second class malllng matter
.\lY"rsee the campaign.
all'lmoeroy, Ohk&gt;, Pest Of!lce.
•The campaign will begin at 9:ll
Member: The Associated Press, lnland
a:m. Monday and contlnue to4p.m.
Dally Press Asooclatloo and tloe Amerl·
can Newspaper Publishers Assoctatlm,
·-March 7. Itwill be concluded with a
National Advertising Representative,
..tina! count at the chamber office,
Brariham, 1TI7 W~t Nt~ Mlle Road,
~d a championship tropby winner
Sullo :114, O.troll, Mlclolgan, 411r15.
:WW be annoui)Ced and awarded at
SUIISCRIPI'ION RATES
Ujat time.
By CArrier or Moolor Route
CJne Week ... ..... .. ..... .............. , .... $1 .00
• "It will require the commltment
0... Month .... ............................. $4.&lt;0
~altd support of each membership
One Year ... ......... ...................... $52.111
"c6mmmttee member and all of our
SINGLE OOPY ·
PRICE
!J9ard of directors to reach our goal
35 O.Ot.s
of 150 members for 1983," said
No subscrtptia'IS by mau permitted ln
Yillllam Eachus: c ha mb er
towns where homE' carrier service Is
:,ptesldent.
available.

LADIES
&amp;

MENS
PURE

Langston said the toxic substance
was on the streets during the
summer of 1982. Users would have
noticed a burning sensation during
injection.
Parkinson's disease kills a group
of neurons in a 2-lnch-long area at .
the base of the brain known as the
substantia nigra, which Is associated with motor coomlnation.

'

William B. Kughn

GRANO OLE OPRY
MAY 20-22
Call AAA today - Ask
about our 5% Early Bird
Discount In llfftlct until
Feb. 28th.

WILLIAMSBURG, VA.
JAMESTOWN/YORKTOWN
MAY 9-13
HOLlAND
TULIP TIME
MAY 15-18
(Holland, Mich.)

INDY 500
REDS BALLGAME
MAY 28·29
KENTUCKY TRAIPSIN'
JUNE 7-11
CALIFORNIA
COAST
JUNE 23-JULY 3
HISTORIC
PENNSYLVANIA
AUGUST 15·19
GAniNBURG, TENN.
SEPT. 19-23

l\lemhership drive

"m

2.-Btlie¥e: ''f?" God so JoYed the WOrk1 that he' gave his ooly begdtl!n Son, th•
~~~ lteliMIII " him shook! not perish, btl have everfasltng life" (Jno. 3:161: and
Bel- on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shafl be saved. and thy house" (Acts 16:31)
3.-llepent: "I tell you, Nar but e.~cept ye rtplltt, ye shal all iltewise perish"
13:31: "RePentance and remission of sifiS should be preached in h~ rwne among a1
nations, l!elinnmg at Jerusalem" (Ut 24:47); ard "But now ccrnmandeth 111 men ewr;
where to repent" (Acts 17:30).
.
4.-Confess: "Whosoever therefore sha! conflss ~before men tim wll confess
also before my Father wh~h ~ in heaven" (Mit 10:32):and"withthe ~eonfmion ·
made unto salvalim" (Rm. 10: 1q.
· 5
5.-llttptia: "Go ye therein. and teach all nations, blptizi" them in the 111me of
the Fattter, and of the Son, and of the Hdy Ghost'' (Mtt. 28: 19) ''He that beiMth llld ·
baptized shal be saved" (Mrlt 16:16); "Repent and be blpt~ every one or lOU in~
name of Jesuo; Christ I!If the remission of sins" (Ads 2:381; and "The ilte igure whenurm
even blpt1sm doth also now save us" 0 l'ell2il.

u

.• .

'j!J.~I 3t".U

lulnillo R..cl • P.O. BoalOI
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
!a..,nN;y MorfttnJ
Aibi•Jt..-vf :lll
W'Orltli•lt: •

stationary in the cahln," Parker
said. This puts the visual and inner
ear receptors lnconfllct,resultlngln
motion sickness.
"People have been trying to solve
the problem of motion sickness for a
couple hundred years or longer," he
said. It would be helpful just to find a
way to test for motion sickness, to
ellmlnate astronauts who are likely
to get sick In space.
Parkerhasbeenstudyingtheway
a subject Integrates Information
from the Inner ear, eyes and skin,
and compares !hose results to that
person's susceptibility to motion
sickness. He's found that the effects
of over-drinking closely resemble
motion sickness.
"Alcohol gets Into the Inner ear
and causes the same activity ·as
·what occurs when the receptors are
In confllct," he said.

:Marriage licenses

WE
PROUDLY
DISPLAY
THIS
EMBLEM

-·
'

Filing for marriage licenses In Gallla Count)!
: P,robate Court this past week were
~nald E. HudsOn, 2.3, Rlo Grande,
'Unemployed, and Robin R. Kralzen·
berg, 26, Rio Grande, assistant
K-Mart manager; and Stephen W.
'l'urner, 25, Rt. 2, Bidwell, furnace
oPet-ator, IIJ1d. Brenda K. Zinn, 18,
Rt 2, VInton, unemployed.·

Mon.·Thurs. 9 am til 9:30
Fri.·Sat. 9 am bl 10 pm
cuiSED SUNDAYS
GO TO CHURCH £VERY SUNDAY

Sat., Marel;! 5, _1 983
W• R•s•vt th' Right to Limit Ou•ntitiel

~i1iillii~~~~~

TAVERN
HAM
BONELESS. FUlLY COOKED

89

the Society and are

.PRE-SLICED
RINDLESS

re-examined annually to .
make sure we're up on the
latest developments.

The®,

SLAB

symbol in ou r

59

.!PaJ ~a.·t!N

-

~

MEMBER AMERICAN

~ GEM SOC IETY

·

S2~P.

WorlfliO •:•

...
.
.............
~

CHARMIN

" Mil .... , ....
Dtilly·WJIM

'FOLLOW THE LEADER

BANKRUPTCY /CHAPTER 13

Call for information

...
' ..

R.C. DIET RITE
R.C. 100
R.C. DECAFFEI
R.C. REG.

TOILET
TISSUE

.

.

11 :$t ii,M

49

'

Lee c. Mittman

. '

Pamela N. Maggied

•
' .'

Attomeys-At-l.aw
8 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH . .43215

'
'••.

:p

.

'' ''
''
••
•

''

•'

.

I ,.

' '
...
'

NEW '83
SHADOW

•

•

'

:.,~ll

I1 1

'I'

.'
.,.
'

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~E

Suaesfed

Retail for this
Bike is

$3,895.

•~ l

:,

. '

~ ~t

:.

Twin

PER SET

AHr VIew m6rror1 ar1 11andard equipment

'•

..

1
1
1
1

$100,000 F,D.I.C. Insurance
Check Writing·Privileges
Dally Interest Rate
No Wlthd~awal Penalty
$2500 Minimum Deposit

MA
HOUSE

SUGAR
5 LB.

BAG

49

COFFEE
3LB .
CAN

NEW '83 :
MAGNA

••

••

1

SHURFINE
PURE CANE

CUSTOM Y.TWIN FOR THE 80'S

Th.e Shadow· 750 combines the styling of a handmade
custom motorcycle with Honda's technological advancements, making It the hottest V·twin on the highway,
Combined wHh liquid-cooling, Hydraulic Valve Adluster
System and an offset dual pin crankshaft that eliminates
primary vibration, the Shadow~ is the custom motorcycle ·
of tomorrow.

I .'

$119 95

4 ROLL
PKG .

SHADOW" 750

':
''i

·I:·,

I,
Promises ~nfusiln, ~mics, lr.nuses .. you'll hear ~ al today ... what some inancial
.
i n - ate gcjng to do for jOU. But once again, Ollio Valey Bank,ll!e Tfi.Counly's
••
'
10novator of the best in total blmklng servK:e, is one step ahead. Easil'/ pn.ven when you
.
·=
check our IJ!rfoonaoce recr rd since we inlrllducal Daiy Investment I way ~k 1n
.•
.•
Augustl981, when many irstitlltions eill1er lldn1 koow w11a1 consu!lle! daily Interest
.
••
investment savini!S were (I' sim~ diln' care m!&amp; tlis customer. s!l'tQ.It, our . ,•
Daiy lnves1ment II MoneY 't1arl!et ~ntis not melh1ng new. Irs Sim~ soot!llung
·~
,•
be!Er. .
.
••,

'.

.

.
.·

$2795

IJ86 MAGNA"

NOTJUSTFAS't

.•

. '·,.
... ll
. -'f

Sugested Retail
Is $2995

~

~
.
II

11R1C15 DO NOT INCWDI DIAIBI PR., RIEIGHT OR lOCAl. TAXES

'. ,:1..

hio Valley Bank

'

.•
~

..

Four locatlona to aerve you better.
Member: FDIC

•

'

BETZ

•
I

'I

.:;:'

"

SALES

7

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•

Deposit
Plus

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•'•

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S3699

.

'

THE MONEY MARKET DEPOSIT ACCOUNT

'•

_..c.DCIA.,... • .....

1J Weeks ............. ... ..................$14 .0.
Ka180u-Oblo
52 Weeks .................................. $56.16
26Weeks ..................................$29.64
13 Weeks ...... ........ .. .................. $15.21

SuMayl!'f'etMftt

1-221-5379

.,

BACON

store is your assurance at
getting tine quality jewelry
and gbod Value .. ·.
because we truJy know
wt:lat we 're sel!lng.

One year .......... ·. ...... ................. $2(1..80
Stx months ................................ $10.40

"
b.ddeOhlo
52 WeekS .................................. $51.48
:IS Weeks .................................. SZl.:ll

STORE HOURS:

it means we are
knowledgeable, ethical
'jewelers ded icated to
consumer protection and
customer set'Vice. We had
to pass rigorous
e~&lt;aminations to enter

MAIL SIIBSCIIIFI10NS

Daly and Suodoy
MAIL SUBSORIPTIONS

FISHERMAN'S WHARF

BECAUSE

~Only

~ GA:LI:.IPOLIS-

Crocker National Bank In San meaning of the measurement.
The Fed said M1 fell to a
Francisco. "But It doesn't bring the
hoopla, cheers and moans It used to · seasonally adjusted $489.5 billion In
bring."
the week ended Feb. 16 from a
sUghtly
revised $491 billion the
Movements of Ml used to be
closely followed by analysts who previous week.
For ·the latest 13 weeks, M1
sought to anticipate Fed policy
shiftS. But the Fed has expressed averaged $481.4 billion, a 12.8
little Interest In M1 since last fall, percent seasonally adjusted annual
focusing instead on broader money rate of gain from the previous 13
·
supply measureS that are reported weeks.
The
Fe&lt;j
has
said
it
would
like
M1
monthly and on changes In ecogrowth to be held between 4 percent
nomic IndicatorS.
1n the past, a sharp rise In M1 and 8 percent in 1983.
would increase fears the Fed would
take steps to drive Interest rates r-;::=::::::::::::==============::::;~
higher to clamp down on Inflationary expansion of the money supply.
A big drop In M1 would raise hopes
the Fed would be more accommod·
BAIT AND TACKLE
alive, letting rates drop to avoid
choking off economic activity.
Nice Selection of Live Bait:
M1 Includes cash in circulation
Night Crawlers
Bass Minnows
TACKLE
and deposits in checking-type
Ambassador, Shimino
Meal Worms
Crappie Shiners
accounts at banking Institutions.
Diawa, Shakespere
Wax Worms
' Arkansas Shiners
The creation of new money-market
'Mud Eels
'Spring Liza rds
Bagley, Bomber. Finw iok
accounts ai banks has resulted in
the flow of billlons of dollars In and
'Seasonal Bait- not available at all times .
out of Ml, and the Fed has said this
·
4 mi. N. of H,olzer M.C .. old Rt. 160 at Evergreen
churning of cash has distorted the

lEAN, NO WASTE

to camera.

., I

AMES, Iowa (AP) exploration scientist here used his
knowledge of the planet Mars to find
out how to keep snow from drifting .,
onto Iowa highways.
. •.
Iowa State University Professor . .
J .D. Iverson, an authority on snow, ,
dust and.sand movement on Mars, ·
concluded that carefully arranged ·
vegetation barriers would provicte . '.
good snowdrift control at highway · ,
bridge overpasses.
The Iowa transportation department funded Iverson's work on the '
basis of reports that surface ,
conditions on Mars resemble Iow~ ·
in winter.
.. ,

r-;::::::::::::::::::::::;11

Th£' Sunday Times-Sentinel wtll not be
responsible for advance payments madfo

•

••

D/ 'jjl..iJ

'jj"-'j

following the 'late afternoon report,
a move analysts attributed to
disappointment among traders that
the Fed did not lower Its dlscbunt
rate.
"Mlisn't Ignored," said Thomas
Thomson, chief economist at

'

. (For Free Bible CorrespollG;;nce Course Write ...)

THANKSGIVING
GATLINBURG
NOV. 24-27

THE NEW FEDERAL LAW PROVIDES
ANSWERS.

·

"0" Preceeding "evir' ~the E~sh word "devil" lhlt ~ deril'!l from ttte
Greek and~ applied only _to Satan. Satan, being 'evH," induced man Ill sin in the l!elinni~
(~lt31. and cooti~~ his dece~e work kt prnmole "evil"lllday (qlh. 4:7; 6:11). The ·
1nrectious diSeaSe stn ushered dettth iniD the world, botl1 sllirilual and physical. Ewr;
accountable person com1111ts SIO, and 1n d11ng so, "is of lite deYI" (I Jnn 3:8). Since ewr;
accountab~ person sins "all have sinned, aoo come short of ti'e gtwy of IJ)d" (Rm. 323).
The soul5 dead _1n trespasses in sin" (Eph. 2:1), and separH!d from God Osa. 59.2). Tfe
need of everyone ~ ~vation from the deadly disettse sin.lt ~ impossible fof man mdevise
his own planof salvation (remedy) for sin, ori_YI'd can do thai, 'Willt 011n this (salvatitnj
1s lmJXIS'Ible: but with God all ttungs ~ncludng salvaliln) are possible; (Mit l!l26). We
mL!il tum to Je~ tl'e great Physician~ by GOO, who ~t;r; come "t) seeltand save 11111
wh~h .was IQSI' Ilk l!UOI. We must accept H~ divine prescription that will resne,
qu1cken Of make our dead, sinful sou~ separated 1rom God aive!
Quicks
Teac~ who teach that "lite oolyone way to prepare iorlife,delttt,andjudgmeotis
~ ~· and ~uole Acts 16:31 and John 116 so as Ill confirm thai doctrine are
quacks, that IS, Talse teachet&gt;" actin&amp; witlto!l wisdom and knowfedae of God The
lacking lite divine wi~crn and knowledge, lalte only one ingredient out of the hettven~
prescnption, ttinking rt will suffice. Any tb:b wht removes one ingre&lt;ient fntm other
essential 1nplents, acts unwisely and unirllilgentiyl The "quacll" Of "false lalcher"
dang the same, ads unwisely and uninleligently! There ~nocuratiw power in"flitfl ooly"
nor any other ooe ingredient when t stands 'alone!"
The lliYine P We IIMJst respect each of the fnh~g il&amp;redients that the ~• Physician has
prescnbed:
. .1. -~r. ''Th~ ~ my betoi'OO Son, in whom I am wei pleased: hNr ye him" (Mtt
17.51, aoo 'So then fatlh mmelli by hlari,., and hllrinc by the word ot God"
10: 17).

NEW ENGlAND
OCTOBER 10-20 .

FINANCIAL QUESTIONS?

b(!rely causing a stir In financial
markets.

• OXFORD, Ohio (API - An
astronaut Isn't much help to his
crew 11 he's sick, so Miami
p n!verslty psychologist Donald
Parker Is tiylng to learn how to
counteract motion sickness In
space.
Parkl!r, a space researcherror20
¥ears, says keeping astronauts well
would ·make space exploration
tnore productlv~. since healthy
l!l;tronauts have more time to
complete their tasks.
..
• ''1lletundamentalproblemwe're ·
dealing with is that half the
ajltronauts who are In space for an
·~tended period of time get sick,"

QUACK - QUACKERY
Music City USA
APRIL 20-24
GRAND OLE OPilY
and
LORETTA LYNN'S RANCH
SEPT. 24-0CT. 2

tor U.S. Interest rates, now are

Its measure of tundls readily
available tor spending, tell $1.5
billion In mid·February, a development that would have nudged
Interest rates lower In the not-sodistant past.
I
,
But Interest rates, whlch .feU
throughout the day, inched up

Scientist ·counteracts ·space illness

In Gollipoli• for 1 day only, Monday, FeiHuary 21.
Call Mr. L. Danl at th• Halidoy 'lnn, Tel, 446-0090:

A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

NASHVILLE

NEW YORK (AP) -Theweekly
Federal Reserve Board money·
suwly reports, once a drMngforce

:;
.
,.
A spacr•

Martian solution

Fed's money-supply reports lose rating stature
TheFedreportedFr!daythatM1,

•

Heroin new key to treatment
By LORE'I'l'~ NOFFSINGER
Associated Press Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. (API - 1n an
Jronlc development offering hope
for victims of Parkinson's disease.
doctors say an artlficial heroin that
left six users without motor coomination may provide new clues to
treating the neurological disomer.
· Dr. J . William Langston, an
assistant neurology professor at
Stanfonl Universlt)l, said Friday
that a "tragic" concoction that
pl'pduced Parkinson-like symptoms last year in six drug usersmay
to be "one of the greater
lronJes in recent medical history.''
The six su!fered symptoms
"almost Identical" to Parkinson's
disease. The case Initially baffled
doctors, sald Langston, who also
heads the Neurology Department at
the Santa Clara Valley Medical
Center in this central California

earned byCablentertalnmenttrom.
service it provided.
Over the period, trustees said this
Would amount to approximately
$54,00!.
Thompson presently has a fran-

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S ·

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

Fel!rua.y 27, 1983

•

I

99

�Pag-A-0-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hospitals unready for veteran care ,

Area deaths
brle! Ulness.
. Born In Rutland, daughter of the
late John and Mary Winn Carr, she
wa.s also preceded in death by six
brothers and one sister, She was a
member of the Richland United
Methodist Church, Athens.
Surviving are her husband
Clarence B. Cash; a son, Claren~
Ivan of Athens; twodaughters,Mrs.
Victor (Camille) Stanson of Athens,
and Mrs. Henry (Betty ) Wiseman of
Chillicothe; 11 grandchildren and 19
great-grandchildren.
- Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday In Hughes Funeral
Home, Athens, with Rev. Ken
Macklin offlcitating. Burial will be
in Athens County Memory Gardens
Friends may call at the funeral
homefrom3-6p.m. today.

Waldo J. Bartels
RACINE. Wis. - Rev. Waldo J.
Bartels died Feb. 23 at the home of
his daugbter, Mrs. Shirley Ross.
Racine, Wis., where he made his
home the past several years.
He was the grandson of the Ia te
Jacob and · Margretha Magg of
Ml~ersville. He was also preceded
m death by his wife, Mabel and by a
daughter, Miriain.
He pastored Trinity Church in
Pomeroy from 1955 until 1962.
Surviving are two daughters.
Mrs. Shirley Ross and Mrs. Mabel
Bowman: six grandchildren and
several grea t grandchildren.
Funera l services were held
Friday.

LAwrence Beegle
Allen D. Hale
RACINE- Lawrence Beegle, 83.
Charleston, W.Va., formerly of the
VINTON - Allen Douglas Hale
Racine area, died Saturday morn:
Jr.,
40, 2ll N. Illinois St .. Wellston,
ing at the homeofhisdaughter, Mrs.
died Friday ni~ht in University
Norman Roush, in Charleston.
He was a retired school bus driver Hospital, Columbus.
Born Feb. 16,1943, In War, W.Va.,
and mechanic with Southern Local
son
of the late Allen D. Hale Sr. and
School District and a retired Meigs
Rasia
Lee Harmon Hale, who
County Highway Department
survives
In Gallipolis, he was a
employee.
·
self-employed
truck driver, at·
· Funeral arrangements will be
tended
North
Gallia
High School
announced later by Ewing Funeral
· and was a member of the Church o(
Home.
Christ of Latter Day Saints, 'Ainia.
Ga.
Virginia Burt
He married Hazel Daigle, who
survives,
in August 1981
CHESHIRE - Word has been
Also
surviving
are two sons, Allen
received by Mr. and Mrs. John
D.
III
of
Wellston
and Carl of
Waugh of the death of a niece,
Springfield;
a
daughter,
April
Virginia Burt of Arizona.
BorninGalliaCounty,sh·ewasthe , Denise Hale of Wellston: three
daughter of the late Emmett and stepchildren, Alex Wilson, Russell
Wilson and Rhonda Wilson, all of
Rachel Waugh Fraley.
Surviving is her hu.sband, Carl Wellston; a brother, Earl of
Burt: four children. several grand· Wellston; and three sisters, Mrs.
children, four si•ters and two George IBetty 1Twyman of Ewingbrothers, in addition to relatives in ton, Mrs. Bill (Billie Jol Brown of
Blanchester. and Mrs·. Paul (BohGallia County.
bie
Jay ) Daniels of Gallipolis.
Funeral services and burial were
Fumeral
services will be held atll
held in Mortroe, Mich., where she
a.m.
Tuesday
in McCoy-Moore
had once lived.
Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial will
be in Mount Carmel Cemetery.
Belva M. Campbell
Friends may call at the funeral
GALLJPOLIS- Unintentionally home from 2-4·and 7·9 p.m. Friday.
omitted from the Belva M. Waugh
Campbell obituary appearing in
Marion Lowks
Friday's Gallipoiis Daily Tribune
: were two children who preceded in
GALLJPOLIS - Private gravedeath: a son, Herman Lee Campside services were held Saturday in
bell. and a daughter, LI Uian
Cadmus for Marion Lowks, 67, who
Campbell Roush.
·
died Feb. 21 in Mourn! Carmel
Also preceding in death were
Medical Center, Columbus.
three brothers. two sisters· and six
He was the son of the late Marlon
grandchildren.
and Jessie Lowks, formerly of
The Tribune regrets the Gallia Coun!y,and anephewofMrs.
omissions.
Stanley Folden. A World War II
.
Army veteran, hewasaBronzeStar
Gertrude N. Cash
recelplent.
Surviving are his wife, Ruth P.
ATHENS- Gertrude Nora Cash
Lowks; a brother, Maurice; and
88, 510 Richland Ave., Athens, died
several rdeces and nephews.
, Friday night in O'Bleness Memor·
: ial Hospital, Athens, following a

By TIMOTIW HARPER
current levels or change the law so
Asooo!•'ed l' &lt;lSS Writer
that not every veteran is ellglble for
MOUNTAIN HOME, TeM. (AP ) treecareatG5.
-Theoldveterancameheavilyand
Dr. John Mather who oversees
slowly off the exarrilning table. He . the VA's geriatric dare said plans
wa.s following orders again.
are being made to ch~el more
He set aside his cane, stood as
money for beds. equipment and
erect as he could and tried to raise staff to hospitals In Sun Belt areas
his right arm. Grimacing, he got 11 with the highest concentrations of
up to his shoulder before his knees
aged veterans.
Richard Lyngh an American
buckled from the pain. The young
doctor caught him and helped him Legion official wh~ serves on a VA
back onto the table In the cramped .geriatric advisory coi)U'Illttee said
examining room at the Veterans he doubled the $50 billion rtilure.
Administration hospital here.
However, he added "The Amerl.. "B~rsltls," Hugh Smith, 72, said. can Legion will be supporting
Got 1t real bad, doc."
whatever increase in the system is
Dr. Ahmed Khan looked at
necessary "
Smith'srecords. Theoldmanhadno
Mountain Home was buUI in 1903
pnvate doctor, no private insu· as an old soldiers' home lor'
ranee, no private funds.
Southern veterans who fought tor
Khan wanted toorderX·raysand
the North In the ClvUWar. All the
othertestsandglveSmlthmedlclne original buildings face South. The
for the pain. But new guidelines llttletheaterlsmodeledafterFord's
from VA hospital officials told him Theater in Washington, where
he shou ld send Smith away..
Abraham LinColn was shot.
When first opened, the soldiers'
Hugh Smith represents a problem home was a city unto Itself, with Its
for the U.S. government.
own farms and small industries and
Under a 1970 law passed by even its own jaiL Until the 19005.
Congress, aU veterans except those many of the soldiers wore uniforms
with dishonorable discharges bemodeled after the dress blues of the
come "100 percent disabled" upon Spanish-American War.
reaching age 6fj. As such, they are
Mountain Home provides medleligtble for complete and free cal care to veterans In much of
medical care at any of the Veterans Tennessee, North Carolina and
Administration's 172 hospitals.
Virginia. That area includes a
It doesn't matter how much
quarter mllilon veterans of txith"
money a veteran has, or whether world wars, Korea and VIetnam.
insurance would cover his · care r-----------~
elsewhere. It doesn't matter if he
®~® ·®®r®
spent the war in a foxhole or behind
~
, ,f ur·
. r!fii,
·a desk. lt doesn't matter whether he
~
m;.
.~
was in the service for three months
or three years. And the law doesn't ~AUTOMOBILE CLUB~
distinguish between treatment for
corns or coronaries, bunions or
bypasses.
Today, .3.3 million veterans are
~
eligible for complete care at VA
hospitals, although only about 25
~
With AAA, You ~
percent of them actually seek such
~
Never
Travel Alone. ~
care each year.
~
But with the median age of the ~
\IW!.
World
Famous
Automo~"!W
nation's 12 million World War II
~
veterans now at 62, the number of !® bile Travel Servic;e.
over-65 veterans will reach to 7.7 ~ - Emergency Road~
r® Service. '
§I
million by 1990.
~3.
Personal
Acciden~
Will every veteran who seeks free
medical help actually get it? Are the ~ · Insurance.
~
VA hospitals ready?
~4. Bail Bond Protection. ~
"The answer is no," said Dr. ~5 . Reim~rsement of At·~
Donald Custis, the VA's chief . ~ tomey s Fees.
~
medical director In Washington.
~ 6. Trip Guarantee.
In truth, many VA hospitals 1!fi;1. Motor Travel Magazjne.~
cannot meet the demand now.
~ 8. Travel Agency Services.
According to the latest records at
~~ 9.No Fee Travelers
.
the vA headquarters In Washing- ~ . Cheques.
ton, there were 4,666 patients on ll;i/1 0 . A~omobile lnsura~
waiting lists to be admitted to VA
SeMCes. .
. -1ll'
hospitals and nursing homes last
~11. Other Persona~
October.
Servrces.
~
· eu.stis and other VA officials say
~
12.
Safety
Activities.
~
that _1f the demand for medical care

I

:vote.

'I

OF

'

SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO

.
There were 20,!XXJappllca !Ions for
a~slon to Mountain Home last
_year. Six thousand people were
hospitalized. Ten thousand were
treated as out-patients. Four thou,sandwereturnedaway.
· Last month, with the number of
hospital applications in1983runnlng
about25 percentaheadoflastyear's
total, a memowascircuialedurging
Khan and MollJttalri' Home:s ot&amp;r
doctors to treat only patients who
need immediate care.
Hugh Smith's bursitis is a chronic

by elderly veterans doubles or
triples, Congress will have to either
spend billions more to keep care at

~

~

360 SECOND AVENUE
GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

~
~
~

~

¥2 PRICE
TROTTERS, JOYCE

Side Zipper Boots

$2500

The

Shoe

ca~e
l.'

;100 Second Avl' .

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0.

~i-ii~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~

··s~~~l.....off!~!l!s,.~!~~ ~ ,.~~leste's help
With the prospect of funding cuts
and declining enrollments on the
horlzon,Ohlo'sinstltutlonsofhlgher
learning are hoping to ride out the
" stonn with the help of Gov. Richard
Celeste and benevolent budget
planners.
'1
"19&amp;3 can be expected to be a
. decisive year," said Richard G.
., . Sheridan, fanner legislative budget
''" officer and an expert on Ohio higher
education.
·; :·.,. Sheridan cited five factors that
inake the next few monthS critical:
the new governor's administration,
· ·· the recession, leadership In higher
~ l!ducatlon. the role of .the Board.of
"' Regents and the new master plan.
~
But ,Sheridan, a faculty member.
:; of Cleveland State University,
"' predicts hlgher edUCl!tlon wiD.
~ remain a low P.liority In general and
• under financial strain through the
: decade.
.. ' To stabntze higher education as
" dollars decline, Sheridan suggests
~parceling out students moreequlta~ biy among state campuses, limiting
• increases in student · fees and
·% revising the funding formula to
; reOect need instead of political puU.
~ He also calls for applying the latest
; budget and management tech, nlques to lnstitutloQs and redrawing
themethodofgovernancetoassure
both leadership and an active
.
constituency.
••
:
According to studies researched
: by The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer,
• Ohio will lose 25 percent to 34
: percent of Its 1971! college ·enrol·
lment In the next 12 years.
t·
"For a great many families,
=- sending a son or daughter to college
!· has become a burden they cannot
!' manage," said Ohio University
; President Charles Ping. "Educa·
'tlon is supposed to prlxluce, as

J,

t

White, Chino, Green, Lt. blue,
Navy, Pink, Yellow.

(arl's
'.: •, ,

'· r,,

1

r•

lion. &amp; Fri.

Toll p.m.

TUtS .. Wtd., Tlut, &amp; Sal
TdS p.m.

~

ii)

condition - the type of ailment the
memo said Khan was supposed to
turn away.
"I come hell' for all my care,"
Smith said. "I ain't got no private
doc!or.Aln'tgotanymoneyforone.
Aln t got nowhere else to go tor
help."
. The doctor turned to him. "I want
todo some X-rays,".he told Smith.
"And we'll give you a shot for the
pain. Please have a seat In the
waiting room um.IU sorneone call~
you."

KEDS®CLASSIC "BLUE LABEL"
SNEAKERS IN ALL THE COLORS TO
GO WITH ALL THE STYLES.

~

MEN'S SHOES

everyone who has a pet project,"
"This is a · piece of paper for
· said Conte. "We are going to pour
. dollars down a rat hole like corn."
He said subcommittee chairmen
of the appropriat ions panels were
more interested in funding projects
in their districts than cceating real
jobs to offset the 10.2 percent
unemployment rate. The chairmen·
are Democrats because their party
coot rols the House.
- ~The 13 cardinals got together
and decided what they would put in
It," Conte said.
·
Among projects cited by the
private Environmental St udy Cen·
ter was $200 million to go for dams
and rivers in Mississippi and
Louisiana, including the district of
ai&gt;Jlropriatlons committee chair·
man Rep. Jamie Whitten, D-Mlss.
, "That Is pure pork-barrel," said
Berent Blackwell, chief lobbyist for
Ute environmental group. ·
Similar criticism came from Rep.
David Obey, !),Wis .. who tinsuc."
cesstuUy sought toellmlnate money
to be spent by the Army Corps of
Engineers lor many construction
projects.
(')bey sought to · include an
additional $445 million in additional
. federal health care tunds aimed at ·
the famtlles of unemployed
•workerS, but was defeated by voice

...

:;

I)

Parties slam
legislation
WASHINGTON (APl - A $4.6
billion recession relief bill heading
·for action in the House Is riddled
with pork-barrel construction projects, according to both liberal
Democratic and Republican critics.
The House Appropriations Com·
mittee apvroved the measure by
voice vote Friday, and the full
House is expected to pass the
measure next week.
·Rep. Silv:o Conte, R·Mass., the
senior Republican on the commit·
• tee, said there are hundreds of
millions of dollars for projects that
will Improve the image of some
· congressmen in their districts but
· produce relatively few jobs.

February 27' 1983

:·~~~~~e~~r:nnw':~ln
~r~:::~
,but an aristocracy of talent. That
"' basic mission has been put in
.. jeopardy."

Gallipolis
Floor Covering
Early Bird
CARPET SALE

'600

Sq. Yd. &amp; Up

INSTALLATION AVAILABLE

!· "OurEngllshmajoreriroUment ls
;. :down from the 700 level to below 200
::' In the last 10 years," said Thomas
:.I&lt;Jetn, a professor at
Green
,; .state University. "Other human!':': ties disciplines are down 60 percent
~ to 70 percent. We are getting
~ frightened."
..
e, At· Cleveland State, only two or
~.three students a year now major 1n

Bowung

'
;:~'religious
studies, compared to lJ to
•'
'
'

~Two injured
~ in accident

GREAT NEWS IN OEPENOABLE

RUTLAND FURNITURf: &amp; BOTTLE GAS

REGULAR PRICE

$26995
SALE -PRICE

$2}995

r;:==::::::======;-1
danci~

pleasure.
AMERICAN LEGION
POST 27

COME IN FOR FREE DEMONSTRATION

BOB McCORMICK RD.

Tuesday, Man:h 1, 1983
. 8:30 to 11 :30 P.M.
legionnaires, Auxiliary Memb-

r~e="~a~n~d~l~nv~~~ed~G~u~est~-~-~~-~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~

substantially higher than your average
taxable income for the years 1978
through 1981, it may be to your advantage to figure your tax under the "inCDme averaging" method. Under the
':income awraging" method, part of
your taxable ine10me may be taxed at
lower tax rates and thus resuh in a William
lower total tax.
,
CERTifiED PUIUC ACCOUNTANT
If you qualify for this advanlagwus tax calculation, o Sche- '
du~ ,G must be .compleNd and otlached ta your Form 1040
Individual Income Tax Retum , The Schedule G income averaging
computation requires iuforn~ation hom your 1978, 1979, 1980
and 1981 fedeta1 income tax retuma. If you think you may benefit
hom "income CIV8IQSiing" but are unable to lomte all ofytM 1978
llwngh 1981 tax returns, you em~ requett a copy of each misting
return by submitting a requeet lo the l.RS. on a Form 4506
Generally, with o few excepllous, you must have provided so%
""more of your own support il@1978 tlnugh 1982 inclusive in
order to income avetage; also, U. S. dlitenship or retidency is
required. II manied, you and your 11f10UM must have pnMded ot
least 50% of your combined suppolf. J

9-·--

t·

GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallipolis
were treated at Holzer Medical
,. Center for Injuries !hey received In a
· single-car accident early Saturday
, morning.
Roberi L. Bate, 20, and Jack L.
.CuiWOOd, 21. were both released
:from HMC after being treated.
' • According to the Gallia-Melgs
· gost of the State Highway Patrol,
:,Bate was sruthbound ·on Gallia
County Rd. 20 at 12:55 a.m. when he
lost control of the vehicle and slid
Into a ditch.
The vehicle sustained heavy
dannage. Troopers cited Bate for an
Unsafe vehicle.
' Two vehicles were slightly dam·
aged when they were Involved in a
mlslilp with a deer 12: ;25 a.m.
Saturday.
James D.. Hess, 18, Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, was northbound on Ohio
160whenhestruckacteer. thepatrol
reports. The collision forced the
deer 1fto the path of another car,
driven by Phillip Mitchell, 18, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, who also struck It.
'The patrol lnvr.;tlgated three
area ococldents Friday.
At 7:10p.m., Brenda L. Bartinus,
24, Rt. 1, Reedsville, struck and
killed a deer on Ohio 124 In Meigs
County. Her car was slightly

1
I

I
I
I
I
II
II

·

448-4471
,t

Valid thru: IMarch 31, 1983

Good only at:

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

..._

__ -

......

NOTE: l.f

y~u intend to.register but cannot attend th e first session, you MUSTnotify the Office

oi Contmu mthg Educatfoon AND.coEmplete the registration proceduoe BEFORE the lirst class
mee1mg. 11 ere are ewer than tGHT prom pity registered slud entsatt~ e FIRST class meet·
~h\~~~1-ass Wilt be canceled . NO REGISTRATIONS Will BE ACCEPTEDAFTER FIRST Cl ASS

·II

1
I~
t~e I
Hall.
·
I
BY MAll: Use the form provided . Fill in All spaces that apply. Enclose,' check or mone I .
order
the co rrect amount payable to RIO GRANDE COMMUNITY COllEGE: Send toRi:
II GrandeforCollege,
Box 878. R1o Grande, Ohio
I
BY PHONE : Call - l ·BOD-282·7201 or (614)245·5353 ; ext 20D. You w11t be asked your I
I 1~ t~ose.
I~
h~ld
I
II
I
I
f!rst
class
I
I For furt~er 1nlormation, Phone· l -800 -282·7201 o; (6 t4) 245·5353. e•tenSion 200. I
.1
This Form Can Be Used For Off-Campus Courses Only
I
Clip and Mail To:
I
PlEASE REGISTER ME.
II
FOR THE FOLLOWING CONTINUING EDUCATION COURSES:
I
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
I
I
BOX 878, RIO GRANDE, OHIO 45674
I
PLEASE REGISTER ME
I
I
FOR THE FOLLOWING CONTINUING EDUCATION COURSES:
I
I Course ................. :.......... .... ..... ... .. ..... .. .. ... .. ......... .....
I
Location ...:............. ......... .. ,.... .. ........ ...... .. .... .. .. .. .. .: ::.:".::::: :::::. "::::: :: ~
I
Fee $ .........................
I
Course .... ..................................... ....... .......... ...... ........ . .............. ....... I
I Location ............................................... .. ............ .. .... ···························· I
II ·
Fee $.. ..... ........ ;....
I
I Course ....................., .. ,........................ :.. .:........... ................... .,....... .... .. I
I Location .......................... ........................ .... ..........:..... ........ .... .. .. 1
I
Fee $ ... .. ..... .. ......
'I
IN .PERSON : v.ou .may register in person Monday rough Frid ay, from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M 10
Offtce of Conttnumg Educa tton, located on the first floor of Allen

meeting of the

pro~Jid in g space is ava 1a1

'' .' . '.'

I

One
coupon per
person, per visit.

I

I•••••••••··~•CUPC()lji)()N ••••••••••••1

2 Fi~h &amp; Chicken.Dinnrrs $3.99~~~n
Valid thru: March 31, 1983
Good only at:
SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
GAI.UPOLIS, OH.

•

Robert D. Angler. 19, Gallipolis,
partclnJ vkllaiJDn; Kathleen M.
Ratll1f, 28, Rt. 1, BidWell, left of
center; ~DouglaaA.Holu!,20,Rt.
2, Gallipolis, drunken driving.

16 St1te St.

HXT: Texbook_
s w•ll be made available On·site only at the first meeting of th e class Prior to
and after the fir st class sesston , teds must be purchased at the College Bookstore fee s for
books must be received befo re books are issued .
·

1
I
II

I

Saturday:

Chamber of Commerce Buildin1

flee of Conhnu~n g Education r.:!serves the nghl to.cancel any cl~ ss due to insu fticentenroll·
ment. I ne number ol parentheses alter course t1tle indicates the number of credit hours.

~~~i strati o n s will "lso be accepted on the

Matthew J. Bradford was a
passenger In a car driven by Keith
G. Bradford, 26.
According to the patrol, Bradtrod
was eastbound at 2:00p.m. when he
lost control of hll\ vehicle In a cuJVe.
'The car received heavy damage
when It Dipped on Its topandslldinto
a ditch.
Tloopeu cited Steven N. Petrie,
16, Gallipolis, for excessive speed
after an accident on Mill Crrek
Road at 9:00 p.tn. Friday.
Petrie was 'southbbound when he
reportedly Js!st control ui his vehicle
and went Otf the right side of the
road, striking a utility pole. His car
was slightly damaged.
A passenger, Ryan T. Moore, 17,
Gallipf:llls, ,J'EI)01'tec!ly received minor lnjunes but \\?15 not treated.
In other law enforcement news,
Gallipolis Oty Pollee cited the
following persons Friday and early

with the
·serta Perfect

Ple_a se Read lnlotmotion 8e,ore Registering
CLASS LIMITS : Cred1t classes. most have a minimum of eight students and are filled on a
f!rsl·com.e ba s_ls. Some class_es h~ve ~ n ro llm ent hm1ts: these are noted in the CO!J rse desc rip·
t1_
on. Rei:!IStr.all~ns are acc.eoted m the order they are recei ~ed until the class isfilled. The 01·

.name, address, so~ta l sec urity number and which class (or classes) you want to take Aspace
classe.s wtfl en be
_for you Providing your check for the appropriate ·registra·
!ton fee 1s.re~e1~ed by the Conl!~ utng Educatton Offtte of Rio Grande College and Community
College w1thtn ftve days followmg your p~one call.

A 4·year-old Racine boy received
minor Injuries, but was not treated,
after a single-car wreck on Ohio 124
Friday afternoon, the · · patrol

ADDITIONAL
SAVINGS

-RE~~~noNFoR~f.oMP~c~~eso~~--

~5674 :

damaged.

otlenng. Comfortable, healthful
support, a lovely quilted cover
and ve"!ical quilted border. LOts .
of paddong _and firm innerspring
constructron. Matching box
sprrngs for a firm foundation .
G~ a Better Ser1l V1lue II tilt best
pric:e.Come inloi!IY. Tomorrow mi&amp;M
be too late.

