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I

12-The Dailly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1 Surrender ends tense jail situation

Area deaths

Lawrence P. Norris
Lawrence P. Norris, 53, Route I,
Rome City, Inc., a former Meigs
County resident, died Wednesday at
Veterans Hospital in Fort Wayne,
Ind.
He was born Oct. 8, 1928 in Letart
Falls, Meigs County. He retired
from the U. S. Army in 1978.
Mr. Norris is survived by his
parents, the Rev. Lawrence P. and
Belinda Wolfe Norris, Rome City; a
son, Robert, Roseville, Ohio; two
step-daughters, Janie McDaniels,
Roseville, and Ethel of Duda , N. J.;
eight grandchildren; four sisters,
Connie Bobbitt, Monticella , Ind.;
Donna Behref, VanWert; Evelyn
Ray, Lancaster, and Linda Koehr,
Black Creek, Wis. Also surviving is
his fiancee, Mary Pletcher, Rome
City.
Services will be at 2 p.m. Saturday
at the Hutchins-Williams · Funeral
Home, Wolcottville, Ind. , with the
Rev. Barry St. Clair and the Rev.
. Russell Stevens otriciating. Burial
will be in Orange Cemetery at Rome
City. Friends may call at the funeral
home after 2 p.m. Friday.

Grace E. Russell
. Grace E . Russell, 72, formerly of
. Pomeroy, died unexpectedly Wed. nesday night at her home in
Millfield.
She was born in Pomeroy, ' a
daughter of the late Marvin and
Nora Eblin Stace. She was a retired
cook from the Athens State Hospital,
. a member of the Millfield United
Methodist Church, a volunteer
worker with the dietary department
of O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in
Athens and an active member of the
senior citizens organization in
Chauncey.
Surviving are two daughters and
sons-in-law, Martha and William
Kelly, Lancaster, and Kathryn and
Don Norman, Millfield; a son and
daughter-in-law, E. Riley and
Evelyn Russell, Millfield; eight
grandchildren, two sisters, Mary
Kesterson, Grove City, and

MARION, Ohio (AP) - A man
jalled for taking a woman hostage
in December held guards at bay
with a shotgun for more than five
hours after a thwarted escape at·
tempt before surrendering to authorities early today.
Marton County Sherltt ,John Butterworth said the prisoner, Dennis
Pounds, 32, handed over the wea·
pan alter negotiators agreed to provide him with an unspeclf!ed
medication and assurred him that ·
his
D!xle, would be allowed to
vls!t him.
Butterworth said the medication,
which he would Identity only as a
"prescription drug," was administered by the Marton County jaU
physician after Pounds
surrendered.
"This was an obvious attempt to
get out o! the jail," Butterworth
said of the incident which began at
9: ll p.m. Thursday .
He said Pound~. who somehow
managed to get a sawed-off shotgun smuggled into the jaU, sum-

Catherine Turner, Shawnee; a
brother, John Stace of Athens, and a
special friend , Homer Brown,
Athens.
In addition to her parents, she was
preceded in death by three brothers
and a sister.
Services will be held at I p.m.
Saturtlay at the Hughes Funeral
Home in Athens with the Rev.
Robert McGee officiating. Burial
will be in the Concord Cemetery,
Millfield. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. today. Friends may contribute
to the Volunteer Servtces, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Hospital Drive,
Athens, Ohio 4570l,in her memory .

wtte.

Uoyd H. Hoffman
Lloyd H. Hottman, 51, Route 3,
Pomeroy, died Thursday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Hottman was born Dec. 22,
19ll In Meigs County. He was a
member of the Apostolic Church of
Jesus Christ and had worked as a
water well driller.
Preceding him in death were his
mother, Hazel Douglas Hoffman,
and his wife, Peggy Coleman
Hottman.
Surviving are a daughter and
son-In-law , Carolyn and Ke!th
Searls, Middleport; a son and
daughter-in-law, Ray Lee and EUzabeth Coleman, Loulsv1lle, Ky.;
his father, Walter Hoffman, Route
3, Pomeroy; two sisters, Helen
Dorst, Tuppers Plains, and Juanita

License
·reminder
The Meigs County Health Department is reminding food service and
vending machines operators that
their 1982 food service and vending
licenses are due to be renewed on or
before March I, 1982.
Any licenses renewed after that
date wiD be charged a late fee of 25
percent as required by Ohio law.
It has also been brought to the attention of the, department that the
renewal statement on the new 1982
license states: "This license shall be
renewed on or before March I,
1982." It should have read, "This
license shall be renewed on or before
March I, 1983. "
This was an error in printing. The
licenses are color codes so there will
be no question which license the food
service operator has obtained, the
health department reports.

Grueser, Mlnersvllle; a brother,
Roger Hoffman, Route 3, Pomeroy; three granddaughters and a
grandson.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Sunday at the Rawlings- CoatsBlower Funeral Home with
Brother Emmett Rawson officiating. Burial will be in Chester Cemetery. Frtends may call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 thts evening and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday.

Meigs seventh
graders triumph

tion and that's what's causing, In
my oplnlon , unfair price
dlscrtmlna tion."
Monthly charges In Columbia's
service area In Ohio range from $56
to $75 for the same amount o! gas,
he said.
Spratley said he knows o! no
other state except Texas where
such pricing policies are utitlllzed,
and added that the s!x other states
Columbia serves use un!!orm
rates.
Spratley also updated the status
of 20 recommendations the Offlce
or Consumers' Counsel submltted
to Gov . .James A. Rhodes last
August.
Among them was a recommendatlon that the Legislature conduct
an lnvestlga tlon to determine If current state laws regulattng,gas utili·
ties are effective.

Gallipolis lost a seventh grade
boys basketball game to Meigs, 4540, 1n a game played at Gallipolis
Thursday nlght.
High scorer for the Little Devils
was Toby Ault with 14, whUe Gary
Harrison and Kirk Jackson had 10
each. For Meigs, the top ·scorers
were P. King andS. Musserwlth11.
Gallipolis' next game will be at
home at 10 a .m. Saturday against
Athens.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Donna Smlth, Racine;
Curtis Cauthorn, Reedsville.
Discharged -- Michael Layne,
PhilUp Donovan, John Scarbrough,
Ruth Ebersbach, Ruby Halliday.

r ·"

Rep. Ronald H. James,, DProctorvtlle, who chairs the House
Publ!c Util!lles Committee, Is expected to lssue a report on the Columbia Gas investigation Tuesday.
"I'm speculating because I don't
know what James Is going to say,
but I expect that James ls going to
push lor legtslatlon to try to force
consol!datlon through the law,"
Spratley sald.
"That's going to be a tough bat·
tie," he said.

maned deputy Jeffery Holiday to
the cellblock under the pretext that
there was a medical emergency.
However, Hollday sensed there
was something wtong and dkl not
open the cellblock, Jeavtng Pounds
holed up there with nine other
prisoners.
At that point, Pounds !Ired a
round which missed Holiday but
gave him minor powder bums. HolIday was treated at a hospital and
returned to the jall.
Butterworth said Pounds had
four shotgun shells when he
surrende~.

"From the outset, the other nine
inmates dkl not take an active
part" In the Incident, the sherltt
sald. He sald no charges will be
!lied against them.
Butterworth said he plans to
bring charges of attempted murder
and possession or a !!rearm under
dlsablllty against Pounds.
Pounds was to remain 1n the
cellblock until after hls wife visited
him later this morning. Then he

was to be placed in Isolation, Butterworth said.
·
Although pollee and sherltrs department negotiators agreed to
Pounds' demand that his wife be
allowed to viSit him, ButteiWOrth
said he has had visitation rights all
along.
Pounds, who had served time for
murder and who was arrested for
taking a hostage at a drug store in
December, had been undergoing
mental evaluation prtor to the setting of a trial date.
The sherlttsald a breach or secor·
lty enabled the shotgun ID be
smuggled Into the jaU. He said
someone apparently crossed a
fence on the north side of the lall
and gave Pounds the gun through a
window.
Pounds was arrested Dec. 31 af.
ter a 20-hour ordeal in which a 22year-old woman was held hostage
in a Marton drugstore.
A cocked pistol was held at the
woman's head and her captor
threatened suicide during the !net-

dent, police said.
Pounds' mothe!' and wife entered
the drug store to talk with hlm and,
at the end, h!s mother, Kathy
Pounds, unloaded the pistol and .
handed 1t to police as Pounds gave
up.

High legislative turnover expected

A pollee chaplain, the Rev. Ed
Hess. said Pounds used drugs 1n the
pharmacy. The drug store incident
began when poll.ce broke up an attempted robbe·ry and arrested
another man after an exchange of
guntlre.

Pollee said Pounds retreated iniD
the store. Two other store employees managed to escape, leavIng store clerkCathy Swartz
hostage.
Pounds, who has been in and out
of prtsons since 1968, was charged
with aggrava.ted robbery, attempted aggravated murder, abduction,
assault and possessing a weapon
whUe under dlsabUity. He was
jailed In lieu or $250,1XXl bond.

Four calls were answered Thursday and on Friday morning by local
emergency un!ts, the Meigs County ·
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
At 5; 31 p.m. Thursday the Middleport Unit took Clarence
Swauger from Riverview 'Drtve to
Veterans Memortal Hospital. The
Tuppers Plains Un!t at 4: 19 a.m.
took Curtis Cauthorn from Reedsville to Veterans Memorial and at
1:11 p.m., the unit took Hennan
Grossnickle from Joppa Road to
Camden-Clark Hospital, Parkersburg. At 12: 54 a.m. Frtday the M!ddiepc&gt;rt Un!t took Bertha Diehl to
Veterans Memorial.

$1000 APAIR
MEN'S LEATHER JACKETS
REGULAR 1 l~tn 1 145w

SALE PRICE

ELBERFELD$

•Valentine's Day is Sunday - Select the gift you want to give
- Hallmark Cards for Valentine's Day - Candy - Plush Toys
- You'll like the selection.
•Save 20% during our February White Goods Sale on the 1st
Floor - Sheets - Towels -.Bedspreads - Area Rugs - ,. Furniture Throws.
.Our Clearance Sale on Winter Clothing brings you savings of
50% on men's, boys, children's and women's wear.

E.LBERFELDS IN POMEROY
..

Today's T-S

MEN'S

TOP COATS

VA'LUES 1r0 17ffll
SALE PRICE

'2000

ARACK OIF MEN'S

LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS

REDUCED

40%

LADIES'
PANT SUITS
VALUES TO 70 SALE PR.ICE '2000
00

OF

LADIES' BLAZERS
JACKETS'&amp; SKIRTS

1

·.P~ICE

2 RACKS OF

LONG SLEEVE BLOUSES
REDUCED

40%

ARACKOFKtm

TOPS-BLOUSES-SKIRTS

~ : PRICE

:e~ran

KNITS-PERMANENT PRESS-COTTON

MEN'S LEVI

Volume Shar es

FASHION JEANS

42,468,480
Issue s Traded

~LUE lfO '3000

1,837

PER PAIR

'16010 SALE PRICE
LADIES' COATS

SALE PRICE

lf2
REG. 60 to 175
1

00

1

00

.

Up
703

LADIES'. DRESSES .
VALUES TO '1111"'

wants

report on
in El Salvador,
page D-1

,$500 EACH

VALUES TO '40110

ol.

.

Down
650

· Business
E-Section

SALE PRICE. ·

LADIES' SWEATERS
CARDIGANS &amp;-'PULLOVERS

Y2 :PRICE
A AlACK OF .
.LADIIES'SLACKS
~'2PRICE
LADifS' ROBES
REDUCED.

r40 %

Reagan's "Federalism'
may hurt Ohio budget
by depleting tax base
By ROBERT L. SHAFFER
As8oclated PreM Writer ·
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan's "New
Federalism" plans would let the Sun Belt grow richer
and North grow poorer, say members or the
Northeast-Midwest Cor.gresslonal Coalition.
A coalition study suggests the admlnlstr; ~lon underestimated the cost o! programs Reagan wants tD
tum back to the states and overstated Tevenues that
states llke Ohio could expect to generate !rom new
taxing authot1ty they would receive.
The coal!Uon sees problems, particularly with an
administration propcsal to release $11.3 billion of federal excise taxes and $16.7 billion !rom the windfall
profits tax.
"Most states in the Northeast-Midwest region already tax above the national average and would be
unable to Impose new taxes without losing even more
jobs and businesses to the low-tax states or the South
and. West," the coalition said.
"Furthermore, many of these Southern and West·
ern states collect considerable revenues from energy
severance taxes and have state operating surpluses
large enough that they would not have to Impose any
new state taxes If they chose to continue the abandoned federal programs.
,
"In addition, lt tllese energy-rich states round that
they needed more revenues, they could go after the

SUITS AND SPORTCOATS

'lf;OCII

11 Section5, a&amp; Pages 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. fll ewspaper

Sunday, Feb. 14, 1982

•

.ALOT OF' MEN'S

$5000 • '7250

30%

REDUCED

1

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Ph. 992· 2115

MEN'S CARDIGAN SWEATERS

Worker injured
Larry Allen Sheets, 20, of Rt. 1,
Gal11polls, Is listed in stable condition at Holzer Medical Center
where he was admltted Wednesday
morning following an accident.
Sheets sUJ'fered head Injuries and
external injuries when he was
caught in a rtg line at Gard Drtlllng
Co.'s well site located at Rt. 1,
Gal11polls.

Copyrighted 1982

SUGAR RUN r~llLS

VALUES TO 135.00

What Is expected to be the highest
turnover rate in 10 years, at least in
the House, seems assured in advance of the balloting by the decisions or incumbents not to seek
re-election. Some legislators are
lea 1ng to seek different elective of-

en't making It," he said.
In the House, where Democrats
hold a 5&amp;43 edge, there are question
marks around 17 members or the
major1ty. Republicans say five of
their Incumbents may not be back.
Seven House Democrats have already..sald they will not return.
All 99 representatives are up for
re-election thiS year as are 17 of the
33 members of the Senate. Nine Democrats and 8 Republicans in the
upper chamber must run again.
Sen. Ronald L. Nabakowskl, DAmherst, Is the only Democrat to
announce his departure so far .

Vol . 16 No. I

•FI ELD SEI::D
•OATS
•SEED CORN

ALOT OF MEN'S PANTS

cals out.''

flees. Others lost their seats
through reapportionment.
senate ¥tnortty Leader Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown, said othen
may have found that thetr $22,500
salary doesn't stretch far enough to
cover the expense or maintaining
family homes in their districts and
living In Columbus as well.
"Many or the others aren 't runrung because or financial problems
and the cost or living down bere,"
M,eshel said. "I think 1t the average
voter out there saw what $22,500
gets in terms of the costs here and
back home, they'd realize many ar-

tmts··

Closed Monday
Offices o! the Melgs County
Courthouse will be closed Monday
in observance or President's Day.
Also closing for the observance will
be the office or the Melgs Motor
Vehicle Registrar located in the
former Gibbs Grocery building,
MulbeiTy Ave.

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
AMocb!ted PreM Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
There will likely be an unusually
large number or new faces In the
General Assembly after this year's
elections and not because Ohio voters may decide to "throw the ras-

•

Farmer's Headquarters For

Emergency runs

-and not because Ohio voters :
may 'throw ·the rascals out'

Among the problems 'facing
newly elected Ohio GOP chairman Mic~l Colley is the rapidly
growing number of incwnbent ·
state legislators who have chosen
to not seek re-election. Many are
leaving to seek dHferent elected
offices... others lost their seats due
to reapportionment...some are
simply getting out of p~litics.

Meigs County happenings

Consumers' counsel
blasts rate disparity
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~State
Consumers' Counsel William Spratley says he feels much the same as
other Columbia Gas customers In
Ohlo.
"It's been a very hard winter for
consumers," Spratley said Thursday during a news briefing. "I
know my own gas bill Is the hlghest
It's ever been. Even though our
family Is succeeding In using less
gas, we're paying more 1than ever
before."
I
Lack of a unlfqrm ratemaking
policy by Columbia Gasl)tohlo Inc.
and the Gas Cost Recofery provision are among reB!'Ons why
monthly bllls may possibly double
within the period of a year, Spratley
said.
He sald, "The problem we face Is
how do we get a plcture~f the enUre
rate base and pro!lt plcture for all
o! Columbia Gas?"
Spratley said the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio has never ,..Jen
a complete picture or Columbia's
compl!cated a nd varled rate
structure.
Columbus has more than 700 dltferent rate tarltts in Ohlo, wl th 300
or them set by incorporated commun!ties rather than the PUCO, he
said.
"Thls Is the crazy qullt of the
energy puzzle," Spratley sald.
"We've got two levels or regula-

Friday, February 12, 1982

GAHS-SEOAL
Page C-2
Area deaths ... - • .. • • D-8

lkllilness .... . ·. -• . . . . E-1
Clasllfled ads • . • .. • D-3-7
Editorial .......... A·Z-3
Farm •....••... •.•. E-2
IJfestyle .......... B-1-8
Local • . . . . • A-5-8-D-8-E-8
State-National ••.•. D-1·2
Sports • . • • • • • • . . • . C.l-8
Take-One . • • . .. • . Insert

News briefs •.•

'freed-up' $16.7 billion !rom the Windfall Profits
Tax." Since much of the taxes on resources produced
in energy-rich states 11re pald by energy-poor states,
the coalltion says this would amount to "exporting the
tax" to states l!ke Ohio.
The JB.state coalition says what may be more Important Is that "the states would not share equally in
the 'freed-up' $11.3 billion in federal excise taxes" taxes now collected by the federal government on
alcohol, gasoline, tobacco and telephone service.
The report conlnued:
"Preliminary calculations by the coalition staff
show that states in the Notheast and Midwest which would be receiving approximately 49 percent,
or $14 bllllon, of the !lnanc!al responslblllty for the
program tumbacks - will get only 35 percent, or $4
bllllon, of the new excise taxes without Increasing the
net .. burdens involved on excise tax payers.
"This means that the already fiscally strained
states in the Northeast-Midwest region actually will
have to Increase excise or other taxes substantially If
they want to maintain more than a handful of the
programs returned to the states."
State governors are also skeptical of the administration's figures. They have indicated they want
David Stockman, director of the Office of Manage-ment and Budget, to confirm figures in the New Federalism program.

Gallipolis Police Chief John Taylor
retires after 16 years on the job

BffiniDAY 173 - Officials lay a wreath ·on the Uocoln Memorial
Statue ln W•hlngtoo Frlclay, on the 173rd aDDiversary of lhe blr1h of lhe
Civil War president. Tbe ceremony Included lhe presentaUon of lhree
wreathll, along wllh a reading of Pretldenl Uacolo's Gettysburg Addreu.
lAP Laserpholol.

•
•
'I'll mr,ss
lt ...
no question about it'
By KEVIN KELLY
T!Jne5.Sentlnel Staff
GALUPOLJS- "Years ago,
you used to Investigate everything !rom cat complaints to
murders," said John Taylor,
who as both a Galllpolls City Ponce officer and the department's
chief for 16 years, has trtt&lt;d to be
a working officer.
"I was never one to sit behind
a desk," Taylor commented.
On March 1, he retires as chief
after 16 years In the position to
become ball1ff and probation of·
fleer for G~ lllpol!s Municipal
Court. While the new responslblllties won't take h!m entirely
away from pollee work, Taylor
said he's going to miss the dally
routine.
"I've got almost 28~ years In
here now, and It (the retirement) wou!d be to my benefit,
because the doctor ad~ me
to get out o! pollee work," he
said. "I'll miss It, no question
about It, but I'll still be In a position to work with and assist the
pollee department.''
Born 59'years ago at the Perry
County vtllage of Junction aty,
Taylor rooved to the Gallipolis
area with his parents, John W.
and Charlotte Taylor, who were
originally from the Poplar
Ridge area, when he was still ,
young. He attended Gallipolis
city schools and was Inducted
Into World Warn service in December 1942. About the same
time, he had become a probationary patrolman in Gallipolis,
and hts Interest in law enforcement continued Into the war
when he !ll!rved In the mllltary
police.
"After three yean as an MP, I

Pope urges end to Nigerian polygamy

had a pretty good Idea or what
po11ce work was like," he saW.
"I spent a lot or lime In the Na·
pies, Italy, area working in an
ll·man special unit, invest!gat·
ing the black market, AWOL
·deserters and a lot more. It was
an Interesting job."
When asked U there were any
Interesting or exciting tales to be
told from this chapter or his life,
Taylor said It was "just routine
work."

ONITSHA, Nigeria (AP) - Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass here
Saturday, praising the lbo people, Nlgerta's Roman Catholic bulwark,
tor holding onto to "!am!ly traditions" but urging them to abandon.
polYgamy.
"Your Ia mll!es have so many positive and praiseworthy 'Values based on your family tnidlt!ons," the .
pope told an audience of about 2 million during the
homily of his Mass, celebrated In a large open field
recently cleared !rom a troplcal rain forest.
11

There are, however, some shadows,"

the~"·""

said. "Traditionally your cuhure did not exclude po.
lygamy, even though most marriages were and are

'

Discharged in December 1945,
he had married the former Pbyl·
Us Samples of Bidwell on Feb. 5,
1945, but didn't return to pollee
work at first. He came hOme to
Gallipolis, and ivlth several
otber people, helped operate the
200 •Cab Co. One of His coworkers was Hollis (Herk)
North, another GalUpolls polleeman wbo retired from the force
1n 191ll.
.
Although . Taylor noted there
was money to be made from
hacking in those days - the business, managed by Wlley White,
operated out of a poolroom
below the old Elks Lodge on Second Avenue - he lett the business after three years, held one
or two other jobs, and worked
more steadUy as a truck driver
for Raymond Hoy &amp; Co.. a local
furniture wholesaler. Hts daughter, Ellen, now a paralega1 assistant In Durango, ColO., was
born In 19fi~HQYfever, 1n 1953 he took a
clvU ~examination as a
patrolman and passed. ·
"Pollce work has chaJ1&amp;ed,"
he commented. "You could
have no training, they gave you
a badge and put you ID work.
You worked a 48-hour week, If

monogamous.''
Polygamy 1s still widely practiced 1n Nlgerta and
elsewhere In western Alrlca, altbough most gowmments discourage it.
The pope stopped brielly In Enugu and then traveled to Onltsha, 234
mJies east or the capital of Lagos, on the second day of an eight-day
African tour, his first foreign trip since last May's attempt on hts l!!e.
Enugu, in the heart of Nlgerta's Roman Cathol!c s!r('nghold, Is the
former capital of secessionist Blafra and the scene of the bloody threeyear Bta!ran civil war.

you were lucky. If you weren't,
there was no telling how long
you worked."
TaylOr said the department
staff varied over the years, but
there'was a force or 10, lnclud!ng
dispatchers, when he succeeded
the late Chester Leeper as chief
In 1966. Last week - speaking 1n
the new oftlce he's only had
since the beginning of the year
- he noted there are now-12 patrolmen, two Investigators,
three sergeants and threll! fulltlme d!Bpetchers, and he thlnlis
the department has come a lol\
way IInce he ftrst joined.
"I do think right now the city
has one of the fillest pollee de-partmenllin southern Ohio," he
said. "I'm leaving at a .time
when It's ID good shape,

· (Continued' iln page Ml
;

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NOAA . US 0f'Pt of Co"'"'''"f'

WEA1HER FORECAST - Tbe NaUooal Wealber Service predlcls
showen for 11101t .r tile West aDd ·•now for Idallo, weotern Montana and
tile Greai LPea reciCIIIln tlleforecul period Saturclay untU Suaday.,(AP
Luerplleto).
.

,

..

.

�Pleasant,

Commentary and perspective

Feb. 14, 1982

Confusion seems to be the name of
the political game in Washington
these days,
When the upper crwnbs of the upper crust of the political pie are confused it is inevitable that the confusion dribbles down to us common
folk .. In this morning's newspaper I
had my first look at the 1!113 budget
and I must admit that I, too, am confused. It is a nightmare product of
OMB Director David Stockman's
dream machine, the White House
computer. If you are fond of nightmares, this one is a dandy!
The official federal deficit for 1983
wiU reach $91.5 billion according to
the Stockman guess that was
released to Congress February 8.
Remember the guess for 1982? That
was $42.5 bilUon which has now
grown to $98.6 billion with the year
not even half over. Boy, is Stockman
confused? While you are enjoying
your nightmare, can you dream how
high this 1983 budget could cllmb?
The defense spending for the fiscal
year 1983 has been officially 8et at
$221 billion. That is supposed to be

A Dlvl•lon ul

~~
~v
825 Third Ave., GalUpolis, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(6J()

992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PATWlllTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher·Controller

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

A MEMBER of The An udattd Pretti, Inland 01ily Pr"11 A!C!ftlf'latlnn allll tht&gt; Amt'ricHn
Nt1Wpupt!r Publl11hen1 Anudatlon.

LETTERS OF OPINION are

w~kiJmed .

They ~hou ld be leu thun 300 wurd11 lonJ! . All

h!ttt!n are 11ubject w editing and mu!tl bt&gt; ~lg nltd wltll rutmt', iuldreu 11ud ~lephunt'
number. No uulgned lettt-n wllllw publltiht'd . Letkl'ti Hhoold be 11:1 good bl!lte,addren:lng

lu1et, DUt ptnouallde!J.

'The nagging of
•
women executives
•

"Why aren't more women at the top of corporations?" The lecturer, a
woman, was Indignant -or she appeared to be- as shedeclalmed loudly
about Injustice and even hinted at female cowardice.
Her audience, mostly women, some of them aspirants to managerial
jobs In their companies, picked up the mood. Later, they would buy her
book. They would become angrier. Some might even conclude they had
failed .
"A cruel hoax," says Eugene .Jennings. The Mlchlgap State University
professor and management authority has heard the refrain at ·semlnars
and conferences. T)le anger Is misplaced, he says. His own anger rises,
Many self·styled female advocates don't know what they're talking
about, he says. He cails them "kibitzers who don't have the courage to play
the game, and who talk and write for self·aggrandtzement."
Jennings, a professor of management, Is known among other things for
his role as advisor to corporate boards on executive policies, a role which
grew out of his pioneering studies of mobility patterns.
,., .
"These advocates are unaware that It ta.k.~~ .i\. quarter-celfftiW to develop a generation of corporate preSidt!ilts/' he says. "Early arrivals will
make It In 22 years, but the majority will take 26."
: The earilest large batch of women to seriously enter the management
prOgrams of major corpora !Ions left college In the years 1972-1977, and now
are at second leve ls above non·managerial positions, he says.
Jennings, who conducted what probably was the first national seminar
for female presidents and vice presidents back In 1965,1s especlaily critical
of the damage advocates do to certain very successful women.
The woman often brutally hurt by advocates, he observes, Is the one who
does not seek the brass ring, who Is happy with a chaileng1ng job, who has
ielf-lmposed Immobility. But such people, he contends, are perceived by
. "the chorus off cheereaders as weak, passive creatures who are betraying

: the cause of women."
·. He suggests that the weil·lntentloned advocate should "encourage exec·
utlves to do well In their jobs, take their time and build a good platform of
results ...
The clock, he adviSeS, "cannot be set a head without Irreparable harm to
·
the Individual and the corporatlon."

:The mayors' annual
:o utcry bas a point
There Is a Washington tradition. Eac h year about this tlme, the president proposes a new budget. A few days later the mayors of America hold
a news conference to say It will destroy them .
Last week they said President Reagan's budget for 1!&amp; would cost them
an additional $13 billion In federal a id, which would bring the total loss
under his administration to $50 biiUon. That's a whopplngflgurerepresent·
ln!Z nearly half the money they got from Washington just two budgets ago.
. "We are trying to understand how cuts of the magnitude proposed can
jJpsslbly be absorbed," said Mayor Helen BoosaUsofUncoln, Neb., preslilent of the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
' : A year ago, Mayor Richard Hatcher of Gary, Ind . sat behind the same
ntlcrophones and said: "If this budget goes through, we will keep 1 million
P!lOPie from job training next year. We wiU kill the dream of a n affordable
dei:ent home for more than 35,&lt;XXlfamllies. We wW take food off the table of
!m)ISE!holds one rung above the poverty line. We V{lll erode the rail and bus
ss-stems that mllllons of people use to get to work, to school, to the doctor.
We will get longer une mployment lines and we lfare roles."
: . The year before that .John Gunther, executive director of the conference,
warned that former President Carter's last budget "would make It diffl.
cult to assure the cities' social a nd economic health."
This pattern goes back to the Depression era when the conference was
formed to lobby Washington for help. Each year there were forecasts of
doom and destruction, and a year later some president would observe that
ll)e world had not come to an e nd after a ll .
·
: Like the lad who cried "Wolf! '' the mayors have a credlblilty problem.
:Their complaints are anticipated before they are voiced, taken with a
:grain of salt even by their frie nds.
: Nonetheless, It's not that easy to brush off their lament.
: (:lilies have been crying regulary for more Washington money for the
past 50 years. Most years they got lt. Most years they needed lt .
Federal money steadtly made up a greater and greater share of city
budgets, but the gravy train began to go off the track long before !lie
newest Reagan budget hit print.
Federal money as a percentage of state and local expenditures peaked
In 1978, not In the Reagan administration. Ever since, cities have been
having to do more with Jess.
The doomsday predicted each year has been averted c hiefly because
city ortlc la:ts ha'!e been robbing Peter to pay Paul. They met the most
pressing problems first, but there was never enough money to do that a nd
jOqk after long·range problems both without federal help.
. :One of the most critical aspects of recent budgets has been the cutback In
federal assistance for .f undamental maintenance of c ities.
·, ·: · While mayors were averilng Immediate disaster by shuffling money
: and pr1ortties, their clUes were literally decaying beneath them.
· • A{ld without repairs, cities crumble. People who can move, do. Busliresses move, leaving relative ghost towns behind.
:·: They mayors do have a point.

:=Today in history
1

·'

Today Is Sunday, Feb.l4, Valentlne's Day and the45thdayof1982. There
are 320 days left In the year.
. : Today's highlight In history:
.. On .F eb. 14, 1929, what came to be known as the "Valentine's Day
Massacre" occurred when seven rivals of the AI Capone gang were mur·
dered In Chicago•
On this date:
In 1859, Oregon became the 33rd state of the Union.
In 1893, Hawail was aM'!Xed by treaty to ..the United States.
In 1912, Arizona became the 48th state.
. . Arid In 19'79, U.S. Ambassador to A1ghanlstan Adolph Dubs was kid·
napped In Kabul by Moslem terrorists and kiUed In a shootout between hls
abductors and..pollce.

',

and also educational in order to
qualify. As a matter of federal
policy, · discrimination is un·
charitable. Tax laws must be construed so as not to frustrate federal
policy. Therefore the exemptions
that tax laws afford only to
charitable organizations could be
denied to these schools.
The U. S. Supreme Court sum·
marlly affirmed this decision, but in
1975, in an entirely different case involving the Bob Jones University,
the court took pains to make clear
that its earlier affirmance had been
largely procedural, " The question of
whether a segregative private
review in this Court, and we do not
reach that question today." Further,

the court's affirmance in the
Mississippi case "Jacks the weight of
a case involving a truly adversary
controversy. n

That brings us to the events of last
month, when the Reagan administration first directed the IRS to
revoke its 1970 regulation, and then
introduced a biU that would effectively write the reguhltion into
statutory law. Now at lea~t. 29
senators, a)most all of them credentialed liberals, have united in a
declaration that the bill is unnecessary. They are perfectly
willing to transfer their own
legislative responsibility to the
unelected bureaucrats of the IRS.
They have sponsored a "sense of the

Congress" resolution to that effect.
The parent sponsors of this Artful
Dodger resolution ought to look
beyond their noses.
These are not frivolous questions.
They go to the very heart and soul of
our constitutional system of government, under which "all legislative
powers" are vested in the Congress.
The inunediately pending controversy was provoked by denial of
exemption to a religious institution.
Are the runaway senators truly
willing to leave so delicate a
question of the First Amendment to
bureaucrats or to judges'
In the waves of emotion that are
churned by charges of racial
discrimination, profound question&gt;/
have been swept away.

~rware.

There are all sorts of leaks in
Washington.'
The most common is the " official
gove rnment leak." Any ad·
ministration learns very quickly the
best way to set off a trial balloon is to
leak it to one or two news sources.
Example: "This is Apollo at the
w1\ite ,House and what I'm going to
tell you is not for attribution. The
President is going to put an excess
profits tax on suntan oil."
The story is printed in Krupnik's
column. All hell 'breaks loose with
the suntan oil lobby, and the
President decides to forget it.
The next day the President's press
secretary announces. " There is ;tlr

I ttrJ5T 5/IY. 5/R,
'OJ lfANiU THAT
/Ia) UK&amp; AN
(X,IJF'f¥). \

one will be deprived who doesn't
deserve lt. Wbo decides? StocJunan
has authority to detennine poverty
level so legally he Is free tO set the
level low enough that there are no
deserving poor. That was authority
given Stockman in the budget bill
passed by an intimidated Congress
last summer, sight-unseen. The new
1983 budget cuts programs hard hit
in 1982 even more.
How about President Ronald
Reagan? Is he so Insulated from aU
society except the rich that he really
doesn't. know what Is happening to
the poor? Is his reading mat~:rial
censored so closely by his aides that
he only sees favorable news? Does
he know he is being pictured a warmonger, a bright, a chauvinist and a
heartless snob? Does he care or just
doesn't give a danm? Is he actually
as confused and unWormed as he oflen appears at his press conferences? You supply your own an-

swers.
Editorial writers and columnists
are still assessing his perfonnance

at his last press conference. The conserisus seems to be that the
president Is not above shading the
truth If he can plant a inyth In his
favor in the subconscious mind ol his
television audience. He knows he is
not going to fool a room full of hardnosed news paople but he alSo knows
that none is likely to dispute the
president on live television betore a
nationwide audience. Not if he wadis
to keep on working: So, when he was
asked about the 8.9 percent unemployment in December of 1981 as
compared to 7.4 in Decemller 1980,
he blamed it on Presidf1t carter. He
said unemployment was rtslng much
more rapidly in the last half of 1980
than in 1981 and assured his
questioners that a million more
people were working In December
1981 than in Carter's last month. He
planted two lies in the minds of his
television audience.
Unemployment was actually
decreasing In the last half year of
the Carter administration. llere are
the figures: July , 7.8 percent;
August, 7.8; October, 7.6; November, 7.5 and December, 7.4. He also
made a million and a half mistake in
his employment figures. When
Reagan took over INI'Il Carter in
January 19111, the nation's work force was 97,698,000.
A year later there were 97,188,000
people employed, 508,000 less than
when he took office. Even his press
secretary later admitted the

"So I made a misstatement aaout the far:ts! So
I'm laughing it off like Ronald Reagan did Hal Hal Hal"

Letter to the editor
A ceiling on everything
"From the highest to the lowest,"
President Reagan says cut
Medicare and Medicaid .
II someone has a home and can't
pay the hospital bill put a lien on

president was "off a little bit on his
nwnbers." That was the un·
derstatment of the year!
The administration is starting its
second year muc,h like it started its
first-alarm over Cuba and El
Salvador and tough talks against
corrununlsm. Why no'? It played
well last year getting the budget and

their home·
If the Congress or Senate wants a
raise give it to them.
I say put a ceiling on everything.
The Slate says · they need more
taxes : taxes for state employees and
welfare. A raise, yet the state is in
debt.
Gallia Co. and Gallipolis needs

tax blllsthethrougll h Congress.
year . y wl

grow coffee and beans instead.
traditional livelihood may drive the
The poppy growers are sub- hill people into the arms of comsistence farmers, not profit-greedy
munist insurgents.
agribusinessmen getting rich from
Into this delicate situation has
the insatiable demands of heroin ad· stepped DiCarlo, the straightdiets in the Western world. To these shooter who has become a State
friendly, primitive hill people, it's a
Department trouble-shooter. As a
sirnple matter of survival.
U.S. attorney in New York, he was a
Not only are poppies one of the few
tough, single-minded crime fighter .
crops that will grow on the steep Later as a legislator, he chaired the
hillsides, .but there is no problem
committee that gave New York the
marketing the harvest. Obliging
most Draconian narcotics law in the
~·
j;·•
nation.
buyers handle au the transportation
details. Coffee and beans, on the
DiCarlo crossed paths with
other hand, don't grow well and · roving correspondent, Peter Grant,
must be hauled to distant markets
in Thailand. DiCarlo's lmpact upon
over virtually lmpassable roads.
the Thai government, Grant reports,
The hill people als.o use opium as a might better be described as a
collision. His no-nonsense approach
~eadily available, all·purpose
painkiller. Unlike the junkies in our
left Thai officials more aghast than
"civilized" culture, the mountain amused.
He plUnged into diplomatic
tribesmen don't abuse their wonder
drug. Finally, there's a political
negotiations with the finesse of a
problem Involved. That officials fear
bulldozer and an insentivity to the
that if the poppy.reradication
Thais' problems. He was given to
program isn't handled properly,
political posturing and armresentment at the loss of their twisting. He publicly faulted the

m/

.Thai government for its failure tf
crack down as hard as he thought it•
should on the hill tribes. In general,
DiCarlo was about as discreet ano
diplomatic as a SWAT team.
The reluctance .of the 300,000 hill
tribesmen to give up their ont&gt;
reliable crop for the dubiouP
promise of coffee and beans is un
derstandable. As a United Nation.•
official put it, " It would be easter t&lt;
persuade the French to convert their
vineyards to cornfields.'' Only a feli
villages have stopped growin!
opiwn poppies "cold turkey." Many
have accepted government sub
sidies to grow replacement crops
but have continued to grow poppie~
anyway.
None of these problems cloudeo
DiCarlo's tunnel vision. He un
derstood only that the opiwn harves!
might wind up as heroin In the alley~
of America. Aller flying over poppy
fields in a htilicopler, he criticized
Thai officials for neglecting "such
easy targets."

we are a}) tO .b)ame'I,L_R_o_~e_rt_~_al_te~_s

•

Stoptheleak~s================Ar=tB=u=m=~~Ld
Ronald Reagan, as with all recent
presidents, is obsessed with leaks in
his administration. He dOesn't understand why people who work for
him continually spill the beans to the
media. And as with all presidents, he
insists he's going to put a stop to tbe
leaks at any cost. With all due
respect to Mr. Reagan, he has as
much chance of stopping leaks in
Washington as he does getting his
wife to serve State Dinners on Tup-

an 18 percent increase over the 1982
budget but who knows what
secretary Casper Weinberger and
the Pentagon brass are actualy ·
spending? Remember those Pentagon officials who were strung up
on lie detector machines last month
to find the culprit who leaked the
news that the Pentagon would spent
over $2 trilUon dollars as part of the
Reagan proposal to "rearm
America'" Will the hawks, Weinberger and Haig, influence Reagan
to get us in a war' A country doesn't
usually pian the greatest military
machine in the world just to wage
peace. If I have more questions than
answers it is because the general
contusion haS overwhelmed me.
How about budget cuts? They include education programs, public
housing, Medicaid and Medicare,
aid to families of dependent
c hildren , food stamps, child
nutrition, aid for the blind, elderly
and handicapped, energy assistance
for the poor and much more. In a
statement made by Stockman, no

'

p 0ppy meanS SUrviva.a:l=====::!!:.la!:!!::!ck!:!::::A=n::::::d:=er;::;;~o~n
WASHINGTON The Ugly
American has returned to the misty
green hillsides of northern Thailand.
He's Dominick DiCarlo, the State
Department's assistant secretary
assigned to cope with the international drug trade.
Square-jawed, blue-efed and
street-wise, DiCarlo could pass as
the •'good guy" in a television crlme
show. He's dedicated to curbing the
flow of narcotics into the United
States, .
But when East meets West,
mutual misunderstanding can
defeat the best intentions of men and
governments. And when one side
shows an insensitivity to the other's
cultural and political problems,
cooperation and good will can tum to
bitterness and despair.
This is what's happening to far-off
Thailand whose government, with
the financial backing of the United
Nations and the United Stales, is
trying to persuade the tribesmen to
give up their opium poppy fields and

solutely no foundation to the story
that there will bti an excess profits

tax on suntan oil."
Krupnik calls up Apollo at the
White House. "You made me look
like a fool."
Apollo says, " We'll make it up to
you. We're sending over a top-secret
CIA report to you on a KGB call girl
ring at the United Nations."
The second most common leak in·
volves someone in the ad·
ministration who is• out to get
someone else.
{ .,
"If you write it, I'll d~ny it, but
Malibu was chewed out by the
President yesterday for telling Ed
Meese the only one in the administration who believes the 1983
budget figures is Bonzo."
The reporter calls up Malibu and
asks hlm if the story is true.
Mailbu says, ''The one person who
could have told you that was Burbank. If you want the real story,
Burbank was caught red-handed
stealing jellybeans out of the
President's personal jar. and he's
been banned from the Oval Office,
unless there is another person in the

room."

1NAT$1JFCAU56
I Mf, I'W;IEEJJ

A F/5Hf!MtAN
FOR MOSTCF
MYUfe.

I've been working behind the scene~
to get a bill pa\lSed, which would im·
peach a federal judge who made a
ruling in favor of any desegregation
issue that Sen. Jesse Helms disapo
proves of. If you use my name, play
down rny role, as a lot of us were in•
valved in the final product. "
Then finally there is what we call
the " accidental leak."
·
This might occur at a cocktail par·
HYou will soon receive a question~
naire which must be filled out and ty where a reporter goes up to a high
returned to the Secretary's office no government official and says, " 1
later than Friday, giving your views Hear you're thinking of raisin~
'
on Abortion, Gun Contr9l, Busing sugar supports to Brazil."
"That's a confidential matter."
and Prayers in School..:'l'he purpo"''
"I haveitfromagoodsource." ,
of this survey is tu help tile
" Then you also must have heard
secretary get to know his staff bel·
ter and to encourage a smoother and we plan !a overthrow Grenada."
" Everyone knows that," the:
more efficient relationship in the
reporter
lakes it.
department. If you do not wish to fill
"If
you
print it, you could getlhe
out the questionnaire, you may
Minister
of
Cigars in Cuha in a lot of
return it with a note stating your
reasons why you refuse to be a team trouble. He works for us."
"I had that months ago," the
player."
There is another type of leak that reporter says.
"If I told you what we plan to do in
everyone in Washington rs familiar
with, and that's one where a person El Salvador, will you forget about
wants to get credit for something he . Brazil?"
"Yeh, but just for now. I can't sit
or she has done.
"I'm sorry I'm late for runner, but on the sugar quota story forever .•.

The third type of leak, which is impossible for Mr. Reagan to stop,
comes from a disenchanted
bureaucrat who sends inside
memoranda in plain while envelopes
to columnists all over town.
They read like this :
"F rom the Secretary's Administrative Aide:
"To All Employees.

~

5/R! \

..

But this
be playing to a dlf-

ferent audience. Between 10 and II
mllUon people are out of work and
several more millions a.re reeling the
pinch and uncertainty . More than a
l'Jllllion and a hall have already
ezhausted their unemployment insurance and have been dropped
from the statistics.
President Reagan is off to the hinterlands to ballyhoo the greatest
peace tlme budget In our history,
$'757 .6 billion, and to sell his New
Federalism to his constituents .
Don't be surprised If he pauses to
visit a few Republican fund raisers
on the way for a brand-new election

trilllcm."

•·

,1 .

more taxes for streets, lights,
rearranging streets, no lights.
We already have a city park and
the 0.0. Mcinty"r e which I think Is
enough for a small town. But~ ·
want to use the taxes fpr another
park at the old golf course.
Why not get a jail fixe'&lt;! with the
taxes to save transferring
prisoners?
Or, fix Eastern Ave. so when it
rains half the street isn't flooded.
Anyone else agree?
Vesta Ham,
Rl.l, Gallipolis

rr===============--=========:-:;::-

WASHINGTON ·(NEAl - Is the
The documentary, accurately
In one infamous recent UDAG
is due November 2. Also the con·
00A,OOO of federal money
"ted
States"
·
t
be
'
""'
promoted
as
"an
unabashed
piece
of
project,
"
fusion
has sunk to the state arid local
U"'
gomg 0 a coun-'
..,..
level. As an example, consider the
that's stronger and better
advocacy journalism," offers a destroyed 1,500 homes, 25 churches,
· Uy, fl nancia II y, ·mora IIy
'disturbing tour of
, the federal 150 businesses and · a 700-room
unemployment
offices
the
econom1ca
country.
At a tlme
of theover
g"reatest
and spiritually?"
government, .hQ!lled not only by con- hospital" to clear land for a General
Former Treasury Secretary
servatives and Republicans but also Motors Corp. plant in Detroit.
unemployinent In years, offices are·
William Simon poses that rhetorical
by liberals and Democrats.
"Maybe a Cadillac plant should be
lctJSing and employees fired. The
I· ·
of
Referring to one of the m~·t built," says Proxmire, "but let
same confusion exists in other ad.
t the
quest 1on a
cone us• on
a
~
miniStrative offices.
generously financed programs ad- Cadillac do that."
Watch how your Congressman
disquieting hour-long television
documentary, then offers his own
lninistered by the Department of
With more than 1 million people
Housing and Urban Development, receiving military pensions at an an·
votes this year. It might help ~ou
answer: "Not with those cocmouts it
isn't. "
Sen. William Proxmire, [).Wis., says nual cost of $15.5 billion, the Defense
make up your mind November 2
.
when all members of the house and
riment ,s retirement
"Those coconuts" are the people
"it's very hard to justify Urban De
program
1 pa
represents another scandalous
one-third of the Senate will find their
who influence, formulate and imDevelopment Action Grants."
plement government policy in this r--------------s-it_ua_t_io_n_
. - - - - - - - - - - o t f - l c e__
s up_.f_o_r_gra_bs_._ _ _ _ __,
capital- lawyers and lobbyists who
represent every conceivable interest
group, executive branch officials
and members of Congres!l .
Their role· in the ceaseless expansion of the federal government,
its work force and its budget are the
subject of a compelling investigative
report written and narrated for
television by syndicated colwnnist
Donald Lambro.
Lambio possesses impeccable
credentials as a thoughtful yet
tough-minded critic of a system of
government that probably is out of
control. Currently a distinguished
journalism fellow at the Heritage
Foundation, he is the author of two
books on the subject- "The Federal
Rathole" and "Fat City."
The .video version of his work,
"Star Spangled Spenders," was
produced by an affiliate of WQLN, .a
conservatively oriented public
television station in Erie, Pa., and is
scheduled to be aired this month by
Public Broadcasting Service
stations throughout the country.
Lambro's central thesis is that
government doesn't spend the
public's money wisely or efficiently
because it has no incentive to do so.
Indeed, it must constantly respond
to pressure to spend more generated, in large measure, by the
same citizens who regularly gripe
about bloated federal budgets. The notorious "special-interest
groups" that incessantly deffi!I"!Jd
more federal funding for tlli!ir ·
preferred projects, the docwnentary
clearly illustrates, are members of
the taxpaying public, their trade
associations, their . corporations,
their labor unions and their lobbying
organizations.
" We are ·a n to blame," says Dr.
Milton Friedman, the noted conservative economist "Every one of
us Is a special interest.''
As a result. the federal government spends t325 million, during
every working hour of every .
woriting day. That's $2.8 billion per
day, Lambro notes, "and becaiiSe
this amount Isn't enough •for the
federal appetite, (It) will run up
another '170 million (dally) on a .
national debt that now exceeds

446-9510

/()f )(}(J
SimP Be
IISHAM3lJ CF

l

The sunday Times·Sentinei-Pa

Bqdget nightmareiLL--~----=Lowe:.::.=ll~W-=.:ins::a.:;e::=..tt Berry's.World

Page--A·2

Enacted by the I.R.St==::::;;;:==Ja=me=s=1.K=il=pa=t_ric=k
WASHINGTON - We are witnessing a disgraceful ~pectacle
these days on Capitol Hill. What is
proposed quite simply is that
Congress abdicate its primary
responsibility, which is to exercise
its power to enact the laws of the
land .
A brief chronology may be helpful.
Back in 1894, as part of a tariff tax,
Congress provided certain ax exemptions for charitable, religions or
educational institulionis. The
provision, virtually unchanged, is
embodied today in Section 501 (c)
(3) of the Tax Code.
In 1964 Congress passed the Civil
Rights Act. The act contained not
one word dealing with tax exemptions. In Title VI the act provided,
among other things, that "federal
financifljl assistance" would be
.denied" any institution practicing
racial discriminatioin, but the act
expressly defined "federal financial
assistance" in terms of grants, loans
a nd contracts.
Nevertheless, in 1970 the Internal
Revenue Service, without a shred of
statutory authority, issued a
regulation to this effect: The Civil
Rights Act created a public policy
against racial discrimination ; no in·
stitution violating this policy should.
be granted financial assistance; taK
exemption is a form of financial
assistance; therefore, any ·school
that practices racial discrimination
must be denied such exemption.
In 1971 a three-judge court here in
Washington, by a 2-1 vote, performed a feat of judicial Ieger·
demain. Section 501 (C) (3) is
phrased clearly in the disjunctive : It
deals with charitable, religious "or"
educational institutions. But hocuspocus-dominocus, the court changed
"or" to read "and," thus requiring
that the Mississippi schools involved
in the case must be both charitable

Va.

STORE HOURS:

Mon.·Thurs. 9 am

Iii

9:30 pm

•FrL·Sal. 9 am Iii 10 pm
CLDSED SUNDAYS

F res!'&gt;
Sliced

BEEF LIVERS:
LB·

39~

�. .

is, Ohio-Point Pleasant·, W . Va .

Feb. 14, 1982

Feb. 14, I

Mondale considers '84 race

HARTINGER GEl'S AWARD FROM BUSH -

Gen. James V. Hartinger (far left, second row) received the Governor'• Award from VIce President
George Bush al lhe Ohio Newspaper Association's
banquet Friday night In Columbus. Hartinger, a MldcDeport native, was one ol281ndlvlduals who received
lhe award during lhe ceremony. In this photo, Bush Is
seen giving the award to Edward Jennings, current

Ohio Stale University Pl')lSident. Hartinger, a West
Point graduale whose ·experience In lhe U.S. Air
Force ranged from being combal pOol to a gunnery
lnslructor,ls presently commander-In-chief of North
American Air Defense Commlilld. ('Done&amp;-Sentlnel
photo by Robert Wingett).

Mandate said, "I've put up and I
By ALAN L. ADLER
, won't shut up. These policies are
Aasoclatetll'resll WrUer
not working as he's said they
CLEVELAND (AP) - Former
would.••
VIce President Walter F. Mondale,
Mondale said today' s economic
consi&lt;;Jertng a run for president In
1984, says his campaign would be woes result directly from Reagan's
policies and not trom the Carter
based on what the country now
administration.
needs and not what was done under
President Carter.
· "All of us who argued against the
. f!:owever, he said Friday, "I
Kemp-Rolh tax bUls last year suswould never make an attempt to
peeled this would happen," Mandisassociate myself with Jtmmy
dale said. " In the months just
Carter. No president ever treated
before last summer. the economy
his vice president better than
was behaving rather well. A lot of
Jimmy Carter treated me."
things were combining to bring
Mondale said his emphasis In a
about some good things."
president~! candidacy would not
"This (Reagan) budget vastly
be on his years with Carter.
understates lhe reality of our econ" It I were to run lor preslden~
omy. It may be an error of a magnlwhich I'm thinking about, l would
t;ude of !() percent (on the low
run on what needs to be done, not
side)," Mandate said of Reagan's
shift old sands. That's not what peoestimated $91 billion deficit.
ple want," he said.
"Experts say the deficit could be
Reacting to President Reagan's
$151 bllllon. The estimates con"put up or shut up" message to Detained within lhe budget are automocratic congressmen who atmatically taken to be a rosy
tacked the president's budget,
economic projection," he said.

Blacks .want tougher frat sanctions
CINCINNATI (AP I - Black
lejidl!rs are calling lor tougher
sanctions· against a University of
CinCinnati fraternity that has been
suspended lor a party that blacks
found offensive.
"The black community wUl not
be silent on this Issue," the Rev.
Melvin Jones. a Cincinnati minis·
ter, said Friday. "We wiU not be
satisfied with glossing over the
matter. The resolving of this problem Is of utmost Importance to us.
We wtll not go away until we are
sa tjsfled."
Some .black leaders say the
"trash party" lhrown by Sigma Alpha Epsilon was a sign of deep ra·
clal prejudice on the campus. The
fraternity chapter has received a
two-year suspension from lhe unlvel'!ilty, but some blllcks wanl a
more severe punishment.
. "It nowhere measures the degree
of Insult we have Celt," said Angelone .Iamison, acting head of the

department of Afro-American Studies. "Two years Is hardly enough
time to cha llenge a way of thinking,
let alone change lt."
Black st udents and faculty
members said Friday they would
ask university officials to Impose a
stiffer penalty, possibly disbanding
the local fraternity chapter.
The controversial party was held
.Jan. 17, the weekend of the anniversary of the birth of civil rights activist Martin Luther King .Jr.
Posters announcing the party
called It the "2nd Annual Martin
Luther King Trash Party," and
urged guests to bring Items Identified with derogatory black stereotypes - a welfare check, food
stamps, large portable stereos,
stolen hubcaps.
The fraternity has said that the
theme showed bad taste and poor
judgment. But spokesman .J.P .
Morgan, the local SAE president,
complained of "abundant negative

coverage" and "the untrue allegations which have been reported ."
Morgan said that among students, the term "trash party"
means an Impromptu gathering
and was "not a term referring to
Dr. King or blacks In any way."
He said the posters and the party
Itself "reflect Insensitivity to and
unawareness of the aspirations and
contribu Uons of blacks In general
and Dr. King In particular."
As part of the two-year suspension from all campus activities, Including lntramurals and approved
housing status, the fraternity was
told to conduct a n educattonal progra m for members on black
awareness.
"We have committed to correct
the uneducatlon we manifested,"
Morgan said.
.Jones called the administration's
decision "a pat on the wrist to the
fraternity, but a slap on the face to
the black community."

and reckless driving and leaving
the scene of an accident. He was
sentenced to 60 days In jaU, lined
$100 and lost his driving rights for
two years, according to court
records.
The suit was !tied Thursday on
behalf of Rohe and his mother,
Florence Rohe of suburban Bexlev.
Alton said Rohe has never regained consciousness. "He's comatose - his body's alive, but his
brain Is dead," Alton said , adding
that although Rohe suttered massive head Injuries, his body Is
healthy enough to support lite with·
out special equipment.
"It's not Just a matter of pulling
the plug," Alton said.

(:hief Taylor retires ...
(Continued from page' A-1 )
manpower-wise and equipment.
wise."
Taylor wouldn't comment on
any thrilling events In his time
ali chief and as an officer, but his
1\llndllng of a potentially explosive situation following the
~ath of Martin Luther King In
11)68 won praise from the ex.
student body president at Rio
C:rande College, writing some
&gt;i!art~ater.
• Mike Graham, In an essay on
student unrest at RGC during
the late '60s which appeared In
':Lamp of the Huts," J . Sherman
Porter's hislory of the college,
said a march through the city
was planned by students followlOg tl1e cl'ffi rights advocate's
murder. The then-city manager
oalled out the police. sherttt's department and highway patrol in
case of violence.
"The chief was successful In
convincing the city manager not
lo order the police to attack the
demonstrators and break up the
march," Graham wrote. "The
sense of decency and justice by
that one professional pollee ofDeer saved the city of Gallipolis
a great deal of shame and

ary. The two candidates for the
position are senior sergeants
Garland Nibert and .Joe Owen.
Taylor said his new job as a
court oftlcer will entail maintaining order In the municipal
courtroom and keeping tabs on
those placed on probation.
"The main thing Is to be honest, dedicated and fair," he said,
looking back on his career. "Especially being lair. It's something I've more or less tried to
be."

By MARIANNE McGOWAN
Assoclaled Press Writer
CLE:VELAND (AP) - Phyllis
Schlatty, outspoken foe of the Equal
Rights Amendment, drew a group
of crttlcs who dressed up In oldfas)lloned clothes and carried signs
that read: "My Home Is His Castle" aqd "Born to Breed."
About 15 members of a group calling itself Ladies Against Women
attended a City Club forum Friday
In which Mrs. Schiatty, a lawyer
and author, talked about a "genderfree society."
Her comments drew several
hisses !rom the group and Its
supporters.
"I thought we'd be in a better position to comment It we used a humorous approach," said Deborah
Van Kleel, 28, a leader of the
protest.
Mrs. Schlatty zeroed In on the
question of whether women should
be drafted for combat as the crux of
her argument against the ERA.
The fate of the amendment, which
must be ratified by six more states

()

GALLIPOLIS · Ron Bubar. executive vice-president, Jeno's Inc.,
Wellston, will be the featured
speaker for Wednesday's noon luncheon of · the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce. Bubar will
review Jeno's plans for Its new
Wellston plant which opens offl·
clally Monday.

at Po111eroy. Ohio, Post Office.

ASIIOt'i ation,

Association

and

lhc

Ncwsp11 pc r

Publi sht'nl

National

Atlvert isinf!;

MONDAY, FEB. 15TH

RCJircsent.alivc, Bran l'lalll, 17117 Wc.sl
Nine Milt: Road. Suite 204. Ottroit.

IN OBSERVANCE OF

Mit:hiMHII, 4M75 .

SUBSCRIPTION RAT&amp;~
By Carrier orMutur RiKJll'

PRESIDENT'S DAY

Ont&gt; week . .................... . $1.00
Ont• Month . . . . .
. . ..... J-4 .40

One year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

SINGLE cm~v
PRICE

. . $52.8Cl

t

35 Ct·nts

Nn subscrlpllnn.!i by
town:~ w~re

•BROGAN-WARNERING.AGENCY

pt!rlllitted in
home carrier ~crvil'c i.s

· 1:1Ytlil11ble.
Tht.• Sunday Ti mt.~ntint.' l will not bt!
n:sporudble for Mtlvant-e paymenlllmade
to c11rriers.

•V.D. EDWARDS INS.

