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I"
Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

"-roy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs ·County happenings•••
Festival committee
discusses activities
'
The festival planning committee
of the Middleport Chamber or Com·
merce discussed theme Ideas and
' activities when It met Thursday
night at the LaSalle Hotel.
The group Is making plans for the
first annual festival and this one
wW be staged In conjunction with
Gen. James Hartinger Day which
wW be observed probably on Memorlay Day weekend.
Yvonne Scally, chairman of the
chamber's festival committee, wlll
meet with Bill Chllds, c hairman of
Hartinger Day, tocoordlnateactlvlttes of both observances. She will
report back to c o mmittee
·members next week.
Attending the meeting were Ve rnon Weber, Les Facemyer, Bob
GUmore, Dick Owen, Ruth Gosney,
Paul Dalley and Mrs. Scally.

. Stolen car found
A 1975 car owned by Deann
Denny, Salem St. , Rutland, reported stolen Saturday morning
has been recovered In Adams
County, Meigs Sherllf James J.
· Proffitt reported today.
: Investigation Into the theft is
'
contlnl'lng.
The sherllf also reported on Tuesday evening a vehicle driven by
Chester R. Elliott, Point Pleasant,
W. va., was traveling south on
Route 33 near Pomeroy when It
. struck and k!Ued a deer which had
run Into the path of the car. There
was moderate damage to the front
of the vehicle and the driver was
uninjured .

To end marriages
Two divorce actions, both chargIng gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty have been filed in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
VIolet R. Arnold, Pomeroy, Is
asking a divorce from WWJam E .
Arnold, Laurel Cliff, and asks that
her malden name of Brown he
restored.

Marjorie E . Stanley, Albany,
asked divorce from Paul E . Stan·
ley, Route 2, Athens.
A divorce was granted Bobble
Branham from Marian M. Branham on grounds of gross neglect of
duty and the defendant was given
custody of one minor chlld.

Drop court actions
Dismissed In the court were suits
Including Herbert L. Grounds
against the Prior OU Well DriUlng
Co., eta!; Nancy J . Adams against
the United Investors Llte Insurance
Co., et al, and Nancy J . Adams
against the John Hancock. Mutual
Llte Insurance Co., et aL

Charles E . Siders, born Aug. Tl,
1913, In Mason County, W.Va., died
at llolzer Medical Center Thursday
at 9:30a.m.
lle was one of five chUdren born
to the late WllllamSlders and Lydia
Hlveley Siders and resided at
Route 1, Cheshire.
A coal miner, he owned his own
coal mine but retired recently because of JU health.
lle Is survived by three sisters,
Mrs. Ploma Nelson, Cheshire, Mrs.
Vesta Hufford, Cheshire, and Mrs .
Goldie Eastman, Pomeroy; onene-

James L. Davis to Monongahela
Power Co., Right of Way, Olive.
Jarhes L. Davis, Diann Davis to
Monongahela · Power Company,
Right of Way, Olive.
Thelma E. Adams to Monongahela
Power Company, Right of Way,
Olive.
Harvey Bartirnus, Carol Bartimus
to Monongahela Power Company,
Right of Way, Olive.
Webster Reed, Flossie B. Reed to
Monongahela Power Company,
Right of Way, Olive.
Paul A. Dulf, Opal Duff to Herald
Oil and Gas Company, Right of Way,

and you realize there's 100 mUllon
eyes on the other end. You say to
yourself, 'Wow, I hope I get to play
long.' "
Lapham recounted some or the
triumphs and mistakes of the Ben·
gals' loss to the San Francisco
49ers, but felt the 49ers knew they
had a much Improved team on
their hands.
For the future, Lapham said the
Bengals will try to keep the division
title and shoot tor that goal of win·
nJng the Super Bowl.
"We'll win the division, get Into
the playoffs, and thenlt'sa week-toweek proposition," he said.
Asked afterward of the posslbil·
lty of a football players' strike, Lapham said he doubted It would
happen because he feels there's no
room tor a union In professional
sports.
"There's not as much unUateral
support !or Ed Garvey as there was
for Marvin MUter," he explained.
"It (a union) would help me and
probably triple my salary, but I
think there will be a compromise.
You won't see the picket lines you
saw In 1974.''

First round action underway
First round 4th and 5th grade action In the Meigs Junior High bas·
ketball tournament got unde!Way
Thursday night.
Bradbury Hood defeated HarrlIOilvllle and three overtime sessions, 37-34.
High scorers for
Bradbury were Sean Gibbs with 13,
Chris Becker with 7 and Todd Hood
with 5. Harrisonville high scorers
were K. Stanley with 12, J. Slleets
with nine and W. Howard with 8.
In the second game, Racine defeated Pomeroy Wright, 36-19 with
top scorers tor Racine being Mark
Porter with 20 and Danny Gheen

with 10. Pomeroy Wright top scorers were J . Wright with 9; Terry
Fields and Dan Grogan with 4 each.
In the final g~me of the evening,
Eastern II won over Salisbury 2621. For Eastern J. Drenner dropped
In 11 and M. Martin, 10. For Salls·
bury Mike WUI got 8 and Aaron
Whaley, 5.
The next tournament action wW
take place Monday when Syracuse
goes against Bradbury Baker at
5: 30; Letart against Pomeroy Powell at 7 and Eastern Ill against
Rutland at 8: 30.

ELBERFLEDS ·
SALE I
MEN'S·
WRANGLER *19.95

'

A living symbol of the Democratic
Pa1ty - Jonathan, the donkey was a highli~ht of a party sta~ed by
Meigs County Democ•·ats at the
multi-purpose building in Pomeroy
last Saturday to conunemorate the
IOOth birthday annive•·~ a•'Y of
F•·anklin D. Roosevelt
Jonathan was tied at the f1·ont or
the building fOI ' the event to give
everyone. entering the " Democratic
spil'it. ••

Columbia.
Alma Jean Pooler to . William
Pooler, Jr., court order, Chester.
WiUiaJ!I Pooler, Jr., Sharon Pooler
to Robert Ray Harris, Parcels,
Chester.
Mary A. Norma aka Mary A.
Velerans Memorial
Smallwood to Timothy R. Priddy,
I
Linda F . Priddy,l.36 A., Rutland.
Admitted--Donald Covert, PomeThomas Earl Manuel to Robert J .
roy; Michael Hubbard, Syracuse;
Spaun, Nola J . Spaun,l A., Letart.
Thomas Justice, Middleport.
Mickey Maynard,
Annetta
Discharged--Bill Kennedy, Ruth
Maynard to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Mulford, VIrginia Ward, Betty Car·
Right of Way, Salem.
penter, WUllam Frecker.
Anthony D. Feller, Thomas Felter
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Way, Scipio.
DISCHARGES MARCH 4
Janice M.. Deem to Norman L.
Deem, Lot, Syracuse.
David Albert, Mrs. Michael ArroJanice M. Deem to Norman L.
wood and son, Lena Blackburn,
Deem, Lot., Syracuse.
Dean Casto, Anthony Childers,
William S. Kelmer, Jr., Laura
Frances Cobern, Gertrude De
Frederiksen( his wife), tp Columbus
Vault, Ghella Deal, Rita. Fallon,
and Southern Ohio Electric, Right of
Jeremy GIWiand, ~!mas Goff,
Wrr;, carthage.
Hugh Graham Jr., James Gregory,
Michael R. Harris, Lori L. Harris
James Harrts, Amy Hatfield, Gerto Columbus and Southern Ohio
aldine Holmes, Jason Hysell, GeorElectric Co., Right of Way, Olive.
gina McDermitt, Evelyn Penix,
Mildred 0. Harris to Columbus
Sally Pooler, Martha Post, Mrs.
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.,' ·
WWJam Rawson arid daughter,
Right of Way, Olive.
Mrs. Richard Richmond and son,
Arthur E. Hood, Donna J. Hood to
Terry Roberls, Kathy Sakach,
Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Jerry Shatter, Albert Shltflet, MarWay, Saltsbury.
jorie Stewart, Elizabeth Well, Mrs.
Thomas Summefield, Carolyn M.
Kenneth Wheaton and daughter,
Swrunerfield to Herald Oil and Gas
Sherry WUson.
Company, Right of Way, Rutland.
Donald F . Johnson, Shirley John·
BIRTHS
son to James E. Diddle, Right or
Way, Lebanon.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Boso, son,
Clyde Johnson, Mary L. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Donald CarRacine;
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
ter,
son,
Galttpolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Lebanon.
Cleon Pratt, son, Pomeroy; Mr.
William E. Kennedy, Earlene ~ ­
and Mrs. Raymond Skeens, son,
Kenn~dy to Richard Manzy,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. James StePatric•a Manzy .
wart, daughter, Coalton.
William Clifford Frazier
deceased, to Helen A. Frazier, Cert:
of Trans., Salisbury.
Joseph Stewart, deceased, 1 to
Mal'Ch 10, a represeutative £rom
Mary Stewart, Cert. of Trans., Middleport.
1 ·
Congressman
Clarence
E. Miller's
office will conduct
an Open
Door
Betty J. Carlisle, Ann W. Dexter,
session from 10 a.m .•J2 noon in the
John Dexter to Doyle Knapp, .75 A.,
Court House in Pomeroy.
Rutland.
If anyone has any questions conCharles L. Morrison, Delores K.
cerning the · federal government,
Morrison to James E . Diddle, Right
please stop by to discuss them with
of Way, Lebanon.
the representative.

Hospital news

The pa•'ly was well attended and
the Hart Brothers, a blue g1·ass
band. enteJ'tained with toJ&gt;-tapping
tunes for some two hours.
Chail'lnan Bud Wilson introduced
several speake1·s fOI' the evening, the
first being William A. LaVelle.
Athens attorney and fonner State
Democ•·atic Chairman.
Charles B1·own spoke on behalf of
his b1·other, Sherrod Brown, candida te for sec•·etal)' of state. B•·own,
of Mansfield, is currently se1-ving in
the house of l'epresentatives.

Tom Hess, fonnerly of Athens,
spoke for William J . Brown, can·
dldate for Governor of Ohio, and E.
A. Wingett, fanner long-time local
chairman, spoke £or Richard F.
Celeste forGovernoJ' .
Roher! H. Whealey , Athens, spoke
on behalf of Charles M. Overby,
Athens, can~idate fo•· Cong•·ess rrom
this district.
Byron Al'baugh, Albany, chair·
man of the political action committee, represented the United Mine
WOI'kCI'S,

Vol . 16 No. 4
Copyrighted 1982

Two persons were slightly Injured In a two-car crash-on U.S. 35
at the Intersection with Mount Zion
Road Thursday night.
The Galtla ·Meigs Post of the
state highway patrol said Charles
W. Pyles, 58, and VIrginia H. Pyles,
55, both of Gallipolis Ferry, were
not treated for their Injuries.
The patrol said the Pyles were
eastbound on 35 at 8:44p.m. when a
vehicle driven by Michael L. Rei·
del, 18, Bidwell, pulled Into their
path from Mount Zion and collided
with Pyles' vehicle.

The accident caused moderate
damage to both cars and Reidel
was cited for !allure to yield.
The patrol Investigated another
Injury accident In Meigs County
Thursday morning.
According to the report, Richard
W. Batley, 26, Middleport, was
southbound on U.S. 33 at 6:25a.m.
when his vehicle went oft the right
side of the road and Into a ditch. It
struck a culvert and overturned.
Bailey wasn't treated for his injuries and his vehicle was severely
damaged. He was cited for DWl.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
The Vill.1ge of Middleport is accepting apphcatJons tor the pre-qualification of contrac·
tors in their housing rehabilitation program,
funded by the Department of Housing an~
Urban Development. Contractors interested
in becoming a contractor in this program are
ilsked to contact the Middleport Office of
Community · Development, 237 Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760 or phone 992·6782 fo;
further information. Contractors who have
•llreildy been qualified in the program need
not re·ilpply as they will . still be eligible to
1J1d on homes being rehabbed . Applications
will be accepted on a continual basis i1S thh
is ;1 continuing program of the Village .
F rl'd Hoffman, Mayul'
Villclg(' of Middleport

Today's

T-S
'

Belushi death
'
Page D-1
Market Analysis

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lobbying priority In Washington because the facUlty Is a main link In
Ohio River traffic. NCA Is also
seeking the rehabilitation or replacement of the locks and dam at
Winfield, W.Va. , and Locks 7 and 8
on the Monongahela River.
Presently, the approJ)rla tlons
committee Is considering the Galll·
polls project as part cit a larger Inland waterways bill. At this stage,
money Is needed to start advanced
engineering tor the new canal, the
prellml.nary step toward
construction.
The delegation Included Rep.
Clarence Miller, R·Ohlo, whose dis·
trict Includes Gallla and Meigs
counties, ar.• Rep. Nick Joe Rahall,
D-W.Va., representing Cabell and
(Continued on A-4)

INSPECTS AGING FACILA congreMional deleptlon and representatives ol
sevetilJ buslne88, labor illld river
CODCei'IIS were at the G.Wpoh
Looks and Dam Friday tor a
lact·ftndlng tour. A U1l8 mlllloD
pi"'ppOIaa to coaMruct a new twoJock hYJ111811 canalts under consideration by the House
Approprlatlou CommiUee. Col.
James Hltpllan, (standing at
right), local u.s. Army eo.,. of
Engineers commander, ex·
plains the situation to the con·
peMD~en. · 'l1le congreumen
then looked at one ol the lockll
firsthand (below). (TimesSentinel photos by Larry
Ewing).

rrv -

830-

be.39

Low 8!07.38
Closed 807.38

.

...~:II•
.•
. ~. !.~~·'-·~·

1000950900-

Business '
E-section .

Redistricting continues as hot
topic for Ohio's legislators

••

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Asooclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A
former member of the Ohio House
once complained that hls newly red·
rawn election district looked like
"an lndlan falling out of a tree."
Others have used terms such as
horse collars and doughnuts to describe districts when they are reshaped every 10 years after each
U.S. _c ensus to accomodate population shltts.
That's the kind of dialogue one
hears these days In the Ohio General Assembly, which ,Is trying to
divide Ohio Into 21 new congressional districts to replace 23 exist·
lng ones.
The Democrat-controlled House
and the GOP-dominated Senate

have passed dl!ferent versions or a
hold together blg-clty suburbs
new plan, and a joint conference
where their voters prevail, and at
the same time Individually splinter
committee meets again Tuesday to
try to resolve differences.
ott sections of blue-collar and other
Both political parties are trying
downtown Democratic areas Into
to protect the proven political turtof
those suburbs.
their Incumbents, but they have to
Democrats, In those same metrocomply with legal guidelines which
politan areas which are most
Vulnerable to gerrymandering, try
make their task extremely
difficult.
· to splinter oft the GOP suburbs.
Both parties have technical intor- ,
Back In 1964, the U.S. Supreme
Court handed down the so-called
matlon toldentl!ythe political character or neighborhoods, so that
"one man, one vote" decision, hold·
lng that election districts must be
redistricting becomes a science.
as . nearly equal In population as
possible.
In the current case, the partisan
Since then, RepubUcans and Demaneuvering has been lessened to
mocrats alike have tried to gerry- a degree because or a general un·
derstandlng that since Ohio Is losmander, or manipulate, ·t he shapes
of districts to their own advantage.
Ing two se,a ts In Con~s . each
For Instance, Republicans try to
party will surrender one seat.

Administration may abandon
tax-cut indexing, says Regan

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Dow Jones

"STATE CHAMPIONS"
1979, 1980. 1981

AGES: 6tol6Years
CLASSES HELD IN
FIVE LOCATIONS:
Pomeroy, Coolville, Belpre,
Parkersburg and Ripley, W.
Va.

tmes

30 Industrials

:·················
RANGERETTES
.
Is now accepting new members- No previous training
is required.

+

lng could be acquired through the
GaUla COunty Bosrd of Commissioners for the e mploymen t of tour
full-tim e jaUers.
Judge Roderic k's requeslfor specltlcs of the sherllf's plans for the
future use of the facility came as a
response to that stated position.
"In our efforts to comply with the
jaU standards act of having enough
staff to operate the jaU and after
repeated efforts over the past three

when state mandated physical facility requirements were met.
The sheriff said late Friday afternoon the jail would probably be
ready to house prisoners wlthll) a
month.
Contractors are\ currently nearIng completion of a\$62,500 security
remodeling project designed to
bring the jail up to minimum state
standards. Despite that work, the
sherllf had previously said he
would not
the
untll fund·

Congressional delegation tours locks
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-Seallnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
Another Interest group seeking the
rehab1lltatlon of the Gall1polls
LoCks and Dam here treated several congressmen, federal, state
and Industrial oHtclals to a tour or
the aging facUlty Friday.
Although members of the
Energy and Water subcommittee
of the House Appropriations Committee had scheduled a !act-finding
trip to the dam, an official for the
National Coal Association said the
vtslt hopefully drove home the need .
to fund a new, two-lock bypass
canal.
Joseph E. Lerna, NCA vice president, said the GaUlpolls rehabiUta·
tlon and construction plan Is l\5 first

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BATON CORP

JaU woulil begin housing prisoners.
At that time, Judge Roderick
said , H be did not receive assurances that the Gama l$cUlt:y- would
soon reopen, he would move to take
the flnanci!ll operation of the jaU
out of the hands of the sheriff's department by appointing a receiver
to administer It on behal1 of. the
·
court.
In a letter, dated Friday, Sberttt
Monlgomery informed the judge of
his "Intention" to
the

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point P.Ieasant

Three hurt in traffic mishaps

Open door session

STRAIGHT LEG OR BOOT CUT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

unba

With Jonathan, from the lett, are Tom Hess, Athens;
Chester. Wells, fonner Meigs Commissioner; Chair·
man Bud Wilson and Sherltf James J. Proffitt.

Donkey adds spirit to celebration.

church one hour prtor to services.
Calling hours at MU!er's Home
for Funerals wUI be from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m . Saturday.

1588

SPECIAL SALE
PRICES THIS
WEEKEND ON WRANGLER MEN'S
JEANS- Sizes 27 to 42 Waist in 30 to
36 inch Lengt_h s. Pre-washed. No
Fault 14 oz. Blue Denim. won't
Shrink or Stretch.

'
By LARRY
EWING
Tlmes&amp;nllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
County jaU wW reopen as soon as
the facillty " ... meets the state requtre~nts tor health and environment," Sh~ rltt James M .
Montgomery told Common· Pleas
Judge Richard C. Roderick Friday.
That announcement came In response to a Mareh 1 demand by the
judge that he be lnformed within
one week " ... how and when" the

HIGHLIGHTS SFSSION - Jonathan, a llve
dolikey, was a highlight of a Democrat party held
Saturday at the m11lti-purpose building in Pomeroy.

The body wW lie in state at the

BASIC DENIM JEANS
5

Sheriff says patrols, budget will suffer

'

phew and one great nephew:
Siders was preceeded In death by
~ sister, Lucille Siders, In 1965.
He attended Poplar Ridge
Church.
Funerar services wW be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at SUver Memorial
Church, Kanauga, with Pastors Andrew Parsons and George Ketley
officiating. Burial wUI follow In
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Chesh!)'e.

Meigs property transfers

Fund raising (Conlinuedfrompagel)
Bowl, he felt they had come a long
way - and there's always next
year.
Lapham credited Gregg's aggresslve training and coaching for
helping the Bengals achieve severa! goals last season. When the
team found It has surprisingly surpassed Its origlnal8-8 projection for
the season, they went on to win five
of their toughest games, leading
them Into the playoffs and history's
·coldest league game - the Jan. 10
encounter with San Diego at Riverfront stadium In Cincinnati, when
the wind chill dropped temperatures to 59 degrees below zero.
"Fan support was unhellevable,"
Lapham said. "It was fun to play at
Rivertront. As cold as It was, we
could hear the fans loud and well."
The Tl-7 victory over San Diego
sent the Bengals to Detroit tor Super Bowl XVI, and the Idea of havlng made It to the top put Lapham
and his teammates on an "unbellevable high.
"You look up at the stands and
there's all those people," he said.
"You run down a llttletunnelofpeopie, with a television lensattheend,

Four calls were answered by local emergency units Thursday, the
Meigs County Emergllncy Medical
Service reports.
Middleport at 6:09p.m. took Thomas Justice, S. Second Ave., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland, at 10:34 a.m. took Robert
Reeves from Meigs Mine 1, to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland, at
6: 21 p.m. took LoweU Carte from
Meigs Mine 2 to Veterans Mernortmal and Tuppers· Plains at 8: m
p.m. took SaUy Pooler from her
home to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Area deaths-.
Charles E. Siders

Gallia jail will reopen

Emergency runs

MEXICO

By OWEN tJlJ..MANN
"-:Jaaed Press Writer

Fatal hotell
fire, Page D.JJ
Area deathS . ...... ... A.f
Aloag tbe River .... B-1-8
Business ' .•.....•.• ~~1

ICJaalifled ........ , ;

Edl&amp;orial .. . .......

7

~-w

Farm . . . . • . . . . . • . . E-Z
~·

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

WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Reagan admlnlatratlon, under congressional pressure to reduce tu·
ture budgetdeftclts,'m libtcons!der
repeal' of a newly enacted law that
automatlcalty lowers Income tax
rates as Inflation rises, Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Regan said
today.
"Indexing we'd discuss (with
CoJii!'ell),'' Regan said ct. a provl·
siOn In lAit year's tax-cut law that
requlrel iax rates to be "llldexed"
permanently to Inflation after 1911&amp;.
The ln!ellt oflndexJn&amp;IB to reduce
tax rates so that people are not pe-

naJlzed by being plished Into higher us," he said. "But we're awfully
tax brackets becaw;e of Inflation- afraid that when you get Into tax
swelled Income gains that leave Increases, Including dropping In·
their buying power unchanged .
dexlng, It would only be an excuse
In an Interview taped tor broad- to say, 'Well, we don't have to cut
cast on Cable News Network's anymore; we've got enough re"Newsmaker - Saturday," Regan venue to cover our added
said the administration might dis- spending.'''
cuss repeal dl the Indexing provl·
ston with Coneress only lt It were · Thus tar, the president himself
assured lawmaken would not use has rejected firmly any suggestions that he accept higher taxes to
the added revenues to Increase fed.
e@l spendlne.
reduce the detlciL The trea.lury seThe objective would have to be to cretary's comments, whUe not
reduce the deaclt, he said.
commlttlnc the admlniBtratlon to
"11 that II the IJII1'II(W and If 1tJe any chanae, sugested the pres!- .
Congress would actually stick with dent might be llexlble on the tax
.
that. that mllbt be conaJdered by luue.

News :briefs.~.
Candidates name running mates
COLUMBUS - Two Ohio guberneytorlal candidates have named
their lieutenant governor running mates for the state's June 8 prim ·
ary election.
Republican Seth Taft chose James A. Duerk, 51, Westervl)le, the
director of the Ohio Depa rtment of Economic and Community De·
velopment since January 1975. ,
Democrat Richard Celeste chose state Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker,
67, Bourneville.
·

Byrd seeks limit on use of force
WASHINGTON - Senate Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd said
Saturday he wUI lntroducl! legislation next week to prevent the
Reagan administration from sending U. S. troops to El Salv.ador
without congressional approval.
Byrd, D-W . Va ., said he is concerned about what he described as a
creeping escalation of rhetoric that could lead to gradual Involvement of U.S. troops In the Central American country .
"It is myvtew that lt Americans are to be asked to shed their blood
In the jungles of El Salvador, all Amertcans should first have an
opportunity to debate and carefully evaluate that action," he said .
Byrd said he would Introduce his proposal Monday as an amend·ment to the War Power Act, which allows American forces to be
committed tor up to' 60 days without congressional approval.
lor

Sunda'f

WEATHER FORECAST- The NaU~KWI Weather Service lorecubl
reiD alld 1aow S.llday iDa wide ballll from Florida lo Maine. Rain Is also ·
foreaut lor .. 111 d. Qrecon, Arlz.aa· and Ca!Hornla. FlurrtetJ are a lao
Ia 1 blld 1MB Moallu

�Mar. 7, 1982

Commentary and perspective
'

A Division of

~lb

131m~

qjv
825 Third Ave., Galllpollll, Ohio
~ 614) 44&amp;-2342

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

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of Tht! AIIIIUClakd Prl!llll; lnlaDd Dally Prell¥ A.11110d11t60D 110d tht• Am~rkllll

Nn¥11JM1Pl'r Publl•lltrtl Alllotblllon .
LETTERS OF OPINION are wekunwd. They 1hoold bt! ktb1 than JOO wunb long . All
ldkni Itt 11ub}ect to edlll11g aDd mulll be ldg!M!CI wltb n~me, addrelill and kll!phuM
number. No utwlgn.:d lt'tkN will M ptlbli•htd. Letlcn sh!MIId be In good t.a1de, llddfetiHing
I¥11U~, aut ptrtollllltltJ.

'B ad marks for
.?~ofessor Reagan
Those Of us who were students in Pr.ofessor Reagan's economics class
-during the 1970s recall that one of his favorite theories involved the pur·
ported link between federal deficits and inflation·_
"~nflalion has one cause and one cause only: government spending more
than government-takes in. There is only one answer: a balanced budget," he
!!J!plained in March 1976.
·.• "The one basic cause Of inflation is government spendi~g more than it
"kes in," he reiterated in August 1976.
.
_
·, "There is no question that inflation is caused by government deficit
spending," he said again in September 1978.
.• .
.
AB recently as November 1981, the prof~ssor was still promoting the
same formulation : "You can like inflation ... by decreasing the cost of gover. pinent to the place that we have balanced budgets."
· • The professor is still teaching economics, but noe' he's conducting
. cjasses at the White House - and the new location has somehow inspired
him to turn that theory on its head.
..
.• · Examine the correlation - or lack thereof - between deficits in the
federal budget (in bilions of dollars) and year-to-year percentage increases
in the Conswner Price Index :
Year
Deficit
CPI
19'17
44.9
6.5
-1978
48.8
7. 7
1979
27.1
11.3
1980
59.6
13.5
1981
57.9
10.3
1982
98.6
7.3
1983
91.5
6.0
1984
82.9
4.5
19115
71.9
4.8
The chart clearly shows that the la1·gest single year-to-year increase in
the inflation rate was recorded in 1979 - but that's also the only year in
which there was a substantial decline in the federal·budget.
Undaunted by that poor performance, Professor Reagan now is offe1ing
a set of projeCtions for 1982 through 1985 that require his students to -forget
everything he taught them in earlier years.
· ·
As the budget deficit soars to unprecedented heights- in the $8(1 billion
to $100 billion range - inflation will dramatically plummet to a level less
than half of last year's rate, he says.
"J:here's '!lore. Back in October 1980, the professor told his students that
"a 10 percent reduction in personal income tax every year for the next three
years ... will balance the budget by 1983 and probably sooner."
The tax reduction program is in place, but even he now admits that no
such result will occur. In fact, the projected deficit figures are deceptively
low.
·
They don't include, for example, spending attributable to "off' budget"
programs, most of which are funded by the Federal Financing Bank.
If those expenditures are counted (as they should be ) the federal deficit
will total $118.3 billion in 1982,$107.2 billion in 1983 and $97.2 billion in 1984.
Professor Reagan's students may recall, however, tjlat back in mid·
December the graduate students who work with him (also known as senior
White House aides) were enthusiastically p1·omoting a new round of excise
tax increases.
To illustrate the despe•·ate need fOI' additional revenues, they ;,leal&lt;ed" a
set of budget projections showing deficits of $109 bill in 1982 $152 billion in
1983 and $162 billion in 1984 - and that doesn't include "off-budget" deficits.
Only one year ago, Professor Reagan was predicting a 7.2 percent unem·
_ployment rate fOI'I982 - but now he says it probably will be closer to 8.9 pel'·
cent.
The gross national prOduct, the professor proclaimed one year ago,
would grow by a quite healthy 4.2 percent in 1982. Now, however, he has
abruptly revised that figure to a very unhealthy 0.2 percent.
Considering Professor Reagan's dismal record or theorizing and
forecasting , is It any wonder that so many students are now searching for a
way to drop out of his economics course?

Berry's World

"You think YOU'VE got It tough ~ my whole
1
day Is structured around nonsense. "

•

Today In history
Today Is Sunday, March 7, the 66th day of 1982. There are 299 days left In
the year.
TOday's highlight In history:
.
On March 7, 1926, the first successful trans-Atlantic ra&lt;\lo-telephone
conversation took place between New York and London.
On this date:
· In 1573, the Peace of Constantinople ended the war between Turkey and
Venice.
·
· In 1968, the United States and Soviet Union pledged to protect all weaker
nations from nuclear blackman and aggression.
In 1974, East and West Gennany agreed to establlsh permanent diplomatic missions In each others' capitals.
Ten years ago: Malne Sen. Edmund Muskle won the New Hampshire
Democratic presidential primary, with South Dakota Sen. George McGov·
ern runnlog a strong second. '
· •
Five years ago: At a conference of A1rlcan and Arab leaders Jo Cairo,
Saudi Arabia said It would give $1 btlllon Jo aid to Black Africa.
'

I

~

Page-A·:
Mar. 7,1982

The Rehnquist Court?

}ames }. Kilpatrick

WASIHNGTON - In the current so often. The two conaervatives
issue of The New Republic, two disagreed in only II of the 120 cases
writers bewail the role on the in which they both took part. But
Supreme Court of Justice William that was no more astonishing than
Rehnquist. He emerges from their the unity of the two liberal justices,
lamentation as a judicial activist Brennan and Marshall. They
who distorts precedents and disagreedonlyl0timesoutofl23.
manipulates records, the better to
The gravaman of the magazine's
gain his invidious ends. The writers attack, on Rehnquist is that the
find his influetlce altogether evil. I justice is successfully pressing his
find his influence altogether splen- ideas of "state autonomy" on his
did.
colleagues. The two critics are
The two critics are Owen Fiss, a themselves apostles of national
professor of law at Yale, and power. They declare it "a fad" that
Charles Krauthammer, a senior toclay the states, and not the federal \
editor of the magazine. Their article government, po$e the greatest
provokes a few observations about danger to liberty. But surely that is a
Justice Rehnqulst and about the curiout "fad." If Memphis closes a
larger issue of federalism also.
- city street, or Mobile changes its
Can today's court-fairly he called local government, or San Diego
"The Rehnquist Court?" I wish it regulates billboards, the purported
were so, but it takes a vivid dangers are at least confined. VY:Jien
imagination to accord such a president orders draft
dominance to Rehnquist. This is registration, or Congress sanctions
nobody's court, but that is a con- racial discrimination, it's a different
dition that has obtained more often
than not. A long time ago we had a
Marshall Court, and largely.because
of one fatal opinion we had a Taney
Court, and in our own time we had
the Warren Court. Today's court
lacks definable direction. It just drif·
ts along.
Last term the court handed down
opinions in 126 argued cases.
Rehnquist was pa1· for the eourse:
He wrote 14 of them. Only three of
the 13 were even modest landmarks,
and only one of the. three had
anything to do with state and federal
rela lions. This is hardly the stamp of
some born-again Calhoun. The two
critics name Rehnquist " the
leader, " but it seems a doubtful appellation. Rehnquist participated in
84 cases last term in which the court
divided; he was on the losing side in
23 of them, and the 23 included some
major cases involving f, ee ex·
pression, labor law and sexual
discrimination.
The New Republic finds it
"astonishing" that Rehnquist and
Chief Justice Burger voted together

Position that Congress may not
nullify a state's power. to fix the
wage and hours of its own employees. In the Pennhurst ~; he
pulled together a six-man majority
in support ol the idea that Congress
may not impose fiscally ruinous
obligations upon the stalioos without
their consent. In a dozen criminal
cases, he has steadfastly promoted
the old concept that state courts
should be accorded more respect
than the Warren Court tended to
give them.
What especially annoys these
critics is that Rehnquist looks back
to I7ffl. He actually tries - damn the
fellow! - to "reconstruct the intent
of the drafters of the Constitution.'.'
Some of us had supposed that such
an effort was the veritable pole star
Of constitutional construction. If this
is what Rehnqulsl is steering by,
stee1·on!

matter.
To The New Republic, every
vestige of state sovereignty went
down the drain at Appomattox. The
resulting Reconstruction Amendments, they contend, "denied that
the states have a •separate' and 'independent' e.x lstence" and
"repudiated the doctrine of dual
sovereignty." The contention is
pallsing strange. In its very opening
sentence, the 14th Amendment affirms that all persons born or
naturalized in the U. S. are citizens
both of the United States "and of the
state wherein they reside." If that is
a repudiation of dual sovereignty,
the farmers of the amendment chose
peculiar words to express their intention.
In my own view, and in the view of
mostconservatives, Rehnquist is on
the right track. In what is known as
the Usery case, he mobilized a fiveman majority in support of the

.

WASHINGTON - There was a

One source, who went to southern ternalional conclaves Of terrorist
l.ebanon to observe the terrorists groups in .recent years. The
vention" of international terrorists firsthand, said the "conventioneers" delegates discuss revolutionary
in southern Lebanon recenUy.
included members of the Red goals and the means to achieve
In some ways, the gathering was Brigades from Italy, the Baader- them; they also, preswna bly, make
reminiscent of the legendary ren·· Meinhof Gang from West Germany, personal contacts against the time
dezvous of pirates from many the ,Japanese Red Army and groups when one group may need the
nations on safe Caribbean islands fronl Cuba, Libya, Pakistan and El cooperation of another.
200 years ago. Unlike the swashSalvador.
Because the condederacy of
buckling 18th-century buccaneers,
The weird convocation of criminals has no formal
however, the latter-day outlaws assassins in Lebanon was not organization, with loose intergroup
didn't waste lime on boozing and unique. As far back as 1974, British links at most, it is difficult, and
wenching a I their meeting in intelligence uncovered ominous sometimes impossible, for outsiders
Lebanon. The political fanatics were evidence that terrorist groups to learn the whereabouts of the
there to talk business - the business around the world were beginning to meetings, Kupperman explained.
of assassinations, kidnappings, join in a loose underground alllance Still, U. S. and Israeli inteiUgence
hijackings and other acts of in- of revolutionary extremists. The agents did manage to find out about
discriminate violence.
British learned, for ell8mple, that· conventions in Lausanne, ' Swil· ·
According to several sources, in- Irish and'Paleslinian terrorists were zerland, last August, and in
cluding Israeli intelligence officials training together In Ireland and the Caracas, Venezuela, last November.
and an actual eyewitness, as many Middle East. German terrorists Alao, Libya and Lebanon have
as 1,000 members of various were smuggling ann.s to their coun- clearly been the site of several
terrorist g•·oups were identified with terparts in Ireland.
terrorist gatherings.
their pales tine Liberation
Dr. Robert Kupperman, of
"But very rarely do you get the ac01·ganizaiton hosts in the n().man's- Georgetown University's Center for tual shooters, the people who plant
land near the United Nations cease- Strategic and lnternali.onal Studies, the bombs, at these conventions,"
fire zones.
said there have been several in- Kuppennan told my erporter Jeff
and

frightening

11

COn·

Nesbit. The delegates are usually
the planners and

11

money. men"

from the various groups, he said.
"The problem Haig and others
have had," explained Kupperman,
"is that it's very hard to ever come
up with a smoking gun."
One definite link between the
Soviets and the terrorists is Muammar Qaddafi's Libya, which is the
reason the Reagan administration
has been so persistent in its hostility
to that nation. Several years ago, 1
learned from underground sources
that Qaddafi was not only using his
oil billions to buy Soviet arms, but
was using his oil tankers to smuggle
them overseas to his terrorist clien-

ts.

On one occasion, according to my ·
sources, arms were smuggled off the
tankers in Puerto Rico while the oil
was being unloaded at a refinery
there. The weapons were later used
in ter1·orist attacks on the island and
in New York City.

Foreclosing on .Polandu=====A=rt=B=uc=hwa=l=d
I have not made up my mind yet
whether or not I want to declare
Poland in default on its loans. I've
been wrestling with the- problem
ever since the Polish government
declared martial law.
My first thought is that if we
foreclose on them, it will teach them
a lesson to pay their interest and
principal on time. When I get a Joan
from a bank and put up my car or
house for collateral and can't make
the_ payments, the bank has no
hesitation about taking them away.
So I have always said, " What's gOOd
enough for me is gOOd enough for
Poland."
But apparently banks think dif.
ferently about Poland than they do
your average borrower.
Plummet, vice president of the "I
Love New York Bank and Tf\ISt
Company," explained why .
Although Polanp owes his bank a
billion dollars, the company chiefs
have no intention of declaring the
loan in default.
" If we l'ut Poland into default, we
would be admitting we ma~e a bad

______

,.......

JfiS,IQP,

.m.+l. I tJON7
THINK I
CIIANGEPHIS

/t1/Nl), 7HOIJ6H.

loan to her, and people would start
questioning our banking judgment.
So we have to pretend the country
isn't bankrupt."
"I can see the bank's reputation is
at stake," I said, "but how do you
slay in the loan business if you can't
collectyourmoney?"
.
" You have to understand international finance. All the westem
banks have made loans to countries
who are in almost as bad shape as
Poland. If we for~Jose on Poland,
we would have to foreclose on other
countries who can't pay back their
debts. This woutd cause some of the
largest banks In the world to go under. As long as we pretend they are
still good ' loans, we can all stay
afloat."
"But I thought the whole purpose
of declaring Poland in default was to
· send a message to the present Pollah
goverrunent that we disapproved of
their methods of squashing
Solidarity.''
·
· "Banks are not concerned with
palilical messages. We have to think

Mediating·El

Deb·u nking energy
Robert Walters

Washington (NEA)- EverybOdy
:knows that available sources of
energy have become scarce, energy
cost increases are likely to escalate
in the future and this country's
.dependence upon imported oil is a
major cause of its energy problems.
Notwithstanding what "everybody
knows," none of those popular
beliefs is correct, according to a ;
group of respected researchers who
recently concluded a two-year study
of the nation's energy prospects for
the future.
The report onJheir work, "Eight
Great Energy Myths," is a
provocative study that attempts to
debunk a variety of widely embraced yet fallacious notions about
energy production and conswnption.
The.study was conducted by the
'Energy Productivity center of the
Mellon InStitute, a cjivision of Ca,...
negie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, under the direction of energy
experts Roger W. Sant and Steven C.
Carhart.
Their innovative analysis differs
from most other efforts becaliSe
they view the production of energy _
notasan end unto itself but rather as
a means of providing crucial ser·
vices to society - notably the comfort derived from heating and air
conditioning; illumination for
homes, offices and fa dories; and
mobility offered by various forms of
transportation.
"People do not need or want gas or
electricity in their homes. They
want comfort and convenience," the
.study explains. "Industry doesn't
really care about using natural gas
or coal. It needs ... machines that
ope~ate to produce products."
If the end-use of energy is considered, "scarcity is not the problem
· (because) abundsnt options exist tomeet this country's service needs,"
the study says. "Growing hwnan
needs and wants are met with very
mOdest increilses in fuel use.''
That's because energy utilization
is becoming far more efficient than
in the past. For example new light
bulbs have been developed that use
only one-fourth the electricity yet
produce the equivalent amount of
illwnination·of older bulbs.
Retrofitting and sophisticated conszructlon techniques have made
residential, commercial and in'dustrlal structures far more energy
efficient than in the past. New cars
travel almost twice as far on a
gallon of gasoline ~ .autos produced
'only 10 years ago,
. Even assuming a healthy 3.2 per·
cent annual rate of economic
'growth, a "least-cost energy
·strategy" wtmld produce a slight
decline in total energy cooswnplion
in 1990 and only a modest increase
by the end of the cenJury.
Increased efficiency in utilizing
energy offerS a means ·Of refuting
another myth - that the cost of
energy will continue to rise at an in·
creaSing rate.
The 1 Carnegle·Mellon study .
assumes that the price of gasoline
will increase by 46 percent - plus illflalion- between 1980 and 2000. But
vastly improved fuel economy will
lead to a nine percent decline in_til!!
cost of transportation.
Attacking the myth tha't
'petroleum imports are responsible
for a disproportionate share of
energy problems, the study
acknowledges that this country "obviously .. . remains wloerable ~
sudden oil interruptions."
It also says, however, that "the.
storm has been weathered,"
becauae "there Is just too much
c&lt;Bllpl!tltion lor the OPEC cartel
(and) energy usen are now free to
c ' - a mix of luela and end-Uie
equipment on the 11u1s of cnwner·

The Sunday Times· Sentinei-Page-A·3

Salva~O--r______________L_ow_eu._w_in_ge--i-~r

It would be ironic indeed if one of should keep our noses, our money,
the world's smallest nations ·oursoldiersandourmunili.onsoutof
·provides the spark that ignites other countries' internal affairs. We
World Warm involVing such gigan- should invoke the Monroe Doctrine
, tic pow'rs as the, United States and against any foreign nation that does
the Soviet Union. Yet such ironies not do likewise.
·are convnon In the history of the
World back through the centuries.
lt would be hard to distinbuish be· I am referring, of course, to El tween the sheep and the goats in El
.Salvador, a tiny Central America Salvador. One side is &lt;IS repressive
_country Of less than five milllon as the other. Yet the administration
population. It has received an inor- has chosen to help the military jilnta
- dina~ amOU!It of publicity the last in spite of their hwnan rights record,
.year because the Reagan ad· disregarding the teal victims of the
ministration has made an internal revolution. They are the thousands
-revolt there an excuse for "halting of citizens who only want to get on
communist
expansionism. •• with their lives inStead of being inRevolutions are as indigenous to disl!riminately slaughtered by both
lllin America as coffee, sugar · or sides. The result of the revolution so
bananas, and if we were to provoke a far has been an almost complete
war every lime a country in Central shattering of the economy, thousanor South America has a revolution
ds of deaths and no peace in sight for
:.Ve would be fighting continually. w~ anyone.

myths

w. va.

he equated with 'deprivation bl1t
rather with more efficient productivity of energy from a wide array of
fuel sources.
That process is already well under
way. One especially promising
cogeneration syste'm, for instance,
utilized a gas-fired turbine that
generates electricity, then uses
waste heat to produce steam for industrial applications.
That system operates at almost 70
percent efficierlcy' _ almost twice as
high as conventional generating
plants. It and other technical ad·
vances hold the promise for an
energy future far more favorable
than generally assumed.

elimination of nuclear weapons~ So
fiu·, I have never seen a response
from the administration. Maybe the
big' shots in Washington have some
1nagic cloak to p1:otect them from
radiation but we common folk sure

It was unfortunate that Secretary President of the Screen Actors'
of State Alexander Haig chose El Guild. He has a constitutional right
Salvador ~s the place to conf~nt the to speak his mind as does everyone
Sov1et Uruon. Why not Afghamstan? else in America.
Why not Poland? El Salvador was
The administration has been supthe '\'fOng place because the peace plymg arms , helicopters and
there will never be won by bombs military advisors to the El Salvador
and bullets but by mediation and junta government. Now they are
negotiatfon. Even if the guerrillas prepared 19 go further and supply
WID, which they well might, the war
fighter planes. In addition, the
will go on. The junta members of Umted States has spent $15 million
today could be the guerrillas of dollars training junta troops on our
tomorrow. But the word "Mediate" army bases.
seems to have been left out of the
Public opinion is running strongly
~agan and Haig dictionary. The of.
against any military involvement
fer of Mexican President Jose Lopez but in his recent Caribbean speech to
Portillo '? act as mediator m El the O•·ganization of American States
Salvador IS expected to he refused. the president proposed an additional
Reagan and Ha1g are both_reported $350 million emergency aid for
adamant against a negotiated set· Caribbean countries, much of itto go
tlement which wtmld g1ve the to El Salvador. In the 1982 fiscal
guernllas a vo1ce m government. year, it is estimated the ad·
With all due respect for the gen- ministration will spend $300 million
Uemen's offic¢8, 1 maintain it is to defend the military junta governnone of their damn business who ment of El Salvador President Duar·
makes up the government of another te. Collllnnist Richard Reeves points
sovereign country. The most urgent out that is $60,000 a yea•·to fight each
action is to stop , the senseless of the rebels · hiding in the El
killings and bring back peace and Salvador hills. •
stability to a neighboring country.
In this day of high unen1ployment,
The election later this month will not recess ion (dep•·ession ) and budget
do that.
strangling, it will he interesting to
I would like to caution the readers see how fa1· Congress will go in funnot to believe everything they read ding the administration's paranoia
in the newspapers or see on with Cmrununism. The spectre of
television. There has heen much Vietnam still haunts millions of
public debate about the political Americans- and the similarity witt.
sympathies of the El Salvador El Salvador is frightening .
' uerrillas. They have heen branded Secretary Haig points out that El
as "Marxists" by the State Depart· Salvado•· is in our hemisphere but
ment because they have reportedly there he •·uns out of differences. We
used arms smuggled in from Cuba at·e doing everything we did in Viet·
and supplied by the Soviet Union. nam - providing weapons and other
Guerrilla leaders vigorously deny resou•·ces. ai'ITiing mililal')' advisors
they are Communists. Perhaps they and faking body counts. Our war
UBed smuggled communist arms but ships cruise off the coast. Even the
in a revolution arms must be domino theory is back - if El
p1·ocured·somewhere. Perhaps they Salvado•· falls , then Guatemala,
also use arms smuggled in from the Honduras. Costa Ri ca and
United States. Does that make them Washington, D. C. Sound familiar'
Democrats in the State Dcpa11In all the macho talk in
menl's eyes' Ed Asner, the Lou Washington, the1·e is nothing to ease
Grant of television, has heen taking 'the threat of nuclear war.
a great deal of heat for defending the President Leonid Brezhnev of the
guerrilla cause. Asner was speaking Soviet Union last week proposed
as a private citizen and not as opening talk.s fOI' the Iota I

to God don't. That's why I urge
mediation both in El Salvador and
Geneva.
The p•·esident and Haig can find
the word in Webster's Dictiona1-y ulider "M"!
,.

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4l
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ministers,
church
members,
revivals, baptisms, shaped-note and
gospel singi!Jll, faith heaUng, camp
meetings, footwasbing, snake handUng, and other traditions of mountain religious heritage

•

~.

•••

'·....•
~

·:·•••
~·

+
......

.

• FOXFIRE 7 .
. .
ed1red. by Pa~ _ Gillespie ._._.
••• ThsHs the ftnt volume 1n the bestsellmg serres to chronicle ~
the tntegral part religion plays in mountain culture. The_._...
~· Foxf•_re students have interviewed people from every de· •
•·• nommatton, capturing the diversity of their beliefs and •
• practtces from revtvals and camp meetings tofootwashing.
.... and snake handlln11,. QUAll1Y PAPERBACK in95 .....
7
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Remember ,
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0

The Alcove

~

•

+ 42 Court

•!•

.-,

~

•.-

Lafayette Mall •:•
Gallipolis, Oh.
•

Open Daily 9:30 til 8:00

Cto.e&lt;! Sundays

-

12J '•:••)(•(•(• •• (•(• ~· ·:+t I2J

r---------------.:..___:._~-.;,_---------~----...L-----------------------

Terrorists' convention~::=======J=ac=k=A=nd=e=rso=n
bizarre

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

of our money first. If we foreclose on
Poland we have no hope of seeing
any of it again. But if we can carry
them, there is always the chance
they may gel on their feel and start
paying back their interest. AB long
as they're paying their interest, we
can pretend they are gOOd credit
risks, and then no one can criticize
us for making a bad Joan."
"But in your heart you must know
that's a pipe dream." ·
"International bankers live on
pipe dreams. Let's asswne we
declared Poland . in default. That
would leave,her no choice but to turn
to the . Soviet Union for financial
help. The Western banks would be
cut off1from ever loaning Poland
money again. Other countries would
say we were heartless and moneygrubbing lnslitulio'!S, and if we
treated Poland like that, we would
probably treat them the same way.
Our reputation as benevolent
moneylenders would be destroyed."
"So what you're saying is that you
would rather make a bad loan than
no loan at all?"

"No bank likes to make a bad Joan.
B~t worse than making one, Is to adrrut you have. AB long as we keep it
on the books as a gll!ld loan, no one Is
going to question why we made it in
the first place. But the moment you
put the borrower intodefault;all heq
breaks lOOSe, and the people in th~
bank respoosible for making the
loan could lose their jobs.••
"You don't feel that way abou(
some poor sap wh_o can't pay bac~
his business loan, do you?"
"We would if he owed us a billion
dollars. But if he borrow~ $50,000 ana
doesn't pay us. on lime, we're noi
going to. let him get away with it.
When it comeJ to piddling sums we
bave to be tough or nobody would
pay us back."
"Then 11s I see it, Poland has the
Western banks over a barrel. They
can't pay you, and you can't put
them jn defaulf."
"That's the long and short of it,"
Plummet said. "But fo1· appearances' sake we still consider
them 011e of our blue chip clients."

DOON~BURY

ecoiKI'Ilies."

. ~ly; the lludy refutes the
eoovenllonal _wledom lhlt that
nalitll ~ _,..,. Ill ny to

I!COIICII)Ic

erowth

by

notinC

tha~

tedlloi1J81cal ~~~~~~~~~ need not

,

4. HOw would you rate the Times-Sentinel in respect to its news coverage·
and treatment of organizations and people?
· Fair .... Unfair .••
5. How would you rate the overall appearance of The Times-Sentinel?
.
Dull.... Pleasing .... Very pleasing ••••
6. Everything being considered, w~t do you think of the Times-Sentinel
as a newspaper?
Excellent.. .. Good .... Passible .... Not much good ....
7. Would like to sit down with me and a few other editors for a frank, no
holds barred discussion of how we can improve the Times-Sentinel?
Yes .... No .... Not now, maybe later......
Any comments you'd like to make now?
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If you were I, how would you handle the following kinds of news?
Use
More

Use
Use about
Less same as now

Personal items about local people
such as promotions , retirements,
parties, etc.
Court news, lawsuits
Business and financial news
Dale

Rot..geb

Routine police news such as
accidents, burglaries , etc.

New• Editor

Talk
back to Dale•..•
----

Obituary details
Engagement details

-

(

Wedding de4ils

How about filling out tllis survey for me? All of us here at The Sunday
Times-Sentinel try to put out a paper that's infonnative, entertaining and
useful to you. We'd like to know whether or not we're suc~eed.ing.
.
Think about it for a day or two if you want, although f1rst unpressiOns
sometimes are the best.
When you're ready, drop it in the mail - I'm at 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or 111 Court St.. Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 .

.,.:

Youth activities

.

"How·to" stories
Church news
Local sports
National sports

1. How well does the Times-Sentinel keep you informed?
Fairly
well

Extremely
well

Poorly

Meeting and activity notices
Conswner advice colwnns

Don' t
know

Take One
entertainment news

Conununity news

I

'-

-

Interpretative or "analysis"
stories ·and colwnns

County news
State news

.

world and national news

Feature stories
Editorials on local issues

2. How do you rate these areas of coverage .in T_he Times-Sentinel?
Good Fair Poor Don't

Excellent

know

.

Sports news

Editorials on national issues
Personal item colwnns

Reports on city council, school
board and other local government
a~encies and their meetings.

"
'

Black and white pictures

sOcial and women's news

/

"

i

Color pictures

SchOOl news

.

Local government news

.

3. How would you rate your confidence that the news printed in the TimesSentinel is true and accurate?
Very ,high.... High....Some.•.. Little.... ,

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0.

�The Sunday

G~!~!~j~il
years to obtain jaUers, we have
again bEen turned down.'' the sher11f's letter to Judge Roderick
reads.
On Tuesday, Shert!f Montgo.
mery requested a supplemental ap.
proprtatlon of $35,CXXI lrom the
county commissioners lor employment of jailers. That request was
rejected.
"We have cut theshert!f'sdepartment budget as tar as possible and
still maintain a minimum of protection to the rural area people," Sheriff Montgomery's letter continues.
"U the jallls to remain open, the
county commissioners are going to
have to make every effort on their
part to find additional funding, to
avoid a repeat of last year's budget
crisis," the letter added.
Last fall, laced with a rapidly depleting budget, Shert!f Montgomery- after repeated requests for
additional funding from the commission - laid-oil approximately
three-fourths of his staff. Those layoffs lead _to the unionization of department personnel under the
AI'J'lj!rican Federation of State,
~ty and Municipal Employees:
and, a subsequent 62-day strike.
Sher!1f Montgomery said Friday
that In order to reopen the jaU he
would have to appoint existing stall
to positions as jailers. He added
that In so doing both the extent of
serviCe his department could offer,
as well as the department's budget
would be "hurt."
The sheriff's 1982 budget stands
at $435,000 ($75,000 of which Is
funded through revenue sharing for
the purchase of supplies). Sheriff
Montgomery had requested
$578,500 be appropriated for the op.
eratlon of his department. 1
Sheriff Montgomery's Friday let·
ter .to Judge Roderick concludes:
"As you know, our tax base was
originally set up on public safety
and public heallh. With this in ·
mind, I'm sure that the conunlssloners Will lind the money to adequately keep the JaU operating."
The Gallla jail has been closed,
Intermittently, for nearly nine
months since a fire - which destroyed the west wing of the courthouse - damaged the facility in
January 1981.
Gallla prisoners are currently beIng housed In jaUs In Jackson and
Lawrence counties at a per diem
rate. In addition to the dally charge
for housing prisoners in those adjoining counties, the department Is
bearing the cost of transporting Inmates to and from ·those out-ofcounty facilities.

'

Quaker State .
I

1.44
Ro1: (88

VISA OR
MASfER CArD

~

Assodutlon,

Nc~'!! J1H pc 1·
Nll llon~:~l

~' l r.J(Q

Retardation. Mn. Eason was
named to a two year term on the

••

b011rd.

~

(HHH(fl\

··~···'·

!W'~-~··
..... ;... .

2.88

\ ' •"""

..

26.97

Johnson
Century Lite Reel

.... l.H

Flshinc Creel

JIOWELRY DEPT.

..