. REGISTRATION DEDUNE: FIRST CLASS SESSION

· Now Avar iable: School' of Homestead living - American Heritage Craft s
Workshops -Summer 1983 - Brochures. Ca ll or Write to be put on
Maoltng l 1st.
·

~;men

If you've been pricing bedding
you ~now what a value we·~

SPRING QUARTER
CREDIT COURSES
OFF-CAMPUS
ON CAMPUS
CREDIT COURSES
Course: ART 101 Sec 161 Sculp·
JACKSON
lure (Clay, Wire, Plaster) (1 credit) Course: ACC 124 Sec 023 Princ i·
Time: Saturdays 10 a.!Jl.-3 p.m. pies of Accou_nting II (4 credits)
March 12 &amp; 19, 1983
Tome: Tuesdays 5·9 p.m. March 8lnstructor: Lilly Goldstayn
... May 17, 1983
·
location: FA 124
Instructor: S. Hyder
Cost: $19.00 ln·Districl' )23.00 location: Jackson High School
Out-District
'
Cost: $76.00 In -District· $92.00
lab Fee: $8.0D
Out-District
'
Course: FIN 114 Sec 362 Personal
Course: ART 101 Sec 162 Batik (1
Fi nancce (4 credits)
credit)
Time: . Wednesdays 6·10 p.m.
Time: Saturdays 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
March 9-May 18, 1983
April 9 &amp; 16, 1983
Instructor: B. Goldstayn
.
Instructor: Uly Goldstayn
location: Jackson High School
location: FA 124
Cost: $76.00 In-District $92.00
Cost: $19.00 In -District; $23.00 Out-District
Out-District
Cou.r.se: BM 273 Sec ,g21 Real Es·
lab Fee: $8.00
tate Appraisal (3 credits)
Course: ART 101 Sec 163 Macra· Time: Mondays 6:30-9:30 p.m.
me/Crochet (1 credit)
March 14-May 16. 1983
Time: Saturd ays 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Instructor: Art DeStephen
April 23 &amp; 30, 1983
location: Jackson High School
Instructor: Jean Ward
Cost: $57.00 In-D istrict $69.00
locati.on: FA 124
Out·Di&gt;trict
Cost: $19.00 ln·D istrict; $23.00
Out·District ,
WELLSTON
Course : ART 203 Sec 162 Special
Lab Fee: $8.00
Toprc: Portraits (3 credits)
Course: ART 101 Sec 164 Metal
Time: Thursdays 7-10 p.m.
Enameling (1 credit)
Marmch 10-May 19, 1983
Time: Saturdays 10 a.m.-3 p. m. Instructor: Li lly Goldstayn
May 7 &amp; 14. 1983
location : Wellston High S~hool
Instructor: lilly Goldstayn
Cost: $57.00 In -District; $69.00
location: FA 124
Out-Di strict
Cost: $19.00 ln·Distri ct; $23 Out· No Lab Fee
District ·
NON-CREDIT COURSES
lab Fee: $8.00
Course: ECO 104 Sec 261 Ameri·
ON-CAMPUS
can Economy (4 credits)
PIANO and VOICE LAB PRAC·
Time: Saturdays 10 a.m.-2:30p.m. TI'::UM'S are open to all interested
March 12-May ·14, 1983
persons. Students s~.ou ld arrange
to mes nd dates with Edie or Merly n
Instructor: B Goldstayn
Ross before registering 10 CEU
Location : SC 112
Cost: $76.00 In-District; $92.00 (Non -red it). Cost: $65.DO per prac·
Out-Distri ct
ticum. Register in Co ntinu ing Edu·
cation Office, Allen Ha ll.
Course: ED 283 Sec 28 1 Special
GYMNASTICS
Topic: Advance d Sign Language (3 ADVANCED GYMNASTICS: 8:10 a.
cred1ts)
m.-10 a.m. Saturdays, March 12·
Time: Tuesdays 6-8.:50 p.m. Marc h May 14, 1983 (No class April 2)
8-May 17, 198 3
Lyne Center Gym
Instructor: S. Cai n ·
Instructor: D. Irvi ne
location: AN 2
Cost: $20.00
Cost: $57.00 In -District; $69.00
BEGINNING GYMNASTICS (Ages 6
Out·District
&amp; up) 10 a.m.· ll a.m. Saturdays,
Course: HPE 252 Sec 442 Trea t· March 12-May 14, 1983 (No class
ment of Ath Injuries &amp; CPR (2 April 2) Lyne Center Gym
credits)
Instructor: D. Irvine
Time: Tuesday s &amp;Thursdays 6:30· Cost: $15.00
9:30 p:m. March 8-April 14, 1983
Instructor: Ge'orge Wolfe, Ph.D. TUMBLE BUGS (Ages 3·5)11 a.m.·
12 noo n Saturdays, March 12-May
location : LC 204
Cost: $38.00 In -District; $46 Out· 14, 1983 (No class Ap ril 2) Lyn e
Center Gym
District
.
lab Fee; $10.00 (2 hrs. lecture, 1 lnstru~tor: D. Irvi ne
Cost: $10.00
hr. lab)

.

your .. listening and

Times-Sentinei-Page-A-7

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
&amp; COMMUNITY COLLEGE

deciding whether to eliminate the glv
·
scope unlike 23 other states, which rely on
department.
.•
es
to each school,
boards.
-Small colleges such as Mount
Union, Notre Dame In theCieveland
suburb of University Heights, and
GAS SPACE HEAliNG FROM
Ohio Wesleyan University all
fielded freshnlan classes that were
at least 10 percent smaller than last
year's. Ohio Wesleyan's freshman
class dropped by22gercent last fall.
UNVENTED HAOIANT GAS HtAHR
Several university presidents say
the state must overhaul- its tax
WlfH llXY[;[N SENSllB
system to finance higher education
adequately. But money alone may
not be the answer .
Howard L. Colller, former state
budget director, said education
leaders must do a better job of
selling the public on the Importance
of education.
· "We have not sold ;It as an
Investment toward future returns, •'
Collier said.
Walter Waetjen,
president of Cleveland State said
"Historically, higher educatl~n ~ ·
been reluctant to lobby. It was seen
somehow as distasteful. It's almost
an attitude of 'We're so great
everybody should recogniie lt. "' '
State Rep. Patrick Sweeney said
legislators tended to believe that
colleges and universities have
plenty of money because they can
•Wall mounted or free standing versatility.
raise tuitions and attract grants and
•Easy to light with spark ignition piezo system.
·gifts, something elementary
(no more matches)
•
schools and service agencies can't
•Variable heat in put from 5500 to 1 5500 BTU . •
do.
·
•Convenient side mounted temperature control.
· "The Legislature has not ·been
•Oxygen
depletion sensor (ODS) for added safety margin .
kind to higher education in Ohio"
•Automatic Safety Pilot for gas shut off if pilot light goes
the Cleveland Democrat said. "We
out.
all show up to cut ribbons on new
•Ouick, spot heat where needed .
.
buildings, but after that we ignore
•High efficiency and clean burning .
appropriations to run them."
·
The Ohio Board of Regents has a
•Attractive styling with warm glow infrared burner.
staff of 50, which collects data,
•AGA -certified on LPG .
•
refines budgets, resolves mstitu·
•Meets federal standar1:1s_for ODS equipped unvented gas
tiona! clashes over programs and
·heaters.
suggests policies to the governor
•Specifications:
30 lbs.
Approximate Weight
27"
Overall Heights
18Y4'
Overall Width
-FEATURINGOverall Depth
8"
Mal}' Lucas and Friends for
•Available for LP or Natural Gas

reports.

INCOME AVERAGING
If your laxaWe income for 1982 is

The

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

27, 1983

Pom810y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

One
coupon per
peroon, per visit.

1

'

"

I Co~rse .................................................... ........................ ... ........ .......... .I
Location ....... ,.. ........................... ..................... .. ..................... ...... ........ J

II

.

.

Fee$ ... ......... :............

.

~

I
TOTAL AMOUNT ENCLOSED: $ .. ... .................. .. .. I
I
I DNo classes now, send me Brochures/Sc hedules when available
.I ::::s~
: ~: : : ~·:::: :~:: : :
I
J City ..........'... :................ :.........................:........ .... State .............. ...........· I
I zip ........................,............................ Phone ...................... .......... .......... I
I Soci1l Security No. ........................................................................ ......... I
I County of Residsnce ............................ ................. ..................... .'..... ....... I
~ut

. :: : : ::: ::: : : : : ::: ::::: : : .: : : :,. : :·: : : :·. . . . ..

I Date of Birth .................................. :....,............,...................................... .1

·-----------------~

'

0

�Pag-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

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

February 27, 1983

Ion theri

GM considers
auto assembly

'

CHICAGO (AP) General
Motors Corp., which is joining
Toyota Motor Corp. ln producing a
subcompact car, would consk:ler
U.S. assembly of another Japanese
small car If new restrictions are
placed on Japanese imports, GM
Chairman Roger Smith says.
"There Is a possibility we could
assemble the Isuzu R-ear here" ln
the mid·l98Js If Congress passes a
law requiring some U.S. ·made
parts ln all cars sold !)omestlcally or
imposes restrictions on Japanese
imports, Smith said Friday at the
Chicago Auto Show.
However, that would not neces· ·.
sarUy mean a joint venture like the
GM-Toyota agreement, spokesmen
for the No. 1 U.S. carmaker said
today.
"You've got to remember that
General Motors owns 34 percent of
Isuzu In Japan," GM's Harold
Jackson said. "We've been talking
about bringing Isuzu In here for a
,.
long time."
GM and Toyota agreed earlier
this month to build a new small car
In GM's idle Fremont, Call!.,
assembly plant for sale beginning in .
the 198:i model year. Plans call for
annual production of about 200,(XX)
cars, to be marketed by tbe
Chevrolet Motor Division ..

POMEROY - Two runs were
made by local units Friday accord·
ing to the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service.
At 10:09 a.m., Middleport was
called for Zela Taylor. who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 2 p.m. , Pomeroy was called
for Etbel Taylor, Lincoln Hill, who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

1 I

Fllfori.Ne

DIVERSIAED

110 LB. BARBELL SET

Orbatron · ~ dtscs and steel barbell
Wtth slee\le. Also includes two
dumbell bars and sleeves ,

$2

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DIVIRSIPIID

ST ANI)ARD lEG UFT BENOI

R~

1

59.99

$4288

HECK'S ALM
351111
24 EXPOSUR£

HECK'S
110
24 EIPOSUI£

$179

$159

RIG. $2.29 •

IIG. $2.19

IIECK'S fiLII

u•u D,._E .... _ ........... s12t

.. .. ~

CASSEnE CAR STEREO

DISH
DRAINER
YELLOW
Rea. 13.&amp;9

ALMON 0

99¢
01

Ooal•ty canstruci!On w1th m~ny
hne lntiJ'I!S to gtve fOU hours ol

6 PC. CAR

QEANNGSET

hstemng en,oymt!f11

lndudes: 11 ql bucket, wMewal!
saubtl!r, Turtle Was car wasl\
wash mitt, SiXJnge, pdisling cbth.

Rffi 12.09

$2 09 •

$1

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12

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Power On Hld!talor, and power
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79&lt;;

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FOOD DEPT.

fOOD DIPT.

11

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$449

8 TRACK TAPE
A. $ale and ettewve wa~ to

Q.EANER

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CHILl

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pro!ect and carry yoor 8

tracks Caddy comes •
l1tdl and unymll handle

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HOUSlWARES DEPT.

REG: $6,97

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lOOZ.

2 oz.

10 OZ. RAINTREE

LOTION 0~~ 4 OZ.
SKIN C EAM
COSMfJIC
DfPJ.

HAND AND BODY
LOTION

$159

COSMfJIC
DIPJ.

$ 29

SHAVE CREAM

$ 39
DfPJ.

NOXEMl·
SKIN CREAM
.
..

12

ACNE
MEDICATION '

COJMfTIC
DfPf.

s

69

$189
COSMITIC

COLUMBUS - State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson's office reported the first advance distribution
ot1983 state motor vehicle registration fees totaling $17,299,853.75 to
Ohio countis, cities, tOWf!shlps and
villages.
' Of the amount, $2,599,995.75 went
to 75 counties and or · their
municipalities that imposed- an
. · additional $5 levy on each set of
license plates sold In 1983.
Of the amount Meigs County
received $16,548.23.

CHlRLESWOOD
TWO DOOR OR DROP UD

WALL UNIT

Vmn cho1ce ol these beaulilul wall um1s Two door un~~
has lwo shelves and drop l1d uru! has 4 shelves Bolh 10
altlat!lve woodyram lm1sh Clfld 5Did unEI55tmbled 10 .
canon

CHlRLESWOOD

OPEN WALL UNIT

A lunc!Jonal wall s•slem 111 an .allordehle pnce. Open
. un11 allords beau11ful display area lor kmcHnacks.
books. or stereo components

PORTLAND - Lebanon Town· ·

RIG. $46.99

ship trustees wlll meet at 7 p.m.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Joseph Proffitt,
Racine; Annette Boyd, Pomeroy;
ZeUa Taylor, Middleport; Lois
Cornell, Pomeroy; Sally Golds·
berty, New Haven, W.Va.
Discharges - Herbert Dixon,
Hilda SchmoU, Brei Larkins, Reba
Greene, John Norman.

"Preschool Slory 'lbne" at
)l(uard MemorIal Ubrary In Gallipolis Involves
more thaD a story being read to
parilclpanta. Learning tbe prtn..
clples of learning to read Is the
goal of the prop-am. Kendra
Cop!l, chlldren's Ubrarlan and
teacher of the aesslons, lntrodu·
ces the children to !etten, words
and spellklg (top photo). Being
quiet and pnlform .. also put of
lellmlng PI'OO!II8 IUid taught
In the program, as Dann,y
Magnuaeen, Gallipolis, demonstrates 118 he listens IDtently
wtdle CGpD reads "'lbree Billy
Goats Gruff'' (above right). 'lbe

u.e

REG ....9.99

Trustees to meet

.

Df~r.

Dr. Samuel L

Registration fees

Tuesday In the township garage.

by Deb Fox
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- "Preschool Story Time" at Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Ubrary doesn't just Involve a story or two being read to the participants. The
children have learned to expect more and before a session begins, they can be heard
asking, "What are we going to do tonight besides hear a story?"
A visitor to the library when the sessions 'are In progress may see a grou p of
children playing "rlng around the rosie," singing along with a record, watching a .
filmstrip or listening to a story being told. They are a lso Included In the program for
three to five year olds.
,
But the goal of "Preschool Story Time," according to teacher Kendra Cogan.
children's librarian, is to get preschoolers involved in "learning principles of
·
. .
iearnlng to read." .
A session, which lasts about an hour, may begin with Cogan holding up cards with
words of colors on them for the children to read. At' the beginning of the six-Week
class, the letters of the words are. inked ln thee &lt;.'O lor the words represent. That is,
the word brown has its letters inked in brown. At the end of the weekly course, all
color words appear In either white or black. By that time, the children are to have
grasped the concept of letters, words and spelling.
Cogan, who received a bachelor of arts degree in elementary education from
Michigan State University and a master of science librarianship degree with a
specialization In children's llbrarlanship from Western Michigan University,
encourages the preschoolers to be active participants In the stortes she reads to
them. During a reading of "Three Billy Goats Gruff," they make the sound of the
story's bridge when crossed by each olthe billy goats, all of which hl!ve a different
weight.
"Sometimes parents watch their children durtng &lt;1 session and tell m e afterward
they're worried about him or her not. taking part In activities," Cogan sail. "Some
won't participate," she continued, "They're not yet used to being in a group."
.
Being In a groupo( children may be easier for those who take the session with a
brother or sister. The younger can be seen clinging to the older, or vice versa, or
wrestling with each other playfully while a story is being read.
Despite those occurances, Cogan said the free program for youngsters stresses
other "fundamentals of learning In school- being quiet and uniform."

DP4*

I S

GLASS
COLUMBUS - State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson's oHice reported today the February dlstrtbu·
tlon of $9,612,960 to the state's
counties, townships, cities and
vlllages in revenue collected from
the state's severt cents per gallon
gasoline tax.
'
The dlstlibution does not include
any revenue from the 4.7 cents per
gallon gasoline tax, which is·
computed and distrtbuted separ·
ately on a monthly basis. ·
Distlibution in Meigs County was
as follows: Middleport village
treasurer, $2,297; Pomeroy village
treasurer, $2,656; Racine village
treasurer, $006; Rutland village
treasurer, $582; Syracuse village
treasurer, $751. ·
Total payment to Meigs County
was$6,982.

27, 1983

Story ood photos

Check accidents

Report 2 runs

Section~

Once upon a time•..

Set comes equipped wtth

POMEROY - Two minor accidents were Investigated by Pomeroy police Friday. No lnjurtes were
reported.
Police said, David W. Fox, Rt. 2,
Racine, pulled from a parking
space on Butternut Avenue at 1:21
p.m.lnto tbe path of a car driven by
Rev. Neal B. Proudfoot, Pomeroy.
There was medium damage to
both vehicles. No citations were.
Issued.
At 3 p.m., Lola M. Smith,
Ravenswood, w ,ya., was in line of
traffic on West Main Street when
her car was struck in the rear by a
vehicle driven by Linda S. Hayes,
Mason, W.Va.
Hayes was cited to court for
failure to stop within assured clear
distance.

~imt!l• itntin:el

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

$3388

HOUSfWARf DfPf,

49 OZ. BOX

TIDE OR OXYDOL
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

5

1

2 .~$].64

HOUSIWAII DEPT.

students alao become ac·
qualnled with bemg In a JI'OUP
and theY . learn to do 110 by
playma llllcll prne8 lUI ''nlg
around the nele" (bottom
photo), As the children clasp
hands and fonn a circle In
preparlltloo of the pme, Cop!l .
(backgruund) lltart8 a recording
of the IIOilg.

�: Page- B-2- Tt.e

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

Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

February 27, 1983

·· ~=~~~~~==============================~~

Tt.e..Sunday Times-Sentinei-Paae-8-3

: . /l.t wit's end

\Now that M-A-S-H

. ..

'

' :

By ERMA BOMBECK

: • On the eve of the last episode of
·:· i· M-A-S-H. " whlch Is a monument
: lo how good television can be, It 's
• Jnteresting to speculate on what Is
: down the road .

is going off, what's in store for TV's future?

I saw a promo the other night for
a new show, hosted by attorney F .
Lee Salley. It seems a guest who
has some real Important reasons
not to tell the truth (the one I saw
featured the man who claimed

~ Katie's korner
:Sorority will host March dance

Howard Hughes bequeathed h1m a
fortune), hut swears hels not lying,
Is gtven a lle detector test.
A great part of th.e program Is
watching a needle zig back and
forth on a polygraph test. You could
die from the excitement.
\\!hat do I know? Maybe an electronic series starring a machine Is
thewaveofthefuture. Nothing else

has '~worked ."

'

It's possible the human element

no longer ~muses or tltlllates us.
Ry KATIE CROW .
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Birthday wishes
tixlay go to Blanche Gilkey.
5 cadley . Street. Middleport. who
obSeJved her 93rd birthday on
Saturday,
26.
We send best
,;.ishes and sin.'
cerely hope your,
&lt;lay was a happy~,. 41:1~1\."!1
one.

~ Forest Run United Methodist
f hu rch will hold its a nnual rummage sa te Thursday a nd Friday,
t1arch 3 and 4, in the basement of
!he church.
' Thr .s ale will be held from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. daily. Forest Run Church
i); located on county road 30, one
·mile from S.R 7.
: As in the pas t, the sale will no
doubt be one worth attending.

: American Legion Post 39, Pomer'.oy, and Preceptor Beta Beta
Sorority will host a dance March 12
: at the post home in Pomeroy.
: : The dance will be held from 9
p.m. to 1 a.m. with music to be
provided by George Stewart 's

band.
. : Tickets may be purchased from
Mick Williams at Mick's Barber
Shop. Pomeroy, Elza Gilmore,
P-omeroy, or from any sorority
member. Since the dance is limited
44 couples. it would be wise to
. obtain tickets as soon as possible.

to

•
• · Judged !lr.s t place In the junior
. tiigh cheerleading contest held
"dur!Jig the Southern Junior High
I}.isketba ll Tournament at Southffh Junior High in Racine was the
~h:eerleadlng squad from Point

Pleasant.
Taking second place honors was
the squad from Federal Hocking.
The cheerleading squads were
judged during the entire junior high
tournament with the winners being
announced Thursday evening.
Junior hig h teams taking part
were Meigs, Eastern. Albany,
Southern, Federal Hocking and
Point Pleasant.
. Adviser for the Point P leasant
squad Is Mary Jane Getty and
members of the Point Pleasant
squad are Susan Stanley. Angle
Hatfield .. Carrie Diamond, Heather
Russell and Jody Call.
R uby Halliday, Route I, Rutland,
wlll be celebrating her 90th birthday on March 2.
Friends a nd neighbors of Mrs.
tl:alliday are planning a card
shower. U you'd like, you can join
her many friends a nd remember
her on March 2.

I know t hls. U this show has any
ldnd of rating at all, Indicating a
trend, you can look 'forward next
season to the following lineup:
Celebrity Heartbeat! an exciting
new game show where celebrities
are given an electrocardiogram

and contestants chosen from the au·
dlence are plttW against one
another to see which one has the
best score. (The audience Is divided
Into red, blue, and green teams and
can a lso share In the tun.)
"And The Winner Is ... " A weekly
series on how the votes are tabulated for such exciting shows at the
Oscars, Errunys, Tonys, Grammys, . Country Westem, · etc. A
behind-the-scenes look at Prtoe and
Waterhouse pushing buttons and
discussing how many rented tuxedos are soUed when they're returned . A family bonanza.
"Feedllng Your Computer." A
computer nutritionist discusses
how to keep your co mputer
. healthy. With guest appearances

by H. and R. Block, E. F . Hutton
wh!ch students "111 pass and which
and I, B. and M.
one wlll fall . (Look for Parallel
"Go Play In the Traffic," a slt·
Parking ·to be a spinoff.)
,
com set In the drama of the Drlv·
Television has always gone w!th
er's License Bureau. Every week, ' trend!;, from ·medicine to law to
Professor Kingsley helps teenagers
Westerns to drama to comedy and
cram for their eye test. The drama
private eyes. It's the machine's
builds as each week we try to guess
tum. Be stUi, my beating heart.

____;;;;.;::
1'Piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii;;;;;;;;
.1

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

LOWEST

PRICES IN
THE AREA!!
WE WiLL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

NEW

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2 Uter.

'

SPECIAL ONLY

Underwater
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -A
team of four aquanauts, directed by
University of Rocbester geologist
Carlton Brett, recently spenta week
underwater investigating several
largely unexplored reef caves near
St. Croix In the Virgin Islands.
Based In the world's only active
hydrolab, a room-slzed cylinder
anchored 50 feet below the ocean's
surface, theteamstudledcommunl·
ties of dee!&gt;'water animals encrust·
lng the caves as deep as 130 feet.
By comparing the living communities with their fossll a ncestors,
the geologists sought clues that
would help them reconstruct the
envirorunent in which the fossils
were formed .

· SUNDAt' CONCERT- Tbe Ol'llllde Chorale of
Colle«e wiD pmJe~~t a concert at Grace
(Jolted Me&amp;hodlot Church, Second Ave. and Cedar sa.,
q&amp;D!polfs, 011 Suaday at 6:»-'7: 00 p.m. The Grande
O!orale wiD ro on lhe road tor Its annual tour.

Rio Ol'llllde

Sunday's concert wiD be a preview of lbe group's
arrangements. Merlyn RoM Is lbe faculty member
under whose direction the choir operates. The public
Is Invited to the CODCert.

FRONT END AliGNMENT ,

TV's

Stylist" Free-Arm
Machine Mode1834

NOW
ONLY
IN~NT
r£ALER .

$2-79·

s

fllhlon Mate• Zlg·Zag
Machine Model 288

NOW
ONLY

$}·89

THE FABRIC SHOP

YOU

DlltNG

,.._...fFA

·•r.-mori!ome
st.,...eom...,
Carrying cue extra on 11! models

~83fFPJEEK

fEBRlW\V119-26
.

POMEROY lANiiMARK

~RGE SELECTION FROM '199.99 TO '1400 FOR OUR CANOPY MIRROR

TOP BED.-:_ SHEElS - COMFORTER -

614~2·2181

...

. THE ACCESSORIES.

•

Dn.. AUttlo and S... A lot-Ot~ Witi,M 1S Miln
y,., We SoMco at Y,..L«al ~ Doalor
So... tto.." 8:30 ro 5:30. Mil Cloiill at 5:00 PH..
s..w.g Moigt. Gallia and ,._ c....tiot

Pomeroy, OH.
SeiVing Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

'

HAVE A SKILL! with

training
in less than one year •••

•A.uto body Repair •Auto Mechanics •Building
Maintenance •Carpentry •Electricity •Industrial Maintenance •Food Service •Machine
Trades •OHice Services •Welding •B.usiness
Data Processing.

'

JACk W, CARSEY, MGI.

S ,!,.f19c~ R 115 W. 2nd

TRAINING PROGRAMS
you can •••

$J495 ,

61't-WJ!...,
WE
SALUTE

.

'

REFRIGERATORS
WASHERS
DRYERS

..'9plil1U

With Our FULL TIME ADULT
.

CHECK WITH US
BEFORE YOU BUY-

SINGER

•

BULK GARDEN SEED
NOW AT
·• :· • LANDMARK
614-992-2181

I'VE LOST MY JOB ·
. . , and I'm too old to be
retrained? . NONSENSE!
"YOU 'RE NEVER TOO OLD
. . . In less than one year
we can moke the difference
between finding a job and
not finding one . .GIVE US A

CALL. ..

•

••

Sale ends Saturday, March 5th. .

••
•
•
•
"

U.S. INSPECTED
AND PASSED BY
· DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
EST. 11

FRESH

GROUND

BEEF

,

;:~~E~~.. ~.~~.~........ .J~t·. ~ 14 90

SMOKED
~A

••
••

......
..•

$}J50

•

••

•
•
•"
•"
•

5 POUNDS OR MORE

•.
•

3
BOXES

.

•

•
•
•

6 COMPLETE

USAGE

$

S
4
OJBED STEAK .................~.~~:.... 10

OLD FASHION

RIB EYE STEAK.......... ~.~.~:.~ 1450

'STRIP STEAK................~.~~...., ,14 00
BEEF TOP .
.
LB. $1 69
BUTT ROAST. ............... ;......... .

SLICED

BACON

FRENCH FRIES ................ 5 lb. 52.95

•

. ."

.

.

FREE

••
•

1· DOZEN EGGS
WITH EAOt

550.00 .
PUROtASE

6 lbs.

BEEF TENDERLOIN ...........~~:.~2 50

•
•

•
•
•
•
•
••
•
•
•

FISH
-c SQUARES

.•
.

•
"
•
••

$799

•

..
'.
••
'' .
..•

'.

8 A.M. • 5 P.M.
Mon. thru Sat. .
TAKE RT. 588 I
TO TEXAS ROAD

.•
......

FRENCH CITY
MEATS

MEATS
:STEAK
.fPAlTIES

.lDASIOAD

'

•
"
' •
•

..
.. ..
..

HOURS

Canterbury .
linen looks

Gingham checks

PORK OtOPS .................... ~.~:. 515.00
CORN DOGS .................~~.~~J. 57.89
·
LB:. . 51 .~
LONGHORN OtEESE ..............

PIZZAS

MEATS

'-

'

BOLOGNA .••. ~ ••.............•..•..~.~-.. $2.99
STEAK PATTIES ............... ..S.!-!1:. 512.00
BACON ENDS ................... ~.~: .. 54.99

SHRIMP

. fNIIII!hfii!J
:

•

SLICED

••
••
••
•

',.•" .

.• ..•
'

'

•

...

Country style checks with
"gross roots" charm .
,
65'/o poly/35'/o combed coHen:
machine wash, dry; 45 " wid e.
leg. $2.29 yd.

Dress weight weaves ot
50'/o potyester /50'/o rayon.
Machine wash ond dry:
45" wide. Rag. $4.99 yd. ·

$3.33YARD

'$1.53YARD
'

Embroidery hoops

Pastel sheers

Choose lrom our entire,
in·store slack ol5", 7" ,
10" and 14" sizes. Great
tor crofts at all kinds.

100'/o nylon solids and prints.
. great tor dressing up and
shqwing oH! 45 " wide:
machine wash, dry.
. Reg. $2.99 and $4.49 yd.

Reg. $1.75 to $5.00 ea .

$1.99AND. .
$2.99YARD

$1.17ro
$3~33EACH

Satin solids
and fancies

Broadcloth
and batiste

"Shimmer" ' sal ins and "Oriental"
jacquards ot 100% polyester.
Machine wash. dry: 45" wide.
$5.99 and $8.99 yd .

1·--t~'l

99 AND
$5.99YARD

price

"Posh" blouse·
and lin log fabric
Polyester solids in a wide ·
'ronge of spring colors.
Machine wash, dry; 45 " wide .
. Reg. $2.69 yd.

~$1.79vARD
. .

1~'
•

~l
O~Freg.

new
spring
seWing
18

O'll'nllld and op erole CI Dr Por:m ·Centers or Ameroc:a . rnc

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10·9
SUN. 1·5
PHONE 446-7576
by Fcb~ol Arnarlco. lric.

••
)

.

',,
'

'

•

Reg. $2.69 and $2.79 yd.

$1.79 AND
$1.86YARD
Iron.Safe'"
LarT)Inated iron cover with
non-stick Teflon · surface
makes Ironing chpres a
snap. ·Protects fabrics too!
Reg. $6.99 ea .

NIRICJ· ~-= ·
·:.__.SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

PHONE 446 3472

Wardrobe builders! Poly/ .
colton sclids: machine
wash and dry: 45" wid e.

I'

$4.66EACH

YOU MEAN TO TELL
ME THAT I"CAN STILL
DRAW MY UNEM·
PLOYMENT BENEFITS

. . . while attending an
adult full time program?
RIGHT!
There
are
numerous financial aid
programs available. Basic
(Pell) Grants, VA Benefits,
Guaranteed Student Loans,
Bureau of Vocational
Rehabilitation grants
WAITING FOR YOU.

I"HATE MY JOB!
If you are stuck in a dead
end job, now is the time to
seek new job skills. With
the job market .today only
the qualified are . getting
the good jobs. NOW IS THE

Are you now out of ·
· work? With very little
or no prospect of
going back to the
same job ... Have
you checked all the
.
job prospects and find ·
that you are not
qualified for any of
them? Have you
thought of retrairing?
In less than one year
WE can make the
difference in getting .ci
good job and not
getting one at all. If
you are now drawing
unemployment benef·
its you con atterid TriCounty ... obtain a
new job skill and still
draw your benefits.
With the job market
today - . . . only the
qualified are getting
the job ... Could it
be that ,you are not
trained in the skills,
employers need?
Control your own
~
·-~
destiny with new job
skills .

.·

TIME . . .
Spring Quarter
Starts .At=rll 4th

---INFORMATION-,

REGISTER IN PERSON OR
MAIL IN THIS COUPON .
I would like more information about your
adult vocational programs. Check one or
more .
Your Name .• ....••.. .. •••..... ... .... .
Address . • ..• .........••... . •...•. : ..••
Phone .. .. ... .. ........ ............... .

· Ma il to : Adult Education
Tri·County Vocationai .School
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764
'

..

FULL TIME ADULT PROGRAMS
- BUSINESS DATA PROCESSING
- WELDING
- AUTO BODY REPAIR
- MACHINE TRADES
- BUILDING MAINTENANCE
- INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE
- ELECTRtCI'TY
-CARPENTRY
- OFFICE SERVICES
- FOOD SERVICE
- AUTO MECHANICS

·Tri-County
Vocational School
•

ADULT EDUCATION DEPT.
Rt. 1, State Route 691
.Nelsonville, Ohi.o
Phone 614-753-3511, Ext •.44

•

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•

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~---------------------------.,

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�27

February 27, 1983

Pomeroy-Midcllepc)rt-Gallipolit, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

The Sunday

'

Engagements
Wall-Icard

•

======Weddings=.=========The groom Is the grandson of the
late Sam Kemper and Mlnnle
Kemper of Rt. 1, VInton, and Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Griffith Sr. of Rt. 2,
Crown City. The bride-elect's
grandparents are deceaSed.
A reception followed the ceremony at the home of the groom's
parents.
Both are employed by Duff's.

VINTON - Tammy Middleton,
daughter of Phil Middleton of
Route 2, VInton, and Janie Mid.. dletDn of Lexington, Ky., and RIchard Griffith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Griffith Jr. of Route 2,
Crown City, were marrled In a
double-ring ceremony at the home
of the groom's parents on Jan. 29 at
7:30p.m. by Rev. Clyde Ferrell·ln
. the presence of farn1ly and f~ds •.

SlORE HOURS:

Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

FOR SPRING DELIVERY

Sunday 10 am·lO

pm

· 298 SEOOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
Wall1 IG~rd

STORE HOURS

Monday throull! Satll'day
10:00 to 8:00
Sundiy

1:00 to 5:00
~

REGULAR

.Special Purchase .

SIIICIAL

$1045° 0

!1!80'!

Aileen
Velour and Kntt

CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE

Actionwear

r ------ --COUI'ON-- - - - .:..__ -

$1590

we carry our own accounts
..,

, GAWPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
:;Garner Wall, Gallipolis, have an•nounced the engagement and ap: -proachlng marriage of their
· ;daughter, Cathy Wall, to Jeffrey
-:Icard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
; Icard, Bidwell.
. The brlde-eleet Is a graduate of
· ,Gama Academy High School and
:Holzer School of Nursing and Is em·
ployed as a registered nurse at
Holzer Medical Center.
• Her fiance Is a graduate or Kyger ·
.Creek High School and Is employed
by Carl's Shoe Store.
An open-ehurch wedding Is being
planned for .July 9 at First Church
of God. A reception will follow.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 5, 1983

Pork Roast .......t~~... ·

Biggs..,Arozar~na

Logan Manumont Company, Pomeroy, Ohio

Cl ,...,,. Mfld "'" f•EE boolo'-1&gt; ""''""~~ - ·•ah
ptif'l-.d tf'l

Per Piece

fvH colot ¥rift'! ~••• oncf pric:M litt.d.

t
29
Ground Beef...... ~ ...

0 llftd'r hQ..,. ot~ o~o~thoriaed lova" Mo~"' Co . l'lpfetentotl.. coli at "'1' hofM .

Tops &amp;Pants

.

Cl -

.. Mfld -

..

1

_ , , obo"' Mal*&gt;lo""''

witftowt oblito-

Regular Values To
$30.00 or More
If Perfect

POMEROY -St. Paul Lutheran
ated from Meigs Higli School. The
: Church was the setting for the Oct.
new Mrs. Davis received an asso23 wedding of Rhonda Sue Reuter,
cia te degree In dental hygiene from
Pomeroy, tD Robert Daniel Davis,
Shawnee State Community College
Forest Road, Pomeroy.
in 1981 and Is employed in the office
The bride Is the daughter of Mr.
of Dr. R. Craig Mathews, D.D.S.
and Mrs. Tom Reuter, R,ock
Davis Is self-employed.
Springs Road, Pomeroy, and the
groam Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Davis, Second Ave., Mid· ~~@~®
dleport. Rev. William H. Middles·
f/;tl·
AlPINE
@.
warth performed the double-ring
ceremony at 3:30 In the afternoon.
WONDERLAND
Music was provided by Lori Ann
Sept. 15-28, 1983
Wood, Pomeroy, organist, and
Tom Reuter, father of the bride, sol- @
Visit Germany,
@.
oist. The church decorations fea- ~
Austria, Italy, and
~
tured seven-branch candelabra @
Switzerland
'@
with satin bows In fall colors and
\;zf
360
SECOND
AVE.
~
altar arrangements of mums In fall
@
GALUPOUS
@
shades of· bronze, gold, yellow and
I~
PH. 446-0699
@.
orange.
Given In marriage by her father,
~®~®~~.the bride wore a formal gown of
white organza featuring ·a sweetheart neckline, accented by hand
sewn seed pearls, empire walstllne
and leg o' mut!Dn sleeves. The flowing bouffant skirt with three tiers of
lace continued Into a chapel length
train. The sleeves, waistline and tiers of the skirt were bordered with
Imported chantilly lace. The bride
wore a wide brim hat of sin&lt; organza and Venice lace highlighted
by a satin bow and streamers. She
carried a· cascade of silk flowers of
sweetheart roses and other flowers
In fall colors. Her jewelry was a
pearl necklace and earrlrigs. She
carried a prayer book belonging to
her great-great aunt.
Pam Napper, Langsville, was
rna tron of oonor. and the brides·
maids were Robin Carter, Westerville; Marni Graham, Columbus,
and Shari Wtlliams, Birmingham,
Ala. they wore Door-length gowns
of apricot, fashioned with leg o'
mutton sleeves, rounded neckline,
etched with lace, and ca rried
baskets of fall silk flower s with
matching streamers.
Ann Marie Riffle, cousin of the
bride, was flower girl with attlre of
identical design and color to the bri·
desmalds, and Terry Ray Reuter,
brother of the bride, was ring·
bearer. Acolytes were Kevin Burgess and Terry Reuter. .
, .-.\leoti R. Napper of LangsvUJe
was best man, and ushers were
Mac D. Williams, Norwalk;
Mickey C. Williams, Syracuse, and
Duane 0. Weber, Ruiland . The
groam wore Ivory tuxedo with dark
brown lapels and the grot:nsmen
wore dark brown with apricot
shirts and matching boutonnieres.
A reception was held In the
· church social room. The tiered
fountain cake was decorated In fall
colors anq topped with an arrangement of fresh mums and baby's
breath. Serving were Martha Jane
Rowe, Thelma LYtle, Marilyn Gra· ·
ham, Bernice Riffle, and Mary
Bowen. Kandy Young and Brldgltte Kullman registered the
guests.
A buffet, hosted by the bride's
grandparents. Dr. and Mrs. R.C.
Retiter. was held at Royal Oak
Park later In the ·evening with
music by Armand. The couple took
a honeymoon trip to Clearwater
Beach. Fla: They now reside at
16328 Old Forest Road, Pomeroy.
Both the bride and groom gradu-

~

Sizes

S-M-L
Actual Men:handise

~

~

Only Sinilar
To llustratioo

@)

'j

LB

Sttotf ...._ _
. -----------.Cil'fOtT-----------~--

IXED
10,-, deposit and .balance In convenient
rnonthly payments. ChooM from the lartl..ltl
Mlectlons In CEntral and Southeastern · C)hl•r:t..
We have the same lnter81t rate as we did
1969. Order now for spring delivery.
SIMPLY MAIL US THE COUPON FOR FUITHEI INFORMATION
OPIN IVININGS AND SUNDAY IY APPOINTMINT

Slight Irregulars

·

,.

tiOf' .

~--~-------------------Mr. and Mrs. Davis

$ 29

FRESH BUll STEAK

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., Inc.

POMEROY, OHIO

VINTON. OHIO

·Pameroy-lluon Bridle
992-2588

W. Mlin Str•t

388-8603

Bigg~
POINI' PLEASANT, W.Va. Vera Biggs and George A. Biggs of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., have an·
oounced the engagement of their
daughter, Valerie Kay, to Anthony
Wllllam Arozarena, son of Mr. and
Mrs. George R. Arozarena, Green·
wood, Ind.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
West VIrginia Institute of Technology with a degree In dental hygiene. She Is employed by James S.
Darlington, D.D.S. In ProctoiVille.
Her fiance Is a graduate of Georgia Institute of Technology and Is
an Industrial engineer with Anrlco
Steel in Ashland, Ky.
An August Wedding Is being
planned.

fryer Parts ......~; ..
BUCKET
.
$ 49
Cube Steaks.....~8~
••

CRISPY SERVE

Bacon................

.$
~8~ •••·

29

Tope-Tobin

11 PIECE WOOD
GROUP
Sofa, Chair, Rocker.. 2
End Tables, Cocktail, Ottoman, 2 Lamps, Bar, 2
--~.,

N~ra~Eln
.
aes.
.
O

Stools.
REG. $1200

. I)

Tobin, Tope

MATCHING UTILE
CHILD'S ROCKER
AVAILABLE

$3995

NEXT 6 DAYS ALL
11 PIECES .

95
ONLY $
-799
IN ANTRON NYLON VELVET

GALLIPOLIS -Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Tope of 525 Third. Ave .. Gampolls, have announced the engage·men! of their daughter, Elizabeth ·
Ann ,Tope, to G~ry Alan Tobin,
son ot Mr. and Mr.i; Harvey Tobin,
Langford, S. D.
Tope Is a 1976 graduate of Gallla
Academy High . School and 1981
graduate of Ohio State University
School of Nursing. She Is employed
at University Hospital, Columbus.
Tobin Is a 1974 graduate of Lang·
ford High School, Langford, S. C.
He received his bachelor'&amp; degree
In cb!!mlstry and biology froin tbe
University of South Dakota In 1978.
~e Is.enrolled atOhloState Unlverllty School 9! Medicine from which
be wm graduate In June.
Plans are being cornpletl!d for a
June 11 wedding at First Baptist
Church, Gallipolis.
·

.

.

Davis-Huddleston
:~ RACINE- Themgagernent and
approaching marriage of Sue
Pavls, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
J'eteJeffers;Portland, and Michael
lluddleston, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dlive Huddleston, Racine, Is being
· jmnounced.
The bride-elect attended Southern High School.
Her fiance
graduatl!d from Southern and is
employed wtth J D. Drilling eo. 1n

•

.

)

•

•••••••••••••••••

Ma(garine.•....... ~.

FlAVORITE

-

Ice

JOAN OF AF.C LT. RED

SUGAR

KIDNEY BEANS

s.-149

.....:_ 15.50Z. CAN

4/Sl

Lintt Four Per Custom•
Atl'ollrs

upt!IA

,,

$
.

FLAVORITE .
. . $
%GAL
C II~eam •••••••••••••
.

.

R.AVORITE

5 LB. BAG.

.

PlASTICGAL

Domino Sugaf.~
SWEET SUE ,
13.s oz.
Chicken Broth..
.

•

Homo • Mllk • ••••••••

DARK , LT. BROWN or lOX .

lllr. 5, 1913

AJuneweddlnglsbelngplanned .

•J

$ 19

NU-MAID ·

Racine.

·,

4 LB. BAG

.-

79
19

�21

1983

====Anniversaries..=::;;==

:~

~on little

armac~
•
Hollcorrtb, 25rh

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold, 46rh
POMEROY - Dares and
Patricia Ann Hysell, and Janet
Mildred Arnold of Rock Springs
Marie Jetter&gt;; Pomeory. Jimmie
Road, Pomeroy, will observe their
Joe Arnold dled.ln 1938, and Henry
46th wedding anniversary on
Guy Arnold died Jan. 1, 1983. The
Tuesday.
CO\lple also .bave 17 grandchildren
Mr. &lt;1-nd Mrs. Arnold have sli&lt; · :;tnd eight great-granddaughters
children, Robert Lee, Southl;ide, W.
wl th one great-grandson deceased.
Va.;
Ruth
Minersville;

(FORMERLY PRICE &amp; SONS PHARIIACY)
"YOUR FULL SERVICE PRESCRIPTION CENTER"

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs.
Holcomb. His wtle Is Janel Fraley
Lee Holcomb, Lower RJver Road,
Holcomb and they reside In
GaUlpolls, observed their 25th wed·
Rodney.
·
dtng anniversary Feb. 22. A celeMrs. Holcomb Is 1he daughter of
bratlon was .held Feb. 21 at the
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence, GaUipolls . .
couple's home_
Mr. Holcomb's mother Is Myrtle
Both natives · of Gallla County, . Holcomb. His father Is deceased.
they were manied Feb. 22, 1958, in
.He Is employed by Kaiser Aluml·
Gallipolis by Mrs. Holcomb's un·
num and a Mason~ She Is a former
cle, Rev. Tyler Mooney at his
Ohio Bell Telephone Co. employee
home.
and a member of Eastern Star.
They have one child, Lee Allen

400 Second Ave.

GAGE - The 50th wedding a nnl·
versary of Mr. and Mrs. Willard
Grate will be observed on Satur·
day, _March 5, at Salem ~tist
Church on S.R. 3251n Gage.
Mr. Grate Is the son of the late
Clarence and Zelia Grate and Mrs.

and Mrs. Hoyr, 50rh
POMEROY - The 50th ·wedding
anniversary of Mr. a nd Mrs. Ar·
thur M. Hoyt, Pomeroy, was celebrated Wltb their family and close
relatives on Feb. 20 at their home
and hosted by their children.
Mr. Hoyt Is the son of the late
Albert M. a nd Mary Margaret Hoyt
of Gallipolis and Mrs. Hoyt Is the
former VIrginia R Evans, daugh·
ter of the late Robert L. and Annie
D. Evans of Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt were married
Feb. 23, 1933 In Catletlsburg, Ky.,
and are the parents of three child·
ren. Mrs. D. Thomas (MiirY Ann)
Crawford of Baltimore, Md .; Ansel

M. Hoyt of New Richmond; and Ju·
ditl) Kay Morris of Pomeroy. Mr.
and Mrs, Hoyt have five grand·
children and one gr"at·grandchlld.

