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Page--12-The Daily Sentinel

Pom-·

O'Brien·completes 29.cases
Twenty-eight defendants were
fined and one other forfel ted a bond
in Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were James • Council, LangsvUle,
disorderly conduct, $75 and Costs· ·
George Nlclnsky, Hemlock Grov~.
speed. $24 and costs; Pt!Ullp Davts,
New Haven, lalled to display valid
registration, $10 and CO!itS; M111ard
Moyer. Wh eelers burg, Ci ndy
Aeiker. Pomeroy, Debra Bryant ,
Portland. Ctlrlstopher Richmond,
Middleport, speed, $21 a nd costs·
J ohn Clark, Ft . Knox. Ky., speed',
$25 and costs; Michael Stanley,
Pomeroy. no muffler, . $.~and costs ·
Joseph Davis, Middleport , s peed'.
$26 a nd costs; Gary Howard ,
Pomeroy. failure to display two
license plates. SIO and costs; Gloria
Grover, Middlep011 , speed , $3:1 and
..

COS I/;.

costs, DWI, $IDl and costs, license
Tamela Frye, WUliamstown, W. suspended 60 days, three days
Va .. speed , $22 and costs; WIIUam kconflnement; Harry Carleton
Swan, Columbus. speed, $3:1 and CoolvUJe; DWI, DXJ and costs:
costs: Rlchand Huffman , Reeds- license suspended 60 days, three
vUie, expired tags, $25 and costs·
days confinement , passing on
Mark Mora, Pomeroy, speed, SiJ double yellow line, $3:1 and costs·
and costs; Thomas Rlchardson
Brian Gheen, Pomeroy. unsaf~
Miami, Fla., speed, $2/l and costs;' vehicle, $5 and costs; Christopher
Ernie Davis, Langsville, speed, $22 Allen, Minersville, failed to control
and costs; Clyde P. Burton, Cool- vehicle, $35 and costs, tailed to
ville, intoxicated pedestrian,$35and
transfer license plates, $.ll and
costs; Luther Blevins, Pomeroy,
costs; Lance Herman, Middleport,
DWI. SZiO and costs, license criminal mischief, .JJ days confinesusp&lt;&gt;nded lor one year, 30 days me nt , costs; John Chevalier, Reedsconfinement, no drivers license, $50 ville, . disorderly conduct, $5 a nd
and costs, five days confinement;
costs, six months probation; Randal
Patrick Johnson. Racine, DWI ,S:.rn Friend, Long Bottom, fishing withand costs, license suspended 60 out a license, $5 and costs.
days, three days conflnement ·
Donald Cannon, thathem. Dnt.,
Samuel Buckley, Minersville, failed forfeited a bond in the amount ot
to yield half of roadwav, ~ and $41.50 on charges of speeding.

Today's
Times-Sentinel

Both cars went off the right side of
the road , Steven Call 's strlklng a
telephone pole and tree, and Ptllllp
Call' sstrikingafence. The collisions
'Caused severe damage to both cars.
The drivers were taken to
Veterans by the Meigs EMS, but no
details were given on the extent of
their injuries.
'111e patrol cited Steven Call for
reckless operation.
A nort hbound vehicle driven by
Mlchaf'l P . O'Neil, 30,Harrisonville,

"'•teal ....... .................... M .
ClasolftedB ... -.... ... ...........1).2-7
FAI.Itorlal ............ ,............. A-2

Fann ........................... ,. CNI
1.A&gt;C81 •••••••••••••• •••••••••••• A-7 ,D-8
Sporis ............................ C-1-'
rt

Vol. 17 No. 14
&lt;;Apyrithfod 1983

was traveling on Ohio 143 at 8: .JJ
p.m . when O'Neil reportedly lost
control on a curve, went off the left
side of the road and struck an
embankmen t, causing severe
damage.
Complaining of Injuries were
O'Neil and two passengers, Brenda
Fry, 33, and Cheryl Hysell, 26, both
of Middleporl. It was not known If
the three were treated for their
injuries.
No citation was issued in the
Incident.

· part of ·the extensive on-going lrnprovemenl8 being
carried out at the Melp Inn in Pomeroy.

May grocery prices do~ sligh~ly
By MICHAELKUCIIWARA
Associated Press Writer
Grocery_ prices slipped slightly
last month, dropping nearly twotenths of 1 percent since May 1,
according to an Associated Press
marketbasket survey.
Fallingmeatpricescontrlbutedto

pork c hops. frozen orange juice discontinued the package size used
concentrate, coffee, paper towels,
in the survey.
butter, Grade-A medium white
They we re selected at random
eggs, creamy peanut butter, and no at1emptwasmadetowelght
laundry detergent. fabric softener, the list according to what percent
t
oma o sauce, milk, frankfurters tage of a famlly's actual grocery
John Bentley s ubmitted receipts
and granulated sugar. A 15th Item, outlay each product represents.
chocolatechipcookles,was dropped Figures are not adjusted for
in the amoun,t of $00 received from
thellstwhenthe manutacturer seasenal variations,.
·
· te nnis .lessons. Beritleynlported that · t~e decline._The pr ice of c nopped ·
chuck, pork chops and ·. ·a ll-beef · r=;;;:::.:.:;::..:;.::.::::;.::::::,::::::.::::::~.:::_:::._,...::~:::::.::::..:=~::_...;....,.:._:__:...
a tennis tournament w1ll be held
frankfurters went down In six of the
June 24, 25 and 26 with a portion of
13 survey cities.
tne proceeds going to the Cancer
The total market basket bUI fell a t
Society.
the checklist store in seven cities and
Jack Williams agreed to obtain
rose in six others. The average
specltlcations for painting of the
decreao;e was 1.8 percent, while the
Murilcipai Building.
average Increase was 1. 7 percent.
George Holman, pool manager.
9:30-5:00
Detergent increased in price in
reported that gravel was needed on
more cities - seven - than any
the pool parking lot and dirt to lUI
other
Item, while mllk prices were
holes below the pool.
the most stable, cllmbing in only one
city and remaining unchanged In a
2 lamps
dozen others.
2 end tables
Since January, grocery prices
I coffee table
1 coucll
nave only risen a litt le m ore than
t c ~a l r
Roof sermon challenge
two-tenths of 1 percent, according to
the survey.
Many know about the sermon on
Comparing prices today with
the mount. However, the sermon on
those at the start of the year, the AP ~r;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
the rooftop Is a new approach. The
found that during the ttrst five I
Rev. Thomas H. Collie r, pastor of
monthsof1983themarketbasketblll
the First Churcn of the Nazarene,
rose at thecheckllststoreLnsixrities
.
.
Racine, has challe nged the congre- up an average of 4 percent .J.. and
gation to break the Sunday School
decreased in seven others - down '
attendance of 8.~ last Sunday. If the
a n average of 2.9 percent.
attendance figure Increases, the
The Agriculture Department had
Rev. Mr. Coillervows hew!! Ipreach
predicted earlier in the year that
·his morning servIce from the roof
food price Increases during 1983
top of thectlu rcn.
would be relatively small, somewhere between 2 percent and 4
.Promotes Bible school
percent.
The AP survey is based on a list of
The Bradford Church of Christ
14 food and non-food items pticed at
lollipop dragon will be ma king
one supermarket in each of the 13
appea ra nces In Middleport and
cities on March 1. 1973 and
Pomeroy Sarurday distributing lolrechecked on or about ll!e s tart of
lIpops and booklets promoting Bible
each month.
school, June 6 to June 10.
The Items on the AP c hecklist
From 9:30 to 11 a.m., the cartoon
were: chopped c huck. center cut
c tlaracterwill be on the s treetsofthe
two villages and from 11 to12noonat
the Middleport Book Store. In the
event of rain, the dragon wUI be at
the book store the e ntire morning.
399 W. Main
992 -2164
Pomeroy. Ohio

CORRECTION

Happenings around Meigs County
Veterans Memorial

Council medS Monday

Admitted --Lulu Russell, Pomeroy; Brenda Pugh, Long Bottom;
Betty Reed, Pomeroy; Evela na
Pauley, Portland; Harold Hu bbard
Mlddlepol1.; .John McDan iel, Clif:
ton, W. Va .
Discharged --Don Wood, John
Mulford. Keith MusSPr, Homer
Bradshaw. Scottie Ford, Randy
Cowdery, Juanita Spencer.

Racine VIllage Council wUI meet
Monday, .June6. at 7 p.m.
The thtrd reading of an ordinance
aU thorizing a $3 per m onth increase
In the service charge for the Racine
Gas Company Is scheduled. Resident s are urged to attend.
The Racine Board of Publlc
Affairs will also meet Monday at
6:30p.m. The meet ing L• open to the
public.

'

.

Emerge ncy runs

'f\vo calls wPre answered by loca l
units, thl' Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports . At 2: 38
p.m . the Racine Squad took Evale ne
p,~ ulry from Sellers Ridgez to
Vetera ns MPmorlal Hospit-a l. At
midnight, the Pomeroy Unit wen t to
the Wolf Pen Road for Phillip Ca lls
and SIPve Ca ll who were Injured In
a n au to accident. They were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Film ·series slated
The tum ser ies focusing on the
family will be concluded at 7 p.m .
Sunday at thP Racine First Baptist
Chu reh.
Two lllms will be shown dealing
with tne topic, "Wha t Wives Wish
Their Husbands ·K new About
Women." The publle is Inv ited.

lnvL&gt;Stigate

bn~akins

The Meigs County ShPrl(['s Department Is investigating· three
weekend brea king a nd enterlngs.
One occur red at Dobbins Store
St JversvWe, ~ trailer owned by
fu&gt;nald Collins. Rutland, and a t the
E ugene Calvin pl'Operty at Rt. 1.
Ewln!(ton . No other information Is
being released a t this time .

Plan tennis lessons
Tennis lessons will be offered at
the Syracuse Tennis Courts beginning Monday, June 6, J ohn Bentley
announced today.
The lessons wUI be from8a .m . to9
a .m . for cl)lldren and from 9 a.m . to
10 a .m . for adult beginners. Lessons
will be held on Monday a nd
Wednesday lor ttlree weeks .
Cost of the lessons will be $12. To
rL'gister for the classes persons arc
tocall 99'l-7351.

Bible school plannL&gt;d

SWI MWEAR s· ALE

WEEK-END SALE PRICES ON QUALITY
SWIMWEAR FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
"Men's, boys' and little boys' trunks.
"Women's, juniors' and girls' suits.

~.

Purina Dealer

Vaca tion Bible School will IX' held
at the Dexter Churc h of Christ
Monday. Junr 6, throug h June 10,
fi·om 9a.m . toll: 30a.m. dally .
i\ picnic will be ne ld on Friday,
June 10. a nd the closing program
will be he ld on Sunday. June 12. at
10: .JJa.m.

MODERN SU

Y

THE STORE WITH " All KINOS OF STUFF" - FOR PETS. STABLES, LARGE
&amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS .

We,ther forecasl
Seyenty percent chance Of showers aqd thunderstorms tonigtlt. Low

REBATE OFFER!

Beginning Mon!!_a,Y the Middleport Pollee Department will issue
ell allons for court appearances to resident s who are allowing yards
to grow uncontrollably. Some property owners have moved from the
town a nd have not made arrapgements to have yards a nd fields
mowed. Violators wUI be cited, pollee warn. ·

,I

-

_or
l~s.Winds
Cloudy
Saturday with
a 50
55-60.
southwesterly
10 mpn
perc~pt chance of showers. High In
the 11\!d-'IUs.
ptended Ohio Forecast

=~~;':!' period.

IDA In the»!. LoWII moetb' In the
~~&amp;.

Buy two 50·lb. bllQS,
gel one 50-lb, llag·free

REST A

Ph . 304-8715-8278
Pt. Pleeaant
8 Mltoo fn&gt;m Pomoroy Bridge . .
HOURS : Mon .-Sat. Open at 15. Sun. 11 a .m . to 2 p .m .
~·Only

1

Peaa &amp; Onions,
Hot Roll 8a a-ega ... ... Only 13.96
ft~~~Th~i~a~S~und~e~y~:
D~ee~p~F~ri~ied~C~h~ick~an~.~M~a~lhad§~Po~ta~toa~
~a.~~

............... -REFUND MAIL-IN 'FORM-11••ii"llf•-·•·
•

•
•

GET READY REGATTA FESTIVAL
HERE COMES THE

Rutland Civic Center

:
7-9
1.00
Private &amp; Class Lessons

DR

To .recerve your coupon for a free 50-tb bag of Layena• brand laying
rat.on or 50-lb. bag ot Field ·n Farm• bra nd-dog meal or 20-tb. bag
?.' Cat Chow•brand cat food . send tht s cer tlf• ca t9 along With two weight
) crrcles from the above named product o f your c hoice same size on ly 10 .

"GOOD AS GOLo ·· OFFER

p0 8

.

. . ox t~342 , Bettevttte. ll 62224

Name

•

NG CORPS"
,....

FOR ADDITIONAL

•.

•

a-s·. 3-6 Slturdays2
30

PARADE CORPS
DANCE lWIRL
AEROBIC &amp;
JA11. DANCING

get one 50-lb. bag free

Buy two 20·1b. bags,
get one 20·1b. bag free

To take advantage of this offer, follow requirements on certificate.

(FORMERLY BRIAN'S 'STEAK HOUSE)

"SJYLffiES

"----

Buy·two 50-lb. bags,

-

•

Ill

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

City

•

State

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.
.

,

.

Vottl Wile!!

ont~ m us

-

~

II Sectiont, b4 Pages 35 Centt
A Multim•Oia Inc. Newspaper

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

•

up In Gallia, down in Meigs

fell by nearly a full percent between March and AprU.
OBES figures show 19.3 percent (2,355) or that
county's labor force of 12,216 without jobs in AprU ..The
Meigs County jobless rate for March stood at 20.2
percent.
Regionally. Gail !a County registered the only
increase In unemployment , with .all surrounding
counties reporting a decline in the jobless rate. OBES
figures for Aprll unemployment percentages Ln
neighboring count ies (March figures In parenthesis)
are: Lawrence, 13.8 (16.7); Jackson, 19.6 (20.71;
Vinton, 18.2 (19.4),; and. Meigs, 19.3 (20.2).
According to bureau statistics, the stateWide
jobless _rate for Aptil was the lowes.t one--month total .

so far-this year. Ohio's unemployment rate for March
st~

at 13.7 percent. That figure fell to 12.8 percent In

April.
Newly unemployed workers in Ohio filing initial
claims for benefits under the Ohio Unemployment
Compensation Law during the week e nding May 28
totaled 3:1,954, dropping 1.1 percent below the
preceding week's total of 2l.l92. according to a
statem ent released Saturday by Dr . Roberta
Steinbacher, OBES administrator.
Continued claims of those Ohlans unemployed on&lt;'
or more weeks were estima ted at 309,7(li last week. a
12.7 percent decline from the previous week's tota l of
354,586.
.

An estimated :148.331 claims fo r un~mploymrnt
compensation we re reportt'&lt;l in Otlio last We&lt;'k under
all federal and staw programs. dcx·rcaslng 1~ . !l
percent from the 409,!m total for the weekending Mav
21.
Across the nation, the clvtlian un!'mploy ment rat&lt;'
edged down to 10.1 JX'rcent in May - lhr third
consecutive monthJy decline. thP govf'1·nment
reported Ftidav.
The national jobless ra !C' was 0.1 pf•rrpntagt• point

below the April Irvrl ancl was thf' bf'st monthly job
mar kPt shoodng s in('(' thr na tio n rpgistP!vd a fl . ~l
JX'rCf'nt unemployment rat0 last i\ugusl.

Citizens to petition ·
·for better inspection

con~tructto n

A. BETI'ER JOB ~ John Peyser of Southell81em Ohio Residents
i\ssoclatlon looks over a brine pit at a gas drilling site In Meigs County.
The association Is going to Columbus this week to press Its case for
Increased funding for inspection of oU IIJld gas drUUng sites in Ohio.

By bVIN KElLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY -A citizen' s group
will apJX'ar before a s tate legislative
com m ittee this w!'&lt;'k to present its
case for bet1er enforcement a nd
Inspect Ion of oil and gas drUilng
sites.
A petition bearing close to 1.000
signatu res from Athen s, Meigs,
Vinton a nd Ga U!a count les wUI lx•
given to the House Natu ral Resources Committee Wednesday.
Another copy will IX' handdelivered the sann~ day to Sen.
Eugene Branstool. D-Ullea, chair·
man of the Senate comrnl!tee
watching Ohio's na tu ra l resources .
Copies will also' be given to the
' district's legislators, S..n . Oakley
Collins. R-lronton, and Rep . .Jolynn
Boster. D-Ga lllpolls.
The purpose of the petit ion, plus
testimony to be presented by the
Southeastern Ohio Residen ts Association, is to urge passagl' of Gov
Richard Celeste's la test budget
proposal calling for increased
money and man power overseeing
oil a nd gas drU!ing operations.
John Peyser. a local assoc ia tion
spokesman, sa id the governor's
proposal. calling tor a 62 JX'rccnt
increase in spendlni( for the Ohio
Department of Narural Resources·

oU and gas division. is lli lin~ with th~
assa&lt;·Jatlon 's propoSIXl inerras&lt;' of
:)~percent .

ODNR has es timated a sta te
inspector spends 14 hours looking al
one well site to S('(' if a ll is opera tin~
properly, cons! ltuting two or thn'&lt;'
trips to the site.
In 1982 , ODNR said 261 wells WL' n '
drilled in Meigs and Ga lli a count lcs.

nwa nlng om• in sJX'&lt;·tor fllr tlw .1rpa
could ~pr•nct :ul:l'l man hours
t'Xatnining al l of tht•n1.
The associatio n' s rn;1in C'IH\L't'r·n is
a iPrting thf' sl01l1 ' ancl 1Juh\!c to

lmprol)('r pra ct IC'P!-."" US~:'(t by som e
c\rUif'rS, part icu larl~' in wa s tt~ dis Jn -

sa l antl restora llon of the land u"'d.
Pt•ySf'r said .
· (Co ni inur'(l un I \ .tgt• A

OBES plans reissue
of lost benefit checks
GALLIPOLIS - i\ plan to issu&lt;'
ben&lt;'fl t c hecks to 4,(0) Ohioans
whose unemployment comPf'nsation was los! in last Wt'&lt;'k's mall Is
scheduled to take effect Monday.
'The Oh io Bu n&gt;a u of Employment
Servlcessa ld checkswli!IX'Issu&lt;'d !o
claimants afte•: local' OBES otflc&lt;'s
In !he area• affectf'd . Including
Ga llipolis , Pnl&lt;;r J.l&lt;•rtln&lt;•nt i n form:~
lion on tr mporaty pay a uthorli.at ion
cards .
Th~ plan r('(]ulrrs th&lt;' 14 local
otf!C!'s afff'Cted to n&gt;&lt;:onstt·uct th&lt;'

ma il Oy n:'V icw l.ng thf\ir pcmJan1•nt
fii&lt;'S a nd pnter lng th&lt;• Information
ror missing claims on tf'mpnra ry
a uthorization canl,. '111e ca r~s will

Ill • prOL''SSC!t us ing onlv loeal offil'l·
records .
Cla imant s

an' not

I'Pq uin'&lt;l to

co ntact ti[(•i r loe;,l uffh•·s . om:&gt;.;
said .
.
.
Cia !Ins rr,: dn'( l in t hP Colum bu s
ct•ntral offi Ci ' w ill lx' pnX'i'ss,'fl
ov t•rnight, said Dr. Hubt•rta Stl'inb·

m·hN. 01'11-:S admin istrator. ()JWS
Pst im;tii 'S it v.:! II I akt •;I( I huurs for Jt s
d;t!a p rtK'('Ss lng sr·r tkm to cnrTt'( '!
t tu • v m blt •m en •a 1{ d lJy 11u • l11~ 11n:ttl.
0111 -:S nfficl al s h:t vt· ;J!ld" i thP
Columbus No r1l1 offil't' 1o th(• li~ t of
locations rPp011ing missin g mall.
A n additional l ~l() Fr~utklln ( 'ou nt y
rf's idt •nl s t ·ot 1ld I"N' ' a f1't'( '! f'fl.

Under a budget approved In May
by tne trl-county 648 board - the
administrative agency which fun nels money to service providers the menta Ihealth center wUI recf'iVP
$1.997,937 In fiscal year 1984, which
begins J uly 1. This Is $337,107 less
than it received in 1983.
"The cut means we're not go-ing to

be able to deliver a bout $.l:Xl,OOO
worth of services, " Niehm sa id.
Because of the funding cuts, the
center wUI have to lay off eight to 10
employees. Niehm said .
Most will be support personnel, he
said, but some may be direct serv ice
workers.
Also. several employees who left

thr center have not been n•placed.
Nlehm said .
For the center's clients, thP
funding cutback means thry wil l
pay more tor services. according to
the director. Less of the cost will be
subsidized by the state and federal
governments.
" The real concern Is the c lic"nts

will have to pay for the tot:~ !
S!'rvicl's ... Nlc hm said . "Yl'l l1ow
can ! hf' indlgPnt or unemploy"l do
tha t? They hav~ nothing to pay ."
What makes tnesltuatlo ncrlt ical.
accorrding to to Nlf'hm . Is tlu•sr·
groups (·omprise most of thr
cpnt er's cllrnt s. According to a
survey taken betwf'f'n May 198'.!and

May l~IKI. 7;l l)( 'ITf'nl. of lh1 • 1hu!-.t'
rPl1Ul's1inJ.: s('rv ict •s 11 1 1hf' t'f'ntPr
Wf'rf' ind\gPnl or uw •m ployf'd .

In

!Pspon sP

to th&lt;'

fundin g

prn blr rns. the f~lH boa rd ciPcidl'(ll o -

f' mphas lze scrv lt'!'S for thosf' c ur
rPntly Inn!«&lt; ra thr•r than S J.l''n~fng
mon0y on preve n t ivf' !-iCIVicf's.

;Corti ilm&lt;'&lt;i onl'ag&lt;• i\-o 1

VINTON- A potentially dangerous situation was
neutralized near here Frlday as a member of the
Franklin County Sheriff's Department Bomb Squad
detonated several sticks of old , deteriora ting
dynamite.
Gailta County deputies were notified earner tnis
week of the presence of nearly a full case of the
explosive inside a sma ll block building on propertylocated on Wes Denney Rd .. one-halt m Ue off
Thompson Rd. - owned by Harold Pauley . The
explosive had reportedly been left there by a previous

owner.
On Friday, Fra nklin County bomb technician
George Nance joined Gallla investigator Capt. Carl
Langford in an examination of the situation.
Approximately 50 to 60 sticks of aged dynamite
were fO\lnd in a frayed, plasUc-lined cardboard box
inside the concrete block building. Four additional
sticks were diScovered lodged in openings between
the blocks of the structure.
Most of the sticks had partially collapsed, with
Jraces of nit_!Oglycertn crystalltzed on the wrappers.

Nance speculated that most of the 'n itro' had seeped
from the sticks of dynamite ~ nd lay at the bottom of
the plastic-lined box .
The bomb technician labeled th0 disintegrating
dynamite as "highly unstable."
"I'd rather defuse a homemade bomb than work
with this stuff," Nance sa id.
"Witt! this old dynamite," he added. "you don't
know wtlat It 'll do."
The bomb technician had originally planned to
move the m aterial - outside the structure for

de tonation. Due to the JX'I'Cclvf'd Insta bilit y of tilt•
dynamite; however, he askf'd - a nd rPcelvJ'd JX'rmlsslon from the owner to Pxplod&lt;' thp substanc"
Inside the a bandoned bull\llng.
Nance chemically constructed two fresh stic k&gt; of
dynamite to explode and bum th(' oldrr s tic ks .
The resulting explosion shook thC' concrete' block
building, tearing out m ost of struc ture's ceiling. Th&lt;•
deteriora ting dynamlt f was destroyt'd .
"The blast wasn't near ly as bad as It could have
been," Nance said.
·

•
•

roh•Otl~ meo 01

ICSIIIC!etl Gooct
APOs Of FPO s Allow 4 to 6 •

weeks lor stupmertt ZI(J cooe m~stlle lnclu~ IC
Ooe '"tam''' aoooss • .,, ~
~Q.'IIlttal1on Th1s certlf•cate most accomiJinr 10W

'""' " "'""'

•

r~uest CcJtues reproouc:ttDnS 01 !ICStlniles w1n
oot lie acceptOO Do not sta!)te gtue Of taoe tfle
ntgllt Crtctes tc aentlitilte

•

0FF£R UPIRES JULY t&amp;, 1983

•

•

11011 •
C&gt; Ralston Puma Cllmoa111 19113 iii:IJI, •
21i0M 160

Zip

:1\

..--De-fusing a potentially explosive situatiOn:--

Cat
QKM,

At . 62

-

HUD· project '
bid $300,000
over budget

By JEFF GRABI\IElER
Tlrnes-&amp;ntlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The poor and
unemployed wUI be hurt most by
federal and state cuts in ment~ I
health funds, according to Dr.
Bernard Niehm , director of the
Gallla-.Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Heallh Center.

ON OUR

Free cancer clinic
A free cancer clinic t for pap and
breastl wUI be held June 9, a t the
MeigJ County Health Department
trom 1 p.m. to 5 p.m . Persons
wishtpgtomakeanappointmentare
to cau 992-6601.

tmes

'Cuts will hurt poor' - mental health officials

BUY TWO, GET ONE FREE!

.High grass warning issued

·

Middleport-P!"11ervy-Gallipolis-Point Pleo1ant Sunday, June 5, 1983

By LARRY EWING
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - WhUe the unemployment rate
across the state - and throughout the irrunediate
area- declined in AprU, the number of jobless Gallia
countlans Increased one-half of one percent over the
Mar~h flgure.
According to labor force estimates released
Saturday by the Ohio Burea'\ of Employme nt
Services, 2.001 of Gallia County's civilian labor force
of 15,268 were jobless during April. That 17.1 percent
unemployment rate for April compares to a March
figure of 16.6 percent.
In Me)gs County, however. the unemployment r~te

POMEROY Low bid for
of a 46-unit elde rly
housing complex on Mulberry
Heights In Pomeroy to be funded by
HUD was $3Xl,000over the construction budget of $1.6 million .
Richard Jones, president of the
Meigs Elderly Housing Corporation, reported that the low bidder
was Karr Construction, Chester,
with a bid of $1.967,m. The only
other bid s ubmii!Erl was from King
Construction, Jackson, in the
·amoljJJ.I-qf $2,010,000.
Tile corporation m et last week
wlth Its architect aqd consultants,
and Jones said that withln the next
week another meeting '\flll be held to
determine what course of actlon .to .
follow . He said thai in a li probability
the project will be res ubmitted for
bid. This, Jones said, should only
delay the start of work some 30to45
days.
The complex will incorporate a
new brick structure with the old
ct!Udren's home. Each floor w ill
have a covered walkway extending
from one building to theot her and an
elevator will be installed in the new
section to entirely elimina te the
necessity for the elderly and ~
handicapped residents to negotia te
stairs.
Plans also include a covered
walkway between the housing
· complex and the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center.

0

•

Une~ployment:
PORCH - ThJs nostalgic front porch trom
another era has been created as the bandstand as ,.

-

Stories on Page D-1

un:ba

Syracuse council may ban trailers
!Continued from page 1!
work done In the village, such as
It was report!'d repair Is needed raising or manhole covers and
on .Chu rch Streel. Tbe street was '. repalrlttganydamagecausedlJYthe
disturbed by Syracuse Home UtUies · sewage system to name a few .
In laying a gas. line. The gas
Mayor Pickens reported tha t the
company will be contacted regard- grant for the Marina has been
ing repair of the street.
approved on the federal level.
Council dL~cussed purchasing
Mlck Ash will be In charge of
street signs for the main tllghway repair to a drain near the Margaret
a nd village s tn.'ets
Cottrill res idence.
Counc il decided ttlat the
Willie Guinther discussed a proSyracuse-Racine Regional Sewage posed sldf'Walk from the school
Dlst !ict L• rosponslble for any and a ll
building to Main Street (SR 12&lt;1) .

.

'

Alollg the River ............... 8--NI
·Area deaths ...................... A·7

Five people hurt in accidents
Five inj uries we re re ported by the
Gallia-Meigs post of the state
highway pa trol in separate accidents investigated Thursday ni ght.
Two me n were treated and
released from Vewrans Me morial
Hospita l following a two-car crash
on Ohio 7 at 10:30 p.m .
The patrol sa id Steven K . Call , 20,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was south bound
w~en he reportedly passed another
vehicle driven by P hlllp D . Ca ll , 2:!,
210Spr1ng Ave., Pomeroy .

-Ai!:ae&lt;tsanada jet ~r~sh probe continues
!!?1!At:vaits F.arm.~ continue growth
Local primary election preview

•••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••;
.

CAU (304) 675-1999

RIGISTI ON SATURDAY

IOUIId; Nuce rtmO\II!II 000 Or lbe Ulllltablesllcks- CO\Iered wlthtry'lt.Ohed nitroglycerin - from thc
......,.. .... ~-..,; llcmbTechnlclan N.we place8 a tw~k charge of dynamltewlththeolder
nWerlillllltl Ml'tl¥ from lhe lfle; as lbe detonation lnlllde the buDdlnJJ explodes and bu!"'li the
~milterllll. (T.S l'lloto. by Larry ~g)

Dl'NAMJI'E ~TROYED- On Friday, a l"ranndm Coullty bombtedwJclan aided GalllaCo!mty
oftlelallllllbe deiUucdon or nearly a full C8! of qed,~ ~~ynam~~e dllcoverecl In a block
hllldJn&amp; VIIIIGD. Pldwed from left to JiAN: bomb ·~ G-. Nuce and Capt carl
Lan&amp;ford of lbe Galla Coun&amp;r Sberllf's Deparimen&amp; examine the ltUuclun Ill whleh ll!e exploelve was

----~----~---------I
i

l'

t .

�Pan~e~~~y-Middleport-Gallipolis,

June 5' 1983

~---~eather~~- ------------------~

CofD:mentary and perspec

Ohio agricultural advisory

June 5, 1983

By Tbe A88001eted Press
Drying will be under w ay, and some sunshine should be bac k for all
or Ohio Sunday.
Evaporative losses w111 be near twO-tenths of an Inch Saturday and
near a quarter -Inch Sunday. 'nils will bring some central •and
northern fields back to working condition. butmuchofsoulhern third
of the slate will still be too moist going Into next Week.
, Haying will be margtnal for southern areas, with some wefflng
rlsk Indicated for the e arly part of next week. Drying will a lso be
slOw, with humidity levels !tOlng back up the first of the week. Some
success may be po.ssible fffi' northern areas with cuts made today,
but the cure out rate will be slow.
Some blue mold activity In tobacco plant beds have been reported
In states to the south . Growers are u rged to keep watch on untreated
tobacco beds for any development from blue m old spores arriving
during periods of south-to-southeast winds and moist overcast
conditions.

What electiOnS are~======J=am=es=·=J.=K=ilpa=_=tr,lC±· ::·~
~m~

WASHINGTON- The president
'a nnounced on May 25 tha t he
· intended to replace ttiree members
of the U.S. Commission on Civil
Right s wi th nominees of his own
c hoosing. Within 24 hours the liberal
pack was in fu ll cry.
"A bad !urn, " said Speake r
O'Neil L " A pu rge," said the acting
execulive director of t he NAACP .
"A perversion of !he independence
of the co mmission ," said one of the
ousted me mbers. "A disgraceful
a nd bla ta nt move to stack the
commi ssion," sa id a columnist In
The Washington Post.
The quotation that prompts me to
com ment came from Ra bbi Mur.·

A Division of

A~

r""r"--' \ ---r - 1,...........;;e d l 'F ==I

~v

Ill Court St .. Pn meroy, Ohin

825 Third Ave .. Ga llipolis, Oh io
1614 ' 446-2342

1614 ' 992·2156--

.

.

ROilF: HT!.. Wl NfiF:r r
PubiJshl•r

PAT WHITEHEA D

HOB/\ RT Wl i.&lt;;ON J R.

Ass J st~n l Pu b! JSil •·r'-Cunl n lit ,.,

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i ..;SU. ''· IHII Jll'f, OIII:I i tl l l ' '

ray Saltzman of Baltimore, another
of the departing commissioners. He
termed the preside nt's action "a
really unprecedented Invasion of
the Integrity of the commission"
because or "the assumption iha t,the
commission should reflect the
political Ideology of !he president ."
In the name of the founding
fat hers, what on earth Is wrong with
that assumption• I venture the ·
thought, based upon 40 years of
covering politics,. that that Is what
elections are a ll a bout Why do we
elect a president, except to have
him organize a governm ent tha t
reflects the philosophy he has
espousr:'(f?

The Civil Rights Com mission Is
no m ore sacrosanct and untouchable than any other Independe nt
agency of the government A
pres idential administration - any
administration - has both a right
and a n obligation to " pack" these
agencies or "stack" them . In the
pejorative verbs, In line with
administra tion policies.
This Is how the system works . It L•
Indeed the only way lt ca~ work. A
pres ident Is not some exa lted city
manager, char ged with na ming
technicians to !'!In the water works.
A preslden t Is expected to have
Ideas, policies. points- of view.
Jimmy Carter named Mic hael

Hardly a mention
of the issue
A wh ilr !Jack, Prr, idr· nl Reagan ra isr:'(f lh&lt;' roof over I-iouse rejcclion of a
constilutiona l amc ndmrnl for balanced fedc&gt;ral budgc&gt;ts. Bul when he a nd
Congress rais&lt;'d !he na l ional de bt limil to $L189 1!i llion. the re was hardly a
mf'ntion of the issue.

:r11e nf'w limi t is r•x p&lt; •c!('[l Ia r·ov pr governmenl borrowing 10 Scp!. 30.
El&lt;'forr' the n. by r un·r nl rslimales. Reagan wil l have to ask for a nothe r $53
bill ion boos! Ia covPr lhr• deb! Ia !he end of !he year.
ll' ~ex per l &lt;'d to.ta ke a n additional $176billion to k&lt;'Pp lhr limil in lincwilh
-the dd id t lh rough the firs! ni ne mont h' uf 19&amp;1 - tile pres ldenlia l
cam paign season ..
A budgrl dr fici l tha i is projected lo r un lo !he $~ billion ra nge is a
cent ral l'5ur• in !he conlin ulng d isput e belwecn lht' administra tion a nd
Con,L,rr ess 0V(1 r spendirl g and tax0s.
II balanc&lt;'d budge! am e ndme nt for which he lobbied in 1he las! sess ion of

CongrPss would havr ta ke n eft ret lwo yea rs aft e r ra tifica tion by the sla tes,
and would havl'rt"(Ju ir Pd Ihre&lt;'-fift hs votes of HouSf' a nd Sena te lo approve
deficit Spt'nding f' xcc pt in war! ime .
Till' df'bl limi l camP Ia a &amp;•na lt• vole with !he Treasury aboul ia bum p
againsl fhe old ceiling, und run oul of money Ia n na ncP the govf'rn mcnt . A
sta ll wou ld havr led Ia I h&lt;' ri sk !ha l govern m en! opera tions would romP to a
ha ll u ntil !he bil l was passed.
Reagan signed the bill withoul comm pn l.
· The on ly men lion of lhP balanc&lt;'d budgC't am cnclme nl came from a
Democra tic Sl'na lor who voted aga inst II. " Thai has gone absolu!ely down
t6e dra in, " sa id Sen. Donald W. Riegle .J r. of Michigan .
'1111' Scn alt' a pprovrd il by ;J two-volt' m argi n las! summer, bu t It
foundered in 1he House, 46 voles short of the two-third s majority required
for a pproval of constitutiona l a m endments.
WASHINGTON - Thf' sketchy
rc w reJX&gt;rfs thC' America n public
Tha t wa• li !I IP ma r&lt;' !han a month before the congressiona l eleclions.
· ~vot ers across Am e rica should cou nt heads a nd la kP naml's ," Reaga n
gels from Afg hanista n a re often
sal&lt;1 , decla ring tha t the fight would conlinue.
cont,·adictory: T he Soviets are
v•in nlng, or the Soviets a re losing;
Since !hal time h('s had a lot to say aboul defl cils, butlittlc to say a bout
Afgha n morale Is c rum bling, or
the a m endmen I.
The House approved !he de bt llmlt bill by voice vo•e, with only about a
Afgha n resista nce Is spr~adin g .
do7.Rn mPmhl'rs on tht' floor- a da y af!er Reagan accusr:'(f congressiona l
But whal Is Presidf'nl Reaga n
" defi cit doclors" of pla nning su rgery on Ame rica n wa llets with e xcessive ,I being raid aboul the s ltua llon - the
spending. House Democra tic lradf'rs sa id !he dr bl bi ll wouldn't ha vr
sa me confusin g jumhle of specula passr:'(f lf !herr had tx&gt;f'n a roll -call voiP.
' io n, lhlrd -ha nd g oss ip a n d
poll! lea ll y-lnspired p t·o paga nd a ?
· While !here's ~n no push on !he ba lancf'd budget a mendme nt this yrar ,
Hard
ly .
It has n't va nished . Hep. Ba rber Cona ble , R-N .Y., said he 's ga thering
co-sponsors for anothPr a llempl 10 ge t I! adopted, Irs! the sta les ta ke thP
F rom spy-sar cllltc surveilla ncr
Issue from Congress wllh a conslltullonal convention.
arou nd !he clock, huma n intell iWhile Congress ra lsn l lhP dPbl llm it , lhP ·Missourl Legislatu re wa s
gence agents Opt'ra ling tnslde
a pproving a resolu llon st'&lt;'klng a convr nlion to cons ldr r the a mendmenl.
Afgha nista n an d re ports by pmfesTha t madl' Missouri lh&lt;' :12nd sia l&lt;' to do so, a nd II only takes .14 10 ca ll a
slona l a nalysts in our embass ies in
convention.
.
the a rea, Hona ld Reaga n ha s
"W&lt;' shou ld dea l w ll h lhP issuP hPr!'ralhPr !han lm v lng it 10 1hP possibiP
acc Pss to th12 bPs t inform ation .
caprice of a conslltuliona l r onvr ntion," c'ona biP said .
ava ila ble !his sldP of thP Kre mlin .
c
nlike his predecesso r, he is not

,

P ertschuk, a dedicated liberal, .to
se..Ve as chairman of the Federal
Trade Commission. Ronald Reagan replaced Pertschuk with Jim
Mlller, a dedicated conservative.
This was no Invasion of the Integrity
a nd Independence of the FTC. Thjs
was political acl!on within the rules
·
of the game .
To contend tha t " civil rtghl$"
somehow are above politics Is
nonsense. The act creatjng !he
commission wa~ a political act Tiie
Voting Rights Act was a political
act The statutes tha t . requiTe
minority set-asides on ' federa l
contracts are polll!cal acts. And on ,
political acts ,- reasonably minded
m en have every rtght to disagree.
The three Reagan nominees, all
liberal Democrats , reportedly oppose racial quotas. They have
reservations about racial balance
busing a nd affirma tive action. How
can these poslllons properly be
termed "d isgraceful•" They are In
fa ct quite sound positions. Racial
quotas, racial bala nce busing ar(d
affirmative action are as unjust an~
un-American as - as what? - as
the laws of the old South on school
segregation. To bus little children
pas t their ne ighborhood schools ,
solely because of the color of their
skins , is a manifestation of racism .
To base hiring and prom 0Uon on
fixed r acial Quotas IS also ·a
m anifestation of racism . Dlscrimi·
nation by a ny euphemistic name Is
- disc rimination. Ills a violation of
civ il rights.
It is sometimes acknowledged by
my liberal frie nds that, yes, quotas
a nd busin g are discriminatory, b~t
it is said that discrtmlna tlon of the
past can be remedied only by
discrimina tion for some Indete rmina te future period. Constitutional
law is said to demand this. But
there is an older law that says two
wrongs cannot make a right

A match for SovietaS=======J=ac=k=An=d=er=so=n

Berry's World

going to be surprised by a ny 1
developme nts In Afg hanista n.
My associa te Lucette Lagnado
has seen classified ca bles to the
Sta te Departme nt that represent
the best estima te our di plomats and
Intelligence experts have made on
the situa l!on three-arid-a-ha lf yea rs
afte r Soviet troops rolled ac ross the
border. Here's wha t President
Reagan a nd his lop po(lcy -ma ke rs
ha ve been told by the elbierts In the
field;
"The situa tion ... chn be besl
desc ribed as a sta ndoff," one
sumina ry conclude s. "w ith pa ra meters dpfined by.the Ina bility of
the Muja hldeen to force the Soviets
out of Afghanista n a nd Moscow's
fa ll ~ re · to c rus h the resis ta nce ...
SoviPI ma stery over the Afghan
people m us t st ill be conside red as a

r

I was having lunc h in one of my

White House doesn't wan! to hear. "
"Well, If you te ll the preside nt
wi th a dl ploma llc corrcsponde nl
something he doesn't want to hea r
from Foggy Bottom , when th&lt;:
you deserve Ia be fired ."
Assistan t Secreta ry of State for
" I would n't be too ha rsh on Too
! nlf'r-1\m Prican Affa irs wa lked i n.
Ta ll," my fr iend sa id . "In a nyb"T hPr&lt;''s 'Too Ta ll Tom my End,
ody' s boOk bur Bill Cla rk's and U.N.
·
crs,' .. I sa id.
Am bassad or .Jea ne Kirk palrick' s,
"Don 't lalk to him ," the dlplohe'd stlll be conside red a ha rd-lfne r
malic cmTcspondl'nl sa id Ia me .
on Central America . Bul If you so
" Wh y not? "
m uc h as me ntion a peaceful
" He's soft on Castroism ," was the
solution as an alle rna tive to the two
rf'ply.
of them , they go up !hP waiL "
" You' ve (!Ot 10 be kidding'? Too
" Wha t has the a mbassador lo the
Ta ll Tom my Is one of !he ha rdesl of . U.N. got to do wll h Cent ral
A mer ica?''
!he ha rd-line rs In !he State
Depat·tment. "
" A lot m ore than Secretary of
" He lsn'l hard-line enough for the
State George Shultz. Mrs . KirkpaWhile House. T hey've just given
trick Is the only ha rd-Uner In the
him the boo!, bec ause he was
administra tion tha i Cla rk a nd the
loaklng for a dlploma llc solution lo
preside nt liste n to. The rumor Is .
the civil war in E l Salvador."
tha t she really got Ucked off when
" Wha l lhl' hell was he trying to do

•

"

"Senator. I'm llere as ll single-issue lobbyist to
enlist your help in o ur crusade against
cellulite. "

tha i for?"

Today in history

•

Today Ls Su nday . J une 5, the l :il&gt;th day of 1983. The re arc 200 days left In
the year .
Today's hlghl lghlln history: On J une;,, 1968, Sen. Robert Kennedy was
s hot In Los Angeles afte r· claiming victory In the Ca lifornia presidentia l
primary . He died the next day .
·
On this date:
In 1917, more than nine million American men registered for the draft In
Worl~ War L
lo 1940, the Battle of France began du ring World War II.
In }947. Secreta ry of Sta te George Marsha ll gave a speech at Harva rd
UnlvEJrslty outlining a program of aid for E urope tha t -would come to be
kno~r as the Ma r sha ll P lan .
~' · In 1967, The Six-Day Wa r betWeen Israel and Its Ara b nelghl:i:&gt;rs
began.
Te r1 years ago: F ighting continued In South VIe tnam and Cambodia
desp~le effort s to make a cease-fire effective.
.
F ive years ago: Moscow demanded the expulsion J&gt;f two American
gu ldef !rom a U.S. agricultural exhibition ln J he Soviet Union, saying they
wer e sl81lderlng tile Soviet 5t,ate and socia l system.
'-~ .
OnV year ago: &lt;;onqu iSta(jor Clelo galloped throug h the lnu d {o score an
Impressive 14 ~- length win In the Belmont Stakes.
Today's birthday: Newsman Bill Moyers Is 49.
Thought for today: "We have lwo ears and only one tongue In order that
we hear more and speak less." - Dlogenes, Greek philosopher (about412

B.C.-323 B.C.)

ver y long -t e r m pr oposi ti o n
Indeed."
.
Within the limits of this overa ll
stale mate, however , It Is clear tha t
the doughty Afgha n tribesme n whose a ncestors fought off Invade rs .
from Alexander the Great to the
British Ra j - have managed to
ra ise some welt s on the hide of the
Rus~i a n bear. How· m ucli punishme nt the Soviets will fltld acceptable is known only to the coldblooded
chess players in the Kremlln, but
the increasing sa vage ry of Soviet
mllltary opera tions suggests thai
the guerrilla s are hurting the
Invaders.
The rebel forces have e ven
succeeded In ca rrying- out the
unequal contest Into !he heavily
gua rded streets of the capita l city.
F rom last November to March,

This frustra tion has, understanda bly , had Its effects on the
communist regime's morale. "We
hear tales of growing discouragement a nd defeatism." a cable
notes, clUng sources close to the
regime. "and a spreading sense In
the regime that eve nts are slipping
out of controL "
Sifting all these signs of growing
proble ms, the State Jlepactment 's
analysts have concluded that time
Is on the side of the Afghan
lri besmen . Though the situation ls
militarily a stalema te, the Afghans
have shown they can withstand the
worst the Soviets could throw at
!he m for three-and-a-half years.
One re port said "It Is dlfflcult to
see how the Sovie ts can counte r the
resista nce 's a bility to lay siege to
KabuL "

End of a hard-line;-=r= = ='::::====Ar=tB=uc=h=wa=ld
favorit f' resta ura nt s thf' othe r day

.

" &amp;&gt;a ts me. r m only lclllng you
wha t I know. The story Is tha i he ·
had proposed a two- u·ack po licy
towards Central America . One was
to pu rsue our military objective s In
!he area and the other was· to try
a nd work out so me sort of
negotia tion with the representatives of the gue rrU!as . The second
trac k blew the minds of Reagan's
Security Advisor Willia m Clark a nd
U . N . A mb ass ador J ea n e
Kirkpatric k."
"I should hope so," I said. "Why
would you want to try to negotia te a
settlement In El Salvador when you
can have a great little wa r down

there? "
" I've seen It happen to other State
O&lt;!partment ottlclals. They . start
out beln~ hard-liners and tt&gt;en they
read the cables from our ambassadors a bout the governments we' re
supporting, and suddenly they
decide there has to be a nother
option besides a mllltary one. Too
Tall's problem was ll1at he started
reporting on the realities . of the
situa tion, which Is something the ·

Too Ta II we nt Ia Spa In a nd a sked
the prime m inis te r If he would use
his good offices Ia ease te~slons
between the factions In !he Central
American a rea ."
" How do you know this? "
" Th~ While House lea ked it lo

" I guess he felt wllhou t congressional support , nothing could be
done about El Salvador."
" Didn't he realize when you start
ta lking to Congress on Inte rnational
affairs you're signing your own
d ea th w arra nt wi th thi s
us. "
administra tion?"
"Too Ta ll should have known
" T know It and you know It, but
bett er. If we 're goi ng to stop Castro poor Too Tall lost his moral
from exporting revolution It's going compass. The m a n became conIa have to be done wit h guns and not fusr:'(f between his role as a State
talk."
De pa rtm e nt diploma t and a
" It wasn't j u~ t Too Tall's la ck of membe r of the White House team ."
ha rd-lining that did hi m in . He was
" Wha t will ha ppen to Too Ta ll
also working the Hill trying to get a now•"
consensus from Congress on what
"The rumor Is hp's going to
ou r policy should be there. He even become our next a mbassador to
talked to libera l Jlemocr ats a nd Spain ."
Republicans ."
"He's lucky. If he were In tHe
"Why would he do somethin g U.S.-supported E l Salvadoran g&lt;h
stu pid llke that ?"
vecnme nt they would have ta ken
him out a nd shot him."
:t HOPE SO- WE NEE!:' '11) BE tN
ON nl~ ~ECI~IOM- HI;: MUSi
BE MORE Fl.E~\Sl.E ...

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Wealher Service forecast
for Sunday, June 5, predic ts showe"! mixed with r3in In an area from
Montana and North Dakota through the Great Plains States to the Gulf
of Mexico and eastward through the Southern States to the AUanttc
Ocean. Rain Is forecast for northern Maine. (AP Laserphoto).

Extended Ohio forecast
Monday TIIROUGH WE DNESDA Y - A cha nce of shower s,
m ainly In souther n sections , each day. H ighs In the 7(); Monday and
Tuesday and In the nud-60s to mid-70s Wednesday. Lows inostly in
the 50s.

..

Sunshirt~ on Sunday
By The A.W&gt;Ciated Press
Cloudy skies wUI give way to mostly sunny In the west and partia l
su nshine was expected east by Saturday afternoon.
High p ressure In the Pla ins will m ove toward Ohio tonight with
clear skies prevailing over the state .
The sunshine should continue over the state Sunday , and
tem peratures Will climb to near seasonal normals for early June .
reaching the m id-to upper _70s.
· ,

By DORO'lllY GAST
Associated PresS Writer ,
WALNUT RIDGE , Ark. I API A man believed to be fugitive tax
protester Gordon Kahl opened fire
on a group of lawmen who came to
arrest him, killing a sheriff a nd
touching off agu nba ttle that letthlni
dPad In a burning fa rmhouse, the
FBI said.

"Mr. Kahi, as far as we know , is
deceased." FBI Special Agent
J ames Bla singame said Frtda y.
·The 63-year-old retired farm er had
been sought since Fe bruary for the
:slaylngs of lwo U.S. mar shals in

North Pakota .
P ollee retrieved · the gunman's
charred body from the farmhou se
a bout 20 miles northeast of Wa lnut
Ridge where the shootout took place
F rtday night Fire destroyed the
concr e te home. built intothesldeof a
hill, after two s tale pollee sharpshoote rs threw tear gas caniste rs
Into the house.
Although pollee did not immedla tely Id entify the dead gunman as
Ka hl. U .S. Marshal Tom Kupferer
said, " We have no reason to doubt .
It ."
Also fata lly w ounded in the

---

")

•

. 0

VOV CAI.L
THAT fi.EY.\8Le?
.

-

gunfight was Lawrence Col!nty
Sheriff Gene Matthews, . :r1, of
Walnut Ridge.
Matthews was wearing a bullet ·
proof vest. but the slug that killed
him went between flaps on he vest 's
side, state pollee said.
Officials sa id both bodlei would be
sent to Little Rock where the stat e
medical examiner would conduct
autopsies and attempt toldentl!ythe
body believed to be Kahi's .
The FBI agent, Mat thews and two
othe r officers approached the farm house where Ka hl waibeUeved to be
hiding, when they e ncoun tered the
tenant, Leona rd GlntPr, carrying a

Page-A-3

Safety board pegins
probe of jet fire .
By TERRY lUNNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP ) - An Investigation of a fire that claimed 23 Uves
aboard an Air Ca nada DC-9 has
moved from the runway to the
laboratory, and the Nationa l Tr!lnsportatlon Safe ty Board has said all
It' s going to say for a while about the
tragedy.
The fire brokP out Thursday
evening as the je t, ca n y ing 41
passenge rs and five crew me mbers.
was e n roule from Dallas, Texas. to
TOI'Ol\IO, Ca nada.
A board spokesman sa id Frid a~·
that a de termlna.tlon of wha t causr:'(f
the fire, which also Inju red ! Bothers
on the plane , will not be announced
for four to six months .
" It a p pear s It was an accidenl ."
sa id board m ember Donald E ngen.
He said Investiga tors will consider a
prevalent theory !hat' the firestarl&lt;'ll
In a lava tory . posslbl_v from a
cigare tte. near !he !ail of th~ plant'
and moved towa rd lh(' cockpit.
" l l wa s I-epo i1ed to m e tha i thl'
ca bin a tte ndants had th(' passenger s

move

forw ard

ln

1hf'

airpla ne duri ng !he dPsCPnt and
landing. and m ost pt'Ople t'xilrd
through 1he two forward slldPs. bOth
rig ht and left . a nd p&lt;'rhaps ovPr lhP
wing," E ngen sa id.
HP sa id Ih&lt;' c harr!'d jellitH'r ·· has
shown in tf'n St:' fire, and I hl'IT' is not

muc h lefl of the lnlerior:· and lhnt
will slow lhf' inv f's tigation .
"WC' have no way of k nowi n):!

Air Canada spokesma n Ted
Morris said Friday tha t the air line
would m ake no more statements
about the tragedy, and that E ngen
alonp would dete rmine what public
sta tem ents wouldbemadeabout thl'
fire and em PrgPncy la nding.
Morris sa id the plane's capt a in ,
Donald Cam eronofMontrea l-who
man)' passengers regarded as a
hero tor br lnging down the smoking,
burning plant' without crashing a nd the res! of !he crew would not
make any sta temenl unless d irPCtPd
lo du so by E ngen .
" HowPver . we share the viPW
lhey 'r-e heroes," Morris sa id .
Engen said Cameron and other
c rew mem bers would not be
avalla biP unlll !hey had bel'n fully
debriefed by thP board.
" Basrd u pon my pt'rsona l PX JX'·
ricncc. lh&lt;' pilo!S pt'dormrd wn·
r 1'cdibly,' E ngrn sa id . " AS l lookc(;
a t lh~scenclast nlght, l cou ldn'thelp
bul ad mir e the genlle m en tha t got
that ai rpla n f' do wn so q u ickl y. ··
E ngpn sa id the re wpre m;m y

quPstions for which he simply had no
answf'J'S, suc h as w hethPr thP Air
Canada c rpw rcjl't't!'d th(' ldt'a of
making oxygen masks avaUablP to
;x1sscngprs . wher-e the plane was
whL'Il srn okf' wa s discovered and

wh&lt;'lhl'r !11&lt;'r&lt;' was an a lrport c loser
th a n C !'f'a !Pr Cincinnati lntPrnallonal w hPn ' thf' pla nP could havf'
landr&gt;Cl g i\' ing pasSf' ngf'r s rnotT'
l imP to l'SC.1Pfl.
" l cannot answf'r S pt"C' ifi c ia ll ~ ·

exactly how tha i firt' .sta rtf'C I a! this
point In llml', " Engt'n sa id . .. -1111'
FB!Is -involvrd beca tis.' !h co ri~rin of
the flre·is unknoWn .··
Of lhf' 21 vlc tim.s. 11 W t 'rt'

sa i(l. '" Wr- w~ IJ do tha t ln d uf' lim e.
Wf' ,~ lfl bt• tJpn •· a num bt."r uf days

Canadian. Ma ny of 1t1f'm · W (lrt'
w tumlng from b usinf'SS ! tips.
in cl udin g in d u st r ia lis t Cu rt is

th PrC' was no pan ic a tx:.ard . f'V f'll as

Ma !hes Jr .. who had l&gt;cP n in llal las.
a nd folk singer Sia n Hogt'rs, who
had appt'mw t rl't'Pnli)' a t a fo lk

how ii1P 2:1 fa tali!iPS OlTUlT('(i, " he

until wt · havf' asstmUa tf'd all l hi' .
ln forinat ion W f' can .··

ThP surv iv ors of l" llg hl 7ll7 sa id
smokt' ins ide !he r a bin intens ifll'd .
Ha ndy Mo rTiS. :tl;, Den lon, Texas,
salcl !he s mokP br&lt;·a mP so think
·sou C•luld tl ' l se-t• you r hanci in front

cocked pistol, Blas ingame said. f(&gt;s liva l in T f'xas.
.....ofvuur
. favt•."
Ginter a nd his wife, Norma , bolh
later a r rested a nd cha rged wl!h
harboring a fug ltlv!', lived In th!' . - - -- - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - home at the end of a dirt road, he
said .
Ginter wa lked !he lawmen to the
house, where someone opened the
door and shOoting began, Blas inga mesald.
1'11 miles north of Holzer Medical Center on State Route 160
A sta le pollee d ispatcher said the
PH. 446-6592
shoaling began a t 6 p.m. a nd endPd
alB : 10 p.in .
"Kahl sta rted shooting. ! think the
sherl!f shOt Ka hi , a nd Kahl s hot the
sherl!f," Blasingame sa id.

MoroR CAR BRoKERs

.Officials inspect dioxin tainted material
. · NEWARK N.J . (AP J-Offic ials
inspected vacuum-cleaner bags ,
. ~-conditioner fUters a nd soil on ·
,Friday to learn whether deadly
tlloxln found a! an abandoned
~erblclde plant has spread to the
.rest of the neighborhood .
None of the residents of homes In
the area had accepted governme nt
offe r of tree temporary em ergency
housing on Friday, and city officials
Said theyd idnot knowofanyonewho
had m oved ou t tostay wlth friends or
rela tives.
Vendors a t a farmers ' marliet
. riear the plant continued to sell their
stock, although they were banned
from bringing In fresh produce a nd

a

flsh .