SPOIITS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT

-.,,
\

,

I

'

-

.!' ,'

,

'

··•
::

-~~­

.......

~~~~

Scott'1 5000 Sq. Ft.
Turtbullder Plue "Haiti"
Prtvonts uobgrm jatso bamyardgrass. loxloil and
goouloil.) Givealull feoding of Turt Buildor
Anlorico'a fovorita foniliNr for de,.loping lhick
pon IIVIIII.
IIMDWAIIE DEPT.

.'
·1·.
...

• t

.
. ...
1~ , •

.' ' 1•-·

.' ,

.

19.99
Reg. l6.99

.

Berkley. ',4 Lb. Bee FishiAI
Line in Assorted Lb. Test

Two 511."' air suspension woot1rs wittr b.uilt -in coaxial '
2" tweeters. Compatible with all 3 to 8 ohm tape
players and radros. Black padded press -on grille with .i
dlt~CiraH~e inse rt $ Instillation instructions 1ntluded.

First quality processed limp nylOn monofilament at a
bargain price. A must for every tisllerman. Specially

I

\

SPOIIJS om.

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

Dl"-

99¢

,

PKG.

•..

11.99

,.•.,

\

·.·-~.

•

·•

Auorted sill nlmon egg hooks are snelled to keep the
boil on! Gold finished.
SPORTS OEPT.

59¢
.....

•

•

~

11.9.9'

Stock up now oo depe ltble h11111dy En11gi11f b""eries
Ptrtact lor eltclronic ( 11es, calcul1tors tnd tr-tiQmed
radios.
'

~

Jobel
HouMplant Spikes

llit-IUI

~- front with con1r1stlng

G.E. Electronic Allnn Clock

bldl. ..... grillt Wll, lilY IO

OtatillctM twge tltctranie srylt rt1dout in bltti Clll.lithltd
::.-:;·;';;.';_wtktl ylij tgtin and tgtln.
1

rM Pidl rull diet end front
- H bioi switch.

.IIWEUIYDEI'T.

4.99
1.99 ..,, . .
Rog. 7.99

Aelreshing Scope mourhwash and gargle keeps

12 Ft. Copper
. Booster
. C.bla

12' 1anglf .lree c1bles are an innluablt safe
ouard in cold weather. bsv to auach to ballery

post

~:::~DEPT.

3

;

------

··.•.;.-

~, ';:, I
'------0

llot-7Mf ...

32 Oz. Heck'1 Pink or

LemonDIIhDeterpnt
M llat 3n P• Sl..

Rot- 2.13
37'4" x·6"tWindow Shlde
Winctow shldii·t,"D !11 mqt~ Sllfldard wiAdows.
tdullor littirifib r ~UI summer-""' and giwing
1dMd privacy:.

HOUSEWAIIE--[liPT.' '

4.29
.........

SET

Sit of-3 Prres•
Mbdn&amp; Bowie
Otnblt Pyrtlll&amp; bowtt
1111.

11'1

idttl lor microwtvt

All American
Wood Toilet Seat

4.44

Reg.6.99

Disttwalhtr sift.
HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HOUIEWAIIf 11£1'T.

COSMETIC DEPT.

Reg. 99.?,6

G.E. 12 ' Black &amp;

Whl

te TV

This 12" diagonal black and white is
the ideal second set. Its loo&amp; solid
state chassis is the product of years
of research and development. And it
deilvers the kind of clear, crisp pic·
ture performance that gives G. E.
Performance Television its name .
At least 10 per store .
JEWELRY DEPT.

99~

PRICE
:l!i CL'Ill"'

No .subl&gt;criplions by mail ~rmltlt..'tt in
where home carrier litn'k'C is
a vii liable.
tu wn:~

The Sunday Thne.I-St!nlint:! l will not be

n'l:lpon&amp;blc ror allvt~nce ~U:~Ymenhltnallc
lOcil rricrH.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

'

SudayOaly
One year , . , ...•........ .. ..... • 2:0.80
.. , , •.•......•...•. , $10.4:0

DallyudSuadlly
Ohluautd Weill Vlr1Jnla
Oncyear . . , .,,,, . .. . .......... $39.00
Six month .. .. .. .. . . . . . . . ..... f:M.80
Thrt!t! tnontlui . , ........••..•... tJ2.3$
Rata O.lllde Oblo
ood 11Hf VlrcJalo
O!lf! year ............ ..· ........ f44.20

Siltmoolhl ............... ..... 133.40

.............. ... •11.10

1.09~..

Pka. of 6 Hershey's C1ndies
r-.,....:
R-e·s Peanut Butter Cups
Hershey's ·Milk Ch.ocolate
1
Kit Kat Bars
Mr. Good Bar
Rolo, Krsckle and Special
Prck your favorite Hershey candy a11d stock up
with thne ~on~enient 8 .Packs. All your
tevorites,.. par1ect lcr lunch time, snack time or
1ny tim1!

COSMETIC DEPT.

88¢

EACH
16 Oz. Suave Shampoo or
Conditioner
·
.
OloDit !rom mDrltd lrtQI'IIICfl in Sunt St11mpoo
and tandlhontr ,now at sptc1ll 1ao41np !

COSMETIC Dl".

·/'lore/co·

Each

CHOICE

1.09

:.F~RI• 1
-·.00'
2
oz.
i$1 :
"' .

16 Oz. Gentle Touch
Bath Beltds

6

Bittle in lu.1ury Wtth Gentle Touch ba1h buds

Avail'abllli

COSMETIC OEPT.

G liliWl :!1(!1
,! Ritl. Oc
Air F reshelltr .. •~ . ··

ill : .assorted

i

1.24

Reg. 1. 77 Eoch

Prestone

Starting Fluid
De-Icer

'h OL Vlllne

Super starts on cold --;;;~;;;,
nlngs wilh Preslone •
remove

Ice

and

Prnlone de-Icer in

and KraiM! container.

AUTOMOVE DEPT.

spray

Ere Dropa

fltt relitl ffom red, itdty tytl

with ViliM.
~ICDfi'T.

' ~ I

· ···.

POMEROY --A pap smear clinic
Is being sponsored by the Meigs
County American Cancer Society
at the Meigs Health Department
from 1 to4 p.m. Thursday. Appointments are to be made with the of·
flee of Dr. Wilma Mansfield,

the

Publishers
AdYI!I'tl lli ll)l

On\' ycar .... , ..... , , . , . . ...• , , $!12.80
SINGLE COP\'

I

Pap smear clinic set

Jnbu1d

ttllll

Foote omits _
first dividend

POMEROY --Six calls were answered Friday and on Saturday
morning by local emergency unlts,the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports.
On Saturday at 7:15a.m., Pomeroy took Roy Douglas from the
Pomeroy ·. Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
2: 26 a.m. the Tuppers Plains Unit
tooll Wayne Willian from Owl Hoi·
tow Road to Veterans Memorial. ·
On Friday, Tuppers Plalna at
7:24 p.m. took Evelyn Gaul from
Chester to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine at 1: 34 p.m. took Frances
Hewitt from Barringer Road to
Veterans Memortal: Middleport at
2: 19 p.m. took Edward Bumem
from the Dairy Isle to Veterans
Memorial and the Middleport Unit
·at 10: 58 a.m. tf!!ated Marcia capebart on Elm St.

79.88

l»iTf'IROf':""T

POMEROY ··A 1972 car driven
18, Route 2, Ra·
cine, was demolished In a on~ar
accident on County Road 28, north
of Apple Grove at 1: 10 a .m. Saturday, according to the Meigs County
she~'s department.
According to the report, Foster
was traveling north when he lost
control of the car, went off the leftside of the roadway. The vehicle
went over an embankment and
landed on Its top. Foster was not
reported InJured.
.
Meantime, Pomeroy pollee said
that was the driver of a car which.
hit a power pole guide line on Mulberry Ave., near Veterans Memqrlal Hospital at 11: 38 p.m. The Une
broke and the pole fell. Foster allegedly left the scene and was Ia ter
arrested and charged with leaving
the scene of an accident. He wa~ .
released by pollee after the acct-.
dent report was completed.
In other matters, sometime after
1: 30 a .m. Friday a jeep belonging
to Howard Searles, Route 3, Pome-.
roy, was stolen.
by William Foster,

Emergency runs

amounts. Will not bum

roots. Good lor oil housiplonts
IIAROWAI!f DEPT .

JCl

/
. .

Modo of 100% orgaoic nilrogert Solid.
prtme~sured

Deputies check
two accidents

EXTON , Pa. - The board of dlrec: . , :
tor;s of Foote Mineral Co. has deter, '
mined to omit payment of the first
quarter dividend on the company's , •
convertible preferred stock - $2.20 '
cwnulative if earned. The company :
expects to report a loss In the first '•
quarter.
Earnings in 1982 will be adversely
affected by the rece~slonary ·
economy and the resultant low level
of business in the U.S. and overseas . ., .
Foote's outlook for the year depen: . ,
ds primarily on the timing of a
recovery In the economy and im·
provemenls in the level of business
of Its primary customers - the ·
steel, foundry and aluminum in·
dustries.

•

,•

.•

~~~

breath fresh without the medicine taste. Pleasant
minty ta ste .

.

12SI2

PJcc. of 2 Evm 11dy Enercizer "~'
·Batteries or H tavy Duty SlncJa; PIICk
9 Volt Batte.ry
,; :

PKG.

Pka:. of 6 Snelled Salmon fa Hodes

Stock up now on windsh1eld washarlanTi-lreele fluid. Keep
·windows clear and rte -hee! Protects lo -20c.
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

INfiTS

.,•'
,:r

CHOICE

a.. -To t .II Pk1-

1111. Ill Pkg.

1 Gallon Tradcct-Windshield
Washer/Anti-freeze

Tilt "-'¥ .., ......... bol INili with llltltJ't&amp;, Malili ol eo,tlrMf
............ 1 rtCimf COR"ffffl!llma. po~iiPtt lltdl .,. tuty

•'

GGG

44¢

FllmbMu One Tr1y Tackle Boa

'fa. Cit! CIIHIII M ..._,I fer eApM
filtintlurn.._. .. , . . . .

Solid jecquord in asonod col011. Big ond fluffy obsorblnt torry both lowola ond
coordinot11 ora idool for ony botfl docor.
HAND TOWEL ...... .. ............. .... ..... . ...... .. ·.............. 1.66
WASHCLOTH ..... :: ....................................... . : ..... .99

.,,,•

\

Rog. U9 Golloo

Cannon Slnta Cruz• Bath Towel

W..·I.H

colori,

SPORTS DEPT . .•

2.44
.... ,."

3.99

.... Toi.M
....... Spl- Lw•

priced duriog our March Specrals Sale! Blue color.

88¢

.'

•

Roo. t.l7

Spark·O.-Matic Spuker Set

24 ()z. Scope Mouthwash

. ... .' . . . . . . .... $4.40

Tilrte monlill

19.99

I

'

t ••

SVBS(;RJPTION RATES

o~ Six months

••

.... 23.11

Made of heavy duty cotlon duck with
rubber becklog. c..ered mtlol """'
opener. adjustable shoulder slrops. built-in
sin scolo, 3 largo pockets. 1111111 clolurt.
mesh ventilotod sidls olld wotor top~l1111.

Poslli\'e anli•reverse with ""I "'""• J60'~ rolaonn
drag control and 3.1 gear· ratio. &lt;.....-,:. ••
friction ceramic guide and pick up,
A~lust.a4;e,· l
audible drag.

.\

By Carrier ur Mutvr Ruutc
One week ........ , ..........·... SI.DO

,

DEPT.

NEW - Mrs. Nora Eason uf
Pomeroy was recently
named a new member of the
·Meigs COOJ!Iy _Board of Menial

Rcprcscntutivc, Branham, 17117 Wc::~l
Nine Mile Roall, Suite 204, Detroit,
M ic hi~an , 4807!i.
·

One Month

~UTOM_OTtVf

near

Roo. 13.&amp;&amp;

Publislk.'\.1 cadl Sunday , ~ Third
Avenue, by the Ohio Valley Publl1hlng
Com~ ny- Multilm.'I.Jia, Jt-...: . St!t•ondcla:f:t
pnstu~o:c paid ul Gallipolit~, Ohio. 45631.
Entcrltti as sec(tlld da~ nm!lin ~ mHiter
at Pomeroy, Ohio, Pt1sl Office.

AnicricHn

feseues provides 1 qull ity lawn in sun or medrum
shade with only modlrare mainttn•nce.
HAIIDWARE DEPT.

''

Reg._29.91

USPS&amp;~

A~ialion

Reg . 1.09

Asst. Tapes

• · -- ---~

A Mullllnt.\Jia Newspaper

Pt·c~

,,

Thrs Ill purpose lnixturt Df blu1gt1nn nd li~e

IIARti~AU DEPT.

*'"'h~ 'timro · Atrntinrl

M~rnber : Ttl!.! A.uociuk.~ Press,

Ro1- 11.44

Scott's 2000 Sq. Ft.
Family Gras Seed

' Scou ~ wepa! blend ol ann ual ryegra ss. bluegrass
an d·trne tescu e rs perfect wtlere la:!.t, 1er1rporary
r:. d~srre d

delegation

Daily

7.88

.

iScoft's ·Quick Cover
Giass- Seed·

USI YOUR

C~ngressional
(Continued from A-1)
another county bordering on the
river. Other area congressmen on
hand were Robert McEwen, ROhlo, and Cleve Benedict, R-W.Va.
Following their tour of the dam, the
delegation travelled by air to study
the nuclear enrichment plant at PIketon In McEwen's district.
Although President Reagan has
okayed the project, the congressmen themselves appeared undecislve on Its future. Miller claimed
the House hasn't faced a project of
this kind for years, while Rahal! voIced opposition to the admlnlstrat!on's plan Ia hike user fees to help
finance the new canal, estimated to
cost $258 million.
"That's an unrealls llc expectation for the Congress and the users
to face," Rahall said. "Holding Industry hostage to user fees would
be a disservice to our Inland
waterways."
The proposed bypass canal considered the best of five plans ·.
developed by the corps In a four·
year study - would be constructed
behind the present public use area
on the West VIrginia side of the
dam.

.

992-QID.

Hl1181

11.99

Veterans Memorial

....II.M

No!Wco Golcll Gun IIDw DrJer

Fold...., hondlo lor Clll1l*t llthlwoiJhlotorogi ond trovol
- - Dull woH• for_... ... 1111. c:onwrtsJo oilllor 120 or
220 VOHL 1200 Willi b 1111 tlryine tJOMI. Freo llorttling
,.,ailioll for 1W0 hondotlltyfing. Tl!fl tlllpi!IIWII lnd lir flow
11111nos lor alyint olllf lilyint oll!ypls of hoir.
AUTOMOTI¥1 fiiPT,

(

Admltted··Paula Cunningham,
Pomeroy; Edwin Burnem, Middleport: Brian Friend, Pomeroy; Bertha Dutton, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Tiffany Alley,
Jamie Ter:wpplous, Ida Smedley,
Dora Wood, Ernestine
Winebrenner.

Special meeting set
POMEROY ··A special meeting
of Pomeroy VUiage Council will be
beld at 7: ~p.m. Monday at village
,hall .

�She was born April 20, 1909, In
GALLIPOLis - A 56-year-old
E. Eileen Mack
New Haven to the late Edgar and
Stinson, W.Va. native was arrested
Zua Shank Capehart.
by GaWpolls city pollee Friday
COLUMBUS - E. E ileen Mack,
night 1n connection with an auto
Her husband, Vacon M.
63, of 42 N. Westgate Ave., Co!um- Richardson, preceded her In death
theft.
'bus, died Friday_In St. Luke Conva- In 1950.
ottlcers, assisted by the Gallalescent Center In Columbus, having
she was a former assistant
Meigs Post ot the state highway pabeen In falling health tor the past manager at the Mason Bowllng.
trot took Brant B McKown no
· •
·
•
eight months.
Surviving are three daughters,
permanent address, into custody at
Born Nov. 'J:I , 1918, In Cheshire, Jane L . Pierce, Baltimore,
the Silver Bridge Plaza around 7:15
daughter of the late Ivan and Ada
Maryland, Mrs. Janet L. Crockett,
p.m . .
Grover Mack, . she was executive Cbeyell!le, Wyoming, fo'rs. Joan L.
The department said pollee were
secretary and accountant tor R)ce Metcalf , Houston, Te31as ; two
on regular patrol at the shopping
Properties In Columbus. She had
sisters, Mrs. Louise Rosenbaum,
mall at 7 p.m. wtten they spotted a
lived In Gauta County until 1935.
Pomeroy, Ohio, Mrs. Betty Krauss,
black, 1975 Buick parked near WenSurviving Is a cousin, Harold Howland j::orners, Ohio; one
dy's Restaurant. After running a
Mack of Cheshire.
brother, Russell Capehart, Mason ;
registration check, they discovered
She attended St. John Lutheran
seven grandchlldren and one great
the car, owned by Richard A. Gee,
Church In Columbus, and was a
granddaughter.
Rt. 2, VInton, was reported stolen
member of the Robert Morris chapFuneral services wut be held at
earlier In the week.
·
ter of the Order of the Eastern Star
the Foglesong Funeral Home on
and the ASWA.
Monday at 1;30 p.m. with the Rev.
l"u neral services will be held at
Bennie Stevens officiating.
--Burial will be at the Crown Hill
GALLIPOLIS -Tile state highl l. 30 a.m. Tuesday In St. John
Lutheran Church, wlth the Rev.
Cemetery In VIenna, Ohio, on · way patrol cited Jason Proctor, 20,
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. with Rev.
Rt. 4, Gallipolis, for lett ot center
WOllam Hutrues officiating. Burial
following a one-car crash on Mill
Bartholomew officiating.
will be In Oakwood Cemetery, BuFriends may call at the
Creek Road near Gallipolis early
cyrus. Friends may call at Schoedlnger Hilltop Chapel In Columbus
Foglesong Funeral Home on
Friday.
11 9
According to the report, Proctor
(rom 6-9 p .m. Monday.
6
Sunday from p.m. unt
o.m.
was southbound at i2: 15 a .m . when
Karen A. Smith
he reportedly tell asleep at the
Charles Neal
PT. PLEASANT - Karen Adrian
wheel. Hts vehicle then swerved
Smith, two-day old daughter of Cynlett, drove Into a ditch and struck a
GALLIPOLIS -Charles J. Neal,
culvert.
thia Louise Boggs Smith and Larry
76, of 838 First Ave., Gallipolis, died Smith of Barnett Road, Point
There was severe damage to
at 9 a.m. Saturday In Holzer MediPleasant, died Friday evening in the
Proctor's vehicle and he wasn't
cal Center.
Gabell-Huntington Hospital in HunInjured.
Born June 11, 1905, In Gallla
tington.
The patrol said a Rio Grande teeCounty, son of the late Jacob and
Surviving are two brothers, Mark
nager escaped Injury In another
Ella Harrison Neal, he was a reone-vehicle accident Frtday near
Joseph and Gregory Stephen, both
tired carpenter and served In the . at home· maternal grandmother,
the village.
U.S. Navy In 1924-28. He attended
Mrs. Ruth McCoy Boggs, Elkview ;
Cora Wolfe,l7,waswestboundon
Grace United Methodist Church,
County Rd. 3, two-tenths of a mile
maternal great-grandmother • Mrs.
was a member of the church 's
Mary Kay Boggs, Pinch; and east of County Rd. 57B, all: 30 p.m.
men's forum Bible class, and was
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
when she lost control of her vehicle
. also a member of the Modem
on a curve, went off the tight sldeo!
Mrs. Joseph Leonard Smith, Leon.
Woodmen of America and the GalGraveside rites will be conducted the road and then came back onto
Ita County se nior ;citiz e ns
the road.
at 2 p.m. today at the . Leon
organization.
Her' vehicle then drove Into a
Cemetery with the Rev. William
· He married the former Thelma
(Bud) Hatfield officiating.
Wright, who survives, on Jan. 19,
i929, In Bennettsville, S.C.
· Also surviving Is a sister. Mrs.
SO MUCH CAMERA
. Max (Frances) Yeauger of CheFOR SO LITTLE;•
. shire, an aunt and several nieces
· and nephews.
: He was also preceded In death by
il sister.
• Funeral services will be held at 2
· p.m. Tuesday In Grace United
• Methodist Church, with the Rev. AI·
: bert MacKenzie and the Rev.
: James Frazier officiating. Burial
• will be in Pine Street Cemetery.
. :friends may call at the McCoy-wetherholt-Moore Funeral Home,
Gallipolis, !rom 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
• Fullfealured aperature preferred automatic 35mm SLR
Monday .
• Bui~-ln outom~llc flash synchronization
: The body will lie In state In the
• Extremely lightweight
; church one hour prior to the
• Shutter speeds from 1 second to on action stopping 111000
: service.

The officers waited for a short
whlle and noticed the brake Ughts
In the rear of the car glow. Pollee
then pulled up alongside the Buick
and asked McKown to exit. A hlghway patrolman arrived and
McKown was arrested.
Pollee said '"~· aJso cited Ricky
W~J
L. saunders, 22, Patl1otStarRoute,
with grand theft after he allegedly
,stolealeatherjackettromThomas .
Clothiers, 354 Second Ave., sometime between 11 a .m. and noon
Frtday.
The theft ot a bolt machine owned
by Chesapeake and Ohio ttallroad
Is also under Investigation by poltce. The machine, used to tighten
bolts on tracks, was last seen on

Man cited after minor mishap

J.

· MASON - Lee C. Richardson, 72.
:of Mason, died March 3 in the
Houston Northwest Medical Center
; Hospital in Houston, Texa s.

Pomeroy

creek and overturned, causing
vere damage.

se-

'
POf,IEROYJoe Parrish, Chair·
man rl the Buckeye Hills Resource
conservation and Development
1Rc&amp;Dl Executive Council, has announced he and the executive council 'will soon submit an application to
the
S. Secretary rl Agriculture,
requesting federal support for ~e
expan$ion of the Buckeye Hills

Rc&amp;DArea .
PresenUy, ' the Buckeye Hills
Rc&amp;D operates in the fivtH:ounty
area of Belmont, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble and Washlngton counties.
Parrish states that the application
for expansion proposes the Inclusion
of four · counties Just. ~test of the
Buckeye Hills Projeq_Area:

u.

The Suf1d&lt;:y Times-Sentinei-Page-A-7

w. Va .

These counties are Athens,
Hocking, Meigs and Perry. This
mllVe for iilcluslon of these four
.counties Into Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D
has been requested in writing by the
County Commissioners and the
Boards of Soil and Water Conservation Districts of the four counties.

Other pu!&gt;lic bodies such as the
City ol Athens In Athens County, the
Margaret Creek Conservancy
District and the Rush Creek conservancy Distl1ct has also promised
their support. Main objectives ol his
council -in seeking the expansion of
the Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D with the
re~lonal plannlnR area known as

If the Secretary of Agriculture
does act favorably upon this expansioo reques~ It will create a ninecounty project area In excess of two
million acres or approJimately II
percent of the land area In Ohio supporting three percent of the state's
population.

Buckeye Hills: Hocking Valley
Regional Develapment District (BH·
HVRDD) . " Through boundary
alignment ol these two separate
organizations we should be able to
more efficienUy serve the public and
coordinate our programs," continues Parrish.

,•

i

ATTENTION

ROLLER SKATERS

MAKE SEARS YOUR
ROLLER SKATE HEADQUARTERS
We have ladies, men's and youth ·sizes. Prices
start as low as $11.95. We also feature "Full
Precision" skates by Roller Derby00 •
0

fo welcome the new roller rink to Gallipolis, Sears
at Silver Bridge Plaza will discount all orders for
roller skates ordered from now until March 18th.

OVER.LLS

BEDSPREADS
•

VALUES TO

5Q%oFF

SAVE 10% -

JUST PLACE AN ORDER FOR YOUR
ROLLER SKAYES. MENTION , THIS AD WHEN ORDERING
AND RECEIVE A 10% .DISCOUNT ON CATALOG PRICE.

You (:an
count on

llg luck

Twin, Full &amp;
Quean Size

NOW

'2311

ISears I

14

Plaza

Sf A ItS . ROfiUCK AND CO.

Phone 446-2770

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back

TAWNEY STUDIOS
Gallipolis

SCARVES,
HATS,
AND GLOVES

JUNIORS

WE

Come in for Demonstration

25
1444
REG. 1
NOW

loyl &amp; Girl•

Junior

METALLIC JACKn5

'25~ow'12 44

REG.

110

Y2PRICE

LEE JEANS

UN DEROOS

'3''

REG.

GIVE,

Straight Leg

JEANS BY LEE

I can only

REG.

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'

IIOW

FAMOUS NAME

BRIEFS AND 1-SHIRTS
VALUES TO
1 5' .

4

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.
277

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NOW

0

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'

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0

LEE JEANS

'

' '
•

TERRY TOPS

•
'•

,. .••

Business Administration
Executive Secretarial
Accountng
Computer Science

This Saturday and Sunday something
exciting is happening at our dealership.
We're having an Open House.
And to celebrate we're giving away a
two free Honda Passports:""
Even if you don't win that, you'll still
be a winner. We're also giving away a
free key chain or a free special edition

in-

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

Rolling Stones poster to everyone who
who drops in,
So drop in. Its a great way to see all
our ~utiful new 1982 Honda
motorcycles.
And who knows? Even though we·~
not planning to sell, sell, sell, you might
still want to buy, buy, buy.

UPPERRT.7 _

GAlLIPOLIS BUSINESS

. .

'12M'

•I
0

'

,

MARat 13 &amp; 14
OO.noid where prohibited bylaw

0 0

By Thare R's, llllltJ
Frock, And BrHlsh Ladr

·

_

~~.h.::
• '~ !

.-

.

lEG . s2r.101
. ,.4 44

::

.

ALL Y 2

1. RCA Video Dilc P'-"'
2. Rieur Sewin&amp; Machine
3. Am-Fm Recimr With Turntable
4. Eureu Upript VICUUm
5. Radio • Caaette Recorder

u. 1o~tmasle• ~nboiltr
1. 1 . 2Q PC. Corelle Dinnerware
3. s~~li~•m :: ~ctric Knife
s. 1 . 6 h. i:orninaware C.SIInlle Set
lO. ToastJnastlt TOIIt•
·•Prizes will ~e •w~•·ded

EVElY ITEM
IN THE STOll
ON SALE

EVERY ITEM
IN THE STOllE
SALE PRICED

·aLANKUS
ssoo

.

.........

BY RHAPSODY

OPEN BOUSE•~~~~~~ t~i
,

'844

PANT SUITS

' , 4.

KANAUGA,OHIO

'837

·si:mlO-- 20
IE&amp;.
NOW

•

'

NOW

"IODY .ND" SLACKS

:.~

BETZ HONDA SALES

AdmlnJons OHice

REG. Sl2IJO

'14.77

N9W

· LADIES
DRESSES

~

•

'2100

aalai~Yion

YA~i~~o .'1122

.•

busin~~~

REG.

Large

LEE JEANS

•

NOW FROM

PROGRAMS AVAILABLE ARE:

••

'11''

'

Make something real of your future . Give yourself the
skiUs which bring a worthwhile paycheck and give you a
chance to advance!!!

mor~

l7

00

Fruit Of The Loom

KNICKERS

'. '

Is this what you are hearing when you apply for a job? If
so, then we can help you.

Financial aid available. For
-f ormation ~all 446-4367.

1

SHIRTS

.

lhPRICE

hire-someone
with good
business skills!"

Attend a school where the sole purpose is solid
training and ca~eer placement.

Man'•·

DRESS &amp;
. SPOil

'1122

1600 NOW

1

NOW

"SORRY,

77~

77

Silver Bridge

• Accepts a lull compliment of Pentax SMC lenses '
and accessories

424 Second

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Additional·support sought for resource conservation

track near the Chestnut Street wapolls, was cited tor assured clea~
tertreatmentplant,andofflcersbedistance foll!'WiJ!g an ~:'~:S
Ueve It was taken sometime
5:02 P-~- Thefrt~ped auto'
between Feb. 26 and Thursd;iy.
couldn t stop orL' aDs
nd Rt
The department was also kept
driven by Mary • rumm9 • · •
busy Friday and early saturday In1, G~polls, and su-uck Drum·
vestlgatlng a series of accidents.
mond s car. There was ~rate
A southbound vehicle driven by
damage reported to Daldvls carhlc
. ._.
The d"""rtment sa a ve "'
Rosalee Dray, 50, Rt. 2, GaWpolls,
~.tailed to stop at the Intersection of
driven by Brenda S. Wll.son, .~Third Avenue and Pine Street at
Point Pleasant, was Jeavtng w't •••
9: 29a.m. Friday and collided with . Skatesv!Ue parking lot off 0 P(II!f: ;
.a westbound vehicle driven by John
River Road at 1: !i~- Saw:~
M. WWtams, 61, Crown City, causwhen she coUld
· a ve
. ;!
lng moderate damage to both audriven by Susan M. Golden, 18, pa, :;
tos . Dray was cited tor failure to
tl1ot Star Route.
rk : .;
stop at a stop sign.
Golden was backing from a r' · , I
1be report said Samuel A. WUlng space when the coWslon oclard, :Jl, Kanauga, was unable to
curred. Moderau; damaehlclge was 1
stop 1n time on Upper River Road
reporled to Wilsons v
e.
,.
at 12: 58 p.m. and struck the rear of
Also cited by pollee overnight •
a car driven by Timothy w. Newwere .George E. Chapman, 33, Gal-- ~
come, 27, Columbus, causing slight
ltpolls, !ailuretodlsplayvalldregt.s. '
damage to both cars.
tratton, . and Rebecca S. No1t, 35, .
Brenda K. Oavls, 20, Rt. 4, Galli- Gallipolis, speeding.
:!
.,
,

Sears

Middleport

•

I Gallipolis police charge two with theft ·

Area deaths

· Lee C. Richardson

Mar. 7, 1982

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

Page-A -6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

MANY MOll
ITIMS TOO
NUMEROUS TO
MINITION AT
·TIIMINDOUS
IAYIN,S.

IIOW

Men•

'349
loy•

SWEATERS

CAIDIIiAIIS, CllW IIECIIS, V-NECKS

•

404 Main Str"t .
Point PlaaHnt

.ALL

Y2

PRICE

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va.

Page-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mar. 7, 1982

Jheri er

_: A ppreciation
.dinner honors
former member
By DALE 1Wl11GEB, JR.
T-8 News Editor
MERCERVILLE - A wellknown resident of this conununlty
whO spent 22 years as · a school
board member was honored here
: Friday night during an apprecta·
· tlon dinner at Hannan Trace High
: School.
· J .E. (Dick) Cremeens, a farmer
· who just recently ftled a petition
seeking the DemocraUc nomina. tlon for Gallla · County commls• sloner, was the reciP,Ient of two
· special framed reolutlons ap; proved by the Ohio House of Repre: sentatlves and ohio Senate, a
jacket with his beloved • Hannan
Trace Wlldcats Inscribed on the
• back, a special plaque given by tlui
, Hannan Trace area classified em; ployes and a special certlflcate
• from the bOard awarding hlnl one: day professional leave.
David C. CampbeU, associate su. perllltendent or the Gallla County
Schools, who served as principal at
Hannan Trace earlier In his career
• when Cremeens headed that hoard,
; gave the welcome to Friday's spe. clal dinner guests and Introduced
' Dr. Gary E. , Toothaker, Gallla
: County School superintendent, who
, described some of the maJor problems a school board member deals
: with.
.
; He thanked Cremeens for his
• long tenure, hard work and
: dedlcatlon.
; Fred Dee!, current bOard pres!; dent, reviewed Cremeens' assocla• tlon with past board members on
! the Hannan Trace and GaUla:
; County boards, and gave a detaUed
· account on some or the accomplish: ments during those 22 years.
: John Hurst, administrative as; slstant who represented Rep. Ron
l James, presented the honoree with
; a special resolution approved by
: the Ohio House.
• Senator Oakley Collins likewise
: presented the Senate resolution.
: During his brief talk, Collins also
~ expounded on two Important Issues
• facing the Buckeye state, the current financial problems and ret apportionment.
! Even though the stat!' legislature
• approved a large tax bill last year,
: the state conUnues to speJid more
: money than It Is receiving. Unem·
; ployment was blamed as a major

l

cause of the problem.
Also speaking briefly was former
Hannan Trace superintendent Dennis M. Murdock who served a threeyear stint as an assistant
superintendent bt the Gallla County
Consolidated District.
Murdock spoke hlgh)y of Cremeens both as a board member
and friend.
"Dick Cremeens Is a man or Integrity, honesty and high Ideas. He
helped put Hannan Trace at the
front bt education and athletics. He
worked hard to get the district estabUshed back bt the early 60's. t
have the upmost r~pect for Dick
and his famlly and I wish him well
In any future endeavors," Mvrdock
said.
Creemeens, In his response, said
It was a great honor to be recog·
nlzed by his fellow board members
and community, He said It was
probably his biggest thrlll even
tho\Jgh he was honored last fall as
an outstanding board member In
Southeastern Ohio but this ;neant
more because his friends, neigh·
bors and those he worked with for
so long were there. "I have worked
with a lot of fine people In Gallta
County Including au former board
members. They are responsible for
t1ie bettennent of GaiDa County's
schools too.
"I want to thank everyone who
had anything to do with this, and,
especially the voters of Gallta
County for their fine support."
Food for Friday's dinner was donated by Standard Food Co.. Ohio
Steak and Barbecue and Heiner's
Bakery.
In attendance were personnel
from the GaUla County School's
central otrlee, principals, current
board members, Deel, Bruce Stout,
and Billy Halley; several former
· board members and residents and
friends or the Hannan Trace attendance area.

at

U2

Ph••• 446·1405
Gelli,.lh

•

•

EmotionPicture

Articles filed

1f3

COLUMBUS - Secretary Of State
Anthony J. Celebrezze, Jr.· reporla
a.rbcles of i_ncorporation have been
. flied With his office In ColumbWI b
DRF. Drllling Corporation
Racme. Incorporator 1s Bernard y
Fultz.
'

J

OFF

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

OFF ·

•LIVING ROOM

•END TABLES
10NLY

ALL

'89

NOW

BLI!~ VI~YL

1 GROUP

CHAIRS

95

NOW

ssg~s

WITH 4 CHAIRS

NOW

'24995

NOW

REG. $449.95

10NLY
REG. $1130

NOW

1 ONLY

LOVESEAT
REG.$499.95.

'199

EXTRA
SPECIAL

~2499 ~

59995·

'NOW S

CHAIR
REG. $349.95

\

RECLINERS

REG. $1199.95

1 OIUY

'750

1 STYLE
REG.$.369.95 -NOW .

'24995

SOFA · CHAIR · OTTOMAN

95

ELECTRIC BED ·
NOW

NOW

1ONLY

TWIN SIZE
R,EG. $1199.95

'565

NOW

DINETTE
REG. $299.95

'24495

ilSJ~

NOW

Tlmea-Senttnel Stall
Its members don't have aspirations of playing Broadway
and most of Its audiences aren't avid theatergoers.
But when the cast of Emotion Picture Show performs Us
repertoire or mbtl-dramas, It not only entertslns but Inform s Its viewers.
Deallng with social and (amlly problems or Issues, the
psycho-social drama troupe, comprised. or employees or
GaUla -Jackson-Meigs Mental Health Center's Consultation
Edycatlon and PrevenUon Department, performs skits
throughout the three-county area for various schools aod
civic organizations In an effort to teach through
entertainment.
"People don't like to listen to talking heads. They're entertained by TV . We entertain," Orman Hall, member or
the group and coordinator of consultation and educaUon,
explained.
Such groups have existed thrOugh various organizations '
for the last four to five years and are Increasing In popular;.
lty, according to Nancy Kohlrteser, group member aj1d
director of consultation educaton and prevention.
I
The local troupe was foimed a year and one-half
and
"began from an Interest bt starting a drug abuse p
am
that was extended. We saw something we wanted .to do and
expanded It," Kohlrieser said.
' educa"Our department has a responslbWty to provide
tion and prevention programs. Tlils Is a useful education
technique," she added.
Other members of the troupe are Phyllis Mason, secretary for the department, Linda Krasner, preventJon coordlna tor, Bonnie McLain, coordlna ttlr of senior friend
program at the center, Pat Arnow, media speclaUst, and
Bette Althof, education speclaUst.
Kohlrteser said most of the skits are for school-aged child·
ren but that the gtoup "showcases for adults what they do
for kids. "
After the troupe performs such skits as "Pushers," which
deals with the multitucki of Items advertised through com·
merclals and the po511lbie effect of that number on a person,
"Chips orr The Old Block" and "One Plus One," a discus·
slon period Is hel.d bt which the themes and meanings or the
mini-dramas ljle expressed, refined and taught.
"If we do nothing more than give them (their audiences)
something to thlrtk about, I feel we've accompUshed something," the director said.
The gf-oup also has a drug abUSe prevention program
throUghout the year usbtg the dramas at Buckeye HUis
Ca,l'4ier Center.
·
Other topics or the troupe's mini-dramas Include communication skills, drug use, parenting, rape prevention and
spouse abulte.
Pertonnlng three to five skits a session, from a repertoire
or lS, the group performs about six times a month.
There Is 110 fonnal c~~arae for their appearances for a
group or organization, but donations are accepted todefray
costs, they said.
'It's fun and we enJoy It People really seem to enjoy It
too, Kohlr1eler said,
Hall added, "It's the rrlOit consistently well-received pro-

it

RECLINER

REGULAR
$140.00

TABLE
REG. $419.95

By DEB FOX

•BEDROOM

•DINING ROOM

END TABLES

Show

We are doing our Spring
Cle~nlng and we need to
make room for our new
merchandise. So you can
Save lOG's of Dollars
Now•••••

LIGHTED PICTURES
lf2 PRICE

'

.

7, 1982

SENATE RECOGNITION - Senator Oatley C. CoiUns, hlmseU a
veteran .educator, pmeniii'J. E . (Dick) Cremeens with a resolution approved by the Oblo Seute In reeognlllon of Cremee1111' lor;~g tenure as a
member o( the board o( educalloo. The preaentallon came Friday during
aa appreciation baJIIiuel at HaDDan Trace High School. Dale Rothgeb
photo.
.

NEW JACKET- Principal Millard Cassidy pn!llented J. E. (Dick)
Cremeens with a red sports jacket with his oame Inscribed on the front
and the Hanoan Traee.WUdcats on the back at Friday's appreclatloa dlllner at Hanoan Trace High School. llllllde the jacket ~kets w~ 'two
packages of chewing tojlacco. Cremeens served 22 yean on the Hanoao
Trace and GaUla County boards of education.
.

0

Section [ID:

•14995

FREE·

I
l
I
•1

II

11"&amp;111 we·~ done.''

One of the mini-dramn. in
Emotion . Picture Slww'.• rc·
perroinr i.. ,.Pwhcn," .thown
above. It in110l...,. the ·mony
and varied advertLfK!htenu (,

penon, played center by Ormon HaU, encounter~. Linda
Kro.~ner,left, provide• violin
mruic to commercial jinglett
performed by, left to right.
Nancy Kohlrieier, Phylli•
Mmnn orwl Bonnie McLain .
In "One Plus One," lr!jl,
McLain , 01 the Iiiier, explaim
lo HaiL the body'• broi~.
what alcohol does to a per•on'• body wlum mixed with
another dcpre/ISOnt . &gt;ucla a•
t)Qlium. Other body paru arc
Kramer .., the eye•. Kohlrie~er w r.he ht."Url and MrP
son as a brain cell. Props also
·play an imporlant pari · in
lhe group ~• pre.sentati.on of
minl-drom.a.•. Included in
"Chip• Off The Old Block.'
botlom, parenl ! Mcl..ain and
Hall. wing joke prop•. drink
beer while advi..sinK lhcir
children, portrayed at left. by
Kohlri e.•er, Ma.• on and
KNIMier, about the danger.•
of marijuano and other
drug.•. The p•ycho-social
drama uoupe. t.'Dmpri.Jed of
membcro of Gollio-JackMJnMeigs Mental Health Cen·
t c r's Con~ultation,
Education arul Prevention
Department, perform• for
variora civic orgoni.zatiom
and &amp;ehoolo in the tri-county

/
'I

!
/
;

I

...•

�,
Page-B-2-The sunday Times- Sentinel

M1r. 7, 1982

Mar. 7, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-;&gt;oint Pleasant, W. Va.

FAC contiiiues membership drive .
GAUJPOUS- The annual memThe public is invited~o participate
bership drive of the French Art in FAC activities, wh¢ther 11\ty are
Colony, 530 First Ave., is in its members or non-members.
second week. Honey Irwin is However, re4uced. rates and morr
chairing this year's campaign which thly newsletters are · two benefits
will continue through Saturday, received from membe hip. Even if
March 13. Vice-chairpersons are one does not wish to particpate in
Ruby Briggs and.Yirginia Covert.
F AC activities, support is urged
According to Irwin, who is the from the community to maintain a
manager of SOcial Services Ad· cultural center in Gallipolis.
ministration, Third Ave., Gallipolis,
Besides Irwin, Briggs and Covert,
"The focus is primarily on team members .that rna:,: be connewcomers in the community and . tacted for membership infonnation
those who have never participated in are Lee Lee, Unda Strnmons, GretFAC art activities."
chen Carty, Anita Tope, Gladys
Included In the group's events this Grant, M'Lou Morrison, Mike
yea•· will be classes and workshops Brown, Betty Kyger, Renny Evans,
in all media, outdoor theater, corr PhyUis Rowan, John Shustitzky,
certs and musiellles, monthly art Dortha Suiter, Mtssy Baldwill and
shows and outdoor nature art ac- Karen Eachus, (Gallipolis), Jean
tivities.
On May
12, ThewiD
Ohio
University
Dance
Company
present
a
program at Washington Elementary
School. A two:.week series of visual
art classes will be· taught June 7-18
and on May 16, nature art activities
will be C()osponsored with 0. 0.
Mcintyre Park District.

·.ou offers

ATHENS - Area residents are invited to tske a learning break this
spring and aI tend one of the
: evening/'l"eekend classes offered
through Ohio University's Lifelong
Learning Office of Continuing
Education.
An open house on Thursday, Mar·
ch 11, from ii-7 p.m. in the Baker
Center Ballroom will provide an opportunity to learn abOut the variety
of classes offered and to meet the in. stl'Jlctors, view clas~ projects, watch
demonstrations and register for
classes.
Avariety of arts and crafts classes
wiil be offered including drawing, oil
painting, watercolor, calligraphy,
chair caning, stsined glass, papiermache and c•·ewel embroidery,
Writers, performers, lecturers
ana advertisers may want to tske
advantage of Humor Writing for Fu~
and Profit, one of only three such
. c.ourses offered in the United States.
An.other communication class,
Creative Writing and Getting
Published, welcomes fledgling
write1-s and seasoned pros. A new
class this quarter, Advanced
Writing Techniques for International Students, will focus on
technical and report writing
techniques.
Physical fitness classes include
Exer-Dance, an aerobic exercise

p1·ogram designed for women of all
ages and all shapes; Yoga Exercises
fo1· beginners or intermediates;
Busy Man's Conditioning; and
swimming classes for infants/toddlers th1·ough adults.
Sign Language for beginning
through advanced students, Con-

the Hutsah Puppet Theatre opened has performed for audiences
the series.
throughout the United States,
The Hotrnud Family recently Canada and Europe.
celebrated its lOth anniversary as a
With material ranging from anband. During the past deeade, the cient fiddle tunes to Uncle Dave
band has developed a sound unique Macon and Jimmie Rodgers to
to traditional country music, a group Merle Haggard and Dolly Parton, as
spokesman said.
well as their own originals, it is no
The Hobnud sound draws from the surprise that folklorists and critics
strengths of more than 50 year~ of have had trouble putting a label on
countrY music tradition, according . Hotmud's music.
to the spokesman. They have a style ·,The Hotmud Family has recorded
with the rhythmic lilt and irr six critically acclaimed albums, the
strumental virtuosity of the old-time first four for Vetco and the two most
bands combined with the expressive recent for Flying Fish.
vocal technique and hannony
For ticket information, contact
singing common to bluegrass and Rio Grande College at (614) 24ii-5353.
country music. This Hoimud sound

after-hours classes

versational Spanish tsught by a
native speaker, and English Conservation for International Women
will also be offered.
Classes for those interested in
business include Small Business
Ownership, a free investment Ject~•·e, and both beginning and
•·efresher typing.
The real estate program includes
Principles and Practices and Real
Estste Law, both required for sales
licensure; Rea! Estste Apprai.sing
and Finance, both required within
two years of licensure and approved
for 30 hours of. C.E. credit by the
Ohio Real Estate Commission. A
weekend seminar for investors and
•·ealtors, Zero-&lt;lown Buying of Single
Family Dwellings, is structured to
capitalize on today's market and approved for 15-hours of C.E. credit for
realtors. Real estste classes begin
the week of March 29 .
Other classes include mic•·ocompulers, ballroom dancing,
vegetarian cooking, greenhouse gardening, cut flower creations,
astrology, beginning and advanced

meditstion, nature study, beekeeping, star gazing, psychic
phenomena, the Biblical basis for
peacemaking,
Most classes begin the week of
April 5 and fees may be paid by
cash, check or credit card. A
detailed brochure including class
descriptions, limes, fees and instructors may be obtained from the
Office of Continuing Education,
Memorial Auditorium. Athens, Ohio
45701 or by calling 59461176. Collect
calls will be accepted.

SOUPS THIS WEEK
DIRECTS DANCER - Ballet star Rudolf Nureyev, right,
gestures u be explaiDa a atep to Bolton Ballet daacer Lorellll Dodd,
left, as be directs the ballet compaay Ill rebeanal Tbunday IIIIIGoiton.

New England Clam Chowder
AND

Hosts~ students
I'

Mushroom

,~_being alone

9'3"x11'4" BROWN/YELLOW SHAG
10'x11'9" GREEN SHAG
12'x13'7" GREEN/MUL Tl SHAG
12'x40' RUST/BLACK STRIPED Rubber Back
12'X14' GREEN/MUL Tl PLUSH
10'xll' BROWN/EARTHTONE Cut Looped
10'x13'8" PEACH
10'5"X13'8" RUST
8'x15' BR
T ORANGE
PLUSH
11'4"K19' BROWN SHAG
12'x39' RUST/GOLD Rubber Back
12'x7S' ORANGE ARMSTRONG
12'x80' WHITE/YELLOW ARMSTRONG
, 8'x12' GOLD PLUSH

$4.50 sq. yd.
54.50 sq. yd.
54.50 sq. yd.
$4.50 sq. yd.
$4.50 sq. yd.
$4.50 sq. yd.
$4.50 sq. yd.
sq .
$5.00 sq. yd.
$5.00 sq. yd.
$5.00 sq. yd.
$q. yd.
$5.00
sq.
: $6.00 sq. yd.
· S6.00 sq. yd.
$6.00 sq. yd,
$6.00 sq. yd.

12'xl5'2" SMOKE PLUSH
11'10"x18'7" LARGE BROWN PLUSH
lf'6"x13'3" BUTTERSCOTCH PLUSH
8'Kl7'7" DESERT SAND PLUSH
MINT GREEN

$9.00
$6.00
$9.50
· $12.00.
$15.00
$10.00
$8.00

$15.00
$8.50
'$10.00
$10.00
$15.00 .
$18.50
$16.50
$22.00
$19.95
$16.95

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA .
Fraltrlldl Uft l11srmmrt
Hom• Offlu ~ llock ltlar\d, lllinol1

.......
~... ~--::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::::::;:;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::~~====~RANGERETTES

·~··········4·~··~·

Thru April 10, 1982

times.

Clair) Dinner

"STATE CHAMPIONS"
1979, 1910. 1911

Only,~2.49

Is now accepting new members- No previous training
is required.

·

Treat your t~te to our tender, Juicy
clams, served with fresh cole slaw and
golden fryes • now at a special p~ice .
,One taste and you 'll love ·~m!

AGES: 6 ta 16 Years
CLASSES HELD IN
FIVE l-OCATIONS:
Pomeroy, Coolville, Belpre,
Parkersburg and Ripley, w.
Va.

Good only at:

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING
PWA

N.B.T.A.
. INSTRUCTOR

allo~.

Mrs. Snider Is the Southwestern
Ohio coordinator for American IntercultUral Student Exchange,
which places teen-age exchange
students In American homes.
&gt; Tills year, Mrs. Snider and her
• husband, the Rl!v. Daniel E.
: Snider, are taking care of a 17-year: old Colombia student who attends
: Harnllton High School.
In past years, the couple bas
• cared for girls froin Chile, Sweden,
· the Phlllpplnes, Norway, J'lrazll,
: Colombia, Ecuador, Iran, Jilpeit
' and Gennany.
: It IS so dltflcult to say goodbye to
~ the glr:ls when they
; leave that Mrs . .Snider said she
wonders each ttrne If she can do It ·
· again.
':Then, come another August, I'll
be standing at the Cincinnati air- ·
: port, waving an Amencan flag In
one hand and holding a gUt teddy
' bear, perhaps dressed In a red,
, white and b)ue T-shlrt In the other,
ready to give a welcome hug to sUll
• another daughter. I really Jove aU
those kids, and I'd miss them If I
~ stop now,'' she saSd.
' Watching the glrls hasn't always
: been easy beCause Mrs. Snider has
• been Ill much of her life. She bas
: had 14 operations for chronic Jntes: tina! disorders.
Rarely do problems occur with
· the transfer students. Years ago,
though, she had to send one of her
girls home early when the girl be-.
came too poHtlcally active.
There are ·plenty of light moments to make up for the dltfiCult

one

. "Once I teased
of my foreign
daughters. I told her she l!)lgbt
have to give up her room and lleep
In the bathtub because we had a lull
house that night. Later I heard loti
of laughter. I went to a bathroom
and found my daiJ8hter snug In her
tub, bed covers-and all. She had
taken me sertously," Mrs. ~
said.

Literary awards
NEW YORK (APl - Charles
Scrtbner's Sons says the winner of
Its MaxweliPerklnsPrlzefDraflnt
work of flctloil abOut the American
experience baa been awarded to ·
Margaret Mltcbell Dtdrore, autllor
of "A Novel Called Herltqe."
Scribner'
Novel ·
Award for a flrlt
baa been
awarded IIi Carol ClerMau Esler,
author of "The Arlildne Clue."
'lbe prl2ll!l
awarded for the
!lrSt time this yeer. 11le wtllllen.
were tel cted' from OYI!I' l{Gl!

The

J!';,e

-e

011112WS

wlll open In

for the price of one
on GREYHOUND

~

, HAMILTON, Ohio (APl ·-Two .
• sons of June Snider have grown up,
• but thE!·former nurse has plenty of
children to take their place.
Mrs. Snider has Invited 11 foreign
girls Into her home durtng the past
12 years. They are plirt or a ft,reJgn
student exchange program that
Mrs. Snider joined In 1970 when she
was looking for something to do to
repl:ice nursing.
"I love people and really hate to
be alone," she said. "Oh sure, there
are times everyone wants to be
; alone - me, too- but what really
makes my day IS being able to be
• tanilly to so many dltferent teens."
Under thl! exchange program,
each student's own farnlly pays
travel expenses·' and provides
spending money. The host family
provides food and a place to Uve. A
. ~-a-montli tax deduction Is

Nureyev choreographed lhe baUet... Don Quixote," which
a.. ton March ll. (AP Laaerphoto).

Now two can travel

to avoid

POOLS

BATON CORP

ts.''
For further information, contsct
RioG•·ande College at (614) 24~353 .

OPTOMETRIST----

SWIMMING
For Your Winter Need
Call304-429-4788

early childhood.
They have composed and recorded
for nationally distributed greeting
cards and for local radio and
television commercials. In addition,
they have also perfonned in mariy
radio and television shows
throughout the Philadelphia, New
Jersey, Delaware and Maryland
areas. Recently they were featured
with several other groups on a
Philadelphia area entertainment
television show "Channel 29 Presen-

DR . GEORGE W. DAVIS

WHOLESALE • RETAIL

. PORTABLE SPAS FITS
MOST ANY ROOM

RIO GRANDE - Kim and Reggie
Harris, a husband-wife musical duo
from PennSylvania, will perform in
coffeehouse at Rio Grande College
and Community College March 16.
The Tuesday night presentation is
scheduled to stsrt at 8 p.m. in the
stadent center on the college campus. There is no charge for admission and the show is apen to the
pubhc.
Natives of Philadelphia, the duo
have been performing together for
six years - the last three as
husband and wife. Both have been in
the entertainment business since

Cooper, Dorotl!y Hayes (RIO Grarr
de) ; Maxine 'Kinnaird, Betty Irvin
(Pt. Pleasant), Judy ArnOld, Carol
Tannehill (Middleport) .
Posters have been placed in the
library, Foodland and Krogers in
Gallipolis, an.d the library and Fruth
Pharmacy in Pt. Pleasant. Fliers
have been distributed at various
clulls, sporting events and housing
developments throughout the area.
Membership applicationS may be
picked up at Riverby or PJ's, 330
Second Ave. Information may be obtsined by calling the French Art
Colony at~- ·
FAC Galleries are open Tuesdays
and Thu1'Sdays, from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. and Saturdays and Sunda'ys,
f•·om I to 5 p.m.
•·

1503 Eaatem Ave.
Galllpolla

.

RIO GRANDE- Tickets are'stiU
available 'for the appearance of the
Hotrnud Family, a country and
• bluegrass group, at the Fine and
Perfonning Arts Center on the campus of Rio Grande College and Community College.
The group wlll perform Saturday,
March 13, at 8 p.m. as the fourth in a
five-part Community Artists Series.
The presentation Is sponsored by Rio
Grande College with the support of
the Ohio Al'ts Council.
Ballet Metropolitan, a resident •
professions I ballet company from
Columbus, recently completed the
third part in the series. Earlier, the
West Virginia group Trapezoid and

Duo
to perform
in coffeehouse
.
.

r--:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiij;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..-

Hotmud Family

Tickets available for
.
Hottnud ·at Rio Grande

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-8-3

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

CATARACT SYMPTOMS
Trouble with·Jights is one of the
symptoms of catal'act. So are
spots or ghost images. Or you
may notice a milky spot in the
pupil of your eye, which is normally black.
A cataract is a clouding of the
lens of the eye that inte1ie1·es
with the passage or light. This
causes blurred vision. A cata ract
can come on so slowly that you're
not awa•·e of itfor a long time.
It is most conunon in you1· older
yea1·s. It will g•·adually get wo1·se
and so will your vlsion. Surgery
will then be necessary to remove
the clouded lens. This IS usually a
simple procedure. Most patients
halve only a sho1t stay in the

hospilaL
The missing lens has o be
•·cpla ced fo1· you to be able to see ·
again. Fol'tunately that is not a
problem. Your optometrist will
prescribe cats•·act eyeglasses or
contact lenses. Then you can sec
as good as new again.
If you're having trouble with
lights or noti ce any othe•· symplOIT)S that suggest you may have
a cata1·act, you should have an
eye examination.

*******

'"t he in tere~ t ol be ,er \115/0n
/rom lh o ofl !ce o l

George W. Davis, O.D.
4S8Second Ave., Gallipolis
Phone 446-2238

CONTACT YOUR LOCAL
AGENT FOR MORE INFORMATION
PHONE 446-7332

STOlfi

Mon.·Thurs. 9 am til 9:30 pm
fri.·Sat. 9 am til 10 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

'

mit4uantitics

529 Jackson Pike

Spring Valley Shopping Plaza, Gallipolis

Restrictions apply. SubJect to ICC approval.

GoGreuhound®.
,~

I
the uT/VIng
rl · ·
t
and ,eave
tO us.

l~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
in stock
McCALL' SIMPLICITY
PATTERNS

BUY 2, GET

At Jo-Ann
Fabrics,
it costs you
less
look you ,
best
Sale

ONE FREE

endllal\1,.,,1
March .,.m,,

Embroidered eyelets

WGidrobe-maketl

VIsa•'Cadence tor auns and
aeparalel; pongee prints for
shirts. f'o!Witer: machine
WOih, dry; 6o• wide.

leg. $4.99 to $1.99 yd.

Rendezvous with romance
In these polyester; cottons.
AJJ.o\19rs and nouncesl
Machine wash, dry, 44" wide.
leG· $5.99 and $6.99 yd.

·•3.99vARD

25%0FF
f

Unenlookl

I

ChiC plelencteral 45 pofV/
rayon WO'IIIfll; 60" polyeller

1

Dimities and Ienos

T-shirt knits

Just this Side of innocent.

A gathering ol greets\
Potv/cotton ptlnts, st~pes
and solids, lor easy style.
Machine wosh, cjf\1, 60' wide.

sattonall Machine wosh, dry.

Polvelfer/cotton Ienos and
dimities are a defighll
Machine wosh ; dry, 45 ' wide.'

leg.$4A9

atg.$3A9yd.

leg. $4.99 to $1A9 yd.

•2.48vARD

~0%0FF

knRI allQ wooens. Sun·

...99yd.

25%0FF
/

upholalwy fabrics

Selec;l group

ot Htm:lllone

Zippers

.

Elalllc
Save newt Choose from our

'Wic»; ltaln-tesillant.
leg, ...99 yd. .

Choose from our entire,
regulally-Pflced cotlectton .
Coals and Ctork, UniQue®
Invtlfble, Beulon·~more.

entire, oeguto1ty.p~ced
stack, Tnctudlng pockaged
and by-the-yard.

•2.99vARD

·2Ch.oFF

20%0FF

allftn upholllery rabllcs . 54'

•

PABRICI

IDAHO

CRISCO :

'BAKERS

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA-GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Store Hours: Mort-Sat. 10-9; Sun. 1-5
PHONE: 446-7576

l~GLB. $}89

maJIIIIPI'Ipll.'

'

3-La.$}99

CA~

1 ·

With
·
Coupon
,!~~o!!!'!...a!.B.!r!~·.;;.·= --'•''"'

1.----

.
'\

�Mar. 7, 1982

Mar. 7

Ohio-Point

Rio nursing students
•
to be honored at ceremontes
RIO GRANDE - thirty-three
members of the associate degree
nursing program at Rio Grande
College and Conunuqity College, will
·be honored March 12 al7 :30 p.m. in
SJII!Cial recognition ceremonies in
the Fine and Performing Arl&lt;l CeJl..
ter.
· The recognition ceremony is to
honor thoSe students in the associate
degree program from the class of
1983. Tlie ceremony is open to the
public.
Dr. Charles E. Holzer 'Jr ..
president of the medical staff at
·Holzer Hospital and Medical Center,
will be the guest speaker at the
ceremony. Arecognition will be held
, following the ceremonies.
- ·. Students to be honored include
/!,&lt;, . . Yvonne Brown, Rodney ; Felicia
Browning, Oak Hill ; Denise Ci~cle ,
Oak
Hill ; Brenda Evans, Oak Hill;
"
Sheryl Evans, Gallipolis; Sondra
-~..... "Fee, Jackson; Marilyn Hall, Rio
.......... -:"P I
,
·Grande ; Sandra Herdman, Rutland;
WINNERS - Kristl Haynes and John Epple are
reading. Winning entries were reproduced and
Vicki Hol;&lt;apfel, Wellston : Cheryl
pictured with their original bookmarks which won first
distributed. Krisll and John received their choice of
Houck, Gallipolis; Tish Hudson.
place bono,.. in a bookmark maklng coolest held at the one book free each from a book fair held during the
Gallipolis : Rhonda. Hughes.
Meigs Junior High School as a part of Right To Read
week as their prizes. Runneflloup were JeH Basham to
Gallipolis; Shirley Hughes. Oak
Week acllville•. Bokmarks were In categorical and arMis• Haynes ill the seventh grade and Kristl Groghan
Hill: Amy Johnston, Hilliaa·d : Bryan
Jo.&gt;eph. JacksOn: Debra j(alinoski .
...,:ll:::,•t::;ic~d:;;:es:::ig:,:ns:,_w;;,;i:,:th~ca;,;lc:;;:h;;;:Y.....;;sl;,;:og::;a;;;ns;...,;t.;.o_e;,;o;;.co;,;u;;,;ra;,;~;,;.e_;,;to~J.;.oh;;;n;,;E;;:;P;:;.PI;,;.e.;;;.in the elgblh grade.
'

stomach'" before the show, but she brought the sell-out crowd to Its feet
at her London stage debut. -·
·
Actor Rlchard Burton, who was married to ~&gt;fisl&gt; Taylolr tw1ce, .... _ ''
present for her trlurnph. He was at work on a 111m
project In AUStria, missing tbe charity preview of
"The Utile Foxes" at the VIctoria Palace Theater
Frtday olgbt. The play opens to the public next
Thumay.
·
Burton and Miss Taylor had a warm reunion; their
first meeting In five years, at Miss Taylor's 50th blith·
day party last weekend.
"Of course I am nervous, but I am very excited
well," Miss Taylor, wearing a burgundy gown, told
the Preess Association, the domestic Bfttlsh news agency,
curtain.
Although It was Miss Taylor's first appearance on a London stage, It
was not her first role in the British theater. She had a non·speaklng part
in a 1966 production of "Dr. Faustus" by the Oxford University
Playhouse.

