<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13809" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/13809?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:22:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44907">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/414d13b0d796e1e86cd286fa5aa2b6ec.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b2f735b8f847550f8dda6895dbd3f5c2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43204">
                  <text>-I

Page-12-The Oaily Sentinel

•· Pon ...

o,

•

Middleport, Ohio

....---Local briefs:--Today's
Times-Sentinel

Superintendent files c~arges
Meigs Local School Superintendent Dan C. Morris has filed three
charges against a Middleport woman who allegedly struck hlm
following a meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education In
Middleport Tuesday night .
Charged In the · Meigs County Court with assault, aggravated
menacing threats and obstructing official business Is Carol Hubl;lard.
Manis said he was approached at the close of Tuesday night's
m eeting by Hubbard, who stated she wanted to talk to htm . Morris
alleges Hubbard Issued a couple of threats before slapping hlm In the
lace.
Hearing Is expected to be held In county court on the charges within
the next lew days.

AIODI lbe River """" "' 8-1-ll
Area deaths ••• •••••.•••·........ A-8

Busloeaa ..••••..•••...••.•.....•. D-8
Ctaaslfteds ................... D-Z..7
Edllorlal ........................ A·%
Farm ........... ............... C-6-7

Locai .................. ......... A-5-&amp;
S110rts .. ....................... C-1-5
:I'V·Comlcs ................ .Insert

Dr. E. Wade Underwood oi, London, Ohlo, has been named
provost-vice president for academic affairs at Rio Grande College
and Community College.
He replaces Dr. Clyde M. Evans. who recently accepted the
position of vice president lor development a t RGC-CC. Underwood
will be respons ible for academic programs, admissions and records,
student development, Intercollegia te at hletics a nd personnel.
The appointment was praised by Dr. Paul C. Hayes , RGC-CC
president, w ho said Underwood's academic background and
professional experience "will make (him&gt; a welcome addition to our
campus."
·
Underwood hol.d s bachelor's and master's degrees from Murray
(Ky.) State College and a doctorate In educational administration
from the Univetsity of Akron. He has served In various management
positions tlu:oughout the state for the past 15 years.
Most recently scrvlng as a consultant to Hayes, Underwood has
been a teacher In Akron public schools and h;ls he ld executive
·
pos itions with the Ohio Education Association.

Bill would reduce pulluiants
WASHINGTON- Legislation requiring a lQmUJJon-ton reduc tion
In U.S. sulfur dioxide e m issions as a means of attacking the na tion' s
acid rain probil'lll was Introduced' In the House on Thursday.
The bill . s ponsored by Rep. Gerry Sikorski. D-Minn .. would pay for
the cleanup through a surcha r ge on e lectric bills that he said would
cost the average hom eowne r between 50 cents a nd $1 a month .
The bill also would impose restrictions on sources of nitrogen
oxides, believed to be a nother cause o f acid rain .

GOP's Bill Miller succumbs
BUFFALO, N.Y.- William E. M!Uer , the Republican candidate
tor vice president when Barry Goldwater made hls White House run
In 1961, died today a t Millard FUlmore Hosplt~ l.
MJUer, 69, had been a pat lent at the hOspital for several weeks and
suffered a s troke last weekend. He had been In serious condition
s ince then.
MJUer looked at the 1964 election loss phllosophlcally.
" I was going to retire from politics anyway, " he told a group
1966, "and ·I just did it a little more prominently than I had planned . I
don' t have any regrets at all. l met a lot of people and had a lot of tun .
It was a great experience for my wife a nd my daughter s."

-In

Ruling could affect Ohio plan
COLUMBUS- The U.S. Supreme Court rullhg on New J ersey's
redistricting plan clear s the way for acUon on an Ohio case that
questions the validity of Ohio's 21-dlstrtct plan.
In May 1982 a three-judge federal panetln Columbus said It would
await the high court's decision In the New Jersey case before ruling
on whether Ohio' s new congressiona l districts are as equal as they
should be.
In li s ;&gt;4 decision Wednesday, the Supreme Court deterrnlned tha i
the congresslonlli districts drawn for New J ersey after the 19ffi
census arc not sufficiently equal in population.

Ohio lottery winners
The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 898.
In the "Pick 4" game, played five times a week, the winning
number was OJJO.

'

Ohio forecast
Clear tonight. Low 67-67. Winds easte rly to northeasterly' less than

10 mph. Sunny and continued wa rrn Satunday. High SG-91.

Rain~

Snow

f':!·.;l

WEATHEJ,t FORECAST - The Nallonal Weather Service
loree11818 showertl for Saturday from Texas and Oklaboma to Florida.
Showertl are aleo forecast lor New Mexico and Colorado. Moot areas are
expected to he warm. (AP Luerphoto)

CHICKEN .BARBECUE
· Sportsored By:

THE PQMEROY VOL. FIRE DEPT.
BEGINNING' AT 11 :00 A.M.
SUNDAY, JUNE 26th

-....:---

'.

.

story oo Page IH

•

tmts

ttdint
• •j

9 Se(tlonl, 10 Page• 15 Centt

A Mul ti mtdia Inc . New•Paper

Auto sales throughout area
f'

.

.

schedule landing at Cape Oanaveral was scrubbed becasne o.f wet ·
weather. '(AP Laserphoto)

Challenger lands safely without fanfare
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE , very cold this morning. The bad
Calif. (AP) Space shutt le new~lsthatltls3,000mUesaway, "
Challenger, rerouted on its 96th ground controller G uy Gardner told
orbit, went around the world two the flight c rew as Cha llenger rolled
extra revolutions today a nd gilded to a stop.
without fanfare to asunriselandlng
"Tllat's what I was afraid of,"
on the famJUar bed of Rogers Dry Crippen replied.
Lake.
Crippen' s c rew Included pilot
"Challenger, wheels down," com- Rick Ha uck a nd mission specialists
mander Robert Crippen reported as Ride, John Fabian and Dr. Norman
the 100-ton winged s huttle touch"\! Thagard.
down right on the centerline as It · A sm a ll NASA crew a nd a
e nded a near -flawless six-day mini-convoy of "sating" vehicles
mission, marrect only by waveoH on was ready and wa iting on the
the first attempt to land a s huttle In lakebed. The regular landing crew
F lorida.
was stlllln Florida.
The s hip' s five astronauts, lncludCha llenger pierced clear skies
Jng America's first woman In space onto runway 15, a hard-sand strip on
Sally K. Ride, hoped to return the the Mojave Desert, a t 6:57 a .m .
shuttle to Cape Canaveral, Fla. , but Paclllc time .
overcast Florida skies forced the
"Nice and smooth on the way In,"
disappointing di version.
said Crippen . "As I said once before .
"The good neWs Is the beer Is very , what a way to com e to Calllornla."

Units answer seven calls
Local units answered seven calls
Thursday and on Friday morning,
the Meigs County Emergency •
Medical Services reports.
Friday morning at 2: ffi a. m ., the
Rutland Unit took Vinton PhJUlps
and J . R. McDaniel from an
accident on Jhe New Lima Road to
Veterans Me morial Hospital.
Thursd ay calls Included 10: 52
a. m ., Rutland unit to DanviUe for
Myrt le Murphy, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital: Rutland, 12: 17
p.m ., to Me igs Mine I for Harley
Eblin, taken to Holzer Medical .

Center; Rutland. 6:02 p.m ., to
Langsv Uie for James Ferrell Injured in a swimming accident. to
Veterans Me m orial Hospital; 7:55
p.m ., ., Pomeroy, to Route 7 for
Francf'S Qualls , treated at her
residence; 9: 23 p .m ., Pomeroy Unit
to West Main St. for Leonard Jewell,
take n to Holzer Medical Center;
9:40p.m ., Middleport, to High St.for
E dwand Wilson, taken to Veterans
MemoriaL

Ir---..;..-------,
Hospital news

Park ...
Continued from page 1
res idence, Baum Addition.
Accondlng to the repor t, a large
dark car was traveling up the hill in
thl' Baum Addition at a pproxl·
m a te ly 10:30 p.m . Thursday. The
vehicle went off the pavement on the
right and traveled In the grass a long
the edge of the roa dway a nd s truck
and knocked off the m a ilbox a nd
newspaper tube.
Thursday evening, Timothy Dav1dson, 24, Pomeroy, was arrested
on c harges flied by his wife following
incidents thai occurred Tuesday
evening ,
Davidson is being held In Meigs
County J a il on charges of crimina l
mischief, carrying or using a
firearm while under Influence of
a lcohol or drugs a nd aggravated
m enacing.
The firearm s and aggravated
m enacing charges are. fist degree
misdemeanors and possible penalty
Is six months and or tine of up to
$1,000, For criminal mischief the
possible penalty Is 60 days and or
fine of $500.

Ve terans Memorlalllospltal
Admltted .. Myrtle Murphy,
Langsville; Patricia Winebrenner,
Syracuse; James Meadows, Por
tland; Bet ty Rood, Lancaster.
Discharged--Pau line Taylor, [)onald Weaver. Margie Lawson.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges June 23
G race Abbott, Gary Brown, Lena
Brumfield, Eirna Caldwell, Ca rrie
DeWeese. James Dunlap, Jessica
Dunn, Mary Fowler, Alvin Haggy ,
Mrs. Gregory Hines a nd son, John
Cobel, James Lane, Mrs. Charles
Lacey and daughter, Sandy Lee,
Cyrus Leeport , Ruby Mace, David
Ma nn, Harold Massey Jr .. E linor
Mills. Mary Montgomery, Geraldine Waugh , Ollie Waugh, Brodie
Whitt ington, Mrs. Charles Willis Jr.
and son.

Blrtbs
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cre m eans ,
daughter, McArthu r; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Ke ith French, daughter, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Johnson,
daughter, Kerr; Mr. and Mrs.
He rman Shepard, daughter, Oak
Hill.

He was pilot on the first shuttle Olght
In 1981.
There were hundreds of thousands of sightseer s and a rousing
we lcome-home ceremony to greet
that mission. This time, only 125
PeoPle made the trip on the chance
that weather would force the detour.
And the ceremony , planned for Cape
Canavera l, was canceled.
NASA first postponed the F lorida
la nding for 90 minutes, c iting
"patches of fog a nd low clouds."
Officials sill! hoped skies would
clear to allow an 8:30 a .m . EDT
touchdown.

Probe accident
A two-car accident occOrred
T hursday a t 9 a .m . involving the
rarsowned by Rober t M. Cooper, 51,
Longbottom and Charles R Harris,
58 Portland. on State Route 124 in
Meigs County, one -half mile wes t of
County Road 3.5.
Cooper attempted to pass Harris
as they were both traveling west-

But just after 7 a.m. EDT, as
Cr ippen was to begin descent to
Florida, Gardner radioed: "The
weatherattheCapelsgettlngworse '
Instead of better, so lt.looksllkenogo
for KSC (Kennedy Space Center).
"You guys cansltbackandrelaxa
ll ttle bit : we will be going Into
E dwandson the following orbit." HI'
added, " KSC had a redcarpetoutfor
you."
Crippen, who had practiced the
KSC landing for months, said In
rc~.ignatlon: "We would have liked
to go the re very much, but If 't he
weather's bad, that's therlghtthlng
to do and we understand." Later he
said, "We're ready to come down
whenever and w herever.''
On orbit !!/, Crippen got the
go-ahead to fire Challenger's twin
braking rockets. That slowed the
shuttle's 17,400-mph speed by 210
miles to start it from 180 miles hJgh
on an hour-long, blazing descent
back to Earth .
The ship landed on orbit 98. ·

Eastern Ath letic BoostPrs will
meet Monday, J une 27, at 8 p.m . at
the high schooL P lans for the Fourth
of July chicken barbecue will be
made.

The Rutland Garden Club wiil
meet a t 7::Jl Monday night at the
home of Mrs. C. 0 . Chapma n a nd
E lizabeth Ann Webster. Mrs. Earl
Bender. Ohio Association of Garden
Club, Region 11 director, a nd an
accredited state judge of flower
arrangtng, will be the speaker. Mrs.'
Bende r will speak on the topic,
"OAGC State News Update."

r;~~~~~~~~~~;;l
"DANCE FOR JOY"
6 Week Summer
Aerobic Session
Joy Compton-Instructor

12 CLAS~ES FOR $22.00
TUES. &amp; THURS.

4:15-5:15 or 6:30-7:30
At the Senior Citizens
Building, Mulb~rry
Heights, Pomeroy, OH. For
regislnttion:

ean 992-m3

Interviews with those applicants.
RIO GRANDE - The effort has
From there, five a re expected to
" barely" begun, accondlng to one
be
selected, with a final three to be
official close to the search for a new
chosen.
Those three will be Invited
president of Rio Grande College and
on-campus to Inspect the area a nd
Community College, but a replacemeet with RGC.CC officials.
ment lor Dr. Paul Hayes Is hoped to
Interviews are expected to be
be In place I&gt;Y September.
complete )ly mid-July, with the
A search committee of admlnls·
replacement for Hayes ready to step
trators, faculty and students met in
In two months later.
Chllllcothe Thursday night to begin
"It's hoped (the final choice) can
narrowing about 100 applicants for
work with the president to get a
the job.
smooth transition," MDler said.
College spokesman Scali D.
RobertS. Wood, chairman of Rio
Miller said that with the help of Max
Grande College's board of trusteeS,
of MJL Educational Consulsaid the search committee Is
tants ot Columbus, the committee Is
expected
to recOmmend a candidate
looking at 20 potential candidates. ·
to
both
·the
private school 's board
The committee Is to cut the list to 10
and conduct In-depth telephone

SALE

PRICED!
"Soa~s

up Moisture
Like a Sponge"

Puts an end to damp basements,
dripping pipes, mildew,
swea t ing wal ls and rust.

Lerner

Fof protection against dampness 1
damage in your home,
get an OAS·IS toda~ .

INGELS

PHONE 1·304-422-5400

a nd · t he

trustees.

community

college's

' '"''~•

"A lot of candidates didn 't give a
lot of serious thought to the thrust of
both colleges," Wood said. "The
numbers In themarketare enoromous In terrns ol those seeking a job.
But the number of pecpleTve seen
have quite a bit of expertise at
technical and educational levels.''
Search committee action Is following a timetable established after
Hayes, who has headed RGC-CC
since July-l!f/6, announced plans to
retire at a trustees' meetlngJan.15.
He expects to e nter business next
year.
,
One of the first phases of the
search was submission of a quesU-

film's attorneys, SallY Bloomfield. CableVIslon; or arrange service
expressed willingness to pull out of transfer to Cablentertalnment.
'11mettSenimel !!&amp;aft
"I would rather spend my time
the township and leaveltsservlceto
GALLIPOLIS- No compromise
Cablentertatnment, provided a fair operating our business than dealing
was reached Friday when all three
market value could be established with this problem down here," Cash
sides In the cable television lawsuit
said. "I wouldn't be opposed to
tiy both companies.
·
affecting GaUlpolls Township met to
Cablevlslon, owned by Charleston getting out of the area, but because
attempt to reach a settlement. ·
engineer Allen Thom[JSOII, clalnns of a bank loan encumbering us, and
Both cable companies Involved
agreed to meet and review the equipment now Installed In the an overbill situation , we can't tum
,
township Is worth about $50,000. But ourbacks."
sltuallon In a continuing effort to
Cash
estimated
It
cost
Cablevlslon
an appraisal conducted by Cablenavoid laking the case to the Ohio
$900
per
mile
to
lay
a
trunk
Une over
tertatnment puts the worth at$8,:Dl.
Supreme Court.
tour
mlles,
plus
$5,001
for
lnstalla·
"You know what .their docket IS . Meeting lnfonnaUy In Gallla
1
llke,' commented Ralph Cash, vice County probate court chambers at . tlon and another $lO,OOJiil eXpellleS.
Asked by Slieets II those add!·
request of GalllpoUs attorney
president of'llDnpeon Cablevlslon,
the Charleston, W.Va. ftnn that Warren Sheets, who t ept e!lalts Ilona! expenaes Including attorney's
claims Its has a
to seiVIce Cablentert.ainrilent In the litigation, fees, Cash said It t!ld. Sheets said .
three alternatives were presented those lees were not to be neaot!ated
people In the townlblp.
' with hi$ ellen! In a ~t.
That claim Is dis!Nted by town· by Cash and Btoomlleld.
"PetsonallY ,I do!!'tcare, becaUlle
1be
flnl
was
to
pursue
the
case
ship trustL'ell and Cablentertalngoing to come out of this a
noi!PdY's
ment, the Point Pleuant leiVIce throulb the cow1B; enter Into a
wllireaa
ion&amp; as this thlng~m.''
tlllltftl a~ a lranclllle to In, 1ranc1111e with tn11teet to continue
Cash
said,
exp1 diSJng Interest In
Juae 1!182..
'
leiVIne 101 resldellts atcned Upwltli
Cash. 8l.'aJI1lllllli by 0111! of hla.

ByKEVINKEILY

El.berfelds. aro open Friday 'til 8 - Saturday 'til 5 with spec~al values in men's, women's and children's
summer clothing. Enjoy Regatta Week-end:

i1attt

PHONE 1-614·"2·5724
.
407 CORRA DR .
PARKERSBURG, WV 2610.1

alii he good tha t th is bill &lt;loPs for this
state a nd sct us llitek 40 ym rs,"
Bowen said.
He referred to an Init ia tive
pet Ilion drive under way in lx•half of
two proposed l'Onslltut ional ;mJe ndments. If they m a ke It on the ballot
and voters approve them. the Issues
would repeal the perma nent 90
percent incomP tax s urc harge
adopted In February_ and make it
more dlffll'ult for thr r,.•neral
Assembly to irnpbse taxe:; in tile
fulut-e.
Republicans, who have b&lt;'en
saying the income tax Inc tease was
excessive, welcom e tht•[)(omo.. ra ts'
$:ll tax credit plan but say It dOf's n' t
go far enough.
"We will support Increa s ing the
exemption tram W&gt;ll to $1,t!Kl. We
have no objection to a tax em:! It as
well," Senate Minor ity Ll'atier Paul
Gllirnor. R-Port Clinton, said.
Most ofthcrellr funder the$~ t ax
credit system - 84 penent - would
go to famili es earn ing I!'Ss th&lt;m
$40,tm annua lly . Ra ising the exemption to $1,txll. as the BouS&lt;'
proposed, would have provided .77
percent of the tax n'lle fto families In
that category.

52 STATE ST .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631 .

PHONE 1-614-446-3051

ta.x

relief

of

pm·kagt•

Jllghllghts of Individual tax
r r.lif'f under thf' Sf-na te version of

th&lt;• Hou,;e-pa ssed $~ billion
stat I' budget. based on dat a from
t he O hio Oe pa 1·tme n1 of
T axation :
l, ,·~rsom\1

lnt."Om e 'fnx

- lncreasl' joint Iller c rt~llt for
two working sp&lt;JUS~o'S .
- FL,1 iS&lt;' senior Cit 17rn I' I'('(( it
from $~ to $."i l.
--Changro r&lt;'tirf'ment f'Xcluslon to a sliding sca lv cr&lt;~lit .
- $20 persona I &lt;'xrmptlon
CI'N iil.

Tota l lnromf' Tax He ll&lt;'! : $t;];l
million .

'"11w pffr&lt;.·t of the personaiPx Prnption er('lli l and thP persona l
Pxemptlon tog&lt;•! her will mean that a
larg-e• numtx'r of low·lneome famlllt•s will pay no Ohio lncornP tax at
a ll." Richard L&lt;&gt;vln uf the Ohio
Department of Taxation said. For

rxamplt:', n two wag£L('Hilt('f' c-ouple
with two c hildren coulcl ea rn up to
$10,.11;;) lx'fon · owing any Olfio lw&lt;.

onnaire to staff and student s to
de te rmine what they were looking
for In a new president.
Mlller sa Jd those quest Ions covered such Issues as fund raising,
commliment to academic excellence, long-range planning and the
abUlty to recruit a nd retain
students.
" It was a guide line for what we a t
the college would need In the next
five to 10 years, to obtain the proper
expertlo;e," explained Wood.
In the event the new president
cannot take charge immediately In
September, Hayes agreed to stay on
until December to he lp the TJ£'W
executive learn the ropes.
r·

expanding on Cablevlslon's present
franchise In Green Town.shlp.
Gallipolis trustees took Cabievtslon tocourtJan . 19when itllledsult
In Gallla County Common Pleas
Court lor damages and a preUmlnary Injunction, claiming Cablevtslon's occupation of pole space obtained before the franchiSe was
awarded to Cablentertalnment pi'I!'Vents Cablentertalnment from
1Ul11111ng the franchise.
Judge Richard Roderick at first
denied the preUm1nary Injunction,
but granted one after a Feb. 25
bearing. However, thelnjuctlonwas

delayed by the FourthDistr1ctCourt
ot Appeals In March.

Since then, appeals judges have
decided they have no jurisdiction In
the matter, leaving all parties to
applY to the alate's hJilt court for a

tl.nal decision.

WAmNG TO SERVE - A aatelllte dl!lb lnllaDed by Thom...,..
CablevtiiDII I!Cudl II&amp; the finn'• Buck Bidp Road site near GI'IHpnlh
While lbe finn pm~ !lei'\'M oedluui ol Green ~.
CablevtiiDII '- . _... Ill caataauln&amp; llfpilon over aervtnc nearby

G.._..,.. 'Townlblp·rn·••·

..;._

v

l-lighlightR

No .compromise in cable-TV litigation

Furniture &amp; Jewelry
MIDDlEPORT
992-2635

SPECIALS·

In-Ground or Above -Ground

upper end of Pomeroy's pari!lnglot. It was one of lhe
highlights ol lhls weekend's celebration, which
Included selecllon of the regatta queen Friday night.

Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cast lng a waryglanceatadrlvetorepeal
a 90 pereent lncol}le tax Increase at
the ballot box, majority Democrats
ln the Senate have come up with a
revamped tax-r e lief plan . tor
Individuals.
It's part of their version of the
House-pru;E&lt;n state budge t bill that
heads for a conference commlltee
this week to workout a compromise.
The Senate proposal scraps the
suggested lnctease In the per sona l
exemption from SffiO to Sl,txll,
replaelng It with a $7il personal
exemption credit for Individua l
taxpayers and their dependents.
Senate Finance Chairman Wllllam Bowen, D-Cinclnna tl. sa id the
upper chamber's bill sends a
message not only about promises
kept In terms of tax relie f and
education funding but about an
expected tax repeal vote In
Nove mber.
"The measu res that wepassed ... I
think will send a resounding
mes sage to the total public out there
... that there wlll be an Issue on the
ballot this Nove mber that can undo

Search for new Rio president continues

DEHUMIDIFIER

D. BUMGARDNER SALES INC.
DAVID BUMG.ARDNER

a Serv.lce

By JOHN CHALFANT

ON 111E PARADE ROUTE- The aruual Big
Bend Regalia parade gul off to a start In dOWJ&amp;own
Middleport Saturday momlng Wid wound up at the

OASIS®

a

Co nnie Barnes. title officer in the Galll a County
Common Pleas Court. said 1.479tltles ~ both for new
and used cars - were Issued In May , adding tha t In
May of 1982, only 1,110 tit les were Jssuc&lt;l.
Locally, NorthJ1lP said he believes peopk&gt; a re now
buying American cars because qua lity l'Ontrois arc
Pxcellent. and added, "people arP realizing that to get
the economy in s hape. a nything foreign will kill us."
Arvid Jouppl , an Indust ry a na lyst, noted that the
Increase for the latest period wa s i-xaggprated
t.Pcause S&lt;:~ l es a year Plulie r welt' depressPd as thf'
companies removed promotions and raisro smne
prtces . The Incent ives la te r were restored.
Genel'al Motors Corp. reported a 77.6 pe1ecnt ~al n
for the la test per iod, Ford Motor Co. was up 00.8
per cent. Cluysler Corp. was up 77. 1 percent .
American Motors Corp. up 78 pi'!W nt . and
Volkswagen of America Inc . up 2.9 pct·crnt .

eye at repeal dr,_iv_e_
_ ------

WITH A NEW

To host meeting

Some private economists are concerned that the
government's widening budget defic it s may (jrtve up
Interest rates later this year. dampening the
economy's expansion.
Ross attribUtes the Increase In hlscarsa les.ln large
part, to the lower Interest rates. "People are willing to
buy at B. and 11 percent," he said .
The Treasury Department reported Thursday thai
the government's deficit In May was th~ biggest for
any month In history - $29.3 billion.
That brought the shortfall for the first eight m onths
of the fiscal year to$1618 billion, the department said.
In their reports on .auto sales for the 10 days ended
June :lil, the major companies said their dally selling
rate of 25,00 was the best for the period since 197'J.
Johnson said he belleves that when "autom obile
sales are going well, the rest of the econqmy seems to
Improve."

inc~ease

D_e01ocrats cast wary

Boosters to meet

REGATTA WEEK-END

a Installation

I

•

GAU.IPOLJS- Although sales may not approach
the rate of Increase for American-made and
pun;_hased autos occurring nationwide, people are
buying new cars In great numbers In the Gallipolis
community.
Sales of new U.S.-made cars jumped 73 percent In
mid-June, while a trade journal said Thursday the
companies would build 4.4 percent more cars this
week than last. Harlan Wood, a salesman at Smith
Buick-Pontiac Inc., 1911EastemAve., said "May was
the best new car month In our history."
Those reports were the latest Indications that the
auto companies are lxlunclng back from a long slump
that slashed sales, earnings and employinent In their
Industry. 1
"I'd say our sales are up 50 percent," said Mike ·
Northrup, a car dealer at Carroll Norris Dodge Inc.,

300 Third Avenue. He added that he believes "the
attitude of the buyer Is different. Since people are
back to work and Interest rates are down, they'll come
In and Sllerld money for a new car."
Bob Ross, a ·car dealer at Riverside AMCVolkswagon, 195 Upper River Road, said "sales have
picked up considerably," adding that " this Is the third
month that things have reallly started picking up we're getting more products ln. "
Although sales have picked up at Gallipolis Motor
Co., "we don ' t have the Inventory to sell the cars right
now," said Bill G. Johnson , a car salesman at that
Second Avenue dealership .
·
In Washington, the Commerce Department said It
expected the value of auto shipments this year to.be 30
percent higher than .In 1982. A government analyst
added, however, that the Industry would never return
to Its heights of the late 1970s.

END DAMPNESS
DAMAGE

The Pool People
Sales
Supplies

,.

From Assoc~ Press
T .S !!.~aft Reports

bound on S.R 124, when Harris r-r;;;~~~;;;;;~;;;;
turned left. Cooper's car stuck the
lett-rear comer of Harris' car,
which received lig ht damage.
· Harris received minor vis ible
Injuries and was c ited for making an
Improper tu m. Cooper's car had
light damage.

31711 NOBLESUMMITRO .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

(Enjoy the Firemen's Events B!tglnnlng at 2:00p.m.
Behind Sugar Run Flour Milia.)

story oo Paps B-l.H

--------

I

CLEVELAND ~

Big Bend Regat~a festivities
Future of SocSec funds secure

Middleport-:-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Poi!lt Pleatant Sunday, June 26, 1983

c I ) ,...... '1983

\

News briefs ...

The Forecast For 8 a.m . EDT
Saturday, June 25

Vel. 17 No." t7

DRY LANDING l - Chall~nger sp~ays a dust trail after relumlng to
earih al the dry lake bed at Edward. A1r Force Base Friday. The

A grand jury session scheduled tor Monday has been cancelled ,
Paul Gerard, Investigator for the Me igs County Prosecutor's Offlee,
reported today . Per'i"ns called to serve as jurors need nol appear.
Gerard reports that tlti'sesslon will be rescheduled la ter

Story .011 J&gt;ap C.2

unba

Undenr-ood named to Rio post

Monday jury session cancelled

T -.ball tournament opens Monday at Rio

•

••

•

1

r

.-

�.

,

r

•
June 26, 1983

.

COmmentary and perspective

Page A-2·
June 26, 1913

Pameroy Middleport Gallipolis,

Oh~l"oint

Pleasant, W. '1/a.

,___.Weather:-------------Bill does more
ohio wea'ther
June 26

.

By The

.a-.....,w Press

!lome patchy clouds were expected to move southeast across the

To the children
I\ Divisinn of
~.__-,-,

WASHINGTON - The trQuble
with writing about the national debt
-one troubl~. anyhow -Is that the
figures cannot be translated into
mental innages. With some elton,
we can Imagine figures that are
only In the mVIIons: We can
visualize a summer's attendance at
the ballparks; we can see millions
or moviegoers, or millions of
bushels of whea t. Once we get -into

.-.--d•-====-

82.1 Third A''"·· Gallipo•lis, Ohio

Ill Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio
1614 ' 992·2156

1614 i 446-2342

HOBERT 1.. WT NCETT

PubliSher
HOBABT Wfi.~ON .JB .

Ex.et·ut n t' Edrt 11r

PAT WHITEHEATJ
Ass ist;.Jnt Publ!Sht ·r·Contr ol w r

James]. Kilpatrick

----~-----------------------------$210 billion. As recently as 196o, the

bllllons, the mind begins to balk. To nostalgia. The new IIJTJit w!U carry
talk of trillions Is to !use im audience out governn'lenl !~~rough the end of
altogether. Nobdy can Imagine a the fiscal year In September.
trillion of anything.
·
U there Is any good news about
Nevertheless we must try. last the statutOry debt, let me give It to
month Congress gave us a new . you now. Our current trllllon-dollar
permanent ceiling of $1.389 billion debt equals :rr percent of the year's
on the satutory debt. The old IIJTJit gross naUonal product. That may
had been $400 billion, but that wa·s a seem high, but at the end of World
SmithSonian kind of ftgure, meant War n the federal debt o! $271
to be housed In a museum of billion actually exceeded a GNP of

'"'I·"'Rl !AI.M'6 I&gt;K~ltii/U!A ~
I.ETTJo:RS ~W f)I&gt;I NIO r\i art• ~·· l • · ,.nwd . Tht·~ shuulct ht· h·~~ than .'ICIO 'o\ ur•l~ Iron~ .•\II
ll"lkr~ ;+ro: •tthJ''' t '" •·olt ttttl! ami rnu!&lt;l lw ~ i.:HI'fl "''h namt·. ;~drlrn1~ a nd lt·l1·ph"''' '
~um~ · r. Nu uu~ • )! n t•tllt • ll n~ ~&lt;Il l lw jtU h l t ~ ht • d . I .t•lh'n s h nuld l&gt;t· in ~uud ~.;, ~ It ·. arltlro-s ~ illl!
IMSUI'!&lt;i , no ol po· r• ulll!lttn·• .

Little presidents: .as.
old as power itself
They hold minor titles and have little official authority but they often
exercise great power as "dedicated public servants," a self-effacing tenn
that veils their true goals.
·
They are the "little presidents," the hobgoblins of heads of state such as
Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. They have a consuming desire to
be In charge and subservient to none, including the boss.
.
Little presidents, says Eugene Jennings, who has studied them in
corporate life, government , academe, religious Institutions, are attracted
to power because they see It as life's ultinnate value.
·
It Is in government tha t they are most mischievous because they seek to
formulate policy, says .Jennings, a Michigan State University professor of
business administration and confidential consultant to corpora te chiefs
and occasionally to heads or state.
They assume righ Is thaI cons tit utlonally are llmlted only to the chief, and
"they hide behind the chief's responsibility to the electorate, but are not
accountabl" to the electorate thPmselves." ·
·
They are found on congressiona l staffs, In presidential cabinets and
among ambassadors, he says, where they may seek to dictate foreign
policy because they believe they are more aware than the president
The U.S. government at this Iinne Is vulnerable to little presld~nts
because, says Jennings, "it Is 'iO big and gangling and spread overto many
areas that It presents wide open opportunities. " .
Jennings believes the lillie president syndrome Is a ra the r common
human ·trait.
Among the other conditions for Its existence are these:
- A gap between legislation and the execution of laws by bureaucracies
and staff men, and a widening of this gap by Ineffectual presidents who
attract little presidents.
. -A widespread belief tha t a bureaucrat's loyalty should be to his
separate office, rather than to the elected head or state.
-A president who relies on the lntlatlve of his staff or cablnwl to handle
·
their work without specific guidance !rom him.
-A situation in which a relatively low-paid bureaucrat presides over a
budget In the,high mlllloris or even billions.
-A president who appears to be an average person, making a
subordinate feel superior.
Jennings classifies as little 'presidents Gen. Alexander Halg, President
Reagan's former secretary of state, and Joseph Califano, who served in the .
Jolmsori and C¥,ter adminlstra !Ions.
Jenn.ings says !Jf such men, "They seem to- and sometinnesdo- speak
for the present... then, however, they speak their own thoughts as though
they were the president's, and ultimately speak their own thoughts ·
regardless of the president."
But he concludes. "The trait Is old as power Itself ... The Caesars were
bedeviled by them . and Alexander the Grea t was so plagued by them he
wouldn't delega te."
·
·

Berry's World

"Hello! i'm_ here to save you! Can anyone ~ear me? Hello!"

percentage ws 58.4. In this perspec~
live, the current national debt Is DOt
grossly out o! ]jne; It Is about wlleni
II was 10 years ago.
·
There Is another"cheerful lterrt
also. w)!tch I bring to you courtesy
of Bruce Barlett, dl.rector of the
House and Senate Joint Ecooomlc:
Committee. The government owes
almcist a third of the debt to Itself;
The Fede~al Reserve System, the
mythical Social Securtty Trust
Fund and other agencies own about
$:ro bWion In , federal bonds;
"Economically," Bal1lett explains;
"this Is the equivalent of taking
money from one pocket and l)l!ttlng
It In another. We could wipe out
over 30 percent of tHe federal debt
'overnight simply by ~anceUng
bonds already .owned by government agencies. This would have no
econoJTJic effect and JTJight malu!
people feel that the debt Is less of a
burden than they thought It was."
Forget the cosmetic gestures. In
a brtef report on our total national
· debt, Bartlett provides some mind·
boggling data. The statutory debt,
great as It Is, represents "only a
small !racllon" of the government's
total llabtlltles. MOst persons are
only diJTJiy aware of the "off-bUdget
debt" represented by loans and
loan guarantees, but economically
these obligations affect the credit
market In the same way that ·
statutory debt affects It.
Piled on top o! the statutory debt
and the off·budget debt are ·enor.
mous contingent llabtllties, chiefly ·
In our _promises to pay pension,
retirement and disability benefits
and Insurance comJTJitments.

Split ·on policy_________Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rs_on
WASHINGTON - Pope John
Paul's visit to Poland Is now
history, and like all such events It Is
being studied exhaustively by U.S.
intelligence agencies.
. In fact, a top-secret Interagency
group has been meeting regularly
sin ce last Decemher to assess
what's ha ppening In Poland and
advise Pn!sldent Reagan on the
proper U.S. responSe. ' The group
consists of representatives of the
_Pentagon, Statepepanment, Commerce Department, National Security Council , CIA, Treasury and
Agriculture Department.
My sources tell f11(' the interagency group was spilt on what
policy the Reagan administration
should follow on Poland. The debate
wa s lntense.

But eventually, the president was
prcsnted an options paper, which he
signed. The options he approved,
once Implemented. could bring a
.relaxation or sanctions against
Poland.
One source told my associate
Lucette l.agnado that the basic

'

quarrel among the Interagency
group was between the "detentlsts"
and the "'troglodytes." The first
group favors betier relations with
the Polish military regime; the
other urges a continued hard line.
Each side ·accuses , the other of
minimizing the risks and·&amp;nefltsof
the rival policies.
Mea nwhile, each side Is examlh·
ing the intelligence repons on"the
pope's visit and Its aftermath,
hoping to find evidence that will
suppon Its own recommendations.
Indeed, the sa me event will doubt.
lessly be lntellJreted differently by
each side to argue Its case.
Now that Reagan has selected hls
options, don't be SUJllrlsed If the
losing side surreptitiously takes Its
case to friendly members of
Congress and the media . Neil her
dententists nor troglOdyte are likely
to concede defeat gracefully.
The main difficulty, of course,
lies In predicting what the repercussions from the papal visit wUI be In
Poland Itself. There are two likely
scenarios, according to reliable

sou~.

.,

~

·
Many P o)es were hoping for a
"inlracle" occunil)g as a result pi
the pope's Visit. Thai clearly.hasn't
happened, so there I~ bound to be a
gi:meral letdown as the Poles'
-euphoria over the papal ·vtstt Is
swallowed up In the drab reality of
life under the communist regime.
Realistically, though, the Poles
have understood that outright
revolution was simply not In the
cards - the Soviet Union would
move In and crush II. . ,
Despite the underlying despair,
according to this scenario, the
pope's visit may serve to buoy up
the Polish people and strengthen
their stubborn determination to
resist the military repression. The
outlawed Solidartty union will gain
encouragement !rom the visit, and
will remain a political force to be
reckoned with. Massive public
demonstrations may once again
sweep Poland on various annlver·
sary dates this month and next.
In shol1, this view of Polish
reaction considers the pope's visit a

.

'

, pivotal event that wtll put new life In
the badly battered o·pposltlon
movement. '
· The other scenario Is less sangUine. It focuses on Gen. Woclech
J aruzelsld; the military dictator. A
shrewd politician, Jaruzelskl so far
has managed to placate his ultl·
rna te bases in the Kremlin and beat
back the power play~ of the
KreJTJiin'S hardllne loyalists In the
Polish Communist Party, willie at
the same time sttf11ng the dangerous Solldartty movement and the
yearning lor Independence ·it has
aroused. "'
These sOurces see Jaruzelskt as
the big wirtner from the papal visit,
which was a calculated risk lor the
mllltary regime. He started out by
winning a sort or truce in tho!
months before Pope Jolm Paul n
arrived. ' With the exception or
disturbances last May, there was a
period of relative ·calm as Jaruzelsld cleverly played on the
people's fears that the pope would
not be allowed to come.

School days_---,-________I_ef_Jc_r_ee_nfi_ie_ld
Suppose you had ga the red 100
politicians, pollsters and pundits a
yea r or so ago and asked them what
most tmpol1ant. Issue or the next
political ca mpaign would be. Do '
you suppose as many as one of those
100 would have cited educa tion?
or course not. How, then, do we
accou nt for the fact that education
Is suddenly a red-hot topic of
political debate? Why Is the
president of the United States
putting this Issue on the political
'\) l'lel b 1 ;of A Inc &lt;fJa"-~~~'!-tfront -burner at press conferences
a nd college commencements? Why
"I wanted, 'My son, the doctor, · or, ·My son. the
. a re his would-be 1984 opponents
lawyer. ' What (Jid I get? 'My son, the skyscraper
Oinging position papers and funding
scaler'!"
proposals In every direction ?
In part, this Interest In the
schooling or our children has but
one cause: the report or the
Na tional Commission on Excel·
lence In Education. In the tradition
of the Kerner Commission report on
'
domestic riots In 19611, and the • Today Is Sunday, June 26, the ITith day of1983. There are 188 days left In
Eisenhower Commission repol1 on
· the year.
·
violet
crime a year later, the report
. My's highlight In history:
on
education
spoke In vivid , highly
: OniJune 26, 1945, the United Na lions charter was signed 1n San Francisco
unbureaucratic
terms: Our future,
· by 50 nations.
It
said,
was
threatened
by "a rising
: On this date:
~~
tide
of
mediocrity";
our
education
: In 1284, according to legend, the Pled Piper of Hamlin, Germany, lured ·
8J:I act of
failures
were
equivalent
to
: 00 children from the town, .and they were never heard !rom again.
"
unilateral
dlsannament.'
; In 1844, President Jolm Tyler marrted Julie Gardiner in a secret
This start rhetoric pushed the
ceremony In New York.
Issue
onto the national agenda . In 1944, Allied forces recaptured Cherbourg, France, from the Gennans
and,
by the way, demonstrated
; during World War 11.
•·
·
once
again
how over simpltfled the
: In 1972, floodwaters from Humcane Agnes began to recede atter leaving
Idea
Is
that
our
mass media "set the
. mo~ than 1:11 people dead In the Northeast.
national
agenda."
If our major
• .Tfl! years ago: The House of Representatives passed a blll barring funds
newspaper and broadcast outlets
: for bombing operatkms In Cambodia and Laos. . ,.
were
focusing on the state of
. Five years ago: A bombing at the Versailles Palace In France wrecked
American
education, It was cer·
, three rooms containing art works celebrating the Napoleonic Era.
.
talnly
not
apparent
!rom the Items
One year ago: The United States vetoed a United Nations resolution
they
were
reporting.
: denlanding a Umlted withdrawal ol lsral!ll and Palestine Ll~ratlon
There Is, however, a more
Organizat~ forces !rom Lebanon.
:
fui\damental
reasOn why we are
· 'l'oday's birthday: Writer Colin WUson Is 52.
debating
this
Issue. In American
•.. TIIOUght for kXIay: "Honesty Is the best policy- when therelsm_oneyin
politics,
education
periodically
It." -Mark '!Wain, American .w nter (l&amp;l&gt;-1910).
rises to the level of amajor concern

-

becauS&lt;' It Is a n empty vessel into
which we pour our most basic
assumtlons and beliefs. Scratch an
argument about our schools or our
school children, and what you find
lurking just beneath the surface Is
an argument about first principles.
Listen to President Reagan, for
example, and what do you hear?
You hear that we cannot make our
schools better by spending more
money; that we should

alternatives to public schools
through the us of tuition tax credits
and vouchers; t~at we should allow
our children to pray in school.
These matters lie at the heart not
of the president's educational poiIcy, but his most cherished Ideas
about our society: the need ot
restrain spending, the · need to
"privatize" public functions, the
need to reassert traditional values.
look at his Democratic

crev

~~A1t#l!;\~~
,

critics. When Walter Mondale
proposes an $11 billion federal
commitment to education, when
Ernest Hollings proposes a $5,1XXJ
raise for every teacher In America,
their programs are more than
statements about our eductional
needs. And they are more than bids
for. the support of the NatiOnal
Education Assoctaton, just as Mr,
Reagan's tuition tax-credit scheme
Is more than a bid for support from
the parochial sehool community.

-..Warm,..

-

WEATIIERFORECAST-1beNatlooaiWea&amp;berService!orecasllor
Sundlly,June26,predlctsshowersloranareacovemgpartsofColorado
and New Mexico moving soulbeasl to.Florida and lhe GuU of Mexico.
ShowersareexpectedlnnonhemNewEnglandStatesandnorthemNew
York Stale. (API "erphoto)

Extended Ohio forecast
MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY:
A chance of showers or thunderstonns each day with highs
generally in the 80s and lows In the 60s.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Needs of
hungry people among America's
"new poor" apparently are not
being met, Rep. Dennis Eckart,
D.Ohlo, said after reviewing a
report by the General Accounting
Office.
.; ·
Eckart said the study, done at his
request, shows that "we have a
fragmented policy and too many
problems In addressing the~ of
a growing number of AmJi'(cans
who are hungry,"
"The recession and our changed
economy have conspired to create a
new class labled 'the new poor," '
Eckart said Friday. "Yet we have
no effective food distribution program to address their needs.''
The study bY the GAO, the
investigative ann of Congress, says

the profile of those seeking help at
emergency food centers around the
country has changed.
. "No lOnger are food centers
serving only their traditional clientele of the chronically poor, derelicts, alcoholics and mentally ill
persons who typically live on the
streets and who most probably wUI
be In need no matter what happens
In the economy," the report said.
"Today, many organizations report that a mountingnumberof'new
poor' are contributing to the
increasing numbers seeking assistance at many emergency shelters
and food centers.
"This breed of ' new.poor' Is m ade
up of individuals who were em·
played and perhaps financially
stable just a short time ago. They

- -----··

-

·.:---- - - -·-···---~-

The nation's weather

.

"

By 1be Asooclated Press
Scattered thunderstonns In the Rockies early Saturday added to
flooding and mudsllde problems in the region, as rain also returned
to the Central Plains and portions of the Mississippi Valley.
Meanw!llle. along the Colorado River In Arizona and California,
man-made ·~controlled flooding" continued Saturday, as officials
trted to ease pressure on snowmelt-swollen reservoirs by opening
Ooodgates on some of the world's biggest dams.
1\vo deaths, both in Mexlco, were blamed on that flooding.

are members of families, young and
able-bodied, and many have homes
in the suburbs.
"They now find themselves
without work, with unemployment
benefits and savings accounts
exhausted."
·
Eckart, of Lake County, Is one of
four Democratic members of Congress plannning to tour a Kansas
City cave Monday where. sullllus
dairy products are stored by the
Department of Agriculture's Commodity Credit CollJ.
Also making the tour wUI be Rep.
Marcy KapturofToledo, Rep. Mary
Rose Oal&lt;ar of Qeveland and Rep.
James Oberstar of Minnesota.
" It Is the blackest Irony that we' re
paying fanners not to produce, yet
we 're having more and more people

·.•

By JOHN CHALFANT
The Senate removed a S50rnilltcin
Asooclaled r-s Wrller
program to bOOSt the coallndustTY..
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - PreWhen theHousepassedltsverslon
mixed cocktails sold at carryouts or Gov. Richard Celeste's spendl.ig
and grocery stores may pack a lit tie plan, It Included the project under·~
more punch If a Senate-passed development program backed by
version or the state budget ~mes profits !rom the state's liquor sale6.
law.
It would have allowed the state to
The bill contains a section provide up to $50 million In loans aqd
increasing the maximum amount of loan guarantees tor coal research
alcohol a llowed in such mlxed and development, providing the
beverages to 30 percent by volume. project created or preserved jol)S
They cannot contain more than 21 and Improved the economy.
percent of alcohol at present.
It Is one"of an array ol Senate
changes in the House-passed bill r:===========~
which now goes to a joint conferenCE'

It pays to be an
idealist when
you buy
a diamond.

co mmittee to ,hammer ou t
differences.
Another liquor law chan ge would
allow some hotels and motels to sell
liquor on Sund ays. regardless of
whether an elect ion a uthorizing
Sunday sa les had been held in the

A d1arrl0nc.~ IS not a casual pur
c t1a sc You want 11 to be worn and
entoyecl t!lrougr~out a lilel11ne

area.

It would apply to fael lltles with 50
guest rooms or m ore. which already
have perm it s fo1· reta il sa les of
liquor and have a licensed food
service operation.
Students in privat e coUPges a nd
universities would be eligible for
grants starting July I. 1984. under
another amendment In the bill .
Sen. Neal Zinnmers. D - D&lt;~ yton .
sa
id the budget would makP $5
going hungry in our country," said
mHllon
ava ilable for stuc!C'nts who
Ms. Oakar.
are now high school juniors a nd
She said the Inland Cave. lhP would be aiiPndlng prlvlltP coilf'g&lt; •s
largest of six Department of as freshmen In the fall of l!Jl:l4 .
G1·nnts would be paid to lh&lt;'
Agriculture storage centers In the
institutions
with the schools rP· \
Kansas City area, holds 100 JTJIIIIon ,
qu
lred
to
reduce
student s' f~X&gt;s by
to 115 mtlllon tons of chee.se and 6.1
tha
t
amount.
million tons or butter.
"As the tu ition gap grows t~vf'r
larger
It will enable many students,
The Commodity Credit CO!lJ.
particularly
in the la rger cltl&lt;:'S
buys sullJlusdalry prodUcts under a "'
int
erested
in
a ttending, for exam federal program topropupthe prlre
ple.
thf'
Univers
ity of Dayton.
of milk.

frlafS Wfly you SMuld 'f'ICyer
cornprornn:;e on the beauty And value:
oi l he d1arnond you buy, regardless o j..
11s Slle You st)()uld took lor a

Otamond that"s bee! I

~Xw ~slak l rlgtY

cut and poi1SI1ed to brrng out all oi1!S
na tu ra l brrlh ance and l:leauty, o ne tha t
meets the e)\ac!lng standJrds ttlat
t1ave been es labhshed as d eal
fhese are cd llefii OOal cut fMrnonns
wr1y 1s cu t so lnliJQitant?

Celeste said coqperatlve efforts
by the states to develop new foreign
markets are something that should
be considered "some Iinne down the
rqad." Cooperation Is oneofthe keys
to economic recovery for the region.
he said.
And according to Celeste, Great
Lakes states have not been doing a
good job presenting their case in
Washington.
"VIrtually every other region has
done a better job of organizing than
these governors," he said. "We've
got to build on our common
problems to develop som e common
solutions."
Blanchard said the weekend 's
sessions might not produce a ny
"We don't have any
predigested
speclflcsolutlonsor
initiatives.
or predetermined set of resolutions
we're going to adopt," he said. But
he insisted It would be wonhwhlle
even If It does no more than
"continue the coopera tion" among
states'in the region .
"Sometinnes the process becomes
as innportant as the Intended
substance," Blanchard said.
Indiana was to be represented by
Alan Kimbell, an official fn the
state's Commerce Department.
Blanchard aides said no one from
llllnols was expected.
After work sessions Sunday, the

1{/1-

gerns beH1r ty oerencts on hQI1t re
ttec1 1011
Wt1en a Cl rrtmonrt 1S 111Prllly

58 tacets etre l)laced 111 prt&gt;c 1se
sy m melriCcl l rel&lt;'l l1011 lo OlllOr s 1hey

ac t as a ser 1es oltrny mrr1or s con
sta nlly c aptu11ng and retl ecli ng lrgtl t
Fllld Uotr llCIII~[ I I bat lr. tllr Ough Ill€ !O~

Columbus, to hiiVf' the oppoJ:ttmity
to choose programs which wou ld fit
thei r nf'ffls a nd goHis tha t would not
be ava ilable to them in public

0 1 Hlf' '&gt; IOIIC 111 d

l)lr lhi\1111)1&lt;119

A J 'dlllOnd Ct riiOO Sllflllow

institutions ,'' Zlmmf'r s said .

&lt;J-~---) ~~~\il1 ~11I IOO
/~

.... •. '

'

,/

"(!nUl l ICI P. ."Qtl !

:

----

In fhe lniereSI of

vision

trom the oWe• ol .

Gftrle W, bivll, O.D.

468 Secopd Ave., Ga!J1Pt11ia
. PbOne 446-D»S

~

1£.!,11-- Huorrqn \
the :. 1df' ~ ,u1d
',
.a ppC.II ... I II. ICh. II\ \
!IH,':' C&lt;'ll' f'l Wl l('l l

_

'

.,

C{)I T1( 1, 11Uf1 1(r dll l( ((', l i \

visiting polltlclans are scheduled to
accompany Blanchard at ceremo-._
ntes observing the 25th anniversary
of the Mackinac Bridge, which links
upper and lower Michigan.

"

\.

Yell c;,1n •,uo 11\e lEJ!OIHSr rrng
dd l(' r(• llCI) yO!HSOII l, K ldOCl l C lJI
I lt diii! Jnc l ~.; ('n:,(lfe yo u
•
~-J
o1 lJ illl ll"ln tr1r n10s1
I~
l ltld11 1V ,Hll l Yil hrP
...

.

IDlAL CUI

Report theft

DIAMOND

•

GALLIPOLIS - Don Saxon,
Gallipolis, reported to the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department that
three Items were stolen from tl]e
truck he was driving In Rodney at
Caldwell Trucking.
Stolen were;,a CBradlo, valued at
$130; a ra tchet, valued at $75; and
wrenches, valued at UJ.
Cited by city pollee was Edward
W. Barnette, 19, Rt . 2, Gallipolis.
running a stop sign.

KiNG

1982 DATSUN
c'A8 4X4 Brown. 4cylinder. 5 speed.
lockout hubs, AM/FMcassette stereo. power steenng, gauges. West r,IJasl IIIII .
rors, radial mud !ires, highack bucket seats. only 8,300 m1les "Gas economy
&amp;4 w.d. combinedt"

1JIWI U I~

.........

404 Sttond "•••••
4&lt;1· tl47
Ootllpolla, Otlto

r-;======================================:::=============
.
FOR PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING &amp; FAMILY SERVICES -

Woodland Centers, Inc.
(FORMERLY THE GALL/A -JACKSON-MEIGS COMMUNTY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER)

The Professionals at Woodland Centers oHer a wide range of
high-quality, confidential, aHordable service:

•DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES

•CRISISLINE/24-HOUR EMERGENCY CARE

•INDIVIDUAL &amp; FAMILY COUNSELING

•COMPLETE SPEECH &amp;HEARING CARE

•PSYCHOTHERAPY

•CHILDREN'S SERVICES

•HOSPITALIZATION SERVICES

•RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT

•SENIOR SERVICES

•DRUG/ALCOHOL SERVICES

•COMMUNITY EDUCATION/PREVENTION

•AGENCY CONSULTATION

Eye Fatigue

*******
lwtt.,

to

m .1h.• • 11 looh. l llQ9 Cr let s &lt;:orn(' o llhu
liqrrr te.tk 0111 " nuougn !Il l~ I ~O !! OI 'l
f
cllltl .rpperJI !;

GEORGE W. DAVIS

these movements, close your
eyes and rest for ten seconds,
blink a few times, !ben rest for
another ten seconds. Three,
repeat the movements, but
going In the opposite direction.
Then close your· eyes again.
u this provideS no relief, or If
eye fatigue seems.to be a chronic
problem, you should consult
your eye doctor.

i ~1 r l

11~

XaviPI', Olterbein or Capit al ht?n• in

Tha t program cost $2 billion a
year the last two years, but the
USDA says lhe cost has risen
shallliY this year and Is expected to
reach $2.4 billion by ttie end of the
year.