I

Sllllday Daly
One yea r .... . ............... , . $2(l.IKJ
SlxmGnlhs .............. . ..... ttO.fO

:•DAVIS-QUICKEL INS.

•

I

'

D•lly and Sun lilly

Ohl11 and We1d VIrginia

Oncye1:1r ... . .. , .1• . ,,,,, ,, , , ,., f39.00
Six month ... , .... ........ , , ... S20.80
11lret! months . . , . , ............. Sl2.33
Rate~ OUtakh! Ohlu
11nd We•l VlriCinia
~cyearh.1 .... . ....... . ...... $44.2CI
S1xrnont .!1 ••.••• • .•••• ,,,, , ,, $23.40
Thrw months .. , , .. .... , , , .. .. 113.00

She, too, could not compete,
Like those before, both she and love
Grew old and obsol ete .
' Twas then I saw a l ift lead
In Heaven's magazine.
Does anybody down 1here wish
To buy a print mach in e?

$200,00),

Beside Rhodes and Colley, the
others who visited with Bush and
his wife Included Ohio State University President Edward Jennings,
Columbus developer John W. Galbreath, Youngstown businessman
Cornell Thayer, and Mr. and Mrs.
Gus Hoster of Columbus, the latter
described as longtime friends of the
Bushes.
Earlier this week, Colley said visits by Reagan and Bush would give
a big flnanctal boost to the state
party organization.

I t cost me all the love I had
But now the shop is mine,
To print a spec ial card each year
Called ... A Valentine ."

'

Of course, you are aware that this
is Heart Month and lhe annual radio
program to raise funds for the Meigs
Heart Fund Drive will he Wednesday over WMPO.
The program will be staged from
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Cenler on Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
Of course, talenl always is needed
for lhe annual day-long show . I( you
can take part, do contact Susie
Soulsby at !1!12-2377- and as soon as
possible so she can get the schedule
going. Don't be backward - you're
needed and it's a good cause .

by June In order to become part of
males and females In the mUitary.
the Constitution, currently Is In
"We should have a national delimbo. A federal appeals court
bate on the Issue. It (a fully Interuled the extension of the deadline
grated military) Is not what most
granted by Con&amp;ress was Ulegal. people want," she said.
The question Is now before the Su"The military Is an area In which
preme Court.
society clearly defines roles for
Mrs. SchlaDy said she opposes . men and roles for women,'' she
the Idea of drafting women and the
said. "The aggressive advocates of
use or female combat troops. but
a gender-free society are .on·the re·
she said efforts are under way to
cord for wanting women In military
break down the barriers separating
combat."

Philip Rayburn, son of Middleport's Amanda Murray, got his
vehicle hung up in snow . A man
came along and Philip thought he
was going to help. The man instead
hit him over lhe head and robbed
him. Philip ended up being treated
for a head injury . Oh - that was in
Clevela nd .
Motoyuki Nomura, P .0. Box 22 ,
O!itose, Tokyo 156, Japan, is also
looking about some Meigs County
ties.
He writes : " I am a minister of the
gospel here io Tokyo.
" I write this card with a dim but
desperate hope that someone in your
country would help me on a Miss
Carme or Carmie Hostetter who
came to Tokyo as a missionary first
in 1892 with other volunteer
missionaries such as the McCalebs ,
and Miss Lucia Scott.
"She stayed in Japan for about
five years, then returned to the
United States, attended Nashville
Bible School and Hiram College and
then came back to Japan_again in
1900. She then married a Martin
Mosser Smyser from Mechanics·
burg, Pa. ,. and did some more
missionary work in Western Japan .
They left Japan and went back to the
Eastern states and worked among
the lumberjacks for a couple of
years.
Then came back to Japan again.
Mr. Smyser stayed in Japan
deliberately during the Pacific Days

as a living testimony of Jesus Christ.
''The wife and their' daughter,
Lois, had left Japan before the war
broke up. The sacrificial work of Mr .
Smyser produced a very active
ministry of gospel in the area where
he had served for many years .
"But we have lost the whereabouts
of his wife and his daughter. "The
only clue we have is information that
she came from Chester, .Ohio. Do
you know the relatives o/ this Miss
Cannie Hostetter in your area
toda y?"
Any helpers please write to the
Tokyo minister.

HILLANDALE
GRADE A EXTRA LARGE

It' s been an informative week .
I've learned that Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Mite~ of Middleport will be observing eithe1 their 58th or 59th wedding anniversary (gotta pin down
that number) on July 3; that Vera
VanMeter had all of her family
together for the first time in 13 years
on Thanksgiving , and that if you buy
a lamp with a polarized plug on the
end of the cord, you've got big
problems. I learned that Patricia
Blakeslee Circle drops whatever
she's dping when the mail brings
The Sentinel to her home in Wichila,
Kansas, so she can find out what's
cookin' on the home front (thanks,
Patty 1; that Dr. and Mrs. Edmund
Butrimas still have such pleasant
thoughts of Meigs County even
though they 've resided in sunny
Florida for the past eight years and l
again learned that Anna Howell
Blackwood is a bright spot in the
lives of so many with that great sense of humor.
May the sun shine on your ice as
you keep smillng .. . !

,.----------------------------l

EGGS

.MEAT SPECIALS
USDA CHOICE

BEEF
RIB
GOLDEN RIPE

..

FRESH LEAN

Mildred and Gerald Shuster, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, will he observing
their 50th wedding anniversary.
l know - you 're right! They don 't
look lhat old. they were married on .
Valentine's Day in 1932 at Rutland.
I
Mrs. June Litsch, 51281 Shelby
Road, Utica, Mich., 40087, joins
many others when she writes:
"Searching for my roots . Wish to
hear from descendants of John and
Nellie Douglas, early settlers of
Meigs County.
Their children were Mary, David,
John, Jr., Elijah, Ruth , Melissa and
Lucinda. Elijah's children were

SIGALL &amp; ZINGARELLI
A nORNEYS AT LAW

$50.00 REBATE

20 LB. BAG

1982.

Regula( low price
Big Bearcat Scaooer Rebate
Your low cost

M. .

Cor P

10008010

300 E..t Covoty Lon. Ro.1
Cvmb&amp;ll•rld
-4G22'i

I"CI••,..,.

BOB'S ELECTRONICS
Ac1oss from the Silwer 8rid11e Plaza

0

1981 MIICCl

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GOLD KIST MIXED

FRYER PARTS

•NATIONWIDE INSURANCE

LB.

HALF
GALLON

10.5 oz.

ROYAL CREST

CAN

]roa$20

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oz.

$}79

1981 .MODEL
CLEARANCE
NO

BROUGHTON

REASONABLE OFFER
REFUSED

GALLON PlASTIC

15.5

CAN

HI-C
DRINKS
46 oz.
CAN

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT
COFFEE
10 oz.

79
Free. Cake

•

•

•.•·

On Valentines Day
At ,Rax Roast Beef Restaurant

99¢
49¢

CHICKEN NOODLE or
TOMATO SOUP

CHUM SALMON

,•.

59

CAMPBELL'S

TUXEDO

2926 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
. Located Between
'
· Convenient and Village Pizza

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PKG.

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Open
10 a:m. 5:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday

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f leet•• ~ny
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•

HARVEST BRAND

'

The BC-350 is the first scanner that shows you
broadcasting frequencies in plain and simple English. Por
the first time, you have the option of scanning fr equencies
by numb ers or names.
This innovation and th e Big Bearcat Scan ner Re b ate,
make th e model BC,150 tl1e s cann er t o see and hear. So
come in for a de monstrati on. Stop, Look , Liste n and Save .

19

LB.

SLICED BACON

Pick up the Beare at 350 Scanner
and tune in police, fire, emergency and
w eather broadcasts. Do it now and get' a Big tle:arc:at
Scanner Rebate between thedatesoff'eb. 1 and March 15,

GALLIPOLIS -The committee
organizing the reunion of the 1950
graduating class at Gallla
Academy High School Is seeking
addresses on II ve former
classmates.
The five are Clara Belle Dotson,
lngrtd Fisher, Wesley Pickens,
Minnie Stmmo9s and Betty Insco.
Anyone wllh lntorma tlon on their
presents wherabouts are urged to
contact Benny Broyles at 446-2071,
or Betty Null Horan at 446-1467 or

446-4550.

POTATOES

WITH

Class plans reunion

.,4/16..1701

ALL PURPOSE

BC-350

)

Columbu1, Ohio 43227

675-7514

GROUND$
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2101 5. Hamilton Road, Suite 10•

BUCK STOVES
And ·
COLONIAL CARPETS

69

BANANAS

So, today, is a day of romance and

MENTAL HEALTH &amp;
MENTAL RETARDATION WORKERS
Lay-Off an.d Job Abolishment
Free Conswltation As To Your legal Rights
Under Ohio Civil Service Law

c

DOZEN
CARTON

I

m~:~ il

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

It then was owned by Venus, a nd

to get a commitment for at least
one appearance by the president
prior to the November election.
· Reagan spoke at a GOP fundraiser In Cincinnati last month,
helping the GOP raise about

Henry, Louisa, Darius and J ohn
Dillon,"
If you historians can help Mrs. Lil·
sch would you please contact her at
.
the above address?

Lounge &amp; Carryout

Member : The Associatt.'tl Prt.oss, lnhtnd

Prcs.'i

I t once was owned by Cupid, but
Grew obsolete and old ,
As mass production her e on ear th
Claimed love into her fo ld.

FRENCH
QUARTER

THE FOLLOW! NG AREA INSURANCE
AGENCIES WILL NOT BE OPEN FOR
BUSINESS ON:

Enh•rcd us ~l.&gt;t.'Oil tl class 11\ltl!in..: mall.t.'f"

Daily

' 'I own a litt le printing shop
Between cloud s eight and nine;
I open it just once a year
To print a valenti ne.

Our license lo sell bear and wine to
go until 2:30 A.M. costs ten times
more than an 01dinary carryout permit. Bul we feel the conwenience to
you of extended shopping hour! is
well worth it. And JOII pay no
premium, because eren in the wee
hour! you buy at our regular state
minimum prices.

Jeno executive lo speak

. tliPS 525-800
A Multimedi11 Newspapt!r
Puhhsht.&gt;d ellch Sunday, ~ Third
An:uuc. by the Ohio Valley Publi!li1in~e
CmnpHny· MullirnaliH, Inc. St!t:ond d1:001
pnslu~ c p&lt;tld 1:11 Gallipolis, Ohio, 4&amp;631.

anguish~''

Taylor suffered a heart attack
at his hOme last May and didn't
return to work until the end of
August. It was lhen It was suggested he relieve himself of the
pressures of the chief's job by
taking the balll!t's position In
Judge James A. Bennett'scourt. ·
"They needed somebody lor
it, and thought l might be Interested," he said.
A civil service exam for the
chief's job is expected to be
taken In the last week of Febru-

He and laWYer Gayle E. Arnold
said they will base their arguments
on precedents established In federal courts In Ohio, Michigan and
California.
U.S. Dlstrlct .Judge ,Judge Carl
Rubin, In oases Involving the !lie at
a Cincinnati-area night club that
killed 165 people, allowed suits to be
filed against all manufacturers ol
aluminum electrical wiring as an
Industry since the exact manufacturer of the wlrtng wasn't known,
Alton said.
Although the jury decided the
wiring wasn't at fault In the fire
Alton said the precedent shows thai
an enUre Industry can be held culpable In such a suit.
The Michigan and California
cases Involved the pharmaceutical
Industry, after It was determined
that drugs taken by expectant
mothers to prevent miscarriages
often led to vaginal cancer In female offspring, Arnold said .

iunbap 'tim"- it•nlinrl

Amt·rkan

It's Valentine's Day and! hope lhe
day doesn't find you " heartless."
Jim Huffman, Sumner Road
'
Pomeroy, has
poem just ·
for us newspaper
folks.
It's clever (wish
I had · written
that).
By lhe way, Jim
and his wife have
been residents of
San Francisco for
BOB
many years, but retired to Meigs
County and love it.
I also want to mention that Mr.
and Mrs. Huffman have a tradition .
and that is - every year he writes a
Valentine's Day poem, just for her.
The one Jim ~nned for us goes -

•
ERA opponent Schafly stirs
protest

Injured ·man sues beer 'industry'
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) -Lawyers for a 29-year-old man who has
been In a coma since being struck
by a drunken driver have tiled a $20
mUllan lawsuit seeking to hold the
brewing Industry responsible.
I;awyer Jack R. Alton said the
U.S. District Court lawsuit was
flied against the Industry because It
lsn 't known what brand of beer the
driver was drinking when the accident occurred two years ago.
Alton said the driver, Wayne
Waring, admitted to pollee that he
was drunk on beer he had consu med at a tavern the night Stephen Rohe was struck while
crossing a Columbus street.
Waring pleaded guilty to drunken

A Valentine's Day poem for yo~.•.

Mondale said ways to trtm the
budget deficit are to:
-Defer or rescind the promised
personal tax cut In 1983. This would
shave an immediate S40 bUUon
from the deficit, he said.
-Approach a defense spending
buildup more gradually, Instead of
by the margins proposed.
....Close ''two or three outrageous" tax loopholes such as tax leasIng and new amendments to the
windfall all profits tax.
Mondale accused Reagan of
many things, but he said the presl·
dent bas been honest.
"He's doing what .he said · he
waul~ do ani! what nobody thought ·
·ne would," said Mondale, who Is
practicing law and teaching.
''! genuinely believe this admlnls- ·
!ration Is not conservative. I think
It's radical, abnost Darwlnlstlc In
the way It treats people In need," he
said. "There has to be a human dimension In this country's lite that
the government has to play."

\

cal," Daly said.
But Colley, who became state
chairman only three days ago, said
he talked to Bush about politics "for
about olll! minute."
In that time, the 45-year-old Colley said, "He said he would becomIng back to Ohio this year to help
our candidates."
Tbat was about It In terms of politics, the chairman said, adding "It
was an apolitical meeting."
CoUey said he also has launched
an effort to get President Reagan to
help the state party In a year when
a U.S. Senate seat and all 21 U.S.
House seats will be at stake, along
with the governor's office and all
other statewide offices.
Colley said he will be In Washington the week of Feb. 21, and will try

Pomeroy-Mi ddleport-Galli polis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Hoeflich's Beat of the Bend

Bush will help GOP candidates
Bv ROBERT E . MILLER
A!llieclntell Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Newly elected Ohio Rellublican
Chairman Michael F. CoRey has .
met with VIce President George .
Bush and extracted from 'l_tlm a
promise to help Ohio's GOP candidates In lhls year's elections.
Colley, along with Gov. James A.
Rhodes, other party notables and
guests, VIsited with the vice presl·
dent for about 20 .mlnutes In a private hotel suite Friday nlghi before
Bush addressed the annual meet·
lng o! the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Jack Daly, Rhodes' press secretary, who attended the meeting,
said his bossdldn'ttalkpolltlcswlth
the vice president. "It wasn't polltl·

.

COKE, TAB~
SPRITE,
MR. PIBB
8-16 OZ. BTLS.

$ 39
Plus

l)epOSit

JAR

FFS
FACIAL
TISSUES
200 CT. BOX

BOUNTY
TOWELS
JUMBO
ROLL

$ 89

�Page-A -6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
is, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Pa

-11· 7

Holzer Clinic Ltd. awards
three nursing scholarships
GALUPOUS - Three students of
the senior class of the Holzer
Medical Center 'School of Nursing,
Lana Bonecutter, Joanna Hayes,
· and Jana Stroth, have been awarded
the 1982 Holzer Clinic Limited An·
nual Scholarships for Student Nurses according to an announcement
by Robert E. Daniel, Clinic Ad·
ministrator.
The scholarships are presented in
memory of Mrs. /. lma V. Holzer,
wife of the late Charles E. Holzer,
Sr., M.D., founder of the original
~ olzcr Hospital, and mother of
Charles E. Flolzer, Jr ., M.D.,

President of Holzer Medical Center School ; and Miss Stroth, daughter of
Medical Still!. Students are selected Mr. and Mrs. Neil Stroth of South
to receive the scholarships based on • Webster, is a graduate of Bloom
their need and academic excellence.
Local High School.
James R. Magnussen, M.D., and
Commenting on the awards,
Daniels stated the clinic was pleased
Richard B. Simpson, M.D., members of the Executive Conunittee of to participate in the scholarship
program for the benefit of the three
Holzer Clinic, made the presenI ...
.
lations to the student nurses.·
students enrolled in' the hospital's
Miss Bonecutter, daughter of Mr. School of Nursing and to assist them
PRESENT SCHOLARSHIPS- Holzer Clinic Ltd.
Hayes, and Jaoa Strotb by Richard B. Simpson, M.D.,
in completing their nursing
nursing scholarships awards were presented ~n· three
left, and James R. Magnussen, M.D., members of the
and Mrs. Danny Bonecutter of
Gallipolis Ferry, West Virginia, is a
education.
senior nursing students, Lana Boneculler, Joanna
cllnlcexecullvecommlttee.
graduate of Point Pleasant High
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......;,------~---------------------------School ; Miss Hayes, daughter of Mr . 1
and Mrs. Francis Hayes of Zaleski,
is a graduate of Vinton County High

For some, the only assurance of
safety Is a gun In the house. For
others, a gun Is a tragedy waiting to
happen.
,Joseph Bochenek !s a handgun
opponent who would argue lor
hours wtth anyone thinking of buy·
lng a handgun for home protection.
"I don 't want anyone to have a
gun !n his home . It's as simple as
that, " sa!d Bochenek, a suburban

Wes ter n Hllls resident a nd
member of Handgun Control, ana·
tiona! group seeking handgun
leglslatldn.
Most people who buy handguns
for protect!on aren't trained adequately, he said, and many have
been shot trying to protect
themselves.
"The chances of tragedy occurring are Increased several Urnes
over the moment a person buys a
gun," he sa!d.
Bochenek's ~U-year-otd son,
Christopher, was accldent,ally shot
10 years ago while playing at the
home of a young friend who had
taken a revolver from a locked
chest. The bullet entered his spine,
leaving him unable to walk on hts
own.
. " We aU llved through It, grew
!rom It, " Bochenek said, " but I
wouldn't want to see others go
through it."
Dell Stith keeps a loaded hand·
g(m !n his bedroom to 'protect him·
self and hts family. He has never used It and hopes he never will, But
he !eels safer knowing It's there.

..

TI-E RED CROSS
•

gve

so
we can

gve
I

.supplies donated by the Twin City
Machine Shop in Pomeroy. Other
participants in the conlCilt, selected
by their instructors, Kenneth Eblin
and Richard Fetty, were John
Lyons, Troy Willis, Rodney Manley
and Charles Landers.
Bill Dernoskey was the contest
chainnan, and advisory council
membei'S judging were Bruce Cot·
terill, Mike Haley, George Wright,
and Bill Miller.

j oann's husband thanks you.
Her daughter jennife r thanks you.
And as fo r Joann, she migh t not be here today, if it weren't for
someone like you donating blood through the Red Cross.
joann needed blood fo r treatment o f a kidney disease a nd during
her kidney trJnsplant operation .
Th e need for blood never e nds. The demand is conlinuo us.
And there is no substitute.
Call Red Cross today for a blood donor appointment.
And bring a friend.
Thanks.

American

RedCl'OSIJ

LOGAN MONUMENT
CO.,
INC.
w.

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Leo C. Vaughan, Mgr.
Phone 992·2588

Main St., Vinton, oh·.
James 0. Bush, Mgr.

$ 19
.Sausage ................
USDA CHOICE
·
$ 99
Round Steak......
BALLARD'S

L!.• •

In that dally rate will be
track and stage

BIG RED CHUNK

to a falrboard spokesC"'TTl.lln. the action was taken In order
provldethe best show at tbe least
:Q:.pensilte prices for Gallla County
additional revenue gener!rom \)le action will be used to
: :n iloc,ate the present fairgrounds
o! tbe fiood plane unto higher
1!levation on property adjacent to
grounds.
:Under the new admission plan,
~i:/&lt;l.U tn exhibitors will receive a pass
· tree admissions and citizens
presenting Golden Buckeye cards
will be admitted free.
No season passes will be sold and
membership cards for the ' pri· .
vledge o! voting In the annual agrt.
cultural election will be sold at $1
each at the !air office during the
fair slated August 2·7 and up to 15
days prtor to the election.
Directors also reviewed Ideas on
the fair premium book . It was decided to publish a similar book as In
past years but to cut costs .
Announcement on fair entertain·
ment will be forthcoming following
Thursday's regular meeting at the
Ohio Valley Bank Bran~h Office on
Jackson Pike.

1-LB. ROLL or
12 OZ. LINKS

Bologna ............ ~;

MIXED

Fryer Parts .......~.

.
W1eners..~ ............

WILSON'S CORN Kl NG

12 OZ. PKG.

FLAVORITE GRADE A

Turkeys............. ~!.

Lincoln
•
dinner date
announced

Donate Blood.

Write for free brochures showing memorials in full coh•.
with sizes and prices listed.
I
·

FILES - Patrick H. O'Brien
Friday fUed his petition of candidacy te roo for tbe office of
Meigs County Court Judge.
O'Brieu is currenlly serving in
the po&amp;l by appointment fliUng
tbe unexpired term of Charles
Knlgbt wbo resigned. O'Brien is
seeldug his first six year fullterm
for tbe non-partisan judgeship.

s,,

the Gallia Council on Aging quarters
at 9 a.m. and at the Meigs County
Council on Aging quarters, Meigs
Senior Citizens Center, at I p.m.
Green Thwnb is an equal opportunity employer and all aging
people are encouraged to apply.
Anyone with questions should call
Penny Wolverton at6Joh193-5349.

REG.:si.U.OO

\

!In~IUI1ed

.

TilE WINNERS - Kenuelh EbUo, Meigs welding instructor, rigbt,
presented glfts to Jimmy Gibbs, center, flrsl place wlllller In tbe weldiug
CQUipetitlon, aud Victor Painter, secoud place wluoer.

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
P.~JC~S _IN EFFECT THROUGtt·FEB•..20. 1982

, .GAI.LIPOLIS · Directors of the
County Junlor Falrboard
.,.,H,ovP accepted reconunendatlons
Its membership committee
!fiil!&gt;cing admission at $3 per person
1tdl!fiY at the 1982 Gallla County Jun-

I

Meigs student welding winner
POMEROY - Jimmy .Gibbs was
first place winner in the district
welding competition Thursday night
at Meigs High School.
Taking second place in the contest
was Victor Painter. Gibbs will
represent Meigs High School at the
regional competition to be held at
the Eastland Vcational School on
March6 .
Both Gibbs and painter were
presented welding equipment and

Sundiy 10 am·lO pm

Fairboard
approves
$3 charge

for
those
1n
need

Will accept job applications
POMEROY - A representative of
Ohio Green Thumb, a federally subsidized program through the Department of Labor, will be accepting applications for employment in Meigs
and Gallla Counties Tuesday.
The program hires aging workers
55 and over and who are below the
poverty guidelines.
Applications will be accepted at

M.on.·Sit. 8 1111·10 pm

:.1..

Recent murder spurs
Cincinnati gun sales
CINCINNATI (AP ) -The.Janu·
ary a bduction and murder of .Jerilyn Stanfield and the recent rash
of rapes and a ttempted rapes In the
Cincinna ti area m ay be spawning a
rush In sales of handguns for home
protection.
"Our phone has been ringing off
,the hook - people calllng to ask
about the laws pertaining to guns,
where to buy them, how to use
them," said Sgt. Charles Horst·
mann, crime prevention coordlna·
tor for the Cinclnni111 Pollee
Division'.
Gun s hop oper ators report
heavier-than-usual sales of handguns during the past lew weeks.

SlORE HOURS:

GRACE UNITED
METHODIZT CHURCH
THURS.; FEB. 18NOON TO 6:00P.M.

A Pubhc S.MCI ol Thll N~r f!WI
a Th• ~d'wen••in; Covntif ~

© 'rhll Amerocan Nat101'181 Red Cross 1981

POINT PLEASANT- Plans are
being made for a Lincoln Day !!Clebratlon this month In Point Pleasant, according to Orville (Buck)
Sturgeon, Mason County executive
committee chairman.
The affair will begin with a
dinner at 6: ~ p.m. next Saturday,
at the American Legion Post 23
Hall on Second Street. A dance will
follow at 9 p.m. with music to be
provided by the musical group
Showdown.
Those attending are asked to
bring a covered dish. Ham and
chicken will be provided by the
GOP committee to complete the
menu.
· Tickets are on sale !rom commit·
tee members at $5 each and may
also be purchased at the door. A
Umlted numbe{ of tickets are
available.

PAR KAY

POMEROY- A breaking and en·
terlng or the Wilbur Dalley hOme on
County Road 10 near CBIPI!nl!'r has
been solved and antiques taken
from the home have been ·
recovered.
.
According to the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, 27-year-(Jid
Rodney Dwaine Jordan, Route 4,
Pomeroy, has been arrested and
appeared In the common pleas
court on a bill or tnfonnatloncharg·
lng hlm with breaking and
entering.
·
Judge John C. Bacon ordered a
pre-sentence Investigation then ordered Jordan released on his own
recognizance pendlllg the parole of· ·
!leer's tnveSiigatlon. Jordan was
aiTeSied
night by Sherift James J. Pr01rtt and Capt. Robert Beegle.

I

$

Margarine ....... !~.
DIET 0~ REGULARs PACK, 16 oz. sns.$

Peps1-Cola &amp;Mt. Dew••

Confession given
antiques recovered

wedi1escla¥

Bananas ........... :~·.

SAN GIORGIO

s

.

19
29 Chocolate Drink ..

GALLON
I

69¢

Limit One Per Customer
. Good Only a.t PO\Oielll's
Offer Ewnlr...

GALLON$

MR. P. FROZEN

ett1•••••••••••

CLOROX BLEACH

KOKO TIME

Pizza ............... .~~~~·.

LB. BAG

'

GOLD MEDAL

HYLAND CHUNK

FLOUR .

DOG FOOD

SUGAR

25 LB.
BAG

5-LB.

5-LB.
BAG

89¢ ·

Limit One Per Custome.
GoOd Only at Powell's
Offer 1[1
Feb. 20, 19&amp;2 :

$329

Li111if 011e Per Custom er
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
ll'eb. 20, 1982

••

FLAVORITE

BAG

$139

�I

'age-A·8-TI1e Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis,

•

Ohi~Point

Pleasant, W.Va.

•

Feb. 14, 1982

.

the ri' er

Health commissioners announce gas value recall plan
POMEROY - Selim J. Blazewicz,
MD, health corrunissioner of the
Meigs County Health Department in
cooperation with John H. Ackerman,
M.D., director of health has announced the recall of more !han
100,000 gal control valves used in
heating appliances fueled by LP
(Liquid Propane) gas because they
may create an explosion hazard.
CPSC staff are continuing to in·
vestigalb the use of 2.5 million of the
same gas control valve in heating
appliances fueled by natural gas to
determine whether a similar explosion hazard is presented. These
gas control valves were manufactured in 1972.
CPSC has been informed of 28 explosion incidents involving LP
fueled appliances which have occurred since February 1972, in which
Honeywell valves, which are a component in an overall furnace system
were present. These incidents
resulted in five deaths and 21 injuries.
The valves being recalled were
manufactured from 1966 through
J972 and distributed to a variety of
manufacturers for use on their LP
fueled heating appliances which
were prin cipally central furnaces,
but also bliRers, unit heaters, conversion burnJ. and space heaters.
The recail is being conducted
voluntarily by the manufacturer of
the valves, Honeywell, Inc., Min·
neapolis, Minnesota.
The combination valves serve the
dual purpose of regulating the gas
supplied to the appliance and of
shutting off the ~as supply when the
pilot light is edlnguished.

In a number of these incidents, it
is alleged that the valve may ,have
failed' allowin~ LP ~as to leak.
Because LP gas, unlike natural gas,
is heavier than air, it may accumulate near the Ooor. If the gas is
exposed to an ignition source such as
electric sparks or matches, an explosion may occur causing property
damage and personal injury.
· The recall pertains to combination
gas control valves which bear one of
the following model numbers and
were used in LP fueled heating appliances : Cil33, C5134, CS5133,
CS5134, V4136, V4146, V51J8, V5189,
V7284, V8129, V8136, V8139, V8146,
VS8133, VS8138, and VS8141.
Consumers should exercise
caution when attempting to locate
the valve and its model number
which is located on the side of the
gas valve. To locate the valve, consumers may have to remove the access panel on the front of their
heating appliance.
If any odor of leaking gas is
present, consumers should not attempt to locate the valve, but should
instead, 'immediately contact their
gas supplier for assistance.
When looking for the valve and
model number, consumers should be
careful not to use matches or any
other ignition sources which could
cause any accumulated gas to explode.

Honeywell voluntarily initiated
the gas valve recall in March 1980,
and have contacted LP gas suppliers
nationwide , who in turn have contacted LP gas users .
Consumers who own one of these
valves should contact immediately

their LP gas supplier or !he nearest
Honeywell Residential Office to

ber should contact their local LP gas
supplier or Honeywell.

arrange to have a new control valve ·
Anyone who has difficulty locating
installed free-of-cha~ge .
' the control valve or its model num-

south of Ohio 160, a til: 20 a.m. Fri·
day. Tjte.-attldent caused slight
damage to Mays' car and moderate to the .Justice auto, and no citation was Issued.
A vehicle driven by Nora E. Lu·
cas, 34. Rt. 4, GalUpolls, attempted
to pass a another vehicle driven by
Anna .J. Shane, 38, Gallipolis, while
southbound on Bob McCormack
Road at 1:15 p.m. Friday. Both veh·
lcles colUded when Shane made a
left tum, causing slight damage to
both cars.
The patrol said Sherr! A. Davis,
20, Rio Grande, was southbound on
7 near the SUve.r Bridge at 12: ll
a.m. Saturday when she lost con·
trol of her veWcle on a snowcovered road, went off the right
side of the road and struck a sign.
Her vehicle was sllghtly damaged.
A vehicle ·driven by Timothy E.
Gillespie, 22, Galllpolls, also lost
control on a curve on Ohio 588 at
1:15 a.m. Saturday and drove Into a
ditch. The accident did moderate
damage to GU!esple's vehicle.

3-Pc. Fish Dinner
Special $2.69
Good only at:

SILVER BRIDGE
SHOPPING PLAZA

'

r-, 1 ~ ws
1----h!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

SUNDAY·
MONDAY

~Rf\u\Of
pr-,NI ~\-lOSt

(lOOJ_(lOl)
Our Reg . 5.96

(1

Our Reg . 3.77·3.97

Our Reg . 1.47·1.68

gge

$3

Misses' Polyester Pants
Double knit in c lassic
styles. Wa istband trim.

2.97

Limit
Pr. 2
Save! L'eggs · Panty Hose
Regular. sheer. quee n size:
o f ny lo n in basic colo rs.

•· .. ,
• itir""
:~--.···

Cinnamon
Crisp

A MESSAGE FROM TlfE BIBLE••.•

THE CHURCH - THE BODY
By William B. Kughn
Our Reg. 19.97

17.99

10.87
-3.00

Sale Price
Less Factory
Rebate

(105)

Men's L.C .D. Chronograph
Black quartz. 8-digit dis·
stop watch func tion.

Our Reg. 1.37

1.07

12.97(106)

3 97

(108)

•

';..:~,'

0u(rl~~~

\ I

'

7

•
6.58
Pyrex"' Mixing Bowl Set
1. Ph . 2112-qt. gloss bowls.

~

Our Reg. 5.97

gge

nm

· 0\'r Reg . 1.68
16·oz. • Liquid Woollle"'
For a ll iine washables.

3.97

Sold
in 5p(xting

GoodsDeotc
VInyl Jogging Suit for Men
Vinyl with elastic neck
waistband, cuffs and
ankles .
0

Save35%
Sale Price

F or Free B lb le Correspondence Course Wri te .. .

.

. ., ~{&lt;

l
I· .

1

I

:Ifill

~huteh

of

68.88

~lw41 '

BulalliUe Road • P.O. Box 308
r..ALLIPOLIS. OHIO 4563t

'

• ne cuurclt wltll tlt&lt;l-~ge·•

..

-

Our Reg. 19.88

12.88

Automotive
Digital Quartz Clock
12-voll clock w ith
flashing hours. minutes and seconds.

WNnttdly

Evtfling
7: Ofl

R•dla ·
'' Meu•tt f ront,
ll'lt Bible"
D•lly·WJEH
H:SSAM

Feb. 14, 1982

HAPPY
VALENTINE'$ DAY

Each dinner includes 3 crispy fish
fillets, golden fryes, fresh cole slaw
and 2 hushpuppies.

r.

so that we might understand th e nature, organiza tion and work
of the church, Christ co mpares His church to that of the physical
body . The scr iptures clearly teac h that the church and the body are
the sa me . Paul, in his epistle to the saints at Corinth, spoke of them as
"the church of God" (I Cor . 1:2). fu rther declar ing, " Now ve are the
body of Christ" t l cor . 12 :27) . He uses church and body in·
terchangeably . Paul proc la ims the same truth to the brethren at
Ephesu5 and Cotosse (Eph. 1:22. 23; 5 :22. 23; Col. I : 18.241 .
.
As the physical body has many members and eac h member ha~ 1f s
own work , so it is w ith th e church . Christians, the called -out bapttzed
believers, consti tute this spiritual body of Christ, the church : ' ' Now ye
are the body of Christ, and members in particular" (I Cor . 12 :27) ; " ...
and gave him to be the head over all things to the church, Which is his
body ... " (Eph. 1:22, 231; and "For the perfecting of the saints, for the
work of the m ini stry, for theedifyng of the body ol Christ" CEph . 4: 12) .
The body (church) is not then one member (Christian) , but has many
m embers (Christians) with each one doing his individual work" (I
cor . 12 : 1.4· 18) . No member (Christian) can say to another. ' 'I have no
need of you," ( 1 Cor. 12:21), for eac h member (Christian) is an essen·
tial part of t he body ( I Cor . 12 :22). When one m~mber is missing or
ina ctive. the body is crippled.
Remember, th e body Cchurch) is one, being tempered together by
God," ... but God hath tem pered the body together .. " (I Cor. 12 :24) .
There shou ld be no divisions in the church (I cor . I : 10· 13) . Here 1S
.proof that the chu r ch is not a universa l body, made up of all religious
organizations, for the body in I Corinthians 12 is a united body, not
being warped nor twi sted by different creeds nor doctrines.
Christ is 1he Head of the church (Col . 1: 181 . His body ( Eph. 5 :23).
Hi s being the Head, the church is subject unto H im (Ep~ . 5 : 2~) . All
things having been put under His feet (Eph. 1:22, 23), g1ve H•m a ll
authority in the church .
.
Christ has only one body IRm . 12 :4,5, Eph. 4:41 . The body be'"g
tt'l e church ( Eph . 1:22, 23); therefore, there is one church (I Cor. 12 : 12,
13) . 11 was th e church (body) Christ promised to bu ild (Mil. 16 : 181. As
there is ONE Spirit, ONE Lord, and ONE God, so there IS but ONE
body . In light of the scriptures, this is the sum : There is on.e ~hurch,
Christ is its Head! He has all authority over the church, and 1t IS made
up ot a ca lled ·out bao tiz ed believers .
. 1

Section~

· Thru February 20, 1982

OSP cites youth
following mishap
GALLIPOLIS - A Cheshire
youth was cited In a two-vehicle accident on McCully Road near Ohlo7
In GalUa County Friday afternoon,
according to the Gallla-Melgs Post
of the state highway patrol.
The patrol said a vehicle driven
by .Jeffrey L. Gardner, 18, lost control while westbound at ~: 20 p.m.
and sideswiped an eastbound auto
driven by Patricia S. Shepherd, 20,
Gallipolis.
; Gardner's vehicle was slightly
damaged and there was moderate
damage to the Shepherd car.
Gardner was cited for !allure to
yield.
The patrol was kept busy Investigating a series of minor accidents
In the Gallla area Friday and
Saturday.
· Troopers said a northbound vehl·
cle driven by Denver Mays, 42. Rt.
2, Vtnton, collided with a south·
bound vehicle driven by .Joseph W.
.Justice, 51, Rt. 1, Bidwell. on a
curve while travelling on Morgan
Twp. Rd. ~0. four-tenths of a mile

_,

• Bo11ery lne~ed

MeiOIIIC lhOOIOIG 510 more

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD . GALLIPO LIS
•

TRADmONAL-Mrs. Jean WID, lop left, Pomei'O)', looboverihe
valenllnes at Elberfeld's In Pomei'O)'. The "nwnber" iihe holds sold
lor S3. CANDY-Dee Simms, lop rtpt, of Swlllher-Loltae Pharmacy,
llhow8 a sampllnc of chocolates offered lor Valentine'• Day. The
amaD one-haH pound box sold lor S:UII while ihe tarce 11tree pouad
box sold lor 8.118. JEWELRY-MrL Clarice Krautter, above left, or
K. ADd C. .Jewelry tlhpiAJia just a smaD part of 1be hearHhaped
valentine Jewelry offered ddt! year. Prices ranced lnJm 110 to 1500.
FLOWERS-Mn. Vera Van Meier, above rflht, of Pctmei'O)' Flower
Shop, dl8play. a pa&amp;qplly diBtrtbuled valentine IIITIIItp!menil container ueed acre~~~~ lbe nation 111111 year lor the "lovebird bouquet,"
MJU1e of p., It features Ileana and lovebirds.

I

By BOB HOEFUCH
nme&amp;&amp;nllnel Staff
"Be My Valentine."
That's the message of the day and
it's dem near -Impossible to count the
ways to answer the pertinent question,
"How do I Jove thee7" with so many offerings on the market.
Racks of valentines, chocolates in
elaborate wrappings, nower shop windows with attractive decorations
beckoning you to stop in and a variety
of heart-shaped jewelry, just made for
your expression of love, have been
enough to frustrate the most traditional
observer of today.
You not only have had to have heart
to observe Valentine's Day in 1982, but
you probably found that a substantial
supply of cash came in handy.
How the whole valentine cycle got
its start is vague and legend for the
most part, but someone way bsck who
certainly had a good eye for business.
You may have chosen to show your
love on this day via the traditional
valentine. Would you believe that some
200 milllon valentines pour throug'h the
postal system each year? This doesn't
count many that are bought just to accompany some sort of gift.
The earliest commercial valentine•
appeared around 1800 and were artistic
pieces trimmed in lace, satin and ribb'm and contained tender Jove
messages. Those sentimenal "old
timers" fetch a hefty sum at auction
sales these days.
Yesteryear's valentines have been
modernized. The lace and satin"for the
most part have disappeared and while
the tender Jove message may still be
there, some other messages today
aren't all that tender.
In the Big Bend area, the least oxpensive valentine you could find this
year In the card racks was 25 cents. The
25 "center," however, probably left a
great deal to be desired but you found
that for up to $3 you could say it well.
Chocolates, of course, arc the most
popular of Valentine 's Day offerings.
It's the heart-shaped box thai gets 'em.
Local merchants offered 8 one-half
pounder In a cardboard heart-shaped
boxfor $2.45.
While it has been pretty well
established that there is a recession, 8
depression, or whatever you wi•h to
call it this year, it is surprising t one
· store reported the supply of elaborate
five pound boxes of chocolates- selliJlg
at $47.50 - was exhausted a week ago.
However, there was still an adequate
supply of smaller goodies on hand like three pounders selling for $29.95.
Great boxes! Perhaps, you chose to go
the jewelry route this year. Companies
produced great heart-shaped jewelry
which meant that you really couldn't go
wrong. One Pomeroy store offered the
so appropriate jewelry In a range from
$10 for a simple piece to a diamond
bedecked heart selling for around $500.
And - last but not least - for the
traditionalists' observance of the day Dowers. Attesting to the fact that
Valentine's Day is a successful commercial venture was the production or
. special containers - jazzed up with
lovebird. and hearts - to help in the
promotion of selling nowers for the ~
servance. These containers were used
by norista acrottS the nation.
Prices on one such cootainer
featured in a Pomeroy shop started at
$17.50 and ran upward depending on
whether the purchaser wished more
Dowers included or more expensive
nowers than those recommended for
the container.
So, these are just a few of the many
alternatives you could have used today to say:
·"Be MyValenun·e."
However, If you did slip up and
forgot to do anything at all about "hearta and nower'!l" day, you still have time
to get verbal and let go with a big, " !
LOVE YOU."
You probably will find that's good
too!

�Pomerov-Middleport- GallipOiis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. va .

Feb. 14, 1982

Feb. 14, 1982

College plans to sponsor five
workshops for area businessmen

Po

Sunday/People
Time out for tennis
'

MADRID, Spain tAP) - Secreta~?" ol State Alexander Halg , accustomed to tense diplomatic meetings with heads of States, had a conlron·
tatlon of a gentler sort when he played tennis with tonner Wimbledon
champion Manuel Santallli of Spain.
Ofllclals Said the doubles match Monday pitted Halg and Santana
against Brazilian tennis player Edison Mandarino and John Bligh,
cpmmerctal attache ol the U.S. Embassy In Madrid.
O!liclals decUned to give the final score of the match, played at the

RIO GRANDE - The ContinUing Financing Business: External and Columbus; Margaret Thomas,
Education Office at Rio Grande Internal Sources, Presenters : issues, director of career placement,
College and Community College and Robert Baker Jr., internal sources Rio Grande' College and Community.
the Small Business Administration president, Venture Sources of CpUege; Sharon Wilkin, skills,
have scheduled five workshops for Colwnbus; Jim Williams, external senior vice-president of Consumer
area businessm~ starting Feb. 25.
sources, president, Southern Ohio Retail Division , HameroffThe workshops are open to the Division, Central Trust Company Mllenthal, Inc., of Columbus, May 8;
public for a $30 reglstratlOQ fee for NA of Gallipolis, March 25. Topic : Topic: Personal Investing: Securing
each seminar. The registration fee Economic Recovery Tax Acto! 1981, ' the Future, Presenter: Robert
includes a bullet lunch, refresh- Presenter: Ronald F. Quillin and an Jackson, registered representative,
ments during break periods and Assistant, Groner, Boyle and Quillin Parker-HW!ter Inv~ent Firm of
workmaterials.
' of Colwnblls, April 29; Topic: Parkersburg, May 13.
For additional infonnation on any
Anyone wl:u registers for all five Wor;nen In Management: Issues,
of
the workshops, contact Rio Granworkshops in advance will receive -ii Skills and Goals, Presenters: Connie
de
College at (614) 24:).6353,
reduction in fee to $125.
Spruill,' gpals, founder, owner and
The sessions will run from 8:30 president, Ohio Forest Products of
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each of lhe r;;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;~
~goaled days in the E. E. Davis
Technical Cereers Center on the Rio
Grande campus. Free parking is
available.
Participants will be awarded 0.7
.
CEU upon completion of each
workshop.
· Following is a list of workshop
dates, topics and presenters: Topic:
CeshFlow, Presenter: Doug Sweazy
ALL TRADE-INS ON MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
of the Small Business Ad·
THIS
AREA.
ministration, Feb. 25.; Topic:
1971BELMOIITI2a65 , ... .. ...... . , .... .. ... . . ..... $7,395
Rise in ro,nance
1972 BAROII, 121&amp;0, CEIITRAL AIR . .. . . . . ... . .... .. .... . $7,395
1976 OAKWOOD 12a52, furnishlll with central iir coodilioning ..... $7,395
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - .
1967 ELCONA 10150 WITlt TIP-OUT IN LIVING ROOM . ...... . , . . $3,450
Hard times will have little effect 1\11
soli hearts this year, predicts 1~
ASK AIIOUT THESE HOMES AT OUR
greeting-card Industry in antlclpa:
IIELPRI LOT
lion ol a ~ percent Increase In the
1973 SHENANDOAH 12a60 .. ............ ... .......... $5,500
sale ol1982 Valentlne' s Day cards.
1970 BUDDY 12152 .. . . . ... . _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,495
The annual holiday for romantics
Is the No. 2 card-sending occasion
In this country.
A-pproximately !OJ million Valen·
lines are exchanged by Americans
llOO E. MAIN ST. ,
POMEROY, DIIIO;
each year, three-quarters ol them
. 992-7034
purchased by juvenUes, according
to Hallmark.

Real Madrid Soccer Club.
Halg was in Madrid to attend the European Security Conference.

Ten years after
UNITED NATIONS tAP ) - Fonner Beatie George Harrison hils
been awarded an honorary citation for something he did 10 years agopromote and perform In the "Concert for Bangladesh" in New York.
The conrert Aug. 1, 1971 was designed to help
Banglades~ through UNI·CEF, the United Natlo~
Children's Fund.
' Sales of the concert tickets and~ albums over
the past decade have raised $10,750,001 for UNICE.F .
Hugh Downs, chairman of the U.S. Committee tor
UNICEF, recently announced HarrisOn's citation.

LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN,
PRE-OWNED
.

.

·MOBILE HOMES

Uniting ·of guilds subject of protest
HOLLYWOOD (AP,) - A plan promoted by Screen Actors Guild
leader Ed Asner to imlte SAG with the Screen Extras Guild was the
subject of a protest by about 500actors, including Charlton Heston and
. Robert Conrad.
The actors who picketed outside the SAG building Monday night
claimed the merger will not help actors or extras and will hurt stunt
men.
Asner, star of television's "Lou Grant," emerged !rom the SAG
building where he_)llaS attending the weekly board meeting to talk with
the protesters about the proposal. ·
The measure, Which will be submitted to a vote sbon, ''would upgrade
the extra to an actor's status," Asner said.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES :

"

MIME ·- Gregg Golston will perform a mime program at the annual dinner meeting of the French
-Art Colony Feb. 25.

perform for FAC

..

i • •

: : GALLI PO !.IS - Nationally. : known Gregg Golston will present a
: mime program. at the annual dinner
: Jlleeting of the French Art Colony,
• • Gallipolis, on the evening of Feb. 25
:: at the Down Under Restaurant.
· : ; · ' i Even in his stillness, there is a
: striking beauty with an intensity of
.: iceling. There is a simplistic beauty
. ~ ln his movement, whether ll be a

: • :Wafting hand under a lone light or
•1 tbe poetic rippling of his feet, " one
: • critic . wrote of a Golston per-·
.: fonnance,
: • :From a background in metal
: il~uipturc and commercial art,
: Pre~g Golston began hi&gt; studi of
·: nlime with Richard Shepard in
: liollywood at a~e 18. By the time he

: Rio
Grande's
.
:~ :~nrollment up

was 21 he had written, directed and
produced three of his own solo ·
snows, each IIUide up of entirely new
materiaL
By this lime, he had built the Salt
Lake Mime audience so that he
could expect a head count of 900 at
hisshows.
·
Golston had pursued mir,ne as a
serious art fonn . He has dedicated
his career to the esta bllslunent. of
mime in the art world as having
equal status with that of ballet, symphony and opera. Those who r.,,,e
seen him perfonn 11gree that if
should be there.
He established the Gregg Golston
School for mimes which last year
became part of the Kenyon Festival
Theatre in Gambier, Ohio. He was ·

judged best performing mirne at the
Masters in Mime Exhibition in
Chula Vista, Celif., in 1978 by four
judges chosen from the top mimes in
Los Angeles.
Mter Golston's first nine-month
perfonning artist residency in the
Uma school system, they have
asked him back for another year to
spread mime from the schools to the
community.
At age 25, he is the• youngest of
lhlise who have made lito the top on
the mime world.
Reservations are $11 per person
and must be in by noon Feb. 18. For
more information or to make reser·
vations, call Jerry Skaggs at ~
3834.
.

,.(

~

,;
:
·

::RIO GRANDE - The number uf
students accepted at Rio Grande
~liege
and Community College has
'
dpubled from the same time last
year, according to. statistics
r~leased recently by DeanS. Brown,
director of admissions and records.
• Brown said that 98 students had
;bt.&gt;en accepted to enroll at Rio Gran·de so far this year compared to SO at
:the same lime last year. He said the
:largest increase in acceptances has
'been in the area of commuter
:females where 26 students have been
:accepted so far this year compared
'to six a year ago.
· According to the statistics, 25
:resident males, 42 resident females,
Jive conunuler males and 26 corn·
"Jnuter females, four crmnuter males
&lt;~ nd six commuter females had been
:accepted.
· Overall enrollment a~ Rio Grande
'c ollege and Corrununily College
'stands at

-2811

~

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Fashion' stitches lor
merdlng, sewing
elaBiic, blind hemming,
ovefedging and
decorative sewing.
Built-In but10nh01er.
Easy to retl'IO'Je and
replace lront drop-ln
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1 ' II

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THE HEW
'I
Hotpoint gives value a new me~ni~g.

FEATURES &amp; PRICE mak!l Ita value to begm w1th.
QUALITY &amp; SERVICE make it a value that lasts.

LOS ANGEU:S (AP) - Former anti-war activist Torn Hayden
launched his campaign for a seat to the Legislature by declaring It Is
time lor "a new generation a! leadership" In ~J!w~~;-.._,...:,
At a lavish lund·ralslng dinner at the Century Plaza
hotel Wednesday, Hayden attacked President Rea·
gan's "new federalism" as a doctrine "whiCh contains a very dangerous sanction of selfishnesS that
will he a disaster for our people."
Hayden said the state capitol in Sacramento "wiU
become a major battleground of the '10!" over resist·
ance to Reaganomics.
"I hope to be part of a statewide progressive coalltlon that brings a
; ; new generation otleadersptp to Sacramento and forges a clear altema·
• • tive to the Republicans and the right wing," Hayden said.
Hayden, a Detncx;rat, was a member of the Chicago Seven and Is the
husband ol actress Jane Fonda.

•,, Carter says party will regain strength
•.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - .FormerPresldentJtmmyCertermade
;' · a brief appearance at country singer Tom T. Hall's home to plug leUow
•I Democrat Jim Sasser's bid lor re-election to the U.S. Senate from
Tennessee.
.
Friday night's reception.was followed by a $1.25 per-person Vq.Jentlne's Day dinner-dance at the Opryland Hotel.
carter, his wife, Rosatynn, and Tennesee's Democratic leaders
joliled Hall and his wUe, Dixie, In greeting more than 1,,001 people at the
$500-per-rouple reception ro~ Sasser.
carter made no formai remarks, but told a reporter that Democrats
"will get our strength back' in the faU elections.

.•

$50 DISCOUNT ·

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP)- FonnerPresldentRichardNixonand
his wUe, Pat, are spending a week In the Montego Bay resort area on
ihls Ceribbean nntlon's northern coast
The Nlxons anived Thursday under light security.
In a brief airport Interview, Nixon said he and his wile were in
· . · Jamaica "for relaxaUon and to enjoy the water and the beaches."
Nixon said he has "confidence In what the prime minister Is doing lor
•
· ; . Jamaica" and said "under hls government, Jamaica ·has a great
: : future ."

.. ,.

~aok ol

' • •tnttr CO"''**f

115 W. 2nd

REE
.·coOKWARE SET

Pomeroy, OH.

Servin1 Meip &amp; Gallia Co.
As Y011r Singer ApprcM!d De1ltr

L-::=::...1 ~zne~~·r••

.WITH MICROWAVE OVENI
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ALL
NEW
LaSALLE
FEATURING DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIAlS, SOUP .OF THE DAY,
MONDAY-BEEF NOODLE
' TUESDAY-P~ SOUP
WEDNESDAY-SPffiEAL
THURSDAY-cELERY
FRIDAY-lEAN &amp; HAM
SATURDAY.:_FRENCH ONION

CARRY-OUT AND

.

•••••••••••••••••• ••·••ILOUNGI,•.e••••••••••••••••
5-7

(POSITIVE ID REQUIRED)
(21 YEARS OLD)

FREE HORS D'OEUVRES

........................•..•. HOTEL·····························~

·ROJtiS BY DAY, WEEK AND MONTH
137 N. 2nd, MIDDLEPORT'
992-9917

.
..•
.l

:

STARTS AS AVALUE
••• STAYS AVALUE!

LIVE MUSIC
MON. &amp; WED.

~

$50 DISCOUNt

PONJEROY LANDMARK

Flllurlnc
VAN JOHNSON

..FRI.Iiid.SAr:··
9-1

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Drive a IIHie and save a lot-Free delivery within 75 miles
Yes, we service at your local Hotpoint Deater
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30. Mill Cll!'ecl atH 5:00 P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallla and Mason Counties

From Alhens: IMWS &amp; DEE
Vtlcllill .. Orpil
fiiiUrill

••
•••

••

8:30 - 12:30
LONE WOLF BAND

.

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IKE LAIIOIIUM On Gaillr

•
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NEW YORK (AP) - Annual
heating and cooUng costs for new
houses before they are even built
will be available,to consumers this
'sprtng, according to a building·
materials manulacturer.
The Energy Performance IJe.
sign System, a workbook and com·
puler program, will allow builders
to measure the energy perfor·
mance of any new home design, ac·
cording to Owens-Corning
Fiberglas Corp., developer ol the
system.
It will determine the numher of
potential "energy units" a home
may consume in a year, taking Into
consideration the lllestyle of a typl·
callamlly of four.
These energy units can be trans·
Ia ted into kllowatt hours, cubtc feet
of gas or gallons of fuel oil, and then
Into dollars and cents using local
uWfty rates. The company cautions
homebuyers, however, that the fl.
nal
should not be considered
an

SWIMMING
POOLS
PORTABlE SPAS FITS
·

'

MOST ANY ROOM
For Your Winter Need
Call 304·429-4788

r~G~a~ll~ipo~l~is~.;;;;;;;;;~~==~~~~~~~~

ASK US FOR
DETAILS
•
GARLANDM.
DAVIS
S12

sec . Ave.

446-1235
Home PHone
J88·9691

•
MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
fr•lmul Lifl b11m1"t1
Home Offlu - lock IJland, IIIIMI1

by 8trideRit~

That's right. Strawberry Shortcake'" Is here. We've just re·
calved a oow shipment of SlrawberTV Shortcake sneakers
and sandals and we wonted you to know oboUI nas early
os posslble. These sneakers and sandals . · "'~,
ore so cute lha1 you'll wont to rush right
·~
In to OlJ' store. So come on In while
lherll's still a large selection and you'll
know why she says: 'Ue Is Delicious".

Call For Our Perm. Special
A new hair style can do wonders for .

your appearance ... ana lor your selfconfidence. Come see what we can do
for you!
For A Flattering New Cut, Perm, Styling
or Color, Try Our Hair Prost Call Us Now!

TOP.OF ffiE STAIRS BEAUTY STUDIO
PH. 992-6720
"Over Top of Dol'- General Storo In Pomeroy"

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

..••
•

EAR, NOSE &amp; lHROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

••

•
'••
l

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

·-- ··-...............................
• ·OIIIP.MI.....,.MM •

+

..

•....... ,....... It!

217 Upper River Road ·

.Office Houn by Appointment Only

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

llui1W04

Captain D'l.

••••••••••••••••••
............ ....
..

~

~~ecatulria.,......aa

I

•

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

\

RETAIL

'TRADE IN ALLOWANCE

Energy measurements

SAVE MONEY!

••

:t

Phannacy of Middleport, Avon
Products, Powell's Super Valu, G&amp;J
Auto Parts, The Deily Sen~inel ,
Meigs Inn, Marguerite Shoe Shop,
Kroger of Pomeroy, Kentucky Fried
Chicken of Belpre, and Wendy's of

""'-olf'llu. •

.

•

PH. H2·"17

DRAFT BEER A111 D A
, LL
.
n ~ ,
LEGAL BEVERAGES

..• ..

.•••' •.

•
7
•
Cycle.
dishwasher t1 Par.
.washer w1th Power-Scrub l!o cycle 1111
Energy-saver dry cycle II Revers ible
color fronr s Ill . Short Wash cycle II
Crystal Clear™ rinse diSpenser Ill sor.
load d•sposer g So und rnsulali on. .

two credits
credits for
from
study
four
lhe classroom
D. E. programand two credits from the em·
ployment experiences at the
training session.
D. E. Is a program of cooperation
between the business community
am! the hi~ h school. Students attend
classes at Meigs High School in the
morning and are excused at l1: 45
a.m. to go to their training stations.
The participation of area merchants is.vital to the D. E. Program.
Those merchants involved in the D.
E. Program this year are Vaughan's
Cardinal, Dutton Drug Co., Village

:· ~:;Se::ag;a;d;~~~his~s~la~Y·~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~l

.••

$50 DISCOUNT

SOUP-OF-THE-DAY

MONDAY -HAM STEAK ' .
TUESDAY- BEEF STROGANOFF '
WEDNESDAY-RIGAnONI
THURSDAY-TURKEY LEG
FRIDAY- BAKED FISH
SATURDAY - BAR·B-QUED RIBS :

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tm 13.8

cu. ft. fresh food capacity
5.2 cu. ft. freezer
sec tion &amp;il Reversible doors 13 Rugged Trilon II
door and cabinet liner m Rolls-out-on' wheels.

SANDWICHES, SIDE ORDERS AND DESSERTS
'CHEF-DWIGHT BURTON

$250

r~frigerator-freezer

The subject area discussed in D.
E . classroom are personal salemanship, advertising, merchandise
display, business, management,
business communications and
business law. Each student receives

Nixon said he has n'o· plans to meet with Prime Minister Edward

r'

AT THE

POMEROY
Distributive
Education is one of the 11 vocational
programs offered to the high school
· students of Meigs County.
Students from all thr~e high
schools in the county, Eastern,
Southern, and Meigs, may attend the
vocational programs offered at
Meigs High School.
The D. E. program combined
work and study for students who are
interested in developing a career In
merchandising,
marketing,
manag~ment, ' business administratioar or service occupations.
The program offers preparation for
initial employment, skills for advancement in a chosen occupation,
and preparation for entry into
technical schools or colleges in the
field of business administration if
students chose to further their
. education.