Snvtlt• r, Oak Hill ; Sht•t')'l Tolliver,
.l a~· kso n : Julie Vance. G~llipolis and
Mikt•al Yaskowilz. Tiffin.
The Rio Grande nursi n~ prol.! ram
~~l) lls is ts
[ttl' the

of a two-year

~urt·i rulum

pa·cparation of registered
nut'SI'S with emphasis on giving
direct nursin ~ ca n' to patients
witll in a strudurcd health can' set-

a n •a\·aile:tblt.&gt; .

Pac-Man
Gobblers

CAKE-TYPE

DONUTS

Topu

Lahaurreaheurnwfo01drlsd ofangdlai nvaitensmaJa·m to
85
1 15
Tickets for " The Glass
Menagerie" are $3 Wednesday,

.

Candy - FREE CANDY MAKING
DEMO. March 11th - Call for time
and details.

1982 SPRING
LEE'S CARPET SALE
Our best selling carpets of this year's best prices.
One low price includes both a thick foam pad and
custom installation.
(Minimum 18 sq. yds.-Sale ends March 271

To;opVJ'

1

fU RN ITU~E
GALLERIES
Second at Grape,.Gallipolis., 446·0332

BEGINNER CAKE DECORATING CLASS STARTS MARCfl
23r~. SIGN UP NOW!

NOW IN STOCK!
DUKES of HAZARD
PARTY TABLEWARE

~rn-andb-and~F~y~i=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

and Saturday. Group a:nd Golden
Buckeye rates are also available.
For more information, visit the.Kantner Hall box office, 17 S. College St.,
Athens, Monday through Saturday,
10 a .m. to S p.m., or call (614) S94ii010. All performances begin at 8
p.m.

LANDMARK IN POMEROY

CLEVELAND (APf- Wigs ar·
en't frivOlous cosmetic Items to Jef·
frey Paul, a hairdresser who deals
with cancer patients undergoing
chemotherapy.
Paul, who runs a hairdressing
and replacement center in subur·
ban Rocky River, has established a
wig bank to help cancer patients
who have lost their hair and can't
afford expensive custotn-made
wigs.
"We started working with chemotherapy patients back In the
middle of last year," said Paul, 30,
a dealer for 'a Minneapolis com·
pany that makes wigs tallored for
cancer 'patients.
"The more 1 did this, the more It
hurt me to.tell them they had to buy
UXJ or $400 wigs. So I began to donate wigs to them. Then I found the
numbers are much greater than I
had thought."
One of Paul's first such customers was Laura Holy, 13, a leuJte.
mia patient and daughter of family
friends. Through her, he learned
that children face a double
problem.
.
"Most wigs are just not made for
chlldren," said Paul. "Even If 1 can
tallor one to a small head, 1 can't
make It look real."
Paul said the experience of losing
hair Is traumatic to all who undergo
chemotherapy but that It Is especially dltflcult for children.
"Kids can be cruel to others," he
said, explaining that those without
hair are subject to ridicule from
their peers.
Hair loss Is also experienced by
burn victims and victims of other
accidents, he said.
"When they lose their hatr. the
shock Is much more tritenslfied,"
Paul said. "It's Uke a'l'louncing
• their •lsease to the world."
Paul says wigs for those who lose
hair through disease or radiation
treatment are more like prostheses
than cosmetic hatr pieces and can
cost as much as $600. Many people
can't afford them, he said, especially with the costs of medical
treatment.
Paul encourages people to donate
wigs they don't use any more to his
wig bank. He and his associates
then cli!an and remodel the wigs .
The recipients show proof that
they are medical patients and in

YOUR DISCOUNT CENTER ON HOTPOINT APPLIANCES AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVIONS

LARGE SELECTION
OF CLEAN, PRE-OWNED

"We Will Not Be Undersold"

s1oooo Discount

MOBILE HOMES
ALL TRADE·INS ON .MODULAR HOMES SOLD IN
· THIS AREA.
!911BELMONT 1216S .. .•.. . .......................
1972 BARON, 12x60, CENTRAL AIR .... . .... . . . . .. .......
1976 OAKWOOD 12x52, furnished wilh central air conditioning .....
1967 ELCONA 10x50 WITH TIP·OUT IN LIVING ROOM .. . . . . . ... .

$7,395
$7,395
$7,395 .
$3,450

ASK ABOUT THESE HOMES AT OUR
BELPRE LOT

1973 SHENANDOAH 12x60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,500
1970 BUDDY12x52 .. .. . . .. .. .. .. . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . .. . $3,495

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
'

1100 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
992·7034

1m Delu~e 19.0 cu ..ft. refrigerator-freezer fJ] 13.8
cu. ft. fresh food capacity 1Ji 5.2 cu. ft. freez!lr
section lliJ Reversible doors ffi3 Rugged Triton II
door and cabinet liner liJ Rolls-out-on-wheels.

99%
F:

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And 100% tigure·perfecl. And you

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\
you tha t fat ls you r enemy- deteat it ~

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You can tnen watch with 1ncreas·
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tlrmea. The secret: the
sctenllllcally tested
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shortest distance be1ween you .and a

~autlfut body.
·~ ._.....n,

'

Ill 7 Cycle built dishwasher • Pot ·
washer with Power -Scrublll cycle 8
Energy·saver dry cycle 8 Reversible
color fron ts 1!11 Short Wash cycle 1!11
Crystal Clear"' rinse dispenser 8 Soil
food disposer II Sound insulation.

..lli"

::::..·::::.'" '";·.
.......

"tl.fJJ..~.

•

U.W!ll· rn.
r;Ht'JV'r'

I

.ssooo.DISCOUNT
ON PAl~

STARTS AS AVALUE
••• STAYS AVALUE!

· TOP OF THE STAIRS
L'~NDMARK ~

.

Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
.
.
Drive a-little and save a lot-Ftee delivery within 75 miles
Yes, we service a! your locai'Hotpoint Dealer _
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:3o·. Mill Closed atS: 00 P.M.
serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties ·

."

RIVERSIDE, Ca!U. (AP) - Mayor Pete WUson of San Otego has
otflclally tossed his hat into the U.S. Senate race, calling himself "a
tront·ruMer" among a bevy of Republican hopefuls.
WUson said a poll shows him slightly tralltng the leac~~nS
date, Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr.
A half-dozen Republicans are vying to succeed In·
cumbent Sen. S.l. Hayakawa, who Is retlrlng.
WUson had announced In August that he would run,
and he had scheduled a half-dozen appearances to
formaUy announce his campaign.
"The suspense Is over," he said Friday.

PRICES EFFECTIVE TODAY THRU SATURDAY MARCH 13th

CUT

RIB
PORK CHOPS

$}6,~
LB.$1 79
LB.$139
LB $139

CENTER CUT

LOIN PORK CHOPS
COUNTRY STYLE

SPARE RIBS
LOIN END

PORK ROAST

FRESH LEAN

SLICED' QUARTER

J}38

PORK
LOIN

~98¢

.
$139
$133 . PORK SHOULDER STEAK
LR.99e MIXED. t~RYER PA~TS Ls.49C
99(: SLAB BACON
La.99(

WHOLE

LB .

PORK LOIN

LB .

GOLDKtST

· SUPERIOR

CHUNK BOLOGNA

SUPERIOR

120Z .
P~G.

U. S. No. 1

.. . 48¢

GROUND
BEEF

FRESH
FLORIDA

IDAHO
POTATOES,

FULL
PINT

88¢

STRAWBERRIES

LB.$129

SlB.

BAG

$ 59

MAXWELL HOUSE
240Z.

CAN

$}28

AU GRINDS

COFFEE

t:

$698

6.SOZ.

CAN

2·LB.
JAR

VIVA

COTTONEUE

TOILET

PAPER

&amp;ROLL
PKG.

need, he said.

'

.

POMEIOY LANDMARK

TM

FITNESS &amp;BEAUTY STUDIOS

'50.00 DISCOU,..T

ll,. tilt»••i .n

~~

Mlt • .-..,...111.
•
" Allington Ubo!IIOfiM, UCI . 1981

• 30" Self-cleaning oven-range with
plug-In Calrod® surface heating units
• Automatic oven limer li Surface
unit "ON" lights • Lift-off black glass
door • . Removable trim r~s/pans .

Iii -Large capacity washer with 2 agi·
. lators for gentle or rugged loads Ill 2
Wash/Spin Speed combinations • 3
Wash/Rinse temperatures !I! Matching
dryer with up to 70 minute timed cycle
II Automatic Sensi-Dryr" dryness
control Cycle @I .Press Guard™ control system ID End-of-cycle-signal.

Mayor to run for U.S. Senate

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
85 Vine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446·9593
arve the Rig(!} to Umit Qual'!tity''

THE

C~NTER

Wig bank aids
. ·'
cancer vtcttms

"That Is not bad at all In this tough world," Ford told a meeting of the
Future Industry Association.
·

SHOP

CLEVELAND (AP) - Pac·Man
doesn't seem to have a chance
where tli!eves are concerned.
The owner of a video game dis·
trlbut.orshlp in Cleveland estimates
75 of the machines, valued at $3,000
each, have been stolen in the last
six months.
"There Isn't an operator In town
who hasn't lost games," said San·
ford Brown, owner of B&amp;B Music
Co.
Brown said he has lost thi'ee of
the popular game machines from .
local bars, bowling alleys and bars
he serves.
.
"They're not stealing pinball ma·
chines, they're not stealing juJte.
box.e ,. They want the video
games," Brown said.
Thieves apparently ha'e a win·
ntng strategy In taking the games.
"It seems to be a well-organized
gang, and there must be a market
for them." Brown said. "They say
they're replacing a machine, and
never return."
There have been no arrests in the
gobbled Pac·Man cases, pollee
said.

THAT ARE NOT FRIED IN GREASE .
COME IN AND TRY I!!EM ......

At anotber pubHc appearance Friday, this one In Boca Raton, Fla.,
Ford had praise for Reagan. He said he'd give Reagan a "good 'B'
grade" for his first year as president.

GREENWICH, Conn. (AP) - Fonru.r Presicli:!nt Gerald R. Ford
says he's already made hi$ "last polltlcal hUJTah."'
Ford said Friday he'll remain active in politics but \VIll never again
seek public oltlce.
Refen1ng to the sensation he created In lJBl when
he toyed with running for vice president on the Reputr
llcan ttcket with Ronald Reagan, Ford said: "That
was my last political hurrah."
Ford made the comment at an appearance for U.S.
Sen. Lowell P. Welcker Jr., who Is expec.ted to an·
nounce soon his plans to seek re-election. It would be
the liberal Republican's third Senate term.
Ford claims to have kicked ·the political bug.
"I continue to have an interest In the Republican
Party, in politics and economics In this country," he said. "Bull have no
personal ambitionsr of any kind."
·

,

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-B-5

Dint Pleasant, W. va .

No 111ore political hurrahs

as

till!.! whert• s upe n ·isidn and guidance

0

Sunday/People

LONDON (AP) - EUzabeth Taylor said she had " butterrues In the

-"''~~'#- '1.50 ADOZEN Reg. 1.79
t,~~,.
~AY OLD '
~\(\ DONUTS ...................~~~~-~1.00
r-:;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;:1 NEW HOURS: OPEN 8:00 A.M.-4:30P.M.
ANfiUAL
Learn how to make your own Easter ·

shape her world and him according
to the standards of a vanished era.
Tom's crippled sister, Laura (Jane
Gabbert-Wilson), Uves in a world as
ft·agile as the glass animals she
collects. To entertain Laura and to
appease his mother, Tom invites a
friend, Jim O'Conner (Gerry Large)
home for dinner. The painfully shy
S

Taylor had butterflies

r~S•;'";ia;;&amp;;·,t;lt;t.;O;a;k~H;il;l:;;A;m;a•~Jd;a;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

.

OU will present
(Glass Menagerie'
ATHENS "The Glass
Menagea·ic," by Tennessee
Williams, will be presented March g.
14 in Forum Theater on the ground
floor of Ohio University's a·adio and
television building.
Stage Ill Tour Company of Ohio
University Theater is producing the
play. The company is comprised of
third-year graduate students in acting and directing and second-year
graduate students in production
design and tec)mology seeking
master of fine art.~ degrees.
"The Glass Menagerie" is the
story of a young man, Tom
Wingfield (Daniel Robbins) , torn between hlnesponsibil.ily to his family
· and his need to be his own person.
His mothea·, Amanda (Linda
Smythe), a popular Southern lady
when she was younger, tries to

Oak Hill: Nancy Ko h lri es~ r.
Gallipolis; Teresa 'Le~. Point
Pleasant , W. Va. : Barbara McCalla.
Gallipolis: Linda McN~al . Oak Jlill :
Bonnie Martin. Wellston: Sheryl
Massay. Jacksoil: Robi n Millt·r,
Greenfield ;
Wanda
Mull ett ,
Wellston : Alice Newkirk . Jackson,
Vicki R&lt;!lhuu&gt;n. South Bloomlield:
Crys tal Ril ey. Ja ckson: · Ann t•
Roberts . Point Pleasa nt. W. Va.:

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~

"

.

Paul said many chemotherapy
patients don't know where to get
wigs and get no advice from thetr
doctors.
A spokeSWoman for the Cleveland Clinic, for Instance, said get·
ling a wig Is left up to the lndlvldual
patient.
""The emotional stress Is lncredl·
ble," said Paul.
Georae Riner, general manager
ot the Allen Arthur Co. in Mtnneapolls, said clealel')laround the country
· are aetttng up slmllar wig banks.

.

HAIIf% MOUNTAIN

CATLinER ·
25 LB.
BAG

$168.

-TitAILaADR
DOG FOOD

MISS-CK

HAIR SPRAY
SAVIlle

5 LB.

BAG

$128

9 oz.
CAN

$l.S8

VAUIYIIILL
FESTIVAL

ICE CREAM
HALF
GAllON

$148

ROYAL CREST

2% MILK

178

•

�Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va.

Mr. and Mrs. Ridgway
POMEROY - A small country
church near Bashan was the selling
for the Jan. 31 evening wedding of
Peggy Sue Trussell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Trussell, and David
Scott Riqgway, son of Rattle
Ridgway and Dr. John Ridgway.

The altar was decorated with red
velvet draping, white lace swags
and adorned with white wedding
bells. Three white candles, placed on
either side Of the altar, were accented with philodendron plants at
each corner.

Will-Moore

are employed at the Gavin Power
. Plant in Cheshire.
The wedding will be held Friday,
POMEROY·- Mr. and Mrs. Leo March 12, at 7:30 p.m. at Apple
Johnson, Harrisonville, are an- Grove Methodist Church. Music will
nouncing the engagement of her begin at 7 p.m. The custom Of open
daughter, Barbara lj:llen WiD, to Jef- church will be observed.
frey Lorn Moore, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fredille L: Moore, Cheshire.

Bowman-

Cunningham

Debbie ROle pmented prenuptial
organ mwlic with selections Including "We Are Loved." A recording of "Uncllalned MelOdy" by
Willie Nelsoil was played prior to the
wedding procession.
Escorted by her father, the bride
was attired In a cream polyester
full-length gown with chantilly lace
on the bodice, neck, and cuffs, will)
long 'full sleeves and satin ribbon tie
at the cinched waist with an unusual
flowing bustle effect adorning the
back of the gown. She wore a matching lace mantle which draped to
her shoulders.
Antique pesrl earrings, borrowed
from her maternal grandmother,
Faye Kirkhart, and a blue garter
carried out the traditional customs.
She carried a caseade of red roses
attached to white net with white
satin streamers.
Missy Trussell, the bride's
daughter, was flower girl for her
mother and wore a erd and white
long sleeved ·dress trinuned in red
satin ribbon. She had red ribbons in
her hair and carried a basket of red
and white rosebuds.
Renee Trussell, sister Of the bride,
was the brideamaid and wore a red
velvet street-length dress with white
tibboh trim. She carried a bouquet
of white roses with red ribbon
streamers.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Trussell chose a full-length
turquoise dress and Mrs. Ridgway a
· navy blue street-length dress. Both
mothers had white rose corsages,
Jeff Ridgway served as best man
for his brother. and Mary Ridgway
registered the guests. Ushers were

Steve Trussell, Scott TruSsell and
John Hoffman.
Following. the single-ring
ceremony conducted by Rev. Mark
Flynn, the couple cut the threetiered wedding cake decorated In
white with red roses around each
tier, The cake was topped wit!) a
cluster of. three satin bellS, and was
provided by the bride's paternsl
grandmother, Sadie ~II.
Gift8 were presented to the couple •·
wbo now r.eslc)e with their daughter
on Pleasant Ridge in Pomeroy.
Attending the ceremony or sending gifts were Mr. aod Mn. Hank
Cleland, Mn. Archie Rose, Synthla
White, RObYl) PiiZer, Mr. and Ml'!.
Avery Goeglein, Mr. &amp;nd M:-s. Bob
Trussell, Mr. ilnd Mrs. Earl Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Edson Roush,
Mary and Michelle Gress, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Webb, RObbie Lawson,
Mite Deem, Mr. and Mrs. John
Ridenour, Jason ilnd Jared, Deidra
COII!dery, Roger Bissell, Tammy
Mossman, Beckie Long, Diane
Ridgway, Avis Jackson, Keith
Krautter, Karen Steinebrunner,
Rita Little, Nola Young, Martha
Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce F. Riffle,
Lola F. Sanders, Dottle Turner, Alke
Marble, Betty Jo Shelton, Sadie
Trussell, Barbara Spencer, Cathy
Spencer, Faye Kirkhart, Audelle
Deeter, Beretta Deeter, Benitta
GAWPOLJS - COnnie Lynn
Deeter, 1\faty Ridgway, John HOffFillinger and Howard Lee Halley
man, Mr. and Mrs. Junror White and
were married Feb. 6 at the bride's
family, Ola Hysell, Mary Grace
parents' home by Rev. 0. H. Cart.
Cowdery and family, Mr. and Mrs.
The bride is the daughter of-Mr.
Donald Trussell and Dawn, Mr. and
and Mrs. Harlan Fillinger, Route 2,
Mrs. Babe Hill, Mrs. Murl Ours and
Rio Grande, and Halley is the son of
Mrs. Betty Gaul.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Halley, Route
I; Gallipolis.
Bridesmaid was the bride's sister,
Patsy Fillinger, and best man was
Andy McQuaid.
Edie Ross sang ancl played the
organ to "The Wedding Song."
Awedding cake was baked by Sue
Hayslip.
have two daughters, Tammy, 17,
ilnd Tanya, 12.
Reservations for the meeting are
to be made on or before March 9 with
Sarah Wlnte", 44&amp;-7444; Gloria
Jotwon, 742-2442; Joyce Hoback,
941}.2325, or Billie J. Dawson, 7739123.
•
The doors will open at 6 p.m., dinner will be served at 7 p.m. and the
couple will speak at 8 p.m.

Signups for soccer
'

ModeiSS22
Universal Pressure system

, "Spinning reel" thread de·
livery • Free·arm

NOW ONLY

{

.
· . . . . . . . . . . . -.. -::M
:-=r.-a-nd.,. ..Mrs. Halley

March of tin soldiers

Signup fot· play in the Mason County at·ea soccet· league for both boys
and girls will beeld in the Family
Clinic, Pt. Pleasant, through Mat·ch

Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Evans, Holl, Scott, Shawn,
Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs. H~r­
bert Cairns, Hebron ; Cathy Ware,
Hebron; Mrs. Jane Leonard, Crestwood, Ky.; Dale Evans and Marilyn,
LaiiCII$ter; Mr. and Mrs. David
Evans, Derald and Sha~non,
Beaver; Mr. and Mrs. Don Ruckman, Baltimore. Mrs. Judy Maxwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dams, assisted.with the celebration
but could not come from her borne in
Glendale, Arizona for the observance.
Gifts and cards were presented to
the couple.
·

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Adams were n!CellUy Sill"
prl8ed by their children at a 25th
wedding anniversary party held in
the banquet room of the Summit Inn,
Pataskala.
Dinner was served to the guests
after which the couple was presented a twD-tlered bearto«haped cake
inscribed "To Mom and Dad M their
25th Wedding Anniversary." Also
presented to the couple was a plate
with an anniversary inscription and
a book of the evening's events. Observed at the dinner was the blrt)lday ~ Mr. and Mrs. Adams' son,
Joe. He, too, was presented a cake.

I

Rodney couple to
speak at Aglow meet
POMEROY - Jerry and Dorothy
Skagga of the Community Church of
God in Rodney will be speakers at
Uie Tbiii'Bday meeting of the
Pomeroy Chapter ~ Women's
Aglow Fellowship to be held at
Meigs Inn.
Mr. and Mrs. Skaggs have been
ministering In Aglow, churches, conferences, camp meetinga, radio and
television for several years. They

The sunday 'nmes-Sentinei- Page-B-7

Mar. 7, 1982

12. Re~istration will take place 9
a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through
Ft·iday,and from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m.
on Saturday.

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP)
- Tin soldiers are· more than
child's play for Wendell Scbol·
lander, wbo bas made more than
270 miniature tin soldiers impeccably attired In their World War I
uniforms.
Schollander, a lawyer for R.J.
Reynolds Industries, spends hOurs
casting a mold. Then he begins
painting the replica. Even with a
magnifying glass, It cart take up to
30 hours to paint one minutely detailed soldier.
Schollander says there are fewer
than 20 fellow enthusiasts In tliif
Untied States.

·

'·

..----=-----·: THIS WEEK'S ..:

:

••

Diet e
•
Rite' .;

8~16oz.

Btls.

e
•

:
•

_e

•

•
e:

too·' ·:•e.·

•

:
•

·- ~

RC ·

•:• ·
:
•
•
•

'

:!

SPECIAL

COME IN AND SEE ABOUT
SIMPLICITY'S BUY 2 AND·GET
THE THIRD ONE FREE OFFER

Mr. and Mrs. Couch, 30th

eeeeeeee••••eeee

.
.:

5522

·POMEROY - Mr. and . Mrs.
Robert COuch, Mulberry Heights,
pomeroy, will observe their 30th
wedding anniversary on Saturday,
March 13, at a reception to be held in
the conununity rooni of the Senior
Citizens Center. .
, Mr. and Mrs. Couch were married
in Racine on March 15, 1952. He is
tile son liE Mrs. Ellen Couch,

AND REMEMBER, PARK FltEE IN
POMEROY All DAYON SATURDAYS

'

Resort:
sUng back

$139 ·: ·
•pi
e
' us e
. Deposit e

e

ICE COLD BEER,
WINE &amp; POP

SINGER

THE FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd

Pomeroy, OH.
Servin&amp; Melp &amp; G•llil Co.

As Your Sinter Appro"d Dealer

espadrllle

.

:

Open Daily lQ-9;
Sunday 1-6

e
e

HOURS
.:
Monday thru Saturday e
8 A.M. tllll P.M.
e

e

: Gallipolis Ice Co.

:

•

DRIVE THRU
•
CARRYOUT
e
:
709 First Ave.
:
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

e

Service Council to meet
Will

Roush-Sands

Cunningham,
Bowman
GALLJPOLIS - Mrs. Mary
Lookado of Porter, and Bill Byus Of
Point Pleasant announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Brenda
Bowman, to Mike Cunningham of
Gallipolis.
Cunningham is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Gillespie of Gallipolis.
The custom of an open church
wedding will take place April!O at 7
p.m. at Rodney Methodist Church by
Rev. Rummel. A reception will be
held following the ceremony at the
Kyger Creek Club House.

Jean Niday, director of the Gallia
County Senior Citizens Center, will'
be the speaker for the March II
Gallia County Human Service Council meeting·.
She will discuss the Senior Citizens
Center and present a slide show
depicting various aspects of the center's programs.
The meeting will be held in the
multipurpose room of GalliaJackson-Meigs Community Mental
Health Center. A luncheon begins at
noon. Reservations for the luncheon
need to be made before noon on Wed-

0\t( llfm lnlen!ion il IO MIYI ..... ry lldVItl·
liNd iltm In eloclc Ofl our ehelvH . II an
U..l1ittd lltm It not lvtlllble for pur·
chaea due to any unlo•eeaen re11on .
t&lt; rnt~n will iltue a Rain Check on requetl

nesday, March 10, by calling Phyllis
Mason a t446-5500.

tor 1t1t mercnandlte (one Item or reaaon·
.,._ tamil)i quenli1y\ to~ purchlled at the

uJe priea ~ver Avtllabll 01 will eetl
you a OOI'flPirabkl quam~ ilem at 11 compa ·
rablt reduCtion In price.

Expensive look

Mr. and Mrs. Neal, 25th

PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.
lntertor decorator here
belleves anyone can get an expensive look In a hOme even with a limited budget.
Her lips are "use classic styling,
such as wing chatrs. Color coordination ts a mllst. Most Important,
walt and buy fewer good piEces,
rather than a lot of cheap thlnga to
fill up the rooms In the beginning;"
says Eta Wright of Inside Design.
(AP) -An

r------------------------1

Look whats cookin'at
'' '
..
'

Turning green
STREAMWOOD, Til. (AP) -Indoor gardeners are caring for more
than twice as many plants as they
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. did five years ago.
The ave"fage number of plants tn
Russell Roush are announcing the
engagement and approaching the 58.8 million households that had
marriage of their daughter, Cindy, Indoor plants In 1981 was 21.9
to Doug sands, son of Mr. and Mrs. plants, up from an average of 10.0
In 1975, aCCOrding to Phillips ProCameron Sands, GaUipolis.
Both the bride-elect and her fi,ance-- ducts, a manufacturer of
planterware.

Roush

i

,.

WOMEN'S HOURS

Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to 7:00
Sat. 1:00 to 5:00

MEN'S HOURS

Mon.-Fri. 7:00 p;m. to 10:00 p.m.
S~clal

Stq-:_tlng_
·

I

I'

..( $15
4 88
our

Reg . 22 .47

00)
1

0urReg . 6 .17

6-pr.

•
Pkg.
6·pr. Pkg. Men's Crew Sock•
Cushion-lined socks of cotton/
stretch nylon. Fit 10-13. Seve.

our

( 102)
Reg. 32 .57

Sole Price

•22

99

$Your

.
Choice
Vlallc"' Fresh Pack Pickles
Icicle spears or butter chips.

Stanadyne Faucets

Touch confrol . Comes complete with pop·
up drain assembly or without rod and
drain .

I
'•

'