Charles and Nellie Kiser.
The Grates have four children
Grate
Is the
daughter
of the late
who are
hosting
the c~lebratlon.
They are, Charles Grate, Patriot;
Mrs. John (Donna) McDaniel, Glf·
ford, Ill.; Mrs. Wllllam (Betty)
Warren, Tolono, Ill.; and Debbie
Grate, at !lome. They have seven
grandchildren and three great·
grandchldren,
Mr. and Mrs. Grate were mar·
rted on March 4, 1933 In GaUla

446-1883

COLOR PRINT DEVELOPING
If your prints aren't
ready when we say,
you'll get them FREE.
Applies to no. 126 or 35mm ori11inal roll
color print film (full frame, C-41
only)

·rt-~E

,....rIll""
...r
•\.Ct

~

W"lll: IN OM l AI. L fOR
AN APPQIN rMI N1

446-9510

•ICElAND lONG FAMOUS FOR THE HIGHEST
QUAliTY IN SEAFOODS. NOW AVAILAIIE FlESH
INAll KIOGEl STOlES DURING THE INTIRE
LENTEN SEASON.
•A NATUIAL ,_ODUCT.
CONTAINING NO ARTIFICIAliNGIEDIENTS.

~ _ Ocean

TO UFE

~flESH

Perch

69

~

~~ .

~' .

CABINET SALE

Snow
.Crab

OFF LIST PRICE ON
-ALL RIVIERA CABINETS

99

$

.....CLEARANCE
- SALE

RIVIERR HITCHEnS
•vRnS PRODUCTS a&gt;mPRnY

liMil OIILI If

w•Julla:U JII

CIAI MEAT IN A SEAFOOD IIEND .
USE IN IICII'IS IN PlACE OF lOISTEl ,
CIAIMEATOISHIIMI'.
~~~

'850.00
$499.00
$400.00
$400.00
$400.00
$600.00

ADMIRAL REFRIGERATOR NS-22, Almond, 3 dr., 22 cu. ft.
ADMIRAL REFRIGEATOR DNT-22, Almond. Ice &amp; Water
ADMIRAL REFRIGERATOR NS-22, Almond, 2 door
ADMIRAL'REFRIGERATOR NT-178, Almond, 17 cu. ft.
ADMIRAL REFRIGERATOR .NT-19, Almond. 19 cu. ft.
ADMIRAL DISHWASHER DU2496, Almo.nd
ADMIRAL DISHWASHER DE-24
ADMIRAL FREEZER; Chest, 8.3 cu. ft.
ADMIRAL FREEZER. Chest, White, 15 cu.ft.

Klec:h.--A.Id.
KITCHENAID DISHWASHER KDS-20
KITCHENAID DISHWASHER KDI-20
KITCHENAID DISHWASHER KDC-20
KITCHENAID TRASH COMPACTOR KCS-100
KITCHENAID DISPOSAL' KWE-200 .
KITCHENAID. HOT WATER DISPENSER (1 only)

$900.00
$900.00
$750.00
$475.00
$600.00
$279.00
$375.00
$300.00
$379.95

Crab
·. ·
Shapes ........ .. .. 1-Pice.
fiH·S HO~EFROZEN

Ocean
. .
Perch Fillets... . ~~:

$750.00
$525.00 .
$275.00 '

fAIMI~ISEO

flESH

'

$299:

. '

. Flounder Fillets ............ .. _

~~~: $199
$259.

BuHerfly
Shrimp

Sh r1mp
• Shapes. .. . .

$

99
H ·LI. WHOlE

$11CID filE -

tee

u
01'- m.

$299
Breaded Miniatures u ....'
FRES-5HORI PEElED . DEVEINED FROZEN
ss 99 .

FIES·SHOitlfiOZEN

P~g .

Cocktail Shrimp__ .

~:...~~

SERVE 'N' SAVl !~lAD

·

$18 9
Cooked Shrimp .. .. ... ~;;: .
FRES·SHORE
CRISPY, CRUNCHY

Fish
Fillets

2

$
10-oz.
Pkg.

"·OZ . PIG ... $1. H
15-0Z. SANDWICH STYLI 0116-0Z . DINNEI STYLI
LIGNT'NCIUNCNYflOZEN

$199

fres-Shore Cod Fillets loch
flf!-SHOft fiOZIN CIIINCHY .

Crispy .fish Sticks .. , ;;o;:
FISN STICK$ . IA·OZ. PWG ... S1.,

S·J19

_,

S
AVE DOUBLE $$ _
AT JOHNSON'S
&amp; MARK V ·

": Tuesday, March 1- CPR Ctass,
~ 30 a.m.; S.T.O.P . Ctass, 10:~
~.m.; Physical Fitness, 11: 15 a.m.
; : Wednesday, March 2 - Vinto~
ilitble Study; Crown Ctty Mobile
t)rilt, 1 p.m .; Card Games,l·3 p.m.;
~merlcan Literature Class, I p.m.;
~oga Class, 6 p.m. ·
.
: : ThufSday, March 3 - Bible
~udy, 11 a.m .-noon; Advisory
. 'Council, 1 p.m .
• •· Frtday, March 4·- Staff Meet·
Jlig, 8:15-8:45 a.m .; Art Class, 1·3
p:m.; Craft Mint.Court, 1.J p.m.;
~tal Hour, 7 p.m.
: · The Senior Nutrttlon Program
!1AJ1 serve the following menus:
• :Monday - Swiss steak,-parsley
-~ttloes, spinach, bread, butter, ta·
b!Oea pudding.
: '1\resday- Cheese sandwich, ve·
~table stew, Jello with fruit,
snlckerdOOdles. &gt;. :· Wednesday - s;ilmon patties,
':::· ~~amed peas, pickled beets,
: • ., ad, butter, apple ple.
:; Thursday - Meat loaf, baked potato, green beans, bread, butter.,
i\'ocolate cake and Icing.
:~ Friday - Navy beans and ham,
~eilaw, cornbread, butter, red
Jello
wlt)l fruit.
1'"' .....
.•

•

•

NO DOUBLE COUPONS
ON WEEKLY
ADVERTISED
SPECIALS

THURSDAY, MAR. 3"

Budget
.P/eQ$er
Special

Sue/get
Pleaser
Special

USDA OtOICE
RJUCUT

BOB FI/ANS

79

BONE-IN
ROUND STEAK

LB.

$199

NELESS ROUND

LB.

Budget

79

$

SAUSAGE
REG., HOT, SAGE

LB. ROLL
_ 12 OZ.

RUDY'S FARM

SAUSAGE &amp; BISCUITSsox

$}69

BOSTON BUTT

$ 39

PORK
ROAST

LB.

PORK

SHOULDER STEAK

Pleaser
Special

Sue/get
Pleaser
Special

Sue/get
Pleaser
Special

FRESH LEAN

USDA OtOICE

HlllSHIRE FARMS

GROUND
BEEF

CUBE
STEAK
$}49

GROUND CHUCK
Budget
Pleaser
Special

$ 19
LB.

· WILSON'S

CORN KING BACON

$ 29

12 OZ.
PKG.

Budget
Pleaser
Special

EMPeROR

LB.

CAUFORNIA

PINT

STRAWBERRIES

$}39

BAKING
POTATOES

10 LB.

BAG

CAUFORNIA TENDER

CRUNCHY CARROTS

$ 39

LUC~

¢

ARMOUR

$139

24 oz.
CAN

BEEF STEW

LEAF

$ 39

COKE, TAB, .
SPRITE, . B-lG oz.
MR. PI 88 BTLS.

Plus

PREMIUM QUAUTY

ICE CREAM
STOKB.Y

TOMATO
JUICE
460Z.
CAN

79¢

HALF

GAL

Pleaser Special

·. STOKELY
CATSUP
132 oz.
,BTL. .

APPLE
SAUCE

17 oz. '
CAN

ROYAL CREST

24

COTTAGE CHEESE

oz. $}29

CTN.

Sue/get
Pleaser
Special

Budget
Pleaser
Special

Buclgee Pleaser _Special

BAG

STOKELY

CORN fA3z.

MRS. SMITH'S APPLE OR

4 LB.

NAVAL ORANGES

STOKELY WHOLE
KERNB. OR
CREAM STYLE

CHERRY '&amp;~-,
PIE FILLING-

HEAD

CAUFORNIA

POUND
BAG

Special

Budget
'Pieaser
Special

$169

¢

HEAD
LmUCE

Special

SLICED, CARROTS ~~~z.

POUND
PKG.

ICEBERG

.special

STOKB.Y

LB.

ALL MEAT WIENERS

Budget
P/easer

Green Beans
Shelly Beans

99

KAHN'S REG. or JUMBO

Budget
Pleaser
16 OZ.
CAN

$149

SMOKED SAUSAGE
POLASKA KIELBASA

Budget
P/easer
STOKB.y

LB .

Sue/get
Pleaser
Special

U.S. NO. I
IDAHO

.

an

~~allia senior center

l-Ib.
,~,

THE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49¢ IN FACE VALUE.

~ ~!~r·~~~~ect'::;t:S:~~~~~~:

; • p ALLIPOLIS - Activities for
~the week of Feb. 28-March 4 at the
.
.
·~nlor Citizens Center located at
~ Jackson Pike are as follows:
: • Monday, Feb. 28 - Chorus, 1·3

$299

...OUBLE
U

EXTRA LEAN

.

Your
.Hometown
Supermarket

_

RED
GRAPES

'

FIIS·SHOREIIIADIDflOZEN

DOUBL
COUPONS'

;. Friday -Physical Fitness. 11:30
'. a.m.; Bowling, 1.J p.m.
:; The Senior Nutrition Program
:· sezves a hot meal at noon each day.
~ ~ll 992·2161 to make a reservation
•: for a meal no later than 9 a.m.
~ · Monday Vegetable soup·
: / crackers, grtUed cheese sa"d·
~ wtCh, sliCed. bananas and oranges.
~· · 'l\lesday - Chicken livers with
•. seasoned nee pilaf, three-bean
~· salad, carrots, muffin, pineapple
&gt;upside down cake.
-: Wednesday - Glazed ham loaf,
:: sweet potatoes, Waldorf salad,
:· sherbet.
:: : Thursday - Pork tenderloin,
· mashed potatoes, lima beans, hot
: rolls, peach cobbler.
~ : Friday - New E ngla nd blUed

..

Pkg.

'PREVIOUSLY FROZEN
RED MEAT

• POMEROY -Meigs Collnly Se; nlor Citizens Center. Mulberry
: Heights, Pomeroy, Invites all el·
~ derly &lt;Jf the county to take part in
• activities at the center.
; .The schedule of activities for the
; week of Feb. 28-March 4 Is as
r folklws: ·
~ Monday - Physical Fitness,
r 11: ~a.m .; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
{. Tuesday - ' PhysiCal Fitness,
; 11:30 a.m .. Chorus Practi.ce, 1-2
•. p.m.
:: Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
:• 11: 30 ,m.;
!: Thursday - Physical Fitness,
:: 11:30 a.m.; Ceramic lnstructlon.10

j namon, biscuits, va nilla
1creamlhot fudge sundae.

$
1-1•.

·

center

'

FROZEN
FRES.SHORE IIIEADED

Pkg.

Alaskan
Salmon

SJ99

Fw-Skue Sped~

189

Fres-Shore .
Cod Fillets .......

S299

Catf1sh Fillets ....... . .,_. lb.

$

~~- S395

sJ99

.. .. .. .. . .. ..·. lb.

•

$2 49

Dressed
Whiting ..... ... ...

'

$550.00
$500.00
$350.00
·.$399.00
$139.00
$79.95

(;.fi;h:~~5~~

ser:~ior

. a.m. -noon.

Haddock F1llets ... .. ... . lb.

12"01.

flO ZEN

•

.

.S359

1

l ·lb.

~ENN·A.IA
JENN·AIR RANGE D-120, Drop In, 2 burner/grill
JENN-AIR COOKTOP C220. (l left) 2 Burner/Grill
JENN-AIR GRILL C101

COOKID, lEADY-TO·EAT

ss99
$359

Dressed Trout .. ··-······ ...lb.

APPLIANCES IN STOCK
AMANA REFRIGERATOR SR22, Side by Side, 22 cu. ft. Gold
AMANA RADARANGE RR-10, Touch Controls
AMANA CORNING COOKTOP AKC-1, Display
AMANA CORNING COOKTOP AKC-3, Display
AMANA FREEZER ESU-13, White, 13 cu. ft.
AMANA GLASSTOP RANGE, ASC-I

leeland1c Cod . ......... lb.

FlESH

lb.

•

FIISH , II()NEI!SS . SMINIESS

!~ fRISHICllANDICJ~Mio

FROZEN FUllY COOKED
CLUSTERS OF ALASKAN

,,......

.

~- Sea Scallops . .. .... ~~-

lb.

Rn

COPYRIGHT 1913 • THIWIOGEI CO ••
ITEMS AND PRICES COOD SUNDAY , ·
FU . 27 , THROUGH SATUIDA~ .
MARCH 5, ltU , IN SILVER IlliDGE &amp;
POMEROY . WE IESERVE THE liGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTntl!. NONE SOlD
TO OEALUS.

WHERE NEW .
IDEAS COME

ICELANDIC LARGE FILLETS

A NEW DIRfCriON IN HAIR DESIGN''

GALLIPOUS - Dr. Samuel L.
!-Bossard Memorial Library will be
nat the following places the week of
: Feb. 28 to March 4.
C Monday - Ewlngton, 1:15-1:45
•p.m:; Geiger's, 2-2: ~ p.m:; Adney
:Rd .. 2:45-3:15 p.m.; Vinton P .O., ·
:.3:30-4: ~ p.m.; Bidwell. 5-6 p.m.;
;Hanisburg, 6: 15-6:'30 p.m.
': Tuesday - Eno, 2: :Jl.3 p.m.;
~~e. 3:~3:20 p.m.; Atrtca Rd.,
30-3:45 p.m.; Kyger I, 3:50-4: w
,p.m.; Kyger ll, 4: 25-4: 40 p.m.;
&gt;Roush Lane I. TI, 4:45-5: 15 p.m.
.Cheshire I, 6-il: ~p. m.; Cheshire II,
i~:35-7 p.m.
• Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15-2:30
!p.m.; Smltb, 2:45-3:15 p.m.; My·
·~s. 3:30-3: 45 p.m. ; Mercerville. ~
;:.30 p.m.; Burd, 4:40-5 p.m.,
Crown City P.O.. 5:15-6 p.m.; Eu·· .
. reka. 6:15-6:45 p.m.
;-.· ·Thursday - Watts, 2:30-2:45
• p.'m.;· Brick School Rd., 2: 55-3:10
:: p.m.; Addavllle Elementary. 3:15• 3:·45 p.m .; St. Rd. 7 (Roadside
:Rest). 3:55-4:10 p.m.; Georges Cr.
• Rd. I. II, 4: 15-5 p.m.; Bulavllle Tr.
: Ct., 5:30-6 p.m.; Plantz Subdv ..
: 6: 1~: 45 p.m. ·
, ;
friday - Kerr, 3'3:40 p.m.;
• Buck Ridge. 4-5:05 p.m.; Jay Dr. I.
: If, 'ff; 15-5: 45 p.m.; Bob McCormick
~ Rd., 6--6: 15 p.m.
·

; Meigs

•JUST HOURS OFF fiSHING BOATS IN
THE FAI NOIITH ATlANIIC WATEIS
!UiiOUNDING ICElAND.

J.\CROSS

~Gallia bookmobile

:a:

r-----..::...;:....::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-1
Monday thru Friday
9AMI09PM• '
Saturday 9 AM to s P M

Tuesday - Portland (Post Of·
:~flee), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Letart Falls
:'. (Effie's Restaurant), 3:05-3:50 ·
~ p.m :; Racine (Bank), 4:35-6:05
:·p.m., short !Dm will be shown 15
: mutes after bookmobile arrives;
~syracuse
(Pool). 6':a&gt;-7' 50 p.m.,
~short Him will be shown 15 minutes
"'after bookmobile arrtves.
·,: wednesday - Tuppers Plains
~ (Arbaugh ) 7:25-7: 55p.m.; Rlggsc·
.1restAddltion, 8:10-8:40 p.m.

f

rr=~~::~~e·~~:::;;;;;;;;j~~~~~~~~~~~l

'•o
'
.

~------

.

EE

County by Justice of the Peace Earl
Cheatwooa and have Uved all their
married Jives in Gallla County.
Open house will be observed
from6to9p.m.forfr!endsandrela·
tlves. The couple requests gifts be
omitted.
·

f ~~t) $

50%

'• .