----~OPTOMETRIST-----.

Fatigue can be an enemy of
good vision. It may be beneficial
to rest and relax your eyes If you
feel fatique setting ln. There are
also ·some sinnple routines which
can elinnlnate mild eye fatigue .
KC!!P In mind, however, that
these exercises are designed for
people who have no vtsual
problem which needs correc·
tion. They are not exercises to
strengthen your eyes or to get rid
of spectacles: EYE EXER·
CISEs ARE NOT SUBSTI·
Ttli'ES FOR VISUAL CARE.
Try the !oUowlq: One, glance
atound to the extreme~~ .
the room without rnovlni your
heed. Look lllowly and rhythm!· ·
caiJy from one spot to IIIOther.
Two, after a collple cl minutes 11

Oo·

cduSe w 1m d1arnond s. unl1ke co lored

C11 l dld11l()rH I

ByMICHAELMcKESSON
AMoclaled Press Writer
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich.
(AP) - Great Lakes states have a
"vital . interest in hammering out
common policies," but that doesn 't
mean they can't compete with one
another for business, saysOhloGov.
Richard Celeste.
A compact agreed to last month at
a Great Lakes governors meeting In
Cleveland was not a "no raid"
promise, but a "fair business
solicitation code," he said Friday.
States in the region cannot give up
efforts to attract business, but they
must collaborate to compete with
other pilrtsofthe country.
"I think we've got a story to tell,"
Celeste said during a moonlight boat
cruise on theStralts of Mackinac. "If
we try to tell It at each other's
expense, we Jrtakelt hard foraUofus
to succeed."
Celeste and Govs. Anthony Earl of
Wisconsin and Rudy Perpich of
Minnesota are guests of fellow
Democratic Gov. James Blanchard
of Michigan this weekend on the
Island that lies between the state's
two peninsulas.
Worit sessions on federal legislation critical to the Great Lakes
region were scheduled today, with
about a dozen congressmen joining
the governors.

•

than spend money

Celeste says Great Lakes
governors can cooperate

.

,,I

northeast half of the state Saturday, but even that area will see
-considerable sunshlneo
Temperatures will be from near !ll along the lakeshore to near 90
alopg the Ohio River.
J:ilgh PI'!'SSIIlt' over northern Lower Michigan Saturday morning
was expected ·to move southeast across the area Saturday to be along
the New Jersey coast by Sunday morning.
The front Saturday morning el&lt;tended from the Virginia coast to
soutbern llllnols, then curved northwest to North Dakota as a warm
front,
The !root will move hack northeast across Ohio as a wann front
late Saturday and Sundax; with a very wann and more humid
southerly flow covering a~ Ohio on Sunday.
·
Afternoon highs will climb tq the JTJid·llOs to JTJid-90! Sunday with
drought conditions continuing. ·
A cold front moving southeast tluuugh the Lak~ on Sunday night
and Monday may flnally bring a chance of some showers or
thunderstorms to end tbe present dry speU.

Legislator says poor need more help

.I

:Today in history

The Sunday fimes-Sentinei- Page-A-3

GALLIPOLIS .

JACKSON

412 Vinton Pike
446-5550

200 Mciin Street'
286-5075

,

446-5554

POMEROY
Mulbtmy Heights
992-2192

---CRISISLINE--286-5554-·-CRISISLINE------992~5554----

�•

.

The

:June 26, 1983

Ohio--.-l'aint P!eataut, W. Va.

.Porueror Middleport-Gallipolis, Oh;-l'aint Pleasant, W. Va. • _

The Sunday Times-Sentinel---Page-A-S

'

Celeste asks .jobless·fund ·aid
By ROBERT L-SHAFFER
As8ociiUed l'reM Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Gov.
Rlclu!rdCelesteandOhlo'sco~­

siOnal delegation are unhappy with
the way reductions In federal
unemployment benefits have hit
Ohio.
Rep. Dimald Pease, IU&gt;hlo, of
Oberlin, says something can be done
to restore-the state's ellglbUity lor
ex tended federal benefits.
Thousands of Ohio unemployed
now receiving · extended benefits
face termination of those benefits

within the next few weeks, ~leste
told congressmen when he met with
them this week.
While Ohio lillemployment edged
upward In May, the unemployment
·figures on which the federal
governrne11t bases ellglbUity for
extended benefits dropped below
the 6 percent "trigger."
The Labor Department counts
only those receiving regular state
.benefits, excluding the unemployed
who have exhausted !heir 26 weel!s
of regular benefits.
Pease introduced legislation this

Ohio River cleanest
in 14 years reports
.
.
.
sanitation commission
'

SHU' OF STATE? ~ Michigan gbvemor .James 'Blanchanl (·right)
and Ohio governor Richard Celeste lake the wheel of a Mackinac Island
ferry Friday night during a moonlight c~ at a weekend Great Lakes
governors meeting. The boat was near the Island that likes between
Michigan's peninsulas. (AP Lase111holo)

'

.

CINCINNATI (AP) _; The Ohio gasoline, lhough this Is conjecture.
River has undergone a dramatic We think the lead comes trom urban'
Improvement over thepast14years,
runo!f," said Thea Townsend,
according to an eight-state monitor- spokeswoman for the commission.
Ing agency.
However, the agency said certaln
The Ohio River Valley Sanitation · problems remain. Three of the ·
Commission cited "The diversity of substances stlll Nldent In the water
fish in tJ\eOhlo River, partleularly In Include bacteria from human
the upper segment tfom Pittsburgh wastes, chemicals like carbon
to the Kanawha River" In West tetrachloride, chloroform and
Virginia.
mercury.
The commission said 16 of 20
These were significantly decharacteristics used to judge the . creased from concentra lions reriver's health met minimum stand- ported four years ago.
ards in the 1982 report.
The warm wea)her months o!l982
"The main contnbutlngfactor for · saw violations of the mlnlmums set
the reduction of lead probably was for these substances by the commls·
the Increase use of unleaded ston, the report said.
Mercury was louild ln higher than
acceptable amounts In 10 percent of.
the water samples taken In 1982.
However, sampl"'1 were barely
detectlb.le In !Ish sarpples.
Ms. Townsend said the amount of
oxygen dissolved In the water fell
be low the level necessary for
aquatic llle durillj; the warm
weather months.
enjoy life as It Is," she said.
The level is a!fected by temperaGollahon was flying alone in an
ture,rainfallandsewage.Shesaldlt
FS·U Crusader when his plane was
was especially low downstream
shot down Aug. 13, 19ffi, she said.
!rom cities that had Incomplete
"He radioed that his plane had
sewage treatment.
been hit but that he was all right and
There were no fish kllls reported
that he was heading for water.
In 1982.
Three weeks later we received
The number and variety of fish
increased since 1~. Ms. Townsend
another telegram saying he was

mOrlth to revise the trtggl!r mechaPease's second biD would lower
nlsin. The Lorain CoUnty Deinocrat · the trigger rate by one point 1o 5
.
is waiting for con\mlttee hearings to percent.
be scheduled but Is optimistic that
Underp~tlaw a state can also
sorriethtng:will be done.
.
. "trtgger on" extended benefits with
"A lot of other states area!fected a 5 percent unemployment rille If its
or soon :will be," Pease said Friday. jobless rate !sal percent higher than
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohlo, of the rate ·ror the same period in the
Toledo, sald3lstatesartlatlectedby two previous years.
the )ow trigger an extended federal
Pease would IQwer that trigger-to
benefits.
4percent.
Pease plans to seoo letters to .Fifteen at.the 21 member.! .of the
congre5smen trom other a!fected Ohio House ctelegatlon haVe Joined
states asking their support.
In co-sponsoring Pease'sleglslatlon.
Pease says hls bllls W®ld reverse
At least three othel' tongressmen
changes made in "the Reconcilia- have Introduced JeglSJation In the
tion Act of 1981~ which enacted same area. Rep. Frederick C.
President Reagan's massive Boucher, D-Va., has a bill which,
budget cuts."
· like Pease's, would change the
"My bills restore unemployment trtgger mechanism lor activating
compensation Jaw to pre- extended beneftts.
l
Reconcillatton ACt treatment," he
Boucher's biU also Includes a
said.
.
provision under which . ~
One Pease bill would require within a state with high unemployinclusion of unemployed workers ment could quality lor e~tended
·receiving extended benefits in the benl!!lts even II the entire state does
computation for the trigger -r ate.
notq~.

.

'

,.

·•

CINCINNATI I API - A woman
whose son was a lighter pilot shot
down during the Vietnam war says
she has new hope tlw t she will learn
· more about her son's dea th or that
his body wUI be located.
. A dog tag and identification
: documents tumed over to American
: authorities by the VIetnamese
government ear lier this month
: !Jelonged ·to three U.S. pilot s shot
: down In themld-1900s, the Pentagon
; announced Friday.
•, The Pentagon Identified the three
Atr Force Lt. Col. Fredric M.
of Cranston, R.I. ; Air Force

:as·

Maj. Mart.ln W. Steen of Grand
Forks, N.D.; and Navy Lt. Gene R.
GoUahon of Clnclrinati.
The Pentagon said "The acquisition of this evidence does not close
the rues, but rather adds to the data
available to us in pursuing an
accounting lor these three men ."
Gladys GOUahon said Friday she
hopes the _governmenl learns more
about her son's death, or Is able to
locate his body . But II theydon't,she
said, "That's all light. "
"Every time the phone rings now
I'll wonder, but In a day or so I'll
come down, because I've learned to

be lleved
dead ' " she
ld.. "That's
the
Information
we sa
had
We hadali
to
Uve with that. "
Mrs. GoUahon said she has little
contact with other parents of men
missing in action, or MlAs, because
their bitterness angers her.

HARTFORD,

..••

.

YOU CAN BEAT THE HEAT BY STAYING
INDOORS BUT' YOU CAN'T BEAT TH~
FUN AND S.UMMER SPECIALS AT THE
Tuesday Night ................. Beer Night
Wednesday Night ....... Specials Night
Thursday Night ............. Laclies' Night

,.
·'

\

,.I
•'

'

,.,...

WE MUST REDUCE OUR INVENTORY

1982

..
•'

AND 1983 BIKES IN
DISCOUNTED TO MOVE!

STOCK

..,.
,."

..
,.,...

.-,.,.

'

think we have time on our side."
InotgoL.gtobeaslmplesolutlon.But
The Advisory Councll on Social
Security, whichalreadywasatwork
devising a bailout tor Medicare,
adopted Its first set of recommendations last week. They call for
boost'lhg tl\e eligibility age from the
current 65 to 67 in gradual steps
between 1990 and ?002.

•'•

'''
'''
'

Tone Dialing·'

. · UPPER ROUTE 7 - KANAUGA, .OHIO
.I
I

We are sony for any inconl'tllience

STORE HOURS:

' , OUI TOWN'S fiNEST SUrfl MAUll
~-- GO TO CHURCH EVERY SUNDAY

ST A~U·~
ANI) WIC
UH ' I'O:"IOS
ELf.OMF.
II EH F.

Thur.. 9 am til I 0 pm
Fri. -Sat.9 am til 10 pm

, CLOSED SUNDAYS

Prices Good thru Sat., July 2, 1983
to Limit Ouant1ties

FRESH SPLIT

GROUND FRESH SEVERAL
TIMES 'DAILY

CHICKEN
BREAST

GROUND

BEEF ·

19_

SUPERIOR

Adve rtls!.nj:l

TAVE.RN HAM

Repres.ent atlvf".

~rlormance .

]

.'

·, ,

_

'

~

4

$}995

•

3~

Ct·nts

No subS&lt;'rtptlons by n'L:JI I pr•rmittl-'tl In

towns whl'rf' homf' carrll'r S&lt;'rvi(.'(&gt;

OnP vrar

Homo"*-4511

WEIGHT
STEREO
HEADPHONES

'
'I'
.•'
•

. .... .. $10.40

Oaily and Sundu.y
SUJJS&lt;'RlP'IlONS
ln.'4idr- OhJo
•,2 Weeks
..... S51.4H
..... 527 ..'11
i6 Wf'f'k S .
... $14.04
13 W1&gt;eks .
MAll~

.-

Rates Oubddt• moo
::.2 \\'rt&gt;ks ..................•. ..... .... S~iU6
26 W('(lkS
........................... $:!1 .64

Dlal-ln·Hsndset
with Tel-Pulse~
Dialing

1~

\\'ceks .............. .. .......... ...... Sl.'i .21

S3695

j
·'

'

,.~

f_- ~

.

I

Off .

.._c...,._ ...

299_.5.

'~

~

-

.,
~

Ca:::ese:oW LMM Awilll tr For Ontr Ill Pw IIOntft

•

'

~

(Ptw A;oll

111'1 U./..... T•)

• Completely Self-Contained Deektop Unh ·

Ill

• ~ ~yte Keytloerd With

Solid Slatoi\CIDC B&amp;W TY wltll
Aulom.ottc Gain Conlfot.

lor NilrMrlci Entry
lulllln
Rnlllutlon 12• Vk*l Sc..Db•l•~tt1 Unee of 14 ClwK~
Two Bull In 1141&lt; Dlell Dll••
M-232C llllerf- 1! Ptll II Ill
A11dl; to Run Softwllw Larlry ~l1lrle

11-l(ey

$

•
•
•
•

'

"EVERYTHING IN TWO· WAY RADIOS, ANTENNAS. ACCESSORIES'~

''l'l

_ _ ,__RII1111fMIA

Gampolls, Ohio
446 4517

•'

.l

•·

29
Yz Gal. Ctn.

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

"*•

ICE
CREAM
Flavors

,.•'

111meung ""II

Rich 'n' Creamy

Assorted

II

0

Holland

SHOWBOAT

48K Model III

~

~

Upper Rt. 1

POTATO
CHIPS

PORK &amp;
BEANS

,-''.

-on.
. v... n••••tv

PEPSI
Reg. or Diet
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

Deposit

COMPUTER

,..!
•••'•'
,

[Just insert
C-' lht okl 8
tr1Ck to a Clssette ..,_._

.o a.rr. ,,, ...

LAY'S
BAR·B-Q or
SOUR CREAM

Plus

SAVE NOW ON A 2·DISK TRS•BO®

•,;•
·'·l

AMIPM Clock Rlldlo

.

ond Pley

HAM
SALAD

'

~

~,

""~"':',;..,
Cr 1111
...

BOLOGNA

S2

)

And The Sestl

CAIIOII-IISWD

Pre-SIIceO

HOMEMADE

· PORK
79 CHOPS
LB.

SALES • SERVICE
LEASING • TRAINING

(.

Aulo

Kahn's All Meat

I

!

•~'

R-.

1.~&gt;

.................... S:JIJI)

Six ri10nths ......... .... .

:

Cordi•• Phone with

· ·

·, G•lllpolis, Oh.
Phone 446-4290

:

Cobra RP74o•··

SLIM
LINE

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

SINGU: ( ' 01~\'
PRic:t:

The Biggest Name
in Little Computers ®

Cocoo Brown (93481)
Whitt (83468)
Btlgt ~13*17)
Atmond/Aoh ~83423)

S3695

OnP Vl'ar .. ..

MAll. SUR."W 'RIP110NS
Sund:l)· Onl)'

•

~

-

One Month ................... .

10 CiliTIP~ .

l

~-

DISPLAY BOX

oHM

HONDA -SALES

CORRECT SALE PRICE
SHOULD BE $],97

SU B.'iCRII'TION llt\ TES
8}' Carrier or Motor R.lmu•
One Wee k ..... .. .

CAROLL SNOWDEN
411 Second Ave.

l .

\

q1,1ll lty and

Compact,
pUshbu!l on wall
phone. Ideal_l or
kitchen use

WE MUST REDUCE OUR INVENTORY
BEFORE WE MOVE!!

BETZ

hospltalizationexpenses.
The Social Security retirement
fund's ellglblllty age also is due to

1
Sunda v Tlnws-Sc nllnct wilt no1 ix'
r~JXltt~ih lf; for advt~nr(' payments made

l

PC-500

"--·-- ~
atal ana adJustiOII
volume on lhe
rln~r. And 11'1 bull!
to ITI atanderds lor

•No.._R.,.-

- PARTS &amp; SERVICE PHONE 446·2648

No. 85, 145, 25, 26. 45 ......1 2.97
On Page 3

avnllablr

.•
.•

you 're lamlllar wlln .

SAVE 10% TO SO% ON AL.. HONDA LINE PARTS AND
ACCESSORIES IN STOCK!!
PHON~ 446-2240

AUTOLITE
SPARKPLUGS

Publlsh~&gt;d,M~,~-~,;c~h:Y"~d";~'~'·.~~~~~~:~~

If your mortgage outlives you,
Mortgage Life Insurance
can help keep your home
In the family.
Check with State Farm

I·

It's The Smallest

SALES

CIRCULAR
In Today's Newspaper

,.~in=g~co~v~e~ra=g=e~to~ln~c~lu~d-e_c_at_a_st_ro~p-hi_c-~r~lse~to~fJ1-.~b~u~tn~o~t_un_t_u_2022
__._ _ _~:th:is==ha=ve=ca:u:sed=o=ur:cu:s:to:m:en=
.

Cross. "We all feel it Is linked to the ~~~~~~~~~~~;!
AIDS hysteria."
1
The disorder, which cripples the
iU11li1V "timrt· Jmtintl
body's disease-fighting system and
USPS5~
leaveS It open to often fatal
Infections , strikes mainly homosexual men, who accountfor 71 percent
I ':;;':;,by ttw Ohio
of the reported 1,641 cases.
IC1
- MullimM ta. Inr.
1
paid at Ga UipoUs.
Other risk groups Include intravas S('('() nd class mailing matter
enous drug users, Haitians and
at Porrwroy. Ohio. Post Off!r('.
hemophiliacs. Nearly 40 perCent o(
Mf'mbf'r: Thf' A..&lt;~socl a!t'd Press. lnlarx:l
AIDS victims die, officials said.
Dally Press Assocll,ltlon and the Aml"'r1·

t

,.r

They also call for charging
beneficiaries more for one type or
Medicare Insurance while extend-

"People have developed an unfounded fear," said Phyllis Tawney,
a Red Cross spokeswoman In
Philadelphia. "We want to get out
the word that It is completely safe to
give blood."

~atlonal

••

•'

afrald .when they read about this
problem," she said in an interview.
"We intend tosolvetheproblem .lt 's

.

' .

- · I'"

1,_

Our 1oweet price everl The Model W is
sure to incra in the productivity of every
manager. Chooee from ready--to-run builness and peraonal programs 81¥1 - how
easy it lsi You can do word proca uing, .
~ ~. elecboolc filing, accounting and more. Don't walt-get your
own Model mtodly and start saving time
llld tflol1,

..... I

•

hls parents killed hls aun\ and uncle
a few months after discharge from
the Buffalo (N .Y.) state ltQspllal,"
Assistant U,S. Attorney Jeremiah
F . Donovan wrote In the govemment's brief.

Brannam. 1717 W(&gt;sl Nine Mill' Hoad.

l lenda•d Mt.lo. phone

I

'••

.

can Nt:'"'spaper Pubtlsh('fS Association,

sggs

••
,.
•'
,.

away by fears about acquired
Immune deflcency syndrome. Con·
tributtons are lagging 10 to 12
percent belownonnat.offlclalssald.
. "This Is a na tiona! phenomenon,"
said Kathy Schuetz, a spokeswoman
for the Baltimore chapter of the Red

:tor-falling blood donations In some
U.S. cities, and health o!ficlals are
responding by launching a cam;Paign to fight misconceptions about
the mysteriOus disorder.
· "It would nNer have occurred to
us that anyone would think. they
'could· get AIDS trom donating
blood," Gef!Y So hie, a spokeswo•man foc Red Cross blood services In
los Angeles, said Friday.
But otflcials In New York,
Chicago, Phlladelphia, Baltimore,
'Miami and Detroit said In a spot
check by The Associated Press that
potential donors are being scared

FRENCH QU/ARTER

STEREO.( '
RADIO ·- .aWITH HEADPHONES

I'

Medicare hospital bills may face
bankruptcy between 1988 and 1996.
The precise date depends on the
economy.
One or the trustees called the
report "an early warning" but said
·there Is no reason for alarm about
theprogram'slncome.
"It's adequate for now," said
Carolyne K. Davis, admlnlstratorof
the Health Care Financing Administration which oversees Medicaid
and Medicare.
''So many of the elderly people are

-~ Pl'elliiWrlter

LAST WEEK OF OUR

FM

..''

.

up before the U.S. Supreme Courl .
The Amertcan Psychiatric Association estimates that successful
Insanity defenses are used In feo.Ver
than 1 percent of felonies committed
In the United States. Dr. Abraham
Halpern, a New York psychiatrist
who opposes the defense, estimates
U.S. mental hospitals house about
4,00l people acquitted of crimes
because of Insanity.
In coort documents, the government Is seeking to convince Cabranes that the mental conditions of
defendants merit consldera t ion only
during sentencing.
"A patient found not guilty by
reason of insanity for the murder of

SUI!£1 201. Detroit, Mlch ii'!;Dn, 4RJ75.

WE WILL BE MOVING TO OUR NEW LOCATION NORTH ON RT. 7
FROM SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA (Across From Holiday Inn) JULY
lst.. .. RATHER THAN MOVE IT WE ARE OFFERING TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS.

AU

.

• "AIDS hysteria" Is being blamed

STEVE YATES .BAND

Wall Phone

.•

liOn of defendants. U.S. District
JudgeJoseCabranesindlcatedhels
considering three questiOns: how
often P5YChlatrir diagnoses oi a
defendant agree, how likely juries
are to understand expert psychlatric testimony and how reliable are ·

By lAURA. KING

APPEARING FOR THE NEXT TWO WEB&lt;S

Space· Saver
(

of New Haven, contends Tornlero
stolethediarnondsbecausehewasa
compulsive gambler and couldn't
The government chall~ aphelp himself. Torniero Is charged
peared first' in a federal court In ' withlOcount -: ofuarisportlngstolen
Connecticut shortly after John W. goods.over st.o•e .ll' es.
HUnckley Jr. was acquitted by
The govern. ""'· . :uso has asked
. reason of insanity of the attempted
Cabranes to ban evidence of
assassination of President Reagan . compulsive gambling.
Two&lt;)efendantschangedtheirpleas
Any decis ion from Cabranes
after the government's motibn was would only Immediately affect the
subinitted.
way he· runs hls courtroom, atBut former jewelry 'store man- though the other six federal judges
agei' John J . Torntero, 32, ofOrange,
In Connecticut would probably
lias held to hls IntentiOn of using the
adopt his reasoning, legal observers
Insanity defense ina case involving say. But if he does rule for the
more than $500,00l In stolen dla- government, Keefe has promised to
moods. His lawyer, Hugh F. Keefe appeal and hiJ1tS the case could end

Blood donations now fewer

FRENCH QUARTER

Thl atn Model III II&amp;

,.

Revolving around the case 1s an

Issue of the merits of psychiatric
testimony about the mental condi-

By BETn" ANNE WilLIAMS
, ...........,. Pl'ell8 Wrller
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - The
Medicare trust lund Is Inching
toward Insolvency, according to
projections rele;jsed last week. But
an advisory papel thinks that by
ralslDg tbe eligibility age lo ,fJ1 and
charging higher premiums, the
system can survive and expand
benefits.
The Social Security system's
trustees, In an annual assessment,
•said the trust fund that pays

·',.

..
-.-"
.

psychiatric Predictions on defend-

Changes may save Medicare system

We are moving to our new location on Upper
Route 7 next to linn's landing, July 1st.
Our phone sale w~s such a success that we are
continuing it for one more week.....

'

Butade!enselawyerroiltendsthe
IIO"ernment "Is seeking a sadistic
revenge against \hose who are
unable to control their actions."

r~sa;;;ld;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

.

'•

·~get away with m~."

Conn. (AP) -Tiie

·1

defense serves no worthwhile

pulpl6e anct 'uterally lets a person , ants' behavior.

' U.S.gcl\'el'llmentisasklngafederal
··JUdge to abolish the centurles~ld
• lnsan.ltyclefense;contendlnglt ''rots
·the. foundatklns of the COIICilPt of
· ~responsibility.''
" .
·: I,awyers and mental health
-· expe.tlsbellev!!lihearingthatbegan
In U.S. District Court here last week
· - .in a case Involving ' stolen
diamonds - Is the first direct
-cha,llenge of the Insanity defense,
:which ·provides for acquittal of a
·'1liiSpeCtlfacourt!lndshewaslegally
ll1sane at the tlnie of thecrline.
· ' The U.S. attorney's otflce argues

MOV,NG SALE

,.
,.·''

~he

By SU8AN OKUJ.A
A..,.. t dl'rea!Wrlter

,.----=-,;_------------------

!MIA mother has hopes for
..:~ more information about son
.•

Offici3Is "s eek abolition ·of insanity defense

�Cllio

Point Pleasant,

1983

JIA'WI

Va.

"t'. ;:~

June 26, 1983

Pomo•or

Program works against drugs:: Women miners get U

Jamoes, Larry,Rlck;y&amp;MIBOJyJill
COLiJMBUS, Ohio (AP) -An
ColumbUs; three sister's, Allee,
Ohio
Domlnlcan College program
Anna and Sandy, ail Qf Columbus;
GALLIPOLIS - Mary Ruth
alid a paternal grandmother, designed to help teen-agers tum
Darst, 68, Rt. 1, Cheshire, died at
their hac~ on drugs and alcohol has
Day o1 Gallipolis.
5:45 a .m . Saturday in Holzer Maude
drawn
150 youths from as far way
Funeral serv!ees will be held 1
Medical Center.
from
California
p.m . Tuesday In O.R. Woodyard
Born July 22, 1914, In CheshirE!•
"Kiss Me, I'm D.t ug Free,'' say
Company Chapel, 1346 S. High St.,
Township, Gailla County, daughter
the
buttons we 1 b:t the teen-agers,
Columbus. Burial will be In Obetz
of the late Martin LutherandMyrtle
parents
and c'CUJ15clors ~g part
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
B. Carrier Gilmore, she was a
In
Youth
To Youth, a prevention
funeral home !rom 2-4 11M 7·9 p.m .
member of Church of God ol
program
hekllast
week.
today and Monday.
Gallipolis.
She married Douglas Darst on j. Everette Shank
AprU7,1934,atKanauga,andhealso
preceded her In death on Jan. 26,
ATHENS - J. Everette Shank,
1982.
48, 1 Mary St., Athens, died
SuiV!v!ng are three daughters, Wednesday afternoon in droWning
Mrs. Dale (Grace) Ellis of Middle- accident In In Lake Erie.
port, Mrs. Brady (Ellen) Gilbert of•
Born March 6, 193:), at Allee
GALLIPOLIS - Gallta County
Rt. 1, Cheshire, and Mrs. Gleason Station In Gallla County, son ol
commissioners Friday appointed
(Helen) Gilbert ol Gallipolis; a son, · Wearthy and Helen Foley Shank,
live representatives to the regional
Richard Douglas of Nelsonville; 15 who both survive, he attended ~Vat~; Ihdllii!Soy 0oUJ1CU.. a ~qp,
grandchildren and five great· · Wilkesvllle High School, was a
which will administer a $3.2 milllon
grandchildren; and two brothers, member of theFirst ChurchoiGod,
federa l jobs training program In the
Millard of Rt. 1, Cheshire, and . Athens Elks Lodge, and formerly a
area.
; member of the Naval Reserve. He
Luther of Columbus.
Officials have formed 29 P!Cs in
Shewasalsoprecededindeathby was employed by Tennessee Gas
Ohio as part of the Job Tratnlng
a son and four brothers.
Transmission Co. In Albany.
Partnership Act. The act Is designed
Also sul'll1v!ng are hfs wife, Jane
Funeral services will be held at 1
to help econonnJcally dlsadvanted
p.m . Monday in Waugh-HaUey- Ann Tyler Denney Shank; three
learn marketable job skills.
Wood F,uneral Home, with Rev. daughters, Jill Shan~ of Athens,
Gallia commissioners will meet
Miles Trout officiating. Burial w~l . Mrs. Krls (Janice) Bunting of
Monday at Lake Hope State Park
be In Gravel Hlll Cemetery,' . !'lelsonvllle, and Mrs. Allen (Kathy)
with officials from the stx other area
Cheshire. Friends may caa u at the Glommen, serving in the U.S. Air
countles In the regional PIC.
funeral home from 24 and 7·9 p.m. Force in the PhllUpines; two sons,
Two persons .were named from
today.
1\enne th R. of Jac~qville, and
Gallla to represem government and
DuaneA.ofBowllngGreen; aslster, three appointees wlll represent
Mrs. Dave Leona McAtee of private business.
Umcaster; two brothers, Ovid of
Doris A. Day
Named were: Emelyn ScarClaremore, Okla., and Rev . berry, Ohio Bureau of Employment
COLUMBUS - DorL• Ann Day, Wearthy I. of Vidor, Texas; and six Services; Sidney Edwards, Gallla·
grandchildren.
~. 1117 Meadow Lane, Columbus,
Meigs Community Action Agency;
He was preceded In death by his
died Thursday In a droWning
Myron "Bud" McGhee, McGhee
first wife, Wilda WellsShank,and by
accident at Zanesvllle.
Realty and Insurance; Madge
Born May 15, 1963, she was the an lnfantdaughter ,AmyLouShank. Boggs, Ohio Valley Bank; and Curt
Funeral arrangements are being Mlller, Federal Mogul Corp.
daughter of Buddy Day, who
suiV!ves In Columbus, and the late completed by JagersFuneral Home
Commtsstoner Paul Niday said
In Athens pending recovery of the
Bertha Wa ugh Day. •
Gallla.
County Is expected to receive
Also surviving are four brothers, body.
$379,9813 of the $3.2 mtuton grant for

Youth To Youth was a five-day
residential. workshop to give teens
support, encouragement andpractl·
cal ,s~ to avoid the use ot drugs
and alcohol, Most attendlng were
!rom central Ohio, but some groups
!rom California and Michigan
attended.
Butch Lowe, 17, a student at
Groveport High School who lsactlve
tn football and (rack, said teen-agers

have many alternatives to using
drugs. He satd he urges classmates

Gallia, Meigs receive ..
development funding
•

GALLIPOLIS Community
block development grants have
been releaSed to Gallia and Meigs
counties and the city of Galllpolis
based upon loca l 'e conomic
conditions.
Gallta County was awarded
$98,100, while Meigs got $87,600.
Gallipolis received $25,o:xl In the
allocation.
Gov. Richard Celeste's office
announced Friday those funds were
part of $17.9 milllon made available
to counties and small cities to create
jobs and stimulate businessdevelopment In rural and non-metropolitan

Commissioners name
PIC representatives

I

Cyclist injured in accident
reported.
The patrol reported the wind·
shield of a car driven by Kelly R.
Spencer, 40. Vinton, was broken
when a semi-tractor ra n over arock,
which was thrown up Into the win
shlel of Spencer's car.
Spencer's car received light
damage, but no one was Injured.

GALLIPOLIS - Carl Vanover ,
41, Pomeroy, was reported by· a
Holzer Medical Center spokesm an
to be In fair condition in the Intensive
care unit as a result of a motorcycle
acccldent al 1: 30 a .m. Sa turday on
Ohio 7 in Meigs County.
The state hig hway patrol said
Vanover lost control of his motorcy·

GALLIPOLIS - Don Saxon,
Gallipolis, reported to the Gallta
County Sheriff's Department that
three Items were stolen from the
truck he was driving In Rodney at
Caldwell Trucking.
Stolen were: a C8 radio, valued at
$1JO; a ratchet, valued at $75; and
wrenches, valued at $.ll.

'lp;ii·~--------ij;·---------iiJ

wentasolfhethemade
left side
of thecurve
road and
Into 1
,.cle
a right

~~a_;":t'::::ent.

Report theft

•INDIVIDUAL •MARRIAGE
FAMILY • CHILDREN
•

The bike had

The patrol reported no one was
injured in a two-vehltle accident

COUNS·ELI N·G

6 ~~~~:a}:a t
~~~~:~;~~u;:~
Albany.
The accident occurred

12:17 p.m . Friday on Lebanon
Township Rd._149.
Evans and Bailey were both
traveling westbound when Evans,
who attempted to avotd striking
Bailey's tractor from behind, went
off the left side of the roadway and
overturned . No Injuries were

•PROFESSIONAL •CONFIDENTIAL
•AFFORDABLE
•Insurance Covers Most

Extinguish fire

Fees+

WOODLAND
CENTER, INC.

GALLIPOLL&lt;; - The Gallipolis
Fire Departme nt put out a fire
Friday on an unoccupied rental
property on Garfield Avenue owned
by Walter L. Lane of Galltpolls.
The fire department reported the
blaze - which started In a utility
room - Ignited the floor ing, wall
coverings and conten ts In the room .

992-2192

\his .s:erv_lce area.

He said PIC could dectdl! to
administer the grant Itself or
contract.with another agency to do
the work.
In other business, the commissioners said they will meet Tuesday
with their current Insurance agent,
Tom Wiseman , concerning the
county's comprehensive poltcy.
"They want to discuss- · possible
ways ot reducing the cost of the
policy. Buckeye Union, represented
by Wiseman , was the only company
to bid for the county's Insurance
poJtcy.thJs year and It seeking double
its current rate.
Buckeye Union bid $136,607 a year
for the three-year poltcy. It currently charges the county a bout
$68,(00 a year, according to ftgures
released by the county.
The pollcy, which includes llabil·
lty for most county employees and
damage to county property. expired
June 7. However, the county has
received two 30-day extensions of
the policy while they search for
ways to reduce the cost.
The county Is paying the higher
rate during the extension periods,
the commissioners said. ·
The commtssloners have said
they m ay rebid the Insura nce If they
cannot work out a cheaper
agreement.

areas.
Counties and communities are
expected to use the money to create

and retain new jobs, Interest

n~

business enterprise, Improve holis:
ing for low- and moderate incune
farnllles and upgrade public
seiV!ces.
The awards were made !rom' a
formula taking Into account locaJ.:I
econotnlc condltlons and population
·
characteristics In each area.
Applications tromsma)l cltt~wtll
be accepted from July 15-2!1.'
Projects that quallfy wW be~
approved by Aug. 13. This year, the
minimum local grant has been·
raised !rom $15,o:xl to $25,(00.
Counties must submit appllca-.
lions between July 29-Aug. 12. Those
qualltylng will be approved by Sept. ·

16.

.

I

I 'I'NIIWrtter

Glenwood 'man pleads
not guilty to theft ·
I

ASSOCIATED
FABRICATORS
INC.

CERAMIC TILE
COUNTER TOPS!

(Formerly Fulton-Thompson)
11 0 Spring Ave.. Pomeroy.

NOW YOU CAN DECORATE ANY WALL
. IN lHE OOUSE .ITH DECOR~TER TILE.
SO EASY TO ·oo AND INSTALL
.
WllH NO MAINTENANa: Attl TILE THAT
WILL LAST ALIFETIME.

PH. 992-5101

WEST - AGRO
DAIRY SUPPLIES .
, 1''-' "NEW
...,'?'oc; PRODUCT"

· Buy A Case Of

BOVADINE II

149 Third Ave.

446-1995

Sports Coats ....

Reg. $125.00 .... .... .. .. . Now SIOO.OO
Reg. $215.00 ........ ... .. . Now $172.00
Reg. $265.00 .......... .. Now $212.00

Reg. $90.00 .............. Now $72.00
Reg. $100.00 .......... .. Now $80.00
Reg. $105.00 ............ Now $84.00

s

•••

Reg. 14.50
Now 11.60
1
Reg. 17.00 ... .............. Now 113.60
.
.
... Now 114.80
1

Reg. $16.00 ........ .. ...... Now $13.60
Reg. $17.00 ................ Now $14.45
Reg. $18.00 ................ Now $15.30

Dress Slacks ....

.Spt. Shirts/Knit Shirts ....

Rt&amp;. $22.00 ... .. .. .. .. ... Now $17.60
At£. $38.00 .. ........... Now $30.40
Reg. $42.00 . ......... Now $33.60

Reg. $16.00 .............. Now $12.80
Reg. $18.00 ..... ... .... Now $14.40
Rea. $24.00 .. ........... Now $19.20

Swim Wear ....

Fashion Jeans ....

At&amp; • $15.00 ....... .. ..... Now $12.00

Ree. $18 .00 ............. Now $14.40

Reg. $24.00 .... .......... Now $19.20

Reg. $28.00 .... ...... ... Now $22.40
Reg. $29.50 ...... ....... Now $23.60

Boys' Summer Wear....

Shoes ... .

Aec. $5.00 .. ......... ........ .. Now
Ate. $9.00 .. .................. Now
Aec. $12.00 ................... Now

Reg. $55 .00 ..... ..... ..... ... ,nuw
At&amp;. $70.00 .:... .......... .
Aee. $75.00 .... ........... ..

3

'

8

Our Reg . 9.97

Sole Price

Our Reg .

5.97Eo 39.

s s stondard
20x26"

Watches For The Family

Bed Pillow With KodOsolf\''' 1 Lux" Dish washing Liquid
22-oz.'mild dish de te rg en t.

5-functlon L.C.D. watches.

' I I Ql

._, 1/
,.

.f

UmH

L::---o=---=-_ j

Our 5.97

Our 5.77

3.95 4.15

...'·

1·

Sole

,,kgl .

EJ

K mart• Alt·season Motor 011

RtniO"' Lounclry Detergent

lOWJO or 10W40

72-oz.'bOx. Great voluel

"

'Nelw1

'

..,,

' •

Dress Shirts... .

CASUALS

. I·
1

bookkeeper, and Darlene L. Higley, ·
18, Rt . 2, Vinton, student.
Roy Dummitt, 19, Rt.l, Thunnait,
laborer, and Kimberly A. Arro·
wood, 17. Oak Hill, student.
James D. Dotson, ~. Vinton,
maintenance man , and Jamie J .
Campbell, ~. Rt. 2, Bidwell, at
horne.
·
Mark S. . Kelley, 19, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, maintenance. and Terri
L. King, 18, Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
McDonald's employee.

' '

.,..
".,

llmll2

.,

Save Now .

::•,,
••
·I

,,

:200/o TO 40%

.

OFF

••
•I

•

'
.•'
·'
'

GET ONE

FREE!

1.97

IG-Ib. Bag
O...r&lt;oal

B 1.28

~~~~~7;·~
~II/ B •
~

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

REG J.llAR PRICE

..

'

!!liliii

..::....

~

EJ

- 1M

Sole Price

Our,. l.28

9

$

7711:· Plastic Plates.Plates
211 Foom

Glod" KHchen lags
Fifteen 13-gol. bogs.

•
-,'
~

,.

Sole Prtce

t

·''
•,
,,•
.•,

1.48Eo.

.;

I .Z•oa:Tulle

~

.......... l l l l l

·:••'
•

...

SPECIAL

IOIIEifS

•

KNEE HIGH HOSE

·~:

:.••

-.•

3 PIS. FOI Sl.OO

"
••

•

~•zemoe

liegulai, get
01 mint -floVOted Crest• .
'""' wt.

·~"'··

Reynolds"
Food Wrap
12"x 75 ' roll
aluminum lo ll.

· 75-squore

99•1;]

~

•

1.48

8

SolePrtce

••
••

Levrs

SotePrtce

lklnCreom
Gieo se tess .
medlcaled .
10-ounce • ICJr.

rooltlp eels

~

...
.

. 9.

1r'l

1

Men's Suits... .

Aci'OII FnNn Holur Medical Cent.

.

mlnein-Mannet, W.Va.
.
" In terms o1 the union, we are
making i&gt;rogress. The Issues are
beingralsedandpeop)earestartlng
to talk abouut them," Clare Fraenzl
of West Homestead said Friday at
the opening of the Fifth National
ConferenceofWomenMiners.
Some 200peopleare attending the
conference.• theflrsteversanctloned
by the'inale-dom!n~ted UMW in the
10 years since the first woman in

in America today," Charles Datz, a
representative of the Pennsylvania
HuinanRelatlonsCommlsston,satd'
Ms. F'raenzl said the Reagan
administration
f
tl
II and
h conservative
h
ed
orces na ona Y ave amper
women miners' efforts.
"There's an attempt to roll back
everything the labor movement has
won, everything the women ' smovement has won, everything the civil
rights movem ent has won." sh~
said.
The women say they are often
denied promotions and are the
subject of Jokes and offensive

'ltJ

SEMI-ANNUAL

Whh Coupon and Pwooif-of-PurcNH FftMTI 0nt HINt 3 -Pietl . !Or .,y
thrw ............., Q&lt;lrmef'ltl.)

•,

Mine Workers Local 2236 furlougbed !rom a u.s. Steel Corp.

"Race and sex dtscrtmtnatlon ...

are the most blatantly abused areas

lJlJlitt_i£

Gallipolis, Ohio

FREE HANIS® T-SHIRT or BRIEF BY MAIL

PHONE 44M»62~

tatlve was the first to telt her that
shrtnklng from the fight against
sexual discrimination "dw!ndles
an&lt;,l weakens the fabric of the
union."
UMWPresldentRichard'l'nimka
was scheduled as keynote speaker
today, .and the women · say his
appearance shows the changing
attitudes of their union " brothers."
"Men have always seen us as a
threat,orasunnecessary.Bullnthe
last year, they have begun taking us
more seriously. They know we need
the money, too," said Marjorie
Foster Qf EUsworth, a miner lor

IrQnlcally, the women say It's
hard times for coal that have
brought UMW men and women
togelhjlr.
Women m$e up less than 2
percent of the mining workforce.
And with layoffs based on seniority,
theysaytheyareottentheflrstsent
onto the unemployment Unes.
Unemployment exceeds 40 per·
cent lor women miners, but lsonty33
percent overall, the UMW says.
"When things get bad, you bunch
together," said Carol Davis of
Marianna, a miner lor ftve years.
Ms. Fraenzl said "tremendous"
problems remain lor women seek·
!ng employment, promotions and ·

ATARI

._(

(For 6 and Under)

Ms. Levitt sald a UMW rep.resen-

t.lve
. female members of Unlled

K. PhllUps, 19, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, Rax ~;::;;;;:;;;;:;:;;;;:;;;;::~:;;;;::;~
employee.
Kerry R. Marlin, 21, 326'h Second
~
Ave., district technician, and Lata·
tla M. Barnett, 21, 326'h Second
Ave., legal secretary.
t,,'nrttmCH
RoyA. Oidalrer,23,Rt.2,Bidwell,
S
psychiatric aide, andMaryK.Reed,
33, New Haven, psychiatric aide.
John · W. Nevllle Jr., 22, 1409
EastemAve.,masonryworker,and
Kimberly A. · Carroll, 23, 1409
Eastern Ave., unemployed.
Ricky L. Sibley, 24, Rt. 2, Crown
City, unemployed, and Bonnie L.
john F. Doolittle
'
Walters, 27, Proctorville, none.
Steven J . Holmes, 29, Rt. 4,
· Registered Pharmacist
&lt;;;atUpolls, housing contractor, and
400 Second Avenue
Holly J . Knotts, 22, Dover, cashier.
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
Stanley G. Spencer Jr.,~. Vinton,
unemployed, andNiomL. Sowards,
614-446-1883
17, Rt.l, Ewlngton, §tudent.
Richard 0. Summers, 19, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, unemployed, and Amy
Jo Noble, 16, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
Hours:
student.
Daily 9-6
David L. Dunn, 34, Rt. 2, Vinton,
Mo
n
.
&amp; Fri. 9 rill 8
entertainer, and Brlnda F . Turley,
Closed Sunday
31, Rt. 2, Vinton, poslal employee.
Cllnt D. Fitch, 23, Ri. 2, Vinton,

Gallipolis Floor Covering

Get 25 lb. of Oynemate
"FREE"
While Supply Lasts

BUY

mlnecoal.

GALLIPOLlS - Robert Angles, days in jail, given a m&amp;y driver's.
GleiiWood, W.Va., entered a not llcense suspension and put on 18
guUty plea tQ a charge o! theft monthsprobationforDWI.
Fj'lday In Galllpolis Municipal
In other traffic cases, Kevin M.
Col,lrt . .
Reynolds, 19, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, was
Angles was cited by city pollee tor lined $12 for failure to yield; Curtis
aJJegedly taking hub cap rings June W.Shaler,39; Rt. 2,CroWnClty,was
22. He was placed .on $fOO recogniz1ou=nd::...:.:to_.:_e_::lg:::h.:..:ty:_:e_ars_.-"-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
,._:recen::
· :,:t:_::ttm:,::es:.:w.:en:::t_:u:::n:de:'.:g:.:
a_ccep_:..t_an,;,ce-:-u-n_d_er_gr_o_u::...
'n_d._ _ _ _ _co_mm
__e_nt_s_
. --:-----ance bond by Judge James A. llned$12forfalluretostopforastop
sign; and Wallace J. Ward, 24, Rt.l,
Bennett and his case was conttnued Crown City, forfeited $100 bond for
until Juty ~tor pretrial.
. misuse o1 a dealer lag and Sli bond
A not guUty plea tQ OWl was for failure to display license plates.
entered by Edgar Robinson, 44, Rt.
David S. Glover, 40, 35 Madison
3, Gallipolis, who W!Jl also face Ave., forfeited $100 bond for misuse
ATARI!
pretrial onJuty5. He was puton$500 ofadealertal!:; GeraldE.RoachJr.,
recognizance bond.
20, Rt. 3, Galllpolls, forfeited $36
. DeloreS Belcher, Rt. 2, Galllpolls, bond forfalluretocontrol; CarnetV.
pleaded not guUty to a charge of Beard, 73, 27 Vine St., forfeited $36
writing a cheCk with Insufficient bond for failure to yield; James R.
funds to Madison Shoes In DeBahks, 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, forfeited
cember 1982. She was put on-$500 Sli bond for squealing tires.
recognizanCe bond and a pretrial
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
was also scheduled in the matter for Juanita M. McGovern; 52, Ypsilanti,
Juty5.
Mich., $31; Teresa A. Chmiel, 27,
,Fourid guilty of lnsutftclent funds Bowling Green, $35; James R.
Custom
llntlng At
wps Richard E . Van Gundy, 190 Carsey, 55, Lanesville, $36; Robert
HoldroCost
Brentwood Drive, for a check R. Meredith. 37,Ellendale, Del.,$36;
wiitten Dec. 27, 1!182, to' Super Jay R. Johnson, 28, Beavercreek,
9.97
America. He was lined $25, given a $40.
s\!Spended six-month Jail sentence
Joseph Davis, 65, Jacksonville,
Ga l . ·
Our
and put on stx months probation.
Fla .. $41; Charles B. Corwin, 19, Rt.
15.97
1, Northup, $68; Richard E. Par·
Terry B. Stephens, 27, 87 Burger
Atar!® Game Cartridges
The Atarl" 5200"'System
.The Defender'" Cartridge
Latex Flat House Paint
sons, 24, Rt. 1, Northup, $70; David
Choice of Football, QIX '" or
You're the captain - defend
&lt;::ompoct desigl), 360' anaThe Pe rt o rmer "', acrylic white.
Ave., was tlneds:nl, sentenced tolO D. Stone, ~. Rt. 2, Leon, $14.
Countermeasure'" cortridge.
your spaceship! From Atori• .
tog lovstlck, coloilul graphics.
Our16.97, 01011 ... .. Gal. 10.97

:GALLIPOLIS - The following
c6uples ftled for marriage licenses
recently in Gallla County Probate
Court.
Thomas R. HaJthlll, 23, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, malntenance, .and Ruth
Ann Bowen, ~. 23 Burger Ave.,
cashier.
Terpo M. Jividen, 27, Oak Hill,
unemployed, and Judith L. Legg, 41,
Oak Hill, unemployed.
Bobby E. Heisman, 19, · Rt. 1,
Bidwell, social worker, and Donna

.."'

10% SENIOR anZENS DISCOUNT
• (60and Over)
KIDDIE-SAY PROGRAM-10% DISCOUNT

aresomeltsstaunchestsupporters.

1be union and women have to work
together," said Joan Levitt, one o1

Couples file for marriage .

364 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio

•Dependable, Low Cost Prescription Service
•3 Registerad Phannacists
•Most complete P,.icription Stock
•Itemized Receipts for Insurance and Income Tax Purposes
.•We Compound .Prescrlptiooa
•We Fill All Third Party Pntac• iptiona
•We Maintain A Complete Record of all Pre~erip­
tions Filled
•Free Parking

plague them. but women coal
miners 5ay they're tlnally getttng
DAWSON, Pa. (AP) - Harass- , rec;ognitlon tnm their unlm.
ment and dlscrlmln.lttonconttnueto
"1be union Is ib!dJna that women
.

recognition

Eo. 29.

FRUTH PHARMACY

Closed thanksgiving &amp; Christmas

BJ~YMacVEAN

\

•••

;~~-~~ 8

....

WEEKDAYS
9 A.M. TILL 9 P.M.
SUNDAYS
11 A.M. TILL 8 P.M.

•

.to !W.Ltnvowed tn sports, music or
oUter activities . .

Tho Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page--A-7 ,

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

..

V__.lowt
Dtllnleclant
48-oz.' crystal
Vanllhe tolet
IIOwt Cleai 191.

WITH COUPON
7~-0z.'ln-tonk

bOwl cleaner.

It.

•

�·'

.·
June 26, 1913: :

Mhl tlh p tilt Gallipolis, Ohia

•

lo

Section~

theri e-r

June 26, 1983

•
••

Big
Bend
·Regatta
1983
floats
and
beauty
queens:
..

.•• .
• •

..'

•

on parade
JOIN STAW- Robin G!lOrge
has joined the staff ol Shear
Pleasure Hairstyling Center, 242
Second Ave. She Is oow acceptIng appolnhnenls lor swnmer
hairstyling at 44&amp;4442.