.

· · Mic hael Lokat, program d irector
'for the state Health Jlepartme nt 's
epidemiology department, said vacuumcleaners werebelngsearc hed
·Qeca use children who played at the
·abandoned Diamond Alkali pla nt
may have tracked d ioxin, cling ing to
dust, Into their homes .
: In the 1900s, the plant m anufac tured components of Agent Ora nge,
of which d ioxin,' the most toxic

c he m ical known, is a byproduci .
testing marine life In the rive r next "hazardous Ia huma n hea lth." he
While the scope of its health effects
week, according to Jorge Berkowitz said .
on huma ns has not been deter - of the state Health Department.
However, he said the heal! h risk is
mined , dioxin Is known to cause
Dewllng said the level of dioxin very high on the sit e but ve ry low in
$1\001\
cancer in rats and a skin rash in
found In soil near the plant wa s
tbe sum&gt;und lng residentia l a nd
and silver. 4 cyL, 5speed. power steer 1ng a nd lmkes. recli
humans.
"about the same" as In Times
business community . .
ket
sea ts, AM / FM /Stereo. rear Window r1 efog' ll!lerva f WI
"The question is how far It's
Beac h, Mo., where a ll res idents
"This should not be com pared 10
m oved off the s Ite . The probability Is
I clock, plu s much more.
have been evacua ted under a Times Beach. Themode ofexposurP
very low Il' smoved 2'h blocks," said
government buyout agreement.
Is entirely different. " Berkowitz of
Dr . Richard T. DewUng, depu ty
Thursday's tests showed " rea'tl the Hea lth Jlepa rtment sa id. While f-- - - - -- -- ---=------------ - - regiona l administrator of the E PA.
lngs of up to hundreds of parll. of people In Missouri were living on top
Dew ling said 25 EPA staff diox in per bllllon" In the ground near
of dioxin , res idents he rewereonly In
the plant, Kean said. The EPA
mem bers were taking .lO samples
potential danger from possible dust
cons iders one part per' bllllon emissions from the plan t. he sa id.
Friday and 200 more sam ples next
week. He said It would cost $500,001
just to d eflne the problem .
The test results should be com- .-- - -- - - - - -- - -- -- - - - - - - - - - pleted by Tuesday, officials said.
Because no cleanup facUl ty or
1
landfill can accept dioxin ,_Dewllng
sa id he e xpected the site will be
sea led and barred from use
If you l ive bey ond the reach u f m os t TV broad"forever."
cast
and cable servic~s, than Satellite TV was
Gov. Thomas H. Kea n, in an des ign ed for you I
nouncing the findings of dioxin
contamination In the ground around
the plant Thursda y, banned consumption of fish taken from the
P assaic River, which flows just
behind the plant. Officials will begin

1981 DODGE CHALLENGER .. .... .

GREAT TV
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By The Associated l'rl!ss
Scattered shower s and thunderstorms headed for Utah early
Saturday, dashing hopes of a dry weekend that would have le t
workers survey the damage of a week of heavy runott from melting
m ountain snows .
Northern Utah residen ts had hoped for a quiet two days to regrou p
from mudslides a nd flooding , but crews In Ogden were already
surveying damage Saturday at the 31st Street Bridge, which
· collapsed into the swolle n Weber River on Friday.
Pollee said l)vo vehicles went into the river, but theoccupants were
not Injured.
A tornado was reported In Moody, Mo., on Friday, a nd more than
2'1, Inches of an fell a t St. Louis In the 24hour period ending at 7 p.m.
Friday, authorllles said.
Very strong thunderstorms rumbled across the mid-Mississippi
and lower Ohio valleys early Saturday, with heavy ra in ove rmuch of
the lower Great Lakes and mid-Atlantic Coast. Dense fog covered
m ost of the Great Lakes region.
F air skies domina ted the centra l P lains and Southwest, with a few
showers scatte red ove r the northern Plains and upper Great Lakes .
Tempera tures around the na tion a t 3 a .m . E DT ra nged from 35
degrees In Flagstaff, Ariz.. to &amp;1 degrees In Laredo, Te xas.

:Fugitive tax protestor believed dead;
sheriff killed in farmhouse gun battle

FOR YOUR HOME
FO~

The nation's weather

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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'

Page-A-4- The Sunday Time..Sentinel

June 5, 1983' .

Pornerqy-Micldlej!Ort-Gallipolis, Ohia Point Pleasant, W. Va.

PLO mutiny: guerrillas battling in Lebanon
By MONA ZIADE
Associated Press Writer
RAYAK,Lebanon (AP) -Heavy
fighting with artUlery broke out ln
east Lebanon Saturday between
PLO mutineers and supporters of
guerrilla chief Yasser Arata!, radio
reports said. Poilcesaldelght people
were kllied and 17 wounded.
It was thetlrstcon!lrmedreportof
fighting in the eastern Bekaa Valley
since the mutiny against Ara!at

began on May 7.
. played down the serious of the
Two Chrlstlan-ol\'lled slatkms,
battle.
both opposed to the PLO presence in
Both said clashes had broken out
the Bekaa, said there were 40 in the Baalbek region, and bl;uned
casualties in two hours of fighting, ·· each other for the outbreak . . But
including 10 Aratat loyalists. The Saleh said the only shooting was
state-run radio said hospitals in the
from Palestine Uberatlon Organ!Bekaa were appealing for blood zatlon units loyal to Aratai and that
an attempt by Fatah partisans to
donations.
But Jihad Saleh, spokesman for storm the rebels' position failed . ..
the mutineers, and sources close to
Aratat's mainstream Fatah guerThesourcesclosetoFatahsaldan
rfila group in Damascus, Syria, argument broke out after the rebels .

gan to help promote peace, economic development and democracy
In Central America, met with
President Alvaro Magana and other
leaders including former President
Jose Napoleon Duarte.
U.S. officials say one of Stone's
chief responslbllltles is persuade
moderate leftists to ~rtlclpate in
the general elections scheduled for
December.

AlO&lt;OCialed Press Writer
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) Leftist rebels bombed
power pylo(ls a nd '·'blacked out a
northern province hours before U.S.
presidential envoy Richard Stone
met with Salva doran leaders .
·The bombs went off ear ly Friday
about 10 miles north of the capital
along the main nort hem highway,
leaving the Chalatenango province
without electric ity. Suc h attacks are
Leftists refused to participate In
~rt of the i·ebels' 4.lmonth effort. to
the March 1982 elections for a
topple the U .S. -backed governme nt. Constitue nt Assembly. saying they
Rebels also attacked the town of feared rightists would assassinate
Tenanclngo, 24 mUes northeast of them .
San Salvador, alrforcesourcessald .
Before meeting with Stone.
Air force je ts, including U.S. -made Duarte told reporters that U.S. plans
A-37 Dragonfly attack planes, for training Salvadoran soldiers in
bombed re bel positions In the town Honduras would create "more
and a few mil.eswest of theslo(ies of conflict~ and tensions, ·•especially in
Guazapa Volcano, but no casualties Honduras.
·
were reported, the sources said.
The Pentagon ha.s announced that
Stone. named by President Rea- about 2,400 Salvadoran soldiers wUI

Church helped avert
Utah -f lood catastrophe
SALT LAKE CITY (API AdvancP planning by Mormon

them , we'd have been down the
creek."

church leaders, who mobilized
thousa nds of volunteers to CUI and
tote sandbags, helped avert catasI rophe during the 10 days of flooding
In Utah, officials say.
As many as 40,1m volunteers
responded when runoff from a
record snowpack in the mountains
sent canyon streams surging out of
their banks and through the streets
of Salt Lake Cily and other
communities In the northern part of
the sta te, leaving SaxJ million tn
damage.
"We'd be d evastated today if It
weren't for this volunteer effort,"
Terry Holzworth, Salt La~eCounty
flood control director, said Friday.
"I can speak objectively because
I'm nol a Mormon."
The Church of .Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, which claims
about 70perce nt of Utah's res ide nts
as m embers, a lso has spearheaded
emergency relief efforts, providing

Planning began several months r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~aj
ago when church leaders realized I
the mount ain s nowpack was hlgh
a nd the state already was saturated
from the previous year's record
moisture, said Elder Robert E .
Wells. a member of the chu rch's
First Quorum of Seventy.
weus gave · the credit to the
c hurc h's network of lay priesthood
leaders who administer a il c hurch
affairs, both worldwide and locally.
"This structure exists aU the
time," he said . "When. an emergency comes along, weare already
organized."
16 oz.
BTLS.
Church leaders in local wards , or
parishes. have notll'led government
ofl'lcials of how many people they~
STORE HOURS
can have availjjble to respond in an
Monday thru Saturday
emergency. When a local Mormon
8·A.M. til 11 P.M.
bishop gets a caU for help, he calls
quorum leaders under him who
each call other members, WeUs
said.

food and shelter for flood vic tims.
authorities said .
Althoughmanyorganlzationsand

" We 'rr&gt; In a position to respond
immediately - 2(Xl peopiP hf'rc, 500
people there, " hes;•id.

control
saidflood
the
churcheswork,
haveHolzworth
helped with
Mormons' ability to mobilize large
numbers of volunteers quickly
saved millions of dollars worth of
property .
Bountiful Police Chief Larry
Higgins said. 'Those people have
been working In some cases to the
t.point.that their hands are raw ."
''t.ocal governmen t officials began
asking Mormon leaders for help
with sandbagging when major
flooding began last week.
With Pach call for volunteers has
come "as many or more as we
needed." Higgins said . "Without

iamba~ timr•- jJtnfutrl

l JSI"S 52.'1-HOO
,\ M\IIUmedla Ntowwpltper

Publi sh(.'&lt;! ()nc h Sunda.v. 825 Third
AvPnUI', by thf· Ohlo Val\('y Publls hln~
Compuny · Mul! lm(&gt;dJa , I nc. Socond class
p:&gt;stuge p11id 111 C aUij)()lis, Ohio 456.11.
Enf(' t't'Cl al'l sl•concl cl fiss mnllln ~ matter
at Pom1•my , Ohio. Post Orfkt.• .
Mf'mlwr: ThP 1\.Sso:lntl'&lt;.l Pt'Pss, lnlttnd

Dally Press

As~ l nllon

und thf' t\nwrh

mn N!'WSJI&lt;Ipt' r !Jubllsht'rS ASSO&lt;'Ia11on,
Noltlonal Adwr tl s ln ~ Rl'presffitallw.
Branhum , 1717 \\I(•St /'Sir\(' Mile Road,
Sutlr :l}l. [)(·tr'Oit , Mld rhmn. 4007~ .

SUilS('RII"'10N RATES
Hy fani4•r or Motor Route

Onl' W('(' k ................................. $1 .00
On~· Month ............. ... . ............... $4.40

On(' Yrnr ....... ... ....... .. ..

No subscrlpllon.•·; bv mall J)('t'mltted In
towns where honlf' {'l u Th•1 ' Scrvk:e ts
uvallabl(•.

ri;~;~~;~:;;;~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~

DaUy and .sunday
MAIL SUBSCIIII'TIONS
lnoldl• Ohio
52 Wt'(fk s .................................. 151.48
~ w...,ks .......................... :..... :17.))
U W('(lks ...... , .. ,.,, .... , .............. . Jl~ .Ot
.,
Uuleff Chtliddt· Ohio ·

CI.OSED SUNDAYS

GROUND FRESH SEVERAL
TIMES DAILY

or

~~ )~))iJnl~.~·~----------~(C~o~nt=ln=u=ed~rr=om~~~ge~Al~)

'&lt;!

~ A Bedford ToWnship resident,
:)}&gt;eyser began ctrculating the petl,tlonln November 1!Rl to determine
;bow maily people were interested In
-;the etrect dr1lllng would have on
•their property; Taken up by the
· association, It was dlstributl!d in the
three sUJTOUndlng counties.
"l thiJik·people are real sym~­
thetlc," Peyser said. "Everyone
down from the governor's office to
the lndlvldual driller reallzes that
things are not being done, and thai
more money and time should be
allotted to make sure everything is
done right."
.
'The association has been in
existence for more than a year. and
received attention earlier this year
when It took up the case of Glouster
ll!Siclents separated from their
:; mineral rights while .drilllhg was

·,

.

conducted.
Peyser said the Glouster situation
was a " special problem," one not
found often In Metgs.--and Gallla
counties because so many property
owners lease their land to drillers.
"We think landowners sbould be
notlfied ll to 60 days before drilling
commences to find out whether or
not they really have rights,' ~ he said.
The association wants to work
with drUlers in solving problems,
now that a resurgence in dlilllng Is
expected and new technology has
been developed for drilling.
If property owners experience
problems with a drllllng operation.
Peyser urged them to call Dick
Shockley at ODNR's oil and gas
division.. office In Marietta at

374-2391.

··:

·;c~h . who killed three puu.a&amp;CI

--_. ............
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n.t _ _ _ _ lo _

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GE"' ~oom Air Conditioner
· Lightweight, with tilt-o ut
filter. 11 volts.

::knew
their teacher, police say
...
another teacher .and a traffic
policeman who rushed In to
investigate.
Fourteen others Including CeQ!.·
haar were wounded in ihe shooting .
spree, Clve cr(tically, pollee said.
Four of the critically Injured were
children.
Students screamed and cried and
others froze in shock as the killer
pumped clip after cUp Into the class
before pointing one of the weapons
at himself and firing , pollee said.

• :. FRANKFURT, West Germany
: ,(AP)- A plstol-~cklngCzech who
. 'rkklled a schoolroom with bullets
killed five people before taking
l)is own life knew the teacher and
.had asked for directions to his class,
. Pollee said.
, . Karel Charva, 34, a native of
',Ji'rague, burst into teacher Franz·
Adolf Gehlhaar's sbdh·grade E ng'llsh class brandishing a 9mm pistol
o1n each hand Friday ·and shot three
: s tudents to death. He also killed

:ilnd

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NEWS
5x7n ....... .

June 5th through June 17th

3 For 2.77

The Chapel H1ll Chutch of Christ will be putt1ng forth a special eHort for the
next two w~ks tn gomg from house to house. encouraging all to be part of "Project
Good News. There wtll be twenty-seven young people lrom David lipscomb
College 1n Nashvtlle, Tennessee to asstst in th1s great work. All of us al Chapel Hill
are grateful to God tor the opportunity thai is aHorded us to be able to meet and
personally mv1te you to study wrth us.
The first week, Sunday, June 5th through Wednesday, June 8th, Doug
Varn,ado and Alan Henderson will be delivering lessons from God's Word. The
Lords Day schedule of services are the same as listed below. However, the time
for the assemblies Monday through Wednesday will be at 7:30.
. I would lrke to suggest should you desire to engage in a special study of the ·
B1ble, ~ease check the followmg and return to us by mail:
.
I I - An informal Bible study in my home.
I - ABible Correspondence Study conducted by mail.
These Services Are Free'

Because We Care, We Wish To Share
The "Good News" With You!
Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bulovltlo Rood , P. 0 . Bo• 30&amp;
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO 4111131 ·
lund•y Momlng
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&lt;!6 w.,.k, ..................... .......... 5:&gt;9.64
1.1 W.-.;ks ................................. SLUl

Fri.·Sat. 9 am bl 10 pm ·

may be Impossible to achelve ln the area residents will have to give were cut altogether from the 648
hardship" for RSVP, according to
current economy.
marl financial support to mental board's 1984 budget. ,The cuts will director Mary Smalley. "but It wUI
Maxine Plummer, executive diPlummer said the 648 board will health. Qu-rently, only Meigs affect each of them differently.
not m ean the end of our program.
rector
the 648 board, said the
search tor money to replace the County has a levy supporting the 648 · Aaron Loney, executive director
" We'll have to work a little harder
of the YMCA , said the 648 board 's for m oney, but we' U manage," she
federaf fuildlng sltuatloll will get
federal funds. Foundations, phar· board.
worse in COOling years.
maceutlcal firms, and federal jObs
Niehm said he Is optimistic decision was "a drastic hlt to us."
said.
maJOr portli)ilOf lbe cei!ter's- PJil!ll'ams·~all possible sources e~residents will-support-a-levy when
The-or-ganization will haw to cut - Gormie Gampbell-Eaton,dlrector
funding comes from mental health · futUre I'!Nenue, she said.
· they realize the funding problems of hours for s laff and postpone plans of the French Art Colony. said the
block grants which have been
for upgrading its facility. Officials loss of $1,!XXlln funds "is going to bP
Ntelun Said "the Idea was state mental health agencies.
decreasing to~ eight years and will
and local guvei1Ullents would' pick
Thementalhealthcenterisnotthe are also "on the verge" of detrimentalto us."
drop to zero In fiscal year 1!135.
up the slack" lert by declining only agency which Is having eliminating half of the group's
However. she said she hopes to
''That money Is gone forever, "
federalgrants.
financial problems.
programs, Loney said. YMCA continue providing art therapy
Plwnmersaid.
"Thathasnothappened, " hesald.
, Three agencies - the Retired received $2.1m from the board this services to mental health clients.
Plummer said she hQPed the
"The center Is going to have to find Senior Volunteer Program in Jack- year.
"!don't want to close the door to
The loss of $4,1m in grant funds them, even with the cut In monh."
center would be self-supporting by other sources of funds."
son, the YMCA of Jackson and the
from the 648" board "will work a she said.
now t.hrOugh obtaining contracts
Both Nlehm and Plununer agree
French Art -Colony In Gailipoljs wlthtndustrytpprovldepsychologl· · . . - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - cal services. However, she said this

Star Strike ' ".mm-1

10 Cll l\'1£11~ .

Otl£' year ............... .. ... ....... .. ... $20.80
She months .............. ,................ .110.40

. Mon.-Thurs. 9 am til 10 p_m

~-

percent. It CUln!lltly receives about

S40,!m a year.

709 1st Ave., Gallipolis

The Sunday Tlmt•s-Sentlncl will not br
rt"'pollSiblf' for ndvnnCi' paynwnts madt'

MAIL SUilS(;RIPnONS
SundMY Only

STORE HOURS:

As a result, the board did not fund
,1M centl!l''s speech and hearing,
' senior citizens and adult actMtles
.
·'programs.
.;-- Nlelun explained what will
;happen to these services.
~ Speech-and heartng:-Thls l)JU.
:-gram wUJ continue, but wjll only
-serve tho6ewhocan pay the full cost
t the service.
!'.: Speciallzed services for the el~ly (Senior Friends) : This wUJ be
1ynalntalned "as long as we can lind
jmoDey and then M!'ll close it down."
~~said he expects itwillrernati1
during fiscal year 1984.
&lt;&gt; Adult IICtMtes: This program's
~t wlU be cut between 25and 33

ICE HOUSE
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ln:.::::ued::....:.:.fro=m:..!::pa=geAll

placed a ' recollles$ rlfle along a
Earlier, Araf@! dodged the grow· largeSt otthe PLO's elgllt factlons.
Bekaa road and that this led t.d a ing mutlJJy by ~lng trom Damas· Before tlylng to Rlmanla, Arata!
two-hour exchange ot machine-gun cus to Romania on an unannounced spent two weeks tourlllg PLO ~
and mortar fire. They said at least
visit with President Nicolae In the Bekaa and In northern
two combatants were wounded 'jj, Cea
Lebanon to try to stop the mutlay
the clash.
·- · -R=~ 's Agerpress nj&gt;ws trorn spreading.
According to all radio reports,
agency reported Aratat's arrival in , . - - - - - - - - -......--.......
fighting raged in villages about
the Romanian capital, Bucharest,
seven mllestrom the Syrian border
withoutdlscJOstngthepurposeof~
and 40mlles east of Beirut.
visit. ButAratat aides In Damascus
The Christian-owned "Voice of
saJd he canceled a mee~ · of
Lebanon" and "Voice of Free
poilcymakers 1n his Fatah factjon
Lebanon" radio stations said rebel
because of the revolt and would
forces led by Col. Saeed Mousa
remain abroad, visiting lndia and
overran a pro-Aratat guerrilla
Saudi Arabia, before returning to
center near Housh Barada, five
Damascus to convene the meeting,
miles west of Baalbek.
probably late next week.
The attack was. mounted by
The PLO Insurrection erupted
Mousa's mutineers behinq a bar· · May 7 among Fatah guerrillas
rage of artillery and ro;:kets,
based in northern and eastern
stations said.
Lebanon, They say the PLO c hief Is
A Baalbek resident reached by not commltted to war with Israel
telephone from the capital said he and has placed appointed cronies
heard artillery fire and gunshots for
who are not respected In command
about an hour at midmorning. He positions.
said tt came from the direction of
They also are demanding what
villages west of the city, but could they call "democratic reform" to
notsaywhowasflghtlngwhom.
curtallAratat's control of Falah.
___:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ _ _ _ _L ____________

begin tra'Ining In Honduras soon.
Meantime, the head of U.S.
military advisers In El Salvador,
Col'. John D. Waghelstein denounced whal he called the massaere of 30 troops after a battle last
week. Wagheisteln showed reporters color photographs of what he
said were some of the 42 soldiers r
kllled at the Quebrada Seca bridge
48 miles east of here May 24. The
photographs of 15 bodies shoWed
powder burns indica t lng the soldiers
were shot from close range.
Though Waghelstein said he
doubted that rebels would continue
"ex~utlng" their prisoners, he said
government troops will "act
tougher in defending their positions" and "be more careful in the
future ."
· In another' development, about 50
women; saytrig they were rela tives · ·
of missing persons, vie t ims of
rightist "death squads" and political prisoners. protested Friday
afternoon outside the Constituent
Assembly in one of the first
~emonstrations by a leftis t-related
group in the last three years.
Government spokesmen said the
gtOu p h.a4 ties to the left and claimed
Its members provide direct support
for guerrilla organlza tlons.

The Sunday Time..Sentinel

.Mental
health
•.
..___:....__
_____________________
•

Bombers black out North; .
Stone meets Salvador leaders ·
By ARTHUR ALLEN

Pame1or Middleport-Gallipoli~: Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO.,, INC.
VINTON, OHIO

W. llin Strtet

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J .... 5, 1983

Pome.vy-Middleport Gallipolis, QWo-Point Pleosanl, W. Vo.

Merger adds (our banks to
Bane One financial network

•

year ejlnlings growth."
COLUMBUS - In the largest approved the ~ger.
The merger will give Bane One 26
merger ot Its kind In Ohio history'-'
' -..=
Bane One Chairman John F.
afftua
te- banks -with 300- bankingsigns on banks In Dayton, Cleve- Havells · conunenti!d, "Wiille this
offlces
and resources of overland, ClrclevDie, and Clncinatl merger appears to make Bane One
·approxlmately
bllllon. The total
changed to Bank One.
the state's w-gest banking organlreflects
the
sale
or
Bank One or
TIIe banks are: Wlnters National zatlon, our quantitative ranking Is
.
Fairborn
to
First
National
Cln~­
Bank and Trust Co., Dayton;
not Important. What Is Important Is
naU
Corp.
That
sale
was
a
Euclid National Bank, Cleveland;
how we $.\BCII up qualltallvely. We
prerequisite
to
regulatory
approval
First NaUonal Bank of Clrclevtne; · seek recognition as the best bank·
·
and Winters National Bank or lng o..ganw.tlon. We ~~ave grown of the Winters' merger.
With
the
addition
of
WinterS,
Cincinnati. Each wtll be pamed followtng a b)ueprint deslgne.;J to
Bank One or the city ln which It Is achieve the quantity capital and the Bane One equity capital stands 8t
headquartered.
market penetration to do Just that. over $500 million. Five additional
The changeover implements the At thesametimewehaveenhance&lt;l banks with total resources of $540
, agreements t&gt;Y the $1.6 bllllon market dlve.rslflcatton, Increasing million are waltlng for regulatory
Dayton·based Wlnters National our ability to contlnue to prcvlde and shareholder approval to joln
Corp, to merge wtth the $5.4 billion our sh8reholde&gt;;s strong year-to- BancOne.
Columbus-headquartered Bane
One Corp.
A few changes, other than ·the
new names, wtll be visible to
customers or the banks ac:cordlng
to John G. McCoy, Bane One vtce
chairman and chief executive
officer .
"Our de-centralized operating
phUosophy has been descrtbed as
the uncommon partnership," he
said. " We have been successful
because we free local bankers from
paperwork to enable them to be
more effective wtth people work.
Basically, It will enable our bank to
con~ntrate on better Identifying
the unique needs of the community
each serves and to meet those needs
with the sophisticated tools we
provide."
Winters National President, Robert A. Kerr added, "Banking Is ln
. the early stages or' a·· revolution:
After decades of Inaction, Congress
has begun to deregulate the Indus·
try, to give banks added latitude to
meet the demands from the
marketplace. We wanted to mahl·
lain the freedom to respond to our
customers while obtaining addl·
tlonal resources and technological
expertise. Bane One was the best
KEl'S ~ J)Qn ~., left, fo!'QtCr owner, !uml; over the keys to Ohio
·· llnswer."
· ·
ValleY Phmiblng Co., 232 E. Second St., Pomeroy, fAi the finn's new
The merger followed a pproval
owner, Nick Leonard.
recently by Winters' shareholders
to the terms of the agreement. Bane
One shareholders had already

rr

\
NEW OWNEI!SHIP ·- Galllpolls Molor Co., 236
Seoond Ave., ehanged hands Friday and was.
renamed .Jlm Mlnk Chevrolet-Old•, AMC. Left to
right ar e the fonner owners of Galllpolls Motor Co ..

WUUam R. Knight, vlee-pl"l'Sident; and A.R. Knight,
president. The new ilwnen are Anna L. Mink,
secretary-treasurer; James L. Mink, president; and
Gene Johnson, vice-p!'I'Sident.

Bob Evans Farms continues
•
exp~ns•on, schedules meeting
·

COL UMRU S F'a r ms

J nc .

Ro b

Evans

rPpor ts nr r sa Ir s of

$187,!i.1 l,r«J for the fi.&lt;ca l year ended
April ~~ . according lo Da niel E.
Eva ns, chairm an of the boa rd and
chief PXPc ut ivf' offi cer for the
Colu m lms-hu sPfl saus:Jgf' and res tauran t cnm p ; ~n_v This is an £'ight

-p('rn ·nr

sa les of
$1 7.'~,4 ~~.f00 II\(• pn•v io us yl'a r.
Ev; ms ; 1tl ri IJu u ·~; thP in c rre~ sr In
nrr s~JI Ps to il fld irimwl rc•slau ra nt s
In

incrf'J !-.t'

Opf'r·atinn

ny ,~ r

and

inc reases in

saus[)g&lt;.' w hoh •sa](' pr ic f's.

Nrt incumf' for 1hP fi scal year
rm cht'&lt;.i $14 .fl&amp;J,(l'XJ or $1.1l )l&lt;'r
sharr . cnmrarf'd \Vi Ill $1:\,656,000 or
$1.09 per sha n ' a year ogo. On April
14, HoiJ !·~va n ~ Farms board of
d i rPctnr·~ dl 't'bn'(l a

7;,

cc n1 s-pc'r-

sh arc di viciPnd payal)lP .J unf' 1 10,
sh arc ho1(1Prs n r r r &lt;'ord May U.
Bo iJ I· :van ~ Far m~ O!X'Ilf'C:I 14
res taur ants during the year, fivt' of

which &lt;lrt• loca ted In the greater
Chicago ;u ea. represen tin g the

company's incn•aslng concrntra ·
tion of resta uranl s Jod tea .tn large

midwestern cities. This brings the
total to 9.1 company-owned resta u·
ranis In opera tion at fiscal year end
as compa red with 79 restaurants a
year ago.
New farm-raised catfish was
successfully Introduced Into all Bob
Eva ns Farms Restaurants In
March, ... a nd In May 1982. the
chicken sand·wlch a nd )iork barbecue sa ndwiches were added as
nrw menu Items.

The sausage sales territory was
expanded to Include Atlanta and
Ma con, Ga., Cha ttanooga and
Knoxville, Tenn ., In the fall. This
was the company's biggest -ever
new market int roduction, making
Bob Evans sausage ava ilable to
more !han 3ll percent of !he nation's
popula lion.
Brown a nd serve Bob Evans
I'arms s'a usage wsa Introduced Into
the ~Juffa lo and Rochester. N.Y.,
area In J a nuary , adding a new
precooked sausage to the existing
product line. Distribution was
expanded to the Quad Clly area of

•

·
. ·
.
Moline, East Mollne, and Rock
Island , Ill. ; Davenport, Iowa. and
St. Louis, Mo., 1n March.
The opening of the 100th Bob
Evans F arm s Res ta urant Is
planned for this fall, with 13
additional restaurants a lso sche·
duled to go Into operation during the
new fiscal year.
· Currenlly there are -96 Bob E;,a ns
Farms Restaurants throughout
Ohio, Indiana , Illinois, Mic higan,
Pennsylvania , W&lt;&gt;st VIrginia a nd
Kentucky . Bob Evans Farms sa usage Is sold In all or part of 16 states
and the District of Columbia,
Including Ohio, Indiana, Illinois,
Michiga n, West Virginia, Tennes·
see, Georgia, Kenlucky, lowa. New
POMEROY - Nick and Eleanor
Jr., 19, and Danle1,14, with the eldest
York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Ma·
Leonard, Five Points, have pur·
son
to be associated with the
rvland , New J ersey, Delawall' a nd
chased the Ohio Valley Plumbing
business.
Mrs. Leonard will handle
Missouri.
.
Co., East Second Street. Pomeroy,
the
bookkeeping
dulles.
: /1
The company's annual sha refrom Don and Sue Ann Buck Beegle.
Hours of the firm wUl7: 30a.m . to5
holders ' meeting Is scheduled for 4
Natives of Meigs County, the
p.m.,
Mondays through Fridays,
p.m. Monday, Aug. 8. at the s helter
Leonards have taken over opera·
and
from
8 a.m. to noon QJI
CLEVELAND (AP) The
house on the Bob Evans F arm near
tlons of the buslness where Nlck Saturdays.
demand
for
steel
Is
on
the
rtse,
but
Rio Gra nde.
Leonaro has worked since Jan. 1 of
Beegle wUJ continue his duties
the chairman of the Republic Steel . this year, besides having periodiwtth
the m aintenance department
Corp. said he stul expects a slow
cally worked for the finn earlier. He
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The
year and no Improvement In
also headed N &amp; L Construction for
Beegles
ha~e
owned the business
operating results for the nation's
several years.
slnce
1979.
fourth -largest steelmaker.
The Leonards have two sons, Nick
Republic lost $239.2 million in 1982
a nd reported a loss for the first
quarter of19&amp;'l.
Addressing the company's stock·
holders lnFiemlngton, N.J .,Republlc chairman E. Bradley Jones said
By ROBERT L. SHAFFER
"the worsl days are behind us."
Altioclated Pro~.• wrtter
"Republic has not only survived;
WASHINGTON (API - A Treasbut In the longrun It will be stronger
uty official says allowing slrlp
as a result of the painful tightening.
miners to take deducllons in
up process we have undergone, "
advance for reslorlng land is a
Jones said.
"dlsast rous policy ."
Currently, about 12,500 of the
William S. McKee, act lngdeputy
company's 39,&lt;XXJ employees are
assl•tanl Treasury secretary for tax
laid off. compared with 17,&lt;XXJ at Its
policy , told a Senate subcommlltee
worst point in 1982.
Monday the Treasury s trongly
Studies cited by Jones said
opposes a bill thai would make such
Republic can operale at 100percent
advance deduct Ions official govern· capacity wlih 7,00l fewer people
mcnt policy.
than In 1981 and can operale at 70
In many cao;es, a t the expense of percent ofcapacltywlth 10.00lfewer
~'Dvernmen l revenues, taxpayers
employees.
·
are able to make enough on the
In the pas t 18 months, Republic
BRENT LEITER
DAVIDmOMAS
advance deductions to more than has la id off more than 3,00&gt;
pay for the rutu re expense. McKee whlte-collar workers.
said.
The American Iron &amp; Steel
He did not estimate the potential Institute ln Washington said 10,00)
revenue loss bul said It "would be
more steelworkers have been
COLuMBUS -::.: Brent A.
fall .
prohlblt ive.··
employed since March, although an
Leiter of Columbus has been
"We tlnd more and more cases
estimated 122,&lt;XXJ steelworkers are
named gas procurement man·
RIO GRANDE - David Thowhere taxpayers are designing
stUIIald
off
nationwide.
ager
for
Ohio
by
Columbia
Gas
mas
. senior examlner lor 1he
deductions for future expenses Jn
of Ohio.
About 2lJ,&lt;XXJ people were work·
Ohio
Department of Commerce
which tax savlngs, when Invested,
lng
In
steel
at
the
beginning
of
the
Leiter,
who
has
been
worklr!R
·
banks
division, was featured
· more than pay tilE' cost of the
year,
the
lowest
nwnber
in
50
years.
as
an
engineer
In
thecom~·s
s peak e r at th e recent
expense," he said.
In the late 197!S, the Industry
Colwnbus o!flce, will be respon·
lnstallment-lendlng class span- '
The · Sena te bUI would simply
employed about 450,00&gt; people.
slble ln his new IJOst for
sored by the American Institute
legislate a pnnclple that already has
acquisition of local gas purof Banking through Rlo Grande
been established by the courts In the " Jones said cost-cuttlng measures
had positioned Republic to reap the
chases
from Independent proCollege a nd Community
Ohio River Collieries Co. tax case,
benefits of Increased steel demand,
ducers wtthln the state.
College.
proponents told the energy taxation
but he noted thai Intense price
fils office wtU be al the
The class Is ta ught by Jeffrey
subcommittee of tilE' Senate Fl·
competition " Is not likely to moder·
company's building at 99 N.
E . Srnlth of Ohio Valley Bank
nance Committee.
ateuntU lheeconomlcrecoveryputs
Front St., Colwnbus.
Co., Gallipolis.
McKee sa id the Treasury position
a
few
muscles
on
Its
rather
skinny
"Colwnbla
Is
COmmitted
to
During the session. Thomas
Is that the Ohio River decision was
frame."
doing
whatever
Is
necessary
to
expl.
qJned his duties in the course
wrong and that the proposed
Republic
last
week
announced
a
acquire
long-term,
flmi
supplies
bank
examination a nd cited
of
a
Jegls la llon would e ncourage
job
tralnlng
program
In
conjUnction
of
natural
gas
needed
to
meet
the
acronym
CAMEL as five .
broader application of the principle.
the
state
under
which
6,&lt;XXJ
wtth
our
customers'
requirements
at
major points stressed when
Joseph E . Nichols Jr., testttytng
worKers eventually will be trained to
the lowest possible price,"
evaluating a bank.
911 behalf of the N.atlonal Coal
operate Repubilc'snew$100mllllon
Leiter said.
The acronym stands for c'api ·
Association, urged adoption of the
contlnllous
s
lab
caster,
expected
to
He said Columqla . will contal adEquacy (C). as"'t quality
bill so the mine operators won't have
begin production this fall.
tinue to buy all the locally·
(A). management ability IM),
lo keep golng to court to fight the
The
caster
Is
one
project
that
produced
gas that can be
earnlngs (EJ and liquidity (L\.
Interna l Revenue Service.
dellver:ecJ to its facUlties, dlrectly
· A 1973 Gallla Academy· High
Despite the Ohio River ruling, continued to receive tull altentlon
and
!lnanclal
support
whlle
Repubor
by transportation through
School graduate and . a .1977 .
"the tax treatment of reclamation
lic has been troubled.
third parties, provided that the . gra&lt;!lJate of Ohio State Univercosts appears to be one of those
.
When operating, the caster Is
delivered price Is below the price
sity with a bachelor·s degreE- In
Issues that will not be a settled ls5ue
expected
to
produce
1.8
mWion
tons
chargro
by
Colwnbta's
pipeline
finance, 'nlomas Is married to
between the coal tndusby and the
supplier.
·
,
year,
company
olflclals
of
steel
a
the lonner Barbara !son and
IRS unless speclflr legislation· Is
said.
A
native
of
Goshen,
Ind.,
has two children .
passed," Nichols said.
Jones
said
shipments
throughout
Thomas also serves as ' an •
He said theOhlocasedeclsionwas
Leiter holds a bache!klo~r~·s::~
In archlb!clural e ·
the steellndusby likely wUI total 10
lnstnactor for the Conferenct.' of
justified because of an "Ohio law
mllllon to 72 mllllon tons this year
from Purdue ( lnJVerslty and
State Bank Supervisors.
requirement for a strtp miner to
compared
with
616
miiUon
tons
last
1 llopes In mmplete hlsl'll&amp;liter's ·
He Is the !l(ln of WPtldell and
estimate hls reclamation Cost and
year. In 1981, shipments totaled 87
at the Unlvenlty of Day1Dn this
LbL Thomas of Gallipolis.
post a surety bond to cover It .' •
million tons.

No switch
expected
in steel

Meigs plumbing firm
changes ownership

Official criticizes legislation
•
allowing stripmine d ed uctiODS

&lt;·'

I

/

I

Area personnel file

'

' ' ,, '
•

STEPIIANffi MUSICK

JONA111AN WISEMAN

Buckeye Rural names
scholarship winners ·
GALLIPOLIS - Stephanie Musick, daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
LatTy Musick, Rt. 6, South Point, Is the girls dlylslon winner In this
year's Bu ckeye Rural E lectric Coopera tive scholarship contest.
A gradua llng senlor al South Point High School, s he plans to attend
Ohio University to major In education.
·
Jona lhan A. Wiseman , son ·of Mr. and Mrs . Charles E . Wiseman.
Rt . l , Pedro. look top honors In Ihe boys division. A graduatlngsenlor
a t Symmes Valley Hig h School, his plans are to a ttend Ohio State
Univers ity and major In chemical engineering.
1\~n Gi llum. d" ughl cr of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillum of Kitts Hill
was clmS&lt;'n a ltmfa t~ In thr girls dlvlslon. She graduated from Rock
Hill Hlglt S.' hr~l and will a Itend Shawnee Sta te Community College
and study medtca l technology.
· l'hoodore L. Beach, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Beach, Rt. 2,
McAtthur. was selected alternata In the boys division. A graduate of
Vinton Counl y High School, he.wlil attend Ohio University and major
In elecll1ca l engineering . .
Bucke ye Rural officials said Its scholarships are open to all boys
and girls, and 21 student s from 15 high schools were under
consldera llon. 'J'he winners receive a $250 scholarship and an
oppo11 unity lo compc lc In !he statewide contest. where the top prlze
l"

$J.rm

·Ju&lt;lg&lt;'' in llll' l oc~J cun&gt;pl'lii'ion were Dr. Clyde Evans, dean and
P,rovusl I l&lt;iu Cra nde College a nd Community College; Sherri
'looJhaker, director of counseling at RGC-CC; and Bryson "Bud"
Carjet·, Gallla County agricultural extension agent
.

'

••

.II

'·'

.'

Junes, 1983

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Celeste sees Glenn-Reagan battle in '84
By AIANL ADLER
A_.,•eted Pl'el!ll Writer
, . COLUMBUS, .Ohlo (AP) -Gov.

higher Income tax. rate IS providing days on new business taxes that
the base lor ilconornlc recovery were stricken !rom his budget
despite a ' recent Jwnp ln the proposal. ' He said he expects
unemployment rate.
business leaders to help determine
Labor Department figures re- ---w!iat struc!imHhiHaxeswUI take.
leasedFrldayputOhlo'sunemploy·
" We must reach .a consensus on
ment rate at 13.6 percent, up from just what Is fair for business. My
the 13 percent recorded Jn Aprll.
proposal was to make the burden to
" I believe todaywecancounton a buslnliss thesameastherest ofOhio
fair and dependable base for pays. I'm looking to buSiness for
recovery In Ohio," the Democratic helplncomlngupwithsuchaplan."
governor said. ''(The taxes) have
Celestesaldifbuslnesstaxbreaks
spared this state the t,rawna that oor are to continue, existing companies
neighboring states bave expe- should benefit, because he said 70
rienced In terms of bond percent to !ll percent of new
reductions."
employees are hired by ihose
Celeste said he expects a com- businesses.
promise will he reached within 10
Celeste generally had pra·ise for

Richard CelesteJlredlcted Saturday
.t hat U.S. Sen.IJolm Glenn will win
the Democratic nomination for
.president and run against PreSident
Reag&amp;llln 198!1.
'Ole governor told Ohio newspaper publishers and editors that
such a race wou'ld be "one or the
!J105t Interesting and toughest you
will ever bave a chance to cover."
He made his remarks before the
~ted Press Society of Ohio.
In a wide-ranging talk, Celeste
reviewed hls 11ve months in ofllce
and said he thinks the state's new

'Political system, labor don't:
teamster chief claims
By M.R. KROPKO

I've been herefor40daysandl guess
that pretty soon the boneymoon wUI
be over . Before too long the media
will he ready to do a job on the
Incoming president of the Teamsters, " ' Presser said.

A.....teW Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP ) -

Teams-

fers leader Jackie Presser says his

new

experiences ln Washington
have conVinced him he has to build
many political bridges for his unlon.
: · "For some unlmown reason, the
poliUcal system makes me a nd
organized labor the enemy,"
Presser said at the C)eveland City
Club on Friday. "We In organized
labor have only one objective- we
w.ant our members to live decently,
lnworkindlgnlty,andwewantthem .
to st~rvlve in an _economy that Is ln.,
great troUble."
.
The new president of the 1.7
mUllan-member union also predicted that his "honeymoon" on the
job will likely end soon.
, "I was taliklngtheotherdaytoone
of my good friends and I says, 'We U,

Asked later to elaborate, Presser
said leaders of the Teamsters have
grown accustomed to "attack
programs from the national press."
Presser replaced Roy L. Wllllams, who resigned after he was
convicted In a bribery conspiracy. ·
Speaking to an audience of about '
300..Presser said, ''L have encoun·
tcred a lesron I will prob;lbly never
forget for the rest of my life ln my
transition from Cleveland to Wa·
shington D.C. I've never encountered so much lobbying and people
pushing bills. We must find ways
and means fo r the members in ou·r

districts to communicate with the
powers that be in Washlngton."
Presser, a Teamsters vice pres!·
dent in Cleveland before assumtng
the top union post, said the unton has
lost 700,00l members in the last 24
months, and he blamed muc h of It on
deregulation of the trucking
Industry.
Presser said one of his thrusts will
be to organize In the public seetor, In
occupations like law enforcemenl
and eductation. Hesald many pubUc
workers are dissatisfied with their
unions and working conditions.
" I can COilJl'll\tnlcate'. with my
· members;'' Presser said: ·•l know
how to advise them as to what must
be .~one ... It's very difficult for the
average white-colla r worker to
understand that It took !ll years for
the lntema tlonal brotherl1ood to
become an American Institution."

Health official says doctor
pl~cement needs examination
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
ofllclal of the Ohio Department of
Ohio concerned
Board of
Health says
Regents
shouldthe
lle more
about where new doctors are going
to practice than with how many new
doctors state medical schools are
tumlng out.
ElWin B. Teuber, chief of health
Information and research at the
Ohio Department o!Health, said his
depart:mE!nt supports the regents'
Study of the state's physician needs.
.It "does not go far enough In
addressing the matter· of the
geographic maldlstrlbutlon of
primary-care pltyslclaps," he said.
· .For example, Teuber said Cuya~ga County, Including Cleveland,
lias one primary-care physician per
1.153 ~le, the best ratio In the
state. But there are pockets withln
ihe county that are offlclally
designated as "shortage areas," he
added. Primary-care physicians
Include lntemlsls, general practi·
tioners and pediatricians.
. Regents are considering a prop.
qsal to reduce the nwnber of state
!'ledlcal school graduates by the
:Year 1900. The current graduation
rate, the regents' staff says, wUJ
~ult In the state turning out 600
more doctors each year than Ohio
\Yill need.
• .Teuber endorsed a regents'
Sl!ggestlon of developing a program
tb place primary-care physicians In
flreas where they are needed . He
f?und fault, as did medical college

[ Area death

officials, with the regents using only

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

OUTDOOR FURNITURE
FOR FATHER'S DAY

lf• CARAT-REG. 1450
SALE

v ROOF COATING

v HEATING ElEMENTS

v WATER HEATERS

v 3 INCH SEWER PIPE

Come In Today And See The

$249

Nollwood Homes By Skyline.

¥1 CARAT-REG. 1650

$42250

SALE

2 &amp; 3 Bedrooom Total Electric.

TAWNEY
JEWELRY
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

GOD GUIDES US UNTO ·ALL TRUTH

n~· Unvtd i\. lt4.•t•d, l,umcroy , Ohio
A s pro mlsC'd by Chr l!il. GOII I!\ilclt'~ us I rH o ~ 1 11 I n n h. Pr alst' lht&gt; l.n rd ~
.1 beca mr !r Chris! !an as a ~~ou n g 1r&gt;t'n, tgt'r. whill ' S('f' 'inl! my &lt;'011111 r) '. I ~,. ;rs ..,, •\·rr t •1\ wntn lth '&lt;.I. 1r .\ppH I in .1
dam agf"(:l bunk&lt;'!" alo m~ wHh St'\ '('l'~t l , •r~t ' ll l .\' S()ldll'l"" locatu:l on llw outsldt •. Ht•; llilhlg 1m · I if" w;~!'&gt; in L:rt{\1
d angPr, I pr a.vf'd 10 G()(l m aking a t'otnn lltnwnt - IF lh' wou l!llt•t nw llvt •. 1 wn ull l Sl '\"\' 1' ll iltl In tl 11 • !'ul ul t'
1m ran ing I would lx'('Om(' n mon· faiThful t 'hrlsllan t 1ll !&lt;&gt; tmd 1 l)I'I'Hil li' ;1 it'"" f.tithfu l ( ' tu i..., ILdl t. ht tlw p l.1n ·
wh('l'(' 1 stoppf '(llovl ng ancl trusHnr.: sotnt ' pr opl t•. WlH'II lt tb IJ.LPJWilt 'tl, I found lift • dl ffin!lt lt l li\• '
O n January :l. l!lfi l. 1 m ark a Nrw Yf';1r' s r t-snlu1ionlo lov p amt t nt st t'\'1'1"\'0ilt'. A" .1 r l"'u \1 , l lt•l l tt tlll 'li
bC'!ter . T hai nig ht . prior to falli ng asl t'&lt;' P. c ; o(r ~ splrll ual stn•ngth ('lllt'rt'Ci m y hod.v With t' ttt hu .. t. t ... rn J,·, tllu l
my m other w ho askrd If I hac! pra.v rd for th ts Pxprr lc~n r'l'. I tol&lt;llwr " no". hu 1 tole\ h\•r pf llu · n':'ul utlttn I h. at
mad e. Shr sn ld Shl' sensN.I"Ihal I sN' ITh'(\ troub ll'l.l am\ sht• prayed for nw . t\lld . pt• rlwps Ct"ll. l : 11\ ... \\"t •r n\ ll t·t
ptay C' r. God answ er s al l pr ayt'' l'=-&gt;. £'ilhN "yr·s" or " no" .
As a n &gt;s ult of m y &lt;'XPf'l'if'n C't\ nw ft!StX).Silion l' llHng&lt;'fl . &lt;;1x1 g;wf' nn· th n'l' "Jl lrtl ual gift!'&gt; - ;tdtllt ir1n.tl f. tir h.
add U!onal splrllual know ledg e', 11 nct il 1'llP~sagt' from Ox\ l ll tTl ~l' lf
(;ad's m r-ssagf' Is I his: O nly l hnst ' l 'hrlslln ns found failh fu l wlwn uur Hv t ·~ ll,t\'l't 'lll it d m1 t':trl h wiii i M· ..,,~,· r d

on .Judgmmt Day . E\"' 'I)'Onf' f'\"1' will Ut· l os t ~
F ailh Is d&lt;•term lnf'd b.v sin . Th(' les,&lt;;; we sin . tht• rnotl' fall h W(' tw vr•. Sill is ;u1 y 1lli ng IH!ll )l. ·in g r In · Will • •I I :\ .1
For II can onl y tx&gt; (;{)(!'!-&gt; Way or S:Hart 's w•w
Sin Is found In thl'f'f' groups: T h!' sin WP ca n 11\·t• wll houl ; !hi' :.in wt· t·an urll.\' .., , ti\ ' t ' 11 • llv1 · wtrtu n11. . md lht·
sln w r C&lt;IIUIOI I'Pt'tlgn!i'.t ' a ~ tx•ing sin . ( ;nd Is w anllrLg il tu bt • know rt lip I Wt ' .dl :.. In And , t 'hn,tl cuJs nt'f-t l lr l l h·
aw ;1rr or snm r of ttl is " In In rod a.\ ··.., !-ou·tt·t ~' : for totl:i y is rn 1Jrt ' tl iffkul l 111 l h ·• · .t fitl thtul ( '111"1.-. tbrt lilt' tllo~n :nl\
othr r 1\mr.
T o put &lt;;o(! fi rs I in nur hP&lt;L rt s, l lllml.-., o~ ncl soub : :uu tr n pit '&lt;LSt ' l :nd ,tnd nul\ I :od ' - W1· lllll.' l dlt l lih to l11 •
s.avN:t: Th t' f'('([U ll'f' lll('Jll ~ 10 clo Ill I!- Is l h.t l WI ' I'I'IX'Il! uf DUI' si us and ill'l"l ']ll .Jt •.., u ... ( 'hrlsl its 11UI ' Savhnlr, n takl n~:
us Chrlsli &lt;.l rt&lt;; . SN·ondl .i . wf' mu st hi' wi lllnc 111 o t lf'~' ( ;0(\' s Cmn ma nrht lt'n l s; :tnd fl n.tl lv In hr• h.lplit " ! Slnt' ' wt ·
arr to IX' followPrs of Cllrlsl . I 1'.111 Oil I\ r'f't "nrnnwrult o 1)1 ' hapl ll(, -\ In Ch rist llk t•fashlnn .!lld !t\. 11 hdng h.t\' 1111~

hr •poltt f' toi'\'1'1"' '011 1'. t'\'t •n if 11 l llt •t .., f.dl t•' rdurtt ••u r poll l1 ·n ' "'' ll11

not uS&lt;' rvil agatnsl r·vll. l lUI Hlwa.v-. u" ' ' gnod rws:-.
Not to look .:11 001k~ . ltlil g;llhl!&gt;:-o. rtltiVif-s, f' IC rN •t•; •l1nl.! nudity or "t'xu. tl hdt.t \ it •r Nol
Not
Not
Nol

• FUN-IN-THE-SUN
COLORS

to ltslt•n 10 or IP\1 dirty jnk r-.'&gt; to lX'rforin or m ;rkP fllr'IY l.!t''i iU rr'S to usP dir ty la ng ungC'lo bl • j f•a lous- IJUI In IX' sat hfl('{[ anrllhmtk ful lor w ho~ I WI ' h:t \ 't ', !Jf"l l\ "tt\1 ~I wt· h.1\., .I ;co~\' " tu ... tl n. n h

food and clot hing.
Not 10 usc alco hol. n wr1 j uana. or d t1J).!S to rtw p 1 iH'~' rI tal it • ·h ; l nJ.(t'~ till 1 rt it! u 1.tl ... t. ttt• ,,f n ttnd . .un l• ..,.., t1f'i t\ J-:

used lor med ical car('.
Nol to h;~ w• Sf ' X wlthoul m ani o1g1'. or Ju st in our ltf •a rl s, trllnds, or snuJ, - tm - o.;; ty un!u yuu , " I Wll tt ltl tl• ·v•·r
ha v(' sex wilhnut m ;_u·r1agf' " ( ;of! kn ows I'm shWt ' l'l ' wh('ll I say this: bul 111 wa... n 'l .md !ltou ~ h t u th•·r·wlst·, it

would bf' lhP samr us hav ing Sf'X 11f· a~s urf'd Gcd k.llO\\'s ;rll l hinJ,!s~
Not to ga mble, rort sl&lt;&gt;tlng of an,v par1 of m otH'Y or ll n.v thl ng of 11 1nnPv \', tl tu •Nol to w ork . If p:&gt;s~lb lc. on ltl&lt;' l.nrd 's D ay anfl kN'P II IHJiy .
Noi to. cheat . liP, S!Pal. or fall to p.a y our df'lll o.; a.s lllf'y hPmm t• clut • - lt;rv t• th•IJh \) rll.\ tl nr, .1..,..., 1rv

Reg. $204

t'ot 10 judgP-bul In usP our npi nlnns.
Not to l{'t our templ'N; gN nul of eonlroi Not to rt ghl - only for thl' df' ff'n5l' of our mlllon. or 111 prof('{'! ou r Ind ivid ual r \g hr-. Wt· , tf uu1d h.tv t • lht•

SALE

$135

courage to fig ht when thf'Sf' sll uatlnns oec ur Bu l. alw a .v ~.; fl~-:ht l hi&gt;St' ball I ~&gt;~.. w \111 low in out ht •;tr h it ntl 11111
ht:\ !rf'd .
To obey th(· law s or ma nkind- hut rf' mf'mht·r ( ;od 's 1,aw s h aVf' fl l'!-. 1 pliorit y .
Not to worry or r omplal n: hul h.a vp ('Oncr rn ami pr ay I'VI'I"}'da y say in g, ·' [)t'ar 1/('avr •nl y F ;tl h• ·t ·' ' . ..... k wh.rl
we will . And , ending·by sayi ng, ''In .JPSu s' n am PWI' i.ISk . Amr·n·· . T hPn havt• p&lt;:tllt•n&lt;·•• 111!Just in lllf' J ,1m ll f) g-11\dt•
u s as He w\ 11 . to serv(' Him wll h dr-slrf'.
T o work for God , by ht&gt; l pl n ~ olhf"r s spir itually and physicall y: whosP flrsl plior lty physlcalru«l ls ltw t
.. w hich l.s needed to slay a live.
I b('l\evf' God considers m any of us mu nl f'n ·r~ hy bc:'lng iJWan• or JX'OpiP&lt;I Ving In t li1 • wo rl d d ut · tu lh• · 1: n·k uf
t hCS(' needs and ow · n('g lig£•n('f' \11 h('lp\ng
God provides for our l"l('{'ds- iln yth ing hr•y ond nur nN't1S L~.; to l&gt;eglv&lt;&gt;n !O(IO thl• w or k u((;uc.l. Wt •s hou!U t 111ly
give according to ou r ability. H we ar P not ahli • In gl\lf' m oney, 4'1&lt;' .. WP :tlwa ys should ht_' :dJir • to ~ l vt' o l

SPRINO BASE LOUNOER

• PERFECT••• AFTER
A ·HARD DAY'S'WORK

OU fS('I Ves .

God' s Word tells us that It Is f'as lr r for a cHmr ll o go lhr'ough th(.' f''oll ' Of a nL"l'lll(•, ttlan for :.t r It ·h m an !Ot •n tt•r
into the Klngdom of God. Also, for the love o r monf'y Is 1hf' r ool of all evil : and th al li bi rnon · l1lr ~st\1 t ugi vt •tl1;rn
to receive.
As the poor receive food, clothing, et c., 1•~1 no man say lhutlhis l"i c:omlng from man - IJul 14•1 t hl'm kmr w lht·
truth - that It Lii romlng from God. so they c&lt;1n ga in both spiri tuall y and ph)(,sll·aliy.
God hates sin, but permits us as Chrl'itlan s 10 sin In a Cf't'taln dCJ.,'f('{': at which poin t hl' mu st draw rtu.• lln r pennlttlng one soul to bar~ly be s~wecl : whllt;&gt; anothC'r w111 barely be los ! !
An e Kample of how Judgment Day wtJII)(' Is for each of u s t.o be lock ed U,J In n sPparal l' housP wll h 01fl r p,
representing sin. To th e Ctuist!ans. God has gtven u s one bu cke t of waler , rcprc srnll ng Ch rist . IIJhalllf'our fi r e.
Tt w e don't possess a lot df sln, we wUI be ablr to put oo.t our flres and be sa ved .
U we possess a lot or sin , oor fires arP too large an~ we wUl be dootroyed . F'or the non -Chr \stlu ns jX)SSCSsl nJ.!

nothing to battle your lire with you , too, will be destroyed.
'
Ourdestlnallon Is en tirely up to us. But I believe GOO Is pr~par lng u s for the grret and drmdfu l Day of tht•
Lord. Thanks to G&lt;id I am ready for that Day . The question L~ - ar e y ou'!
If you are nOt a Christian, you can lleqlmeone anywher l"' and anytime by pra y tng to God a nt! sayi n~ lhCS('

tOday.