·on time or

Golden year observe~

~~~12~7~1~9~8~3d~~=r~===========P=o=m=eroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,W. Va.
-Meigs bookmobile
PRICES
POMEROY - BookmobUe ser·
vice In M~Countyls provided by
EFFECTIVE
Meigs County Public Library under
contract with Ohio Valley Area
SUNDAY
Libraries.
fEBRUARY 27
Bookmobile schedule for Mon·
day - Carpenter (Laura's Store),
3:10-3:40 p.m.: nexter (church).
THROUGH
W0-4:40 p.m.; oanvUJe (Cllurch),
SOPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9A.M. TO 10 P.M.5:20-5:45p.m.: Rutland (ClvlccenGalipo~.- na. •
P...._e
_ u.:gs~
SATURDAY
. ter), 6: l&gt;-8 p.m., short fllm will be
•URl
-.llllt VII 10
tMI .....,. ~;J
81::i1 VineS'-"
.;:~=5~smtnutesatterbookmoblle
'We Resen1 tbe RtM to Un~ Quantity"
MARCH 5

STOKaY

~RUIT

COCKTAIL
'1702.
CAN

59¢

ROYAL \.CREST
.

2% MILK

GAL.
PLASTIC

$

99¢
..._.,. ... BROWN ·POTATOES ~i~-

ORE-IDA

.

Budget Pleaser Special

Budg~t l'leR•er Spe&lt;:lal

PAR KAY
MARGARINE

SUNNY MORN
GRADE A

4 STICK- ·POOND

EX; LARGE

F

0
R

DOUN

�Pag1 8-8-The Sunday Times Sentinel

Februc11y 27, 1913

brant. Davidson Is a senior at
Seabury-Western TheOlogical
Seminary, Evanston, Dl.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT Special
missionary services wW be held
at Middleport Independent Holiness Church Sunday at 7:30p.m.
with Rev. Thy Troyer o! Hope
Sound, F1a., as guest speaker.
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
Invites the publlc to ttend.

MONDAY

POMEROY - A spectal mee~
tng of Pomeroy Chapter lll,
Royal Arch Masons, will be held
at 7 p.m. Monday at the temple.
Work wUl be In the mark master
and past master ctegrees.

MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Guy
Troyer, Hope Sound, Fla., wtll
be guest speaker at missionary
services Sunday at Middleport
lndependent Holiness Church,
Services wlll be at 7:30p.m. Tbe
Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor,
lnvltesthe public to attend,

day at 7: 30 p.m. at the hlgh
school.

Memorial Library. The session
Is an ,Introduction to romputer
usage. Pre-register at the II·
brary, 641 Second Ave, or call

446.READ.

POMEROY - OH KAN Cotn
Club wtU meet at 7 p.m. Monday
tn the Riverboat RoOm of Dla·
mood Savings and l.Dan Co. A
social hour and trading session
wtU be followed by a coin auc·
tlon. Tbe group wW complete
plans for Its 8!ll1Ual coin show to
be held March 13 and refresh·
ments wW be served,

SYRACUSE - Rev. Howard
Lance wW be gue5t speaker at
Syracuse Church of the N;lZS·
rene Sunday at 10: 30 a.m. and at
· 6:30 p.m . Featured singer dur·
lng the morning service wUl be
Mary Janice Lavender and
during the evening services will
be Debbie Powell. Tbe Rev,
James Kittle, pastor, Invites the
public to attend.

Calendar
GALLIPOIJS - GaiDa Chap·
ter of the Ohio Civil Service Em·
ployees Association wtU hold an
annual dinner meeting at Duff's
Restaurant Monday at 7 p.m.
Presentation of current mem·
bershlp card will be accepted as
the cost of a .meal.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern At·
hletlc Boosters wtll meet Mon·

POMEROY - Special meet·
lng, Pomeroy Chapter Ill, Royal
Arch Masons Monday 7 p .m .
with work tn the mark master
and past master degrees.

TUESDAY

Sun~y

Hi

The Saving Place ..

ROMAN

~

r.~

. HOLIDAY

~

(®

.

®®®~~

SUNDAY
Thru
TUESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - A computer
orientation session will be held
Monday at 7 p.m . at Bossard
PORTER PORTERS- World Series MVP Darrel Potier carries equipment out of the St. Louis Cardinals' club house with fellow catcher Glenn

Pat Robertso n began to realize rhere are principles in the
kingdom as enunciated by the
Lord that are every bit as
for our lives as the law
thermodynamics or the
law of electriciry. The physical laws ate immutable, and
he soon saw that the kingdom
laws are equally so.

of Reciprocity
of Use
of Perseverance
of Responsibility

Brummer, right, Friday In St. Petersburg, Fla. Tlte
Wclrld Champions opened their early camp for
pitchers and catchers' Friday. (AP Laserphoto),

Platooning frustrates ·Hassey
2

WITH COUPON

Malted Milk Balls
Crunchy candles. 13 oz:

TUCSON. Ariz. lAP)- For Ron
Hassey. the scenario Is all too
familiar.
In each of the past three years. the
Cleveland Indians' veteran catcher
has been In a spring-training battle
for the starting catcher 's spot. And
in each season, the left-handed·
hitting Hassey wound up being
platooned , first with Bo Diaz (since
traded to Philadelphia) a nd last ·
year wit h Chris Bando.
" I am very frustra ted," said the
29-year·old Hassey. " but I feel right
now that I can do t he job if I just get
the opportunity to play a little

Eo.

4.72

Cl:

Sale
Price
WITH COUPON

•Net WI.

his new book Pat discloses
the laws of The Secret King ·
that will bring you an '
abundant life ...

I

6. Pair Men's Socks
Cotton/nylon. Fit 10-13.

8!1

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Foam 1111, zipper cover.

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

Cof.4)onGoodllvuMcw. l,1983

,

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•Law of Greatness
•Law of Unity
•Law of Miracles
•Law of Dominion

Polyester Thread
225-yd. spools. Colors.
Couoorl&lt;oooa nw -

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Last season, his fourt h \&lt;ith the
Indians, Hassey appeared to have
won the job, but he started out
slowly, At theAII·Star break, he was
hitting just .194.
"When we left spring training, I

fl'lt we had a very good team ,"
Hassey said. " But things just
weren't jelling for us, and It affected
my play.
"At the AU-Star break, I did not
stay in Cleveland. I went home (to
Tucson I, and I told m yselfthatlhad
to prove tha t I -am not a .190 hitter,
that I am a .300 hitter, which was
what I hit two years ago."
In 198l, Hassey hit .318 to lead aU
major league catchers.
Hassey Indeed did rebound in the
second haif of 1982, hitting .317 to
ftntsh the season at .251.
" After the break, I thought I was
very consistent, " he said. "I hjt for
average, drove tn runs, rroved the
rurmers and played well defen·
s ively. That is my goalthts year, just · ·
to be consistent."
But the Idea of platooning still
does nqt stt well with hlm.

Umll2

Our 5.47-5.67

The Alcove
42 Cout1 St.

Umll 2

Our

WITH COUPON

GaJ/ipolii, Ohio

Reg. 224

attorneys and Generals officials.
WRIGHTSVU.LE. Ga . (AP I Herschel Walker. continuing his
"It's behind closed doors, and it's
stra nge odyssey to the muitl·million
got to stay there,"WlllisWalkertold
dollar world of professiona l football,
Tbe Associated Press. "We'd love to
said goodbye to his coach. goodbye
cooperate with you, but we haven't
to his parents, and headed south to
been alone wtth him two minutes
begin a new tile.
s ince he got here."
Tbe 20-year-old Reisman Trophy
Walker's attorney; Jack Manton,
winner left Athens a nd the Unive~­
said Friday that he would someday
sity ol Georgia on Friday, sped to his
mak!' Walker " the highest paid
farntly' s home In east-central· player in a ll sports, both teamspons
and tennis, golf or boxing."
Georgia and prepared to leave for
Orlando, Fla .. site of the rratnlng
Manton . sa id the USFL's televicamp of the New Jersey Generals'
sion package wtth .ABC and ESPN
of the United States Football
- " no renewal wUl be granted until
.
,
the television people ftnd out how
League.'
Friday night, Walker, hts fiancee
long Herschel is committed to the
league" - will give his client
and hts father arrived back home in
Wrightsville, gu nnlngthelrcars into
increased bargaining leverage in
the driveway and scattering a . future years.
In Orlando, at , the ·Generals'
crowd of reporters and photographers gathered around. Walker
camp, the excltem.lnt was building
entered the house without speaking,
foward the arrival of the man some
as Georgia Ma tc troopers cruised
have called not just "Tbe Fran·
the street and a priva te bodyguard · chlse,',' but to the fledgling USFL,
parked tn the driveway.
"Tbe League.''
Four hours late r, Walker's father
Team officials announced In
said the family had had "a V!'ry
advance that Walker ~ld pracImportant meeting" with Walker's
tice immedia tely after h1s arrival tn

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Pert Shampoo
11 oz. bottle of
relreshi~ shampoo.

OPEN DAILY 9:30 nL 8:00
&lt;l.OSED SUNDAYS

got 1t.
MR-SO.Sl!Giff PIAlfOIIM srti.!NG
I" ·, .e i()UI IOCfl

~ I~

rl nee&lt;JI f'&lt;JI Irnre aooea "''iJ'''

rl so tosniJ!1trgnr let :Jessed "'

nrg~ll

$J6.()()

~OVI arra elil\jam

Your'
Choice

1.37ea.
WITH COUPON

Colgate"' Sale
New gel or regular
flavor toothpaste.

"'·
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AVOIIai:We only In
Slotes Wlh

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lriiOOpm
111!1 ll!d filltl
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2.38

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78$
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High-performance
oil treatment. 15 oz. •

Sale Price ·

77~g.
WITH COUPON

'

•

"Net wt.

1~500pm

185 I.JIJIJer tnvcr f~rl.. Gallipoli~) OH.
:· ' ··.

,•

''I'm thetype o! guy that does not
enjoy going to the ballpark to watch
the game," Hassey said. "I need to
play more. But they have their
reason (for platooning) , and I
understand it.
"Eecause of the numerous lefthanded hitters we haye in · our ·
lineup, they have a need for a nother
right-hand~ bat. "
This year's competition for Hassey will come once again from the
sWitch-hit ting Bando and Jim
Essian, a right ·handed batter
obtained last m onth from the
Seattle Mariners.
With these three catchers In
ramp, the~ Is the possibilitY of a
trade, Hassey satd.
"I've heiJ.rd a lot of rumors that
since we picked up E sslan. I was
going to be traded," Hassey said. ·
" But I've been hearing those for the
last couple of years.·'

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Charles Hun scored 14 of his 15
points in the second half Saturday
and sparked foul-plagued Kentucky
to an 81·72 Southeastern Conference
baSketball victory over Georgia.
The victory raised No. 10 Kentucky's record to 19·5 overall and

114 lri the SEC. Georgia dropped to
17-8 and 8-8. ·
Tbe Wildcats blew open the game
With a 10-1 streak that widened their
lead to 80-66 wtth 1:49 remaining.
Hurt hit a thunderous dunk shot
and Jim Master contributed two
Iong field goals tn ihat run .
The Bulldogs, who trailed 43-33 at
halftime, remained In contmtion
through most of the second half on
the scoring of Lamar Heard , who
had 10 of his 16 points tn the second
period.
Georgia trailed . just 70-65 after
Terry Fair sank twofreethrowsand
Vern F lernlng hit a lay\Jp with 4:33
togo.
A long jumper by Master then
Ignited Kentucky's decisive scoring
run.
Master finished with 14 points,
including 10 In the second half.
Fleming led Georgia with 23 points
and James Banks added 14.

Xavier in rout
CINCINNATI (API - Anthony
Hicks set a Xavier U niversity

career searing record and Steve
Wolf hit a career-high 22 points
Saturday to higlight 79·53 rout of
Oklahoma City in a Midwestern
City Conference basketball game.
Hicks, a ~nlor·guard, hit 13 points
to passSteve.Thomasas the school's
all-time scorer. Hicks has 1,726
career points, four more than the
mark established by Thomas in
1965-66 season.
·
Xavier improved to 9-4 in the
conference and 18-7 overall, the
most victories by a Xavier team
·since the 1957-58 club went 19-11 and
won tne National Invitational Tournament. Oklahoma City suffered its
16th straight loss, falli~g to 3-21
overall and 0·12 in the conference.
Wolf, a senior guard, made a
jumper to give Xavier a 29-23
advantage at the half. He thi!n hit
three consecutive long jump shots
early tn the second ha lf to help
Xavier build a 43-31 lead.
Oklahoma City was forced to use
just four players the last 55 seconds
because three of its seven players
fouled out.

a

Petty starts 900th race
RICHMOND, Va. (API -When
Richard Petty starts his 900th race
Sunday in the $203,0ll Richmond 400
Grand National, it will be .a record
352nd start in a row- and he has no
thoughts of quitting.
"As long as I enjoy racing and can
make a decent living, I'll continue to
race,'' says Petty, who was ihe first
Grand National stock car driver to
earn more than $1 million in his

career.
What position Petty Will start

from was to be determined today .A
series of s howers a nd a wet track
forced postponement Friday of
time trials that were to have
determined the top 20 starters for
the30-car fi e ld that will run Sunday.
The firSt 20 spots were to be filled
today With the other 10 to be
determined later.Also on tap was
qualifying for the Eastern 150,. a
Late Model Sportsman race to be
run today at Fairgrounds Raceway .

Budweiser Grand Prix race
underway ·in Miami streets

MIAMI (API - Tber!' ts danger
lurking tn the streets of Miami this
weekend dur ing the running of the
Budweiser Grand Prix.
Saturday and Sunday there are
going to be sports cars - some of
them standard production models,
otber s more exotic and prototypes
- racing on a winding, 12·tum
?
course constructed amid the downtown businesses. ·
Tbe danger is not so much
camp Saturday
Inherent in the speeds of up to 160
Before leaving Athens, Walker
mph that the fastest cars will hit on
spent about 30 minutes alone with
the two long straightaways, In·
Georgia Coach Vince Dooley. It was
stead, it is evident in the 3-!oot -taU
the first time the two had come
concrete barrters that line virtually
together face-to-face since before
the entire circuit.
the week' s strange happenings,
"Tbere is no place for error here
which reached a climax Wednesday
at all," noted Hurley Haywood, one
as the university declared Walker
of America's premier sports car
lnellgtble for his senior year. The
drivers. "Whenyoumakeamlstake
star tailback .then signed a threeyear pact with the Generals,
reportedly for $5 million.

on most road courses, you slide
through the grass and evf!ntually
stop. Then you try to get the car
going again. Here, If you make a
mistake, you're in the concrete,"
Englishman David Hobbs, who
has driven tn justa bout every major
auto racing series, agreed. "Most
drivers wlll adapt pretty well to
whatever the conditions a re," he
said, "but drivers are going to make
mistakes. , And here, a sma ll
mistake Is going to turn Into a major
drama.
.
'I think the most dangerous
aspect of the whole thing Is going to
be the less experienced, less
efficient drivers. If they get
involved with any sort of contact
with the wall, lt 'sa verygoodbetthe
track will become lnstantlv

"I appreciate Herschel coming
by, and we had a good visit," Dooley
told a crowd of reporters. " I wished
him tuck and told him to keep in
touch and told htm I was happy for
him."
"He said he'd be back in the fall to
continue his education, and I was
glad to hear that."
Before leaving the Georgia cam·
pus, Walker also said he planned to
return to school. "I'll sttU come hack
and get my degtee," he told a
reporter. "My plans haven't
changed, just redirected. "

..

recorded a modest Tl feet , 4'\4 Inches. It was good
NEW YORK (AP I- Carol and Carl Lewis made it
enough t9 wtn, but it wasn't good enough to satisfy the
AU-Family Day a t the USA-Mobil Indoor Track and
crowd at Madison Square Garden. Some booed when
Field Champions hips,
It was announced that the Willingboro, N.J., resident
VIrtually flying away from the field, Carol Lewis
was passing h1s last five tries.
set an American Indoor record In wtnnlng tbe ·
The jeers turned to cheers when Lewis whipped a
women's long jump ai 21·5¥. a t the stan of Friday's
field In the 60 that included James Butler, !he world's
activities In this . prestigious day-long event at
top-ranked 200-meter runner, and Ron Brown, the
Madison Square Garden. Lewis' jump eclipsed tbe
fonner Arizona State University stsr. It was only the
American record of 21-4 % set by Martha Watson In
second such double tn the meet's ~year history. The
1973 a nd equalled In 1976 by Watson and Kathy only other athlete to do It was Barney Ewell In 1945.
McMlllan.
Meanwhtle, Stephanie Hightower set a .world
Not to be outdone by his sister, Carl Lewis recorded
Indoor best tn the women's 60-yard high hurdles. The
a rare double victory at njght, first wtnnlng the long
top-ranked American for the ~t three years,
jump and then the 60-yard dash in a breeze.
Hightower just clobbered a first -class field that
"I felt I was In charge of the race from the first
Included Candy Young and Benita Fitzgerald. .
step," said the 21-year-old Lewis after becoming the
Hlghtowe(s time of 7.36 seeonds clipped .01 of a
first athlete to wln a sprint-long jump double tn the
second off the world Indoor best of7.37 she had shared
USA-Mobtl Indoor Track and Field Championships In
Young, set last year,
38 years, "I came out of the blocks well, accelerated wtth
In the men's rnlle, Ireland's Eamonn Coghlan
and jus! dictated this race."
continued hts mastery tJver American record holder
Lewis' perfonnance In the sprint - a meet-record
Steve Scott and scored his sixth victory without a loss
6.04 seconds - was all the more remarkable the way
thls season, running· the mile In 3:58.50.
he was feeling. He had been suffering with a "a bad
Bllly Olson won the pole vault at 18-113;0 on fewer.
chest cold" and as late as Tbursday, was examined
misses over his Pacific Coast Clull teammate, Dan
by a doctor and told to use an Inhalator and take
Ripley. Greg Foster won the 60 hurdles in a
anttoblottcs for the rest ot the day.
meet-record 6.92 seconda. The old mark was 6.94,
In !hi! long jump, Lewis - the only athlete ever to
established by Renaldo Nehemiah In 1979.
clear 28 feet Indoors - took only one jump and.

.

- •"*

.!&gt;

-

....

ON DUKER- cart Lewis of tile 8allla Monica
Tl'llck Club bealll the 001iiji8lllloa to tile ftnWI Jlfte In
tile fiDaiA evl!ld of tbe 80-yllld dash for men duttng the
t .l -·--~

a

blocked. Then, you could have
chain-reaction accident.
The circuit wasn't even ava.Uable
until this morning because city
authprlties did not turn contrololthe
roads ove r to the race promoter,
Miami Motorsports, unt.il 7 p.m.
Friday.
And, HaywOOd, who will co&lt;lrive
a Lola T-600 prototype wit h E nglis hm an Brian Rl'dman , said it may not
be as bad as evetybody thinks once
the cars.get out of the course.
"You don't even really know what
the problems are going to be until
you drive the car on the track," he
explained. "Once you do that. what
you expected to be a problem Could
be just fine , but something e lse you
didn't even think of becomes a real
problem . We 'll all just have to walt
and See."

Indoor meet becomes family affair

.-::. • •• • • • COUPON

lllt w
lllrwl,

Wildcats win

Walker continues strange odyssey

1.97

5.27ea.

lAfayette MaJJ ·

conne~s

BOWLING GREEN , Ohio (AP)
- David Jenkins scored 22 Points
and Colin Irish 21 while Bowling
Green sank 37 of 46 free throws
Saturday tn deieatlng Ohio Untver·
slty89-75 and wrapping up a shareof
the Mid-American Conference bas·
ketball title.
With two Mid-Amer ican games
left, the Falcons also clinched the
home-floor a dvantage and a first·
round bye In the conference
tournament.
Bowling Green, 13-3 In the
conference, outscored Ohlo8-2tn the
last five minutes of the flrsthalffota
37-29 halftime lead . TheBobcatsare
11-5 in conference play. Both teams
have 18-7 overall marks.
Tbe Falcons then reeled off 10
straight points tD stan the second
half for a 47-29lead. Ohio never was
closer than nine points thereafter in
losing to Bowling Green for the
second time this season,
Tbe Bobcats, paced by Jeff
Thomas' 20polnts, had 10 mote field
goals tha n the FalCGns, but collected
just three of seven free throws,
Bowling Green used a balanced
attack with Keith Taylor adding 16
points and Bill Fatne 15. John
Devereaux and Eddie Hicks hit 13
apiece and Eric Hilton contributed
12 for the Bobcats.

POMEROY - ThelzaakWalton Club wtU hold Its annual winter covered plate dinner and fun
auction Monday at 7 p.m. Per·
sons to bring own table service,
beverage and Item for the auction. Members and friends are
Invited to attend.

GALLIPOUS - Sernlnartan
Don Davidson will speak at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church Sun·
day at 10: :lJ a.m. Father AI
MacKenzie, rector, wW be ceJe.

•Law
•Law
•Law
•Law

Falcons rip Bobcats;
share MAC crown

G

POMEROY- Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commercewtll met
Tuesqay at noon at Meigs Inn.
All members are urged to attend
and take a guest.

Open Daily 10-9;

~~

W1J APRIL 10-18 . ~
~ Round Trip Airfare
~
.·~ 7 Nights Hotel
~
..:tJ · · 360 Second AVe.
ll:il
~li~~
~·

POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters wtU meet Tuesday at
7: 30 p.m. at the high school.

Southern Local

POMEROY ..:.. Bible prophecy lecture at Pomeroy
Seventh-day Adventist Church
at 7 p, m . Monday on the topic
"Blood on the Moon." Take Bl·
bles; study book wlil be
provided,

ADDISON - Rev. Jack Par·
sons wW speak at Addison FreewiD Baptist Church ,S unday at
7: 30 p.m . Tbe Addison Quartet
will . appear . Tbe publtc ts
Invited.

r®®®®e•

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees wtU meet Tuesday
at 8 p,m, at Syracuse Muntclpal
·- ..Building.

POMEROY - Plans for an ·
annuai cotn show w1li be made
when OH KAN Cotn Club meets
In the Riverboat Room at Dla·
mond Savings and l.Dan, Pomeroy, Monday. Social hour and
trading session 7 p.m.; coin auction following; refreshments.
RACINE -

r_
ts

Board of Education wW meet ·
Monday at 6 p.m . tn the high
school auditorium.

USA/MobUe 'l'rllck and Field Champlolll!lhlps at Madlion Square Garden In New York Friday night. (AP
LaserpiMJio).
.

- - - --· ----r ---~--'--·-·

�Ohio-Point PlealGnt, W. Va.

February 27. 1

27 1983

Ohio-Point

W.Va.

Southern cli1tches seventh sectional
title
.
.
despite gallant effort by Southwestern

Mowery ranks high
in 3 MOC categories

.

RIO

GB~ W~LFEtook all lour

quarters to decide, but when the flnal fireworks had ceased Southern's Tornadoes had clinched their
seventh consecutive Class "A" 'Sectlonal Tournament title with a
hard-fought 62-56 victory iwer the
persistent Southwestern
Highlanders.
After three periods, ·with the
score knotted 4444, the upsetminded Highlanders added to that
momentum to begin the final round
when senior center Paul McNeal

TIGHT DEFENSE ..:.. Despite a tight defense, Southwestern's Paul
McNeal, a 6-5 senior, gets high oH the floor lor a jmnp shot over the
strelchlng hands of Southem'sChris Bostick (35). McNealhadl7polnts
oo the night. Sou them advanced to the Class A District Tournament at
ChiBlcothe wllh a 62-56 victory. Others shown In this Bill Bahr pboto are
Southern's ROO Uttlefleld (13) and the Highlanders' Jeff Meek (20).

SWHS carne right back to again

~tthe~re.
Fourth Quarter

gave them a 4644 edge.
A strong finish from southpaw
Zane Beegle, however, counter acted any sliver of hope SWHS had
going down the stretch. He ended
the game on an offensive tear that
netted him a career high 37 points.
· Together Beegle and side-kick
Rod Littlefield poured In 53 points
as Littl!'fleld mtched a 16 point
tally.
Dennis Teaford was ilie only
other Tornado to make a field goal
thl' entire contest.
·•
Southwestern · placed three men
ln double figures as McNeal
dumped In 17 points, Randy Layton
12, and Gary Baker 10.
Unlike a week ago In regular season play when Southern blitzed
SWHS 9044, Southwestern came
Into the contest with a rebirth of
confidence and streaked to a 16-10
first period lead. WhJ!e taking the
upper hand the Highlanders utll!zed a deliberate offensive pattern,
working the ball around the horn
for a good outside shot.
An occasional feed Inside to
McNeal, coupled with a blistering
outside shoaling attack stunned the
Tornadoes.
In the second frame, Southern
came storming back with an over- 56·
determined effort against the
Southern canned 22 of 29 from the
sticky Highlander man-to-man. It
field for 56 percent, whll!' hitting 18
was Southern's Intensity, not a flaw
of 24at the line. Beegle canned 17 of
In the oppooitlcin that gave SHS the
26 field .goals with an outstanding
upper hand at the half 32-30.
effort, complemented by a fine exSouthern, struggling to get a field
hlbltlon from Rod Littlefield, who
goal from Its nine other players, deadded 16. SWHS hit 22 of 38 for 39.
pended upon the experience of and canned 12 of 23 from. the Une.
team leader Beegle and Littlefield.
The Tornadoes will next play at
Meanwhile, Southwestern was
Chillicothe High School on Wednesenjoylnganexceptlonalteameffort
day, March 2 at 7 p.m . They will
by hitting 14 of 18 field goal at·
face the winner of the Bishoptempts for a torrid TI percent the
Flaget vs. Huntington Ross game
first baH.
which was played Saturday night.
Coach · Carl Wolfe said of his
Southern Is 20-2 overall, going
team's performance, "We never
Into district tournament play at .
Chllllcothe.
mentally got untracked tonight,
Our kids played not to lose, Instead
Soulhem C&amp;:i - N. Bosdck 0.3-~ Brinager
0.3-3; K. Curtnian IH-1; llootick 1)1){): Teaf
layln
win
W
II
f
1
0 P
g to
· e rea Y !'.t the · lord 1.0.2; Beegle 17-3-37; Uttlelleld4-B-iG.,..:.
pressure ... they never iell It at all."
ta1o 'IZ-IU%.
"Of course, last week was an en. Soulhwowiem (5%)- McNeel6-5-l7; We lls
2~ Layton !'&gt;2·12; Baker 5.0.10; Jeff Meek
tlrely different story. We were at
2.Q.4: carr 2·1·5. Totalo 'IZ-U-!11.
home, It was parents' night, and we
Sc- by qllllliett
were relaxed . We won It at the line
Swthern ............................ IO 22 10 :D-62

USED CAR SAVINGS

AWAll'S BALL -Southern's Kevin Curfman (23) waits for the hall
·: during action In Friday's CliiSS A Sectional Tournament aiiUo Grande
: · College. Tralllng Curfman lsSouthwestcm'sRantlyLayton (40) .South:· em advanced to the district play for ·the seventh straight year with a
: · come-from-behind, &amp;-36 victory. Bill Bahr photo.

W
Wlllsl! .... ....... .... .. ... ................. ......... .... .... ... ... ...... .... ............... 14
Rio Grande .............................. -.............................................. 11
Tlll1n .... ............... .. ...... ... ... .......... ............................ .. .. ....... ...... 9
Cedarville ............................. .. .............. .. ...... .. " .................... .. ... 9
Malane ..... .. ............ .......... ~. ........................ ........ ....................... 7
Urbana .. .. .... ........ .. ...................................................................5

L
0
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5
7
7
9
Mount Vernoo .. ....... .... ......................... .... .................................. ! 1J

TO GET YOU OUT
OF A RUT!!!
1981 DODGE MIRADA .

Wahama tops
Puval, 75-45
: GRIFFITHSVILLE, W. Va. Five players reached double figures as the White Falcons defeated
i:&gt;uvai 75-45 here Friday night.
: Wahama, 7-12. opened up a 38-22
baHtlnne lead and was never threa,
tened In the second half. The loss
&lt;iropped Duval to 2-16.
: Scott Kimes led Wahama with 21
polnts. DonnleVanMeleradded12
and Ron Bradley 12 for the winners.
Eugene Estep led Duval with 19

, seuon with a 11-1 reclll'd. OveraD, the team enJoyed a 14-3 record. Team

$7395
302 motor,automatic, air cond .

.~ Young

Sale Price $4 195

1979 PONTIAC CAT ALINA
Station Wagon, 9 passen-ger, well equipped, extra clean.

$4695

'

1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA
2 dr ., V-8 motor, air cond'., vinyl roof. This car shows e•cellent core .

$3995
Sale Priced

$3595
$2695

.

PH. 992-2174

POMEROY,OH.

: Following a time out Br:Yan
:Durst knotted the score at 2·2, then
~ds later Jeff Johnson gave
. &amp;stern an edge of 4-2 that It beld to
.'the Initial buzzer.
• Eastern settled down In the se~nd frame with fine ball control
;against th!' much taller Red Devils
;and held .a seven point edge most of
"theway. In the latter portion or the
:rrame, however, Albany came to
:\lfe and cut the lead to 16-11 at the
•baH.
• With fine hustle and determlna·
:tlon the young Eagles of Coach
;scott Wolfe !'nJoyed a fine third
quarter start.
: Late In the ·canto, however, AI·
)lany came back to take a 25-24
~. but Jeff Caldwell put Eastern
back on top 25-25. Albany's Doug
:Ketter hit a stdelf11e Jumper to re:t&amp;!n his club's lead, but Kyle Davis
21pped a key shot, giving SHS a
slight 28-27 lead before the buzzer.
~ Eastern calmly padded Its lead to
84-29 by the midway point of the
final round.
At that point, Eastern went to a
deliberate three-man oHense that
pulled out the Albany defense,
while running large chunks of time
off tbe clock.
Twice Eastern's strategy paid off

WE ARE EXPANDING OUR SALES LOT · AND
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4 door, blue, 4 cyl. engine, automatiC trans., AM radio, air cond .,
cruise control, white sidewall radial lites. Only 28,741 miles.
'

$4795

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
CAROLL SNOWDEN
4.17 Stcond Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 44.,4290

Home 446-4511

Office Hours by Appointment Only

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

CALL {614-) 992 _. .
2104
l
or 304) 675-1244

-t

18 20 14 2:h75

II 11 15 8-45

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:-SWIMMING POOLS
TO SWIMMING
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Jn &amp;fl)und, any type or above
Jutlnd. Pools, .oquipment,
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Spas.
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WE HAVE OVER 100 REMNANtS AND
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WE AlSO HAVE ROLLS OF CARPET OF AU
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675-1160

312 Sixth Street
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HOURS:

It's the lowest bank financing
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Point Pleasant

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a a.m.-5

p ....

Saturdily 8-12 noon.

•Any make, any model new car!
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it pays to be a
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_1982 OIEVY C 10 OJSTOM DB.UXE
Blue &amp; silver, 305 engine, automatic trans., AM radio, rear step
bumper, power steenng &amp; brakes, dual fuel tanks, radial tires.
25,000 miles.

·$7500
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MOTO'R CAR BROKERS
,
Ph miles from Holzer MediCII Center on State Rt. 160.

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WUtlams 1-3-8: Workman 0.~3; Paul ey 1-0-2.

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1982 CHEVY CAMARO Z-28

S1t11 h rm!niUI,nu to~ptnils

•

..

cord. Albany dropped to 13-1.
Eastern hlt16 of 50 from the field
for 32 percent, and eight of 13 at the
line for 61 percent. Albany canned
11 of 38 for 28 percent and hit seven
of nine at the line. Despite being
outstzedEasternwonthebattle6f
the boards 39-28, Jed by~Jl's J8
(Continued on page C-4)

White, 305 V-8 engine , automatic trans., air con d., cruise control,
hit wheel, AM -FM cassette stereo radio, intermittent wipers, wine
colored velour bucket seats. Only 13,000 miles.

I40fM OlhcH: IIOOmlnt10I'I , lll1n0i1

239
127
116
191
1!!6

No· wax Floortrig
REG. s4.79 NQW $39sa~o

Jnlnutes.

FOR INSURANCE CALL

Tl9

• 29 ••

Imperial ~
Accotone~ VInyl

SMITH .NELSON MOTORS
500 E. MAIN

1'! lS ...

SALE
I
Artnstrona

1979 FORD PINTO WAGON
4 cyl., 4 speed .

23 9
17 '
16 '2 :

--.-.,..-'-----..,.--------------f

of!

1978 PLYMOUTH VAN VOYAGER
6 cyl., automatic.

Eagles capture tournament

'RACINE - In what was dubbed, with two unchallenged lay-ups by
'"The battle of the· unbeaten, " the Durst and Johnson. Caldwell put
,hustling Eastern Eag\!!5 stormed to tlhe icing on Eastern's victory cake
·a dramatic 40-29 triumph over AI· with three straight free throws and
.bany's Red D!'vlls here Thursday aoother by Bryan Chadwell to give
'evening to claim the Southern sev- EHS the 40-29 triumph.
,enth grade tournament
Easternendedtheseasonastour·
·championship.
nament champions and SVAC
: A talented Meigs team roared to champions, with a perfect l&amp;&lt;l re:an early lead then held
the Fed· 1
•eral Hocking Lancers to claim
:third place with a 35-31 victory In
'the preliminary consolation
:contest.
- Gate receipts Indicated more
'than 400 spectators jammed the
:Small Southern Junlor High Gym,naslum, setting the stage for the
·start of the champlonshlp game be:tween two unbeatens: Albany, who
:was l.W and Eastern, l.$-0. ' Albany controlled the opening tip .
:and after two scoreless tries by
both clubs, scored first to take a 2.0
,lead. Eastern ran a solid offense,
·but failed to score In the firSt three

:II 0 .-

G FG PT 'I? AV. • '

R. WIUiaml! (W) ..... ................................ .. .......... ...... ...... ..... 21
R WWlams (W).... ........ .................... .. ............................... 17
M. Vallihn CUI .... ........................ .... .. ........ .. .... .. ........ ........ .. . Ill
J . Mowery (RG) ...... .. ......... ,........ .. .............. .......................... 31
J . Zlegler IM) .... ..... .. ............................ ................................. 26
J . S=J&gt;ponsld (W) ..... , .................................. .. ., .................... :18
W. Warwick (W) .. .............. ........ .... .......... ...... ................ ..... :14
D. CaJT (C) .. .. .... .. ...... .. .... .. .. .. .... . .. .. .. .... .. .. .... .. ................. :18

;

1979 FORD MUSTANG COBRA

W L .•

E . JackBon CTI ........ .................. .. .......... ....... ................. ........ 21 221 n 525 :n.o :
F. ~o (T ) .... ............ ................ .... ................ .... ................. !II 172 68 112 39.6 •

members wete, ~ te rtpt, Bleil Glbnere, Kevla Napier, Brlu
McCarley, .JoMiltanepr, Larry !'Alp, Clmck Vopl, ~y Morpa,
Steve Waugll, Brian Wamaler, Robert M:ren. AntJQJy Kitchen and
NdHudllon.

i Creek Bobldttens captured the svAC reserve cbamplo-. lhla put

1981 FORD FAIRMONT FUTURA

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
.,

SVAC RI!SERVE CHAMPS- Ccaeh Mark Hariman's Kypr

,

2 dr., 6 cyl. , automatic, air cond ., AM-FM stereo, low miles.

STATE FARM

®

~~&lt;:on~ri-.

N...,.

r-;=::::::=========:1

INSURANCE

.

MOC Reoord Ovenllllec"rd
Teom

SWHS ................................16 14 12 14-52

tonight. This team has been setting
records all year for foul shooting."
Southern hit 18 of 24 attempts for 75
percent at the nne, six more than
the Highlanders could bucket and
the difference In tbe game.
Both teams slacked off the torrid
paces set In the opening two rounds,
but the Intensity and excitement of
tournament basketball play was
stlll evident as the score see-sawed
from side to side.
Southern went up 38-35 with three
minutes left In the third round but

ranked eighth In free throw shoOtIng at 75 pertxnt and forward Jolin
Maisch was ninth at 74.5 percelil1
As a team, the Redmen tllllshed
third In offense with an averqe Of ·
78.5 polnlll per game, II!COIId Ill dffense yleldmg 89.6, flnlt In free
throw percentage at 71.3, secoad -111
rebound percentage at 56.1.
The Redmen flnlilhed t he
regular-season with a 23-9 overall
mark, 11-31n tlle MOC.

RIO GRANDE- Guard John
Mowery or Rio Grande College fin.
!shed the regular season ranked In
three categories of the Mld..Qhlo
Conference statlstlos.
The 5-8 sophomore from Wtlll·
amsport, Ohio, ranked second In
tree throw percentage of &amp;1, sixth In
scoring at 16,0, and eighth In field
goal percentage at 53.6.
Two other Redmen ranked In the
statistics. Guard Kent Wolfe

r....................................~.....

After battling near-even for most
of the gllllle O&gt;ach Uoyd Myers'
Highlanders gained their biggest
boos
t, starting off the final frame,
when McNeal canned a base-line
))lmper til give the Highlanders a
46-44 edge.
At the 6:50 mark McNeal, play~
1ng with four personal 'fouls, took a ·
gutsy offensive foul from ballhandllng guard Uttlefl ld Th
•e ·
e noncontrol lou! sent McNeal to the line
with thechancetoputhlsclu9Upby
four, but h!s first attempt bounded
to the side, where Rod Uttlefleld
took control and raced It In lor the
4646 tie:
•
After a fruitless SWHS poosesslon, shooting wizard Beegle aced
the two free-throw att~&gt;mpts for a
48-46 SHS lead.
After hauling down a rebound,
McNeal again knotted the score at
48-48 with 4: 52 left In the game for
h1s 17th point, n.e !'xcltementgrew
with each tick of the clock, but
Southern's fans roared with enthuslasm when Zan!' Beegle canned
two Jumpers within :.1 seconds to
give the Tornadoes a grinding 52-48
.
The n!'ver-give-up Highlander
crew sent Wells to tbe llne, where
he sank two straight free throws to
pull his club as close as they would
come the remainder of the game,
52-50, at the 3: 40 mark. A goal by
Tornado giant D!'nnls Teaford and
drlvebyBeegtestokedthefirefora
SG-50 advantage, forcing SWHS to
play catch-up the rest of the way.
Bostick and Tyron!' Brlnager hit
four crucial free throws to lee the
game, despite goals by Baker and
Wells that tightened the final at 62·

The Sunday

't

."

Member . FDIC

Spring Valley

...

•
''

�'

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

"

.

-.

...

Pag--c-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pebrua.y 27, 1983

Opening d(ly .only five weeks awOy :
CINCINNATI- When the tJn.
ening Day figure swells to 1,756,662.
cinnati -Reds meet- the Atlanta
The la~t croWd ever to see an
Braves Mnday, Aprl14,1n the tradiOpening Day in Cincinnati was
tional National League Opening · 52,949, when the Reds hosted the
Day at Riverfront Stadium, . the
Houston A.strt6 on Aprll 8, 1976. The
crowd attending the game wUl push
Reds' Opeillng Day attendance
Lyne Center·closes
within a lew thoUsand of the one
mlllloil mark !or the last 25 years.
RIO GRANDE _:All facilities at
Some 942,5]2 fans have attended
Lyne
Center, (gym, weight rom,
the last 24 Opening Day games In
pool, and racketball court) wUl be
Cinclnna tl, including 610,521 at RIverfront Stadium in the 12 games closed to the publlc from Feb. 26
through March 8 for Spring Break.
since 1971.
A new schedule wUl be published
When Reds' attendance . figures
when classes resume on Tuesday,
~ totalled for the last halfmarch 8, 1983.:
century, dating back to 193,'!, the Op-

bJaest Crosley -Field crowd at all
Opener was 35,74'/ln 19'JC.
;.
As the 11rst pn;less1Qna1 team tp
baseball, the Reds are annually a.,
corded the pmriJege of playing lit
oome on Opening Day. MaJ&lt;t
Le~ Baseball's other 25 clubf'
open at home In alternate years. •:
nc~cet~~ to the Reds' 1983 0pene1o
are avallable and may be orderesi
by mall. Opening Day ticket prlcell:
are: Box seats $8, reserved seatS
$6.50 and $4. Orders should be
to The Cincinnati Reds, Box 19'70,.
CinCinnati, OH 4:i:m. Each total
order: should Include a $1 postag~
/ handling chalge.
·:

set#

MEIGS CENTER

I

l

·'

I
l

·GOODYEAR
TRACKER Al

'

BOBCATS END SEASON - Kyger Creek Dn·
lshed Its 1$82-83 basketbaU season Wednesday night
with a 61-511 loss to Southwesrem In the Class A Sec·
tlonal Tournament. The Bobcats complled a 16-5 re-

MARCH CASH N' CAR
BUYS

cord, the best ever in the school's history. Team
members were, first row, left to right, Joho Kanegar,
Robert (Yogi) Myers, Steve Waugh and Roger
Stroucl. Second row, -Keith Clark, Brent I:ove, J. D.
Bradbury, David Martin, JeD Moles and Ron Martin.

).'oung Eagles-capture tournament
ever, and gave Meigs a scare at the
(Continued from page C-3)
and Durst's 10. Eastern had 12 buzzer, 35-31.
Michael Bartrum led Meigs with
steals, 11 turnovers, and 13 fouls.
13
points, Don Dorst had nine, BU!y
Brent Bissell led the winners with
;1.2 JXllnts, Caldwell nine, Durst Brothers, J ohn Sisson, James Noreight, J eff Johnson four , Kyle Da- . man, Sean Thaxton, and Jason
Rupe two each, and Mike Rou sh,
vis two, Tony Hendrix two, and
WUlla m s, and Morrts one
Scott
Bryan Chadwell one. For Albany
For Federal Cbat Tate
point
each.
Paul Cook had 13, Doug Keiter
had
13,
Chrts
Bartlett 14, Andy Wateight, Mike Chapman six, and Rick
son
three
and
Brad Maxwell one.
Ator two.
In lower bracket action on Tues·
CoJJS&lt;Jiation Game
day,
Federal Hocking dumped Pt.
• In the consolation contest, a hardPleasant
4().23, as Tate poured in 29
charging Meigs crew took a 35-31
ir!umph over Federal Hocking.
Meigs ) urnped to an 8-2 advantage,
then went up 14-4 before a late FH
stand pulled them close at 19-15 at
the half.
·
: In the third quarter a standout
effort shut out the Lancers, for a
h-15 advantage. The Lancers
C~ught fire in the last round, hOW·

SEEDS ..- ~_.·:_~_:_canyl l!l:-.:r_d·.·ot.
Silver Queen Com
90 LB.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i1

$3

MR.
15'/z Ga.

710

7 558 5!1!
8 481 5ro

6 Ft. ................. ;.......... 2.40
6'h Ft. ..................•......... 12.60

Mr. Goodwrench givu 1 complete front-end
alignment Job for • special price. He adjuna
cuter. camber end tOe-in lO factory apecificl.
tions. Thlt special il for ell Americ., en
uc~ Chevenat 8nc1 compact with front·whMI
drive/ end or Mecf'h.-eon IIUipONion/ ollghtly
~lgh•. 4·whoel ollgnm.,t ovollol&gt;le kM' J . K. ond
X body Clll"l and .eome imports.
Trucks - '20.00.

Fence Post

'

REPLACES PRICE
155-13 $42.00
CR78xl3 $48.00
CR78x14 $52.00
ER78x14 $56.00
FR78xl4 $58.00
GR78xl4 $62.00
HR78xl4 $66.00
ER78x15 $58.00
FR78xJ5 $58.00
GR78x15 $60.00
HR7S.I5 $64.00

•2 Fiberglass belts
•Free 30,000 mile limited warranty

F.E.T.
$1.51
. $1.88
$1.99
$2.14
$229
$2.42
$2.59
$225
$2.39
$2.51
$2.71

SIZE
'
P155/ 80Rl3
P.175/80Rl3
P185/80Rl3
Pl95fl5Rl4
P205/ 75R14
P215fl5R14
P225fl5R14
P205/75RI5
P215fl5Rl5
P225fl5Rl5

REPLACES PRICE
155.13 $39.00
BR78x13 . $4.4.00
CR78xl3 $44.00
ER78xl4 $48.00
FR78x14 $52.00
GR78x14 $54.00
HR78xl4 $58.00
fli78x15 $52.00
GR78xl5 $54.00
HR78x15 $56.00

•Steel baited •20,000 mile potential
SIZE
.
.
. REPlACES PRICE
Pl55 /80Rl3
155·13 $19.00
P165/80R13
AR78K13 $22.00
Pl85/75R!3
BR78K13 $2C.OO
P185/80Rl3
CR78x13 $26.00
Pl95/75R!4
ER78d4 $28.00
P205/75RI4
FR78xl4 $28.00
P205/75R15
FR78~15 $28.00
P215/75R15
GR78~15 $30.00
P225fl5R15
HR78xl5 $32.00
All Radial Retread Prices are Plus $1.10 F.E.T. and Recappebit Casing ($4.00). Our retreads carry the same warranty as

F.E.T_
$1.51
$1.] 4
$1.81
$2.08
$223
$2.40
$2.63
$2.39
$2.54 .
$2.68

P2.~•n•SR•I•s. . . . . . . .~.7.5x.15._ii._ii. .~~~~. . . . . .~~~~~~. . . ..:~

.......

1. _ . _. . . . . . . .. -. . . .. -

¢EA.

lf4 Mile Electric Fence Wire
$725

Our mOdem oloctronic front· whool

i·

KIEP THAT
' · GRIAT GIM FilLING WITH CIINUINI CIM PARTS.

10 ft.-5 Panel Gate .......... '34.20 Vigoro Weed Control Fertilizer
12 ft.-5 Panel Gate .......... '38.60
50 lb. $17.95
14 ft.-5 Panel .Gate .......... '42.00 t---V-i_g_o-ro-La_w_n_F-er-ti-li-:r:-er---'16 ft.-5 ·Panel Gate .......... '49.60
lb. $ •
25
7 75
10 ft.-7 Rail Pipe Gate ..... '40.95
12 ft.-7 Rail Pipe Gate ..... '46.00
Vigoro Lawn Fertiizer
14 ft.-7 Rail Pipe Gate ..... '51.00
50 lb. $13.95
·
16 ft. -7 Rail Pipe. Gate ..... '60.65
Vigoro All Purpose Fertilizer
40 lb. $6,15
White Salt Block.............$P.J~•..S.3.25
s4 05
Crabgrass Preventor .
TM Salt 81 k

.

Also. have a free headlight aim with a lube, oil chanae and
fiHer on all cars and •;, ton trucks.
These Specialo Expire March 1, 1983

PH. 992-6614

SIMMONS
OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVY, INC.
POMEROY, OH .

308 E. MAIN ST

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

. .
oc ...............$P.I~.....
5,000
ft. $7.95
T.M. Sa~ - ........ :........~.J~...s3·70 5-10-10 Fertjlizer . so lb. $3
Special Mixing Salt ..........~P.\~.)3.45 12-12-12 Fertilizer
so lb. $4.35
Water Softener Pellet ..,..... ~P.J~•..•.3.45
Northern Lawn Fertilizer
H.E.P. Block ............... J.~~!L~5.15
lb. $5,95 20
Mol Mag Block...............40.Ib •. ~.60 Kentucky Bluepss ·
lb. 65'
Rumensin Block..............~O.IJI, .~.95 Kentucky Ptl'ltway Grass
37% ·Protein Block....... J.3~~W!~. ~4.05
BEAUTY LAWN v"'";,;,
ss.55 I lb. $1.10

MASON, NEW HAVEN, VALLEY, FLATROCK,
,.~__.

.

GALLIPOLIS, POMEROY &amp; MIDDLEPORT
FIRE DEP.,.RTMENTS, POINT PLfASANT &amp; MASON

RESCUE SQUADS AND THE Si'ATE, COUNTY

NOW IN STOCK

· &amp; LOCAL POLICE DEPARTMENTS.

FIELD SEEDS

l

YOUR EFFORTS TO SAVE OUR BUILDING
(~lEfiT/'I"'U'OG
lSOUA 8U$tl'lln~

r.---J

~ -

~b

TOBACCO SUPPLIES

Red Clover • AHalfa
Timothy • Orchard Grass ·

WERE DEEPLY APPRECIATED.
,.

Kentucky 31

·e

SEED e PLASTIC •,
, DOWFUME • CANVAS
.
APPLICATORS

Fescue

'

GOODYEAR
PRIVATE BRAND'
GOODYEAR
CUSTOM
FIBERGLASS RADIAL POWER STREAK II
POLYESTER RADIAL
CLOSEOUTS
•Whitawall &amp; Blaclcwall

•VI/Ide Whitewall

•Whitawall It lllllckwall
•Fiberglass Belted

eOE Treed Pattam

SIZE
P15518C11!3
P17518C1113
P!85/8CIIl3
P185fl5RI4
Pl9!ifiSRI4
P205fiSR15
P215175R!5
P225fl5Rl5
P235/75R15

REPlACE! PliiCf FH.

.

155-13 $44.00 $1.53
11!78-13 $49.00 $1.79
CR78-13 $5UI $1.92
CR78-14 $51.00 $2.04
ER78-14 $63.00 $2.18
m7B-15 $66.00 $2.47
GR78-15 $69.00 $2.59
ffl78-!5 $71.00 $2.78
IR78-15 $76.00 $3.01

SIZE
PRICE. F.ET.
P175180113 $34.00 $1.67
P19!i/75R!4 ' $39.00 $2.01
P205/75Rl4 •$40.00 $2.29
P205/75R15 $41.00 $2.35
P21517SR15 $44.00 $2.48
P225fl5R15 $47.00 $2.67
P235/75R!5 $49.00 $2.1!6

$78
rmoorr or
domnlic cars

. .\ddlliOIIII IIatts
1nd servtc~
exln 11 needecl

Monroe
Super Stnlt™

Supension

•Diagonal 4 Ply Polyester
SIZE
A78-13
878-13
C78·14
E78·14
F78:14
G78-14
F78-15
G78-15
H78-l5

PRICE
$25.00
$32.00
· $33.00
Sl4.00
$35.00
$36.00
$37.00
$37.00
$39.00

NEW TIRES

F.E.T.
$1.44
$1.54
$1.58
$1.78
$2.1&amp;
$2.28
$2.13
$2.38
$2.55

SIZEPLY
(Tl} H78·15 (6)
(Tl) l78-15 (6)
(IT] 7.00·15 (6)
(IT] 7.50·16 ,. (8)
(TL) 800-165 (8)
- (TL} 8.75-16.5N(8)
(TL) 9.50·16.5 (8)

RIB
M/S
PRICE . F.E.T. PRICE
$65.00 $3.37 $69.00
$70.00 $3.48
NIA
$45.00 $2.81 $54.00
$59.00 $3.54 $69.00
$69.00 $3.38 $61.00
$68.00 $3.78 $75.00
$73.00 $421 . $80.00

FU.
$3.45
$3.14
$3.97
$3.43
$3.95
$4.43

SIZE(IT] 700·15
(IT] 750-16
(TL} 800-16.5
(TL}8.75·165
(11.) 9.50-165
(TL) 12.00·16.5

PLY
(6)
(8)
(8)
(8)
(8)
(8)

RIB
PRICE
$25.00
$32.00
N/A
$31.00
$35.00
, N/A

Entertainer

THIRD AND SYCAMOII ·

I'

STRUT
SERVICE FOR
YOUR ~~~RT

12900 $119
NOW ONLY

Uaits
•
•
They put the Monroe nde In
•
. MacPherson-type suspensions.

PER
PAIR

'

Pair
Installed

Fits some models of:
Audi
Mazda Datsun
Ply. Champ
Dodge Colt Toyoto
Honda
Volkswaaen _
Price includes installation and ·
FMC compputer front end al ianment. Addition parts extra
If needed.

INSTALLED

.Fits some models of:

Dodce Omni, Ai.res, 400,
Plymouth Horizon, Reliant,
Mercury Zephyr, Coupr,
Lynx, Ford Fairmont, Granada, Escort, Chev. Cita.tioa, Celebrity, Olds Omep
Cieni.

• Ins pect all four tir es Co rrect
a! r pressUffd • S~d rront o r ft-!Rf
wh eel caster. ca m bur, an d lot1

to proper aliJ.:nment • Inspec t

Restore original sta bility
and handling _ Protect
.suspension and st ee ring
systems. Protect tire performance .
Monroe " Stri&amp;t
Replacement

Cartridge•

'

suspnnsion and s!ttt~r!n,~o~ syste m. ·
MoSt U.S. cars a nd Import.-. with
ad justa ble !i us pension. Jncl udt~
rront wheul ~rivl!. Chevelti ~ S .
!ightlruc'ks an t! r:a r!i rt lQ Ui ri n~o~

MacPherson St ru t corroction
t!XIrH . Parts and addltiOn HI
:.t•rvlces extra if n ~t:dull .

FMC COMPUTERIZED
3 MONTHS OR 3,000

MILE LIMITED

GAWPOLIS, OH.

),

'MIS
PRICE
$29.00
$35.00
$30.00
$35.00
$38.00
$46.0Q

All Tires Plus F.E.T. and Recappable Casi1111 ($7.00)

BOSO AGR~-CENTER, INC.

I

•

P225fl5R15

ALL SEASON RADIAL

•2 Steel Bars
•Whitewall with scuff bar.
SIZE
P155/8CII13 (Bik)
P185180113
P185fl5R14 . .
P195fl5Rl4
P205fl5Rl4
P215fi5R!4
P225fi5R!4
Pl95/75RI5
P205fl5R15
P215fl5R15
P225fl5R15

RADIAL· RETREADS
ALL SEASON WHITEWALL

ollgnmont lo by VI- Knight who
hll 20 VMII expwlence and II I
grlduete of l81r Alignment School.
C11l for your appointment today.

WOULD liKE TO THANK THE POINT PLEASANT,

I .

$21 so .
7

. ..................... ........... 13.05
...............•.....••..... :... 14.05

THE MANAGEMENT OF THE ENTERTAINER

We'll Be Back
In Tlu!
'
Near Future!

16 Ft Combination Panel
48

1

New head coach

•

WIRE

$2J95 $3250

Ti9 549
2 664 562
6 486 644

$1705

A

ALL SEASON RADIAL

•2 Steel Belts •Whitswall
SIZE
REPIJtES
PRICE F.E.T.
P155/8CII13
155·13 $46.00 $1.52
P175flCII13
P155/!llR13 $54.00 $1.62
P115/8CII13
BR7S.13 $54.00 $1.74
Pl8518C1113
CR7S.13 $54.00 $1.91
P175fl5R14
BR7S.14 · $58.00 $1.85
P185fi5RI4
CR7S.l4 $58.00 $1.88
Pl9!ifl5RI4
ER7S.l4 $64.00 $2.16
P205fl5R14
FR78x14 $68.00 $2.30
Pl9!ifi5R15 ,
ER7S.15 $70.00 $221
P205fl5RI5
FR7S.15 $70.00 $2.42
P215fl5RI5
GR78x15 moo $2.57

16 "· HOG PANEL

BARB

WIRE

• XX - SVAC and Sectional champs.
: Reserve champ - Kyger Creek with 9-1

•
•

LUNDY ·

BARB

'
FIN!I"s~.:;;~GS
Soothern .............. ......... ... 10 0

.

12¥1 Ga.

GAUCHO

North Gallla .............. .. ........ 7 II 1153 1150

•

GOODYEAR
ARRIVA ALL SEASON

ONION SETS
PlANTS

SEED POTATOES
ARRMNG SOON

reQ&gt;rd.

•Long lasting steel belts
plus durable polyester
•Raised open letters
•Load Ranga C
SIZE
PRICt F.E. T.
lR78K15
$92.00 $3.55
30K9. 50R~l5
$95.00 $3.40
31K10.50Rxl5 ~ $99.00 $3.97
32xll.50Rxl5
$105.00 $4.53
32x12.50Rx15
$115.00 $5.12
9.50RX16.5(8 ply)
$103.00 $4.70

White Half Runners
$}20 LB.

!';astern .... .. .... .................... 2 19 9611146

&lt;EDMONTON (AP) -For someone who has been out of work for
Qtree weeks, has no Canadian
Football League background and
~hose pro experience is essentially
that of a scout, Pete Kettela landed
himself a pretty good job.
· ; Kettela, named Thursday as the
Edmonton Eskimos' new head
roach, has been a m e mber of the
Oreen Bay Packers' organization
the past five years.But only in last
year's strike-shortened National
Football League season was he a
full-fledged assistant coach.
. Kettela, 44, was offensive coordl·
i$tor at Stanford University during
19T.!-76 and had the No. 2-rated pass
¢ffense in college footba ll . training
c;uarterbacks such as Guy Ben·
}amin of the San Francisco 49ers,
Steve Dlls of the Minnesota Vikings
and Ed Luther of the San Diego
Chargers, each a reserve with his
NfLteam.

SALE ENDS NOON MARCH 5

DAYTON
DAYTONA
RADIAL RLT

·BUY IN BULK AND SAVE!

SVAC STANDINGS
•
ALLGAME&lt;;
~
WLP OP
ltX-Soothern ...................... 20 2 l!i89 11111
KYger Creek ...................... 16 5 1392 1185
&amp;Man Trace .................... 10 11 1136 1275
Soot11westem .... .. .......... .. ..... 8 1513341383

7 621

•All Terrain
•Raised Open Lettars
•Aggrassive, self-claaning
daaplug
SIZE
PRICE F.E.T.
l78-15 (11J)
$89.00 $3.43 •Long lasting, 4 ply
polyester
9-15
$85.00 $3.74
•Raised
white letters
10·15
$89.00 $4.34
11-15
$94.00 $4.58
SIZE
PRICE F. E. T.
Other 4 wheel drive tires available F70-14
$52.00 $2.60
- Goodyear Wrangler Radial L78-15
$59.00 $3.07
Road King Widetrack Big Baja ,- 31-10,50-15
$89.00 $3.99
Grand Prix - Ground Hawg 31-11.50·15
$94.00 $449
Dick
to 18.5/44xl6.5.

..

Take advanll&amp;e of 011'

points for the winners. Bartlett
added nine, Maxwell three and
Welch one. For PP Craig Herdman
had seven, David Faber five,
Scotty Vickers four, Brian Sayre
three, John Rosh two and Craig
Hensley two.
- In Tuesday's o ther bout, Meigs
trlpped Southern 41-36 as Bartrum
pitched in 12, Brothers 11, Snyder 10
a nd Wllllams eight. For Southern
Turley had 12, Amburgey . eight,
Jarrod HUl seven, Barry McCoy six
and Scott McPhail three.

SVAC cage
standings

l{yger crEek ....... .............. .. 8
HaMan Trace ........... ...... .... 4
Soot11western .... ........... ........ 3
North Ga!Ua ..................... .3
Eastern .... .. ....... ................. 2

TOP QUALITY*LOW PRICES*LARGE QUANTITIES
THATS WHAT MAKES A GOOD TIRE COMP~NY

GOODYEAR
WRANGLER

'I

.,

�Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomen~y-Middleport-Gallipolis,

.,

Febr~ 27, 19q,

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Redmen open baseball
play in Florida today
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College head coach Larry Cook and
his 19113 baseball sqqad lett Saturday for an eld!lbltion 1nur of
Florida.
The majority or the team's
games wtll be played In the Jack·
sonvllle are~ . Cook said the Red·
men will o~ the tour tOday when
they take on Florida Junior College
In a doubleheader atl p.m. The following day, Rio Grande will battle
Jacksonville University tn a single
game at 2:30p.m .
On March 1, the Redmen take on
Santa Fe Community College before having a rematch with Jack·
sonvllle University the foDowlng
day.- Both games are scheduled to
start at 2: 30p.m.
Cook's dlarnondrnen will close
out
the exhibition
doubleheaders
on Marchtour
3-4. with
They'll
bat·
tle Liberty Baptist College In a

ao

s ingle game beglnnlng at 10:
a.m. March ~ and wiD vie with the
University of Central Florida In the
secondgameat3p.m . TheRedmen
will conclude the tour with an U
a .m. doubleheader With Lake Laiid
College on March 4.
"We're really elicited about the
southern eld!lbldon tour," Cook .
said . "We've scheduled some
teams that we think wiD provide' a
challenge and allow us to get til
shape four our conference season,"
A highlight of the tour will b&lt;!'a
contest with Llbelty Baptist Col:
lege, the tlfth ranked team In tile
nation last year.
RIO Grande Is comtng olf a 16-21
mark In 1982,lncludtng a 9-5slatelil
the Mid-Ohio Conference. The Rei!- ·
men won 13 or their !lnall9 games.

Duringthemld·l951ls,GAHSwon42stralghtreservegames,wllinlngtbe
llnal nine d.lbe 19~ campaign, alll9ln 1953-54, and the lint 14 d. the
19M-55 season. The Imps also won31 straight league games during thai ·
span. Members ol the 1982-83 championship team are, first row,left to
right - Keith FeUure, Paul MacKenzie, T. J. Pasquale, John Ow..,s,
. Jbn Beaver and Dan Dres&amp;el. Renr - Jack Payton, coach; Todd ·
Berpoll, Brett Bostic, W~ Meeks, Gordon Splete, Kev Carty and Greg
Woodrum.

fi, '

lls Blue bnps captured lite 1982-83 Sodheaslem Ohio Athletic League
reserve cbamplonshlp wllh a 1().2 mark Ibis winter. The Blue Imps
posted a 17-3 season record, their best eflort since the 1953-54campalgn
when Coach Dick Shrider's reserve squad llnls,hed 19-1l.ll wasGalllpoUs'
eighth reserve crown since "B" play began In 19:f7. Prevlws Udes were
won In 1941-42; 1951-52; 19~1953; 1953-M; 1954-55; 1979-80 and 1980-81.

20-TOTALS

AV.
10.5
9.9
8.3
5.3
3.9
1.6
1.5
1.1
1.1
1.0
.6
.2

332-744 184-342 296 447 M6 648 42.4

Assists-Bostic, 52; Carty,35; Pasquale, 42; Dressel, 33;
Bergdoll, 24; Beaver, 10; F e llure, 9; Splete, 7; Owens, 4;
MacKenzie, 1. Totals 217.
By quarters:
Gallipolis .......... .. ... .. ......... 184 211 213 220 14 &amp;-848
Opponents ...... ... .. .. . ... ...... .. 141 179 153 193 10 4-68J
. SEASON RECORD
Gallipolis 43 Logan 39
Gallipolis ~ Waverly 25
Gallipolis 27 ;\thens 39
Gallipolis 41 Pt. Pleasant 26
Gallipolis 53 Washington CH 43 Gallipolis 38 Jackson 25
Gallipolis 26 Waveriy 36
Gallipolis 35 Portsmouth 36
· Gallipolis 42 Jackson :rr
Gallipolis 38 Ironton 32
Gallipolis 49 Ironton 34
Gallipolis 39 Alexander 22
Gallipolis 58 Alexander 37
Gallipolis 54 Meigs 33
Gallipolis 48 Meigs 46 (ot)
Gallipolis 48 Pt. Pleasant 36
Gallipolis 49 Logan 47 ( ot)
Totals 848
640
Gallipolis 34 Athens 32 (ot)
Won 17, Lost 3.
Gallipolis 50 Northwest 23
. SEOAL reserve champs (10.2) .
Galli lis 46 Wheelersbur 32

----Local bowling-___;,_ __
Hair Designer .... .......... .................. ... 66

Skylln&lt; Bowling Lanes
Momlng Glori~
February 15, 1983

Team
Two's Compa ny ...

..... ...

Pts.
. ......... 143

Custom Print. ............ ......................... 127
Slmmons Okls. Chevrolet
and Che\1 ....... ... .. ............. .............. 93
The Meigs Inn ..................................... 74

The Fabrtc Shop .. ... ............................ 73
Merrt Ams ba ry

RIVERSIDE V.W. INC.

·IS ON ITS .WAY
Lesley not conceding No.I s . . ."' .. SPRING
SO DON'T DELAY .

1982-83 GAHS Reserve St8tlstics
(~ame Total)
G- Player
FG-A Fr·A PF RB TO TP
W-Brett Bostic ....... g}-173 40-66' 52
&amp;! 40 210
19-Dan Dressel... .. .. 17-188 3549 40
37
35 l89
W- Todd Bergdoll .... 65-148 36-67 56 101 47 166
W-Kev Carter ..... ... 45-98 16-47 48 140 27 106
18-T. J. Pasquale ... 29-63
13-23 27 36 33
71
16-Gordon Splete ..... !l-15
8-16 17 15 12
26
19-Jim Bea ver ....... 11-33
6-24
17
9 24
28
16-Kelth Fellure .. .... 5-11
7-15 20 11 21
17
13- Paul MacKenzie .. 2·4
10.13
3
5
1
14
12-John OWens .... ... 3-7
6-9
8
3
3
12
12-Greg Woodrum .. 1·3
5-8
7
5
3
7
9-Wes Meeks ........ 0.1
2·5
1
3
0
2

"top

High Ind. game - Kathy Cumings 192;
June Lambert 169; Barbara WhltUngtOn 167.
High Ind . three-games - Brenda Haggy,
Kathy CUmmins 459; Barbard Whittington

455; Doris Grueser 433.
High "team game - The Meigs lnn 8'll;
Custom Print 776; T)wo 's Company 765.
· High team three-games - The Meigs Inn
2328: CustOm Print 2223; Merrt Amsba ry,
Ha ir Designer 7213.

the field.
Lesley finds that more fans know
him this training camp.
"The difference this spring 1s that
people know my name. Last year It
was. 'Bradwho?' It'sgood,"Les!ey
sald.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) - Reliever
Brad Lesley isn't conceding the No.
1 spot in the Cincinnati Reds
bullpen.
Lesley was called up July 311ast
year when. bullpen ace Tom Hume
required knee surgery. Lesley, who
galned the nickname ''Anirnill" for
IUs mound demeanor, went on to
post an impressive 2.58 earned Tun
average with foqr saves in his first
. major league stint.
Although Hurne has recovered
from the surgery and is expected to
resume his role as bullpen ace,
Lesley isn't ready to take a back
seat.
"I'm not going to say at all that
I'm going to be the No.2 man out of
the bullpen ," Lesley said. " He's
been here a lot longer than I have,
but you can bet that I can pitch in the
same ballpark.
"He's a fine pitcher, and I
consider myself in that same class.
It could tJi.·an interesting battle for
the No. 1 job. l'tn really looking
forward to it. Whatever happens,
happens."
Although the two are rivals,
Lesley thinks he'll develop as a
pitcher by working with Hume.
"Just the fact that he's been
there; he knows a lot or the hitters,
and there are still three teams that I
have never had a c hance to face."
said Lesley, who has never pitched
against Chicago, St. Louis and
Pittsburgh. "My stuff is good
enough ·to get me by. Hume 's
.outlook, his opinions from experience, can be a great help."
Lesley became a favorite among
many Reds fans last year for his
Intensity. He paces a round the
mound. pounds the baseball In his
glove , and makes umpires' cal ls on

~~~®®®

~ ATLANTIC CITY 0
~
CAPEMAY
0
~.:. .April 26-30, 1983 . ~-·
~
5 DAYS, 4 NIGHTS
~
~.

Don't Miss This One!!

~

360 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS
PH. 446-0699

~rr:Jj) ®

f1})

VINYL OR ALUMINUM SIDING IS ONE WAY OF RE.·
DECORATING YOUR HOME.

.

COMPLETE FINANCING AVAILABLE
We Are Trim Work Specialists-WINDOWS. · DOORS. ALL OVER·
HANGS, GUTTERS, SPOUTS. WE CAN COMPLETELY SEAL YOUR HOME
FROM All WEATHER.
.
All THIS WITH GUARANTEED WORK AND AT A LOWER COSTTHAN YOU
CAN GET FROM ANYONE.

Compare Our Price &amp; Ability by Calling or Contacting...

0

JOHNSON &amp; SON
ALUMINUM CO.

Rt. 1 Bulaville Rd.

Phone 446-4741

X·Motgo ..................... .. ....... 2 18 988 1311
X·Completed Seuon.

•
•

,.,...,•• rwulta

Northwelt 12 Porurnouth Wett 55
~them Ill Marietta ill
Lair aster 63 Logan !54
Mardi I pmm
Washington CH vs. Greenfield at UniP.o, 7
p.m.
'

'
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING!
..

·

Mardl4pna

S300ro

NOW RENTING
LARGE SELECTION

1s oz.

BTLS.

"-!all 118.15 .

I

QOSEOUT. ON ALL

MAnEL CARTRIDGES
Upper Rt. 7

••

!.

I.

tFinanclng is available thrOugh particlpa(ing dealers and lenders lor .
qualilled buyers. DEALER CONTRIBUTION MAY AFfECT CU STOMER
PRICE. •Protection Plan is a limiteCI warranty on engint~ and power
!rain , and oultr body rust·throogtl. A,deduttlble may be reQuired .
See dealer lor detalts .

Only

Yau must order br February 28 ur take delivery by March 31 .
.

.

R.l,tln•

CHRYSLER

Plaza)

CARROLL NORRIS, INC.
Gallipolis, Ohio

...
v

~lVI.'

73, J,Jns].\'. W. Va.