Entries still
accepted for
Racine parade

.. ..

~~~ll
"'~-..• 11 .
-a·
., ,...·.

• .. .

.

.:

::rj!&lt;

.

~..

• •.

c - ·

••

;;::;!!,

..

. ••

•• •

,, -=;-

.... .,., ..•• :n·... ...
·· · ~""••
. ii:~ ~

~
~
~w-

.,, . -

;;.

lla

.;,

::
"'

-1

~

111• "'1:1

0

· •t!

-..·~
·
~·
.....,,

-

N ,..

,'

.- •

n ~·

•.

~.

..·· ·= (")... . --------------------------------..
- ..
..
...•·· -•• n

.:;

g

m

flit!

•

•· ..... '8 -"&lt;
•·'
::J
CD Z
~

.•
••

IO OD~.,
c..

ttl

·~

•• w

'

. ...._._._.
... 'l .._._.
. ............
' ...
.
II._._
l.A.A.
• '

•

0

RAONE - The Racine Volun teer Fire Department wlll hold Its
annual Fourth of July celebration
next Monday, beginning with a
parade and flag raising ceremony at
Racine Junior High School grounds
a t 9:45 a. m.
Scott Wolfe, parade chairman ,
sa id entries for the parade are stU!
being accepted.
Any float, business, or Individual
may participate with any type of
entry. Several entries from the Blg
Bend Regatta parade are expected.
Following the parade, firemen
will have a chicken barbeque-at the
firehouse, games for the children In
the afternoon, a talent show In the
evening, topped off by a fireWorks
display.
For further Information call
949-2045 or M9-25W or send entry to
Fourth of July Celebration. Box 181,
Racine, Otuo 45m.

~

..

'."I

•'.

•••

·•
:-.

.

•
•

..••
•
,•
•

A~ACl'IVE AltracUvely costumed, these
sludents of Barbara's School ol Dance made a pmtly

==! •= =·
~~ ~'"I . -~
;!i - ~ ~- .,
~a-c I'"""
~c~

~

z :Co

,;,.

fi'". ~
••
••
••
•••

£:'

- o~

•

::IC

•••

00

I

n

~

., I . .
'

••
••
••
•

... CD
""
•

,...

f;

!"

••

••
•..
'\
••

.

rft
en

••

••
•••

C"'

.•,

•
:.
,.:z:

•

••

.,...
•

;.2
.,.,

••

Iii

Ul' ~ UI

I

1""'1

z
en
••

••

m.&lt;.i &lt;i .'-i

.~

-0"'
...
,., c:

._.

-tit m m;::
.... 0"'!!!

CD

•

I

1

A"

I

o()

:z:!: ~

-o :r&gt; n"'

I

3:m
0

•

-~

a.

••

••
•
~

.......

"'
.-tit c:o
l&gt;,._
... C)"'"'

I·

Speaking' without words - this life of mime fascinates children

)&gt;"CCI

o()

m

..

~-

'

'

By Cllt\RLENE HOEFUCH
11mes-Sentlnel Sial!
POMEROY--Telling a story without wonls ..... expressing through
gestures ..... conveying with body
la nguage .. ..
It's a ll the lively art called
- pantomime.
So explained the vivacious Liz
Wa lton , children 's librarian of
Wellston.
She was " loaned" to Meigs
County, Tuesday, ior a special
program at tbe Middleport Library.
In typical mime costuming -. black knickers, a red shirt, black
cap, white stockings a nd gloves .... and grease paint, a little but nota
lot since It was a hot and humldday -Walton e ntertained and then was
joined by some of the children for a
time of "let's pretend."
But not only did the nearly 40
youngsters there get to be active
pantomime participants, they were

a lso " m ade up" by the vis iting
artist.
Using " glo" pain ts in vivid colors ,
s he decorated faces and arms, wit h
flowers a nd things to conc-lude the
activity .
The program was a part of the
resource exchange of children's
librarian s s ponsored by the Ohio
Valley Area Libraries.

ARTIS'I"S TOUCH -

glo paints, children's librarian
Lb: Walton decorated the. faces
and anns of nearly 40 younpters with Dowers "" a part of her
PJ'OII'IIIII In panwmlme. Here,
she begins on Tammy Hol-

rman•s cheek.

SIPPING - U you guess
Walton Is miming, !llpJ:tlnl
through a straw, )'1111' re
the IIOIIe.

.... .. '. . ... '. ...
'··· ·············
'

'

' '

'

....._.LA.A.U.A . _UJ

'

Conserve water
~!dents

....•. a;c::
~

.. .. ! ..~- 0n
--

'

~

"'!!!
':~g..,.

( :ongenlallly by till' oth&lt;•r c·nniL'!il:utts, ,Julie Spem:er
1U1d Roblnllulfln~n . l\tl&lt;;s Jlapp l• presiding ovrr the
evenloii of tht• wt."t~ kt•nd. All ·cn ntt'St!U1t~ n~t·lved
Oowo•rs, sllvt•r 'trays :Uld- otiM'r gifts. MlL'Ilt•r of
Cl'rl'monlt'S for th(~ coronaUon .WlL"" Ron A~t . locu.l
Ohio Powr-r ( 'o. rmumgcr.

Mo·re regatta festit;itie.r on B-6

Stickers due

r.

REGATTA RO\'ALTV - ,JlU.'QUallne (.Jadd&lt;!)
Rapp, seated, daughter ol Mr. :Uld Mrs. Larty Rnpp,
w..S ~TOWJMJd queen of lrtm 1983 Big Bend Reg..tta In
cer emonies Frida)' night at tbe s!llge area along the
Ohio River. Others who will serve as h&lt;!r courl
SIUTOWid her. They are Kelly Wl~Uatch, t\ndrew
Baiey, Dee Oatley who wW&lt; sele&lt;.1ed Miss

'

•

POMEROY - Local emergency
units were kept on the move with
calls Friday and Saturday morning,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports.
Saturday momlng at 1::!4 a .m .,
Pomeroy look Carl Vanover !rom a
motorcycle accident a t Forest Run
and Ohio 7 to Holzer Medical Center.
Friday runs Included Pomeroy at
9:03 a .m., Frances Qua Us from
Clhester Road to HMC; Pomeroy a t
2:51p.m . treated Mary Darst at Hlll
Street; 1'uppers Plains. 6:28p.m.,
took Sherry Wilson from Success
Road to HMC; Pomeroy, 6:53 p.m.,
!or John Arnott, motorcycle accident on Ohio H3, taken toO'Bleness
Memorttal Hospital, Athens; Porn&lt;;_
roy, 8:57 p.m., took Max Schloss,
East Main Street. to veterans
M~oMal Hospital.

Admitted ..., Velma Brown,
J:..angsvWe.
Discharged
Avenelle Pettit,
Clara Custer.

picture on lhetr Ooal In Saturday's Regatta Parade.

POMEROY - Crowds- enjoyed Saturday 's 19th annual Big Bend
Regatta Parade which o!!ered somelhlng for everyone. There were pretty
girls representing not only loca l quee~ groups but queens from other
counties.
There were floats, three h1gb school bands--Eastern, Southern a nd
Meigs--a huge display olllre equtpmen t from throughout the area, Boy and
Girl Scouts, 4--H Club groups, Little League baU players and pollee
, departments taklng part as well as a wide variety of entries from
commercial Interests .

llD"'
o-t

,.

.. 6 I."''''l- -

~en

••
•

~~ •
iilnr•

.~

:~~J:J

..
~ - ~~ Zi! ~~

"'
"".
en ••
••

::;D !:: :::1:1'- ~

!!! i"f'' a

;;t :z:~

::a=a"'c;_
e;:;
.

""
en

;g :-0 ;;- ~·

Emergency runs

· · Veteran~ Memorial

·•·

..

POMEROY - · A comme rcial
driver's training school offered by
Automobile Club of Southeastern
Ohio has been opened a t the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Museum in Pomeroy.
Clarence Pack, safety director for
the a uto club's area otflce In
Portsmouth, said opening the driver' s school here means students wlll
not have to travel to Gallipolis or
A I he ns to -receive drlve r's·
education.
Space at the museum has been
s upplled by Charles Blakeslee, a
member of the Me igs County
Historical Society and AAA's board
of directors. who obtained permission from the state.
Classes wUI be held start ing the
first Monday of each month from 4-6
p.m . for four days. For scheduling,
call AAA office a t Gallipolis,
446-0699. The first class w lll be held
Aug. 1.

SYRACUSE All Syracuse
have been asked to
coMerve water {or at least the next
tlu'edays.
'n!ey areaske!lnot to water lawns
lllldllowers, w114h cars or engage In
an)' other actlvlfy requiring excess
w~r durlrig tW, 1perlod:. ·

~

...:.
. .•••

Driver school opens
.

POMEROY - Resident s whose
last names start with H, land J must
have new license stickers on their
veturles by midnight June 30.
The license bu reau, aside from Its
l'eflllar hours, Is open on Friday
nljjllts and !rom 8 a.m. to noon
Satllrday. Theof!lcels located in the
lol'!'ller Gibbs Grocery buUdlng on
M~)berry Avenue In Pomeroy.

•

z:1111 ,...,.~

, ... - ,.&gt;: ~~ :

: if .. ~~

-o ~1ft .
g1
. ' .....Dl• •' •' ..• •::•
' '

.,

�·-----

',

Page

8-2

Beat of the Bend
- - - - -·

NELSONVILLE - · Women
. within driving dlstance1lf Hocking
Techlnlcal College wW be able, tor _
an hour or two, to transport
themselves to San Franclsro, Calif.,
through the wizardry of
teieconferncl!!g.
By special arrangement with the
American Assoclalori of University
Women, Hocking Tech wru retrteve
a teleconference program being
broadcast live from the btennteal

sant visit .
If you have talent or are a part of
a musical group, perhaps, you
would contribute to the success· of
the Meigs County Fair.
A stage Is under construction "on
the hUI" at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds and at designated
times during the fair, entertainment is planned for that area.l!you
would like to be one of the acts
taking part, do give fair board
secretary, Muriel Bradford, 9lf&gt;3974, a ring so that scheduling can
be worked out.

convention
AAUW
by 251hit
satellite,
Tuesday
at 5of
p.m.,
In Room
the

1

..

wo

'

Keith 0. Wood

Game protector
named in Meigs
by Ohio DNR

4-H news

cflarRE' of HM.• prtJtol:ram . Rost.omary Cox and
Susk.&gt; Bin~ It'd crvotlo n.'i. Wt• co lh.&gt;ctt&gt;d dues.
dtscussed bake sa le and had rcl'reshmt&gt;nlS.
Advisors are Tra(.'('y Dotson, Unda Cox,
Carol Cox. Bet ty Rhocles. Mcmbn present
Were Sandy Master.&gt;, Te rrt Mastt&gt;rs , Bruce
Masters. R()S('mary CoM, ~a ncy Cox. Chrts
Cox. Sus!(' B\nJ:!, Todd Taylor. Una BlnR.

taldngp~ln~Francisroatthe

In NelsoovDie. . .
· Recognizing lhat many of the

--[j . ._...

Zenith

.

';Y ..

as

.

3 REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD
. RENT AND NOT BUY
( 1") NO CREDIT HASSLE
(2) FREE SERVICE ·
(3). NO INTEREST
STOP BY AND SEE OUR NlW

, :"GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel
· t; Bossard Memortal Library will
lli!,at the following places the week
¢ June 'lJ to July 1.
• Monday: Lewis Dr. 12-12:15, C&amp;S
aa_nk (Ri. :fi) 12:15-12:30, West
Apts. 12:35-1, Meadowbrook 1:00I: 30, Scenic Hllls N urslng Center
t' 35-2, Gallta Metro Estates 2: 05-3,
pinecrest Care Center 3: 15-3: 30,
F!odney VIllage 4: 15-4:45, Crousebeck Rd. 5-5:30, Northup 5:45-6:15.
Tuesday: Mitchell Rd. 3-3: 30,
Sanders/ Adelaide 4-4:30, McGuire

STORE IN MIDDLEPORT
"THE RENTAL STOllE THAT GIVES YOU MORE"

INGELS APPLIANCE RENTAL
Middleport ·

175 N. 2nd Ave.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell
were Father's Day weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Chapman, the
fanner Kenda Russell, and child·
ren, Shelley and Kimberly, at
Pickerington.

ROUND TABLE

$170 70

299.!15

1

n-act with the Ohio Valley Area
blbrarle"s.
: Bookmobile schedule for Monday, June 27,1983:
• Hemlock Grove (Post Office)
i:45-3:15; PagevDie (store) 3:554:25; Harrisonvtlle (Church) 5:35~: 05; New Lima Rd. (1 mile south of
tort Meigs) 5:·m: 00, short !1Im
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile
arrives; Rutland (Depot St.) 6; 408: 10, short film shown 15 minutes

RAT-IAN
GLASS TOP

DINmE TABLE 6-Chai,..

4 ARM CHAIRS

$177 70

REG
1

299.95

GAME TABLE
4-CH~IRS w/ CASTIRS

$78888

REG .
l07B

1

'

•OJtOON NO. '

~6~i.95

$4444

REG . •
C49.95

1

~

. . . .._
....... u ..........

217

III&amp;~K
r~

Riwr Road

Wef(II{Uests . - Report« Bany Call .

E .1'.C. 4-H Club mt'&lt; May ll at Rodney

Wood, president.

pr-esldt&gt;d and had c harg(' of !he program.
Anile Hudson and Usa Beck led dt:&gt;vollons .
Rodnl'Y Nlben ••ve a d&lt;mon"'atl&lt;&gt;n on
rabbltJ . Wf" decided that l'Vt'I'YCW' should glvr
a dcmonstra;iunat mcetlngJune ZJ. The next

meeting Junt' 1 at home of L~a and Thill')'
Henr)l. Advisors arc Charlrn~Wood and I..yda
Hudson. - ReporiM' Deann11 Caldwr\1 .

END TABLES

'

Eoc~ dlnnerlnclu&lt;M: n'v.e -·golden
brown lah ftliell, crtopy tench ties and two
Southern atyte huah P&lt;JPIIIel.

Olaroxp••• 7·10..83"

Not good with any otler ap«llal or dllcounl

{at PQ111&lt;:1paotng Copl.,o·a.l

GMLUtO il. oam

I
1:
1

I
I
I
I

.,

"'· 141-olll
-llf-Htl

C&gt;•••••D".... -

- - - -

.......,._~

Ofrl ()Q.IiiCJH fi8QIG

I
I
I

c- .....

.· ,,.
'

~!;991

&amp;

'

IIMCO fiUU Sill

BOX

MilT . &amp; lOX

$17070

II G.
149! .95

$227 7 0

LIVING
SOFII &amp; LOVESEAT ........... ... 11.~ . ~!1.1.! ..
"USYII:L

SOFA ........ .......... ...... ............. .~.E.~ . ~'-'-~ ···· ·

1

SOFA &amp; CHIIIR ..................... •1.~.~!9.9!.01

I

................... 170000

........................ '•70DO

.,,-~.

,

- ....

................ '570"

$1.000FF

•u:TON

SOFA &amp; CHAIR .......... .
ICINC.t.tD

SOFII &amp; LOVESEAT .. ........ ...... !1.\.~mt~L ....................... '670°0
SOFA &amp; CHAIR . .................... .!'~l..~!~.~~ ............. .... .......... '77Q7o .
FLEJCS1fll

~

INOLAND

trague tells stories at schools,
l!brarles, civic clubs and parties.

SOFA i. LOVESEAT ........ .... .... !J~ .~ !AAQ-.1!'! .......................... '170'•
.

SOFA &amp; CHAIR ........... ...... .... J!.~ . ~,.I...'.L ........... .............
,
......... ....... ..... J!.~ . :!'-'.Q.'!'! ............ .. ............

lUXtON CUlLII

•nO"
'170'•

..: Ms.

_

..................
OIIK HUTCH

$77070

~flGHt5

fiLL CitY OAK

rtDISTAl TAILl

·~••D'&amp;
'fia,_.._
....... ,._
- ·-

CtfY

$97070

~(-;?t.ll
•

TILL CITY

OIIK HUTCH

~t~u1

$57070

TILL CITY
'
DROP-LEAF TABLE
REG. 1969.9S

flU CITY

"

01111 TAILI

: One Is to aVoid drawing attention

I ·CMAUtl

~~Efius

tO

$77070

yourself - no melodrama, no
~ jewelry or .bli hats to
~ an audience !rom a tale,
WhiCh could run as long a.s 45

S57()10

rialnutes.
•

,.
'

BEDROOM

SUITE

:· ''Children have the lhortest
spans/' Ms. M,enear
idded. "A rule ot Uaunb Is to tell a

8ttentJoo

-Cory that's as

WITH UGMTID
, IIIDOI
OAM lltNISH

RIG.

Joni a.s tbe children

JVI!old."

'l Adults enjoy

S67Q70

tile most,

'.

..

The Golden Edition
Chest Freezer

Story time set
at library
10% Dtpoalt •d lol•co In Connniont low Monthly l'lyMtntl

Red.
Navy, Beige.

Choose From The Largest Selections In
Central and Southeastern Ohio

or White.

CDNYINIINT CIIDIT TIIMS AVAILABLE - WE CAllY OUR DWN ACCOUNn

The Same law Interest Rate As J 969
- - - - - - - - COUilON - -

I

../WI ,_. flU boolr.l,fl· .~ .. "'" meMO~· alt
pronNd '" f,.ll t olor ••th ,,,., ol\d P"t •t l•tfed

I

0 Kof'ldlr flo ... on a.,.tf\otoled looon

l
I

0 l"tota• w.-:f -

The
Shoe Cafe

~w~,o.,.,.,..,,

Co

·~·.....

•ah ... colllrf "'" hotf'le

,_

~oh abaul Ma.,...lolouml w•tho"" o""'go·

I

I

1

Do"

•I"

I
I

I
I,

It """

olliW,..Ien

. _ .

I. •t In ,

C i r tIt • I lit ,

Vinun ,

Powunr .
Wellston

I loe~tkl11t

or
: . .

••'ft

Plhton
C.ll ••

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

l•·-• or "'"'•
Coty

Mtldtll

I coH•et Wt4
s•H ••
I re,-.settt.tt••• ,, ,..,

1 ,..,...
I

I Gt&gt;t .....

prlc•• ••d n•p&amp;.to
I inforJMtlon ... •l"nt

a "'•OM

j

I

------ I

LO&amp;It1 Monument COmlllny, Pomeroy. 01\ID

r,

1

r....

t•

tNntportit._

1111111

1 froM "'' of . . '""'-••

••Iii• ...

I .. ' Of tiMpty

-~~~··

II~~-

Open Evenings and Sundays by Appointment
Monday fhru Friday
9 AM to9 PM

ACROSS

Saturdav 9 AM to s PM

,...r·u·tE.....r

.J

w .. ,. '" ao;. '
·~

~

~ I. ' 1t1
API' UII\; ' '-'1 .. '

446-9510

·~tt

LOGAN MONUMENT ·
COMPANY INC.
I

PoM•roy , Dfllo

Vinton , OIMt

..... C..ty

.....

Dl•plty Ywd Ht•

Po"'•••r·M••on

A NEW DIRfC rtON IN HAIR DC SIGN

lridt•
'•"'JfiCIWI , M!l'·

c.....,

Dlsp.., t.r~

._., 0. a..t.
M......,
lthono UI·UOJ

.~.....~~;';'·~·~·;2·~21~•;•............................. , .
'

' ·-

.

Chrla~

stories

she said. Ollldre!l atDI
\f¥1 old !avorltelllla! the '!'lbret!
tittle Pip.'' ·~," aftd
''C"d'lfocln! apd the '11lree Belra. ''
I

Model RT17FOWN

17

;:........._JIIIIII"
cu. FT.

The Golden Edition
Refrigerator
•
•
•
•

M-1 FHt8M2WM
15 6 C u. Ft.
R.t s~e t
• M("!W.lbiP. Dt~rlt'r

• I r!l Out

• Opti01UI Rtlllt&gt;IS
• HI ~MI('If'l._.) Mt~h

Menear said the teague
!laches storytellers lheflnepolntsof
tile craft.

SINGII

'I ~99 90

after boodmoblle arrives.
Bookmobile schedule for Wed·
nesday, June 29, 1983:
Chester (fire station) 2:15-2:45,
short film shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives; Keno (North
Side of Keno Bridge) 3-3: 30;
Success Road (near :lml) 3: 454: 15; Long Bottom (PQSt Office)
4: 25-5: 10, short film shown 15
minutes after bookmobile arrives;
Reedsville (Reed's Store) 5: m: 10,
short film shown 15 minutes after
bookmobile arrives; Tuppe,rs
Plains (Lodwick's) 7:10-7: 40;
Baum Addition S-8: 30.

Menear said the Columbus

: "I practice in the bathroom," she
~. laughing. "It's one place you
tiave !Jrlvacy, and theaccousticsare
jood.''
.

SOFA .......... ............. ..... .......... ~~~ -~!~~·.Qq .. ., ....... .............. . "170'0

fll~

Shapes and Pictorials

•

MIDDLEPORT - Stor1esabouta
graveyard ghost, a green monster
that grows bigger and bigger and a
Subdv. !, II 4:45-5:15, LeGrande I, II young genie who botches a magic
5:20-6, Neighborhood Rd. I, II spell are all a part of the program to
6: 15-6:45.
be offered at the Middleport Public
Wednesday: Chatham 3-3:30, _ Library at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Venz Rd. (Davis Dr.) 3: 40-4:15,
The program will feature Gwe.Kanauga 5th 4:30-5, Johnson's Tr. nyth Arnold, chlldren's librarian at
Ct. 5:15-5:30, K&amp;K Tr. Ct. 5:45-6:15. the Portsmouth Public Library, as
Thursday:_ Cora 2:45-3:10, Rae- the story teller. Anyone wishing
coon Tr. Ct. · 3:15-3:45, Pattrot- further lnforrnaUon Is asked to.call
!Claggs 3:50-4:05, Patriot P .O. the library, 992-5813,
4: 10-4:40, Gallla 5-6.
Friday: CroWn City (City Bldg. I
12:30-1: 30, Shafer 1:45-2,

i Convention general chairperson

FLIXItlll

. Not good with ony ohf tpte:IOI Of diiOounf
)OJ porttclpalng Capt D'l.)

CINf CCl.-otf . . O,.I1I()WII

,

SOFA, WING CHAIR, SWIVEL ROCKER ....1\.,.'.l.l!ML ....... •970"

Ollar-.. 7-10.83

- -

•

lliOOICWQOD

SOF,t. &amp; CHIIIR

(Children's menu ltema not if1cklded]
'
'

- -

.

SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT AS IS .... ..... !1~ . ~~~! .1!'! ......................... , ••70'"

IU)nON CUI.LII

ON ANY
COMPLITE
ITEM ON

SN

................ '570' 0

uwu•s

FLIXSTtll

•

marpen

STU.I.In

&amp;lUTON CULlll

.· . . oror'/ .
Co"tetrtP todca1
. •gl'l fOr
Peraoncl!llzed
.
M~tarlols
Des•
With Individualized

a

lUXTON CUlLII CONT!MPOUIY

1

• • • • • • Ct.PlHSCOI..I'ON • • • • • . ,

tencn frieS • .Creomv cole 110w • Two IOU!hem style hush pupplel • lanar
sauce • Lemon wedge

Horne Offl(• - lock hlol'ld, llllnol•

MilT .

$470 7 0

REG ,
1132

• A genrous portion o~llghfty I80IOiled tender fish flllets • Natural cut ftoVOiful

Fr•ltrlllf.l L/j1 I•JIIrtlMU

IEMCO 'ULL SIZE

HI BOY

lEG .
319.95

1

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR ....... !'!'.. :!9!!.!'!! .......................... '1070'"

Ught. Tender Fish Dinner $2.99

MODERN WOOD.MEN
OF AMERICA

II

·SOLID C.HERRY'

$170 70

1
I
1
I

·I

51Z .SKoMl Aw•.
111111001~, Ott.

11
1

REG.
]19.95

1

SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT ................ m .~m!.'!'! .......................... •670'"

Captala
D'&amp;
,,_..,.........
,._

::-1\:IS. Bean, a teacher at Linden
Park Alternative Elementary
School, says storytellers don't
l)iemorlze a tale. They make It part
~f themse!v.es by reading It over and
ever agalil. adding special touches
With props or trimming parts to
i'€ep It Uvely.
: "There'sasaylngthatltyouread
story 50 times, It becomes yours,"
ihe&amp;ald.
: Ms. Bean and 70· fellow yarnspinners representing 21 states met
·lhJs week to swap stories and
their skllls at the Nallonal
Story League's Central District
eonventlon.
: The 80-year-old league, with 1,200
members, Is a service organization
oedlcated to encou~ apprecla(,lon o! Ule and literature through
~rytelllng, said Martha Fried·
lant1er, or Columbus, Central Dtstiict president-elect.

209 .95

1

:
:

1

IMII"'PAOIIInCiudel: I IIIII ftNell. crip
lrench tie&amp;. creamy cole uaw and I hUih
pupplel. 5eNe1 U

• - - - • ~ c::oe.JION P£R ewtot.a

2 FOR $3.99

$170 7 0

I
1

SN

FISH N'

...

VALUI MOIIInCIU&lt;Iel: 1211111-. Ctllp
tlWICI\ tte~ c19011ly colulawand I huoll
P~L S..W. • or mm.

Offer eiQ:)Irll 7-10-83
NoT gopc1 wilh anv other special or Cllscounl
, , tat p0f1k:1)allng Cclpt D'J.I

• • • • • • O.IHIOOlfON • • • • • - ,

$249

REG,
1 149.95

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

: That's because Ms. Bean Is a
¥oryteller and the squirrels are her
·~warm-up" audience.

95

I

- - - • • a.TMic:::c::uoN - - - . - . .

, •

adlllace

REGULAR '399.95

4·CHAIIS

IIC
13lU5

~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;w~

Cap • ID D'..

•RUST

S47070

~i:ooo

..

It's
qot unusual to see Barbara Bean
lalklng to squirrels. And It's
probably not unusual to see them
ilstenlng.

•BlUE

TABLES

POMEROY

$2.00 OFF
or
, F.&amp; I UE
THRIFT IIIA•CK
rM--

'27070

CHESHIRE - The GalllaMetgs Community Actton
Agency will hold tts free clothing
day for low income persons

.• OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

•GREEN
•BROWN

WllH MIIIOI

Wednesday, June 29, fmm 9
a.m. until noon. The Agency's
Clothing Bank is now located in
the old high school building in
Cheshin?.

Storytellers meet
~o sharpen skills

$4444

CONSOLE

Nort hup Lassies ;md Lads ~- H Club met
May 9 a1 Ohio Va ll ey Bank. Rhondu CH rtt.,presldPd and 100 df:&gt;votions. The nt•MI ml'E'tlng
will be June 14 at Ohio Valley Bank. Janel
Pellus Is advisor. Members pr('lt&gt;ill W£'f(!
Barry Call. John Clagg. C"'cyl Clagg, E nld
Sprlegel, Hhonda C•ner, Na than Sprlcgel.
Todd Cart('('. Mrs . Sprlll[el Rnd Mrs. Caner

$11 7 70
S-ONLY

LANI

992 -7034

~~·:;_,5

MIRRORS

19.95

1100 EAST MAIN ST

$38888

12-0NLY

1

FROM THIS DATE THROUGH THE END OF JULY
RECEIVE FOR THE LOW, LOW PRICE Of _$500 A
NEW 3 TON SEARS SELF-CONTAINED CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONER.
KINGSBURY HOME SALES. INC .

DINETTE
TABLE. •·CHAIRS

PICTURES
REG.

. I

DINETT.E .
Oval Tal&gt;lt. 4-Swivot Chltrs

departed· with well-wishes and
hopes !llr many happy returns of
the day.

Meigs COunty
~ounty Public Library under con-

REG.

Time was spent visiting, eating,
and recalling old times. All guests

Gallia County

.•• .

Clothing Day set

Mr. and Mrs. Millard Grube

Bookmobile schedules

.• Bookmobile service in Meigs
County ts brought by the Meigs

MID-SUMMER SPECIALS

lffirbra Adums, MIS!i.V Roble, Suslf' RobiE&gt;,

Crat•

.

! ·CHAIRS

and Shai'K' Easton 100 ck&gt;\•otion.~. The film&lt;~
w"re about phy .~ l ca l runess and good hea ltH.
nnd rabblls. Barb Kemper brought two film'
and showf'd them . Offlo•o. had n special
meeting and madl• up laM for tilt&gt; yea r . We
talked about a cookout In .July and kld.s
otgalnst parents .-.oftball ~a rn e. TOO rx&gt;:d
nu!eUnR will tx&gt; Junp 6. AdvlotOI"Sare Barb11nd
Junior KE'mJX'r. Membfor""S pr~t•nt W('f" Kelly
Miller , Mall Kr rnper, Mike Kemper, Kart'll
Sta&gt;le, Sh11ne Glassburn, .Jadt• Block, Jackie
Glassburn, Crt.l: Glassburn. Ramona Wright ,

homr.

·• Many Of their chldren, grand:;,htldren and great-gt'andchtldren
_were present to congratulate them.
·Included were Mr. and Mrs. Toin
t&lt;rube and chtldren of Gallipolis,
~rs. Wanda Ftlltnger and family o!
Rt. 1,. Patrtot, and Kenneth Grube
•and grandchtldren of Lecta.
: Phone calls included sops, Merillll E. Grube of Anchorage, Alaska,
lnd Marcus E. Grube of Columbus,
well as grandchildren, Mark
(irube of Patrtot .Star Rout~:,
~alllpolls and Mrs. Cheryl Hively ot ·
!;ecta.

I.NGELS APPLIANCE RENTAL

.

POMEROY - The third annual
Buckeye RWs SentonrCttlzensCra!t
Show and Sale wlll,.be July 21-23, at
the C. WUltam O'Neil Senior Center
In Marietta.
Senior citizens, ages 60 and over,
are encouraged toentercraftstn the
following categories: ceramics,
crocheting, crewel, cross-stitch;
needlepoint , knitting, macrame,
miscellaneous, quUts, sculpture,
weaving, carpentry and carving.
First plqce winners in each
category will be displayed at the
Janis Center during the Ohio State
Fair.
Entry forms are due July 7.
For forms and Information.
contact Allee Wolfe at the Senior
Citizen Center at 992-2161.

.~usy.

.

- ltt.&gt;portcr Robert Davis.

Ntben ' s

' -

Father's Day guest

Hillbillies 4-H Cl ub met May 2 111 Kelly
Miller's hOme. Man Kt'mpcr pmided and
had charge or the proruam . Gr~ Glassburn

.

r:;~Uege ~Lextensloll319:

·

Linda Rutan. Mrs. Blancht• Slalf.'r was a

Rrporl&lt;'r K&lt;'IIYMlllrr.

aunfetteratHocldngTeclvll•

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page---8-3

Crafts sought
for senior
citizen show

PATRIOT - Sunday, June 19,
\Jelng Father's Day and also the
51th wedding anniversary o! Mr.
and Mrs. Mtllard Grube o! Rt. 1,
-.Batirot, they had a double reason to
:fl!lebrate. From 10 a .m. 111110 p.m.
::guests and phone calls kept them

GlASS TOP TABLE

F.astPrn Star.; 4-11 Club met Aprii2R at Lori
Oavi5' home . •Jackk&gt; Gruham !='"CSick-d. Gina
Hutan had t'hargw- of the program . Jac k.Jl•
Graham w a~ sproakf'r. Shf' told us about thf'
project Wf' could 111 kc. OftiCt'rs l'i«'tl'tl W£'rl' ,
presldl:&gt;nt. Gina Rutan ; viet"• pr1~iden t, Sandy
Da vis; Sf'Crctary, Audrvu Rutun; ll'&lt;.'Ord&lt;&gt;r,
Robert O.w l.~ . Advbmrs an~ Lori Davis and

Wright. Mlo;sy Rob!(• a nd Sus ie Roble. We Md !h.r('(' new mrmiX'rs. Ramona

c~~r lnfonnatton. lVIIb;lc::t

•
atlended
these
lectures
on
Saturday
I
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!'~
mornings .
·
~
Teachers are selected !or partici'
pation in the program on the basis of
recommendations by school superIntendents and principals.

Libby Carey .• Joanna Rho&lt;:k$, Tc r&lt;'Sa Cook.Repor lcr Sa ndy Masters.

K'!lly F111lnl!wr. Jan(' Ann GIRssburn , Shane
Easton. Sham• Swisher, Ca rl Hlvt-ly, nana
Green. M!chael RobC'rts. Cu&lt;&gt;sts wen• Janet
MIU&lt;"rm Ma r~rll£' Roble, Mandy Kempt_'f.

a!':va:uabie

8ral)d

ut ern

RACINE--Two Southern Local
School District teachers were honored recently as Martha Holden
Jennings' Scholars at Ohio University in Athens.
The two Southern teachers honored as scholars of the program
are Michaela Hoback and Wtlllam
Beegle.
An honorS luncheon was held at
the Ohio University Inn where the
Jennings' Scholars received
awards.
TheJenntngs'SchQlarProgramis
sponsored by the Jeru11ngs Foundation and Ohio University to recognlzeoutstandlngteachersinelemenlary ,junior and senior high schools.
During 1982-83, the . Jennings'
Scholars were rajulred to atteqd
five of six lectures focused on a
diversity of topics w~h emphas·
lzed promoting . reading and communication ·sktlls among students,
enhanc'lng self concepts, providing
for excellence tn . teaching and
capltallztng on teachers' strengths
The scholars
and commitment.

=

f·~a~t;no;;charge;;;~·;Ins~tru~clkliiiiiinal~medtal~~ji~c;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiii

~·-~ Middleport Gallipoli$, Oh~Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Anniversary
-celebrated
byGrubes ·

lnterestedlnf()(lowlilgthepugxjiitJ:
The Athens branch of AAUW Wi\1
event With Ugllt refre$b.
lloSt the
lded Facllltil!6 ' tot
ments
at the Hocking
Motor Lodge at the ~

assoclatlon members. would not be
abtetoattendttsconventxm, AAUW
lsmatdngtheteteconrerenceavaDable to selected sites aci"06s the
country. ·
Association members and lndl:
vlduals Interested In AAUW mem
bershlpmayattendthe,confernece.

&lt;

. _June 26, 1983

speclallstDavld~~=
==~for tholie wbQ ~

same time the.audience is viewing It

Titled "Tomorrow's Homecollege.
WTork,"thepSorogramwlllhactuallybe

Things continue to go great gilns
at the Rutland Civic Center, which
has developed into quite a place for
public events.
Twelve additional tables have
;· Cine of Pomercy's finest, . Pat
tochary, a former Pomeroy Post- been purchased, making now 48 on
)naster, by the way, will be
hand and the center now has 500
POMEROY- Keith 0 . Wood, son
'Observing hts 89th birthday on July chairs. Six ceDing fans have been of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Wood, Route 1,
purchased and will be Installed Long Bottom. has been named the
J.
: Pat has undergone hospltallza- quite soon. There Is a new publlc oew Ohio Game Protector In Meigs
' 'Uon and surgery recently, but I'm. . address system and add! Ilona! County by the Department of
~tad to say Is now well on the way to racks for storing tables and chairs Natural Resources, Division of
:recovery. Things are lookln '
wUI be buUt. There Is one concrete WUdll!e.
walk from the street to the buUdlng
:good ....
Wood was employed for three
and a second walkway ts planned
years
as a depu .y in the office o!
: Recen tly. in The Dally Sentinel
for the lmmedlate future. lnclden·
Sheriff James J . Profitt,
Meigs
tally, the new American flag over
:there was a picture of George
starting
hts training program
before
the center scene was secured
'Folmer, Sr., Pomeroy, holding a
with
the
Division
of Wtldtlte at
:large photograph which might or through Cong. Clarence Mlller
Reynoldsburg
in
June,
1981. Follow:might not have been a very young through the efforts of Reva
Ing the approximate three month
:Spanky McFarland from the "Our Snowden, civic center association
training program, Wood served in
treasurer.
;Gang" comedy youngsters.
Wlldllte
District 4 as a game
. Wl'll - Spanky, himself, put the
protector
at large In the 19 counties
Hol&lt;(ard and Ruth Ann Edwards
:question to rest when he was here
of
the
district.
He then served as
1or th e Dave Diles Golf Parker who have resided ln.
game
protector
of Stark County for
Morgan City, La., for the past 18
Tournament.
and
one'hal!
months.
nine
. McFarland visited tbe Folmer years, are now rnaklng their home
In Ogora, CaUl. However, Howard,
home- for a coupleofhours yet-.
In Meigs County, Wood replaces
who Is with Texaco, has been
He verl!led that the picture is of htm
Andy Lyles, the county game
as a youngster taken on a Universal transfer!'l'd to Los Angeles. The
protector for several years. Lyles
Studios back lot a number of years Parkers have a 16-year-old,son who
has received a promotion with the
_ago. He was delighted to see a copy always makes It back lor a visit
dlvls ion· and will be working In the
of the photograph and asked to with his parents and their many
Columbus office.
purcllase it from the Folmers. They relatives. Both Howard and Ruth
Wood Is married to the former
didn't want to sell It but he did give Ann, of course, are former ·Paula Hawk, daug hter of Mr. and
them his address In case lhey ever residents.
Mrs. Paul Hawk, Chester, and Mr.
change their minds. While at the
and Mrs. Wood are ltvlng tn Chester.
Ali the the ladles of the Trinity
Folmer home, McFarland signed
Residents having questions about
autographs and had a most plea· Church told me they kept smUing as
wildlife or wishing to know dates of
they served their excellent food
the hunting seasons are asked to
over Regatta Weekend. I· hOpe that
contact Wood at 98&amp;-4400 as are
whlle you did your thing at . the
persons wishing to report wildlife
Rlvl'r Rats -I ·H Club met May 5 at Bt•ny
regatta you, too, kept smiling.....
Rhodt&gt;s' humP. Chris Cox prlos ldt.-d and had
violations.
·

RU~t .

26, 191:1
•
.

Teleconfe;ence slated for AA UW in ·Nelsonvile

Background ·sought
on wooden carvings
By BOB HOEFLICH
· • It's strange how one sees some,:wr,g every day
:Ootlces ....
; . Recently, Postmaster James
. :SOuisby pointed
: put the ex~::~
· 'WOOden
· :piece s which
:hang high on the
•Pomeroy Post Office. One depicts
:ihe sto"l(.Pf4lt In Pomeroy; the
. J:Jther coaL They are excellent.
- · Jim says they've hung in the pest
; (,wee for many years and he would
,Jike to have some background
:tnforrnatloq on them. If you have
:;rnythlng stored away to help
~upply some Info, would you please
l:ontact Jim at the post office?

June

Pomeroy Middleport-jiallipolis, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

M.l[Jill'11 tel ~.11
, " Slrt)f' t Stlvt&gt;r \ tr'llf"l\1 Fo.tm lr1:;l~. \ll\lll

, co-. 1ntrrl\tllt1rM Sf'll

At1lu~ltllf11tt'1

• Acltu~ll!llt&gt; ClliCI Control
• 1ortr. wtlh l't1,l ·f1ut S.11rry "l'\'
• [)f!t{l!:l W,\IPI f'lr.1rn

• •.tn1t ~::: Pr01Pfl1011 Pl;tn

·•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Patented Frost· Clear System
Total ~nergy Saving System .
Optional Ice Maker Capability
Three 6· Position Adjustable GlideOut Shelves
"Super Silver Lining" Foam Insulation
Convertible-Reversible Doors
See-Thru Crispers and Dairy Door
Woodgrain Door Accent Trim
10-Year Golden Warranty
F~II-Width Freezer Shelf
"Quality Mile" Testing
Energy Saver Switch '
Textured Steel Doors

See all the Gibson Golden Editions at

.
5 99

$

With Trade-In

The Golden Edition
Air Conditioners

• Patented Gtbson Air Sweep
• AdiUSl..lble Howontal Louvers
• SI10e To Tne Stele 10

Re-veat ConlrOI S

• Thtee Speeds
• Htgh Etltcrencv
• Ener gy 5avilt Swt! Ch

M-1 AM1.EIEMB

14.000 BTU 7 6 EER
2302al Vol t

Model AKoti"EMB
9.000 B1U 9.6
115 Volt

EE~

�The

Time$-Sentinel

Ohio-Point

June

W. Va.

June 26, 1983

1983

DurbinDavies

We Reserve The Right To
·
Limit QuQnities.

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

faml(y hoine.

.

white flowers and she carried a
.bouquet of plrik ·sweetheart ·roses
and s\eJl}lanotls.
·
. Sis~ of the bride, Mrs. Michael
F1o~. ClnclnnatL and -Dr. Elizabeth Fultz, Columbus, were the
attendants and they wore ankle
length gowns of pink and white
(jotted swiss with long sashes, and
carried bouquets of pink and white
sweetheart roses.
Patrick Parsons, Charleston, w.
Va., 5\'IVed as his brother's best
man, and his father, Harry Parsons
was an usher.
A reception and dinner party was
beld at the Fultz home following the
ceremony. Pink and white net
qerorated the bride's table, which
also featured bouquets of pink and
white carnations flanking the two
tiered wilddlng cake, which was
topped with !lowers. A deCorated
German chocolate groom' s cake
was also served.
. Pink candles, napkins, ribbons

POINT PLEASANT - Mr. and
Mrs . James D. Durbin , Rt. 2, Point

Pleasant, are anouncing the en-

$· 29
Chuck Roast. .....L~·

gagement and forthcoming marrjagc of their daughter, Ellzllbeth
.!a ne to Da niel Harold Davies of Rt.
£, Patriot. Davies Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Davies.
Davies gra du ated from Southw·
PStcrn High SChool and Buckeye
Hills Career Cent er. He Is self
employed.
: Miss Durbin · Is a graduate of ·
Point Pleasa nt High School.
: A July 9 open-church wedding Is
tieing planned for 6: 30p.m . a !'the
~.U . B. Church In Point Pleasant,
W. Va .

USDA ·CHOICE

·

•••

.

t·n
LB$
.
o
·
·lf4 Pork L ••••••• ••
•

Leark.- Casto

$

SUPERIOR BONELESS WHOLE

E-Z-Carve
MIXED

Hams.L~...

Kendra Cogan,
Timothy Staten
wed in Michigan

69

.,

PESCHKE

12 OZ. PKG.

VIrginia University, College of
Pharmacy and Is employed with
Ripley Rite-Ald.
Farntly members coming here for
the wedding bPSides those named
were Mr. and Mrs . Martin Saffer
andCharles,HIUsboro,W. Va.; Mrs .
Harry Boggs, Keyser, W. Va.; Mrs.
William McOmber, Lebanon; Mrs.
Karen Eaken, PembeiVille; Mrs.
John Fornash, Chillicothe; Mrs.
Helen Mlller, Convoy, and M1chael
Florez, Cincinnati.

'iiiJ'
$'f ,.

Kendra
Lynn Cogan of Galllpolls became
the bride of 'T'tmothy Paul Staten at
·,
the First United Methodist Church,
\
May 7, In Bay City, Mich ., In a
doub~rlng ceremony.
She Is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard L. Cogan, Bay City,
Mich., and Staten Is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Staten, Oak Hill,
Ohio.
Officiated by the Rev. Carter,
nuptual music was provided by
Jeffrey Cogan, soloist.
Given In marriage by ber father,
the bride was attended by Mrs.
Colleen Martek, Bay City, Mich., as
matron of honor. Sbe wore a deep
pu!ple off the shoulder dress.
Bridesmaid was Sandra Foor and
flower girl was Kendra Martek, who
wore matching dresses of lilac,
fashioned off the shoulder. They
carried deep pu!ple, IUac and white.
flower arrangements.
Best man was Phn Staten of
Columbus, and groomsman was
Shawn Cogan. Ushers were Jimmy
Mrs. Timothy Staten
Clarkson and Benjamin Cogan.
Mrs. Staten Is employed as the
A reception was held following at .
Stalen Is self employed.
the Carousel Supper Club In chlldren'sllbrarlanat theSamueiL.
The couple reside on Route 3 In
Bossard Ubrary In GaUipolls.
·Essexville, Mich.
Gallipolis.

¢

W·leners ••••••••••••••••••••

and sllk flowers decorated the
tables, and all of the guests were
presented with rose corsages or
boutonnieres.
The couple spent a week at a
cottage in Deep Creek Lake In
Maryland. 'They now reside at Lyn
Circle, Ripley, W : Va.
The bride Is a graduate of Ohio
State University, College of Phar·
macy and Is employed with Ravenswood Rlte-Aid.
Parsons Is a graduate of west

FOURTH OF JULY
POP SPECIAL

Mr.· and Mrs. Donald Nicholas Rees·

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Post Parsons

BAY CITY, MICH. -

¢

Fryer Parts...........~.
BATTER DIPPED
Fish....................... !~·.

ALL BRANDS

Stacie Nemec weds Donald Rees
HERMINIE, Pa. - The marPa ul E. Rees. Dayton. Ohio. Mr.
riage of Stacie Lynn Nemec a nd
and Mrs. Terry Heaton. Norlhville.
Dona ld Nicholas Rees was solomln ·
Mich., Mr. a nd Mrs . Addison
!zed at St. Edwards Church,
Dre ss ler, Mr. a nd Mrs. Bill
Herminie, Pa .. May 21.
Drt"ssler and family. Mr . and Mrs .
The blrde Is the daughter of Mr . · Roget'. Davos and son , all of
and Mrs. F rank J . Nemec of Rt. 3,
Zanesville, Ohio, and Mrs . Wilma
Irwin, Pa. The groom Is the son of
Heaton of Pittsburg h.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Eugene Rees
Following a reception at the
of Gallipolis. This was the 51st
American Legion In Manor, Pa.,
wedding a nniversary of the
the new lyweds left for a honeymoon
in Acapulca. Mexico. The ·couple
groom's grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. P aul C. Rees of Gallipolis.
will reside at 3037 Dorris Avenue,
The bride, given in ma rriage by Columbus. whNe the groom Is
her father, was attired In a gown of employed as a n acl'ountanl for
white luster glow knit with a Queen
Kmger Com pa ny anrt the twtclc wUI
Anne neckline. tong fitted sleeves,
continue her educa tio n at Ohio
A-line skirt and chapel length State Univers ity .
watteau
. Her
veil wscacathed·
ral lengthtrain
with
a profile
p head
piece and both gown a nd veil were
lrtmmed with a lencon and venice
lace and pearls.
The bride was attended by her
sister, Mary Ann Copema n as
matron of honor, the bridesmaids
were Cindy Schmargen of Greenville, Pa ., Sue Butlna of Green•burg . Pa .. and Jennifer Copema n of
lrwtn, Pa.
The bridesmaids wore tuxedo
styli' gowns of pink. and white
taffeta with high neckltne and pink
bow tie and cumbcrbund. '11tey also
wore pnk Derby hal s awllh face
blushes.
The best ma n was Todd Recs of
Morehead, Ky., brother of the
groom. The ushers were Frank
Nemec of Irwin. Pa., Douglas
Sisso n of Co lumbu s, Douglas
Fou lkes of Celina. Ohio. All the men
In the bt1da l party wore black
tuxedos with pink bow tie a nd
cumberbunds.
Out-of-town guests Included Mr.
a nd Mrs. Paul G. Rees, Mr·. a nd
Mrs . Nolan Ca rter, Mr. and Mrs .
Jack Richards. Mr. a nd Mrs. Bill
Brown and Mr. and Mrs. D. Gene
Rees and Todd , all of Galllpolls;

8

16

$149

oz

BTLS.

CASE LOTS ONLY

COKE &amp; PEPSI
24 CANS

$5.75
ALL BRANDS

2 LITER BTLS.

$1 . 19

ICE HOUSE
DRIVE THRU
709 1st A"e .. Gallipolis

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~~~~~~~~::;;

SUPREME 21" self-propelled
• Up to 30% more us a bl e power
• Touch-and-go control ha ndle
• Solr d-s t ate rgnrtron
• Ou1et under-the -deck muffler
• F1ngertrp s t art1ng
• Patented Lawn-Boy sa fety
feature s

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
CHESTER, OH.

985-3308

'

Bananas ............. !!·.

Hamilton
Davis

•

Students will learn new cheerS,
chants. sideline cheers, porn poiJ
routines, fight song routines,
partner stunts, pyramids, jumps
and tumbling tricks.
They .-111 also partlclpatt' in
works hops In fund raising, competition. pep rally, spirit boost&lt;&gt;rs and
effective cheer leading.
Ribbons and spirit sticks will be
given dally for competitions during
the clinic, and trophies wiU be
awarded the final day.
: For addiliomil Information. contact Eastern Cheerleaders Association. PO Box H5, South Hl)l. Va., or
call (8011 6J6. :axxl.

embroidered ba~te trlnimed with
Jace,-tulll!lbow length sleeves,vltha
pale pink sash tled 1n a bow 1n t11e
back: In )ler h&lt;\11' sbe wore pink and

Elizabeth Durbin,
Daniel Davies

TifURMAN - Mr. and Mrs.
WUUam A. Lewis of Thurman, are
announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter Carol !.ynne
to Johll Robert Bowens, son of Mrs.
Mabel Bowens and the late John
Bowe~ of Monroe-Hickory Road,
Oak Hill.
The open chu~h wedding wlll
take place June 26. 2 p.m., at tbe
Thurman Unlt4!d Methodist
Churcll, Thurman ,
·
Rev. Wald Radtorct of Beaver will
oftlclate,

2.3-26.

The bride, given in marrJage by
ller pat't!nts, wore an ankle length,

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JULY 2, 1983

LewisBowens

ATIIENS - 1'here will be a
cheerleader clinic for junior and
senior high school cheerleaders,
sponsored and conducted by thll
Eastern Cheerleaders Association
of South Hill, Va.
·
The clinic Is scheduled for JuJSI

Becky Sue
Fullz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
l3emard Fultz, Middleport, and
9retW~Y Pilat PanmS, son of Mr.
' BDd Mrs. Harry Plll'DIS, Ripley, W.
:Va., exchanged wedding vows ln .a
~ held at f)ie home of the
:bride's parents, May 21ilt 5: 30 p.m.
· • The Rev. Robert Robinson per.
fom!ed the double ring ceremony
following a = = of music by
Mrs. ,Joan
. Ferns, pink
azaleas, h8ngtng baskets of pink
bnpatlents decorated the Fultz

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

VINTON - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hamilton are a nnouncing the en·
gagement and approaching wedding of Iheir· daughter, Gwendolyn,
to Arthur A. Daniels. sonofMrs.and
Mrs. '1110mas A. Daniels of Bidwell.
The open church wedding wlll
take place July 2, 7: ~~ p.m., at
Calvary· Daptlst Church Iii Rio
Grande. A reception will follow
Immediately at the church. '
MJss HamUton Is a graduale of.
Gallla Academy High School and
Rio Grande College and Corrununlty
College. She Is employed as a
teacher a t Bidwell Eletr1entary.
· Daniels Is a lso a graduate of
Gallla Ac~demy High School, and
attends Rio Grande College and
Community CoUege.
·'

Cheerleader clinic
planned in Athens

. MIDDLEPORT -

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

MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Danny
' Bowers of Route 1, Middleport, Is
announcing the engagement and
approaching_ marriage of her
daughter, Tina Marie Leark, to
Mark Allen· Casto, son of Mrs.
Gertrude Cas to and Frank Casto,
Pomeroy.
'The open church we-dding wUI
take place 4 p.m ., J uly 4, at the
11lmeroy Church of Christ. Nell
Pi-Oudfoot will officiate at the single
r ing ceremony following a program
of mustc by Peggy Brtckles.
The brlde·elect Is a 1983cosmotol·
ogy graduate of Meigs High School.
Her fiance has l ust completed
bas te tra ining and AIT schooling for
the National Guard. ·

Middleport-Gallipolis, ~nt Pleasant, W.t Va.

Fultz - Parsons
f!XChange vows

Engagements

Tina Leark

Pon~etof

VALLEY BELL

M
.I
k
2lO I ......... ~~L~~
01 .

PLASTIC
••••

6

59

PARKAY

(6 ·PAK

.

$

¢

$' 99 Margarine •••••••••

Coca-CoIa.••••••••••••••
12 OZ. CANS
CASE OF 24 CANS

LB.

lf()lftl~ls .......~ ..... ~~~.

¢

BORDEN'S ELSIE

5
8
15
20
25

Cu.
Cu.
Cu.
Cu.
Cu.

.

$

Ice Cream ......~:!~ ...

29
.

TIDE DETERGENT
,840Z.

$29~

CLOROX BLEACH
GALLON

79.~

OtARMIN

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROll
PKG.

99¢

Ft .................................. $235.95
Ft ................ ~ .................. S285.95
Ft................................. $355.95
Ft. . ...................... ......... S418.95
Ft. .. .............................. $472.4'5

UPRIGHT MODELS
17 Cu. Ft .......................... $42795
20 Cu.~_Ft .......................... S458 9 s

ALL HOTPOINT
REFRIGERATORS
IN STOCK AND ON

SALE

CASH. &amp; CARRY

· SPECIAL
1-5 Cu. Ft. ................................ 1325.95

.

BOUNTY

CHEST FREEZERS

Delivery can .Be Arranged,

ALL PEPSI PRODUCTS
$]00 A CASE (24 CANS)

f

PRICES START AT

$36500

S GAL. ASPHALT ALUMINUM

WE WilL NOT
BE UNDERS.OLD

2 LITER COKE

•.

ROOF COATING

r-

S GAL. BLACK (Fiber or Non-Fiber)

.ROOF COATING

'

614-992-2181

614-992-2181

.WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

'

$2475

WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

$995

�I

'

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

/

Calendar

Big Bend Regatta 1983

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The a nnual
Y lneyard reunion wUI be held
Sunday a t the recreation building at Royal Oak Park. All
relatives and friends are Invited
. to attend.

.,

II

~

~ RACINE - The 52nd a nnual
;spencer reunion wUl be held
Sunday a t the Shrine Park In
Racine with dtnner at noon. All
r elatives a nd fr iends are
welcome.

POMEROY - Friends of the
Library will hold a used book
sale Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m .
{o·s p.m ., In the basement of the
Pomeroy Public Library. Hard·
back a nd paperback books wW
be sold at 10 cents a copy.
POMEROY - The Royal Oak
Dance Club has been invited by
the Marietta Dance Club for an
evening aboard the "Valley
Gem, " a party boat. The event
will take place 8 .p.m. to
midnight on Sunday, June 26.
Spa ce Is limited , and interested
members are asked to phone
Gig Powell a t 992-2622.

QUEEN - .Jackie Rapp, the 1983 Big Bend ~gatta Queen, a.rid Dee
Dalley, Miss Congeniality, perched on top of a convertible to ride bt
Satunlay's l!lth annual regatta parade. Members of the court rode on

other cars.

·

~

- -'EATING - Pictured are 80tne ol the oonlestants
wbo a1e their way thl'oogh 10 m1n11 tes or hambUrgers
bt 'a Mnle8t Friday evening as ·a ,part of the Bfl: bend

,

~gaUa.

~

t

~

RACINE - The 52nd a nnual
SJ)f'nccr reunion will be held
Sund ay, .June 26, a t the Shrlners'
P ark in Raci ne. beginning a t
noon . Re latives and frie nds are

•

•

't;.

..

\

a

I

welcom e.

PENNZOIL

. PORTER - Porter United
Methodist Church and Sunday
School will have a covered dish
dinner. Sunday, 6 p.m., for the
Rev. a nd Mrs. Cheesbrew a nd
Mrs. a nd Mrs. Frank Claytor,
assistant. Ser;lces will follow.
BIG FOUR - The Grubb
Fam ily Singers will bea t the Big
Four Church, Sunday, 7:30p.m .
The Rev. Bob Grubb will speak.
GALLiPOLIS - Bible studies
wi ll be conduc ted by Bishop
Or;tl le T . Collins beginning
Sunday, b p.m . For further
Information, call 446-8537.
GALLIPOLIS - The Emblem
Club will have a picnic, Sunday,
noon . Bring a covered dish.
KYGER - The BradburyJenkins reunion will be held
Sunday. a t the community bu ildIng In Kyger .

RELIANCE "LUCKY STIK'""

1 OW·30 MOTOR OIL
fhe

POMEROY - The 'annual
Vineyard reunion will be held
Sunday , .June 26, at the rec reation bui lding a t Royal Oa k Park .
Relatives a nd fr iends are Invited
to a ttend .

motor oil with Z-7 tor better engine protection,
lubrlcatoln, and tuel economy.

u

97°CQUART

titania with shock rings. Spinning
handles feature anodized alumil')um. 1
reel seats with double locking rings
and 1-piece ASS construction with ·
pistol g(ips.

7A4

I!A

•

ASSORT£0

BRONZE HOOKS

12 OUNCE
SOLDER SEAL
OUII LOW PIIICI

99¢

- 241NCH -

BAR·B-QUE GRILL

Fine quality hocks that won' t
corrode . Available in assorted
sizes .

.,.,

ST~UCTO

•SINGLE SHANK
•TREBLE SHANK
•BAITHOLDER

BRAK·E FLUID

SMALLEST- These ire some of tliesmaDest participants bt the 19th
annual Big Bend ~gatta Parade. They are the Uttle Slylettes from

SPIN
CAST OR SPINNING ROD
Graphite blank. Guides of low friction

FOLDING CAMP COT

Makes a sizz ling success or steaks,
chops, and hamburgers. 380 sq. inch
chrome plated cOo king gr id .
Removable tripod tubular regs .

OUII LOW PIIICI

13.

WJII!NER - Todd Soowden of Rutland was the -"1mter bt a
hamburger eating Contest Friday as a· part of the Reg!Uta.•He ale his
way tllrough seven ham!Hirgers bt iO minutes IAl wbt over n1ae others.
SnowdeD, on left, receives his prize - a f&amp;mlJy dlmier at Burler Chef from Jbn Hill, manager. The event was sponsored by Burger Chef. BID
Quickel was emcee.

CROWN CITY - Good Hope
Baptl' t Chu rch will present li s
1983 Vacation Bible School program, featurtng Jim Willis'
gospel m essage show, Sunday, 7
p.m . The Rev . Ron Nicholas.
pastor . Inv ites all to a tte nd .

MONDAY
POMEROY - The OH KAN
Coin Club will hold a regular
business ml'&lt;' tlng, Monday, 8
p. m .. a t U1e Riverboat Room of
the Dia mond Savings a nd Loan
Co .. W. Ma in St. There wlll be a
social hour a nd trading with
deale rs preceding the meeting.
A coin a uction will follow the
meeting and refreslunents will
be setved. Anyone interested In
coins or paper money Is Invited
to a ttend.
GALLIPOLIS - Soldlers Rellei Commlsslon will meet9a.m .,
Monday a t :iro Jackson P ike.
RU:J'LAND Rutland
Ga rden Club wlll meet 7: llp.rn ..