NOW

Sis blke-a-lhon that wat1 to be held
morning, but was can·
celled clue to rain, will be held
Thesday at Mel'lS ·. County Falr1
gtounds ~ 10 a.m. untn noon .

SEE _K&amp;K MOBILE
HOMES FIRST!

murdNI'l' ('ll fl tx 'l:·omf' a f(L ilhful Chr lst\;rn
Nnl to t10\rt ~nJdg f~ or hit vr hl !ll ·rrl • ~ -"

. POINT . PLEASANT - James
Johnson Jones, 54, Gallipolis F erry,
died Friday afternoon ln Pleasant
Valley Hospital !allowing a lengthy
Illness.
Born July 28, 1928, In Henderson,
son of Dewell and Helen Johnson
Jones, whoboth surviveatGalllpolls
F~ . he was a member of
Henderson United Methodist
Church.
Also survMng are two sisters,
Mrs. R.obert (Juanita) Shamblen of
Galllpolls Ferry and Mrs. William
(Joy) Martin of Shade, and several
rileces and nephews.
' Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday In Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, Point Pleasartt, with Rev.
Benny Stevens and Rev. Mike
l}rown 'ot!lclatlng. Burtal wtll be 1n
Hendenoo Cemetery. Frtends may
tiaJJ at the funeral home after 4p.m.

$alurday

attempts by Sun Belt states to
acquire fresh water from !he Great
Lakes.
"If God wanted tha t (lndus tna l)
de.v.elopment In the Sun Belt, She
would ha ve put water there," he
said.

r£'fusr h('lping othrrs In !IN'([ ht'( 'llU !-&gt;f' of fP; tr .
. To love and nl.Jst f'VC ' l")'OIH' - llw mon • WI' l'i\11 du -.n, rht • 11lor+' f. 1i1hlu I wp • u ' · \\'' · n 1u ... 1I• t\"t ·' ., ., n n111 · 11II 11·
s;_\Vf't:l. WI' rn usl for gtvr I hoSt' who il11 t•v ll .:11'1." :tg:1i nsr u.'&gt; tr 1h1· ... .tvt~l . l llll l\ th•l...r· ' ' \ II .wh .trr· .tJ.:: un ... t 111. 11\ '..,
laws. !hal prrson should !)(' prO.SI'( 'U!f'f l a1-rort1 1 n ~ 11 1 m an 's b w ... !lui, llt '\'l' t b.v r·, tpll. tl punl " hrnl 'nl . ln t . 1

James J, Jones

~ POMEROY -The Cystic Fibro-

''They do occasionally tumble the
ball, like they did a couple of days
ago," said Celeste.
Celeste said last week's Great
Lakes Governors' .COnfe rence
helped fonn a bond among Great
Lakes states thiit will fight off

our ln:lif'S pur under w&lt;L i l'l' h~' J rninb r,•r
T o tow• a net ff'a r ( ;()([ mOrt' 1h.1 11 ;my ! hi ng - 1h+ • mon · \ ~' !' 1·a n f1•.t r 1 ;11d .un 11111' It...,, wt · 1·,u1 It·. 11 l l1i ng-.. 111 I l1r ·
world. lhr m nn• pf' riC'&lt; ·t L" nur lov(' w i rtl~.:ofl. Oh l ill nl tl g fP:1r 11f ( ;, "' 1 l n, lk t -.. u .., :1l t ,1t1l II &gt;\' ill•nhl\ ' '" · t l~· ti n ... r r ;,~,
WC' must rca llzr l ;od has r hf' powt'l' tn 1 'a ~ 1 us l ntn hPII fl rr • It' w t • ;m · filii wllll tlJ~ l r• ul"ll ., l lln 1 w, . " I" tidd 11 1 .,., ·t

I

Reschedule
bikeathon

physician-to-population figures .

the PubUc Utllltles Commission of
Ohio, but he did mention last week 's
acUon In which the PUCO ordered a
Colwnbla Gas of Ohio rate Increase
of 51 cents per-mousaml cubic feet,
even though the utijliy had asked for
only 25 cents.

words- "Dear God, f orgive me of my slns, for I have slnned . I accept y our Son, J esu s Chr is ! , as m y Sav iour,
Amen':. God's answer ls like this- "I rorR"tve you or aU your sins of th e p ast , but wU1Judgey04- for lhOS('Slns y ou
possess when yW'r Ute has E!lded here on earth." Make up your mind to be baptized the fir st opporlunily you

NOW$65

have.
·
AB workers for God and havlng the desire to let others learn of th is promised r evclallon hy Chr lsl. hnv!'

CORI)IN &amp; SNYVER
fURNITURE CO.
955 Second Ave.

446~ 1171

Ill, Ohio

other new'!P3per companies In this aroo prtnt thls good news through paid adl/ertlscment . The destre for work
sh9uld come with lalth, ror there Is nothing more pleasing to God than having works. And, He will reward us
accordJng to our Works .
For these words within. let no m a n t ake away.
God bless yOu, everyone; and m ay we meet In H eaven Is my des 1re. Amen!
Paid forb:.· Dt~ vld A . R eed

�M' *'leport . Gallipolis, Ohia Point fl!.a_..t, W. Va.

. Paga A 8 The Sunday Timet-Sentinel

. ,~yne

Charged in death

20.

~

--o
A

body.

POMEROY - Unde; investlga·
tlon by Pomeroy pollee is a two-car
accident that occurred Friday • t
1l : 49 a.m . on West Main Street In
front of The Dairy Valley.
According to the report; a car
driven by Kathy Williams, 31, Rt. 1,
Langsv ille, pulled from The DairY
Valley into traffic and was struck by
a car driven by Evelyn E. Davis, 35,
Mason, who traveling west on West
Main . There were no reported
Injuries.
. · At 5:50 p.m ., on Lincoll) Hel" hts,
· 'Robert Foreman , 2o, Condor Sl reet,
Pomeroy, was traveling down hill
when he went Into the yard of Tom
Grueser a nd struc k a fence and light
pole.
Foremen was c ited to court on a
charge of destruction of property.
Also unde r investlgallon Is !he
breaking of a window at the
proper ty of Amy KingSland Jones
located on Court Street In Pomeroy .
The incident occurred at 3:12a.m.
Saturday.

-

5

SuiTOIIIIded by trayel posters, maps and souvenirs, Max Taimey
sits In his photography and jewelrY shop office In downtown
Gallipolis and remtnlsces about his work and travels.
In ·bu siness since June 2, 1933, one day ·after his high school
graduation from . Gallla Academy In Gallipolis, Tawney is
celebrating his 50th year In business .
,
Tawney salq he got-Interested In photography at age 14, when his
cousin gave him an Eastman Box Camera .
"I would spend ;ill my money taking pictures," Tawney said. He
would take the film to Watts Studio. and the owner would let Max
·help out In the darkroom. Shortly before graduating from high
school, Tawney Said, Watts approached him with the idea of going
Into business with him.
Buying a one--half interest In the studio for $1,500, Tawney said he
was busy a! he studio by 6or7a.m.eachmornlng, developlng50 or60
roils of film dally. He stayed there until 1 or 2 a.m. the next morning,
.
. ·
he said.
The next year, Tawney said, Watts suffered a heart attack and had
to slow down his work schedule.
Wa tts had planned on selling his Interest to his son-In-law, Tawney
said, but Max talked hinn into selling the other haH of the business to
him tor another $1,500.
Both tinnes, Tawney had gotten his fathe r to sign for the money,
which back In 1933 was a great s um, he added. Within that first year
after becoming a partner, he had already paid back $700.
Hiring a photographer from Marie tta, Tawney would travel to all
the schools In four counties in West VIrginia, three counties In
Kentucky and four In Ohio, to take photographs of the classes.
PhOtos cost the students 25 cents for a five inch by seven Inch
portrait, and Tawney said that 00 to 90 percent of the children bought
the photographs. "'!1)is was in the re.al depression, when a quarte r
·was mo!}ey." he said.
·
· · •
·. . · · '
·
· ·
Within ihe next nine months, Tawney said he had paid b.ick both
loans, and business was booming. Each week, over $:.nl would be
taken In, he added.
It was about that Iinne, Tawney said. the owner of the building he

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Sunday June

'

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'

ThrOugh ups and downs, in business 50 years
By lEE ANN WELCH

•• en -a

Probe accident

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She returned to the apartment and
called an emergency squad, which
took the child to a hospital, where he
·· was pronounced dead.
Pollee olflcer Kevin Clark said
doctors found bruises on the chlld 's

,..
nn%

Section~

r1 er

.'
'

"' CIRCLEVILLE,

Ohio (AP) - A
charge of Involuntary manslaqgb·
ter has been tiled against a inan In
connection with the death of his
4-'month-old son, who police say was
struck and who showed evidence of
previous injuries.
Harold F . Payne, 18,ofCircleville,
was being held Friday In the city jail
In lieu of a $7,500bond. Arraignment
was scheduled Monday.
He was accused ofstrlklng his son,
Timothy, on Thursday, said pollee
Lt . William ·Pontious. The c hild
apparently had been crying before
being struck, the officer said.
Payne told pollee that he got
scared when the child stopped
breathing, and rushed to get the .
child's mother, Rebecca Arledge,

•

5, 1983

:z:, ,. - - - - - • - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "'a : .::.••
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• ' •• • •

was In wanted to sell for $9,000, and the photo studio had ·30 days to
buy It or get out.
In 193:1, Tawriey's father signed the family farm over for
mortgage, so he.coilld buy the building. His father had the trust and
ronfidence In his son that. despite his youth. he could really take that
business places.
Max Tawney worried a nd fretted over the awsome task of
repaying that loan to the bank , working 15 to 20 hours dally. aJid by

the time 1937 rolled around, he had paid off the biggest part of tha i
loan.
Thai was the year of the b ig flood.
During thalt inne, Tawney said he was told the river was cresting
within six hours. a nd his equipment and negatives In the basement of
the bulldlllg should be safe .
Instead of cresting, the river rose five Inches and. Tawney said,
'"wiped me out ...
•
·
He had pretty much recovered by 1939, and opened a branch studio
in Point Pleasant, W. Va .
Just about nine weeks later, Tawney ran into another s nag .. .fii"f'.
With no Insurance, he said he was !"f'ady lo '"t hrow In the towe l.'"
but two representatives from Eastman Kodak. plu s hi s fa ther . .
talked him Into s ticking il out .
"'U It hadn 't been for them and my dad." Tawney said . " I think It
would have led to m y leaving the photo business ...
""! must say:· Tawney added . '"! owe It aU to mv fat her and mot her
who W~rt' good hard working Chrlsllan pPOpl&lt;' ...· He also gives much
credit to his wife Mabel. who worked in I he s hop :lO years ~&lt;11h him.

•

·Face charges
POMEROY - Arthur Gray a nd
Sherr! Butcher, both of Rt. 2,
Racine, were cited lo Meigs County
Court on charges of trespassing,
acrordlng to the Meigs County
SherHfs Department.
. They were reportedly a t the
Letart Falls school grounds after
hours Friday night. Signs restrict·
lng access to the property are posted
at the entrances.
Deputies returned James F . King,
Rt. 1, Leading Creek Road, Middleport, from the Franklin County Jail
to a nswer cho/ges in M&lt;flgs County
for the May 21 breaking and
ente ring of Woodrow Engle's resi·
dence at Rt. 1. Middleport .

Max Tawney, in 1933

I

Emergency runs

.and Max Tawnl"y t o da y
I

""J

J&gt;?MEROY - Four emergency
runs were m ade Friday by local
units and two early' Saturday
morning, the Me igs County E mergency Medical Service reported.
Pomeroy was called at 12:03a.m.
Friday to an a uto accident on Ohio
143 for Philip D. Call and Steve Call ,
who were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy a t 7
p. m . for Mike Dorst, who was taken
to Veterans; Pomeroy at 8: JJ p.m .
to the sheriff's office for Keith
Musser, whowastakentoVeterans;
Racine at 9: 42 p.m . toAAnllqulty for
Hom er Graha m, who was taken to
Veterans.
On Saturday at3: l'i a.m ., Racine
we nt to Antiquity for Home r
Graham, who was Ia kcn back to
Veterans; Ml&lt;jdleport at 5:04 a.m.
' for Allee Clark, who was taken to
Veterans.

· Photography,

Incorporated
COLUMBUS- SecretaryofState
Sherrod Brown reported that articles of incorporation have been filed
with his olflce In Columbus by
Kitc hen &amp; Son Construction, Inc.
Charles L. Kitchen is listed as
inCOflXII"ator a nd Karen H. Story,
Pomeroy, as agent.

Guest speaker
' - Dave Watkins,
PAGEVU..LE
missionary to Alasl!,a, will be guest
.speaker at Pagevllle Freewlll
Baptist Church 1\tesday at 7: Il p.m .
Watkins will show slldes of his
work In Alaska. Ralph Butcher,
pastor,lnvltes the public to attend.

.

creattve expresstan. . • "

By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Stall

In the late 1930·~ and early 1940's,
the Tawney Srudio looked like this.

.

Travel has a lways been a passion of Max Tawney. It is evident in
his sm all office in the bac k of Tawney J l'welers .
He suJTOUnds hinnself wilh Items from around the world. For
example, on the walls, there are maps or lt"f'land. China a nd !hi'
world . There are also orienta l paintings hangin g high ovPrhmd.
On his desk, enclosed under glass. are currencies from around the
world .

On fh(~ s hPIVf'S arf' artlfact s from tl! s trip lo i\frk;1, surroumlf'&lt;i by

more posters from Spa in a nd ot he r pll rts of lh&lt;' world .

travelogues or magazines.
He has more than just tou r lsttrinkPi s to rl'mlnd him or hi s trawls.
During his vis ll s. he h'" kept a eom piPic rT'&lt;"Or"d of lh&lt;' tri p wllh his

camera.

"There Is somethin g a tXJut photo~-,&gt;Ta phy thai stays wit h you,"
Ta wney said.
,
Some linnes spending six or seven hours In lh&lt;' darkroom printing
photos of his lrip5. Tawm•y gels rm l sallsfacllon In SP!'ing the
photography come to llle .
" It Is a creallve expression , se&lt;'lng something a nd takln~: a picture
of II . E nha nc ing II In the darkroom, " he sa id. gPII Ing to the fi na l
product.
He said he had wanted to travel since grad£' sc hool. whe n he heard
Lowell Thomas tell ol his advenlu N'S a ll over the world .
Beginning when he was 2o years old, he has traveled. Thai year hP
saw a sign In a travel agent 's window In Clncinnall for a $99 round
trlp to Cuba tha i was leaving withi n two hours.
He walked Into Ihe office and gave the agent the nquired sum of
money. With no luggage, a nd only $51 le ft in his poek&lt;•l, Max Tawn&lt;'y
took olf for Cuba on a five-day ITip .
·Since that time , he has visited a ll five conllnonl s, Europe, Asia.
North America. South Ame rica and Africa, and plans to kL'&lt;'p
traveling, "as long as m y health holds out, " he sa id.
His latest journey, to Alrlca. was c hronicled in !he Ga Ul polls Oaily
Tribune a nd the Point P leasant Register within the past year .
He plans on returning to Africa next year, a nd In twoymrs ta kPoff
for T ibet and India.
Will Max Tawney retire from the photo a nd jPwe lry businesses to
devote his Iinne to his hobby, !ravel?
" Maybe In 1990," he sa id . Thai will be aft er 57 ymrs In bu siness .
but Max Tawney admits he probably won't really rPIIn.' .

Trustees to meet
LEjARTFALI..S- Letart Town·
ship t~ustees will meet Monday at 7
p.m .

· Today; Tawney's isn't just a
photo srudro, next door is the
business he purchased in 1953,
which used to be Wall's Jewelry.

Veterans ~emorial

AdrJiisslons ~ None.
Discharges Walter King,
Walter Barrett, Harold Hubbard.

,,
I

r'

'·

4

·

He has vls iiC'd most or ltlf' worlcl inp&lt;• rson, not throug h te iPvision

•

�.·

•

Pometoy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Paint Plea.-t,

Pag&amp;---:-B-2-The Sunday Ti"-Sentinel

W.

..

RIO GRANDE - Two students
and a faculty member trom Rio
Grande College and Community
Col• recently attended the sev·
enth annual meeting o! the Ohio
Netwo~k o! Educational Consul·
tants on Aging In Columbus.

needs interest

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Either you door you don't, and If
you do, It's time
action.
Linda
Fulk
• •
" that there Is difficulty In getting a
reunion of the
M e ig s High
School Class of
•
1973 off the gro11nd~
Some express Interest, but tickets
don't move, and unless there 'ts
follow-through, the whole thing Is
going to be called off.,
Plans call tor the traditional
banquet and dance tor the class
which Is observing its lOth year
sin'ce graduation. Deadilne tor the
reunion tickets has been extended
to June 11 and tickets may be
purchased at the New York Clo·
thing House In Pomeroy or at King
Builders' Supply In Pomeroy. Or
you can even buy by mall from
Lind a Faulk, 120 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy .
You are urged to buy your tickets
as soon as possible so that plans can
be comp,leted .

.

•

\9

Vera Beegle who served as
preslden t of the former Meigs
Natlpnal Bank In a day when
women bank pres idents were quite
rare w111 be observing her 87th
birthday on June 8. Cards may be
sent to her at Box 131, Racine.
Speaking of anniversaries, Hensley's Grocery, founded In 1893 by
the late A. F . Swan, Is marking Its
. ~ anniversary . The store located
at Long Bottom has been In ·u,e
same ·location lor Its Ulettme and
hds been a family operation passed
on from the late Mr. Swan to
daughters, Mae and Leona. It
became Hensleys In 1957. The Mae
Is ·now Mae McPeek.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, AmertLegion, Middleport, Is opening
a pUblic fund drive to raiSe $750 to
ho nor the town's Congressional
Medal of Honor winners who are
the late Edward Bennett a nd the
late Jimmy Stewart.
The post would like to purchase a
bronze marker !rom the Ohio
Historical Society as a part of the
h&lt;&gt;norlng processes.
}lesldents who would like to help
wlth the project are asked to send
their donations to Feeney-Bennett
P&lt;ist 128, Amertcan Legion; At!:
H~nry Clatworthy, Middleport .
c~n

Friends have learned that Mrs.
~lph Zundel, former Pomeroy
and Middleport resident and a
former teacher of religious educaIn Meigs County, Is confined to
atlQ.ll
:Zanesvtue"hospltal
!ollowtng a
heart a ttack and stroke. Cards may
b(i sent to the home address which Is
7'n Calwell St.. Zanesville, Oh.,
43701.
Harold Willis In Room 316 at the
Holzer Medica l Center, his fou rth
hospitalization sln&lt;-e December. He
has had his second artery by-pass .
Harold would appreciate vlsllors
and ca rds . He expects to be
confined lor some time.

•: J~~ne 5, 1983

are advised that photos taken at
commencement are now ready lor
dlstrtbutlon. Members o! the gra.
duatlng class can pick them up
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday
through Friday from Grace at the
,high school ot!lce.
•

Lorena I&gt;obbllis of Portland,
Ohio, anc~ Manba Cl)nlln rt Jack·
son, Ohio, atteaded the conference
along wlth Leonard .H. Seyfarth,
Associate Professor of Soclal Work.
The students are study!Dg I!@I'Ontol·
In the social work program' al

RACINE- Mrs. Elleen Buck, Letart FaUs Elementaiy School
teacher, retiring alter 38 years
serviCe, was honored Friday by
sta!fteachersat a meeting hosted by
the Sou.them Local Education

..
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The uprtver vegetable farmers
who depend on early crops are
having many problems. The wet
weather and lack o! warnn nights
means that nothing Is growing
much. The yard sale peQple can't
a !tract customers or even show
their wares In the constant rain.
The rest ot us are checking lor body
tungus.
However, things are worse elsewhere so we do manage to keep
smiling, don 't we?!

Fl:iii'N

'

:_

Professor chosen
• •

RIO GRANDE - Dr. Ivan M.
Tribe, Assistant Professor o! History at Rio Grande College and
Community College, has been
chosen to attend the Summe~
Seminar for College Teachers
under the auspices o! the National
Endowment for the Humanities.
The seminar wlll be hi!Id June 13
through August 15 at the University
of North Carolina In Cahpel Hlll.
EntJUed "The American South:
Myth and Symbol," the seminar
will be directed by Professor
C'-rge B. Tindall, author of such
books as " The Disruption of the
Solid South," and "The E mergency
of the New South."

•

I
• .

I

U hamb1U'Ien

• • • • ciiPlhlt coupoo • • -

-

mor:~ .

THRIFT 'Ac;k lnc l~o~deS : 8 fish tlll8fl, cri~ tren_qh_trk!s; creo mv cofe slaw qnd B·hush ·

..-•~==--n•·· · ·~:p::::D'•

i":;.·~:

217 UPPER RIVER RD . . . . ._ . , . . . _ _
.. •
- onecou,.,percu~omer-

. i
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.,

TREMENDOUS SAVI.NGS

50°/o
OFF UST PRICE
13 STYLES
6 STAINS

WAYSIDE FURNITURE

ALL WOOD
STOP IN TODAY AND LET OUR
KITCHEN SPECIALISTS DESIGN YOUR

KITCHEN-WE GIVE FREE ESTIMATES

APPLIANCE SALE
ALL APPLIANCES IN STOCK ARE
MARKE~ DOWN TO[OUR COST OR BELOW!

WED IN VIRGINIA - Mr. and Mrs. Frankillt Smith Jr. were
married in Pembroke, Va. May 21. Mrs. Smllh Is the lonner Leah Hood
'o! Gallipolis. The couple Is residing at Ft. Stewart, Georgia where Smith
Is serving the U.S. Arnny.

McDonald's supports education .
' RIO GRANDE - McDonald's
Restaura nts throughout Ohio &lt;!f·
: firmed their commitment to sup; port quality education recently by
: raising S598 for Rio Grande College
"through the Ohio Foundation of
: Jndependent Colleges (0FlC) .
; .. Th e McDona ld 's Campa ign
• iheme of "Support Quality Educa·
: "don _ McDonald's'and You" was a
• ·~eal success," according to Tom
: E:ewster of McDonald's Corporatron . "Our custom ers really came
: .th rough," Fewster said, noting that
lhe student participation a nd the
'.itstrlbutlon of coupons was the
-most Important element In the
. fimdralser. The montes raised
: 'through the dona tion o! a quarter
; 1J:,r every coupon redeemed will
•
·
60 (XX) t de t
· l?eneflt more than '
s u n son
. 'qver 35 ~ampuses.

-Outstaruiing nursing
•
'rJ-ward given at Rio
HEADBOARD-FRAME-DECK-PLAIN RISER-FULL WAVE
MATTRESS-LINE HEATER-FILL &amp; DRAIN-,ATER CONDITIONER-PATCH KIT-KING OR QUEEN SIZE
..

MANY MORE STYLES IN STOCK-SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY
COMFORTERS-SHEETS-MATIRESS PADS
NO PAYMENT TIU.AUGUST
241 THIRD AVE.
OPEN ION, &amp; FRI. H

446-1830

AMANA REFRIGERATOR SR22, Side by Side, 22 cu. ft. Gold ................... $850.00
AMANA RADARANGE RR-10, Touch Controls ......................................... $499.00
AMANA CORNING COOKTOP AKC-3, Display .......................................... $400.00
. AMANA FREEZER ESU-13, Whitlt, 13 cu. ft ............................................ $400.00
AMAN~ GLASSTOP RANGE._ASC-1 ......... _
, .,,.. ,....................................... $600.00

lflmlliUll',

ADMIRAL
ADMIRAL
ADMIRAL
ADMIRAL
ADMIRAL

REFRIGERATOR NS-22,' Almond, 3 dr., 22 cu. ft . ..................... $949.00
REFRIGERATOR DNT-22, Almond, Ice B. Walter ·....................... $900.00
REFRIGERATOR NS-22, Almond, 2 door .................................. $799.00
REFRIGERATOR NT-178, Almond, 17 cu. ft ............. ................ $475.00
FREEZER, Chest.-8.3 cu. ft ........ :... :....................................... $300.00

..

GAUIPOLIS, OH.
lUES.-WB&gt;.-llfURS.·SAT. t-5
'

PANASONIC MICROWAVE i020, Touch Cc.ntrols, Genesis .;..................... $550.00
PANASONIC MICROWAVE 9900. Convection ..........................·................. $800.00

..

WUilamson.
·
Sixth .'n'ade - Glf'n BarC'us. ·n mothv
Brumtk&gt;ld, Sandy Houck, Chrryl MontgOmery, Todd Noglf', Joe!! Rucker. Ja :v
Stapleton. Sl'('nt Unroe.
Sevrnth wadf' - F:r·tc Stapleton. Jack
Sta pleton.
Eig hth gradr -

Bf'lh Davis, Mcl lssu

H&lt;~ ll ey

B

~1J2 - 0472B

CAROUSEL

CONFECTIONERY
GOING OUT
OF
'
BUSINESS SALE
..

317 N. 2nd Ave.

Mrs. CunnIngham Is t he da u g h t er

Life Insurance

Includes all this:

Ringbearer was Tony Stan ley,
nephew of the groom.
Matron of honor was Fay Stout ,
cousin of bride. Bridesmaids were
Sharon Grtfflth. sister of bride. and
Yvonne M. Jacobs, sister of groom.
Flower gtrl was Stella Dawn
Harless, cousin of bride. Attending
the guest reglste_r was Berdie
Harless, bride's aunt.
A reception was held at tl)e ,
Vinton Town Hall .
The couple reside In Bidwell.

CA-BINET SALE

ROCK ISLAND. IL LINOI S

Leora Mann. Brth M11ls, Ve-ra Rossller. Be11 v

Reg. No.

• RIO GRANDE - Edllh Dotson
became the bride of John S.
CuMlngham during wedding ceremonies held In the Lillie church of
the West In La s Vegas . Nevada.
March 20.

ON -ALL
RIVIERA
CABINETS

WATERBED SALE

EWINGTON Earn es tlne
Blackburn and James Michael
Jacobs were married May 13, at the
: 1 ~
Church of Christ in Bidwell . She Is
the da ughter of Mr. and Mrs.
• · . ·Jimmie Blackburn o!Ew1ngton. He
• · ' ts the son of Yvonne M. DoM ett of
Dayton, and the late J ames F .
: ' ~ Jacobs. The ceremony was o!fi· ~ d a ted by Mose Nornnan. .
Best man was Charles F . Jacobs,
bi·other of the groom . Groomsmen
were Bobby Blackburn, cousin of
bride, and Richard G. Barsotti.

F1ftl'l grade- Brtgtnc Surd._Anne Leavi tt .
~

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE

d Blackburn, Jacobs trade vows

: :-~
: .:!:

Watson, J otut Woods.

992-6342

Middleport

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA

Seniors of Sout hern High Schoo l

Mr. and Mrs. James Michael Jacobs

Dotson, Cunningham wed

ENJOY YOURS WITH A
MODERN WOODMEN
RETIREMENT PLAN

•

I'

61

Mr. and Mrs. JohnS. Cunningham

RETIREMENT

l&lt;~raternal

-

$1.00 off Thrift Pack or Value Pack
VAI.U• PACK Includes: 12tlsh Me1S, ertsp•ench ~teo. creamyebte Sla_w aild 8 nush
_
·
· . ·_ pupplei. Serve• -4 ?'
· . . · · -·
-

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

HOME OFF ICE

:J

I/

Heat h Halley, Tracey J enld n.&lt;t, Mike Kll ngt"r.
Amy Pu~ h . Craig Ranki n. Ertc_Sau nderl'l.
Christy Short, Wendy Staple1on. Jason

WHEN? SATURDAY. JULY 9, 1983
2 ;00 Til 4:00 P.M . ~ 4 WEEKS
$75.00 ~ NO BOOKS NEEDED
CALL 446-4367 or 992-7644
For Reservations Now

•

~-.J
'i:=~

Btuy Bay~ . •ra.son BI&lt;K"k.

Fourth grade -

Scott Blake. N lkld aary. Riehle CorN&gt;lL

has designed a "Computers for Kids" Class so your
child in grades 5-7 can get a computer education .
Gives kids a broader understanding of computers &amp;
their capabilities .

-

...

•

tor U'IC last sl.x weeks of the school yur.

&amp;

{
;. -t

Ca~inD's.

-

.

Mlllard Cassidy , Pr!Jl&lt;ipal. Hann.c1n Ttl!('('
Elementary SeMel. announCf'S thf&gt; honor roll

behalf of the teachers, presented ry;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~Mrs. Buck w1th a gift certificate.
In the business meeting, officers
ATTENTION MOM
DAD!
re-elected were Beegle, president:
Aaron Sayre, vice president; Janice
Deem, secretary; and Debbie
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE
Wilson Sayre, treasurer.

: .i

217 UPPER RIVER ROAD
~eafoOcl

.:~

I

'

dinner tnc iiJCies: two golden txown filh fillets, crllp trench tries, c reamy cole
sk:lw and 2 sou!horn srvte husn puppies.

Stewart of Gallipolis; and Mrs. H.
E . (Karon) McCormick o! Ga·
hanna, Ohio.
They have seven grandchildren
and one great·grandchtld.
Gothard Is retired from Point
Express, Charleston, W. Va ..
· .An open bouse · ·liWltatlon · Is
extended to all friends and
relatives.
The couple has requested that
gifts be omitted.

~~·

AssociatiOn.
Florence Circle, Chlorus Grtlmm,
and Betty Roush, retired teachers
whQ taught many years w1th Mrs.
Buck were guests and · made
appropriate remarks concerning
theltworklngyears with Mrs. Buck.
Mrs. Roush read an ortginal poem
about Mi's. Buck and her teaching
C81'l"er.
John Costanzo, Meigs County
elementary supervisor, was also a
guest, and In h1s remarks commended Mrs. Buck for her dedlca·
tlon and service to the dlstrtct and
the students. He noted that Mrs.

MllJan:l Cusidy, Prlnclpa J, H ai}.Mn Tracf' '

Buck had taught all but one year In ' Eiffllefltary School, announces rhf9 ronor roll
for the- last slJc weeks of lhe- scnoc:M year.
the Letart Falls school.
·
'·
FoW1h grade - Billy Bays, Jason Black.
Bobby On!, superintendent o! the Scott Blake, NIW Clary, RJchJe Corne ll,
Southern Local District, thanked Hea th Halley, Tracey JE&gt;nklns, M Utl' Kli nger.
Amy Pugh , Craig Ra nkin. Ertc Saunders.
Mrs. Buck for her dedication and Christy
Short, Wendy Stapleton, Jason
long service and extended best Wat5on, John Woods.
Fifth grad E'- Brigitte Burd , AnnC' t..eavtn,
wishes for her retlrenient. He
l...fq'a Mann. Beth Mills, Vera Rossltrr. Beny
especially thanked her lor volun- WUllamson.
'
,
SiXIh. grade - · GI~ Barcus. Timo1.11Y
teering a coupleotyearsago to teach
Bru~ld, Sandy Houck, ChPryl Momgo.
the learning disabilities class to
m ecy, Todd Noglt&gt;, Jodi Rucker, Jay
keep another teacher from betngcut Stapl eton. Bren l Unroe
Seventh gradt'o - Eric Stclpl('lon, Ja ck
durtng a staff reduction.
Stapleton. .
Robert Beegle, Southern Local
Etgbth grade - llPth Davts, Mei L"SLI
Education Association president, on Hatley .

:

2 CHIPPER DINNERS $3.69

Gothards' golf/en anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs .
Lowell Gothard will celebrate their
50th wedding aMiversary Sunday,
June. 12, at the Mental Health
Center from Hi p.m .
They are the parents ot three
children, Wllllam Gothard of Van·
dalla, Ohio; Mr5. Nonnan (Phyllts ) .

.

MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY

Mr: and Mrs. Lowell Gothard

~

. .

;:-_!

(01 pamci~:IIIIIQCopta~ D's.)

$299

... .
'-lc,~
. .

' . .
- '•.
' -

!och dinner !netudes: two fisn filloll, a generous pootlon ol
boneless chicken Ill lets, er11p trench tries, creamy cole llaW,
two Southern style hush pupples and sweet'"" sour 10uce.

-'

'

~

C~III

,
.

Honor Rolls

Retiring teacher honored

.. I

Assem Klibesh of Egypt has
made his home in Meigs County tor
the past year attending Meigs High
School where he completed h1s
senior year. He has resided w1th
David and Barbara Pratt and-their
daughters, Teresa and Angela.
Assem, a!fectlonaiely called Oscar
by the Pra It tamlly, will be heading
back to his home country on June
18.
•
Assem wrttes o! his personal
experiences here:
"The more days pass, the closer I
get to leaving. And as the days pass
by 1 keep thiniltng about these
people who had special touches on
my Ule. I think about those people
whom I lett happy with and sale
between them.
"Mom, Dad, Teresa and Angie
(The Pratts) are the firSt people I
would really like to thank lor all the
happiness I felt with them, and tor
all the efforts they made to make
my stay a nlee and happy one.
"In school, I would like to thank
Mr. MOler, Mrs. VeMart, Mr .
Redovlan, and all my teachers, Ms .
McCoy, Mr. Gerlach, Mr. Fergus,
Mrs. Kessinger, Mr. Gibbs and
Mrs. Poston who were always
ready to help me whenever 1
needed It. I
"Other gr,oups ot- people I really
cannot express -my teellngli toward
are my frtends who were always
around m e In my bad times. Special
thanks 1 would love to give to
Grandma Hysell, Sharon Manley
and Mr. and Mrs. E dward
Kennedy.
"These are the very special
people who occupied a large place
In rny life a nd in my heart and I
want to tell them 'Please don't
Iorge( me because I will never
forget you.' AU I can say now Is 'I
love you.' "

The Sunday TimeJ-Senti~I-Pag-B-3

Pomeror Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

·Students attend aging conference

Beat,of the Bend

R~unian

June 5, 1983

Va.

Snyder of Oak Hlll, Ohio, recently
• RIO GRANDE - Amanda L.
· was awarded the Outstanding
·:Nursing Graduate Award by the
' -Rio Grande College and Cornmun ·
'lly College- Holzer Sc hool of
·Nurs ing.
·, According to J anet M. Byers,
; :i&gt;e~ n of the School o! Nursing,
: Snyder was selected on the IJa!;ls of
rIller academic achievement and
· ~xcellent clinica l eva luation

;·records.

: •; A 191ll graduate of Oak Hill High
:-School, Snyder will receive a
. · S;lvtngs bond irom Pleasant Valley
: Jfospltal as the ho~ree. She
' 'reCently graduated cum laude !rom
· "ruo Grande.
' : She has accepted a ·stat! nilrse
. )iosltlon on a mect-surg unit at
:.mercy Hospital In Ports~th. ·
.;. : She Is the daughter o! Mr. and
iflrs,. Wilfred Snyder of Oak .HID .

"The members of the Foundation
are extremely gra teful and thank ·
ful to McDonald's fo r this contrlbu lion" said OFIC President Ben
Spru nger. " We need the support ot
more fine organizations like this ."
OFIC represents the largest
single source of unrestricted gtft
Income · for 85 percent of the
member colleges and Is the second
largest source of gift funds for the
remainder.
"This Is just another facet o!
McDonald's contin ued commit·
ment and effort to support ecfuca·
tlon," sa id F ewster . McDonald's
has always supported public educatlon through tax doltars, and now in
view of the recent federal tax cuts,
we !eel business and industry
should become more Involved.
McDonald 's Is pleased to play a
major part of the OFI C fund raising
effort especially since the majortty
of the McDonald's work force Is
comprtsed of college students and
young people about to begin their

of Mr. and Mrs. Chari&lt;'S Dotson of
Rio Grande. The groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn A. Cunningham
of Gallipoli s.
Following lhe_ ceremoni es. a
wedding 1break1ast was held at the
Las Vegas FI ~ rrilngo Hilton . Gues ts
attendln~ Included J eannine and
J ohn C~nnl ng ham of Galllpo lts:
Mary and Rod Pullins. Point
Pleasant, W.Va .: Jim Cunningha m
of Ma Fshall, Mich .; and Jo Ellen
Fuller · and Ma rk Cunningham of
Tucson, Ariz.
On March 26, the bride a nd

groom retumed to Ga lli po li s 10 th&lt;'
Shrine Club where thry wrrf'
honored wit h a wedding r&lt;'Ception
given by 200 fri ends and rei a llv ~s .
'l'he couple arC' now making th('ir

home In Dublin, Ohio.

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

Special
Anniversary Sale!

All Cand y M ol ds 12 Pr ice
Chocolat C' s 1 .2 ~ lb .
Raw PC'a nul s ~ 1 llJ .
Cookie Cutt t'l's 1;2 Pr irC'
In stant Fond ant .5~ / pk g .
Ca kC' Dero r atin g Tips 'h Pr ice•
Wilton Charac i Pr Pan s 2:'i' i· Otf
Party Supplie s 2:'! to 50' i Of f
Duke s of Hu zz ard . Super F l'iPnd s.
P ac Man, E .T ., Popey e
Weddin g and Baby Sh owC'r CeniC' rpiPct· s &lt;l nd
Party Str ea m er s ~ Q"; Off
Sorbee Sugar Fr€e -C andy &amp; SuckPr s 2~ '; Off
All P lastic Birthd ay Cuke Decorations
15'/i Off
Birthd ay Part y F'uvors IJ, Pr it't'
Tuk 'N Ruffle · Blu e, GrC'e n &amp; Pin k 2"~ ~ F t.
All Chri stm as , HallowC'Pn
&amp; Easter Mer chandlsC'
Y2 Pri ce

~Cl(drube

REG. 1150.00

In service

SAU:

~-

Exquisite

$79 50

111

·:··. . .

oali 'tlw rrno( lu d ' jiru 'i h

I

White

TAWNEY
JEWELRY

POMEROY - Na vy Chief Hospital Corpsman J a mes C. White, son
of George'C. and Jessie C. White of
373.15 RO\'k Sprtngs Road, Pome·
roy, has reported tor duty at the
naval Regional Medical Clinic
Pearl Harbor. Hawaii.

422 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, 0 H.

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER
SINCE 1949
Hearing rests
Medical R.efertOls

Home Appointments
Also Available

444 w. UIIIOII, ATMIIIS "4· 3571

r;~c:ol~le~ge~car~ee~rs~.';'!i!iii!iii!!!;~i!!~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ATTENTION: DADS

Distinc tive .. .

1

Versc:ttile .. .
Fresh.. .

Bold...
o wwdrobf'
rill S S/y/ 1:; /J

fJ/

NATURAL
fin ish
nlw. :h /iuC'ab1l11y

SI)./C !J ~, J Y I I'fl W IJf{lf()r)(l

(Non-Dads, too!!)

I! rho pm luc l '' '' ~ "'' if l or t1ll y rJLJ r
!i /Orllf}C ncorJS A l l fli!C1Y (1(/ (/11 1011 / ()

Show off on Father's Day. We can help.

' ' ' rtny d ecor C u ~,t rt1 tumg s yOu ltl• '•

any / 10 1110 fltf/ii(; I IVf) /y diJ S I',}fri) IJ /0
s /urdy ,

HAIRCUT &amp; BLOW-DRY STYLING

OAIC.

lm !S itl.ld W iflt'110be wt/f r

(19C0f#HIV(J 1111/ ( / WIH IJ' 10 )lOll 11! d (! rtC II

' reg. $9.00

lhiJI S !IS 1111 1/I CIIIJU C:IS !/Jf)
W /l tdrobfl r/s nlf

·$600
or

~

t/3 OFF ANY PERM

....

Now through 6/ 18183 II you mention this ad .

We Jet your good looks go to your heod,M

Silver Br idge

Plaza

446-3353

c

�June 5, 1983

Poi;..,oy Middleport-Gallipolis,

Ohio-~int

'

Mon.-Sat. g am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEa)ND ST.

POMEROY, 0.

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quanilies.

..... ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.,

~UNE

11, 1983

·~

Larkins Browning
'

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Larkins . Long Bottom. are
announcing the e ngagement a nd
approaching marriage of their
daughter. Roberta Ann Larkins, to
Randall Glenn Browning, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ric hard Browning,
lreedsvU!e.
The open church wedding will
take place Saturday, June ll, 3:30
p.m . at the Long Bottom United
Methodist Church.
· Miss Larkins is a graduate of
Eastern High School. ·
: Browning is aisA graduate of
~astern, and is employed with the
C. and 0 . RaUroacj.

29
Ground Beef... ~.!!.!
BUCKET

Cube.

a

FRESH PORK BUTT

.GRADE A WHOLE

.

Fryers...................'!'; ••
PESCHKE
oz.
W1·en·ers •••••••••••••••••••

Doralene Carter,
Daniel WilliamJ

CarterWilliams
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel "Tuck" Carter of 642 Filth
Avenue, Gallipolis, a nnounce the
engagement of their da ughter,
Doralene, tp Daniel R. Wl!iiams of
Gailipclls Ferry. W. Va . He Is the
son of Leslie Roy W!iilams of
Gailipciis Ferry. W. Va .
An open-c hurc h wedding Is
planned at the home of Mr. and·
Mrs. George Carter, 6: 30p.m . June

12

$ 19

.

.

MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for the open church
wedding of Kimberly Sue Birchfield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield. Rutland, and
Raymond Allan Willford, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William WiUford, Route 1,
Middleport .
,.
The wedding will take place at the
Middleport Church of Chris! June
18 at 1:30 p.m . with the Rev. Bob
Melton performing the double-ring
ceremqny. Music by, Tammy
Black: soloist, and Maryln Wilcox,
organist, will preced e th e

¢

PKG.

Bacon ....... ~.~...........L~

¢

·'

~t eartc

arid.

Scm&lt;' of our ancestors bcliPved IIi
consuming quantities of ga ri ~ tt\:
ward off the bugs, while otiX'r!'
stewed fra gra nt he rb!" arou nd th;
house in hope that the odoi· might txf
too much for the mosquitoes.
Now while we can't eliminat e
mosquitoes. we can do CPrtaln

things to discourage them - like
e mptyi ng containers aJ!!I't'ans that
rontaln standing wat£'r, a nd ciC'an'
ing birdbat hs, pools and fount a in s
frcq uf'ntly sincr thf'SP ar(' the
places mosquit()('s like to l.&gt;r&lt;'Cd . ·

But r&lt;'gardtrss of what wr do to
discourage thf'm. thl'y' l! comr just _
as surf' as thf' sum mer sunshlnf'.

Then t herC&gt; w~n' those who covrrc'(f

Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. Hill
Schneider, all of Pomeroy .
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the Meigs Inn. The
bride's.table featured a three tiered
cake decorated with white roses and
wedding bells.
.
Hostesses were Melinda McLaln,
Tam Bearhs, Sonja HIU, and Paula
McCloud . The guest book was

attended by Rita Stobart, aunt of the
bride.
The couple resides at 507Wiliia ms
Street, Middleport .
Mrs. Hill is a graduate of Meie:s
High School.
Hill graduated from SouthPrn
High School and ts employed at tlw
Meigs County Highway Gara g~.

· job Bank offers
help, opportunity

·Brown -. Kainer
GALLIPOLIS - Announcement
is being made of the approaching
marriage of Katherine Marshall
Brown to Charles James Kainer.
The wedding will take place June
26 In Houston, Texas.
Miss Brown is the daughter of
Mrs. J . W. Brown Jr., 418 Fourth
Avenue, Gailipclls, and the late J .
W. Brown Jr. Kainer is the son of
Mr. and Mrs . Charles N. Kainer,
San Antonio, Texas .
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and

conn1e.s got 1t.
SUN.· TRAPPIN G SANDALING

GAL LI POLIS - T ho S..'nior
CltiLens J ob Ba nk. 220 J ackson
Pikf' . ha s continuf'(1 to 5('1"\'C'
cmplo,vr•rs in th(• arPa. Employers
fi nd tho older worker to be

SAVE

motiva ted. produce consiste"ll y,
they have a reliable attendance
I'PCO I'd , a nd they bring wit h them
vast value of experience .
The .J ob Bank has qua lifiC'd
applicant s. 50 years of age or older,
Ohio University and is President of SC'&lt;'klng employment to help people
Marshall Operating Co . 1nc.. Hous- in the com munit y wi th Owir
springtime home ma lnt enanc!'. if
ton, Texas.
Kainer is a graduate of ·Texas · you n!'&lt;'d help with your ya rd wo1·k.
landscaping, painting. or genf'ral
TI'Chnica l University, Lubbock,
Texas and Is employed as Adminis- repai rs, call -14t;.7(Xllhnd put in your
Job Orclrrs .' Til c• sc1v lcr is without
trative Assistant for Compushop
char ge.
Inc., Houston, Texas.

20% ~,~Fr""

a

CONNIE SANDALS
ReR. 1 26.00

_,'

less 20"o 5.20
1

20. 80

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -

!1 _ _ _
nn•n

H

Mon 1L I ' '

"""' ., ,

hoe\

w~tJ lll u" s..1

~·
OUWJiiOWN liAHIPOII S

CI~\Pd ~~~~•IJw
~-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ .._...._ _ _ _~,.,.;~:....------------...L.J

SINGER

NOW
GOING ON.
SUPER SAVINGS

.()Ill .

'·

.,

\
Flip &amp;Sew•
Machine Model 1425N

~LORIDA JUICE

,,.

$

5 LB. BAG

GALLIPOLIS - Wedding plans
have been completed for lhe
marriage of Elizabeth Ann Tope, .
daughter of Mr. a nd Mrs . Earl
Tope, 525 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
and Gregory Alan Tobin, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey Tobin, Langford,
S.D.
The open-church wedding will
take place at First Baptist Church
of Gallipolis Saturday, June ll. The
Rev. Joseph GOdwin will o!ficiale
with music startihg at 6 p.m. a nd
the ceremony at 6:30p.m.

and adjustable maxi-topstitch
• Wind-in-place bobbin · t -s tep
bunonhoter

Sugar...............~.
KRAFT

BORDEN ELSIE

hPIASTIC GALLON

CANNED POP

COUNTRY TIMES

ATHROOM TISSVE

COFFEE

LEMONADE

12 oz.

CANS

6/S}

, 6 ROLL
PKG.

$}39

3LB.CAN

$659

.Limit 'One Per Customer

Good Only At Poftll's
Offer Expires June 11, 1983

r

Cu. Ft .................................. 5235.95
Cu. Ft .................................. 5285.95
Cu. Ft ....... ... ............. .. ........ 5355.95
Cu . Ft ................................. $418.95
Cu. Ft. · ................................ S472.95

SI'FC/!1 L
15 Cu. Ft .................... .. ........... $325.95

UPRIGHT MODELS
17 Cu. Ft .......................... $42795
20 Cu. Ft . ....................... :. $458 9 5

Pomeroy, OH.

We Service What
We Seil

·-

OPTOMETRIST-

SuNGLASSES AND NIGlfr VISION~·.
EKposure.to ordinary sunll&amp;ht
has been found to produce both
temporary and cumulative ef·
feels on night vision. Dally
exposure to bright sun without
the protection of sunglasses has
been proven to cause SOI)'IC
deterioration In visual acuity at

nlglit.

8

~t&amp;. $279 i 1l
Limit One Per, Customer
_9
Good Only At Powell's
z
Offer_ EliJI!nt$ June ';,1._1!1:. • ••

Pe!'90ns engaged In tasks
where night vision is critical
. should wear sunglasses when In
bright sunlight. Boat and plane
pllols, truck and auto drivers,
all benefit from protecting
the night vision mechanism
from too much sun during' the
··day. When very dark lenses are
· used, tbe tmprovement may be
· ·u rnuc11 as tenfold. ··
But care slwld be taken when

can

•

·'

5
8
15
20
25

~REEZERS

presents.

.. .:eouPON·
MAXWELL HOUSE

IN OUR STORE.

DR . G-tORGE W._Dl&lt;VIS: - - -

•

COTTONELLE

$26999

¢

$

SHASTA

NOW
ONLY

CHEST

CASH &amp; CARRY
Delivery Can Be Arranged

'12 GALLON

•

ON ' EV~RY ITEM

Machine Model 5528

Se!ving Meigs &amp; Gallia Co.
As Your Singer Approved Dealer

.oz..$ 39
29
.Miracle Whi
ICe Cream ••••••••••••••
32

·--

115 W. 2nd

•••••••••

.

Free-Arm

THE FABRIC SHOP

2% Milk .....~'=.~~~~~.

Fruit Punc.

-

SAVE$7500

FLAVORITE

REITER

.

.25 stitches including speed baste

29
nranges
~
···~·············

Tope- Tobin

PATRIOT Mr. and Mrs.
Bradfc:&gt;rd Massey, Rt. 2, Patriot,·
are announcing the approaching
marr\llge of their daughter, Robin
Elizabeth, to Terry Joe Reynolds,
son or Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Reynolds, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
The open-ehurch wedding will
take place Sunday, June 12, 3 p.m.,
at Salem Baptist Church near
Gage, Ohio.
TOO Rev. Dave Saunders will ..
,perform the double ring ceremony.
•A ~lion will be held immediately following the wedding at the
churc'h. · .
'MI~s Massey b a gradqate or
Buck1rye Hills Cai'Et!r Center, rna·
jorlna; In casmetotpgy.
·
Reynolds Is a graduate of GaUia
Aca~my High School, and Is
emplqyed as a padc technlciltnatO.
0. Melntyre Park Dtstr1ct.

their skin with mud as a way of
discouraging Insect bites. Although
this was not the most practical of
attractive method , it was hande&lt;j
down from one generation to
another of scratching families. :
Other pcpular repellents wer~
known as " dopes, .. those homesty le
concoctions ofte n consisting of oil o;
citronella mixed with delicacieS:
like gum camphor, pine oil ot:

~y

Miss Carter is the gra nddaugh ter
of Mr. and Mrs. George Carter of
Bidwell a nd Anna Hampton of
Waterloo. and the late Boyd
Hampton.
Williams is the grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Oscar Sm ith of Charles·
ton, W. Va ., and Mrs. Laura
Williams of VInton~ Va . a nd the la te
Leroy Williams.

Massey Reynolds

Now just a few quick facts ...
Bet you didn't know that only the
fe male biles, and she must spend at
least 90 seconds on your skln in
order to complete the "meal"
which she needs to produce eggs.
As she injects sauva to ease the
blood flow. It creates a n allergic
reaction on your skin. That's what
itches .
During the life cycle of any
female. she may lay upto4.00Jeggs
which ha tch int q larvae. called
"wrigglers" 'by most Of us. since
they squirm like worms in the
water, and then go into the pupa
stage before e merging as the flying,
bi ting lnsect we det£'st.
The problem has been a round for
a long time.
Take the time when today·s
scientifically concocted repelle nts
\verf?n't ava ila ble.
Our p io ncN in g fo rf'fnl hers
smeared their bodi&lt;'S with grms('
from the tallow or animnls to wal'(t
off the fl yi ng bugs. a nd If that didn't
stop them . the smell proba bly d id.

WEDDINg
GifTS

.•

8.

I

By Charlene HoeWch
So you think it's going to be all fun
and games once the weather hits
"80" a nd the rain stops?
Well. have another " think! "
If the insect
repellent com·
pany (a nd
they're planning
on a bumper
year) have it
right this is the
"year of the mosquito" and.you had
better be ready.
But what else with the mild
winter and the wet weather can we
expect? Even the scientists agrl?!'
that 1~ will be a heavy mosquito
season . So the thing to do is to
borrow the "be prepared," motto
from the Boy Scouts. and get .
equipped with an insect repellent in
one hand and a swatter in the other.
This year promi ses to be a dandy
for the little darlings a nd what
they 're after is your blood ...
literally.
.And do n •member tha t without
you and your blood, the mosquito's
life cycle would be disllJpted .

ceremony.
A reception will be held In the
social room of the church immediately following the wedding.

Birchfield
Willford

- · ·

ARMOUR'S COLUMBIA

Mosquito season is upon the area

Engagements_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Steak/Roast
....
!~- •••
¢
.

'

d

.

Community Corner

· POMEROY- -The Pomeroy
&lt;llurch of O!rist was the settbig for
tOe Jan. 22 weddlngotKellee Renae
qrtmth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
~ M. Griffith, Pomeroy,' and
sl~ c. Hill, '$Oil ·ot Dennie lfill,
Racine, and Sandra Baer,
Minersville.
· The 6:,3) p.m. double ring cerem·
ony was performed by Mr. Nell
Proudfoot, following a program ot
organ music by Carla Shiller,
Racine, and Cindy Schneider,
cousjn of the bride, soloist.
Given in marriage by her parents
and escort£d to the altar by· her
(ather, the bride wore a gown of silk
and lace fashioned with long · fuU
sleeves and wide cuffs, and a
bouftant tiered lace skirt which
llowed Into a chapel train. Her
fingertip veil and blusher of illusion
fell from a bandeau headpiece and
was accented with motifs of lace.
She wore a pearl necklace and
earrtngs with diamond studs which
belonged to her paternal grandmother, Fredr!caFaris, of Parkersburg, W. Va. The bride carried a
bouquet of white daisies.
Regina Griffith served as mald of
honor for her sister and wore a gown
of pink qulana with a chiffon cape.
She carried pink daisies.
Flower girls were Autumn Grif·
flth, sister of the bride, and Marcy
Hill, sister of the groom . Both wore
pink dresses, with circles of flowers
In their halr, and carried baskets of
pink petals.
. GreggHuffman.ofRaclnewasthe
best man, and ushers were Rick
Taylor, Chris Taylor, and. Steve

S10RE -HOURS:

Roberta Larkins,
Randall Browning

•

Griffith, Hill
¢xchange vows
.

Engagement

The Sunday Tirnes-Senti~l Poge-B-5

Pleasant, W.Va.

..
it

choosing sunglasses . An alarm·
lng number of Inferior ,glasses
are on the market and It Is not
always easy}O tell the differ·.
ence. While cneap and substand·
ard lenses will probably not ruin
your ey~lght- unless you rely
on them to absorb harmful 1'8YS
- there are risks . They can
distort vision and promote eyestrain, tbereby diminishing your
visual · acuity and jeopardising
your safety.

*******

lrl the 1ri"rer est Of better vision

WE WILL NOT BE UNDER SOLD

A fashionable
new line of
Tennis Wear

featuring:
Skirts
Matching Tops
Sleeveless Dresses
Pants

a-ce .w.l&gt;a~O.D.
451 Second Ave., Gallipolis
Phone t*-U

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR:·

Jrorn the office of

'

43 YEARS OF SERVING OUR qJSTOMERS
IN MEIGS, GALLIA AND MASON COUNTIES .
SPECIALS ON ALL HOTPOINT AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES

300 Second A\
Gallipolis, OIL
.. tbe Lafayette MaD

Yes, We Se!vice ·At Your Hotpoint Dealer
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mil.! Closed at 5:00 P.M.
Servin1 r..tp. Glllia and Mason Counties
41~-992-2181

�June 5, 1983

MASON FURNITURE IS HAVING A JUNE

p~

Calendar
PRICES IN EFFECT

SUNDAY
In Ellect Now Th"' June 20, 19t3.

*FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE

. •LIMITED QUANTITIES ·

,,

i --::

Enqland Furniture · including their n('W high ·back
( ·ounli LJ Colonial Grr&gt;rlf'·' '

.'I

I

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

.

3 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE GROUP!
Gd Specldcular Saving~ on our entire co llcclion o{

SUNDAY
JUNE
5
THROUGH .TUlSDAY, JUNE 7

. TUPPERS PLAINS- The:&gt;t.
P~ll\ United Methodist Church
will celebrate the dedication: of
their church facUlties on Sunjla:y. June 5, with a special
Service of Dedication set for 2 ·
p.m. guest speaker will be the
Rev. Benjamin Edwards, Dis·
trict Superlntendent for the
Athens Dlstrtct of the West Ohio
Conference of the United Methodist Church.

.

MONDAY
Zenith Custom Series TV's with these greot feQtures:
• Chromoshorp
PicttJto Tube lor outstanding

• Electronic Powe r

' • ReiJObi O l · t

sonrry - IOf energy

Chaub tOO'i. Modulot

e Hicioncy

plc !Ufo shorpnos:»

2$" ZENITH COLOR .CONSOLE

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
Athletic Boosters will meet,
Monday, 7: :xJ p.m., at the high
school.
CENTERVll.LE - CenterviDe Young Farmers will meet
Monday, at 6:30p.m .. at Center·
viDe Methodist Church. Program will be by Dr. A. Jackson
Balles from the Optometrtc
VIsion Center. The meeting Is
open to any 4·H member.