K~ ron G."l, Ada fJ7
urna ~hawnCf' 6J. Footorla fil

Lucas n. C'rf&gt;sll inf' ffi
Mnllsfll•ld 55, Markin Hardin~ "g)
Mans. M&lt;i dlsotr
MM s. Sr. Pl•l!•r 'i l
Mans. M&lt;r lallar 81. l,.exlnh'lon 66
. Mans Temph• 9:'), Gra('t• Baptist :y;
Markm l..oC'al 50, Fon Rl&gt;co\•cr'\' .ll
McComb !l'), AreOOI;r 70
Miller Clry 90, Lllrrty Benton 5fl
~· K!lQXVI..Ik' 63. Mlnstt' r 61
Oak Haroor 77. F.ustwood !iO
OntariO lfi. Colonf'l Crll ~iord .u1
0t.sego 6'1. Kan.'W!~ Lakow 46
Parkwa y 'if\ Sr . Mal)'!&gt; 70
Pa t rid:: Henry frr, Nawlr..m ~
Sr. Hmf)· 118, Crlci&gt;nwUI(' Pt'r"l)' c.;
S!.&gt;rR-.:·a E . n. N. Bal rirnOrt- 52
Sht&gt;lwood F'air'.;lf'W 7:i, i\.rl'llllOid ~17
S ~~
67
.......... tral "'· EcJL'iOr1
5p&lt;!t1 &lt;'C'1Villf' 00. Mmdc:m·L'n ~ n ;17
Stryker 7'l. Mon!.IX'Ilf'r .~
SWanton tH. Otl&lt;iwii.C landort r,1
Tiffin Ca lvM 7.1." !\imdu~ky Sr. Mary 1\.1

~,.l

Advance
Anti-Freeze

Reg . 3.49 limil4

Anti-Freeze Tester

Fram Air Filters

Reg . 4 .44 . Umlt2- · Far most ~mestic cats.

69¢
79¢

.... .2.69
·. 3.69

Nationwise
Maintenance Free
Batteries

Nationwise
10W30
Qt.

Reg . 79'

· Nationwise
10W40
at

Reg. 89'

Kendall
10W40
Qt.

Reg._1.09

Cobra Ignitions
$11nd•rd Eumple1:
Tun..UpKI11
FDr6crf.G.M.

Reo

2.21

2 95

Et..:tronlc E1amp1•1:

~

$1395

r--------------------------,
1
Over the Counter Special . 1

Discount off manufactu~uugested list 1·
1 price on parts puf!:hased ov« the counter. 1
1 15%

·

Everyday Low PriCe

24
50
. •
HNtorContro1Vol¥tl
10• 50
AI Low At
HuterBioworMotor
22 95
AILOWAI
I'HMtarHosa
1·• 88
AslowAs

Includes band adjustments, replace of fluid &amp;filter. (Does not
apply to trans axles)

.

25% OFF

AslowAs

Remanufactured
26.88

Cut out this coupon.
Good thru April 30, 1983
PAT Hill FORD

.

Now HNtor Corn

i~

I
I

'

·'i

Reg . 94•

Tun..Up ~Ita

Starters or Alternators

of all fluid levels.

Standard

29.884omonth
41.88somonth
47 .88somonth

LUBE, OIL &amp; FILTER SPECIAL
·
Includes " to 5qts. of motorcraft oil &amp;filter, lube job, check·

I

I
I

I

1~----~--------------~-----J

79~

Buy 2 CD-2

Products&amp;
Rocolve by Moll

IMifl rlbuildltlhle•ctwrgoe lor most dome!tic c81"1
llCIDt ln_..lf'l(fMofOfOII.

Snap

From CD-2

~:;=.~

aome Fordll .

Alttmltm with 1~ l ;o; ·
CfWigt IDI' lnlegrll_,cl Motorola

Windshield
Washer
Solvent

81Ctp1 high H011ft9.

Reg . 99'

A S1 'rebate

Hlgh torQue 1W1er1 wrm robl.rrld~e
alChengl!ll tar most Chryslers and

.'

"
I

;_,·.'7

17.88
. ~ ~(.

'(,:,:' ,~'":'(. ,~7. ~---·
4.88 C"i" ~ ~ ~
Relined Brake Shoes
For m"ost domestic cars ancllight trucks
2 5,000 miles rated

Promo Disc Pads
FOI' most domeatlc cars and light trucks.
25,000 mleo rated. •
.

19.88

~~~~r~·ii

CD-2 Anti-Wear , •.,,
CD·2 Tune-Up , •.,,
CD·2 Trans-Aid ,., ..
CD·2 Gas Treatment ,,.,,

Original Equipment Quality

Mufflers
lifetime warranty for most domestic
cars and llghtlrucks.

G11llno

. Starting
Fluid

Ant~FrHze .
Reg o69"

Exhaust &amp; Tailpipes From 3.95

Reg 1 09

As Lpw As

3.25

I

I

Jet
Carburetor

-·

"

~.

Kits

12 95 As Low Ali
49.95
Idler Arms
18
95
Foreign Auto
From
•
Starters or
Tie Rod Ends
4 50 Alternators
Ball Joints

From

From

•

•

Auto

Foreign
011 Filters
AoLow.Ao

2.95

I
"

!

''~''
4.88

Sold In 4 Pkg. Only

Foreign Auto
Spark Plugs
Reg 6.50 4 Pkg .

• I

.SEE YOUR PARTICIPATING CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER FOR PROGRAM OETAILS .

BOB'S
ELECTRONICS
Gallipolis, Oh.

Sharon 1Pn. 1 Ctu·,

Fort cwl. Chry11t,. Reg. 9.49 . . .

TRANSMISSION SERVICE .......... $49.95

You could save even more down the road with Chrysler 's
Protection Plan for live years or 50.000 miles. whichever
comes li rst~ Chrysler protects your ·new car investment
long afler most other car warranties have ru.n out..

H1.1ds90 W.
61

709 First Avenue
Gallipolis

CARS •.•............·........ ·............ $14.95
TRUCKS .............. "................ $16.95

•

.- ~ --

~.

Hqwland Christ.
.17

2.88

FramForOil
Filters
most domestic cars.

Rea. 3.44. Limit 2 -

BTLS.

Includes checkil'l and adjustil'l of caster; camber &amp; toe- in.:

5/50 PROTECTION PLAN ON EVERY NEW
AMERICAN-BUILT CAR. .

HOfiC'Wl'iH ..ouckm 71, Nnr lhiH.t"ld liJ
HOI,\ Splri! li'i. Clu"'-!l an l'••mvl •• @"I

.

Sl

FRONT END ALIGNMENT SPECIAL

PROTECTION PLAN

Bloom-Carroll~

.19
3.19

Foreign Oil Filler Reg . 3.95 ..
Foreign Ali Filters Reg. 4 95.

spe~ials

Coaxia l T ~pe An tenna Connect or. Dynam ic
Microphone \IIIi th Push-To-Talk S\lll'llch.

Slocll ND. 500 3221 .

.

SERVICE &amp; PARTS

Once again Chrysler comes through with help lor new
car.buyers. Now . 11..9% financing on all ol our cars. No
excepllons. Gellhe car you want at Ihe financi ng you can
afford. Or take the cash !rom Chrysler. to spend or apply 1
to your down payment.

S pe a~er

Wlllough~ S. 40

co.n auun..,,..,....,
Ashtabula Haroor 70. Grand Val. 54
Barnes\'Uie 58. Jefferson Union 55
car lls lt&gt; 74. Mld:::ll('tOI'In Madlson 56
Ilellefonta ine 49. Miam i E . 11
Cin. McNlchoia,s 78. lncllan Hill !'6
Col . Centennial ~. Co l. Brl~ 49, CIT

Cal. Easl 72,

Hlll rw 50, T1nora -17
Holgatl.' li1 . F'DW'IIf' ~

Rld~

Yw!ll. Soo
a ..,\
h ~~ ~.~~~-•-·

~1
ICE HOUSE

p.m.

OR

and P.A. Jack. ACIDC Switch. 115 Volts AC or
12 Vol ts DC {Po sltlve/Ne(;laliYe Gr ound).

W. Geauga !!1,

Drfiana' 6.2. Pw&gt;ny~Wr~~: 4.1
DPipOOs Jeff('O;O(I6i, Ohio Cltv 00
f\:olptps St. JoM 71. Bath 51
Dl•i'a 7:!. Maurne(' m
Elmwcod !'Jil . ~oo of!
F"on J4'!1nln~ 69, l..clp!:il&lt;' 'i l

Morgan 73, Meadowbrook 59
Ol msted Falls ?fl. M(.od.Jna HIWJiand ·18
Obedln 68, U:waln Bruoksldl• ~1
PalnesvWft Harvey 68, Jefferson •18
Pllwlon 60, MinfOrd :'16
•
Ravenn~.~ SE !)!!, Struthers 47
River Vk&gt;w 66. Dovt' r ~18
. Roots town 57, Ol~rl n Falls 56
St. ClalrsvlliC' 81. Union l..o('al tH
Sparta HI!O:hlimd 53, MI. Gll!!ad :l!
Sprlngt:Dro 69, E:aton 66, OT
Spring. Shawfll'f.' &lt;10, Kenton
38
Waterklo 67, JackSon-Milton &lt;18
Whlteha116J, Llekln.l!: Val. 57
OUM A ToumamentH
Bl.'avr r Eastern 61. S. Webstf'r '17
E:. Canton RJ. Hillsdale !"t-1
Gucl"l"IS(')' Cat h. &amp;3. Conotton Val. 00, err
lnrllan Val!(')' s. ftl. NI"WoomentfJWJI 41
[.(odgemon1 ~- Falrp)rt Hardln~ ~2
N('\11/a rk Cu t h. 62, Danvllko 48
"N&lt;r1hmor ~1. E . Knux 521';1
Qak HUI 63, Ironton Sr. Joseph Sl
Re!l:ular Se!Nln
Artln_eton 67, Ek.'ftsvUII.' 49
AycrsvUlc fi:j. Liberty Ccntrr .r,G
&lt;&gt;AI'"""" 68, B"-. ru s 5;.l
ct: ....
~-'
Bllrfflon 75. Car:v·R.awson ~1
Bryan 6..1. Pt&gt;II L&lt;;vlllt&gt; oo ·
Ca ntOn 'I'rinily 91. 'ioung. ChrL~I l&lt;1.11 ii.')
Ck'v{'. Ba pt ist ·7!\ Laluo Rl~l' 31

Clfo\le. Kennedy M. Cresrwood -12
Clew&gt;. Marslla.ll lii. Cleve. W. T«h ~
.Col. Eastmooi" Gt Gl"!:)llf'pOrt ~
Col. Mlffllh 72, West1.'1'1 Uil• N, 45
E. ~leveland Sha~· R8, Cleve. Hay 49
Eucl k1 6t. A.5hhiJ.,,IIa 5.1
.
Field 56, Marllngton "-'5
Grow CITY 42, Watkins McmorlaJ ·10
Hamilton Rcl&gt;s 58, &amp;-tllel-Tatl.' 5o!
Lancasl&lt;'r 63, Lo.e:an ii4
Ml&lt;klletow n 51, Cln. Oak Hills 53
Norton lli, Akron Flre!iiOnt' G.1
Parma Valley Far~ Eli, Cloverlt&gt;af l'1
Walsh Jesui t 74 . Hudson 60
Wamin Local 74. Mlam11'rare 51
,,_warren W. Reave 73, Yoong. Ursulin('

Lorain KiJJI( 78, Elyria 26
Nllcs MC'Kinley 62. '/ru ng. Ea~1 54
N. Coll~e HW 53, Weste rn Brown 3'1
Sa lem 52, lleaV('r Locall6
' Wadswort h 52. Parma 51
WOO'§;ter tO •.LoulsvWe l2
a~ AA Toumamea&amp;s
&amp;:de)" ~. Licking Val. 40
·
Col. ~les 58, W. Jefferson 41
Col. Ready 73, Col . BMggs .:If
Dublin«!. L..ord:ln 3i
GranvU\e 52, Heath 51
N. Union 49. Marysville ::!1
Rivf'r Val. 48. BQ.:: Walnut 46
W&lt;wf'rly 51, Greenfield McClain 46
Westfall47, T&lt;"ays Val. 41
0 8811 A. Toumamen&amp;H
Adena 41. N. Ad&lt;rns 38
&amp;aJISVUIC 29, Woods~el d 'lf
Bellaire Sl. J ohn 47. Ber .....,l1. Sprlncr. 45
,.....
,.. .
Fort Frye 53, Waterfurd 40
Lom...town 66, Sputhln~on ~
Maplewoo.:l 49, MIJF[aOOre 47
Pain t Va l. 4G, Peebles raD

Co n \~' 01-shir&gt;w iR, Ka lld..i 7( O'f

Glrard 8-1, Newton Falls :;I
oo. Deer Park.,
KenS!Orl TI, BcdfoNI ChaneJ 6.1
Loglin Elm 56. Col. Hamilton 1\vp. :n
Lorain Cat h. fC. Keystone t9
Mlllf'fVa 19, Rittman 66
McDrrm:X t NW 72, Poris. W(l$1'!fJ

ar

ALSO COCA-COLA,
TAB, SPRITE, MR. PIBB
16 oz.

M&amp;rdllp.mM
AlhMB. IPC:'tlonal ftna.Js at The Plains, 7: l}

CASH DEPENDING ON MODEL, '1 DOD ON
IMPERIAL, ON NEW '83AND REMAINING
'82 CARS.

Transmit h'1dlcator light. External

8

lrolllm 62 Jadclm 58
Pt. Pleasant 53 George Washington 52
P14t~Q'a ,..,..

Atherw w. OlDtlrottleal OU. 7 p.m.

Au tomatic Noise Limite!. CBIPA Switch.

Brunswick '18. Mldview 68
canron Thnken 57, LoulsvUit' 43
Ctn. Baoon $ . Cln. Purcell -Marian 55
Cln. Colera in 70, W. Chester Lakota 66
Cln. LaSalle !i&lt;f, Cln. WithroW 53
~- Co!U n!llood 00, Eastlal-:1.' N. 54,

'18.

x-Alexandor .. -- ...... .. .. .. ........ 8 13 13:1T 1311

.

SQ uelch, RF Ga in and Mic GAin Co nt rol.

Atllens ti! , MllJ'kotta ~
Bay
n Aml""erst StN"Ie :r1

~ . PanOOra.(;UI:oJI

_ Coklmbus G!"'O\'r

"'"""'

89~

Waverly vs. HWsOOro at Unlcto, 7 p.m.
Ncnhwat VB. MlniJrd at Pcrtsmooth; 7: ;r,
p.m.

R619 40 L.nannal Base/Mobile wilt1 40 Ctla n.
nel Digi tal Readout. SIRF Mete'r. \lolume.

~

·- -

"m

,.

Pr~

4 Pa.r

The~~aboatandSportsShoW ,..~::S:h~:Y:'':oo:.~:· :•~:k:ey~':w:.~:::::::::::::~:':'m:~:':M:'::n:P:Ia:~'
~ :~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i

going on now through this weekend.
In Charleston. When the weather Is
bad (maybe) tomorrow .try going.
Local Report : It has been quite
awhlle since we've had any info,
but with this sprtng-llke weather,
we expected some. Now If It turns
colder (we hope not), they will turn
oft Uli later.
Area ponds - Because they are
usually shallower than lakes they
are hitting now. Bass up to 14 Inches
have been reported to LTF. Some
nice crappies ru:e coming dut also.
Tycoon Lake - Over' the wee- .
·.kend we know of a two pounder and
a nice six and half pounder taken.
Crappies should be getting restless.
Minnows can be seined out or the
creeks.
Ohio River - Some nice mixed
bags have been reported taken
below the Racine and Gallipolis
Dams·, (sauger, white bass, carp).
Also below the dam at Eureka Is
some nice channel cats.

twan:h2c.ne

forward ttnd rt&gt;vt"r ~e vrsuill \t'"l( h PAN PV I

••-.,.

co

(Je'&gt;"f'. UUIVC'r"SitV ~. KISid

w..~- 01 ...., .......... .... 7 13 n12 133'

7:30 p,m .

1Dlllt:&gt;t.~
2- 4-6 Hr IJHS- LCD D••~:;::~;~,:~~~:~; l
, ,;,.. w umrc. pau~e l&lt;; tJI I 'rnmt' .s1nq1e

.

AVAILABLE

Pcnsnooth vs. Rock HJD at lrontm, Bp.nl.
lrontoo vs . Wheelersb.t llil at Po'tsrmuth,

40 Channei .Digltal
AM Base with RF Qaln

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Clt&gt;ve . Central Cath. 74, Col.rrni:Aa 48
Cortland lakeYiew :;1, Pymaluninl( Val.

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x-JaciiiOn ........................... 8 13 1309 12!1!

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VIDEO CASSffiE
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thing that ls against the fishing regW tl
IJ'
u erlng laWS, Of
a OnS Of earns ft
poIIUtlOD, and yDU \1!30t to dO some9-

a- AM T""""""m"

Ulkewood 66, N. Ri~ev Uie 41 '

each line. llyou See some-

'

Fri..,.,.....,

0.. AAA TCIUn1arn(lltK
AusttntO\III"o-Fitch 41, Canfield :11, :JOT
BarbPr"lon 79, Copley 50
BrecksvWe 39, R~ 32
Cln. Hughes 68, Ctn. SP!on 56
On. ME-rcy 551 Ctn . McAuley "S1
Ctn. Reading il, HamUton Ross Z1
Clevf'. Soutll64 , Bedford 46
Day. Carroll 51. Day. Dunbar 47 40T
Garf!Pid H tA. s:t. Cleve. Lincoln-W . 49
KetterlnJi: Alter 44, Day. PaMe-rson 3(1

at one time, and DO IYXJrethan three .

and report It

Ohio Hla-b Sc~ 80)'8 Basketball
• ., A- -- A... -· ~

. s, .,..,.,..........
- · -···...• ,.._

fifty eaC· h ' y 0U Can have aS many
flsh at hOme in the freezer that will
fit
Remember, only two rods or
hand lineS per person ln the water

u"""

Ohio HI. . Sdtool Gins ISa&amp;ketbllll

ALLG.\MEII
'lUll
W L P OP
· Wbeol.....,.rg ..................... IB 2 14.83 11t;
I'Wtlmouth ...... " ............. ... 17 3 1371114!
~lpolls ....... . .................. 14 6 1108 9!8
Aliens ............................... 14 7 1331 129J
x-Lo11n .................... ...... ... 1110 12&amp;1121!1
Northwest .. . ........ ... ....... ..... 11 10 121M 1111l
lronton ..............................lO 1111'10 11$
Shertdan ......... , .................. D 111319 1331
Pt. Pleasant.. ................ ...... 810 ll52Ue
Waver~ . ... .... ..................... 8 12 11!18 1:15

Gallipolis, OH.

's

the llshlng Ucense goes to the local
Conservadon Club to be spent In
this county f or conservation. These
licenses ffiUSt be carried when fish·
• the
ing. If you lose
ffi Y OU must get a
duplicate.
Bag Umits - Y OU can 0 nlY ha ve
10 trout per ftsherman ln your pos·
session. For bass (largemouth,
Smallmoutb, SPQtted) eight fish tO·
tal per person. L0Cali."J IOr Sauger
and Walleye, YOU Can l}ave eight (total) but I Lak Erl It l o.. If
Of
e e S SI.A. YOU
go to Lake Erte to perch jerk it's

hookS 00

Boys results ,

Girls results

•

Cage
standings

NOBODY PUTS ADEAL TOGETHER UKE YOUR
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALERS.·

Royce Super Buyl

8omoroy

•INTEREST RATES ARE DOWN
•MATERIALS ARE DOWN
•LABOR COSTS ARE DOWN

Ohio high school basketball results

Fishing regulations

seems

"low and One·W~ low Rates
Maintained Trucks
"Ri1ht Size Rifht Equipment
"hand Trucks~ urniture Pads
"Nationwide KDid Service
"Moving Tips &amp; Insurance

The Sunday Times-Sentinel . - Page-C7

-

Let's talk fishing

By Veraoa Cllftoos
and Jerry 811111
. Sped•• C. a &amp;II DOrientl
. Last weekend LTF; along with
two other members of the Galllpo11.!! l1as8 Busters, attended the state
~meeting o! the Ohio Bass Fed·
~·ation In Columbus. They had
some regular business and also
some good speakers from the Ohio
P,)iartment of Natural Resources.
· 'jbe main topic was problems with
bliss pop,ulatlons In some central
Ohio lakes. Of Importance to the
local angler, Information on Lake
Snowden was addressed. 1n order
to Increase the population of keeper
bass, size regulations start on
March 1. NO bass fUteen Inches or
under can be kept.
After the meeting LTF was ap.
proacbed by Ron James (now with
·the ODNR). He talked to us about
possibly fixing up the park lront for
better access to tile fishermen. He
,Jl; going to get back with us when
·ilomethlng Is more definite. Also we
~with Russ Scholl, an Ohio fl.
li~ter~es btotogtst.
that lor the
)lest smallmouth fishing In Ohio,
try around the Bass Islands In Lake
Erie. We're trying to get more In·
f!&gt;rnJadon and then we will let you
know. We've also heard of problems with the reciprocal agreement with West Vlrglnli! and the
6hlo River. We will receive some
more Info on It and .r elay it to you
later.
';These are not the complete regu·
lations but a general idea.
The first day' of March Is when
you need them, If you are sixteen up .
to' 65 years of. age. A fishing license
·Is 'required !or even frogglng or turtling. One does not need a license to
!l.sh In a private pond or lake.
The license will cost $7 plus a 75
cents Wlitlng fee for a resident
(llved In Ohio lor previous six
months). Remember, jw;t like the '
hunting license, some money from

RYDER
TRUCK
RENT Ai.
· , _....,.._.,~"
ONE-WAY

OAKLAND, Calif. ~AP ) - Un·
seeded Andrea Temesvarl of Hungary, upset top-seeded Tracy Aus·
tin 4·6, 7·5, 6-41n quarterfinal play of
the $150,&lt;XXl Virginia Slims o(
California tennis tournament.

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

.•

r-::==========:t

Records upset
SEOAL R~ERVE CHAMPIONS- Coach JackPayton'sGalllpo-

!

r.bruary 271 1983

•i

.J.

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.

.......,. PH. 992-2196·
461 S. THIRD AYE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

209 Upper

River Rd.446·3&amp;07Z
••
I'

'

�-, .

~8-The

Page

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

Sunday firMS-Sentinel

r.brua!'Y 27' 1983

.S tate/ ational

I Daniel Webster ran his restaurant below Court St.

By JAMES SANDS
Special C&lt;Jrreipondeut
GAlLIPOLIS - The almost
dllapldated bulldlng that stands
below the Sohjo Station at Second
and Court was bunt sometime
aroond 185().55. At
least according to
the recollections
of Henry Bell,
only frame buDd· ·
lngs Q!::CUpled this
area In 1946.
Ammg thel;e bulldhigs was a
·two-story structure run by Daniel
Webster as a restaurant.
We knew that the present Ivy·
covered bulldlng at 243 Second was
In operation by 1855 as the Charles
Carel art gallery. It Is likely that the
structure In question was put up by
Franklin Carel for hls son Charles
FRANKLIN CAREL came to
Galllpoils from France In 1803 with

hls parents a.."1d ills brother VlrgU.
By 1820 Rene Carel (Franklin's
father) was the fourth w-ealthiest
man In Galllpolls (according to the
tax records) .
Ahead d Carel were Claudius
Menager, J.P.R. Bureau, and
Joseph DeVacht. .
Rene Carel started the town's
first sah works, and Franklln and
VIrgil started the town's first
foundry. In addition, Franklin was
a noted Inventor making a number
of contributions to the steamboatlng Industry.
CHARLE'! CAREL was burn In
1832 In Gallipolis and had s tudled
art. photography, and music . It was
at 243 Second that most aspiring
vioUn players In tbwn first had their
Instruction. Carel also taught art
here and Painted the portraits of
some of the town's more prosperous

DISPLAY POST(:ARDS, BALLOON - M~ Grube, left, and
sister Amy display postcards and balloon they found In woods near the
G;illlpolls radio station.

PEEPS: A Gallipolis Diary

Amy and Matthew Grube find
drifted balloon from Cincy
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GAlLIPOLIS - Six postcards
tied to a balloon Identified It as
coming from Pierce Elementary
SchOOl, anclnnati. Amy and Mat·
thew Grube found the balloon with
the cards attached. E. J . Bryant
was the child who sent the device on
its long trip across southern Ohio,
and the teacher was Miss Edwards.
These Identifications were wrttten
on the stx cards, each of a different
color from 1he others.
AMY , 8, IS A pupU In the third
grade of Green Elementary School
just a.whipstltch from Centenary In
Gallla CountY,. Her ·brother, Mat·
thaw, 6, Is In the ll.rst grade of the·
same school. They and their
maternal grandfather, William H.
Qay, 72, Huntington, were brows·
lng through the woods near the
WJEH radio tower at 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. ~THE CINCINNATIANS sent a
message: return this card; If the
finder does return the cam he'll be

eligible for a prize. Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Grube and chlldren reside on
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, which Is State
Route 141 - Highway Number 141
- 'way up there on the hilltop.
THIS HAS seen the light of day
before, but ol' Peeps thinks it's
lmporlant enoogh to re.mlnd yoo:
any loformation you may have
about Revolutionary War veterans
who resided in Gallla County should
be sent to Maxine Northup, Rt. 3,
Galllpolls Box 121. Or to Henny
Evans, 638 First Avenue.
RENNY IS HEAD of the newly
formed genealogical society, which
exists for the purpose of collecting
Information on Revolutionary War
soldiers who once Uved In Gallla
Count:Y. they want the veteran's
war record, where and when he
lived In Gallla County, the maiden
name of his wife, and the names of
his children. But If you don't have
ALL those facts, please send In
what you have, anyway.

No-tiJJ farming can reduce
soil erosion up to 90 percent
O)LUMBUS - A decade ago
ta1111ers using conservation tDiage
were ahead of their time. Today.
tarmers converting to conserva tlon
tillage are just keeping up with the
tlmes.
Ohio farmers used conservation
tillage on more than three mllllon
acres in 1!£!. Over the laSt three
years, conservation tillage acreage
has Increased from 2.4 mllllon to the
three mllllon·acre mark, ail annual
Increase of about 200,000 acres.
A variety ri conseiVatlon tillage
systems are used In the state. The
top conservation system Is no-till
where the soU Is hardly disturbed at
all. 'The seed Is plantedlnlastyear's
residue. One trip &lt;:Ner the field
usually takes care d the entire
planting operation.
"In tough economic times, soU
conservation may not be the first
consideration for some," says
Robert R. Shaw, state conservationist In Ohio for the U.S. Soll
Conservation Service (SCS). "Sav·
lng time and money and maintain·
tng production levels Is always a
prtme consideration tlnugh, and
no- tnt will do the job," he says.
Widespread Interest and sizeable
Increases In the amount c1 conser·
vatlon !Wage acreage In Ohio shows
that farmers agree on the value and
economics of no-lUI. Shaw cautions
that conservation Wlage, as great
as It Is. is ~tDI only part of the total
re!IOOrce management system necessary to Increase or even sustain

TIUS SECOND A VENUE building was almost completely
covered with Ivy this past summer (1982). For Its first 58 years an art
gallery was housed here, starling ahoot :w5 wllh Charles Carel. In the
20th century older re!ildents say a restaurant and a boarding house were
here at separate times.

famWes.
Care) was also one of the first
daguerreotype plntographe!'S In
town.
As a matter of fact, one of the
pictures of President McKinley
released to the newspapers and
magazines upon the occasion of the
pres ident's assassination was taken
In this building by Carel whlle
McKinley was stationed In
Gallipolis.
IN NOVEMBER . of 186) as
several soldiers had gathered at
Carel's to have their picture taken .
to be sent home to loved ones, a man
came running down the street
shouting: "Secesh! ~sh!"
A number ri. people oould be seen
running toward the wharf and those
In the Carel gallery no doubt
pictured In their mind General
Albert Jenkins, the Confederate
secessionist was raiding Gallpolls.
Just then the cannon from atop
Fortification Hill fired.
BUTW)IEN'DIEcrowdreached
the wharf, It was pnly the steam·
boa 1 Telephone pulling In with the
41st OVIon board. Thlsunlthadjust
returned from a foray to Greenbot·
tom, West Vlrgtnla. where they had
captured, among other things, one
of J enklns' veal calves.
As the regiment band played, thls
celebrated "booty of war" was
paraded through the park accom·
panled by the 4l,st OVI which was
housed In the present day Gallla
Hotel (then called the Monroe
House ).
Greenwocxt was. paid Sffi for the
damages done by these hyped up
soldiers. However, several Second
Avenue residents were not relm·
bursed for the chickens that
mysteriously disappeared tbat day.
ACCORDING TO a directocy put
out in 1876 by the Gallipolis
Bulletin :
"Carel's Gallery was established
over 20 years ago. Although Mr.

Carel takes all kinds of pictures ot
modern types and styles, he makes
a specialty of plntography. This
particular branch Is his delight and
study and we !Dust say we have ~t
seen finer work anywhere, than he
•·
exhibited to us."
Charles married Henrietta Wood
and they had one daughter Kate,
who, at a young age, moved to New
York to become an actress. In l8li6
Kate Carel made her return to
Gallipolis in one of the most
· elaborate plays ever presented In
the Old French city.
'l1IE STAGE PROPS for "The
Curse of Gold, " starling Miss
Carel, Included waterfalls that used
86,000 gallons of water running Into
the BetzOpera HooseatSecond and
State.
Father Charles also had show
business In hls blood as he spent
several summers traveling with the
JolUl Robinson circus band as well
as appearing In a number of bands
and orchestras In Galllpolls.
After Carel closed hls art gallery
In the l89Js Ed Mercer ran a gallery
here as did a Mr. Gllmore and a Mr.
Smeltzer after that. In the 20th
century the bulldlng oo Second has
been used as a restaurant an() a
boarding house.
James Sands' addreal Is P.O.
Box 92, Clarbburg, Ohio 43115.

r------------®®®®®®

~ •Old Salem Dinntt
~;
•Greensbom Din- Theatre~
&lt;
••
·~ •VMI Tour ·

O)LUMBUS, Ohlq (AP) Criminal activity Increased moderately during a two-day outbreak of
"blue flu," according tQ prelim!·
pary Information released by city
safety forces .
About 90 percent of 1,200 officers
scheduled toreportdurlngtbestrlke phoned In sick, and pollee officials
said burglaries and robberies
reported during the two-day wal·
kout were up by about one-third. But

•

/f;io

MARCH 22-26, 1983

~

1~'
~

360 SecoAij Aw.

Gllli;4't .
Ph.

~

l!;i

~
I@

t

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GalllaCoumy
GAlLIPOLIS - Fields with
crops such as pastures, hay, and
no-till row crops seldom receive
any tlllage . . Since the fertilizer Is
applled to the soil swface for the
production of these crops, there Is a
tendency after two to three years
for the phosphate and potash levels
of the soU swface to become very
high an !I the pH to drop to very }Qw
levels. Lime and fertilizer recommendations made on OSU soU test
reports are based on a sample
taken to plow depth.
If a sample Is extracted from only
the surface Inch of soU, then the
fertilizer recommehdations wlll not
be adequate. For example, let's
assume a Held has been In no-lUI
corn and beans for five years and
all the ferlllizer has been spread on
the soU surface. If the top Inch of son
has a phosphorus test of 90 and the
· next seven Inches has a phosphorus
test of 10, then the average
plnsphorus test for the eight Inches
Is only 20, and this ls well below the

~~~-~®

A farmer who would have this
condition and samples only the top
two Inches of soU would receive a
recommendatkm for only X~ pounds
of phosphate to produce 120 pOunds
of corn when, In fact, the recom·
mendatlon should be 55 to' 100
pounds d phosphate, depending on
whether an annual or buildup
recommendatkm was desired. The
same kind of errors exist for potash
levels.

, NEW YORK (AP) -To get on the
air, television commercials must
pass the muster of network censors.
Up to 1,00J commercials a week
are screened by each of the three
major networks.
-

Ony 10,411 miles - not a misprint - all the options you
would expect a Cadillac to have. Truly a luxury car.

1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

WILUAM8 Wfl'll ACTRI!SS - PiaywrlgN
Ten•
E WIIIIanlll and llallaa adreM Anna Mac·
• UDI pose Ia IIIIH pdor to ll&amp;arilnclhe mm vel'!lloa of

A preventive maintenance check-up can help add to
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shape now. so it will be ready for the summer season. Call the experts. Call~~ SI!'IYice.

'

By MIKE FEINSILBER
the ruling and the American Qvll
Alllloclated Preis Wrler
Liberties Union ls planning to
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Alltld a
challenge it In court.
Meanwhile, Sen. Edward M.
: storm of protest, the Justice
• Department is defending Its re- . Kennedy, D·Mass., Is demanding
. qulrement that three Canadian · that Attorney General William
films be \ l~beled political propaFrench Smith be brought before the
;ganda under a 35-year-old law.
Senate Judiciary Committee "to
• Two of the films are about acid
elgllain this Inexcusable action by
rain and one Is about the consequenthe department he manages."
Said Kennedy: "We should aU
:ces of nuclear war.
; Canada's ambassador said he Is
expect this kind of thing from the
: asking the government to reverse
Soviet government. But we must

••

1983 CUSTOM VAN ST ARCRUISER

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never accept lt from our own:They
attorney general has dropped his
own iron curtain across the movie
screens of Arrierlca."
One of the films, "If You Love
This Planet," Intersperses scenes of
the · atomic devastation in · Hiroshima and N agasakl with a 26mlnute lecture on the medical
conSequences of nuclear war by Dr.
Helen Caldlcott, president of Physl·
clans for Social Responsibility .

The others, "Acid from Heaven "
and "Acid Rain: Requiem or
Recovery ," deal with the damage
which environmentalists think Is
caused by sulfur dioxide pollution
mixed with rain .
At issue is thedepartment'sorder
last month - which just came to
Ught thls week - that the films
carcy a propaganda warning when
they are shown and that the
government be given the names of

and a bleak family life for much of
hls material. "Streetcar" and
"Cat" won Pulitzer prizes.
,
"He was the greatest American
Playwright. Period," said Walter
Kerr. a drama critic for The New ·
Yor~Times.

Williams' body was found Friday
morning by his secretary, JolUl
Ucker, on thefloorofWIIUams' hotel

room. ;
He had been registered for about a
week at the Elysee, a mid·
Manhattan hotel where Wllllams
stayed occasionally for 15 years.
Since 1945, he had spent most of his
time in Key West, Fla., "justalways
writing," said Michael Powers , a
spokesman for Williams' manager.
A preliminary examination deter·
mined that Williams died of natural
causes, said Dr. Elliott Gross, the
city's chief medical examiner .
Gross said an autopsy would be
performed later today. He would
not comment on a pollee report that

•

an empty wine bottle was found In
the room and that two capsules or
pills were found beneath the body.
Although Tennessee Williams'
last commercial success ca me In
1961 with " Night of the Iguana," be
never stopped writing. In lgg), his
"Clothes for a Summer Hotel"
closed on Broadway after · a
disastrous run .
Williams was an avowed homosexual. and homosexuality subtly
pervades his works. He sa id he lost
his will to live In 1963 after his ·
constant companion of 14 y ears,
Frank Merlo. died of cancer.
Williams' greatest works are
distinguished by a melding of
reality and fantasy. macabre fact
and :;oaring poetry. His plays show
compassion for outcasts.
,
Plays like "The Glass Menagerie, " "A Streetcar Named Desire"
and "Cat on the Hot Tin Roof"
remain among the most popular
productions for theater groups and
repertory companies.

organizations that ask to set-them.
The Foreign Agents Registration
Act requires those steps for material It labels "poUtlcal propa·
ganda." And the department said it
has "consistently" applied that
term to "any attempt to Influence a
segment of the American public
with reference to the foreign policy
of the United States .. ."
Joseph E . Clarkson, a career
lawyer who ls chief of the reglstra·

lion uni t of the depa rtm en ~s
internal security section , ru led that
the films mu st carry this d iscla i·
mer: "This material Is prep ared,
edited; issued or circula ted by
(name and address of registra nil ,
which is registered with the
Department of Justice, Was hing.
ton, D. C. under the Foreign Agenis
Registration Act a s a n agent of
(name a nd address of fo reign
principle) ."
,,

renchtown Car Co.
1640 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis
44&amp;-0069

\.

,.

~·

•

But fears remain that Interest rates will head back up this year for two
By JAMES PELTZ
main
reasons: First, that the recovery will create stronger demand for
AP Bu!llness Wrler
credit,
and, second, that any evidence of rising Inflation wlll force the
• NEW YORK .(AP) . -:- In some ways It appeared to be the best of all
Federal Reserve Board to be less expansive with money.
worlds this past week.
. Rising private demand for credit could bump Into the considerable
' 011 prtces fell. The prime lending rate fell. ~risumer prices only edged
financing
needs of the government, with the collision pushing rates up. A
higher. tn January, the government reported : . .
more restrictive Fed policy on the amount of money avaUable could only
New orders for durable~ rose a robust 4.5 percent last month, the
•goverMient said, Instead of falling as some economists piedlcted.
· aggravate the situation.
It remains to be seen how much tension the central bank keeps on Its
Watching all this, tile stock market churned out a wave of buying that
· credit reins throughout the year. Fed Chairman Paul Volcker said he saw
' utted the Dow Jones lndustrtal average to a new record. .
"significant room" for bank lending rates to fall further, but said that was
Is It too early to predict substantially better times for this year? Or Is
the banks' decision.
evidence becoming overwhelming that a recovery stronger than
'previously through! Is unfolding?
.
In testifying before the Senate Budget Committee, he also said current
Inflation, money suppl,y and credit levels "lmpUes lower Interest rates
, Perhaps because rl the recession's severity, caution remains In force.
than otherwise and more room for real growth" tn the economy .
·And several thor-.' Issues stllllolter that warrant such an outlook.
· Volcker said the~ In on priceS "only reinforces that outlook."
Take Interest rates. Some major commercal banks cut their prime
The consensus about lower on prices, at least'on Wall Street, seemed to
lending rates Ibis past week to 10.5 percent from 11 pen:e11t- the lowest
li!Yelllnce November 1,918.
.
•
shift this past week. Initially, fears ran high that dropping prices woold
place International banl&lt;s In jeopardy, since heavUy Indebted nations that
i . Tbe cull retlect decllnlng open-mar~t rates, which have lowered
rely
on on Income would· fBce further problems.
·
'
~· cost of acquiring money for lending.
~---,...

'

their treatment from city officials
who for montho insisted they h ad qo
money to .give IJJe safety forces.
"They were pushed into a corner
and they came out fighting," a dded
Sgt. Charlie Beeler, who worketl
double shifts during the walkout. "I
don't think there is a policeman In
this department that wanted to do
this. but fru stration can drive a man
to do an awfullot of things. "

:Despite economic recovery, caution ·prevalen'
This custom van has options
. like cruise control .·tilt wheel .air
cond., power windows, power door locks, rallye wheels 4 re·
clining captains chairs, special accented two-tone paint' port·
' able TV, and muc·h more.
· .
· '

Ridenaur Supply

. · The tally of crimes reported
Wednesday and Thursday showed ·
95 burglaries. up from 73 !'E'ported
on Jan. J0.31, used by the depart·
ment for comparison.
There were 19 robberies com·
pared to 13 for the earlier period;
two rapes compared to four earlier;
five aggravated assaults In each
period; 10 auto thefts compared to
eight earlier; three purse snatches

compared to one; one kidnapping
lively raising their take-home by 5
compared to none, and one homb · percent retroactive to Oct. 1, 1982.
threat in each two-day period.
In addition, pollee officers and
Most Columbus poUce officers firefighters wDl get a 5 percent pay
and firefighters were back on duty
increase starting Dec. 4, raising top
_Friday after a 48-hoursickoutstrike
patrolman's pay from $21,986 to
to protest the lack of a pay raise.
$23,088 annually and top flreflgh·
The strike ended Thursday night
ters' pay from $21,882 to $22,984
when the Columbus City CouncU
annually.
agreed to reduce pension contribu·
Af!er the settlement, many offic·
lions by each of the city 's 800
ers said the issue wasn'tmoney , but
firemen and 1,200 policemen, effec·

!Rules Canadian disaster ·films 'propaganda' ··

This sport hatch is exceptionally sharp. Air cond., power
steering, cruise control, sun roof and only 20,820 low miles.
One ·owner car ....:. one of a kind.

• o o o o o ·o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o • o o o o o o • o o • o o o•o o o o o o o o o o o o o

•

1.500. pollee said.

By LAWRENCE KILMAN
AS'!Oclated Press Wrller
NEW YORK (AP) ~ The
conflicting Impulses Inside Tennes·
see Williams gave him the bril·
Hance to write dramas like "Caton a
Hot Tin Roof" and "A Streetcar
Named Desire," but also brought a
tormented personal life that ended
in a Manhattan hotel room .
WDllarns, who \lied at IJJe Elysee
Hotel on Thursday night at age 71,
wrote in his 1975 memoirs: "Make
of the paradox of my life what you
Will. I make an honest effort to make
sense of It."
Despite his bouts with drugs,
alcohol and depression, he did not
ask for pity. "I have had a
remarkably fortunate life which
has contained a great many
'.."""m·om!!llts •of joy; both •pure and
ln;lpure," he said.
'rhe playwright, whose first
success came In 1945 with "The
1118 play, "'lbe Bose Tattoo." WDUarns died In New
Glass Menagerie," wrote nearly 70
York Friday at age ·11. ( AP Laserphoto).
plays, drawing on his Southern roots

·· - ~

Be ready this summer...

Clean commercials

statistics showed little effect on the
numbers of most other crimes
reported, they said.
Pollee supervisors and non·
striking officers responded during
the strike only to life-threatening
situations.
·Police reported that in the 24
hours ended at 6: :ll a.m. Thursday,
they were dispatched on m calls.
The average number of calls
ansjVered tn a normal day Is 1,200 to

res!ionse curve for ·corn and
soybeans.

PRE-SEASON LAWN
MOWER CHECK-UP

taping session for a program by C-SPAN, the cable
public aHalrs network. The program Is sponsored by
the Close-Up Foundatk10. (AP Laserphoto).
•

Playwright · Williams found dead Friday;
had a 'fortunate life' ·

Sears~----.

.

ANSWERS QUES110NS - President Reagan
answers questoll8 of high school students from
around the country Frklay In Washlngtoo during a

Crime increased moderately during sickout

~
~~

CAROUNA
OUTLETS PLUS

Soil sampling for
no-till crops

330 Chain Saw

...

w.

By
DALE NElSON
Affairs Network.
·
difficulty hearing the question and
Associatedl'relsWrller
The "squeal rule," which ·hils
aSked to have It repeated. Once he
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Pres!· · been blocked by federal court
understood It , he grinned and said,
"I'm glad you asked that. "
fed
bsld
lin
Ires
ll
ru gs, requ
era y su
·
, dent Reagan, asked by a teen-ager
:about the "so-called squeal rule,"
!zed clinics to .lnform parents when
"This has to do with the squeal
says the disputed ·birth· control '· their daughters under 18 receive
law," he told the teen-agers.
regulation Is needed because the
birth ' control pUis, Intrauterine
" I don't think any of us can say ·
devices or dlaplil'agms.
that sexual behavior Is without a
government "can't be Mama and
·Papa and shouldn'ttry."
Twofederaljudgeshave held that · moral connotation. Where they are
"I am not sure you wDI be on my
this Is contrary to the Intent of an complaining that this Is govern·
side on this, but maybeyourparents
Congress and would lead to un·
men! interlerlng with the rights of
.wUJ," Reagan told Felicia Lynch. a
wanted pregnancies If teen-agers
young people, what about governhigh school student from Union . decided to forego birth control men! Injecting itself into the family
rather than l)avethelrparentslearn between parent and chlld 'and
City, Calif., wln asked him about
the rille Friday.
,
of their sexual activity.
saying, ··we, llie govetnment ,
·-The girl was orte of 44 students In
Reagan, however. said It is the reserve the right to do something in
Washington for a government study
clinics that are defying the Intent of collusion with yoor chlldren and we
Congress, which he said wanted . fr~; not going to let you know about
..program sponsored by the Close Up
Foundation, who met with the
them to "Involve and maxtmlze
president 1n the Old Executive
famllypartlclpatlon ."
"I don't think government has a
Office Bulldlng next door to the
'J'he question he was asked, was, right to stick Its nose into the family
"How does your administration and tell parents what they can and
White House.
The meeting was televised by
justify this so-called squeal rule?"
cannot know about their chlldren ,
C·Span, the Cable Satellite Public
Reagan, who has ear trouble, had and therefore we have put out that
regulation .