Monday, a t the home of Mrs.
C.O. Cha pman and Mrs. Ellzabeht Ann Weh&lt;;ter.- Mrs. Earl
Bender, Ma rietta, will speak ori
" OAGC State News Update.

FROG - This clever lone frog perched on the back ol a Corvette was
the entry of the LaSalle Restaurant and Hotel bt Satunlay's parade.

OtnnOOR - Membem of Salisbury Girl Seoul
Troop lllO rode high on a truck amid an outdoor

· JUNE IS THE MONTH OF

POMEROY - Image Seekers
Camera Club will meet Monday.
7: 30p.m ., at lhe Melgs Museum.
Emphasis of Ihe meeting will be
on exhlblls and projects for the
Meigs County Fair.

ROSES
Weekend
Special _

-~-

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Junior and
senior officers wlll be lnstallecj a t
a meeting of the Drew Webste r
Post 39, American Legion Ladles AuxU!ary to be held a t 7: 30
p.m . Tuesday.

Sl200

••

•

'

Dozen

•I'

I

A sharp, sleek little model, II will

save you money. You won't owe

SPicemaker drawers go above tne

the telep~one company a penny
In phone rent, end the money you

glide out tmoothly, till down tor

s~ve will qu ickly offset the low
pu ro hese price of the Own Font .

counter 1nd under the cabinets . . .

-vac:c-.

•

.

tOW JOaiCI

.29.99

J
~

• •
OPEN 8 A.M. TO 8 P.Mm
• . ''
'
463 Jecklon Pike
OH.
Just We.t of Holzer Hoapitlll on U. • •

·

. ....
..

IPAC.IIAKI!R
DRAWIRI

'

PHONE 446-6681 or 446-4848

CHEERS - Melp IUp School I I • • - &amp;nd
reserve cheerleadem road lqh above the~.., a
.

.

'

~

'

f .

......

:

INSTANT

.
••

GARDEN CENTER AND FLOWER SH'OP

.

· MEMORY

KODAK
CHAMP

SMELTZER'S

J

TECHNIDYNE
10 NUMBER

•

WHILE THEY LAST!!

CHESTER - Chester Chapter OES wm meet Tuesday. 8
p.m .. at the Masonic Hall to
celebrate the 62nd birthday, for
presentation of 50 year pins and
to honor past rna trons and
patrons.
POMEROY - The Past Matrons Club bt Pomeroy Chapter
11!6. Order ot'Eastem Star, will
meet at 7: ::MJ p.m., Tuesday, at
tbe home of Edna Schoenleb.

camping scene _In the l"eJalia parade.

'I

•

•
_1

I

.

"

'

CAMERA
Kodak' s si mple alm-ond-shoat
operation . takes beautiful
Instant color pictures .

1/orelco•
CHROME ll" SLIM

CURLING IRON

Chrome pl1ted barrel with cool hp
Ouat heat control tor versatili ty. Hi·
to, on·off liaht and ready· to-curl

dot. I'IIIICI .. , ..

21.99

3WAY

MIST HAIRSETTER

The J-1n- t halrse1ter that giyea 8
con ditionmg mist set , water mist
set. or tong-l asti ng cry set .lnctudes
20 p~tented Klndnen l!l rollers and 6
oz. oonte of Condiltontng Mist
Treatment.

OUII LOW PIIICI

�---~-~----~------------------------~-

Thirst quenchin'
By Dale M. SloU
Meigs County Extension
Home Economist

summerti~e

!Or beverages.
Try a, punch, shake or other
beverage. Your family wHI love
them~

The hot.. dusty, dry days of
summer are approaching a nd kids
and adu:•s will be swimming,
biking and hiking. After a stretch of
strenuous activity in the hot sun. a
cold beverage Is wonde rful to
quench thirst
'
, Wha t kinds of beverages do you
serve thoughout the summer?
Pop and other sweet drinks
contain no nutrition . they cost a lot
and mayu cause cavlllcs and
unwanted poundage .
Why not serve beverages that can
make some contribution to your
family 's diet? Here are some ideas

Juice Is always a good choice for
summer refreshers. be careful,
though, when you choose a Juice.
There are many producta on the
market that are labeled "Juice
drink" or "drink" and actually
contain few vitamins or other
nutrients. Read the ·label ct all of
juice products. LoOll for "100
percent pllre juice" and theft look
for the lowest prices among the
category.
After opening a can of juice,

transfer the contents to a clean,
plastic milk jug or allier non-metal
container. The Food and Drug

Senior Citizen activities
Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Activities for
the week of June 27 - July 1, 19&amp;1 at
the Senior Citizens Center located
at 220 J ackson Pike are as follows :
Monday. June 27 - Chorus , 1-3
p.m .
Tuesda y, June 28 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11: 15 a.m.
Wednesday, June 29 - Vinton
Bible Study, 1 p.m .; Card Games,
1-3 p.m.
Thursday, .June 30 - Bible Study,
11-12 noon ; Vinton Blood Pressure
Check, 1Ll0 a.m.
Friday, .July I - Staff Meeting,
8:15-8:45 a. m.: Art Class, 1-3 p.m.; .
Craft Mini-Course, 1-3 p,m ,; Socia l
Hour. 7 p.m .
Saturday, .July 1 - Yoga Class,
10:30 a.m.
The Senior Nutrition Prog-ram

wlll serve the following menus :
Monday- Pln.to beans with ham.
tossed salad, cornbread, butter,
orange jellow with fruit, milk.
Tuesay - Salmon patty ,
crea med potatoes, broccoli, pineapple crisp, bread , butter, milk .
Wednesday - Spanish rice, wax
beans, pear salad. bread, butter,
milk .
Thursday Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes with gravy, buttered peas, Ice cream, butter, milk.
bread.
Friday- Swiss steak With gravy,
!)uttered noodles, buttered cabbage, brownies , bread, butter,
milk. '
Choice of beverage served With
each meaL
Mea ls subject to change without
notice. ·

7e~tg_s_C:,..o_u_n...,.ty
..,M
~

POMEROY - Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center. Mulberry
Heights. Pomeroy, lnvlles a ll el derly of the county to take part In
activities at the Center, The Center
Is open Monday . through Friday
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Schedule of activities lor the week
of June 27 - July I. 19&amp;1 Is as follow.&lt;:
Monday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a.m .; Square Dance, 1-J p.m .
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
11:30 a.m.: Chorus Practice, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday - Physical Fitness.
11: 30 a. m .; Bingo 1-2.
Thursday - Ceramic lnstruc·
tlon, 10 - noon; Center Blood
Pressure Clinic, 10 a.m.-noon;
Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m .
Friday- Physical Fltness,ll: 30
am.; Bowling 1-3 p.m .
Coming events: Make plans now
to attend Center on Thursday, .June
30 for Blood Pressure Clinic. This Is
a good way to keep check on your
blood pressure free of charge, Call
ahead for your meal reservailon .
The Senior Nutrition Program
serves a hot meal at noon each day.

June 26, 1983

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

Page-8-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

refreshments beat ·the ·heat

Administration advises against
stor1ng juices In open cans. There
have been reports cit Increased
Ieveii at lead lp juices s!Dred In this
manner. Also, !lie juice !astes
better when stored In a non-metal
container.
· Juice can be purchased In frozen
and drlec\ form, too. · Be careful
when buying frozen or powdered
drtnk mlxes&gt;YOU may 1M! paying for
sugar and artificial Ingredients.
Check the label.
Here Is a recipe for-,a festive
punch made With a vartety of
juices. Yau can cut down on the
amount of sugar. 'too. This could be
used for a p;~rty or for a club
meeting. Float a slice of lemon or
orange In each glass for an extra
ipeclal touch.
JIFFY PUNCH
~ cup oran~ juice
y. cup lemon 1ulce
1 cup pineapple juice
y. cup water
Y. cup suar
I pint (2 cups) glngerale
cracked Ice
Dln!ctlons: Meaure fruit juices
and water Into a large pitcher.
Measure and add sugar to pitcher.
Stir unttl the sugar Is dissolved. Add
glngerale. Add cracked ice. Stir
gently once more to mix .
Lemonade Is a traditional summertime thlrst-quencher that has
vttamtn C. Have you ever wondered
how to make a good old-fashioned
lemonade. For each tall, Iceclinking glass of lemonade allow
two tablespoons of fresh lemon
juice, two tablespoons of sugar (or
less ) and one cujp of water. Mix
lemon juice with the sugar, stir to
dissolve the sugar and then add
water. Serve With lots of Ice cubes
and garnish with a slice or wedge of
lemon.
-Here's how to make a lemonade
syrup to keep In the re!r!geraor for
quick lemonade .
LEMONADE SYRUP
Combine 2 cups of fresh lemon

jutce With 4 teaspoons grated lemon
For your free copy of a handout s!on. Agent, Home Economics, and
about beverages made With milk•. 4-H, at 992~orwrtte!omeatBox ·
peel and l~ cups sugar (or less).
Mix until sugar dissolves and store contact Dale Stole, Coonty Exten- 32, Pomeroy_, Ohio 4!j7!$.
!n the refrigerator until time to use . - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - it. When ready to serve, pour Y. cup
of the surup Into 'e ach glass and flU
with lee cubes and water.
Honey can be used In lemonade·
Instead of Sligar. Cutting down on
the sugar still makes the drink
refreshllll\':_ The tartness ts very
good! A mint julep can be made by
crushing a spring of fresh mint With
the sugar..wllen ntaldng _lemonade
as ' previously descrtbed. Proceed
with the ' recipe tor a · really
refreshing beverage!
Mllk Is a super refresher In the ·
Office Hours by Appointment Only
summertime. Icy, cold milk Is an
excellent way to quench thirst and
great the calcium that your body
needs. It's very difficult to get
enough calcium unless milk of
some fonn Is Included In each day's
meals.

JOHN A. WADE,

M~D.,

GENERAL ALLERGIST

GIGANTIC JUNE
BEDDING SALE

By
SIMMONS and STEARNS &amp; FOSTER

NOW IN PROGRESS!

+. 1 FURNITURE
.
L1 CZSL (l SHOWcAsE ·F~~~KING

I

446-3045

[i]

Oldsmobile

Check Our Deals Before You Buy

The Pool People

This Week's Specials:

D. BUMGARDNER SAlES INC.
DAVID BUMGARDNER

1982 Buick Electra Park Avenue

1981 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz Coupe

Soles &amp; Service
Supplies &amp; Installation

31711 NOBLE SUMMIT RD .
MIDDLEflORT , OHIO 45760

PHONE 1-614-992-5724

'Sew a straight m~tal eye at top
of slit in skirt to prevent
ripping.
'When covering buttons, wei the
fabric first; fabric will be
easier to handle.
'When sewing on loopy fabric.
tape end of presser fool so
It won't catch In loops.
•spray starch on the edge of knit
fabrics that curl to prevent
additional curling.
'Tape a paper bag to side of
sewing table for
trimmings.
'Place straight seam on selvage
of woven fabrics when
possible. This eliminates
seam finishing.
'Use zipper foot for stitching in
the ditch.
'When hand sewing buttons.
double thread, then thread
needle,

'Loosen the upper tension
slightly when maklag
buttonholes.
'Lay slippery fabric over towelIng or on ~rpet to prevent
sliding when cutting out
fabric.
'Rub soap over firm fabric,
eliminate facing. Just tum
and stitch.
'Set fuslbles by spot !using nrst.
'Use a damp cloth when
applying luslbles.
'Use buttonhole thread In bobbin
when gathertng, It won't
break .
'Use embroidery floss tor tailor
tacking. It's less slippery.
'Glue a tape measure to Yllllr
sewing table for quick
measurements,

1 111 W. 2nd

Ponrerwy, OH.
Senllng Meigo • 0.. Caur Til r

Ao Your Singer Approwwd 0.....

All tile options you would eKpect on this top ol the ~ne car. Locally owned and only
18.976 low miles.

Fully loaded - Digital readout !)rl dash - New rad1al tires: white on white with
matching leather interior. Truly atouch of class unmatched in today's pre-owned
market

19'79 Ford LTD 2 Dr.

1981 AMC Eagle 2 Dr.

In straight sets. 6-2 and 6-2, at Wimbledon s.iturday · (AP Laserpholo).

Philadelphia·defeats New York, 4-2
Rookie

fourth Inning with solo homer, his

kevin Gross and Wlllle Hernandez

fifth of the season , and the Met s

combined on a six-hitter to lead the
Philadelphia Phlllies to a 4-2 victory
over the New York Mets Saturday.
Gross, making his major-league
debut, pitched 6 r:31nnlngs, allowing
two runs on ftve hits . Hernandez
recorded his fourth save.
Walt Terrell, 1-1, gave up all lour
Philadelphia runs on six hits before
being relieved by Doug Slsk In the
seventh Inning. '
The Phlllles scored tWice In the
llrst with only one hit, an RBI single
by Von Hayes, the ftll&gt;t of his three
singles. Bob Demler walked to open
the game. stole second and Pete
Rose also walked. The two then
executed a double steal, and Joe
Morgan's grounder scored Demler.
One out later, Hayes singled in Rose.
They also scoied twice in the sixth
on consecutive singles by Mike
Schmidt and Hayes, a sacrtflce Oy
_by Gait MatthewS and a single b,Y
Ozzle VIrgil.
Keith Hernandez opened the

scored once in the seventh.

Pirates 10, Cards 3
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Dale Berra
and Jason Thompson each homered
to highlight a 13-h!t attack as _the
Pittsburgh Pirates crushed the St .
Louis Cardinals 10.3.
Lee TuMe)l, 2-3, got the win With 4
1-3 scoreless Innings In relief ol Don
Robinson . St. Louis starter Kevin
Hage!), 2-l, was touchedfor.!lveruns
In 31-3!nnlngs.
The Pirates j!Ot their first DlJ1 In

the ·first Inning as Marvell Wynne
walked. moved up on a wUd pit ch,
took third on a grounder and scored
on a groundout by Bill Madlock.
The Cards tied It on Willie
McGEe's third homer, In the second,
but Pltlsburgh answered with two
runs In the third .
Robinson singled lntworuns lnthe
fourth and Berra made It 6-1 In the
fifth with an RBI single. Thompson
smacked a solo homer in lhe
seventh, his ninth, and Berra added
his eighth, a two-runshot.lalerln the
Inning. Mike Easier singled in an
eighth-Inning run.

---Summer standings---"
RDblll'i ....... .

1UM

\'an~

Athlefln ..
Rt'd Sox ...........

S«lators ............
\Yhlh•Sox ..

'f1et'rs ..
Padtel ..

WL

...... 4 I

I 2

Orlok's .. .
Jayhawk..•;

fl.'\

....... :1 1
T-ft.UJ.. l.EA(OUE

. ..... :1 '1

.. ............. 3 ~
................................. ...... 1 J

...... 1 4
.. .. I &lt;I

WL

'J?A.\1
~s ...

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

RanJolf'I"S ..
A.~tru;

..... ' ... '.

.. .. "' ... ' .. ' .....

Cubf; ..... ...... ..
Orn\II'S

TEAM
WL
Bl...c Jay1 ....... ...... , ............. ...... ....... ......... . 4 I

qne. auto. trans., only 36,386

This handsome coupe is extra clean throughout. Air cond .• cruise control. Landau
top. Local retired businessman's trade.

-READY AND WILLING TO MAKE A DEAL-

'"

. :1 I

. ......... .1 I
......... 2 2

........................ ' ..............

Co1Tll't5........ ..... ............. ... ........ .... ..

Jim Mink
•

'

" ' - ·rta - lll1l R&lt;W. ~.,-n , 11m
O'Brten. 81-10- 74; Pat O'Bl1tn, 7U..flt, tlnit
Slluler. IJ.J.l.«l
~ M - Arthlr Grtfnn, 107·lH7:
DwiJhl Sham!).

Un '1&amp;-JQ.M. Dick ~~~~ !1}-J).M; Grwp
lla ·Tim Role 96-1&amp;.78, ow ~k . 100.211-

CHEVROLET
OLD·SMeBILE
Gallipolis, Ohio
. 446-3672

111·18-93.

CieclrF Sbamblin. 8l·U4:
~:

Jamts Darrow, Gl&amp;-66: Tom Crllp,

~17«1-.

0.... lth -

Gary Rol.ilh. 7J.8.{6j ~k

Stanley, 82·12:10: Bob Gne, i4-~: Ropr
Ro.lalt,~'DQ.

0... II -

~

Ka)o Knller, II&gt;J&amp;al: lli1J
7f-1Nt: SUNt•Story, 8'7.17·'70; J.D.

Slooy, ~..,_
'
0.., Jl - Jim Buton, IQ.lT ·'iti: Bob
MWfr,l).lUl; .J\mThomu, lQ3.»&amp;'!; John
KftT, 9'l'·Z.T'r; O.W 011!-.. •tHI: Kent
Bob CIIDa •tJ.1t: Chti1N

w-.
•:ru.:
t..:h.

1Jl.JO.T1.

an. .. - -

Bill Gene
,,

-

the lasl \6, Two . .Jimmy Alias and Gene Maye r,
withdrew before the tournament began because of
Injuries. Seven more have been gu nned down In
competition.
Martina NavraiUova, runaway favorit e to J'('tain
her women 's crown, served and voUeyf'd hf"r \vay to a

6-2.6-1 victory over Mirna Jausovec of Yugoslavia for
a place In the last 16.
Since liT&lt;' defeat of Chr ~&lt; Evert Lloyd by Ka !hy
Jordan Friday. critics have "'&lt;'n the women 's
tournament as a one-way race.

NavratUova quipped : "The way some people ar('
talking. why nol hand me the lmphy now and do away
w!lh the tournament ? But I'm nol taking lao much
notice of any of lhl&lt;...
Nine of the 16 women' s seeds have gone through as
expected. Two wer&lt;' elim inated Saturday .
.Jennifer Mund('l, 21-yea r-old South Nrlcan lcft hander. put out No . ~ Sy lv ia Ha nlka of West (;,&gt;rmany
2-6. IH. 6-3,
Eva Pfaff of West G&lt;' tmany edged Britain 's .Jo
Durie, the No. 1:1, 7-6. 7-5. But Britain stil l had a
conte nder - 37-yrar-old Virginia Wade . the !9i7
champion, who came back fmm a set down and 1·5 to
master Andrea I.Ra nct :l-6 , ?·h, G-2.

Hana Manct llkova of Czechoslov akia. seedPd
ell(hth, outplayed Loul"" All!'n 6-1, 6-3,
VIrginia Ru?Jcl of Romania. St.'('tled 12th, beat
Sabina Simmonds of Italy 6·1. :l-6. 6-2.
Claudia Kohde of West .Gcnnan v, seeded 16th. won
6-2 , 6-3-agalnst 13arbara Jordan , elder of the sisters
from King of Prussia , Pa .
Sunday was sdwduled as a t1'St day.

Americans
•
expectmg
tough fight

1 4

n~

By LARRY SIDDONS
AP Sports Writer
COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo.
!API -American athletes will be
ready to win in the 1984 Olympic
Games, butstlffercompetltlon!rom
more foreign countries will make It
tough for the United States lo regain
the medal supremacy It once
enjoyed, the top two officials of I he
U.S. Olympic Committee said
Saturday.
And. said USCX: President William E. Simon, the 19!ll boycott of
the Olympics In Moscow In a
political protest wUI never be
repeated by the United States.
Simon told a new s conference al
!he National Sports Festival thai It
was possible for America to rega in
the overall medal-WIMing lead in
the Winter and SUmmer Games ,
which It last had In 1900,
" But since 1960. the rest of the
world has risen dramatically In Its
ability to compete with us In
athletics, .. Simon added.
F . Don MIUer, the executive
director of the USCX:, agreed and
predicted that the 1984 Wint er
Olympics In Sarajevo. Yugoslavia,
and Summer Games In Los Angeles
would produce "a greater dlstribu·
tlon of medals among countries than
ever before...
The Sports Festival's fifth edition
officially began Friday night, wtth
torch-lighting ceremonies and a
show featurtng Bob Hope at the Air
Force Academy's Falcon Stadium.
Competition actually began last
Wednesday, with diving and figure
skating preliminary rounds, and
SaturdaY was the first big day of the
competition, whleh runs through
July 3 In this city at the foot of Pikes
Peak.
·
Finals were scheduled In two
events- the foil in fencing and the
women 's to-meter platform dive.
Wendy Wyland, the 17-year·old
world champion from Mission
VieJo, Callf., held a big lead over
Kim Engel, another 17-year-old,
!rom Miami. Fla., after Friday's
preliminaries In the 1o-meter.

Individual results of 1983 Dave Diles Tournament
Need a four-wheel dri~ vehicle? This is it! Six
miles. New Blazer trade. One Local Owner.

'

l

Jackson 714,699, wllh Ben Ogilvie of Milwaukee the
NEW YORK (AP~ - Voting for several starting
closest contender wilh fi82,844 .
positions for the July 6 AU-Star Game remained close
Dale Murphy of Atlanta continued to pace the NL
Saturday, Including a five-way battle ~ !or the
outfield with 1.02Jl,024, followed by Montreal's Andre
American League second base spot that Manny TrU!o
Dawson with 724,Di and Willie McGEe of St. Louis
of Cleveland led by only 769 votes.
With 673,485. McGEe' s teammate George Hendrick
With only one day of balloting left, Commissioner
still was in contention with 586,231.
·
Bowie · Kuhn 's office said that other races still
The race for the catcher positions in both leagues
undecided are catcher and the outfield In both leagues
was close, as welL In theNL. Garycartero!Montreal
and the National' League first base job.
had 841,555 votes to 749,279 for the cardinals' Darrel!
Trillo was 769 votes ahead of Jim Gantner of
Porter and In the AL , Ted Simmons of Milwaukee led
Milwaukee, 499,897 to 499,128. Frank Whlteo!Kansas
Lanee Parrtsh of Detroit 695,747 to 5T1.2Zl..
City, With 470,174, Bobby Grlch of California. with
Milwaukee's Robin Younl continued to hold an
431,544, and Detroit's Lou Whitaker, with 328,734,
Insurmountable lead for AL shortstop with 1,376,217
were still In cOntention.
votes. But· he was In a tight racE' for the Gillette
Steve Garvey of San Diego led the race for the NL
Trophy, given annually to the player who receives the
first base spot w!\h 515,283, only 86,513 ahead of Keith most votes .
Hernandez of New York. He rnandez was·in fifth place
Yount's closest competition comes from CaliforIn last Monday's balloting update.
nia's Rod carew. whO leads AL first basemen with
Pete Rose of Philadelphia had 466,670 votes to stay
1,271,559 and George Brett of Kansas City , the AL
In contention, along with Montreal's AI Oliver with
third base pacesetter with 1.242.301.
428,770.
The NL starters will be announced Tuesday and the
In the AL outfield. where catifomia teammates.
AL starters on Wednesday. Pitchers and reserves,
Fred Lynn and Reggie Jackson both have led at one
who are picked by the resj)ectlve managers of both
time or another, Dave Winfield of the Yankees was
leagues, will follow taler in the week.
the new leader with 744,004. LyM had 728,367 and

NEW YORK (API -

In-Ground or Above -Ground

Cutting Corners---------

MCENROE ADVANCES- John McEnroe of the
United States defeated fellow American Brad Gilbert

All-star voting still close

New Chevys &amp; Olds Now Arriving

PHONE 1-614·446-3051

By GEOFFREY MD I.ER
AP Sports Writer
WJMBLEOON, England (AP) - Roscoe Tanner.
the big server who slipped down the tennis ranklngs.
came thundering back Saturday to upset Mats
Wliander of Sweden and make the last 16 In the
Wimbledon championships.
The 31-year-old left -hander slammed 19 aces past
his 18-year-old opponent , who was seeded fifth . and
won 6-7, 7-5, 6-3, G-4.
Tanner was one of the most exciting players In
tennis In 1979, when he was runnerup to Bjorn Borg at
Wimbledon. Now he. is ranked 140th In the world and
before Wimbledon had won only four matches lhls
year.
Another surprise Wtnner was 23-year-old Robert
Van'! Hoi of Dallas, Texas. who upset llth·seeded
Johan Krlek 6-3, 7-6, 6-1.
Krlek, South African born and a resident of Naples.
Fla ., said he had not been feeling, later pollingoul of a
men's doubles match.
John McEnroe, the second seed, battered Brad
Gilbert 6-2, 6-2, 6-2; and Ivan Lend!, seeded third.
eliminated Jakob Hlasek, an exiled Czech who lives In
Switzerland, 6-1.6-2. 6-7. 6-4.
Jimmy Connors, defending champion and lop seed,
had already reached the lasl 16 Frtday.
, Other third-round winners were Bill Scanlon. , the
14th seed. Pat Cash of Australia. Mike Leac h and
Sandy Mayer. Scanlon defeated Tim Gullikson 6-4.
6-4, 6-3 and earned a meetin g with McEnroe nex t
round.
Of the orlgtnall6 men 's Sf'eds. only seven reached

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

•FREE
DELIVERY

1983

Tanner surprises
Mats Wilander in
Wimbledon aCtion

INC.

A Sales Tradition!!

PHONE 1-304-422-5400

;

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT ··

+

52 STAlEST.
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631

~imts· ientirttt .s e·c..ti9!! 26,

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

' IN IJAll v 10 'J p M - MON &amp; FRI TO 8 p M '
Ca ll 992-2161 to make a reservation
LOP
.
------for a meal no later than 9 a .m . the
day of the reservation. Tuesday Is a
CnrnPr uf Timd &amp; Olive
GallipoliS
'special menu day' . Prize winning ,-------------1-..:==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::......=::::::::::::======
recipes, submitted by our senior
citize ns, will be used Ia comprise
the day's menu . Special award
winners are Josephine Smith,
Elvira Barr and Frances Roush .The following menu Is planned lor
the week of June 27"July 1:
Monday - Baked white fish,
oven browned potato wed&amp;es.
c reamed peas, lemon puddblg In
graham cracker crust With topping.
Tuesday .,.- Chicken casserole,
green beans, cole slaw, Italian
bread, fruit cup (oranges, grapefruit, bananas) .
Thursday - Beef stew · with
carrots, cabbage, potatoes, tossed
sa lad. cornbread, coconut cream.
pie,
Friday - Escalloped potatoes
with ham and cheese. broccoli with
carrots, fnlit cup (peaches, peall&gt;,
pineapple),
Choice of milk, tea, coffee
availa ble dally .

407 CORRA DR .
PARKERSBURG . WV 26101

Sports

!JT"'"'' ""'

IM-\8.6t: Ty Rwah. 11·1·10', !ted
fi&amp;.JU7 .
Grollp u - Ned Gal'ller, 8'7· ~1l: l&lt;fonn)'
Kl!rr, M-IS-7'9; Karl HWWrx. 96-18-77: Don

RouSh,

1\rl{or,

f'OIUonl. 11)-J&amp;. 73.

"- "-

w-."'"''

~Harokt 'MM. llfr.n6l
Larry
Powell. fl2.11-81t;
wttu.n HawldM, 11).2}4},

o...., .. -Jom~Ponl r Bl · U*, W1ltrr
Gna~!r. 518-81: Dirt EwJna. toU'J·'II:
DfJe WIII"Mf, lJ.S.)f.tt,

·a n.p n - Jol luJilona. • • 10: PtJ.Jl
IW11KII. 86-1&amp;-a: Dtek f'Qllrod. 11&amp;-:H-61:
. Bemard Nrz, f1.JI.81.

an. 10-i·TI;
.. - """Jollla.m-.
llf&gt;&gt;Ol' Bill
Ml.llltl', .2&gt;-66;

~

ArTr\laCt)

CcUnbo, .,.. . ..

... - Chudo
· 15-12-43:""'
F'rftld.
tt.l&amp;-78;
oewtysm&amp;lll,ID-10.13;
PaW
Ddly, fl.)ll.'a
I
BoAIIon.
fl·JI.~ Bll Dlill, fT...TJ; Rq:lh ijullb.' .~
..... T21"'tl.

-·-bWhl........

r

~f
'

MERCERVUJ..E 'S fbtest cage players of 45 ym~n~ ~&lt;go wen•
photographed when they wt&gt;n• at the ho!lglrt of their skill. Th (; ,tJua
CAIIIIIIy basketball trophy l' on Ill&lt;'! •tcps. The players !\1'1', left tAl right,
(biiCk row) Ev1111 BelvU~, J!.I!Uiall, Wymtut Sheet.•. tUtd fn&gt;nl now,
Bunon Rlcloards and Robert G!IWWood.

'3 7 Mercerville five
first to cop Gallia
County hardwood title
Robert Gatewood. In front of
By J . SHERMAN PORTER
Wyman
Sheets.
MERCERVILLE- The MercerJuly
9. there'll-- be a rPlllilon
vUle WildCats' 1937 quintet was the
centered
on these !lvp WildcHts.
first Mercerville team to capture a
Warren .Sheels, membet•ofthe !•WJ
county cage title. and a member of
MercervUle Wlldra ts, will bP m asthat squad reminds us of that fact.
of ceremonies. The !ale Hob
•ler
He Is Bill Hall. middleman In !he
Cornwe
U wrote thP story on Monteam picture (atxJve) who Is holdlnA
day , March I, 19JT,l'alllng Hall nnd
the ball marked, "Champs , 1937."
Then there's ,.\h~ sliver llft&gt;slze Sheets (Wyman ! outstanding . He
basketball trophy on the steps wrot"' .J.Ite late Howard Hardv. ay
_
beneath the players. On the left Is was thl"coach .
nl
team
selccllons
All
-tourname
Evan BelviUe, and on the right
Wyman Sheets - left and right of included Hall at forward a nd Sheels
at center on the first team v. llh
BUI Hall, that Is.
The two others are Burton Richards and BelviUe on the second
team .
Richards, in front of Belville, and

Central Division title
at stake in Windy City
By The J\Moolated l'reM
The Michigan Panthers, who
havewonnlneoltheirlastllgames,
visit the Chicago Biltz today In a
United Stales Football League
game which should decide the
Central Division title.
·
1bree Central clubs are still In the
race · tor three ol the remaining
plllyM -berths. Chicago tops the
division With anll-5record, lllllawed
by Michigan and Tampa Bay, each

10-6.
Philadelphia, winner of the Atlantic Division, Is the only team set for
the July 9-10 playoffs. The three
division wlnnell! and a Wild-card
team make the playotts.
Seven teams ate still in theplayo!l
picture heading Into the next· to-last
weekend of the regtJlar-leaSOn. 1n
·addition tO -tile Central leaders,
Oakland, Boston, Denver. and Los;
Angeles are still alive.

�-Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis, Ohio

-·-

Jurw26,

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

HOME

New York
lbtoo

3434

MUwaukft:o

.~

~

a,,..,....,

31

"""'...

:w

-~

'O"J

ll
,J j

.' li

47 \

42
47

417 ~
..156 1:1'. ;

.1.'1
.47{) 7
:t1 .17
.w 11-'J
WEST DlVI!iiON
"
T"""
."17 31
.544
· Ca llbrnia
J7 .12
.[),}i
Y.!
Kansu Clly
:W :lJ
~11
I
Ool&lt;IMd

MJ•....,..
.Sioaltk.-

~

1
..

~ 'AG .ilMii
OakiiVld ~1

Phllildc-lphl a
Plllsburgh

:II
2!1

ChiC'~

;l}

l.o6 An.relf'5
Allanla
San Francml
San DioP.AO

~.

D&lt;~wsun .

Mo111reaJ. ~: fv'! urphy ,

San

0io1(0.

7!1; ou~·t·T. MonnvaJ, 79 .
Dawson, Monlfl.'al. Ul:
Knl~&lt;:ht .

.l l,tl
WI
7Y.z

.&lt;W6
•WI

:m

fl

11

.1&gt;'11 -

44
41

ll

-~~

:1 '11

;~

J,l

.!i'l2

)I

.:tn

!J
.491 10
.41.1 1:'.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Ladles Golf Association held an
18-hole gail tournament last Wednesday with approxtmatley 60
ladles attending from vario)Js golf
clubs In the area .
Prize · winners In each flight ,
home and away were:
Fl~ FUght: Low gross: Helen
Fenderbosch. Gallipolis. and Mary
Roush. Riverside. Low Net: Opal
Baker. Gallipolis, and Mary Ar·
nold. Hidden Valley. Low Putts:

Moll'flo, Houston. 2"2.
P!Tnn NC 1li OOrlslon1a : Ollwlcy,
/l(lu.~ too . ~- I , JGJ. I 'rl: f' ;tlrurw.. AUa.nt a,
;:, 1. .R'JJ. 2.4R LIVP111'. San ~Tarwls.."Q . ~ I.
.11.1.'1, 2./Wi: M&lt;lntt'fUlii"O. San Dh ~l, r.. l .
~ J.

Jl.ll. 1.{)&amp; .

~~ mU&lt; EQI.JrS:

Carllon , f'hUt~&lt;k'lphl a.
11 7; Sol o, Clf'l(•lnnatl , Jrr7: Ml'WIII lllffiN,
Pln . •t•nKh. !t4: Jk&gt;rmyl. CinCi nnati, !15:
llo!(Fr.i, Montrl'al. It!

SA VF:S: Hr•;tn:lon. Mont!T'fl l, 12: !...1,
vr llt', S.'lll Frandsm. JU: Bcdroslilll. ,\ t
lama, 9: l..t• Smith, Lllll'a-'CQ, 9: Fors1£'r.
~:

l\ t1 :mta,

Sl!'war1 . Lu;

San Olfl(o 0

Sixty participate

Srhmidl . ~h U ade lphia, 1".
~iOLE N RA.'\F:S: R.alm-"'. Monti"T'al. :rl:
I.A•.\1 astr r . SAA f'rilllf"lst-o. 26. Wil,;on.
Nrw York , 2'i: S.Sax. Los A n~lt:':\, '! 1:

.K.\1. r1.t'i; Hyan. -Hou ston.

l'(llnton, .'i;m
A n ~·IP!i, II,

~~o1rani'IS('O,

K.

Transactions

Hlind".V'I UartiU'I
Phlladl!Jphl a a1 New York, 2
CliiC'ago at Monl rt.oal
Allun la ar C1ndnwd l

1\nlnY. . . """"'"
BIILTIM OHE ortiOI..D&gt;-Piartod

Dan

Forfl. oorn1•1df.'r, on the' &lt;!l ·dJI)' diAAbll'd
l l~l and rf'&lt;.' Alled Milt(&gt; You na, ou t1if'lli'r.
fru n
Ftr.x.'ht'!itt&gt;r of ttM'&gt; lnte rl\illlona1

Mond~·~ (l amtt~

tllk':IJ(O a t Mootn' lll, 1n1
Plllsb.Jil!h al St. IAru[s. n1 1
At1an t.a at ClnclnRHtl. 1n1

IJ'IIj.!UI'

On ly .lfiUTII'S .';t."" tW'duk'{\

J").y:•ynt• Murphy. oulfll•ld'i·. nn lhP

0

A

K

I.

N

1\

D

1\THI . ~ :l"l f~ PI ;H~ '(/

RIO GRANDE - A 12·tearn,
single elimination tournament wlll
highiJght play In the Gailla County
T -Ball League Monday.
Games will begin at 6: 15 each
evening and will be played at Rio
Grande.
First game Monday (In the lower
bracket) pits Clay, 3-3, against the
Green-Blue Team, 2-4.
Second game, Rio Grande. 0-6.
wUIIock horns with Green-Red. 2-4'.
In the nightcap, Southwestern,

\ ~rl ay

l ll~ nblfod IIIli. Cll iiC!:I up

Rlel&lt;l' l'r iC'r"S. OUI
no•IU! •r. from Taroma 0 / lhP P11t&gt;llk C"oiL~ I

Leaders

I R II!(U f'

AMERICAN 1..&amp;\GUto:
flA'rJ1N(; (l'lf) a l l»&gt;t111: Ca nw . C'id llor
nl.a. .&lt;110: IJoRgs . Boslon. ..l i-t: Mcfbt' .
Kan!tfl.~ City, .Jor'i; Grlffry. Nrw York,
.DI!; Thornioo, CIPVf'land, :Jl'l.
RUNS: Rlpkm , llflltJ.rmre, 411; MU m&amp;}' .
8/lltlmun•. 47. Younl . Mllwaulu••. 47 ;
Ca~llnn . Mlnlli"Sflta . oUi: Wnrd. Mlnnf"innn.

"·

RBI : KJ1tl(', , &lt;.111C&lt;IIC(), fl l: Wa rd, Min
50; I:JfoC lnro&lt;~, C:tlliornlll, tli .
Ccq:N!f' , Mllwaukr£1, ~~ : llk'fl, F.losrot1, n .
HITS: E!oiQCI. Bos ton, 00:· W11Jtakrr. Olb
lrolt . 00; ('an&gt;W, Calllornla . lfl: C'IL~ tl~ .
neli(Ma ,

W~trd. Mlnlli'SOia. fW.
OOUULF..S: MeHac, K.ansus Clly, ·~t:
BolotRfi;, tlo6ton. :O: Hrbr&gt;k, MlllN'IIOia, 'It,

llAN G f:ll~tlorllod

TE XA.&lt;;

lo E wmsvllb• of lht•
ASSOda110n.
Nll~Ll:M~W

t111 ('Af.:O CUBS-S ignt'd Rick K.Nsch£&gt;1. pitr·hl·r. to a minor ko.al(l.lr ronlml't
and ass l~f'd him to Quad Clt k'!i o( Uw•
Mldwt•sl I ..CI¥l\lf.'
N ~~ W
M~tRadan ,

YORf\ METS-SIIUI(l(\ 0.1v/CI
ll t'!it baS«na.n , and assl,0tf'd
him lo ('olurnbl ;~ of lhl! Sooth A!la.nllc
IJ&gt;ugut&gt;.
-

PHJt.A.DEU' IIIA P JIJLLJ~-:r-;-(' HIIf'd up
Kt"'ln eros.~. pllc h«'r, from Porlland of
I hi' Pat·lflt' Cl...:ast I.A'agul"'.

Mlni'INI01tt,.fl&gt;:

Parrbih, Dl'lroll, ~ B lk&gt;JI, T MUUi, 19;
S.Hffir.lt•rson, St&gt;atliP, 19
TRIPLES : Moorl'. Mllwnukl-r. ~: Wilson. [)l&gt;!rol! . !i: G rlftln . Torooro. ~: llt&gt;r·

nron. Oclrolt , :'!; C lll0011, Dctrolh

~:

Win

Mark

WU,!o!ll!'f", .~ OOrt stop.
~ lean

in golf tournament

Sandy Gatewood, Galllpolls, and
Alice Icard, Hidden Valley.
Second FUghl: Low gross: Juanita Neal. Galllpolls, and Jean
Green. Riviera. Low Net: Candace
Pope, Gallipolis. and Maiy Burton,
Riverside. Low Putts: Jean Gloss,
G.allipolls, and Adeline Harless,
Fatrgreens.
Third F1Jght: Low gross: Bar·
bara Miller, Gallipolis, and Maxine
Summers, Riviera. · Low Net:
Marge Snedaker, Galllpolis, and

~444·

Joan Ward, Falrgreens. Low Putts:
phyllls Sheets. Gallipolis, and
Balmalne Hatfield , Riviera . Longest Drive: Candace Pope, Galllpols,
and Diana Wolfe, Falrgreens.
Closest to Pin: Candace Pope,
Gallipolis, and Liz Cutler. Jaymar.
Breakfast ·and snacks we re provided by Gallipolis Club members
and a dellclous lunch was catered
by The Sugar Cone of Pt. Pleasnt.
Deanle Smith was tournament
chairman.

MEN'S
SUNJUNS

3-3, will meet AddavWe, 1·5.
Cheshire, 3-3, drew a first round
bye.
In upper bracket play on June 29,
Bidwell, 5-0, wUI battle Hannan
Trace, 5-0 in the first contest.
In the nightcap. Vinton Green, 5-0,
wlll battle AddavUie-Red, 5-1.
VInton-Gold, 5-1, drew a first
round bye.
Quarterfinals and seml!lllals wlll
be played June 28 and 29.
· ..
The championship game wUI be

played June 30 or July 1.
Hannan Trace is defending tournament champion.
This is the third year of the
tournament. Director is Ron
Hutchins.

~.

Mlke
Schult'!" IL&lt;;.'IIsla.nt ronrh .

NEW .JERSEY NETS-1'rlll»l LA'II F.l
rmr'fl, t't'niPr, 10 1tw&gt; N1""' York Kn lr k ~&gt; ror
II Sl'f'fJnd •IUUnd r,b·aft CIJ.Jit't' Jn 1!1Roi

MoToR CAR

ROKERS

l.i

2}1 ~ ~
:mu Second Ave.
Lafayette :\1all
G,allipolis, 0.

Jt!WPI!i

J

3

;!

3
5
5

I
I

Old Bric k Ta vern
RESULTS:

.w

Mini cage camp to be held July 13-15
rna tely two and one- half hourS long
each day, tram 12: J:l until around 3
p.m. Additional Information wUI be
announced later.
Osborne said the GARS gym will
remain open dally through the last
week of July for summer basketball
actMtles. The gym is open 10a.m. to
1 p.m. Monday through Friday, and
tram 6 to 8 p.m . on Monday and
Wednesdays.

Clly Merchants 17 Molson Ponies 11
Fruth Pharmacy 16 Old Bric k TavM'n I
JCW('l:r&gt; 1.1 Sktl!esvlllc. USA 11
JlJNE :!liTH GAMt}!l
Skau:osvtJlc, USA vs. Oty M(&gt;t"Ch.ont s

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Recreation Conunlsslon wlll
sponsor a tennis tournament June
30, July 1,2, and3 at Hartinger Park
In Middleport. Entry fee Is $8 for
singles and $10 fo~ doubles plus one
new can of tennis balls. Entry
deadline is Tuesday June28at7p.m .
All divisions must have at least 8
entries. Awards will be presented to
·Winners and runners-up In each
:division. Players may lind out their
:starting times by phoning 614·992"
·5523 aftr 6p.m., on Wednesday June
:29. Mall or phone entries to the above
·:number to: Larry L. Baker, 7TI
:Broadway Street, Mlddleport Ohio
145760.

1\

••

'

' .......;: l.--

"'-

•

614-992-2181
·wE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD
{

'

....~ ·-· ·.. .

'

POMEROY LANDMARK

Jock w. c.r...,, Mgr.
,
Dri,. • little •nd ••, . • !ot - F,.. delivery wttllln 7&amp; mltee
. Y••· - ....,toe •t your locel Hotpolnt DMier
Store Houre: 1:30 to 1:30. MIN CloMd ot 1:00 P.M.
8orvl~ Molga. G.... •nd MallOn CountiM

,.

•

....

,

..
'

•
•

s

•,'

.

I

''
•

•••
·I
•
•'

•'•

! Tun...Up Kits

4.95

:MFL draft set

Standard

'

Reg. 87C limit 16

Spm•

Vacuum Guage 12.95

Reg . 16 95 A·J

Compression Tester
Kits

Reg. 1995 A· 1

,•lo •1 H ollo~ olJild" · •,
f' • .t mpt (• () 1 vi (.. l'r ,

Plu&lt;l

W11~Srl

Actron
Starter
Switch
Reg 6 95 A·9
16.95

' ' '""" " ' "

Autolite
Spark Plugs

''''•I

, .,

I ol 'l

. or ~ m•··,

Cobra Tun...Up Kits
d&lt; o" !lf'':&gt; l &lt;(

•. j /J ' "'

t dl ~ lllll t• ~ t ·l :

,

'I' •

Cobra Distributor Caps
•, t ,lnr1 ,11 ol 1\jrlri &gt;OII " lot~
' 10 •1'1''&gt;1 ,, ( ,1 1~ ()Ill , k •.•,;

Fram
Air Filters
For most do meslll and

(•l o•t lllllllt

IQliiiUI! ·

CJ~;~~ ~~~~~··&lt;~
f'I (•("IIOf!OI 1\) !1 •1" '''
IOIT1 t •'.l'

•moort car s exce p1 Vrq,1

l rH &lt;11(1 1, )

d1 ese1 and t urbO Re g 4 44

Ho •q " '"" ,1 .I 11'•

25%
OFF

Rotors

11ghr
5 hat\ f' Tf)I Q(I I &lt;&gt; h o r lq 11rof1 1

111lJI1 p np dl.! h uuo.,l''ll
la Ch ...v o 1k s on 4 !1 .~ H1 vr
e ng 1m' wilh c on~ f 'tt! lll tlrrl
o r er e c l t OII Il. ,ytl lt lurl o.,

N ,_
, mple f ovo ta C 1010
Reg J 50

Wire Sets

e~o.~mp!e VW
Reg l 95

I'

u•

"' ·

9~

9~

l'

Distributor Caps

IAPCO
Ignitions
Actron Timing Tun&amp;UD
Khs
ple t o yota C10? 4 2.21
Light or Dwell exam
Reg 2
Tachometer
Distributor Caps &amp;
Reg 21
ca

Reg . 1.09 limil 16

1

, . ., •• !)I ,.II'( (r 11 nor

15.95

Resistors

C ·1 101 4 1 1

2.62

5.96

NO

77c ea.

Foreign Auto

-~~~p~J~9s
Req 6 50 I.JC ' pk
So ltl til 4

pk c, Ofl ly

l1flll l 2

your choice

3.88

Sl1nd1rd

Reg. 99C limit 16
1ftar mfg' s rebote

Turtle·Wal;C
Mrnute Wax
Sale 3.68

lennis
classes lo begin

'·

,(..
. .r,_
............

A CHRISTIAN BUS INESSMAN
HAWLEY-256·9391
8 Miles S!VI of Gallipolis

.

•

.

~ond

'

~08

""'' lfll'1". ~on.rr ou•,
(• • ,lll l[i lt' b (' ~ I ("•I ~, , ., •, •i t •o ; / 1' ,

SYRACUSE - The 1983 Bill
Hubbard Memorial Utile League
Tournament wUI be held at the
Syracuse Ball Park beginning July
11. The tournament wUI be sponsored by the Syracuse Volunteer
Fire Department. No all·slar teams
will be pennltted to participate.
Entry tee In the t~rnarnent wlll
be $10 and 2 balls and entry deadline
on July 5. To enter or for more
lnfonnatlon call (614) 992-2900 or
992·7181.

~

Quality Worl! • Reasonable Rates • Free Estimates

lanitions

;meet next month

Old Brick Tavern vs . •lt:Wf'L~
Molson Ponies vs. F rulh Ph a rma cy

.

•ADDITIONAL CIRCUITS FOR APPLIANCES .

HH Bmm Wire Sets

'

DISCOUNT
ON LAWN
TRACTORS

•REPAIR SEVICE EMERGENCY CALLS
oNEW HOMES WIRED -OLD HOMES REWIRED
oCOMPLETE ELECTRICAL SERVICE

u an

: Syracuse to host

$1,000
DISCOUNT
ON GARDEN

BOB'S
ELECTRIC
CERTIFIED BY THE STATE OF OHIO

une·

:more, 446-3993.

$3()()

Cincinnati runner Into scoring
pOsition dut1ng the first eight
Meanwhile, the Brav es pounced
on Reds starter Bruce Berenyi, 4-8,
for a run In the fourth and three In the
llfth, Biff?ocoroba's two-run single
highlighted the ra lly .
Atlanta added a run In the eighth
and then exploded for five In the
ninth, with Pocoroba and Rlmdy
Johnson. collecting two- run doubles
for a 1().Q advantage.
All that was left was for Day ley to
complete the drubbing. Hegave upa
lead-off double to Gary Redus, got
two outs, and then surrendered a

•

flrst ·pltch horner to J ohnny Bench. :
The Reds scored three more times •
before reliever Steve Bedrosian :
wrapped things up.
:
.. He threw about 140 pitches. He i
just ran out of gas:· Braves :
Manage r Joe Torre said of Dayley. :
··v ou take a chance (by leaving him ;
In ) tha t a line drive wUI be hit at .
somebody: ·
.
:
The sweep gave Torre and the !
Braves something to cheer about on ·
an otherwise dismal road trtp. The ;
Braves, tra Uing the Los Angeles :
Dodgers In the Na tional League :
West. have won justfllurolllgames •
on the trtp.
:

l

' GALLIPOLJS - The Gallipolis
: Midget Football League draft lor
: boys In the fifth and sixth grades will
:be held Aug. 18 at 7 p.m. at the
: Buckeye Rural ~lectrtcCoopofflce.
• Only coaches wlll attend the draft.
:Applications can beplckedupatBob
:Saunders Quaker State, which Is at
• the Intersection of Second and Pine
: streets, or by calling Phlllp Skid·

WIM IAWtH
5
I
5
I

City Merc hanTs
Molson Poni('S

Innings, and allowed just one

for 17 .lnnlngs; they didn't muster
any ollensive threat for most of the
nlghl
McMurtry, 8-4, pennltted just
three basenmners andretln!d 201n a
row before the Reds put a Couple of
hits together In the ninth Inning.
Cincinnati got just one runner as far
as seci&gt;nd illlse In the game. and that
came with two out In the ninth.
"'I knew 1 had retired a few lin a
row). and I hoped I could keep them
from scortng, or at least keep the
lead. " McMut:try said. "'Once you
get Into those last two InningS,
you've got to klnd of kick yourself.''
The rookie rtght-hander snapped
a personal five-game slump by
posting his first victory In his last six
starts. Glenn Hubbard paced the
offense with a two-run homer off Joe
Price, 5-5.
"'The only thing I know Is In the last
t1uv eor four games I hadn 't thrown
the ball that well, " McMurtry said.
"Ifelt I had to get my act together:·
The second _game looked like a
repeatforelght Innings, with Dayley
taklitg command. The left-hander
struck out ·seven In the first three

'

17·11. Fisher. Kldd, Donna Stewart,
Woodall and Atkins all went 3 for 4
at the plate. Meanwhile Wall led the
Ponies going 3 lor 4. Winning
pitche r was Deb Stewart while
Butter received the loss.
STAN DIN OS
TEAM
Ska ttosv llle, USA
Fr uth Pharmut·y

CINCINNATI (AP) The
Atlanta Braves illls3ed pnlllllll off
the first doubleheader sllltOI't in
Riverfront Stadium by just one out.
Riding the crest ot Craig McMur·
thn!e-hltter In the opener
try•$
Frtday night, lett·liander Ken
Dayley blanked the Cincinnati Reds
·fOr 82-31nnlngs before falterlng and
settling for a 10.5 victory In the
nightcap. ·
lt was as close as the Reds had
come to a double shutout since
. Riverfront Stadium opened In 1970.
" I didn't think wewe~evergolng

Recreation
group plans
tennis tourney

Summer adult league results
GALLIPOLIS - Results of Tuesay nlght"s women·s softball ended
In a major upset as the Jewells, led
by Stoney, Evans and Krautter
defeated league leader SkatesvUie,
U.S.A., 13-12. Winning pitche r was
Sandy Hunter, while Mary Rollns
took the loss.
Fruth Pharmacy destroyed Old
Brtck Tavern 20-1. J. Sanders went
5 for5at the plat e. Including a triple.
Stutler, Travato, Gardner. Young
and Taylor all powered the ball for
extra base hits. The winning pitcher
was Reynolds while Reed suffered
the loss.
City merchants a massed 22 hits
attack to defeat Molson Ponies

to II(Orea run," said Reds Manager
Russ Nixon. '"That was a famine."
The Reds dldn't just fall to score

By#OEUY
AP 8pJoto Writer

-at992-9968.

·.WAYS TO GET
LOW-COST
MORTGAGE LOANS

N.uon.l S..kethdl Alt!ol•ladon
MI L WAUKEE
DU C}(S-N am t'd

Reds drop twinbill to BraVes, 3-0, 10-5 ~ ~ ;

MIDDLEPORT - A second .-. GAILIPOL~- A mini basketball camp will be held In the Gallla
.session of swtmm1ng lessons will be
Academy High School gym July 13,
given at the Middleport Pool from
14 and 15 according to GAHS Coach
July 5through16.
Jim Osborne.
The schedule follows: Advanced
The camp will be open to all city
beglimer, 8 a.m. to 9 a.m.;
and
county grade school youngsters
beglimer' s ages eight and up, 9a.m.
and girls). Registration wUI
(boys
to 10 a.m.; beginner's ages five to
begin
at
noon on July 13. A small •
seven, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.; basic
registration
lee will be charged.
rescue and water safety, ages nine
Camp sessions will be approxl·
and up, 8 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Thebaslcrescueandwatersafety
courne is equivalent to a junior
Ufesavlng course. Swimmers learn
how to safely handle aquatic
emergencies. Students interested In
thls course must be able to complete
simple eligibility requirements . .
Cost of the lessons ts $12 per person
plus $10 for additional famlly
members.
Those Interested In registering for
any of the classes should contact
Mary Slavin at 992-3710, Pat Kitchen
at 992-6212 or the Mlddlepopn Pool

Tou?Iamerit will highl~ht 1983
Galha County T-Ball action Monday -.

BA.~F.&amp;\LI.

[&gt;ittsl"xlrgh at St . Loul.~
San Dl&lt;'lro at San F ra nd sro. 'l
Houston at La; 1\llJ:I'It~

Neai, Liz Coder, Sandy Gatewood and Candace Pope. Rl•l!Mnl L. toR.
- Opal Baker, Helen FeQderbosch; Mary Amolcl, Allee Icard, Jean
Green, Balmalne Jlalfleld, Barbara MBJer, Marge Snedaker, Jean
Gloss, Joan Ward, Diana WoHe, Adeline Harless. :

GALLIPOLIS LADI.EB GOLF ASSOCIATION INVII'ATIONAL
TOURNAMENT - Participants shown are, lint row, left to right, .
Mary Burion, Phyllis Sheets, Mary Roush, Maxine Suinmers, Juanita

Houston.

Jfl: But'k ncr, Ch lc t~,ll'O. 17: &lt;:naz, Hou.~ t o n .
17: OllvPr, Mont f"t'al, 17.
mwu:s: M {J""f'OO, Hoostoo, ~ Daw
son. Mont rf' fll . ti: Ha lrn;-s. Munlrl •al , !\;
WMhln!ffon, Atlanta. :'.: 7 all' tlf'd with 4
HOME A 1/tf'.JS: EYnns. Sar1 F'ra ncbcu.
19: Murp hy, Athmt u. 19: G ur rT~' ro. J.o:;
Anwk-s,
1 ~:
Dltwson, ~1 tWl 1n'aJ , N :

P111WurWJ 8. St. Loo i~ 1
(a; Angr.'le!i 7, HOIL&lt;;too 2

San Fl1l0Cisro

Middleport plans
second swimming
session July 5-16

NA110NAL 1..&amp;\GUE

.).f{lly, Plltsburl!"h. 111:

~71i

XI :"
.l i :IIi
.'WI ~1
f'rida,y ':t HlUiln.
Mon!l""f'al 4, ChlcaJ;:o J
1\!kti\UI l-10, ('ln&lt;'lrtn:l\1 [i~
Ph1Jadl&gt;lphl11 fi, New Vurk&lt;J

'

DOUOU X

:~1

Houstoo
Clndnnatt

SAVES : QJISI.'I'lberry, Kat1sa1&gt; City , Ul.
Sti101&amp;y. lbtlon. ~ Caudill, Sf'ai!W, 1.1,
!..opf;oz. DPtrolt. n : Tlavls. M lnneso!a. 10.

Vf')'.

~r.

~

York, ~ -

HIT'S: Thiii."Wn. M ontn&gt;aJ. 87: Thon.
lioos!on. ~: Murphy. A tli\f"lUI, 112: Gar

.11

rr

4.28: Su!C'I ltfe. (.'Jel.·f."!an d, H .818.. 3.82.
S'm. ll&lt;EXX!I'S: Sdeb. Toroolo, 101.
Btyll'ven, Clevelanl;i. 117: MQrrl~. Dt&gt;troh,
~ 1 : Sul!on, MilWaukee. M: RJ~ttl . New

At lanta. m: HNldrk:k. St.Lou l\. ~ ;
E\·ans. Sa n Franrl'iC'O. 48: Garnf'f. Hooston, oW.

~n PL1 GR
:tl
:ii i -

.l fi
.'IH
41
Nt-w York
'Nn;T IJIVtiiOJ'I,'

Balll!"nore, 6-0, 1.00). t
nia. &amp;1, ..&amp;'i7, 3.23: Koor;man, Clrirasco. s. r,
ffl7 , 4.115; J acksoo, Toronto, ~ 1. .31\

R.Bl:

NATJONAJ. I..F.AGUE
EA.Io\T Dr\o'tHON

:w

16 dfclskins t:

ll"flal. ~ ~-

~~: arncs ~hfd u l cd

.'17

Planagari.
72: Klsofl, Califor-

P rJ"CHTNG

RUNS: MliJ1)hy. Atlan ta . 6.1: ( :arvey.
S.1n Dk&gt;J;to, ~1: Ra l.nt's. Montl"f'al. ~ :
F:vans. San r ranl'Lo;('t), riO. Dawson, Mon·

Tttuts a1 CHllfor nla. 1n 1
KllrtAAJi Clry 111 Oakl &lt;~n d . 1n1
Chk'EIIW a l Scoi!ll k' , 111 1

Montn&gt;al

Tnas. 25.

:V..l Mui')Yty. AUan tll . .323.

• Bal!lfnor{&gt; at NI'W York. lm
[)(&gt;troll at M11Waukef&gt;, 1n 1

St . l.oub

STOU:N ~ES : CI'\IZ, Chlca,ll'O, .}1 :
WIL'i011. Kllnsas City, 3l; HenderSon, Dak·
land, J l : R.Lilw, Chka~. 29; Sample.

!litl at bal.~ ~ - Hendrick.
SI.Louli;, .~; MadiOd&lt; , PltiSOOI'I!'h . •U~
Dawson. Montreal. -1'27: Knight , Houston,

Mood.-,·'111 {jamf'fl
Cleo.'Cllirld . I Il l

" '

17;
()e..

0.\TllNG

Texas fHi,
Detroit 9, Balllmorf' 0
Boaron 5, N~ York 4
M.llwaukl!e ~. Clevt·!Md 2
M.lfiOI."SSUU ~ Chlc'ago I
Ka.rwu. Clly 11 . Ca lifornia .l
Toro nt o 4. Se&lt;~ rt iP 2
l'lunday'~o Gam"'
New York at· Boston
DPtroit a t fla1 rlmor£&gt;
M l nl"lt."SoU.H aT Cllk:tlo\'0
Oevf'land il l Mllwa u k~
Californi a a! Kan.wts ('ITy
Toronlo ill Scotti£'
. • Oa.kland al Tt&gt;• a.~. 1n 1

Only

RUNS:

H: Ward. Mklnesota, 14.

W L Pet. GB
:!! 29
.57t :II 29
.574
:.tl :lJ
..WI 1
-~
32
..%2 :p..,

,_,.
"'"""

AI

GAILIPOLJS - In Pee Wee Jo&amp;q pitcher.
leagueactlonFrlday, the Blue Jays
In Friday's PonY League action,
doWned the Robins, . 9-1. .as s. the Dodgers defeated Hannan
HamDton picked up the win 011 the Trace, 12-6. Gary Lee Harrison was
mound and C. Carmen was tagged . the wlnl\lng pitcher, and Barr took
with the loss.
· the loss. Jell Haner- rapped twO
In Little League play on Frtday, trtples for the Dodgers.
the Senators blanked the 'l'1gers,
~. Jeremy Spencer, the winning
STANDINOI
PONVUWlUE
hurler, fanned 12 batters and was , . _
WL
four for fltur at the plate Including a Bravee ................................ ......................... s 0
Dodgoen ...................................................... 5 1
triple.
Padret ......................................................... 2 2
In a Girls Soltball ·League game, GIWfl ... ..................
............. 12 .
Hannan~ .- ........ .
. ................ ... 2 3
the Phlllles defeatal the Sluggers, ridwe:u
........................................... ,.......... 1 ~
22-15, with Lisa Hauldren picking up SouthWf'Stf'm ......... .
. ....... , .; ...... I 2
Vtntoa .................... ............ . :.......
.13
the win. Teresa Combs was the Olesliire
.. . ... . .. .. . .... . .... ..•.. .... ... .. ... . ... .... ...... 0 "

Clrot'(&gt;$, C81ll!l'nia, L'i: John&amp;on, Toronto.

AMI!BICAN LI!'AGUE
EAST DrVJSJON

Ba.M bt..,..

Kmlt&gt;, Chlc11g0,

A.rmaa. Bosl:on. 1&amp;: R.lct&gt;, lbton. 16:

The Sunday Timet-Sentinei-Page-..-C-3

PonMtiOf Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleaoant, W. Va .

Summer youth league results

..

field. New York. ~.

IS)'The~PnM

• Boslon

.luna 26, 1983

1~

Scoreboard ...
Majors

•

•

,~

T-16 16 oz. IIQ
T· 1.7 13 oz.

GALLIPOLIS - A 'second four·
• week seSsion of tennis lesssons for
youths.and adults will begin a July 5.
Mornltlg sessions wp! beforyouth
beginners and lntennedlates. Adult
beginning singles and beginning
doubles sessions will bll held In
mor'nlng and evening session.
The fee for classes Is $10. To
register, call the Gallipolis Parks ·
and Recreation Department, 446-

Reg. 1.24 limit 16

ACor
Champion
Spark Plugs

Rupe wins lop
bowling honors

79