Nixon vacations on Caribbean

II Deluxe microwave with large 1.3 cu.· ·
ft. capacity a Solid-state touch controls II 1o Power levels plus defrost
cycle Ill Cooks ,fast by t1me or temperature Ill Quick-set control for popular foods a Double-Duty™ shelf D
Black glass front

THE FABRIC SHOP

DE combines education

BOSTON (AP) - Mildred F. Jefferson, an anti-abortion activist,
says she will run for the U.S. Senate seat held bySen.EdwardKennedy.
She Is the second Republican to announce for Kennedy's seat. Busl·
nessman Raymond Shamle entered the race several month&amp; ago, _
Speaking to about 100 people at a Faneull Hall rally Friday, she asked"
the crowd to work together "to build lor the kind ol America that
President Reagan dreams of, that I dream of and we all dream of."

t

CLEARANCE
SALE
CONTINUES

VIcky DeBord Is a seolor at Meigs High Sch110l ~oiled In lbe
Education progi'am. Her trainlfig statloD Ia at DnUua
Drug Company, Mllldleport, ·.vhere she recelvet~ experience In merebandlslog.
'
Dllltrlbutlv~

Says will challenge Kennedy

'•

NEW SPRING FABRICS NOW IN STOCK

•'

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-t+o1:furi..nJ:

PAUL DAILY AND YVONNE SCALLY INVITE
YOU TO HAVE LUNCH IN THE LOBBY

DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS

m L~rge capacity washer with2 agl- .
tators for gentle or rugged loads Ill 2
Was~/Spin Speed combinations 1m 3
Wash / Rinse temperatures Ill Matching
dryer with up to 70 minute tim'ed cycle
m Auto'matic Sensi-DryTM dryness
control Cycle Ill Press GuardTM control system a End·.of-cvcle-signat.

I

SALE PRICE $17999
WE HAVE IN STOCK A
GALAXY Of CRAFT ITEMS

'I

ICE
MAKER
WITH REFRIGERATOR!

EI&lt;Nen

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PROUDLY INTRODUCES FOR 1982

FREE

'

.:
·,
:·•
.

Says time for new leadership

.r I

DIU Cogar, a seofor at Southern High !khool, attends the
Distributive Education Program at Meigs High School and Is employed at Meigs Inn where be reeelve~~ experience In food ilervlce.

7

8trldeRitt'

~

AMERICAN OllffHNGS CORP MQ.I U.O.

. . . . . . . .

~

ZFlab Dlnneaalor $4.99
Eocll fish Dl,_ lncludn J 9olclen fish filets, creamy
cole sl•w, french frlts, •nd.2 delicious hush puoDies.
tlllor b,.. ,.._, II, I tit

Mon. &amp; Fn . t il8 P.M .

Tue s. w ed . Thur . &amp; Sa1 .
til S P .M .

�Page-B·6

The sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomerov

Middleport

Po me

Feb. 14, 1982

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.
5

Contemporary dance
group to be at OU
Ohio University will host the Lar
Lubovitch Dance Company in
Athens on Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. Comprised ' of ten dancers with diverse
backgrounds in dance training, the
company performs contemporary
dance.
Lar Lubovitch is fr&lt;m Chicago,
training at the J uilliard School in
New York as a full scholarship
student. His first teachers were An·
thony Tudor, Anna Sokolon, and
Jose Limon . Studying both classical
and modern techniques of ·dance,
Lubovitch blends these styles in his
choreography.
In October 1968, Lubovitch took a
leave of absence from the Harkness
Ballet Company to begin work as a
lull-time choreographer. Hence, the
::;Lar Lubovitch Dance Company was
-formed . The next II years produced
: a solid, well-respected professional
:::cJance company with both traditional

GALUPOUS Carol Jean
Layne, Gallipolls, and Billy R. Bennett, Bidwell, will marry Feb. 20 a\
First Baptist Church with Pastor
Curtis Sheets officiating.
The bridHlect is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs, Calvin Layne, 633
Third Ave., Gallipolis. Bennett is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Stanley,
Route 2, Bidwell.
Layne wtll gr~duate from Galiia
Academy High School in May. Ben·
nett gradiUited from Hannan Tl"llce
High School in 1977 and is employed
by Ohio Valley Publishing Company.
An open church ceremony will be
observed at 2:30p.m. with a reception following .

..

{

..:,

-

•.

Bennett, Layne

call~ . ·

~Employment office
. •
payment award
:wtns
,.

Mr. and Mrs. Tucker, 25th

•

••

·; POMEROY - A performance
:tpward was presented to the
;:pomeroy office of the Ohio Bureau
;:Employment Service in recognition
:.Or being the office in the district
::Which paid the highest percentage of
:tirst unemployment payments
·:'l!imely.
~ A plaque was presented to Mrs.
::Edith Adkins, the person in charge
-of the Pomeroy office, by Homer J .
::Schein,
district
manager ,
·'
the office as the. 1981
· ··--· year winner of the award.

percent of all first payment timely.
This is well above the 87 percent per·
formance level established by
federal regulation. The Pomeroy of·
fice edged out the Logan office by
.008 percent.
Several other southern Ohio of·
fices had outstanding performances
according to Schein. The Waverly of·
lice hall a 94.7 percent performance,
while the Jackson and Athens offices
had 93.5 percent and 92.4 percent
respectively .

Mr. and Mrs. Kropka

MASON - A surprise family gettogether was held for Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Tucker, Mason, for their 25th
wedding anniversary at the home of
their eldest son and his wife, Terry
and Cathy Tucker, New Haven.
The couple were married on Feb.
I, 1957 at Clifton United Methodist
Church, Clifton, by Rev. Richard. L. ,
Wright. Mrs. Tucker is the former
Shirley Oliver.
The Tuckers are the . parents of
four sons, Terry, Todd, Tim and
Troy.
Attending the affair were Mr. and

Mrs. Chester Oliver, Mrs. Tucker's
parents and Mrs. Louis Harms, her
aunt, Tim, Troy, Terry and Cathy
Tucker.
Tod&lt;J, their son, was unable to attend due to college.
A cake was baked by Cathy
Tucker and ice cream and soft
drinks were served.

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ANNUAL PERFORMANCE AWARD- Homer J.
Schein, dbitrlct manager, OHio Bureau of Employment
Services, presents a plaque lo Mrs. Edltb Adklrul, person In charge of tbe Pomeroy office In recognition of
having paid the largest percentage of first uoem-

(Sears I
SEARS, ROEBUCK

Silver Bridge Plaza

ployment paymenlll Hmely. They~ plctufed, left to
rigbt, with E111elyn Scarberry, Galllpollt-Pomeroy
OBF.S manager; Cathy First, Carol Ritter, claim
a••lotanta, and Kathryn Hart, claim• examlaer.

''SORRY,

~----------------------------------4

PLAN
YOUR TAN!

Colwnbus, Oh io, both cousins of the
bride, and Mary Smith of Mason
were bridesmaids. Junior brjdesmaid was Lisa Lawhorn of Clifton,
also a cousin of the bride. They wore
gowns of similar design in rose
qiana. The attendants each carried
nosegay bouquets of rose color
forget-!lle-nots and burgundy car·
nations, accented with baby's ~reath
and ~ose and burgundy satin ribbon
Candace Kropka, daughter of the
groom, was the flowergirl. Her gown
was of white eyelet trimmed with
burgundy ribbon and she carried a
frilly white lace basket made up in a
pink ·and bur g und y silk
arrangement.
Roger Micker of Rayland, Ohio
was the . best man. Ushers were
Larry Kropka, Tiltonsville, 0:1io,
Terry Kropka , Yorkvtlle, O~i~. hoth
th
of th
,, .
bro ers
e gruom, !"Ut 1••
J ewell, Rutland, Ohio, Mike Wolfe,
New Haven, and Carl Kelley,

• 8- 16 01 ·
•
:
•
•

presented to the mothers by the
briile and groom. White satin bows
markedthefamilypews.

Brilliant, Ohio. Justin Kropka,
nephew of the groom, was ringbearer.

•
•
:

and
escorted
to the byaltar
by 'her ·
Given
in marriage.
her parents
father, the bride wore aformal gown
with Queen Anne neckline in chantilly lace, double sheer sleeves ending in ruffled wristlets, and
cathedral train with cascading ruf·
fles of chantilly lace caught upon the
sides with satin bows. The skirt and
train were edged with a border of
crystal pleated '. chiffon. Her veil
featured a bandeau headpiece of
matching chantilly lace, and chapellength illusion edged with a narrow
band of the same lace. Her accessories included a single strand of
pearls which beloqg to her grand·
mother. She carried a nosegay
bouquet consisting of burgundy
roses, forget me nots, stephanotis
and baby's breath, accessorized ,
with lace stramers lied in love knots.
Carla McFarland of Mason, sister
of the bride, was maid of honor and
Gladys Stewart of Mason was the
: matron of honor. They wore princess
j ,tyle gowns of burgundy qiana with
• ivory lace inserts. Robin BQcock of
Huntington and Angie Cundiff of

stre'amers.

TOP OF THE STAIRS FITNESS STUDIO
PH. 992-6720
"OYer The Dollar Gueral Stan In Pomeroy"

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open
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an event of March 20 at the Racine
United Methodist Church at 6 :30
p.'rlJ.
The bridHiect is employed with
Cole and Boster, attorneys at law.
Gallipolis. Her fiance is self·
employed. Sht! graduated from
Southern High Schoolln 1981, and he
graduated from So~thern in 1979.

RACINE- Mr: and Mrs. J erry M.
Johnson, Racine, announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Della
Louise, to James (Ozie) O'Brien, son
of
and Mrs . Larry O'Brien,

,.!ton~.----------~:!!:!!!!;

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GALUPOUS - Mr. !lnd Mrs.
Robert Legg of Patriot Star Route,
Gallipolia, announce the marriage of
their daughter, Te'resa Marie, to
John Kevin Parsons, the .son of Il k
and Mrs. Jack Parsons of Rt. 2 Vin-

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MASON - 'Mary Elizabeth MeFarland, daughter of Mr. and ·Mrs.
George McFarland of Mason, and
Roger Allen Kropka , son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Kropka of Rayland.
Ohio, were united in marriage Jan. 2
in a double-ring ceremony at Mason
United Methodist Church. The 6 p.m,
ceremony was performed by Rev.
Bermie Stevens.
Evelyn Proffitt, organi:lt, included
in her selection, 11 There Is tove,"
" Nadia's Theme," ' 'We've Only Just
Begun," "Still," "If," and "Theme
From Love Story." Vocalist was
Kelli Bocock, cousin of the bride
from Binghamton, N. Y., who sang
"Evergreen" and "Annie's Song."
Herae&lt;;ampanistwasLynnKitchen.
The altar decorations included two
seven-branch candelabras trimmed
, with foliage and white ~tin bows, an
·altar vase made of gladiolas,
.
snowdrift mums and pink carnations. Attached to the profile
kneeling . bench were two roses

Teresa is presently a senior a
Buckeye Hills Career Center of Rio
Grande. She is majoring in High
Skill Stenography, and is currently
employed at Buckeye Community
Services of Gallipolls.
Kevin is also a senior at Buckeye
Hills Career Center, majoring in
Agricultural Mechanics. He is
currently employed at Milhone's
Sohlo of Rio Grande.
A February 20 wedding is planned.
The wedding will take place at the
Vinton Baptist Church at 2:30 p.m.
The custom of an open church wed- .
ding will be observed.

J.'2,

••••••••••••••••

'

The Pomeroy office, one of 22 offlees In the district, led the way
throughout the year. It was first in
five of the 12 months and was twice
quar.terly winner of the performance
award.
A primary objective of the unemployment division of the Ohio
Bureau of Unemployment Services
is the prompt payment of ·unemployment benefits when due. The
federal'~ criterion for a timely
paymen requires that payment to
be mad ( i. e. , the check to be written) wit in 14 days after the end of
the first k:ompensable week. In winning the annual performance award,
the Pomeroy office had paid 95.6

and
r ose bud
b outonnier e .
The
ringbearer 'was attired identical to
U1e groom . The groomsmen wore
niatching tuxedos with black ascots
and burgundy tipped white car·
nation boutonnieres.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the Royal Oak
Recreation Lodge. The bride's table
featured a three-tiered cake topped
with wedding bells and . Qride's
bouquet of candied pink roses, fountain and staircases leading to two
side cakes. A buffet was catered by
circle's Restaurant of Gallipolis,
Ohio aq!l music was provided by The
Last Shot Band, also of Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Hostesses were Alice Lawhorn
and Kitty Bocock, both aunts of the
bride, Ruby Jones. Bessie Hudson
and JoAnn Harbour. Martha Sayre
registered the guests.
The bride is a graduate of
Wahama High School and is currently a seni or at Marshall University
where she is a pre-law m.~jor. The
~r(l()m is a graduate of Ohio University and is currently employed at the
Foote Mineral Co. in New Haven.
The couple now reside at 1301
Allendale Court, New Haven.

Couple plans
to marry
Saturday

qualities and innovative
choreography. The company has
since toured Europe, the Middle
East and the United States under the
auspices of the National Endowment
for the Arts Dance Touring
Program.
Lar Lubovitch himself has been
the recipient of several National Endowment for the Arts choreogr;~phy
fellowships , a CAPS gl"llnt and a
Guggenheim
Fellowship for
choreography. His success is
displayed through his dance company. " Lubovltch ... makes dance
like Bellini wrote operas : seamless,
flowing, and musical," proclaimed
the Daily News.
The group will perform in
Memorial Auditorium. Tickets are
available weekdays from noon to 4
p.m. and on the evening of the per·
formance at 7 p.m. For reservations

1-

MADE IN U.S.A.

PRICES StASHED·FORTHIS SALE

PROGRAMS AVAILABLE ARE:
Business Administration
Executive Secretarial
Accountng
Computer Science

GUITAR, BANJO, MANDOLIN STRING SETS Buy one set at
Regul_~r Price and ge~ the second set for HALF PRICE

Flnancla' aid available. For more ln:formatlon call 446-4367,

IOPEN MONDAY TILL s:oo P.M. I
BRUNICARDI MUSIC, INC.

DON'T WAIT - CALL NOW
CLASSES START MARCH 29th

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FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY

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CORNER 3rd &amp;COURT STS.

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PHONE 446-0687

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�Pjlge--B-8- The Sunday Tim es- Sentine_l

&gt;' omeroy - Middleport- Gallipoli s, Ohio- Point Pleasant,

Astrographs

SUNDAY

February 14, 1982
A person of influence will be a key factor in helping you achieve a
higher status in the year ahead. You will also have fortunate dca lin~s
with others who can OJlt!n the right doors for you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 A bit of competition may I&gt;&lt;' re-quired
today to bring out your better qualities. When you begin to really try,
you'll sense Lady Luck's presence.
PISCES (Feb. %0-Marcb ZOl Select activities today l11at po:rmil you
to move around both mentally and physically. You'll fed better if you
give your mind and body a workout.
ARIES (Marcb 21-Aprlll9 l This could be a rather lucky day for
you, but not necessarily from areas in which you've already done
some spadework. New ground will be broken.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ) Any important matters whi ch you
negotiate today should turn out favorably for all , especially if you see
things from the other pt!rson's point of view.
GEMINI (May 2I-June %0) Something advantageous is developing
converning your work or career. You might begin to see the first
evidence of ittoday.
.
CANCER (June 21-July 221 In situations where there is an element
of chance involved, Lady Luck tends to favor you today. However,
she's not apt to back outlandish gambles.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22J Press for closin~s today if you have any
propositions hanging fire which you feel could be to your benefit once
you have a firm commitment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 You have the ability today to swa y
)
others to your way of thinking, or to convince them they should buy
what you have to offer.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. Z3) Your finan cial and material aspects look
very promising today, but you'll have to be able to recogni•e your opportunities and act upon them wisely.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 221 To begin with, you're not the type who
. goes unnoticed in a crowd. Today, your presence will be even more
strongly felt without h~ving to lry.
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov.- 23-Dec. 21) Basically you're very kind and
generous, ·a nd these impulses will be pronounced today. Secretly
doling things for others will give you great joy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 Today you may rediscover how
essential it is to be hopeful regarding the outeome of an important
event. Positive thoughts instigate affirmative actions.
February 15, 1982
Goals you set for yourself now are likely to be changed over the
coming months and be replaced by goats which are more rewarding .
You'll grow in ambition and purpose before your next birthday.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Jill Your possibilities-for success are
good today, but not necessarily from your first efforts. If stopped, you
should regroup and charge again.
PISCES (Feb. %0-Marcb.%0) Your anticipation as to how difficult
something Is today could hold you back from trying. This would be a
mistake. What faces you isn't really that tough.
ARIES (March 21-AprO 19) A bothersome financial matter you
may have to attend to today can be improved upon if you negotiate it
properly. Try to work out new terms.
TAURUS (April %0-May ZOl Associates may not be in harmony
with your objectives and goals today, nor will you be in tune with
theirs. Each must make adjustments.
GEMINI (May Z1-June %0) At work today your first ideas may not
be your best ones, so don't lock yourself in on a particular way of doing
things. Keep an open mind.
CANCER (June 21-July %0 The way the household budget should
be handled could ciluse a rift today if you and your mate are not
careful. Each may have to trim pet expenditures.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're pretty good at working out
agreements today, but It's not likely you'll get everything you'll want.
Keep your expectations within reasonable bounds.
"
VIRGo (Aug. %3--Sept. Z2) Be prepared to stand up for your rights
today if something owed yo~ is being reneged upon. Remember: It's
· the squeaking wheel that"gets the most grease.
LffiRA (Sept 23-0ct. Z!ll This is nota gOOd day to become involved
in risky fi118ncial situations. You1 [lOSBibillties for gains are pormlslng, but not from gambles.
SCORPIO &lt;OcL 24-Nov. 221 Even in areas where your selfInterests are at stake, you'll do better t&lt;J&lt;~ay if you don't behave too
aggressively. Be assertive, but considerate.
· SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.' Zll Usually you have a rather
positive outlook. Today, you might spend too much time worrying
about things which will never happen. Be daring, not doubtful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. :!Z-Jan. 191 Although you may not want to, it
might be necessary to spend a little money today in order to make
some. Cast your bread on the waters.

Senior
Citizens'
Calendar

Games,
J-3 p.m.; Garden Club, 1-3
p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 18- County Councli,J :30p.m.
Friday, Feb. 19 - Yoga Exercise
Class, 10 a.m. ; Art Class, 1-3 p.m.;
Cran Mlni..Course, 1-3 p.m.; Social
Hour, 7 p.m.

W&gt;A...
lllr

RIO GRANDE - Metropolitan
Ballet will perform at 2:30 p.m .
Sunday in the Fine and Performing Arts Center, Rio Grande
College and Community College.
For information, call 24~3 ,
ext. 360.
VALENTINE PARTY, Sunday
6 p.m. at Krodel Park Club

House, Point Pleasant, for all former members of Gallipolis Chapter of Parents Without Partners
and singles wpo are divorced or
widowed. Ladies, take snacks;
men, take soft drinks .

MONDAY

Feb. 14, 1982

·

Calendar
GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Lafayette Post T/ will hold
a-regular meeting Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the Post Home on Bob
McCormick Rd. All members are
urged to attend.
ADDISON UMW.• will meet at
the Larry ,HOOd home at 1 p.m.
Monday. Mrs. Joe Drummond
will have u\e program.
GALLIPOLIS - . Catholic
Women's Club will meet Monday
at 7:30 p.m. in the church hall.
The agenda includes a card party
and Lenten luncheon.
GALUPOLIS - La Leche
League will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Judlthe
Thompson. The topic of the informal discussion' will be
weaning of the breasUed baby.
For further information, or for
breasUeeding help any time, call
~14 or 446-4010.
CHESTER PTO, Chester
Elementary School gymnasium,
7:30 Monday night.
POMEROY - Special meeting

GALUPOLIS - St. Peter's
Episcopal Churchwomen (ECW)
will meet Monday in the Parish
Hall for a noon luncheon business .
meeting. Guest speakers will be
Dorothy GIQVer . and Margery
Newman, Diocesan ECW board c
members.

of Ohio Valley Commander; 24

7:30 p.m. Monday for conferring
the Order of the Temple ; all
Knights Templar Invited.

TUESDAY.

Presbyterian Church, . 7: 30
Tuesday night at the church.
Mrs. William Morris and Mrs.
Louis Sauer to~ hostesses. Mrs.
Myron Miller to give devotions.
. The second chapter of the study
book will be reviewed by Mrs.
Wanda Johnson .
POMEROY - · Father's Night
will be observed when the
Salisbury PTO meets at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the school. Game
Protector· Andy Lyles will
present the program.

GALLIPOLIS - Unit 27,
American Legion Auxiliary, will
mf'lll in the Legion hall at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday.
GALLIPOLIS
An
organizational 4-H Club meeting
will be held Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
at Ohio Valley Bank's Jackson
Pike Branch. All interested
people are invited to attend or
may call the Gallia County Extension Office at446-7007 .

Exhibit for the month of February
- 30 pen and ink drawings by Randy
Rose, Newark, Ohio.
Gallery Hours - Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a .m.-3 p.m.; Saturday
and Sunday, I p.m.-5 p.m.
Thursday, February 18, noon Deadline for reservation to the Annual Dinner. call Jerry, 446-3834.
Thursday, February 25, 6:30p.m.
- Annual Dinner, festuring Gregg
Goldaton, to be held at the Down Under.
Tuesday, March 2, 7 p.m. - Membership Drive Meeting. All workers,
please be present.
Thursday, March 4·, . 7 p.m. Watercolor Class begins. Earl Tope,
instructor, Call 446-3834 for
registration.
Thursday, March 4, 4 p.m. Children's Printmaking Class
begins. Barbara Carter, Instructor.
Call446-3834 for registration.

CLEARANCE
CONTINUES

•

ON WINTER
MERCHANDISE

--- &amp;tc. o

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NO
. TIC.E
THE FOLLOWING FINANCIAL

MONDAY, FEB. 15th
IN OBSERVANCE OF'
PRESIDENTS DAY

C&amp;S BANK
CENTRAL TRUST
-OHIO VALLEY BANK
GAUl POLIS SAVINGS &amp; LOAN
BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN

Meals sullject to change without
notice.

...

Announcement
KYGER CREEK A
Boosters Club wiU meet Thursdily
7:30p.m. at the highschool.

Dear Customer,
Our Great Shoe Sale
continues on with fantastic bargains - Stop in!
Happy Valentine's Day,

MIDDLEPORT - Group II, .
Middleport First United ·

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-·

unday, Feb. 14, 1982

Bucks end hex
on MSU court
EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) It's been a long time since Ohio
State has beaten Michigan Stale
twice in one season, not to mention
at Jenison Fieldhouse, and Buck·
eyes Coach Eldon M!ller savored
both milestones.
"It was a great win for us,"
Miller said following hls team's 5146 victory Saturday in Big Ten college basketball. "We feel fortunate
to beat a well-coached team like
Michigan State.
" Our offensive patience was
sound. We made a few mistakes at
the end, but our kids came through
in the clutch."
Freshmen guards Troy Taylor
and Ron Stokes sa nk 'six straight
free throws in the stretch to secure
the victory for the Buckeyes.
The triumph was Ohio State's
first in J enison Fieldhouse since
1m, and coupled with an earlier
• triumph in Columbus, was the first
time since 1965 the Buckeyes have
defeated the Spartans twice in the
same season.
Spartans Coach .Jud Hea thcote
was not pleased with the often·
shoddy play of his troops.
. "Titls was a typical Big Ten
game for us - we just let lt slip
away," Heathcote said. " We had
bad luck and bad judgment at the
end of the game.
"It was a game we could have
won, certainly one we should have
won. This loss puts us out of contention for a·lot of things."
The victory Improved Ohio
State's record to 7·5 in league play
and 16-8 for the season. Michigan
State fell to 5-7 In the Big Ten and
10-12 overall.
The Buckeyes rolled to a 9-2 lead
at IJ: 59 of the first half, but Michigan State rallied and settled for a
24-24 tie at intermission.
Michigan State took control ea rly
in the second half and held leads of 3
points on five occasions. The Buckeyes regained the lead for good
wtth 6:55 to goon a tip-In by f&gt;.foot·11
Granville Walters. A pair of free
throws by Stokes and Taylor upped
)he lead to 47-42 wtth 29 seconds
remaining.
Sam Vincent countered wtth two
free throws for the Spartans to
make It 47-44 with 24· seconds left.
Taylor then sank two more free
throws and Watters scored on a
dunk at the buzzer.
I
Junior forward Clark Kellogg
grabbed game scoring honors wtth
15 points, followed by sophomore
fmward Tony campbell wtth 11.
Waiters scored only 7 points, but he
had five blocked shots.
Sophomore forward Ben Tower
led the Spartans wtth 14 points
while 7-foot sophomore Kevin WU-

CLEVELAND (AP) - Pitcher
John Denny has signed a threeyear contract wtth the Cleveland
Indians which hts agent described
as "very liberal."
Indians spokesman Pete Spudlch
aMOUDCed at about 3: 15 p.m. that
the club had reached agreement
wtth Denny. Spudlch would not release any details of the agreement.
Denny's agent, Riehle Bry, con-

adapts cleaner to most
carp~~t. Special plush
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lis and senior Kevtn Smith netted 10
each.

Iowa loses, 73-58
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP I
Ted Kitchel put on an awesome display of offense for the second
straight game as Indiana romped
to a 73-58 victory Saturday over
fifth-ranked Iowa ln Big Ten
basketball.
· Kitchel scored 33 points, Including Including Indiana's first 13 In
the second half, then led the Hoosl·
ers on the 14-4 spurt that gave them
a 57-441ead wtth 9:21 to play.
Tl)en the Indiana defense took
over, led by Jim Thomas and freshman Winston Morgan.
The victory lifted the Hoosiers'
record to 14·7 overall, 84in the con·
terence. Iowa dropped to 18-3 over·
all, 10-2 in the Big Ten.
Indiana's 14-4 burst began with
five stni.tght points by Kltchel and
ended wtth a layup by Kitchel that
pu t Indiana up by IJ. The Hoosiers
later stretched that margin to as
many as 20 points, 68-48, on a threepoint play by Morgan. ·
Iowa cel)ter Michael Payne led
the Hawkeyes wtth 20 points.
Indiana led by as many as 10
points In the first half, but the Hawkeyes, behind Payne, battled "to
wtthtn 35·31 at halftime.

Ball State triumphs
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) · David Scott scored a game-high 17 ·
points and inade a crucial free
throw wtth four seconds left to ll!t
Ball State to a 55-53 victory over
Western Michigan In Mid ·
Amr rican Conference college bas·
ketball Saturday.
The Broncos tied the game twice
in the final minutes of the second
half but could not overtake the
league.Jeadlng Cardinals. Western's Jasper McElroy hit a short
jumper at 2: 49 to knot the score at
50 and Mike Seberger tied It again
for the Broncos at 52-52 on two free
throws at 1:16. But Ball State's
Rick Hampton hit twice at the free
throw line to put the game out of
reach at 54-52.
Seberger missed the first shot of
a two-shot bonus, but hit the second
to pull Western wtthln one, 54-53,
bu t Scott's free throw sealed the
Cardinals victory.
Ball State held a 29-20 lead at
halftime.
Ray McCallum scored 12 points
lor Ball State, now 12-9 overall and
8·3ln the conference. McElroy was
high for Western wtth 16 points and

firmed in St. Louts that Dermy had
signed wtth Cleveland.
"It narrowed down to Oakland
and the Indians, and he decided on
the Indians," Bry said. "It's a
three-year ~ntract with very liberal terms.
"He 's very pleased to be going
back to the club he has beep wtth for
the past two years," Bry said.

Broad, bright beam of
light helps seek out litter.

. Soft touch cord
rewind
Controlllid rewind for
smooth retraction.

Seberger flnlshed wllh 15. The
Broncos dropped to 11-11 for the
season and 5-7 In the MAC.

Missouri 72 OSU 57
STILLWATER, Okta . (AP)
Senior forward Marvin McCrary
scored five of Mtssourt' s last 11
points as the Tigers held oft a late
rally to beat Oklahoma State 89-82
In Big Eight basketball Saturday.
The fourth-ranked Tigers led 72·
57 wtth eight minutes lett when the
8owboys went on a 15-polnf scoring
spree to narrow the gap to 76-72.
But Missouri held onto the lead by
connecting on seven of eight free
throws in the final two minutes.
Thirteen b1 McCrary's gamehigh 25 points were made at the free
throw line. He missed only one free
throw and hit six of eight baskets
from the field . Junior guard Jon
Sundvold and senior fornoard Ricky
Frazier also notched double figures
for Missouri wtth 24 and 18 points,
respectively.
Junior Leroy Combs was high
scorer for Oklahoma State wtth 21
points and 10 rebounds. Loreriza
Andrews and Joe Atkinson were
the only other Cowboys In double
figures wtth 15 and 10 points,
re'".Jectivety.
Mlssoui1 Is now 21·1 overall and
J0-11n conference play. Oklilhoma
State Is now 13-9 overall and 5·5 In
the Big Eight.

SCRAMBLE - Michigan State's Ben Power (DIIID'
ber %0) battles for a l11011e ball against Ohio State'•
Larry Huggins (rear) and Troy Taylor (right) during

Miami 69 Kent 60
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Center
George Sweigert scored 24 pOints to
lead Miami (Ohio) University to a
69-ffi victory over Kent State 'In a
Mid-American Conference basket·
ball game Saturday.
Sweigert led three Miami players
In double figures. Guard Chuck
Stahl scored 16, all on field goals,
and guard Craig Tubbs added 11.
Stahl's jump shot wtth 5:41 to
play In the first half put Miami
ahead 22-21, and the Rcdsklns
never trailed again. Miami built a
nine-point lead by the halt.
Miami padded the lead to lJ
points In the second half." Kent State
got no Closer than 7 points as It lost
Its 29th consecutive game on the

road.
Guard Larry Robbins came off
the Kent State bench to score a
team-high 14 points. No one else hit
double ligures for Kent.
Miami Improved to 9·1J and f&gt;.6tn
the Mid-American Conference.
Kent Slate dropped to 9-13 and 5-7 in
the conference.

Denny becomes the third Cleveland pitcher who entered the free
agent drat! at the end of last season
only to sign wtth the club. Sid
Monge and Rick Walls also entered
the free agent market before the
Indians signed them to new
contracts.
Denny, 29, had been rumored to
be speaking wtth two clubs besides
the Indians and Oakland- the New
York Yankees and the New York
Mels.
Last season, Denny was 10-6 for
Cleveland and had a 3.14 P.RA. Tr.
146lnntngs of work, he recorded 94
strikeouts. He pitched three
shutouts.

lint per
· •'ion at Jenl1on Field House In East Lanslog, Mlcl~.. a Saturday afternoon. OSU won, 51-48.

Southeastern Ohio League
may be victim of. changes
LOGAN - The Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League, one of the/ ll!!lest
high school leagues In existen~ in
Ohio, could be facing many unsettling changes in the future.
The opinion was expressed in a
front page article by Craig Dunn,
spOrts editor of the Logan Dally
News, in Friday's edition.
It reada:
The Southeastern Ohio League,
the state's oldest continuous athletic
conference, is facing what could
become a disastrous series of
changes.
With Wellston leaving the SEOAL
at the conclusion of the 1981-82 term,
the loop will be down to seven teams.
Asecond school has taken the first
step toward finding 'II new aUiance,
and thoug~ts of leaving the conference apparently have been
brought up at still another.
The Waverly School Board, acting
very quickly , approved a motion at
this week's session to file for membership in the Southern Ohio Conference - the same league the
Tigers had domlnaled prior to jumping to theSEOAL in 1970.
Waverly, which has done well In
the SEOAL in all sports except football, cites travel expenses to faraway league cities such as Logan,
Athens and Meigs as one reason, and
being able to compete in all sports as
another.
Members of the Southern Ohio
Conference compete In a l;wodivi.slon fonnat, with four schools In
the Class AA Division (Wheelersburg, Portsmouth West, Minford
and Scioto Northwest) and seven
schools In the Class A Division

(Lucasville Valley, Portsmouth
East, New Boston, Portsmouth
Notre Dame,_ Gl'l!l!n Twp., Portsmouth Clay and South Webster.)
The latter division will increase to
nine teams this spring when Ironton
St. Joseph and Pike Eastern are added to the fold .
Waverly feels it would be able to
compete much better against those
schools, and that the SOC schools
would bring more revenue to
Waverly when the Tiger football and
basketball teams play at home than
SEOALteamsdo.
,
Meigs High School, which has had
its problems competing in league
sports in the last few years, i.s
rumored to 6e talklng about exiting
the SEOAL as well.
According to a statement ln the
Jackson Journal-tferald, Meigs
Principal Jim Diehl said there has
been no official discussion nor any
meetings planned about that
possibility.
But the possiblllty of the SEOAL
breaking up - perhapa only slight at
the time - has to be considered.
Once Wellston leaves, the seven
schools remaining wiU be Athens,
Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, Logan,
Meigs and Waverly.
Subtract Waverly, and possibly
Meigs, and you would have a fiveteam league consisting of Athens,
GaUia,Jronton, jackson and Logan.
The SEOAL membership has
never been lower than seven
schools.
And Ironton, which has dominated
the SEOAL in football for the last
decade (except for 1976 and 19TI

when Logan either won outright of
shared the title) , would like to get Into another league with (it feels)
tougher football competition In order to make the state football playoffs more often.
Ironton was J().(J last season and
probably one of the best Division II
teams In the state, but didn't make
the playoffs because most of the
SEOAL's other teams suffered
through hm;rlble non-league seasons
and thus deprived ratings points to
get into the playoffs.
At the present time, there are no
schools interested In applying for
SEOAL membership, for two
reasons - they could not start competing for league titles until 19115
because of many schedule tie-ups In
football and basketball, and the
league Is so spread out
geographically that travel would be
expensive.
With the Central Ohio League
breaking up after next season,
schools such as Lancaster or Marietta might be interested in entering
the league, but travel would again be
a problem for them and the current
member schools.
1
Plus, Lancaster very easily could
dominate the league in just abqut
every sport besides football and
basketball.
Portsmouth, one of the SEOAL's
original members when the league
was fonned In 1925, has all but ruled
out entering the SEOAL because of.
travel.
Depending on what develops, it's
quite possible that the SEOAL could
be no more In a few years.

Petty says strategy will detertnine winner

~o1249

95

SAVE

wtth an 10-second lead and cruised
to victory. "Okay, l guess you could
say we outsmarted them," Petty
said. "We won the race, and that's
all that counts."
Petty's victory in a car that quail·
fted well back In the field proved
somewhat embarrassing ID Alii·
son, who had been besieged all
week because his sleek and contro"It's a race of circumstances" versial Ponllac LeMans was con·
slderably faster than Petty's Buick
said Petty, who put his car through
Regal and the rest of the !leld.
a smooth and Swift practice session
Friday. "I've won wtth some fast
"The greatest sandbagger of aU
cars and I've won wtth some slow
time," Allison has called Petty.
Petty 1wUJ drlve a new Pontiac
cars. It's just a question of where
you are when something happens." . Grand Pl1x that had a quaUfylng
speed of 195.469. It was the third
A year ago, Petty was in ftfth
fastest quall!ylng speed posted for
place tate in the race when polesltter Bobby Alllson ran out of gaa and
Sunday'• S927,00l event. That put
was forced to pit. The other con- him In the front row for pne of
tenders !oliDwed suit, taldng gas
Thursday's two quaUfylng races.
and tires.
He ran In contention throughout
Petty remained on the track, took
the ~rnller but fell out after an
uncharacterlatlcally long pit stop.
the lead and then pitted last. He
. took gas only, returned to the track .Petty returned behind several of
DAYTONA BEACH, F1a. - Rl·
chard PettY says sulategy probably
wtll determine the outcome of today's Daytona 500, stock car racing's premier event.
And when the seven-time Day·
tona 500 winner talks about winning
on the 2.~mue, high-banked Daytona International Speedway oval,
it pays to listen.

Regular s299.95 .
Power-seal AttaChments

~ime- j'eutiut! Sect,·on

.Denny signs 3-year contract with Cleveland

Automatic
carpet
adjustment

Complete with 5 piece

"Services rendered on a non-

-

GALLIPOLIS - · Lafayette
White Shrine will met Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple.

CLOS~D

dlscrimlnat~ basis."

GALLIPOLIS - Christian
Women's Club will present " Love·
Is Something You Do'' at a noon
luncheon Tuesday at Holiday Inn.
Jean Cole will discuss Jove and
poetry, Cynthia Drummond will
discuss love's song and Barbara
Hum will speak about Jove in action.

GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke
Club members will meet Tuesday
at 8 p.m. with Mrs. Aldeth Robinson.

, INSTITUTIONS WILL BE

Monday - Closed.
Tuesday
Oven baked
chicken/dressing and gravy, cranberry fruit gelatin, fresh fruit, butter, roll, milk.
Wednesday - Johnny marzettl/cheese topping, broccoli,
pineapple salad, tapioca, Italian
bread, butter, milk.
Thursday - Swiss steak and
gravy, whipped potatoes, buttered
splqach, peach slices/oatmeal
cookies, brea butter, milk.
Friday- Beef stew, gelatin fruit .
salad, cornbread, fruit crisp, butter,
milk.
Choice of . beverage served with
each meal.

GAWPOUS - Gallia County
Right to Life organi2ation will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Senior Citizens Center. ·

Riverby
Calendar

50%-75% Off

The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menus :

'

. PORTER - Ralph Butcher will
deliver the evening message
· during 7:30 p.m. services at
Valley Freewill Baptist Church
Sunday. Pastor Steve Rollins invites all to attend.

Second Awenue

Activities for the week of Feb. 1519 at the Senior Citi2ens Center at
220 Jackson Pike are as follows :
Monday, Feb. 15 - Closed.
Tuesday, Feb. 16 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
Jl:15a.m.; BlbleStudy,J-2p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 17 - Vinton
Nutrition Educa~on, ll :30 a.m.:
Vinton Bible Study, I p.m.; Card

G"LUPOUS - Soul Finders
will appear at Bell Chapel Church
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Everett Delaney invites all to attend.

w. va.

•so.oo

CLOSE CAlL - Marll Beard (11) 1'11111 ID!O Sam Ani (18) of
Asheboro, N. C. u they came Into the pltta dartD8 the numiDg rl the
Geod)' JIG at the Da)'IOII!I laternatlo•l Speedway Sallll'day. Geor-ge
Dai!GII, e1 Wubaw, NC (SS) goes lly lhe mllbap In the pltta wblcb cbael
crew memben liVer the retallllq waiL (AP Luerpltolo).

i&gt;

the slower cars and llntshed 11th,
which gave him t1le 21st starting
position Suhday.
There are seven other drivers In
the 42~ar tteld from whom Petty Is
likely to get the nrongest
challenge.
A panel of racing experts has
tabbed defending NASCAR Grand
National champion Darrell Waltrip
the man to beat.
'
The others would be Yarborough
and Buddy Baker, wtruiers of the
quaUfylng races, Jn.slde polesltter
Benny Parsons, out.lde polesltter
Harry Gant, Nlllon and Nell
Bonnett.
Waltrip won one of the qualifying
races last year and had the second·
fastest car. But he bleW an engine
early In the l500.
·Aside from Petty, still the darling
of stock car fans after 195 career
v1ctorlel, the sentimental !avortte
would have to be Gant. He lln1lhed
second seven times last year and
•I

would like to shed his nmnerup
Image.
But that may be difficult It Yarborough, himself a two-time Daytona
l500 wtrmer, Is correct In his prerace assessment.

Falcons roll, 95-66
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP )
- David Greer, one of five starters
for Bowling Green In double ftg.
ures, scored 18 points to lead his
team to a 95-$1 Mid-American Conterence basketball victory over
Eastern Michigan Saturday.
Bowling Green jumped tD an ~
lead, then ran off a 12-4 !ICOrtng
apurt to go ahead 20-10 and never
ttaUed after that.
Bowling Green led at halfttme 4426.
I
Following Greer In double-figure
!!COring for Bowling Green were ·
Marcus Newbern, 17; David .Ten· ·
ldns, l!j; BIU Fatne, 14; and Lamar
Jackson, 12.

'

I

�Porh croy- Moddlc port- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

1982

w. va .

GAHS tops Meigs, claims
eighth SEOAL cage crown

LANE PUMPS - GaUipollll' James Lane (33) Olps In tWo of his
game-high 18 polnta in Friday's Gallipolis victory over Meigs. Lane also
bad 13 rebouad1. Otben left to right are Marty GleDD ( 11) 1 Rick Chancey
fIt) aDd Bob Ashley (241. GAHS won, 71-48, to capture Its eighth SEOAL
basketballerowu.

MEIGS' senior center, Bob Ashley (241 seored 13 points and pieked
off 20 rebounds In Friday's SEOAL cage game at Gallipolis. Ashley Is
being guarded by Tim Lanier fcenterl. On left Is Mike Edwards (401.
GAHS won, 71-48.
0

Meigs resenres force Imps
I

into

ov~rtime,

lose, 51-46

GALI.JPOI.JS - Coach Mick Rathburn 0 ·0-0 : Garber 0·2·2.
Childs' Meigs reserves forced TOTALS 2H·Sl.
Gallipolis' reserves into overtime M!i~:uarters:
9 16 13 2 6- 46
here Friday night before losing a 51- Gallipolis
6 u 12 8 11- 51
46 prellmiunary, decision to 'Coach

GALI.JPOI.JS - Gallia Academy
High School jumped off to an 8-0
lead, then went on to defeat visiting
Meigs, 71-48, here Friday night.
The triumph gave Coach Jim
Osborne's Blue Devils the 1981-82 undisputed Southeastern Ohio League
basketball championship, the
school's eighth, and second under
Osborne. ·
Previous Blue Devil crowns were
won in 1933-39; 1948-49; 1953-54; 195450; 1955-56 ; 1958-59 and 197.3-74.
~ ach
Gordo'l Fishe r'"
Marauders, ;till searching for th,:ir
. fir;1 win of the campaign, trailed 228 after one period. GaUia Academy
led 3~23 at halftime and 54-32 going
into the fina I canto.
Gallipolis upped its season mark
to 13-li. inside the SEOAL, the
Gallians improved their record to 121, with one loop game remaining at
Logan Friday night.
Meigs dropped to ().18 on the year
and ().JJ in conference play.
Substitutes Freely
After the Blue Devils built up a 2().
3 first quarter advantage, Osborne
began substituting freely. Mosf Of
· the GAHS regulars watched from
the sideline in the second and fourth
quarters.
James · Lane paced the Blue
Devils' attack with 18 points al)d 13
rebounds. Lynn Sheets added 13
markers and Mike Edelmann seven.
Bob Ashley led the Marauders' atJack with 13 points and 20 rebounds.
Rick Edwards and Randy Murray
chipped in with 11 points apiece.
Gallipolis hit 29 of 69 field goal attempts for 42 percent. GAHS was 13
of 20 at the foul line for 65 percent.
Gallipolis had 45 rebounds and 10
turnovers.
Meigs hit 14 of 51 attempts from
the field for 27 percent. The
Mrauders were 20 of 28 at the foul
line for 71 percent. Meigs· had 41
rebounds and 19 turnovers.
Nets Cut Down
After the contest, GAHS players
and coaches took turns cutting down
the nets, an old championship
tradition.
After Friday's game at Logan,
GAHS will end regular season play
with a home game against Pt.
Pleasant on Feb. 20.
Meigs will host Wellston Friday in
its season finale. The Marauders
tpok on Wahama in a non-league till
last night.

SEOAL competition, GAHS was a
first division team 15 times and a
second division team 29 times .. .
Osborne has never missed a game
(out of 269 outings) or a practice in
his 13 years as herad Blue Devil
coach ... A Jim Osborne-coached
.team has never scored 100 points or
more in a single outing, but the
Devils have had several chances to
do so during the past decade .
Tom Duncan and Dave Tawney of
the GAHS Boosters Club repocted all
but one of the additional Blue Devif
sweaters ordered recently were sold
during Friday's game ... Danny
Greene captured the "championship
game ball" during halftime
ceremonies ... Gallipolis' seventh,
eighth and ninth grade ' 'farm team"
players were introduced during the
halftime intermission Friday.
It's been a tough five years for
Meigs in SEOAL play. The

. TEAM
Wheelersburg
Portsmouth
GallipoHs
Athens
Pl. Pleasant
Chillicothe
1ronton
Waverly
Jackson
wellston
Washington CH
Logan
Meigs

Marauders are :&gt;-64 during that
span. Howeyer, second-year Coach
Gonion Fisher is a good•basketball
man, and if given enough lime, he'll
build a winner at MHS. Things are
already starting to look up at Meigs.
'The Meigs' seventh grade team is
unbeaten thus far. Coach Mlck
·Olilds' reserve squad has lost
several close encounters this winter,
including a 51-46 overtime battle to
the GAHS Blue Imps Friday nlll_ht.
Friday's varsity box score :
MEIGS (481 - Edwards B · ll ;
Riggs3·0·6; Ashley 3-7-lJ; Murra y 4-

Frld~y · s

nedyll-0·0. TOTAL$19·1-46,

GALLIPOLIS RESERVES (51)Wolfe 3+10; Duncan 4·0·8; Smith 2·
3·7; Carter ~ - 0 · 8 ; Ellcessor 8·0·16 :

•

AP Sporta Wdter

!' OP

16 1 1278
1~ 3 12-40
13 5 988
13 5 1207
8 3 629
10 8 826
9 8 945
9 8 96 j
9 9 1285
8 tO 1153
5 10 773
5 I~ 1077
o 18 964

Non·SEOAL scores :

953

1037
896
1006
586

788

930

906

1234
ll38
838
1224
1279

Wheelersburg 71 l.u.casville 44
Hillsboro 75 Washington CH 55

Chillicothe 52 Westerville North 32

SEOAL VAI!SITY
W L P OP
12 1 745 627
GallipOli S
Athens
9 3 822 681
Ironton
7 5 685 646
Waverly
7 5 679 617
5 7 798 773
Jackson
Logan
5 8 732 800
Wellston
5 8 809 875
Meigs
0 13 698 949
TOTALS
50 SO S968 5968
Fridav ' s
results:
TEAM

Whaley 1·2-4; M. Edwards 0·1·1.
TOTALS 14·20·48.
GALLIP.OLIS (71) - Sheets ..S13 ; Madison 2·2·6; Lane 9·0·18;
Glenn 2-0·4; King 1·0·2; Skidmore 3
0·6;; Bergdoll 0·0-0; Lanier 2· J.S ;
Edelmann J·l -7; Isaacs 0·0·0; Allen

1·4·6; Clark 2-0-4. TOTALS 29·13-71.
Score by quarters :

8 15 9 16-48
22 17 15 17- ll .

Gallipolis 71 Meigs 48
,A. then$ 76 Jackson 70

Waverly 70 Wellston 64
I renton 55 Logan 45

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Athens
10 2 566 ~54
Jackson
9 3 545 429
lron1on
Gallipolis

9
9

Waverly
Wellston
Logan
Meigs
TOJ ALS

3 593
4 537

474
470

6 6 468 489
4 9 553 613
2 11 444 589
1 12 4~5 633
SO SO 4151 4151

Friday's results :

Gallipolis 51 Meigs 461ol)
Athens 35 Jackson 34
Wellston 45 Waverly 41
1ron ton 60 Logan 39
Tuesday ~ s

games:
Wasl")ington CH' at East Cl inton
Pt. Pleasant at Milton
Delaware at Chillicothe
Thursday's game:
.

Sissonville

at

(makeup, 1:15 p.m.)

Pt/

Pleasant,

Friday's Qames:

Gall ipolis a! Logan

Wellston at Meigs
Ironton at Jackson
Athens at Waverlv
Chillicothe at Whitehall

Greenup at Portsmouth
Wheelersburg at Northwest
Wilmington at Court House
Saturday's games:
Chesapeake at Wheelersburg

EDWARDS EYES GLENN ,.... Meigs' Rick Edwards ( 10) keeps an
eye on GalllpoU&amp;i!liBrd Marty Glenn In, Friday's SEOAL cage game at
GaiUolla. Edwards scored ]I points and picked off eight reboundll for the
Maraudel'li.- Keith Wtlsoa photos.

Decker sets record

Portsmouth at Irenton
Pt. Pleasant at Gallipolis
Jackson at Waverly (makeup)

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

NEW YORK (AP) - Mary
Decker broke the world lndoor. best
In the women's mlle at the 75th Wanamaker MUJrose Games.
Decker covered the mile In
4: 21.47 to erase by more than three
seconds the mark of 4:24.6 she es·
tabllshed last xear.
In other women's events, Candy
Young an.d Stephanie Hightower
crackE!\1 tM lndoQr best In the 61).
yard high hurdles, finishing · In a
dead heat In 7.38 seconds. Chandra
Cheeseborough smashed the meet
record In winning the women's 60yard dash In 6.61. .June Calvin
erased the American Indoor mark
in the (()().meters with a clocking of
52.88.
Among the· men, Doug Padilla's
13: W.5S in - the 5,(XX) erased the
American mark of 13: 22.6 established in 1981 by Alberto Salazar.
Renaldo Nehemiah broke his own
meet record In the ®yard high
hurdles.

~~AME N~ Gary
(Gunner) l.ane asked this question
after Gallipolis' title clinching victory over Meigs Friday night: " Has
Gallipolis ever had both a father and
I halle a lite Insurance plan ·to help your
son play on championship basketball
tamtfv
keep~ hoh:te. flee and c:eor. If
learns? ... Lane, James' father, was
your mortgage oufllves you. Call me iOI'
a member of the 19'..a-59 GAHS
details
.
championship team under Coach
Mark Wylie. He was a junior at the
CAROLL SNOWDEN
time. The following year, under
417 Second Ave.
Gallipoli s, Oh.
Coach Carl Ward, GAHS went
Phone 446· 4290
winless in the league and finished 1·
19overali.
GAHS has never been above the
.500 ma(k in GAHS play since the
.SloMFann
league was formed 57 years ago.
Llelnouranoe Componv
The Blue Devils, now 121 and 60
Hor"'DHJce: BloominJ)ton. lliinois
under Coach Jim Osborne in 13
years of loop play, are just six
games below the .500 mark with a
35&amp;-361 record ... Overall, since the ~---------~~-.JL-----------------------192:&gt;-26 campaign, GAHS is 546-569,
or 23 games below the .500 mark ...
Ol's career record at GAHS is 171).99
... It took five years, but GAHS climbed straight up the ladder of success
in SEOAL play to win this year's
crown.
After a surprising 6-11 fifth place
finish in 1977-78 fin the Brad AbelsTerry Waugh era) GAHS has
finished fourth, third, second and fir·
st in that order ... Gallipolis has
finished in the league's first division
10 times in 13 years under Coach
Osborne ... In the first 44 years of

'liiii!iijPiPiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Jack
Payton's
BlueoffImps.
Meigs
jumped
to a !lo6 first II
period lead, and led 2:&gt;-20 during the
halftime intermission.
The Uttle Marauders were on top.
J3.32 going into the final period.
MHS led J3.28 at one point in the
third stanza.
In overtime, Chris Elicessor's
field goal and three foul shots by !
Steve Wolfe, plus a goal by Tom 1
Duncan and a free throw by Brad l
Smith gave the Imps a 4~2 ad- f
vantage with 46 seconds left.
1
The visitors came back on a goal
by Greg Taylor and two free throws i
by Chris Burdette to pull within
three, 4~, with 12 seconds left.
Wolfe scored on a layup at the buzzer to give the Imps their 13th win in
18 starts. Meigs dropped to H 4
overall. In loop play, GAHS upped
its mark to ~. Meigs dropped to I·
12.
Ellcessor led the lmPii' attack
with 18 points. Wolfe added 10. Burdette tossed in 14 markers for the
visitors and Jay Evans led the Little
Marauders' attack with 15 points.
Box score:
MEIGS RESERVE$ t461- Smith
4-1·9; Barr 0·0·0; Burdette 6·2·14;
Taylor 3·2·8; Evans 6·3-15: M. Ken· .

By BARRY WILNER

Pt. Pleasant67 Parkersliurg60

3·11 ; Friend 0·0·0; Chancey 0·2·2;

Meigs
Gallipolis

W L

Ohio-Point

Decker has run-in with track official

Area cage
standings
· ALLGAMES

idd

NEW YORK (AP) - Mary
Decker almost didn't make it onto
· the Q'ack. Candy Young wasn't
sure she wanted to be on It. When
both got finished at Madison
. Square Garden, however, they'd
· set world bests.
'
Decker, who set two !Jldoor bests
. last week In Los Angeles, had lrou·
ble with a Wanamaker MUJrose
·Games o1flclal Friday night before
finally getting to the starting Une
tor the women's mlle run. Just
4:21.47 after the gun, she crossed
the flnlsh Une to establish a world
mark tor the distance In the 75th
edition ot the meet.
Young, meanwhile, wanted to
withdraw from the event when she
learned on Wednesday that her best
frtend's sister had died. But Young,
urged to compete by the friend, ran
to a world best of. 7.38 seconds In the
· ti().y&amp; .. hurdles, finishing in a dead
heat Wtth Stephanie Hightower.
Decker's ron·ln with the official
came just prior to the start of the

mlle.
"I was real upset because he
nearly ,threw me out of the build·
lng," said Decker, whosetmarksln
the 2,(XX) and 3,®meter last week.
"People around him told him wbo I
was, but he said, 'I don't care,' and
he PUShed me."'
"He said, 'What's your business
here, anyway? You're 110t getting
on the track.' I had to go around a
fence (stanchion) to get on the
track."
Once she was safely on the track,
the 23-year-old Decker ran away
from the field, with the 18,293 tans
screaming support. She passed
1,500 meters In 4: 03.6, then erased
the previous best mile time which she set on Jan. 22 in Los An·
geles - by more than three
seconds.
"It wasn't a surprise because It
was what I was after," said
Decker, who had missed the entire
198llndoor season because of inlur·
ies. "I'mexcltedbutl'dllketogetlt
below 4:20.
"The crowd was so supportive to

me, the last two or 1hree taps It
made me a llttle strooger. If no one
was In the stands, I wouldn't have
felt that extra adreDaun. They're
reward Is to see a good, fast time. I
make the other people feel well by
running well.''
Earlier this week, Young didn't
feel like running at all. The sophomore at Falrlelgb Dickinson Unl·
verslty was heartbroken over the
death of her friend's sister.
"I gave a )Qt of thought to not
running," said Young, who origl· .
nally was announced the winDer fUrther viewing of the tapes made
the ot!lclals decided the race was a
dead heat. "I wanted to go home,
but she wanted me to run. She told
me not to worry about her or her
family. She told me, 'If you don't
want to stay for yourseH, do It for
me."'
Young, who shared the Indoor ·
best with Hlgtrtower at 7.47, appeared to be mltted at the.decision
to call the race a tie. But she credited Hightower with helping her
lower the rerord.

" When I get together with Stephanie, It seems we're able to lower
to It," she said. "We push each
other to lt. I don't think I could do It

without her.''
The biggest upset of the night
came In the men's 5,1nl when Doug
Padilla erased the American mark
with a time of. 13: 20.55 . .Padilla's
clocking just missed the world In·
door best of13: W..4, set by Sulelnian
Nyambul of. Tanzania In the Mil·
JroseGamestastyear. Italsobroke
the American mark of 13: 22.6 set by
1981 Ml11rose runner·up Alberto Sa·
lazlu', who was fourth Frtday. Sa·
lazar, reportedly suffering from
tendinitis, edged Nyambul, who
was fifth.
"I was just trying to bang on,"
said Padilla, formerly a competitor
for Brigham Young University. " I
was out In Lane 2 and I didn't want
to be there.
" My strategy was to stay with
Alberto. I knew he'd push it. Being
ahead of. Salazar made me run
faster."

lt'UIU» RECORD - Doug
SaJuar, bolh ~ the Athletlrti Weal track club, stand
after
padilla woa the 5,000 meter race at Friday's Mlllnt~~e Gam's at Madlsoa
' Square Garden. Padilla, formerly of Brigham Young University, clocked
a time ol 13:2U5, just shy ~ lhe world Indoor best of 13:20.4. Salazar
finished foarthin U:25.18. (AP Laserphoto).

Denny
·decision
due soon
CLEVELAND (AP) ·- Pitcher
John Denny said Saturday he
would soon reveal whlch ot three
·maJor league teams will hav.e his ·
services for .the next three years.
Published reports have Indicated
three clubs - 1 the Cleveland Indl·
ans, Oakland A's and New York
Yankees - were In the bidding for
Denny, a right·handed free agent
who pitched tor the lndlans the past
two years.
Newcomer to the circle of
bidders Is the Yankees, who would
reportedly attempt to trade Rick
Reusehe! If they signed Denny.
. Reuschei, a 32-year-old right·
bander obtained by the Yankees
from the Chicago Cubs last season,
Is in a dispute with New York over
.Thls contract, whlch ha~ two years
'remaining. He has not reported to
the Yanks' voluntary training
camp In Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Denny, 29, was 10-6 with a 3.15
earned-run average last season tor
the Indians. He is generally regarded as the most attractive
player still available In the free
agent market. ·
The New York Times In its Saturday.editions quoted a source close
to the· Yankees and to the Denny
negotiations as saying the team de- ·
clded to go after the pitcher on]y
within the past couple bf days after
the problem with Reuschel arose.
Denny's agent, Riehle Bry, said
three teams still were In the bidding
for his cUent and Identified the Indians and A's as two of them. He
would neither contlrm nor deny the
Yankees were the third team.
The Cleveand Plain Dealer said
the Yankees were offering a threeyear contract worth $2.1 mlUion,
with the A's and Indians' offers
worth about $600,000 annually for
three years.
"Right now, John plans to lock
hlmseH In a room and speDd most
ot the night trying to decide wbo to
sign with," Bry said. "We have all
the offers·and the. Indians are com·
petitive. The A's are also In the run·
nlng, but I won't comment about
the third team. Right now, It Is up to
John."
Thirteen tea ms named Denny In
the free agent draft. That made
him . the second-most popular
player In the draft.
Pitcher Ron Guidry, wbo eventually re-signed with New York, was
selected by 17 teams. In aU, the
Yantcees signified their attention to
negotiate with ftvf free agents.
One of them was another of Bry's
cllents, former Cincinnati out·
fletdlir Dave CoUins, whom the

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GaWpolls. '
,
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nJe Becker added 8, while PhD King
~:e Musser pitched In 6'each.
,I'd
r also had 11 rebounds.
cOach Rusty Bookman's Ma·
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each, while Donnie Becker aDd
Huey Eason each had 10. Musser
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'whlle J;R. Kitchen had 4.
' Scott Powell played an excellent
'p.me corning ot.r1he bench in the
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MetP Ia now J2..0 and meets Gal·
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Its 11th and 12th victories ot the
year with wins over Oak Hill aDd

•
· Certifi~tes

'

.'