Agriculture and our community

production levels.
Soli and water conservation
districts In Ohio have long advlsed
against fall plowing and representa·
lives say real progress Is being
When recommended amounts of
ma9e. Many of the district leaders
nitrogen are applied to the soU
are pioneers of no-till farming In
surface, the pH ts lowered fairly
their counties and have witnessed
rapidly whlle the soU one to eight
considerable top!Dil savings com·
Inches below the surface may
pared to either plowing or reduced
remain at a satisfactory pH level.
tillage methods.
Very low pl{··values at the son
No-1fll farming can reduce soli
surface can reduce the activity of
erosion up to 00 percent.
triazine herbicides (atrazlne,
"We hope farmers wUI deCide not
Bladez and Princep l In controlling
to tlll the ground this spring and
weeds. In thls case, It is desirable to
even more wlll make the decision
know the pH of the soU surface so It
next fall," says SCS Agronomist
can be corrected by shallow tlllage
LaVern Feusne~. "Fall IDling Is the
or llmlng when It becomes too low
most damaging, but erosion poten·
(below pH 4.8) .
tlal ts there any lime the soil Is
disturbed," he says. Feusner says r-------------------~-----l
Interest tn no-tlll farming Is phenomenal and he expects sharp
Increases b) the number of Ohio r - - - - l
farmers usb1g the method.
For more Information contact the
SoD Conservation and Gallla Soli
arid Water Conservation District at
529 Jackson Pllie In the Spring
Valley Plaza or call 446-8687.
.

HOM ELITEs

....,....

High school students
:q uh Reagan on rule

-,,

-·

But the annooncement that six OPEC nations had agreed on a new;
albeit undisclosed, price signaled some stablllty In the oil market. That
translated Into an orderly decline In prices, and Its benefit s seem ed tn
outweigh Its detriments, many observers believed.
.;
For the consumer, the latest news isbrighterthan that heard a year age:
Fuel bills are down. Installment and mortgage rates have fall en, althoui;l
~~as sharply as open-market or the prime rates. Average food prices a
flat. And overall, consumer prices rose just 0.2 percent In January. ;:
Time to cheer? For some, but not for many others - those workers stilt
unemployed and those firms that are still not sure whether IJJey wl~
emerge from the recession healthy enough to reap a recovery's benefit!j,•
In the week ended Feb. 17, amid lots of talk about a budd ing recove~
business !allures hit a post-Depression weekly record of 713, up from 4 •
the previous week and 505 In the year-earlier week, according to Du n
Bradstreet Inc., a business-Information service.
:.,
The previous post-Depression high was 6961n the week ended Aug . 26•

til

1982.

.

•••
So far this year, 4,319 companies have failed for an average of 617 -~

week. At this time last year, 3,065 firms, or an average of 438 a week, ha&lt;tl
~~ -

~

�.

-

· Pag&amp;-0-2--TheSu~~T=im~•~·~~~t~ine~l========~~~~~p~~m~~~-~~~~~M~~~~~~~~Go~l~lipo~I~~·~Oh~io;;;P~~~n~t~~~ea~~~n~t,~\N~.~V~a~.~============================~h~Hw~Ua~~~2~7~,~1~98~3~

Beat of the Bend

·. Commends sheriff.....

the agency's problems have been
estimated that a third of the EPA's
exposed.
.
problems have been unoovered,
"We're Just getting the lid off of
said Reagan Is getting poor advice
Pandora's box," said Rep. Bob
from the Justice Department In
Whittaker, R-Kan., Friday, whoslts
pursuing the confrontation over the
on one of the five House subcornmlt·
documents.
tees investigating EPA.
Whittaker said that after Mrs.
Whittaker also called for the
Burford's situation Is taken care of,
resignation of EPA administrator
''Then we need to look at the Justice
Anne McGill Burford. But Larry
Department. Some heads need io
Speakes, deputy White Ho11se press
roll there as well."
·
secretary, said President Reagan, .
Also an Friday White House
who has already asked for the '· announced an "ln~rnal revtew' of
reslgnatlo?.s of three EPA managwhether there were Improper

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
rma of patterning for Tracy. The
By BOB HOEfLICH
dent
Reagan Is considering asking
Commendations for two em - Gllmores needed the relief and are
David
F. Unowes, a University of
extending thanks to the Pomeroy
ployees of Meigs Sher iff James J.
llilnois
professor, to study the
Senior Citizens for the many hours
Proffitt have been made by Lt. L.C.
implementation of federal law that
given by volunteers In helping and
·Gibson, officer
provides
for cleanup of toxic waste
to the kind penple of the Silver Run
detective bureau
dumps,
a
White House omclal said
and Rutland Baptist Churches.
of the City of
Saturday.
A nice quote: " If I pass this way
' P ar k er sburg.
The official said a passible
but one time, let it be to lielp a
W.Va.
Llnowes
study woold not be
child." ... Thanks to everyone who
Praised by Lt.
expanded
to cover tlie overall
pitched In to give the Gilmores that
Gibson are Romanagement
of the EnvirOnmental
much-needed help.
, Iiert Beegle and
.()ary Wolfe, Lt. Giii
'
Protectloi)~Agency, which Is em- ers, was pretty adamant In 1\ls
broiled In allegations of confllct of . support" of Mrs. Burford - Anne
P.C. King, young son of Linda
letter to Sheriff Proffitt:
Interest and political favoritism
Gorsuch before her recent
and Curtis King, Is ·In critical
'•On May 4, 1982, a Wood County
focusing
on
Its
hazardous
.
waste
marriage.
woman was abducted from a store condition at St. Anthony's Hospital
program.
Whittaker and the other Republi·
In Columbus. Plans now call for
in Parkersburg and subsequently
The
official,
who
spoke
on
can
members of the House Energy
raped, robbed and beaten by a P.C. to be moved on Tuesday to
.condition
that
he
not
be
Identified
by
and
Commerce subcommittee on
Richard Lee Abbott. Upon learning Children's Hospital In Columbus
name,
saldReaganhaddlscardeda
Investigations
wrote Reagan on
from St. Anthony's. Linda 'and
Abbott's name, our Investigation
suggestion that a special commis- , Friday, asking (or a quick, comled members of the detective Curtis are staying In Columbus to
slonbenamedtostudytheagency's
plete release of the requested
be
near
their
son.
,bureau into Meigs County in the
problems. ·
·
documents.
•early morning hours.
The official said that "there has
They said they were not satisfied
The Ohio Cancer Information
: "At this time, Meigs Deputies
been
no
firm
decision"
to
proceed
·
bytheWhlteHousereleaseofedlted
Service has a toll free mnnber now
:Robert Beegle and Gary Wolfe
versions of some EPA documents
with the .Lin owes study, although
now -1-lm+CANCER
;assisted the detectives and worked
had
been
receptive
to
that
the administr ation says are
the
professor
Cancer affects two of every ·
·for several hours trying to locate
Idea.
The
WhiteHouse
already
is
covered
by executive privilege.
the
three families (now that absolutely
· :Abbott. Later the same day, Abbott
looking
Into
Improper
contacts
"We
are
stating again .. . our
astounds me In view of the wealth of
;was arrested by Beegle and Wolfe,
strong feeling that those records
between Its staff and the EPA.
our nation) and the toll free number
·his truck located and a consent to
"
We
should
explore
ways
the
should be turned over In total," said
:search was obtained. Crucial evl· should Increase public use of the
superfund
could
better
operate,
the letter from Whittaker and Reps.
service in Ohio. The phone Is
:dence was obtained from the
either
under
the
act
or
by
changing
James
Broyhill of North Carolina;
•vehicle. The proficiency of the staffed by experienced, knowledgethe
act,"
the
official
said.
Thomas
Bliley of Virginia and
able personnel who are equipped to
.arres t, search and seizure by
A
Republican
congressman
est!·
Michael
Oxley
of Ohio.
;Deputies ,Wolfe and Beegle led to a • field a variety of questions jiertaln·
mates
that
only
about
one-third
of
Whittaker,
who
didn't say how he
;conv iction of Abbott on Feb.17, 19&amp;3 lng to cancer.
If you have a question - even If
·for r ape, robbery, attempted
you
think It's asinine- do call and
,murder . alxluction and assault.
discuss
lt. You'll feel better.
: "It goes without saying that this
·kind of quick action and coopera·
Register by ApnllO, 1983
Do keep In mind that a meeting
· :lion is essential to the profession of
No p u ir n ~ sP nP.r.P.ssary
will be held today at 3 at the library
• 1aw enforcement. "
of Meigs High School to organtze a
Junior and Senior High
Meigs
Norma A. Lee is encouraging a
School
Chapter
of the Fellowship of
:surprise card shower on WednesChristian
Athletes.
Mike Olejarz, ·
tlay honoring Mrs. Ruby Halliday
Southeast
Ohio
Regional
Director
on her 90th birthday. Mrs. Halliday
has leukemia and must have of the Fellowship, will be on hand
for the session. The chapters have
A egrster at our store to wrn an ATAAI 400 ·
; pumerous blood transfusions. She
Home Computer &amp; The Edrrcator · Krt from
• is now entirely blind and, of course, been quite successful In other
Gold Lance Cla ss Rmgs ·
school districts. Parents, students
· becomes discouraged at times. You
~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
'might help lift her spirits Wednes· and all other Interested persons are
day. The address Is 37120 New more than welcom e.
Lima Rd., Rutland.
This Is the final week you have to
order
tree packets and ground ·
: . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilmore
UPTO
GRADUATION
: apd granddaughter, Tracy Payne, cover plants from the Meigs Soil
KEY CHAIN
;. ~ave returned from Philadelphia and Water Conservation District
Witn Gold Lance
.
,• • where they. spent a week at The LadleS Auxiliary,
Cla ss Rmg purchase
IN
RING
.
There Is a wide selection offered
•: : Institutes for the Development of
For the Classes of
and
for informalion on prices and
:: Human Potential.
OPTIONS
83. 84 . 65 and 86 ·
·:
They go to the Institutes period!· types offered just stop by the roil
Choose from a
conservation office, 221 W. Second
brg selecHon at
·: . cally for Tracy who was recently
custom optrons
St., Pomeroy, the second floor of
'. •: re-examined and It was found that
rncludmg gotd
. : : she has doubled her neurological the Farmers Bank Buldlng, or call
lener on stone .
3·0 mascot. sports
•. age In 10 months, has a language 992-6647 between 7:15a.m. and4::Jl
emblems. trrebursl
; Victory and can now r ead at a p.m. March 3 is the deadline for
stone. your name on
.; second grade level. The Gilrnores ordering.
the rmg and others
:; and The Institutes staff are well
Bring this ad to our store now
Remember whe'l you couldn't
::: pleased with her progress.
t!l
receive these great free offers.
the
way
prices
were
going
believe
. : . You might remember having
up
at
the
gasoline
pump?
Now,
you
·
•' read a story severa l months ago on
: : Tracy and the .Intense patterning can't believe that they're coming
:: program that Is maintained for her down. Don't get too carried away
::· upon the recommendation of The though .. Y oor elected officials wll
figure out a way to get the new
·: Institutes. Incidentally, the article
422 SECOND AVE .
pennieS that now jIngle In your
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
: produced volunteers to give the
pocket. 'Til then, do keep smiling ...
•; Gilmores the lift they needed in
:: carrying out the extensive prog-

son

'

[2,000
wait
for
·
Queen
..

Gold Lince Clus Rtnco • 2·4 Week Delivery • Full Lifetime W•ITIIIIJ

Giveaway

Rep. Mike Synar, D.Qkla., chairman of one HollSe sllbcomrTI!ttee
probing the agency, asked the FBI
Friday for Yet anot!ler
Investigation.

•re

IDm.e fun .

Alcoholica Anonymous. Call

448-0276, 304-676·3647.

THREE sets steel coil

bedoprings, 304-896 ·
3972 .

ATTENTION LOG PRO·
DUCERS: We need grade
logs and venaer. we ar.e

paying top priCes for quaitity

__

___
•'

', 4

Give,!l!
.lNIY
___::.:..._

' ANY _PERSON who has
anvth•no to give l!wey and
doea not offer or attempt to

material dalivered to our
mill. in the followin9
species: The oaks , Aah,

Charry, Hard Maple, and

Found: Brittany Spaniel on

At . 338 balow plant! . For
information 614-247 -

2681 .
ofleranyo1herthingforurel---------- may place an ad in this 1....- - - - - - - - - colur'nn . There witt be no 7
Yard Sale
charge to the advertiser.

,4 ...

Flea Market- Southern
Ohio 's new.e st weekly Open march 6 , every Saturttey. Fiesta Drive-In 2 mies

)

Public Notice
PI:IBUC NOTICE

Not1 ce 1S h~ re by g 1ven that on·

\c,. ·
~r·.:
~

10·00

a m a pub l1c sale w 1U be

tleld at 105 Un1on Avenue.
~~; • Pomeroy. Oh1o. to sell lor cash
the totl owmg coll ateral·
1973 Hohday Travei Trl . Mtr.

Seno l No 5734 190 24161
• Model - 190 VAC

The Farmers Ban k and Sav-

R anQ~

may

~arv

dC'pcndmQ upon local opcrrn rn q &lt;;ondrt+QI'IS In &lt;,IJml'

S rl u ~ I •OI'S r.1ngc wrll rca ctl /5(11 ~ o r m 01r:

'Preedomcphone·FF-550

mgs C o mpany. Pomeroy. Oh1 0
reserves ttle nght to b1d at th1s
' sate . and to withd raw the abov e

'Veh1cle

.to sale Furthe r.
the Far rners Bank and Savmgs
Com oanv rese'rves the r1g ht to
re1ec t any or all b1d s subm1t1 ed .
Furt her. veh•c le s are sold 1n
the co f'!dltlon th ey a re m w1t h
no 8&gt;\Qressed or 1mphed war ran t res

.,...~ --

-----

' - ··

~

-- r--~

'

Walnut. Blaney Hardwoods

of Ohio, Sr. Rt. 339 NorthBarlow, Oh 614 -678-2960 .

Mercury Marquis . Cal

Folding meial table and
depre ss ion glass . Call

614· 367-7169.

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

as trash burners. Call

614 -367-0491.

WVa State Champion Aucti·
oneer Rick Pearson. Estates,
antiques, farm. houaeholda.

Comptato households .
Licensed Ohio-WVa. 304· Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
773-6 786 or 304-773 - Pomeroy, Oh , Or 992 ·
91B6.
7760.

~:mor

g1ven

Auction every Fri. night at Gold , a;ilver, u8rling,
rhe Hartford Community jewelry. rings, old coins 8r.
Center . Truckloads of new cunency. ~d Burkett Barber
merchlndiae every week . Shop , Middleport. 992 Consigmenta of._"" new and 3476.
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds Wantecf to buy used Piano or
Auctioneer. 276-3069 .
one being given away. Call

1----------

614 -742-2233 or 614 742-2421 . Rutland Civic
Center.

ALL CARPET
INSTALLED
WITH PAD
FREE

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

STARTING AT

$}2 95 PER YARD .

equipment. Jerry Lowery l!o

Asaocietea Karate Studio .

143 Burlington Rd., Jack·
son, Oh . Call 814-288·
3074 or 614-384·81 60.

18

By Oswald Jacoby

and dependable. Call 446·
3169 after &amp;PM 266· 1967.
LEMLEY 'S DRILLING Water
Wells, Shallow gas and core
drilling . Myers and Gould
pumps .. Sales and Service.
Gaaend oil well service. Call

and James JacoJ&gt;y

going to break 2-2, tne nand
!s a cinch. Ho:-vever, trumps
break 2·2 less than 41 per·
cent of the time.
. The queen of diamonds is
opened and yo~ ~ak~~r

RUBBER BACK

Cub. 304· 743 · 7173.

Baby bed and dresser and -or

WANT E 0 -International
farm tractors, C, Super A or

$4.99

................
I.........................
Help Wanted

J ack ' s Locksmith Service .
Com mercia I - Domestic -

f

Frigidaire 17.0 cu n
Elite Refrigerator·
Freezer
• F01get the mess ana time
consuming OOther or delrost·
ing. This refrigeratll'·freezer
is 100% Frost·Proofl
• To eliminate condensation
on the outside of your
door openings-no
matter how hot the
weather-there's an
Electri·Saver Loop.
• Keeps spills from dripping
through onto food below. The
shelves are tOIJQh tempered
glass. Solid and easy to
clean . Easy to rearrange,
100 - because they're fully
adjustable.

CLOSEOUT

White,

Gold, Al,;ond

WAS S989.95 WT
NOW

$79995

• Eliminate the nuisance of filling and
spilling ice trays with an Automatic
Ice Maker. Available at extra charge.
• Help conserve energy the easy
way- with a conveniently located
Electri-Saver switch. Use Hi
when the weather is hot and muggy
.. . La when. it's cool and dry ..
• Keep most top-quality meat cuts ·
fresh and ready to cook for up to
7 days in the Flowing Cold Meat
Tender. Cold control lets you adjust the amount of Flowing Cold
air you want.
• Keep melon. cabbage, celery- even
sacks of fruit- fresh and crisp, with
th is glide-to-you Vegetable Hxdrator.

CLOSEOUT
ALMOND
3 ONLY

$799.95 WT

NOW

$59995

~NEWSPAPER

11

CLOSEOUT

Now$64.995

WHITE &amp; GOLD

GREEN &amp;COPPER
ONLY

\NAS '749.95 WT

NOW

$59995
. .

.l

~ Maybe

Ladies needed for pleasant
good paying temporary
office like work, no experience necessary. Also need
ladies with car for light
delivery work. · gas allowance . Apply in person

tAbsolutaly no phone cello),

· Mrs: Carter. Econol Travel
Motel between 12 and

• Four half-width cantilevered wire shelves'give
you the fle1ibility to store
virtually ~nything , no mat·
ler whal size . Each hall·
width shelf is fully adtust·
able. apowlng you to
match them up for a full·
width continuou s shelf, or
get the depth and height
you need for odd-shaped
foods and containers by
· staggering them as
needed . ·
• Forget the mess and time
oonsuming bother of de·
frosting . This refrigerator·
freezer is 100%
Frost-Proof!
To eliminate condensation
on the outside ol your
door openings - no mat·
ter how hot the weatherthere 's an Etectri-Saver
Loop.
• Stunning textured steel
doors offer an elegant look
-'and, better still. protec·
lion against the mess of

\

\

Room

Mature women to liwe in
with eldary couple. Room ,

or

l '

I

Critical Care
.Y ou
is .for

'

'

II*
I

*

~~

.

An· Opportunity
to join In 1 tndltlon and reputation of 60
years of e•cellence In provldtna patient care.
to use and npand your clinical knowledg~
and ...... meqt skills tn o patient cenlered
environment.

to put patients first ond paper "&lt;irk se&lt;ond
·
10 obtain additional compensation for edu·
calion and compe1ence In these special areas.
to partl~lpate In our ·excellent salary and
J
l ·: benefit packaae.
\ II y~u w..ld like to .be part of our special team
Qf aurses, contact:
' Merc:y Haapltal, Jean Carllon, R.N.
Porllmoutb, Ollto 1614) 353·1131 ~xt. 351.

*

- ward clerks on duty l4 hrs.

board and smoH ularv. Call
61 4· 379 -2609 or 61 4·
379·2139.
'
INA.ATtON GOT YOU IN A

ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

fllnwnalal

21

Help Wanted

Wanted executives. doc to ra

l!o laW(ers to Invest $1 0.000
in a·4o ft . Yacht in Florida.

working with mentally

For il'lfonnatlon sand reply
to Ports International. Inc .

retarded adults with beha vorifll disorder~ . lfinteres•d

P.O. BoK 442, Choapeoke,
Oh.

contact Mike Rife , Ohio
Residential Services. Call

its. 820 -825,000 possible

446·4768.

22 Money to Loan

4961 orwrita P.O. Bo•275.
Ironton, Oh 45638 . An 1 - - o - - - - - - - E qual 0 p port unity
ations
Company. ·
Wanted
EKcellent income for part
time home assembly work .
For information call 504·
641-8003 Ext. 7124. Open
Sunday.
The West Virginia Department of Health is seeking a
full-time Hospital Adminis·
trator for i'tl Fairmont

Business
Oppo~nity

Busileu &amp; Second Mortgage loans. Equity Re sourses. in Ohio

1-800-992-2361. out of
Ohio 1-513· 258-0112.

TREE TRIMMING 1!o REMO·
VAL
LL 614 4 21 29
· CA
·9 g.
l-o_R_6_1_4_·9_9_2_· _
6_o4_o_._ __

HOME LOANS 12 % fi•od
rate . Leader Mortgage,

1-614 -692-3051 .

Have vacancy in boarding
home for elderly. 614-992-

6022.
l----------

23

Would like to have Senior
Citizen to lharehome . Must

Professional
Services

Emergency Hospitoi. lo· .. neat l!o clean. 614·949·
cated in Fairmont, West 2317 anytime .
Virginia. Requirements: 1 --~..:....
Baccalaureate degree plus Will ptow or disc g&amp;rdens in
two years of experience in Racinaaree . Call949 · 2277.
hospnal or health services,
or business administration .

This 44·bedfacility pr01ides

long-term skilled nursing
services and outpatient
clini:: services . Applicants
should submit r•lM'Jles and
applications to : L Clark
Han,barger, M . 0 .• Director

of Hoal1h, 1800 Washington
Street. East, Charleston.

13

Tax Returns a. bookkeeping
far Individuals &amp; buSinesses.

Short fomu 85.00
Long forms $20.00 and up
Carol Neat
446-3862

.Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER

PIANO TUNING 1!o REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint·
ment, Ward's Keyboard,

Insurance Co. has offered
services fof' fire insur•nca

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

for almost 1 cant~y . Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet indiwidual needs .
Contact Neal Ina . Agency,

REMOVAL- Professional
Electrolysis Center. Inc ..
A . M . A . Approved, Or .
Returala . GiftCertificates·.
new hours. By appointment,

covorsgo in Galli a County

agent. Phone 446-1694.

446-4372.

PEA MANE NT H A I A

304-675-6234.

LOOKING for a part tim• job
that has good pay. life
insurance, raiirament plan ,
thllt will teach you a valuable
job skill, plus help with a
college or Vo- Tee education? There 's only one
around! High school seniors
or graduates, you may even
qualify for 81 cash bonus.
Contact the Wea:t Vii'Qinia
Army National Guard . For
more information call
Sergeant Sergeant Lutton at

MONTH FREE ·RENT
With a Year Lease
TARA TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS
OFFER GOOD UNTIL MARCH 1st
Swimming Pool • Clubhouse .- Range - Refrigerator· ·
Basketball Court· Air Conditioning· Furnished Apart·
ments - Unfurnished Apartments - lat11dry
Plawround.

304 -675 -3960 or call toll
free 1-800-642-3 619.

Call 367-7850 or 446-3432

legal secretary Wen ted,

typing &amp; shorthand re-

quired. Send resume to Boa:

HELP WANTED
We Are·Now Taking Applications
For WAITRESSES and BARMAIDS. Only Experienced Need
to Apply in Person.
-

AUTHORIZED
FACTORY SERVICE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
&amp; HOTPOINT
WE ALSO WORK ON
ALL OTHER APPLIANCES

~

~·· ·

1\oe;d)al\ S&gt;Wf\..
.

POMEROY
lANDMARK

614-992·2181

. of Callrp()lu

450 Pike St.,

NEW PINE DRESSER
WITH MATCHING BED

641 -8003 Ext. 7124. Open

· . · Sl49,95 -

Temporary, port !lrne Pro·

NEW 3 PIECE
BEDROOM SUITE

·

gram Aniltant fot Litter
Education. March through

Sep1ember, 19B3. Rospon·
albllltlea: Conduct litter

$179.95

education program with

2 DRAWER BROYHILL

emphaola on 4-H and tocel
·ritter problema. Require·
menta: Bachelor of Science

NIGHT STAND

$65

degree preferracl . 11 . S.
diploma acceptab~• With
experience ahd lnterelt in
y~uth and educational

Gallipol;s

drlv••

3 PIECE

BEDROOM SUITE

$99.95
BOXSPRING &amp; MATIRESS
$99.95
2 DOOR ALMOND

Refrigerator
s22 9. 95
. $229.95 ·
MATCHING ELECTRIC RANGE
$119.95
40 IN. FRIGIDAIRE

BUNK BEDS

ELEC. RANGE
$250
20,000 BTU WARM
MORNING HEATER
$11

sgggs

develop and Imp lament

valid

USED

WHITE CANOPY BED

aCtivit leo. Muot be able to

specially funded actlvltleo
relotng to the litter control
end reoyctlng praleot. Mull
have the ability IO ·p•pare
raporto. Automobile and

roy. 614-992 -2133.

on CR 28 . Call247 ·311711.

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

COMPLEtE

$219, 9 5

license re-·

quifed . For mora lnforme'
lion and an appttcatlon,
write lo• 32, Pomeroy,
Ohio . 411781 . We are en
!!quat OppOrtun·tty
Empllfl'ar.

''

ANTIQUE A\JTIQN

,I

PUBLIC CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
HOWARD &amp; SONS IMPL. AUCTION SALES, INC . •
7 mies north of London. Ohio at Rt. 42 &amp; 1-'10 lnten:ha,..

TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1983, 10 A.M. .
Farmers, Dealers and Everyone Welcome as aconsignor or
buyer. Spnng 1s JUSt around the corner, and now is the ·
time. to start thinkinr of your sprinr needs lor the busy,
farmmg season ahead. good used tractors and equipment.
is in demand. our Feb. Sale was even better than an·
ticipated and~ look for the March Sale to be even better.
Now is an excellent time to consign that no longer needed·
equipment. Partial listing of early consignments .
,
JD 4430; JD 4230; Fd. 50000; Fd . 36000; MF 11350; 35's;
Int. 10660, Super C. w/c ult.; Super A./mower; C1 se 580 bk.·
hoe &amp; ldr.; Case 450 dozer: Pettibone No. 5 log skidder; 12
cu. yd. pan; 1972 lht..4070 Aroad tractor w/ 238, ) 0 sp. tan·
dem axle; 1973 Int. Fleet Star2HOA w/ alum . dump; Ge··
neral 40 ton, 36' low boy trailer; 40' grain trailer w/ alum .:
body; JO, Fd . Int., &amp; White plows from 18, to 68.; JO,.Fd., lnt ·
&amp;Bush hog disc, from 6' to 31'; severa l late model planter.; &amp; .
drills. inc. Wnite No.S400 6 30" row pit.; Int. No. 5100 drill.'· .
soybean spec. w/adt. depth &amp; press wheels, like new; JO NO ..
8300 drill, soybea n spec. w/ adJ. depth &amp; pre ss wneels; tnt.
No. 800 ear ly riser pit. fully eQu ipped, used 1 season: NH
358 grinder mim,tike new; New Parker 2100 grav bed .
w/ext. &amp; runmng gear.
The above is just a few of the many items to be sold March · •
1st. If you would like a.lull sale bill call orwrite: Consien·
ments taken up to and rncludrnc sale day. Truckrne availa·
ble to &amp; from sale. Inventory subject to change due to'
daily business.
•
A large percentge of t)le items on this sale will be sold.
Come prepared to buy.
·

HOWARD &amp; SONS, INC .

P22. Tha. Polnt . Pleasant
Reglstar, 200 Main St. Pt.
Plaasant. WV 25560.

sell Avon . Call 614·843·
2982, 61 4-3 88-9046. or
81 4·992 ·3690.

Sun .

a. lou for s.te.

3 bedroom houea for 'sale .
New carpeting.l hroughout . 1974 Liberty mobile 'home.
Located on Bashen Rd. and 14x70 . 2 room abuilt on: On
aita on 3 acres of Ia nd . 19 acres of ground. With
Excel.lent terms to right Tuppers Plain• water .
party . MAKE AN OFFER. 30 Outside c~llar, 'big out
year financing ava,ilabla . building I . Ten minut•s from
Contact Bank One of Pome- Ravenawood bridge . Letart

Cl!o L Bookkeeping

___.. . :____

PINCH? Ease the squeeze-

Excellent income for part
time home euembty work.
For information call 604-

Mobile home

1967 Buddy mobile hrme
naor Waterloo. Call 614· t4K60. 2bdr. guhell. rural
843 -2422 .
water. sat up whh 2 or 4
tots. Call446-1240.

.
I Mile East on Route 788
.
Oa k curved glass china w/4 shelves; very nice 4 drawer Vic · ·
tonan dresser, Acorn pulls; ma~ogany bookca se slan t front '
secretary; 3 snelves 1 door mahogany book case; 6 drawer ·
maple h1gh -boy cnest; oval fold up child's table; 3 drawer .
walnut Victorian dresser wit~ wood carved pulls; very nice 4 ·
stack oak book case; gateleg table with 8 legs; gateleg dro-,.
plea! edensron table wrth hrdden leaf; edension hippie
whrte table with 3 e1tra leafs 17' tall) ; 2 tier table witn rat feet· ·
Martha Washington sewing cabinet; chestnut dresser w~h
square m1rror , 14 dra~erl : oak claw foot sideboard with gal ex~; small oak chrld s desk wrt~ 1 drawer, -2 oak pottie"
charrs: camel back trunk; very old toolbox; cedar c~est; flat •
top walnut desk; blanket chest; slant front Governor Win -..
throp secretary ; 2 drawer metal file cabinet; oak hall tree
with sea t; mahogany music cabinet; pier mirror with beveled
mirror and marble inse rt; 2 slant front chi ld's oesk. . .•
C~unter top desk; melal 3 door ice box; maple r;in bed; oak ·
hrgh back bed; 6 drawer oak hignboy chest with mirror; large ,
2. door clothes closet; 2 piece primitive cupb,o,ard on legs;
p1tcher and bowl set; p1tcher and bowl rack: IZ p1ece step·
back cupboard lrougn); pole hall tr.ee; drop leaf 3 drawer
desk; cnestnut hignback bed; oak hi~hback be~ : 4 matchin~ '
chair.;; oak 3 secti:m counter !Of), srmll rutHidl oak table· !II~ ··
dresser, Empire style; small wooden chest srf.oak table;' oak
rockmg charr; Fran ki m.Platform rocker, real nice; applebut·
ter slirrer; showcase w1th cas hdrawer; old double tub wrin·
ger washer; 20 pieces Roseville pottery; 2 gold watcnes; sev·
era! U.S. srlver corns; 100 plus foreign coins.
We will have much more, such as stone jars; dishes: &amp;lassware; mrscellaneous.
Refreshments will be served.
Owner: Coleman Bellamy
Phone 614·286·2200 1 286-3065
Auctioneer: John Notter

Regislrlr, Pt. Pl811aant .

l!o night shift on weekends

the first year . For more
Information cal 1-814· 632 -

12:30 PM. Tua. march 1st. ·

,•

tobacco allotment . 2 acres
woods, Lawrence County,

WANTED work on dairy
farm . Experienced. depen·
dable, non-drinker . Write ,
Box P 26, Point Pleuant

Immediate employment day

DISTRICT MANAGER

614 · 446 · 7109 . Equal

opportunity employer.

Emergen~y

r-------------1 •

WAS 1799.95 WT

RN's

TR 1- S TATE M 0 B ll,E
HOMES . USED · CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 ,7672.
---------CLEAN USED MOBIL~
HOMES KES.SEL'S OUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST , GALLIPOLIS,
RT 3&amp;. PHOI'JE 446·727&lt;'.

Jackson Aucton House--Jackson, Ohio
Sunday, Marth 6, 1983 at 11 :00 A.M.

SHORT TERM LEASE AVAILABlE

~ttention

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Auromotive. Celt 304-BB2·
2079.

didn't need to.

NEEDED: Persons in Gallia EXPERIENCED, permanent

County to provide temp orary care in own home to
ii1dlviduala with developmental disab!lity . Receive
aalary, room and bored tee
and fri1ge benefits. Training
provided . Call Buckeye
Community Services at

24•34 building on 'II acre . It
being uoedforchurdl.could
be converted to home. Fuly
carpeted . suspended ceil·
lng. Call446·7849.
•·
3-67 acres, houH, barn a

Gallipolis. Call 446-7364.

use Blackwood because he

Help Wanted

December 16. Salary negotiable . Equal Opportunity
EmpiC7(or-AA Plan ·M·F.ti

chest, 304-676-5085.

dominium. Depooit is 100%
refundable . Choose now.
S'\a John Ecker. Rlveraide
Terrace. Cal448-1126.

Mother will babysit in her
home . Edgemont Dr .•

A word about the bidding.
South's five no-trump call
was l he old-fashioned CuJbertson grand sJam force to
ask partner to bid seven
with two of the three top
trump honors. South did not

Try not to look at the East
and West cards. You .are in
six spades . If trumps are

WANTED ·tO lease. Tobocco
quota . wilt give .15 lb .
Morgans Woodlawn Farm ,

32

Homes for Sale

61 4-3BB·B643.

break except the one shown.

West Virginia 25305. by

Pliny 304 -675-2275 , 304 623 -6843.

Wahted to Do

General Hauling and Trash
r emo val ServiCe . Reliable

be no way to clear the whole
club suit against any 4-2

Phone 614 -992 -2t66 .

KITCHEN ·CARPET
STARTING AT $8.99
CASH &amp; CARRY

Across from tht Sliver Bridlt Plaza

INSTALLED

Woukl like to get very tiny
dog. Want for a house dog .
Would prefer a Shitzu or
Pomarainion . Does 't have to
be registered . Will be treated
with the very best of care.

31

Times-Sentinei-Page--D-3

$100 down reeervas con·

BEDS - IRON. BRASS . old
furniture. gold , silver
dollars. wood ice boxes.
stone jars. antiques, etc .,

Schools
Instruction

The

will show that there would

Sales··orien ted. agress lve
person wanted for manage ment openl11g. Full training .
Stock bonus . Excellent
ratir~ment and other benef -

446·2031.

Va.

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all privatq. leuone.
Men , women, &amp; c hildren .
ln1;tructior1 thFu black belt .
Aho available Karate
uniforms pu ching and
kicking bag a. and protective

ace. Now can you find any
combination of adverse
NORTH
2·21·83 ...cards that )!ill allow you to
make your .stum against the
+A 7 4 2
3· 1 !rump break?
'I' K9
Let's work it out. You can
• 10 5
make the slam against that
+KJ612
3·1 break if you can get to
WEST
EAST
discard your three diamond
.• J
t Q10 6
losers on dummy's long
'I' lOIIi 32
'I' J 7 4
clubs before the man with
t K a 62
tQJ9
tnc three trumps can get to
t 9a53
+ Q7
ruff in .
SOU Til
You must slart by pt~ying
+ K9653
yo
ur high trumps and you
'I' AQ
must /lay your king and a
t A74 3
secon trump to dummy's
+A' to
ace. Next, lead a low club
from dummy, (inesse your
Vulnerable: Both ·
10, cash yoiJr ace, return to
Deater: North
dummy
with the heart king
'
.
West
North East South
and get your three discards
t+.
Pass 1+
since West must follow to
Pass 2+
Pass 3•
the third and fourth clubs.
Pass 4+
Pass 5 NT
Note that you could not
Pass
6+
Pass
Pass
handle a 3-3 club break since
Pass
that deadly ruff would come
as you got your second diamond discard. Further study
Opening lead: +Q

Driver side Door with power

l!o grill for 1971 or 1973

15

Test your skills

11

36 0 John Deere . Call
614-3BB-9681 .

W.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Wanted to buy wench for

2-60 get. drums to be used

121 2 7. !31 2. 4 . 3tc

WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF
PORTABLE PHONES IN STOCK!
UPPER RT. 7

North of Chillicothe on US
23.

sa·turday. March 5th. 1983 . at

.~&lt;,. • •

Ing

__ ......

Bitt Gene Johnson
448·0069

out!. Call 448-0176.

.

of

Frenchtown Car Co .

Cash for used mobile homes
or travel trailers. Will
consider damaged or bum

There 's no need to sit by I he phone when
Freedom Phone • 550 cordless telephone
,
is at work.
You can ca rry on cordl,e ss conversations
up to 750 feet from ihe cont rol unil. Around
your home. office. backyard, even next door.
wi th the neighbors.
The Freedom Phone 550 features a call
button to page the handset tram the cant rot
unit. Two-position volume cont rol. Time-saving
automatic redial. Decorator Styl ing. Pushbullon
dialing . Dynamic mini -speaker and
mic rophone . Lay-down cha rging . Battery low
tight. And more. All at an aflordable price
. Come in today for a
test dial of the Freedom
Phone 550.

BRIDGE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

away a beautiful 4 mo. old
female black kltteh with AUCTION every Saturday
whlta feet and a white beb. night, Mt. Alto, WV, 6 p.m.
SW E.E PER and sowing Catl614·246·6484.
C .o ~slgn ment o welcome .
machine repair. partl, and 1 ---------~-- Emma Belt auctioneer.
suppliae . Pick up and 2bfackpuppieo,1 malaendj =;:=::;::==::::::=====
delivery, Devil Vacuum t female. Part Labador l!o 9 Wanted To Buy
Cleaner, one half milo up port Collie. Call 614-38B·
Georgoa Creek Rd . Call 9746 after&amp;.
WANTED TO BUY Old
446-0294..
1- - - - - - - - - furntture
end AntiqUes of ell
0nelerrierpup&amp; one mixed klndo. call Kenneth Swa;n.
Gun shoot. Racine Gun broad dog. Call 446·2949 .
448-315 9 or 268-1987 in
Club. Every Sundey otartlng
t p.m. Fac1ory choked gun a 3 amall pup,plas . Call the eveninge.
only.
446-7283.
Buying Gold. Silver. Pla ti·
--------------bGINGI!R BREAD STUt;&gt;tO· Puppy. Black with brown num. Gol4 and Silver prices
the hiOhelt in two veers.
Art le10ona. JONI around eyes &amp; brown paw s. check
our prlceo on gold &amp;
cARRtNGTO N-698 -3290. 614·992·6506 .
.
silver. scrap jawetry . Buying
Old colnl. scrap rlnga &amp;
The lzaak walt!)n Club will 2 Border collie ~ixed pups. silverware
. Daily quotes
have its annual winter 7 weeka old. Call 614-992 ·
available.
Also
cons a. coin
covered p~1e dinner end fun 7180.
auppliea h»r sale . Spring
auction Monday Feb . 28th
Trading Co., Spring
at 7 p.m. Att mem.. rl and 12 YEAR old Border Collie Valley
Valley
Plaza. 446-8026 or
friends urged to attend . to goodhomeinthe coUntry.
• · Bring your own dinner were Good companion for older 446·8026 .
· ··, and dr i"t~ . Also something to people. Call 304 -675 ·
'tl• pay cash for lata model
• auction. Come out end have 676B.
cleW! used cars .

as yacht enters bay
26~-hour stay In San Diego.
By NORM CLARKE
'
Heayy seas were forecast along
Associated Press Writer
'
•,
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The royal the West Coast as the Britahnla
., yacht Britannia entered San Diego made Its way frOm Mexico after
·• Bay Saturday in choppy ocean. leaving LaPaz on Tuesday.
"l hope she has her sea legs
; • waters, bearing Queen Elizabeth II
; : toward the first stop on her first visit becausethewavesaregolngtobeup
there," said National Weather
to California.
· The 412-foot, red-white-and-blue Service forecaster Wally Ciegel.
Britannia was slightly ahead of Four·to 7-foot swells were expected
on top of high tide, which was to
~hedu le when it entered the bay at
8: 30 a.m. , so it circled under rainy begin at 8:18a.m., he said.
The queen Is on a month-long tour
skies to give guests and royalty
watchers time to be at the that began Feb. 131n Jamaica and Is
Broadway Pier for the arrival of the scheduled to end next month 1n
queen and her husband, Prince Victoria, British Columbia. '
. From San Diego, the royal couple
P.hillp . .
plans
to fly to Palm Springs, Calif.,
·: The yacht was escorted by a U.S.
on
Sunday
to visit Walter Annen·
Gaast Guard cutter, and dozens of
berg,
former
U.S. ambassador to
yachts, water-spouting fireboats
a)ld pleasure craft headed out tosaU Britain.
Other California stops will be Los
alongside the Brittania as it moved
Angeles for a Hollywood gala,
through the bay.
: Authorities had orders to arrest President Reagan's ranch nearany boaters who ventured to within Santa Barbara, San Francisco,
SacramentoandYosemlteNatlonai
300 yards of the 5, 769-ton yacht.
Park.
: People began llnlng up along the
IJ!:&gt;ardwalk near Broadway Pier at
5!45 a.m., and by 8 a.m., there were
2;1XXJ hoping for a glimpse of the
Cancer weapon
r(lonarch. Many In the crowd sang
'"!'he White Cliffs
Dover," a
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)
World War 11-era song about the
Vaccines produced from a cancer
famous cliffs facing the ·English
patient's own tumor are becoming
Channel.
an Important weapon against
;Twp 21-gun salutes, heayy secur·
cancer.
tty and a floating reception party
Developed at the University of
awaited the royal coup!~. Gov.
Rochester . Cancer Center by Dr.
Qorge. Deukmejian, Sen. Pete
Craig McCune, the vaccines stimuWUson,"R-Callf., and two ranking
late the patient's Immune system to
pres idential aides were to be among
destroy mallgnant cells:
11ie welcoming delegation.
In research Involving klc:lpey ·
: :Tile 56-year-old royal head of the
cancer patients, McCune found !hat
United Kingdom was to spend the
a vaccine ,... made of Irradiated
fli-st day of her 10-day visit
Uver tumor cells and dead bacteria
sJI:htseelng In one of America's - caused five otl6 patients togo Into
most popular resort cities.
remission, Cllle lasting longer than
• :Forecasters predicted mostly
two years.
mJnny skies with a slight chance of
The vaccines are produced from a
6hoWers and temperatures reachpleceofthenimorwhlchlsremoved '
the 6lB during the queen's
during surgery.

8

3 An nou nceme11t1

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

TAWNEY JEWELERS

'

4

Taking applications to give

contacts between presidential aides
and Environmental Protection
Agency officials.
"This Is a review to make
absolutely certain that no one In the
White House had had any improper
activity concerning EPA," said
Speakes.

Hollie Computer

$35

Ohio-P~nt ~ea~nt,

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

Study of ·waste law possible
By EVANS wrrr ·
Associated Press Writer

.