~~~!~,Kit
Reg . 11 .49

Ex-Dent

Puller

1.96

1.99

Bondo
Body Filler

3.39 quart Reg 4 99
7.95 comp let e k11

7gc

age
.
ggc

INCREASE PERFORMANCE

,.

Restorer, or
Restorer
T274

Bondo Body .

6. 74

Reg 2 69 W I 26 1
ou ao t Reg 4 99
gatt o· Reg 13 4Y

3.89
8.95

E11 ceods A tl AP I Sta nda , ,..~

SAVE GAS

HUNTINGI'ON- Glenn Rupe, 'a
fanner resident ol Cheshire, cap.
tured lql honors -In the senior
cttllens tournament held at lmpe-.
rial Lanes here two weeks ago.
Rupe, a resident ol Hunt:Jnaton,
tolled a 5frT In the team ewnt, 6&amp;21n
the slnilel actlclland 5frT In dOubles .
tuiljli!tlllw fol: an all-eveat IDtal o1
1831, toplln the tou~t. .

Finis~

2.39

64C Nationwide 1O'f30
69C Nationwide 1.1)\y4o

Rnlaton

1'189, ext. 24.

Turtle Wax
Color Back,

.

·'

Valwline10W30. Nationwide JO NoM&gt;et.,
Kendall 1OW30. Nationwide Dexron.
Nationwide FA
Quaker Stile tOW30.Vatvollne IOW40,
Qual&lt;er State IOW40, Kendall tOW40,
GuH 10W40, Castro! t0W40. Ca•trol
20W50. HP020, HP030,
Valwline Transmission Fluids: Dexron.
Type FA, Pennmll IOW30. Pennmlt t OW40.
KendiN 1OW30 DSl. Valwllne Racing Oils:
30. 40. 50. 20W50

�..

,

Times-Sentinel

01 "

tt.

; ,l!nl

w.v..

I

~.

P'oeue.or Micldleporr-Gallipoli$, Oh~Point Pleasant, W.Va.

1.913

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page C-5

Youth league plans toomey

1. legion .splits twinbills. with ·opponents
.

'

:

.

·.

ROCK SPRlNGS- The Meigs
Legion BasebaJI team

walklngone.KevlnLangcameonln
Marietta tooka3-11eadlntheftrsl
relleftoflnlshtbegamewtih9strlke
lnnlngthel!managedtoholdonlor ,
: recently split two games with outs and oo walks.
the 9-6 Win against the local ·
; Parlrerflb1rg and Marietta, clalm· · Me~ hitters were Scott Gheen,
chargers. Meigs' ROO Cunnlngltam,
• lng a !H win over the West Tony Rime, Zane Beegle, RDb
went three innings, tallylngnostrlke
: VlrgiJIIans and drqlplng a 9-6 Wt to Cwmlngham, Nick Riggs, all with
outs and three wallcs, while Gordon
: the latter.
singles. Scott Gheen reached on a
Splete went the last s1x to fan 2, and
:
De.nny 'lbomas pitched a super passed ball a Jackie Welker double
walke four.
• game to pick up the win with a save gave Me~ their two runs in the
ot(enburger went eight Innings
; trom Nick BuJh. Thomas took ~enth Inning. EarUer the game for the Win to strike out 8 and walk
: command to'whlp the Parkersburg had developed Into a sharp p!tehlng . slx. Prichett went one Inning to
• SouthclubforlOstrlkeoutsandjust duel, butthescrappyMelgsplayers salvage the save with 1-K and two
: one walk. Bu$11 fanned 2 and walked emerged to the victory circle.
wallcs.
; .one, while the duo combined tor five ·
Tom SUnbaugh had a double .and
Marietta. hitters were Joe DaviS
:, hits.
slng)e, Chr1&lt;; Baker a single, Bernie two singles, Hammond a double and
• Chris Baker suffered the loss In Parsonsaslngle,andBIIIMcClunga single, '!'om Day!s two singles,
: flv~ Innings of work, fanning 7, and single for the losers. '
Offen burger two singles, Pritchett a

Slngle,Blalradouble,andStewarta
l¥lme run. Me~· hitters were Scott
Gheen a ·home nm, Zane Beegle a

:American

of Jill'

·suMMER SALE DAYS AT

25%
........--

PANELING

OFF ALL

Til.£ IN STOCK

·~

SAVE ON SELECTED STYLES

.
..

,.
..

·.

STAIN

NUTMEG ......................... :...... ... s11.09
'GOLD lACE ..................... .. ....... Sl0.99
SEASIDE .. ......... ......... ................sg_sg
MOONl1GHT MAPlE ...... ................ '9.89
lAUAN ......... ...... ........................ '7.99

SAVE ON QUAUTY

4" .Paint Brush

25o/o OFF

ONLY$3l 9

ALL STAIN

REGUlAR $5.99

IN STOCK

"OUR BEST QUALITY"

MINNESOTA PAINT

. 25o/o ·OFF

~40°/oOFF
ALL
VANITIES
·---. j) IN STOCK

92f

l

~.-!9!

15%

•

Don't settle for
anything less ..
·Insist on

'l

I

OFF

All MEDICINE CABINETS

·CHECK OUl OUR COMPLETE
.UNE OF CHEMICALS, . JOYS,
AND EQUIPMENT. .

ALL SKIL AND
BLAO&lt; &amp; DEO&lt;ER

Power Tools

15°/o

4 FT..........s19.99
6 FT. ....... 'S28.99
8 FT. ...... "S38. 99

HOUSE PAINT

OFF

-No Primer NecessafY
eReuseable Plastic Bucket

4"

X

100Ft.

ONLY

!Indians
drop decision .to
..

Milwau~ee Brewer nin

; · Mn..WAUKEE (AP) - Many Cooper drove In three runs with a
I wanted It very much, not just for . pitchershavebetter fastballs,curve
; ·itmong the 46,037 fans at County · homer and triple as the Brewers
myself, but lor the catchers and balls, sl!dersandchangeups.Maybe
: ·~tadlwnFridaynlghtcametocheer
won&amp;-2.
·
1
otherswhohavehelpedmealongthe my greatest asset Is control."
Sutton, 38, jumped off the mound way."
Thomas struck out three times
• GonnanThomas,andtheyrecelved
; several bonuses.
and raised a clenched fist when he
"He's a great pitcher. Give him and walked once in his first game
; They saw Milwaukee's Don struck out Alan Bannister In the
my coniratulilt!ons," Bannister here since the Brewers traded him
said. "Idon'tfeelanyworsethanthe to Cleveland June 6. Thomas
: S\ltton pass one of the most elusive e!ghth!nnlngforNo,3,00l.
• mllesiOI)eS• In baseball. He struck
"I was very excited," said Sutton,
other 3,00l he's struck out."
received three prolonged ova t!ons
Sutton does not consider himself and several gilts from fans, who
: out eight to raise his career total to ;;.4, whose victory was his first since
an overpowering pitcher of the lined the top of the bleachers with
; 3,00ll and become the eighth pitcher Mayl. "Itwasa3-2sllderand!ttook
• ·tc) pass the 3,(Xil milestone.
alotoutofme.Iknewthat !fit breaks· classic NolanRyanorSandyKoufax banners sup(lOrtlng him .
"We didn't stay In one part of the
: 1be fans also nearly saw a well, he either hils It Into the ground . mold.
"I don't consider myself a plate on him," Sutton said. "With
or misses lt.
: no-hitter.
"lwascountlngdown,deflnltely ,"
strikeout pitcher," Sutton saki.
any hitter who can hit the ball out of
: And they even saw a Brewer
'"That may sound kind of stupid.
any park in the country llke he can,
• vlclmy, oo conunon occurence he said. "At my age, 3,500 Is put of
: lately. ~utton held the Indians reach, so thlswasam!lestoneforme · r.:.:sltt:::in:::g:....h::.:e.:.:"':....o:::n::.:3::.:,00l.:.::..,b;;.:u;;..t.::.a..;;lo:_t_;;o!:__::...yo_u_ha_v_et_o_m_lx_lt_;up:_.'_·
; hitless lor sll( Innings and finished and I wanted to clinch it . I've
•. with a t!Jree.hltter, while Cecil pursued Uvery hard since I got 2,()1) .

12 FT.
$7.29

$2395

ROO

AND THERMOSES

¥2

All ELECTRIC
WEEDEATERS

~

Mobile Home
R~f Coating
99
ONL~

Favorite Beverage"

PRICE
/ a -.

5 Gallon

"Perfect For Your

BLOCK
UNDERPINNING

40%

OFF

Rl DNEOUR'S TVGtt§fi~t~(E
CHESTER, OH. ·

:Bend Area Jaycees plan tournament
:· NEW HAVEN- The Bend Area
:Jaycees wUI sponsor a Fourth of
o,July Weekend Men 's Slow·Pitch
:So!tball Tournament on July 1-3 at
;!he New Haven Ball Field.
• Entry fee wU! be $75 and balls wU!
;~furnished.

.

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER
SINCE 1949....

•• 011

20% Off
FIRE

·l a,JI

KNIFE SETS

TUI " TIU CAULK

.. •........ •

149

$11 99

""• S.le Price l .l t

WARRANTY

Mok.. o neot, whit., · - · .
tighf ' " ' arovnd tvbl,

"'*-·

and shower sialls. 11..11
loose +lie, caulks l111arlor
wlndowt a11d door fro- .
l&gt;rl" loll and ....,. llnlble.

4 MIL

,_,__

10'X25'

PLASTIC

PRICE

.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A~TH~E~N~S~~

112· 12011CJC11 E....,...,

7U· 1311 1002il'r~J~t

KWIK-$1AL

.ONLY.$

PH. 694·3671

tn I bolt

7 PC. ·and 6 PC.

Coffee Makers

problems.

tihz• ''"' and at'lrubl Ellmlnett ftNwy baOf, .
mnty preparatiOn. wa111 enG
protMma.
You can lertill,ze a " " 1n ' " ' tr'lan five minute~ . 5

$ 39 SHEET

•

All

Automotive
·Accessories

30%

OFF

Goodyear's
Famou s Doubl e
belted Perf ormer

Our primary concern has
been to provide good
hearing through amplifica·
tion, for thousands of
individuals with hearing

SHELVING GRADE
LUMBER·
etor•
lx4 ............. 14' ft.
lx6 ............. 25' ft.
- - - -...
D..
AP-..-.. ...
_ --41 lxlx812 ....._
....... 3535: ftft.
t61· 11U 1000 Tr..

Mr. Coffee

PH. 992 -6931

,•

and Shrub Spk" 111 1 rriOfuttOnlry .._ to W-

ONLY

ACCENT
FENCE
Pomeroy, OH.

$23

FRUIT TREE SPIK£S
Your Clloloe $229 i.flar-

All LAWN &amp;GARDEN TOOLS

Special Introductory
Rates
"FREE ESTIMATES"

:Club . of Pomeroy for his first
:hole-In-one.
•; His perfect 7-lron shot was
:witnessed byRichard Rupe, James
;lrboinas and Pat Williamson.
·1· Northrup will now be registered in
; 'the national hole-In-one drawing for
: fl free trlp to Scotland.

Convenaent! EffK"ti¥el Long-tuttng! JCIIM'I Tr•

OFF

"New In 1118 Area"
· 9 Yeara Experience

IN STOCK ONLY

JO.I'I TltiiAIHIIUa,lftlll

. GALVANIZED 28'' x 60"

BLANDEXI
WAFERWElD

1/4,; - $6.24
7/16" - $7.99

'•'

.••'
.•,.

.

PROTECT MOVING PART6

•',•

5

95

LUBE&amp;OIL

CHANGE
19 51nckldn"' "'"'

••

"r,.
·',.
•,.

HUNDREDS OF USES

MINI BARNS

With l it1er

103

"~

.,,-~

.

Gallipolis, OH.

STORE HOURS:
.
Mon.-Fri. 7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. .
Saturday 7:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

,' .

• Please call tor appotnlment

VISA

FREE
Belt&amp;
't1o~se Check
• We 1nspect all coo11ng system hoses
and engine I an belts and recommend re ·
placement parts, If needed .

Wheel
Alignment

$19

WARRANHO fO DAY S OR 4.000
MILES. WHiCHEVER COMES FIRST

LIFETIME ALIGNMENT t48.
WARRANTED FOR AS LONG AS VOU
OWN THE CAR.

Financing Available -with Approved Credit

Cash
Lay·A·Way .

-

,.,.

.,"

675-3930
426 Viand St.
-~Pt. Pleasant·

,.••,.,.

;

...

,."
.

·,

• lncluctes·hghltrucks

MaaterCharge

••
•'
'
,.

SHINGLES, ROOF, HINGES, ETC.
.,'

""'"
'"""
tOWi&lt;!ll
oi blond

• Chassts lubncatton
and 01 1change

••

INCLUDE ALL BUILDING MATERIALS R~QUIRED­

WRANGLER BIAS

REG. 'll19

•' .

87 Olive St.

TRACKER A-T

••·,

,.r
•'••

12x8:.. ,.......... ~500.00
12x10: ............ 560.00
12x12~ ............ 640.00
12x14~ ............ 720.00
12x16: ............ 800.00
12x2a. ............ 980.00

RIB HI MILER

WRANGLER RADIAl

I

.

NOW WITH AN EXTENDED WARRANTY
5 Years on Picture Tube
1 FUll Year on Labor
1 Year on Parts
Model CLB266P-CLB261W

••

ALL HAND TOOLS

Build your own Patio Cover,
Carport, Greenhous.e, etc. Available in green or white.

.

co-:

-----L...---------- - - - - - - -- -

'.
.
•; NEWHAVEN-ClilfNorthrup of
.
•' New Haven
aced the ·155 yard
:-seventh hole at the Jaymar Golf

GOTT COOLERS

10FT.
$6.09

.

' .

;:Northup has ace

~D $}299

OFF

8FT.
$4.95

•

llate

oGf·MoticN oolf·odjusting
lor oyotom
•Micro computer tuning with
oequential scan
• vHF/ UHF / midband/ suftr·
band / hyperband ... 12
channel c.pability
•Room light monitor
•Audio output jack
•Mediterranean 1tyiinQ in "-•
cabinet of Pecan gra.n finilh.
on hardboard; concealedcasters
•

'

25o/o

FLEXIBLE PIPE

FILON

P~ICES

•25" Dlogonol Dork- lna~ 100
l!lac:k mll1rix pic;turw 1\Jbo •
•E-300"' challis ... 100% tolid-

,.

Vow &amp;tlre.HDml

IN STOCK ONLY

¥2

NEW ARRIVALS

:· Based on a 20 team field, four~
:sponsor trophies will be awarded In
•addition to Individual shirts for the
:top three finishers . .
:, 'l'o !!Iller or for more Information
•contact Dave Richardson at (3!4)
:1!82·3435 after 5p.m ., Keith Sayre at
:882-3318 or Gary Clark at 882·2328.

2 GAU.ONS LATEX

M-*'D llwi . .ue tor

200/o

·..

===================~

double
and two singles. TonyRI!Oe rtwoslngles,andNickRiggsastngle.
Earller Me~ droPPed two dec!·
slons to Athens 18-0 and 12·5, then
later on ln the week dropped a closer
7·2 contest to the same opponent.
RDbb!e Cunningham pitched a great
game lor Me~ at Wellston, but the
· Meigs bats ran oot of steam and the
locals dropped a 7·2 ba(tle.
Melgs played at Glouster ln a .
twtnblll yesterday, then hosted
Parkersburg North at Syracuse
King Field today.

•

30°/o Off

DO-IT·
YOURSELF
REPLACEMENT
COUNTERTOP

f

The Mkldleport 'Youth League is sponsoring a Uftle League
Tournament starting July· 2.
Entry fee 1s $10 and two new balls. No all·star teams wUI be.
penni!ted to take part. Those seeking more InformatiOn ~ to call
Susie Stewart. 992-3326orGregGibbs. 992-2178or992.J443. · ·
·

I,

..

.,;

.,

~·

�flag• c 6 The Sunday ·rnnes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle~

Gallipolis, otu-Point Plea1C111t,

w.·va.

June 26, 1983

1\W)

Bergland named to REC post ·;

"

WASHlNGTON (AP) -Aformer
secretary or agi'lculture has been
selected as the new chief executive
otllcer of the National Rural
Electrtc Q:loperatlve Assoelation.
Bob Bergland, 54, w1U ·succeed

Dry weather
will continue

Harley .Warrick Is the last

.4-griculture and our .c ommunity

:Pink-eye can cause eye damage
By Bryson R. Carter
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS _ Pi nk-eye, an
Infectious and contagious disease of
&lt;;attle, can cause permanent eye
damage that Jowers the market
value of weaned feeder ca lves.
Affected calves don't nurse or gane

treatment, preventive measures
and labor associated with pink-eye. ·
A study in Kentucky has indicated
that calves that have pink-eye at
any time during the grazing season
weighed nearly 40 pounds less at
weaning than unaffected herd
mates.
To decrease chances of perman·

effective fruit pest cntrol combina·
lion. Most home orchardists find
that three other pesticides _
Kelthane, Jmldanand Seven_ wUI
glve them better pest control
results alone or ir. combination with
all purpose fruit spray.
You can mix the all purpose fruit
spray and additonal pesticides, but

agricUlture secretary during the ~·
Carter admlhlstratlon.
~;

sOPER MARKET- oPEN DAILY &amp; suN. 9 AM TO io PM ·
MIDDLEPORT .
PH. 992-3480

R,EGA.TT A SPECIALS

.

4X4

.

.to tnH Quantity"

!&gt;RED ELM . YOUR MANifACfiJRERS MONEY; .
SAVING COUPONS AT .IOHN$0N'S AND RECEIVE
DOUaE·TilE VALUE WilEN YOU pURCHASE THE
SPECIFIED !TEll. ONE COUPON PER 11£11. NO
EXPIRED COUPONS ~EPlED. DOUBlE RE·
DEIPnDN OfFER DOES NOT APPLY TO "FREE
MERCHANDISE'', COUPONS OR COUPONS OVER
49' IN FACE VALUE. NO cASH REFUNDS WHEN
DOUBLE COUPONS VAWE EXCEEDS PRICE OF
ITEM. CIGARETTES AND CERTAIN OTIIER ITEMS
ARE EXCLUDED BY lAW. TO INSURE PRODUCT TO
All OUR CUSTOMERS. WE ARE LIMITIMG OUR
"DOUBLE COUPON" OFFER J O ONE JAR OF
INSTANT COFFEE AND ONE CAN OF GROUND
COFFEE PER SHOPPING FAMILY.
COUPON OF~ER GOOD THURSDAY, JUNE

TUREIS CENTS OFF COUPONS UP
TO 49C IN FACE VALUE.

.SAVE DOUBLE $$

TRANS.'~

AT JOHNSON'S

SAVE UP TO

~.r~~rr

$2,00000
OFF LIS-T PRICE

PAT HILL FORD

FRANKIES

~:~LE

12 OZ. PKG.

Budp;er
Pleaser
Special

USDA OIOICE
BONBESS

•

,,

CHARCOAL

••'

,,
'•.'.

STEAK

.,
.,I,'

SUPERIOR

.,

•

SUPERIOR

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

,..•
·'••

.,••
.,
.,
...
.,'•'

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE ·
RATE

~=

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

Bwlget
Pleaser
Special

AT-C&amp;S Bank

SLICED BACON

$

FISH-N:-BATTER

t.

PICK OF
THE CHICKEN

49

6 CHOICE PiECES
2
2 lEGS

LB.

12 Oz.

Pkg.

SEA-STAR

' 't

LB.

$}29

KAHN'S REG. or JUMBOpound
Pkg.

WIENERS

·

$}69

KAHN'S REG. or

BEEF BOLOGNA

99¢

.

;,.•
••

••••
,.

Budp;er
Pleaser

r:

Special

~

LB.

$}49

Plt•ascr
sw~'ial

,,••
•'

U.S. NO. 1
IDAHO

GEORGIA

••

PEACHES

,

BAKING
·POTATOES ~~G

LB.

CALIFORNIA

TEXAS YELLOW

RED PLUMS

SWEET ONIONS

.

CHECK WITH ANY OF OUR
lOAN OFFICERS
•No Additional Charges!

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

,.

·',,'
'

..,••

....•
{
.•••

BUdget
Pleaser
Special

MAXWB.L HOUSE

COFFEE
3 LB. CAN
Drip, Rei. ADC•
Elec.Pett
WITH
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

••

•

Budget
Pleaser
Special

'•I.

VALlEY BEU.

iC'EUM QUAUTY$
CREAM
Half
.
Gal.

ROYAL CREST

'

POLISH SAUSAGE

Rwl/{el

FRESh

"
.,
••.

.

SUPERIOR

SHOULDER STEAK

~

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

$169

FRESH PORK

...

'

Pound
Pkg.

'''

''D

Fish story

NO DOUBLE COUPONS
ON WEEKLY
ADVERTISED
SPECIALS

Budget
Pleaser
Special

HAM

461 S. Third
OH.
r~r~ls~k~o~f~w~as~h;-o~ff;tod;a~y;wil~l~c;a;use~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;:::~~~~~~:;~~;

PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY, JUNE 26
THRU
SATURDAY, JULY 2

Budget ·
Pleaser
Special

TAVERN

PH. 992-2196

discomfort
treatment
withprompt
eye medimust become
familiar
with. Kel·
and
are . in a great deal of · effective
ent eye damge,
early,
and there
are some
limitations
you spraying conditions to deteriorate.
Pink-eye, or IBK, primarily cation Intended for ophthalmic use thane and Imidan In the liquid
'!fleets nursing calves on pasture in critical. Many veterinarians use concentrate form added to the
durtng the summer, although the a special tnjeciton tehnique that is wetta ble powde r "all-purpose
disease can occur In other seasons etlective If used early tn the eourse spray'' may cause some burning of
and occaslonaliy ;Ufects adult of the disease.
leaves and fruit in the form of spots.
cattle.
Prevention is usually' more re· This is due to the action of the oil in
.The cause of pink-eye is the warding than treatment. producers the liquid concentrates with the
bacterial organizm Moraxella bo- are urged to clip pastures and fu ngicide captan. Such burning
vis. Eye irrttation by dust, pollen,
weeds when possible; provide could be harmtull to the foli age.
intense, direct sunlight, and face shade for cattle; and control face
Here are alternatives ou may
rites is usually necessary before the flies with acombination of Insect!- consider: I ) Use only wetta ble
disease appears. This Is why clde impregnated ear tags, face powder or flowabie type formulapink-eye Is most prominent in the mops over salt nad mine ral feed· lions in combination with the
summer.
ers, and possible a la rvicide salt all-purpose mix . 21 Use only liquids
.All breeds are susceptible, ai- additive. Mineral feeders should be together and not with the au.
though animals with a lot of placed where calves used them and purpose mtx. Because capta n is
pigment around the eye seem less are treated simultaneously wtth a sold only as a wettable powder,
so. In addition, sonle sire groups
contact insecticide.
another fungicide could be selected
are more susceptible than others.
---to use with the liquid mix. 3) Do not
Symptoms of pink-eye are red·
Homeowners often want to know apply a liquid eoncentrate within
denlngofthe membranessurround·
if an all-purpose pesticide mixture two to three -weeks of a captan
Is sa tlsfacory for the home orchard spray. It you are in doubt about
ing the ey_e. excessive tearing and
pain. If untreated, the cornea
of a tree or two. There are all spray combiatlon Injury, check the
becomes affected and turns c loudy.
purpose fruit sprays on the ma rket label , ask your county agent or
Temporary blindness may result.
that contains mixture of malathion, apply the mixture to a small portion
methoxychlor and captan ~ two of the tree and wait a day to see
ln. some cases, the infection spreads
through the entire structure of the
Insecticides and one fungicide . This what happens. If bum results, do
ey.e, causing permanent blindness. mixture Is safe but is not the most not apply the combination.
Jlut permanent damage from r-------------_;_:..:_________:-j
pink-eye causes more tha n suffer·
lng to the animal. The producer
suffers economic loss through lost
v~lue of potential breeding stock;
lowered market value of weaned
feeder calves; and the cost of

NOVATO, Calif. iAPl - Wha t
may have been, for a Hme, the
world's most expensive fish - a
mUllan-dollar st rtped bass- eluded
th~ hooks of fishermen who paid $10
each for a chalice to catc h It In the
5¥ramento River Delta.
The Lodl Memorial Hospital
Foundation bought a $1 million
msurance poitcy on the fish to lure
anglers to Its recent lishlng derby
lund raiser for a new emergency
room. Under the policy, which cost
$28,000, Fireman's Fund Insurance
Companies would have paid $1
mUllan to any lisherman in the
dj!rby who caught the specially
taggl!d bass and brought It to the
derby's headquarters. No one
caught the flsh .

85 VINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS; OHIO

'DOUBLE THE VALUE OF MANUFAC·

1-4 CYL., 4 SPEED
l.:...V-6, AUTO.

GALLIPOLIS · . .
, PH. 446•959.3

SECOND &amp; IIIli ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
(Formerly Mart V) .

· DOUBLE .
COUPONS

1983 RANGER

will provide good field working
conditions. Hay will stU! cure at a
good rate tOday, but the risk of
showers w1U increase aga.ln Mon·
day and Tuesday. dlrnpllng prospects lor new cuttings for a while.
Thundershowers during the early
part of the week may beai"COmpanied by some moderation In tempera·
tures by mid-week, putting them
back to near-normal levels. Addl·
tiona!· moisture should bring some
improvement In growing cbndl·
ttons, at least in northern Ohio,
where recent rains have been
lighte;t:
High temperatures In the .west
tOday andover thestateSundaywUI
make Ileal stress on livestock a
concern . With light winds making
na tural ventUa tion poor, shade and
accesstogoodwater supplleswUlbe
imporlant to_all animals.
Spraying conditions will remain
good most of theday, with afternoon
wind speeds selc:lom over Ill mph.
Stronger winds and an Increasing

painter who adorns barns With the "Chew Mall Pouch
Tobacco" slot_an. ( AP Laserphoto)

congressman and fanner, was ::

14e ResetW tile

By The Assocla&amp;ed l're!!s
Dry weather Js expected to
continue througll this weekend and

8.\RN I'AINTEJt -

CONVENIENT
LOCATIONS

rural lobbies In Wash!rlgt911 on ,
wtderangeoflssuesrelatlngtorural', · .
;:
deve!cipment.
Bergland, a former MinnesotA.;

Robert D. Partrtdge, who plans to
retire early next year. Partridge has
headed the association - which
represents about l,OOOrural electi'1c
systems- since 19Gl.
The assoclatl6n is regarded as one
of the strongest and most etlective

The Sunday Ti.,_Sentinei-Pbge-C7

W.Va.

Ohio Point

2% MILK

••

••

GALLON. PLASTIC

~

•

69

18 Oz.
KRAFT

BAR-B

14 Oz.
HANOVER

99¢
3 79¢

48oz.

E SAUCE
.

Can

K-N-BEANS

Btl.

f

0
R

300 Ct.

$219
$}49

"Always on ·your side."

cars

BIG CATCH FOR Lfl'I'LE
GIRL ·- DanleUe Crow, dtllllhter ~ Mr.pd Mrll. Danny Crow,
l'omeivy, IMded a :U·Incb Cal-

The Comnwrclal • Savings Bank

M In a !Ike Ill Galla Coualy

Wednnda.v evM~n«. 4 •wtq
DaaJelle Willi ber IJ'IIIIIImOCher,

~-

I

.•--

'
"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

Mn. .lean !!lout ~ llynaule.
I

Bank Q

I,

...

Silver Bridll' Plaza .

"

Member FDIC

VETTI

HOTDOG
SAUCE

ORANGE·
JUICE

Spring Valley

••

•

�)'

June 26, 1983

l'ips on pasture
management
•

By Doug Pauley
Dlotrlct Co~~~~ervallonlst
SoU Conservation Semce
GALLIPOLIS - · With the coni
well on Its way and the first round of
haymaklng done , now ts · a good
time to turn our attention to the
pasture. Pasture production and
quality can be Improved by apply·
lng some simple management
practices.
The first step in pasture improve·
ment Is "bush·hogglng" or clipping
pastures. It Is Important to do this at
least once a year just before the
weeds develop seeds. By clipping In
July, this will allow nesting wlldllfe
ttrne to raise their young and catch
the weeds at the proper stage of
growth. The clipping of pastures
will control many weeds and brush
species, 'but plants like multiflora
rose, Cqnada thistle and tall Iron
week Will also need spot chemical
treatment.
..
Many thin unproductive pastures
ca n be renovated with the addition
of lime and fertilizer. Pastures are
freuentiy low In pH and phosphorus
and may need potash. A soli test
should be taken to determine
present saU fertutty levels then
apply nutr1ents as needed.
Rotational grazing of pastures
alone can increase the cariylng
capacity of 60 percent. Rota tional
grazing helps to e UmJnate selective
grazing, animal !raping and waste.
To rota tionally graze, the pasture
land should be divided Into three
Inches, .then rotate to the next unit
a llowing a ll fD 25 day recovery
period before the field Is grazed
again. An added benefit of rota·
ttonat grazing Is the prevention of
disease and parasite bulld·up espe.
c lally Important In s hee p
production.
A good way to Improve the
productivity of a grass pasture Is to
Introduce a legume. The legume
(white or red clover, alfalfa) wUJ
provide nitrogen to the grass and is
a good forage for livestock. The
no·tUI seeding me thod Is an excel·
lent way to add a legume to an old
pasture. The SWCD has a 10 foot
Haybuster dr111 for rent that does an
excellent job seeding grass and
legumes.
These are management practi·
ces that can Improve your pasture
shor1 of total ~lng. A produc·
tlve pasture provides a good forage
for livestock while protecting and
enriching the soli.
For more Information on pasture
manage ment and the no·tlll drill
please cont act our office at 446·8687.

S.uncta , June 26 1'983

recommend raising .the age of eligibility f()r the
lederal health tnsurimce from 65 to frl. by 3121.
ActUallY. Medicare was In worse shape last year
when the trustees. warned It could go broke by 1986.
COJign:.gs ,already has taken some steps ·to reduce
Mec)lcare's long-term deficit. ·
The trustees cautioned llu)t lt there Is "any sevl're
ecortomlc downturn" over the next lour years, Social
Security's old age arid survivors fund could run Into
short-term trouble an.ew.
"After 1987 the program's abUity to Withstand
economic downturns Is projected fD improve
steadily," they said.
The upbeat report generally attested to theefflcacy
ol the bipartisan, S165 bUJJon Social Security ref!JITM
that swept through COngress thts spr1ng.

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL

"-&gt;eeated l'ress W~r

WASHINGTON (AP) "'- Social Security's old age
and disability funds now have an official clean bill of
health, but the pi'Ogl&lt;im's trustees continue their dJre
prognosis for Medicare.
The three Reagan Cabinet secretaries who preside
over Social Security told COngress on Frlday !hat the
recent ref!'rms have made the cash benefits sound
·· ''for many years Into the future."
·
But they said Medicare could go broke as early as
1988 without corrective action.
That was not a surprise. The Reagan adnilnlstra·
tion already has an advisory panel headed by Iarmer
Indiana Gov. Otis Bowen looking for ways to avert a
Medicare crisis, and the experts this week voted to

BOLT ACTION RIFLE .

Weslerner rrlles are perfecr for o~en-cOoorry 0,
mounta~n game. TMse boll ection hunting rifles ere
economtcal.ly prtced and offer ucellem -.aJue u lint all·
around utd1tr niles. The Westerner teatufls traditional
Model 70 accur.cy. dependability, srrength. and
durabd1tr
.

'

259.88
al!T~iU.lR
LEVER ACTION
RIFLE

leYer ICtton is smooth and rel1able. In
30 Wmchester. the rapid ·firing st.n hot
mag;mne capacnv pro't'tdeJ two mort shots
than most eenterf1re hunting rifles.

.,

7YINCH£ST£Ae
RANGER

OUII LOW PIIICI

RANGER

PUMP
SHOTGUN
WITH VENT . . BARREL

SEMI-AUTO SHOTGUN

149~88 .

"The Social Security Amendments of 1!R'l have
restored the financial integrity of the Social Security
cash benel!t program for many years Into the ruture, "
declared the trustees, Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Regan, Labor Secretary Raymond J . Donovan and
Health and Human Services Secret811' Margaret M.
Heckler.
The program : 'wUI be able to pay benefits on time
for the next 75 years under all but the most pesstrntsttc
of the various sets of assumptions," they said,
Seventy.!Jve years Is as far as the actuaries try to
predict the fUture for the $170 b!Won retirement and ·
disability progriun, which rollects taxes !rom 115
mUJJon Americans and pays benefits to 36 mllllon
re\lrees, disabled workers and ,their families.
· Even under the most pesstrnlstlc long· term

forecast, the trustees said the system should be able to
pay cash benefits on ttrne untP 1/.m.
.
The trustees warned that under a pesstrn!sttc ·
forecast, till! Medicare trust fund would be Wiped qut
in 1988; under " Intermediate" assumptions It would
last only untO 19!Kl or 1991 and even under 'a n
optimistic scenario It would go broke In 1996.
The National COmmission on Social Security
Reform, which President Reagan tapped to solve the
old age lund's crisis, did not attempt to deal with
·
·
Medicare.
Medicare Is paying $40 billion In benefits thts year
for 26 million elderly peopl~ and 2.9 million disabled
workers. The trustees said that over t he next25years,
Medicare Is expected to cost lJ pereent more than It
takes ln.

Astronauts get weekend off
.after six days aboard shuttle

WINCHESTER '

WITH VENT RIB IARREL

-

Ranger slide actiOn guns are chambered lor 3" or 2lH " shots~ells.
Complete w1th ventilated rib. The action is super·fast for setond and
ltmd ihots fWtrl act1on slide b;ws prevent b10ding

Ranger semt·tutomatic: shotguns are chambered for 2W' shotshells.
These new guns are last-shooting .,ith minimal reco1 l.

OiJil LOW PI!ICI

129.88

'

to a flawless landing on a dry lake bed at Edwards,
scene of all but one of the previous shuttle landings.
In a phone call to the crew, President Reagan said
!hat despite the disappointment of the Callfornla
.landing, It was a "wonderful mission" that set several
firsts . - Including the flight of the first American
woman astronaut .
"You were there for one reason ," Reagan said to
Ms. Ride. "You were there because were the bO&gt;st
person for the job."
·
Lt. Gen. James A. AbrahamSOn.. director of the
shuttle program, said the mission accomplished 96
percent o! Its objectives, Including the launch of two
satellites and the !lrst major use ol Its robot arm .
Failure to land at Kennedy will not set the space
program back "In a significant way, " although
another attempt to land In Florida will not be made
"most likely" untU Flight 11, he said,
Asked lt he thought Flight Seven was the " best yet,"
Abrahamson said: "I'd say yes, when you measure
the complexity."
Crew members said they enjoyed the mission.
"I'm sure It wUI be the most tun I'll ever have In my
life," saki Ms. Ride at a ceremony after Reagan's
call.
Technicians at Edwards began p~rlng Chal·
Ienger for a plgg)lback ride across the rountry atop a
747 jumbo jet. Abrahamson said the tr1pwUI add eight
days to prepara tions for Flight Eight and rould cause
a delay In the mld·August launch plan for that
mission.

By PAUL RECER
AP Aeros~ Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP ) -The astronauts
of Challenger , back on Eart h from slx days ol Dying
the "best yet" mission of a space shuttle, were given
·the weekend off to relax with lhelr families and reset
their topsy· turvy sleep cycles.
• .Space agency officials granted the astronauts eXhausted from their 9S-orbtt, 2.5-mlillon·mUevoyage
- tbelr first lull day olf In weeks today. They needed It
to adjust biological clocks turned upside down durlng
the mission .
On Monday, mission commander Robert Crippen Is
. to lead his cnO"W of three men and Sally K. Ride,
America's first woman In space, Into the !lrst day of
about three weeks of debrieflngs.
The Flight Seven crew landed at Edwards Alr
Force Base, Calif., on Friday after a wet. low layer of
clouds blocked two attempts to make the shuttle's
first landing at the Kennedy Space Center In F1orida.
The landing site change was the oltly major
disappointment In a mtsslon that the shuttle
program's director said was the best yet by
America's Winged spaceships.
Crippen, Ms . Ride and their crewmates, John
Fabian , Frederick Hauck and Norman Thagard,
twice prepared to land at.Kennedy, and twlcemtsslon
· control gave them a "waveolf," sending them around
, : the world on another orbit l'ach time.
· · FolloWing tne second pass at Kennedy, Crippen
:· dropped Challenger !rom orbit and brought the craft

WELCOME HOME - President Ronald ReaglUI
talks by phone lrom ·the White House Friday
attemoon with astronaut Sally Ride, shown on TV

scrt'l•n, 111t1•r slw• 1U1d fhc ot111•r shultk• c•rew landed 111
Edw11rd•, AFII, (;1111lontla. ( i\1' l.!~&amp;•rpl""o)

. '

German protestors attack Bush's motorcade
KREFELD, West Germany (AP) - !iundreds of
screaming protesters threw stones and bottles at VIce
· President George Bush'smotorcade Saturday during
·· his visit honoring German·Amerlcan friendship.
Pollee said oo one In the motorcade was Injured and
· Bush's limousine was not dannaged but three officers
sustained llght Injuries. A pollee olflclal said some
cars sustained "mlntrnal damage." There was no
word on demonstrator lnjur1es.
. The five· vehicle motorcade drove oh as not pollee
charged the protesters, standing only yards away. A
line of pollee separated the mob !rom the cars.
"Bush go home! " the crowd of 2(X).JOO (lemonstra·
tors yetled. They tore up pavement stones and hurled
them at the five· veh icle mo!Dreade as It was heading
toward a luncheon at a nearby hotel.
The protesters, many of them wa vlng black
anarchist flags and black masks, hurled anything

BELLEVUE, Was h. (API -

'

D., :

SocSec fundS ·outlook good; medicare bad

Frisky gray squirrels are becoming

.ewerts.

~mu.- ~enthul Section

'

Squirrels
blamed for
power outages
a major cause of power outages In
the woodsy suburbs east of Seattle,
as tbelr hlgh·wlre acts become
high· voltage deaths, utility ortlcla ls
say.
"Ten years ago you would get one
a month," said Bob . Glllespte,
spokesman for Puget Sound Power
&amp; Ught Co. based In Bellevue, a city
of 74,m:J residents across Lake
Washington !rom Seattle.
·
But In 1982, Puget Power logged
about 200 "squlrrel·related out· ·
ages," and there are already more
this year, GUiesplesaldWednesday.
Squirrel outages usually happen
when one of the rodents, scannper·
lngon a power pole, bridges two hot
wires or transformer bushings,
where the wires go Into the
transformer. The squirrel becomes
an fustant, furry conductor for a
huge jolt of eloctrlclty- and dies. It
also blows a !use.
In the last two weeks, squirrels
have blown !uses slxJimes, lnclud·
ingat!east two outages IIi one day In
the Newpor1 Hills area, pegged as a
squirrel hot spot.
last month, a squirrel crossed a
breaker switch In a substation,
kllllng!Joth Itself and power to about
3,400 ~OUS!'hOids In · Bellevue and
Redn]ond, another suburb.
last summer, a squirrel cauSed
$10.!q! worth of dtllllage when It
cross'IC! a circuit and knocked out
the Uilli!Y's · Eastgate substation,
GUiesple said.
Ne111p0rt HUts resident Clyde
Margq)ls says the f!!Uirrel popula·
lion Is !lOOming In lxlrnelghborbood,
probablY becatiseofthemtld \¥tiller.
"II' I squirrel city out there. Our
cat Is l!l'lngtng one qr two a day Into
the ~·" she salcj. ·
Sucl1 stories don't surprise wildlite
who say the 1oca1 gray
squ~ pqllllation has been on the
rise fQf years.
''1111 Uvtng COJKUtlons for ,.qulr·
relsaJ\iimprovlngbecausetheyllve
With man and eat foods asa:JClated
With man and become seml·tame, ''
said Richari:l Taber, a proli!s8or of
forest zooloi!Y at the University ot
Washington.

ional

-

they could get their hands on a t the motorcade ,
Including bottles and uprooted rose bushes.
Witnesses said pollee dragged at least 10 rioters
away. The Windows of a nearby tavern were
shattered.
Earlier, about l ,IXXl anti·Amerlcan demonstrators
In helmets and black masks battled riot pollee while
Bush spoke at a ceremony honoring U.S .·German
friendship . Slx officers were Injured slightly and 100
people were arrested . West German radio reported at
least 20 demonstrators were Injured.
"Chase out the Yankees, shatter NATO!, " many
screamed. Others yelled "U .SA , SS, SA!" coupling America with Adolf Hitler's notorious elite
Nazl storm troopers and ss.
The violence erupted when protesters began
stoning pollee whlle marching toward a hall where

Bush was speakin g. Officers used dubs to cllspPrse
the crowd.
Extra secur1ty for t.hc elghl ·hour Bush visit wa s
Imposed after an unexploded bomb was found Friday
outside a U.S. firm In Du sscldori.
Bush arrived In Dusseldorf from London aboard
Air F orce Two at 9:56 a .m. He was grectf'd by
Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
The two leaders the n flew by helicopter to Krcfeld,
the Rhineland textile center where Bush commemo·
rated the first organl7.ed emlgr a llon of German
fannllles from Krefeld to Germantowr . Pa .. In IR&amp;I.
At the same time, thousands of pactn,ts marched to
the mar ke tplace about 1.2 miles from the ha 11 wher••
Bush and Kohl spoke. Organizers expected 20,00)
demons tra tors; pollee sa id there we!'f' lO,IXXl by ea rly
afternoon. No violence was reponed at the rally.