3 66

~~~..

2

87~~~

9 97·

4.97

Reg. (106)
5x7
(108}
•
12.57
Jeans With FortreP
Salld Hardwood Frames
Cotton/Fortrel"'
polyester.
Our 8x10 · · · · · ·--- 5.97
tton/polyester.l3x15"
.
Co
r -shirts and other stvle:;s·_..J_.::=;..;:.::.:.:..:..r-....:.....:.-...JL..----r---r;--~::::-

•
4.96
MIIMI' Fashion Tops

3.87.
lundle Of 12 Dl.sl!clotha
•

0

DEVELOP and PRINT

We're serving up our old-luhioned Filh Fry Dinner! .
Tender fish filets, prepared in Shoney'a special ~and served
with tasty tartar sauce and a fresh alice of lemon. Plus
french fries (or steaming baked polato alter SPM), warm touted
grecian br*, and aB the hot homemade soup and IPirden
fresh salad you can eal It's a great catch at this apecial price. And
another way we llll}l "Thank you lor coming to Shoney~s:'

328 Viand Sl

/101)

., t
•

OurFIShfu
DinnerIs BaCk!

Now '20

. ' Phone 446-4108 ·'
CENTER HEALTH SPA

'

-

Mar. 8th thru Mar;~nst
Reg. $30 Member

Merrill Wilcoxen, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Stewart and their children, Jason
and Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Hawks, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hawks,
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Hawks and
Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Voreb,
Mr. and Mrs. James Plants, Rev.
and Mrs. Jerry Neal and Cynthia
and Valerie, and David Stewart.
Those sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. John Zinn of Gallipolis and Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Neal Of Port
Chester, N.Y.
The couple is semi-retired from
their dairy farm business at their
new borne on old Route 160 . in
Evergreen.
Their son, Ron, and his wife Judy
operate their own dairy farm which
was started In 1943 by Mr. Neal's
father, Elvin Neal.

•

l

Gallipolis. Oh.

Open Under New Management
DONNA FISHER • MANAGER

••

•

FITNESS CENTER HEALTH SPA
417 Second Ave.

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Neal of Rt. I, Bidwell, celebrated
their 25th wedding anniversary with
an open bouse party Feb. 28 with
their children, friends and relatives.
The Neala were married March 1,
1967 in Riclvnond, Ind. They are the
parents of three children, Mrs.
James (Sherry) Preston of Bidwell, .
RoMie Neal of Rl 2 Bidwell and
Teresa Jo, at home.
Mr. Nealis the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elvin Neal of North Fori Myers,
Fla., and Joan is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Hawks of Vinton.
1'00ie helping them celebrate
were Mr. ilnd Mrs. James Preston,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Neal (the former Judy Newhart), Teresa Jo, Kim
Smith, Jackie Jones, L. A. Guinther,
Joyce Jones, Jerry l'aylor, Mr. ilnd
• Mrs. Ronnie Wilcoxen, Mr. and Mrs.

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Mar. 7, 1982 ·

SUNDAY

THE Revelators of McArthur
will sing Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Zion Freewill Baptist Ch.urch,
Lower Plains, Athens. The Rev .
Eddie Boyer, pastor, invites the
oublic.
EURE~

- A revival continues at Eureka Unied Christian
Church at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
Rev. Donnie Johnson. Joy Heirs
will sing Sunday. Rev. Warren
Woodyard invites the public.

MONDAY

•

·calendar

asked to call Ruth Reeves, 698. 3290.

HARRISONVILLE Chapter
255, Order of Eastern Star, will
hold a practice session at 7 p.m.
Sunday. All officers are asked to
be present.

THE SOUTHERN Junior High
Athletic Boosters Club will meet
Monday at 7:30p.m. All parents
of players and the cheerleade1·s
are asked to attend. An awards
banquet will be planned.
RIO GRANDE - Atwood Club
will meet Monday at noon at Rio
Grande College Dining Hall.

A MEETING of persons interested in a 4-H horse project is
asked to meet at 7:30 Monday
night at the Hoof Hollow Bandits
Fatm. Those interested a1-e

GALUPOUS - Extension
Bee! School will meet at 7:30p.m.
Monday at the PCA Building.
Topics will inc.lude Buckeye
Feedlot Conditioned Program.
Speaker will be Jim Clay, area
extension agent, Animal Industry, Jackson.
GALUPOLIS - ReKistration
for the sp1·ing session of
presrhool 'story hour at Bossard
Memo1·ial Library, 641 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, will begin Monday. To register preschoolers,
call 446-7323 or 1-egister at the
library. Sta11ing dates a•·e March
17. Sessions will last fo1· five
weeks, ending April 14 and 15.
The Wednesday session wlll be
from 6: 4a to 7:4a p.m. and the
Thursday from 10 to 11 a.m.
Sessions will include a mixture of
stories. fingerplays, songs, filmstrips and c•·afts.
THE POMEROY PTA will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
school. The , p1·ogram will be
presented by Virginia Strong,
supervisor of the EMR and LD
classes of the Meigs Local Board
of Education. The second grade
room mothers will have the
refreshments. The third grade
will lead in the pledge.

GALUA Academy High School
class of 1967 will meet Monday at

7:30 p.m. to plan a 15th year
reunion. 11le meetlns will be held
at 261 Sanders Dr. All Interested
members of the class are invited
to attend. For more information
contact Julia Shawver Roderus
at 44&amp;-2287 or Jackie Gilkey
Davies at 448-2626.

GAIJ.JPOIJS - La Leche
League will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at the Bobbi Hood residence.
Discuaslon wiU be held on "The
Advantages of Breastfeeding."
This Will be the first in a ~Jeries of
four meetings for encouragement
of and breastfeedjng information
for interested mothers. Fof fur.
ther infOrmation call 446-4010 or
444Hi314.

GALUPOUS - Washington
Elementary School PTA will hold
its last meeting of the school year .
Monday at 7 p.m. in the school
auditorium. A physical education .

members.
March 16, 8 p.m.
terdepartmental Meeting.

-

-By William B. Kughn

RIGHTEOUSNESS

I

The gospel consists of facts to be believed, promises to be
received, and commands to be obeyed . 1 'Facts" deal with reality and
truth. "Promises" offer the assurance that is founded on an
agreement or convenant wherein the stipulations we must meet are
-made known and on which the promises rest. "Commands" are the
exercising of authority, having the power to control in religious
precepts . The gospel is real and true (facts) ; it is the divine
arrangement that reveals the conditions you must meet in order to
have the assurance of things hoped for {promises); and it is the power
of God to control you bv the principles of righteousness (commands)
established In the truth . Since the gospel contains the power ot GOd to
saYe and the gospel is made up of facts, promises, a'nd commands, vou
cannot ignore any one of the three! As a minister of the gospel of
Christ, I cannot advocate that "keeping the commandments" is not
essential to sal vation.
Jesus, our example and whom we must follow (I f;lel . 2:21), the
necessltv of obeying the commands : "My meat is to do the will of him
that sent me. and to finish his work ' ' (Jno. 4: 3-t) . "Meat'' has referen·
ce to food which refreshes and supplies strengm. To Jesus, the doing of
th.e will of God was the spiritual food that refreshed and supplied him
w•th strength. Even though He may have been tired and hungrv, He
was ab le to overcome it because of His desire to save a sou l and to at·
compllsh lhe task He was sent to do.
Christ came from heaven to do the will of God, "For I came down
from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me"
(Jno. 6:38) . He finished the work assigned Him, ''I have glorified thee
on earth : I have finished the work Which thou gavest me to do" &lt;Jno
17 : 4). Christ's life waS one of obedience, "Though he were a Son, vei
learned he obed ience by the things which he suffered" 1He11. 5: 8);
"And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself and
became obedient unto dealh, even the death of the cross" (Phil.'2:8l;
imd this was a commandment He was to obey, 'No man taketh it from
me, but I lay it down of myself. I have power to lay it down, and 1 have
power to take it again . Th is commandment haVe 1 received of my
Father" (Jno. 10: 18) . By Christ keeping the commandments of God
the Father, he abode in His love (Jno. 15 : 1). It was through Hi~
obedience to tne commands of the Father, He made known GOd's love
finished His work, offered the sacrifice of sin, · laid down the principle~
of righteousness, and established His church.
"
Can you hear the Lord feasoning , "1 do not have to obey the com·
mands of my Falher, tor He is able to accomplish in me that whi ch He
desires w i thout my obeying" Neither can you re~ s on "1 do not havt• to
obey the commands of God, because He Is able to save me without mv
obeying ." Just as Christ could not have finished the work of the Father
nor have glorified Him without obeying lhe commands of God, nei ther
can you! Vou must betleve the facts and obey the commands of the
gospel if you desire to be rec ipients of its promises!
'

'
For F ree Bib le Cnrn'spondcnce
Course Wr i te ~ ..

rcltaftet7Jfill rc~utt:!t of rcltti.il
Bulaville Road . -P.O. Bo-iJoa
GALLIPOLIS, Ot&lt;104SU1 .
Sune~a.,.

E un1ng
Worshipf :OO

Wftlnesdly
Evening
7: 00

R1dlo
" Men•ltlrom
lltt Biblt"

Dlily ·WJEH
11 :SS.AM

orts
Blue Angels advance to regional meet

11JffiDAY

.

"

GALLIA County District
Ubrary Board ol Trustees will
meet Tuesday at 5 p.m. in the
Rare. Book Room of Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary,
641 Second Ave.
•

~ancy

Evans nets 23,
Sarah Evans has 19;
Shelly Dodson shines
in 59-53 district win

OUR LOWEST
'PRICE

HARRISONVILLE - The
Golden Age Club a! Harrisonville
will have a free blOod pressure
clinic on 'fuesday, from 10 a.m. to
I p.m. at the townhall. Ferndi&gt;ra
Story, R.N., will conduct the
clinic to which the public is invited.

$55990

THE PLAINS - Gallla Academy High ·School's Blue
Angels advanced to the Class AA Regional Girls Tournament
for the second straight year Saturdlly afternoon following a
59-63 basketball victory over New Lexington In the district
finals at Athens High School.
.
Coach Jackie Knight's crew, now 21-3 on the season, will
battle Warsaw Riverview in a 9 p.m. .game Wednesday,
March 10, at Lancaster.
.
Coach Roger Hooper's Panther girls bowed out with a
respectable 1&amp;-6 season record.

PHILCO 25" DIAGONAL
CONSOLE MODEL C4727PK
. TRADinONAL STYLE
• Color· Rite ll Automatic Picture Control
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• A.C.T. Control (Auto-Lock Channel Tuning)
• Efficiency 300 Solid-State Chassis
• 70-Position Cl.ick-Stop UHF Tuning .
• Lighted Channel Indicator
• 100° Tripotential Black Matrix In-Line
Picture Tube (25" Diagonal)
• The handsome cabinet is of lush Oak grain
fm1sh on hardboard. The drawer is of wood
solids with decorative hardware. Also
equipped with full plinth base, overhang
top, and wide-range 6" oval speaker.

According to a recent survey 8 out of 10 beds have
mattresses not giving proper support because they are
"beyond the age limit! .Don't negiect yours ;~ny longer.
Come see and test our fine quality Simmons
Beautyrest or Stearns and Foster Correct Comfort to·
day .

In-

GALUPOIJS - Activities for the
Monday - Cheeseburger on bun,
week of March B-12 at the Senior · seasoned green beans, lettuce, fresh
Citizens Center located at 220 tomato slices, or stewed tomatoes,
Jackson Pike are as follows :
fresh fruit crisp, butter, milk.
Monday, March 8 - Vinton Site
Tuesday - Soup beans/ham,
Exercise, II :30 a.m.; Chorus, l.J tossed salad, deviled egg halves on
lettuce, cornbread, oranges or canp.m.
Tuesday, March 9 - Tax-Aide, taloupe, butter, milk.
il:30 a.m.-3:30 'p.m. ; S.T.O:P. Class,
Wednesday - Oven baked
!0:30a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11 :15 chicken/gravy, cranberry sauce,
a.m.; Bible Study, 1·2p.m.
dressing/gravy, mixed vegetables,
Wednesday, March 10 - Vinton pineapple crisp, bread, butter, milk.
Nutrition Education, 11:30 a.m.;
Thursday - Baked liver and
Vinton Bible Study, 1 p.m.; Card onions/gravy, escalloped potatoes,
Games, 1-3 p.m.; American sherbet ice cream, butter, bread,
Uterature, 1 p.m.
·
milk.
Thursday, March 11 - Vinton Site
Friday - Baked steak, buttered
Crafts, I p.m.; Bible Study, 1-2p.m.
noodles, seasoned fresh cabbage,
Friday, March 12 - Tax-Aide, peaches, bread, butter, milk.
9:30 it.m.-3:30 p.m.; Art Class, 1·3
Choice of beverage served with
p.m.; Craft Mini.Course, 1·3 p.m.; each meal.
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
"Services rendered on a nonThe Senior Nutrition Program will discriminatory basis."
serve the following menus :

.

POMEROY - A meeting of
Eastet·n School . District Band
Boosters has been set at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at Eastern High
School's band room .

.

Most likely your
mattress · is too OLD
and too SOFT!

Lifestyle

Rinehart's
works.
Exhibit for
March Is Majorte
Gallery hours are Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m ..J p.m.; Satur·
day and Sunday, 1 p.m.-5 p.m.

AMESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE...

GALUPOUS - Rive1· Study
Club will meet at I p.m. Tuesday
at the Madge Shahan residence.

ON SALE!

Senior citizens' calendar

..

p'rogram with Mrs. Lane's
classes will be held and children
will assemble in the cafeteria af.
tar the program to be met by
their parents. Refreshments will
be served. The public is invited to
attend.

·page-B·B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

Riverby Calendar
March 23, 7 p.m. - Membership
Drive Meeting. All team workers
must be present.
March 23, 8 p.m. - Trustees
Meeting.
April 15 - Creative Writing
Classes begin.
. March 1-13 - Membership Drive.
March 9, 7 p.m. - Second Watercolor Class, $24 members, $30 non-

w. Va .

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

CITY FURNITURE

CORNER THIRD and OLIVE, GALLIPOLIS
442-3045

Across from the Post Office
Downtown Point Pleasant,~w. Va.

MIKE .HARGRAVES, right; 141urDtuaeDt malla8er, pteaealll
Gallipolis' sarah Evau aDd teaauuates lbe 1911-82 Claa AA Dlltric.t
Girls' Cbampioublp bulletbaB trophy momeDIII after lbe Blue Aqels
eUmluated New Lexlngtou St-SS In Saturday's cbamploublp pme at
A!beDS Hlgb Scbool. On left II Coach Jackie Kaigllt lllllliDIIDilger Emily

LayDe. Othen left to rJ&amp;hl are ,rm Mlller, PnJa Ruaell, '~'!lema !~'odd,
Nancy Eva118, Kril Coak, Shari Howard, Reaee Halley; Sarah EVIDI,
Tratey HeDDe!ly aDd Shelly Doda.011. GARS will play Ill the regloultowuameat aiLaDellller Wedaelday.- Kelllt Wllsoa photo.

~ -

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For as little as
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Three tie
for second
in Big Ten
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP),-,
Ted Kitchel scored 17 points and
Tony Brown added 14 Saturday as
Indiana, pUing lip a huge advantage at the tree thrOw line, beat
. Michigan State 74-58 to ftn1sh In a
second·pla:ce tie In the Big Ten Con·
terence basketball race.
The Hoosiers' victory, coupled
with Purdue's ~ upset of Iowa
and league ~hamplon Minnesota's
86-73 victory over Ohio State, produced a tl\ree-way tle between lndl·
ana, Iowa andOhioStateforsecond
place.
lndtana hit 13 of 16 tree thrOWs In
the first half e11 route to a J5.26lead,
~ broke the game open with a
J.9.4 burst early In the secQDd half.
Thirteen of those 19 points came at
the foulltne.
For the game, the Hoosiers hit38
of 47 free throws to only 10 of 15 for
Michigan State.
Kltc~l's 17. points left him eight
points behind Purdue's Keith Ed·
monson for the league scoring
championship. Edmonson also had
17 In the Boilennakers' victory
over Iowa to flnlsh with a 20.6 aver·
age. Kitchel wound up with a 20.1
average.
Indiana's second-half burst
pushed the Hoosiers' lead to 22
points, 52-30, and the Spartans
never came closer than 16 points
the rest of the game. Michigan
State, !tnlshlng the season at 6-121n
the Big Ten and 11-17 overall, was
led by Kevin Smith with 25 points
and Sam VIncent with 18.
Jim Thomas added 12 points and
Randy Wittman 11 for Indiana, 1U
In the league and 18-9 for all games.

u

will give you

$647,248
.
for yQur retirement
at age 65
'

Tar Heels, Cavs win
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)
Sam Perkins scored 16 polflts and
toll' ranked North Carolina hit eight
free throws In the (lnaJ 1: 21 to &lt;*

feat North Carolina State 511-46 Sat-.

Through participation in our Individual Retirement Account (IRA).

*

It was a close contest all the way

'

OSU drops
87-75 battle
NANCY TAKES HER TURN - Gallla's Naacy
EVBDI, wbo scored Z3 polall alld picked off 11 reboulllll
In Gallipolis' 51-53 dlatrld cbamplollllllp vldory over

New t.exlll,lltGa. cJipl ..rt of net I I Blue Aqels
celebnle lltetr aecoad straiKht trip In 1be Class AA
Rectonal tou1'11811leaL
·

•

urday and earn a berth In Sunday's four-corner offense, took advanAtlantic Coast Conference basket- tage of Wolfpack fouls to hand N.C.
Stali! Its ntnth loss In 31 starts.
ball tournament flnals.
James Worthy, wt10 scored 13 of
The Tar Heels, 26-2, wtU No. 3
Vtrgtnta for the championship. Vir· his 15 points tn the first hal1, hit the
ttrst two free throws In the late goglnla edged Wake Forest In the
, log. Matt Doherty hit four more,
nightcap, 51-49.
N.C. State crept to within 50-46 two each at the 47-and 26-second
when Scott Parzych scored off an marks, and Jirmny Black added a
assist by Sidney Lowe with 1: 32 pair with four seconds lett to close
scoring.
remaining.
N.C. State trailed by as many as
North Carolina, operating In Its

seven In the first half before bat·
tllng back to take the lead 30-29 on
Dereck Whittenburg's jump shot at
the 18: 18 mark. PerkinS' two tree
throws, which made It 33-32-at the
17: a5 mark, put North Carolina
ahead to stay.
Doherty scored 12 points for the
Tar Heels. Whittenburg scored 18
for N.C. State and 'Illurl Batley
added 10.

.Hawkeyes upset; Dayton,· Michigan

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.'

WEST LAFAYE"i-rE, Ind. (AP)
_ Freshman forward Dan Palom. b~ hit a free throw after time ex.plred Saturday, lUting Purdue to a
~upset of No.11-ranked Iowa In·
.their season-ending Big Ten Conterence basketball game.
The Botlermakers, paced by
Mike Scearce with ' 19 points and
Keith Edinonson with 17, rallled
from nine points down In the second
halt. Edrnollsoll'a last basket with a
minute to go tied the game at 6.'1-65,
then after Iowa stalled toe a last
lllot by Kenny Arnold, Palornblzlo
W8l touled 81 be scrlunbied torl!le
reboond.
I
1lle free throw fpr the 6-foot.S
freshman was his OIIJy pobtt of the
game.
The victory lhqlped the Hawlleyft tD » 7 tor the-- IIDIIlU
,ill the 811 Tell. t&gt;urdue f!n!IJ!ed at
11-7111 81&amp; Ten play and U-13 CM!J'o

,.

play by Nancy Evans.
Saturday.
After the Panthers got off to a 4-0 . Nancy Evans hit a long jumper,
lead, Gallipolis came back late In layup and Sarah. Evans a tlpin
the first stanza to knot the count at within a two minute span to glve the
!~Hill. New Lexington led 12-10 after Galllans breathing room, 50-43, with
3:30 left to play.
one period.
Nancy Evans' layup with 2: 1~ left
Behind the outstanding play of
proved
to be the game's wiMing
Nancy and Sjlrah Evans and Renee .
bucket.
,New
Lex fouled repeatedly
Halley, GAHS outscored trni Panin
an
attempt
to stop the clqck late In
thers 17-14 in the second period to
the
game.
take a 27·26 halftime advantage.
Although New Lex controlled the
Nancy Evans' goal with 40 seconds
boards,
GAHS managed to pick off
leit following a steal by Halley gave
32
rebOunda,
11 by Nancy Evans.
the Angels .their one-point halftlme
GAHS
hit
26 of 58 field goal atadvantage.
tempts
and
seven
of 16 charity atGAHS scored lbe first six points of
the third perilld to take a 33-26 ad- tempts.
The district champs had 10 assists,
vantage before the PantherP hlod
Shelly Stalter, Shelly Jorge•
I four by Nancy Evans and seven
Kelly Mooney pulled within tw., 37- steals, four by Renee Halley.
GAHS had 12 turnovers.
351 with 310lleft in the third period.
Besides Nancy and Sarali Evans'
Gallla 's Sarah Evans picked up her
fourth foul a.t this point, and lett the output, Halley tossed in nine, and did.
a good job against the New Lex
contest.
Shelly Dodson came off the bench press. Shari Howard played an outand played a tremendous game for standing defensive game. DodsO!I
the Galllans. "Her job was to keep chipped in with slx points.
All Ohio candidate Shelly JorgenTina Crook off the boards," said
Coach Knight. She did. The Panthers sen had 1'1 for the loaers. Shelly
were unable, to capitalize on Sarah's Slater had 20 points for the Panth!&gt;rs.
abaence.
Box score:
The Score was 39-all after three
NEW LEXINGTON 153) - Kelly
periods.
Mooney 1.0·2; Trlcla Kunkle 0:2·2;
New Lexington held brief two . · Mi
ck Fisher 1·0·2; Shelly 'Sioller 8·4·
point leads early in the final period, 20; Jane Able O·D-0; Tina Crook 4-0·
41-:39, and 4~1 before Gallipolis 8; Shelly Jorgensen 8·1·17; Mlchllle
Nash 1-0·2. TOTALS 2H·S3.
pulled it out.
GALLIPOLIS (59) - Chris Cook 0·
Key play came with 6:23 showing 0·0; Shelly Dodson 3·0·6; Nancy
on the cloek. New Lexington's top Evans 10·3·23 ; Sarah Evans 8·3· 19;
rebounder, Tina Crook, picked up Renee Halley 4· 1-9; Shari Howord 1·
0·2; Jill Miller 0·0·0. TOTALS 26·7-59.
her fifth foul. Coach Knight Inserted
score by quarters :
Sarah Evans. The Blue Angels had New Lexlnglon
12 14 13 14-53
10 17 12 26-59
taken a 44-43 lead on a three point . Gallipolis

all, averting Its ttrst losing 'season
since 196fi.

scorea23 potnts for Notre Dame.
Bill Varner had 16 points, while
nm Andree and Mike Mitchell
added 12 apiece for the Fighting

F1yen whip Irish

Irish.

. DAYTON, Ohio _ Senior center
Mike Kanlesld poured In 22 points
and heiped Dayton build a big half·
ume edge 1n ieai'.Jng the Flyers to
79-72 non~'!ce victory over
Notre Dame tn ~ t-ronferenre col·
lege blllketbBII sa :urday.
\

Kevin

Coara4~
,
21 points,

aDd ~
added 18
tor the Flyers.
'
Dayton lbot 68 rcent !roJn the
floor 111 the nrst
boldlng a
40-:14 halfllme marpn.
The Flyers coatJnue4thelrdootl·
111111Ce Ill tbe 11eC01111 halt, leading
1343 w1111•: 1711!ft 111 the pme.
Junior auard Johb J'I\:UO,I\

.

.,

Kanleskl was 11 of 14 trom the
floor In pacing the Flyers.

Badgen haltered
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Thad
Garner and Ike Peraon combined
for 46 points to lead Mlchlpn to a
91-84 victory over Wltc(JnstD In the
Bie Ten tJaale for both teams
Saturday.
Wllcoutn, playing Its last hOme
game under Coach Bill Coneld, a•
sUred ltaelf of 1aat place In the COO·
terence 81 Its record chopped to
3-15, 6-20 overeD. Mlchte•n Improved to 6-12 ill tile Btc Ten, 7-19
overall.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Randy
Breuer scored a career high 32
potnts and grabbed 12 relx.,unds as
seventh-ranked Minnesota de·
feated Ohio State 87-75 Saturday
and gained the Big Ten
Championship.
Minnesota went Into the game
with a share of the tltle clinched,
and the viCtory gave them the tltle
outright.
The Gophers finished the regular
~Jeason 22-5 overall and 14-4 In the
Big Ten. The Buckeyes finished 219 and J.U.
It was a wide open game from the
opening tap, with Minnesota grabbing the upper hand behind,_ the

shooting of Breuer, a Hoot·3 cen·
ter, and Trent Tucker, who scored
23 points.
The Gophers bulli a 10.polnt lead,
but Ohio State cut It to slx at Intermission behind the shooting of
Clark Kellogg.
In the second half, Minnesota
kept th~ pressure on, building Its
lead to If early, and then never faltering. Ohio Stali! could never cut It
doWn and was forced to foul In the
closing minutes.
·
Ohio State had four players In
double figures. Tony Campbell lf!d
with 21 points, followed by Kellogg,
20, Granville Walters, 11, and Larry
Huggins, 10.

•
WID
•

The Wolverines, paced by 25
points from Garner and 21 from
Per&amp;OII, !led the score at 74-74 with
4:45 rernalnlllg . iln a three-point
play by guard Ertc Turner. Turner
then stole a pass from John BaUey
In the Wlsconatn backcourt. and a
Person layup gave Michigan a 76-74
lead with 3: 41 rernalnin.ll.

Brad Sel.len, the high scorer tor

Wisconsin With 21 points, m1Aed a

shot and Gamer rebounded with
3: 25 to play. Dan Pelekoutlal then
SCOI'I!II on a layup to give the Wolverines a '7S-74wlth 3:03)ett. Pelelux.das Wll whlllled tor an offellllve
foul aplnlt Gree Dendrtdae on the
allot, but Dandrlclae m1Aed the
frollt ead of I bonUI attempt and
Penolllf8bbed the rebollnd.
With 2: 16 left, Turner put the
Bleiler&amp; out of reach with tWo free
throWI to ma!r.e It 80-74,

'l1IB LONG AliM TAKD rr- Mlveut.•s H Jeater Ralld)' Bl'fter

c•) •11-ileiOI!IeiMalef-•nl ToayC.mpbell 1•1 totaileallllckeye

a 11 1 ' • Clull JteDoa (JI) nklln c1a!1q Bill Tea belkelbllll aclloa
. . . ..,, afttn 111 . . . _ _ • .., 87·71. (AP Luer1111oto&gt;·
\

~

�,,

Page-C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mar . 7, 1982 ·

Pomeroy- Middleport...:..Ga'llipolis, Ohicr-Poin1 Pleasant, .W . Va.

Mar. 7,1982

Pomeroy- M-i ddl e port

The Sundjly Times -Sentinei- Paqe- C-3

Ga!lipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W . Va .

Philadelph-ia, New Jer$ey, Phoenix, . Boston win
By~ K. BARNARD
AP Sports Writer
In National Basketball Assoclatlon games Friday night, Phlladel·
phla tripped Atlanta 89-8&gt;, New
Jersey bombed Chicago 1111-90,
Plloenlx beat Kansas City 110-98,
Boston edged Houston 100-98,
Denver trimmed Washington 127·
.126, Golden State nipped San Diego
ll7-116 In overtime and Seattle
topped Dallas 98-97.
Soolcs88, Maverlcks97
Gus Williams scored 38 points for
Seattle and hlt a free throW with 30

an 81-72 de!lclt early In the fourth
quarter. But they outscored tbe
Bulls 22-31n the next 5; 45 to grab a .
94 -84 a d v antage wit h 4: 20
rematoing.
Ray Williams led the Nets wlth20
points, while David Greenwood and
Dwight Jones paced the Bulls with
H.
Celtlca 180, Rockets
Boston, playing withOUt All-Stars
Larry Bird and Tiny Archibald for
the third game In a row, won Its
tltth straight as seldom-used Eric
Femsten hit a three-point play with

98

seconds
left to break a 97-97 tie.
rj·35~seco~.~nd~S~le~ft~to~be~a~t~H~ous~to~n~.:
After Williams put the SuperSon-·

I

CHAMPS- The Meig~ Junior High School seventh
grade team won first place ' honors at the recent
Southern Invitational Basketball Tournament Pictured are members with their trophy, front Ito r, Jesse
Howard, Steve Musser, Scott Powell, Huey Easton,-J .
R. Kitchen, Mark J;:lliott; second, I tor, Tim Cassell,

WINNERS - Mem,ben of tbe Meigs Julllor 8Igb
School elgblh grade bukelllaU team are pictured with
the lint place tropby wblcb tbey receatly caplur!d at
the Federal HoekiDg IDVIIIIU-1 TOWD8-ot. Tbe
team Is coached by John Amotl They are: front, I to r,
Bryaa Kom, Chris KeDDedy, Dave Warth, Pallll&gt;ufl,
Rodd Harrison, Eric Jolmsoa, Mike KIOH; b!lct, I tor, ·

Jeff Hood, Gary Tillis, Jeff Nelson,.Rex Haggy, Lonnie
LeMaster, maiUiger; hack, I to r, Phil King, Marty
Cline Gerald Moore, Greg Fields, Stanley
. Broome,
.
Brian Tannehill, Donnie Becker and Coach Rusty
Bookman. Not present for the picture were Charlie
Barrell and Jan Buskirk.

.

.

Parker Long, Brian Houdasbell, Mike C._acey, ilao
given awanlli as tbe moot valuable player of tbe tolll'llBmeol, an all-touroameot trophy and best .. foul
shooter; Lee PoweU, Chris Shaak, wbo ~lved aa alllollrnameot trophy also, and Rick Wise, wbo also
received
and tbe moot poiJita. tropblei.

lcs abead, Dallas' Allan Bristow
missed a shot- that would have
given tbe MaverickS tbe lead. After
Qallas rebounded and called time
out. Brad Da.vls missed another
jumper at !be buzzer.
Jack· Slkma added 22 points and
17 rebounds for Seattle.
'l6er8 88, Hawks 80
Jullus Erving scored 22 points
and Bobby Jones added 20 to lead
Philadelphia over Allanta, which
because of InjUries had only nine
players and bad two foul out.
The HawkS, who traDed 83-6S
Wtth live minutes left In the game,
, Scored 10 straight points to cut tbe
!leflclt to five with three minutes
lett. ButfourpolntsbyErvlnganda
dunk by Jones blunted the
eomeback.
Net. 107, Bulb 90
Reserve, guard Darwin Cook
scored 13 of his 19 points In the
fourth q~t when New Jersey
outscored Chicago 37-14 to win Its ·
ftfth straight game.
The Nets trailed by as many as 14
polilts In the third period and faced

..

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

BUY YOUR GRAVELY

Hagler
defends
title

TRACTOR AT 1981 PRICES
PLUS FlE.CEIVE A FREE rviOWEfi '

r

GIRLS-These are members of the 1982 ~rls'
Meigs Junior High School haskethall team, comp....,d
of both seventh and eighth graders. Making up the
group are, front, I to r, Heather Cullums, IIUinager;
Lisa Pullins, Greta Kennedy, Sherry Russell, Maria

Mus.er, Susan Jones, Jennller Couch, Anita Smith,
manager; second, I to r, ·Gloria Alexander, coach;
Kathy Clonch, E ~ln Anderson, Dawn Thomas, Charmete Turner, Beverly Kauff, Beth , Blaine, Rhonda
Zirkle, and Rhonda Neece.

Reagan, Nixon, Ford roast W9ody
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -PresIdent Reagan and former presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald
Ford joined In roasting long-time
Ohio State football Coach Woody
Hayes Friday night.
Former U.S. Rep. Sam Devine of
Ohio read a letter from Reagan that
said In part; " You are the legendary General Patton of college football, You have shaped the lives of
thousands of young men who you
have coached,"

Hayes, who coached the Buckeyes to two na tional cha mpionships
In his 28 seasons, had telephone
calls from Nixon and current Alabama Coach "Bear" Bryant during
the lang ceremony before nearly
2,(Xl) fans.
Nixon told Hayes In a telephone
call, "I've been Impressed with
your leadership in football . If you
come back In a nother life, you'd
make a very effective secretary of
state. "
Bryant, who beat Hayes 35-7 In
their only meeting, In the Sugar

ATI.ANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) Iii what appears tQ be a tuneuptora
defense against Thomas Hearns,
Marvin Hagler will defend the undisputed middleweight title Sunday
against William "Caveman" Lee,
who, like Hearns, Is a member of
Emanuel Steward's tough Kronk
gym stable In Detroit.
Hagler originally was schedlll. J
to meet Mickey Goodwin, another
Kronk fighter, 'but Goodwin had to
pull out because of an Injury.
The 25-year-old Lee, a native of
· Philadelphia, will get his big
chance at Bally's Park Place Hotel
and Casino In a fight !bat will be
televised live on "ABC's Wide
World of Sports," which will run
from 4:30p.m. to 6 p.m. EST.
"I feel Lee's a better opponent,"
the 29-year-old Hagler said. "He's
made me work harder.
Lee has a respectl!ble record and
Is ranked. But he Is not expected to
Interfere with what could be a
multlmllllon-dollar payday for
Hagler against Hearns. ·

Bowl, told the former Buckeye
coach, "I'm just glad I didn't have
to play you more often."
Ford, In a letter, said "My affection for you Is unlimited."
Among those roasting Hayes In
person were current Big Ten football coaches Earle Bruce of Ohio
State, Bo Schembechler of Michl·
gan and Indiana's Lee Cog;o.
Former conference coaching rivals Johnny Pont of Indiana and
Northwestern aryd Duffy Daugherty of Michigan State also took
their shots at Hayes.

BUY THE TRACroR,_
GET ·

THE MOWER FREE.

During our spring sale, with the Gravely
·riding tractor of your choice, you get a free mower.

~Bonnies

Tll!s offer is good on all our r1ding tnlctors. All tnlctors feature our famous
7 ~~~_,~, direct drive for years of depend,___.,__ able performance. Save now. But
huny. the sate ends soon.

PITI'SBURGH (AP) -

llon.·Fri. 9:00-5:00
Saturday 9:00-1:00

MANNING ROUSH-OWNER
204 Condor 51.
Ph. 992·2974
Pomeroy, Oh.

· "SOME OF THE VALLEY'S FINEST"

ROYALE4 DR.

Air conditioning, power windows, power
locks, power seats, power
steering, power brakes, cruise, tilt, AM·FM, cloth interior, AM· FM. Low

1980 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 ROYALE 4 DR.

I

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP ) - With
his team down by a point, no tlme
left on the clock and a Memorial
Coliseum crowd screaming for htm
to miss, James Silas sank two free
throws Friday night to give the
Cleveland Cavalie rs a 111-110 victory over the Portland Trail
Blazers.
"I've been around for 10 years. I
hear them and I don 'I hear them, "
Silas said of the crowd noise. "I
relax as much as I can. Alii have to
do Is knock the ball home ."
"Fora player to go to the foul line
after a game with his team trailing
the home team by one point, and a
full house screaming In his face,
and hitting both shots - that's the
mark of a real pro,' ' said Cleveland
Coach Chuck Daley.
"James Silas Is a real pro."
With five seconds left In the N~
tiona! Basketball Association
game, Portland led 11().109.
Mike Harper of the Blazers and
Bobby Wilkerson of the Cavs went ,
up for a tap after a jump ball was
called.
Harper batted the ball toward
mldcourt. Silas grabbed It, dribbled
to just behind the three-point
marker and let go.
Calvin Nat! of Portland went up
with Silas, hitting Silas' arm, and
was called for a foul.
Natt bad been In the same sltua·
tion as Silas last Saturday In New
York when he was fouled at tbe
buzzer and bad a cha~ to send
Portland Into overtime against tbe
Knlcks. Natt · ml~ both free
throWs and the Knlcks won, 1111-1IXI.
Cleveland, now 13-45, the worst
record In the NBA,. made 14
stralght free throWs, Including ~l­
Ias' game-ending shot.!.
Tile victory broke a four-game
Cleveland loilna streak.

Air conditioning, cruise, AM· FM·Stereo, power steering , power brakes, new
tires. Only 29,000 miles.

1978 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE
Air conditioning, AM · FM -8 Track, 'CB, tilt wheel, cruise, power seats, windows, door locks. Local owner. Landau top. Baby blue w ith cloth interior.

NOW ONLY

•..

..

; . Mariners pitcher Glenn Abbott has
• ·been told to take a week off from
: spring training because ·of bone
:•chips In his right arm, a spokesman
-· for the American League club said
' Friday .
'!'he bone chips were found dur~ : lng tests at Tempe Conununlty
, · Hospital. Abbott experienced sore: · ness In his arm after 'Ibursday's
:- workout.
•. Additional tests will be made at~· ter the layoff.

seats, new tires, AM· FM·8 Track, low miles, local owner .,

- .~-.

ne
metallic, 4 speed, 4 cyl. local owner. 'One dark bl~e. 4 speed,,4
cyl., power steering, local owner. (Buy one or both . They'r~ cheaper by th&amp;

**********************
RCA'S AMAZING VIDEO DISC PLAYER

•
:

WATCH WHAT YOU WANT
WHENEVER YOU WANT-

~

1978 PLYMOUTI1 VOLARE STATION

latler t• •tMnhllatUI a,...,.. pl.-,.r,

:

Air conditioning, powe.r steering, power. brakes, crul.s e, 6 cyi.·Local owner.
•

1978 PLY
Loadil'lg lhl:l AC,., V1010 1)1 ~ piA ~Ir 11 ti mpl oc otv 1l ni l

:
;

V-8, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes.

Jytt sloCie the sleel'tl HliO tl'ls pl1yer. 11mo~ the
llteve !the dose Is no• msode till pl,ytr). t w•ICh lhe
l l.lnct•Orlll~l' to " plly". 111 b.c~ lntj en loy lh e I hOW

J{an8as,

1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 4 DR SEDAN

W£ HAVE AGOOD
SELECTION OF MOVIES IN STOCK

•

6 cyl., automatic, air conditioning, cruise, AM·FM. Local owner. New tires.

MERCURY BOBCAT 2 DR.

NOW YOU CAN WATCH THIIIST IN HOLLYWOOD MOYIIS,
SUNISTAI lOCK CONCIITI, CHILDIIN'S PIIOOIIAMI AND
MDIII - JUST IY PI.AYING A RICOIDI THI RCA YIDIO DISC
PI.AYII HOOKS UP TO ANY TV AND GIVIS ;AIULOUS IN·
. 111TAINMINT AT YOUI PINOIRriPS,

•
'•
I•
'

.SIMMON'S OLDS.-CAD.· ~CHEVY, INC.
308 E. MAIN' ST.

PH. 992-6614

Mon.-Fri.

8:00 to 6:00

~
'

(

I

by Appointment

MENOMONIE, Wis. (AP) Dan Neklch swept hall the lndl·
vidual events and the all-around
Individual title, leading WisconsinOshkosh to a second consecutive
National Association of Intercotleglate Athletics gymnastics championship Friday.
In winning tbe all-around_team
title, Oshkosh totaled 211.70 points
to 196 for runnerup Fort Hays,

·POMEROY, OHIO

SatUfdar
9:00 to 5:00

•
;:
•
•,
, I'

.:

c:

!---.

1-- ·

Wlsconsln-La Crosse was next ·
with 190.55, followed by host
Wisconsin-Stout at 188.15, Metropolitan College of Denver, Colo&lt;, at
154.:1! and Wlsconstn-Plattevllle
with 149.!50.
Neklch finished first In the pornmel horae, stlll rings and horizontal
bar competltloli5.
He won the all-around Individual
honors for a second straight year
with 53.6 points to 48.4 tor Jason
Smith of Fort Hays and 48.25 for
Scott Undblad d. Oahlrosh.
Mickey Smith d. Oshkosh won
the floor exercise competition,
Mark Rezac of Stout won In vault·
log and Davie Pieper of OallkOSh
won In !be parallel bars. ,

•'

K.C. BASKETBA~L
TEAMS, COACHES,
CHEE. LEADERS AN
R
D
STAFF.

WE LOVE YOU
·

YOUR FANS

155SR12..

,

EYEIIYDAY LOW PRICE I

Kelly Springfield
Sporlmark Radials
• Metric alnl dnltnlld lor lmporta
• 5 rib trMd wttll 2 ftbergiiN Mila
• Polpmr .adilll plilla ~ IIOGkwolla

79~qt.

SIZE

PRICE

SIZE

t55SA13 , . , , . '35
t65SRI3 .. . .. '31
185SR14 .... . '"'4

PRICE

155SR15 ,, , ,. '37
165SR15 .. ,, , '31
F.E.T. 1.51 to 2..21 ,

Valvoline 10W30

as~ qt.

. sasA70x13

EYERYDA Y LOW PRICEI

Kelly Sp1nglleld
Super Chlrgera
50, 60, 70 S1rl1a

Sale Oils Limit 12 qts.

Olts I!IJceed •II new car spec!!l . of SFICC

• Double poly - · lor

atrengtll end ltlbll"y -

OIL CHANGE ACCESSORIES

. flberglaaabelta "
• Oulllnlld willie lattara

011 Fllttr Wrench, Reg. 79' ...... 44.•

SIZE

S.ve ower 25"'!

fT9.4

1.59

PRICE

B60x13 ... '42
E60xt4 , . , '47
G60x14 , , , '51
L60xl4 ... '51
G60x15 ., .'52
L60xt5 ... •eo
E70x14 . , . '43

Nationwise Filters
Oil

SIZE

PRICE

F70x14 .. , '44
G70x14 .. , '41
G70i&lt;l5 ,. , !41
'850xl3,, '47
; M50xl4 . 'II
N50x15 .. '70

F.E.T. 1.71H.07
'4 ·ply poly corct tlret

2.44 Air

2.57

qt.
Prastone or
SolderSeal
Brake Fluid

Sale 99¢ ea.

9.88

Reg. 3.49 qt.
Seve over 25!'.

your choice

88•

Nationwlse PCV
Valves, Gas Filters

Megular's Cleaners

Reg . 16.95

4()0!0 off!

Quartz Mini
AuiO CloCk .

Reg . 1.49

Heavy Duty Cer Clunar .... 1.77
16 oz. Reg . 2.95

Save over '71 lfCK 600

SolderSeal
Puncture
Seal

•Velcro strip for mounting
•Pull -out stand for home/office
•Large easy-to-read numbers
•Push button night light

S.ve ower 1/31

Poly Wuh .. . .... . , .. . , ... 1.77
16 oz. Reg . 2.95
C1r Cltlntr/Wu . . . . . . . . 2.87
16 oz. Reg. 4.95

NO RAINCHECKS

-7e-ea.

Non RHiator
Reg. 94•

9e-ea.

Realator

Reg. 1.1a

AC

c
&gt;

1980 PONTIAC TRANS AM
Silver, red interior. Air conditioning, li-s: cru·ise, tilt wheel, automatic, bucket

.••

non~·l,~

Air conditioning, tilfwheel, cruise, power windows, power door locks, Am · Fm Stereo, power steering, power'brakes. Only 33,000 miles.

4 cyl., 4 speed, power steering, AM-FM, tuggag'e rack . Bright red .

.•.

,$31

Natlonwise 10W40 ~~===~~

,

1980 CHEVROLET CHEVEnE 4 DR.

**********************

.

By The Alilloclated Pn!l8
: • TEMPE, Ariz, (AP) - Seattle

CONGRATULATIONS

59.88

2.98each

Wire Sets
3000 Serlea

• cyl .. .. .. ua
Reg. 7.95
1 cyl .... . 7.88
Reg. 10.95

17.88

Aeg. 66.95

Mufflers

Eagle Headers

Autotron
Tune Up Kits or
Distributor Caps

Kravex

Reg. 19.8B

Original Equipment Replacement

For most domeatlc cars and light trucks
,
If onythlng go.• wrong with thla mufft.r, Natlonwlae will ..chango h
FREE •• ~ng •• ~ou own ,our Clrl

Sne over 1 7!

Except tltctron&amp;c lgnltlonl
Tune Up Kits, Aeg. 3:95

. .. .. . . .. . .. from

Distributor Caps, Reg . 2.95-4.75
5ava
to 1131

trucks

New unique de1lgn
mlnlmfzel matntentnce
to produce 1 better

power plcklge 111
around

14.95 wlrebljlldable exchg. 5.88 axle set (2 wheels)
'22 wlrebulldable exchange R.,..nulact..-..1

32.88

Remtnuftctured

Starters or AHernators

40 MONTH

Both tor most domestic cars
except Integral &amp; Motorola

Natlonwlse
Calcium Batteries

41.88 47 88
•

MONTH

HOUR$:

Sun.
M·F

60 MONTH

10.5
8:30 • 7
8:30. 8

Sat.

.

•

l~e~agu~e-~bes~tJh~o~me~~reco~rd~to~25-~5~.--~B~ull~e~ts~,~ln~c~lu~d~lng~e~lg~b~tln~the~~fln~al~·~'ZI:·___:___~--------~--_;:~~~~~~~~~~~

s~qt~

~~ Sport shorts•.•

1979 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

classified ads

__

Fast- ·

.Tony Washam combined for 32
,POints as ninth-ranked West Virgi-nia raced to a ~ victory over St.
Bonaventure Friday night In the SO:
):nltlnals of the Eastern Eight bas·
'kethaU tournament.
: West Vlrglnla, now 26-2, dls~layed Its usual blend of quickness .
~ balanced scoring In its victory
-over tlfth·seeded St. Boliaventure.
: W!ISham scored 18 points and
;Jones added 14 points to ·lead five
-Mountaineers In double figures . Re- ·
~rve forward Michael King added
12 points, followed by center Phil
, :COllins with 11 points and forward
: Russell Todd with 10 points.
'. · Desplie a rash of 16 turnovers In
· the opening half, St. Bonaventure
')rept it close, trailing only 3UJ at
·intermission.
, · But the Mountaineers, whodoml. nated the league In regular season
: play, ran off eight straight points to
: open the second hall, the final two
· ~on a layup by Jones after a steal.
: ~ey were never headed after that.
; · By the midway point of the se&lt;cond halt, West VIrginia beld a 5G-40
: lead, outscoring the Bo1Ulies22-101n
: ,the opening 10 minutes of the half.
· - St. Bonaventure, which dropped
·:to 14·14 on the season, was paced by
: guard, Mark Jones with 21 points.

SIMMON'S OLDS.-CAD.-CHEV ., INC.

Cavs edge
Portland

3:43 after they trailed ll&amp;-110.
_S pencer Haywood led Washington
with 'Z1 points.
Wanton 117, CUppen 118
Mike Gale scored on a reverse
layup with one second remaining In
overtime to give Golden State Its
fourth straight victory alld hand
San Diego Its sixth loss In a row.
The Clippers bad taken a 11&amp;-115
lead on a layup by Charlie Criss
with 11 seconds remaining.
WorldFreeledallscorerswl!h30
points tor the Warriors, while Ml·
chael BrookS paced San Diego with

breaking guards Greg· Jones and

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES and SERVICE

1981 OLDSMOBILE DELTA

The Kings fell to 4-27 on the road,
worst tn the NBA.
Phoenix Improved a five-point
.halftime lead to 86-76 after three
quarters and rolled up a 1&amp;-polnt
bulge In the fourth period.
Nuggeta 12'7, Jlullel8 us
Klkl Vandeweghe scored 23
points, Including the game-winning
bas~et· with 29 seconds lett, and
blocked a shot with eight seconds
on the clock to keep Denver ahead
oiWaslllngton.
Greg BaUard had. 13 of hls 23
polilts In the fourth quarter for the

VaiVollne 10W40

·.n.o match
:for ·WVU

NEW SPRING AND
SUMMER HOURS:

Tile Celtlcs tralle,l 98-96 before
the tttree-polnt play. M.L.. Carr hit
one of two free throws with 10 secodds remaining to complete the
scorb)g.
Cedric Maxwell led Boston with
24 polrits, while Moses Malone
paced Houston with 38.
Suns 110, Kings 98
Alvan Adams scored 15 of his
ga,me-hlgh 26 points In the third perlod to help Phoenix trip Kansas
City.
Guard Walter Davis added 22
points as the Suns Improved their

Read

·

Water Pump..

For most domestic 4-6 cyl, cars
and all Chevy small block V6

1969-71
"'7
High IOfQUI Sllrllf Wlrrt bulldlble
-6. exct"tg . fo r most Chry &amp;ler 1nd some
Ford c:ar•
·
18.95 w/rebulldable exchg,
S36 lor
Atternlto,. w/febulldllble •• ch11ng11
for most 8 cyl. domestic and
Integral &amp; Motorola eu:e pt hlgl\

All batterieS w/exchange, available

1mp HO unit•

for most cars. ·Never needs water
· under normal conditions

209 Upper River Rd.
'

.

''

most 4-6 cylinder Imports

Relined Brake Shoes

w/exchange

8.88

25,~

miles rated

axle set (2 wheels)

Ouardl8n New Br1k1 Shoat
with exchange

or Qulldl8n

New Dl1c Pllds

Both 50,000 miles rated

446-38-07
,,

�Heaaoa, Kyger Creek; llalldn Patrlek, S.lbwntera;

GmLS' AIJrTOIJKNAMENT TEAM - Pictured
Is die lts% Gallla County jiUIIor Hlgb Toul'lllllllenl,
Mlebelle Gearge, Nortll GUIJa.VInloll; DlaDna Nlda,
·
Tovaey
MVP, s.lbweslml, aad Dr. Gary Toothaker,
Girls' AU-Touraament Team. Left to right - Julle
Dllloa, JfaDMJI Traee; Milly Roble, Bidwell; Dee Dee
~t1Gdii!Ceuty8ellotll.

tournament.Conference baSketball
American
Raybom bit a crucial three-pomt
play wltb five seconds remalnlng to
11ft Northern llllnots to a. 67-66 victory over Bowling Green wblle
McCallum poured m 30 points m
Ball State's 76-72 victory over West·
ern Michigan.
Western and Bowlbtg Green:met
In the consolation game In the Unl·
verslty of Michigan's Crisler Ar· ·
ena. The winner ot the MAC
tournament galns an automatic bid
to an NCAA regional tournament.
Northern lDinols ll!d by as many
as 10 points on two occasions m the
tlrst haq, but stubborn Bowlbtg
Gl'l!en, behind the shooting Qf Mar·
cus Newbern and David Gl'l!er, refused to fold.
The Falcons closed the gap to .3431 at the half and finally tied it 58-58

wltb 5: 31 remalnlng in the game.
Bowling Green never gained the
lead, but managed to tie It two more
times - the last at 64-&amp;i with 1: 10
left.

BOYS' ALL-TOURNAMENT~ -'- Plc!Ured Is
the 198Z GaW. Couuty Janlor Htgk Tournament, Boys'
AU T'*rnament Team, left to right - Mike Kemper,
BldweU; Scott CwimaD, receiving trophy lor Brad

Roblaaon, Kyger Creek; Jimmy Jelfen,
western; Derrick Barnea, HaDII8n Trace, and Pbllllp
BaUey, Tourney MVP, Hatman Trace; Dr. Toothaker, .
superlnteadeat t1 Gallla County Schook. Not piclured
Is Van Ellis from Nol1b Gallla-VInloo.

Northern llllnols ran tbe clock
down and Leonard Hayes put up a
15-foot Jumperwltb nbte seconds remaining. However,- the shot
bounced ott tbe rim where Rayborn
grabbed It and put It back up on a
twisting layup that dropped
through with five seconds
remaining.
Rayborn, who was fouled on the
shot, then canned the free throw
which proved to be the maJ;gln or'

.

Northem DUnolll, ~13, and Hayes
added io.
'·
Newbern llnlsbed wltb 22 points ·
for Bowling Green, 17·11, wblle .
Greer bad 17 lind BID Falne U for ,
the FalconS. .

victory wllen Newbem scored at
the buzzer for BowUng Green.
Rayborn, a 6-root-9 senior, ftn!shed wltb a garne-blgh 24 points.
John CoiJ1ns added 12 polnts for

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) .,;, Big
M'elvlri Turpin scored 24 pobtts and
Olrlc·l\finnlefleld added 111 as 15th·
ranked Kentucky withstood a gal!ant comeback by Mississippi ·and
edged the Rebels 62·58ln the semlfl.
nals at the Southeastern Conference basketball tournament
Friday night.
~ victory, Kentucky's :1Jth In a
row on Its Rupp Arena home tloor,
moved the WUdcats Into Saturday
ntrllt's championship game
agalnat 18th-ranked Alabama,
which ll8ed late clutch free throw
shootlllg' by freshman Bobby Lee

GPi•-----------;.;~;.;;;;;;;;w

•

SPECIAL

.'

SAVE '30000 to '3~ ·
ON AG tRACTORS.
IN LIEU OF CASH SAVINGS ON SOME MODELS, NO INTEREST OR MONTHLY PAYMENT UNTIL JAN. 1st, 1983.

DALE .HILL
FORD TRACTOR
992-2668

not ready to

l1.r1 I ,
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POMEROY, OHIO

..,.' -.

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT
ACCOUNT OPTION.

NO JOB _TOO .
LARGE OR SMALL
WE CAN HANDLE THEM ALL
YOUR LOCAL
CARPET DOCTOR ·IS
'

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BUCK STOVES And
COLONIAL
CARPETS
.
•. 675-75i4
2926 Jackson Ave,
Point PI-nt, W.
.Located between Convenient and Village Pizza
Monday·Friday Open 10:00 a.m.·to Si30 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.·to 3:00 p.ni.
Alii

Wllalnrle To ContridDn

Now Central Trust offers
an even better invesbnent for
fuur money by offering four
gh-interest IRA options. 113
a working person, you can
deposit up to $2000 a year at
guaranteed high interest rates.
And better yet, the intet)est you
earn is tax-free until the funds
are withdrawn. Central Trust's
~.interest IRA options.
·chever plan you choose, it's
the safest, surest way to your
future security.
1.111-:Month Variable Rate Option
All deposits earn the c11rrent
rate of 15.25' guaranteed
through April5, 1982.
Subj!!Ct to change on monthly
basis.
2.18-Month Fixed Rate OpUon
Current" rate of }4.110% guaranteed through APrll5, 1982.
Interest rate for all deposits
detennined for full18 months
on·date of initial deposit.

4. i-Month Option
$10,000 minimllm deposit
required. Account is paid at the
then current &amp;-month Money
· Market rate.

HIGH-LIQUIDITY
OPTION.
With Central Trust's Money
Market Account, you can invest
as little as $2,500 and earn
approximately 10.0% to 12.0%.
And better yet, your money is
100% backed by securities
of the U.S. Government.
Maturities are from one to
89 days. Money Marltet rates :
change weekly. • Daily for new
investments but are fixed
· until maturity from date
of investment. •

.

'

"

-

SHORT-TERM OPTION.

~

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With Central Trust's Six·
Month Money Market Certificate, you can eam 13.693% on a
$10,000 investment. Your interest is paid.to you monthly, quarterly or at maturity. Federal
regulations prohibit the compounding of interest.•••

•P

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LONG-TERM OPTION.
For as little as $500 you can
earn 14.05';{,, with Central Trust's
30-Month Money Market Certi·
ficate. On certificates of
$5,000 or more, you can elect
to have our interest paid ·
monthly.•••
So, if you'.-e deciding on
invesbnents, come to your
nearest Central Trust office.
When it comes to helping you
plan a course of action for your
money. The Financial Center
Invesbnent Plan is the answer.

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~

By The Aaeoclaled PreM
DALLAS (AP) - Two University of Houston atbletes have been
given an extra year of ellglbillty,
but star Southl!rn Methodist runner
Sammy Koskel bas been told his
eUglblllty will eXpire at the end ot
the current semester. •
Southwest Conference faculty representatives, meeting In c'onJunc·
tlon wltb the league's post-season
buketball tournament here, de- .
- clded Koekle will only be alloWed to
complete the current track .and
lleld seuon for the Mustangs.
Koslcet's age has been In dispute
ever .mce he claimed to be 20yean
old wllen he tried to enroll at a U.S.
co11eae from Keriya four years ago.
SMU reconls list Koskel's current

•This ,account not insured by F.O.I .C.
''If a d'posltor elects to withdraw
inters! on a periodic basis prior to
mafurlly file effective yield to the
depositor of the lax free certificate
will be lowered. A substanlllll ,
intere$1 ~natty lsrequlredlor
early wl hdrawaf ,
..•Subllanllal penally forearty
withdrawal .

,.

. ..
' '

~L
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(

Wake Forest's iarge$tleads W!!re
36 points, the last at 85-49 with 36
seconds remaining.
Sylvester Charles scored agamehlghl8-polntsfortheDeacons,aUm
the second half. Helms and John
Toms added 12 points each and An!bony Teachey contrtbuted 11. .
For Duke, which cloSed Its season at 10-17, the lone double figure
scorer was senior Vince ·Taylor.
The ACC's season scoring cham· pion scored 17 points in his finale
and drew a standing ovation when

he left the lmeup In the dosing•

mmute.
In Moscow, Idaho, Gordie Herbert sank two free throws with 1: 2.1
remaining to boost slxlh·ranked
Idaho to a 57-55 victory over Weber
State In the first round ot the Big
Sky Conference basketball tourna- .
ment Friday night.
Herbert's foul shots spelled the
difference In the game, giving d~
fending conference champion
Idaho a ~55 margin. Brian Keller· ·
man, who bad 18 PQlnts; hit another .
foul shot with 2 seconds reniabtbtg.

!

MEMBER: FCIC

· ,'

REBATE** DIRECT
FROM CHEVROLET
REBATE MODELS

• Maximum test drive allowance is $120 (2·hrs I and is good on any new Chevrolet car
rn~~ .
•• Factory rebate s good only on model s listed in chart. Manuta cturers condition of dealer
contribution may affect co~sumer costs .

MAX. $1/MINUTE
TEST DRIVE
ALLOWANCE

$750 $120
$750 $120
$750 $120
$750 $120
$500 $120
$500 $120
$500 $120
$500 $120

CAVALIER
CITATION
'

Offer ends March 31, 1982.

MANUFACTURER'S
REBATE

·.

LT. DUTY

TRUCKS
VANS

CHEVEIIE
CELEBRITY
LUV

TRUCKS
8-10

TRUCKS

•

.

./

TOTAL
SAVINGS

$870
$870
$870
$870

$620
$620
$620
$620

, TEST DRIVE ALLOWANCE GOOD ON~! NEW CHEVROLET CAR OR TRUCK DELIVERED BEFORE MARCH 31 . 198~ .;
.

Group One

GAWPOUS

l.

SIMMONS

OLDSMOBILE·

..
'

..
.,

giate 'Athletic Association
• · c~ track and field meet
tn Baa ftouae, L.a .
In other declstonl announced at a
• Friday news conference, the
•• 1eqa1 awarded an eXtra year at
elfllblllty to HoUIIOD blleball
(llayll' Mark Vlckman and runner
David ~ UDder the hardship
rule.

'&lt;

• GET A $500 ·oR $750

A $500 to $750 rebate on ~elect car and truck models direct.
from Chevrolet. And a test drive allowance that makes proving Chevy's :
quality. worth it. For every minute (up to 2-hrs. Max.) of your test ;
drive. we'll knock $1 00 off the price once you decide to buy. That's :
good not only on top of the rebate specials. but any Chevrolet you
buy! Double savings, a double value . Only from the best selling ·
Chevrolet Dealers in the country Group One Chevrolet.

agelll9.
,.
·Tbe IIOphomore speclaiJzes in the
440-yard dull and tlll).yard run and
helped·SMU to a II!COnd-place fin·
Ish at laltiiUIIII1Iel"aNadonal Colle-

•t

v:

, KENNER, La. (AP) -The professional football players union said
Friday It was not quite ready to
threaten a strike If National Football League ownerS refuse to pay
higher salaries.
"It's too early. I can't sit here today and say we are going to strtke
over a percentage of the gross, hut
a strlkee is the ultimate weapon we
have," said the Oakland Raiders'
Gene Upshaw, president of the Na·
tlonal Football League Players
Association.
Players get only 30 percent of a
team'slgross revenues, less than
professionals In any other major
sport, tbe union clalms..It wants the
players' share raised to 55 percent.
•Upshaw and a half dozen other
players came to this New Orleans
suburb Friday for a regional meetlni to discuss their demands with
union members and to drum up
support for the move to win _a new
contract to replace one that expired
..
·on July 15. '
The contract will be the biggest
Issue to come before the NFLPA
convention on March 21 In Albu·
querque, N.M., Upshaw saki, and
he expects about a third of the unIon's 1,530 members to be there.
Upshaw and the others accused
the owners of the NFL's 28Jeams of
arblirarUy setting salaries and
Commissioner Pete Rozelle of goIng along with them.
"Thhe wage scale right now Is
that every player m a cerlaln posi·
lion gets so much money and that's
it," whether It ts 8 fourth year lineman or a No. 1 dtatt choice, Upshaw said.
Jet! Van Note or the Atlanta Fal·
cons agreed. He said the owners'
strategy was "to pay the No. 1 draft
choice a lot of money, the super·
stars a lot of money and let the rest
ot the money trickle on down
through the ranks."
He saki the NFLPA proposes to
set wage scales based on the
number of years' experience,
playoff money and other
Incentives.
The union released figures show·
ing wide dlllpar!ty between the av· ·
erage pay levels ot NFL.teams :from $106,028 by the Denver
Broncos "to $69,740 by the ·Atlanta
Falcons.

.•
,. . .: Sports shorts••.

... ,,

TAX-FREE OPTION.
· Now you can deduct~ to
$2,000 interest tax..free wi
Central Trust's Tax-Free Savings
Certificate. All you need is a
$500 minimum deposit to earn
70% of the current 52 week
treasury' bill aver;t
investment yield.
current
!'ate is 10.79%. Interest is
paid when certificate matures
in one year.••

at 2().10, and by halftime, the Dea·

c0ns fronted 37-16.

WE DOUBLE DARE YOU ro·.
FIND A DOUBLE SAVINGS
DEAL UKE THIS. ·

strike·· yet

;:

colleges and professionals. ( AP Laserphoto 1.

Onsaturday,NQftbCarollnamet
North CaroUna State, followed by
No. 3 Vlrglnla and No. 16 Wake
Forest.
Guanl Mike Helms scored 10
llrst-half pobtts to &amp;et Wake Forest
out to a fast start as It rallled its
record to 2().7 and became the tlrst
basketball squad m the.school'shlstory to post back-to-back :!().victory
seasons,
After Duke Jumped in to a 3-0
le~d. Helms hlt three straight
baskets to give Wake Forest a lead
It never surrendered. His field goal
at the 7: 02 mark doubled the score

NFL players

THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A BmtR TIME THAN NOW
TO PURCHASE THAT NEW TRACTOR.

•

SCORING POINTS - A new lightweight buketbaU backboard
· produced by Goodyear for the Porter Equipment Company Is pillng up
lloiola with youngsters. The molded llberglan backboard has a ribbed
!-eking thst makes it' as tough and lively as those used ~y high schools,

'

At Greensboro, N.C., Ralph
Sanipeon's bale line Jumper wltb 3
mbtutes remabtbtg provided Vlrgl·
nla·wlth 8 56-54 victory over stubborn Clemson In a !1m-round game
ot the AtlanUc Coast Conference
basketbaU tournament · Friday
night.