February 27, 1983

Rt. 3, Box 59, London. Ohio 43140
614-879-7631
AUCTIONEER: CURTIS C. HOWARD
Lunch Served
Howard &amp; Sons is also now selling soybean seed. Call or ·
see us for details.
·
r

AUCTION

ANTIQUES AND FARM EQUIPMENT
SATURDAY. MAR. 5. 1983
FARM EQUIPMENT TO SELL AT 10 A.M.

Locatron: 4 mrles west ot Jackson,Ohio on the Appa·
lachlan Highway or ~nown as 124. Turn left on C.R. 20.,
Mustard Auction House.
FURNITURE TO SELL AT 12 NOON : 2 wood rce bms oak
hall seat, pecan bench, 21 sp ind el, wicker couch &amp;chair, Hi
Boy c~est , Sheridan walnut blanket chest oak highback bed
full size, fancy tall iron bed. several press: back rockers, doll
trun~ lour bin from old store daB! 1893. brass fern stand,
1ron Oabybed,,old clocks, 2 fla twall cupboards, 48" roll top
desk las 1s), wooden churn, old wash stand , child's fa ncy
step back c u~boa rd, old 10 gauge muzzle loader shotgun do· ,
uble barrel, 1ron kettles and stands, pie sale, 2 spool cabi·
nets, ~alnut child's wooden wagon , small egg ba ske~ several
old qurlts, old buckboard seat wooden 4 drawer
File cabinet, 6·1uns, copper boiler, old time cider press
.set of 6 chairs, blue graniteware, stoneware, some w/ writ;
mes and laney des ian, wood kitchen utensils, wood tools
and box.es, horse collars, blacksmith anvil, sinele tr11s,
oak larkrns de.sk, Ironstone, pitcher&amp; bowl. small han-ina
cupboard, Darsy chum. some nice classware, old coans ,
plus alot more.
FARM EQUIPMENT TO SELL AT 10 A.M.: Oliver Super 55
tractor one owner, 8N Ford very goOd con d., Oliver plows 2
botlom 14", Ford plows 2 bottom 12", New Idea manure
spreader ex. cond., New Holland 7'·mower,' New Idea to·
baeco setter, scoop and bucket, 2 tow cultivators, 3 pt:
seeder, 3 pt. ~ater pump, 3 good wagon s. boom pole, Inter·
national drag plows, old International horse drawn manure
spreader e1. cond., old buckboard wagon, 6 ft. Ford disc,
harrow, drag, draw bars, pitchfork &amp;shovels, Sears oil heater
w/thermostat, 700ft. m/ 1cured cherry lumber, 8ft. culli·
pactor, o.ld horse plows. 74 Cllevy pickup 4 speed, like new,
10 H.P. ndrng mower, cam per trailer sleepssrx . wheel horse

tractor etc. ·

·

·

T£RIIS: Cash or Certified Check. or local check. No out of
stat&amp; personal checks.
Lunch Served.
MUSTARD'S AUCTION SERVICE
Jackson, Ohio 614·286-5861
Preston Mustard, Auctioneer 614·216·5861
Ter Llo d, A t. Auctioneer 614·286·1229

'·

·•

�Ohio-Point
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1974 Kir kwood Mob i le
Home . Go od cond: Phone
446 -2446 or 446' 4792 .
1971 Star 12x60 . 2
bd .room with stove, rafrig.,
a.c .. LP gas . porch and
'a INning . Very good condi I ton , Set u p on ranted lot .
$6 ,500 . Call 614 -949 3023 .
1974 Fre edo m . 12x65 .

'6600. Appointment only .
Call 614 -742 -2055 .

USED MOBIL E HOME .
676 -27 1 1.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr . Mobile Homo uri . &amp;
dep. Call 614 -256-1922.

2 bedroom unfurnished
mobile home, 12x60, on Rt.
36 . Deposit &amp; ref . required .
Call 446-4229 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

2 bedroom unfurnilhed

mobile home in Cheahira .
Deposit &amp; ref . required .
Uti lilies furn is hed . C~ll
446 -4229 .

2 bdr. mob ile ho·ma in city ."
unfu r ni s hed , deposit req .
Adulta only. Call 446 -3791
after 6:00PM.

ONLY ONE New 12ft. wide. Eureka riverfront 12 x60 ,
2 bedroom ., all ele ctric . fumlahod, f160mo .. 1 bdr ..
mobile homo. only $7,99'6 , $100 mo . Ref . &amp; dep .
bank financing· available . All Adulte. Call614-643 -2644 .
:state Moduler Homes. half 1 ~-:--:------­
.JN&amp;y between Pt. Pleasant&amp;. Nice 3 bdr . mobile home
·Huntington on ST.RT. 2 . fumishad , Upper Rt . 7 . Call
_304-576 -271 1 .
614 -245 -6818 .

=====:::;::=~==
33 Farms for Sale
:Farm for sale 26 acres
·mo stly level, good hay
'fields . $46 ,000 . Must .se ll .
Jaaaon abl e offer . 3 bdr .
-home. new furnance ,
·county water new bath
:carpeted , new alum . sicing
~oa l &amp; wood burning stove .
-G ood barn &amp; other out
bldgs . garage . Located on
~old 160 near Porter . Call
-614-388-9060.
.25 ac . hrm fenced. 1980
~Windsor trailer furnished ,

tobacco base . outbuidings.
good well, off 776.
826,900. Call 446-0844 .

·207 acre farm . langsville .
~ineral rights induded. No
-house . $12,000 down . Will
:carry rest. 614-38B -9346 .

· 35

Lots

l-3--b_e_
d r_o_o_
m-:M-o-b'"'il_e_H-~m-o .
Approximately 5 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport .
614-992-6868 .

1-==------:--TWO mobilahomeafOJ rent

on At . 2 about 5 m i nutes
fr om town . Call after 6 .
304· 676-6277.
TWO bedroom trailer kitchen f~rnished , couples
only, one small child ac -

cepted. references, 3046 7 6 . 1 0 76.
month .

$ 1 80 . 0 0

44

Apartment
for Rent

&amp; Acreage

SMALL 2 badroom furnished trailer. Burdette
Addition . $126 per month
~ 1-16 Acre lots and-or house. plus utilities ~ deposit
Seller will landscape . required. Call Rosalie.
304- 675-4600 Monday :446 -179B.
Fridey. 9-4.
·a
acres of land rural water
'and well. sept£, barn and 2
buildings. Price $12,500 . 43 Farms for Rent
C.i1614-388-9763.
1- - - - - - - - -

I:;:;;==::;:=;;:==

.For sale 2 acres ST.RT . 36 PASTURE for rent. phone
•Over 500' frontage . Less 304-675-61 10 .
~han one mile from Spring
:Valley Plaza . Coil 4464818.
44 Apartment
for .R ent
For sale-Acreage on Geo rga
:Preelands property . Call
-it 4 -992 -2646.

to Rent

to rent hay
or
PIIturet for cows . Call
2 bedroom furni•hed Apt . 614-388-8234.
Coli 614 - 992 - 6434 or!=:====::==;=====
1-882 · 2666 .
48 Equipment
Ap.o rtmenta. 3 04-87 6 .
for Rent
5648 .
1--::-::-:---===~=-a
Beck hoe
APARTMENTS , mob ile 11 .. large bed p
up
homes. houses. Pt. P••••nt heulable, operate yourself.
d G
$90 . per clay. 304-896·
8~ . ollipolia. 6 1 4 "448 " 3841 .

21

I- - - - - - - - - -

UNFURNISHED opar1mant
lor rant , 1 bedroom ,
S1 80 .00 Call Automotive
Supply , 8 -6 . 304 -076 2218 . 675-6763 .
ONE bet;iroom apartments
for the elde rly . All utiiHias
paid. Tenants pay 30 percent of their adjusted
income in this HUO subskl·
ized apartment
building.
Twin
River s Tower,
phone •
304-675 - 6679 . Equal
opportunity housing .
ONE bedroom unfu mishad.
$ 176 . month , oil utilities
paid. except electric ,
304-676 - 1371 or 675 3812.
ONE bedroom apart man t in
Henderson, newly painted ,
phono 304-675-1972.

45

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room $125, utili ties pd . single male, share
bath. 919 2nd Ava .. Gallipolis. Cai1446 - 4416 alter

==::;::=;;===

'A MILE out Sandhill Road . '-;7P;M::;
304 -676-3B34.
I· .
THREE bedroom furnished
all·•lectri:: trailer, built on
family room . coal - wood
burning stove. on acre .
garden plot. outbuilding.
Jerrya Run Road , refaren ceo. $275 month. plus
deposit . 304-676-2366 .

47 Wanted

Space for Rent

1----- - - - 1 mobile home lot on At . 35.
Call 446-4229 .
KOUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large Iota. Call
992-7479,

1- - - - - - - - -

47 Wanted to Rent
1 - - - --,-----WANT TO BUY OR LEASEFarm of any size . Tillable
land within 2 6 miles of
Raven awood. WV . Also
need to buy farm equip·
ment. Sand inquiri8s and all
infonnation to:FAAM · Box
741 , Ravenswood, W.VA .
26164.

61

Pl-tant,

Household Goods

1-:---------SWAIN
AUCTION
FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Golllpollo: King
cool
wood heotor• with
fon 14119, 101 box oprtng I
mattrno 1100. firm •120.
oofo -loveaaot a ch•lr 8199.
love -~~ no. IWW cool a
wood heaten as low 11
1399 with blowero. u11d
cOal • wood heatera, new
dlnot . . to. 1100
up,
refrlgeratora, rangea. bunk
bado complote 1179, bunIdea mlttrwaes *40. chel1s,
dreaaara. lV'a. Coli 44831119.

a

a

a.

49

For Lease

2 bdr . unfurniahed apt .
overlooking city pork. n 76
par mo. Call448-1819 .
Want to lease tobbecco
pou ndogo for 1983. Will PI!Y
20 cents • pound . Cll!ll
614 -246-6047.

W. Va.
EXECUilVE HOME - RENT
OR SAil ...:.. This coltempor-

ary 4 bedroom, 2 bllh hcJrne
wrth finished fanily room, allached ptagl! localed near
Pomeroy is available for immediale
A lease anID pu~~:hase can be
arranged.

WHY'RENT7 This well cared lor
3 bedroom home ~energy elfi-

cielt, localed on paved roads,
coovenienl to the mines, shopping &amp; schools. Affordable wrth a modest down paymen~
yoor monlhl~ payment is less
than $175.00 per mootll!

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker. ottoman. 3 teblaa. (extra haavy
by Frontier), t686 . Sole,
choir end lovoaeat, t275 .
Sofoa and choira prioadfrom
8285 . to 1895. Toblea. 145
ond up to $126. Hlda-abeda ,8 440 . and up to
8526 .. Recliners, 8176 . to
$350., lampa from 12B. to
176. 6 pc. dlnottea from
$99 .. to 8436. 7 pc., $1 B9 .
ond up. Wood table with olx
chaira 1425. to $746 . Deok
$110 up to f226 . Hutches.
8650. end up, mapleorplno
finiah. Bunk bed complete
with mattreasn. f250. ond
up to f395 . Boby bada.
8110. Mattreaaee or box
springe, full or twin. f68 ..
firm, 168. and 878. Queen
sa to , f 1 96. 4 d r. chaau,
142. II dr. choltl, t64. Bed
fromea. 820 .and *26., 10
gun · Gun cobineto, 1360.,
~inette chalro •20. and e25 .
Gsa or elactric rangu, f326
up to 8376. Baby · matreoau, e25 &amp; f36, bad
frames 820, f26, &amp; $30,
king Ire me I 60. Good
selection of bedroom aultea.
ceder cheats, rockera. metel
ceblneta. awlvwl rockera.

~a-::.=~~~~~::.·~:~~~:::

welhers. dryers. refrisleretora and TV'a. 3 miles out
Buiavillo Rd. Open 9om to
8pm, Mon. thru Fri ., 9om to
6pm, Sot.
448-0322

51

Real Estate General

HOUSE FOR SALE

BALANCE OF LOAN ALL
WE'RE ASKING $39,174.88

';'f

Copportone Whirlpool
washer • dryer metch pair,
eJ{tra nice, 30 dey warranty,
1250. Coli 814 -268-1 207 .

ASSUMABLE 11.5% INTEREST
MOVE RIGHT IN!
1ST STREET IN BIDWELL

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- waahera, dryers. refrigera·
tors. rangea. Skagga Ap·
pllonceo. Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446 -7398 .

2 Lots, 3 or 4 bedroom. family room. basement,
etc.
, .

Call .303-276-3024 (owner) or 388-9952

RCS REALTORS

T~o bedroom unfurnished.
carpeted, adults preferred.
f100 deposit . Near
Pomerov· Mason bridge ,
Clifton. 304-773-6962 or
fr13-6776 .

For rent unfurnished apt .• 4
rooms and beth. Inquire at
87 Vine St.. Gallipolis.

2 bedroom furnished, 1
child , 8150 . month. New
Haven . 304-882-2466.

Cllli&amp; Swanson
1-614-593-5571

-----------~~~~~~~~~--------Real Estate General

FOR SALE: 1974 KIRKWOOD MOBILE
HOME 12x60. TRAILER AND ACCESSORIES
S799~.00

FIRM
PH. 446-4792

FHA - VA SPECIAL - 3
malntenlnce
home. (Vetmns - No down p~ymentl (FHA bayliS approx. $1.250 down). Located in Rodney Villep II.
BlACKBURN REALTY 446-0008.
Real Estate General

CENTRAL REALTY

MOBILE HOllE- with large adckln building. also asphaH driveway. Located on quiet, clean stree1 out of high water in Racine. The
living llXIm is ex1ra large. Theil!~ acemenl walk and large C!M!t'ed
pach, also a melal sorage building. You can be in this one ill two
weeks for only $16,900.
·
NEW LISTNG - 4 bedllXIm home in the country, liriyl sidio&amp;
siDnn windows, on 3 acres. lois of fruit ll1!es. plenty of good water.
assume loan ol $18.500 with 111011thly paymentof$258 or arrange
a !lBW loan.
NEW LISTING - 3or 4 bedroomspossiti!onthisone. Trailet with
large add-on on nearly an acre lot Includes siDnlge buiding. Lei
can have second traier as ex1ra income. Call lor more delails.
Asking $12,000.

In Pomeroy, East Main St ..
IJrge house, 6 rooms , 2
luge bedraoms. S176.
month. $60 deposit . Call
~14 - 992 -7284 .

2 bedroom &amp; yard. Pomeroy
.,. • . 8160 . month. 614992 -6848.
---------lcBaahan-4 bedroom housellesement, garage , and
car-part. Two acre lot. 8250
monthly plus deposit . Pay
dwn utiltties. Call after five
949 -2660. Rolph Trussell .
SIX room house, full basement, garage, nice location.
$226 month , 304 - 87611190.
.

T.wo

bedroom house for
rent. 304-676-4046 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bedroom mobile home .
I Ox 50. Near Racine . Call
~~ 4 -992 -6868.

CANADAY .
REALTY

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
Diana
Pearson,
.
.
.Rciaitor 675-GM
25 locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

Furnished 3 rma . with
private bath. 1.st. floor. 846
2nd . Avo., Gallipolis. Call
446-2216.
6 rm. fu"". apt ., no kKis . no
pets. $176 mo . water &amp;
sewer fuponished. Cal
446-1607.
1- - - - ' ' - - - - - - 3r . &amp; bath apar,ment.
partiiliy furni s hed . Call
4 46-373 3 evening&amp; call
,_44_6_·_1_0_7_1· - -- - ,.
JACKSON ESTATES ' Equal
Housing Opportunity' has
one bedroom apartments
rent starting at $167' per
month and two bedroom
apanments rent starting at
$19 3 per mont h . Call
4 4 6 · 2 7 4 6 or leave
message . .

cold

ClASSIC CAPE COD - Has all the timeless appeal ol i1s New
England forebears - gable roof, dormers, horizonlallap sidin&amp;
large lronl porch. But lacks none of the modem leatures so
necessary today. Traditional enby hal with open stairway, formal
living and dining rooms. Work saver kll!:hen. 3 bedllXIms, 1'h
batlls. Cen. air cond., fireplace, basement and prage. Beautilul
view d the Ohio. Excellenl cond NEW IDW PRICE $n.~.

6 rm apt. shower. Pomeroy
shopping area , adulh, no
pets. new tv carpeted, 8160
mo . plua utilitioa. 814-992 3201 .

Real Estate General

992-5739
215 Mulberry Ave .

NEW LISTING - Looking for a nice home in town? Tlis raoch has.
3 bedrooms, carpoi\ vinyl sinding, locaiBd in Adrian Dr.
.
.
#4350
NEW LISTING - Nice 2 bedroom home, new building fur shop or
storage, garage. close lo hospilal. Only $26,500.

.

411562

COMMERCIAL BUILDiNG - Has 4.000 sq. It Excellent
haidware or any small bu~ness. Additional space for
overhead. Living quarters in back has 2 bedroom~ bath,
- dining and i~ng room. Call lor more details.

412255

ACRES - Large brick ·&amp; Ira me home. has new rod and
511001ti·r1&amp; large barn, owner wil f~ance, city school dislriet
411145
ACRES - Cklse ID R~ Gra:U, half woods, $12,500.
~'1MI!IG ROOM

C'-JII.HIIe~,

AISCIC. - Phont 742-3171
Velma lllcinsty, Assoc. - l'llone 742·3092
Andy Lyles, Assoc. --~ 98S-3947

=~~urn:~~

Wlllll saver equipped kitchen,
dishwasher, range and refrigeralor. Large utility room wilh lots of
siDrage. 2 car garaee. Brick elrterior fur low mailllenance. Nice
country setting, nearly an acre Kyl!l!f Cll!ek School Dist Owners
have made lliying eiJSf by reducing the asl&lt;jng price 1o a low, low
$45,000.

Real Eatate General

Apt. for rant. Half double-2
bd .room Apt . Adults preferred . No po1S. 614-9922749.

Hobstetter
Realty
Phone

~Iller

fireplace. 3 bedrooms, 1\!

Furnished apt .• 2 bdr., 8176
mo ., wa'ter pai·d, 2nd. floor.
13 1 4th Avo . , Gallipolis .
Call 446-4418 alter 7PM .

- Good building sile, 8'A acres.Graham School

-64

62 CB ,TV,

Radio
Equipment

..,..

Video coaaatto racordora for
Rocondltionod proclolon VCR . Collet 448-6&amp;66.
21" RCA color television.
phone 304-1176 -28111 .

64

Misc. Merchandise

197&amp; Plymouth Vololre
atotionwogon I 1976
Starer aft crank-up camper .
Coli 448-1662 after 6.

P,'lisc. Merchandise

54

Misc . Merchandise

For aale lump coal • fire·
wood. Zlnn Cool Co .. Inc. MUST oell new living room
Coli 446-1 408 .
oulte, 3('• ·876-6162 ofter
&amp;:30 p.m.
Cut your own firewood'. *6 il
Pickup load . Coli 814-245 - Now 1983 White aewlng
11047.
maChine free erm mode I
with built-In otretch atloh .
Mattei lntellvlalon exc . zig zag patterna ,. mekea
cond .. 9 cortridgeo. 82&amp;0 . button holes, monogram•.
Coli 448-11 &amp;&amp; oftar II.
inuch more . We are over·
atockad with thla model. we
Cut up alebs fo~ firewood mutt decrea~e our lnven·
116 pick up load . Coli tory . Factoreaae y 20 yr .
111 4 -2415-&amp;804.
gutrantee . Reg. price over
1300, your coat only 895 .
Old roll top dnk·&lt;tiiOO. old Cell 614- 385-8918 out of
hotel waah atand I mirror town call collect . Free
. t2&amp;0. Coli 814-367-0638. delivery to your home.

Reel Estate General •

.5

Nicley fumished mob . home
in city. Adults only . Call
446-0338 .

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point
64

room, w.b. fireplace, and dining room, bui~-in
microwave oven, family room, use of tennis eourts and swimming
pool. Assumati! loan - 8\! %.

lAND LOTS OF lAND - Kyger Creel! School
~~~§1 District, approK. 9 acre~ 9,~0. 51 acres,
$25,000. Some woodland, pasture, se~~eral
good bLikling si1es.

1

121 ACRES - 50 tillable. 30 acres timber, 4 BR frame home plus
prpge apt
·
COMMERCIAL - SUPER BUY
PRICE REDUCED FROM $69,900 lO $45,000. OOWNTIJtiN BUSI·
NESS llJILDING. OVER 1400SQ. R. llJSINESS AREA FRONTII«l
~COURT STREET PLUS OVER 1300 SO.

n. BUILDING SUITHIL£

QUICK ACTIOII PRICE TMI! Price $-l-11-s-h-e-d. New 12xl6
kll!:hen, buiH-in range, microwave oven. dishwasher &amp; diSilOSill
New bedroom &amp; bath, 2 other·bedrooms, gas heat Washington
Elementary.

'

MIDDI!PORT .- New log. cabin. Select your own carpet and
decor. Lovely nver VM!W, ltVIhg room. 2 bedrooms ~tchen balh
Gas heat Priced 30's.
'
'
·

FOR STOII/a, AUTO REPAIR, ETC. FRONTII«l ON ALLEY. 2 BR
APT. ON SE~O FI.OOt THE PRICE IS RIGHT •. CALL FOR A

SHONING.

GfiiERAL STORE would probably be the best use for this buiklin&amp;
but ~u h&amp;V!! a diflerent venlure in mind, it mipt be suitllble.
Mam btild1~ ;s 36x36 plus storage and walk-in coder. Qlncrele
block constn.dion. Good lotation. Owner ~I consider financing.
$32,000.
.
.

n

. $26,!100 SnLL BUYS a nice place to ive. 2 bedrooms, large 1\ing
room and.kkhen, I story frame home wth alum. siding. Very nltl!
lot, on Lower Rt 7. Clay Elemenlary School Galia Academy Hijl
School
·
1911 VDITUIA VILlA. 14x64 - (KY $13~.. 2 ~one .is
K·tn lire. Bath with Wllhlr • dryar hoolwp. IMI•II Clilneb II
livilll aree. Bat ...,. . lpM:ious lft:llen l!1d livin&amp; room. Cll
.Diana to see this one. ·

Pl-sant,

Misc. Merchandise

IAIIGE SPACIOUS HOME- 3 bedrooms, 2 ~ bath, living room,
lormal dining room, family room, modem kitchen and 2 car garage
in city school dist
uiM ASsU.PTION - 9¥•% INT. - $3,900 DOWN PAYMENT .
-Monthly payments $348.24 incl!ding Ia xes &amp;Ins.3 bedroomh
raoch. Large,kll!:hen. ·
·
.
.
POMEROY- ROUND CEDAR HOME- Lots of glass arid aloVely
view. Wooded lot 3 or 4 bedrooms, kilthen, liv1ng room -dining
area. All wooden beamed ceilines. Circled rustic round deck
completBiy • • the home.
.
epptoved subd~. Central sewages
district

•·
'

W. Va.
54

The

Misc . Merchandise

54

Sunday Times-Sentinel-

Misc. Merchandise

·-

54

Page

- D-5

Misc . Merchandise

TROY81LT ROTOTILLERS Dlacounts . Free hiller
Included . Immediate ahipment . Parta, englnea.
703-942-3871 .Hickory Hill
Nuraory, Rt. 1 Box 390 A,
Flaheroville , VA 22939.
Trade -Ina accepted.

World Book &amp; Child Croft for
aalo. Call 949-2277.

Qullto-150 .00 . Cushions · Firewood delivered • 80. •
18.00 . Afghono - $36 .00 . co rd . Co.-1 delivered •46.
ton . Call Tom Hoakina
Cell 889 -8041 .
614 -949 -2160 or 614 ·
REPOSSESSED SIGNI 742-28~4 .
Nothing down! Take over
poymenta 158.00 monthly. Firewood , apiit, 130 .00 o
4 x 8 fl11hing arrow aign . truckload . 136 .00 dell New bulba . letten . Hale vored. Ph. (614) 992-2770
Signl. Coli FREE 1 -BOO · or 1304)882-2194.
626-7448. onytlma.
Luxaire natural gas furnace.
Gravel or fill d irt. Delivered. Complete. Excellent condl_:
tior •. Call 814-992-7810.
Coli 114-992-3859.

LADIES Wllaon 'golf cluba,
four wooda. eight irona. cell
304-BB2-3268 .

Waahor a. Dryer $160.
Natural gea dryer $126.
814-742-2362 .

3 cord aooaoned 1plit oak . One Vz Karat Solitaire
e60. cord . Coil 814-992 - diamond pendant 388 8801 .
3869.

For aale -10 ft. John Daero
tro naport dlac - 17 . 00 . 4
bottom liner plow-18.00 .
Hay- round bale a. 843 8218 .

--·-

CAU US TO BUY OR SEU
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE

Houee for rent on Bulaville·
Porter Rd. 4 rooms &amp; bath .
Call 446-4732 .

Household Goods

19 cu. ft . Amono upright
fraezer 1126, GE froat free
refrigerator white 1176, GE
electric dryer green •96,
Kenmore Waaher It match·
dryer 1230. Coli 4488 81 .

NEW LISTING- 1973 hlet' in Middleport, 2 bedroom, laundry
room, underjinning, insulation, IDial electric hookup iocluded,can
be moved ID your lot or rental at present locatioo. Appraised value
more than asking price. $6.950.
.
.

rm. house &amp; bath . Inquire l - - - -- - - - -.it9182nd. Avo ., Gallipolis, 2 bdr. unfumlshed apt. in
{)h.
Crown C~y . Coli 614-26B6620 .
8 rm. hou 18 2 baths , no pets. I--:-:----:----::-:-::
•300 mo. plus deposit. Call Furnished apt. 1 bdr., 920
:446 -2380.
41h Avo.Galli polis. Adults,
water &amp;. electric pd, $200
&amp;moll house in Gallipolis mo. Call 446-4416 after
~ery nice, adults only, 8260 7PM .
ino plus deposit . Call
3 rm . and 4 rm. unfumishad
448-2300.
apartments. Utilities paid .
Dn Bulaville Porter Rd. 4 rm . no pets, no children. Calf
446 -3437 .
• bath . Call 446-4732 .

February 27, 1983

CAll:
Uving room suite blue·. and
green floral. coffee end end
tablea. 1160. Cali 814-38B'
8287.

~~~~~~~~~~ ~ --'------~-51

27, 1983 -

Real Estate General

DITCH WITCH'S T R E N C H E R s
Reconditioned - Uoed . M -4
"9hp". J2o " 18hph", v3o
&amp; 2300 " 30hp", R40
" 40hp" , R86 "86hp " ;
Backhoe's I Davlo 1 8 + end
mini aneakers . Dava call
814 -443-9761 . Nlghtoond
weekend• call 614-1192·
61!86.

.

.
Real Estate General

�Ohio---9oint

27, 1983
54

Misc . Merchandise

Musi cal
Instruments

57

63

Livestock

83

Livestock

84

2 yeor old Rog lotorod L1

ON E Franklin woodburn ing
stove. 304-675-5029 .

Yoerling bullo. Rog . Polled
Horoford. Coli 814 -379·
Ki mball Art i st con a ole 2871 .

mark Domino Her,tford bull .
Hie alre wet Sr. 'Champion

GAS clothes dryer , 8 85 .
304·458· 1798:

color. 8800. Call 614-992 ·
3209 .

Ohio Stole Folr ond Stoll
s ·how 1979. Low ronco
Burdell, 81 4-245-5181 .

piano . Like new . Pecan

ELECTRIC rongo. Kenmore.

69

For Sale or Trade

Corning top, good condi-

tion. $175 . 304-B95-3494·.
SMAll beige aofa . 2 rod
Martha Washington chair&amp; ,
de1k &amp; end tables, grand
piano , pump organ, c all after

4 p.m. 304-676-1654.

55

farm equipment of equal

value. Coli 446·4537 .

Building Supplies

Building materials
block. brick , sewer pipes .

windows . lintels , e -t c .
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,

0 . Coll614-245 -6121 .

56

1975 Buick Electro 2 dr ..
PS, PB, AC, AM-FM otero
11 .860 or trade for cattle.

Pats for Sale

61

Farm Equipment

All hyd . loader fits MF 135
tractor $275 . Also a trip
loader flu Ford tractor
$150 . MF 35 diosoltractor
$2,400 . Call 446-7322 .
364 International farm

HILLCREST KENNEL -

tractor. 33 HP. 600 houra.
446 -2300.

Doberman Stud Service .

Loader- Massey Ferguson 1
wk . 356 with forks . Call

POOOLE GROOMING . Call
Ju~y Taylor at 614-367 7220 .

Slmmantal Hereford cro11

oocond calf holler with
hplfor . Colt 11 oldo out of
ARBJ oMtro . At Bon Bickoro.
Double 8 Form . CoU 614·
367-7727.

- - - - - -- -lc-

Regiatered Quarter Horae .

Ruth Rooveo. Aloo grade.
Saddles . brldlat . winter
hone blanket• · Western

booto. 614•898-3290 .

1~::=:::;:;:=:::::::====
64 Hay
rain

HENS tor ulo, .50 oach , 1 - - - - - -- - - 304 -937 - 2266 8uffolo . Hoy for ulo. $1 . 26 bolo .
WV . If no anawercellafter6 614 - 843 · 6465 . L. R.
p.m.
Glu•aencamp.

Mlxld hoy. n .50 bolo. Coli
814 -379-2817.

71

lly owner 1982 Dodge
Mlrodo ex. cond . 15.000
mlloo, 318. V-8. cruloo.
mony oxtroo. 17.932. wHI
ncrNico. Cell446-0047 . .

· -11

Polaro 4 dr.. auto. trono, PS.
PI, 380 V-8, good cond ..
tiiOO finn. Coli 8711-84111.

avalloble. Call 448 -IIUII.

·~· 1.1!7.8 Ford Muotong. V-8. 4

Conditioned hoy. eor corn .
Coli 814-949-2870.

~

~ Fdr aole or troda 1878
~ Plymouth Vololro 8 cyl ..

; auto .. PS. PB, now point.
~ Call 614-378-2728.
.
~

[B

Call evaninga or weekend•
011 -614-687-3838.

Hoy for oolo. •1.;26 bolo.
614·992-6288 .

: For oolo or'trade 19'7 9
• Plymouth Fury 318 outo ..
• PS, P8, Call 814 · 379·
:2728.

REALTOR"

·--------~
~ For 1ala or trade 1988

OUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.
J.

Manlll

Cai1Br-Realtur-379-2184

•

AMERICA'S NUMBER 1 TOP SELLER, CENTURY 2~:

1871 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill,
power otoorlng, power
lwakoo. air oondltlonod, coli
30,.·882-2428.
U77 FORD Movorlck ,

power atHring, eutom~~tlc
tnlnamlulon~ eir conditionIng 40.000 octuol mlloo,
304· 773-5170.
1988 FORD Folcon, good
work cor. •3oo.oo 304·
176·7762.
304·896 ·

Z1980

71 BUICK. good running
condition, e2&amp;0. 304-676·
1117.

1:;:;=:;;;:=:::::;==;:=:;=

•; 1980 Pontiac Phoenix· tilt wheel. crulae control,

'
: coupe, 4 cyl.. auto .• AC.
; A.M_-FM. 1979 Fo.rd Pinto
: hole h back. 4 cy I.. 4 op d ..
~ I..W· mllea. Both aoNd, ohorp
• li &lt; reoooneblo. Coli 441·
7.438.
,&gt;.....,_
______

446-0008

~ '17· chevy Mellbu2 dr. cpe..

NEW LISTING modern hOme
in tile city school district HOme has 4 bed roms. III
batlls. family mom, kitchen wth dining L This
home is priced in tile 50'~ Possible loan
assumptim.

.row corn planters, Ford buzz
saws. Ford pulleys, 8 ft. 8t

1977 MU,TANG Cobro II,
302 on gino. '4 opoed.
IJiclllllnt condition. 3041178·2018.

remote
mlrrore.wire
rMr
wlrl-,
:" dow
defrol1er.
wheel
~ rodlolo. 2 tone point. only
Trucks for Sale
' 1.&amp;,600 mlloo. Price only I - - - - - - - - - • t3,000. Call 81'4 · 388· 1979 Blazer K5 4WD full
~-8-8_1_1_.- - - - - - - time, PS, PB. AC. PW. PDL,

Don Blllke-At.ac:,-876-1480

REALTY

INTERNATIONAL post hole
digger, $280.1nternational
6 ft . blade , $175 . Phone
304 -743·7173 .

Autoa for Sale

18 DODGE,
3488.

Pinto 2 bdr. hotch·
.• bock. 4 cyl.. auto .. olr.
• AM·FMotaro, PS.PB. R&amp;L

Becky ~-Aaoc. -446.()468

71

• Comoro. Coli 814 · 378 ·
: 2728.
.

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

Judy DeWitt-Reeltor-388-8166

614 -246-5804 .

...il.. AC, P8, PI, 1110. oond.

~ ~It 114-2118-8738.

Excellent quollty hoy. About
700 boleo with oooy occoas
et Lather farm In Ruttand.
About 400 beloo 11 Goebel
Anguo Form In Coolville.

BLACKBURN

Auto• for Sale

·-------.1! ow nor 1973 Dodge

Round balet. delivery

ORAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL . AKC -:how~ ~~~==~~==:.
puppies. CFA Himalayan. !Persian and Siamaso kit - 61 Farm Equipment
tens. Call 446 -3844 after
4PM .
For sale Wheat drills. 2 &amp; 4 ·
DACHSHUND &amp; Poodle
pups. 304-895-3958 .

1975 Buick Electro 2 dr.,
PS. PB, AC, AM · FM otero
11,850 or trldo lor cattle,
form equipment of oquol
voluo . Coll448-4537 .
·

Grain

Real E:state General

live power, axe. cond . Call

Boarding a ll breeds . AKC
Reg . Dobermans pups afd

Call 446 -7795 .

2 Reg . Chomlalo bulla. 2 ylo.
old . Coli 446-6686.

Hay •

Ohio--'--Point Plea~ant, W. Va.

27, 1983

Tinws-Sentlnel

W.Va.

11262

~ V-8 auto , PS, olr, good

..

ENJOY REAL LIVING in th~ spacioos 3 bedroOni
biie'lel. I f~l batil, 21\ bi&amp; Lar~ famly room,
with w.b. fireplace. Plenty of cabinet space 11
kitchen. Garalll!. large lawn. As$umable mortpge.
Pr~e reduced $5,000.

•, c·o n d .. 11 , 7 96. 8 &amp; D
: Motoro, Col1446·7322.

42,000 mlloo, chorcol. oliver
&amp; bl 1ck h
e• 49&amp; Call
·a orp. u,
·
441-1724 ..

1---------Int. 2'h T cob &amp; chula long
wheel booe, 12,500. Coli
614-379-2817.
1--~-.,....---CONTRACTO-R'S EQUIP ·
MENT SALE- 1978 Style·
old 1 plck·u p, 4 epeod.
29,000 mlloo. 197B F-250

57

Musical
lnstrumants

ll2sl

Now Idea No . 310 corn
picker , rakes , balers&amp;.
mowers. ·8N Ford front
loader. 1 2 &amp; 3 bottom 3
367-7169 .
point plows , other field
ready equipment. Howes
ONE Genie Magic Quartz Farm Machinery Rt. 124 in

Wurlitizer Funmaker Sprite
Organ. excell. Call 614 -

organ. 8650. Phone 304· Mayhew Rd .. Jackson, Oh.
676·3236 .
Call 614-286·5944.

RODNEY-CORA ROAD- Approx. 30 acres wood·
land located 3 mi. from Rodney. Coun~ waler
avaiab~. $12,000.
·
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 82x80 an steel con·
struction wrth lireprool insulation. Overllead crane,
has office &amp; baths. Formerly used fort10at sales &amp;
repair. Located across from Silver Bridge Plaza wilh
access to the Ohio River. Potential unlimited. CaU
Ranny Blackburn.

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
NEW LISTING - Rt 33 - 1 lloor block house, 2-3 bedroom~
approx1malely 1 acre lot. Equal housing opportunity. $14,600.00.
NEW LISTING - RUTlAND -Nice 6 room ranch home w~h 3
bedrooms on 4 lots. Hardwood floo"-&gt; and carpeting, gas foced air
heat Equal hous1ng opportuni~. $32.000.00.
NEW LISTING $8,000.00.

L-0-C·A-T;I-0-N - 620 4th Ave., 4 BR. 21h balhs,
large LR, formal dining rm , complete kitchen with
disp. OW compactor. refngeralor and range. 6
fireplaces. garage. new aluminum si:lingand storm
windows. Shown by appo1nlment orily.

Acre lois 1n Five Poinis area. $5,000 to

PRICE REDUCED -MIDDLEPORT- Duplex rental investment
2 rental umls wtth $300 monthly income. Housein good cond11ion.
insulaled. some furnilure. Just $19,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED- EASTERN DISTRICT - 4 bedroom modem
home w~h full basemenL I \I balhs, insulated. FA. gas heat
carport, above ground pool, on 2 acres. Reduced lo $35.000.00.
LONG BOTTOM - ApproXImately 71 acres wooded land with
n1c~y remod~ed farm house. 3 bedrooms, forced air heat plus
wood burner. insulaled. New 2 car garoge. $55,000.00 for all or
owner w1ll sell house, garage. small acreage lor $35.000 00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Jr .. GRI ...... ........ .. .. .... ........ ... 992-6191
Jean Trussell ....... ............. .. ................... ...... .. .949-2660
Dottie Turner ................................................. 992-!;!i92
Office .......... ....... ..... ..... .......................... 992·2259

m
KEAlTOK .

Real Estate General
B r ok er · Auct1onccr

LIF E
IN SU R ANCE

CaU 446-0552 Anytime

Beth Null 245-9507
BMR 427 - $30s. ma1ntena nce free Sldmg, fenced back vard.
family onenled-neighoorhood. Th ~ is a very clean 3 BR homE. Call
for appoinlment
BMR 389 - This !me home has 4bedroomsand is located close
to lawn. You will hbavea large lot with a country atmosphere and
have alllhe c1ty conveniences. Call nowl
BMR 414 - 12160 mobile hom• &lt;il" ' '"" on I acre plus lol
Includes lu rmlure. h&lt;SAlf. PENOING•nverted front deck.
12x24 garage wilh sL.•

,e.

BMif 422 - N1ce ranch located on Roush Lane 1S pnced tosell at
$38.000. Large LR_. 2 BR, kitchen includes range. eye-level oven.
dishwasher and diS posal Call to see.
BMR 424 - 2 plusacres w1th avery n1ce 3 bedroomranch slyle
home. You w1il love lhe country almospohere. Possible loan
assumption.

PRICE REDUCED TO $32,900 - 50 acres rrore
or less near 'Eureka. approx. 15 A. grassland. bal·
ance wooded, nicely remodeled 6 rm. and batil
home. WF fireplace. slmle. refrig .. several outbwld·
ings. Owner1&gt; leaving the area and wouldhke a
QUICk sale.
BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE - Approx
5\.\ acres locaal on tl'l; Graham School Rd,
coonty waler. OYer 300 ft. rood frontage. Green
Grade School and Gallia kademy High School.
$10,900.

EXECUTIVE CHARM- That's what you'll find
in this 4 BR, 2~ bath Dutch Colonial located in
beautiful Charolais Hills Estates. Complete in
every way including a complelely equipped
kitchen, large living &amp; dining rms .. family rm .
with lireplace, basement &amp; cent. air. The 300
sq ft. sun deck overlooks the beautiful20x44
pool. All this plus a well landscaped 3'h acre
lot. Shown by appointment.
OHIO RIVER lOTS FOR SALE- Localed 3 miles
below E11eka Dam. Idea for camping. buildng or
mobile hanes. Call Ranrry Blackburn.

'BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY - 132 acres .. moslly
clean hill pasture. good fences, 11b story home
TWO MILES OUT STAT£ ROUTE 588 - Remodeled home includes 6 rms. and bath, carport, , lar ge barn. tob. base. fronts on 3 roadsnear Mudsock Price reduced lo $64,000.
,
stove, relrill., dishwasher, ~most 6 acres of land
and priced for quick sale.
NEW LISTIN~ Approx. 50 acres near Vinton. al
clean grassland, remodeled 6 rm. &amp; bath home,
$1.000 D(MN PAYMENT on ths Oho RiverVIeW 60x90 barn. 2 silos, pond, only $49,500
.
pr~erty . (Wrox. 8 acres woiXIe:l land on Route 7
and 5 mi soulh of town. O.Vner will fin&lt;11ce ba~
GREEN TOWNSHIP- CENTRALLY LOCATEDance at 10%.
112 acre larm has frontage on Stale Route 588.
Fa1rlield
Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fa1rtield Rd.
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST- Like new sec·
Ecellenl for farming or development Older 5 rm. &amp;
Qonal home, 1200 sq. ft.. j BR, _2 baths. cathedral
ceilings, 2 water systems. Anthis on 1.55 acre lot balh also 1ncluded. Owners will consider sell1ng
with fishing pond between R1o &amp; Vinton. $29,900. smaller tractsof short term finaming. Call for more
Information.
NEW LISTING $49.500-0wne"-&gt; have m011ed &amp;
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef. hay &amp; grain farm.
have their lovely 3 BR bnck ranch pnced lo sell.
80 acres, m/1. approx. 35 A. good cropland. 10 A.
Special features are 1\I blhs. lamily rm. wrth WB
woods. balance pasture. good fences. 9 rm./bath
fireplace. carpet throughout lull basement garage, home was buitt in 1872 &amp; has been partially
c011ered rear porch &amp;large ~~ on lhe Bulaville Rd.
remodeled. 50x50 cattle barn wilh concrete floor.
large silo with auto. unloader. several sheds. large
BEEF CAllLE COUNTRY - 132 acres. mostly
pond. springs, ~anding crops go lo new owner.
clean hill pasture, good fences, I \I story home.
large ba rn. tob. base. fronts on 3 roadsnear Mud- NEW LISTING - 25 ACRE MINI FARM located
sock. Price reduced to $64.000.
approx 4 mi. north of HMC on old route 160.
Modern tn-level has bnck &amp; vinyl construction. 3
RECREATION lAND - 25 acres m/ 1, mostly
BRs. 2 baths. equipped k~chen, pining .area,
woods, lronis on Little Raccoon Creek &amp; Stale
laundry &amp; 2 car garage. Can be bought with or
Route 325 near Tycoon l-ake. $15,000
without acreage.
I
GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLY LOCATED PERRY TOWNSHIP - 78 ac~&gt; 15 A..Simms Creek
112 acre larm has lrontage on State Route 588.
bottom. balance rol6ng paslure &amp; woods. mce
Fa1rtield Centenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairfield Rd.
modular home, large barn, several otiler bU1Id1ngs.
Excel~nt lor farming or development Older 5' rm
Tobacco base. corner ol SR 141 &amp; tile Vern!Xl
&amp; bath also included. Owners will consrder sell1ng
Woods Rd.
smaller tracis of short term financin11. Call for more
information.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 82x80 all steel con·
slruction with fireproof insulation. Overhead crane,
has office &amp; baths. formeny used for boat sales &amp;
repair. Located across from Silver Bridge Plaza with
access to the Ohio River. Potential unlim~ed. Can
Ranny Blackburn
SECLUDED COUNTRY SETTING. LOOKING FOR
SOMETHING SPECIAL? Let us show you this new
3 BR, 2 balh double g;~rage home with over 1700
sq. ft. of living area. Just nghl for tile large family
thai needs amp~ spate. Other features are natural
wood sidinP. heat pump, range, refng., OW &amp; d1sp.
Can be purchased with 2 acres or 40. Located 1n
Green Townsh1p.
LOCATION PLUS QUALITY should describe th~
love~ 3 BR brick ranch . Special features are a
large LR &amp; dining rm .. equ1ppell ~tchen. I ll balhs.
laundry, quali~ carpet, cent. a1r &amp; an oversiZed 2
car garage. Located on U.S 35 West &amp; shown by
appoinlment

GU.VAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/ 1, lociioo
south of Mercer~ll~ /ljlprox 20 A. tllable, balance
woods.llb. base Owrers wil h~p finance.
HOLIDAY PARK- 2 camping lo~ lumishoo 26
ft. Trdwwd travel tra1ler, sheler house, utility
bulding, county wat~J, sewer. access to Racoon
Crrek. Priced for qui:k sale.
BARGAIN PRICED AT $10,500- 10x55 motikl
home w~h l0xl8 addition, several buiding;, over
6 acres of land on Sarxl Hollow Rd 1n Grem Twp.
OwrEr will help f~anre .
STYLE ... ELEGANCE .. A WAY Of LIFE - firsl
lime on lhe markel for this like new c!Xltemporary.
,3 or 4 BR's. 2 baths, large open LRwith f~replace &amp;
beamed ceilings, kitchen includes range. OW &amp;
refrill.. full basement wrap-around deck. cedar
sidinl'. 12x24 above ground pool, garage, barn &amp;
10 aGres near Eureka. City sch~ls.