�The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-5

Feb. 14, 1982

Pt. Pleasant sl~ps 67-60
defeat on Parkersbur five

Torrtadoes whip Highlanders,
clinch sixth league crown

RANDY LAYTON

ROBERT BROWN

KENT WOLFE

guard, bad 28 poloIs; Brown bad 15; Layloo netted 22
lor the Highlanders. Southern relaloed 118 league
cbamplonshlp with a 72-56 trtumpb over the Highlanders.

SHINE IN SVAC CONTEST- These lwo Sou them
playen Kent WoUe and Robert Brown, and one Soulltweaten. eager, Randy Laylon, bad oulslandlog olghls
Ill Friday's SVAC game at Patriot. WoUe, a senior

Wildcats storm from behind,
•
post 80-65 WID over Pirates
MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Tracj! came from behind lr1 the last
five minutes of the first half of Frl·
day's SVAC game with North Gal:
!Ia to' tie the affair 31-31 at the
buzzer enroute to an 8().65 victory
over the Pirates.
North Gallla, back in action alter
a fi6.59 defeat by Oak HU!Iast Saturday, jumped to an early start and
outdistanced the Wildcats on theit
home court by five polrlts at the end
of the first quarter.

vented double-digit scoring until
well into the final canto.
"Thlrlgs didn't go too well early in
the game, but alter the second
quarter,it was okay," Jenkins com·
mented afterward. The w1n puts
the Wildcats at 4-5ln the league and
8-9 overall, while North Gallla Is
now 2-13 lor all games and 1-6 In
loop play.
Hannan Trace led In the treeihrows, slrlking an Impressive 67
percent for 18 out of 27 tries. From
the field, theit scoring suffered at48
However, the shock of the sur· !percent, or 31 of 64 attempts.
For Coach Bruce Wilson's PIprtse attack soon wore off as Coach
Mike Jenkins' embattled crew was rates, Mike Mays was top scorer
able to tum the scoring around lr1 with 19. He had help from Matt
the last few minutes of the second Kemper with 15 and 11 each !rom
Bob Blackburn and Gregg Dee!.
canto.
Toby Sheets emerged as Hannan Sta tlstically, their effort was nearly
Trace's lead scorer of the night, set- even. They canned 13 of 26 on the .
ting a high of 28 points, with 24 supp- charity toss tor 50 percent, while
lied by teammate Greg Webb and the field shooting was better - 26 of
12 chipped in by Kelly Petrie. ·
48 tries for 54 percent.
The Wildcats had 27 rebounds
The Pirates kept up the wessure,
but HaMan Trace was able to stay and North Gallla tallied 22. Sheets
ahead by six or seven points going netted eight rebounds for the borne
into the third quarter. A few oppor- effort. HT had seven turnovers and
tunities to plit the visitors away the Pitates 26, with Petrie prov!dwere available to the Wildcats, but lrlg 12 assists for HT.
turnovers and other !actors preIn the reserve game. the junior

Pitates took the game away from
the defenders ln a 50-4(Ldeclsion.
Dwayne Marcum was leading
scorer lor North Gallla with 19, and
Larry Lee supplied 13. For HT,
· Robby Brumfield had nine, with
· eight each offered by llussell
Saunders and Terry Cline.
The Wildcats face a. busy schedule next week, their f!nal set of
season games. They, travel to Hannan, W.Va. on Tuesday and play
Symmes Valley, In a game twice
delayed by weather, on Wednesday. On Ftiday, they host Eastern.

.

North Gallia was s.lated to play
Federal Hocking Saturday night.
The Pitates also travel Tuesday
to Eastern, and defend the h&amp;nw .
turf against Southwesferi]· on
Friday.
HANNAII TRACE 180) - Petrie 4·
4·12; Webb 9·6·24; Waugh 5·0·10.
Shee ts 12+28; Barnes 1·2·4;
Rossiter 0·0·0; Campbell 0·2·2.
Total• 31-18-80.
NORTH GALLIA 165) - Black·
burn 0 · 11 ; Deel5·l·ll ; Holle 1·1·3;
Hollingshead 1·0·2; Kemper 7-1·15;
Mays 6·1· 19; Moore 0·0·0; Neal 2·0·4.

Totals 26·13-65.

Score by quarters :

Hannan Trace
North Ga llia

12 19 20 29- 80
17 14 13 21 - 65

Edmonton scores hockey victory
By The ~lated Press
Washington goa.!e Pave Parro
dld)l't make 1! easy lor Edmonton
- but then the Washington defense
didn't make easy lor Parra.
After Friday nlght's warmups,
Parro told Coach Brian Murray
he'd !Ike to start against Edmonton, the wlnningest team In the National _Hockey League. Murray
gave him the green light - then the
Capitals rolled out the red carpet
for the Oilers' shooters.
Fifty-one shots later, Edmonton
had a 5-3 victory. In the night's only
other game, the Colorado Rockies
bombed Quebec 9-2.
"We had to work as hard as we
could to beat them," Edmonton
Coach Glen Sather said of the Capt·
tals. "But when you get 15 to 20
shots a petiod, pretty soon you're
golrlg to end up beating a team."
"He said he wanted to play and
he played outstanding," Murra~
sad of his beleaguered netmlnder.
"It's unfortunate that when you get

that kind of performance you can't
w1n tor him ... He certainly deserved
it."

Parro, whose 46 saves were the
most by a Washington goalie this
~ season. kept the Caps on an even
looting with the high-powered Oilers until less than six minutes remained In the game. Then, at 14:06
of the third period, Matti Hagman's
goalmouth deflection put Edmonton lr1 front 4-3. And just 31 seconds
later, Paul Coffey whipped a 35-foot
wrist shot home for l]ls 27th goal of
the season.
Earlier, Wayne Gretzky scored
his 70th goal of the season, leaving
him seven goals shy of breaking
Phil Esposito's NHL League record. And his ' two assists against
the Caps gave him 65 lor the season.
His 155 points Is nlrle away !rom his
own year-old record.
Dave Lumley and Mark Messler
also scored tor Edmonton. Chris
Valentine, Mike Gartner and Dennls Maruk connected for the Caps.

L yne Center Schedule

Week of February 14, 1982,

DATE - GYMNASIUM
Feb. 141-4 p.m./Open Recreation
,
8·10 p.m./College Recrealion
Feb. 15 8·10 p.m./College Recreation
Feb. 16 7 p.m.!Redwomen vs . Capital
·Feb. 17 8· 10 p.m./College Recreation
Feb. 18 8· 10 p.m./College Recreation
Feb. 197·9 p.m./Open Recreation

Feb. 20 2·4 p.m./Open Recreation

Feb. 21 1·4 p.m.IOpen Recreation
8·10 p.m./College Recrea,tion

I

1·4 p.m./Open POOL
Swim

Rockies 9, Nordlques 2
Vell-Pekka Ketola scored twice
in ~ second period to trigger an
eight-goal run as the Rockies tied
records tor most goals In a game
and the biggest winning margin.
His first goal tied It 2-2 just 33
seconds lrlto the second period, then
he scored the game-wlrlner at 7: 12
of the period before Colorado
pumped home a team-record six
goals- two by Dave Cameron - in
the third period.

Announce PPHS
revised schedule
POINT PLEASANT - Point
Pleasant Big Blacks Coach Lennie ·
Barnette Saturday announced the
revised schedule for the basketball
squad.
Here's the remaining schedule:
Feb. 16 - At Milton; Feb. 18 Sissonville, home, 1: 15 p.m.; Feb. 20
- at Gallipolis; Feb: 23 - .Ravenswood, home; Feb. 26 - Huntington
East, home; Feb. 27 - at Sissonville; March 1- at Hurricane; Mar·
ch 3- Mllton, home; March 5- at

books, while Sou!hern·achleved Its
widest lead of the game with 21
points toward the close of the thltd
quarter.
·
With a blgh scoring total 'l~ 22 for
the game. Southwestern was led by
Randy LaytOn, whUe Paul McNeal
contributed 16 points to !he home
effort and Roger Wellsll. Other top
scorers for Southern - Wolfe allowed most of his squad to play lrlcluded Robert Brown, with 15,
whUe Richard Wolfe, Tom Roseberry and Jay Rees had six points
each.
Southern enjoyed a gOOd night on •
the foul line, shootlrlg 18 of 28 tries
lor 64 percent. From the field, they
taUled 27 ot 62 attempts lor 44 percent. Southwestern rema!ned almost the same in Its percentages
lor the night, maklr1g 50 percent (10
of 20) on the free.throw line. They
sank 23 of 47 b&lt;~skets for 49 percent.
Led by Brown's 10, Southern bad
35 rebounds, 15 turnovers and 19
fouls. The Highlanders totalled 27
rebounds for the game, with

McNeal snatch!ng nllie. They also .
racked up 23 turnovers and 20 fouls. •
The Tornadoes now stand at 17-1 :
overall and 9.{) in the league. :.
Southwestern Is 2-14 overall and 1·7 ,.
mloop play.
·
In reserve play,' Dennis Tea· .
lord's 24 points ted the Southern B.
team to a 57-22 romp over Southw· .
estern. Mark Pelfrey w;lS top :
scorer lor Southwestern's reserve
with 10.
For Its f!nal week of regular play,
the Tornadoes host Miller In a nonleague matchup and round out
thlr1gs Friday when they host
Kyger Creek.
Southwestern travels toWahama
Tuesday and North Gallla Friday.
SOUTHERN (72)- R. Wolfe 3·0'
6; Frederick 1-2·4; Rees2·2·6; Bostic
1·1·3; Brown 4-7·15; Roseberry 3·0·6;
Beegle 1·2·4; K. Wolfe 12·4·28. Totals
27·18·72.
.
SOUTHWESTERN (56) - LeWiS
1·1·3; Baker 2·0·4; Wells S·l-11 ; Me·
Neal 6·4·16; Layton 9+22. TotalS 23·
10·56 • .

Score by quar1ers :

Southern
Southwestern

22 13 21 16-72
13

12 17 14- 56

Lakers lose I 00-94 battle
after poor third quarter
By The ~lated Press
It wasn't exactly a poinQess period lor the Los Angeles Lakers... but It was close.
They managed a measly nine
polrlls against San Antonio lr1 the
third quarter Friday night - theit
worst quarter of the season. And
the Spurs, behind George Gervln's
27 points, beat Los Angeles 100.941rl
a Natlonal Basketball Association
game.
In other games It wa5 New Jersey 109, Golden State 98; Dallas 103,
Seatlle 100; Utah 129, Kansas City
114; Phoenix 94, Atlanta 90, and
Boston 129, San Diego 116.
Los Angeles led by 15 po!nts late
lr1 the second quarter before the
Spurs got hot and closed the margin
to 52-45 at the haU. Then the Lakers
reaUy cooled off as San Antonio outscored them 26-9 to take an -61lead
going lrlto the final period.
"This game was a continuation of
our game with Kansas City Wednesday night," Lakers' Coach Pat
Riley said, referring to a 1.25-102
loss. "We could not get on track and
we can't seem to put away teams
after leading by 15 pqlp". ~ third
quarter was a rughtmare."
"I t111nk the big difference for us
was the third petiod," said Spurs
Coach Stan Albeck. "It was the
turnlrlg point that gave us a lot of
confidence."
The Lakers got wlthlrl two points
at 96-94 just 22 seconds from the end
before Gervln and Mark Olberdlrlg
sank two free throws apiece for the
Spurs to put the game away. Jam·
aal Wilkes topped the Lakers with
23 po!nts. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
benched early because of foul trou·
ble, scored only 10 polrlts lor Los

all went !lat...It was just one of
those nights,". said Abdul..Jabbar.
Neta 109, Waniors 98
New Jersey, which lost 12 of Its
fltst 15 games this season, achieved
a plateau o! sorts by reachtog the
.500 mark with a victory over
Golden State.
"This Is just a way station," said
Nets' center Len Elmore. who
scored 1,8 points to back team
leader Ray WIIUams' 22. "We are
bappy to an extent, but our goal Is
the playoffs. This Is only a start."
"This Is more slgnlficani for the
guys who were here last year,"
added Nets Coach Larry Brown.
"But we have made a lot of roster
changes, and I think this team has
more talent than the Nets have ever.
had:'

Golden State managed to close
within three points at99-96wlth3: 37
to play before the Nets scored 10 of
the game's ftnal12 polrlts.
Mavertcka 103, Sonlcs 100
Rookie forward Jay Vincent's 38
points, includlrlg six In a row to put
the game away In the fourth petiod,
helped Dallas post Its 15th victory of
the' seasodj malc!ltrig Its total
number of Victories in 199}.81, the
Mavericks' first year In the league.
"The way the guy Is playing just
amazes me at times," Dallas
Coach Dl~k Motta said of Vincent.
"Every game he does somethlrlg
that surprises me. If _y;e could

Last quarter charge fails;
Eagles top Bobcatstt 4 7-44

somehow package him for Rookie
of the Year, It would be great."
Center Jack Slkma led Seattle
with 30 points.
Jaa 129, KIDp llt

Adrlan 'Dantley's 27 polrlts, plus
21 by Rickey Green and 20 by Dar·
rell Griffith, C!lrrlOO Utah past Kansas City.
The Jazz outscored the Kings 15-2
during a three-minute span in the
fitst period to take a 35-21lead, then ·
made It 72-57 at the half with
another 12-2 burst~
"Utah really came out smoking
tonight and did a number on us,"
said Kansas City Coach Cotton Fltz·
simmons. "Technically, we were
never in the game. This Is discouraging and dlsgustlrlg and you'll
never see this ballclub play that
way again. We're go!ng to make
some changes."
,
Larry Drew led the Klr1gs with 17
points.
SWI» 91, Hawka 90
Dennis Johnson's 21 points, lncludlrlg one with a decisive foul shot
42 seconds !rom the f!nal bll2ZI!r,
helped fhoenix hand A!Ial)ta Its , ..;
elgh-ptive loss. . \
, , ·:)
'I1Ii!'"!Uils rallied !rom an early •
10-potot deficit to take a 50-44 balf- .
time lead, then opened a margin ot· ·
as many as 14 points in the third
quarter before the Hawks rallied.
Wayne "Tree" Rollins led all scorers with 26 points lor the Hawks.

r---------------------------~--------------­

MEN! Just For-You:
Exercise and Sauna
At The Top-of the Stairs

Ironton topples . Logan

FITNESS STUDIO

Angeles.

"We knew If we were going to w1n
It was going to be with our defense," said Gervln. "Tonight we
really slowed them up. They really
didn't go to Kareem and !bat was
their loss."
"We had a good game plan specifically to keep Kareem from
having a big nlg])t," added Albeck.
"We started .out playing like we
were capable of playing and then It

By GENE MOORE
POINT PLEASANT - The 18th
ranked. Point Pleasant Big Blacks,
paced by the outside shooting &lt;t
Todd Gibson and strong per·
formance from Senior John David,
shot to a big fir.ll hall lead and
withstood several· rallies to defeat
the Parkersburg Big Reds, 67-60,
Friday night.
Gibson, a~ junior guard, who is a
pure shooter as well as a fine
playmaker, saored 15 first half points, finishing the game with 23 points
for high scoring honors.
Overall, Gibson connected!on nine
of 17 shots from the field and sank
five or eight free throws.
,
David, 6-4 post-man, had his
biggest offensive night of the season.
He scored 12 of his 18 points in the
second half, which came on seven
buckets and four of five from the
charity line. He also had seven
rebounds to share that honor with
Poini's Kevin Smith.
Coach Bill Camp, second year
mentor
of the Big Reds who led the
UP AND OVER- Point Pleasant's 6-8 senior ceoFriday nlghi. Also shown are PPHS' Todd Gibson (No.
team
onto
the PPHS court with a l&gt;-10
ter, Ed Legge (No. 34), goes up and over Parkersburg
14), Big Reds' Jim Hertz (No. 13) and an unldenllfied
record,
felt
Point Pleasant's two
Big Red defenders in this Cbarlle Lee action photo
player.
guards, Gibson ami Littlefield, con·
trolled the tempo, a key factor in
Parkersburg's loss.
"It was a good game with good of·
ficiating," said Camp after the en·
·counter, " but TQdd Gibson is the
best shooting guard we have faced.
COoNC~EIIITRAT1ION - Point Pleasant's Todd !Ice) Gibson conOur game plan worked when we got
central~ as:;be prepares to shoot a · frL'Il throw In the Poll)! Pleasantthe big boy in foul trouble (Ed
Parkersburg basketball game Friday night at PPHS. "lee" led all
Legge), but David and Smith really
scorers with 23 Ia IIles as the Big Blacks turned back the Rig Reds, 67-60.
(Photo by Charlie Lee. I
hurt us inside."
time to regroup.
lead.
By SCOTT WOLFE
.
Point
Pleasant
scored
the
first
two
From that point on Eastern broke
J. D. Bradbury paced that attack
EAST MEIGS - Eastern's
Mark
Mihis
with
16
points
followe~ ,
In
the
final
quarter,
Point
points
with
7:47
on
the
clock
on
a
the press, and glided to a 47-34 lead
Eagles, alter soaring to a 47-34 lead with four points while Sandl; and
closely by Watkins' 14 points. Jeff
at the 2:54 mark. After several at' jwnper by Gibson. Parkersburg tied Pleasant managed to maintain its
midway through the fourth quarter, Moles chipped in two.
Ancrile scored 12 points coming off
lead
behind
the
scoMng
of
John
it
on
a
jumper
by
Mikes
at
the
7:00
tempts in which EHS came up
Following an Eastern time out
repelled a serious late game
·David,
who
scored
.eight
of
his
18
the
bench.
mark.
With
Gibson
scoring
10
points,
challenge by the .Kyger Creek Bob- that counteracted the Bobcat attack, scoreless, Kyger connect~d on its
Point
Pleasant will travel to
points
in
the
period.
Parkersburg
the
Big
Blacks
outscored
the
Bi~
end of the court. With time on its side
cats for a 47-43 SV AC triumph here Eastern hit six straight markers for
Milton
Tuesday
night to take on the
managed
to
outscore
the
Blacks
I
ft.
Reds
1!&gt;-3
to
take
a
21-7
first
quarter
Eastern ~cored the important 47-14
Friday night. The victory boosts a 1&amp;-16 deadlock. That surge was
Greyhounds.
1:tio
narrow
th-e
m•r
~
i
"
to
a
'inal
lead.
•
paced by Tim Dill and Roger Bissell , league victory .
Ea&gt;"tem to 11-6, while Kyger Creek
Parkersburg's Little Rcd.s
Point Pleasant upped its lead to 16 score of 67-60, the Big Blacks' fourtn
Eastern
canned
18
of
51
from
the
who
ended
up
on
the
scoring
end
of
a
has an 11-5 mark.
defeated
the Little Blacks 72-59 in
straight
victory.
points,
32-16
when
David
hit
on
a
noor for 35 percent, while K. C. hit
The Eastern brigade was led by successful full court press. •
the
reserve
game. Donnie Jone~~ , .
Coach
Lennie
Barnette's
team
is
short
jumper
with
3:17
remaining
in
for the same percentage at 16 of 46:
the double figure scoring of Tim Dill,
scored
20
points
to pace the Little
now
0.3
on
the
year
while
the
Bi~
Eastern hit II of 19 from the line for the half.
Most of the remaining two minutes
P. G. Riffe, and Greg Gole who net·
Blacks.
Rod
Bordman
and John.
Reds'
record
goes!).
II
on
the
season.
ParkersburH, however, was not
ted 14, 12, and 10 points respectively. in the half was spent at the foul line 58 percent, h~··' 28 rebounds, 15 turOshel
had
11
and
10
points
respec· ·
hit
on
24
of
57
shots
Parkersburg
novers and 17 fouls. Kyger hit t2 of about to allow the Blacks to make a
Tbat ttio, "''m btnet.O »ith clutch per- as both cl.ubs tried to take advantage
lively.
Coach
Larry
Markham's
for
a
42
percent
while
Point
Pleasant
17 at the line for 71 percent, had 33 run-away of the contest as . they
formance by Mike Bissell and Roger of the bonus situation , It was
tuam is now 6-5 on the year.
came roaring back with 14 straight tallied on 28 of 56 for 46 percent.
rebounds,.l5 turnovers, and 15 fouls .
Eastern, however, that came out on
Bi~~SSII, sparked the Eagle vidory.
Varsity box :
Sophomore
guard
Rod
Littlefield
Moles grabbed 14 caroms for the points to cut the margin to 32-30 just
Three Bobcats also hit double digit top and carried a 21-18 lead into the
scored
13
points
and
had
six
assists
Bobcats, while Riffe pulled down II before halftime.
PO INT PLEASANT (67) - David .
scoring as Keith Clark led the way Iockerroom at the half. Dill led the
Mark Mikes, a ~ senior guard for while Kevin Smith came of! the ben- 7 4·18 ; Legge 3·1-7; Simpkins 0·0·0: .
with 12, J. D. Bradbury II, and Jeff leaders with nine points and Cole six for the winners .
Liff letield 4·5·13; Gibson 9·5 23 ;
Eastern scorc'll an exciting 29-27 the Big Reds: gave the visitors their ch to score six points and pull down 1 Walls
points, while Moles canned six for
Moles 10.
0·0·0; Sm ith 3·0·6; Rutherlord ,
seven
rebounds.
Todd
Gibson
come-from-behind victory in the first lead of the game, 36-34. This
0·0·0. Totals 26·15-67 .
The Eagles of Coach Dennis Kyger.
finished
with
nine
assists
to
lead
that
came at the 5:04 mark of the third
PARKERSBURG J 60) - Mikes 6·
Eichinger were seeking to avenge an
The third frame was completely reserve contest. Mark Gaddis led
category
.
Ed
Legge,
sitting
out
most
4 16; Mor ri s 2·3 7; Williams 2-0 4t ..
quarter.
With
the
game
lied
al
40,
earlier loss to the 'Cats, as both controlled by Eastern. In that canto the Eagles of Coach Arch Rose with
Di iS 0· 1·1,· Watkin s 7·0-14; Her tz 2 - 2 ~ "'
of the game scored his season's low
and less than three minutes left in
, 6 ; Ancrile 52 12 . Totals 24-12-60 .
' •
the hosts outscored the hustling Bob- eight points, while Sieve Waugh
teams prepared for a close battle.
of
five
points,
all
of
those
coming
in
the period, the Big Blacks outscored
Score by quarters :
In the first period the "tooth and cats 13-4, to lead 34-22 a( its con- dumped in 12 forK . C.
the final period .
Parkersburg
I 23 12 18- 60
Eastern hosts North Galli a the Big Reds, 12·2, to take a 52-42
claw" ·battle began to form as cluSiOn.
Point Pleas;~n l
21 11 20 15-61
Parkersburg was led in scoring by
lead
at
the
end
of
the
third
stanza.
Adetermined effort by P. G. Riffe Tuesday, then plays Hannan Trace
evidenced by the five lead change:J
under the offensive bucket ~parked Friday and Miller next Saturday.
and four ties that came about during
Kyger Creek was scheduled to
the Eagle attack, along with two key
the stretch.
play
at Hannan Saturday night and
Despite Kyger Creek grabbing the
buckets by Mike Bissell.
goes
to Elk Valley for a 6 p.m.
Riffe dropped in six points in the
opening tip, it was Eastern's Greg
engagement
· Monday. Friday, the
LOGAN (451 - Don McDaniel 3·0·
percent from the field on 24 of 47,
IRONTON - Senior Jimmy
Cole who connected on the game's frame and pulled down several im6;
Ji m Gi ll 1 0·2; J im Angle 8·5·21; •
Bobcats
will
play
league
champion
made
seven
of
15
free
throws,
and
Morris scored 21 points and grabbed
first score at the 7:26 mark. Jeff portaQt rebounds.
Da ve Moore 1·0-2; J eff Morgan 6-1Southern.
grabbed 32 rebounds .
eight rebounds in leading Ironton to
While trailing going into the final
Moles looked the score at 2-2, setting
13; Milch Tru cco 0·1·1. TOTALS 19-7KYGER CREEK 1441 -Cia rkH· a 55-45 victory over visiling Logan
Logan's high scoring duo of Jeff 45.
the stage for the ensuing moments. ~!retch, Kyger Creek was forced to
10; Sands 4·0·8; Martin 0·2·2; Moles
IRONTON 1551 - Ed Rawlins 1·1·
Morgan and Jim Angle combined for
Friday night.
make an early charge for the lead.
When the dust had settled in the
5·0· 10 ; ~rice 1·0·2 and Bradbury 4·3·
3; Jay Wolle 3·1·1; Mark Fields 3·2·
34 points and 15 of the Cheftains' 20 8; Jimmy M or ris 10-1-21; Ri ck Fritz.
It was a goal by Morris in the first
Eagles' nest, the hosts held on to a The Bobcats controlled the oP.nin ~
11. Totals 16-12·44 .
EASTERN (471 - Ritchie 0·0·0; period that gave the Tigers an 0.7
J-0·6; Dennis Ba con 2-0·4; Bil l
rebounds.
tip and scored quickly on a goa l by
I~ lead.
Cole 4-2·10; Riffe 5·2·12; Bissell 2·0 lead which they never lost as the I·
The Chiefs finished with 19 of 53 ThOmas 2·2-6. TOTALS 24-7-55.
During the break between quar· Moles.
4; Sprague 1·0·2 and R. Bisse ll 2·1 5
Score by qua rten :
from the fi eld for 36 percent, seven Logan
Tigers le4 by quarter S&lt;'OrE!!l oi27-14
Seconds later. Dill connected on
te¢1, Coach Keith Carter made the
Totals 18-11 -47 .
I I 13 18 - 4'
off 11 at the charity stripe, but only Ir onton
and 38-27.
Bv quarters :
8 19 If 17 - 5~ ~
netessary adjustments for his Bob- two free throws, but Kyger Creek set
Creek
8 10 4 22- 22
Reserve score : Ironto n 60, Logarl
The Tigers, rebounding from a
committed 10 turnovers .
cais, as they grabbed the second up in its full court press and caught Kyger
39
Eastern
10 11 13 13- 47 pair of losses last week, drilled 51
Box score:
the Ea~les off guard. K. C. cut the
q~rter tip and quickly ripped off
ei!,\ht unanswered points for a Hi-8 lead to -36-29 before Eastern called

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1

PATRIOT- "We don't play well
at Southwestern - we were just.
glad to get out of there alive."
That was the feellng of Southern
Coach Carl WoUe followlrlgtheTor·
nadoes' 72-56 victory over the Highlanders Friday night . It was
Southern's ninth straight league
victory, assuring the ').'ornadoes
thelt sixth straight championship
in the Southern Valley Conference.
With customary top shootlrlg by
point guard Kent Wolfe, Southern
blasted Its way to a 22-131ead at the
close of the fits! quarter. However,
Coach Wolfe later felt the Tornado
push slowed down somewhat enterlrlg the ~ond canto.
"Physically, we played well, but
you knoJ,, when you get a 20-po!nt
lead yo~fbegto to make some careless mistakes," he observed.
Nevertheless, the veteran SVAC
mentor said he and the team "were
glad to w!n" and they managed to
keep the defenders at bay for the
remainder of the game. The closest
Coach Lloyd Myers' team came
was 10 points, according to the

Sat.
9to5.

IM7 Fl1ilay 111C1L Dll ce d It polala to led lhe EAII"' t'Ht SVAC
wu.,. AI left Iii KV. '11m l'ltce (11). '11m 'l'llcller plloto.
0.

Point Pleasant, W. V.
8 a.m. · 12 "noon

.
.·:
•'

•.

•

•

•

.

•''.
•

�Por11erov- Middleporf-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Feb. 14, 1982

w. va.

o - Point Pleasanl , w. va.

DePaul's Cummings unstoppable say~
Loyola hardwood (:oach Gene Sullivan

CHAMPIONSJUP BAU.- Danny Greene, center,l&amp; presented Friday's championship game baD lollowlng GaOJa Academy High School's
71-48 Southeastern Ohio League victory over v181tlng Melp. MaldDgthe
presenlatlon are Dave Taw,.ey, left, preslde11t ol the GABS lloollters,
aad Skip Meadows, " member ol tbe club'slund-ralslug project.

Waverly outlasts .
Wellston, 70-64

.

WELI..')TON The Waverl:y
Tigers connected on l4 of 20 free
throws in the fourth period Friday
night to hold off the home-standing
Wellston Golden Rockets, 7o-&amp;l.
Wellston, now 3-10 ~nd 5-3, suffered its fifth consecutive loss as the
Rockets bowed to the Tigers for the
23rd time in 24 games over 12 years.
The Rockets led most of the cor&gt;test by quarter scores of 20-16, 38-32.
Wellston had built an eight. point
spread late in the second period
before Waverly closed it to 50-411 af·
ter three qOBrters.
With four minutes remaining, the
'l'igers grabbed the lead, 57-56, and
were never headed.
Waverly, now !).jl and 7-5, was led
by .Eric Breitenbach's 23 points
while John Derrow tallied 20 foo:
Wellston, including a perfed 10 for

10 n1·ght at the foul line.
Waverly hit 25 of 59 from the field,
20 of 31 free throws, and snagged 21
rebounds, 12 by Breitenbach.
The Rockets were 19 of 50 from the
floor, 28 of29at the line, including 22
of 22 in the first half, and pulled
down 38 rebounds with Brad Benson
getting 13.
Box score:
WAVER~Y (70) Tom Them·
pson 3·2·8; Joe Branum 4·3·11; Jerry

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Gene Sull1van had a game plan·
... but It didn't Include how to stop
Ten)' Cummings.
"In my book," said the coach of
the Loyola (ill.) basketball team,
"there Is nobody who can stop
hlm."
The "unstoppable" DePaul cen·
ter virtually had his way with Sull1·
van's team Friday nlgbt, scorlng33
points and grabbing 19 rebounds to
lead the third-ranked Blue Demons
to a ~ victory over Loyola.
"Ten)' Cummings Is probably
the hungriest player In the country
right now," said Sullivan. "We 11g·
ured we could beat .them If we held
Cumm1ngs to 20 or. 25.. poWS.- bul
there was no way."
Ounmings scored his game-high
point total despite a nine-minute
drought at the beg1nn1ng ot these. cond half.
"Thts year 1t Is a different Cum·
mlngs and a different DePaul
team," said Sullivan, referring di·
rectly to the absence of 1981 star
Mark Aguirre. "They play much
more Intensely. When Cummings
took charge, he just destroyed us."
Wblle DePaul Coach Ray Meyer
might have been happy with Cummlngs' per10I'fli8Jiceand his team's
22nd victory 23 games, he wasn ,1
too happy with theoll1c1als, who hit
the Blue Demons with 17 traveling
calls.

"It was Uke Disneyland out
there," said Meyer, who was fur·
taus enough to pick up what he said
was only the third technical foul of
his 40-year coaching career. "I
thought, 'What the heck, I've got
nothing to lose,"' Meyer satd of the
technical. "I felt Uke the team
needed something to shake 1t up."
In the only other game's Involving
ranked teams Friday night, No.JJ
Idaho defeated Weber State 71-62
and Calltornla upset No.l9 Wa·
shington 54-50.
Top Twenty
Ken Owens' 25 points powered

Idaho over Weber State. The victory 1 - only Idaho's second ID
Ogden since the two teams began
playing ID 1963-64 - moved the
Vandals to a leaglle,lead!ng 9-1 record In the Big Sky Confere.1ce.
Idaho Is 20-2 overall. •
Michael Chavez had W 1101nts and
California outscored Pac!f!c-10
Conference leader Washington 8-1
In the 1ast 3~ minutes to upset the
Huskies.
·
Ulll'llllked Teams
Reserve forward Darren Daye

EAST LANSING, Mich . (AP) OhioStateellmtnateddelendlngun,
oll!clal Big Ten women's champion
Minnesota 68-liG Frtday to win a sernlflual berth ID the conference's
l!rst oft!clal women's basketball
tournament.
Ohio State's Kelly I.!.QI;lJ,IIsOn
canned a turnaround jumper with
26 seconds left to give the Buckeyes
a 66-6t edge over Minnesota In a
gam e that saw the lead change
hands 29 tlmes.
The Buckeyes played Northwest·
em last night. The Lady Wildcats

Athens defeats Jackson in
high-scoring ·contest, 76-70
s

ATHENS teve Bruning and an d the BuJld ogs never trailed
Matt Bonzo each tallied 25 points again.
Friday night, but Bruning's Athens
Athens led by quarter scores of 36team hung •m to defeat Bonzo's 32 and 52-45, and finally built a 6~7
·Jackson team, 76-70, in an SEOAL lead with just 3:30 remaining in the
contest at Athens.
contest.
~
TheBulldogs uppedtheirrecordto
JHS made it close in the ft·nal
13-5 and !l-3 by drilling 55.6 percent of period by hitting 11 of 12 free throws
their fielders (30 of 54). Jackson to conclude a sensaiional evening at
dropped to!l-9 and:&gt;-7.
the foul line with 24 of 2B.
AHS
D
·
jumped to a quick 5-0 lead
oug Morris was a perfect 10 for
before t~ Ironmen knotted the 10 and Bruning converted nine pf 10.
score at 11-11.
Athens made 16 of 27 free throws
Wood M 1
d . ked ·
Y aye's goal just hefore an PIC
off 19 rebounds, seven by
the first period ended made it 13-11 Mayle .

Jackson WI 23 of 51 fielders for ...,
'"
percent and claimed 24 misfires,
with Allen Collins and Morris each
getting five .
Box score:
JACKSON (70) - Matt Bonzo 8·9·
25; JonCtay6·0·12; AllenCollinsB ·4·
20; Doug Morris 0·10·10; Mark Fenik
1·1·3. TOTA~S 23-24·70.
ATHENS 176)- Brent Henry 1·2·
4; Jim Schanzenbach l0·1c21 ; Kevin
Schwarzer IH·1; Mike Croci 4·2·10;
Woody May le 7·1·15; Steve Bruning
8·9·25 . TOTA~S 30· 1~76.
Score by quarter.:
Jackson
11 21 13 2s-7o
Athens
13 23 16 24--76
Reserve score: Athens 35, Jackson

.
Ohio high school
basketball scores
.lonarhan AJOOr £2, Grandv&amp;Pw 56

Jlla"h &amp;hool8o)'l 8ulleiiMU

K.lllda

87 The .4MoctMed Pnw!
Frtday'• Reilulta
Ada 47, SIX'flcervllle 45

~

..
•i

•

~

1\kron Manchester fil, 1'rlway !i.'i
Allhland 74. Dover ~1
AVOI\ 53, }({&gt;ystonP :10

Ucklng Hta. 78, Llddng Val. 59
Ll.•bon 8J, Stanton Local 66

Aycrsvllle ~ . Edgerton ~
Bfdford Chanel 81, GUITlOUr st
Bellaire 14. Brillg('flOr1 72
Bellbrook li6. Day. Norlhl1clge 47
Bellelontalne 62, Kenton fUdge 52
C!!.rllsle &amp;4, Gm'!nvUJe 62. 01'

Locklarrllfl, Landmark 70
Lorain 60, Manon Kardlna: 57, 20T
Lorain CaUl. 63, Lorala Southview 58
Loul~vllle "· Mas1Won 66
Mnrtl!rln Butlm- Ill, Mason 56
Mana. Malabar ~. Clear Fori!: 62

"

Bluffton Ill,

Ll ncolnV\~

52

Drookfteld 76. YOURA:· Llbcrl y 70

Lln! ly

Buckeye Trail 73,

Bo~8vtllc

56

C31dwP.ll M , Meadowbrook !'tl
Cana l W\nchl&gt;sll&gt;r ~. Bl!MW' UnJoo &lt;11

ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions . ............. .. .... ... ... . ...... . ·: ~ 189,585,000
U.S. Treasury securities ............. .. ......... ... . ........................ 62,422,000
Obligations of ot~er U.S. Gov't. agencies
and corporations ...... . ..... . . . . . ...... . .... . . .... .... . . . . ............... 65,615,000
ObligationS of States and political subdivisions
in the United States .................. . ........•.•... ... .. ...... ....... . .. 152,643,000
other bonds, notes, and debentures ......· . ....... . ........ .. ............ . .... : . . 595,000
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . . .... . .......................... . ... 1,914,000
Trading account securities ................ ....... ... ; ..... ...... .. .. . ..... ... 1,597,000
Federal funds sold .............. .. ..... ....... ...................... . ... ... . 23,900,000
Loans, Total ( ~xcluding unearned income) . ... ............... . . . $620,451,000
Less: Allowances for possible loa'n losses .... .. .. .................. 1,350,000
Loans, Net ... . . . ....... ........ . ............... . .. .... ; ... . ............ . 613,101,000
Lease financing receivables .. . .. .. ... ................ . .. .............. . ... .. 89,084,000
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . . . . .. . ....... ............. .. . .. .... 23,104,000
Real estate owned other than hank premises ................ .. ........ . . ..... , . . 1,955,000
Customers' liability to this bank on acceptances outstanding .... . .. . . . .. . . ........ 6,954,000
Other Assets ........... . .... . .. . ......... . ... .. .... . . .. .. . .... ... ..... . .. . . 27.076,000
TOTAL ASSETS ..... .... .. ....... .... ..... ... .. . ............ . .... . . .. .. $1 ,2591545,000

.

Cardlnaton ~. Loudonvtllr 48
Chagrin Falb 78, W, Gt-ouga !'tl
Chardon 'l"l, Cantina I 60

Mllront 49, Ulveland 47
Mineral RJdae ~. Lowcllv!Ue ~

Cln.

~.

Na~ 47, SylvarUa Northvtew 46
Ncllonvllle-York &amp;1, MWer 6..1
New Philadelphia 72. WOO'lter 61
N1:w8rk 52, bmelv!Ue 38
Newton 64, Twtn Valley S. if7
Nlll's McKinley fG, AU!ltln10wn·F'1t.:h 38

ii,

N. OIITUIOO 50, MOO-Ina 41
N. Royalton 81, Mlapark ~
N. Union 78, New A.lbany 62

aayrnont 66: Canal J'ulton NW 50
Qermont NE 90, Batavia !17
arveland His 16, !,anna 46
QC!Vf!. Kcmnedy Iii. C\P.w. F. . Troch :u

Northmont 50. Mlamlsburw 49

Cllnton · MaMI~

Day. Roth lll1, Day.

Jo~ alrvll'w

Olentan&amp;Y 66. Big Walnut ~
_
On,[on Oay 69, Uma Shawnt't'8'7, 2CYr
Om1Jko 51. w. Holmes l7
Oltawo Hi lls 70, N. Ba1Urml1' li4

_.,

.
"'

I

Grtenview 62. CediiVllkt 51
Grove City !WI, lleyt'l()ldaburft 49
Hamlltm 'RoM MI. Little Mlamt 46

Hardin No11h!m 81, Cory-Raw10n 48
Jleath 61 , ,Johnstown NortMdgt' tll
Hilliard 13. Col. r rl'lnklln li t~ 60
IIUlsOOI'O 75, Wn.&lt;otllnll'tOn C. H ~
lnd!an IIIII ~. Glen Est(' 56

Jerknon 61, Falrpor1 Hardl11144
John G)enn ee.

w. Muakl~ ~

Preble Shal¥l'll!'e 70, Twin Valley N. ~
R.a&lt;"lne St.IJthem 72, PatrkJI SW ~
RBW'I'Ina !9, NordoAla &amp;9
RaY1:nna SE ~'1. Garretlsvllle ~
ltcadln&amp;' 66, HIII"I'IJ.orl 65
RIChmond HIA. 46, Newbury t3
Rld~72. Carey~

Del~ St. •l&lt;lhn 71i. Bath 0

Falrn...&gt;td 1i0, HamUton Badin ~
FalrftQ!d Union 48, Logan Elm 44
f'tshcr Calh. 59, Millersport 51
Fort fWalvcry 79. Parkway 00
Franklin Monroe t.6, BradfonJ ~
f'rccltler '!D, Fort Frye 51
Gatw.nna 67, GIVftPOI1 !58, 20T
Geneva 4fi, Conneaut 41
Georgetown 82, FayelleYtlle S2
Glbea'lbui'i 2, Gcnollli6
GJ'I!IIt'llftekl17. TN.y1 Val. e
G.wnon. 73. S{xtna:. Sbawnet&gt; 67

3J

IUver m. New Martin.!lviUe, W. Va. ~
Htver VIew 63, New Lf'xlrli!On 1iCJ
Roolatown 8J, Strnet~boro &amp;.1
Rourord M. Anthciny w~ 44
Seneca E. 60, Old Fan 31
Shadyside 61, Buckfoye w. -47
Sherwood Fatrvtew 62, Tinon 50

Sidney :18. PIQua 50
S. Woo.ter ~. New Bolton M
Sprtna. North 119, Beaverclftk II
Sprtna. Northtutem IU. Larmn !!fi
Sprlrla . South ~. Day. wa~ fJil
Sti!UbenVIUe Calh. ~ ,Jcf'tenon UniOn

"

Stow ~ Wabh .Jesuit 47
Slralburl: )7, TuacarawU Cath. 4.5
'f'ecumleh J8, Vandal.ia·Buller 36
'ntTin Calven 66. Q)'de 56
Tol . MKUnbl!r 63, TCII. Woodward 6l
Tot . St Frlncll 72, Tol. Central :m
Tol. Waite 72, Tol. Ubbey G3

-~ . ~:~~::

MEMORANDA
AmoWtts oustanding as of report date:
Standby letters of credit, total .... .. . . .. ... .......... ........ ...... .. . .... . S 45,5.14,000
To U.S. addressees(domicile ) .............................. .. $ 45,079,000
To non-U.S. addressees (domicile) ... . ............... .. ............ 455,000
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
,
. of $100,000.or more .... ....... ...... .... ........ . ....... ...... . . ....... ... 193,976,000
Other time deposits in amounts of $100,000 or more . ........ . . . . . ..... .. .. .. .. ... .. 145,000
Customers' liabillty on acceptances outstanding ·........ . . •.. .... . ... ..... ... ... 6,954,000
U.S. addressees (doriiiCile) .. .. . . .......... . . .. ... . ........ . .... $ 904 ,000
Non-U.S. addressees (domicile) ..... . ...... .............. . . ..... . . 6,050,000
Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date :
Cash and due from depository institutions . ...... .. .......... ........... ... . . l11,753,000
Fed fWtds sold ... ..... .... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 25,353,000
To~lloans ...... . .... . ... . ................... . . .... .. . .. . .. .......... ... 637,297,000
Time certificates of deposits in denominations of
SIOO,OOOOrmore ...... .... .... .. . . . . ........ . . ..... . .. . ... . . . • · · · · · · · · · 192,~·:
Total deposits ....... . . ... .... . .. . . ... ........ . .... . · · · · . . .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · 900,03 •
Fed. fWtds purchased and securities sold under agreements
•
.
to repurchase · ..... ·'· .... . .................... .. ....... .. .. ...... . .. . . . . 174,010,000
Other liabilities for oortowed money .... ... .. .............. .. ..... .. .. . . ... .... 42,000
TOTAL ASSETS ........ . ............... .. ... . .... . ............. . ......... $1,231,439

Port!l. East 511, Franklin Furnac. GTE'81

OlJdt S5, npp a~y :10
DubWn 56. Bucke)'e Val. t9
E. canton f!l, Tualaw 46T

Falrbom Balu'r 18. W. Ca!TOll too ffi

Pauldllll( 77, Alk&gt;n F.. 59
~k&gt;s T7, White Dak :11
Phllo 59, CrooksvUJt. 56
Poland Sr.mJnar;
Silrm '-\
Purt!. Clay 90, Potu. Notre l)am('

- •
·-·-_

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

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP)A jury found David Leon Cheadle
guUty of first-degree murder In the
shootJng death of Galle Nava, a
former University ol New Mexico
basketball player, and also recom·
mended that Cheadle die by lethal
injection.
·

---....
u.aca

.......
-.- -...
-·. .
~~o·--··c--.
.,.. .....
~

o;a._

· 1, Fred H. Gardner, Vice President &amp; Comptroller of t~ above-oamed bank \10 hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and beh"t.
·
·
Fred H. Gardner
· Jan.uary 13, 1982

Tot Scott 6.\ Strltch 51
UnloiO II. AdeM M
Upper Sand\llky 83, Norwalk(()
Upper Sdow Val. 63, Coi!UIIbul Grtn~e

"u...... ..,...,.,.-52

HORIZ()..................................... '11.65

HOUGHTON BIRCH •••••• •••. •• •• •• •••••••••• '11. 95
MISTY BLUE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '11.20
NATURAL PECAN •••••••••••••••••••• • • •. • • • • '11.65
PATINA GOLD••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '12.45
PATINA GRAY. ••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••• '12.45
SANDY BEIGE •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• '10.95
SEAFOAM WHITE •• •••••••• :•••••••••••• •• •• '12.24
UNION CEDAR ..... ••••••••••. ••••••• ••••• •••• '11.65
MOHEGAN "'I• ••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••• '14.59
HIGHL.AND HICKORY %';••••••••••••••••••• '24.95
COVENTRY BIRCH %': •••••••••••••• ~ ••••·•••• '17.95
BLOCK
HOUSE "'14 ............................. '14.35
'
CIDER BROWN ••• ••••••• ••••• •••••• •••••••. 'J0.39
PRAIRIE PINE••••••••••• .. ••••••. ••••••••••• 'l0.98
PLYMOUTH PINE···••••••••••••••••• ••••••••'10.98
PORTAGE PINE•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'10.98

•.

. we, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of ~is statement of resources and
liabilities. We delare that it has been ezamlned by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
1
belief Is true and correct.
Joseph D. Landen
James K Lewi.ll - Directors
Jan!es E. Mountjoy

'

..

SALE
'6.44
'9.99
'12.69
'8.49
'12.69
'9.29
'8.49
'12.29
'9.89
'10.19
~9.49

'9.89
'10.59
'10.59
'9.39
'10.49
'9.99
'12.39
' '19.8'
115.19
'12.29
'8.85
'9.39
'9.39
'9.39

BATHROOM PANELS
GOLD LACE••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'12.95
AGEAN GOLD ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••.'13.95
SPRINGTIME, ••••••••••• ••••••• •• •••• ••••••• •1 13.95

'10.99
'11.89
'11.98

...........,.
,!'

·~~

-A... ;., l=lu..-uw'it

c ...... .,,_
fj.

·--··-••v•U ••O-o•&lt;·~-- · --~·- ~•

...,..........••.-

•

13
48-IN. WORKSHOP LIGHT
88

HOUSEHOLD tij.\l
STEPLADDER '0/

Two-light, rapid-start lamp Is wired and assembled, all
ready to hang in your workshop, garage or loundry room.
·3-wlre cord, 24-ln. chain. Tubes not Included.
240SP

~--CEILING TILE

Haa pail shelf with rag rail
and tool holder, pin ch-proof
spreader, and botlom and
I

2"x4" ECONOMY GRADE

14 STYLES
IN STOCK
TO CHOOSE FROM

PRE-CUT STUDS

99( EACH

·20% OFF

WE CARRY ACOMPLETE SELECTION OF
WIIIBER FOR ALL YOUR BUILDING NEEDS

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
•

Utka '16, Newarfll Cath. :50
VIJI Wen 63. Celina 55
Vcru.IUet !10, Miami E. :r1
WadBW«lh 11:1, StronasvtJJe t8
WaPftkoneta H. Ottawa-Glandorf 38
Wl1'l"'!rr Han:ttna iT, Youn,. Ul'alllne 51
W8l'n!ft LaBrw KJ, Newton F'IUI&amp;t

REG.

CHERRYTONE LUAN.~•••••••··~··••••••••••• · '7.59
ALMOND••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••• '11.95
BAMBOO GARDEN ••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •• '14.95
BRANDY B.IRCH •••••••••••• •••• ••• ••• •·••••. •• '9.89
CARMEL ••••••• ••••••••• •••••. •••• •••• •• , •••• '14.95
CASCADE PECAN. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '10.95
CRESTLINE •••• ~ ••••••••••••• •••• •••• ••• ~. •••. '9.95
CHANTILLY. •• •••••• •••• •••• ••••••• ••• ••••• •• '14.39

. :. : . .
Undivided profits ....... . ....... .. ........... .. . ... . .. ..... . ...... · . · · · · · · · · 43:984:000
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .. ......... .... . .... . ..... . ........ . .... .... . . S 103_133000
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ..... . .. .. .. ............... .. $1 ,259,545,000

Parma Holy Namf! tifl, Brookl)'Tl 47
Parma Normandy 18. Shalter Hb. 40
Panna Padua 73. Lake CaUl. 44
Parma Valle)&lt; Forae 84, Ca rfle&amp;d HtA.

n.

71

Euclid 54, Bedford~
Evergt\"('11 74. Mootpeller 6.1

Su':p~~ s-~~~- ~~~~-~~i~~-. ~:27.0.'~ ~P·a-~V~l~~) ..·..· ::::: : . .. ::: :. : •

Paint Val. 60, zane Trare 43

Oily. Stl.'bblna73, 'T"rry 49
O.y. Wrlj:ht 76. Day.• lctft'r!IOn 58
Dl'f\PL"~' 14, St. Marys 66

E. Cleveland Shaw 81, Lll~ 19
Elyria 81, Fremont RoN 5.1
Elyrta Cath. 'f'J, Elyrta W. 48

f1 . UFI!f

Mo111:an 6.2, Sheridan ~7
MI. Vernon t&amp;, '!A&gt;lawal'l' 28

Cln . Pr1ncmoo 76, Hamlllon b:

89, S. Ct\arli.'S!On SE Sl
Cloverleaf 9'2. llrecksvlllc 77
COidW8ll'r 46, St. Henry :19
Col. A.cndemy 61 , W. .Jerrcrson 54
Col. DriK~ 'l'l, Col. lndciX'f\dcnce 67
Col . Centennial Y.l, Col. Uudcn·
McKinley !17. ar
Col. Eut 91, Ccl. MIMIII M
Qll. Hamilton Twp. 79, Uberty Union ~
Col. MaJ1on ·Fnmklln Ill, Col. Eas tmoor
63
.
Col. Northland 61, Col. ~heron 41
Col. Sl. ctiarlt"S 42. Col. DtSillel 40
Col. Waue.-.on fAi, Col;. Hartley 6:2
· Col. Wehrle ID, Col. Read}' f6
Cot. West 10, Col. Sout h m
Col. Wl-6!\oJF ~. CDl. Brmkht~ve n :'!0
Cosheoton 44, Mans . Mlldt10n J.!
Day. Cham ..Tul. fl!, Kettering A.ltcr &amp;I
Day. Dunbar 81. Day. Whit{' 73
OQy. K.lJer 411, Day . Ponencn 39
Day. Mcadowdale 67, Day. &amp;olmont 40
Day. Oakwood 57, Mllton·Unlon ~2

,....._..

SAA!~,......

MlMtl!r 112, BolkJM 63
Mlululnawa Val. 56, Arcanum 51

~

Cln. E .OOr ~1, Cln. PtH'f'l!ll 46
Cln. Groonh\111 ~. Cln. M&lt;" Nichola~ 49
Cln. Ut..c;aue ?.J, Cln . Moeller !17
C1n. Northwest ~. Norwood t"

Cln . Woodward 9J, Cln. Taf1
Cln. Wyomlna &amp;7, Ta)ior &amp;I
Qf'('II&gt;V\Ile &amp;1, WllmlriJfiOO ~2

LIABILmE'l
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations .. .... .... .. . .. . ............................. ..... ...... $ 296,214,000
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnshps., and corps............ . . . , .. . ......... . . . .. . . ................. .. 500,637,000
Deposits of United States Government . .. . ... .. . . . . .. ... . .. .. ... . .. . . . . .. .... . . 3,993,000
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
intheUnitedStates ... .. ..................... .. .. . . ....... . . ..... .. .. . .... 92,474,000
Deposits of CO!IUDercial banks .... ......... . ... .. ·. t , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... .. 15,056,000
Certified and officers' checks .... . ......... . ... ..... . ... .. . . .... .... ......... 16,021,000
TOTALDEPOSITSINDOMESTICOFFICE'l ...... . ......... .. ... $926,395,000
Total demand deposits ... .... ......... ......... .. .. .... .. ... .. $342,052,000
Totaltime and savings de'posits . . .... . ....... .... ... ......... .. $584,343,000
TOTAL DEPOSITS fN FUREIGN OFFICES. . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . $ 13,750,000
TOTAL DEPOSITS .... .. . .. . .................. .... .. ..... ... .... ....... .. 940,145,000
Federal funda purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase ............. . ..... .. ... .... ... .... ......... 170,005,000
Interest-bearing demand notes (note balance l
issued to the U.S. Treasury . .............. . ...... .. .. ... ... .. . · · · · · · · · · · · · · 11,218,000
Other liabilities for borrowed money ... . ........... ... ..... . . ... ..... . .. .. ..... 1,346,000
Bank's liab1lity on acceptances executed and outstanding .. ...... . . ..... . .. ...... 6,954,000
otherliabilities ..... . ...... . . . .. .. ....... . ... .... ..... . .. . ........ . ... .. . .. 26.7~,000
TOTALUABIUTIES ............ . ·. ...... . .. . . . . . . . ..... ... .. .. .... . . . $1 ,156,412,000
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Conunon stock
a . No; shares authorized 1,500,000

Minerva m. Sandy Val. S2

WcstervWc: N. 32

Anderson 81, Forest Pnrk

0

Mld·Amt'rtca Chr. 63, MauiUon Cllr. ~

MIOOil'town Fenwick 78, Franklin 76
Middletown MadiiiOCI 81, MallOn :'!1
Midvlcw :':1 1. Lorain Oearvlt!w ~

Olllllcothe

GREEN TAGS MEAN GO FOR THE DEAlS ON
GOODYEAR TIRES. SAVE BIG NOW lHRU Mr. NIGHTI

~7

Canton South 62. MnMillon .lacUoo :'J6
canton Timken til, Canton O&gt;n1n11 Cath.

po!J!ts to help tbe Eagles take a 47-44 victory. Sands
had eight poluls for tbe Bobcats. Tile victory avenged
an earlier 1088 at Cheshire.

re8poase to call made by Comptrol!er of the Currency, under Title 12, United States Code, s.,.,.
tlon 161. Charter n.umber 16416 National Bank Region Number 4.

GOODifEAR

Medina Buckeye fir, Cuyahop HU1. fi t

Canflekl 63, SCruttw:~ 44i

WOOD PANELING

of Cincinnati In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 1981 publ!shed in

MassUion Pl&gt;ny 50, MarUngton 47
Maysville 36, Trt·Va!Jey l5
McComb n, Van BUI'I.'II S2
Mc~rmou NW 12, Porta. Wet\ 511
McDoftald 64, Columbiana n

Buckeye S. 86, Toronlo &amp;J

1.- '• •
lreep!l pace wllh Eaatem guard Greg Cole during
Friday'• SVAC encounler at Eulem. Cole caruted 10

Maplt'WOOd ~. Brtlto.l 47
Marlett&lt;~ :\9, Lancutflr :!A, 20T
Marton Calh. 71, Northmor 56
Mnrlon Local 64, New KnoiMUt' ~
MartiM Fem U3, Wt'a&gt;llt!K (W. Va .)

Buckeye Central ~. Rlvcrdnle 21
Buckeye N . 47, Bellalrt! Sl . .Jol\n ~. OT

Come in and see our complete collection of high
quality
paneling.
We
feature colorful
woodgrains, decorator prints, textures, and
patterns .

STEP BY STEP - Kyger Creek's David Sands ( 11)

'

C"4mway 43
Lebanon 78. Ll!mon·Monroe U
Lfdgemont ~. Perry 411
Ll!hrnan Cath. M, Spring. CatMIIt 41

Belh4:!1 58. TJ1.VJUafle !\7
91-xley ~7. Marysville 56
Dloom ·Carroll ~. ArTUJndii · O~an:ll't'k

•

Olk:lvllle 44i

•

.

l.akl'lllnd 4fi,

Akron CenHiower 57, Akron EUct 50
Alln:ln Coventry 70, Ft~kl ~
Akron F l rettl:lnP ~. A)lron N .

~.

Ken! Roosevelt IIi, Cuyahoga Falls 10
Kenston 89, AW'Ora 63

•

20% OFF

..

.

ONo

Cheadle found guilty

SAVEUPTO

The Cent-ral Trust Company, N.A.

Waverly 41.

to seven points but never led
against IU1no1s .

•

REPORT OF CONDITION ~

1·0·2. TOTA~S 19-26·64.
Score
by
quarters :
waverly
16 16 16 22- 70
Wellston
20 18 12 1~4
Reserve score: Wellston 45,

reached the sernll1nals by defeating Wisconsin 62-52.
Northwestern and Iutnols found
winning strength on the bench to
their semifinal berths.
"Coach (Jane) Schroeder gave
me a specific job to do, to go In and
tak~ it to the hoop," lliinp!s' S.foot-3
fres\")1an center Kendra Gantt
sa1d[af1er..coming off the bench and
pacing a 79-64 llllnl victory over
host Michigan State on Frtday
night.
Michigan State trailed 32-25 at
the half, then narrowed the margin

TRUCKLOAD

Miller 8·0· 16; Eric Breitenbach 7·9·

Perkins 7· 2·16; Scott Massie 2-0-4;
Bub Noris 3-4·10; Charlie Lindauer

e-C-7

Buckeye women cagers gain 8emifmals in loop tournament

scored 10 straight points In a 2; 3!1
stretch ot the second halt alld lin·
!shed with 18 to spark ucLA over
Arizona 88-73; Larry Anderson connected on a 25-!oot jlimper with one ·
second left to give Nevada-Las Vegas a 52-50 victory over Brigham
Young; Guy WUilarns scored 13
points and grabbed 13 rebounds to
lead Washington Statetoa62-54vlctory over Stanford; Eric Batley
scored 21 points as Boise State
nipped Idaho State 71-68 in overtime and Orlando Phllllps scored l8
points io pace .:Pepperdlne 1over
Gonzaga 73-59.

r---------:-----------~-------------------3-4._'- - - - - - - - -

23; Joe Brown 1·4·6- Jeff Allen 2·2·6.
TOTA~S 25·20·70 .
' WE~~STON (64)- John Derrow
5·10·20; Brad Benson 1-10·12; P. J .