Igloo
LITTLE
PLAYMATE
· COOLER

TUESDAY

Was ................ !1595.00
Sale Price Now •.•11195.""

Here' 8 Deep-Seated Colonial
Comfort With Bold Pine Ac,celllt81

TWO WEEKS ONLY

~''"' •ww i "'''"t
'J 9'""" ,ld; .,,. '"''"''"'~
,.,..". ·.. ·"
Co ~;~tury lolon11tl s1yl1ng J'&gt;
t• n l t~n l t't l

wlu·n· ' Tlu·

$895 00

Zenith CUSTOM · SERIES Color TV · Model S2550P

Over. 40 'three Piece Groups
In Stock ••• A II At Sale Prices!

'rM t

Wtlh hurrw.hr·d hn nt&lt;y Jllllf" Wll i!:J dfld r1fltl d(. t'flt!&gt; ,
'&gt;W(! t'pHl!JI .Ie~u:nl bd' k.'\ cmd eKirh dt-t•p hullo11

~~;:~~~,:~·~·:~:·· vuu"' '"m'""' Sill&lt;·"'"~'

GALLIPOLIS - GaiUa County
Right·to-Life will meet at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday In the Buckey&lt;&gt; Rural
Electrtc building, 143 Third Ave .
Election of officers will be con·
ducted and preparations will be
made lor F ather's Day and the
River Recreation Festival.

.

· Q~ahtY 25 " d1agonal Trans:•ti onal Con

sole w1th b6attllful stmu tated gr~ me&lt;:f Oak ·l •msh.
f ea ture s Tn ·focus P1 cture Tube for out standing
ptcture sharpnes!&gt;; reliable l 00 1 Yu modular Z· l
Chass•s; [lectr oru c Tuning w tt h o ne knob VHF
.:m d UHI· Ch;uwel Selection; Automatic Color
Coni rol SystC!II I ilncl r lec troniC Power Sentry for
eff1 c1 ent enc1gy us&lt;~ge . Z~ n1 th Quality means
~~ reater Value!

•SAVE UP TO 50% ON SELECTED GROUPS

WORLD OF WOOD

Styled Groups. All Made Of
SoUd 2x6 Pine Frames. All
Groups Covered In 1184e~u1'ifu
100% Antron Nylon Fabrics
For Longer Wearabllity.

ll--------------1
SOLID PINE

BUNK BEDS
Unheard Of··
Price

Six Piece Groups From

12
• Bedding
Extra

''• • • '•· ~ " ' •" ' I •~·•••' '"

..... . ......
............
........ ' ".'
~

'"

·· ~""""

~

•
•
•
•

"''

- Bar, stool and wall units special order only I

Sturdy 2"x4" framing
Built on ladders
Built on guardrail
Bolts together lor added strength

Make it a

Family affair!

A

~

FRABILL

BOAT SEAT

DEXTER - Vacation Bible
School w!U be held a t the Dexter
Church of Christ Monday
through June 10, at 9 a.m. to
11:30 a.m . daily. A picnic will be
held on Frtday and the closing
program will be held on Sunday.
June 12, at 10: 30 a.m.

MANN'S

21NCH

AUGERTAIL
BAIT
ASSORTED COLORS
Ofl tml Sill and weight. Alll,m llftllllld h&lt;Wtehtdr
leather cover 1S handsewn Wllh oti'Utd tonon lhrud

CHESTER - Chester Methodist Community will hold vaca·
tlon Bible School MOnday
through June 10, from 9:30a.m.
to 11:30 a.m. dally. The theme Is
"Jesus, Lord Of Promise."
' c iasses will be held from age
two to adult.

Everybody chip in and
give Dad a genuine

d

;.o.

~~Jl ... the one

1

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

4 Piece Bedroom Suite
ONLY

, , ~., .

A (;(llllpl(II O, CIOSSIC Mo1let t.&gt;edroom wHh OVOI V
lqaluo you .c0Uk1 WOlf lrcx:liltorOI r:tl6ganee a t
uxCt,ip!IGtlUI SOYI~ PIOnly ~ SIOfOQO 5POCO In

lhl$4 pocu gu.p, crollod In Worn Poc-oo Q'Y1
rx :coo!Od wllf\ llroo Tono tflm InCludes a 10~
tl Ci'OW'OI t:1r6ss6l wtlh 0 !101 K.Jv doo' ~loroQe
cornportlli(Jf1t u cOO«:tlnohOQ mlrro.
QuOtll'lliiiiJ ~

I'IOI.KbX.l ld. ondOhald

~nv

1, ,1

,,f

,,.,,1. 111 '\ ' ' ' "

'" / 1\toy ''''""''I
' ~~~It

fMII kl'l'

f \\ ~""'''( NIU 011 lfu ol

II\

h' ""''"'l"'

' "" ~ '

"''"l )fu •l ; &lt;'t' &gt; Ill •1\ l ' 0I Vt'l\o 111!o•
NUll ll!llll ll' l

fht~

·! ''" '''"'''" '' •foi &lt;1!'1111,)11

1• 11 1" 1 V t• t\
ollki iMl""

lo

j N O" O!III

1\ I I

,,. ,. •ilw"V' '"

•t ~0 '1

I("

lu 11"!1

, ,tl ,ll, ~tl , l,.

""1 ''~111111 ( ), ~j ,-,

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

"~ "·· ... •

,", ' ·"

' ' " II

L

o1 O'Owt'Jf Chftsl

Matchina
Niahlstand
(with stora&amp;e)
Extra.

COMFORTABLE, SEATING AND SLEEPING FOR
HOLIDAY GUESTS ..• FOR APARTMENT DWELLERS••.
FOR SUMMER COTTAGES ... FOR ANYPLACE YOU
· NEED DOUBLE DUTY . YOUR SOFA.

.. .

k ._1~.-!!~'\.,
'

'

I

With a Converta -Couch . you can have full site sot'a
beauty .and comtc;»i"t ·p lus an eas·y open heavy duty
mechamsrn . Sleep soundly on an extra firm solid' foam
. manress or a luxurious innerspring maf ess.
Available in full or queen sbe .

oH &lt;I

wlto•11

, .. _

SLEEPER

lull u

prices from

. . . . . . . . . ft . . . . . . . . ,.. .

3 PIECE SET ONLY

~

I~ .. , ' I ''" ,,,l f t lii"OI \ () ty jM I·&gt;\t&lt;&lt;o l '' ' Y' ' " '" ' ' ' ' " " ' ol f 1&lt;11~ f

~ ···

,,., ..... "'' .... ito·~ .... ~ •••• ' "''' •• ··~

~

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...... , . .......... ""''. '

.....,........
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'". .,.., ',,...,, ........ ,,"' .... ..
,...............,...,._" ............... .

lluo l "' '' A,,.,.,'" ' l,hh•&gt; ' "''" "'"'"''"' " "'''

· '~

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' -..:;:,""f
, .....·:_;.: :1 ·.._~. ~
:. .. 'i~ · -..."'
.. .: ·:~: ,., l

MIDDLEPORT - Eleanor
Circle of Heath United Methodist Church will hold a rummage
sale beginning at 9 a .m . Tuesday
the church basement.

Tennis lessons

Dark Pine
""''' "" "'"" ,.,,

Save

$34995

FULL SIZE
Sale Priced

•1sooo
QUEEN ~IZE
Sale Pnced

·'

from

naltHII

CHOICE

BASS EMBLEM OR REEL EMBLEM

.19

FISHING CAP

U0.2.99

SI'OaiS Dftf.
~FOOT
Bttltr than 1 brush l
Gutrllltlld to rem9ve

~1·:·44

$39995

step

ladder

CRESTLINE

!1811 bfiCIS and hrnges

ld11• for thousends ol
uus in the house .

g&amp;:

HIBACHI GRill
16 "x 10". Steel body with two wood
support bases, slide out steel tray .
adjustable draft controls, 14S sq. in.
plated grid with wooden handle.
Adjusts to two levels. Wood carrying

ool 11d1

OIPJ.

7.44

handles .
HAIOWAII
OIPJ.

REG . 59 .99

8 DIGIT

WAUET CALCULATOR

HOU SE WAR E DEPT .

TIMEX
ALL

Meh ulcuhtl llly sunple
With lhts"' handy IOIJI

tunc11011 potket ca lcu ·

.

s a~e

lelur

TIMEX
WATCHES
lO% oil

the mam• t~c t unu s
on 111811 s. ladtes·. and
cflt ldren s June. ..-.atche"s frne
qualol~ ltiiii:'IJU!re\ &lt;~~arl11ble 10
lt ~ t pu c~

' SYRACUSE- Tennis lessons
will be offered at t11e Syracuse
Tennis C&lt;;~urts beginning Mon·
day, June 6.
· Classes will be from 8 a.m. to9
a.m. for children and from 9
a.m. to · 10 a.m. for adult
beginners. Lessons will be ~elq
on Monday and Wednesday lor
tl!ree weeks. Cost for the lessons
Is $12. To register call 992-7301.

7.99
UG. 11.99

JIWiliY DIP;.

Free cancer clinic
P&lt;)MEROY - A free cancer
cUnlc ( ror pap and breast ) will
be held Thursday, June 9, from 1
p.m . to 5 p.m. at the Meigs
County Health Department. For
appintment call 992.Qi01.

Wellness film
to be shown
&gt;

'POMEROY - The film, "Wei·

IJ8s RevolutiOn," wDJ be shown

at )he East-West dln.ln&amp; room at
the Veterans MmiDrlal HOIPI·
biJ, 11 a.m., WI!Ciraday, by the
~ County Health Depart111$1!. The slllwlng II open to the ·

•

Hendy

teahns sttldy wood
conslruct•on with strong

HAaOWAal

public.

;

Made

Tht tdtal cap lor the f1Stltrma11 Bry ban emble111
ICIOSS The lfo nt

NEASE SEITLEMENT There will be a hymn sing today ·
at 2 p.m. at the Nease SettleiTK'nt
church. Featured singers will be
t11e Herdsman Family of Colum·
bus and United Gospel Singers of
Delaware. Pastor Don Karr
Invites the public to attend.

'

c

RIG . 10.99
SPOIUS DfPT.

componems

IIG. 3.99

Hymn sing schedul

Matchina 2 Draw;-"··
Nighlstand ..... Extra

':~ ~~7i:;,el

SI'OIIIS Dfi'J.

'

.....

.··~,~ ~ , gr~'

// '· . . ~ r

Rummage sale

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

"'M" ' '

SI'OaiS OIPT.

2.66

&gt;O 0M OH ' " """"'" ' ' " .. ' "-'''

o ooHo

uo. 1.29

7.99

wtre seat cushion. Cushio11 rs
venulated to ~liP ~DU cool and
persptrlhCWI ·lree

Hartis Baptist Church will be
having special singing Sunday
with the Singing Glorylanders,
from .Dayton at 11 a. m.
·

..... '''""
_, ..'' .,._
··-···'"' ... · ~
' •'-•-··- . ...... ..

DOY.

Recliner this FATHER'S DAY

·· · -

..

RIG. 3.39

l(ll many

Rectuce drr&gt;~ing tattgue and
d1scomtor1 w1th a comforteble

C Ol l EC ! l ()N

'ljllrt/uf V' '·' '' ''Vt 'W

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

"'"

\ o~o

ln emta~ l e

,.r-0..-..lj._l

$IU1ilijf

WlRE SEAT CUSHION

Special ·singing set

111~ /IUII/o 'if Ultl/r 1/u 1/ lnll lflllo/

_

,. ~

Rrnllsltt at!lon and colo•

specrts of garne hsh

Foam r~&lt;td d!ld sl!at anti back
wl!h durable ~ r nyl cove1 Sea l
iotds tol ease ol carrvmu or

WOOD STEP LADDER

// t&lt; ' ·,u/ •1/1 · UJUII/1//i 11/1 I IIIII/I V

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

SPORTS DEPT .

in

EARLY AMERI
lAili!

9.99 .

REG . Sll .44

....-,

She Piece Group includes sofa, chair, rock er, cocktail
table. and 2 end tables .

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

S2'·''

REG .
SPORTS DEPT .

Vacation Bible schools

Zenith Quality Means Grealer Value I

HEAVY DUTY

19.99

1

·Happenings

$5,89.9.5

limited Supply

ChoOse From Four Different

''

StJI'TON - Sutton Township
trustees will meet Tuesday, 8
p.m. , at the Syracuse Municipal
Building,

The ltt!le Playmate coo let I§ made ot 1ouyl1
to dean plastiC and holds rw1e calls ot yow
tavorrle be\lerage wHh ple nty ol •tee P1rsh bu11 on
loc:k keep s ttd securt• a11d a11otd sprll s

••

•

au01ted

s l~ltt s

ot la ce~ and bands

20°/oorr

�Page

Ch~;istian

'

I
I

school
graduates first
.class in Meigs
POMEROY --Lori Bissell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bissell,
Long Bottom , Is the first graduate of
the Wesleyan Holiness Christian
Academ y which opened In Meigs
County last fall.
Commencement exercises for
Miss Bissell, the only gradua ting
senior In the class of 1983, were held
Friday night In the sanctuary of the
Wesleyan Holiness Church.
The Rev. E arl Fields, pastor of the
church and principal of the Christian school was · speaker, a nd
presented the diploma to the
graduate.
Miss Bissell has enrolled a t the
Union Bible Seminary In Westfield,
Ind., and will pursue a degree In
Christian education. Prior to her
senior year a t the Christian
Academy, she a ttended the West
VIrginia Training School three
years.
Meigs County's only Christian
school operates from the Wesleyan
Holiness Church Sunday School
wing, and had an enrollment of 21
students ranging from first through
12th grade this past year. The
textbooks used a t the school by thP
seven staff persons lncorpora te Ihe
Christian philosophy, according 1.0
Fields, who was head of a slmllia r
school in Washington Court House
three years prior to coming to Me igs
County.
In addition to the regular aca .
demlc curriculum, devotional periods are held each morning a nd
regular cha pel services are con-

G ALLIPOLIS -Tile Dr. Samuel
L . Bossard Memorial · Library wUJ
be at the following places the week
of June 6 to June 10.
Monday - Ewlngton, 1: 15-1: 45
p.m.; Geiger's, 2-2: 30 p.m .; Adney
Rd.,. 2: 45-3:15 p.m .; Vinton P .O.,
3: 30-4: 30 p.m .; Bidwell, 5-6 p.m. ;
Ha rrisburg, 6: 15-6:30 p.m.
Tuesday - Eno. 2:30-3 p.m .;
Rece, 3:05-3: 20 p.m.: Africa Rd.,
3: 30-3: 45 p.m .: Kyger I, 3: 50-4: 20
p.m .; Kyger II , 4: 25-4: 40 p.m.;
Roush Lane I, II, 4:45-5: 15 p.m.;
CheshJrp I, 6-6: 30 p ..m.: Cheshire II,
6:35-7 p.m .
Wednesday - Bane's, 2: 15-2: 30
p.m .: Smith, 2: 45-3: 15 p.m .; Mvers.

GAlLIPOLIS - The . annual
Buckeye Girls' State -·Tea
conducted May 15at the Legion HaD
In GalllpoUs. Amerlcan Legion
Auxlllan', Unit 'l1 basted this year's
event.
The program was opened by Unit
'l1 president, Beverlee Ctark. She
Introduced local officers, Frank
Hamilton. Commander of American Legion Post 'l1; Mrs. Thora
Gatewood, District 8 President;
and M,rs . Lola Mae Suiter, Chair·
man of this year's event.
Mrs. Suite r explained the pro·gram to the girls and guests who
attended the tea. She then Intra·
duce9 guest s peaker, Mrs . Doris
W a inwright , Department
Secretary.
·

was

3:30-3:45 p.m .; Mercerville. 4-4: 30
p.m.: Blird, 4: ~5 p.m.; Crown
City P .O., 5:15-6 p,m .; Eureka,
6: 15-6:45 p.m.
Thursday - Watts, 2: 30-2: 45
p.m .; Brick School Rd., 2: 55-3: 10
p.m .; Addvallle Elementary, 3: 53:45p.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.: Plan~ . Subdv .• 6:156:45p.m.
Friday Elllott's (Rt. 35),
2: 15-2:45 p .m .; Kerr, 3-3: 40 p.m .;
Buck Ridge, 4·5: 05 p.m.; Jay Dr. ! ,
II, 5: 15-5: 45 p.m .; Bob McCormick
Rd., 6-6:15 p .m.

Meigs County
POMEROY -

Bookmobile ser-

VIce In Meigs County Is brought by

FIRST GRADUATE-Lor! BlsseD Is the llnit graduate of the Wesleyan
llollness ChrtsttM Academy which opened bt Meigs County last faD .
Commencement exercises were held Friday night.

dueled each Wednesday.
In the fal l, the school wUI expand
a nd c hange from the Beka publica tions program to the ACE (Accelera ted Chris tian E ducation) program
which Is more individu a lized the
minister . reports. There wlil b e

..

everyday cooki ng.
The Senior Nutrition Progra m
serves a hoi meal at noon each day.
Ca ll 992-2.161to m a ke a reserva tion
fo r a m ea l no later than 9 a .m., the
day of the reservation. the following
me nu Is planned for the week of
· .June f.-10:
Monday - Wiener. saue rkra ut,
mashed potatoes , mixed fruit ,
cookie.
Tuesday Macaroni / cheese.
pea se/ ca rrot s, bl us hin g ,pear s,
bra n m uffin , Boston Crea m pie.
. Wednesday - Chicken-rice cas·
serole, green beans , ora nge/ bana nas . blscuil , a pple pie with cheese.
Thursday - New England boiled
dinner, ham w ith cabbage, ca rrot s,
pota toes, applesauce, jc llo cake.
Friday- Roast beef/ mushroom·
toulon gTavy, m ashed potatoes.
slaw with ca r rots, va nilla pudding
ove r banana in graham cracke r
crust.
•
Choice of milk , tea, coffee
ava ilable da ily.

c lasses for children kinde rgarten
throug h senior hlgh school. The
school, Fields stressed. is a n
GALLIPOLIS - Delmar Glngealternative for concerned Christian
parents who recognize tha t the
ric h, Director of Quality Assurance
education of their children Is a
a t HoizerMedlcaiCenter.InGalllpo·
miiii$D:Y of !lw church.
. lis, was recently electe&lt;i president
of the Quality ReVI!'w Coordinators
of Ohio, at their annual meeting a nd
workshop held In Columbus. Glngerich served as VIce president of the
organization In 1982, has been a
me mber of the Board of Directors
s ince 1979.
At the National Association of
Qua lity Assurance Professionals
Annua l M.eeting held In Denver,

Colo
.. in Nove
he was
a
m e mber
of thember.
House1982,
of Delega
tes.
Ohio has one of the largest
me mberships a nd was the first
sta te to affiliate with the National
Associa tion of Qua lity Assura nce
Professionals.

Delmar Gingerich

Revival starts Sunday
CROWN CITY - A reVIva l will
begin Sunday and run untU June
11 a t VIctory Baptist Church.
Rev. Gle nn Matthews wlU be
guest s peake r, and special singIng will be held . Services will
begin nightly at 7: 30p.m.

Wednesday
Roast potatoes,
turkey ,
gravy
. catTol. -mashed
dressi ng, pink applesauce, milk.

J.\CROSS
"f'-r ,..t

Benefit
. sing
slated tonight

Tuesda y, June 7 - Portla nd
(Post 011lce) , 2: 1().2: 40 p.m .; Letart Fall s (Effie's Restaurant ),
3: tJ5.3: 50 p.m .; Racine (Bank).
4:35-6:05 p.m ., short fUm will be
shown 15 rnlnues after bookmobile
a rrives: Syracuse (Pool) , 6: 20-7:50
p.m .. short film will be shown 15
minutes after bookmobile a rrives.
Wednesday, June 8 - Tuppers
Plains (Arbaugh ), 7:25-7: 55 p.m .;
Rlggscrest Addition, 8: 1().8: 40 p .m .

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424 Second Ave.

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446-1883

400 Second.Ave.

or
COL.ORPRNT

9 AM lo9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to S PM

.....
r
''\.t t

'

IMA

GAlLIPOLIS-A benefit sing
featuring such groups as the
Holley Family, the King's Messengers, the Heirs of Christ and
the Gospel Five and others wUI be
he ld at Gallipolis Church of
Christ In Christian Union on ·
Easte rnAvenue at7p.m. today .

r-·r~

'J

Gingerich, origina lly from Kalona, Iowa, attended the 'c ollege of
Nurstn~: at the University of Iowa
where he received hiS BS degree rn ·
1954. After working ti.Vo years at the ·
UniverSity Hospitals In Iowa City,
he joined the Holzer Medical Center
staff In 1956 as a urological nurse. In
1971 he becameinservlceCbordinator for Nursing Services at the
hospital, and four years later
Utilization Review Coordinator. He
accepted his present position as
Director of·. Quality Assurance In

Monday ttlru Friday

~

you prhts aen't
ready when we say,
\Oil get them FREE.

WALK"' ()fl I "'L I I ; )R

" N "'PI'OtN r lol l N I

446-9510

A NEW DIREC rtON IN HAIR DESIGN' '

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roll

t-,~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:~;:~;:;;;;;;:;;;:;~;;;;~~~~:;~~~;;;;~'~~~~~··~fl~tm~(~fu~ti•~WM~~-C~-·~,~~~:~:.~~~~l~
.

AIU;YAM
. ERICAN CHARM
,

Thu rsday - Sloppy J oes, but te red corn. tossed salad. bun.
butte rscotch pudding. milk .
Friday - Dry lima beans/ toma toes, peach/ cottage cheese, cornbread, butte r, Ice Cl't'am , milk.
Choice of bever age served with
each m eal.

.

.

e e

no~:.lssubj&lt;&gt;cllochange wlthout

.

program. M&lt;'mbers Pl'l'5Cnt were Ton:va

Plantz, secreta ry. Barbara Ht"fles...•y, n:~:re;:~ .
t&amp;on ; DarJena Smith, p res klt~nl ; Sheik&gt; W£&gt;sl,
vke president; Debbie P lantz, IK'ws ll:'pOr·
ter; Melinda Gooldin . treasurt'r. - ll£&gt;porrer
Debb~ plantz

.

with·all the convent•en.c es
f
0 'modern efficiency

FOUR'IH STATE TITLE - Patty Metzler of North
Jackson, Jackson-MDton IDgh School smiles as she
wbtitbe glrls'IOOOMetersRunattheOhlo HighSchool

'

.

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP ) - Ashtabula St. John
scored seven runs in the first two lnnlngsandwe ntonto
crush MWer City 1().2 and wth the Ohio High School
Class A baseball championship Saturday at Ohio Sta te
University .
The Heralds, behi.Jid the five-hit pitc hing of Mark
Hayes, closed their title 5eason with a 23-6 record.
Mlller City finished 18-3.
While Hayes notc hed his fifth pitching victory
without a loss, he enjoyed solldo!fensivesupport . First
baseman Chuck Herpy and third baseman E ric Opron
had doubles along with a pair of singles each.
Miller City staribtg pitcher J eff Hennlller and his
second-Inning s uccessor Mike Lammers gave up 10
lilts but suffered from a defe nse charged with six
e rrors.
Because of rain delay Friday. the Class AAA and
Class AA games semifinals were to be played
Saturday afternoon. Outcome of the games will
detennlne whether those championships w!U be
played Sunday or Monday. Graduation dates are set
for some teams, which would force delays of those
games .
Meanwhile. In gtrls' softball action. Gmvr City 's
Lori P a tzer doubled a nd scored Sall.Jrday to pace he r
team to a 2-0vlctory ove r Tallmadge a nd capll.Jre the
Class AAA girls high school softball cha mpionship.
All of the scoring came ln the first' Inning. After
Patzer hit her double, she wen t to t hlrd on an error and
scored on a passed ball. Kim McKeon . who got to first
on an error, went to third alter a single by Teresa E isel.

Track and Field Meet bt Columbus~· Metzler
broke her old stale record of 4.56.46 winning her fourth
strnlght title with a ttroe of 4: 55.64. (AP Laserphoto) .

Marion Harding claims title
the first 200 me te rs. I was anllclpatBerea finished second In the Class
By QEORGE STlWDE
. AP Sports Writer
AAA boys team race wlh 28 points. btg too much . !knew imlnedl~tely II
third-place Mas.s lllon had 26, Cleve- · ·was me tha t had false-sta r ted," she
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Marton
land St. Ignatius 24 In fourth 'p lace, said .
Harding shed Its losing Ima ge by
Her VIctory in the 100 low hurdles
Alliance 22 In fifth and Columbus
grabbing the boys tltle andLaVonna
In state meet record lime of
came
West 211n s ixth.
Martin became the first girl e ve r to
She
won the 100 In 12.05 e ight
13.82.
Martin, 16, a junior . became only
score all of her championship
and also captured the
minutes
later
the fourth Individua l to score aU of
team's' points Saturday In the Class
'lOO
In
24.
91
after her 400
her team 's title-winning points In the
AAA state high school trac k a nd
disappointment
.
state track m eet, started In 191R
field meet.
"Winning the sta te c hampionship
Three boys have a chieved the
Har ding's Presidents, whose only
makes
up for the false start a little
other Ohio team title was the 1952 · · feat: Gleim ·"Jeep" D&lt;!vl5, late r an
bit,';
said
Martin, who did not start
Olympian, mustered a ll of Barbercross country crown, rode the legs of
high
school
track sea son until
he
r
ton's points in the 1954 m eet, Craig
seniors Zorba Ross and Robert
18
this
'year.
She had been
April
Wallace- scored Dayton Dunbar' s
Pittman on the way to41 points. The
running In open competition In a bid
en tire total In 1963 and Eric Pennick
school has suffered thrOugh losing
to get a qualifying time for the
did the same for Gates M!Us
football a nd basketball seasons lor
na
tional junior team.
Gilmour Academy In 1971.
years.
theCias s AAAglrls team chasc.
In
Martin's triple victory helped
Ross won .the long jump, was
Celina
finished second with 26
overcome her dlsappoint'me nt of a
second In the400meters, sixth In the
Cincinna
ti Forest Park was
points.
disqualification. a fa lse start , In the
200 and anc hored Ha rding 's thirdthird
with
23.
Cente
rville fourth wtih
400. She we nt unde r Ohio Stadium's
place 1,600 relay . Pittman won the
22
and
Cla
yton
Northmont
fifth at20.
stands and wept after it .
hlgh hurdles, l'lnlshed third In the
Gailla
Academ
y
Hig
h
&amp;;hoot 's
"That was the race I was nervous
low hurdles and ran the third leg on
Cora
Wolfe
fin
ished
sixth
In lh&lt;'
• a bout. 1 knew I had to get out fast In
, the1 ,600relay.
Class AA gtrls' 100 Low Hurdles.

.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Texas
center fielder Mike Trent tried to
hide after tying a College World
Series r ecord Friday night and
Longhorn pitcher Calvin Schira ldi
said two of his three pitches we ren't
working In his live-hit shutout .In
first. round play of the NCAA
basebaU championships here.
The top-ranked Texans ripped
first-time CWS entrant J a mes
Madison 12-0 to advan ce to Monday's 7: 10 p.m . CD'f winner s
bracke t semifinal ag a inst No.
3-ranked Oklahoma State, a 3-1
VIctor ove r second -ranked Sta nford
In Friday night's othe r first-round
game.
James Madison a nd Stanford play
Sunday at 5: 10p.m. In an e llmlnatlongame.
Trent scored four runs on three
bunt singles and a walk to tie 13
others for the single game scoring
record In CWS actlon. He came close
to breaklng the record In an
eight-run eighth when he raced
home !rom first on a ground-rule
double by Bryan Burrows. The
umpires made him return to third

CentcrviUe El('('tr on.' 4-H O ub mrt Aprll 28

-

Hal l, Angie Hose, Cheryl Darnell. Keith
Carter . Ku n •n Rose. -Cheryl 0al1l('ll.

base.
Meanwhile at Marie tta, Stanley
Harris sUd in head first 1.0 score the
wtnnlng run , on a suicide squeeze
bunt as Eastern Connecticut ellrnl·
na ted Montclair State from the
NCAA Division III W orld Series
with a 6-5 victory Friday.
EasiPrn Connecticut Improved to
1-11n the double-elimination tournam en t, while the New J e rsey school
·
dropped out at ().2.
With the scored tied 5-5 going Into
the eighth Inning, P aul Martineau
led off with a wa lk for Easte rn
Connecticut. When Harris singled to

New Redskin assistant
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Dean
Pees has been named defensive
coordinator for the Miami Univers ity footbaU team .
P ees, 33, has s pent the last four
years at Findlay College In a s imila r
pos ition. The 1972 graduate of
Bowling G reen State Unive rsity
was named to his new position
Friday.

Tracy Smith' s single the n scored McKeon.
Ka thy Thornton had a double for the losers .
McKeon was the winning pitche r . whilr Tami
Johnson took the loss.
·
The victory gave Gmve City a 21 -:1 mark. wh UP
Tallmadge fell to JS-6.
!n boys' triple A action, Ha milton, behind a record
hit produc tion . swamped Grove City '1:;-7 whil&lt;'
Aust intown Fitch handed Solon Its first loss of lh&lt;'
season, 13-7, In theClassAAAOhlo hlgh sehool baseba ll
semifinals Saturday a t Ohio State Un iversity.
Hamilton (29-21 laces Austintown 12.1-41 in lh&lt;'
championship game Monday at 11 :30 a. m.
The wtnnlng Big Blue collected 25 hil s- most in
Class AAA sta te tourna ment p lay since Colum bus
West's 20 In 197S. Ham ilton's 11m F isher and Da""
J ones , each with four hits, beca me the ft fth and sixth ·
batte rs toshar e the record for Individua l hit product ion
in AAA tournament com pet Ilion.
The sta rter . Mike Conley. gained a w in for Hamilton
for his ninth victory In 10 decisions. J im Cox. tlw
starter. took the loss fo r GrovP C'ily, which cloS('(llt s
season a t 17 6.
Fitch ovf' t"Camt· a tht'('{'- tun deficit \ViOl a scvPn·IUn

outburs t In the fourth i nnln ~ on five llit s wrapj)&lt; 'CI
around two &lt;'ITOI'S. Au stintown's Ed Mauch. roughf'd
up for five ru nS In the first Inning . s urvived to go thP
dlstanct&gt; and notc h hiS sixth pit ching vle.lo!J'.
Dave Ta lboo was lh&lt;' sl m1cr a nd loser for Solo n.
whic h look a 20-0 t1X'ord in lo the sPmUinal gamr.

Akron Hoban, Portsmouth Clay capture titles
ASHLAND. Ohio (AP) - Dl
Rober1o knocked In three runs, a nd
Terl Massciud pitched a thtee--hlt
shutout Saturday to lead Akron
Hoban to a 6-0 victory ove r Warsaw
River VIew In the Class AA gi rls
softball championship game.
It was the llrst softball championship for Hoban, 22-4 . River VIew
e nded the season at 21-4 .
Hoban scored all the runs It
needed In the third inning.

ASHLAND. Ohio (AP ) - Pon smouth Clay's Karen Ada m s held
Mineral Ridge to four hlts a nd
knocked In two runs to lead her team
to a 6-2 triumpll and the Class A gtrls
sol1 bail championship Sa turday,
the tea m 's third title In four seasons.
Portsmouth Clay. whic h won
stat e softball titles in 19lll and 19Hl.
!lnlshed 1he season with a mark of
24·1. Mineral Ridge sutfpred lits fl r~t
loss In 17 games.
Adam s pitched lhP enlil'l' ~am &lt;'

for Clay, st riking out four ll'hi iP
1-~ vln g up &lt;'ighl wa lks She a lso
buniPd In two runs in lh&lt;' fourth
Inning. In th&lt;' fin a l Inning, Mindy
WlntP rs singled in a run a nd SusiP
Conley a ddf'C l anolhPr SCDI'!' on a
sacrifice ny.
• .Iulie' Crost. who a lso pll r h&lt;'&lt;l thP
Pnlir&lt;' gam r , took thr•loss.
Miner al RldgC''s two 11.1nscam f' in

lhP fina l Inning o n Chrl.s Timko's
ltiplP. while· Lisa Ma rino knocked In
a sPcond nm .

Simpson keeps Kemper lead

Texas outfielder ties NCAA record

ut C(_'flli'TVil lt• School. Keit h «;a n cr pres ided .
Advisors :ue Sue Rurr, Barb Lcwb and
Ka thleen Darnell. Members present were
Kathy Dar·nell , Tina Sllvrrs, Tracy Lewis,
Laura Tf'rr~. Joh n Darll('ll, Jos h Rutf, Usa

.

ttntind Sect

·Ashtabula St. John,
Grove City girls win
state championships

----4-H news----Kanall{i:ll Tom boys HI Club met F'cb. 7 it I
lllnniP Gooklln 's homr&gt;. Bonnie Gooldsln.
advtsor, presided and had charge&gt; of thi•

1tim.e•-

Great Pictures,
Automatically!

Holzer staffer c~osen state post

Gallia County
The Senior Nutrition Program
will SNVI' the following me nus:
Monday - Ha m , sweet potatoes,
peas/ m ushroom s, bread, butte r ,
chiffon jello, milk.
TuPsda~. Pepper steak, rice,
butte red cabbage , bread, butter ,
lemon pudding, m ilk .

the Me igs County Pu)}llc Library
unde r contrac t with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, June 6- Carpenter (Laura 's
Store), 3: 1().3: 40 p.m .': Dexter
(Church) , 4: 10-4: 40 p.m .; Danville
(Church). 5:20-5:45 p.m .; Rutland
(Civic Center) , 6: 30-8 p.m .• short
film fill be shown 5 minutes alter
_bookmobile a rrl vPS .

..

orts

'

conducted at Legion

Gallia County

Meigs County

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of June 6-10 at the Senior
Citizens Center located at 2'20
Jackson Pike are as follows:
Monday, June 6 - Ceramics
Class, 9: 30 a .m .-noon: ChOrus, J.:l
p.m.
Tuesday, June 7 - S.T .O.P.
Class, 10: 30 a .m. ; Physica l F itness ,
.11: 15 a .m .
Wednesday . June 8 - VInton
Bible Study, 1 p.m .: Card Ga mes.
1-3 p.m .: Garden Club, 1-3 p.m.:
American Lite ra ture Class, 1 p.m .
Thursday, June 9 - Bible Study ,
11 a.m.-noon: June Birthday Party,
noon; Bingo Games, 1 p.m.
Friday, June 10 - Art Class, 1-3
p.m.: Craft Mini-course. 1·3 p.m .:
Social Hour.- 7 p.m .
Saturday , June 11 - Yoga Class ,
10:30 a .m .

Girls' State Tea

Bookmobile schedule

Senior citizen activities
POME ROY
Meigs County
Senior Citizens Cent e r, Mulberry
He!ght s, P ome roy, InVItes all clderiy of the county to take pa rt In
activities a1 the Center. The Cent er
Is open Monday thro ugh Friday
from 8: 30 a.m . 10 4:30 p.m .
Schedule of activities for the week
of June 6-10 Is as follows:
Monda y - Physical Fitness,
]]: 30 a.m .; Squa re Dance, 1-3 p.m .
Tuesday - Physical Fitness.
ll :30 a. m .; Chorus Practice, 1·2
p.m .
Wednesday - Physica l Fitness ,
11:30 a.m. : Bingo, 1-2 p.m.
Thursday - Ceramic Instruction, !O a. m. -noon; Nutrition Education, 11 a .m.; PHysical Fitness ,
11:30 a .m .
Friday - Physica l Fitness, ll :30
a.m .; Bowling, 1-3 p.m .
On Thursday, June 9, Dale Stoll,
Meigs County Ex1enslon Agent, will
present a nutrition educatln program using Dry Milk. The de monstration will include recipes a nd
methods or using dry milk In

June 5, 1913

Potfteroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Paint Plea11C111t, W. Va.

B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

cente r fie ld. Marl lneau was thrown
out at third by Mike Nicosia a nd
Harris advanced to second .
Sean Risley m oved Harris to third
with a check-swing dribbler up the
first-base line for a s ing le . Kevin
Willoughby then laid down a suicide
squeeze.
The tournament is a six -team ,
double-elimina tion event .

BETHESDA, Md . !AP I -Scott
Simpson shot paron the front nine to
remain eight under par afte r lhr
falrst nine holes Saturday In the
third round of the Kemper Op!'n
championship .
Simpson. a flvP-year tour pro
whose only victory has been the 1900
Western Open , shot a secom,l li8
Friday to take a 2-stroke lead over
Tom Kite midway through the
Kemper Open ove r the 7,173-yard .
par-72 Congressiona l Count ry Club

F ebruary .
In the pack wNe82 playcrsoul of a
starting fl!'ld of 106. the Sf'COnd
largest group to m akP 1hP c ut slJK'e
the S:lin '. os ;\ngeles.
Only 13 players shot pa r or bell cr .
All42. six strokes behind the le ad&lt;'r,
we rf' Fred Couples, .Jack Renner
a mj T;oe-C'hUilgChen, thetouHoo kle

from Taiwan.
.IOf' In man and nuctdy C; 1n hwr

wc• n •lll'd fur sPvt•n lh at IH. whllc a t
&lt;'VPn par for thf' two cto1ys Wf'!'(' 'l 'om

.lmklns . l'ayn•· Slrwa rt, Andv
Bean, Bobby Wii rlk ins and .lo h;,
Mahaffey, lhl' winnt •r 111l' first !lnw
lh&lt;' KPmp!'r wa s hclct a t Congres·
s lona l in 1900.

course.
George Burns. the first-day
leade r with a cou rse-tying S.undPr·
par 64, lost five strokes Io par a nd
was In third placeat141. fi ve strokes
behind Simpson and three s trokes In
bac k of Kite.
Playing before the rain came,
ASHLAND. KY . - A former
Simpson was the model of consisSouthern basketball coach, who led te ncy as he shot four birdies In the
CarUsle Counl)l to Ke ntuc ky's 1983
first s ix holes and the n had pars the
championsh ip game. has been rest oltheroumi.In the first two days
chasen tas the new head basketba ll of the tourname nt. he has had only
coach at Ashland High Sc hool.
one bogey.
Craynor Slone, 43, was one of 37
Afte r the round , Simpson told of
a pplicants lor the job and was
his days wi th Craig Stadler , who has
selected from a fina l fie ld of four
won the Kemper the past two years
candidates. Othe r fina lists Included
but whomade the cu l (a t 150) by only
forme r Ironton 11ger cage coach,
three strokes with his 72-75-147,
BuddyBeli.
despite an eag le on the 493-yard .
Slone's Com ets were ra nked In the
par-5 No. 10.
top five In Kentucky last season a nd
"I kept telling him, 'I don 't know
complied a n overall 40-4 record.
haw you can play out here, " ' said
During fi ve year s at Carli sle
SlmRSOn. "He said. ' It' s not tha t
County, his squads had a 134-34
tough.' He 's right . I didn' t believe
record and 7().9 mark the last two
him . Now~ It can only last two more
years.
days."
Slone, a graduate of Morhead
Even though he has a 2-stroke lead
State In 1962, served as coach at
wi th his pair of 685, Simpson knows
Southe rn for three season where his
there's a lot of golf to be played.
teams complied a 54-26 record .
Tom Kite. who played half or
Following tha t stint, Slone spent six
Friday afternoon round In a steady
years at Trimble County, Ky., then
rain, described his round a s his best
moved on to Henry (::ounty, Ky.,
since the tour hit Florida In late
whe re his clubs complied an 8,';-50
record.

·F ormer Southern
coach awarded
Ashland, Ky. job

TRAPPED - Second round leader ScoUSimpson hi&gt;L'its his Wll~ out of n
trap on the third hole during the thlrd round of the Kemper Open aJ.
~Country Club In Bethesdn, MnryltUld Saturday. Simpson
shot par goU on the front nine lorematn8underpar alter the ftn;t nlnt•of
the Utlrd round. (AP Laserphoto) .

·Rain hampers· Detroit Grand Prix t~ials
WHEN YOU
BRING IN
THIS
AD.

'

I

charm and beauty of on Early 1\mericon livillg room grOtJp

can bt .youn 1o enjoy. Thi1 furn iture i1 srroight forward , unaH.cted ond
honesr 1n design and construction .. Add to this the modem conwnttnce of
lon; wearing .A.ntro(l nylon uptlolstel')' with pluth urethane foom poddirlg

and you han both 1tyle and durobllil)i that will lost and lott. Thot' 1 real
value .. . Come in todciy and make f+li• beoutifvl group your ..ert own.

DETROIT (AP) - Keke Rosberg
was wet and feeling miserable.
The defending world champion
from Flnand also was on the
provisional poleforSunday' ssecond
edition of the Detroit Grand Prix.
Rain feU steadily Friday alter·
noon during the hour-long opening
qualltylng session. The downpoUr
lett standing water on some parts of
the track, sent long roostertalls of
spray flying from the back of the
slipping, slldlng and spblnlng cars,
and allov.red the drivers using cars
• with non-turbocharged engines a
chance to gain ari advantage, at
least brll!fly, over the dOminant
POLE Sti"I1LR - . _ ~ ol Fr.-e eaJo111 the II' 1•• •lie
turbocharged cars.
IIIII will repoiWW 8Uirda.v tlftel' wlltttAol the pole P' n .. wllb 111
There was on!y a chance of rain
..-1 ol 8S.MI mph for Sulld'-V'I 0etroM GI'IUIII Prix. (AI' .
today,
meaning that
speeds bt
'"~).

Sofa&amp;

LOveseat

avenae

'

•

me

:t-r-~----------~~----~~------------~- -

the final hour of qualifying probably
will be much faster.
Rosberg, known for his aggressive style on the racetrack, was the
only driver able to complete a lap
under two minutes and six seconds.
His fast trip around the twisting
2.!5&amp;mlle street circuit averaged
E9.503mph.
The diminutive Finn, who cur·
rently stands fourth in the world
championship point standings behind Alain Prost of France,
NeiJon Piquet of BrazU and Patrick
Tambay of France- ducked alit of
theuauallomlalbttervlewfollowlng
the qualltJing session.
BUt, standing brlefty In the rain
near the pit wall, Rolberi glanced
up at the gray c~. _seemtngly

hanging barely above the towe ring
J ean -Pierre Jarrte r of Franc&lt;' put
Renaissance Center, a nd spa! out:
his Llgter In the second spot a 168.81 1
"Damn rain. The condltlons have to
mph Frida y, followed by NIgel
get better. They couldn 'I get much • Ma nsell of Engla nd In a Lot us a t
worse, could they?"
68.736. Andrea de Cesar ls of Ita ly
The n, saying he felt "lousy, " he
was the fastest o f the turbocharged
stalked off to take a hot showe r and
e ntrieS, taking the fourth posit ion at
some rest.
68.600.
"Considering the wet track, he did
American-born Eddie Cheever,
a very fine job,'' said team owner
driving . a turbocharged Re na ull.
Frank WWia!\15. "Keke Is thetYpeof
was siXth a t 68.401, while Da nny
driver who can make this kind of
Sullivan of the United Sta tes was
condtllon work for him.
'lTth and last on ihe opening d ay at
Rosberg's teammate Jacques 63.3041n a Tyrrell.
Lafflte of France did not have a very
Prost, the other Renault driver
g9Qd day. He slid his WWiams racer was 25th after the first hour ot
on the main straightaway. next to quallfY.Ing and was one or' sever~
the pits, and struck the wall. The top contenders who spun on th.
right side of the car was damaged, trea cherous trac k.
btl! Laffll;e was not Injured. '

�•
Ohio-~nt Ple(J~ant, W. Va.
Ohio-Point Plea$Gnt, W. Va.

e

NG athlete finishes fourth mstatemeet

Collinsworth
ues
talks with USFL team

AI'Sportll~

he balked at discussing
posslbillly.
.
"Thls thing is getting really nu• no •
perspective,'' )Wild the receiver,
has been tl)'ing without successs to.
renegotiate his agreement with the
Bengals. The team has expressed
willlngness to extend the contract"
but not to renegotiate it. Collins•.
worth's 1982 salary was report£dly;:' ·
in the $120,00J range.
·
Neither Colllilsworth, a forme1;
Collinsworth has another year on Star for the F1orjda Ga tors, nor '
his contract with the NFL' s'Bengals . Bassett ruled out the possibility ihai:
and has hinted that he might join the he might eventually return to his :;
Bandits after his option runs out. But .. home state.