SEMI-AUTO SHOTGUN

PUMP SHOTGUN
WITH VENT RIB
Arneuca's but salling pump 8t11on thotgun. Double
act1on liars, receiver machined lrom ordnance·quahty
steel. mtetchaoguble barrtls Arntncan Walnut sloe•
and lore ·end.

!f.~

258.88

The m_odel II 00 is Amerk•'s most popullf autoloadtng
sho tgun. Sponsmen .and women CourU on 11 lor sweet
handling. loiN retotl seAutfoA. deptndablt performance
under the most adverse condt!IDRJ. And fpr tis tncrtdlble

:!~

,

325.8

l'lMI JIMII[L .... ........ ... .. ...

:.rn.t•

PWII IMIEL ....... , . .. .. .. .. .. 221.11

MARUN

MARUN

.

30/30 CAUBER

30.30 WITll
CAUBER
RIFLE
4l SCGI'E

LEVER ACnON RIFLE

30/ 30 uliber. 6-shot magu:ini, ltnr aclion two·
P••ce blac• walnul wlfull pistol gri p.

30/JQ cahber, 6-shDI magiLiint, lever acl ton, two·
walnut frnished hardwood stock w·pistol grip

OUR

...

VATICAN CITY lAP) - The priest who wrot e a
Vatican newspaper editorial saying Solidari ty chief
Lech Walesa " lost his baii iP" against lhe Polish
government has resigned as deputy editor . the
Va tican announced Saturday.
The Rev . VIrgilio levi wrot e in Friday's edlllon of
the L'Osservatore Romano lha i Walesa "officially ...
once more leaves the scene" and generally portrayed
the labor leader as Ineffective now In the Polish
people's fight for workers' rights.
Walesa, meanwhile, said Fr1day In his hometowr of
Gdansk that he was going fishing and to somr "hard
thlnklng" aboul his 11tursday meeting with the Pope
John Paul fl .
Asked about the editorial's cont ention that Walesa
was out of the political picture, his wife Danuta
Insisted Friday her husband doesn't Intend to qull
anything.
The Rev . Pleriranco Pastore, the deputy Va tican
spokesman, told reporters Saturday levi's reslgna ·
tlon had been accepted .
"Concerning the article published yesterday In
L'Osservatore Romano under the headline 'Honor To
The Sacrifice' signed by the deputy editor, the Rev.
VIrgilio Levi, I confirm what the authOr htrnself has
already declared: That It was a case of his personal

WITH VENT . .

wersartltly.

:179.88

l

· :!~ 168.88
.

REMirliiON

MARUN

PUMP RIFLE
Rtmlnoton Modtl 71t0 Pump.Actlon ctnttr 11 .. rlllt. New IMiuret and
lmprDvtmtnts mtkt lhla 111e lntDOIIItat, ''""""'· moat dtpendtblt big
game pumiHictlon rlf!t RtmlnotDn Ml tvtr modt.

OUR LOW

PRICE

288.88

pill'ilf'll the windowless room into darknPss for about
fi vr m inu tPS . lrivPstigat or s did not rule oul the
poss ibility of sabotag1• .

Bu sh cl lcl not mrnl!on thP demonstra tion in his
OJ&gt;f'ning t'Offltnl'llts. nor did ht• d lrectJy refer to the

Nm·th i\tlantle T1&lt;&gt;a ty Organlzat loy plan 10 deploy
new U.S. bt1 ill nudear miss iles lhls y4'ar In West
("'nnany , llr ita ln , Italy. Fli&gt;Jglum and the
Ni•lht,rl;mds.
Ru sh arrivt'tl ln WPst (;t•rrnany frl)m London where,
h&lt;' saki Friday Iha l Nl\'1'0 wllllx&gt;gln deploying lbe ~7\!
U. S. r rtllse all(! Pershing 2 missiles on schedule
despih• Sovlt'f

warnings

and

som e

EurupeaJ1

· opposition.

Vatican priest resigns post
after anti-Walesa editorial

REMINGTON

REMINGTON

l nsid&lt;' lllc&gt; moch •rn St'ick.•nw('bPrhaus, wh('re Bush
and 1\ohl addrf'Sst'fl an in v itallon·only audiPnce or
Sf'V1'r;1l hund n'(l Gflrmans and Americans, a blackout

BACK IN GDANSK - Fonner Polloh llolldu'My

~22

~Union leader Lech WIIIMaiiiMitllllllboftalake

SEMI-AUTO RIFLE

near Gdanllk Friday rnornm, on .., dt,y oil relaxln1

.

•

.

OUR LOW

.PRICE

68.88

"In light of the Interpretations glvrn to thr artlcli!,
Don l.evl has cons lcler•"'llt oppor1une to resign from
L'O.'iservatoff' Romano.''
u'vl could not be reac hed for comment de5pltll
repeated te lephone calls to his office. Pastore refused
to comment aft er rradlng his brief statemenl.
The l 'OsSI'rvatol't' Romano Is published by ltit! .
Vat ican. bul It doosn 'l necessarily reflect official
vlews 'of the Roman Catholic Chu rch.
"Sometimes the sacrifice of uncomfortable Jl80I!II!
Is necessary so a higher good ca n be born for U.
commu nity," the editorial said in pa rt . "Wa*'C
appears to have enter'l~l Int o this splrll ....
,
The editorial also said Walesa "had to meet !tit
Holy F athPr as a private person In a secret man.Wr
without de manding lo counl any longer In the pr'esl!l'lt .
phase of life In his cou nt ry."
• ·.
On Friday, a day after Pope John Pa ul !I completed
an elght.&lt;Jay pilgrimage to his homeland, a senlbt
Polish official said lbe Communist government mlgjlt
soon remove m artial iaw .
.
Martial law was suspended In December 1982; a
year after Its Imposition on a 'society galvanized by
Solidarity's demands for workers' rights and other'
freedoms.
·

,C ourt rUling ·stirs national . auto safety debate

~c.cktlbtr, II lhol mtflllllnt; Hml.. uto, 0111 pltco walnut flnlahed hlrdWocxl

l•v

while fllldng. Walesa had met Pope John Paul 0
'Diunda,y In ihe Nra lllOUJtialn8 dwtlii &amp;he Poalllf's
Iaiii d~ of his elghi-Gy visit lo PoiJI,nd. (AP
Ia• I pllil&amp;o)

opinions as a journallsl ," Pastore said.

'

.~··

.'

'

.

: ,'WASHJNC'roN (AP) - A national debate IM!r
: 1111trlnl0blle safety II heating up .,...._ fueled by a
_:'Supmne Cairt decision that the Reagan adrnl:llltN·
unll!wfully llfted a I'I!QIIIrelllel that
new
• automobllee IOid In the United States bt! equipped
1flth air blp Ill' autanaflc seat ~ ~ ·
·Jn a rullna.-nced Friday, the coort said the
. ~tiDMI lfllbwaY 'l'rllftlc Safety Admlnlltratloll
, must do· a ~ Job ~ 1111 19111 cleNlm to
·~ rt!IIC~ the reqtlln!mi!nt for IOi!alled pualve

•-uon

au

.-

l'

a

restraints, or set new deadline lor a~~;to Industry
cmtpllance.
There'a no word yet on the plansofthe NH'l'SA, part
of the Transportation Department. But 't'ransporta·
t1on Secretary Ellzllbeth Hant:ml Dole said she
W.:.lcornel "the apportunUy to tully revljlw tbll matter
under the (lllltlance prQYic!ed by the !lupJbile Cairt .••
In Detroit, the majOr autoinaken
tltuck 1o their
cootentlon that ·air bap and automatic seat belts are
not needed.

"We stUI believe that the best and most effective
strategy Is to get motorists to use the safety belts for
wh!Ch they already have Invested more than $14
bllllon," said Helen 0. Petrauskas, Ford's vice
piesldent for environmental and safety engtneer1ng.
'Ibe government estimates that Imposing the air
bag or automatic belt requirement will add abollt $1
billion to the prlceil of·new cars each year- from$185
to PXl for each Yelllcle.
Pasilve restraints Include air bags built Into

au

.

'
i

.

'

'

automobile das hboards designed to Inflate Ol} significant Impact and seat belts that automatically
wrap arou~d a person entering a car.
The debate over their usefulness dates back t() 1967
when Congress !Irs! ordered manually operated seat.·
belts to be lstalled In aU cars to reduce deaths add ,
Injuries on the nation's highways.
:. •
The Reagan administration rescinded Carter ·
administration orders that would have required Qlr :
bags or automatic seat belts In all c.ars by 1984. : ,

�•

Page-0.2- The Sunday Time..Sentinel

,.

Pomeioy-Middlepc!rt-Gallipolia, Ohio

Paint Pleasant, W. Va.

June 26, 1913

Country music fans
.
present ·no prob.em
'

--

-

metal and New Wave bands played

By LEANNE WAXMAN
A•oc!eted Pl'ell8 Wrller

NASHVU...LE, Tenn. lAP) ,
W)tether they're ln Ohio's Brush
Run Park, on a hillside ln St.

to 'a crowd of ~.OOlln !ate May,
ottlclals say arrl.;tsand violmre~P"!'
vlrtuaUy non-existent at country
tests like the Jamboree. the Ala·
~JuneJaminFortPayne,Ala.,

21

·· ....Giifiipoiia.. ·· ····· ...... P:fPieau.nt·····

. ....
,~

£· I.

4~ lllolo~o

I I

IAI ...

I ) ......,....,.

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

~on t

......

()f.. ~

• • ...,. •

I

1-5240
3-5260
2-5645
2-5665

Wound deputy
after incident

ALL IN STOCK -

'the sherltt's department because
-the cafe Is outside the city Umlts.

: ~ •.,.., was a routine call," Jakmas

, ld .
•tiJl ·

,.

I

.

AT .COST -

Balloons for 111 occuions.
Sey Happy Father·• Day,
fa t Jflmo-..11nlil h&lt;ly w 1th o w n Happy Birthday. I Love You.
equtpmenr Seal ed b 1ds wrtl Oet Well. It' a A boy or lt'1 •
be r ece•ve d untt! M o nday. Girl. Anything.you wish in a
June 27 nt 2 p m at w hrc h different w1y. Delivered to
11me they wtl! be opene d an d ho!lpitot or homo for atmoot
publt c ly read _C.ommrSSIOO · any Dccaslona. Balloona •
er s have the r rg ht to re1ec t Co., 4411-4313 .
any and all b1 d s
0 Mc tn tyre Par~

-o

B1lloont for all occaaiona .
Soy Hoppy Fathe•"• Day,
· Or Clyde M Evans . Presrden t Happy Birthday. I Love You.
Ju no 23 . 24 26
Got Well, lt'o A boy o• ft' oa
Gl ... Anything you wloh In •
different way . Oolive.. d to
ho1ph:1l or hOme for almost
Public Notice
any occteion•. Balloon a &amp;
Co., 44&amp;· 4313.
LEGAL NOTICE
A pub l tc heanhg wttl be hetrl Bingo t•lp to ChorokH. N.C.
Tuesdav . Jun e "30. 1983 at July 15from Pomeroy. 166.
7 30 P m tn the Munter pal per penon for tr1n1por1e·
motel. 8 14· 882Cou rt Room. Gathpohs M un1c1· liOn •
pat Burldrng, 5 18 Second 3377 or 814·992-1007.
Reeervation• nece ... ry.
Aven ue. G&lt;tt ltpo lt s. Ohro
Comm 1ssro n

PlUS 10% .

The purpose o f the hear1n q 15
to have publtc rnput on l he
prOposed Communr1v Develop.
men t Blo ck Grant lunds

.

FREE DELIVERY

Chr ls tr an P. Mor r1 s

Crty Man ager

.NQW SERVING MEIGS, MASON •• _GAWA COUNTIES

GRAVELY TRACTOR

J une 16. 26

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

SALES AND SERVICE

Fed:YsklaotacaHabout12:31a.m.ot

,p~Qu~~Y and directed the caller to

red &lt;IS pr1 ce per b ale Sue ·
cesshrl b1d&lt;1e r rs re sponst bl e

(NO
TRADE-INS)
.

• than llflhouraftettheshootlng,after

pciuce had received two calls

H.P.
H.P.
H.P.
H.P.

CHECK THESE PRICES ...
WE'RE READY TO PEAL!!!

· · Deputies on Friday charged
~rt Stone, 24, of, Leavittsburg, a
night watchman at the cafe, with
attempted murder.
• Stone sutTendered a little more

J)ty

.... . .......... .. .... . .. 8
.................... .. .. 8
.. .................. . 12
.. ... .......... ....... 12

speed
speed
speed
speed

1-8123 ............ 12 H.P. ......... .... ...... Hyd. Lift
1-8163-B ........... 16 H.P . ....... .......... Hyd. Lift
1-8179-KT ......... 17 H.P ................. Hyd. Lift
1-8199-KT ..... .... 1-9 H.P. .. ..... ..... .:.. Hyd . Lift
1-830 ...... ...... .....8 H.P......... .. .... ..... 30" Cut
2-830-E ............. .8 H.P................ .... 30" Cut
1-1130-E .... .. ..... 11 H.P................... 30'' Cut
2-1138 .............. 11 H.P ................... 38" Cut

~pllal .

an wu:uJy per10n inside the cafe.

4
4
4
4

RIDING TRACTORS

Wi\RREN, Ohio (API -A pollee
ottlcer talked a shotgun·wleldlng
assailant Into surrendering alter a
Trumbull County sheriff's deputy
was wi)Unded at what was thought to
Ill! a " routine chll. "
Lt. Stephen Fedyskl, 55, a 12-year
veteran or the sherllfsdepartment,
Was shot In the abdomen as he
~pProaehed the door of the Country
Cebaret to Investigate a reported
i'llsturbance early Friday morning.
· : Fedyskl was In serious condition
Friday night at Trumbull Memorial

patrolmWl Michael Albanese or the
Warren City Pollee Department had
talked to him extenslveiy over the
telephone, pollee said.
·: Sherlft Richard Jakmas said

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

lotlltOCI .....

Commtss•oners are acccp t- delivery. Devie V1cuum
tnq sea!Pd b 1d s l or removal bt Cleaner, one half mile up
hay on 60 ac res morf'·or tess Georget Creek Rd.
C11t
at the Racc oo n Creek COlHl l y 448-0294 .
Pa rk Brd s should be s ubm11- 1-::-::---:--:-:---.,--

WALKING TRACTORS

.

3

· MANNING ROUSH-OWNER

~GTR~~EI
V
" V ..I

.
I

PH. 992-2975

21 0 CONDOR ST.

'

Announcement•

lllvorvlow Poroonot c1 ,.
~omo Ia IIIIW opon IQr
lOry ...- . .. ()pan.

ililliiiiiillit___.,._•.•PO•M-I!It•O•Y•'•O•H•.-~ . ~"W:Jr3.=t'd -'"'"·.

.....
__

SECONO annual PlonH•
Days. 81turdey Junt1 25.
Sundoy Juno 211, Mooon
County Farm MuMum. 4
MI ... North of Pt. Ploollnt
on Rt. 82 . ,.,_ ocimlulon·
ent.natnment.
THE Jockoon County 8PIId·
- r . Folrploln. one of tho
footllt lpeodweyo IIIIo lido
of Dixie. wilt be •unnlng on
801urday nlahto. GuorentMd ,.,_, 'frill runo begin
ot '·
.
G08P!L Hymn ling, Gufd.
lng lllr A - Church.
lltu,.y, June 21th. 7:30
p.m. flolurlng HNI Pemlly,
Chi........., ontl Ambl.,...
cior Trio. E - • - o m e.
'

.......

: Friendly Home Toy pertlei
. now in our 28th yHr, le
· exp1ndlng and hae openinga
for managere and dell••·
P1rty pl1n experience help·
fut. Ouarln1Md toys and
gifts. No ce•K lnveatment,
no oollectlng or delivering,
no Mrvice cherge. Car a
phone ..-o11ry. Colt col·
ltot.l11·411·1ltl or 111·
411-4421.
.

IU~

1 M~-

SELL THE BEST. So!! Avon .
Colt 441·3311.

~w

]~

0...---

~

"'-·

UIIID II ......

does ncn ofter or attempt to
ofler any other thing for Hie
mey place an ad in this
column. There will be no
ch1rge to ·the •dvertiHr.
Kihena all mele Tom Ceu.
Long hal" 1 black. 1 whit••
orange, 2 white. Cell "41·'
3732.

1--"------ - 9 pupptH. Colt 3&amp;7-0294.
3 edo•ablo 8 wk. old klttleo.
litter 1rained and aU ••chad
to go to new ho,... Call
1114-268·11494.

1----------

8 . e wk . old puppleo, Port
Huoklo. Colt 448-1703 .

1------'-...:_:__

Fem•l• Beegle; full blooded.
1tll ahotl. 1 4 mos. 9ld.
Excellent with , kldo. Call
44&amp;·3007.
1. box opringo. Call &amp;14·
261·1658.
KIHeno. Coll44&amp; ·2418.
'h Lab. and Y.t Pit Bull femae..

....,_~ _

oo

puppy. 3, I'ROntho old. blond
• whlll. 304-178-20!11.
8

lost end Found

LOST: 3 cor kayo 0r1
phone 304-&amp;75-1333.

8

•

Public Sale
II Auction

aovERNMENT JOII ·
Thou•ande of vacancies
llouot Ill llflod tmmodllllly.
Up 1o doto dlrealory lloto
j,bo · from 117. 134 lo
· •so. 1 12. can 211·414·
2100. Including Sun., bt.
f431 .

Auction every Tuesft1of
night. Krodel Po"' Club
HouM, Pt. Pl•etant ~ .
Auct. Lonnie N11l. Colt .
114· 3&amp;7· 7101 .
.

Alcll Peoroon Auctienoer
S.Nice. Eototo, Form. Aft:
tiq"" a fiquidotlon - • ..
Ucennd • bondod In Ohio li'
WYo . 304·773· 1711 or
304· 773·9181 .

WANTED: HAIR DAIBSER,
opply: Now York. Now Yo"'·
401 Vle')d lt. Pt. Ploount,
304·171·7311 .

Aucti~Mt .very Fri. night at&gt;
the Hartford Communtty"
Center. -Truckloldl of new•

m""'hentlioo awry - · '
Conoit....,.to of "'"
ulld morchon- o'-'f'
-omo. llicherd lloynolh'
Auctio-. 27&amp;·1011.
v

4 fomolo kiHono. Colt 114·
)17·7128 .

::=-~-:--:---::--, ·

3 fomJte pupploo- pori
oohnounr. Cal 882·1711 .

7UP a PEPSI n&gt;ult clellvory
11111 pooltton obovo - Income . . A..,.,.g• work cMy
10 hq. You will own your
own buelne11, flnttnclng
ovolllblo .to quottloci opptt"""''· ox-..t opportunity
to edvenoe into Mltntrglng
pooltlon. Appllcotlono wll
Ill tMin 11 lho ?UP Plflll
Wlrthouoo. lt. AI. 7, Cho·
lhlre. Oh. Thure. Juno 30
IAM·12,M.
\

nr111,

te moo. old, - d whh
chiklran, good watch dog ;
Coil &amp;14 -21&amp;-1&amp;60.

FREE PUPPIE8··hltl hilh
8o-. off fong·holt'ld, color
mbod . loYWOblo, gOOd whh
chlldron1
lhodo. Ill·
1234.

· Accoun1 Rer,r•••ntatlva.
:· Muot hlvo cot action, typing
.nd aomputer upertenn.
Only ·quotlflod poroono
lhould opply Monday lhru
Fldoy, 1:30 a.m. to 4 :00
p.m .. 10 tho Admlnlllrelfvo
Olftce, 8-nd Floor. Holler
Cllnto LTP .• 3811 Jocktc&gt;n
Pike, Goltlpotlo, Ohio. No
phonl coMo plaiN.

I ] QO
• ~

Aooount riPfllantatlve;
lllfu'l hoYo cotlecllon, 1\'P·
tog. end computor ,.,...
rionct. Only q""flllocl pot.
••• lhould oae!Y MOfl!lly
......... Frfdey; .:iO I.RI. to
4 p.m .. 10 tho odmlnftlreofflotl, - " " floor, Hoblf
Cfjnlo Lid., 318 Jlokoon
,..., Golllpollo, Ohio. fllo

Complete Auctlo- ..;:;
vic:o. Ateo o1o , .......-~
Ucen..ct • bot did to . ..
Hou-o. fol'ln tu ...llllt·'
lngo a A N I -· ()yw 21 '
_ . ex"'lo:oow In ~~uy~o~gf!i
lOlling&lt;._, Ulld ..........
fu ... lluro. .. 4·112·1110.t
OobyA. Martin.
•

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

••

AUCTION ......,, ll""'t •
, ..... Mt. Aile
Auollon lorn. Cenoltfl"

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

.._

THREE clto, 3U4 -. . 2·

Ill A - . 104 418:"

1:00 1111 -

.

20to.

---=
........,......,;.,
........
4\0e,...,.
...
........... ::-= ...·
..,...
......-=
:.:Ill:~=···
ACCOUNT A!PAEIENTA·
1JVI. Muet haw eal1at10n.

Kltteno fJw to good home. ........ I
Alto I monlh-old ....,...
Cottle. 841·3070.

10:00 A.M.

... ...... .

c.t~

a.-.

Country Con-yout for oolo by
· U - Rt. 7 In
t~~~~:;~~~~~ Kllloueo. Ohio. Call 441·
2112 or 441·1171 .
1 t. Help Wanted
Moving late 210iol. lacon~
CJGARETTE · DISTRIBU ·
live.. Gotllpotlo • .187i Looking for wo""" wh!l 1:0R8H!P lnotonl coohllowt
Mo- C - 8 oyt. , 2 dr.. would fico to hlvo toy Wo ore o .....,_ nlllonol
1!110, 18 ln. TV,
port ... orwoukl-lolllo flnn ..poondlnglntolho-.
lllgh choir. Nttle boyoclothH Friendly Ho1t11 D..-. Get H. you ore -1"11 o _u,.
•odulloclothoo,ondtablo• kit with 1280. to 1300. bull_. opportunity . ·
limp, llllhroom otond, hot! worth of toyo • glllo to olart provtdo oil rltlll loclllono
!lod:;:':m:l:oc:.:·:toy:;:"':;::;::;:;:,~ wtth. For more info. c ..l and all n•ce. .ry tr81nlng.
Full or port lime. W!N8TONPo · · 192 3"81
:
mo•oy
. "
'
8ALEM - KOOLS. 1 -800·
32 Mobile Homea
.241 ,2211 .
for Sale
12 Situation•
9 Wen.t ld To Buy
W•nted
22 Money to loen
4 bedrooms, forced air he1t,
'luylng Gold, Bllvor, Pfotl·
altO co1l wood burner. 11h TRI · STATE MOBILE
n~m. (Jold lind Silwr prtcee
mile• from Racine. Sep•rete HOMES . USED · CARS .
;i!re tho higholt tn two yooro, Ouallflod nur10'o uoiltont HOME LOANS 11 ~ fixed gorege, llrgo tevtf tot. Call TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
ohock our prloto on fl'ild a -1"11 omplo,n.nt . . Witt rote. LHdor Mortgage. 77 E. 814-949-2023.
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
oliver, ocrop jtwotry. Buying wo"' day or night ohlh. &amp;toto. Alhono, Ohto. 1-814446-7172.
Old colno,' ocrop rlng1 a 742·2337.
882·3061 . "" ·u to 4PM ·HouH; 4 room•~ bath. 2
large loti. Long St. Rutland. CLEAN USED MOBILE
ellverware. Dally quote• Iii==~~~~:=== 1·800•341 · 11114 In Ohio.
Ohio.
Phone 814- 742- HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
· ovolloblo. Alio colrio • ociln
oupptleo fD&lt; lila. Spring
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
3166.
)/otley T•odlng Co .• Spring
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
23 Profeulonel
Vtfley P.lou, 441·80211 or
49 · acret. some wooded. RT 31. PHONE 44&amp;· 7274.
Services
441·802&amp;,
SANDY ANO BEAVER In·
chicken house, outbulld·
aur1111ce Co. ha.~~ qffered
inge, elx room houM, good 2 lQt1 &amp; a mobile home
cOndition. Dry b.. ement, 121180, 2 bedroom, with
~· pay caoh for leta modal Mrvtcea tor fire lneurance
C&amp; L Bookkoaplng
covlltago !n Galfie County
clean UMd can.
ateic storage. attached •had, rur•l water, g. . heat. Ha•
Broad renge !Df bookk..lng piitio, rurel water, clo~ to aome furf'liture. price
for almoat: 1 century. Farm.
Frenchtown C•r Co.
•rvic••·av•llebl• to Pomeroy, Middleport. 992· 112. 500. Or 4 \Ota&amp; mobtto
home 1tncl pei'IOnal property and
Bill Gene John1,on
e14.800. Colt 441 ·1240.
441·00119
covertg•• 1re h•ll•ble 10 auit your buslne.. n"da.
7082.
448-38&amp;2
"'"t lndlvldutl .-do. Con· Corot Naor ·
RUSTIC. ranch otyle houH. 1980 BAYVIEW Ootuxe,
Molar for 1976 Ford truck. tact Ray Wedemeyer. ogont.
PIANO TUNING Ill off plul 11tting on 1cenic, rolling 5 14x70 2 BR C/ A. fJrepl1ce .
,_0 mull be, good. Call Phone 388-1249.
dlscounta tO nnior clti1•n•· acreil Priv1te but not ••· g1rden tub. 1ppliencee, un·
4118·1818 oh.,IIPM.
... ,. you paying to much for cliurchoo·IChoola. Call Bill cludedl 4 bedroom•. 3 derpinnlng. *14,00. Call
atindlng Tlmbor. any you• hoophof·hoohh lnou- Ward W1rd'' Keyboard , llllho. Iorge Jiving. dining &amp; 446-1211 .
kl~chen . C&amp;ntrll eir &amp;. heat
•mount. Call 814· 388· ranct. Cell Cerroll 448·4372.
pluel woodburning etove in 1973GRANVILLE, 14•702
99011.
Sno-n, 44&amp;·4290.
PIANO TUNING-LANE OA· ba1ement den , g1nga, BR , g11. Unfufniahed, A/ C.
NIELS . Reliable 1ervice workehop. This hou11 11 skirting , awnlnga 1nd
Wanted.' Junk autos. 1ny 18 Wanted to Do.
alnce 19115. Auociate of ~r~ltr• modern Inside! The porches. 2 utility bldgs. Set
condition. Cal 114·388·
Brunlcan:U MLitic Co. Phon1 houae of your dreamal Price up on choice lot. Quail Creelt
9303.
814-742-2111.
80'o 304-675· 3099 fo• M. H. Pari&lt;. Exc. Cond .
appointment.
Fr•nch City Brokerlng Servl·
· .Wonted to buy loiiMit llld·
ceo. 446.-9340 .
roo~ furniture, old Selem
BY owner, Greenbrier Est- 1---------::-::
meple. eleo E1rly ~rlcen
ate. mid entry with 2 c1r 1,4 acre lot with 1 0MI50
chair. Colt &amp;14.·2U·1118.
goroge. 22B8 oq. h .. 3 .5 trailer. outoldo building ,
acres, 2yearaold .• 76,000. along Raccoon Creek .
BEOS· IRON, 8RAS9.
Phone 304·773·91 14 ofto• 112,600. Cell 614-266·
fumlluro, gold. oliver dol·
'"'· wood Ice bOJift, none
Nowty remodolod 2 ltOJV 1_6..:.p_.m
_ .--~====-.!::1=
4=4=6·===----­
j1rs. antiques, etc., Co~·
frame, 1 "'1.:1 bath, 3Yt ecr... 1
plete hou1ehold1. Wrlla:
city ochoolo. riverview.,
8
Public Sale
M.D. Mllft•. Rt. 4. Pom..oy. Trellt hii.!Ung done. C•ll
132.000. Call 448-4222
&amp; Auction
114-388·8813.
Oh. Or 992-77&amp;0.
betweon9•1.
Gold, on-. atoritog. I• Aft ty.,Oo of carpentry wo"'. HOUSE FOR SALE in Mid·
wtlrt. ""~~"· old ocilno • remodeltng and painting. dleport. NeWly rtmodeled
currency. Ed lurbtt. larber lnterktr • eJCterlor. Cell home with tlrepllce. po11i·
Shop. Mlddloport. 992- &amp;76·5400 . .
bl1 woodburner. cloM to
3471.
1chool1 and •hopping . Call
Will cera for elderly person In 614-982-&amp;941.
Wanted to buy. N.w, UMd • their home. Hew trena .•
• ntlquo furniture. wtlf buy 1 houra lloxlblo. Call &amp;14·
NEW construction • 3 •4
" • 0 o rt 1 Mount.
ploco or complole houM· 3 •••
holdo. Colt Ooby A. Martin
opproxlmotoly 80 percent
11, 4-992-1370.
CARS hand woohod and flnlohod uptlc oyllom,
w.xed. lnteriora clelned . iluminum aiding, 3 bed· CLEAN acr1pelumlnum. 30 Call 304-171 -2132. We room . 2 baths . Hou••
· clntalb. alto buylrig cane 20 _m_o_k..,•_ho_:·_u_
.._•_•_ll_•·_ · - - - 28'x4fr. nice lot, city water.
Located off At. 33 on Sand Hill ROad in community
i:onto lb. Tri-State· SaiYIIgo
.o_o_ _ __
1 °_n_ty:_I_Z_2_.o_o_o_
of
Letart, W. Va. leaving state and the following will
1
304-1123-1872.
SEPTIC oyotomo, landocap· '
·1
1 ASSUMABLE 8'1. percent
be
offered to the highest bidder.
Ing (1 It 1 Ize 0 f d ozers
·grave lo1n, 3 bedroom, cent rei air,
• dift: hauling, will lay lhort all •lectrio. 2 tota 230 h .
~NTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES: Brass bed (ntce); antique
or long gil 6 w•ter lines, long. ft-lllpoflo fo•rv. Will
solid
oak dresser with matching chest; stone jar imprinled
bookhoa
WO&lt;k.
FrH
oltl·
...
.........
..
'"
mateo. Phone 304-273- take troll" lrodo·ln . 304Brinker Bros. Gen. Mere., letart W. Va ,; small and large Do.·
3181 o• 304-273· 9830.
&amp;76-1809 .
naghho stone jars: deoression ul;~c;c;_· mi ~ r. ~tom~ ia rs: ~iano

SAT., JULY 2. 1983

~,. 1

-

1..:_____..:____

·-·

..,...,s~,...

....-...

tNOTICEI
THI OHIO VAU.EY PUI·
UIHING CO. NCo11101 you do buoin- with
poople you know, and NOT
to-d-.ylh.......,tho
molt uml you hlvo imrootl·
golld lho o"lr'•"'(i.

'u

__

,'"""-"'"o-.

YARD uta, . Wodntodoy.
Thurecloy. Frfdoy • 8otur·
cloy. lltcll of Now Hoven; 1'1
m I I o f r o m U n I o.n
campground.
J

m • ,..
10M .......... ......, .......
1.

...... . . . .

0n1r •

J I do ;

1177.

I

CLEAN .ANTIQUE
YARD SALE
SAT., JULY 2-9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
Must Sell All. 8 East Stnet, Monkey Run Rd., Pomeroy, OH. Watdl for Silfls. Rain or Shine. (Rain •
Inside). PH. 992·3985.
.
VidDrian tables (1 walnut), mahogany server, oak library ta·
ble, oak wash stand, Duncan Phyfe table (nicel. spool table,

mass sewing table, Jenny Und bed (excellenij, oak press·
6ack rocker, Primitive oak bench, maple table, 5 mirrors
(oak and walnuij, wicker table, wicker hampers, baskets, 4
oak chairs, trunk. pressback chair, ood chairs, fern starid,
piclures, oak haH tree, wood stool, oak cabinet (real nicel.
Slooe jars, crocks, bean crocks, butter chum (excellenQ,
jars dalJld 1858, ~re, defJl!SSion, carnival, Fiesta, Nippon, Willow Ware. quilts, qui~~ lamps, pitchet • btMI, old

lools, fi!lllrines.

Much More Too Numarous IJJ Mention

PUBLIC AUCTION
\

,;

- THURSDAY- JULY 7, 1983
SAL£ TIME: 11:00 A.M.
LOCitlon: Stilt

G11ndt, Ohio.

Rt. 325 (W. Colle&amp;• St.) in Rio

THE CHAntLS OF THE lATE MRS. CARRIE DALE
AIITIQUES &amp; GLASSSWARE: lots of ironstone, German china
German shavin&amp; mus.. mi.Ik alas~.
~ public ~arntval
vases Bavarian bowl$, B1sque hgur10esl Haviland pllles,
aepres11on end paHern at ass, 'flow ·B ue', old kerosene
lamps, fenton vases, Bone china, vineear cruet, 'Buffalo Pot·
tery' • pitcher &amp; bowl set, silver butter dish and other silver·
ware, a 24 kt. cold florentine tableware set. Bradley &amp; Hub·
bard lamp, 3 clocks· Ansonia wall, 0. J. shelf, end a Waterb·
erry shelf; brass candelabra, y'rn winder, stoneware p~ch·
ers, stone jar &amp;juJIS, old baskets, stone umbrella stand, 1853
aold dollar, antique Victorian walnut highly cmed arm
choir, marble top oak dressers, several other oak dressers,
oak china etbinot, 2 oolt drop-liof tables, marble top coffee
table wash 1tand, sltilh bells, sdlool bell$. Aaate smoking
stand, several etmel bal:k trunks, end tables, 1 churn, num·
erous choirs, Kimblll blby arond pi•rio · excellent condition,
1 lew old postetrds, hundreds of other small collectable
items.

areen

IAYI£L A. DALE JOHIIOI--OIIIEI
or ~JI!Iill¥t I.D.. !well

TOIIIY JOE

ITIWAIT~IOI££1

llllpalla,

Olio

.

II 11:00 A.M.

I

------r

ESTATE AUCTION

FRI., JULY 8 - 5 P.M .
SAT., JULY 9 - 10 A.M.

Tho follolrin1 poraonal property fromtht ESTATE Of MAR·
GARET S. BRADBURY, Cast No. 17531, will bt otforod for
stll at public auction. Tht salt will be conductod at 729
Socond Avo., Gallipolis. Ohio . .
CHINA
All chila will start selling at 5P.M. friday, Ju~ at~ Assorted Sfaf.
fordshire ~ales, numeroos commeratiVe ~ates, several pieces
milk Qlass, pair of cameo decantClS, flute and pan~ footOO bow\ I
set of 7 Umoges soup bowls and saucers, set ol 4 Weimer bowb
and saucers, I pair Moon and Stat tooted cupboard bow~. cut
glass fruit bowl. Queen City Quadruple plated ooffee service. sev· ·
era! pieces of Aesla ware, assorted pressed glass, much moreline
china, cups and saucers too numerous to mention.
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTABLES
Anlilues w~l se! immediately following the modern household
items. Partiallistine; Antique bed with carved headboard, cherry
spool day bed, federal style chest of drawers, two drawer SfKllll
cabinet. I drawe1 occasional night table. I drawer Sheritan walnut
night stand, w~eer Empire slyle chest, walnut chest with oak leaf
pulls, cedar chest oak buffet. 3 Tbal:k chairs, 5 oak diling room
chairs, Pennsylllania Dutch softwood cabinet. wicker tea cart 5
toot high cherry screen with antique hand painted panels, Victorian m•ble top s«teboard, 1890 Gold leaf mirror, flat wall oak
kKtben cabinet. briSS han~ng chandelier with prisims, antiQue
electrified l11111ps, oak pressed back roclier. William and Mary choir,
wicket chlir, oali bookcase, assorted antiQue mirrors and pi:ture
frames, Sc:otch I.Jssie ceramic head doll, numerws wicker baskets, trunks. cast iroo door stops, dozens of Old booll5 and records.
.
MOOEIM HOUSEHOLD
HoiJsehold items will sef( at 10:00 A.M. on Sit, Ju~ 9th. Partiallisl·
inJ Dinilg room table and cheiB, dinlll hW:h. assorted dishes,
IMC. small ~ tatYin pob and pons, &amp;lamre. ftllpcint
10 cu. It freezer, Kenmore dryer, couch, oc:cesional choirs, lamps,
end tablets, beds. driiSSI!B, lilens, olfioe desk and chairs, file cabinets, book shiMs, Reproduction ~ boa 00 111(15.
'

.,...

Ttf•a: Calli, Cuhlora Clltctc, Pr•approvtd ptftonal
chtckl or lrith currlftt llltor of crodit from blnt.

MARGARET S. BRADBURY ESTATE

aamd.
- .

.

=~= llotl: This Ia a ¥ttY cia~ lilt, with hundreds ~
- ~-·· 1., ha Out le lilt nutnerous amount tlf 1111111 H
ult CIIIIICIIIII Clllllllrll1 an Tllurtdoy It wli Ill continued
• frtdty tilt •

I
1·
I
I
I
I
I
I
OWNER: SANDRA SHIELDS
I
TERMS: Cesh or Check with 'Positive 1.0.
: EDWIN WINTER
I ·Cottalovlllt.AUCTIONEER
W. Yo.
Phone 273-3447

This ulo rapr11ant1 IOIIIIYIIJ II•• ontlquoa and collocll·

fr•-·

can

stool w1th ~las s claw feet; bullet w1lh beveled glass mutor;
wall mount, coffee grinder; kitchen cupboard with !lour bin;
Ma il Pouch thermometer. small glass butler ch urn; Singer
tread le sewing machine cabinet; pitChel pump la1ge p1ess
ctder press.
MISCELLANEOUS : 3 pc. bed roo msuite; rou nd maple dinette
sel with 6 ch airs; china cabinet with matching bullet; cane
back and botlom lOCker; cedar wardrobe desk; Magtc Chef
electric stove; Whirlpool refrigertor; Speed Queen automatic
washer (3 yrs. old); Hoi point dryer; che st type lreezer; 8H.P.
Bolens ridm g lawn mower; push type lawn mower; square
shower stall; Ashley woodbur,ner stove. Other miscellaneou s
items too numerous to menhon,
Lunch ~erved
Not Responsible for Accidents

Auctlon111's Iota: IRS. BRADBURY hn bttn 1 proitllnttll
antlq11 dNier and colioclor In 1•11 1111 for ovtr 30 ,..ra.

liYinl room sde, Whlrlpoofwashtr &amp; dryer, Zenith B&amp;W
partible IY, humidifier, 3·oek beds, numerous chairs, num·
111111 dillies &amp; other household Hems, numerous picture
cedar chest. sometintn and quils, some small tOOls.
many other ltaml tao numerous to mention.
T -:

The

W. Va.
32 Mobile Home•

32 Mobile Homea

35

for Sale

for Sale

.1171 SCHULT, 14x70, 2
IR. 2 btthl, C I A. Good
oond. On NnUI lot near
Goodyeior plant . A...:.mabte
loen, low down paymen1.
F,..oh City lrolt"tng SoNI·
coo. 44&amp;-8340.

USEO Mobile Homoo, 304576·271 1 .

lott II .Acreege

Bu.Jneu

Opportunity

r

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

2lM!&gt; MWIDII&gt;U

.

wllll M11Jor

1--------....:..-

cry ou -.
~~=~~~l~~~~~~~i~~~:: against manufaclurer .

~

• Vicinity

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

OUR IIOARDING HOUSE

Paint

c-.

were

C oo dolf~o~h lf•-'• &lt;&gt; M~•""•I

~-

8olo Old Rt. 7,
' .
e. Ohio. July 1 • 2.
• dryor, co"- ltblo.
. IM. dllhto. IOpO cloc;l&lt;, IMP
LoP· quality mon'o,
womon'o, chfldren'a
cilothl"11·

never

st eeIwor
· k
· ers

• Vicinity
······--·· ... --· --· --.--..

.e
-·•

second annual one-ilay test, mo&amp;t d.
whom were drunks pteked up " for:
their own,benefit" before they :did"
'·•
any damage, says Wayne ParXel',.
assistant pollee chief In FortPilyne_
"We lleYer have any p~·
They're not here to raise bell,". ~
said. ·
TheJamboreeinTheHD!s,beklbt
St. ClalrsvUle, along with the Other
fests,_aren't lriunune to large-crowd
traffic jams, the planners and
protectors say.
~
But Behnont County SherUf Dick
Stobb&amp;, who has swvlvecf ~
Jamborees, says the toopei atlon of
countrY musk diehards sets then!
apart !rom rock crowds.
"We're real proudofthecoopeia·
lion we get !rom th!! crowd· ·We
have any major problems.
They drink, they party, they
soclallze, but. to lhem It's just aooct
clean tun," the sherlf! says.
·
Stobi)S says only two ariests
made at the event last year, one a
drunk picked up lor disorderly
coilduct after 'he broke Into two
can'ipers, and the other a "young
lady tak!ng her top off · 'l illd
displaying herself."

Clalrsvllle, Ohlo,orattheTennessee
.-State Fairgrounds, country mUSic or such NashvUle nnainstays as the
International Country Musk Fljll
fans are just plain dltrerent.
and Charlie Danlels' annual
·Fair
·They .!Son't beat each other up,
Volunteer
Jams.
they don't loot each other's
CatbyGurley, a spokeswoman for
campers, and they don't eat drugs
Fan
Fair co-sponsor the Country
IikecWJdy. At leastlhat'swhatsome
Muslc
Association, says the mood of
of the coordinators and securtty
coun!ry
crowds Is due as much to the
officials who .plan several major
performers
as to their faithful
country music festivals each year
followers.
have to say about thelr crowds.
"It's the orientation. It comes
" We've never needed strong-arm
from
the artists. They give so much
tactics. Country music Is the kind of
STD..LBEING CLEANEQ- A warning sign hangs Dammable chemicals have been ref!lOVed from lhe
of
themselves
that the crowd Is
muslc everybody Cljll relate to,"
. lrom a fence marking the site of a toxic wa!U site In
site but nearby Mldents are anxious for a final
wUllng
to
give
to.
The fans wW stand
says Debbie Wieser, a coordinator
Rock Cmek, Ohio. One thousand barrels of toxic and
cleanup. ( AP Laserphoto).
'
for Jamboree In The HUls. "1be on lines wafting to get autographs
music Is a reflection of them; It talks because they know the artist Is
to everybody. It's a celebration of tak!ng the time with the person In
front of them and wtll do the same
themselves."
The· Jamboree, held the third when lt's their turn," Ms. Gurley
weekend In JulylnOh.lo'sBrushRun sald of the 17,00! people who
Park, 17 mlJes west of Wheeling, attended Fan Fair June 7-10.
The June Jam drew nearly 37,700
W.Va., drew 50,00! people last year
people June 4 to a hillside behind
for 23 country acts.
Unlike the rowdy US Festival in Fort Payne High School. Just 22
people were arrested during the
fund " to provide money forcleanlng
By ROBERt: GREENE
According to the U.S. EPA, there Southern California, where heaV:,.
up dump sites. There Is nothing In
are· at least 14,00! unregulated
A!I!OCiated Press Writer
Ohio has a poisonous problem: the current state budget btu to
hazardous-wasteslteslnthenation.
hazardous wastes. The problem has provide lor cleanup of abandoned
Ohio has ahou t 700.
been around for years and remains hazardous sites.
" We don't have anything other
.
today,ln every corner oft he state.
than
by
going
to
the
the
C
ntrolllng
notably
the
Public
Utllltles
Commis'
0
At Rock Cf!'&lt;'k In northeastern
Ohio, 4·year-old Amy Laughlin Board," Sedam said. Sta te EPA
drew a pl'cture of a house with oHlclals &lt;:oncede that Is true; but
~!ra nge figures In the sky. " Those Ohlo EPA Dlrector Robert Mayjoined In enforcement, too, because
are the barrels blowing up," the girl nard vows that the money will be
there w.hen needed.
· told her grandmother.
.
' theycanbestuckwlthahugellabUiy
PHll.ADELPHlA (AP) _ The Frankel, the union's associate
McGeehan said. "Weareflghtli!gt&lt;?
Thefederalgovernment operates
Near Toledo, the state's only
under federal and state law if United Stee.lworkers union has fUed general counsel, told reporters at a
save the nation's steelmakalng. We
operating nuclear power plant an environmental. Superfund that
something gt&gt;es wrong, Ohio EPA an unfair lahor practice charge press conference.
don't want the coun!ry to ··become
produces waste that can remain provides money for cleaning up
officials say. The strict llab!Uty has against u.s. Steel Corp. amid
Earlier this year, the nation's steel-dependent like It Is ontadloactive a thousand years or hazardous-waste sites. By March,
also meant another form of com· reports the firm Is pressing to biggest steehnaker announc~ It
dependent."
$7.~ million had been allocated for
more.
pllance bY waste producer s.
complete a controversial lnnport was considering an arrangement to
McGeehan said lie had written the
· In HamUton, officials stUI are 140hlosltes, the stateEPAsald. The
" We're seeing a goodly amount of deal before the end of tbe summer.
Import millions of tons of semi- company asklng for Information on
cleaning up about 30,00! barrels of original $1.6 billion, five-year fed ·
horderUne hazardous waste that
finished steel slabs from the
the British deal and was refUsed in a
. ~hemlcals and other toxlcwastesat eral Superfund was financed mostly
people are saying, 'Hey, I'm sending
Under the plan, U.S. Steel would Scotland plant of governmentletter from William Miller, the
the Chem·Dyne disposa l sight. Tile with fees collected from the
this to a ha£ardous-w.aste facility Import British steelfor finishing at subsidized BrltlshSteelandhavethe
company's vlce president-lahar
petrochemical Industry .
ciost will total at least $.1.4 million.
because I don't want to have to Its Fairless Works near here, a slabs finished at Its Fairless Works.
relations.
Tile ·U.S. EPA provides emer: Figures from the Ohio Environ·
worry ahout It five or 10 years from move a union spokesman said British Steel, ln return, would make
"The material you seek to obtain
mental Protection Agency show gency cleanup money where publl,c
now,"' said Steve White, assistant "would mean the end of steelnnak- an lnvestnnent ln the Fairless plant.
Is so sensitive', that Its publication
that- at the very least - one- third health Is threatened hnmedlately .
chief of the Ohio EPA's,Divislon of lng In the Unlled States."
wouldproveextremelydamaglngto
of a ton of hazardous stes werehpro· States must pay 10 percent of
Hazardous Materials Managrnent .
The USW went to the National
James McGeehan, director of the
the business position of U.S. Steel
duced In 1.81 for every man, woman follow·up or "remedial" work to
The Ohio EPA has been tracklng Labor Relations Board Friday to USW's District 7 and chairman of
vis-a-vis our competitors," Mtller
make a site permanently sale.
and child living In Ohio.
hazardous wastes thrOugh a com· protest U.S. Steel's refusal to the union's bargaining committee
sald ln a letter sent two weeks ago
In theory, the site 1s cleaned up
What .Is hazardpl's waste• Off!·
prehenstve reporting system that provide Information on Its dealings with U.S. Steel, said such an
and made public by McGeehan.
clals say the materials include and authorities try to get payment
Although MWer said "no ~
requlres documentation by bust- with British Steel Corp. as . a arrangement would cost ,3,00! jobs
pesticides, acids, caustics, pickle from the polluters . Ohio officials - nesses from "cradle to grave" ofthe viola lion of Its bargaining at Fairless, whose steelmaking
ment has been reached with British
liquors from steehnaking, heavy submitted 35 sites for federal
generation and disposal of waste obligation.
capacity would nolongerheneeded.
Steel," he insisted thelnnportatlolior
metals, cyanides, phosphorous Superfund consideration. Of those,
materials.
" The company is refusing to
"The plan, if successful and then
slabs was the only way to save the
compounds, hydrocarhons, oils, 19 made the llsl.
"It appears that we've got provide the information we need to expanded. would mean the end of
Fairless Works from being clOsed
"We have 16 sites out there that
plastics, resins, paints and more.
sufficient capacity ln Ohio right now fight the U.S. Steel plan," Carl steehnaklng In the United States,"
permanently before 1990.
The state EPA says federal aren't getting any attention," Se.
to handle
most
of Hannahs
our hazardous
waste,"
said
Roger
of the
environmental regulations consider dam said. "The only way is tlu-ough
voluntary
efforts
or
some
klnd
of
Ohio
EPA.
';A
slgnlticant
amount
Is
materials to be hazardous "if they
st,ate
action."
being rendered non·hazardous beIgnite easily, react spontaneously
Tribune - 446-2342
Tom Carlisle. who works with
lore.II goes into the environment. "
•, with air or water, corrode mateSentinel - 992-2156
waste management In the Ohio
Critics say the main weakness In
dais, or II they are Infectious or
EPA,
says
the
sta
te
remains
aware
Register - 675-1333
state law is that II contains language
poisonous." Hardly an lndus!ry In
of
those
sites
and
work
wtu
cont
lnue.
prohibiting It from being stricter
· the state exlst""hat doesn't produce
"You've got 'to look at why they
than federal law. State officials and
sbmething that falls under that
didn't make It (for federal Super·
environmentalists would !Ike to see
&lt;jellnltlon.
,,
I ..,
fund consideration)," he said. In
that changed.
• But how lsOhlodolng in this battle
I
21 . ....,..., o...,~""""•
71 Aool. . tvos.( ,' /ll~~jfi• ·rl l'ti,W ·• o'fU o•r I h o•
As Dennis Muchnick ! of I he state
to control the dirty underside of · some cases. the state lacked
2 ...
...... .......- • •
t1 Cl , l V I lliaolool., ... _ . . ,
lllo""hlao . . .
Ja....._ ... _...,
,,
.
.
.........
.
sufficient
Information
about
the
l l v....... wo
/u//.,., in/( lo ·lo•tohuru • •••dum/!,'.•
2l"'-'-'''""'"''' 54Mooc ....
• o......
IOdustrlal greatness?
Attorney General's office put II ,
14 M"'•c1'dft
~::.Ji.lfiii!i .=
,,.,
...
..
sites, he said. In others, the Ohlo
' "'""''
n.A.,.,,.,,..,
.,.N•--•Aco•'"'""'
"If's been fairly welllnd1cated that
• " It depends on how you look at It,"
''"' ....... . ...,.,.....
&amp;I fo tt too ....
Jl
"
-..........
71
.. c..;...,
1 ~ ......... ............ .
llM-.IiornniCioiOio
' ' Mutocoll.,...,...,.,,,
EPA "has begun d!SI'usslons " with
('!,_c...,.. an
the federal EPA Isn't exac tly a
answers Stephen H. Sedam, direc·
J
l
,
...........
.
.
n""'"'"II''"'" I Y_,,...,.,
·~7
1C•-•
'-"'
,.....
responsible parties.
]
....
'"""'"'"
....................
.....
~·
tiger."
tpr of the Ohio Environmental
Jli-loto a 4arHt•
·~ , ~-·
]61
~
U 1'1-f•o,.Wu••d
"In
some
cases
It
was
usefu
l,"
1M Ylootoro
, ,. ""-G•o,..
' " c......
An
event
during
the
spring
hinted
&lt;;ouncU. "On balance we are
, ....... n ... .tz b: &amp;411
I ll"
111 _ , . _
~-=:-j.- JI~
)43 - a..,.., o,.,
f;i;t~;
147
, ..... , ....
Carlisle said. "This site was
that the state wants to be more of a
probably doing better than most
14!1 ...._
I l l At-O..t
,,
,.
,....,_,,
41 H...MII"' ""''
ll!lo ... ...
11 f•M f qu_..,,
.,.._,
! 1 - · ..... ...
H-1"'
14 l .......,.,
suggested for the list but didn't quite tiger ltsell. Along with Medina
~11 ..." .... .
S.o.-....
l l WM!Ooi i!UI ...
u.....-.. a .....
slates. We're far ahead as far as
4 3 f ..- .... ~~~....
••1
c-. ....
Ill••·41·A....•·
IooJt
....
make
It
.
It
's
klnd
of
a
goal.
Do
a
lit
tie
lllo
u,.,.,.. llel,.,..at_ '-· - --1
I
I
l
u
-oo
ltoo14
IIHt""ollo
f
.
County prosecutors, tfieslateattor·
illn)lnven tory of where hazardous
fl fu onooloN I't -.,o
,.........
l,!klo.. a-.. ....- .
4
.
,,.
.......
_,
..
.
and
we
might
make
It
on
more
..
......
,
....
c
.........
u.,
,.,
,e..,.-.
u
.....
t7w_...,,
...
..,,
ney general's office began Its first
waste In the state Is produced. In
"u............,
fl f QIIIG"'I"t lot !'lUI
V.oonw.. ,. -. ..., ... -~
$ "/00
there. We haven't lost sight of crlnnlnal prosecution of an alleged
111 w.,,., ,. euo
o..
, .. _ ...... _ ... ,.. loto.l
• • fa• , ....
terms of addressing abandoned
them ."
Illega l waste hauler.
dump sites, we're probably lagging
behind other sllitL'S like Michigan
Public Notice
and New JerS&lt;'y ...
3 Announcements
4
Giveaway
4
Giveaway
The biggest reason for that,
SWEEPER end •ewing ma·
officials say, Is money. Unlike some
PUBLIC NOTICE
chine repelr. pans. and ANY PERSON who hao
The 0 0 Mcintyre Par k auppliet.
states, Ohio lacks Its own "superPick up 1nd anything to give away and PART trioh loHor, female

th~~:':n~~~er:~::teh=:~~~~~~

Ohia

•

.