Times -Sentlnei- Pa

f'

555 Park St.
Middleport, OH.
llltlrs: lloa•.fri. 7 to 5 Soil 7 lo 3

'

PH. 992-6611

�,
Page- C-8- The S unday Times-Se nt ine l

Cooney
still has
painful
feeling

Pro standings

SiundlnKs
W. L

:ro

2

Ct!nl ral Supply
NewRivt-r Elec.

26 G
Z2 10

McDonah.l's

Z2 10

Slllrd and Fuller Hell lty
Hendquart.cn B&lt;~r
•The Hll1r Ciippt•rs

20 12
12 20

-Bob Ev ans fo' ann

·"

Transactions

Sl. Louts

Wlrtnlpr&gt;g
Chicago
Turonlo
Dt&gt;troll

.

Nf:W YOHK \' At-.'KF. E&amp;-S!I(lled

Ntlson. pitcher
Nallonal teo~~.gue ~
MO!\' TREAL EXPOS-Signed Terry

II :lll
10 247 264

WlcghDw; , c a1t· h~ r. and Tom Gorman,
Bryn Smith. BHJ Sattlr-r. Bob .James and

!J

.left Ta ylor. p11Chers.
NEW YORK METS- Named Rusty
St;~ ub, first haSl'man, a p!aycr&lt;aach.

"' "' """" ""'
,.. ,."" ""'
'"' ""
318 ,.
", ,."' " "" "'' ""'
" ,.,. " "' ""''" ""'
"' "'
Quebec
26

.

II

UJ

Smythe DlvtaiM

Clllli!BI)'

v'""""""
l..os

Ang~:lt-s

Colorado

IJ 10

BA.'iKETRA.U.
Natlon.II.J BaslwUiaJI AH8ociatlon
SEA T T L E
SUPE R SON I CSAajuired
Phil Smith. guard, trom S.On ~ eg.J Jn eJ•.

I !OJ

12
9

15

12

12 20
12 20
12 20
6 26

~ . N~&gt;wa rk .

JJ ·

cMngl' ror Armond Hill. guard, a nd

F"Ttdll)''l G&amp;IN'Il

Colcrado S,
2
Edmoolon 5, WashinJ(tOn J

"sccOrid-round draft Dick In 1002.
FOOJ'BAU.
Nallona.l Footha.ll Lell«1fe
DENVEH BRONCOS-Sigood Terry t:J.
~ ion, Nate Lu ndy and .fO hn Noonan, wid('
recelvt'rs. Arlington .Jonl'~. running back;
Bruce Byrom, cenwr.guard: GI'(Of(g Ger ·
ken. linebacker: a nd Larry Ve rnon, kid ·

Sun:l~ ·· Gamel!

NY lslandl:!!ll at Ha rtford
Lot! Angeles al P hlladelphl.a
Que be(: al New York Raogcrs
Wash lngwn a1Colorado
noston at Edma1ton
Monday'11G~

\llf.'W"

tl-46.
4, Colctwatcr, Jlj.() , beat St. Henry 46-39
5, War:~aw Rlvt'r View, 17·1, bea l
Croo ksvtlle 'ri' -19, beat New Lexlngl()n fU.

m

W('Sicrn

7. Dayton Roth, 13-!t. beat Dayton FalJ.
"1ew l!n-71 , played a\ Yellow Springs Sal·

GENERAL

W
Do9.ton
Philadelphia
NN" .Ieney

Pet.

-

J4

H
25

.?U!

I
ll

2~

.MXJ

'II

.460

IJ
1J

GRAND CANYON COJ.LEGE-Sll{llOO
./oe Arnolc, head bas~ ball roach , to a

.7\li
.440

IJ

.4!11
.404

14 Yi
14 \.5

..
.UI

U lfl
2:!

Indiana
Atlanta
Chicago
ClevEland

U

37

thra~year

a

Uouston

2t&gt;

11
2'l

Denver

25

2J

Utah
Kan.us City
DaLlas

17
16

31
l1

15

3J

.606

p- ~

Gotd(&gt;n State

"

So n ))lego

14

21
'll

2ti

-

·"'
.:m '
.:rw.
.m

Ci.'h

.313

16

J, Columbus Academy, J7 ~. lost to
Delawan- nuckeye Valley 40-:la, tx-a t
We!il .leffer!if)fl 61 · ~ .
4, New Waslltll,\{ton Buckeye Ccnlral, n.
0, lx'al Mount BlaRChard Riverdale 52·21;
played 11Ifln Calvert Safurtla y.
5, KaUda, 16-1, beat Ouovtlle ::6-4E.
6. AMa, 16- 1, beat Hous ton 62-l7.
7, Old Washington Sockeye Trail, 17·1.

S.Carollna St. 82,

'7'h
1

. ~:.!

35
.:tlfi
Frlday'e GIUllelll!
New .l('f!ll'y 100, Golden SUI!(! ~

A&amp;M 70

{)(o f)aul !18, Loyola, Dl . 8l
N . Mlchl~an 91, Lt~ k e land 84
FAR WE.'fl'

20

Alr

Dallas 103, Seattle 100

fo~on..~

lh PRICE

Wynfunl S'2, Cra wford 52
Xenta 65, ~nlervlllc 55
Young . ChrlsUa.n n , Geauga Chr. :lJ
YCAJng . Mooney 11. Boardman ~~
Yrung . Rayen 64, Young. ChaiK'y 41
Young. South 1'.4. 'ioung. Eas t Gl

Portland 68, Loyola, Calli. 61
San Franci5CO St. ffi. Soooma Sl. 56

UCLA H8, ' Ar17nna 73

G11vin E1ee.
Elks

PRICE &amp; SONS PHARMACY

~

Gallipolis, Ohio

2nd &amp; State

u

OVER 40

~

LATE &amp; EARLY
MODELS TO
CHOOSE FROM

VilltlKt: In ~ .

6 26
won d !!hl pumt.-1 from Village lru; .
Hi~h bowler fnr Warehime's WllS 0 . Hhobough
with -600. Hil!(h bOwlur for V ill a~c Jru; . was H.
Wa re hunc · ~

Wal:lonwilh 521.

New River Elec. won ch: ht [ lOi nL~ from Baird
Realty. Hl~/1 bowler New IHver wa~
,K. Rel.o.d with a39. Hi ~ h Oowlcr for Baird and
Fulll!r wa:t D. Bloomer and B. Halle)' with s&amp;t.
Centnd Supply won eight poinb1 from The Hai r
Clippers. tli,lo(h bowler for Centrul Supply was B.
lllld f''uller

Shaw with 59-4 . High bowler for The Ha ir Clippers

was 0. Murtln witl1&lt;192.
81jl Evans farm won cif!! hl p11int.s f rom
Hcadquurte rs Bar. lligh bowler for Bob Evmu
Fa rm wa:~ lt. Spence wllh 635 . High bowler fo r
Hcmlquurlcrs Bttr was T. Waugh with 51:1.
Jlnw netU'!i won six points frum Gavi n. Hllo( h

1979 CHEV. CUSTOM DELUXE
Tr.i ple burgundy , air, crui se, AM -FM . landau top,
r oad wheels, 16,340 mi les.

4X4, au to. trans., P. stee,.. .• cru ise, tilt wht•e l. new
Sf in9er t ir£&gt;s. One local own er . 19,0.45 miles .·.

NOW

Special Accent Paint

Tu~.!.idllY

s ta .ltli n~ts

••
••
:
:•
-· ••
••

for Ji'e[). !J, 1982 : ·
W. L.

Prc.'i~ rijll ion S ll OPI"~

-14 12
38

18

36 20

30 26
30 28

C&lt;muncrelal &amp; Savln ~s Ba nk
Rawsorl'-" l n.surancc

28 28
28 28

C ilizc11~ Ntttional Bank
Fountaiuof YuuU1

28 28
25 J l
22 J&lt;l

Tc11m No. 9
Baby land Dropout!l
Cn .&gt;dit Bureau of

Th is compac t tru ck is extra cle~n . Buc ket sea ts, auto
tran s., new topper, only 33,00&lt;1 mtles.

15 U

P\ . Pleysant
12 44
Indiv idual : Peoples, 184--472 F . Dulwan tsub l:
Jaymar's, 175 (,. SwlsiJC I', 470 J. 13 utler ; City l&lt;:e
&amp; F twl, 217 C. Jones, 550 0 . Custu: Moo!tt!, 194 W.
Jarvill, ~ 96 B. Gcnn111n ; P rcseripti on Shoppc, 178no A. Smith; Commr.rch&amp;l , 191 W. Sca rberry, 514
D. Hcrn : ~aw s on 's. 166 J . Clark. 430 H. Wal!ucr. :
Citizens, 191-:HI C. Roush; Fountu in of Vuuth ,

169 A. t:ar roll , 4J2 B. Casto 1sub); Team U, 172 H.
Walhwc, 441 G. Hendcr!IOn; Bub.ylltlld, 173-469 U.
Allen ; Cmlit Bureau. !Sl-384 L. Na valkowsky.
Spll~ convcrtL&gt;&lt;I: H. Stump, R. Hall :)..6 ; fo'.
Duncan , A. S mith, 3- IO o0 . Hern, I ~ Swisher!J.7 ;
M. Wanl4-5.

Little Angels
defeat Athens
GALLI PO LIS The Gallia
Academy Junior high girls' basket·
ball team improved its record to 4-3
by beating Athens, 11·10, recently.
The Little Angels were led by J enny Poole with four points. Teresa
Combs, Theresa Edelrtlann and
La Tanya Anderson added two points
each. ·
Kristen Carty·scored one point to ·
round out the Little Angels' scoring .
Teresa Combs pulled down 12
re bounds and Tina Barsotti six to
lead the AngeLs on the boards.
Gerig led Athens' scoring with
fourpoints .

WAS $1695

NOW

••

'

MorniniJ,

••

1981 OLDS CUTLASS 4 DR •
Extr a sharp , V -6, air, AM-FM, locking wire wh eel
covers. 11 .175 miles.

****
• *** *********"'*'"'**~'*'**'*'"'**"~~r•·••·•

Ml'IJurwld 's won six points from T~ E lks.
Hi~l1 Oowlcr for McD1tnuld's was J W11rren with
!;38. Higl1 Uowlcr 'for The Elks wa~ 1... Bu.'&gt; h with
662.

Tttlm
pt'oplcll Hank
Jti)'IIU! r'-"
City k c and Fuel
MOO.'IC 11\!IIMll

••
•

:

bowler for J irmuw ttl's WIHI D. Mol'r is with 5."11 .
Ji igh bowler for Gavin Elcc. was B. Bet"htd with
&amp;42 .

~

'4488 t

NOW

4 x4. lock out hubs, p re mi um t ir es, 6 cyl . engine,
ga uges, 26,471 miles.

wmm5

LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL - Ford
Motor Co. VIce president for Labor ·Relations, Peter

PestOJo beams as he tells members of the preos that
negotiations with the United Auto Worken; are almost

over Friday night at Ford's World Headquarters in
Dearborn, Mich. Paul Ryder, right, Director on the
Labor Relations staff, grins In the background. lAP
Laserphoto).

~995

'4388 t :::

NOW

55995

iC

:

.t

NOW

'3588

NOW

'5288 t

By JAMES HANNAH
Asoocialed Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Although defending
President Reagan's economic pollcy and Indicating
there were no plans to change course, VIce President
George Bush says the admlnlstra lion would welcome
new Ideas.
The president has taken a lot of criticism on his new
. budget, Bush said Friday night before about 500 people at the annual meeting of the Ohio Newspaper
Association. However, he said, "We're walling to
hear something new ."
Bush· said the federal government Is spending $88
mllllon an hour, up 18 percent.from last year.
"We're trying til slow down the exit or money out of
those (taxpayers') wallets," he said. ''This Idea of a
tax cut and a budget cut - even with this spending
going on and money coming In for the federal govern·
ment at record rates - It's fundamental to what
we're trying to do ."
There are no plans to alter current economic pol·
ley, Bush said, adding that President Carter shifted
his economic policies t09 often.
"In the last two years of our precedessors' (admln·
lstration), there were seven different economic programs ," Bush said .
"We're going to stay with this program," he said .
"It's going to work, and It's going to get this country
back to work again."
Taking the offensive against critics of Reagan's
budget .cuts, Bush pledged there would be no "retreat" from helping the needy .
" I challenge the charge that we've written oft so-

clal spending," Bush said of the budget cuts and
" New Federalism," which would shift control of
many welfare programs to the states.
H~ said the admlnlstr~tion Intends to spend $364
billion on social service programs In flscall982, $391
bUJlon In 1983, $417 blllion In I!&amp; and $472 bUIIon by
1986, up 29 percent.
" ... $472 bUIIon In spending on helping others that's not pulling back, that's not a retreat," Bush
said.
Before his speech, Bush met privately with some
top Ohio Republican Party officials. After that meet·
lng, state GOP Chairman Michael Colley said the
vice president vowed to return to the state to help In
this year's election campaigns. "He told me he will be
coming back," Colley said .
Although security was tight for the brief visit, Including a ·requirement that dinner guests pass
through a metal detector, the Secret Service saki It
went smoothly. "The trip went very well from a security standpoint,': said Gary .Jenkins, special agent
In charge of the Columbus Secret Service office.
About .two dozen protesters met Bush's motorcade
when it arrived at the hotel. Among the signs carried
by the demonstrators were those which read: "Stop
the Racist Cutbacks,'' "End Ald to the Faclst Govern·
mentor El Salvador" and " Feed the Hungry People,
Not the Pentagon·."
Attending tbe dinner with Bush and his wife, Barbara, was Gov. James A. Rhodes. A totalof32Gover·
nor' s Awards were pressented to various people and
groups "lor excellence of achievement benefiting
mankind and · promoting the quallty .of life for aU
Ohioans."

\

1977 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC
Truly an exce ptiOnally n tce car . Air , AM ·FM B· track,
wire cove r s, new Premium Rad ial s.

BRING YOUR ROPE

WAS 17695

SPECIAL BUY

NOW

1977 DODGE MONACO 2 DR.
Ai r, 318 V·8, auto. trans.
NADA ADV . RETAIL ' 2100

f

SPECIAL PRICE

1588

WASS3995

NOW

'3

WASsJm

NOW

'2988

1971 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR•.••..•.••••••.••$588

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

D ark blue exter ior, landau fop , cru ise, tilt~ AM· FM
st er eoS-tra ck, Ral tve II wheels.
I , i

JIB en gine, air , AM-FM ,only 28,000 mil es, cruise, tan dau top, loca tlyowned. Double sharp.

w m 4995

1976 PONT. ST. WAGON ..•.•••••••••.• $1288

E.NCHTOWN CAR CO.

t

NOW

il

1974 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

Ru ns out A·L V·8,air , P .S. , ~ . B .
WAS 51295

NOW

"Home .of the Sharpest Used

'

t
'188 t

it

****************************t*******"'*i~***'*'t*'*** ..r*'"'**;.:;.~~***'*

$3495

TIIANKS TO THE CHOIR - VIce Prelldeat
George Bush waves hl• thank! to the Ali.Ohio Yllllth
Choir as he sings with his wife, Barbara, aDd Ohio
Governor James A. Rhodes alter a banquet In Colum·

bus · Friday lllghl. Rhadea bad po:0!111!Dt.d Vice
President and Mn. Bnsb with one of his auual Gover·
nor's Awards. (AP Laserphoto).

there."

:

For nearly two weeks, the nation's No.2automaker
has tried to get the union to agree to lower labor costs
so ,Ford can become more competitive with foreign
carmakers.
.
Similar talks at General Motors Corp. collapsed .
.Jan. 29.
"We're closer now than any time we were at GM," .
Fraser said of the progress of the Ford talks.
The UAW and Ford, which says ltlost more than $1
billion last year, have been at work on a concession
proposal the automaker put on the bargaJnlng table
Jan. a
.
Ford originally asked the company's 106,200 autoworkers to accept a 15-month freeze on cost-of-living
allowances a.t 1the current $2.03-per-hour level and
forfeit eight annual paid personal holidays and a
week's paid vacation.
In return, Ford offered guaranteed Income equal to
at least 50 percent of base pay for workers with u; or
more years' seniority, transfer of laid-oft higher·
seniority workers to openings elsewhere, a one-year
moratorium on plant closings, an unspecified profit
sharing program and Improved retirement and SUJ&gt;'
plemental unemployment benefits.

NOW

'888

1974 FORD COURIER PICKUP.............~1188

in the Valley"

16~0 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis

446.()()69

Reagan wants report on American
advisers in El Salvador
The statement stressed that U.S. military personnel shown on the CNN tape "were not and have not
been Involved In combat activities, nor were they
accompanying Salvadoran combat forces .' '
Shortly after the statement was distributed at the
Pentagon, aides went to reporters' desks to try to get
It back, but that was too late. Reportefll who asked for
an explanation were given none.
Reagan also responded to a question about a state·
ment by Hinton, In San Salvador, who spoke out
ual weapons, "usually sidearms!'
against "serious excesses" by the El Savador govern·
Defense officials said the Americans In El Salvador
ment In ItS war against guerrillas.
are allowed to have M-16 rifles In their quarters to
/
Reaga~ responded:
.
protect theJll5elves against possible attacks on those
"I
Just
heard
all
of
you
on
the
news
not
too
long
ago,
oouses, but they are not supposed totakethearmsbut
not very much time was given to It, but there was a
with them on jobs.
mention
that the guerrillas had attacked a village up
Later, the Pentagon tried to withdraw that
on
the
Honduran
border and It was reported that 100
statement.
people
were
killed."
Reagan, asked Friday about reports by the Wa·
At that point, an aide tried to cut off questioning and
shlngton Post and Cable News Network' about the
the helicopter engine was started, nearly drowning
arms, said:
·
.
out Reagan, whO continued:
"The only thing I can assume Is they were for
"I CQnslder that a violation of human rights. We '
personal protection and I think that's unc~&lt;:rstanda·
ble. I'm asking for a full report and we'll have one ' know that there have been problems from both the
left and the light. That's why we're supporting the
from the Defense Department.'.'
Duarte government which Is between both of those
"The policy Is tbat they do not engage In combat,
factions, · both of which have been ·somewhat
nor were these gentlemen, as far as has been lnd!·
extreme."
eated, doing that lit all,'' Reagan told reporters as be
Hinton, however, was referring not to attacks by
left the White Hause for a hP"~opter walling to take
right-wing paramilltary groups, but to those or forces
him to Camp David for the weekenjl.
of tbe government of President .Jose Napoleon
After hours of consultation, the Pentagon issued a
Duarte.
staleme!Jt saying the matter Is under lnvestlptlon,
"There Is a limit, and at tlrtles this government has
but that "the rules on carrying weapons as applied by
treaded dangerously close to ihat limit,'' the amb8sthe U.S. ambassador (DeaneR. Hinton) authorized
sador said In San Salvador.
, the carrying of sidearms only."
By JAMES GERSTENZANG
Aaaocialed PreM Writer
WASillNGTON (AP) - President Reagan has
asked for a report on U.S. military advisers In El
Salvador carrying M·l6s, even though he· says It Is
"understandable" they were carrying the rtOes.
Deputy . White House press secretary Larry ·
Speakes said Friday that under U.S. policy, tbe men,
on a three-day mission, were aUowed to carry lndlv!d·

****************************************************~*********************
1981 CHE\1. MONTE CARLO
t
'1971 OPEL ST. WAGON
f . 1979 DODGE MAGNUM 2 DR.
Two·tone paint , V·6, air, AM -FM Rallye wh eels. Mu st
be seen to appreciate.

Fraser said the Issues, left unresolved at the subcommittee level, would be taken directly to the main
bargaining table "and we'll take a run at It from .

Bush ·in Ohio: presid.e nt
open to new budget ideas

' *"~~r*'"'*'"'************************"t*****************************"J********************~··'"'*'*****"•'~~
1977 OLDS "98" REGENCY 4 DR.
t
1980 CHEV. CITATION
t 1978 FORD PINTO RUNABOUT
All the power equipment yo u would expect . New
t--tc 4 cy l in der , 5air,DR.auto.,HATCHBACK
t "cylinder, auto., aircond.. 32,400 miles, wire covers·
rad io, two·1one pain t, 26,660
iC.
Prem1um Rad1a1 s.
WAS

JOB WOOLLEY
Aaaocialed Press Writer
DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -United Auto Workers
President Douglas Fraser says' be 's confident the
UAW will hand Ford Motor Co. a historic contractconcessions agreement - If the precise wording can
be worked out.
"We think we're going to settle," Fraser told a
news conference shortly before 11 p.m. EST Friday
when the talks were recessed until today.
"We've got some problems In language," Fraser
sald. However, he added: "We're confident. I think
we've come together In a lot of principles. It's~ very,
very dlfflcult thing to refine."
He spoke after a 16-bour session at the Ford head·
quarters here:
The Issues that need fine· tuning, Fraser said, were
seniority, equaUty of sacrifice for blue-and whitecollar workers and the automaker's practlceoffarm·
lng out the manufacture of components.
"There are a couple of dlfflcultdebates ahead of us,
but we don't think It's anything Insurmountable," he
said.
Ford's chief negotiator, Peter Pestillo, said the
talks Friday concentrated on "narrowing our dlfferences and Indeed we've succeeded In narrowing our
dtfferel!Ces. We expect to be especially careful and
hope before this weekend Is out to have a labor
agreement."

By Russell Stover

Oldo lllgh !khool Bo)"ll Ballke th..tl
8y The t\.'VKJClated Pm!.1

Nev .· Liu Vl'((US 52, Brig ham Youn g~
~ppetdlOO 73, Gonzaga ~

Washlflgton St. til, Sta nford

ALL VA LENTINE
CANDY HEARTS

High school

43, Ul.all 42

Boise St 7l . Idaho Sl. 611, OT
Ca!Jiomla ~ . WashlnlftOO 50
Cal Pnly-SI..O 60. Lo5 /ulgcle! Sl. !1.1
E.Washlng1on 8'l. W.Wuhlngtoll 11
Ida ho 71, We tx-r St. 62

Utah 129, K.alllll.'l C1ty 114
Phucnlll 9&gt;1, Atlanta !lO
sa n IUltonlo 100. Los Altge les 91
Bollton 129, Sa n Diego U6
SoodaJ'• GIUJM'JII
New York 111 PhuadP.lphla
Golden Slate al Karau a1y
Bot!ton II l...o8 Angeles
Sea ttle at San Antonio
Dnllas a t New .J~

lst ~tl

F'lo rld ~t

,UDWESI'

By~

'

bcut B!irnesvllle 74~"i. playl'd 111 EifNPrly

Belhavc11 69, Della Sl. M

~

VA W, Ford say they
need time to reach accord

1 PMtil5 PM

Fon !"rye Saturday .
8, Racine Scuthem, 17-1. bc-ot PatMol
Southwestern T..!·56. played Hemlock MIUer
Sa turtlay.
9, Fayette G&lt;J rham-Fayetle, 16- 1, bcal
Plonl'('r North Omtral Gl-46, pl 11y«&lt; lltck·
~v ille Saturday
lf), LA'ipslc, 14 ·1. tx.oat Vanlui&gt; 96-6:1.

SOI!I'H
Aubur n·MOnl . 58, Ala.-Hunto;v1Ue ~. CTr

E ight Conference; Max Urick, as·
soclate athletic director at Iowa
State, and Jack Lengyel, associate
athletic director a t Missouri .
" Jim Lessig bas superb quallf!·
cations. He has a record a! success
In a thletics, alumni activities and
fund raising. His quallflcations are
unique. They will serve the Univer·
sity of Kansas well In the years
ahead ," Budlg said.
'
" He appreciates the value of the
academic community, he relates
well to faculty and students and Is
committed to strength In the class·
room and on the athletic field."
Lessig said he was aware of some
problems at KU, Including the overuse of facilities, especially Allen
Field House a nd the weight rooms.
He asked staff members to list the
things they felt needed Improvement and said those lists would be
the base from which he would
work.
"I have said often times the athle tic department Is the front porch
or the university," Lessig said.
"The front porch Is not the most
Important room In the home, but It
is the most visible.

OPEN TODAY!

llalh 7t43

Frtday'11 c:oue,;e BMkelhall Swre8
, By The AMoclllkd PmM
Eo\ST
Columblll ti7, YalE 5!1
Corne-ll &amp;7, Brown 54

6
14

Paclftc:: IMvllllon
Se.ottle
:14 15
Los Angeles
:W- IG
:n 211
Portland

l..i'sslg a lhlctlc

College results

MltfweM DlvWon
Jl

.J~ m~

d.JI"f!Ctor.

State/ at1onal

Lucas\lllll'

Valley 7144, playl'd a l Waverly Saturday
Ill. Ottawa-Glandorf, ltl-4 , tool to ~a ­
pakoneta 44-.'lJ.
CUM•
I, Sidney L£ohman, ISO, tx&gt;at Springf"teld
Ca lholtc 60-45.
2, Del~ Sl. .John . 14-2. ~at Lima

oontracl.

KANSA.&lt;.;-Narnl'd

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Slt n An!Ofllo

Saturday.
9, WheelersbW""K, 16-1. bc&lt;tt

Tim Gar! trainer.

08

.729

"ll 28
20 29
1!1 :m
l&lt;J . .lO

H, Ha m lltml ltos..". 17·1. Ilea! IJilll.'
Miami 5(.1.46, played at Hamilton Badin

Hank5 assistant baskcilx!U coach, Named

IJ

.500

"""'·

T EAM - Namr&gt;d

.15

tetltral Dlmlon
:W 14

Dt&gt;trolr

N ATIONAL

C.OI.LEGI!:
DETROIT-F'lrod Willie M&lt;.'C.II.n.cr, lwad
baske1ball coac h, effective at the end of
thf !i{'aS(In.

t'i
24
:t.J

Wa!i hlngton
N('V.• York

MUwaukre

L

USA
Mli«'

00.!12, played Sl. Par1s Graham

Silturday.

Schnelker of"lc nslve coordlnal or.

NMklnal Bulldba.ll ~on
By 'l1w. AMocWH1 PreMo
fo:A..'ITERN OONYEKENt:E
Allantic Dhia6on

•

li, Urbana, 15-l, tEat Sprtngfleld North·

"·GREEN BAY PA CKERS-Namt'd Bob

Mlnnesola al Toronto
Vancouver at Chicago

11·2. b(•&lt;tf Zalll'Svtlll' !'12·38

!:i. Lomln K ill{:, J7.1, beat Westlake 74
43, br'at Sandusky 78-50.
6. Duytun :\'lt'i:ldowdall', 13-1, bl&gt;at Day·
loo Belmont 6740.
7, LtxU Qcwerlcaf, UJ.Q, beat Brecksville
!12·77, played Bc!lvtUe C1ear Fork Sa turday.
IS. Wtnwrsvtlle, 13-0. bea t Richmond .Jel·
feorson Union 83-13, beat M()Undsv\lle,
W. Va., MarsMU 79--47.
9. Akmn Ct.'nl ral·HoWPr, IS-2. bear Alf:.
ron Ellet 57·50. pla yed Canton ·nmlten Sat·
urday.
!(), Alllimce, 1&amp;-2. plu yed MarUngton Sat·
urday .
ClASS AA
I, W!Uard, J1.0, beat Tiffin Columbian
74·ffi.1Jl.ayed Bellevue Saturday .
2. Columbu ~ Bex.Jcy. J..8..1. bea t Marysville 57 56.
J, Napoleon, L'&gt;-1, beat Sylvar.la North·

G f 'l ll'

Frai"\C(lrw a nd Pal lloont!)", o ut!lddtn .
WalliK'f• .lllhrL...-m. Rra!l Mills, Mikt&gt; Caws
aoo Da \1(1 ~l osteller, tnf!eltl~n: Tom

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Edmonlon

AJ

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18

16
16

ORIOL ES-Signed

~.

2. Warn'fl WMtcm Reserve. Il't-1. beat
Warrl'n Howland fi4.~. played Youngsi.CM'n
Ursuline Saturday
·~
3, Col umbus Nor1hland, 17·1, b€ti:t..-Columbu~ Beechcroft 6141.

llumtJ '"'. &lt;.outflt:ldt•r, to a lwo-vt'ar ctm·
tral"t. SIIUI!'tl Dun Wl'lctw•i. plil'llN . 10 a
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1. Kettering Altc!r, 1.5-2. kiSt to Dayton

By The t\Nioda.ted I~
BA."iEBALI.
DALTIMOR E

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -The
University of Kansas has named
James W. Lessig, a thletic director
at Bowling Green State University
for the past 3~ years, as the
school's new athletic director.
Lessig, 46, who has worked as an
assistant basketball coach at the
college and professional levels, sue·
ceeds Bob Marcum, who resigned
Jan. 2 to take a similar postat South
Carolina.
KU Chancellor Gene Budig said
F riday that Lessig would receive a
ye&lt;iFiy salary of $51,00). Marcum
reportedly received a three-year
conlract at South Carolina for
$59,00) a year.
Lessig said he still has commit·
ments a t Bowling Green but pla ns
to take over his.new post by May 1
at the latest. Interim Athletic Dl·
rector Del Shankel will continue In
the post until then .
Budlg said Lessig, who was selected from a field of 46 candidates,
was the first choice of the unlversl·
ty's screening. committee. Three
other finalists Interviewed for the
KU post were Steve Hatchell, assistant commissioner of the Big

COLUMBUS, OhJo IAP J - How I~ lq)r.. nkOO teams In The Asloclaled Pres..&lt;~'
Ohto boys prep basketball poU fared :

12 20

J iffii!. n ct li '~
Th~

ll.y ....... AMoclalHI PreM
" 'ate. Conference
Paa11ck Dtvhkln
WL TOFGA PIII
NY lsLande~
35 ll 6 2t9 m 76
l&gt;nlladel!Jhla
.l"J :l:l 5 22-t :XS I'll
N\' R.anKP.I'~ : :l 21 9 2ffi 215 59
111tsbu r~o: h
:ll '11 9 21.1 2-ll ~~
Washtn;:lon
Ui :rl 9 217 24U ~~
.\danlll Dlvt,ion
Muntrr-al
u 12 260 lfll
Boston
32 17
71
ll~!lalo
t.JJ 181' 6!1
Quebec
:n 21 10 2.16
llartlurd
24 14 Jill
Campbell t:onlerorttef'
Noi"Ti!l DlvWon

"' 'r.

Feb. 14, 1982

Lessig named
to Kansas post

How they fared

Munday'11 G~~me

l)(•rwl'r a t U tah

SALE STARTS MON.
FEB. 15 8:00 A.~N

Sky:lael"' Leagu ~
Ft!b. 4,1982
Home

l.tortland at Indiana

Milwaukee a1 Q(."oo'ela rtd

NalbW l bkey i.e&amp;(tM'

Local
bowling
Wareh i mc '~ F' une rnl

w. va .

Scoreboard...

KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. !AP I
- Heavjweight contende r Gerry
Cooney at times still feels pain In
his Injured left shoulder, one of hls
manager says, but Dennis Rappaport adds tha t he does not consider
the March 15th title fight with WBC
ch 1m pion Larry Holmes to be In
jeopardy.
" He still Is hu rting whe n he gets
his shoulder In certain positions,
but he can now go through certain
motions with no pain, which was
not the case a couple of weeks ago"
Rappaport said Friday night a t
·Cooney's training camp.
Cooney had to cancel a Jan. 22
bout against .Joe Bugner because of
a torn shoulder muscle but Rappa·
port said Cooney has been back In
the ring for about a week. Rappaport added that Cooney sparred six
rounds Wednesday and five on
·Thursday.
· "He's running, he's sparring and
he's working toward our objective,
which Is the fight March 15," Ra ppaport said. ·
"We are concerned (that Cooney
still feels pain , but is the fight In
Jeopardy? No, I don 't think so.
· "But, I will tell you this, Gerry
wUI not get In the ring against
Holmes unless he Is 100 percent a ll
right, " Rappaport added .
Cooney appeared to be throwing
.punches with power in the final two
:rounds of Wednesday' s sparring
·session, although trainer VIctor
Valle was not pleased.
"That wasn't the real Gerry Cooney In there," Valle said. "His hook
did not have his power. He was
.throwing his right hand well, but
:without his left hook, hiS right hand
·does not mean anything."
: :D r. .Jeffrey Minkoff, Cooney's
physician, was expected to examIne the fighter's shoulde r today and
watch hlrtl spar.

Te11m

Po m e roy - Middleport- G al lipol is, Ohio- Point Pl easa nt,

SALVADORAN

TII.OOPS ARRIVE
Aa
~ Speda' FOI'I!e8 olfteer leadl part ol ~ uo.
. IIW! c:GIItllleld ol El s.lwaclenla lreOpa 11 they arrive

•I Fort Brag, N. C., Friday. The SalvadoraJII will
receive ll!faatry traiDiDII by the u. s. Army'• 711!
Spec!lal Forces Group at Fort Brag. IAP Luerphoto) •

I I

�Feb. 14, 1982

...

Jurors in Williams trial get free
run of alleged scene of crime
ATIANTA (AP) - Wayne B.
Williams' murder trial Jury
climbed through brambles and
peered Into the murky waters of the
Chattahoochee River Saturday on a
19-mtnute vtslt to the bridge from
which prosecutors say he threw the
bodies or two young blacks.
Helicopters can-ylng pollee otttcers and reporters clattered over·
head as the 12 Jurors and four
alternates - under Judge's orders
not to talk d)lrlng the Inspection walked slowly up and down the twolane, steel-and-concrete span. One
of WWiams' lawyer was at the
scene but WWiams remained In
)aU. Sheriff's deputies blocked traf,
tic and curious spectators from getting near.
Jurors were given a free run o.r
the quarter-mile-long bridge and
spent some or the time cllrnblng
through the brambles where
mef!lbers or a pollee stakeout team
were stationed last May, when WU·
Iiams was stopped near the brldge.
"They're doing a good job. That
Indicates they did follow the testlrn·
ony," said presiding Judge Clar·
ence Cooper or Superior t:;oiut, as
jurors walked to several of the key
posltlollB mentioned during the sensaUonal .trial.

RETREADING METAL - &amp;b Hodges keepa a
eye on a retreading machine thai be helped
:develop for Burlington Northern Railroad at JIB Spring·
~lll!!e

field, Mo., shop oomplei. Tbe machine retlores rail·
way car wheels lo lllelr original dlmeasloDII In less
lime lhan before aDd lbe retreads aow.laat longer. (AP
Laserpholo 1.

·six more plead guilty to taking
part in interstate car theft ring
alleged scheme, and that they have
since entered guilty pleas:
Ltfrry James Pauley and Stanley
Lee Dixon, both 37 and of Charleston, one count eacl\ or Interstate
transportation or stolen motor vehl·
cles;
Tommy C. Williams Sr., 43,
Five or the defendants signed
South
Charleston, W.Va., one count
agreements during the 1 Y.z-year
or
conspiracy;
Ronald M. Ray, 31,
long Investigation saying they
Hinesville,
Ga.,
one count of·
would plead guilty If they later
conspiracy.
were Indicted, Rich said. One of ·
The followbtg defendants also
those was former West VIrginia
have
pleaded guilty to one count or
stale trooper Michael George ·
coll8plracy,
he said: Edward Earl
Lowe, 34, or Charleston, who
Pugh,
30,
Columbus,
and ,James F.
pleaded guilty to one count of con'
Love, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
splracy, Rich said .
Rich said the following defendOn Friday, Raymond Edwin
ants have been transported to GeorDarco, 24, of Charleston, pleaded
gia to face trial on various charges:
gullty to two counts or Interstate
Robert Wayne Sapp and Glenn
transportation or stolen motor vehl·
Purcell, both ·of Baxley, Ga.; and
cles, Rich said.
John Vernon Hardie of Savannah,
In December. a federal grand
· He said the following men
Ga.
pleaded guilty on Friday to one
jury Indicted the 22 on various
charges, Including conspiracy, In·
count each or Interstate transporta- · . He said the following defendants
will be tried next month In
terstate transportation of stolen
tion or stolen motor vehicles: Den·
Charleston:
nls R. Cobb, 28; Timothy Unn
mota vehicles and receiving stolen
Delmar C. Eicher and Faye D.
Epperhai-t, 26; Clarence Wayne
motor vehicles.
Eicher, both of Charleston; John
. The Indictments Included
Fugate, 26; Chester M. Wheeler, 23,
"Able" Mathews or Rio Grande;
charges Involving 50 vehicles worth
or all of Charleston; and Norman
,James Franklin "Buddy" Morris
Eugene Landers, 31, of Sissonville,
$1.5 mllllon. Rich said, adding that
W.Va. · .
and Thomas Edgar MorriS, both or
500 to 1,000 vehicles may have been
Bristol, Ga., and Major Dobby
Involved ln the a lleged scheme.
Rich said the following defend·
Tomberlin, 45, or Baxley, Ga.
. He said the Indictments con· ants agreed before they were In·
Rich said the Investigation of the
tended that cars were stolen In
dieted that they would plead guilty
alleged scheme Is continuing.
West VIrginia, Ohio. Kentucky, ' to charges In connection with the

. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (API Six more men have pleaded guilty
to charges Involving an alleged In·
terstate car theft ring that author!·
ties say operated In 10 states.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Wayne
Rich said Frtday a total oflJ people
.now have pleaded goUty to various
charges Involving the alleged rtng,
and that nine others are scheduled
to lace trial next month.
~ · The gullty pleas were entered by
residents or Ohlo, West VtrgtnJa,
Ceorgla and Flortda, Rich said.
Three or the defendants who have
.pleaded Innocent to charges facing
them have been transported to
Georgia and the remaining six will
be trted In U.S. Dlstrtct Court In
Charleston, he said .

Pennsylvania, VIrginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Georgia and Florida, and that they
were sold In West VIrginia, South
Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

Polish army braces for further
protests as martial law contlnues
-WARSAW, Poland (AP)- The
martial law regime deployed
tanks, armored cars, water cannon
aJid heavy pollee patrols Saturday
to guard against possible protests
as military rule entered Its third
month In Poland.
. The Corilmunlst authorttles also
slapped a 25-year jail sentence on a
former of!lclal convicted of spying
tor the qA, and rejected proposals
1o let Solli:larlty chief Lech Walesa
a ttend the christening or hls seventh child.
Beefed-up pollee units checked
drivers' IdentitY cards In Warsaw,
and appeared In greater numbers
than usual on the streets. Hundreds
of pollee vehlcles wound through
Warsaw Thursday a nd ' FI1day
.Venlngs.

Travelers from the Baltic port of
Gdansk said pollee threw a tight
ring of trucks and water cannon
around the monument to workers
outside the Lenin shipyards, where
the now-suspended Independent unIon Solidarity was born 18 months·
ago.
They said pollee In Gdansk were
guarding railroad stations, that patrols standing 20 or 30 yards apart
were checking Identity cards, and
that numerous tanks, armored cars
and pollee trucks were deployed.
Gdansk was the site of rtots In the
early days of martial law which left
one' person dead, and a renewed
outbreak or violence Jan. 30 when a
mob tried to bum the party headquarters and fought pollee with
stones and gasoline bombs.

There have been persistent rumors that Poles plan to buy copies or
the Communist Party daily Trybuna Ludu and strew them about the
party headquarters, or light candles ln their windows as signs or
protest.
The Polish news agency PAP, In
a dispatch from Lublin that It later
wlthdrew.lndlcated there had been
some sort of disturbance there and
that the official response had been a
severe retightening of restrictions.
There was no way to cheek the
report., nor could It be determined
why the story had been kllled
shortly after being sent. Western
journalists have been confined to
Warsaw except on a recent escorted trip to Gdansk. and normal
communications are cut.

Police mourn at trooper's funeral
MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP) · - A
sadness enveloped Muskegon like a
cold Lake Michigan wind. One or
the town's sons was dead and his
was no ordinary funeral.

Scott was shot three Urnes by a passenger or a car he had stopped between Jackson and Lansing.
An esUmated 1,000 pollee officers
traveled to Muskegon for the fun·
eral and memorial service.
Lydia Scott, the trooper's wtfe or
live months, sobbed uncontrollably
during the service at Ithe Ftrst Reformed Church. Her three chlldren
followed as she was led to her seat .
by lamlly members.

Local · pollee officers from Michl·
gan, Ohio, five other states and
Canada joined hundreds of Michl·
gan State Pollee troopers Friday In
Muskegon to pay their res!M!Cts to
Craig A. Scott.
,
·Scott, a 28-year-old trooper as·
Several hundred Mlchfa'an State
signed to the Lansing post, died af·
Pollee
troopers then led pollee oftl.
ter a gunfight Tuesday, becoming
the 34th state trooper kllled In the cfals from several Mlchlgan COlinties and clUes Into the church with
line of duty·slnce 1921. A newlywed,
I

•

state pollee from Florida, Call!ornla, Illinois, Tennessee, Ohio and
Louisiana . A delegatiqil of provincial pollee from Ontario attended.
"I was awed at how many pollee
officers are .here," Sgt. Charles
Nystrom, a member of the MlchJgan State Pollee emergency services team, said. Also attending the
funeral were Gov. WWiam Mil·
liken, Attorney General Frank Kelley and state pollee commander
Col. Gerald Hough.
Scott had been cited for bravery
as an Army mWtary pollceman lor
savtna a woman's lite and breaking
up a narroUcs ring.

Williams, who Is black, has
pleaded Innocent to murdering Nathaniel Cater, Z1, and Jimmy Ray
Payne, 21, two of the 28 young
blacks Sllllh during a 22-month period here. No arrests have been
made In the 26 other cases but prosecutors have Introduced evidence
they say connects WWiams with 10
additional slaylngs.
The bodies of Cater and Payne
were found In the same area of the
river about a month apan last
spring, ,11nd prosecutors contend
both were thrown from the same
bridge.
The jury, which has been seques·
tered at a suburban motel slpce the
trial began Dec. 28;Was taken to the
bridge ln a white Fulton County jall
bus, Its windows covered with Iron
grlllwork.

ur.:l~mcath.

ers have contended the stakeout
· team members were out or position
the night they stopped him. They
also argued that the 23-year-old
freelance photographer and selfstyled talent promoter Is not strong
enough to throw bodies over the 4foot concrete railing.
The stakeoUt team, one or 24 such
teams secretly assigned to bridges
after the bodies of young blacks began surfacing In rivers, stopped
wuuams after an officer beard a
loud splash In the water and saw
WUUams' car above the ripplr,
witnesses have tesllfled.

Before boarding the bus :or the
return trip to their hotel, jurors also
examined the IICjUOr store parking
lot at one end of the bridge where
poliCe said Wlillnrns turned around
before they stopped him.
The prosecution had attempted
to bring the bridge Into the COUf·
troom, using a $15,000 scale model
and hundreds of color photographs
to depict the concrete and steel
span where Williams first came to
pollee attenUon. But defense lawyers had requested the Jury be taken
to the brtdge to.see the scene for ·
themselves because of Its lrnporlllllce In the trial.
Besides Cooper; the jurors were
accompanied by defense lawyer
Mary Welcome, Assistant District
Attorney Joe Drolet, dozens of sherllt's deputies; two sketch artists
and court personnel. Media coverage was llrnlted to one reporter
from The Aasoclated Press and one
from United Press InternaUonal.
Court reporter Susan Northington set 1\er stenograph machine at
one end of the bridge, Its paper flapping In the frigid wind. No testimony was taken while the jurywasat
the bridge. ·
Ms. Welcome said a· gag order
Issued by Cooper barred her from
saying what she hoped the jurors
would see. But she added, "you can
assume what I hope they'll see."
W1lllams, who remained at the
Fulton County jail Saturday, was
stopped at the two-lane bridge at
2:50a.m. on May 22. Defense lawy-

But none or the officers saw WUII'
ams' car approach or stop on the
bridge, and the officer underneath
did not see what made the splash.
wuuams claims he threw no~
from the bridge, but a friend of his
tesutled be told her he threw garbage In the water.
.·Cater's body was found about a
mlle downstream, two days after
Wllllarns was stopped and questioned at the bridge, which Is known
locally as the Jackson Parkway
bridge.
What happened at the bridge, one
or dozens connecting Atlanta with
suburban counUes, has dominated
testimony at the trial, which enters
lis eighth week on Monday.
Defense lawyers began presentIng their arguments last week, calling witnesses who claimed the
decomposed state of Cater's body
Indicated It must have been thrown
Into the river long before Williams
was stopped; lhat a body thrown
from the Jackson Parkway bridge
could not have surfaced where Cater's or Payne's OOdles were found;
and tbat the stakeout team officers
were Incompetent.
The defense also called two pathologlsls to contest the findings of
the Georgia medical examiners
.who ruled that Cater and Payne
were murdered. The pathologists
said medical . examinerS did not
rule out heart disease or drowning
In the deaths or the two young
blacks.

After receiving Instructions from
Cooper, Jurors tiled out of the bus
and Immediately beaded to where
the bridge crosses the rtver. They
spent most of their tlffie on the
south edge or the bridge, where wit·
nesses tesutled WWiams' car was
spotted moving slowly close to the
railing.
The jurors walked up and down
the bridge whlle court personnel
and the reporters waited at one
end. The jurors jleered over the
edge at the brown river water and
the railroad tracks that pass

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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP) - More than 2,000 blacks
marched lllegaUy through .Johan·
nesburg's plush white suburbs Sat·
urday just ahead of the funeral
procession of labor leader Nell Aggett, theflrstwhltetodleln security
pollee detention.
The marchers waved banners or
the outlawed African National Con·
gress, shouted (Prime Minister
P .W.) "Botha Is a terrorist! " and
tore down election posters of the
ruling National Party. The ANC Is
the major force trying to end whiteminority government.
The march from the downtown
St. Mary's Anglican Cathedral, site
ol Aggett' s funeral, wound through
the plush whites-only suburbs or

hours In the storm-tosoed Atlantic, north of the Azores.
Tboee rescued were ferried to a Dutch frigate 21 miles
(32kmj away. The search conllaues for 15 people still
1mluing. (AP Laserphoto).

"VICTORY" RESCUE OPERATION - A Dolch
helicopter, Saturday, winched 17 crewmen to salely
from the sheared, badly llatiDg, hull of the Greek
Tanker "VIctory" that bas beea adrift for more than 33

Storm pounds parts of U.S.
A storm oH Cape Hatteras
spread up to half a foot or snow
from VIrginia to New Jersey oh Satwday and pounded some coastal
area• with gale-force wtnd.6.
Gales raked the Vlrglnla coast
and Chesapeake Bay whUe heavy
rains leU In the Carolinas .

.na.

Veteran screen actor Victor Jory
dies at home of heart attack
HOLLYWOOD (AP ) - VIctor
.lory, veteran movie bad-guy
whose successful stage career
spanned 60 years, has died at age 79
of an apparent heart attack , his
lamlly reported.
Jory, who played Oberon In "A
Midsummer Night's Dream" and
Injun Joe In "The Adventures or
Tom Sawyer," was found dead Frl·
day In his Santa Monica apartment
by the apartrnent manager, .lory's

very much, " Rooney added.
The Alaska-bam actor had been
scheduled to direct "The Oldest
Uvtng Graduate" at the LoulsvUie
theater next month, his son said.
Jory directed .:'On Golden Pond"
there last year, and had starred In
''The Time or Your Life" and "The
Last M~tlng or the Knights of the
White Magnolia.''
He was born Nov. 23, 1902, ln
Dawson City, Alaska - then a gold
son, Jon.
rush camp. When be was a teenJory, who had a history of hean
ager, his famUy moved to Ptsad·
disease, had last been seen by
ena, Calif., where he made his
friends on Monday, his son said
professional stage debut In 1918 In
from The Actors Theater or LouJs.
"Master or Shadows" at the Pasad·
v!lle, Ky., where be Is producing ena Community Playhouse. His
raml!y moved to vancouver, B.C.,
director. ,
His screen credits, which date where be attended high IIChool and
back to 1932, Include "Gone With · . won an amateur light-heavyweight
the Wind," "1be · Kansan" and
boxing championship.
''The Miracle Worker." On TV be
After a brief stint at college at the
co-starred In 1959 with Patrick
University of Callfornla, Berkeley,.
McVey In the syndiCated series,
he took up acting again and went to
"Manhunt,"· playing a San Dle&amp;o New York In 19~l. He made his
pollee orr1cer.
BI'Oadway debut In "Berkeley
"Needless to say his passing Square" and In 1927 marrted acleaves a void or rrtendsblp In my Ute
tress Jean Inness, who appeared
because over the years we have with him on stage over the years.
been very dear and very cloee
Besides his aon, Jon, he Ls sur·
friends ever since having done 'A vlved by a daughter, Jean, or LoMldsqmmer Night's Dream' 1&amp;- gan, Utah, and four grandchlldren.
gether, ". said actor Mickey Rooney His wUe died about three years ago,
In New York. ·
his soli said.
Private ,funeral services were
"He not only was a good actor but
pending.
a good human being. I loved him

northward orr the Atlantic Coast
dropped 6 Inches of snow 'In southern Maryland and the Eastern
Shore, puttbig tnto eHect snow
emergency plans ln.10 counties.
Maryland state pollee reported
numerous minor accidents.
"Roods are dangerous," sald
state pollee Sgt. Gary Bounds.
"Most people are staying home. If
they get out, they are going to be In
trouble untU they get all those roads
plowed."
Parts or VIrginia got up to 5
Inches of snow, with 3 Inches reported ln Richmond, Lynchburg
and Farmville.
washlnglon. D.C., got only about
an Inch, while PhlladeJPh!a and
New York City ~aped with only a
jlustlng.
Heavy snow was falling In southern New Jersey, snarling trafllc In
the AtlanUc City area, and a forecaster for the National Weather
Service In Pomona, N.J., said

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP)- Sarah
Hart and Iter slater Susan were
among the first shlverjng specta·
torstollneupforaaeattoCiausvon
BuloW's attempted murder trial
one day last week.
The sky mier Newport's steeples
was still streaked with red, and the
warm county courthouse wouldn't
open for two hours. But that didn't
diSCourage the growing Une of peopie who waited Friday to see for
themselves the socialite aCCU9ed or
trylng to murder his mUUonalre
wife, Martha "SUMy" von Bulow,
with Insulin Injections.
"It's like a soap opera, better
even because It's J;eal· lite," said
Miss Hart, a 17-year-old high school
student from BostOn who was out of
school ror the Lincoln's birthday

holiday.
~
Her 23-year-old sister, a New
York City bank employee, !iCanned
thefacesaroundber: '"It'sthemoney lhat fascinates people."
Every day, the curious, many of
them women, walt In Une for a
glimpse or the trial that Is laying
bare the Uves ot some of Newport's
moneyed elite. Chuck Connor, the
deputy sherllt who has guarded the
courthouse door since the trial began, said the second-floor courtroom has 42 seats for the public.
"We've turned. away probably 20
or 30 people every day," he sald.
During the first two weeks of tes·
tlrnony, the crowd has swelled or
shrunk depending on who the prosecutloa called In Its effort to prove

northern Johannesburg to West
Park Cemetery for the burial
service.
Security pollee In camouflage
uniforms made one brlel appearance along the march route but did
not Intervene. It was the first Ume
ln memory that blacks had defied
the law and gathered Illegally In
whites-only area.
Aggett's father, Aubrey, said: "I
am stunned. It's Incredible." His
car and others In the procession
were delayed In reaching the cemetery because of the protest .
David Webster, a member of a
committee working on behalf or
peopte detained without trial under
South Africa's security laws, said:

Card ot Thanks

1

We wish to extend our
thanks arfd appreciation to
evervone who sent flowers
and those who con!rlb.u ted
food and money to us
during the death of our
brothers Doc and Bob Me·
Daniel. Their Sister and
Brothers.

The family of Greg
Swaim would like to expr:ess our thanks to all
our relatives, neighbors, co-workers at the
mines, loy at friends and
churches in sharing my
deep sorrow in the loss
of my husband. Words
a lone cannot express
my deep gratitude ot
generous
your
tlowers.
donations ,
foods and all your
prayers a'nd kindness.
He was more than a
hll'band, he wa s my
friend and companion
and t know he was Well
loved and well missed
by alt.

vonBulowtriedtotwtcetriedtoldU
his wife during Christmas vtslts to
their Milllonalres Row mansion.
"When we had the maid, that's
when we got the most people," he
said, referring to the testimony of
Marla Schralthammer, Mrs. von
Bulow's maid or 23 years.

3

Card ol Thanks

1

To our dear family , other
reletlves &amp;nd friends , for
beautiful cards, poems,
flowers, gifts, and may ac·
ts of kindness . We extend
our grateful thanks in ob·
servance of our 50th wed·
ding
anniversary ap preciatlon to all who
shared with us a day to be
remembered. Allen and
Polly Eichinger.
An11ouncements

3

SWEEPER and sewJng
mach ine repair, parts, and
Pi ck up and
supplies.
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner/ one half mile \Jp
Georges Creek Rd . Cal l

A46·0294 ..
Complete line of Mu zz le
Loading Guns and · Sup·
plies.
Spring
Vall ey
Trading Co .. Spring Vall ey
Ploza, -1.46·8025 .
French City Meats are
booking Custom Ca!11e.
Call 446·3472.

Announcements

Gallipolis. Ohio
Will ba cloMd for Saturday sal" two
w-kaonly:
Saturday, Falwuary 28, 1"2
Saturday, February 27, 1912

Miss Schrallhammer · tesllfled
she found a black bag In von Bul·
ow's closet containing hypodermic
needles, Insulin and drugs. She also
saki von Bulow waited untU his wife
was "barely breathing" before
summoning a doctor on Dec. Zl,
1979.
The state alleges that was the day
von Bulow first tried tO klll his wife
with Insulin shots. She fell Into a
brief coma.

we will reopen for Saturday sale on ~arch . 6 at
regular time. There will be a Tool Auct1on Fr~tlay,
March
1982 starting at 7:00 p.m . at t.he
stockyards . everyone Welcome. For more 1n·
formation phone :
TO-Y JOISTIWAtiT

s,

10:00 NOON

This older home contai ns se\len rooms and bath , 2
fireplaces, for ced air fuel oil furnace, and features a
professionallY installed woodburner and ru~al
water . Outside features los of storage space 11')·
eluding worksh~s, a oar age and e screened sum·
mer kitchen wit buitt·ln grllt. Buildings and ouJ·
side arell has electric, garden space, and several
trees (some new, some mature) . The lot is fenced
and has ac~ess from streets and allies on three
~d~
•
Terms : 11,000 cash or acceptable che:ck at time at
sale. Closing on or before March 27, 1912.

\

Tue• to be pro-ra ted day of closing.
To be sold with the confirmation of the seller.
To see prop;rly call "Bud" McGhee Ilea tty at 1614)
446-0552.

Slit conducted by:
~·

,.

'·

-

~·-~

PERMAN E NT
, HAIR REMOVAL
Prof essional Electrolysis
Center. A.M .A . approved ,
Doctor refer a Is, by ap·
polntmen! only . 304-675·

6234 .

JIM S Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304·67H397 .
Cllrhp Conley .

Specia l Feb ., March &amp; Apr.
only . Gene's Deep Steam
carpet cleaning, Scotch
Guard · Free Estimates.
992·6309 .
McDaniel custom
chery . 30H82 3224.

· Announcements

3
For

bulk

de livery

ot

gasoline. heotlng o/1 and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
9'12·2181. Pomeroy , Oh .
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. · Everv sun. starting
at 1 p .m . Factory choke
guns only .

- -

Racine Fire Dept . sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6:30p.m .. Bashan . Factory
choke 12 ga uge shotgun.

- - ---

Classified Ads

but-

brlna you
extra cash
for
shopplna sprees

------··--

Hoof Hollow · Reg i st ere d
Morgans and Arabians .
Also grade horses . Saddles,
etc . 614-698·3290.

---

Daddy Osborne,
We love you. Happy
Valentine's Day.
Judy, Wayne Jr. &amp;
Melissa Osl)orne
Mom,
We love you.
Happy Valentine's
Judy, Wayne
&amp; Melissa Osborne

--

4

Glveaw•v

ANY PERSON who, has
anything to g ive away and
poes not otter or attempt to
otter any other tnlng for
sale may place an ad In this
column . There will be no
cnarge to the advertiser .
1 female pup part Beegle.
Cal 367 ·0576.
Regist ered Cockersponlel
puppy, 6 mo. old, female .
Call 379·· 2721 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

,

.

Real Estate ·

Personal Property

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

Located In the village of Thurman next to the
vl11age hall .

.._te

- - Announcements
--------------

3

.1 ....... 7H2 - 44'-t7M

FEBRUARY 27, 1982

"TTdt lla't priHL It'• Paradile lllud.'' Pbota wu
I8RJa Jut 1111116 wileD tile llftaatloa jllac"e•ed
al •a I iililde. (AP lMerpllolo).

JunbaJl
~imes- Jentinel

THE OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.

(real estate)

"PARADIBB?"- Ia ....... .&amp;wtkl rd alllle·
-,.,..mi...... !Illite...._ .. .81
vOle, Mill.,
wdbte • ~lpls ~ wbet P' Ole
aald,

"We told the pollee we were golnJ
to take the buses In a procession to
the cemetery. But the marching
just happened. It was spontaneous.
"We tried to persuade the ANC
supporters not to carry their
banners but they went ahead and
did lt."
Before the march, union leader
.Jan Theron told several thousan(l
mourners at the cathedral that
more nationwide work stoppages
WtU be called If pollee harassment
of black unions continues.
Theron Is national secretary of
the African Food and Canning
Workers Union, which has a mostly
black membership. Aggett was the
union's secretary for Transvaal
province.