DAWN'S DISCUS
IJigh school In Clllclnnatl watches her 'discus during Ciasa AA Girls'
~Event at the Ohio Hlgh School Track and Fleld Championships
II! Columbus. Dawn broke her .tanding stale record throw of W'O" with
~~~brow of 142'6" . .(AP Laserphoto).

ALL IN STOCK SNAPPERS .AT COST
PLUS 10%

HOUSTON 11\P i - MicheiPBush
ran to beat sundown in the fin als of
the wom en' s 1500 metPrs at the
NCAA Outdoor Track and Field
Champloqshlps.
· She won.
Bush, a UCLA S&lt;"nior, Is a devout
m em ber of th~ SeVPnth Day
Adventist Church, which docs not
permit ht•r to participate tn nonreligious activities from s undown
Friday to sundown Sa turday each
week.
Bush, whost' raer. started a t 8: 10
p.m . ~'rtda y, barely bea I sundown
a t 8: 17p.m. but ran away from the
fi eld to es.ta blish an NCAA ml'&lt;'t
record four minutes, 14.48 seconds
that gave the Bruins a big boos t In
their btd to rep&lt;•a l their nationa l
women' s championship.
Buoyed by Bush' s record, UCLA
took the team lead by a 5741 margin
over second placl' Florida State.
Stanford was third followed by
Nebraska with 4321 and T&lt;'nnesSl'&lt;',
38.
"I've told her for thrff' WCf&gt;ks she
could win It ," UCLAwom&lt;'n'scoach

Scott Chisam said. "She· s not noted
lor her kick but she fooled the three
JX.'OpiP sHe went around to win the
race."
Bush's record was one of nine
meet records · broken in Friday
nig ht 's finals. Florida State's 1,600
meter vic tory a lso est.a btishd a
collegia te record.
Southern Methodis t took a narrow
4746 lead in team points over
Alabama In the men 'sdlvision with
an unexpected 48.88 victory by Sven
Nylander in the400 met&lt;&gt;r hurdles.
Texas-E I Paso was in lhird place
with 4012 point s followed by Oregon
and meet favorite Washington
State, 40 each, Tennessee, 36,
Brigham Young, 35. and Indiana 27.
Dean Crouser or Oregon , lhe
defending cha mpion in the.shot put
and discus, broke his own meet
record wilh a toss of 216 feet, two
Inches to win the discus.
CrouS&lt;'r will go against SMU's
Michal' I Cater In tonlghl' s shot put
fl nais. CartPr Is unbeaten in the s hot
put this .season.
In other mept rPCord men ·s

performances, Oregon's J oaquin
Cruz won the 800 meters in 1:44.91.
~MU ' s Robert Weir took the
hammer throw in 244·2 and Arkan sas' Michael Conley est&lt;1btished a
long jump rccotd despite fin ishing
S€&lt;'ond in the event.
Ralph Spry of Misssslppi won the
long jump with a .wind-a ided 27-5 14
and Conley placed second wit.h a
record-break lhg jump with the wind
In legal range.
Cruz, a freshman from Brazil,
posted the second best time in the
world this year in the 800 meters.
Other women 's meet records
were: Sa nfo rd' s Alison Wiley,
9:03.51 in the 300l meter run; Judi
Elrown ofM JchlganSta tc ,56. 44 inthc
400 !l'le ler hurdles; Carold Cady,
Sta nford, 560 in thr shot put and
Florida Sta te's team of Randy

_.~~-~

(NO TRADE-INS)

ma intalnt'll close ties with hi s
hometown.

Also )otnlng lhP fi eld lor the firs t

r

Grande narrowly missed gatritng
AJI-Amertcan honors in the javelin
Ia&amp;! weekend at the NAJA National
Tf!lck and Field Championships in
C(larleston, W. Va.
;Ross; ·a sophomore from C!ies~. finished eighth In his spec~ty with a toss of n3 feet. The top
s~ finishers in each event earn
Alt-Amertcan honors. Blllls the son
o~ !'dr· and Mrs. Davis Ross. ,
.

River Downs results
CINCINNATI !API - .Jockey
StE've Neff rode four winners F'rlday
a t River Downs, including Sly Tex.
who won the $5,400 featured e ighth
race by five lengths.
The winner paid $ 5.40. $3.40 and
$2.60.
Roaring Tide was second and pai(j
$3.20 and $2.60. and What Hope.
third , $2.80.
The 1-1 da lly double of Lady
Vodllka and Billy Mike Jr. paid
$14.70 and the trlfecta combination
ofl -4-Jwas$395.70.
.
Attendance was 3156
·
and the

NOW SERVING MEIGS, MASON &amp; GAWA COU~,ITJES

GRAVELY TR_
ACTOR

Named AD-Dilltrlct
Jeff Leeth,
trhhrnan outfielder at Rio Grande
CQilege, has been named to the
NIUA District 22 AU-Distrtct baseteam by the district coaches.
)!:arller, Leeth and teammate
~~ Wolfe, a freshman from
Ral:ine, Ohio, were named to the
~Mld.Qblo Conference team.
:Goach of the Year was Bob
Starcher of Malone College, who led
the Pioneers to a stellar 19-7 season.
Leeth, a 6-3, 190-pound left/righthander tram Chillicothe, Ohio,
batted in .392 in 29 games for the
Redmen In 1983. He connected for 38
hits In 'J1 trtps to the place while
scoi1ng 15 run.&gt;.
·
He collected nine doubles, one
home run and 20 runs batted in.
The Redmen of coach Larry Cook
recently concluded an ll·19 season,
Including an S-6 mark in the
Mld.Qhlo Conference.

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Wright , and
Payne Angela
with a ~-m

3: :al.46in the 1,600 meter relay.
Tennessee's Willie Gault anchored the Vols to a 39.22 victory in
the men's 400 meter relay Friday
and wUI try to add titles In the 110

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Bruce refuses
comment about
discipline issue
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) .:_Earle
BruCf, Ohio State University' s
football cdach, refus..'S to say
whetjler thrff' student s disciplined
by the Big Ten Conference school
are f!)J!ball player·s.
Rocincy J. Harrison, acting provost tor student affairs, said In a
wrlt~n statem ent that two Ohio
State students were suspended and
a thir.d placed on probation afte r a
schoq! Investigation.
'l'hl! action came in connection
wi.th , n alleged rape in a campus
dom\ltory in Febl'\lary.
Tht alleged rape of a woman
stud!!~!! by several men on Feb. 23
occuf1J'ed in Stee\) Hall In rooms
OCCUJl'ed by footbltll and basketball
plaYEI(S· A Frankjln ·County grand
jury j~lded AprJ! 4 not !Q indict
anyo!JC in conntctlon Wlfh the
incldylt.
In the univer, fty actiQr. one
studt;rt was suif&lt;'nded tor one
q ~r and the, other fpr two
quarttrs. The seq&gt;nd stud~! can
retu1 to school in fhe tall Q!frter it
he dges not fllr)her violate the
S!Ud€111 code.

'

:~no GRANDE -Bill Ross of RJo

FREE
DELIVERY

m e ter hurdles and 100 meter dash
Saturday nig ht.

Gen. Hartinger joins celebrity list
RACINE - The Dave DIIPs·
Appalachia golf tourna mt•nt has
landed more than a major celebrity
- he's a four-star general.
·
Middleport native J a mes Ha rt Inger, the four-star genera l who
commands both NORAD a nd our
space program. wttt be on hand
both for the hillbilly supper on June
22 and the golf outing on June 23.
Hartinger ~a s accumulated just
about every honor that can l'Ome to
a mtlttary ma n. He's had a
distinguished ca rcw not only as an
airman . but as an at hlete and a
scholar. HP'II polot an Ai r Force jet
Into Ohio lor the fifth a nnua l Diles
classic. It will b&lt;' General Hart inger's first tlme In the event.
A gradua te of West Point (United
States Milita ry Academy) Hartin·
ger has had a n outstanding career
as a jet fighter pilot and a lways has

jloss- pla~e~ eighth
iri NAIA '. track ·m eet .

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right, are: ,Joe Roderus, Oint Davis, Dax HOI, Tim Pavey, Ryan Rose,
,Jenny Dovyak. Third row, left to right, are: Matt Polcyn, Ryan Young,
,Jason Daniel, Robbie .Skidmore, Dan Polcyn. Fourth row,left to right,
are: Dan Polcyn,_Assb;tant Coach, Wayne Rose, Head Coach, Jack
· Roderus, and Greg Shrider,' Assistant Coaches. Photo by Debra Rose.

peeled to break several standards

Ohio State will appeal
Tomczak's ineligibility

MAY 31 -JUNE 19
ALL ,N STOCK
GRAVELYS
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baseball crown today.
St.John needed eight Innings to
eliminate Chllllrothe Uniofol-2, the

winning run scoring on an error.
Kirkham and 1976 Olympian Saturday in the 72-event windup for
Dale Lammers' bases-loaded single
Brenda Morehead, competing for the meet.
The
early
boys
team
leaders
were
led a four-run rally by MUierOty In
Toledo Scott In 1974, had shared tile
Findlay,
with
16
in
Class
AAA;
the last inning of a 10.9declslon over
state's previous bestof1~7~ In any
Circleville, with10inClassAA; and
Hamilton New Miami.
kind Of prep competition .
1n sortball, Tallma dge blanked
Onl:t one othe!' state meet mark New London, owning 10 in C1ass A.
Brecksville loW and Grove City
fell in the~ day of the track Theglrlstrant·runnerswereColum·
meet, marred by rain in Ohio bus West with 16 in Class AAA. edged Xenia Beavercrek S.71n Class
Stadium. Dawn DeHart of Lovelanq Loveland Hurst with 10 in Class AA ,AAA, Akron Hoban bounced Little
Miami 10.0 and Portsmouth Clay
Hurst lowered her C1ass AA state and Maria Stein Marion with ll in
Pioneer North Central S. 7
defeated
Class
A.
mark for thesecondstralghtseason,
Rain
forced
postponement
of
thP
in
eight
innings. •
in
this time throwing the discUs 1~2.
Class AAA and aass AA boys
New Miami was leading Mineral
MaU Kemper, a North GaDia baseball semifinals at Ohio State
RJdge S.O in the sixth Inning when
Junior, lllll8hed fOOrth In the stale In and
one contest each in the ClassAA
play was suspended in the Class A
the !!hot pu&amp; wllh a tOIIII of 51 feet,
and Class A g\rlssortball semifinals
softball contest because of rain.
three and oae ba1f lncbli8. Kemper Is
The other postponed games were ,
at
Ashland.
ooached by fanner Melp MaAshtabula St.John (23-61 faced
reschedule&lt;\ for Sa turday in baserauder, Ted I.A!bew.
Miller City (l.S-2) for the Class A ball and softball.
The boys could not account for a
single meet record in their nine field [lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;-

state track championship by onequarter of an Inch In her treslunan
season.·
. "I've been looking fmward to this
meet all ~k. Oh, not all -week,
really all year. Losing last year
bothered me a Utile blt. That made
me want to try harder this time,"
Kirkham said after she took her
revenge in . record-shattering fashion Friday.
,
The 16-year-old sopbomore tram
Cente.ville soared 19 teet, 7~
Inches, unmatched in Ohio high
school girls track history. It lroke
theall-tlmeOhio best and erased the
state meet mark of llHl ~ Donna
Schuh of Avon Lake had posted in
nipping Kirkham In 1982.

Fa,her§Daq
$peclal

and running preliminaries
Friday. However~ they ~re ex·

crown.

It was a frustration thatil;nawedat
Laura Klr1cham all year, losing a

'

t!naJs

Kirkham soared past 19 feet three
tJmes In winning the Class AAA

ByGEORGES'DWDE

TAMPA, Fla. (API- Cincinnati
Bengals wide rerelver Crls Collins·
worth visited Friday with the owner
of a team in the rival United States
Football League, but he Insisted the
trip to Florlda 'clldn't rneali much .
"They asked us to comedown and
talk," Colllnsworth said of Tampa
Bay Bandits managing, partner
John Bassett. " Whether something
happens or not, I don't know."

SOCCER CHAMPS - The Tornados took first place thl• year In 'i;,e
seven to nine year-old Galli a countywide soccer league with a record of
&amp;-6-1. Pictured In the first row, lell to right, are: Amy Morris, IIUI
Morrloon, Aaron Finley, Rod Youn.:, Matt Wamsley. Second row;leltto
.
.
.

The Sunday

SilVER BRIDGE

PLAZA
For Service
Phone 446·2902

I&gt;

..

..
'-~

...

~

.. '

.

Announce Resui&amp;s
R!O GRANDE - Two ' RJo
Grande College women's track and
field standouts recently competed
in the NAJA National Championships In Charleston, W. Va.
J ean Emnett, a sophomore from
Portsmouth, finished 26th In the
javeiln with a toss of 117-2. Last
year she won All· American honors
with a fourth place finis h.
Andrea Riggs, a sophomore from
Middleport, Ohio, was 17th in the
high jump with a height of 5-3~ . It
was her first trtp to the national
meet.
Eighty-eight schools from 30
states were represented in the
competition.
Michael Selects
RIO GRANDE - Standout point
guard Robin Michael of Anna, Ohio,
has signed a women's basketball
letter-of· Intent to attend Rio Grande
College. the 5-7 Anna High School
graduate averaged 5.3 points per
game last season while shooting 44
. percent tram the floor and 66
percent at the free throw Une. Her
team went 20-4 last season and
advanced to the state tournament
before falling to Fort Loramie.
Mlchae' was first team AJI·SCL,
All·Area, and All·Wapakoneta. She
was selected to play In the Dlstrtct 9
All·Star game. During her tenure at
Anna, her squad won the confer·
ence, sectional, dlstrtct, regional,
and state championships. Last
season, Michael was named to the
C1ass A State Tournament Team.
Michael plans to major in
plzyslcal education at Rio Grande.
She Is the daUghter of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Mlcbael of Anna.
Rayburn l'lckl Rio
RIO GRANDE - A standout
votleyball player tram Lucasville
baa sJined a women's votleyball
letter-of-intent tollttend RJo Grande

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -Ohio
State wlli attempt to get quarterback Mike Tomczak relnslated,
according to athletic director Hugh
Hindman, who says Tom&lt;:Lak
neither profited nor was Identified in
anadvertlsementplcturinghlm.
Hindman refused to speculate
Friday on whether the NCAA wlll
reinstate Tomczak, a junior from

CalwmetOty,
ru.
He was suspended
tor appearing
. In an advertise!l'lenl In a CQhlmbus
Monthly magazine, a violation of
NCAA rules.
Hindman says Ohio State wtlt
Sheri R. Rayburn, a 5-10 splker appeal Tomczak's Ineligibility.
tram Valley High School, Is the "Our case Is that he did not go into
latest player to join the Redwomen this venture tor financial gain,"
told. , ·
Hindman said. "Secondly, he was
Rayburn Is the daughter of Mr. not Identified nor was Ohio State
and Mrs. Harold Rayburn of Identified in the advertisement."
Lucasville. She plans .to major in .
Tomczak ied Ohio State to seven
nursing at RJo Grande.
straight victories, a ~3 overall
record and a Holiday Bowl berth in
Park Going to RGCC
1982. He threw for 1,602 yards and
RIO GRANDE - Tiffany Park of elgltt touchdowns and scored five
Chillicothe, Ohio, has signed a track times himseit.
and field letter-of-Intent to attend
Hindman says he learned of the
RJo Grande College.
violation when Columbus Monthly
Park has been active in basket. magazine hit the newstands Wedball and track at Unloto High School nesday. He report£d the violation to
where sht&gt; holds a personal best of the NCAA enforcement omce.
54~ in !Jie high Jump. She was
Tomczak, according to Hindman,
all-conference In basketball and wlli not be on scholarship as long as
track.
he' s suspended.
Park plans to major in computer
Hindman was asked it the
science at Rio Grande. She is the quarterback might never play
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert ' college football again. "There's a
Park.

GENERAL ALLERGIST

posslbUity," he answered. " lf the
appeal Is turned down (by the
NCAA), his eiJalblllty is gone at all
NCAA member Institutions."
Hindman conllrrned the $40
modeling fee Tomczak received, for
the advertisement plugging JeanPaul Germain clothing for Lazarus
Department Store, was turned ewer
to the Leukemia Society.

Office Hours by Appointment Only
I

CALL (614 \' 992-2104
I
0 f ( 3 04 ) 6 7 5 -1 2 4 4

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Check SUSP.ension parts for wea;
and damage ~ also tires lor wear
and slf!ltv. Parts extra, il needed.
No extr1 charge tor air·condi·
tionH ens, or torsion bus.
Call for an appOintment now.

Dollar Saving s:
• For Farm. HOme and
ttgh!

cammerctot

ORANGE TAG:

• SIMI ~~- · optlonot

,,.,.1

... tbe fila ,..

- 50.00

$189.95

Hurry ... sale ends

Fathers' day

WILKINSON SMALL ENGINE
MIDDlEPORT, OH.

498 LOCUST ST.

PH. 992 .. 3092

SMITH

Hill&lt;

,,

PrlN

r 1/\r

• • ALL ORANGE TAGS ARE SUBJECT TO INVENTORY

College_

"

�Point Pleasant, W. Va.

June

19t3

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

·uoward ·new pilot; . ·
Bamberger quits MetS

...
MEl'S' MANAGER RESIGNS - New York
Mets' manager Gcoorge Bamberger, left, announces
at a pre&lt;• conference In the Iucker room at Dodger
Stadl'!m Friday night, that he l• rc..lgnlng a.•

manager of the New York Mets Immediately. Frank
Howard, far right rear, wiD become the new manager
lor the remainder of the season It wa.• announced.
( AP Laserpholo) .
'

lJ
•
d b at h eJ.p mg
• In d ians
DI•Jones
revive
- C!..EVEl,AND tAP 1 ~ RookJP
ClevPiand 1ndians' Manager Mike
F'e;raro was nol looking for any
m acles when h&lt;&gt; took Migu&lt;'l
Dllone off lhp bench and put him In
the starting lineup four games ago.
Ferraro was merely lrylng lo
shake lhlngs up a little, In hopes of
pulling his American I.Ragu!' team
oul of a s lump ( 121oss&lt;os In 15,::ames 1
lhat scnl illnlo las I pl"c"
"It was lh&lt;' idea of m aking a
chang&lt;'. do som&lt;'lhing dlff&lt;'rmt ,"
Ferraro said .
The mow· ha s paid off
handsomPiy.
Dllonf' has collected seven hils
and lhreewalks In l~officlal al bal s.
scoring or driving in seven of
Cleveland's 19 runs sine&lt;' h&lt;•
relurned lo Ihe lineup. His jJ('rsonal
surgp has helped lhc Indians rw·ort l

'

.
four stt~ighl vlclories heading lnlo
lonlghl's game agalnsi the Oakland
A's.
Friday nlghl' s contest with Oak·
land wasralned oulandwiiJ bCmade
up as part of a doubl.,.header on
Sunday.

''I'm Impressed wllh Dllone and
I'm going to keep on playing him. "
F'erraro said,, "I'm a IIIII&lt;' surprised
because I lhought II was· going 10
lake him three or four days loge! his
liming down ...
The swllch-hiller's ru-ent play
has given F'erraro a giimpSP of Ihe
way Dilone performed w hen he flrsl
came to thf' Indians early In the 19111
Sflason.

Purchased from t hf' Chicago
Cubs' orgajJ_Ization, he hll .341 tor the
Indians In 1.12 games thai SPason,
selling a club record wllh 61 slolen

Price, Reds
defeat Astros

·

'

ba~~- hit .290 in 1981, Ihough his
playing lime dropped off sharply,
and he fell to a .23.~ average last

LOS ANGEI.JES (AP)- George
Bamberger, saylng"amanagerhas
to sutter and I don't want to suffer,"
resigned Friday night as manager.
oltheNewYorkMets,theteamwlth
· the worst record In baseball. He was
replaced by coach Frank Howard.
Bamberger \Vas lured out of
retirement a year ago to take over
theMels, whohavelostelghtofthelr
las! nine games. Going Into Friday
nlght'sgamewllh the Dodgers here,
they had a 16-30 record.
"I feet fine physically," the
57-year-old Bamberger, who has a
history of heart problems, said at a
news conference where he an·
nounced his resignation. But he
Indicated that he wanted to preserve
his health and added:
Mets General Manager Frank
Cashen, who last year lured
Bamberger from his fishing relreat
In Tampa, Fla .. said Bamberger
had lold htm two&lt;irthreeweeksago
!hal he was thinking of stepping
down. He Si!ld thai Bamberger
called htm Thursday from Los
Angeles to give him the final
decision.
Howard, 47, managed the San
Diego Padres during the strike·
shortened 1981 season. posting a
41-69 record .
He emphasized !hal the team
needed better production from
someofltsveleranplayers.Oneof
!hem, slugger Dave Kingman,
entered Friday nlght'-s game with a

lloyd ca:.:tures French Open

,18I batting average, though he had Dodgers, Washington Senators and
Detroit Tigers. He bad a llfetirhe
10homeruns.
average
of .273 with 382 home ru,ns
Bamberger was managing the
and
1,119
runs batted ln.
Mets on a one-year contracl
sen~ed
as a coach WKier
He
reportedly calling lor more than
Bamberger
In
Milwaukee, befdre
$400,«XXJ, making him the second
taking
the
managerial·
Job In Spn·
highest-pald manager 1n baseball
Diego,
then
became
a
coach
with the
behind BUJy Martin of the New York
Mets
last
year
~
Bamberaer
Yankees.
·
Bul desplle Bamberger's repula· washlred.
t'lon for working magic wilh
pitchers, the Mets plichlng staff was
one of the piinclpal causes of the
team's downfall last year as the
Mets slid to' a 67·95 record.
Bamberger also suffered-from the
failure of. slugger George Foster,
acquired during the off-season.
He called the year "a sealjOn IDled
with dlsappolntmenl and frustra·
tlon for me and for the entire New
York Mets' organization," bul said
he would return for 1983.
"As far as lhls year goes, I'm
.'
'
confident wewlllbebetterln1983. lfJ
\ '
didn't feel thatway,!wouldn'lhave
"New In the Area"
come back."
9 Years Experience '
But If anything, things got worse.
Special
Introductory
The Mets lost 15 of their first 21
Rates
games , rallied briefly when slugger
"FREE ESTIMATES"
Danyl Strawbeny and shorts\Op
Jose Oquendo were called up from
minors, then slump again as hitting
was virtually nonexistent.
Howard, 6-foot-8 and 270 pounds,
wasastarbaskelballplayeratOhlo
Pomeroy, OH.
State, then was one of baseball's
PH
. 992 16931
mosl feared sluggers during a
15-year career with the Los Angeles

Scoreboard
Majors

ACCENT
FENCE

a.too

-·CleYelond

'

'

23

~

1.1

-11,.2

.m

.

"44C

~~

.500

3 '

.ii'i"9

"

WD'i'DIVIIM..29 2l . .llll 2.1 ~
lJ %&gt;
2123

per qt after'
mig's $2.00 rebate on 5 qt

.4i9

5
5
..-r75
,(79

Z3

26

-~

5~

22
21

11
32

.423
·""

8
9\1

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

2.

.

1

Kendall
10W40

KiNaJ ·Cti;Y 0

Bostoo 6, Minnesota 3

Tune-up Kits
~!!!!!1,1 Delco Mopar
Motorcraft
1

RESIST ORS
Re.g 1 07 J~rnrl t~-

Detrdt 12. Texas 1
s.a,"a Garnt8
Kansas City at Chka@O

. Autolite
Spark
Plugs

Oakland at Ck!veland
Seattle at New York

Toronto at Baltbnore
Blxton at MJnn!'5llla

ca.u.tlrnia at MUwallkee
Dl!ttdt at Texas. (nl

e:o:cepl

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE

•

~

..

Montreal

. .

RATE

.~

27
:JJ

San Francisco
San Otego

'l1
2J

23

ctndnnall

23

:J3

.400
.J62

7'h
9Y,

.6&amp;0

1Y.r

.. -

S21

·'"'
.469 117\1
. ~1 12

216

n

Hwston

F .E. T' 76· 2.96
A78•1J Reg S24 00

.m lJ'h

.11

fl"rkka.Y• Gamee
Chlcqo 9, P1tt.sburth 3
Clnctnnatl l Houston 1

RF G

SALE

$JO 00
$3\00
$J I 00

$17 00
$J2 .00
134 00
136 .00
$38 00
$32 00
137 00
$J9 00
142 00

$J~

00

Atlanta 5, St. Louis J
San """" 8. Phlladel.... 5
Montreal 9. San FranC'IsCO 2

$41 00
$3'i 00

Lee Angell's 2
s..dQ'aa.mm

$4 2 00

New

$•10 00

York~.

St . LoWs II Atlanla

1.99
~ Ace

· Poly Whitewall
Benchmark 78's

4¥.,

.4.17

WEST DIVIININ
• l...Os Angek&gt;s
34 J!i
Atlanta
3J 17

ROKERS

for lllOS I d O ill OS II C Car s

...with $3 Off on

"''7

21
:0

"
11

ryr11!r on::.

I

.565 -

:1)

"
.,

Plllladell"'•
0\Jc...
Pl"sbu!l(h
New York

elect r o nr ~,:

I

Air Filters

NATIONAL J..I'.AGUE
EAST DIVI3.10N
W_ ...L...Pct_GB

St. Loulo

Ace
Oil Filters
Reg 2 411 tm) tt 2

Original Equipment

purchase

O&amp;Jtland at &lt;Jeveland. PJXi., rain
Balt~Jfow&gt; 3, Throoto 2
Seame 5, N,ew York o
Calitlrnla l Mllwaukre 0

his head thai gavP him reason for

COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) -Swift
Stitches, driven by Eames! Kauf·
tman, went the mile In 2:043-5 to win
lhe niJith·race feature F'rtday night
at Scioto Downs and pay $5.40, $3.20
and$l.60.
Seco"ndwasswlfl Royalty for$3.20
and fl-80 1 followed by Campus '
Champ for $3.80. .
The eighth race trtfecta, 5-8-2,
paid $P,818.50. .
A crowct of 4,348 bet $449,761.

"23 ·.531""

" "

Dotroll

concern.

Scioto Downs results

.56.1 .56.1

"

..
"

AT-- C&amp;S Bank

He lx-'Came so fru slra ted by his
; parse playing time this season Ihat
he asked lasl week 10 be released,
traded or eVPn sent to the minor
leagues 50 h&lt;' could play every day.
Yel Ferraro said he was lrr'i·
pressed by Dllone's allilude al the
ballpark on days when hP was
unlikely to play.
"Even though he wasn'l playing,
hf' was laking his exIra hilling and
fielding," Ihe manager said. "He
was staying ready, ·a nd he's
cerlalnly taken advantagf' ofll."
Veteran first baseman Mike
Hargrove sa id Dllone Is lmportahl
lo lhe Indians. who lack power.

2l

.

llaltlmor&lt;!
New York

CIN CINNATI (API - .JoePricP's
elbow was fine Friday nigh! . II was

The Cincin nall Reds il!fl ·handcr
overcame several mental mistakes
to toss a fou r-hllt l'r F'rlday nigh! and
beat the HousiOn Astros 3-1 . II was
hls firs I complele game since being
sidelined by an Inflamed lefl elbow .
" I had been very lrnlatlvt&gt; In
pllching ... said PriCf', 4·2. "Up lolhls
polnl, I've been a lit t lelcntatlvl 1 wlth
my breaking ball. Bull figure If my
elbow goes bad, il might as well be
with an honPSI effort"
Prie&lt;&gt; admilted !hal hi s lhlrd
slralg_hl victory F'rlday WiiS morf'
Ihan a n avprage effort . Ht• lhrew 140
pltchf'S and overcame some Parly
wUdnf'Ss and a pair of unwise plays
logo on lo his lhird complele game.
He Iowen'&lt;! his earned run avcragf'
lo 2.'1:7 in lhe process.
Price was second-gu&lt;'Ss lng him·
self . after making a wlld pickoff
lhrow for an Pryor In Ihe fh·sllnnlng.
and falling lo llcld Luis Pujols' easy
ground ball for anoll1er error In the
second Inning.
· He seltled down after that.
allowing jusl one run on Omar
Moreno's Infield s ingle In Ihe flflh .
Theolhcrhalf of the Reds' batlery
turned in a perfect job al the plate.
Ca tcher Dann Bllardcllo wcm
3-for.:l. drivln!( In a pair of runs wilh
IWo doubles off knuckleball pllcher
Joe Nlekro, :J-5.
Ron Oester and BUardello
doubled for a 1·0 lead In Ihe second
Inning. Oester walked with two oul
In' the fourth , Dave - Concepcion
singled and Bllardello hll a ground·
rule double that IO(Iged In the
padding of lhe left ·flcld slands for
another run .
Gary Redus doubled, advanced
on a grour.dout and scored on Cesar
Cedeno's sacrifice fly lor Clnclnna·
ll'slasl run ln,thcflllh.

rr
rr

Tmoolo

~.~~~~;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Sf'ason.

Times-Sentinei-Page-CS

The

$4 1 00

'

Superchargers

S35

F E II 17 ·4 01
A70x 1JAog $38 00

Sl?r

Ill &lt;;

SALE

0 11U • I I
M'10• 1.1

l&gt;~l . ' \)(l
~ 1 11

N ~O .r '·,

1. /h ()()
$4h 0l)
1. 1 1. 1 00

$&lt;1 9 00
l7 t oo
S7 3.00
54 3.00
$4 9.00
$53 .00

on

860 • ' I
£- 60· 1·1

~'1 t 1 00
lob'&gt;00 162.00
V•li no sss.oo

( oliO• 1•1
LbO, 14

'bb6

ou

'f,tl l 00

$63 .00
$44 00
S46 .00

148 .00
150.00

Hc:aastm at C!ndnnatl
Pittsburgh al Chicago
New York at Los Angeles

Philadelphia at San Dlf'l'O
ar San F'raocLsro

...with Waxes and Accessories

Montreat

I...' . .

Leaders

.

Save over 11
your choice

NATION..U. LEAGUE
BATI1NG 1100 at ba~I ·Madltt:k , Pins·
b.lrah. .343: Daw100, Montreal, .:W: Benedict. Atlanta, .ln: McGee. StLool:t . .JJt:

Evans, san Franctll'O.
ton, m .
RUNS-Murp~ .

~:

Atlanta.

26.88

80111 l o r mosr !J ome~r .r r ,uo;
eo r ecu lr'lreQr:ar 8. M o r o • ur ~ ;o. otll
H!Ou•ld •• en

.-33.

RBJ -MW"Ji1Y, Atlanta, 42: Hendr1dl .

StLwls,

CHECK WITH ANY OF ·ouR
LOAN OFFICERS

'~'KennedY.

WAATTOWORK

.

fatigue.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
CHESTtl, GUO

I

'

'

"Always on your side."

to o rl\ 051

Bn rh 101 rn n ~r onm l'~ l"

iffl(llogtll Uul ... .. 'IO!XXJ

o

•·~

m o O&lt;&gt;~

' &lt;'1 11'0 il oll' &lt;,1•1..,

5.88 Relined Brake

Shoes or Promo

36,88 A t U!rrl ii!OI~

" 'Ill
re !Jur ld i!• Cft l n gtJ lor loliPQt ioll ,\

£~~f}~~~~1!!'&gt;iot ··~

MDioruld f!o Ct!P I llogll di11 1J 11 0 -

o,j lrrl .t olr ~ '' "'

Montreal, 13: EMilner. Ctnclnnatl.

d "(l lo gn r lrur k ~

25001'l

=-...!l..~ S il li• p r tr r

J h.i

1 15 11i 01 &lt;;pr dy
f 16 16 Ot' lrQUt (1

•r,tf ~

r

17 I J ()/

Acq S 39 X

p d c, t fl

••
~

miPUSMoreno, Houstm. :e: Butlt&gt;r,
Atlanta. 4: Dtwaon, Montreal. 4: Ralnf&gt;tl.
Monti"MM. 4; SSu, lLll Angek&gt;t. 4: WashIngton, Atlaala, 4. ..
HOME RUNS-Evans. San F'rancl&amp;ro,
12: M'~. Atiant•. 12; G~HTero. Los
MariN. 11; Brodl, 1...011 ~IN. 10: FOA-

w.-.

New York. 11}.

10: Sctntldl . Ptlil*lphia. tO.

9.88

'

~LEN

,,

1

Kfnlman, Nl'W Y&lt;rk.

Remanufactured

BAS.IS-WIIIon. New Ym-k, J8;
~ t.tJnono. Hwlton. 17: SSu. Loa An&amp;eles.

~~!~ e~~~~2 P~
Che,v 1969

17; Lacy. P1ttltlw'gh, 16: fllodu. Ctndn--

nltl. 16.
PI'IO«NG !4 decilllonii ·PPforez. At·
6-1. Jm, 2.1M; APena. [.,(8 Angp\r!l.
s-t . .8.'13. 2..:11; Stewart, l.ol All~lel. t-1 ,

1 t w11t1

14.95 1/V oth •Ctlull(l c •t t• tor

10\ tn; McMurtry, AtlanLI, 7-2. ;778,

ano small

R.otm.

2M;

mo' r oome~&gt; I • C H i cyl Ctoevv

Montreal, 7-2, .'T7B, 2.34.

· The Commerdtal &amp; Savings Bank

·"

. Mombtr FDIC

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

Silver Bridge Plaaa

Spring
.,

VIiley

Reg

tort•lln

Reg .

rr'\Oit 8 CJ I oomnt•c ~nd 4 6 ql

.... ,.
'

.I

AMERIC.\N

MLtwa~

61; EM\UTIY, Baltimore, ell;

Gr1ftl!y, New Yl'rt, S

, lXX.JBLES.Hrtltk. MIIU)!IIOta, 18; 8er.
Ollc.... !!!; FGrd. llolt........ !!!;
~ l:liPU'dl, t5; • Ul! t1l!d with u.
1ltiPI.D-CWlllc:ll. Drtroll, ~; WWdleld.
New Ycrl.. , 5: Dloc:ft, · M1lw11dM!r. 4;
Kmlo, ~»oF. 13; ...... " " - Clly,

U; Rko, u: t.ym. Colll&gt;nU. to.
S'IOLI:If"IWIESJQ\11.
- · 311;
........
- Ol:y, It; RJIIJiodt;WWI,
{ OM&amp;.d, 11; RLaw, Cl*ap, • MDIYta.
- I S ; -,..,..., 15.
P!1'aiiNO ~· dl _. .,.,...........

I

'l'llnll*t. 4-l, •

-

'&gt; 16 ~ ou r
al tP I rflt g

t ll~l

tru 1

l j oll \

~ ~~tliiU!

L-2-8;__8_ _,
•

a tie r

"" ' q ,,
$2 m l f) n •I JCJ!•

54.95
uo ~

_ -~ Sale pr1 ce 3 88

18.50

to s70ff on

28.95

I

1.95
FS'ER
Fcrilgn ~

Nationwise Maintenance Free
Calcium Batteries

Foreign

lt'

Alternators or
Starters

)

36.88
40.88

Reg from 49.95
With rebu tld e•ch

OH Filters
from

Now Clutch

2.95

Assembtv "••

llr·r. r·

01:

~~ 1'

27.95

NowC"*h
Disc
• .. 9.95

Foreign

Tiwow 0111

Fb'1

........,... t2.95

. Ut WJttte.

--.H.IIJ),~a

r

r·,.-j

50 MO N!H Req -II oo&lt;

60 MO NTH Reg 41 hri

•

All ba11eues are lor mo s1 ca rs an ct lrgtll I ru c ks
W1th exchange
•
Never need water under normal con(lltt ons

·44,H.1.11\
UIIIO.
- up
Clll·
~
1lll1.11;
lcftan.
••,
H. , . Ul; ~ ~ 0-L . ,,
Ul:' liND. Olwllfld. .. 1. D. UT: '
Rl

IJ' '

r'2 16'
UU rn l~ oetJ,IIt-

-·--·

Prestone
=Anti-Freeze ~i1,~ " ~~~~~t,s ,.,,
strcc l hook
'!' ,. 1Coolant
Rey fr om 32 95

~U':

BA.TnNQ· 11m at billsl-Canlw. CaiJhr·
lia, .UJ; JJotrp, llolkl'l. .381: Bmt, Kan·
... ClOy, .3111; Mcl\w, K.riu Cl!y, .3lj;
Y(IUII, MUWiliJDif, .D .
Rt!NS-Cutilo, MlnMIOta, -11; Brt'tt.
Kana.aa Qty, :It Boas. Boltoo, :W: RipMil. Balttr'rl:ft. 33; Fonl, Bal1~• .12.
RBI ·KIIUt. Chir-.o, Jr. Ward; Min·
n.Jta, l8; RD. lblm, 38; Hrt:ft.. Min·
31; .a.... K.uloU crty, :1&lt;
IIITSCa..... CIUb1U. 'N; - · ....
ton. f7: CUCiDo, Mlnnaota. 57; Younl ,

Upolstery
Cleaner
2 ' lg I ? I I

1l ! ()

on 2 gat

14.88

Thrush Header
Mufflers

'f'8 69 / 1

~:.'
~

1595

18,95 W o!h retJuoltl ~ · crtt tor

t&gt;I OC ~

~

Pr

..
#

Thrush Mufflers

SAVES-La\'dt, San ~· B: Elrd·
rotlan, Atlanta, 7; Forster. Allanta, 7;
LA!&amp;inltll. Cllk'-1110. 7: SHowt&gt;. Loe M&amp;'f""

HOME RIJNS.DoCIIIooo, CdmU. U;

_C8rS ·a ank· Q

BBL

,.,ta,

Grllllft, 'l'aniiKo, 4; tllrniiDft. Demlft ....

25 Court Street

e•rt-.

Disc Pads

Turtle Wax
Colorback
Spray Wax
or Finish
Restorer

U: Homer, Atlanta, Ll: KHemandE&gt;2..
StLouiS. u.

Lower Interest Rates
are 1ust on~ more way
it pays to be a
C &amp; · S Bank Customer!

•She-point lliblallon ISOlatiOn system enectively reduces

SEEH~410CHAINSAWAT\'OURLOCALDEAL£R.

'IIIII~ H.H!Uo ln

Cnry!'IIPr s 11n0 so mP r ow ..

~rlton. Philadt'lphl;a. 86;
Soto. ctnctmatt. '1S; McWWiama , Ptn.
biU'gll. 1'5; Valenzuela. l.ol ~ :!11:
Roten. Montreal. 5'7.

· vtbfal!on levels for more comfortable operation.and teas

hMYy...,.

26,88 H tQII I OIQ uP Ullt ll'f&lt;.

treal. 63; Garvey, San J:lkT-1. 61: RRamlret. Atlanta. 61: Oester. anctnnatl, 58.
IXXJRLESJRay . Plttsblrah. U: Daw-

•Any make, any model new car!
•Ask about this special offer at }tour nearest C &amp; S Bank office o~
ask your dealer to arrange it! .
•Used car rates have also been reduced accordingly!
.Pick OU! the car you want then come in or have your dealer call
us. ;..

YOU

• Thtee-plece, 'centrifugalliried clutch transfenl more power to
the bar and chain for opltmum cutting action.
• Autometlc oiler With RWIU81 cu••lde lets you customize the
011 ftow to matCh cutting demandl.
• cap.cllor diacherge,~ for dependable all-weather
,llalta. .
•.Dual chember Softone" mufller Wilflllont-mounted, boHom
dllchargi for quiet opetalion.
..
• SAFE-T-'JP anti-ldckblck diYice protecll you and your saw.
• 4.1 cu. ln. dllplaclmtnt malcel the 410 tllrong enoUgh tor l
~tllght- _ . . . lflOUUh for limbing.

Montreal. JS:
Olf¥1, .16: Gat18", Hous-

HTT"S'lbon, Houston. 66: DaWIOn, Mon-

•No Additional Charges!

KEEPS YOU CUTTING FOR AS LONG

DawiOfl.

San

ton, lS.

IIOn.

It has the
one thing a pro looks
for in a saw. Everything.

11:

New Brake
Shoes or New

Starters or
Alternators

Gar-vey,

+f:

San DiegO, tO; Evans. San Franctiloo. 36:
HO"I'II'I', Atlanta . .14; LeMaster, San F'ran·

3.88

8.88

Aem•nutecturtd

Knlgtu, Hws-

Save over s1

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Page--~The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ot,lo-Point Plea.;.,t,

w. Va.

June 5, 1983

Agriculture imports
rising with re.covery

TAG, YOU'RE IT - J ack Holt, a blrd·bander
from North Andover, Ma...... , tags an eaglet 60 feel up
In a tree at the Ottawa National WUdille Refuge east

.

'

Agriculture and our communiiy

Talks
will
.
contmue

By BRYSON R. CARTER
E xtension Agent
Agriculture and CNRD
Gallia County
GALU POLIS The Gallla
County Ex tension Service Invites
area dairy fa rmers. their families
and loca l agri-business representatives to the ann ual nine-county
.Jackson Area Dairy Day Thursday,
July 7, at Wa lnut Hills F a rm In
southe rn Ga llla County.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nlsly a nd Mr .
a nd Mrs. Ca rl Hat1man a nd fa mily
mem bers own and m anage the

Wa lnut Hllls . .Da lry He rd on the
Merrill Ca t1er Fa r m . The fa rm Is
located southwest of Ga lli polis and
Is seven m iles south of Sta te Rt. l41
on Sta te Rt. 775.
Throug hout the day P hil a nd Ca rl
will e~pl ain and show how they
have achieved a 19,900 pound plus
Rolling Herd Average for milk
produc tion with their 95 cow
RegtstC'red·GI·aclc Holstein Herd .
SomC' of the practices a nd
me thods use-d on this modern da iry
f~r m tha t will be of Inte rest to
vis itors Include: cows a re milked
thr ee times each day; there Is no
concentra te fed in the double-six

herring bone mUklng parlor; use of
a tota l mixed ration - two groups of
cows plus .challenge feeders for
those producing over 75 pounds of
milk per day; Ha rvestore silos for
hi-moisture shelled corn and hay!·
age a nd conventiona l sUos ; Steiner
"Roll-a-mix feed. wagon"; r a tion
evalua tion a nd us ing computers
and dairy feeding progra ms; calf
hutches ; earth solid m anure storage pond and a wagon tour to the
fi elds showing produc tion of high
qua lity a lfalfa hay.
Dr. Don Pritchard, Ohio State
University E xtension Dairy Spe·
clallst, Doug Pauley, G a Ul~ County
District Conservationallst, a nd me,
along with representatives of Plo·
neer Harvestore, Landmark, DeLa"al, Germa nia a nd others will
assist Carl and Phil with the
progra m .
The program wUI run from 10
a. m. until 2 p.m. Lunch wUI be
served court~ of the agri-business
firms me ntioned above:
Come see a dairy where the herd
size has Increased 40 percent a nd
the rolling herd average climbed
al mos t 9,00J pounds In the last five
years.

Announce homemakers camp
By BE'ri1E Cl"i\RK
County Extension Agent
Home •::conomiC&gt;s
Most people In Ga llla County
have heard som clhl n ~ abou t our
bea ut ifu l ~ - H Ca mp a t Cn ntet·'s
Cave. lf you have been e nvy ing the
4-H members ltc'Cause they get to go
to camp a nd you don't , here Is your
cha nce to c ha nge all that! At tend
the J ac kson Area Home make rs
Cam pi
This Is a n adult ca mp to anyone
living ln~any of the nine counties of
the Jackson a rea without rc!'(ard to ·

a na tu re walk a nd a slide presenta·
tlon . E ve ryone should bring something for an auction a nd a fa vorite
recipe a nd/ or household htnt to

sha re.
The c ra ft s aiT' to be: (1) bleach
bottle tote bag (you will need four
one-gallon bleach bottles, No. 5
c rochet hook, and a skein of four ply
yarn ); (2 ) sattn roses (need one
yard one Inch satin ribbon) ; (3)
butte rfly magnet, greeting cards
(need six by six gray felt and glue);
and (4) needlepoint pic ture fra mes
(need plastic ca nvas, one light and
race, color , national origin, sex.
one da rk skein yard a nd a tapestry
handicap or religious affilia tion. or ya m needle ). Scissors are
And a nyone who has ever attended
needed for all crafts.
one of the homemaker ca mps
The the me for this yea r's ca mp Is
report s tha i It Is t111ly a n rd uca- · " Place To Be In '83." And the dates
tlonnl and fun experience. There a re J uly ll , 12 a nd 13. The cost Is
will be classes In craft s, progra ms, $27.50. This covers your meals and
ca mpfires a nd three de licious lodgi ng for the three da ys. 1f you
meals cuth day.
like to ha ve fun a nd meet new
Patsy Glass. area extension
your Rregistra
tion
to
agent. home rconomlcs. will do 11 friends
Lillia n R.send
Thomas,
t. 1, Box
1525,
program on quilts. Everyone (who Cheshire, Ohio 45620 by July 1.
ca nt Is ask&lt;od to bring a quilt for Ma ke checks payable to Lillian R.
display. John Clark will be the t'l' for Thoma s.
'

New processing regulations
will .become effective July I
WASHINGTON (APl - New
fedeta l regu la tions for processing
cooked roast beef to help redu re the
chance of food poisoning will be put
Into effect on July l. sald Thursday.
.The Agriculture Depa rlment said
" 'l'llursday tha t the new regulaUons
will replace emergency rules or~ dered tn 1977 that required roast beef
to be cooked to an Internal
temper.ature of 145 degrees to
destroy salmonella, the food poisonIng organisms.
But studies later showed tha t
sa lmonella could also be killed by

cooking m eat longer and at lower
temperatures. Thus, the depart ·
ment revised Its regulations to
provide various combinations o!
cooking times and tempera tures.
The rules apply to roast beef and
cooked corned beef In federally
Inspected processing plants.
Donald L. Houston, administrator
of USDA's FOOct Safety and Inspection Service, said tighter standards
for sanitation SJid other handling of
roast beef andcornbeefwereadded
last year foUowtng several outbreaks of salmonellosis.

.

~~- ~~~:~y ~~~9~~}H~

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~
·~EPAIR
SEVICE EMERGENCY CALLS
·
• EW HOMU WIRED - OLD HOMES REWIRED
• OMPLETE ELECTRICAL SERVICE

·

oADD ITIOIIM CIRCUITS FOR APPLIANCES

Quality \Vork • Reasonable Rates • Free Estimates
A CHffiSTIAN BUSINESSMAN
BqB HAWLEY -,256-9391
8 Miles SIW of Gltllipoll$ '

I .

WASHIN_GTON (AP) - Talks
between the United States and the
Soviet Union on a possible new
long-term gratn agreement wUllie
continued later this month In
Moscow, according to Agriculture
Department offiCials.
The announcement was made
Thursday a,tter preliminary discuss.lons concluded tn Loridon.
J ohn Ochs, an aide to Agriculture
Secretary ~ohn R. Block, said the
next ta lks were tentatively set for
June 20. No further detaUs were
ava ila ble.
The London meeting was held
on
the current
gra in agreement
Wednesday
and Thursday,
Initially
which expires on Sept. 30. However,
the Soviets agreed to Include
preliminary discussions on a possl·
ble new agreem ent.
Unde r the current pact, which
took effect Oct. 1, 1976, the Soviet

l('o 10 eay to be •

Mexico.

We offer tiNt ""'edit&amp;d program of ct.u wotk you'N ·
required to complete befoN
!liking the Ohio s- Board
Examination.

by lltUdying at GBC, 2

-oe •

WBOk.

Campleta in oalv 11 weeks.
Enroll · now! CINM• will begin
June r7. For more inlormrion,

·

"Pork Imports, up about 15
percent, hae also risen because o!
this exchange rate dltferentlal, and
low pork supplies In the Ulilted
States," the report sald. "Canada
supplies 00 to~ pereent of tlie U.S.
fresh pork Imports, whlle Europe
provides over ~ percent of the
processed pork.' ' ·
Another growtng Import uem 1s
frozen concentrated orange juice,

WlnLE THE PRESENT occupant ol 49 Court Street - Maek's
Auto S.Ore - dates to the 1940s, the building here js 1M years old.
Erected around 1833 and llrsl used by the Halliday Bmlhel'$Hardware,
the edifice has also been home to at least five other hardware stores, a
clothing store, and three auto stores.

c:ontact. ··

GALLI
POLlS
•
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
~~~! UG]

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

....v-N

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

Max, Mabel Tawney met

Reg. No. 76-02-0472-B

~;the::repo==rt=sa=ld~.======~=========~~

Jack Dempsey in New York
By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS ·- Max and Mabel
Ta wney were In New Yor k City 15
or 20 years ago, a nd they went into
Jack Dempsey's resta ura nt on 42nd
Street a short block from Times
Square. Believe It or not. heiT' was
Jack Dempsey himself , owner of
the joint and ex-heavyweight c ha m·
pion of the world.

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Canvas Casual

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Unlonlsrequlredtobuy a tleast slx
million metrtc tons of U.S. wheat
and corn annually, with an option to
buy an ·additional two mUllan. If
more than eight mUllan tons are

-· ·•
~··

L

w anted, the United States must be

·' ~'

consulted .
A me tric ton Is a bout 2,205pounds.
In the year ended Sept. 30, the
Soviets bought a bout 13.9 million
tons of wheat and corn. So far this·-year, they ha ve bought a bout 6.2
million tons.

• j

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11' -..lll'

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4" lAP SIDING, SHINGLE ROOF WITH 16" OVERHANG. BRONZE HOUSE-TYPE FRONT AND
REAR DOOR, STANDARD R-18 INSULATION IN SIDEWALLS AND ROOF, STANDARD UPGRADE GAS FURNACE, 30 GAL ELEC. WATER HEATER, 100 AMP SERVICE, PLUMBING FOR
WASHER, UPGRADED DINING ROOM LIGHT, 14 FT. REFRIGERATOR. POWER RANGE HOOD,
STRAP HINGES, BASE &amp; MID. SHELVES IN KITCHEN, CARPET THROUGHOUT WITH PAD,
DORMER, SPECIAL RESIDENTIAL TYPE PACKAGE, VAULTED CEILING WITH BEAMS. RECESSED FRAME, BUILLET LITES OVER BAR.

Fluroide decision
slated June 13th

$26,500 ~~u:

CAN1'0N, Ohio (AP ) - City
Council Is expected todeclde June13
whether It wUI continue Its decadelong ba ttleagatnst addlngfluorlde to
Canton's wa ter supply.
Fluoride, a che mical found In
m any toothpastes, Is added to water
to he lp fight tooth decay, especially
tn children. Canton HealthCommlss lone r Robert P a ttison said more
than 100 million people In 8,00JU.S.
communities are now drlnklng
fluorida ted wa ter .
Studies Indicate tooth decay can
be ed
65
r . uced percent with fluorida tion, he said.
Yet s ince 19?4, Canton has been
fighting Ohio E nvironme ntal Protectlon Agency orders to fluoridate
Its wa te r.

(INCLUDES CRAW SPACE &amp; GRADING)

KINGSBURY HOME SALES, INC.
1100 EAST MAIN ST.

rzt

POMEROY

992-7034

~eat.,

BOSO AGRI-CENTER, INC.
965 THIRD AVE.

poultry ·
production to
retain levels

GALLIPOLIS,OH .
PHONE 446· 2463

Purina Dealer

BUY TWO,.GET ONE FREE!
ON OUR

riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltfii~p;·•••.-J

u~tu

CARS

f

FOR ' 2195
1978 Buick Skyhawk

1

-

REBATE OFFER!

x-

LAYIIIIA

4 speed, V-6, P S., P.B.

19n Ford LTD Loaded
.
t
19n Buick Regal silver
1976 Olds 98 4 Door, tully

Buy lwo 50.1b. bags,
Buy two 50.1b. bags,
Buy two 20-lb. bags,
get one 50.1b. bag tree get one SO.Ib. bag tree ge.t one 20-lb. bag tree

I

FORM-··········

To take advantage of this offer, follow requirements on certificate.

I

.•··········.....:REFUND
MAIL-IN
'r o receive your coupon for a tree 50-lb. bag of Laye na•brand laying

Any One Of
The Above Cars
Can Be BoughtFor The Low

ration or 50. lb. bag of Field ·n Farm• brand dog meal or 20-tb. bag

•

of Cat Chow tbrand cat food . send this ~ertificate along with two weight

YOlO wne~e r oniDIIeCI. tare~~ or reslrlctell Good
0
1

"GOOD AS GOLD" OFFER

~"'"' ""' " OM W llmlly. """'· fQUO "
DrQinrUIIOII TillS llei'Uik:a te iMISI &amp;C~yoot

•

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$219500

circle's from the above named product or your cho ice, Same size only, to:
N

•

City
State

Of t~tsimites

frill

not be itt&amp;lllll'll Oo not &amp;tal»!. glUt .or laDe tne
we~ c11c~s to eetlltieate