Ohio seeks solu.t ion to
toxic waste problem

1983

June

IM. .,_ Conloy-Atty•.
Robart S. lrldkrr-becutor I
GEOIIIE E. WOODWARD Jl.-AUCTJOIEU

446-1411
m-2517
IMMh 1111 h S.V..

lot ...,..,lbla for Acclftnla

1174 Kirkwood ; unfurniahld two IR. 1ppU1ncea.
UncMrpinning, carpet, callIng fon. Excefton' Condition.
•10.000. can 211&amp;-&amp;035 or
oftor 7 PM 218-1572 .

1••70 traHer • 10 acr• of
land, for 128.000. Colt
&amp;14·388-9949 after 5PM .
USED MOBILE HOME .
17&amp;.2711 .
1978 Shannon, 3 bdrm. all
llec. 1.• x70f buiJt. (m room,
12x28. coal .or wood burner.
forgo porchH. utlftty bldg.
1cre land. exc . cbnd . good
Wllill, J8rry' s RUn Road .
Appfo Orovo . 304-6.71 ·
2311&amp; .

1981 WINOS OR . Iorge kit·
chen &amp; living r!i)o.m , fur·
niehad a h11 cantril air'. cell
ohor 5 p.m .. 304· 882 2234 .

33

Watoon Rd. Ownor - c·
1"1!ovolloble. catt 441-1221
lfter e wMkdlyl.

Farms for Sale

Melga Co . Rd 18, 88. acr•
1 / 3 pollure. 2 / 3 woodod.
all rn lner1l righta, unlimit•d
gravity fed springwa1er.
maturing timber, fenced In
pa1ture. 24' by 30' pole
barn. l•rge utility bUilding .
B11u1Hul 8 room home. all
electric, complet-'v inlu·
Jeted. lnch,.ldes new carpet.
fenced in yard, ttlf cl.. nlng
oven, aide by aide refrlger•tor freezer . Aahly wood
burning stove. ld11l for lcldt
and hort ... t88,000. Cell
446-9610 o• 992-3501.

36 Lots • Acreage
For Sale: From 2 to 11 1cre1
il"! Gallipolla Townthlj). on

Bulovlllo
4670 .

Rd . Cell 44&amp;-

41
4 rmo &amp; both, located 733
Third Ava .. Gotllpollo. t111
mo .. ·176 dopolit. Coll44e·
3870 .. 441 ·1340.
Now duplex. forgo LR. lultv
equipped kltchono. dining
1rea1. two bedrooma.
ahower·beth. Wllher· drver
hookup, attached ..,..•• elr
condltlonld. c1rpeted. 2~
mlteo Rl. 1188, dopooh a
references required. *300
mo . Call 448-3041 doy,
44&amp;-2&amp;02 lVII.
!5 Am Hou1e 1nd 81th . .N..t '
city Umlto.. P•.ofor •etW
co.,.ple , No peta or children.
Call 44&amp;-31548.

Lot , on Raocoon Creek. 2 bdr. houn for ren1 It 10
13,200. Colt alto• 6 446· Lincoln Avo .. Golllpotto. Re3430 o• 44&amp; -9189 .
tired coup'- only. Cell 448·
3059.
1 .4 acre lo1 irt Bradbury.
Good location,· trailer hook•
up . All utilities. 1eptic lVI·
FOR LEASE OR RENT
tom. Coli 614 ·992 ·2:602 .
COMMERCIAL BUILDING

--------·· .

WHY PAY RENn New
14'x70' 3 bedroom Fairmont mobile home. lilt prlc•
1111.996 . Now only 1.3 acre lend, 1eptlc tank.
013 ,99&amp; . PtuofrHoircondl· city . water. electric. outtioner . 10percentdown plu1 building, 2 mile• out Sand
low bank finenclng. A f!JIIIot · Hill Rd . o.n Bethel Rd.
of mobile homes to choon u .ooo . 304-675-4399 .
from . All State Mobile
Homet. hilt way between TWO nice lots for tale In
Point Plaeaant &amp; Huntington New Haven . 87.000. 304·
on St. Rt. 2 , 304·576 · BB2 ·:i590.
n11 .
2 1~ ACRES . corner Greer &amp;
8
Mlle . Black top road. city
CLEARANCE SALE 111rting
noon Sunday. June 26th ., water av1ilable, owner will
uve thou11nde of dollars pay for tap . 304-676-1 198 .
par home. plua one free air
condltion1r with every home
bought now . UNBELIEVA- 54 Misc. Merchandise
BLE 14' wide. 3 llldroom.
1 'h baths, B" out1ide walla.
drywall construction, " bet·
ter lnaul1ted , more fire ·
TIRE SALE
proof ". No better houaet
1nywhare than this Comma·
dore hOme. •12 ,995 . T~i• it
not mis-print . New 14 '~t 70 '
Commodore mobile home .
SERVICE STATION
houee type inaulatlon , only
OPEN 24 HRS. A DAY
114,795. 14 ' wide, 2 bod·
room Commodofe , 1 'h
baths. 8 " outside walls.
drywall construction. "' Bet ter ln1ullted. more fire ·
proof'", bey window front
kitchen. Iota of cabinets.
I 1 1 , 996. Plua many more
SERVICE SlATtON
homes from which to
992·9932
chooae, only 10 percent
down, low bank financing .
ALL STATE MODULAR
HOMES, 'h way between
Point Ple111nt and Hunting·
ton on St . Rt . 2 . 304·576·
2711 .

LOWEST PRICES
IN AREA

7.000 sq. ft. II!Cludts tlrJt
showroom. Upper Rivtr ltd..
St. Rt. 7, Kanaup, OH, Inquire at Betz Hondo .Soles.
CALL 446·2240

54

Misc . Merchandise

FREEZER SALE
CHEST MODELS

5 Cu. Ft. ..... 1235.95
8 Cu. Ft. .... '285.95
15 Cu. Ft. ... 1355.95 20 Cu. Ft. ... 1418.95 ·
25 Cu. Ft. ... 1472.95
Sf'£CI At

15 Cu. Ft. .... 1325.95
Prices Good ttwu Juno 15

POMEROY
lANDMARK

POMEROY
lANDMARK

~
..........

~ 614-992·2181

-

FOR SALE

SPECIAL PRICES

Muat 1ell 1976 14x70 with
tilt out. remodeled . new
carpet throughout , total
electric, woodburner. cen·
tral 1lr. partially furnished ,
underpinning. 89 .800 . Call
814 · 245 -6408 01 446 0212 .
1989 12•60 2 bdr. total
aloe . U,400 . 1979 14•66 2
bdr., total alec .. 1&amp;,900.
Colt &amp;14-448 -01 76 .

NEW: I and 2 Row Cullivalort, 4-5-6-7 ft. Rotary Mow&amp;rt, King Kutt&amp;r, 3/ P Tillen, Woven
Wire 10-47 • 20 rod, Wagclns, Boler • J.D. ·

USED: Mowing Machines, 4·5-6-9 ft . Brush
Hogs, Hoy Rakes, N.H. Haybino 9ft., Lawn Tractort, Form Troclort.

Jim's Farm Equipment Center

Rt . 35 W .
GaiHpollo, Ohio 46631
PHONE 446-9777- 446-2484

Real Estate General

FOR SALE

GREAT BUY
9.9o/o FINANCING
JUST LISTED - Th~ comlorta·
~e 3 bedroom home iss ~uated
on 2 acre wrth several
outtjdl!1 Paved roads, con·
venenl to the mtnes. shopping
&amp; schools. Best ol all affordable,
wrth a modest down payment
· your monthlymvestment ~ less
than $175.()(11

ROUSH

LANDING, RACINE, OHIO

Campground on Ohio River with 22 fuH·
hookup spaces . Over 8 acrea w1tli 1200'
concrete walled river fronlllge . 40'x90', 3
story bldg. with modem apartment. Sacrifice
price: $76,000. Owner can

finance.

614-949-2526

'FIRST TIME BUYER - 9.9%
INTEREST - IS avatlable on
th~ contemporary 3 t:edroom
home which features "uhed
ceilings, oak cabtnelry, lami~
room, &amp; ~arage. Take advan·
!age ol th~ opportunitj today.

Reel Eatate General

CAU

RCS REALTORS
Crala Swonson

I-614·59Hm
Bill Childs

992-6312

FOR SALE BY OWNER

LAND
SALE

FIRST WEEK OFFERED. IN TOWN.
S31r900- 446-2081

*Campsite...
"Big Foot Park"
water • Electric

Bath Ho~se
&amp; Boat Dock

NO MONEY DOWN
150 Per Mo.

*Homesite...
RacCoon Creek
water·· Electric
City School Disl

NO MONEY DOWN
'50 PER MO.
DIRECTIONS ...
1outh 011

Rt. 7, 5 mll11 bo·

low lllllpolla, to Reccoon
Crt. lrldct an• follow
alps.

SHOW SAT. &amp;SUN.

UNBELIEVABLE OFFER - NO INTEREST FOR 5Y1IS. roll UVI

"'·000 No gtmmicb. Price 1111 boon roducod to $79.!100. Yot

pay $20,000 down and $515.00 J* IIIIHIIh. Ail tho fliiWIIIIIIII
applr to princlJIII tho 1st 5 yoaq. $51511&amp;0 1110. • 134.500•

· 120.000 down fiiYIIIIIII • 154,500. Purc:hal price 179,900.00
-$54,500 1 - 1 principal beltnCo of $25,400. Tho monthly
fiiYmorlt ori tho' bolallct of S25.400 at 15% Int. Is 1!110.41 per
1110.!01' 5 vn. wllldl II 60 mo.a$510.41•$34.121.
UU29.00+Sl4,500+20,000•SIU30.
t1tot toe,..
.,. loin- $79,900 ·S20.000downiii'JIMIII, UUOOst 1:r.

eon.n

lnllrllt for20yn. requll'ltll montlllyiJIY1IIIIIIotM49.51. 240

s.m.. ·

mo.aS.649.5N155,900 ·SIU30 • HU70
And you're pllin1 one of
fillllt hoM. I rr.old.,.
tfiY tfflclant, 4 bedloom llrict (f' lnsuiltlanln Mila- Andlr·

tho_.,

10ft lhll1110pi110 windows p(H llarm wil dMI~~
100111 with flrapla, fonrtlf dlnfnl. 2full 1111111.

tltch.l, 2~·, biSI.,.n, .75 IC. In city llcfloollliflll
riwlr ...

-

1111111 Olcflri

Price - -

,.,_. .

Ill to J7UOO. IIIII 11111111 C tiJ'I llllt ... Call
lilt 111•••111- dltllll. 446-3643. Ew. 446-mt. ...
IIAII aw. man MDtCY•

n111

•

�. . ......

".

Times-Sentinel

41

Houses for Rent

42 Mobile Home•

42 Mobile Home•

for Rent
In country , 3 bedroom
home, fully carpeted. 21arge
porches. big yard p'rtially
fenced . 992-7201 .

Ch"'rrning 2-story, 2 b!td ·
room house. Fireplace. river
view. garage . t225 mo.

304-8e2·2836.

Large 3 , bedroom home in
Sy ra cu'l~ . S225. month plus
utilities . Deposit. 614 -9928284. Alter 5 p.m. 614·

992 -5732 .

$150 per month. PH . 13041
ee2-2466

CHARMING

2 story. 2

hedroom hOuse. with fire·
place, river view, garage,
S226 . month. phone 304-

ee2 ·2 e36.

NEWLY renovated. 2 bedroom . full sire basement.
nice yard,large garden spot,
$260. &amp; deposit. Gallipolis
Ferry, 304 -676-6110 .
MODERN
At . 141 .
downtown
dctposit &amp;

875 -3655 .

2 bedroom. on
2 · miles hom
Gallipolis, $275.
reference. 304-

tWO bedroom house on Mt.
Vern O'n Ave. S226 . a month
~all Mrs Jack Buxton, 304-

675·2651 .

i2

for Rent

Mobile Home 1pece in Galli·
polls. 920 Fourth Ave. t70.
WaJer paid . Call 446 -441 6
"after 7 PM.·.

2 bedroom mobile ·h ome in
Roclno. 8!4·387·0288.

43. Ferm1 for R!ln1

FOR RENT Mobile HOme, 2
BR , furn . w / w carpet, 19ft.
LR . nat . gas heat. air cond.,
private lot . Ph . 446-1409
from 4 tq 8 p.m.

FarmhouM and-or farm . 3
IJadr ., furnanc:a. wood ·
burner, carpeting, rural water, 4 buildinga, 10 mi.-froJn

Trailers furnished , lilr con d.,
bea1,1tiful riverview in Ka nauga . Foster' s Trailer Park .

Qolllpolla.

.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bedroom mobile home for
rent, Y.t mile off Rt. 7 on
BulavUie· Addison Rd in AdM
dison . Nice Y2 acre lot . $200
mo . Call 614-3 88 -"9755 .
Eureka : Aive.rfront Jot. turn .,
1 bdr., $100 mo., adults ref.
l!o depQS it . - 1· 614 · 643 ·

2644.

Two bedroom, furnished or
unfurnished, . air conditioned. yard. extra clean , 1
child. ho pets, above New
Haven on R.o ute 33 . PH .

13041 882 -2466.

THREE bedroom, all elect·
ric. 14x70. panly furnia~Bd .
built on room 12x28 , cool or
wood buriler, large porches,
utility building. acre land .
excellent condition. good
well . Jerry'11 Run Rd .

446·0756 .

12x60 2 bdr. mob ile home
lill utilities paid, except
Dlectrlc . Dep . Req . Call

446-8558.

deposit, · referen ce . 304 -

676 -2366.
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO BUY: 14' wi~e . 2 bod·

e.Al ....

..,_.11&gt;

Art!HUR ¥AS6UI&gt;,

44

284car&lt;6~

57ft667,

42 Mobile .Homes

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

for Rent

12 x 60 2 "bedroom mobile
home for rent. Approx. 6
milea from Middleport or
Pomeroy . 992 -6868 .

2 bdr . mobile home fully
furnished, air cond ., aduhs.

Adult11 only . Or family with 1
child. Furnished with utili ·
ties paid. Deposit &amp; r·.aferen·
cea required . 614- 992 364 7 . No ~pets .

!- -- - - - - - - 5 room mobile home for
rent . At. 338 . 614 -949 ·

2424.

Call 446-4110.
'2

bdr. trailer furnis hed,

located by At . 180 Auto
Ciini&lt;:. &amp;.160 mo .. l50 deposlt. Call 814-388-9783.
1981 Happy Houle 14x62
electric furn . or unfurn . Set
on lot Jol"'f;son's MH Perk,
eJitc. cond. Cell 61 4-266·

1776.

1- - - - - - - - - ------=---:-:----::---:--- - Real Estate Ge11eral

1 bdr. apt. downtown 324
3rd . Ave .. Gallipolis. Stove
l!o refrig. Call 448-9788 or

446-3810.

1- : - - - - - - - - - Neerly new. 1 BR apt . No

pati. Coll441-3617.

1- - - -- - - - - -

·2374 .or 441·.028..
. .

Unfurnished apt. 3 . rm.

beth,

613V.

a.

Third Avo ..

Furniahed 2 rooms and bath.
Downstain. Cleitn . No pets.
Adutta only. Referitnce required . 44"6·1619..

'
Ur.o. trailer lot on 8ulavlli•

Addlolonfld. Call448-4216

~; e

IIKt&gt; ~AR;Nq AT lftt .. ·•t&lt;O

~

,-:-::-'=-- - - - -

. COUI'jl'RY .MOBILE .Homo
Pork, Route 33 .. Nonh of
Pomeroy. le'lJO loto. Call
992 -7479:

49 For Lease
1 - - - - -- - - - -

1 bed room Apt. •1.98. mO.
inclUding utilltlea . · Equal
housing opportunity. Conteet Village M•"or. Apt•~

For Nle or Ieese by owner.
Commercial building sultl ·
bit for 1 Florist w;th a walk
into coo ..r, or can be u•d
for any kind of bu11ne11 or
oftice sp•c•• · Exc~lent location. Upper River Rd. Call

114·992-7787,

,.. !-VeRy 11Me
l't&gt; e\'eK lJti~ P.Ball' l"o1Ti NC:! My
A~ I'IRO!J'I!). KeR, l'tl ~ Tflt!!oe
eye&lt;;, SQR-,~ it-nO 'Tile 'tJI¢dr MY
N«&lt;::. 1\!olt&gt; I'Di'DRN . ~ · ANh 11\e.Re'::&gt;
He!!. CllT, .Al'Sr 'SfM;NU ~T Me .. .
II WP6

~r 44~·4738.

Apt . .for tont. Half doubla·2

bd.room Apt. Adulto prolerrod. No pall. 814-992·
2749.

., .... _..

Ohi-Pvint Pleasant, W.Va.

. LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa; chair. fvcker, otto·
ma~. 3 tlblelo (•xtra he•vy

by Fron~ierl, aSBIS. Sofl,
chair and· tove...t. •275.
Sofa• and Ch1lrs pric:ad from
•28&amp;. to *895 . Tablet e4&amp;
111nd up to • 1215. Hi,de -• ~
bed1 , *440 . and up to
1526.. Raclinera, *175. to
1360., LamP• ·from *28 . to
t75. 6 pc . dlnenes from
199.. to *436 . 7 pc:, 1189..
and up.· Wood table ·with 1ix

t11 0 up- to t225·. HutChes,
t650. and up, mepl.e or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete"
with mattreiHI, *250. and
up !O $396. Baby bed1.
t110. Mlnra..es or box
springs , full or twin , *68 .,
flrm , •68 . and $78 .. Ouoan
seta, $196 . 4 dr. · ·c~asts .
$42 . 5 dr. cheats. *6". Bad
frames, t20.1nd *26 ., 10
gun - Gun cablnltl , *360 .,
dinene chain 120. and t26 .
Gas or electric ranges, t325
up to t376. 841Jbymatre11e.s.
$26 &amp; 136. bedframes*20 .

51 Housellold Goods

*211,. UO. klnglrame 160. Wuhe r &amp; dryer almond
Good telectJon of bedroom color. less then 2 yesrs old,

SWAIN
AUCTION li FURNITURE
82 Olive St .. Golllpoll1. 8

su ite s . Cedar chest~ .
rockers . matel cabinets .
twivel rocken .
Ueed Furniture -- bookcase,
range1, chaira, end teb:les.
Wllhert, . dryers, refrigera ·
ton J~nd TV 's. 3 miles out
Bul•ville Rd . Open 9am to
lpm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am to
5pm , Sat.
'

44e·0322

---------

COUNTY APPLIANCES .
Inc. Goo~ uaed appliances,
wes~era. dryers. refrig .• TV

Htl . "627'h 3;d . Ave ., Galli poiie . Cell 446-1699.
Newer couc" &amp; c hair, good
cond., a. gaa stove . C"all

446 -0713 .

Modern couch and chair,
two Early America n end
tables, two table lamps . Call
evening• after 7PM . Saturday call anytime . 614 -246 -

9221 .

90 day warranty, 1325. Call

piece wood living room sufte
with 6 Inch flat erm1 •399.
bunk beds complete with .
Brand new sewing machine l;»unkiet t199 . 2 Piece en·
$6~ . 1983 White sa""'ing
tron livlngroom tuit·e at199.
machine slightly paint dam· antron recli.,an t99, other
age. retell $329 . Call 614- recllnera •so. mapl' dinette
386-453 5 collect.
1ets $179, love seats 170,
hida · a -bad 12·6() , box
Birch kitchen cabinetl. Nine springe S. mattress twin or
foot sink baaa ui1it. 42 inc~ full *1 00 tet regular ~ firm
bua unit, yellow tops .
1120. maple dinette chain
Three wall units. Broom t36. wesh stands .. 3 ... ·
clo1et. 992·3301 or 992· maple rockers t59 . 7 piece
' 6461 .
chrome dinette 11at I 1 49, 6
piece dinette" .. t t89 , uud
Wringer type Mey tag bedroom suites, refirgara·
w u her. S26 . 54 in. metal ton. ranges. chest, dressers.
sink, S20 . Afghans. differ · wringer . washen , TV ' 1,
ent sizes and colors. 986 - dryeres . &amp; 1hoes . Call 448 ·

446-8181 .

3916 .

3169 .

Maytag automatic wu~er .
$1;)6 . 40 in . gu range. 166 .
40 in. electric range, $86 .
Hoover portable waaher and
dryer. $276. Refrige;ator.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES .

$86 742-2362.

3 rm. unfurn. apt., good
location, nice for 1 or 2

' 3room.blithtumishedapt.
114-992-15908.

NEW.
- i
bedrms., WOOI)burmng stove,

people. Call 441-3356.

NEW LISTING - Nice2 bedroom home, new building for stwor

Apertmenu . 304 -676 ·
8848.

Judy DeWitt. Roolllw. 38&amp;-8155
. J. MiniU Carter, RuHor. 37!1-2184
Bedy Lane. Associate, 446-0458
Bedy Elliott. Associille, ~5

APARTMENTS . mobile

OUTSTANDING BUY - Frame home with aluminum sid il~ 2
bedrooms. bath. localed 1n town. On ly $8.500.

MOBILE HOM.£ - With Jarge add-on bu ild1n~ asphan driveway.
located on Qu~et street oot of high water in Racine. The livingroom
IS extra large. Ther~ ~. a cement walk and largecovered porch, also
a metal storage bwld1ng You can be 1n th~ one·in two weeks lor
only $16,900.

homes, houMI. Pt. Pleasant

H0085
10 ACRES - Close lo R1o Grande, hall woods. $12,500.
ROA ...ING ROOM - Good building srte. B'A acres. Graham School
Rd.
HI080

and Oallipoll1. 814 ·448·
8221.

$0UTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

ONE bedroom 1panment,
402'11 24th. St. Pt. Ploaoant,
phone, 1·814·992·58&amp;8.

MAIOIIjl

¥F~

REALTOR®

• Willis T. LNdingham, Ae.llfo r, Ph . Home 446 9SJ9
• Phyllis loveday , Phone•44-12l0
• J o,ln Bo..gg s, Phone 446·l194

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

MADE US NUMBER I, CENTURY 21;

ONE bedroom apartment.

t225 month, all utllhie1
paid. 304-876-2896.
Furnished one br apt. in Pt.
Pleesant . Extra nice, edutta

•

only. No Pets. 304·676·
1381.
SMALl furnished ·apart·
ment. newly decorated. util lt,iea paid, nb pets, edults

Rllal Estate .General

NEW LISTING - \! mile out ol Racine, 3 bedroom home on \! acre
lot. liVIng room carpeted, kdchena and dining room Pine &amp; Cedar. .
I.Oak and make offer. Ask1ng $24,900.

prof-; 304-876-4351 .

nii(~E -room opartmant,

.NEW LISTING - 2 bedroomfully lu rnished Mol&gt;le Home, mcludlng washer and dryer. located on private drive. Asking $11.000.

Wid\ defltnl

air, big kitchen

l!o fln\fly rli&lt;lm. water paid.
ca)l 304-87i:l294.

N.EW LISTING - .2 bedroom !railer, 12x55, for salecompletely lur·

n~hed or unlurn~bed. 1ncludmg undeq:inning Ask on th ~ one

LIFE IN
the I
the lawn ol a lovely restored Welch
home. All modern conven.,ces. stone f~replace and
bay window 1n fami~ room. 12 well balanced acres to
enjoy .
#374

Has new Bl£k
blacldop road. Approx.
40's.

H373

wrth 3 bedrooms. kdchen
complete. Living room wrth bay window, dining area
has glass ~iding doors to deck, 21ull baihs. basement
completed with a family room and beautilullireplace
Olf1ce room or 4th bedroom. Galli!Xll• School 0/Stnct
#321

BACK WHEN THINGS
NICE BRICK
WERE BUILT RIGHT
LIKE NEW. CLOSE
620 4th AVE .
TO EVERYTHING
Very spacious and INable 4 Beautiful surroundi ngs 7
bedroom, 21\ balhs, large new 100ms. all b r~ck, tw&lt;&gt;car gara ge
well equipped counlry k~chen
La1ge lot. Family room 14'x28',
with bay wmdow. living room ·livmg room 14'x28' . N1 ce
plus parlor, d11111lg roo m. miXJern k1lchen And the best
garage anct ceHar, and much
part alxlul !Ius property • the
mm e. -By appointment only
low . low pnce. Phone now.
PriCed a1 $55.000
H554
~579

APARTMENT!IIer ront,lur-

CAll US 10 BUY OR SEll
NANCY JASPERS - ASSOCIATE
PHONE : 992-6951
.Or 992·2751 To leave A Message

nilhed or unfurni1hed, 304-

RENTAL AREA

875-9760 Qr 814-448 4229.

J BEDROOMS - l.J8 ACRES

Pr~ce reduced 10 $3 1.500.00. C1ty wafer. aose to f~r e hydrant
Basemen !. Well budl house. CarpM Oui bui ld~ngs Good ~ns latK&gt;n.
trees. garderl space. Very Qlllel area. Possibleassumablemortgage

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
aldo~y

Real Estate Generai

at low 1nterest rate Phone lor deta1ls.

• diAblod with on

income

of

leas

then

#566

*12,300. Renting lor 30

8V1% ASSUMPTION

percent of 1djuated income·

.Phone 304,876 -8679.

TWO bedroom apartment,

· ··· Clifton, WV, 304 -676 .· ,.· 1-()44.
·~

ON~ bedroom apartment,
utlllto.. fumi1hod, '304·876·
3000. 3301 Jock1on Ave.
Pt. Pleeunt.

46

5 Rooms. 3 hNtrooms. targe mndern eat-m k1tchen . full basement

JUSTED USTED - DRIY£ BY ... but don't judge thi;
immaculate · ranch throogh your wind$hidd. 3
bedrooms, krtchen that woo~ please any lady. New
' dec~ I acre o1 manicured lawn. O n~ $37,500. Call
triday.
H375

MIDDLEPORT nice older home has
bedrooms, formal diniO~ bath, eal·in krtchen. lull
basement central a1r, alum1num sdin&amp; stiYrn
windows, garage. Located near Meill:l Junior High.
•
#312

liAS IT ALL - 3 bedrooms, formal din1ng
room. nice size knchen co m p~le . Top lhiS off with 3
baths. 2 fireplaces. 2 car garage plus assumable
mortgage. R1ver VII!W. One ol the best.
#344

Jim Cochran, Associate, 446-7881 Eve.

Clyde Walker, Assoc., 245-5276

Furnlehed Rooms

room1. Perk Central Hotel.

Coli 446-0758.

Reai Estate General

EAFORD
1/t~GIL

8.

5~.

216 r . 2nd St .

NEW LISTING - NEAR RACCOON CREEK - You
must see lh!l lovely 3 bedroom homeS1lualed on 5
acrr.s mure or li!SS with OOalingaccess tot he creek.
The home has a ful~ equ1pped eat-1n kitchen.

l1 replace. tam1ly room/ wet bar, dining room, 2
balhs. 31' deck. 30•36 newer barn (used as a 3
bay garage). plus a beaut/l ui llat lo slope
landscapoo. 5ac. yard. P1iced at $59.900. Call Jm1
Cochran.

OWNERS MUST SELL - WAS $51.900. NOW
$45,000- Modern 2 siiYY 4 bedroom home w1lh
walkmg d!llance to schoo~. Has 2 fireplaces ,
eqUipped k1tchen. du11ng 1oom. knotty r•ne lamily
100n1, 1 '~ baths. lull basemen!. nat gas H.W. heal.
2 car garage and everytl11ng 1n very good cond.
Immediate possess1on.

BRICK TRI·LEVEL - 2 ACRES - 5 year old; 3
bedroom home off Rt. 218.1ncludes aIami~ room
w /l~replace. 1'h baths, large Mchen. heal pump.
cent. 3/r and 2 car garage. Pnced tosell at $64.000.

3.6 ACRES - 2STORY HOME -Good local ionoo
Lower River Road. 4·5 bedroom remodeled home
has 2 wood burner&gt;, 2 baths and lamily room. More
acreage ava1lable $57.900.

,,
,,,,

1

-'·

~

. {f.
..,._(!

'

'

Looking for a small larmil' acres, M. or L. in
Clay Twp.. Gallip~~ Cily School Dis! with 2·bedrm. mabie tKlme
attached an d small barn . Price $29.900.00. Owner may help
finance to Qualilied purchaser!

..

NEW USTING -Just righl for
children. 3 bedrooms, bath, TP
water, carpetin~ full basemen~
fumac11 fiont p!l'th, barn, and
9 acres in the country.
$32,500.

LOWER RIVER RD. - Beaulilul 3 bedrm. brK:k overkioking the
River. Property has riVer lrontage and sw1mming pool in rear.
N1ce lamily room and woodburning fireplace. A QU&lt;~I ity home yoo
stKluld see today!!'
Oh~

NEW LISTING - Modernized
2 bedroom home. Furnace,
bath. carpeting. lgc basemen~
and central air. JuSt $15,000.

MOBILE HOME - wl l'h acre lenced·in lot. 1979, 14'x60'
fairpoint. 2 bedrm. situated alongBidwell Rod ney Rd., near·access
to n"" highway. pnce $18.000.00.

HOlLY PARK-14x70and 18
acres in the country.

NEW LISTING - 3 bedrm. ranch wrth attached garage, Gallipolis
Crty Schoo~. 75'x120' lof. Rodney Village 11, buy now for
$26.500.00.

EXCELllNT - For the bu~­
ness couple. 2~ tiliths, modern
7 rooms.

WATC~ THE NEW COURT HOUSE construction lrom yoor frorrt
porch. Clean Dutch colonial home,lg liv. rm . with w·burn. fireplac~

COUNTRY - A lamily tKime
with Heal+lator. 3 bedrooms.

formal dining rm.. 2 or 3 bedrm . 2 full baths, central air cond. ·

4 BEDROOM. 2 STORY HOME k&gt;cafed along Upper River Rd. I

' SWIM POOL - 1\1 baths,
carpet, 7 rooms in Middleport.

mobile home hook·up. Residential or commerc/31. Lg. garage.
owner will ~ade lor small larm. $44,900.00.

12 UNITS - Uve in one and
rent lhe others.

10 UNIT MOTEL BUSINESS wrth ready "cash llow". l~hi ng lak~

exira land, 2 bedrm. home and 2 moble home lots, w/hook-ups.
Callloday for good business opportunity
·

RUTIAIID 2 story, 3 .
bedrooms and.J-1 lots.

87 ACRES,M. Iir L.. overlooking Ohio R~er. near Eureka. 1,300 lb.
tob. base, Gal !~is City S.O. Price $37,000.00.

IMI{RONT - 3 bOOrooms,
furnace, carpetin~ and lamily
room.

2 BUSINESS BLDGS. in downtown Ga llipol~ Can be leased .,.
purchased.

IN THE COUIITIIY - 14x70
trailer and 3 acres.

12'K60'. 1972 SHULTZ mobile home srtualed on 6 acres M. or L
Halel Bridge. Buy trailer separate lor $7,750.00.
'
'

OVEI 3GO ACRES - 10 10001
home, 2 baths and free ~

2 SlORY, 2-APARTMENT BUILDING located along 4th Ave.
gar111e and park~
·n in.r~r: Presently be1ng used as 2apts., can lit!
oonverted to ~n e residence. Good location to churches and
, !ithools. Price S ,000.1)0
•

'IIAILER &amp;
Syracuse.

12'1165' MKWOOD MOBILE HOME. 214'x l04' loi. tEar Tycoon
'

·I'GIIEIOY $11,500.

...,.

1 111 '

wt

HAY£ SOli£ APAifiiEIITS F01 IDIT.

Older home.

..UI'OIT - 2 bedroom

3 BfDRM. HOllE on Madison Ave. with swimming pool.le Mia
rm., lenced·m yard. Adapted for w/ burner. Price $46,900.00.
CAlL

In

,... service station.

· 7,936 SQ.
COIICRETE IIUlCK BLDG. In Gali~i\ av~~~blefoi
•
or sale. ,
.
.
.

n.

2 lOTS .-

CM .sH - Go/X! location

lake Ideal !or weetcend retreat or permanent residenre
$15,000.00. Extra lots aYailable.

. . sltns. $17,500.

17 ACID - 7 1011111 home,

~

'

fletpsarwill

...... £lillm ICIIaall.
Hr•; ··filii
'.

11111111 1 1 1 J l l t l t f t 1 t r t t l T ' 9 n

H313

IEILTOI '

1-(614 )· 992·3325

u•••nu -

I.DOtiiNG FOR A
, more 1Y less.
story 4 or 5 bedroom home. Kitchen, lormal dOiin~
lami~ room, bath, living room, enclosed porch .
Basement. Large barn. si~. machinery shed. m~k
house plus other outbuildinll:l. Pond. Priced in the low
S(Ys.

Phone

H· lll•t·'·''fl·r•;

payrncnt and IO&lt;in assumable. Pa yments o! $292.00 per month.
Nrce liHP,e lot. Phone !01 lull miOfmalmn

1 ACRE S PLUS NICE COUNTRY HOME

and light houoo k-ing

REALTOR

Willi large familY room and·woodburner lhat does an excellenl job
healmg llus home Garage, summer au cond1toned. A down

Large 12 room remodeled home. 6 bedroo ms.-2 baths wrlh
modelrl krtchen. Home coveH~t "wrth carefree alum srding
rn errnopane wmd ows, 2 sundccks, luel orl FA furn ace wrth a
woodbur ner mserl 4 car gara ge an d numerous storage

For rent Sleeping Roome

B. J. Hairston, Assoc., 446-4240 Eve.

446-7398 .

446-6610

1 bedroom furnished apt .

814-992-11434. 992-5914
or 304-88'2-26118 .

CENTRAL REALTV

Ike Wiseman, Broker, 446-3796 Eve.

· washers, dryers, refrigera tors. r:engas . Skaggl Appliencea~ Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Mot81.

4416 after 7PM.

Apartments now eveilableto

Real Estate General

Sunday Times-Sentinel-~ge-0-S·

51 Household Goods

61 Household Goods

chair• 1428. to H48. Dllk

448-3893.

, The

Furnished apt .. $210. utili·
ties pd., 1 bdr., 920
Ave ., Gallipolis. Call

#1562

Calls

Slooplrtg room U 2&amp;, utiltioo
...
. ld. lingle malo. Short!
bath. 111 lJ. Second 'Avo.
OalllpoU1. C.U 441-4416
altar 7PM.

i

.

1 bedroom apartment fOr

3 AC.RES IN RACI.NE -Surveyed flat land, private and peaceful
locatxm. Owner Wlll help linance.

No Sunda

..

Available · July ht. nico 2
!Mdrooin in, Konougo, Carpated. W·D hookup, -'ov• •
refrlg., •111. plu1 eleCt. •
goo. depoait l!o 1..... Call
4411.,29P.

stiYag~ garage, close to hospital. On~ $26.500.

Call 446-4341 after S P.M.

.

Middleport-Galli~is,

411 . Furiliahed Roomo KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••
by Larry Wright
r-----------------------~

Unfumtehed 2 bedroom,
ga,. a,.rtment. Catl448- ,

------::--:-:::----::----:-----Real Estate General

For Appointment.

PHONE 992-3862

odulto, 807 2nd. Avo, Galli'
~QNo . Coli 448-4416 after
8PM .

NEW LISTING - .Priced lor QUICk sal~ 2 bedrooms,'bath,large liv·
1ng room and eal&lt;n kitchen. Lower level has 3rd bedroom. laundry
area and exlla room. Concrete lloor with shed at the end ol drive.
Conventional and FmHA financing possibla As~ng $27.500. Make
yoor offer, owners loss can be yoor gain. located in Rac1ne.

3 Bedroom house for sale by owner. Located in
town. Swimming pool, central air. 1'12 baths,
also bath house outside. Fully insulated. Low
utility rates. Finished basement with woodburner.

Apertment
for Rent

1 lldr. opt. QQnveftlint. loc.ltlon, no peto, 46 Space for Rent
'I 1P . t;IIH 4411-2088.

2 bd;, RIP!IRCY Inc. Apon- 448·4222, $ to 6.

menta •200 per mo. , or If
income Ia *10.000 or le11
HUD evaileble. A-One Reel
Ettates, Carol Ye~er. Realtor. Cell 304-876-6104 or
304-8711-7388.

Pomeroy

-n

Furnlohed opt .. t225. utili·

ties p~id. 1'"'bdr., 2nd. floor,

Gallipolis. • 1 36 mo. Call

HOME FOR SALE-BY OWNER

property.

Apartment
for Rent

!6· 1983

Uofurrll- apt., 4 rpqmo •
beth. odult1 Only, rwf. • 1ec.
clep. roq . Coli 4411-0444.

$176 mo.; water paid. Coli
448 ·4418 lifter lPM .

•zoo

MAPFoFIP,

Real Estate General

v,

Furnished apt., 131 * 4th
Ave ., Gallipolis. 2. bdr.,

rent. Coli 446 -0390 .

room. ell electric mobile
home, letting on ni Ce lot.
readytomovelnto. &amp;185 .00
per month . 304-576 -2711 .

If you want a home in Syracuse with all its
recreational facilities, this is it. Rench brick, 4
BR. 1
baths. ceder lined closets. full dry
basement. woodbuming fireplace. country
kitchen with built·in double o"'n range, 4 car
carport, and central heat with air conditioning .
Attractive yard, comer lot with rustic fence.
Many extras includi11g 2 refrigerators, washer
and dryer, soft water unit. unique storage shed .
etc. Call for appoi11tment. Fred Monow

44

$2211 mo. or

12,000 yr. 814·888-3730.

7329.

$275 .00 month plus $100.

1\fjobile home for rent . Call

RNOOVT
SHE's,4
PI7CH..

2 bdr. trailer In C~eshire.
adultl!l only. Call 61 4 ·367-

Pari&lt;. 814-992-3324. ·

Apartment
. for Rent

''"*··

71(/fiN 'fOV

~IIIlA·

12x52 2 bedroom trailer.
Adults only . Brown ' a Trailer

44

June

with 175 acre farm . . APARTMENTS IEHOI one
bedroOm r8nt .1 1arta at *16 7
~14·1188-3730 :
per mo. tWo bedroom ·a-tarts
1no
. 175 acre patturB-hay farm . ot et93. Dapo1it
pets) near Sprt~g V~lley
good water, axe.
gr111, cornll, two barns. Clnel!'l. Cell 448·2746 or
1300 lba , . t.o bacco b•••· le.ve m11uge.

•a&amp;o

4411· 1602.

Two bedroom, furnished .
· two eir conditioners, clean
con dition , 1 c hild, no pets.

June 26, I

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

l.l)()t(ING FOR A NICE HOME PLUS ACREAGE? Then take a look at th~ 3 bOOroom tKlme. large livini
rrn, kitchen with plenty of cabinel space. 2 baths. 2
ca1 garage. Basement. ~nyl and brick. 25 acres. Wrth1n
5 miles ol Holzer Medical Center.
#351
COUNTRY CASUAL - En~y the comforts of th~
charming tKlme. 3 ·bedroom ranch with living room,
bath. kitchen &amp; dining comllnai!Oil. 1ami~ room.
fweplace. Storag~ Ill acres, more or less. listed at
$24,900.
H303
HOME AND INVESTMENT ·2 bedrooms.
wel~uipped kitchen, oil furnace, 1ireplace, partial
basement Rental hom~ 4rooms with bath. Nice 2car
~age. Ulility building, shed. over I ~ acre awn.
rden, Strawbernes.
•
.
U36
RENTAL PROPERTY - Needs sane fixing but would
be a JP)d ren'lal investment Small 2 bedroom home
with living room. kitchen, atlic, basement and nice size
lawn. Located in city

tm5
IDEAL lor yoong. old and in-between. 3 bedroom
ranch. Nice carpet throughout. Garage with electric
opener. Fenced back ~wn. Nalural gas forced air heat.
Central air. located in lown. Pri:ed In sell.
#314
JUST USTED - RACCOON CREEK LOCATION 1970 Molile home. 20x24 garage, nice 11at lot Motile
tKlme includes central air, woodburner, relrigerai!J.
stwe and dinette set. Nice froot p!l'th lor lazy tKlurs.
H361
A PLEASAIIT 8RICK RAIICH - 3 bedrooms, lamily
room, complete hitchen, nalural gas kJrced air, divided
basement A double end 1!)1. Shrubllery. everareen
shade trees. Excellent location near hospital.
#347
JUST USTED!- COlE lOTHE COUIITIII' and enjoy
the quiet oomlort al his 49 acre farm. Remodeled 3
bedroom home. Hell pump, central air. Basement
Pond. Gillen house. Good pasture, bottom land
I1Mtialty wcoded Priced in the 50's.

'

#340

SECWDED - l.oclted - Ga11ia. 3 bedroom home
i1t11 ha been ltiTIOdeted. New lam. room, large INing:
room, blth. nice kicheo). ScenE setlina wlh 2\lacres.
Plice in the low 30s. .

..

. *339
IIIII FAIII - 27.20 acres, 2 miles 1\:!m on
Mt. Tebor bl. 3 bedroom. Ill lt!rY
electric ·
b1 b•d hell -Vinyl siclne lmulllld Ill~
Clrplled. /II mint!lll rights. Priced rWTt

~

-~

NEEDS REPAIR. - But at price you tall'! beat. 3
bedroom ok1er frame home.. Living room, diningroom,
lami~ . krtchen. bath. large lroot porch. Off street
parking located at 721 Th1rd Avrmue. $21.500.

#309
VICTORIAN STYLE WITH lOTS OF CLASS - Home
has been pa r11y restored. Could be a beaut1lul tKlme.
New krtchen, new bath, lormal d1ning room. lamily
room. l~ing room. 3 bedrooms. Basement and attic.
Appro• . 1 acre. Priced in the 20s.
. #189
RIGHT OUTSIDE CITY LIMITS - Selling cheap.2bed·
room home with living room. dimng room, kitchen,
bath and utility room. Overlooks the river. localed 155
Garlietd Ave. Priced at $14,000.

#3411

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROPERTY Brief&lt; and fram e tKlme wrth fin~hed basemen~ garage,
lil'ge deck in back of hous~ lormal living room. 2
fireplaces CommerCial bu11ding 4(fx6(1 , mobile home
court wrth 1I hook·ups, and 9 mobile tKlmes. central
sewage. sidewalks. 2.53 acres.

SOUTHERN PlANTATION? - Not Qwte, but has lhe
style of thesoulh. Perfect for alarge family,enter1a1n1ng
or just to en10y this home Has all the modern
conveniences. II acres wrth pasture. small creek,
pond, barn , 2 outbuildin gs. Some l1llable ac1eage.
Localed '" Green Town~h ip
#300
LOOt&lt;ING FOR A NEW HOME - !he owners have
pr~ed thiS home to sell 4 bed rooms, largekitchen and
dining comb .. liv 1ng room, double vamty 1n balh
Natu ral gas heat. 4 extra lots. Mobil e home hookup
Pr~ed 1n the 30's. City schools
#171

'

ROUTE 35 AREA - N!Co frame bi·level home w1th 4
bedrooms. 1~ balhs, l~m g room. krtcher1. d10mg area.
lar ge fam 1ly room. 2 car garge, central a11 and rolling
back lawn. Priced in the low 50s.
#362

l 'h STORY FRAME w/ approx 2'.\ acres. Home has 3
bedrooms, large kitchen, living room w~h f&gt;replace. 1
bath and part basement Tho overlooks lhe nver and
pr~ed al $25.000
#256

#316
BUILD NOW while1nlerest rates aredroppmg 10 Ac1es
vacant land to do as yoo please. NO restnct10ns. City
school district.
~268

170 ACRE GRASS AND BEEF FARM - 57 Acres
permanent time and treated pasture. 60 Acres
reclaimed, lreated and seeded in aWalf~ c ~ver,
orchar~ grass. Woods, tobacco base, 2200 Christmas
trees 2 year&gt; old. Modern 7 room house. good barn.
Buy while larm prices are low.

#360
COUNTRY FEVER - Settle 1n lh ~ umque country
home. 2 large bedrooms. I ~ baths. lormal din ln&amp;
32x2Biiving room with stone fireplace, nice~ ananged
kitchen, plush carpet. basement garage, ooveroo patio.
60 acres. barn, stocked pond. Give a call today on thi;
home.
HJ43
NICE BHEVEL and 40 acres located in Perry
Township. Home has 3 bedrooms, living room, 2 bat hi.
Kitchen and family area in lower level, sewing room
and utiity area. 24x36 unattached garage. land mostly
wooded. Approx. 5 acres cleared. tobacco basa
Hl52
NEW LISTING- 3 BfDtOOI eRICK HOllE in avery
nice locatiln. Home has eat-in kik:hen with ~idinUiass
doors, large living room. balh with garden tub, large
utility room. fiorrt porch. Nice ~g lawn \lith garden

area

.

#365

WHO COULD AS1( FOIIIOR£- Nice view of the river
and piKe to dock your boat ~ included with th~
i~ 3 12!oom, 2 bllft home. Kkhen has
island 1Jf18B. Basement c:omletay finished. l.lree
'9'x5r deck plus 9'x5r petio. Priced ri&amp;!lt in the 50'•
.
'
I
11274

WHY WAIT 'TIL TOMORROW WHEN YOU CAN GET
YESTERDAY'S RATES TODAY when yoo assume lhe
present mortgage on lh~ attractive b&gt;II!Vel home. I lull
bath. 21\ baths. krtchen with d~hwasher, range and
more !han average cabinet space. Fami~ room
Gara ge Spac&lt;Jus lawn. $54.500.
~358

EXCEllENT L.OCTION - In the city Older 2 bedroom
home. largt&gt; krtchen. diing room. livmg room. bat h. part ·
basement. Iron! p!l'th, nice hardwood floors, lireplace.
large back 1ard. Nice for retirement cou ple.

#345
OWNER FINANCING - Located Route 160. Older
tKlme thai is neat, clean and cheertul. 4 bedrooms, 2
upstairs. 1 downstairs. Bath. dining room. iving roofll,
kitchen. sewing room and utility. In good condrtkm lor
an older home.
#299
LOVELY SETTING - 3 bedroom ranch and I acre ol
trees, flowers and shrubs. Some amenities are lamily
room wrth ~ sliding doors and woodburner. large
covered pabo in till! back. O~building wilh awiYksi'Kip,
woodshed and storage. Priced in lhe 40's.

#306

MODERN LOW MAINTEIIAIICE HOME - 2bedrooms,
buit·in kitchen, iving room, bath, county water, small
ifeen lot with a view to en;,y. Listed al a markabte
price. $25,000.
H359

3 B£010011 HOME With living room, kdchen, bat~
nice. front pon;h. Property very neat and clean with
separate garage. locale:l near a playgroond lor
children. Priced in the 30s. Localed in the-city !ithool
district

.

bld w; 2 09 3 ams Rol lin ~ Ia level land . A real Coun try Gent·
Ieman Home Phon e now.
#578
5.1 ACRES. HOME IN THE PINES
AS SUMABLE LOAN
Oeaulilul I rooms, 4 bedroom home surrounded by tall
prrr es BH!eJI:l way , moderrr krtchen. ce ntral arr , assum able
loan w1th pa1m enis ol $50 6.00 a monlh. Annual 1nteresl ol
9 ~% Owner anXIous lo sell. Look lh1s one over.#577
BRI CK HOME - BAS EMENT
DEBBIE DRIVE
Central au, lul l basement. natural gas furnace. crty water Sewage
syslem Nr cr· l:lrrek home 111 an excellent subdtV IS IOn. Has an

assu mable ~an Phon e lor dela~• .

#572

PEACEFUL AREA
A hall ac re more or less wrth fru~ !rees. plusa three bed mom home,

-loVIng wom, krtchen w1lh bUIH·m cabmets. utility room. lull
basL"lenl and garage. !hal • part~lly converted 1nto a den.
Unlrnrshed room wrth a heatolater lrreplace. Nrce fenced m yard.
Call lor dela~•.
#492
BEAUTIFUL HOME INSIDE &amp; OUT
7 yl!ars old. LIK ENEW! 3 bOO rooms. mcekitchen. electr ~ range~ II
carpetoo. concrete patio. gar!ge, concretedriv..,ay. Thermostat to
control heat 1n each room, rural water system. storage building
cha~ n 1111 k lence enclos!s lhe backyard. lnsulat&lt;Jn m all ootsKJe
walls l ots of shrubbery. APfliDX! ma l~y I m1le fr om Ho~er
Hr~ p1lal . IUS! off Siale Roole 160. N1ce comfortable home Seen
~571

1/0W

•. l7 ACRES - 7 ROOMS
Ntce home Central a1r. mral water system. large lamr ly room,

26'•22' Ga rage. storage bwll1 1n ~ storm wurduws and doors. Nice
home. See 1f now.
~570
PEACEFUL SffiiNG - $39.000
IF1t's pnvacy 111 acounlry almosphere you want. we've ~ot rt Three
bedrooms. 2 balhs, large IN!ng room and lam 1~ room. K1tchen plus
for m~ dmmg rOOIJl. All oo 1.5 acres. New I!Simg
#561
BRICK HOME AND 1 ACRES - $47.000
3 bedrooms. I ~ balh home wnh lois of exira lealures. bu1h
cal)lnets. self-cleamn g range, dishwasher. garbage diSposal and
large di n&lt;lg room. Kyger Creek Sch09ls
#501

.

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST
84 ACRES MORE OR LESS
step 1nto one ollhe cleanest farm tK!mes 1n an 1deallocatoo. Three
good saed bedrooms, large living room, sunny eal·ln krtchen. batll
Tobacco base. gas lease andlree gas all~ w~h it large barn, cellar
house and ch1cken house. Call today lor many more exlra~NI3

'

DRIVE A LITlE, SAV~.A LOT

3 BR, lull basement, wMe aluminum ·S~ in~ fuel o~ FA furnact,
30'x40' barn. shingled rool, lots ol younj~ each and appletrees,M
th~ reduced foo nly $14.900.

114~

,

•
POS~BLE ASSUMABLE

CHARMER AT $27.900 .
LOAN WITH LOW ootll(fAYMENT
Could be 4 or 5 bedrooms, large ~hes, bath, living roont,
lireplace wrth gas logs, dining room, krt~en with buift·in cabinets,
lull basements, storage building and ;iarden spot in city school
district Call lor more detai~.
,.
H550
39 ACRES MORE oR LESS
Tillable pasture land, some timber, JilerilY of spring water. ~ mile
!rootage on Prospect church Road. f'tii)e for lui details.

.

.

BEAUTIFUL WATERFRONT All BRICK HOllE
CITY SCHOOLS
Ideal lor boatin&amp; fishing and pid&lt;nicking at your back door. Enjoy
t.., spacious cheerful house wrth 3 bedrooms. HI baths,
living 1oom, eal·in kitchen, 2 fireplaces, lull basement 2 pon;n111,
chain link tenoo, plus moch more. Call today to
appoinbnenl ID see this lovely year around home.
· . .. ,.::-"

.~·

�June 26, 1983 ·

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

1).6--The .Sunday Time$-Sentinel

61

Household Goods

Uled Maytag, GE washers.
Extra nice. 'full guarantee,
30 dava. Al so drvttrs. other
w u hero . Call 614 -268 ·
1207.

64

Misc. Merchandise

Niw Oak Furni,ure. teb laa,
chairs. ct,~p boards , pie n fe,
dry 1inka. Paul Conkel •
Ant ique•. Tuppers Plai n s.
SEVEN maple chairs, newly
refin ished . Etegere for disploy. Phone 304-876 -162 1.