Earlier in the day, top-ranked
North Carolina and North.Carolina
State advanced to the .tournament
semifinals on saturday. 'The Tar
Heels downed Georgia Tech 55-39,
whlle the Wol!pack $topped Mary·
land 40-2$. Wake Forest bad an
easy time beating Duke 88-53.

WID .

.

'

3. 30-Month Option
Interest on each.deposit is paid
at the 30-Month Money Market
rate current at time of deposit.

ler a slow start and scored Uothls
111 points during the comeback that
saw the Rebels twice i:ut the mar·
gin to two points within the final
!our mbtutes.
'l'll!llln tossed in his filial basket
onabeautlfUlhookashewas!alllng
away with Just over two minutes to
play, and 90 seconds later MlnnJe. •
l!eld grabbed a rebound, dribbled
the length ot the coun and dunked It
over two defenders to put it out ot
reach at 60-52.
The victory llfled Kentucky to 22·
6 !or the season arid Ole Miss fell to
17-11.

'

•

llldlt a year ago, traUed the Wlld·
cats by 18 points with 12: 22
remaintrig and stlll was down fly 16
at~ Wttb lesS than 10 mbtutes to
play. .
.
However, the Wlldcats began
having troUble at the free throw
line, missing 12 of 2&gt;1 down the
stretch, btcluding the first shot of
oni!-and-ones six times, to let the
Rebels get into contention.
Carlos Clark, 'Mississippi's all·
conference forward, warmed up af.

"

At Central Trust, we understand how important it is to
stop and look at all your options
before making an investment.
That's why we offer a variety of
plans each designed to help
you get the highest mileage out
of your money.

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Pa!le-C·S

Hurtto~T~~~
r-~
' --~------------------------~----------------------------------~~--~----------------------Ole Miss, Which won this tourna-

"SPRING SELL·A·BRATION"

251 W. MAIN

w. va.

Wildcats hold off Rebels, gain SEC finals with 62-58

Ball State, NIU gain finals
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Clutch shoOting by Northern JUl.
noll' Allen Rayborn , and Ball
State's Ray McCallum earned semlflnal victories Friday night and
put the Hl18kles and Ca.rdl!lals Into
last night's title game ot the Mid·

.

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

Mlr. 7, 198l

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

. 200-240 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, c: ~

CHEVROLET, INC.~
!JOS-318 EAST MAIN STREEl .:

POMERpY, OH

.
.. .

.•'
•'••

.
:I

, I

�Mar. 7, 1982

Porn

Scoreboard...

-----

Boys scores
.,. 1ite

--

UCLA68, =""~

,.,._

........

Cia. a.con 56, Cln. Woor.tward fl
Cia. MoeUer 61, an. Andil!riOII 57

lie i'..alf; c

Shaw 74, Solon S3
Grove Oty :U. Westen111e S. XI
Kent Roolevelt til, A.krm Buchtel 71
~-

Um&amp; 83, Elida &amp;5
Lcrain Kine 93. MljMew 38
MuJiield 81, 11tt!n CoillJTII:Un 61
~ Malabar 82, SarldWIIcy fS
OT'

Newarll. 77. Qi Eu1 M
Panna Normandy 57, Lakewood 53
Tot Macomber !12, Sylvania Southview

GA~ FREStiMEN....The Uill-8%
North Gallla Pirates Freshmen fialshed wllh a H
record. Team members are, first row, left to right- ·
.Jackie Glassburn, Tim Smith, Chuck Lewis, Jamie

NORTH

COMPLETE SEASON - The Nortb GaUJa Junior
High Girls' basketball team recently completed the
season with a 7-4 record. Tht&gt;y were &gt;-3 in league play.
Michele George received all-county recognition for .her
performance In the Junior Hlg~ County Tournament.
Also receiving special recognition from their coaches,
Kathy Al,dermao and
Denise Payne,. were: · most
.

valuable, Jayne Campbell, beat defensive, Tina Blackbum; beat offensive, Micbele George; mwt rebounds,
Paula Smith and.most Improved, Cynthia Neal. Squad
members are, front row, left to right - Ubby Slone,
Robin Marcum, Cynthia Ne111, Paula Smith and Sharon
Hoover. Baek row - Tondra Price, Tina Blackburn,
Jayne Campbell, Mlcbele George and Lori Crilow.

'

WITTENBERG'S Jay Ferguson, left, hounds
Hope's Scott Benson In Friday night's NCAA Division
Ill hardwood eon test In Holland, Mich. The Tigers led

26-24 at haUIIme, but dropped a 77-60 decision to the
host team In the Great Lakes Tournament. (AP Laser. pbotol.

)

Wittenberg drops contest
'I)

HOLLAND, Mich. (API - Senior center Pete Metzelaars scored
30 points as Wabash College or Indiana defeated Ohio Northern 81·61
Friday night to advance to the fl.
nals of the NCAA Dlvlslon III regional tournament.

The Little Giants met tournament host Hope College Saturday
for the IItle. Hope a(lvanced to the
finals with a 77-fJJ victory over Wittenberg University before a packed
house at the Holland Clvlc Center.

Local bowling
Thunday Mora.Jng Stan
Jao. 15, 1982

Tenth, Gallipolis Food Inc.• M. Gr~ene a5, 411.
Eleventh, Modern Woodmen of America , G.

w. L.

Tea m
Jnuk Rous/1

:;o 14

C1·own City Mimn11
DobbillJ&gt; &amp;I SOns Con .
GCOI'io:C'sGroccry
Dan'11 Tl1·cs

40
40
34
32

Hunl, 136.lJ6.

Ri!~Vl!l''.!i Gu1·a~c

24
24
30
J2
32 32
31 33
28 36

Po1J1bers
GaUipolb FO&lt;l(IJne.
M'odc1·n WoOOme1l of Americil

27 37
::!\ 38
24 40

t'our Ro:~cs
Kempe!' &amp;tlvage

C~nvenienl Food Market

a1 24

M. Gl·iHilh4-H!l.

'

'

P•1meruy Bowun11 Lant!"
Tue..tay Trlplkare

Marrh!, IIIIZ
StandlllgH

Mm~ s

• :.Place, hil!lh ,ii.HJIJ~ and hi gh series a1·c listed.
: .Firat, Jark Roush, S. Reynolds 173, 425.
• &amp;oond, Crown City Mining, D. Swain 187, 497.
, "l'hlrd, Dobbins arld Sons Con ,, D. Dobbin.!! 184
' 4rJ.
.
: · 'F&lt;lurth, George's Grocery, F'. Petrie 165. 423.
, .. }'iCth, Dan's Tires. P. Clary200, 503.
• Sixth. FourRII!'Ie.s, J. Fife !53, 418.
: .&amp;vertth, Kemper Salvage, D. Kempci' IS4, :~&amp;.
.. .fti1Jtlth, Beovcr's0ai'8Ke, P. Abshire 153, H4 .

.. ~"Ninth, BomDers, M. Jenkin., 149,417.

Twelfth, Convenient Foo:l Market, B. Baisden

164 , 388.
Spli ts converted , D. Swain 2-1 P. Ab.'lhire 2·7

N~i

T~m

Inn

..~ .

p•.51

Wabash, now 2(}.4, never trailed
and held a 44-27 halftime lead.,Stan
Mories led Ohio Northern, now21·7,
with 23 points.
Hope came from behind In the
second half to record lts first tour·
nament victory ever. Wittenberg.
appearing In Its seventh tourna.
ment In eight years, suffered Its
first-ever loss in the opening round.
Matt Nell led Hope, now 19-4, with
20 points, while Wittenberg, which
fell to 20-9, was led by Jay Ferguson
with 19 points.
Hope and Wabash mellor thesecond time this season In the regional finals last night. Earlier this
year, Hope edged Wabash, 85-82, in
overttlme.
WI
be
tten rg and Ohio Northern
played in the consolation game.

.

lf&lt;bron Lakewood ... Joluo~ "

HlUaboro 63. Grtt'nf\e_ld S8
Uma Catb. i1 Oltawa-Glandor1 39

MJnf'IVI. e&amp;. Su:ly Val. 47
NapoleOrl !16, Bry'!' 46
PleaJant !!(1, Clentar!gy 48
Porbmouth !D, Coal GJ"'Ye '13
RtYer Val ill, kkeye VaJ. :r1
RoNford 41. HolLand Spring. 4.1, 201'
SarrSusky SL Mary 5!i. ~ 45
SherWood Fairletw 65, WallliMn
Swankln !!8, Eastwood :ll

~

WarTertiViUe 33, Beachwpod ll
Welll.lwtoo 6&amp;. El;y11a CaUl. 63, 40'1'
Wheek-nburg 48. Ironton 47, 20"1'
Whlll!ha.ll 67. Heath 47
WUianl ·50. ~BtX)'I11S 42

U, E. Palestine~
a.. A Toutumen&amp;i
Ada 60, Allen E. U
O.ta\18 39, GeorgetOwn J8

"YOilftll.

Brrl&lt;shlre 73. Ledaemorll 51
Bltmon 69. N. Baltlmon! 64
Buckeye Central IB, Carey &amp;4

Bucke)oe Trail 61, Jewett..scb 3t

ctn. Sum.mtt 74, E. Olnt.ora 49
Cot\Vf!Y Crntvrw 57. Ottovt1le 50
Delptxlil St. John 82, Antwerp ()
Garaway 61, Comtton Val. ~1
Ka.1kta 88. Ollumbus GJ"OI.Ie ~
Lorain Cath. 1!1, lndependenC'e 7V

Mans. St. Peter 67, New Lmdon 47

-

~

n

St. Henry 93, Minster 4G
S. Amherit 61. Cuyahoga Hb. ~
S. Centra.l 50, Mans. Chrt.!itlan 49
'1'1ttln Clllven 62. Old Fort ¥.!

--

Upper SCkrto Val. 53, Hardin N. 46

Vanlue li9, Van Bw-en 66

Canton Heritage 00, Corinth Chr. 57
Cantoo Trinity UM. Xenl.11 Chr . 00
Young. Ch.rl.ratan 41, canton Herttagl' 34

Girls scores

................
a...MA,.__,_

OWo HIP School Glrtt Buketb&amp;ll
Barberton 57, Uniontown Lake 50

an. Hughes m..an. Wltbn.M" M
an. ou. HWs 52; ctn. Sycamof(' "

_

Clew. E . Tectl19, GaJ11eid· HUI. 47
E. CleYclattd Shaw n, Ocve!And Hts. 52

.,.. ...
~.

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

~

Lord!town 52, Southern Local 48, 20T
McDonald .S, Akron Lady of EIIT'II 40

College scores
F'ftday'a CGUep B-Mkebll8cdrel
EAST
1Brown

Sl. Dartmouth 51

Pf!nn 68. CorneD !'ll

1981 BUICK REGAL

1981 BUICK S~YI.AR~

exterior w ith con-

blue

'

TrasTing blue cusTom cloth, V·6,

cruise,

Landau

top,

• dr., 4 cvi.. auto. trans .. fldlo,
rallve wheels. On ly 17,370 mHeF

chrome

plaTed wheels, 19,245 miles:

Wu$4995.00

'7995
1981

OF THE LOW PRICE OF
ARE PASSING THE SAVTO YOU. TAKE AQVANTHESE GREAT PRICES

N~W

1979 DODGE

MONTE
Two tone blue, V~6, cloth Interior,

Rallyewheels. Double Sharp.
WuS79t5.oo

'7495

1979 CHEV. PICKUP

"MASONIC
"EASTERN STAR .
"CAMEO
"RUBIES

CHEYENNE

,t.l!fo., two lone paint, dark blue
r~~
Auto. trans. trans. ,

~'.

;:::re.

1980 CHEV. MONZA
I

;cloth interior,,. cyl. , auto trans
1

.
.ALE

'5295

TOWN COUPE

Dove gray exterior wifh CU!tom

power steering, air cond.,· speci~i

accent stripes, Only 13,051 miles.

'5495

"Home of the Sharpest Used Cars
In Tile yalley"
. &lt;:) AMERICAN GREETINGS CORP. MCML.XXl

CHAPMAN SHOES
lltxt lo Etlltrfll.ln PGIMIIIJ

Car Co.
,.,.. hltern, Golllpolls
441 ....

Indiana
Dl!lrull
Atlanta
Chk:aiJO

61, 0'1'

"

San Antonio

BowUna Green £16

N.l.lUnols 67,

Mld-Ea1Un1 ~

Alabama 56,

c

I

Uri

Ji

~

26
24
23

3.'1
32

.?U
.467
.441
.429

J4j

.J!iO

16

e

31

21
7'1

.6.18 .500 ' :!

!9
tl

.D

...........J3
XI
XI
19

·--

.3'l8

7Y.~

18~

to

.lll

lB%

19

f{l

..322

18%

fo1

19

39
:VI

zo

·""
.661

-11\

2::!

-Portland

33
:11

"21

.576
,..
.517

7' "
10

San [)k&gt;rQ

1.5

fo5

·""

Plillad£1~

89, Atlanta EO
New Jel'lle)' tm. Chlcqo 00

Ketltucky 62, Mlsslulpp Sf!

:m

u

~·Ganw

'rennesaee 50

Solitbeta C •

1:1
16'!.!
11
19!h

Lea Anaeles..
Seattle
Gokten Stale

~

8nec ...., __

42

Utah

Freano St. OJ, Fulleiton St. 51

1~

13~

De:nu

Middle TeM. 56, MIUT2y' St. ~. O'J'
W.Kentuclcy !15, MoreMad St. f1
Padlk CoMI i\t~Wk "'-dab

12 ~
161,)

Knsu City

OIIIG Valley ConfiM'MOI!

:1)

-

.525

.ru
.47fo

Denver

Howard u. 63, Md.-E.snore 57
Bethune-Cookrnan 5fo. S.Caroltlll S!. 53
F1orilla A&amp;:M 47, Delawan! St 42

T1

.74.1

.-'59

Hoo!!ltoo

Colllcwnoe

11
29

.2:14
Ml!ft:IIN CONRIIENCE

, (.1eo.teland

.,.,.,_

.!len n

.

BoltM 100, Houston 98

IW

-

Th.·Olatt.a.nooaa 70, E.T81flelll'e St. 60

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

Dav!d!lOn 57, Olidel M

Tcxas-Arlln,ton 78, l..aJnar 73

SW Lo\IJ.!!lana 1(11, McNHIII! St. tD
Soldlllnat c.f am
!len
h
Arkansas ID, ~xa• oU1sr1.n 10
Hou.stQG 89, Texat AI:M i1i
ao.dilwtllltern .-\UIWk! Cmli! eece
" 9ei2Sh
Alcorn St. ~. Te.us Southern 8l

Denver 1.21. WUI\ll!gtOD 1l6
PhOer\lx 110. KaMal Oty !ti

Cokien Statt u7, sin 01eao
Cev$nd lU, Portland 110
~tOt M. Oallu 97
s..IQ'•Giuns
New Ycrt II BMMn
1...o1

us, OT

,,.

INDIANS-Signed

SIJ.

....

C INC INN AT I REDS -Signed

HouSE"holdf&gt;r, outrleldl;&gt;r.

CINCINNATI - Reds on Radio
returns to the air Wednesday when
the Cincinnati Reds open their 1982
pre-season schedule against the Pittsburgh Pirates in Bradenton, Fla.
Marly grennarnan and Joe Nuxhall
will again be broadcasting Reds'
games every day during spring
training.
.
In all, th!!re will be 25 game broadcasts from Florida_, plus the final
pre-season game from Colwnbus.
~ch spring training broadcast
will Include two pre-game shows,
beginning 30 minutes prior to game
time. On RedSet Report, Brennam8n and NWihall will interview
managers and players of the other 25
major league teams and give a
preview of each team. Jim GlasS
will anchor the show. That will be
followed by Tampa Surfside, on
wl\ich Nuxhall will interview a Reds
player.
· the post-game lineup will include
Nuxhall's Star of the Game show:
Reds' Scrapi!O&lt;i, on which Kathy
Lehr, ,WLW air personality, wiD
namte stories about spring training
history; and Reds' Replay, hosted
by Bnmnaman and featuring 25 of
the most exciting momenta of the
1980 season aa
on the original
game broadcast.

hea?l

I
'

Ro·

I

Kobinson.

Pro standings
National Hockey Leapt
Wales Conteret~ee
F.artcll. Dlvi:IM
WLTGFGAPU
NY Jslandl?n
45 !4 7 .124 2fli !J7
NY Rangers
D2311:141.248 7J
Phlladl!lphl a
l!:l6 72m26l71

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

22
19
15
15
13
12
12
10
10

~attle

SOUTHERN
REVUE-

Sports briefs
TENNI8
ROME tAP ) - &amp;.ter Mottram beat
ltaly'a Mrtano Panatta :1-1, H. fr.3. .6-4 to
K!VIl Brlta!Jl • 1~ IN::I ln Davia Cup

~

22~9267273~

:16 1..2 17 2!B IR7 " ~
l5 21 !t 2'56 273 79
JJ 19 u 248 Di 79
:II 23 It 296 279 74
17 32 ~ ~ 211 ~ t9

Tne day'A lfi('OII(I matcll wu halted by
dal""luleu w1!11 CorraOO BarauutU ol Italy
and Rlctlard Ltwta tied S..S In lhr t\rat sel

PRAGUE, CXedmlovalda tAPJ -

~

cho8kwak1a td a :!-0 leld O'Vft' Wesl Cif.r.
many tn a flnHwnd Davis CUp matcll Ill
Tomas SrmdbMt Ull P\nnerS.7, 64, fi.l and
Ivan LendJ beat Rolf Gellrtng 6-1, 6-2, 6-2.

STOCKHOLM, SWeden (APl - Swede~! ,
playing without B!om Borg, jumped to a 2..()
Oavb Cup lead over the Sov1ct Union u
Mats Wllander beat Vadlm 8orllov !J-1. &amp;-1.
6-4 and Al.oon Jarryd worn down AJemmdEor

FRENCH

And PRESIDENT o//ere dae onfv
CB Bcacflo JWO l'EAII
RJ1L WARR.4.Nn'l
........,....,

---

••••••

......'t;' :.l';

10~z.

.Tra~H!~.!1l!ll ·
••• .,

.......

c...- ............ of dae ,.....,.,

BOB'S ELECTRONICS
~ross from

the Silftl Bridae Pl1•.1

Rt. 7

Golllpoll•

zvenev 6-1, l-6, 0.6, 6-3, &amp;-2.

BUENOS ..UFU.:s, Argentina tAP! - Ar·
gentina and France splil tDelr two singles
matches In Davia CU"p play asGulllenno VI·
las dehted Yanniclr. Noah d Franot &amp;-1,
4-6. 7·:1, U. ,T-5and F'rarx:e'•TII&amp;erry1"1llasne
dcNined Rkatm Caoo 6-1, 6-l, 6-2.
SANTIAGO, ChlJe - Ch8e and Romania
tle&lt;ll-lln theft Davll Cupslngiel matches u
Romanian llit Nastue doYtned Bel~&amp;~ Pra·
)oux 1-G, !J.?, &amp;-4, &amp;-a &amp;.2 and Pedro ReboUcdo
af CllJ1c CJ'I!hed f'lorln 5eprt'WIU &amp;-fo. 6--2,

...

· LOS ANGELES tAP\ -Billie Jran King
tei'Tll11l\all of tbe Sl!KI,Oll
Avm TennlsChampiON.hJJ» Of J..oa ~.
&lt;iefcatlnf Andrea Leand
6-&lt;1. 1-'.
The :11-year~ and unseed!d KinR will
face ftrlh·k'fded Mirna Ja~. whO
downed Yvome Bermaak Ci: South AJriea,
7-6, 6-1; whlleunsefded l...e§l!P.~.a 7-6. 6-0
wtnner over Baroora Pouer; wtlllace tltln::l·
adv ai'ICf'd to the

a.-.

~

Sylv1a Hanlk.a of West Germany,
whO el1mlnated Jo Du.~ o1 Great BrltiM,
S:2. &amp;-1.

For Safety... Convenience.. ~
Have·vour
Social Security
Check

BANKRUPI'CY/CHAPTER 13
(Wage Earner Plan&gt;

No fee for Information~

1-221-5379
Lee c. Mittman
Pamela N. Maggied
Attorneys-At- Law
88 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH . 43215

NEW '12

VWRABBR
Cars &amp; Trucks
G,s cir Diesel

'350 VW DIVIDEND
'350 RIVERSIDE .DIVIDEND
'700 - TOTAL DIVIDEND

DEPOSITED
DIRECTLY!

THE ONLY
•'

Bankiftl facility with

lobbJ

B•n•in&amp; thit is

open DownlowR untii
4 P.M.

..
Why risk the chance of having your ..- .,• •••

check f(!ll into the wrong hands? Direct
Deposit insures you that your check will
get to you .·.. automatically each
mqnth! 1t's a sure th~ng! Get the facts!

Ott• Cilod Till April lOth
tame Itt NOW ~Good Selection

•

..

C&amp;S Bank Q
The Commercial • Savings .Bank

. Alexander vs. Wheelersburg, 7

p.m .• ~ou

Portsmouth

'

jull

QUARTER
Lo.unge &amp;Carryo.ut

'69.95

From

~ .... pea~

wEDNEsDAY, FRIDAY
&amp;SATURDAY

· March 12 games:

slated March 17. in Convocarlon cen·
fer .

CB Radio in your car
puu all sorts of aid
at your
jlngertfpsl

THISWffK

High school .
.
pm
vs. Hillsboro, 9 · ·
aiOU
•
&amp;
· nets
Winners advance toOU "-~ 1 o
•

L

Hillsboro63 Greenfield S8
Aie)Cano'er 71 Nelsonville -York 62

competitiOn.

24 l2 10 240 278

P
OP
1 1656 1265
3 1593 1361
5 ·1349 1108
7 1210 1102
7 1161 1117
9 964 925
10 1520 1~9
12 1238 1191
12 1210 1215
9 12 1342 1353
8 13 1232 1308 '
7 12 1018 1093
5 16 1184 13-16
o 21 1123 1-II&gt;B

W

Wheelersburg 481ronlon 47 (2 oil

-·-

SEA1Tl..E MARINERS-Signed Gayhlrd
Pl&gt;l't")', ptiCher: to a one-.)'f'ar contract.
TradOO Mlke Parrort, pitCher, to thfl MUwauketo Iirew@n for Thad Bosley , outfielder.
N....... . . . _

PltUburgh
Wul\lnaton

ALL GAMES

TEAM
•·Wheelersburg
•·PortSmouth
•·Athens
Galnpolis
• ·PI , Pleasanl
• ·Chil lic othe
Jackson
Waverly
1ronton
Wellston
South Point
washington CH
Loqan
Meigs

Bolton al Dl!'lro6t
Dallu at San AntOnio

pltchl!r, lo .a one-year contract.
MINNESOTA TWINS-Signed Dave

."

For your /otidy'e eqfety •••
alld your pe•ce of•lnd ••. •

Pt. Pleasant63 Ripley 58

Portland al Goklen State

~

I'OOI'BAll.
~llilorllll Foetball Leape
OE!'I'VER BRONCOS-CialiTK.'d

Area cage
standings

Portsmouth 80 Coal Grove 73

Otkaao at Kanlu Cll}'
at:Yellnd al Drnver

BMEB.UJ.
Mtertcan i..eape
OOSTON RED ·SOX-signed Daw
Stapleton. Infielder. to a one-year con·
tract
CLEVELAND

'

Friday's results:

Indiana 11 Dallu •
HoutonatPhoeDix

San D6ego 11

FINISH SEASON WITH I-f RECORD- The Nortb Todd Deel, best field g1111l and free throw percentage;
Gallla Jualor High Pirates, CIIIICbed by Jolin Denney,
and Tim SteveDI, m08t valuable player. The Pirates
eemplled a H overaU reeerd tbls aea-. The Pirates
are, left to right, row 1 - Paul Lee, Eugene Adkins,
seored vletorlel over BldweU, Soutbweltem, Kyger
Palll Davll, Dave Diddle, Randy Oller, David Mullins,
Creek, Oak Hill, Wlltoa alld MeArtbor. Lollles were to
Wayne Dl!ldle, Sco« Donahue. Standing ln back Kyger Creel! ud HaDDan Trace, R~vlllg all-couoty
maaager Tim Neekamp; Todd Deel, Ed Dople, Steve
Mareum, Tim Stevens, Harold Mays, Van Ellis,
" reeognltloo waa. Van Elllo. Reeelvillg special
reeogaJUoo f.r0111 CGaeh Deaaey were· Paul Lee and
manager; Jcaatllan Bush, and Coach John Denney . .
Wayne Diddle, beat defense; Steve Maretlm and Ed
Not pldured; John Kinney .
Dople, best 1lxth mao; Vaa EW•,.,m_os_t_lm_p:...r:...o_ved.....:.;______~--------------~

)( - Still in tournament .

Af9lel at PN!adelpl\la

Transactions

Hartlonl

Reds on radio

Dark

----

15

J'l

:II 33
.,_,.,.,_
M.Uwaukee

~

BaU Sl. 16, W.Michlgan 12

-·

,.

.I

..._.
Ocnse'aHon

.....lo

Arizona St. 9l, Oregon 62
Oregon St. 92, Arlt.oM 64

EXTRA • EXTRA SHARP

Ylr&amp;11lia Tech lUi. Clndnnatl M

Bo!IOD

starts March 10

Thats right. Slrawbeny Sho!1cake'" Is here. We've just received a new shipment of SlrawberTy Shol1cake sneakers
and sandals and we wonted you to know about ~as early
as possible. These sneakers and sandals "'•·""'"
ore so cute that you'll wont to rush right /
"'··
in to our store. So come on In v.llile
there's stlll a Iorge selection and you'll
know why she says: 'Ue iS Delicious".

F'lorkla St. 5fo, '1\dane 49
LoulsvUI(' 7&amp;, St.Lo\lb tf

Montreal

.... ......,

1·

"

a

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

Alan Bla.nshan, tackle: and TeK
kicker.

Yale IM, Harvard 81

·

WLP«.Ga

Lisowski, tlJI:ht end, on walven from the
Cle\leland Browns. SlgnOO .Jeny Compton.
Wide ret'elver; Richard Gan..a, guard :

Breck.svUie 45

Canal WliiCheiter !16, PIEAUDI

trans., power steering, sliding siqe ·

--

West Virgl.&amp;ja Ill, St.BonaV@nture m
Pin li(J, Rutgen &amp;7
MeG c..fei'&amp;!IIOC

St. Pf!~r't

ft:a¥B

N.u-1 a
lhiAMoc~UL•
........... OONn:III!NCI!

Engle, ootnelder.

Princeton ~. Columbia 53

owner.

Dl!trdt al Nrw YCJTt

Cld Dominion 17. Richmond 69
JaiTI('S Madl.sotl &amp;&amp;, WlWam a Macy t9
I!'.Mtmt l!lJIW C ' 1eaoe
Sen 95 a.

Richmond Dale SE 4(1, Latham Westem

RJver Ylew &amp;4, Sleubenvllle Cath. l2
Tri·Valley 51. Wellsv1Ue 26

Highst: ries - Dian~ Ash ril2: Carolyn Bachnt!r

Sr..Lwis at M.lMeso\1

New Krloxvllie ~. New Bremen 42

Ashtabula 75, Badger 71
Noswayne 66, Tuslaw 6.1
Reading 49, Coshtn 40

.1979 CHEVY
SPORT
VAN
- ..
..

..........

Jacluon St. 65, Grambling St. a
Celltenal")' 106. A.rk. ·Uttlfo Rock liD

... McDonald"

Medina

Look at this:

-·-

Calaary at Plttlburab

~f!,Dalton49

!&lt;Yr

SAVE $'s
AT OUR .
PRE·S.PRING
SALE

...........

Ra}'t'rl

Miner City 6l .l..dp!ilc

vancouver at Wlnnlpef_ ~

Montr.al at Butfak)
w........... Ptillade!phl.o

St .Joseph's 83, La ~ n
Drexel !II, Amf'rlcan U. 62, OT
ECAC-

lona 66,

:m l!i rn 297 m
l! 32 It 253 298 50
~ ,., 11 :u 293 fol

23

~ An~ls at HarUord
~ at C'hJcaa'o

Fordl\am 7&amp;, Fair&amp;ld St

COk1water !ifl, Bath 13
Col. St. c.::twiN. 58, Urelevllle !5I!

r~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

8trldeRite '
1

Centrai c'ath. 73. Sherwoo:t Fa.Jr-

42 lt 12 362 2M "
,_ 28 14 228 Z36 62 .

Wlnnil)el" 2, Oetrdt 0

Weber St. 55
Nev.-Reno 97, Monta.\a 93, 20T.
Eut Cout C n' cuoe

Metm Atlantic AUIIedc

--

16 Zil ll3 ~

"-=~r
-.no-

...........

~7.

Hartley .,

Hubbard 58, Wa~n W. Resel'\-e M,

Pressure play

-CHOOSE FROM-

~-

V-St. M 11. Wilynedale 45

""'"

~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~~~~~

NOW

"BIRTHSTONE
"LINDE STARS
"OPALS
"GARNETS

Cl@ve.

4116 ; Pa1Carllon477.
T L"Iun h!i!h)(a•~e - MeiW&gt; Inn r.os .
Tt!HIIl h1gh se l'lts - Mei~:; Inn I 3M .

·20o/o
OFF

--""-

campbell Memorial 1.01, Waterloo 70

FOI"C:JI Run Block
4!
Ji111 's C:ull
44
3fi
St&lt;tr Sup111y Co.
29
C~ Penntoil
24
H1~h Ind. ~tunc - Oiculf A.!th 214 : Ca J·olyn
Hadutet· lOO ; Pa t Car!!on 180 ,

ALL IN STOCK
STONE RINGS

Tol. Scot1 fli. Tal. Wbl.~ ft)
WapakOrleC.IlS, CPUna 33
warren Harding 53. Poland Seminary H
Wlnlet'SV'We Iii, Steubenvllle 6t
Xmia • • Dey. Stivera-Pa~ 63

"""'
""""' .... ·Col.

The
Cafe

NORWALK, Conn. (AP) _Barbara Potter, therlsingyoungstarln
women's professional tennis, was
talking about pressure.
.. •
"When you are talking about
pressure," she said, "you're talk·
log about losing. 1 only think about
winning, about how much I can
move forward. If I trip along the
way, that's too bad."

ar

Nel!m.VUJe.York 62
Astltabula Harbor 63, Painesville Har·

· RIPLEY - The Point Pleasant guin the 63-M victory. Gibson, Scott
nament. They will play the Sl
Big Blacks, paced by the shooting of Rutherford and UIUefield all hit
Albans Red Dragons on Wednesday
Todd Gibson and a balanced scoring crucial foul shots in the closing in Charleston.
attack from Ed Legge, John David minutes.
Led by 14 points by Randy Meand Rod Littlefield, handed the host
Once again, Coach Lennie BarDonald and 11 and 10 from John
Ripley Vikings their 18th defeat of nette's Big Blacks ·had four men in Oshel and David Lambert,.the Point .
the season, 63-58, Friday night. Gib- twin digits, with Gibson leading with Pleasant Little Blacks downed the
: son, a 6-0 junior guard, has been the 23 points, Ed Legge contributed 14 Ripley JV's 48-4~ in the preliminary
encountel'. Coach Lal'ry Markham's
leading .scorer throughout most of points and 12 rebounds.
the games, scored l2 of the Big
For Ripley, Cunningham's 17 poin- learn closed its season with a 12-11
Blacks' 24 last quarter pOints to ta~
ts led the Vikings' scoring attack.
record.
the game scoring honors with 23 Ten-y Snyder finished the game with
Point Pleasant (631 ,.- John David
points.
13 points. Ripley, now 3-18, shot only 3·410; Ed Legge 6·2·14; Todd Sim·
Overall, Gibson connected on
40percentfromthefloorwitha 22-55
P~ i ns 1·0·2; Rod Littlefield 5·2·11;
~
Todd Gibson 8·7·23; Joey Wa llis O·Cl·
h
eig I Of 18 shots from the field and
shooting night.
O; Kev;n SmHhO·O·O; Rutherford0·2·
sank a perfect seven Of seven free
The Big Blacks tOOk :;s shots and
2. Totals 23-17-63.
throw shots while pacing the win.
connected on 23 of them for a 42 pe•·Ripley (581 - Terry Snyd~r 6·1·1l;
Th
Bryan Mullens 1·2·4; Scott Cu~·
e outcome of the game could
cent average. From the foul line the
ningham 6·5·17 ; steve Casto 4·0·8;
probably be summed up by the Big -Blacks were 17-22 for a n pel'cent
Chef Rhodes1 ·1·3; Bruce Brown 2·3·
Blacks' success at the free throw
perfo 1·mance. Point Pleasant 7; Dave Chancey 2·2·6. Totals 22·1~·
58
line where they sank 17 of 22 atfinished with a 13-7 mark. The
score by quarters ;
tempts.
Blacks will tum their attention to the
Point Pleasant
14 12 13 2-4--~
Point Pleasant took an early lead f ...
· "'e;.:c.;.oc.nd;;;.. .;;s;.:e;:;as;..:o.;;n.:. ,..:t.:.:he;;_;s;.:e;;.cl::.io;;.:na::::.l...:t:.:o.:u•:..··--R-;p_le_v_ _ _1_o_ _ _1_4_1_2_2_2_.-511in the first quarter and never ·
1·elinquished it. Ripley Vikings' 6-3
sophOmore Scott Cunningham,
. ad tar.'" Super
scored eight of his team's leading 17
comfortable all·purpose In Both
shoe with contemporary Men's and Women's
points in the second stanza to help
running shoe
' the Vikings outscore the Big Blacks
styling . .
14-1~ . PPHS led 26-24 at halftime.
In the third quarte1·, Point
Pleasant outpointed the Vikings, 1312, to take a slim three point lead
heading into the final period. Big
:100 Second ,\ ve.
Blacks took 12 shots and made gOOd
Lafayette Mall
on six in the third ~riod. Point
Gallipolis, Q.
Pleasant upped its lead to 11 points
contest. Ripley, however, was not
about to allow the Knights to make a
run-~ way Of the contest as the
Vikings came 1·oa 1·ing back with low·
baskets, to cut the ma 1·gtn to three.
Forced to foul Point Pleasant
Ripley saw its efforts feil as the Big
Blacks sank eight of 10 foul shots to

Fraoc!Ji 59,

AJei.ander n,

'

in theover
final three
quarter.
This came
little
minutes
left inwith
the

"'Td.
Tot fiol'ers 67, Tol. Ubbey 63
St. John CI. Tot St.

Akron St.

Big Blacks finish-season
•
with' 63-58 WID
over Ripley

by 8trideRit~

BECAUSE
GOLD WE
INGS ON
TAGE OF
TODAY.

Callihan, aad JeH Cregor.' S~ond row - Manager
Marie·Mays, C1111~h David Moore, John Diddle, Sherman Mareum, Kevin Burnette, Brian Hawks, and
manager Frances Russell.

c.Jpey .
1..01 ~
COiora4o

Seu4' ah

IdahO

83, 'Charcklrl Sf
~.

Edmonton
Vancou¥tr

EIW

Missouri 58. Nebnt.SM. 53
Oklahoma 68. KaiiSill St. 62
Ill 8lly eo.feftiiOe

~

New Phlladelpbia 62, Zll'll!Svile

I

~

17

18 !7 12 232 292 •

""-"""'......

Wn·

cdZ~-W .

Melltor

-

Sen p . 'a
Vlllanow 74, Boeton eou. n
~57, St.John's 42

~

Lakewood St. E;dwan:l 44,
t2
l...ebanoo 48. Kettertna Alll!r

281919&amp;1M'r.i
2:5 n .13 m a 63
27 l3 6 5 286 &amp;)
21 33 10 216 :m !116

1

Norttl carouna !55. Georata 1'Ecb 39
N.Carollna St. 41, Maryland 'IB
V\ratnJa 5$, Clemson :w,
Wake Forest 88. Duke 53

a...u.A~

AlliaDCe ~ Miumon 61
Bay 80,. AYCXII...ake 4&amp;

[.

r..e.. c

AaiMIIe

--

~c·....,.

Soutbem Cal 61, WaahlnpJn St. :16

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

Silver Bridge

Plaza

D

Member FDIC

.·I

'

...•

Spring V aUjy
•i

�'

Mar . 7, 1982

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

_.c -8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

,S tate/ ational

Veteran p~ayers say. Cincinnati training camp ~ell-organized
·' TAMPA, Fla. (AP) _Veteran
ers acquired by the Ctnctnnatl
:
tn ott-season trades say they
•
what they're finding In the Na:ilona! League club's spring training
camp.
· ''This 1s my 14th spring training,
and the only one that Isn't oriented
to what I consider controlled contuslon," said rellever Jim Kern, who
has pitched for the Cleveland Indl·
. ans and Texas Rangers.
"Sprlng training Is usually filled
wtth so many bodlesdolng so many
; things with so ml!lly groups. Over
here, It's organized so you do your
workandyou'regone."
,
. Kern saki his biggest complaint
· about most camps was "getting
.: loose early and then standing

around; by thetlmeyou'rereadyto
run l!lld go In, you're stltf and

tired."
Pitcher Gregg Harris, who came
to the Reds with Kern and catcher
.Alex Trevino from the New York
Mets for George Foster, said the
Reds coaching statt makes the
work seem produCtive.
"The big dltterence here Is organ·
lzatlon," Harrls said. "The atmosphere just seems to be better than
with the Mets. Everyone Is having
tun at It, and we're getting the job
done sooner."
Utility player Wayne Krenchlckl,
obtained from the Baltimore 011oles tor pitcher Paul Moskau, said
be likes the emphasis on hitting.
"Baltimore seetned to · put In

morettmeonfundamentals; here,
we work a lot harder than I'm used
to," Krencblckl said. "Baltimore
let you get lilto shape on your own;
hl!re, we run hard, work hard and
get a lot ot bitting ln."
Outfielder Cesar Cedeno, dealt
by the Houston Astros tor Ray
Knight, said the Reds camp Is shorter but more Intense than he's accustomed to. :
"I was In Houston tor 12 years;
they train tor a longer time than we
do here, but there we hit a lot less.
You don't s(and around here killing
time," Cedeno said. "This Is the
waylthlnkacampshouldberun I'm having tun."
Trevino, who will be the Reds
regular catcher unlt!!15 he Oops

b&amp;dJy In preseason games, feels

that's a key toward being a

he's absorbing a wtnntng feeling In
· the Cincinnati camp.
"The only dltterence here Is that
there Is a lot ot discipline; I like It
much better. There Is moreconcentration,'' Trevino said. " I guess

Winner."

•

Outfielder Clint Hurd)e, obtained
trom the Kansas City Royals for
pitcher Scott Brown, Is making the
switch trom !be A!nertcan League,
along with Kern and Kre!!chlckl.

. "KansasCitywasawlnnlngball·
club In the five years I was there,
but here things are speeded up, "
Hurdle said. ' 'The training camps
are a lot alike: the main dltteiences
are the faces , the names, the colors
of the uniforms - and the (low·
stirrup) socks."

~ime.· i'entintl Section 0~ ·
Sunda ,

John Belushi dead;
apparent choking victim

Cleveland Indian . notes.••
. TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)- BertmyIeven will be the starting pitcher
when the Cleveland Indians
their Cactus League exhibition
baseball season on Monday, Man·
ager Dave Garcia said.
The Indians will be hosting the
MJiwaukee Brewers at HI Corbett

open

Field, Cleveland's sprlng horne.
Garcia said the Indians would
play two eight-Inning lntrasquad
games this w~kend In prepara:tion
for the exhibition opener. Sixteen
pitchers were slated to hurl two Innings each In the contests.
Scheduled to pitch In the Satur·

day tntasquad game were Ed Whitson, Dan SpUJner, John Bohnet and
Neal Heaton for Coach John Gor·
yl's team. and Tom Brennan, SUvlo
MartineZ. Mike ·Schwarber and
Ray Searage for Coach Dennis
Sommers' team.

By STEPJIEN FO){
A180CI• 1-d Pre. Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - John Belushl, the beety
comedian who played a manic Samurai W!lrrlor on
TV's orlgll)al "Saturday Night Uve" and .a slobby
fraternity brother In the movie "Animal House,'' apparently choked to death, says a security guard who
saw the body.
Belushl's nude bodY was found about 12:15 p.m.
Frlday In bed In a $n}-a-day bungaiow the 33-year·
old actor rented behind the Chateau Mannont Hotel
on Sunset Strlp. He was pronounced _slead at the

·,

Indian ace
determined
.this spring

scene.
, ,~~
Los Angeles .County Coroner Thomas Noguchi said
an autopsy would be performed todliY, .but Los An·
gele$ pollee L't. Dan Cooke said tpere was no Imme.
diate Indication ot foul play., /

to;~~~=~~~~~e~~ ~~~~~.~~~~~~~

. TUCSON, Arlz. (AJ') - 'l11e le: gend ot Joe Charboneau died last
: year, thevlctlmota bad back and a ·
players' strike.
' Chatboneau Is determined to re' vlve It tills season.
· Not since Rocky Colavito had a
: baseba1f player so excited aeve; land Indians tans.
; Charboneau took the Lake Erie
·city by storm In 198l, his rookie sea·
·son, and the rest of the counlry
1went along tor the ride.
The storles had 111m pulling his
I
.own
rotten tooth with a pair ot pll·
;ers, scraping off an unwanted tatoo
:with a razor blade, opening beer
:cans In strange ways and drlnklng
·the enclosed beer In stranger ways.
I
, The storles caught the tans' at·
)tentlon, but It was Charboneau's'
•hitting that kept thetr Interest au
:year. He hlt•.2119 with 23 home runs
:-one ot them a monumental blast
;In Yankee Stadium tllat may have
·slngJe.handedly earned hlni the
. :1980 Rookie ot the Year award.
He came to sprlng training last
1
year with contldence, knowing
:Manager Dave Garcia would either
play him or be dropped Into the
·lake.
: Then, the nlgbtr!lare. There was
pain In his hack, not really bad
r nough to take seriously. but allways there. The powertul swtng
;developed a limp, and finally, Char)loneau was a Charleston (W.Va.)
p!arlle.
· He couldn't hit there, either. He
l!nlshed with a .210 average In 48
.Cleveland games and a .217 mark
In 14 Charleston outings. He was
sleeping on a cot In the Charlles'
locker room.
~ "The surgery really helped,''
~harboneau says now, reterrlng to
an operation to repair a damaged
illsc In hls back after that dlsasp-ous season.
• He was up on his feet three hours
\liter surgery, and he.was playing ·
t acquetball In a matter of weeks.
Some unrelated back spasms were
with a shot a month ago, and
he says he's never felt better.
; "I'm folloWing a real strlct routine ot exercising, and I make sure I
get to the whirlpool at the rlght time
every day," he saki. "But I feel
Br-eat now. 'I)lere's no pain In the

have found nothing to ·m ake'lt seem suspicious In any

way."

MEMBER OF THE BLUES BROTHERS DIESJobn Bel11illi Ia flanked by Chicago Mayor Jane Byme,
left, aJI!f her daughter Kathy In Chicago In 1979 as Dan
Aykroyd mugs In background. Belushl and Aykroyd
~ ·~

~

ANN .JOB WOOLLEY .
AMoclated PreM Writer
DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. officials
who want to use the Ford Motor Co. pact as a starting
point tor reopening their own talks are "unrealistic"
It they hope tor more concessions than Ford won, the
United Auto Workers union president says.
Douglas A. Fraser said Friday he "would not be
optimistic" If GM Is expecting greater labor cost sav·
lngs. than those won by Ford.
Fraser noted that GM reported a $333 million profit
In 198land Is seeking concessions In order to·become
more competitive In the marketplace amid the domestic auto Industry's worst sales slump since the
Depression.·
Ford, meanwhile, reported a 1981 loss of $1.06
bUIIon.
GM officials have said the Ford agreement would
be a good starting point If talks with !he UAW were to
resume, but have not said whether they plan to seek
further concessions.
·"I don't think anything Is de!lnliely In or out (of
GM's bargaining stance) from what we've seen of It
(the agreement reached with Ford, )" said GM Chairman Roger B. Smith.
/
UAW o!flclals announced Friday they Wpilld ask
would ask GM's 29().member councU to m~t '!burs·
day and vote on resumption of early contract talks

TRACKERLT
• The strength of
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• The dependability of
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• For front- or rear-wheel
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G78-15LT
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Sale Ends March 20 Noon!
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• Aggressive. goanywhere tread
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• Extra grip, on or
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• Rides quieter
than many other
tracti()n tires

..

..

•
:
,

'•
·

..

I

I
with the No. 1 carmaker.
/
Talks between GM andthe,UAW startedJan. ll but
broke off Jan. 28 over job security Issues. Since then,
the UAW has reached a 31-month agreement with
Ford that saves the No. 2 autQmaker $1 billion. Ford
reported a 198lloss of ~1(06I billion.
.
Fraser said the union's :p-member GM bargaining
committee, which voted earlier this week In support .
of reviving contract talks, would not agree to any
settlement that ·the &lt;;ommlttee doesn't think will be
supported by the membership.
The vote In favor ot resuming talks at the GM
councU meeting next week In suburban ,Detroit
should be }'something higher than 65 percent" in
order for1the UAW leaders to feel they have a mandate !ror!l members, Fraser said.
He predicted that "we ought to be able to do it (the
bargaining at GM) In a week."
Fraser sa14 the union was Interested In talking
again about the proposal GM and the UAW discussed
In the earlier talks. That proposal wo~ld lujve passed
alolli all -labor cost savings to consumers In the form
ot lower car prices.
But GM President F. James McDonald has said
since then that the automaker Is not Interested In
rekindling that discussion. McDonald has said the
proposal, announced at the beginning 'of the talks,
stalled

TELEVISION TANNING SESSION- United Auto
Workers Prealdent Douala• Fraser oqalolllbrOIIJlh tbe
glare of television llgblland smllell al reporters during
a news couferenee Frlday at the union's headquarters

In Delroll. Fraaer ..ld that General Moton 1balald DOt '
expec:t lo get anything mort! lu contract uegotlaU- •
than Ford reeelved In their new contracL (AP Lalel'
photo).

I

• All-terrain performance
tor on-road as well as

olf-road driving
• Gas saving economy

Houston ·hotel fire
kills 10 people

with easy-rolling radial

construction
• Cut and brui~e
resistance with steel

cord belts

H7H5U load Range

C. plus 3.~~ FET. No
hade needed.

latlon. Fire officials said 178 people were evacuated
from the JOO.room hotel, which was buUt In 1980.
The !Ire started at 2: 28a.m. CST and was brought
HOUSTON (AP ) - A smoky fire In a tourth-tloor
under control about 3:48a.m., firefighters said. Poroom of a lllgh-rl&amp;e hotel killed 10 people early Saturllee dispatched two helicopters and 50 emergency
day, and the city's tire chief said there was some
vehicles, Including nine ambulances, were:called to
question whether the smoke detection system worked
the scene.
properly.
Fire department spokesman Larry Dean saki .
Among the dead, In a room across the hall from the
some ladder trucks were used to get to guests on
tire, was a famUy ot five here to attend a wedding,
upper Doors.
authorities said. 1\vo ot the vlcUms were children,
" Lois of tbem (guests) were coming down tho '
' aged 2 and 4.
ladders
and they ( !lreflghte~) busted out windows," r
The tire, which poured heavy black smoke Into
said
Deputy
Fire Chief J .T. Thornton . "We got them 1
adjacent t1oors before It was brought under control at
out
anyway
we
could." .
the 14-story Westchase HUton, also Injured at least ll
went
up through the stairs, or possibly .
''Firemen
people, fire offiCials said.
even
used
the
elevators
on manual control to get to
"I was waked up by the screaming and yelling and
other
people,"
Dean
said,
adding that as tar as be
general chaos,'' said Donna Harris, 32, ot Beaumont,
knew,
no
one
jumped
to
escape
the tire.
who was staying on lhli fourth Door.
"Most
of
the
victims
were
found
on the !Ire noor,
"I broke out the window In our room with an ash·
and
two
others
were
found
In
the
stairwell,"
he saki.
tray and then I took a chair and knocked the rest out, "
Joha
Moorehead
ot
San
Francisco
,
a
hotel
guest, ,
she said.
complained that telephones and tire alarms did not , ·
Fire Cblet V.E . ROgers said Investigators found
work during the tire.
,
some guests did not hear the tire alarm, raising the
"I pulled It myself and It still only went ott for like
possibility that the hotel's smoke detection system ·
half a minute and then It went back ott again," Moore.
was not working properly.
head said of the fire alarm. "For the entire time of ·:
"Our arson Investigators are contacttnc five and
this thing the tire alarm only rang about .. . not more
six people on each tloor, trytng,to find out what did
than 15 or 20 seconds." ·
happen," Rogers said. "So tar, we'vetounclout some
said they did hear the alarm. Some say It i!ld not go . Four of the Injured were hospitalized and listed In ) :
· stable to guarded conditions, hospltal.otticlals said.
oft,
_ _ , wllen a tire broke out llflllq II pesta. (AP
Dean said that smoke damage extended to the top
Rogers said lnlt!ai reporta Indicated no reuon to
Luerpllela i.
..
Door
of the hotel .
•
~arson, He said all victims died otsmokelnha·
•
By .JAMES R. KING

AMoclated l'reM Writer

SHOCKS
M~nrOI'- IibiAW'II
1 and

YJns IU
ol!

l h~

1 1101~

•flatdlt u

f.O ~u111 tm
llv s ~II'ICKI1~

lurntr I!IGI!

2 Full Weeks of Sales!

Prc ~ ~!n .
u~~t on 01
~l lbl!

to!!!

ott ell tr~

$2495
~

MOII U.S. and aome
import light trucks •
Align front wheels,
set c11ter. camber,
lnd IDe-ln. 1'11111 eJCtra
if needed.

COIII'UTEIIZED - GUUAIITEED

I

' r

4

Wrangler All Season
Radial

.,,oq.

~fense.

MACOMB, m. (AP) -Joe Dyk·
l stra ot Western Illinois set an
!NCAA Division I record bymll,klng
' 64 COIIlleCIItlve tree throws.
'

,
:

'-

t

~

,,

says UAW president/

my

I •

,

..

GM .officials 'unrealistic!

hack."

.
.:Free throw ace

'

"I've never closed sOmebody's eyes before, but I
did It this time, " Beckler said. " I wanted to brlng the
man back."
·• Hotel o!flclals said they delivered food to Belushl's
room ab\)ut 8 a.m.
.
Beckler said the hotel desk manager became concerned Friday morning because Belusbl didn't
answer·hls phone.
"We knew he was In his room because he checks
out with the desk It he leaves. We suspected something was wrong,'' Beckler said.
Detectives detained a dark-hatred, heavyset
woman who returned to the bungalow lh Belushl's car
about 2: 1S p.m . The woman, ldentltled only as a Myear-old worker In the entertainment lnduslry, was
taken trom the scene In handcutts but was released
after questioning.
"She woke 111m up this morning about 8 a.in .,"
Cooke said. "He was brellthlng with difficulty trom
some nasal congestion. She asked If he was alll'lght
and he said yes . She gave him a glass ot water and he
went back to sleep. Sbe went Into the Uvlngroomand,
assuming he was asleep, went out about an hour
later.
"Detectives are satisfied that there Is no criminal
Involvement on her part and she Is being released,"
Cooke said . "She Is quite distraught. She didn't want
to talk to reporters."
Belushl, who lived In New York City, checked Into
the hotel last Sunday. He was In Los Angeles for a
Paramount movie , "Noble Rot."
'

·/

tured

: Still, when Charboneau Is not
•around and his teammates talk
:about him, his glove Is never mentlloned, olie way or the other.
"I hope he's healthy,'' one pitcher
jsald· "We need his bat. That boy
~can hit.''

'

Belushl's physical trainer, William Wallace, found
the body after Belushl had been dead for two or three
hours, Cooke said. '
"He trled to ad~lster mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, and the paramedics were called," Cooke said .
Bruce Beckler, a hotel gardener and day security
guard, said be went Into the builgalow with Wallace
and saw Belushllylng on the bed with his head on a
pUiow. Elfllilshl appeared to have choked on food and
had sw~llowed. his tongue, Beckler said.

created'the characters The mues Brothers and filmed
a movie about the characters In Chicago. Belushl died
Friday in CaWomla. ( AP Laserphotol.

/'
'

:this

: He says he Is confident he will be
PI left tleld again this year, but be
lmows this time he Is In tor a fight.
Mlguel DUone, Von Hayes and oth,ers are looking tor steady work,
'and Charboneau can count on no
~an uprising If be's on the bench
l.vhen the season opens.
: "The more competition, the
more I enjoy It," Charboneau
Insists.
' He has ellmlnated some competition· within himself, however - he
:bas decided between a career as a
~wer hitter and a career as a .30011lt1er, although he talks as It could
)'I UCcesstully pursue either.
. "I think I can hit .:m and hit
lmaybe 20 to 25 home runs," be said.
"It they said, 'Go tor the long ball,' I
could probably lilt 30 or more, but
average would sutter. I'm more
)Jt a doubles-type hitler."
: His weakness, admittedly, Is In
;the field, .where be sometimes looks
:awkward.
"My fielding and throwing, defltely. That's where I can lm,p rove,'' he said. "I'm taking a lot ot
rtly balls, doing ·a lot ot throwing,
\!lifting the cutoff man."
Improving hls fielding Is partlcu·
•tarly Important this season, since
\Cleveland has stockpiled pitchers
and revised lis Infield, Indicating an
lorganlzatlonal emphasis on

ar. 7, 1982

992-2101

MEIGSTIREC

.Z~

... ~--:-i; .- .,.............
....,.,.--~--- -.. - -··-· ~. ..... ,. ..

John Fultz - J. Martus Fultz

INVESTIGATES SCENE OF H~ FIRE- Ar:

- llmetlplwl " tile ....... ,..... Depulmellt .
"Dml"' a- .. II tile Weslcllue HOt. lllllllnllly

II

.,

�•';.

w. Va.

Pomeroy-Middleport.;_Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

.

.

OFFICERS- These are the offices ol the OH KAN
Coin Club which wUI stage 1111 annual show next Sunday. From the !eli are Ru~~t~ell E. Slayton, Jr.,

Annual

e

COlD

•ecretary; Russell E. Slayton, Sr., sergeao•a•arms;
Edward Burkett, vice president; David Edward•,
president, and Donna Davidson, treaHurer.

no admission charge. Activities open
at 9 a.m. continuing to 5 p.m. This
event is the only one scheduled in
this area of southern Ohio each yea f.
Edward Burkett, show chainnan,
reports that 15 coin dealers from out·
of-town have secured booth display
space, and will have a vast assort·
ment of coins, and other materials
for sale and display.
In addition, dealers accept trades
of old pocket watches, knives, swor·
ds, or anything made of gold, silver,
or platinum. Evaluations by dealers
arc free.

GAL!JPO!JS - Coin collectors of
aU ages, coin dealers, and the public
from Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky will have their day here Sun·
day, March H, when upwards of a
.quarter million dollars worth of rare
coiris, paper currency, medals, and
related items will be on exhibition,
or for sale in the banquet rooms of
the Holiday Inn in nearby Kanauga.
The occasion is the 19th annual
coin show hosted by the OH KAN
Coin Club of Middleport-Pomeroy,
Ohio. The event, held regardless of
the weather is open to everyone with

Terminates . 14 cases
GALLIPOLIS - Fourteen cases
were termllll!ted Friday In Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Brownie WUson Jr., 27, Gallipolis, charged with DWI, fined ~.
sentenced to·four days In jall, driv·
er's licenSe suspended for six
months and placed on six months
probation.
Charged with no operator's II·

Daffodil Days
set in Gallipolis
GAL!JPOLIS - What do one
million daffodils have to do with can·
cer control? Daffodil Days, a special
event nationally of the American
Cancer SO!jiety (ACS ) wiU be observed on Friday and Saturday,
March 26 and 27 in Gallia County.
The daffodil represents the sym·
bOI of hope, much the same as the
ACS. II is also the first flower of
spring and appropriately is
available for all who wish to make a
donation to the local Gallia County
cancer Unit during the last weekend
in Ma•·ch .
Five thousand daffodils will be
here in Gallia County, according to
Cathy Bostic and Mildred Stevenson
who at·e co-chairing this project, the
fifth annual event 101' the local unit.
Anyone interested in placing ad·
vance orders to assure getting their
daffodils in the last Friday and
Saturday or the month, may call the
local Cancer Unit office at 446-7479,
see a memhe•· of the conunittee, or
contact Mrs. Bostic at 446-4449.
Committee members include Mat'
sha Rodgers, R.N., 1981 Nurse of
Hope; Margi Ehman, R.N.. 1980
Nurse of Hope and Charlene Bostic.
Presale orders must be placed by
Monday, March 22,1982.
Daffodils will be available by the
bunch at $3 or 35 cenls lor an individual bloom. Anyone who orders
five ot· more bunches will have free
delivery . On Daffodil Days ,
assisting the ACS in having the daf·
lodils in convenient locations
throughout Gallia County will be the
Gallipolis Emblem Club.

lOth District, pledged to _continue
providing the type of close personal

po~~ii~b:~cvi:~ ~~~~ c~f: ::ci ~~i~~e ~~r~fice

has established

STATE ·FARM

I
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1

were:

Calvin S. Allen, 54, Rt. 3, OakHlll,
$38; Rebecca K. Windon, 21, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, $38; James Harreld,
Gallipolis, $39; VIrginia B. Chapman, 44, Rt. 2, Crown City, $40.
J ai'T)es R. Wlillams, 46, Marietta,
$41; Alonous L. Ferguson, 42, Hur·
rlcane, W.Va., $43; George D.
Henry, 56, VIenna, W.Va., $43; Con·
nte H. Pharris, 46. North Albany,
$44.

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LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
' POMEROY,OHIO
Display Lot

\liNTON, OHIO
Gallia Co.

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James 0. Bush, Mgr.
phone llt·UOl ·

A1 Pomer.oy/Mason Bridge

Leo Vaughan, .Mgr.

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.·

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'
'

otftclaJs ot the Ohio employment
bureau said Initial claims tor wiemployment lleni!r!ts were up during
tbe last week ot February by more
than ~ percent
They attl1buted the Increase to
lack.of order layoffs In the auto and
auto parts Industries, and by manufactuters of such durable goods as
appliances.
Meanwhile, Indiana offlclaiB say
It wW be a while before Hoosiers
know where they stand.
Officials at the Employment Security Division said It would be
another four weeks before they
have state unemp)oyment figures
tor February. The figures for January were released earlier this

week.
Indiana had a seasonally ad·
Justed unemployment rate of 12.5
percent In January.
'.'The national data have been so
tar beneath .t he state data for some
months now, It's really dlfflcult to
·correlate it," said Charles Mazza,
chief of research and statistics tor
the division.
"That little depression In the national unemployemnt rate In January (from 8.9 percent In December
to 8.5 percent) did not show up In
Indiana. So I don't know It the jump
In February will show up either,"
be said.
,One sqre Indicator ot the state's
employment situation Is the weekly

report on unemployment Insurance
claims, Mazza said. " Since the first
ot the year, unemployment claimS
have been at a steady pace. Overall, our regular Insurance claimS
have been fairly steady. There
hasn't been much Improvement to \
date."
Tile state unemploYment rate tor
January was 13.6 percent, 12.5 sea·
sonally adjusted.
Tile January figures showed that
Anderson once again leads the
state In job woes.
'
Indiana's 10 largest communities
had the following seasonally ad·
justed unemployment rates In
January:
Anderson, 19.5; Elkhart, 12.4; ·
Evansville, 10.9; Fort Wayne, 12.8;
Gary, J,3.9; Indianapolis, 9.6; Lafayette, 7.9; Muncie, 15.8; South
Bend, 10.9 and Terre Haute, 13.2.

Dogs get epilepsy
NEW YORK (AP) -EpUepsyls
more common In dogs than In humans, according to the EpUepsy
Institute.
Epileptic dogs are often purebred and have a family hlstoty ot
the Illness. Epilepsy has been reported io be Inherited among certain breeds Including Iris11 setters,
Gennan shepherds, beagles and
poodles.

\

.

t

to U.3 percent In February but state oftlclals said the actual
rate could be hlgber.
. According to the federal figures,
1.29,500 more .Ohioans are out ot
work.
However, the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services said the fed.
era! figures don't re!lect the state's
·true situation beCaUJe the numbers
do not Include people who are out ot
work due to ot seasooal layoffs.
WUIIam Papler,- chlef d. the bu·
reau's research dlvlslon, said there
were ~.ooo unemployed Ohioans
In January. The state's true Janu·
ary unemployment rate was U.9
percent, he said, not the 10.7 per·
:cent figure cited by the federal
government.
Nationally, the unemployment
'rate also Increased during
February.
. Tbe LabOr Department satd the
rate was 8.8 percent, up from 8.5
:percent the prevfous month.
The national unemployment rate
stands only two-tenths ot a percentage point bekl\V the post-war
high ot 9 percent, which was recorded In May 1975.
. More than 9.6 milUon Americans
were QUI ot work last month, the
·Labor Department said.

:now

'

IN S U RANCE

1

$}OFF

Friday that Ohio;l's unemployment

rate rose rrom 10.7 percent In Janu-

i

~00~~~~

organized at Pl. Pleasant, W.Va. in
cense, fined $15, six months jaU
sentence suspend(!(! and placed on
1962, but moved to Middleport in
stx months probation was David W. · 1973, and has prospered these past
years offering enjoyment to all
North, 43, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
races, creed, and color.
Lena Pleasants, 72, Gallipolis,
Current officers are David Ed·
charged with laUure to display
valid registration, forfeited $35
wards, president, Edward Burkett,
vice president, Russell E. Slayton,
bond.
Charged with defective exhaust
secretary, Donna Davidson,
and forfeltlhg $30 bond was Laura
treasurer, Russell E . Slayton, Sr.,
J. Johnson, 22, Rt. 4, Oak Hill.
sergeant-at-arms.
Thomas A. Fisher, 18, Rt.l, Galllpolls Ferry, charged with unsafe
·--------------..
vehicle, forfeited $30 bond.
Charged with assured clear distance and forfeiting $40 bond was
Dalrl C. May, 49, Bidwell.
Forfeiting bond tor speeding
1

By 1be ,4 JtDrf•*ed Pftal
; The u.s. Labor Department said

.

paper currency vintages issued
during the last . 200 years. Door
prizes of U. S. silver dollars will be r--------------l
given every hour of the show.
·
Souvenir wooden nickels and coin
publications will be given as the supply lasts.
Any Individual is encouraged to
exhibit nice or unusual items that
they may own. All competition will
be norH:ompetitive: Locked security
cases will be provided by the host
organization for that purpose. Mem·
bers feel that many person• have
items that they would exhibit, and
will receive free appraisals.

REG.~

~,DO SOMETHING EXCITING w' ITH - ~

with who
area maintains
residents through
the
tact
close conMiller
use of regularly scheduled open door
sessions throughout the 13 county

show March 14

BUY NOW AND SAVE $25500

SPECIAL

The Sunday Times· Sentinei- Page-D -3

Unemployment rate
;rises in Ohio, Indiana

Miller will seek re-election
LANCASTER - Maintaining the
job of rebuilding our economy has
just begun, and that much remains
to be done to see this effort through,
Clarence Miller Saturday an·
nounced his intentiowto seek reelection to Congress from Ohio's lOth
congressional district.
Tlie Lancaster legislation in announcing his candidacy, pledged to
continue his efforts to restore
economic health and opportunity to
Southeastern Ohio and to the nation.
Miller, who sits OJ! the important
house appropriations conunittee,
has been a long time critic of government waste and mismanagement
and has used his position on the Appropriations Committee to legislate
this point of view.
Since becoming a Member of the
Committee, the Congressman has
made it a practice to offer cost cutting amendments to most major ap- '
proprlation bills brought before the
Congress in an effort to gradually
reduce the level of federal ex·
penditures.
Had Congress gone along with him
on more of these proposaiB, the
sizeable reductions the Congress has
had to make during this session
would not have been as necessary .

.

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-P-int Pleasant, w. va .

Mar. 7, 1982

Mar. 7,1982

Gasoline price wars resume
By -'-'l•ted ~
Two hotirs alter Rex Parker cut
the price ot regular leaded gasoline
to96.9cents a gallon at his St. Louis
,tatlon, his sales had doubled, his
pujllps had run dry and customers
were pounding. on his windows.
~ Parkl!r Is a soldier In the II&amp;!!
wars popping up a$ Americana use
tuel, and dealers desperate for ·.
sales cut their prices to the bone ·)Ind. In SOIIJI! cases, even lower.
"The gas war today Ia tar inore
Vtctous thaii when 1111 was 29 cents
gallon," said Cbarlei Sill~. ex'e cuuve dU'ector al the Mlcblpn
. ~ervlce Station Dealers

;ss

·a

.usoctauon:

• An Associated Press spot check
~ prices nationwide showed reguiar leaded gllliollne selll.ni tor as
~ow as 88.9 cents a gallon. Motorists
,In 11 .n umber d cities were paying
Jess than $1 a lfallon.
• .
j. That's afar cty from the sl.33-a·
gallon national avera~ price all
'irades last March - and even the
'current average ot about $1.28 a
gallon.
At an Amoco stailon near Henderson, Ky., ~ ot a fierce price
war, Mary Jo Williams said her
crew has changed the sign board so
'
'
pften,
"We've worn
out our
!ladder."
.
'
' Bob Ballance, a competitor, said

ror

the latest form ot price warfare
·doesn't compare to the street
comer skirmishes ot the 1960s. It's
lllNI tnore the oU companies' f)ght
than the dealers', he said.
Yet son'ie dealers are seiling
below cost - to stay In business.
. James Fash, a gasoline station
operator In Terre Haute and presldel\t of the Indtalljl Service Station
Dealers AssoclaUon, cited a Mara·
thon dealer In Fort Wayne whQ was
locked In a turtous war with a netah·
boring Shell station. The Marathon
dealer was seiling his gasoline for
$1.03 a galloa, or 15 cents a gallon
less than he paid tor It, Fash saki.
"The whole markl!tplace Is In an
upheaval," said Paul Dennis, a spokesrilan tor Union OU Co. ot
Ca!Uornta.
Major oil companies such as Un·
ton, struggling to boost sales, have