ame

Address

•

P.O. Bo1 14342, Beltevtlte, tL 82224

~~~~ ~~~, ~~ ~~Jt~, ~ ':1 u~ 1~

reQOesl Cople_s.~ r ~ t iOIIS

II

.

Price ~l

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260.&amp;h260

Zip

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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

PAt HILL

FORD, Inc.

•
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WASHINGTON (AP) - World
meat and poultry production In 1983
Is expected to be at about the sam e
level of the past two years, slightly
more than 103 mWion metric tons,
says the Agriculture Departmert.
The so-called world production ·
figures are based on estima tes for
"selected" countries - ma inly
those that have reputa ble agricultura l statistica lr ·"J
~ stems. They by no
. means Include meat a nd poultry
output for every nation.
Even so, the annual figures are
useful tn comparing production
from one year to another, a nd to help
-In spotting trends that can affect
American livestock producers a nd
conswners.
The preliminary estimates for
1983 biclude: Beef and veal production. 39.52 mUIIon me tnc tons; pork, .
36.73 mWion; mutton and goat ; 4.35
mWlon; and poultry, 22.85 mUllen.
'A metrtc ton Is about 2,205pounds
and Is the ulilt most favored In
International agricultural trade and
statistics.
The IJnlted States 1s by far the
largest producer of beef and veal,
With output estimated .this year at
· 10.52 mWion tons. Other leaders

lnciude:

OfFER u,tttn .ltiLY 11, t113

.

&lt;Canada, 1.01 mWion metric tons;

the l~natlon European Commtin·
11)-, 6.74 mDilon; Eastern Europe,
2.~ million; Soviet Unton, 6. 7
mWJon; Argentina, 2.32 mUUon;
llNguay, 0.~ million; Austnllla.
million; and New ZeQ!and, 0.46

ts.

mDllon. .

I

Around World War I Swa nson's ,
Hardware was briefly toea ted here
as well as In the Ales hlrP Building at
5.1 Court . In 1919Swanson's sold the
Cha ndler-6 automobile.
FINALLY I N 1922 aft er some 89
years In SC'rvtng as a hardware
store 49 Court becamse Amsbary ·
Da lcCiothtng . ln 192!\onc couldbuy
herr a Hart . Schafncr a nd Marx
suit fo r $20. Stetson spring hats sol&lt;l
for $:\. A popular Item long slnct•
disappeared was rhc garter which
cost 3ii cents then. In 1929 Amsban ·
Oa ll' also OjX'rated at !he bac k Of 4~
Cou 11 thf' Sanltnrv Drv Cleanct-s.

Somelinw In ihc J9:10s ~9 Court

bccamr hornr to ihr Gallia Aulu
Ston· unrl&lt;'r Oscar Rost•n and
Sherman Buckman 13~ · 1!14 I flu'
nnmr tlact !}(&gt;(ln changt.•d 10 Jack 's

1886 d iS.W,.butm over $J mil lio n tn it s
stockholders. On tile return trip

Auto Store a nd s till later in thP 1940s

thf'~'

Avncr.
If \IO U wa nt to wrltt• to ,Ja mes

Mack 's Auto Ston• undPr

left on August ~na nd arrived at

Gallipolis on Si'ptl'm ber 4... m aki ng

Max

Sand~. tht• author, his a ddrt!SS Is

thf' quickf'st trip on recor d." If
wou ld bf&gt; lnrrrl'sttng to know if the

Box 92, Clark.s hurK. Ohio 43115.

miles north of D&lt;•t roil .
"When I r a me to 1\ruoklyn, I
wondPred 'Wha t ean I pm•Jue&lt;' in
Brookly n?' Th0 answPr was vc1y
little . So I staned kt•Pping bc&lt;·s a nd
took summe r courses a t Rut ge1·s

-

Regular 9

, \o ·- - ·

'lf ~ f.'Cft,l

hardware store for a few years .

a

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NEW YORK tAP )'- Armedwtth
a brush a nd cardboard box, shielded
by a veil a nd gloves, the Rev.
Willlaml.ester does ba nleas thebee
man .of Brooklyn, protecting Gothain 's humans from st inging

mine."
Close to thf' Dutt on minr w:l s lhf'
Y an k("(' Girl Mine whir h had h~·

Gallipolis-owned silver mine ever
panned ou t.
W. H. Hutchinson continued thl'
hardwaiT' store at 49 Coun until
1910 when a Mr. Dunn operated a

--,-

-Comfonable, casual style. Sailcloth uppers, rei nforced counter:
Elastic side gore for snug fit,
sponge cushion insole and
Sperry's deskidded outsole.
Comes in white or navy. Open Mon. &amp; Fri.

'IQ ~

HE NOW IS THE only c hild of
Gallipolis-born Regina Johnson Ad·
klns and her husband, a n account a nt w ith Brown Associa tes ,
Athe ns. Ma rgaret Johnson Is the
ma ternal grandmother. a nd Levi
E. Adkin s t he p ater n a l
gra ndfa ther. ·

Beekeeping hobby
now civic crusade

Court Street had pooled their
finances and bought the Dutton
Silver Mine near Ouray, Colorado,
as a way to build up their capital
reserves. WUI!am Hope Harvey
was the merchants' agent In
Colorado but every few months first
one mercha nt and then a nothN
would go west to check on thP mine.
For Instance , this was the re port
of two merchants who visited their
mine In August, 1886:
" They left GalUpolls on Monday,
.~ugusl 23, and reached Ourny,
Colorado, on Friday, 1\ugust '!1,
having traveled 1,765 nill'"'· They
lound the Red Mountain mining
district booming with excitement
over the extent of the rich silver and
gold developments ol the pa.'ll
summer. They · made a car:-erU1
examination of thf' Dutton ~tine 1md
were weU plt~Ml&gt;d with tht' s uhshu•tial · c ha rarCPr of th.- work in tht•

GEORGIA MYERS Is a nominee swarms.
Univer sity in bt'P.keeping ," said the
for sm allest woman In Ga Uia
The Episcopal pries t has turned a
priest, who is assign£&lt;] to All Sa int s
ASWE SAYDOWNin Ciay Twp., · County physically. Lloyd Myers Is a penchant for beekeeping Into a c ivic
Chu rch in Brooklyn.
here was one of the most fa mous son; Of norma l measurements . cru sade- capturing bees In urban
As his expet1ise grew. Lester
faces you'd e ver expect to see. Merrill Cart er- reported on the locations a nd releasing them tn less gained reputat ion within the city's
Dempsey was champion from 1919 removal of an ancient house ac ross populous a reas or displaying them
fire and pollee departm ents, who
to 1926. 01' Peeps was 18 years of the road from his house. Off SR 775 in controlled environments.
, now call hlm as oft e n as four times a
age In 1926, just new ly out of you go right ()nto Hanpan Trace
" MayandJuneare thcswarming week. He serves the city without
Lexington (Ky.) Senior High School
road; first house you see you turn months,.. Lester said . " When
r harge, he sa id .
left; prior to ~herazln g theold house :hey're swa rming. they're pre tly
a nd getting ready to wear the dark
He recalled a telephon9 call one
95
bjue beany as a University of had much of the weather boarding ge ntle."
hot Sunday aft ernoon from long·
off to expose the mud brick ccnte nt
l{entucky freshman .
On Friday. LC'stcr traveled to thP shoremen on the Broo[l.cy n docks. A
of the walls-'- m ud brick a nd straw,
Bronx, where a batch of bees was foreign ship had just dockf'&lt;l a nd
' OL' PEEPS ALSO wa s a fan of a boxlike kind of thing In Germ a n swarming on the sld&lt;' of a building.
when the hold was opt'tWd, tho uHollow.
one Jack Dempsey and was grossly
In 15 m inutes, he had whisked the m sands of bees swarmed ou t.
disappointed whe n scholarly Gene
"The ship had com e from Sout h
into a cardboard box - w ithout
IT'S ALRE ADY been In the getting stung.
TUnney went the distance with
.
Amer ica, and a ny forPig-n inSf'CIS
Dempsey and unthroned him I her· _paper that Debora h Mullins re·
"I usua lly get stung every day ," shou ld Jxo do&gt;sl roy('(! immrdia tcly
ceived a 4.0 In two algebra courses.
eby. On · a · return engage ment
allergic
a nd have
· :•s:·p=s~th:c:y~t=n:ig:h~tl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
id . ''I'm
Dempsey knocked the T-waddln · geometry, and two ma th courses a t he
no sa
react
ion. not
There
Is very
little r_;~:_:or~d:i"':
Gallla Academy High School, a nd swelling, very little pain . I'm used to
out df Tunney to flatten him In one
late round. Tunney survived . And she received the Board of Regents a lillie pain."
won. And Dempsey ultimately scholarship of Sl,OOJ a year plus
His next run . on Ma nhatta n's47th
a nother from Ohio State University Street, took longer: 20 to 2'\ minutes
became a restauranteur.
for $200 a yea r.
before the insects were rem oved
MAX AND MABEL Tawney
from the s ide of a building to ma ke
HER ADDRESS is 46 He nkle
shook hands with Dempsey, talked
the area safe again for humans.
Ave. 01' Peep&gt; envies young fo lk
with him, and we re Impressed by
Once boxed, the bees a re ta ken to
who can handle numbers through
him - Impressed In an entirely
country beekeepers, or to such
the intricacies of arithmetic.
different way from the way Demp·
places as the Broo klyn Bota nic
sey Impressed his ring opponents!
Garden, whe re they are placed ln
It's hard to believe that Dempsey 's
CORRECflON: Peeps said tha t observa tion hives for the edification
dead . But It was hard to believe that
Brent J ohnson went to Notre Dame. of visitors.
he was 87 years of agel
and tha(' s not true. His brother
LC'ste r . a priest for 2.1 years ..
Dave DID , attend Notre Dame became Interested in inSf'Ct life
KEITH ALLEN Adkins. born at
University, however. Brent went to while growing up on a fa rm nPa r
Elyria, Ohio, In 1972 as Keith Allen
Xavier University a t Cinc innati.
Mount Clemens, Mich .. a bout 40
Roush, was one of the graduates r-;::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-;;;:::;:=::::;;;;;;;::::;1
From the Washington School sixth
grade the week of May 2,1. The week
after he turned four years of age.
when he was living In Point
Pleasant , childless Mr. a nd Mrs.
Kenneth Adkins. 1820 Cha tha m
Ave., took him Into their home.

White

lr;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;::;;=:;;;;;:~~~~~~~~~§~Tues~.-~W~eti~.·Ttt~urs~.~·Sat~.9-~S~iDOWIIT~OWIIF~G;AU~~~PO~U~Si
. "' .,,

put behind 49 Coun Street.
By JAMES SANDS
BY 1860 LAING Halliday had left
Special Conespondenl
About 1833 two young men who the store and Thomas was In
were born In Dumfries, Scotla nd . partnership with .J. A. Va nden a nd
opened a hardwarestoreat49Coun one could b uy here window bltnds,
Street . The pair had ccme to town sash, door locks, latches and copper
tools too. Laing beeause a bullder of
only s hortly be- .
· steam boats . Among his accompfore t hts as
lishments were Ohlo-1. Ohlo-2.
blacksmit hs and
Ohlo-3. Ohio-4, Golden Era. Eugecontinued blacksnia and the Fannie McBurnle. In
mithing as well
on the opposite
1869 Laing became a partner In the
Waddell . Blazer a nd Compa ny
sid e o f Cou ct
Street. Soon these two me n, Tho· Woolen Mill .
At least by 1866 Thomas had
mas a nd La tng Ha lliday. a lso had
reti
red !rom ~9 Coun as the firm
stores tn surrounding towns a t
beca
me known as Vanden a nd
Pon er a nd Northup.
In 1845 one could buy at the Hutchinson a nd by 1881 Hutchinson
Halliday Brothe rs store mlllsaws, and Baldridge. In 1881 the ha rd·
crosscut saws, ha nd saws. edge ware store at 49 Court sold over 600
tools, chi sels, rasps, na lls , draw Oltver Chilled Plows. T hey also sold
chains. log chains, shovel ploughs, numerous reapers. mowers. a nd
and wagon boxes as well as grain cooking stoves.
IT WAS DURING the middl&lt;&gt;
scythes. pitch forks, hoes, cradle
rakes. a nd coa l shovels. No doubt 1880s that the talk in the stores on
Court St reet centered around
some of these tooks were m ade In
the blac ksmith shop which eventu· silver. It seems as though in 1886 a
num ber of Gallipolis mercha nts on
ally was moved across Court a nd

.-nbei' oi •

goow"G prafelaion. Slllrt .now.

"·-·A•·....,........,,dollar.

Overall, Imports of meat and
m eat products, excluding poultry,
were valued at more than $1 billlon
tn the first slx months of this fiscal

Two -blacksmiths open shop for hardware in Gallipolis

Imports of ltve cattle durin8
October-March were the highest In
three years, due largely to an
Increase of feeder cattle tram
The report said that Importers of
MexlcanfeedercattleandCanadlan
"fat" cattle have been able to pay
lesS tn U.S. dollats for the foreign
animals due to the strength of the
dollar against the peso and the

leesand
aimed
at restricting
the
dand
emand
the U.S.
quotas, duties
flow of foreign sugar.
Meat Imports, always of concern·
to U.S. livestock producers, rose
sharply tn January from levels of
the previous two months when
" voluntary restraint" actions by
Canada,AustrallaandNewzealand
held shipments down to avoid'
triggering Import quotas.
Some of the meat that would have
e ntered the U.S. market late tn 1982
was placed ln bonded warehouses
"and Immediately entered (he
United States at the begtnning of
· 1983," the report said.
. ·

.

Dairy Day slated July 7
at Walnut Hills Fartn

pepoo of1981-82.

WASHlNGI'ON (AP) - A new
Agriculture Department analysis
shows that Imports of agricultural
products are Increasing whlJe
commodity eliports continue to slip.
The report said that the Imports
are "rising with economic recove ry" tn the United StateS.
In the first haU of the fiscal year
that began last Oct 1, the value of
agricultural Imports rose 5 percent
fromthe sarneperiOdayearearller
to $8.1 bWion.
"Most of the Increase came from
non-competitive products, partlcu·
larly cc!fee," the departrtlent's
Economic Research Service said.
" Coffee Imports reached 553,lXXl
(rnett1c) tons through March, up 7
pereent!rom!lyearearller."
On the other hand, sugar Imports
are about half ot last year's pace,
reflecting a conttnutng decline In

of Toledo. Holt perfonned the chore Thursday on four
eaglets at national refuges tn Lucas and Ottawa
counties. ( AP Laserphoto ).

ATTENTION'
WANTA
REAL ESTATE
LICENSE?

year, up 21 percent flml the same

By DON KENDAlL
' AP Fann Wrller

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C 7

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

""World cattle Inventories at the
of 1983· ~ 2.7 m1llloll head
1eS1 than last year," the USDA's
Foreign Agricultural Servlce'Sa.ld ln
Its rworL·
'

The Sansabelt gift
makes Father's Day ~
more comfortable.

NOW

Devoe

Regency House·
Our Longest Lasting Exterior Acryli c
Latex House and Trim Paint

Save s2.00 Gallon

• Res1s1s pce l 1n q
• M ddew e~ nd
lad e re s , s tr~nt
· • O ne c o at wh l?n
np pi 1Pr't r1s rtllt 'c tf·rl

$1440

GALLON

oeuoe•
A t .t ,h ll lf1 ,Jblt· ~t l t

h

~ rc,JI

But tl rl •.1'\o th•IJ\'t'f" .1 lo t 111
com t ort, th en yoll ' w !4f"~l d rL·&lt;~I
wmnN. Th.lt:, 1-.·hy " r.lrr nl
S.m-.Ll~t·lt ~ I.K!.. ., 1~ ,rlw. 1 y~
..~rprl&gt;cl.ltl·d . T ht•rt•' :, t h t

up-

to -thP -mrnutc ~ tyl m g plu ~
tht' rJtt•ntcd t r ip lt·- ~·.trt•t c h
w.1istbJn d ).:Uarante('J tor

the lifeol the sl•c ~ . H\
th t• sec ret ot S.msJ ht·lt \
trim ~ooJ lools ,mJ
o;upt•r co m tort. So. ~ivt•
tht• mJn in vour lilt• com ' lortJbil- S.t~&gt;Jbclt ;l.o c ~;
Tht·~,.~ .1 woriJ (lt

.,tylt"•.

color~ JnJ I.-hn c'~ lt1
c hoo~t:' tr0m .

. . - ---~

~- ~ ~V ~ Sansabelt
Slacks
Frnm

138

All-Weather·
Our Longest Lasting Exterior
Alkyd Gloss House &amp; Trim Paint

Save s3.00 Gallon .

• Resists peelin g
o Mildew resista n t
• One coat whe n
app li ed as di rected
• Ou tstanding ad h e~ i o n

$1675

.

GALLON

Devoe

Wonder-Tones'"
Interior Latex
Flat Wall Paint

s

·

Save 2.00 Gallon

$1 0 60

• Hig hl y was hab le .
• One coat
whe n appli ed
as directed
• Wa te r Clea nup .
•c ustom colora alightly higher.

GALLON

.

OFFER GOOD MAY 31, 1983 THRU JUNE 11, 1983

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY.CO.
312 SIXTH STREET
Mon. -Fri., 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

675-1160

POl NT PLEASANT
Sat., 8 a.m._
-12 noon

�~~~~;:~~~~~==::::Oh::i:~::~:·:"':":MO::um:·:t::w::.v:a:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·~:::s:·~l::~;

.limes-Sentinel

CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS
SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 A~M. TO 10 P.M.
MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-3480

SECOND &amp; Mlll .ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OtUO
(Formerly Mart V)

GALLIPOLIS
. PH

Johnson's
Super
Markets

APPRECIATION

DOUBLE

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

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT JOHNSON'S
Appreciation
Sale _

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

SUPERIOR'S
JUMBO RED

CHUCK
EAK

CHUNK
BOLOGNA

Appreciatron

Appreciation
Sale

Sale

PICK of the
CHICKEN

. ~"'

CHARCOAL$
STEAK

·a CHOICE

$}79.
LB.

'

PIECES-

2 THIGHS, 2 LEGS,
2 BREASTS, 2 WINGS

LB.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

ENGLISH ROAST

City voters will naJ"I'OW field of candidateS
from seven to four

SALE
PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY, JUNE 5
THRU
SATURDAY, JUNE 11

BACON ENDS &amp;
p
LB. BOX

$}99

SUPERIOR

POLISH SAUSAGE

LB.

99¢

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

SUPERIOR

FRANKIES

12 OZ. PKG.

$}79

CHOPPED

STEW BEEF

SIRLOIN PATTIES

Appreciation
Sale

LB.

Appreciation ·
Sale

FRESH

FLORIDA
RED RIPE

GREEN
CABBAGE

TOMATOES

C~IPOLJS

:-- City voters ,
wlll·narrow a field of seven city
commission candidates down to
four In Tuesday's prtmary
election.
·
There will be no other races or
Issues on the Gallla County
bauot Tuesday.
The four candidates who
receive the most votes Tuesday
will face off November 2 for the
two positions opeli on the
commission.
Four men and three women
will appear on the· ballot.
. Current city commissioner Rl·
chard Moore Is the only candl·
date who has held elective office
In Galllpolls.
Howard Baker Saunders, the
other con'lmisslorrer whose seat
Is up for election, deCldf&gt;d oot to
seek another term .
Until the !!ling deadline, city
and civic leaders feared no one
would run for the open seats.
The Galllpolls Area Chamber
of Commerce launched a drive
to find wllllltg and eligible
candidates.
All seven c&lt;mdldates _filed In
the final two days before the
deadline.
'l;'he commission Is nonJ?"l'tlsan and Its members are
, not paid. Under rules of the city
charter. candidates cannot acl;lvely campaign for themselves.
They are allowed to publlsh up
:to three "statements of position
·In the local newspaper.
: The Times-Sentinel spoke to
' the candidates last week to get
their views on city Issues .
• . Based on these Interviews, the
. city's lack of adequate recrea·
. ilon facllltes was one of the
.· major concerns of the
:candidates.
• Voters last y ear refused an
Increase In the city income tax
which would have financed a
11001 and recreation complex.
Several candidates mentioned
parking and traffic downtown as
Issues to be dealt with.
Since traffic lights
removed .on several Intersections
downtowrn, some residents
have complained of difficulty
crossing Second Avenue.
A lack of parking has also
been Identified by some as a
problem.

were

(Editor's Note: During the
past week 'flmes.&amp;ntbtel staff
members Jeff Grabmeler and
Kevin KeDy Interviewed the
!IeVeii candldaies seeking elec• tlon to the Gallipolis City
Comrnilslon. 1be foOowlng re.ports are the result of those
' Interviews.)

Sam Bennett
.

Appreciation
Sale
VALLEY BELL
PREMIUM QUALITY

MORTON
FAMILY MEAL

69

ICE CREAM$
HALF

Appreciation
Sale

Appreciation

SHURFINE
WHOLE
KERNEL or
CREAM STYLE

SHURFINE
DECORATED

Sale

PAPER
TOWELS

.CORN 16
32 OZ. JAR

SALAD DRESSING

99¢

CAN
SHURFINE

17 oz.

FRUIT COCKTAIL CAN

2~79¢
Appreciation Sale
SHURFINE

SALTINE
CRACKERS
Pound

city more than 16 years and
knows what needs to be done.
"I've seen a lot of money spent
In Gallipolis, some on things that
are unnecessary," he said. "I
Intend to change that."
Bennett, who lives on Smithers Street with his wife and two
of his three chllctren: said
parklrig and streets are scime of
his major concerns.
Half of the meters on the
municipal parking lot on Third
Avenue should be taken out to
give area ~dents a free place
to park, he said.
Meters should be added at the
space_s on First Avenue along
· the city park, he said.
Bennett Is not happy with the
tratflc signalization program
which took out many of the
traffic signals on Second
Avenue.
"I believe some of them
should be put back," he said.
Bennett said he would also
seek improvements In the city 's
recreation department and
stricter enforcement of tratflc
laws against "hot-rodders" and
speeders.
Although "expansion of the
clty limits Is necessary for
growth, " he sald annexation will
only work If the people In the
area agree to It.
He said the city can attract
Industry by emphasizing the
area's "centralized location" ·
and easy access to the Ohio
River, railroads and the regional
airport.

Joseph Fenderbosch
GalllpoUs City Commission
candidate Joseph Fenderbosch
says officials should be working
to promote lndustrtal and ecooomlc growth In Gallipolis.
"I would like to see a vigorous
program for economic development," said Fenderbosch, 60, a
registered safety professional
for Ohlo Valley Electrtc Corp.
" We can't let our community
stagnate."
As part of thJs program lor

City primary
election locations

GALLON

SHURFINE

Sam Bennett, the only t'andl·

· date for Gallipolis City Comrnls·
• slon from the east end, says he
will "work for the people In all
parts of the city" If elected.
· Bennett, 41, a retired boiler·
tnaker, said he has lived In the

Appreciation
Sale

116-0Z.
ARCHWAY STYLE COOKIES
WHEN YOU PURCHASE 2 BAGS
AT REGULAR PRICE

BLUE POWDER
$139
TERGEN 49 oz. BOX .

June 5, 1983

1

to Uti~

-"11e ResetVe the

USDA CHOICE
BONElESS

·Primary Election Preview

Section[Q) ·

GALLIPOLIS- The following locations have been designated by
the Gallla County Board of Elections lor Tuesday's city prtmary.
City 1-A ~Willis Tire Co.
City l ·B- Washington Elementary School.
City 2-A- City building.
City 2-B- Bob Saunders Quaker State Service Center,
City 3-A ...:washlngion Elementary School.
City 3-B- Lodge building, comerotThlrdAvenueandPineStreet.
City 4-A- 700 Second Ave. , building below Gllllngham DrugStore. •
City 4-B- City garage.
City 4-C- Bastian! building, Third Avenue and sycamore S!rf)'!t.

development, he said the city
commission must consider annexation of outly1ng areas.
" We Cjlll't get boxed ln . It's an
!ssw&gt; we have to address," he
said.
Fenderhosch, who Is marrted
and has three children, said he
has been .. active In all facets of
the community."
·
He has held various pOsts with
the Red Cross and several
committees Involved with area
education.
' 'We should make sure government Is responsible to the
people," he sald. "! won't go
haltway (If el~ted ). I'll devote
the time and energy and listen to
the people."
Fenderbosch said he Is concerned about taxation, especially for the elderly .
Although taxes are nerejsary,
he said "I'm opposed to taxation
just for the sil.ke of taxation."
Government should expla in to
citizens what taxes are to be
used for, he said.
He said "It disturbs me " tha t
many of the elderly' cannot
a(ford to ljve on theli Umlted
Incomes . The commiss ion
should work to help the aged, he
said.
Fenderbosch sa id he a lso
wants to improve recreation
lacllltes in the city.

Dow Saunders

Naney Smith

Brt'nda Wilson

Ga llipolis. Theclty wUlalso need
to pu rsue anne xation of surrounding areas to keep from
going below a 5,(XX) population
a nd becoming a village.
"I would a lso like to see the
c ity a nd county wor k rloser on
projects," Moore sa id, "because
If we have unity we have mo re
powe r ."
Moon&gt; Is ma rried and has
three sons.

clients," she said . "They can 't
cross the street a lot of times."
This threatens the downtown
area. according to Myers·
Campbell.
" Uwe·re not careful. we won't
have a downtown." she said . " I
want to preserve ll (the city I for
my son a nd my business."
Myers-Campbell a lso stresses
the need for a recrea tion com plex. Youth In the community
especially need s uch a .c ente r.
·she said.'
City officials should a ll r'dCt
industty to the city: she said ,
becau se more jobs are needed.
"Our young people have nothing to come back to,·' she said.
"They're a ll lea ving and you
can't blame them ."
Annexation would help th&lt;'
city grow. she said, but the
people Involved . would have to
approve s ince " they're the ones
tha t live there."

race as an qpporturnltY to help
the city progl·ess and to gain
som e p€'rsona l growth by work·
lng w ith the city.
" I have gone over thP mlnutes
of (com mission I meetings to
look a t major th ings they are
fac ing," sa id Nancy Adams
Sm ith . "Offha nd. wr have to
look a t a nnexation in the future.
and gas and other ra tes. The city
commission Is handling things
beautifully. so it' s a matt er of
bringing In new Ideas."
·
Mrs. · Smith. 35, who resides
with her husba nd Btyce, a vtce
pres ident In Diversified InvestIng, Gallipolis. and he r . three
children at 619 Second Ave ..
listed her m ajor concern as
S('('lng 1h&lt;' city pmgress.
Pt-og~-ess would take the form
of a mo1-.. definit e Idea of a
recreation comple.~ for the city's
youth. a well-Informed app roach
to a nnP"!tlon and a tt racting
lndu st ry to the art:' a .
" I th lnl&lt;,_ lt has to IX' a joint
cffor1 at looking for Industries
th at would be desirable. choosln ~ the right Industries for the
community," she sa id. " In order
to see thl' city p rog~·rss, a cert ain

'

Dow Saundel'!'l

Richard Moore&gt;
P.S. Myers-Campbell

Joseph Fenderbosch

Richard Moore
As the only current ci ty
commissioner among seven candidates running in the prtmary
election this Tuesday, Richard
Moore stresses experie nce as his
strong point.
Moore. 46, an employee of the
Goodyear plant in Point Plea·
san!, has served as City commissioner since Jan. 1, 1981
" In the past four years there
have been severa l accomplishm ents, but there are many more
to go," he said recently.
Among several projects he
would like the city to undertake.
Moore said construction of a
recreation complex "lor a ll
ages" Is one of his major goals.
The sewage system In the city
also needs to ol upgraded,
according to Moore. He wants
Gallipolis to go through with
plans to construct a new $7 .5
million wastewater treatment
plant.
Meanwhile. he feels the
Spruce, I Street extension lift
station should be repaired to
eliJnlnate an odor problem In the
area.
He also wants to see Easte rn
Avenue widened to three lanes to
relieve "a very congested area"
In the city.
In order to achieve growl h,
Moore said city officials should
"personally contact" companies
and encourage them to locate In

Pa tsy S. MyE-rs-Campbell said
she knows what concerns c ity
I'eS idPnt s because her job br ings
her in contact with people every
day.
Myers-Campbell. a :16- year old divorrf'd mother with one
son. Is half-owner of Founta in of
Youth beauty sa lon on Second
Avenue a nd a candldate.for the
Ga lllpolls City Comml.slon .
" I'm in contact with people a ll
day long, " she said. "I know
wha t lh&lt;' prople wan t."
She says Improving the down·
town area Is one of hr r ma jor
conC('rns.
Some of th&lt;' traffic lights take n
down ' " pa rt of the signalizatio n
projeet should be replaced. she
sa id.
Ma ny persons. esi)('Cially the
elderly. ca nnot shop downtown
because of the dllflculty In
cross in g Sl'cond Avenue, s he
said.
" II rea lly affects our older

Recrea tion a nd fina ncia l stab1llty for the c ity are major
concerns of Gallipolis City Commi ss ion ca ndid a te Dow
Saunders.
"Recreation has befon a longterm need In the city a nd will
continue to bP so." sa id Saund·
er s, 16, who works as director of
social serviCes a t Plmsa nt
Va lley Hospit a L
·nte cit y Is In · goO&lt;i finan cia l
condlt Ion now. bu I hl' s a tel tlnll's
will become toughe r· as Gall ipolis l'ece lves less federal and sta l&lt;'
asslc;tanCC' .

Sa unde rs. who Is s ingll' , Pm ·
phas l7.cd that hr has tx&gt;rn a
llfelong resident oi the c ity and
has "a lways bPen lnlerPSif'&lt;i in
communit y affairs."
He rt'Celvcd " a lot of Pxposu!l' " of city affa irs from his
fa ther. a cun-..nl city comm ls·
s toner whose te rm expln&gt;s at thP
end of this year.
Saundf'rs said If f'lected ht•
wants to Improve pedest rian
traffic downtown . Although the
ci ty does not need traffic lights
on every corner, he sa id s&lt;lmc
plan must developed "t o show
pedestrians com e first. "
Also. more communication
and coopera tlon Is needed bPIween the city and county,
especia lly to seeure fed eral
funds for various projec ts, ac
cording to Saunders.
The city and county could
cooperate to bring neW businesses to the area. he said.
"I think we need to a ttract
Industry," Saunders said. " We
definitely need to work on tha t."
Saunders a lso supports anne xation of outlying area~.
"II the citizens are Interested
It would be a good move," he
sa id.

Nancy Smith
P.S. Myers-Campbell

One or the three women
running for the cl ty commission
In Tuesday' s primary views (he

amount of

llf'W

industry ha"i to

com e in .
· A partt tm e registered nurse at
Hol7.rr Medica I Cr ntrr. Mrs.
Smith (('('Is r£'Cr f'cttlon. "a major
probl r m ." should tx• answri't.&gt;ci U
Shl' IS !'lf'C'If'd.

Hn~nda

Wilson

lm provcm&lt;' nl and PXj)llllslon
of thr city's rcereal\ona l fac lliIIPs Is onP of th&lt;• major Issues
Bt'Pndil L. Wilso n will &lt;-ommlt
lwi·sclf to If CIN'If'd to thf' r lty
com m ission.

By Pxpandlng pn •sm t fac \11·
til'S, Wilson, 25, fw ls rcerra tlonal programs will not a ppPII r
llmltro to young peopk. while
som !' money s hould be Sp€'nt to
In sta ll tlf'II Cr ltghr ing and te nnls
cour1s.
" In thf'las t fl vPtosc-vPn yPa rs,
m onf'y has bPt'n put to good use,
a nd I'd Ilk&lt;• to sce It &lt;·ontlnur ."

s he sa id .
A 1970 Gallia Acadf'my High
School gradu aw who l'f's ldes at
4t2 F'OU11 h IIVP ., Wilson obta ined
a degr&lt;'C' In bu siness administration. wit h a concentration in
m a nagement , f1·om Rio Grande
Co li&lt;~&lt;' In 19E().
E m ployed for thf• I"''' two
yrars with local retail flims, she
said h!'r business education and
practlcil l cxpe rlmce handling
sa il'S a nd money qualutes her
fo r a sea t on the conunlss lon .
Wilson agre!'d with other
ca ndidates in Tuesday's p rim·
ary that Industry and a nnexation should be pursued by the
c ity. By attract ing Indust ry. she
said lhr comm ission should
work with the cham ber of
commc rc&lt;• and the Community
Improvem en t Corporation to
ma ke the city a desira ble
reloca tion spot

-

Pomeroy, Middleport elections set Tuesday
By BOB HOEFUCH
'11rne&amp;&amp;nttnel Stall
:
POMEROY - Voters,,ln Pomeroy and Middleport will go to the polls Tuisday when June p~ary
~Iectlons take plaC1,:
·
Little Is happening In Middleport, but In Pomeroy
bOth Democrats and Republicans have races.
; On the Republican side of the ledger In Pomeroy
llkre are three candidates seeking nomination td run
tor mayor In the fall while rolir Republicans seek the
nomination to run ·ror two seats on councU. There are
two Democratic candidates seeking the nomination to
oppose the Republican nominee lor mayor In
·Pomeroy.
.
The three Republicans seeking the IJ8I1Y nod to

run for mayor are Incumbent Clarence Andrews:
Roger Manning Davldlron, running lor his second
time: and Richard D . Seyler, taking part In his first
· political race.
The four Republicans seeking nomination for run
lor council are Brenda Kae NeutzUng and Ila Juanita
Rusche!, their first time out; Henry J . Werry,
formerly Pomeroy pollee officer and tire chief. In his
first political endeavor; and lltcumbeni · Bruce J.

Reed.

.

H. D. Brown, Democratic. Incumbent, Is assured
of nomination as the only councU candidate and he
will be opposed by the two Republican oomlnees in the
fall.
Kenn:t K. IOeln and William C. Quickel, bOth In

the political ring for the first time, seek the · Democrats have no candidates running. The trio
includes Incumbents , Carl J, Horky a nd Willia m G.
Democratic nomination to run for mayor and the
Walters , with the third candidate being Roland E.
winner will oppose the Republican nominee In the fall.
Goodwin. e ntering the politica l a rena fo r the first
lncumbent .. clerk-treasurer Ellen Jane Rought,
time.
serving by appointment, Is unopposed In her bid lor
Republican Mayor Fred L. Hoffma n is unopthe Republican nomination for the post. However, In
posed In his bid tor nomination ~nd reelection as
the (all she wlll be opposed by Democrat. WilHam E .
mayor as Is Clerk-Treasurer Jim Buck, Republican .
Snouffer, a former council member, who Is seeking
In his bid,lor electon to the post he now holds.
the clerk-treasurer' s post.
There are to be two m embers elected to the
.. Chester M. Knl~ht Is the only candidate lor the
Middleport Board of Public Affairs .. There are onh
Pomeroy Board of Public Nfalrs, with only one
two candidates. Thomas R. Ander son and Lew is 1-i •
person to be elected.
Sauer, hoth Republicans .
In Middleport there are three Republicans
Polls will be open In both Pomeroy an&lt;!
seeking the nomination tu run lor councU and tile two
Middleport from 6: 30 a .m. to 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday.
wtnners will be assured of election In t~ fall since the

.,
J

I

�June 5, 1983

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

By ROBERT E. MDI.ER
AMW&gt;J•'M l"'-Wrtter

MANHUNT - Sherltf's ofllce SWAT team
members nllih Into a room at the Deltooa Inn In
Orange City, Fla.,looldngforarnanthatshol two FBI
agents Frklay. Tile two agents were shot at a small

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State
senators are to vote this week on a
bill that would virtually prohibit
utllltles trmi cbarglngcustomers In
advance for construction work In
progress
The much-discussed proposal wtll
come to the floor Wednesday as
three conunlttees In the Senate
continue their deliberations on the
House-approved state budget bill.
Attention In the House will be
focused on further hearings tiy a
commerce and labor subcommittee
on a highly controversial proposal
establishing cotlectlve-bargalnlng
rights for public employees.
Senate Finance ChaJrman William F . Bowen, D-Cinclnnatl, said
his panel will resume deliberations
TuPSday on the overall budget,
which he hopes can be brought to a
tloor vote around mid-June.
Meanwhile, the.ways and means
committee will consider recom
mendatlons for changes In the
taxation part of the blll, and the
education commlttee will review

J"elltaurant wben they recognized a man that Willi' a
fugitive smce the 1977 slaying of a SeminOle County,
Fla. deputy.

lAP Laserphoto).

Search continues for man
wanted for shooting agents
ORANGE CITY, Fla. (AP I - A
fugitive wanted In the 19'T7murderof
a she riff's deputy was being sought
today after two FBI agents were
wounded when they tried to arrest
him, pollee s aid
After Friday' s shooting, pollee set
up roadblocks and began a house-to
house 'search for Clarence Eugene
Rob)nson, 38, a former amate ur
boxer wanted In the murder of a
reserve sherlfr s deputy In nearby
Seminole County
"The guy should have been In the
Top 10 (wanted criminals) years
ago," said Tim Robinson, an agent
w1th the Florida Department of Law
Enforcement. "Gene Is always the
brains behind the punks He's
becQme a dadgummed legend In his
own time, that ' s the bad part"

Witnesses said the FBI agents
were shot on the sidewalk outside
Kitchens' Restaurant In this small
town southwest of Daytona Beach
after they recognized a departing
patron as Robinson
"As one ofthe agents reached for
his I D . (the suspect) shot him In the
s tomach," said restaurant owner
Don Kitchens He said the gunman
had been a regUlar customer at his
restaurant during recent weeks, but
no one knew his name.
"As they approached him, they
Identified themselves and he drew
down andstartedshootlng at them,"
said FBI spokesman Doug Jones ln
JacksonvUie
FBI agents Thomas J. Sobo
lewskl, 40, and Dennis G Wlckleln,
42, were In stable condition after

see;ks debates with
Collins i~ governor's race
publican gubernatorial candidate
Jim Bunning has called on hts
Democratic opponent to limit cam
palgn spending and e ngage In a
series of debates.
Bunning, speaking Friday a t the
Kenlucky Press Association c onvention here , said he had sent Lt
Gov Martha Layne Collins a lette r
that contained four points he s aid
should serve as directions In the
campaign
In addition Ia limiting spending to
$1.5 mUllan , Bunning also called for
seven debates, a pledge to e nd
pat!1lnage , and a promise o f a
positive campaign
Bunning said he had not ye t been
In personal contact with Mrs.
Collins, who was also Invited to
appear but wa s out of s tate
Bunning, noting the amount s pent
In the Democratic primary- ove r
$4 milllon by the three majo r
candidates - said he did not want
the media to focus on fund -raising

"The governor's office should not
go the highest bidder," Bunning
said.
"It Is my opinion that such a Umlt
Is vitally Important In this race, so
the media can concentrate on the
Issues each of us present andnotwho
Is winning the money-raising race."
Mrs Collins spent about $2.2
million during the primary race,
while Bunning , who ran against
token opposition, spent about
$50,000.
Bunning also called for a series of
de bates to be he ld In each of the
state's seven congressional
districts
"I want the people of Kentucky to
look one-on-one and see what her
approach to the governor's oftlce
will be and what my approach wUI
be," Bunning said.
Bunning . commmended Gov
John Y.
Jr for his position
opposing patronage and said he
hoped the governor would be able to
convince Mrs. Collins tocontlnuehis
stand.

aro%

Brown has said he wants to talk
w1th Mrs Collins about her patron
age views.
Bunning also said he was disturbed by some of Mrs Collins'
advertising m the primary campaign which, he said, "became very
personal In nature against Mayor
(Harvey) Sloane "
,
Sloane finished second to Mrs
Collins by about 5,tlXI votes,
according to unoltlclal vote tallies.
"We should stick to the Issues,"
Bunnlngsald "AttackswUlserveno
one. We don't want a negative
c ampaign
"I pledge to you that my
campaign wUI be very positive In Its
approach and wUI not contain
personal attacks. I believe the
people of Kentucky deserve that
kind of campaign this fall "
Bunning, a fanner professional
baseball pitcher and state senator,
said he was "excited" about running
andcalleditachallenge
"I've had challenges all my life,"
he said .

• : Assoclattld Pross Writer
SE4TTLE (AP ) - The life of
Richard Starr, a forme r Peace
Corps volunteer held c aptive for
ttu:w years by guerrillas In the
Colombian jungles, was something
of a mystery to those who knew him.
Now l)ls unt lmely death has become
'a my,tery as well .
: He pnce called hlmsell "a bit of a
loner,'' and acquaintances agree
th&lt;!t lltarr, found dead 'TUesday In
the bfthroom of his Port Angeles
apirtrnent a few days berorehis36th
b1J'Pl&lt;IIIY. kept to himself
An autopsy dl&lt;l not determine
caiise
death, b\ll foul play has
~ rulecl out and laboratory tests
were stUI being conducted. His
mO!htr. Charlotte Starr Jensen of
E~. belleves he may have .
col)t~cted a dlselfSe In the jungle
thatllf!ally caught up with hltnWhft Is known IS that Sbirr wa8
setlo~s and sott-spoken an&lt;! led a
qu\elie. He lovet:l classlcalllluslc,
books and tropl~al plant~. and
beilevr:J deeply lp personfil and
poJJtiGili freedom . fiince his ~lease
9tree~sago, het.'fljoyedhlswork
In 'lilt torests a')d fields pf the
01~ Mountalllf ~a b o • t for

or

I

the National Park Service .
"It was hard to get to know Dick
Starr, " said Woody Jones, a
co-worke r who went to Starr's
apartment when Starr ralled to
showup.
Starr's mother also went to Port
Angeles on Tuesday, worried when
her son didn't answer his phone, and
asked co-workers for help.
Starr had been a botany lnstuctor
for two years at Northern Arizona
State University In Flagsta1f when
he joined the Peace Corps In June
1976, hoping to do research In
Colombia for his doctoral degree.
He had been worklrtg In a small
Colombian village when It was
overrun by leftist guen111as on Feb.
14, 1977, and he was taken captive
Forthreeyearshlscaptorsmoved
hlm from one camp to another,
feeding him rice, bananas and wild
pig and monkey. He lost welglltand
had parasites. Onceheheardaradlo
report thathewasdead.
His mother traveled to Colombia '
four times to seek his release, and he
was treed In February 19lll after
columnist Jack Anderson raised
$250,0011nransom,andStarrmoveq
to Port Angeles
Captivity left him "preoccupied

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NOnCE TO
t•vely •n su re th&lt;J t tn any co ntrac t
CONTRACTORS
entered mto pur suant to thtS
STATE OF OHIO
adverttssment mtnonty bU SI ·
DEPARTMENT OF
ness cntcrpr 1ses Wi ll be at
TRANSPORTAnON
fo rded tutl opportun iTY to su b
Columbus. Ohio
m&gt;l brds n response to th1s
Moy 27, 1983
tnvtt&lt;JIIOn Md wll no1 be
Contrc:t U . l.egol
dts cr1m1nat0d agatns t on Ihe
Copy No 83-829
grounds of race color 0 1
UNIT PRICE
nattonal OIIQin 1n consrderat10n
CONTRACT
fo r an award
FR-oDORf123)
Mtnrmum wage rates lor thiS
SR-OOORI901
protect have been predeter·
Sea led
' recorved p(oposals Wtl l be m1ned as reo u•red by law llnd
at the off•ce of the a•e se1 tan h on Ihe brd
Oerec to• of tho Oh10 Depart· propesal ~
men t of TransportatiOn Cotum The da te set tor comoletton
bus Ohoo unlrl 10 00 AM . of th•s work shatl be set fort h tn
Ohto Standard Ttme Tuesday. the b1dd1ng proposBI
June 28 1983 for 1mproveEach b1dder shall be reou1red
mcn ts tn
to hie w1th h1 s b•d a cen1fle&lt;J
Pans 1 to 10 •nclustve are check or cas ht er scheck fo• an
offered as one cont ract and w1fl amoun t equal to five per c.u:
be cons1dered on the bas1s of of hia bid. but 1n no event more
the total amou nt btd
than fifth thousand dolla•s or a
bond fo r l en ~ , rtdfl of lm hid
p - 1 "'"' 10
Athe ns Gal l~tl Hock1ng and payable- to tht.• Dir«ltlf'
V• nton Count1es Ohro on
R,lik.on; musl ttpply.un rhe prnrcr
V8110US secttons o f va nous furrt"ti l(lt' quahfo run til lt.·.t"'' rrm
ro ut es and Sect1on (0 79) of d:l ) S prMlf' rn the du1c.&gt; st1 ~ltn ptnln,il;
State Route 7 m the Vtllage of l&gt;&lt;h m xu&gt;rtbnao wnh 0\apt ~
Crown City Ga ll ta County by ))2) Ohoo Jindal v ode
remov1 n~ and replac• ng br. dge
Plam and sp«rfJCDtlnm at'(' un fi le
ra11ings nclud1ng ter m1nal asm rhr IA!JX!nmt•tu n( Tntl'l'ipurtusambiles remov.ng 9XISIInQ tMm and rhe uff~a: uf 1hc.- Disrno
guardr arl and co ns tructtng
t:ltpul)'l);r«&lt;or
Type 5 gua rdra1 l 1ncludtng
Tne Di rcctl,ll' rcscr"c~ the ns;hr to
an chor asse mb l•es and berm r('J(( t :my and ;all bl(l.._
reshaprna
WARRfoN J SMITH
Work Lenglh- 4 4 37 moles,
DIRECfOR
The Ohto Depart ment of 1\n 8 17-71
Transpo rtat•on hereby not1f1es
an b•dders th at 11 wtff aff• rma
June 5, 12

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.

LEGAL NOTICE
Bo ard of CommtSston rr'l GaU ta Mc tropohUin Housn11 Authortty wil l open Sealed
Btds at th f'l f otttce At 2 Apt
14 aldWPII OhtO 456 14 on
July 13 19 83 at 2 P M for
Insurance Coverage
Specthcm1ons may be obtamt.."f! lro m the Hous1ng Au th or ty 01 rec10r John P Rode
ru" 446 025 1
The Oonrrl o l Commrss1oners
of or e Gntt1a Metropol ttan
Houstng Authontv reserves the
rt!lht to accept 01 •etert anv or
all btc1S
John P Roderu s
Dnector
M(1y 29 Ju ne b
Thr

.

LOcal Burro Dealer

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pm

1he M~ tn iCt pat Court
'" Gal
l1pOI1 s MtlniCipal

Ropm

Gatl!pohs Oh1o
T1;1P. purpose of the hem1ng 1s
to h ,JV!J publi c 1npt1t nn th e
proposed use o t qeneli:JI re
venue sh mtnq lunds

10:30 A.M:

M'lnaqe r

Mr and Mrs . VtT'f Layne
Familv

M av 26 June 5

49 PINE ST.
Watch for Listing

'

11

Public Notice

•

4 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT

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SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1983

Help Wanted

L.P.N.

--

PUBLIC AUCTION
11:09 A.M.

'

.

1:00 P.M.

SAT., JUNE 18th .

ChrtSIItln p M Of!IS

LEGAL NOnCE
TO BIDDERS
LAFF-A-DAY
NottCP. tS hereby g1v, ·n lhat
SCJIOO btdS Will be ffX:PtVf'r1 by
~ -~--:- - - ~ .....
the C1tV Mananm ol. the c,ty ol
Gal lipOliS Oh•o ill th•" o tf u o 111
the Mun1c1p.ll 8tt1ld1 nq lor
laboratnry eq u1pmont 10 be
used 10 the C•ty s Wasr tw:-rter
Treat men t Lab
Btc1S Will be ff!C('IVI'(I &lt;II lhl'
3 b0Vf' named OJit cP 11nt1l
ll.
I""-, ~
12 00 Noon on Tuesday Junt"'
14 1983 Md publtcly Ol)flnerl
a nd rP.Dd at tha t ho ur and pt \rfrl
'rttN 81d forms m.w be nht ~ nt •d ut
the O fl t~;P of thf' C tv M.t n 1F''
5 18 SE'C ond A,flt' tJ P C•t\ r·t
"Listen don 1 you hear lhat Galhr&gt;olls Oh10
laugh track' ·
Mav 2!J J1•n• • ~

JUNE 11, 1983

AUCTION

Budcimq 5 18 Second Avenue

~ ~t v

AUCTION

Second Annual
Ole Car Club, Inc.

LEGAL NOTICE
A pub!tc heanng w 11 be hf!lti
Th ursday June 9 198 3 at 7 30

Work in ahealth unit for a national manufacturer of frozen roods.
Applicants must have emergency room ~nd
industrial nursina experience and typmg
skills of 30 w.p.m. we offer a good salary
and good frinp benefits. _
Send ReSume to:
Box No. 650, c-o Daily Tribune. .
All EQUII Opporttinity Elllptoytf

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S OUA~ ­
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 M~ WEST. GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 36 PHONE 446 7274

located 6 miles from Gallipolis on State route
the following wtll be sold :
_

141 ,

Far mall "C' . Farmall "H · w1th front end loader . JD semt·
fTillUnted 6' mowmg machme, culf••afors (will flt either of
the above tractors). sptke tooth harrow , dra g disc . MF 7'
adrustable disc (good cond1toon), 25' corn conveyor, two
ha_y wagons, electnc grass seeder for tractor, 3 pt cui olf
saw. 4 HD plows - 2 htllside and 2 lands1de, 2 house
jacks. wagon load of hand tools and other m1scell~neous
1tems

«

.

CISh or Check with I. D.
JAMES L DAVISON , OWNER

Terms:

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER
Crown C1ty, Otuo
Phone 256-6740
Not Responsible for Accldt11ts or loss of Property

tec hner llowe1 stan d table lamps 22 cal se mo a uto r~lle / s
cope 16 on &amp; 20 '" bo1 fans. 20 tn round ian. 2 M1 Coffee
makers la wn c haors lold1n g glass looe screen Sun beam
M11 master w/j uocer looeplace basket d oshes pols pa ns
pa per log tolle r old wooden hogh c ha~ r press ur e canne o mo
•• e sc ree n on tropod wall gun Ja ck
,
LAWN AND GARDEN
7'h H P Bolens 750 - 36on c ut, 3 HP Homka lllle1 , 2 pr saw
h01 ses ne w 10• 12 ta1p SO It II on hose. 12 speed droll
press ;A H P \i cap, drill press vose new shallow well pump,
car ramps, 7'A '" B&amp;O w cular saw, I amp battery charger,
Lawn Boy 18m rotary mower , ha nd and garden tools, 3step
ladd ers. lawn cart, wheelba11ow , markong plow , 5 II trailer
lor g~rden tra ctor mowmg sythe, 14 '" e l ectr~ c rota1y
mower, 12 ft. alum ext ladder, 75
elf cord
·
MISC.
Small amount lumber, gas can s, hOr se me sulky on rubber.
mortat pan, ho rse s hoe tool s 1n tote bo1. Jam esway stan
ch1ons. Buzzsaw or belt dnve cut ofl saw , wooden p1ckup tool
bo1 old corn chopper 'r~ c ks haw , otne1 mise olems
AUCTIONEER - LAWRENCE DONOHUE

.

742-3048
CASH: POS. 1.0.
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.

,,

Buy your future hom•• tt•
now No money down. baok
rate rnterast 6 milee from
Galllpolio. Oh CIIV Schools.
Call 8 to 5 weekday• on1y
448 1241 .

2 lots &amp; • m o bil8 home
12x60, 2 bedroom. w1th
rural water, gat htlt Has
aome furniture pnce
e12,600 Or41o1a&amp;mobll~
e14,800. Cali448-1240.

41

Houses for Rent

1973 Carrage houae mobtla
Ntc e 2 bdr house with
homo 70x12, AC W &amp; D
hookup, d11hwasher 2 bdr . · f~replace &amp; basement near
Crown C1ty $275 mo C1ll
2 bath Call afler 5 , 61~ Tfie W1seman Real Eetate
682 -7277 or 614 882 Agency. Call 446 3643 .
7262 Best offer
Hou .. e for ren' $.200 month
1975 PEERLESS 14•70
Call Cleland Realty 81-4·
MH w / t1lt-out. E C can!~
992 2259 .
'
tur , W / 8 , 'fiVW Ic arpet
f
throughout partial y ur large home m Syracuae on
mshod Outbu1ldmg undar nrce lo t Suttable for family
pmn1ng, $10 ,600 Call614 or 2 or 3 smglea $.276 plu•
246 5406 or 446-0212
u)rhhes , deposit 614-992·
6284
or after 5 614-992N1 c e 2 bdr 1211160 mobile
67 32 .
ho
me already
on
rented
lot Callset
614up256Meigs Co -Chester Town_6_2_2_4_· - - - -:-:::-:-shtp 2 year old 3 bedroom
rust• c farm house S.JOO
1976 Freedom 14~70 like
m onth Call 614 592-4471
new J acres . elf furnrtura &amp;
o r 592 4524 nogh1S.
woodburntu
gous w1th
R
1
1
t r a •I a'
ure w a a r
FOUR room house at 1.77
S16 ,000 Call 614 2 66
Park Or Ca ll Mrs Charles
_9_3_3_3_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Lenhom . 304 675 4692
Good cle an 2 bedroom.
10~~: 62
mo b1!o ho rntt en
42 Mobile Homes
closed patiO a nd large shad
for Rent
Cell 446 3647 .
1979 14 x56 Lobert v 2 bdo
total elec tri c. goo d co nd .
86 900 Call 614 446
0176 .
1973 2 bdr alec or wood·
burne1 s ett1ng o n pnvato
lol Coli 614 26 6 6813

----------------- lc

1972 14x6 5 Mo bil e Ho me
Pa rt1ally turntshe d lnctu~
: ing undarprnntng and bac k
porch Coli 614 992 2156
betw een 9 &amp; 5 ask to r Tm1
After 5 1 c BII l 04 88 2 359 2
1978 LIB E RTY m o bil e
ho mo 3 bedr oo m on hug tt
lot 2 outbuild ing " City &amp;
well wat er to ncod rn boc k
yArd good toca uo n Gall1p o·
hs Fttrry S 18 000 3 0 4 ·
575 535 5
197 4 1 2 x60 BAYVI EW un de rponned ll H c or nhtton o ~ .
pert1attv furn1 s he d tw o bed ·
room c h~ Hn runted lot 304 675 66B7

-----

M o bil e ho mo tor ront Call
446 0 756

1 2x 60 2 bdr mob1le home
Hll ut1 l1tres pa1d
e~~:cept ·

eloc tn c Oap
446 8 568

Req

Cnll

F URNI S HED or un ftir
1119hud Alf co nd . bo out1ful
rt vurv 1ow 1n Kanaug a Fos
ter s Trarl or Park 446
160 2
Mobil e Ho mo spoc o rn Galli
po lls 9 20 Fourth Ave 87Q
Watttr pard Call 446 441 e
afte r 7 PM .
FOR RENT Mo b1le HOme, 12
w / w c ~trpet

BR hun

19ft

LA nAt gus h oot Air cond
pnv1n e lot Ph 446 1409
fr om 4 to 8 p m .

------

2 bodroom mo b1lo ho rne on

811d gemnn St
Syracun,
Oh Partly turn1s hod Dep &amp;
rot Crtfl 614 99 2 39 04 at
lflr 5 614 992 7866

MOBIL E h•) nHt lor !lftlo
1982 KnoK 1 2.,70 fully
turm shod oil olnc tnc set up
on •uc n rtmttnl lot 10 MAso ':' .
Asken n $10 000 C nll 304
773 6640

ona tn
4 229

33 Farms for Sale

12•52 2 bodr oo m tra1le1
Adui iS only Bru wn s Trailer

2 2

bdr

hom o~

unturn

ontt o n R1
C h tJS hlfo

rnobiht
3 6 fUH1

Coli

448

Pmk 6 14 9 9 2 332 4

2 IH JdtO OI!l 1 2 x6 Q fur
14 2 uc ros llll iU A ttl G rnnd•~ ·­ m stw d itl! wmdmr dryttr
hou se &amp; bu1hh n~ I S Writ S t ill $ 175 pl us ufl lrtr es &amp; dep
o ft or pnJt Cntl 44 6 2599 OSI I
N o put s
6 14 9 92
11IH1r 6
7 4 79
-- fc
S MAIL 32 nc: ut hum 6 2 h och oo rn muiJrl u humu tn
1111l us n ul Sundlult Ad J H~t r. •no 6 14 367 0 288
llflcl! oom h o u so SJ B 0 00
30 4 6 75 5335
2 bMiroom hiiiWi hOd Dop
11 ~ 1 1
Nn put s Atl lllt!i Pflf
ffllnJd 6 14 9 92 27 49
35 Lot s &amp; Ac rouge
TWO mob tht hnmus t o r rent
on At 2 abo ut 5 m rn u t~ s
5 2 0 A c 111s w oud!l ovtH
fr u m tow n Ca ll aft or 6
lon klll iJ Ohru RrvtH l 1ty 1 .1 0 4 6 75 6 277
sc ho ols 44 6 355 4 o r 1
- -5 1 3
4 7 3
8 9 ] B
TrariUI 1 4 llltlu ou t Snn d Htfl
Aun d P hono 30 4 615
Ow ru u Ag ur 11
:103 4
35 II Cti JS lit ft o dn oy O il W 1
W n t son Ad Ownur IIIHirH
tnn nvlld ll bf u Call44 6 8221 43 Farm s fo r R e nt
ullm 6 w onkdnv s
SHi o 10 8 ll f. rtlS o n M +II!I S Cou nt v
C h us tt11
Bulnv tllc Ad 111 Gal lip oli s T own s htp pnstuw &amp; t tllllhl fl
l o wn s hrp
Aollu c: ud 1 0 lund fo • runt IIHilwnahln C nll
53 6 0 00 C nll 446 4570
6 14 592 44 7 1 tlu ys 592
4 52 4 IIISfh iS
1 4 H CH J l o t Ill 811t dbur y
Go od IOCilti On t tlt~ l ur ho o k flA S rUA E lor 111nt tor 20
11 r_) all utrltt1us sopt• c sy s h un d o ! cn ntu h ns go od
111m C1tll 614 992 2602
SfUIIIII 304 4 68 160 2
Fm

FIV E nc res lund fl own 1111y
numt nnd tnk o O VIH p ny
mu n ts c •tv w 11tu r &amp; uloct fi C
o n 111nd 304 6 75 2 44 9

44

AppHu lmnt••lv 1 4 11r.rus f n t
snle No hootlup s R oad
fr o ul .tUO U ll R1
12 4
85 900 6 14 7 4 2 2 4A 7

Apt to, r1 m1 Ha lf dn ubl u 2
hd rou m Apr ' Atfult s p ro
lmrod No n u l ~ 6 14 9 92

- - -- - - - -

Prices

llull•••

35 Lo.ta llo Acreape :

for Sate

Yard Moving Sale 'At '1 ,·
1!14NO TUNING-LANE OATuppera Plains. across from e dogo- 2 block • blonde. 2
i J.i1ELS
Reliable service
Hawka Pennzo•l June black female, 1 w~red haired
alnct 19"815 . Aaaoc1ate of
3,4 ,8,7 .8 .
Brumcerdl Music Co Phone
··---- ---------·------------ - 1- - - - , - - - - -- -lc- ! ·! •male. 1 bloncM female
1114-742-2951
.
dog . Col! 448-4978..
Flea Market Ra&amp;el'\le your
~PuNN';l
PERMANENT hoor removal
apace for Sternwheeler 'Re·
Germen Polica • Hulky
h-4 I::=~~§=
Profenlo-nal Electrolysis
gotta Flea Market. Porta· Lobby Flohor' o Yotlowbuah puppoeo Call 814- 26&amp; ·
Clonoc A M.A. opprovod Dr.
mouth Juno 24-28 . Appli- Rd. Racma. Monday June 8076
referralt . Monday , Wedne•·
',
OOTTA'
cation• wnte Convention 61h Hondo XR 80. loroploco 1 -----'------:-~
HALF GROWN 1hort h1ired
day , Friday , by appointment,.
Bureau, P 0
Bo.~e 434, blower, clothes , rug ,
/JVT WHEN
~
; ;:---- 6A!-5LLI~ --YA
304-875-5568 .
curtains-etc
pu~ Black fem1le . Low-11ble
Portomou1h, Oh 46662,
HE: I&lt;ICI&lt;S
Orl~'f Ul'f OIICE -and good with children W1ll
1He &amp;71£7;
! \)
\MIGHT AS WEU.
Yl
Garage Sale 101 Court St . 3 f1mily June 8-7 -8 9 to 4 . be medium s1ze when full
PEA MANE NT ha1r removal
GallipoliS Ra1n or 1h1na. Baby clothes . muses grown. Call388 8610
ENJOYrT·"
clothes. Iota of m1sc Items: - - -- - --:::-:---:-=
Profa11lonal ElectrolySis
Refngarator 860 .
1041 Y• S . 2nd . Moddloporl. Flal watt olcinoa Colt 448Cllnm A M A approved 0!.
:•
roferoolo 304 -876-5668 .
9896
3 Fomlly Yard Sale Fira11hia
~~~I .
-.. _
Bonna Haodley-Eiact .
1
year Clothmg aod mtiC\ R~.
~,L~~
36 ~ 1f2 mtle pass Kessell's
3 pups Coonhounds Call
PJZ!VE,
446-3897.
&amp;Vicinity
Market Fnday , Saturday
1
f&amp;'INA ,
fllpwl InN
and Sunday.
.ttiHH.
~
· · long he1red kitten &amp; mother
~
31 Homes for Sale
Buement Sate June 4 6 1 16 DIFFERENT yord soles 614 ' 949 ' 2488 '
1
mile of Rt 218 on Hannan
on Jerrys Run Rd at Apple BUNDLE of papers &amp; mage·
Trace Road .
Grove fnday &amp; Saturday. zmea, call 304·773-6666.
4 bdr 2 full baths fm1ahed
9 )
buament, 2 car garage
4 Family Yard Sale 7.8,9th,
Appo•ntmant
only 203 K1 9:00 trl 6 00 1% mdes from
Wanted To Buy
naon Dr Galllpohs 446 ·
13
Insurance
Chash•re . Rt 664 Camper CARPORT sale. Remodel- l-::--:--:--;-;:---::-- 9
auppheo Mosc 8 00- 6 Lost and Found
1223
top. tools drills, furniture, ong
4 00 , 3233 Frankton, P1.
bedspreads . drapes d1shes. Pleasant Saturday Ram or 1- --:--:-- -:---::- BEDS-IRON BRASS old SANDY AND BEAVER In - 3 bedroom. 1 332 sq f t ..
ntce clothmg all s1zes an- shlne
FOUND Wh1te male poodle furmture gold , 11tvar dol
surance Co has oHarad under constructiOn , Ivy Dale
tiques Avon, wtcker lots of
rn B1dwall vmcm1ty Call Iars, wood 1ce boxes stone serv1ces for f~re tnaurance SubdiVISIOn KCK contra£ I jars antiques. etc Com coverage m Gallla County lors Inc Call 614 367m1sc Luther Coleman .
MOVING yard sa~a . Satur· 614-245-5247
households Wrtte
0631 or 446 1769
dav. lhe 41h . 27 Burdena 1-- - - --:--.-':_
:-:-_-- plata
for almost a century Farm
- Addition, Pt Pleasant Com- lOST long haired Siamese M 0 Mtlter, Rt 4, Pomeroy
h01111
and personal property
Oh . Or 992 -7760.
plate household of furn1ture cat 1 00 block of 3rd Ave
coverages era available to 3BR 2 full bath central a~r .
and other Items Rem or Gall•polts Chtldren ·s pet
meet 1nd1v1dual needs Con - fireplace large lot close to
Middleport
Wanted to buy New used &amp; tact Ray Wedemeyer , agent
town Call 446-2599 after
shone . 304-676 3419 .
Ca11446 -4877
&amp; Vicinity
antiQUO furn1tura Will buy 1 Phone 388 8249 .
6
pift ce or complete house- - - - - - - - - - BASEMENT sale from June lOST B1focal sun glasses
Yard Sale 316 Broadway 6-11 . at 99 Burdette Addl· black nms Name engraved holds Call Osby A Martm Are you paymg to much for HOUSE FOR SALE in Midyour hospital health InSU - dleport Newly remodeled
St Mrddleport lues. June t 1on. Pt Pleasant All kmds •ns1de
2372 Please call614 992 - 614 992 6370
rance
Call Carroll home w1th ftreptace . P OIII 7 614' 992 274B .
of lhongs.
•·
Wanlod -dead colord TV ' s
ble woodburnar close to
Snowden . 446 4290 .
schools and shopp1ng CAll
LOST
Tick 614-949-2994
Not over 10 Ifyears
old
10 m1leBlue
Leon v1cmno answer
Hound,- male
614 992 6941 .
oty Reward $50 304 675 - call back .
l -:-::--;-:-;-:--;-:-~:-3 'Announcements
2028 675-3265. 614 992 - l- - -- - -- - - - 18 Wanted to Do
3 bdr llvmgroom f~ra place
3663 enyt1me ,
CLEAN scrap aluminum 30
1 Card of Thanks
~tao~~m~~ttrlg:,atotru
r~a~~~ :
centslb also buymg c ans 20 1- - - - - - - - - -c
11 614 388 8757
cents
lb
Tn
State
Salvage
GATLINBURG
fun
lour.
2
.
,
'
304 - ~23 - 5872 .
General Hauhng and Trash lon . •
ntghts, 3 daya, August 6 7
8
Public Sale
___
·
-remove~
Serv1ce Rehable Lovely 6 rooms 0 Quble
Price i11clud~s lodg•ng
&amp; Auction
PAYING cash for comics and dependablo Call 446- gerage beautifully lend•
The trustees of Sandhlll tral11po rtatton . beg gage
cape d area lot Atop Rose
Cemetery , Long Bottom handlmg, etc $161 CAll
and paperbac ks. buy , self or l-:3 _1 _5 _9 -:-b_e_tw
_ ee-:-n_ 9_•_n_d_6: -:H1ll Po rn 40' s614986
,w11h to thank all who LUCAS TOURS 304-346 t rade Contac t Chttster . Expenence house painting
304 676 6239
4257
donated toward the upkeep 7542
and lawn mower rep an Very
of the cemetery It w.as
reasonable rates Calf 446
RustiC H1lls. 3 bedroo m all
,grea11y apprec1ated Trus- GRAND Ole Opry-Oprylend
6688
electrtc
storm wmdows
.tees are leona Henstey. toUf. 2 n1ghts. 3 da-;s.
carport &amp; sloroge $34 500
Dorsel Larkms. John Hens- August12 -14 and October
W1ll do babysiHing in mv
lay, Mae McPeek, Chester 7-9 Pnce mcludes accomo 614 992 -5976 .
Rick
Pearson
Auctioneer
Help
Wanted
home
on Adefa1de Dr Galh
Walla
1
1
dat•ons at Opryland Hotel.
Serv 1ce Estate Farm. Anpolls anytrme Call 446
New 2 bedroom home w•th
Nashville tour, Grnad Ole
t1que
&amp;
llqu1dat10n
sale~
,
,
o
-:-6-:-9-:-6- - -- --::---spac1ous eattn kitchen Ierne
Opry . free Sunday break - ltcensed &amp; bonded 1n Oh1o &amp;
..3 Announcements . iast. day at Opryland All WVa 304 - 773 -5785 Qr W1l do baby s1ttmg m my 1Wfll mow yards &amp; ceomater hv1ng room and 1 bath fully
carpeted throughout hou se
11cke11 5213 CALL LU€AS
304 773 9186 .
home anyttme. fenced i'n •es m Pt Pleasan t area
Heavy lnauladon and total
TOURS 304-348-7642
back yard &amp; referen ces 304 676 6838
electr1c Large oak 1 2• 2 4
AuctiOn every Fn n1ght at
SWEEPER and uwmg ma do ck on back of homm
9766
chrne repan
parts . and BIG Bmgo tour. Cherokee
the Hartford Comrnumty 8V81Ieble
Call 614
Rutland Oh1o 614 7 4 2
North
Carbhna
20
gamea
at
supplies
P1clc up end
Center Truckloads of new
,hram;h!l
3067 .
&amp;6,000
plue
4
Jackpot
$50-100 daily commirssions
merchandiSe every week
delivery Dav•s Vacuum
Cons1gments of new and poaa1bla plus mo ntly bonus 21
Cleaner . one half m1le up games Fmal Jackpot coveBusmess
BY owner 2 320 Mt Vo rnofl
used merchandiSe always on repeat sales Consumable
Georges Creek Rd
Call rall $60.000 June 1 71h
Ave Pt PloaSHnl 3 Bod
Opportuntty
19th
1983
$60
per
parson
welcome R1chard Reynolds pro ducts evaryone uses .
446-0294
1oo m 1'h bath k1t chen
mcludes transportation &amp;
Aucttoneer. 275 -3069
Qualify for company ca!·l- - - - - - - - - dmn1ng full basement nnr
holat
CALL LUCAS
travel, retrrement program.
!NOTIC E!
age carport gas heat. con
BAlLOONS for all occa- TOURS, Charleston, 304Complete Auctioneer Ser- Work lull / part t1me from THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
11ons Say Happy Father s
tool a or $43 000 304 72 7
vtce Also do appraisals home Not door to door We LISHING CO recommttnds 2168 for appomtment
Day, Happy B~rthday I love l-3;4:::8:::·:::7:::5~4;2=======
ltcensed &amp;. bonded to sen. tram you . Call 446 1988 .
You, Get Well , It sA Boy or lthat you do buSiness w1th
Households farm furmsh It's A G~rl Anythmg you 4
Giveaway
. . people you kn ow and NOT FIVE rooms bath 1 mile o ut
wtsh to say 1n a d1fferant
mgs &amp; Real estate Over 26 WISH TO HIRE Sharp ambt· to 58 nd money through the Mrllstono Ro ad , Appl e
years exper~ence m buy1ng &amp; hous lady to superv11e dem- ma 1t unt 1t you have 11west1
wev Dehvered to hosp1tal or
Grove WV 3 1h acres c all
sellmg new . used S. antique onstralon for House of gated the othmng
homa for almost any occa
after 6 00 p rn 3 0 4 6 7 6
stan Balloons &amp; Company ANY PERSON who has furntture 614 · 992 ·6370 Llovd Tov Pertv Plan WORK
2771 .
anything to grve away and 011by A. Martm
446 4313
FROM HOME Call Collect Country Carrvout for sale by
doea not offer or 8nempt to
Shame 304 -736·6330
owner Upp&amp;r At 7 m EIGHT acres small hmuA
'Gun Shoot Rutland Amari · offer any other thrng for sale AUCTION every Saturday
garogo out btuldtngs p ond
Kanauga Oh10 Catt 446
Mt
Alto Wanted lady to cere for 2192 or 446 9171
can Leg1on 1 p m Sun May may place an ad m th1a ntght , 6 p m
&amp; m~nerat nghts redu ced
2 2 Absolutely factory column There will be no Auct•on Barn Consign - elderly lady L1ve m wrth 1- - - -- - - - - pn ce 304 896 3819
choke guns only
charge to the ~dvert11er
ments taken ll'lvery Saturday room &amp; board snd smll'lll Equipment to sta,.-t your own
1 00 t1ll sale t1me Emma salary Ca ll 446 3169 days. small busmeu at home ttea THR EE bodroom, bath ltn tl n
Million dollar bingo July 2 Bloons for all occusions . Bell Aucllneer 304 428- or 614 -256 1967 evenmga. markets , or sho p Small half local ad m Pt Ple asant
Free bus to Cherokee N C Say Happy Fathera Day, 8177.
Call afte r 6 30 3 04 6 7 5
mvustment grtHtl potential
HELP WANTED Full or Part Senous 1nqurr1 e9 only Call 6640
For 1nformat1on call 614 - Happy Birthday, I Love You ,
tome Coli 9 to 9 , 446-2166 . 446 33B 1
992-5007, 992 3377 or Get Well, It ' s 11 Soy or It's a
Grrl Anythmg you Wllh m a 9
614 985-4184
Wanted To Buy
1 -:----::----;-~~ BY owner 3 bedroo m 2
different way Delivered to
Ne ed 5 serrous about work - Country Carryout fo r safe by s tory bnck 12 11 Matn 5 1
Gun Shoot at the Rutland hospttal or home tor almost WANTED TO BUV Old furni - ing people to teach and sail ownor Upper At 7 m Prr ce Reduced 304 6 75
Amertcan legron Sunday any occass1on Balloons &amp; turo and Ant1quas of all Tn Cham crl'lft product,s . Kanauga Oh1o Call 446
2381
June 5 at 12 noon Abao · Co .. 448 4313 .
ktnda , call Kenneth Swam. Part time o r full time No 2192 or 446 9171
lutely factory choke guns .
100x50 ft lot wrth trn•l er
1 experten ce necessary Great! :;;=;:;::==~:;::~~=
Pupp•aa to giveaway Call 446-3159 or 256 1967 n advancement
program Ro $13 700 41 Owdt1 t18 Add1
the evenings.
g1onal manager w1ll be mter - 22 Money to Loan
ATLANTIC Cotv tour. 3 614 -246 9670.
11o n. Pt Ploas ant 304 6 7 5
nights. 4 days. July 16-1 8
Buying Gold S1lver, Plati - vtewtng at the Holly Hrll
6076
Pnce 1ncludes tour of cui MIXED breed adult dogs, 6 num Gold and Sliver pn ces Molel US 35 '" Jackson
9
nos, welcome dmner at The months old pupp•es and are the h1ghest tn two years. June 10 Call 614 286 ·
THR EE bedrooms bu11t 111
HOME
LOANS
1
OW'/.,
ll
~~:e
d
Sands, hotel lodgmg at the cats, free fto good home Call check our pnces on gold &amp; 2136 June 10 after 12 Noon
rat e leader Mortgage 77 E ku c he n 2 bAths TV room
Bale Midtown, transport&amp; · 304 675 -2264 .
Sliver . scrap jewelry Buymg for appomtment o r wr~te Tri State Athens Oh1o 1 614· extra bedroo m or lam•ly
t1on , baggage handling. tee 1---~~-=-~--:-;­ Old coma, scrap rrngs &amp; Cham P 0 Bo~~: 2256 Co 592 3051 oo 1 BOO 3 41
room m basement central
• 292
CALL LUCAS MEDIUM ai:re female rabb1t silverware Da1ty quotes fumbus. Oh 43216 .
a1r,
well m sulated Asst1m a
6564 m Oh10 .
dog found. brown head , available Also coms &amp; com
TOURS, 304-346-7642 .
ble 8 % percent mortgA(Jtt
black &amp;: white body Iovas suppltes for sale Sprmg GOVERNMENT Jobs . != = = = = = = = = =
192 N Part. Or 304 675
' MYRTLE Beach. 3 nigh11. 4 kola, 304-676-5704 .
Valley Trading Co . Sprmg Thousands of va c ancies 23
6010
ProfessiOnal
days August 6 -9. Sep Valley Plazll 446-8025 or must be filled 1mmed1ately
.
Up to date d1rectory t111ts
Servtces
. tember 9 12 Pnce includes
446 8026
~ransportat1on . lodgtng at
jobs from $17 634 lo
32 Mobofe Homes
3 Announcements
Holiday Inn Oowntowner,
We pay cash for late model $50, 112 Cell 716 -842 for Sale
6000 •n cludmu Sundl'ly .
baggage handl1ng . etc
CS. L Bookk oe pmg
clean used cars
E•t
4438
8.23B double occupancy,
Broad ntnge of bookketuhg
Frenchtown Car Co
$185 quad CALL LUCAS
and tax servtces nvrulable to 1RI S TAT E MOBIL E
B1ll Gene Johnson
Excellent in come for pert s utt yo ur busmoss need s
rouRs . 304 -348 -7642 .
446 0069
t1me home BS sembly wo rk Carol Nttitl
446 3862 HOMES USED C AR S
TRUCK S GALLIPOLIS
Offerine
For miormatton c all 604
Diamonds
gold
bands
class
CHE CK OUR PRICES CALL
1 Card of Thanks
-8003
E•t
7124
Opon
641
PIANO
TUNING
55
off
plus
rmgs. allver coma 10-14
diSCOUnts tO san10r Cllllens 446 7 5 72
karat scrap J&amp;Werly Tawney Sunday
churches schools Call 81ll
Jewerlers. 2nd Ave . Galll Ward Ward s Kevb o ord USED MOBIL E HOM E
polos. 446 1615 .
CARD OF THANKS
ltlhlwet&amp;ht frberalass tra11et
6 76-2711
12
Situations
446 4372
tratler ktt form or factory as1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
The famtly of Rick Layne
Pay
cash
for
Used
Mob1fe
Wanted
sembled Des1aned for today's
would hke to e~press then
Home or Trevll'll Trailer Call
small c1rs
--=
8
614 446 0171!,.
smcere gratitude of thanks
CALLI
-614-446-7325
&amp; Auction
to all fnends netghbors
Open1ng for en elderly m11n
Wanted toba cco plants Call or woman m my home
and relatives for all then
458 1997
• Reasonable rates. good ex ktndness and sympathy
penan ce 614 -667 6329 or
dunng the Illness and
Gold s1lver sterling , je- 667-3402
death of then son Then
welr,' rmgs old coma &amp; 1 ------~----:­
cards food . flowers were
currencv Ed Burkett Barber Have vac an cy lor elderly
greatly appremted
Shop. Middleport 992 - person , room board &amp;
3476 .
laundry. 614 992 6022 .
Speml thanks to the E
For health 1easons Wayne &amp; Melva Tuoner are moYOng
M S• of Gaiila and Mt~as
south and woll offer the followln&amp; 1tems for sale
Cos , Or. Harder, lntenme
From Sohlo StatiOn on Hamsonvoltego 4 mote west on Sf
Care Umt at HMC , Ewm1
Public Sale
8
143 - then west or left on Co Rd 17 3 m1les to township
Funeral Home and Rev
&amp; Auction
10. 111ht on 10 . I 5 to trailer Watch too sogns
Wlfltam Curfman for the11
spetlll care and attent1on
HOUSEHOLD
they gave Rick May God
Maytag automa 11c washer &amp; d ryeo lull be&lt;l •,, bed b eddon~-­
Bless You
pr end ta bles coffee table, Hoo ve1 up righ t swee pm c haoo

--------

Tnbune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156
Register - 675-1333

32 Mobile Homes

Pi1no &amp; Drg1n Leuon~ ­
Mory Lueoo, 4411-9787 Formarty with Wards Keyboard.