BMR 425- Exe cuiNe ty pe brick home, _in French. Prr!'!~~~­
Fealuring 2.100 square feel ol hvmg are• on lhe mainfloor plusa
full walkoul basement This fine home IS one of a kmd 1n th1s area.
Be lhe l1rst to see lhis one. Call now.
BMR 426 - Pnced right at $37.500. II has an assumable loan
wilh only 9\\% interest We are talkmg_aboul a very clean. 3 BR
home situated on nice flat !olin a fam1ly onenled neighborhood
'Call lor complete delails.
BMR 398 - PRICEGREATLY REDUCED' Owner tran~erred and
must selllhis 3 BR ranch .• Close to lown includes d~uxe l &amp;x36
inground pool. Reduced to $44,500 - PlUS owner1&gt; will pay
f.HA-VA . points and closing costs.
.
BMR 428- Steel siding, 3 BR ranch ,situated on large flat lot. ()ty
School District Priced at $37.5Ul00. Call for appomtment
BMR 429 - All electric bi-level in Kyger Creek School Dstrict
~tuate d on 1.21 acres wrth assumab~ 9'h% loan. Call for complete
details!
BMR 430 ~ NEW LISTING - Exc~lent buy •t $38,500. Lovely
lrame ranch w~h 3 BR's, large kitchen with.carpeted dining area, 2
batils. ~r see th~ !Xle today!
IIIII R431 - NEW USTIN ~ - Brick ranch includes 3 BR~ LR,
OR .. family room, 2\7 balhs, ~luated on 38 acres. Call to see th5
one today!

ASSUME 8\1% !DAN -Lovely ranch at the edge
of I.Wn is piict!d to set1 at $49,900. Features are 3
BR, IIi baths, large LR with WB fireplace. modem
kitchen &amp; dining area, laundry rrn., garage &amp; gas
heat Call for appantment

a.fAN - CONVENIENT Ill TOWN
iilliriiiii_ 2 BRs, 12xl8 LR, larJ! Uchen &amp;
dining area with range, refrig. &amp; disp.launlty wth
washer &amp; dryer, new carpet expensive.drapes,
carport, ps he ii. hum idnier, dehumidfier. air
ce111er, cenlral air: Watch till Blue Devil foolbal
ganes lrom t 11ll il'ill! rears111 dec~ $50.000?1P'IJ. .
$37,500.

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

74 DO(I.III von cuotomlzod
fnoldo ._out. pop-up sun
roof. port holo windows.
31 outo, noodo body work.
ti!OO firm. Call446-2166.

a

73 DODQE von, 304-876·
5081 .

~ ~ ~~·

±

unocr.- NM lour,_,
0111lottorlotoctuquw,lotcrm
lourord!Nrywonll.
1
.

CQLIG

I I

V

·~--=

_

--

11..

74

10 uood blkoo from tiOcc to
750 cc. All under $999.
8otz Hondo Soleo. Uppor Rt.
7. Konaugo. Oh.

76

8t

Auto Parts
Accessories

2-Bft PU topporo-choico
$90. Aloo PU tool box $36.

!::~:~~r~~~r:n~~~~

&lt;:j
..4

.I

Yesterday 8

l-----------

I
Now anango ..,. cirCitd lotttt1 ro
1orrn the aurprlaa _ , , as aug·
gootod by lht - -·

t 1 I I TD t XI I )
(-"-1 MorldoY)

Jumbln: FRIAR 6EGOT ENOURE GAMBLE
Answer: A guy who acts like a wild animal might be
.
tamed when ht'l ti'III-' 'MATED':

Good Win1or auto. ·trans. &amp;
perta for Winsor motor, 351.

1...,-------

TWO 14" otudded radial
on ow tires. $60.00, like
now, 304· 576-7752.
Auto Repair
• Willis T : Le•dlnghom, Rultor, Ph. Horne 446·9539
*Phyllis Loved•y, Phone t46-22:10
·
294

•Joa'Pii:· oi'Fic

81

! ·'1873 Oldo Cutlaaa Suf,'preme. Good condition.
~

MOBILE HOME- 2 bedroom "Trenton", 12'x65'.
Includes refrigeralor. range, couch and chair. New
carpet. Loan assum!Oln. Purchase price $5,500.

11281

FARM - 114 Acres. 3 bedrooms. 1~ story frame
house. 2 barns. Smoke house and other outbuild·
ings. Tobacco base. 91 Acres paslure and woods.
23 Acres til~ble. Mineral rights. .&amp;JIIhis and more
for $80.500. Farm equipment optional.

11280

VACANT LAND- I Acre. Day Chapel Road. Hartl
surface road. Good lot for trailer or home. Rural
water available. No restrictions. $2.500.

11280

COUNTRY COMFORT ..;.. Excape to peace, quiet
and carelree ivng in lhis fantastic contemporary
home. Beautif\.1 Quaker made cabinets in kitchen,
sunken living room witil fireplace and cathedral
ceiin11. Formal diring, 3 or 4 bedrooms. den, 2'h
baths, lamily room, basement. 30'x60' gara&amp;l!. Approximalely 10 acres. Owner will consider financing. City schods.
. 11241
INVEST IN'IAND- You'll be a/lead in tre future
70 acres. approx: 3 mi from Galipois. 6 room
house. 2 oorns. tool shed, farm shop. Coonty water.
Green Twp. We invite offers now. Listing price
$50,000.
41248
40 ACRES. more or less. BHevel hOme, 5years old
with 3 bedrooms and 2 full batils. Large separa£
gar-age. Coal shed Tobacco base. Approx. 5 acres
cleared . This property is mostly wooded and lociied in Perry Township.

112l1
BRICK RANCH -COMPLETELY FURNISHEDLove~ 3 bedroom ranch lealuring a living room,
dm. dining · kitchen combined, 2 baths. Termopane windows with marble window silt and many
more extras. A lovely home with many fine lealures. CALL NOW.

112%7

f

COlY! is tile word to descrbe th~ darling 2 bedroom home. Newly remodeled, one car garl!f! wllh
attached carport and summer kitchen. aluminulll
siling. lhermopane windows and sD-m dolts.
Nice fa mly hOme.

.

6 ROOMS and bath. 2or3 bedrooms. wood~mer,
and Hreplace. Driled well County water avaialje,
1.50 acre~ Close 10· Wayne National f~rest

$24.~.

11~

r

VICTORIAII STYLE WITH LilTS Of ClASS
Home has been partly restlred. CoLid be a lletuti,
ful home New kitchen, new balh. formal dining
room, larnily room. livllg room, 3 bedrooms, Basement and attic. Appmx. I acre. PrX:e in the 20s
1119
Ill STORY FRAME willl approx. 2\.\ acres, Home
has 3 bedrooms. large kitchen. iving room wilt
fireplace. 2 bath and part basement This home
overlooks tile river ard pricj!d at $25,000,. ,
11256
COUNTRY LIVNG at the edge of lown with lhis 3
bedroom remodeled ranch witil 11 acres. Srnal
barn. Motile home indudil:l fol extra inoome.
Priced in tile 40's.
..

M254

COMIIERCIALBUILOING PLUS ADDmONAliN·
COME - ldeallocatioo b" your business, !)IIi 3
mobie hOmes, all retied for extra income. Two I~
Olf street parking. fonlle~y 2 lloral shop. Owners
anxilus to sell. Call br more information.

M233

COURAGE, Mv Dear. Are yoo tired of looking at lite
same ok:l hanllo m~nli!in overpriced homes. Then
see this lovely brick ranch with 3 bedrgorr; ~
baths, fireplace. central air. 2 car garaae witll
electric opener. Nice lawn. $59,500.

CROWN CITY frame and brick ranch home Will
maintained. Spacious lawn with lots of frut trees ill
back. 3 bedrooms, I h.il and 2 hal baths, lar-&amp;1!
kitchen, liv111g room. fami~ room. full basemert
and oversized 2 car garage. Apj)mx. I 'h acres! ·

M240

CONVENIENCE IS the word forth~ 3 bedroom Ill
stDiy home. 1~ bahs. i~ng room, formal dini•L
basement Garaae. 8 river lront lots. Priced in the
low 40'1

$~2.~

IS THE ASKING PRICE of tilis 3 b8:1room
home in Rutland. Living roqm, formal dining room,
batll, kitchen, enclosal heated front porch. Basement Naklraf gas. Large slaage area Owner fi.
nancing available.

SMALl FARM - 251! Acres, house, barn, bush
hDL tractlr and wa111n. 2 story home has 2 bedrooms ~tair1&gt;, iving room. dining room. kitchllll
and batil down. Land mosUy pasture; some tillable
and a rice size lnbacco base. Property islociie&lt;tll
Friendly Ridge.

SUPERB SlTTING - five acres of wooded area
surrounds this nalural wood sided orne. 3 bedrooms, 21ull baths. Fireplace, ciltiledral ceiling and
wood beam1 Tastefully decorated, Minutes 11
Ho~er Medical Center. Priced 10 sel.
41196
LET THE SNOW FALL! You'll be cozy warm1his
winter in tilis·cure, easy to heat 3 bedroom home.
Bath, den, partial basement unattached 2 car
garage, small worbhop. rural water and much
more. Cklse to schools, church and grocery store.
Call today!
11215
ENJOY EASY LMNG without destroying your
budget bedroom older home. Remodeled. 3 acres
plus mobile home hoolt-up. .lJst off Rt 160.

NEW LISTING - SmaH .2 bedroom home~
just inside !ity ~mils, PrtlS@IlUy used as rertal
property. Home has INing room. dining room, k~­
chen. balh and uti~ room. Priced at $14,900. ·
:
112&amp;'1
01.0 TIME CHARM- 2 story wilh some reroodel'.
ing, 3-4 bedrooms, I bath,livingroom, dirnngroom
and family room. Large prage wth car-poll. stor;
age building. Cellar house. Property couk:l be used
br home and bu~ness. Situated on 4 large kits.

BUILD NOW whie interest rates are droppin11. 10 ·
AciiiS vacant land mdo as yoo pease.NO restric·
Ions. City school district

'
NO RESTRICTIONS on lh1s deared corner lot
Apprort. I acre, more or less. Well. Rural w~r
available. City schols.
' · '·

11255

11261

m1

ll2t6

11232

3 ACRES - Located ak);ig lower Route 7..Nice
l;~~d br bulling a home. land lays llat and over-

looks tre river.

..

112p
l'r\ ACRES included witil the sa~ of this ddef
home with basement 301&lt;40 barn. Tobacco baSe.
Pricl!ll in tte md 20s.
.
· ~
H118

llldl OPPICIIIIIrDaft.DIII'RY -DUDOfiUIID.

(i) 1982 Unhlty 21 Rtal Esta:. Carpxatton UltUIICif for IlK NA.f I N~ 1nd TL~ trild~marks of
C.ntury 21 Rell Etlll"! Corporation Equal Housing OpportuNty tit
.

i· HARTS Uoed Core . Now
~ Hollon Woot Vlrglnlo . Ovor
: 20 leta expenalve can In
t otock.
t·- ;...
~~~~~~~~~
t 19D1 VW Robblt. 304-875·
:_ 81113 .

J

~

EALTY, Inc.
446-1066

1972 Mercury Marqulo.
r 78.000 mlloo, ucollont
: condition . 4 new tirea.
.. uoo. 304-882· 2934.

11221

RENTAL PROEPRTY - Needs some fixing but
wolid be a ~ rental investment Small 2 bedroom home with limg room. kitchen, attic, tasement and nice size lawn. Located in city.

11265

'

; 3106 Cue bulldozer, I way
, blade Pa 1976 Lincoln
' CO..tinentol Mork IV. 814·
742·2126 .

11247

COMMERCIAL R£TAIL BUILDING located downmwn business district 3 siOry. over 6,000 ~- ft
BUiding divided for extra income. Use part lease
lhe rest Call br more delails.

WOOD

t400. 949-2870 .

t

.

Public Notice

#456
DUTCH STYLE COUNTRY HOME
4 bedrooms, 2\1 batils, fully eQuipped eat-in kitchen. formal dinin~ '
room, lamily room with woodburner, two car garage with auto.
opener. S!)1e, beauty, charm &amp; comfort- all describes this home.
Priced $74,900.
#322
25 ACRES - B-ROOM HOME
Nice remodeled home. Blown-in insulation. 2 sf!lrage buildings,
c~ckenhouse. Mini farm. Cheshire Township. New counlry
kitchen.
#558

\nRGrL a. SR .
, Z16E.2nd5t.

.

Phone

'. 1-(614)·992-3325
NEAR POIIIEROY - on hard
. fQad.l.arge blik:ling lor garage,
fru~ or fBI marloet Large 3
be:lroom home ·th8t has nice
tarpelilg. II\ baths, furnace
and heatolalor for ony
'$40.000.
NlW LISTING - Coal min~
tilis is a 3 bedroom ranch
~orne 3 or 4 Y"-'· old. Batil,
carpemg. and al electric. s.w.
bf Salem Center. Has 4.8 acre
· . af]d private. Only $39,000.
. .J8' ACRES - With new1y
' driled gas well near Rutland. 5
' 100111 home, one lloor. bath, on
· good country road . Just
: ~.500.
' ~ ..
RUTIAN Q - Large lot b" tile
chik:lren. 8 rooms, batil, nat
gas, aty waler near school out
of. all food~ Only $25.000.

PACKED WITH POT£MliAL
.
HOllE &amp; 6 ACRES SITS CLOSE TO TOWN
Just a s~p and a hop to Green School. 2 or 3 bedrooms. living
room, dining room or den, large c:Ounty kitchen wilh appliances.
bath, utiify room, and ~orage room. Voo wil ike tilis one! Only
$26,!01 with a land contract avaiable.

..

RIVER FRONT - One beauti·

ful place to live and enjoy. nice
carpeting. 4 bedroom, remodeled home. Gas furnace and
wood burning fireplace. Dining
room or den, and basement
$45,000.

..

tilt-IT - Looks nice but can
use a few things. Has sh4Jp
room, endosed front porch,
carport and 111 acres fOI just
$12,000.
.
II~~ t

MODERN - Ths 4 Yr· iMI
home ~ in the country. Has 3
nice bedrooms, 2 full ~s.
IJWiy family room with Wood
burning fireplace. Lds of nic~
carpeting. 2 car prage and
one acre. $62,~.

346 ACRES -

Good forcattle.

huntingandsorneflrrrlng,l:las '
I ~ 10 room 2 ba111 home
with free ps, or will sel any
/iart Want $175,000.

tlltNKING 01 SEWIIG. CALL

TOFOIID'S. NO 011£ CAll DO
IT IDTEI AT 912-3325.

Housi!l!f
H'-'&lt;11 lc1uar fl'l.\

GOOD HOUSE SENSE
RETIR£MENT OR STARTER HOME
Comfortable, neat home with large living room, eat-in kitchen with
biJi~•n cabinets. 2 bedrooms. siDrage room, bath and carport Very
ct11ven~nt location. .Call for further detais.
#533
HOME WITH A LOVELY VIEW
ASSUMABLE LOAN 11 'h%
.
.
If !·floor li~ng suits your life style th~ brick &amp;lrame r1ncher 1s
for you. 3 bedrooms. 1il batils, dining area. wei eqmpped Mchen
with buiHn catine~. living room wilh brick fireplace, garage,
redwood porch, and a ~rge above ground pool, with an acre of
land more or less. City schools.

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots, nice size b!ilding lois with all utilities there Lol size
101.8 by 1712. Better get 'urn now. •

·rEAFOR
.

A
Truly gracious lam ii-I living can
be yours in tilis beautiful 4
bedroom home approx. B mi.
from Gallipolis. The kitchen is a
goormers deight UnbBieva·
ble dining room and family
room. Sui~ lor tre most dis·
criminatng home owner. 20
acres. Pasture ~nd. Horse sta·
ble. Another 73 acresava~lble.
Many, many amenities.
. #542

WHAT A DEAU! $27,000
Come see for you~. Cozy 6 rooms and batil, washer, dryer,
dishwasher, refrigerator, woodburner, and al like new. Storage
building and 2 car carport Kyger Creek Schools.
#552

..

~:

IN GALLIPOLIS
WAlKlD
SIIIP DOWNTOWN
6 roans, 3 BR. full basemmt
ni:e l&lt;rge frmt porch. No upkrep. Vinyl siling Nalural gas
furnace, nice large shade trees,
low taxes. Home you siDuld
check on.
#530

#563

:; 3i CHEVY 2 door Soden,
• 1hQt rebuilt motor, body in
; good· ahope, otklnu •5oo.
·' 31&gt;4-1178-2802.

COUNTRY HOME &amp; 40 ACRES II. &amp; L
8 rm. country home - 5 bedroms, ooth. shower, some carpet,
driDed wei wlh pump. Nice lobacco barn. Two com cribs. Garaga
All mineral rights ~ Several natural ~.rin(!S, some fruit trees.
Locatd on State Hgllway. Priced only $30,000,00.
.
ff543

6.95 ACRES VACANT LAND OFF RT. 35

3 BEDRI. RANCH located in Rodney II S.D. Equipped for woo:l
burner. attached garage, electric heat county waler and sewer. An
excellent buy fol $31,!01.00.
COMMRCIAL PAOPEm located along St. Rt 7, in Gallipolis.
Approx. 2 acres. zoned c-2. Price $30,000.00.
APPROX. 2 ACRES located along Story's Run Rd., price includes
mobile home, concrete bloCk bldll. and old farm hOuse. Buy now
lor !Xlly $10,000.00.
3 BEDRM. HOME. family nil., adapted for wood burning heater;
i~iround swimming pool, fenced yard, large carport . Pnce
$46,900.00. .
R£SID£NTIAL PAOPEm IOCIIted along 4th Ave.. Gallipolis. Can
be used as 2 a~ or converted ack to sllgle resilence. Lg. !«
eiC!eods from 4tll10 5th Ave. Buy now for $65,000.00.
20 ACRE FARM located in Ohio Twp, Gania County. Has 2 bedrm
home with qice garage. Approl 1,200 lb. tob. base. Pnce
$35,900.00.
STATELY BRICK IIOIE situated along 2nd Ave., Gallipoli&amp;
Pr(IIJerty needs some worf&lt;, however, basic structure is sound ard
location is great
2 APARTMENTS adjacent.IO ~ff course. Adlit.sonly, no pets. From
$200.00.
.
COMMERCIAL PROPEm in doWntoWn Gaflipol~. apprOlC, 4,0011
' sq~ 11. can be purchased or leased, across from aty Pllrking lot cal
for rl1018 ilforrnltion.

.

AHtrUO

Mobile Homo Roof Prob·
lome? Would you liko to end
roof le1k1,, roofrumbkl, roof

cootlng. ceiling condonu·
lion opou ond nvo 30 to 40
porcont on your hooting bll?
Call 992 -7034 and osk
about

our

New

Roof

Need something hauled

HAMUN KING

ATTORNEY-AT-lAW
Dissolutions or Uncon-

lested Divortes $350.00
(Costs included).

Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

446-0855
512 Secood Al't .. Galllpeiis
Servin&amp; Gollla &amp; Mtls
Counlies

awey or aomethtng moved?

We'll do it. Coll446-3169 or
6.1 4-266 -1987 aftor 6.
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim Lanier. 304-675·
7397 .

: Bill's

Product.

RINGLE'S SERVICE exporloncod roofing, Including
hot tar application. carpenter, oloctrlclln. mooon. Call
304-676-2088 or 676411150.

87

Nu·Prlme repluor~~enl

Upholstery

windows

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Avo .. Galllpolio.
448-7833 or 446-1833.
·
MOWREYS Upholatory Rt.
1 Box 124. Pt . Plea11nt ,
304-676-4154.

Storm windows &amp; doors
Alumlnur~~ &amp; vinyl
siding
How met Pallo Covers

How met screen rooms

Mobile home awnings .
. "'lumlnum utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive

ohopo. Water romovol, FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-446-2107 .

WOW! $39,!01.00
WOW' 9% owner fmancing. Wow! 3 BR. 2 baths, central air, prage,
storage building, all furniture included. 5 minutes to downtown
Galipoli&amp; City schools. Large level lot

:-Makea good work car .

T~or

All
Wlr nc. lnsuf1llon
Coli 446·1515 or 446-0445

Get your karpet in ahip

Stercraft

Home
Improvements

lll~i~\;,;.iH.aifnc &amp; Air Colld~

44\-7699

Campers

M270

HOWARD L . WRITESE
ROOFING COMPANY . 86
General Hauling
Guttero-Downopouto-NewRopolr-Guttor PointingStorm Dooro Ill Wlndowo.
BOYS WATER
Fru Eotlmotu . Phone JONES
SERVICe
.
·
614-949-2283 or 614 · 7471 or 814Callo614·367
."367-0591 .
992·2791.

RON'S Toleviolon Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola . Quaze r, and
houoo callo. Coli 576-2398
or 448·2464 .
·

Hove block also for $75 .
814· 742-2283.

*2,800. Call 675-2504 or
676·1824.

..
. ..
MIDDLEPORT - Solid older home . excellert
conditXJn. 2 stDiy wlh 3 bedrooms &lt;11d large bath
up. Main level foyer. livmg room. all modern kit·
chen and a beautiful dining room. Ths hOme has a
ful basement 3 car g;~rage and nice big log

0 f lgorotlon wuhor
R
dryero.
ronges. dlo ·
r
hwoahora
. Seriva' Pa ropolr of'
all mokoo &amp; model a. Call
441·81819to6 .

Morcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
Ing. 30 yeoroooxporlence, ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
opoclollzlng In byllt up roof. SERVICE coli City Furniture
Coll814-388-9867.
304-675-2808.

Datoun, l;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

22ft.

RUSS AND MAX

&amp;EWING Mochlno ropolro.
oorvlco. Authorized Singer
Saloo &amp; Sorvlco Shorpen
Scluoro . Fobrlc Shop .
Pomeroy. 992· 2284.

ILUTTER±
I I K )
AnswerJiere:

Refrigeration

EUIOTT

Toyote. Call446-7322 .
flU Chevy Luv,

1972

.

•

Motorcycles

1976 Hondo 760 with .
fairing &amp; ooddle bago. For ,,..Y
__O,...J"""'E,..,C""K,..,..,j
1111 or trade for amen car or .
_
truck. Call 614-246-6211
I" "' i(
oftor 6 or oil doy Sot. &amp; Sun .
1\.. .A
1\..

Electrical

84

STUC""' P
IIJitu,.d
clol onp
eotlmateo .
1182.

campe.r in exc. cond.,

NEW LisTING - Locatsj •al upper Roull! 7. 2
stDiy home with separate 'page and nice size lOt_
2 M.H. spaces. At present:.r~ ~ a small oorber
shop in front and one roonilla$ been used as agun
'
•
shop

Home
lmprovamonts

1:;:;::::;::;==.:::== 11-=~-:-::~::-1

8t
PRESTIGE LOCATION - Developerl for carefree
living and entertainment. 3 bedrooms, 2 full batils.
I shower stll. Top grade appliances. Home in
immaculale condition. Porch, Dec~ng. 30'x36' · 3
bay garage. Two boat docks avai~ble . _ ApprOlC . 4
acres lo enjoy.

81

IJrHoniiAimldonriBobloo

79 Motors Homes

PEACEFUL COUNTRY-LIKE SETTING. Excellent
buy at $45,900. Owner1&gt; have been transferred &amp;
are anxious to sell th~ lovely brick &amp; frame-ranch
with 3 BRs. ~rge ~!then . LR with Mllire!)ace.
nice carpet lhroughout, attached garage &amp; I acre
pine-studded lot. Possible blended mortgage for
qualified buyers.
(MN YOUR OWN CAI'tl' SITE- in lhewlderres;
of the Wayne National Forest. 5 to 9 acre tracts of
woooland now available, adjoining thousands of
acres of IJivernment ~nd Publi: illnting, fshing
and camping permittoo. Prices start at $3500 with
financing avai~ble.

'il!I~Nll'i&gt;'ll ~THATICII'• 1111 --

&amp; 4 W.O. .

Byerly ond Felto Automltic
Tronomlooion Repair. NOW
OPEN . Corner of Kemper
Hollow Ill Kerr Bethel Rd.
Call 446-6639.

10 ft . wheel disk , 3 pt.

scoops. pull disk. pull plows.

Vans

77

adjustable disks. used rotary

mowers, fertilizer spreaders. manurer spreaders, post
hole diggers , reversible

73

The

Rolling land - beside Okl U.S. HiRhwav 35. In an area·tilat is
de'leloping fast Rt 35, short distmce west of Gallipol5. Get ~now.

-

..

11544

ONE ACRE PWS - HAS ASSUMABLE !DAN
Kyger Creek School Dist 4 room home with ful basement With
small down payment DWible lo assume the present loan Phone

for

detal~

#556
1 ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
home witlllice large shade tree1 Concrete front
porch, lots of fruit trees !apple, chelly, plum and pe1ch), grape
ari)Qr, raspberry vines,~ prden land, allievel.ln Green Twp.
Rural water, 2 car garall"o fuel ol F.A. furnace. Basement, bam,
approx. 16'J24'. Priced m the $20's.
!1491
Ni~ comfortable

•

I AC!ti!S'-

Witllin 10 miit drive lo dawu\Mn GllirdS. Cilv School System
Has hoolrup for tile moble home. Gill Rural Wall!r, electric and
septic link, me lthf.on pole, 2111 ft fronll&amp;e on Graham Scheid
Rd. Timber. Buildng sites. cal Now.

!1471
OWNER WIU FINAICE
Walk iniO !Qrmal enlrance with open staircase lo tilis I&lt;M!~
cOITlJ)Ietely iedeconted home loclted in tile ely. l'lllhin wal~ng
distance 1o sho!IPinlal!ll. 3 bed1110r11S, 2lUI baths, and charming
~ar_., kithen. Spacbus lvng room wlh woodburning fireplaca
Tlis pious home ha 1 natu11l 1J1S F.A. fu'nace like new.
lmmediale p nmion. We're wailir1 for your call.
·
..
.
1146

STARKS Tree Trimming &amp;
Removal. Mini-backhoe
•16 . hour. Insured, free
ootlmetoo, 304-576-2010.

E &amp; R Tree Service. fully
lnaured. free aatimatea.
Phone 814-367-0636, coli
after 6 .

82

Plumbing
• Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448·3888 or 4464477

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 laler
6 Support

72 Bitter vetch
74 Discharged
76 Oolong

istic
16 Tranquillity
21 Diurnal
22 Forllfi~
calion

77 Reveal
78 Singer
Horne
79 Dealers In
pens, pen·
ells, etc .

23 Wash llghlly

82 Religious

11 Character-

24 Mountain
nymph
25 Mature
26 Heroic
events
28 Purport
30 Short jacket
32 Greek letter

33 Proceed
34 Bother
35 Grain
36 Mix
37 Obtain
38 Greek teller
40 Eskimo
42 Mod's home

84
85

86
88
89
90
92

94 Feelings
98 Allowance
for waste
99 Pay attention
100 Watch

43 Sharp
44 Evergreens

45 Layette Item
4r Onewho
shoots rrom

cover
49 Sandarac

lree
50 Distant
51 Hesitate

54 Rip

house
Ascends
Mountain
lake
Act
Dispatched
Cupola
Stnct
Parts of a
dinner set

pocket
102 Wait ()n
103 Cover

104
105
106
108

Hurried
Dregs
Criminal
Portuguese
coin of old

109 Dad

I tO Cyprlnold
I ish

133 Partners
135 Legal matters
138 Once a·
round track
139 Contest
140 Parcel of

land
141 Southeast
Asian

holiday
142 Abbr. on
a map

143 Hebrew
month

144 Identical
145 Took om=!'s

part
147 Repulse
14~Munched

150 Roadside
hotel

152 Aen1
154 Arrogate
156 Vessel's
lowest deck
158 Genus of

heaths

20 Redacts

29 Bellow
31 Metal

36 Red and

42 Allow
43 Malay
dagger
44 Fall short
46 Pronoun
46 Remunerated
49 Cutting
tools
50 Abundantly
supplied
51 Roman
deities
52 Separate
53 Fixed
amount
55 Places of •

weight
69 FOOd pro-

1 Saw
2 Bundle of
sticks

64 Girl of song
68 Sewing

3 Cravat
4 City train

Implements

70 Mate

grams
70 Become
insipid
71 S1afl

6 Newlywed s
7 Tally again
8 Mad. Ave.
products
9 LA's State

tt9 Booty

tO Goal

11 Group of
three

floWers

128 Dr.' s gp.
129 Level
131 Rodents
132 Malay

gibbon

19 Tardy

123 Early hrs.

127 Russian

·120 Small valley

126 Parts of

~

t21 Click
beetles

58 Soft drinks

61 Ripped
63 Sly klok

DOWN

nan! at

67 Measure of

1 18 Han~est

126 Top of head

71 Feel indig·

124 Vas1 age
t25 ~oothe

. ods
116 Former Russian ruler

57 Male bee

bread

language

passes
113 Bridge term
115 Time peri-

t61 Cries

112 Babies'
beds
114 Dutch town
t 16 Number
117 Punctuation
mark

66 Byel

105 Diving bird
106 Preposition
107 Tidy
111 Disturbance
1 12 Mountain

125 Ships ol

5 Type of

122 Wipes out

More e"\lerturesome

worship
56 Strong wind

product

area
65 Artificial

99 Retained
101

159 Cuts
160 Silly birds

t 11 Baker's

64 Shopping ·

96 Pith t&gt;elmet
97 Bridges

Adam
41 Bound

II alliance
56 Merchants'
associations

eer's word
95 Forest
feature

Yellow
37 Female
39 Competent
40 Son of

55 World War

59 imitate
60 latvian coin
62 Cheek indentations

runway
91 Barter
92 f:rulf skin
93 Auction-

z1 Crony

t2 Split
13 Social
insect
14 Exist s
15 Seesaw

t6 Needy
17 Sea eagle
18 Diphthong
19 Prance

73 Glossy

fabric
74 Granular

snow
75 Fear
77 Parts of a
skeleton
78 Citrus ftull
80 Fruit cake
61 Deposit

e3 Plural

ending
84 City on
ihe Tiber

87 Loss
89 Distribute

90 Airporl

the desert

plain
~29

Blaze

130 Toll

131 Male shoop
132 Mine veins
134 Summer,in

Paris

t36 Bar legally
137 Walks
139 Festive
140 Speech
impediment
144 Dry, as wine

145 Capuchin
monkey

146 Excavated
147 Regret

14eBase
149 Pub potable

151 Scale note
1'53 Printer's
measure

155 Compass
point

157 Scale note

�Page 08-The Sunday Ti,.,...S..:.tinel

-

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleas.ant, W. Va.

Februa'Y 27, 1983

Charge bank's misffianagement o( Groucho Marx estate
'

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) The at1Dmey for Erin Fleming hllS
accused the Bank of America of
sqW\Ilderlng several hundred thousand dollars from Groucho Marx's
estate on litigation against )lis
longtime companion.
A bank o!ftcer who testified
Frtday denied the assertion.
Heidi Galke did say, however,
that Marx left nearly $2 inllllon
when he died In 1977 at age 88, and
about half that total was eaten up by
taxes, legal fees and assorted
expenses before the Marx children
received anything.
"The sum total of Inventory as of
Groucho's death was $1,850,00!,"
said Miss Galke, a vice PrPSklent

· "A little over $408,00! baS been
and trust officer In chat'g&lt;.&lt; of tbe
probate administration center .lor distributed three ways," Miss
the bank, which Is executor of Galke said. "About $.ll0,00lls left In
the estate."
Marx's estate.
"Why aren't you distributing It? "
From the gross amount, Miss
asked
Sablh.
Galke said, the estate paid out so1t1e
"The
estate cannot be closed until
small cash bequests, lnherttance
this
litigation
Is resolved.'' Miss
and . gift taxes, administrative
expenses, executor and attorney Galke Said of tbe current suit
against Miss Fleming, 42. Sablh
fees and commissions.
The Marx children, Arthur, . Indicated the $DJ,OOJ probably
Mlrtam and Melinda, were to wo\lld be used to pay the bank's
receive the balance of the estate. attorneys.
The bank is suing Miss Fleming
But ·by the time they got paid, sbe
said, what was left was "Some- for return of about $400,00lln cash
and gifts that Marx gave her In the ·
where In the area of $100,0CO."
six
years they were companions.
Attorney David Sabth asked how
During Miss Galke' s testimony,
much actually was distributed to
Sabth accused the bank of spending
the children.

more than $400,000 already on the
lawsuit against Miss Fleming.
"No, sir," Miss Galke protested.

llltlmately wrote a check for the
amount. Sablh said outside tbe
courtroom that a probate Judi:e had

''I don't thinkU's$400,(0).''

Impassioned objections from
bank attorney J. Brin Schuhnan,
however, prevented her from
saying how much the lawyers have

~npald.
"Isn't It true," Sal&gt;lh asked, "that r~~.,,.~,.,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

the only reason the chlldren of
Groucho Marx have not received
the $RI,OOJ Is because of this
litigation?''
"I think so," said Miss Galke.
As for Miss Fleming's lnherttance of $150,00!, the witness
said the bank protested paying
It and filed an objection In court, but

-SPRING.
SALE
SAVE $6000
DELUXE E.S.P. UPRIGHT
-THE MOST POWERFUL WE SELL......

Man pleads not guilty to two traffic · charges
GAlliPOLIS -

A Galllpolls

man has pleaded not guilty to

charges of DWI and left of center In
municipal court.
·
A pretruil conference has been set
tor March 7 for DavidS. Glover, 40,
35 Madison Ave., who was put on
$1,00! bond.
A OWl charge against Steve D.
Mulllns, 24, Galllpolls, was dismissed after Mulllns pleaded guilty
to an unsafe vehicle citation. He was
subflequently fined $50.
Gary F. Finley, 31, Rt. 2, Crown
City, received a three-year driver's
license suspension after being found
· gullly of OWl. He was also fined
$lXl, sentenced to lOdays In jail and

put on 18 months probation. Dallas
McGuire, 46, Rt. 2, Patriot, had his '
OWl case continued until Wednesday for a plea and was put on $1,00!
bond.
Russell B. Scaggs, 25, Flatwoods,
Ky., charged with speeding, had his .
case continued until March 7.
Forfeiting bond In traffic cases
were Darlene G. Boggs, 20, Ri. 3,
Oak Hill, failure to stop for a stop
sign, $36; Ferne M. Davis, 70, Rt. 2,
Vinton, left of center. $36; Mickey L.
Graham, 22, Crown City, left of
center, $36; Tony J. Nelhardt, 24,
Bronson, Mich.. failure to obey
traffic control device, $36.

ordered Miss Fiemlng io iiost a
bond to receive tbe
Inheritance.

$100,(00

George W. Yeater, 35, Colerain,' 104MabeleneDrive,$35; Beverly A.
failure toyleld,$36; Lasco A. Niday, Lewis, 21, Oak Hill, $35.
·
584 Sun Valley· Drive, obstructed
J erey
ff
c. Ward, 20 , Rt. 1,
view, $40; Stephen E. Harder, Z7, Ew!ngton, $35; Delores A. CreRt.l, Ewlngton, .expired ol&gt;erator's . means, 37, Rt . 1, Proct orville, $36;
license, $3J, and failure to obey a Richard M. Freeman, 29, Alderson,
stop sign, $36; James L. Hammon,. W.Va., $36; Edward B. Kells, 57,
20, Rt. 1. Bidwell, passing stopped Ravenswood, W.Va., $36.
schoolbus, $72.
Marshall J. Barnhouse, 58, Ri. James D. Duty, 38, Rt.1, Patriot, pley, W.Va., $37; Genevieve R.
Unsafe vehicle, costs; Bob Angles, Jacober, 55, Cottageville, W.Va.,
1087 Second Ave., failure to pay $37; Stanley Q. Taylor, 29, Rt., 1,
parking. violations, $10; Jeffrey L.
Ga lllPD=·
"' ....,;
•oo carc1yn· s. Webb , 24 ,
Moore, 21, Rt. 2, Cheshire, $12.
Oak Hill, $10; Kevin D. Pullins, 18,
Forfeltlngbondforspeedlngwere Rt . 2, Bidwe· u, $35; Bruce A.
JerryC.Massie,35,346LowerRiver Ande
.,- , WVa
. .,
. rson, , HuntJnmnn
Rd., $3!1; Roberi D. Brislln, 26,
$38.
,
Ironton, $35; Dana W. Daniels, 23, . ...------...;__-----f

more
Best ....

Huge 6.6 AMP
Motor
•Brilliant Headlight

•RIJ9Uiator-Siiding scale adjusts to any

carpet height.
•Exclusive Vibre Groomer II beater bar. 7

2
·
2

individual beaters for over 20,000
ci!Nining pulsation!! per minute.
.
·•Triple Filter bag - gives vir:tual dust free
cleaning.
· ·

Bare areas need early treatment

BUY NOWIII

I

$60.001

Ust '199.95
SAVE
trol · on bare areas. Has can give good soil protection
pinkish-white Dowers from June around the home.
If you are considertng planting
fall.
untll
POMEROY - Early sprtng Is
2~6
llodtt
GUARANTEED .RETIREMENT
some
ground cover plants on a bare
English
Ivy
close
clinging
the time of year when bare, eroding
INCOME FROM
areas are quite evident around the vine. Develops dense covering on area, some site preparation Will be•
MODERN
WOODMEN
necessary.
rocky areas. Green year round.
horne or on the farm.
Following
are
tbe
steps
to
take
Bare areas of sou along lanes and Works well under shrubbery,
for planting: 1. Prepare a firm
roads contribute high amounts of grows well in shade or sun.
Winter Creeper - Pointed dark seedbed and work to a depth of
5edlment Into road ditches and
green
leaf, one Inch long, t1irnlitg three Inches; 2. Ume and fertilizer
streallllj. Getting these eroding
crimson
In fall. Grows to one and - for best results take sou test.
areas covered
with some type of
I
.
one-half
feet
tali. Will cling to stone, Instead of a soil test use 150 pounds
·vegetation not only adds to the apper 1,00! square foot agrtculturi!!
rocks
and
trees.
pearance but also helps to keep
(ground) limestone or equivalent;
Myrtle - green year round.
dltcbes and water courses open.
and
apply a minimum of 15-20
This year, the Meigs SoU and Wa- Light purple flowers In spring and
poundll,IXXJ
square foot of 12-12-12
ter Conservaton District ·(SWCD) early summer. Tolerant of sun or
fertlllzer or equivalent; 3. Work
haS available for sale several spe- shade.
GARLAND II. DAVIS •
Pachysandra -only plant which lime and fertilizer Into soil; 4. Plant
cies of ground -cover plants that are ·
512 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH.
specifically suited to plant In the will grow under pine. Ideal under ground cover plants according to
Ph
. 46-8235
Home 388-9691
"'
planting guide.
all evergreens, shrubs or In foundasmall hard to manage areas.
The
deadline
for
ordering
ground
tion
plantings.
Grows
six
to
eight
The following Is a list of brief desMODERN WOODMEN
criptions of each ground cover Inches high. Thrives In shaded · cover plants Is March 3. If you
OF AMERICA
would Uke to·establish hardy, lastareas.
plant:
·
Frate17lJJl
Life l11nrance
Ing
plants
around
the
home,
now
Is
Once established, these ground
Crown Vetch -deep rooted perHome
Ofl1
ce
•
Rock Island . Illinois
the
time
to
get
started.
For
!urtheri
ennial legume. Winter hardy, ~ver plants will start to spread out
drought tolerant. will persist under and become more lush over the ye-· . nformatlon, contact the Meigs
Ught'shade. Grows 12-18" at matur- ars. If properly maintained, they SWCDforfuriher~ormation.
~--------------------~--------~------------------~~--~---------Ity. Good for cover and erosion con-

$

By ROBERT L FIRST
Dl8lrict Conserva&amp;loalsl

a

95

A guide to local
television p
February 27 thru March 5

'

$30.00 VALUE- 6 PIECE
TOOL SET $1 000
WITH 2086 PURCHASE

Includes complete

listings

Rock Bands
Pages 3, 4
"Channel .23 listings i~luded
in this week's guide."

1980 PONTIAC TRANS AM

Showheat
Pages 4, 5

a

This local one owner trade-in f~tures low 22,179 m.iles. Fully equipped with factory air,
automatic trans., lilt wheel, crUise control, AM/FM/8-Track, and cast aluminuw wheels.

"EXPECT THE BEST"

1979 BONNEVILLE 4 DR.
Only 17,000 klw miles. Silver metaJiic, tit,. cruise, velour
interior.

1976 OLDS CUTLASS SALON

·Hollywood
Page6

2 dr., coupe, T-lops, bucket ~als, loadea. Silver and sharp.

'83 leSabre Trade-In

'83 Regal Trade-ln

"83" ROCKWOOD CONVERSION VAN "305 SERIES". .
EXCEPTIONAL QUAUTY AND EXaPTIONAL VALUE

ON DISPLAY ·

lllllllc....,_

TWINKLE. TWINKLE - fAJimu.,
Porter Waapuer IIIII In I* OrMd Ole Opry
dl t,. roam Ia oae of I* II rbla ellloaesull&amp; BeleCIIIftlltly appearlns ID bls lint movie, "Boaky
Tonk Man." (AP Laserpboto).
.

Filmeter
Pages 7, 8

Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties
•

\PARK[ AVENUE

RUTLAND RJRNITURE
742-2211

'

RunAND, OH.
•

I

I

J

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