been cutting wholesale prices al·
most dilly. And In many cases they
are being undercut by the smaller,
Independent marketers.
In Chicago, the AAA·&lt;;hlcago Motor Qub saki Its most recent survey
showed 40 percent ot the area's gasoline dealers were cutting prices
compari!d with about 2S percent
changing prices, up and down, just
six weeils earlier.
Dan Lundberg, publisher ot the
Lundberg Lettet' that tracks gasolifle market trends, said prices

since January have been dropping
half' a cent a week.
In Austin, Texas, a price war belwej!n neighboring stations drove
the price below $1 a gallon. And a
petroleum marketing group In Missouri says prices bave dipped to the
$l·a·galiC'~ mark In much of Kansas and Missouri. i
Regular grade
gasoline was sel.
I
ling In Tulsa, Oklil., Portland, Ore.,
Fort Wayne,· Il}d.. and Denver tor
less than $1.10,a gallon. And In New·
castle, Okla. the price for regular
tell as low aS 88.9 cents a gallon one
day.
I
"It's something that was not even
drea~ of two years ago," said
Tom Bl!lns, an economist_al Stand·
ard 011 Co. ot California.
Indeed, gasoline prices climbed
above the $1-a-gallon mark In 1979,
and as recently as last year some
people were expecting the price to
hit $2 a gallon.
Why the turnaround? .
Mainly because the United States
and other Industrialized nations are
using lesson as a result of conseiVatlon and conversion efforts
launched following the 1973 and
1978 aU price Increases triggered by
the Organization Qf Petroleum Exporting Countries. 011 use by major
consuming countries tell14 percent
between 1979 and 1981, according to .
the International Energy Agency.

.

F.t'T:.I.ILJII'Y.;_ A tw...,ar a~cl~eat on Route SS,IiearTh.-ee Mile Road south of Heodenod, killed·
Woodrow Lu~as Sr.,
Rciate S, Procious, late yesterdlly afternoon. Lucas waft drlviDg a 11177 Cbevette, rlgbt,
whlc_h was totally amaabed to tbe rlgbtalde by a 11187 GMC pickup truck driven by Charles Bechtle, 71, Hendenoa.
Bechtle was reported In Rood .,godttloo at Pleaoaut Valley Hospital. (Photo by lee Kampmeyer)

West Virginia man dies in wreck
maintain control of the 1977
Cbevette he was driving.
The vehicle ran otf the right side
of the road, whipped to the left, and
When Lucas applied his brakes, the
car went Into the southbound lane
and collided with a GMC pickup
Woodrow Lucas Sr., 69, RL 3, truck driven by Charles Bechtle, 70
Procious, W.Va., was pronounced Henderson.
The department said Bechtle atdead at the scene by Dr. John'
Grubb, Mason County medical exa· tempted to stop, but was unable to
mine(. The body was later trans· avoid the collision.
ported tO the state medical . The truck skidded ~ feet prior to
examiner's office In South Charles· the Impact and the Chevette went
103 feel until both rested below an
ton tor an autopsy.
According to the sbertff's depart· embankment. The right front of the
ment, Lucas was travelltng north truck pinned the right side of Luon 35 when he apparenUy failed to cas' car, lhe report noted.

POINT PLEASANT - A Clay
County man was ld.Ued In a twovehicle accident on U.S. 35, north of
Three Mile Road, at 4:40p.m. Frl·
~ay , according to the Mason
County Sheriff'S Department.

moved northward across Miami at
MIAMI ·(AP) - A rash of torna· talllllg traffic light, said poUce su15 mph.
does blasted a three-mOe swath pervisor Ella WUllams. A church
The Florida Highway Patrol also
across the south side ot Miami · partly collapsed when high winds
reported citing a tornado moving
early Saturday, Injuring at least swept off part of Its roof, she said.
north of Perrine, Ms. Mcaatn said,
one person, ripping off part of a
Nelson said the gystem had
church root and tllnglng trees into
cars, Metro-Dade pollee uld.
'
"Everything was hit- we have a .
report of about 1,tnl cars . belllg
damaged In one complex from
E lbert Ferguson, 30, Huntington, :
trees falling down on them," said
GALl-IPOLIS - The following
W.Va ., heavy equipment operator;
people nted for marriage licenses
Metro-Dade dispatcher Jane
and Judy A. Adkins, 28, HuntingthiS p~st week In Gallla County ProMcClain.
ton. W.Va .. unemployed .
National Weather Service forebate Court.
Michael Ro$e, 30. MlnersvUle. se·
casters reported a series of toma·
Gene Blankenship Jr., 23, Rio
cu;.1ty JIUard , and Debra Nibert. 28,
does hit the Penine area of south
Rt. 1. Gallipolis, labora to ry Grande, student, and Karla Davis,
Miami, accompanied by heavy
20, Rt. I, Apple Grove, K·Mart
rainfall, haU and lightning strikes.
technician.
employee.
James
M
.
Pennington.
20.
Rt.
I,
The stonn system had moved ou&lt;
Darrell Barr, 47, Rt. 3, GaUlpolls,
GaUipolls. laborer, and Mary L.
over the water: by about 4 a.m ., otfl·
barber,
and Goldie Locey, 44, Rt. 3,
22,
Rt.
I,
Scottown,
Scarberry,
ctals said.
GaUlpolts,
retired teacher.
The heavily residential area had
custodian.
HID Jr., 23, Apple
Melvin
L.
Jr.,
20,
Rt.
Arthur
J
.
Fogelstrom
numerous power outages, said foreGrove,
grinder,
and Drema S.
2 Galllpolls, unemployed. and Tina
casting aide Martin NelBon.
Simpkins,
19,
Appl e Grove,
Helgesen, 19, Rt. 2, Gautpolls, ·
One motortst was injured sUghtly
unemployed
.
unemployed .
when the car he was In was htt by a

Mariiage licenses

446·2342
PHONE 992-2156
675-1333

t~~lch

lntrl4ate detailed carvings and
earthy brown
color of Forest Pine will add a slmple,.but elegant atmosphere to any decor. Constructed from authentic
App•lachlan white pine timber and ven~rs, these
beautiful accent tables are built lor lunctlop as well
. as t&gt;eauty. Enjoy special savings now! Quai\oty built
by Broyhill's superior craftsmen.

BUY AT WHOLESALE COST OR
LESS DURING ALLISON ELECTRIC

GOING OUT of BUSINESS

.. ....

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

• • • .1 • •

'

_,

l ·Card of Thanks (paid in 8dvance)
2·Card ot Thanks I paid in t4dvance)
3-Announcements
•·Giveaway

SALE

2f·Business Opportuni t.,

.·

7··Vard Sale (paid in advance)

8-Public Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanted lo Buy

HOTPOINT

.................
... . .. . .......... "

......... .

'

.......... .

52-CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
SlAnliques ·
54· Misc. Merchand ise

neal esuwe

55-Building Supplies
S6· Petsfor Sale

Jl·Homesj or Sale
32-Mc&gt;.bite Homes tor Sale
JJ·Farms tor Sale

-__.-···•···
· ..... . .
........ ..... .-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

following telephone exchanges.

73 Vans&amp; 4 WD
7~ · Motorcvcl es

75· Boat!. &amp; Motors
76 ·Auto Parts &amp; Ac cessor ies

love: unlimited visitation, expenses
as low as $15 a year, a trained stair
to handle feeding, and clean-up,
and year-round babysitting.
Of course, the "child" might be a
giant lruit bat, crested porcupine,
or a river otter,
, But Kansas City has some broadminded "parents," and they are responding to an ."Adopt a WUd
Child" campaign recently
launched by the K$nsas City Zoo.
For as little as $15 1a year a zoo
parent can teed a tarantula (10
crickets a week), while $5,500 teeds
Casey, the bull elephant, who needs
25 pounds of cabbage and cafl11(s
and 70 pilunds ot hay a day.
·

ll ·Help wanted .
12·Situation Wanled

20 x 28 11 30 Inches

lJ ·1nsurance
U ·Business Trainlng
15-SchOOis lns,tructlon
16-Radio. TV &amp; C,B Repair

WASHERS

1,'-"'~

tf..tf. .

44 ·Aparfmenttor Renl

Arc,, Code 614

992- Middleporl

446-Gatllpolis

Pomeroy

l67- Cheshire

JIB- II Inion
24s-R io Grande
256-Guyan Dist.

64:1- Arabia Dist .

379- Walnul

81-Home Improvements

45.- Furnishe-d Rooms '

Door Cocktail

•

11 54 11 161nches

,

.1

83 -ExcavaJing
8..4 -Etecrical &amp; Refr iqerat ion

6J·Livestock
64· Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

85 General Hauling

458- Leon

343- Portland

S76- Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven

949- Racine
742- Rutland

895- Letarl
937- Buffalo

98S-'-Chester

247- Letart Fans
667- Coolvitle

up to 15 Wor d5. ... Thre_e day

ihScrt•On .. .

86-M ,H . Repair

Up to 15 Words ... One day

in rtcrtlon .....

87 Upholstery

Up to 15 Words ... Six day

inserti on .............. $7 .00

,

47 ·Warlted to Rent
AS-Equipment for Rent

.. .... $3 .00

.... $4.00

(A v e rage~wGrdspe rline )

ALLISO.NtllCTRIC CO.

I

773-5592

MASON FURNITURE CO.
'

'

HERMAN GRATE; OWNER

•

, MASON, W. VA.

9

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

- -

-- -w_ _ _

.,_ - -

F

•

3

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATEOI"OHIO

DEPART~ENTOF

Hill Commode
23 x H% x 20 Inches

Gallipolis

61· Farm Equipment ·

Mason Co., wv
Area Code J04
67S- Pt . Pleasant

3~~A:n:n:o:un:c:e:m:e:nt~s-:~
· ~~:::::::::::::::-~::::::::~;::•:
~·F:o:rTL:e~·~~==~~~~::~,-::~~~=P;,u~~k~~.-.~-N;•~'~'~=.-::~~jj--~-LA~;F~~~::~-r~~~~~~~~~~~::~:-~--~~~~
~
A ..

DISHWASHERS
.

BUY LESS THAN DEALER COST
AND SAVE! SAVE! SAE!

62·Wanled to buy

40-Space lor rent

17·Miscellaneous
18-Wanled To do

- -P"'
ub"'t"'
tc""N"'o""
llc' e

218 Third Ave.

41 -Housesfor Rent
42 ·Mobile Homes for Rent
4J ·Farms tOr Rent

Meigs County
Area Code614

Gatl(a County

77 ·Auto Repa ir
78 ca mping Equipment

ser raees

--·~-···'"''
,,
,
-.
.,

36 -Real Estate Wanted

Classified pages cover the

71 Autos for Sale
72·Truck.s for Sale

57·Musciallnstruments
58· Fruits &amp; Vegetabl es
59· For Sale or Trade

J4 ·8usiness Buildings

- -.............
-.=
=
".. .
'......
. . ..=

.,

51 · Houset1old GOOds

22-Money to Loan
23· Professional Services

S·Happy Ads
"Lost and Found

Cllalrslde Table

KANSAS CITY (AP) - It's an
adoption program a parent could

I

M.

82 -Piumbing &amp; Heating

Whal's GNU?

West VIrginia State Pollee asslstecj the sherttf's department with
the accident tnvestlgatlon and directed tramc, which was delayed
tor approximately 45 minutes. -\lso
at the scene was the Point Pleasant
Fire Department.
Both vehicles were listed as total
losses.

Rash of tomadoes sweep through Miami

.

I

Deputies said Lucas had apparenlly been driving under the
tnfiuence.
Bechtle was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital, where he was ad,
mltted tor observation. His condition was reported to be good ,
Saturday morning.

TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ofllo
•
Fetruorv 26, 1ft2
•'
ControciS"'"
Lepl Copy Na. n-211
: UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
•: sealed propooala will be
•received at the office of the
Dlrtelor of the Ohio i)opM·
ltment ot Tra-taflon,
;columbus, Ohio, ~nlll10: 00

A.M., Ohio Slandard Time,
Tuesday, March 23, 1982.
for Improvements In:
Gallla County, Ohio, on
GAL·S.R . 160·(3.26-8.41) State Route 1d0, by ·resur·
facing with asphalt con·

check

for

an

amount equal to five per·
cent of his bid, but In no
event more than fifty
crete.
thousand dollars. or a
Pavement Width bond for "'" per coni of ftll
Vari.s.
Pro! eel and Work Lo11911l llicl, peyable to the Olrec·
t90'.
-37.693fMior 7.19 miles.
"The date S.t for com· I Bidders must apply, -on
pletlon of 11111 ~k tnall be the proper forms, tor
as set forlll In the bidding ·qualification at least ten

Cleaner, one half mile up

Plans and specifications

are on file in the Depart·
ment Of TransportatiOn 8nd
tile office of the District
Deputy Dire~lor .
The

Oire'ctor reserves

the right to relecl any and
all bids.
DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Mar . 7,14

tak inq ap plications for 3 Jr,
League Managers, Senior
League managers end um ·
pire s. Wrlte des ires &amp;
qualif icat ions to Mel Ross,
2605 Garf ield, Pt. Pleasa n·r,

SWEEPER and . sewing
machlno repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery. Oavls Vacuum

days prior to the date set
proposal,"
Each bidder shall be tor opening bids in ac·
required to file with his bid cotdance with Chapter 5525
a certified check or Ohio Revised Code.

cashier's

Pl . PLEASANT BABE
RUTH LEAGUE now

Ann041ncements

Georges Creek Rd .
446 · 029~ ..

Call

WI/, by March 15th .

.

~---~-

Fishing License on s8le .
Come and see our new ship· .
ment of 1982 Flslng Rods.
~;;.-~=~~~:;;;;!Reels.
&amp; Lures . Spring
"
lime he
Valley Trading Co .. Spring
-"'nc for my
- a Valley Plaza, «6·8025.

pound or onions I"

GIT

AmiiTIOII

Tur key Hunters We have
mouth calls, slate box
cal ls, camo gear &amp; decoys

in ~ tock . Spring \/alley
Trading Co .. Spr ing Valley
Plaza , ~40 · 8025 .

- . - -· -- ___
__.__

--

�Page-D-4-The
3 --"
A"'
n"'
n-'ou~n~c~e_m
-'-e~n_t~
s__

Easter Candy Prices, $1.60
lb . SUO lb. for full case.
Di ' s Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza Call446 · 213~ .

Pomeroy-M

Times-Sentinel

--

4

·------Wanted to Bu

THREE CATS. One white
wtfh gray markrngs, one
white
w i th
caltco

mar:kmgs, one all calico

-=:::::;;;::;;~;;;:::=
•6 Lost and Found

·- --====-==-LOST Tach tmine guitar on

sso.

Reduce safe &amp; fasJ wtfh

Rl. 588 Reward
446 3~28 .

Gobese Tablets &amp; E·Vap
Gtllingham
Grug.

LOST Siberian Huskey
(male) mostly dark gray

·water pills'

Call

with white markings, one
For bulk delivery of
gasol ine, heattng oil and
d1esel fuel, cal l Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy. Oh,
--~---- ----

Gun Shoot Ractne Gun
Club. Every Sun starttng
at 1 p.m . Factory choke ·
guns only .

brown eve &amp; one blue eye,
answers to 'KeeGee' safe to
approach REWARD . Call
.w. 49'18 or 4-41&gt;·3172
Lost full bloOded female
beegte 4 ye·ars old An·
swers to name of suste. In
Rocksprings area . 992 5875.

Lost Black nd white collie

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat ntghts
6:30 p,m .• Bashan . Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun .
Hoof Hollow- Registered
Morgan and Arab1ans, also
Grade Horses. Saddles.elc
698·3290.
'

type male dog . 5 Points or
Flatswoods area Reward
9'12 3~9. 992 ·7382 ,
LOST · Car keys, Duffs
parkmg lot, Silver Bridge
Plaza , Reward Call 3()4675 1595,

.
1

PERMAN!:: NT
HAIR REMOVAL
Professional Electrolysis
Center . A.M.A. approved.
Doctor referals, by ap
potntment only , 304 675 ·
6234
4

Gtveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anyth1ng to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thtng for
sale may place an ad 1n fhts
col umn There wtll be no
charge to the advert1ser
Female Husky, good w•th
k1ds and good watch dog,
outside pet Call «6·8647

----

8 wk old pupptes. mt xed I·
8 mo. old male. Call 245
5626
1 female black Labador
spade, very good w1th
children. Call 388 8745 after
5PM
Male, bla ck Heller dog, I
l /2 yr . old Cal1446·2222
2 mate pupp1es
9306.

Call 388-

4 femal e pups. Part
Shepard. part Irish Setter
992·6736 after 4 · 30 p . m
vERY fnendly, black , ll
month old, I mh Setter &amp;
Labrador. male pup. 304
895 3568.
OLD Kelvmator dryer, tor
parts or scrap, 304 ·675·5726

CARD OF
THANKS
We WISh to express our
deep appreciation to
fr.ends, fam•ly and
neighbors for their
cards, flower and food,
Also to Rev . Charles
lusher, . pallbearers
and organist.
THE FAMlL Y OF
LILY M, KERR

Yard Sale

Rummage Sale F r1day
thru Sunday A-Frame on
Rt. 248 near Long Bottom
Oh ,
8

BUYing
GOld,
Silver,
Plattnum, old coins, scrap
nngs &amp; silverware. Da1ly
quotes available Also
cotns &amp; cotn supplies for
sale .
Spr.ng
Valley
Trading, Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446 8026 .

GUITAR
lessons,
tndiVIdUal classes, personal
attention, modest prices.
Call 304·675·3734.

we pay cash tor late mOdel
clean used cars
Frenchtown Car Co .
B1ll Gene Johnson,
4-41&gt;·0069

18

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal ,
auto bod1es, and cars. Bat ~
ten es, alumtum, brass &amp;
copper GallipoliS Block

r-::::==~~;;;~::::,-::;::::::~~~~~~::'"l

Wanted to buy junk cars or
wrecked cars . Phone 388·
9303.
Wanted to buy cash
reg1ster. Call 446·2240
Land on land contract 1 to
10 acres in GallipoliS area
Caii446·77S8.

Locust fence post Cal l 379·
2436,
L E Neal Aucftoneer Ser ·
vtce
Estate - Farm Household-Mise We selltf! Wtll do baby s1tttng 10 my
Ltcensed &amp; bonded Oh1o &amp; home for pre-school ch1ld
WVa . 367·7101
After S or before noon 9922772.
9

Wanted lo.-'B=-u~y'---

OLD FURNITURE. beds,
brass, or wood . K1t
chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or squar:e.
Wood tee boxes Old desks
and bookcases. W1ll buy
complete hous~hold Gold,
s11ver, old money, pocket
watches. chams. r.ngs, and
etc . 1nd1an Artifa cts of all
types . Also buying baseball
ca rds. Osby Martin 992
6370

II

.......

------

Ant1que corner cupboards,
other anttque cupboard '"
any cond1tion Call 367
0138

Tractor Trader Ortver
Must be 25 vears or older
Must have 8 years ex pertence Can be home

Good used baby furniture.
Call446-6695 eventngs
BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old
furn tt ur e, gol d, Stiver
dollars, wood tce boxes,
ston e jars, ant1ques, etc,
Complete
hou sehol ds .
Wr.le . MD. M1ller. Rt 4,
Pomeroy . Oh Or 9'12· 7760,
CHIp WOOD Poles max .
diameter 14" on largest
end . S12 SO per ton Bu ndled
slab . $10 .50 per ton .
Oeliverd to Ohid Pallet Co,
Rock
spr.ngs
Rd,

~0~-~ r-o~ ~~-~~8~ _ - - - ·

Gold, si lv er, sterling,
1ewe lry , rings, old co1ns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, Middleport 992·
3476

Director of Social Services
Immediate opening for
Director of
Social Service. M.S.W. required, prior
hO&gt;pital experience preferred. Submit
resume with salary history and requirements to :

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Personnel Office
385 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
or Caii1·614-446·510S
An Affirma1ive Action/E EO Employer

CUMMONS CONTRACTING

CO,

"Siding Specialist•"
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM SIDING &amp; SOFFIT
eFASCIA &amp; WINDOW TRIM
eVINYLSHUTTERS
eSTOAM DOORS&amp; WINDOWS
e REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
eAWNINGS &amp; SPOUTING
With our Inflated economy it's money wise to repair
resent home. Call today and ask about Mastic Solid
elnyl Siding with a SO year warranty. Work Guaran·
teed by local col!lpany with plenty of excellent
references.
'

"FREE ESTIMATE"

TOM CUM MONS
446-2715

ev~r~ ~~~-h~ ~85 4325

Housec lea ni ng
8191

lmmed 1ate open1ng for
ba ss player
•n an
established country -rock
band. Expenence and
equ1pment
necessary
Senous 1nqu•res onlv . Call
446·8272.

-· Situations
-.------12
wanted
- ..... ------ - ----

Will babysit in my home for
2 children. Call388·9306

---~

wom an to live '" &amp; care for
lady
Also household
duttes. Prefers one w1th
car Call 446 1930.
Have room, board , and
laundry for elderly person
•n my home. 992 6748 .
13

Insurance
·---·-------

SANOY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv•ces for fire •nsurance
coverage 1n Gall•a County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
property covera ges are
available to meet tn ·
diVIdual needs
contact
Foster Lewis, agent Phone
379·3318

Catt- 446

·:------ - - · -

WILL do housecleaning
and babysitting, 304 675·
6070

Flnanelal
21

Business
Opportuntty

Cigarette
Vend1ng
Business Call304·773 ·5651 ·

22

Piano
Tun1ng
&amp;
Repair.Call Biil Ward for
appo1ntment,
ward ' s
Keyboard. 446·4372

ouse-27 acres. Eagle
1dge Road. Price reduced
for quiCk sale. $37,500. Also
2 bedroom house trailer
$1 ,800. Call949·2793.

C &amp; L BOOkkeeping Com·
plete bookkeep1ng and tax
service for business and 1n·
dividuals.
Carol Neai.W.-3862

Can be for 1 family or 2
·separate
Apartments .
Near town . Call after 7p,m ,
9'12 3592 .

STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser·
vtce, all types trtmming &amp;
removal, in!ured, 30.4-576
2010 .

House Meadowbrook Ad
dition 3 bedroom, family
room w1th fireplace, cen tral air, basement, ~· 61S ·
1542,

31

nomes . New 12ft. wide, all
etectr.c, 2 bdr.,' $7,9'15. New
14ft. wide, 2 bdr., $9,9'15.
12x55 2bdr .• $4,9'15. Also Introducing the highest
energv efficient home ever
buill. 14&lt;70. 3 bdr, I 112
bath, with 2x6 sidewalls,
fully insulated, R-factor 23,
ceiling, 20 in wall 21 tn
floor. Check anywher no
other home is insulated th.is
good 10%down and tow
bank financing All State
Modular Homes. Half way
between Huntington and
PI Pleasant on St. Rl. 2.
304·576·2711.

Homes for Sale

1972 Concord Mob1le Home,
12x65 Ca l l 446 7015 after
p .m .

14x70 SKYLINE.
two
bedroom, all electnc, cen tra ta.r 304·675·6986.
1981 ALL ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE,
2 BEDROOM
mobile home setting on lot,
ready to move into $8995 .
10% down, BANK FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE, 304·
576 2711.

ONE owner house, 1211
Matn St. 6 rooms, 2 story
brick, custom built by
Everett Lutton 304·675·
2381

4 bedroom house for sale

Rt 325 toward Rio Grande
Call 388-9676 .

32

Beaut•ful brtck &amp; frarne, 3
bedroom home w/scenic
view,
wood - burning
f•replac~, forma l dtn1ng,
ce ntral atr w/heat pump
Lanscapecl, 1 acre lot
w/fenced in back yard,
$45,000. Call446 3766 .

14' WIDE. 3 bedroom
mobile home. $89'15. All
State Modular Homes, 30.4576·2711.

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
L• ce nsed &amp; .nsurecl. Call
304-576·271 1

1972 Buddy mobile home
trader, furnished, 1/2 acre
lartd. Natural gas, rural
water, Cheshire area. Call
367·7718.

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
tra11ers, furn•shed, w1th
air Call304-773 5651 .

New Income Limits If you
earn between $9,000 to
$15,000 . a year, you may be
able to buy a J bed room
house (not a mobile home}
for as little as $135 . mo No
down payment. Call 992·
7034 ,

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. WVa &amp; Oh10. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St.,
Athens, Oh , 592·3051

,l 2 TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. G~llipol i s Price
reduced, used mobile
nomes. CALL 446·7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, f•nan·
cing available. Phone 446
1294
1 acre W1th mObile home.

water, ce llar house, wash
house, Ul1llty building , Will
sell wfth or without mobile
home or v1sa versa Call
367·0218.
New 82 E lcona 70xl4, $1.000
off 1964 champ1on 44x20,
DBL ·Wide, $7 ,995 , 1978
Hillcrest 70x14, $9.995 . 1973
FleetwOod 65xl4 $5,9'15.
1965 Castle S5xl0, $3.~95 .
Caii.W.-9662 or 4-41&gt;·348
1970 mobile home Elc:;:ona
w1th expando. Large lot •n
Mercerville Call 446·0827
after5 .
'
----------1972 12X6S Schultz, 3
bedroom, gas heat, parttally furn1shed. Call 675·
2907

- Mobile HOmes - ~ ·
for Sale ___ _

USED MOBILE
576 2711.

3s

----

- - -Real
- -Estate
---16
wanted
Farm
76 acres, good
house, barn. workshop,
small chicken house. 1 m11e
west of Langsv ille on Sr .
124.742-2860 after .4 p.m .

PUBLIC

Call Collect:
614-446·8500

~=T:•:t:k:lo:· J:o:h:n:M::c:G:":":e~~

l1

E.arn more money part
fime fhan most full
hme jobs working for
Rumley
Insurance
Agency .
Respond
Rumley Agency, 1323
Clover Sf, Zanesvtlle,
Oh10, 43701.

LIGHT PlASTICS
MANUFACTURING
A Bustness ol Your Own m the
Plast1ts Fteld.

Wt

npilldt•l 1nlt lh11 1111 111d lit
1Ml1nE I~ Ill l~dt"lhlai -.lit WMII1 to lit
l~dtPtndtM iftd IIIIH&lt;IiiiJ MUll It
111

lll.lnY11CIU1t lftd 111rt.tt ~llhly DloiiiiNf

fllnllt plodUtlt..
•llo prt_, uptntftct lltl~td
•llo ••••lllltl

•Mtlt or hmtlt
ofd" l)llllimt

SHARP HOMEMAKER
PARTY PLAN PEOPLE

tiiCOIIII

Supervisor fo hire, train
people from home 6
months
of
year .
Teachtng, bus1ness or
party plan background
helpful. No selling, no
mvestment . Training
provided. Call collect
for Barbara 816·763·
7212.

TOYS &amp;GIFTS
HOUSE OF LLOYD

po!lltllll hmtlld 11111, b' lfl~tndllll

clultrt llld tffOtl
oColr!PMIY lliii!IMtllll DrlllfiM ICCGUNh '
•Cu bt Ojlttlltd 11om 1pprol 200 tf!Wifl
lttlhMmenl C:trllf tic

•$7150 OCl

cull

ttQWiftd

lor

R!Khtntty 1n

ltniiii'J, l rl'~'"lllt

fUlllllfOIMAJI()II
tUIH 01 cau nm'
c-11v11 """'·add''"·
fOI

p-fi~RIIHf

Un1ted Plastics lndustnes, Inc.
P.O. Box 37
Ozark , Missouri 65721
417·882·7407

Car; 1947 Hudson Commodore, 2 dr . coupe w/extras, show condttion

NON--DRINKING
MAKES GOOD·
SENSE

PUBLIC AUCTION

35857 WELLS RD.
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
.
742-2160

SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1982
10:00 A.M.

Locally Owned and Operated

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

CALL
BETH FARLEY -

8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
742-2160
or ,

located on Stat~ Route 790, one mile east ol Lecta
and 5 miles west of St. Rl. 218. The following will be
sold :
Ford 801 Powerml!lster, Ford 2 bottom plows, JD
pull-type disc. Ford mow1ng mach tne, 3 pt bush
. hog, New Idea hay wagon. JD l ime spreader, New
Idea hav rake on steel, 8' hay tedder, mowing
mach1ne for Super A, Quick Hitch platform scales, 2
coal stoves, Can't hooks, vet tools, 2 western sad·
dies, calf creep feeder, log cha~ns, come-a-longs.
cross-cut saws, horse harness, several collars, tool
bo&lt;. corn elevator, 8' metal culvert, wooden tool
box , 300 gallon water tl!lnk, HD wagon, cultivators,
hillside &amp; landslde plow, Deppmgs maddos, etec.
drill, Stevens 12 ga, shotgun (over 100 yrs old),
Stevens 22 Hornet, ox yoke, hames, cast iron seat,
hand corn planter, woven wire stretchers, one horse
sled, milk cans, 19171lcenses plate, cow bells, stone
pots &amp; jars, Green River corn knife. steel fraps.&gt;i~.
steel fence posts, 2 lawn chairs, house lack, wooden
gate, stone churn, coal oil light, Maytag wringer
washer, Mavtag automatic washer (like new), an·
llque rocking chair, 6 leg Harvest table &amp; chairs,
spinning wheel ( 100 yrs. oldJ. couch (makes Into a
bed) &amp; chair, elec, sewing machine, washboards,
cast iron pot, broad axe, 2 beds, several dishes, sad
irons, many other farm hand toots and ·antlques and
collectors items being sold after a lifetime of collec·
ling 12yr. oldbay mareduetofoalinAprll
Terms: Cash
Lunch Available
HARLEY MYERS, OWNER
Lee Johnson

250·400 Dealers
se,·up ss.oo per spacec
Rt. 7,1 mile
above Proctorville.

Real Emto - Oonorot,

BARBARA WELSH
•

742-3104

Crown Citv, Ohio
Phone 2~·6740

Frank Herald Jr., Owner &amp;Operator
'for accidents. or ll1U ot proPtrtv.

IU!hliils
·- -----41

Houses for Rent

~--~--

F.urn1shed house, 4 rooms,
near HMC. $200. water
patd, one child acceptable
Call446 4416 after 7PM .

Unfurn1shed 2-3 bedrooms
near Holzer Hospital. S26S
mo. excludtng utd1fies.
oepos1t
&amp;
refern ces
required . Caii.W.-9307
Homes for Rent, Leascm or
Land Contract tn town . or
co untry .
Call
Strout
Really, 446·0008
3 bed home in Centenarv
Ca ll446 6566

5 room house wtth bath
Large lot near Rac1ne 992
5858 '
2 bedroom house Cal l 6753431
3 bedroom house, filmtly
room wtth woodburn,ng
fi re plac e, central air cond .,
carpeted , ref
requtred
Call304·675 ·2497 after SPM.

INSURANCE
COMPANY

West Des MouJes.

1

42

Mobile Homes

for Rent
- -~~""-,---

Iowa

centenary, 2bdr., private
tot, ref &amp; dep., $160 mo .,
adults. Caii61H~3 - 2644

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

2 bdr, adults only, no pets ,
turn1shed, 322 3rd Ave
GallipOliS. Call 446 3748 or
256·1903

42

Mobile HOme_s __
f r ftent
0

1

3

bedroom

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
46

S ace for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
9'12·7&lt;79 ,

Aaol Eotata - Oanarot

furn1shed apt.
pa1d. 356 N. 4th St..
Middleport.

S room and bath furnished
Apt. No pets. Deposit
required. 992·2937 .

M0b1le home for rent . 2
bedroom completely fur
mshed. Catl446·9669

RMI Eltltt - General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
Gro.-ge S. Hob•t,lter

Jr

&amp;rohr

N tCe 1 bedroom furnished
mobl!e home. 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt. 33 ' Phone
for appointment 992 -7479
3 Bedroom
furn1shed
Mobt le home w 1th washer
and dryer on pr1vate lot
Deposi t requ•red No pets
949·2253
For rent 3 bedroom tra tl er
w•th 2 car garage, kitchen
furntshed, $250 per rna
plus deposit. Call 30~ 576
2708
TWO bedroom mob1le
home, ntce porch &amp; garden
area , good locat•on, phone
304 675 3030 or 675 343 1
TWO bl:!droom tr atler for
rent, Hereford Lane , Apple
Grove , 304·576·21 03

44----·· Apar,memtfor Rent
----------·
-~

2 bedroom unfurnished
apartment in Crown Ctty
Call256·6520
Furnished apartment .4 rm
&amp; bath . Adults only, ref &amp;
sec . depostt. Call446·044.4
- - - - - - - - - - -

0

APARTMENTS ,
1
bedroom, rent starts at
S152 . Special rates for
sen+or Citizens. Cal! 446 2745

--------3 bedroom unfurnished

cozy'
COUNTRY
LIVING - Immaculate
ranch -style,
three
bedroom , llh
bath
home
Living room
features butlt ·in book.·
esse, kitchen and dining
comb.,
ufit1ty room,
Otlio Power electnc, a~r
condition Plenty room
for garden on your one
acre. Must see this one!
Only $30,000 00
GOOD
LOCTION,
SPACiOUS and in mint
condition .
Three
bedrooms, 2 baths,
modern kitchen, 11v1ng
room w/fireplace, f or mal d ining room w / bay
wtndow, family room,
full basement w / woOd·
burner A quality home
full of warmth and
gracious llv !ng . Call for
de1alls
SALEM
ST.
RUTLAND - Two story
store bulldmg wtth
walk -in coo ler Second
floor apartment rented
Extra
lot
adjo1ns.
Asking $12,000.00.
EXECUTIVE HOME Beauttful lwo story
brick hom e. Three
bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2
half baths, liv ing room
with ltreplace, dining
room wifh fireplace,
built-In kitchen. breaklast
room,
full
basem ent . Beautiful
carpet, chandeliers and
woodwork througt1out.
Magnificent view of
nverl Call for vour
pnvate showmg
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc
Phone 742·3092
Cheryllemley, Assoc.
_j'_hone 742·3 171

BOOK
GOODTAHE
NG
AND GOOD BUY
Unique
or tour
Crouse· Beck Area
bedroom brtck home in
Beautiful
3 to ~
mint condition Large
bedrooms, two and oneliVIng room and tamtly
half baths, 2 car garage,
room,
both w.th
extra lar ge kitchen
baths. Front porch and
1ead1ng to a sun deck,
back Ratto Kitchen IS
f a mily room with
equtpped with butlt ·ln
ftr ep lace, e)( tra lot, plus
stove,
refr1g erator ,
more. Superb condition
freezer, dishwasher and
and In c 1ty schools
food cent er . Ma ster
L1 sted In the mld seven
bedroom has a private
ties
~ 514
dress1ng room with
sliding doors lea ding to
patto
and
pool .
Bea ut.lully decora ted.
Call today for more
detail s
N521
A HOME FOR YOU
$49,000
Lbvelv brtck and frame ranch home I cealed on st~te
highway. Large country style kitchen with lots of
built •n cabt nets, bar. range, and refngerator
Three bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining room. and
large living room with firepla ce. Call for your ap·
pomtment now .
N378
LAND CONTRACT
$39,500
owner will help you finance ttlts extra neal home ,
located on state highway . Three bedrooms and
bath Kitchen with range and refrlger;ator Would
make a good investment tor a home or rental . 1493
COUNTRY LIVING Af ITS BEST
84 Acres More or less
(Free Nat. Gas)
Step 1nfo one of the cleanest farms in an idea lloc·
tton . Three good s1zed bedrooms, large living room,
sunny eat-in kitchen t~nd bath Tobacco base, gas
lease and tree gas all go with H. Large barn, cellar
house and chicken house . Call today for many more
ex tras
tf 483
LIKE NEW BRICK HOME - KINEON DR .
PRICED REDUCED OWNER W IL L HELP
FINANCE . 6 room, 3 bedroom. garage, tmmE!diate
possession, natural gas furnace, central a.r . All
closets are cedar ltned . Th1s is one well built brick
home You can see the qual tty'" lhts home Call for
an appotntment
M515
IN CROWN CITY
N ( t' 4 room frr~rnt · houst..• with,, bath Ef1 t 1n kttch cn
with metal cab• nets and double .. sink. Fuel oil
heattngstove Located on nlcccl ty lot near church
NSll
BRICK HOME AND 2 ACRES $47,000 - 3
bedr ooms. 1'/:;o bafh home With lots of extra nice
features , built in cab10ef s, self cleantng rane, dish
washer, garbage dtsposal and large dming roo m ,
l(yQer Creek Schools
N SOl
ATTRACTIVE ALL BRICK HOME II
En joy the beaut1tul Ohio R 1ver from tht s spactous,
chee rful house, J bedrooms. llh baths, large l1v fng
room, cat · in kitchen, 2 f ir eplaces, full basement, 2
porches, plus many extras . Phone today for detl!IIIS
1505

',

39 ACRES MORE OR LESS
Tdlnhll' p.=1sturelnnd. some l tmbcr , pk•nty of spnng
wn tN , ' '1 m•lc tr on taqc on Prospect Church Road
Ptmnt • l or full dr• lc1tl~
N497

FARM LISTING Modern
.,omt.•, full basement . all modern con
vf&gt;ntl'nccs. Rura'l water , barn, corn
r.r 'n Rolllnq qround. approx 30 acres
nrrt':'ls. 10 wood ~. 2 tarm ponds One ol
• hctt,•r ont.'S Call for moredcta 1IS. II
7
3
•

'

WORTH IT All - 92 acre farm .
sse 900. E tQht room modern house only
S f~ Vt:.' rl yers old and full basem~nt Htolt
pump, central atr, tobac co hilse. coa l
lt•itS(", ClitS &lt;1nd oil lease Wondt.'rful
Vlf'W YOU must IOOic: thiS over
N 974

Older home
.but modern
tn every wav. 2
and full
basement. Special
is a beaut•ful
dtning room with chandelier. Large lot
w•th n1ce garden area. Also 2 car

~~--

MIOOLEPOA'T - Rtqht downtown . A
1 hedroom apartmt•nt bu1ld inu w ith rt 2
car garage tn lower level. Convenient
and a good rental for added Income ,
pnced so low. Call for complete details
~ 936

Nlli

•

ASSUMABLE LOAN 10&gt;,%
Call For More Details.
MILLION US VIEW - Off State Route 35 - Close to
Holzer Medical Center . Doctor moved out of the
area needs t o sell this lovely new rustic L ·shaped
ranch. This very plush hOme features 3 large
bedrooms, formal entry and liv1ng room. Built-in
kitchen, 2 full baths, full basement. 3 cor garage.
Sitting on 3.2 acres. Be one of the Best Addressed
People in Town! Priced 1nthe80's!

'

971

OUIET I
Y This home can be
wi
1 to 6
acres. has 4 BR. 2 baths, fam ily rocm ,
bilsement, study, large covered patto, 2
car garage. Lots of beautiful shade
trees owner financing makes this one
even more attractive.
# 943

LOTS

FOR

S.L\lE

1 ACRE LOT - Located on slate high·
way, has drilled well, and 1s ready for
the home of your choice . Priced at
$3,500,
#876

OWNEAWILL HELP FINANCE! - Lovely home
overlookt~g the nver. 3 bedrooms, livmg room,
m.odern ~~tctJen, full basement. N ice family room
~tth Wb fireplace. In-ground swimming pool all sitting on an acre of ground!

5.4 ACRES OR S ACRES - Are you
looking for a troct of land for the home
of your dreams? S ott acres partla~ly
c leared and par,tially wooded or 1S acres
of mostly woods Make yoUr own
·
#877·1171
choice.

•

' I

POSSIBLE LAND &lt;;ON1RACT - 6 abres, more or
less, would make a gOOd home spe, goOd well and
timber on lhe)l&lt;'Operty Approx 800 lb. tobacbase.

VACANT LAND- Three acre bulldmg
site':' Two acres clear. approx. one
WOOded. Owner will help finance.
Listing price$3,000.
1970

COUNTRY PLEASURE - 2 bedroom
frame home and 37+ acres Home' all
electric, large ktfchen, lots of cabinets.
Add·on room . 1 bath and new basement
Land has approx . 12 acre~ tillable, rest
Is wOods &amp; tobocco base.
N 91~

LOT~

FOR

St,RFNITV IN NATUR E - Lovely 3
hcdr oom, 2 ba1h home with 11 58 acres
' Hunters haven with 9 acn•'j woodt·d.
Homt• hMi formal drn inq, l1v1nq r oom .
family room, uttllty, k ttcht:n Wtth nice
«:a tlnq bar and out!ttdc stor fttR' bu ildinq.
W•ll st·ll on l;tnd contract.
, 972

l BEDAOOMS - 3 ACRES M . OR l.
Mobile home 14'x 70' 1976 Freedom, 1'11 baths, un·
derplnnlng, lots of budf.tn cabinets, range,
refrigerator, dtnette sef. Alr condlt toner and Olher
furnllure Rural we fer, ntc e land for garde n. All this
for only $22,500
~ 425

COMMERCI .. L LOTS - R10 Grande
Vtlla cn:, 2 lcvel lots . Close to R t 35.
c-l,urches. ilnd Rto Grande Collcqc All
ut il ities 11vailable. Just listed Call
today
• 911
ACRE~GE
3 acr.·s tota l. A loVely
huddinu spot S•ts hiqh and overlooks
tht• n vt·r w• fh a beautiful view.
N9J4

2 ACRE: s - Ideal for log home. Par·
ti111ly wooded Water and electri c
avitlable. CttY school d1Sf1rct
89S

*

JUST LISTED - Acreage - 2 acres.
more or less. Nice place for vour new
hou~e or mobile ho'me . county water
available.
1961

CHARMING TRI ·Lf.VE L
1800 SO, FT. PLUS REDU CE 0
Larqe ltV1ng room w 1th f tr cplilCI'. dintnQ room wd l'
slidmg doors to conc refl' prttt n, modern cat ,n kd
chen, large re cr eatton r oom on f irs t I(' V(' J Uldtly
room, 3 bedrooms w i th pll •ntv of clmw t spa c~;,•, 7 1 ?
baths, a.r cond lt! Ont•d, sform cloo r::~ and w 1ndows 2
car f tntshed QarAge. level lo t 100' • 300'. lots mon ·
Ca llf ~,Mo
w46S
KYGER CREEK SCHOOl DISTRICT
Modern 3 BR ranch home appr o)(. 4 111 yrs o!d. Tl,f'r
mopane wtndows, storm door -:;. FA furnace , w,tt-.
centra ! air . ktt chcn ha s hutll .n ( ,lhtnel s. sl r11ni {'SS
1stcoal dbl. Stnk and dtn ing Mil Full t)r1Semt'nl wtth
oat•o doors. Rural wafer svst cm. &lt; l t~rrtoe ( ,111 now
N379

SALF

MUST SELL IMMEDtATiiLYllt A
small down payment and a OOOd cred~~
rating, we' re In business. S room house,
bath. 011 furnace, aluminum siding,
county water. Close to Route 7.
Blacktop road nad gOOd lot. Sl8,000 .

,.,.

OWNER FINANC 1 NG - Don't worry
about financing or• .1is 22 acre farm 2
older homes. TObacco barn. All mineral
.rights $22,000
N 9~~.

21TM

,. '

,
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL BRIC~ HOM E
Locf1tl'd '" cttY, of Gall •polis, close t o supermark ets
rtnct hus,ness sect ton. 10 r oom 5, 3 or 4 twarooms,
modt•rn klt Chf'n w 1th lots nf Cilbtnets, d 1s hwnsher .
llrtrhil&lt;l(' d •s posal. eh:ctrt c 1rlble top rr. nqt: Formr11
d 1n,nq room , lam dv . rccre at. on ro om J ust loi s of
r onm Ct·ntral &lt;lt r, nruural ~.15 FA furni1cc, nntrrtl
p A syo:. tem. hrt-plncc. plilntf'r 1n hom e Younq .:tp
oh· ilOd peach trt•t'S, flowtm• Mill shruhs ""d a lot
mnrt• MUST SE E TH IS CI TY HOM E
;J91

DRIV E A LtTT E, SAVE A LOT
3 BR, full basement, whtte ~ 1l.tm 1 num Stdtnq, tu!•l ntl
FA furnace . 30'x40' barn. shtnqlcd r oof . lot" of
younq peach and .:t pph: tree s A ll lh,~. rcct~ ct.:&lt;l tn on
ly $14 ,900
• ~52

30x48 melal
buil&lt;11nq wtfll
2 r oom apartmt.•nt
1 nrr l' of ground and h~s rpob!l t• homl'
• nnkup. Locatt•d 8 miles from fil l' park

PARK - LOW DOWN PAYMENT- LAND CON;
TRACT. Solid 3 bedroom home and sma\f acreage.
Excellent Location.
·

Furnished Rooms

room

.·

ASSUMABLE LOAN-ONLY $3.000 down 9'1•% in!,
rate. Payments S353.71 including taxes and ins.
Modern 3 bedroom ranch, large living room and kit·
chen and 'dining area. Only 2'h years old , $33,700.

TWIN Rivers Tower Apartments for the ·elderly, 200
Second St Pt . Pleasant, An
Equal Opportunity Hovs,ng
30-4·675·6679

•5

Ulilit~es

l2x60 2 bedroom , un·
turntshed, Sl75 per mo ..
$100 dep , Gas &amp; water fur·
ni sl1ed, no pets . Call 446·
4745 or 446·1630

-

CHAMPAGNE TASTE? You'll bubble with ex·
c1tement wnen you sip In the features this luxury
horne offers. Large format liv1ng room with W.B .
ftreplace Formal din10g room with huge built-m
chtna cab1net 3 modern bedrooms, 2 baths, built· in
kttchen With breakfast bar . Family room w1th
sliding pat1o doors leading to a 18x36 pool and patio
c;:~as grill. 2 car garage. Beautiful decorated home:
.G as heat and central a•r Professional landscaPed
grounds Shown by appotn,ment.

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·•46·8221 or 614 · 245-9~~ -

THREE room furn1shed
apartment , clean. private,
adults only, references 70J
Mam, 30-4·675 ·1591 ,

unfurn tshed

CITY LIVING AT ITS BEST!
You don't want to spend lots on "fixing"~ Then thts
lovely older home is f or you. Complete new kitchen
1&amp; eat area. Formal dtn.ng &amp; living room. FamtiY
room with woodburner, 3 bedrooms, new vinyl
stding &amp; storm windows. Comple1ely insulated. Full
basement. Smgle car garage, Large lot POSSIBLE
LOAN ASSUMPTION
Tl P TOP SHAPE!
Ju st a l1ttle prettter than so many Modern 3·4
bedroom brick home Formal living &amp; dihing room .
Large kttchen. Full basement. Large 2 car garage .
Workshop &amp; b~rn S1tfing on 58 acres, more or less,
of landscaped grounds. Spnng Wl!l be breathless
here! Owner will helpftnance. 10% lnt Rate

Apartments, 675·5548

Rent

apartment.882
9922566
·5434
5914or304
. or 9923

"'

apartment $215.00 month,
plus uttllttes . $100 deposit
Three credit references
requ1red Court Street Call
l.4x70 3 bedroom trad er , 446 -0088 for appo.ntment to
total el ecfrtc Caii388·9J13
see apartment

PHONE446·7699

~•

AUCTIONEER

Ir!:":·-=~=w=·=~======:;::::::~====:::::::::!

446 · 25~ .

We insure ·only nondrin~ers. Check the extra
benefits we offer on all
your insurance needs.

Terms: Cash or local checks w / prop. I .D. No out-ofstate personal check. To be held inside 1f weather is
bad . Lunchserved.
MUSTARD'S COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
Preston Mustard, Auctoneer
Call614·286·1229 or
Terry Lloyd, Auctioneer, 614·286· 5868
Bud McGhee-Auctloneer

HERALD OIL AND GAS CO.

j

.

Furnished 3 room cottage
tn town . One lady or a
married couple please.
Deposit requ.red also
references, no pets . Call

ON

Terms of Sale : Cherry knockdown safe, cherry
stepback cupboard, emptre cherry chest, wood Ice
boxes, oak kitchen cabinet w / flour bin, very nice
round table, 2 roll·top desks, 2 child's rocker, 10
very nice wi cker baskets, wood churn, several oak
hi boys, pressback cha1rs, brass cash register, corner cu pboard, large wall phone Farr Telephone
Co., Chicago, very n1ce ptesafe w/eagle tins, hi·
back bed, 3 oak dressers, several flat wall ·cup
boards, set of shaker chairs, old dentist cabinet,
several wood cabinets, old wash stand, old wash
boards, brass and copper kettles, bean pots, very
fancy old oak carpenter's box with over 20 different
block plains, very unusual broad ~xe, other old hand
tools, several oval trunks, old stepback cupboard, 20
stone jars w/ wnting some very large, iron beds and
wood beds, sad 1rons, carbtde lamps, old crocks,
mustache cup, old scales, forge. 1864 Springfield
Civil War musket, large gas lamp, old dolls,
railroad button and pencils. Dazey churn, several
old cotns, hangtng 011 lamp and other oi I lampsr offset pie safe. wicker rocker, coffee box , 2 V1ctorian
cha1rs, corn mill , several old guns, cylinder recor·
ds, horse collar, plus a lot of ni ce glassware.

1 Bedroom Apt ., utilif1es 1n·
eluded . Mlddleporl, Oh.
$180. 992·7177.

OFFI C E r41- l00l

ANTIOUES FROM THE HILL COUNTRY
DATf: SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1982
AT 10:30 A.M. -

actnow.

2 bdr. apt . HUO excepted,
kitchen furn , utilities par·
tially pd ,
excellent
IQCal10n. Call 675·5104 or
615·7284
°

44

3 room furnished Apt
Utiliti es pa1d. No drunKs or
dope, no pets . John Sheets.
3&amp; miles South of Mid·
dlepori.SR 7.

2 bdr tra iler furntshed,
adults on ly , Brown Trailer
Park , 992·3324

FtEA MARKET
EACH SUNDAY
Lawrence Co.
Fairground
7 A.M.·4 P.M.

DOBERMAN
PINCHER
Male, black &amp; rust,
ears unclipped, large
round scar on rlghf
rear leg,
j(. '"'aSiOnal
llm/l.. Last St:. r'l near
Jt~~~':!e~~&amp;~~~onds fo
Substantial REWARD
for return or leadtng intormatlon. Pn. 742·2316.
't{g8~~~ys, call after

44

1 bedroom furnished apt.
992·5434 992 5914 or 304·882 ·
2566 .

18 acres, beautiful building
s•te, rural water, sept1c
tank, tobacco base. 8 acres
tillable. Call256· ll56.

Apartmemt
for R,;::
e:.:
nt:..__

44

3 room unfurnished apart
ment, adults only, no pets,
uttl1f1es pa1d . Call-446·3437.

-,
Lo
::.,o:-,•&amp;~A
'-crei!IO- -

5786.
For Rent. 1 acre trailer lot.
Flatswoods
$70. month
plus S70 depostt 404·860·
8405

The sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-5

2nd floor effiency apt.
Adults only, no pets. Brad
bury Apartments, 446 0957.

HOME .

LARGE TRACT of laod.
Dead ends on Peacock Ave.
Has water and sewage
Wtll ftnance to respons1ble
party at 12 percent 992-

w. 1/a .

Apartment for rent. Call
4-41&gt;·0390

1970 H1llcrest Mobile
Home 12 by 65 $3500, 9'12·
7559 '

NEW Moon 12&lt;55, 2
bedroom, furnished, gas
heat, atr conditioned , underpenning, carpet. North
Pt. Pleasant, $5500.00 304·
675 2195.

LQSJ MG
~

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARL VLE "'

,. bedroom, central air and
heat. city water, fireplace ,
unfurnished except kit
chen . $300 month plus
utilit~es
Reference and
depos•t
required .
In
Rilctne. 949-2293

1;:;::;:;::;;:;:;::;:;;:;:;1

t;:=========;i

I

LOT CLEARANCE SALE

st.OOO to $3,000 ott on all

ASSUMABLE 8'12'1&gt; loan. 2
year old, three bedroom
house. All electr.ic. 1112
baths Large level lot .
Stove, refrigerator and
dishwasher (all 2 years
old) slay Upper end of Pt
Pleasant. $56,000. 304·675·
1538.

neal estate

Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Mobile Homes- for Sale

Money to Loan

POMEROY

E'Xperten c ed
Auto
Mechan•c Expenenced tn
engine tune-up A tr con dlfiOnlng and heat• ng
Wnte Box 743 , Pomer oy,
Oh 45769
POOL MANAGER and
lifeguard appll ca t tons for
London Pool for 1982
seaso n will be accepted by
Syracuse V•llage Clerk
Jantce Lawson unt1l 7:30
PMMarc h 15,1982
- - ~ - - - -

Will do babysitttng in my
on Rt. 35 · Call ~46-

~~5';'e

Appl•cations now being accep ted for summer employ men! at the M1d!tl eport
munic1pal par k . Pos•fions
f-;:===~~~===~ 1
ava11able mclude pool
manager, life guards, and
SWimming InStructor ap- r-;::;;;;:;;;';·;-;_:;,
_ ;_:;_:;;~
ply at M iddleport Mayor's
offtce Monday throu gh
Established Insurance
Friday, SAM to 4PM ·
Co. openmg branch of·
fices
in Gallipolis,
LANDMARK
Pomeroy, Pt Pleastlnt
Studen t page at Bossard
Need branch
mgr ,
Memona l L1brary after
614 _992 _2182
.ueil
sates milnager,
school and weekends. Ap·
and trainer licensed
For
Farm and
prox 17 hr per week at
lif e.
health .
Need
Home Delivery of
S2 35 per hr. Must be 16 yrs
cCJsu.llty mgr. licensed '
Gas
Diesel
old 4 weeks probationary
casualty
Also need
penod Call446·7323
p.rl
tome andRe
fu s11pond
tome
pHeftaltCin~DOiRI.IGHJ
agents.
Rumley Agency , 1323
Clover Sl .. ZaneSVIlle,
CALL JODAY.I
Math/Sctence
OhiO, 43701
Background? We Can
Make You an Eng1neer
If you alfndy have a bac
cllauteatr derree the Air Fctrce
w111 por rou up to $17,000 a
,ear AND, PIJ tu1tton and fm
too up to II months tf school
necessary to complete an
ena•neenng degree
Wonder
in1 how to ctlanJe catHrs wtthCMit
suflenn1 the los.s ol tob srtufll(
Located 3 miles east of Jackson, Ohio on U.S. 35 bel·
Th1s may be your golden op
ween Chillicothe and Gallipolis, Ohio.
potlun•tr Openmasa1e lim1fed, so

Help Wanted

WANTED sma ll puppy for
ChildS pel , 304-675·5123

-

PRIVATE duly Nursmg, at
Ptncrest care center. for
mate pat1ent, 304·675·5941
or 614 446 9727 .

--~-

GET VALUABLE trammg
as a young business person
and earn good' money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
ltnel route earn er . Phone
us nght away and get on
the eligibtllty list at 992·
2156 or 992·21 57

i i- -HOipWanted-

Why settle for tess Sell the
best Sell Avon. For more
Information call440·3358.

Around OHIO Magaztne is
looktn g for a med1a
representat1ve tor the
Gallia County area to handl e advert1s1ng and
editoria ls Please write or
call
Around
OHIO
Magazine. 1035 Walnut 51 •
Coshocton. Oh 43812, 614·
623 8133
·' "

GOOD used bathtub, phone
304 458·1042

-

Hetpwanted

11

31

FIRST
and
second
morgages, land contracts,
and receivables purchased .
614·446·4113,

1982

Homes for Sale

_ ___s
=-e
"'r-'v-'ic"'e~
s _ _ __

Wanted to Do

Custom
woodwork,
planing, molding, nk nacs,
and some repair. Call «6·
2738 day and 466 3201 after
8.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

CAROOF THANKS
From the Fam1ly of Fred Karshner,
Thanks to the TuppersPiains E.M A. who
worked so hard trymg to save my husband . 1 know
every effort was made at my house and Veterans
Memorial Hospital to revive my husband, but I
know now it was God's plan to call h1m home.
Special thanks to Carolyn Tripp and karen
Baker, also Sumner Rd. Community, Alfred Com·
munity, Tuppers Plains Community, Chester Community for all the food and flower s, and Silver R ldge
South Bethel Church
To all the Fnends that Fred and Linda have at
lmpenal Electnc for food and flowers . Special
thanks for the beautiful serv•ces that were performed by Shade River Mason1c Lodge Evangeline
Chapter, Amen can Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128
of Middleport, Ohio. The Songs by Howard Wntesel
and Margaret Tuttle, the P.lllbearers, the mus1c by
Linda Will and the service:; performed bv Pastor
Duane Svdenstricker
.
1 cannot eJCpress m words all th e kindr:~ess and
support that my film1ly and I have rece1ved during
the loss ot our loved one.
DORIS KARSHNER AND FAMILY
RAY AND CORA KARSHNER

DAN CUMMONS
446-9867

Karate the ultimate on self
defence all private lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children .
Instruction thru black bell.
Also available Karate
uniforms puch1ng and
kicking bags, and protec·
tive equipment . Jerry
Lowery &amp;
Associates
Karate
Studto,
143
Burlington Rd ., Jackson,
Oh. Call286·3074 ,

CASH PAl D for clean, late
model used cars Smith
Buick-Pont•ac, Gallipolis,
Ohio. Call446·2282

~~---------

Schools tnstructoon

Oi's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza. 446·2134. X·
stitch headquarters. ALL
colors DMC. Free lessons,

WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
446·3159 and 256· 1967 in the
evenings .

Co, 123 1/2 Pine Sf , 44\6·

Mar. 7, 1982

W. 1/a.

15

They'll Do It Every TiMe

9

Giveaway

All female . Cal l 388 8510 .
Shooting Match every sun·
dav 1PM, Gallia County
Coon Club. Kr1ner·Sand
Hollow Rd .

Ohic. -Point Pleasant,

BUY THIS HOME
FROM OWNER WITH S2.S00 DOWN
And low inter est rat~ Of"l balance with owner, 2
bedroom cottage withtn s minutes of Sliver Bndqc
Shoppmg Plaza.
1260
ZONE BUSINESS GALLI POLIS
can be a Bel!lutlful Home or Home and/or
Business Offices, Apartments Lots of uses . LoJs
of off street parking . 12 rooms plus 4 rooms ,n
basement. Nett .· gas F A furnace, central air. Close
to bus iness section. 3 car garage . Must see thts one
·
I 522

�Page-D-6- The

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

T i mes-Sentinel
65

Farm with house, til lable

acreage in Gall ipolis a rea .
Call446·8381 or 367·7141.

49

For Lease

USED
MU E L LE R
Climat rol F vet Oil Fur·
na ce, 100,000 BTU. Ph. 992·
7815 after 6 p.m .

s'1

Westinghouse d r yer , 3 tern·
pera t ures, $80. Ke nmore
au to w asher , 2 spd ., $9() ,
guara nteed. Ca ll 256·1207.
Call256·1207.

Coffee tab le &amp; e nd tables.
Must see to appreciate,
reasonai De . Call 446·3937.

LAYNE 'S F UF&lt;NITU RE
Sofa,

chair,

rocker,

of·

loman, 3 tab les, $500. Sofa,
c hair and lovesea t, $275.
Sof as and cha1 r s priced
Irom $285. to $795. Tabl es,
$38 a nd up to Sl09 . Hide·a ·
bed s,$340., quee n size, S380.
Rec line r s , $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc. difette5 from $79., to
$365. 7 pc ., $189. and up.
Wood ta ble with 4 chairs,
$219 up to S495. Des~ -$110 .
Hutc hes, $300. and $375.,
m aple or pine finish.
Bedr oom suites · Basse tt
Oa k, $675., Bassett Che r ry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
wi th m a ttr esse~. $250. and
UP IO $350 . Captain's beds,

$2 75. compl e te. Baby beds,

S99. Mattresses or

box

spr ings, full or tw in1 S58.,
firm , $68. and $78. Que en
set s, SI9S. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. chests, S42. Bed
fr a mes, $20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cablhets, SlSO., dlnet·

te c ha irs $20. and S25. Gas
or e lectric ranges, $295 . .Or·
thopedic super firm, S95,
ba by malresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed fra mes'$20$25, &amp; $30.
E lec tri c fireplace. gun
cabinet, Uvln9 room su ite,
wood table &amp; .t chairs.
U sed ·
range s,
r efri gerators, and TV 's. 3
mi leS

out

Bulavi l le

Misc . M erchandice

S4

Plas tic Septic Ta nks. state
and cou nty approved. 1,000 .
g al . tank, pri ce $340. Othe r
si zes in stock, haul in your
pic kup truck . Call 614· 286·
5930, Jac kson, Oh. RON
EVAN S ENTERPRISES
Fa; Sa le Bea utiful floor
mOdel con sole stero, AMFM a-t ra ck &amp; re cord
p laye r, $300.00. Call 379·
2314.
500 ba les of hay and 3,000 fl.
of lumber . No checks . Call

388·8483 or 1-471-1472.
---·~

For sale 1967, 10X43 mobile
home, one bdr ., with ·gas
turnance. Al so tru ck cam ·
per sleeps S with furnance .
AJso coffee table and 2 end
tabl es with wooden frame
&amp; gla ss top. Call446· 7525 af ·
. fer 5.
Dried walnutsfor sale. Call
446 ·2738.
Fir ew ood
split
and
deliver ed, $35 pickup load .
Al so taking orders for next
year . Ca ll 388·9823 .

Rd.

Open 9 ~ m to 7pm , Mon.
thru Fri . 9am toSpm . Sat.
446·0322
SWA IN
AUCT ION FURN ITURE llo
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St. ,
Gall ;pol iS. 3 nice bedroom
suites, gas &amp; electri c
r a nges,
s
u se d
r efri gerator s, 2 new frost
fr ee refri g . at $27S.OO; 3
pice living r oom suites

2 pump jacks and 16 fl .
·
pick , $125. Bolens
attachment for
lawn mower, $250. Call 367 7257 .
Couch &amp; matching chair in
good cond .. 2 end tabl e s &amp;
tamps . Pri ce S230. Call 256·

I 5.

-.

-------,

Antiqu e w ood burning
Hom e Comf ort cook stove
$199.00, 2 pi ece living room
suites $140.00, love seats 1 w., o'•e n. Ca ll 24S·9241.
$70.00, wood d inef set wit h 4
ca pt ain ch oi rs {new )
asse y
Ferguson
275.00, l ino le um 'rug s 9x l 2 bulldozer diese l, 7ft. blade,
SlO, la rge owl tamps S2S.OO, wenc h, good cond., $l.4,0Qt, .
padded maple rock ers
Ca ll446·2522 afte r 5.
$34 .00. new &amp; used wood
burne rs from 160.00 to
Wedding gown perfect con·
$275. 00, se veral chest and
·dressers, variety of· silver dilon, s iz e 9. Call 446·2959
after 5.
Ston e cook ware, 4 utility
kitchen ca binets, TV's,
d ine t sets, b e ds ~ desks, and
Locust Post for se ll. Ca ll
tots more. Open lOam ·to 367·0632 afte r 2:00PM
Spm, 446·3159.
E xcelsi or Oil Co., 636 E .
GO O D
US.ED
AP ·
Main St ., Pomeroy , Ohi o.
PLIAN C E S
wa shers,
992·2205 .

dry ers,
ran ges .

H ardw ick 36 ln. wh i te Gas
ran ge. Very good conditi on. $50 . 992-5006.
B ATHROOM sink with
fa uce tts, $20. phone 304·675·
2973 .

-------- -~--·-

Used Furn iture 2 sofas.
Cannonba ll maple bed,
Queen m attress and box
spri ngs. Corb in &amp; Snyder
F urni tur e, .4461 171.
late model GE auto.
wa sher, perf ect shape,
$110. El ec tr ic range, r eal
ni ce $110 . Ca ll 446·8181 or
446·2674 .

___ ID _ _
byHoM-MCIBobiM

tftoN lour J u -,
ono_to _ _ ., IOiorm
Unoetomblt

lour ordtnoty -

·

POODLE GROOMIN G.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGOI'IWYI'ID
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Ch o w
pupp ies,
CFA
Hima layan , Per sian and
Stamese kittens. Call 4463844 after 4 p .m .
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding ·all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call 446· 7195 .

TWO pai r ladder jacks, one
shin gle cutter , one craf·
tsman wood lathe, one
Cr aftsm an metal lathe, one
A" Craft sm an sh aper. 30A·
675· 1205, call a ft e r 3:30
p .m .

~TONPHY' ()
) I I
Prlni11111W8fhere:

_....,.lhodrclocltonoraiO
"""' lho lllrprioo - · u IUfl•

goot«l"'"'"-- ·

rn rn rn
THE

&amp;

~--~~

Yaslerdly'a 1

Sal~

1977 Cutlass Supreme
SalOn, p.s., power window s,
p.b ., reclin ing buckets, TTop, velour Interior. Like
new . $3,800. or best offer.
992-6362 .

Jumbles: PIANO FEINT DEBATE BEOBUG
Antwef: Whit 1 pt110n who cheatl on 1 diet 11 apt

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS' many sold
through local sales, under
$300.00. C'all HU·569·0241
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.

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

PEAVEY bass amphlifier
and guitar , like new, both
for 5500 . or will sell
separate'. 304·675· 3978 .

PIANO, upright, call 304576 · 2~9 .

·- - · Fruii
_ _ _&amp;..Y.!.g_!ta~l ~ --- - ·

58

Black raspberry p lants
$5.00 per doze n. Call 367·
7637 .

1981 Ford 1700 tractor·25
hp. 4 wheel drive, p.s . 3 pt
hitch. Used one summer.
Includes 5 ft. Ford rear
mower and woods post hole
digge r . $9100 . 614·985· 42'/0.
1981 · Bo lens
12 h .p.
Hydrostatic 42 in. mower.
Tra c tor
tires,
uti lity
Ira iter. 992-7605 or 992· 2845.
Farm·AII140 tractor. Plow,
disc cultivators , grader
b lade, scraper bucket,
draw -bar.
and bell y
mower. Price $4,500. 614·
837-5703. Lithopolis, Oh .
NEW Idea hay conditioner,
304·895·3471 .

Farm Equipment
63

- . - LiVeStOck. - *· .

------ -··----

TROYBILT ROTOTILLE ·
RS A ll models, b ig discoun ·

ts. Can ship. Avoid April
factory price increase and
end of discount. 703·942·
3871 Hickory Hill Nursery ,
R f. I Box 390 A, Fi sher ·
SVille , VA 22939.
135 MF trac tor , perk . gas,
excel lent conditi on, 304·675·
6986.

Dairy
Herd , grade
Holste ins . Phone 304-6751336. after 7 P.M .

1972 Chevrolet Impala ,
good condition, $450. Call
367·7822 .
1980 Bonneville diesel
20,000 mi., $7,400 firm . Call
446·8310.
1980 Toyota Corolla Terce l,
AM· FM, air, auto., radials,
15,000 miles, $3,795.00 . Call
446· 1724.

7._3c.__V
,
-'-a"'n""s &amp; 4 W. D.
For sale 79 Ram Charger 4·