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

McKEESPORT, Pa - G C Mw-phy Co. reported net Income for
the 13 weeks ending April 28 of $1.702,000, or 43 cents per share,
c ompared with $63,000, or two cents per s hare, during the same
period In 1982
Sales for the first qua rte r of this year were $188,594,tlXI, down
$6,926,000 (3.5 percent) from the first quarterofl982 At lheendofthe
reporting period, the company was operating 417 stores, 19 fewer
than at the same time last year.
A sales decline was attributable to less aggressive advertising and
s a les promotion during the first quarier, said Charles H Lytle,
Murphy chief executive officer.

~· ~ o o l olo .., l oo lloo

-

Coli 814-246-

1---- - - - - --

First quarter income jumps

ss a~o.o.,.s.........

"" l

II PukS...
Au&lt;O"'"

•

I·

992-6629.

11 4 MI N MH CUNio. .

~

...
.,,_,._
, ..._.__

.

CHESHIRE- Gallia-Me1gs Conununlty Action Agency can place
e mployees with area firms through an on-the-job training program,
allowing half of the new employee's starting wage to be paid byCAA .
Payment Will be made while the employee Is trained, the agency
s aid.
Persons placed under this program make the employers eligible
for targeted job tax credits on their 19&amp;1 business tax return
For more mfo rmat1on about the program, call CAA at 367-7342 or

·---.,_
-

J lll ~o

II
IJ

I el :: ;;

with thenotlonoffreedom, "said Joe
Hess, a U.S Fish and Wlldllte
Service biologist who met Starr In
Colombia and kept In touch with him
after Starr's return.
Starr gave Hess books abou t
people living under as little govern ment as possible. Starr - who
named two pet parrots Sakharov
and Solzhenilsyn -admired Sovle t
dissidents. Hess said. The names of
the birds "In a nutshell shout~ tell
you philosophically where he's
coming from," Hess said.
Colleagues say Starr discuSSed
his captivity matter-of-factiy when
It related to work or carne up In
conversation.
"He'd tell me what monkey mea t
tasted Uke or the time a snake
crawled Into his hammock," said
co-worker Paul Crawford.
Starr talked of how Inept and
disorganized his captors were
saying . they could hardly fend for
themselves, Jet a!OJI!I lead a
revolution.
Starr was "hurt very deeply by
what happened to him. It's no t
something that yuu forget In just a
few years," Hess added.
Yet Starr told crawtord he would
like to return.

CAA -makes job placements

Mlll'llill

1 CM n D II~UII I DOoftotl •duow: • l
1 '" Mooon&lt;&gt;&lt;.,
lo\n
_,..., _ _ , lp ..d n od•o~u t

Mystery remains following
P:eace Corps worker death
· By SUE O'CONNELL

!