Classi ieds

South Jersey would get 3 to 41nches
as the storm pushed northward toward C..,e Cod.
A storm moving through Kentucky on Friday evening dumped
up to 4 Inches In Lexington and
some other areas, disrupting rushhour traftlc and causing a rash or
accidents. HopklnsvUie got 31nches
and Louisville 2.5 Inches.
Elsewhere, a high wind warning
was posted along the Front Range
ol the Rockies In Colorado for winds
or 40 mph gusting to 75 mph.
Some clUes In northern Minnesota and northern Michigan reported subzero temperatures, but
temperatures were above freezing
from eastern Texas to the southern
Atlantic Coast states, with morning
lows In the 50s and 60s across FlorIda. By contrast, on the same date
In 1899, It was 7 below zero at New
Orleans, 1 below at Mobile and 2
below at Tallahassee, Fla., the cold·
est reading ever for Florida.

PUBLIC AUCTION

DIES - Aclor Vidor Jvry, a
vete1'U bad py of dozeu of
IIIO\'Iel aad the 11a1e, faaad
dead Ill his Sallta ~. Calli.
•partmeld Frld8y. Jory was 'it.
(AP l.uerpMia ).

land, Tregoning said .
The 12,487-ton Greek-owned and
Llberlan-reglstered tanker carrte(l
a cargo or molasses bound from
Florida to the British port or Liver·
pool when It broke apart Friday aro
mlles nonh or the Azores Islands
and 840 mUes southwest or Land's
End, the southWestern tip or
England.
At least 12 crewmen were reared
drowned ·after their Ufeboat capsized and shattered In !50-foot waves
Friday .
"Sea conditions ... Improved slgnflcantty," during tnday's rescue operation, the spokesman saki.
Earlier, a spokesman at Plymouth Marine Rescue Center said
the 100-foot stem section, ail that
remains afloat from the 500-foot
tantcer, has developed a 45-degree
list to port and could capsize "at
any time."

2,000 participate in funeral march .

Dense fog made driving dltflcult
ln central and southern nuno1s,
. , most or
and southwestern
Michigan.
But, lor the most part, milder
weather returned to the. frozen
Midwest with only a few places reporllng temperatures below zero.
Pellston, Mich., was the coldest
place In the nation at 18 below.'
1n HawaU, a storm that had produced 150-mph winds abated Frl· ·
day afternoon and 26 students who
had been trapped In a cabin at a
dormant volcano crater for two
days walked out to safety.
The Saturday &amp;torm pushing

black males aDd the prooeculors coaleDd be dumped
llle body of one of bla aUeged vlellms from the bridge.
( AP Laserphoto).

were rescued by a Dutch Lynx hellcopter flying from one of two
Dutch frigates sent to the scene.
The CfiiWlll&lt;)n were flown to the frl·
gates Van Speyk and Callenberg.
about 20 mUes Iron\ the shattered
shJp, he said.
The heUropter, Y.i th a doctor
aboard. shiJttled bacit and !,&gt;rth between the Victory and the frigates.
and wlthln 90 minutes all al.oord
were rescued, thecoastguardsald .
After the rescue, the helicopter
and two British Nimrod patrol
planes picked up the search for the
15 missing sa !tors.
"Phase One or the rescue has
been asuccessand17ofthe32crewmen are accounted for," said a spakesman. "Phase Two Is now
checking the 17 lifeboats ln the area
for more survivors. Arter that there
will be a flnal sweep or the area."
The Dutch warships were taking
survivors to the Azores, the nearest

FALMOUTH, England (AP) A Dutch helicopter pulled 16 crewmen to safety sdturday from the
badly listing stem of a broken
tanker adrift tn the stormy Nortl\
AUanUc, the British coast guard
said.
· One sallor was · found dead
aboard a life raft and 15 other seamen were reported missing, said
Doug Rundle, senior watch otncer
at the Falmouth coast ,guard sta·
lion In southwest Englnnd.
It was first believed one of those
hoisted from the tanker's stem was
InJured, but Rundle said It was later
determined the crewman was
pulled dead from a raft.
AII known survivors were
winched orr the 100-foot stem sec·
lion of the tanker VIctory, 33 hours
after It broke In two, sal.d Martin
Tregoning, anothersenlorofficerat
the coast guard base.
Tregoning said the crewmen

'lllill ··"'

•• 'I

The sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-0· 3

Dutch helicopter · pullls 16
crewmen.from stormy.water :

...

-i

Trial atmosphere like , soap opera

A BRIDGE IN QUESTION- The J~ry bearlllg the
murder trial of Wayue Williams llahOWIIID lhlll arlllt
sketch as It visited the Jaebon Parkway Bridge Saturday. Williams IIi accuaecl of the murders of two Atlanta

w. va.

P omeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea_sant,

Feb. 14, 1982

Owne~:

MGGKEE

cwnthiallnlll,awlki

Alction 111d Rul Estate Co.
4Z8 SKond ATe.
Gallipolis, Oltio
45631

BniUr

Auctilnter • Rul Estlta

IIIJt'GI1 "Bud" llcG~ee

Phoii~614)~5Z

AUCTION
SATURDAY,FEB.20, 1982
10:30 A.M.
Located on Eagle Ridge Ad. approx . 5 miles from
s.R . 1 turn East at Meigs Me!"orial Garden• on co.
Rd. 3S or from Racine/ Oh1o tak~ Co. Rd . 28 to
8ashan, turn West on Co. Rd. 35 . Watch for auction
signs.
ANTIQUE 011 COLLECTOR ITEMS
011 lights, copper elettric light, chifferobe, g lass
door cu pboard , ctlrni\lal, depression , cut, cry stal ,
ruby and other misc. dishes.
.
"HOUSEHOLO"
Ster eo wlrecord player w/AM &amp; FM radio and 8
track tape player, 19 ln. co lor T .V .• 3 pc . bedroom
suite, small ro ll·t op desk, and VIctor upr ight deet'
fre ele .
'MISC ."
lntedge meat grinder , I
H . P . Copelond
refr ioeration unit w/blower for walk ·i·n cooler, 4ft.
brush hOg, pull type disk, 22 W inchester sem i· auto.
w/scope, Ice cream freezer. cha in hois1 and misc.
.hand tools.
" HOUSE TIIAILEII "
196910x50 2 bedroom w/ bollle gas furnace .

"CATTLE"

3 Beet heifers.
ONWEII - MII . &amp; MIIS . IIOGEII CAR PENTEII
Dan Smith
·
Jim Carnahan
949·2708
949·2033
Positive t .D .
Lunch
Cuh
'
" REAL ESTATE "
To be auctioned by owner 27 ac re farm , 3 bedroom ,
hou"' w/built·ln kitchen. Corpeted all thru , central
air w/heat pump, also wOOdburner, ,v inyl siding on.
hou..,. All new tences. 12x16 and 12x36 red building•
to be sold with or without torm . 10% down day of
auction. Bal. on deiiYery of deed. Signed, Roger
Carpenter.

.
• &lt;

�.'
t' om

The Sunday Tomes· Sentinel
]I

He lp Wan1 cd

odd I

Gallopolos, Ohoo-Point Plea

They'll Do It Every Time

i2 -sltu~tions w~nted

11
LPN or R N needed part or
full time . Excellent
benef i ts , comparable
salarv . Arcadta Nursing
Center, Coolville, Ohio. 6613156.

Will care for elderly m mv
home. Private room or

semi-private. 992-67-UI.

' 2
Part-time babysitter for
01rls 2 days week My home
or will cons1der yours if
close
to
Elementary
Expenenced Auto Body school
man. 10 years e•penence,
must have own tools. Call 13
Insurance
675-3373.
~-----'===-SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offered
servtces for fire tnsurance
cOYerage in Gallla County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet rn·
d1vrdua1 needs . Contact
Lewis Hughes, agent.
Phone .j.l6-3318.

·------

Together, we specraltze rn pro·
v1ding the Non· Dnnker the very
best rn tnsurance coverage tor
Auto, L1fe, Home. or Church

Preferred

Risk

Mutual

Rul Eetate General

LEADINGHAM AGENCY
Gallipolis, Ohoo

HERALD OIL AND GAS CO.
35857 WELLS RD.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
742·2160
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED

If interested in leasing
your farm for purpose
of drilling an oil and
gas well ••••

CALL
BETH FARLEY 8 AM-4:30 PM
742-2160

Moved can't keep female
black cal Call 675·2948

2 hall Chow II. hall St. Ber
nard &amp; Collie pupp1es, 8
wks old, 1 black &amp; 1 cream
Call367·0663
Pupp1es 16 weeks old Ger
man
Shepherd Collte
moKed Call 675·2254.

----------Lost and Found

6

FOUND : Female black II.
tan dog
Looks mostly
Oochshund . Black body
wlth borwn hei.d . Found at
Meigs High School 992
6188

------

LOST: Black II. Wh ole male
cat Lost in Tuppers Plains
Call 667 3323
Found : Black and tan Ger
man Shephard in Cherry
Rtdge. Will owner please
call 992· 6504 . Young dog ,
approximately 10 months
old

FOUND small dog, black
blanket back , yellow head,
feet, Ieos. breast and
stomach. Call 304 675-5164
1

YardSale

Huge Garage Sale Sat ,
Sun. &amp; Mon Furniture,
clothes, glassware Lots of
other mrsc
Items 5th
house above Coast Gullrd
Stat1on above Henderson .

'

Wanted to Buy

euv•no
Gold,
Stiver,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware Daily
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sate .
Spring
Valley
Trading, Spring Volley
Ploza, 446 8025 or .j.l6·8026
We pav cash for late model
clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car co
Bl II Gene Johnson,
440·0069

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal,
auto bodies, and cars Bat·
·terles, alumlum, brass &amp;
copper. Gollipotls Block
Co., 123 t/2 Pine 51., .j.I6278J.

•

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
turnoture, gold, sliver
dollars, wood Ice bo•es,
stone l•rs, ontiQues. etc ..
complete
hou .. holds .
Write : M . D . Miller, AI. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·7760

•
·'
•
&lt;
'
'
;:

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter U"· on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab. $10.50 per ton.
Oellverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd .,
Pomeroy. 992-2~.

Medocal transcription/receptionest for
Jenkons Clinic in Wellston operated by
Holzer Medical Center. Previous experience
in
med1ca1
termonology
transcroption essentiel.
Contact : PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
385 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
614- 446· 5105
An Affrrm alrve Actron/ E EO E mpl oy er

Bookkeeper
Only e•
penenced need apply Send
resume fa Box 507 rn care
Gall rpolis Dally Tribune,
825 3rd Ave , Gallipolis, Oh

.__563
_1
Ladoes needed lor good
paytng temporary off1ce
l tke work No experience
necessary Also need ladies
w1th car for tight delivery
work Gas allowance AP·
pty tn person to Mrs . Car·
ter, Room 105. M eigs Inn
Hotel, Weds. 9 to 9 30 a. m ,
F e b. 17