. wheel drive. Call 388·9991
or 388·8623.

BAI~D &amp;FUL~ER (H
REALTY

.,.,,,,

7.~4'----'-'
M:,:O:;:t::;
Or:.::c:.ry_,
c:,:
fe:.::Sc__

1981 PM 125 .Suzuk i, S900 .
304-675·6367.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Gl~ss . lnsur~nce
claims welcome, free
mobile service available.
Call446· 10ll.

3506.

STUCCO PLA STERING
textured ceilings cp;mmercial and residentl a t: ~
free estimates. Call 256·!

.

--------------'

PAINTING · interior and~
ex terior , plumbing , /
roofing, some remOdeling.~
20 yrs. exp. Call 388·9652 . 1

Auto Repair

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work .' Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446·1968.

1977 Mustang II . Good con·
dition . For information call ·
992·5771 after 5 p.m .

1980 Ford Pinto, 16,000
miles, 4 cyl ., .4 speed, like
new . S3600. 992-7892.

RUSSANDMAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Htallnt
Conditlonlnt. All
Insulation. Electri;caf
Wiring.
Call 446·1515 or 446·0&lt;445
after4:30p.m.
lfc

AERIAL BUCKET
TRUCK SERVICE
47 It. Working Height
PASQUALE
ELECTRIC
152 Third Ave.
614-446· 2716
tfc

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car, :·
pel Cleaning featured bY .
Haffelt Brosther s Custom
Carpets . Free estimates. ,
!Call446·2107 .

partMr wu bridle teacller
Ktlta call. Tile oiher -.u of
tbe wu Mr. aDd Nn.

.QT

•en

lAIII

.AITI

Carpenter
work .
remodeling, &amp; roofing. Call
36'1·0194.
•

l

or'

J

Special March and April •'
only . Gene's Deep Steam :
Cleaning. Scotch Gaurd. ,
Free estimate . 99H309

$

••

ewater&amp; smoke
domate
·
Industrial
cOmmercial
Residential
Depe.n dable, I years e~e.­
perience. We do caret

~'fl. !.MPRDVEMENTS

Bill'S

$9'995.()()

r

Nu·Prlme replacement
wlndOWI
Storm window• &amp; doon
Aluminum I vinyl .
lldlnt
.
Howmtl Patio Coven
HawmtllcrHn room•
Mobile hom a awnlnt•
Aluminum utility
build Inti
"I Miller Orlve
44t-2642
Fret E1t1motu

FORs12,500

lkl w11eman ,·Brour. 446· l1U Eve.
Jim cochnl1. Autclalt. ,.,. , .. , Eve.

Just in tim e fo r spr !ng, loca ted close to town, look
today . E x,ce ll ent r eS iden ti a l.
·
1y, ~c res ... . ............. ss,ooo
3 acr es ,., . . . . . . .
. .. se,ooo
5 c. cres ..... : . . . . . . . . ... $12 ,000

-·

:· Evenings Call
·1'Jtricia Smith, Assoc. 367·0228
Bob France&lt; Assoc. 446·1162
~n Fu~er, Realtor, 444327
•

·-

'·

Elst

Soil~

Pus
Pau

3 NT

Pus

Pau

a,

Oowald Ja&lt;Ob,
ud .Uaa Soe111
No lilt of 80-year-old
playen woul~ he complete
without a band played by the
late Jaek Ebrlenbaeb. Jaek
wao tile llntllfe muter on
the Paelllc Cout.
He only won
UtV

1

bedroom 'b rick r~~~;~
deluxe features, 1
interest, priced
S60's. 45141 Ba
tion Road in Cn.,;ror·.•
OH.

RON ' S T elevision Service.
Specializing in Zenith ·and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576-2398
or 446· 2454.

,
F 8. K Tr ee Trimm ing;
stump rem oval. 675·1331.

PHONE 446-3643

RINGLES ' S SERVICE e x·
peri enced mason , roofer,
carp e nte r , el e ctri c ian,
g en e ral
r e pair s a nd
remod eling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675· 4560 .

loul Buildef

Excellent References
F01lnf01mation Photle
256.fi582

Ph. 1-687-6429
614-992-2571

'

'

Broker· A uctio~!_e:r

'

LIFE
IN,SURANCE
428 Second Ave.
Call446·0552 Anytime

FOR A BARGA"
~UNTEA - A real horse trader will
love to see the deal the owner s a r e of·
fering on this very attractive L -snaped
ranch. Over 1700 sq. ft. of living w / 3
.bedrooms, 2 baths , l arge family room,
cozy fireplace, very nice kitche n. 2 car
garllge &amp; 1h acre (9~ assuhlpiton &amp;
will help finance on balance) .

Water w e lls. Commercial
and Dom esti c. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-895- 3802 . ~
'

JUST LISTED - Bric k llo frame ran c hon Rt. 141 just 2 mil es w est of town . J
bedroo ms, fireplace, eat· in k itc hon, tull
basement, r ec. room, family room ,
qaragc, dec k &amp; fenced back yar d on
nL· ar lv 8. acre. Good l ocat ion.

LOCKSMITH
SerVICe .
Re side ntia l, automotive .
Emergency servic e. Ca ll
882·2079 .

~3

",.;~!Je · BRICK R

. 141 - 'Very al·
ONLY $31,900 $15,000 DOWN tractive 3 bedroom ranch just minutes
PAYMENT - VA acquired property . from town . Has family room , wood·
-Any.one can buy . 3 bedroom home with burner. equipped Jc; Jtchen, 2 baths, heat
'fllmily room~ nat. ga,s heat. Large yard . pump , oversi1ed 2 car garge plus 1.32
City schools . Wash. Elem.
ac . With mobil e home hookup. 60's.

-

BMR 388- OWNER FIN,II."r · NGI Three BR, large
family room w ith firep~S()\ll~tural gas heat. CaJt
, ..
-fbr details!

Russell D. Wood, Realtor. Eve. Ph. 446-4618
Ken Morgan, Realtor, Eve. Ph. 446·0971 · · 1
.Mose Canterbury, Associate 446-3408

NEW LISTING - Conveniently located adjacent to
St. Rl. 160 within the village of \linton. Attractive 3
or 4 bedroom homeln excellent condition. Modern
kitchen, spacious living room, carpeted throughout,
steel siding. This home Is ready for you to move In·
to. Price: $53,000.00.

BMR 13?- OWNER FINANCING! TwQ story home
on Second Ave., 3 or 4 bedrooms. REDlJCEDI Bet;'
ter see this one.
BMR 402F- CHECK ON THIS ONE - 37 acres'
with 14011b. tobac( abase, 30:1:30 ba rn . Call today! •
BMR 404- LOW 30's - City schools, newly car ~ ·
·peted and painted . This 3 BR home is a great buy on
today 's.mllrket .

BMR 399 - OWNER FINANCING! - Two s tory
home presently being used as a duplex . could be ·
eas ily converted to single family , Choice location
near Washington School. Call for details !
BMR 409 - OWNER FINANCING - Th;s split
foyer home includes 3 bedrooms, 2 fu!Lbaths, lart~e
den with fireplace , heat pump . SeP this fully car ·
peted home now. L.ocated in Crown City!
'TIs TN&amp; SEASON to prel)llre for summer with !his
1811 x32' ln·ground swimming . pool, scrll!'enecHn
eating area, attached garage with workshop .are,.
All this Including modern 4·bedroom home s llualecl
within walking distance from Holzer Hosplt•l . Price
$75,000.00.
160 YEAR OLD, 3·bedroom, corpeled home with
formal dining room, 2'h baths, wood·burnlng
fireplace, spacious rooms with • lot of character.
Owner will either sell or rent with proper referen·
ces. Call for more Information.

.

MOBlLE HOME With fenced ·ln yard and block
storage building, located within the city of
Gallipolis, Prlce$12,000.00 .
Wt hi VI Olhtr homtl lor rent or Slit- Check your
requlremtnfl with us and perha,a we will have
exactly what you wonllll

WoOd Realty, Inc.
32 Loculi St., Gallipolis
446·1066

BMR 391 - REOUCEDI - Own•r wants it sold
now! Mobile home located on river front lot .

, OOZES WITH CHARM, gorgeous ..,nlry, bridal ,
staircase, ,fQrmal dining, brick patio In secluded
rear yard. Owners have given this home a French
touch! Stop by and see. Assumable mortgage.
THREE ACRES AND MOBILE HOME - $16,000 or
mobile home and 25 acre - $34,500. Two bedroom
mobile has eat· In kitchen with range &amp; refrig . 10x26
porch . City schools .
PAMPERED RANCH $45,000 Near city . 3
bedrot)ms. lg . plush carpeted living room . Eat· in
kitchen, ample cabinets, range refrlg . Forced air
gas heat. Central air cond . Attached garage. Move
in condition. City Schools.
.
.
•

a.

NEAR RlO GRANDI'- $31,900 - Nice 3 bedroom
home, eat· in kitchen, forced air furnace . Hardwood
floors. Carpeted living room, kitchen and bath. City
sctiools. Rio Grande elementary (

BMR 389 - This tine home has 4 bedrooms and is
located' c lose to town . You will have a large lot with
a country atmosphere and have all the c ity con veniences. Call now!

··.

BMR 398 - GET READY FOR SUMMER! Owne r
transferred and must sell this J BR rancn. CIOSl' to
town includes deluxe 18x36' incarOLJnd pool. Cal! for
an appointment today!
8MR 407F - Camp·slte Potential! 32 acres m / 1w ith

frontage on Raccoon Cr. as well as frontage on
black top highway .

.

.

BMR 410 - NEW LISTING - A·fr am es ituated on 'a
beautiful wooded selling, you wilf love Jhe at·
mosphere. Owner f inancing for qualified buyers.
LOW 30's,
'
'
.
BMit :116acre lot

DUCE 0 - Quiet country ,home on lfo
20x20 barn with loll, and partial
details!

-

-

-

-

-

~--

-·

Electrical

--*"

..._

--·-·

~ ~e!_r~ ~~~'! - .

·-

RHI E1t1te - Genera!

NEAR THURMAN - 5 year ol d 3
bedroom, 2 bath home .si tui'l ted on 31•
acr e. 16:~C22 l iving r oom . wo~burne_r-. 1
U x16 master bedroo m . eQUIPped kif chen . el ec t . he at. plus ..-s torag e bldQS
On ly $32,000.

13 ACRES - Very pretty location jus l2
miles north of Rio Grande. Lots of
pines, some timber reported. Excel lent
fOr horses, some crop &amp; pasture land .
GOOd bullcilng tots. $42,500. City schools .

FA
... 56 ACRES - Beautiful pasture and
meadow land, some. wooded . Fenced. GoOd barn
and other outbldQ. Nice 3 bedroom home, fireplace,
knotty pine paneling in living room , kitchen has
bu ilt-in O\len, counter top range and dlshwash~r.
City schools, Green Elementary . Approx . 3 miles
'from Gallipolis.

*-

-

JACK S REFR IGERATIO·
N Air condi tion ser vice,
comm er c1a l. i ndus tr tal.
Phone 882·2079.

IN TOWN - Private loc ation on this·
older w ell kept 3 bedroom , 2 story
home . Has equ i pped k i t c hen. 2
fireplaces, tamliy room, 1'12 b ath ,
beauty shop , nat. gas hea t , 2 &lt;. ar
gara~e,
16xJ2 in· g roun~ pool. a ll
situ ated on approx . 1 ac . 60 s.

513 2ND AilE. - Very a!tractive and
spacious 2112 story 4 or 5 bedroom home
in town. Has 2 fireplaces, family room .
den
formal dining, 112 baths,full
bas~ment, nat. gas, cent . air, etc . Ex ·
cellent construction and care . · Cold
easily be adaptab le to professional of ·
fic:es. can for information.

446-106&amp;

---------

--

I
I

1
I
1

OWNER WILL FINANCE - Witt• tess
$4,000 DOWN - ONners must sell. Will than 20o/o down payment and 11% in·
finance at low interest rate. 4 bedroom teres! . 168 acre farm off Rt . 554 . Ap·
home oft Lower R t . 7. Has fireplace, .prox. 20·25 ac . crop balance in pasture
, full basement&amp; garage. $34 ,900 .
and woods. Lots of pine (red &amp; wh i te ),
barn, plus modernized J bedroom
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS Ex· home. 60' s.
cellent conStruction ~ Immaculate ..t
bedroom home on Little Kyger Rd, Has
'
fireplace, equipped kitchen, fami ly 18 WOODED ACRES - ATTRACTIVE
2
STORY
HOME Remodeled 4
l'oom. 1'12 batn~ full basement, nat . gas
bedroom
home
off
Lower
Rt . 7. This ,
heat, and 2 acres. A must to see. $53,500.
spacious home has family room . 2
WASHlNGTONE ELEM. Cozy 2 woodburners, firep l ace. 2 baths,
bedroom home located In city school r emodeled kitchen, 2 car garage.
dlst. Has fireplace in living room, large Se veral fruit trees &amp; ni ce large lawn.
kitchen. lh ac . yard. 9112% assumption . $61,900 .
.

I
I
I

20'S. '--

LOW 30s - NEW LISTING - Older
remodeled 2 story home located 700' off
Rt . 7. southof town in sem i - pri~Jate
location 3 bedrooms, fireplace, wood ·
burner , ·2 car garage and more . '11 ac .
yard.

CITY SCHOOLS - RT. 218 - Modern 3
bedroom ranch situated on over 1.3
acres. Has large living room , kitchen,
bath basement. woodburnino furnace .
car.,O.t &amp; mobile hOme hookup. priced
at $32,000. AssumabiP.ll% mgt.

I
I
I
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Owne r s
I
a
I
bedroom · 2 balh" fam ily room, wood ·
I
I
9lf• % ASSUMPITON - One of the p re!· I
II
2
I

REOUCED TO 569,000 - Owne rs musl
$CII now. Priced orig inallY at $83 ,000
this lovely 4 bedroom tri-level offers 3
full bciths, deluxe kitchen, . forma l
dlninq, family room w / stone ftrepla~e ,
rec . toom. w qodburner, e'l&lt;tra 1n·
sulat ion, 2 car garage plus 4.5 a ~res of
fenced yard . This is a real bargatn . Call
tor appl.

moved t o another state, must sell fast .
Attra ctive tudor ranCh located , in Rod ·
ney in
very good neighbOrhood . 3
burner , large master suite, garage (1'1":1
ac. yard. Low SO's.

DO YOU NEED A SMALL HOME IN
TOWN? - Then this one is perfect.
Cory and modern 2 bedroom, 1 floor
plan. Hs brand new kitchen, dining
room. living room , detached garage
and n ice flat yard. Make us an offer.

tiest &amp; pri~Jate locations in the area.
Located in Northup ntis charming
home has IJinyl siding, fireplace, full
basement, new carpet, detached car
garage plus 2 acres with lots of trees.
$43,500.

lO-s.
liT 511 - SECLUDEO BI · LEVEL NHtled in over 1 acre of trees this dutch
style home hal 3 bedrooms, 2'12 baths,
family room, 2 large unfinished rooms
In lower level, large wrap around deck
and 2 car garage . outstanding location.
$67,500.
-

'I

.,

.

- II

PRICE REDUCED TO UI,SOO
Owners arb:iovs to sell this 3 bedtoom
ranch on Rt. Ul . Has family room. eatin kitchen, nat. gas heat (~38 -budget),
plu1 .3 acre fenced yard.

,

NEW LISTING !!~~n~:~.:~old time 2 story home . sll 4TH AVE . - 112 block from
located 4 miles from town In Green
Washington Elem . l'jewly redone
Sctrool Olsl. House has 3 bedrooms,
throughout. 3 bedrooms, equipped kit·
11 eplact dining room, gta•• enciOied chen, fireplace, nat. gas heat, garage.
,:;.ch &amp; beth . very scenic location with
Lot ' goes to foo.t~ll field . A 1 story
lotS of shade trees. 1 mile off Rt. 7. Low home. Priced In 40 s .
,

i~Mrii·.-..1. .1111···. .,. . . . . . . .1. .

1
I
I
I
1

·· -·

w

... ...... .

Ph. 992-6614
30I .E . Main Pomerov ~

Roger Hysell's
GARAGE
~. Oh.

St. 111.124

3 mi. west on

124 toorlld lotiMid

AUTO &amp;TRANS.
REPAIR
PH, 992-5612
01 992·7121
Opt~~

PH. 992-7201

P ARH AN D SE R II \ Cf.
AL l MAIC ES.

•W al l\tn

eorvu •
eR•nttl
eO isDOU II

1-11·1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSEll
SIDING CO.
" Beautiful ~

Custom
Bullt Girages "
Coil for free siding
estimates. 949·2801 or
949-2860.
No Sunday C-lls

I AM. 1o 5:10 , ,M.
1-ll·lmo

· General Hauling_

Haul1nq
i• m es t one or
qr a vc l by
t o n s for
dri veway , or mi sc. haul ln!=l .
George Woodya r d . Ca \14469428 .
J IM S Wat er St:.' r vi ce. Call

Jim La ni e r , 304-675· 7397 .
Ca mp Conley.

87

• :uji'i_olsiery :-_: -

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gal lipoli s.
446·7833 or 446·1833.
MOWREY S Upholstery Rl.
1 Box 124, Pt . Pleasant, 304·
67S·4154 .

Scout C1mp Rd . . . . .la....j
Chester, Oh.
.,
• short tame praclice
• Pro Golf lessons
for a It ages.
• Repair : cleaning

refinishing ,

new

grips,
length change, weight
change.
*'••I se•·vir:o 2·28· I mo .

• O llnwa l l'l t' r l

•Hotwatt r TAnlll

'!l if e

3lllfc

REESEdNl'
TRENCHING
SERVICE·
warer-sewer·E lectri~
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 367· 7560
1-7· 1 tt c

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERV-ICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radiator .
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Y rs. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

C&amp;M
EXCAVATING
AltO

CONSTRUCTION
Dozer- &amp; back hoe service, water, sewer,
ponds,
tounda1ions,
reclamation.

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Phone 949·2293
or 949· 2417

1-~~::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::2:·:26:·:tl:c~~==============3·=3=·1=fn~

ROUSH

Gerald Reuter

CONSTRUCTION

INCOME
TAX
SERVICE

New Homes - ex · ·
tensive remodel ·
ina
• Electrical work
•Custom Pole BJdas.
• Rooting work
14 Years E tcperience

PHONE

992·2490

FOR AN
APPOINTIIIENT
2·25-1 mo. pd.

Lecturer
992·3382
Membership
$3.50
weeklY Cla$1 .
12.50
_ 2·3· 1 mo.

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
2·12·1 mo.

RHI Ewt1te - Gener•l

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

E . Mai·nl....II

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
ALREADY
AP ·
PROVED FOR A VA
LOAN Thi s frame
home has a large living
room, fam ly room, 2
bedrooms, and is neat
and nice. $24,200.
CLEARED LAND - 6'13
acr es of ni ce lay ing land
w1th a drivewey and a
drill ed wel l. Close to
!own . Ask inQ$11,000 .
Ml DOLE PORT - Thi s
5 room one floor home
has a din ing room . 2
bedrooms, large liiJing
room, garage and a nice
tot. $19,750.
NICE LEVEL LOT 0\ler 1/:1 acre and a
12' x60 '
2
bedr oom
mobile home w i th patiO
and i s close to town.
Sl2,000.
TUPPERS PI,.AINS Heavily insulated 3
bedroom home with a
large carpeted attic,
!"li ce front porch, central
air and other nice
features . $34,500.
LARGE CORNER LOT
- Wi th a ri\ler \llew &amp;nd
a s room, 2 bedroom
home with an equ ipped
kitchen , and a garden
space . $16,000 .
NEW LISTING
POMEROY
Two
bedroom h!jme on a
'50' x368' nice lot . Also
has full basement .
Refrigerator and range
included . $17,500.
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
GRl
992-6191
Jlan T,russell t4f·2660
Dottle Turner 992-5692
Office
' 992·2259 ·

ld

A t i Q io'

Phone
H 614 l ·992· 3325
POME AOY - 1 acres,
more or less, building
lot. Panora m ic view of
the rtver and breath
taking.
ON TIME - You can
buy this 2 bedroom full
basement home with lit·
tie down. Nearly one
a cre. Only $17,500.
COUNTRY - 13 acres
of land for cattle, pe t~ .
and garden . Al l utiliti es
and a 6 room homezon
state road .
COUNTRY - Nice car ·
pet ed
3
bedr oom
modern home with batn,
fami ly room, basem ent
and 2 garages with
stor age over one .
OUT OF TOWN - 5 yr.
old 8 room , one floor
home . 2 baths, car·
peting, and 1.88 acres of
level land near town on
hard road .
INCOME You c an
buy fhese hous es and let
one help you pay for
both . 3 bedrooms e a·c h
end all utilities .
COUNTRY Finish
thi s home you r self and
save . . N ow b e ing
renovated. 3 bedrooms.
bath, and over 3 acres
lor only S19 ,500.
NOW IS THE RIGHT .
TIME TO SEE US
ABOUT THE S~LE OF
YOU~ PLACES. CALL
992· 3176; BRUCE OR
\IIRGIL

Housinq
Heile lqu; u ft!rs

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
All type&gt; of roof work,
new or repair guHer and

downspouts.
gutter
cleaning ,nd painting.
All work g_uaranteed .
Free Estlm'ates
Reuonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2263
tl9·2160
2·24-lfc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rl. 50 Eul
Guyovllle, Ohio
Authorlled John Deer,
New Holland, Bulh Hog
Farm Equipment

Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1-J·tf c

POMEROY,
OHIO
PH.
992 · 2063
STOP and look at our
fine selection of plaster
and cenmlcs.
-banks
- planters
- statues
- paint
-mirrors
- I pray
-plaques
-brushes
. FREEA $2.00 detail brush,
with the purcha5e of a
paint kit.
J-5· 1 mo. pd .

CENTRAL REALTY
LO\IEL v 3 BR brick home, has wOod burning
fireplace in living room . 1'17 bath, well constructed
&amp; insulated. One floor Plan. Asking $35,000.
OWNER SAYS SELL - We have reduced thi s home
from Sl7,000 to $12,900 . owner will work terms. 2 or
3 B.R.
kitchen wi1h breakfast bar, stove &amp;
l;ef.rig,j?r.alo•r; ·!laundry room riff kitchen . La r ge living
room
furnt~cc and cellar.
UNUSUAL HOME - Call &amp; ~I details on this
lovely 3 BR, 2'17 bath, A-frame, on 6 plus acres.
Large work garage, root cellar, located close to
Forked Run State Park. Ask ing 173,000.
NEW LISTING ~ 2 BR trailer on very nice lot on
quiet street. K hchen nas sto\le, refrigerator, dinette
set, corner d ish d isPii!y cabine t &amp; easy ~ lew i'nto
$P8Cious L. R. ThiS place could be very n1ce living
for you or just as inv"tment property . Now rents
forS175. Ask lngl12,000.
JUST LlSTED - l'lew dOll type 3 BR home, cozy is
t~ key word here. Kitchen com~• complete with 1
year otd self cleaning o~Jen , refrigerator &amp; 6 chair
wooden dinette set. This home is aSout 1.5 "111H out
of Middleport on 2 plus acres . It has outbuildings for
storage . Rental income from a trailer $175 . All tnts
lor only $35,000,

..............___ AW .
..

-

SERVICE
Ca II Ken oung
For Fast servi ce
985-3561

lUll.

____E~c~ ~a!!ng __ _

SEW I N G Machine r epa ir s,
serv ice . Au thori zed Stnge r
Sales &amp; Serv ice Sharpen
Scissors. Fabri c Shop,
Pome r oy . 992 ·2274.

BMR 412- NEW LISTING Older nome located in
Thurman . Contains 7 rooms anet bath, 2 fireplaces, ·
professionally installed wood burner, forced air fuel '
furnace . Outside f eatures a garage and a screened, '
summer kitch en w ith built·in grill . Call for ap. pointment.
1

CANADAY
REALTY

no-trump eontracta. litre "'
- Jact with a U IIOint ..,.
trump. Olflclally, Tact illed
standard ..,.trumpoao North
ralledbim rl&amp;bt to1ame.
Tbe diamond lead came to
1111 joel!:. He led a spade
toward dummy. Weal "*
with the tin&amp; and led the
lour of heart• to hla
partner's ace. A heart wu
returned . Jact took his tl"f.:
led a spade to dummy·a
queenr c1me back to h.iJ
band with the kin1 of ella·
monda and waa home wben
opadea broke s-s.
Three ..,.trump bid and
made would llavo been a
1101r top, but Jact came
home with II trlcka. Eut
hd Weal each let one club
ao. So Jact wound up wllh
four tplldn, one bYrt and
three trlekl In each minor

-

•backhoe
wexcavating
*septic systems
•¥tater, sewer
&amp;gullnes
•dump truck
wllmestOnl!!
Ucen~.l 119odtd..

~-

Gallipoli s Diversif ied Con ·
st. Co. Cu stom dozer &amp;
ba ckh oe work . Sp ~ cial
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446-.44.40 .

64

Good mixed hay f or sale.
Francts Andrew 985 ·3593 .

SIMMON'S OLDS.CAD.-CHEV., INC.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . F our t h and Pine
P ho~ e 446·3888 or 446·4477

84

M1xed hay for sale. Call
379·2424 .

rather J)OCII' platen aDd
nalb tiied to mate IW1!
tbaf lie 1101 to play doubUul

12- -· • · Plumbing .. - - -· _! ~ ~_!!'.!_Y_ - - -

'

On Lake Dr.
In Rio Grande ·
75% completed, $45,000,
91 1% interest. S4,000
down_ · land contract.
Monthly payments $350
mo. 245-5439.

-

-···

. BMR 411 - NEW LISTING·._ 3 bedroom honie 3
miles from city . owner will consi der financing.
Situated on larqe flat lot. V inyl siding &amp; natural gas
heat .. carport witt'1 storage arE:'a.,Call for de f ai ls!

.. '

•

NorD ~

Opening lead: +3

8 . J . H•ir•ton. Auoc ., 446 · •~40 Evl·
C h1d ~ walker, AssGc 145 •!ilh Eve .

. . . ....--

MDclern Electrical
Equipment

•

., J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

11---------+---------+- - -- ------

Wnt

From

Whl1 2 t.oc:.tlan•
Rt. 83 North
Jackoon. Ohio
; 286·37$2
or
3411 Jackoon A...
Pt. Pleaunt, W . Va .
(F&lt;&gt;rmerly K.K Mobile
HomHI
. • 8715-3000

~-

Jact lllll&amp;lly pla,-1 with

1 NT

D&amp;W
ESTATES, INC.

y

NOW HA UL IN G house coal
8. 11mestone t or dr iveways.
Calli or est im ates 367-7101 .

Uttle 01 no down pa;mot

Real Eetate - Oener1l

YOUR PRIVATE FARM - 43 a c res, attractive
wooded country selling for this b ig beautiful 4 BR
Colonial home, only ~ years old . N ice view.
NDS28

* * * BEAUTJFUL WOODED LOTS• * *

.JII

Vulnerable: Eut·West
Dealer: Soutb

'

LARGE COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Has 4,000
Sq. Ft., ex ce l le~t tor grocery , hardware or any
small bLJ si ness. add~tional space for . storage
overhea d. living quar ter s in b ack has 2 bedrooms
ba th, k i tchen d ining and living room . Call for mor~
de ta il s .
12255

+Q 81

... - With Genuine GM
PariSI _

JON ES BOYS WATER
SER VI CE . Ca ll 367 7471 or
367·0591 .

OFFICE 446-7013

JUST LISTED- 9% LOAN ASSUMPTION - This
quality built brick home is loc ated in Rio Grande
Has a woodburning fireplac e du cted to all rooms:
Comfort able fami l y living c an be yours in th is 3
bdrm . home with full base ment &amp; large rec . room .
N 1645
NO LAYOFFS HERE - Fam ily run gr ocery &amp;
gasoli ne -busi ness. Property has a st ocked ·grocery
store and 3 bedroom mo,bi le home on 2.89 acres. Ad ded bonus for the bus1ness person wi th a green
thum b is a~ 24x 40 greenhouse .
110040

• Q 1013

.AQII
Uti

Prices
Ever
On

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

unlllllll death a an ....... u
putiO.
,

8S

TMIS HOME CAN BE . ;
YOURS
., ON YOOR LOT ,

.

EAST

.Ill

Lowest

New 14' Wide
MOBILE
HOMES

f:·

French City
Painting ~
resident ial &amp; commercial. j''
interior, exterior, paper
hanging ,
&amp;
textured .
ceilings. Call 367-7784
367-7160 .
&lt;' .

WEST

• KJ 10
9J11

SHMr.

Arllold ltaudor. Mal)' Jaoe
ltaudar Ia DOW Nan Jaae
Fanll ud Ia .... ollhe top
womea playen of all limO.
Jadt wu 011!7 I&amp; wben he
woa tbat ·111Uooal, ud he
....u.uod to plar with puplla

NORTH

NOTICE

3$ Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
· Call446·3896
446·3080
tfc

Business Services

Bridg• among the veterans

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING INC.
Backhoe •nd dozer work
by the job or by the
hour. Also licensed septic tanks installeCL
Dump truck .
Free
estimates . Call 311·8623
or 446·t4S9.
tfc

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

CHECK US OUT Guaran·
teed automative repil ir, 35
years experience . Garage
behind Arcade on Court St.
in old G &amp; J alley . LOW
rates. Caii446·91S9.

HOUSE
REDUCED
BY OWNER

BRIDGE

Offered

-------------~
· (

·- - - - - - ,

77

,

Marcum
Roofing .&amp;··
Spouting. 30 years ex·
perience, speci alizing in
bu ilt uproot. Call'388·9857 .

'

NEW LARGE
7t;lOOM
BRICk HOUSE

i

1182.

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

1972 Ford Mustang Mach I,
351 Cle\leland engine, auto.
trans.. air shocks, ~ .
Cai i 388·93,S4.

~~r~?ice~

Home .
Improvements

II

1978 FORD 4· WD . 'h ton,
$3,200.00 Ne eds minor
repairs, 304·675·3534 or 675·

WOOD REALTY, INC.
0

1975 DOdge Ra mcharge r.
Automati c, . Full t i me.
Mileage 50,632. Good con·
d ltion. $1600. 992· 2382 . Call
after 5 : p .m .

The Sunda

Va .

§eFiliEtS

Vans &amp; 4 W. D.

All used Dikes redu ced at
1975 Chevrolet Impala. 2 Belz Honda, check w ith us
door. Call !&gt;efore lp.m . befor6 yov pay to m uch.
Mon. lhru F ri. any time Call446·2240.
weekends. 9'12-7675.
Harley parts &amp; accessories
For Sale. 1972 Monte Carlo, now at Custom Cycles ,
Rl . 7 North ,
a .c ., p.s ., p .b . Excellent LTD .
Gallipolis. Open evenings.
condition . 667·3333.
5·8PM . Ph. 446·7346.
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virg i ni~ . Over 1977 XL Honda 350 , good
20 less expensive cars in condition, S450 . Call 614 ·
388·9809 .
stock.

~--* · -

61

LI G HT dresser a nd book·
case bed , $60.00, 304-675·
2844 .

Wt;Ai AN HONI!fl
EL.!VAiOI'I: MAN
P'I'I:01!5AI!!JL."r' 1'6.

I ()

Auto for

to do-GAIN-IN THE END
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming. ~----------r-----------1 1976 PINTO, 30H15·5995 or
AKC
Gordon
setters,
675·2247 .
English Cocker Spaniels . 6_1_ _Farm.Equipmen-t 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Call388·9790.
JIVIDEN'S
FARM MIXED hay, Ja ck Roush, 1977 Monte Carlo, low
mileage, n ice . Contact
304-882·2079 .
EQUIPMENT
Good clean horses for sale
Mike at 28th St. Amoco.
446
·1675
and horse trailer . Call 388675·9768.
Special Sale o n NEW
8623 .
LONG TRACTOR!
1965 Rambler, Amer ican,'
Model
HP
Price
AKC Registered Beagles . 2~
24
$4924.00 ' 71
304·675·5120.
Auto
for
Sale
See Benny Wilson. Rac ine . 31(}-28 5594.00
949·2543.
3l(}--4x4-28 7072.00
78 Ford Fiesta 45,000M, WILL lrpde 12 Maverick
3~
35 6555.00
exc. cond., $2,800, 536 302 automatic for small
41.97353.00
Jackson Pike, Apt. 85B .
Re gistered
Brittany 460truck, automatic . Phone
9619 .00
Spaniel Puppies. Females . 460-4x4- 41 .9304'· 4~· 1042 .
48.57778.00
8 weeks old. Ha\le shots and 51(}-1981 Dodge 024 PS, PB, AM·
9886.00
wormed. $60 .00 each 992· 51(}--4X4- 48 .5FM cassette, white &amp; red, 76 Pinto SW $900.00 or trade
51(}-48 .58450.00
7563 .
sharp, $.1,900 . Ph. 256· 6862· for pickLJp of equa l value,
61(}-64
9314.00
or256·1142.
304-675·7455.
61(}--4x4- 64 - 11.304.00
DOG-1 year old, registered
Plus Freight
Eng lis h Bulldog w i th
For sale 1978 Chrysler cor·· 7;:;2:=::::0;T;;:r:=u=:c:;:k:;:
's=;f;::o:=
r :;;
S:=
a ;=
le==
papers, pri ce negot iable, Sale Date.March 13, 1982
doba automatic, AT, F'S,
ca 11614·992·2807 .
CALL NOW! PB, air, cruise, leather in- 1977 Ford F · lOO with 1976
terior. low mileage. Must 811. coachman camper or
-·- - ·- *•• - · - - 57 -----~ MusTci l---~
trade for 79, 80, or 81 mini
sell
. Call245·5841.
Gravely Tractors, 'pur·
motor home. 614·256·6244.
Instruments
cha se a new Gravely in
1963
Ford
low
mileage,
Mi cromoog Synthesizer 77 March and get a special
model , 32 ·note key board , early Spring discount, in Sl,OOO, collector item. Call 67 Chevrolet PU 283. Call
446·9219 after 4.
excellent condition . Ca ll addition to a FREE rotary 446·1735.
plow or- tiller . Outdoor
Nick at 446·0921.
------~· -· Equipment Sa les, Jet. Rt . 7 1965 Mustang a utoma tic, 1980 El Camino super
&amp; 35, Gallipol is . Ph . 446· pony interior, '289, new sport. Black with factory
K imball electnc organ En3670. Open weekdays 9 to 5, front shocks &amp; air shocks, mags. Excellent condition .
t e rta i ner
3.
double Saturdays 9 to 1.
ssooo. 742·2784 .
$1,600 . Call 446·4408.
ke yboard . Call446·7230.

Oak lirewood . Call6l5·2757 .
Fuel Heater, all electri c lit
with blower $300. Warm
morning coal stOIJe, like
new $250 . Topper for sma ll
tru ck $75 . pressure canner
$20 Phone 304-576·2069 .

I I IJ

71

Mar. 7,

1980 Monza, V·6, 4 sp!M!d,
sun-root , AM· FM 8 track.
s.eclO. 614·949· 2045 .

2 AKC Reg. Coll ies S75 ea .,
1 fe male Cocker Spaniel
spaded &amp; housebroken S50.
Call446·6310.

Used t •res. Hanshaws Tire s
on Lucas Lane. Ca II 675·
7360 .

Re11 E1tete - Gener1l

0

QiJ ~ ~~·

Pets for Slit

r efri ge rator s,

Ska g g s
Ap ·
pli al{ces, Upper River Rd ..
1
beside Stone .Crest Motel,
446·7398.

•

Bu ilding mater ials block,
br ic k., sew er pipes, w indows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winter s, Rio Grande. 0 .
Caii24S·512l.

~fl!}N}fj)~ ' fililliAT

-----~--

Whi r lpoo l 2 speed washer, 3
tem p . W hirl pool dryer
looks nearly new, gua r anteed . Call 256·1207.

Household Goods

. Building
- - -----Supplies

w, va .

CALL FOR INFORMATION
ON RENTALS
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Noncy Ja..-n- As-Jolt
PH.II43·2075

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- - . .. d.-101
........., ..d plltr wall
..f.oo&lt;roloworll
-'lumblntond
olo&lt;lricolwoll
~roo Ellllllllaj

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-JQ.Ifc

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION
•Roofing &amp; Gutter

•VInyiSidlnA
•Carports/ Patio
Coven
•Concrete work
•Room Additions
Insurance Work
Wind, water, or Fire

CALL: 992-6323
2·19·1 mo pd,

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulatlon

e Storm Door s
• Storm Windows
• Replacement

Windows
• New Roofing

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
1·15·1 mo.

MARCH
PERM ·SAL£
Mon., March .1
thru
Wed., March 31
Reg. SlO
Now 111.50
Reg. S25
Now Sll.SO
Rog. no
Now Sl7 .50
ns Wave Lenlh
For Longer Hair
Now 129.50

Kar'sBeiUtr Salon
169 N. 2nd
Middleport

Call992-2125
3-3· 1 mo.

ATOZ

HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS

20 Years Experience
Plumbing, carpentry,
Roofing,
Electrical,
Cisterns, Cement, Stone ·
Wolls, Chimney Repair.
All Home Repain
Trailer Roofsand
Underpinning
PH. 99l· l872
3-4- 1 mo.

8·20·1fc

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sizes 1tart from JOx24"

Utility Buildings
Sizes lrom 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24&gt;36 .
1n1u1oted Dog'Houou

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Bo• 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-113·2591
·
6· 15·tf c

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
eSiding
• Remod eling
• Free estimate s
elO Yrs . experienc e

TOM HOSKINS
Ph .949 ·2160 or 949· 2412
7 s lfc

MAIN STREET

GARAGE
(Formerly BareMetol)
271 W, Main, Pomeroy

Rick &amp; Bill Cogar
Owners
BRAKES·TUNE·UPS
OVEIIHAULS·
DIESEL·EXHAUSif
Open Mon.·Sif. f.S
3-5·1
mo.
'
.

•Mobile
Sileo
•Water" Ga s Lines
•Sprint Developm·ents
··:small Jobs A
SPtclllty' :

JIM LUCAS
PH, 742·2753
3Sifn

�•

s1ness
Z PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITES ......... ..
3 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITES ..... ..
8 PIECE FAMILY ROOM SUITES........ .

PRICII ARE THI
LOWEST THAT SEEING
IS BELIEVING

'limts· tentbttJ

sunday Mar. 7, 1982

Tri-county realtors meet ·recently;
discuss anti-trust law compliance

DON'T IUY UNTIL
YOU CHICK PIRIT
AT IUTLANP PUINITUII
The Tlmfl ·
To Buy !

IINCHCR~PT',

WITH fMI IIUIICMAII OP ANY 2 w I iiiiCI LIVING
IIOOM IUITI YOU WILL IICIIVI A DIIICOUNT II, TO

IUSHLINI

·-011-0PP.
S,.ICIAL IONUS IOptlonolj
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A LIVING 1100M SUITE YOU
CAN RECEIVE ASET Df END TABLES
AT

GALUPOUS - Twenty-four Gallipolis, provided the equipment
members of the Southeastern Ohio used to show the fibn and gave a
Board of Realtors ~re in at- short talk to the members on the use
tendance at the Feb. 23 meeting l!eld of sucl! equipment in a realty finn.
•t the Holid!ly Inn In Gallipolis.
The meeting was conducted by
The program .lor the evening was President Winnie Blair of Century 2'1
presented by Audrey canaday of - Winnie Blair Realty of Jackson.
C&amp;naday Realty In Gallipolis, who
Two members of the group, Conhad obtained a TV tape from the nie Walker of Century 21 - Winnie
National . ASsociation of Realtors Blair Realty and Betty Hairston of
graphically presenting the problems Wiseman Realty, were unable to atfacing realtors in complying with tend as they were in Colwnbus atanti-trust laws.
lending the annual meeting with the
The !ibn portrayed the need for legislature.
care in even the most casual conOpes !o; the current year were acversations regarding commissions cepted at this meeting. ' The next
on sales so as to avoid aU poaslbility meeting will be March 23 in
of the charge of price-fixing.
Gallipolis with Wood Realty in
This !ibn was purchaaell by the charge. All dues must be paid by
group and placed In the board's · that tline.
, library for use by all mempers. Ike
James Cochran of Wiseman
Wiseman of Wiseman Realty, Realty presented a list of continuing

SALEon~

Y2PRICE
Broyhill
'

~

~ ···

v~
. . . ..
',

REDECORATED- A.Jeaded gu wlnllow hangIng, pe,......albpd with the name Mathews, Is one of
the hlgbllghta of the recent redecoration of Dr. Craig

INSTANT REBATE ON THE SPOT
SAV.E'50 to '100 ON ANY DISHWASH£.

PORTABLE OR UNDER THE COUNTER

.Broyhll

MA YTAG WASHER

~f~

BUY ANT BEDIIOOM SUITE
STARTING AT '6".95 AND GIT THE

STARTING AI
95

$699

l~i-ge Tub Model Sl5 Instant Reb... .
makes this model Within ss .oo ot
small tub models. Good for Limited
Time.

NIGHTSTAND FREII ALSO AS A SPICIA~ IONUS RICIIVI A
SEALY FULL siz1 BCX SPRING AND

3 LEFT OVER MODELS
GOLD ONL.Y .
'489.95.

Gib'
son
·a.est Freezer ..

2BROYHILL

DINING ROOM
SUITES ·
TABLE, 6 CHAIRS, CHINA CABINET

.

., _.,

· Less 100. .

15 CU. 'FT.

$39995

BRAND NAMfS SUCH AS VIRGINIA

HOUSI,

wreB.

BROYHILL

.r.

aASSITT

'89995

20 CU. FT.

COMPLETE

$44995

Featured in our best selling V~ood
Dinettes. In your choice of warm Salem Maple Finish or rich Colonial Pine Finish.

EARLY AMERICAN CHARM-

$49995 .
7-PC. SETS

$279

SUG. RETAIL

476

1

17 CU. FT.

$59995

•

7-PC. SETS

$399

$49995

1684

-AUTHENTIC

SAVE

COLONIAL STYLING WITH
MORE QUALITY THAN YOU WOULD EXPECT
AT THIS LOW PRICE. LARGE 42" ROUND
TABLE EXTENDS TO 66" WITH 00 12"
LEAVES. FORMICA TABLE TOP RESISTS
SPILLS AND SCRATCHES. ALL SIZE CHAIRS
. CONSTRUCTED OF SOLID HARDMJOD WITH
STURDY HIGH BACKS AND SADDLE SEATS
FOR EXTRA STYLE AND COMFORT.

SAVE ·

Come see our building loaded with
slightly damaged furniture, slow
movers and odds and ends: Coffee
tables, living room suiteS, bedroom
suites in popular styles and name
brands.
SAVE

BERKLINE RECLINERS
.

LARGEST . DISCOUNTS
GOING ON RIGHT
NOW • .YOUR COMFORT
IS BERKLINE'S BIGGEST
CONCERN.

,.

SEALY MAnRESSES
TWIN; FULL, QUEEN AND KING
SIZE.

BUY .l
.GET 1

SAVE '40 to '100 Per Pc.

FREEl

FOAM.

SPECIAL PURCHASE ON FULL
SIZE ONLY INTERSPRING OR

..

COLUMBUS - Daniel E. Evans,
chalmlan of ·the hollrd and chief
executive officer of Bob Evans Farms Inc., reports consolidated net
sales of $130,988,000 for the nine
months ended Jan. 29.
This Is a 19 percent increase over
net sales of $110,000,000 during the
same period last year for the Columbus based sausage and restaurant
companY.
Net Income for the nine months
reached $10,866,000. or $1.27 · per
share, compared with $9,098,000 or
$1.08 per share a year ago. On Jan.
14, Bob Evans Farms board of directo~ declared a J(kents-per-share
dividend_ ]!llyable March .. 1...to ali
S!l'iirefioiders of record Feb. 12.
Evans attributes the 19 percent increase in net sales to additional Bob
Evans Farms Restaurants in

operation and Increases In sausage
wholesale prices. According to
Evans, the cQmpany' s net Income
rose as a result of niore restaurants
in operation a"d coniinued improvement in sausage margins
because of highe1· wholesale prices
and lower raw material costs.
Four new Bob Evans Farms
restaurants opened during the third
quarter. Located In Roseville
(Detroit), Mich.; Niles (Youngstown ), Ohio; Irwin (Pittsburgh),
Pa.; and Clarksville, Ind.,
thesepenlngs bring tQ n the total
number of company-owned
restaurants in operation at the end
of the nine-month period, compared
with 61 a yea·r ago.
Two additional restaurants are
scheduled to open before the fiscal
year-end in April. They are in West

Mifflin (Pittsburgh), Pa., and Barboursville (Huntington), W. v._ A
total of 13 Bob Evan&amp; restaurants
will have ~ned during tlie 1911-&amp;
fiscal year.
Projected for the upcoming fiscal
year are plans to expand the company's sausage sales territory furthe•· south into Atlanta, Ga., Knoxville and Chattanooga, Tenn. Expansion within the restaurant
division includes opening 13 additional Bob Evans Farms
Restaurants.
Bob Evans Farms Sausage Is sold
in all or part of 15 states and the
District of Columbia, with 78 Bob
Evans Farms Restaurants
operating in the seven-state area of
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan,
Pennsylvania, West Virginia and
Kentucky.

COLUMBUS - Opening day of the
Bob Evans Farms Restaurant in
Barboursville, W. Va., just outside
of Huntington, Is set for 6 a.m. Monday, March 8, according to Daniel E.
Evans, chainnan of the board and
chief executive officer of Bob Evans
Farms Inc.
Located at the Huntington Mall on
1-64, the new Bob Evans Farms
Restaurant is the second in the Huntington area and the company's 79th
restaurant to go Into operation.
The 149-seat, family style
resiaurant will employ ap-

proximately 70 area residents.
Hours are 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday and 6 a.m. to
11:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. A
bright red and white exterior color
scheme wiD be carried over inside
where gingham and antiques add to
the overall country kitchen atmosphere.
·
Managing the new Bob Evans Farms Restaurant is Jim Noe. Noe,'26,
started with the company in 1972 as
a grill cook, moving into
management in J9n. He most recently rnamaged the Bob EvanS Farm

Restaurant at Third Avenue and Sixth Street in Huntington.
Bob Evans Farms Inc. began ita
sausage and re~taurant business
more than 35 years ago with a 12stool, 24-hour restaurant In
southeastern Ohio owned by Bob
Evans. Today the CQmpany operates
more than 75 restaurans throughout
the seven-state area of w~st
Virginia, Indiana, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and
Illinois. Bob Evans Farm Sausage is
sold in all or part of 15 states and the
District of.Columbia.
'

RGC offers environmental class
SAVE

REG.'460 SET

· ~PRICE

NOW

$230

The 698 employees of these two
banks will bring Bane One's personnel total to 4,641.
"We have a simple 8aylng which
explains OUI' success in attracting
banks," explained John F. Havens;
Bank One Chairman. "We do the
paperwork so the banks can do the
peoplework. Regulatory and competitive pressures are requiring
highly technological l'elponsea and
we have developed a national
reputation in pr·oviding them. We let
th.e banks concentrate on better serving their customers and communities while we provide the tools .
to deliver greater convenience."
Bane One is one of only · five
banking Institutions among the 100
lar·gest in the U.S. to have lncrased
both eamings per share and dividends every year from 1971 through

RIO GRANDE- The Professional
Education department at Rio Grande College will be offering a class entitled "Environmental Education"
starting in the spring quarter.
According to H. Paul Lloyd, chairman of the Professional Education
department,' the course will be offered at 6 p.m. each Thursday
during the spring quarter In Anniversary Hall on the Rio Grande
campus. Registration for spring
quarter Is March 8.
Lloyd said that the course is a consideration of the environment in its
totality - natural . and ·built,
technological and social (economic,
political, cultural, historical, moran
and aesthetic). He said each claas is
designed to explore these influences
and to bave the student deVelop an
awarelleiS and sensitivity to this
total envlrorunent and .Ita allied
problems.

EIIYirOnmental Education ahOOid

ulllize diverse learrilng envlronmenlland approachel with rrtreas oo
practical actlvlties and lint hand
experiences, UO)'d saki.• Varloua
pi'OI1'IIDII will be presented and
~

and activities from each

1981.
Cur·rently pending shareholder
and r-egulatory app~oval ar·e six ad·
ditional affiliations. The First
National Bank of Sardinia, The
Chardon Savings Bank Co., . The
Citizens State Bank In Somer'Set the
.
'
Heritage Bank in Toronto,
The Twin
Valley Bank In West Alexandria,
and tho First National Bank In
Chesterhill will add ~20 million In
8118etS to Bane One.
In addition · to Akron and
Youngstown, Bane One has bank af·
flliales headquartered in Columbus,
Ashland, Athens, Cambridge,
Coshocton, Dover, Fairborn,
Fremont, Kenton , Macsfleld,
Marion, Middletown, Milford, MI.
Sterling, Painesville, Pomeroy, Por··
tsmouth, Ravenna, Sidn.ey,
Wapakoneta, and Wooster·.

.

Army ROTC offers
variou~ .scholarships
: RIO GRANDE - Anny ROTC at
Rio Gr~nde College and Community
.College has a variety of full-tuition
scholarships available to atudents,
according to MBJ!r C&amp;rlill C.
Carrales, Assistant Professor of
Military Science.
"Many students.in high school and
their parents know about our fouryear scholarships but they don't
know that we have other scholar·
NAMED CHAIRMAN- Woships available as well," Carrales
llam Canlrell, flldllly llbllneer
said. "So when they apply for a fourand llafety ofDcer for the Ga!Ua·
year scholarship but are not selected
Jackaon-Melg• Coinmanlty
to receive one they feel left out. They
Mental Health Center, baa been
shouldn't.
named chalmuln of &amp;he public
"There are a large number of
employees aedlotl o1. the AD·
highly
qualified and deserving
Ohio Safely Con!jreM let for
young men and women who lose out
AprD ZO.!! bi &lt;AIIumbue.
on the four-year scholarships
because the competition for them is
so intense," he explained. "Because
COLUMBUS - At its jllilt- of that, we offer three-year fuD
completed 48th annual convention in tuition scholarhlps, too, and those
Honolulu and Maul, Hawaii, R. Ken- young men and women, or any other
neth !(err, president of Kerr qualified student already oo campus
Distributink Co. in Athens, was elec- in their freshman year can apply f!r
them. All of our scholarships pay fuD
ted to the WBAO board of director~.
The Wholesale Beer Association or tuition, books, lab fees and other
Ohio, Inc. is a trade association education expenses plus up to $1,000 ·
based in Colwnbus representing 187 a year in living allowances for each
beer distributors throughout the year the scholarship is in effect."
According to Corrales, ti1ere are
state.
Kerr previously served as an of. several categories of three-year
fleer and director of the association scholarships available. The first is
from 1968 through 1970 and served as offered to men and women already
the association's president in 1971. enrolled in Army ROTC and is called
His election to the board of directors a )lost Institution scholarship. The
rnarks the first lime in the second category Is for students who
association's 48-year history that a are not taking part In ROTC, and
past president has been re-elected to these are referred to an nooenrolled
scholarships. Tile third category is
the board of directors.

Kerr elected

Opens 79th Bob Evans eatery

14 cu. n.

SUG. RETAIL

the wood which has a chair· r·ai!loOk
at the top.
An antique lamp table features an
inlaid checker board designed top
and for the youngster waiting for
that dr·eaded visit with the dentist
ther-e is a refinished school desk and
chair fr-om the 1000.. Youngsters can
find coloring l!nd reading materials
inside the desk. A maroon, \clvety
couch, made for solid comfort, roun·
ds out the new decor of the Mathews
office.
Mr·s. Ander·son works thr·ough the
Elberfeld Store arid the Fabric Shop
in her· redecorating as well ~s independently.
I

POMEROY - On March I, the affiliations of two Ohio banks with
Bane One Corp. will mark the
largest single asset increase In Ohio
history for a ba.nking organization.
Bane One will continue as Ohio's
fastest growing bank group as The
Firestone Bank becomes Bank One
of Akron, N.A.. and The Union
National Bank becomes Bank One of
Youngstown, N,A.
The two wiD add $7119 million In
assets to the multi-bank holding
company which, ill year's end, counted total assets of ~.6 bUlion. Bane
On~ has capital in .excess of $250
· million while The Firestone Bank
and Union National together have
capital in excess of $70 million.

Bob Evans pulls in $130,000 net

26 CU. FT.

.
'
JUST AFEW OF ntE VALUES WE HAVE ARE LISTED BELOW.

Mathewa' deatbttry ofDce In Middleport. Becky
Neaae Andenon, who did the Interior decorating, ill
seen In a aectlon of the newly decoraled omce wWl
Dr. Mathews.

MIDDLEPORT - Becky Nease yesteryear mood.
Anderson, who's just getting started
Windows have been done with a
in the interior decorating business in
Uny pin stripe cotton fabric made inMeigs County, has used a nostalgic to a country two-tier curtains,
look of the past to create a relaxed framed with ball fringe and per·
atmosphere in her recent sonallymadebyMrs. Anderson.
· redecoration of the office of Dr.
Stone crocks are used about the
Craig Mathews, DDS, in Middleport.
reception room to hold magazines
The look of the past is emphasized and plants anc braided rugs of
by Mrs. Anderson near the entrance ,. color·s to accent the wallpaper are
where she used an attractive oak hat
used along with braided pads on the
and coat mirror chair made by Harrow back Windsor arm chairs. One
vey Lemond of The WOOdshed in
wall of the area ·has been done in
Racine. A perso~U~lized leaded glass solid wood pla11ks and other walls
window hanging is also used near
featur·e wood used only a part of the
the entrance to enhance the
way up with wallpaper used ·above
.

MAYTAG
BIG LOAD DRYERS

educauon programs which will be
sponsored by the board this year. He
listed five six-hour sessions which
will be held at the Buckeye Hills ·
career Center. These sessions will
be open to all real estate salespeople, at a minimal cost.
The annual Green-UP America
program was discussed and the
following committee was named :
Roger Turner, Meigs County;
Russell WOOd, Gallia County;
Michael Gillwn, Jackson County.
Each county wiU conduct its own
project
The annual private property week
observance scheduled for April was
discussed and observances will be
coordinated In each county by the
following: Elsie Perry, Jackson ;
Helen Teaford, Meigs, and Ron
Ganady in Gallipolis.

Bane One purchases two banks;
capital totals over $330 million ·

Fledgling decorator completes
work on doctor's office look

MAYTAG
JETc;LEAN DISHWASHER

MAPLE DINING
ROOM SUITES

Section~ .

will be used and students. wiD portance to people seeking
professuonal growth in the acexamine the various approaches.
counting
area, according to Krishna
Several outdoor environmental ·
L.
Kool,
chairman of the departeducation curriculums wlll be
ment.
examined and each student wiD
receive a Project Leaining Tree , Ed Prince, CPA, assistant
Teacher's manual and detailed professor of accounting, will teach a
training in ita use. Project Learning course entitled CPA Review, MonTree is a multi-disciplinary set of ac- day and Wednesday from 11-9:50 p.m.
tivities designed to develop which will prepare 110n-GPA acawareness, knOWledge, and skills counting professionals to take CPA
related to the interrelationshiprr of examinations. A number of persons
humans and their environment. The completing this course have sucactivity was developed by the cessfully passed their CPA
American Forest Institute and In- examination in the past; Kool said.
Larry Pacl, CPA, wiD teach an involves
social
sciences,
troduction
course in taes, Monday
mathematics, and pl!yslcal scienand
Wednesday,
from &amp;-7:50 -p.m.
ces, and at the sa~ tline, make use
which
will
provide
a general backol the basic skills of information
ground
of
the
tax
system
and cover
acquisition, analysis, and
speellic
tax
changes.
Pacl
is an
evaluation.
a.uistant
piOOfessor
of
accounting
at
For further infonnation, contact
Rio
Gralide
College.
the Professional Education Office at
If you would lllr.e to register or get
Rio Grande at (614) 245-6353, ext.
more information about theBe cour331.
.
!es, caD Rio Grande College Ad•
The .Business .Administration missions Office at ~. ext. :108, '
department at Rio Grande Collese or the Department 01 Bllllneu AdNEW UGII'I'II!law beea ln........ 1111 I
"' nunp lillie._ Blldp 011
and Community College will off• rnilrlltrallon at 2411 nu, ext. 2111.
Reglltratlcln for the ljllinc quar1Vpper8Mr ..........IICiarallleriDwlllrnlllc
two claaaea in the evening during the
ter
is
Marcb
a.
lwvlltl Cl-d!lp''w Aa OlliD l)eparimeat .. TraMporIIPring quarter whlcll will be ol im-

for enrolled or nonenrolll!d students
at an ROTC exter~~&lt;ion center. This
opens scholarship possibilities to ·
students at Rio c;rande College and
Community College as well.
In addition, there are two-year Ar·
my ROTC scholarships available for
sophomores, Carrales said.
ROTC scholarships are awarded
strictly on merit, so Corrales said
grades are important. The student,
wh~ther In high school or college,
must be able to demonstrate leader·
ship potential through participation
in athletics and other school extra·
curricular activities such as clubs
and organizations. The applicant
must also be able to pass a physical
aptitude examination and be
medically qualified for military ser·
vice.
Army ROTC scholarship students
who succeasfully complete their
academic and ROTC requirements
are expected to accept a commission
as a second lieutenant In either the
Regular Anny or the Anny Reserve
and serve on active duty for a periOd
of four years.
.
"With the costs of a college
education going up every year we
find more and more students applying for Anny ROTC scholarships," Carrales concluded.
Anyone wishing more lnfonnallon
about Army ROTC scholarahlprr
should contact Carrales at the
Military Science Department, Rio
Grande College· and Community
College, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 or
call (614) 245-9565 or (614) 245-5353,
ext. 342.

l

"""tn111c .....

~

..

,

tlllloD

.cud7 lll&amp;wed the -

.

-

bad one ollbe lllsW

aooldeal...a.lu&lt;~ in.CernOido,mallifJdloetothe
lllcll of tnalc ooatnl.. . . . oato the brldp.
.

•

�•

.
Page-E·2- The Sunday Times· Sentinel,_
..
~gciculture and our communi~)'

Mar. 7,1982

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

Don't forget March 18 ·
training session
pesticide
•
.,

By BRYSON R. CARTER
· Exteuloo Ageot
. AgrlcaltureandCNRD
GALUPOUS - Last week I was
talklng with a local fanner who
viewed Pesticide Applicator
Training as more of a necessity than
a. requirement. This man farms
quite a few acres and he said last
year by the end of the day when he
sprayed his com field he and his
helpers often felt SOJ;IIewhat sick
from exposure to the chemicals,

Cotton industry picture gloomy, department' says
By DON KENDALL
Al'FannW~r

WASIUNGTON (AP) - ~Wter·
ring tD "the dismal per1onnance of
the economy," a new analysis by
the Agriculture Department paints
a gloomy picture for the cotton In·
dustry In the months ahead.
"Excessive supplies and low prt·
ces dominate the U.S. cotton out·
look," the department's Economic
Research Service said last week.
"A 28-year high In production,
coupled with disappointing U.S.
(textile) mill use, points to ex·
tremely large ending stocks (car·
ryover) this crop year."
The cotton Inventory carried
over when the current marketing
year ends on July 311s estimated at
6 million bales, which would be
more than ilouble the 2.7 million on
hand at the beginning of the year
last Aug. I.

'

"RellectlDg this pmspect, fann
prices this. winter are averaging
abOut a third below ayearearller,"
the report sata.
Based on surveys In early Febl)l·
ary, cotton farmers Indicated they
Intended to plant aboutl2.6 mUUon
acres of cotton for the 1982 harvest,
· down 12 percent from tast year.
"However, Intentions may be revised as economlc conditions and
weather change between now and
planting time," thenewreportsald,

crops.
Analysts said the plantings sur·
vey, probably dtd not renect
farmers' response to the control
programs, which requires a 15 per·
cent .reductlon In this year's cotton
acreage for a producer to be eilgl·
ble for benefits.
"Widespread partiCipation In the
program ls likely, because cotton
prices are well under the 1982
target price," the report said.
The 1982 program calls for a
target prlce of n cents a pound for
upland cotton. That means If
market prices fall below the target
the government makes "deficiency
payments" to make up the

mllllon In total payments.
The 1981 cotton crop was about
15.7 mllllon bales, up 41 )lei:Cellt
from 11.1 rnllllon In drought·
gripped 1911!. That was the bluest
crop sln~.j953 when Ianners harv·
ested 16.5 mUUon bales.
"Reflecting the dismal P!!l'formance of the economy and Increased cotton textne 1mporta, U.S.
mill use conllnues to drop and tor
the season ls projected at only 5.6
miJIIon bales," the report said. "In
December and January, use fell to
4.6 rntlllon and 5 rnllllon bales, respectively, on an 8llllual basis the lowest In almost ro years."

applicator, a person must pass the
Cor.e and appropriate subject matter
category examii)Btion. A private applicator is a fanner or anyone
producing agricultural pi-oducts. All
other pesticide applicators are commercial. Commercial applicators
are required by Ohio law to be certified and licensed. Private applicators must only be certified If
The department has announced
they use "restricted use" pesticides.
acreage
programs aimed at reduc·
It appears to l)le as I indicated at
lng
this
year's
plantings of.cotton,
the beginning of my article that
feed
grains
and rlc.e. Slgnup
wheat,
anyone using pesticides would
Cotton use llY textne mll1s was 5,9
In
the
programs
continues
through dltterence.
benefit from this trianing whether or
1 hear th)a kind of report much
mUUon
bales In 1®81 and 6.5 mil·
In
1981,
for
example,
the
cotton
AprU 16.
not they wish to become a certified
more often in recent years. With this
lion
In
1979-8l,
by comparison.
target
was
70.87
cents
a
pound.
The
Fanners must participate In
applicator. John R~re,_ ~nunty ex·
In mind I urge anyone using
One
bright
spot:
Exports are ex·
marlcet
price
averaged
63.2
cents,
those programs to qualify for price
tension agent Agriculture in M~igs
pesticide (weed, insect and disease
peeled
to
reach
7
rnlllklll
bales, up
meaning
a
deficiency
payment
of
supports, target price payments
County, and I will be doing the
chemicals) to attend our Ma1-ch 18,
·18
percent
trom
tast
season.
7.til cents a pound or around $&lt;18)
and other benefits on their 1982
teaching of the sessions.
Pesticide Applicator Training
If you do plan to attend our March
Session for new applicators at the
18 session and wish to take the
Columbus and Southern Electric
examinations, I strongly recomCompany building in Gallipolls.mend that you obtain stujly
We'll have an afternoon session
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The ad· Johnson, would streamline proceto reshape the ·present regulatory prtve NFA of Its financing base and
materials from our office prior to
running from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and an
ministration
and
commodity
tradeliminate Its purpose of absorbing
lor
handling
trader
reglstra·
dures
structure In radical ways."
that dale. The reason is this : we'll
evening session covering the same
ers
are
going
toe-to-toe
over
jlon,
approving
trading
exchange
While there· Is debate over a regulatory burdens.
cover the material but il involves
material and running from 7 p.m. till
for
con·
President
Reagan's
plans
Other Industry officials, while ac·
rules
and
dealing
with
customer