Bargain Barn . Two miles ou t
Georges. Creek Ad . from Rt .
7 . Wa shara. dryers. refrigaratou , atoves·. Also part:a for St r awberr ie1 , pic k y Our
any make of appliances . Call
own, 60~ per qt. at Oougla•
446· 803 3.
Roueh ' s, 2 mile• back New
Haven at Union Camp 6 antique kitchen chain . ground. 304-882-2237 .
Coll614 · 268· 1668 .

•

54

Misc . Merchandise

Kn auff Coal &amp;. Firewood
Pricea reduced M ay-July .
Pi ck up or delivered. We
h onor HEAP Vouchers. Call
614· 266 -6246 .
For sal e metal culvert 8 inch
thru 80 in ch in stock . State
approved 16 ga.,ge, 1 2 inch
$6 .36 per 11., 24 Inch
$10 .10 per 11. 36 Inch
t16 .60 per tt. Also plastic
culvert In stock . 8 inch thru
18 inch . 8 inch $1 .80 per ft .,
12 inc h 83.60 per ft . Ron
Evans Enterprises. 4 mi .
South of Jackson on ST. RT .
93, 614-286-5930 .
Limest one , Sand , Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446 -7785 .
Amana air cond ., $126. See
at 668 Third Ave .., Gallipolis .
after 4PM .
Small engines repaired
Have your old mower recon dit ioned f or a fraction of t he
cost of a new one . We now
are equipped to fix outboard
boat motora . Nel1on &amp; Sons
in Eureka , Ohio . Call 614·
256 -1643.
60 in. console stereo with
AM -FM radio . tape player
turntable, excellent cond .
$100 . Coli 614-268· 9398 .
Zenith con1ole color TV like
new $400. 2 end table• &amp;
coffee table Early American
1tvle 8100. 2 lamps ginger
jar stvle $60 . Caii814 · 3BB ·
8610 .
Antique Ounlce &amp; Fife droplesf tabl e and 6 fan back
solid wood chairs 8400 . One
30 ' electric range $60 . Ail in
excellent working order. Calf
446-4030 afte• 5 :00.
Live fi sh bait , pressure
treated fen ce post $2 .96
ea .. barbed wire, staples,
nail1, hard wood lumber. We
plane lumber. Bidwell Coun·
try Furniture, Rt . 664 in
BidwelL Oh. In the former
Bidwell Pipe Supply build ·
ing. Open 8 to 6, Mon .-Sat .
Call 814-388-8453 .

2 nice upholstered chairs.
maple dresser . Call 446 ·
3939.
AntiqUe dolls , glassware,
kitchen cabinet . 992 -7494 .

56 .

W EEKS W £STIE KENNEL
AK C West Highland white

terriers. puppie s a nd d ud

66

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breed s. Sel ling
Happy Jack Dog Food . AK C
Dobermans: S1ud Service.
Call 44&amp;· 7795,
POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor at 614 - 3677220 .
DRAGDNWYND CATIERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
pies, CFA Himalayan , Persian and Si!!llmese kitten s.
Call 446 · 3844 altar 4PM .
Reg. Lha•a Alpao puppi es 6
females , 3 males make good
pets . $200 . Call 446 -0 706.
Beagle pups. 826 . Call614·
258-8866 .

1- - - - -- - - - -

AKC Reg . German She·
pherd pupploa. Coli 446·
3430.

1- - - - - - -- - -

Regiatered Quarter Bucks·
kin mare, e1360. Black
mare with filly, 8860 . Both
bred. Also, 2 veer old small
hona mare, $360 . 992 3460.

NORTH

J-D-P

• • KJ

tAKIIO

. AJ 6

GIBSON guitar case. after 4 ,
304-876-3 238 .

gugasheater
for ~;;:===~~====
bath.
one
fireplace
. One
hot plate.
--:
Ono Fo•d disc, used 6 hours . 58
Frui1
Three point hitch . One 6 11.
&amp; Vegetables
grader blade for Ford trtl c·
tor. One piec_e comm ode. all
white. One lsrge double
hung window in frame . Strawberries, Tayl or 's Berry
Patch , Kerr~ Harrisburg Rd . 8
304-773· 6323 .
AM -8 PM. Mon . · Sot. 121b.
or more 40 cents a lb. C all
55 Building Supplies 446 · 8692 or 614 · 245 ·
9 5 67 .
Building materia l s
block. brick , sewer pipe s,
window S, lintels , t;~ t c .
Claude Wintert, Rio Gran de,
0 . Co11814-246-6121 .

.,

Regia ter e.;l Germ an Shepherd, female. Small"riding
horse, perfec1 for children .
992-6 691 .

HONDO II acou st ics guitar
with cate. excellent condi·
tion . $126 . 304 - 67~ · 3379 .

Strawberri es, Taylor' s Berry
Pat ch, Kerr -Harri sburg Rd . 8
AM -8 PM , Mon .. Sat . Call
446 -8692 o r . 614 - 246 9 557 .

59

For Salo or Trade

Trade, excellent cond . 1982
4 HP Scrapper mini bike, for
a small good cond . camper.
Call 614· 388-9969 .

61

Farm Equipment

For sale · m anu re spreader
New Idea 12 A l i ~e new,
portable 24ft hay elevator,
hay baler s, hey conditionera,
hay rakes , tob&amp;cco setter,
Altice Chamber G tra ct Or,
pl ows and c ultivators , bean
drilL ail types used Farm
machinery . --Howe 's Farm
Mac hinery Rt. 124 &amp; May·
hew Rd .. Jack son 614 -2866944 .
1924 FARMAll trac tor,
run s good. 8 600. Cycle bar
mower for Gravely T ractor,
$2 60 . Phone 895 · 3974 .
SUP ER C Farmall , plo w ·
,disc, cultivators, 7ft . mowIng machine. 1200.00. 304·
675 -6667 after 6 p.m .

84

Pulling through

service . Cal l 614 - 367 0 .6 2 4 .

PARROT Palace. p8rakeets,
89 . 99 . Canaries . male
830 .99. female 812 . 98 .
Myna bird 8299 .99 , ltalkol .
Male raccoon $60 . 10 pr . Blue head Pionu s $259 .99.
boya jeans, 14 reg . 1-new Red Maok Mitred a99 .99 .
S26 . for all. 304· 676 -5079 . · Senegal Par ro t &amp;89 . 99 .
Meye r s Perrot , $89 . 99 .
BEDROOM suite, dresSer. Du 1ky Conure $24 . 99 .
ch'lst, queen size m attress &amp; Seeds&amp; supplies available .
bo• spring•. $260 . Antique Call for appoi ntment 304fireplace mantel with bevel 6 7 5· 1 300 .
m irro r. excellent co ndition .
8150 . 304· 676· 4677
57
Musical
BABYBEO 8t mattress , 304Instruments
676-6686 .
ONE 8 ,000 BTU Gibson air
conditioner, use&lt;! &amp;bout 30
day1 . One 62 " wide 7 ft .
high overhead door. t op
taction glass, ideal for utility
building. One gas heater for

BRIDGE

Pets for Sale .

WEST

EASf

.QI0 84
• A 10 3

·• e 5

• 10 95

+Q

•KQJIU

. K8 !

• 10 9 7 3

SOUTH
• 7 &amp;3!
• 987
• J 72
. Q4 2

.
.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East

We1 t

Pass
Pass
Pan

Nortll
Dbl.
4•

East
2\'
Pass

So.tll

Pass

Pass

Pu s
2•

MIXED
2264.

By Otwold Jacoby
aod James Jacoby

-

. ..

Joe was flyinc· on a wing
and a prayer, and thinp
looked mlchty bleak when
the dele- sl.lrted with two
rounds of hearll.
Joe ruff!'id in dummy and
started on, diamonds. East
dropped the q-. on the
fiTs! diamond, and Joe saw a
lillie Iicht at the end of the
tunnel.
.
He cubed dummy's ace
and kine of lrUmpo · and
came to hi.J band with the
Jack of diamonds. Then

In the mixed teams at the
Spring Nationals in Hawaii

we find

Joe Steuer of

Memphis sitting South with
what is best described a a

wound up losing just one
heart and two trumps to

score a lucky came
As Joe · said to

Louise

...... -

Farm Equipment

·

Gravely tractor &amp;: att.·· 30"
mower dock, aulkey, 1ickle
bar, snow blade, chains.
$1000. 614· 698 · 1227.
NEW &amp;. U1ed Harvaatore
Structures. Automated li·
ve1tock feeding -computer
feeders . Call collect 614·
686· 2260 . John l. Batts.

ENTERPRJS£ ASSN .)

82 Wanted to Bu_y

~-------· IC LaBonto ' s Quail Form .
Chicks &amp; eggs readily avail able . Order early. Mat"re
Quails available again in
August. 814· 9811-4345.
Cilves for s1le. 843-6186,
after 9 .
Holf-blood Simmontol bullo
end heifers. Sire PVF Lom.
bert 823948-· grandlon of
Renz 772. Big calves from
gocd bHI hord. Coli 814949·2822

ONE uoed Now Holland
modal 860 Iorge roung 1 ---------~
beler, 84,600. 2 New model TWO year old regl1tared
847 New Holland round mare, 304 -676· 2098.
balers, $7,300 . 1 new, New!======::;:::====
Holland model 861 round 64 H · •· G ·
beler, f8 .300 . Keeler• Ser' _ _ _
r_a_rn_ _
vice Canter, St. Rt . 87. Pt. 1
Pleasant-Ripley Rd . 304- Hay ond Strow. 304-4681668.
895 -3874.

•_v_"'_ _

304 - 876 ·

1978 Plymouth Voloro
Sport coupo 11 ,996 . 19n
Dodge Royol Monoco 4 dr.
udon f1 .295. Coli 4469882.

.

······

.

.

1980 AMC Splrij, 4 cy·
IInder. 4opood. 12700. 1irm.
614-992-7721 .

1970 Buick • . 1226.
448-1370 alter 6 .

-- - -1975 OLDS Cudou. nM&lt;i•

1974 B"ick leSabre con vertible, all original. excellent condition. 38,700 ac~
tu11 milea. Aaking 85600. If
untere1tad, make offer.
]614)986 -3333 .
1979 Dodge Magnu&lt;11 XE ,
excellent kondition, 39. 990
actual miles. Asking $4200.
If interetted make offer.
(814) 985-3333.
Wlllaell.or trade forcampa e;-1967 Ch
2d
p
ovy
oor. on. 8
cyl. outo., $1400. 992·
7368 •11.. 5 .

1-:-::::-"":':-::-----1972
needa
wise,
1600.

v 0 lk
•wagaf . Efgine
crankcase . 01her·
excellent condition .
843 -5384 .

1978 Subaru s~ation
wagon. 986-3920 .
1976 Lincoln M1rk IV, low
&lt;11lloogo . 304-468· 1 864.
1982 FORD Escort, 4 door,
air conditioning, automatic,
power steering, power
br1ke1. rear window defoger, 18,000 miles. ·clean,
excellent condition,
a&amp;.676 .00 phone 304 -8763446 .
1973 CAPR! CE , S360.00,
runs good, 304· 676 -2542 .
Can be seen · Henderson
Trailer Park

72

Truckl for Sale

81

7j F100, FORD truck wkh
cltmpor top , 304 - 676 5844.

motor, G04- a7&amp; - 73~2 .

1.:;_:_.:...:,_:__ _ -::-:-::-7 72 LTD For4. 8700, Phone
304-675·4 174 betwoen a .
9 p .m.
.

79 ' CHEVmE, olr .conditioner, good MPG. 4 door
hatch ·bock; 13200. 304·
676-4195.
·
EVC~
~EAL A&lt;:&gt;E,

Trucks

1'0 LD
HE!&lt;! I!IIIO'H&amp;&lt;AY C::AI&lt;E

tOr Sale

1980 :1,4 To.n Chevrolet P.U,
o&lt;lto trono. PS. P~. S4, 195.
John'o Auto• Soln. C.. l
446 -4782 Opon EJHOnln.go.
· 89 Chevy truck 3 opd., a
cyl ., 4 new tirn. Cell
814 -256-9333. .

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured cetli!'lgl commercial and residential, free

GENE'S CARPET CLEAN·
lNG SERVICE . Rocom·

WOULP6E 'TH 15.
Now arrange the Pr,cled lefters to
lorri'l ti'Wi surprise answer . as sugge'Jied by the aoove cartoon.

87 VOLKSW... GOII! campo•
Yin, good condition . ~1 200.
'304-676 - 3685 . 2910
Spruce Ave. Pt. Pleasant.

74

CALL 304-675 · 1293 lor
concre_
te and black top titimatet, m'etal building and
f ence erection costa. Al10
buying and selling heavy
equipment . Hone &amp; atock
trailer sales . Furniture. electrical &amp;. electronic 1uppliea
and equ ipment. Pleasant
Meadows Distributors and
Sales. ·

Motorcycles

73 FORD 'h ton plck.up, 72
Ford 1Jl ton pickup, 304675-4893.

81

Brolter-Audioneer
:1975 RM 125 Suzuki &amp; lots
of other parts. Call 614·
388-8609.

15 FT. alumin um
.304 -675 -4 276 .

1983 HarleY Davidson, wide
l!Hdo, 8,000 &lt;11ileo. 86,000.
.for more information call
1114-742-2923 ol1er 5 .

76

BMR 431 - Brick ra nch includes 3 BRs, LR: DR !ami~ room, 2\7
baths, si!uated on 38 acres. Call to see th5 one today'

:1981 Honda. moto.rcycle .
i=or more information. 992JI368 .

1976 Ford 6 cvl. engine,
transmission parts. S 1 50 .
Call 949-2801 .

BMR 426 :- Priced right al $37,500. It has an assumable klan .
With only 9\?% interest We are talking about a very clean. 3 BR
home ~lualed on nrce liallot in a far!i~ onenled neighborhood.
Call for Cllmplele details.

•1978 Harley ~ Davidson Low
'Rider. *3800 for sale, or
i rado. 949- 2446 . Call even·
ings after 6 :00.

LIFE
INSURANCE'

Call 446-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245-9507

D'

BMR 429 - All eleclric hi-~fr'u'-c'E'
Creek School Drstrict
s~uated on 1.21 acres wr
U . ... ,, loan Calllor Cil mpete
deiai~! Owner anxious to s~l!

RE

.1 966 Triumph motorcycle
chopper with 71 . 660 So·
neirlle motor. 8600. Call
992-7662 or 992 · 6711 .
0

BMR433-NEW LISTING-()WNER TRANSFERRED-Nice J
BR rancllrndudes drnng area off l~ing room natural gas heal,
central arr ... budgel $48.00 month. Sm. play room or den Ut~ily
area off krlche~. I car garag~ Silualed on large flat lot On jacksoo
Pike Prrced to sell al $44,900.00 Bett.er call lo see lh~ one.
BMR 434 - NEW LISTING - 3 BR, spM-Iev~l orne. Thrs horne ~
better. than new. Includes 2 car garage. Silualed on IR corner lot
Frrst trme on lhe market Priced at $44.500. Call lor delai~!

1980 Kawasaki LTD 750 .
Very low milage. like new .
Asking 12000. 949-2148 or
aee Dave Henaler .
HONDA. 1981 C8 900
custom. 82860. 304-675·
2661 .

'76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

. B.MR 435 - NEW LISTING - Ideal starter home - 3 BR 1
kttchen, LR, carport, nalural gas heal, wied w~hin Gallipol~ (:~
lrmrts. Prrced at $31,900. Be the lirsllo see lh~ one!
'
BMR 436 :- NEW LISTING - Excellenl starter home wrth 2 BR
LR. DR. nrre kitchen, . utilily . and new balhroom. Carpeted
througrout. Screened palio, carport large lot Call lor appointment
BMR 427 - OWNER TRANSFERRED - PRICE REDUCED
DRASTICALLY - This ~ a very clean 3 BR home, 1anch style. ·
mamtenance free sidrn~ ~rble B~ loan assumption Priced at ·
$33,000. Cam or ~eiails.
.
·

18 ' Runabout with 85 HP
,Johnson Engine and Tan dem a~le trailer. 61200 . Call
614-246·6870.
17 11. Coraval 140 HP
inboard. outboard. fiberglass &amp;. trailer. Call 4463721 .

BMR.389 ~ OWNER SAYS SELL TODAY!Yourfamilywillenjoythe
roomrness.of thJs house. Includes 4 BRs, 2 baths. LR, llR, bui~·in
knchen. Srtuated on large corner lot Close to town in cily sc hoof
drstrrct (Green Elem.). Call to see this one'

&amp;

79

Home
Improvements

boa1 .

Auto Parts
Accessories

Pai nting interior &amp; exterior,
wallpaper hanging. Insured,
Free estimates. 614 -949 2686 .

PAINTING . interior and
exterior, plumbing, rdofing, 1 --------~Hi Pressure Cleaning. Alum ·
some remodeling . 20 yrs. inum siding . inobile homes.
wood , brick , sandstone
exp. Call 614 -388-9652 .
building
and homes . Also
Marc um Roofing &amp; Spout· heavy equipment. Fully ini ng . 30 years experien ce. sured . Free estimates. 614speci alizing in built up roof . 949 . 2686 .
Call 61 4 -388· 9857 .

years

e~tper ience .

Phone

. 814-378 -8349 .

RON'S Television Servictt.
Spec:ializirig In Zenith and
Motorola , Quaur, and
houoo callo. Coli 578· 2398
or 446-2454 .
F &amp;. K Tree Trimming. 1tump
removal. Call 876-1331 .

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

·81

Seniees Offered

Home
lmproy ements

ROOFING • outside point ·

•ne. .,..

eltlmllll, 114-

82

Plumbing
Heating

i!o

Get your carpet in ship
shape . Water removal, FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANIN·G . CAPTAIN
STEAMER 614-446· 2107.

J .A .R . Constrli'Ction Co .
Water lif'leS . Footers .
Ora ina. All kind• of D itching .
Rutlond . Oh . 614 -742 ·
2903 .
.

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
insured , free estimates.
Phone 614-387-0638, coli
after &amp;.

Meig• Ex·c avating. Bulldour
&amp; b•ckhoe 1ervice. Basa mentJ , footers, land•caping,
driveways , farm ponds .

REAlTOR

SR. l'h baths, combinat~n family room/ k~c hen . less than 5 yrs.
and newly painted insKie. Well maintained lhroughout At·
!ached gmga $46,900.

okl

110111a ·

86

PRICE REDUCED TO $35,900 - Be the first to see
this ·~argain priced ranch w~h 3 BR. balh, large
knchen. 12x 1B LR. !Ox18 lamrlv rm. an d laundry.
Located on a llat 10: in Centenary.

ac..

acoa
m
............... limlior ................................................$69,500
..

·2t; ~ust ~~eet, Qo.~~tpoQtr. ~k-lo

446· 2642

Free Es ti mates

1-----------if---------85

87

General Hauling

N8ed aomething hauled
away or something moved?
We 'll do it . Call 446 -315,9
between 9 and 5 .

U pholslery

TRISTATE
UPHO LSTE RY SHOP
1 16 3 Sec . Ave .. Gallipolis .
44 6 -7 833 or 446· 1833 .

r~-------------------J~-------------------

position

ACROSS

abb r
6S Exists

1 Tint
6 Br aid

It Dissension

· 66 Musical
organize l ion
67 Part ol.
&lt;I fOSS

69 Femalo

horses
7 1 Init ials
ol 32nd
President
73 Preten tious

2 1 Confirms
23 Clenched

hand

IN TOWN - QUALITY PLUS - 3 BR brrck ranch
is rn excellenl condrtion &amp; offers an eal·rn krtrnen
wrth eye level oven. ran ge. drsp. &amp; relrr~. dining rm
wrth WB lir.eplace, like new carpet over HW lioors,
cent air, gar.age, breezeway &amp; a proless~nally
landscaped lot
LOCATION PLUS QUIAITY should descnbe t h~
lov ~y 3 BR br.ick ranch. Specral feaiU'.~ are a large
LR &amp; dining rm., equrpped kitchen. l 'h ba ths,
laundry. qualily ca rpet cent arr. &amp; an oversued 2
car gar.age. Located on U.S. 35 Wesl &amp; soown by
apprnntment.

GREEN ACRES - ~ke new Cedar Home offers 3
Br.s., large LR &amp; knchen . 2 car gar.age, carpeted
pat~ . wrap- around deck. cent arr &amp; 1'h lots. Be the
firs! to see IbiS one.
TEXAS ROAD - One of the best built homes
i've seen. This all brrck ra nch oilers 1864 SQ .
ol livin g area on th e l irst lloor. all larRe
rOOms. ca roet over HW lloon, hot water heat. lull
basement with !Bx50 !a mi~ rm., 2 1 ire plac~ 2 car
garage and approx. 2 acres of lawn.

n

) BR. llt!tll sidirr&amp; patio, IJIC)d klcalion, ely ................................$27.500

, 5 ~ ''I'~· 3 BR home. new bam ........................ .. $34,900
• 2 At:ra .., hooir·up, Raccoon Creek lronlage ................... $12.000
· 28 Acn, nit:e home. t.n, new IJw price ............................... $40.000
Ml
MoiJilo HrJrM. sm. ordllrd. Oll~l'"'ent ..................... SJS,OOO
AI*, IPIId'lann-lontl. home. riCit1S .....................SI21.(XXl
.1t:11s. F...,.s Flm\ rmdern home .................................$JXI.OOO
D1iJ ar Beef Callie Fsmr. IOOdern home .............. $187,000

Counties

SOLUTION

JONES 80YSWATER SEA ·
VICE . Call 614 -367-7471
or 614- 387 ·0691 .

NEAT ANO CLEAN - CONVENIENT IN TOWN
LOCATION - 2 BRs, 12x l8 LR, large kitchen &amp;
dinin g area with range, rehif,&amp; d~p. , laundry wrth
washer &amp; drye r., new carpe\ ex pensive drapes,
carpo~. gas heat humidilier. dehumidilrer. air
clea ner. centr al air. Watch the Blue ilevil lootball
games Irom the large rear sun deck. $50,000' NO,
$37.51Xl
ONE OF VINTON'S fiNEST - lov~y 1'h ~ory
bnck ind udes 5 BR's, I ~ balhs, LR wrlh lireplace,
krtchen &amp; drnelle. lull basem ent &amp; a well
landscapffl corner lot Call lor apporntment.
FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF AND SAVE MONEY
- Approx. 10 acres. mostl.v llat ~ nd near Rod ney,
28x60 unfinished house wrth full basement l ro ol
potential.
·
GREEN TOWN SHIP - CENTRALLY LOCATED I 12 acre l arm has lrontage on Slate Route 588
Fa1r1i~d Cenlenary Road &amp; Vanco Fairlield Rd
Ecellenl for lar.mrng or dev~opment. O~er 5 rm . &amp;
bal h also rncluded. Owtrers wrll Cllnsrder sellrng
smaller. tra cts ol sho~ term linancrng Call lor more

mlormatton .

01110 RIVER lOTS FOR SAlE - Located 3 miles
bel ow Erreka Dam. Ide~ for campin&amp; builting or
mOOile hanes. CaH ~onny Blackburn.
GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP - 15.5 acres m/1,
n.:~y remodeled 2 stOry larm home. 7 rm s.. bath,
basemen!, 4 firepla~. barn &amp; tobacco base.
Aski ng $38.900.
CREMEENS ROAD - 53 acres m/1 approx . lOA
lil ~ble balanre woods, remodeled oome. I \7
~ IJ'ies, 7 nro. an d balh. new sidin&amp; new well,
exc ellenl 24•40 steel lluading several old
bu ilding;. Only $37,500.
NEAR NORTH GALLIA HIGII SCHOOL - 5.29
acres m-1, approx. 2 acres cleared. ba~nce
wooded, 3 BR 14x70 root!i~ home in good
condilon, ca rpeted throughout, stove &amp; rein&amp; stay.
Bargain pr~ed at $25,000. Cal lor appoirrlment

mli:

. GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres
IOOated
south of Mercerville. Approx. 20 A. tillable balanre
woods, tob. ~ Ownen will help finance. ·

~file

F-LMD IDIS:

446{)855

512 Second A,.., Gallipolis
Servirc lllllia &amp; llei«s

General Hauling

20 Withou t end

~lor I'M!, IJIC)d oond.. dly . .. . . ... .....
............$13.000
19111Vrclr&gt;ia0 ~Home, 14x67, .W) ~Cf ..................... $15.900

l'r1de, 1568 sq. fl. 3 BR 2 bath• nice .... ................. .125,000
2 Story, 3 BR. prden space, ~um. sidrng ely ....................... $30,000
2 DR l!ricli, 1M&lt; view, blacllnjr drive. dly sclrools ........................ Sll's
lledecorM!!d, 2 Story, 3 OR, ~'~'1~ ~ acr.e ;Jus ...
...... .$34.000
t.ile Now Modular, river view, 3 R, lu~ basemen! ...................$35.000
3 BR. 2 boitl. brick ranch. '4 ar;re. nice car pet ....~ .................$49.900
Briel! &amp; frame. 3 BR lamiy rllllll. near dly .........................$49,900
3 BR. spit llyor, lui bosement lam. rm., garillle .......................$55.000
~ BR, lamiy '"'" .,.r. Holzer flosp, garage ............................$55,000
No.- Ft&gt;rnoroy, 3 BR. C.pa Cod. sPerldid rive'. YeW .................$7a900
4 BR. I I! blllu.lul bosemerlt 2 car l!l''ll". "''lishop ........:.:~65,000

included).

SEWING Machine repairs.
•arvice . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Sciuors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy . 992 -2284.

19 Check s

FARMER'S FARM - Approx. 50 acres near
Vinton. All clean crop &amp; pasture land, remodeled 3
BR home, 60xBO barn. 2 silos (lor. mer darry !arm).
fr.onts on 2 rds , large pond. SEE THI SONEBEFORE
PLOWING TI ME. $49,900.

'QUALITY PWS and available on land conlract toqualdred bu~er. 3

(Costs

Nu· Prime replacement
windows
Storm windoWs &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
sidi ng
Howmet Pat io Covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum utility
build i ngs
691 M i ller D r ive

DEPENDABLE WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR Guaranteed work. Cali anytime
614-268 ,8620 or 614-266·
1207.

A.morlcan
mammal

FHA-VA SPECIAL - 3 bed room. maintenance
l ree home. (Vetera ns. no down paymen~ (FHS
bu yers. approx. $1,250 down) l ocated in Rodney
Village II.

lEEDS AN OFFER - Owner ~ movin g must sell. Very nice 3 BR.
l!rick and lrarne ranch near cily, faml~ r.oom, garag~ $40's.

Dissolutions or Uncontested Divorces $350.00

Electrical
Refrigeration

t8 South

OWN YOUR OWN CAMP SITE - rn the Ylllderness
of the Wayne Nalional Forest 5 to 9 acre tracts of
woodland now available, ad1rnn rng th ousands ol
acr.es ol go vern ment land. Publrc hunti ng. fishing
and cam~ ng permitted . Prrces start at $3500 wrih
financing avarlable.

.

r

SUNDAY PUZZLER

COMMERCIAL BUILOING-52xBO all steel con·
structK!n with fireproof insulation. Overhead crane,
has office &amp; baths. For merly used lor boat sa~s &amp;
repair. located across lrom Silver Bridge Plaza with
access to the OhKI River. Potential unlimited. Call
Ranny Blac kburn .

DEXTER - Approximate~ 6acres w~h Ill story lrame
block house that has a huge living room, with lirep~ce.
i i
·
• 3 bedrooms. Fronl and rear porches.

{ " .Bill' s

JIMS WATER SEI\VICE .
Call Jim Lanier . 304 -676 ·
7397 .

u:&gt;."'"' - Ownersa,., sell
th 5 month. 3 BR
brrck fmnlleatures a
nree lamilv room wrl h chimney lor WB ~ave, LR,
large k~che n . laundry rm. and large back porch .
l ocated on Bulavrlle Rd.
·

~;;,_'";':'

HAMUN KING
ATTORNEY-AT-lAW

614-742
2068 . -2407or814-742 ·

BUY factorv direc t. light weight, fiberglass Scamp
1 3 ' and 16' 1rave l tr ailers &amp;
new 19' 5th . wh eel. Call
now toll free 1 -800 · 346 ·
4962 for fr ee brochure and

Cm10day 446 · g6g6
CDiaM CnomQey 675 -4008
CReaQtohs
lB @

After 4:30

Wills $25.00
Small Estates $350.00

l,onnie Boggs · Excavating .
Dozer. backhoe, dumPtruck .
Work by hour or job. Call
448· 7903.

TRAV E;L trailer, 1 9 74 Ma ·
rauder, 26 ', 2 door, co m pletel y equipped, rear dou bl e bed . e .rc ce ll e nt
co nditi o n, S450 0 . phone
304-675-2847.

save!

Call ~851S .. 446-0445

otl-(:.IMPROVEMENTs

Excavating

&amp;

1 Types IMUilllon. [ ieclriWirin,

, .·

JIM' S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt ' s
Plumbing. Call 814-3870678.

84

ELLIOTT

Hulin&amp; &amp; Air Corkition-

446 - 1637

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477

83

RUSS AND MAX

W'rth central air conditi~
inc from Gene Plants &amp;
Sons. For free estimate
call:

Water Wells . . Commercial
and Domestic . Teat holes.
Pumps· Sales and Service.
304. 896-3802 .

SEAMLESS GUTIERS. Dna
piece cu1iom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Guttor, (Doy 814 -692-4088.1
!night 814 -698-8206 .1

BEAT THE HEAT

367·0636 .

DDZER WORK 8y Ted
Hanna', ponds . ditchel .
lpfsament1, etc . Call 4,4 64007 . Carter &amp; Evan•
Transportation.

446-0008

'Realty

·--... ··coli!

The Sunday

RINGLE 'S SERVICE oxporiin'ced roofing. including
hot tar applieation , carpenter, electrician. mason. can
304 · 675 -2088 or 876 ·
4680.

Canaday

m

W. Va.

Pro....ion•l floor Nnding
ond rofln l 0hl ng.
Booutlfy
your hom~ by , reflniahing
thoae hardwood floor~! 10

REALTY

1979 Mall ard camper 2 1ft..
exc. cond ., sleeps 6 , se lf
contained . Call 614 -246 52 88 .

tfiudh~~

"BABY FACE JO"
Alias: Jo Hill
Newest member of the C~and Gang.
Ciln find real "eteala".
Always "gunning" for new liatinga.
Call Cleland Realty if you want thla gang member.

Guard· f - Eotlmot.o. Coli
Gene .o t 614· 992-6309 . .

BLACKBURN

1 9 74 Flee twin g 12 f1 .
camp er trailer, sleeps 4 , gas
stove, furnace, ice box se·
parate. electric &amp; water
hookup . Excellent Condi ·
t io n. $1 ,200 firm . Call614 245 -9398 .

446-3636

.

mi.nded for proflllion.-1
1te1m cleenin ... Sccttch

Real Estate General

Motors Homes
· &amp; Campers

Real Estate General

.-

.'

61.e -25S-

Aoofi ng 1nd Carpentry
work. general repairs. c•ll
Anthony Willianraon. 61 4~
367-0194.

6S CHEVY, 30 Serial. n1no
goo~. 304-676-2010.

72

I mprov~mentl

1182 .'

Vans 8a 4 W.O .

Home

I mprove~n~~nts

est imatn . Call

73

81

Home

Real Estate General

Cell

1981 Monte Carlo low
mileage . Call 61 4 - 266 ·
1946.

A uti&gt;a for $1ilf •

71

Autos for Sale

1980 Ford Pinto . Auto ..
PS-PB, ·radio . Real sharp .
*2895. John'• Auto Sales .
Open evo'o. Call 448-4782.

Mary

J .D . 45 combine •quare Motor for 19761 Ford truck,
back both hoods, good 360 m.uot l!e go~d. Call
cond .• 82,200 firm . Jock _4_5_8_
· 1_&amp;_1_8_o_lt_•_r_6_P_M_
. __
1
Millar. 814· 379 · 2640.
Wont to l,oooo. NHd 2 , 600
360 .John Deere 6-way lb, tobocco . WHI poy 1.36
blade. good cond ., $7,600. por lb. Coli 448-9777 , 4483692 .
1979 dodge 4•4 8 cyl.,
atanderd, white spoke
wheolo . 162.000 mi.
Livestock
$3 , 000 . Coli aU- 388 · 8 3
9081 or 614-388 · 8320.
2 yr. old Super Ohix guild·
II.!ow your PIK ocroo w~h 1 2 lng, excellent temperment
conformation, ready to
11. stalk chopper. 540 PTO. and
troln. 1760. Coll4411-9510
1600. 986· 3681 .
or 992- 3606 .
Ford 5000 tractor in good
condition. t6600 . 992 ·
3460 .

hoy .

1974 Audl Fox axe. 1101
mileage, ru"a very well, new
tires. Asking 8650 . Call
448-4381.

t~::::::::::::::::::1r-~::::::::::::::::~
61

71

1976 Mocury Marquis
59,000 mi .. PS, PB, air,
8-track, good cond ., asking
11,600. Col1448-4347 .·

were lucky that I held the
r i ght queen and r ight jack."
~

Grain

L.

afterwards, "Yo·u

~NEWSPAPER.

8a

1978 Chevy Nov.. auto , AC.
rool ohorp, 12,396. John' I
TIMOTHY hoy, II .75 belo, Auto Soles on Bulovlllo Rd .
On the wagon. •2 .00 a bllle · Call 446-4782 . Open eve'a.
tloiW.red, 3Cl4-875-6054.
1979 Ford Fieata, ,harp,
11.296. John'o Auto Soleo.
....
· opon evonlngo till 8 . Coli .
446-4782.
71
Auto• for Sale
1979 Thunderbird oi[ cond .•
PS. PB. cruloo. 302 englno.
exc. cond .• alsQ. 88 Cemaro .
1976 Chevy Co price Ciao· Coli 814-367-1238.
lie, 4 dr. 1ed1n. one owner .
12,600. Coli 448- 1616 or
19a4 Ford Golloxy 8 cyl., 3
446-1244 .
opd., f260 . Coli 614-379·
2894.
78 Plymouth Volare Premier
4 dr., air cond .. one owner. 1978 Sulek LoSobre, good
Coli 44il- 1815 or 448 ·
cond., air, tilt wheel. Coli
1244.
446-3939.

came a di•mond to dummy's

Opening lead: • A

Hay

Coftdit}oned hay--Timothy,
AHatfa, Clover. Never wet.
11.60 belo. 814-742-2873 .

band from a horror movke.
· Eul'o two-beart ~n was
one of thooe weak two bidl.
· Joe purred - wbat eloe?
West · r.a~aed and M,ary
LouiJe Joe's wife) doubled. •
Joe bid two opldes like a
real trouper, and Mary
LouiJe took hi m .rl&amp;ht to the
opadecame.

ace and a lead of another
diamond on wbich he aot rid
of hiJ lui heart.
West trumped and led a
club. Joe had to finesse, but
that worked also, and Joe

JUne 2 ' 1983

Ohio-Point

IIIIIEDIATE OCCUPANCY
owe ' ID
you~ and your la.m.i t; to see · one. 3BR's, 2 All ADDilfSS TO BE PIOUD Of - 331 DEilY
la!le LR &amp; dinng rm.• galley krtchen wrth. DRIVE _ 3 BAs. 21? baths, larae lwniiy rrn., LR,
q r:NI. ranae &amp; drsp., den, tamiy rm., EIS heat , lpieiEiy llll' jpoed kilchen 2 car gnce lnd
&amp;
ail,=ered
lio, &amp; luJI basemert AI this
w:Jt..u biive by tlti!' one lnd !hen call
on 1 wellandsca lot at the ed&amp;e of town. FHA ~ lot 1111 appoinlrnenl to see the inside.

ball!s·
car1t

-VA:-

:rl)l

h om&amp;.;

2 4 P 0198SSille
p ron oun
26 Clay8)' earth
2 7 Spanish:
abbr.
29 M11rrled

74 Bro ther o l

Ja cob
76 Clim bing

plan ts
79 Cowboy

again
30 Diplomacy
3 1 W arm
32 Fall behind

competition
81 Gol l m ound

82 Shos honcan

Indian

3-4 ForebOding

84 Turki sh c1ty
8 5 Longs lor

35 Ae'o'e &amp;l
36 Right of
hojdlng

8 7 Traced
90 Ki nd or duck
92 Soak

38 Bank

93 De tec ting
device
95 H ~s
9 7 Filled period

33 Oe'o'ourod

·

employee
40 Free or
41 Troo trunk
42 Ven111ates

oltimo

4 3 Anclf!nt
" 5 Baker ' s
products

~B

instllutlon
Fork prong

49 t Oth Presi-

dent
51 Sanskrit
dlalecl
52 U.S. bond
II!Wftf : a b br.
53 Before
54 Young horse

iron
99 Man's
nickname

101 Thea le r

boxes
103 Epoch
104 Female
105 Apple drink
108 FBf18hOOd
110 Put beck
11 2 Prohibits
t

13 Emerged
vk; l orioua

Hebf'ew

114 Prefix : d own
11 5 Ms. Fitzgerald

ascetics

ttl Pierces

55 Anctent _

57 POIIMSM
S8 Ancient
&lt;:harkrt

60 Culhlorts
61 AnglOSaxon
money
62 River In

Afrtca
64 Footblll

1G Molo shetlp
17 Oocll rle r

ptlnod
UJ Noblemnn

ub br
2 1 Assu ss p ro por tron atoly

B6 Wise

t31 Hairless

2l C/luses to

132 Merry

romom hw
23 Jo urney
101 th
25 Greek totler
27 Por tnln inH

8\l Mntal
slr nnd
f+O ~l obr uw
lo tl m

WOSI O

133 Born
t34 Tau ored

cloth
136 Oealh ralll o
137 Transac tiOn
I JB M use ol
poetry
139 Te nsile
stre ng th
abb1
140 An i i!O~ti n s
141 By way or
142 Kiln
143 Flam es up
sudd enly
144 He rm it
146 Arllcto of
lurn ih HC
14B Demand
149 og, e
150 Pr ep ares 101
prin t
15 t AnnounCO·

men1 ol
proposed
marriago

1t8 Step on
laddM
11 9 Rabbit
120 Chaldean
c:lty
1.21 Profits
123 Relll lvtl!l:
colloq.
124 Tolled
125 MuSICal

to tM stru :&gt;
28 Porso'o'oro

3 0 Spooch
3 t At th is plnct:l
3 3 Suprom o
Elmng o l
Mo tlam -

mmtons
:15 l''nrl ot

skvloton
36 Shad e
37 A ct ress
1erry

39 Cut Oil

41 1-,oe t
4 2 Is ill
4 4 Coarso col·
ton dr 1I1111Y
4 7 Insects
4B Small
c hildren
49 For m er flu ssum rultHS

98 Sym bol fm

"e Ar11cle

47 Financial

instrum ent
126 High card
127 A p~n d to
129 Sanoy

DO WN

I Poc ked
oway

2 Asytu m

3 Im itated
4 Underw orld
god

5 Teu 1ontc
deity
' 6 Cost
7 For fea r

that
8 River Island
9 Preposition

10 Unll of
Chinese
currency: pl.
t l Demolishes
12 Pron oun
13 Trade for

money
14 Soul~·
~ ea st e rn

European
15 Wild ass
of India_

50 Royal

54.Tippod
55 Gron t L.ak o
56 ConUnued
story
59 Nfl livo chr ot
in Ind io

60 Time gone
by
6 1 Stamp ol
o ppro val
63 Peruse
66 Co ttego
dug rae
a bbr.

67 Steamship
abbr

68 Ridiculing
70 Tr apped
7 1 Cook in rat

72 Female deer

73 Large
'o'ulture

75 Declares
77 Donk ey : Fr
18 Used o chair

80 Oli he

pot sons

88 Pitchers

9 1 ,.,.09EI 11VU

PI OfI.'(
94 Aornmn s 111

•

ea se
96 " Th on ," Ill
Uw rrs
!IB Kuon
99 Fas ttt1rou al )l

tnst£Jtul
100 [ ~tpnmh;
10 ~ Sod .tt,e
t Ool Mob
105 G r;&amp;rn
106 Ins truct ·
107 Altnr SCt tw.rl
109 Ch otr.o pnrt
111 t onk ou l
112 Sho r t hi t
1 13 H o s i&gt;~t n l
S HCIIOfl

116 Co ltoc llo n
ot lac l s
118 Unusual

119 Pit
122 S ri!
124 lull
125 Stop
126 W ar nmg
d t.JYICOS

12B Dnmago s'

IJO Capuchm
rnon kov
IJ t Foundatrons
131! Smnll
p nrllc le
135 Manner ol
runnrng
t37 Season ing

tJB Verve
140 Thea1er ·
sign abb r .
1'1 2 J8pllnese
sash
143 A s1a to.
abbr.
144 Prln1er'S

measure
1'1 5 Symbol lo r
telluriu m

147 Paid notice

t48 Sym bol lor
columbium

�i

"'"*''

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 26. 1983 .

Mllililepart Gallipolis, Ohio Paint Plllatmtt, W. Va.

Chapel HiD Church of Ch~st

Business Briefs:

Buhiville Road • P.O. Box 308

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
June 26, 1986

File for incorporation

Dear Friend:
. I
On !iehalf at the members at the Chapel Hill Church of Chnst .

COLUMBUS - Secretary of State Sherrod Brown reported that
articles of Incorporation have been tiled by hls office by LRC Pizza,
Inc.
The lncoprorator Is listed as Larry Randall Coleman, while the
agent Is Identified as Tena Elaine Coleman, 44 Delaware Drive,
Chillicothe. Brown said 250 shares we~ Died.

would tike tv thank each of you for your interest and hospitality
shown our worl&lt;ers during our special endeavor called "PrOJect ·
Good News."
·

Graduate realtors exam set

The last two weeks have been very exciting. Every worker hasbeen
extremely busy.-Each day had aheavy S«;hedule, but yo~r kindness
and response made ~ possible for us to face the dawn!ng of each
day and endure the heat with much zeal and enthus1asm. .

COLUMBUS- A graduate realtors exam will be given by UleOhlo
Association of Realtors July 19 at University.Hilton Inn, Olentangy
River Road, Columbus.
The exam tests knowledge learned In required courseS and ablllty
to apply that knoWledge to solving current real estate problemll.
To be eligible to take the exam, participants must members of the
National Association of Realtors and completed requlreQ courses In
real estate principles and practices, law, finance, appraisal,
brokerage and special topics at accredited, approved colleges and
universities.
An optional , but recommended review session, open to all
licensEeS, will be held the morning of the exam. The review session
wUI count as four hours of continuing education credit
All participants In the review session or exam should pre- reglster.
· The exam fee Is $25, and the review session costs an additional $.li.
For more Information, contact the OAR education division at
614-228-6675.

Cable association elects officers
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Cable TelevlsloQ Association reCently
elected new officers and fllled vacancies on the board of directors.
Elected to serve a one--year term, the o!flcers are:
President. Patrick L. Deville. Buckeye Cablev lslon, Inc., Toledo;
vice president', Leo W. Brennan, Coaxial Communications,
Columbus; secretary·treasurer, David A. WUson, Vlacom Cablevlslon, Cleveland.
Elected to three-year terms as associa tion directors were:
Harvey Frankel, Warner Amex Cable Comrnulllcatlons,
Cincinnati; David W. Metz, Times Mirror Cable Television,
Ne)llark; Barney L. Printz, Ohio Va lley Cable, CrooksvUie; Patrick
w. Riley, Community TCI of Ohio, Steubenville; Dana V. Webb,
Continental Cablevlslon of Norlheast Ohio, Wickliffe.

Name local builder

Cherie H; GaD

Or. 'lbon- Price Jr.

Personnel file

If you are not among the number taking the Bible Correspondence
Courses or enjoying a horne Bible study, and have decided that you
would like to, please let us know.

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Thomas P. Price Jr. was elected ninth
district councilor, ~rese~~tlng soutlleastern Ohio, for the Ohio State
Medical Association at OSMA's recent meeting.
At the same meeting, Dr. Oscar W. Clarke was reelected
chairman of OSMA' s 28-physlclan delegation 10 the American
Medical Association, and Dr. Thomas W. Morgan was reelected
alternate for the Ohio delegation.
Price, chief of obstetrics and gynecology at Holzer Cllnlc Ltd., has
been with the clinic since 1959.

I was happy to meet those of you who are listeningdatly to AMessage From The Bible o~~er WJEH at 11:55 A.M. with theexception of
Salurday which is at 12:20 P.M. I just wishit were possiblefor me to
meet each one personally.

Should you have a Bible queslion that you would like answered by
way of the neWSpaper or radio, please send it to the above address.

. RIO GRANDE - Cherie H. Gall of Athens has been named
assistant professor of business law at Rio Grande College and
Community Cotlege. , ·
Recipient of a bachelor's degree IIi economics with honors from
the University of VIrginia, Gall earned her law degree from
Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary,
Williamsburg, Va.
She has been employed as judicial clerk for the Family Court of
Delaware In Wilmington, and was sununer law clerk at the finn of
Stenker, Brandt, Jennings &amp; Johnson. Gall has been admitted for
practice In Ohio and V1rglnlil..

We extend to each of you a cordial invitation to meet with us at all of
our services. The schedule of services is listed below.
Sincerely,
William B. Kuhn

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bulaville Road • P.O. Box 308·
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO 46631
Sund•y Momlng

Sunt~.y Ewnlng
WOrthlp 8:00

Bible ltudy 9 :30

Bane One buying computers

Wanhlp 10 :30

Wedn..day
Evening
7:00
R.cllo

HOUSTON, Texas- Upton Construction Co., Leon, W.Va., has
been appointed a local builder for Metallic-Braden Building Co.,
Houston, acconllng to Upton representative Henry Upton and
Raymond J. Clcconl, executive vice president for Metallic-Braden.
Upton will market and ('(instruct Metallic-Braden metal building
systems designed for commercial, Industrial, heavy Industrial,
agricultural Institutional, recreational and special use applications.

Urge calling before drilling
GALLIPOLIS - Property owners and contractors are again
urged by Ohio Bell Telephone Co. to contact the utility before drUI!ng
or digging on land where Bell cable Is Installed.
This Is to prevent accidental damage to Bell's cable, explained
R.L. "Doc" Payne, local Bell manager.
Payne said Bell can be Informed by calling 1-ln).362-2764, the
toll-free number of the Ohio Utilities Protection Service (OUPS).

Chain to promote belt usage
COLUMBUS - McDonald's hamburger chain Is joining forces with
the state's highway safety depart ment to sell Ohio children on the Idea
of buckling their seatbelts dur1ng
sunnmer auto trips.
An extensive television and pro·
motional campaign will Is underway through the Fourth of July
holiday weekend.
Carl Osborne, vice president of
McDonald's Restaurant Operator 's
Association, said :WO McDonalds' In
Ohio will be passing out "Make It
Ctick" pledge cards to children ages
12 and under.
The cards asks children to
promise to buc~le up their seatbelts

We are thankful to God for the opportunty afforded.us to meet and
· visit w~h you, and at the same time, share wrth you tt\e "Good
News" of God's word. fiis a joy to seethe great number of Bible Correspondence Courses coming in daily by mail, and the office help
grading·and reluming them wrth the next lesson. The home Brble
studies are certainly being enjoyed by all who are participating.

for every trip In the car for a full
week. The child checks oft each day
of belt use In spaces provided on the
card,andthenthe cardtsslgnedbya
parent.
Any youngster returning a completed and signed pledge can! to a
participating McDonald's through
Labor Day will receive a tree
two-ounce Ice cream sundae as a
reward.
say''Over
that noonehasdonea
the years, I think better
It's fairjob
to
of getting their message across to
children than McDonald's," said
Kenneth R. Cox, highway safety
director.

COLUMBUS -To encourage Its
executives and management to
Increase their . awareness data
processing potential and Its llnnltatlons, Bane One Corp. Is sharing the
cost of buying 150 personal
computers.
The bank holding company Is also
sponsol'lng 10 training seminars,
developed and taught by Ohio State
University for participating
execullves.
"We are rapidly automating
offices and branches," explained
Bane One President John B. McCoy.
"Just because our data processing
executives are among Ule best In
their field doesn't aut.Omatlcally
mean the heads of our other
divisions and departments will
make the best decisions marrying
their operations with automation ."'
PUtting computers In executives'
homes, providing education and
encouraging experimentation turns
those home Into laboratnrles,
McCoy said.
"By making the program voluntary and requiring participants to
share the cost, we believe the
• computers will receive heavy and
enthusiastic use," McCoy said.
The company, with ~ aftlllate
·banks and 300 banking offices,
lncludingBankOneofPomeror,has
also donated $50,1XD to Columbus
public schools as seed money for
what Is considered the largest

"We must redefine our approach
to today's education," explained
Donald J. McWhorter, Bank One of
Colwnbus president.

" MhAge from

1M Bible"
Oeily ·WJEH
11 :85 A .M .

''The Church

~lth

A guide to local
Television programming
June 26 thru July 2

iho Mouage"

Includes complete

I

NEW·

Feelif)g

SQ.~CIOL,

rI

...
li.~ting.~

Fo.r the softness you deserve
next to your skin

''

Hollywood
Pages 4, 8

Refund

Fr,-,,rn

Playtex iSoo c,.,, '"' oo•a"'

"Channel 23 listings included
in this week's guide."

project In the country.
,..~p=rlv~a:te~sec:to~r:tu:n~ded~u:rba:n~sc=hoo:t
u~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;~;~~d

Station listings
WSAZ
HiiO

MAX
CBN

Cine,_
Chrlat&amp;.n Netwrk
&amp;porta Network

WTVN

Columbue. OH

ESPN
WTBI
WTAP
WCHS
WPIY
WINS

BRAKE

...

we instill new fron1 brake pads,

resurface rotors, repedc fron1

SPECIAL

.'
;··

.' .
.," ·

wheel bnrings, Inspect mutor
brake Clltptr, and .
br•llo hoses, bleed syslom ond odd ,

· WHEELFRONTOtS CI CVCiinder,

$58 88

new fluid, then road test the car.

-

MOlT AMIAI CAN CA AS

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
$1611

AIR CONDITIONING
SERVICE
ddd up to 1 lb. ol

freon

*Leak Test &amp; Cylinder
Performance Test
Hdjust Bells
*Clean Candet!MII Fins

$1495

HAS rr ALL PLANNED OUT -

ONLY

We'il set caster, camber and toe--In

to manufacturer's specifications,
Check suspension parts for wHr
and demagt, also tires for . . . ,
tnd s•f•ty. Parts ••tra, It n.edecll.
No exlro chlrtt lor llr·c-1·
tloned cars, • torsion Mrs.
Call tor •n IPPOintmlftl now.

OIL CHANGE
SPECIAL
. , ,. . .

New Buicks
And Pontiacs
.
In Stock
Ready T() Go•
'

···.

.,.

SAVI

""' MOST AMI:.ICAN c.t.•l

5 qt1. oil, new otl IIIIer.•

lubricote chants, ci!Kk

111

fluid

levels,

tire

pressure, ~ttery belts, hoMs, aftd
check exh1ustoy11em COIMII!Ion.

Come In And '
'

'

Browse Around.
CALL LAllY CAITO AT 446-22fl fOI AI'I'OINTMINTI

SMITH Bll!CKP(l~J
(

I.

Iii\ .

.........

~--·

+-...
' , _...__. _

stan Shaw, who stan rih Ralph Walle In the CBS IMrles
"'lbe M' ' 'ppl,'' 8ays he resardll hhmelf u a "different ldncl ol actor'' ... une who hu mapped
eat
Uld .IIAidllo 1118 &amp;lmeUIIIes IUid pals IInce he wuln I!Choal. "You have lo plan,"
11Q11 Shaw, wlllo Man M LalayeUe Tll&amp;e, care&amp;alrer ol the boat ud lnveliiiJalor for Waite In the
Marl&amp; TwaiiHype .....laDDI the mJpty Mhd 'ilrl· (APIa ;photo)

'* _..

CMOST AMIRIC.t,N
CARll

-

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

5

TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF

8.8% A. P.R.
. ON

2000's

2-BUICK.SKYHAWKS ·

2-PONTIAC· 1000's
FINANCING WITH GIIAC

OHw ,,.. June 30tft

Late .Model
Quality Used
Cars
In Stock
SUNDAY SHOPPERS
WELCOME/I

8 (1)
(I) •
(I)
(I)
(I)
(()
(()
(!)

A-.GA
PerkerMurg, WV

c.......ton.wv

Huntington, WV
Columbua. OH
WOUB Athene, OH
WOWK Huntington, WV
WVAH HurriCMW, WV

Showbeat
Page3

Seroing Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties

DAYS LEFT
7~PONTIAC

"'

Huntington. WV
Home Bo• Otllce

•m
(()
(JG
(fll

.IIJ

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="157">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2747">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43206">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43205">
              <text>June 26, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="476">
      <name>darst</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="861">
      <name>day</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="371">
      <name>gilmore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="959">
      <name>shank</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