12

Income tax service. Prom·
pt accurate. Martha Fry ,
Pomeroy 992·3414.
Reel Eatete Gener•l

~~~

I'IHOBSl

Real Estate General

wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY ~d Nr
niture and Anttques of aft
ktnds, call Kenneth Swain,
256 1967 in the eventngs

We offer an excellent beneht program rnctudrng
patd hie hosprtallzation, viston, hearrng, prescnp·
tton drug rnsurance; 10 pa1d holidays , srck leave,
educational benef1ts , pa1d vacaton, and penston
plan. Hours of work at 8· DO Cl m . s. DO p.m ., Monday
through Frrday.
Apply by February 19, to Judy Matheny, Personnel
Department, Ohto unrvcrstty, Ltnd1cy Halt ,or call
1614] 594· 5387

OHIO UNIVERSITY
ATHENS, OHIO 45701
An Atf1rmat1ve Act1on/ Equal Opporfllnlty Employer

CASH PAlO tor clean, tate
model used cars. Sm1th
Bu1ck Pontrac, GAIIrpolls.
Ohoo Call 446 2282

Situations Wanted

Wrll care for elderly in our
home Women and men
Trained and e•perlenced
992 7314

If you are regtstered or board eligtble 10
H1stotechnology and have a background rn brology
and chemrstry, an e•cellent opportunity a watts you
at Ohio Univenty College of Osteopathic Medtcine

FRANK HERALD JR., Owner &amp; Operator
?

NEED IMMEDIATELY:

Why would 2 Diamonds, 6
Emeralds, over 40 pearls
and 500 D1rects sw1tch? 20
per cent retirement on
S2,00 00 wholesale Call614·
446 4273 or 614·446 9332 or
wrrte S G Associates, 336
2nd Ave. Gatl1polis, OhiO
45631

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST

After 4:30 Call 742-3156
or
BARBARA WELSH 742-3104

{__ _ _
G_!y!_aW~-­

Growi ng Company has
postt1on available for a
Women rn the Gall 1potrs
area to prov1de our servrce
(no products are sold)
Free Tratn1ng Set your
own hours. Start1ng In
come SlO hour! Send
r esume Vera's .' Colonzed'
Image Professtonals, Rt 2
Bo• 137B, Molle rburg, Oh
44654

OLAN MILLS has $1!Verat
immediate openings for
telephone
appointment
clerks
No experience
necessary . We tratn. May
work 9AM to 1 PM or 5PM
to 9PM. Apply Jackie Car·
sey, Scottosh tnn. Room 163
between 12· 1 PM or 4·5PM
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday .
Equal Opportunity Em ·
plover .

THIS HOME CAN BE
YOURS ON YOUR LOT
FOR $12,500
Lillie or no down payment
Local BUilder
Excellent References
For Information Phone

256-6582

REALTY

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker
OFFICE 742 2003
RACINE Lovely 4
bedroom, 2 story home
Wel l
tnsutated ,
reasonabl~ utlltttes. K1t
chen has hand -crafted
ca brn e ts
AsktnQ
$32.500 00
Owner
an)( taus to sell, wilt con
srder reasonab le offer
RIVER
FRONT
Large
two
story
co lon1a l 4 bedrooms,
cttn1nQ room. bilth, lilun
dry E)( Cellent VIeW Of
the r1vcr 111 M1ddleport
0V¥n er
f1nan c1 nQ
.wadable Good terms
St:!IIS for $26,500 00
COUNTRY - 2 acres
w•th 5 vr old ranc h 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, krt
cl1cn·dtnrnq combo, ful l
basement, caq:~ort and
utr l1fy budd 1nq Extra
qood quc=~trty bur It home
Se l ling for $.45,000 00
PRICE REDUCED - 3
bodroom, total electr1c.
1'h baths Srtuated on 1
clcr(' on New Ltma Rd
Redu ced to $30.000 00
SUPER BUY!!
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phonc742·J171
ve1m.1 Ntcmsky, Assoc.
742· J092

15

- --- - - - ...

1_! ___

Schools Instruction

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E . 2nd St.
Phone

H 61.4 1·992-3325
JUST LISTED - Lovely
lerge 8 room brick ran·
ch. 2632 sq 11 2 lull
ceramic baths, family
room, 3 car garage, bir·
ch
krt c hen
wrth
refrtgerator.
range,
dishwasher and 2 patios
on 180•120 tot Only
$69.000
M I DOLE PORT - Level
corner lot near stores. 3
large bedrooms, bath,
automatrc gas hot water
heat. Formal dtntng,
storm drs. and windows,
full basement, large
porch, garage and car
port $40.000.
GOOD BUY - 5 rooms,
bath, full basement, city
utilities and 3 lots for
only $11,000
HANDYMAN SPECIAL
- Here you go w1th a .f
room house and 43f.acres of woods at only
$6,000 cash
REALTORS
Gorden Teaford
Helen Te~ford
and sue Murphy
992·J876

1&lt;11rate the ultimate In self
defence all pnvate lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children .
lnstructiion thru black
bell. Also avaotabte Karate
untforms puching and
kicking bags, and protec·
tive
equ1pment
1.43
Burl tngton Rd, kason, Oh .
Call 286·3074

21

~ ::.~·~

..

Real Estlte Gener1l

E MaiooW.
POMEROY,O.

With the Army National
Guard 1 you' ll have a part
lime lob with full time
benefots. You woll attend
trarnlng one weekend each
month and two weeks each
year . Benefots Include tow
cost life Insurance, ex·
cellent pay and a free pen·
slon plan . Plus the Army
Guard' s valuable technical
schooling may help you
prepore for a well paying
civilian occupaTion. Call
675·3950.

RNI Eltlte Otnorol

NEW LARGE
7ROOM
BRICK HOUSE
On Lake Dr.
In Rio Grondt
75'Ht complttld, $45,000,
9'1•'Ho lntorost. $4,000
down, fond cootlroct.
Mootlhly ,..ymtnh SUO
mo. 245·5439.

New Income L•mtts. If vou

earn between $9,000 to
SlS,OOO a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
Call 992•

House. Apple Grove 25 per
cent down, finance balance Caii30H75 3618
-~--- --- - -~ ----------

32

Mobile Homes
for S~le

- -- - -- - - -

decorating store AAA 1
paint manufacturer needs
distnbutor for thrs area
Modest Investment. Call
collect C304) 743·5071 Mon
day·Frrday or write ?.0
B~• 308, Milton wva 2SS41

CLEAt.l USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 Mt
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE 446· 3868

Money to Loa-n- -

23

Professtonal
Services

P1ano
Tunrng
&amp;
Repair .Call Bill Ward for
appotntment,
Wllrd's
Keyboard, .j.l6 4372.

C II. L Bookkeeping . Com ·
plete bookkeeping and ta)(
serv1ce for business and rn
diVtduals
Carol Neal 446·3862
..

...-:::=o•

1

.r

Adverttsmg spectalrttes .
Book matches, calenders,
pen &amp; pencils, dicount
coupon books Otsmuke's
405 2nd . Ave ., GalltPOIIS,
446·0474
P•ano's tuned and ser·
voced Call Bob Grubb, .j.164525.

31

Homes for

S~le

1972 Concord Mobile Home.
12K65. Call .j.l6·7015 after
5:30p.m .
By owner, 2 bdr. house in
crty,
excellent neigh borhood Only $18,500 Call
446·2942

Real Eotate GonMol

12•60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobtle home Set up wrth 2
or 4 lots, gas heat. rural
water, close to town, ftnan cing avarlable Phone 446·
1294

77

windsor
14x70,
l
bedroom, 1/2 bath, all etec ·
tnc, cen1ral air cond. Call
446·968 1 alter 5

5 75 acre with or w rthol.lt
1912 l4x70 mobote home.
12KU room, 2 bdr Call 256·
9352
1980 Wrndsor new cond .•
deluJ&lt;e kitchen &amp; llvtng
room, 2 bedrooms, h1dden
utility rm &amp; nice bath Call
alter 3 OPM Call 379 2310

USED MOBILE
576 2711

HOME

1911 KIRKWOOD, 12K65, 2
bedroom, famtly room , un ·
derprnned, IOx20 awning, a·
c, w·d Good condition. 304 ·

675 5739 ,
weekends

11.

evenings

Comfortobte 3 bedroom
home, 8 'h percent
assumable loan, and 1s
near PPHS, large fenced in
yard. krtchen appltances
and
more
We
are
relocating and can share
realtor's fees by sellrng
now . Call alter 6 pm 675
1625.

A LOT FOR YOUR MONEY - That' s what you get
with this like new brick rancher. 3 BR 's, 11 2 baths,
1h27 family rm . with heatalator fireplace, 14x20
LR w1th WB stove, equipped totchen, double garage
with auto opener, cent. arr, cent. vacuum, large flat
lot &amp; much more. Located in Rodney Call Ranny
Blackburn for a personal appdintment. STROUT
REALTY-446·0008

House meadowbrook Ad
drt1on 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen
tral arr, basement, 30~ · 615
1542

1974 Schultz '1Ax70, exc
cond., AC washer &amp; dryer.
2bdr ., dtntng room, all etec ·
trrc. Phone 615 3~.

NOTICE
Lowest
Prices
Ever
On

.A.IJliU
.K3

.,.

WEST
••
,2
.101?43

.K 10
orQH

•JOt

.Q ••• ,

EAST
tQH

SOOTH
.AJlll

•u•
U2
•u•

Tra1ler Sttes 10 percent
down 992 2571 pr 992 3830

Vulnerable. 8oth
Dealer South

Houses for Rent

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

- -- - - - - - -

Small 2 bdr suitable tor 2
people 104 Fourth Ave ,
Gallipolis
Deposit
reQUired 446·2957
3 bdr house, 2 flretJiaces,
centrala1r, garage, fence &amp;
sw1mmmg pool. Call 675·
S104
Homes tor Rent, Lease. or
Land Contract 1n twon, or
country
Call
Strout
Realty, 446 ·0008

Euo

Pass

,.

p. .

4NT

Paa

~

Pw

Pus

SNT

Pw

Pus

required Call 440·4554

House 2 bedroom, 733 3rd
Ave., Galtrpolts Depostt
requtred Call 446·3870 or
446 1340

Nord!

Pw

2 bedroom fam1ty rm, $300
mo
u1111ttes and dep

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
New l y
decorated un
furnished , 3 rm house
Su•tabte for srngte person
or retired couple. Garden
space, deposrt &amp; references
requored Call 446·0450 or
446· 1291.

w...

Paa

By Oswald Jacoby
aod 'lluo Soota1

'

Today's hand Is of Interest
to match point duplicate
players only

New 14r Wide)
MOBILE '
HOMES

Mobote Homes
for Rent

2 bdr and 3 bdr mobtl e
homes Call 446 0175
Centenary, 2 bdr , prrvate
lot. ref II. dep., $160 mo,
adults Can 6l4 6-43· 2644
3 bdr double w•de loca ted
rn Johnson ' s Mobtle Hom e
Park
No pets, deposit
requ1red, all u111ities pd
e•cept electrtc, new ly
decorated, SJOO month Call

'1 bdr mobtle hom e close to

HMC . Call446·7032
Mobtl e home for rent
Adults only , no pets Call
367·7438

House for rent . 3 bedrooms,
kitchen ,
living room ,
dining room , and bath
Nice and clean. Some car ·
pet . No onsode pets Deposit
required 992 3090.

3 bedroom mobile home on
pnvate lot, 3 mtles South of
Gallipolis Adults, deposit,
no pels
Call 446 1326
evenr ngs

4 bedroom house w•th large
livrng room , din1ng room ,
and garden . $175 month .
securotv deposol Call 992

2 bdr trail er in Kanauga,
partially furnished
Pay
own utrlt1es. Call 446 7044
between 9·5

From

$9,295.00

2 bedroom house. Call 6/S
3431
42

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

Mobile home for rent Call
.j.16-0390

D&amp;W ·

ESTATES, INC.

Tratl er for rent Call 446·
0756 or 446 4225
mobtle home Quail
Creek . Call 245·9S19 alTer
SPM
2 bdr . trader furnrshed ,
adults only , Brown Tratler
Park , 992·3324.

or
341 1 Jockoon Ave.

PRICE REDUCED! Plus land con
tract! Lovely 3 bedroom, beauttfUI k1f
chen. famrly room &amp; workshop in
basement Garage Owners need a
#953
quick sale . Call today!

(Formerly K&amp;K Mobile
Homtool

876-3000

•

BMR 400- BARGAIN - For only $8,500 you can
buy a two BR · w/rural water and bath Gallipolis
c,ty School Oistrtct
BMR 402F - CHECK ON THIS ONE - 37 acres
with J.IOIIb . tobacco base, 30•30 born Call lodoy!
BMR 404- LOW 30's - City schools, newly car·
peted and painted. Thrs 3 BR home is a great buy on
today's market
BMR J99- OWNER FINACNINGI - Two sTory
home pre$ently being used as a duple)(, could be
easily converted to single famrly Chotce locatron
near Washrngton School Call for detaltsl

CONVEN
.
Older two story 4 bedroom home. Larqe
kitchen with old tahsron pantry
Natural gas. Off street parkin~ School
bus ~ckup $29,900
~ 193

HILLS· TREES - Older 4 room home
now rented . Shallow well water system
Some outside building!., rncludlng root
cellar arid cettar house . -42 acr'es, most
all timber land. A noticeable amount of
hard wood $26.500
N 880

WOODED ACREAGE
GREEN
TOWNSHIP - Approx. 2 acres Over
900 ft . road fronta ge. County water
ava1albte 4 mtles from Gallipolis.
Pr,ced at $8,000
#921

PRICE REDUCED Sl4,000 on this 110
acre farm in Me•qs County Large
remodeled • bedroom home 2 new
f rreplaces Full basement GaraQe . 2
story barn Ch1cken house and feed
room Pond. Tobacco base Owner will
consider helprng with financing.
I 931

SPRAWLING SPLIT LEVEL
DrsCover
tht s
beituttful
home
overlooking the Spr1nq Valley Plaza.
Huge d1ning , ltv•nq and tamtly rooms 3
or • bedrooms, •clectnc hei'lt, 2
fireplaces, 2 baths, 2 car rJ;:trage, Can be~
purchased with 2 or '2 develop1nq
acres.
~ 951

BMR 316- REDUCED- Quiet country home on
acre tot tnclu- 2lllC20 bar~ with toll, and partial
bjtoement. Call for delallsl

614·367 -7811
2 bedroom trailer ctose to
school; stores, and park.
Oepostt requrred
Mtd ·
d leport 992 5914

t

and

-------

Furn1shed apartment , up·
sta trs. -4 rooms and bath.
One or two adults, referen·
ces and secunty depostt
required. Call 446 0444 at
ter 5PM
Apartment for rent
446 0390

Call

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes,
houses ,
Pt
Pleasant and Ga llipolts
614 446·8221 or6 14 245 9484.
---~--~·

3 b edroom
turnrshed
Mobile Home wr th washer
&amp; dryer on pr1vate lot
Ocpostt requrred, no pets
949 2253
MOBILE home for r ent
wrth opt ton to buy, 304 576
2711
2 bdr mobile home un
furn1shed, couples only
C ~ ll675 · 1076

2 bedroom mobile home tor
rent Call675--3885

Efflctency room s by the
w eek on Main Street,
Mason. WV 773 5651
Garge apartment,
mobile hom es on R I
mi nutes from town
675 3000 after 5 call675

two
2, 5
Call
6277

E ffl ency ap t , pr 1vate
home, with prtvate en
!ranee Catl675·3220
New 1 bedroom apartment ,
downtown , furnrshed or un
furnished , pr1vate parkrng,
304·675·9760

Re11 Eatate General

CENTRAl REALTY
LOVELY 3 BR brrck home, has wood burnmg
firep lace m l!vmg room ll/:2 bath, w ell constructed
&amp; 1nsutated One floor p lan Ask1ng $35.000

' ACRES more or less would make a good home
s1te, gOOd well and some t im ber on the property Ap·
pro• . 800 lb toba cco base

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Ja spers - Assocrate
PH. 843· 2075

Reel Eatete Oeneret

CANADAY
REALTY

Nr ce br1c k home rn
RENTALS AVAILABLE
Le1art, OH S250 a m onth plu s Sl SO depos ot &amp;
ref erenc es

A..l E•t•te Oenerel

EASY CARE ranch Bn ck and VI nYl Stdtng make
the ex terror of thrs home a breeze to ma intatn 3 BR .
equipped krt chen, central ai r cond. At tached 2 car
garge Natural gas hea t C1ty school s S49,900

NO HEATING PROBLEMS HERE ' lmmac utale
and beautifully decorated 3 year old L ·shaped ran·
ch Massr ve stone f1r eplace 1n hv rng room plus wood
burntng stove in tamtiY room J BR , 111? baths
Equ1pped ktf chen , fenced back. yard with patio .
Nearc1ty $54,500
SUPER RANCH
move 1n con d1tr on 3 bedrooms ,
famtiY room , wood burnmg stove, th ermo pane win
dows. 1 car garage , and for Summer fun, 16'X32'
pool F enced back yard Loa n Assu mption K ygcr
Creek area $59,500

TWENTY-SEVEN ACRES - MosTly level. good
produ cing land 3 bedroom nome has rwo sun porches, wood and coat burn ing stove, new furnace,
bath and water system Alum1num srdlnQ. Barn
plus other outbtdg Ru ral water Located lUSt ott Rt.
160. $S4.000

LINESt And Inside some genu1ne
a 14'x24' living room with traditional
l"noromo•u• master suite For easy trv tng,
with lots of counter space, built·
steel counter top range and dish
ten. air 2 car~ attached 1garaoe
storage buitding. Shown by appotntment
$96,000.00

2

bed
rooms $152,
Rent 2starts
at , l
bedroom
bedroom
S18B, deposit $200 . Colt 446
274S

LAND FOR SALE - Close toR t 7 70 ac r es Ask1ng
Sl3,000 Owner Will land contrac t 10% down &amp; work
together on balance

be~utifut

1h

2 bedroom house trat lcr '"
Racine. S175 per month $75
depos1t You pay ul ll lf1es
Unfurnrshed but k1tchen

4S

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt ,
Par k Central Hotel .

• WilliS T. Leadingham. Realtor. Ph. Home
• Phyllis Loveday. Phone 446·22JO
• Joan Boggs, Phone446·l:t94

.PH. OFFICE 4~6-7699

2 bdr . completelv turn , all
electrtc, carpeted, adults,
no pets , 458 2nd Ave ,
Gallipolis, $225 per mo
plus qeposot. Call 446 2236
or 446·2581

ASSUMABLE LOAN- ONLY $2.000 DOWN
9% lnt rate, 27 yrs Askmg only 554,000 Want
peaceful sectus1on., See fh1 s l ov ely 3 bedroom
brick home su rround ed by J acres of pri vrtcy,
cozy hv 1ng room with w b ftrepta ce, k1fchen
and breakfast bar

BMR 407F - Camp· site Potentiotl 32 ocres mtt with
frontage on Raccoon Cr. as welt as frontaoe on
bta~ktop highway

BMR 395 - Three bedroom home on Neighborhood
Rd, situated on 1 acre m/1 Includes two mobile
home pads. Reduced!

N1ce 1 bed r oom furnished
m obile home 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Pnone
for appotntment 992 7479

3 bedroom unfurn1shed
apartmenl 992 ·5434 or 992 ·
5914 or 304-882 2566.

Apartmen ts 675·5548

2 brd. apt H U D excepted~
kitchen furn , utilittes par·
t 1ally pd,
excelle nt
locatton Call 675 510-4 or
675·1284

VERY NICE - This home ha s 3 n1ce SIZC BR's,
closets, eat 1n k ttchen, DR or FR , &amp; a n eKtr a LR .
Lot 1S 3 plus acr es, garage, several other nice
bull dtngs fru1f trees, se veral van ef1 es of berry
bushes, curta ins, woodburncr, dishwasher, all stay.
Grve us your otter tn the $50's

BMR m - GET READY FOR SUMMER! Owner
transferred and mu•l sell this 3 BR. ronch Clo.e to
town Includes deluxe 18•36 inground pool Call for
an appointment todav!
·

BMR 410- NEWLISTtNG - A framesttuotedona
wooded setting, you will )ove the at·
mosphere. owner financing for qualified buyl!rs.
Low 30's.

Deluxe furn ished apartment, excel lent locatiOn, 1
or 2 adults, only $275, ref &amp;
dep required . Call .tl46,
0338

ASSUMABLE LOAN ONLY $3,000 down,
931.-% int rate Paymen ts $353 11 including
taxes and ins Modern 3 bedroom ranch , large
hvtng room and kttchen and dtn rng area Only
2'12 years old $33,700

BMR 319- Thos fine home has 4 bedrooms and os
located close to town. You will have a large lot with
a country atmosphere and have all the city con·
venlences. Call now!

Nice 2
bedroom home
on Bfue Lake.
Ltving room, kitchen and 1 bath . Use
for summer home or ltve year around
64 acre lawn and a real fisherman's
haven
1937

Mobote Homes
lor Ren1

Upsta trs, 2 bedroom, tur·
nished apartment Pnvat e
entrance Call 446 2374 or
446·0284.

Furnisfled apartment for
rent Call446 3937.

JUST LISTED - New doll type 3 BR home, cozy is
the key word here K1tchen comes co mp lete w1th I
year old sell c1ean 1ng oven, refrrg erator &amp; 6 chatr
wooden d1nette set Th1s home 1S abou t 1 s mt les out
of m iles out of M1ddleport on 2 p lus acres, 1t has out·
build i ngs for store Rental income from a trader ·
$175 A l l th rs foronly$35 ,000

BMR :191 - RE OUCEDI - Owner wants ol sold
nowl Mob1le home located on riverfront lot

YOU BE THE JUDGE and tell me if
you don't think this well matntained
home 1S not worth the asking price 2
bedrooms, basement . Large storage
area Owner willing to help with down
payment RuTland $24:900 .
N 890

42

tor Rent
----~---

~~ rn1shed

MILLION SS$ VIEW - ~I State Roule 35 - close to
Holzer Medical Center Doctor moved out of the
area needs to sell this lovely new rustic ' L
shaped ra-nch Thts very plush home features 3
large bedrooms, form at entry and hvtng room
Butlt tn kitchen, 2 full baths. full basement 3 ca r
garage Srtttng on 3 2 acres. Be one of the Best Ad
dres5ed People in Town' Pr1ced 1n the 80's I

BMR 409 - OWNER FINACNING - Thos •Piil
foyer home includes 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, farge
tten wtth fireplace, heat pump. See this fully car·
peted home now . Located 10 Crown City!

MOTIVATED SELLER ANXOUS lo
move out of state Owner respons tvet to
specrat ftnanc1ng. Over 41 acres . 2
story. J bedroom home 16 f1ll ab le
acres. t800 lb toba cco base La rge
tobacco barn $40,000
/1886

EN'1"'FJlPRR ASSN)

--Apartmcmt

room
$85 ,
utilrtres pd , single male,
range, t'efrlg share bath
446·44 16 after 7PM

NEW LISTING - 2 BR trailer on very nice lot on
qu1el stree t Kitchen has stove. r efn Qeralor , drnette
set , corner drsh drsptay cab•net &amp; easy v1 ew In to
spactous L.R Thrs pl ace could be very nrce l tving
for you or tu st as mves fm en t proper ty Now r ents
lorSl/5 Askong$12.000

J,5_ _::L:.::O.:.:IS,_,&amp;,_A=cr'-'e"'a.._ge" - -

BMR 139 - Two stroy home on Second Ave • 3 or 4
bedrooms REDUCED! Bellerseelhisone.

(N!:WSPAPER

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

UNUSUAL HOM E - Call &amp; I"'C ! detail S on th rs
lovely J BR 21/ 7 baths, A fram e, on 6 plus acr es.
L ar ge work garage, roof cell ar , loc ated close to
Forked Run State Park Askmg $73,000

Pt. Pteuont. W. Va.

BMR 318- OWNER FINACING! Three BR , large
family room with fireplace Natural gas heat Call
for details!

onslead of his 10.
South wins with his ace
and thinks awbole. Then be
comes to the conclusion that
Wesl Is sUII holding the 10
and two lltUe tnompo. So be
le.ad! a amall trump and
pial" dummy's lline. Eut
ukes his 10.
South will atill clear the
diamonds to make sil:, but
will find that be has very
few match points, If any

For rent mobtle home, Pt.
Pleasant Call446·8221

OWNER SAYS SELL - We have r educed lh1s home
from $17,000 to $12,900 and wil l work te rm s 1 or 3
BR home W1fh eQUIPPed k1tchcn 1nctudt ng breakf ast
bar , stove, &amp; r fr,gerator L ar ge 11v1ng room ha s
ftreptace. also cellar and l aundry r oom

21837112

BMR 411 - NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom home 3
mrles from city . Owner will consider financing
Srtuated on large flat lot Vrnyl srd•ng &amp; natural gas
heat. Carport with storage area. Catl for details!

an overtrick.
Now let's see wbat happens If East pial" bls lting

2 &amp; J bedroom mobtle
homes furnished or un
furntshed l one bedroom un·
furnished apartment. Call
675 1371 or 675·3812

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

-------

J bdr

With 2 Loc:ationa
Rt. 93 North
Joclloon, Ohio

5 acres SR681, near Tup·
pers Pla1ns Good building
sole 614855 ll16 after 5 30
pm .

spade contract. Nortb had
tried to get to seven, but settled for the small slam after
he found that the ltinc of
trumpo was beld by bls
oppoDOIIts He held the other
three ltings and Blackwood
had discovered that South
didn't bold any ltings
South wins the be.1rt le.1d
In dummy and le.~d! the
~ght of spades
Even In l~e eapert class
pracUcally all Eut playert
would make the rotltlne play
of the I 0 spot South would
win with the jack, lay down
his ace and go about the
busl,.,.. of oettlllg up the
diamonds to come out with

I~==:::::::::-===:-j-:::;==;;:::.:~;;;:=:-1
--~
- - - --,
42

44

- -Mobiie HomeS - ·-

Apartments

5692

LIFE
INSURANCE
428 Second Ave.
Call 446 0552 Anylom'

"&lt;IME SWEET HOME - 5 rooms total
arn, ouTbuildings, grape arbor, fruit
trees Approx. 15 acres tillable, 20 acres
pasiUre and r.est wooded 77 acrP.s total ·
Priced In tow 40's.
1144

•'Ka

.j.16-3547

Broker-Auctioneer

A BUY I $23.0 00 land conTract.
low down payment Will buy th1s ntce 3
bedroom ranch 1•12 car garage , cha 1n
I tnk fence 1 acre, more or less.
Owners very anx iou!l to sell
11 950

HI-ll

.Q ..

Large trac t of land located
10 Pomeroy, Ohro. Can be
frnanced at 11 percent 992
5786

Older 3 bedroom all etec·
tric house rn Pomeroy Car
petr ng, porch, patro, yard,
'
and garden space Dep.
1972 12x65 Schultz, 3bdr , and ret. reqUt red . S250 per
gas heat, partially fur ·month Wnte Box 729 ·S,
Pomeroy. Oh 45769
noshed Call675 2907

Re1l Estate Gener1l

Owner
rtvatlabtc. Custom built 3
home 2 baths Kitchf'n dminQ· fam•ly
comb1nat1on
Woodburnhcr
He~t
pump WC'IItnsutated 2 car qaraqc AU
itpphanccs mcluded Best qrades of
corpe t County 1 32 acres Mus I sec • N
9
2
0

South is in a cincb six·
NORTH

The Sunday Times- Sen

for Rent

For duplicate players

70 acrea of va cant land
$210 per acre, mmeral
nghts •ncluded, located on
German R1dge Rd , ap
pro• . 1 112 mo ott Slate Rt
141 Call 379·2676

41

4l

BRIDGE

•

Ntce level homestte m
Clearvtew Rtver Estates
Sewer -Wate r Elec SSOO 00
down. Phone 256 1216

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
L 1censed &amp; 1nsured Cat I
304 576 271 I.

House for sale 1n Rutland
Suburb Needs remodeling
Asking $15,000 949·2428

J.louse 4 rooms &amp; bath, Hen·
derson, $10,500. Call 675
4203.

ROOMY COUNTRY HOME with om
mediate possess ton Older home tn good
cond tt ton w1th 3 4 bedrooms, dtnrng
room , l1v mg room , k1tch en, 1 bath,
ut1hty room and n1ce ca rpet Big tree
shaded lawn . Make an apporntment to
see this home
f 956

Lots &amp; Acreage

--- -- - ----

Home sate or rent R t 62 N
7 rooms, 2 bath, basement,
. carport. dep &amp; ref. req.
Call 1-614·928· 4339 alter
'5:30PM.

A GREAT BUY! 3 bedroom ranch
w tth JV2 acres Th1s home Is not very
old. Amentftes 1nclude large k rtchen,
m.irn bath. l1v 1ng room, part basement
and 1 car garage rn basement level
Posstblhty of owner frnanctng Li sted m
the $30's
957

35

w. Va.

Point

..

Own your own parnt and

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 vear fixed
rate WVa. &amp; Ohio Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. Slate St..
Athens. Oh 592·3051.

Hous.i1g
Headquarters

: ..:.~

Help Wanted

~--

TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES Gallrpolis Pnce
reduced, used rtlobr le
home• CALL 446 7572

22

NEW LISTING
3
bedroom, energy efficient, home in Pomeroy .
Fully
insulated ,
beautrfut rntertor wtth
new carpettrrg, WBFP,
$.45,000
NEW TOWN A 4
bedroom home, baTh.
dining room, on approx 3;_. acre lot partially
remodeled .
$28,500
PRICE REDUCED E)(cellent locatron in
Moddteport
3
bedrooms, gas F .A .
heat, porches, full base ment $29,000
MARBLE FIREPLACE
- and beautiful wood·
work in th 1s -4 5 bedroom
home. Family room ,
large toyer. Approx. 1/ 2
acre lot In Racine.
$.45,000
IN POMEROY - 1'12
story home w tth 3
bedrooms,
full
basement, pantry area,
bath, famtiY room Just
$22,900.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
GRI
992·6191
Jean Trussell
949·2,60
Roger &amp; Dottie
Turner
992· 5692
Ofloce
992·2259

Sl!t WIEtS

11

Bustness
Opportunity

Your own ieans and spor·
twear shop! offer the latest
in jeans, denims and spor·
tswear. $11.9.50.00 includes
Inventory, ft•tures, etc
Complete Store! Call MR
LEE . 1 800·814-47800

Campong pull trailer 15 to
20ft long Gas and electric
refrigator. 614 985 4394

..

- - --

J.!_ __ .J:Iom~ lor Sate .

down payment
7034,

OLO FURNITURE, beds,
1ron, brass, or wood. Kit
chen cubbards of all types
T abies, round or square
Wood rce boxes. Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
complete househo ld Gold,
srlver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
etc Indian Artifacts of llll
types Also buyong baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992
6370

::::

::_

Ohio-

for as little as $135 mo No

-----.

-.

wanted iooo

house (not a mobtfe home )

Gold , silver, sterling ,
1ewelry, r.ngs, old corns &amp;
currency. Ed Burketr Bar
ber Shop, Moddleporl 992
3476

JUNKED cars, scrap
meta ls, aluminum cans,
transmissions, motors. bat
tenes, rad1ators, 011 welt
drilling bils, tungsten car·
bide , hrgh speed steel,
waste paper, cardboard,
raw furs, hides, ginstrtO
and yellow root HarperHalstead Salvage Co 300
Eleventh St., Pt Pleasant,
304·675 ·5868. Also Ilea
market open Monday
through Friday, 1 s p.m.

Po

Wtll babysit in my home,
895·3911

Oi's Craft Supply, Spnng
Valley Ploza • .j.l6-2134. X
stitch headquarters, ALL
colors OMC. Free lessons.

992·2259

TEAFOR

512 Second Awe., Upstaors

Regtstered Nurse wanted
by a resrdental and day
treatment program ser
vtng retarded adults wtth
behavior disorders Sttlary
range $16,000 to $18.000
year, comensurate wrth ex ·
perten ce
plus
other
benefits
Responsrb111t1es
tnclude
so me
case
management duties as well
as health care related
tasks Appltcants must be
energetrc, creattve, rn
terested send resume to
Michael
Blyth ,
Ohio
Resrdental ser11rces, Inc,
Rt. 1 Box s, Mill Creek Rd
Gallipolis, Oh ~5631

Feb. 14,

Feb. 14, 1982

W . Va.

THE SMALL FARM you've a lway• wanted . Ontv 8
miles from town. Kyger Creek Schoots. 2
bedroomhome, 1 yr.otd fur ~ ::: e, storm windows.
Barn, other outbfdg Price$32,000
COZY COMFORT - t.. si ngles, young married or
retired couple 2 bedroom, dlnl ng room, kitchen lind
parlor A little work and rmag1na11on can make this
home your " castl e". Deep tot goes to the water 's
edge. tncitv . $16,000 .

MEIGS COUNTY
3 25 ACRES M or L

WHAT A VIEW
WHAT A HOME
Brand
n ew
3
b edroom s, ntc e stze 2
baths, 1nsutated doors.
tt'.ermopane
Wi ndows
D tshwasher. garbag e
drsposal Large family
room appr ox 12' )(20'
F1n1shed 2 car garage
1500 sq If . plus hvrng
space Just 11 sted Sec If
now
fl 520

POND
8
room
r emodeled
country
llOme beautifully Jan ·
dsca pcd, All J 25 acres
mowed Garage wrth
co ncrete
dnveway
24' x27' family room with
frr eplacc Large block
storage butldrng Fruit
1recs
Been redu ced
over Si 17,000 You must
sec th1S co untry nome
Pl ~ one now for an i!p·
p01n tme nt
N507

REAL CLOSE TO GALLIPOLIS
A brrck home that you can get wrtn a small down

payment and tow interest ra te 6 r ooms , 3
bedrooms , baement, and gArage, one tloor plan
Ni ce landscaped lot
natural gas F A . furnace
Lrke new Don' t delay , ca ll todc'ly
N517

WELL BUILT AND COH
In Mint Condition
3 or 4 bedrooms w1fh large closets. One bedroom •s
perfect for offi ce or sc w rng room L1v1ny room,
d ini ng room , bath and eat tn krtchcn with built 1n
cabinet s Front and back por ches , lull base ment
and garage w•tt1 .11.4 1 a&lt;Jre more or toss, rn Ctty
School s Priced rn t11c m•d ~O ' s Catl today for
details on th e charm 1ng hom e.
N519
DUTCH COLONIAL
Styl e, bea uty , charm , comfort - a ll descnbes fh1 s
nome, 4 BR ,' 2•11 baths, equ1ppcd eM ·1n k ttchen,
famrly room w1th ft re pla ce, formal l•vmg and dr n
rnq room Y ou won' t believe th1 s home unl ess you
see •t tor your se lf Mak e your appomtmcnf today to
walk 1nto th e entrace of one of th e most lovely
homes rn t he area
W312
FIND YOUR RODg
(F )(fro lot Avi'Uii\biCI

t 111 · pt rtrc t ,111 br•ck ''nnw 1S r1 q11tt wrr 10 North up
" nrl li'r'l iUri'S 3 1)Pd r oorns, 11 'J h i't th s , 'i.Pi'lf •Ou &lt;;. liv mq
ronm d1n1nn rlfri'l ctwrry kt! r tw n, 7 r ilr &lt;ril rnqr,
piltlo. plu ~ m uch rn nr r- CAll nnw ,1 nct IPI u s tnilk £'
you r drPa m s corn(' tr uf'
liS t'l
LOTSONBLACKTOPROAO
S7 ,SOO
We have 2 tots Situated on Bu lttvll l(' Port er Road.
,; 510
Approx 1!7 acre each CAll fo r dc tnds

.

WHAT A IHJY'
R(•,1 rty 10 m o vp? Wf' Vr&gt; qnlt u'&gt;l w11. 11 yn tJ ,l rl' lnnk 1nq
l nr l Fur n,._ llr'd nr u n lurrw·, l~t • rl c, rl 'tl l lor &lt;:, l ii rh nq
1•1!1 nr ll ' l i rT IIW H I f.ldr.l n ,( l ' 1Y l9 mnrll'l m oh dl'
t•n m 1 nn .lpf) r ll) ' · ,1rn • lt ' V ' I lot wil l • c ll ,, ,n 1u1k l ~&gt; n
Cl ' L •k1 IH 'W Prt r l'rl• nll ,elow?n..,
,.5 18
NICE - CLEAN
6 Room hou se, ba th , cellar, 2 st or age bulld1ngs,
own water sys tem. n1 cc country atmosphere, ni ce
qround, l oi s of shrubbery, larciC level garden area
and pr1ccd only $2r,J,900 You mu st sec th1 s one
Phone
;f516

2LOTS GREEN ACRES
Lot sN2 1 Sidewa lk. 75'x i4B'
Lot it 2J , va cant88' fr ont age by 148' depth. pr1ced to
soli
H JJ4 1 3JJ
PEACEF UL AREA
A h111f rlcre more or less with fru 1t tr ees plus a three
b ed room home, lrv1n ~ room , kttc hen wrth bu !u 1n
cabtnets, u tll1ty room, full ba se ment and garage,
pad1ally converted 1nto a den An unf inished room
wrth a hca tol ator frrept ace N 1cc fenced 1n yard.
Call for details
11492
WOW I
Look what you ca n o et on a land contrac t a t 9% 1n
terest Owner r edu ced th e pr, ce $7,900 and Is
an)( ious to se ll Th1s three t cd rcv m sprtlcss, il1r
condrtmncd home ha s l baths , l rv1i19 t l orag e
bu il d1ng, h.eateo qar.:'lge , all furntture mctuded
E verylhinQ you need tn one purcnasc . In clt)l sc hooi
d!Sfr1cl
11401
I ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
Ntce comfortable home wrth ntc c larqc shade trees,
concrete fron t porch, tot s of fru i l tr ees (appl e,
c herry, plum and peach). grape arbor, raspberry
v1nes, good ga rden l and, .=.II l evel In Green Twp,
Rural water , ~ ca r garage, fu el o.t F A furn ace,
B asement, barn approx 16'x24' Pr1ced tn the S?O's
!4?1
IN MIDDLEPORT
N1ce, cold be 100 y ear old home m n1ce cond 1t 1on .
Solid, 1t has 7 room s. 4 bedrooms , llh baths,
basement, modern kttchen, family room. fir eplace.
All c rty utd1t1cS Carport. Shown by apporntm enh
only Phone now
11 506

! ACRES
Within 10 tT!in dnve to uowntc w n Ga tllpolts Q1ty
School Svstem Has hookup for mobile home. Ga~lta
Rural Wafer , elcc fri c and sc pt1 c tank, nrte l rgh t on
pole, 200ft . fron tage on Gr ahflm Sct1ool Rd T1mber
Bu i ld1ng si tes . CBII Now
11471
SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Va cant tots, n1ce size build•n o lots w1 f h all ut11tt 1es
th er e Lof SIZe 101 8 by 171 2 Betlc r get 'um now
&lt;456
ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME
Well kept, 9 rooms , 5 bedroom s On St ate Hrghwav,
approx imately 1700 sq II hv1nCl spa ce Concre te
block cellar wlfn frame sm oke house Larqc too l
shed, large block work shop w ith 2 car eM port w rfh
concrete floor Four lots - ovN I r~ c r ~ of level land .
Alltoronty$41 ,90000
w513
CITY SCHOOLS
3 bedroom ranch styl e hom e Ea l ,n k1tctH:m, fu l l
ba sement Spacious l tv,ng room . o wn er mu st &amp;e ll
Pn ced dras t ica lly low $29,900
OWNER WILL FINANCE
Walk rnto forma t entran ce w rf h op en s f it~rc,lsc to
th is lovely comple tely redecor ated home l nc ttted 1n
th e ci t&lt;; Wit,hin walk ing d1stnnce to shopp.ng area J
bedrooms, '1 tutt baths ,,nd c hr~rm r n &lt;t large k i tchen
Spac10us living room W1th woodt:lurntnq f1rcp1ace
This grac ious home has a nflturrtl qas F A. furna ce
like new Immedia te possesston We're wait 1ng f or
yourcall .
NJ 46
REMODELEO COUNTRY HOME
In Ohro Township, set son 2 c1 cr cs more or tess, has
atum l num srdlng, 3 bedrooms, and barn. ~n ee d
$21,900 See by appointment only
K41l
NEW AD DAILY

�.'

.

.

Page-D· 6- The Sunday Times-Senti
5_! __
COUNTRY MOBI L E Home
Pa rk , Rout e 33, North of

Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
992-7479 .

Tra iler lots for rent. Sewer
&amp; water furnish ed. Call 675·
1076.

~4erebandlse

gas

51

electr ic

&amp;

s

pice

liv ing room suites
$199 .00 , 2 piece living room
suites S140.00, love seats
$70.00, woOd dinet set with o4
captain chairs cnew)
275.00, 9x l 0 linoleum rugs
9X12 $10, large owl lamps
$25 .00, padded maple
roc kers $3-4.00, new &amp; used
wood burners from S60.00

to $275 .00, several chest
sil_v~r

Household Goods

Automatic washers &amp;
dryer s . reworked &amp;
guaranteed . pri ced from
$80 to $125. Ca ll 256· 1207.
GOO O
U SED
AP ·
PLI ANCES
wash ers,
dryer s.
refrigerators ,
ranges .
Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446-7398 .
19 cu .ft. refirge'rat or .
Lerge freezer, avo&lt;;ado G.
C. S200. Huffy 10 spd .
bicyclf. new, $135. Call675 ·
2635.

Hou se hold

G ood ~

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

•

by Larry Wright

variety

Ot

stone cook ware, 4

ut111ty kitchen cabinets
TV's, dinet sets, beds:
desks , and lots more. Open
l Oam fo5pm , 446·3159.

RAY'S
U SED
FUR ·
N I TU R E Wood burner
$100, WOOd &amp; coa l stove$85,
gas heater $100, chest S35,
dr esser $25, rocker $25
bedroom suite $65, dinne;
bell $45, 2 end tabl es $24
Antiques and much more
furniture . 361·0637 .
Baby bed for sale .good ca n·
dition, $40.00. Phone 446·
3235 t ill 2:00P , 446·2610 at·
ter 5:00P.

Rell E1tate Generel

WOOD REALTY, INC.
446·1066

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
toman, 3 tables, $500 . Sofa,
chair and toveseat; $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced
from S285 . to S795. Tables,
S38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
beds.Sl.W .• queen size. S380.
Recliners, Sl75 . to $295 .,
Lamps from $18. to S65. 5
pc , difettes from $79 ., to
5385. 7 pc .. $189. and up .
Wood table wit h 4 chairs,
S2 19 up to S495. Desk $110.
Hutches. $300. and $375 .•
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Basset1 Cherry,
5795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. compl ete. Baby beds
S99 . MattresSes or bo~
springs, full or twin, $58 .,
f1rm , S68. and $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, S49.
4 dr . chests, $42. Bed
f ra mes, $20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets. $350., dinet·
le chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electri c ranges, $295 . Or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses. S25 &amp; S35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; $30
Electric fi repla ce, g'un
cabinet, L iving room sui te,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
Used ,
Range s
refrigerators, and TV's, '
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
thru Fr i. , 9am to 5pm, Sat. ·
446·0322

Misc . Mercharidice

54

446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446·0971 ·
Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408

54

Misc. Merchandice

Lump Coat S32 per ton.
l inn Coal Co., rnc. Ca ll 446·
1-408 between 9 and 4.
For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs, $25. See at 769
Brownell Ave., Middleport .

Snow tires, new recaps,
G78·14, $30.00. Call 675·6898,

56

For sa le 7 ft . Brunswick
pool t•ble S250, drum set 6
PC . Ludwig $300. Call 675·
4287.

1969 Ford 2 ton cabin
chassis, new 300 m otor, 5
spd trans., 2 spd. rearend,
new tires, new paint fob,
outstand ing condt'ton . 3 yr .
old Da lmation, male. Ca ll
367·7533.

loading

rif le .

Kerosun heater, solid oak
couch &amp; ace . tabl e, glass
fi re screen, 50 ga l. drum
with pump . Call 446·4122.
I~~~~;;;;~;=l=::=~======::=~
Brown leather couch
51
Household Goods
54
Misc. Merchandice
chair. Call446-6220 cheap.

54

Misc. Merchandice
1 treadmill
675·4616.

20 ft. telephone poles for
sa te. 30H75·6918.
Excelsior Oil Co., 630 E.
Main st., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·2205.

iogg~r.

$50. Ca ll

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK

&amp;

614· 992·2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil .

Movi ng must sell Kenmore
heavy duty washe r &amp;
dryer, like new, $550 for
pair. Call245·5624.

PRICED RIGHT
CALL TODAY!

Tire chains for pickUp
truck 15' wheel never used.
Call307 ··7790.

For sa le firewood $10.00
pickup. you get. Call 304·
576·2010.

Pels for Sate

POODLE GROOM IN G.
Call Judy Tay lor at 367·
7220.
HI LLCREST KEN NEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Ca ll 446·7795 .

puppies $125 ea . Call 446·
8367 or 256·6461 .
Priced to sell. Female
A. K.C. registered Golden
Retriever puppies . 9 weeks
old . After 5 p .m . 742·2957.

B. J . Hairston. Assoc ., 44'·-'240 Eve.

J im Cocln1n. AUOC:il1., U6·7Ul Eve .

Clvde Walke r , Assoc . 'lO· S1 J6 Eve .

EADY for summer when you pur·
swimming pool with e~tt8ched 3·
bedroom home. Located within walking distance
from Holzer Hospital. Nicely decorated and wa iting
fo r you . Price $75,000.00.

OWNERS TR
mediate possession on this newlv listed
bi ·level in Rodnev. This family sized
home has 4 or 5 bedrooms. 2 baths, huge
fam ily room, 2 car garage, plus 111 acre
yard . pri ced in low 60's . Make us an of fer .

I
Low down payment and pay
ur'l·
der $.320 mo. on this 12% mtg . assump·
t ion. Redecorated 4 bedroom home in
Wa shington El em . and Galli a Academy
sc hool distri ct. Has full basement,
family room. equ ipped kitchen. $35,600.

' I

wooded area and modern
6 ACR ES OF
3·bedroom home si tuated along Bear Run Rd. near
Raccoon Creek. When vou purchase this home
you'll thi nk you're on a continuous vacation. All the
modern conven iences but with the solitude of countr y living. Price ~7 8 ,500 . 00 .

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted
~ulld1~g lot. 1.22 acre, nice wooded set·
ttng, c1ty schools. $5,900.

'I

SPRING WILL BE HERE NEXT MONTH! Fisher·
man!· Outdoucsman ! Nature Lovers ! We have a lot,
near Tycoon Lake with mobile home and screened-.
in 116x20') covered ea t ing and r elaxing area, also,
12'x 12' storage shed. AI If or $12,900.00.
-

MAKE US AN OFFER - Th is could be
your chance to buy a n ice home with a
low eQuity 91h % · mortgage. Newer 3
bedroom ran ch w it h f ir eplace and :v.
acre y~rd . Better hurry . Rt. 218 .
$40,900.

LOOK NO MORE fo r that downtown office building
or apa rtm ent!! ! Property loca ted in 400 blockon 2nd
Ave . Can be used for offi ces or 2 apartm ents Priced
rig ht at $37,000.00 .
·

218 1ST AilE . - One of the best 'ad·
dressed homes in town . This totally
r enovated colonial. Circa 1860, has a
terrifi c river view and convenient to
every thin g. 3 bedrooms. 21/ , baths,
family room , 2 fireplaces , insulated,
gas h .w . heat . Call for more info . •
$135.000.

I

WANT TO BUILD th at new dream home ???? We
have a 75x120' lot si tu ated In Rodney Village 11 S/0
Pirce $5,900:00.
·
Wood Rea l1y , Inc .
J2 Locust St., Gallipolis
446·1066
Real Estate General

0

BAIRD &amp;FULLER (H
REALTY
..

0

I
I
I
1
I
II

RT. 588- SECLUDED BI · LEI/El Nestled in over 1 acre of trees this dutch
style home has 3 bedrooms, 21f2 baths,
family room , 2 large unfinished rooms
in lower le\o'eL large wrap around deck
and 2 car garage . Outstanding locati on.
$67 .500

S22,000 - OWNERS DESPERATE Well kept 3 bedroom brick home on Up·
per 2nd Ave .• full base m ent , na t. gas
heat, carport. Thi s is a real barga in.

AI " ' '

OFFICE

446~7013

10% ASSUMPTION - LOW EQUITY
MORTGAGE - Owners moved ou t of
state: must sell . 3 yr . old home in an attract ive 1.07 tree studded setting. 3
b~drooms , 2 ba th s, f irepl ace, deluxe
k1tchen. 2 car gara ge &amp; workshop.
$63.000.
MOBILE HOME &amp; 5 AC . - 12x65' 3
bedroom mobile home located off Rt.
160. Has equipped kitchen, covered
pool, rural water, air cond. Land lays
real well wllh some woods.

.

p

MAGNIFICENT CUSTOM HOME - 5
yr. old .split-tev~t features 4 or 5 BRs. 3
baths , 30 fl. LR . 2 family rms., 2 wood·
burning fireplac es, la rge kitchen and
din ing area, 2 car garage, one of the
county's nicest pools (20x50) and a truly
professional landscaped lot. Located on
Debby Drive. Owner says sell ... so call
Ranny Bl ack burn for a personal
showing . You ' ll be p leased you did .

STONE RANCH A spacoous 4
bedroom nome O\o'er look ing the river.
Owners have pr iced well under market
varue . Has family room , fireplace, 3
baths. di ning room , nat . gas, cent. air &amp;
2 ca r ga r age . A must to see.

a.

gasolme business. ropertv has!
orocerv
store and 3 bedroom mobile home on 2.89 acres. Ad·
clcd bonus for the business person with a green
thumb is a 24)( 40 greenhouse.
110040
JU ST LI STED- 9% LOAN ASSUMPTION - ThiS
quali fy bui l f brick home is loca ted In Rio Grande.
Has " woodburning fireplac e du&lt;; ted to all rooms.
Comfortnble family living can be yours in this 3
bdrm . home wi th full basement &amp; large rec . room .

9'12% MTG . ASSUMPTION - Owner
mo\o'ed out of st at e - mu ~~:; t sel l fast .
Making double nouM· ray mcnt s. 3
bedroom bi -tevel with 2 ba ~ n s . fdr nil y
room , fireplace. deluxe kitchen, nat .
gas. cent . air &amp; garage. Near ly 11'1 ac .
w / pool. $55,000 . Less than 1 mile from
town .

1645
UNBELIEVABLE! One and half story 3 bedroom
home with separ ate ga rage sits on a· huge 111... acre
lot . What is unbelieva ble is that thi s home is in the
clfyoiGall ipoli s Check thlsoneouttoday.
W1155 .

"NICE HOME - GOOD LOCA.TION ;You' ll be Pleased when you see th is lm ·
mac ul~tely kept 3 bedroom . 2 story
home m t~n . Has family room , wOOdburner. d ln m~ room , 1'17 bath, natural
gas, central a1r an~ fenced yard . $40's .

NO TRAFFIC N E IGHBORHOOD - Lovely fr•me
ra nch on a . private street, ha s 3 bedrooms, living
room with fireplace , garage and large lot .
# 144'

LAND - LAND - LAND - Crop Pasture - Lots of woods - Tobac co
Ba se -:- 217 acres. $300 per acre. C• ll For
more Information.

OUTSTANDING BU Y Frame hom e wlfh
aluminum siding. 2 bedroom s, bath, loca ted In
town . Only $8,500.
10085
6'12 ACRES - With two mobile ~omes barn •nd
other outbuildings, not f~r from town .
'
$14,000

PLEASANT VALLEY ESTATES You Will enjoy the care this attractive
br ick home has been given. lmmaculate inside and out. Plush carpet,
lovely fireplace, 3 bedrooms, d•'n•'ng
room, equipped kitchen, nat. gas. cent.
air. 2 car garage and corner lot. $59,900.

Evenings Call

I
I
I ~ave
I

Assoc. 367-0228
Bob France, Assoc. 446·1162
Darvin Blciomer, Realtor, 446-2599
John Fuller, Realtor, 446-4327.
Patricia Smith,

A·FRAME MOBILE HOME - You
to see 1t to believe it. 3 bedrooms,
ltreptace, loft, much more . Only
Call us •n&lt;l let us show you this -unusual
home.

J

ss.ooo.

9~2%A5SUMPTIO~ = ~

LISTI
- Owners in Saudi Arabia and must
sell the ir home immediately.~ bedroom
tri -l evel situated on 3 acres overlooking
Oh io River. Has family room, 11!1 bath,
equipped kitchen &amp; c8 rport. It's
unusual to find a home like this with an
unbeatable view for only $53,000. K.C.
Schools.
RIO GRANDE - 3 or 4 bedroom home
nght o~ campus. Has 11J, bath, family
room, fireplace, full basement, nat. gas
hea t, gat age plus nearly lf• acre. Cold
be used as rental . $38, 900 .
36 ACRES - S16,9il0 - Owners very
anx ious to se ll this 2 bedroom home in
city .school d ist . Home needs som e
r~pa 1 r . Has lots of woods and coa l seam
r1gh tout your back door . Off Rt. 218.
160 AC~es - Former da iry operation
near RIO Gra nde. 50·60. at . crop, 70 ac .
pasture, balance iP woods~ B c:: rn~, ~ilc. 3 ,
tobacco base, gas lP.i! Se ;Jiu~ an older
r emodeled. 4 bedroom home. Frontage
on 3 r oads mcluding Rt. 325 .

111 ACRES - Step in &amp; star t to w"o rk.
Approx . 40 ac. crop, balance in pasture
&amp; woods. 2 large barns, well fenced,
2400 lb. tobacco base, 4' ·5' coal vein
reported ( inc.ludes all mineral~) plus
remodeled 3 bedroom home. Ca'll for
more info.
·

I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I
II
I
II

1I

I
I
I

I
I
II
1

I

- ·I1
I
I
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S25,000- MAKE US AN OFFER
OWNER Will Fl NANCE - You can
~ave low mo._payments and at the s~me
t1me buv th1S J bedroom home at a
b ~rgain price, LoCa ted In Rio Grllnde
t~1 ~ 11h story home has full basement,
d1n1ng room , bath &amp; nat. gas heat.
Large yard.
,
JUST LISTED - 10'12% ASSUMPTION
- 4 yr.old Colonial bi-level close to
town. 3 bedrooms, 1 full &amp; 2 half baths
(could easil';' be 21!::~ baths), deluxe kit·
ctlen w/ microwave, huge L·shaped
family room, electric F .A . heat but has
woodburner ducted Into all rooms &amp; 1112
car garge. SSO's.
I
.
1
PRICE REDUCTION - vvas 52,000,
Now $38,500. 9 room, 2 story on 1.7 ac.
on the bank of the Ohio River. At·
tractive. older home. owner must sell
now . to settle estate. Would consider
·hetptng w/flnanctng.
·

s

II
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I

I
I

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

LOG CABIN - very un ique, old hand
hewn log beams, steeping loft, large
stone fireplace , modern barn, 14 acres
woods, located in the Wayne Nationa l
Forest, 20% down.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% down - Campsites in th e Wayne
National Forest . S to8 acre t racts wood ed land, good hunting , Pr ices start at
$3.500.
Near
JOHNS CREEK ROAD Mercerville and Crown City mines, 1973
Duke Crown
mobile home.
14'X65' , 2 BR.
. .:-ning stove, flat
lot with well, bargain priced. Ca ll about
this one.

SOLD

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588
- Remodeled home inc ludes 6 rm s.,
and bath, carport, stove. r efri g.,
dishwasher , almost 2 acres of land and
priced for qui ck sale.
BUILDING OR MOBIL E HOM E SITE
- Approx . 51!:~ acres located on the
Graham School Rd ., co. water , over 300
fl . rd. frontage. Green Grade School &amp;
Gattia Academy High School. $10,900.
·WALNUT TOWNSHIP - Beef, hay &amp;
grain farm . 80 acres, m/1, appro)(. 35 A.
good cropland, 10 A. woods, balance
pasture, good fen ces, 9 rm.lbath, home
was built in 1972 &amp; has been partially
remodeled. soxso cattle barn with con·
crete floor, large silo with auto.
unloader, several sheds, large pond ,
springs, standing crops go to new
owner.
NEAR CADMUS - Forty acres, ap·
prox . 112 tillable and 1h wood s, ol d 2
story farm home in need of repairs,
barn, shed, fronts on 141 . owner financing available at 10%.
PRICE REDUCED TO $35,000 ASSUME 81!2 LOAN - Over 1500 sq . fl .
Of living area PLSQ\hSfull basemen* in
this 3 BR ra ncr. ·
r is leaving the
state and is a1
_... to · sell . N\,lke
YOUR offer first . Loca ted on Ingalls
; d.

...

- - ---

ROOM TO ROI\M - This lovely brick
ranch Offers lots of good living tor your
growing family . 3 BR's, 2'12 baths, large
kitchen &amp; LR . formal dining qn ., 2
fireplaces, wood burning stove, cent.
air, garage, full basement with family
rm., bar &amp; laundry . Located on approx .
2 acres on Stae Route 554 between
Porter &amp; Eno. Priced -to sell atSS9,500.
I

NEAR EWINGTON - 141 acres level &amp;
rolling land, lots of frontage on Raccoon
Creek,. some mature timber reperted,
6,000 young black walnut trees •pprox .
6 yrs.otd. Asking $63,000 partial flnan ·
cing availa~le.
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP 176
acres m/1 vacant land. front son Raccoon Cr~k the Tom Glen Rd . Approx.
31 tillable the balance wooded. Under
S400 per acre.
•

a.
a.

ll S tfc

=====~·

FARMER ' S FARM - One of Guyan
Township's finest. 106 ac r e m / 1, approx . 45 A. fertil e bottom land ,
bal apasture &amp; woods. Nice modeki t c hen &amp; fam!!Y rm . 14x 18 LR, att ac hed
garage, maus 56x 104, also inc luded is
20x2o4 steel garage, workshop &amp; severa l
sheds . Owner is retiring &amp; wi ll help
finan ce.
START RAISING &amp; GRAZING, 132
a~re pasture farm, mostly r olling &amp;
hill y gra ssl and with approx . 10 A.
woodec:t, tots of springs, Ph story home
has 4 rms . &amp; bath, lar ge barn, tobacco
ba~e. fronts on l roads in Wa lnut TownShip.
BEST BUY IN TOWN - ~ty li s h 2 story
home was built in 1894 and ;, -~ u s t be seen
to appreclat~ . Large open foy er and
stairway, L~ . dining rm ., parlor, COM ·
ptete1v equ1pped modern kitchen, 4
BR s, 2 V:~ baths, new siding, gara9e,
nea r schools, shoppi nq , etc
LOT FOR SALE - GU 1'1n Twp., Rocky
Fork Rd .• well.
ank , ideal for
mob ile hom e. Aski;J
....JO.

'"-0\.\)

LOVELY BRICK &amp; FRAME RAN ·
CHER plus 78 ACRES of land in
Cheshire Township offers lots of good
liv ing for your grow ing family . Home is
just like nP.w with 1438 sq . ft . of livin g
area plus a.. attached gsrage. 2
spacious BR's, 2 baths, 8x27 LR. 10x24
kitchen with refr ig., disp., OW, double
oven &amp; range, washer &amp; d.-yer stays in
laundry. Land Is mostl y rolling pasture
land w ith approx . 25 acres wooded. Call
for appointment.
GREEN TOWNSHIP - CENTRALLy
LOCATED - 11 2 acre farm has fron ·
tage on State Route. 588. Fair f ield
Centenary Road &amp; Vance Fairfield Rd
E)(cellent for farming or development.
~~d~r 5 rm . &amp; bath fa rm home, barn &amp;
~110 Included . Owner s will consi der SfJ.II·
!ng sma ller tra ct s. of shor1 term finaifc·
mg. Call for more mformatlon.
OHIO RIVER VIEW - Approx . 8 acres
wood ed land, nice building site, county
water, located on Route 7 approx. 5 m i.
south of town. 56,500.
MORGAN •TOWNSHIP Small but
nice, 2 BR home is.fiC'v 2 vrs. old &amp;
clean as a pin .
r a sma ll faml ·
ly, weekend retr
nunting lodge
Si tuated on 36 acres of Morgan Lane
Rd.

PESOW

BEST BUY IN TOWN - Sty I sh&lt; story
home was bu ilt in 1894 and must be seen
to appreciate. Large open foyer and
stairway, LR, dining rm ., parlor, com·
pletely equipped modern kitchen, 4
BRs, 2lfz baths, new siding, garage
near schools, shopping, etc .
'
RODNEY CORA ROAD - Approx. 2A
acres woodland. located 3 m L from
Rodney, county water available.
$12,000.

Weds., !huB. &amp; S.l
HAIR SlYltNG
Both Men I Women
CALL 949·2320
· 1-- 24· 1 mo.

·

Pomeor,, Oh.

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
elo-Boy
• Trencher
• Water • Sewer
• Gas Lines
e Sep ti c
Syste m s
Large or Sma ll Jobs
PH . 992.~ 2478 .
1·21· 1 mo. pd .

mi. west Ofl

124towlrdRutllnd

&amp;

AUTO
TRANS.
REPAIR

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

&amp; SERVICE
'·

Open 9 .M. to 5:30P.M. .

1·11·1 mo.

See Mr . Goodwrenc h For A

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

1·3-lfc

For

FRONT- END
ALIGNMENT
·-· ·- With Genuine GM
(,0 ·
Parisi

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

. ·--···· .~.

all your wtnng

.-Is; fu~ repair
1 8 r v i c 8
an d
irmallation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
custom kitchens and
appliances,
cu5tom
ba1hrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and·

Call 742-3196

.

Modern E teclrica I
Equipment
SIMMON'S OLDS.·
CAD.· CHEV •• INC.
Ph . 992-6414
!08 E. Main
Pomeroy ,

64

Hav &amp; Grain

Auto for Sale

1977
Trans
m , auto,
PS,
PB. air.
tow.A
mites.
1979 vw

~s~d. ,

air cond. Call 446·

4

8-20·tfc

ROOFING
And Home Main1enanc e
• Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free es tim ates
e20 Y r s. ex perience

Utili~

Buildings
Sites fr oin 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24 x36.
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box S4
Racin e, Oh .
Ph. 614·843·2591
6· t5tt c

FIREWOOD

.
Mixed Hardwoods

. TOM HOSKINS
Ph.949-2t60 or 949·2482

1970 Chevy Nova good tires
and good cond. Ca ll 256·
6542 .
1979 Chevy Chevette . Four
door, hat ch back , factory
luggag e
rack,
under
coating , new radials, one
owner, very low mileage.
Priced under book . Will ac·
cept trad e in. 667-3085.

expensive cars in

John Wi se
(614) 742·2131
David Price
1614) 992·3556
I ~ 13· 1 mo. Pd .

VALENTINE
PERM SALE

Mon., Feb. 1
thru
sat .. Feb. 27
Reg. $20 NoV($17.5ll
Reg. $25 Now S22.5ll
Reg. S30 Now S27 .st
us w.ve Length
For Longer Hair
Now$29.50 ·

HOZ
20 Years E xperience
Plumbing, Carpentr~.
Roofing ,
electrical,
Cisterns, cement, Stone
Walls, Chimney Repair.
All Home Repai.-s
Trailer Roofs and
Underpinning
PH . 992·3872
2·3· 1 mo. pd .

3· 1Hfc

Gas Line-Ditches
Wat er Line HOOJ( ·Ups
Septic Tank s
Countv Certified
Rou sh Lane
Cheshire. Oh .
Ph . 367· 7560

SJ.SO
S2.50
__ 2·3·1 mo:

1-I==========~
56

Pets for Sale

ORAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL . AK C
Chow
pupp ies.
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kithms. Call 4.46·
3844 after 4 p.m.
59

For Sate or Trade

1971 KIRKWOOD . 12X65
Mobile Home·witt trade for
good tate model 4x4 pickup.
304·675·5739 evenings &amp;
weekends.

·- ---------1
............ ...
---·--·"·'.'.
HARRISON
1V SERVICE
61
Farm Equipment
NOW
.1980 MF 255 diesel trac1or
OPEN
' like new'. 1980 MF 450
w -.• a ..- . . , .., .,

992-6259
·, 276 Sycamore St. ~
. :, Middleport, Ohio
. • 9·21 · tfC

1968 Cheve tt e Malibu $600,
1973 Chevy Luv truck $350 .
Both needs some work . Call
675·2845 anytime.
1975 Must and. good con ~
dition ; asking $1 ,000. Call
304·882·2257 or 882·2823.
1975 Plymo uth station wagon very good cond .•
cruise control, AM -FM

Ch• ll eng er
R T · 440
maginum . Call 675· 1606.

Farm Equipment

J II/ID EN'S
FARM
EQUI PMENT
446· 1675
Special Sal e on NEW
LONG TRACTOR!
MOdel
HP
Price
26024
$4924.00
31()-28 5594.00
31()--4X4-28 7072.00
36035 6555.00
46(}-41.97353.00
46(}--4x4- 41 .99619 .00
51(}-48 .5- 7778 .00
51()--4x4- 48 59886.00
51()-48 .5- 8450.00
61()-6-4
9314.00
61()--4x4-64 - 11 ,304.00
Plus Freigh t
Sale Date Marc h 13, 1982
CALL NOW I
SHOWIN G OFF
VERMEER
SU PER
BALERS
And Associated
Equipment
Plus
The New Line of
Vermeer·-·
Zweegers
Mowers&amp; Rakes

'

Used Color TV Sets for
sate.
• '
SALE PHONE NO.

1975 · Votkeswagon Super
Beetle, new pa int, sunroof,
low miles. other extras,
$2 ,600 . 304-675·2415 • Iter
5PM .

70

61

2· 1· 1 mo.

"Beautiful, Custoni
Buill G•rages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949·2801 or
949·2860.
No sunday Calls .

Wid ter·Sewer- E tectr ic

SLINDERELLA
DIET IE XERCISE

Mid RIS )lrl
Colt 992-2725

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1981 Ford Escort, super
sharp. PS, PB , AM·FM
ster o, extr a low m ilei!l ge,
$6,000. Call 675·2571 or 675·
4318 .

luggage
r~=:;:;;;;;;;=~r=======':7:1:':'c=·i radio.
Ca ll 937·2226
. rack. $1,200 .

189 N . 2nd

&amp; Aluminum
SIDING

REESETRENCHING
SERVICE·

HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS

Kay's lllluty Salon

Vinyl

GO VE RNMEN T
SUR··
PLUS
CARS
ANO
TRUCKS now available
t hroug h loca l sales, under
$300.00. Call 1-714·569-0241
for your directory on how
to purc hase . Open 24 hours.

7-5·1t c

Delivery A\o'ailable
or You Pick Ua
Also wood Splitter
For Rent

round H~y bater 'like new' .
1980 MF 725 h•Yblne 'like :
new'. 19U Ford 601 Work·
·master diesel trattor
IN/front end loader. New
Idea hay rake, grader
blade: Phone 675·3203 ~fter
5:30PM.

(....._.Monday)
ACCENT

Motorcycles

74

Date : Febuary 22, 1982
T ime: 8:00PM
Piece: Gattia Academy
H igh School , 340 4th Ave .,
Gallipolis, 1/o.Ag. room.

1973 Plymouth Valient 6
cyt.. very good cond . Call
675·2529.

7'1

Truck's for Sale

1981 Datsun p ickup 5 spd.
transmission, long bed.
Call 446·8380 after 5.
1975 Ford T880 15 ft . steel
dump, gas. 5 &amp; 4 tran s., 34
rear rears . 1972 Ford T9000
20ft. al um . dump, tfr iaxle,
318 Detriot, 5 &amp; 4 trans ., 38
r ears. Phone 614·992-386 1.
70 tnter·na ti ona l pi ckup,
good cond ., $450. Call 256·
6309 after 6PM .
1980 Toyota, SR5 Pi ckup,
am-fm,
5·speed,
low
mileage . Excellent. $5,500.
742·2877 after 5.
·
1972 J/4 Chevy picku p. exc.
shape with self contained
camper $3,200. 65 Old• 98,
new paint, good cond ., S8SO.
Call 882·3180.
73

l/ans&amp;4YJ .O.

1978
Chevy · van,
customized. Call 446·7015 or
446· 3684.

76 Dodge van 400 eng!ne,

64'7"----,H=ay--;;&amp;-;G;:-::ra:-;l'n~--

air cond., PS, l&gt;B, he•vy
duty suspension, crusle
control • .rattey wh~ts , tow
mlteage, S2o200. C~ll 1·J0.4.
&amp; · 1513.

' Large round bates
each. Call 458· 1656.

For sate 1918 CJ5 J~p
Renagade, good cond .,
$4,000 . Call 675·6545 .

Groynd ear corn S82 . t on .
985·3581 .
sl5.00

1978 Subaru 4 W.O. station·
wa gon. Needs engine work .
30·35 m .p.g . $1,400. or
m ight take gun, roto·tlller
·or Gravely as partial
tradein. 992·7247 ..
1977 Harley Davidson 1200
c ustom . Must see to ap·
preci ate. Call 446·701 5.

77 Chevrolet Monza CouPe. ·
42,000 miles, auto., 4 cy l. ,
1975 Honda 750, drag pipes,
$2,150. Call 388·8769.
6
over
front
end,
King/ Que.en sea t, eMtras,
76 Gran d Torino, 69,000 $1000. Call Calvin anytime
mi.l es, auto, PS, PB , AM· 446·6638.
FM 8-tr ack , Air cond., very
good cond. $1,700 . Call 388·
1977 Honda 360 Street, S400.
8769 .
Call 304·882·2257 or 882·
2823.
79 Mustang 4 cyt .. 4 spd.,
37,000 mi les, exc . cond .,
$4,250. Call aft er 5PM. 446· 1981 Honda GL· l100 tn·
terstate, like neW, 1,900
4292.
m ites . Call 675·6850 or 675·
3203 after 5: 30PM.
79 Mustang 4 cyl., 4 spd .,
37,000 mites. exc . cond .. _== ==::
B=
" "= =,=a=n=d===
75
1
!j;~SO . Ca ll after 5PM, 446·
Motors for Sale

HART
Used
Cars, Over
New
H aven SWes
t Virginia.

Sizes start from JOx24"

IX I I IJ

1979 H•rtey D•vtdson Spor·
tster. Excellent condition.
S2700 f irm . 4 Good Year all
5,000 bales of straw, ne\ler t errai n steel belted radials.
wet, wire t ie S1.20 per bale . 30 by 13.5 by 15. Like new.
Ca ll 614 ·474 ·6889 . Cir · $400. 4 Chevy 15 ln. wh ite
spoke wheels. $80. 949·2221
creville, Oh.
after 6 p.m .

71

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION

AERIAL BUCKET
TR UCK SERVICE
47 fl . working Height
PASQUALE
ElECTR IC
152 Third Ave.
614· 446·2716

Furniture Stripping

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
lennox Healing &amp; Air
Conditioning. All Tv.PtS
Insulation . Electrical

a

l;lCCAVATING INC •.
Backhoe and doatr
work by the lob or by
fhe hour. Also llctnttd
sopite tanks tnstallod.
Dump truck . Free
esthnatos. co 11 388·162~
or44H4S9.

Home
Improvements

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
and Refinishing
perlenced mason, roofer .
carpenter.
electrician,
35 court st.
general repairs and
Gallipolis, Ohio
Wiring .
remodeling . Phone 304-675· '
Catl446·1896
Call 446·8515 or 446·0..45
4
2088 or 675·4560.
._ __:o::r:_:4~4~6::·l~o8:0~--JIIoii"iil''iiieior•;;
' liiOoipii.iimii·- - - . . 1
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes .
Pumps Sa les and Service.
304-895·3802 .

f-----------lf---------ADVANCED
CLEANING SERVICE
446-3915
No Answer 446-20.2
Modern steam cl eaning
tor carpe1 &amp; upholstery
f insurance work l .
• Scotchguard~ 3M
• Walls, floors,
windows
• Water &amp;
smoke damave

wett:padded-"CUSHY"

· 1=~1~m~o~.'t.===~==::;1·~2;8·~1~fc~~
~;::~~~~~~2~
ALL STEEL
OHIO VALLEY ~~~ss

BUILDINGS

.. -

gnledbylho~- -

I Answer
Juma:MH:
YOUTH
FORUM wP'Io'l
MISFIT
: A.
job for eomeone

heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

I_

Now arrange lhl dra.d len«~ to
form the IUrprfN aniW'el', U tug·

THE( XII

Transportation

EXCAVATING

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

COUNTRY, YET CONVENIENT
Great fami ly home with 3 BR , 2 baths,
15X27 LR with gas fireplace, l arge
modern k itch en with range self c lean ing oven, ow and disp., laundry
rm . with washer and drye.-, part basement, large cover ed patio. garage and
over 6 acres of la nd at the edge of to wn .
PRIC REDUCED TO $59,500.00!! 10%
fi nancing avaita lSOLD haped ra nch, 3
BR s, 1lf2 baths, L
.. . firepl ace, for mal dining, equipped kitchen, gas heat .
CLAY TOW,NSHIP - Raccoon Creek
frontag e, Ph story, 4 rms. and bath ·
down, upstairs unfinish ed , good barn ,
garage, shed. near Blue La ke, city
schools. Asking $42 ,500 .

IN RACINE

GARAGE

BOGGS

1978 FINANCING AVAILABLE - 20%
down, 10% inter est, 3 BR , bath, LR,
family rm . with ch imney for wood burner, kitchen. laundry, large back porch,
natural gas heat &amp; a large fl at lot
loca ted on Bulavill e Rd .

B-A BEAUTY

PULLINS

l

Yesterday 5

'

For sa te ear corn . C•ll 614·
384·4514.

Roger Hysell's

St. At. 124

• Oisponts

• b is hwu hers

81

I1-:;::=~;:::;-;-;;::=~r:-;==~;:;::::;::::::~

s:;=====~==~~~~~~~~~~~j
~

••angn

,;·,"""'""

NOW AT

9~ 30~11c

U.S. Rt . so East
Guvsville, Ohio
Authorized John Oeer.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
A

SERVICE

992·6215 or 992· 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

• Orytn

SALES

BEVERLY WICKLINE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

• w.unen

-

PHONE 446-3643

Page-D- 7

•

A Ff':UtiFUt..
60U!rCE OF

I SCIBEP±
rJ r J
Answerhere

CARPENTER

-Piumbilllflll
elect!iul """'
lflft EllimlltSI

1- I'J

INFO~MATION.

'2.00 Each

-AciOons ud rtmtdtlin1
-lloofin&amp;llld "'"" W&lt;lll
...(oncltte wD!I

PARTS AND SE AVICE
AlL MAKES

•HofW itlrT."'Inks

.1

ANNOUNCING

Keep This Ad For
Future Reference

HOMES FOR RENT, LEASE, LEASE WITH
PTION TO BUY OR LAND CONTRACT. TWO
ND THREE BEDROOM START-ING AT $200
PER MONTH.

I MEEGR~

~;::~~~~~~~~~I~~~=~~~~~:;-~
YOUNG'S

Rabb its for sale. Call 304·
675·7428.

Call Ken Young
For Fast Serv i ce
985· 3561

I I I

Also ·Buyers of Radiators and Copper
" We Also Sell Used Auto Pa rts "
Located on Rocksprings Rd .
POMEROY , OHIO
West of Fairgrounds
PH . (614)992· 6564
2·5· 1 m o.

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or 992· 2282
2· 12·1 mo.

"APPLIANCE
SERVICE

V.\LIT

$ 50

BAnERIES

CONSTRUCTION

2 Reg. apricot male Poodle

25

MOTORS ............ :.:~-~??.~.~~; ..

ROUSH

New Homes - ex· ·
tens i ve
remod el·
in g .
• E"tectricat work
•cuStom Pole Bldgs.
• Roofing work
14 Years Experience

OF

UNCLEAN

1-14-1mo.

BRIARPATCH KE NN ELS
Boardi ng an9 groom ing.
AK C Gort:lon
setters,
English cocker Spa nie ls .
Call 388·9790.

Frank Rose Canst. co.
repalr1 new
construction, i ll types.
Free estimates, all
work fully guaranteed .
Residen tia l /
com ·
mercjat, Industria l and
rrilning, electric work .
MSHA Cert.
446·4627
R em~ellf)g

"JUNK CARS.........:.~~-~- ~?.~.~~:~ }
BUYERSOF
S}OO
1
APPLIANCES ...... -~-~~ . .~~ -~~~-••••

PH. 992-7201

d/1~~

Ike wi~em•n . Br olltr . 446-1796 Eve .

BUYERS

"*backhoe
•excavating
•septic syst~ms
•water, sewer.
&amp; va• lines·
•dump truck
• limestone
Ucensed &amp; Boode~ _

STROUT* REALTY, Inc.

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

The sunday Times· Sentinei-

Services Offered

PomerOy Scrap Iron Metals

CONTRACTING

Reel E1t1te General

WISEMAN

G ,a llipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. w . Va.

$CASH$

J&amp;F

Building Supplies

Sears dune cart, good con·
dition . Ca ll 304 ~ 576 · 2164.

ca liber. Call 304-882·2823 .

Jenson AM· FM cassette
stereo with bu ilt in booster .
$225. 614-742·3154.

SS

f' om e r o y - Middleport-

Business Services

Quil ti ng frames, velvet
throw pillows, book cases,
pic nic tables, lawn fur ·
niture, and I will do
r epair s. Ca ll 446-0978.
·

7360.

Lineman Great Plaines, 50

Feb. 14, 1982

Misc . Merchandice

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, wi ndows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0 .
Call 245·5121 .
·

Muzzle

GE auto. washer, nice,
$110.00. Norge, dryer exc.
shape. $90 .00. Call 446·8181.

S4

1982

New wood stqve, ha lf price,
ne\ler used, $350. Can ccn vert to furnance . Call 2561216, Gallipolis.

Used tires . Hanshaws Tires
on Lucas Lane. Call 675-

Aeal Estate G8neral

Russell D. Wood, Realtor, Eve. Ph.

Feb . 1

·Air compressor 5675; large
advertising sign $350; Nova
parts 68· 72 model. High
performance model 350 4
volt main short block $275 ;
39 Chevy body $500; new
couch S.SOO : 39 Chevy sedan
$1,000. 30076·2602.

ca ptain Mate ma ple bed
and m atc hing chest , ex ·
cellent conditi on. Call 675·
6162.

used

refrigerators, 2 new frost
tree refr i g. af $275.00. 3

and dressers,
51

Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .
Gallipolis. 3 nice bedroom

ranges ,

.

iddl

~sehotd

suites,
1 acre country trailer lot.
Flatwoods. S70 m ont h plus
$70 deposit . Phone 404·860·
8405.

.

.

1978 Hyd ra Sport 18ft. Bass
boat, 1SO HP Mercury with
trim &amp; 1111. 12·24 volt
Evenrude trol li ng motor, 3
batteries, P'ro·trail trailer .
C•tt 304-773·5593.
Auto Parts

76

&amp; Accessories

LOCKSMI
T H automotive
Service ..
Resident
ial,
Emergency service. Ca ll
882·2079.

82

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4•77

8l

84

8" Ford tru ck bed. Ca ll 773·
5528 or 77B950.
Auto Repair

71

Ouatity AUIObodY 8. Paint
work . Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Tr im Center, ol&lt;l6· 1968.
78

Camping
Equipment

1979 23 ft. Layton travel
trai ler S3,.SOO. Located in
Racine, Oh . Call 247·3925 or
247·3774 .

Home
1mprovements

ST UCCO PLAS TERING
fe)(tured ceilings com mercial and resident ia l,
free esti mates. Call 2.56·
1182.
CAPTAIN STEEM ER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hallett Brothers Custom
Carqets . Free estfm~tes .
Call 446·2107 .
PAINTING · Interior •nd
exterior.
plumb i n g,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call 388·9652.
Call 446·2801 tor termite,
r oac h, bird, rodent. spider,
and fl eas control. F ree
estim!tes,sBIII Thomas.
M•rcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex·
perlence, specializ ing In
built up roof . Call 388·9857.
\.A!' lAIN STEEMER C•r·
pet Cleaning featured by
.H allett Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
Call 446·2107.
PAINTING • Interior and
exte ri or ,
plumb i ng ,
rooting, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 388-9652.
C~ll 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
eslimates.sBIII Thomas.

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex'
pertence, speciattrtng In
buill up roof. Call 388·9857.
RON' S Television Service.
Spectellrlno tn Zenith """
Motorola, Quazar, •nd
houM calls. Phone 576·2398
or-146-2-'SA.

a.

F
K Tret Trimming,
stump removal . 675· 1331 .

r

1-----------l----------

SEWING M•chlne repairs.
service. Aut~or lze d Singer
Sates &amp; Servl ce1 Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992 ·2274.

SOLUTION

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition ser v ice,
commer cia 1, I ndustr 1a 1.
Phone·882·2079.

IS

General Hauling

JONES BOY S WATER
SERVICE . Call 307·7471 or
367-0591.
87

Uphot•tery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 sec . Ave .. Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 446·1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt . Pleasant, 30•·
675·4154 .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

·--

"CR098

lllfo•-ol

-23-42..-..
--·
.·-10 Bill&lt;

14 Auto 11)11
It~-

2t"lolounloln
IIIII

22,._
240uotlll

21~on

2aCoflngl
21~

JOW32-

33R l " a

3-ITOtlld
35E..-

37f-

....,

39 Ulloty
40 Clr.41por11

81

lndustrir~l

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

New Auto Parts $20,000
stock, fit most . 25-50 per
ce nt cost. Porter. Oh. Call
367-0230 or 307 ·7101 .
Power steering for 1973 &amp;
newer
Chevy
tr ucks.
Power brakes set up for
sa me. Custom sunroof, new
r ings, main bearing, rod
bearings, t imi ng chain,
gasket set, for 350 Chevy
engine. 3/4 ton Chevy tru ck
rearend . Call 388·9684 .

Bill's

Nu· Prime reptactmtnt
wtndowt
Storm window&amp;. door&amp;
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
ttdtno
.
Howmtt P1tlo Co~ers
Howmtt scrttn roams
Mobllo home awntn11
Aluminum utility
building&amp;
"1 Miller Drive
44 ..2642
Frtt Estlmlfts

Commercial
Re•tdenllat
Dependable, 8 years ewerlence . We do care I

Excavaflng

Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
b•ckhoe work. Spectat
farm rates. Call us for free
estlmates. •46·4440 .

r

'1':{1. LMPROVEMENTS

44lbiM bl•
1111
fOOCI

47Pr48 B!llpol
50 Antiquo

"""""'"
53s..g..-.

5256~

!IWougil

57T-

a,mbof

M~

.. - n o l l
10 Urge on
70 52: Rom.

133Looatl
134 - io¥1 or

71 -

t35llilllollri&lt;l
137 " - "

73 Oooth

75 Wl6rC*

77Juniof"l
71 CUbic motor
Ill Doctl1nl
a1 AA c1opot
12 114 Run -'Y

~~-·
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17 Joining
111 Colo crt
12 Wllllr Arrro

Slum-

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88 lAII In
101 Foldt
103~"104 c.105 On the
1 0 1 - noll
107 Dlpl1ihong
101 Apollo'•
-

110 o..ol&lt;
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11 t Prlnllr' l
_..
112 Huntod
113-

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115 Conttgrorn:
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111 s,.,bol"'
IID120 P•kwnll

121124Young
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1211 ~
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14011111•1111
14 t Will point·
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143 Toiled
146 Doll - limo
lola LMnp
lola Ogro
160 - com1co
162 WlllttpOOII
163 toot.t1
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160 Domf DOWN
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�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. ~a .

Page--D-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

I

I Gallia man

Area deaths

73, of Rt. 1, Cheshire, died early Sat·

Joseph W. Bartels

DAYTON - Joseph WUliam
(J.W. ) Bartles, 91, of 342 Green·
mount Blvd., Dayton, died early
Saturday In Miami Valley Hospital,
Dayton.
Born March 22, lllll, in GaJUa,
son of the late Pete and Ella Soud·
ers Bartels, he owned and operated
the J. W. Bartels Construction Co. In
both Dayton and Gallla County and ·
also operated the Gallla Limestone
Co.
He also served as a state bridge
Inspector, and was a member of the
Amerk:an Legion Lafayette Post
No. 27, where he helped form the
Sons of the Legion Bugle and Drum
Corp~~, was a scoutmaster and beJ~ed to several local lodges.· He
attended Grace United Methodist
Church and was active In the choir.
Surviving are bls wtle, Veola Fla·
herty Bartels; three sons, Gale of
Spring Valley, Ohio, Don of Fort
Myers, Fla., and Emery of Gallipolis; and .s ix grandchlldren and four
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. Monday In the Schllntz a nd
Moore Funeral Home, Dayton.
Burial will be in the Dayton Mausoleum. Friends may call at the fun·
eral home from 2-6 p.m. today.

Huber B. Fulton
CHESJURE - Huber B. Fulton,

unlay morning in Wooster.
Born Nov. 21, 1!KE, In Gallla
County, son of the late Franklin S.
and Carrie Oty Fulton, he was a
partner In Fulton-Thompson Trac·
tor Sales In PomerOy for :.&gt; years
prior to his retiremleot In 1!176. He
attended Little Kyger ' Congregational Christian Church and was a
member of the Little Kyger
Grange, the Cheshire Masonic
Lodge and the Gallla County Foxhunters Association.
He married the former Mary
Thompson, who survives, on July
17, 1937 In Gallipolis.
Also surviving are two sons,
David of GrUlln, Ga ., a nd Michael
of Wooster; a daughter, Mrs. Margaret Sue MuHord of Russelvllle,
Ohio; seven grandchlldren" and a
great-grandchild; three sis~s.
Mrs. Gall White of Upper San~·
dusky, a nd Mrs. Elizabeth Nichols
and Mrs. Dorothy Reiger, both of
·
Columbus.
He was also preceded In death by
three brothers and three sisters.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m . Tuesday In the Utile Kyger
Congregational Christian Church,
with the Rev. John Davis official·
lng. Burial will be In Gravel HID
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Miller's Home for Funerals from
3-9 p.m . Monday.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made to the American
Cancer Society.

Kaiser to end supplemental benefits
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. CAP) Supplemental unemployment
beneflll being plild to workers at
Kaller Aluminum's Raverwswood
plant will end In March, .a union
olflclal says.
Paul RWien of Wheeling, a
director of Dlatrlct 23 of !be United
steelwoi'kers of America, said the
Jll:rmenll have brought laid-off
worken at the plant . about 85
~t of what they would have
made had they been working.
Under normal clrcwnatances, the •
worllers would have been eligible
for u much u 52 weeks of supplemental benefits. But Ruaen said
that II not pouible becauae of the
ezc.Uve nwnber of employees
n01v laid off at the plant. Over 1,500
worken now are off the job.
"When It goes to just straight
unemplo:rment, I think you're
!oc*lng at a very serious reduction

In their standard of living," he said.
He added, "The aluminum Industry, like !be rest of the economy,
has just gone straight to hell."

Restrictions placed on
B~d Run Bridge
POINT PLEASAI'll'- The West
Virginia Department of Highways
has aMounced the following restriction on a Mason County bridge.
The span Is located at Broad Run
near New Haven and has been li·
mlted to 12 tons.
This restriction has been posted
to prevent serious damage or des·
!ruction from occurring to bridges
whe n used by overweight vehicles.
Motorists are reminded the bridge
Is structuraUy sound In design and
sate to travel when restrictions are
observed.
·

Judge ends 13 cases
GALLIPOLIS - Thirteen cases were tennlnat.ed Friday In Gallipolis
,
Municipal Court.
Forrest E . Thompson, 52, Rio Grande, charged with DWl, fined $300,
sentenced to four days In jaU, drive(s license suspended for six monthS
and placed on six months probation.
Charged with faUure tO display valid license plates and fined $W was
Jack E. Waters, 53, Rt. 2, VInton.
Dale E. Geiser, 20, Rt. 1, VInton, charged with no eye protection, fined
$10. '
Each charged with laUure to dlslpay valid registration and fined cost!;
only were James E. Bush, 43, Cheshire, and Becky M. Atkinson, 33,
Gallipolis.
DonaldS. Miller, 18, Gallipolis, charged with overhelght rear bumper,
lined $15.
Charged with no mulller and lined $15 was Llda G. Drummond, 24,
Gallipolis.
Helen L. Ebersbach, 43, Rt. 1, Middleport, charged with !allure to regis·
ter, forfeited $40 bond.
·
Forfeiting bond for speeding were:
Thomas B. Clary, 27, Galllpolis,$38; Lundy D. Brown, 31, Galllpolls,$42;
Guy E. Guinther, 48, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $38; Michael Plumley, 31, Muncie,