number .or the administration's .
quite a bit of information to be ab10 p,m Officials from the Ohio
tlnued
federal
regulation
of
com·
'
knowledgtng
the CFTC's rt!Ed to
complaints.
proPosals, the one drawing most of
sorbed in a three hour period, and I modlty futures, a key In setting
Departmefit of Agriculture will be
obtain
financing
In Urnes of budget
Johnson says It also would extend
the attention ts the so-called user
on hand to adlninister pesticide cer· feet most people would rather have a daUy market prlces for farmers ,
restraint,
say
the
"transaction tax"
existing enforcement "lntD lbolle
fee. With the Industry growing so
chance to look it over ahead of time.
Ufication tests to anyone desiring
"We're
just
getting
the
Initial
ar·
Is
Inequitable
because
It forces
shadowy crevices where violators
last, Johnson says the fee Is the only
Call me at 446-7007 if you have any
certification, The testing will be of.
Sen.
Richard
Lugar,
R· now find shelter." Senate tnvestlga·
guments,"
to
support
almost
by them·
traders
way the CFTC can keep pace. In·
questions about pesticide safety or
iered at the .close of both the af·
Ind.,
said
last
week
durtng
the
fifth
selves
a
regulatory
system
that betors have put a $axl mllilon a year
dustry says the tee Is Just an lncen·
applicator licensing and certemoon and evening sessions.
day
of
congressional
hearings
on
nefits
not
just
them
but
everyone.
on
commodity
·
trading
prlcetag
ttve for federal regulatory
tiflcatioo.
To become a certified pesticide
whether the Commodity Futures fraud.
"There Is no recognition of the
expansion,
Trading Commission should con·
The Industry, .Jed by o!!lctals of
The CFTC proposes to charge l2 benefits of regulation which accrue
tlnue functioning beyond Sep- the major trading exchanges and
cents on each commodity futures to everyone In the marketing chAin,
tember - and under what supported by major llgT!culture ortransaction to traders who are Including consumers," says Bruce
conditions.
ganizations, acknowledges the
members of self-regulatory organ!· »awley of the Arrierlcan Farm Bu·
Both the administration and the need to streamline regulatory . zattons like the National Futures reau Federation, an ardent adrnln·
lndustr.y see a need for continua lion procedures and crack down on · AsSociation and 24 cents a transac· !stratton supporter on other Issues.
of
the CFTC, created under a 1974 fraudulent operators. But they con·
lion to nonmembers,
By BETI'IE CLARK
adult say to a child "I'll give you a
law
to
regulate
the
rapiOiy
expand·
tend
that
In
many
cases
th'l
CFTC
Johnson says the fee, bringing In , Offlcfl\ls .also clatm tbe transac·
Extension Agent
raw carrot if you will be good?"
lng
commodity
futures
Industry.
plan
would
·make
the
commission
$15
mUUon a year or more, Is the tlpn fee will reduce market Uquld·
Home Economics
The1'e may also be p1·oblems when
But
theY're
at
odds
over
the
powers
executive
officer
of
each
"the-chief
only
way the CITC"can secure the tty, dampen trading activity and
GaUla County
parents equate food with love. For
the commission should have.
exchange,
not
merely
a
member
of
funds
necessary to '!1alntaln ts reg· minimize the abllity of futures
GALUPOLIS - A pizza with all exaniple, some child1·en are taught
The_
administration
proposal,
ac·
the
team."
ulatory
role pending development market to Indicate the range of
the trimmings for a straight-A to eat all that mothe1· provides. A
cording
to
CFTC
Chairman
Phllip
"The
commission
has
made
of
the
tildustry's self-regulatory daUy spot market prices.
report card, no dessert for leaving mother may say, "If you love Mom·
·
great
progress
In
estt;!IIIShlng
a
He said the two-tier fee,
agencies.
Robert WUmouth, president of
peas on the dinner plate - these are my, you'll eat yoUI· dinne1·." So the
regulatory
system
that
recognizes
lower
for
members of sell· the Chicago Board ot Trade, says a
just a couple of ways parents use child eats for approval - and learns
Crownvetch
the practical needs of the Industry
regulatDry agencies, recognizes the transactio!! tax would hit hardest
food to reward and punish children.
to over-eat.
without
compromising
the
baste
contribution the Industry's own reg· on professional traders, who at·
It's common for people, overplants are
But. parents can help child•·en
goal of protecting the futures
ulatory efforts can and will make. tempt to make small profits on
weight or not, to reward theii)S~ves establish mm·e healthy eating habits
markets and the public Interest," · "Our industry cannot rationally large numbers of transactions.
available
with food. We rationalize our ~hoices and more healthy attitudes toward
be expected to pay twice for the Since It Is precisely those traders
GALUPOLIS - The Gallia Soil says Bennett Corn, president of the
of food, For example, you may say food. For one things, try not to offc•·
same regulatory process," coun~ that make the market, he 5\lys, a
to yourself, "I worked hard today, l food as a •·eward Ol' consolation. A and Water Conservation District Coffee, Sugar and Cocoa Exchange
ters Leo Melan\ed, president of the transaction lee would eat"'dlrectly ·
now has crownvetch ground cover In New York.
deserve a piece of pie." We also little ooe may sec denial of food as a
But Com adds, "We urge COn·
fiedgttng National Future Assocla· Into their profits and serve as a dfs.
plants available In ·its annual tree'
teach children to indulge themselves denial of Jove,
gress to be wary of other proposals
lion. The transaction fee would de- Incentive for them to participate,
seedlings sales program.
with food by our example and by
Belter rewards fm· a job well done
Ground covers are low growing
treating them with snacks and or app1·opriate behavior may lie a
plants, (especially good for rock
desserts for good behavior or a job special activity with that child. In
gardens), used in areas where grass
well done.
our society, whe1·e adults are
will not grow or where it is difficult
Psychologists say we eat the way pressured for time, reading a story
to mow, Ground covers tie down the
we do because of learned habits and or playing a game together is a
WASIUNGTON (AP)- The Na· buy surplus butter, cheese and non· their share or the program.
soil and give good erosion control Ilona! Milk Producers federation's fat dry mUk tD prop up the price of
attitudes. And we know for sure that reward that's beyond a price tag.
Ms. Dondero said the board also
while adding beauty to the area. board of directors bas approved a milk paid farmers, There Is no limit
eating habits begin early in child·
To prevent over-eating, se1ve
approved a national dairy product
hood.
child-size portions; or p•·ovlate a Ground covers also make good cover plan to have dairy Ianners pay lor on how much the government must promotion program, to be financed
for wildlife.
·· Youngsters may continue to use choice of nuhitious foods and allow
part ot the cost of the government's buy.
by producers. It would be estabFor. more information on tree mUk price support program.
food as personal rewards and com· children to help themselves. And try
The federation's plan would limit lished under separate legislation to
forts in their adult years. Un- not to ove•··•·eact if a child isn't seedlings or ground cover sales, conThe board decided Thesday to federal buying to the equivalent of 5
be Introduced In Congress.
fortunately, high-&lt;:alorie desserts hun~ry and doesn't ..;ant anything to
tact The Gallia Soil and Water Con- seek congressional approval of a bllilon poWids of mUk annuaUy,
According tD the CUJTellt lss1ie of
and snacks a1·e foods often eaten in eat today - he'll make up fo1· it servation office, phone~.
"Dairy Stablllzatlon·World Price with dairy farmers · themselves the Dairy Industry Newsletter,
these situations. If youngsters think tOITIOI'l'OW!
Program" which would provide a paying for purchases above that which Is published by a former
of food as a reward for aclnleresl up in March
· Parent's positive altitudes when
two-tier prlce level of supports, said level.
Agriculture Department official,
complishment or as a comfort in int•·oducing new foods can influence
Producers would get a specified James Wellllter, Agriculture SecreWASHINGTON (AP) - Con· federation spokeswoman Donal·
disappointment or unhappiness, children to like all kinds. Also, gel·
support price for 90 percent of their tary John R. Block !eels the federa·
tlnued ·high commercial Interest leen Dondero.
thel) regular habits of over-eating
linK children involved in food
Currently, the dairy supPOrt pro- mUk, but the price for the re- .lion's support plan is "a step In the
rates have pushed the Interest rate
may be established.
prepa•·atimi can make vegetables, on federal commodity and storage gram requires the government tD mainder would be reduced by the right direction" but bas not taken a
At the same time children are
fruit, breads and other nutritious
amoWit of an assessment to pay for stand y,et.
loans up an additional seven·
learning to associate foods high in
foods exciting and appealing to
eighths of a percentage pOint In
sugar and fata with rewards. they
young taste buds.
March, the Agriculture Depart·
a1·e often conditioned to think more
The key is to teach 'child•·en to
ment says-:
nutritious foods - like vegetables
select and enjoy a wide va1·iety of
Department spokesman Everett
and plain fruit - arc not as
foods, and eat fOI' nourishment - not
Rank said last week the Interest
delicious. Have you ever heard an
as an expression of emotions.
rate In March will be 14,875,percent,
up from 14 percent in February,
The rate, refiectlng the interest
rate USDA Is charged for money by
the U.S. Treasury, Is appliCable to
all commodity prlce support loans
and farm stDrage loans Issued this
month, It will not affect loans
attachment
WASHINGTON (AP ) - I! products,
Issued prlor to Monday.
there's anything that puts governDuring our spring sale you get your choice of any one of three
ment bug sleuths In a tizzy It's the
gardening attachments with the purchase of a Gravely 2·wheel
khapra beetle, descrlbed as "one of
tractor. You can choose between our rotary plow. rotary cultivator
the world's worst pests" of stored
grains and cereal products "- and
or tool holder with tools. No matter which you choose, it will
some have been spotted In New
make your gardening a pleasure.
Jersey,
Versatile. Gravely tractors are priced and sized to handle all
The Agriculture Department
gardening jobs. But the tractor is just the beginning. The Gravely
says the beetle evidence was found
System of over 20 at:!'3chments lets you-mow. till. hoe.
In a warehouse of the Amerlcan
sweep. furrow. cultivate. plow. doze. haul. remove
Tennlnal Corp. In South Kearney,
N.J., In the New York port area.
snow . , . dqjust about any job imaginable.
· Ronald Johnson of the depart·
...,...~
. Hurry. Come by and see the Gravely 2·wheel
ment's Animal and Plant Health In·
~~2
tractors soon. The special free
specUon Service said last week that
offer ends April 30th.
larvae of the beetle were discovered durlng an on-going surveU·
~THE
lance progralll aimed at spotting
GRAVELY
' the beetles at ports of entry. ·
The warehouse, whlcb Is used to
SYSTEM
store spices and cotfee, wUI be fum·
!gated to eliminate any of the beetles, he said.
Homellte&lt;~&gt; 380
Although khapra beetles doe ·not
• Vib~atlon isolation subdues vibration between the
feed on those products, they are
engme and the handles for less fatigue
someUmes carried from their na·
•
Loop scavenged eng! ne has ram intake porting for
ttve habitats overseas In crevices
more horsepower with greater fuel economy
apd corners of burlap bagging used
• Aut~matlc oiling gives smoother cutting with less
The~
I*:Js a free gardering attadrnent.
tD ship dtfterent kinds of cargoes.
cha1n wear
.
Johnson said It was the first con·
conY."";"nt ch.alo
• Ch,ain tensioning SQtf!W., allo
·- -_.- .\~
, ~·
~
I
firmed khapra beetle Infestation In
adJustment
- - · -- ·
·
the United States since Inspectors
• Dual chamber Soltone'"'n'luffler keeps noise
found the Insect In an empty Porl
levels down
,
·
'
.J'
Authority warehouse In Newark,
• Displaceme,nt ;3.5 cu. ln. (57.4cc) with herni-head
N.J., last December. During late
~eslgn
.
1911! and through 1!111, Inspectors
PURCHASE YOUR GRAVELY IN MARCH AND GET A SPECIAL EARLY
found 21 separate beetle Infests·
. SPRING DISCOUNT, IN ADDITION TO YOUR ...I GARDENING
ttons In the United States,
ATTACHMENT
Open W•kdays
The khapra beetle, whlchlstound
9to5
In India and some other Asian coun·
·saturday
tries, Is blamed lor miJIIons of dol·
9to1
Iars of damage worldwide each ·
Jets. Rts. 7 &amp; 35
year to stDred grains and cereal

Officials at odds over powe~ commission should have

1

Ray Matura getting Florida degree .... leads for Celeste
By J . SAMUEL PEEPS
GAl .UPOUS - Ray Matura, who
Ji, es out beyond the Spring Valley
plaza. is getting his doctor ci
philosophy degree in Florida but has
returned- to Rio Grande College to
teach: Matura is the local leader fill'
Richard Celeste for governor of
Ohio, and if he can find any
Democrats he'll talk up Celeste in
the most eloquent fashion.

One of world's worst pests
found in New Jersey facility

360

We'll give you a free gardening

to prove it.

w

2-wheel b.a::tot

~

.....,_

RIDENOUR

SUPPLY

-

~

· ·Outdoor Equipment Sales
=,~0

•

From tbat untan came !helle
childml: Mlldnd Fllhnore, William
R., Dr. Eugene L. and Nancy Belle
Hereford (John T.). Same of the
~of above named attend our
present day reunions.

HERE'S A LETTER frOm Betty
Swanson, 196 Forest Lawn Blvd.,
Marion 43302:
1 thoroughly enjoy your column in
Tile Sunday Times-Sentinel each
~eek - and especially the Dec. Z1,
1981, issue.
·

IN FACI', a son of above William
R. was the oldellt per100 at our last
year's reunion. Orvie Philip said he
waaiO years old. caroline C. Safford
married Philip Blazer. He was a son
of Peter Blazer (a direct descendant
of the original Bluers - Jacob and
Dolly- who immigrated to America
from Bllden, Gennany, in 1717.)
Peter was born 1195 lind his won
Phlllp was born 1132 and Philip
married caroUne c. Safford in Ulfi6.

THE COL. ROBERT Safford you
wrote about is also connected
remotely with our Blazers, so I was
fascinated to team how he tied Into
the French Five Hundred, namely
the Cameron marriage. I knew from
Blazer records about his felling the
first tree on the present site of
Gallipolis.

FROM YOUR article I've tried to
trace Alanzo C. Safford. He attended.
every 131azer reunion while he ljved
- even the ftnt ane In 11'111, but I
never knew the relationship exactly.
1 am now thlntlng that caroline Saf·
ford Blazer wal Alanzo Safford'3
aunt. Scmetlme I must check this
out with hia descendanta.

· TIIROUGH IUS son, Robert Saf.
ford, Jr. comes some of the Blazer
Une. A daughter, Carollne C, Safford
(granddaughter of Col. Robert Safford) married Philip Blazer in 1tiS6.

BRYCE M. SEALEY, 425 Green
Terrace Otlve, Rt. 3; Gallipolis,
reUred a half-dozen years ago as
supervisor of~ Tlc T In Chicago constructtan, a Job he held for 10 years.

Bryce, seven years older than his
brother Chester Sealey, Ls custodian
of five and a half-year-old Pippin
Leroy, a bouncy white lamblike
AKC.registered toy poodle which
belongs to Maxine Roark. Maxine is
the sister of the late Ls,wrence
Dickey, Chesler Is In Lubbock,
Texas. There are 12 In the family ,
nine of wbom are still living - that
is, Chester, Bryce, and their
brothers and sisters -" but there are
only two of these siblings remaining
in Gallia County. Besides Bryce,
there's Mrs. Hartle Randolph, who
resides at Little Bullskin. Pippin will
turn six on July 23.
VERNA BRYAN EVANS, 585 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, bas
noticed a coincidence of death in her
family reflected in the number 22.
It's 22 years between her parents' .
deaths•and it's 22 years between the
.deatlli of ber sister and brother.
Thus : June Bryan Scott died in 1951
and 22 years later her brother died in
1973- he was Bobby Bryan. Verna'~
mother, Alma Brown Bryah, died In
1960, and Verna's father, Guy Vernon Bryan, died in 1982.
MIDDLEPORT is the horne of the
next guy to write about. k
distinguished looking gentleman

State joins Caldwell well wishers

GALUPOUS - The State of Ohio
has joined in the parade of celebrants of Elmer E. Caldwell's lllth birthday.

Garbage
becomes
useful

The fruits and vegetables you
bring home from the shopping cen·
ter can provide tun and knowledge
lot youngsten; - and adults - dur·
Jng the long, cold winter, What you
normally might toss In l!le garbage
pall can produce an attractive
house plant.
SOme of the things you can use
are pineapple tops, onions, carrots,
beets, sweet potatoes, garlic or
'seeds from a grapefruit, orange or
.lemon.
The pineapple top will gtve you
an almost Instant plant. Buy a pi·
neapple with a !resh, stiff, green top
because yelloW or willed tops are
more dltflcult wroot. Twist the top
out of the pineapple, clean off some
• , !1f )he 1~ pulp, then remove some
{'I
!he·smallleaves at the base of the
shoot. Take otf just enough to ex·
pose the lower portion of the stem
and some of the swollen spots that
·wUI develop Into roots.
Next you have two choices.
Either 'place the top In a glass of
water, keeping the plant base con·
slantly submerged. Or you may
plant It directly In a pot of well·
drained soU In a sunny Window,
keeping the soU moist. The plant
wUJ live for a long time, once rooted
and properly cared for,
Sweet potatoes grow last In a
planter hanging near a window.
Poke tootbptcks halfway up the potato side and suspend It half submerged; In a container of water. ·
Small "eyes" will tell you which
end is the toll. Soon attractlvegreep
'vines will aooear.
- Carrots wiD make a temporary,
fem·llite plant. Cut otf the top of a
carrot, stand ltln water, pebbles or
· soU only deep enough so that the top
• tsnotquttecovered. Youcandothe
· same with beets. Both need bright
·light. For a hanging plant, hollow
·out the thick end of a carrot. Make
· three holes lor strings, fill with wa·
., ter - and a rem should grow from
: the hottDm.
: Start onion bulllll' or garlic cloves
·· by sticking them In the top of a jar
·.of water or planting them In pols of
;•soU. The tops wUI grow rapidly and
·: you can trim them for use In salads.
·~ Citrus fruit seeds are abundantly
:· available. Put some In a pot of soU
::kept moist. In addition to lemon,
• grapefruit and orange, another pas: slblllty ts the kumqUat. The planta
: will grow for years and may be. come fairly large but they gener·
· ally won't !rult under normal home
::condltiohs.
: You can' get additional Ideas by
. looking over the bins In your local
· supermarket.

with a white mustache sat down
beside old Peeps and propped h)a
feet up on the Peepe' desk while
Peeps was talking to Vickie KenThe Republican Senate of Ohio
nedy on the telephone, It was Don passed congratulations to Democrat
Mullen, Meigs County commissioner
back 20 years ago or so. Don w a s . - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - back !Mlm Florida, said that he read
the Peeps' column every Sunday
even though he knew few people
mentioned in it ... but now here's one
he'll know. Don Mullen sold hiS Insurance agency to Downlng.Chllds
and then went to Florida. His No. 2
son - &lt;lluck - is in charge of the
agency. The No. 1 son, Sean, Is .In
third year of medical college; No. 3
son, Michael, is in capital u. Law
School; No. 4 son, Patrick, is a
cement finisher; and No. 5 son,
Brian, works for Hackett Roofing.
VICKIE KENNEDY, Quail Creek
out at ROdney, was our girl out front ·
at the Times-Sentinel. She has a
baby son who looks "just like his
dad.." The baby has his father's complete name, Carl Edward Kermedy,
but answers to his middle name,
while Pop answers to Ted, Uke the
Ted Kennedy from Massachusetts:
no kin. The baby has b~ hair, big ·
blue eyes, a dimple in the chin, atld
chubby cheeks. When he was born
Jan. 23 Edward was 22 inches long.

CAROLL SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.
G~lllpolls, _ Oh.

Phone 446·4190
Home44&amp;-4511
UAU ltoiM

. . l'a!nl
lle-COII-!11

ttOmfQ~ :~Bioom..,_. , J..

•

I

•

. Don't expect tomatoes, which ar·
· en't fully red when they reach
: market In winter and early spring,
· to ripen If they are kept refrlger·
: ated, Tomatoes that are llght pink
. but sUllflnnwllitumredandattaln
' better flavor If placed In a boWl and
• keptatroomtemperatureforaday
' or two. Then retrlgerate them.
, Good ripening coodltlon lor toma·
·toes ts a temperature of 95 to 75
, degreeS. Overheating them on a
: stOve or In direct IUJiltght wOl
· soften them too much. Al8o, high
: humtdtty stimulates micro·
;·organism growth; low bumtdlty ·;
. can ca'IIIM! dehydration and shrivel: lng. A plastic bag wltb air veDill Cllt
·.Into the lide will help COIItrol
: bUmldlty.
: Tomatoes pvwn In the wann
south tn fall and winter are barv·
ested wldle they are tmmature for
better slllppiJii and

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000, which
can be subtracted from your income before
your taxes are figured each year. If you
have a non-working spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of course; if you
and your spouse both work, you can each
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
money market interest rates for an
inflation-proof rate of return.
The chart below illustrates how quickly
your financial future can grow.
You can choose one of two ways
to eam your Interest at BANK ONE.
You can choose an
interest rate which
is set for 18 months.
Any_new funds
depos~ed will earn

INDIVIDUAL

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During March the
18-month rate is 15.75%.*) Or you can .
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in eft~ for March is 15.00%. *)
Act quickly to get
the best tax advantage.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
or the variable rate plan, you will be a.ssured
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
for your retirement. To maximize the taxdeferred interest you earn, you should make
your contributions as soon as posSible after
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
statements on the status of the Account and
your funds are
insured by an
AGE
AMOUNT
When You Open
You Wll Accumullte
agen.cy of the
AtAge85"
Your IRA
federal
$
83,506 government.
50
$ 298,667
40

RmREMENT

ACCOUNT

30

$ 966,926

20

$3,042,435

" Thts assL.Jmes that 'fa\j make a $2 .000 COntrtbuliOn at the begtnM'IQ ol each year at a t2°otnterest rat
and thai you 1ea11e funds 1n your IRA lhrough your 6511'1 year
There 15 a su bslan11al 1n1eres1 penalty for f;! arly w ithdrawal

Whcnnir you 811nk .

·olr:1ut.11 . . .,,our name
comes up lint.

Member FDIC

..
-

1MI111Aite1

•

·or

I

.I

Elmer CaldweU, 1058 First Ave.~
Galliolls, on Feb, 12. The document
Ls signed by Sen. Paul E. Gillmor,
president ol the Ohio Senate, an4
Sen. Oakley·c . Colltna, 17th district:
It bears the seal of the president of
theohloSenrte ..

•

Eating habits begin early

UNEQUALED
E
IN THE GROUND, ON THE GROUND~
ABfNE THE GROUND.

I

:PEEPS, ·a Gallipolis Diary:

Homemakers circle

Milk producers approve new plan .for farmers

The Sunday Times·Sentinet- Page E-3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipol is, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Mar: 7, 1912

Stop by any
BANK ONE office
for details.

BANK
ONE:M
BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEROY•RUTLANOeTUPPERS Pt.AINS

--

IIIIJ'Irelllli.
'

I"

�Page-E-8-The Sunday Times-sentinel

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

H~flich's Beat of the Bend

Home furniture essentials change era to era . . ::

'Think spring'

Orders for the next Meigs County
FOOd
C&lt;&gt;-op
must be placed
no late•·
than pickup
4 p.m. Thursday.

J;ly BARBARA MAYER
AP NeWIItealuree
Home furniture essentials
change from era to era.
Today's Informal way of llfe has
made what formerly were rarelyused or unknown articles of !urn!·
lure more Important than they once
were.
A case In point Is the coffee or
cocktall table. There was llttle need
tor one when meals were served tn
the dining room which figured 1il
almost all households.
The tea table may have played a
role
homes,lnbut18th-and
cocktalls 19th-century
and between-

chairs face one another.
·•
Several small bunchlng tables
work well In pjace of one larger one
In rooms where modular seating 1s
used or where space Is severely
llmlted.
These easlly moved pieces are
hlghly useful in front of a sleep sofa
and In small rooms where the slight
tables are In proper scale.
Oval and round coffee tables less popular than rectangular and
square shapes, accordfug to one
manufacturer - are a fortunate
choice In front of curved and
kidney-shaped sofas and with
curved modular seating.

The co-op provides some good
buys and unless the program is supported, you can also expect that like Iota of othe•· things - to go
away.
Orders can be mailed in care of
the Meigs Senio•· Citizens Center,
Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, or
placed in pe1·son on Thursday only at
the center.
Delive•-y date for the next orders
is Thursday, Marcli 18, and orders
can be picked up from 3::ro to 4:45
p.m.
- -Too few of you are talking back to
me. Some, but too few. We'd like
your input. Come down as hard as
you like or even Sa 'v something

meal snacks In the llvlng room did
not.
Today; no one can do without a
coffee table, as designer Richard
Neas noted recently. Wl)ere would
you put your drink, your ashtray,
coltee-table book and fresh nower
arrangement?- he asked tn lllOCk
amazement.
rn response to the need, there 1s a
greater variety of coUee tables today than used to he the case, and
guldellnes for making a good cholee hal[e been worked out. The correct proportions are more
Important than matching periods
or wood tone.
Rectangular coltee tables, for examp1e, are a ttrac11ve p1aced '-...,.

The proper height for a cotfee Ia·
ble dej)ends both on looks and what
seerils comforiable. There are no
detlnlte rutes. Formal traditional
sofas that tend to sit high usuallY
look well with a higher table, and
squashy sofas that sit low look well
with lower tables.
Most -contempoary cdtfee tables
are about 151nches high, while tradltlonal coltee tables are often
aboutl61nchesfromthefioor.However, Roger Rogers, merchandlsIn g v 1c e pres Ide n t for
Peters-Revtngton Furniture, a Ia·
ble producer, notes that table
height can vary up to about 18
h
·
. - es.
Acco
· rdlrlg to Rogers, consumers

•

By BOB HOEFUCH

Despite the cold weather, B111y Joe
Spencer of Pomeroy insists that
spring is a case of mind over matter.
Billy Joe advises
you to " think
spring" and he
carries a small
bouquet
of
miniature pansies
from his yard
resulting from his
positive thinking.
Personally, r took
BOB
off my coat, thought spring and instead of flowers, picked up a great
cold.
Thanks to Liz Culler for catching
me with lights left on my car during

one of the recent foggy days and turning them off for .me. Liz and I have
decided that one does not need two
I"Un down batteries.
Pomeroy Village will miss the services of Jane Walton, long-time
• clerk-treasurer, who has resigned
effective April I. Jane has been
dedicated. These days there's just
too much red tape and detail Involved in village """ta for anyone to
hang on forever. ~· Incidentally,
Bill
Young
reportscouncilman
that Cablentertainment which had recently
requested a rate hike has withdrawn
the request. Now there's a switch in
the mood of the times.

Mar. 7, 1982

topics for inclusion in a university
speakers list.
Those interested can contaCt the
university's office of public information, 'lEI Lindley Hall, Ohio
University , Athens, 4a701 , or by
telephone, 614-594-ro43. Tr·avel exl"' nses would generally be expected.

~ of extra storage or seiVing

space or both.
ThJa melfll8 dropleavesand pullout shelves are pep dar features as
are butler-tray taljles with sides
that fold down. Double-&lt;lecker tabJes with a second shelf for magazt.nes, and tables with drawers or
utt-off tops that open to reveal bar
storage also are avallable.
·
·
A trend ls to otter a greater varlety of sizes- often smaller sizes In
keeping with today's smaller spaces- but with expandab111ty, said

Politics
filling
•
atr
waves

One option consumers often don't'
consider but should, In his opinion,
Js. the tea table. There area yartety;

of tea tables on the market, pllrtlcularly In 18th-century reproduction
styles. Tea tables are higher than
coffee tables, ottep up to 24 lnclleS.
One attractive version has two pullout shelves, one at either end, said
Rogers.
•
It you haven't bee!' shopping
lately, you may wonder about cost. ..
"From $100 to $l,IXXl Is the range," ·
said Rogers. However, typical pri·
ces might !&gt;e In the range of troto •

How soon?

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
OHice Hours by Appointment Only

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

COLOR TVs .'
AND
MAJOR·
APPLIANCES

E. J , Hil), who was at one lime

with the U, S. Postal Service, reports
he received two letters Friday. One
was mailed from Barcelona, Spain,
and the other from Jacksonville,
.· Fla. Both were mailed the same day,
Feb. 28, and both a•·rived the same
day although one did travel a considerably greater distance.
Incidentally, the letter frpm Barcelona came from Hill's grandson,
Jack Hill, who is a third generation
Hill to serve in the U. S. Navy. The
three generations are E. J., Paul Edwal-d and Jack.

sail!-

Men of the Chester United
Methodist Church will lake to the
kitchen Saturday to stage an oysle•·
soup supper.
Don't cringe like that. I understand they're quite good In the
culinary field. · The men will head
their men}' with oyster stew but wili
also have chili, sloppy joes, hot dogs,
pie and beverages for those who
aren't too enthused about oyster
slew.
PI;OCeeds from the supper will go
towards the purchase of an outdoor
bulletin board.
The church is located across the
street f1·om the Chester Elementary
School and there is plenty of parking
space. Serving hours are from 5 to 8
p.m.
The Ohio Deparlment of Liquor
control has a new toll-free hotllne
for citizens to call for help in stopping illegal sales of alcoholic
beve•·ages to teenagers, Director
• Clifford Reich announces.
The 24-hour hotline nwnber is 1800-282-3477. All citizens with ln• • fonnaUon about sales to minors or
other .liquor law violations are urged
to call the nwnber.
Reich guarantees that aU .complaints wiU be investigated and that
all callers will remain anonymous.
1•• '

And something else I thought you
oughtto know.
Local organizations can contact
Ohio University for suggested
speakers for programs scheduled
during · spring. A number of
professors and administrators have
;. indicated a willingness to address
• arelj groups and have submitted

*

*

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"Y{e wanted to make sure the
people of Ohio knew that Bill Brown
was numtng and knew who B111
Brown was,'' he said. "I wanted to

:

was numtng."
Welsh said the campaign comml~ expects to have about $1.5
mlllkil to spend on the primary, the
bulk of that earmarked for
television.

. Bob Squire of the CorilrilunlcaCo. In Washington, D.C.,
· :; headstheBrownadverllslngeftort.
· • "Sq\lln1 has worked oncarilpalgns 1il
' :~ :vlriJnla, Florida, .Collorado and
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"We are trytna to marry the old
poUtlcl with .lhe new poUUcs," he
said, adding that the campaign will
mix televlslm advertising, mallinllll and candidate speeches.
''TV advertising Is exbemety expensive," Antbony said. "But when
you're up ap1nst other politicians
that use It, ycu've got to do lt."
TV ads aren't everything. Roy

*• t

GALUPOUS, OHIO

PHONE 446-8390 '

· · • • ' "Televlalon advertising camP"IIP'In&amp; baa reached the point that
t can't' IIUitatn 1t1e1t alOne Wl1eSs
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television can portray a candidate,
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For Rlnehari, much of the cam- .
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make poslttVely s~,~rethat there was
no doubt In anybody's mind that he

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vertislng, mostly 30-second
television spots.
WltiJkott a&lt;lded, "I think we'll
probably key on his administrative
experience and try to translate that
to the vaters."
Duane Welsh, campaign director
for WWiam Brown, said the Democrat's 'ad campaign - made up of
two &lt;WJ.second television spots and
one 00-second spot - was launched
Jan. 18 and ran for 11 days In northeastern Ohio and a week In other

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second TV spOts shorUy after he
annod his candidacy last November, accordfug w Tom With·
golt, campaign' coordinator. •
"It was just to let people know
that Seth Taft was ronnlng.for governor,'' · Wltligott said. "It was
· (run) statewide, except for the
Oeveland area," where the candl·
date's narne already Js known. He
.w as a Cuyahoga· Cbunty

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Republican Seth Taft of Cleveland spent about m,IXX) QD 30-

Pauline Atkins and her mother,
Ml1i. Ruby Halliday, offer a big
salute to residents who contribute
blood to the American Red Cross
BlOOd Program so that others might
· live.
1;. nwnber of residents gave for
Ml1i. Halliday at the recent bloodmobile visit. M1-s. Halliday has an
Illness that does require a considera!&gt;le amount of blood. So from
· Pauline and Mrs. Halliday 11lanksl
You can't beat Meigs Countians.
The graduating class of 1948 Of
Middleport High School remembered a classmate in a thoughtful
and worthwhile way, recently.
Members of the class living in the
area joined together and made a
donation to the heart fund in
mem01-y of the classmate, the late
Bessie Glaze Hill, and her daughter,
Denise, who both died quite recently
in Colwnbus.
The class has fond memories of
Bessie, a member of the class com-·
menta.

I

*

~~-

campalp commercials. Nearly
!'Very candidate for j!O\'ernor w111
use them; The only question Is:
Dernoci"at!C Attorney General
wnuam Brown, wbo began sticking
ptns In his 1!182 eleCtion battle map
1n 19'19, was among the first to air
TV ads. Hls political operatives say
It helps to get an early_start.
But Mark Anthony, press secretqry for Dana ~hari. says the
Republican's camplllgn won't
begin writing checks to television
stations "untll we see the whites of
their eyes" - In the days just betore the June 8 primary election.
. "Tbat's when It's ITI06t cost etfectl\&gt;e. Many people make up their
minds In the last 48 hours before
eiectton day," Anthony says.
The Brown and Rinehart campaign tactics are the OPJXlSite poles
ol advertising strategy, which Is
guided by a candidate's budget,
personality and how mucb recognt.
. 'tlon the public has of his name.
"Wilen's the magic date?" asks
Moss 'Murphy, campaign director
tor Delnocrat Jerry Springer,
wondering It It's ever too early to
start campaigning.
Murphy .said 00-and 00-second
Sprtneer commercials have been
run In Ohio's i!lgbt major television
markets. About halt Springer's
budget Is earmarked lor adverilslng, whlcb probably w111 cost
$750,00) to $1 mllllon, Murphy said.
"Our Immediate task was to lm·
prove out;(natne) recognition. Our
next task ... Is to try to move the
(opinion pplll numbers," Murphy

~

*

·-1;

nearlY every city, Ohioans already
are healtng the blare o1. political

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

·Mr. and Mrs. Jennings Buller
. were among the guests at a reception staged by the Southeast Ohio
Junior Miss, Inc., honoring the 1982
Meigs Junior Miss, Lynne Dee
Oliver. The Butlers are Lynne's
grandparents and are parents of
Mrs. Dorothy Oliver. They made the
trip here from Glenville especially
. to attend the event honoring Lynne.
' Nice people, the Butle•·s, who did en. joy their short stay.

SNEAK PREVIEW

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Carpets of

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
From aealiy every television set In

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IDGE PLAZA
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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1

PHONE 446-8390

*
''

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohi~Polnt Pleasant, W. 1/a .

Page-E·lG-The Sunday Times.· Sentinel

Mar. 7, 1982

Mar . 7,1982

Cincinnati riverfront has new life
OOVINGTON, Ky. (AP) -The
Cincinnati-area riverfront, long
grown stagnant since the btg bend
In the Ohio River was the launching
site for development of the western
ftontler, Is bustling with new life as
an entertainment center.
Much of the revival Is attributable to Ben Bernstein, a restless,
former Peace Corps volunteer .
whose mld-Ufe crisis led to a new
vocation as restaurateur and
owner of an already sizeable and
groWing fieet of excursion boats.
"! think you're going to see a renaissance on the liver. In this area
as well as other rtver cities," said
Bernstein, whose Mike Fliuc restaurant - a retired sternwheel towboat - Is permanently moored
across the Ohio from Cincinnati's
Rlverlront Stadium.
"! think It would have happened
without me, although people tend to
say, 'You started It,' or 'You're doIng It, now everybody's jumping on
the bandwagon'," he said.
"I really think the tlme had come
for a renaissance, especially
around Cincinnati, beCause the
river runs right through the middle
of the btg metropolitan area. It
hadn't been exploited and It has
such a rich heritage.
"In the next 20 years ... !'firmly
believe that northern Kentucky, In
partiCular, because It's all within
walking distance to downtown, has
the potential to be like Georgetown
. aod Alexandria are to Washington
:D.C., like the VIllage Is to New York
City."
Bernstein, 61, grew up In Cincinnati and recalls the lore he learned
about "the river era of Cincinnati,
when Cincinnati was the fifth larg: est city In the United States because
•of Its prominence on the river."
"! have sort of a unique perspective, tbe liver having been part of
my life sinCe early chUdhood," he
.ald.
.
"The five years I moved away
and came back allowed me to clear
a lot of the emotionality"concerned
with Jiving In the city ... then, find·

lng my vocation across the rtver In

northeJll Kentucky."
Bernstein had been Involved In a
famlly-owned manufacturing busl·
ness, but felt burned out In the early

1960s.
" It was a time when. I was very
unhappy with my life; what I was
doing was unproductive and I was
unsatisfied," he recalled.l:le balled
out, took a post as director of a
Peace Corps project In tbe South
Amelican Andes, living In Equador
for five years.
"El Greco (In nearby Newport)
Is the restaurant that my wife aod I
started wl\en we moved back to the
United States,'' Bernstein said.
It became the cornerstone of
Bernstein's new enterprises, and
Its advertising slogan says a lot
about him: "The Italian restaurant
with the SpaniSh name, hosted by a
Jewish couple with the Greek
partner, featuring American
steaks, French onion soup, Equadortan cevtche a nd ~wtss fondue."
Bernstein's success led to a n appointment to a Kentucky tourism
commission - and to his fleet of
fioallng restaurants and excursion
boats.
The Mike Fink had been converted to a restaurant about the
time Bernstein opened the El
Greco. By 1977, the Mike Fink was
near being sold and moved to New
Orleans. Bernstein became head of
a committee to preserve It In northern Kentucky - and ended up buyIng It
"The restaurant was doing modestly well, but Capt. (John) Beatly
was not a restaurant man- he was
a salvage man on the liver," Bernstein said.
"Being a restaurant man, the
more I looked at this tourist attraction I thought, 'This has got to be a
gold mine If somebody operates It
as a restaurant rather than a boat
first and a restaurant second.
"There really wasn't much here
prtor to tha t ... kind of a pleasure
craft, summertime thing, and people didn't think you coUld exist on

the river In the wintertime. But
that's not true... "
Excursion boats followed his operating the Mike Fink.
"! was struck by the countless
number of calls we receive Ina season (asking) 'Is your restaurant
really a boat?' Yes. 'We can get a
full dinner there?' Yes. 'Does the
boat go out?' No. And then sort of a
groan of disappointment," Bernstein said. "! thought to myself, there's got
to be a n enormous market nobody's
tapping. Why can't I, as a restaura nteur - and being on the liver as
a restaurateur and being a liver
enthusiast - get a boat that will
serve dinner? That was the start of
the whole-thing, and now we have
eight or 10 boats, and five or six
bsrges... "
His fieet Includes the Mike Fink,
Betty Blake, Good Ship Lollipop,
Becky 'Thatcher, Mark Twain,
Robby B, Shirley B. Terrt B. Betsy
B, Buckeye, El Greco and seven
barges. The first four craft serve
food a nd beverages to passengers
on excursions.
'
Two of his boats are on a 21-day,
1,200-mlle trip down the Ohio R!ver
and up the Tennessee River to
Knoxville, Tenn., where Bernstein
has lined up the excursion business
for the 1982 World's Fair. He pur-

Taypayers
pay more
this year
'

chased two more boats from a New
Orleans company to handle the
traffic.
"There was some pretly fancy
juggling," be said. "I couldn't get
the World's Fair contract until I ·
had the boats; I couldn't get the
boats until I had the World's Fair
contract; and I couldn't get either
until I had the financing. There
were some hairline squeakers
down to the last minute of options,
wpen everything looked like It was
going to fall through."
Bernstein wants to continue expanding his fioatllla . He also wants
to put together a river museum.
"We would like to do a museum
or boats deplcllng the pioneer days,
the early opening of the then-West
with fiatboats and keelboats and
rafts and all, and then augment it
with ethnic craft from all over the
world - an authentic Chinese junk,
a gondola from Italy ~ and have
these as a contemporary fioallng
museum, given the helitage or our

area."

Prashker named
NEW YORK (AP) - Betty
Prashker has been appointed vicepresident, editor-In-chief of the
Crown Publishing Group.

BEN BERNSTEIN ON THE RIVER - Ben Be111Bieln, a Northern
Kentucky reslaurantelll' and owner of a fleet of exeunion boats, stands 011
the shoreUne of the Ohio River framed by the sternwheel of hll floating
restaurant, Mike Flllk, and tlie front of one of his excursion .boats, Mark
Twain. Be111Bteln thlnk.8 there will be il renaissance along the river
because of Its rich heritage In this area, as well as other river clUes. (AP
Laserpboto).

MEET YOUR FRIENDS IN THE

LaSALLE
137 N. Second St.
Middleport, Oh .

LUNCH IN THE LOBBY
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TUES.- Meal Loaf
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FRl.- Frog Legs&amp; Fish
SAT .- Bar- B·Que Ribs

ALSO FEATURING PEEL &amp; EAT SHRIMP, SOUP OF THEm,
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TCHING LOVE SEAT'187
•ROCKER '127,

REASON #12: The changing tax laws.
:'

The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 affects every
ltaxP&lt;tver, regardless of income. Your H&amp;R Block tax pre•n'"''' can show you how )he new tax law helps you save
on your 1981 taxes, and point out changes that
ld affect your taxes in 1982.

ers are spelldlng a lltlle more on
Congress this year - a total average cost of $2.4 ~n per leglslatDr - to gp about the business of
ctecldlng wllere to cut the budget of
nearly everyone else In the
government.
The cost of Congress keeps creepIng higher each year. The 100 senators and 4.'fi congressmen wlll
spend $1.3 bllllon on their work this ·
year, a small boost over the fiscal
year that eoded last Sept. :.&gt;.Next
year, the congressional budget request Is expected to Inch upward
again .
The spending figures for Congress are somewhat deceptive.
They InClude the cost not only of
operating the House and Senate but
of running several agencies under
congressional control. Among
them are the General Accounting
Office, the Investigative arm of
Congress; the Government Prtntlng omce and the Library of
Congress. ,
Also, part of the budget Increase
In recent years stems from cost-&lt;Jf·
living r~ses that Congress lias
given Its employees and federal
workers, as well as some pay ln.creases for Its own members.
When lnfiatlon iS taken Into accoUnt, the Ieglslators' speodlng on
their operations has Increased little
- If any - In real terms since 1977,
when the total topped $1 bllllon for
the first ttme.
" You would have to say It has
unquestionably declined In real dol·
tar terms since tlscal 1979." said
one House Appropriations Commit·
tee staff member, who declined to
be quoted by name. ''There has
been stabWty or reduction In em. ployment and other kinds of
expendltlp'e!l."
Since 19'19,.approprllltlons for the
legislative branch have lisen at an
-average rate of 5'.5 percent whlle
overall gi)Vernment spending rose
12.9 percent - about the same as
the national Inflation rate.
The current budget for congressional operations Is about 5.8 percent higher than the 1981 budget.
Budget requests Cor fiscal 1983,
starting Oct. 1, are expected to
jump about one-half of 1 percent to
· just under $1.4 bllllon, Ho~ and
·Senate staffers said.
· . , Funds actually approprtated for
· Congress for next year could be less
than that. Last year, the House
pruned Slit million from congressional budget requests for fiscal
1982.
The situation · In recent years
seems stable when compared with
the 19ros aod 1970s, when speodlng
by Congieas on Itself and Its staff
grew rapidly.
Last year. the Senate ordered a
staff freeze that kept at 8,037 the
number of full-time employees In
.the Senate and In agencies under
Senate housekeeping authority. ·
That freeze, however, was only for
one year, and must be renewed

Mon.-Sit. I •·10 Pill
Sundlf 10 am·10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
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PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH MARCH 198~

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annuallY.
Actual operations of the House
and Senate account for about half of
all funds spent by the legislative
branch. The Senate's operating
budget this year ts $216 mllllon, up
· from $W6 mllllon last year.
· 'I1le House, with Its much larger
. membership, Is operating on a
budaet of $364 million - up $2.8 mll·
· lion from last year's levels. Items
.-. under the control of both branches
: add about $M mllllon to the !Qtal.
• The congressional fiefdom ex;: tends tar beyood the halls of the
Capitol and Involves more than
what most people regard as typical
. • legislative actlvltle$. .
•
Congress wW send $244,100 this
_year to the District of Columbia to
educate the young pageS that work
on Capitol Hill. Another $734,00&gt;
will go to guides that escort visitors
·' on tours of the Capitol. The Botannlc Garden, which supplies plants
for' congressional offices and receptions, wW receive $2.3 mllllon.
Retirement benefits Cor fortl)er
legblators and staff members,
coupled with generous cost-ofllvlng adjustments, cost $93.2 mil·
, lion last year, ' even though the
number or people enrolled haS been
·dropping. That's more than doUble
the M).5 ml11lon paid In 1976. Tile
; • procram 1n 1957 cost only $2.1

; ,m1Dioia.

'

ConiJ'es8 also will spend money
for a doctor's omce In the capitol,
~ ,barbers and beauticians, and cba·
• • ' plalnl that offer dally prayers on
· •the House and Senate noon.
: ~ Some IIIIIISII8I expenaes also
·: came out r1. the budget. Congrea
' : IPMd $2,1lXllut April on a memor·
~: 1a1 MVIce fer the late Rep. Tenny·
1011 GuJer, R-OIIIo, and It ljlellt
: _.,..,. $2.467 to, eend II!Ve"B1
• rr.aallll!ls to the flllleral the late
Rep. Wllllam Cotter. ().QmD.
•' It a11o IPI!IIt $1421ut July, one or
~: lleWI'Rl IIIICh expelldlturel cliarlnK
• the )'l!lll', for l\llll)llel for the Capitol

:

or

f1.reasons. One smart decision. .

STORE HOURS:

WASHINGTON (AP) -Taxpay-

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4 ROLL PKG.

99¢

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. Va .

Page-E -12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mar. 7, 1912

SU,PLINEIT TO THE SUIDAY nMU lllniiL

They built this edifice for Henry Bell in. 1852
.
By JAMES SANDS
GAWPOIJS- The building at 58
Court Street that today houses the
FrenchCityFabricShoppewasbuilt
in 1852 for Henry · R. Bell as a

THIS IS ONE OF GalllpoliH' mUHI widely recognized buHIDet!HCH Heilklng, Bovie and Company whole•ale grtli'el'l&lt; began bere al 58 Court
Street In 1852 just alter the building was llni•hed. In later yeal'l&lt; till•
huildlng would house a saddle shop lor some 80 years. In the prc"t;enl century a musk store, a shoe store, anti a b.auty •hop have been here. Tnday
lht' Frenl'h l'ity Fahri•· Shoppe has the building.

Financial crunch on hog
producers easing, officials say
WASHINGTON tAP) - Livestock economists In the Agriculture
Department say a 3-year llnanclal
crunch on hog producers finally Is
easing.
Since early 1980, producers
"have continually reduced the pig
crop" from year-earlier levels, a
new report by the department's
Economic Research Service said
Tuesday. '· In surveys last IJe.
cember, they Indicated further cuts
In the first halt of 1982.
"These reductions should lead to
substantially higher hog prices,"
the report said. "Large corn and
soybean crops have resulted In

lower grain and protein supplement prices, which have reduced
feeding costs."
Thus, lower feed costs along wtth
"moderating prices of other Inputs" may reduce the total cash
costs of farmers who ·carry out
farrow-t9-flnlsh programs - from
baby pigs to market hogs ready tor
slaug'!t_er, It said.
"However, a major l!ncertalnty
exists about the retaU demand for
pork because of general economic
conditions and the resulting reduc·
tlons In consumer purchases," the
report added .

CHARLES HEMUNG also hss the
distinction of operating from 1851
until 1862 Gallipolis' only bank.
Henklng's bank was actually more
of a brokerage firm than a bank as it

combination
was
not a national
bank,
but hesourwas
ness houae busiand
nonetheless
one of the
primary
residence. While
ces of capital for the town.
Bell resided upAfter Heilking and Cadot left $8
stairs here from
Court Street In the year 1858, He!U"Y
1852 until his
R. Bell moved his saddle shop here.
death in 1900, lie
Bell came to Gallipolis in 11148 and
was not the first
associated h\rnSelf with Robert
one to use the
Black in the st1ddle business that
SANDS
was then located at 45 Court. Black
business room
downstairs.
left the business in about 1862 to
That distinction belongs to the erect a paper mill in town.
grocery finn of Henking and Cadot.
BEU.. RAN a saddle shop at $8
In 1852 Alfred Henking, Charles
Court Street from 1858 until his
Henking arid J.J. Cadot formed a
retirement in 1894. Here Bell made
partnership to start a wholesale and saddles, harnesses, collars, hsmes,
halters, and traces as well as
retail grocery house. The Heilkings,
who were cowins, were inunigrants
various other leather products.
from St. Call, Switzerland. Cadot's
After Bell's retirement the
ancestors were among the "French . business house was operated by
500."
Henry Ecker and Charles Weihe.
THE RETAIL PART of the
The latter was also a saddler and he
business ended at 58 Court unlll1858 continued the saddle business at 58
while the wholesale P@ri moved in Court until about1922 when he died.
1854 to Charles Henking's oew
FROM 1922 until 1926 the home
building at 25 Court.
Dry Goods store was here; followed
The latter building served as the from 1926 until1929 by F. E. Fuller's
boone of this firm under its various
Cash Store. Then the house was
names until 1937 when the holdings
owned briefly by the firm of Carlton
of the company were sold to .the
and Cross who sold radios, books,
Midland Grocery Company of .anti musical instruments among
Columbus, Ohio. From 1938 to 1962
other things,
the Atlantic and Pacific Tea Com.In the early 1930sW. L. Doepping
pany was located at 25 Court, and
established a shoe store here . II was
now it's closed. The building at 25
in 1936 that Dan Thomas and Son
Court was tom down in the 196011 to took over Doepping's store 'of 7,700
make way for the present Compairs of shoes and began a iong
mercia! and Savings Bank.
association with 58 Court Street. The
In the 85 years that the Henking son in this firm's name was Loren
fatnily was in the grocery bUsiness Thomas. The Thomases sold shoes
the finn went by such names as at 58 Court for about 25 years.
Henking. Allemong, and Company;
· IT
IN the early 1960B that
Allemong, Baer and Company (with
the Heilkings as silent partners);
Allemong and Henking; and finally
from 1886 to 1937 Henking. Bovie and
Company. AI one time Henking,
Bovie and Company had offices in
Kansas City, San Diego, and Huntington, W.Va. In the latter 60 years
of the company's existence it
restricted itself to the wholesale
~rocery blllliness and at one time
operated a packing plant .;nd , a
whiskey distributing house in
Gallipolis.

Dan Thomas and Sen Shoes moved
to 324 Second Avenue. In the 196011
the Chann Beauty Shop was located
at 58 Court and for the last decade
and more the French City Fabric

(

LOCUST and PEA.Rt STRE.El

Shoppe has been in this ante-bellum

business house.
You Cllll write to the author,
Jamea Bands, at P.O. Box tz,
Clarbburg, Oblo t311i.

ffiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

rdinal
SUPER MARKETS

ELBERFELD$
NEW SHIPMENT

MIDDLE,DH, OHIO

.. .

.

lVke'le ~-kip ANd StwiMg6 Go. Htucd ,·9K HtuuL
_.WE FUTURE U.S.i.A. CHOICE BEEF • FOOD STANN WELCOME

5 &amp; 7 PC. DINffiE SETS

lOll CASUAL AD DJ188-UP DIJJIB&amp;

,U.S.D.A. CHOICE IEEF

Glass top tables and Formica tops in a good selection
of colors - sturdy construction - Now ready for your
selection- Furniture Dept., Jrd Floor.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

/

.FULL

POUID
"--.. ·-

CiiT .

BOIELESS mAK POVND~z'b•

IOSTOIIBUn

Wanta

greener,

1982 PONTIAC TlOOO
List
Price

•6246.64

•Radio
"Styled st..:! wheels
•Reclining front sear
"Vinyl custom trim
•4 cyl. engine
"Rallye Stripes

Sale Price '5980.00
Rebate 500.00
Net Price Only S5480.00

$750 REBATES
$500 REBATES
If you demand the best, don't missthisone' Finished
in tW(HOne green wich matching interior. looded
with rilr wheel: cruise comrol; rear defroster, air
ronditioning, AM-FM radio and power door locks.
Showroom de-an.
"FACTORY OFJolCIAL'S CAR'

$7995

ON
ON

healthier
·l awn
this
spring?

Includes:

Buick Skylarks and Skyhawk
Pontiac J2000 and
·
Phoenix
Buick Century
Pontiac TlOOO
Pontiac 6000

1981 OLDS

LS

Exceptionally clean 4 door sedan. Maroon finish
wirh facrory A/ C. 6 cylinder, and only 1~.000 low
miles. !00% Warmnry.

POUID

GRAIIDPA'S RECIPE
FRESH HOMEMADE
PORK

fertilizer~
the right formulation to s u = the "grow power" your turf needs.
Lawn Peps plant food contetit Is In both fast and slow-release form, to

4DOOR
Gotx:i mlor, g(XJd sizt', good price, automatic transmission, A/C. only 13,000 low miles.

feed your grass right 8W8¥ and also over an extended period of time. lfs
free-flowing, easy to use.

BAG COVERS 1,500

SQ."· .

***

CRABGRASS A PROBLEM? USE
.
LAWN PEP PLUS Do it early, before the forsythia blossoms

rior, V-6 engine. chrome wheels, tilr steering wheel,
accent stripe, AM-FM. Ask abonr Smith's 100%

$7995

Net

LAWN P-=P!Thishig.~nalysislawn

1981 OIDS. OMEGA

Light bmwn meralli( exterior with matching ime-

ONLY

.r..

with

1981 BUICK REGAL
Warranry.

£..

Start

drop, and Lawn Pep Plus can pr8118tit crabgrass and 14 other lawn weeds ...
while feeding your turf at the same time. One bag covers 7,500 sq. ft.

189')) •

'

NOW

t

THIS COUP~SAVE '3.00 ON YOUR
BAGOF.~
PBPORLAWNPEPPLUSI

1980 BADGER 'CAMPER
FOR PICKUP BED

Absolutely flawless. Refrigerator, 3 burner stovo,
shower, toilet, hearer. Uses bottle gas or elccrriciry.
Grear for hunters and fishermen.
Take this Coupon to the LANDMARK Dealer
listed below, for the Special Introductory
'3discounton yourfirstbag of Lawn Pep or

1979 DOIXJE DIPLOMAT

Lawn .Pep Ptua. Umlt, one coupon-one
beg-per person, Offerexpi1118 May31,1982.

2DOOR

This ml one owner is «jllippcd with a small V.g
engine, factol}' air, vinyl top, automatic transmission with only 36,000 miles. Good mid-size
transponation

.

L,J
,.. •
'

\

J

'·

.

$

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