4 k1nene

9151 .

~~~~~~~~~~~t~;:;;~~~~;:::~

HUNTINGTON , W Va . - Marshall University's Communlty
College will offer a personal financial management course this
summer through Its continuing education division.
Taught by Robert Russell, vice president and trust officer at
Twentieth Street Bank, the course wUI focus on financial gOals,
analysll), evaluation and decision making.
Slx two-hour sessions wUI be conducted In Community College
Building Room 139 from 7 9 p.m. Tuesdays, beginning June 28 and
continuing through Aug. 2 There wUI be a $if; registration fee and
advance registration Is required, accondlng to Robert Lawson, the
college' s continuing education director.
Additional Information may be obtained by calllng the continuing
education office at 3o4-696-3646 .

J££1&amp;88ifted A•ls
.-

Professional
~ervices

10 puppioo Y, l..iobodor Ro!riovor, Col1814-388 -8885.

Offer management courses

Junba!! 'iimts- ientinel

M

-

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-3 ,
-'..:..

23

GivNway

I .-

1111Voi/..V~

Business Briefs:

\

CLEVELAND (AP) - A Cuyahoga County Conunon Pleas Court
jury was to resume deliberations
Saturday morning on whether It wlll
recommend the death sentence for
convicted killer David Mapes, a
spokeswoman for Judge James P
Kilbane said late Friday night
The same jury convicted Mapes,
28, last week of aggravated murder
with specifications and other
charges In the robbery-kllllng of
John W . Allen.
The jury broke off Its sentencing
deliberations about 11 p.m Friday,
the spokeswoman said.
Aflen, 35, was killed Jan . 30 by a
shotgun blast to his face, moments
after two men burst Into his bar to
rob it.
Mapes' accomplice, Rodney Newton, pleaded guilty to the Allen
killing after prosecutors dropped
the threat of the death sentense.
Newton, 21, testilled against MajJes
and faces a life sentence
Mapes, whose sentencing hearing
was held Thursday, told the jury he
had offered to spend the rest of his
life In jail for the slaying, but
prosecutors rejected the deal.
Prosecutors have argued fo r
Mapes' execution In light of his
conviction for killing another man In
New Jersey In 1972 He was paroled
after five years In prison for tha t
Incident
If jurors recommend de ath,
Kilbane will have the final say.
Under Ohio 's capital punishment
law, hecouldstillsentenceMapes to
life In prison

4

--F,-o-miiry ---

death sentence

surgery for their bullet wounds at
West Volusla Memorial HospitaL
Officials said the agents, Investigating an unrelated bank robbery,
spotted the gunman as ~ey walked
toward the restaurant. Officers said
the man concealed a 4S.Callber
automatic pistol under a newspaper
and fired at least three shots after
they ldentllled themselves.
Robinson Is among central Florida's most notorious fugitives, said
Duval cOunty Sheriff's Detective
R W Carroll, whocalledhlnn "one of
these guys everybody wants to get
their hands on "
Robinson was sentenced to federal prison In 1966 on a burglary
charge and served about three
years.

.

..;...

~

,.

Jury ponders

Bun~ing

By ANDY LIPPMAN
Associated Press Writer
LEXINGTON, Ky. (API - Re-

Budget blll amendments aren't
expected to be fonnally voted- on
until that time, said Donald Peslch,
Meshel' s executive assistant.
Sen. Michael Schwarzwalder,
D-Columbus, picked up bipartisan
support last week for his utlllty
measure, which blins - except for
pollution control projects - the
Inclusion of construction work In
progress In a company's rate basE!.
TheOhioOttlceoftheConsumers'
Counse~ the Ohio Publlc Interest
Campaigo and other groups are
pushing for the bill, which they say
will at least put a check on future
Increases In utillty bUis.

Middleport-Gallipoli•. Ohi-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'lard SaleS

Soqleopposltlon Is expected to the
bill, lncll!dlng tbat of Sen. ntchard
H . Finan, R-Cinclnnatl, who says It
runs afoul of state policies seeking to
stabUize business and Industry.
Casting the only vote against
Schwarzwalder's measure In cmnmlttee, Finan said repeal of CWIP,
enacted In 1976, penalizes utllltles
that embarked on long-range projects In anticipation of Its use.
"We're changing the rules In the
middle of the game," Finan said,
aftl!r offering the committee an
unsuccessful amendment that
would have limited the ban against
CWIP to future projects.
Schwarzwalder denied that the
rules were changed, pointing out
that the law authorizing CWIP only
provided It as an alternate way to
finance projects, subject to approval of the utUltles commission.
"We didn't guarantee It to the
utilities," he said

June13.

.

.

s future on line as·
Senate-·vote on hill looms
the school-funding component
The offJce' of Senate President
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, said
the tax and school components, with
recommendatlops tram the other
committee•. will be !!resented to
Bowen's committee the week of

June 5, 1983

8

Apartm e nt
for Rront

2 74 9

• Publoc Sale
&amp; Au c 11on

FIUBIIJII!II-11~
IU!:, ~,.--

~[1

!:1..1

i SAT.. JUNE 11, 1983
I

I
10:00 A.M.

located at letart , W Va at mtersecf1011 of Rt 33 and
Sand Htll Road Sale by order of Genevieve Rous h Executnx of the Estate of Ira Charles Hobart Ball.

~

·1I

I
I ANTIQUE
S AND COLLE CTIBLE S Q,ok kriclll'll llfl;lll 11 11wolh I
loll top rover com ple!t• w1th llou1 btu r .111111\ ll'l "'"' \ tll'•ll 1
I b•n deuH (rl tv e lf o::.led
r piiUn.tlly 1111 tl rop
I ta ble w1th
lou t cha 11 s, 2 wctslt btMH I mt" all wood urH· wrlll I
lobacco cutter l;;uge
ut ' lOIII' lill'&gt;
Oil I' I
rt n!ed wtl h W I Hay man l t•ta rl W Va flltlk Cdll
I 1mp
bar rel pculor rot:ke t w1th claw
dllltrOO'&gt; / - 8 d ttV'I
1

~ I a ~~ l 'X I

g las~ .

ct ~s t

tl

IP,II

&lt;-~fHltuR~

Wlfl l'

I
I
I
II

&lt;Hill \

manl el clocks w erg~rl cloc k ncr&gt;LI ~ fl",lorrd ,ullllllH' 111 ,11 11t I ,
clock cotses, bone handled nHtn t CUi t~ \1'1 1ertl olcl !Jonr.
ha ndl ed carvon g se t, consts ts ol koll ll' look an(l s lcl'l In
match coppe• kelilc, 2 buttm chiii il l 11111' woth meta l ho t
tom. one wtlh glass hand woven ba sket•, cotn ClaC kf' l Sllldl l
cot n shelle1, shoe hasp gmulstonf.! l ar t ltHC~'le~ ~a U'tdRe
mo ll, la o g~ oron kettle, ons u i~I O IS
1

·I
1
II "'

l re~fUOifl

MISCELLANEOUS Kerosene porl ab ll IH•,olco 11 r. w
.
I sutte
GE re lr~gm tot , stove. wondow '''" If I Buo 11"~ '' pot 1
beO y' stove, 1970 fa lcon auto 10u ~h ltunlld liocr ool sin'" 'I

I

I
I
·I

I

metal ktl chen ca b1net la wn mo wp, . , Cl(tl ls man skrll 'law
wheel ba11 ow loR cham s. car cha on s •. tcp lad ders mu ecl lot
of tongue and goove lumb er , large lot ol han d lools Many ,
miscell aneous 1tems too numerous lo mcnloon
Terms Cash or Check woth Posotove I 0
Not Responsible tor Accidents
Lunch Served
Aucltoneer: Edwm Winter- Cottagevtlle . W Va~-, •
Phone 273-3447

·-----------I

J
J
J
1
'

.

�44

44

Apartment
for Rent

Apartme nt
for Rent

51 Household Good s

KIT 'N' CARL YLE ••

by Larry Wnght

New Oak Furmture, tables,
cha1rs cupboards pee safe,
dry sinks
Paul Conkels
Anttques Tuppers Pla1ns

COUNTY APP l iAN CES
ONE bedroom apartment
402 Yt 24th St Pt Pleas ant

2 bdr Regency Inc Apart

menu e 200 per mo or tt phone, 1-614 992 5858
tncome 11 $10,000 or leas
tor Call 304 675 -6104 or Pltd 304 675-2595
304-676 7386

Small fu rmahed house m EFFICIENCY ap a rt m-e n t
ctty adults only

Cell 446

0338

Inc Good used applianc es
washen dryers, refng TV
sets 627112 3rd Ave Galh

polis Coli 446

HUD avatlable A-One Real ONE bedroom apartment
Estates Carol Yeager, Real e225 mo'"h all utthttes

304-675-3220

16~9

Gradtng Blade and chatnsfor
Gravely r1dmg tractor 614

CONSOLE Early Am er Ze
n tt~

985-4339

Color TV $400 4 pc

Queen S tze Earl y Am er
be do om sutte $75 0 Call

REPOSSESSED SIGN I No
th.ng down ! Take over
monthly payments 68 00
monthly 4x8 flashi ng arrow
Stgn New bulbs leners
Hale 11gns C all FREE 1

388 8610

e

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

Furnlthed apt , 1 31 Ya 4th (:

Avo

Galltpolts 2 bdr
$ 1 85 mo water patd Call
446 4416 after 7PM
Furn1shed attiC apt $160
Ut1ht1n pd
Men only
Shower bath 919 2nd Ave

Galhpol11

Call 445,4416

•fter 7 PM

erchand1se

54 Mi sc

800 626 7446, anyttme

51 Household Good s

For sola Appro• 1000 It 12
m schedule 40 steel ptpe
20 ft secttons Ideal for gas

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

ltnes Call 614 992 5272
days 614-992-7384 oven

62 Ohve St Gallipolis 6
Pl&amp;ee wood hv.ng room sutte
w1th 6 mch flat arm s $ 399

tngs and leave mesJago

5 rm &amp; bath

1n

Call 446 7548
3666

Galhpohs
m 446

2 bdr apartment on Rt 218
at M ercerv1lle Call B to 5
weekdays only 446 1241

.:t bed room Apt $ 196 mo
lncludtng uttilt1os
Equal
housmg opportumty Con
tact Vtllage Manor Apts

614 992 7787
1 bedroom 614 992 5434.

614 992 5914or304 882
2666

-Five

room apt Pomerov
Shower No pets adults
J160 per month 614 992
3201 New carpet

J; room apt for rent Phone

614 992 5434 614 992
6914 or 304 882 2566
~

bedroom furnished Apt
torrent $155 month Oep
011t ond uttltttea 614 992

7177

GOOD USED APPLIAN CE S
washers dryers roh1gera
tors ranges Skagg s Ap
phancea Upper A1vftr Rd
betude Stone Crest M otel
446 7398

I- - - -- - - - - LAYNE S FURNITURE

Sofa cha1r ro cker olio
man, 3 tables {eKtr a heavy
by Frontier) S68 5 So fa
chatr anl;l lovese at S275
Sofas and cha1n puced fro m

$285 to $896 Tables $45
and liP to S125 H1de a
beds $440
and up t o
$625 Recliners S175 t Q
$360 , lamps f ro m $28 t o
$76 5 pc dmelles from

S99 to S436 7 pc $189

and up Wood table w1th s1 x
ch1ur11 $425 to $745 Desk
$110 up to 8226 Hutcfle s
$660 and up mapltt or ptne
ftntsh Bunk bed complete
With mattresses $250 and
up to 8396
Baby beds
$1 1 0 Mattresses or box
sprmgs full or twtn 558
ftrm $68 and s 78 Oueon
seta $195 4 dr chest s
S42 5 dr chest s S54 Bed

$20 and $25

Aparlment s
~648

10

cabtnets S350

304 676 I dinette charrs $20 a nd $25
Gas or electnc range s $3 2 5

up to 8376 Baby matres se s
$25 &amp; $36 bed frames $20
$25 &amp; 830 lung frame $50
Good selection of bedroom
11221
SUites
c edar c hests
rockerS", metal c abtno t s
DNE bedroom apartments swtvel rockers
for the elderly All utthtiOS Used Furmture
b ook case
patd Tenants pay 30 per l:~,~~;:;.:cflatrs end tBbl es
~ent of their adJusted '"
come m thta HUD subsidized
drvers re fngera
TV 1 3 mtlo s out
apartment bulldmg Twm
Ad Open 9am 10
ftevers Tower phone 304
M
$75 6679 Equal opportun
Sa~" thru Frt 9am t o

APARTMENTS mobtle
homea houses Pt Pleaunt
ind Golllpoha 614 446

•tv houstng

Public Sale
8t Auct1on

DIRECTIONS The Farm IS located between ATHENS &amp; ALBANY
OHIO From Athens follow US 50 West to County Road No 17
(lnst left past Un1ted Apartments) Travel3 mill!1&lt; on Co Rd 17
to Co Rd 76 Turn nght on Co Rd 76 and go about 1 m•lelo
the S..nds Farm 01 same d1rect1ons from Albany only 5 m1 1es
East on U S 50 WATCH FOR SIGNS

SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1983 AT 10 30 AM

ThiS latge sale 1epresents years of colledmg by the Sands fam
1ly Many unusual 1tems1 A VERY lARGE SALE Somethmg fm
everyone Evetythmg sells to the htghest bidder regardl ess of
price S1tuated tn a pleasant farm settmg. thtS sale w1ll fasl all
day The tollowmg list IS very bnef
FURNITURE &amp; SPECIAL INTEREST ITEMS Eat ly sl,lb llom pmlly
cupooard looks ltke ong tl'&lt;i pamt unde~ blue old baby Cl ldle
w/some on~ roo pillnl hand deco 2 pc VidO"'n Collar f' h&lt;•d
room su1te brass bed chestnut h1gl1back bed old k1tctwn CdhiiH'I
w/ flom b111 wal11ul spool lx•d set (6) Early Spl1nt Aoltom la&lt;l&lt;lt ,
back c~a1rs unsusuttl Salesman Silmples ol Wt11tehou';c ce
cream treezer &amp; Holland lurnace 1work1n g model) I' XI •ll1•nl
Or1gmal SIRne&lt;l Jolly N1~er Meehan cal Ba n ~ Counlry Slo11
cheese cutter 1r on OOok p1 ess 1850 muzzle lo llling r lie an!l Ste
vens Mod 878 auto nile N1l10 12ga sholgun l " mpAit Compole
w/ cover old camera s (6) B&amp;G lin11ted Ed1l10n collectm pl&lt;~t cs ol
Currtet &amp; lves Sce11es
GAR,DEN ITEMS Seats 8 hp hansaxle ndnlRumwe1 C" dr 11
Way rubbel wheel cart OLO BARN NEARLY FULL OF As Is
FURNITURE Includes step back cupooard washstand t•endle
beds chests beds stan$ chaus and olhe1 fmnrtmc tn IIL'!ld ol
repatr
MAYTAG GAS ENGINES &amp; RElATED ITEMS 3 Maytag sm1Je
cylmder gas eng~n es I Maytag tw1n cyl engme 1915 Maytag
wood tub washer and othet Maytag 1tems PRIMITIVE ITEMS
Good old yarn Winder f1ne b1oad axe 2 butter chur11s spltnt bas
kets Sm ox yoke &amp; plow 12) barge t~hts brass kettle complete
bladismrth fot ge hand corn shellms &amp; gnnders wood malls posl
&amp; bean drillS cream sepa~ators crocks &amp; I"' old gra~ute &amp; llli
~ems. good old moldmg wood planes hand fm ged 1tems Ioney
coal hod hand lo1ged fue axe liVer boal beacon l1ghl wood 1ce &amp;
rollet skates PLUS HUNDREDS Of OTHER ITEMS'
RAILROAD ITEMS Seth Thomas RR watch 1nspectors lante111
Dexter statiOn baggage 11uck NYC yard slick maps RR 1a11terns
and othe1 1tems COLLECTOR ITEMS. QUILTS. GLASS. LIGHTING
TOYS &amp; MISC ITEMS N1ce handsltlchoo qu1lts - Sunflower
"Wedding Rings
BOTILES KT&amp;K Meretlith O ~amond Club rye whiS key ru ~ Hosten
er.; bitters frmt 1ars area m1lk bottles and others OIL LAMPS Sev
eral barr. lanterns m1n1ature hghts lull SIZe oil lamps Cresolene
VapQ Light
~
TOY$ 10" Teddy Bear w/ movable head &amp; legs, Keystone R1d1ng
Stearn Roller cast toy banks cap guns and ot~er toys CLOCKS
Fanoy New Haven cast ~ron clock Seth Thomas btass case clock
LariiF, Assortment ol Old Auto Tools &amp;Related Items very laney
floor lamp w/ etched sllade &amp;claw feet several pc; Welle1&amp;Rose
vile p&lt;ltlery Adm Dewey bta,;&lt;; wall m1rror depresskm glass
str~h glass console set black amythest giJQd selectiOn of collet
tor ~ass fey, pes Carntval ~ass; postcards Occ Japan Hundreds
ol htniS Impossible to l~t Mil
COI~S· 10 old ~lve r dollar.; 6 PfOOf &amp;mmt sets 25 &lt;~lver half dol
Iars, over 35 stlvl!l' d1mes w~h som~ hard to lind dales plus tokens
&amp; medals
Terms C,sh or Cheqk w/ PoSIIIve I D
lllnt_&amp; Outbutldinas muslbe clelfled out 1n order to cet to ~ems
!'"~are cownd up at th1s lime, this w111 be along all day sale
Sonjllhtllfllor ~OIIt Hundreds olrtems to sell from the old
blrq, sheds &amp; home
•
OWNER. P~UL &amp; LILLIAfi SANDS
AUCTIONEER OTTIE OPPERMAN
(6141 315·7195
Apprenlleo Ray Dennrs

$ 50 00

NEW Balsaw Sawmill &amp;
Planer St1ll1n Ongtnal crate.
S 3

used ,

sale

Doberman•

83,750 00 Runs off tractor
or other low RPM engine
Portable, can be taken t o
t1mber. aet up base not

1983 Whtte free rt rm sew.ng
mac hme 20 yr warr anty
used 1n stor e demon str a
t•on s reg pn ce $
299 95
demo pnce $76 C all colle ct
Q1 4 3 8
Fre
8
dehvery 5 8 6 7 8

54

M
ISC

Merchandise

For sale walnut logs
458 - 19

Call

97

1-:--------- Equtpmentto star1yourown

L1vmg roo m m a tchmg co u ch
and chair tw o ea rly am en
CBn end t abl es an d two
tabl e lamps Ca ll 614 245
9221 after 7PM

GE dryer rea l m ce $70
Whtrlpo ol wash er l1ko new
S110 green retug real mce

S175 Call 446 8181

small bu smess at home flea
mrtrkets
or shop Small
mvestment grfJ at potential
Senous
446
3391nqutr1es only Call
1
Dewalt

ltvmgroom SUII B w11h rue
liner ro cker &amp; sw1val rocke r
green fa1r cond $ 100 Call

446 6689

5 Motarola 110 Watt H1g h
Frequenc y Rad1n s 1n servi ce
3 months
cos t new
S4 500 00 w111 sell sep oraro
or all t ogeth er w1ll1hrow 10
spe akers c ry stal s antenna
and rom o t e con tr o l s w1th
each set n~ ta1l S2 5 0 ea ch
on e c ompl ete se t S1 500 00
each w1ll d1scuss bett er prtc e
tf WISh to buy all umts at

once - Coll304 675 6517
or 67 5 6971 to see

54 M1sc Merchandise

TIRE SALE

LOWEST PRICES
IN AREA
SERVICE STATION
OPEN 24 HRS A DAY

POMEROY
lANDMARK
~~

. .......

A

k ettl e

barbeque

1 2 s p~e d ltng d1 stance tour
mg b1ke hke new$ 150 Call

614 388 9809

' 1'1&lt; 111

15 Cu Ft

1325 95

Pnces Good thru June 15

POMEROY
lANDMARK

&amp;1 614 992 21St

...... ..
~

Real Estate G e neral

LAND
SALE
*Campsite...
"Big Foot Park"
Water - Electnc
Bath House
&amp; Boat Dock

NO MONEY DOWN
sso Per Mo.

*Homesite...
Raccoon Creek
Water - Electnc
Ctty School Dtst

NO MONEY DOWN

sso PER MO.

DIRECTIONS
South on Rt 7 5 miles-be
low Galhpohs to Raccoon
Crk !frtd&amp;e and follow
s1ans

SHOW SAT. &amp; SUN.

Knauff

Coal

&amp;

Ftrewood

Prtces reduced May July

P1ck or delivered We t\onor
HEAP Vouchers Call 614

256 6245

For sale metal culvert 6 mch
thru 60 tnch •n stoc:k State
approved 16 gauge 12 mch

65 35

per It

24 mch

$10 10 per ft
36 mch
$15 50 per ft Also plasttc
culvert m stock 6 mch thru
18 tncll 8 1nch S1 80 per ft
12 mch $3 60 per ft Ron
Evans Enterprtsos 4 m1
S outh of Jackson on ST RT

93 614 286 6930
Cheap carpet If you hrtve
rental property or rent don t
mmd shghtlv 1r r e gular
c arpet y o u can save money
Pr~ces start &amp;2 99 sq yd

992 6173 10 6

30 06

Re

AUTOMATIC

mmgton 41 mag Ruger
Black Hawk p1stol &amp; Pelt
mtno mare about 1 150 lb
S1lvertone electnc guttar
Strad 0 lm flat top guttar
Ptione 304 576 2782

Building Supplies

0 Call 614 -245-6121
Build your own Early A mart
can flome , 2 or 3 bdr

AKC regtotered Poodle 7
months old silver, male,
176. Cell 304-676 4156
eftor 6 30

$2,995 Call 1-614-886
See our model

furnished

$2500 304 676 2328 or
576 2606

JOHN Daora 1010 tractor
plows .

SEARS

t

and used Swisher lmple
ment Co • Sr Rt 7 North,

Galhpohs. Oh 446-0476

hog

304 876

1- - - - -- - - - -

1800 hours Call446 0706
Gravely L-1 tractorw1th 30
mower Needs some work,

5'250 Call 446 3733

"'"-' "..,. A GUY

WH,0' 6

A

~eVEI(Ai

L.0~:5 FO~

WORD$ OFiE-111 15.

monthly payments on sptnet
ptano Can be seen locally
Wnte Credtt Manager P 0
Box 33. Frredens
PA

NEW &amp;. Used Harvastore
Str uctures Automated II
vestock feedmg c omputer

' - - - - - - - - - - ' ! feeders Call collect 614
685 2260 Jo~n L Botts
NOW arranoe the drcled llf11t'S IO

63

Livestock

Purebred

Appaloea

m~re

Call 814-388-9026
Hammermtll

grinder

Call

614 388 9025
Registered Quarter .hor ..
geldtng, 6 yra old, gentle 1
Regtatered AppaloH stallion. good collar 6 yrs old.

LOADER .
136 to
160 246 9143

gentle Coli 446 1393

63

4dayoldnew
pullets Call61

Lrvestock

LaBonte s Quell Farm
Chtcks &amp;. eggs readtlv avatla
bla
Order early
Mature
Ouatl s available agatn tn

LaBonte ' s Quatl Farm
Chicks &amp; eggs readily available
Order early
Mature
Oua1ls available aga1n In

Augu st 614 986 4345

August 814 -986-4345

REGSTERED &amp; grad e wal k

1 baby calf 1 hetfer, 1 bull
calf 8 mont hs old Phone

horses l E
304 676 2178

Ke1ster

tng

614 843 6186 after 7 p m
- -- - - - - - -lc-

form the surprise answer as sug

gested by l~e above cat10011

16641
STRAWBERRIES. ptck your

Frutt
8t Vegetables

own E•penmental Farm, Pt
P1easant 8 12 a m Mon
day, Wednesday &amp;. Frtdoy
Startmg June 3rd

STRAWBERRIES. ptck your
Darrell Buck Farm, Strawberues
P1ck your
Tribble Rood 304-458 - own Call Claude Wrnter
1627
Call 614-246 -5121

7311

own

Real Estate General

Reel Estate General

446-6610

atr

condttto ner used 2 months
Ortgtnally $450 Wtll sell for

$325 304 675 6894 alter

Judy DeWitt. a..ttor. 388-8155
J Memll Carter RuHor. 37~2184
Becky lane....oc:111e 446-0458
Beciy Elliott, Assoc:1att, 446-0885

4

BREAKFAST bo o t~ &amp; tabla
l1vmg room carpet 13 %x22
ft • double glass ptcture
wtndow double med1ctne
cabtn ot 304 6 75 1211

REA LTOR®

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

PAYING cash for com1c s
and paperbacks buy sell or
trade Cont a ct C hest e r

I NEW
LISTING - Just off
on
6 5 ACRES - CLtstom
4 Y' old 4 bedroom
Road In gtou11rl pool w1th sl1de ntce s1ze
home w1th a
IJrew of Rm Grande a
I level 2 baths hreolace HlliVIOCroom
r h01ce locatmn Th iS home has a lull basement
I room
3 BR pape"d walls n1 ce k1tchen 2 ca r
wrap atou nd deck 2v, ba lhs &amp; 2 car garage
garage also ca1port Pncrd at $68 600 Ca ll Clyde YoLt must see lh1s one Call Clyde Walker
I Walker
I
I

MAION&amp;ttQMES AfFORDABLE MADE US NUMBER I, CENTURY 21;

304 675 6239

-

REALTY
Geo S Hobstetter Jr
Broker
Ofltee 991 5739

tor operatiOn
137 ac1es,
2 free I
machinery
shed. 2 Silos,
bushel corn cnb m1lkmg par~1
glass hoe milkers. 2 bulk tanks 5ponds Tobacco base.
1680 sq It modem home 3 bed1ooms 2 full baths
On~ of Gallla County s most productive d31nes

• Wdlts. T Lead1ngham , Reilltor Ph H om e 446 9Sl9
• Ph y ll1 !. Loveday Phon l" 4 46 2 730

• Joa n Bogg s. Phone446 31 94

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

OUTSTANDING RANCH . 4 bedrooms. l'h baths den
sew1ng room plus large fam1ly room Beaut1tully
decorated Full f1n~hed basement Over 'h acre
landscaped tor ru~ the begmmng One m1le ol city
l1011ts State Route 141 By ap)Xlnlment
#297

btr~lt

11

lar~e

1";1'~

HOBSTETTER

b1rdsc~e

la~ge

'

PRICE REDUCED - Beaut1lul
IJnck three bedroom home
l am1ly room w/ hrepl&lt;!ce cen
lral a ~r drapes &amp; equ1pped
kitchen Situated on ave&lt; 1
acre 1n Baum Add1tron Owner
anxmus to sell mflke us iln ol
ler

b ush

FREEMAN

SPINET-Conoole Plano 811gatn Wanted Responstble
party to take over ow

58

disk

bl ade

Troy Burlt rotottllere new

1974 backhoe MF 50 dtesel
300 loader 64 hoe, less than

APPROX 14 ton of c oal
Both lump &amp; fme 304 895
3819

1982

Farm Equ1pment

Ma11ey- Ferguso n

Saalpoint Stameae ktttens

Buddtng matertals
blo ck bnck, sewer ptpes
w1ndows , lintels - etc
Claude Wtnters, Rto Grande

Fruit
Vegetables

MUSIC&amp; I
Instruments

8500 00 Soma other furnl

55 Building Supplies

8t

I OUSLE

ture 304 676-6230

810 Baby htg~ c~otr 825
614 9112-2607
- - - - - - - -lo Englloh Setter btrd dog
Regiotered. 2 yoor old le
mate *1150 ortradeforgun
614-992-6848 .

58

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
• KENNEL AKC ChQw pupplea, CFA Htmalayon. Per
ltan and S1ameae k1Uens
Call 446-3844 otter 4PM

WEEKS WESTIE KENNEL Wanted Responsible party
AKC Welt Highland while to take over low montly
terrier•. pupptea and stud payments on spinet p11no
oorvlco Call 814 -387 - Can be aeen locally Wrtte
Credtt Ma,ager P 0 Box
0824
637 Shelbyvtlla, IN 48176

tncluded 304 937 2589

house tratler

55

57

SlameM kittens, pure bred

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - 1980 14x70 mo b le IIOIIIC 4
bedrooms k1tc hen eqUipped wth range and
relngeral01 bath Porch and undcl pinn nr, llllliHiecl
Settmg on rented lol $12 000
#346

#334

NEW LI STING 81/o% ASSUMPTION - Good
locauoni 4JliW l~' homeon ~easanl Valley Esta te~
oil Rt 35 Over 1450sq It ot l•v a~ ea~n clud es
amn1g room lully equ1pped k1lchen I 'n batiiS ulil
roo 11 1at gas cent 1m oversiZed garage &amp; large
yard Owners anxtous to sell Ca ll J1m Coclu 111

LAKE DRIVE - RIO GRANDE - Poss•ble
assumpt1011 011 thiS lovely 3 yt old bnck 2 story
home Includes 4 hechooms 2 llill &amp; 2 half baths
iiiCe bu1lt "' k1lche11 Willi b31 lull b.isement tam1ly
room w/ hreplace ami 2 ''" ~arage $67 500
Owner iH1XIou s lo sell Call hrn Cochnm

FARM - 135 70 acrPs w1lh01l
&amp; r.as miiiCial\ 81g ba111 &amp;
stmage blrtg All utllihes close
lo Rulldnd Ask1n1' $49 000 00
Velma N1cmsky Assoc
Phone 742 3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
Phone 742 3171

IN GALLIPOLIS
WALK TO SHOP
DOWNTOWN
6 10oms 3 BR lull basemr.nl
n•ce large front pmch No
upkeep v nyl Sldtng Natutal
gas lurn ace N1ce large sllalle
lt ee&gt; low taxes Home you
shOuld check on
#530

1'1• ACRES WITH
COUNTRY SETTING
NICe anrl sol1 d 2 bedroom
liomc localcd on a State
H1gllway Wll h no real close
nerghbors Rural water system
plus dnlled and a dug well
Extra • aiel lap lor a mob1le
home hook up N1ce resrtul
M P.ll atter a day s work
#574

RIGHT DOWN TOWN - large 2 story home Could be
used as commercial or resrdenllal property Stattway
and woodwork on~nal 9 IOOI11S total The edenor IS
l &lt;l!lun~inulm Sldln~ Garage w1th storage area located

LOCATED ACROSS FROM new court house 111 Gal hpol~ 2 or 3
bedrm Dutch Colo111al home part fin iS hed basement detached
~ a~ ar,e wth e&lt;ra pa~ km p, w/ bu rn111 g fu eplace 12x22 hv~ng rm
forma! cl 1n111 ~ room 2 balhs

LOVELY TO SHOW - 3 bedtoom bnck ranch wrth
eat 111 k~chen, large liVIng room 1\\ baths, ut11ily room
fam1ly room w~h ~ass shdmg patiO doO&lt;s Nice s~e
lawn located 10 Kyger Creek School system Pnced 111
the m1d SO's

MIDDLEPORT - Solid olrlm home "' excellent
cond1l on 2 storj w1th 3 bedrooms and larRe balh up
Mam level foyer hvmg room all modern k 1t c ~ en and a
beautiful dmmg too m Tilts home has • lull basement
3 ca1 garage and nice b1g lot

#322

KYGER CREEK SCHOOL OI&amp;TRICT
bUill tn ca bmets sta nless sled dbl smk anct cl111 n ~ area Full
basemen! w/ pallo doms Rural watet syslem garage Call
no•
#379

V +h'G il f\ '.R
Jnd ". t

i I 1&gt; I

Phon e
1

(01 ~ )99233 2 5

NEW LI STING - L1ke new
spill entry lam1ly lwme w1t11 3
11cres Has 4 bed rooms and
lilrV,f' rrr room wrth !•r eplaces
3 c u Prlr If'£ w1th !ott garden
r trf small s!J c,Hn All tilts m ille

country

NEW LISTING - '&gt; 100111 lolly
carpele1l ho1111 V'. ilh 41ots Ntce
111 town kiCiiiKJn out ol all

lloods Jusl $32 500 Assuma
ble loan
NEW LISTING - fi 1oom tench
11em Rutlamt ? baths all
elect11c full IJasemenl and 2
acres
2 APARTMENTS - 6 1ooms
each 2 baths 2 poiC hes a11d
level lot 111 Middleport
$1 3 000 00 - Will buy IIHS6
room

home Ba th

lurn~ce

nem stDf es m Po m er o~

100 x 400 LOT - Good older
home w1th turnace 2 baths
carpetmg n1ce paneling
ga~dett and lg garage In
Raeme..
HANDYMAN - Tlus may be
your chanu! to buy and finash
3 bedrooms 13nch garage and
2 acres
BAS HAN - 2'4 acres 011 hatd
1oad 7 rooms 2 balhs and 2
outbwldmgs
MIDDLEPORT - One lloor
plan be1ng remodeled Bath
lumace and level 101 near the
pari&lt;
MIDDLEPORT - 8 rooms 1\\
baths 3 bedrooms gas hot
water furnace coppet plumblllg and carpet1ng '
3 47 ACRES - At Bradbury
near Rt 7 l1Hie 4 room home
With bath and woodburner
ch1mney Only $11.000

Housing
Headquarters

I
I
I
I

Modern 3 BR ranch home appro)( 4 1 ~ yrs old l hl!mmpllr te
wmdows stmm doors lA lu!ll ace w th cf&gt;n tral a11 kitchen has

FOR

I

I

POMEROY - Co1 ne' lol wilh
111ce 1emomdeled two slory
11ome Three 01four bcd1ooms
2 baths lull basement 2 car
c ~t rpor l Owner llni,l nCing to
qual1f1ed buyer $22 000 00

SERVICE STATION
992 9932

CHEST MODELS
1235 95
5 Cu Ft
1285 95
8 Cu Ft
1355 95
15 Cu Ft
1418 95
20 Cu Ft
1472 95
25 Cu Ft

,

drum

gnll Call 614 367 0639

FREEZER SALE

~

uw

614 388 9026

52 CB.TV, Rad1o
Equipment

arm

24 fl sec tional horJe' C,all

RAY S USED FURNITUR E
poer 1wtn bo ok c ase beds $20
ea c htld s desk &amp; chtur S20
che st of drawer s $ 30 htgh
cha1r $20 5 pc breakfa st
set $45 refngo rat or ~ 45
dressmg t able S 20 M a yta y
wnng et w as h e r S100
lamp s pottery Bnd glass
ware Call 614 36 7 0 637

radtal

$175 Call 614 256 6620

Mise Merchandise

Judy
7220
Col 448-8508

CHEST type freezer
st25 00 CL 360 Hondo

200 00 - Cost

Cell 4411-7786

un~t ,

2310

prtca

Stud Servict:t

WINDOW

a1r condttionrng
used 1 year. can be
1een at 61 1 Mam St Pt
Pleasant or call 304-678

Call 304-773 6814 altar
3 30 p m

never:

swtmm•ng pool Wtth big sant
filter, $660 Bohn tractor. 2

$600 Plows $250 &amp; up
Rotottller $200 10•60

lARGE PUBLIC AUCTION
AT THE PAUL &amp; LILLIAN SANDS FARM
ANTIQUES &amp;COLLECTOR ITEMS

HOTPOINT elect nc range tn
cond1tmn

HILLCREST KENNEL Boei'ding Ill brMdo Solltng
Heppy Jack Dog Food AKC

speed blade, Mowery tratler
t\,000 1952 C~evy truck ,
$726 00 Alter 5 p m 304
675-6512

3099
good

1976 HONDA Super Sport
excellent cond•tiOfl ,
81695 00 4'K18' round

wtth loader S1650 Ford
BOO w1th loader S2850
Hay baler New Holland 66.

0322

8

used 2 Natural gas floor
furnaces, used One 30 gal
natural gas water f'!eater.
uaed One 1 5 K W alectnc
furnace used 304-676 -

760 .

MINNEAPOLIS Bohne 3 pt
w tde front, power steer~ng

$226 mo ut1ht1es pa1d Call
446 4416 after 7PM

3159

Garage door.

66 Pet1 for Sale

call 304 576 2467

613 THIRO AVENUE 1 bunktea ~199 2 ptec e an
bdr , $175 plus ut1ht1B1 tron hvmgroom suttes $199
m c ludea water
Call 446 antron rechners $99 oth er
recllnen $80 maple dm e n e
4222 9am to 5pm
sets S 1 79 love se ats $70
bo x
~ Furmshed apt
2 bdr 243 htde a bed $ 250
spnngs
&amp;
mattre
ss
twm
or
.Jack son P1ke, Gallipolis

Agency Coli 446 3643

ONE 8 pf

54 Mlsc . Merch8nd1ae

TOBACCO plants for sale

bunk beds complete w•th

full $100 set regular ftrm
$120 maple dmett a cha1rs
$35, wash stand s $34
maple roc kers $59 7 pte ce
2 bdr apt overlookmg park
front S176waterpa1d Dep chrome dtnette set s 1 49 6
ptece dtnette set $89 used
&amp; rei Call 446 391 9
bedroom su1tes refergera
tors, ranges chest dresser s
Furn11hed efftency apt 1n
town S 150 mo Call The wrmger wash e r s TV s
W11se man Real Estate dryeres, &amp; shoe s C all 446

54 MIBC-

The Sunday Time5-Sentinei- Page-D-5

Plea5Cint, W Va.

June 5, 1983

June 5,

Ohio-Point Plea5Cint, W . Va.

Times-Sentinel

I 1 ACRE CLOSE TO GALLIPOLI S
N1ce com lorta ble 2 bed 10omloc.ile(l on '"" landsc.1 pe&lt;l yaiCI w1lll
larger garden area Partral f1r1 1Shed basement FA lurnace garage
storage blllldmg Storm doors ami wrnd ows Nu.:e clean and
#575
comtortable home Phone for more det311s
TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE
II 11 s lots ol space you need 11 e got 11• 4 bcd 1ooms 21 baths
In level home Fmmal hvmg and rlln mg 10om spacous lully
equ tpped eat 1n kitchen and lan11ly i DDIII w1tll !~r e p lace All thiS
~lO us e rs srluatcd on 41 acre mOTe or lrss that rs bt'11Uiilully
lamtscape&lt;l
~576
25 ACRES - 8 ROOM HOME
N1ce remodeled ho m~ Blown m msulahon 2 storage buiiCflng&gt;
chtcken hou se Mm farm Chesh11 c Township New country
kltCIIen
~558
ATIENTION CITY COWBOYS
Have horses' See the tenced Ill pasture wrth 4 actes mmeor less
rnclud ng a thr ee bedroom home JUSt a few rn les from Galhpohs
Excellenlland fm tarm1ngas well as new homeconstrucliOn Large
barn plus two storage b01ld1ngs pond stocked w1th cart1sh bass
and bluegill large concrete dr ve Call lor a shuw1ng and be
surpnsed
#437
DUTCH STYLE COUNTRY HOME
4 bedtooms 21-1 baths lolly equipped cal "' k1lchen tormal d1n1ng
room family room wtfh woorlburner two em garage w1!h auto
opener Stjle beauty charm and comlort - all descnbes lh5
hOme Pnced $74,900
#322
GRACIOUS LIVING IN A COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE
T1uly g~aclous fam1ly liVIng can ~e yours tn thiS beautiful 4
bedroom home approx 8 m1le from Gallipolis Th e k1lc~en s a
gou&lt;met s delight Unbelievabledtmng 100m and tam1ly 100m BwH
lor the most d1Scnm1nat•ng home owner 20 acres Pasture land
Horse stable Another 73 ac1es available Many many amenrttes
#542
"I

I

WHAT A DEAL' $27 000
Come see for yourself Cozy 6 tooms and bath washe1 dryet
diShwasher refngerator woodbu rn er and all like new Slorage
bu1ldmg an d 2 cat carport •Kyger Creek Schools
#552
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots-N1ce sue b01dmg lots w1lh all ultlrt&lt;es the1e Lot stze
101 8 by 171 2 !letter get urn now
#456
I

6 95 ACRES VACANT LAND OFF RT 35
Rolltng land - beside Old U S Highway 35 In an area thai IS
develop1ng last Rt 35 short d ~ta nce west of Galhpol5 Get ~now

#544
8 ACRES
W1thm 10 mmutes dr~ve lo downtown Gal hpot~ City School
System Has hookup tor mobile home Gall1a Rural Waler electriC
and septtc tank Night hght on pole. 200 H frontage on Graham
School Rd T1mber BU1Id1ng Slles Ca ll now
11477

$69900 PRICE REDUCTION - Was $1 690DO
NOW $100 000 You save $69 000 Bcaul•ful
Polynes~an home neslled "' 3 8 ac 11111e woocts
overlookmg ba~&lt; filled lake rust 2 tn1les lromRt 35
3 bedroom llome wtlh ovm 5 000 SF 2e11t11r walk
ol glass open 1ng o111o sundeck &amp; pat 1o A g1eat
100111 w1th atnum "" '" 'es yea1 tOUtlll fl owet s &amp;
trees 21 hflths lots of custom made tllull 111~ &amp; 2
walls ol ~ tlelv1 ng 1n l!brary Mothe1 w•ll 1pp10ve ol
krtchen w1th eve1ylh ng and k1ds w II IIISISI on Dad
lm~hm g mdoOt pool Ow net moved out ol &lt;laic &amp;
must sell

I MOBILE HOME - 2bedroomKlllllSiev 14&lt;10 wtil
All electnc 4x6 po1cl• 8xl 6 metal
I h 24 expando
A I cond Call Clyde Walker
I NEW LI STING - Modem 3 BR full basemen!
1
home on I 91 A 1usl 2 mil l's m/ I wesl of Ky get
S co watm excellent VIew good mortga ge
I Hassumpt
poss hie Ask111g $39 900 Call Clyde
I
I EASTERN AVE - LOW INTEREST ASSUMPITON .---H~A~RD~W~A~RE~S~TO!'!'R'!"E'! !FO~R"!'SA~l'!"EbUI)di O~

located on th5 64
Townsnlp CMde1 l'h story homem
need ol repair large barn corn cnb tobacco base
Tilable acreage Owner f1nancm~
#3L8

3 BEDROOM all elccl1 c ~anch stluated on 75 x120' lot '" Rodney
II Attached garag e Pncerl lo1 i mm ed ~ate sale $3000000
NEW LISTING - We have 1ust liSted th s 7 936 cu H concrete
bldg Located Wlllim the c 1~ ol GallipOliS Idea l tor small
m a 11u f act ur ~ r b.ten~ tve eledrtc al mstallatron Can be purchased
or IPt!Sed
2 APARTMENT HOME &lt;en be convert eel bac k to s 1n ~e residence
Deep~~ w•t11lots ot p.uk111 g "' ' e" Garage and outbuild1n~ 1deal
location for 1et ~red persons or lam1ly w1th school age Children

MIDDLEPoRT LOCATION - and reduced to $35 000
Nrre older remodeled 2 story home wrth 3 bedrooms
bath, d1mngroom. kitchen liVIng room. Garage The1e IS
a garden spot lru~ trees and grape aroor Home" m
excellent cond1!10n
#287

3 or 4 BEORM HOME ~lon g Upper R"er Rd Lot has one mob1le
home hook up Good location for erthe1res1denttal or commmaal
Owne1 w1ll lrade to1 " "''II Iat m $44 900 00
'

COIIIIIERCIAL RETAIL BUILDING located 1owntown
buSiness distnct 3 story, over 6000 sq ft Blllldmg
d111ided for eKira mrome Use part lease the rest Call
for more details
#253

APPROX 3 ACRES w1111modern 3 bedtm home lotsot fruit trees
"""' Ranoon Creek (llear Run Rd) Heal ~ump carport 2
outbuildul gs

FEU FENCED IN7- Then take alook at thiS very well
ma1ntamed ranch 2 bedrooms mce s1ze hvmg room
kitchen, bath, attached garage Bath pond 3 acres
more or less Pnced 1n the 40's
#338

12 x65 1973 OAKWOOD MOBILE HOME Siluatedon 214 xl04 tot
•n fdm ona T&lt;ail Subd " near Tycoon Lane Ideal to1 weekend
1etreat or permanenl home Or\ly $15 000 00 E~ t a lots av31lable
lm $3 000 00
1 LOTS

111

SPRING IS HERE and ifs tme to start construct~ n on
that nl!'li home you have been wantmg. 2 acres
Cl~red Bulavtlle Rd. Rural water Kyge1 Creek Schoo~
#317

Plantz SD Buy holh lm only $~ 900 00

9 LOTS "' Pt anl7 S0 Buy all 9 101 $20 000 00
12 x65 1972 SHULTZ MOBILE HOME Sllua too on apptox
Hazel R1dge Buy tr311et alorlelo1 $7 150 00

o .t w~

511 ACRES - Do as you please No restrictiOn Home
site Wooded Road trontage $3 3~ 00
#244

BUSINESS I 0 umt molel &lt;eady lm you to tak.- ovet Mid have
ready cash flow e•tra land and 2 mo~ le home uml&lt; 1nclurled
Call .IOOUI liltS one lodaylll

FAMILY SIZE remodeled home with 48 75 acres and
own gas well wnh free gas 4or 5 bedtooms IMngroom
wilh firiJ!llace mce k~chen bath, fam1ly room and
ut~ily Oirts1de worltslllp and shed Nrre big lawn
l.oeated m AddiSOn Townshrp
#319

CORNER LOT IN EWINGTON lorm&lt;rly house:l hlhn ~ stat ~ n
Owner has 1educed pr~ce to $1 800000
2 BEDRM COTIAGE across from foodl&lt; •cl CIDc Galhpohs deal
locahon lor retued persoos Near downlown stores and chu1 ches
$28 000 00

SUIIIIER PLACE - 2 bedroom ootlllge w~h INmg
room krtchen bath, utility room 69 acre lot Located
next to Raccoon Creeft Pr&lt;ced at $25,000

3 BEDRM HOME IN VINTON Ownet has Ia ken very I)Oocl care ot
property Large lot w1th ample garden at ea App roved purchaser
may assume ex !Sling FHA loan

mo

THE DEAUVIUE - French prov111aal style tiOme w~h
tlllt!r 2.000 sq It of 1111ng space on ttl! matn level ThiS
hOme IS all bnck wilh dou~e entry dooo and so many
~r~~enllies I can I write them all Access to the wounds.
club tiOuse and pool at Tara Estates Call for complete
detailS

EXCELLENT CONDITION 2 story home on 2nd Ave w/ garage apt
111 rear Can be used as reS1dent1al or 1nvestment prql€rty
$8500000
3 BEDRM HOME 111 Galhpot5 lg hv1ngl m dinin g 10) lamtly rm
fenced 111 yard With 111 ground sw1mmmg pool All for $46 900 00
'FIRST TIMF' HOME BUYER can apply lor 9 98%State Mortgage
Revenue Bond money 130 yr flied rate) Call arout th~ one today"'

,.,
\

,

1

n,,,, ·\
0

'

•l•\(

I

111

11

'•

LOVELY NEW HOME needs a fey, l115h1ng touches
UVIng room mar~e fireplace d1mng room k!chen
complete, spac10us master bedroom, 1 and 'A baths
garden tub 111 matn bath Covered patiO breezeway 2
car garage full basement 2 scemc acres Pnced 10 the
60's
#327
BARGAIN OF THE YEAR - Suburban 3 bed1oom
ranch Fam1ly room wnh f~replace plus wood burmng
stove Fully catpeted 2'h car attached garaga \\ a_cre
lot Fenced 1n back yard Prteed for QuiCk sale
M264
FRAME RANCH - 3 bedroom baltl attachoo garage.
ntce ktchen. l1v111g room and alovely landscaped lawn
Back lawn 5 fenced fo1 PfNacy w~h a gazebo
chtldren s play are&lt;~ pen for yrur favorte pel Garden
spit
M301
LOCATED IN THE CITY school d~tr1ct Frame hom a
excellent coooiton 3bedrooms bath ntee s~e klchen
Unattached garage Home 5 neat and clean Priced tn
the low 30'~
H286
NEW FARM LISTING -'- Large 4 bedroom home 1n a
scen1c setlinJ Tobacco base, barn and other
oulllilildtne; Just large enoogh - 20 acres most all
tillable. Present crop aija~a and orchard grass
Harnson Twp,

m OFFER -

113'S7

THE FEELING Of FREEDOM' 39 Aetes H a~roon
Township Ranch style home with 3 bed rooms lormal
dmln&amp; large hvmg room bath Barn PIIVale settmg
Well Good ga rd en atea $34 200
#298
MOBILE HOME - 1978 BayVIewDel uxe 14 •70 w1th
8x 24 pullout 3 bed rooms 2 balhs fully equ1pped
krtchen w1th lot5 of cab1nets Gas heat an d central a1r
Call lor more d eta~ls

mo

NEW LISTING - RIVERFRONT COTIAGE
bed1oom latge kitchen !~replace wtth heat a Jatar
Unattac~ed garage 01 works hop w1th IUi nace Deck
overlooking Oh•o Rtver l ot landscaped w1 th sl'\leral
beaul1ful lrees and shrubs Perfect Itt ret ~red couple01
newlyweds

COUNTRY LIVING IN THE CITY - EII IOY the country
atmosphere ol 1 h~ charmtng home and st111 be 1n the
city 3 bedrooms I \\ baths, equtpped krtchen
fueplace carpeted throu ghout Alumrnum sld1ng Large
covered patMl 16x32 mground sw1mmmg pool
co mplet ~y fenced Large storage butldmg $59 900
#332

MEIGS COUNTY - You II be pleasantly surpnsed
when you see thiS 3 bedroom ranch PatKJ doors Vinyl
sidln&amp; Cell at and cella1 house plus 2\\ acres moreor
less $21 000 Shown by appotntment
#308
PRICE REDUCED! Enfoy thev1el'l of the O!iKl from the
front porch ol thiS 1\\ story home 3 bedrooms 1'h
baths. full basement Natural gas heat AlumlnUIJI
sidmg and stucco 8 Lots $35 000
H331

oome

..

LARGE LOT - ApproXImately HI acri!S Dra1ns well
County water available Electric o~ land Nea&lt; Park
Distnct on state highway Owner fmancmg posstble.

#294

• -...-..-.....~'CIIIND11nonUnD

#254

~259

5 rooms and bath Modern kitchen
Woodbumer Electpc baseboard heat. Two mo)jle
'pad~ Threes~ tanks Rural water One acre
of 1and. III miles ~om Holzer Med1caf Center $30 000

wooded

of town wrt h thiS 3
' t acre Small ham
ex tr a moo mc PriCP.d n I he

26 000 SQ FT 4 bedroom hill'llel large IlVIIII' room
deluxe k•tclum dimng area lam1ly 100m I ~replaces 2'?
baths heal pump central ' " 2 Cal gat age conc1ete
dnve Switnmlng pool 18 x36 Lois oll1vtng on '&gt;ac re
corn er lot

U56

Electric and telelltiOne serviCe Installed Partially

~
I It !1

FARM - 114 Aetes 3 bedtooms 1'h story trame
house 2 barns Smoke house and other outbu~d1n gs
Tobacco base 92 Acres pasture and woods 23 Acres
lillable Minl!l'al riRhtS All lh~ and more lor $80 500
Farm equ1pment optKlnat
#285

8\1 ACRES. more or less Hunlingtoo TownshiP

...

•

NEW LISTING- SMALL FARM - lmmedtately takes
your eye 5 room modern ranch style home 3
bedroom; barn tobacco base 6 acres most ~II crop
land Several different type hUll trees Better look one low pnce $25 000
#357

COUNTRY LIVING
bedtoom remodel ed
Moille home tncluded
40s

*278

BUSINESS We have 2 bmldmgs avatlableon Ct St Gallipolis One
Is tmmedl31ely available other by August located across kom ctty
park1ng lot CaM for more 1nforma1~n"

NEW AD DAILY ·

9 ACRE ESTATE - Ranch
baths basement CaretakeiS
beautiful landscap1ng large clean
pond We
w•ll show you the rest Fa~rt1eld Vanro Road Green
Township
#251

e IMZOmtur¥411
11n1 b&amp;a:. Cocpocilllon•tru•teeiJortMNAF ® andTL!- Ir.-H:rmrh of
C..tury 2lllui-Co&lt;!t0rotion Equal Hou.... Oppotlunttytil

#354

PICTURE FROM HOUSE
- D••~n &amp; Jack have spent thelast 3
years maktn~ th•s house over and believe me she
has a taft&gt; Ill I ake your t11ne willie you rp looi'J11gso
y011can see eve1y Ititle cxetlmg deta •l II features a
la~r,e 11ew lamly toom w•tl1 Uuck sto ve and
overhead fan 2/, baths a l1bra1y wtlh skylight 3
I;Hge be(l!ooms forma l 0111111 ~ wrth cry stal
cha ndelier newly remOO eled k1tclwn rww root
amt a ve&lt;v niCe Sf•ttinRon la~ge Spr~ng Valley lot
You should look at tillS one bcfotebuyinganythtng
rlsr Ownet transfeued must sell Puss 1biP91;%
ass umption $59 900
'
CHAROIAIS HILLS - Vmy allractiVe 2 slo1y
I1Unie ~lua led nn 3'' actes oH Rt 160 I hiS I ne
hume otfetS 4 bPd1ooms d~uxe kllcl1en tonnal
tlllll lll' 100111 lmmly 1oom w1lh f11eplace and Buck
stove 2' baths full b.tsemenl 2 ca1garoge plus
/ 0•40 IJO~ and exceph ollal la lldSCall llg Call Ike
W1seman

011

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Walke~

- A2 bedroomhome'" good repair Excellent lor
1small fam1ly or 1enlal p10pert v $25 900 Call Clyde
BUY ON MARKET can I beat tim
1I BEST
pr~ce ol th1s 2100$11 h bnck ranch locatml 111luwll
l (m
16x22 master Sl llle) 3 balh s 24 IIVIIlg 100m

....
EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - If
you have always wanted to own yow own
busmess her es yuu r chance Th1 s IS " 7 yr old
l1arclwrue stocr locitled 1n ,, P,rowmg ar e,\ I he
stock ~ all up to-rt ale clean and fr esh w1th no
oul daled merchamhse as you woukll1nd n an

a vPry ~O&lt;i n~l!! hbtHhood Has 3 bedrooms

oilier store All mventory ~ h elvm g d1spiC1y

l t1repta1e 25 lam1ly room lor mal dtmn g room vr ry
n1ce eQUI DIJC(f kltCilen nat m heal cent at anrt
lar ge landsca ped yard Call Gl yd e Waii«Jr

tacks slmel01mshmgs and f'QUipmenl lo slav
Owner startCI'1 tJu stness as an 1nvestnr cnt &amp;
tiU e to oll1e1 tulll1me cmp~yment obl1gatons
no longm has tha lime lm sl01e managemenL

II

Wa l~e r

~ou

I
I HOME
&amp;BUSINESS - US RT 35 - ThiS an
excellent opportumty lor a busmess on a heavy
location 13 actes with 273 frontage (2 plus
I traacresffic ava~labl
e extra! The home has 3 bed 1ooms
tt y room wood burner tu eplace and theground
I lam
level basement excellent lor you&lt;buSiness Nat
IS

I1 8,,~,

IS

gas heal 2 car garage &amp;more Only $69 500 Abtg
bargmn fo1 anyone Catlike Wiseman
ASSUMPTION _ AttractiVe 3 bedroom hnck
,, -,.
locatoo lUSt o« Rt 35 OvCI 1300 SQ ft ol hvmg
area mcl udes a la~ge bat h W~h garden tub
equtpped k1tchen Uillllj 100rn lalge covered
porch and attractiVely deco~atoo Good loan
assumption $55 000 Call J•m Cochran

l
I1
ARE YOU HUNG UP ON REAL QUALITY? - Well
I heres
one that wtll 1mptess you A fine bnck ranch
whtc~ was built w1th good mater~! by a hoe
I craftsman A formal sunken hVInq rOQm fane~
d mng. and a compete k!chen and eallnJ area t.
1
I woodburnmg
hre~aces 2 baths 2 car garage 4
large
bedroom;
a beaubfuf fa m1ly room large
I ubhtv and rec rooms
plus a very n1ce party room
I gone
w1th wet bar Th5 one will be here when you're
Wed love to show tl to you $89900 '

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LOAN ASSUMPTION - $5.00 DOWN
PAYMENT - OwneiS must sell If you arelook1ng
for a mce older 2 story home w1th lots ol character
then you must see th1s one Owner.; have
redecorated most of tnti!I'Klr lndudeS 4 bedrooms,
wal k 1n closets formal dlmn&amp; . (bul~ m hutch)
fam 11y room w/hre~ace. modern equ1pped
krtchen, old fashiOned bath, full basement.
vloodburner plus fully Insulated Situated on
approx 1 acre 10 Bidwell $43 500 Call Jim
Cochran
HEW BRICK HOME - $49 900. over 1350 Sll It

I1V1ng space rn th1s n1ce bnck ranch Has 3
I ofbedrooms
fam1ly room la1ge k~chen garage &amp;
I s!uated
on a cornet krt near Raccoon Creek
I Excellent blly Builder I)IUst sell

a.

------

$27 500 - We rust hslell llliS2bedroom homeon
Ro ush Lane "' Chest11re Situated on 'lo aCIC lh5
could be an excl'll enl starlet home or make a good
•ental p10perty Call J11n Coc hra n
509 OAK DR - Bea ut1lul 3 01 4 bed1oom bnck
ranch thai has everythmg llns top qualify home
offers hatdwood &amp; teak fl""cn 1me new carpet.
superb decorallr " in\)Ct.U eplaccs lmmal
dmm&amp; fam 1ty rooQ'-~•'" ktlchen full hasement
plus exce phonal landscapin&amp; and lat ge heated
pool Much more Call J1m Cochran

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PfllCE REDUCE~ - WAS $89 000 - NOW
.
$64 ,333 - One ot a k1nd - Penect for a
1
professiOnal off1ce abusiness myour home, a large
residen ce or as tt stands
a2 fam1ly home Th~ 1.
IS a quality bw~ older home thai has 2 k~chens 2ih I'.
PRICED TO SELL - KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS Nearly new 3 bedroom homeSllualed on alarge lot
'" a WOOded a~ea Has 2 balhs ruce step saver
kitchen d1ntng room lhe lull basement could
ea~ty be made mto a n1ce lam1ly room &amp; IS
plumbed lor another bath Has an attac hed gara~e
and landscaped yard Only $49 900 Call J1m
Cochran

llOVi

baths modern gas furnace &amp; central air You could
have a mce office complex downstairs and fam1y
rental or 100re office upslatrs There's a finished 3
noor, full basement and 2 car garage In the
process of ney, pamt ~rpet &amp; wallpaper located
near Court House &amp; Citv Butldm~t.
. ,

1··.

I;

OWNER SAYS SELL TODAY - Must sell very soon
or I'm m big trouble Owner has threatened to camp
on my doorstep hll ~·s sold So tf yo" ~re looktng lo1
a lovely 4 bedroom 21\ bath home wtth an
equ1pped kitchen, huge fam1ly room dmtng room.
2 car garage, nat gas cent1al a1r and located 1n
Washrngton Elem School Dlst then call me today
Please call Jrm Cochran 60's

1:.

1:.
1:

J:f
-----·------ .
,

�--

'.

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Ohio-Point l'l«asont, W. Vo.

Times-Sentinel
Livestock

63

71

SEVEN week old pigs . c_,ll

304·458 · 1727 or 304-675·

-==========
6208 anytime .

1979

Autos for Sale
AMC Concord · OJ

. slationw6gon . 4 dr .. 6 cyl ..

air, p . b .,BouQht
p . s .,
_ canette..

_

Hay &amp; Grain

64

No .. 1 good hay. 3 fields ,
sta nding. cut &amp; take · for 60
cents square bale, 304 -468 -

1602.

.

1m - ~m
in

n~w

Florido, Eoc. cond . Accepl
trade. 614-667-3085 .
1980 Chevy Citation , be -

for.
_.:.....c.._ _
__
1969 .Chevrolet" truck, 3
spd .. 6 cyl .. 4 new tires,

1971 Chev. Yi ton . V -8 . 4M4,
I. bed, good work truck.

t600. Coli 6.14·256-9333 .

$1.495 . Call 446-8508.

1976 F350 truck. 12 fL
steel bed, heavy duty susp8naion . GoQd cOnd . 614 992-3798 oi contact Vernon Weber .

72 Ford van new tires &amp;
battery, runs good, S650 .

Call 446-81 81 .

tween 8-4, 304-675•3929

after' 4 : f5 , call 304 -675 -

7546 .

1964 CHEVELLE .SS 350,4
speed , vary nice , muat sell.
304 -675 -2663 alter 5 p.m.
1979 PINTO statlonwagon.
power steering. automatic,
A -1 condition. $2800 . .

1976 Chevy Caprice Clas - 39 ,000 miles. 304 -882 ·
sic, 4 dr . sodan , one owner . 2814.
S2.500 Call 446 -161!; or ----~----446 ·1244 .
1977 FIAT Spider. red with
red interior. new top, new
78 Plymouth Volare Premier paint . cassette · player ,
4 dr .. air con d .. ana o wner. $3,000 . 304-882 ·231 8.
CEt ll 446 - ,615 or 446 1244 .
79 Silver LTD auto. fully
equipped . $5,000 . 80 red
1972 Chvrsler ex . cond .. MGB contverible 4 spd ..

Vans &amp; 4\N, D.

73

74

78 LUY truck , low mileage,
12.700. Phone 304·675 ·
5076 .

Motorcycles

1========:::::::;::
Vans S. , W . D .

1976 Harlev Davison Super
Glide 1200 CC. new tires.

1976 dodge power wagon.

good cond . $3.200 negotia ble . Coll446-3183 .

new paint, gumbo mudders,
headers , extra sharp .

'76 HONDA MR250 Els ·

73

s2.500 .
5837

4

Call 614-245·

Call 446 -0514 .

1982 Ford EXP loaded . Chev . Von . 304 -675-3099 .
15 ,000 m i., 66 ,600 or best
offer . Ca ll 446 -4134 after 1967 DODGE Dart. slant 6.
A - 1 condition, new paint &amp;
4PM .

tiros . $550 304-675 -6730

1981 Dodge Colt hatch back . good gas mileage. Call 1967 , PONTIAC Firebird.
61 4-388 -8453 allor 6 614 - excellent shape, $ 1900 .

388 -9756 .

Phone 304 -773 -5944 .

1974

1977 FORD Pinto. 4 speed.

Ford

446 -25 14.

GalaMy.

Call

good
good

1980 Plymouth Horizon . 4

running co ndit ion .
bodv . good tires,

1973 Dodge Charger . Red . wheels. real sharp, See at
Sharp looking . $1,000 . 1205 Colonial lane , Pt .

614 -949 ·3092 .

Pleasant .

1975 V8ga . Good CO:nd. 1976 OLOS Cu11oss Su S276 . or best offer. 992 - prema, 2 door, hard 1op,
6846 Or s68at'541 W . Main power steering ." pow8r'
brakes , air. 304-676 -6281 .
St . under bridge.

Real Estat11 General

MOBIL£ HOME - Wrlh large add-on bu rldrn~ asphall rhtveway
Locale\! on quwt str eet oul of hw.h water 1n Ra c1ne. Jlwliv1ngroom
IS eKir ala1 p,e. fhe1e ISa cement .walk and lar J-.'1! covered pmd 1. al so
a meli!l'slorf!ge UUiklmg You can be 1n lh1s on ~ m twv weeks lor
only $16,900
SACRIFICE - QUICK SAl£ - ? I&gt;,Jrooms. balh. hvrngrohm. &amp;
·erum k1lclwr1 on l1rsl Hom Uasmncnl llas 31d bedroom. lat111dry
ar ea &amp; exira rQnrn Concrete tlo01 wrlh shed all he cnrf ol rl11vc
Convenlmral anr.t l' mHAlrnan crng possrblc. Askr n ~$27,500 Make
yocrr oflcr. ownci' s loss can t~ vour gam l.ocaletl 111 Racme.
3 ACRES - 11acrrw, owner wrll help hnance
CAll US TO BUY OR SEll
NANCY JASPERS - ASS/1CIAT£
PHON£: 843- )17~
Or 992- 27~ I Jo leave A Message

'

living room, din.ing&lt;oom, den with woodburQing fireplace. 3-.4 bedrooms with large clo.sots, kitchen with dis·hwasher, built-in ranae. oven and cabinets galore and
breakfast area, 2'h tiled baths. barroom, larile covered patio with charcoal fireplace. full ellicient heat pump and
air conditioned . Prite $125,000. Owner willlinance.

t97ii850Suzukl'2,300mi.,
sliofl drive. 4 cvt.. ••c .
cond:, t1,750 or bon after
CoU 446·8195 tfler 5.

PHONE 985-4270 .

1978 Hondo Eltinoro 260 .
e... cond. 11'14-742-3177.

Real Estate General

1978 Koweaoki KZ85o. 'new
back tire, K.erker header.
looks end runs good. Must

Real Estate General
Broker-Auctioneer
liFE
INSURANCE
Call

446-0~~2

soil. $700. 614-949-2488.

Beth Null

24~· 9507

BMR 427 - $30s. marnlenance tree srdrng fenced back ya, .
lamrly 011enled nerghborhood. Thrs rs ·a very clean 3 BR home Call
for apporntmenl

BMR 426 - Prrced rrght at $37,500. II lras an assumable loan
wrlh only 9'/,",, rnleresl. We are lalkrnr. aboul a very clean, 3 BR
home Situated on mce llat lot rna lamlly onented ne1ghtxJrtmod.
Call lor complele detarts.

QUICK ACTION PRICE TAG! Prrce S-1-a-s-h-e-d. New 12x 16
krtchen, burlt -rn ran ge, mrcrowave. oven, d ~hwasher and d~posal.
New bedroom and bath, 2 other bedrooms, gas heaL Washtnglon
Elementary . Prrced rn the 30s. $1,750 to $7,000 down - P.ossible
owner ltnan cing avarlable1 Wtll second mortgage.

BMR 398 - PRICE GREATlY R'"""' " Owner t~a nslerr ed and
musl sellthrs 3 OR ~anch
SALE ncludes delu&lt;e 18x36
'"~round pooL Reduced tc PENDING'lUS Owners wrll pay
fH A. VA . oornts and cklsrc, ""'"

MODERN RANCH HOME - 3 or 4 bedrooms, nrce ltvtng room;
eat-rn krtclwn, lamrly roorn. lull basement Thtshume hasbeen very
well kepi. 2 car garage. Prr ced only 1n lhe 40s. As low as $2,400
down

'E'. o·Creek School Drstncl
RE. 0UC _, , loan. Calllorcomplele

BMR 429 - All etec111c 1&gt;-tounl ..
srtuatert on 121 aoes w.

.

. BMR 430 - NEW LISTING - F""""1t buy at $38.500. Lovely
I~a me ranclt wrth 3 Bf
th c a~peled drning area. 2
balhs. Beller see thiS
....... Cl 1: uwne r am:1ous to sell! ,

RE. 0 UC [ 0

ROOM FOR HORSE &amp; GARDEN - Nrce ranch home. 3 bedrooms,
woodburnrngstove. 2 car garage, large barn. almost 8 acres of nrce
rolling land. Be the hrst to see th~ one..
.. ..... ~1449
ClOSE TO HOSPITAl - Good hOme, remodeled rnsrd e, 2
bedrooms, kttchen wrlh range and telngera lor, new workshop
burldrng ami garage..
. ~ 1~62

BMR 432 - NEW li STING - 3 BRIll level, rn Rodney Vrllai(C II
lncluclcs l;umly 1oom. fneplace ami more S1tuated on tr.nced
corner lot Call lor dPt;His.
·
&lt;

BMR433-"NEW USTING_:_OWNER TRANSHRHD - Nrce 3
BR ranch Includes d1n1nR are.1 oH liVIng 100m. nnlural g~s he&lt;lt.
cenl ral '" . budget $48.00 month. Sm. ~ay room or den U trl~ y
areaoil krtchen. I car garage Srlualcd on large llallol On Jackson
Prke Pnced to sell at $44.900.00 Bener call to sec llus otra

extru. exc .. must sell.
t1 .100. 614 - 949-2181
ev1ning1.

1980 Harley Davidaon FLT.
J ,bOO miles, fully dressed ,
chocolate brown lh color ,
I'M -FM 1tereo canette
ptiyer, asking $5,400. Se rious inquiries only, 304-

676-6546.

TIRED OF RENTING?- Buy lhrs hornelrkc payrng rent Owner wrll
pay pomls and all closrng costs lor VA or FHA loans. NO dowh
payment on YA. $900 down on fHA.Call today , see how easy you .
can buy thrs home
·
•~2800
ENJOY THE WEEKENDS - In l hrs 2 bedroom conage wrlh lu!
basemen! overlookrng the Muskrngum Rtver close to Beverly . Oh~.
Furnrture slays $16,000.

BMR 434 - NEW liSTING - 3 BR. spirt·level ome flm homers
better !11an new. Includes 2 car garage. Srlualed on lg corner lot
First trme on lhe market Prrced al $44.500. Call lor delarls 1

GOOD BUY - Ranch rn counlry 31Jeorooms, woodburnrng slove,
I acre, Kyger Creek schoo~
#119~

BMR 43~ - NEW liSTING - Ideal sta ~ er home - 3 BR. lg
kttchen, lR. carpor1, natural gas heat. located wrthrn Gallrpohs crty
hmtts. Prtced at $31 .900. Be the f11st to see th• one'

BEAUTIFUl FARM - Thrs Iarmhas 150 acres nrce rolling land, 2
large barns. tobacco bise. pond, localed off Ill. 141 rn crly school
d~trict. Owner wtll sell par1 or all and help fmance ........ #1209

PRICE REDUCED - OWNER SAID SHU - lhrs round rust~
roun~ home IS surrounderl by I acre more orl es.sol woodland _lots
ot glass and a lovely vtew~ All wooden beamed cerlrn gs. 3 or 4
_. bedrooms, krtchen-lrvrn groom, 2baths, family room. 1.660 SQ. ~livrng space, plus a full basement. Over 1600 SQ. ft. of rusttc
wraparound decking The on ly round home rn thrs area. Make us
an offer.
·
PEACEFUl COUNTRY SETIING - Rolling 2 acres, more or less,
adds a spac 1ous sett1ng lor home. living room, d1n ing room , 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen wrth an rsland, garage, pal~. Green
Elementary. look th~ over and make us an offer!

3'l73. ·

1981

3331 .
1

1970 HONDA. motorcycle.
450cc DOHC mint condition, 20.000 •ctual miles ,
ona owner. $460.00 firm .

304-676 -1981 .

trailer self contained, per -

fact shape. Coli 446-81 81 .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
Local Burro Dealer offering
factory direct ·Prices . light
weight fiberglass travel
trailer, kit form or factory
atsemble. Designed for ·to days small cars . Call 1 -614 -

1- - - - - - - - - -

1976 Wenabago camper.
completely worked over,
$18,000, will finance differ-

once with $3000.00down,
take over loan, $391 month
loan balance on $9,000.00
new air conditioner with
4000 W Generator. new
tires, muffler system com~
pletely rewired . big engine
with 4 barrel carbortor,
automatic. completely aelfcontained. water, hot water.
stove with oven , gas and
electric heat. sleeps 4 adults ·
guarantee for 90 davs.

NORTH

.K3

"A 7 3
PAI,..TING - interior arid
ext8rior. plumbing, roofing.
aome remodeling. 20 yn.

+J 7 43

.A IOU

WEST

•s
•a

s~

fKQIOI2
+743

Roofing. shingles. spouting
and aluminum siding work.
Insured , Free Estimates.

614-949-2686 .
Hi Pressure Cleaning. Aluminum siding , mobile homes,
wood, brick, sandstone
building and homes. Also
heavy equipment . Fully In ·
aured. Free estimates. 614-

"QIOSI
+AU I

•Ks

SOUTH
.AQJlotll
"K 4

... .

Painting interior &amp; exterior,
wallpaper hanging . Insured.
free estimates. 614 ~949 -

2686.

E.4ST
•• 7 2

Call 614-388 ·9857 .

+QH%

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
W~sl

Nortb

t+

Eas&amp;

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT
3•
·49

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pal:~

Pas.s

2•

SovU•
3•
4•

&amp;+

Opening lead: t K

949-2686.

GENe'S CARPET CLEAN ·
lNG SERVICE . Rocom ·
mended for profeuional
steam cleaning . Scotch
Guard - Free Estimates. Call

Gene at 814 ·992 ·6309.

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. 0 ne
piece custom fit vour home .

By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby
Any pair good enough lo
reach a world championship
final match is likely to h.aye
a bidding kit lull ol &amp;•dgets .
Now look al bow this champlon pair bid to six spades .

Interior-exterior painting .
No job to smalL Experienced
on bern roofs . 614-949·

BLACKBUR

••'
••

REALTY
446-0008

RON'S Television Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Qua•ar. and

house calla. Coli 676 ·2398
or 446 -2454 .
f &amp; K Tree Trimming. stump
removaL Ca11675- 1331 .

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxporienced roofing. including
hot tar (lppllc•tlon. carpen ttlr . electrician. mason. Call

304 -675 -.2088 or
4560.

67~ , .

Bex~u•

lonnie

FOR SALE

EK;cav•ting.

.

4 Bedroom. tri-level. 2 baths. large LR w/ fireplace. din. R.
. 1arJe equipped kitchen, family rom. rec. room w/Kinc
stove. 2 car p~e. I y, acres. near HMC &amp;town. Priced in
the 80's. 16 x24 building_
.

Dozer. bllckhoe, dumptruck.

Work by hour or job. Cell
448·7~03 .

Services Offered
84

Electrical

~~ I__MPROVEMENTS

&amp; Refrigeration ·
DEPENDABLE WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR . Guaran teed work. Call anytime
614-256-8620 or 814 ·2661207.

1.__

Dissolutions or Uncontested Divorces. $350 ·00
(Costs included).
Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

SEWING Moc~ino ropoiro,
oorvlco . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp;

...~

HAMLIN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-lAW

.

44G.QS

Service Sharpen

Scisoon . Fabric Shop,

windows

storm windows &amp; doors
Alumrnum &amp; vinyl
siding
'
Howmel Patio Covers
Howmet screen rooms

55

Mobile home awnings

Aluminum utility
buildings

691 Miller Drive

Co unties

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR

446 ·1641

~t=========j-==~F:•:•:e:E:•:Ii:m:a:t:e:•==

SERVICE
call City or
Furniture
304-676-2608
446 -

0831 .

SOLUTION

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER ·
VICE .. Call 614-387-7471
or 614-367-0591 .

Home
Improvements

Need tom et hI ng hauled
away or 1omething moved?

We'll do it. Call 446-3169
between 9 and 5.

JIMS

Roofing and Carpentry
work , general repairs , cell
Anthony Williamson . 814-

WATER

SERVICE .

Call Jim Lanier , 304 -875 -

7397 .

367 -0194.
CALL

304-875 ·1293 lor

concrete and black top Bltimatel. metal building and
fence erection cotts. Alto
buying and selling heavy
equipment . Horse &amp; atock
trailer sales . Furniture, electrical &amp; electronic tuppliM
and equipment . Pleasant
Meadows D1stribotors and

Salee.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Ave .. Gallipolis.
446· 7833 or 446-1833

L._-----------'

I SUNDAy PUZZLE J

r""

HOUSE &amp; roof peinters. free

ootimateo. 304 · 773 -6157
or 773-6908 .

82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

304 -895 -3802.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

Get your carpel in ship
shape . Water removal, FREE

ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEAN lNG , C/IPTAIN
STEAMER 614-448-2107.

•
••

! ami~. You'll
this home situated on almost 3
acres with tots of trees, pond &amp; ctrcular drt.e. The
2300. sq. ft. of ll•ing area tncludes an equrpped
kitchen, LR. family rm., laundry, 2 baths, 2 WB
fireplaces &amp; cent. air. Call lor apporntment.

completely equrpped &gt;~chen, 2 car garage and
MUCH MOR£. Drive by this one and then call
446-0008 lor an appomlmenl to see the rnsrde.

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3888 or 4464477

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
insured , free e•timetes .

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

Phone 614 -367 -0636, call

Plumbing. Coli 614 -367 0676 .

after 6 .

lNG . Fomerly

NEAT AND CLEAN - CONVENIENT IN TOWN
lOCATION - 2 BRs. 12x 18 LR. large klchen &amp;
LOCATION PLUS QUIAITY should desctibe
· tqvety 3 BR brick ranch.Special learures a~e a large drning area wtth range. rein ~&amp; disp.. laundry with
.LR &amp; .dining rm.. equ1pped kitchen, l ,h baths. washer &amp; dryer. new carpet. expenstve drapes,
taundl)l , qual~ carpet, cent arr &amp; an oversaed 2 caroor1. gas heat humrdrlrer, dehumtdrfter, atr
tar. garage. Located on U.S. 35 West &amp; shown by cleaner, central arr. Watch the Blue Oevtllootball
games from th e large rear sun deck $50.000' NO,
•appointment
$37,500.
.fiNISH THIS ONE YOURSELF AND SAVE MONEY
_ Approx. 10 acres, mostly Hat land near Rodney GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/1, located
, ·~sx60 unfinrshed house wtth lull basement. Lots of south of Mercervrlle. Approx. 20ft trllable, balance
:potential.
woods. tob. base. Owners wtll h~p finance .

·'

GREEN TOWNSHIP -CENTRAllY lOCATEDacre farm has frontage on Slate Route 58&amp;
Fairfield Centenary Road &amp; Yanco Fairfield Rd.
lxcellent for farming or development Older ~ rm.
&amp; bath, also included. Owne~ will consider sellrng
'sm~ler tracts of sh&lt;lrt term financin&amp; Call lor more
·information.

:uz.

WANTED FOR:

l

. FARMER'S FARM - Approx. 50 acres near
Vinton. All clean crop &amp; pasture land, remodeled 3
' BR home 60x80 barn 2 silos ~ormer darry larml.
· :lnintson Zrds.,largepOnd SEETHISONEBEFORE
:' PlOWING TIM~ $49.~ .
•
•PRICE REDUCED TO $35.900! - Owner says sell
· th~ month. 3 BR ranch w~h brick frorrt features a
:nM:e lami~ room wtth chimney tor WB stove, LR.
·large kitchen, laundry rm. and large back porch.
: located on Bulaville Rd.
:PRICED REDUCED TO $3),!100! -Be the fi~t to
bargain priced ranclt wtth 3 61&gt;, bath, large
: j~~~ 12xl8lR 1Dxl8 fami~ rm. and laund~ .
' on a flat ~I in Centenary.

IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - You owe R to
yoorsetl and your family to see thrs orr e. 3 SR\ 2
baths larger LR &amp; dining rm .. galley k~chen wrth
refliti. DW, range &amp; d ~p . , den, family rm . gas heat
&amp; cent air, covered patio, &amp; full basement. All tM
on a well landscaped lot at the edge of town. FHA
- VA - CONV(NTIONAL

9
14

20

Real Estate General

Realty

446-3636
Judhr~ Co11oday 446 -g696

COiatta CnomQey 675-4008
CReaQtohs
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summ•r

$51 ,000 for a fabulous 3 yr. old l -shaped ranclt. Beaut~ul comer

lot. formal living rm. w/ lireplace, ]:Alr.i fami~ rm. w/ woodburner. 3
BR, l'h baths, recently redecorated.
MEIGS COUNTY near Forlted Run lake. Over 3 acres beautffut'
custom buift Jlr.illr.i cedar home 3,370 sq. ft. living area plus full
basement l.g. lormalliving room w/ bay windows, lireplac~ lormaf
dining room plus dinette. Family rm. with easy access from CIIS!om
designed, M equipped k~chen. Spacious study and central foyer.
4 large bedrooms, 211 baths. A very desirable quality bull home
Shown by appointment on~.
'
FARMS. LAND. LOTS:
5 Acres-- home. new born .............................. $34.900
2 Acres-Trlifer hoolr-up .................... .................................... $12,000
t4 Acres-Ky!fl' Creek"'" ................................................ $17,500
22 Acres- Nice home, wooded ....................... .... ........... ..... $44,000
26 Acres-Good hom~ born ....... .......................................... $43.000
112 Acres-Qwi!I!M cedlr home .......................................... $280.000
121 Acres-Good fl'm lind, lltlme ...... ................ ................. ~12i,OOO
270 Acres-farmen fl'm. mod. lltlme .....................................$ll0,000
154 Acres-r.tld. home, ••c:etlent farm .................................. ~187,000
176 Acres-Min. righl. poss. owner frnance ...........................$81.500

REEDSVILLE out Rt.
Family
comfort wijh plenty of 1oom in this one.
2
baths, 1V room , and extra nice kRchen. This home I
has a garage and workshop in a lui basement. l'llr.i an
Natural gas heat All

=oo~a~n.J~::;!;=~

WE'LL HELP YOU FIND A HOllE PlUS FINANCING YOU CAN
AFFORD. FHWVA RATES ARE IIOW 11 Y,%, IIIOIIGAGE
REVENUE BOND IIONEY STILl AYAIWLE AT 9.911% TO
QUALIFIED BUYERS.

'25 ~ocust gt~eet, QaQQipclir. (Slhio
\

fr
' '

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i-

ll'qi' nel tll 'f
It Ill( hi

hO t•: P

SPRING COLDRS - Newly painted yellow/whftel brtMn Shutt~,
coontry setlln~ 3 BR. lg. living room. country k•chen, covered
patio, garage, workshop, carport. As~ng $34,000.

'

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138

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81 Bergo•n
even Is
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COUNTRY SETTING.- River, only afew miles from crly, well cared
101 brick, lovely sloping lawn, blacktop drive, super buy.Call lor the
price and an appointment to see lh~ home'

. ml

D r om e r1 i'lr~

estate

!12 ACRE ESTATE - fabulous log home has over 2600 sq. ft.
livrng area plus garage. 4 bedrooms, 2'h baths. Master su~e has
fireplace. prrvate bath. Fam~x rm. w/fi~eplace. Form~ living 100m
has fire place-conversat~n Pl1 area. Formal dtmng pkrs dinette.
Equ ipped pullman knchen. Shown by appointmect on~.

1\i,l fltVI ' fl ll li\ ,11 '{

Be comos

69 Reslaura111

A GREAT DEAl - 10'h'li&gt; Blend may be pos~ble on th• 3 BR.
brick ranch . ~C school rlstrrct $48.000.

q 1 Gnv t•nt
'"( ' M ,l lo.t •

DCSI

2:2

HOliDAY PARK - 2 camprnglots, lurn~hed 26 ft.
Trotwood !ravel trarter. shelter house. uhlrly
buildtn~ county ,water, sewer, access to Raccoon
Creek. Priced tor quic k sa le.
GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP - 15.5 acres mi l,
n~~y remodeled 2 story farm home. 7 rms. bath,
'basement. 4 fi rep~ces, barn &amp; tobacco base.
Asking $38,900.
.
CREMEENS ROAD - 53 acres mil, approx.lOA
bllable, balance woods, remodeled home, 1\\
stor ~s. 7 rms. &amp; bath. new ~d rng, new well,
excellent 24x40 steel burld tn~ several old
buildtngs. On~ $37,500.

1\C ROS S
1 Onnkpy
4 Leave m .1
r1urry

Dewitt ' s

Canaday

'•

NEW LISTING - Beautiful f ormal Home ~ Pomeroy
- 3 bedrooms. 11h baths. larRe room with unu~ual
features throughout. fireplace. rec. room rn basement,
sunny krtchen w1t11 bar , trash compactor,
disliw.,;her, ra~ge. hood. Chatn link fence r.n baCk yard.

Th~

5 AN ADDRESS TO BE PROUD OF - 331 DEBBY
is jlr.it right 101 your growing DRIVE _ 3 RRs, 2'h baths, ~rge lamrly rm .. l R.
HOU!StS DON'T -

ALIAS: Hank Cleland, Jr.

extra unattached

T
-

~ill'S

Nu· Prime replacement

511 Second A,. .. Gallipoi~
Sel'\ling Gallia &amp; Me llS

Pomeroy. 992 · 2284.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE,ASSN.)

81

2488.
t

South 'a respl!nse of two
spades wu a slam invitational 11me force and
showed a very strong spade
holding,
North's two no-trump
rebid said, "I have 1 bal·
anced minlmuni."
South's bid of three dla·
m011ds lbowed a stn&amp;Ieton or
void and club tupport. South
would not have rt!IJ&gt;OIIded
two spades with a spade-diamond twO'suiter . l'lorth's
call of three ~des said, "I
have a hl&amp;h spade lt]llrl of
my balanced minimum."
South's lour diamonds
· said , " I am void of
diamonds."
North's call of four hearts
showed that ace, and South's
jump to six spades closed
the bidding. It was pooolble
but · higbly improba61e that
North held the SllAde king,
J;leart ace and clu~-- ace-king
lor his balanced mmimum. ,
The play was easy. South
rulled the diamond lead,
drew trumps, lost the club
finesse and claimed the
slam.
It turned out to be a 500
point or II IMP swing since
at the other table North
passed as dealer and South
o~ned with a super-strong
btd of lour spades to shut out
,all slam bidding.

1~~::::::~:::::::::::::::~-r;:;::::::~~~::::::::::::i
-

Guaranteed. Advanced Gut- 81
Home
tor. tDoy 614-592 -4056.1
Improvements
jnig~t 614 -898 -8205.1

Real Estate General

"BIG BROKER"

Fair Appraisals. .
Shoots for Quick Sales.
Often Seen with Home
Buyers.
Known to be active in community service.
Call Cleland · Realty if you
· want this gang member.

ceilings commer-

,Ekcavating

DOZER WORK By Tod
Hanfta, ponda. ditches.
booomento, etc. Cell 448 4907 . Corter • Eveno
TrAnaportatio,. ,

Accurate bidding

cial and re~idential . free
estimates. Call 614· 266 1 182.

68 Frolic 20 foot travel

1976 HONDA C8 550 . 4 easily - Call304-676-6971
St. Pt. or 675-6517 to see . Will

cyl. 1200 Vlond
Pleasant.

tex~ured

83

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Water WellS . Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .

Cleland Gang leader

lETART :.... fantasttc •1ew1 Approxrmately 19 acres
wooded land with 2·3 bedroom mobrle t10me.
Greenhouse. new block toot cellar, outbuildtn&amp;
Mnerals induded.

650

Mixim, shaft drive. new tire ,
2 helmets. excellent condi tion. $1500 . 304 ~ 882 -

-:::
~'
~;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BIUIDBURY - 3 bedroom ranch home. 2 yrs. old,
14 bu rldrn~ wood burner and bnck chrmnev.
,M,, • ., rnsulated. B.B. eloctrrc heat. Apptox. ~ acre

YAMAHA ,

STUCCO PLASTERING

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. 30 years 8XP':ti8nce.
specializing· in built up roof.

Priced to ooll. Call 2566201 oftor 6pm ,

VERY SMAll DOWN PAYMENT - Settrng on lhe edge ol town.
Wooded tot. lots of prtvacy 3 bedroom ranch . li•ing room
· w /w ~urner. drmn g roorn, large ~eel ott dtntng room.
unfinisned basement and g~rage. Washington school. Very low 30s.
Make us an oHer.

TARA ESTATE' bi·level, 4 bedroom. 2'h baths, modern
~lchen; formal drning and deck area. huge lamtly &amp; roc room.
Prrvale use of Club House - swtmming pool and basketball courts.
lots of nrce landsca pi11g.

BMR 436 - NEW liSTING - ExcellenI sta~er home wrlh 2 BR
lR, DR. n~e knchcn. ulthly and new bathroom. Carpeled
throughout. Screened pat10. carport. U.rge lot Call lor appornlmecl

conditiQn. $860 .. 304-675 -

Home
Improvements

..p. Call 614 -388 -9652.

446-7325 .

1980 ODYSSEY, o•collent

EXCEllENT STARTER HOME - Modern 3 bedroom. ltvrng room,
drnrng room. modern krtchen. laundry room. mce tamtly room with ·.
a woodburner. Large storage area of workshop, marntenance tree.
Nice lot rn c1ty school d ~trict Priced 1n the 40s. $2,100 to $8,400
down - dependrng on financing.

BMR 389 - Thrs lrne hom~ has 4 bedrooms and rs localed close
to town. You w1 l~ have 11 la rge lot w1th a counly atmosphere and
have all the crty conveniences Call nowl

detailS! pwn1~r an1ti04S \v sell!

1978 Hondo 750K . Block

81

SLIDE IN Road Cruiser
camper. self contained .

with gold t1ripes, lots of

HilDA DRIVE - · Bnck tn -level. farrvrew Estates. 3 HRs. liVIng,
room, mod. krtchen, family room wrth woodburner, basement,
Garage and storage building lots of trees, shrubs and flower.;. ~
Washrngton Elementary. Make us an offer.

Anyttme

1972 .FORD truck bod
t1 60.00. Stop bumper
t50.00. 304-875 -2199.

1973 ·super Glide Horloy 78
Camping
Oovidton . Good cond . ·
Equipment
u.ooo. 814-992·8072.
---------

SPRING VALLEYS FINEST ol
rare charm . rare value. Quahly-burll throoghout lot unusual~
wcll tandscanod, huge lrvrng room -w/ bow wtndow. spaC!Olr.i
tEO rooms. 2Y;sparkhng bath:;, complete modern k~chen w~h all
the e&lt;lras, beautiful ia.mtly room wtth bnck wal~. lovely ftreptace
and complete bar . loads of cklset space. A picture perlect home
tns~e and oul. Owner wrlltng 10 help wilh financing to qualrtied
buye1.

BMR 431 - NEW liSTING - Brrck ~anch rncludes 3 BRs LR
IJR. lamrly room, 2' .' balhs. srlualed on38 acres Calllo see thrsone
to&lt;1,yl

CENTRAL REALTY

extra crome. · exc. HEAVY duty· Reese hitch for
firm. Coli Chevy pickup, '250. 304oftor 4PM . 458-1838 .

W. Va.

BRIDGE

Accessories

Harley Davidson 1uper

ON TWO ACRE LANDSCAPED LOT
.IN BAUM ADDITION

$550 . 937 -2026 .

spoed $3 .000 . 614-992·
1974 CHEVY, Malibu Clas 7447 .
sic. all eMtras. keystone

.&amp;

lo~e a gracK&gt;us sett1ng1 Home

$7.000 . 304-882 -2036 .

lux . sedan . 73 Coupe Deville Cadillac. 71 Sedan
Cadillac. 72 C -20

Auto Parts ·

Real Estate General

2300 mile. 246 -9143 .

1977 Ford LTD -2, PS , AC,4 USED CARS , 77 ,98 Olds
dr ., high mileage, exc . cond.

Ohio-Point

nore . Like new.. less than

- -- - -

S495 . Call 614-245 -9570.

Beautiful·Brick Ranch Home

June 5, 198a ..

•

�the ~••docov Times-Sentinel

1983

Will they or w&lt;!n't
.they? Fluoridation
still issue in Canton

Local Briefs
Machine blamed in death
roLUMBUS, Ohio (API- kathern M. ReltmlreofPomeroyhas
filed a $2.25 mii!Jon suit against Interna tiona! Haxvester Co.,
contending the design of a fann combine caused her husband's
death.
Olin Reltmlre dled Nov. 13, 1981, of Injuries sustained when he
became caught in the combine's corn bin.
Mrs. ReltmJre's suit was filed 11)ursday in U.S. District Court.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Qty
CouncllisexpectedtodecldeJune13
whether it will continue its decadelongbattleagaln$tadcllngfluorideto
Canton's water supply.
F1uortde, a chemical . found In
many toothpastes, is added to water
to help fight tooth decay. especially
in children. Canton Health Coltlmlssloner Robert Pattison said rnore
tlllilrlOO'rllllli011 people·tn 8.000 U.s.
eommunltles are now drinking
fluoridated water.
Studies Indicate tooth decay can
be reduced 65 percent with fluoridalion, he said.
. Yet since 1974, Canton has been
fighting Ohto Environmental Pro-

Carleton scholarship available
SYRACUSE - Carleton Memorial scholarship applications are
now available, according to Milton Varian, secretary. Applications
are available to Syracuse residents only planning on a ttending
college In the fall.
Applications must be Cll!ed out and returned by June23. Forms are
available at Varian's residence.

Mesh crib playpen warning
POMEROY -John D. Jacobs, deputy health commissioner of the
Meigs County Health Department, in cooperation wlth the state
health department, Is warning parents thatdrop·side mesh playpens
and portable mesh cribs, used wllh a side left down. poses severe
safety hazards to infants.
Jacobs sald that when one side ofthe playpen or crib is down, m esh
forms a loose pocket leaving a gap between the edge of the floor
board and the mesh side. An infant can fail or roll into the pocket and
suffocate.
Jacobs warned that drop sides · should be locked securely In
position w henever a child is in the playpen or crib. The drop side in
the down position presents a serious risk of s~ffoca tion to very young
infants.

Legion post elects officers
GALLIPOLIS - Jabez Parsons was e lected commander of
American Legion Lafayette Post 27 for 1983-84 in the recent post
·
officer election .
Jarvis Klrl,ly was elected first vice commander and Char les Berry
was named second vice commander.
Other .offlcers el.e cted were Arthur Wroblewski, finance officer:
. .John Pasquale, adjuta nt; Rev. Everett Delancy. chaplain: Thomas
White. sexvlce officer; Ronald Calhoun, judge advocate; and
William Jackson, sergeant-at-arms.
The new commande r and all other officers wlli assume their duties
at a dlrmer sla ted for 6:30p.m. Monday.
Parsons said he would work toward reinforcing the Legion's
national theme of "We Help America Work," and intends to expand
the post's community service programs.
He also applauded work done by his prf'dPCessor . .1. Frank
Hamilton, durlilg whose term the post building on Bob McCorll]ack
Road was expan.ded .and lJost membt&gt;rs)lip was· increased to Its
highest point in 30 years.

Gall pleads guilty to charges
FREMON'r. Ohio !AP I -.Jack
Gall made a net reduction In his
prtson sentence bypieadinggullty to
kidnapping a 19-year-oid Genoa
woman, Sandusky County prosecutors say.
Prosecutors sa id Friday they
probably could not have won a
murder or aggravated murder
conviction against Call and that's
why they offered a plea bargain
under which Gall pleaded gu ilty to
(9dnapplng In exchange for having a
charge of aggravated murder
dropped.
Gall. a ·former Sandusky County
sheriff's deputy. was charged with
the kidnapping and aggravated
murder of Debra Vlne in 19!10.
Assistant count y prosecutor
Alfred Cooper said \ha t based on the
evidence prosecutors had, a jury
probably would have convicted Call

of mansla ught er, whtch would not
have increased the time he spent in
ja il bt&gt;forP parole
Ga ll was serving 26 to 90 years in
prison for earlier conv ictions. in·
elud ing cx tortJon, auto theft and
escape.
Coop&lt;&gt;r sa id prose&lt;:utors con·
suited Miss Vine's pa.rents bt&gt;fore
offering the plea bargain deal and
the parents agreed.
Call, 36, a ppeared in Sandusky
County Common P leas Court for an
evidence hearing Friday, but the
hf'arlng wasn'l held because he
accepted
the terms
plea bargain
offer.Cali
Under the
of the offer,
agreed to accept a prison term of
Sf'ven to 25 years on the kidnapping
conviction.
Earli&lt;&gt;r prison sentf'nces were
reduced to a pair of seven to 25 year
sentences, making Gall's prison
total prison term 21 to 75 years.

. AFTERNOON ACCIDENT - GaDipolls City Po~ cited Emmett
Raines, 54, 42 Nell Ave., for DWI and failure to yield when the station
wagon he drove collided with 11 wrecker owned by Robens Brothers
Garage, ~ Eastern Ave., at Second Avenue and OHve Street at 1: ~
p.m . Friday. The wrecker was driven by John P. Robens, 28, Rt. I,
Gallipolis. PoUce saJd Raines reportedly puDed from a stop sign Into the
path of Roberts' wrecker, crwslng the coUislon.

Tractor recovered
GALLIPOLIS- A Massey Ferguson tractorownedbyRayWa ugh,
Rt. 2, Crown City, was reported
stolen Friday afternoon but was
later recovered, according to the
G a Ill a Co unty SherIff's
Department.
.
·· Waugh s"id the tractor was
missing sometime between 1: 30and
5 p.m., but at 8:30p.m. the tractor
was reported having been returned.
Deputies are also investigating
three other theft reports dealing
with outdoor equipment reported
Friday.
Beverly E llis. Rt. 1. Cheshire,
returned to her property on Moore·
Jeric ho. Road Friday and discovered a John Deere tractor was
missing, while Richard Long, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, said a rototillcr was
taken from his residence.
A Homellte chainsaw owned by
Kenneth Farmer. 641 Third Ave.,
was reported missing from an
unlocked outbuilding at Farmer's
business, the Country Carryout, 581
Upper River Rd.
Jailed overnight were Fred B.
Paxton, 22, Rt. 1. Patriot, for DWI,
and Carl R. Bing .Jr., 20, Rt. 2,
GaUlpolis, for receiving stolen
property. · ··
.
Cited by Gallipolis City Pollee
were Kendall C. Wandling, 20, Rt.l,
Point Pleasant. failure to display
valid reglstrati(ln; Janusz Harris,
21, Rt. 2, Bidwell, open container;
Franklin E. Wolfe, 20, Racine, ·no

Shaffer, 18, 1821 Chatham Ave.,
disorderly conduct; and Janet E .
Carr, 39, Point Pleasant, and Mark
A. Banks, 25, Rt. 2• Gallipolis, each
for speeding.

:~~~~ency orders to fluoridate

ed
Two injur in
Saturday crash

Council President Ray Denczak
said heopJX&gt;sesfluoridatlon because
he dOes not believe government has
the right to force medication on the
public. Denczak has suggested that
council appropriate money to buy
Ouorlde pills for people who want
them.
This week, about. 20 Canton
residents and others told council in
person or by letter that they, too,
oppose fluoridation.
Glenna Post, a retired teacher
and author from Wooster, told a
council hearing Thursday that
fluoride Is a polson that comes from
waste from the aluminum and

GALLIPOLIS - 'l'wo Gallla
County teenagers were injured In a
m otorcycle accident on Nelghbort
hood .R oad early Saturday.
· DanlelN. Paxton,l7,drlverofthe
motorcycle, and Darrell R. Cox, 16,
a passenger. both of Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
were both treated at the scene for
their injuries.
The GalllJX&gt;lls post of the state
highway patrol said Paxton w&lt;JS
southbound at 6:31 a.m . when he
reportedly lost contrQI on a t:~~rve
and struck a mailbox, slightly
damaging the motorcycle.
Paxton was cited forDWI and no
operator's license, the patrol said.

r----.,---------------------__;______

;_~----

·'

Cross.Your Heart Summer Sale·

..

1

A guide t9 loeal .

. .

Television .Programming

June 5 thru ·June
II
••

20°/oOFE·

Cross \bur Reart" selected styles·:.
Super Look "panties

Includes complete

The.sale is on! Sensational savings on
Cross Your Heart'-- America's #1 bras
-- and smoothing Super Look panties.
Choos11 from selected popular Undercup
Support Pane.! bras, Stretch bras, Seamless bras, Soft Sider• bras. and for the
first time ever, Elegance bras by Cross
Your Heart• -- .and cross -over to.a better
figure! Hurry in now, and you can save
20% on smoothing Super Look'' panties,
too. Clothes look smooth ... you look super!

li.~ t.i ng.~

Showbeat
Pages 3, 4

r~m~u~ffl~e~r~;
M~u~ll~in=sj,Phil
1~8~,R~ti.E.2t,~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~J
Vinton, ~W~a~yn~e~K~.~
unsafe vehicle;

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

We'll Be Here Tomorrow to Back-up
'
What We Say a~d Do Today!

Couples file for marriage
GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples filed for marrtage licenses
thls past week In Ca lllla County
Probate Court.
J ames 0. Bennett Jr., 27. Kitt s
Hill, teacher. and Redilh Ga ll
Boster; :ll, 5W Spring Valley Drive,
title staff assistant.
Benjamin P. Meek, 18, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, farmer. and Gwendolyn S.
Knox, 17, Patriot Star Route.
unemployed.
George D. Miller, 81, Waterloo,
retired fanner. and Maggie Walker .
67. Rt. 4, Oak Hill. housewife.
Michael J. Camden. ~- Rt. l .
Bidwell, truck driver, and Diane R
Campbell, 22, Rio Grande, licensed
practical nurse.

fertilizer llidllstrles"It's criminal to make anyone
drink fluoridated water.' ' she ~­
"NobOdy can profit except .the
aluminum and fertlllzer lnd\lSt111!S
and the undertakers."
·
·
Canton re:;ldent Bette Rubel
contended It would be wasteful to
fluoridate the entire water supply.
I)€Causeonly aportionoftheWaterls
used1or·cookingol'drlnkingr - - -~ •
Speaking In favor of fluoridation,
Elizabeth Bennett sald she raised 12
children In areas with fluoridated
water before moving to Canton in
1972.

FINANCING RATE AVAILABLE
ON CERTAIN NEW BUICKS AND
PONTIACS. SEE HARLAND WOOD
BOB BRICKLES, JIM COCHRAN OR
GREG SMITH FOR DETAILS.

Harold 1,. Heugcl, 39, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, boilermaker. and Ida M.
Nibert. 32, Ga ll ipolis Ferry,
homemaker.
Carlton L. Stroop. 24, llOl Sunset
Drive, S&lt;'lf-employed, and Char len&lt;•
Hively, 25,l&lt;err, proof operator.
Ricky A. Carroll. 20. 1409 Eastern
Ave .. unemploycd ,and ChristinlaA.
White. 18, 1441 Eastern Ave.,
waitress.
.Jel'frey R. Hawley, 28, Middlepori, U.S. Na;y, and Donna M.
Persons. 21. Kanauga. Duff's
employee.
.
Terry J. Reynolds, 18, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, maintenance, and Robin
E. Massey. ' 18, Rt. 2, Patriot,
unemployed.

Psychology Today
Page 4
Blackstone
Pages 5, 6
THIS IS GUS - Jtlllna COIIIIIry 11111Rc •lnP'I: G•llllrdln wu nlcltnamed GUll all a
l.eelui«er - and It llluck. The lllllpr of Tulsa, olda., hu beea married lllx IUne!. (AI'
I ,

erjihoto).

Hollywood

Pages 6, 8

Serving Gallia, 'Meigs and Mason Counties

1980 Olds Toronado
local one owner, silver metallic. Diesel economy. loaded.

ONLY

1982 PONTIAC

GRAND ,PP.iX
12,000 low miles, loaded.
Local one-owner.

PHOTOS ..;... Carrying out a yesteryear theme In 11 dining room of the
·~ Jan !!&amp; Pomeroy are 80flllli!O pholop-aphll depleting eq Melp
·Ccuj&amp;Y tJOOIP MOlt of .the photo!~ are CCJI!Ied throtiRh courtesy ~f the
~ CGullty Pioneer and IIIICo.tcal 8cJcle&amp;y.
.

$8995

1976 ·Audi Station Wagon
locally owned , auto .. AC, only 32,000 miles. Showroom
clean.1
WAS 3495
. Special at

$288.8

1980 BONNEVILLE
COUPE

31,000 low miles, we sold it new. Artie
white.
100% WARRANTY

1982 KAWASAKI
440 MOTORCYCLE

Only 2,500 miles. Extra Sharp.

SAVE

BUICK-PONTIAC

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