Ind., $38; Alfred T. Dews, 46, Rt. 1, Ewlngton, $40.

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis
man has pleaded guilty to a break·
lng and entering charge In Mason
County Circuit Court.
Roger A. Rutherford, 24, of 2145
Eastern Ave., entered the plea In
connection with a break-In at the
Burger Chef restaurant on Jackson
Avenue In Point Pleasant last July.
He was arrested by Point Pleasant
pollee shOrtly afteJWard.
Sentencing has been set for Feb.
18 before Judge Clarence Watt, according to Mason County Prosecu·
tor Damon B. Morgan Jr.
In other matlers, the Gallla
County Sheriffs Department Is
probln£ the theft of three fuel tanks

pleads guilty in Mason Court

from the Charlie Miller farnn off
U.S. 35 near Rio Grande.
Miller told the department he believes the theft occurred late Thursday afternoon. It was not known If
the tanks were full at the time.
Deputies are also looking Into the
theft of an electric motor from an
on drUling site nearcbeshlresome-'
time during the past week.
The motor was removed !rom a
rig on the Jimmy Roush property
and was owned by Poston Opera!·
lng Co.. Ashvltle.
The Gallipolis Fire Department
returned to a mobUe borne on Ohio
141 at 11:10 a .m . Friday to put out a

Pontiff praises people
du~ng Saturday mass
ONITSHA, Nigeria (AP) - Pope
John Paul n celebrated Mass here
Saturday, praising the lbo people,
Nigeria's Roman Catholic bulwark, lor holding ontO to "family
traditions" but urgli!g them to
abandon polygamy.
"Your !amllles have so many
positive and praiseworthy values
ha!;ed on your family traditions,"
the pope told an audience of about 2
mUlion durlng the hOmily of hJs
Mass, celebrated In a large open
field recently cleared from a tropl:
cal rain forest.
" There are, llowever, some shadows, " the pontiff said. "Tradition·
ally your culture did not exclude
polygamy, even though most marriages were and are
monogamous.''
Polygamy Is still widely practiced In Nigeria and elsewhere In
western Africa, although most governments discourage It.
The pope stopped briefly In
Enugu and then traveled to Onltsha, 234 miles east of the capital of
Lagos, on the second day of an
eight-day African tour, his ftrstforelgn trip since last May's attempt
on his life.
Enugu, In the heart of Nigeria's
Roman CathoUc stronghold, Is the
!ornner capital of secessionist Bla·
tra and the scene of the bloody
three-year Bla!ran clvtl war.
Eastern Nigeria, the heartland of
the nation's oil wealth, Is Inhabited
mainly by the predominantly Roman Catholic and relatively well·
ed~ated lbo etl!nlc group. They

Feb. 14, 1982

broke away from the rest of the
country Iii 1967 In hopes of ending
northern Moslem domination.
The federal goverrunent broke
the rebel resistance through food
blockades that are believed to have
resulted In the deathS by starvation
of 1 mUlion people, mostly chlldren.
During a Mass celebrated shortly
after the 61-year-old pontlt!'s anival Friday In this teE:mlng west Al·
rican capital of 4 mUlion, the pope
heard a young Nigerian girl call on
those assembled In lOO,®seat Na·
tiona! Stadium to " pray for the
souls of those who died In tbe clvtl

reltlndled lire at the Robert Hartenbach residence.
Heat tape had shorted and lgllited pipe and Insulation at the
trailer, owned by James Montgomery, Patriot Star Route, on Thursday afie~on, causing an
estimated
damage. Friday's
brief fin:. ~ by 13 fire.
men and two truckS, caused minor
loss to the trailer exterior.
Galllpolls City Pollee were on the
go Friday and early Saturday with
a series of trat11c accidents In which
four people were separately cited.
Officers said Melvin L . Blars, 22,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was southbound on
!be 700 block of Second Avenue at
4: 35 p.m. Friday when he failed to
stop and collided with a stopped
vehicle driven by Preston K.
Coughenour Jr., 19, Gallipolis. This
forced Coughenour's auto Into
another stopped car drtven by
Mark A. Richards, 21, Gallipolis.
The accident caused moderate
damage to all three vehlctes and
Blars was cited for assured clear
distance. The report noted Blars
suffered minor .InJury, hut he
wasn't treated.
The report said Thomas Walker,
45, Gallipolis, was attempting to
back out of Whittington's Sohlo on
Upper River Road at 5:20p.m. Friday and struck a stopped vehicle
driven Ly Julina L . Luhrman, 34,
Jackson. There was slight damage

done to Walker's car and moderate
to the Luhrman auto, and Walker
was cited for Improper backing.
Kenneth R. Clark. 23, Gallipolis.
wa§ unable to stop at t11f: lntersec·
tloil of Third Avenue 1and State
Street at 6: 11 p.m. Jtlday and
struck tbe rear of a stopped car
driven by Rose M. Skidmore, 46.
Galllpolis. There was slight dam·
age to both cars and Clark was
cited for assured clear distance.
Officers said Wilbert White. 20.
Galllpolis, was travelling on the
lllD block of Second Avenue at 1: 27
a.m . Saturday, skidded on snow
and struck a parked vehicle regiStered to Welch S. Lewis, McKen·
ney, W.Va. White then allegedly
left the scene.
The accident caused moderate
damage to both vehicles aand
White was cited for leaving the
scene of an accident.
In another minor Incident on Fri·
day, pollee said a vehicle drivel) by
Terri K. Poynter, 21, Rio Grande,
struck the open door on a vehicle
drtven by Nancy J . Minor. 46, Cheshire, at 1 p.m . In the K-Martpark·
lng lot off Upper River Road . There
was sUght damage to both cars.
Also cited by pollee overnight,
were Donald, G. McBride, 36, Bid·
well, and Darrell E. S~phens. 33,
Rt. 4, GalllpoUs, both for disorderly
conduct, and Terry B. Stephens, 26,
Rt. 4, Galllpolls, open container.

Jolin Paul referred to the effects
of the war In hJs remarkS to President Shehu Shagari at a govern·
ment reception Friday night.
"You have given other countries
an example of bow to reconclte
when brothers have had serious
misunderstandings," he told the
president, a Moslem from the
north.
Few visible signs of the war remain In the lbo region. But a
number of bookS have appeared recently here that attempt to discuss
both In fictional and memoir fonn
the reasons for the fighting, and the
continuing repercussions.
Nigeria, Africa's most populous
nation, lias :.&gt; mUllan Moslems
among Its estimated 90 mUllan population. It has 18 mUllan Christians,
5 miiUon to 6 million of whom are
Catholic. The rest follow traditional
reJJglous practices based on ancestor and spirt! worship.

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. Coupon pick-up dates given
POMEROY - Meigs Countians
who participate in the WlC progr81J1
are to foUow lhe schedule following
to pick up their March and April
coupons.
AU participants are to report to
the Meigs County Health Department fr&lt;n1 9 a .m. to II a.m. on each
of the designated five days. Reportins days are A·D, Tuesday; E-H,
Wednesday ; I· P, Thursday ; Q-S,

Net income for the quarter and the
year reflected an increase greater
than the operating profit inerease of
14 percent due to substantial investment ·tax credits and the
c'llpitalization of certain interest expense incurred in connection with
the construction of cable television
systerru;.
On Jan . 7, Multimedia acquired
the second 2J percent ins!JIIIrnent of
the slack of Tar River Com·
munications, Inc.~ an eastern North
Car olina cable television company
with approximately 44 ,000 of
Multimedia's 155,000 cable s ubscrigers. Multimedia has an
agreement to acquire the remaining
60 percent of Tar River stock over
the ne.t three years.
Also in January, the boa rd of
directors declared a dividend of I 7
cents per share payable Feb. 15 to
shareholders of record as of Feb. I.
The dividend will he a 13 percent increase over the former dividenc rate
of 15'f.. cents per share.
" We are pleased to report these
fine results for 1981," Wearn said,
" but due to current economic con·
ditions, we are concerned about the
first half of the current year. It is our
hope that by mid-year our compa ny

Remember••••

The Alcove

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
post ol!Jce wtll be closed Monday In
observance of President's Day.
42 Court St., lAfayette Mall Gallipolis
The lobby will be open lor custoOpen Dt#iy 9:30 til 8:00
Closed Sunday
Veterans Memorial
mers between 8: :.&gt; a.m. and 1: :.&gt;
p.m.
Admitted--Bertha Diehl, Pome- ~=----------'---------------------­
roy; Melvin Lovesee, Middleport ;
Bonnie Warner, Pomeroy; Cara
Walters, Pomeroy; Nona Ritchie,
Pomeroy; Elizabeth Salser, Racine; Arch Markin, Athens; Edward Bush, Racine.
Discharged- Clarence McDaniel,
. Jr., BeMy Spears, Donna Smith,
.Ja mes Meadows.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SALE I

KELLER DINING ROOM FURNITURE

::;
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will be puJUng out of the recession
and that our company will continue
to make good progreS$ in 1982."
Multimedia, Inc. publishes 13
daily and 22 non-daily newspapers,
owns a commercial printing plant,
owns and operates six television and
12 radio stations and produces and
syndicates the "Donahue" show, the
" Bob Braun" show, Young People's
Specials, Show Biz, Inc. country
music programs and other special
shows through Multimedia Program
Productions, Inc. Multimedia also
has cable systems that serve communities in Kansas, Oklahoma,
Illinois and Nor!h Carolina.
In other Mullimedia business, Don
McGouirk has been named general
manager of WMAZ-1V in Columbus,
Miss., where he lias been sa les
manager and general manager. He
will replace Albert Sanders who
recently announced his retire ment
after 37 years with WMAZ.
McGouirk is a native of Atlanta,
Ga. and a graduate of the University
of Alabama .
Besides WMAZ.TV, a CBS af·
filiat e, and WMAZ Radio ,
Multimedia owns and operates five
other television stations and II radio
stations.

Kroger unveils new produ~t line
Edwin A. Sleveklng, vice president of the mid-Atlantic marke ting
area for Kroger, said Cost Cutter
products are a lower grade than the
top quality Kroger brand line or nationally advertised brands, but are
just as nutritious.
Sa vlngs are substantial, accordIng to Sleveklng, rangirlg from 10 to
' 40 percent Jess tha n national
brands.

"Cost Cutter brand further ex·
tends the Kroger prlva te lab!'! line
to provide yet another alte rnative
for our shoppers," he added. "Cost
Cutter Is as low-priced as no-name
brands but customers do not have
to take a chance on what they'II!Ind
In the can.
"We believe that It Is lrnponant
to give consumers consistent qual·
lty - and we control the quality so
you'll find the same quality level
from week to week," he said.
Sleveklng believes consumers
wtll be pleased with Cost Cutter

values, a nd to prove the point, they
have printed a sattsiactlon guarantee on the package.
Cost Cutter products can be Identified by bright yellow with the fa·
mll!ar red-and-black price cutting
scissors which have served as the
symbol for Krogers low-priced
advertising.
Sleveldng said the Cost Cutter
line was expanded In the mid·
Atlantic marketing area after In·
ltial testing In Cincinnati, Dayton,
Los Angeles, Nashville and
Atlanta .

Ex:~nds

HEAP

deadline

~!!; ~~.ER

Two officials chosen
to se..Ve on council

if you don'r Jee il, mk w.
We •pecwl order books, records and 1apu.

Closed Monday

GREENVILLE, S. C. - Wilson C.
Weam, chaim)an of the boaf\1 and
chief executive officer of
Multimedia, Inc., announced 1981
unaudited net earnings of
$25,1124,000, a 10 percenl increase
over 1Ml net earnings of $21,618,000.
Earnings per share were $2.5:i for
1981, compared with $2.15 for 1980,
alao a 19 percent increase.
Revenues for 1981 totaled
'19S,276,000, a 19 percent increase
over 1980 revenues of $162,563,000.
Newspaper operating revenues were
$78 ,475,000 compared
with
f71 ,332,000, a 10 percent increase.
Broadcasting operating revenues in·
creased 17 percent to $97,369,000
compared with $~3.~61 , 000 .
. Revenues from cable television
operations were $19,432,000 compared with $8,950,(100, a 117 percent
increase.
Net earnings for the four!h ·quar·
ter ended Dec. 31, 1981 were
·f7,940,000 compared with $6,510,000,
an increase of 22 percent. Revenues
for the fourth quarter were
$54,323 ,000 compared
with
$46,172,000 for an increase of 18 per·
ce11t. Earnings per share were 78
cents compared with 65 cents, a aJ
percent increase.

f·

,., , . .

/

Frid, and T through Y, Monday ,
Feb.22.
Those unable to meet the schedule
are to report from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
onMarch9.

•

Multimedia records revenue rtse

''Cost Cutter.''

0

Sunday Feb. 14, 1982

•

SALEM, Va. - Kroger Food
Stores has unveiled a new budget
prictlll, branded product line caUed

war."

~iuus-~tntiud Section~

Business

COLUMBUS :- Two G!'IIipolis
women have been appointed by Gov.
James A. Rhodes to serve on the 1982
State Prime Sponsor Council for the
Comprehensive Employment and
Trianlng Act (CETA) program.
The appointments were announced by Albert G. Giles, Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
(OBES) administrator.
Names ere: Jeanne Fisher, direc·
tor of the Gallia County Welfare
Department, and Emelyn Scarberry, job service manager of the
Gallipolis OBEC office since 1969.
• The State Prime Sponsor Council
was established in an effort to obtain
local Input on the direction of em·
ployment and training program
within Ohio. Council members will

advise Rhodes on the labor market
conditions in their communities,
thus tailoring training program to
meet the specific needs of Ohio.
· Mrs. Fisher has been with the
welfare department for 32 yea rs and
Is a member of the Hwnan Resource
Council. She will be represented
welfare on the council. She and her
husband, J;lay, have two children.
Mrs. Scarberry is a member of the
American Personna I Assoc,lation advisory commisslon ; the personnal
advisory board of Rio Grande
College; and the Regional Man·
power Council for CETA. She serves
on lhe Farm Bureau board of
trus~ees. Married to Alfred A. Scar·
berry Jr., she has four children. She
• will represent ODES On the council.

. --

CHESHIRE - The stale has an·
nounced that the deadline for accepting applications for the regular
Home Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP) has been extended until
.
Feb. 26.
In cooperation with the staie, the
Gallia-Melgs Community Action
Agency will accept applications for
the program until4 :30 p.m . on that
date.
Individuals must supply Social
Security numbers of ea·ch househ&lt;lld
member, present a cojly of a fuel bill
of the primary heating source andproof of income for the past 23 mon-

ths.

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k?"'·
I

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•

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.
OPENS STORE - Super M, a convenience store
looatedatlheoldPeqnzoJiael'vlce s&amp;ationatiOIOFlrst
Ave. In Ga!Hpolla, Is holding Its grand opening with a
special sale. The store Is manaKed by Marlt Johnson,

who also operates M.E. Johnson's tn Henderson. The
store Is open from 6 a.m. untO midnight Monday
through Saturday and from 9 a.m. WltU noon on
SWlday.

Self-interest decisions helpful
WASf!TNGTON (AP) - Years
ago, a businessman joined the Cabinet and stirred an uproar by sayIng he'd a lways thought what was
good for the country was good for
General Motors Corp. a nd vice
versa.

That remains the best-known utterance of Charles E. Wilson, the
General Motors boss who became
secretary of defense In 1953, a l·
though he often Is misquoted as
having put the corporation first.
President Reagan's advisers are
more cautious, more scholarly a nd
leiS colorful In describing the philo·
sophy behind adrninlstra lion economic programs. Boiled down, It Is
that Individuals and businesses, left
alone by government In most
areas, will , collectively, ma ke decisions that are good lor the country.
In an effective free market, the
President's Council of Economic
Advisers suggests, self-Interest will
lead consumers and producers to
decisions that wtll serve the national Interest.

u a l ca n by making c hoices
That Is broader a nd more refined
himself."
than the remark Wilson tossed off
The cou ncil says the most effl.
In Sena te testimony 29 years ago.
&lt;'le nt form of transferring resourBut the principle Is similar, a nd
Reagan's advisers say It wtll work. ces to the poor Is In cash, rather
tha n In In food stamps , housing or
In lis aMual report to Congress,
medical care.
the Council of Economic Advisers
The council says tha t a m ajor obcites government regulation of the
jective of the Reagan admlnlstra·
marketplace as a case In point.
" The best solution Is to respect tion Is to reduce the federal role In
economic decision -m a king a nd
the judgment of the private market
strengthen that of Individuals, prl·
whenever It Is ava Ua ble," they say.
For example, Reag'ln's. econovate enterprise and state and loca l
mists say, private Insurance could
governments. The Reagan advisers say that will be more efficient prove more el!ectlvc In promoting
job safety th a n government
a nd suggest that the stakes go
regulations.
beyond economics.
" Many government programs,
"Expansion of the economic role
of the government tends to reduce
s uch as detailed safety regulations
both the level of agreement on goor the provision of specific goods to
vernment policies and' the lncllna·
the poor are best described as pat·
tion to e ngage In politica l dissent,"
ernalistlc," the report says. "This
administration rejects paternalism
the counc Usays. "The link between
political a nd economic freedom Is
as a basis for policy . There L' no
Important.
Increasing economic
reason to think tha t commands
from government can do a better . freedom will also provide grea ter
assura n c e o f o ur political
job of Increasing a n Individua l's
economic welfa re than the lndlvld• freedom .''

•

The Gallia-Meigs CAA will
provide individuals with assistance
in filling out an application. Those
interested may call 446-4612, ext. 63
in Gallipolis, 992·5605 in Pomeroy ,
and 367-7341 or 99U629 in Cheshire.
The HEAP Emergency Assistance
Program will be available through
March31.

Opens business
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- Cha·
rles E . Hoffman. son of Mr . and
Mrs. Dana Hoffman, Rutland, has
opened "IMer VIsion," a photography business at 225 W. State St.,
Rave nswood. The store will be open
Monday, Wednesday and Friday
from 10 a.m.-5 p.{Jl., noon-S p.m.
Tuesdlty and Thursday, and on Saturday by appointment.

~~f,: ~~-,

~JJ ~ _ \..

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CREDIT UNION'S OFFICIAL FAMILY -The
and original olllclallamUy attending the ~th
anniversary meetinK ollhe Kyger Creek Credit Un·
ion are (sea&amp;ed). Paul DameU, Marte Boggs and Bud
Solsoon; (lint row) Fred Folden, Betty Baronlck,
p~nt

Richard Neal, ,John Sommer, Joe Burger, Dw-lene
Price, C!Jrlsttne Williams, Calvin McDaniel and Euge ne Steele; (8econd row) Gordon RAith, Le!!ter Ply·
male, Jowk Mink, Uoyd Hess, .John Fbher, Joe
Fenderbosch, Ke Meth DeLong and William Buck.

KC Credit Union has meeting
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek
Credit Union celeprated their 25th
anniversary at their annual meeting
recenlly at the employees' cluJ&gt;.
house.
In a message to the credit union's
board of directors, CUNA president
Jim R. WIUiams said, "You can be
proud of your achieve"ments in
helping people improve their
economic weii·being , improve their
standards of living, and ir. ~ rease
their awareness of financial alternatives. Your efforts have helped
the credil union movement become
a family 46 million strong."
The Kyger Creek Credil Union

was incorporated Feb. 15, 1957 and
by March, 1957 had obtained 103
members with assets of $336.75. On
April 15, 1957 the first Joan was
made . During the first year of
operation, 38 loans were made
totaling $6,240.
The cred it union continued to grow
and in January 1959, payroll
deducations were sla rted a nd the
memb e rship
a nd
assets
mushroomed .
The present membershi p now
totals 649, with a!lBets totaling
$1,115,627. The credit union ha s paid
dividends to its members con·
tinuaiiy since 1958 and this vear

decla red a dividend of 10.2 perce nt.
The members of the credit union
have the privilege of borrowing
money at a low rate of interest. Tbe
interest rate charge has never ex·
ceeded a true a nnua l interest rate of
12 percent, even In these past years
of high rates .
The orl~inal incorporators, board
members and supervisory committees were invited to the silver anniversary celebration a nd six were
able to attend . The host for tbe
evening was Eugene R. Steele, who
has been president of the credit
union for 18 years.

~~r -;-.""

'''

;~ f

~ -·

1982 PONTIAC TlOOO
Sale Price
Rebate
· NET PRICE ONLY

p.

S750 REBATES .
ON

Buick Sky'-k &amp; Skyhawk '
Pontiac J2000 &amp; Phoeni~

3347 Rourd Pedcstol Table

48" X 48"·60"

3306
Tall Spirdlt&gt; &amp;ck Chair

3391 Curto China

41 " x i6"x 74"H

337513385 Bulfet &amp; Hutch Top

56"

k

19" IC 75" H

DIANE OILER

looudes:
•Radio
•srytm steel wheels
•Reclining Front sea £
·•Vinyl custom trim
0
• , 4 cyl. eng ine
MUCH MORE

$500 REBATES ·
-ON

Buick Centu.y
Pontile TUIOO &amp; 6000

Nurse, psy,c hologist
receive certification

Crafted from solid oak hardwoods and oak veneers rubbed
to a deep natural Golden Oak finish. Chairs f~re long wearing
saddle seat for ·comfortable relaxed sitting Draweni are decorated with brass and porcelain hardware all by Keller, a leading
name in solid wood furniture.

GALLIPOLiS - The medical
services coordinator of tbe GalllaJacklon-Melgs Community Mental
Health Center's Inpatient unit, 131ane Oller, R.N., recently quallfted
as a certified nurse administrator.
The American Nurses Assocla·
tlon, whO awarded the .certificate,
said Oller had "achieved a hllh
level of performance."
Oller received the certltlcalion
after pasaJng an exam and ruttWtng
· req~ts for on-the-job experleoce. Sbe iiU been working for .
the lllpatfellt unit alDce It opened In '
Jani!IJ'Y 19'19 aJid baa beell medical
~ coordlllator Iince Sep!ember 1981.,

REG. $83988 CURIO CHINA ••••......... $64goo
·REG. s11n38 BUFFET &amp; HUTCH ••.... $93goo
REG. $1741 66 48" TABLE, 6 CHAIRS s134goo
FURNITURE DEPT.-3rd FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

JAMEs ALTHOF

'

In another personnel matler at
the mental health center, Dr.
James Althof, outpatient therapist
with the Gallipolis clinic, recently
received his Ucense to practice In
Ohio. In order to become a licensed
psychologist, Altho! worked Under
a clinical supervisor for two years
and passed a national written and
oral examination.
A center therapist since May
1979, Althof workS with groups and .
couples and hall recently been
wotldng with VIetnam combat
veterans. He also works with PfO'
pie who have anxiety and stress disonlen with the uae of relaxation
techniques, hypnotherapy Jlnd
op!er methods. •

S,WDIMJlN - Teny
llamiMon, u, (}dipole, bu
jollied Fnaeldowll Car Co. 011
Eo ' ra Av- Ill Glllllpollll u
a saiMman. He wiD lllllo he U.
11111111towaer Bl1 Geae lul••m
Ill manallnc the ueed car lot.
llarnl1tGa, a Galla CGunt:y tlve W·h • atteacled Gallla
Aelldem7 lllall 8diDal - IUo
GI'UIM Clllfl, fiM:W 10 yean exper' ,. • art~e .

....

.,

BACINO ENTRY - P1edraont Alrllna unveiled
IIII'IICIIIC colon for the NASCAR-WblltonCupclrcuB
wllllllle• ..... team o'IIUcllj Buddl(left) and JU.
cUrd ~ "'the ...... corporale hndqll&amp;l'. . Ia WlnlloD-8alem, N.C. Budd wU1 be drlvlll«

.....
Pontlatl Nurnber'lbree, buill byChildress at his f~M:U·
ltleo In Wlllllon-Salem. Kudd and CitUdre.. recently
llped to represent Pledmoot on tbe Ni\SCAR circuit
ber;lnlllnc loday wUh the Daylona 100. The aircraft In
lhe b~M:kgreund, Incidentally, Is a Piedmont .,B-73'7,
aloo brand new.

�The

leport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pll'ilsant, V.. V;,,

Tim

Agriculture and our Community

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Agent
GALUPOUS - Lime needs for
tobacco is a question · that often
comes up this time Of year. Soil pH
should be near 6.4 before transplanti!lg. This prevents the seasonal
pH drop, which occurs soon after
fertili7er is applied, from getting low
enough to ca use high risk
tllanganese toxJcity. It also ensures
that residual soil molybdenum will
he available for plant uptake.
For best results, limestone should
be applied two to three years ahead
Of the crop. If this isn't possible, the
lime mllljt be mixed thoroughly with
the soil. Do not apply more than two
tons Of lime to tobacco in one year.
Consideration should be given to a!&gt;"
plying and mixing lime into the soil
in the fall when disking prior to
seeding the winter cover crop. If not
applied in the fall, apply in the
spring and turn half under with the
cover crop, followed by broadcasting the remainder just ahead of
final field preparation. In the latter
case, disking twice at right angles
would ensure good mixing.
How much concentrate (ground
feed) should you feed a dairy cow'
Precise
rules of thwnb a re: one
I
po~nd of concentrates lor every two
pounds or milk produced by high
testing breeds, one pound of concentrates lor each two and one-hall
pounds or milk produced by low
testing breeds above the level of
milk production that can be supported by forage . High testing cows
can be expected to produce 15 to 20
pounds of milk per day and low
testing cows about 20 to 25 pounds or
milk when consuming only forage.
Such rules-of-thumb aoolv at all

levels of production. Feeling additional concentrates to thin, low
producing cows near the end or their
lactation to improve body condition
is desirable. This practice should
not, however, be overdone.
The concentrate intake of cows
should be increased at the rate of
one to two pounds per head per day
after freshening . Care should be
exerted to see that the cow is not
thrown "off feed " as the concentrate
intake is being increased. II a
magnetic feeder is used, a lull lied
of the concentrate mixture should be
achieved in the parlor prior to the
time that magnets are attached to
the cow to allow her access to a
magnetic feeder. It is important thai
the magnets be removed•from the
cows when they drop below the
target level determined necessary in
the herd.
The crude protein percentage in
the concentrate mixture must be ad·
justed according to the kind and
quality or forage led.
Seed TeHIIng Home Gardening
Determine if stores seed are still
good by running a gennination test.
Clean, coarse seed, venniculate or
jiffy miX are good materials for germinating seed. The mediwn should
be moist but not soggy wet. Broadcast small seed over the ger·
minating medium surface. Seed
medium sized and large seed in rows
and cover. Place the seeded container in a plastic tent and place it.in
a warm place (71).75 degrees F. ). M·
ter seed germinates, determine
whether a sufficient nwnber of
seelings are produced to justify
keeping the seed.

Job director plays important role

•

Farmers prepare for seminars, school sessions
By JOHN C. RICE
Ext. Agenl, Agriculture
Meigs County ..
POMEROY - Here are important
elates to remember :
Dairy Records School, Monday,'
Feb. 15 at the Extension Office at
!0:30a.m.
Beef Seminar, Tuesday, Feb. 16,
at the Presbyterian Church in
Jackson. Dinner is al6 p.m.
Pesticide Recertification - Monday, Feb. 22 at the Meigs County Extension Office, I to 4 or 7 to 10 p.m.
Reservations are needed .
Meigs County Beef Ca lli e
Association meeting - Wednesday,
Feb. 24 at 7:30p.m. at the Extension
Office.
Pesticide Recertification - Thursday, Feb. 25, in Gallia County from
I to 4 and 1 to 10 p.m. Reservations
needetl.
•
Pesticide Recertification -

Friday, Feb. 26, 1 to 4 p.m. at the
Athens Courity Exlension Office.
Reservations needed.
The dairy records school is open to
everyone regardless of whether you
are on lest. If you are wondering
what the dairy testing program
provides, this would be a wonderful.
opportunity.
Th~ Beef Seminar is sponsored by
COBA and they need reservations. I
believe the cost is $3. The seminar
fealijres genetics.
The list of pesticide schools include Meigs, Gallia and Athens
Counties. Athens County hils additional schools in March.
We will be taking reservations lor
the pt!sticide schools so be sure to
call and give us the date you want to
attend and the categories. For those
adding · categories, schedule the
training dates and not the recer-

tification elates. Meigs County phone
992-0096 ; Gallia County phone 467W/; and Athens County 593-6555.
Federal Crop Insurance
I mentioned this once before but I
want to make sure everyone knows
that crop insurance is available for
1982. It is my understanding that
disaster programs will not be
available. This is not definite but is
expected. Crops covered In Ohio in·
elude com, wheat, soybeans, oats,
barley, grapes, tobacco, tomatoes,
and sugar beets. The program is
designed to protect the producers'
working capital when disaster
payments are phased out. The
producer can elect to cover 50, 65 or
75 percent Of your nonnal yield. You ·
can also select from three different
guaranteed prices. Price optidhs for
corn are$1,70, $2, and $2.70 for 1982.
Summary
A wide variety of disasters can

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP l - Ronald Trewyn. who keeps track o!
surgery schedules at several Ohio
hospitals, has a little-noticed but
Important role In the fight against
cancer.
In his job as director of the
TUmor Procurement Service at
Ohio State University's Comprehensive Cancer Center, Trewyn Is
responsible for finding actual cancerous tissue for scientists to use In
their research.
Often, even whUe a surgeon Is
cutting tissue from a cancerstricken patient , a nurse or technician from Tetwyn 's staff is In the

cause crop losses to farmers.
the new program, there will be
straightforward system for
everyone. Premiwn rates will be set
based on the potentU.l risk of crop
loss in each area. The expanded
protection will serve farmers' financial needs by helping to ensure cash
flowstabilitywhich: .
-Will make it easier to obtaih and
pay loans, especially for those
producers who don't have a big
capital reserve.
.
- Will secure forward contracts
with insurance to guarantee funds
for meeting the contract.
The amount of insurance that's
right lor each producer will depend
on cash flow needs. Insurance agents can help producers choose a
protection plan. But finally, each
!ann operator must determine the
level or protection he needs.

WASffiNGTON (AP)- AgrtcullUre Secretary John R. Block has
urged a study panel to take a close
look at extension operations with a n
eye to streamlining the f n
ar- ung
system.
The study comes at a time Prestdent Reagan's budget proposal for
the Agriculture De artment In-

eludes significant cutbacks In the
federal share used to help finance
extension programs.
Some projects such as aid to city
gardeners and farm safety would
be hit the hardest, although federal
aid to carry out food and nutrition
education would continue.

Block said Monday he has told a
newly formed study committee to
"re-examine the mission and
scope" or the nation 's extension
te
sys m.
The committee Is jointly responslble to the department and the Nationa I Associ a tlo n of State

Universities and Land Grant
Colleges.
Block asked the committee to develop "specific recommendations
on the future mission of the nationwide Informal education network,"
which !or 68 years has offered educational help to mllllonsof peopleln
both rural and urban areas.

'·•

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NEW HAVEN FURNITURE·

.· NEW YORK (APi - The
head of the Greek Orthdox Church
In the Americas says that a federal
judge's recent prohibition of teach·
lng "creation science" In public
schools Is a "form of censorship
that enslaves Americans."
Archbishop lakovos says the. decision of Judge WU!Jam Overton in
Arkansas threatens to prevent
"free citizens from studying all possible theories and Ideas on the
origin of life and the development of
life In our universe.
" Academic freedom cannot be
curtailed to exclude any single theory on the origi n of life. Discussion
and debate on this vital topic In the
classrooms or our country should
be the rtght of every American
citizen."
· Calling the ruling "another veUed
attack against religion and a distorted understa nding of the separation of church and state," he says

,,

"you can experience the same
thing In the Soviet Union ."
WASHINGTON tAP) -Higher
postage rates recently imposed on
non-profit mail "threatens the sta bility and very existence" or relig iou s a nd other no n-pro fit
publishers, says the general secreatry of the U.s. catholic Conference.
Archbishop Thomas C. Kelly
says "the practical effect of these
huge new postage Increases Is to
deliver a ma jor blow to the ... religious press In the United States to
speak Its mind and message."
LOUISVILLE. Ky. tAPJ - A
noted Bible scholar, the Rev. Roy
Lee Honeycutt ; has . been elected
president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, the denomina tion's flagship ministerial training
center, replaCing the Rev. Duke K
McCall, who has retired after:llyears service to' the Jnstltutlon.

Court issues order

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~

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED! DUE TO THE BAD WEATHER AND THE ECONOMY
WE HAVE 1143,000 OF INVENTORY WE MUST MOVE NOW. NO REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSED. YOUR GAIN ... OUR LOSS.

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speakers. S peakers each ha ve 4" wooter and 1" tweeter.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A
!ormer clerk of the Butler County
Area One Court has been issued a
finding lor recovery or $2l,li:ll.51 becauseoracash,shortage tha t apparently existed when court records
were destroyed by !Ire, state Audl·
tor Thomas Ferguson says.
A special audit of the court was
prompted by the June 22, 1981, fire.
Records that accounted for cash receipts and disbursements or the
court over a year-long period were
destroyed .

It's A Mass Sell-Out ... Profits Forgotten Lasses Expected!

Pieces

the

,.

FURNITURE

MAnRESS
AND
FOUNDATION

purposes only one operator per
farm may be designated," she said.
"Operator designation Is determined by the lndlvl~ual couple and
usually the husband Is selected. Females designated as operators
most often run the farm enterprise
alone or are widows of farmers ,"
Ms. Kalbacher's comments were
In a report Monday at an annual
Farm Women's Forum sponsore&lt;;J
by the department. More than 100
women were signed up tor
twoday meeli!Jg.
'
" In terms of !ann size, most
women operators run small ranns
whether measured by acreage o;
value of agricultural products
sold," the report said.
"Their farms ·average 285 acres
In size and account lor about 4 percent of an land In !anns. The average size ot farms operated by men'
Is' 423 acres." ·
.

Add These Matched Components for a
Complete Stereo System-Save Even More!

Church leader feels ruling

keys to a sensible diet

By DON KENDALL
WASHINGTON (AP) -The latest census figures show that
women make up a tiny minority of
the nation's farmers, but one Agriculture Department expert says
that statistic by Itself can be
misleading.
According to the 1978 census the first to classify farmers by sex
there were 128.170 women
fanners, 5.2 percent of the 2.5 million farmers In the United States.
Judith Z. Kalbacher o! the department's Economic Research
Service says the government's reporting procedures result In the
number of female farmers being
"somewhat understated" In the
agricultural census ligures.
· " Most !ann wives do some farm
work and many share responsibilIty of running the farm with their,
husbands, but for census reporting

• 1'\\

FINDS CANCER TISSUE FOR SCIENTISTS - Ronald Trcwyn,
director of Ohio State Univcrsity•s Comprehensive Ca ncer Center tumor
procurement service, says his group's work is essential if scientists and
researche,.,. are to have the steady supply of fresh tumors for their work.
Trewyn Is shown at the group's Ohio State lab with storage bottles ti
tumors, while research associates Peggy Sans .;nd Richard Meister work
ai an environmentally clean storage station. IAP Laserpholol.

Variety and moderation-·

Farm census figures
'can be misleading'

"shopping list" of various types of
tumor tissue, blood or urine specimens which may contain cancerous cells.
" We know what Investigators
want," he said . "Some need fresh
ttssu e dall y and o th ers
sporadically."
Pat Phillips. medical comm!'nl cations specialist at thecenter,sald
work Is belngdoneon over !OOtypes
of cancer.
Trewyn said that whUe animal
tissue, rather than human, was
used In most of the early stages of
cancer resea rch work , tha t situation has changed .

Block urges study of extension operations

definite form of censorship

foods should represent all the food
groups - Milk and dairy products,
fruits and vegetables, cereals and
breads, and protein-rich foods such
as meat, poultry and fish. Moderate
amounts of other foods such as fats
and sugars may be included when
extra calories are permissible. Each
group should be included in
moderate amounts depending· on
your calorie needs.
What happens when one food
group is completely omitted from
your daily meals? The nutrients supplied by that particular group will be
lacking, and you will greate an im·
balance in your diet. For example,
the so-called low carbohydrate diets
rely on excessive amounts of fat and
protein to provide ,eoergy.-When fat
supplies a large percentage of your
calories, there is an increase in your
blood and urine of compounds known
as ketone bodies . This condition is
referred to as ketosis, with symptoms of nausea, fatigue and low
blood pressure.
High protein diets promoted for
weight loss create an imbalance in
the diet by forcin~ the body to use
excessive amounls of protein-rich
foods for energy. This type or diet
adds stress to lhe kidneys in ridding
the body of large amount.• . of
nitrogen-containing compounds that
are not utilized as protein. Your
grocery bill will be higher when the
critical need lor energy must be met
with protein-rich foods.
The calories in our diet should
come from all three nuetrienls carbohydrate, fat and protein.
Nutritionists now recorrunend that
about 55 percent of our calories
come from carbohydrate (bread and
cereal groups and the fruit and
vegetable group ), 30 percent fr om
fat and 15 percent from protein
foods.

!rom other campus researchers.
"Before this service was ava ilable, Individual researchers hassled
surgeons and pathologists In order
to get the tissue," he said. "The service has made life easter."
Trewyn, an assistant professor of
physiological chemistry at Ohio
State's College of Medicine, said
the work Is essential If researchers
are to have fresh tumor Ussue for
their work.
In addition to maintaining records on upcoming surgery ,
Trewyn tries to keep scientists Informed of the klnds or tissue they
can expect . His staff rytalntalns a

Qperattng room waiting to gather a
sample.
" It's true that we use (cancerous) matter which would normally
be discarded, " Trewyn said. "But
what we have found Is that lnves\1gator:s need fresh material. We try
Ia get It to them within an hour or
two after sufgery."
·
Once primary pathological work
Is complete, the tissue sample Is
rushed to a laboratory at the cancer
center and readied for researchers.
Thirty to 40 scientists at the hospita l are directly Involved In research
on cilncer In humans. There are
also requests for tissue samples

.

I

Homemakers Circle

By BETfiE CLARK
Home Economics Agent
GALLIPOUS - Do you remember the sack dress? That was certainly a fad in lhe world of fa shion,
and eating only grapefruit and hardcooked eggs is a lad in the world of
diet. Truly classic style in' either
clothing or diet will always be in
fashion and in good taste. Classic
style in dieting can be summed up in
two words
variety and
moderation. T:1cse are the two keys
to sensible eating. Promises of
quick, painless weight loss are an indication that the diet is probably not
medically sound.
A diet designed to help lose or
maintain weight should be one that
can be lived with for a lifetime. Food
should be one of our greatest
pleasures in life. Therefore, we
should lea rn to ada pt our preferences for certain types of food to a
daily meal pattern that will meel our
nutrient and ca loric (ene rgy) needs
without adding excess weight. Your
personal dtet plan should not
become a hardship - it should
satisfy not only your nutritional
needs but also the socia l aspects
associated with food.
A diet plan that overemphasizes
any one food or food group to the exclusion of others could probably be
labeled a " lad" diet. There is no
magic food which will help " burn"
fat and thus bring about immediate
and perm~ nent weight loss. There ts
also no food wbich magically
reduces appetite. When just a few
foods ar~ allowed on a diet, you tire
of the foods and have less desire to
eat, but this is not the way to develop
a lifetime diet plan.
A diet which results in weight loss
or weight maintena nce (if you are at
your ideal weight) can a nd should be
made up of a variety of foods. These

The sunday"Ttmes-Sentinei- - Page E -3

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

•

Meigs County's Agents Report

Lime needs for tobacco big
question this time of year

Feb. 14, 1982

Feb. 14, 1

YOUTH ·

I·.·

Reg.

3.99

~~·791

By Raallstlc

100/o
·Off

BEDROOMSn

I

I,

gsa

Makes ftguring taxes eaay, and
gives you a permanent printed record. Ten-digit display, 4-key rMil1"
ory. PercerJI, discount and add-on,
gross profit margin keys. 1166-664

Reg.10.95

Enjoy music, news and

ALLISON
ELECTRIC CO.
.

•

218 Third Awe.

..

sports anywhere! Jacks for
earphone, AC adapter. Wrist
strap. 112·173 • .,,.

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~ No lnatallatlon~ Just Plug In and Aim

One-piece s~tem protects home and
family 24 hours a day! Covers 20 x 30'
area. 1149-303

Gallipolis, OH. '

'

PAICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL.

ST~U

',.

,,

if.

•

(

•

AND OJ,ALERS

,~DIVIS I ON OF TANDY C011 POAATI0 N

�Page-E·4-The Sunday Times·Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Po.i!lt Pleasant, W. va.

H

Testimony shows center's sexual, ·drug abuse, torture

Recognition
banquet set

The young woman said many
drugs, particularly LSD, we_re gen·
erally available at the lnatll)ltlon.
Treanor recoonled the case of a
13-year-old boy who said a guard
broke his ann because the youngster refused 10 go to bed on tlme.and
stayed up watching televiSion.

the state Human Services Depart·
TreanOr said the young woman
ment disclosed that two employees
IOid him that O!le guard frequently
of the Oklahoma Children's Center
stood outside her window and "ex·
at Taft had been llred. The depart·
posed his sexorgans"ID her. Trea·
ment said Nathan Alexander Jr.,
nor said another guard told her that
1
the center's security chief, was
'1t you go to bed wlth me, you'll be
fired for allegedly propositioning a
out by IOnight."
girl to "engage In prostitutlon for a
The witness 's aid another former
'sugar daddy" ' and making "lm·
inmate of an Oklahoma instltutior
proper and Illegal sexual advances
told him She was "shack1ed to tht
tD a female student." It said Gary
bed hand and loot for 14 days and
Warrior, recreation supervisor,
had to beg to go to the bathroom ...
was dismissed on charges ol suppThe teen-ager told hlm she was
lying marijuana to students ~nd ly·
placed In a cell 4 feet by 8 feet for
lng to department Investigators.
· seven days, and that the only fur·
Treanor testified that one young
nlshlng was a bed with
thin
woman, now 18, said she was the
mattress .
object of repeated sexual advances , A runaway told Treanor her
by security guards and was twice
bands were tied behind her back
"stripped naked, "• searched and
and her feet were bound lor. 24
handcuffed on the day she entered a
hours as punishment lor getting
children's center in Oklahoma.
into a light with another girl.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate C0115ultant ~ test!fled that
four Oklahoma teen·agers told him
of sexual abuse, IOrture and widespread drug usetn thestate'slnstltu·
!Ions for young people.
WIUiam Treanor, a consultant to
the Senate Judiciary subcommlt·
tee on juvenile justice, Interviewed
four former Inmates of the lnstltu·
Uons In the past week. The four had
been placed In the Institutions as
runaways or because they were
abandoned or mistreated by thelf
parents.
The panel's public hearing was
prompted by reports of sexual and
physical abuse of children ln Okta·
homa Institutions that were published by the Gannett News Service
atter a five-month Investigation.
In Oklahoma City, meanwhile.

Treanor sald two guards Involved
In that tncl!lent claimed lbey were
restraining the boy, and lbey refu.sed .to take lliHieteCtor tests.
Treanor sald state offlclall and
employees he Interviewed Ia·
mented the conditions In Oklahoma

By DON KENDAIJ.,
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Dry
weather iast month In Brazil has
helped Improve U.S. export pros·
pects, says the Agriculture

DeP&lt;Irtment.
But the news w1ll not mean much
price Improvement, It any, for
farmers who have held on 10 their
last year's soybeans, according to
figures released Thursday.

The Sunday Times· Sentinei-Page-e: s

Processing plant's future depends on beet producers

InstitUtions but were a1rald to V().
lunteer Information lor fear theY

'FREMONT, Ohlo (AP)- Thefu·

posed by the company earUer this
year In a "non·negotlable" otter.
The growers have had a ~~ of
the company's profits from sugar
sales In contracts dating back tD

ture ot northwest Oblo's only sugar

would hi! fired.
He said many otflclals told him
there were a number of "deprived ~ •
young people who do not belong In •

beet processing plant now rests
with the fanners who grow the

crop. '
After empleyees at the Northern
Ohio Sugar Beet Co. approved a
contract with concessions this
we;ek, company o!flcials say an
agreement wlth the growers iscritl·
cal to keeping the plant In
operation.
Plant manager Robert Kessler
said that the estlmated 350 sugar
beet growers In northwestern Ohio
must plant 20,1XXJ acres of the crop
to keep the plant In operation.
Talks between the growers and
the company are expected to re.

Institutions" In the state.

Dry Br~il weather· helps improve
export. prospects, AD officials say

a

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

Feb. 14, 1982

Last year's bumper crops of soybeans, wheat ani! com have helped
depress prices ·tiilll season. That Is
why farmers, traders and govern·
ment experts watch developments
In other countries.

1932.
They say the nat rate would not
reflect Increases In the world price
of sugar and would divert all profits

to the company and it's parent
finn, Great Western Sugar Co. of
Denver, Colo.
Earller this week', the union locals representing workers at the
plant approved contract conces·
stons wlth the company amounting
to 7lJ percent across the board wage
cuts and compromise on a seniority
clause.
When talks began this year, the
company threatened to close the
Fremont plant unless both the

swne next week.

The growers rejected a $27-a·ton
.nat rate for the sugar beets pfOo

growers and Northern Ohio em·
pleyees agreed to the company's
terms.
Great Western backed away
from that stand alter both groups
rejected the company's Initial

tng sugar cane at the p~t In Janu·
ary, ending live years of that
practice and resulting in the layo!l

The layoffs, along wtth the layo!l

of about :Jl sea!IOilai workers,
tx1mmed the plant work Ioree to
near the target level of 72 perman·
ent job6, Kessler said.
During beet processing ln the
fall, Kessler said, as many as 150

ol!Of permanent emplayees.
Cane processing was Intended 10
keep the plant running after the end
of the beet season.

offer.
WIUlarn Baird, a Great Western
vice president and the firm's chief
negotla tor, said the wage conces·
slons would Sl!ve the comi&gt;any
about $60,1XXJ a year. The agreement · keeps Intact other contract
benefit provisions ranging from va·
cations to health care.
Baird said the company is satisfied that the unkm, the American
Federation ot Grato Mlllers, did Its
share to keep the plant In operation.
Great Western had termed the operation marginally profitable.
Great Western stopped process·

Celebration shows 'Simple livestyle :
'

HARTFORD, Corm. (AP) Their simple lifestyle was reflected

now arelaclng,what maybe a more
complex struggle lor survival. It Is
a numbers game.
"The commitment Is just as
strong. In fact, I think with the
c hanges In Vatican II ... it has deepened awareness and commit·
ment," says Sister Margaret
Crowley, the head of the ConnectJ.
cut group.
But ln terms of numbers, she

In the way they recently celebrated
150 years of helping the 1190r and
needy. The Sisters of Mercy joined
togther In a meal of bread and soup
and prayed they can continue.
The Mercy sisters, who through
their history have withstood anti·
Catholic attacks, crossed oceans
and braved the American frontier,

~

Guest speaker for the dinner will
be the Honorable A. James Man·
chin, West Virginia Secretary of
State.
· Eagle Scouts to be honored are
.Bradley Henry, Troop 62, Pea Ridge
United Methodist Church; Randall
Moeller, Troop 21, Beverly Hills
Presbyterian Church; Steve Diniaro
and Phineas Munsell Randell, Troop
7, First United Methodist Church;
Darryl Roberts, Troop 700, Pea
Ridge Baptist Church; Steve Pack,
Troop 20, Johnson Memorial United
Methodist Church, all from Hun·
· l tington; Bryan Combs and David
;o{oore, Troop 52, Chesapeake Easl
Elementary School; Terry Shaffer,
Dwayne Walker and Philip Haynie,
Troop 605, Locust Grove Baptist
Church, Kenova 1 David ·watson,
·Trop 701, Beulah Ann Baptist Chur·
· ch, Ona; Mark Freeman, Troop 92,
Bethesda United Methodist Church,
Ona; Dewey Ball, Troop 88, First
Baptist Church of Kenova; Steve
Carley and Charley Carley, Troop
:48, Church of God, Kenova; Roher!
·Townsend, Troop 96, Millon Baptist
·Church, Milton; John Gloss and
Mark Dillon, Troop 200,
Businessmen of (;allipoiis; David
Grueser, Troop ~. Pt. Pleasant
National Guard Armory; Randall
Jackson, Troop 133, Princess Chur&amp;h
of Christ, Grayson; and · from
Ashland, Tony Smith, Troop 114, Ar·
mcoSteel Corporation; Portet Stein,
Troop 148, First United Methodist
· Church; Laurant LaBrie and
. Richard Curnutte, Ttoop 154, Com·
munity Presbyterian Church.
. The Eagle Scouts will be picked up
and escorted to the dinner by fonner
Eagle Scouts and Tri..State Area
Council board members.
· Malcolm Orebaugh, Chairman of
· the local chapter of the National
Eagle Scout Association, w,ill
.preside over the dinner. Orebaugh
will present Eagle Scout paper·
weights to the Eagle Scouts and
Scout emblem tie tacks to the escor·
Is. Certificates from the Sons of lhc
· American Revolution will also be
. presented to the Eagle Scouts.

Drunk drivers
.present other
problems too
COLUMBUS - The deaths, in·
juries and economic lo.ses brought
about by the dirnking driver are
being brought to the public's at·
tention at an accelerated rate by
concerned citizens groups, the traf·
·fie safety profession, and the news
media. However, there is another
side of the drunk driver that is of
considerable interest and concern to
pollee officers throughout Ohio.
• Of all the people being dealt with
on our highways by Patrol officers,
drinking drivers are the persons
'IIW8t likely to be found carrying a
pmcealed handgun or o~r deadly
weapon. It was very disturbing to
discover that 53 of every 100
weapons violations Involved people
who were arrested for driving under
the Influence of alcohol.
We are concerned about the safety
our officers who must confront apprOximately 50,000 dn\nk drivers
each year. We are · also concerned
about the safety of Ohio's motorists
who are thrust Into contact with
·drunk drivers almost as frequently

Ha«.t ·.e',., .

Hatfield &amp; McCoy's Presidents Dar. Sale ends MondaySo .if you haven't been to see us yet- It's time to get movin'
cause every Color TV, Major Appliance and square yard of
Carpet in our 9 stores has been reduced.
We're celebrating 3 birtbdays - George Washington'~
Abraham Lincoln's, and Old Man Hatfield's - ALL IN ON~
SALE and the values are fantastic. DON'T MISS IT!

.

SUNDAY 12:30 to 6:30
MONDAY lOam to9p

FINAL DAYS
CONTEMPORARY OR
MEDITERRANEAN
COLOR CONSOLE
Single knob electronic
tuning
• Deluxe cabinetry

.(4'66

.•
WE CANNOT TEl.L A LIEWE'VE CHOPPED DOWN
PRICES .ON EVERY ITEM
IN OUR STORE!

0~ CARPETING, COLOR TVs,

• RCA extended life chassis
•e Automatic line tuning
system
• Viewer controlled color
and tint adjustments

NOW

$6 ~~ 14

1C
IT'S BEEN FOUR SCORE
AND SEVEN YEARS
SINCE ANYONE HAS
SEEN VALUES LIKE
._....._THESE!
•

NOW

95

A large variety of level loops In pat"erns
tweeds, solids and textureds. In cushio~
backs as well as jute backs. Many of
th.ese styles are Scotchguarded®and
static controlled and all are extremely
durable.
-

*

VALUES TO $17 .··
95
95

VALUES TO $27

$9~~0$18~~

NOW

$5

TO

1

'·

-·
lOCk · 1n CO IOt &amp; fme
lun tng

All ·ele c tr o n 1c c hann el
s ~t ec t• o n

12'' COLOR PORTABLE

$1

KITCHEN PRINTS .&amp;
COMMERCIAL QUALITIE

Rich velvet plushes and highly textured ·
friezes in solids and tweeds. Beaulful
and durable stylings that compliment
contemporary homes.

NOW

TO

Property
transfers

'('-

•

-

·· ~ -

.

-

• Automatic line
tuning
' Black matrix picture
tube

~'2:S"

•
•

PLUSHES and FRIEZ ES

I

e

VALUES TO $25
$895

Con'lentent sw•ve/ base
Automattc Frequency
Con lrol

19" REMOTE
COLOR
PORTABLE

• Front access
color controls
• Black Matrix
picture tube
• Automatic fine
tuning

In a tremendous range of color.!:,
weights,and yarn systems, includ 1ng
Antron's, Anso's, and contlnous .·.
filament nylons. A color pattern ·for
every part of your home.

Sculptures, Cut &amp; Loops, Traceries and
more-In solids, multlcolors, and tone·
on-tones. Many new styles all at sale
prices!

95

•
•

•$o2J;8 5

SAXONIES

Keyboard Electron 1c

Tunmg

PORTABLE

*

VALUES TO $20

•

19" COLOR

ON ANY IN STOCK CAR.PET

MULTI-LEVELS

DIAGO,NAL REMOTE
COLOR CONSOLE

CONTEMPC~ARYCOLORCONSOLE

&amp; MAJOR APPLIANCES .

INSTALLATI,ON
1¢sa. vd.

ncn

RCn 25 '' DIAGONAL XL1 00

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MICROWAVE OVEN

ncn

VIDEO·TAPE RECORDER

**...,UST ARRIVED ****

~

Quasar~

*lt
* lt"'-

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•
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Mechanical tuner
Programmable autostart
Digital clock &amp; timer

s577

$1

if
if
ie

* ••

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6:1 Power zoom lens
Electronic viewfinder
Boom microphone
Playback monitor

..,.-

lt

•
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Separate defrost cycle
Sealed·in ceramic shelf

$595.! ·$236

if*****************
'

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WhirlponLAUNDRY PAIR
WASHER

OR YEA

.or

aaourofflcersare.
.·behavior
A person
whose judgment
are Impaired
by the useand
of .
liquor is a potential threat to you .
e\'enlltbeydonotinvotveyouinan

sa~e~ddltion
to the three standard
vows taken by followers of a Ro-

vo;'.;ey pledge their Uves Ia service,
~ care for the poor, the sick, the
· alienated ln society and for ihosc
whose "lite potential has In any
way nol been realized ."
Over the years, lhe fourth vw;
has meant everything from caring
for cholera victims 10 helping han·
dicapped children adapt to a public
school classroom.
Sister Patricia Gould who works
for the Hartford Archdiocese's t:lf.
nee of Radio and Television, exem·
plifles the community's mooern
adaptation to the needs of society .
Twenty years ago, she says, the
sisters had no choice b~t to become
teachers In parochial schools.
Today, although she cherishes
the past teaching experience, she
helps produce educational leievi·
slon shows and makes public scr·
vice announcements for radio.
"You' re going ·alter the un·
churched through the 30-second
spots , the Ql.second spots," she
says .
The nuns also have shed lhclr
habits over the years, no longer re·
quirlng the black veils or slllf col·
Iars that once Identified them. Now
the sisters wear only a silver ring
while other jewelry and a habit are
. optionaL

&lt;{:{

•

and dress over their century and a
half, particularly since the reform·
tng 1962-65 Second vatican Council.
but .their purpose remains the

man eathonc order - c hastity,
poverty and obedience - the Sis·
ters ot Mercy take a fourth, untque

o

1981.

moot Importantly, help us get them

adds, the direction is down.
Although there are 20,000 Mercy
sisters In the world, the number In
Connecticut has been nearly halved
In the past 50 years to about 440.
Nationally , the number of U.S.
nuns has shrunk by more than a
third In the last 15 years to about
122,1XXJ. A"'ut 9,000 of them are
Mercy sisters, their ranks similarly
reduced by the downward trend .

~j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~~=:!:~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~;;~;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;~ They'vecha~edtheirm&amp;hoos

American
. HUNTINGTON Legion Post 16 of Huntington will
host the annual Eagle Scout
Recognition Dinner Feb. 18 for those
Scouts in the .tri-state that have ear·
ned the Eagle Scout rank during

:~::~:f!Jho:'w~thth~':::ua~

temporazy workers are hired.
Growers say that lf the Fremont
plant closes, the nearest processing
plant would be In Saginaw, Mich.,
and that shlpplng beets that dis·
tance would cut heavily Into their
profits.

Mildred L. Stevens . to Phyllis
Given, .08acre, Pomeroy.,
James J . Proffitt, (Sheriff fori
William L. Hoover, Rebecca Hoover
to Peoples Banking and· Trust Com·
pany, Parcels , Orange .
Charles W. Hayes to Esther Bonn
Hayes, Charles W. Hayes II, Mary
Sue Hayes, Cert. of Trans.,
Pomeroy.
.
··
E'sther Bonn Hayes to Charles W.
Hayes II, Mary Sue Hayes, Lots 86
and 87, Pomeroy.
·
.Charles W. Hayes II, Claudia
Dawn Hayes, Mary Sue Hayes to
Esther Bonn Hayes, rLife estate 1,
Lots86 and 87 , Pomeroy .
Diana Lynn Pope, Johnny Pope to
Carroll Johnson, Mildred Johnson,
Pt. Lot No. 3, Middleport.
Charles D. Kennedy, Mar~aret J..
Kennedy to Kramer Exploration
Co., Right of Way, Rutland .
Charles D. Kennedy, Margaret :L.
Kennedy to Kramer Explorati&lt;m
, Co., 3.62 acres Meter Site
Agreement, Rutland.
· '
Pamela Hart to Barry Hart, Lot
No. 115, Behan's Add., Middleport.
Ernest J. Wright, ROSBiee Wright
to Earl J. Wri ght, Beaulah ·B.
Wright, Parcels, Salem.
Dwight Graham to Lucille Hiett,
Leafy Chasteen, 30 acres, Rutland.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Clyde J. I
Morlan, Ethel M. Morlan to Corn·
merclal Bankers and Investment
Co.,l.OO!acres, Orange.
Cora Michael dha Cora Hilton,
Wayne Samuel Michael to Cora
Michael , Wayne Samuel Michael,
Parcels, Lebanon.
Mary J. Clark to Nancy ;1.
Jaspers, .44 acre, Sutton.
Ethel May Evans to Phyllis Gwen,
Mildred L. Stevens, Cert. of Tran,...
·fer, Pomeroy:
Betty Lou Snow, William Snow to
Dorothy L. McGuffin , 'h int . N 1Ar Lot
318, Middleport.
Ralph E. Carl , Sadie Carl to J . D.
Story, Parcel, Bedford.

.

SAVE 20

-

Grazing fees lowered ·

*

soo~

0

ON NEW SPRING INTRODUCTIONS
AND REMAINING FALL AND WINTER
INVENTORY

SILVER B~)DGE PLAZA

any washer purchase

GET 10 lbs OF
DISHWASHING
nF.TERGENt FOR

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

wlthnydtollwuherpu~w•

*

*

GET A IOlb TURKEY FOR
with any mlcrowll\'e or

Jf.

-fl.

•,..,j~•+'ir'**...,...,***,.n'e*pu;; ... * * * * * * * * *

off the highway. Tbe drunk driver

PHONE

-8390

may~vemoreUum~underhisi.Ja.
. . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . ..;~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . ..-;.;::;;~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~.:~~~.~~~~~~;."~~"~~~lf~~~
.
..............................................~........................l
''·

. bell.

••

•

•

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department has lowered grazing fees charged for II·
vestock on "natlona I grasslands" ln
nine Great Plains states . .
R. Max Peterson, chief of the
Forest Service, said Monday the
1982 fee wtU be $3.34 per animal
month, down 22 cents from last
year. An a nimal month is the equl·
valent of grazing one cow, one
hoi'!J!' or five S!teeP for one month .

�Page-E -8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Feb. 14, 1982

PEEPSNJ Gallipolis' Diary:

They just don't make such clever ·cQusins ~ny' more

TilE BUILDING THAT has been home for Oscar'• has also served in
a number of other capacities Including use as a grocery tailor •hop, egg
store, mortuary, and even a newspaper office. This building was known
before the turn of the ce.,tury as the Drouillard block In honor of Joseph
Drouillard, one of Gallipolis' early settlers.

Building 113 years old
houses Oscar's place

By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLIS - They just don't
make s uch clever cousins any more.
Reference here is to A. Don Pope,
2919 Helen Ave., Orlando, Fla . 32804.
Pope and Peeps have the same grandfather, and that makes us cousins.
There the similarity ends. For that
guy is sharp!
Most recent elWIIlple is his choice
of a name for the Peepshouse dog, a
name .which caught on among the
readers of this column though
.stodgy ol' Peeps wanted something
else. Then there was this automobile
·which crippled Li'l Bo Peeps, and
there was the mercy-killing an hour
later. · ·.
This cousin is a scientist with the
soul of a n artist. Or is he a
philosopher with the brain of a scientist and ' the heart of an artist?
Pope's symbolic art shows the lethal
tire track and the flowers of youth
and the tears dripping from the
signature'
RIO GRANDE College and Community College Alumni News for
January 1982 (Volume 181 has two
smiling ' athletes on its cover :
Clarence ( Bevo ) Francis and Wayne
Wiseman.
Their Coach, Cla rk County Commissioner Newt Oliver, is in the
background of this cover photo. It
reads over on Page 7 that they took
the picture in the atrium of the new
Fine and Performing Art Center,
located where Community Hall once
stood. Community Hall once was a
~ymnasium where Bevo and Newt

By JAMES SANDS
Court. In 1955 we find Western Auto
Special Correspndent
here and in 1959 it was Tope's
GALLIPOLIS - The building that Flooring.
WE ARE NOT sure when Oscar's
today houses Oscar's at 57-59 Court
Street was built in
took over the 57 Court address but
H. N. Ford. The
believe that Oscar's has been at 59
original owners of
Court since the 1940s. Oscar's was
the building were ·
founded in the 1920s by Oscar
Bastiani who came to the U. S. from
Dr. A. L. Norton,
D. S. Ford and
Italy. Thanks to Jack Rose of
James Harper.
Gallipolis, who worked for Oscar, we
Between 1825
now know that Oscar's started in the
John · Betz building at 346 Second,
and 1868 the lot
where Oscar's is
SANDS
whereMurphy'slsnowlocated.
s ituat e d wa s
The businesses that preceded
wASffiNGTON (AP) - Rumors
covered by the home of Joseph Oscar's at 59 Court were in the late
and specula tion about the posslbUDrouillard.
19th century tailor shops : Mauck
uy·of the administration Imposing a
trade embargo on the Soviet Union
Norton, F ord and Harper were all and Brand berry; Mauck and Genrelated to Drouillard through try ; just plain Mauck; and just plain
are hurting farmers, says Agrlculmarriage and hence the name of this Gentry. In 18116 Miller Produce wa s · ture Secretary John R. Block.
building which Oscar's now uses was located at 59 Court and then it
the Drouillard block through its became a barber shop run by A. L.
"Everyone seems to want to talk
early historyFee for several years.
about embargoes," Block said . "I
Joe Drouillard, who lived to be
SOMETIME AROUND 1920 G. J.
don't want to talk about e mbargoes
almost 99 years old, was one of Wether holt moved his mortuary to
because they make the marke t nerGallipolis' most interesting residen- 59 C~urt and remained here into the
vous and they cause apprehension
and concern , and they hurt prices ."
ts. Joe was the son of Peter 1940s before he moved to First
Drouillard: a French fur trader who Avenu e where the M cCoyBlock made his comments Toesbecame famous as the man who Wether holt-Moore Funeral Home is
day In response toaquestiondurJng
saved Simon Kenton's life when the now located.
a telephone intelView with a group
The Drouillard block served as the
of farm broadcasters.
latter was held prisoner by the
British during the Amer ica n home of the Gallipolis Journal newsPresident Reagan suspended
Revolution. .
paper from 1871 to 1891 when one of
forthcoming grain talks and 1mJOE DROUILLARD was bom in the building's owners James Harper
posed other sanctions on the Soviet
Wellsville, Virginia (now West was affiliated With the paper. HarUnion for its role In the Imposition
Virginia ), in 1796 a nd came to Miller per had earlier beeQ owner of the
of martial law 1n Poland.
Moreover, Reagan has , threa(south of Crown City) in his early Journal from 1849 to 1863 and his
tened further action _ lnciudlng
years. He enlisted in the War of 1812 father James Harper was founde~
where he became a fife major and and editor of the Gallipolis Free
the posstbWty of total trade embargo _ It the situation In Poland
saw action at the battles of Wabash Press in 1925. During the Civil War
and Mississinva . At the age of 24, James Harper Jr. was chairman of
falls to Improve.
Joe married Sarah Bowen of Marie!- !he Gallipolis Military Committee
Ma ny far mers and their organlta and the newlyweds took up which served as a l(aison between
zatlons are fear1ul of another e mthe military and the civilian
residence in Gallipolis.
bargo, perhaps tighter than the
Drou1·11 ard was c1er k of th c · com- population of Gallipolis.
·partial lid ordered by the nI
d
rts
f
moo P cas an supreme cou
rom
A......,R HARPER'S death t"n 1891
.,.,.
P resident Carter on Jan. 4, 1980, as
183", t o 1858 · He was coun tY t reasurer the rJournal
moved to the site of the
froin 1827 to 1844 and postmaster
retaliation against the Soviet move
from 1861 to 1866. The post office was present Revco store where the JourInto Afghanistan.
th .
b .ld. (b ed 10
. 1895) nal had been printed in the 1830s.
Tha t embargo was lilted by Reaen 10 a ut 10g urn
The Journal finally died in 1918 on
that preceded the old Ohio Valley
gan last April after months of presthe corner where the Lafayette now
sure by Block and other .farm
Bank building on Second and State.
THE OLD HOME of J oe sits in a building which burned in
leaders.
.
Drouilla rd at 57 Court was moved in 1923 · Sadly the Journal was in its
"The president has made It quite
1868 to Fourth and Grape across IOOth year in 1918· Through those 100
clear that there won't be a graltt
.
.
years of the Weekly .Journal (the
from the roller mtll. Droutllard later Jo n 1
d . f
embargo (by Itself) because he
. th b .1d. th 1
ur a was a at 1y rom 1892 1o
loo k up rest.dence m
e m 10g a • I !lOB) the Ha r had h nd 10
. 1ls
would not want to single out.. . agrlbecame known as the Farmer's
.
rpe s
a a
Hotel on Third Avenue.
operatiOn for about35years.
culture," Block said.
Displaying edginess at the quesDrouillard was known especially
You can write lo James Sands al
tlon, Block added: "I just need to
for his hunting foray each year into Box 92; Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.
West Virginia . Evan into his 90s . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - r e _ m l__
nd_peo
__
P_le_-_N_o_._l,_th_l_s_ad_ml_n_-_,
Drouillard hardly ever missed the
hunting season in West Virginia
where he would pitc h a tent and stay
for several weeks. Sometimes Joe's
neighbors got a little uneasy on
Third Avenue because of a ll the hunting dogs he kept in preparation for
his trip.
TilE FIRST OCCUPANTS of the
building at 57-59 Court were : D. S.
Ford grQCery; Zerr and Steifel tailor
·shop; and the Gallipolis JournaL Dr.
Norton had his offices upstairs.
D. S. Ford operated a grocery
store at 57 Court to about 1900 when
he gave wtiy to G. B. Sawyers'
grocery. In 1918 Swanson Hardware
used 57 Court and in the !Dals a Mr.
Buonomici ran a fruit stand here. In
the 1930s Brown Electric used this
room and about 1950 Glassburn's
Poultry and Egg store was at 57

and other Redmen played basketball
- a typical " matchboK" gym.
WHAT'S AN ATRIUM? Your dictionary says that it's an entranc.,,
and, in the case of Rio Grande, it is
also an exit. This one is Impressive
with tall glass enclosing it so that it's
like an outdoor c~rt. Atrium. The
"a" rhymes with 11 hay," and the "i"
with " it" ; accentthe first syllable.
FIRST NEWS PAGE reveals that
Kim Adkins was the homecoming
queen. Another news item proclaims
that the Mid-Ohio Conference
coaches picked Rio Grande as the
Number One basketball team in the
1981~ season. The only other item
on that page tells us that Martha Six
got ·the Wall Street Journal award
for outstanding business sense, contribution to the college, and promise
of success.

Brazil Is the leading competitor
of the United States In the world
soybean market.
The facW(y, which Is operated by
the departments of Commerce and
Agriculture, said Tuesday that
"dry soils were moistened and crop
stress was temporarily relieved" In
production areas of Brazil.
However, the agencydidnotlndlcate whether yield prospects had
Improved.

Light hCrisp Shrimp Dinner
It's our al-lft recipe.~ uee big shrimp,
prepared with a IW!~ crispy layer of specially selected
inllredienta righl in the Shoney'e kitchen near you, and served
with Shoney'a own cocktaillllUCe, hnch fries (or baked pot.Jo

alter 5PM1 wann touted~ bo-', and all the hot
homemade aoup and .,..drn holt salad you can eo!.
Tty ~ now, at thia apecial lnlroduclorJI price.

w.. -~.$419~·-

w• FIArua• .u.s.a.A. cHalc••••• . •ooD ITAMN vmcaMI

&amp;mR 1ow ~-

muscles to try to bring them Into
line. This can cause headaches,
fatigue, and somettmea double
vision. It also affects your depth
perceptlon,your abUity to judge
the size of things seen at a dlslano

18\1-11 oz 101'

ce.
To be In good health, you should
be able to control all of your
muscle movements, Including the
muscles of your eyes. u you've
noticed any weakness In your
vision, It's time to bae an eye
examination.

*******

In t he Int eres t o l be tier vi sion

LLY-CDOKED

Irom the o ff ice ol

George W. Davis, O.D.
458 Second Ave., GaUipolis
Phone 446-2236

Ohio Valey Bank, where you can and

WHOLE

should expect mote, Introduces the

POUID

1 TO 89 DAYS MATURITY

DAILY INTEREST .RAn
NO
PENALTY
'3,000
DEPOSIT
A consumer llliJUIChase ~ lhat does
not requile you to get locked inlo a~
inii9Sbllent You choose thelllrm-from one to
89 days; you choose the amount-from as illle
as $3,000 to as much as $99,9991

vou earn high intaleSt ~dally. The rate of

w-

interest
be delemil8d liach lllUII•IQ and wl
be elfectiYe the same day. The 11118 w1 float dally.
Therus abao!u!e!y no penally lor~

wHhdrawal. '100 haw access IDyour money !V'td
its earned inlerest whell81181" you Chooee. And. of
course, you CM reirM!st at the 1J191iali 111 11118 at
the end of your IBrm.
Leave liD lhfi Olio "*'!Bank to prcMde a

neW irMistment OfliXJrU1IY thai does Ill this and
more. '100 erjoy the map lliMnage of a daily

floating in1818Sl rate Itrllecti IQ IDday's nw1cst
conditiOns. '100 haw a short-letm meslt•IBirt with
daily cash lquidty.

---THIS IS ITI-000 \laley Bank's Daily lllliestment Aocot.l1t as
an altematiYe to Money MalkB!Iunds is
par1ieula1y llllractM! fer the smal irM!slor who
CBI)I10I or does not )¥MI to lie his money up in a
fixed rate fer six months, two and one-haH years,
four ye81S or longer.
For morelnformltloll, IIIII or vlllt MY Ohio
Vlley link o1t1ce. ·

'FOR DAILY RAn
PHONE

446-1631
•

A~~~~

rooll . . . . . . . . by"" F.on!Oipolot

NlwW'OI Cai;lotatiorl lnMNcl. ~ • .,.. ~ ~by 1."-1

91- GMI'nrntnf ~kiN. llllfY IIIIIOrm OIII'IWII!!'ef'll

I

CAKE
MIX
Aaee*' fhlw

OPTOMETRIST-- - - -

EYE COORDINATION
When your eyes are working
the way they should, they're both
looking directly at an object with
the same intensity aDd precision.
But H they' re not, there may he a
problem in the muscles of one or
both eyes.
Each eye _has six muscles that
control movement and position.
They must be In good working
condition to give you proper eye
coordination. If there's a
weakness or defect in any of
these muscles, your eyes are not
getting the help they need lo see
well.
This can cause prdblems. Your
vision won't be as clear 811 II
should be. You'll probably be putting edra strain on tbe weak

I

I

PILLSBURY PLUS

DR. GEORGE W, DAVIS

'

•

PILLSBURY BAKE DFF comsr IUL~ A~AILAILI AT·OUR STORE.

--THE RESULT?--

· New

.It·MARKE-TS
inal

MIDDLEPORT,.GHID
WkN FlliefUb.lcip.Atcd SaviNg&amp; Go. HoMd 9tt HmuL

ant

Substantial rain
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government's Joint Agricultural
Weather FacW(y says " the year's
first substa ntial rain" has been reported In spybean areas of Brazil.

'

MARVELLA DERENGE, 500
Kathnor Lane, Apple Grove, w. Va.
25502, has retired after 10 ye.a rs as
communications operator for Rio
Grande College and Community
College. They pitched a Moulton
Hall luncheon in her honor, it reads
in the Alumni News.

lstratlon Is the administration that
took the (previous) e mbargo off,
and, No. 2, this Is the administration thaI has not Imposed an e mbargo on grains. I think It's
Important for people to keep that In
mind."
However, Block said Reagan still
needs to keep some prerogatives
"to do whatever he felt was absolu tely necessary" regarding the
current situation, including "a total
economic sanction against the Soviet Union or anyone else, should It
be necessary ."
. Block sa id there are "a lot of reporters that seem to write about
embargoes a nd other people that
seem to feel that they would be a
most appropriate action to take"
agatn•t ihe Soviets.

.

LOCUST and·PIARL ·STREET

AMONG THE numerous items on
Page 2 was one which announced the
establishing of a Wayne Crow Jr.
memorial fund - he was in the class
of 19'18, a nd donors should make
checks payable' to it and mailed to
· •&gt;,e development office Rio Grande
College 45674.

Embargo rumors
hurting farmers

Look wbath cookin'at

. year. lt'l( a ·smp.;which saw action
J . C. AYERS, Box 74, Wildwood, both in -wbrld War ll and the Korean
Ga . 3U157, is president of the U.s. s. conflict Write to Ayers if you want
Pittsburgh Ass9Ciatlon. The Pitts- _10 go \0 the reUI!ion, and please tell
burgh's fonner officers and crew Peepa ·abOUt It, too. Where will the
will have a reunion Sept. 8-11, this reunion be? Seattle, Wash.

..

SUPPLEMIIT TG THI. lUNDAY
TINIIIIITIIIl
'· .

vou roo couLD • AWIIIIR. · .
I

·aEST

LOUR
s
LilA&amp;.

\

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